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                    <text>THE TOWER

1990

��-------

Featuring

Student Life
8
Sports
46
Classes
70
Organizations 98
Index
126

��Titl t P.agt • I

�Ri g ht ·

Students juggle
life with school
Juggling classes, homework,
extra-curricular activities, jobs and
a socia l life proved to be never the
same ole thing for students. For
freshmen , this was only the
beginning of the college pressures.
It was their first experience in
registering for classes. Educational
reforms on the local and national
levels became a regular part of
school life. Seniors could not
graduate without having passed
th e COMP tes t, th e College
Outcomes Measurement Program
Test which measures how well SEU
is accomplishing so m e of its
ge n e ra l educa tiona l goa ls and
cove r s th e thr ee a r eas of
functioning in social institution
(science, technol ogy, a nd a rts).
Throughout
th e
yea r ,
opportunities were provided for
a ll s tud e nts to exper ience a n
increase in bo th responsibilities
and achievements.

Tom Schable and juan

Gonzalez meet for the first lime at the
Meet the Ch&lt;!pter sponsored by l)('lt.,

Sigma Pi. l'hotobyGilbertoSantos.

Righ t: Sunshme 7'i degree weather

'\ocbsses. \Vhatclserouldonl'posstblv Wilnl to do b..lt play football at

Z.llcrr.Jrl

2 • O PEN I G

Pha~obv\1ts...vGonzalez

�t~ft

Bn.:anW&amp;IJ.crdotcu"""'acl.t

wothEhr..lbcth"hlle&lt;Jwot.:o~aqu~&lt;.l
peelatt~(atOCTa

l'hotob\"-'a"

\hiler

OPENIN

•3

�Righ t
Kevm CalJwdl and Frank
l&lt;;.raf\..1 w•te for theu fa .. ontt&gt; rt-pT't'&lt;;n&gt;!ilt"·e outo.ode \1oodv I !all wl\ere
John '-a~h ;and Aho.a !&lt;;.col art&gt;worlmg
tl\e!ilble Ph&lt;&gt;tobvScan \hiler

4 • OPENING

�Uof1 A .eu.ift&gt;l ..... · - CU"CKII

•bout tlw """""'\.""' ,t.\

can-,...

!otw-lppn'J'llloquotom&lt;&gt;l.lfl« I •M
k-...rl\llllo."\'

Back to reality
May, Jun e, Jul y, Augu t .
Where did tho e month go? It ju t
eems like ye terd ay you were ju t
in class taking the Ia t fin a l a nd
o yo u
ho ping that yo u 'd pa
wouldn't ha ve to repea t it. But
wouldn't yo u know it , it '
September again.
Time for a ll the ca refree, lazy
summer days to end a nd back to
rea lity yo u go . Forfreshmen, it was
exciting a nd thrilling ye t sca ry.
Being a freshmen mea nt tarting a ll
ove r aga in. You had to ge t used to a
new schoo l, teache rs, as well a
friends. Your status as a senior in
hig h chool no longe r exists. For
the so phomores a nd juni or , it wa
one step further into yo ur 4-year
coll ege career. For seniors, it was
your las t year in co ll ege. The
rea li zation that in le tha n a yea r,
you would become a part of the
working wo rld where late wo rk
and being late is unacceptable.
With a ll of this a head, you can
onl y dream of w hat' in sto re for
the next ummer.

�Right: Gerri a nd her
their cat.

p&lt;~T(&gt;n ts

w1 th

Geraldyne Kerwin Weishaupt
Gerri was in her
senior year here at St.
Edward's University. She
was a very active member of the uni versity
co mmunit y being very
involved in the Office of
Campus Ministry and
Student Activities. Her
involvement and com-

Top Gem gets re;Kivtogoout w1th
two handsome men, Tom Bolm
~nd Dean l.:irzuela

Team and the Hunger Through her, we learned
Awa reness prog ram. a great lesson in fighting
Cerri loved life and lived Life's battles with hope.
it to the fullest in her Cerri was greatly loved
twenty-three years of li fe. by all who knew her. She
There was no ta sk too was never co nside red
great nor dream too im- just a friend, she was
possible. Cerri lived a family. Cerri, we love
happy active life. She you and we miss you.
was bright, energetic and
always a joy to be wit h.
-----Fr. Roger
Her streng th of spirit
Temme
remains an inspiration to
w her.

Right Cern w1th "lannelle llervas
and Charhe Ochoa at Spnng Amg

1988

�Gerri Kerwin Weishaupt
1966-1990

�Back into the
swing of things
After a warm, relaxing summ er, it would be hard for anyone to
hit the books. But, this was the
ty pical scene for s tudents at St.
Edward's beginning in September.
Students found them selves with
tougher requirements and higher
expecta tions that made academic
life more stressful. Yet, in the midst
of all this, they still found ways to
have fun .
For some, a day would begin
at 8 am and not end until 6:40pm .
Those more fortunate had a four
d ay weekend. While school life
put pressure on students to do well
academically, it also allowed them
the chance to make new friends
and enjoy social activities. And a t
St. Edward's Uni versity, a school
which draws students from all
over the world, friendships and
fun were never the same.

�Top 1-o-nnolo"'G
........ h
Mft&amp;I.DJtnhrrb, bft-tlwn

!, .. ! .11 •

.tllo-lt.l~l,•tltw-\i....tttw

(.lwf"'&lt;"'lntlw\l~ltuoa. Phcoto

to..&lt;..a.rn

ntu.

�Starting all over
.
again
She was standing
there in the midst of it aU.
Alone in another city
knowing no one. Having

AU of a sudden she kne\v
that she had made the
right choice.
"For everyone, it's

no one to talk with. she

the most exciting day of

had left all her friends the yea r. It represents a
and her family for this.
new beginning and an
Regrets and sor- end to old friendships
row were already form- from hi g h sc h oo l ,"
ing in her head. Was it Megan Murphy, Director
worth it to come here?

She looked arou11d with
fear in her face. Then s he
noticed someone tapping
her shoulder. It was one
of the counselors. "Hi!
WelcometoSt. Edward's.
Let me help you get situated," said the counselor.

of Admissions, said of

Freshmen Orientation.
Freshmen Orientation is
an event coordinated by
the Undergraduate Admissions Office with the
help of Student Orientation Leaders, peer advisors, faculty, and s taff.

It all s tarts off with
a barbecue for students
and their parents to get to
know other new students
as well as returning s tud e nts and professo rs.
About 850peoplewere in
attendance a nd enter tainment was provided
by the Swingband. "It's
an emotional time because parents and new
students part for the first
time,'' stated Betty Gibbs,
Assistant Director of
Admissions.

1

�ldl .,.. \\ilhalll l&gt;u.ut ~
Wllhf'-0'1&gt;1 Jumt,;:thc-t..~
n..,,.,,b1,~'-hut-M

i.t"fl Altcr.a k~d.llvol rqtl'&gt;ti&lt;IIII&lt;W\.
Uu..lml~ I•~&lt;•~ .a brN.~''" tho· lt'f"" ,,f
Cl'.J\1..iun f"h&lt;•l&lt;lbvj.lln."toubm

�A week at the
beach
Sharks. Flamin- movie, "jaws", where one
gos. Palm trees. Hot could watch "jaws" on a
beaming sun wi th a slight screen while laying in the
breeze now and then. pooL Then came the PreSpring Break? Summer? Diez Y Seis Fiesta in the
No, it 's Beach Fest Week cafeteria and topping it
at St. Edward 's!
off with Beach Bash held
just once a year, in the ReUnion with live
the Dance Committee music by the Rockin '
puts together one fun- Neumonias.
filled week of beach en"This year's theme
tertainment. Beginning was a fun theme because
on Sep tembe r 13, com- everyone has their shirts,
median Don Reed pro- shorts, and leis on," said
vided laughter. This was
followed by a d ive in
Right Students enjoyed diincing to
the mustc by The Killer Bees during
the Be&lt;~ch Bash Dan«&gt; held m The
Relinion. PhotobySeanl&gt;hller

��Helping to end
hunger
Hands Across the sa id Campus Minister Fr.
Grotto was started a few Roger Temme.
Dr. Bill Quinn was
years ago to get people to
be aware of hunger in the the guest speaker which
world. People gathered started at noon and lasts
a rou nd the grotto and for about 20-25 minutes.
held hands and listened This year, balloons and
and prayed to each other. clowns were incorpo·
"HandsAcross theGrotto rated to unite th e St.
is to make o urselves Edward 's community to
aware o f the issue and to a larger world.
make us do something,"

Rg.hts. L&amp;lura Hellmger and fnends
dres.s up as dowru; to male the event
fest•\ e. Photo by Sean 1&gt;hller

Right. Ed1th Valdespmo listens in-

tently to Fr. Rogt'r

Photo by Sean

~-hiler

Bottom; l'oople gatheri.'d around the
Grotto and held hands to celebrate
Hands Across the Grotto. Photo by

�ltft
.. J

111 F
h.

ua.

od t.:

..

td

Calling for help
Almo ... t c,·cr,
Mittc wa~ callt.--d on
tobcr 22-29. One \\ t.'t:'J.. of
2&lt;Xl ,·oluntecr,, pnm;:ml,
student-,, phonmg m ·cr
6,000 alumm, parent~.
and fncnd.,fordonahon.,
for the annual fund
whJch goe., toward., fin;:mcial a1d, scholar-,luJ"'
and opcrahons budget
"lt 13 truly the ~tudent..,
that mak'e th1s such a

Rom;un, Dlrt.."ltorol An ·
nuall·und ·\lumm Rcklhom.
Phon o 1 h o n ·..,
theme \,·a., Pnonht..~ for
the
wh1ch r.ll ...cd
m·er l&amp;l,&lt;X"Xl. ht..',alonH
\nth ~1 :-,tt."&gt;Cnng comzmttee, whic h n)no.,,..,t.., of
uppcrcla..,..,mt.•n who rt..' cru1t other ...tudent., an:o
reo,pon..,lbll' for th1.., ,-ery
co:-,t-cffiCicnt fundra1o,cr

qo·.,

�Top 1ft Terry Newton listens carefully to hLS students. Photo by Pete
Erickson
Rig.ht
\llatt McVearry tells a cuY
tomer that the &amp;tes' Motel just recentlyacquued a vacancy Photo by
PeteEnckson

�Lights, cameras,
and actions
For the pa.,t fi\'C

year!-,, Pete EncJ...son,
I lead Resident

As~astanl

of Doyle I fall, ha~organa.ted a yearly video con-

Th~

faculty tmd ... t.1ff
ndeo~ JrL'

o.,hown

Ill

the

cafctena on the b•g ~n..'t.'n
telC\'I'tiOil."

Tilt~

wanner-.

of the contt-..,1 JrL' u ..ualh
lhestudcntsmake awarded placque..,
a 2-3 mmute vadeo of Erick.wnal~wcmted!lto
be known that tht~ nd t~t

�Home away
from home
Remember way
ba ck when it wa s cool to
go off to college and live
in th e dorm s? To be
proud of your school and
proud to li ve the re?
W e ll , thi s p as t
yea r, seve ral c han ges
ha ve been mad e a nd no w
it ma y be cool again to
li ve o n campu s. Ea ch
roo m in th e res id e nce
halls now have access to a
pho ne. The re is no in sta lla tion fee o r bills if the ca ll
is local. To ca ll a round
ca m pus, a ll o ne has to do

is dial the las t four digits
of the phone number.
Second, everyone now
has the choice of whether
they want a credit line in
the Re unjon or not. This
choi ce, althou gh catered
by ARA also, gives everyone a break from cafeteria
food . Third , the men 's
dorms on th e second and
third floo rs each have a
lobby now. This spreads
people out more so everyone won 't be down in
the main lobby.

�~:: R:.;; ~~~~ ~~~ ~:!::!: ~,:

\l•~wGoru..alerm.ki&lt;- &lt;..tu..lc"11h~&gt;hi"T'I

u~ 1~ \b.l&lt;&gt;nM&gt; Room lor th.-

;,':'&lt;:!.llt•mt~ l'ho.&gt;tobvG•Ibc~r":o""

What do
• k
you l h In

of the
changes in
~he dorm?

Faw

the dorms, they

iw ere what I expected as

he typical dorm. The
hangesaregoing to add
a whole new perspective
~o

dorm life."

-- Stacie

emec

' I think it's good that
hey're doing it . It's
going to bring more
plebackon campus."

r

--- james Casey

I' Thechangesare nice. It
/will make living in a
dorm more comfortable
put I think the money
should go towards improving the meal s
,served in the ca feteria . I
think the food is what
t-urns people off the most

bout dorm life."
---- Phi Duong

�Right . MynamS1lva finds hmetoput
m some work hours at the ReUmon.
Photo by Pht Duong

helpstudentswhoarehavmgd,ft•cultoes w1th any cl&lt;lss. Photo by G.tberto
Solntos

�Ldt

C..\t\J,..,I...J........,~•II'mt~
nnt•""'" m the, RC'\U'I

"hen Mlptn~ •

Working for the
Three out of every
four students work. ot
on ly do they work, but
they are also full time
students. Mos t work
because they have to pay
for their education. Some
work for extra spending
money while only a few
work for s heer CllJOY·
ment. Inthisdayandage,
working IS as common
and essential as going to
school.
With tUJilon ris mg
agam at St. Edward's as
well as across the nation,
workmg wh1le gomg to
school is essential. To~
pmg 11 all off is the ex·
L~fl
\Liv I hrlp vuu""
_.-hu-.,;
u .... n.1....\ hNrlnwnC..-....tr•
\\~ht .. ho ....n.~.nttwlk
f't••:"ot&gt;"l J't\•1"-'1

pense of entertamment.
Gomgoutand having fun
is so expensive thesedays
that m order to have fun,
one must spend at least
$20 each lime one goes
out. That could really
burn a hole m one's wal·
let.
li enee, w1th the
h1gh cost of hving wh1le
going to sch o l, many
students arc forced to
worJ..to helppay forthcsc
expenses.

�Bottom; Dr. Bill Quinn has fun helping the H1spanic Students' Association with the1r p•e throwing contest.

Photo by Pete Erickson.

[ M

Oktoberfest
One nig ht every
year the ghosts and gob!ins all appear for some
mischievous fun. People
copy this tradition by
dressing upassomething

chance for clubs and
o rgan iza tions to raise
money as well as ha ve
fun. With over a dozen
clubs and organiza tions
represented, it was a big-

else for a night of fun.

ger turnout than l as t

This traditio n is Halloween.
St. Edward's celebra ted Halloween with
Oktoberfest held on October 28 in Moody Ha ll.
The Oktoberfest theme
was paralleled to th e
German festival. It was a

year's. The carnival was
combined with a dance.
The best booth was the
pie throwing at your faverite professors sponsored by the Hispanic
Students' Association.

Right: Lynn Fast and O.ana Merriam
dress up as a gorilla and a cow for
Halloween. Photo by Phototech.

�U.ft
EDir(;N;,,...n•l~ \1onn•
\l ,oaw ~ '''' hrr ""mhc-.nt
Oon•IJ Ou,lo.
f'h 1&lt;1 t_." f'rtclno.lo.."""

Top L•uuii~Ulp'f .. rNIJ\tol.a.:.•~'\&lt;&gt;ni""M"~toUlt-•dw"'-~
l'tw..&gt;l,lkf't11fl-n..lo.....,.

�SEUWeekend
SEU Weekend is a
se m es ter event co n du cted by the Und ergraduate Office of Admissions. It is a chance
for perspective students
to get a realistic view of
what St. Edward's has to
offer. The perspective
students visit the campus
for a weekend and partici pate in seminars,
campus tours and ci ty
tours. Theyarehostedby
on-ca mpu s st ud ents
which gives them a first
hand look at life in a residence hall and a chance to
talk to current students,

faculty and staff. "A big
part of the success of an
SEU Weekend is the hosting aspect. Our s tudents
that host perspective students indormsarecrucial
to th e s uccess of the
weekend," commented
Cole Ho lmes, Director of
SEU Weekend.
The weekend involves about 50 to 75
perspective s tud e nt s
from Texas with 25 to 30
current s tudents helping
the Ad mission s s taff.
With the event, there is
also entertainment provided fo r the perspective

Top
Stt&gt;n•n \.lcGiaun and Soma
Esqut'dat&gt;agt'flyawaltth.t'persp«llvt&gt;
studmb Photo by Gilbt'rto SantO!!

students. "If a student is
considering several diffe rent colleges and is
going through that personal selection process,
he or she can only learn a
limited amount about a
school if he or she is depending on pu blica tions
or word of mouth. I think
that it's really importa nt
fo r st ud en ts to vis it
schools thattheyare consid e r ing and throu g h
SEU Weekend, we allow
them that oppo rtunity,"
stated Holmes.

~

�'.

·'~

-~ ·

lu&gt;n mt'mbor-n. 'H•r'lr'lt' An~tuuno.

\kot~o~lhd...~. o1nJ c;.fil ~\ . trU prr
~p«&lt;l\t' .tud.-nt &lt;"'-m l..irk"UrTII•
'-t EJ"ud' .11&gt;«\ioto
f'!t,._-to) ~
C".alh.-nol~l'""

Gorhnto '••If"•

�Right :The cross on top of Old Mam
all htupforthec1tytosee. Photo by
)ana Shubert

The light on the
hilltop
One. Two. Three.
And there they shine for
the whole city ot see. It is
our gift to the community.
Th e fest i val of
Lights is a tradition at St.
Ed 's welcoming advent
of Christmas season. The
St. Ed's community as
well as the Austin community are both involved
in thi s event in which the

eve nin g.
people are involved in
th e Festival of Lights.
The lights stay on from
the first Frida y of December until the first week in
january. "It's (the Festi val of Lights) for us here
at St. Edward's to remind
us that we are the people
of God. It's our gi ft to the

city, being the light on the
hilltop that shi ne s,"
stated Fr. Roger.

Right Students smg Christmas Carols Jt the e•·ent l'hoto by )ana
Shubert

�lt-ft BoD\\ IUns o~nJ I J I•'I•W'I KJ\ I"
tht·llt•U.\t•lthrd.ln...-

Dancing into the
night
After a scm~ter
of t-sh trts, Jeans, and
shorts, the hristmas
Semi-formal gave everyone a chance to get all
dressed up and have fun
together. The dance was
held tn Moody Atnum
wttha hristmastn.--ca nd
lights.
lub Eleph•nt
provided the mus ic with
avideoscrcen. th~who
wanted a picture with
Santa and Mrs. laus

lt-fl
htii\IV A~ o1nJ ,i,lt..t'
...., ~ro-ww1ttl~nu.

could pose wtth joe and
Mary
on ... ale7
"It
&lt;Christmas Dilnce) wa3
the most attended event
becauo;c tl\ a chance for
everyone todrcs~ up and
loo~ nice," sa td Diana
Mcrnam, A Dance
oordmator

�Jobs are us
With over fifty
compa ni es represented
and over s ixty percent of
these companies hiring,
students at St. Ed ward's,
especia ll y seni ors, were
we ll prepared for the
eighth annual Career Fair
held Tuesda y, March 20.
In charge of helping s tudents wi th their
r es um e pa cke t was
Da vid Schwartz, director
of the Ca reer Reso urce

Center. "We ha ve helped
a lot of people wi th their
resumes and tau ght them
how to interview as well
as how to look fo r a career," said Schwartz.
In ternationa l
Business Machines

( 2: ·}·:·l~::

(IBM ), 3M, Blue Bell Ice
C ream , Sea Wo rld of
Texas, Allstate In s urance, the Central Intelligence Agency (CI A), the
Fed eral Bureau of In vestigation s (FB I ), independent school districts,
Z102 FM, KVBO TV, th e
Air Force, the Army, Taco
Bell and No rth Carolina
National Bank (NCNB)
were a few co mpanies
that were present.
The fair was open
to the public wit h students from va riou s oth er
schools a tten din g. "St.
Edward's gets exposure
at the local level a nd with
emp l oyers," sa id
Schwa rtz.

I::: I

�Keeping healthy
blood pn~..,ure cht.&gt;t:kl"tt
for frt.'C'. It ,.., a ~rn&lt;.:e to
hc.1lth ad\ICethrough th e people to )('t them be
aw11re
that the1r heJith ,..,
Health ·•11r held 1n
Moodv Atnum
umer- 'cry •mt·,ort.llll Pl"•ople
ou~ table~ were M-1 up for sometime&lt;, forgl..'t to gC't
d1fferent health ~rv•c~ the1r annual cht.:&gt;&lt;:l -up or
Brochures were av.Jii.J.ble are afra1d to go to thl'
as well as free C\ alu- doctor for feM of fmdmg
ahons. For example, )'Oll ou t that there cou ld be
Ea c h year,

~tu·

d e nt.!-. could get free

could get your eyes c,{) llll'lhmg wrong With
checked or have your

them

!Aft llun tiWIINIIhf•u l&lt;a..if'Tit
""Udlllt'tlrw.a.f\&gt;o.ll'lnomtlwu,_
~to4or. wt up an \1 •• ..t~ Alfll.l"'
A
I Jt'nl jl;&lt;'l

ct.-1...-.J

hll'r t&gt;loo.f

['b._-.t•l~

rrniUit'

\MJcoJ

�Bottom : Guillermo and Dana have
fun at Mard1Gras.

Fat Tuesday
begins Lent
If y o u couldn't Edward'swas heldin The
make it to Mardi Gras in ReUnion with Club Eleew Orleans, St. Ed- phant as D) . Tossed
ward 's provided the next beads and prizes made
best thing to the real the event like New Orthing. Mardi Gras at St. leans.

�ldl (.;&lt;~f41rw.tl1f\ld\arlt
Wlh.t..,lttot11w.o~•kt..un

Music Fest
If you aren't
aware of \~hat t't gomg
on, spendmg a day w1th
the Killer Bees and tick
People mily not sound
very promt~mg. I lowever, for the !Jtudent't
who attended the th1rd
annual Htll s t oc lo.. , 11
cou ldn't have bt.."Cn bet-

I thmlo.. 11111-.toclo..

l'toneofthelx....,t en~nhat

St. Ed\_ lllw e ha\'mg the
ch.1nce to hc;te n to the
loca l group-.; the mu.,ic t't
great!" e\clatm't -,entor
Ten.:."'w.1 I hll
\Vhah~\ Cr thl~ re,1.,on one attend-. 11111s toc:lo.., good friend't and
mustc can be found
lffl Th t..1 -r fl._, m~M· .1 •r-"~ I
.lrf""'r.lron_..llllw\lo.w.cto:"tlnt'l'ltt"''
urn the, rn• .. ..t .an.! hJ
dw
l'n&lt;\' the··· (,,..,.. ,,... t..llh mf'WI.IIjl:l!'
,,.&gt;(ub• '''111"' An!CU~I'It'

It""

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�Right : BJ Conroy and a friend enJOy a
friendly g~me of frisbee at Crazy
OlympiCS Photo by Yvonne AngUJ·

Crazy Fun
What co uld be
more fun than an afternoon of passing Lifesavers on a toothpick a nd
pla y in g l eap frog?
Maybe being blindfolded
and feeding baby food to
you r partner or cha nging
shorts underneath a blanket.
All these activities
p lu s a few others were
part of the Cra zy Olympics sponsored by SAC.
The three teams that participated consisted of fac-

ulty , the international
cl ub m e mber s, and a
number o f r ando ml y
picked students.
"I hadn 't planned
on doing the olympics, I
was ju st there watching
Hillstock; and when Lauren Stout asked me, I
thought why not,'' said
fres hm en Ke rr y Hart ,
"and I actually had fun! "
Th e winne r s
didn't receive any money
or trophies, but rather a
day in the sun to let loose.

Top One of the gam"" ~I Cra.:ty
Olympu:s was -·under the Bliinlct"
whert&gt;pLl)er5CXdl&lt;lngcdtheor~horts

under the bLlnlct
Blocher

Photo by Kurt

��To p : Holly Cooper and Manny
Lozanoen;oyeachother'scompanyat
the dinner portion of Spnng Hing.
Photo by Sean ~11ller

Left : Geronimo Rodriguez and Elda
Munguia snuggle up dose during a
slow song. Photo by Scan Miller

Spring time fun
It's a time when
students can shed the ts hirts and tennis shoes
and dress in tuxedo's and
evening gowns. It's a
time for eating good food
in a fancy restaurant instead o f the so called food
a t the cafeteria or 59 cent
di nners from Taco Bell.
And it's a time w here
s t uden t s w ill spe nd
longer than fifteen minutes gett ing ready because they aren't just
going to class. The occassion-- Spring Fling 1990.

d inner was held at the
Radisson Hotel.
T ho se
wis hed to reli ve the ir
pro m d ays ca me and
da nced amid their fellow
Cind erellas a nd Prince
Cha rmings.
Despite the low
a ttend a nce beca use o f
Jack of funds towa rds the
end of the semester, those
who ca me had a grea t
time. "I do wish more
people wo uld h ave
shown u p, but we had a
good time despite that,"
On April 27, the sa id fres h men Ke r ry
SAC Dance Committee Hart.

sponsored t he 1990
Spring Fli ng. The semiformal a nd con nected

��A trip around
the world
Standi ng there, I Atrium March 20 and 21
never thought I'd be able with a fashion show held
to see so many countries outside Moody H all.
all at once. To my right Countries such as
was Trinidad / Tobago Trinidad and Tobago,
and Peru while to my left, Japan, Peru, Uganda,
I could see Japan and South Korea, Indonesia,
Qatar. Imagine taking a and Qatar were repretrip a round the world in sented.
Javier Pacheco, a
two days.
Where am I? I'm junior International
at the annual Interna- Studies major, said that
tional Fair sponsored by the fair was to "show stuthe Office of Student Ac- dents that they have optivites, SAC Multi-Cu i- portunities to get to know
many cultures from
around the world in their

Ri g.h t ls•dore"id.:!JIZoproud lyrq&gt;re5entslusrountryofUganda Photoby

I ,~oo.j:~~r~:~~ I : :c.,~. ~~

�Les Elites
ne of the most cellcnce Award went to
prestigious events to take Robe rt Munday and
place at St. Ed's is llonors some of the Presidential
ig ht. Thisa nnualoccas- Award recip1ants were
sio n is celebrated m o rder Gerry We is haupt , Fr.
to honor those students Is id o re
dagi71mana ,
who have excelled out- Bed..y Chavis, and Amy
sid e th e average aca- Brooks.
demic program.
Ma s te r of e reorne of the momcs was Dr. Willi;un
awards that were recog- Quinn and Fr. Roger
ni7ed were: the Umver- Temme led the ln vocasity llo nors Program, the

tlon.

Na tional llonor Society,
All mall, the mght
Awards for E:\cellence in proved specia l for all
Graduate and Baccalau- those w ho \\'Cre nom1·
reate St udi eS, Stu den t nated and honored by
Service Award s, tu - teachers and fellow stu·
dents on the Deans L ist, dents. These people '"'ere
and many o ther awa rds. the "cream of the crop..;
The Teachmg Ex- they were the elites.
•

l&lt;r:f1 """"""~\1d;~h (&lt;;;( '"~
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a"'aRh ~\f'f~ ~a"'.ml"'af'"'W"Itdb'\'Dr JD 1.-

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�-

N. MPION.
89 90

Top: Chris Tresslar. Roy Jaramillo,
Zollle Mtimkulu, Terence Woods,
P«ulG&lt;ltJca,andjohnChenposewtth
Jerry )ones after the announcement
that St. Edw&lt;~rd's would be the sum·
mer traming camp for the O..Jlas cowboys. Photo by Amy Brooks
Lt' ft
1\.byor Lee Cooke males a
speech at the ground breakmg ceTemony Photo by Amy Brooks

�~~~

J.m r-~t"'-t'.t

fJ,...rJ.L ruu•ntl\ b tlwCIChcu.l
•"'"'" •~·
camr t..w thr I&gt;ann
I
M A.m•l'n

(,.to.,,,

Cowboys make
soccer field their
training camp
After month~ of
rumors and uncertamty,
Jerry Jones announced
that St. Edward '~ would
bcthehomeoftheDallac,
owboy5t trammg c01mp
in front of an enthustasllc
crowd of I,000 people.
On December 6,
team owner Jerry jon~.
Jake P1c~Je, U.S. Represcntatn·e, P. Powers, St.
Edward 's
ntver5ttty
trustee and h.11rman of
the Greater Au~ttn
Dr. Patncia I Ia yes, President of t. Edward's Umverstty , Lee
oo~e .
Mayor of Austm, Sally
Shipman, Mayor Pro
Tern, and Chuck Taylor,
hair of the Chamber's

world of the great news.
Abo present wac, the
Tra\'is I hgh School band
playing Deep, the llcart
of TeJ.11S and about 50
photographers, camera
operators and reporters.
t Edward '~ wtll

get two 1-L-c~lhbcrprat&gt;
lice ftl'ldc, wtth national
expcl'lure from the owboy~.t tratntng camp
move. About 1,000 n~.tt tors a day aree\pt"'Ctcd on
campuc, from mtd-july
through late Augu'.tt The
city will get u~ of some
of I. Edward'-, recrcJtional fa lltllC't, and an
expected $2.5 million
~~to the economy.
Renovattons of
the field3 IS t"tllmah.'&lt;.i to
ta~eabout two months to
complete. It 13 scheduled
to fill15th on Apnl 16
whtch tS bemg done by
apttal Excavation o.
The ortgtnal
$191 ,000 pnce tag for the
renovatton of the field
was a low estimate acrordmg to a report 111 the
Austm-American tatC'tman. The undcrcstlmalion was due to the owboys specifications f a
fteld that must dratn
wtthin one hour of a
heavy ram

�Top : Casino Night in a bmi's eye
view in the Maloney Room. Photo by
l'h.iDuong
Right : Steve McGlaun, Jamie Misko

wmbig bucks.

�a~1n0
ight,
orcd by Delta
Pi, a professional
fratem1ty, was
111 the Maloney
on Apnl 7 It IS an
fundraiser held
Spnng. Everythmg

about the mght pt:~rallels
gambling m L..1., Vega'J
except ,..,mnmg. Instead
of wmmng money, one
has Lhe chance to '''Ill a
wmd ~urfer, a comp.1ct
disc player or a car alarm
as well as compact d1.scs,
dinner tickets and gift
certificates.
"I thought Casmo
Night was a blast. I
thought Delta Sigma Pi

d1d an excellent job of
puttmg 11 together I've
never been to a a~1no
1ght and I was \'erv
1mprec,M.'d I thought the
pnLcs were excellent' I
won three CO's! " ex claims Laura I lam.
as1no
1ght
bnngs gambhng and La~
Vegas right on school for
those who haven 't been

able to go to Vegas.

ll'fl '-t n l uo:o~~\'&gt;ht&gt; .. itofl ""dNI
trtg"'f'"11:toe• l t lw EU.-&lt; LJ~ l ut¥

'ot only can on('
han.• a good llmt:', but
e\ eryone who omt:to.,
,,mo.,J pntc.

�Right : Valedictorian, Marcia Muehr,
gl\·es her speech about the world to-

day and how each individual ca n
make a difference.
Miller

Photo by Sean

Graduation, the
final step
For everyone ,
g raduating from high
school is a big step. It
m ea n s m oving awa y
from one's parents and
dealing with the pressures of college life. But
when it comes time to
g raduate from coll ege,
it's an entirely different
and bigger step. A step
into the real world. Looking for a job and moving
out entirely from the parent's wings.
But for the most

quer what lies ahead for
them.
Va ledi c torian ,
Marcia Muehr, began her
speech by telling of what
past va ledi c tor y
speeches' main themes
were. She spo ke of how
she assumed they would
talk of s u ccess a n d
achieving goals; but ins tead most of them reflected the events a nd
feelings of the time.
She went on to relate some of todays problems and said that people
make the difference.

T op M.uy K.iy \l15l.o LS too e11ated

Right Claud~a Santamana and \&gt;!anna Tll"\-mo congratulate each 01her
Photo by Sean \hile-r

about gradu.'ltmg All she "'anb ~for
her roommate. AIKi.J Ked. to sha~ Ln

(.f~,~f~~~,~ I : : : I

�l.t"fl l)r l'.nn.-uo ll.a1 .anJ &lt;. k.lof
m.an t&gt;f tho- S.&gt;~nt t•l Truo.to
AnM
\\ ~ nnt' h•tl"rr hl l)f )...orlt. •!'"" h
I,._"'' I.&gt;\ ...._a.,
\1dk-f

dunn~lht-&lt;O'fftnllfll

�Bottom : Kristina Steward and Karen
Uhrbrockaregladthattheyarefinally
graduating after 16 yearsofstra1ght
school. Photo by Amy Brooks

Ri gh t Kathleen Person gets a hug
from Dr. Ed Shirley Photo by Sean
Miller.

�l c&gt;fl

Carmd.l fpnght J'l'f'd•-n t&gt;fl

"'h.liK~;oJu,iiM&gt;nrNII\ me;~m

b\ Am\ Bn-.,L_,

f'ht•hl

Top Tho:(ll t&gt;tl""'l
\1ol...,

I~•IM'-t.an

�Right :Tim Burke (ft12), Matt May·

field (16), and Ste,'e5anders (f9) all

�Getting into the
sport
Pa rti cipa ting in a port required effort both on and off the
fi eld , trac k, o r court. Ea h playe r
fun ctioned as a pa rt of a tea m, that
when perfected, could go any di tance. They strove to be in the be t
condition menta lly a nd phy ica lly
before competing.
Practice was numerous a nd
length y but all the swea t and hard
wo rk would be co mpensa ted by a
vic to r y. Wh e th e r it be ize,
streng th, speed, ba lance or endurance, each athl ete must have b en
able to be the best at w hatever he
pl ayed . And each ga me proved to
never be the arne old ga me.

�Right : Chns Robinson (1110) takes a chance and
s hoots a bas ket.

Shooting for the top
The 1989-90 men's basket- playoff ga me the men have ever
ball team had a very successful hosted in the Recrea tion and Conyea r fininshi ng seco nd in The vocation Center. The selection of
Hea rt of Texas Conference. The senior Ja y Lee Hobbs, SEU's secteam advanced to
and all time lead
the semi-finals of the "The chemistry of
in scorer, to the
Distri ct IV NA JA
All-Distri ct Tea m
team work has
pla yoffs before loswas attributed to
ing th e final record attributed to our
this fine p layer.
of 19 and 13 was the
"The chemistry of
success
.
tea m's best in three
------ jay Lee Hobbs, Jr. teamwork has atyea rs. The team fintribu ted to our
is hed very s trong and seemed to success. If the chemistry was th ere
pea k at just the righ t time. The more often, we couJd be better,"
highlights o f the season we re a last s tated jay Lee Hobbs, Jr.. The
second win over archrival Texas men 's team pla yed a vigorous seaLutheran and of course a con vinc- son of basketball and surpassed
ing 13 point victory over Eas t their goa ls for th is season.
Texas Baptist in the first home

Righ t Charles Obonn.a (133) stea~ the ball from
the opponents Photo by Gllbeno Santos

�h o: lo.ro""

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��Women's basketball unites
In any sport, the abll1ty to
wtn depends a great deal on the

md,,·iduals of the team But no
matter how talented each md1vid·
ual may be, succc:,s cannot be easily attamcd 1f the players co1n't
work together.
TI1is type of umty was the

most 1mportant and app..uent aspects ofSEU's women's basketball
teJm th1s past year.

"C0 11Sideri11g Ollr tea111
was yo1111g, we did
wo11derf11 l. It was a
better seaso11 tha11 we
a11ticipated. For 011ce
we were a tea111 illstead of a battlegro1111d.
--- Patti Phillips (Jr.)

The team has had very talented and Cil~lblc players over the
pa11t years; but accordmg to Path
Phillips, they acted as one.
self.
Such r~pect brought great
" OllS Jd enng our team '"as
They achieved their success results for the team. verall, they
young, we did wonderful. It was a through long, hard daily practices. were 26-6 w1th the co nference cobetter season than we anticipated. They put aside their personal feel- champions t1tle.
For once we were a teo1m instead of ings and decided that as the Lady
It takes sk11l and dcd1 ca11on
a b.1ttleground," stated Phillips.
II ill toppers, they were one person. to be a good player, but to be a
Much of this togetherness Through all of this, they brought good team takes a great deal of
~terns from respect towards the themselves great success.
effort and care.
other players and for the game it-

�Victory at

hand
The sport of volleyball has
long been connected to sand y
shores and bronzed muscle men
attempting to impress their female
audience. But at St. Edward's the
picture is just a little bit di fferent.
First of all, players consist of
very talented young women and
the aud ience, comprised of both
genders, is there for the thriiJ of the
game and to cheer the girls on to
victory.
Secondly, the g ame is
played indoors (a far cry from the
beach), so the girls do not have the
opportunity to acquire a savage
tan while getting sand between
their toes. The women on the volleyball team are too serious about
the game and playing to win to
worry about whether or not they
have a perfect bikini line.
The team 's coach, C hris
Mayhew, feels that the success of
the team rides on the hitting intelj~~s~~~~
ligenceoftheoffenseand theinten- -··
sity of the defense. "This team is
the most cohesive and mentally
determined that I have coached at
St. Edward's," said Mayhew.
Right Chmllne 0 \1alley JUmp$ to block the ball
fromhltllngtheground

��Bottom ~ Bade row : Carlos Garcia, Herb Gonz.llez, Brant Parker, jeff Cox, Robb C.1talano, Mike McCollough, Marrus N;~lepa, Kevin Karo, Scott Radke; 2nd row
j.1mes Keller,Chris Ferguson, Steve McCormick, Gino Paganucri, LarryTaghen. Todd Massey, Tom Drohner,Gene5illa7..lr, jack Lala, Rick Lmdell; l si row: M1chael
Cournoyer, Rob Hughes, Marco Acevedo, Todd Mucha, jesus S.1ldivar, Clay Arnold. Photo by Sean ~·hiler

The crack of wood as ball be nefit of the team a nd no t just as
and bat connect. The pop of the indiv iduals," s tated sophomore
hardball as it hits a soft leathe r infielder, Robb Catalano.
g love. And the cheers from the
Whether all the members
fans as a nother o ut is marked on the baseball team ha ve realized
d own for the St. Edward's baseball it o r not, there is a s ignificant bond
team. Was it luck?
ot quite. between them as players that en·
Skill? Fo rthe mostpa rt . O r the fact a bies them to put forth so much
that the team has it together, men- effort towards the success o f the
tally and physically.
team.
It ta kes more than just a
Agreatdealofthecloseness
sunny day and a good wind in the ste ms from the fa ct the newcomers
right direction to give a team an to the tea m were so well accepted.
added advantage. And although They were not made to prove
ski ll is an a pparent requisite, the themselvestothe"old" playersand
right frame of mind and wi lling· in turn were allmved to add their
ness to work toghter is what own brand o f finese to the team.
spa rks the names for achievement.
"It has been an easy acquisi·
"We a re a lot closer as a tion. I've been treated really well
team, we work hard, and have and accepted as one of the guys,"
strong players who work for the s a id second baseman Marco
-,:.:.::.::-="F:-=:-=:-="F:.:::.::.::"'iiiiAcevedo.

(: ·:•:b±l:::I ::: ~~~~~~~'~""r'-f~h"""•'-'"ru

�Left

lll.'T'b COI'I7..oi1Ct (11'21) pub llll hl!i ('!f,,rt mto

huun~ th•~b.•ll

Phohlbv t,1a1\-Swcndnt..-

�Right : Player 13 hopes to hit a homerun. Photo by
ScilnM•llcr.
Bottom :Our girls play so well that they can JUSt
waltz mtoa base. Photo by Se~n M1ller.

�Can too much of a
good thing be harmful
A combmatlon of wms and

losses arc what makes a

h~i.lm

great. ToomayofeJthcronccould
prove fatal for not only the plan~rs·

liB wa"o probabl\- the one
team that hc iJX'd 'thow SF \ , 't&lt;Jft·
ball team the rc.1hty of the contept
thtlt too mu h of ~mcthmg i.., not

outlooJ..onthetcam, but the team\ Jlway" a good th1ng.
ab1hty to play accordmg to the1r
oach Ph1l Koehler C'\talent and not the outcome of pre- plamed the 'tlluahon at tht• liB
VIOus games.
EU game: "We came there w1th
The women's softball tc&lt;~m the att•tudc that all \\'C h.1d to do
began thc1r season w1th a strong wa't waiJ... out onto the fidd to wm
wm agamst Tnmty University; They lo..Jckl"d u.., around a httk• and
however, they were defeated by 1t's thc ~~ thmgtoh,lppentou't&lt;,O
the llouston Baptist Un1vensty far."
team at the followmg two games.
The team ended w1th a 2...1\·
19 and conference of 14-6.

�Bollom : Back row : Man:Swendner, MikeS.1miago, Kirk Wagner, Tim Burke, IJn Lipski, Maggie Jimenez, Steve Sanders, Pablo Marron, Russell Byrd; Front row
: Matt Mayfield, Johnny Kress hen, Matt Lankes, Dennis Chavarria, Pedro Serrano, Bill Kiaunt&gt;, Ale:o.: B.1lh.•steros, l&lt;ln«.&gt; Sanders; Not shown John Sebok.

�1...-h H•llt...~uf\&lt; •1-1\.art&lt;Jt...ui.\\J"""'"''IOI•IJ!h.,,
h-ll••"'tdmnuh']&lt;,j,l'tn\t...~'':"llnNo'I."A

1kc-b.lll l'ho.•h•t&gt;, ...,.,.n\hl\rr-

It's all up
For !&gt;{)me, soccer ~~ JU~t a
bunch of guys getting 1-.ich:&gt;d omd
stepped on in an attempt to get a
ball in a net. I lowever the players,
the coach, and the fanscvoJ...equitc
a different attitude towards thb
radical sport.
The majority of !JL~ple arc
unaware of all that goc~ on behind
the glit1 and glitter of the constant
bombardment by sweaty opponents and the thrill of watching a
multitude of bruises fonn on one's
over abused shins. They fail to see
the long hours of nonstop practicing, the energy spent discovering
new strategies, or the time used to
workout any kinksthattheplayers
feel are affecting the tenm.
"We have been working
hard everyday at practice; and if
needed , we talk through any problems we think the team is having.
We've got a talented team and we
are ready to prove it to people,"
said freshman player Kirk Wagncr.

With a slew of new players
coming in, intertwining their individual talents with the "old" players seemed to be one of the team~
• biggest feats.
Bill Kiaune, sophomore
player, feels that although there
may have been some tension at
first, "The tea m is getting along better and moral is up. It just took
getting to know each other and
then we were able to play."
l.-ft t\.l.rJ..\\.aww:-rfllOII"IIhf&lt;&gt;rlht-rt"OUh&lt;&gt;fthoc

l rhc.-.wtn·Se.n'Mkf

�I I I

'I ''I
I

'l

I I

II

II
II

To p : 8.11ck row Holly Cooper, Wynde Bush. K.aren Allen, Co-aptam; 2nd row Cru;una Lopez, Mansa Ben.Jvides, Front row Ramona H•d•s, captam l'hoto by
Sean\illler

J'

J

�l..~ft

lur't'nAI\im,lt&lt;&gt;lh(.olo.'f'" \1.on.,.l\t-N\1ol&lt;

(.n 11MI~'f"t.t.•n.J\\\~l,·Bu..tl• ...lnlh"thitlrf"1'

~~~. In"" d.. -.r c•rt·un. ltun.,.r&gt;o~ th. L•
..._'&lt;ln\ldlft

'"""'" l&gt;\

Raising school spirit
So chL&gt;erleader., are not JUo;i
Lookmg good m a s hort
sktrt and having a prettv smile are around to look pretty and fltrt with
not th e only requtrements for theaudtencc. They play an tmporbemg a cheerleader. One of the tant role 111 how the tetlin~ will
most tmportant pilrts of a cheer- play. To be a good cheerleader
leader's job is the ab tltt y to raise the means gelling the crowd rowdy,
spirits of the audtencc and app ly e\clled and JU'it a littl e bit vicio~-,
that to whatever game they arc toward~ the other tea m
cheenng for at the tim e
Whether people are aware
of tt or not , the ~pmt of the audtence and the cheerleaders has an
effcctonhowthetcamplays. lfthe
team feels they have the support of
thetr fans behtnd them, then thev
§CI
up to do a §ood

hyp:;d

rb.

�Right Robm Spiers, through his practices, mad e Jt
to n a h On.l!S. Photo by Kurt Blocher.

Dedication and
determination pays
off
Led by strong players such thatthey are consid ered the und er·
as Todd Doss and Robin Spiers, the d og, the tea m had a victorious
men's tennis team came out with a seaso n with Doss and Spiers winseason of ten wins and five losses. ning the title of di strict champions
They are the conference champi· in do ubles a nd ad vancin g into
ons with a score of 5·0.
nati onals.
The tea m consists o f eig ht
"It's a drea m come tru e.
pla yers. The toughes t competiti on
thi s season includ e In carnat e
Wo rd and the Uni ve rsity of MaryHardin Bay lor. Despite the fa ct

�Ldt ToJJ Dl
pra..1~~X

thn&gt;ujth Jdt'm\trwt"'" •nJ t\.11\J

m,a..k It to thor n.III&lt;~R

Ltoft 8nJ J•~ u
' ,,. •OA .111 W b.Jitu ••"« onr
kwthttt-.m ""'&gt;t•lbv"'-.,.n\t•Dn

�Bottom: B•ck row . Russ.:-11 Stt::ms, Karsia Kub.."'nil, Christy Key, Sus.;tn Martm; Front row : Anna GolUille.:, SueChreffler, Kelly Martm.

Aiming for the gold
The women's tennis team is
something that you should not Jet
pass you by. They are very hopefu I
of a fantastic season. "The team
looks a lot stronger and it stands a
great chance of winning conference," sa id Lisa Brollier. The season wi ll not be easy, but they are
confident. With a lot of hard work,
we shou ld be able to do well,"
stated Susan Martin.

These ladies not only have
their minds set on conference, but
also their hearts. "Having a lot of
depth is wha t it'll take to win conference," said senior Bra llier.
Lady luckmayalsobea part
of this tea m too. "I think we'revery
lucky to have the players we do
since we unexpectedly lost three of
them," said Brallier.

��Bottom A member of the International Club demPhotoby

�\ tutwn l•m 1&gt;.-... m. I n.. \ t'"lt-1"·

\t,~·

tl•""-4._.

l&lt;&gt;hnM t..n ~a.-.n. fronl row lhm t..l!'l...•.l.tn.'t"
.... und'"" 6ollt...1o11uno l'rlt"''l~"'"-1'"" Rnn8ru"'1o11
l~•hi8\\Un&lt;...,ornJNT

�You of all
people
"I don't recognize any of these
people" and "Where is John Doe?"
were some of the statements expressed in the beginning of the
year. Old, familiar faces were gone
while new ones appeared.
Students each year lose
friends to another school but made
new ones with the incoming students. This was not hard with the
increase in enrollment at St. Edward's University of about 300 students.
Each year brings in new faces
and welcomes old ones. With this,
the faces were never the same old
ones.

���~ft

(\;IUjl(,.,Jruo..h

Po~ul(,..roco~

.. nJ

~h&lt;..o~lr.J..t tro, hi h11J ..-th.~ 1&lt;1
k.t\l'hoolt)~(~., ..... , . .

���Gillespie, Christine
Hometown : Vail, CO
Major : Theatre Arts
Gonzalez, Jua n
Hometown: Ingleside, TX
Major: Marketing/ Finance

Gonzalez, Mary Kay
Hometown: Elkhart, IN
Major: Psychology

Harborr, James
Hometown: Rusell, KY
Major: Computer Science
Hernandez, Pedro
Hometown: Asherton, TX
Major: Social Work
Hill, Teresa
Hometown: Sugarland, TX
Major: Religious Studies

What has St. Edward's done or
meant to you?
"St. Edward 's ha s given me
the id ea l educational climate for

me to complete my dgeree."
--- Dave Moral es

It's meant grow th and warmth. It makes one feel like
one belongs and you feel glad to be he re. Because the specia l
cere money that they did fo r Gerri Weishaupt, it makes a
person feel more specia l to attend a small, close co mmunity
beca use something like that wou ld ha ve never bee n do ne at
UT.

·-- Becky Paul
"St. Ed's has allowed me to
m ee t and become friends with
very special people and at the sa me
time, given me thecha nce to have a
wond erful educa ti on ."
--- Donna Reed

"Since the day I ca me to St. Ed wa rd 's I ha ve ga in ed mo re
than an education. I have encounte red a w hole Jot o f different
things such as makin g friends tha t co me from far and near. The
different na tionalities and races have shown this school the
diversity that one ca n e ncounte r. Not o nl y does one receive an
education in a particu lar fie ld, but an education everyone need s;
and that is interacting with d ifferen t people not o f your sa me
race.'
·--Karen Dunn

�John!tOn, Cordon
ltometown: ltouslon, T\
1\bjor. Politic:.al denc('

Kelly, u"
llometo"" n: Virtoria. 1 &gt;.
\1.,jor: lntc_m;~tion.~t tudic~

Kloc, JcH
llomelo\'1 n : llouston, TX
Major: Marl.eting

Kwok, lndraw.:Jty
Jlomelown: lndonesi;~
Major. MangJ Marketing
leanos, Esther
llometown: Dallas, TX
Major. Marketing
Leopold, Kelly
Hometown: lbllettsvillc,
TX
Major: Mark) rinance

�Martin del Campo, Jose
Hometown: Queretaro,
Mexico
Major: Finance/ Mark.
McVearry, Malt
Hometown: Dallas, TX
Major: Religious Studies
Mendoza, Isabel
Hometown: Presidio, TX
Major: Bilingual Education

Misko, Mary Kay
Hometown: Thousand Oaks,
CA

Major: Political Scit'nce
Morales, David
Hometown: Corpus Christi,
TX

Major: Marketing
Nt!'mic, Christie
Hometown: Corpus Christi,
TX
Major: Social Work

��Pena, David
Hometown: Roma, TX
Major: Poli. Science
Peterson, Cheryl
Hometown: Temple, TX
Major: AcctJ Eng. lit.
Poth, Julie
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Biology

Ramos, Hector C.
Hometown: Laredo, TX
Major: Criminal justice
Rodriguez, Geronimo Jr.
Hometown: Alamo, TX
Major: Poli. Science
Rybarski, Sharron
Hometown: Dallas, TX
Major: Sociology

Right With book in hand. john Hoff~tctter II
makeo; his way to his car to rush home to
study. Pilato by Ph• Duong

�Rivt'r•. lto\ton
Hometown: Corpus hri'ih
lt.bjor: rimin•l Ju~ticr
Ruiz, Belly
flometO\O'n: EJIJ.aso, T\
Major: Biology
.lt'nZ, Ann.ll M.
flometown: .an Antonio,
TX

ec. EdJ Sp•ni.sh/

olodyna, 8.ub.11r.11 A.
Hometown: flouston, TX
Major. Marketing
Springer, Clint
ltometown: Chri.sti.lln.Sted,
St. Croix
M.lljor. Psychology
St;avinoha, D;aniel
Hometown: Richmond, TX
M011jor. Crimin;al justice

SteHek, Theres;a
ftometown: Austin, TX
M.lljOr: English
Stout, Lluren
Hometown: Spok.1nc, WA
M;ajor: ltistory/ Educ;ation
Stringfellow, Jerry Buter
Hometown: Texillrk.1n;a, TX
M&lt;\ior: Sp;anish/ lnt. Bus.

Tompkins, Us;a M.
llometown: Corpus Christi,
TX

Trevino, Alm;a D.
Hometown: Hulingen, TX
M;ajor: Social Work

�Valdez, Viviane
Hometown: Houston, TX
Major. Psychology
Vega, Fernando
Hometown: lima, Peru
Major: Business
de Ybarrondo, Michelle
Hometown: Houston, TX
Major. Eng. LiiJ Photo

Right Ch ... ryl Pt:tl.'r&lt;;o.&gt;n takt-s a brcal from
hcracrountmgdubtundraiscr_ Photo by Phi
Duong

�Ll'ft T.•l•nctiml'wl}ftlnllft'Sdom•n

,,.....

~71t~tw.-...-. ..

quhl

r•

whill' .l•IIJI5•lltt11'

hutni'Wtltl.

l'tu•t" t.&gt;y I'Ju

��u

un..n

Blochrr, kurt
ttomdown: Pu)•llop, WA
M•jor. PhoiCK'Ommunkalion

C.rdrnu, Mich.1rl
Homdown: Wrtl•co, TX
Mo~jor. Biology
Orlg.ldo, Jor Darrrll
ftomdown: u fin, n
~bjor. Mano~grmrnt

Duffy, Annrnr
llometown: Librrtyvillr, IL
P.hjor. M•n.asemrnt
bpinos._ Po~ulln._ .S .•
ttomdown: los Angrlet,
A
Mo~jor:

Religiou StudiH

Codnich, Douglu
Homrtown: Co~lvetton. TX
~bjor. Accounting
Cfftnr, Theodo~
Hometown: Anchor•gt-, AK
Mo~jor: Soci•l Work
Crttnwood, k~lhrrinr
Homt'lown: Trophy Oub, TX
P.bjor. Engli h Writing
Crttr, Debby
Hometown: S•n Antonio,
TX
Mo~jor: Eng. WritinsfArt
Cu.rdiol•, Je•nnie
Uomdown: Lindo, TX
M•jor: Fin•ncr

�Johasson, larrs
Hometown: Rukjavik, Iceland
Major: Marketing
Knaggs, Robert
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: English Writing
Kral, Denae
Hometown: Meadows, TX
Major: Math/Set:. Educ.
Lankes, Matthew
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Photocommunications
Mendoza, Ramon
Hometown: Progress, TX
Major: Accounting
Mendoza, Rozie
Hometown: Robstown, TX
Major: Communicatins
Mensah, Br. Paul
Hometown: Asankrangwa,
Ghana
Major: AcctJ Finance
Merriam, Diana
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Art/ Eng. lit.

Miglini, Michael
Hometown: Dallas, TX
Major: Bus. Administration
Polavio, Fr. Victor
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Bus. Management
Ramirez, Rolando
Hometown: Houston, TX
Major: Spanish/ liberal Arts
Russell, Lynn
Hometown: Decatur, ll
Major: Photo/ Comm.

�11'11 M.uroAo:-.-wdoand•rrWtld•t•

.......

d..&gt;rn~~!~J""*'t')'&lt;~

Sm~Uil., St~" rn
Uom~lown
U\lin, n
i\i.ljor: AC'counling

Torrn, Cuill~nno R
llom~town : So~n ntonio, TX
~bjor: P }C'hology
Tl"f'vino, C•ndy
llom~town: Progrno, n
1\.hjor: Bu~. LduC'o~tion
Vo~no"rr, Christin•
Homrtown: Sprin~ TX
i\hjor: lliilory

llomrtown
ushn, n
\hjor: HRS\1-AI) PT
Wijono, Jrffrry
Homrlown: Jo~Urt.a.lndonr-

"

\bjor: Computrr Sci \hth
Wood, Trrrncr
llomnown S•n Antonio, T\
\bJOr. \1•n•grmrnt
Uomrtown U I rri.t. TX
\1.1JOr: \1ukr ling

��Angui.ano, l

"·onn~

Otol Rio, TX
bjor: Accounling

Hom~lown :

B.ayn.a, Ch~ron
Hom~town: Houston, TX
M.ajor: Photorommunic.ationJ
8~11.

U.s.a

Hom~town: C~d.ar Cr-Hk,

M.ajor:

TX

Chrmi~try

Dniules, Juan.a
Hometown: C~rg~town, TX
M.ajor: Computrr irnce

Decker, Teni
Hometown: Tens City, TX
M.ajor: Accounting
Drum, Kristy
Hometown: Austin, TX
M.ajor: Social Work

Faulk, Amy
Hometown: Montgomery, TX
Major: Eng.lish Writing

Gabriel, Jennifer
Hometown: S.an Antonio, TX
Major: MarkJ Comm.
Gallegos, Prdro
Hometown: Dallas, TX
Major: International BusinHS
Green, Melanie
flometown: ltous ton, TX
M.ajor: EducJ Poli. SciJ Engl.

Hilbig.. Kenneth
Hometown: Red Rock, TX
Major: Psychology

�Bottom Christine O'M.:~lley, \1ona
Hicks, and M.ike Steger demonstrate
the1r gambling talents at Casino
Night. Photo by Gilberta Santos.

Lapinski, Elizabe th
Hometown: Kerville, TX
Major. Ma nagement
Malarky, Shannon M.
Hometow n: Guadala ja ra,
Mexico
Major. lnt'l Bus. in Spa nish

M ille r, Sean
Hometown: Rockport, TX
Majo r. Photocommunic.ttions
Rodriquez, Alberto
Home town: Ala mo, TX
Majo r. Crimin al Jus tice

�~.~l.aur,t.~ur•

tlon1 town: &lt;,.m,th\lllf'. T\
ll«"mrnl.ar\ I du o~lmn

~bjor:

c;o~nto . G1lbc-r1o
I tomriO\'\ n: Llrf'do, T\
M.110r: Con1put r &lt;,.c,f'ncr

Sl'J,ur.a, So~ndr.a
llomf'town: Anglf'ton. T\
~b1or: M.arlo.rhng
~p«-lling , Rob«-r1 Jr.
llomrlown
u'ilin, T\
'1.1o~jor: lconomic'i

~~!:...__~
Vrlo~, l'hihp

tlomrtown: l...arc-do, T\
\hjor: M.ark. Bus. Adm
\\lo~lbc«-, t\.rv1n
tlomelown: llouslon, TX
flohjor: lnl' l Studir" M.arlo.
lo~mor.1, Mui.a L
Hometown: Au'ilin, n
\hjor: I ng. I il lduc.1110n

��Cottrr, O.a"id
lfom~town : Brolen Arrow, 0
\hjor. lnt'l Studi~~

Coy, john
llometown S.an Antonio, TX
\h1or. ln~Ji.,h \\ ritinR

�Right Amy Bauman rush.--s to the
main attraction. Photo by Gilberto
Santos.
Bottom · Manny Lo:t.1no puts away a
projectorafterapresentation. Equipment such as this could be borrowed
from the Learning Resource Center
Photo by Phi Duong.

Esparu, Aguida
Hometown: Natchitoches, LA
Major: Spanish lnt'l Studies .

Fischer, Patrick
Hometown: Penn Valley, CA
Major: Criminal Jus tice

Fortner, Helen
Hometown: Round Rock, TX
Major: Crim. Justice} PolL Sci.

�Chaleb, Joey
Hometown: Austin, TX
M•jor: Economics
Cr.1ui,K•r•
llometown: flouston, TX
Major: Social Work
Griffith, T. Kirk
Hometown: Stow, Oll
M.1jor: Marketing
Hill, Chriss
Hometown: New Orluns, LA
Major: Crimin.1l justice
Hosty, Mui"
Hometown: Houston, TX
Major: Undeclared
Ibanez, Cynthia
Hometown: Rom•, TX
Major: Accounting
J•me!., Michelle
Hometown: Arans•s Pus, TX
Major: Undeclared
Jones, Paula
ltometown: Albuquerque, NM
Major: Math

�La Rowe, Aymii Louise
Hometown: Mansfield, TX
Major: Communications
Lawler, Wayne 0.
Hometown: Spring. TX
Major: Political Science

Hometown:
Major: History/ Education

Me rcado, Hermilo Jr.
Hometown: Donna, TX
Majo r: Math
Mi ca, Carl
Hometown : Aus tin, TX
Major: Politica l Science
Mill e r, Kori
Hometown: Barrington, TX
Major: Cri minal jus tice

�lAit '-4uJ,-nt lc'lll,.:htl"r•~rl..ar~,.:
"1-c Alull~rl.m~:lo&gt;~.- ... h.II)!OUII
""""" unl.-.. \IIU k.J,,. An &lt;~~th! fldo&gt;&lt;. J..

d.,

l'h"tut-,

J&gt;tur:~u&lt;.,tt

Mouse, Anthony A.
Hometown: Austin, TX
~bjor. Psychology

Donn111, TX

Nemec, Stade
Hometown: Robstown, TX
Major. Communications
OliYarez,Jaime
Hometown: Muleshoe, TX
Major. Criminal justice
Olivuez., S&lt;~~lv111dor
Hometown: Muleshoe, TX
M111jor: Engineering

Owens, Teres.
Hometown: El Paso, TX
Major: Biology
Pusons, Dani
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Undecided
P111tino, Connlo
Hometown: C111la8&lt;1
Major: Undt'Cided
Pe_~z.. Dan.t Muie
llometown: San Antonio, TX
Major: Accounting

�Perez, Felicia
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Undedared
Pulgarin, Esther
Hometown: Pearsall, TX
Major: Economics
Ramos, Marta
Hometown: Donna, TX
Major: Business
Ramos, Raul
Hometown: Laredo, TX
Major: Criminal Justice

Rodriguez, Julian R.
Hometown: Mission, TX
Major: Art
Rodriguez, Renee
Hometown: Harlingen, TX
Major: History
San Miguel, Alicia
Hometown: Donna, TX
Major: Undeclared
Santos, Mario
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Pre-med

Saunders, lance
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Pre-med
Slaton, Charles
Hometown: Grauger, TX
Major: MarkJ Fin.
Slaton, Jim
Hometown: Granger, TX
Major: Fin ./ Mark.
Thomas, Gregory
Hometown : Austin, TX
Major: Accounting

Tolley, Eric
Hometown: Tehachipi, CA
Major: Theatre
Watson, James
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Biology
Zapata, Celina
Hometown: Austin, TX
Major: Education

�Pt'rrz. Rogt'r
ltomt'town: S.m Antonio, n
1\.hjor: l'ollti o1l Scit'nct'
Sig.tl~ M.,silo~

llomt'town: So~fford, A7
1\.hjor: 8usint'S5

�Right : Members of Delta Sigma l'r
take a break from their meeting to
takeinthe\•iewof Aushn l'hotoby

�Uniting together
as one
C lubs a nd orga ni za ti ons go t
s tud ents in vo lved in ac ti v iti es
oth er th an hom ework. Some orga nizations, such as Alpha Sig ma
Lambda a nd A lph a Phi Sig m a,
were acade mi c-ori ented while others, like Stud ent Ac ti viti es Coun cil
and th e Internationa l Club, were
fun -oriented. But all tri ed to give a
feeling of belonging and enjoyment
to th eir members.
Ad visers played a key role in
organizations, providing guid ance
and ideas for m embers w hil e building lead ership ab ilities . Devo ti on
a nd spirit were w hat students put
into orga ni za ti o ns; in vo lve m ent
a nd a sense of belongin g we re w ha t
th ey go t o ut. Th e num e ro u s
choices of clubs and orga niza ti ons
m ad e being in vo lved never th e
sam e boring ac ti vity.

�Student Association,
Inc.
The Student Association,
Inc. is the student's advocate and
acts as a liason between theuni ver·
s ity administration and the s tu dent body. When SEU admin istrators wa nt to know what students
think abou t the quality of life on
ca mpus, proposed changes in th e
curri culum, and university policies and procedures, they turn to
SA l and vice-versa with s tud ents.
Th e membersofSA I bridge
the gap between stud ents, ad mini stration and facu lty by listening,
planningandacting. Someoftheir
activities include a 200o/c increase

in voter tu rnout from 42 votes to
340 votes in the 1989 fall semester.
Th is is more than 10% of the student body wh ich is t he national
avera ge for government elections.
They created the first all student
directory which wi ll be an annua l
project for them. They reached out
to the community with the Hands
on Housing project in which over
30 stud ents, faculty, and staff volunteered to help end the hous ing
cris is in Austin. They also raised
money for th e Ca pitol AreaUnited Way.

�Jrd row B1U 11·~~-m.fl.
d R&lt;w. k.a. Laut"l'"f\ ~oUI. II.,.

Jld~'f"I(~T. "-'l'f'k.afl~o~.•l
7..o~tm&lt;•r~.

l t l row

u..l&lt;•.l ... ur.tlldhn!'t'l'".)uJI AnJ~·-r•.... n. I 1 n11 f.bl 2nd ro .. R.ur,.&gt;!W lhd•-"
k1 {-(&gt;lh"'' ~- t..r.~l. I~ '-.N"

thn~uwl

un.1 \l.ln.Jt&lt;'fd.l

\ ld~ru.- &lt;..t,,ftr._,_:~'ll. Do~•

leaders in

~ft ]&gt;AmV.•nd,.r ll .-rf,judvAnd.-I"''fl,l)(o.e&lt;;h;.,.·,
and Oa• W Cotter lNm to worl tog('thl'r "'•th uch

othl'l" to gc1 •

JOb done

Are you a bo rn lead er ?
S o m e individual s are lu c k y
enou g h to have SLt ch a g ift s ince
birth, or so it seems.
It 's poss ibl e, th oug h, that
jus t a few years ago these wond erfull y ex uberant peopl e were the
shy, quiet types wh o hid behind
o th er's s had o ws and were d estined to foll ow all th eir li ves. That
is until they join ed th e Stud ent
Lea ders hip Trainin g Prog ram
(S LTP).

This cons is ts of a h vo semester prog ra m o pen to an y s tu d ent . SLTPmembcrs parti ci pate in
retreats and wo rksh ops to be a
lead er.

�Right . M1ke ~·hiler, Dr Ed Sh1rley, and Dr William
l'enn all celebrate the peace pole. Photo byCilbcrto
Santos.

"Peace of Christ"
Pax Christi is a La tin phrase
meaning "peace of Christ." It is a
community of support and friendship. Regularly scheduled meetings provide a social setting to
meet new people, talk and s hare,
celebrate special occassions, while
being affirmed as person and
peacemaker.
It is a community of growth
and learning. Films, talks and discussions help students understand
world problems, local concerns,
the gospel message of reconciliation and nonviolence.
The five priorites o f Pax
Christi are: disarmament, peace
education, a! terna ti ves to violence,

Vow of Nonviolence
Before God the creator and the
sanctifying spirit, I vow to carry out in
my life the love and way of jesus Christ
By striving for peace within
m yself seeking to be a peacemaker in
my daily life
By accepting suffering rather
than inflicting
By perservering in nonviolence
of lounge and heart
By living conscie ntiously and
simply so that I do not deprive others o f
the means to live
By actively resisting evil and
working nonviolently to abolish war
and the causes of war from my own
heart and from the face of the earth
Cod, I trust in your sustaining
love and believe that just as you gave me
the grace and desire to offer this, so you
will also bestow a bunda nt grace to fulfill it.

Top: ~th row Br 8ruct&gt; l..e'ICh('T". John Cov. Y•·eue Gah·;~n. \.hll!' M1ller: Jrd row Sondra Boani'"Sra, \.lelaml' C'""'n, Joey Mohn.a, J1m li&lt;~ndy, jo~M Ani!', Rob
\.k\.lurrev . .;;,~ter l'o~uhne. Sr \\1lllilm Dunn. 2nd row Ron Bru.5Cia, Br l'aul Ml'"Tt-'ilh, BtckyChav1s. Br ]01' Barry; 1st row \.I.JU l..anke, B1ll K~aunt'. Fr R&lt;&gt;gt'r
T~~

�ilvtl- \ntro-.

A.aNis.nv.l.b.IR.-.Io«WL~~l\t,u..f.AIItU.I
\t DttA.IbtrtT.p; l~,....

~r.J.B.Nrncwl«W~t._.~

I..NftrQ. \tort.uu.(

\._._,

lndro-.

k..;lhpt~.....,tw...._,

;att..,(rb..K...f"«''ft,~a.tl.t.m

Texas

tudent Education
,., a prl"-profl..,.,Jo nal
organl7atlon (o r both undergraduate and graduate l&gt;ducaho n
studento, who are not y..:ot o:,aJ,,nec..l
teachen..
Tho TSEA had a p&lt;&gt;'&gt;l •r '&gt;&lt;110
to h..:olp p..1y for the StalL' om enhon m March . They had a film
stnp about !:.Uf\"1\·al Sklils (o r (,r-,t
year tea cher-, a3 we ll a&lt;., a o,pcakc r
panel.
TSEA is affiliated w1th the
Texas State TeachcN. Ali~ahon
and the "\at1onal Educat1on Ac;'sOAs~ahon

�The Young
Democrats
The purpose of the Texas
Young Democrats is to increase
political awareness and participation amo ng the SEU community.
Over the pas t year, SEU students
ha ve helped in campaig ns at the
local, s tate, and national levels.
Som e fo rme r membe rs of the
Young Democrats have also been
elected to s tate o ffices within the
Texas Yo ung Democrats.
Besides all this, they are a
cleaning house fo r jobs. They volunteer work and internships with
the va rious campaigns. One of
their accomplis h me nts was to
move the precinct polling place to

our campus.
Righ t \ hchael Sauet.'da, Gerommo Rod riguez, and
D.:tvtd Pena are the hosts for the 1990 State Young
Democrat:. Convenuon held at The Dnsklll Hotel
Right Cerom mo Rodnguez, newly appomtcd
Govemml'nt.ll Rela tions Oiroxtor for Tcxo1s Young
Democrats, w1th Stolle RcprescntolllVe Dan Morales
from S.:m Antomo romp.He notes at the 1990 State
Young Democrat Con,·cntJOn

�~fl

•\

l

IQn

rr I

'"''

f'rth j.(.,tl ; f~U )P,- l..caunt&gt;

J

II

I' ftl

·~

T

., •r

Academy
of Science
Th~ Acadcnw of Sc:u~m:t:&gt; ,.,
an orgam.1Jhon for .:..Ciencc mJJOI't
to help 11nd ..,uprx.)rt t:&gt;Jch other
Tht:&gt;y began the1r n•ar "·•th a piJnt
..,.1le for a fundra1~r Th~ plant..,
arc grown and can..'tl for by th('
'tCICnce ...tudcnt"t. Tilt~\' ,lltCndt.-.J
the oll~gl&lt;lte Ac~1demy ofSc1t:&gt;nl:~
Mecttng~ 111 San MJrc~ with other
~•cnce ma}Or. 111 the Jrca They
took. SC\'cral lnJ"'' th1.., p~ar Some
of the lnJ&gt;"' were the ecology tnP"'
to the East Tcxa.., RC"ten•illlon, to
EnchantL&gt;d Rock, and to the 13..un~..•r
l'.lands 111 Port Arano,._1s.
Tiley also had several commumty '&gt;Crvices !:ouch as a workd.w
fert1li;mg the oak trees and thc1r
annual 81ophy!)mk at ZIIJ...er Park.

)rdrow l"lt

)IIIUn\ \hlt.. O...-..J.J l ~

ut l l•lut.arlt..m.af~A"''"'It'S.I
S.rT'I'I'oiTC"'''"C"'oO(~f'I"Aih'tll R1u- l~ro..

tm;• .,.f'tlll~ lndrow fn l lloii.T.ommyAut...,.. ltlhrrtr,... ~u

Dl't&gt;tlf".ahC..,.t.ip&gt;&lt;

\1,

T.o

&gt;l&lt;'\11~

•)•

f', .. h \1,

�Bottom: Alph.11 Phi Sigm.11: Back row : Danie!Stannoha,John Nash, r..·l att Young, Peter Tuttle, Dr. D.wid Horton (Adviser); Front row :Judy Anderson, Diane, Diane
Lowery, Hector Ramos, Ron Cordes. Photo by Sean Miller.

In
pursuant
of justice
There are two groups on
campus which promo tes interaction a mo ng persons pursuing degrees in the field of Criminal justice. Alpha Phi Sigma is an Honor
Society for criminal justice majors
w ho are academi ca ll y inclined
while the Criminal justice C lub is
for everyone interested in the law.

�1
College
Republicans
The College Republican ..
began thc1r year w11h a mt.-ehng
February 2.2. Thev worl...l'(i w1th
the PreCinct ouz~tv Republican
Party. They hclpt.&gt;d w1th PnmJnt.'"'t, elt"'Chon ,1nd reelection campc.ligns and h~ted a lecture tour

They hope to get uwoln&gt;d m pro·
te&lt;,l., and dcmon..,tratiOn't, work

w1th Pax hri~ll m Peace Vig1l m
March, and Jl.:,o ha\ e debatt.~ w1th
the Young Democrab. ·1 thmk we

wJIJ do well, ' stalt.&gt;d Da,id Cotter,
Prc-,•dcnt

�Right : Br. Paul Mensah and Monica Delg~do sell
thetr b;~r·b-que bnslet pl&lt;~ tcs &lt;1t &lt;1 softb&lt;~ll g&lt;~me
Photobyl'hiDuong.

Debits
equal
credits
The accounting club prom o tes profess iona l preparation
throu gh interaction, guest speakers, and other func tions. Th ey
ha ve fund raisers such as the bar-bque brisket plates sold after the 11
o'clock mass to raise money. Their
membersh ip is open to all Accounting majors with an overall
CPA o f 2.5 or an Accou nting GPA
of3.0.

Top: l rd row · Mon1ca Delgado, O.aneAtlms. S..rb.:lraCass1dy (Adviser); 2nd row Janet Mass1ck. Dawn
St-ma, Br Paul \lensah, Cheryl P~&gt;terson (Treasurer), Mary J...Qpe:t; lsi row ldohna Cortez, Cas1lda Ugle
(President), Yolanda Alonzo (5t&gt;cretary), Mancela De 1...1 Gar.t.J 'ot shown Yvonne Angulilno
Right Cher.·l Peterson, Ca~dda Cagle, and Yvonne
Angu1ano are proud of the1r succeo;sful fundrai.Sel"
Paul Gat.ca supports theu b.:lr-b-que bnslet plate
sale Photo by Ph1 Duong

�..
'F''osteri'i1g the study of
business
Deltit agma Pa, a cot.&gt;d pro-

ft......,..,,onal bu.., Int.....,.., fratcrml\ , ,.., orgamn"li to fO"ttcr the &lt;.,tudy ofbu...,anc~..,lll um,·cr-.atu..~; to em:ourage
~hol.Jr;.,lup, -,ocial achnt~· and the
a':oo;ociatlon of ... tudent&lt;., for thc1r
mutu.1l ad,·anccmcnt bv n ..~.uch
and prachcc; to promote deN:" affihallon betwt."en the commercial
world and student., of commerce,
and to further J h•ght:'r :,tandard of
commercialcthicsandcultureand
the CI\'IC and commercial welfare

ou.., ~..~ , cnh that mu ..t be Jccnm
pla-.hed. The mo-. I popul,u ,.., &lt;l'&gt;mo ''ght, ,1 fundr.u~r for tht.~
fratcrmty lta..,Jru~htforc\ervonc
to gamble and wm pn.tt..-.... Along
\nth thl'-, the fr.11ernat\ mu ...t mt..X'I
ch.1 ptcr requm:-mcnt.., for ch.1ptcr
lX)IIll&lt;., through communJIY ~r\" ­
icc~ and profc.,.,tonill ac.:llntlc..,
They ha\'C hdpt.."&lt;-l w1th the food
dnn:-forCampu.., Mma.,tryanuall~
and the profe..,.,•onJI act,,·,tle._
han:&gt; mdudt.."li ..,peaJ...er&lt;., "ouch a ...
Mark 1urdock, lcg&lt;~lcoun"-Clorfor
IBM

ll'fl B.acl. row In! \\ 1II-M' F'hilo!' \N (1-.r...
"LLa... 1\ul r ..dum• 1.-nniff'f &lt;.wnn f\11 .....\I!W
(hn•l'lnhiNIIUI../u.t~(.on.r.aln.1lJTI0..:Wt.• bthrow

\l.1n

\

\h~l...ll

\ i •lt·

\f,~hn•

Sth row l 't'\Jno

(~l,_w;..l\1,...-o~W.,.AitmJ,\o~kl....l
Rw.JW; 4throw ll."'"l ~•. (h&lt;"OI

~'""

I'rt•'"'""

,._I'IKt'lol \1 Ht-h hro1 /ont"• Jrd row
iJo th
\ lo-.1'""' )\.,, '"' AnpUn.. n., .. ,.. ~ 2nd

ro" \bn t ..,.... Mt.'fl&amp;-ll i'Am ' •"IV'"' \io \
lroturow l'hllluo...,.(hn "'hrY '-ot
Sl\o"'n l'rtf'f8o. l rt ~B&amp;.,.IJulln.~Ce&gt;rtrL
,.,, ...., .........., fn.J,_ ....I'It&gt; ...........,
\\
, I ••k 1.....,8urU\.or1

( -.u

[)r .....

�Omni
Singers
The Omni Singers not only
sing fo r their enjoyment but they

also bring joy to others such as the
retirement home that they went to
visit. They practice eve ry chance
they get to ah ieve harmony.
Right JenmferO"Qumn,Jenm Brewer, Tony&lt;&gt;Osh.•r·
\mg. and Enc Tolley want to hurry up wnh practice
sothev ~;:an go and play outstdc

Right Brother Gerald \t ullCT bnghtcns someone·s
smgmg to her &lt;&gt;I the RBJ Rct1rementCom m u·

d&lt;~vby

mty

�Learning
different
cultures
The lnt c rn Jllo nal
lub
of c,t'\ era! dtffcrL'nl cultures from all m·cr the \\" Orld Tili,;,

co mpn~

Tetp• S..CI.rv" O.nJ
C,.hm 1111'!1 J,.&gt;d~.~··h'-J,-,RudBuMft\, )..)wbrJ,.t..JI,..i Air&gt;.).._...(
IUio~~lt.-,..-.-\l. T"'""''""'t."'·
RA..• l~.t lw..t•A .,_.m..lnJt;~"''"'' 1ndro.. ~'""r~&lt;.omor.Talrna!f'TftioJ""'t E:Dilr(.hu:NO&gt;t.Amllu.aru.(..-.,.'o'l..., ARN\.uJ.,..Il'IO.I~ •.-.~.,
.. h o ntrv.. ~nltu•n1 J, •rn(.,..,J.in ).a.~J,.nP.Jra.t...n.o'l&lt;-"' h 1.-.J,~'~rnar (1.,
d'lu~ ,,.""l&gt;v..,...n\1, ...

�MBA
This organization provides
a support group and professional
opportunities for MBA students.
They help each other out with their
classes and their studies.

T op: 8.od, row Ted D:&gt;n..lhue. Co1rlo&lt;; Puentes. Anne '-lilnt&gt; BH1bi\St'n. RL&lt;.lil 5entL'tlil. Ja•·•C"r Wllh~. 2rd row \1Ml \1auml, Dr \1,upnt&gt; Fout.c !Ad\·her). Glen f~·

nil. Hollv Doughtv U're-&gt;oJenll. Don ' ebon. Front row Cvnthl&lt;l Smoth. Jean O;:al, \h:hrd~ V,uano. R..:h Taylor l''holo bySe.1n \hiler

�Lol'fl

jollmt'\

R.."'..lk-. o11.W Juh1: R.tolo:1

.n.-..lt. ,,

f"'""f'l".'tl'o;~l'nt,dunng&lt;,fL\\"'klonJ

th..

l"h&lt;&gt;4••

1:&gt;\ l'tuiAA•ng

SAF
The tudcnt Admi~sions
Foundation is rm organinltion
sponsored by the Undergraduate
Admissions Office. The SAF
members ivc dail y tours to prospect-ive student s. They hos t them
for a weekend durin g the SEU
Weekend and show them what the
school is like in a student's eyes.
The s tudent s in the foundation
work very hard during the Week end and mos t become Student Orientation Leaders in the fall for in -

Top lbck row &lt;.;;.no l&lt;..clh·- SAFCoordonator, 8.!11)· Ruo~. ~wn Lotll, P'tu Duonjl,. \il(hMJ Blollttau. 2nd row Karen R.fnw.- Admo wns CounW'k&gt;r, j;~~mt'\
Klno~~tN.:or Conn.a \1ul'lot);l!. Lu Lartn.o.k) .).11~ Roo.~ leo-. jul.... &amp;tlt"'. [)(:&gt;rm.IGu•tM!fWl--SAFO.~or o~nd Adm1 tonS(oulbclor rront row Am1 \byn.ud. "'t.trll.!ool'
l.o)nn. o. ..-n CO'&gt;I.Inhno. \l •M- \hlleT _
e \lcCbun Photo b' Scollr'l \hlk-t

s.....

�Right :Thet rophyofMr.Doyleaw&lt;utsfor~ lr .Doyle

himself. Photobyl'eteErickson

Dorm Activities Board
The Dorm Activities Board Spring Break, the Alcohol Awareis an organization run by stu dents ness Week, and the Drug Educawhose purpose is to take students tion Committee. They had their
who live on campus to plan activi- annual trip to Six Flags.
ties for on-campus students.
They met every WednesSuch activities have in- day from 5-6 pm in the Hil arian
cluded the co-sponsorship of the Room.
Hawai ian Luau and the hotdog
and volleyball game. They helped
with the "j ust Say No" packet fo r

Right Arthur ts puthng for popcorn as one of
DAB's C'\'ents. Photo by Pete Erickson

��Top Coordm.1tors &lt;;lmonl' T;,lnu, Cl.:ludld Gam.1. Dand

l'en.:~.

Dl.1n.1 \lerri;om, l.oull."'l Stout. Scott Brodv, .ood R.:lmon.J

Hoc~.

Photo by Se.1n MilleT

�Uof1 I urm'-i•ou'"" urt•ortlw(toii\Oha•I'K'
•~.,.,,.,.,,,. tn&gt;nl&gt;lll,•l\ ln..

Activities
Council
The Student Activit1c:,
Council (SAC) i" thL' ITiclJOr programminggrouponcampus. SA
brings you exciting event!. such as
dance:-,, comedy :,how:,, lecture::-,,
world culture festivals, concert",
and films. Some of the popular
events that SAC has sponsored
include the ktoberfcst Carnival
and Dance, C raty lympics, and
the Christmas Semi-formal.

Top: SAC o .. n.c-~CommiiiM- : St.andin.g \hn.~.m"'-""· ~~ E.'f".lru. D.-.• 1d r&lt;."fW. l.o1vC.trTV..ak-o Tt&gt;n\ .W•t'n. ~'I'm«. Lu~Jo~rr..a.CbuJ_.(..~.tottin8
Du.no~\IC'fl'V.m. \!..In \lc\Nm l"hocoM·SNon\llllc-t

�Right cDavid StokeywithChrislineGillespie,Cindy
CuniS, and ChriStme Denms in the Spnng produc·
lion of "ChJcago: Photo by Sean Miller

Theatre
The 1989-90 Mary Moody
Northern Theatre began the season with the first production
"Rosencrantz and Guildens tein
are Dead" by Tom Stoppard followed by "Love by the Bolt" by
Georges Feydeau, "Beyond the
Horizon" by Eugene O'Neil, and
"Chicago" by Frank Ebb and john
Kauder.
Students are involved in
almost every aspect of each production with probably the exception of directing it. It is unique for
theatre majors at St. Ed's because
the theatre department is a part of
the Actor's Guild.
Another great as pect about
the theatre department is that there
is a guest star each semester, such
as Linden Chiles this past year.

�L~ft Ann ,,._,~•nJ t•tubp'\,•olrn .. uh.a bUir(lni
._tn-•nll'wf"'IJU..tkonui S.,..,..Jthrll&lt;on.IDn.

rho.'ol&lt;lb-. '"'" \1olkr

Bottom TN-&lt;" o~,anJ,w..oot !k"'',..Jtlwtt•..u•on
S..l. "'"' jenno/t"'"\t-..!.11, /f'nm a,.._....~ fl'l( Ttobn
ll.iuJ
0.1~
&lt;..11""'',....
1"11ohp'\,,.an, ~ndmw \1,1N\1, hlft./.llmwA•t"'"•
~t·llv \i'"lli""'"· l,..quo•ln~o~_. I·~ lonJ•'fllh•lor
Am\ 'o.•o.m,c.. \1•1.•· \1lilo.•T. e.-m..J1rw Rll-'11jt&lt;'tl I mnt
ro"' a._.,h"'oo•nt ..n_llo~•...t"'oo"l.n- f'h.'ol,,b-,...,,n
\Ulrf

o..t.._.,...,_

r,,..,..,...

(,,n."J"

�Bottom Back row · Gilberto S.1ntos, Todd Hart, Amy Brooks, Cannela Epnght, Steven Peterson, Lynnette Perez; Front row :jeff Wilson, Kurt Blocher

�Hilltop
Views
The ~ hool newo:,p..1JX!r, the
ll•lltop Views, ts a b1m o nthly
ne wspaper that circulatl~ toabo~t
300 student-,, fa culty, ~taff, and the
Au~t111 community
The p.1pcr - •., wholly produced by Mudcnt~ w1th an ad\'1-.er
to gua.le the m . The paper pnnl&lt;,
art•clcs by .,tudcnls o f ncw't locally
as well ao; nahon.JIIy .
l ..ft TI~J ltlrt J"n""~· "'"~'""' h'flhor f'lf'"
T'ho:•hl t&gt;v(.annd.l f rng,ht
l .. ft
&lt;.lbo.-n•l •,,.,,.,.., l(ll"h .~u h, prJ ur .. hn!. ,,
o•mr tu ulo...tng f"&lt;IUn anJ
thftn l'b.&gt;t&lt;l

J"l"'"'8

1:&gt;1. )..urt81.-.;hrT

�Preserving
history
The Debate Team. Knights
of Columbus. The ECHO. Abby
Players. The "E" Club. The Forum.
The Emirc Club.
What a re these? These we re
some of the organizations that
were he re at St. Ed's ba ck in 1943.
This is what a yea rbook is
all about. History. Yearbooks record a sc hool's his tory.
Thi s yea r's staff consisted of
five ind ividuals w ho m et frequ entl y to discuss the la yout of the
yearbook. They worked hard and
achieved this book.
Rig.ht Ed •tor rtu Duong IS reitdy togl\·e upwuh
then:-arboolo.

�/;
Lrfl l"h&lt;&gt;t•'ltrartw-r \bn. &lt;.,,..tnJ..., .,n.,.. run
unt'ho.. ~\mn,hltoldt: l'h&lt;&gt;t••t&gt;) \t.ln..,,..t'I&gt;JI"M"''

l.d l

AJI""lt'I('•I"J'mkfldntho-mt""'h"f~hnWtht:

o.kw;•rll\lw•hlll""ntdulwr~.t&gt;

l'hntub\ ,,.,lluo&gt;nJ

�Everyman
The Everyman is a literary I
art magazine which is produced
yearly by the Office of Student
Publi cations. The works contai ned
within are created entirely by St.
Edward's s tud ents, faculty and
staff and consist of literature: poetry, prose and short stories; and
art work including: bla ck and
w hit e pho tograp h y, paintings,
comercial art and line drawings.
All work was chosen by
committees comprised of students
and faculty members. The 1990
Everyman s taf f included: M.
Carmela Epright, edi tor-i n-chief;
Becky Chavis and Kathleen Per-

son, assistantedi tors; Amy Brooks,
art consultan t a nd Kurt Blocher,
computer layout and design.
Right : Edttor Carmela Epnght types the s ubmisSJOnsfortheEn•rymiln

�~n

Pho~o

bv Golberto S.:.nto•

Lrft Kun Blochef

'll'&gt;m~'t•IN"'&gt;

..,,,ht-1, tn.t

h(·l\.1

'"'ontohdphlm"'uh•llrhe"'&lt;.,.Lhrh.a~todo

o1

�cevedo, Ma rco A. 54,85,97
Samahiji, Raed A. 72
ldridge, Cary D. 107
Uen, Karen 60,6 1,83
lonso, Yola nda 72,108
lvarado, Alonso 71,103
nderson, Judy A. 83,101,
106
gu iana, Yvonne j. 9,25,
27,87,108,109
nspach, Terri D. 72
nthony, Melissa A. 53,57
rie, Jane C. 102
mold, Clayton G., Jr. 54
tkins, Diane 108
ubin, Ta mbra L. 105
vera, Jamie I. 119
vila, G raciela 20
vila, Ludivina 91

iley, Julie A. 113
J\esteros, Alex 58
llesteros, Antonio 105
ncroft, James 130
rrera, Jesse 105
rry, s,. joe 102
rtlett, Troy L. 91
uma nn, Amy R. 91
yna, C heron R. 87
ilhan:, Peter J. 9,72
II, Lisa R. 87,103
II, Robin L. 4,72,103,105
navides, Marisa S. 60,61
nnett, Dave 57
nnett IIJ , Davis C. 72
nwill, Jessica L. 91
i11ings. Brand y A. 91
lai r, jason L. 72,100
lattau, Michael 17,91,113
Iocher, Kurt K. 83, 120, 125
a negra, S."!ndra L. 102
hmfalk, David L. 83, 106
;Bosquez, Alfredo 75
ras h, Rachel M . Il l
rewer, je nnife r G. 11 0, 11 9
rody, Scott . 11 6
rooks, Amy R. 120, 125
royles, John C. 62
ru.scia, Rona ld J. 67, 102

~

Bui, Eryk l-l uan D. lOS
Bunsen, Rodney J., Jr. 72,111
Bu rke, Timothy 46,58
Bu rton, john C. 72
Bush, Wynde 60,61,91,1 15
Byettansen, Anne Marie 112
~58,9 1

~

Cagle, Casilda G. 108
Caldwell, Gaynelle M 118
Caldwell, Kevin 4
Cantu, Melissa 103
Cardenas, Michael A. 83
Carpenter, Alison K. 123
Carrizales, Juana L. 5,87,117
Casares, As.•lia 91
Cassidy, Barbara 108
Castagnos, Deborah S. 105
Castaneda, Eddie 72
Castilleja, Angela 53
Castro, Norma L 20
Catalano, Robb 35,54
Cattin, N icole A. 91
Cerda, Maria E. 101
Chady, Br. Thomas 97
Chavarria, Dennis P. 58
Chavis, Rebecca 102,125,128
Chen, john 38
Chidambaram, Karti 62
Chreffler, Sue 64
Christiansen, Alex Joen Ill
Clemens, Bailey T. 53
Cobanga, Kerri 57
Collier, Melissa D. 111
Condon, Kenneth W. I 05
Cooper, Holly 34,60,61
Cooper, Kirk 30
Corcoran, Br. Cornelius 97
Cord es, Ronald L., Jr. 106
Cortez, Beatrice 103, 115
Cortez, Idalina 73,108
Cortez, Tony 91
Costa ntino, Dawn R. 9 1, 113
Cotter, David 91,101,107,110
Cournoyer, Michael R. 54
Cox, jeffrey L. 54
Coy, john H. 91,102
C rain, Nicole A. 87
C ross, Donald 105
C ruz. Eli7.abeth A. 53,57
Curlee, Marisa 35
Cu rtis, Cindy L 118
Cyr, Helen A. 101
Czaplewski, Monte 17

D

De Los Sa ntos, Ka the rine E.
53
al, Jean 11 2
ker, Te rri A. 87
I Donna, Michael 130
lgado, Joe Darrell 83, 109
lgado, Monica R. 108
nnis, Christine L. 92, 11 8
rouen, Ca rolyn 5
Sarro, Nicole 92
witt, james 67,92
ickson, Da vid 119
na hue, Ted 112
s, Anthony T. 62,63
ughty, Holly 11 2
inkard , Eric L. 107
ohner, Thomas j . 54
m, Kristy H. 87
dney, Andrew C. 48,49
ffy, Annette L. 83
nn, Br. William 11,97,102
ong, Phi Q .87,109,113,122

anes, Robin 97,103
dwa rds, Kimberly D. 15,19
dwa rds, Wendy D. 50,57
pright, M. Ca rmela 45,
120,124,125
rickson, Pete 111,130
sparza, Agueda 92,11 7
spinosa, Paulina S. 83
squeda, Sonia 24,92,105
thridge, Kimberly D. 57
vans, John W. 72
vans, Ray C. 87

algou t, Ruth M. 65
arinacci, Elizabet h M. 72
as t, Lynn J. 22,73, 101
aulk, Amy B. 87
erguson, Chris topher A. 54
e ma ndez, Rosa M. 20
e rri ll, Gle n 112
ill pot, jody 53,57
ischer, Dana L. 73
ischer, Deana M. 15,73
Fischer, Patrick A. 92
ores, Diana E. 105
ores, Vanessa 92
oyd , Kath leen A. 73
Foris ter Ill , Bryan W. 87

1

Fortner, Hele n M. 40,92
Foutz, Marjorie 112
Fritsch, Anna M. 73
Fuller, Catherine A. 73

G

~
Gabriel, jennifer 9,87,109
Galecke, Elizabeth A. 71
Gallegos, Pedro 87,100, 109
Galvan, Yvette 102
Garcia, Carlos, Jr. 54
Garcia,Claudia j . 116,117
Ga rcia, Delia E. 65
Garden, Nicolette 73
Garza, Luis A. 117
Garza, Marice Ia de Ia 108
Gatica, Paul P. 38,71
Gendusa, Charles P. 2,118
Gillespie, Christine L. 74,118,
119
Godinich, Douglas T. 71,83,
100
Gonzales, Anna L. 64
Gonzalez, Edelia "\9
Gonzalez, Herby D. 54,55
Gonzalez, Juan 2,74,109
Gonzalez, Marisa M. 19,109
Gonzalez, Mary Kay 74
Gonzalez, Sandra L 29
Grau l, Kara K. 93
Green, Mel.111ie G. 87,102,103
Greene Ill, Theodore W. 83
Greenwood, Katherine A. 83
Greer, Deborah M. 83
Griffi th, Timothy K. 93
Guardiola, Higin ia 83
Guitierrez, Donna 113

H

1

1

~

Haas,Gracc Ill
Hall, Steve 124
Ha ndy, Jim 102
Jlarden, Jason N. 49
llarborr, James 74
Harman, James A. 83
Hart, Todd C. 83, 120,121
JlartLog Ill , E.ul P. 49
Hayes, Dr. Patricia 43
llegeman, B1ll 10 1
1-l cin/e, Werner E. 62,63
Helhnger, L.1ur,1 C. 14,23, 101

�r

!

("fl\,l

,

t'fll\lt"f

I• rnJnJ £.1\..Jnt ~~
ltm.mde' Tt-m 103
lt'fT\'1'.1.~1\h ... lf}C;
hd. , R.lmoNI I 2c;AI.Nl
hJ ,}\:',M,Hll.lltl
hlt'ltg,. ~('nn.; th A 1"7
hll. C hn..topht-t E 4:\
hll. Tt·n.."!l.l A ;".&amp;
t•r,ml, An' A Ill
hram. Rosot·mm Ill
l1rp.""hm8 Ill
InN~. jAy I
Jr 44
lnhll.:lll"r II, Jtlhn J 7!'1
lug.an, Ot·IL..a I ~1
h•njy Wlml• 130
lunqm.: I. \1Kh.ld P 67,107

lnrhm. llanJ lOb
lt'r)'"· ).lnt.'l p _ t\R
h"'l\'. \tan.~ E 4:\
ludlm \1e1Amt' I c;1
lu~hl-... Rl~·rt F , Jr S4

Jo..l·ll. Ahtl.l I 4 42
Jo..dbaugh.Tma 110
Kdll·r. Jaml..,
Jo;:dJy, ')ara II 1q,2c;,r;)i(J
~t•l-.c). ( hmtophl."r A b7
Kl'\ , (hmt) L M
Kt.tUnl', \\'1lham \\ 46.11\S,'W,
07. Hl2, HW
K1llough, Jac,on 40
Kmard, Md1"""' I 105

Kmah.' tlcr, J.tm('&lt;o, R 113
)l.mscy, Da\ 1d D. Ill
Kloc, Jl'ff M 75
"""AA"· Robl'rt J &amp;I
Jo..oc h, Kennl'th W q4
Kochll'r, llh•l 57
Kr;tf\..a, Frank 4
"'-r&lt;tl. IA&gt;na..- L. 37,81l, IOI.IOJ
Krau~. C.1ry ll7
"'-rcnck, Ren('(' Le1gh 57
Krt.':'&gt;!.lem Ill, john J ll8,59,07
)l.ubcna, "'--.tssia L J7,b4
Kwok, lndrawaty 75

L
LaRowe, AmyL. 91
!..ala, Jad.. 54
Lanham, Dan.1 L 97
l....tn~t~. Matthe" T r:;s,&amp;~,

102
.:u:l"'-'"· C'.ordlll\ L 21
at:qud. FJward '1 27
aml-... \h.. hell~ \bne 93
.ml•ura, Jacqudme A 111
J.t'Ol'k. Jlaul.-t K. c;7
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thn.,.,m, Gnn.ton I ]-;
ulll'S,.lk-rtram E t\X
•n Ja~o.qud•nt• f 119
!'auld D. 41
con•"' Tara' 4,-")ji.S leN

J••n• ,

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Lawler, Wayne D. CM
L.1p10'&gt;~•.

L.c,ln~. f:.. !&gt;ther R 6,75
Lcm.tncn~. R.1fal Ill
Lron.ud, C1n.1 M 94
Leopold, Kelh· L. 75
Lescher, Ur Bruce 102
Lmdel, R1ck S4
Lip&lt;,li, lan r;s
Litton, Jo..elle\ A 9-1
Loma.,ney, r'eler J 67,94,107
Lonn, Marh'&gt;C R 9-1,113
lope7 , Cn~IIO.l R 60,61
Lope1, Elo1o;a 1(11
LOpl'7. Mar• 108,1(19
Lotf1, Lahoucme q4
Loth, Dawn R II]
!..ower.·, Ount' C. lOb
LA.l.t..ano, \lanuel, Jr :W,'n .

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lo7antl, jlW 105
LUCIO, 5t~phame 101
1 un.t. Chmhna L. 101

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1.11t.·v. L,nn \1
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1artln. Kelly C M
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1aund. ~brk 112
tavhdd. \iatthl'w R 4#-1,
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1avhc-" , (hn, ~3
1avn.arJ, Amv K.l" 94.11:\
1cCollough. \1u:h.ld A ~
1cCullough, Br Thom.,., ::\7
1cConnKk. Sh.· \e P 54
td)onald, Deborah L. 57
tcClaun, Stl'n.· n C. 24,40,
94, 111
c\1urrc-y, Rub 102
cVearrV, ~anhew J. 16,
69,76,117
1cdrano, Ruben R., Jr 9-1
1egown, Kelly I 119
1endoz.a, 1-S.lbcl 76
1endo.r..a. Ramon 84
1cndo;r,a, RO'odm.'l 84
en...lh, PaulK S-4 , 102, 1(~
1l·rc&lt;tdo, ! lerm1lo, Jr 9-1
1erriam, O.an.a L. 22)W,
116,117
11ca, Carl B. CM
u::('h, Angel;t M 109
11ghm, Michael G 84, J(Jq
1•11~r. Kori L. 9-1
111lcr, M1chael C 102, 10'\,
113,11Q
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1111!,, J•mmy 105
till,, Scott ll7
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11&lt;,ko, Mary KaY 42,76,109
to• ..an, Mallhl.'w C . 67
1ohn.t, Joey 102
1oral(~. D,,\'ld S. 70. HW
1organ, lnc b7,Cfl
1ou'ol', AnthonY 95
thml..ulu, Zo hle T 1R
1ucha, Todd R 54
tuchr, Maroa m 42
tuller. Br GerAld 110
tungu1.1, Elda J.l
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'd'olm. Don 112
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O'Qumn, Jenmfer E 110
b.lld.ll\, j,l~lntl Ill
Obonna, h.ulc&lt;; D. 41-IAQ
Obnen, MIChal'! R 77

OhbartY, Jam\c" ~c;
Oh\·are.r, S.tl\'ador 91l
Ol~n. Kn ... ty A 77,103
01\'er.-., Cl,llldlil I 77
Onorato, John I' 77
Orthm.tnn, hnc, L IOQ
O..lcrhng. Tonv.-. 110

Owen.., T~:rt..,, A 9e;,10c;
o-,un.-., l...tura L 81

p
Pachoo.l, javlerl n,III
Pac•occo, 0Jn I&lt;W
Paganucca, Cmo ll4
Parker, Brant F. ll.J,M
Paf"'&gt;&gt;n\, 0.1n1 K. 91l
Pat..-, Tom 49
Patn\0, Gon.r,alo Qll
Paul, Rcbt."l·ta J 77
l'cna, Da\ •d. Jr 1'i,7H,HI,I04,
116, 11 7
l'(&gt;fln, W1lham J(l2
Perc.r, Dan.t Mane 95
l'(.·re7, FdKt.l '1 %
l'nt:7, L\·nm_-tte Y 120
l'l'rt'7, RogerC. '17
l'l'T"!lln, K.lthi'-'Ctl A "". 125
l't·ll.'l"'iin, Chervl A 2.1 .7H)!O,
IOR, I(}q
Jl(.·l('1"90n, SU:\ en Jo hn 120

�' rovince, Anne 97
uentes, Carlos 112
ulgarin, Maria E. 96

111

~

dke,

Scott W. 54,55
mirez, Rolando 84
mos, Hector G. 78,106
mos, Marta I. %
mos, Raul 96

:~~: ~~~~n~1 ~ott

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117
ndon, jesseS. 71,115
esende, Eduardo W. 46,49
tger, Bernadine R. 119
edle, Steven A. 109
ppee, James P. 118
vera, Jynne C. 106
·era, Steven C. 79
Robinson, Christophe r 48,
49
obles, Corinna 35
ocha, Cristela 101
cxiriguez, Alberto 88
Rooriguez, Celia Y. 103
cxiriguez, Geronimo M., Jr.
.3-1,43,78,100,104

~~~:~:~: L~!:n~~3 96
cxiriguez. Renee A. 96
osalcs, James 113
ui.z, Betty 79,105,113
usseU, Ly nn j. 84
y barski, Sharon L 76,78

eru:, Anna \&gt;1. 79,103
laZ&lt;lr, Eugene 54
lazar, Laura L 89

Saldivar, Jesus 5..J
Samaniego, Michael J. 58
San Miguel. Alida 96
Sanders, Steven L. 46,58
Santamaria, Claudia M. 42
Santos,Gilberto 89,120,121
Santos, Mario a. 96
Sauceda, Michael a. 27,10-l
Saunders, Lance E. 67,96
Schable, Thomas 2
Schela, Christina M. 109
Schmidt, Shelley S. 50
Schmitt, Jennifer A. 81
Scott, Fred 97
Scroggins, Kristina M. 53
Segura, Sandra L. 89
Sentissi, Rida 112
Serna, Dawn 9,108,109
Serrano, Pedro J. 58
Shaw,Devonya L. 101,111
Shirley, Ed 44,102
Sigala, Marisela C. 97
Silva, Myriam 20,57,11 7
Slaton, Charles E. 96,109
Slaton, James P. 96,109
Smetak, Steven a. 85
Smith, Cynthia 112
Solodyna, Barbara A. 79
Spellings, Robert D., Jr. 89
Spiers, Ro bin D. 35,62
Springer, Clint K. 79
Stansbury, Lisa N. 2
Stanton, Becky 119
Stark, Mandi J. 65
Stavinoha, Danie l D. 79,106
Steffek, Theresa A. 79,103
Steger, Michael L. 49,88
Stems, Russell P. 62,64,97
Steward , Kristina N. 4~
Stoffregen, Melanie D. 101
Stokey, David N. 118,119
Stout, L"luren E. 79,101.1 16,
117
Stringfellow, Jerry B. 79
Swendner, Marc M. 46,58,
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[Tindall, Tina L. 57
[Tolley, Eric G . 96,110,119
[Tompkins, Lisa M. 79
[Torres, Guillermo R. 30,85
[rowery, Clay 119
[fresslar, Christopher A. 38
revino, Alma D. 79
revino, Candy 85
revi..no, Maria C. 42
revino, Marina 42
rigg, Lizzetta K. 79
utile, George 49
uttle, Peter K. 106
yler, Liana L. 53

~

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de Ybarrondo, Michelle 80
Young, Amy G. 119
Young, M."ltthew B. 106

44

z
Zambrano, Armando F. 85
Zamora, Maria E. 89,101
Zapata, Celina R. 96
Z1rzuela, Deangelo B. 6

aladez, Edith 103
aldespino, Alfredo 109
aldespino, Ed ith 14,109
a ldez, Viviane M. 80
1valdovino, Anna M. 111
j\fander Werf, Pam 98,101
j\lanove r, Chris tina L 85,110
~asquez, Patricia 67

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80

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T
Tagle, All:x-rt 103
Taglieri, Lawrence R. 54
Tal rna, Simone A. 111 ,116
T,msiongco, Melissa R. IOS
Taylor, Rich 112
Temme, Fr. Roger 10,102
Terry, Rodney E 49

Weishaupt, Geraldyne 6,7
Wheele r, G regory R. 62
Wijono, jeffrey, 85
Wilkins, William W. 27
Williams, N ikell D. 49
Wil\ia rd,Javier 112
Wilson, Jeff 120
Wise, Neil 97
Wolf, Mark j . 49
WO&lt;Xl.s, Terence L. 38,85
Wright, CassandraS. 21

Wagne r, Kirl, A. 58,59
Walke r, Bryan K. 3
1walker, je ffrey R. 109
1W alker, Shay 53
Wallace, Dena L. 85
Wallace, Kevin J. 89
Watson, James A 96
Weber, The resa M 53

�General Index

G
raduation
Accounting tub
Alpha Phi Sigma

+4--45

H

B
Bar-b-que
Ba"'ball
Ba'ketball
lleach Bash

y

10
54-55
48-51
12-13

c

Hand s Across the Grotto
14
Health Fair
29
Hilltop Views 120-121
37
Honors Night

I

18-19
28
40-41
60-61
Christmas Dance
27
J Club
106
College Republica 107
ommencement 42-43
raty Olympics 32-33

Interna tional Club
In ternational Fair

111
36

juniors

114--115
Ma rdi Gras Da nce
MBA
Music Fest

124--125

Festi,•al o( Lights

56
F~men
90
Fre,hmcn Orientation
Dance
11

.10

Phonothon

15

Young DcmocrJh

104

s
116-117
SAC
SAF
113
SAl
100
Seniors
70
24-25
SEU Wee~end
SLTP
101
58-59
Soccer
Softball
56-57
Sophomor~

86

Spring Fling

34-35

J
82

ifennis
lfheatre
:rower

M

Everyman

Pax Chri~tl

30 iV

112
31

0
Oktoberlest
Omni Singers

64-66
118-119
122-123

Top llilod'itoM-vmthe J&gt;r!M.Iu&lt;toon
(lj"(hou~;o

Video Contest
Volleyball

16-17
52-53

Working

20-21

22-23
110

r•hutobv'&gt;e;o.n \tol~

�Right \hchael [k-l Donno uses the
llbrary to study Heinrich Boll Photo
byl'h1 Duong

Right T1na Kelbaugh ilnd Pete
Erickson discuSS ideas for the dorm

�����Editor-in-Chief
Phi Duong
Student Life Editor
Stacie emec
Sports Editor
Manuel Lozano
Organizations Editor
Michelle James

Classes Editor
Allison Carpenter

Photographers:
Kurt Blocher
Amy Brooks
Lisa Burkhart
Matt Lankes
Sean Miller
Gilberto Santos
Marc Swendner

Adviser
Steve Hall

Special thanks to:
Hilltop Views Staff
Ann Blackburn
David Cotter
David Pena
Geronimo Rodriguez
Brenda Thompson

��</text>
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                    <text>����ower
St. Edward's
University

AUSTIN, TEXAS

�Cold
Fun
In lieu of sleds
and toboggans,
students took to
the slopes with innertubes a nd
child-sized swimming pools.
Kurt Blocher

Missed it by that much
During Beach Fest, Stan Cetnor impresses a
ma rtia l arts enthusiast with his knowledge of
Pork Lo Mein.

John Balli

Long lost twins?
The student publica tions research team has delermined that
no photos exi.st that contain BOT II Kenny At tal and Geor ge
f\ l ichael. Far be it ror us tost1rt rumors but .
Sean Mile1

�Orientation gets
under way with a
round of Win,
Lose, or Draw.

Claudia Garcia

Manlankes

Left, Amy Brooks spends a quiet afternoon away
from the office - nut not too far. Above, "Dirty
!J oys" J oe Ma lina a nd J oh n Klin gele relax aller a
long day of congressional lobbying.

�Halloween
Happenings

•

(Right) Chris Milawski
explains to Ca\·ewoman
Cindy Lofgren that he
doesn't ha \'e SO cents to
bail her out of jail. (Below) Desperado Donald
Richie walks the Atrium
in star ch of his horse.

....

~Jei1Wilson

.
I

j

i
li

~_

3

Jl_/~

If ~?

..,..-

"·

�(Above) Jam es
Uancroft had a
hair-raisingly
good time at the
Ha lloween Carn ival and Dance.
(Left) These three
mysterious
masked men , who
had been wildly
cavorting around
Moody Hall
throughout the
night, stood still
just long enough
to be ph oto·
graphed. Who
were they?
Jell Wilson

�Kelly Rigoni waits to see what rate Tar ot reader Dyron Silvas has dealt her as Da n Paciocco looks on.

Count Dracula, a.k.a. David Pena, stalked the
Moody parking lot arter the restivities.

J unior Lauren Stout and Senior Beth Dupee get
into the Hallowet&gt;n spirit a rew days berore the
dance and carnh·al.

�All types of indians, de.,.ils, genies, a nd nym phs
could be found roaming Moody Hall .

SAC Dance Coordina tor Dia na Merria m
ta kes a break from the Ha lloween Dance to
go buy snacks for the cleanup crew.

7

�With the combined efforts o f over
250 volunteers the Phonothon goal o f

1988

the difference be ween what students can pay
and the actual cost per student of running
SEU by providing monies for financial aid.

$180,000 was reached. We were
thrilled with the participation this year!" faculty and staff salaries. and the physical

total pledges received by a single
volunteer in Phonothon's 11 year
history.

said Annual Fund Director Martha St.
Romaine. " I am thankful to everyone

operation of the university.
This year over 250 people, mostly stu·

who helped make Phonothon a bttCat

dents, volunteered for lhc event and had a

success. Everyone did an outstanding

great time meeting new people. talking to

job."
" Help Continue the Tradition" was
the theme of Phonothon '88 which was
held October 23-27 in the auxiliary
gym of the RCC. The annual fundrais
ing event involves calling SEU alumni
and parents and asking them to pledge
donations to the university 's Annual
Fund. It is this fund which helps meet

old friends. and winning fabulous prizes.
Organizations whic h were highly visible
working at the event were Physical Plant.
SAl, and SAC. Alicia Kcil was declared
first prize winner overall for collecting over
$23.000 and was awarded two tickets to the
Robert Plant concert. Other highly successful fundraiscrs were Matt Young ($17.000).
Katrina Coortinocsis, Esther Leanos. and
Rozi Mendoza.
For those who didn't raise quite as many
doantions, the re were hourly and nightly
prizes such as dinne rs, records. and posters.
And of course the re were plenty o r snacks
and drinks furnished for everyone!
According to St. Romaine, this year's
Phonothoners received increased numbers or
new and increased pledges which should
make next year's event even more successfull.

Btenda Thompsorl

Junior Sha" na Carter was one of 0\'er 250 \'Oiunteers who made
Phonuthon '88 a great success.

8

�C lowning for the camera .

Du r ing the "C heerleade r " rout ine.

Anthony
Clark
what a comedian!
During Spring Fling Week, crazy comedian Anthony
Clark perfomted in the ReUnion. Anthony is a fastri sing young comedian and has performed on MTY.
Showtime, and on many other college campuses around
the coun try.
The SAC Special Events Comminee, led by Mary
Kay Misko and Lauren Stout, sponsored the event.

The audience loved Anthony,

Monique Armstrong

9

�The ReUnion
H ~~7n~~~~~~::~~~~~{o~~~~~~~~ccold drinks. pizzas. and l.he latest

news. While nearly every S.E.U.
student has been in l.he ReUnion
during his or her time here not
everyone knows the ReUnion's
unique history or the names behind

the faces that work there.
From I883 to 1970 the ReUnion
was the site of the university's

natatorium, or indoor swimming
pool. This natatorium, filled by an
artesian well. was the first one built
in Texas and was promoted as the
university's prime amenity. T he pool
survived a tornado in 1922. the
capping of the well in 1938 and was
used until 1970 when the building
was renovated and designated as the
student union.

The ReUnion was the place to
meet and cat on campus. In 1987
ARA Services officially assumed
management o f the ReUnio n. Since
then ARA has continued to make
available a wider range of foods including hamburgers, baked potatoes,

10

Freshman Gordon Jackson takes a customer 's order.
yogurt, as well as fresh salads and
sandwiches. The ReUnion was also the
location fo r many o f the year's great
concerts, dances, and comedy shows.
The 1988-89 ReUnion staff was
composed of Location Manager, Robin
Lillie; Cash &amp; Catering Manage r,
Henry Gideon; Closing Manager (fall)
Mark Harris; Student Closing Manager
(spring), Frank Krafka; and student

Jell Wilson

workers Stan Ccu10r, Sondra Aores,
Minh Carrico, Alo nzo Alvarado,
Angela Miceli, Gordon Jackson, Jeff
Landry, Paul Hartzog, Miguel Rodriguez, Thco Hopkins, John Chin, Eugene Watson, Carl Hendley, Pablo
Vijello. Myro n Pihut, Jose Trevino, and
Tabitha Erickson. ARA Services
Manager was Alfred Walker.

�World Culture Fair/Club Day

Manl.ankes

Carol Hintz and David "Amadeus" Stadthagen drum up
membership for the Classica l Music Society.

A s a paper air balloon hovered over l.he Moody

atriwn, inviting students to "Tour the world" World
culture day was held on Wednesday March 15.
The event co-sponsored by SAC and the International Club. invited students from different cultures to
share their traditions. exotic foods and his10rical artifacts with l.hc SEU community. A total of ten cultures
were represented: the Caribbean. Icelandic, Indian,
Iranian, Japanese, Mexican-American, Mexican, Oman.
Pakistani and Quatar.
World culture day was joined by a Clubs and

Organizations Fair, sponsored by the office of Students
Activities. While the events were planned separately,
they occurred in the same place and complimemed one
another.

_....
LynnettePerez

David Pena takes a turn at the helium ta nk

11

�Diez y Seis!Ballet Folklorico
The Ha llet Folklorico Aztla n De Tt&gt;jas performed for a lunchtime crowd in the cafeteria during the celebration of !\·texico's independence. The Sept. 16 show was sponsored by the SAC Multi-cultural committee.
Amy Brooks

f

-

'

�Guillermo Torres

The Roommate Game
The Roommate Game was one of many events sponsored by Teresa Hall. AbO\'e, Head Resident Darlene
Krenek touts a pair of Ca lifornia RaisinsT'-' as prizes while below, several residents otTer their suggestions as
to the ideal roomma te.
Guillermo Torres

�Health Awareness Day

EricHoVOf

Above, Guadalupe Flores and Sharon Rybarski receive free medica l infor mation at th e ex hib its sponsored by the
Health Center. Below Dee Shaw is a little timid about donating blood.

�On the move

Joel
DeGuzman
joined the
Learning
Resource
Center staff as
the assistant
director.
DeGuzman, a
native of the

Philippines, got
a quick introduction to St.
Ed's by taping
the graduation
ceremony for
the LRC
Jell Wilson

15

��Student Admissions Foundation
STUDENT ADMISSIONS FOUNDATION is a group of volunteer students who assist the Admissions Office in the
recruiting process. S.AF. members he lp by phoning, writing to , and hosting prospective S EU students. S.A.F.
members also give campus tours and travel with Admissions Office Representatives to recruiting fairs and meetings
at high schools and colleges. The gro up's Student Coordinators were D.J. Lopez and Michaci "Woodic" Wong.
Adviser was Bcu y Gibbs.

JeHW1ISOI'I

From left to right : D.J . Lopez, Esiquio Uba lle, J a net Richbourg, Cole Holmes, Aleja ndro Balles tros, Megan M urphy, Paul Tramonte, Minh C aricco, Betty G ibbs, Michael Wong, Kelly Rigolli,
Dan Paciocco, Helen Cyr, Matt McVearry a nd Donna G utierrez.

17

�International Club

Club members included: (front row) Benedict Mukwaya, Henry Tang, Maureen Bromet, Simone Talma,
Raez Islam, Marie Souvay, Mercedes Sanchez, Kazumi Sakas hita, La lli J onasson, Ali AI-Hajr i. (back row)
Diana Espinosa, Teresia Widjaja, Salim Hirji, Teresa Cheung, "Labu" Ally Mu rtza, Isabel Beudard,
Andre Rohlehr, Aman Lodhi, Fernando Vega, Ellie Ghaznavi, Divonya Shaw, Mario Va lverde, Alex Christiansen, Rida Sentissi, Ana Munoz, (not s hown) Flo Arevalos, Aziz 1-lira ni, and Mazin Kha tib. Adviser was
J im Sage.

J affer Al-Nasser
presented many
beautirut items
from Oman at the
World Culture/
Clubs and Organi7.ations Fair
held March 15,
1989 in the
a trium or Moody
H a ll.

18

�Mexico was
just one orthe
many countries represented at the
World Culture Fair
which the
International
Club co-sponsored with
SAC MultiCultura L
Here American student
Stan Cetnor
sa mples
sopap illas _

(A bove) Ellie Ghaznavi, Interna tional
Club President. (Left Above) The
Internat iona l Corfl.•e Hour was a weekly
club event. Here Ali AI-Hajri gives a
presen tat ion on his home country of
Qatar. (Left) Simone Talma and Rachel
Brash prepared and presented Carri bbean foods at the World Cu llure Fair.

19

��Delta Sigma Pi
DELTA SIGMA PI is a professional business fraternity organized to foste r the study of business in universities; to encourage scholarship, social activity, and the association of students for the ir mutual advancement by research and practice; to promote a c loser affiliation between the commerc ial world and students of commerce. and to funhcr a higher
standard of commerc ial ethics and culture and the civic and commerc ial welfare of the community. lbroughout the year
S.E.U.'s Theta Omega chapter brought in speakers, did many fundraisers( includi ng the exciting Toga Dance and the St.

Patric k's Day Dance). and visited So uthwest Mcdiplcx Nursing Ho me.
Officers were Presidents, Rando lph Wright (fall) and Clemente Zabalza (spring); Sr. Vice-President. Sara H. Kelly;
V.P. for Pledge Education. Juan Go nzalez (spring); V.P. for Professional Activitics, ldolina Co rtez (spring); V.P. for
Chapter Management Randy O'Re illy (spring); Treasurer, Nathan Wade Hello; Chancellors, Dan No lan (fall) and Mary
Kay Misko (spring); Secretary. Dan Paciocco and Chris Sche la (both spring); and Historians. Cleme01e Zabalza (fall ) and
Mike Miglini (spring). Adviser was Fr. Roger Temme.

Members included: (front row) Cheryl Peterson, Tara Jones, Yvonne Anguiano, Phi Duong, Wade Hello,
(second row) Mary Kay Misko, Sara Kelly, Angela Miceli, Kevin Wallace, Edilh Valdespino, Steve Rogers,
Idalina Cortez, (third row) Pa m Migrini, Marisa Gonzalez, Chris Schcla, Sharon Havard, Jason Bla ir,
Da niel Paciocco, (fourth row) Deana Fischer, Kim Edwards, Randolph Wright, Clemente Zabalza, Randall
Mays (D istrict Director), (fifth row) Mike Miglini, Juan Gonzalez, David Morales, J ay Garza, and Randy
O 'Reilly.

21

�College Republicans &amp; Young Democrats

Jeff Wilson

The S.E.U. DEMOC RATS increased s tudents' political aware ness by sponsoring
\'Oier registration drives, a de ba te, a nd
pa r ticipat ing on the s tate leadership Je,·el.
Chapter officers were President, Geron imo
Rodriguez Jr.; Vice-President, Vice-Presiden t, David Pena J r.; Secretary, C hristina
Vanover; a nd Delegate to State College
Democrats, Mary Kay Misko. State officers
were, Chairperson of College Democrats
Board, Mary Kay Misko; Minority Caucus
Chairman, Geronimo Rodr iguez; Minority
Caucus SecretaryrTreasurer, Rosa Macias;
Minority Institutions Committee Chairperson, David Pena Jr. Adviser was Ed Shirley.

22

The College Republ icans existed to educate the student body a nd to promote Republican va lues a nd cand ida tes. The Club s ponsored a Voter Regis tration
Drive a nd pa rticipated in a de ba te with the S.E.U.
Democrats. Cl ub orticers were Preside nt, Michael
O'Br ien; Co-Vice-C ha irme n, Bessie thibodeaux and
Jim Robi nson, and T reasurer, Joanna Lothringer.
Adviser was J .D. Lewis.

�Hispanic Students' Associaton
The Hispanic Students' Association
strove to increase Hispanic cultural
awareness and sponsored and participated in several cultural events in
the S.E.U. and Austin communities.
The group co-sponsored events such
as the Dicz y Scis de Septicmbrc
Cclcbracion. Posada. Multi-Music
Dance and the W orld Culture Fair.

They also brought singer Gary
Hobbs to lhc anuual music festival
(Hillstock).
Off-campus the group partici-

pated in grape boycotts at local
su~nnarkets,

ancnded Hispanic an

shows and attended leadership
conferences.
Group officers were President,
David Pcna Jr.; Vice-President, Rosa
Macias: Treasurer. MaryAnn Martinez; and Secretary. Diana Espinosa.
Advisers were Esiquio Uballc and
Randa Safady.

Ann Martinez and Rosa Macias were act ive su pporters
United Farm Workers a nd worked to bring the grape
to the a ttention of SEU students. They were a lso
r esponsible fo r bringing Tejano music sta r Gary
to SEU's Hillstock Mus ic FestivaLs

LynnemePerez

HSA members David Pena a nd Lety Carri1.ales
a r e r eady to give out food samples and answer
q uestions on Hispanic culture at the World
Culture Fair which was co·s ponsored by HSA,
thf International Club, and the SAC Multi·
C ultura l Commitee.

Dia na Espinosa wor ks on a banner for a joint
HSA-SAC event. T hroughout the year t he two
groups worked together to s ponsor fun activities
like the Diez y Seis de Septiembre Celebracion,
Posada, a nd World Culture Fair.

23

�Multi-Cultural Committee
The Student Activities Council's' Multi-

Cultural Commitec programmed events
designed to increase studctnts' cultural
awareness and appreciation. The group
worked with other SAC Committees such as

Music and Ideas and Issues to sponsor events
like Jamaica Relief Week and Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Remembrance Day. The

commiucc also worked with 01her student
organizations such as the Hispanic Students'
Association. lmcmational Club. Palt Christi,

Campus Ministry. and the Young Democrats
to sponsor events I ike the Posada. Dicz Y

Scis Cc\cbration. Arabian Conccn. MultiMusic Dance. and World Culture Fair.
Committee leaders were Coordinator
Lynnette Perez, Assistant Coordinator (Fall)

Shawna Carter, Assistant
Coordinator(Spring) Maria Cerda, and
Publicity Coordinator David Pena. Fr.
Roger Temme. Dr. Terry Newton. Cecil
Lawson, Pam VanderWerf. and Michele
Moragne e Silva shared t.heir insight into
multi-cultural concerns with the commiucc.
SAC Adviser was Steve Hall.

After she spoke on the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ,story.
teller Marian Barnes chatted with s tudents and staiT inc luding
Director of Student Activities Pam Vander Werf, Philip Wiggins,
and Professor Cecil Lawson.

Lynnene Perez

M embers included: Norma Cast ro, Mary A nn Martinez, A lma Aguirre, Norma Rocha, Patty Vasquez,
Rosa Macias, R osi Briones, Shawna Carter(Asst. Coordinator), Maria Ceerda, Alma Reyna, Diana Es pinosa, G racie Al'ila, Lynne tle Perez (Coordinator ), (not s hown) Oal'id Pena, Rube n Pere7., J ea nnie Guardiola, Claudia Garcia, Le ty Ca rri1..ales, Lu is Ga r za, Karime' J adallah, J ay l·le rnandez, C roshelle H arris,
Philip W iggins, Fr. R oger T emme, and Cecil Lawson.

24

�(Right) Austin's Quizumba entertai ned students during Jamaica Relier Week in Novfm·
ber. (Below) Carol Hintz gives Tejano dancin g
a try at the Multi-Music Dance which was co·
sponsored with liSA. (Right Ce nter) mmmittee
members Diana Espinosa and David Pena are
ready ror lunch at the sp rin g SAC Thank You
Party.

Lynnette Perez

Lynnette Perez

(Above) Norma Rocha signs up to work the
door at a Multi-Cultural event. (Right) Com·
mitee members take a welt-deserved break
from plan ning and ban ner making.

25

�Student Leadership Training Program

S. L. T. P.
ST UDENT LEADERSHIP TRA IN-

ING PROGRAM
The S.L.T.P. is a year long program
for curren t and JXllCntial leaders. The

purpose of l.hc program is to develop
future S.E.U. and community leaders.
Membership is by application and all
students are invited to apply in September of each year.

Students in the S.L.T.P. participated
in two retreats and several workshops as
well as sponsoring a community
serv ice activity. Participants learned
essential leadership skills such as Public
Speaking, Communication Styles,
Ethical Leadership. Goal Setting. etc.
S.L.T.P.ers also planned and carried out
a carwash and Blanket Drive for Victory Outreach, an Austin o rganization
that works wilh lhc city's homeless.
Studcrus who graduate from the pro-

gram often go on to become campus
leaders. lluough active panicipation in
workshops. activities, leadership games
and team builders, Student Leadership

Carmen Maverick

Games such as The Electric Fence require st udents to improvise, think
critically, a nd cooperate to ach ieve a common goa l. In this ga me partici·
pants m ust get each squad member over the rope withou t touching it.
Training Program graduates do indeed
havethe knowledgeandbasicskill s to
make a difference in their fields and in the
SEU and Austin communities. Coordinators of the program were the Student Leadership Team members. Advisers were Bill
Quinn and Pam VanderWerf.

JeftWitson

SL T Member Carme n f,·l averick gives directions ro r a crazy iceb reaker to high
school students participa ting in Project Cr ossroads, an SEU and Southwestern
Bell sponos red s ummer leadership program.

26

The Team
I
1

STUDENT LEADERSHIP
TEAM
The S.L.T. was responsible for
coordinating and selecting panicipams for the Student Leadership
Training Program. Team members
were experienced leaders who usc
their knowledge to develop current
and future campus leaders and 10
further develop their own skills.
This year the S.L.T. not onl y coordinated the S.L.T. P. but also
facili tated an event for the Big
Brothers Big Sisters Program and
led icebreakers fo r Project Crossroads.
Fall semester S.L.T.ers were
Carmen Maverick, Denise Beck.
Aziz Hirani, Marcia Meuhr, and
Debbie Umphrey. Spring semester
S.L.T.crs were Carmen Maverick,
Debbie Umphry, Joe Green, Lynn
Fast, He len Cyr. Alic ia Keil , and
Eli7..abcth Streng. Advisers were
Bill Quinn and Pam VanderWerf.

�(Lert) During the fall retreat at Camp
Chrysallis, Gracie Avila an d Kurt
Blocher try to get their squad over the
imaginary Raging River 0' Death. The
River is a popular outdoor leaders hip exercise. (Below) Kurt Blocher prepares to
fall from atop a stage into the link ed
arms or waiting SLTers during the
Trust Fall exercise. Later in the exercise
members fell from atop a ladder on the
stage into the arms or their fellow
SLTPers.

(Lert Center) Kenny Hilbig and Patrick
Gendusa take Beth Dupee for a ride
during the Cha riot Race a game requiring skill, speed, and caution. (Lefl) Beth
Dupee and Aziz Hirani clown around
during one or the rew free minutes or the
f:~ll retreat. SLTP gives students the
opportunity to make new frie nds, realize
their potential, and improve themselves.
Va luab le contacts and friendships were
made during the program.

27

�Campus Ministry
Fr. Roger
Temme and

Becky Shickell
shared their love
and warmlh wit h
everyone th ey

met. Toge th er
they were fri ends
and advisers to
th e many stu -

dent s involved
in the Core
Group. Hunger

Awareness Organ ization, Pax
Christi, and the
weekly celebracions of mass .

The Ca mpus Minis try
office was the place to go to
for guidance, involvement,
or a fri endly talk with Fr.
Roger. Campus Mini stry's
Core Group, ad vis£&gt;d by
Becky Shicke ll. met biweekl y to s ha re thoug hts,
pray, and plan events s uch
as th e Food and Flicks

series co-sponsored with
DAD . Cor e G r oup members :1lso helped during

masses and sponsored
re treats.O ther groups sponsored by Campus Ministry
wer e the Hunger Awareness Organi1.ation and Pax
C hristi.

28

�Pax Christi and Hunger Awareness
PAX CHRISTl is the International Catholic
Peace Movement. The group's purpose is
to respond to the Christian call to peacemaking and to commit 10 the principles of
non-v iolence and justice. S.E.U. 's Pax

Christi group met bi-weekly to share ideas,
discuss issues, and plan activities. The
group co-s!Xlnsorcd Hands Around the

Grotto and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Remembrance Day. They also sponsored
Peace Week which included a Peace Walk
to Bcrgslrom Air Force Base and therededication of the Peace Pole and participated in many off-campus peace activities
The group was sponsored by Campus
Ministry. Advisers were Fr. Roger Temme.
Br. William Dunn. and Ed Shirley.

HUNGER AWARENESS ORGANIZATION
This organization's purpose is to raise awareness about hunger both locally and internationally by having fundraisers and other activities to
involve students in making a difference. This
year H.A.O. co-sponsored Peace Week, brought
Bread for the World's campaign to fully fund
the W.I.C. Program to campus, and sponsored a
Thanksgiving Food Drive. HAO also sponsored
its annual Hunger Cleanup in April. Tite organization was sponsored by Campus Ministry and
was advised by Fr. Roger Temme, Becky
Shickell, Sue Fitzgerald and Bob Fastiggi.
Student coordinators were Chris Darwin, Laura
Ham. and Juan Gonzales.

�Alpha Phi Sigma

ALPHA PHI
SIGMA is
S.E.U.'S
Criminal Jus-

tice Honor Society. The
society promotes high
scho larship and
professional

preparation.
This year the

group spon-

sored several
fundraiscrs including the November Baskct-

baiiToumamcnt. The
\988-1989

chapter officers
were President,
Bonnie Lopez:
Vicc-Presidcm.

John T. Nash:
Sccrctary. Jcff
Motley; and
Treasurer,
Steven
Mumma.

Adviser was
Dr. David
Horton.
JettWilson

30

�Criminal Justice Club

CR IM INAL J USTI CE CLUB The purpose
of the C J . Club is to promote interaction and
scholarship among st udents pursuing careers
in criminal justice. Through fie ld t rips,
speakers, and regular meetings, C.J . Club
membe rs keep up with iss ues and
advancements in their field.
T his year the club sponsored many successful
fundraise rs incl uding the second annual
Friday Nite M usic J a m. The club's officers
were President, Rosa Macias; Vice- President,
Rosi Briones; Secretary, J udy Anderson, and
Treasurer, Martha Loera. Adviser was Dr.
David Horton.

JeHWilson

Rosa Macias, Ros i Bri ones, Judy Anderson,
a nd Mart ha Loera we re committed offi ce rs.

~I
CJ Club members incl uded: (left to right) Mary Ann Martinez, Martha Loera, J ay
Herna nd ez, J udy Anderson, Alberl Rodriguez, Rosa Macias, a nd Rosi Brio nes.

31

�I

NBA Superstar
Kareem AbduiJabbar hooks one ol

lhelastshotsinhis

professional career
alter20years. six

championships and
38,387 pomts, the most

mprohiStory.
Tour de France

2

winner Greg

LeMond embraced hts

magic bicycle on the
cover of"Spofts
Illustrated" alter being

named Sponsman ol
the Year.
Califom•alnterstate

•

880 prtched and
heaved Oct. 17 when

the quake hit
Aeg•stering 7.1 on the
Richterscale, i1
claimed 67 lives and

caused S6.5 billion '"
property damages.
~ Voyager II caplured

•

a false-color 1mage

o!Nep~uneonitsway

toanendtessjourney
into interstellar space.
A mao~aeal grin lit

I

thelaceofthe

Jokm (Jack Nicholson)

in WarnerBros: actiOfl·
adventure film

"Batman.·

·~~,;my

crushed a human

barricadetoregam
control of Tiananmen

Square.thesneofa
month-loogproctemocracyprotestby

one-mi0101'1Chlnese
studentsandwortlers.

�J ~on:~~~~~~

eternal teen has come
alongwaysinceher
introduction and now

en;oys atrendierlool&lt;
and richer sales.

•

Aweary President
Bush a nnounced

U.S. troops had
invaded Panama Dec
20 on a mission 10

capture General
Manuel Noriega on

d rug charges.
•

Firewontssizzledin

the Paris sky,
illuminating the Arch of
Triumph during the

200thanniversaryof

!he French Revolution.

··~~~~~~!
in28yearsfo!lowing

the destruction olthe
Berlin Wall. Bertin
youth danced near
Chedq:Join!Char1iein
celebration.

~~ ~~~~~he
popmusicsceneby
stormwiththeirNo.l
h~ single,"l'll Be Loving
You (Forever)." Group

members are Jon
Knight, Danny Wood,
Joe Mcintyre, Donnie
Wahlberg and Jordan
Knight.

12 ~~y~~-~1
radar-eluding B-2
stealth bomber was
displayed lor the first

lime in Palmdale,
Cal~omia.

�IOI'mer Commumst
party chief Todor
Zhivkov.

2 ~:~~~r:i; ~o~
outlielderR~c:key

Henderson. reliever
Denn1s Eckersly, Series
MVP Dave Stewart and
thndbasemanCarney
Lansford.

~~~~~~~~~de

•
h•sdebut as alatenight talk show host on
"The Arsenio Hall
Show." Robert OeNiro.
left. was among Hall's
celebrity guests.

-4 ~~~-~~fi~~ed
Jagger when the
Rolling Stones
embarlled on a 36·CIIy
$70-m•lliontour,the
band's first in tO years

·=rAL:u~~tes
l.allers cheerleader,
sang and danced her
way to lour MTV
awardstorherh1t
s•ngle "Stra.ghtUp."

·~a~e~~r;;~!~'~~
new classic. the Mazda
Miata. whiCh became
oneolthe honest·
selling sports cars on
the U.S

- " " ' '" ' ; -

�gameforthefasttime
after evidence revealed
he placed bets on his
own team

andcons~racy.

9 ~;~hg~:~h~i~t~ry

s~naftercapturingthe

Virginia governorship
and becoming the first
elected Clack governor
in U.S. history.

~· ~:~~tesident

-.
II

\

'

· ·· - . . . . _

A

.

Gorbachevpromised
PopeJohnPaulllthe
USSR had changed its
anitudeonreligious
freedoms during the
first·evermeeting
DetweenaKremlin
chielandapontiff

II ;~~~~~~-~i~~~~
oil swirled on the
surfaceofAiaska"s
Prince William Sound
after the tankerEnon
Valdez ran aground,
creating the worst oil
spill in U.S history.

12 ~~~~:~h~ugo

South Carolina coast in
Septemtler.leaving$3
Dillion in property
damages in its wake.

�Dorm Activities Board

DAB members included Pete Rivera , Jay Herna ndez, Carlos Yerena,Robert Cervantes, C laudia Garcia,
JoA nn S il va , Maricela Trev ino, Pete Erickson, Becky Paul, Ann Meyers, Carina Robl es, Laura Hellinger,
Albert Rodriguez, and Malt McVearry.

DORM ACfiVITI ES BOARD is a group or donn residents who plan and implcmcm residence hall acti vities. Thi s
year D.A.B. SIX&gt;nsorcd or co-sp::msorcd popu lar events such as the Six-R ags Trip, Luau on the Lawn, S. E.U. Weekend
Comedians Henry Cho and Hugh Fink. "Family Feud" in Doyle Hall , and the Dorm-Wide Video Contest D.A.B .
Chairperson was Matt MeV carry. Publici1y Dircc10rs were JoA nne Si lva, and Secre tary, Beatrice "Toby" Canez.
Adviser was Pete Erickson.

36

�1...-----------.
THE UNEXPECTED
GUEST
by Agatha Chri stie
October 4- 16
Scenic Designer:
Costume Designer:
Lighting Designer:
Stage Mananger:
Ass istant Stage Manager:
Directed by:

Jim Carroccio
Sara Medina-Pape
Michael Massey
Katie Blackwell
Gordon Jackson

Susan Loughran

CAST (in order of appearance)
Richard Warwick:
Gordon Jackson
Laura Warwick:
Christine Gillispie
Michael Starkwedder:
Gregory Magyar
Miss Bennett:
Karen Uhrbrock
Bre m Bode
Jan Warwick:
Mrs. Warwick:
ChristieOnh
Henry Angell:
Dan Applegate
Sergeant Cadwallader:
Peter Be ilhar.t
Inspector Thomas:
Philip No len
Jutian Farrar:
James Rippee
Who is the mysterious stranger that discovers a dead man's
wife stand ing over him with a smouldering gun? Why does
this stranger frame another? Are the police convinced or
merely watching and waiting? Agatha Christie at her fin est.

37

�Dorm Activities Board

DAB members included Pete Rivera , Ja y Herna ndez, Carlos Yerena,Robe rt Cen •an tes, Cla udia Garcia ,
JoAnn Silva, Maricela Tre\•ino, Pete Erickson, Becky Paul , Ann Meye rs, Ca rina Robles, Laura Hell inger,
Albert Rodriguez, and Mall McVearry.

DORM ACTIVITIES BOARD is a group of dorm residents who plan and implement residence hall activities. This
year D.A.B. sponsored or co-sponsored popular cven1s such as lhe Six-Rags Trip. Luau on the Lawn, S.E.U. Weekend
Comedians Henry Cho and Hugh Fink. "Family Feud" in Doyle Halt, and the Dorm-Wide Video Contest. D.A.B.
Chairperson was Man MeV carry. Publicity Directors were JoAnne Silva, and Secretary, Beatrice loby Cortez.
Adviser was Pete Erickson.
M

36

�THE UNEXPECTED
GUEST
by Agatha Christie

October 4- 16
Scenic Des igner:
Costume Designer:
Lighting Designer:
Stage Mananger:
Assistant Stage Manager:
Directed by:

Jim Carroccio
Sara Medina-Pape
Michael Massey
Katie Blackwell
Gordon Jackson
Susan Loughran

CAST (in order of appearance)
Richard Warnrick:
Gordon Jackson
Christine Gillispie
Laura Warwick:
Michael Starkwedder:
Gregory Magyar
Miss B ennett:
Karen Uhrbrock
Jan Warwick:
Brent Bode
Mrs. Warwick:
ChristieOrth
Henry Angell:
Dan Applegate
Peter Beilhar.t
Sergeant Cadwallader:
Philip Nolen
Inspector Thomas:
James Rippee
Julian Farrar:
Who is the mysterious stranger that discovers a dead man's
wife standing over him with a smouldering gun? Why does
this stranger frame another? Are the police convinced or
merely watching and waiting? Agatha Christie at her finest.

37

�A MIDSUMMER
NIGHT'S DREAM
by Will iam Shakespeare
November 8-20
Guest Star:
Scenic Designer:
Costume Designer:
Lighting Designer:
Sound Designer:
Stage Manager:
Assistant Stage Managers:
Mishler, Meg Hemmer, Ann
Directed by:

PH ILIP ANGLIM
Michael Massey
Ann Means
J im Carroccio
Michael Wong
Susan Loughran
Melba ManinezJarrell, Pat Munoz
Charles Ney

CAST (in order of appearance)
Theseus:
Michael Craig
Hippolyta:
Denise Odom
Philostrate:
Peter Beilhar.t
Egeus:
Hermia:
Lysander:
Demetrius:
Helena:

Peter Quince:
Nick Bottom:
Francis Flute:
Tom Snout:
Snug:
Robin Starveling:
Puck:

Changling Child:
Peaseblossom:
Cobweb:
Moth:
Mustarseed:
Dewdrop:
Titania:
Oberon:

Mike HamiltOn

Kathleen McC laine
Gregory Magyar
Jim Rippee
Kristina Steward
Dan Applegate
Philip Nolen
Raben J. Pupelis
Bryan Moses
Chuck Goodin
Kevyn J. Wallace
Gino Chelakis
Cameron Ney
Cindy Curtis
Ga le Warren
Melita Morgan
Kelly Rigotti
Ana Torres
Laura A. Walberg
Philip Anglim

A romp through one of Shakespeare's funniest plays.
They had such fun, you were tempted to join Puck
and Bonom and all the forest creatures in this ce lebration of love and life.

38

Above, Phil ip A ngli m as O bero n extracts sleeping
juice from a nower onto the eyes of Titania played by
Laura Wa lberg.

�Below, Hermia (Kathleen McClaine) and
Lysander (Greg Magyar) devise a plan
to escape form her father's wrath and
steal into the woods.

Left, Philip Anglem and Gino
Chelakis as Puck observe
Lysander (Greg Magyar) and
Demetrius (Jim Rippee) as they
constrain Hermia (Kathleen
McClaine) from scratching
Helena's (Kristina Steward)

39

�Left, Robin Stavling played by Kevyn
Wallace and Snug played by Chuck Goodin
perform their part in Pyramus and Thisle
for the Duke.

The rustics gather to prac.
lice the play for the wedding
of Kuke Theseus to Hip·
plyta. From th e left; Kevyn
Wallace as Robin Starvling,
Chuck Goodin as Snug,
Robert Pupelis as Francis
Flute, Philip Nolen as Nick
Bottom and Bryn Moses as
Tom Snout.

40

�HEDDA GABLER
by Henrik Ibsen
February 28 - March 12
(Translation by Gerry Sammon and Irene Bennan)
Guest Artist:
Scenic Designer:
Costume Designer:
Lighting Designer:
Sound Designer:
Stage Manager:
Assistant Stage Managers:
Guest Direc10r:

KE N LEITNER
Michael Massey
Susan Lough ran
Gary Vander Wege
Rick Mishler
Melba Martinez-Mishler
Susan Loughran, Michael
Craig, Patrick Gendusa
MICHAEL COSTELLO

CAST
George Tesman, historian:
Hedda Gabler, his wife:
Miss Juliana Tesm~. his aunt:
Mrs. Elvsted:
Judge Brack:
Ellen Lovberg:
Berta, the Tesman 's maid:

Philip Nolen
Kathleen McClaine
Bernadine Rettger
Gaynelle Caldwell
Ken Letner
Gregory Magyar
Donnell Daniels

What is it that drives Hedda to hold all that she meets in
contempt, including her husband, George? Enter a new
victim, Thea. Can she wilhstand Hedda's onslaught and
save both herself and George?

41

��43

�44

�ANNIE GET
YOUR GUN
by Herbert and Dorothy Fields
April 19-30
A Salute to Irving Berlin!
Scenic Designer:
Costume Designers:
Lighting Designer:
Sound Designer:
Stunt Specialist:
Assistant Director:
Stage Managers:
Assistant Stage Managers:
Assistant to the Director:
Directed by:

Gary Vander Wege
Sara Medina-Pape, Christie Onh
Michael Massey
Steve Gerik
Andy Weisburg
Valerie Blythe
Ann Jarrell , Cora Fagan
Dana Fischer, Gale Warren
Adriene Mishler
Melba Martinez-Mishler

CAST
Older Annie:
Charlie:
Dolly Tate:
Foster Wilson/Francisco:
Mac:

Dawn Baldwin
Ph ilip Nolen
Patricia Munoz
Gino Chelakis
Dan Applegate
Frank:
Jim Rippee
Annie:
JanaMora
LiHle Jake:
John Paul Bimler
Nellie:
Megan Simler
Jessie:
Kati Eaves
Minnie:
Kate Bimler
Bobby(Yellow Foot:
Becky Stanton
Rusty/Pawnee Indian:
Joe Simler
Colonel WiiJiam F. Cody:
Greg Magyar
Mrs. Little Horse:
Melita Morgan
Mrs . Yellow Foot·
Laura A. Walberg
Mrs. Iron Tail:
Katie Blackwell
Pawnee Bill/Herbert·
Peter Beilharl
Wild Horse/Robert:
Roben J. Pupelis
Iron Tail:
Gordon Jackson
Sitting Bull:
Nathan Gillion
Pete:
Paul Sticklin
Peg/Photographer:
Peggy Graham-Bimler
Anabelle/Mrs. Adams:
Amy Young
Connie/Mrs. Potter-Porter:
Cindy Cuni:s
Loretta/Mrs. Henderson:
Meg Hemmer
Rachel:
Rachelle Rose
Darling:
Dana Fischer
Gay:
Gale Warren
An outstanding Broadway hit, this musical of Annie Oakley
brought a grins to the faces of those who relived the trials and
triumphs of one of America's most beloved Western heroines.

45

���A FROZEN CHRISTMAS
by Mel ite Morgen
Scenic ond llghting designer Jomie Avero
Costume Designer
Cynthio Hoskel
Sound Designer Michoel Wong
S te~ge Manager
Erin Oovidson
Directed byChristie Orth

CAST
Rhymin' Simon
James Boncroft
Nice Noncy Dono Fi sc her
Whi nny Wendy
Kotie Blackw ell
Tou gh Timm y
Brent Bode
Gloom y Gus Gordon Jockson
Mean Moxine
Donnell Oo vis
SontoGordon Jockson

48

�49

�Christie Orth is a senior theatre maj or. She has been a MMNT Costume
Assistant for the last two years and has co-designed the costumes for ANNIE
GET YOUR GUN. Christie directed the chiJdrens show A FROZEN CHRISTMAS, lN THE FALL OF 1988. Her stage credits include TH E UNEXPECTED
GUEST, HOW T HE OTHER HALF LOVES, TEXARKANA TANZI, HOLY
GHOSTS, SAM THE BOLD, THE MlSER, ONCE UPON A MATTRESS and
BORN YESTERDAY. In the spring of 1989, Christie was awarded for her
outstanding achievement as a student from St. Edwards theatre depanment, and
she recieved the Presidential award for outstanding service to the university and
her community.

Gino Chelakis is a senior theatre major and has been seen as William
Detweillerin HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVES, as Sam Hendrix in WAIT
UNTIL DARK, and as Puck in A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM. Gino
was recognized in the spring of 1989 for his outstanding achievement as a
theatre student by the St. Edwards theatre department.

G ino C hela kis
Philip Nolen is a sophomore theatre major from Gadsden,
Alabama. He has been seen in CHARLEY'S AUNT. MAN OF
MODE, HOLY GHOSTS, HOW THE OTH ER HALF LOVES, A
MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, HEDDA GABLER and ANNIE
GET YOUR GUN. Phillip recieved 1988's ACOT Selection Committee's award for "Best Lead Ac10r In A Comedy."

Philip Nolen

50

�Melita Morgan is a junior theatre major from Maryland. Melita has
been seen in THE MIRACLE WORKER, HOLY GHOSTS AND ANNIE
GET YOUR GUN. Melita recieved the Moody award for her achievement
in writing 1988's Childrens's show, A FROZEN CHRISTMAS. Other
awards include, Best dresser for ANNl E GET YOUR GUN and outstanding
Sophomore for which she recieved a theatre scholarship.

Melita Morgan
Gregory Magyar is a sophomore theatre major from Houston
Texas. and has performed in ANNIE GET YOUR GUN, HEDDA
GABLER, A MIDSUMMER NIGHT 'S DREAM, THE UNEXPECTED GUEST and HOLY GHOSTS. Outside of hi s work at
MMNT Gregory has made appearances with "plays for living" and The
Texas Shakespeare Festival in Kilgore.

Gregory Magyar
Kristina Steward, a junior theatre major from Houston, has
appeared as Helena in a MIDSUMMER NIGHTS DREAM and as
Kitty in CHAR LEY 'S AUNT. Kristina was bitten by the acting bug
at the tender age of seven when she was cast as one the little girls in
FIN NIAN 'S RAINBOW.

Kri stina Steward

51

�Susan Loughran brought a wealth of theatrical experience to her position as MMNT's
Anistic Director. She received a BA from Webster University Conservatory in St.
Louis and a MA from Southwest Texas State Univers ity. The 1988-89 season marks
Loughran 's I I th year with SEU. She directed over twenty-five plays, including
MMNT 's production of the farcical CHARLEY'S AUNT in 1987-88 and this season's THE UNEXPECTED GUEST. Loughran particularly enjoys mysteries and has
directed many others including T HE MOUSETRAP, THE HOLLOW, DEATHTRAP, and WHODUNNlT. As an actress, Loughran performed in over I 00 productions, appearing in ro les as diverse as Billie Dawn in BORN YESTERDAY with
Broderick Crawford and Olivia in TWELFTH NIGHT. She taught Acting and Costuming and served as costume designer for various productions. Before coming to
Austin, Loughran was based in New York City, working as an actress, director and
costume designer throughout the United States and Canada. Loughran has worked on
TV and in films. She is on the board of Austin Circle of Theatres and is active in the
Texas Educational Theatre Association and volunteers with Recording for the Blind
Program.

Melba Ma rt inez-M ishl er

Me lba Martinez-Mishler, SEU faculty member and MMNT Business Manager,
taught Acting and Ans Administration . Martinez- Mishler holds aMAin Theatre
from the University of Wyoming where she received the Ellbogen Graduate
Teaching Award. She studied the "Lively Arts" in London, England , through
Ekerd College. Maritez-Mishler directed MMNT productions of HOW THE
OTHER HALF LOVES, HOLY GHOSTS, HAY FEVER, THE MIRACLE
WORKER, BUS STOP, ROUND AND ROUND THE GARDEN, and G IFT OF
THE MAGI. A member of Ac10r's Equity, Mishler performed in MMNT 's
production of DEATHTRAP. She won the ACOT Best Actress award for her
performance in the Capital City Playhouse Production of THE ROSE TATOO.
Maninez-Mishler rece ived an ACOT Best Director nomination for HOLY
GHOSTS and ROUND AND ROUND THE GARDEN. Maninez-Mishler and her
husband have their own troupe of actors (THE PRACfiCAL PLAYERS) which
performs for conferences, seminars and training fiJms . A recipient of the Child
and Family Services Community Service Award, Martinez-Mishler is on the
Advocacy Committee for the Texas Education Theatre Association.
Charles Ney, assistant professor in the Theatre department at SEU, directed lhis
MMNT's production of A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM this season. He
has an MFA in directing from Southern Methodist University, a BFA from Illi nois Wesleyan University, and is currentl y finishing his dissertation on the functions of academic theatre programs from the University of Illinois. Ney founded
Manhattan Clearing House, a Dallas contemporary performing arts center where
he directed the world premiere of JOAN rN MEATLAND and the Southwest
premiere of MISS MARGARIDA 'SWAY (featu red at Neiman Marcus' Brasil
Fonnight). In addition, he produced Dallas' first Contemporary Dance Festival.
He currently serves on lhe Board of Directors for lhe Texas Educational Theatre
Association and directs their advocacy efforts. He is also a board member for
Theatre Austin. MMNT audiences will remember him from MMNT productions
of TEXARKANA TANZI, MAN OF MODE, THE MEDEA, EL GRANDE DE
COCA COLA, and THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE.

Chuck Ney

52

�Michael Massey became a Theatre facuhy member at SEU this year. He designed the sets for A MIDSUMMER NlGHT'S DREAM and HEDDA GABLER and the lights for THE UNEXPECTED GUEST at Mary Moody Northen
Theatre. A graduate of Texas Tech University with an MFA in stage design,
Massey was involved with "entertainment lighting" at Sea World of Texas in the
summer of 1988. Previous to that he worked as commercial designer for the
Design Centte, with clients such as COLUMBIA PICTURES, PORSCHE
AVIATION, NEW WORLD TELEVISION, and KEEBLER COOKlE CO.,
among others. Massey designed numerous stage productions including THE
NUTCRACKER BALLET for San Angelo Civic Ballet, A GERSHWlN REVUE for Witchita's Art Council, and THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE for
Lubbock Summer Rep. While at Hardin-Simmons University, he designed
productions of THE GLASS MENAGERJ E, CAESAR AND CLEOPATRA and
ANNlE GET YOUR GUN.

Michael Massey
Gary Vander Wege became MMNT's Technical Director in 1989. HEDDA
GABLER was his ftrst production. Since 1977 Vander Wege has designed and
provided technical services for theatre, dance, film and television. He served as
resident scenic designer for the Center Showcase Theatre in Michigan and technical director for the Arkansas Opera Theatre. Van der Wege moved to Austin in
1979 and designed the settings for productions such as A LIE OF THE MIND,
THE LIGHTS ARE ON, LILLITH, ON GOLDEN POND, BUTTERFINGERS
ANGEL, DOUBLEPLAY, and I'M NOT RAPPAPORT. He also has a growing
list of credits in film and television including set dressings for HONEYSUCKLE
ROSE and THE TEXAS RANGERS , production design for THE ROAD TO
FAME (with the cast of TV's FAME), and scenic artist for LONESOME DOVE
and NlGHT GAME.

,.
Gary Vander Wege
Sara Medina-Pape was MMNT's Theatre Costumer and pan of SEU adjunct
faculty. Medina-Pape has an MFA in Theatre Costume Design from the University of Texas and a BA in Political Science. She designed the costumes for the
MMNT productions of THE UNEXPECTED GUEST, MAN OF MODE, FIDDLER ON T HE ROOD, HAY FEVER, and T HE MlRACLE WORKER. She
received ACOT nominations in Costume Design for MMNT productions of MAN
OF MODE and HAY FEVER. Other costuming credits include CRACKERJACK, RAGS TO RICHES, BY-BY BIRDIE, DRACULA, COS! FAN TUITE,
the kLRN production of NEWSCAST OF THE PAST and the movies BLOOD
SIMPLE and NOT FOR YOU.

Sara Medina-Pape

53

�Hands Around the Grotto

JeNWitson

Jell Wilson

One hundred and fifty peop le ringed the Grotto to raise
awareness about hunger- both locally and globally.

54

�Oct. 19, 1988. marked the third
annual "Hands Around lhe Grotto" ceremony. Sponsored by the Hunger Awareness
Organization (HAO) and Pax Chri sti , this
event served to heighten awareness of
starving people around the globe.
Speakers included Father Roger
Temme. Professor Edward Shirley, humani ties student David Stadlhagen and Resident
Assistant Darlene Krenek. Participants were
invited to hold hands around the lawn in
front of lhe stone alcove, sing songs and
meditate on the condi tions of those less
fortunate.
Several hundred prayers fo r the relief
of hunger were released in balloons as lhe
ceremony closed.

Issues of Chris tian responsibility were the
focus of a ta lk by Ed Shirley, Religious
Studies instructor.

Kathleen Person is the keeper of the ball oons which contain messages of how to ass ist the hungry.

55

�Guillermo Torres

Festival of Lights
Dec. 9, 1988 heralded the coming Christmas season with a
glorious display of lights. song and holiday spi rit embodied in the tenth
annual Festival of Lights.
This event has become a meaningfu l tradition at St. Edward's as
a communal celebration of the season of giv in g. Having begun as an
idea generated by SEU students several years ago. the event is now
sponsored by SA L
Student volunteers placed 500 luminarias along the main cam·
pus drive in preparation for the 6:30p.m. celebration in front of Old
Main. Participants gathered around the steps of SEU's most prestig·
ious building with lit candles in hand. brought together by a sense of
goodwill and peace in longing for the season of Christ's birth.
The event, following a program of prayer and singing, was
topped off by the lighting of Old Main in the glory of multi·colored
Chrisunas lights.

56

Gu1llermoTorres

��Spring Fling/Casino Night
The SAC-sponsored Spring Rin g treated
students to "a touch of class"; a night at the
luxurious H yatt Regency on town lake, and a

gourmet meal. Combined with Delta Sigma Pi 's
Casino night. lhc annual event offered plenty o f
emcrtainmcnt and delivered a rousing good time

to all who attended.

Above, Alma Reyna and
Patric k Kelly were the
Freshm:m members of the
court. Above ri ght , Fling
King and Queen- Marian
Michel and Joh n King.
Right Becky K eze le and
J\·l ega n Watson get into the
Spring Flin g spirit out on
the dance noor.

58

�59

�Mardi Gras
Some students chose Bourbon Street.
Some students braved icy "Fat Saturday" winds
and chose Moody Atrium.
Most of SEU's campus party gocrs donned Mardi
Gras masks and danced despite the weather and lhe
distance from Louisiana.
Decorated in traditional purples, Moody's Atrium
served as a local pre-Lenten party pavillion.

Joey Malina (left)
and Damon Kellar

in New Oreans.

Se\·eral SEU stu·
dents made the trek

Manlanke•

60

�ReUnion Music

Guillermo Torres

Above, former SEU student Paul Minor returned to his old ha unts with his band Roman Candles. Below,
Rick Kelly entertains a Beach Fest crowd.

61

�Beach Bash

Beach Bash, one of Fa ll Term 's biggest events, fea tures swimsuits and Haw iia n shirts. O nce aga in
1988's 'Fest tu r ned out to be a "Beachin"' good time.

Guille rmo Torres

62

�Computer Fever

Je ff Wilson

1989 saw the first occurance of computer viruses on the St. Edward's campus, causing computers and
printers to malfunction. Viruses are mini·programs th:tl :1t1ach themsch'CS to computer files and spread
from machine to machine via noppy disks and networks.

63

��Yvonne Jean Anguiano
Daniel James Applegate
Jennifer Lynn Aromi

James S. Bancroft
Sandra L. Barghausen
Cheron Renee Bayna

Lisa Renee Dell
Frau Blucher
Samuel Stephen
Canterbury

Juana "Lety" Carri1..ales
Linda Dawn
C hristensen
Nicole A. Crain

65

�Terri Anne Decker

Elaine De Los Santos

Phi Q. Duong
Corie A. Fagan
Lynn Ellen Fanto7.zi

Enrique Elias Fa raj
Amy B. Faulk
Claudia Jean Garcia

66

�Lisa Marie Graham
Mark A. Guerrero
Croshelle De Sonyette
Harris

Jeanette Marie Hatcher
Laura C. Hellinger
Jennifer A. Hernandez

Ramona Ingrid Hicks

Sherwood " Woody" D.
Hidalgo

67

�Carol Marie Hintz
Janel P. Horyza
Antony Allen Hughes

Laura L. Ivey
Gordon Lowell Jackson
Karime' N. Jadallah

Mark Johnson

Bertram E. Jon es

68

�Kelly Janette Jones
Tara Nicole Jones
Valerie Kay Jones

Nabeel K. Kanoo
Elizabeth Jane
Lapinski
Gilbert Siu Kei Lee

Christina R. Lopez
Valerie Ann Madero
Shannon M. Malarky

Lynn M. Maley
Todd William Massey
Wendy Leigh Mayfield

69

�Meghan Eileen McCauley

Kelly Jean McMann

Ant hony C hristopher
Merritt
Angela Marie Miceli
Mike Guido Miglini

Melinda Lee Morehead
Jacob C. Morisak
O:wid Tung-Yan Ng

70

�Christine H. O'Malley
Maria Angelita Padilla
Dolores Anne Pa lmisano

Estella Perez
Ester Perez
Nereida Maria Perez

L_--------------------------------------------~ 7 1

�Teresa J. Quatrin
Richard E. Rendon
Deb ra Rosa

Lau ra Luci la Salazar
Karri Lin Sanders
Chris Whitney Spencer

Ma rc M. Swendner
Donald E. Vaughan Jr.
Scott Edward Whelan

Ada m M. Wright
Carlos R. Vere na
David Zertuc he

72

�Sophomores
Judy Ann Anderson

Kurt Kenyon Blocher
Michael A. Cardenas

Maria Elena Cerda
Erin C. Davidson
Guadalupe Alejandra
Flores

Carolina Patricia Galindo
Char les Patrick Gendusa
Douglas T. Godinich

73

�Joseph M. Green
James W. Handy
Todd C. Hart

Alicia Hess
Delisa Louise Hogan
Dominic H. lemma

Laurus "Lalli" S. Jonasson
Steve C. Jones
James L. Klingele

Denae L. Kral
Matthew Thomas Lankes
Joseph Alexander Malina

74

�Kristy A. Olsen
Cheryl Ann Peterson
Martha M. Ramirez

Kelly J. Rigotti
Linda Rogers
Lynn j. Russell

Christina Lynn Vanover

Michael Wong

75

�Juniors
Albert Abou-Jaoude
Terri Daniclle Anspach
Alejandro V. Ballestr os II

Rayne\ M. Bamsch
Jorge Barrera
Robin Lynn Bell

Ais ha S. Bin-Suwira
J oseph Hunter Brown Ill
Gaynelle Mar ie Caldwell

76

�Thomas G. Cronin
Julita M. de Ia Torre
Jose L. Delgado

Dex Dextraze
Dana Lynn Fischer
Deana M. Fischer

Anna M. Fritsch

Melinda Garza

77

�Christine Lyn Gillespie

Nathan A. G illon

Vernita Hampton
Richard Allan Hrbacek
Robert W. Ikard

JeffM. Kloc
Kelly L. Leopold
Theodore James Marshall

7M

�Matthew J. McVearry
Jacquelyn Grace Mik a
Raul P. Miranda

Mary Kay Misko
John P. Onorato
Becky J . Paul

Parona Ann Pease

J esus G. Perez

79

�Ca rolyn Diane Rabalais
Nancy Lynn Ra,·eling
Steven C. Rivera

Geronimo M. Rodriguez Jr.
Maria Isabel Rodriguez
Roel Rodriguez

Sha ron Lynn Ryba rski
Claudia M. Santamaria
Ali G. Sharif

Sabrina M. Smith
Lauren E. Stout
J effrey J. Wilson

~0

�Seniors

Valerie Blythe
Theatre

Todd Dolginoff
Real Estate

Carol Gill berg
Management

Denise G reen
E nglish Writing

Marinelle Hervas
Writing!Commullications

Catherine Honey
Liberal Studies
81

�Xl

Andrew R. Jones
Computer Science

John King
Biology

Daniel Lambert
Management

Darlene Lee
Finance

Rosa M. Macias
Criminal Justice

Mary Ann Martinez
Social Work

Ca rm en Mave rick

Ma ria n E li1..abeth Mi chel

Psychol ogy/Wr iting

Sociai \Vorkl C.J.

Ra ndy O ' Reill y
Marketing/Finance

�Anthony L. Ross
Sociology!Crminal Justice

Homero Xavier Sandoval
Finance

Martha Taylor
Management

83

�SEU fans are the greatest

Jetl Wilson

�Men's Basketball

JeHWilson

85

�Baseball

Jell Wilson

86

�87

�Softball

�Women's Basketball

�Volleyball

90

��Soccer

��Music Fest: Hillstock II

��Crazy Olympics

��1989

�I I

St. Ed's held its IOJrd
commencement excercises
on May 6, in the RCC .
This year's graduates
tota led 362. Of those, 67

received master's degrees
wh il e 74 recei\'ed New

99

�Abo ~'e, Susa n Loughr:an and Sarak Medina-Pape listen
to Ma rk Gr iffith (far above) deli\'er his valedictory a ddress.
At r ight, not all eyes were on the podium.

100

�Right, Javier Salinas
starts the ceremony with a
rousing rendition of the Star
Spangled Banner. A Pearsall
native, Salinas' voice has
been featured in several
Mary Moody Northen Theatre productions as well as
the Hilltopper Chorale.
Below, Denise Green and
David Fox contemplate a
future beyond SEU's hallowed halls.

Kurt Blocher

101

�President Patricia
Hayes presents a diploma to Chris McCau ley, one of the 221
recipients of und ergraduate degrees.

102

�Jell Wilson

Above, Texas Rep. Wilhemina Delco receives an honorary master's degree from St. Edward's. Delco,
the first black Austinite elected to a slate office, is well known for her ardent and untiring support of
education as the chair of the House Higher Education Committee. Below, Dr. Bill Quinn is recognized with
the annual Teaching Excellence Award.

Jell Wilson

103

�The 1989 graduating class
104

�JeftWilson

105

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                    <text>����1988
TOWER
ST. EDWARD'S
UNIVERSITY
AUSTIN, TEXAS

��OPENINGJj

�4 OPENING

�DIVERSE CROWDS!!!
St. Ed's the school on the Hilltop. The student body although
small is very diverse. Students attending St.Ed's come from as far as

India or as close as down the street. St. Ed's has the unique ability to
have a community with many different small groups willing to work
together to make the University a more enjoyable place for all. The
students of St. Ed's represent the quality students that, the other
in Austin wished it could have.

OPENING S

�6 OPENING

�St. Ed's
Students
Samara Flener and Dawn D.1rilek (above
left) check out the 86-87 Yearbook.

Dino Varzuela (above) shows the proper
technique in swallowing a whole slice of
piz za. The girls basketball team (above
right) celebrates their latest win. Megan
Watson and Sherri Greffith (middle
right) take a moment from their busy
Halloween festivities to pose for a

picture. Manny (right) camps out in the
bottom floor of M oody Half to do some

studying.

OPENING 7

�Students in Action

BOPENING

�Some students find that
the best action is inaction. David
Kinsey (above left) proves this point
well with one of his usual afternoon
naps. In contrast Jeff Wilson and
Randy O 'Reilly (far left and upper
right) find a smile in doing an afternoon worth of work. Some students
on the other hand enjoy involving
themselves in extracurricular activities
such as Festival of Lights (above) and
cheering on the basketball team. Their
is an exception to every rule though
and Thomas Bolin (left) points out that
some of the best extracurricular
activities have nothing to do with the
University at all.

OPENING9

�PHOTO BY: THERESA STfffECK

St. Ed's

Faculty

IOOPENING

��ACADEMICS

��Theatre

Charlie's Aunt
Cast of Characters
Jack Chesney...... ............................... }ames Venhaus

Brassett ...... ..... .............................. .... ........ Ron Hayes
Charley Wykeham ............................... Gino Chelakis
Lord Fancourt Babberley....................... Philip No len
Sir Francis Chesney ................ Cary Gunnar Bergman
Stephen Spettigue .................................. Dick Sargent

Donna Lucia D'Aivadorez.............. Denise Odom
Ela Delahay...................................... Gale Warren
Amy Spettigue ..... .... ..... ..... ..... ..... ... Sherri Griffith
Kitty Verdun ............................... Kristina Steward
Understudy to Mr. Sargent .................. Ron Hayes
Female Understudy ...................... Susan Loughran

�ACADEMICS 15

�Fiddler on The Roof
CAST OF CHARACTERS

Tevye, The Dairyman............................ Rodney Rincon
Golde, His Wife.......................................... Dixie Smith
Tzeite/, His Daughter...........................Cynthia Haskett
Hodel, His Daughter....................................Ana Torres
Chava, His Daughter........................Christine Gillespie
Shprintze, His Daughter............................ Gale Warren
Bielke, His Daughter............................. Merissa Marion
Yente, The Matchmaker........................ Katie Blackwell
Motel, The Tailor......................................Greg Magyar
Perchik, The Student................................ james Rippee
Lazar Wolf, The Butcher......................... Gino Chelakis
Mordcha, The lnnkeeper.............................. Ron Hayes

Rabbi..........................................james Venhouse
Mendel, His Son ............................ Peter Beilharz
Avrahm, The Booksel/er.................james Remitz
Nachum, The Beggar......................Andy Herrera
Grandma Tzeitel............................ Valerie Blythe
Fruma-Sarah....................................... Shari Getz
Constable .....................................Mike Hamilton
Shaindel, Motel's Mother............ Darlene Krenek
Sasha .............................................../avier Salinas
Yuri........................................................jeff Kloc
Fyedka....................................... james McGowan
Anya........................................janet Hemingway
Caroi................................................Christe Orth
Rifka....................................... Gaynelle Caldwell

Mirala ........................................ Mary Pat Helton
Rache/................................................Ji/1 Duggan
John, The Baker................................. Kenny Attal

Yussel, The Fishmonger.................. Brendan Hall
Fiddler...........................................Celeste Guinn
Two Boys............ David Di 8/asio, Karsten Sethre
Female Understudy.......................Melba Mishler

16 ACADEMICS

�ACADEMICS 77

�Man of Mode

Cast of Characters
Dorimant................................................................ Philip Nolen
Handy................ ..................... .............................. Brendan Hall
Orange Wom an ...... ........................................... Katie Blackwell
M edley......... ... .... ... ....... ................................... .....}ames Rippee

Young Bellair... ....... ....... ... ....... .............................. Greg Magyar
Lady Townley... ... .... ... ... .... ........................... ....... ... . Dixie Smith
Emilia .... ... .......... .......... ... ..................... ...... ... Christine Gillespie
O ld Bellair....................... ... ................ .... ............ Mike Hamilton
Miss Loveit.. ...... ... .............................. ....... ........ Cynthia Haskell
Pert.................................. .... ............ ....... ............. Va lerie Blythe
Be/lin da ....................... .............................. .............. Yve tte Brun
Busy............................................................... ........ Gale Warren
Harriet ........................................................ .. Kathleen McClaine
Lady Woodviii....................................................... . Barbara Tutt
Sir f opling f lutter.................................. ............... Gino Chelakis
Sm irk...
.. ............................................................. je ff Vance
Servants/ Footmen/Equipage .............................. ... Pe ter Bei/harz
Chuck Goodin, joe Green
Prologue....... ...................... . Gaynelle Caldwell, Gino Chelakis,
joe Green, Me rissa Keyes,
Me lita Mo rga n, M ichael Wong

18 ACADEMICS

��THEATRE
Behind the Scenes

20 ACADEM ICS

�ACADEMICS 21

�HILL TOPPER CHOIR

21 ACADEM ICS

�ACADEMICS 23

�Honor's Night
Originated by the Brothers of Holy Cross, Honor's Night
is one of the oldest ceremonies at St. Ed's. Students are
recognized for their outstanding work in various
academic areas. Actit'e seniors and involved
underclassmen reap the rewards of their hard work for
the year. It is a time feel proud of one' s efforts, to thank

those that made them possible, and to begin reflecting
on the year, and for many the years gone by.

14 ACADEMICS

�ACADEMICS 25

�CAMPUS
STAFF

��Physical Plant

28 ACADEMICS

�ACADEMICS 29

�Advising Center

Counseling Center

30 ACADEMICS

�University Relations

Photo Lab Interns

ACADEMICS 31

�Business Office

job Bank

32 ACADEM ICS

�Registrar's Office

ACADEMICS 33

�Reunion
Change. That sums up the Reunion this yea r. The
Reunion became part of ARA foo d ser vices and with

that some minor adjustments had to be made. The
hours the Reunion would be open were cut down
but students were now able to buy pizzas with there
m eal ca rds instead o f ea ting in the ca fe teria. In all
the students didn 't seem to mind the changes at all.

34 ACADEMICS

�ACADEMICS 35

�Student
Organizations

��Student Activities Council
Music Festiva l, Diez Y Seis Celebration, the
Hallo ween Ca rnival, and m ore. Thank you SAC.

The Student run Activities Council had another
highly productive yea r. Student volunteers produced an eventfilled, funtime yea r for the entire

St. Edward's campus. Although their events only
last a fe w hours, the time and planning they put in
was grea tly appreciated. The SAC coordinators

were:

Music- Rob Detweiler
Dance- Christy Lane
Multi-Cultural- Lynette Perez
Ideas &amp; Issues- Howard Kainer
Special Events- Mary Kay Misko
Films- Alicia Keil
Publicity- Shelly Pipes
Travel- Todd Doss

38 Student O rga niza tions

�Student Organizations 39

�40 Student Organizations

�Student Organizations 41

�42 Student O rganizations

�Student Organizations 43

�44 Student Organizations

�Student Organizations 45

�46 Student Organiza tions

�Student Organizations 47

�Student's Association Inc.

48 Student Organizations

�Student Organizations 49

�Student Leadership Training
The Student Leadership Or·
ganiza tion recruits and deve/opes
current and potential stydent
leaders. The training program,
which consists of beginning

m embers, is run by a team of
students who ha veleadership
experien ce on campus. An advisory board of students, faculty

5 0 Student Organiza tions

and sta ff exists to oversee the
organiza tion and plan long-term
goals. Activities include intense
weekend retrea ts and wo rkshops
during the year which revolve
around topics like e ffective communica tion, retention techniques
and handling stress. The Student
Leadership Training Program is
headed
Dr. Bill

�Student Admissions Foundation

The Student Admissions Foundation, over 40 members strong
always ready and willing to help
out, is a volunteer organization

that is designed to assist the SEU
Admissions staff. Throughout the
year Foundation members are
kept busy with various projects.
Such projects include SEU Week-

ends in November and April, TelA-Student held in November and
February, and Campus Tours for

SEU visitors. Advisor, Betty
Gibbs stated that "student particimakes all the difference in
the success of our recruiting
projects. It is important to prospective students to hear from
someone who has recently been
in their position, chose SEU and
made that choice."

�Academy of Science
Over the past year the Academy of Science kept

it's twenty members busy with many project and
events. Academy members participated in workdays, a back-to-school outting, plant sales, the
Halloween Carnival, a Fall Forray to the Enchanted
Rock, a Christmas Party, the Texas Academy of

Science m eeting, a Spring Break trip to East Texas,
Special Olympics, judged a Science Fair at St. l.ouis
Catholic School, and ended up the year with their
annual Bioph ysnik at Zilker Park. The Academy was I
led by ad visoor Dr. jimmy T. Mills, President Kelli
Vallejo, vice president Lisa Nolen, secretary/treasurer Rita Moreno and historian Louis Patino.

51 Student Organizations

�TSEA

TSEA the Texas Student Education Association is an edu·
cation based organization. Those involved in TSEA are educa·
lion majors. TSEA promotes the developement of teaching

skills through workshops, conventions, and campus activities.
In order to raise funds to attend the annual state convention
TSEA members sponsored a booth at the Halloween Carnival
and held various fundraisers throughout the year. TSEA did

quite well at the State convention this year. SEU members
were elected to both district and state positions.

Student Organizations 53

�Pre-Law Society

Criminal justice

54 Student Organizations

�Delta Sigma PI

Alpha Phi

Student Organizations 55

�Accounting Club

International Club

56 Student Organiza tions

�Photo Society

Art Guild

Student Organizations 57

�Student Publications
Student Publications encompases a wide variety of
people and experiences. The Publications office houses
the creative works of The Everyman (and Woman) Liter-

ary Magazine, The Hilltop Views bi-weeekly newspaper,
and The Tower yearbook. Throughout the year students
are in and out of the office sharing their creative abilities,
knowledge and skills in writing, layout designs, and photograph taking. Those involved in the three publications
work throughout the year conjuring up new ideas, stories,
and layout designs. Student publications give you a
chance to share your ideas, views, and kno wledge with
the campus community. The Publications staff is one that
spent countless hours working day and night to keep you
in fo rmed of campus events and news, and also one that
gives you lasting mem ories o f SEU.

58 Student Organizations

�Student Organizations 59

�60 Student Organizations

�Student Organizations 61

�Outdoor Recreation Club

MASO

6 2 Student Organizations

�Pax Christi

Hunger Awareness Organization

Student Organizations 63

�Dorm Activities Board

popular saying among the Dorm
Activities Board members. DAB is
an organization designed to
sponsor different events for the

dorm residents. DAB not only

sponsored events but they co·
sponsored events with other
campus organiza tions. Some of

the even ts sponsored and cosponsored by DAB included a
Drive-in Movie and Hotdog Bash,

a Christmas party, a trip to Six
Flags, workshops with the Counseling Center, and an ente rtainer
for SEU Weekend. DAB's officers for the year were, Cary

Jessen as chairperson, Laura
Giardina &amp; Va lerie Straub as
secretaries and Pe te Erickson as
advi or.

64 Student Organiz ations

�Student Organizations 65

�Resident Hall Staff
The Resident Hall Sta ff, headed by BR.
john Thornton is always there when you
need them . Whether you need a lightbulb,
change, or just some one to talk to. The RA 's
are a group of people who watch o ver the
dorm s and keep the peace, solving an y crisis
that m ay arise. The RA 's also plan various
dorm events to make everyone feel comfort·
able and right at hom e. RA 's are, in a sense
the unifying factor in the family feeling you
get while living in the dorm s. The RA 's all

work together, sharing ideas, but not only
with each other, with dorm residents as well.
They are always listening to residents odeas
and iplem enting them with ideas of their
own. So the next time you see your RA, say
thanks!

66 Student O rganizations

�Student Organiza tions 67

�STUDENT
LIFE

��Students

70 STUDENT LIFE

�STUDENT LIFE 71

�72 STUDENT LIFE

�STUDENT UFE 73

�Music festival
just like a Saturday in the park. The SAC Music
Committee sponsored the 1st St. Ed's Music
Fest. It was a fun filled afternoon with students

playing games, listening to music, and just
having fun. The master minds behind the
whole e11ent were Rob Detweiler and Tom
Bolin. The two almost closed the show because
of oncoming rain, but with a little luck, and a
lot of prayer the rain held until just after the

final band left the stage. Going to a Catholic
school does have its benefits!

74 STUDENT LIFE

�STUDNET LIFE 75

�Music Festival

76 STUDE T LIFE

�STUDENT LIFE 77

�Registration
Do you have the correct six digit number on your registration card? Is this your correct address? Can I
please see your validated student I. D. Welcome to the age o f registration by computer. Students enjoyed a
quick and easy registration this year. The three year old computer system for student registration has all the
kinks worked out of it and students are in and out in les than 15 minutes! If only books could be bought by
computer too. With so many students finishing registration in such short periods of time the bookstore
becomes heavily backed up with students buying books and supplies for the upcoming semester. Well at
least waiting in one line is better than two.

78 STUDENT LIFE

�STUDENT LIFE 79

�Christmas

80 STUDENT LIFE

�Festival of Lights

Festival of Lights is quickly becoming
one of St. Ed's most popular traditions. Every
year just before Christmas students, faculty,

and neighbors of the St. Ed's community
come out to sing songs of Christmas cheer
and watch as St. Ed's lights up Main
building with enough lights to be easily seen
from North Austin! St. Ed's Christmas gift to
all of Austin, Festival of Lights.

STUDENT LIFE 87

�Friendly
Faces of

82 STUDENT LifE

�STUDENT UFE 83

�The Cafe
The dorm student's nightmare, the ARA
cafeteria. The cafe has been the center of bad jokes,
student horror stories, and other forms of abuse for

years. The question though is still unanswered, "is
the cafeteria food really that bad?"

84 STUDENT LifE

�Scarborough
Phillips Library
Home of the nerd, never. The library is one of the busiest buildings on

campus. Students have found the library
useful for not only research, but for study- _ ing, a quiet place to write, or even a nice
~

place to take a snooze. As every semester
winds down the library picks up. Students
with papers to write and exams to study
for flood in and camp out until the library

closes which at times can be as late as 1
or 2 in the morning. Students have found
the library a good friend if they treat it
right and use it correctly.

STUDENT LIFE 85

�Before Class Blues!

Art

Freshman Studies
Spanish
U.S. History
Economics
86 STUDENT LIFE

�Computer
Science

Business
Sociology
Journalism

STUDENT UFE 87

�The m en 's baske tball team didn 't do to
well in conference play this year, but
they did have a fe w good hot shots
(photos abo ve). Baseball m eanwhile hiJd a
wind up iJs conference play wound down
(right).

SEU SPORTS
The 1st St. Ed's bonfire was a huge success this year. Students
watched merrily as firefighters controlled the blaze (below
right). The cheerleaders (below) took the liberty of lighting the
fire with a dummy of arch-rival St. Ma ry's mascot, the Rattler!
PHOTO BY: KURT BlOCHER

�soccer teammates play.
SfU students (above left) relax while
watching a soccer game. "Is that beer or
soda in those cups boys?"

HAVE SPIRIT!!!!

A new and welcome member of the St. Ed's
cheering section this year was the SfU
mascot (Pictured below). The big question
on campus was, "is the mascot a ram or a
~w

STUDENT LIFE 89

�ARA
Reuion

�STUDENT LIFE 91

�Social Life

92 S TUDENT liFE

��Pancake
Dinner
The Dorm Acti.-ities Board
(DAB) sponsored many activities this
past year, one of which was the

pancake dinner. Dorm residents
were invited to the cafeteria alter
the bonfire to enjoy a meal of fresh

made pancakes and waffles. The
nig ht was capped off with " m ak e
your o wn sundaes. " Students
returned to their rooms to await the
warm feeling of waking up with ice

cream, chocolate, fudge, pancakes
and syrup in their tummies the next
morning .

9~

STUDENT LIFE

�1st SEU
Bonfire

STUDENT LIFE 95

�The Dorms
Home Sweet Home!

PHOTO BY: T.J. MARSHA.LL

96 STUDENT LIFE

PHO TO BY:KA.Y TRIGG

�STUDENT UfE 97

�AT

ST. ED'S
The annual Halloween Carnival and Dance
this year turned into a show of outrageous

and creative costumes. Students participated
in carnival games such as the ring toss, the
tricycle race, and dart throw. After the
carnival students danced through the
witche hour and partied until sunrise.

98 STUDENT LIFE

�Shawna Carter (above) models the latest fashion craze for Halloween ~Br.
Randy O'Reilly, or should we say Miss O 'Rielly welcomes Cerri Weishaupt,
Marinelfe Hervas, and Esther Leanos to the Halloween carnival (below).
Terrorist, Christa Joyner (/eft) hunts down some students with her deadly
water pistol and camera. PHOTOS BY: T.J. MARSHAll

STUDENT LIFE 99

�Crazy Olympics
Soonsored By: SAC Special Events

100 STUDENT UfE

�Pre-Cinco DeMayo
Every year Cinco De-Mayo, an annual May 5th event is

celebrated on the St. Ed's campus. This year because of
the semester ending before the 5th the celebration was
moved ahead so all students on campus could enjoy the
festivities. A picnic was held (below) and games such as
the tostada toss (bottom) were played. Students were also
invitH to take a crack at the pinata's filled with candy
(right). Although slightly early the traditional Cinco De·
Mayo was celebrated by all.

STUDENT LIFE 101

�St. Ed's
Hits the
Big Screen

f'HOTO Bl'_. T./. MAR5HAH

102 STUDENT LIFE

�STUDENT LIFE 103

�Life on Campus

104 STUDENT UFf

��Campus Ministry

106 STUDENT LIFE

�Peace Day

STUDENT LIFE 107

�Name That Tune

The men in the shades, John Powell, Tom Bolin, and Richard
Bullock (above) were this years winners of the annual Name That
Tune contest. Marian Mitchell (right) was this yf'ars hostess and
coordinator of the show. The music man, Mike O 'Brien (below)
took charge of the stereo system and tested students memories on
some classic tunes.

I 08 STUDENT LIFE

�Mr. SEU

'

STUDENT Uff 109

�SPORTS...

.

��INTRAMURALS football
Since the beginning of St. Edward 's
University, student intramurals has
become a highly anticipated and
competitive part of the students
extra-curricular activities.

KURT BlOCHER

R.P.R. Itl

The treache rous and often times intimidating flag
foo tba ll competition has proven to be a popular
spo rt for the true jock as we ll as the pseudo-jock.

Champions-La M afia
Miami Ice
Clam Diggers
Old M ainge
Team Generic
Raging Woodies
Century Club
D estruction Inc.
0 -Kee-Pa Wa rriors

These intense athletes vie fo r the coveted intramural flag football
championship as well as the highly prized intramural t-shirt.

112 SPORTS

�Basketball

OI NO REYES

West Conference
It's Alive
The Hungovers
Flesh Monsters
juvenile Aligators
The Total Package
Floor Masters
East Conference
Dream Team
faculty Falcons
Keg Kats
Emilio 's Team
Hawks
X-men
Champions
Total Package

SPORTS 11 3

�WaterVo//eyba/1
Steve Rivas demonstrates the proper
form to put one in
the hoop while
floating in a tube.

.-------.-Mr. Raquetball, Pete
Ericson, been a dominant
force in this years
Intramural Racquetball
Compettition. Ericson,
shown here, watches
another one of his victims
fall by the wayside.

114 SPORTS

Raquetba/1

�Cross Country

Mens and Womens Cross Country
Women finshed first in District
Outstanding player-Maria Guerro
Most Improved-Rosario Rodriguez
Men finished second in District
Outstanding player-Cieto Chasarez
Most Improved-Dennis Sanchez

SPO RTS 115

�MEN'S TEAM
CLETOCHASAREZ FR.
MIKE FERRELL
FR.
JAMES HERRA
SO.
ROLANDO JIMENEZ SR.
LOSE LIMON
JR.
TREY MARTINEZ
FR.
PAUL ROLLING
FR.
DENNISSANCHEZ FR.
GILBERTO SOTO FR.

116 SPORTS

WOMEN 'S TEAM
BEATRICECORTEZ
FR.
MARIA GUERRERO JR.
ESMER LOPEZ
FR.
IRENE NINO
SR.
ROSARIO RODRIGUEZ FR.
SYLVIA TORRES
FR.
COACH : MIKE MCCRACKEN

�Soccer

SPORTS

117

�I 18 SPO RTS

�SPORTS 119

�SOCCER TEAM
j esus H ernandez

Chris Smilgin

SEU 1 In carnate Word 4
SEU 4 Texas Lutheran 1

Kelley Hargis

Scuddy Wagoner

SEU 1 St. Mary 's

Ma rga rita jimenez

j oe Champine

Matt Lankes

Godwin O naifo

jorge H ern andez

Ruben Turrubiates

j ohn Kress/ein

john Sebok

D avoud Fanailou

Clint Springer

john H ofstetter

Fernando Fontes

Pedro Serrano

o•

SEU 2 Pan American 6
SEU 17 Schreiner 0

SEU 0 Coli. of the SW 1
SEU 13 Schreiner 0

SEU 6 Baylor 1
SEU 1 Texas Lutheran 1

OT
SEU 6 St. Mary 's 0
SEU 4 Univ. of Dallas 1
SEU 0 Midwestern 10
SEU 4 Incarnate 4 O T
SEU 2 PanAmerican 2

SEU 0 Trinity 2
SEU 1 Trinity 3

SEU 11 Baylor 5
*Forfeit

Statistics for 'Topper Soccer 87-88
The St. Edward's soccer team ranked fourth in the nation in team offense.
The Hilltoppers scored 73 goals in 17 games for an average of 4.29 goals per game.
Individuals standouts on offense were Freshman Forward Matt Lankes and Junior
Midfielder Kelly Hargis. Lankes ranked sixth in NAIA with an average of 1.53goals per
game and ninth in points per game with a 3.53 average . Hargis was sixth in the NAIA with
an average of one per game.
All Conference honors goes to Godwin Onaifo and Kelly Hargis.
MVP·Godwln Onaifo
MIP·Margarito " Maggie"
Outstanding newcomer-Matt Lankes
110 SPORTS

�Volleyball

SPORTS 121

��SPORTS

123

�KAREN DUNN #9
CAROLYN RABALAIS
# 11
MICHELLE DEYBARRON0 # 14
LIANA TYLER # 15
}ODY FILLPOT #8
MARINA FLORES #8
KATHI STERN #12

124 SPORTS

�Women's Basketball

SPORTS 125

�126 SPORTS

�SPORTS

127

�1987-88 LADYHILLTOPPERS
CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL TEAM
MARGARETBUTLER •
JULIECHAVIN

MARTHA ESTELLE

~~~·

NORA FLORES
MARIA FLORES
MARIA GUERRERO
SHERRIEHAWKINS •
DELISA HOGAN
LISA HUDSON
MARIAN MICHEL
PATTIE PHILLIPS
MICHELLE POWELL
VERONICA SEGOVIA
HEAD COACH:
DAVID MCKEY

87'-88'STATISTICS FOR LADY TOPPERS
WON 29, LOST 4
SEASON RECORDS
MOSTWINS29
BEST WINNING PERCENTAGE 87.9%
MOST POINTS SCORED 2724
MOSTPOINTSPERGAME82.8%
MOST FGM : 1099
MOSTFGA: 2296
BESTFGPERCENTAGE47.9%
MOSTFTA: 831
MOST REBOUNDS: 1287
MOST ASSISTS: 473
MOST ASSISTS PER GAME: 14.3%
SINGLE GAME RECORDS
BESTFG PERCENTAGE:66.7VS. MHB
MOST ASSISTS: 29 VS TRINITY U.
INDIVIDUALS RECORDS
MOSTFGM : 169, S. HAWKINS
BESTFG PERCENTAGE: 54.9%, S. HAWKINS
ALL DISTRICT· S. HAWKINS, M. BUTLER
ALL CONFERENCE : S.HAWKINS, M. BUTLER,
L. HUDSON
M'ie·SHERRIE HAWKINS
MS HU$ILE.JULIECHAVIN
BE$INEWCQMER-MARTHAESTELLE

128 SPORTS

�Men's Basketball

SPORTS 12 9

�130 SPORTS

�ACADEMIC ALL

CO!'&gt;fERECE
CHARLESOBONA
RAYNARD THOMAS
PAUL HARTOG
JAY LEE HOBBS
RODNEY TERRY
MARK WOLF
DARRENARNECKE
ANDY DUDNEY
TEAMGPA : J.O

SPORTS 13 1

�1987-88 MEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM
MARK WOLF
DARREN TEMPLETON
JOEY SANDERS
DWIGHT WHITTINGTON
RODENY TERRY
ANDY DUDNEY
RAYNARD THOMAS
TONY GARDNER
CEDRIC WHITLEY
DARREN ARNECKE
JAY LEE HOBBS, JR.
DEVIN KAMPERT
PAUL HARTZOG
CHARLES OBONNA
ALEKSANDER NECAK
HEAD COACH :
TOM PATE

nsncs

87 .OO"ST A
FOR MEN"SBASKETBALL
WON 17, LOST 16
SEASON RECORDS
BESTFREETHROWPERCENTAGE:71 .4%
MOST ASSISTS:484
- - - - ' " ' - ' MOST POINTS SCORED: 665,JA Y LEE HOBBS
MOSTFIELDGOALS: 265, JAY LEE HOBBS
BESTFIELDGOALPERCENTAGE:82.2% DARRENTEMPLETON

132 SPORTS

�Golf

SPORTS

733

�! 34 SPO RTS

�Women's Tennis

1987-88SEUWOMEN'STENNISTEAM
MARLABYERS
LAURA LYON
WENDY HANSON
KATHLEEN RYDER
YVONNE RENDON

SUESCHREFFI..ER
TEAM AWARDS
MVP-YVONNE RENDON
MIP-MARLABYERS
COACH DIANE DANIELS
ASST.USABROUIER
FINISHED THIRD IN CONFERENCE

SPORTS

135

�Men's Tennis

1987-88 MEN 'S TENNIS TEAM
CARLBEL.FRAGE
ALEXALVAREZ
RANDYGEIR
GERALD CHAVEZ
SCOTT BRODY
SERGIO ARAGON
FINISHED SECOND IN CONFERENCE
MVP-&lt;::ARLBEL.FRAGE
M.lf- TODD DOSS
BESTSPORTSMANSHIP-ALEXAL VAREZ
COACHRUSSELLSTERNS
FINISHED SECOND IN CONFERENCE

136 SPORTS

�Baseball

SPORTS 137

�I JB SPO RTS

�SPORTS

139

�TEAM AWARDS
MOST VALUABLE HITTER-KARL RUDISON
MOSTVALUABLE PITCHER-JOE " POPS" DUNNIGAN
TOM HAMILTON AWARD-DUANE DEROUEN
NEWCOMEROFTHEYEAR-KEVINKARO

1987-SSHILLTOPPER BASEBALL TEAM
MARK DAVIS
DUANE DEROUEN
JEFFJACKSON
MAGGIE JIMENEZ
DAN KVETON
KARLRUDISON
KEVINKARO
JOHN NEMEC
JOE GONZALES
RODNEY KANA
HERB GONZALES
EDDIE SALAZAR
CHRIS FERGUSON
CHUCKlE ROBINSON
GREG HERMAN
GENE SALAZAR
JAMES RINN

140 SPORTS

COACH : JIM KELLER , ASSTS.JIM SHELTON ,JACK LALA
SEASON RECORD : WON 21 , LOST 29, TIED 1

�ST. EDWARD'S OUTSTANDING SENIOR ATHLETES

JULIE CHAVIN, A SENIOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION MAJOR FROM MCALLEN, PLAYED
BOTHVOLLEYBALLANDBASKETBALL.SHE
WAS AN ALL-DISTRICT PLAYER TWICE IN
VOLLEYBALL AND WAS NAMED MOST
VALUABLEPLAYERTHISYEAR. SHE ALSO
RECEIVED THE "MS. HUSTLE" AWARD IN
BASKETBALL.SHERANATTHENATIONAL
CROSSCOUNTRYTOURNAMENTFORSEU
AND WAS NAMED ALL FOUR YEARS TO THE
HEARTOFTEXASACADEMICALL
CONFERENCETEAM.

DARREN ARNECKE,ASENIOR BIOLOGY MAJOR
FROM CORPUS CHRISTl, WAS A CO-CAPTAIN ON
THE HILLTOPPERS BASKETBALLTEAMTHISYEAR.
HE WAS ON THE HEARTOFTEXAS ACADEMIC ALL
CONFERENCETEAMALLFOURYEARSATSEU.
ARNECKE PLAYEDONTWOCONFERENCE
CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL TEAMSWHILEAT
SEU, AND HE PLANS TO ENTER MEDICAL SCHOOL
IN THE FALL.

SPORTS

741

�PEOPLE•••

����������152 PEO PlE

�BEN AHARANWA

JULIANA BAlANDER

AlEJANDRO BAllESTERO

CARl BElFRAGE

PEOPlE 15.

�15 4 PEOPLE

�ALEJANDRO CARDENAS

MICHAEL CONNELL

CYNTHIA CORNELL

ADA DELAFUENTE

PEOPLE 155

�15 6 PEOPLE

�JAY GARZA

ALED GEIGER

RHONDA HALEY

LUPE HERRERA

PEOPLE 157

�15 8 PEOPLE

�SHELLEY KEMPf

KARENKEZELE

JOHN KING

CHRISTY LANE

PEOPLE 159

�160 PEOPLE

�}ERIEWNOW

DIANA LOWTHER

CARMEN MAVERICK

GRISELDA MENDOZA

PEOPLE 161

�162 PEOPLE

�RANDY O 'Rf/LL Y

CHERYL OTTINGER

LEONARDO PEREZ

ROBERT PRATER

PEOPLE 163

�1 6~

PEOPLE

�SANDRA SEGURA

RIDA SENHISSI HDRISSI

}ANINE SPIVACK

CUNT SPRINGER

PEOPLE 165

�166 PEOPLE

�RANDY WILHELM

JEFF WILSON

ELIZABETH YOUNGBLOOD

AFSHZADEH

PEOPLE 167

�Saint Edward's
Faculty
and
Staff

168 PEOPt£

�PEOPLE 169

�170 PEOPLE

�PEOPLE 111

���Stop listening in on m e!!

Rebekah Morris, a sweet person, if you can get past the
fact that she is compulisvly nea t.

Kirstin Griffin struggles to come to grips with the
fact that simply flattering the computer will do no
good.

174 Campus Comedy

�PEOPLE PICTURES

Yes, its the return of Bigfoot, the king of all

dorm rooms.

Amy Brooks and Bridget Keefer as they share a warm moment
seconds before they were consumed by a Texas sized cockroach.

Campus Comedy 17 5

�PEOPLE cont.

Br. Perron when he loses all o f his inhibitions. Can nothing
upset this m an?

I I I

I

II I I
II I I
II I I

SEU's mascott doing what he does best.

r~

--:ll'\?

T.}. Marshall holds next sem esters class
schedule as hostage until he gets a cup of
co ffee and better hours.

...

The choir~ in an historic m om ent, pledges the destruction of all Cabbage Patch d_o_ll_s -~~

I 76 Campus Comedy

�FANTASTIC FOOD FOTOS
Katie Blackwell shows how deeply
emotional she can get after watching
Godz ila vs. Bambi.

Greg Magyar performs perhaps the most difficult o f all table stunts,
the pushing of his lounge through not 1, but 2 13yers of paper nap-

kin.

Kurt Blocher as he tries desperately to keep
a candy bar from entering his body. Will he
succeed? You decide.

,...--.,.._..,,......--

A sample of fungi from the moon as seen by an Apolo

astronaut.

Camp us Comedy 177

�Mac King reveals to thousands just how Ronald Reagan has lived so long while staying so young looking after all
of these years. Film at 1 1. Now stay tuned for a special CBS 12 part mini·series on the life and times of Frank the
otter and his friends.

178

Campus Comedy

�COMEDIANS IN ACTION

And yet another comedian falls into the easy
temptation of abusing small dolls simply for the
sake of a few laughs. Please send all donations to
the Prevention of Doll Abuse. Together we can
win.

Jim Gober tries his hand at being a comedian at
the SEU talent contest.

Text, because I didn't have any photos to go
here and I was too lazy to take any ...
While everyone else in the yearbook was frantically working on
their portions of the yearbook with
T.}. standing over them with a
whip and laughing a lot, I was
sitting back and taking it easy. T.}.
was just joking when he said that
all sections had to be completed by
tomorrow morning under pain of
death. Ha, what a laugh I said and
went to the dollar movies and saw
a cheap slasher involving Mary
Lou Relton and several masked
people with long, sharp objects. I
had a great time. When I got back,
I noticed that there was a small
note on my desk from T.}. On it,

drawn in crude letters in motor oil
was the following message. " If you do
not finish your section by tomorrow
morning I know where you live and I
don 't want to have to use a baseball
bat to explain how urgent this request
is." The note and the fact that there
were quite a few holes punched in the
walls around the office, holes in con·
crete walls convinced me. Suddenly
realizing the importance of the situ·
aaon, I rushed to the computer and
started to compile my ucampus
Comedy"section. I was able to suslain myself throughout the night by
drinking large quantities of jolt cola
and Morning Thunder tea while in-

gesting pounds of M&amp;M's and five
gallonsofpopcorn. At about seven
that morning I was done and it felt
good that I could gather so many
photos of people acting and look·
ing like idiots. Meanwhile, back at
the Hall of justice, Wendy,
Marvin, and Wonder Dog await
the return of Aquaman .... But, I
digress. As I was saying, after years
of hard work and undying dedica·
lion, my section stood finished. 1
felt happy and fulfilled and so did
everyone else. That is they felt
happy until a six foot tall Cumby
with rabies and an Israeli submachine-gun entered the office and
asked for the editor....
Campus Comedy 179

�These photographs were left over.
I have no specific catagory that they
can go under and besides, all of this
typing takes up space so I have to
have less pictures. Have a fun day.
Even if you don't want to.
TAKE A

(31TE
ouT

0"

~~ M~

I

,. ••Sf'ICJOI)

s

RE,oRr Art'/ ,.,

Here we catch the Easter Rabbit red-handed, passing
out subversive literature to innocent college students.

Ac-r-•v•T~ ¥'1]1Clff

(...~~J-=7- 9_01S~

Agian, some evil presence has made
itself kno wn on campus through the

senseless mutilation of a harmless
poster. Ca n it be sloped?

180 Camp us Comedy

Winn er o f the best sign I have seen all day while traveling through
west Texas while on my wa y to the 1988 Austin Spam -A-Rama.

�person . If you
know, put the name on a 35 by 69 inch postcard and send
it to "Bob" c/o the Western Washington Mental Facility and
he will send you a fabulous pair of round trip tickets so the
Arctic Circle. Have fun kids.

What do you mean there is no class today.

Crap, I missed!!

\ .

Why can 't I play with the big boys dad!

Campus Comedy 181

��GRADUATION 183

�184 GRADUATION

�GRADUATION 185

�186 GRADUATION

�GRADUATION 187

�Congratulations to the
St. Edward's graduating
class of 1988
188 GRADUA TION

�GRADUATION 189

�CLOSING...

��How to Make a College Yearbook

Step 1
Get a rope, you 've made a mistake to
even try something like this!!!!!!

Step 2
Drink heavily.
You 'll need to overcome
the fear of what you 've

actually gotten yourself
into.

192 CLOSING

�Step 3

Brmg together as many people as you can to help.
(People pictured helped with this book.)

CLOSING 193

�194 CLOSING

�ClOSING 195

�Step 4
Take lots and lots of pictures.

/
196 CLOSING

�CLOSING 197

t

�198 ClOSI G

�Step 5
Invest in a coffee machine and radio. You 'll need
them to keep going through all hours of the night.

WARNING!!!!!!!
Don't look in a mirror at this point!

,...-...,......,

Step 6
There's only one thing left. The final page. This your

page. The only requirem ent is you have to leave
some kind of advice for people to live by.
GOODWCK,

�Coo, Coo, Cachoo, Mrs. Robinson.
jesus loves more than you will know.
·Simon &amp; Garfunkel·

This is where we walked, this is where we
swam. Take a picture here, take a souvenir
-REM-

Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream.
·Beatles·
Trust in your calling be sure your
So often tim es it happens that we live our lives in
calling 's true.
chains. And we never even know we have the key.
-REM-Eagles-

Remeber abou t the time when we
were remeberin ', remeber?
·Firehose-

I'm lakin ' my time, please
don 't rush me. Trying to sort
out somethings I didn 't know
exsisted.
-Little Feat·

Yo u ca n 'I always get what you want. But if
try sometime you just might find, you get
what you need.
-Rolling StonesImagine no possesions. I wonder if
you can. Nothing to kill or die fo r.
just a brotherhood of man.
-john Lennon-

The waaait is the hardest part.
-Tom Pett y-

-U2-

Don 't beleive in Modern Love.
-David Bowie-

-U2-

200CLOSfD

Superman and Green Lantern ain 't
got nothin ' on m e.
-Donovan-

But I still ha ven 't found what I'm looking for.

Leavin ' the city, got to get away.
-Canned Heat-

I took poison from the poison
stream and I floated outa here.

There is a deeper wave than this that you '
don't understand. There is a deeper
wave than this tugging at your hand.
·Sling·

But my dreams aren't as empty as my
conscience seems to be.
- Th e Who-

There are so many here among us that
fee l that life is but a joke.
-Bob Dylan-

�����</text>
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                    <text>��ST. EDWARD'S UNIVERSITY
1987 TOWER
SEPTEMBER 1986 - MAY 1987
AUSTIN , TEXAS

Pholo by KIRSTIN
GRIFFIN

OPENING NEW DOORS

�t

�Table
Of
Contents
OPENING

Pho1o by K/I?ST/N GRIFFIN

STUDENT LIFE

12

ACADEMICS

40

SPORTS

74

ORGANIZATIONS

108

PEOPLE

124

CLOSING

166

�BAWDY AND BAD -

MR. DOYLE CONTEST

�SPECIAL OLYMPICS FOR SPECIAL PEOPLE

This Founder's Day, the Academy of
Science coordinated a day of fun and
games for some very special children.
With the help from Circle K and SAC.
both children from The Texas School for
the Deaf and the Texas School for the
Blind participated in various events.
Some of these included relay races where
children ran from a pool to a bucket and
filling it by wringing out wet sponses, and
also a basketball toss. The day ended with
a large barbeque with hot dogs and soda.
The Academy of Science hopes to
make this an annual event to help the
handicapped and show they care. This is
just another example of how St . Edward's
students are continuing to open new
doors.

�GOLD OR GONG?
TALENTS STRUT THEIR STUFF!

�FACES

�- · ·- - · -

-

-

HALLOWEEN
HYSTERIA

��'TIS THE SEASON OF JOY

T~

I r:suval of Ughtt at Sl. Edward's h

*" ocuston that Is kxtlo.ed fo..w&lt;)rd to by
nUin)'

Autt~nllet

all year

~ng .

Howevtr

th•t yur the hghnng of the mam tKukhng

w•• s~c111 ~caute of the compW:11on of
the remodelmg of the mam Evt'ryone at
St l;dward't reCt'IVt'd a lor'tQ IW&lt;I!It'd g•fl
w ith thf: ~rung of the main •nd new

recreatiOn ct'nll:r
Ht"fc at~~~ fcosnval of Llghu. ttudentt.
f.culty. alumni. and cuy t~CIIIOft flood
"''lllltnil for the hghtt to bt swnchcd on
and the ur~•"i to btgm Art«wMdt.
tours ~&lt;~ol'ft' held of the- ~wly rcmockled
m.~1n. ~nd the~r wat 1 gre,u tense of the
Chrtfl~t •p•n• tn t"rryone

•

�Merry

Christmas

��I

STUDENT LIFE
1)

�LESS IS MORE
br HEATHER MCKISSICK

It's amazing when you talk to someone
who has lived in Austin just about their
entir e life and haven' t even hard of Saint
Edward's. Unfortunately. it is true that

of a ll for life outside of acade mia. He re.
there are no e laborate organizatio ns behind which we can hide our individual
identities. Our work and our play is assoour community here on the hill is o ft en
ciated with no one but ourselves. The soovershadowed by a muc h larger and cial activities we do e njoy are based o n
seemingly more glamorous university. our unique abilities to express our own
And when you t ell someone about Saint
ideas, quirks. and values. This stress upo n
Ed's, the fact t hat it is a smaller univers i- the individual s tude nt combined with the
ty ohen lead s them to believe that al- intimacy of our campus serves as premithough the quality of educatio n you re- um practice gro und for the infamous
ceive may parallel that of a larger school, " real" world. We are being prepared to
you are undoubtedly limite d in social op- hold our o wn, learning to interact with
portunities. I disagree.
people on all levels of the social stratisNo matter what the universit y, a s tu- phere . Where else c an you suffe r through
dent 's social life can be as e xciting, or a s a grue ling RCM conference and then head
s tagnanl. as he or she chooses to make it. over to the Re union for a cold one ··· with
Nevertheless, it is essential to redefine the professor! And hopefully. such genu·
the terms "socia l life" and "social oppor- ine soc ial sharing as is seen at Saint Ed·
tunit y" in order to understand exactly wads will provide an excelle nt example to
how a s tudents life a t Saint Edwards is the rest of the world when they see the
e nhanced rather than limited by its com- confide nce and pride of self-assured
paratively tiny size.
gradua tes making their way through the
A social life may be judged by some as confus ion of modern times. Product ive.
far as how many people you know or unique individuals whose social skills
friends you claim. Social success is often have been polished to near-perfect ion
weighed in terms of popularity. And a thanks to the specialize d and genuine
fantasti c socia l o pportunity may not ex- suppor t with which Saint Edward's Unitend far beyond a great party on Friday vers it y. small as it may be, has provided
night. But the n again. the spectrum of the m.
social success may be broadened whe n
you take into consideration the qualit y of
social interaction tha t is involved. Webster says "social" has something to d o
with natural growth among o the rs. and at
· Saint Edwards, social growth rathe r than
simple interaction is almost inevitable. A
students' social life at SEU reaches be yond casual inte ract ion among peers due
to the intimate atmosphe re t ha t we
share. Smalle r classes e ncourage discuss ion and even friendship between facult y
and students. And the limited number of
students assures a frie ndly. or at least
familiar face no matter where you may be
on campus. The re is a sense among everyone in the Saint Edwards communit y
that all things here are to be shared unit y
tha t all things here are to be shared by all.
But are we being she ltered? Does the
familiarit y and friendship that are c haracteris tic of a smaller schoo l somehow
blind us to t he realities of the big. bad
world? Granted. we are spared from milelong hikes from class to class and an occasional dose of intimidatio n may be
good for the soul, but learning to function
well among a s incere group of commilled
individuals may be the best preparation
pil&lt;ll&lt;&gt;$ by S~M~RA FlENER

��"

�MORE ST. EDWARD'S
HALLOWEEN HYSTERIA!

�FUN? . .. . .. YES!

"

�PROFESSIONALS? . . . NO!

"

�MID-WEEK BASHES WITH THE KILLER BEES,

ST. ED 'S STUDENTS
DAN E AWAY THE
MID-WEEK BLUES
•

�TRIK TRAX, AND THE URGE!

�DIEZ Y SEIS
MEXICAN INDEPENDENCE DAY CELEBRATION AT ST. ED'S

�2)

��,

�TOGA
TOGA
TOGA

�TOGA
TOGA
TOGA!

�"

�"

�JO

�And

SOPHOMORE
DANCE

11

��DAVE RUDOLPH

�,.

��ROYAL LICHTENSTEIN CIRCUS

�"

�SURF'S UP AT SEU

"

�JAMMIN'
AT THE BEACH

"

��ACADEMICS

��THEATRE

ONCE UPON A MATTRESS
THE MEDEA
THE MISER
THE MIRACLE WORKER

�MARY MOODY NORTHEN
THEATRE

011ce Upc11
a

Mattress
Jay Thompson, Marshall Barer
Dean Fuller and Mary Rodgers

lepf. JO • Ot:f. t.l

St. EDWARDS
UNIVERSTIY

�ONCE UPON A MATTRESS
Cast of Characters
(In order of appearance)

..... DAVID SCOT
. ....... .... VICTOR PENA
GAYNELLE CALDWELL
.. CHRISTIE ORTH
. MITCH BERRY
. COQUINA DUNN
....... SHARI GETZ
. SHERR! GRIFFITH
. .KATHLEEN McCLAINE

M INSTREL

PANTOMIME PRINCE .
PANTOMIME PRINCESS .
PANTOMIME QUEEN
WIZARD .. ..... .... .. ...... .

PRINCESS NUMBER TWELVE
LADY ROWENA
LADY MERRILL . .
LADY BEATRICE .
LADY MAYBELLE .
SIR STUDLEY
SIR HAROLD
SIR LUCE.
SIR CHAUNCEY .
PRINCE DAUNTLESS.
QUEEN AGRA VAIN .
LADY LARK EN .
KING SEXTIM US ..
JESTER . .

. .. GA YNELLE CALDWELL

... JAMES VENHAUS
.. ROBERT LONG

. ..... .. .. . VICTOR PENA
. .. . ................JAVIER SALINAS
. .... .. .. ... PETER BEILHARZ
.HEIDI SCHWARZENBART

.ADRIANNAGUERRA
. .. ARNOLD VILLARREAL
. CHUCK PULLIAM
. . . MIKE HAMILTON
. CYNTHIA HASKETT

SIR HARRY . .
PRINCESS \VINNIFRED
\VENCH... . . . . . . .

..........

. ....

THE NIGHTINGALE OF SAMARKAND .

MALE UNDERSTUDY .
FEMALE UNDERSTUDY . .

. . COQUINA DUNN
. CHRISTIE ORTH
. .NAT HAN GILLON
.CHRISTIE ORTH

�..

�Theatre Department Plans
To Expand
Theatre Director Susan Loughran has
high hopes that in the near future SEU will
build a new theatre to facilitate the ever
growing theatre department.
" The possibility of a new theatre,"
stressed Ms. Loughran " re mains just that,
a possibilit y. With a new fine arts building. students could be trained, taught,
perform, and build props. and costumes."
She gave some ideas of what a new
Fine Arts building might house. Some of
these additions would include~ a proscenium s tage, a black box theatre, fle xible
seat ing. a costume shop, sound proof
rooms, choral room. and maybe even a
dance studio.
It is already a thought of tearing down
the old costume shop a nd making the old
bookstore into the new costume shop.
"The current theatre is an Arena Theatre, which limits the production the department can put on." added Melba
Mishler, Business Manager. She says
some productions require a "procenium''
theatre.
MS. Mishler says. "If additional theatre
opens up to s tude nts it would provide
better facilities for training, increased
c urriculum. re hearsal space, lighting set
design require me nts and interaction wit h
the performing community of Austin.
This year the program had 6S s tudents.
Next year the faculty and staff are expecting to have SO s tudents. This list of
ideas seem to echo the growth of the
theatre de partme nt
iust another way
St. Edward's is trying to ope n new doors
for it's students and it's communit y.
Once upon a time. in a faraway kingdom
where ONCE UPON A MATTRESS took place. Well, not this year. This
year it took place right here at the Mary
Moody Northen Theatre. It was an adult
musical version of THE PRINCESS AND
THE PEA. The show was full of wacky
antics of the princess Winnifred and her
court. The SEU theatre was filled with
laughter during this c harming performance, as well as the crazy performances
by the SEU students.

��.,

���)1 .-\H\' )100()\'

~OHTtU: ~

Till-:.-\ TN I-:

The

Hedea
\ 1-. ' II t._ J 1 1--.

�THE MEDEA
Cast

NURSE to Medea.
TUTOR to Medea's children .
TWO CHILDREN of Medea and Jason .

.DlXIE SMITH
. ..... ARNOLD VILLAREAL
. ..... MATTHEW BREWER
STEPHEN BREWER
CHORUS OF CORINTHLAN WOMEN ...................... J[LL GILES
KATHALEEN McCLAINE
DENISE ODEM
YVETTE BR
MEDEA, princess of Colchis and wife of Jason ........ CAROL VANNATTA
CREON, King of Corinth .
. .CHUCK PULLIAM
JASON, son of Aeson, King of lokus ..

.BRIAN PATRICK CLARKE

AEGEUS, king of Athens. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ......... GARY BERGMAN
MESSENGER .
. .............. TOM LANDEN
SOLDIERS ... ....................... ........ ...... ... RON HAYES
JOHN PAGE SPEARS II
UNDERSTUDY TO JASON .
. .................... DAVID SCOT

"

�,.

�55

�"

�Brian Patrick Clarke. known by Ge n·
eral Hospital fans as Grant Putnam.
was a guest star at the Mary Moody
Northen Theatre for the Greek traged y. THE MEDEA. Clarke, who has

lli4rS•····
illlVW
11311Z :~ .•.•

played off broadway and in the mid-

wesr. was very e xcited about being _in
his fir st Gree k tragedy. He played
Jason. Medea's husband.
As for the gues t-anis t program a t
S1. Edward's , Clarke s tated , "II is a
terrific program. I have been treated
so we ll, il's be en d e lightful. It is also
good for the stude nts to have contac ts
with professional actors, although the
students themselves are very profe ss ional. More than some " pros " themselves."
Br ian had never had an y ac t ing exper ience until he starte d doins com·
mercials . Whe n he was 24, he left
Oklahoma with SSOO and arrived in
Hollywood. He found a job as a Universal Studios' tour suide and later
starred in commercials. Who knows
maybe someday one of our s raduated
St. Edward's theatre s tude nts will become fatllOlls, like Clarke , a nd pa y us
an e nlertainins and re ward ins visit.

�MARY MOODY NORTHEN
THEATRE

TME MISEK
by MOLIERE
adapted by Miles Malleson

FEBRUARY 17-MARCH 1

.&amp;..
StEDWARDS
UNNERSTIY
AU S T IN • T E X A S

58

�THE MISER
Cast
(in the order of appearance)

VALERE (in love with Elise) .
. ...... ...........}AMES VENHAUS
ELISE (Harpagon's daughter) ...... ....... ... . . .
. .CHRISTIE ORTH
. ......... DAVID SCOT
CLEANTE (Harpagon's son) .
HARPAGON (the Miser) ................ .. ........... KEVIN COONEY
. .... ... ... GARY G. BERGMAN, JR.
LAFLECHE (Cleante's servant).
MASTER SIMON/SERVANT (a moneylender) ... ........... j iM REMITZ
FROSINE (a scheming woman).
. ... . . CAROL VANNATTA
JACQUES (Harpagon's servant) .
. ... . . TOM LANDEN
FIRST SERVANT ... ... .......... ... . . ........... ..... SHARI GETZ
SECOND SERVANT.
. .... CHRISTAL NOLTE
MAR JANE (in love with Cleante).
. ... KATHLEEN McCLAINE
j USTICE OF THE PEACEISERV ANT .
. .............}ON HAWKINS
CLERK TO THE JUSTICE/SERVANT.
. HEIDI STUDEBAKER
SEIGNEUR ANSELM/SERVANT .
. ...... jOHN SPEARS
UNDERSTUDY TO HARPAGON .
. .... ARNOLD VILLAREAL

�THE MISER. a class ically hilariOt.Js farce
by Moliere, began the Spring se ason off
for the SEU the atre. The play was gue sr
directed by ac tor/ director Rodney Rincon, whose performance credits include

stints at The Alley The atre, the Houston
Grand Opera. the Ne w York Shake speare
Public Theatre and Julliard's American
Opera Center.
THE MISER also featured a guest anist
Kevin Coone y who is an accomplished actor in film, television and state. His movie
credits include," The Trip to Bountiful"

and "North Dallas fony. " This production
was truly an adventure to se e , and filled
with gre at tale nt.

60

�61

�61

�"

�MARY MOODY NORTHEN
THEATRE

THE

MIRACLE
WORKER
by WILLIAM GIBSON

MARCH 31-APRIL 12

..

�THE MIRACLE WORKER
Cast
(in order of appearance)

HELE N KELLER.
. .................... ANA TORRES
MARTHA .
. ..... MELITA MORGAN
PERCY .
. .JAKOB EAVES
CAPTAIN KELLER .
. . . ........ jiM FLETCHER
KATE KELLER .
. ........... DIXIE SMITH
VINEY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • • . . . . .. .
. ..... DENISE ODOM
JAMES KELLER .
. .. .. .... .. . . . . ... .. .......... MITCH BERRY
AUNT EV .. . ............. . .... ... . .. . . .. ..... . KAREN URHBROCK
MILDRED KELLER .
. ........ TAMARA CANUP
ANNIE SULLIVAN .
. .... )ILL GILES
MR. ANAG NOS.
. . . . . . . . . . . •.
. . ARNOLD VILLAREAL
BLI ND GIRLS: SARA.
.KAT! EAVES
CINDY .............. .. .
.. VALERIE BLYTHE
BEATRI CE .
. .... KATHLEEN TODARO
ALI CE.
.. .... KRI STINA STEWARD
BELLE, the dog. . . . . .. .. . . . . . . .. ..
.. ......... TRAVIS
Voices from the past:
j immie Sullivan .
Old Crones ............... . . .
Doctor .
Man's Voice.

. Shaun Eaves
. ...... Yvette Brun
Lana Diete rich, Linda Eaves

.. .john Spears
. ............. . Charles Ney

Incidental Mu sic by Jim Fritz ler

65

�..

�Ana Torres and Jill Giles held the lead
roles of Helen Keller and her teacher. Annie Sullivan, in the story of the deaf and
blind Helen struggling to understand language. The shows performances received
standing ovations because of the emotion
between teacher and student, as well as
protective family and daughter. Together. the performances were entirely captivating. ·
Other noteworthy performances by
Jim Fletcher and Dixie Smith as Captain
and Kate Keller. as well as Mitch Berry's
role as James Keller, provided the real life
energy against which the story of Helen
Keller could be told.

67

�..

�"

�SPECIAL PEOPLE
JIM CARROCCIO returns 10 St. Edward's Univer·
s ity's Mary Moody Northen Theatre after a tl&gt;ree
year absence during which he served as Scenic
Art ist at the U.T. Performing Ans Center and utab·
lished his own Design Studio here in Austin. He h,u
designed the productions of THE MOST HAPPY
fEllA and GOOD NEWSI for the Zilker Park Sum·
mer Musical and THE SlEEPING BEAUTY BAllET for
U.T. His designs for A MURDER IS ANNOUNCED.

PRESENT lAUGHTER, and WHODUNNIT at Zachary

Scan Theatre center have earned him ACOT
;~wards for St&gt;t Design. and his set for COME BACK
TO THE S i DIME JIMMY DEAN JIMMY DEAN is
nornin;u ed for this year's ACOT Award. He also
desigMd ZSTC's ~eduction of SEASCAPE and
tooredwi!ht hesh.owinEnglandas TechnicaiDin:•c·
tor. This past yearJim receivedh.ollOI'"awardinFine
An s from the Austin Chapter of the Amerl,an lnni·
tute of Ar,huect s.

BROTHER: JERALD ENOS. is a theatre faculty
member a t St. Edward's and is a member of the
Congregation of Holy Cron . Brother Enos is a graduate of U.(.l.A. with an MFA in Product ion Des ign.
He has directt'd thl' MMN theatrl' pi'"Odu,tion of
THE MUSIC MAN and des igned thl' lights for BUS
STOP. THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE. and The
Texas Catholic Sesquict'ntennial Pageant. Prior to
coming to Austin, Brother Enos worked on proje c ts
with M.G.M. and Universal Studios. thl' televis ion
pi'"Oductions of HILL STREET BLUES and FAME, along
with touring companies of 4nd STREET and CATS.
Followinggraduatl'nudies hewasinvolvedwiththl'
Olympic Aru Festival u auociatl' designl"'' for vis·
iting compan ies from Japan, Brazil. Holland. Polland.
and China.

JIM FRITZlER received his BA from Haning Col·
lege inthedoublemajorofDrama·S~ech. English

linguistics Educ ationandcameto thl' Univen it y o f
Texas at Austin to re,l'iVl' his MFA in Direc ting.
Prior tO this Jim was trained as a classical pianist
undl'rprivateinstructionin(olorado and Nebraska.
HehascreatedcomJ&gt;OSitionsandsounddl'signsfor
many thutre. dancl' and film productions from
coast to coast including. most recently, GATHERING. a dance collaboration with Ka y Braden. the
premlereofthedance/ performancepil'Cl' inwhich
hl' also ac tt'd and dirl'ctt'd SEVEN WERE HANGED
andtheupc omingproductionatliveOakThl'atrl'in
January of THE BLOOD KNOT whichi hl' wtll ~
dtrl'c tmg.

SUSAN LOUGHRAN. begnmng hl'r eighth yl'ar at
St. Ed's. bringsa wealth of theatrical l'Xpl'r ience to
her J&gt;OI IIIOO as ArtiSi ic Director o f the MMN The·
atre . She receive dherB.A. from Webstl"!' Untversi
1y Theatre Consl"!'vatory in St. l ouis and a n M.A.
from South-Wn t Te u sStat t' Untvl"''sity. As a n a c·
tress she has worked throughoot !he U.S. and Canada. ap~anng m roles as dtverse as Bdhe Dawn in
BOfi:N YESTERDAY and Oltvta m TWELFTH NIGHT.
Most recent directing credus indude OEATHTRAP,
BORN YESTERDAY. at the MMN. and WHODUNNIT
forZSTC. InasddlltOnto herwork asAnis licDtrec·
tor. she reachl'sa vartet yofsubjec uat SEU. tncludmg ac ltng.costurne. and makeup.

70

�ANN MEANS b a graduate of U.T. with
an MFA in CoJturne Design. Ms. Means
received her MA and BA with an ernpha·
sis in Actins and Oral Interpretation at
S.W. Missouri State Universit y, where she
also undentudied the role of MEDEA. Ann
d uisoed the coJturnes for U.T.'s produc·
t ion of OEDIPUS REX. She wu anistant
Costume Designef" for the film NOON
WINE and has desisned the costumes for
numerous Aullin Productions includins
EUBIE!. MARAT SADE. TERRA NOV A. and
THE OUILTERS fo.- which she recei11ed u
Austin Circle of Theatres nomination.

MICHELE NEY is wockins towards a M.F.A. degree
in design at U.T. She has s tudied Costume Design at
Southern Methodist U. and the UniYersity of Illinois
where she received a B.F.A. in Theatre. In 19S1.she
won the National Costume Desisn Award for her
desisns of Goldsmith's SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER.
Last year. Ms. Ney wu a SEU faculty member and
desisned the costumes for the production of THE
MUSIC MAN and El GRANDE DE COCA·COLA. She
has rect-iYed nominat ions from the Austin Circle Of
Theatres for hef" designs foc RUDDIGORE and PRIVATE liVES.

MELBA MARTINEZ MISHLER is a St. Ed·
ward"s faculty member and Business
Manaser fo.- the MNN. Melba teaches
Act ins and Arts Administration. She
holds aMAin Theacre from the UniYersicyofWyomins. whereshe receiYed the
Elbogen Graduate Teachins Award. She
hasalwstudiedthe"liYely Arts'" in l ondon. Ensland through Ekerd Collese. l ast
summer. Melba appeared as Helsa Den
Docp in the MNN production of DEATH·
TRAP foc which she receiYed an ACOT
nomination. She receiYed the Aust in Cir·
de Of Theatres Ben Actren Award in
the role of Serafina in the Capitol Cicy
Playhouse production of THE ROSE TA·
TOO.

CHARLESNEY is an assistant professor in theatre
at SEU. He is currently working on his PH.D from,
the UniYersity o f Illinois. He received his MFA in
Directins from Southern Mechodist UniYersit y in
Dallas where he was s iven the Bob Hope Out nandins Graduate Student award. He receiYed a BFA
from Illinois Wnleyan UniYenity. The Manhattan
Clear ins House, a perfocming arts center in Dallas
was founded by Ney in 1978. While there he con·
ceiYed and produced Dallas" first Contemporar y
Dancefestivalanddirected theSouthwenpremier
of MISS MARGARIDA'S WAY. O ther direct ins credits include. TURCARET. ON GOLDEN POND, THE
MAIDS. THE GOOD DOCTOR. THE FATHER. THE
PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE. and El GRANDE DE
COCA-COLA.

BROTHER GERALD MULLER is beginninghis ninthyearatSEUasmusicdirector. During his 40 years as a Brother of
Holy Cron, he has graduated from Notre
Dame. received his Maner"s from VanderCook College of Music and worked
with some of the linen choral condue1ors
in the world. last summer he went to
Wales to study with two contemporary
composef"s. Alun Hoddinnott and William
Mathias. He huwr ittenahundredbooks
for youns rtaders Including a biography
of Martin luthef" King. Jr. and presently
sings with the Austin Choral Union.

SARA MEDINA-PAPE is the Costumer for St. Edward"s MMN. She has studied at U.T. Austin where
she received anMFAincostumedesignandaBAin
Political Science. Sara has desisned the conumes
for produc tions such as. RAGS TO RICHES and BYE
BYE BIRDIE foc U.T.. and supervised the construe·
tion of the designs for the Paramount production of
DRACULA. Her moYie credits include work as
Wardrobe Desisner fOf" the Austin based film
BLOOD SIMPLE and as an Assistant Designer for
NOT FOR YOU.

RENATA POWERS SANFORD has been a member
of ACIOf"·s Equity since seYenteen and has per·
fOf"med in many Broadway shows- HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS. PLEASURES AND PALACES. SKY
SCRAPER and SWEET CHARITY. She has worked
with Bob Fosse, Michael Kidd. and other distin·
guished choreographers. Ms. Sanford hu choregraphed U"l ABNEII:. MUSIC MAN. CAMElO, ROAR
Of THE GREASEPAINT, BOYFRIEND. and HOW TO
SUCCEED IN BUSINESS. She is an SEU facult y mem·
ber and teaches point fOf" BALLET AUSTIN.

�G&lt;wu M:l or lkiMI

Po~lflt:·l

CI.Nh o1nd our llwo11rr1
Qwn S...un l~Moln.

Brian was bm'n In Gettsb!Jrg. Pennsyl·
vania and spent h•s early years in Mary·
land. New YOI"k and NOI"th C~rohna. His
interell in acting emerged when he at·
te nded Mineola School of the Theatre in
New YOI"k. At 15, Clarke moved to Shaker
Ht-lghu, Ohio, guduau·d in the top five
pncenr of his class and earned the disunctloo of bemg a National Merit Schot·
arsh•p Fin~list . hie awarded Clarke an
ac ademic sc hotarship and his B.A. was
complete in J h years.

.,.....,. " " "

"

CWi f'

Later. he obuined a }ob at a tOUt" guide
at Unlvert~l Stud~• and contacted agent
NlN Blanch.Md, who t ijMd him within
the hour. Cl.arl.e continues to wOf'k with
ac tlnj co•ch Vincent Chase By 1979. his
cMeer wo~s deckkdty go•"i to be ac tina
and he S40n beco~me an u1M In EIGHT IS
ENOUGH and DELTA HOUSE. co-IIMr ed

in such TV movies as THE GRACE tr:ELL Y
STORY and THE YEAGERS. and guest·
s tarr ed in such weekly series as ONE
DAY AT A TIME. FAME. KING's CROSSING
and o thers.
from January 198J ttvouah December
t985. Brian was a uar in ABC's GENERAL
HOSPITAL. as Granl Andrews, a fOI"rTWr
enemy agent turned aood auy. Viewe.n
were a~m~ zed at Brian's versat ilit y and
talent when he beaan a ucond role on
GENERAL - Grant Put~m. a ptycholk
kilkr.

One of Btian's favOf'ht' PfOieC U Is hit
involvement with FIND THE CHILORE .
.In Of'janiutton founded by ADAM Pf'O'
ducer linda Otto. which aids pMentt In
thek' seMch fOf' mlsslnj chtldren.

�GUEST ARTIST KEVIN COONEY
at ion was the Houston Shakespeare Company, Theatre Under the Stars. and Dean
Gross Diner Theatre.
Kevin has just finished filming BLOOD

RED with Eric Roberts and Dennis Hopper, a picture which will be released this
summer by He mdale. l ast year he was
featured in YURI NOSENI&lt;O. KGB a film
starring Tommy lee Jones produced by
the BBC and aired in the U.S. on HBO and
co-starred in a pilot for CBS. D.C. COP.
O ther film credits include NORTH DAL·
KEVIN COONEY is a member of thE
Actor's Studio and received his Masten

LAS FORTY. DEADLY BLESSING. HOT
WIRE. NORTON FOOTE'S LOVELY FILM

in Drama from the University of Houston

and THE TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL
Kevin's television c redits include THE

He came to St. Edward's Universit y tc
reunite with former colleague. Rodne)

GIRLS IN THE OFFICE. ATTACK ON TER-

Rincon. Both artists attended the Univer·
sit y of St. Thomas in Houston and participated in the UST Drama Club. which was
instrumental in developing UST's first
Theatre department. Both Kevin and Rod-

ROR. and a starring role in THE LONE
STAR BAR AND GRILL. a miniseries for
Showtime. l ast year he s tarred in a production of CURSE OF THE STARVING
CLASS. His other s tage credits include
the National Tour a nd Broadway production of THE BEST LITTLE WHOREHOUSE
IN TEXAS, as well as SAME TIME NEXT

ney had the unique opportunity of studying with Charles Krohn and Sam Havehs.

Their basic training ground after gradu-

YEAR. TWELFTH NIGHT. THE MUSIC
MAN. THREEPENNY OPERA. MY THREE

ANGELS. BLACK COMEDY, and many

more.
Kevin lives with his wife and three sons
in katonah. N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Cooney are
currently collabarating on a screen play
based upon her c ritically acclaimed novel,
THE 25 CENT MIRACLE , which was c hosen as one of the Best Books of 1986 by
the SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL

GUEST DIRECTOR RODNEY RINCON

RODNEY RINCON is a native of Houston, Te xas whe re he began his theatrical
career as a drama student at t he University of St. Thomas. He has been a s taff
director of Plays For living in Houston, an
acting teacher a t the Alley Theatre Merr y-Go-Round School and stage manager
for the Houston Grand Opera. The New
York Shakespeare festival. and the Paramount Thea tre. As a stage manager, he
has ass is ted such directors as Frank Corsaro. Tito Capobianco, Sarah Caldwell,
,. )ames lucas , Patric k Bakman, Walte r Du. cloux a nd Paul Bake r. His own directing
c redits include THE CARET AI&lt;ER. THE
CRADLE WILL ROCK, CAMELOT, YOU'RE
A GOOD MAN CHARLIE BRO WN. THE
GREAT WHITE HOPE and STREAMERS.

He has also been on the production
staffs of The Julliard School and the New
York Shakespeare Festival Public Theatre,
a script writer for Public Television's
SONRISAS. Production Stage Manage r for
t he University of Texas Performing Arts
Center and Performing Arts Supe rvisor
for the Austin Parks and Recreation De partment.
As an ac tor. he has pe rformed with
suc h prominent companie s as the Alley
Theatre , the Houston Gra nd Ope ra, the
Odessa Shakespeare f est ival Public Theatre . the Ame rican Ope ra Center, the
American Place Theatre . and most recently. the Mary Moody Northen Theatre.
film credits include SHORT EYES.
WITCHfiRE. PRAY FOR DEATH. and THE
LEGEND Of BILLIE JEAN. He is also a regular on the current PBS TV series. THE
ADVENTURES Of SHERLOCK JONES AND
PROCTOR WATSON.

The Sr. Edward 's Universit y Faculty
and Students would like to express their
great apprecia tion and deepest thanks to
Guest Artists. Brian Patric k Clarke and
Kevin Cooney. and Guest Director. Rod·
ney Rincon for making our year a successful and special one.

7)

�Phot o by TODD HAI!TMAN

�SPORTS

�HILLTOPPERS

"

�OPPONENT

OPPONENT SEU

5- 4 I· l
RICE
SOUTHWEST TEXAS STATE 5- 4 2· 5
SOUTHWEST TEXAS STATE 7- 5 6- 5
CENTRAL ST. OKLAHOMA 1- 5 5- 9
PAN AMERICAN
5· 9 4· J
s. 5 1· 6
PAN AMERICAN
BAYLOR
1- 6 1- 0
CONCORDIA
16
10
SOUTHWESTERN
ll
8
TEXAS TECH
5· 8 J. J
HOUSTON
5-l ) . 0
KANSAS BENEDICTINE
105 J. IO
N. DAKOTA STATE
ll
I
7
U. Of DuDUOUE
6
CONCORDIA
I· 1 9· 5
II
S.W. ST. Of MINNESOTA 6
7
OKLAHOMA
8
) . 0 ll· 7
U. Of NORTH DAKOTA
) . 1 Q. l
ST. MARY'S
5
NOTRE DAME
1
MO. VALLEY STATE
1· 6 5·10
4
S.E. OKLAHOMA
6
). 0
EMPORIA STATE
4·11
11- s 5· 1
LUBBOCK CHRISTIAN
15- 6 J. 8
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
7
15
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
7· 6 9· 8
INCARNATE WORD
7
6
TEXAS LUTHERAN
7
ST. MARY'S
4
ll
HUSTON-TILLOTSON
6
) . 9 4· 10
SAM HOUSTON STATE
ll
SOUTHWESTERN
6
TEXAS LUTHERAN
4· 1 Q. 4
DALLAS BAPTIST
5-9 4· 4
HUSTON-TILLOTSON
O S 1· 4
MARY HARDIN BAYLOR
7· 4 9· 8
5
MARY HARDIN BAYLOR
6

Po st Season Play - District IV
Tournament

SOUTHWESTERN
SOUTHWESTERN

FINAL RECORD -

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4
1010

6
l -17

31-31-1 ---.500

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�ST. EDWARD'S
UNIVERSITY
MEN'S
BASKETBALL

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��1986-1987 BASKETBAll SCORES

OPPONENT
/NCARNA TE WORD
SOUTHWESTERN
CONCORDIA
UNIVERS/DAD de
/as AMERICA
.AUSTIN COllEGE
TARLETON ST.A TE
CONCORDIA
STEVEN f . .AUSTIN
TARLETON ST.A TE
TEXAS .A~/
SOUTHERN NAZARENE
OKLAHOMA CHRISTIAN
MT. MERCY
INCARN.A TE WORD
TEXAS .Atl
SOUTHWESTERN
ST. MARYS
SCHREINER
TEXAS LUTHERAN
MARY H.ARDIN·B.A YLOR
UT .ARLINGTON
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
HUSTON TillO TSON
CONCORDIA
SCHREINER
ST.M.ARY"S
TEXAS LUTHERAN
MARY HARD/N-B.A YLOR
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
HUSTON TilLOTSON
SOUTHWESTERN
ST. WRY'S
SOUTHWESTERN

..

OPPONENT

mJ.

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84

ICC
6J
64

.."
70

71

91
79

67
56

/C6

67
81

68

75

""

84

79

76
51
60
67
71
68
71
87

""
77

"ss
84

65
67
7J
SJ
81
79

75

91
81

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68
76
81

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81
84
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114

SJ
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81

75
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68
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�WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
/986-198 7 WOMEN'S BASKfTBML SCORES
OPPONENT

OPPONENT

AUSTIN COLLEGE
TARLETON STA Tf
SCHREINU
TR/Nirr

55
59
67
81
79
46

TRINITY

JJ

McMUI?IlY
SOUTHWESTERN

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TEXAS WOMEN'S
UNIVEilS/TY
AUSTIN COLLEGE
UNIVERSITY Of
THE SOUTH
TARLETON ST.HE
CONCORDIA
ST. MARY 'S
SCHREINHl
TIC
MARY HARDIN BAYLOR
SOUTHWESTERN

EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
HUSTON f/llO TSON
Md!UIUlY
[liST TEXM BAPTIST

54
51

48
71
69
81
60

61
68
68
79
71
67
66

TEXAS WOMEN'S
UNIVERSITY
MARY HAIWIN BAYLOR
ST. MARY'S

50
61
86

TlC

67

CONCORDIA
HUSTON TILLOTSON

6J
71

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��'TOPPERS
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OPPONENT
MATCH- CW/ L )
HUSTON- TILLOTSON
W
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
L
MARY-HARDIN BAYLOR
W
BISHOP COllEGE
MARY-HARDIN BAYLOR
s.F. AUSTIN STATE UNIVERSITY
W
TRINITY UNIVERSITY
L
SOUTHWEST TEXAS STATE U.
SCHREINER COLLEGE
W
L
CONCORDIA COLlEGE
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST U.
W
TEXAS LUTHERAN COllEGE
L
HUSTON TillOTSON
W
L
A NGELO STATE UNIVERSITY
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
L
L
ST. MAR Y'S UNIVERSITY
MARY-HARDIN BAYLOR
W
TRINITY UNIVERSITYT
W
TEXAS LUTHERAN COllEGE
l
CONCORDIA COLlEGE
L
ST. MARY'S UNIVERSITY
W
SCHREINER COllEGE
W
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST U.
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY

"

GAME SCOKES CSEU SCORE FIRST/
IS·IJ/ 15·8/ IS-S
15·6/ 15-1Jj /}·15j l5·17j l}-15/
15-J/ 15-S
/1-15/ 9-15/ 15-6/ 18-16/ 15-J
15-6/ 14-16/ 11-15/ 15-llj/5-10
16-14/ ll-15/ 15-8
15·8/ 15-1}
6-15/ 6 -15/ 8·15
15-IJ/ IJ-15j l}-15j l5-7/15·6
5-15/ 18-16/ 1}-15
15·6/ 15-8/ 15-1}
1}-15/ 15·6/ 9·15/ 10-15
15·9/ 15·9/ 15·8
S-15/ 5-15/ 6-15
7-15/ 1}-15/ 1}-15
4-15/ 15-8/ 14-16j /}-/5
16-14/ 15·6/ 16-14/11-15/ 15-/J
15·9/15-7/ 15- 7
5-15/ 14·16/ 9-15
6-15/ 7-15/ IJ-15
15-5/ 15-17/ 15-6j /S-IO
15·9/ 15·5/ 15-J
15-J/ 15-4/ 15-1
9-15/ 15-IJ/ IJ-15j l}·/5

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�SOCCER

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�100

�THANK YOU TO EVERYONE
WHO WORKED TO
OPEN OUR NEW DOORS
l h.Jnk you to JIM GONZALEZ for

h is nMin building phc1o1.

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���ORGANIZATIONS

�ALPHA CHI, HONORARY SOCIETY
Photo by T.J. MARSHALL

DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOC.
Photo by STEVE JA CKSON

110

�SAC - DANCE COMMITTEE

�PHOTO - SOCIETY

Phmo by JEFF WILSON

11 1

Phclo by

MICHELE
CAMPBELl

�T
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K

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l'tt.lror by O.A.MIAN MORGAN

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�MEN'S BASKETBALL
,.,_,,.,. by DAMIAN MOI/c;...N

�CROSS - COUNTRY TEAM

Pharo by
DAMIAN
MORGAN

G
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L
F
T
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Photo by STEVE JACKSON

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�SOCCER

VOLLEYBALL

116

�ALPHA PHI SIGMA

STUDENT LEADERSHIP RETREAT
A FUNCTION OF SAC

�Community musicians, organized by
Jeff Flagg. prac ticed swing and sympho·
ny music in the Carriage House twice a
wee k this las t year. Je ff Flagg. and the
band members, which he helps to organize, have one thing in common1 a passion
.-------------------------,

THE CARRIAGE HOUSE:
IT'S SWINGIN'!

"'

~~ ;~ur~c~1:;!~.s:~~ga~a;~0a;1a;Yi'~':t~~:
me nts we re encouraged to attend. The
re hearsals were informal. a nd all invited
to attend.
The driving force behind the Swing
Band is Jeff Flagg. 4J. After receiving a
bachelors degree in music from Boston
Universit y, he spent a lillie over four
years in the U.S. Navy. At that time. Jeff
played in a Navy swing band, and it IS
that exper ience which gave him the format he uses today.
Six years ago. he came to Austin, and.
as the cit y grew he saw the greater need
for communit y based music. Four years
have passed since Flagg started the
Swing Band. while the Symphony is sttll
relatively young _in only it s second year.
This was the first for both at St . Ed·
ward's.
While the Symphony is under a Board
of Directors, the Swing band Is Jeff 's
baby. He acts as manager and mus1cal
director and Alto Sa x player all at once
He also plays the oboe in the Symphony
Orchestra, but Swing is his main •ntert&gt;tt .
Swing is more commonly known as B•g
Band Music. and was popular a• long as SO
years ago. It Is a type of music moll
greatly influe nced by jazz. The Workshop
reperloire include• tune• by Count Buu!'.
Benny Goodman. Artie Shaw and Tommy
Donie. In general. the band plays stock
pop tunes in common arrangement• from
the 30'1. 40's. and SO's.

�YEAH!

119

�PUBLICATIONS?

eran of a large metropolrlim daily. W ilson
becarno:" fa m ous af t e r breal.. 111g t h e stor y
that t he gu11 ust"d by Bernard Gotc"ll.
agarns t h ts subway ass.Jdam s was 111 Iii..: I
supplted by (ol. Olltt• Nort h . Through the
m yftenous ,\ \r . Go bubafar , the former Al 1
of Buba.

Amen.: a's most famous lt"ad&lt;'r aftt'r pub·
ltshmg lwr ftr s t boo!.. . "We'r t" supposed to
bl• a ,\,h&gt;lt mg Pot . DAMIT." W IH.:h rod,et ·
t•d lwr to mter nauonal respe~·t. a obt&gt;l
Pe.Kl" Pn : &lt;?. and a top of tho.' lmt' wt
bla.:l... gerruuw Ma y tag was her and dr yer .
\\.' hen a t t ht' awards t·ert;&gt;mony for her
$e..: ..md bt."s t seller . " 100 Wa ys to \J1al..e
love Wr tlw ut Guns'' she t urnt'd to the
l·arnt&gt;r as and sard . "No w Sl't" Olhe. Isn' t
tha t t.&gt;as y?"

r .J. \1ars hall Won th\.llrsands of dolla rs
.t Sl'll portrart p h oto. errto&gt;ro&gt;d 111 tho&gt;
B.·n Gr1::l)' -'\dams loolo, a ll lo, c
,·,mtt&gt;St He tho.&gt;n ran o tf to Ha .... all to bt&gt;·
,·ome a surkr and dl\t' r \l.h dt&gt; d1\mg.
und.·r ,· o\t•r tor \ kGarre tt ot 50 ht&gt; d 1s
0.:0\l"ft&gt;d a 1nill1"n t"n~ " ' ruSt \ bu llt" t S.
A ll. ~ ~·s. and Sill.. WOflllS t Not t" bo&gt; 0.:011·
fu h ·d With the ~ 111o,..,. or111 nnssdt• l h1dden
111 a St"~·r..-t under v.att" r \du lL 1de ntil1ed
Orll) With a tag th.:ll s a1d. ' Happ\ B1rth
da) O ll1e·· l o \ e Bill C a s e y"

wllh

~.,_; .·ntk

�Vincent leo Chives: Vincent mysteriously disappeared for twent y-five years
from famil y and friends, re.,ppearing just
recently as Captain of the S.S. Purple
Skies1 the yacht whic h finally re turned
the Amer ica's cup to America from
Roughions. He is now planning to write a
book called "How Ollie made a Sailor
Outa Me". Whe n asked how he'd spent
the past twe nty-five years he replied.
" There's lot 's of peac hes out there. and
lots of hungry mouths to feed."
lief Anderson and Robert P. Ross: The
both of these men created their own Publis hing Company, and gained the best of
the best-sellers under their publication.
They get along well in their partnership.
however l e if is always fighting for all the
credit. saying "''M the brains of this company." It was learned yesterday that the
two had bee n arrested for publishing
training manuals for the contras, such as,
"Remaining Alert on Your Siesta", " How
to be the Best Dressed Contral", and
"Games to Play Whe n Things Are Slow at
the Front". Whe n in front of the Judge.
lief exclaimed. "He's the brains, he's the
Brains".

Kirstin A. Griffin: Js still trying to finish
the 87 yearbook. (that 's 1987). She won
acclaim as the subject of her friend Rebekah E. Morris' block-buster novel
"Somebod y's Gotta be the Missing link-·
DAMIT". She is now planning on writing
and s tarring in her own Opera. called
" The y Can Ac t. Now Teach Those Governme nt Offi cials How To Sing". -Maybe
she'll be famous someday .

�M
A
I
N

��PEOPLE

PH0f05 b y OA.MIA./11 MO~GA/11

�FRESHMAN

�Luis;~ Alonso
Ye&gt;l&lt;tnd&lt;t Alonzo
Alonm Alvdrdo
Arc&lt;~dio AIVdrddo

Terri D. Anspach
M&lt;1rit&gt; C. Arnold
Andrt&gt;dM. Bilrr
Robin Bt&gt;ll

Rosi 8rwnt&gt;s
G. C&lt;1glt'
C&lt;tldwt'll

C.uild&lt;~

G&lt;~yt&gt;ll..&gt;

N~C&lt;~rrillo

Shdwnd C.Jrter
NormiJL. C&lt;~s tro
JohnCokmdn
Mo~ryContr&lt;'riJs

,,.

�Cindy Cornell
Tom Cronin
Clmton E. Cummings
DawnDarikk

AbriB.Decanini
MlchelledeYbarrondo
Barbara Ann Eckhdr/
fliubeth Elizalde

D&lt;~n&lt;~Fisch&lt;&gt;r

Dl'ilnaFischer
Cynthia Flores
A1&lt;~ de/Rourio Flores

Anna Frueh
Me/issaGarcid
Judy&lt;Mrza
FranciscoG&lt;~ru

�\

Christine G•l/esp•e
N.Hhdn Gdlan

Ed..tia Gonzal.-z
Elsd G. Gon:al.-:

Al.mzo

128

Gur~rez

�1-.&lt;'llr Lynn leopold
Ju.m lope::
J.Jmesluhrm.Jn
M yrn.JM.Jrtine::

,,

�Su~anM.tson

Matthew J. Mc Vearry
h cquelynM/h
Elvir.JYoluMiller

Scott .Allen Mill~
Mary Kay Misko
Dilvid S. Morales
Nilnc y MOf'eno

M.trcia Muehr
John T. Nash Ill
.A/eJtiildisNick
Francisco Nieto Jr.

Chrma/Nolre
M!chaeiO'Brten
John O••Of'iJro
Kelly Ozymy

1)0

�Daniel J. Pad«~o
Rebti'~~a Paul
Parona Pease
Amy A. Petrus

Khang Ph4m
Joey Pirrone
Renee" Pcmtello
Julie Poth

Dtane Pu~~iarello
Carc/yn Rabalats
G. Ramos

H!!~tor

Noral\eyes
C/arriua Rn·era
St.•1·en RH"o?rll
Taml!riiRob..•rts

�Conn.J Roblt!s
Andri.'.J R.xlrrcks
G&lt;&gt;ronimo Ro&gt;drigut.&gt;: Jr.
M.Jri.J lsiJbt!IRodrigui!z

Ro.J/ Rodngui.'z
lynnRuHt.&gt;/1
NhnS&lt;!bok
Andr.J Sh,.ffi,.ld

JohnSmrm;mg
C.Jrml!n Spio!th
l.Jur.•nS/ou/}.
J. 8.J~I&lt;'r Strmgfdlow

P.J.\ IttoJn foJh/.JtMtt

c,ndi rr..vmo
Homt&gt;r Tn'\'mo
Cuill&lt;•mooR. Torrt·~

�AlfiHisc VM1t'rdr
.Jo~

lui•

Adr•m
Rto~L.

v.uqu~:

Bof.'~

w• ...,_

bbMz•

Phou&gt; by T.J. AfltRSHALl

"'

��SOPHOMORES

�Wge Borrego
Yve11eBrun
Edith S. Cilnw
)uiln Cintron /II

M ich.Je/Connell
l&lt;iJnmDunn

Kimberly En,,
TiniJ Fit zp.Jtrld:

Phcto$ by JEFF 1/.1/LSON

�Lydt.J Flori's
N&lt;)f"&lt;tflon.•s
MtroHern.Jndez
Lup&lt;' Herrer&lt;t

MilrmelleH•.,.us
Cathy Honey
John PiluiHudson
How.JrdG. Kainer

lo.;weKf'lly
Shelley Kempf
Jchn A. Kmt;
ShiJnn.JnKrumrey

Lts.J Kubi s
Chr~nyLilne

Est/wr Leanos
DilrleneLee

1)7

�R.tqueiLOPI'l
C.trfTK'nM.twrlck
M:Jri:JnM/chel
Afshm Moh:Jmm:Jdl:Jdf'h

John Nemec
R:Jndy o·Rf'1lly

Cht&gt;ry/Ownger
teon:Jrdo Perez

hnt!l Richbourg
Alf'ld:J Rodrlsuf'z
MeiiU4 Ann Rodriguez
l(,uhli!'f'n Rydt:r

Judy S.anchn
S.Jndr.a Lei' Sc&gt;sur.a
Clm1 Springer

Th.ves.a Sielfek

"'

�Mo~rg.Jrild

T.Jgle

G~rri W~•sh.Jupr
M.Jrgdr~f

'""'di.J

T.J. MARSHALL

Wi/bec/.:

r~pe:

Phoros by JEFF WILSON

��JUNIORS

I

�M3hmood Albulshi
T&lt;~riqAismdi

A/mil Ros3 Aguirre
Jenmfer 8.Jtcl!elor

Gregg B&lt;"leuky
C.Jr.J C3rpenrer
Ju/ieChi!UVIn
Kim Coffey

Sh&lt;Jron Cox
Robert Detwerler
JitnmeF.tnrh&lt;Y
Arturo Fernandez

lor/Fierchtv
Brian flanm&gt;rr
CMronGanrr
J.JrmeG&lt;~rzil

,.,

�K~rsrm A. Grtffm
ltsa Gomez

Mary CLJre Kempff
Mrchel/el.msella
Af.JryA.nnlrcea
Abrylope:

,.,

�Audi.&gt;lt.JJ.M.Jhchi
Li.&gt;.thAf.Jrtm&lt;'tS
ChrisMcC.Jull'y
Bobby McCot"mtck

T.tncuye McNorton
Rn.tMoro.'no
CrulMOI'.Jii&gt;sJr.
Rebekah E. MOI'ris

Photc by Jfff WILSON

�Ft.&gt;IIZ Munoz
lrt.&gt;fl&lt;' Ntno

lis.t Nc/t.&gt;n
Ct.&gt;li!stme O'Dink.J

frtc Ptckk
Ronwlt.J Rt.&gt;yt.&gt;s

Gu.Jd.Jiupi! Rodrtgui!Z
M~reii.J Rodrtgut.&gt;z

M.frt.JRcu
Tcny Rou
John Rcub&lt;fl
W&lt;flhY5f('I4'.Jrf

,.,

�Arnold Vilfilrea/

Peggy Wad..
Karen Wocllt'y
S.rndr.J Word

"'

�Phot o by MICHELLE C U1PBELL-

��SENIORS

�,,.

�}e;mineCiJdend
Theret&gt;iJCilmpbell
Ch:rffer II
Trouble L. Cf:ryron

5/~tddon

RosiJ/indiJ VeAlviJ
MichiJeiVeCello

NiJnimEvilrisr
M1sr:helleFisher

Phorcs by KIRSTIN A. GRIFFIN

�J.Jcob Fraire
Odu C. FranciS
Elizabeth Garcia

151

�ThcmiJs Hudson
SJ/omcn Tcrres·HurtJd(J
ltdebJy(J lfuliJ

Charlie Keffeler
DeburJh Keny on
)Jnet Kloc
Chrtslemchi

Steph.Jme lied
GlortJlirJ
TerrtA1Jr$hi111

153

�Kyk t.1um:hn11h

VtclorMura
Sylvie Nelson
Brtan Nenwc

Shelly NichDis
Chris Okeasu
PalrlcltOnyenab
Kelly O'Re1lly

G.Jbriei.J CKi rJ;.J
o.~ ..no..·rns
PiJirir:l. PNa/ore
S..siJnPetrrsen

H _,.IMPtrel

""'ftnmc-l'nr:r
AJI'wnle
RICe

Jud~

,,.

�Etl&lt;'f.'n il&gt;~n-Ro/U
x~mif Sllit•~dr~

Tom

S~l1:11~m

H~idi St:hw;rr;:~nb~rr

M.JrySht-1/ds

C.ulos

Torr~'

llr:&gt;bn-1o
VIISqtu'Z
Ter~u W~bb

rtw1o by JEfF WILSON

1S5

�HenryA/fmiller
Andrew Ansermeier. C.S.C.
rhom.u B;e/land
Anna Bollms

M•chelk CampbeR
Brenda Car1er
8.Jrbar.J Casstdy
BettyCMf

Dor/1 Con111nrine
looi• CO&lt;'. C.S.C.
~~'•""Conoly

CtYnetlul CtYCtYan. C.S.C.

An.w Crane
kim Dailey
G&lt;&gt;orsc-Oa oollnl
Stan ...vm

,,.

�Photo by JEFF WILSON

157

�R1chilrd Hu&amp;he•
fiiGilnHunrer.C.S.C.
Rich.JrdKmsey
MilrCiiiKmsey

}.tnoel Aoch
81NAenn&lt;&gt;dy
C« illiJwSDn
J. D. lrwif

f nmliJLou lmn
J&lt;lhn luc • s
Dilniellynch C.S.C.
Sco/1 M cAfer

\fc-o\':1•

\f,H"IIMZ -\fllhkf"

Che-rry \liJU'
Allnrr\iJ \l•kl
Jomm~ \Ill•

..

,

�Gt&gt;raldMuller. C.S.C.
Terry Newrcn
Palrina O"Ccnnor
O"Nea/

J~seph

Plul1p Odeue. C.£C.
kichardOr1on
HadiOveiJi
W•lliamPenn

John Perron. C.S.C.
Connie Pulley
ldnice R;mdl&lt;'
Eileen Shcci:et

Bern&lt;Jrd Smwn
lt&gt;thiJSpiJrh
)0&lt;! Sprus
CiJtherme Thompson

�Simon Scnbnff. C.S.C.
John Trout
Marie Andre Walsh. f.H.M.
Cathy Weber

Madel£"1n.! Weber. f.H.M.

J
Phcto by DAMIAN M ORGAN

..

,

�'"

�Ph;:m.11 by KIR5rlf.JA. GRIFFIN

A SPECIAL LESSON
Walaga Lake Dream
An old Aboriginal wife man appeared
and said , " White man came to this land
and pushed my people oot of their sacred
land, making them live in one place and in
houses. c utting them off from their Spir it
which is so bound up with the land. They
took my people's Spirit and gave them a
boule of c heap plonk in irs place. The
white people of today see the re1uhs of
this- a people floundering without direction. and dan the m a t worst, as drunken
no-hopers. or, at best, as oor poor brown
coosins, a nd offer them charit y.
Now Is the time of the Renewal of the
Dreaming. now is the time to redreu the
balance. for my people's sake, and thlf
coonty's sake. Australia can be a shining
Spiritual example to the rest of the world
over the nex t decade.
Australia is the last land on earth that
hal the Dreaming and hasn't had wan
foogh t on i ll fOil. Start ing with the Yuin
tribal territory. we are charged with renewing the Dreaming In Australia, mountain by mountain. The Yuin will rife from
a detnbalised. sca11ered people to find
anew their dreaming, and their place u a
tribt' in this world tha t seems on the 1ur·
face to hokt no pl.lce for them.

"'

It has s tarted to work c hanges here
with some of the c hildre n and some for
the adults wearing the red band. It is a
powe rful force for the people to get their
spiritualit y back again and drop the
drink. When the renewing is complete
here, irs strength will awake n othe r tribes
in othe r areas to ta ke their heritage and
renew the dreaming in their traditional
areas".
He then looked at me fie rcly and asked
why I wear the red band. "I wear it oot of
respect for the land and the spirirs there·
of, and the aboriginal people. It says to
yoor people, it is time you ltopped being
what the white man hu made you. and
took up your heritage as custodians of
this land with pride and dignit y, and I will
support you in any way I'm able to restore
this land and all its people. regardless of
cob- Of" c rt&gt;t&gt;d, to balanct&gt;, so that by ex·
ample. Peace and Harmony can onct"
again How out of this land to tht' rest of
the world as it did once so long ago.
By. ~boo Tt'd Thomas l / 5/ Sl

Guboo. which means "good Friend" , is
a seventy seven year old leader of the
Yuin tribe from New Sooth Wales. He has
1pent the last three years traveling the
world spreading his message of spiritualism and appreciation of nature.
When vis iting us at St. Edward's, Gu·
boo showed us slides of hil beaut iful land
on Wataga Lake, which included many of
the sacred s ites his pt'ople meditate at.
These sites are believe to havt&gt; been c reated t&gt;specially f« them by Darama, the
great spirit. God.
His message is a simple one, teach peo·
pie the appreciation and respect of nature by using the Aboriginal medium of
"Oreamtime" (as myst ical state in which
tht' Aborigines experit&gt;nce themselvt&gt;s at
one with nature).
Guboo if lnvolvt&gt;d with prt&gt;serving the
land rights and protec ting the sacred
sit es that the Aborigine• depend on for
1piritual wor•hlp and strength. Howeve r.
the govtrnment wanu the land for deveJ.
opment and mining. ~boo uid that
through 'Orumt ime' people ca n realite
the true meaning of the land and the importance of it'• prefervatton.

�MAYOR CISNEROS
PAYS ST. ED'S
A VISIT

Mayor Cisneros from San Antonio
spoke at St . Edward's during the Spring
semeuer. Citywide press inlerviewed
Cisneros in the newly dedicated Recreation and Convocation Center. The Mayor
reflected on budgeu:. ethics and his own
college experience as he spoke on the
future of higher education.

'"

�..

,

�"'

��CLOSING

�...

�These open doors are like family to me.
The first s trange faces - no longer so
strange.
living togethe r , learning toge ther,
laughing together.
When we part and go our seperate
ways,
l"ll remember you and smile.
Our days together were beautiful
But now we are free. and parting.
It's our turn to open our own new
doors.
Doors to our future. Doors to our life.
K.A. GRIFFIN

"'

�"'

�"'

�171

���1987

ST. EDWARD'S

�Phcto by
DAMIAN
MOI?GAN

y · ~·
. y)

;:r'&gt;-

j;::;

"'

.
.t;D.

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.. .

1986 Tower
St. Edward's University
Austin, Texas

��The 1986 Tower is dedicated to the Holy Cross Brothers.
May the dream of a quality education continue to be realized at St. Edward's for the next 100 years.

, ~ruuruuyr•-t-""nllllf.J_, Uorar,
:&gt;a1nt Edward's Umvers1ty
1\uslln TPxas 7870•

�A new m«ring place wu c re·ued in rh e area berween
rhe ReUnion and the new boobrort; it was topped off
by a canopy co keep remperuuru from gening 100
warm. - photo by Dlmiln Morga~~
In rhe fall semester. in1e rna1ional day brought co•·
fumuandsighr•froma ll overrheworld to our hilllOp camp&lt;~s. - phoro by Dlmiut Morga~~

�beginning again
We were beginning again in many ways.
The year, however, began amidst physical signs of decay, wear and tear. Students returning to the
h11lt0p after a summer of recreation or work (or both) as well as newcomers found the main
building surrounded by scaffolding, dust, and fences tO keep inquisitive students out.
The building sponed boards instead of windows, the building's parking lot featured dump trucks
instead of cars and construction workers bustling in and out instead of students, faculty, and staff.
The area had also endured another scorching summer, as measurable rainfall had not occurred
since an Independence Day downpour. So, brown, dry grass greeted students back.
On a less visible but JUSt as notable scale were the real events that were happening around us. It
was once again a new beginning for the sophomores, J•.miors, and seniors who, for the most part,
had for years bttn dividing their lives into semesters and summen. It was a time to bring into
fruition those oft spoken and oft thought of resolutions to begin new work habits, new study
habits, Jnd the new, improved ways we had thought of over the summer to deal with those people
we JUSt couldn't get along with or with those we wanted to get to know better.
And, for the freshmen, it was a new situation altogether. For many fish, it would be the first time
away from home except for one week-summer c.11mps fraught with homesickness.
All of us, however, fit into the grand design of the Holy Cross Brothers, who founded this
institution with precisely those experiences in mind.

It's 1ime for a «lebnoion! There's aho•ay1 an ueno
thao soud.,noJ .,• ., chow down u be''"'""" dauu. photo byO.mWI M~an

�fall of '8' was, of course, the beginning of a
age on the hilltop, the beginning of the
next 100 years.
previous century the hilltop had seen
growth in both student population and
began our second century with a
replete with new ideas and a new
our energies and resultant efforts
results.
brought us, then, other new exper·
i
to those felt by the students;
noticeable changes that altered feel.
in a positive direction.
climbed again. as newcomers from
country and the world heard of our
and wished ro share in the ups and downs
building them. Even the filing system in the
financial aid office had to be changed to handle all
of the skinny new files that had been added on for
the new year!
People also saw long-awaited changes from the
seemingly mundane to undebatably spectacular
rake place.
Sidewalks that it seemed should have been built
in 188' were finally put in place in 196,, saving us
muddy treks to class and work during rainfalls.
The poor lighting conditions that had bttn
complained about for years were finally being re&lt;:·
tified with the addition of huge, bright ""pink""
lights that bathed the track and the area in from of
Hol y Cross Hall with a comforting glow that was
somehow eerie at the same time.
On a grander scale, we did not see the scaffold·
ing and boarding up of the main building as an

continued on fMge 9

Ginny Green !how5 the imen5it y
oha&lt;he!P"durrytheTopP"ninto
thenationolcournomem. -Pf&gt;«oby

""""""'

Pam Dilwor1h and Juli nrme de
Ybarrondo anchor a cough dtfen5e
thao kreps ohr ball on the oppo·
neror5" ~ide ofohe (OUr&lt;. -phofoby
~rol

fonn

��Thee cheeaceer cdcbra ced che ctnrcnnid wirh reviv·
als o( tht ir mos1 popul.r shows, suc h as Thee Mu·
sic fl.bn, and The Prime of Misf J ean IJroditt
pholo by O.mdn Morgm

Scudencs(oundchancucochJtaboutrhtpancakt
concoction! they were treated to u ... d l u the lacu r
goncp (rom the IUS! ended dance. · phow by Marlene

-~

�bef!iltHiHf!
Of!0/11
but rather u a messy means tO a long-anucipatcd end. The rcnoY2·
·10n of one of the area's most beautiful and h1stonc buildings meant that we
;r.ould bt able to take pndc in 11 again
The equally :awa1tcd for and much needed convocation cemcr, seemingly
I

future plans and agendas for decades, also started to take shape as
and d1tch d1ggen plowC'd up the area across d1e suM from the
We were able to put up w1th the loud no~s. dusty air, busy
suttts and falltn oaks in the ant1cipauon of a new building to
to acquamtancts lind guests.
W1.S

an eagerness 10 meet tht challenge of an uncertain future the
rewarded with a year of growth and change
Sogh~&gt;

of C'OMinKtoon characrcr.~ed

th&lt;"ytar; s1udC'n" orckkrd ooclu~ un•
der the shadows oftranu and dump
uvclts. - phow by O.mwt Morpn

�A1 1ht ~nd of 1h~ day,,..~ ..., nt m~ssag~ carl)'i ng tn t·
loons into the c~ n &lt;ul Tuu ski u. W~ ..-outd r~c~iv~
:;: ~;;,~from as far away as Indiana!- e
o by Rich·

•

Gray Skies, Rain Move In On Celebration
It had be~n one hundred years since the Holy
Cross Brmhers had come to central Texas 10 set
up what they hoped would someday be a SUC·
cessful educational institution.
We celebrated the success of that effort and
the benefits that the City of Austin had received
from it on Centennial Community Day; unfortunately, the celebration was dampened by
heavy rains which forced the cancellation of
some events and the relocation of many others.
The celebration really began, however, during the previous week as KVUE"s Good Morning Austin did a segment from the theatre,
'"Catch a Dillo"" tOurs of the campus were conducted, and business leaders from the Austin
community gathered for some treats under
threatening skies in front of Holy Cross Hall.
L&gt;unng that week and several weeks before
that, Austinites were bombarded by an extensive publicity campaign designed 10 bring those
outside of the St. Edward"s community to Join
in our celebration.
For instance, people opening their bank
statements in September and October were

10

sure, there was an entire section in the Austin
American -Statesman devoted to past, present,
and future happenings on the hilltop.
Expectations were high as the day drew
nearer. Hilltoppers and Austinites alike were
particularly excited about the free hot air bal.
loon rides, and for awhile the most popular
(jUestion on campus was ""I wonder if 1"11 be able
ro get a ride?'"
The day dawned with gray and th reatening
skies. As the morning wore on into the 9
o"dock hour, hopes for a dry day were still
intact as those threatening skies remained just
that- threatening.
We hoped together· that the weather would
not interfere with all the hard work that had
been put into preparing the numerous displays
and exhibitions; together we hoped that our
Television public service announcements efforts would at least for a day put the hilltop
produced by the Texas Cable Network surring into the limelight that it richly deserved but
Students Tina Bockrath and David Williams only rarely received.
were aired, as well as radio advertisements that
Our high hopes, however, were dashed when
the gt;~y skies opened up and the rain came
beckoned people to Join us.
In addition to the extensive radio/TV expocontinued on ~ge 13

greeted with flyers trumpeting the celebration;
in all, 70,000 flyers were sem out in several
strategic locations in the Austin area.

�Children aucnding 1he fe&gt;1i&gt;i1ie~ file in for 1he final
ceremonlu In 1he ReUnion. - pl&gt;oto by O.m11n Mor·

goo

IJalloon~

and smiles always accompany uch mher,

even on a cloudy, ra iny day,- phoro by .R~":...
'':...
'J_
N_
'"-------,

Cindy Gallcgos' facewun &lt;hc feel·
ing~ of all of us on Communi&lt;y Day.
-photobyRoch.rdNtn

11

�Tho.w obar brued

tb~

downpour uw Guy C•d ...al·

Iadet and Jill Giln act 0111 obit seen~ from 1M Mruic
M•n. - phoro bf' D.miln MQrgan

Robl~t rudi~t ob~ h•llooos for ohei r 1fteroooo
nigh&lt;. - phoro by RicNrd Nin

OK1r

Kodak r~pr~.wouli•~ from R och~lltt plid •
•ioi110 !he dy~ ltiiiU(tt uhibi1 in the pholo-

commu,.;c;.,;OIIU lab. - phoro tJ, Ridlud Nft

12

�Kidscro...-dt:duovodtbecenteonialcake,
wa itins for Pruidcol Hayn 10 u"e it up.
- pltoro br TomiJ~ Hvkmri&lt;kr

concinu~d from

pg. 10

pouring down. During th~ downpour, which
lasted until just before noon, workers scurried
w r~move the tables that were in place undern~ath the bright white and yellow tents in front
of Holy Cross Hall that would have bten part
of the main stage ar~a. and volunteer student,
faculty and staff work~rs fled to shelter in th~
gym, cafeteria, and ReUnion keeping a good
face on things but wond~ring "Why us, why
now?'" as th~ Austin area receiv~d iu heavi~st
rains in over three months.
The list of events that had to bt cancelled
was long: the free hot air balloon rides, of
course, had to bt scrapped, as did the antique
car show, a varsity tennis match, celebrity cro·
quet matches, an alumni softball game, and a
high school cross country meet. All the other
~vents wer~ moved to indoor locations.
The events that were moved indoors and thus
were able to go on as planned were events such
as Stan lrvin"s pottery technique demonstration,
and an .aerobics demonstration.
The day concluded with the colorful launch·
ing of blue .and gold balloons with messages
inside them for whomever happened to fmd the
balloon where it landed. When it was all over
people couldn"t help but feel .a little disappointed, bur the celebration was as good .a celebr.a ·
lion as could bt had under the difficult circum·
seances, as visitors learned about the history of
the hilltop from .a display mounted in the Ji.
brary, as President Hayes cut the centennial
cake. A week or so later, Austin was much
greener.

Dick Kio.oey mred blasy all day, ruonins errand ahu
errand after errud. - p1toro by Damian N«g.n

13

�14

�Grotto Hosts Celebration Of Lights
For s.o•·~rol ~urs, rhcc Ulebrmon of lighu hu Mn a
mam nenr on campus. Tho glmering of the lights, th~ watm
loOUndsofOmstmucaroltinthealf andrhecooiD«embor
wu thtr ha~ oil telled ro mah rht U lebrauon an mstiru r;onrnrust a fewshonyears
Tinsy... r,howevn,tM"'"' "'"'ionofrhe Mom Building
rhrewano!Mrmonkry o.,enchintoahrlltoprroditoon. Since
rht rr&gt;&lt;:ef'{;on of tht Cdebrarion in 1977, o f course, dw:
hilltophn takenprLo:kind«onungtht Marn8uildingwrth
ch«ry Ch11stmu lights durmg the holiday stuon. W1&lt;h rk

In addrllon to rhc cdebmion's diffc~nt loatoon, •he
nrght fca&lt;urcd two new hohday gifts from the halrop to rM
cityofAustin. ahugc,brighdylitrcdandgoldsm,anda
colorful Chrisrmu II« of hshu on the •oo.uh wall of
Moody lhll.
DMp&lt;rt rhc oovelloca&lt;ion fortMncnr,tht everung
pwvided portocrpon!lwithgood memories and WJtm feet.
"'S'· ''Jr's a wonderful opportunity for "udcnu and their
famihes to gn together," lard Danict Dailey, who helped

boJildmgco~tedintcdfoldmg,annl sirehadrobocho­

dr.t~nbutectndlestorhttrowd.

stn:forrhtfirS!andp&lt;oboblylall yenever, thtcekbrouoo
o f lrghrs would be h.tld m rM gomo

Anothe• rhrng that the cekb&lt;ation srsn.als bnodu good
""'" rs tM hcgrnnrns of the tnd of the stme.,er. Dailey
S.Oidtharrt p&lt;ovrdtsone lastopportunrryforstudenutogn
rosnhcrhcforethedreaded finab week and the dduseof
hourtandhounofstudyrng
Jto.....,ver, rht t dtbratiOn rn.lly ushers m the holrday
sn.soro fortkholhop.assrudtmsknowlfwill5001'lhcur...
!Oiaf&amp;oodbyerothcirfrrendsandto thcy...r,onlyro
reunrte&lt;hefoiJo,..rns January

Theusualchttrfulcrowdarrived,consostlngofproptem
rht A""'" commuoity as wdl as thOK of us from rk
hillrop. Thocr~dpin&lt;:drnsignmgnad!!IOnalChrlJ.{mU

&lt;&amp;rob after p&lt;a)'ff' and re nKtron.
OM rhmg &lt;hat tlw ~novation ofrlw Mam Buadms
couldn'r chanse wasrlw plac~mn. toflumrnar~ason Uni·
v~rmy O.ov~. wludo hdptd lud rh~ portociponrs ro 1M

Furure Hilloo ppen d imbed o n g ro wn· ups sho ulders
10 gc• a btue r look at rhe acrion. - phoro by V.m,an
Morg.n

Garamond

15

�H ayes Energizes Campus Activities
Energy, charisma. and vibr:mt ltadership.
Over the past year, thest were three of the
leading ctaiiS that Dr. Patricia Hayes utili:.tt&gt;d in
leading us into our Sl"COnd century. The native
New Yorker, since taking over as President of
rhe University, has constantly displayed not

only thest" but many other positivt qualities that
have hd~d ro put the school back on the map.
Not long after her arrival here, Dr. Hayes
took steps that have changed both the look and
fttl of the campus. After cartful first observations of the school, she has pur forth her efforts
whtrc they were needed the most. In addition to
the more favor2ble changes that have occurred,
Hayes has also made some unpopular decisions
that nonnhdess had co bt dealt with.

16

One of these moves was dealing with the
school's tuition structure. Over an eight year
period, the school's tuition fees were dropping
in relation nat only with ather small universities,
but inflation in general. Beginning this past
year, the new tuition structure went into effect
in hopes of dealing with the ever-increasing
coSt of an education.
Reputation was another problem that Dr.
Hayes has worked hard to overturn. Trying to
bt in the public eye as much as possible has put
the one-time little known school imo the forefrom of small colleges in Texas.
The president"s impact has stre~ehed imo the
athletic department u wdl. The new Convoca·
tion Center is a prime example of her dedication

and desire to make the school more attractive
not only future students, but to the present on
as wdl.
One problem th.u she is currently trying
tackle is the long-term investment of t
school, such as the devdopmemof the land t~
Stretches from the east end o. f the campus tot~
highway. It may bt some time before this land·
utilized, but Hayes is showmg the same type
enthusiasm for the project a.s she does for a
others.
Choosing the critical path in search for answers is never an Nsy one, but with the type of
skill and leadership that Dr. Ha yes hu di5played, this school can look forward w many
prosperous and fullfilling yurs to come.

�H ayu looks on while Susan Loughran announcn th e
Co mmunity Day The• pi an Co mpetiti on winne rs. phoro by Srotr Foreh~nd
As the balloons disa ppeared into the westun sk ie•,
Ha yes and Dick Kinsey watched the las t uent of
Communiry Day lit erally float away.- photo by Srotr
~h~nd

17

��ldr: Assislant RA Vicki Hoffm an could alwap bt seen
..:ooring from one end of campus ro rhe orher on her
moped.-photobyChrU!:yU.ne

righr; Mart inlarrey'1pe pperyperw nalirywue nrhusi.. ri·
ca lly wdcomed by rhe hilhop communiry. - phoco by

RichudNin

New Faces on rhe Hillrop

Mary Ellen Harding
GrnchenGilley
Karhy Henning
Mark Ha11is
Ellen Bober
Murr~yCarey

Dolores Garcia
William Jackson
Ken Kendall
SocorroPaniqgua
Janice Sampwn
DovidSchehr
Calvin Hodges
Gene Miller
Oscar Robles
Sony Tre&lt;.&gt;)

Dorio Adams
Car~Fe!Red

Eduardo Garcia
Mkhael GerKke
Vodi HoHman
Martinlarrey
Josephine Middleraad
Sofia Pina
Carolyn Rogers
Mary Wdls
CheryUFrazie•
Megan Murphy
Gleo Piller
Do.vidCas11dy
BonnieEscobo.r
KriRi Higgios
CarolynUwis
Humphrey Man

MelindaGaru.
LiodaEaves
Maria Hemande&gt;
James Terry

lr nuoOrti&gt;:
Jack Buder
Cnrina Smith
Julie Barbour
Margarn Biddioger
Bryon Brown
Carole Jones
Ki•a Holr
AodrewTrsevich
Edith Heard
Do.vid Kor:h
Tenchiu Marr
Oswald Nira

Becky Erle (righr) rries ro keeptrackoffhe hillrop's
numerous graduues. -photo by Rich.rd Nin

19

�~bo•~: Pre•iden&lt; lhye&gt; •po ke confidendy abou1 rhe Ur

,..,rs ity's f•.,ure bmh inside and ou1sirl e •ht dauroom
photobyD:om~;~nMorg•n

/.,(, Hr01h er Simon Scribner balded 1he brit~h&lt; su n'"
1he Ia'"'' iuu~ of &lt;he Ed ....rdian. -photo by Rtehard N

20

�Ceremony Honors
Construction
December the 3rd dawned bright and warm,
perfect weather for an event that had been billed
as a groundbreaking/reception for the convocation center and the Main Building which was.
of course, under renovation.
From the beginning, those in attendance
knew that something unusual and special was in
store for them, as it became apparent that they
really weren't attending a groundbreaking ceremony. During the spee&lt;hes by Board of Trustees Chairperson Greg Kozmetsky, SAl president
Charlie Keffeler and President Pat Hayes,
among others, trucks hauling dirt away from the
convocation center site roared back and forth,
throwing dust and debris into the air
The crowd squinted into the sunlit sky as
H ayes spoke enthusiastically about the contin-

ued forward movement of the university. One
had only to glance in virtually any direction to
see proof of her enthusiasm as workers busily
combed rhe convocation center site, the recemly built library gleamed in the sun and the Main
Building resonated with the sounds of busy
construction workers and was covered with
scaffolding.
The afternoon continued as the crowd
moved into the Main Building for a reception as
the spacious, hollow halls echoed with rhe
sound of students, faculty, and staff for the first
rime since the building's doors were locked up
in early 1985.
""People have missed the building and they
were excited about seeing it again;· said financial aid counselor Mitzi Thomas.
lo ~rldt: The crowd flocked ro rhe Main Building for
snacks and olong·awaired lookar rhe progren ofrhe
reno•arion in5ide. - phofo by O.mi.n Morg'n

21

�~oo~. Pruid~n&lt; H oy~' ~pol&lt;~ con(id~n&lt;Jy

··ru iry·,

futur~

both

i nJ id~

phoro by O.mun M orgon

20

and

about rh~ Unt·
cb n room. -

out ~ id~ 1h~

�Ceremony Honors
Construction
De&lt;:ember the }rd dawned bright and warm,
perfect weather for an event that had been billed
as a groundbreaking/receprion for the convocation center and the Main Building which was,
of course, under renovation
From the beginning, those in attendance
knew that something unusual and special was in
swre for them, as it became apparent that they
really weren't attending a g roundbreaking ceremony. During the speeches by Board of Trustees Chairperson Greg Kozmetsky, SAl president
Charlie Keffeler and President Pat Hayes,
among others, trucks hauling dirt awa y from the
convocation center site roared back and forth,
throwing dust and debris into the air.
The crowd squinted into the sunlit sky as
Hayes spoke enthusiastically about the contin-

ued forward movement of the university. One
had only to glance in virtually any direction ro
see proof of her enthusiasm as workers busily
combed the convocation center site, the recent·
ly built library gleamed in the sun and the Main
Building resonated wit h the sounds of busy
construction workers and was covered with
scaffolding.
The afternoon continued as the crowd
moved into the Main Building for a reception as
the spacious, hollow halls echoed with the
sound of students, faculty, and staff for th e first
time since the building"s doors were locked up
in early 198~.
""People have missed the building and they
were excited about seeing it again,"" said financial aid counselor Mitzi Thomas.
lowrr lrfr: The cro,.·d nocked 10 1h~ M~in Building fo r
soockso nd along·awai1edlooku1hprogrenof1 he
renovu ion in!id~.- phoco by O..mi'n MOtg•n

21

�Additions Of Many Kinds Welcome
Students In
The dust was flying, trucks bumped down
dirty campus roads strewn with dirt clods as
passenger cars' drivers kept: out of their way.
No. this wasn't intramural bumper cars, just
the steady pulse of campus growth ushered on
by our new resolve to maintain our starus as
Austin's beacon of private education.
The physical changes were made on rhe
ground and several stories above ground as

well.
Above ground level, of course, was the upper
floors and tower o f the beloved Main Building.
Those o f us who called the hilltop home looked
in wonder as the tower ( as well as the rest of the
building) were cleaned off, causing the whole
building co shine with a radiance that nobody
had ever seen before.
"With the work being done, the campus may
be unattractive, but a look ar how campus has
changed since Jan Term shows how much improvement there has been,'" nid John Vondrak.
In addition to the Main Building restoration.
the convocation cemer was rising from a hoi-

Tht old d•nct atudio wa~ turnt d into a
Stlgmguu for • n usortmentofnt w

•ddutonsfor tht butlding. -photo by
}tm Gonnkz

22

�Fall
Semester
lowed out pit where oak trees once grew, where
campus organizations used co have their year.
end picnics before the stress and strain of finals
Wt't'k.

That area, however, was converted into a very
busy area as dump trucks roared in and out
carrying their dusty cargo to the campus dump.
'Tm a fan of progress, but I was also esprcially happy that the giant oak uee was spared
amidst the construction of the new sports center," said David Koch.
In addition to the building work, other less
massive but just as functional additions to the
hilltop were being made.
Many areas, such as the space betw«n Andre
Hall and Holy Cross Hall, served as shortcuts
for years. The one problem with getting from
point A to point B when one was in this region
of campus was that the shortest way became a
quagmire when it rained, forcing all ambulatory
traffic to take quite a long way around.
This situation too was rectified in the fall
when a fairly short, ordinary section of sidewalk
in what was once the potential quagmire allowed the rainy journey from A to B to become
shorter and quicker.

Workerscrawledall overchebuilding.gi• ingicmuch
needed auencion. - phoro by Jim Gonnlcz

23

�beginning again

Srude nrJtntoya reluingafttrnoononrl&gt;t hrllli,.con·
ing ro rhe Mexrcan Mariu~hr ba nd Los RomanctroJ
durmg Dre1 y S&lt;"i,, - ph&lt;xo by O.m"'n Morgt.n

�. . . stude11t life .. .

�positions.
The year brought the arrival of the
Leadership Training Committee, which
many events designed to help student
the difficult tasks they took upon themselves
carry our.
There were stress management workshops,
speakers on campus, and a recruitment party
end of the year. Each semester also saw the
pack up and take off ro campsites in the
Texas area for intensive leadership training
shops.
Seemingly descending, descending, then
beginning.
"We learned how to run meetings, handle
conflicts, and how to re&lt;ruit and retain
said Richard Nira. "We learned all the things
essary ro build a strong student organization
had fun roo!""

•bo...-: Ro,. C•dtn• dOt"• ht r $h~rr u b11ckrc
mrmbtr.handlinschrictctrambuekrr ..irhan
btyond her fi~r minucu o( P'"'o'" ' "'"'''' "'" byRt&lt;h•rdNi,.

P""'&lt;l

ldr Mary Ann lieu concrncracu ,..hilt liurning co
rimr man•gtmcnr diK.uoion. - photo br RKhArd Nin

26

�27

�28

�and the silence of disfilled the ReUnion
form of Casino Night,
the hillwp business
Sigma Pi.
Casino, known as
host to plenty of
I games where stu ! try their luck at all kinds
build their fortunes or

I

chance intermingle, and many, many
others. The games either built or
toppled fortunes, depending on the
savvy and skill or just plain luck of
the ben or.
Thece was one big change from
last year"s casino night, and yes, it
did have to do with the beer. Lase
year"s night featured the immortal
green beer left over from St. Pa ·
trick"s day, but this years" booze was
regulae brew that kept gamblers in
high spirits.
The already-decorated ReUnion
was given a special dressing up by
Delta Sig, as banners stretching from
the top of the ceiling to the railing
sucrounding the main flooc were
hung.
Publicity for the event was also
top-notch. The Delta Sigs showered
the campus with posters and banners
proclaiming the events, which definitely played a ~rt in its success.

th~ R~Union. Della Sigma Pi 5ponwr~d Cuino Night w hich indud~d
bbck jack. craps. and roulltt~ rabin . - phow by DlmUn MorgJn

29

�30

�Distress And Shorter Lines

31

�College Work
Many peopl~ come to a university to acquire
skills that will hdp them out once they reach
the "cold. crud world"'. That t~ining takes
place in many ways - in the classroom, at an
inttrnship, or by gwing a job off campus to
support oneself.
Another way that this knowledge can be
acquired is through college work-study. This
program, like all educational experiences, has
advantages and disadvantages, but being a college work-study studt'nt is a prt'ferred status
that many students appreciu e.
The program is jointly funded by the federal
government and the university w the tune of
S266,000 for the year. In order to qualify for
work-study, a student must be eligible according to guidelines determined by the federal
governmt'nt Jnd by the financial aid office.
"It's a good program and it gives students
good oppon:unities,'· said Marlene Fon:una,
who worked during the year at the Learning
Resource Center. One such opportunity is evident when a student seeks a referral from the

32

�Study; Financial And Social Opportunities
financial aid offic~. There, the job seeker is
faced with a wide choice of job opportunities
which require multitudes of different skills.
Because of the myriad of choices, chances are
good that a student will be able to find a job in
that student's major field of study or in a job
that he or she has an aptitude for. There are jobs
that require typing and other clerical skills, math
skills, telephone answering skills, and others.
''My job is at a convenient lon.tion," said
Fortuna. On-campus students have only a short
wall$ tO work, while off-campus students need
not race o ff after class and fight the Austin
uaffic in order tO get to a job in North Austin
on ume.
Wo rking with familiar faces is another adof the college work-study experience.
working with fellow students and getknow them bener," said Fonuna. This
the job can hdp to prevent serious
in the workplace from occurring,
communication have already been
i places other than the workplace

such as the ReUnion or in the dorms.
Many students can also find a job in the field
that they hope to pursue once out of school.
Fortuna, who besides this year has worked in
the LRC in her first three years on the hilltop,
hopes to work in TV production upon gradu.
ation. She said that the LRC job provided her
with the opportunity tO videotape speakers and
lecturers in classes, and do the promotional
policies class commercials which involves
shooting and editing.
The program can also help prevent identity
confusions from bothering students. Often, students that work part-time or full-time can begin to feel the tugging and the pressures of both
school and their jobs and suffer through questions of whether they're students or workers or
whatever.
Also, students that wo rk on campus as opposed to off campus can expect to find employ·
ers that are more sensitive to their needs for
time off to study for that killer exam coming

"P·

C..~&lt;om~r5 of aiJ ~ileS COOle 10 see juan Vela in th~
ReUnion.wheth~rit be for a cold brew ora hotdog
and a coke. - ph&lt;xo by RicharciNUa

JJ

�Off-Campus Life; Advantages And
When you're deciding whether to live off or
on campus, there are several things to consider
The first reaction to this might be to live off.
campus. However, there are certain advantages
and disadvantages to ponder before reaching
your final decision
Living at home. or in your own apartment,
has certain advantages. Among these advantages is a suble, secure and possibly inexpensive
place in which to pursue your studies. One can
usually find a quiet spot to Study in your home
or apartment. Another advantage of off campus
life is the easy access to the bathroom instead of
fighting off half the dorm to get hot water for a

shower
The advantages of living off-campus can be
numerous and enjoyable but there are some real
disadvamages. One of th e drawbacks of living
off campus is that you don't have as many
OpfX)rtunities to get to know all of your classmates. Thus, dose relationships may not come
about and you may not be invited to attend as
many different activities as the on-campus students. This is particularly true of the last minute,
unplanned social events. The lifestyle of the
dorm student makes it quite easy co drop whatMichelle Mitchell dmu off watching TV after an
afttrnO&lt;&gt;n das~. - phoro by Rich•rd Ni"'

�Disadvantages Away From The Hill
ever you're doing and go out with friends.

Another disadvanuge of off -campus life is
the need to plan your time carefully. Unlike the
on-campus student who may have the extra
rime to participate in SEU's athletic and cultural
events, the off-campus student must budget
time to include transporution to and from these
events, to say nothing of such routine things as
getting through Austin traffic w make it to
clus on time. Ironically, one of the advantages
of on-campus living is that the noisy dorms
probably will force you to use the extensive
Library here and, as a result, may improve one's
grades in the long run.

In some respects, the services and functions
fulfilled in dorm life are substitutes for the
functions provided by parents at home. The
basic necessities of shelter and food are there. In
off campus living, this may not be the case.
Thus, there may be the opportunity to assume
greater responsibilities, develop confidence and
independence. The task of managing these basic
necessities off -campus may tax the average student because of the time and expense involved.
As you can see, there are a number of ad van.
rages and disadvantages to consider when deciding whether to live on or off -campus.

�Michelle Mirc hell broadens he r horiwns u she ruds
abour £.seer - rhe Pencecosoal Way. - photo by
RiclurdN.n

36

�Students Explore Other Faiths
Yamikas, the Koran, Bhagavad-Gita: What
are theS&lt;' exotic names and what were they
doing in Moody Atrium at the same place at the
same time?
T he event was called World Religion Day,
and it brought representatives from the Jewish,
Islamic, Hindu, Pentecostal and other faiths to
explain to interested studems the basic tenets of
their faiths. w hy they believed in them, etc.
"T he students were able to talk to the representatives in a non-threatening way. Religion is
a touchy subject for a lot of people," said Diana
Ferrari.
"h was good for pwple to have a chance, in
an informal academic atmosphere, to discuss
the faiths and beliefs of different people," she
said.
There were six different faiths represented at
the event: Islam, Methodist, J udaism, Hindu,
Catholicism, and PentecostaL
Each table had a number of different items
that would familiarize the casual visitor with the

faith that it was representing. T he Islamic display, for example, had copies of the Koran,
pictures of Arab lands and their people, a map
of the world with the Islamic world poimed out.
and other items.
The Pentecostal table, staffed by Premont
RA Trouble Clayton, featured an audio tape of
Pentecostal hymns, literature about the Peme ·
costal views of holidays they feel are com mercialized such as Christmas and Easter.
"Twenty years ago you would never have a
Catholic university putting on a world religion
fair and have students patticipat&lt;' in it,"' said
Christi&lt;' Chapman.
""As a Christian," she continued. I felt it was
important to show the campus community ho w
far the Carho!ic Church has come in opening its
doors and listening to th&lt;' beliefs of o t her faiths.
Another feature of th&lt;' day were services in
the traditions of the exhibits in the atrium, giving students a chanc&lt;' to &lt;'xperience firsthand
the ways of other people.

37

��plete with colorful native costumes, hats, and boots.
They were accompanied by
tape . recorded Mariachi music that
helped everyone get into the international spirit.
" It was great,'' said Diana Paciocco, basking in the warm March
sun afterwards. I liked the different
food they had. It was a good
change from the usual cafeteria
items."

39

��plete with colorful native costumes, hats, and boots.
They we re accompanied by
tape-recorded Mariachi music that
helped everyone get into the international spirit
''It was great," said Diana Paciocco, basking in the warm March
sun afterwards. I liked the different
food they had. It was a good
~hang~ from the usual cafeteria

Mexicanda nc,.rsmasqu.-radinguS£U
s&lt; uden&lt;s &lt;ru&lt;edthc aud ienc .. &lt;oth .. ir
~ki ll •.

-photo by

Ri&lt;::h~rd

Ni,.

39

�Doylt Hall Wtdntsday night
Anyont look1ng for a s1gn that humamty hu
truly mo~d ~yond tht but 1nsuncu of our
apuh anctstors nttd only 5« thiS marvelous
dasplay of human IOttlltct, br~~wn and cour~~gt
1n cht fact of mttnst comptuuon
Ont can ste tht muvtlous adv:t.nct of our
riCt 10 whlc as calltd Bowlmg for Burmos
Htrt, 10 th11 sttrn ttst, comptti(Ors v1t for cht
grtattst pnzt pou1blt; anywhtrt from fivt burmos 10 ont bum1o on ~ won
Thtst bumcos, strvtd 111 100 mfr~utntly tn
tht Clfttttll, ut won by, yts, knock1ng down
plastiC bowlmg pms ( w1th a plastic bc»o-hng
bill) st1: by pttlmg mask~ng tapt ~na prtdtttrmmtd arn on tht floor m tht lobby
Tht b1g Kr«n TV gOts off. tht J-th to tht
ch1ps tnd soft dnnk machmts becomts blocktd
w1th Ooylt rtSidtnu consumtd With cht dtsttt
to wm thost burmos, and tht din rtachts Com.
muruty O.y ruckus levds
In tht tnd, 111 tht ~~~ bowltr clu.t wuu cht
ptll'C' th1t Ooylt mtn dtt"am of bumtos chty
would ntvtr Itt Mom know thty wtrt ncmg
...,. \IKiO'l'' ...... to Gf IU'J bo.. riiOI daan •• ob.r
••od•ololoelloo6J'l'••-u - pltotoO,.ktwrr/1\n

tlflw Au..uc,u•ltaltO!b.rbo•lcn .....ccu

-po•

u• -..~coil tl., dofftnMc bel•""' a 1Nu11o- orbouuoo •• all - p1t«o 0, ~"l'l.atrll\.ro

40

�~cree n TV, pool or
ping· pong; &lt;hi• e~en&lt; i$ i&lt; ,
&lt;h is co mpe&lt;i&lt;or's face dem·
phmo by RKhard Ni"'

rop: No &lt;ime fo r scudyi ng. che big

a'

on~!fa&lt;e•. ~
lo~r

ldr: Ouch! Too man y pin$ left! Well, &lt;htre's always

nen W'ednnda y!

~

phcfo by Richard

N,,.

41

�C ha rl ie Keffeler ~ how~ off oh e
ware. - pi&gt;&lt;xo by R rch2td Nln

42

l aoe~ •

in

fa~hion ~wim ·

��Commedian
Da 1d
aster

�Caricature
Drawing

-op.·

Scud~nc

Acci•·icies Council brought in a caricature cartoonist (or Spring Fling

..eek; che m•dcnu had u much fun ..-uching him u rhe
Jra ..-n'-phorobrRt&lt;h•rdM,.
"'lhl" Sc..denu
Jloch.rriNITI

lo~ed

«eing

chem~t.·u

~cudentlo

who were being

u they would rully like co be. -photo by

�rwht Th~ agony of uhl~ok compctuion. Th~ junior
du• no~d on~ last dupcnt~ unit~d pulllllllllllll
oganut th~ tough young rr~•hman clan. Donna Gu·
uur~&gt;., Bttan N~m~c. THtt M.,•hall, and Tom H..d·
son. dod nm won tM tug a ,..., compctiuon dupit~
1h~•• dfor1s. - phoro by Goil &amp;/Jus
(u

rwltt. IJu.,td! You"r~

&lt;nr~ckt

tou~d.

-

all W(t! liud Ruidu1 M tk(
nnno1 sut tht balloon 1ha1 Out Oockoon

phoro by Goil &amp;/Jus

r•

0or«e Dr•uo, flo Art..IIU, and )oh• nu
I
kKk 0001 of ...,,ch•"l thor othMIK •oth..opll ofolw; S1:11h
A-1 Crary Oly•pon - p1toto "r AICtw.l /&gt;.n

�fi'a -r.//t"""cJ';:

~
LOS ANGfLOS

Crazy Olympics
On a gray day in April, competitors from all over
the hillwp gathered to compete in a grueling athletic competition designed to sternly test the limits
of every competitor involved. It wasn't on Wide
World of Sports, put it was certainly worth the
coverage.
What was this great evem ? It was the Crazy
Olympics, of course!

The afternoon was marked by high tension and
drama of the kind that only the Crazy Olympics
provide and in the end it was the Class of "89, the
freshman class, that came away with laurel leaves
and ultimate victory.
The class of '89 started off slowly. not showing
too well in the pyramid comest or the pull-thesuing-through-your-cloches comest. T he y saved
all their contest effort umil the tug of war contest.
1 where they came away victorious over their huffing
and puffing com!X'tition.
ChriMie Lane, class o f '89, said that the Olympics
provided the class with a chance ro show what it
• was capable of. "The freshmen proved them·
.sdves," she said.
She said that suff participation in such a non·
SC"rious affair was somewhat surprising. ""I guess
most freshmen wouldn"t have expected the staff m
be out there,"" she said.
abo.,., San in~ Cadena gi~e• the inJtruct ion and rules for
the nut uem . She and Stephine lieck coordinued the
d•y• acti•itiu. - phow by Rich"d Ni,.
11i'f't''Witrt&lt;&gt;m&lt;'r.The

juniorclass.lud by a determined
Tetrt Mor~holl display their coo rdination by not drop·
P'"l! their balls in che Cnzy O lympic nee. The rut of the
team Ulduded Ste•e Muir, J unine Piru, and Bri an Ne·
llltc. - photo by Richud Ni,.

•bo.,.nghr:FacuhyandJtaffshowedthattheycankee pup
"'"h tbt $1udentJ in che BaiiJ Bet,.·een ch e Bodies walk
MokeGereck,CuoiJonu, D~•·e Dickson. and Mrs. Lucas
roce to the fini•h line while Rhondo Safady and D.. id
Honon si•e chem cheers of encouragemen t. - p/Kxo by
1ht lutdNin.

I

fil l&gt;&lt;; The infamous Pass the Life Saver game is always the

humero•n highlil!ht in the Olympic gamu. David Honon
•nd Carol Jonu show off thei r tolented toothp ick maniplllacoofl•.-phtxobyRKit.rdMn.

47

�48

�Spring Fling D ance
Crowns N ew Royalty
Long ~ulned robes, flashing crowns, oOhing
and aahing at the royalty on parade marked the
annual Spring Aing dance which featured the
crowning of the 1986 Spring Fling King and

Queen.
When the dust had setded and all the anticipa ·
tion had b«n quieu~d. DeNdi Davis had been

o•'Tied King; the new Queen w.u Michelle Huff.
Bo!h JOined in the Royal Dance with their court
as their loyal subjeculooked on from the Moody

I

Hall floor and the upp&lt;&gt;r levels of the building.
Providing the music for the Royal Evening
were Jamie Smith and htr band. Intro ducing th_e
Kmg, Qu~n. and their Court were Hugh Lew1s
from 24 Action News.

~t p.p dockwiu from rop; Michelle Huff, &lt;he
Spnns flint Queen; Queen Mirhdle and King DtNdl
Dn11 •n &lt;he Royd Dance; The Spring Fling Court. photo,IJrRK~rdN~n~

top j trry Fariu hand, o~tr his royal pri~ilign to tht
r&gt;t.,. kont OtNt ll Oa~il. - plt«o by RM:~rd Nrn

~Jtan•ntCidtnaandhtrparontr )huearomantic
ID01tWn1 -.holt mo••ng

10

tht l low &gt;OundJ of Jamit

Sm11h. - p/totoJ by RK~rd N~n~

49

�begiHHiHg agaiH

\\' herc,.ercyo..,.,hcntht loghn,.cmout i Durong•hc
d~&gt;Npted •
p&lt;&gt;"'rr lonr, cumng off the tlcuroc~&lt;y all o•tr thr

fdl ronal' ,..,.,k, conJ&lt;n.oc,on cquopmcno

(lmpon.~nodrntJhadtotokrtllrorfinabouuodrorby

••••l•hlr light. -

pltoro by R..:Mrd N.n

�. . . aeademics . . .

�Everyone Gets
Studies!
When freshmen first come here they may not
hear of Freshman Studies right away.
Ho wever, all freshmen hear about what they
will soon become intimarely familiar with one
way or an01her, via other students or their advi sor who says that you "have" w rake it, or by
simply looking at the class list for the coming
semester and seeing the words "Freshman Studies", surrounded by strange numbers like 10.01
and M300.
This intimidating setup, studems find, sooner
o r later, rtally is nothing tO be afraid of. The
class is broken up into smaller sections primarily
ro learn effective writing techniques and take
the dreaded in-class essays. These smaller
groups are about 20 to 2~ students strong, and
are raughr by a faculty member and a reaching
assistant, an upperclassman who has gon~
thro ugh th~ trials and tribulations of Fr~shman
Studies before.
The other part of Freshmen Studies occurs in
a large group, where half of the se·nions g~t
cogeth~r to listen to lectures from inscrucwrs of
various disciplines.

TA funk Sol •~ •nd hi) countupuu hcclpo:d th~ fresh·
mento cope ... nhthedemand~ofthccclan... phoroby
R&gt;clurd Nrn

)2

�Brothu John Puroo pro"cl~1 cl~t•lltcl ontii'\ICIIOGI
for hu onocltnto· !Wit uoosn,....no - photto br
lbdwrdfw•

Ptrron IH~»« apoont M h•• to makt about 1n
auosn,....nt Mbu,.u• ...,,,..,...d -pbotobr
fCICIIa!J,..,.

ll

�)4

�Tht sounds of beautiful music flowtd through
Thtrtsa Hall lobby in April as Brother Gerald
·1
choir put on anothtr proft ssional show to
of two standing room only crowds.
the poking of dorm residtnts, the piano
with the sounds of Rossini, with the
lovely melodies of its own.
evtnt, publicized in the local mtdia, was
ex.ample of the vibrant arts scene here.

"Ah&lt;; h cou ldn 't hu~ h apl"'n~d with ou&lt; &lt;h~ liule 5quig ·
Kleo on P•P"• whic h mad~ P"rfecl .&lt;ense 10 &lt;he musidans.
-pl&gt;oco byRu:lurJ Nifll

�~"':"
..
~~~=--· ·

Guaranteed
Needs Test Student Loan

1985-86

A. STUD£NrS IN
1· -

Ij

L

:
. ""
•

FORMATION

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....

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\.J

Oh no! Financial aid paperwork!
For most Studems, the road to a degree is lined with lots of paperwork, much o f it the
homework and term paper variety, not to mention RCM. There's another kind o f paperwork
that's just as dreaded and loathed as any ocher kind t hat students will ever find in their
colleges lives: financial aid paperwork!
There are zillions of forms for just about everything that rakes place in the financial aid
office. GSL. Hinson -Hazlewood, College Work-Study. you name it ~ lots of papers with

lots of little words on them need to be signed.
The paperwork is not, however, without its purpo~. It was responsible for the educational
pursuits of many students who, without financial aid, could not possibly consider pursuing a
degree on the hilltop.
In all, $4.7 million was distributed to students in need of aid during the year, and some
students, such as Charlie Keffeler, usually didn't mind the avalanche of slips and forms rhe
financial aid office showered on him. "The paperwork doesn't b()[her me but sometimes it
~ems a little redundant"'
Some students continued to worry about the cuts in federal programs that President
Reagan and Congress kept talking about in order to get the huge federal deficit under
control. Financial aide director Doris Constantine. ho wever, said that the year should have
cau~d students worried about their aid no trouble at all. The total financial aid available to
students, said Constantine, jumped from $4.2 million in 84-8~ to $4.7 million this year
In October, all hilltop students received a letter from President Hayes outlining a tuition
hike that would add a modest but significant addition to students' tuition in the coming
years.
Most students seemed to take this announcement in stride, though, as Constantine didn't
get many questions from worried students. "I was surprised I didn't get mo re (inquiries);·
she said. She concluded that "returning students aren't t hat concerned because the jump
wasn't too much
it wasn't that much extra money that it wasn't manageable through
financial aid or their !»rents ..
Even as tho~ loan totals mounted as the years spent on the hilltop went by, students
continued to be thankful of the opportunity that financial aid provided them. "I feel you get
back what you put in,'· said Keffeler. There's no easy short cut to get ahead. I look at it as
paying your dues."
Keffeler added that financial aid helped with that difficult time after high school
graduation. "You don't have to wo rry about having to collect money to get you ahead. and it
eases the transition from high school to college."

�Trying To Stay Awake At

SPL
OK. l'v~ got to get some studying done-. I've
got two tests this week, and I'm starting to (all
behind in my homework again.
One form of~rrici~rive management prac·
riced by some comp3nies is ream mam~gc-menr.
In re11m management, the man:Ager
Ooooh
there she is. Who's that guy she's
with, anyway? I don't think he goes to school
here - maybe I just haven't noticed him good, he's leaving. Maybe I should ..accidemal-

ly run imo her'' she's so good looking - she
looks tired- wait a minute, now she's kaving! I
misstd a chance to talk to her! Oh wdl. Maybe
she'll go the dance thing on Wednesday. I really
should check the library and see who's here
before I surt studying.
In uam m;magc-menr, the msnager wotks liS a
ream rJthtr rhsm on the typical one-to-one
~iss. Thr- increasing
"H~y man, what's up ?"
Compf~xiry "H~y! I'm just studying for this
business class. It shouldn't be any big deal. Did
you see her leav~?
'"Yeah, she loohd pretty good, huh?"'
""Sh~ sur~ did. Who was that guy sh~ was
with, do you know him?"
··on sure. He's studying to be an oblate or
som~thing like that, so you don't have anything
to wo rry about him.""
'"Gr~t.""

'"Well, I"ll let you study now. I"m going to go
Gods Must Be Crazy" at the Dobi~
while you sit h~re :.tnd study. H:.tv~ Fun!"
"Sur~. 5«- Ya."
How nn th:.tt guy n~v~r study :.tnd still get
such good gr:.td~s? H~·s probably taking :.tll euy
se~ 'Th~

)8

classes.
Th~ incr~:.~.sing compl~xity :.~.nd rapidly
ch:.~.nging technology in emily's business world
ue bur two F,crors rh:.~.r h:.~.ve m:.~.de ir
"Hi."
"Oh Hi."
It's her! I thought she'd just Idt!
"What are you studying for?""
"Oh, some business test. I don't think it"ll be
:.1. problem. He said it would be from the book. I
thought you left I mean wh:.tt are you up to?"
I've got to ask her to the dance thing
Wedn~sd:.ty.

"Oh I just came in to get some books I need
for :.1. paper that's due in :.1. few d:.tys."
"I know how th:.tt is. Hey, kdixcivoV1lksnei.
fo3Sj.Ni?
"What ?"
"Do you want to go to the dance thing
w~dnesday ?"

"Well. l"ve got this paper - oh sure. I c:.tn
uke a break from homework and stuff and"
if you wish to check out any library
books. pl~ase do so immediately. The lib~ry
will be dosing in 30 minutes."
Oh great, I fell asleep again. Well, maybe I
can get in a half :.tn hour. Th:.tt wu so re:.tl too!
One form of~rrici~rive m:.~.n:1.g~m~nr prac.
riud by som~ com~nies is ream man:.tgem~nr.
In re:1.m msm:.~.gement, the m:.~.n:.tger works
"Let"s go to the dance thing Wednesday!"
I can't believe it! She's asking me!
"Afterwards we can walk around the tr:.tck
and '"
the library will be closing in fifte&lt;'n
minutes "

�Zzzzzzzz ...

l9

�Students Can't Be Studying All The
Time
The mrernship program on the hilltOp is

gro..·ing. The purpose of this program is to give
st udents supplemental experiences outside formal course wo rk. It creates pract ical work experience in a controlled environment. There are
a variety o f internships from which scudems
may choose such as freshman studies. account·
mg. computers. science, business and athletics
Each division chairperson is in charge of its o wn
internship program. Students must obtain the
permission from the chairperson of the division
m which he or she is rna JOring, in order to
participate in an internship. The internship must

be

dm~c!ly

related to the student's degree.

The Career Resource Cemer can hel p the
students establish comacrs with possible em ployers who in turn will establish an internship
that will satisfy the requtrements of the division
chatrperson. Some intern posist ions are paid and

l1&gt;1 Popp, unlokt )Omt of u~. dOt"~ sttm ro find her
.. o rk ~nro)•blt. - photo b1 Marl~~ Forruru

some are not. Almost always, St. Ed's gives
college credit for the students' participat ion in
an internship. The length of the internship can
vary from one semester to a year. The university
faculty oversees the educational process while
the student receives his practical experience in
the everyday workplace.
Some of the advantages of the program to
the student are the excellent quality of contacts
which the student may make with future employers. Often, at the time of g raduation. the
company for which the student worked in an
internship may offer the student a permanent
job. ln addition, if a student chooses to take
part in an internship which also pro vides a salary, the student can apply the money toward his
education while en1oying the advantages o f
learning practical skills. Another advantage is
thattheinternshipteachesthestudemthatthe

Yodto ltc hnology ~urrounds Marltnt for&lt;una, who
h fpJ t • t ryrhong undu eonrrol by rhf hyboard that
f tJIJ IO

60

real world is not just like the textbook wo
On the o ther hand. the student often will
that textbook theories do apply to the every
work place. The ability to deal with peo
successfully in thl." business world is one oft
marks o f a high achiever. Internships help t
student ro develop successful coping skills
enhance one's ability ro interact with vari
types of people in the business world.
The internship programs available herl." of£
advantages which the serious student shou
consider during his or her four years here.
program may not be for everyone; however. tf
student is interested in relating classroom
knowledge to practical application in the sut
ro unding community, it would be beneficial
and worth the effort to consult the chairpersoo
of onl."'s division and ulk ro the career counsel.
o r at the Career Resources Center.

hulap. -phoroby RicharrJNJ,_

�Ruben l barra.cutand all, triu tocomplete hio next
tu l&lt;. - phow by Marlr-M Forrun•

6!

�•bo•.... Scou rheorganisr (and piano player) provided
rhe wund• ofdo&gt;en•ofpopular •onp. ~ phoroby

RidwrdN!r•
rrghr BrmhH Jerenuah •ho,. ed off hu ... arucolon ro
an appreciaro•e a udrence. - pltotoby RK:IwrdN!r•

62

�erhostel '86; Fun,
od, Learning And
ompanionship
Powerful convictions can be difficult to experience somctimes.
Concerning any matter, there are enough cons to every pro and vice versa co
any opinion on any stand on any issue not emirely absolute.
for anyone connected with Elderhostel, convictions, strong ones, con.
the role of tht elderly and how they are u eated in this society are gained

doubu, no cons.
i these individuals, ready to learn more despite their years of
i the dusroom and the "real" world, ready to make anyone's
, ready to share advice as well as listen to it, one is immediately
silliness of such things as manditory retirment laws and by the
of institutions such as nursing homes.

bKomes aware of the tremendous waste of their knowledge and
of the superficiality of corporate America trying tO sell us on the
rternal youth.
ready for new experiences, the group learned about computers,
the history of scientific though. They visited the historic sites of
themselves in the Brothers" dining area. made new friends and
new talents.

l~ft· Frank ~nttnain~d with ~m• of both thoughtful
comical n~rurn. - photo by Richnd Ntro

~nd

.bow: Charlofft ujoy(d tht tKI~ from htr involumary
lalitudt 11 home. -photo by Ridu1d M,.,

63

�t~ghr ~hk~ Cm~ and an accomplice prepue ro do
•urgery on a "rangely quiuc~nr pu~nr. -photo br
O.mJJrr Morg~n

�Sane 28
Jeannie is alone in her apartment, looking
at the 1986 Tower. The room is dark except for one light by the chair she is s itting
in.
Jeannie: ( sarcastically ) That was a reall y good
spread. Let's see what this one's about
Hmmm. Student Revu e; Comedy, Parody, ln samty
She looks over rhe piciUres and is silent for
Jeannie: Wait a minute! There wasn't a Student
Revue this year, was there ?
Voice: (o.s. ) No there wasn't.
Jeannie: so what are these pictures do ing in
here, anyway?
Voice: The organi~ers felt that they weren't
prepared enough. so they called it off.
Jeannie: So there wasn't anything else to put on
these pages then, was there ?
Voice: Well
Jeannie: Why didn't you ask me for ideas?
Voice: Well see we had a strong cennal organi~ing theme, beginning again, and as I'm sure
you can tell everything in this book fits it perfwly
Jean nie: Sure.
Voice: I feel another yearbook reader out West
who wanu mask a disembodied voice something, OK ? Gotta Go! Bye!
FIN
top left: Planning rll~ Srud~nr R~~~~~ is s~ rious work
rhar rakt s many hour&gt; of commin ~~ dee isions. pltofo by Dom1an Morgan
Jdr. Whao's Chuck Pulliam up oo ohis ynr 1 Pulliam
hu play~ d a major rol~ in oh~ R~~~~~ for a numMr of
yurs. -phew by Dom,.n Morgan

�France Meets America At The Bois- Robert
School
In the 17th century, French explorers traveled

across the Atlantic Ocean in search of ne w
territory and adventure.
It is now the 20!:h cemury and once again the
French are exploring. This time, however, they
are in the form of students in search of an
education. In the fall semester of 1984, the Institute de Bois-Robert became a ne w and refresh-

ing addition

tO

the hilltop environment. The

non-denominational sc hool, founded in France

20 years ago by Jean Patier, gives f rench students the opportunity to mix Ame rican culture
with their own while at the same time uphold
traditionally tough French academic standards.
Herve Allee, the academic director for the
American branch of the school, said Austin was
chosen for several reasons, the biggest being
that because it is such a large college town, this
type of atmosphere would enable the new students to adapt quickly and efficiently to thei r
new lifestyle. '"Austin provides us with the right
blend of culture and schooling that best suits
the students" needs and wants,"" says Allet, who
mentioned that the students adjust very well to
their ne w surroundings.
The 4!i students, consisting of 2/3 boys, live
on campus in the dorms and lead, as close as
they can, an American type lifestyle that also
helps with adjusting to this new way of life.
In France, students study very hard and that
helps with adjusting to this ne w way of life
During the week, the students study up 10
three hours every night and as many as ten on
the weekends. This, however, does not deter
from another imponam aspect of their lives
FUN!!!
While over here, the French scholars enJOY
the same type of entenainment that we are so
familiar with. Some favorite activities include
going to concens, museums, athletic events,
and, of course, Sixth Street. Because Austin is
the capital of Texas. the students are also given
a closer look at American politics and perhaps a
clearer understanding of them. Every weekend,
the students can be found playing golf or football or anything that they might find interesting
to do.
A favorite pastime with the French students
is to talk with their American coumerpans and
exchange different views and ideas. Communication with friends and relatives back home is
done by leners and sometimes by telephone.
Every three weeks Mr. Allet gets in touch with
the parents of the students and lets them know
how things are progressing and if there an y
problems that need to be dealt w1th.

obow rv;ht ESL tncher Se•erley Grouman hands
Tluerry V&gt;ncent h•s la•u• ~~lling e.um l»ck. -

photo by R.ch.rd

!&gt;/,,.

Munel Ko,.enboum u•d her fellow clu~mat eo lmen
clo1ely •oan •n)lrucuonal Engltsh tape . -photo by
R~th.tdMn.

66

�67

�Music Man
In October. the walls of rhe Mary Moody Nonhen Theater reverberatd
with wnes from "The Music Man."
Director Brother Jerald Enos and his cast put together a delightfJ
rendition of the famous Meredith Willson play in which Harold Hill (Wil
Usey) sells band instruments 10 an entire small town without, of courst.
having the slightest knowledge of how to teach them how to play thetr ne•
purchases.
The cast had several surprising members in it, including faculty memb(nr
Sister Marie Andre Walsh as the Farmer's Wife, and Brother Louis Coe .as thl
Farmer.
The staff was also well represented by Mary Pat Helton .as Eulal
M.ackenknie Shinn, and Jim Fletcher as Charlie Cowell. Fletcher was also t
understudy to Arnold Rodriguez, who played Mayor Shinn.
The lead. Will Usey, is a graduate of the hilltop and returned to act in o
of the most successful shows in the theater's history.
"Music Man" also featured the skills of child actor Will Kennemer, "''
played well the difficult pan of Winthrop Paroo.
Unfonunately, the show was not received with optn arms by the Aust
critical community, as the musical elements of the show were round!
fanned.
The show touched off a season with a new theater director, Susa
Loughran, who oversaw a revival of the theater's most successful shows

The' Music !tbn, naturally.

danctng. -

68

(utur~d

lou o( songtng and

phoro by IAom ..n Morgan

�THE CAST
!Wold Hill
Mman Paroo

"'"""""'
""~~

0w1.w eo...,u
Tommy Dtolu
l.onMoSIIlllll
M.or&lt;rilutWnhbu.m
Wonrhrop Puoo

--

EWat.e M.ckenluue Sllonn
Erlw!Toffkm~t~

AI&amp;DIIm

...... "'""""
Mn &amp;.
Mn SqUifn

E-.n. Dunlop
00.&amp;.
"'""Ho

}o«fSquoft'l
Coruubi.Locke

""""'~

"""""'

1

Townspropk
Suun Pnuwn. K&lt;"tryGtttne,Ovut~t Onll, Atu. Toron, Vo.leu• Blythe, ShetnGnff11h, Anno
M!IIIOI, Zoe fnguKifl.. Aoron l~uuk,Jon HowkU\1, Andft'&gt; Hm..,.,Jom Remou, O.vtd Wilhanu, Mttch Z...k.
Kathto .... Pnct, Corey Rubin
Karhmnf Proce
O...CeC..pcaon
The F.,....,
S..XM!l.ouiiC.O..,C.SC.
S11tet Mlltlt And~e WWh, LI-LM
TheFu....,IWoft

Mut~c, mu~oc uuy•bcrt; r•o tu•gtrt •·"h • poooo bthond
obcmateondonr,.eo(thtmutocfillednenongohaopaoront
•ttefrnotdoo. -pltorobflllom.anM&lt;X&amp;UJ

�It was a scene remmiscent of ancient
Israel; people were dressed in loose fimng
dCMhn, some wtth sandals and some
wLthout. h happened in Our Lady Queen
o f Peace Chapel, and it was called J esus
Chrtst Superstar.
The three performances in early Dt.
etmbtr were attended by big crowds ea.
ger to see the musiC department's pro duction of the famous play. "We had
standmg room only crowds for the three
performances." uid choir conducto r
Brrn:her Gerald Muller.
The play LS the latest m a ser1es of
religious musicals that the mus1c depart.
ment has put on in the last few yurs. The
prtvtous year uw the department stage
anCMher famous play, Godspell: Celebrate
L1fe was the group's offermg the year bt-

fort that.
Dutctor and choreographer Rozanne
Ward was crucial to the show's succus,
satd Muller. "She had the cast read rhe
scnptural passages for the character that
they played," said Muller. "That made it
much more realistic for the performers
and the observers," he uid.
'The play's dramatic and theatrical
success was due to Rosie and the show's
fine musJCians," u•d Muller.
Natuntlly, the ardurous task of rehearsmg for and ptrformmg such a com plex show led to some unique expenences
on the part of the performers. These ex·
ptrtences would also prove not 10 bt
limtted to the performers them.stlves, but
would affect some members of the crowd

obo.-r One of rhe few q111t1 momenu on rhe play, u
)~JII&gt;

(Alan ln) hang, on che nou. - photo bt

R~NrdNuo

ngltt Pare of ch~ l'dm S11nday mayMm rhar accompa
no~d )~JII) 1n10 1h~ cuy
photo by RKh.ord r.uo

70

�TH E CAST
Jesus
Mary Magdalene

. Alan Lee
. Jacqueline Davis

Judas

Chris Alan Janovsky

Pilate

Gary Cadwallader

Caiaphas

Fred Reyna

Herod

Stephen Muir

Annas

Andre2 Herrera

Priest

.. Jim Remit2

Peter

. Perer Beilhan:

Siman Zealotes/dancer
Thomas
maid by the fire

. .. .... Arnold Villareal
Colette Amador
Melony L. Bell

dancer

. Tina Bockrath

Manhew

Michael Conwell

Muy

Roman soldier/dancer
soul girl
dancer

Cynthia Haskett
. Tracey King

. Lisa Lamb
Amy S. Leissner

71

�The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie
The prime of Miss Jean Brodie was the

thi~

return engagement of a play in the theatre's centell
nialseason.
The guest star was Elinor Donahue, who pia~

the part of Miss Jean Brodie.
The story revolves around Miss Brodie and
position as teacher of an all girls' private school 1

the 1930's. Brodie runs into problems in the S«r)
when her unconventional teaching ways and meth
ods begin ro run her afoul of those who don't shirt

her views.
The smry is told in a series of flashbacks ffOel
the point of view of Sr. Helena (Carol Van Natu
who is relating to us the story from many ytan
after it has actually taken place.
In the end. Brodie ends up losing her job at th

school because she is just too unconventional

bl

handle for some. She is accused of being a fascil
and of teaching her girls to be too politicaL l"hh:
fate is especially hard for Brodie to handle becau~t
she feels that teaching is the most imponant part
her life.
The line that the play is most remembered for
Brodie"s declaration: ""Give me a girl at an impm·
sionable age and she's mine for life!"'

72

�The Cast

Sandy (A m y l cinner) ge!5 a 5!~ rn lee&lt;ure from M iu
J ea n Brodi e. -ph&lt;xobyO.m,..nMorg.n

73

�A b1g round ofapplau~ (or all1ht duen·ing. hard
"orkmg ,.-,nnera. - plloco by O..m1~n M orgrn

74

�Deserving Thespians Win
Moodies
The familiar sounds of awards
ctrcmonics could tx- hnrd in the
theme, where hard working theatre
rudcnts won "Moodies·· for rhcir

dforrs.
Among the winners:
Jill Giles and Gary Gdwallader,

rrht:

best actress and actor in leading
roles, Alan Lee and Paul Comreras,
most outstanding seniors, Adriana
Guerra and J on Hawkins, best supporting actress and actor; J ill Singletary and Robert Long won special
awards.

and!htwinnuis

75

�The first sign of the year's coming to a do~
is April's Honors Nigh1.
Here, active ~niors who have been hearing
"when are you graduating" questions as well as
freshmen who quickly learned the benefits of
campus involvement gather to receive plaudits
for their efforts.
It is a time m (ed proud of one's efforts, to
thank tho~ that made them possible. and to
begin reflecting on a year 1ha1 has entered its
twilight.
abovt' Hol'lors Nig hr bringo smiles 10 those re(og·
niud . e nhu from ha ppinus or c mhuunmem or
b01h. Ginny Green and Liu Popp g rin away afru lisa
hn won an awud. -phew by RicMrd Nrn
abovt' rwhr Brother William Dunn wu named a 1986
P'IM'' P rofesJOr by tht Minnie Ste•·tnt Pi!M'r fo1,1nda·
tion o( San Amonio.- Pharo by DomWI Morprt
Photographer Marlene fortuna taku a pkrurt o(jac·
qucline Oa~rs and J~ Bock. woman and man o( the
ycu. - phorobyRKhardN~n

76

�77

�•bo.-., Vern, Mu., , a nd llerh Thomas ~pec ubre on rhe
1mprenron rhe co r~r c 11" of rhe umc n p! ul c will mak e
in fururc gcr~tral i OM. -photo by J•m Gonn/~s
"gh&lt; Much "a&gt; •~ •d abour rhe uems that a brer gen·
~u11011 .,.,JJ nll orufacr!.- photo by R.ch-.d Niro

78

�An End Of Hillto p D ays For Some
StruotM~ings.

Cafl' and Gowns at th~ Bookstore.
Graduation ~rufication.
1\o Preregistration.
To aU stniors, the signs of the end were all
thrrt No "fall of 86" awaited,

...m new npentnces.

]USt

a new world

Rellizlng that this time was near, howC"ver,
wu an enwdy different matter. !Xspite the
lboft hints, among others, most ~niors were

roo busy trytng w think of passing RCM, get1111 out of various departments' stnior Sl!'minars

aiM. and

JUst

trying to get enough slup

to

gaspdl( rtt.l and the inevitable.

Graduation.
At. SoffiiOfS removed their "disposabl&lt;'' caps
and gowns from their plastic bags, plopped
down on the 1roning u.ble and put them
tM wide open eyes of friends, relatives,

omen.s, a new feeling emerged. Suddenly,
graduation b«amt more than a solemn convoCttiOil at Palmer Auditorium, more than an

earn~st d~str~ n01 m fall off th~ stage, n became
n01 a 11m~ to "finally gn out of here" but a
b•tt~rswC'tt, em01ionally lad~n transnton from
an establish~d hf~styl~ co an ill-defin~d future
of JOb hunting or relaxing o r grad school or
somnhing lik~ that.
M ost o f all, what it mum wu goodbye.
Goodbye to what~v~r mad~ th~ Sc. Edward's
~xperi~nc~ special to whom~ver was saying
goodby~. &amp;niors had always had as the first
priority of their lives graduating and finally gnting out, but didn't r~aliz~ that It also m~ant
decisively losing touch with peopl~ and places
that had mad~ th~ times her~ something special,
som~thing that truly uniqu~. som~thing truly

good.
So, for

th~ seniors. graduatmg end~d it all.
Lik~ th~ dandelion. peopl~ and ~xpenences
would blow in all dtrections. Like th~ dandelion. the eff~ct of thts sepa.mion would be new
!if~. n~w beauty.

79

�rop. Torn•do and fla•h flood "'uchu arrt~ed "'"h the
graduatu and cheor gutJtJ. Dunng che ceremony. llury
nons """'P' onoo rhe .,u thunder ~:rumbled tiS "'"Y'
onto the auduotoum u Lor. Eic~l~rgu "'d Perry
MeW ill tam• ga•t tht 1r addru~•. -photo by 1Am11.11
Morgan
•bot'l" A tuJideu Hrother Dlonn uw yet another dau

bunrn&lt;' alumnt -photo

br DomW! Mcxg"t

/t,(r " You h .. e ~en o ne of the mcnt

"""f""

~noor

duuJ on St Ed,. ud'• 100 yuu o( c~ute&lt;Kc," J.aod
P erry Mc 'l'tlloamJ, - photo by /Amgo Mtxg• n

80

�The Class Of '86

81

�beginning again

h ....u a year for lidhopptr uhletu to congruulu e
their n nq11ishcd opponents for • game ,. clJ pl•yfil;
1\crc, Mo~s ltbam congruula)U a 11.C bulldog after
a Topper won. - ph«o by R&gt;e~rd Mn

�... sports . ..

�abo•·~· H on n i~ Smith "retchu obo•·e th~ defen'e for
'" o again'' St. ;\h ry''· - phofo by ~mt•n Morg•n

bdow· Lonni~ Turn e r cele brate s th e T opr-ers first
confHence title in 1s yea no. - phow by ~mUn Mor

''"

"""""· Greg Alexander grabs the offen,i•·e board
against TLC. - phofo by R t&lt;h•rd Ni,.

�Hilltoppers Win BSC
This season marked the first time in over
twenty years that the team won the B1g State
conference title outright. Led by the play of
postman DeNdi Davis and forward Ronnie
Smith, the team marched throughout the season
with only two conference losses while sweeping
rival St. Mary's for the first time in history.

Coach Tom Pate, voted NAJA coach of the
year, fielded what could have been the most
talented team ever on the hill
"Smce bt-coming head coach I have never
had a ream as good as this;· he said. ' They had
expereince, talent and senior leadership; what
more could you ask for?"
Russell Sterns, an avid fan and supporter, put
it more subtly. "They were awesome! They had
depth, speed and a potent offense that could
score at will. This was the best team the Big
State Conference has seen in awhile."
Things, however, did not start out as nice as
they ended for the team. Leroy Nicholas, a
returning aU-conference center, was lost for the
season because of a back InJury. Thought by
some to k the best player in the Big State
Conference, the loss of Nicholas looked :as
though it would ruin the entire se:ason. It w:as
O.,N~Il

Oa.,, outlnp• hi• man for the ball and
ph&lt;xo by R~~;hard l\'tn

Davis, though. that saw that this wouldn't happen as he picked up the slack and earned alldistrict IV honors himself. Other pla)·ers like
James Johnson also rose ro the occasion and
saw to it that the '8~··86 season truly would
belong to the hilltop.
It was basketball excitement :at its finest . It
was a team led by the talent of the underclaSS·
men and the will and experience of the seniors
T he Seniors included Leroy Nicholas. Stephan Stovall, Richard Jackson, Lonnie Turner,
Stuart Schultz and Mike DeCello, :all of whom
will surely be missed.
The team looks forward, however, 10 the
return of talented players such as J eff Applewhite, Ja mes Johnson, Ronnie Smith and of
course DeNell Davis, the returning NAJA play·
er of the year who could prO\"e to be the most
dominant player of all time here on the hill.
lt"s sad, that as a team, it"s ove r for this fine
group of men. They were a confident and
uniquely talented bunch who belonged together
:and played as one. A combin:ation of fine
coaching :and raw talent spelled success for the
club; everyone associated with them, faculty,
students :and Staff, will never forget JUSt how
good they really were.

1h~

balk~t.-

85

�.oo.,..

Big cro,.·ds were ohe no r m in ohe Top per!·
"""'on. The biggeso crowd showed up fo r ohe big
game agai nst So. Muy"s. where many fans had to M
1urned away u ohe door beca use of the o~erllow con·
di1ions. - phoro by Dami• n Mo rgan

rop nght. J ames J ohnwn change• yet another oppo·
neno "s shoo. - photo by O.mmt Morg•n
t~gho

lonni e Turner strugg le5togct up afoerammble
in ohr physica l TLC much up. - ph&lt;xo by Dom1•n

Mo.-g•n

86

�Names &amp; N u m b e r s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

From tow: Chuck Wigonmn, Eugene Wauon, Mike
Deeello, RKhordJatkSQn, Chns Rores, T:oiner Tommy
Adame. Mtddle Ro w: Loonoe Turner, Cooch Tom Pate,
Kewn C:.ldwdl, Stephan S!onll, Roome- Smith, Uroy

Langston
Texas Wesleyan
Tarleton
Southwestern
Concordia Lutheran
Lubbock Christian
Tarleton
Schreiner
Stephen F. Austin
Southwestern

Concordia Lutheran
Texas A &amp; I
Howard Payne
Sr. Mary's

"

7688- 78
87- 77
84- 73

111·121 (2 OT)
64-

"
&gt;9·
69·
"

82-

8()

66

82 - 77

(OT )

Scheiner
Texas Lutheran

Mary Hardin-Baylor
Concordia Lutheran

East Texas Baptist
Huston Tillotson

Nicholu, Asststont CoocMs J~ Kocurrk and Elhs
Montrt. B.ck Row:JomesJohnson, fkNdl Dav1s, S!Uan Schulu, Anthony Gardener, Greg Alexallokr, Da&lt;ren
Arn..ch, Tom Soltzstein, Jeff Applewhtte

94·

71

62- 60
70- 74

,._

"

92- 86
8(). 78
78- 60
77- 63
76- 62
91 - 69

Texas Wesleyan

Bishop
St. Mary's

8(). 81
87- 93

,_ ,.

Mary Hardin Baylor

77- 81 (OT)
61- 41

Southwestern

69- 74

Bishop
East Texas Baptist

81- 8()
6-9:&gt;2
87- 83

Texas Lutheran

Huston Tillotson

87

�88

�Hard- Luck Lady Toppers Better Than
Record
Heartbreakers was the word that seemed w sig ·

nifyche Lady Hillwppers this year. They lost five of
their first six conference games by one point and
two of chese games went into overtime. The highseason was a victory over Texas LurhCollcge, a team rh:at had consistently beaten
Toppers in yurs past.
Like the men, the women's ream had mo re tallllkd players th1n ever before, although their record didn't indicate it. Led by rhe play of Inger
Brown, two time disuict star, the Toppers proved
fO bt tough opponentS to everyone rhey played
although something always seemed to keep them
ronr. onpg. 90

PI 98 rop kfr: Ginny Green ..-un a look of din ppoim·
ll&lt;nl afcu rni..ing the firS&lt; of '"'0 very imporoanr free
lhro.. , ago inS&lt; Mary Hudin-Baylor. - pi&gt;«o by R1&lt;h2rd

'•

f'688wprrghr.AquilloJohnsonfind•a holein1hedefense
lfldfirt•.,.·ay.- P1KJtobyRIChndN~t•
ll'fr. Tough dtfen~ grtt&lt;td 1ht Toppus in 1hcir win o~tr
Tnu 'l'omtn"• Uni•·tnily. - phoro by Rich"d Nott

rop. Topoff!Jngtr Brown duels a Lady Bulldog1odtc ide
111 •no!htr jump bill. - phoro by RKhlfd Niro
.loht Chau•in and Maggie Adam) ••ndwich 1ht opposi·
11011 on an effort 10 foru a turno•u. - ph&lt;xo by O.mo•n
ltiOtgon

89

�(rompg. 89

from winning the close ones
The Lady Hilltoppers will only lose two pla)·er~
this year to graduation, Ginny Green and Inger
Brown.
Green. a native Austinite who started as a fre~h.
man. looked as though she would break several
records through the course of her career. As a
sophomore Green was voted captain of the rttm
and led rhe ladies in free throw percentage. She WJS
known for her hustle and inspirational attitude. Her
junior and senior years, however, would not prove
to be as productive, as Green's playing time was
cut. However. when fans and supporters remem ber
Green they won"t remember her as a cheerleader,
they'll remember a fine basketball player who never
gave up no matter what the circumstances.
Inger Brown, a Florida native, is considered to
be the best basketball player to ever play for tbr
l.adytoppers. As a junior she was ranked nationalJr
as one of the rop rwemy rebounders in the counay.
She was also an offensive machine and when sht
got on a roll she was absolutely unstoppable. T'ht
team will no doubt feel the effects of her gradu.
arion.
This was a solid ream, a ream that knew how to
win and kne w how to lose. The fans enjoyed rhtnl
and appreciated their will to win; they were ind«d
winners in our hearts.
J~hcChau~in

(22} andJrnny Ba&lt;ehrlor wO&lt;kthe ball•n•gar•
Btshop College. - pho10 by Dam••n Morgan

Names

+

Numbers - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

From l(&gt;w· C011ch Da"'d Mc Kry . Karen Ross• . VICki
~"""· Aquillo Johruon . Jenn,(er SarcheiO&lt;, Manoger
Maggoe Tagle Second Row, MaggJC Adams, Theresa
Campbell. Malina Ztptd•. Jul.., Ouu~m. Thud Ro w.

90

Anne Gokelman. Karen Woolley, Maroa Guerrero, Virg1n11 Grttn. Back Row· Inger Brown. Malian MIChel.
M IChelle Vdl.orral

Concordia Lutheran ( Nebraska)
Tarleton
Incarnate Word
Schreiner College
Austin
Trinity
Tarleton
Concordia Lutheran ( Nebraska )
Southwest Texas State
T rinity
Schreiner
St. Mary"s
Incarnate Word
Texas Women's
Texas Lutheran
Mary Hardin-Baylor
Concordia Lutheran
East Texas Baptist
Huston Tillotson
Bishop
St. Mary's
Texas Lutheran
Mary Hardin Baylor
Austin
Bishop
East Texas Bapt:rst
Huston Tillotson

6~·73
68-6~

(OT)

94-57
61-(fi
74-49
90-61

78·B
79-57
52-78

78-47
45-(fi
71-73 (OT)
,2.47 ()T )
76-68
~-43

84-86
74-63
70-73
64-66
63·82
69-71
67-72
58-81
72-47
95·92 ( OT)
84·82 (OT)
74·83

�J.-nni Ba•chclor u ic~ 10 keep •he boll ou! of enemy
hands and in!o fri.-ndly hand• closer 10 •h e hoop. photo by Ricfmd Niro
Ginny Green looks !hrough a fore&gt;! of ba&gt;ke!ball
jer.eys•ofind&gt;omcon&lt;c!opau•heball!o. -ph&lt;xoby
Rich~r&lt;J Mro
Maggi.- Adam&gt; pick ~ h&lt;croelfup afw r a n un&gt;u cns ful
rebou nd ancn&gt;p!. - photo by R!Ch~rd N1ro

91

�Volleyballers Go
It was a banner }'&lt;'ar for the- St. Edward's worn ,
en's volleyball team :as well as for their fans who
turned out in record numbers to watch the Top~

perform
Closing rhe season with a phenomenal u·cord of
30-6 and the conference tide Coach Diane Da~~
team en joyed their finest snson ever. led by stn
iors Julieanne de Ybarrondo, ( an NAIA AllAmerican) Ginny Gran and Pam Dilworth, the
talented squad played rival Southwesrrrn in the
first round of the District IV playoUs. In what
emerged as rhe most exciting game of the year, tht
Toppers sraged a dramatic come-from-behmd vic.
wry over the Pirates after being down in the final
game 10-1.
Following this comest, the Toppers played an-

92

�To National Tournament For The First Time Ever
Olhtr rival, Texas Lutheran College, whom they
had btiten earlier in the season, only to be defeated
in duet smight games. Despite the heanbreaking
loss. though, the Toppers travelled to Milwaukee
for the NAJA national tournament, their first appt~rance in the hisrory of the volleyball pro~ram.

In the Southwestern matchup, poor sets m the
(1111] g11me of rhe season put the Toppers at a 10-1
dtfKit. [t appeared that the team would be another
··also"ran"
As the home crowd of Pirate fans roared, the
Toppers rattled off twelve unanswered points
~~oTiich lowered their shouts ro whispers.
Whether ir was spikes by Dilwonh and Word, an
au by Green, or a spectacular save by de Ybarrondo, the Toppers hounded the Pirates, regaining
a IHO lead. The Pirates, however, came back to
tal:eal4-12lead
The tide seemed to flow against the Hillcopper
fans, though, when we scored to bring the game
wtthin one. Yet in one quick move, the tide
chJnged. As de Ybarrondo approached the net.
apparently to spike the ball, she merely tapped it
O'ltr, bringing the game to a 14-14 tie. A spike by
Southwestern put them on top by one, but it was
IOOfl followed by Sandra Word's potent slam
whit:h tied the score at 1~.
The game tied once more at 16, but when
Southwestern knocked the ball out of bounds, the
Toppers gained the lead at 17-16. And, in one final
shot, they capped the season's most exciting comeback and the game, 18-16
After the rush of fans had cleared the floor, once
the photo session had ended, once the players filed
out of th~ gym, Coach Daniels had this to say.
'When we were down 10-1 in the final game, we
rtmembered when we had "em 9-0 in game three
and lost it. If they could come back, so could we.""
When asked what was said during St. Edward's
tunc out with the score 12-10, Coach Daniels replied, ""We just looked at that sign on the wall and
ui "Here lies St. Deads, buried Nov. 6, 198~ and
lncw that was not going to be us; we were going to
bury them."
The Saturday following the exciting, come from
btbind victory at Sout hwestern, the Toppers travtltd to Seguin to battle Texas Lutheran for the
Diatrict IV championship, but a battle it was not.
Blow-out" would be a more appropria te phrase.
Plagued by poor sets and touch breaks, rhe team
•pptarcdslowand listless as they lost the match in
thrtt straight games, 1~-~- 1~-7. and 1~-JO. Texas
Luthtran was impressive with near precision sets
lfld pt"rfect serves. They returned anything and
notrything, including spikes by Dilworth and de
Yhlnondo which are usually unstoppable. Not
hen the deceptive, ""hit em where they ain't,"" play
of Gmny Green could stop the T LC onslaught .
It had nothing to do with desire,"" said Coach
~ Daniels. ··we wanted it .as bad as they did.
We were confident but they played exceptionally
tttll and when we lost the momentum early, we
Just couldn't get it back.""
However. the great drama, the peaks and valle ys
of the last parr of the season were all relegated to
ICCondary status when the Toppers were named to
fdloneofthe at-large bids for the National NAJA
tournament in Milwaukee.

T hoclocal n&gt;ediapick ed uponth esuccns~toryofthoc
T opp&lt;&gt;r• too; hu ... G inn y Gree n gi•e&gt; her in~tghr~ of
the team' s success to Danny El~n.-rofC h a nnelH .­

phofo By Dom11n

Back row: Nora Flor ..s. Manager, Ann ab.- lle
Cantu, P am Dilwort h. Anne Gokelman.Julinnnt
de Ybarrondo. Mic he ll e Villar .. al. Sandra Wo rd.
G inny G ree n. Coac h Dr. Diane Daniels. From

Southwt~ern

Tt"X.Is Wesleyan
Concn&lt;dra
1\uston-Tillouon
Ma ry lbrdrn- Ba ylor
Ptu!hps Colkge
Huston-Ti!!O&lt;oon

,,

Pan Amtrican
St.Phi!!,psCollege
Schnener
lncarn.ate Word
Tnntly
1\uston-TillO&lt;oon
Mo ry·s
Teu.s Lutheran

'

1~-1 2; 1~·2;

16- 18; 11-1~; ~~-to
l j-1), 11-19, 1~-0
14-16. 1~-10. 9·11
n-1, 1)-9. 1~-0
11-6.l1-7.12-1).1)-9
1)-10. 11-~
n-1.11-1
n-6. ~~ -9
11-8. ~~ -~
11-1.11·9
11·}. ~~-9
l1·2. 17 .J). ·~- 7

11-6.l1-7.1)-2
11-6.11 -11.n-LL,1 4-t6.n-11
11-11, U-11. B-1~, 8-11
.,. 7, 1~-J

Morg~n

Row; Juli e Chau•·in. M ari n ~ Ztp&lt;""&lt;i •. Oh•·ia Ze ·
ped~, Olivia Zamarripa. Karen Dunn. Theresa
Ca n&gt;pb.-ll , Ka ren Wool .. y and Juli a Birdwell. -

phow by O.m1.1n Morg•n

Schrerner
n-9. ~~-8. 4-11. n-6
East Tt"u BapnS&lt;
Southwestern
11·12. u-n. n-~. B-1~. 10-n
M• ry Hor drn-Baylor
n-6.7-n, 11-6.l1-6
Tens Luthet~-n
1)-4. 1~·9. 1)-12
E•st Tn:.., S.pust
!)-~. 1)-13. 11-6
11-12. 11-8. 17-1~
Trrnr1y
Co&lt;Kordra
8-11.13- 1),11-8.11 -IO.U·ll
11-),1).11
NO&lt;th Teus Snte
1~·9. ~~-6

Teu.sWuleyan
l\ard1n Srmmons
Teu.s A &amp; I
Southwe~ern

Stephen F Au st1n
Mary·•

'

9-11.9-11
B·11.n-JO, 1)-12
4-11.1)-4,11-ll
11-11.13-11.11-10.11-13,10-11
ll-11.11-13.11-B
B-11. l1-IO, 1~-10, 11-1

93

�Hilltoppers Fall One Game Short Of
Title
The baseball team began again this year wnh 1
new coach, lots of new faces and a m~ar miss ac dlt
district title.
In the playoffs, the Toppers bowed to disuin
champ Texas Lutheran 9-4. Before that, they had
surprised many observers with a very strong show.
ing, crushing Huston-Tillmson, Schreiner llld
Southwestern; the smallest margin of victory of tht
three was an 8 run blowout over Schreiner.
TL~~forcunarely, the run at the t itle was ended bf
Coach J ames Keller's charges played a tou&amp;b
schedule with several ''name" teams on it. Aguna
the University o f Houston Cougars, the Topptn
dropped a doubleheader by the close scores of1-1
and 6-:i
A doubleheader against the Baylor Bears tumtd
up similar results - close. but not close enough at
the Topers lost two close ones by scores of 3-2ll\l
~-4.

W hen the T CU Horned Frogs came co town,
though, t he Toppers were not robe denied a victory as they rook rhe second game 7-6 after bt~
beaten in the opener 19-14.
Another viccory over a Southwest Conftrt~~tt
team was co come against a red hot Texas Ted
ballclub, as the Topeers ended their 14 gamt ft
streak by a 12-4 margin.

Mike Cour's aufmpltli
throwoutofa Horned frog ucapeintoleft field. -~

by

O.m~n

Morgan

�Nowhere else but Tens can you find 90degree
,.·uthcr and bo..,ball on o Fe btuuy after noon.-

photo by V.moan Morgan

�conr_ from

PR- %"

Names &amp; Numbers ~-------------

Against eventual conference champion TLC tht
Toppers more than held their own, losing tht f1111:
contest between the two but bouncing back late! tn
the year for a 11-4, 5-0 doubleheader Sw«p.
It was an exciting yea r for Topper baseball fills
T hose journeying down the hill to see the team
in action saw a homerun hitting barrage by TO'""
Lawless, new coach J ames Keller"s managing5fj"Jt
and caught plenty of rays of sunshine.
The sp ring brought with it unseasonably ..-a~~
temperatures. including a 90-degree heat wavr .
February. T he warm weather and action on b
diamond was reminiscent of a Jul y day tfwl 1
February afternoon that reg arded finals week au
distant event.
Those afternoons contrasted with the arrival
more seasonable, chillier days when the last rtadla
of arctic air breezed through the hilltop, redu~
fans to a brave few willing tO stand some cold·
cheer the team on.
As usual, weekends were popular - studta:!
toting jamboxes flocked to the diamond to ~
what baseball fans do- some paid attention, SCllr
yelled when everyone else did, some talked abo.
classes or other people and some just enjoyed
fresh air.
Fans, coaches. players, the eyes o f East Hall
all enjoyed the season again.
TaggedOut! TonyArrediafi rstba..,man.tag•IMitQ
opposing bue runner . On a good pickoff thro"· frpitcher Mike Sanders. - ph&lt;xo by Dom~n M Ol&amp;'"-

Southwestern
Concordta
Prarie View
Schreiner
Southwestern
Concordia
Benedictine
Centr11l lo wa
North Dakota Sr.
Houston
Sui Ross
S.S. of Mmn.
Baylor

TLC

96

5-3,2-3
9·2.10-7
4 -6,16-5
10-2,3-12
1-9,7-6
5-2,6-9
5-9,3-0
11-0

,.,

l-5,5-6
7-3,10-7.8- 4.6-3
5-6,12-9
2-3,0-4
8-10

Emporia State
Husron-Tillotson

TCU
Trinity
Missouri Valley
East Texas Baptist
Southwestern
Lubbock Christian
Texas Tech
Kern ey State
Texas Tech
Lu bbock Christian
St. Mary"s
Sam Houston

2-5,2-6
12-0,10-1
14 -19,7-6
12-2
4-3.4·3
6-3. 13-2,6-12

,.,

7-8.1- 12
3-6, 12-4
2-7
4-6

10-8,8-10
0-3.3·13
6-8,1-12

TLC
Sr. Mary"s
Schreiner
Southwestern
Trinity
l-lusron-Tillorson
Mary Hardin Baylo r
UT at Arlington
Playoffs:
Southwestern
Huston- Tillotson
Schreiner
Southwenern

TLC

11-4_,.0
10-11
0-10

,.,

14-3
9·1
6-0,5-6,9·'
3- 1,4-2
4-8

13-1
12-4
14-3
4-9

�Anod&gt;e&lt; opposing buerunner 15 out on a good pby be.
t-..en~thefimbuemanandtl&gt;tpitchercovermgf~tS&lt;. ­

plwxo by Dam11n Morgan
Acr pttcl&gt;tr Moko Saruk&lt;ll fires in hos famed curwball.
San&lt;k&lt;s c.pcured conference hor&gt;Or$ for hos dfons. plwxo by Dam11.n Morgan

97

�t...otiJ• .. h•••.,..n ood Moh Uroooe. pl•r•nA on wp;o

r-&amp;1~ ~"'· •ho• 11M- doffuooftl I.U.IU of reodo ....~ ohoA•- P'•'u "J'O'O "' P'•T""· - phottobr O..llllllll

"""""

�Another
Conference

Title
fOf eM: 26ch time in 27 years, the Toppers mC'n's
roms team came away BSC winners. The team
dinc!J(d their tide with .116-0 win over Mary Har-

jn.Baylor, the team that tied the Toppers for the

ronfntnce titk last year.
1llc neuers thtn went on tO mat tht University
Teus at Tyler to compete for national berths in

die NAIA wurnament, where Karl J auhiainen and
Michael Lamon emerged victorious, urning them
btrths in the nationalwurney.

Coach

Emm~t

Strohmeyer credited Larsson, a

tlvt of Buenos Aires, with keeping the team

ustd on winning.
"Michael has provided strong leadership for the

, sttting goals :~ond kttping enthusiasm high."
Suohmeyer, a veteran of the hilltop coaching

raff for over 30 y&lt;'lrs, is modest when explaining
role in the Toppers' continuing sucess year after

Jl 1rhey',,; &lt;h•'o"'" wlmdo the work, not m~... he
id. "I do stress conditioning 21nd a concentration

r rht basics:· Strohmeyer's team once again made

I name for itself both on and off the court, as the
hiD players all posted higher than a }.0 GPA.
Anof~r y~r. another title. For the men's tennis
hill and Coach Strohmeyer, the excellent has
rwntd 1010 the routine through hard work and
~tdicttion.

,IMJio Rop.s preparc,.to rifleareturn sbo•to his opponent,
-pllotobrDwm..n MorgiVI

Names

+

Numbers--------------Temple J unio r Colltge
Schreintr
Southwestern
M eLennon
Pan American
Temple Junio r College
&amp; hreiner
Southwl"stern

F10n1 Row- Tnry Sunl'l',John DtSoo. Ale-

Jtll&lt;lroAlvareLS.ckrow-KarlJauh~ao~n.

w
w
L

7-l
6-0
6·3
6· 1
8- 1

,_.

w
w

Huswn-Tiii(){SOO

w

McLtnnon

w

Oklahoma Ciry University
U.st Teus Baptist
St. Marfs

w
w

,..

7-2
6 ·0
6-2
8-2
4-2
6 -0

M..:hul L.omon, Url Botlfnoge

99

�nghr: The dctumination on Kelly O ' Reilly'• fur
shows u she knocks back a return. - ph01o by [h.

mi•nMotg•n

b«rom: Fencu, supply b&lt;ogs. and thermos bordu rhe"' are the only rhings rhu pre•ent a player from
being rora lly a lone during s ingles competition. photo by U.mian Morgan

100

�Close, But No Cigar For Women N etters
Although it was another fine

~ason

for wom-

n·$ ttnnis on the hillwp the Toppers fell short of
cf1~eving their goal o f a conference championship.
t

agam, the title wem

to

the University of

ry Hatdin-Baylor with the Toppers finishing
ood
T}Ko team's downfall came in the conference
with the Crusaders, who earlier handd tht Top~rs their only conference loss of the

~nument,

~. lnthetournament,theCrusaders'netters

lwtpl nnrly all number one and t wo places, leav-

infl tM hilltop netters out in the cold.
Gtaduation and Coach Diane Daniels departure
h~ tht tn.m especially hard. Three of the team's
rrwnstays for ytars, Merry Ann McCrary, Karla
Gallt, and Ktlly O'Reilly all departed due co
sraduation.
The season, saw, however, new blood on the
team which will improve Jnd challenge for the
coofermce title someday. Leading the new charges
on the team were Freshmen Anita Cantu and Laura
NtvesMissona.
Lndenhip, of cour~. is an imponant pan of
lllf spons team, and J unior Elsa Guevara can be
ted to provide the leadership that next years
m will need when conference competi-

"P·

+

Numbers--------------

Temple Jr. College
UT San Antonio
Trinity Jr. Varsity
Southwestern
Schriener
Mary Hardin -Baylor
Pan American
Texas Lutheran
East Texas Baptist
Chriener
Trinity Jr. Varsity
St. Mary"s

frorM ro,. Mtrry Ann McCrary. Robon Pamh. laura

w
w
w
w
w
w
w

Ktlly O "Rtolly. K.arla Gallt, Ano11 C.nru

L)'ORI, Eba Guma Block rwo Coach DiaM Danotb,

101

�102

�What's New? Varsity Soccer Is!
Making the playoffs came down to one
game, a contest against perennial rival St.
Mary's. Unfortunately, the Toppers came up
short, losing 4-3. That loss, however, was just
an dement of a big year for the team.
It was a watershed year for soccer on the
hilltop as numerous changes in the program, all
positive ones, meshed to give birth to a new
~rts tradition.
For the first time ever, soccer became a varsicy spon. In the past, it had been o n a club level
filth no scholarships to hand out. The yea r saw
sevtral scholarships handed out to deserving
playeu.
The Toppers also played home games on the
track in front of the main building. No longer
did hillrop soccer fans have tO travel to Zilker
Park or some other location to see their team
play; in previous years, rhe team had played in
the Ausrin City League, an organization which
united clubs around the Austin area for competition in both rhe fall and spring semesters
The change in competition helped students.
faculty and sraff see the exploits of the team

lxtween classes or after work as the cram's fan
support and awareness of thC' team increased
dramatically.
Because th C' Toppers had gained varsity seatus, their opponents were now other college
teams instead of informal clubs, and the H'llm
and its coach, Manuel Juarez, realized the great
diffC"rence in competition before long.
'The teams we faced were much better pre.
pared," said coach Manuel Juarez. "They were
well conditioned and well prepared." The Toppers were also able to have more say in their
schedule, playing more matches during rhe
week instead of rhe A.M. Saturday and Sunday
games.
T he new competition, new home games, new
game times and new suppon enabled the cop·
pers to turn in a 7-6 overall record, with a 3. 2
Big State Conference mark.
The mark was achieved with a young ream:
new co intercollegiate soccer and new to rhe
college life as well. 12 of the 18 players on rhe
team were freshmen. In addition, the team had
just a week to prepare for its first ever intercollegiate game, a 2-0 win over the College of the
Southwest
The stiff challenge presented by the new
competition was met head on by the Toppers as
all of their six losses were by just one goal.
"Nobody blew us off the field." said Juarez.
"We were in every match that we played."

College of rhe Southwest

Texas Southern

M o~) Abam gains conuol of 1be l»ll as Mark
McCa nn loob on. -photo by O.m~n Morpn

0-1

2-0

Trinity

1-2

Texas Southern

1-0

2-1

Texas Lutheran

l-0

2·3

St. Mary's

3-4

2-3

Trinity

1-0

l-1

103

�Jbo..., tighr: Gid Grues and R&lt;X-1 Momes prac1ice
dri.-ingin &lt;hefairwayof l osiCreek Coun&lt;ryCiub. photo by O.miJn Morgon

righr:GidGrnes &lt;ries •oguide his puu in1o1he hole
wi1h his body J.nguage. - photo by O.m;.n MorgJn

104

�BSC, Turn In Good Year
Green grass, wide open spaces. the

:.~.bSt"nCe

of cheering crowds and the cloS&lt;" confines of
gymnasium walls set golf apart from most other
vars1ty spom on thr hilltop, but the Topper golf
team maintained the sundards of sports excellence that had been set by other varSity clubs.
Making up the squad were Giles Kibbe, a
freshman and first year letterman from Beau.
mom; Gid Graves, a senior and 2nd year !et~er­
man from Marshall; J effrey Dumont. a freshman
and 1st year !enerman from Kened}·: Rod
Montes, a freshman from Canutillo; Stevr Jack son, a freshman from Anahuac; and Bill What, a
senior and 3rd year letterman from Austin.
The team was coacht'd by ) 1m Koch, and

AsSO("iate Professor of Behavioral and Social
Sciences. and assisted by Dr. Glenn Hmkle. the
Center for Teaching and Learnmg Charr
The golfers did well against rough competition such as the Rattlers from Sr. Mary's South·
western, Texas Lutheran Colltge, Trinit)' Uni·
versity, Schrtintr Colltgt, and Concordia Luth·
eran Collegt.

Th.- golf1.-am rcen1crcd &lt;he 81g Sr~, .. Confer.-nc.- rh"
faiL T hey comp.-red again)! golfers from S1. Mary'&gt;.
So,uh .. n•crn. Ttinuy •nd Concord... - phow bJ
Damr•n 1\forg•n

!Ol

�106

�HeMan Takes Intramural Football

Title

Despite rain, forfeiu, and Charlie Keffder, it
was an another exciting intramural n.~~g football
snson. This year, the teams w lxat were He Man and the Masters of rhe UniverS(', the Dog s
of War, and the Wetkend W:miors.
These last two teams, familiar innitutions
within intramural football, returned again this
snson to make their third and fourth straight
ap~arances, respectively, in the playoffs. Yet,
bmh fell short of tht'ir goal as He-Man, led by
that graduate student qullrttrback David Koch,
brought home the title.
Also partici~ting in the playoff picture were
the Oblates, who finished the season with a
respecuble 7-4 record. The Weekend Warrio rs,
with t he league's best record of 11 -0, fo und out
in the championship that their talented quarter back Stephen Stovall and his favorite receiver
Ronnie Smith were not enough to win the tide.
As for the Dogi third straight playoff loss,
four year veteran Brian Senn ha.d this to say.
" We had a great quarterback, the league's best
defense, and some awesome receivers; I don't
know why we lost. It must be my fault.
The championship showdown betwttn HeMan and the Weekend Warriors was a tight,
low scoring game but in the end it was the
HeMan squad that came out on top. •
The game began with a calculated HeMan
drive, sparked by quarterback David Koch's
sideline toss to receiver Jeff Applewhite, and a
short pass to Leroy Nicholas, which he turned
into a ten yard gainer. Inside the ten yard line,
Koch threw a strike to Sal De Ia Garza in the
corner of the end zone to put HeMan ahead 6 0.
The score remained the same until the Wttk end Warrior offense, which appeared tired and
frustrated in the first half, exploded in the second half on a long drive, capped by Stephen
Stovall's couchdown pass to none other than
Ronnie Smith.
But the HeMan offense was quick to answer
with a surge m the Warrior 10 yard line follo wing the interception of a Stovall pass. HeMan
quarterback Koch hit Applewhite on seco nd
and goal to put HeMan ahead for good 14-8.
The Wttkend Warnors, shaking off the dogged pursuit of the HeMan defensive line,
marched to the HeMan 7 yard line but failed in
four anempu to cross the goal line.
HeMan then took control, burning up the
dock and leaving the Wttkend Warriors only
thrtt plays to score from their own 3~ ya.rd line.
Thrtt last ditch passes fell incomplete and when
the last pas.s hit the ground, HeMan and the
Masters of the Universe were undisputed cham.
pions of intramural football.
The team MVP"s are as follows: Dogs of
War, Stuart Schultz; Dongers, Eugene Watson;
HeMan, David Koch; Oblates, Anthony Cipolla; 0 -Ktt-Pa, Paul Spanvath; Rookies, Giles
Kibbe; Terminators, Leon Patterson, USFL Re jects Jesus Gt.rcia, Wttkend Warriors, Stephen
Stovall.

107

�D-SATS, La Mafia
Captures Titles
It was a year of revenge for the D-SAT S, who
grabbed the intramural crown from the Bachelor.
enes with a 9-4 drubbing.
The D-SATS were led on the road co glory by
Julie Chauvin, Thereu Campbell, Doreen ~VItt,
and Rosa DeAlva. It was their timely hitting and
sure fielding that led them lO cap:ure the tide that
had eluded them rhe previous year.
In men's action, La Mafia Kids were the winners,
clinching the crown in an anticlimactic final which
saw them crush Golden Dave and the D -Damsina
fighr marred rout.

Leading the way for L11 Mafia were Andres Sosa,
Pat Rowland and J uan Vela. A disappointed Dave
Koch mumbled "no comment'" after the rout.

Had Compa ny's Brion Saa ri rrcrivu congruularioos
from r&lt;cammace Oavr Scardino aftrr anmhtr of Suri's
round trippers. - phofo by Richud Nin
bdoJV: Even Gretchen Gilley"s dog couldn"t htlp th-e
Twisted Si~ters on thi~ day u they fell victim to th-e
Bachelo renu. - phofo by RicMrd Niu

108

�109

�11 0

�team. lk&gt;thofthe.-., playeu ,.ere ke~
to their tnms' 511CCU5 thi• S&lt;'a&gt;on. -

phoro by

O.m~Jn Morg~n

Hoopsters, All Slabs

#1

The intramural season crowned two new champions, the Hoopsters in
women's action, and the All Slab Team in men's.
In women's action, the Hoopsters had w banle the Misdits w the end,
winning }5-B on two late fr«: throws by Margaret Butler.
The low score of the contest is evidence of the conservative style of
each team. Colette Tepe, captain o f the victors, opened the game with a
15 foot bank shot and from that point, the two teams traded buckC"ts up
to a 21-19 Hoopster lead at the half.
In the second half, Rosa De Alva and Butler knocked in 15 points each
10 hold off the Misfits, led by Olivia Zamarripa and Vicki Lewis.
In mens' competition, the hard -luck Spanish
Flies, denied a title in last season's action by a
last second shot, were again denied their move
to the championship in the same way; this year's
damage was done by Richard Hughes, who
downed a last second jumper ro knock the Flies
out. The title this year, however, belonged to
the All Slab team, who beat the Buckhorns }529. The All Slab team, composed of baseball
players who proved that they could hoop as well
as they could hit, took control of the cham.
pionship game in tbe second half, led by to
George Watkins points.
The All-Slab defense also proved too tough
for rhr Buckhorns, as their 1-}-1 Jefense held
Buckhorns offensivr lraders like Russell Sterns,
Tom Dechant, and Chris Novos,ad to two
points or lrss in the second half.
The Buck horns were inspired during the sea.
son by sixth man of the }'t'ar Humphrey ''The
Terminator"' Marr, who continually came off
rhebenchtosparkhis reammateswithhisferocious rejections. stuffs. fast break conversions,
and Stt'$ils.
It was a season of excellent competition,
exciting ballgames and fun. with two wonhy
teams coming out on top.

Ill

�Nobody Could Beat The
Firm
Forget the o ne-day cancellation :md the dropped out reams: 11 was a
great }'ear for Co- Rec softball, and The Ftrm emerged from rhe day's fun
as champ1ons.
ThC' F1rm uounced a ream led by M1ke l:kcello and Tom S:~ltzstein ill
the finals w ca!Xure the tide.
For the first rime m Co- Rec tournament compeuuon's short hmory
the event was cancelled for a day due to b.ld weather. On the Frid&amp;J
befort the tournament was to be hdd a torrential downpour soaked the
Ausrm area.
But when Sunday rolled around, The Firm proved uns10ppable. Onl)
one team, led by Karla Galle, J ohn Nemec, K.u hy Hanensteintr and
Kt&gt;vm G.ldwdl mounted any typt" o f challenge against the big bm and
sure gloves o f che Firm.
It was also an histOrical C'\'ent.
For ynrs and years, an intramural T -Shirt had betn J ohn Vondrah
ptrsonal Holy Grail. Ac lase, h~ conclud~d h1s qu~sc by captunng cht
championsh1p w1ch Th~ Firm.

Humphr~y Marr
Gmny Gr~~n
13nan Sun
Th~r~a Campbell
J ohn Vondrak

o.~od

du1cll.
plo&lt;r

Koch dr"m1 (&gt;f l11s f'onl boMt clurlllg homtr. Ius
d~&gt;lllgCo!cll onlkoutfd~d. oruutd ployo1111t
phoo:obyRKIIIIdl\0111

Ttwprnono.ltlloughtsol Kout PoiCtOtlohuorud S..1urd1 y
of&lt;tmoon h • • lon.,: dn~. dttftttp 10 kfl fxld. M1
~g. MI80U18. U!OfW 0
phoo:obyRICf-oo.rdl»111

11 2

cf
rf

p

�113

�begiHHiHfl agai11

Studeruorgantzauon &gt;put on rile Halloweencarni•·al.
.... hi,h fc•turcd ... c,ldortg&gt;.l• ilmp. •a&lt;H(&gt;)'fC&gt;,apple
dunking' and n~uch more. - phoro br Rich•rd Nir:.

�0

0

0

organizations

0

0

0

�Cindy Qui rol accuus Guy J e~ n of rubbu chicku
a bu~ be fore Judge ( P e oe Ericbon ) WopMr·s Oi•oru
Coun. ~photo by Richord Nin
/o,.,.,r left: Thert wu no ~ ho ru.ge of qualifi ed targeu
during the annua l Hdlowccn ca rni val . -phow by Ric~rd
Ni,.

116

'

�A Hilltop Halloween! It's Scarier
Than RCM!

I

117

�l~ft: Mark lckn,
"' Un)oabl~

winnu of oh~ An&lt;hony Puk,~s
for Soci(oy'" award, - photo by RKI!.rd

N.n
lxlow: Good ohing i• "'' un"o "" Bobbi~g for Fren.c:b·
frin""! - p/loto by Roch~rd Mro

118

�Club
Now what event could possibly bring the Grim
Reaper, Dracula, Judge Wapner. the Invisible Man
and Damian Morgan together at the same time?
The H alloween Carnival, of course!
The numerous life forms that gathered in
Moody Hall to celebrate that ghastly holiday could
choose from any number of diversions. Marriages
were being performed: if it didn't work our, a
divorce could be had just a few feet away.
One could meet Dracula in a mysterious black
shrouded booth (for just 2~¢) or bob for apples
under a menacing hatchet that swung just inches
above the bobber's had.
One could take money and love to the Vegasstyle casino and win enough to
back those
swdem loans, or lose enough to put security guard
M:.m inVillafrancainjailjustthreetimesinsteadof
five or six.
Everyone with an urge to threw something was
amply satisfied. Those with a particular disaffinity
for SEU"s Tuition Man could have a toss at him
with a wet sponge; there was also the whip cream
pie booth, where unfortunate humans gm pounded
-again, for just a quarter.
The Hallo ween Carnival, moved inside because
of threatening weather, is the high point of the year
for the collective effort of campus organizations;
once again campus clubs benefited from the fun
and were able to finance club projects from the
G.rnival's proceeds.
For the second year in a row, the band that was
supposed to play at the dance didn"t make it. so
Mike Conwell took over and spun discs and rolled
magnetic tape ) to keep things going bump in the
night.

raY

The Student Anl\itic~ Council is !l&gt;e Maror acttVJUCS programm.ng org•mzauon on campus Swdent
•olumttr5 staff comm•ttees wh och plan. promote and tmplemem a •-art-ety of campus events - phoro by
Rtcbard Nml

Closeup
P.R. I.D.E. (Po•eny Relief" Dc•doping E•eryone) '"'""d ovet S400 ftom
sponiO&lt;S "'hen they cleaMd up the Ope-n Door PrMChool. Funds ....,,. controbuted
toC.utu.anorganouttontlu.thelpshungl) •ndl&gt;omelesoAuountteo.-pho&lt;oby
Chm~n

Morgon

119

�upptrrrghr:ApowerfullegthruJtJplinttrJanunfortu·
nate wooden board. - phow br Richud Nin
fi&amp;ht. Stance nd po5ition are a major pat! of
diJ( ipline.-phorobrRichMrdNin
obo&gt;T

fnlht: Tunling in thef.culty lounge helpJ theJeTu
Kwon Do ttudenl$ lurn th h.rd way. - phoro by
R..:hud Nrn

0

120

....

�Club
One walks from the laziness of a typical Saturday afternoon -study/sleepers in the library, golf
on T V, a campus outdoor population of brave
midafternoon joggers- to a quiet but very intense
evem in the faculty lounge.
Home to holistic grading, the English depaH·
ment's senior seminar presentations and the Phonothon this room also saw an invasion of bare·
footed white dad students who were to display
their knowlt'dge of T at' K won Do to an imposing
man in a tC'd ro~ who would apparently decide
whether their knowledge was ade&lt;:juate for the oc.
cas ion.
Now they stand in frontof him, counting under
their breath bur just loud enough ro hear - they
are nervous, unsettled inside as they practice the
different moves they have committed co memory
before today.
Yes, they do appear ready.
New they engage in combat rogether, moving
hands and feet swiftly, here defending against their
partner"s attack, there being rebuked by an equally
efficient defensive move.
New they do the Oriental bow as they prepare to
move into another part of the demonstration. How
curious - members of many ethnic groups are
here, t heir objective today is to demonstrate profi.
ciency of an ancient tradition that began years and
year ago in a distant land that most of the participants have doubtless seen only on television or at
the intersection of latitudinal and longitudinal lines
in geography class.
Now they break solid wooden boards with a
swift kick and a yell. Motion - the cry of aggres·
sion- the sound of woodbreaking- then silence,
as the loud but brief noises sink onto the plush
carpet of the lounge
Now it is over. The participants bow and exit,
carrying on a noble tradition.

Closeup

121

�rop rwhr ])~rltine lee "n't rhe only one cheerong •ftcr •

b.-k.,, by &lt;he Topi&gt;&lt;'&lt;&gt;·- phoro bJ·)•m Gmmlu
ro;;h1 C.&lt;&gt; Topf&gt;&lt;'l' Go' Sporm arc •h• ay&gt; lugh u the
en&lt;ranceoo•hegym.... hereoh.,cheerludenrootforthe
home tum. - phom bJ )rm Gonz~ln

122

�Club
In the cold of a late afternoon of mid-January,
an old gym in its last year plays host to a nonconference match between the women's basketball
team and a red-dad squad from many miles up the
interstate.
A look at the stands shows that these women
play for the enjoyment of it - certainly not the
glory. Fans at this game dot the stands like towns

dot west Texas.
The Toppers have gotten the rebound to the
collective yawn of the spectators but there is a
noise coming from the entrance to the gym - an
organized, proud, loud noise - it's the cheerleaders!
Speaking of hard work/no glory pursuits on the
hilltop, the cht't"rleaders certainly deserve mention.

"It takes a lot of time to prepare," said Pedro
Ramirez, the squad's senior, captain and three veteran.
At this campus, where all endeavors are possible
targets of ready cynicism. the cheerleadtrs encourage their favorite teams' successes regardless of the
place. the number of fans. or even NAJA restric uons.
In a disuict where road games include sabbati·
cals to places such as faraway Marshall, Texas, the
cheerleaders can be the only familiar faces in those
hostile gyms. "'We were the only support our team
had at some road games." said Ramirez.
And yes, somrone with missing fingers could
have counted on one hand Toppet fans at some
home games. There was one women's game where
there were more cheerleaders than fans he said.
Even the NAIA has somtthing to say about
what the cheerleaders can and cannot do. "Under
NAIA rules;· said Ramirez, " we can't do body
stacking and climbing. Sometimes it seems the
cheerleaders are more like a Sport than an organization.'
But it was a good year. "I was a cheerleader for
three years
it was one of the best years I've
had."'
Through the high points and low points of
cheerleading, the goals of the organization remain
the same. "We uy to promite school spirit and
represent the school well. You always have to be
ready w go."

Alph• C hi ,. on organi&gt;atoon of Honors Students. rheso: acodem;.; h •gh ach.even are sponsored by SLSter
phow br Riclurd Ni,.

Mar1e Andre Wla&gt;h. -

Alpha P h i S ig ma, a nauonal CfLmLnal JUsuce honor soc~y. enn&gt;urage1 r.~rch. d•»tmLitl.uon of
koowledge. 1'..-ntLfK pncc;.;es and pt&gt;de &gt;n th&lt;c pmfnsKm. - photo br Chnsr,- ~M

Closeup

123

�0

ldf")ackir

Dni~

is

pro~ing

rqualto 1hr fitnus lUI

umil shr begins 10 Jhow thr inuitab lr arrobics
(uigur abovr. -phorosby Rtch.rdNtn

124

�Club
"One!''
"Two!"

'Three!''
"f our!"
"Y'all are doin' great!"
Even after half an hour of this jumping and
stretching and yelling J eanie Wagner somehow
manages to continue leading her weary charges
into deepe r depths of exhaustion and breathless-

ness.
This is cardiorobics. one of the fitness craze's
strongholds among students. E\·try weeknight,
Hilltoppers shed their idemies as students, girlfriends, boyfriends, or TV watches and assumed a
ne w one - a breathless. sweaty, tired organism
struggling to keep up with the beat of Jeanie's
portable Flmbox, which roared over the nearby TV
( whe re students comfortably lived with low pulse

rates, Don Johnson, and Cagney &amp; Lacey).
Why drive yourself miserable frding exhaustio n?
'Tve got to lose some weight and get into
shape," said Diana Ferrari."" ] don"t want to end up
looking like a three hundred pound elephant.··
But every night?
"" lt"s important to keep going to get into shape.""
she continued
Ho w much weight do you need to lose?
""Over here,"" as she pinches her waist, ""over
here."" pinching her stomach. ··and over here,""
pinching wha t she calls her flabby arms and legs.
Jeanie changes the tape, the beat thunders away,
and the lobby"s exercisers move in unison again.
'One!"
""Two!""
""T hree!""
""Four

Closeup

Thf A co d ~my of Scie nce. rcoporuoblc for
the ~nt sale ot fall and lpr•ng ocgollrot!OnS.
cndcovor&gt; to pmmore Kient~f&gt;C omcrcll, cd1&gt;cotionondrc ... orch,whichconmb.o•c••othe

ptnon.al and pmfcsooonal development of •n
mem!)&lt;'r1. Kdli VaUcto. Prcsodent. Hmry
Voce Pl&lt;'sodcnr. ~photo by RKh·
•rrJNu·a
Trym~nsho.

12l

�cfDoh·• t - "'P' Wit ItA • ~~~~e (,..rnh aad \'.._l,
ll ..
llw ~l:&gt;k•. fuGl'woht aad ~. fuo.l.-1'
roudt 10 ~~-tiM O"•ou-.1 ,..... •. a.d (.,., A In_. ... ,
udJ-.I .. I)o.l--...o-a,_••O"It.lhup,...,,..,r-ranllf

ff,..•"'"

.,..,...... .......

1.111

,._. h

\ta.rlrow , _

�Club
l!'s No•·ember on the hilltop. As is
normal Texas wearherwise, there's hardly
a hint of winter in the air.
Those looking for entertainment can
go see the thriller ' J agged Edge," surring

''Smman" Jeff Bridges and Glenn Close.
"The Gods Must be Crazy is a return
engagement at the Dobie, while "Sweet
Dreams,'' the s1ory of Patsy Cline's tu·
multuous carC"er, is showing at a different
theatre every week.
''But wait," say Jane and)Ot' Dormdwellers. wondermg what to do on the
weekend. ··we don't have a car, the busses stop running about II or so, movies
cost too much anyway"
On this parucular weekend, there was a
solutiOn 1ndeed.

CAMP (Cotl~g~ AH,.unc~ M•gt~nl Progr~m) ga"' m1gran&lt; (arm..-otkcrs· cl!ildrrn a clu!nct IOf"'UUf
a colltgt carNr on tht hilltop - ph«o bf llom..n M org•n

Change the R.A.s from students to
nattily drtSS('d waiters!
Change the cafeteria food into real
h.dian cuisine!
Change the food g:uhering process
from a rodeo to civilized manner!
Change the ordinary din mw soft,
classical music!
It all added up to a pleasant dining
expenence billed as the spaghetti dinner.
Students got dressed up for the occa sion, too, as they were served by R.A.'s
from all four dorms.
As the students dined. a chamber
group played music 10 soothe the mood
and add a touch of class to the occasion.
" It was \'try nice," Said Scott Peden.
''The dinner was a welcome change from
ihe ordinary meal at the cafeteria. I th1nk
everyone enJO)'ed themselves.''
Afterwrads. everyone could burn off
the pasta and paste calones by dancing
the night way.
"That wu fun," Said Jane Dormdweller to Joe Dorrndweller as he walked
her back. "Let's do 11 agam next year."

Closeup

Copy, phoros.layoun and d&lt;'11di.ntS dofunnyrlln'lgsropC'Opksopucal
S)'J&lt;tms, n publocauon~ &gt;.U(ftfl ""Ill tdl )'00 btt......,n buCk&lt;'ls of co((« ph«o by Dom••n"s Nda)(l fMJ

127

�~~
r

,,

•

�Hard To Find But Well
Read
Wh.:u ~u ,.// rho~ C/JtS doing on .~~ w«knighr 11t the 11nnex?
Hmm
rhe phonorhon's in the filculry lounge, there- :;~ren'r
1my classrooms in rhere, they play b&lt;lskerba/1 in the gym -hey,
mayb.r ir 's scudenr pub/ic;uions. I he11rd they were over there
or llU they in Holy Cross H111l?

Such is the story of student publications here. A devoted,
energetic group of folks whose location and worktimes are
often only guused at by the hilltop community.
The Edwardi1m cominued to change, becoming a monthly
newsmagazine that featured an in-depth section and sixteen
pages of information per issue.
During the year, Edwudilln readers learned more about the
theatre department, Central American refugees, University fiscal
policies, and other timely, interesting topics.
Sports was also apanded to a four·page ~crion. The heroics
of the basketball and volleyball teams received ample coverage,
as did the Walter Mittys of the intramural wars.
Aiding in the expanded coverage was a new IBM personal
computer that sraffers could type their storeis into instead of the
clanky typewriters available that work only to a degree.
Another fine Everyman appeared in May, showcasing the
literary and photographic talents of students ~arching for a
meaning in the parade of testS, papers, and homework.
Publications advisor and photography supervisor Damian
Morgan weathered another storm of last minute photo re-quests,
ever. menacing deadlines, lab water ranging from arctic to tropic
temperaturewise, and a diver~ mix of publications suffers.
It was the last full year tO hear the shuffling of galleys, the
squeak of the lab paper cutter, and the sounds of HeJira late at
night; in 86·87 publications would be moved co a new home
after the completion of the Main Building Renovation.

129

�. . . beginning again ...

�... people . ..

�begiHHiHfl agai11 ..

Seniors

1)2

�Sabh AI.Ararfi

Margaret T Alnand~r
Allxru L Alf01d

ScouJ Anthony
MehndaJonelknnet&lt;

JowphJ Bock
Greg&lt;&gt;&lt;)· Todd
Bourgt!'&lt;lrs

Jacquebne E.

So~er.

""''

Ed,... rdS!e•·eB«ght
DolraC.dena
Donald E C.mpbtU.Jr

M&lt;l«wl

Cur~tl

Damca L,e, Darley
Salvador O.bGoru

133

�Ana Velasquez
on being a senior
Ana Velasquez. a na1ive of Colombia. gradu.
ated wuh a degree in photocommunicatJons. As
500n as 11 had ended. the pressure to find a JOb
quickly eclipsed the elauon of getting Jt all over
wuh
"If I did It over agam, I wouldn't wan until
graduation (to find a JOb );· she sa1d. After the
c.aps. gowns. and ctlebratJon of graduation 11
took her two months 10 find a JOb, she was
h1rt.•d to a pos!Uon wnh the City of Austin as a
med1a worker
lnterv1ewmg at various places. w1th the
knowledge that she needed a JOb soon coupled
w1th her Spanish accem caused a great deal of
stress for her at the bcgmn1ng of the [Ob hum
''] would literally be shaking at some interviews." she said; the search did noc net any
immediate results and she began to wonder
whether she should JUSt forget all about living
in Amenca and return to her nati\-e countr}'
·What I am do1ng here)" she asked herself
when there seemed to ~ no hope for a JOb
prospect. But she was determined not to g1ve up
look1ng. for that meant fa1ling m front of her.
self 'I don't care what an}·one else thinks. Ana

Johnf[)rSOI
h,.. Ahmtd Fbuhom
)•"'"' fbuhom
AdontS 1\dubn

f~~

wants that goal and I went for It," she s~id
"I was so scared because I know 11 wasn't
going to ~ an easy step," she said of the
interviewmg process. "To start everythmg is
hard. but it becomes more natural - but the
first few umes can affect your confidence a lm
b«ause }"OU can find a nice or nasty mterviewer
Getting out alwe was made more d1fficult for
Ana because of her tnternauonal student status
and language differences '"It"s not an easy thing
to~ a foreigner and get a degree," she said. She
felt that n was a positi\'e thing, however, nOt a
negat1'e one. 'I am proud of be1ng bilingual. I
was proud to have the opportunity 10 deal w1th
two different cultures and languages
So, for Ana. it's a new JOb, the beginn"ing of a
career, and no more school days on the hilltop.
She views her departure as a good thmg. but
she"!! miss 1t
" I fed at home at the Umverstty,'shesald. I
never had one problem wnh anybody; I liked all
my classmates. I was glad every t1me I had to
go."
J"IJ m1SS the l~m,etSllf

�MKhck M Frm&lt;:h
Karla G. Gall~
Cymh•aJaM Goll(g&lt;&gt;S
R(MG11c..

Dlon~

AbMGran

Jam~da

J

Jbmzo

Kathy JN.n lt.rtomst~rMr
A H U(J

~ndra

VK!Or lrO&gt;.buchr
YongunJung
Karrn £.Knoll(

Jcant'frtM L«
Mary Ann Mc&lt;nry
Mrchtlk D Mr&lt;chdl

135

�Ma•y M Molina
A NICholas
l.au11 L. NIChols
Richard) Nua

l~t&lt;&gt;J"

Johro Ob•nno Ofoxgbu
AIIKno

P~rn

L1saC.Popp
Kom1Krl1· R Poulin

Mo&lt;:hd~ M J&gt;.. nuk
Ali A-l.auf Rnhdan

Kay N Ram.. y
J&gt;~rla R~al

AngdoJ Rod11gu~•
Gr~g S. Row•n
E...,ngdonf Ann.-tlf

Schoono&gt;er
Jamts M Sou1I""~IJ

�F.ld~rhostd '86 brought mor~ ""mors ro tl&gt;t tullmp. Parttnpoms
w~m ro a comp•n~r class, a drawing class, uw th~ Ausun srtes
lind had a cookout rn Zilker Park. Th~y harl~d (rom places as (or
away u New York and Dnroor. and u clo..,uS.n Anoonroaod
l louston. T"beypto•·edthat l~arnrngdOfsn'ttoda(terschool­
you IUK don't poy u much (or it'.- photos by R.chJrd Nl~

Pn~rJ Tornatore
Shrrl~y F.. Tropom
John C. Vondrak
Judy Ann Wood

137

�Facu lry Address
Dr. Perry McWilliams

Dr. Hayes, Lt. Go\·ernor Hobby, Members of the Board of
Trustees, and Very Relieved Mothers and Fathers:
Seniors. we are very proud of you- and I am honored to be
able to d~liver these few words of homage on this occasion. For
as a senior official in the Registrar's office astutely observed.
you are a sort of. well, "different" kind of class- so that your
having asked me to speak at your commencement is not surprising. I supfX&gt;se you know what she meant.
1 think she meant that you have been one of the most unique
senior classes in St. Edward's 100 years of existence. And I think
that your uniqueness lies partly in your being hereafter known as
the "almost"' class. For you are the class that was almost, but not
quit~. the one hundreth graduating class of St. Edward's University. You are rhe class that almost, but not quite, got to use the
new SfX&gt;rtS Complex. You are the class that almost got to enjoy
the new ReUnion, the move into the new dorm-apartments, and
to enJOY the new Student Activities Center. Almost.
And yet. in some very imfX&gt;rtant ways, there was absolutely
no "almost" about the class of '86. You were difinitely not
"almost" the last class to be able to donk beer on the St. Ed's
campus when you were 18 - or even 20 years old, for that
matter. You are the last. And there was no "almost involved in
your being the first class to win conference championships in j
and maybe 4 SfX&gt;rU 1n one year, in your having sent your
volleyball team and 5e\'eral cross country runners to national
compeution. in your having two all-Americans, a host of allconference players. a coach-of.tht-}'ear, a home run record
holder, and a men's basketball team which won the first unshared conference championship tn 34 long, dry. years.
No, there was no "almost" about those accomplishments and
they will definitely stand as very large marks on St. Edward's
standard of ach1evemem. And yet, such marks as these - the
ones which go into the record books for others to see- these
are not the marks of which those of us who have shared these
Oeetmg years are most proud. The marks we admire most are

138

etched in the spirit of St. Edward's - and they are the marks
which are more visible - and more enduring- than all others,
for they form a part of rhe legacy which you lea\'e behind
These marks appeared each time you stepped on stage to give
another of your sterling performances, when you filled the air
with music, or when Tony Lawless knocked another baseball all
the way to Congress Avenue. The spirit of all such performances
was shown in the fact that you musicians weren't invited to sing
at Carnegie Hall. you actors didn't perform on Broadway, and
you athletes didn't fly cross-country to play before 90.000 fans.
You couldn't even get involved in a ticker-scalping scandal
because you didn't have anf tickers ro scalp. You rode in cars
and vans, and played before audiences so small that It sometimes stretched the meaning of the word to call it a crowd. You
caroled rour hearts out in the lobby of Teresa Hall, gave
performances before mini-crowds in the Mary Moody Theater
- and showed the world what it means 10 have chatacter.
You demonstarted that character when you arrived fresh
from another country, some1imes still struggling with a new
language and a new way of life, only ro learn thar "Welcome to
Texas" was translated to mean eight hours of placement !ests
and a course spelled RCM. You showed the sp111t of St. Ed's
when you returned to school after an absence of several decades
and took )'Our places beside smooth cheeked progenies of the
Computer Age when your last experience with an examination
rook place when Edsels and Hula Hoop.s were still household
words. You showed this spirit when you delivered pizzas,
washed dishes, graded exams, typed papers, and took out student loans to pay for your educations and to stand here proudly
today. up to your necks in debt.
Seniors, we are extremely proud of you - for the character
you have demonstrated, for the legacy }'OU have left us, for
passing RCM, for sticking 1t out to the end, and for being here
today to receive a diploma whiCh cert1fies that you have recei•·ed
the best education that th1s nation provides. Congratulations1

�Valedictory Address
Lori Eichelberger

It is customary at commencement exercises to discuss the
future, and how the graduating class will fit into ic. But I'm not
going to, because I can't. Within the next 10 years over 60% of
all jobs will be involved with produces that don't even exist right
now. So, whatever we end up doing will probably be far
different from what we've prepared for at St. Ed's.
But that doesn't make our education useless. though. Education never can be. It has allowed us co improve our basic
business skills- our writing, mathematics, reading and communication. And the curriculum has exposed us to a broad
range of subjeciS - not confined us co a single career afield.
But the education that will prove most valuable to us didn't
come out of books. W hat we have learned extends far beyond
academia. We"ve learned to stick with our projects, and see
them through tO the finish. We"ve learned to work well with
others, and also on our own. We have learned tO think critically,
and to solve problems. In short, tht greatest thing we have
learned in college is how to learn, and that is the most valuable
skill we can take with us into an unknown future.

139

�beginning again ...

Juniors

I«&lt;

�Augu~"''" A Aman&gt;~h
Robt11 F Am
Da•·rd llorold Bal"y
luru f &amp;.II~Sleros

Doug A Beck
Ann C.d.,na
Sheldon C Chaff~r
Kare M Fox-Shrpman

J"anm~

F, ndrrcaGah,an

Rrc kJ rmenel
Darm C Koffder

Lr.. S K"""'
Jann M K!oc

141

�Kate Fox
on being a
JUnlOf
Kate gm married!
In August in '85 Kate Fox married Brian
Sh1pman. helping w make her JUnior )ear an
mterestmg one.
''It's really differc:m;· she sa1d of that pr1mary

concern of all college students -

t~me.

"We

ha\'t' to be real careful planning our schedules,''
she said. ment1onmg the pressures of Juggling
studies and exuacumcular dm1es and srill man age to spend a few hours with her husband.
Being married changed her financial status
wo; the 1nvisible formulators of financial a1d
formulas that decide what and how much aid
students will receive decided to make life for
Mrs. Fox-Shipman jUSt a little bit harder.
" lie makes enough that I've been bumped
from Pell Grams but I've still got to come up
wnh a J6,000 a year to stay," she said.
h LS habnual for many students to turn 1nt0
!)pe-A personal1t1es after a few years, burrow·
mg themselves deeply mto many campus orga·
niutions. taking a full load of courSes and
working a part-t1me JOb too
Kate may not have turned mto that ktnd of
person but dunng her first few years she was
m\·olved heavily m student publications. staying
up well beyond midnight insure quality product
on Fnday. Bemg marned didn't change that, as
she was managing edaor for the Edwardism
durmg the sprmg semester, but it hrlped her say
that word that so many students don't seem
to have in theu extracurricular vocabulanes. The
word ts no. " lk keeps me from overextendmg

142

myself.'' she said. " I have an easier rime saying
no wah him in mind than for myself."
" Also. he"s one more person expecting )'OU co
do well," she said. She"s and academic high·
achiever and a student m the Honors Program.
Shecametothe hilltop after a ten year higher
education hiatus. She graduated from Reagan
high school in the fall of '74 and that fall
enrolled at the University of Texas.
"It was horrible!" she said, addmg that the
StU and lack of opportunity 10 get 10 know
students and teachers one-an-one d idn't satisfy
her.
After that Semester. she spent until May of
1984 ""having about 10 JObs in 10 )'ears
I
kept gettmg mto jObs where I realized lt didn't
matter. After six or eight weeks I would start 10
hate tt. I wasn't doing anythmg 10 better the
world.""
After hanging up her 8 to~ hat dunng those
years she said she would spend the e,·enings
working for cauSes. eventually concluding that
such work was what she really wanted to do.
but also realizmg that she needed a degree to
make a living at it. She followed her brother
David's footsteps to the hilltop where she found
what she had been looking for but not finding
at UT. '"St. Ed's was probably the luck test break
m my life,'" she said.
Next year is her last on the hilltop. and she IS
closer now than ever to realizmg her goal of
makmg the world a better place 10 live.

�S&lt;~phanot

Ann LrKk

Cbor~ P Manofa
Ahc~J

Morona

Th~•n•

/&gt;.boe

/&lt;.br~ha!l

Tawn1·• M Mochot

VrC!O&lt; G. Mur.
Sylvr~ Dominrqu~

Ndson
Adrea l.)"n Norswonh)
Ter...., Nuckols
Romeha Re)·~s

PaulalttS..:teSl
P•ulaJ Sheffidd
BriiSurherland
Colrtre M T~pe
Kat hy lyon T homp&gt;&lt;m

Carlos

V Torr~s

S&amp;lomon Torreo- ~l urudo
Ter~"' R W~bb
S&lt;db K Wong

!43

�. . . begiHJtill!l agai11 ...

Sophomores
144

�lkn I. Aharon...a
M•hmood S
Al~tandro Boll~st~.os
J~nnif~r

Ann

Batc~lrn

Cua Ua C.nptnt"'
EdnaCC."'ul&lt;'!
S.an!..yJo..-ph Cnnor
Ro~~~ Chacon

Juh~

S. Chau"n
Kom A Co((~y
Sh;uon Ceo~
llumb.-no S. Enr"''u~

Anuro R F~rrund~r
Garza
Manho Z Gafl&gt;
lknha G . Gonulu

J.,m~ A

145

�Cathy Hellinger
o n being a sophomore
How can you do less but accomplish more?
That paradox assails college students as they
know that becoming involved can unlock many
doors: heightened responsibility, career references, and new friendships. to name a few.
OnecanalsoseeOiherstudemsthatseemco
be involved in eve-rything, and begin to wonder
·why can't I do everything like so and so can ?'
The very phrase ' 'becoming involved" can become a synonym for a Type-A desire to join
every club. engage in every activity, a spiraling
trap that can lud tO burnout and physical exhaustion.
Cathy Hellinger, during her sophomore year.
learned that she could keep her involvement

under control, do the things she chose ro do
better and not feel as if she was missing out on
something.
"'There·salimitmmyself,"shesaid."ltturns
out better in the long run if you don't do
everything yourself."
During the hectic rush of the spring semester
there was a time management workshop that
she decided nm to attend despite the afternoon's benefits
" ] didn't hase time to go to a time management workshop!" she said
Then there were the daily battles of how
much homework can really be done for 15
hours of classes.
" I didn't read for my classes." she said.
Whar?!
"Yeah! You get the book and you read the
muoduction and then the summary at the end
of the chapw! I guess that when you don't do

146

something you realize you're no worst off for it
like when you don't read your literature assignment and realize it didn't make a bit of difference or it doesn't make enough of a difference
w make it worth it."
But what :.~.bout those days when you have a
million tests :.1nd papers due during the same
week?
"Taking care of my mental state of mind is
more important than staying up until'seven in
the morning studying."
She played a crucial role in the fortunes of
the spring retreat which she felt wen: very well.
" Wehadarealsuccessfulretreat."
She is involved in tetreats because " I like to
seeotherpeoplemeeteachother.lliketowatch
them gain a friendship, or see something they
hadn't seen before. It"s not like every person
gets "something out of it - it"s JUSt t he little
things."
As soon as the year ended she moved with
friends into :.1n :.~.putment close to campus. Until
then, she lived at home in North Austin
"Trying to go to SEU and live at home was
kind of challenging. Everybody wants your at ·
tention."shesaid.addingthattherearethe daily
home related tasks to do as well. Roommates
are d1fferem, she said.
"You can JUSt kill "em. You can JUSt go to
our room and blow "em off;· she said, laughing.
Cathy emerged ftom her first two years assured and confident, qualities that will certainly
come in handy during her next two years of
what is called college in some quarters, occa ·
sionally meaningless mayhem in others.

�Jo"'ph 1\ Gu•n•o
C.th~nne E lldhn!:~'
Audrrallollo"&gt;)'

S)·hi•lbarr•
Rolan&amp;oJ•m~nez

Bndg.. E

..::~rr~,

luCialongor••
lt-ah K Maruneu
Johnny Man!MzJr

Bobby Glnm
McCormock.Jr
TanouytM Mcr-..onon
Gn,.,lda l M(ndou

147

�Jo~lin~

Nrgrctr

Los• Nokn

l.ynrur Y .

Perr~

Morr• Lorr Roso

TOO)' Ross

Shrrl&gt;h C R,·•n
H S.lrn••

J•"•r

PholrpM l.'inllwnt
Clrrn.nrrA/.4ba!t•
Lrn..I•M 1.4f&gt;"l&gt;

1\H

�149

�. . . beginning again . ..

Freshmen
150

�Mo~s T Ab;om
Tomml Ad•rmc
EdN Agour~
Klt, lrd M AI- Airb.sr

Molt..mm~d

M AI

Rom1rhr
"'I~J•ndro Alvar~z

Majn'd A Amrnr

Juliana B•land~r
p.,..~, J•ck lkilhorz
[),....]),.~ ikrNI
Yal(ll~ J BI)1M

Essa

S.l~h

Boalla)'
Borct-..rs

V1l~"~ R~"'""

JO&lt;ge

V . ikr&lt;&lt;~go

Amy Brooks

151

�Ed1!11S:;uah11Canru
Edward Casu
Momd A11nga Ch1
Juon E"roqu~ Ci"!r&lt;.&gt;n

/l.ll{had F Conwrll
Chrost•nr DcC•uui~
J•m~

l)a,•,d DuBms

Coquma Annc11r Dunn
Kar~n D. Dunn

Godw1n W En)'odah
O.n.aM F~u"·d
l'aulB Frn&lt;'r

[)a,.,d Gandaua

152

�......,:. . ,

(oUD

lo.Nn(.h.VI"'''"J

J..an"(-...,..1&lt;-f
,!ado&amp; 5

(.tft'nr

�M~noJ

llenao
Maua lkredta
)""" Eddm"o
H~rnand~z

JuanF IIern.andez

Rodolfo Hemond~'
C..tMfln&lt;"A !Ioney
Sten&lt;"l)nn ) ackson
Kathryn E. Kelly

154

�John A Kmg
Lo» M•roa Kub11
J""'ALI.nd&gt;n

Clemt"nt K !£("

Darl&lt;"nt L

m

L~&gt;v.·L,.Shung

R•cordo Llanm
/\man Ull•h looh&lt;
GWtgc A lopt"z

T&gt;l' Ki1 L.n

Ro» M Moc••s

!jj

�ll.t.ryAnn M•"'""'
Muk McCann
Sura11,., Ma&lt;) McGough

s..n. Mududo
Ac"'c L NdM&gt;n

Johll F 1\cm...:
OaudooOIV&lt;"&lt;o
Orth
Chcu L Oumgc•

Chn~W" 1.)'1111~

r..w,&amp;&lt;c&lt;&lt;k&gt;Pc&lt;cr
·su~ GregoriO Pcrfr
~ot&lt;k&gt;Ptf&lt;'&gt;
~lan•

1~

dcJcw, Pt&lt;cr

�Mary T Pone(
Da!&lt;a RrdJil
Jacqurhn~

Rodnqu(Z
Val(nun lbaua Salaur

! 57

�Aziz Hirani
on being a freshman

Aztz Jbrani encountered the problems all
freshmen do- finding out where the butldin,!;S
were, genmg used to the cafetena food, S&lt;jutez-

mg bdongmgs mto the dorm
What Azt7. faced m add~tton to rhose ordinary obstacles w normality was the fact that for
the first 11me, he found himself tn the Unued
Statrs. uymg to matmam a sense of identity
whtle asstmtbtrng mto dus suange new place
called the USA
In addtuon w that. hts ftrst semester was not
m the fall, where he could ha~e formed at least a
parual tdentLI) wl!h h1s fdlow newcomers, but
m the sprrng. when he was making tht uanmion
alone
"ThefirS!semesterwashard,"heuLd,speakmg m a rhtck l!!n; accent ''There w:.~.s nobody
to pllrty wuh like at home_ Ltvmg m thC' dorms
was lLke bemg t~ed up·
AZLZ '''as St'parated from hts freshmen contt'mporar~es by the fact that hC' had ~n out of
htgh school for two years before com1ng to the
htlltop. As all students know. gewng back co
the academiC grooH' IS d1Hicult C"nough after
thC' summer, but Aziz had to !C'turn to acadC'm1a
after two )·ears off. as .,.ell as bemg taught m a

(;,..., M

~odc-1

t.uJo\\4miShn!OI
lo;r·~" Alan~~~

K4ttllc-rn l•MS.&gt;k

fore1gn language.
Yes. he was hLt by that malad) known as
homes1ckness - except that m his caSC' home
was an ocean away. a hemisphere awa). After
the semester had begun he lost all h1s cop1ng
confidence.
"That had ne\et happened to me. l thought I
could handle It ..
Am helped get h1mSC'If out of this 1am b)·
ket'pmg m mind what this C'xpertence would
mean tn h1s future". ·· 1 told myself that tt's gomg
to help (mC') in the future.· lie knt'"' that gomg
home would mean not gettmg a unt\'C'tSLt)' education. "Gemng in a univers11y at home tS tough
and you have to ha~e top grades. Also, I had
seen my brother domg it ·
Yes, of courSC', aren't you Kanm 's brother'
'That was good for awhile". thC'n I got fed up
With It"
Aztz IS Kanm l1 1rani's brothC'r, who was a
popular student that graduated m 198~ whiiC'
becomtng fnends w1th JUSt about everyone and
wmmng the prC'Stigious Man of the Year award
St Edward's has a tradition of SC"nding SC"veral membeu of a famtly through the tumult of
college- the Nu-as, the Datle)'S and the Ryans

are among the fam1lies that ha'e pep~rC'd the
hilltop populatton wllh the~r numbers for )ears
lnvanably, the latter members of the famtly
ate expected to l!,e up 10 theu o lder stblmg·s
accompl!shmems, and Aziz, American or no,
wasn't an excep!:ion
·- pC'ople look at me through Kartm's achte,emems They want to g"e me a challenge and
say 'let's set' what you can do· The) alread)
expect me to be a fant;~.suc student ltke ffi)
brother"
Through all the compamons, and the di fficult transnton Aziz made 11 out of the semester
all\ e. In the summer he made the me of passage
from the dorms to an apanment, and thmgs are
look1ng up fOr the next ft"w years_ Its a great
expertence for me to meet different people; lm
glad to be here
' I m also gmeful to my brothel. lie gl\e me
"- lot of confidence If 11 "'eren t for him, I
wouldn't be here. A wonderful guy, that's what
hets
And. someda)·. Kar~m wtll be somewhere on
campus. Somffine wtll gl\·e h1m a knowtng look
and uy ·aren't )'OU
Aztl brother'"

�Cl•n~

Kuk Sprmg~r
Ann S!df~~
Margama T•gl~
M.chad M Ta)·l01

Th~re»

Mary T1llman
Sara Tr~•·mo
C.rm1n ~bue Vasqun
Eug~ne P

w.,....,

MegonMoneWarson
Gtrn K Wc•shaupt
Char\csWcslc)'
Wigmlon
Ron&lt;l)· l:&gt;ak W~hdm

Randolph!\ Wnghr
7...omarupa
G . ?.;~mora

Stcv~

Gabr~tl

159

�Jlcnry A!!mollC'r
AndtC'W Angcrme•cr.

esc

111omu B)C'lland
Anno Boiling

Mochdlc C.mpbdl
Br..nda C.r1e1

BorbaroC.n•d)'
lkuyOo((

Louos&lt;:o...C.SC.
Woii&lt;'Conoly
CorMolus Corcoran,

c.sc.

ArmC'CD!lC'

John Da•IC')'
Grorgcl&gt;..wk,ns
Sunlrvm

160

�Brother Simon Scribner C.S.C.

Retired Yes,
Rememberd as Holy Cross Brother
Teacher
Inspiration
Photographer
Humorist
Friend .. .

. . . always.

161

�Lucian Blersch, C.S.C.
1900 - 1986
Vaya Con Dios

Da"y Ol!k -llo.en
W•lli.am Dunn. CS.C
Rob Fm&gt;&lt;:h

Rosl&lt;'

Gonnl~1

Jo lb)~S
Gl~nn Hmkl~

Mauan,.,.Howr

162

�Rtehord HugMs
Eag.n llunttr, esc
Rtehard Krn"'r

Marc" Krn"'1'

J•mts Koch
Brl! Ktnn&lt;"d)
C«illaw~

J D I"'"'''

Emma Lou lrnn
John lucas

O..nrd l)-nch esc
Scou McAf...,

Mdbo ManrMz-Mn.llltr
Olf•ryMauk
Mrn&lt;"""'Mdts
J rmmy Mdls

163

�G(rald Mull(r, C.S.C
Tetl) Ne""'on
P&gt;&lt;nna O'Connor
J~phONul

PlulrpOdeu... CSC
R1Chord Orton
llod,(hcersr
Wrll~am

Penn

JohnPmon.C.SC
Conn,.. Pull~
Jon.ce Rondk
Shockn

E~ttn

8&lt;-rnardSnrK&gt;n
IA:~haSparks

jO&lt;tSptug

C.thc-nM Thompson

164

�f•rlt'ft Chari&lt;'OAnderst'n,C.S.C.I911-1986. Anderst'n
"orkcd a• D rrccror of Srud t'nr Acrl\itres from 19~8M and D rruror of Admis"on&gt; from 1%4·70.
1 926·1911~.

Connolly

far lcfr: Majclla llcgarry, C.S.C. 190~-

191!6. H egarty raugh r philo&gt;ophy and
cducarion courses from 19-H ro 19~7.
anrrr. Henry o'Rourh. C.S.C. Ui9S

1986. O'll.ourh ma naged rhc book·
&gt;OOrC from 19-16-47.
l..ft

Funcis Srrm_. CS.C.

19211·198~.

Srmon Scnbn~r. C.S.C.
J ohn Trout
Mauc Andre Walsh,
!liM
G&gt;thyWcbcr

Madcki~ Wobn,
111 M
Davrd Wrll.. ms
NcaiWrs..,O P
WrllramZ.n.atdr

165

�Libra ryscafftrJktpcRCMtndochtrhor&lt;k$ofrt:~«rC~

happy by providinggurdanct and inf01marion roscudenu
whow~drhty'dpickedanothersubJ(Cl. -phcxoby

Rich.rdNtn

S.:curioy offocers mtd( their rbundJ rhiJ Y"' in oht rw:w
S«uriryuuck, ,.hichmadtthfirrobs a iOitU~tr.- phcxo

byRich.rdNir1
U~ t~ghr: Wanna J!:raduate? Sorry - you ctn'r do if
"''thout rhtso: proplt'J hdp! rht Regisrrar'J Offin "aJ.
wayJhappyroinformyouofyour&lt;iJing (or failmg) GPA
- phcxobyRich..dNin

Wd10111 rht daily flood of numbom rht 8uJin(h offic(
staff proctuH Hch day, our hilltop nmpuJ ruJt couldn'r
scoy afloor. - phorobyRKir•rdNJN

166

�Ne-ed

som~

money ? If you go to the. Financial Aid Office,

you 'vehi&lt;thc.rightspoo.asthesesm~ingfoaswiUMipyou

gn &lt;ht01.1gh•ht flfl.l.ncill soormofa hilltopcolleg~n•N&lt; .

- photobythrmonwhouid'"Jiimyrrls'"

These people. known informaUy u the. Moody Hall S~cr~·
tariu. ""' multital~nt~d individuals c.Ued upon to perfOfm
nuny ~ita I tasks; many a gra&lt;dul soudent muso turn to them
as thc.lt prima'}' contaCt bn....en thc.mstiVft and thc.iJ ..,.
spective department . -photo by Ric!urd Nin

Yes, 1u the. faithful RA's, who kKp the dorms habitabl~

places to liw that only mildly tesembl~ """' :ones. - phoro
ByMorkM Forrum

One c~nt~r of aet•~"Y· certamly. 1S the communication
center/ post offic~. NNd CoptM ~ A long d~unce
p1&gt;ono caU ? A ln&lt;tt from your love &gt; Ask th~m' photobyRic~rdN!n

167

�168

�169

��l7l

�A
Abam, Moses 10}, 151
Adame, Tommy 87, 151
Adams, Magdalena 89
Aguirre, Edna 151
Aharanwa, Ben 145
AI Araifi, Salah 133
AI Bulushi. Mahmood 145
AI Busmait, Mohammed 1}3
AI Rumaihi, Mohammed 151
Alexander, Gregory 84, 87
Alexander, Margaret IH
Alford. Alberta 133
Alvarez, Alejandro 151
Amanzrh, Augustine 141
Amini Ma1eed, A-Nabi 151
Anthony, Scon 133
Applewhite. J effrey 87
Arabzadeh, Lobat 151
Arevalos, Florinda 33, 46
Arnecke, Darren 87
Arredia, Tony Jr. 96
Aziz. Robert 141

B
Ba!ander.Juliana 151

Baley, David 94, 141
Ballesteros, AleJandro 145
Ballesteros, Lu1sa 141
Barchdor, Jennifer 90. 91, 145
Beck, Douglas 39, 141
Beilharz, Peter 151

fknnett. Melinda IB
Bernal. Dee Dee 151
Blythe, Valerie 151
Boallay, Essa 151
Bock. Joseph 76, 77. 133
Borchers, Valerie 151
Borrego, J orge I~ I
Bourgeois, Greg 77. 1}3
Boyer Bc:ard,Jackquelme 1}3
Bnght, Edward 133
Brooks, Amy 1~1
Brown, Inger 89

c
Cadena, llilia 133
Cadena,Jeamne 47, 141
Cadena, Rosa 26, 149
Cadwallader, Gary 12, 69. 71
Caldwell. Jon 87
Cantu. Ed1th 1)2
Carpc:mer, Cart 14~

172

Carrizales, Edna 145
Casas. Edward 152
Cetnor. Stanley Jr. 14~
Chacon, Roger 145
Chaffer, Shc:ldon 141
Chase, Caroline 133
Chauvin. Julie 89. 90. 145
Cheves, Vincent Ill
Cintron, Juan III 152
Coffey. Kinberly 145
Con well, Michael37.152
Conez, Idalina 39
Cote. Michael 64
Cote, Susan 152
Cox, Sharon 145
Curiel. Mariso1133

D
Dailey. Danica 133
Davis, DeNell49, 85,87
Davis, Jacqueline 76. 77
De Ciutiis, Christine 152
De Rouen, Duane 94
De Soi. John 134
De Ybarrondo, J ulieanne 6
De La Garza III, Salvador 133
Decello, Michael 87
Devin, Doreen 46
DuBois, James 152
Dunn. Coquina 1')2
Dunn, Karen 109. 152

E
Ebrahim, Essa 134
Ebrahim,Jassim 134
Eichelberger, Lori 139
Eke, Adonis 1}4
El Moussaoui, Mahammed 152
Ellis, Kimberly 1')2
Enriquez, Humberto 14'
Enyidah, Godwin 152
Erie, Rebecca 19
Esquivc:l, Dina 1')2

F
Fernandez, Arturo 14')
Flores, John 87
Fortuna, Marlene 60, 76
Fox-Shipman, Kate 14l. 142
French. Michele 13')

G
Galle, Karla 135
Gallegos, Cymhia 11, 77, 13~
Galvan, Endrica 141
Gandaria, David J')2
Garcia, Elizabeth 141
Garcia, Rene 135
Gardner, Tony 87
Garza, Jaime 14')
Garza. Martha 14'
Garza, Sergio 153
Gereche, Michael46, 47
Ghaznavi, Rad 1')3
Giles. J ill 12,69
Gilley, Gretchen 108
Gonzalez, Bertha 145
Gonzalez, Juan 153
Gran, Diane 13')
Graves, Gideon 104
Green, Virginia 6. 76, 89. 91, 92. 93
Greene. J adella 153
Greene, Kerry 1')3
Griffith, Sherri IB
Guerrero, Elvira IB
Guerrero. Maria 141
Guinto, Hoseph 147
Gutierrez, Donna 46

H
Hamza, J ameela 13')
Handa!, Frida'IH
Han, Kris 1')5
Hartensteiner, Kathy 13')
Hellinger, Catherine 146, 147
Henao, Mario 1')4
11eredia. Maria 1')4
Hernandez, Juan 1)4
Hernandez, Rodolfo Jr. 1')4
Hirani, Aziz \')8
Hoffman. Vicki 19
Ho1loway, Audria 147
Honey, Catherine 1')4
Hudson, Thomu 46, 147
Huey, Sandra I}')
Hurf. MIChelle 39,49

I
lb:ura, Ruben 61, 107, 13'
lbarra,Sylvia\47
Jrobuchi. Victor 1}')

�J

Maalouf, Rita\')')
Manifa, Portnip 141
Marina, Alice 141
M arshall, Theresa 46. 47, 143
M:.utinets, Leah 147
Martinez, Guil1ermo ~~~
M.:~.ninez , !meld.:~. ~~~
M.:~.rtinez , M.:~.ry 1~5
M.:~.verick ,Cumen

Perez, Mui.:~. dJesus 156
Pires, Jeannine 47, 113
Ponce, Mary 157
Popp, Lisa 60, 67, 136
Poulin, Kimberdy 136
Price, Ketherine 112
Psencik, Michele 136
Pulliam, Charles Jr. 6~

61

McC.:~.nn , M.:~. rk 15~

Jackson, Richard III 87
Janovsky, Chris 70

Jauhiainen, Karl98
Jessen, Gary 117
Jimenez, Ricardo 141
Jimenez, Rolando 147

Johnson, Aquilla 89

Johnson, Jamu 86, 87
Jones, Cuole 47
J ung Yongun

13~

K
K ~fer,

Bridget 147

Keffeler, Darin 42,141

Keizer, l isa 141
Kelly, Kathryn IH
Kempt'r, Mary 122

McCormick. Bobby Jr. 147
McCrary, Merry Ann I}~
McCrary, Merry Ann 77,101
McGaugh, Suunne I~~
McNonon, T.:~.nouye 147
Mendoz.:~., Griseld.:~. 147
Michel, Mari.:~.n 1~5
Michie, Tawny.:~. 143
Mitchell, Michelle 36, 13~
Molin.:~. , M.:~.ri.:~.I36

Kibbe, Giles 106
King, John 155

Kloc,Janer 141
Knolle, Karin 135
Koch. David 112

Kubis, Lisa !55

L
Lamb, Lisa 27
Landin, Joe \55
Leanos, Esther !55

Lee, Alan 70

L«,Ckmem 155
Ltt, Darlene 122, 155
!..«,Jeanette 135
Lei.ssner, Amy 73
Licea, Mary Ann 26
Lieck, Stephanie 143
Lira, Fie 155
Llanos, Ricardo U5
Longoria, Lucia 147

Lopt"z. Grorgr U5
Lowther. Diana 15')

M

R

Montes, Roe! 104, !56
Mora , Victor 143
Morris, Rhonda 135
Muir, Stephen 43,47

N
Negrt&gt;te, Josephina 148
Nelson, Sylvie Ill, 143
Nemec, John 154
Nicholu, 87, 136
Nichols, L.:l.uri tn
Nira, Richard 77,136
Norswonhy, Andre.:~. 143
Norton, Alison 148
Nuckols, Teresa 143

Khan, Mohd 155

Q

Quiroz, Cindy 117

0
O'Rielly, Kelly 100, Hl8, 109
Ocho.:~., Rinrdo Ill
Ofoegby, John 136
Oliv.:~.rez, Melissa 148
Olsen, Cindy 77
Olvera, Claudia 155
Onh, Christie 155
Ottinger, Cheryl 1~5

p
Perez, Albeno 136
Perez, J esus 156
Pt&gt;rez, Leonardo 156
Perez, Lynette 148

Ramirez, Pedor Jr. 122
Rashdan, Al i 136
Real , Perla 136
Reyes, R omeli.:~. 143
Rodriguez , Angela 136
Rodriguez, Jacqueline 157
Roesch. William 42
Rosa , Mari.:1. 148
Rowin, Gregory 136
Ryan, Eileen 45
Ryan. Sheilah 148

s
Saari, Biran 107, 108
Salazar, ValeminJr. 157
Salinas. Javier 148
Saltzstein, Thomas 87
S.:~.n Miguel, Lucila 157
Sanchez. Jud y 1~7
Sanders, Michael97
Samawinata, Pipon 1~7
Satyananda, Mimi 157
Scardino, David 108
Schoonover, Evangeline 136
Schulrz,Sruart87
Segovia, Lorrina 112
Seidel, Gina 154, 1~8
Sht&gt;ffield, Paula 143
Shuffield. James 143
Singletary, Jill
Smith. Keith 158
Smith, Ronie 84, 87
Sok, Kathleen 157
Solis, Francisco 52
Southwell, James 77.136
Stovall, Stephen 87

n

173

�T
Tepe, Colette 143
Thompson. Kath y 1443
Tornarore, Peter 136
Torres-Hurtado, Salomon 39, 143
Trapani, Shirley 136
Turner, Lonnie 6. 84, 86, 87

v

Van H orn, T odd 9'.&gt;

Vela. J uan 33
Velasquez, Ana 134
Villareal, Michelle n
Vondrak, Hohn 197, 136

w

Warson, Eugene 87
Webb, Teresa 143
Wiginton, Charles 87
Wilhelm, Randy 32
Wong, Stella 143
Wood, Judy 136
Wood, Rob 136
Woolley, Karen 109

y
Ysla,Jod 136

z
Zabalza, Clememe 148
Zaldumbide, Ena 136
Zamarron, Ada 136
Zapata, Linda 148

t74

�28

Colo flower
with very high expectations as lights like cities floated undern eath. Someone cold me I had seen

Memphis.
Bette Midler was right! She sure was! Elation such as that wouldn't, couldn't be realized umil much
later. Faces, wood and the rectangle witnessed the incredibly dull conversation. In a way a truly
forgettable event; in a way a life-changing one. Its paradoxical nature is certainly no surprise.
On it went: optimism reigned. An old picture, a newer one gained o n th e timeless day, rh e long trips
home. Then the night of tears, the next awful day and the rampant, sickening feeling of complete
inefficacy. The "trap's" maker was now ready
No, of course we weren't going ro die, and he told us so. Only life waited - after one mort." trial.
Which picture was it ? The drawing ? The aerial? I will never know. What a surprise it was! - I
think. Perhaps the brush, the surprise and the location all added up up to the five minutes of
inconclusive stammering. The next day, only glassy eyes, red and white stripes and rehearsed replies ( to
rehearsed statements ) took place near the faces, wood and rectangle.
But out of such apparent failure came the Beach Bash night, and those \0 minutes o f miracles in the
most unlikely of places. There really is hope for us. I have seen it
Then the one formerly known as trapmaker
. this is getting too obvious, isn"t it ? Besides, we
wanted to keep the most readable parts a secret.
Without lots of help from lots of people my survival, not to mention this book, would not have
been possible. I"d especially like to thank the following individuals, most of whom are in no particular
order: my family ( including Tomilee ) , Damian, Amy, Steve, Kris, Christy, Christie, Carmen, Jim, Mike,
David, Marlene. Doreen, Pooch, Kim. Scott, Ed, Margy, Gail,Jili,Joni, God &amp; Cindy. J"ve enjoyed
working and laughing with all of you; some of you have helped me in ways that may never occur to
you. I hope rhat I have enriched your lives as you enriched mine.
As any Vogon, Oklahoman or artist in space will tell you, this year was one great adventure!

m

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                    <text>�1885

1895

1905

1915

1925

1935

1945

�Contents
Centennial Review
Student Life

Academics

1955

1965

1975

Sports
Organizations
People

17
.. 34
.. .. 54

. 82
.............. 112
124

Index

164

Graduation

172

1985

��1985 TOWER
St. Edward's University
3001 S. Congress
Austin, Texas 78704

�A colorful procession in which studtnls and hcul·
ty particip.atfd prtctdfd th t cutmony. ROH
Shulu, Linda Ervin, and Emilio Morales servfd u
fbgburtn.. - Photo by D~mi~n Mors~n
Loc.alluminades such u Bishop Hani1 and Govu·
nor Ma rk Whitt attt ndfd tht festivities in additio ntoinvitfdguest5andmt mMrfofthtunivtrfi·
ty community. - Photo by o.,mi.an Morg.,n

2 - Opening

�A Centennial Celebration
Cen tennial - the passing of our hilltop community's
firs t hundred years provided a natural stopping point for
us to pause and reflect on what attitudes we would carry
into the next century.
What did we find after our reflection?
We felt a sense of newness and optimism, not a one of
oldness or age.
A new president, Pat Hayes, the first woman president
of the university, provided us all with a new sense of
vitality and provided the school with a feeling of rebirth
when she was inaugurated in the presence of Governor
M ark White and Bishop Vincent Harris.
Other new faces brightened our days and added their
gifts to an already diverse and varied population. Among
those we welcomed were French high school students, a

The Black History Month fb,g
wh ich hangsintheatriumfor the
enti~ month of February symboliz~ the cultu re. Red is for the
blood, green is for the land, and
black is for the people.- Photo by
Damian Morgan

Up, up and Aw~y! The ha rd working volunteers of the Phonothon once
ag..in exceeded their goal in the an nual fund r~istl. - Photo by
Damian Morgan
Chris Plunket s hows the ~fter effects of the celebr~tion once the goal
had finally been reached. - Photo by Damian Morgan

Opening- 3

�Record snowfalls gave students and
...., _ .._.,.
~~
. un lovers in the immediate area re~"~
id chan.ces to pracllor'~-*'b \.
m~l~oto by EJamiaii7VfOr~

Enn S.. nt.o '• • l v~ want Ch ristmas prrsent.. K:~tt
fox isuughttillingonS..nt•'s bpwhiltllllthe
5tu&lt;knts wue busy d;~ncing.- Photo by An.~/Vtl•squer

4 - Opening

�A Centennial Celebration
new Campus Ministry director, and a new Student Ac·
tivities Council coordinator.
Other members of our community found that their
dreams took them elsewhere. Brother Jim Hanson and
Brother Raymond Appicella ended their multi-year stays
to work among the poor of East Austin and to work in the
area of pastoral ministry, this followed their dreams that
were cultivated here, and left in search of new challenges.
Their departures were not ends either; rather, they were
beginnings, spurred by experiences and people that they

had met on the hill.
We also celebrated the completion of a new and much

needed arts building, which housed the photocommunications and arts departments. Images impossible to cap-

Th~ celebration of Ughts continuf'd toM~ hi gh point of tht holid~ y
season. Visitors could stt th~t wt wtrt ctltbr~ling two birthd~ ys. lhe
univtrsity's lOOth birthd~y ~nd tht birth of Ch rist. - Photo by Ana
/sabot/ Vtlasqut:t

'. inda Ervin practices her new found
nowball making talent, glancing sky~a rd as another sn owstorm approaches.
- Photo by DiJmiiJn MorgiJn

Opening- 5

��A Centennial Celebration
lure could now be seen in a studio and advanced color
techniques which became available to students.
Together we began to construct the future of ou r
school.
The Hillier Group, a company specializi ng in planning
an orga nizat ions fac ilities, came to the comm unity to ask
what we would need to operate effectively in the future .
Input from faculty, staff and studen ts during the Centen·
nial year has set the university's direction for the next 100
years.

K y l~

Munchrath dashes back to first base after detecting a kickoff
move by the opposing pitcher. - Photo by Damian Morgan
longtime f;~C\IIty member Jimmy Mills is usi ly recogn ized driving an
older model nd pickup truck. - Photo by Damian Morgan

Opening- 7

�I nauguratio N
1st Woman President

Colorful flags, photographers, TV
cameras, and visiting dignitaries marked
the inauguration of St. Edward's 22nd
president, Dr. Patricia Hayes.
The spectacle was witnessed by a
crowd of faculty, staff, and studen ts, all
charged with Dr. Hayes' sense of optimism and progress that they had experienced during Ha yes' first semester.
Many famous faces were on hand to
celebrate Hayes' inauguration. Austin

..------------m-•y..,or Ron Mullen was on hand, as was

PTe~idt'nl Ho~ ye~ spokt'

not on ly lo lht' St. Edwud 's

co mmuni t y o~ndin v itt'dguesls, buttoo~num y of

photognpht'n.l nd tto ltovision Umt' T.IS; th t' t'vt'nl
w;as wt- 11 COVt'Tt'd by tht' Austi n mt'di.1. - Photo by
Dilmi~n M oTgiln

8 -

Inauguration

Texas governor Mark White, and the
bishop of the Austin diocese, Vincent
Harris.

In her speech, Hayes compared the
school 's mission with that of Aus tin.
" Austi n is commi tted to the concept of

self-renewal, while St. Edward's tries to
hel p each person become a self-renewing
person, a lifelong learner."
Governor White praised the school for
its diversification, mentioning the graduate degree programs and the College
Migrant Assistance Program.
The ceremony was foilowed by a reception in the library, as the crowd filed
in and met the newly inaugurated president and the governor.
Three previous presidents of the universi ty, State Representatives Jake Pickle
and Wilhelmina Delco were on hand to
congratulate H ayes.

�Inauguration -

9

�fltht r Bob Wistm11n brf'~ks tht brud as ~ucha·
ristk min ist~ n prf'par~ to distributf commu·
nion to tht f;~ithful. - Photo by lim Conul~z

10- Religion

�Campus Spiritual Life
Chapel Crux Of Much Activity

The year saw campus ministry undergo a big change, as Father Bob Wiseman
arrived over the summer to direct the
program.
· Wi seman came from Conneticut,
where he was director of vocations for
Holy Cross Fathers.
Under Wiseman's gu idance Campus
Ministry sponsored many events for stu 1dents.
During Lent, Catholics are encouraged
Ito abstain from meat on Fridays; Campus Ministry sponsored a fish fry for
students, followed by a prayer service.
March saw a symposi um on discussing the bishops' pastoral letter on econom ics in San Antonio which students
were able to attend due to Campus Minist ry-rented buses which took students
there and back.
There were also the retreats to Rockledge, weekends where s tudents could

spend a few days away from the pressures of campus life and spend some
time reflecting on which way their lives
were headed.
Campus Ministry also organized a
penance service and world hunger day to
increase awareness of the plight of the
hungry around the world.
Campus Ministry, said Wiseman,
"hopefully helps students discover some
of their talen ts or gifts. " I think it helps
student s realize they're good people, that
they have potential and that they' re
worthwhile."
He hopes that s tudent s, with the help
of Campus Ministry, don' t engage in relationshi ps that become "use, abuse, and
discard."
Freshman Cathy Hellinger felt that
getting involved in Campus Ministry
helped her get closer to the Catholic
Church. " It has given me a cha nce to feel
part of the Church by letting me become
involved as a eucharistic mi nister, lector,
Musli ms hav~ an opportunity to worsh ip on am- and in being able to hefp plan the penpus in th~St. Joseph H~ ll mosque. - Photo by jim ance service.
Gonzalez
"This is," said Wiseman, "kind of a
continuation of my vocation work. I'm
continuing in the journey to help people
discover their d reams and challenge their
value systems."

People of all ages purchased autographed copies of
Brother Jim Hanson's book " If I'm a Ch ristian,
Why&amp;- a Catholic," at Emmaus Bookstore in Hancock Center. - Photo by Richard Nira

Religion -

11

�Th e N ~ w O rl un s Wo rl d's Fair w;os • fi n;oncial
dis,uter, rough ly h;olf of the ex pec ted vistors
turn ed o ut to vie w the '84 ex po. Howeve r, the f;o ir
h;od ;o li nger ing,posi tive effectont hrcil yas the
wa re house distr ict was r~ n ov a ted. - Photo by Cin dy Olsen
T he T exa n m;orke t nea r t h ~ c;o mpus w;as beseiged
by a ngry citi zens who dem anded tha t po rnogu ph y be m;ode in acci'5Sible to children. - Photo by
M ich elle H uff.

~~

POR~~$

I&lt;ILL: PORN
IS
A

12 -

World Even ts

�Never A Dull Moment In The
News
National Or Local
It was, as usual, a stormy year on this
big blue marble that we call home. Beyond rhe usual conflicts that arise whenever humans are involved, there were
some events that stuck out above the
rest.
Out of an attempt to provide Americans wi th fun and enjoyment came a barrage of bickering and finger pointingthe Louisiana World 's Fair. The fair ended its unsuccessful one year run awash
in red ink, but did provide tourists and
thrillseekers with some interesting exhi bits such as the space shuttle, Exxon 's
duplication of an ocean oil rig and a syn-

chronized swim and diving show by the
U.S. Olympic teams.
At the same time as Ronald Reagan
was elected to a second term Amikal
Gorbachev succeeded Konstantin Chernenko as the Russian head of state.
Armed confl ict continued around the
world as thousands starved in a drought
ridden and civil war torn land . Students
responded to the situation by raising
money selling "S EU for Africa " buttons
and sendi ng the money to help aid the
teeming refugee population there.
The Salvation Army' s planned
the hilltop gained
citywide attention
too. Area residents
and businesses
joi ned to fight the
move, which they
said would cause a
decline in the
quality of

At ~ P ro-U f~ r~ ll y on the steps of the npitol, ~
sm~ll b~nd of brave counter demonstrato" voice&lt;!
their opinions. - Photo by Rich~rd Nira.
P ro-Uf~ r's gathered to cond~ m n th~ Roe
ded~ion of 1972 to lt-ga l i ~e ~borti on. Ric:h~rd

vs. Wad~
Photo by

Nir• .

World Events - 13

�Decision '84:
Record Win

14 -

Election

�A Clear Choice
For Reagan

6
R~~g~n chid~d Mond01l~

lifving in ;a "tax ;and
Rich•rdNiu

:md

J~nd"

th~ D~mocril5 ;u

policy. -

bePhoto by

Election -

IS

�Photos Courtesy
of
Austin Travis
County Collection

16

�€entennial Beuiew

tCentury
iaf
tCommitment

Centennial Review -

17

�father j orin
St. Edward's owes its founding to a 5
foot 8 inch tall H oly Cross priest who
was born in Febr uary 6, 1814, near Laval,
France.
Father Edward Sarin acq uired 123
acres of land from Colonel W.L Roba rds
and Mary Doyle's 400 acre farm to begin
what was for many years called "The
Notre Dame of the Southwest".
At the age of 26, he joined the Holy
C ross order, and became a priest in 1838.
It is said that Sor in "possessed a highvoltage personality" by those who knew
him. This personality involved him in at
least three major projects while in their
infancy; the H oly C ross order, which had
just been organized in France, and his
founding of the Universities of Notre
Dame and St. Edward's which have
greatly contributed to the tradition of
Catholic education it the United States.
Sorin's " high-voltage perso nality"
eventually led him to the position of Sup ~ rior Generalship of the order of H oly
Cross before he died in 1893.

18 -

Brot hers

\

�lJlurturing Jtudents for 100 !1ears
Beginning in 1885 the brothers of and begun teaching in other places," he
Holy Cross have enjoyed a 100 year rela- added.
With the overall number of Holy
tionship with St. Edward's that has reCross Brothers decreasing, there have
mained vital and strong.
Until 1984, all of St. Edward's presi- been fewer and fewer replacements for
dents were members of the Holy Cross those that have left.
"We don' t have the corral of brothers
congregation, which oversaw tremendous growth in every aspect of the we used to," said Scribner.
Until the mid-60's brothers used to fill
school. including majors offered, number of students, and the number of nearly every faculty and administrative
buildings.
position of the university. Although
Brothers were an intregal part of the their presence today is not quite as perschool's everyday function and continue vasive, the brothers still hold many imto serve in that role today.
portant positions on campus such as
The only difference that the century head RA at Premont, Dean of Students,
has brought, says Brother Simon and numerous faculty positions.
The brothers are also a very visible set,
Scribner, who has been here since 1946,
is that the number of brothers has de- as s tudents can always see Brother John
Thornton bicycling on campus or Brothcreased.
"Our members have become less," he er Thomas McCullough hiking around
said. "Some have gone on to other jobs Austin.

Brothers -

19

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You think you have it rough now! Imagine yourself entering St. Edward's College in 1886. These rules a nd regula tions, which appeared in
the 1886 catalog, were not only s pecific but strictly enforced.
-

-

20 -

Acad emics

Rules and Regulations
Students must conduct themselves on all occasions as gentlemen, who
enter college not only to improve themselves in science, but also to
cultivate habits of refinement and propriety, and thus fit themselves to
take their place in society with credit.
Intoxicati ng liquors are absolutely prohibited.
Tobacco is for bidden, except to senior s tudents who obtain written
permission from their parents.
No one will leave the college grounds without permission of the
President or Vice-President.
All letters sent to or received by the students may be opened by the
President or his representative.
Students should not keep money in their possession.
Parents are requested to put money in the school treas ury.
Everyone will rise at the same hour in the morning and retire at the
same hour at night.
Students may only stay in the city overnight with members of their
family.
Students are expected to take baths regularly.

�flcadrmics

l\lcadrmics: ill j tory @f lxpansion
Academic growth has been the trademark of the University since it began in
1886.

W e have come from two degree plans
o 31, from 17 faculty members to 100,
from 25 students to 2500; tuition has
rown from $180 per session to $1600.
When chartered with the power to
on fe r degrees in 1886, the school offered
tudents a choice of two degrees - Clasical, concentrating in La tin, English and
athematics, or Commercial, involvi ng
usiness education. Seventeen faculty
embers took care of the students' edutional needs.
St. Edward' s remai ned, however,
ainly a preparatory school until 1920,
hen plans to expand the curriculum
nd increase the amount of faculty memrs were laid. In September of 1921, the
irst freshman class was enrolled.
By 1934 there were fou r colleges of
tudy; Arts and l ette rs, Engineering,
ommerce, and Science.
By 1962 educational opportunities
ontinued to expand. In a n effort to inrease learning exper iences there were
our different Division s, each of which

included its own list of majors: Division
of H umanities, Division of Social Sciences, Division of Physical and Biological Sciences and Division of Business
Administration.
In the late 60' s and early 70' s a revolutionary new program called Model Q
was tried. The basis for Model Q comes
from Cardinal john Henry Newman's
book The Idea of a University. Students
in Model Q were encouraged to actively
explore every area of academia that they
could instead of focusing too much on
their major's courses.
Model Q was not accepted by some
s tuden ts and some faculty members. It
was a controversial period in the school's
academic history and did not survive to
greet today's s tuden ts.
W hile Model Q was relatively short
lived, some of its general ideas have survived to appear in today's catalog.
The general outline of the students'
education is spelled out in the beginning
of the 1984-85 bulletin. The principles of
Exploration, Integra tion, and Concentration all have their roots in M odel Q.

Remember the sayi ng, "early to
bed, early to rise, makes a man
healthy, wealthy and wise" 7 Officials appear to have had steadfast
belief in this particular saying as
they kept schedules that no contemporary studen t could dream of.
T he 1886 catalog contained specification s concerning every aspect of
the s tudent's day:
ORDER OF EXERCISES

5:30a.m.
6:00a.m.
7:00a.m.
7:45a.m.
10:00 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
12:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
4:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8:30 p.m.

Rising, Toilette
Study
Breakfast, Recreation
C lasses, Study
Recreation
Class, Study
Di nner, Recreation
Class , Study
Recreation
Class Study
Supper, Recreation
Study
Retiring

Academics - 21

�tt

~casons

1o ~Ucnd

The aim of St. Edward's University is to give st udents a thorough education. The Faculty recognizes
moral; training as an essential element of education and, therefore, st rives to form habits of vi true- right
thinking and right living - as a com plement of true culture.
Advantages
St. Edward's University:
L Is not co-educational.
2. Is located in health belt of Texas.
3. Is removed from city influences.
4. Offers a faculty , priests and laymen, trained in a
sympathetic understanding of boys.
5. Provides a complete Catholic environment.
6. Provides wholesome campus contacts between faculty
and s tudents.
7. Supervises manly recreation in s ports and amusements.
8. Is organized on the basis of family life, with common
participation in living and study quarters.
9. Offers regularity of hours for s leep, meals, st udy,
recreation.
10. Maintain s its own farm and supervises its own cuis ine to provide substantial meals at a common table.
11. Has its own physician and infirmary facilities.

The Administration Building
This building- modern gothic, of white limestone- contains at the present time the Administration
offices and classrooms. In its east wing are the dining room and chapel; in its west, a large lavatory, study
hall, and two dormitories. The top floor is occupied by the department of Music. The building is fireproof
and is in its appointments, as modern as buildings can be made. The Chapel occupies the fourth floor of
the east wing and is 82x50 feet. It ca n accommodate about three hundred students. The Department of
Biology is in the ce ntral portion, second floor. The Department of Chemistry is in the Chemistry Building.

22 -

Background

�I

Illackground

lexas Jees first
~ndoor Pool
Splish

splash

splish

"Valery sounds from the school's own in-

loor swimming pool could be heard for
nany years following the drilling of an
utesian well in 1883.
A catalog advertised the soon to be
'uilt pool in this way . . " It is the in tenion of the authorities to construct, in the
1ear future, a natatorium, which will
.hen give students at the college all the
1dvantages of a health resort."
The pool was one of the prime ameni:ies of the school, and was featured
,n ominently in every catalog from the
1884-85 edition untill92.2, when the tornado struck - it even had hot and cold
running water in the bathrooms\
The tornado blew away the roof and
:::me wall of the building, but it was repaired just three months later.
It operated without furthe r incident
until 1938, when the well was capped;
students could however, take a dip in its
waters until 1970.
The building continues to provide a
break from students' daily routine as it
now serves as the s tudent union.

Background - 23

�24 -

Background

�.ll3ackground

In

th~

tower of the Main Building sits
is simply known as "The Bell".

I

in July of 1941, it required four
it up three flights of steps
to reach its present 125 foot

ill llisrful, lrmprrmrntal
After the fire of 1903, the tower on top
of the main building was rebuilt and
took on a new function- that of a water
tower.
Water from a well in what is now the
carriage house (which used to function as
the school chemistry lab) was pumped
up into the wooden tank and distributed
to the rest of the campus. The elevated
pos ition of the tank was necessary to
provide the campus with s ufficient water
pnessure.
The new system, however, did not
come without some humorous problems.

~atrr

lower

The system was susceptible to break·
downs, and would do so about the time
of every other dance on campus, - students were then unable to take showers,
leaving them unprepared for the evening. The s tudents reacted by renting two
rooms at Rankins', an old Congress Avenue motel, to dean up.
Some Students were afraid that a
storm would come during the night, and
sweep away the tower and cause all the
water to flood their rooms, but their fears
never materialized.

Backgroun d - 25

�26 -

Wars

�ijlars

illradcmirs Jet !llsidt lauring limes

~f

IJar

On the wooden wall of the
The late 60's a new war, re- and faculty ques tioned , debated ,
chapel , a golden plaque bearing ceived a different reception tha n protested , fa sted and pra yed in
reaction to the undeclared war in
23 names hangs quietly.
a ny war in America's his tory .
Instead of loyal obedience to Viet nam .
The plaque di sp lay s the
names of 23 St. Edwa rd's g radu- ou r leaders' di rectives, s tudents
ates who gave their lives in the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
service of their count ry. The
In Memoriam
names rep resent the involvement St. Edward's has had in
Ti mmy O 'Con ner '50
James A. McClosky '29
America's wars si nce the time of
Joseph M. Fahey Jr. '51
Leorard W. Pauli ssen '42
the Spa nish-American war .
Arthur K. Tyszh iewicz '56
Joh n Vargo '42
In 1941, the school responded
JohnS. Schmid '61
Ra mee S. Walker Jr. '42
to the confli ct in Europe and
Peter A. Semmer '63
William W . Walsh '43
Asia, fo unding a military acadeWalter E. Daniell '65
John 0 . Sue ' 43
my. In following years, military
James E. Stehling '44
Ken nteh ]. Farrell '65
Leo E. Phillips ' 44
Leona rd E. Dornak '66
training became compulsory for
Pres
ton
Lee
H
ooper
Jr.
'44
high school students.
g~~d
Ii.sB~fia~~~~ '66
Benard L. McCudden '45
By 1943, only fr eshmen reEdwin R. Dischinger '45
Paul j. Donal son '69
mained in school as the rest of
James E. Davis '46
the sophomore, junior, a nd senior cadets marched off to war.

L--------------------1

Wars -

27

�mary Jaoyle
Ths oasis of trees, grass and squirrels
amidst the busy streets and businesses
was once part of a 400-acre farm owned
by Mary Doyle.
In 1871, Mary Doyle met with Father
Sarin and Bishop Dubuis of Galveston to
discuss educational plans involving the
congregation of Holy Cross.
After that meeting, Doyle said she
would donate "a goodly portion of her
estate for the establishment of a college,
school. or other educational institution."

Doyle, however, would donate her
land only if Father Sorin would found an
educational institution here. To convince
her of his sincerity he acquired an adjoi ning 123 acre tract belonging to Colonel W.L Robards. Doyle died in 1873.

28 -

Women

�I~omen I
lRary Doylr
lllicr Easl

Trresa lRc6iunry
lRary j)rrmonl

lRary lRoody llorlhrn
Scarborou9h-j)hillips

laoylr Mall
last Mall
mary moody llorthrn
lhratrr
moody Mall
frrmont Jlall
§rarborough-fhillips library
1rrrsa Jlall
Women- 29

�lfith l hr €hangrs taf lhr lflrcadrs
Each day we can see what the lates t
fashion is by simply walking across
campus between classes or by going
wherever s tudents congregate.
During the 1970's fas hions were
less classic than they had ever been

be~~:t~d.

tie-died rhinestone studded,
wildly printed clothing was very
much in. Captioned tee-shirts displayed opinions on millions of chests.
Mini-skirts were all the rage, and men
sported long hair. Black Americans
began wearing cultural das hikis, large
afros, and ethnic jewelry.
By the mid '70's psychadelic clothing, wild hair, and high soled shoes

30- Sty les

were popular.
------~ .....
In the late '70's fashion took another turn as the " peasant look" became popular for girls. High rnacramed espadrilles and woven purses
were in . G uys began wearing the old

I te~~~i~~Jse:~ha;nddidde~~~f~~;:15the
fas hion trends there was always the
classic, or " preppie" look consisting
of loafers, chinos, sweaters, and pullovers.
The 1960's brought raised hemlines
and bright plaid pants into fashion.
Sleeveless, close-fitting dresses and
pumps became popular. M en wore
narrower, less vivid ties with plaid
polyester s uits. As the decade went
on, many students became less conservative with their appearance and
went for the "flower-child " look. Men
wore their hai r long.
The look, on the whole, was anties tablis hment and was a way of protesting the United States' involvement
in Vietnam.
During the 1950' s men wore vividly
patterned ties with suits. Flowers, circles and various other abstract designs
could be found on these ties. Bow ties
were also popular. Men also wore
long, baggy fitting s uits. Women
wore full and tea length gowns to formal occasions. In leisure time, young
men wore the ever-popular blue jeans
with letter sweaters, tee s hi rts, and
long sleeved shirts. Girls wore long,
narrow sk irts with bobby socks, loaf-

�fltyles

Jtyles

~{ept

laking 41ln llew l ooks

er one went, brightly s titched and labeled jeans could be seen. Next, the
preppie look ruled, with millions of
young people scurrying to buy boat
shoes, button down s a nd polos. Izod
...tresses and espadriles were worn for
awhile. Guys wore button-downs, palos, chinos, blue jeans, loafers, boat
shoes, and the argyle sweaters popular
suits were the rage.
The teens brought us straight cut at the turn of the century along with
dresses for women, three piece single just about everything else for girls:
For awhile, the natural look was in.
breasted suits for men - argyle
Sailor tops, wide gauchos and clamsweaters were also in vogue.
Near the turn of the century even diggers were worn. Next the " new
the college catalog had an idea of what wave" and fifties looks prevailed. Peostudents wore in every day college ple began ditching their Calvins and
lzods for purple and pink polka-dotlife.
The 1886 catalog ad vises students to ted minis, torn tee-shirts, skin-tight
Jring the following articles of doth- cropped jeans, and purple porcupine
ng with them to Austin:
styled hair.
th ree s uits adapted to the seasons
Fashions, of course, come and go.
two hats or ca ps
T he only thing the ever changing
six shirts
world of fashions and the changing
four pairs of d rawers
tastes of students is that they will consix pairs of socks
tinue to change and change and
two pairs of boots or s hoes
change
six handerchiefs
six towels
combs, tooth, clothes and s hoe
brushes
" No money," warns the catalog,
"will be advanced to students for
clothes."
Fashion has always been s ubject to
constant change, and the 1980's continue that trend.
Fashion in this decade started off
with the designer jean craze. Wherev-

ers, pumps or saddle shoes.
T he th ing to wear in t he 1940's was
a uniform. America was, of course, involved in armed conflict in Europe
and the Pacific Ocean in the struggle
against the Axis powers.
In the roaring 20's, knickers, vested
suits, argyle sweaters and pinstripe

Sty les -

31

�Just @ne more look

t~rross

32 -

Centennia l Rev iew

€ampus

�Photo by Richard Nira

The Way It Is -

33

�f u rth trproof th.. t thtSurgeon Qntnl
wu rorr«t .&amp;bout mt n b«oming prtg·

" ""' If tht&gt;y drin k too much bftr. -Photo
by O.mi•n Mors•n

1885

1895

1905

1915

Tht spring of '&amp;5 brought with it th~t
c~rt•in ftrvor but ntgl«t~ to provilk
tht RtUnion with • nt w liq\IOr lictnK.
Empty boul~ su nd •s • tributt to tht
mo~ny B.Y.O.B. p.1 rlits held i nstt.ld. Photo by R1ch.ud Mu

34 -

Studen t Life

�Student Life
Since 1885 students have attended the university and participated in s tudent life.
G ranted, student life was quite different 100 years ago. Students were not allowed to
leave campus, and had to retire at 8:30 at night and awaken at 5:30 in the morning,
putting a damper on night life. Today, things are quite different - for the better,
most students would think. Today there is no curfew, s tudents may co me in at any
hour of the night (or morning) and wake up at any hour of the day (or nig ht).
Student life encompasses a wide range of activities, from dances to do rm life, from
the ReUnion to 6th street.
August was greeted with anticipation from some students and dread from others.
But the various aspects of student life and the new optimis m of the university helped
bring the anticipators and the dreaders together.
Studen ts danced to the sounds of so me of Austin's best bands either in the
spacious Moody Atrium or the more intimate confines of the ReUnion. Students did
not have to pay $5 and go off campus to see recent box office hits such as Splash . the
Big Chill and Purple Rain.
If campus entertainment was not enough there was always the bright lights and
boisterius crowds of 6th street or area clubs such as Pardners. Liberty Lunch,
Continentia! Club and the Hole in the Wal\, all depending on one's particular tastes.
Students were also able to see bands with worldwide appeal such as Bruce Spring·
steen , Chicago. U· 2, C ulture Club and REO Speedwagon.
The mix of campus and citywide diversions preserved many a s tudent's sanity
from the trials of teachers, textbooks, and tes ts.

Tim~ ru lly h'vtn't ch~ngrd th~t mu&lt;h
tl ill ~do~ ~nd show off thti r c;~n u much
r.rstd to. - Photo court~y SEU Archi v~

1965

1975

mt n
u they

1985

Student life -

35

�Th~

yur ly rit ua l of. mot h us clu ning out th eir
soon· to-be- new room i5 pbyed ou t once
aga in in E..ast H all a tth~ beginnin g of th~ schoo l
y~n. - Photo by john Sh~ppdrd

d~ ughter's

Bfau Ranheim battln sprl ngfever and~nioritis
in an effort to study for his cbsses. • Photo by

D•m••nMors•n

Dorm life during the cen ten nial year
was the best and most interesti ng ever.
The addition of the French students in
Doyle and East halls, new freshme n , includi ng CAMP students, uppe rclassme n,
proved to be a colorful group.
Many events rocked the dorms as well.
The She Bop da nce in Teresa proved to
be a hi t (once enough people got there).
T he attention getter at this da nce was the
"lone Frenchman" dancing the n ight
away.
Also, the Family Feud contest in East
Hall pitted floor against floor . The winners turned out to 1st Floor North , led by
Gracie Garcia and Co.
The name sign s on each girl's door
s plashed color in East and Teresa Halls,
but Eileen, "To the Beach " was a litt le
too creative!
Pete's Place, or Doyle Hall, housed the
French students on the first floor, many
roundballers on the second floor , and a
bag of mixed nuts on the third . For sure,
Pete Erickson, Emilio Morales and Frank
Soli s were kept busy most ai the time.

Es~~~~~ 1 ~t!lt~r~i~eh;.,~iC~::: 1::rively. Partying, loud mu sic and general
hell-raising prevailed . Perhaps the most
well known floor on campus was the
"Premont Penthouse" (a phrase coi ned
by Rick Smith and Co.), with Gary lies as
ringmaster. Brother John, Charlie KeJfeler , and Trouble Clayton were the oth-

36 -

Dorm life

��Austinit e thought th ty h.,.d put thtirlnntr tube
.. w.. y forthtwinttr, butththuvys now;o nd stttp
hillinfron t oftht tr..ckb roughtth tmoutoftht
g .. r.. gt .. nd on to tht t lope. - Photo by C•ro/

Foun

38- Snow

�Rare Snows Hit Austin

Brr
lind~ Ervin'1 cold-l ooki ng tyes and covft'ftl-up f~ct tt l\ th t story of Austin's snowiest
wi ntn In rtctnt history. - Photo by Do~mio~n Mor-

•••

A~ thtst tht sttps to an ~dministrat io n building
in No rth D:~kou7 Aluk:~? Moscow? Nopt
this
k Austin, Tn:;os shi vtring undt r ~n unusu:~l cold
~II. - Photo by Carol For~n

O n Feb. 1, you may have looked out your window and thought,
"What is all this wh1te stulf?I s it powder, dandruff, or cocaine? "
No, it was snow, real live snow1
The anxiety mounted as students began to frolick in the snow.
Many chose to slide down the h ill or have snowba ll fights (Right,
Brother John K?)
Rumor had it that a student even stood n ude in the snow to
""tive the experience."
For many this was an experience. Those from the Valley had
never seen snow before. As Robert Vasquez of Alamo stated, "The
closest I had ever come to snow was just readi ng about it . It
uplifted my spirits."
That evening, dorm resident s lifted thei r own spi rits. Numerous parties abounded in each of the fou r dorms as students
celebrated the event.
•
Students from the North (Yankees) were given a reminder of
how winters are back home. As Susan Sanford of Naugatuck, CT,
said, " It was grea t. It felt like home." And how was the driving in
this weather? " It was terrible, the ca r was going its own way."
said Armando Magallanes of Del Rio.
However, a lot of good came because of the snow. It brought
out the best in all of us, and made the St. Edward's commu nity
even more peaceful and harmon ious than it already is. (It brought
a few froze n butts as well.)
It's good that it snowed because people were sliding down the
hill and if the snow had not been there, it would have been a
mightv -ough trip down. - Photo by Carol Foran

Snow- 39

�Stud~nts

of ,.11 cult ures had an

uc~ll~nt

ch,.nc~ to mi ngl~ at th~ R~Un ion g~t·
tog~thers. - Photo by Cindy 0/s~n

40 -

Internatio nals

�Varied Peoples
Bring Diversity
It is not difficult to experience the
myriad of peoples that make up the international population on the hilltop.
A short walk in the busy Moody Hall
a trium between classes will immediately
bring the walker present w ith a cacaphony of exotic sounding tongues; Spanish , Korean, Arabic - these are only
three of many that can be heard.
Some of these foreign students are in
the United States because they are looking to experience another way of life.
Some are here because they believe this
country offers something to them that
they could not receive in their own countries.
Some are here because they could not
enter one of the universities in their
home countries Uust as students from
the United States enroll in medical
schools in, say, G renada.) All are in the
United States for a n education.
And what brings them to this small
community?
Some foreign students are in our classrooms because they have relatives or
friends here (or who have been here.)
Some are here because we are located
in Austin.
Others are here because they enjoy the
benefits of a small university - having a
chance to make friends fairly easily, a
pleasant study and living environment,
personal attention from ins tructors.
In s hort, foreign students are at St.
Edward's for the very same reasons we
are. A nd they feel the same pride when
they walk across that stage to receive
their diplomas.
" I am excited to be here," said Ana
Isabel Velasquez, who hails from Columbia. "The system is pretty different, but I
~eel c~.mfortable. It's been a good exper-

lndi~n d~nct"r Aunthi wow'd ~ Moody H~ll
crowd with ~ brilli~nt dispb y of n~tivt- l ndi~n
d~ncing. - Photo by Rob Wood
N~w~l Buchnry, left, ~nd Sat. ~1-Ar~ifi wur h~­
dition~l ct-remon i~l gowns from B~h~.,in during~
Wffklong e~~~:po sponsorfil by thto N~tion~l Union
of Gulf ~nd Aubi~n P'ninsub Studt-nts.

Internationals -

41

�42 -

Caree r Fair

�T

he Search Begins

Career Opportun ities Explored

Despite a healthy economy and a
strong dollar, seniors neared the end of
their undergraduate careers with the
trepidation that has plagued seniors for
many, many years, caused by anxiety
about the future.
But help was on the way, as the Job
Bank and Cooperative education sponsored the Job Fair, featuring area employers of quite a few professions s uch
as 3M, IBM, the Aus tin Independent
School district, and so on.
Seniors, aware of their imminent relocation into the " real world", flocked to
the fair to talk jobs with possible employers. " It gave me an opportunity to
look in different fields outside my major
and opportunities in those fields," said
Moses Salas.
Salas also learned more about the intimidating world of job interviews. " It
gave me some ideas as to what kind of
questions I could expect from potential
employers," he said.
Another student said that the fair provided seniors with the chance to es tab-

!ish some business contacts. " It provided
them with an opportunity to make contacts with lots of different employers,"
said Jim Gonzalez.
For the seniors it signaled the beginning of their job hunting phase and the
e nd of schoolbooks and studies, but the
career helped in easing the transition .
" I was glad that someone was con cerned enough to help seniors as they
neared graduation and s tarted looking
for a job," said Gonzalez.
Tht Cart't'r f~ir tn~btt'd sludtnlslo ~clu~ lly fill
oul ~ppliutions ~nd intrrvirw with Juch com~nit'5 u Pust, Mnwkk, Milchrll ~nd Co.,
~nd R~di~n Corp. - Photo by D~mi~n Morg~n

Career Fair -

43

�Twist-n-Shout:
Remember "She Bop" ? "Dancing in
the Dark?", "Like A Virgi n ?" If you
don't, where have you been? If you do,
then this will bring back memories of
some good dances on campus.
The Welcome Back Dance in the ReUn ion, the las t Friday of August, was a
success. Chris Allen of KEY-103 was OJ.
The finale of this dance was Adrienne
Turman's announcement of a party at
her house. Nice touch!
The famous Beach Bash in the Atrium
was a hit again this year. Students
"bashed " all through the night. (They
had a good time at the dance too.)
The "Spaghetti Dance" was a first this
year. The dorm staff served an elegant
Italian dinner and then s tudents worked
off the meal by dancing to such tunes as
"Let's Go Crazy", "Drive", and "Lucky
Star."
The Halloween Dance

J ~ Subl' ll

'"d

SEU ll udtn l N'ncy Reynokk of
tht Srcrtt Sh, pr rfor m in ' prt ·Th,n!ugi .-inlld'y
- Photo by M• ry Ctor6t

ct ltbr~ t ion .

44 -

ReUni on

�The Beat Goes On
many ghouls and goblins. A costume
contest was held at intermission, with
"Ghostbusters" (Paul Chalhoub, Paul
Gallatin, Robert Gonzalez and Philip Ro·
cha Ill) taking top honors.
The Christmas semi·formal was a festive event. A large crowd gathered,
dressed to a tee. Students danced to the
sounds of XKE. Christmas cheer and
spirits were lifted that evening in more
ways than one.
The Senior Class/ SAC Street Dance
proved a hit. After two warnings from
the police and a few rainshowers, the
dance was still successful.
air echoed with the sounds
in the Dark", " Material Girl",
"Glamorous Life."
There were a variety of dances to fit
every style d uring the rock in' year. May
1985-86 be even better!

Tht hut from th' music, .1 hot f\lmmn night, ""d
COnil.lnt movtmtnt could br htlprd on ly by Jo cold
~r
lirgt faru. - Photo by Q,vid Fox

'"d

Ktybo.ucb, b ybo.ards, tvtrywhut , Jond to w't
lht tound or tht Killu BHs.- Photo by J•y john,.,.,

ReUnion- 45

�The bt~ t goes on - rhythm is ~nti~l fo r ~ny
IYP" of dJ nce music, ~ nd the Killn B«s did no»
disappoint students ~s they flew into the ReUnion
~nd stung them with d~nce ftver. - Photo by )1)!
j ohnson

T he ever·popu l~r Omu 1nd th~ Howle.,, vo ted best blu~
b.lnd by the Austin Ch r~:m icle, pb ytd ' ' the wtlcomt
b.lck d~nct in J1nu1ry. - Photo by D1vid Fox

46 - ReU nio n

�Dance
Dance
Dance

l ntun ~tion~l

S.~ to

wH k saw the ,uriv.d of the Killer
.a j.1 mmin ' crowd. - Photo by ]"Y Johnson

ReUnion- 47

�Th~Hnlor cl_c,ltbr~lfl ~

rnt win in tht' c:om pt·
titlon, finishins fi~t In tht ruc:h your h' nd
throush your Jhirt ~nd pw ll tht •poon throus,h

J-~mt.

48 -

Spring Fling

�S

Sp~ing Fever's

pnng

After spring break had ended and st u·
dents had returned from their vacations
in farflung locations, a spring fever and
senioritis epidemic struck the hilltop
comm unity with a savage fury.
The solution? Spring Fling Week!
The celebration began with the fourth
an nual Crazy Olympics. Thank s to the
hard work of Lance Rodgers and his
committee, the high -spiri ted inter-class
competition was a big s uccess - especially fo r the class of '87, who once again
reigned victorious.
An interesti ng twist in the games was
the presence of a Faculty/ Staff team who
placed a "disappointing" third place.
Even the athletic prowess of Dr. Hayes
couldn't move the team ahead of the
strong second place junior team . The fitting conclusion to the wacky events was
th e awardi ng of "scrubs" ribbon s to the
fourth place senior team and the la st (of
course!) pl ace baby Topper team - the
freshmen!

F

Only Remedy

ling

K• th y lind •nd Jury F~ri41, th~ QuHn •nd King
of th f Spri ng Flins,. blow out th~ und ln on th~
Ctnlt nni•l birthd•y uh.- Photo by Rich•rd
N~r•

The hoopla continued into the eveni ng
in the form of the Semi-Formal Dance.
Celebrated as the "centennial Spring
Fling," the entire court was uniquely
dressed in 1885 apparrel.
The releasing of balloons and confetti
on to the unexpecting crowd brought
squeals of delight from all . The rocki ng
tunes of "The Urge!" kept
dancing late into the night .

l.dl: Who ~IH cou ld ~~ ~I Minsto proftMion·
at 1uc::h a mund.an ~ K'liYi t y besides D•Ykl ill·
ley ,nd Donn• Cuti~rr~z7- Pholo by C•rol

~I

FOI'4n

Sprin g Flin g - 49

�Atrium Filled With Laughter
Fifth Annual Ms. Grotto Winner Crowned
It was a n evening of fun and laughter
- it was the fourth ann ual s tudent re·
vue, which was directed by Michael Cote
and Chuck Pulliam.

The highlight of the revue was once
again the dramatic and hilarious M s.
Grotto contest, as Ms. N ight School, Ms.
Loyal to Doyle, Ms. Main Building and
Miss Cafeteria, among others, vied for
the coveted award.
Spectators were t reated to the vast and
various talents of the contestants. Ms.
Cafeteria (Carol Foran) swallowed a raw
egg before the incredulous crowd, and
Miss Night School (Michelle Simpson)
tried to seduce any man s he could find,
even Brother Gerald Muller!
Ms. Main Building (Mary Sheilds)
wowed the crowd with a seductive dance
accompanied by her beautiful christmas
lights; the entire audience was amazed at
all the hidden ta)ents that had s uddenly
burst into view.'
It wu ~n emotion;;~ I night for the p&lt;~rticip~nts .u
well as the ~udience, ;as Julie Smlth110n WilliS during ~n Omni Si ngers perform;;ann. - Photo by
Ktvin Dozzi

50 -

Student Revue

MiS~&gt; C~fettri&lt;~ (Cuol Foun) wins the coveted Ms.
Grotto contest. Last yen's Ms. G rotto winner, Ms.
Speed Bumps (Kuen Kon:endo) preents hu with
the crown. - Photo by Kevin Dozzj

The excitement built to a fever pitch
when the contest drew to a dose. When
the tension became simply unbearable
Cote announced the winner - Miss
Cafeteria had won the title of Ms. Grotto
for 1985!
In one of the evening's most touching
moments, last year's M s. Grotto, Ms.

Speed Bumps (Karen Korzenko)
the new q ueen of the campus
legendary pie plate s ignifying
ner's immense achievement.
The evening also featured an
ance by none other than
(Chuck Pulliam) from the
who had a hilarious trial
the s how!
Another skit featured
from all over the world mania, a nd South Africa, rated by
perienced panel of judges
zenko and Mary Shields).
The judges decided, after a
bitter competition, that the
can team Uohn H awkins, Michele
son) was deserving of the gold

�Sout h Afriun burping S!H'dlli51
(Mich~ll~ Simpson) g~tt ~'dy to
un lnad on~ for th~ picky judges,
whor,tednchburpon.aK.altof
1 to 10. - Photo by K~vin Doui

Student Revue -

51

��Hour!

An

ing~nious

invtl'ltion, happy hours

~~~:n.'xfo,'i::~dpi;, ~~~Y ~~~c~e~'%~~
whistle with 1 Long Island Tu or Cowboy
Martiniatrvtr-popularPardntrt. Or, fora
mort rtfinrd atmosphr rr , The Edgr of
Town (vot~ Texas' 11 club for 1954) or
Ch• ppirscando thr trick. For aln s rtfinedatmosphrrr , thrRrUnionhldhappy
hours of its own. This happy hour providedthr~ndulofall:S2pitchrfland

alltht comradtrit of students th;u you
couldhandlr.
Many happy houu art good pla«s to
ut supptr u -11. Chappits provided
rcNst bftf,chickrn lrgs, and manyothu
trnts. Tht Edgt of Town had si milar food
u wrlL provided you drovr tO thr edgr
Oitrully) togrtthrrr.

Ho-vtr, in

Novrm~r

tht st"t ltgisla·

turrpundllawb.anningthrulrofmul-

~f~~tw,~:s ·~r howr..~&amp;·.~ ~~~.If~~

to suvrjumbodrinh though.

Happy Hou r -

53

�54 -

Acad e mics

�Academics
A comparison of today's educational environment with its counterpart of a century
ago will reflect the steady expansion of the physical and intell~ctual ~nvironment
here.
Today there are many majors, classes and teachers to choose from .
An entering student today can choose to be a busin~ss major, ash~ could in 1885.
Just about everything else, however, had changed.
A student coming out of high school can study about psychology, leading to child
development, and t~ache r education careers or rehabilitativ~ s~rvice and community
mental health.
One can study to become a social worker or a health care administrator, or study
for a career in law enforcement under the criminal justic~ program.
A fr~shman coming to the hilltop who want~d to g radual~ with th~ credentials to
teach physical fit ness to childr~ n of high school~rs, or with th~ ability to tak~
pictur~s for a newspaper or magazine.
One thing that hasn't changed, how~ver, is the school's intimacy. Tuch~rs and
stud~nts enjoy a relationship characterized by discussions and dilib~rations about
the subject being taught in class, as they did when the school began.
Those who have completed their und~rgraduate work can come to earn a mast~r·s
degree in business administration or human services at nighttime, so they can
.
continue their jobs and pursue their studies as w~ll.
A short walk through Moody Hill between classes will show that students from all
over the world com~ to study on the hilltop; as ~xotic sounding Nigerian and Spanish
languages are only two dialects that can be h~ard.
St;~~l~tia

provt lh;~~l tludtnU, t uch ;u liu &amp;,nch,
who frtlloftln thth
oflfn til towuch thf
b.lck of tht ci&amp;M nprci•lly In l lilit tic d;~~ta. -

cl•-·

Photo by Cindy 0/un
St•te of lht ••I equlpmtnl ;~~ppe•rfli on umput In
tht 60'1 •nd b 1tlll In UN toohy, KCOrdlnato lq·
tnd. - Photo rnurtfly SEU itChitvtf

1915

1925

1935

1945

1955

1965

1975

1985

Andemics -

55

�C..ry C1dw~ll~r •nd Jill C ile mi., it up durinf!
thto hif!h J( hoo l d.on~ . - Pho1o by C.u ol Fot•n

56- Grease

After many delays due to illness
within the cast and crew members, the
Mary Moody Northern Theatre ran the
production of Grease, the musical.
The lighthearted comedy was performed by a primary cast of 12 as well
as a s upporti ng chorus. The cast and
crews rehearsed long and hard for six
consecutive weeks in order to produce
the well-reviewed final production.
Each cast member displayed his or her
musical as well as dramatic talents in
the high-spirited show of skill and hard
work that was " well worth the wait"
said cast member Paul Contreras.
Light-board engineer David Williams said " I learned the theatre is not
just fun and games - it's hard work
and dedication ," he said.
Running crew co-head Janine
Fansher expressed similar sentime nt s.
" I devoted many hours (to the production) that I was not expecting to devote.
I never knew there was so much to put·
ling on a musical. "
Chorus member Susan [ftNiro remarLed that "even after the trials the
show was put through , like illness and
the tedious choreographing, the fact
that no one gave up showed the true

determination of the group."
Both Fansher and DeNiro agreed that
"it was one of the best frustrating times
of our lives."
The production , directed by Donald
Seay with technical direction by Victor
McQui stion , made use of six movable
sets. There was also a flying angel to
content with as well as an actual working "car", con structed from a golf-cart
by McQui stion and his crews for use in
the scene at the drive in.
"(The car) wasn' t so much of a chal·
lenge for us as it was for (the actors)
who had to drive in on and off stage.
We had a lot of time to complete everyt.hing, but that doesn't mean we didn't
work our butts off. I was very im·
pressed and thankful to all of the peo-ple who put in so many hours on the
show," said McQuistion.
After the days and nights of rehears·
a! and choreography, the cast and crew
of Crease were rewarded by not only
the successful completion of the run of
the show, but by " that unique feeling
that every ilctor gets when he hears thilt
applause on opening night ," said Contrens. ''There's nothing quite like it

�~.1uty Khool dropout Suun DeNi ro (fon ··
ground,cfntu)J.aid th.itdHpitf thfhHdshiP'
tht•howfndurfd " Noontpvf u p, thowing
tht trufdf ttrmin•tlon of thfg roup."-Phoro
by C•rol for•n

Grease- 57

�Cat On A
Tennessee Williams has entertained theatregoers for years with

playes such as "The Glass Menagerie," a "Streetcar Named Desire"

and " Night Of the Iguana."
Another play, "Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof," did not fail to entertain s~cta ­
tors here as the production was well
received both on campus and in the
Austin press.
" Everyone wanted more," said Kevin Phinney in the Austin AmericanStatesman. "George Murdock (the
guest s ta r who played Big Daddy) was
the reason . . he gives a blazing pe rformance as Big Daddy."
The show was just as much fun for
the cast as it was for the spectators.
"Cat was an extremely fu n show,"
said Paulo Contreras, who played

Cooper. "The good show, the good
cast a nd George Murdock all added up
to a really good show."

The Cast
LluuO' Ibr
~l')'~w.all.adn

Amy j . IAiJtntJ
Mupn1 Conn~lly
~rs~Murdock

Norm•n frll'dan
P.1uloA. Cont~ru
Johr~Spe.arY
Monic&lt;~

Boyd

J..cq~lyn

Nicoiii'No.&gt;ck
St•ny Su.fford

K.atill' Pridt
Brrndtn Enlow Ktllt'y

Bustu
Sh.aun P. Uvn
Undtl"ftudy to Bil D.addy
Chuck
Pulli.1m

Big M.am• (M.IrJ.Irll'l Conntlly) lritt
htr h•nd "' rtbtins to thll' younsn
Photo by C.u ol For•n

K'l. -

58 - Ca t O n A Hot Tin Roof

�t Tin Roof

Cat On A Hot Ti n Roof -

59

�The titles of Act I &amp; II , "The Ambush"
and "The Massacre" give a more accurate
description of the women in this play
than the "ladies of the Alamo." T hese
" ladies" can be lethal.
The setting is the Remington Room of
a multimillion dollar theatre complex in
Texas City, Texas where a power strug·
gle ensues over who will manage the the·
atre. Joanne Remington, philanthropist
and one of the "'ladies" trying to take
over management was well played by
Angela Rogriguez. Casting was excellent
for Shirley Fuller, the nasty sidekick in
the corporate takeover. Amy J. leissner
played the famous actress·come·home
with believability.
Marissa Keyes handled the very diffj.
cult part of Suits with professionalism
that elicited both revulsion and pathos
from the audience. Jill Giles, who stumbled and fell across the stage as the
town's bed partner and drunk, was so
good members of the audience often
wondered if she was brought into town
from Hollywood by capable gue~t director Flora Plumb.
The surprise of the season was the
dominating performance of Margaret
Connelly. Playing Dede Cooper, the present, powerful theatre director, she made
a somewhat choppy story glow with her
emotion and ability to carry threefourths of the lines without faltering.
The whole package showed obvious
teamwork. Congrats to all: Victor
McQuiston, Production Designer; Joan
Miller. Costume Designer; Alan lee,
Stage M anager; and Adriana Guerra, Assistant Stage M anager.

Dfd~ Coopt&gt;r
M~IJ~rd Conn~lly
IWibC.udtntr
JIII CIItt
Suits
M11i~N Ktyto~
j0.1nnt Rtmins ton
Anstb Rocl rl&amp;uu
Sh itl~y Fu lln
Amy J. l~iMnn
Voict'l
l.luu O'l»r, Guy C1d w1lbd~r,
D~vid Willi•m•, Monlu Boyd

Dtdt th ru ttM Jo~nnt to gi vt u p the fight for cont rol of
th rutrt. - Pharo by H~rty Morrno

th~

IWII~ (Jill GilH) flfpo.ft Shirlty (Amy J. l~l"n~r) for htr
mfl't•l dtficitnctt Jnd mJnlu tt ndt ndts.- Photo byH1rry
Morrno

60 -

Th eater

�Jo.annr (Angrl.1 Rodriguu) 1nd Ordt (M.1rprrt Con nrlly) wtrl' .11 uch
othtl"t thro.~u throughout tht tntirt show. - Photo by H.1rry /.1orrno

Shirlty is run out of town by thr gl«ful cnt, which is only too h1ppy to '1ft
hu go. - Photo by H.ury M ortno

Theatre -

61

�'Godspell'
O ne thinks of the Bible as an old
book, concerned with people that lived
long ago; images in our minds that may
not seem very real to us.
The Gospel of Matthew, however, was
made very real by the students of Brother
Gerald Muller as they put on a s uperb
performance of Godspell.
T he musical deals with the teachings
of jes us as he wanders among the jews,
presenting the work of Cod in a new and
vibra nt way. .
"We portrayed Jesus as a human being
just like the rest of us," said David Williams who was cast as Jesus.
"(D irectress) Lori Faga n, (choreographer) Rozanne Ward and Br. Gerald
all made it e njoyable," said he.

Pt rformus
whit~ f~c~

C4rol

Wfff

in

th~

m.ldt u p in timpl~ but ~HKtivr
first put of th~ thow.- Photo by

For&lt;~n

D•vid Willi•mt, who p14ytd t h~ put of J~us, u id
t h~ hud~t rol~ I ~v~r h.1d" - Photo by

" it w.1t

C•ro/ For.m

62- Godspell

Tht prrform~r$ utiliu d the enti rt fp~Ct of tht
ch~prl to muimiu the s how's d"m~tic dfKI. -

Pho1o by C•rol For•n

�The Cast
Melony S...Il
Mo nin Boyd
CJry Cadwallader
jJqueline Dav is
Jill G iles
Ki rsle n G riffin
Cy nlhia Hask~u
S..ndu Hu~y
ChriS )il novsk y
Bridgel Ku fer
Kevin Kenned y
MiSiy Kt'yes

Liurel Knox
Ni~ncy Koughan
U sa Limb
Alan Lu
Amy Leisser
Robt'rl Lon g. 11
Rtb«CiiMilrlin
Ma rlinMilrlinn
Tanou ye Mc Norton
Steve Muir
Shtl~y Nicho ls

Alison No rto n
lauraO'Bar
Su5.l n rete rson
Jea nnint' rires
Jim Remitz
Bruce Rippu
MJryShie lds
Jo Ann Silva
Eduardo Valvt'rdt
David WilliJmS
Julia Wi mes

Godspell - 63

�Creative Expression
The feeling of rebirth that spring always
bri ngs to the hilltop community in the
form of wildflowers, bi rds, and warm
weather was felt in a concrete sense as the
art department moved into its new quarters
in the fine arts building at the beginning of
the semester.
The new space provided the 25 Art majors with new and definitely different surroundi ngs, aesthetic as well as practical.
"(The new space is) cleaner," said senior
Art major Linda Ervin. "The rooms are
smaller," she said, but added that they also

enjoyed more rooms than were in thei r former studio in O ld Main, as well as additional storage space for their materials.
She also men tioned the increased security, which would hopefully prevent another
break-in such as the one that occured in
Old Main d uring the fal l.
The new studio spared the students the
ardurous climb they faced when they wanted to work in the Old Main stud io, and, last
but not least, the all-important bathrooms
were fi nally on the same floor!

fr~hmin Tin.- Brockr~th tr ies to duplk .olt tht "nt

leslit Hj rriJ' Ijfesl ctr.omics crtitio n is hudtdfor
j fin~l bjking in tht kiln. - Photo by H.ury
Mottno

work" in

Foun
&amp;Jo,.~ Tht

mou nting tru h on tht dr41wing

bo.ordisrvidtnctof thtrt~jftd .olltmpts
nK~ry

to skttch tht prrftd pkturt. Photo by C.orol Forjn

64 -

Art

j

btginning ut cl.u.. -

Photo by C.orol

�Realized

Art- 65

�Students Welcome Lab
Picture this - a new photo lab with individualized processing
rooms, a s tudio, simultaneous color and black and white printing,
an expanded black and wh ite typing room- sound s good? That's
exactly what greeted photo-communications s tude nts upon their
return from the Chri stma s holidays.
" It 's a beautiful space," said Photo-com faculty member an lab
manager Michelle Campbell. "We have a lot more room - we're
very excited about it ."
Students were unanimous in thei r praise of the new lab space.
" It's given me an opportunity to work with new and more advanced equipment," said Photo maj or Stephanie Sanchez.
Some of the new equipment that Sanchez mentioned was a
reva mped system of processing film. Before, there was ju st one
si nk and one film loading room, but in the new lab 5 individual rooms waited for students to process their film.
"The rooms are absolutely fantastic, " sai d Greg Cook,
who added that the wait to process film had become a
thing of the past with the new fa ci lity.
The lab's eq uipment , of course, did not ju st walk to
it s new location on the ot her end of ca mpus. Students
who stayed in town during the Christmas holidays
volunteered their time , helping move the photo·
graphic paraphe nalia bit by bit .
" It (the move) was a lot of work," said
Campbell," but well worth it. We could n' t
ha ve done it without our fine students." J41~1ii•
The major continued to grow in size,
becomi ng one of the most popula r programs on camp us. It attracted st udents from as far away as Alaska,
Washington, and Colombia .

fkowutl No tub;Kt ~·Pft tht w•ndfrlns
tyi'S ol phCMo m•lon- I!Sprc:i•ll y tht eyft
ol Rit hud Nir.t.
Pltoto by Tomd« H• r
A. tn r~Jtt

IAft, Somt pfOp~ thin!. photo m•Jon . ,.
•ttondifft~nt w•n~nstlu th•n tht ri!St
It'• tnH'. C..rot For•n, [d

of tht world -

ro~ t~hibit

.. h.•t they

cvnt.IO.n to bt norm• I bth.... to,.

l'ttoto by

8risht, •nd D•vld
,.,,..~Jit Hulf

66 -

Photo-Communications

�Cindy O lsen, 5-lbrln~ Bfrmingh~m. ~nd
' P.. ul Str~nd ~trr r~livt th~ spring
b·~~k trip down tht lowrr c~ nyons of
thr Rio C .,ndt. - Photo by RIC·h,~rd

Nir•
Hum~n tripod D~vid Fo,.: "~iJtJ Jo hn
ShtppHd d uring ~ long r,.:~urt. -

Photo by D"m'"" Morg•n

Lo..·t r Corntr: Photo II studt nts Rilty
H~rpool ~nd EliKO Mo.,]~. Jr. t"kt
g rNt u rt in cutt ing thtir n~~tiv~ to
mttt Bill Ktnntdy's n ut photo ' "i&amp;n·
mtnt. - Photo by Rob Wood

Photo-Communications -

67

�Students
of a
Different
Sort

P~~~l cl~ hnt givtn Libr~ri~ n Con nit Pullty tht upprr h~nd in tht computu ~gt. Photo by Rich~rd Nir~

68- Staff

C lasses taught during the school year
gave s tudents the opportu nity to learn
about the presiden tial election, how to take
pictures and develop them, and how to keep
up with America's increasing compu terizati on - sta ff members as student s, that is.
Staff employees ca n take one free cla ss
each semester, and they took adavantage of
the opportunity last yea r.
" I think it's a great benefit," said Universi ty relations employee Carol Hu ssey, who
said she takes classes that she did not get a
cha nce to take while ea rning her bachelors's or master's degrees. " It's an opport uni ty to dabble in thi ngs I didn't ha ve time
for, " she said.
As Walter Mondale and Ronald Reagan
batt led for the presidency duri ng the fa ll ,
H ussey was enrolled in a class called The
Presiden t that reviewed the President's
powers a nd the history of the office.
" I try to take one class each semester,"
she sai d.
Another s taff member back in the educational game is brother John Kuche nbrod,
head resident at Premont Hal l.
Ku~henbrod took a class in photography,
someth ing he hopes will become another
hobby.
He added that being an older st udent has
no bearing at all in the classroom. " I don't
feel that I'm an older person in class," he
said.
Taking classes, he added, is something
that he will continue to do as long as the
opportu nity exists, he said. " If the opportunity is there, I certa inly will "
Library worker Connie Pulley is meeting
the challenge of the compute r age head-on
by taki ng classes in computer science.
She took her third class, Pascal. during
the spring semester after having taken Fortran and Cobol earlier.
" I had sat in on the class and wanted to
go ahead and take it," she said.
Since staff workers need to be at their
jobs during the day, night classes or classes
around the lunch hour are best for staff
stude nt s, said Pulley.
" Evening classes or lunchtime classes
work best," she said.
" I encourage all employees to take advantage," said Hussey. "'They are a chance to
broaden your exposure."

�Right: Video I st ud ent ~nd Doyle head RA Pete
Erickson do a littlesuppleme nt~l work, videotaping the Sp ring Fling's Craz y Olympics. Photo by Carol Foran

lurning Resource Center worker Kath y Wells
and Piano teacher Sue Dawson rully aren't
glumpeople; .. bsoluteconcent raliononthepart
of st udent andtucherarerequi red in piano
cJ..ss.. - Photo by Richard Nira

Staff -

69

�A Decade
of
Innovation
The Hilltop's adult degree program
s hares the school's anniversary celebrations as it recognizes its tenth year on
campus.
New College's innovative methods of
learning include workshops on everything from Managing the Boss to a Texas
Wildflower workshop; from China 's
Gifts to the West to Women in Advertis·
ing.
Workshops (colloquims) are usually
filled to capacity and participants enjoy
the experiences.
Recognizing that there are many ways
of learning and that learning can be fun
is one of New College's strong points.

Form~r Ntw Co ll~f slutknt Ch.&amp; rl~ Cr« n .&amp;nd
hit wift', lily, ch.&amp;t with Ntw Collc-gt&gt; frit&gt;nd .&amp;nd
Austin Commu nit y Co llt'gt' Ac.&amp;dtmic Dr.&amp;n C r~n
Olfoduringtht!O)'U foilnnlvtrs.oryctltb.,tionof
tht prosum. - Photo by Coll«n Pndr

Sludrnls pondrr lht gtnn~l munlng of n•lurrwildflowrrs in p~rlicubr - during o1 colloquim. -

Ph o1o by Collffn

70 -

ew College

Pr~dr

�Danella Gooda ll pt"ers at a picto rial history of the
innovative prog ram during its 10 ytar birthday
party. - Photo by Richard Nira

New College - 71

�Veterans Earn College Degrees
Osw~ld Nir~, ~s he ~ppeared b~ck in 19S2 ~fter he h~d just
e me rged intact from boot c~mp, ~ nd l l yurs l.ter .u ht trie to
emerge intact frQm Br. E~gan Hunter's eduution~ l psychology
cl.as.s. - Photo by Richard Nir•

Veterans were once faced with many

challenges. There was the spectre of
fighting in Europe, Japan, Korea, or
Vietnam.
The veteran was also faced with the
cons ta nt s train of move after move after
move, as new orders kept comi ng down
the pike - families were often forced to
move right along with them as well.
Some veterans now take on another,
altogether different but just as challeng
ing endeavor - coming back to school
after many years away from the class4

room.

Vetera ns affairs counselor Rex Jerden,
a serviceman for 36 years with stints in
World War II and Korea, says that the
time s pent away from studying presents
the biggest challenge to the vet who
wishes to continue his or her studies.

sc~~e s!ir~~~~. ~~~~l J~5rd;~i."!h~u~a~J

that veterans mus t re-adjust themselves
to the world of books and teachers.
" It takes time to try and get back into
the swing of academic s tudies," said Jerden .
"Once they do become used to the academic ways again, however, the vet usually does well," said Jerden . ' 'The class of
1985 boasted a vet with a 4.0 CPA." he
said.
" Not counti ng the ce ntennial class,
the veterans program had 85 participants
earning degrees, mas ter's as well as
bachelor' s," he said.
"Of course, the veterans are older than
a verage students, whose ages range a nywhere from the twenties to the s ixties,"
he said.
The maJo r development that the yea r
brought was, unfortunately, not a good
one. The heart of the vete ra ns program
on campus was the office of veteran's
aHairs, which referred vets that needed
help to a ppropriate agencies.
The office, howeve r, was not included
m the 1985-86 budget, ending its 10 year
exis tence on the hilltop

72 -

Veterans

�Georgt Nicho ls, su rrounded by .oil to riJ of m•ttri.ol on Afri (.o,
tri~ to g lto~n from thOH mo~ttri~ls ~rtintnt inform~tion on
tht " Duk Contintnl" for his RCM p~~·-- Photo by Rsch-

.ordNiu

�Right : Tutors suc h ~s J~cob Fri~re help CAMP
student s in thei r tr~n s itio n from high sc hoo l to
co llege ~c~demi~. - Photo by H.ury Moreno
Below: By the light of the April sun shine, tutor
st udent unlock the mys teri es of~ homework
- Photo by HMry Moreno

~nd

~s.sig nment .

Botto m: CAMP director R ~n da Sahdy, right , ~s­
sum ed the duti rs of advi!&lt;lr ~ nd counselor during
the finan ci~l crunc h dull by budget cu ts.- Photo
byH.nryMoreno

7 4 - Ca mp

�Camp Program Facing Extinction
Saved By Renewed Federal Funds
From what the federal government calls
an economically disadvantaged situation to
attending a school that costs about $3,500
per year sounds like a d ream far beyond the
reach of children of migrant farmworkers.
But for a lucky few, the College Assistant M igrant Program (CAMP) provides
them with a shot at something they m ight
not otherwise receive: a college degree and a
way out of the transitory and unpredictable
lives of the season farmworker.
It was a tumultuous year for CAMP, as
budget cuts by Ronald Reagan eliminated
federal fund ing for the program for the '84'85 school year. The university was able to
provide funding for 50 students but without federal funding the program may have
faced a gradual phasing out due to a lack of
funds.
The lack of funding put a hardship on
the CAMP staff. as director Randa Safady
had to add the duties of advisor and counselor; only one other s taff member, John
Graves, was on hand to serve as tutor.
To survive, the program needed to secure

federal fu nds again , and Safady sent a
p roposal to Washington appealing for
aid. President Pat Hayes pursued
funds too, as she made several trips to
D.C. on behalf of CAMP.
In April. the big announcement
came: Federal funding would once
again flow to the hilltop, saving the
program and the dreams of75 migrant
workers hoping for a college degree.
"CAMP has given us a good chance
for a better tomorrow," said CAMP
s tudent Rolando Jimenez. " It's helping us to achieve something more."
Jimenez said at the beginning of the
year that the CAMP students stuck
together as a group but that as the
year wore on they began to make
friends with other students.
Jimenez' parents are just as excited
as he is about coming to school.
"They' re very proud of us," he said.
They never expected us to be in college," said Jimenez, whose two older
brothers are also in the program.

R~miro Quh~, Ruben Oi.ot, f.obi.on Limon, .ond
:"'ntonio Rtyn.o dtddt to lmpr~ thtit ftllow studtnts

Ro bndo C'"tro shows off his t.oltnts .os .1 OJ fo r
tht fil"it tvu Chiu no night htld in tht RtUnion. - Photo by D.1mi.1t1 M org.1n

Camp -

75

�French School Adds Culture
Few people are aware that St. Edward's University has shared its culturally d iverse campus with the Bo is-Robert International School
(BRIS) for French students duri ng the past
three years. Bois-Robert is a s mall, private
academy that enrolls approximately forty s tudents. T hese students are offered a concentrated curriculum that includes Computer Science, Bus iness, Mathematics, French and Eng-

lish.
M ost of the BRIS students came to the United States to work towards thei r bacculaureate
degree- which is the Fre nch equivalent to a
high school diploma. They study from 9 to 5
daily preparing themselves for the exam that
will put them on a Junior College level by
American standards. Although there are a selected few who attend St. Edward's classes,
75% of these students are strictly with BoisRobert.
While academics is the key purpose for
their presence at St. Edward's, most French
students are enjoying the experience of living
in a " foreign' country. Adapting to the American lifestyle is a task that most of the French
students been striving for since their arrival.
" I want to be able to say that in the year I have
s pent in the United States I have learned the
American way of life-whether o r not I accept it
completely." said Jean-Luc Richard, BRIS student. The majority of the BR IS s tudents live in
Doyle Hall on St. Edward's campus, and take
part in most campus activities such as basketball games, dances, and parties . " We try to fit
in, have fun , and show people that we' re not
so different from everybody else - but there
are times when we feel like somebody on the
outside is looking through the window," said

Florent Cebron about the s truggle fo r acceptance in the American culture.
"At firs t, they (the French students) kept to
themselves, but once I got to know them and
to accept their differences, I found o ut that
they' re great to be aro und and a barrel of
laughs", said David Williams, a freshman at
St. Edward's who has learned about the French
culture through the s tudents at BRIS. The cultural exchange has gone beyond academics
and into lang uage, music and general attitudes
about life.
Katherine Walke r, a St. Edward's freshman,
ag reed that she has learned "more about the
French culture through being friends with the
BRIS stude nts than a entire semester of French
history could have ever taught me." The
French students have in turn, learned " When
in America
. do as the Americans dol" Williams exclaimed.
Janine Fansher s ummed up the general feeling towards the students of BRIS. "I respect
their courage a nd their tole rance for living in
this completely different world. They are
wonderfully open and free and are good students as well as loyal friends ."

l l'fi:Tht notch~ ...th •nd con&lt;"rttf noon oltht
ntw Fint ArtJ buiklinl houMd tht Khool"• d .11nd offkft. - PhotO by H•rry M.11rtno

fUOfftf

Rwhl Htn&lt;t Atlti tor"'~ • dir«1or •nd tudwr
for tht Khoot, which .. ,.. ft•hntd In'" .11r1kW In
tht Aus:tin ArMrk..ln-SUtlf'li••"·
Phom by
A.4.1lr("O R on&lt;.llfl

76 -

French School

�French School - 77

�French School

=:" to:.nd::i'EEri.r,.;":-~.r.i.,:;.;:z:;:;;"if
s"iPOrt to Gille "Lulu" Collet as he tries
to make it 1n tht' USA - Photo by Mlch~lle Huff

78 -

French School

�F~c ult y

member Jean Pie rre Jot i m~itre siT~ ~
po int during J le!iSO n. - Photo by Hdrry Mouno
A hot c~ feteriJ mu t prov id es ~ c h ~ nce fo r Rob nd
MJrchi x to ta ke a break from his sc hoo lwork. Photo by Hdrry M.~reno

French School -

79

�Excellent Work Merited Honors
Keating and Hirani win top student awards
Handshakes, smiles, and the word
"congratulations" could be see n and
heard everywhere as the university honored and awarded its hard workers on
honors night.
There were some surprised and new
awards in the ceremony.
First year faculty member David H orton won the teaching excellence award,
ove r such campus luminaries as Brother
Cornelius Corcoran and Brother j ames
Hanson.
Horton, a criminal justice teacher, received a standi ng ovation from appreciative stude nt s in the crowd after he had

80 -

Honors Night

committee which chose the
night , too.
Someone who probably
One was the establishment of an
award to the st udent that had written the gotten an award but did
I
best Research and Critical Missions pa- ceremony was Brother
per of the year. That award, and a $500 who played the electric piano
check, went to julie Smithson, who, Dr. Omn i Si ngers' numbers
Emma Lou Linn joked, "has a 5.5 C PA." wrapped in casts from a
Another change involved the proceA look at the program for
dure in the awarding of the always popu- ny revealed words such as
lar Man and Woman of the Year.
excellence, merit, and
In past years, a committee had chosen T he large n um ber of awards
four men and four women fi nalists that served as a testament to all the
faculty, s taff and s tudents voted on to that possess those qualities and
determine who won.
them with others on the hilltop.
This year was a complete reversal of
that procedure, as the stude nts, faculty,
and staff made the nomination s to a

�Honors Night -

81

��Sports
Varsity spo rts have come and gone d uring the last 100 year s as have the facilitie s
that they ha ve played on.
In the beginning, there was the school's foo tball team , whic" fo r a few years had
hopes of turning into a powerhouse like Nortre Dame, but those dream s quickly
faded away.
However, not all traditions that died in past years are irreversibly doomed to
memories on old newspapers and yearbooks. The track team , which once trained on
the South Austin hillsides, will retu rn again next year as a new varsity sport.
The hill has seen some famous names in the world of sport s uch as Knute Rockne,
Billy Di sch , and Roger Metzge r. Metzger played in major league baseball with the
Houston Astros and San Francisco Giants before being involved in a freak accide nt
that seve red the fingers on his throwi ng hand .
Today, the college sport mainstays such as men' s and women 's basketball and
varsity baseball are alive and thriving. In recent years the programs have acquired a
new sense of optimism as a new athletic director, and men's and wome n's basketball
coaches were named .
New optimi sm has penet rated just about every area of varsity sports . T he men's
basketball team has come to the brink of contendi ng eve ry year in the Big State
conferen ce, the volleyball team is young and improvi ng, the tennis team continue to
roll ove r all of its opponents, and the baseball tea m keeps setti ng new records each
year.
In addition, the new convocation center, seem ingly on a drawing board since ti me
began , is scheduled to become a reality in the fall of '86.

A g l ~nce o101 St. Eddie's b-elieve it o~ not is s hown
he~e. Th e~ rn ll y W oli!l _..foothi ll te ... m on th e hilltop d u rin11 th e o ld d~ys! - Photo Courttsy of
S.E.U. A.rchivrs

1915

1925

1935

1945

1955

1965

1975

1985

Shout it out
w•hln ll mu hinn proba bly ho10ve
niP, tmun 1bout clothes li ke tht51!, but
bo)'ll
will b.r boy.!! - Photo by Rich1rd Nir1

Sports- 83

�An Upsetting Season
Injuries and moments of competitive brilliance marked the
basketball teams' season, as the Toppers posted a 16-9 regular

season record.
Injuries were the major cul prit in the season's below .500
record, as the team at one point in the season had eleven
players hobbled with one injury or another.
"We had injuri es that kept us from getting in a groove," said
coach Tom Pate. Because of the injuries, Pate had to keep
sh uffling lineups that, natural ly, ca used consistency problems.
" It was hard for us to keep the continu ity we needed ," he

said .
Coach Pate sha red in the disappointment of the season. "
felt like we had a legitimate chance to con tend for the
ence cham pionship," he said.
The team did make s trides in Pate's second year as
coach, however.
" I think we had a better team th is year," said Pa te. We
able to reduce our turnovers from 15.7 to 13 a game
were a little bit bette r defe nsively," he said.
And the season was certai nly was not wi thout some
exciting games. The team finished with a 10-3 home
one of those wins came agai nst eventual District IV i
Southwestern. It was a three overtime marathon wh ich had
Topper fa ns at the edge of their seats the enti re game, with
T oppers prevailing at the end.
Another was a 71-65 win agai ns t the 7th ranked team in
country, St. Mary's, in front of a deli rious crowd that
T opper Leroy Nicholas to the dressing room in the
mayhem .
"We had a great team attitude, a great effort from all
players and by far the greatest amount of fan support in
time at St. Edward's," said Pate.

Sl..ml B.ulutNII kno- of no grultr
spi rit [l;~nn,ling pl'y th 'n thts on~,
u p l'y~n 1nd hru allh g~l ' big
( hul~ out of SHinl thf rim mQYf
1nd th~ Nc:kbNrd sh1kt from th~
forn of lht j1m. - Photo by M idttlltHulf
j1mi'S Johnton ftdt thf p,aln of'

(.._ to. to (fOMtown ri Y'l Con(Or·
di1. -

84 -

Basketba ll

Phcro by O.msotn Mors•n

�Topper pla yt' rs, oo.Jches, and fa ns
protrstwha ttht'yperu ivt' tobt'abad
ca ll by tht' officials. - Photo by
RichardNiu

Tht' Toppers a ppl y tough dt'ft'n~ to
th t' Co ncordia Stags in an t'ffort to
ca tch up lat t' in tht' ballgamt'.Photo by Damian Morgan

Basketba ll -

85

�COKh Tom P~tt dlrKII tht Toppu
tufflc durlnsthtMCond h~lf of th&lt;'
M-..On ...ndlns "- 11 St. Muy'a. -

Pltoto by

86 -

Basketba ll

R1~lt~rd

Nu•

�A determined Lonnie T u rne r fig hts
his way to the ho lt against a St.
Mary's t riple tea m. - Photo by RkhardNira

A c.. utio us Co ncordi.. Stag g uard
backs offas heentt rsthevalleyof
tht gia nts underneath the Toppers'
well defensed hoop. - Photo by Damian Morg~n

Won13

~~u;~o{thc t..kc
T u lHon Su tc
T~Chriotion

S.:hRincr
HOUJto n Baptiot
Tn:• A.._ •
Pout Quinn
Southwt~lcrn
NotthT~Sutc

Pout Quinn

...
...,

.,_.,.,
71·74

67-69

S.:hnincr Cotl~c

Our t..dyoft hc t..kc

St. Tnomu
Huoton -TillolfOn
Eut Tc,.... BaptiltCotlcsc
Torleton Stoto
Tcxao luthcnn
Muy Hordin-Bay lor

.,_,
'~ "

~;..r:!,:~~llo-n
Kneeling (L to R): Chris Ryan;
C hris Bentley; Lon nit Turner;
Verno n Fran klin; Rich H ughK;
Mike D eCello; Jerry Farias.
Standing (L to R): To m Pate: )OC'
Kocu rrk; Leroy Nichol~; Mikr

Lt d beu er; CharlK Taylo r; j,.mes
jo hnson; Grtg Altxandt r; jeff
Applewhite; Ch ris Collins; Sttphan Stov..ll. - Photo by D•mianMorgan

St. Thom•
Stephen f . Auttin
T n . luthcun
Sou.th wt~tcrn

Muy Hordin -Boylor
St. Mory'o

Basketball - 87

�Stnior T~mmy Koub~ strain• to
block' shot from~ St. Mny'• R~ttler
u Thueu c~ mpbtll tritt to get in
rebounding potltlon. - Photo by
M ic:hrflrHuff
junninePirttnces upthe rnurton~

fut bruk 1plrut P~n Ameriun u
K..en Rl»6i t.,ilt the pby. - Photo
by Ric:h~rd Nir•

�mens' Hoops;
ew Coach Hired
the season did
as planned,
h igh points
. Included in the
were a first·ever
over archrival Souths tern U n ive r si t y of
Georgetown, a two game
sweep of conference opponent Mary Hardin-Baylor,
and a pair of close losses to St.
Mary's University and Texas
lutheran College.
junior Inger Brown led the
Lady Toppers in both scoring
and rebounding. Brown also
fi nished among the N.A.I.A.
leaders in rebounding, as well
as being named to the Big
State AII-Confere'nce first

was a stabilizing point for the
Lady Hi\ltoppers. Chauvin
s tepped in as a freshman to
provide leadership and a cons istent outside shot.
Two seniors were lost from
the 84-85 squad, Tammy
Kouba a nd Sonya Binger.
Kouba provided strong ballhandling s kills and a combination of q uality inside and
outside play for four years.
Binger, also a four year
team member, was the team's
second leading scorer and was
known throughout the Big
State Conference as a superb
outside shooter.
The Lady Toppers have
benefited greatly from these
two young ladies' talents, and
they both will be sorely
missed.
Firs t year head coach David
Mc Key also received some
quality play from Junior Ginny Green, sophomore Anne
Gokelma n, and sophomore
Teresa Campbell.

Tip-Off! St. Edwnd't and St. Mary's
pby~n Mgin th~ir c hase forth~ buk~tb.J.ll a t th~ Mginning of th~ Jut
rrgulu seuon contttt of th~ yur. Photo by Mich~/1~ Huff

Basketball -

89

�frts hmanJulie Chauv inflitsh ighin
practice,anticipa ti ngwha t 5hehopes
will bot a good ~ rfo rm anct against
St. Ma ry's. - Photo by Michelle

Huff.
Th t pbyers o n the floor a ren 't the
on ly o nes in vo lved in the ballgame.
Tam my Kouba, Karen Woo ley, Marin aZepeda, MonicaM illerandTheTI!'S.I Campbtll all watch their team
atten ti vel yfromthebtnc h. - Photo

byMichdlt Huff

Names &amp; Numbers
Wo n !)
Schreiner
Tu.u Women'• Un iversity
AUftln Coll rst
HH din -SimmOnl
Concordia
Trinity
Sout hwft tern
Pa nAme ri nn
lncunattWord
Conco rdi.o
Tu... Wo men '1 Univtnity
Sc:hrtlner
Hud ln Simmont
T rinity
H wto n-Tillotton
£...tTu.u!Upti1t
TuM Lutheran
M ..y Hudin-!Uylor
St. M ..y't
Hutton·TIIIobon
Muy Hardln - ~ ylor

TnMLutheun
(M'IT- B.Ipt ~

St. Ma ry'•

90- Basketba ll

loit 14
69-12

.....
.....
, •• 7J

69-19

.........,
...,,_12,
...,
.....
7).'J

,

• .)1

.,_.,
6S.7J

,,_,.
.,...
,., ...
...
...,.
.,...
&gt;Hl

61-10

�Devon lies, David Baley, Mary
Kemper and Tom Hudson celebrJteSt.Edward's upset win over
conferencekingpin St. Mny's. Photo by SJbrinJ lkrminshJm
Bomb~ Away!! Inger Brown
launchesone fromthepaintover
the outstretched a rms of out-ofpoosition defender-s. - Photo by
RichardNira

Basketball -

91

�Youth &amp; Costly Mistakes
It was and up and down
season for the volleyball team
as the women in gold and
blue compi led a 13-23 record
in overall play and a 4-6 record in the Big State Confe rence.
T he ups: a 4-6 confere nce
record, which was much better than their overa ll winning
percentage. Another bright
spot in the season was a good

showi ng in the St. Phillips'
tournament in September, as
the T oppers wo n two out of
the five games they played.
Two of the three losses they

suffered were both

tough

matches, includi ng a loss to
the host team, St. Philli p's.
Another positive aspect of
the season was the Toppers'

fast finish. The dub won 5 of
its last 7 games, ending the

season on a high note.
" Overall , I would say we
s t arted slow but ended
strong," sa id volleyball coach
Diane Daniels. She agreed
that too many unforced errors
and problems with con sistency were the downfall of the
team. " I didn' t expect some of
the mistakes we mad e," she
said.
Furthermore, there were no

Names &amp; Numbers
w..,u
a,.,.. .... nt

LooiU
~

~':n~y1 Coll&lt;f;•
St. Mory'oUnivonily
Southw ... ••n Unlvnoioy

6-U, ._U, l._l.
!-U, I-U, 11-U

M &lt;M~uy U,.Ivonit y

1~.1,._11

PonA~~~triun

1._1•. &gt;-u

Unlvonit y

5:s~;~ 1~~·1;,~~-::~:1::
:,•.:!,,';'".-61nloy....

11-U, l\•U

1)-U,U·"
1&lt;)-U,~~: :~;,1~: :

St. Phlllip'o Collop
St. Mory'oUnlvonity

~:C,:=kon
Trinll y

r::.:::~:.:J""
~ri':;''
~4-~·..Y•

:f

1)-IJ, ;I!-Z,.I-1'

U•l•, 1-U,
1!-10,

1~:

1~:~ ~::: :~:!
,;;!\~;~-1~:!

Mo i"J Hordinloylo&lt; 11--li, U·U, ,._IJ, J.IJ
~~,::""' Stooo

1-\J, 1-U, l-IJ

Souoh.._om
6-U, l-1,, U-U
~~'t!!oodln loyJ.o 7- U, !-U, l~~-~~;
PonA-okon
~:IJ

T ...... L.otlwt on

~!,.";,~

Ttr0$1 C. mpN H rut he to con&amp;utu l, tf Ci n ny C rH n ~ftf r •h• tc:o rn '
IOu&amp;h point •&amp;•int i St. Mny't. Pho10 by "'"' luMJ \~rl•1qtHZ

92 -

Volleyball

1!- I Z,. I!-1
U-U, I!-J, IM

�Mark '84
seniors on the team, something that obviously did not
help when times got tough.
"We might have needed ad:ied leadersh ip on the club,"
said Daniels, referring to the
seniors that she did not have.
T he players she d id have,
however , s tuck together
through thick and thin. "We
had a super season as far as
everyone playing together_"
she said. Ginny G reen and
Pam D ilworth were two juniors on the club providing
most of the leaders h ip
through their experience and
excellent play, diving for
loose balls, and slamming
hard-to-return balls back to
their opponents.
Freshman Julie Chauvin
~]so contributed to the team's
efforts. "She played real
well," said Daniels: T heresa
Campbell was the most improved player on the team.
Daniels stated, "She really
:arne through and started
running some good plays for

Volleyball - 93

�Afl e reighl yeus inlhe dugoui ,Ca&lt;~chJ ohnKno rr

resigned lo b«omt th t fulltime
- Photo by D~mian Morsdn

~lhltl i c

directo r.

�Team Fluctuates, Knorr Leaves
Topsy-turvy is an apt descri ption of
the baseball team this yea r, as the team
had a hard act to follow; the 1984 team
that sets all kinds of records in all kinds
of categories.
Coach John Knorr was for ced to shift
lineups and put his players out of posi tion due to the season's instability.
Over the summer, said Knorr, the
team underwent changes becau se players
weren't able to return d ue to various reasons, including monetary ones. "We lost
some kids to economics," said Knorr.
The changes forced hi m to play younge r players, who normally would have
had time to lea rn by observing. This season, they had to learn by doi ng, always
difficult in sports.
" I had to play a lot of young people,"
said Knorr.
&amp;cause of the ins tability and surprises dealt hi s way during the summer,
Knorr wa s plea sed with the way the season turned out, and added that the team
exceeded his expectations. "The team
more than maximized my expectations,"
he said.
As usual. the team had its standout
performers which guided them through
Gr;1y skie thrnl~n~ o~ ll o~ft~ rnoon in th e Top~rs'
bo~lll~ with Ko~ ns.u Bt- n ~ictin~, but never de liv~r~ .1 show-sto pping downpour. - Photo by Ktvin Dozzi

the year.
" Pat Farrell finally had the kind of
year we were hoping he'd have, " said
Knorr. A.]. Waznik made the all district
team, (as well as an article in the Austin
American-Statesman), Lance Rodgers
had another great year and played a great
third base for us. "
Of the young players that helped the
team throughout the season, Knorr mentioned Mike Cour as having a good year.
"He really did a good job for us. "
The season also brought with it a big
announcement development - the announcement of the fact that Knorr would
be stepping down as baseball coach to
become the full-time athletic director
Knorr named the plans to build the

Fo~llpro~cticeisjust•sdem•ndingo~sspringplo~y,
asth .-wTopperstak tabrukinthedugout. ~

Photo by Ana l!iabd Vd a&gt;quez

new convocation center as the main rea son behind the move.
" Next year is a critical year in the
planning stage," said Knorr. " I guess
what really broke the back wa s the inability to juggle my time correctly in the
spring," he said .
Knorr's resignation ended hi s eight
year tenure as coach, during which time
the team consistently won lots of ballgames , became a team respected
statewide and graduated all but two of it s
athletes.

Baseball -

95

�Co.Kh Kno rr ( U) looks on nrdully oilf hit pl•ytrs
mfft in o~n lntr~uoild K rimm.ogf during tht
$pring. - Pholo by Do~mio~n Mors•n

96- Baseba ll

�Mik~ Sh~nnon d~li v~n ~pitch to~ te~mm~te d uring th~ Spring; thii ~ction occurrrd ~fter thr T rxu

Christi~ n
cont~t.

-

Univrnity
Photo by

b~llclub f~iled
D~mian

to show
Morgan

for~

Names &amp; Numbers
T~i&lt;as Ciub

T rinity
South west

T~i&lt;~S St~t~
Concordi~ lut h~r~n

,_,

Prarie View A 6: M
K~nsas Benedictine

8-4, 0-5
IJ-7, 12-4

Southwrst~rn

Not r~ D~mr

Pio&lt;hlns Su ff, f....,o.,w, loor.Soow lkltJ. Dol4 llod:.. Mi k•
S.nclo.., )o'lfTIJ&lt;•i.,., RobonMo~ftO, RobbioC.ou,Todd

O..oH•Idtn&lt; rn&gt;nl Row,IIO r. P•~I Sp..owoth , Eddi&lt;Co, uk&lt;,
johnJIIns.Rol.cnM«o,..., So.,.n S.I..g l, ll•d ltc&gt;w, l oor.
Don Dohmy. Dous Bock. D• • ld a.~ey. S&lt;o&lt;•
Anohony,KNinOiton. - Ph&lt;&gt;'&lt;JbyDomi•nMotr• n

s......

s....,.,.,._

Phok&gt;l&gt;yDo,ionM&lt;&gt;&lt;r•n

Ust T u u B~ptist
East T~us B~plisl
Southwrstrrn of M l nnnot~
Hw;to n T illo tson
P.1ul Quinn
Southwrstun
U..ker
St. Mary's
Concordi~ luth~r~ n

T rinity
Mny Hardin S..ylor
P~ul Quinn
Sc:hrr iner
Huston Tillotson

Front Row, I to r: Don Dohu ty, Eddir Gonza·
ln. B~ck Row, I to r. John King, J~ff W.111is,
Sc:oll Anthony. - Photo by 0.1mian Morgan

3-6
10-6, 0-6

louisian~ Tech
North D~kou Stat~

Sch reine r
Tu~s lutheun

H•rl..._..-. llo&lt;~ ltc&gt;w, l oo r. P•• r••~l l D•.,I n R-Ed
Clnd., Doole: Wh hohu d, Jlcvh• O loon. Ml~• Sh•n,...n. -

7-16, 8·1
11-8, 5-1

7·13

,_.,

6--0,0-ll

9 · 3 , 6-2

7-6, 4-9
6-n

,_,
.,_,

4-3, 3-10

14-10, 4-6
IJ-10, 11-9
2-2, 3-4
14· 2
8-9, 3- ~
1· 10, 16-14

._,

7·7,0.0
5·9, ()-IJ

CNchrs: I to r: j ohn Knorr, Onid Long~nf~ld,
D.1vr l ucukowski. - Photo by Dam•"an Mor·
gan

Baseba ll -

97

�One More For Emmett
It was not an un us ual season for the
men 's tennis team coached by Emmett
Strohmeyer, as the team jus t kept win-

ni~~ew;~an~n~:ile~ ~ihr:i~:h

Big State
Conference (BSC) competition without a
loss, but had to settle for a tie with the
tough Mary H ardin- Baylor Crusaders.
T he title was the 45th BSC championship for the Top~rs in 26 years, as
Strohmeyer continued his winning ways
in his JJrd year of coaching.
" I thought the tum playtd very well,"
Sllid Strohmeyer. "The season was very

good."
The post-season confuence tournament wt~ s the same story for the Topper
netters ;~s ~II as their opponents, as the
netters domina ttd the com petition, landing pl11ytrs in all the champions hip
match position s - ii R all Topper fi nal in
both s ingles and doubles.
The te.Jm wu rewuded at the end of
the RUon with three spots in the NAIA
national tourna me nt in Ka nsu City.
K.Jrl Ja uhi•inen, Julio ROJAS, • nd RusR II Stearns •II m• de the trip as s ingles
pl•yers, while Jauhiainen a nd ROJIIS represented the district as • doubles tum

98 -

Tennis

In all, it was the kind of year that has
become to be expected of the team, a confere nce title and ple nty of representa tion
a t the national tournament, but there
was one unusual thing a bout the season
- the weather.
" We had nice weather every time we
had a match ," said a pleasantly surprised
Strohmeyer. " We didn' t have to battle
any s trong wi nds. The weather always
seemed to be in our favor."
The team continued to field players
from the ends of the earth. For example,
team captain M ichael Larsson hailed
from Buenos Aires , Argentina, Afttr participAting in Spanish and Swedish tournaments.
Ku l Jauhiainen came to the hilltop
from Finland iifter reaching the qualifying final on the Finnish Siitellite Circuit.
Senior Julio RojiiS wu born in San
Jose, Costa Rica iind won nume rous honors playing there and in Guiitemala, such
as the nAtional men's doubles champions hip in 19&amp;1 -82..
John Houck won numerous titles in
Kentucky, his home state and ranked
25th there in 1984

R..-11 Slum• "ioinrd th~ l~nn;, lum •h~r 1
brl~ 1bMnu•nd w~nl on 10 rotnprt~ In N•tion..l
Photo by M.rr.
Ronnr.

comPf1it ion i n K• , _ City. -

�Names &amp; Numbers
Schreiner

Won

University of Texas- San Antonio Lost

M cMurray

Won

Schreiner

Won

Emporia St.

Won

Trinity JV

Won

Texas Lutheran

Won

Huston-Tillotson

Won

Trinity JV

Won

East Texas Baptist

Won

St. Mary's

Won

University of Texas -San Antonio Lost

Mary Hardin-Baylor
University of Texas -

Tied
Tyler

Lost

Northwest Mississippi St.

Won

Concordia Lutheran

Won

McClindon JC

Lost

L toR; julio Rojas, Ku l )au h iai nl! n, John DeSoi, Mi kf L..u·sson, joh n H ouck, Steven Pie rce.
- Photo by Damian Morgan

The doublt'S tum of John DeSoi ~n d Sttven
Pierce takt' a few wnm-up swings befo re
they begin play.- Photo by Marco Ronc.Jri

Tennis- 99

�M~rry Ann M
r~ry p~p.orl.'t to u n l"'.oth h~r dndins•rvt to ~ n unfortun~lt oppontnt w' itinJ on
tht ot hff tilk of tht n tl. - Photo by M•rro Ron-

100 -

Tennis

�Women Tie
"MHB had done some extensive recruiting and was stronger than I had anticipated," said Coach Daniel s.
The Toppers partici pated in the tenni s
wars without a senior on the team, a fact
that one would think would hurt their
performance during the year, but Dan iels disagrees.
She said that she didn't think that the
lack of a senior affected the dub adversely, saying that tenni s is "such an individual sport" that the women were able
to play well without that senior leaderKarl&lt;! ~lie concentr~tes ~s she nears hu next encounter wit h her w;~ i ting opponent. - Photo by
Marco Ronca:i

BSC Title

ship.
The most experienced player, Merry
Ann M cCrary, was voted most oustanding player by her teammates at the e nd of
the season.
Two players who provided strength to
the team were also commended by their
fellow netters, as Karla Galle and Kelly
O'Reilly were named the most improved
players on the team.
It was a year of continued improvement for the women's tennis team. The

The.'iOiitary figure of head coach Dia ne D•niels
bruksupt hemany li ntsof thete n niscourtduring a brea k in practice.- Photo by Mdrco Roncdri

J~:-~:r;l~ir~~h~~:al;~hi:~flt~;~e~:~~
their only conference loss of the season.
" It was a good season," said tennis
coach Diane Daniels, "in that we won all
but one of our conference matches."
The T oppers were denied a chance to
represent Dis trict IV in the NAJA tourname nt in Kansas City because of the
loss to the MHB Crusaders.
In the Big State Conference teams can
sometimes sneak up on an unwary opponent, especially in a sport s uch as tennis,
where information about other teams
isn't as wide sp read as it is in other
s ports.
La st year, it was the St. Mary's Rattlers
that sneaked up and beat the Toppers,
preventing them from a conference title;
thi s year it was the Crusaders.
O'Reilly also made it to the finals of
the BSC tournament along with her doubles partner Robin Pari sh.

Names &amp; Numbers

Temple Junior College

Lost

Texas A &amp; I

Lost

Southwestern

Won

East Texas Baptist

Won

M cMurray

Won

Texas Lutheran

Won

Southwestern

Won

St. Mary's

Won

M ary Hardin-Baylor

Lost

Front Row: Ito r. Robin Pnish, Merry Ann McCruy. Back row, Ito r: Karb Ga lle, Coach
Diane Daniels, Kell y O'Reilly. - Ph oto by Muro Roncari

Te n nis -

101

�Risht: Prr-jpmt Jt rttching ~nd stutrgy pbnning
hr lptd thr Topprrs to thrir impressivt r«o rd
~g~inst Austin City U~gut t r~ms. Photo by
M1~hrllrHuf(

Upprr Cornrr. M~rro Roncni l4krs • brt•k from
tht h ut ~nd thr shotsofthr tnrmy wi th " bott lrof
co ld, rd rt~~hing w• tu. - Photo by 04mi•n Mor-

s•n

Wo n UU.t .lTitdJ
Rewrv.H
Fin•nflf"
Y-Purdy'1
B.ihr•ln
R4nc h to tl.hrht
juglrn
W•ndr~rt

Ruffi• l"'f
Athlrt ko
W~trr loo

u.tf-Prkt
Rrwrv•

Y-Purdy'1
R• nch toM•rl..lf1

Juakn
Ruffu,.
Athkikv
w,.rr loo
H•lfPri«

102 -

Soccer

,_,

,..
,.
....

ford it

...

....~ ·

.......,,
,..
...
~·

~·

�Team Reaches
New Heights
The Soccer team was blessed with an
excellent year, as they continued to
dominate city league competition. They
received even better news in the fall, as
the team was granted varsity status.
Three full scholarsh ips were granted
to the team.
''The team as a whole is very excited,"
said coach Manuel Juarez. "We've been
wa iting for the opportunity and we'll
utilize it as best we ca n," he said.
H e added that the three scholarshi ps
would be divvied up among the 20 players so that everyone, and not a select few,
would receive financial help for their talents.
The good news about the coming year
did not overshadow the team's accomplishments during the year, however.
The team dominated its oppone nt s
during the city league schedule, posting
an 8-2-1 record during the fall and a 5-12 sp ring record.
In the spring, the Toppers were especially dominant as they scored 30 goals
while limit ing their opponents to just 7
rack ing up three shutouts along the way.
"The season was a success," said
Juarez. "We won decisively and dominated the games we won. A few players
were outsta nding, but an outstanding
team effort enabled us to win. "
Those outstandi ng individuals were
singled out in the team 's postseason
awards, voted on by the players. Father
Pascal Rwija was the team's MVP, David
Juarez won the hustler award, and Joe
Champine was named most improved
player.

Soccer - 103

�Half-Astros Tie
For Championship
Ginny CTffn flt)l(ft hn fingers as she w~ils on
S«ond ~H for a hit to bring hu home. - Photo

by Rkhud Niu

The fourth annual Co-Ree softball
tournament saw the Half-A stros attempt
to do what no other Co-Ree team had
ever done- win three titles in a row.
After a gallant effort, they did - in a
way.

After losing one game early, the Astros won five straight to reach the finals
against their rivals the Half-As tra
Krushers. In the final s, the Half-Astros
would have to win two s traight while the
Krushers would only have to win one.
The first of these was a complete
blowout, 4-0, in the Half-Astros' favor.
Th is paved the way for the final, which
was winner take all. Thi s was also the
sixth game in a row for the Half-Astros;
four of which were in the heat of the day.
Th e game s tarted fast with the
Krushers jumping on top to take a 1 0
lead. After 6ih innings the Krushers led
4

104- Co-Ree

2 1.
4

With two outs and runners on second '
and third, the game was tied on a David
Koch si ngle up the middle, leaving the
game at a 2 2 deadlock heading into the
seventh and final inning.
In the Krusher half of the inning, with
two outs and runners on second and
third a routine shot was hit to s hortstop
Mike DeCello who was purposely inter
fered with by one of the Krusher baserunners.
The Ast ros responded to this by cal\
ing him out which s tarted a huge di spute. The rule book would later prove the
Astros right in making the call.
The debate raged until 8 p.m., when
the game was called due to darkness,
leaving the Half Astros and the Half-As·
tro Kru shers co-champions of the CoRee tournament .
4

4

4

4

�Co-Ree- 105

�Rain Didn't Wash Away The Fun
Slrrrrr.-tch! T he int u mur~ l 5t~50n i'i
.1bout to wit nes.s ""other dr&lt;lmatic
touchdown p.ass.- Photo by Rich.1rd
N~r•

106 -

l n tramu rals

The 1984 Intramural football season was hampered by
sloppy condition s week after
week but t his did not seem to
affect the fun and competitiveness that fl ag football always has. " I was o n a winless
team and I've never had so
much fun in my life," explained Bill Foley of the Delta
Destroyers.
T his season marked the
firs t time in years that members of a varsity team on campus were able to play flag
football. " I thought this
helped bring our team closer
together," said Mike DeCelle.
" Even though it was football
and not basketball, it helped
us as a team get to k now each
other." The team of basketball players (C.A.T.S.) added
more talented athletes to the
intramural program, which
enhanced competition greatly.
The team to beat at the

opening of the sea son wa s the
de fe nding c h amp ion Untouchables who steamrolled
through the 1983 season winning the cha mpions hip game,
45-0. It would not be so easy
in 1984, but the Unto uchables
would win it, beating their rivals, the C A.T.S. 12-0 o n a
rain soaked field in the championship game.
T he Untouchables will be
forced into retirement, losing

a ll but o ne player to graduatio n . T heir win ning strategy:
" We did the same th ing that
we've bet-n doing," said Moses Salas. " T ogethe rness,
sportsmanship , a nd desire
helped us win ."
And there you have the
wrapup of the 1984 Int ra mura l football season. It was
competi ti ve, uniqu e, b ut
above all, fun for everyone as
Intramura l sports sho uld be.

�Victor St« le .and o ther spt&gt;ct~tors
d emonstrate that intra murd ls is fun
not only for thepbye rs, but for th e
f.ms as well,evenin.a steadydriu le.

-

Photo by Richard Nir"

O~vid Koch bHks out instruction s to
his ~~~~ntivt tu mm,.tes ~S tht y try to
figure out .a w.ay to penetr.at~ the
C.A.T.S. tough defense. - Photo by

Rich11rd N ird

Intramurals -

107

�Tht' Sp~ni~h rli~ r~in control of lht' b~H ~
To m P~ lf •nd R~H Slt' rnJ 8•~P unJuccfully for tht' rrbound. - Phoro by D.tm1~n
M ors•n

108 -

Intramurals

�Running Sreppot's Rule
The 1985 Basketball season was excit·
ing and very competitive. In all, there
were 11 teams wi th the Sreppot's (Topper's spelled backwards) taking it all and
ending the season 12-0.
' The Sreppot's were s imply awesome," said Chris Bentley, coach of the
BAMF's. "Their fast break just couldn't
be touched." Bentley was referring to the
fast paced style of the Sreppot's who
seemed to wear down their opponents
game after game.
Other powerful teams in the league
were Acid Hot and the Spanish Flies. The
Spanish Flies took the Sreppot's to double overtime in the finals only to fall
short when Duke Kinley of the Sreppot's
hit a shot at the buzzer.
"The team with the most effort this
year was the KSA Tigers," said David
Koch, Intramural coordinator; KSA
stands for Korean Student Association
and the in tramural department and the
rest of t he teams admired the tigers for

their effort and sportsmanship.
The s leeper team this year was the
BAMF's. T hey took Acid Hot and the
Spanish Flies down to the wire in both of
their games

Final Stdndings
Sreppot's
Spanish Flies
Acid Hot
fdntastyx
Stove Top Dressing
BAMF'S
Meister Bdlls
Obbtes
Deltd Destroyer,;
DSATigen;
janitor,;

10
8
7

2
l
4

6

4

5

5

lntramurals -

109

�A

dis.~ ppointed P~t Rowl~ nd h ~ lf-h~ut ~dl y

co ngr~ tu~ lt n

o pposing pb y~r Ro ~rt Wil bourn •fl u K~n f n ltr hid hit ll Row l~nd pitch
kn oc king in runs, th ~ runs th • t ~ nt Rowb nd's
tu m to d~f~~ t . - Photo by Rich•rd Nir•

Intramural Softball
Tough Competition
Toug h competi tion, a few s urprises
and good times helped make the sp ri ng·
time softball season a hit with all of the
participants.
In men's play one of the differen t
looks the season brought was a surprising Space ly Sprockets team who
marched all the way to the fi nals on ly to
get beat by the defending champions
Bently and the Jets . T he Jets, led by the
bat and glove of Jeff Applewhite and David Koch, cruised through the season
with only one loss on thei r way to the
title.
Other teams which fared well ~re the
C.A .T.S., Undercover Angels and the
BAMP's of Wu.
In women's action the Bachelorettes
had a tough go of it , but still claimed the
title in the end with a 4-3 win over Heavenly Scent . The Bachelorettes ~re led by
Ginny Green and Ann Cokelman , who
played hard throughout the season
The s•ze of the softb.lll was chAngeda 12 b.lll wu used instud of the 14" ball
thiilt had been used tn put yurs
It was iii welcome ch•nge , too. Hey,
were All men, Siilid John Vondnk I
thtnL we un handle a sm•ller b.lll

110 -

Int ram ural

tJ,~ .:' 0'

'-

-..
/

""

·-....__\;c::;

�K;athy Hutt nsteinn of tht' B;acht lo reu es ,w;aits '
pitchth;a t sht hopessheun knockoutoftht ruch
of 'n opposing dtftndtr 'nd 'du nct Ginny
Gr« n, who luns off lht b;ag. rudy to go. - Photo

by Rich"d Nira

Chris8t'nl lt'y~m,shtsont",S MiktOt'Ctllo s_,nds

rudy should tht b'll come his w' Y· Ktvin Do.zzi

Photo by

Intramurals -

111

�During • pr-l«tio n frH 5pH(h •llt-y, i:)t,mocut
Mnk Funt-r contfmpl•tn •n tffto:ti vt" rtobuU•I
•&amp;'inJt hiJ Rtpubliun oppontonl. - Photo by~ ·

bnn• &amp;rmt"Jh•m

1885

112 -

1895

Organizations

1905

1915

1925

1935

1945

�Organizations
School, though some may find it hard to believe, is not all books and studying.
Students could put on their dancin' shoes on weeke nds for shindigs in the
Atrium and the ReUnion, see the King and Queen of the Spring Fling crowned, or
have their brains picked for the bits of trivia they knew for a prize.
All of these things, of course, didn't just happen. Campus organizations were
responsible for sponsoring these events. And, to get even more specific, it was
students concerned enough about the non-academic life on the hilltop who made

them possible.
T hese, of course, were students who belonged to organizations such as the
Student Activities Council, Delta Sigma Pi and the cheerleaders who, of course,
pent to class and held other jobs and committments too
The century long history of clubs on campus is one of change, as clubs have over
the years been started to meet a need, and then discontinued when that need was
met.
One thing hasn't changed, and probably never will - caring and involved
students will conti nue to make life on campus more than just tests and papers.

1955

1965

1975

1985

Thf c~lm before the storm - Tht o ld publiutionsoffict JWJits theflurryof Jctivit ysuch..IS
typing, tditing, screJming, Jnd te mper l..intrums thJt inevitably JccompJny e..1ch dudlint . - Photo rourtrsy SEU ,uchi&gt;•es.

O rga nizations -

113

�Jtu) \\ hht•nd \lilt l&lt;..tllt) oftht Austin
Amtroc•n-S.t•t n m•n ~ pol.t to • bflmnin ll
c b~•bout tht p ~ •nd co m of
tht pubhc•too n, ""O•Id - PJt,,,,~ bv [h.,J

"'"'"""''''"!!
,,,,

R1$1tt \\ omt n '• "'HI. on tht holltop
b•oul! ht • h~ t of •pul.tn .odd'"""'"! th t
oomttomn co nt •O• t n i•l ....ut'O f.ocon ii "'Om'" tod• ) bv ..... ,... ru &amp;orm.n(lt•m

r" ,,..

114 -

Org.1nizations

�Speakers
[nform
Listeners
React
They call this the age of information beause of the development of computers. The
tudent Activities Council also wanted to
bri ng information to the st ude nts and the
commun ity. However, they did not do it
with computers, bu t with speakers discussing all aspects of the world.
Such speakers included:
Free Speech Alley, "Platform s '84" Mark
Farner, Democratic representative vs. Rob
Sweezy, Republican representative. The
Free Speech aliey provided information to
students about the presidential candida tes
prior to the election. Mark Farner, State
Field Director, and supporter for Walter
Mondale. Rob Sweezy is the Organizational
Director for Texas/Reagan &amp; Bush Campaign. Both parties presen ted the ca ndi dates views on the economy, foreign policy,
and domestic policy.
John Stockwell. "The Secret Wars of the
CIA." The former CIA member was one of
the most popular speakers of the year.
Stockwell spoke of his experie nces (some of
which were not pretty) in Vietnam and Angola. He also discussed some recent developments in Nicaragua. Stockwell spent 19
years in the Marine Corps and 13 years as a
CIA field case officer in Vietnam and Afri ca. He is the highest - ranked CIA official
to openly criticize the agency. "The CIA
poses the ultimate threat to democ racy, and
is a major cause of the world 's move toward
nuclear extinction," Stockwell sa id.
John Calkin, "Proposed New T ra nsit
System; Capital Metro. " John Calkin spoke
in the ReUnion to present the proposal for
the new transit system. He spoke prior to
the election of Capital Met ro whi ch was
overwhelmingly pa ssed.
Carolyn T yle r-KTBC Ch. 7, H ugh LewisKVUE CH. 24, Tonia Cooke-KTVV CH . 36,
'T .V. News Panel. " As part of Black Hi story Month the three T.V. news people discussed growing minority opportunities in
the world of media.
Doug Inch and Studen t Panel. Sponsored
by Campus Mini stry and Student Activities
Council. Doug Inch discussed the atrocities
in Central Ameri ca. He worked in Nicaragua for six months for Wittness for Peace.
Arnold Rosenfeld, "journali sm Ethics"
Et hical problem s of journalism v-:ere discussed by Rosenfeld , editor of the Austi n
Ameri ca n -Sta te sman. He presented
hpyothetical situa tions and asked each per-

Art Gui ld
Front Row, I tor: Lind,. R.. mirez, T ricia Kea tin g, Ty rell Courtney, Tina Bockrath, Robndo Castro.
Back Row, I tor: Beverly C..r land, Linda Ervin, Stan Irvin, W all e Co n oly, Rachael Sarnoff, Tim
Robinwn. - Photo by Damian Morg&lt;~n

CAM P Club
Front row, lt o r: JuliePa lomo, Lyn ell e
Sholt z, Arturo Fern.. n dn. M iddle row, I
tor: Pat Gonu lH, Bertha Gonule., Gracie Fucia. Back row, Ito r: RolandoJ imenez Elvira Ortiz, Robndo Cutro. -

Photo by Ric/.,rd Niu

Orga nizations -

115

�Crnlrr.

Rtpublo~~ n

rtprernl ~t h·r

RNg~n't conlroursi~ l

by ~l&gt;rm~

JUnd on

Rob S"'u z&gt; npl~ins
Sptnding. - Phota

ddtn~

Btrmmsh~m

R~ghlc ~mocr~l 11-hrl. r~rntr fitldtd numtrou~ qutSh On)
~bout Mond~lt's pl~n to oncruSot lht ftdrr~l in&lt;'omr ~~'· Photo'"' -~l&gt;.,n~ 8ummsh~m

116 -

O rg.Hlit.ol tio ns

�Speakers
son present how they would handl e each
situation.

Dr. Patricia Hayes, " Ethi cal issues in the
Women 's Moveme nt" Or . Hayes, President
of the univers ity, di scussed topics that
raised conciou sness about e th ical iss ues of
wome n.
Janice Hein , " Human Rights in Latin
America" Janice Heine is the Director of
the American Frie nds Service Committee,
TA chapter. She di scussed US military
prescence in Hondura s and El Salvador.

Dell:~ Sigma Pi
Front: Chi! rles Brash. SKond Row: Jame Bohles, Mrrry Ann McCruy, Mi cht&gt;llt' Felu. Third
Row: D:~ vld Bush, Ad:~m Guillr n , K :~ th y Und, Mt rC\Irio Mntinn. B.ack: Kyle Hampton, John
Waltr n , Arthur Guib.ay, R. j . Nicho ls, Funk friday, Tom Quinn. - Photo by Rkhard Nita

~
~/(

~~~

Crimin:~l Justice Club
Front row, Ito r: Adrilfnnt Turman, Ronald Finch, Clflrina Smit h, Susan Hfrrtra, Dawn Owne,
Kutn Ratti, Liu Bra tchlfr. lbck row, Ito r: Mich;otl j ohnso n, Paul Fujimoto, Bobby McCormick,
Todd ~ Long, Paul Wut, Or. David Horton - Photo by O.rmilln Morg;m

N1f

Organizations -

117

�Student Association Inc. (SA l) consisted of approximately 23
students who dedicated their time to the betterment of thf
University. Their main goal of the year was raising money for
a sidewalk. that would run from the women's dormitory to thf
cafeteria . They raised over $1200 at a silent auction where they
sold encyclopedias, dinner for four at the Mang House with
President Hayes, and a typed final RCM papt&gt;r by Cathy Weber. SAl hopes the sidewalk will be completed by the fall. Photos by Rich.ud Nird

118- Organ izJ ti ons

�S A I

Outdoor Renution• l Club
lkhind tr«: Jim Fletche r, Anne
Province. On tree: Tyre ll Courtney,
Linda Ervin

T S N

u s c
D

0

0

N

I

P

T

A

0

S

T

R

I
0

A
T

E C R
B•ckp&lt;~ck i ng Trip
MHC Huber, R'bberto Vasquez, Salomon Torres, Tyrell Courtney, Linda Ervin, Paul.. Femandez,
Tom Quinn. - Photo by Anne Province

N E
D

Can~ Trip
SEU members were Bill KennNy, Jim Fletchtr, Cindy 01S4'n, David Rehburs, Anne Province, a nd
Sabrina Bnmingm&lt;~m.

Organizations -

119

�120 -

Org;1niza tio ns

�Write! Write!
Right?
In trying to capture the essence of what
Student Publications involves, words came
to mind like diversity, flexibility, critical
thinking, synergy, learning.
One would think, automatically, that the
Student Publications staff members come
from one or two majors: Photo-communi·
cations or English . What has made the collective experience of the members greater,
however, is that many academic disciplines
are often entenwined creating a greater collective knowledge.
One of the editors of the Edwardian
walked into the office at this point in my
writing and, to validate my point, I asked
him what his major was.
" Mass confusion," he said.
Thinking that I should have worded this
differently to prove my point. I stopped the
"head honcho" of the Edwardian, who
spends an enormous amount of time put·
ting together a staff and producing what
has evolved from a four or six page Hilltopper newspaper to a ten page newsmagazine,
renamed the Edwardian.
With a name change like that, you know
you are going to get a solid answer that can
be properly applied to such an aus picious
space as this one in the Centennial yearbook.
I as ked him to explain what his goals in
life were. "To pass RCM and get out of
school."
Again, I perceived the problem to be my
ques tioning. This time, however, there was
an inkling that it was not the question,
rather it was the group I was as king the
questions of.
Maybe a nother group in Student Publications, the yearbook staff, would be more
eloquent. I didn't have to wait long before
the Associate Editor of the Tower came in
the office to sharpen his pencil.
" Richard," I asked, "what are your
goals?"
"To meet this deadline. (55 pages due in
six days). Beyond that, who cares?"
Understanding that perhaps at 8:30 in the
morning this group was under too m uch
pressure to sagaciously a nswer with the
auspicious meaning I was looking for, I
dropped this line of questioning.
Of course, if I didn't have to meet this
deadline I could wait until the thi rd group
of Studen t Publications meet a nd ask their
editor what she wants, dreams of, or has
visions of being when she gets out of
school. But having worked with that group
for the past two weeks, day a nd night, designing, doing their own layout and pasteup for the literary/ a rt magazine, Everyman,
I knew what the a nswer was. "To get this

S.C.O.R.E.Oub
front row, Ito r: Eric John.on, Andra: Enrlqun , Hum~rto Enrlqun.
Qui~no, Rick P-.n•, V•knll! Lun-. - Photo by Rid tilrd N ir• .

~k

row, I tor: M.u COI

Organizations - 121

�122 -

Org.1niz.ttions

�Publications
thing out so I can have something for my
portfolio."
Left to my own resources, I want to try to
explain what Student Publications is.
It is a group of committed volunteers
who have a desire to create, write, photograph, design, manage, and learn. Though
the three groups don't meet at the same
time, they often overlap in duties. T he
Tower staff also works on the Edwardian.
The Everyman s taff have written for the
Edwdrdian and take pictures for the Tower.
On the two retreats to Lake Travis we all
went together. The same learning workshops were valuable for all groups on the
end-of-the-year retreat.
The Student Publications group works
hard at what they do. They put in late
nights, weekends, holidays, pre-school and
summers to get their work done, meet deadlines, or spend the time improving their
skills for the " next time"
This year, many are graduating and we
will go into our next 100 years with new
staff members, new ideas and new focuses.
But one thing seems to remain constant
with publications staffs. They are dedi&lt;:ated. They believe in giving as much as
they receive. T hey are neative. They want
to make a difference in the world. They are
explorers
dreamers
doers
reachers.
It's understandable if they get burned out
just before deadline. All publications
people do - that's part of the job. It's understandable if they have so much going on
they &lt;:an't think about the future - that's
the kind of people who would spend that
much time producing Everyman, the Edwardian and the Tower for the benefit of
others. These are people who will always
stay involved in life. T hese are the staff
members of Student Publications. - By jo
Hayes, Adviser.

Tt)(.A§ Student Eduntion Assoc:iation
Front row, I to r. Art Flores, Terry Monta lvo, Roy Ramos, Cindy Gallegos, Ptdro Ramirtz. S..ck
row, I tor. Brothtr Eagan Hunter, )e5U$i ta Htrrtu, Shari Shtrman, Maria Molina, Lourdes Ruiz,
Adriana Gutrra, Muia Solor;~n~o.

Organizations -

123

�People
Our lives are e nriched every day by our encou nters with the diverse population
that helps our surroundings to be more than a set of buildings on a hill.
Fo r seniors, the year was filled with expectation, as the much talked about " real
world" awaited, as did the resulting opportunity to finally discard the books and
homework that had been hounding them since age six, or thereabouts.
Freshman encountered expectations of a different sort. After a complete year of
college, they expected more parties, homework, and a chance to move off campus which involved escaping the cafeteria food, of course.
Despite 100 years of education, those expectation s have, by and large, remained the
same.
Be it 1885, 1985, or any year in between, graduating or entering students have
always s hared those hopes and dreams.
Another aspect of expectations that hasn't changed is the desire to establish lifelong friend ships that develop over four (perhaps five) years.
Whether by chance or by planned meeting one could find students catching up on
the latest gossip in any of the various meeti ng places on campus such as the
Reunion, Library, in a leaning position on the rails of the Moody Atrium or on the
hill overlooki ng a n ever-changing Austin.

1885

1895

1905

So- thlnp """"' ch.ontt St\Mkntt .ond .okohol
"" tM "'""""" C'Omp.oub.. comMn"lon. fttoto (Ofll tf'f)'
.ordll&gt;'ft

set..

124 -

People

�Is thi5 man happy? o~vid Fox bundles up to hce
the h arsh J~nu~ry e lements; cold high winds ~ nd
bright sun5hine. - Photo by O..mian Morgan

1915 1925

1935

1945

1955

1965

1975

1985

People -

125

�Seniors

~nior
lei.~

C,_ Offict'rs -

lknt'thm~ Ako~ldt'r
Aumo~ AI·Arr&lt;~y~h

MuruuAIIy
Ankt'to Akmzo

'"onnt' Att'ndt
S.nti.IIO Ari.11
Lor..,. lknt'hU
S.kh !k01W1n

126 -

niors

Ct'trino~ Smith, Mo~rk
Rui~·A.rthur -

Ed RipPft, LCXJrch,

Photo by Rl(·h.,d Nir.t

�lis.~~ Br~nch
J~mts Bohls
Mnk Bruckbauer
JerryCulow

VktorCegarr~
Ev~ Church
Mng.u et Connelly
Cristina Contreras

AiuCr~ioni

D~ni~l Crider
Shannon D~iley
Steve Dnis

Siobhan Desmond
Dor«n Drvill
John Dryo
Arturo Diu

Seniors- 127

�M~l ynd.1

Dillud
EdwinEb
Va lui~ Eldu
Justin Emtodi

Und1 Ervi n
LorihS"n
J~rry hriolll
P.itrickFI.ihin

Arthur Flortt
Cu o l Tloun
VirJinl.i ford
Etch~r C..n::LI

Mkh~ICI .. noltl

Brv« Cilktt~
Ron .. JdC,_I
Cltnn Glo~~·

128 -Se niors

�Alternatives To Academics Easy To Find
Okay, it's 6:57a.m. Three minutes. I
prom ised myself I'd get up at 7:00 and
fini s h studying for that history test.
So I'll just close m y eyes for a second
and then I'll get up. Really.
This may not be an unfamiliar
scene to those students who have fa llen p rey to the dreaded procrastination epidemic. As the semester gets
into full swing, more and more students find them selves juggling their
classes with their family/social lives.
As the stack of homework gets taller
and taller, so does the pile of excuses.
"Temptation is hard to resist- especially around midterm when everyone gets super-bored with the same
old routine. It's easy to put things off
until tomorrow when there's an opportunity for variety," sophomore
Jessica Swisher said.
Although there is little variety in
the da ily rigamarole that students are
subjected to, there is a big difference
in opinions about the subject. Using
medical reasons, personal reasons,
and just plain lack of sleep as excuses
to wait 'just a little while'; most students differ from those few that are
always on time with their assignments.
"Homework is my life," freshman
Stu Perfekt affirms. "Who needs to
party when you have Integral Calculus!"
When it comes right down to the
line, however, nearly everyone find s

the motivation to fini sh that paper, or
that dreaded photography assignment.
"Hey, its college! We' re here to
lea rn, not just through books, but
through life. We party when we need
to, but we're also pretty responsible. It
may be tough, but most of us manage
to pull off that passing grade - at
least I hope so!!'' said T rida Keating.
So when you're sitti ng through that
final Module IV lecture, and you're
wondering whether you should go to
the ReUnion thi s afternoon, or stay in
the dorm and finish up those Audi-

ence Analysis sheets - the choice is
yours. Just remember, you may surpri se yourself, and that responsible
model st udent lurking deep within
your in ner self just might peek h i!11
head out and show you just how
much you can really learn from those
books. And if he doesn't, what the
heck, take him to the ReUnion maybe he'll show you - tomorrow.

Even the librilry contilins distrilctiont; for the
studious individu.JI. Wing Ping y.,; checb
upon the liltest exploits of the Mi;~mi Dolphins
inste;~d of studying. - Photo by Richilrd Niril.

Ad~lbertoGuerra

)oseGue rrtro
Ma li k Guet~ rni
Bu tri ceGu tie rre&lt;t

Seniors - 129

�Celebrating Mexican Independence

These members of the mariachi
band " Los Romaneros" display the
celeb ration and joy that surround s the
Mex ica n holiday Dies Y Seis. Students
took part in the celebration of Mexico's independence from Spai n by
dancing to the of sa lsa sound of Sa la man th e night before the main celebration . The next day, Los Romaneros
came to pepper the patio behi nd the
Mai n Building with mariachi music
as students feasted on a buffet-style
Mexica n food lunch. - Photo by Ana
Isabel Velasquez

Monk&lt;~ 1-hllgr~n

o....d

l hnton

~n l-h .,~l l"

K.1rlm H iu nl

Sw.an Huly
[rn.,.to H urt.do
M&lt;~rlt.ltht

On~lt...c:hllsbottonu

130 -

Seniors

l

�Ony~jiuw.a
lgw~buik~

Chris].novsky
)O$C')imenn
Michael Johnson

J~ t

Ryo n Jung
Keating

Patrici~

Obi~geri Keboch.a

Hong Kim

David Koc h
T~mau Kouba
Lydi.a Ur~

Ca rolyn Lisb

Michul Lombndi
HumphreyMnr
MercurioM.a rtinn
LtstuM.ayfi~Jd

Seniors -

131

�Am~li~ M~ndou

Mn'Y~li~ M~ndon

M• ryMc&lt;:uty
K•y Mi l• m
M ynMitch~ll

M.,b Mon t• I'YO
M•ri• Montill•
Monl"
Rich~rd Nir"'
t..u ra O'S.r

C.,m~n

Joh n Of~bu

Clifford Ohu~ri
Bin Qiimm•
CindyO~n

llow.,d o.bornt

Mi~ PoncMr
c-rp Portntr
[J-uki4R•,.irt'l
Ptdro ltlml~1
Robt-t1R.InM1•

132- Seniors

�w~~~~sion Maki~v~'v' ~~~'~::~.~ J

Where to go?
What to wear?
What to eat?
Wha t to drink?
What do I do?
Endless decision s have to be made
within a short time span. Some decisions
are minor, but even those decisions can
be very tryi ng and tedious.
Many decisions have to be made even
before you get out of bed. For example,
you have to decide whether to get out of
bed or roll over, whether to take a shower
or try to avoid close contact with other
people.
What to wear? (Probably more appli ·
cable for the female gender). Many elements must be take n into consideration
when deciding what clothes to wear~ if
it's cold, hot, or raining outside. If it's
going to be a long day, then comfortable
clothes would be preferred.
By goi ng through the process of elimination one can determine that they have
nothing to wear. When one has determined that there is nothing to wear a
roommate's closet is always nearby. Getting up late is an additional complication
to this decision. What to do when you

have nothing to wear?
Deciding what and where to eat can be
as nerve-wracking and time consuming
as finding something to wear. Again,
there are many elements that must be
taken into consideration; for example,
whether to choose from the always slim
pickings of your local refrigerator and
cupboards or to venture to the cafeteria
for a hit-or-miss meal. Ronald MeDonald and his counterparts offer a fast
food alternative, but deciding which fast
food place to patronize can task a hungry
mind.
What should I do? Should I end this
story now or should I continue? I'll de·
cide later

Some peuple just c..n't milke up their minds, even
about Sf!rious matters. This studen t decided to let
everyone know he is undecided in the presidentio~l
election. - Photo by Cindy Olsl'n

Sen iors -

133

�ReUnion Get-Togethers Create Fun
"ReUnion GeHogethers", the
brainchild of humanities professor
Jann Randle, were created to give students, faculty, and staff a new opportunity to get acquainted. "They helped
create an opportunity for people to get
to know each other outside of their
business situation, to get to know
each other as people," said Randle.
The Get-togethers were held each
Thursday afternoon, and featured
half-price drinks and free food provided by whichever department was
sponsoring it that particular week.
Sophomore Robert Ortega said that
the GeHogethers were a good thing
because you met a lot of people and
made a lot of friends." Senior Mark
Ickes agreed, saying that " they were
good because they were a break for
everybody, and everyone got 10 mingle and meet new people." - Photo by
Damion Morgan

Ati• R.uhd•n
C.~rdlt Rf'td
T•mmy Rtntln
Rtbc«• Rryet

.,_,.,

• n&lt;y Rtynokk

R~nb.ouah
Rkl.tt~

Stott

[.t..•rd RIPf*

134 -

Seniors

�Edith Robinson
Lance Rodgers
C umen Rodriguez
Christine Rodriguez

Rosalinda Rodriguez
Th.1is Rowland
George Rubai dum
Rose mary Rubio

Lourdes Rui z·Art hur
Susan Sailer
Gustavo Salas
Deann ~ Sanch~z

K~ ll y Schachrrl
Jim Sh ~ lt on
John Sh ~pp.1 rd
Lour.1Simuoth

Seniors -

135

�(l'lri no~ S mi th
Raqul'l So to
Victor Sttt lt
T a mm y St rii'S II'r
Kl'nn y Stroud

f r• ncit Surui
loiU Trtv ino
Gr~"S Trli cl' k

Lifl'&lt;~ n y l

RCII51t

Uc ht

U rii'So~~

Andrl'w
Ului"Jbu n• m
l eonor v.~rp.
j ON vi"Joo
AnaVtl.otqun
joh n W.1ittn

Mk~.-y

WhitWy
Courtnt"Y Willi•
jotiWtlltt
Po~trldl

136- Seniors

p.,m,.

�Students Stretch Into Shape
. and one . . and two

and three

The shouted instructions of Debra
Summers, accompanied by the grunts
a nd groans of students trying to get in
and or stay in shape filled the Teresa
Hall lobby in the form of aerobics.
"You feel good about yourself because
you are doing something good for your
body," said Financial Aid Director Doris
Constantine. It's this lure of a long term
goal that keeps aerobics participants going despite the obvious short ter m disadvantages. "The following day I couldn' t
move," said Patricia Gomez after a tough
workout. " I was extremely sore."
Gomez said that even though the workout gets very s trenuous, you have to
keep on going. "She (Summers) encouraged us to keep moving and not stop,"
said Gomez.
Con stantine agreed, saying that the
various exercises are necessary to ensure
a good workout. "They work every part
of your body, from your a rms to your
calves."
Miriam Gutierrez said that after the
workouts she d idn' t feel good at all physically. "You feel hot, sweaty, and
tired."
But she added that aerobics was good
in another way. "Psychologically you
feel like you' re doing something good
for your life. You feel a sense of accom-

plishment."
Staff member Nora Lumbrera said that
despite the physical stress, aerobics did
have some short term advantages.
" It's relaxing," she said. "It's a good
way to release s tress."
5o with all of the sweating and bodyache that aerobics delivers, it also delivers a more relaxed body and a mind
that is more at peace with itself.

AProbi~ instroctor V..bril Summi'D rl'iiChN .,J/ thl'
WilY to thl' ground iiS hl'r 5tudl'n ts huff iln d puff
illong. - Photo by Milrty Wilrfil'ld

Seniors - 137

�Juniors

junior Cl.._ Offlal'f - Cindy CJ IIrtJC¥, Bri.m
St-nn, j ohn VonJr•k. O.wiJ S.:.mlino, Oi•nt
Cr•n. Di•nt OtCh•nt - Ph01o by M1c-htllt
H uff

RoMrt Abbots
rtlici•no Attvrdo .
M•rth•B•r rt"
Rotor &amp;th•••
Ja.rp h Bode

C r~ brJtok
h ·t l Brxho
[ d..,• rd Brl&amp;h t
Cullk rmo Buit " IO
Oon• ld Ctm~ ll

c.. ,_... c.......
R*rtc,...,_.,.
L«aCtN
Troubk CLiyton
&amp;t..r-' C•rkl

138 -

Juniors

�MuyCyr
o~nic~ 0.1iley
Jacqueline o~vis
Ros.-tlind~

De

Alv~

Rhonda Ehrle

Marlene Fortun~
David fox
Knla C. lie
Cynthia C.llesO$
Arm~ndo C.rci~

Mari~ Garza
P~tty Gomez
Diane Gran
Ginn y Green
C~rol H.~ckbarth

M.1rth~ H.1ley
j.1meei.J H;omZ.J
K.1thy Hartensteiner
Gildardo Heredi~
Robert Hern~ndez

Best ltu.1h
J;uonJohnson
liu Keizer
j.1neUpeyre
Julielolpeyre

Albn lee
Junetlelee
lrm~

Lopez

lubel Lopez
AdbeeiMutinez

Juniors -

139

�N~mi MaluU
Mf rr)' An n McCn ry
RtnH Mick
MichtlltMitchtll
Muy Molin.a
Kyi&lt;I'Munchr.ath

M&lt;~IJ.Ir&lt;l't N&lt;l'.al
Rol&lt;~ndo Nf8rtlt

Lluri Nkhol5
Johf'l O 'H;arf
Prd ro Ptf'li
Albtrto Ptrn

Lis.l Popp
Klmbtrly Poulif'l
Lind.a Ramlrn
Ali R,q;hdo~n
Pnli Rto~l
Fr. P.ate.al Rwijo~

Brio~n S.url
UrlotS..ivtdri
o,vldSc:udlno
Stuut Sc:hultz
Bri1 nS&lt;I'nn
Funcltco Sollt

Jim South-11
C..ykSp&lt;l'unu
Af'ldrtt Sow
Col&lt;l'tttTtpt
LiwTtpt
Adri&lt;l'nntTurta'lif'l

~nVondn\.
W;~nd..Whllt

Doutl.r. " 'hltthud
Rob Wood

HO- juniors

�Zzzzz
E=mc:
Metaphysical Biologica l
Socio-economical
The time now is 9:07 a.m.
A before C except after B?
9:10a.m.
Robert Fulton and the
steam engine
9:10 and 20 seconds
" Bob, could you answer
that for me please? Bob?
Bob!!?? "

ZZZZZzzzzzz .
Poor Bob, he just ca n't
seem to keep his eyes open!
Possibly it was the late hours
he kept last night , or the couple of pi tchers he shared with
some buddies at the ReUnion.
Or maybe he was up 'til three

studying for the " Big Test" in
his three o'clock class. But no
matter what the cause, it is
now 10:30 a.m. and old Bob
just can't seem to pay attention .
The Bob syndrome is
shared by many, and everyone can sympathize.
" We go out, we party, and
stay up too late - then we go
to class in the morning and
fall asleep while our professors are trying to make some
earth-shattering point about
the anatomy of some dead
frog, " said Maria Muskrella, a
freshman learning her lesson
the hard way.
Some s tudents, however,
cannot sympathize and feel
the solution to the problem is
a matter of priorities.
" If somebody knows they
need to study, but still
chooses to stay out too late,
then they shouldn 't gripe
about failing a test or a quiz
the next morning," one wise
junior commented.
Taking No-Doz, loading up
with coffee and eating a good
breakfast in the morning are

some proposed solutions to
cure the sleepy-eyed student
situation. However, as everyone seems to agree
The
best sol ution is SLEEP!!!!
Sleep is a luxury to most s tudents, as it ha s become just as
valuable as homework and
party time.
"Sleep comes before everything, " according to one
senior who said that the sandman is his best friend.
"I can sleep just about anywhere, anytime, and under
any circumsta nce s," s aid
Debbie Ebert, " including during cla ss - that's the problem! "
However, Peppermint Patty
from famed Charlie Brown
land seemed to sum it up best
when she said .
" I hate to
go to bed at night - and I
hate to get up in the morning!!!!''

Juniors -

141

�Sophomores

r

Sophomo" C/~~ Of(icus - Bri,ln Ntmrc:,
Ttrrl /\IJrsho~/1, Kirk Bod.-o&gt;&lt;t·r- Photo by
CrnJyOisrn

S.u.d AI Couibi
M.u i' A.lmtld"
lrt nrAnug..
Robtrt A:r.l1
Clll s.. ld~tt

S..b rin" &amp;rrmin&amp;h•m
M•rk&amp;rr'"lrln
ki rkBodo.onn

Ctortr

810fl..

Thn~ C•mpM II

UuutC•"'"

... """"'

ClorU Ch..ll'ft
C.noltn Chol

QtaA Cnu

142 -

Sophomores

�M•ryD•vis
MicheleOickehut
M ich•el Dugg,m
Christopher Dwyer
Michelle Fesler

Lind• Flick
D•niel Flores
K•te Fox
JacobFr.aire
Endric.a G•lun

Melinda Garza
MeliSSdGaru
J•mesGonulez
Robert Gonzalez
Gid Graves

Oon•ld Grish~m
Adriana Guerra
LuiuGuerrero
Susan Heredia
S..rb• r• Hoffstaller

Michelle Huff
jack lngr~m
Rick jimenez
Darin Keffeler
Michelle Kinsella

Karin Knolle
Chariss Lech~r
Brian Lewis
Alice Marina
TheresaMarsh•ll

Sophomores -

143

�Toni Mt'dio
Mkhit&gt;

T~wny~

Grt'fiOI')'

Mlkak~

JOt&gt;Mor.la
F~li•
Sylvi~

Muno•
Nt&gt;lton

Bri~n Nt&gt;mK
R~ y Nichols
Sht'lly Nichols

TfH. South Kon~n IY..bf.qw _,, .1nd
noodkdiJh ...--.. .1Jofl6 ..·ith t~ Fnn&lt;h
wint' .1nd ch#'tstr, lhP trN¥1 popubr .1 /·
tn&lt;"tion oft~ ~y. - Photo by An.1
luMJ Vrluqw1.

Andrt'• NorJworthy

Richudo Ochu
Dou Olivun

Vinct'niOnyeyili
~brlt&gt;I~Ort..p

RobutOrt"P

o~wn Owt&gt;nl
P~lridc P.r,t!Ort'

Sus;an Pfluson

144 -

Sophomores

St u&lt;kntf ..'""' drt'~Md in tht'lr n.1tivr
f"WIUIMS .1nd dispf.1yw/ tltrir t1111tsic.1f
inftl"llmPntJ .111d utifxtJ. - Photo by
O.m1.1n Mor8.1n

�~==~~~===~~

24 Cultures Explored
October 24, 1984 was officially ob-

served all over the world as United
Nations Day and that was no exception on campus.
Moody Hall was transformed into a
colorful exposition of international
flags, cultures, languages, music and

foods.
Over 24 countries were represented
by students who showed off traditional costumes, artifacts, curios, and photographs. "Spa nakopeta " from
Greece, "enjira" from Ethiopia, and

"pulgogi" from 5. Korea were some of
the exotic foods sampled.
The countries represented at the International Expo '84 included: Bahamas, Greece, Nigeria, Liberia, Uganda,
Kenya, Saudi Arabia, Trinidad &amp; Tobago, Baharain, Kuwait, Panama,

Korea, France, Italy, Venezuela, Iraq
and W. Samoa.
The Expo, one of the many events
of " International Awareness Week"
held on campus, was spon sored by
SAC and hosted by the International
Club.
A reggae concert by the Killer Bees
in the ReUnion s tarted the week off.
Othe r events during the week included guest speakers, who were invited to
discuss special topics. Students representing the Middle East won an international trivia contest, and the week
was brought to a successfu l end with
an Oriental dinner buffet.

Hondura s, Lebanon, Bangladesh, Algeria, Mexico, Pakistan, Ethiopia, S.

Kl'nyan Karim Hirani, SAC Multi-Cultural
Concern5 Coordinator, helps Sl'l up hi5 country'5 tabll', which featurl'd curiM, mU$k;./ in·
5/rument5, and art. - Photo by Damian Mor·

Sophomores - 145

�"Mr. Postman, Is There A Letter For Me?"
" It is just so depressing. I never get
any mail. Never. I swear there are cobwebs in my mailbox. I think I'm
gonna start paying somebody to wri te
to me."
Thi s poor, lonely fresh man is not

alone. He a nd many othe rs s uffer the cle in con temporary ghost.
torture of the daily caravan - thou''I'm thinking of starting a chai n
sa nds of tired, exp ressionless faces letter . at lea st then I'd get a postcard
ri si ng to join the mailroom throng.
from some s tranger in Guam," said
It s tart s w ith Moody 300-last five one frustrated studen t.
minutes of Freshma n Studies-and the
No matter how much agony, lonli- 1
tiny glimmer of hope that maybe, ness and depression is connected with
possibly, there just migh t be a letter the post offi ce, there is s till the total
waiting inside the tiny glass cubicle bliss experienced by those lucky stuwith your number on it. Then it dents who are blessed by the UPS
grows to a sense of anticipation and fairy.
eventua lly into a burning desperation
"It makes me feel missed and not
for something - anything - a scrap forgotte n ," sa id fres hman Debon lies,
of pape r
yes even CA MPUS who writes as many letters as time
MAIL!!! And so the poor student waits will allow.
with bated breath out side Holy Cross
Mail - the mysterious, illustrious
Hall. He sees his fr iend s and class- scraps of paper that ca n either make
mates emerging with happy, beaming or break someone's day. It is the thing
faces ca rrying enormous packages we love to hate- we all wa nt it, we all
and nume rous letters. But lo and be-- need it, forever, the mail room will be a
hold , the only thing that g reets him place of havoc and chaos, of joy and
when he anxiously peers into the tiny laughter, and of gentle reminders that
gla ss window is the friendly face of ' home' is sti ll out there somewhere.
the spider that ha s decorated hi s cubi 0/g~

Cru"' ~nd Arturo Ftrn~ndtl t~kt i bred:
from tht rigors of ~&lt;hool ind c:~tc:h up on tht
f.a t~t h~p,wnings luck homt. Photo by
Ric:h.ardNir•

Junnin t Pirn
ChTistintPiunhtt
K~thrrint Prict
Dia n.aR.amlrn
Muivtl Rtyn

Romtlia Rryn
Bruer Ripp«

Yobnd;a Rivru
Philip Roch;a Ill
Kurn ROMi

Ellnn Ry.an
TomS..ltuttin
AndrruS..vvidn
Mnb Solorzano
P.aul Spnw.ath

146 -

Sophomores

" You 'd think my T»rtnts would ~tnd tht c:htdc
on timt, "Uyf C~ ro/ For.an. Evt n budding bt~u­
ti~ nt-td to tr.avtf incognito wilh • bodygu .. rd;
htr bodygu.ud for this JUrtlc:ut..r d" y w"s Doug
Rhodenluugh - Photo by Richard Nir"

�Sophomores -

147

�Freshmen

Fn:thm~n

CJ- Offi«,.., - P,igt F"ntltt,
M"ry Ann Lkt4, CrtB lkltlsky, M"rnit Cngtl,
LDd Ptttl'K'n - Photo by f • r )ohnsort

Btrn.1dtllf Aguil•r
AlfonJOAt~uln~ul

}tnnifffS..tchtlor
Cr~lk!.tJky

Mtlony lXII

Mny Bortf10

U...Br•tchtr
Llu"llrl&amp;ht
Annt Bromtt
LtBro.. n

Rk h.1rd lulled.
An1•Lo lku\t~
An nt lurnl.y
UM.i ....CII

)ft. C.. kku

148 -

Freshmen

�RicardoCllballero
Edn~ Ca rriza les
s~Jvador Cavazos
Joseph Champine
Julie Chauvin

lsmael Chavez
All~nCbrk

Janet Cleary
hnieContnras
Julie Dalton

Do lo res De La Ros,
Susan DeNiro
Robert Detweiler
Ruben Diu
Shelley D rei lin g

BethDu~

MnnieEngel
Carol Ellpinos,
J~nine Fansher
Arturo Fernandez

Marinfilipovic
Lorifletchfr
Lilia Flores
G r~Cif' G.ll rci a
JohnG.llrci•

J•mieG.ll ru
M~rthaG.llna

Berth• Gonuln
lsrulGundiola
Bubar• Gutorrf'ro

Freshmen -

149

�C~ thninr

Hrllingr r
JorgrHrrn1ndn
Honey

C~thr rinr

~n l ckn

bid J1 wli r

Robndo Jlmrnu
Cuolr Johnson
8ridgrt K«frr
Muy Krmper
Jo;anno~ Krrwi n

S..m Kr~kry
Ling Kwok
Yuk-Chlng ~m
ly nn~nglry
Mich~l

LarMO n

Muy Ann Lieu
F•bloiln Umon
Luci.1 Lonsorio~
Mo~ rylopu.

Joy

M&lt;~llekr

Mon ko~~hrtlnrl

~hrdrl..

Mutlnu
LuhMudnttt

Bobby MfCormlck

Hu thrr Mc K'-kk

Tonouyt Md.,Otton
Criwkl.l Mrndou
,~I Minor
N..dirMtttunl
£liMo MouN.

150- Freshmen

�Black Heritage Celebrated

Elouise Burrell helped celebrate
Black History Month by performing a
mini-concert in the Re-Union on February 14. Black History Month is celebrated every year during the month of
February on campus. Other events included a dance, prayer day, and two
movies - Malcolm X and Purple
Rain. A TV news panel which included Tonia Cooke, Carolyn Tyler and
Hugh Lewis discussed minorities in
television broadcasting.

Freshmen -

151

�r------

Cinco de Mayo
Cinco dt M.ayo w;a~ ctltbr.11td on frid.1y, M.ay
) . Thtfesti vitiHtl&lt;llrttdurlywith.a lunc hf'On
outsidt Moody H.all ;;~nd mU$ic proYidtd by
S.C.O.R.E. Th.at tvtn ing .a d.anct W.lllponM!red
by SAC 41nd Alph.11 Sigm.&amp; Phi. Tht d.ance fu·
turN DJ'sand Sl mupritB. - Photos by 0.1mi.lnMorg.~n.

Lori Ptttnon
Johnny Quint1nlll~
0 11&lt;' R.1mirn
Rostlkl R.amlrn
A111tli.1 R&lt;~m&lt;»

M.uioRI)'ft

Oon.11d Rlchlt
C ulo. RodriJlM:I
OM OM Rodrlcun
Mula Rodrii\M:'-

S..uhR~ n
Chritt~tROCM

M.uLI Row
ChmR.t.l
IIW.u Ruu

152 -

Fr hmen

�Sheibh Ry.&gt;n
J.&gt;vier s. lin;as
Steph;m ieS,m chn
David Seibe rt
WalterStewut

J•cque Stinson
FungT•m
ChulieTe rry
MdiSS.&gt;Thornhill
Ana Torres

Aim.&gt; T~unto
Sergio Trevino
Antonio Tu ipe•
Sidney v .. lle
Kelli V.&gt;llejo

Gu.&gt;d•lupeVebsquez
Inez Viesc:a
Arnold Vil brea l
Seli naVillarul
Monin Vuna

KatherineWalku
J•mesWarren
Bert West
Robert Wilh elm
D•vidWilli um

JndioWolfenson
Cleme nte Zlbalu
Lind.&gt;Z...pat•
~Angelo Zarzutb
Marina Zfped•

Freshmen -

153

�Pra~nl P~ trki~ li ~ya

.t&lt;kkdh.-rJiftttoth.conNdt'ubk l~kf'IIJ tuppliN
by tM Holy ro- brot!Mn..
b.t'kbon.- olt ht' Unlv.-"hy
for 100 ~;u~. - Pho4oby
D~vid ro~

VlrJinU O.lky
O.vkt OkkJon

Rot.rt rnlte'h
Rk:lurd .._,,_,.
)oftn Lut•

154 -

dmini tntion

�Henry Ahmiller
Andrew Angermeier
R&lt;~ymond Apicelb
Colle.-n Ayc()(k

Ann&lt;~ Bolting
Michelle C~mpbell
louis Coe
W&lt;~ lleConoly

Kathleen Co~bnd
Cornelius Corcor&lt;~n
Anne Cr~ne
John D&lt;~iley

George

o~wkins

Willi&lt;~m Dunn
Jo Hayts
Glenn Hinkle

MHi~n ne Hop~r

RichudHughts
Logan Hunter
Irvin

St~ n

Faculty - 155

�Bill Ktnntdy
Mnd;a Kins-ry
J;ames Koch
CtcU Lawson

J.D. Ltwi'
Emma Lin n
O;anltllynch
Chtrry Mauk

j.KqutllntM({:;affrey
Minun M Un
Jimmy MIIb
~ra ldMu lltr

Jowph O 'Nt;al
Tury Nt .. ton
P.1trkLtO'Connor
Rk hud Orton

156- f•cult y

�What Was Your Most Embarrassing Moment In Teaching?
"Teaching a freshman studies class, I asked a student what "discourse" meant and he replied; " Dizcourse is about writing good." - Cecil Lawson.
"I was teaching a class in bowling, and I had never bowled before. I took the ball and was going to show
everybody the five-step approach and I threw the ball into the gutter in front of about 50 people.! quickly
recovered and turned and told everybody that that is how you do not do it. - Thomas Pate.
" I was at a once a year sociology convention. I saw a friend that I hadn't seen in a long time, went over to
him and sat in his lap, put my arms around him and realized he wasn't my friend." - Perry M cWilliams.
"One day in class I had a student named Richard complain about having to turn in a typed research
paper. He said he couldn't type and doesn' t have a girlfriend who could do it for him. I innocently replied,
"Well, you can always pay for it," and with a pause, the class broke out in laughter and whistles." - Sheila
Henderson.
I think it was Jan Term a couple of years ago. My son was five years old and they had a teacher's holiday
at his school so I had to bring him to school with me. I had h im sit and draw in my office and told him not
to disturb me in my classroom. Well, I got a phone call and he answered it and took a message. He came
into my class room and he said , 'Excuse me mother but you have a phone call from the priest who is named
after our dog." Our dog's name is Leroy. The phone call was from Fr. Leroy Clementich. He said, "it's a Fr.
Leroy, Leroy Clem. He's named after our dog isn't he?" - Cathy Weber.
"For dramatic effect in a lecture I drop kicked a waste paper basket and hit a front row student in the
face." - Bro. john Perron

Was Your Decision To Be An Educator A Wise One?
" I think it was a very wise one. I'm a writer by trade and by teaching as a second occupation, I keep fresh
and not stale.lf I stayed locked up in my house all day long, I would surely become an old crab-apple. The
students keep me alive and renewed." - Sheila Henderson.

If You Could Do Anything You Wanted To Do What
Would You Do?
" I would take a sabbatical with full pay for a whole year and do nothing but visit places on the O rient
and Mediterranian area and I'd like to get to portions of India. That would keep me busy for a year. I would
go all by myself, not on a tour, I'd have to be free to go when I wanted to go and stay when I wanted to stay
equipped with a camera and an endless supply of film . - Bro. Simon Scribner.
"What I'm doing." - Anne Crane.
"Play the oboe; direct a symphony orchestra; In other words be a conductor for Baroque music."- Bro.
John Perron.

John Ptrron
J~nicr R~ndlr

RoMrt Rtftf
Timoth y Robinton

Dorothy Rutisha~r
Slnchrz

Jo~nnr

Oon~ld Sr~y

Btrn ud Simon

Facully - 157

�If You Could Trade Places With Anyone For A Day, Who Would
It Be?
"I would like to be a monk, far adva nced in the mystical life and on that day I would want a vision of God." - Brother
Simon Scribner.
" I've had several thoughts about this one: a big league fi rs t baseman, because I love baseball. Second: a championship
level swimme r, because I ca n't swi m and I wish I could." - Ct&gt;eil U wson
"The President of the United Sta tes for a day: why not see how it feels to ha ve all the power at your disposal and see what
it feels like to be in a position like that, ''I'd try to just reassure myself that I was glad I didn't have that kind of pressure on
me all the time, but I think tt would be an interesti ng experience." - Thomas Pate.
" I wou ld trade places with Maya Angelou, because he is a very talented person , and very crea tive." - Cecil Lawson

What Advice Would You Give Someone Who Is Going To Take
Over Your Job?

"Good luck and ask for a raise .. . " Bro. john Perron.
" I would tell that person to bring a cot and dinner and expect to camp out. " - Cecil Lawson
"Try to become independentl y wealthy before they d id so." - Thomas Pate.
"To be absol utely convinced that there is no aspect of life which is alien to University studies. T o quote a phrase I've used
a bill ion ti mes , all my students know it, " It all goes together." - Bro. Simon Scribner.

Ueh .. Sp.ukt
john Trout
M ...it W,Ish

C1t hy Wtbtr

M..dc!Un,w,btr

o .... ld wuu.. au
Nul WIK

o,vldW rl&amp;ht

\\iiiW•Z..n..rdi

158- hculty

�Thom ~s

Bjelbnd
Rand all Braddock
Brenda Ca rt er
Betty Cliff

D~isy D irk-Haze n
Do ris Cons tantin e
Rosie Gon z&lt;~ lt"S
K~ th y He u ik

Bubnalau
Willi a m McAfee
Melball.hrlinez·Mishl er
Philip Odett e

Ann e Prov ince
Co nnie Pull ey
Eileen Shocket
Jostph Sp rug

Staff- 159

�Staff

orr~ Fron t Row:
Ch•ir~. llumph rey
M,orr, Ang~l Wo~tkins. Second
Row: Muk lc kC"S, A.nnt Province, Rt n tot M ick. Third Ro w:
Scol t McAfM, Vivi.1n Mush,
Ci ndy Stilley. BKk Row:
Oi,ont Bun:ynski, Rogtr Hn j udy ~h. Sa nd~

Busirte"'IS

C5ori~

""ndn.

Fit:o:p.ot ridc... -

brin,o

Pholo by S..-

&amp;rming~~Jm

Co mmu n in tOom Ctnln L«
Lomb.rdi, ~lly Cliff, M,ourkt !kneel - Pho10 by ~­
mi.tn MOtg,on

fi n,onci.10l Aid Offi« Doris
Co nst,on tint, Ly nW.ConuiC"S,
M it&gt;:i Thom-as - Pho1o by
R,dlirdNir•

160 - Staff

�Job Rank- Coopt" rative
Ed ucatio n
Anne Isham, Eileen
Sw«ney, Pam H udson Photo by Richard N ira

LiburySt,.ff
fro nt Row; Sonde Sh i..sta,
Joe Sprug. Kath y Herzik,
Philip Odette, Jeremiah
Myslewiec, Rose Villamez,
Virginia Knei ser. s .. ck
Row; Vi lerian McEwen,
Ann Cabbrese-Ke nda ll,
lnes Nira, Julia Larke,
Gretchen Holton, Connie
Pu lley, Ei leen Shocket. Photo by Damian Morsan

Mood y H allS«ret.. ries
I to r: Linda Metzgrr, ThereR Wood,
Peggy Usseter, Arm~ LAm on, T yrell
Courtney - Photo by Damian M orsan

Staff- 161

�UniYt'nl ly Rtb iiOnJ
f ron1 Row: lucy Ptrn, Tin&lt;~
R()(h,, Jim So..lhwtll. 8.1( k
Row: Bob FrilJ( h, Bo n nif
S..bi n,C.I roi H u!iHy. Photo by Rich•rd Nir•

P01t Offke
LIK.-C•n•. Pt'dro R~mirn,
Milh. Jim Conult'1
- Pholo by O.mw1 M M6'"
Do~hy

Ph yMc~l Pl~nt

front Ro...., M oncMII Rl'ddk,
VtcU d.tApl... Aru
c;...rrrtro, Lull P~nUoqw,
LIK')' Sou. "" Rochlpr..
M•.U Mudnn.. M&lt;~ry Sue
fn-nc'h, An:hi&lt;t ColflA. Do..
[lkrlty, lu krlftt'tl.IJ.K..
R- rr~n .. a-lk, T,~;.
'14M)', Jell C ru-. ,
Sl•~n lf'f P~t a-lind.
M~ kol• (Jynlof) Moody.

Ch_ .. \\ lnUn,

JJ

fktdMr

, .......~, le..tc:tl) South-11.,
Arlh11r .\t-.• .._ \ ~-"'-"-"""
CIIIMii IU.rdy. t.dw IIIIL -

,.,_ h- Dt.awn \

162-

••ff

'"

�Registru's Office
Roger C ha con, Donn a
Holcomb, jua nita Garda,
August St ewar t, Ca ro l
Hu~y, Scali McAfN' Ph oto by D;wid Fox

Fe male R.A.'s
Front Row: Kath y Lind,
Ei iN"n Rya n. S«ond Row:
Doll y Kelbaugh , Amelia
Mendoza, Donna Gut ierrez. Bac k Row: Brenda
Ca rt er, Anne Daugherty.
- Photo by Richara Nira

Pfilro Pena,
Aleta Brentl ey, Lirry Garriso n, Martin Villafunca,
Andrn 5os;&amp; - Photo by
Damian Morgan

Staff -

163

�A
Abbotts, Robert 138
Acevedo, Feliciano 138
Aguilar, Bernadette 148
Akalefu, Benethmag 126
AI. Araifi 41
AI Arrayedh, Asama 126
AI Gosaibi, Saud 142
Alexa nder, G regory 87
Ally, Murtaza 126
A!meida, M aria 142
Alonzo, Aniceto 126
Applewhite, Jeffrey 87
Arends, Yvon ne 126
Arguindigui, Alfo n so 148
Arias, Santiago 126
Arteaga, Irene 142
Aziz, Robert 142

B

Baldus, Gai\ 142
Baley, David 49, 91
Balleste ros, Alejand ro 104
Barrera, M a rtha 138
Basha ra, Rose 138
B.ttchelor, jennefer 148
Baudoin , Hu~rt 78

Bele ts ky, C regg 148, 121
Bell. Mela n y 148
Benetua, Larissa 126
Bentley, C h ris 87, 49
Berming ha n, Sabrina 67, 119, 142
Bernstei n, M a rk 142
Beruwin, Sald1 126
61ngu, Sonya 90
Bock, Joseph 121, 138
Bockoven , Kirk 121, 142
Boclr..rath, T in a 64

Bohls, j ames 121
Borrego, Ma ry 148
Bou r~wis, Greg 138, 121
Bracho, lvtl 138
Br o~ nch, Lrw 55, 121
Butcher. Lis• 148
Brlght, Edwud 66, 138
Brrght, Lauu 14&amp;
Brock. Gtorge 142
Bromet Anne 14&amp;
Brown, Inger 89, 91. 90
Brown. Lte 1~
Bruclluuer Nb rk 121
Buchtery. N1w.1l 41
Burtrago. Curlltrmo 138
Bullocl. Rr ho~rd 14.!
BurlH. Angel• 148
Burnley. Annt 14&amp;

16-&amp; -

Index

Bus tos, Linda 148

c

Caballero, Richardo 149
Cadwallader, Gary 56
Caldera, Jes us 148
Cam pbell, T heresa 88, 90, 92, 93, 1 42
Campbell, Do nald 138
Cantu, Maria 90, 14 2
Carlow, Jerry 127
Ca rrizales, Edna 149
Castro, Rolando 75
Cavazos, Carmen 138
Cavazos, Robert 138
Cavazos, Salvador 149
Cebrou, Flore nt 78
Cegarra, Victor 127
Ce na, Lucas 138
Chaires, Gloria 142
Champi ne, Joseph 104, 149
Chauvi n, Julie 90, 92, 149
Chavex, lsmael 149
Choi, Carolyn 14 2
Church, Eva 1 27
Citerne, Eric 78
Cla rk, Allyson 149
Clayton , Trouble 42, 138
C leary, Janet 149
Cloush , Sam 142
Collet, Gille 78
Collins, Chris 87
Connelly, Margaret 49, 56, 58, 127
Conoly, Walle 65
Contreras, Ch rist ina 127
Contreras, San Juanita 149
C rescioni, Aixa 127
Cride r, Daniel 127
Cruz, O lga 142, 146
Curiel. Marisol 138
Cyr, Ma ry 139

D

0.1tley, DaniC.I 139
Dalley, Martha 127
Dahon , Julie 149
O.IVrS, Muy 139, 143
O&amp;vis, Stephen 121
De Aln, R0S11lmd.1 139
De Cello. M ike 48 , 87
De lA ROS&lt;J, Dolores 149
De Nrro. Suun 57, 149
Dnmond Siobhan 53 121
Detwtrler. Robert 149
Drvru. Dorten 121
Oeyo. John Ill
Dru. Ruben 15. 149

D icke hut, Michelle 143
D illard, Melynda 128
Dilworth, Pa mila 9 2
D reiling, Shelley 149
Duggan. Michael 143
Dupee. Elizabeth 9
Dwyer, Christopher 143

E
Eagan, John 56
Ehrle, Rhonda 139
Eke, Edwin 1 28
Elder, Vale rie 1 28
Emeodi, Justin 128
Engel, Marnie 121, 148 , 149
Ervi n, linda 2, 5, 65, 119, 128
Espinosa, Carolina 149

F
Fagan, Lori 128
Fans he r, Janine 149
Farias, Gerardo 49, 87, 128
Fe rnandez, Armando 146
Fe rnandez. Arturo 149
Fesler, Michelle 143
Filipovic, Marin 149
Flahive, Patrick 128
Fle tcher, Lori 149
Flick, linda 143
Flores, Arthur 128
Flores, Daniel 143
Flores, Lilia 149
Foran, Carol 5 2, 66, 128, 146. 174
Ford, Virginia 128
Fort una, Ma rlene 139
Fox, David 15, 66, 125, 139
Fox, K.1te 4, 143
Fr.1ire. jacob 7 4, 143
Fra nklin, Vernon 87
Frenette, Meliss.J 148
Furia tr, Jua n 104

G

Galle. K.lrl.1 1J9
C..llegos, Cynthia Ill , 138, 1J9
C...lvan, Endric• 92, 10
C.rci.1, Armando 139
C.rcs•. Es ther 128
C..rcr&amp; C r1Crtl1 149
Garcu John 149
G.ue&amp;a, Ju.1nrt• 149
Guu,J• rmt 149
C.ru. M•rr.1 139

�Garza, Martha 149
Garza, Melinda 143
Garza,Melissa143
George, Mary 36
Gianotti, Michael 128
Giles, Jill 56
G illette, Bruce 128
Glover, Glenn 128
Gokelma n, Anne 90, 92
Gomez, Pa tricia 139
Gonzalez, Be rt ha 149
Gonzalez, James 143
Gonzalez, Robe rt 143
Goodall, Babetta 71
Gran, D ia ne 121, 138, 139
Green, Genny 90, 92
Gressel. Ronald 128
Grisham, Donald 143
G uardiola, Israel 149
Gnerra, Adalberto 129
Guerra, Adriana 143
Guerrero, Barbara 149
Guer rero, Jose 129, 133
Guer rero, Maria 143
Guetarn i, Mali k 129
Gutierrez, Beatrice 129
Gutierrez, Donna 49

H
Hackbarth, Carol 139
Haley, Ma rtha 139
Hallgren, Monica 130
Hamza, Jameela 139
Hanson, David 130
Harpool. Riley 67
H arris, Leslie 64
Hartensteiner, Ka theryn 139
H avelka, Susan 130
Healy, Susan 130
Hell inger, Catherine 150
Heredia, Gildardo 139
Heredia, Susan 143
Hernandez, Jorge 150
Hernandez, Robert 139
H irani, Karim 130, 145
Hoffstatter, Barbara 143
Honey, Chatherine 150
H udson, Thomas 91
H uff, Michelle 143
Hughes, Richard 87
Hurtado, Ernesto 130

I
Ickes, Edward 126, 130
Edkes, Leila 150
lgbojionu, Onyekachi 130

Egwebuike, O nyej iuwa 131
lies, Devon 91
iles, Gary 107
Ingram, Jack 143
Irvi n, Stan 65
It uah, Best 139

J

Ja novsky, Chris 131
Jawli, Zaid 150
Jimenez, Jose 131
Jimenez, Ricardo 143
Jimenez, Rolando 150
j ohnson, Carole 150
Johnson, James 84, 87
Johnson, Jason 139
Johnson, Michael 131
Juarez, David 105
Jung, Jae Ryun 131

K
Kassoul, Karim 79
Keating, Pa tricia 131
Keefer, Bridget 49, 150
Kefferler, Darin 121, 143
Keizer, Lisa 139
Kekeocha, Obiager 131
Kemper, Mary 50, 91, 92
Kerwin, Joanna 150
Kim H ong, Ryul 131
Kinsella, Michelle 143
Kinsey, Michael 47
Knolle, Karin 143
Koch, David 107, 131, 175
Kocurek , JO€ 87
Kouba, Tama ra 88, 90, 131
Kroskey, Samuel 150
Kwok, Ling 150

L
Lam Yuk, Ching 150
Lapeyre, Jane 139
Lapeyre, Julie 139
Lara, Lydia 131
Larsson, Michael 150
Ledbetter, Michael 87
Lee, Alan 139
Lee, Jeanette 139
Leschber, Chariss 143
Lewi s, Brian 143
Licea, Mary Ann 121, 148, 150
Lind, Katherine 49

Liska, Carolyn 131
Lombardi , Michael 131
Longoria, Lucia 150
Lopez, Isabel 139
Lopez, Irma 139
Lopez, Maria 150

M
Marchi, Roland 79
Marina , Alica 143
Marr, Humphrey 131
M arshall, Theresa 121, 142, 143
Martinets, Leah 150
Martinez, Adbeel 139
Martinez, Maricela 150
Martinez, Mon ica 150
Martinez, III Mercurio 131
Mayfield, Lester 39
Mazuca, NO€m i 140,
McCarty Mary 13w
McCarty, Mary 132
McCormick, Jr Bobby 141, 150
McCrary, Merry Ann 140
McKissick, H eather 150
McNorton, Tanouye 150
Nedio, Toni 144
Mendoza, Amelia 132, 172
Mendoza, Griselda 150
Mendaza, Marvelia 1.:&gt;2
Michie, Tawnya 144
Mick, Renee 140
Mikeska , Gregory 144
Milam , Katherine 32, 174
Miller, Monica 90
Minor, Paul 150
Mitchell, Michelle 140
Mitchell. Myra 132
Mithani, Sohail 150
Molina, Maria 140
Montalvo, Maria 132
Mantilla , Maria 132
Montoro, Frank 78
Morales, Carmen 132
Morales , Emilio 2
Morales, Elisio 67, 150
Morales III ]0€ 144
Morales, Jr Eli sio 150
Moreno, Rita 151
Muir, Stephen 151
Munchrath, Kyle 7, 140
Munoz, Feliz 144

N

Neal, Marga ret 140
Negrete, Josefina 151
Negrete, Rolando 140

In dex -

165

�Nelson 5ylvia 144
Nemec, Brian 142, 144
Nichol s, George 73, 173
Nichols, La uri 87 , 140
Nichols, Ray 144
Nichols, Shelly 144
Nino, Irene 151
Nira , Richard 66, 132
Norsworthy, Andrea 144
Norton, Ali son 151
4

0
O' Bar , Laura 58, 132
O'Hare, John 140
Ochoa, Richard 144
Ofoegbu, Joh n 132
Ohueri, Clifford 132
Ojimma, Bin 132
Olivarez, Dora 144
Olivarez, Meli ssa 151
Olsen, Cindy 67, 119, 132
Onyeyili, Vincent 144
Oonwala, Sajjad 151
Ortega, Gabriela 144
Ortega, Robe rto 144
Osbor ne, Howa rd 132
OsuJi , C Gibson 151
O tt , Clemens 15 1
Owens, Dawn 144

p
Paciocco, D1ana 151
Palomo, Julia 151
Paratore, Patuck 144
Pena, Eva 92
Pena, Pedro 140
Perales , Elda 151
Perez. Alberto UO
Perez, Antta 151
Perez. Lynneue 151
Peru. lynnette 151
Perez Manlu 151
Petersen. Suun 144
Peterson. Lori l21. 148
PuH . He .. nnette 90
PuH . He.. nmne 88 . 90 140
Plun~ett .
hnshne J . 146
Ponder V.:dlu 132 112
Popp. Law 4q 140
Portner . CAorge 132
Poulan . lo..amberly 1J2
Pun . O..thenne 146
Pulham . P.. tno.a Uo

0

...-,

Quinn, Thoma s 119
Quiroga , Ramiro 75

R

Ramirez, Diana 146
Ramirez, Esmeralda 132
Ramirez, Linda 140
Ramirez, Jr Pedro 132
Ranheim , Robert 36, 132
Ra shdan, Ali 134 , 140
Real. Perla 140
Reed , Gardie 134
Rentler, Tammy 134
Reyes, Marivel 146
Reyes, Rebecca 134
Reyes, Romelia 146
Reyna , Antonio 75
Reynolds, Nancy 44 , 134
Rhodenbaugh , Douglas 121 , 134
Ricketts, Scott 134
Rippe, Bruce 146
Rippee, Edward 126, 134
Rivera, Yolanda 146
Robi nson, Hel en 135
Robi nson, jacqueline 190
Roc ha Ill. Philip 7, 146
Rodgers, Will iam 135
Rodriguez, Angela 57
Rodriguez, Carmen 135
Rodriguez, Chris tine 135
Rodnguez, Rosa linda IJS
Ronc.ri, Marco 104
Rossi , Karen 88, 90, 146
Rowland, Thais 135
Ru baadum, ~ r ge 135
Rubio, Rose Mary 135
Ruiz, A l ourdes 126, 135
Rwiga. Pascal 140
Ryan , Eil~n 46
Ryi11n , Sheilah 153

s

S...an . Bnan 140
S...u•edra Carlos 140
S.aler . u.wn US . 174
S.l..s . Cust,.vo. 115
Salu. Jr MCKH 109
S.lmas . Javaer 1SJ
S.hzste1n Thomas 146
S..nchu. Dunne 115

Sanchez, Stephanie 153
Savvides. Andrea s 146
Scardino, David 48, 138, 140
Schacher! , Kelly 135
Schultz, Stuart 48, 140
Senn , Brian 121 , 138, 140
Shelton , James 135
Sheppard, Jr. John 67, 135
Simeroth , laura 135
Smith , Cetrina 121 , 26, 136
Solis, Francisco 140
Solorzano, Maria 146
Sosa, Andres 140
Soto, Raquel 136
Southwell , James 121 , 140
Sparwath, Paul 146
Speranza, Gayle 140
Strand , Paul 67
Steele, Victor 107, 136
Ste rns, Russell 108
Stewart, Walter 153
Stin son, Jacque 153
Stovall. Stepahn 87
St ri egler, Tamyra 136
Stroud , Kenny 136
Suraci, Francis 136

T

Tai , Wing 129
Tam , Fiona 153
Ta ylor, Charles 87
Tepe, Colette 140
Tepe, Lisa 140
Terry, Charles 153
Thornhill , Meli ss.1 153
Torres, Ana 153
Torres, Culos 147
Torres, Riu rdo 147
Torres, S.Jiomon 119, 147
Trevino, Lolis 136
Trevmo, Sergio ISJ
Trli«k , Creg 136
Tuapea, Tamoni J
Turnam , Adnennt 140
Turntr, Lonme 86, 87

u

Uche. l Ifeany1 136
Uratgu. Ros•e 136
Uzu~bun•m Andrew 136

v

�Vallejo, Kelli 153
Valverde, Eduardo 147
Vargas, Leonor 136
Vaszuez, Roberto 119, 147
Vega, Jose 136
Velaszuez, Ana 136
Velasquez, Guadalupe 153
Viesca, Inez 153
Villagomez, Roxanna 147
Villarreal, Arnold 153
Villarreal, Selina 153
Vondrak, John 48, 49, 138, 140
Vrana, Monica 153
Vagner, Jeanie 147

w

Walker, Katherine 153
Wa lters, John 136
Warren, James 49, 153
Wells, Kathy 69
West, Bert 153
White, Wanda 140
Whitehead , Douglas 140
Whitley, Mickey 136
W ilhelm, Robert 153
Will iams, David 62, 153
Willis, Courtney 136
Willis, Joel 136
Wilson, Cullen 147
Wolfenson , Indio 153
Wong, Stella 147
Wood, Rob 140
Woolley, Karen 90, 92, 147

z

Colophon
The 55th Centennial edition of the Tower was printed by Josten's American
Yea rbook Co., Topeka, Kansas using offset lithography. The press run was 700
copies.
Paper stock is 100 pound cream white enamel, historical section paper stock is
80-pound Ivory. The pictures are spott toned in Tempo Brown # 469. The
end sheets are Tempo Smoky Blue #543. The cover is quarter bound with sapphire
velet, silver foil and s ilver brushstrok grain.
Body Copy is 10 pt Palatino; capions are 8-point. Type face for healines; Student
Life - Souvenir, Academics - Times Roman Sports - Optima, Organizations Century Schoolbook, People - Korinna.
Class pirctures were taken by Varden Studios of Texas.
The Centennial Tower included 176 pages. Distribution was in August 1985.
Publication adviser was Jo Hayes.

Zabalza, Clemente 153
Zaldumbide, Ena 147
Zapata, Linda 153
Zarzuela, Deangelo 153
Zepeda , Marina 90, 92, 153

Index- 167

�On' hot, ft.lnnyd..y, Ht'n.t' Allt'l '"d' ttudt'nt
ftnd comfo rt uncMr' lrff to t'njoy tht' Cinco Dt
M'yo ft'.HC. - Photo by lNmt'n Mor,,n

168 -

losing

�History Of Dreams, Future Of Optimism
It was a year unlike any other.
The new "SEU sidewalk" was also
It all ended with physical signs of completed as the year neared its close. In
change; the Main Building was being their relatively isolated environment begutted, with loads of unusable material tween the women's dorms and the cafetebeing swooshed down wooden chutes ria concerned members of the communiinto the beds of waiting trucks that even- ty worked with wheelbarrow, pick and
tually carried their cargos intQ dumps s hovel to install a sidewalk that will keep
women dorm dwellers' journeys to the
around Austin.
The sounds of drills and picks and cafeteria from becoming a muddy and
hammers burrowing into the ground wet ordeal.
wafted through the open windows of
The year also ended with less tangible
Holy Cross Hall and the ReUnion as new s igns of change. It ended with a renewed
phones, replacing the increasingly ar- optimism about our educational misc:haic old phone system, were being in- s ion, the optimism spurred on by our
stalled.
new, energetic president, Dr. Patricia
Thick, shiny black cables were laid to Hayes, by other new faces, new buildcarry intra-campus conversations as well ings and the renovation of an old one.
as the calls coming in from all over the
What we also gained from our centenworld.
nial celebration was a sense of the insti-

tution's history, which we realized
wasn 't just a musty old set of books
locked away in some dark and dusty
bookshelf. We realized that it was our
history too.
We learned not only through an increased awareness of the past but also
through more concerted efforts such as
the centennial edition of the Edwardian.
This student publication increased our
awareness of the school's history and informed us of exploits and stories that
had occured on the hilltop; academic expansion, Texas' first indoor swimming
pool, and our energetic founder, Father
Edward Sarin, among others.
Our celebration also provided us with
a sense of perspective regarding our time
and its problems.

T he much n«dt d ~idew~lk from the girls' dorm to
the c~fteria was built by SA I-org~nized worker$,
during the spri ng ~mi'Sier. For three voeeksSAI
mem~l'$, dorm ri'Sidents and st~ff mtm~l'$ spent
their weektnds building it. - Photos by Rich~rd
Nir~

Closing -

169

�,..
Th~r

Mutians u~ comins. th~r Muti..ln1 1re comin&amp;! For tht tnd of tht wmesltr m- . tht toervices
we~ 11 tM Grotto. - Photo by Ri&lt;hud Nin

170 -

C losing

�Optimism
The budget troubles that had been so
prevalent and the cut backs during the
'83-'84 year departed as we turned our
attention to our centennial h istory and
learned that fina ncial troubles, like the
season, arrive for a brief time and then
leave, only to return for a short time and
leave again .
We were also able to look at the gutting of the main building with the
knowledge that this was not the firs t
time that one of our structural jewels was
in disarray; a fi re and a tornado in our

distant past ravaged beautiful O ld Main

and Holy Cross Hall.
Energized, confident, and optimistic,
those of us who bade farewell to the
lOOth graduating class remained with yet
another realization; that the history of
the next century would begin with the
story of a vibrant people who dreamt and
worked hard to enrich thei r own lives
and the lives of those around them.
The next century, we realized, would
begin with the story of ourselves.

of 1986 when once ~gain members of the community m~y w~ lk thfflugh the h~ lls of the historic~ I
l~ndm~rk. - Photo by Michd!f.' Huff
M~y 4 g.ave studenls, faculty,st;off ~nd theirf;omilies;och~nnlorelnandsoci•lize. The university
Picnic w;os held outside of the Cafete ria with food,
g;.mes •nd music by the Lone Stu Country lUnd.
- Photo by Dami•m M orsan

Closing -

171

�Mi le; Pondu nuvousl y c hKks his foldu to !1ft if
it holds ~ dqrtoe. -

Photo by D•v•d Fox

A Centennial Graduation
The centennial class, proud parents " Her concept of success was fresh and
and friends converged on Palmer Audi· inspi ring,"
Another senior, David Koch, found
torium to wrap up the year . a day that the
graduates had certainly been looking that the ceremony wouldn 't have been
the same had it not been for Weber's
forward to for a long time.
Spectators. some sitting dose to the inspiring address.
"Cathy Weber's speech made the enupper reaches of the auditorium , looked
on as President Patricia Ha yes and new tire gradua tion," he said . "She seemed to
Registrar Carol Hussey conferred de· ha ve brought the class closer together
grees upon 450 new graduates, all eage r during the year and her speech summed
it all up."
to begin a new phase of their lives.
Aside from the pagentry and family
"The memory was a memorable one,"
said new degreeholder Patricia Keating. celebrations. graduation also carries with
One of the highlights of the afte rnoon it a responsibility, said Master's degree
was Cathy Weber's commencement ad· recipient Ines Nira.
" I have the opportunity to contribute
d ress, whose s peech inspired the gradu·
something to society," she said . "There
ates.
"Cathy Weber captured my dreams is a responsibility that accompanies my
and hopes for the future ," said Keating. accomplishment . Growth and peace of
mind ca n be attained by using the gift as
intended."
As is common with all ceremonies of
this type, there were some mixed feelings
as some graduates didn' t have close fam ·
ily members attend the ceremony. " I felt
proud for Mom , my g reat inspiration ,"
said Nira , "but she is gone now and I
wa s unable to share the moment with
her."
President Hayes handed out the degrees to the First graduates of her tenure
with the effervescence and energy that

172 -

udu:.ation

�Georg~ Nichols fulfi lls ~ lif~ long drum of r«tiv·
ing ~ degr« in history. - Photo by O~mi~n M or-

s•o

C~thy Wtber gives ~ moving ~ddr~ on wh~t suc·
cess should be for uch individual. - Photo by
O;,vid Fox

Graduation -

173

�characterized her first year on the hill.
"The warmth that she greeted the
graduates with was kind" said Keating.
"She said a word or two to each graduate
and was warm and friendly when she
was distributing the diplomas."
Other feelings of pride and honor
were felt by the graduates. "I was honored to be a part of it," said Koch. The
ceremony was very touching."
There were, of course, other happenings which made this commencement
unique. During the ceremony, Senior
class president Cetrina Smith. presented
Hayes with a gift from the senior class: a
centennial banner designed by the class
and a scholarship to be given to a handicapped student.
Former pres ident Brother Elmo
Bransby, and U.S. Congressman Jake
Pickle received honorary degrees for
their service to others over the years.

Suwn S..iltr &amp;hft htr d.o~&gt;&amp;httr, Lindwy, ' hut
,ftrr tM &amp;r..d...,tion urtrnony. - Photo by Do
,..,..n "''" ' '' "

TM thrH Ph.oeo c-munk..,tiont &amp;•61J...,tt"fo. K..y
Mot..• . John SM-pp.~rd. ,nJ uol for;~n. 1-'lhtr In
diJ,b,rllf.,t ..fttr ~thin&amp; thrir doplom.o. - P'-o
b,.Dm JFo.

1

~

-

r;aduation

�lnes Nir~ cri es with joy ~ ft ~ r r«~iving ~ M~s t tr of
Arts in Hum~ n Serv ic~. - Photo by D.Jmi.an M org• o
Dav id Koc h v~ ry n rd ull y con c~ ntra t es o n ch.a nging h is ~~~ ~ and urryin g his dipl oma whil~ walk·
ing .acrosos th~ stage.- Photo by D"mian Morgan

Graduation -

175

�176 -

uduJi io n

��1885

1895

1905

1915

1925

1935

1945

�Staff

19'75

J:dltor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cindy Olsen
Associate l:dltor .. .. . .. .. . .. . . .. . Richard Nira
Sports J:dltor
Aoslstant to the Editor . . . . . . . . Philip Rocha Ill
Assistants . ... ... . . Lisa Branch, Doreen Devitt
Linda Ervin, David Fox
Kate Fox, Mark Ickes
Heather McKissick, Lynette Perez
John Sheppard
Photographers . Sabrina Bermingham, Ed Bright
Kevin Dozzi, Carol Foran
Marlene Fortuna, David Fox

Mary George, Michelle Huff
Jay johnson, Harry Moreno

Richard Nira, Cindy Olsen
Marco Roncari, John Sheppard
Ana isabel Velasquez,
Marty Warfield, Jerry White
Rob Wood
Photography Supervisor . . . . . . Damian Morgan
Publications Advisor . . . . . . . . ... .. . Jo Hayes

t:::::
1985

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                    <text>�You are
never given a wish
without also being given the
power to make it true.
Youmay
\
have to work for it,
however.

�.----------------1114

Contents
Student Life .......... 8
Academics .......... 42
Sports ........ . .. . .. 66
Organizations ........ 98

. -- - - - - -- -- - - - - - - • People ............ 116
Index ..... . ........ 164

��1984 TOWER
St. Edward's University
3001 S. Congress
Austin, Texas 78704

�...

~

:
~

&lt;

.j
0

As the univrnity prepares to enter its
second 100 ynn, it searches for new
hopes 01nd drums that will make the
future promising and prosperous.
During the Chrislmu season, Old
!'.bin brings 01 renewed glow to
c01mpus.

p nin

�Metamorphosis 1984

ime of Passage
Students come to a university to prepare for their future. Youthful dreams, hopes and ideals are constantly
being tested and examined in the light of classroom and
non-classroom experiences. These countless re-evaluations
help to shape their future by forming the basis of important life decisions.
Among the most valuable are the personal relationships
which often last a lifetime. A small university can offer
comradeship and closeness not often found on a
mechanized, mammoth university campus. Such a
university exists in South Austin, high on a hilltop, offering a quality of unity uncommon in our age. Hardworking, dedicated staff, faculty and students commune
in an excellence of fraternal education.
Marshall McLuhan said change is occurring so rapidly
in our modern society that we no longer have the time to
adapt; but we must learn to deal with change itself. This
year students learned a great deal about how change affects the world in which they live.
Metamorphosis is painful and consequently creates anxiety and tension. Yet nothing holds more promise for
beauty than the cocooned butterfly.
As this university prepares to enter its second one hun-~
dred years as an institution of higher learning, significant ~
...
-------------------------------------------------~
Checking the mollilbox is olin everydolly
ritu.al for residents. Gollry lies finds oll
quiet plollce on collmpus to rud.

A weolllhered sign ollnd oll newt-shirt ue ~
symbols of olin old institution suppor- .!:
ling new ideollls.
~

Opening- 3

�Time of Passage . . .
changes, inward reflections and dreams of future greatness dance in the minds of those who took part in the first
one hundred years. Solutions to complex problems often
seem as elusive as butterflies.

We are now the chrysalis . ..
The Listening Task Force was established to perform a
collective self perception. Many of the comments were
negative; however, the types of questions asked sparked
negative responses and were born in a deep love for the
university.
Brother Stephen V. Walsh, CSC, resigned after bei
associated with the university for twenty-three years
first as a student, then as an administrator, and for
past twelve years as president. During Walsh's tenure,
university underwent many changes and improvemen
including the Scarborough-Phillips Library. Walsh's successor would not be known until after the academic
was over. With anticipation, students, faculty and sta
waited to learn what tomorrow would bring.
The University received a gift of $500,000 to build a fine
arts complex. Plans were drawn and the preliminary construction budget seemed within the means of the gift.
However, city ordinances and escalating costs caused

Bnch Bash brings
color ilnd smiles to
senior Robin Mick.

Providing ill plue for the Royill
lichten tein Circus to entertilin, the
pi~lio behind Old Millin enilbles kids of
.. 11 .. ge to enjo "bruk from the dilily
routine with li~ughter and suspense.
By dilly,
1xth
treet bustles w1th
b~smess ilctiv1ty . But lillie in the evenIng, 11 1 lriln form d into " Bourbon
treet-like illmo phere.

nin

�In the ch&lt;~nging
environment of
Austin, m;~ny
buildings ue ;~dd­
ed to the skyline.
One Americ;~n
Center, loc;~ted on
Sixth ;~nd Congress, is the newest
;~ddition .

Opening- 5

�The univenity
lhOWI its grief
upon hearing the
new• of the 1uicide
bombing of the
Marine barracks in
Lebanon.

p nin

�p nin

�Student Life

ime of Passage
Change never happens overnight. It is a slow, gradual,
sometimes painful process. As students, we began a
transformation the moment we arrived at college. We
were on our own without families or old friends for
guidance and support. For some of us it was our first time
out of the nest. A definite change had occurred to set us on
our first steps toward independence.
New experiences were found around every corner. New
ideas were learned, old ideas seen in a new light. New
friends were made and new adventures experienced.
Every aspect of college life, from classroom settings to the
new social life and independence, altered our perception
of life, love and the pursuit of fun.
Growth we experience as college students is as painful
and beautiful as the metamorphosis of a butterfly - a
transformation of one being into another.
Prepouing for the annual Halloween
Carnival much time is spent getting
into costume.

-

tud nt Lif

Asserting independence by going
against the crowd, Mike Ledbetter
heads to class while others return.

�Richard Nir~ ~nd S~ndy Br~dley share
light moment between cl~ ses.

~

Computer portr~its are offered b
SAC ~s ~ ervice to students. Friends
t~kr ~dv~nt~gr of thr portr~it
~ a
ch~nce to rem mber thrir collrgr d~

..

tudent Lt

�Registration more than form~

~amp us
Registration is a social
event sponsored each
semester by the administration in Moody Hall. Waiting
in line provided the opportunity to make new friends
and renew lost acquaintances . Chatting casually
helped to pass the time
pleasantly, until the business
office brought us to reality
and to jot a quick note to
dear old dad .
Chance meetings grow into life long relationships . In
a sense, new families were
A new coat of white makes Our
Lady Queen of Peace Chapel a
bright attraction on campus. Lalo
Garcia and Melinda Garza add
their own splash of color to the

10 -

R

tr ti n

Reunites
being born. Each smile, each
hello and every recognition
began and renewed bonds.
The campus family was
diverse with many countries
and socio-economic backgrounds being represented .
Registration was in many
ways a family reunion .
Learning about the summer,
about new hopes and ideals
for the year are as much a
part of registration as the
frustration of waiting in
lines.

An old indoor swimming pool converted into the ReUnion becomes a
central meeting place for studel)la,
faculty and staff.

�RegisUAlion is • time of filling out
forms, urAnpng schedules And
finding old And new friends.

The

cuborough-Phillip
thr ~cqui ition
150,000th book ~nd qu ic k!
~n rlrg~nt tradition to tud
thr hill.
crlrbr~tr

M ood H~ll brcomes ~
for cl~ e ~nd mrrt in
modern , oprn dr i n .

libruy
of its
brin
ing on

foe~!

point
with its

R

1

tratt n -

11

�A city and campus prepare to face dramatic changes

Co~munity

Looks Toward the Future

~

Change was not relegated
solely to individuals in the
past year . The campus
underwent major changes in
office locations and occupants. Austin also faced
dramatic alterations.
After arriving on campus
in the fall , students were
presented with a trusty map
to help locate where vital offices had been moved.
The renovation of Old
Main had not begun; the art
center was still housed on
the second floor and the
bookstore on the ground
floor . The ground for the
new Art and PhotoCommunications Complex
still lay intact.

~

ld 1ain t ill retain it inner
beaut e en though it ha been
reduced to a hollo
hell.

12 -

Prepuing for Old
ain ' reno a- ~1&lt;
t ion , workers begin moving office
furniture to uiou lou lion .

Ground was broken all
around the city as Austin
shifted into a new era . The
high-tech age brought a
wave of people, which
meant more residential construction, witnessed in the
South Austin area by the
rapid rise of condominiums
and apartments. The migration increased the flow of
traffic, provoking an election
in which voters decided to
finally complete Mo-Pac.
All of these changes were
not easily accepted. Many
went against the tide of
public op1n10n . It took
courage to generate change
which affected so many
people.

�ot on! is the universit under
renovation , but downtown ustin
i al o undergoing a change of
identit .
Moving van are frequent!
een
on c.mpu . The are port of the
fir t ta e of the renovation .

- 13

�~
0

:l
c

-~

!

0

Ev~n

though Old Main stands
it still is a significant part
of campus lif~ . It also plays a major
part in th~ c~l~bration of
Chri tmas by shining forth color~d
lights for mil~ aero th~ city.
~mpty ,

Th~

c~l~bration brings
Au tin it~ both m.all a11d

14 -

I br ti n fLig ht

togdh~r
lug~ .

�Old Main stands empty

ommunity Gathers
The fifth annual Celebration of Lights provided an
opportunity to gather with
friends one last time before
delving into finals and packing for the holidays. An
evening of lights, prayer and
song ushered in the
Christmas spirit. Edsmen
sponsored the celebration as
a gift to the community. Br.
Don Marengo, an advisor,
said, "It has developed into
the most enjoyable community celebration of the
entire fall semester."
A consolidated group effort brought about this
event. The December afternoon was warm as Edsmen

lined the main drive with
luminaria s and crane
operators outlined Old Main
with strings of lights .
Although Old Main was
empty, for many people the
building still housed the
spirit of the university.
Celebration of Lights provided an occasion to unite
with others in the hope that
someday Old Main will be
overflowing with activity
again .
Lights from the celebration glowed warmly several
miles down I-35, wishing
Austin a Merry Christmas
from the hilltop throughout
the season.

Highlighting the fall semester is
the Celebution of lights and Song.
People of the university as well as
the surrounding community share
in the beginning of the Christmas
season on the hilltop.

Choral members and Br. Gerald
Muller lead carolers in a variety of
Christmas songs including such
favorites as Silent Night, Joy to the
World and Rudolph the Red-Nosed
Reindeer.

Celebration of Light -

IS

�The universit y provides the equipment, the volunteers provide the
energy for a s uccessful Phonothon.
There is a party-like atmosphere
during the ca lling, but the s tudents
eagerly contact the alums.

- Phtnwt hon

�Volunteers contact alumni nationwide

ledges Far Exceed Expectations
The 1983 Phono thon s urpas ed its p re-set goal by
$25,000 . A group of more
than 200 vol unteer co m posed of faculty , staff, students
and alumni managed tci raise
$176,000.
The now desola te Information and Referral Center was
bustling with activity Oc-

Phonothon Steeri ng Co mm ittee
C hairpe rson George Koehler i nks
in th e res ults as th e th e rm o m e te r
rea ches th e magic amount of
$150,000.

tober 16-19. Eight round
tables were set up, each
equipped with five phone ,
five callers, pencils and a
stack of pledge cards. In
other parts of the room people sorted pledge cards,
noting refusals , sending
thank-you envelopes to
p ledgers and tallying the
pledges.
Bells sounded each time a
caller received a pledge .
Other sounds filled the air,
too - like the excited voices
of vol un teers thanking old

college churns for $1,000
pledges. ot all the pledges
reached the four-digit mark ;
but no matter what size the
pledge, it was received with
enthusiasm . More than 2,000
people contributed to the
total of $176,000.
This was the Phonothon 's
si th year. The event has
become a permanent part of
the university life, providing
funds for general operations.

Linda Ervi n inte n tly looks at a
pl e d ge card as s h e b r i n gs it up to be
ta llied .

Ph n othon -

17

�A re ident takes advantage of a
nice afternoon to blow bubbles out
the dorm window .
In almost every room, the bulletin
board are filled with reminders
and personal memorie from home
or experience
had at the
university .

1&gt;-

�L

Home away from home

ife in the Dorms

Lat night chat, hall paries, cafeteria food , conversaand good friends are all
rt of dorm life.
Thi year the dorms made
improvements. Pool
and color televisions
added to make the
enwas
and
r onal touch . Th resident
al o provided
office for

a univer ity requirent, freshman students
ve to stay in the dorm for
fir t year. One freshman
udent aid, "I think it is
the first year. You have a
chance of making
and using the
cilitie . You are also able to
ttle down and get u ed to
v rything that i g ing on
round you ."
Th dorm have a few

rules and regulations, most
of which are for the
students' safety. For example, all dorms require that
visi tors leave at midnight on
weekdays and 2:00 a.m . on
weekends . Teresa Hall also
requires that men must be
escorted by a re ident. There
are also fire safety rules, including no irons, or electrical cooking appliances in
the resident rooms . " I don' t
feel the rules are restrictive .
They are only there for our
safety," said a female
resident .
Some students continue to
live in the dorms after their
first year. " It is a convenient
way to live and you don' t
have to worry about cooking," said one three-year
dorm resident. Another student aid, " I like living on
campus because it is where
all the action is. If there is a
dance, speaker, or other activity, I can easily walk to the
event."
The pied piper of the dorms, Pete
Erickson, gathers the re idents for
a Mardi Gras celebration.
AI Puente, a man alone .

.

..&lt;f.
D rm -19

�Dorms -

Continued

Activities are planned
throughout the year for the
residents of the four dorms.
In the spring, cookouts consisting of hotdogs and fajitas
gave the residents a chance
to socialize and relax for the
evening. Other activities included movies, and a Trivia
Bowl, where students from
different floors are pitted
against each other to answer
trivia question s . This
popular event soon encompassed all four dorms and
eve ntually the administration and faculty participated.
Also included in the ac-

tivities were holiday celebrations such as Mardi Gras,
Halloween, and Christmas.
It is inevitable, that crazy
things will happen when
there are about 100 students
living in one building. For
example, water balloons,
m ~ rbles , and other assorted
obJects are thrown down the
hall. Clothes disappear when
someone is taking a shower
resulting in naked bodies
dashing down the hall .
One familiar expression
that can be heard throughout
the halls is, " Don't flush the
toilet, I'm in the shower."

During football season, it is common to
see students putting their books down
to watch a game. Colette Tepe and
Rosalinda DeAiva anticipate the end of
the Dallas-Minnesota game.

Yolanda Rivera carefully applies
black mascara before painting the
town red.
Mulrnr

Fortun~

Mulent Fortun•

P I ... Trouble, is that Alan
Funt behind that camera ?

~

0

.

~

c

_ _ _ __. oe

2 -

)fffi

�A hungry Tricia Keating, head for
the cafeteria for lunch.
Kirk Bockoven buues one of the
resi dents in Tere a hall before
heading out for Halloween .

0 rm- 21

�0

ReUnion hosts variety

pen Mike Draws Talent

Live from the ReUnion,
talent galore. Thursday
nights were filled with
mini-concerts, coffeehouses
and
Open
Mike
eli).tertainment.
Open Mike gave students
a chance to test their potential as a standup comedian,
blues crooner, guitar virru.v _-o and other performing
roles. The Student Activities
Council (SAC) sponsored the
events. Open Mike has produced some regulars . Who
knows? Maybe some day one
of our Open Mike regulars
can attribute their success to
th e warm encouragement
th ey received in the humble
ReUnion .
Coffeehouses- brought in
appearances by performers
on the national college circuit. Trovatori, an electric
jazz group returned to bring

Eddie Lopez and Jose Gerrerro
seem to have all the answers.

Ent rtaining the audience, Chuck
Pulliam plays during an Open
Mike.
For the Open Mike finale, Deb
Harris, Maggie
onnelly, Caro l
Foran , and Oeni e Klodnicki le d
the crowd in the traditional chool
drinking ong.

22 -

Mini

rt

an energetic performance offering a variety of songs,
costumes, choreography,
light comedy and a blend of
fine voices.
Bermuda Triangle made a
lot of frustrated singers happy when they passed out
kazoos and let the audience
do a little entertaining
themselves .

Hot Shandy brought in
high-energy music
originating from Ireland and
the U.S.
A high turnout of students
enjoyed the entertainment
from the ReUnion . It gave
them a chance to catch up on
the newest gossip, the
newest talent, and it was all
for free!

�Coffeehouse favorite , Deb Harri ,
keeps the crowd in high pirits.
At a mini-concert, Roger from Bermuda Triangle keeps student
entertained with kazoos and
dancing.

Mini Concert offered a wide
variety of talent uch a the versatile group, Trovatori .
John Eagan give a olo performance at one of the frequent Open
Mike .

1m1

nc rt - 23

�The merry-go-round at Zilker Park
get a new coat of paint. The
playground and Barton Spring
Pool are main attractions in the
heart of Au tin .
pring in Austin i cri p and clear,
offering gorgeou days and blue
kies for quiet time at Town Lake.
c
0

iL.

.,.
24 -

u ·tin

�Parks, Lakes Draw
Crowds to Austin
Austin, T xas. It is aid
that very T an ha two
home , Austin and where
they liv . The si t picked
lmo t ISO year ago by the
father of th T xa Republic
intain its natural appeal
ay . Spanning th bank of
lorado Riv r wh e re
Te a
Hill

man - made
in and around th area
of bas
ailing, or
and
to
the
t

Zilk r Park, just so uth of
Town Lake from downtown,
boa t the world' largest
natural pool. F d by Barton
Spring , the p ol is a yearround 6 d gr
. In ummer
tim
it offer a welcome
r lief from the usually hot,
dry days . In th winter a few
brav
ouls still trot out to
the "S pring" for a piritual
revival.
hildren play in
Zilker's elaborate play ground
r ride the train
a round the park . Adults picnic, play
occer or rent
ano s and paddle down to
Town Lak . Summ r nights
c me to life with outdoor
plays pr ented fr e on the
hill ide th atre .
Au s tin , growing to
become a lead e r in the electronic indu try and fighting
to pr erv it heritage and
coping .

arc h da in Bull
r('('i.. Park
d ema nd s tud ied relaxation from
this Austinit(' .
A n ew e•pan,ion bridge over lak e
u tin co nne cts Loop 360 through
th e cenic Ifill countr of West
Austin .

U'&gt;ttn -

2

�I

'We Want to Know What the U.S. Is All About'

nternationals Like Small Campus

They co me from all parts
of th e world: Bahra in , Hong
Kong, Poland, Venezue la .
They fight culture shock
and lone lin ess to get an
Am e ri ca n ed uca ti o n. Their
na mes are mi ssp e lled and
mispronounced, and th ey
often feel out of place.
But as one foreign student
sa id , th ey " want to know
what the United Sta tes is all
abo ut. "
Almost 350 stude nts from
54 foreign nations attended
the university this year.
Benethmag Akalefu from
Nige ri a said h e decided to
come to St. Edwa rd 's because
it i a small, church-related
in titution .
"S tate sch ools wi th la rger
numbers of students do not
give adequate attention to
stud ents' problems," Akalefu
sa id . " I just want to be noticed in school and make
friends with people from

oreign tuden ts

different parts of the world.
St. Edward 's is multicultured
and less tribalistic ."
Victor Nwakihe, a
freshman from Nigeria, sai d
h olidays are difficult, parti c,: ularly for internationals
who live in the dorms. "The
dormitories are locked during h o lid ays," Nwakihe
n o ted. "A foreign student
who lives in the dormitory
ha s n o family, traveled
th o usand s of miles to come
here and has absolutely n o
place to go."
Another problem is learning to eat new foods. Alade
Adewale, a freshman , said , " I
live in the dormitory, but I
don ' t eat in the sc h ool
cafete ria because I can't find
any food to ea t. "
Other studen ts complain
about th e cutback in hours
for the foreign student adviser and abo ut the $150 extra each foreign student pays

every semester .
Yet Ja s in Glulom of
Bahrain says it is easier to be
a student in the United
States than in some other
countries. Glulom, who came
to the United States on a
scholarship, said , " To live a
good student life in the
United States is cheaper.
Most of my friends in Britain
are suffering. Things are
very costly there. "
Glulom said he came to
this universi ty because he
has famil y and friends here:
" They can help me a lot with
my assignments. I have
direct contact with my instructors. That helps me a
lot, too."

For foreign students life on cam pus
means adjusting to a whole new
world, not just to college.

�Student from more than 50 other
countrie braved the s hock of joining a s trange land to seek a degree
on thi s campu .

Mo I tudents welcome the opportunit to replace prejudice with
knowledge by getting to know
students like Asia Rashdan .
alive dr
of ada AI ahaf and
Mona AI haikh bring an international flavor to campus fa hi on .

For ign tud nt - 27

�'Over-the-Hillers' Find
Home in South Austin
Here is a test to see if your
life's work is finished . If you're
alive . . . it isn't.
- Richard Bach

grams and college credits for
out-of-classroom learning experiences. If that sounds like
an easy way to garner a bunch
of credit hours for your job exNew College, MHS, MBA perience, try to qualify for
and regular undergraduate some and you'll discover the
programs are what the univer- rigorous proof and testing resity is about. Since regular quired. The master's programs
undergraduates outnumber offered are of unusually high
graduate and New College caliber and follow low
students by six to one, it is teacher/student ratio and conreasonable to assume that the tact hours offered in the
average student age is around undergraduate programs.
21, but it's not even close. In
Non-traditionally-aged
fact it's closer to 30 than 21.
students are also attracted to
Older-than-the-traditionally- undergraduate programs not
aged students comprise a large offered elsewhere in Austin.
portion of the enrollment.
Photo-Communications,
Among the many attrac- writing and theater programs
tions at the University are the are unique and compreheninnovative New College, and sive.
the excellent programs ofFitting in with the less old
fered in Master's of Business students is one of the great
Administration and Master's fears of entering a university,
of Human Services. New Col- but the it's-never-too-late synlege offers extremely flexible drome is alive and doing quite
hours, individualized pro- well here.
Austin entrepreneur Bob Labry
returned to college to study
photogrilphy ilfter 13 years in the
business world.
Ex-servicemiln Dilrrell Stanley
graduilted with il 4.0 grilde point
ilverage in business. He gave the
Villedictory ilddress ilt
commencement.

8ri.1.n P•n lu u

2 -

ld r tud nt

�Human anatomy class f i nds
Michael Jackson dissecting a rabbit
with the help of Adalberto Guerra
and Rubert Longoni .
English and history major George
Nichols earned the Outstanding
History Student Award and still
had time to write prose and edit for
Everyman.

Old r tudent - 29

�'c-'
1 r~m Conservative to Radical
War of the wardrobe

Students for generations
could be placed chronologically by their clothes. The
'50s were known for poodle
skirts and bobby sox. In the
'60s they grew long hair,
wore mini-skirts and raggedy
clothes. The '70s gave rise to
the all-occasion way of life blue jeans - while others
donned bright polyester
fabrics and leisure suits.
Students of the '80s were
not so easy to categorize,
especially those who trekked
across the campus during the
year. They came from 40
states and 54 foreign countries and ranged in age from

17 to 78 . Different
backgrounds were often
reflected by the dress . Many
chose to continue wearing
their traditional native garb,
while others interpreted
Austin's moody weather as a
lig.ht cotton top and shorts or
soft wool sweater and slacks
on the same day .
Common sights on campus
pictured a traditionally
dressed in ternational walking with a T-shirted, bluejeaned local. The '80s also

Sneakers never d ie.

gave us preppies with their
alligators, weejuns and initials conversing with punk
rockers with their short, colored, choppy hair and hard
metallic clothing.
If there was one common
denominator , it was
ANYTHING GOES!

Austin 's cont rastin g values often
expressed themselves in arc h itecture as well as in cloth ing.

�Casual

prep showed up
ev~rywhere, even hiding under
Mtke Connor' blue jeans. Mike
Kinsey models a look all his own.

Hilltoppers were known for a
ca ual approach to fashion , a.s
demon trated b Maria Gutierrez,
luc
Gonzale
and Ofel i a
Batancourt.

As the physical fitnes craze continued aero s the country, orne of
its fashion elements - uch a leg
found their wa into

M.ar l ~ n~

Fortun .a

i
"'
0

Fad

Fa hi n - 3 1

�Lisa Branch is only too excited to
begin another day of higher
educa6on.
Work, sc hool, and socializing
demands take their toll on Deb
Harris's bedroom.

Cuol Fonn

32 -

ff

mpu Living

�Parties, rent, dirty dishes unite to form a unique experience

ff Campus Live: Fun, Trying Times

campus student faces . Instead of a five minute walk
to class it can be a 10, 15
campus minute walk or in some cases
a 20 minute .
For those without their
to overe is finding a roommate own transportation, coorroommates. This may dinating one's work, class
ecome a difficult task; and social life with the
oommates who are public transportation system
thy and responsible can upset the delicate
n dealing with the many balance of one's mental
lls that must be paid each health.
Household duties can be
onth are hard to find .
After a trustworthy rela- very trying on roommates.
ionship has developed the Cleaning, grocery shopping,
t problem is finding a and cooking are three addi·to live . There are ad- tional challenges that off
to living close to campus students must face . It
pus and far from cam- helps if everyone in the
A place close to campus house has the same taste
1 provide easy access to buds when it comes time to
but it also might do the grocery shopping as
more unannounced the consumer is faced with a
that you might or myriad of purchasing
ight not be ready or possibilities . Pizza?
nting to see. Living far Mushroom, pepperoni, black
rom campus will reduce the olive, or sausage? Salad
' ikelihood of those sudden Dressing? French, Italian,
·ts. However, this can lead creamy, local, ranch , or
Thousand Island? Milk?
a feeling of isolation .
Transportation is yet Skim , homogenized , or
nother obstacle that the off chocolate? Bread? White ,

wheat, or rye?
Dishes piled in the sink,
pots and pans filled with
leftovers from the night
before still on the stove, a
half-dozen , half-filled
glasses sitting in the living
room, newspapers, books
and magazines spread
throughout the living and
dining room are many duties
that are sometimes
overlooked when bus y
students live together.

" Keeping the house clean
is difficult. obody feels like
cleaning at the same time so
usually one person cleans at
a time. Once I cleaned the
entire kitchen and living
room, and when I got home
from work 8 hours later the
place was a mess! " said an off
campus student with three
roommates.
All in all, off campus living is exasperating, but fun .

As the time required for class and
extracurricular activities increases,
household tasks are sometimes
overlooked.
Did Maggie Connely resort to the
warm confines of the theiitre after
being locked out of her apiirtment ?

Off Campus Living - 33

�Sixth Street: Where the Action I
Crammed

with

bars,

hotels, art galler1es, hot tub
spas, restaurants, and live
theatres, East Sixth Street
from Congress to Inter·
regional Highway is Aust1n's
vers•on of Bourbon Street.
Every weekend and during
the week, {but only when
there a re no classes the next

day), students can be found
enJoying the many forms of
entertainment along the
stnp.
Throughout the year on
certain holidays the city officials close portions of East
S1xth to motor vehicles and
people fill the street like
Mardi Gras in New O rleans.
Halloween is one of those
days. People in costumes

ranging from the bizarre
creatures of the undead
movies to Snow White roam
the street laughing, singing,
dancing, and drinking.
Children sing, mimes in·
flate balloons, food vendors
sell hot dogs and fajitas
while John Lennon look
alikes vend flowers. Often in
the local pubs, students and
sometimes faculty can be
seen consuming beer and
dancing into wee hours of
the morning. On East Sixth

Dt'rt'licU, dt'gt'nt'UIH , ~nd d~mH ,!iu Rich,.d Niu, Micht"llt' c ,mp·
~II, Purct' Burslyn, Dorun Dt'viu ,
K~y M il~m. Cindy OIHn, ~nd john
U g•n - inudt' ont' ofSi-lh Slrt't'l'•
hoi spob fo r • night of mt"rrym•king.

34 - 6th Street

Street o ne can locate almost
any form of entertainment to
complete an evemng o r
begin one. It is difficult to
walk along Sixth Street on a'
Friday or Saturday night and
not find several people with
whom you are acquainted
and some with whom you
wish you were.
All of what Sixth Street is
now is comparatively recent
Five or six years ago it was a
run down turn of the century set of buildings housing
roaches and rodents withj
two and four legs. Renovation is the god of East Sixth
Street. Where dirty book
stores once were, are now expensive French restaurants
and where used clothing und
furniture stores once were
are now live theatres.

I

:r~:1t~ ~~a!n~~ ~h~ 0n:~~

n
n
for a "village area" to satisfy
the more cosmopolitan immigrants and university
students.

�All

orts of

p~opl~ c~n b~

~long

Au tin '

from

flow~r

found
Bourbon tr~et
p~opl~ to busin

~ ~cutiv~ .

R~n

ing from b~lloon to button
find ~n
ort of ouv~nirs
i Lh tr~~t.

on~ c~n
~lon

6th Str

t - 35

�What better way to get out
and leave the pressures of
school for a while than to
dance yo ur heart out?
Dances were regular events
this year with various
themes accounting for
various types of music.
The annual Welcome Back

Sixteen Year Old Charlie Sexton, of
the Charlie Sexton Eager Beaver
Boys, performs at a dance in the
ReUnion.

Dance, Beach Bash, with its
swinging surfers and hula
girls, and the semi-formal
Spring Fling Dance were
once again big successes.
New themes for this year
were the Vacation Bash and
Club Night, each of which
were a hit and may soon
become an annual event.
Of course, a dance is not a
success unless there is music,
happy faces and clicking
fingers. This year was

highlighted by a number ol
performances by up anc
coming local talent. Om
such talent, Charlie Sexton
and the Eager Beaver Boys,
gave a fantastic show that
had the floor packed with
spastic dancers . Jesse
Sublett's Secret Six, featur·
ing student Nancy Reynolds,
also played funk and rhythm
tunes for dancers .
Other bands that per·
formed were Random
Culture, Ernie Sky and the
K-Tels, and Chase .
Usually , the dances
proved successful because
they provided students with
a chance to meet new people,
get some exercise, relax from
the daily pressures of school
and work, and most of all, to
have fun!

Junior Mitch Zuk shows his movet
out on the dance floor .

Murbza Ally and Irene Arteaga
dan ce to the musi c of the Fanatics.
The annual Beach Bash held in October allows tuden ts to dre
in
beach attire and look forward to
warmer days.

n

�"

Dance in the Atrium allow for ad di t ional pace and give tudent a
change to Ia e a break from the
dancing and watch from above .
Michelle Huff and Bill Fole
whoop it up at one of the man
dance throughout the en.

Dane

-3

�,

The Seniors' bubble bursts when
Brayde McClure's balloon explodes
and the Seniors are dropped from
the competition.

Martha St. Romain is crowned
pring Fling Queen b y last y ear' s
queen , Cindy Bu tamante .
lourde Rui z- Arthur, vice pre ident of the Junior Ia , pin a
boutonniere on Duke, Jerry Farria , at the emi - Formal Dance.

p nn g Fl ing \ cd.

�Spring Flings Crazy Olympics
Spring Fltng Week, pon or d
by SA , wa held March 25-31
and provid d a variety of
activitie .
The razy Olympic started
the week off with each cia
comp ting again t each other.
The competition included such
games a the Water Balloon
Toss, the Life aver Pa s, Simon
Says, and a Tug 0 War.
The Freshman class won the
over-all competition with the
Senior
in
econd place ,
Sophomore in third and the
Junior cia in last place .
In the middle of the week a
Health Fair wa held in the
Atrium . It included a variety of
display about nutrition, a viion
creening , weight and
height ch ck and information
on various di ea e .
Yet another day during the
week aw Robert York, a juggler, magician , and comic perform on the patio and later that
night an op n mike in the

ReUnion .
Thew ek concluded with the
Spring Fling Semi-Formal
Dance. " Sunri e," a band from
San Antonio, provided the
entertainment in the Atrium .
During the Dance the Spring
Fling Court wa announced .
Martha St. Romain was crowned
Queen and Ellis Mantel wa
crowned King . The rest of the
court consisted of Juniors -

Kathy Lmd , Jerry Farria ,
Sophomore - Greg Bourgeoi ,
Diane Gran ; and Freshman
Candy Gomez and Jill Gile .

Deb Oliver ilnd Kri til Bockoven
listen closely to Simon.

The Three C' of The Water Balloon
Toss - Careful! Concentrate! Ciltch
It!

Thi con te lilnt in the clothe rel01y
i not 01bout to get Cilught with her
p01nts down .
tuden
enjoy the music performed b the bilnd , " unri e," ill
the emi-Formill Oilnce.

pring Ftin W

-39

�Student Revue Live from Austin, Texas, it's
the Annual Student Revue!
For the third consecutive year,
the SAC-sponsored event enjoyed great success, playing to
almost a full house . It was codirected by Kathy Harris and
Mike Cote.
Along with Cote and Harris,
the show was put together by
a group of about 20 students,
each of whom contributed to
all aspects of the production.
Takeoffs on the Tasters'
&lt;1:hoice coffee achievers commercials, Thriller video, and
the news were interspersed
throughout the program. In a
skit reminiscent of the
Lawrence Welk Show, the
Omni Singers performed amid
a shower of bubbles.
The show was filled with
spoofs on an assortment of
things ranging from musical

Paul Contreras is one of the nonliving in the spoof of "Thriller."

St. Ed 's an s wer to Christie
Brinkley, Carol Foran, shows her
stuff during the talent s how of the
Miss Grotto Contest.
John Hawkins and Caro la Summers imi tates M ichael Jackson's
"Th riller" video.

tud nt R

u

Taking It Off

numbers to television game
shows. In one such skit, Mike
Cote played host to a panel of
"Celebrities" Cary Cadwallader, Carola Summers,
and Michele Simpson - on
"What's My Ailment?"
Once again, the main event
of the show, the Miss Grotto
Contest, featured a wellrounded group of contestants.
Miss Photo-Communication,
Miss Baseball Dugout, Miss
Speedbumps, Miss Health
Center and Miss Mt. Carmel
Annex comprised the diversified field with Carol Foran,
Jill Giles, Karen Korzenko,
Michele Simpson, and Julie
Jirousek ably performing in
the respective roles.
The audience was kept in
suspense as to who would be
named Miss Grotto of 1984. It
came down to a choice between Miss Speedbumps or
Miss Baseball Dugout, with
Miss Speedbumps gaining the
title .
Tradition was broken,

however, when last year',
winner, Miss Cafeteria, wa
unable to crown the new Mis
Grotto . Emcee Rob Muir in
formed a stunned crowd tha
Miss Cafeteria, while perform
ing the talent which gaine
her last year's victory - stuff
ing a pack of hot dogs into he
mouth - had an unfortunat
accident and was kicking u
daisies in that great dinin
hall in the sky.
The crowning of the ne
Miss Grotto brought thi
year's Student Revue to an
end, but not before a final cur
tain call for the many talented
yo ung people who put the
show together.

Sonny Cloud, " the eye in
weather man," a. k .a .
Pulliam, describes a severe
of showers during the news
ment of the Student Revue.

�Michael Jackson a t St. Ed' ?
During a n i nt erview wi th ta lk
s ho w h os t M i ke Co te, Russi an
de fector Vlad im ir Krus hn ik, expresses h is d esire to be a reggae
"g ro up ."

Pepper Minton warm up to the
crowd with a rendition of " Raule
Dazzle."
Miss Health Center, Michele impon , restrain her enthu ia m after
being named third runner-up in
the Miss Grotto Conte l.

tud nt R vue- 41

�An important part of the accounting
major is the accounting lab, where
students can get help with their
studies.
Assistant professor of Spanish, Miguel
A. Nino, presents a speech entitled
"Freedom or Bondage of the Press."

2-

d mi

�Academics

ime of Passage
Educational experiences at a small university can be a
efreshing change from large state institutions with
lasses of more than 100 students. Professors at larger
iversities often lecture in a monotone from a podium
early a football field away as students write furiously
d strain to hear. Students rarely have the opportunity to
k questions or hold private interviews to discuss probems or coursework progress.
Tucked away in South Austin overlooking downtown is
he alternative. With a student/teacher ratio of 19 to one,
veryone has the opportunity to have his/her needs adessed. Students from all over the world live in educaional and spiritual convivium.
Specializing in a liberal arts curriculum, a unique blend
f classroom and life situations offers students much more
han the numbers game at Behemoth State.
ring the Open House usisunt pror St~n Irvin demonstr~tes pottery
echniques ~nd results ~~~ ~ curious iiUIence looks on with interest.

The Atrium provides ~ ch~nge of ~t­
mosphere for studying or rel~xing between cl~sllt!S.

Academic - 43

�The ladies in the cas t carefull y appl y make-up before a performance.
Garcon wait patientl y a Lad y
Bro ck hurs t deci de what to drink .

44 - Th ' tltr '

�'The Boyfriend'

High energy mixed with
directing, choreography and
individ ual style marked the
theatre's season opening
show, "The Boyfriend," a
play by Sandy Wilson . The
I musical comedy was directed
by Susan Loughran with
staff members Don Seay, Br.
Gerald Muller, and Renata
Sanford h elping in th e
production .
A sty lish love story, it

Hortense
Maisie
Dulcie
Fay ..
Nancy
Polly Browne
Marcel ..
Pierre ... . .
Alphonse . . .
Madame Dubonnet
Bobby Van Husen .
Percival Browne .
Tony . . . . . . . .
Lord Brockhurst .
Lady Brockhurst .
Pepe ..
Lolita .
Aaroon

takes place on the French
Riviera in 1923. It is both a
story of young love, that of
Tony and Polly, and unrequited love, that of Madame
Dubonnet and Percival
Browne .
An upbeat show, it is
characteristic of the Roaring
Twenties, with its flappers
and boop-boop-dee-doos,
and its " happily ever after"
ending.

Percival is shocked at Madame
Dubonnet's true identity - an old
flame.

The Cast
. Pepper Minton
. Rozie Ward
. Angela Rodriquez
. Margaret Connelly
. Jill Giles
. Julie Jirousek
. Michael Stack
. Paul Contreras
. Alan Lee
. Helena Lyczak
. Chris Janovsky
. Rob Muir
. Michael Hinton
. Craig Kanne
. Elise Wagner
. Larry Perez
. Carola Summers
. Gary Cadwallader
Carol Fora.n

Madame Dubonnet and Hortense,
her secretary, make big plans at the
costume part.
The Cast and crew of " The
Boyfriend" take time out to show
that they are having fun with the
show.

45

�Cuol

Ri chard Rich is having second
thoughts about his perjury against
Thomas More.
Wh e n Alice refuses to remove
Thomas' chain of office, th e tas k is
give n to Margaret.

4 - Th

tr

for~

�'A Man for
All Seasons'
The second production of
the fall was "A Man For All
Season ," directed by Mark
Landi and written in 1960
by Briti h pla ywright Robert
Bolt.
The play takes place in
England during the reign of
King H nry VIII and i ba d
on th controve r y which occurred when H nry tried to

Common Man
Thomas More
Richard Rich
Norfolk . . . .
Lady Alice ..
Margaret More
Cardinal Wolsey
Cromwell ...
Senor Chapuy
Attendant ...
Will Roper . .
King Henry VIII
Woman . . . . . .
Archbi hop Cramner .

get his marriage to Catherine
of Aragon annulled.
The principal character is
Sir Thomas More , a
respected statesman who
must give his consent to the
annulment before the Pope
will consider it. It is More's
refu al to do so which is the
primary action of the play .

The Cast
. James Daniels
. Donald W. Seay
. John-Michael Eagan
. Mark Bernstein
. Elise Wagner
. Martha Patino
. Ted Watson
. Jared Foster
. Fr. Leroy Clementich
. Matthew Miller
. George Brock
. Rob Muir
. Helena Lyczak
. Mitch Zuk

Margaret begs her f~ther to ~ccep t
Queen Anne .u Henry' wife.
Be c~u e of hi refu al to consent to
the King '
econd marria e,
Thoma More prepare for death .

Th atr -47

�'A Con1pany of
Wayward Saints'
Commedia del Artel visits
the Mary Moody Northern
Theater via " A Company of
Wayward Saints." Trapped
in time and bored of playing
the same roles for so many
years these players have fun
breaking through their roles
and showing off their own
particular talents of improvization. Communication

breaks down and the troupe
faces many difficulties in
looking for the most meaningful moment in life. They
break apart and reunite in a
serie s of improvized
moments in life. They slowly
recapture the art they were
searching for and become
once again " A Company of
Wayward Saints."

The Cast
Lew Horn ......... ......... .. . ........ .. Pantalone
George Brock ............ . ... . .. .. .. .. .. . Harlequin
Christopher Cho .............. . .. ........ . . Scapino
Chuck Pulliam ... ......... . .... . . . ... . . . ... Dottore
Mark Bernstein .......... . . . ...... ..... . .. Capitano
Alan Lee ............. . .. .. ........ . .... .. . Tristano
Jill Giles .. .. . . . . . ... .. .. . . ................ . Isabella
Sharon Round .. . .. .. . . .. ............... Colombine
Maggie Connelly .... . . .................. .. Ruffiana
Gary Caldwallader .. . .. . .. .... . .. . .. .... Understudy

Dottore a ttempts to diagnose Pan talone's ailment.
Harlequin introdu ces Ruffiana to
the audience.

4 - Th a tr

�Colombine thrntens Capiwo u
Pantalone prepart!S to tep in.
Pantalone ervt!S u a comic relief
amid t the confu ion in the
compan .

C.a.rol Fo n .a

Th atre- 49

�-

'Summer and Smoke'
Soap opera star Peter
Bergman, Cliff Warner on
ABC's All My Children,
starred in Mary Moody Northen Theatre's production of
"Summer and Smoke ."
The Tennessee Williams
drama spans the summer and
winter of 1915 in Glorious
Hill, Mississippi. It focuses

on the unrequited love of a
proper minister's daughter
for the irresponsible and
young Dr. Johnny Buchanan
Jr .
" Summer and Smoke,"
under the direction of
Donald Seay, was the last
performance of the season.

The Cast
REVEREND WINEMILLER ...... .... MARK LANDIS
MRS. WINEMILLER ... ......... MAlA FORSTCHEN
JOHN BUCHANAN, JR ........... PETER BERGMAN
ALMA WINEMILLER ....... .. .... PEPPER MINTON
ROSA GONZALES .......... . . . . . MARTHA PATINO
NELLIE EWELL ................... TRACY HARNEY
ROGER DOREMUS .......... GARY CADWALLADER
DR. JOHN BUCHANAN, SR . ... DARRYL WIMBERLY
MRS. BASSET ........ . ... . ..... MICHELE SIMPSON
VERNON .... . ....... . . .. . . ... NORMAN FREELAN
ROSEMARY ...... . .............. JILL SINGLETARY
PEDRO ............................. LARRY PEREZ
GONZALES ............. .... ........... ROB MUIR
ARCHIE KRAMER .............. MARK BERNSTEIN
UNDERSTUDY TO
DR. BUCHANAN, JR ............. GEORGE BROCK

li
j

I•

Rosa, realizing the anger her
outspokenness has caused, fears
the worst as Dr. Buchanan, Sr.
orders Rosa Gonzales and the party
members out of his house.

Young Nellie does not understand
why Miss Alma does not share her
happiness in the announcement of
her engagement to Dr. Johnny,
who was Alma's life long love.

T he
ummers c~n be un co mforbbl
ho t in
lorious Hill,
Mi i ippi, ~nd Mrs. Winemiller
~c t ~ccordingl .

rol Foran

- Th atr '

�Alma trie to prove to Johnny that
she is not afraid of doctors (or him)
anymore, but his thoughts are occupied with his fiancee.
Or. Johnny tries desperately to
answer the nosey questions of Mrs.
Buset as Alma looks on .

... •...

Mrs. Winemiller may have seemed
demented , but she makes it clear to
her husband that she knew euctly
what Alma was doing when he
watched through the window the
goings on at the house next door.

Th atr -51

�omputer Programming Becomes Universal
In the quest for a computerized American society, the
university is definitely doing its
part to help in the transition .
Br. Steven Walsh, president of
the university, wants all the
students who graduate to be
computer literate.
Kenn Whiteside, director of
the LRC, who is responsible for

II
Comp uter science whiz Hamoon
Hedayat is a welcome sig ht for
stu dents working on programs.
As ista nt Professor David Wright
co nsults with a student about a
program problem after class.

2-

mputr

Richard Nin

academic computing, said this
" is a good goal."
Already , more than 500
students are using computers.
And not all of them are computer science students.
"We're branching out, continuing to serve more students.
We're becoming more diversified," said Whiteside . Computers are now being utilized by
students in business, chemistry,
and psychology.
Even Freshman Studies has
been hit. Last semester, five or
six students were taught text
editing to see if it would improve their ability to write .
The computer program has
" grown rapidly over the last
two years," said Whiteside.
They used to buy computer time
from UT, but now they have
their own independent system.
Students can use two types of
computers. One is the TI 99 / 4A,
a microcomputer. Since this
model has been phased out,
there are definite plans to
upgrade the personal microcomputing equipment.
The other model is the DEC
PDP-11 / 44 . Because this
minicomputer can be hooked up
to several terminals, it is faster,

more powerful, and more versatile than the microcomputers.
" We're still adding equipment this yea r," said Whiteside,
" and we' re adding more and
more applications packages."
One addition is an electronic
spread sheet, a tool that makes
business projections and
forecasts . This is useful in any
field which involves planning
quantities.
The main problem with expansion, Whiteside explains, is
that " we' re running out of
physical space for people ."
Whiteside is not sure what
the next one or two yea rs hold
for the computer program .
" Future expansion is very complicated . There are lots of
scenarios for the yea rs to come."
One idea Whiteside projects is
a campus-wide communications
system. Terminals in Fleck Hall,
the library, and other buildings
could all communicate with a
central computer.
Regardless of funding, which
determ ines how much equipment can be added, '.'we' ll continue to make provisions,"
Whiteside assures .

�Tl·99/t: &amp;
f

,,.,~, ,,,

For tudenls with home com put rs ,
the Tl-99's are a familiar ight , a
the are u ed in personal co m puting cl~ e .
For computer scie nce s tudents ,
uch a Robert Murph , the term
" homework " took on a new mean ing. a their homework wa don
in the
omputer enter on the
RT' .

.

i

mput r

1

nc -53

�Basic skills, accounting centers compliment classroom instruction

.-....-abs Give Students Chance to Gain Upper Hand
Sometimes it takes more than
a professor, a textbook and a
classroom to nail down a subject. To help stu dents over th e
hump, the university created an
innovative group of learning
labs in such basic skills as
reading , writing, listening ,
math, and in academic programs
such as accou n ting.
Some students are required to
attend the learning labs due to
their entrance exam resu lts.
Others attend beca use they
want to improve their skills.
Dr . Robin Bu ck-Smith,
Reading Lab director, explained
that her lab is divided in to one

section for classes and one section for stu d en ts who wan t to
work with various reading
materials. Some stude n ts come
to th e lab to improve study
tecpniques .
The Writing Center, housed
in Sorin Hall, includes the lab
and a center where anyone can
come for help with writing .
Students who have a Research
and Critical Missions (RCM)
class also come in to get additional input.
Cecil Lawson, Writing Lab instructor, said the lab's objective
is "to help develop skills lost,
that students never had, or just

Finding time for labs makes a difference in the classroom.
Help! Accounting Lab offers
students a chance to get the figures
straight.

54 -

b

missed as a result of various
educational backgrounds."
Students who are required to
take th e course must complete a
series of steps and tests designed to teac h their basic En glish
skills.
Dr. Patricia O'Connor, director of the Writing Center, said
the Writing and Listening labs
were developed as support
mechanisms for the Freshman
Studies program .
Dr. Terry Newton, Listening
Lab director, said most people
have only a 20 per cent listening
efficiency . The purpose of the
lab is to help students raise that
percentage, and learn to retain,
record and organize information . Students listen to tapes
and lectures, take notes, answer
questionnaires and participate
in group discussions. Listening
is also located in Sorin Hall.
Math Lab, listed as Math 9,
helps students learn arithmetic
and algebraic skills, explains
Mavis Waggoner and Br. Mark
Rufe, math lab instructors.

"The Math Lab helps students
get ready to be su ccessfu l in college math courses," Waggoner
said. Th e lab offers in dividualized tu toring on Wednesday
even ings in Fleck Hall.
Somewhat different from the
basic skills labs is the Accounting Lab . All studen ts who take
such lower-division cou rses as
Principles of Accounting, Cost
Accounting and Tax Accoun ting
are required to pay a $5 fee per
class each semester for the labs,
alth ough no one is required to
attend lab.
"Basically the Accounting Lab
is a place where you can go to
get help on you r homework
problems and ask questions,"
explained Rich ard Ginn, senior
accounting major. The lab does
not supply calculators or computers. " If you want it, you bring it," he said.
As with the basic skills labs,
upper division students work as
interns or tutors in the Accounting Lab.

�The Force is with Johnn y Y~nez
as he works in the Re~ding ub.
ubs in Mood y, Fleck ~nd Sorin
halls are open at various hours
to help students improve their
learning skills.

C.IH \1\'\
Li tening ub
director Terry
urs.

tudents ~nd
ewton ~re ~II

Lab -

~s

�Andy Lyon poses for AI Puente as
he converts his dorm room into a
studio.
AI Puente contemplates a difficult
expo ure.

5 - Photo-

)mm

�hoto Prograin Developing
In th
pring the Photo- a photo-communications / art
Communications tract was complex to house the new
thre
year
old . As the major, but they succumbed
univ rsity prepared to to building delays, budget
graduate it
first majors, cuts, and city ordinances.
student
remembered the Revised plans were to conearly day and looked for- struct a caled-down version .
ward to th fulfillment of Color facilities were put on
hold pending the fate of the
the undertaking.
The program was designed p hoto-comm un ica tions
to teach vi ual literacy and building . As the year closed,
provid
ompetent, hireable hopes for an early complephotograph r for the job tion of the substitute edifice
mark t. A 48-hour major re- were raised when the board
quirem nt was in tituted to of directors approved the
allow tud nt to concen- plan .
Ri on Reed was added as
trate in four photographic
area : writing for the media, an adjunct instructor in the
vid o, studio and audio- spring to teach color audiovi ual. Th goal was to teach
photography a a liberal art,
how oth r di cipline related
to it and how photographs
communicate . Mo t in titution
att mpt to teach
photography a an adjunct to
other ar a of concentration .
Cone ptually the program
wa a brilliant troke, and by
year' nd the major boasted
mor than 45 major , well
ahead fall projections.
Initial plan wer to build

visual. The first graduate of
the program, Bob Labry,
said, " I believe the program
is very good . With some
minor adjustments in the
curriculum, it could be
great."
He added: " The progress
of the program can hardly be
discounted , even with the
minor setbacks experienced
this year."

Howard 0 borne critiques hi color slides for the new photography
course - Visual Communication
Aids.

Over 200 photographs Ia on the
floor of Mood
trium a judges
ch e th best work for the first

AI

ust in provi de
for phot o raph

a d iverse
tuden .

e tt in

Darkroo m che m ica l tak e t he1r toll
on Richud in aft e r lo n ho u rs t n
th e I. b.

Ph t -C mm-

P~n t ~

�The beauty of each day culminated
with a s pectacular s unset.
Chri s tine Jamis on and Kay Milam
press on during a challenging five
mil e hike.

The group vi it Mexico, arriving
by rowboat aero s the Rio Grande.
Ka y Milam , pent after a long hike,
plop down for a nooze .

5 - Big

'nd

�Photo students get caught in the light

Big Bend Experience
The Big Bend was the
plac , it was said by the Indians, that "when the Great
Spirit finished making the
earth, He had a lot of extra
material left over o He
threw it down here creating
the Big B nd." Jan Term
brought a unique way to
earn two emester hour '
photo credit for students. A
field trip to the Big B nd National Park was the in piration of Bill Kennedy, director of th
Photo-Communications Program .
Six tudents, two in truetors and one assistant pent
ix days and five nights in
the B nd traveling from

Marathon to different areas
each day . Lodging at the
beautifully restored 19th
century Gage Hotel and
three meals per day were included in the package price
of $175.
Days began before sunrise
at 6:30 a.m ., with car trips to
interesting places in the park
and outlying areas, including the Window Trail,
Grapevine Hills , Glen
Spring and Boquillas, Mexico . Other expeditions included a visit to the ghost
town of Terlinqua and the
Rio Grande canyons of Santa
Elena and Boquillas. A side
trip to a natural hot spring

on the north bank of the Rio
Grande was a welcome relief
to feet sore from hiking all
day .
In the evenings students
and instructors shared e periences and photo ideas
and traded tall tales of the
desert over home-cooked
meals. Slide shows and critiques were held several evenings to complete the traditional photographic field
experience.
Richard Nira, a student on
the trip, said, "Every place
offered a unique opportunity
to take pictures that you ordinarily wouldn ' t find in a
semester in Austin ."
For Clevelander Cindy
Olsen it was the first time
she had seen the country
west of the Pecos. " I had no
idea Texas looked like this .
It's beautiful and different
from anything I've ever
seen."
Everyone who went
agreed that the chance to get
away from the tensions of
school life into a quiet place
to take pictures was a n ice
way to spend Jan Term .

Bob Labry' rendition of the " Fool
on the Hill."

The ho tel in Muathon wa a
w elcome sight after a long day of
exploring.

atu re h;os a tende nc to nu up
o n o ne " from behi nd ." Carol Foran
refuses to it down aft r a bad exp rience with a cactu .
ftu an e ha lin da of h1
th e group' elde , Todd
Bill enned and Bob La
for a bri f respite .

Big Bend- 59

�Long blackboards are nece ary for
the photo ynthesis equation which
Dr. Jimmy Mills explain .
Academy of Science Pre ident Beau
Ranheim yells to the upper reaches
of Moody Hall to attract pro pective customers to the plant ale .

0-

r

nh u

�Students provided with extra educational opportunities

reenhouse Enlivens Campus
In classroom situations
students learn from professors or by watching data
flicker across a computer
monitor.
In the library students
learn by reading the many
books available. These are
the more traditional ways
students gain knowledge .
But the greenhouse offers
a unique learning encounter.
The greenhouse, located between Fleck Hall and the
Scarborough-Ph ill ips
Library, gives students a
first-hand opportunity to
observe many of the
wonders of nature.
"The greenhouse holds a
collection of specimen
plants," said associate professor of physical and
biological sciences, Jimmy
Mills. The plants are used for
student projects and an extension of the clsassroom
experience.
Mills added that the
greenhouse is used to nurture ick plants back to
health by the use of fairly
constant temperatures.

In the summer the
temperature is never allowed to exceed 85 degrees,
while in the winter it is not
allowed to drop below 70
degrees.
The greenhouse was built
four years ago by Mills,
Brother Daniel Lynch, and
two ex-students, Casey Hector and Henry Noble. The
crew received sporadic help
from Brother Louis Coe and
the members of the Physical
Plant staff. Beginning early
each morning, the crew
worked until driven indoors
by the hot summer sun.
Costing a total of $16,000
to build, the greenhouse
replaced the old facility,
which was located on top of
Fleck Hall. A larger facility
was needed to meet growing
demands, but an engineering study showed that the
roof of Fleck could support
no additional weight. Hence
the decision to build a new
greenhouse with funds made
available from a gift.
A $15,000 grant to the
university was made

available by faculty
members. The gift was from
local residents Mr. and Mrs.
Milston Hart.
Lynch and Mills are essentially responsible for the
maintenance . During the
year the crew regulates the
temperature by constantly
checking the air conditioning and heating systems. Insect control is obviously an
important task, as is proper

watering. During the school
year student volunteers,
such as Maria Silva and
Steve Davis, help with the
chores but during the summer it's up to Mills and
Lynch to keep things going.
The greenhouse not only
nurtures beautiful plants,
but also stands as a symbolic
monument to the cooperation between area residents,
students, and faculty .

Longtime professor, Br. Daniel
Lynch, contemplates his next
chemical concoction.
The greenhouse building, like the
plants inside, point toward the sky.

Greenhouse- 61

�New College Dean Jean Meyer and
faculty members Anna Bolling and
Joanne Sanchez take a break from
teaching.
Under the admini !ration of Dean
Jean Meyer and Ass is tant Dean
David Williams, the New College
s tudent population has grown to
almos t 700 s tudents from around
the s tat e.

...

.

...c

~

&lt;

.i
0

"'

62 -

�People from all walks of life

arn a Unique Degree
Almost 700 members of the
st ud ent population came to the
university for a degree no one
else could offer them .
They came for New College, a
specia l program which enables
them to learn and complete a
degree while still working full
or part tim e and taking ca re of
families .
New College ern phasizes
learning rather than the learning situati on and makes it possible for students to earn credit in
eve ral ways. They can take
co urses in the traditional way,
atte nding classes with oth er
stud e nts at th e university . Th ey
also can take co urses on an individual basis, working closely
with New Co llege faculty . In
addition, s tud ents prepare a
rtfo lio o utlining their past
rning expe riences, such as
rning on the job, and transfer
it from ot her accredited
instituti ons.
But New Coll ege is more than
program .
" In many respects, New College is the people in the proram ," says Dr. Jean Meyer,
n of New College . "One of
delightful discoveries made
people new to this program
their colleagues are really
human beings - whether

they are bankers, aerospace
workers , drug counselors ,
teachers' aides, homemakers, or
employees at IBM, Tracor and
M otorola ," Dean Meyer
explains .
She notes that adults enrolled
in New College major in a variety of fields ranging from
business and public administration to gerontology, education
or English .
They represent a cross-section
of racial, cultural, and religious
backgrounds and their ages
range into the 70' s. Although
most New College students live
in Austin or Travis County,
others live in such far parts of
the state as Brownwood and
Houston .
Students a re positive about
their experiences with New
College .
" I had attended other universities that were large and traditional ," saxs Cheryl Travis of
Houston . ' I never felt I was being given the credibility as an
individual that I've gotten at St.
Edward's. The staff has been extremely responsive to my needs
and to what I have wanted to
get out of th e program."
Gurnisindo Gonzales of
Taylor has three sons and says
his family comes first in life. " I

structure my schedule so that
my school work does no t interfere with my famil y life," he
said . For someone with a family,
community obligations, and a
job, New College is a motivation
to go to school and stay in
school."
Jasper Francis of Harlingen
said he enrolled in colle9e for
himself. " The St. Edwards program allowed me to gain credit
for my learning through many
years of experience in the
business world . This is definitely in my favor, since I've been
in the business world all of my
working life," Francis said .
Elias Limon of Austin felt the
traditional classroom environment would not work for him .
New College, with its individualized, self-paced instruction , offered a solution . He says
he likes the colloquium sessions, personal attention to
students and one-on-one
instruction.
" They know you are there,"
Limon says.
An operation as big as New College
requires careful management .
Mary Gill, assistant to the dean,
and David Williams discuss some
paperwork.

Faculty member John Houghton
and Assistant Dean David
Williams are among the more th..n
100 resource persons ava ilable to
New College students.
Open House found many people
interested in the New College table
manned by Joe 0 ' uJ , ew College faculty member.

ew College - 63

I

�A young relative of a recipient
checks out the crazy people sitting
behind her taking pictures.
The evening brought out mutual
appreciation between student and
faculty. Joy Lock presented Pati
Juarez the Outstanding Social
Work Student Award.

- Hn

igh t

�Honors Night recognizes hard workers

rue Dedication Rewarded
tudent , fa ulty and taff
r r ognized for th eir
t tanding ontributions to
univ r ity
n Hon o rs
ight, held in th Dining
all on April 30.
Dr . Emma Lou Linn,
hairpers n of th e
e havi ral and Social
D partment, wa
a standing- r omnly cr wd sa w hard rkin g individual s rece iv e
ward s f r th ir time and
ffort.
Winning th e much anicipated Man and Woman of
he Y ar award w e r K vin
ontgom ry and Martha St.
main . Th
other three
nali t for the Man of th e
r award w r
Richard
nni Kan and Pete
while th
thr e
for W man of th e
ea r w r Ther a Mader,
huler and Marina

or
or

of Hum anities Pete Pesoli
ach received awards for 30
y ars of
ervice to th
univ r ity .
Bu ine s in tructor Cathy
Weber won the teaching exaward;
he wa
c II nc
ch sen by students from
othe r nominees as an
outstanding faculty person .
Wal h al o pre ented the
Pre id nt' Special Service
Award to all member of
th ph ysical plant staff for
th ei r xcellent work while
num rous campus offices
w e r being moved due to the
main building renovation,
and to Virginia Dailey for
her continuing excellent service to th e univer ity .
Al o awa rd d during the
eve ning were more than
$15,000 in cholarship to actudent leaders. The
tive
mon y wa
rai ed by
stud nt , who appealed to
local bu ine es for funds .
Senior Dennis Kane won
th e newly e tablished
Brother Dani I Lynch
cholar hip Award. Kane
plan
to attend medical
scho lin San Antonio .
During th
proceeding ,
th Hilltopper Chorale, led
by Brother G raid Mull er,

ent rtained by performing a
lection from "Elijah ."
The crowd wa treated to
refreshment when the program was over, a another
year of hard work and
dedication paid off for recipi nt of the awards .

Kevin Montgomery and Martha t.
Romain will be remembered a
Man and Woman of the Year for
19 3- 4.
Deni e Klodnicki' hard work in
s tudent activitie wa reco nized
b Brother John Thornton , actin
dean of s tudents, a
he won the
Out tand ing
tudent Acti itie
Council Member Award .

�I

Sports

Passage

I

The Recreation/Convocation Center remained on
drawing board, but sports continued in a positive
nonetheless. The fall brought a new Athletic Director.
Coach John Knorr, head baseball coach, was named new
Athletic Director, replacing Sr. Jean Burbo who had been
acting Athletic Director since the removal of Dan Montgomery. The soccer team provided another highlight
the fall as they went undefeated.
The spring began on a down beat as the lights went out
in the St. Mary's gym, postponing the men's and women
basketball games. But as spring continued, the Hilltopper
teams took on a new light. The baseball team climbed to a
national ranking while the women's and men's tennis
teams closed in on the conference titles. Intramurals continued to be popular as students, faculty and staff formed
teams hoping to win a coveted intramural championship
t-shirt.

-

Time-outa during volleyball games
provide Diane Daniela a chance to
give the team pointen.
During fall practice, senior Ellis
Montet listens as new head CNch Tom
Pate explain various •peds of the
offense.

�Men's tennis co~ch
Br. Emmett
Strohmeyer hel~
R~ndy Pollud
with his serve in
pre~r~tion for
conference puy.

�Toppers Fall Short
For the second straight year the
men's basketball team ended its season
against perennial archrival St. Mary's,
as the Toppers lost on a last second shot
to end their playoff hopes.
But it was a successful season. Tom
Pate, in his first year as coaching the
Toppers, led the team to a 14-21 record .
It was his first year as a head coach at
the colleg~ate level, and his calm style
inspired his players through many
close contests.
The season started slow but finished
fast for the team as just two of the first
14 games were at home, against opponents such as Southern Methodist
University and Houston Baptist, both
NCAA schools, and played on the road
against similarly tough teams such as
Southwestern University and Southeast
Texas State University.
But once the Toppers got past that
tough stretch of games, the team
entered conference play and, with
some games at home, became a tough
host themselves.
The most impressive stretch of the
season came in late January and early

February when the Toppers won five in
a row during a five game homestand.
After a close win against Texas
Lutheran College, the Toppers went on
a tear that saw them outscore their opponents by an average of 25 points a
game, with three of those blowouts
coming against conference opponents.
But the Toppers had to hit the road
again for three of their last four conference games, winning only one of
those, including the heartbreaking loss
to St. Mary's which killed the Toppers'
playoff hopes.
Leading the Toppers this season was
sophomore DeNell Davis, who set a
single season scoring record with 599
points, averaging out to a team leading
17.1 points per game.
Ellis Montet was the only senior
starting on the team, playing in all 35
games and averaging eight points per
game; he was second on the team in
assists with a 2.4 average .

Jerry Farias takes a break from play while Coach
Pate encourages the team from the sideline.

The job of s ports information d irector is time
cons um ing. In th is po ilion Chris Ryan must
pre pare 01nd kee p st01 tis ti cs o n 0111 of the men 's
bask e tball game ; he c01t che
up du ri ng
halftim e.

i

In th e d i a ppoint ing lo at ho me to I. Mu y's,
G u Be nso n tak e to th e free- th ro w li n e in ~
hope of a b ucket.
:::

- M n ' Ba

1...

tb II

�1 n ' Ba

tball _

�Durin g a game Ass is tant Coa ch Gu y Burleson
checks the s tati s tics and gives tips to the team .

ut tanding pia er De ell Davis show determination as he hoots • penalt .
Jame John on position him elf for the rebound as De ell Davi put up a hot in the
home ictor o er East Te as Bapti t.

70

I ' n'.., I a!-1-. 'I ball

�Basketball
Continued

Brayde McClure and Mike Jones, the
other two senio rs on the team, also contributed to the Toppers' season .
Other statistical leaders of the year
wer Jerry Farias, who led the team in
total as i ts (lll), and Gus Benson, who
was the field goal percentage leader,
shooting 60% from the field . Benson
also led the team in free throw
p rcentage with an 81 % mark .
Davis led the Toppers in rebounding
with 7.7 boards per game, and Farias
pa d out a team leading 3.2 assists per
game .
On offen e, point guard Jerry Farias takes the
ball upcourl between Texas A&amp;l defenders in a
narrow win .
Mnlene Fortuna

Names 8l numbers
Won 14

hri Bentle , Mike Jone ,
lli Monte! , Bra de McClure, Jerry
aria , reg M ers, Mike Ledbetter,
Tro
Malhi , Manager
ernon
Franklin . Bilek row:
i tant Coach
Front row:

Gu Burle on, A istant Coach David
McKe , Chri Collins, Augusta Benon, De ell Davis, Greg Alexander,
Jame John on, tuart chultz, Charlie
Roberts, Allen ears, Coach Tom Pate.

Lost 21

McMurry
Schreiner
Eastern ew Mexico
Schreiner
Sui Ro s
Southwest Texas State
Southern Methodist
Texas A&amp;l
Howard Payne
Angelo Stale
Texa Wesleyan
Southwestern
Howard Payne
Angelo State
Hou ton Baptist
McMurry
Texa A&amp;l
South we I Texas Stale
Schreiner
Sam Houston tate
Texa We leyan
Southwe tern
Huston-Tillotson
Tarleton State
Ea I Te a Baptist
Te a Lutheran
Mary Hardin-Ba lor
SulRo
Hu ton-Tillotson
Ea I Te a Bapti I
Tarleton tate
Texa Lutheran
Mary Hardin-Ba lor
I. Mary'
I. Mary'

66-56
59-69
61-78
65-67
82-79
67-74
88-95
71-70
70-66
70-83
63-81
76-80
68-56
69-72
56-74
74-63
56-55
66-67
69-73
49- 3
60-69
67-73
55-67
92- 1
64-65
2-67
5-62
100-66
-64
2-60
63- 6
6- 5

-63
59- 4
62-64

M n ' Bas

tball- 71

�Defending agains t Our Lad y of the Lake,
Marina Tijerina and Ma y la Salazar converge on
an oppos ing player.
In the season finale against St. Mary's, Ginny
Green soars for a rebound.

T he u d Toppers li ten • tt en tivel • Cooc h
Mc ll ro g ive i n !ruc t io n d ur ing • ti me-o ut.

72 -

om n '

k.et

II

�Lights Go Out Early
on Lady Toppers
The Lady Hilltoppers concluded the
1983-84 season with a 12-15 record .
The Lady Toppers jumped out to an
exce ll e nt sta rt, winning three of their
first four confe rence games. It was, in
fact, the best start ever for the Lady
Toppers.
But things turned sour at the end of
the year as the Lady Toppers lost their
Ia t five co nfe rence games to finish 3-6
in Big State Confe rence (BSC) play .
The turning point came after the
Lady Toppers ca rried th ei r 3-1 conference record into a road game with St.
Mary's. Minu tes before the end of the
first half th e lights went out and the
game was postponed until a later date .
From that time on the women would
not win another conference game, as
th ey had problems offensively and
defensively , especially guarding
against opponent ' fast breaks.
One s tandout performer of the
eason was In ger Brown . She in pired

her teammates with her tough play inside, while leading the Lady Toppers in
scoring with a 12.6 per game average .
She al o led the team in rebounding
with a 13.7 per game average, and also
led in field goal percentage with a 41 %
mark .
Brown was al o named BSC player of
the week during the year for her
efforts.
Only one senior departed from the
team . Forward Marina Tijerina capped
off her career with a last second bucket
in her last game as a Hill topper.
A newcomer adding talent to the
club was Anne Gokelman, an occasional starter who hurt opponents with
her outside shooting .
Other upperclassmen that con tributed to the team were Sonya Binger
who hurt opponents with her bombs
from outside and Tammy Kouba who
harassed opponents with her good
defen e.

Inger Brown battles an Our Lady of the Lake
player for possess ion of the ball.

Co-Captain Marina Tijerina puts up a s hot
agains t East Texas Baptis t College in a disappointing co nference loss.

73

�Ginny Green gets the tap on a jump ball against
Ea t Te a Bapti I College.
In the opening econds of action again I Our
ud of the uke, Tamm Kouba drive the lane
for two.

74 -

m

�Women's
Basketball Continued

Another solid cont r ibutor was
so ph o m ore Ginn y Green (the only
Austinite on th e team ) who shined at
rebo und ing and sh owed lots of hustle .
Sophomore Pattie M cFerren came off
th e bench to provide a tough inside
prese nce and help out Brown on the
boards.
One st rik ing thing about the team
was the number of fre shmen . o fewer
than six of the 12 playe rs were
fres hmen who will add their experi nee and th eir talent in the coming
yea rs.

Point guard Vicki Lewi s directs the offense in a
win over Concordia.
Much ins tru ction is given from the bench.
S haron Mcilroy coaches the Lady Toppers during conference pla y.

Names &amp; numbers

Won 12

o~ml.an \.-1 org~n

ana ger
Manager Debbie rawford ,
Kouba ,
Laura
z.aguirre , Tamm
a lazar,
There a
ampbell , Ma Ia
Petra Resendez, Mar i na Tijerina ,

icki Lewis, Anne Gokelman , on a
Binger, Inger Brown , Ginn Green ,
Karen Ros i, Coach haron M c llro .

Lost 15

Texas Women 's
Schreiner
Wharton
Mary Hardin-Ba ylor
Wharton
Our Lad y of the Lake
Texas Wesle y an
Concordia
Trini t y
am Hou s ton tate
Our Lady of th e Lake
Pan American
orthw e I Mi ouri tat e
Texas Women '
South wes tern
Trinity
chre i ner
Hus ton- Tillotson
E.1 I Texas Baptis t
Texas Lutheran
Ma ry Hardin-Ba lor
Huston-Tillot on
E.lst Texas Bapti t
Texas Lutheran
Mary Hardin-Ba lor
Concordia
t. Mary'

62-57
53-69
71-57
66-72
63-71
6-55
5 - 0
92-71
-51
66-90

- 0
65-6
60-70
55- 47
63- 4
79-69
57-61
6 -65
53-7
6 -60
66 -63
0- 2

6-7
4 - 0
56-59
71-57
6 -79

m n' Ba k tball- 5

�Senior Greg Trlicek is the Toppers' primary
long ball threat, leading the team in home
runs two years straight.
During fall practice, the batting cage is a
familiar site to the players, who spend
everal hours each week polishing their hitting skills.

7 - B

,b 11

�Team Has RecordBreaking Season
It was a record-breaking year for the
baseball team as the Hilltoppers, led by
Coach John Knorr, won more games
than any team in the school's history .
The Toppers were 40-13, with the 40
win total breaking the old record of 38
set in 1980.
The Toppers also had 520 hits, breaking the old record of 505 set in 1959,
442 runs scored, breaking the old
record of 428 set in 1959, and a .369
team batting average, breaking the old
mark of .315 set in '78 and '80.
The team got off to a quick start in
conference play, winning three of their
first four contests. But a doubleheader
against St. Mary's, yanked the Toppers
out of first place in the conference for
good . In those two games, the Toppers
fell behind early and never recovered,
losing both by scores of 5-2 and 4-0.
That doubleheader loss started what
would become a five-game conference
lo ing streak that dampened any hopes
of a conference title .
A District IV playoff berth was still at
stake though , and the Toppers made it
to the playoffs with a six game con-

ference winning streak and a 13 game
overall winning streak.
The Toppers carried the 13 game w in
streak into the playoffs, but ran into the
Rattlers from St. Mary's again , losing by
a score of 9-4 and ending the season just
as it seemed the Toppers were ready to
go a long way .

For the Topper baseball team, the season begin
in earl
eptember with fall practice and does
not end until late in the pring.

Base ball - 77

�Baseball
Continued
Leading the Toppers in a
number of statistical categories
was outfielder Wes Tumey .
Tumey led the team in innings
played with 347, runs scored (61),
hits (70), doubles (14), triples (6),
total bases (102), stolen bases (21)
and sacrifice flies (10) .
Other offensive leaders were
senior standout Greg Trlicek, who
led the team in RBis (58) and
home runs (12), and Lance
Rodgers, who had the team's
highest batting average (.444)
drew the most walks (44) and had
the highest on-base average (.587).

Fireballer Ed Cinek leads a young and improving Topper pitching staff.

Names 8l Numbers
Texas Club
13-2, 12-9, 14-2
Trinity
6-0, 9-6
Austin College
4-0,6-1
Louisiana Tech
5-8
Concordia
14-7, 7-3
Texas Lutheran
6-4
Sui Ross
3-8, S-4, 10-5,
Mary Hardin
12-2
Baylor
2-5, 17-12
Huston Tillotson 6-2
Notre Dame
7-5
Buena Vista
16-11,20-10
St. John 's
12-5, 9-1
Mankato St.
9-0
Southwestern
4-10
Paul Quinn
12-0, 10-0
St. Mary's
2-5, 0-4
Sam Houston State 4-12, 0-2
Concordia
S-0, 15-4
St. Mary's
3-11
Southw~st~rn
11-17
Texas Luth~ran
0-5, 8-11
Schriener
12-0, 8-5
Trinity
18-2, 10-5
Huston Tillotson 5-3, 14-3
Paul Quinn
15-3, 10-1
Mary Hardin
11-5
Baylor
Ea t T~xa Bapti t 19-1, 11 -7, 11-6
8-5
Concordia
9-4
t. Mary's

7 - 8

�During a break in the action , Freshman Doug
Beck discus es hitting strategy with several
teammates.
The Topper bench W&lt;tS bolstered by the addition
of everal tran fers and the return of veterans,
among them sophomore A . ] . Wunik.

Baseball - 79

�'0 -

V )II , b,1ll

�Young Team Gains
Playoff Berth
The Lady Topp r , under the direction of H ad Coach Diane Daniels and
fir t-year A i tant oach Roy Ramo
f und 'them elve
in the district
playoff
against Southwestern.
Although the Topper
found
them elves on th
hort end of the
c re, thi game with the Pirate
marked the fir t time the Lady Topper
had ev r journeyed into p t-season
play .
Two tough conf renee team the
Hilltopper
oppo ed were Texa
Lutheran ollege and St. Mary' . In her
preview analy i of th team , Daniel
n ted that " the team is tronger than
Ia t year in skill." Daniel , at that point,
aw T xa Lutheran a the only team
that would be ahead of the Toppers in
th Big State Confer nee final rankings .

Diving for t he ball, There a Campbell makes an
effort to ave a point.

A the r gular ea on came to an end,
however, the Topper wer tied for
econd with Texa Lutheran behind St.
Mary' . " obody expected St. Mary' to
be a tough a they wer ," tated
Daniei .
The team , which fini hed with a 1916 overall record , wa led by enior captain Marty Binder. Other r turning
player who provided leader hip and
college
xpe rience included : junior
Julieanne deYbarrondo and
ophomore Ginny Green and Pam
Dilworth . Three fre hmen , Anne
Gokelman, Mayla Salazar and There a
Campbell, rounded out the team .
DeYbarrondo's con istently
olid
play earned her a slot on the AllDistrict team . DeYbarrondo felt
honored becau e 'our district i one of
the toughe t in Texas." Green and
deYbarrondo were nominated for the
All-Conference team as well.

Phd Zou&lt;"hl

Juli~ann~ d~Yburondo

ratulat~

and Mart Binder conPam Dilworth on a point-winning hit .

frfihman Michell~ Ru nak di pia her athl~tic
. he compete on both the voll~ ball
and lenni teams.

abiliti~

oil

ball- 1

�Julieanne deYbarrondo makes an unsuccessful
attempt to save a spiked ball.

In a match against Texas Lutheran, freshman
Anne Gokelman demonstrates her spiking
abilities with a hit over the defensive front line.

Names 8l Numbers
Won 18

Lost 16

15-9, 5-15, 15-7
10· 15, 15- 2, 15-5
15-8, 15-13, 15-7
15- 12, 15-9, 15-13
Southwestern
9·15,7 -15, 12-15
15-3, 15-6
Trinity
15-0, 15-3
Schreiner
Mary Hudin B.t ylo r 11 · 15, 15-10, 4-15, 16-14, 15-13
Tex.u lutheun
9-15, 13- 15, 9-15
5-15, 13- 15
Concordia
SuiRo
15· 11 , 17· 15
7· 15, 12-15, H-16
51. M•ry's
15-9, 15-13, IS- 9
McMurry
Hardin-Simmon.J
13-IS, 13- IS, 15-6, 3-IS
Hu.5ton Tillotson
IS·1, IS-I , IS- 3
IS· 4, 0- IS, 8-IS, IS-11 , 16-14
Tu.1 luthenn
Muy Hudin Ba ylor 9-IS, IS-8, IS-1
Southern loui.sianot IS- 10, 16- 14
Ten Wnley.tn
11 - IS, IG-IS
SouthwHt TtUJ
S-IS, 12· 1S

Texas A &amp;t I
Bee Coun ty
Eut Tex.u Baptist
Wuhit~ B.tplist

Tuu

luthero~n

Southwestern

D.tmi.tn Morg..n

Front row: Manager Debbie Crawford,
inny Green, julieanne deYbarrondo,
Pam Dilworth , Anne Gokelman,
oach Diane Daniel . Back row :

2-

11

b II

Manager Roy Ramo , Marty Binder,
Michelle Ru nak, Mayla Salaur,
There a ampbell.

1· 1S, S- I S

7- 15, 7- 15, 0-IS
9- IS, I5·12,5- 15
TuAJ Wnley.an
9-15, 15- 9, 15- 11
Concordi.t
15-7, 6- 15,9- 15
11 · 15, 15-1 1, 12-15
S.tn J•clnto
14- 16, 10- 15
I. M• ry'
M.t ry Hudin B.a ylor 15- 11 , 15- 6, 1 - 20, · 15, 15·7
15· 17, 15·7, IG-15
Trinh
U.T
15- 10, 15-7
15-9, 15· 9, 15-12
U tTu.a S..pt i I
Concordl .1
14- 16, 15-9, 17-15,2-15,15- 10
15- 17,6- 15. 11 -15
I. 1-hry't
H ton T illo tson
forfeit
So~m

Hou ton

�Phil Zouch.t

etting i a fundamental kill of
Julieanne de barrondo di pia
her
a set for Pam Dilworth .

olle ball.
ill with

upport i hued durin a time-out b Coach
Daniel and th e Toppers durin a co nferen ce
match .

yball- 3

�Toppers Undefeated
In Conference Play
The men's tennis team tied for its
24th District Big State Conference Title
in the past 25 years, making it yet
another successful season for the team
and Coach Emmett Strohmeyer.
The men sailed through conference
play undefeated until the March 27
match with Mary Hardin-Baylor. The
Crusaders surprised the Toppers, and
the teams settled for a 3-3 tie in
matches.
The tie was the only blemish on both
teams' records when conference play
ended; both teams ended up with four
wins, no losses and one tie .
After the season was over, the two
teams met again in a one-game playoff
to decide which team got to compete
with the top independent team in the
district, the University of Texas at
Tyler, to decide the District IV
championship.
The Toppers could not come away
with a win in that battle, however,
eliminating any chance- that the team
had to go to the NCAA tournament in
Kansas City .
But there was still the Big State Con-

ference tournament to look forward to,
and their hopes were at least partially
realized .
The Number One doubles team of
Julio Rojas and Karl Jauhiainen won
the competition in doubles, earning
them the right to a trip to the Nationals.
" It was a good season," said
Strohmeyer after conference play had
ended. " The players tried hard and
played their best."

John DeSoi follows through on a deep shot from
an opponent.
The team practices every afternoon . During an
afternoon practice Randall Pollard works on his
backhand .
Marl e ne

Fortun~

Names &amp; numbers
Won 9

D•mi.tn 1org.1n

Front row: John Houck , Anton
Buningh, Karl Jauhiainen . Back

-

M n ' T nni

row: Randall Pollard, John DeSoi ,
Julio Roja .

Lost 6

Tied 2

Sam Houston State
1-9
Southwest Texas State
0-10
Pan American
5-5
Trinity JV
9-0
Incarnate Word
9-0
1-8
Southwest Texas State
2-7
Pan American
UniversitY. of Texas at Tyler 3-6
Huston T!llot on
6-0
6-0
St. Mary's
8-1
Trinity JV
East Texa Baptis t
6-0
Mary Hardin Bay lor
3-3
Texas Lutheran
6-0
Grinnell
9-0
Southwe tern
6-0
4-5
Mary Hardin Ba y lor

�During the matche it i up to the players to
make the calls. Karl Jauhiainen question s a call
made again I him .
umber One ingles player Julio Roja
shot over the net to an opponent.
M.nlenr Fort uno~

fire a
1.1rl~ne rortun.a

.t.
j

1 n ' T nm

�Dedication is needed to be a good tennis player.
laura Yzaguirre and the rest of the team practice
a couple of hours daily.
The doubles team of Merry Ann McCrary and
Michelle Rusnak await their opponent's serve
during one of their match victories.

•

."
~

..

~
c

- Women'~

T 'nni~

�Tournament Play
Hurts Netters
The women's tennis team, coming off
of a conference title in 1983, hoped to
repeat that succe s and play in the
NAJA tournament, but those hopes
were shattered at the end of the season
due to a conference season-ending loss
to St. Mary's and a disappointing showing in the Big State Conference
Tournament.
The women were undefeated in conference play until the last match of the
ea on, when they took on what proved
to be an underrated opponent in St.
Mary's.
"St. Mary 's surprised us," said
women's tennis coach Diane Daniels,
adding that from their # 1 and #4
single player, St. Mary's had a lot of
depth .
The Lady Topper took just one win
in ingles again t the surprising St.
Mary's netters, then encountered more
di appointment at the Big State Conference Tournament in Marshall, Texas.
In the tournament, Michele Rusnak,
Karla Calle, and Laura Yzaguirre won
in the fir t round of singles competition but were eliminated in the second
round, ending the women 's season .

Coach Daniels, who completed her
12th year of coaching, fully expected
the team to win the conference and go
to the
AIA tournament in Kansas
City.
But, if the saying " adversity breeds
success" holds true , then the adversity
provided by the team 's disappointing
finish will result in stronger teams in
the future .

Number One singles player Merry Ann McCrary lobs a shot to her opponent.

Laura Yzaguirre cuts aero s court to return a
hort shot.
Ric hnd

i r~

Names 8l numbers

Won 7

D~m l o~n

Morsan

Coach Oianr Dannie! , Karla
Galle, Michelr Rusnak .

Sam Hou ton
Trxas A&amp;d
Texas Luthrran
Trinity
Southwrstern
Trinity
Schrrinrr
Mary Hardin-Ba lor
Hu ton-Tillotson
Texas A&amp;d
Ea t Texa Bapti t
outhwe trrn
t. Ma ry'

Lot 6
0-6
7-0
4-2
2-5
7-0

3-4
1-5
5- 1

forfr it
1-6
6-0

4-0
2- 4

Women' T nni -

7

�Watching from the sideline, Coach Manuel
Juarez keeps an eye on the action.

AI Purnlr

�Fall Team Undefeated
The soccer team had a very successful
season, posting a cumulative record of
17 wins, 2 losses, and 1 tie over the fall
and spring semesters.
The fall semester was an excellent
one for the team, as its record was 10-0
against teams in the 4th division in the
Austin City League.
Their performance against opponents
in the fall was very impressive: the
Toppers shut out their first three opponents while scoring 17 goals. It was
the fourth game until an opponent
could score a goal, and in that contest
the Toppers scored 7 of their own to
win it 7-1. The Toppers would continue
to dominate their opponents in such a
manner for the entire fall semester, as
they never gave up more than 1 goal in
a game through the fall , winning by

heed with two oppo ing players Jorge DaSilva
uses his footwork to break away.

two or more goals in each game played.
Their domination of 4th division
teams was awarded by a promotion to
the third division, where the Toppers
would face tougher competition .
The Toppers finished with a 7-2-1
record against their 3rd division opponents, almost repeating their superb
defensive performance of the fall - in
one game an opponent scored two
goals, and in another game, the Toppers lost 5-0 - only because the
minimum of 7 players suited were in
town the day the game was played in
January, when most students were still
home for their Christmas vacations.
The Toppers had to forfeit another
game because they didn' t have the
minimum of seven players.

The goalie serves as the defensive backbone of
the team. Marco Roncari leads the team to a
winning season.
AI Puente

�- --'- -

Ed Bright

Names 81.. Numbers

Ric h.-rd

urachai Kambhu, Raul an ti teban , Juan Furiati, Muco Roncui ,
Paul Ware,
cu
ilva , Ha an
1- lladdad.
O..cl. : Fr. Pa cal Rnija, Wadiht Elijuri,

Front:

r

iu

Carlo Pena, Gonzalo
camez, Joaquin Conclave , Jud on eal, lberto
Lobei a, Roberto Perez, Pedro Pena,
Pati Juuez, Coach Manuel Juarez.

Won 18 Lost 4 Tied 2
Austin Community College 5-0
Bokonon
6-0
Cosmos
6-0
~1
YMCA
Re ervas Guanajato
2-0
Jugglers
5-1
Romulans
10-0
Concordia
3-1
High Voltage
forfe I
Coyote
forfe I
Deportivo Comonfort
forfe I
Ruffians
2-1
Phoenix
0-5
Olympians
forfeit (SEU)
Deportivo
2-0
Half Price
2-0
Olympic
4-2
a tani
1-0
u tin Thunder
3-1
Real Macondo
0-0
Athletico
6-0
Texa Lutheran
0-0
Baylor
1-5
outhwe I Texas tate
1-4

�Soccer
Continued
With the exception of those two contests and a 0-0 tie, the Toppers would
go undefeated for the season, but fall
just one win short of qualifying for the
second division, which would enable
them to compete for state playoff competition with teams from other city
leagues in Texas.

Keeping an eye on the opponent, Roberto Perez
heads for the goal.
A corner kick by Juan Furiati puts the ball back
into play with the hope of a goal.
Ed Bright

AI Puente

1 ,~~--

-

;'

I

,

R•ul •nti teb•n b•tUe •n opposing pt. er
for control of the b.JI.
AI ruenle

�Norma Ramirez of The Farce gets the out at first
during softball action.
Congratulations are extended to Norma
Ramirez after belting a homerun on the first
pitch of the game.

.

z .

!

~ .
~

.

i

2- Intramura l

,.
~

.~

�Intramurals Provide

un for Everyone
Intramurals offered fun and recreation throughout the year. All faculty,
staff and students were eligible to participate in the variety of ph ysical and
not-so-physical sporting events.
Under the direction of Sharon
Mcilroy the program enjoyed a succe sful year. The regular events such as
football , oftball and ping-pong were
very popular. Co-ree volleyball returned this year for the second time
and remains as one of the most popular
events. Other activities ponsored were
a tennis tournament, free-throw competition and fun run . For the not-soathletic, the staff spon ored an 8-ball
tournament and a spades tournament.
Winning was not everything,
although some teams were very determined . The purpo e was for everyone
to have a chance to get away from the
books or job and get orne e ercise. A

lot of the events gave the participant
time for fun in the sun .
Winner included Bobby Aziz in the
fun run . In the ping-pong tournament
Theresa Campbell won the women '
singles while she also won the double
and mixed doubles team ing with Karen
Wooley and Ruben Ibarra, re pectively .
The intramural program provided
opportunities for everyone to participate in his or her favorite sport,
whether it was athletic or otherwise
challenging .

Victor Steele goes for &lt;~n opponent's fl&lt;~g &lt;~S
Emilio &lt;~nchez b01cks him up on &lt;1 defensive
pl&lt;~y .

Intr&lt;~mur&lt;~l fl&lt;~g footb&lt;~ll

i the highlight of the
fall S('mester. John Loth look for &lt;~n open
receivrr down field .

Intramural -

3

�Jim Bagan kept track of the cores during the
day, as teams were elimjnated one by one.

4-

R

�Half-Astros Return
For the third year in a row, the corecreational softball tournament was
the hit of the spring semester intramurals program. The tournament
began in 1982 and has become one of
the most popular events sponsored by
the intramural department. The oneday event featured a hot dog and hamburger cookout and, for those who
were in a more festive mood, four kegs
of beer.
While some teams entered the tournament solely for the competition,
there were others who entered just to
have fun . The chance to get out and get
some sun, get together with friends,
partake of free food and drink, and
engage in friendly competition was
more than inviting as not only students
but faculty and staff as well joined in
the fun .
The Half-Astros - Mike Malloy, Barbara Sollohub, David Koch , Doreen
Devitt, Maurice Lange, Ginny Green,
Albert Cipolla, Sharon Mcliroy, Kevin

Koch, and Laura Yzaguirre - captured
the championship, taking it for the
second straight year. The defending
champs, led by a stellar defense, faced
determined opponents, such as last
year's runners-up, the Brayde Bunch
and the Half-Astro Krushers, who gave
the Half-Astros an early loss that put
them into the losers' bracket of the
double-elimination tournament. But
the Astros rose to the occasion and
defeated the Krushers in back-to-back
games to take the title.

Even though the pitcher was on the same team
as the batter, bad pitches were still thrown .

David Fox

Chules Kdfeler ometimes resorted to so me
not so fair tactics to keep batters from getting
hits.
All participants in the tournament were treated
to scrumptiou hamburger-hot dog cookouts
after the toutth competition wa over.

Co-Ree- 95

�Dawn Owens, a freshman black
belt, instructs Victor Lyons and
other s tudents the martial art of
TaeKwonDo.
Compe tit io n is friendl y when
s tudents ga th er for a volleyball
ga me .

.
L

~
"

- Fttn 'S'-t

�he Craze:
Physical
Fitness
Phy ical fitness! Se ms like
veryone these days is conrned with th shape of the
dy and are making efforts to
prove it condition . Young
r old , larg or mall, people
re all doing their own thing
&gt; improv .
Around the city and on camu th c ne i r peated daily
1any tim
over. With a
limate that sports a ten10nth pring, summer and
II, Austinite and those who
me to chool in the ar a find
o difficulty with tl-te
eath r. The " I can't go joging today because the
;eather i bad " or the " Sun
,n't hining o I'm afraid we
n' t play tenni today" just
oesn't cut it very often here .
'hat is one major excu e to
a e your con cience about not
etting your exerci e Mother
ature ha taken off the list of
o ible scape .
Within
asy driving
residents and

Matthew
ewton proves the
physical fitness craz.e is for people
of all ages.

students can choose from five
man-made lakes with which
they can enjoy an abundance
of water activities nearly year
round . Additionally the city
has set aside numerous parks,
hike and bike trails, and green
belts for its people to enjoy .
A major jogging attraction
each year in the spring is the
A us tin American-Statesman
Capitol 10,000. The " Capitol"
as it is affectionately known, is
a 10,000 meter race beginning
downtown and ending up on
Fiesta Shores across Town
Lake . Each year several thouand people of all ages, from
all walks of life, from cities
across the nation and from
foreign countries line up to
walk, run , jog, push or pull
their way along the six-mile
path . As they come bouncing
over the many hills that litter
the trail with their multicolored hats, one is reminded
of colored popcorn popping at
the neighborhood theater.

Tae Kwon Do, a Kortan Karatr,
coordinates thr mind with thr
bod .
Austin provide man hikr and
bikr trail along thr various lake .

Fitne

-97

�-

The annual Au s tin CapitollO,OOO is
fa s t beco min g o ne o f th e m os t
po pular ra ces in th e country.

au g ht up in th e fitn ess craze, Bo b
Fritsc h jog dail y.

�Physical Fitness
Continued
A robic dancing is
noth r fav rite with many
tud nts and ar a residences .
If you think it' fun and asy;
think again! Wh ther it is
fun is ubj ctive and can be
bat d according to your
per onal vi w , but easy it is
finit ly not. ive it a try
and if you can walk away
without leg
made of
pagh tti and arm made of
eaw d, you are in excellent
hap .
In th pring and the fall
Au tin's park and campuses
ar
fill d with young
hildr n leading their
par nt
around by kite
tring . Each year the old oak
tr
on campus gobble up
kite that v nture too do e,
ften with a teary-eyed
oung ter imploring the
rent to climb the vil oak
the tattered re-

Ping-pong not only requires good
hand and eye coordination but also
acrobatic skills as exhibited by Eric
Lozano and Juan Vela.

mains for yet another try .
Volleyball is a perennial
favorite of students. Almost
every day of the week one
can locate a spirited co-ed
game somewhere on campus.
Late into the night stories
are exchanged on how if only we had done this we
would have won . Comparison , evaluations and
mayb
next times are
laughed about and
discussed .
As the fitness craze continue
its dizzying pace,
more esoteric ways are found
to sati fy students' desires .
Judo, Karate and other
Eastern form of self-defense
are explored.
With all of the choices
available, it is small wonder
tudents spend many nonclassroom hours enjoying
physical endeavors.

During Health Awueness Week,
tudenl puticipated in aerobic
exerci e .
Colorful kite fill the ky on cleu,
wind da .

Fitn

-99

�Organizations

ime of Passage
An indispensable part of the university consists of
several groups of concerned students. Some organizations
are large and visible in many areas of university life,
while others are smaller and less visible. They all have the
same philosophy - that involved students working
together can make significant and lasting contributions
not only to the university but to the community as well.
One of the activities that students coordinated was
world religion day, an event held in Moody Hall that
featured booths explaining religions from all over the
world.
Another event was the senior prom, in which students
welcomed senior citizens from the Austin area onto campus to show them their appreciation.
Student involvement, from community-wide functions
to fund-raising bake sales, continued to flourish to the
good of all.

Dilvid Fox

rgani.tatll

n~

The SAC sponsored Health Fair
allowed students, such as Lucas Cena,
to have a free health check up.

At a Hilltopper Chorale concert, Br.
Gerald Muller conducts the singen
while John E.lgan accompanies the
group on the piano.

�The Moody Atrium provides a readily
accessible place for students to attend
the various functions sponsored by
the different organizations.
SAC's Spukers/Social Issues Commitlee brought noted spukers on campus.
Dr. Arthur Purcell came from
Wuhington D.C. to discuss the future
and the high tech era.

r an11at• n -

101

�Jim Hanson dan ces with o ne of the
senior cit ize ns fro m the n ine nursing hom es that partic ipa ted in the
e ve nt .
The 650 Ranch Hands, a senior
citi zen s' band, performed the
e nt e rta inment at the " Senior
Prom ."

D~mia n

c~ d e m of cie nce
Rose Bas h ~ ra , Kell
Judso n
ea l,
Robe rt

1

r

nizati n

Mo rgan

�Senior Citizens
Appreciated
In today'

on
our community .
Th
ophomore clas did
v rl k the
f ur ociety . They organiz d a "Senior
Prom" - a day wh r
nior
citiz ns from all ov r the

live
and w
to tak
pp rtunity
how
thi
th m ur appr ciation," aid
a oph more cia officer.
The activitie in lud d a

Prayer Servic , a performance by th Omni Singer ,
a tea at St. Jo eph' Hall with
Bob Mugerauer giving an
op ning tatement, and the
day concluded with a
pr
ntation of an appreciation certificate by Br. Jim
Han on .
Resident
from eight
Au tin nur ing homes attended and
ntertainment
wa provid d by the 650
Ranch Hand , a band made
up of enior citizens.
The event wa ponsored
by the ophomor cia s and
SA . Th
ophomore class
offic r are Gr g Bourgeois,
Dian Gran, Tri h Dillon,
Jim Southw 11 and Joe Bock .
Br. Mark Rufe take a twirl on the
dan ce floor with a enior citizen .

Feature

Alpha hi
Front Row: Tom
hindell ,
Tricia Keating, Linda
rvin ,
Martha
I. Roma i n , Robin
Mick , Richard Ginn , Denni
Kane , Kath
Lind , Ranita
unn , r. arie ndre al h.
Back Row: Brian Pankau ,
Thoma
Quinn ,
d Rippee ,
e in Mont orne ry, Tom d e,
Ken F ler, Dav id Gran , Patricia
Hinton , Ow1 ht
llfford , Jim
Brocato .

r an tza tJO n - 10

�Students Experience World Religions
The Christian Leadership
team, a new group that was
formed this year, had its first
event in Moody Atrium on
March 21. This event was the
World Religion Fair. The
theme for the fair was the
declaration on the relationships of the church to nonChristian religions ,
paragraph 2, in the document of Vatican II:
"The Catholic Church rejects nothing which is true
and holy in other religions .
She looks with sincere
respect upon those ways of
conduct and of life, those
rules and teachings which,
though differing in many
particulars from what she
holds and sets forth, nevertheless often reflects a ray of
that truth which enlightens
all people."
There were nine different
religions represented at the
fair, ranging from Roman
Catholic, Greek Orthodox,
Pentacostal, and Muslim .
Each religion had an information table that displayed
fliers, books and different
Feature

rt Guil d
Fro nt Row: tan Irvin , Ra chel ornoff, Am
Person , Linda
rvin ,
Lori Mann , Edmund hiu .
B&lt;~ ck Row: Phillip
mard , Bert
Faria , Wall e
onol , Maria
Baucom, Le ti cia Licea , Jeanna une,
Ja Morgan .

1 4-

r

ni

ti n

symbols which reflected
their faith . For example, Br.
Jim Hanson representing the
Roman Catholic faith
brought a number of statues
of different saints. Also,
Firuzeph Mehrabani, a student representing the
Zoroastrian faith , had a
sacred string and undershirt
that the Zoroastrians pray in
five times a day.
There were also slide projectors with slides and tapes
on Buddhist, Taoist, and Hindu
religions; the tapes were
available for students to
become informed on the
general beliefs of those
religions .
A member of the committee commented, " Twenty
years ago you would never
have a Catholic university
putting on a world religion
fair and have students participate in it. As a Christian, I
felt it was important to show

The fair gave students a chance to
learn about religions vastly different from their own.

the campus community how
far the Catholic Church has
come in opening its doors
and listening to the beliefs of
other faiths; that is why the
Christian Leadership Team
chose the declaration from
the Vatican II Council."
Another student said,
" The students were able to
talk to the representatives in

a non-threatening way.
Religion is a touchy subject
for a lot of people; we
wanted people to have a
chance, in an informal
academic atmosphere, to
discuss the faiths and beliefs
of different people."

�In preparation for th e event, local
repre entative of variou world
religions were conta cted .
Religiou literature filled the man y
table
which repre ented the
religion of the world . tudent
Hilda luna, Trouble Cla y ton , and
Robin Mick , top at one u ch table .

B h~ vioral ~nd oci~l nence
Front Row. F.-h ~ Gnu , Kell
H~ pp,
.-ni t ~
B ~ h~door 1n h ,
h ri t ine R odn uez , Larr
err ~

no.

Ba ck R ow:
u ~n
~nford ,
r ~hdel 1ne
op h 1e ~ eber, .role upent r,
nnt' ul on , d R1pp , \l ui~
o telo, \1 JI.. e 1~nottJ

r anJ7atlon -

10-

�Denise Klodnicki , special events
coordinator, is hard at work in
SAC's new office at Mr. Carmel
Annex.
Always trying to meet deadlines,
Linda Ervin, publicity coordinator,
works on a poster for a film.

Patr ici a Garcia

Richud Nin

Fea ture

Big Brothe

and Big i ters alencia, Tri h
Dillon, Deni e
lodnicki , Jim
Brocato, Ri chard
ira . lUck Row:
Tomilee Harkenrider, Ed Rippee,
at Luna,
ura imeroth , There a
Mader, Pedro Ramire z.

Front Row: Rosa

AI Pu~ntf'

r

ni z ti n

�SAC - Providing a Variety of Activities
The Student Activities
Council consists of student
volunteers planning different events and activities
that improve student life.
SAC consists of five different committees: Perform-

ing Arts, Speakers / Social
Issues, Films, Multi-Cultural
Concerns, and Special
Events.
SAC provides both educational and social events. For
example, Women's Informa-

tion Day, Health Fair, and
Leadership Conferences all
provided students with an
opportunity to become acquainted with different areas
that are not usually taught in
a classroom situation.

Some examples of social
events consisted of dances,
Mini-Concerts, Open Mike
nights, a Halloween carnival
and trips to Astroworld that
gave students a chance to
have fun .
Also throughout the year
films were shown to give
students a chance to escape
from reality. SAC presented
Academy Award winners
such as On Golden Pond and
Gandhi. For comic relief the
films committee showed
Beach Party and Tootsie.
In addition to all the planning SAC does it also coordinates all the other
organizations on campus. A
good example of this is the
Multi-Cultural Conerns
Committee which works
with the Soul Society and International Club .

Gina Frigault, director of stud~nt
activiti~ , is busy planning ev~nts
for the upcoming year.
F~iltur~

Camp Club - Front Row: Frank
Martin~z, Hiram Cudo, Luis
Bald~rrama , Lu~ P~q~no .

Row:
al
Sobranzo

Cad~na ,

Bilek

Maria

Organization - 10

�Speakers Discuss Issues
Banners and posters were hung
throughout the campus to promote
upcoming speakers.

I ~1\I:H
• •

FRIDAY

1Gerson

Speaker

BOB LEVERS·
Richard

Nir~

Feature

Delta Sigma Pi - Front Row: lisa
Horsak , Maria Cortinas, Venita
Bahadoorsingh. Second Row: Tim
O'Keefe, Richard Ginn , Tina Jo
Garrison , Mere Martinez, Adam
Guillen, Miles Ponder, Merry Ann
Me rary, Pablo Lotze, Michelle
Fesler. Third Row: John Luzen ki ,
Gary Thomp on, Bill Flynn, John
Walters, Ken Fesler, Tom Scherrer,
John Beckelhyme, Kathy Lind,
Kevin Ma ie. Back Row: Eddie
Lop z, David Brash, harles Bras h ,
Frank Frida , Tom Quinn . pring
ecutives: Maria ortinas, Merry
nn M rary, Bill Fole , John
Walters, Bill Fl y nn , Li a Horsak,
harl Bu h , Tina Jo arri on.

10 -

r

niza t i n

As a division of the Student Activities Council
(SAC), the Speaker /Social
Issues Committee arranges
for speakers to come to the
university throughout the
year. The topics ranged from
events in Lebanon to tips on
job hunting .
Tricia Keating, speakers
coordinator, said, " I tried to
bring a diverse amount of
speakers that spoke on international and national issues
that are current and affect
us."
The different speakers
included:
Free Speech Alley
"Social Program vs. Defense
Spending." The open forum
consisted of Richard
Kraemer, a government professor at the University of
Texas. He defended the
stance that money should be
distributed to help the needy
in order to prevent social
decay . On the other side,
Bernard Simon, a manage-

ment professor with the
university, backed military
spending. He felt that the
safety of our nation depended on a strong security
system.
Phillip Berr yman
"Alternative U .S. policies in
Central America." Berryman
is from the American Friends
Service based in Guatemala
and discussed the issues in
Central America.
Dr. Miguel Nino
"Freedom or Bondage of the
Press." Nino is a Spanish instructor with the university
and compared Mexico,
Argentina, the U.S. and the
restrictiveness of the press.
Howard Figler - "How to
Get Your Foot in the Door
and Make a Future for
Yourself." Figler is the career
center director at the University of Texas. He presented
information that assisted
students in dealing with a
full job market. He gave
hints on interviews, and

how to make a positive impression on prospective
employers.
Dr. Arthur Purcell
" 1984: Now that We're Here;
What Does It Mean." Purcell
is a scientist, educator, and
an international public
speaker. He gave a view of
society today and discussed
the pros and cons of our
high tech era.
Bob Levers - Levers is an
art professor at the University of Texas. He showed slides
of his work and discussed
ideas leading to his recent
pieces. He also was one of
the five Texans to be
represented in the 1984
"Venice Bienmale."
Joseph Gerson - "Arms
Sales and Disarmament."
Gerson is the peace education secretary at the New
England American Friends
Service Committee . He
discussed the current happenings in the Middle East.

.

�choluship Boud - Thereu
Oenni K.. n , Ev.. Munoz,
inn , hrin .. Tijerin ...

Student Activities Council - Front
R ow: G .. r
Thompson , Tom
hindell , Frank Solis. lhck Row:
Oeni e Klodnicki, Trici.. Ke .. t ing.

Or anizati n - 109

�Jim So uthwell s port s
fa s hionable SAl s weats hirt.

the
Phil Zouch'

Feature

Front Row : Ev a Munoz ,
Romelia Re es, Lourde Rui zrthur, Me llie Mendo za, Krista
Bockoven , Merr
nn M e rary
2nd Row: Denni Kane, Marina
Tijerina, J. Jud on
eal , Ken
Fe ler , Kath y Lind , Trish
Dillon , Diane ran , Dawn Wato n, Jim outhwell.
rd Row: Ric hard
inn , Mark
lcJ.. es, Paul McH ug h, Robert
Lopez, Tom
ch errer,
co lt
and Iin ,
orma
lonza , Ro
Ram o .
8d I. Row: Jim Bro a to,
re
Bo urgeoi s, Joe BocJ.. , d Rippee,
Bo Ranheim , Deb li er.

1I

rga nt?d t it n.

�SAl Seeks More Recognition From Students
Th univ r ity aw many
chang
ov r th y ar and
SAl wa not an xc ption .
pring of 1983 elecr held for pre ident
vic
pr id nt . Ted
Stavin ha wa I ct d pre ident, Marina Tij rina was
elect d vic pr ident and
Tom Sch rrer wa voted in as
ecretary-tr a ur r. However, at th b ginning of the
fall em ter it was learned

that tavinoha would not be
returning in the fall due to
academic r a on . Therefore,
Tijerina became president,
and 0 nni Kane, who was
elected enior cia president
wa voted vice president.
The changes did not stop; at
the end of the fall semester
Tom Scherrer resigned and
Li a Williams became the
new seer tary-trea urer.
It i hard for any organiza-

tion or institution to go
through changes whether it
is at the beginning of the
year or the middle .
A president, Tijerina was
trying to change the feeling
toward the organization .
"SAl is ineffective because
there is no motivation . SAl
must be made more accountable." To try and help SAl
become more recognized,
they purchased sweatshirts

bearing the SAl logo.
Throughout the year SAl
formed many committee ,
including a committee to
study the feasibility of a
patio to be constructed on
the north side of the
ReUnion .
SAl has continued to run
the concession stands at the
basketball and baseball
games. They have also programmed candidate forum
where candidates for state
and local offices come to
speak and answer questions
from the students or faculty .
"We tried to lay the
ground work for a better SAl
and recognize the
possibilities of a lot of opportunities in the future," said
Dennis Kane, SAl vice
president.

SAl meetings ue held every other
week where progress is discu ed
on each committee.
Phil Zouch•

Feature

oul ociet
Robert Long II, Trouble Cl~ ton ,
Brend~
De h~ , Cetrin~
mith,
Rebecc~ Mutin .

Or anizati n - 111

�Publications Survive
Through Tough Times
Change was the motto for
Student Publications this year.
Editors changed, logos
changed, yearbook themes
changed, offices changed,
people ch anged and publications changed.
The year began with energy
and optimism . Editor Al
Puente, Managing Editor Rob
Wood and the Hilltopper staff
worked during the summer
months to put together a
special eight-page registration
issue that set the pace for fall.
It was not long before the staff
found out the 1983 - 84
Hilltopper had won its second
All-American rating from the
Associated Collegiate Press.
Yearbook editors Cindy
Olsen and Bob Labry attended
a workshop during the
summer and came back with a
theme and plans for their
book . They were dedicated to
making a true and meaningful

Julie Newton

record of the year.
George Nichols began the
fall with great hopes for
Everyman .
Just as you thought it was
safe to go back into the
publication offices, the seams
came out of everything. Key
administrators were fired . The
president resigned.
Publications, especially the
weekly Hilltopper, were caught
in the controversy as editors
were determined to cover
events accurately and fairly
and to keep their readers
informed. Pressure built and
courses became more
demanding . Wood and Puente
resigned for personal reasons
and for a while it looked like
there might not be a Hill topper.
Money for Ev eryman ' s
beleaguered budget did not
appear, literary and art
submissions to the magazines
were skimpy and publication
was postponed until spring.
George Nichols resigned for
personal reasons just before
the spring semester began.

Fall Hilltopper editor AI Puente
foun d out editing a newspaper
often means d oing everything
from selling ads to taking pictures.

Not ;mother deadline . . . Tower
co - editor Cindy Olsen and
Hilltopper ports editor Richard
Nira console one another about
their publication woes.
A typi cal Hilltopper t;~ff meet ing
found Editori;~l Board members
deep i n conference. Clockwise
from foreg.r ound ue l i ~ Williams,
Muy O;~vi , Marlene Fortun;~,
B ri ;~n P;~nkau , Robert Castillo, and
John he ppud.

c
c

i

.

i

· - - - - -- - -- -- - - j"''
112 - Publi ati n

�.,

Br i an
Fortuna and
Jo n Sheppud discuss th e
s ubtleties of ~~ ·ng a con trove rsial seri ~o
·c1 es on
d rugs, sex and religion .
Julie

ewlon

"

Hea d p h o t og r apher Damian
Morgan aw tars after a full yeu
of upervising t udents and making
ure all last-minute
as ignments were complete.
Advi r Julie ewton had mixed
feelin
about the end of the year
a
he made plan
to pursue
!':- photographic tudies .
.D

.J

j
Q

"'

Publicat1 n -

113

�r

p)

. fro

Ja.u-( (/..0
Yo&amp;... ~ p tU

ff)

cP tk. ,

(JAJ!Mfx1A-{_

~1 wnM-·

OJ en became known a
the
' Benevolent Tyrant' as he twi ted
roommates' arm to help her with
the Tower. lisa Branch was 50
desperate he wrote a letter home
but wa caught before he could
to it out the window.
Everym;on mag.uine finall found
i w;a to public;ation through the
ffo
of l ' a
llers and man
oth rs.

114 -

ublt ati n

�Publications
Continued
Seemingly impervious,
Labry and Olsen continued
to document the year.
Then students began to appear. One by one they began
to volunteer and to inquire
about the newspaper. They
formed an Editorial Board.
Original members were
Brian Pankau, Richard Nira,
Jeannie Wagner, Colleen
Cole and Robert Castillo.
Later John Sheppard, Mary
Davis, Lisa Williams, and
others would join in the
ometimes all-night sessions
to make sure the paper
would come out on time .
Later Pankau and Sheppard
w r appointed editor and
managing editor.
Everyman also drew a
group of di -hard volunteers
who wanted to make sure
th magazin was published.
Lisa S ll r , B ck Bradshaw,
Kim Pur ley, Marlene Fortuna, Lance Smith and
aroline
hase
olicited
more work and edit d
through the 300 items to find

the best.
Fortuna, with help from
Puente, assumed major
responsibility for lay-out
and design of the magazine.
New head photographer
Damian Morgan and the
photo staff had quite a year.
Staff members included Ed
Bright, David Fox, Fortuna,
Patricia Garza, Tomilee
Harkenrider, Kay Milam,
Howard Osborn, Puente and
Phil Zoucha .
The last to complete its
work was the Tower staff.
Members had burned the
midnight oil on numerous
occasions but dug deep and
found the will to once again
trudge over to Mt. Carmel
and finish the last 58 pages
needed for the June 1
deadline .
And soon the cycle would
begin again .
Tower co-editor Bob Labry
discovered by year's end that if he
pu t h i car on cruise con t rol, it
automatically drove to Mt. Carmel
for Tower work sessions.

Publication
paid so well

photoguph~rs

th~y

ar~

can afford top-of-

th~-lin~ ~quipment.

Fall Hilltoppu staff~rs ROSt" hul~r
and Rob Wood hpt ha cking out
tb~ cop
~v~n wb~n publications
offic~
w~r~
mo ~d durin
dudlin~ ti m~ .

Publicatwn -

115

�T
1 ime of Passage
People

Just smile for me and let the day begin. You are the sunshine that
lights my heart within . ..

Jeffrey Osborne
Relationships are what people are about. Understanding one
another requires insight and perception flavored with sweet
and sour memories. To understand and become one with truth,
it is necessary to experience both joy and sorrow.
Metamorphosis is what relationships are about. Without
change and growth, relationships stagnate and die . Through
the year relationships were the renewing force carrying us like
a warm gentle breeze to a more complete awareness.
This year had a special presence of belonging to a community
that was struggling and reaching out, which was at the same
time frightening and exhilarating.

Father Leroy Clementich, director of
campus ministry, is an important and
active member of the community.

11 - p

pi

Richard Ginn talks with another
member of Delta Sigma Pi before a
meeting.

�Senior Rose Shuler keeps the campus
informed about athletics as Hilltopper
Sports Editor during the fall semester.
SAC secretary, Colette Tepe, keeps the
daily routine in order.

A party sponsored by the Art Guild
gives Linda Ervin and Trish Keating a
break from classes.

Peopl - 117

�Seniors

Morris Abbott Jr.
Bola Akinniranye
Hassan Al-Haddad
Abdu laziz Al-Saie
M urtaza Ally
Tom Alvarez

Holly Andreozzi
Yvonne Arends
Ariston Awitan III
James Bagan
Sarah Barlow
Menahem Beniflah

Ana Berain
Krista Bockoven
Belinda Bonilla
Rebekah Brads haw
Charle Brash
Jim Brocato

Anna Brown
Hennetta Br wn
Patn 1a Bryant
Mane n Butler Jr.
ar ardena
Luts arreno

11

'Ill

r-.

�Circus Brings
Laughter and Suspense
Children of all ages gathered
one sunny day on the patio to see
the smallest circus in the history
of traveling entertainment - The
Royal Lichtenstein Quarterring
Sidewalk circus.
The ever-touring show arrived
on campus early in the morning
and began to set the outdoor stage
for an hour of delightful surprises. Clowns, dancers, jugglers,

comedians, musicians, and magicians were all portrayed by five
talented people who wanted
nothing more than to bring us joy
and laughter.
The circus provided a wonderful break in the action of the college routine . Wisecracks about the
predicaments of today's society
opened our eyes to the world
around us. A mime skit showed us
that a capitalistic society need not
be cold, but in fact can be filled
with warmth and kindness if people would pay more attention to
the needs of those around them
than to dollar signs.
The show was complete with
trained animals that contributed
greatly to the entertainment, including a tiny stallion, a bear, a
colorful parrot and two baby
spider monkeys .
All in all it was a wonderful
production that showed us the
humor in ourselves and the world
around us - and the joy we seek
in magical games and funn y faces .

Not only did the performers play usu&lt;~l
circus tricks, they also acted out a short
skit about economics in today's world .
Lichtenstein performers delighted the &lt;~u­
dience with their acrobatic-unicycling
skills.

.
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Semor - 119

�·.

Brushing Up on Tradition
Luck . Everybody needs some now and then. Even if you are sure
of yourself, it does not hurt to have a little good luck on your side .
If you know luck is on your side you will generally have a better
outlook day to day .
A four-leaf clover, a rabbit's foot and crossed fingers are all
signs of good luck . But on campus there is a special way to gain
good luck for tests, papers or intramural games. By rubbing the
nose on the bronze plaque of the Rev . J. Foik, the odds will be in
your favor.
The bronze plaque of the Rev . Paul Joseph Foik was dedicated,
upon his death, by the students, faculty and alumni of 1941-42.
Standing on a granite pedestal just east of the ScarboroughPhillips Library, the plaque was placed in memory of Foik's
dedicated service as the librarian from 1924-41.
Rubbing Foik's nose has become a campus tradition passed
down through the years. The tarnished plaque with shining nose
reminds us of all the years gone by and the luck brought to
students on the hill.
For a little extra confidence, rub the Rev . J. Foik's nose before
that big exam, intramural game or just when walking by to keep
things going in your favor .
For years Rev. J. Foik's nose has
brought good fortune to students in
need of a passing grade.

Feature

Francisco Caso
Leticia Chavarria
Wang Cheng
Albert Cipolla

Dwight Clifford
Colleen Cole
Lee Colwell
Tee Conroy

l_ -

enior

.

'

�Maria Cortinas
Bridget Cote
Kelly Cote
Judith Cowan

Helon Cox
Timothy Crews
Roberto Cuadros
Eduardo Cuellar

Su an Cunningham
Robert De ter
Lui Espmoza
Brenda DeShay

]a me
Glad

�Emmanuel Ewuzie
Ivan Faroh
Edith Felton
Susanna Fernandez

Ken Fesler
William Foley
Maia Forstchen
Hattie Foster

Frontaine Freeman
Merri Friesenhahn
Christina Garrison
Laura Gatewood

David Gill
Richard Ginn
Armand
onzal
David Gran

12.2 -

nwr

�Della Green
Ronald Gre sel
Adalberto Guerra
Victor Guerra

Mauric1 o Guti e rrez
De bo rah Harri
Patricia Hinton
Dora Iban ez

The Year of the Rat
ain d

1t

the Rat,
di tinctiv nickname
one nam d the
Although it
a n gative conf the mo t

to it diver-

sified clientele . For video
maniacs, beer guzzler , soap
opera addict , and pool sharks
it provide a place for a much
needed break between
demanding cia
Mo t of all , though , the Rat
provide a place for students to
m t, talk, and relax .
Gera rdo Rom e ro e n jo y l un ch and
frie n d!
co n versat io n in the Rat
w h ich is d eco rat ed b fla gs fro m a ll

�Canice Ifeobu
Arthur Isaacs
Michael Jackson
David Jarrell

Jose Jimenez
Patricia Juarez
Jae Ryun Jung
Dennis Kane

Craig Kanne
Mabel Kekeocha
Margaret Kelbaugh
Hong Kim

iktor Kopponen
Robert L.:~bry
Maunce Lang
Paultne Lawr n e

�Hanson
As a child, what did Jim Hanson want to be when he grew
up?
"I went through all the occupations little boys go
through," he said, mentioning
specifically a desire to be an
archaeologist.
Although he has been
around Catholic schools for
many years, he had a rocky introduction to them.
It was the third grade on the
fir t day of school that Hanson
was introduced to the Catholic
school.
The day started out badly
when he was turned in by an
eighth-grade girl for talking
during the flag salute.
Things quickly got worse . He
r calls the " overwhelming
presence of the nuns in their
habits (I'd never been around
such creatures!" ) that seemed
quite formidable .

Educational Experiences of All Kinds
He was further frightened by
his discovery that everyone in
the class could write in cursive
and he could not - as the
pressure mounted , Hanson
made his big decision .
He ran away .
He headed home , where " my
father suggested there might
not be much of a future in staying home," so he returned to
school, never to run away
again.
Upon returning to school, he
discovered that " they had not
missed me in the highly supervised lunchroom and
playground activities."
Hanson has been a faculty
member since 1973, and has yet
to run away from one of his
classes . He received his
master's from Fordham in 1975.
Paulist Press will soon publish
a book he wrote entitled If I Am
Ch ristian , Why Should I Be

Catholic - the Biblical Roots of
Catholic Faith .
Recent experiences Hanson
has treasured include living in
the Holy Land and spending
weeks in silent retreat .
" Living in the Holy Land
was a fantastic experience
because it put me in touch with
the Bible in a much more concrete sense," he said .
He was also struck by the
harshness of the Middle East, a
harshness " which sensitized
me to the plight of the
Palestines."
" It gave me a sense of
ecumenism in the Middle
East," he said.
Hanson also appreciates the
week he spends each year in
silent retreat:
" I find it a time of significant
personal refreshment, peace
and personal insight."

In 1981-82, Brother Jim H ..nson took his
first bre•k from tuch ing •t the university
when he went to Mexico for .J ooe-y~ar S.ibb•tic•l. While in Mexico he le•mecf to spe._k
Sp•nish fluently .

Ri chud

Ni,.~

John Leary
Mickey Leopard
Robert Longoni
Eduardo Lopez

Guadalupe Lopez
Robert Lopez
Rolando Lopez
ora Lumbrera

�On the Air With Owensby
If you turn your radio to 89.5
FM, station KMFA classical music
for central Texas, and listen on
Wednesday nights, a velvety voice
exudes from the speaker. The
voice belongs to Susan Owensby.
She has been a part-time announcer with the station for over
two years.
This non-conventional parttime job came about from the
prompting of Owensby's mom,
who said she was too lazy and
spoiled and needed to work .
When she thought of all the possible job opportunities and her
qualifications, the idea of being a
disc jockey struck her fancy . So
one day she marched into the station and announced to the program manager, ''I' m yo ur new girl
announcer ." As soon as a vacancy
opened up, Owensby was gainfully employed.
Looking back, Owensby had to
laugh beca u e when she applied
h r only as ets for the job included a long-standing membership
with the
tation, theater experi ence, fluent French, no fear

12 -

"'nl r'i

and little modesty. She is still not
a radio electronic engineer; if
anything goes wrong she's on the
phone in a panic.
Susan enjoys being part of the
radio profession. As a woman in
the field there is a great deal of
mobility, because women announcers are scarce and good ones
are even scarcer .. Since there is
not much to do, the job does not
pay very well, but the nature of
the station and the atmosphere it
creates compensate for the pay,
Owensby says. Sin::e KMFA is a
fully member-supported radio station, pressure is less than at a commercial station because. There are
no advertisers to please, only the
audience .
Owensby says the job also is
humanistically fulfilling. Because
part of her program is devoted to
requests, she plays music people
want to h ear. Over the past two
years she has established friendships with people who call in,
many of whom she has never met.
Susan Owensby concentrates on changing
the music before air time.

�Patrick Mackie
Margaret Macora
Theresa Mader
Diana Marquez
Rebecca Martin
Adriana Martinez

Onesimo Martinez
Lester Mayfield
Jane McClaine
Brayde McClure
Pietro Micale
Robin Mick

Myra M1tchell
Charyl Monroe
Kevin Montgomery
Evangelina Munoz
Joe Munoz
Marianella Na

Jam
eal
Bonifac
wangburuka
V ilham O 'Connor
Timoth y O' Keefe
Debora -O li ver
Michael 01 on

�Susan Owensby
Daisy Palmer
Brian Pankau
Petros Pashiardis

Cynthia Pepper
John Poth
Patricia Pulliam
Fernando Ramirez

Soap Opera Viewers Solve Daytime Dilemmas
Who will Tad sed uce next? Will Devon ever stop whining?
Where actly are Port Charles, Landview, and Pine Valley? For
decade , fans have been asking these deep questions about their
favorite soap opera.
Anytim during the afternoon, in dorms, apartments or
anywh re there i a T.V., omeone may be watching one of the
many daytime drama shows. Many people actually go to the
trouble orne and sometime difficult task of arranging their
ch dul
th y can watch their favorite soap opera. These people
are true addict .
Oaytim drama were dubbed oap op ras when they were on
radi b cau the how were produced by oap companie . The
c mm rcial air d during th program were aimed at a specific
audien - hou ewive . Hou wive are no longer the major au
di nee . tud nt and profe ional have joined the group of oap
pera addict .
how are, o are their
A varied a th audi nc
rea n f r tuning in . " I lik
late t fa hion on oap . I
hildr n" ju t t
w tch " II M
what Erica i going to wear,"
td n
a p p ra fan .
n th r fan aid , " I d n t kn w wh I watch th m . I think it i

12 -

ni r

In b tw~ n cb
utch up on th~ir
Re nion .

,

oap opera fan
tori in the

favorit~

because it's interesting to follow the characters. You can laugh at
the dumb things they do. You can also get attached to the
characters -you either love them or hate them ."
For those who cannot watch their favorite soap, they can read
the weekly update in Sunday' s Showtime section in the Austin
American Statesman .
Now stay tuned for this week's gripping daytime dilemma .

�Reginaldo Ramon
Roy Ramos
Matthew Ready
Scott Rickett

Charle Robert
Gerardo Romero
Gu tavo Sala
Sanad Salem

Mancela Saltna
Dick Satterf1eld
Jimmie Scott
Ruby Segura

�Dunn Captures History
With Centennial Book
Next year the university will
celebrate 100 years of existence.
Within our midst is a historian
who has been working steadily
to pull together the fragments of
the past that make up the story of
this institution.
The book will cover the
history of organization, development, finance, academics, faculty, students, administrative matters, and Austin-related subjects.
Br. Dunn has been collecting
material for over 29 years. He
has accumulated most of his information and topics from people's stories, administrative correspondence, and old school

newspapers and yearbooks.
Commenting on the book,
Dunn Sa.id, "It will be instructive
and interesting. It is going to
save and retrieve things that
people do not know or
remember off hand. We need a
centennial history. It is an anniversary book."
The history of this university
should prove to be exciting and
informative for those who are or
have been associated with the
institution.
:;
In 1982-83 Dunn was free from teach ing ·~
and concentrated on writing the book.
o

Rose Shuler
Lance Smith
Patricia Smith
Karen Smithe

Martha St. Romain
Michael Stack
Roger Stiefer
Fran ce Stout

' 111

r~s----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------

�Kenny Stroud Jr
Ricardo Tamayo
Jame Thoma
Marina T1jerina

Dolore Trevino
Hermima Tyminski
Rosa Valencia
Craig Warath

Eli e Wagner
Philip Waldock
Dawn Wat on
Valetta Wil on

Hattie Wo dard
Yvett Yanez
Laura zaguirr
Alfr d o Zapata

�Juniors
Patrick Aniekwena
Vasiliki Apokremioti
Frances Ayala
Chris Bentley
Sonya Binger
Catharine Bowers
Lisa Branch
Aileen Bresnahan

Wanda Brown
Antonio Castellanos
Paul Cerqua
Carol Clay
Margaret Connelly
Cristina Contreras
Jorge DaSilva
Shannon Dailey

Eleanor Davis
Stephen Davis
Salvador De La Garza
Petchada Dhamcharoen
Melynda Dillard
Edwin Eke
Valerie Elder
Linda Ervin

Gerardo Farias
Parhck Farrell
Fa u hnus Okafor
Jesus Ferna ndez
James Fletcher
Ca rol Fora n
Oebra Ford
Jesse Ga rcia

Mtchael ia notti
Bruce Gil le tte
Estevan Gomez
Eddie onzalez
Gu~tavo onzalez
Jo~e
uerrero
k e ll y Happ
M argu~ Harn

)t'~U~It.il H~rrera

H.1rn~tt

Hoglt•

It Hundtdt
( htdl&gt;71d lbt&gt;h
1.uk I k ,,

R&lt;,t ltu~h
L.:1 Vt•rnt' J.:~ck,on
! 'I J.:~cJ.., &gt;n·h•hn 'n

�United Nations Day
'Come Join Hands'
" Come Join Hands" symbolized the feelings expressed at the United
ations Day.
The event, sponsored by
SAC, allowed faculty, staff
and students an opportunity
to acquaint themselves with
the vast cultural heritage
represented on the Hilltop.
On October 24, the patio
behind Old Main was
transformed into an outside

learning experience, combining fun and education .
Entertainment was provided by folk , and belly
dancers. In addition to the
dancers, a buffet offered a
wide variety of cultural
foods .
This event offered the
community a first-hand
glimpse at different peoples
cultures, their beliefs, traditions, and lifestyles.

Students look on as belly dancers
perform various routine .

International dancers from the
University of Texas display a variety of dance found in different
cultures.

]un1 r -

133

�Br. Don breaks away from the rigors
of office work to relax.

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u
Feature

Michael Johnson
George Jones
Eid Ka.dm
Patncia Keatmg
Recheal Kekeocha

Den1~e

KlodnJCkl
Dav1d 1-..och
Tamara Kouba
L 'dla Lara
Tony Lawless

Can&gt;lyn L1'l..a
~ath\ [ 1nd
MKhat·l l t&gt;mt&gt;.~rd•
Rt&gt;t&gt;t•rt [ un~:
Paull &gt;Ill'

" Niece" Doreen Dev itt is amused and
somewhat confused as to why " Uncle"
Don has a suitcase on his head.

�Marengo Keeps Campus Smiling
As ociate Director of Campu
Ministry, Br. Don ·Marengo, is
on of the more interesting
staff members on campus.
Campus Ministry provides
opportunities for students to
deepen th ir faith during the
time th y pend at thi university. As Associate Director,
Marengo help plan student
r treat and special liturgies, arrange for speakers and is
gen rally available to tudents
as well as faculty and staff who
n d omeone with whom to
talk .
Th
ampu Mini try offices
ar locat d on th third floor of
Andre Hall, but finding him in
his offic occur about as often
a a now torm in Au tin . It is
not that Marengo i not working - he just tak a different
approach than other . He like
to go wh re p opl gather and
run count r to the pace and
pre ure of daily lif by " hanging around" as others da h
ab ut . One of his favorite "office " to hang around in i the

cafeteria, where he likes to
hare conversation over a
morning cup of coffee with
students.
Marengo has also been
responsible for bringing the
Royal Lichtenstein Quarter
Ring Side Walk Circus to campus. "Everybody likes the circus. Nick Webber and his gang
bring out the child-like
qualities in everyone and show
that there is more to life than
meeting deadline after
deadline," aid Marengo.
It is Marengo's child-like
quality that is so appealing to
others. He can often be een on
campus balancing all sorts of
odd objects on his head, juggling oranges in the cafeteria,
handing out daisies or telling
one of his dry joke . When
Marengo is in his office he
often hand out dum-dums to
tudents who might not otherwi e have the energy to make it
through the day .
Marengo doe not live at St.
Joseph Hall with the other

brothers. Instead he resides at
the Center for Creative
Ministry - a Christian lay
ministry program . The Center
is mainly compo ed of university students with a common
interest- finding a way to live
out their Christian faith and
respond to the needs of the
church today . Marengo is the
director of this program but it is
apparent he is much more than
this as several members affectionately call him " Dad" and
other students on campus call
him "Uncle Don ."
It is obvious that Marengo
really cares for the campus
community and ministers to
them in the best way he knows
whether it be as an
under tanding listener or giving
omeone a daisy or
dum-dum .

"Hanging out" at the Royal lichtenstein Circus, Marengo exhibit one of
his unique ministering talents.
Cind y 01Kn

Feature

Natalia Luna
Maynerd Matro
Jose Malave
Teresa Manz
Ktm MacAuley

Humphrey Marr
Mercuno Martinez
Mary McCarty
Greg McCord
Patricia McFerren

Elizabeth Mclellan
Melly Mendoza
KayMtlam
Kac 1e Monto ·a
Cumen Morales

Junior -135

�...

Sailer Aids Offenders
Every day Susan Sailer
goes to work she must deal
with individuals who have
committed misdemeanors
and felonies. These people
have committed crimes from
shoplifting to involuntary
manslaughter.
Sailer works as a probation
office intern for the Travis
County Adult Probation
Office.
She first became interested
in probation in her
sophomore year. "As a double major in Criminal Justice
and Social Work, I wanted to
do volunteer work in a place
that I could receive experience in both fields . Probation had the most to offer
me," Sailer said .
Sailer interviews and
counsels individuals who
have been assigned probation by the courts. "The most
interesting part of my job is
conducting the initial interviews. It is the first contact I
make with my clients. I

L

- Juntor"

receive their history and we
work on a positive plan of action," Sailer said.
Each probation officer has
200 clients. Eighty percent of
the people who see a probation officer will succeed in
not committing a subsequent
offense.
'
If clients violate
their probation, a motion to revoke
will be written which will
result in a hearing before a
judge. "I have no remorse in
writing a motion to revoke. It
is part of my job. The clients
know the rules and regulations of their probation and if
they violate it they will have
to pay the consequences,"
Sailer said .
Sailer plans to work for the
Probation Office after she
graduates in 1985.
Sailer added, "One advantage of my job is that I know
who not to date ."
Sailer reviews her clients folders
before they come in for their
counseling.

�Cathenne Mulhall
Let1c1a arvae.t
R1chard, 1ra
Laura O'Bar
CindvOI en
How~rd Osborne
Lori Pag
Carlos Pena

Patnc1a Pern•
Georg Port~er
Alfon o Puente
Esmeralda Ram1rez
Pedro Ramirez
Marv Ahce Ramon
Robert Ranhe1m
)ma Rasmu. en

Betty Reddmg
Tammv R ntler
ancy Reynold
Dougla Rhodenbaugh
Edward RiCCIO
Edward R1ppee
Lance Rodgers
Arnold Rodnguez

Carmen Rodnguez
Mano Rodnguez
Tha1 Rowland
Lourde Ruiz-Arthur
Sw;an Sader
Cynth1a Saldana
Wahd Sahm
Deanne anchez

Herlmda anchez
Jim helton
Tom Shmdell
Laura S1meroth
Tamyra Stnegl •r
Franc Surac1
Ro 1 Unega•
Erne I U" az1

�Sophomores
Feliciano Acevedo
Jaime Agueros
Aniceto Alonzo
Ali Al-Sharai
Scott Anthony
Irene Arteaga
Martha Barrera
Rose Bashara

John Beckelhymer
Joseph Bock
Greg Bourgeois
Shirley Brennan
Edward Brigh t
Inger Brown
Mark Bruckbaner
Guillermo Buitrago

Gary Cadwallader
Donald Campbell
Jeff Canaday
Robert Cavazos
Wing-Hang Cheung
Trouble Clayton
Marisol Curiel
Mary Cyr

Danica Dailey
DeNell Davis
Jacqueline Davis
Rosalinda DeAiva
Stmona DeLeon
Patricia Dillon
Anne Dougherty
John Eagan

Ahce E~parLa
Marl e ne Fortun a
Paul FUJimoto
"-aria ail e

,n•tcht&gt;n ,tilt&gt;\
l'arttct.l (;(&gt;me;
D1anl' , ran
Ctnn \ (. r •t•n
R(&gt;t•l oUl'rTJ
.m•l H,,, kt&gt;arth
(,tld,~rd,, I lt:rt•dta
l't•mtlt•t• H.ul-.t•nrtdt•r

�A Culture Remembers
"Retrospecting , Introspecting, Projecting Black
View" was the theme of thi
year's Black History Month .
The theme enabled Black
Americans to review their
history, correct the error ,
and examine how hi tory affects them and other individuals as a whole.
Every year February is the
designated month where
Black Americans from acros
the nation celebrate their
heritage. The purpo e of
these month-long celebrations is to acquaint people
from other cultures with the
heritage of the blacks. It is a

time et a ide for remembering , saluting, and re haping
the hi tory of thi specific
culture.
The univer ity and the
Austin Community
celebrated the month with a
variety of activitie . Austin
provided such event a a
Go pel Mu ic Fe tival and a
public reception where
ethnic dre wa encouraged .
The Soul Society and the
Student Activitie Council
(SAC) sponsored events that
contributed to the celebration . During the month two
movies were hown , " Raisin
in the Sun" and " The Wiz."
AI o, a Jazz Band performed
and a Drama ight provided
entertainment for everyone.
The Soul ociety pon ored a Gong
Show where students could show
off their hidden talent . Trouble
Clilyton
ing to the itudience
before getting gonged .
Br. Jim Han on, one of the judge
of the Gong Show, anxiou ly
prepares to gong the next
contestilnt .

ph m r

-13

�Hard Work Pays Off
Working in the theatre has
"shaped a great deal of what
I've done," explains Susan
Loughran, an associate professor at Mary Moody Northen
Theatre. Loughran has been acting, directing and designing
costumes for a variety of stage
productions at the university
for six years.
A native of Long Island, New
York, Loughran has always
been interested in acting as
well as speech and debate . " I
began acting as a child, and
have been involved in it ever
since," Loughran said.
After graduating from
Webster College in St. Louis,
Mo ., she toured on and off for
years out of companies based in
New York City. When not doing a show, Loughran did

costume work to supplement
her income. " I am a workaholic.
There is always too much work
to do, it's there and I'm the person to do it."

Loughran keeps a watchful eye on the
cast during rehearsals.

Feature

I.
I

Kathy Hartensteiner
Todd Hartman
Lori Hernandez
Robert Hernandez
Byron Huff

Ruben Ibarra
Joe Jalomos
Carmen Juarez
Ltsa Keizer
Karen Korezenko

Jane Lapeyre
Juhe Lapeyre
Jeanette Lee
R no Lemo
I bel Lopez

140

)ph 1m rt:s
~--~--------~--~--~~-------------------------------------------------

�Carol Foun

Feature

Alex Mart1ner
o~m1 Mazuca
Merry Ann Me rary
R~becca McCurrv
Paul McHugh

Marvella Mt&gt;ndoz.J
Ren.:e Mtck
Mtch ... JJ,, Mttcht&gt;ll
Mary Molina
Margaret
&lt;JI

Laun 'rchnh
Fran Orn,•J,h
Ta'tt'Obt o .. ·rt&gt;
Alma PI n·n t.l

L1-...1 Pnpp

�Kimberly Poulin
Chuck Pulliam
Manuel Ramon
Mary Alice Ramon
Ali Rashdan

Thelma Reyna
Suzanne Richards
Patrick Robertson
Douglas Rodreguez
Julio Rojas

Brian Saari
David Scardino
Thomas Scherrer
Francisco Solis
Gayle Speranza

Fea ture
A I Puente

Waitin until tomorrow i mo t
common among s tudent . Howard
borne da dream s about hi
weekend plan in lead of hittin
th e book s.

l ·L -

)pho mo r ·

�AndresSosa
JimmySosa
Jim Southwell
Ghiath Tabbaa
Colette Tepe

Jana Trower
Adrienne Turman
John Vondrak
Jeanie Wagner
William Wahl

Wanda White
Rob Wood
Margarita Zuniga

•
Feature

Why Do Today What You Can
Put Off Until Tomorrow?
Procra tinate - To put off
doing until a future time .
How many people have
waited until the Ia t minute
to do so meth ing - to write a
paper, l ok for a job, read a
t tb k, or tud y for a te t?
And ev r time you
ay,
" Why did I wait until the last
minute ?"
Pro ra tination i a very
p pular pa time . Peo ple will
c me up with almo t an
r as n t
put off d ing
mething . I eping, eating,
watching T .
and
da dreaming ar common
e u e f r pr era tinating .
And wh not? A i m t frequent! the ca e, pe pie put

things off that they find
unpleasant or just simply do
not want to do, like studying
or job-hunting. When was
the last time someone actually enjoyed doing homework?
Some former students have
declared it to be about as
much fun as a toothache,
which probably explains
why they are " former
tudents ."
Most parents try to teach
their children at an early age
that when omething must
be done, it must be done . For
example, the
are always
reminding their kid to clean
their room, take the garbage
ou t , and to do their
h mework . Wh do parents

always harp on their kids to
get their chores done ?
Maybe it is because they do
not want their kids to pick
up the bad habit of procrastination . But procrastination is an ancient art that
will probably remain with
future generations.
Fortunately, when the
chips are down , and the
paper is due tomorrow, or
the check register is in the
negative numbers most of us
usually pull ourselves
together and get down to
bu iness, i.e . we stop - yes,
we top procrastinating and
do what need to be done .
(Your reading this is proof of
that.)

Sophomore - 143

�Freshmen
Maria Abrego
Laith Al -Bader
Mohamed Al-Jallaf
Mona Al-Jallaf
Austin Ananen u
Uchenna Anugnaede
John Aren dt
Sandra Austin

Bobby Aziz
Venita Bahadoorsingh
Gail Baldus
David Baley
Doug Beck
Mark Bernstein
Kirk Bockoven
Miguel Bosques

Robert Botello
Charlene Brash
Leslie Brawner
Antom Buningh
Salbador Cadena
The resa Campbell
Maria Cantu
Felicia Carstensen

Elvira-Ester Castro
Sheldon Chaffer
Paul Chalhoub
Rodolfo Ch avarria
Siu Ch iu
Vai Man Ch oi
Michae l Cour
Rodri go Crispin

Olga Cruz
Maria Diaz
Danette Dzikowicz
Uche Ehiogo
Lon E1chelberge r
He tor E1chelmann
Va lentine Eke
Bartholomew EZlka

lberto Fanas
Eduardo Fanas
M1 helle Fe ler
.mme F1~ht?r
Lmda Fhck
an1t?l Flore
Robert Fl ~
Rov Flore-.

144 -

�,-

Cinco de Mayo
Celebration
A popular celebration of
Mexican heritage is Cinco de
Mayo. Cinco de Mayo is
celebrated throughout the
Southwestern United States
as a day of Mexican unity.
On May 5, 1862 Mexico won
a battle against the French,
hence the yearly celebration

of Cinco de Mayo.
SAC sponsored many
activities to help the university remember this facet of
Mexican culture.
On Friday May 4, a
luncheon buffet was held on
the patio with live music by
Marimba Tropical .
On May 5, a Mexican
buffet was held in the
cafeteria with entertainment
by Mariachi Rebelde. Later
that night a dance was held
in the ReUnion where
Salaman provided the
entertainment.
"The celebration was a lot
of fun and it helped all the
students become more
familiar with the Mexican
culture," said a participant in
the activities.
Students and faculty were treated
to Mexican music by Marimba
Tropical as they gathered on the
patio for lunch .
Mexican food provided by the
cafeteria added to the flavor of the

Fr hrn n - 145

�Excuses! Excuses!
and More Excuses!
To sleep in or not sleep in? That is the question . We've all
been there, nice and cozy under the covers when the alarm
screams out the wake up call. It's amazing how many reasons
we can come up with to stay in bed. Have apy of these
thoughts o r excuses ever entered your mind on such an
occasion?
"It's raining and I don't have an umbrella and that little bit
of a sore throat will s urely turn into pneumonia ... better
not risk it!"
" I didn't do laundry and I d on't h ave anything to wear."
" It's Friday, no one expects me to go to that 8:00 class, why
disappoint them?"
" I' ll just hit the sn ooze alarm and catch a few more winks."
That last on e is probably the most widely used excuse.
Sometimes those cat naps turn into polar bear hibernation .

A morning dilemma that students
face is w h ether or not to get out of
bed.
Feature

Jacob Fraire
Endnca Galvan
Eduardo Garcta
Elt/abNh Garcia
Juan Garcta

Juan arcia
Bevt•rly Garland
Gll'nda aua
Ma Car/a
Ml•dltnda ,aua

Ml'h'"-' Gar/-.l
f.tr't (.t'llr~t'

l.rt ·h (,)aVl'
S.1nh"' Lllmt:l
).lmt'' C&lt;&gt;n/ollt'/

14(1 -

1-r shm •n

�Robert Gonzalez
Adnana Guerra
Gloria Guerra
Elsa Guerrero
Maria Guerrero

Mana Guerrero
Patrica Guerrero
Alexander Gutierrez
Elizabeth Hale
Rhonda Haley

Leslie Harris
Carolyn Hart
Cassandra Harvill
Susan Heredia
David Hernandez

Enrique Hernandez
Michael Hmton
Michael Hlaval
Barbara Hoffstatter
John Hovck

Thoma Hudson
Mjchelle Huff
Brenda Hutzler
Joseph ldehen
Fyneface lkpo

Ahmed jalloud
Chnstine Jam1 n
Usa Jenerette
Dtana ]1men z
Rick Jtmenez

Fr hmen- 147

�Kelly jones
Darin Keffeler
Kevin Kennedy
Tommy Kerbow
Michelle Kinsella

janet Kloc
Benny Kosarek
Michael Ledbetter
Kwok Lee
Brian Lewis

Stephanie Lieck
Mong-Ching Lin
Enrique Lopez
Laura Maldonado
Alice Marina

Theresa Marshall
Ana Marhne.t
Lilia Martinez
Jovita Medina
Rafaela Med1na

Tawnya M1ch1e
Matthew M1ller
D1ana Moreno
S,lndra Moreno
feh/ 1uno7

14 - Fr •shman

�Sarin Oak:
A Historical Tree
Many students on campu
are p rhap familiar with the
hi torical ignificance of the
Main Building . Chances are,
how v r, that mo t are
unawar of the important
rol th old Liv Oak tr e,
located n ar the northeast
corn r of the building,
play d in lecting th location for the building .
Broth r William Dunn, a
t acher of hi tory, ha done
xt nsive r arch on the
hi tory of the university and
ha
uncov red several
ref rene s made to the tree
in old d cuments. In one
uch document Brother
Dunn di c ver d that Father
Sorin, founder of the univer
ity, was particularly im-

pres ed with the beauty of
the area around the tree .
Father Sorin r ferred to the
tree as " the umbrella tree"
becau e of its shape .
The land for the university was originally given by
Colonel William Robards on
the condition that a Catholic
school for m n be built on
the site. Father Sorin, who
led the organization for
planning the school, intructed that the stone for
the Main Building be placed
to the " west of the umbrella
tree ." He believed the location was best uited for the
building because of its view
of the Colorado River and
the recently built Capitol
Building .

The tree, which is referred to as
Sorin Oak, is the oldest of its kind
in Travis County. Becau e of its
age, one of the larger branches is
supported by a metal bar.
Ricb ud

in

Feature

Ray ichols
Shelly tchols
Mana mo
Ferdinand wagbo
Onyegesi Obi

Julio Ochoa
I toma Okpah
}o ph Okp gbue
Dora Oltvarez
Khadt)a Oulahna

Dawn Owen
Eu bto Palact
Lupe Pequeno
Larrv Per z
Chn" tma P It

�Susan Petersen
Alma Placencia
ChnMine Plunkett
Randy Pollard
)anevie Porterfield

Kathenne Price
Ro~a Prieto
Marcos Quijano
Moh a mmad Qureshi
Diana Ramire;:

Olegano Ramon
Petra Rcse nde /
Julia R~ycs
Marivel Reyes
Romella Reyes

Yolanda R•vera
Ht•lt•n RobJn'&gt;on
Phd Roc ha
Ro,,, Rod ngu e/
M ,lu n cio Roml'•ro

M.nco Roncan
t...an·n Ro"'
CvnJ1Rmnn
ll~o1na Ru11
M~t·h~k Ru,nai-.

I

l dn•n R\an
h&gt; S.1l1dt'
1.Htll' 'i,m, ht'/
'-ou&gt;tt S.1ndhn
Ht•n Santan.l
du.~r

�Andreas Savvtdes
Suzan Sechler
Karen Serafin
Jill Singletary
Mana Solorzano

Monica St Romatn
Carola Summers
Ghiath Tabbaa
Recy Terry
Kathy Thompson

Carlos Torres
Ricardo Torres
Salomon Torre
Mohamad Toufeth
Kelly Treadwell

Mehssa Trent
Irene Varga
Roberto Vasquez
Blanca Veloz
Albertina Viesca

Enck Vtles
Roxanna Villagomez
Chn ttne Walters
Martm Warfteld
Ltsa Wtlliam

Cull n Wtlson
Karen Woolle
Amal You uf
Mtlan Zabka
Johnn. Zamora

Fr hmen- 151

�Graduate Students
Alfredo Baiz
John Beck
James Bisson
Partick Dailey

Mazyazr Daravi
Lourdes Espinoza
Alfred Fant
Maxine Friedman

Charles Hassett
Anthony Lavallais
Carlos Moreno
Awni Nabulsi

Raymond Rowehl
Dorothy Sailer
james Spruill
Kheng-Koe Tan

arol Taylor
ltzabeth Thomas

152 - Graduat

�Walsh Gives 26 Years,
Realizations Abound
Twenty-six y,ears ago
Stephen Walsh was
graduating from St. Anthony
High School in Long Beach,
California.
Since that time he has
become a Brother of the Holy
Cross, earned a doctorate and
served as president of a
university that seems to thrive
on uncertainty .
He has been praised for his
vision and willingness to innovate, held up as an example
of one of the youngest college
presidents in the nation ...
and criticized and pressured
because of the failings of his
administration and institution.
Those who know him well
have seen the look in his eyes
change from bright, hopeful
optimism to fatigued surrender. Coping with the real
world and helping to usher
the university into the '80s
took their toll.
Walsh began his associa-

Brother Walsh departed after 13
years of serving as president of the
University.

tion with the university in
1958 after graduating from
high school and joining the
Brothers of the Holy Cross. He
has known this institution inside and out. He earned his
bachelor's degree in history
from here in 1962, and then
earned his master's degree
from Our Lady of the Lake
University in San Antonio and
doctorate in education from
UT Austin .
Walsh has been a faculty
member, chairperson of the
Center for Teaching and Learning and Academic Dean of
this university, and was named president in 1972. During
his tenure the enrollment
doubled and the operating
budget increased five fold.
The university achieved national distinction for programs
serving adult learners, the
education of migrant farm
workers, bilingual education
and writing and listening
programs.
A I Putntt

Feature

Gene Binder
Jean Burbo
Virginia Dailey
David Dickson

Bob Fntsch

Donald Goertz
Rtchard Ktn ey
Robert Mugerauer

Administration

�Walsh was always on hand to congratulate hard-working students
during Honors Night through the

Feature

Faculty
Henry Altmiller
Andrew Angermeier
Raymond Apicella
Anna Bolling

M1cht&gt;lll' ampbell
Walll' onoly
l&gt;rnl'l1u' Corcoran
John Da1ley

154 - J acult ·

Brother Walsh discusses a point
during the university's selfanalysis held in the fall.

�Accomplishments by f•culty •nd staff
were recogniz.ed by the President's
Speci•l Service •words; here, Jim Fletcher receiv~ ~n awa_rd from Walsh on
beh•lf of the entire physic•! pl•nt.

Walsh ..
Among the achievements of
which he is most proud is the
building of the ScarboroughPhillips Library.
Walsh wanted to resign
earlier but was persuaded to
continue . He resigned in the
fall knowing the job was unfinished . . . but found there
was no more to give.
David Fox-

Feilture

George Dawkins
William Dunn
Glenn Hinkle
Marianne Hopper

Rtchard Hughes
Eagan Hunter
Stan Irvin
Marcia Kinsey

r-----------------------------------------------------------------------~Fa_c_u_lty--155

�Faculty

James Koch
J. D . Lewis
Emma Linn
Susan Loughran

Daniel Lynch
Jacqueline McCaffrey
Sharon Mcilroy
Jimmy Mills

Gerald Muller
Terry Newton
joesph O' Neal
Richard Orton

Leo sterhaus
Had• Ove1s1
John Perron
Robert Ree&lt;e

-Faculty

�Apicella's Book Helps Community Prayer
Br. Raymond Apicella is an
important contributor to the
unive ity.
He t ache all the basic
criptur cours s, Old Testament Survey, Introduction to
th
New T tament, and
topic cour s in religion . He
al o I ctur s on th family
and cultural div r ity for
Fr hmen tudie and i in
charg of an adult ducation
program n campu .
A maj r and r cent contribution Apicella made wa
writing a prayer book . The
b ok contain re ponse to
liturgy, morning and evening prayer ,
criptural
r f r nc , ugge tions on
how to pray, and om blank

pages for per onal reflections . The prayer book was
published and sponsored by
Campus Ministry . Apicella's
dream for the prayer book is
for every student at the
univer ity to own a copy.
One of the first contributions Apicella made when he
fir t came to the university
in 1976, was to e tablish the
Center for Creative Ministry,
a program which allows
tudents to live together in a
Christian community .
Apicella said, " St. Ed's is a
highly creative institution
that i committed to the mission tatement and it has a
str ng sen e of community. I
like working here."

Dam ian Morgan

Not only does Br. Raymond
Apicella teach religious course, but
he also takes an active interest in
students and their views.
Feature

Ttmothy Robtnson
Joanne anch z
Letha park
Glady Thomason

John Tr ut
ian • ~ al h
Cathy~

~r

Madeleme

~

ber

Faculty- 157

�A 40 Year Legend
Several events
Phonothon, Celebration of
Lights and Song, Beach Bash
and Spring Fling Week have become traditions
within the past five years.
Other things - Freshmen
Studies, RCM, and the Big
State Conference (BSC) tennis championship - have
been part of the university
for quite a while.
When speaking about the
BSC tennis title, quite a
while means 22 years. At the
helm of this tennis team is
Br. Emmett Strohmeyer, an
83-year-old Holy Cross
brother.
As one enjoys a game of
tennis or racquetball, takes a
jog around the track, or
walks over to the Cafeteria,
Strohmeyer can always be
seen down at the courts. His
time is spent, in addition to
coaching his players, keeping the area around the
courts neat and trim .
Strohmeyer still finds time
to mow the lawn and care for
the rosebushes . He also
oversees operations at the
Pro Shop.
When Strohmeyer was
asked what his secret is for a
full life, the answer came
Br. Emmett can frequently be seen
walking around the tennis courts
picking up the garbage and keeping the area groomed.

Davtd Withams
Neal Wtse
David Wright
Wtlham Zanardi

158 - fa ulty

easily and quickly: "Stay
cool and keep going . Hard
work and prayers is my
philosophy."
During his tenure with the
university from 1947 to present, Strohmeyer has put in
much hard work . Prior to being named as the head tennis
&lt;coach, he was the Bookstore
manager .
Strohmeyer has remained
an unchanging facet of the
university.
Through hard work, prayer, and a
stay cool attitude, Br. Emmett has
been able to take the tennis team to
22 titles.

�Staff
Thomas Bjelland
Ruth Bounous
Randall Braddock
Leroy Clementich

Betty Cliff
Dons Constantine
Daisy Dirk-Hazen
Rosie Gonzales

Kathy Herz1k
K1m Jessup
Barbara Lau
John Lucas

Melba Martmez-M!Shler
Phl11p Odette
Anne Prov1nce
Connie Pulley

Eileen Shodet
Charles m1th
jo eph Spru
Cathenne Thomp,on

taff- 159

�Staff

Admissions Office
Front Row: Chris Ryan, Natalyn
Whitis. Second Row: Manuel Juarez,
Deb Noll. Third Row: Jean Franz,
Carole Jones, Josie Barrett. Back Row:
Rex Jerden, Martha Matinez.

Cafeteria Staff
The ARA Dining Service has been
with the university for the past three
years.

Job S.nk
Ruth Bounou . Wanda White, S.rry
Li ter, Virgini.a uit , J.an Porterfield.

�Planning/Institute Research
S.uah Sitton, Danica Dailey, Bob Strong

Female R.A.'s
Front Row: Martha St. Romain, Robin
Miele S«ond Row: En Munoz, Teee
Conroy. &amp;ck Row: Brenda Carter, Dolly
Kelbaugh, Kathy Lind, Natalia Luna .

.

z

MaleR.A.'
Pete Erickson, Trouble Cia ton, Paul
Viera, Frank Sol , Joe Bill, Guy Illes.

Staff- 161

�Registrars Office
Donna Holcomb, Su-Zan Harper,
Becky Erie, Mary Gayle Leming.
Ri ch.ud Niu

Security
Front Row: Susan Heredia, Cetrina
Smith, Noemi Mazuca. S«ond
Row: Roxy Villagomez, Aleta
Brentley, Joe Fenton. ~de Row:
Andres SoN, James Tindel, Larry
Garrison, Miguel Villafranca,
Pedro Pena.

162- taff

�Library
Front Row: Margaret Johnson, Br.
Jeremias Mysliwiec, Kathy Herzik,
Josie Morales. &amp;ck Row: MarieLucie Mauger, Eileen Shocket, Br.
Phillip Odette, Inez Nira, Annie
Paulson, Joe Sprug.

Moody H;lll Secretaries
Front Row: Tyrrell Courtney,
Peggy l..useter, Linda Metzger.
&amp;clc Row: Patricia Hinton, Helen
Jacobs.

taff - 163

�Index
A
Abbott, Morris Jr. 118
Acevedo, Feliciano 138
Abrego, Maria 144
Agueros, Jaime 138
Akinniranye, Bolanle 118
Al Bader, Laith 144
Al Haddad, Hassan 90, 118
Al Jallaf, Mona 144
Al Sharqi, Ali 138
Al Saie, Abdulaziz 118
Alexander, Gregory 71
Ally, Murtaza 36, 118
Alonzo, Aniceto 138
Alonzo, Norma 110
Alvarez, Tom 118
Ananenu, Augustine 144
Andreozzi, Holly 118
Aniekwena, Patrick 132
Anthony, Scott 138
Anugwaede, Uchenna 144
Apicella, Raymond 175
Apokremioti, Vasiliki 132
Arends, Yvonne 118
Arendt, John 144
Arteaga, Irene 36, 136
Austin, Sandra 144
Avila, Maribel118
Ayala, Frances 132
Aziz, Robert 144

B
Bagan, James 118
Bahadoor ingh, Venita 108,
144
Balderrama, Luis 107
Baldu , Gail144
Bal y, David 144
Barlow, Sarah 118
Barrera, Martha 138
Ba hara, Ro e 138
Baucom, Maria 104
B k, Dougla 79, 144
Beckelhymer, John 10 , 13
B niflah , Menahem 11
B n n, Augu ta 6 , 71
B ntl , hri 71 , 132
B

1

-

In

Bockoven, Kirk 21 , 144
Bockoven, Krista 39, 110, 118
Bolling, Anna 62
Bonilla, Belinda 1 1R
Bosquez, Miguel144
Botello, Robert 144
Bourgeois, Greg 110, 138
Bowers, Catharine 132
Bradley, Sandra 9
Bradshaw, Rebekah 118
Branch, Lisa 32, 132
Brash, Charles 108, 118
Brash, David 108
Brawner, Leslie 144
Brennan, Shirley 138
Breshahan, Aileen 132
Bright, Edward 138
Brocato, James 103, 106, 110,
118
Brock, George 48
Brown, Anna 118
Brown, Henrietta 118
Brown, Inger 73, 75
Brown, Wanda 132
Bruckbauer, Mark 138
Bryant, Patricia 118
Buitrago, Guillerm o 138
Buningh, Anton 144
Burleson, Guy 70, 71
Burstyn, Pearce 34
Butler, Marion Jr. 118

c
Cadena, Salbador 107, 144
Cadwallader, Gary 44, 138
Campbell, Donald Jr. 138
Campbell, Michelle 34, 155
Campbell, Theresa 75, 81, 82,
144
Canaday, Jeffrey 138
Cantu , Maria 144
Cardenas, Cesar 118
Carreno, Luis 118, 144
Ca o, Franci co 120
Ca tellanos, Antonio 132
Ca tillo, Robert 112
Ca tro, Elvira-Ester 144
Cavazo , Robert 13
na , Luca 100
rqua, Paul 132
haff r, Sheldon 144

Cheung, Wing Hang 138
Chiu, Edmund 104
Chiu, Siu 144
Choi, Vai Man 144
Cinek, Ed 78
Cipolla, Albert 120
Clay, Carol132
Clayton, Trouble 104, 111,
138
Clifford, Dwight 103, 120
Cole, Colleen 120
Collins, Chris 71
Colwell, Leonita 120
Connelly, Margaret 22, 33,
45, 48, 132
Conoly, Walle 104
Conroy, Anne 120
Contreras, Christina 132
Contreras, Paulo 40, 45
Corcoran, Cornelius 169
Cortinas, Maria 108, 121
Cote, Bridget 121
Cote, Kelly 121
Cote, Michael 41
Cour, Michael144
Cowan, Judith 121
Cox, Helon 121
Crawford, Deborah 75, 82
Crews, Timothy 121
Crispin, Rodrigo 144
Cruz, Olga 144
Cuadros, Roberto 121
Cuellar, Eduardo 121
Cueto, Hiram 107
Cunningham, Susan 121
Curiel, Marisol 138
Cyr, Ma ry 138

0
DaSilva, Jorge 89, 132
Dailey, Danica 138
Dailey, Shannon 132
Daniels, Diane 82
Davis, De ell 70, 71 , 138
Davis, Eleanor 132
Davis, Jacquel ine 138
Davis, Mary 112
Davis, Stephen 132
De Iva, Ro alinda 20, 13
D La Garza, Salvado r III ,
132
DeLe n, imona 13
DeSha , Br nda111 , 121
D Ybarrondo, Julieann 1,

82
Denny, Shaun 121
De Soi, John 84
Deutsch, Debbie 121
Devitt, Doreen 34, 134
Dexter, Robert 121
Dhamcharoen, Petchada 132
Diaz, Maria 144
Dillard, Melynda 132
Dillon, Patricia 106, 110, 138
Dilworth, Pamela 81 , 82
Dirks, James 121
Dougherty, Anne 138
Dozzi, Patrick 37
Dzikowicz, Danette 144

E
Eagan, John 23, 34, 46, 100,
138
Edge, Thomas 103
Ehiogo, Uche 144
Eichelberger, Lori 144
Eke, Edwin 132
Eke, Valentine 144
Ekeh, Gladys 121
Elder, Valerie 132
Elijuri, Wadiht 90
Erickson, Pete 19
Ervin, Linda 5, 10, 103, 104,
106, 11 7, 132
Escamez, Gonzalo
Esparza, Alice 138
Espinoza, Luis 121
Ewuzie, Emman uel122
Eymard, Phillip 104
Ezika, Bartholomew 144

F
Farias, B rt 104, 144
Farias, Eduardo 144
Farias, G rardo 3 , 6 , 71 ,
132
Faroh, Ivan 122
Farrell, Patrick 132
Felton, Edith 122

Fi h r, irginia 144
Fletcher, Jam 132
Flick, Linda 144

�Flores, Daniel 144
Flores, Roberto 144
Flores, Roy 144
Flynn, Bill108
Foley, William 37, 122
Foran, Carol22,40, 132
Ford, Debra 132
Forstchen , Maia 50, 122
Fortuna, Marlene 1, 112, 138
Fo ter, Hattie 122
Fraire, Jacob 143
Franklin, Vernon 71
Freeman, Frontaine 122
Friday, Frank 108
Friesenhahn, Merri 122
Frigault 107
Fritsch, Bob 98
Furiati, Juan 90
Fujimoto, Paul 138

G

Gonzalez, Robert 147
Gran , David 103, 122
Gran, Diane 110, 138
Green, Della 123
Green, Virginia 72, 73, 82,
138
Gressel, Ronald 123
Guerra, Adalberto 123
Guerra, Adriana 147
Guerra, Gloria 147
Guerra, Roe! 138
Guerra, Victor 123
Guerrero, Elsa 147
Guerrero, Jose 22, 132
Guerrero, Maria 147
Guerrero, Patricia 147
Guillen, Adam 108
Gutierriz, Alexander 147
Gutierrez, Mauricio 123

H

Galle, Karla 138
Gallegos, Cynthia 138
Galvan , Endrica 143
Garcia, Armando 138
Garcia , Eduardo 143
Garcia, Elizabeth 143
Garcia , Jesse 132
Garcia, Juan 143
Garland , Beverly 143
Garrison, Christina Jo 108,
122
Garza, Glenda 142
Garza , Maria 138
Garza, Max 143
arza, Melinda 138
Garza, Melinda D . 10
Garza , Melissa 143
George , Mary 143
ianotti, Michael 132
Gil , Jill 45, 49
Gill , David 122
ill , Mary 63
illette, Bruce 132
ill , Gretchen 138
inn , Richard 16, 103, 10 ,
110, 122

75, 2
me z, Patricia 1
antos 143
, Joaquin 90
, rmand 122

Hackbarth , Carol138
Hale, Elizabeth 147
Haley , Rhonda 147
Hanson , Jim 102, 125
Happ, Kelly 132
Harkenrider, Tomilee 106,
138
Harney, Tracy 50
Harris, Deborah 23, 123, 169
Harris, Leslie 147
Harris, Margie 132
Hart, Carolyn 147
Hartensteiner, Kathery n 140
Hartman, Todd 140
Harvill , Cassandra 147
Hawkins, John 40
Heredia , Gildardo 138
Heredia , Susan 147
Hernandez, David 147
Hernandez, Enrique 147
Hernandez, Lori 140
Hernandez, Robe rt 140
Herrera , Jesu ita 132
Hinton , Michael 44, 147
Hinton , Patricia 103, 123, 17 1
Hlavac, Michael147
Hoffstatter, Barbara 147
Hor ak , Li a 10
Hogle, Harriett 132
Houck , John 147
H oughto n, John 63
Hud n, Th o ma 147
Huff, B r n 140
Huff, M ich elle 37, 147
Hun ai d i, Al i 132
Hutzler, Bre nda 14

I
Ibanez, Dora 123
Ibarra, Ruben 140
lbeh, Chidozia 132
Ickes, Mark 110, 132
Idehen , Joseph 147
Ifeobu, Canice 124
Ikpo, Fynefance 147
Iles, Gary 3
Irvin, Stan 104
Isaacs, Arthur 124
Ituah, Best 132

J
Jackson-Johnson, D. Y. 132
Jackson, La Verne 132
Jackson , Michael 29, 124
Jalloud, Ahmed 147
Jalomos, Jose 140
Jamison, Christine 58, 147
Janovsky, Chris 45
Jarrell , David 124
Jauhiainen, Karl 85
Jenerette, Lisa 147
Jimenez, Diana 147
Jimenez, Jose 124
Jimenez, Ricardo 147
Jirousek , Julie 41 , 44
Johnson , James 70, 71
Johnson , Michael134
Jones, Kelly 148
Jones, Michael 71 , 134
Juarez, Carmen 140
Juarez, Manuel88, 90
Juarez, Patricia 64, 90, 124
Jung, Jae Ryun 124

K
Kambhu , Surach ai 90, 109
Kane, De nni s 103, 110, 124
Kann e, Cra ig 44, 124
Ka zim, Eid 134
Keating , Patricia 21 , 103, 109,
117, 134
Keffel e r, Darin 14
Keizer, Li a 140
Ke keoc ha , Rech ea l 124, 134
e lba ugh , Margare t 124
e nned y, Kev in 14
Ke rbow, Th oma 14
Kim, H ong 124
Kin e ll a, Michelle 14
Joe, Jane t 14
I dn icki , De n i e 22, 65,

106, 109, 134
Koch , David 134
Kopponen , Viktor 124
Kosarek, Benny 148
Kouba , Tamara 74, 134

L
Labry , Robert 28, 59, 11 5,
124, 171
Lane, Jeanna 104
Lange, Maurice 124
Lapeyre, Jane 140
Lapeyre, Julie 140
Lara , Lydia 134
Lawless, Anthon y 134
Lawrence, Pauline 123
Leary, John 125
Ledbetter, MichaelS, 7 1, 148
Lee, Alan 45
Lee, Jeanette 140
Lee, Kwok Wah 148
Lemos, Rosario 140
Leopard , Mignia 125
Lewis, Brian 148
Lewis, Victoria 75
Licea, Leticia 104
Lieck, Stephanie 148
Lin , Mong-Ching 148
Lind , Katherine 103, 108,
110, 134
Liska, Carolyn 134
Lock, Joy 64
Lombard i, Michael1 34
Long, Robert II 111 , 125, 134
Lopez, Eduardo 22, 108, 125
Lopez, Enrique 148
Lopez, Guadalupe 125
Lopez, Isabel 140
Lopez, Robert 110
Lopez, Roland o 125
Lo tze, Paul 108, 134
Loughran , Susan 169
Lozan o, Eri c 99
Lumbrera , o ra 125
Luna , Hilda 103
Luna , a talia 106, 135
Luce nski, John 10
Lyczak , H ele na 45
Ly n ch, Dan iel 61
Lyo n , Victor 9

M
Mackie, Patrick 127
Maco ra, Margare t 127
Made r, There a 10 , 109, 127
Malave, }o e 135

Ind

- 165

�Maldonado, Laura 148
Mann, Laura 104
Manz, Teresa 135
Marengo, Don 134
Marina, Alice 148
Marquez, Diana 127
Marshall, Theresa 148
Martin, Rebecca 111
Martinez, Adriana 127
Martinez, Alex 141
Martinez, Ana 148
Martinez, Frank 107
Martinez, Mere 108
Martinez, Onesimo 127
Martinez, Rafael 37
Massie, Kevin 108
Mathis, Tony 71
Mayfield, William 127
Mazuca, Noemi 141
McCarty, Mary 135
McClaine, Jane 127
McClure, Brayde 38, 71, 127
McCord, Greg 135
McCrary, Merry Ann 86, 108,
110
McCurry, Rebecca 141
McFerren, Patricia 135
McHugh, Paul110, 141
Mcilroy, Sharon 72, 75
McKey, David 71
McLellan, Elizabeth 135
Medina, Jovita 148
Medina, Rafaela 148
Mendoza, Mellie 110, 135
Mendoza, Marvelia 141
Meyer, Jean 62
Micale, Pietro 127
Michie, Tawnya 148
Mick, Renee 141
Mick, Robin , 4, 103, 104, 127
Milam , Kay 34, 59, 135
Mille r, Matthew 148
Mill , Jimmy 60
Minton, Pepper 41 , 45, 50
Mitch ell, Mich lle 141
Mitchell, Myra 127
Molina, Maria 141
M nroe, h ryl127
Montet, Elli 71
M ntgomery,
vin 65, 103,
127
M nt ya, Jacki 135
M rate , armen 135
M
M
M
M

1

-

lnd

Muller, Gerald 100
Munoz, Evangelina 109, 110,
127
Munoz, Feliz 148
Munoz, Jose 127
Murray, Brenda 148
Myers, Greg 71, 148

N
Narvaez, Leticia 137
Nass, Marianella 127
Natsis, George 148
Neal, James 90, 110, 127
Neal, Margaret 141
Nelson, Sylvie 148
Nemec, Brian 148
Newton , Julie 113
Nichols, George 29
Nichols, Lauri 141
Nichols, Ray 149
Nichols, Shelly 149
Nino, Maria 149
Nira, Richard 9, 34, 57, 106,
112, B7
Nunn, Ranita 103
Nwagbo, Ferdinand 149
Nwangburuka, Boniface 127

0
O'Bar, Laura 127
O' Connor, William 127
O'Keefe, Timothy 108, 127
O'Neal, Joe 63
Obi, Onyegesi 149
Ochoa, Julio 149
Okafor, Faustinus 132
Okpah, Isioma 149
Okpegbue, Joseph 149
Olivarez, Dora 149
Oliver, Debora 39, 110, 127
Olsen, Cindy 34, 112, 137
Olson, Michael 127
Ornela , Frank 141
Osborne, Howard 57, 137,
142
Oulahna, Khadija 149
Owen , Dawn 98, 149
Owen by, Su an 12

p
Page, L ri 137
Palaci , Eu bio 149
Palm r, Dai 12
Panb..au, Brain 103, 112, 12
Pa hiardi , Petr 12

Pate, Tom 68, 71
Patino, Martha 46, 50
Pena, Carlos 90, 137
Pena, Pedro 90
Pepper, Cynthia 128
Pequeno, Guadalupe 149
Perez, Larry 45, 149
Perez, Roberto 90
Perry, Patricia 137
Pequeno, Lupe 107
Person, Amy 104
Pesoli, Christina 149
Petersen, Susan 150
Placencia, Alma 141 , 150
Plunkett, Christine 150
Pollard, Randall 84, 150
Ponder, Miles
Popp, Lisa 141
Porterfield, Janevie 150
Portner, George 137
Poth, John 128
Poulin, Kimberly 142
Price, Katherine 150
Prieto, Rosa 150
Puente, Alfonso 19, 56, 112,
137
Pulliam, Chuck 22, 40, 48,
142
Pulliam, Patricia 128

Q
Quijano, Marcos 150
Quinn, Thomas 103, 108

R
Ramirez, Diana 150
Ramirez, Esmeralda 137
Ramirez, Fernando 128
Ramirez, Norma 92
Ramirez, Pedro Jr. 106, 137
Ramon, Manuel 142
Ramon, Mary Alice 137, 142
Ramon, Olegario 150
Ramon, Reginaldo 129
Ramos, Roy 82, 110, 129
Ranheim , Robert 60, 110, 137
Ra hdan, Ali 142
Ra mus en, Jina 137
R ady, Matthew 129
Redding , B tty 137
R ntler, Tammy 137
R endez, P tra 75, 150
, Julia 150
, Marivel 150
e , Romelia 111 , 150
R n ld , anc 137

Rhodenbaugh, Doug137
Riccio, Edward 137
Richards, Suzanne 142
Ricketts, Scott 129
Rippee, Ed 103, 106, 110, 137
Rivera, Yolanda 20, 150
Roberts, Charles 71 , 129
Robertson , Patrick 142
Robinson, Helen 150
Rocha, Phil III 150
Rodgers, Lance 137
Rodriguez, Angela 45
Rodriquez, Arnold 137
Rodriguez, Carmen 137
Rodriquez, Douglas 142
Rodri uez, Rosa 150
Rojas, Julio 85, 142
Romero, Gerardo 123
Romero, Maricio 150
Roncari, Marco 89, 90, 150
Rossi, Karen 75, 150
Round, Sharon 49
Rowin, Cynthia 150
Rowland, Thais 137
Rufe, Mark 102
Ruiz, Iliana 150
Ruiz Arthur, Lourdes 38,
110, 137
Rusnak, Michele 81, 82, 86,
150
Rwija, Pascal 90
Ryan, Eileen 150
Ryan , Chris 68

s
Sailer, Susan 136, 137
Salas, Gustavo 129
Salazar, Maria 72, 75
Salazar, Mayla 82
Saldana, Cynthia 137
Salem, Sanad 129
Salido, Eduardo 150
Salim, Walid 137
Salinas, Maricela 129
Sanchez, Deanne137
Sanche~ Linda 137
Sanchez, Joanne 62
Sanchez, Martha 150
Sandlin, Scott 110, 150
Santana, B n 150
antie tebah, Raul 90
Satt rfi ld, Dick 129
avvide , Andrea 151
ch rr r, Tom 10 , 110, 142
chultz, Stuart 71
cott, J1mm1 129
ar , Allen 71

�Sechler, Suzan 151
Segura, Ruby 129
Sellers, Lisa 113
Serafin, Karen 151
Severance, Charlene 129
Shaaban, Khaled 129
Shelton, James 137
Sheppard, John Jr. ll2, 129
Sherman, Shari 129
Shindell, Tom 103, 109, 137
Shuler, Rose llS, ll7, 130
Silva, Maria 60
Silvas, Oscar
Simeroth, Laura 106, 137
Simpson, Michele 40, 51
Smith, Cetrina 111
Smith, Lance 130
Smith, Karen 130
Smith, Patricia 130
Sobranzo, Maria 107
Solis, Francisco 109, 142
Solorzano, Maria 151
Sornoff, Rachel104
Sosa, Andres 142
Sosa, Jimmy 142
Southwell, James llO, 142
Speranza, Gayle 142
St. Romain, Martha 6, 38, 65,
103, 130
St. Romain, Monica 151
Stack, Michael 6, 45, 130
Stanley, Darrell28

Steele, Victor 93
Stiefer, Roger 130
Stout, Frances 130
Striegler, Tamyra 137
Stroud, Kenny 131
Summers, Carola 40, 151
Suraci, Frances 137

T
Tabbaa, Ghiath 143, 151
Tamayo, Ricardo 131
Tepe, Colette 22, ll7, 143
Terry, Recy 151
Thomas, James 131
Thompson, Gary 108
Thompson, Kc.thy 151
Thornton, John 65
Tijerina, Marina 72, 73, 109,
110, 131
Ting, Cecil123
Torres, Carlos 151
Torres, Ricardo 151
Torres, Salomon 151
Toufeili, Mohamad 151
Treadwell, Kelly 151
Trent, Melissa 151
Trevino, Dolores 131
Trlicek, Greg 76
Trower, Jana 143
Turman, Adrienne 143
Tyminski, Herminia 131

u
Uriegas, Rosie 137

v
Valadez, Carlos 137
Valencia, Rosa 106, 131
Vargas, Irene 151
Vasquez, Roberto 151
Vega, Jose 137
Vela, Juan 99
Veloz, Blanca 151
Viesca, Albertina 151
Viles, Erick 151
Villagomez, Roxanna 151
Vivas, Laura 137
Vondrak, John 143

w
Wagner, Elise 44, 46, 131
Wagner, Jeanie 143
Wahl, William 143
Waldock, Philip 131
Walrath, Craig 131
Walsh, Marie Andre 169
Walsh, Stephen 170, 175
Walters, Christine 151
Walters, John 108, 137

Ward, Rozanne 45
Ware, Paul 90
Warfield, Martin 151
Watson, Dawn llO, 131
Wazhick, 79
White, Wanda 143
Williams, David 62
Williams, Lisa ll2, 151
Wilson , Valetta 131
Wilson, Cullen 151
Wood, Rob 29, llS, 143
Woodard, Judith 131
Woolley, Karen 151

y
Yanez, Juanita 137
Yanez, Yvette 131
Yang, Yee Yen 137
Yousuf, Amal151
Ysla, Joel 92, 137
Yzaguirre, Laura 75, 86, 131

z
Zabka, Milan 151
Zamora, Johnny 151
Zapata, Alfredo 92, 131
Zuehlke, Jill137
Zuk, Mitchell 36
Zuniga, Margarita 143

Colophon
The 1984 edition of the Tower was printed by Taylor Publishing Company in
Dalla , Te as . All printing was done using offset lithography .
Paper stock i 100-pound cream white enamel. Endsheet stock is 65-pound
vellum printed in two designs with midnight blue #17 .
over i a 10-point Lexatone material in blue #452 . The embossed design was
done by oel MacDonald. The grain is hand tooled with a black rub .
B d copy is 12-point Palatino; captions are 8-point standard; photo credits
ar 6 point. Type face for headlines: Student Life - Korinna, Academics li r, Organizations- Times Roman , Sports - Wind or, People - Optima .
la picture were taken by Varden Studios of Texas.
p t color in the opening i silver, spot color on the division pages is midnight blu .
Tne 19 4 Tower include 176 pages and ran 400 copie . Distribution was in
Augu t 19 4.
Publicati n ad i er wa Julianne ewton.

Index- 167

�F~ther

~nd

d~ughter

shu-e light
in ~ private moment
during the ceremon .
~nd s h~dows

r~du~tion me~n

f~milies

gifts and proud
ce lebrating in the heut of

us tin .

Rtc tyrd

radu::~tion

1u

�Graduation:
Time of Goodbyes ..
. . Goodwishes
Four years ago and
sometimes more, we first
crossed the boundary into
university life somewhere
from the outside world . We
came from high schools
across the country, jobs in
Austin, foreign countries,
military service ... each with
different dreams, ideals and
understandings of what the
university had to offer and
what we hoped to achieve .
Each of us during the
tenure endured hardships
and experienced triumphs of
rollercoaster proportions. " I
don't speak English so good
A group photo on the steps of the
M~in Building is u
much of a
tr;~dition for gr~du;~ting seniors u
mortubouds ~nd bl&lt;~ck robes.

and difficulty with the final.
~Se habla Espanol ?" "I lost
my meal ticket and my folks
can't afford to send me any
more money ." "I found the
greatest job! It fits perfectly
with my schedule and I can
study on the job!" " What did
you get in Space 101? I can' t
believe I got an A ."
Somehow we got here scrapping, kicking and scratching
all the way .
At graduation we found
ourselves caught in the ambivalence of wanting to stay
and wanting to go . Finally
we had made it, but now it
was time to leave. So much
effort, so many friends, so
much change, and now it
was over.
Commencement is il lime of fin~li­
ty for bculty members, too, ~s they
uy goodbye to students who have
become friends . Brother Cornelius
Corcor&lt;~n gets help with his hood .

Sistu Muie Andre W~lsh ~nd
Assi tilnt Profe sor Susan
Loughran get re~d for the hcult
proce sion into P~lmer
Auditorium.
Debor~h Harri
prepares to lud
the pro ce ion of gradu~ting
seniors and perform with the
Hilltopper hor~le .

Graduation - 169

�Brother tephen Wal h handed out
diploma and honorary degree in
one of hi Ia t official acts a
pre ident.
The
abrieli Bras Quintet, the
llilltopper
horale and ke ad ministrators were part of the pomp
and circum lance.

17

raduation

�Graduation ...
Change the tassell ... They
spelled my name right ...
Exit to the left." Hugs, congratulations, kisses
"I
really did it!"
Now we were graduates
" with all the rights appertaining ." What were those
rights? Was it a special bill of
rights written somewhere to
tell us some mystical revelation? If so, who had it? Now
that we were officially
educated , weren ' t we
qualified to read it? Each of
us in his or her own way was
struggling with the past,
which now was codified on a
piece of parchment and
uncertainty .
The past always lives in
the now as long as you
remember, and as we left, we
With ou t a picture- taking session,
promised to remember .
w here would the memories be in 20

How is it that humans are
able to experience extreme
joy and sorrow at the same
time? This day we did . The
agony of leaving , the
gratification of finishing .
Was it worth it? Everyone
told us it would be,
somehow it felt different
than what we had expected.
Just a few days before, we
were tudent struggling to
finish that last paper and
cram for that last final, and
n w we were standing in
line, waiting to enter the
auditorium . "Where is my
name on the program?
Maybe they are trying to
give me a hint. It's not there!
Phew, settle down heart.

After it was all over, Bob Labry was
all smiles.

yeus?

Graduation is a time of closeness as
families see their children fulfill a
dream .
Patricia Hinton gets a hug for
finding time to graduate while
working as a university staff
member.

Graduation - 171

�Oo~mio~n

Morg.-n

Hilltop light that ha brightened the
day for the university community for
almost a century shines through lonely Old Main windows.
Getting seniors to stand where they
s hould for a final photograph was Damian Morgoan's difficult loa k the doay
before comm encement.

172 -

in

Rtch.ud

iu

�ime of Passage_
Present at the ninety-ninth commencement were familiar face
we had known during the year and previous years. Many would
not be present at the one-hundredth . Vacancies in many of the
highest offices were still open, leaving an aura of my teriou
foreboding .
After commencement, the new president was named . Patricia
Hayes, a vice-president of administration and finance at the College of St. Rose in Albany, N .Y., was named as the in titution'
first woman president. Hayes had directed building programs and
fund-raising projects and as director of admi sions developed a
marketing strategy which resulted in a 50 percent increase in
freshman enrollment. Hayes was selected from more than 400 applicant and appeared to have the necessary vita to lead the
university through the time of passage. Renovation of Old Main,
building the photo-communications / art complex and convocation
center, and non-competitive faculty salaries being broad ided by a
hrinking income were the the university's welcome wagon .
As the cool pring breezes warmed to summer, we continued to
remind ourselve of the beauty of the metamorphosis and that:
For those who graduated the end of
the ynr brought the end of one way of
life and the beginning of another. It
also mnnt more time to relax.

Old Main peeks out from behind the
Hill, as if to say, "Don' t forget about
me."

C•mille •nd
icole l.lbry hield
them lves from • cool r•in b.--ze
during gr•du•tion •ctivities.

The universit looks out over • ci t
ch•ng i ng h t with • boom i ng
econom .

10

-1 3

�c

~

0

.e

~
c

0

Commrncrmenl is too much for two
young bo s ~s A oci~tr Ac~drmic
0 ~n Don Gorrtz bod rr~dy .
A ign in thr Financi•l Aid Officr
rrmind tudrnl of thrir drbt to thr

P•

J/ 4 -

(( Stn

I.

�Time of Passage . . .
A spring sunset silhouettes the campus u another ynr closes on the
Hilltop.

There is
no such thmg as a problem
without a g1ft for you
in 1ts hands
You seek problems
because you need
their gifts.,.
As the penultimate year of the Centennial closed, those who
graduated looked back over their shoulders mistily trusting that
their triumphs and aching would provide the inspiration to
discover the gifts. Those who remained girded themselves for the
challenges ahead with renewed vigor injected with courage.
An organization runs from the top down, its spirit imbued with
the personality and energy of its leaders melding into automatism.
This is especially true of a small institution lacking the
bureaucratic layers to buffer enthusiasm and creativity of its
leaders.
Patricia Hayes, welcome to the cocoon.
•from l/lusrons by Richard Bach

Woman's Day brought guests, books,
and ideu for young women seeking
IUCC

Brother Raymond Apicella finds one
side of heaven - il table-full of food
and no one else to claim it at il faculty /staff picnic.

President Stephen Walsh walk
familiar ground toward Mary Mood
Northen Theater for il filcult I taff
day of self ano~tly is.

CI

in -175

�Symbolically the door to Old Main i1
open in ardent anticipation of
regained nobility.

17

in

��Staff
OndyOI&gt;en
R
&amp;!11-x (,.n1u

n LAbry

RtdwrdGnn

pons Echtor

Law Branch, Col n Cola .
Do..., O.,ot . John EAgon.
C.rol f0&lt; n. Kelly JOMt
Tnc... K• 1 , T"hcr
M der ,
Br~
un y, R.t~rd 1rA
AI "-••. Lln&lt;U S.nchtz

R
Ph&amp;: 1

•()twt

ShuloT,Johnny ZAmou

�The mark
of your ignorance is the depth
of your belief in injustice
and tragedy.
What the caterpillar
calls the end of the world
the master calls a
butterfly.

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                    <text>��Contents
Student Life ..... .. 8
Organizations .... 54
Sports .. ...... . ... 74
People .......... 106
Index ........... 164

�1983

dower
St. Edwards
University
Austin, Texas 78704
Volume 53

��������Coffeehouses. intramural Carnival and the Celebration
sports and dances are usually of Lights.
thought of as the only activities
Student life does not consist
on campus. If one were to solely of organized activities,
delve a little deeper, however, ho\vevcr. Student life also
he would find that there is means spontaneous get·
almost always something in· togethers \Vith friends. In the
teresting h&lt;.lppening, \.vhcther it Rat to share ~ood times and a
he &lt;l concert behind Old Main pitcher of het~r . a backgam·
or &lt;In intcrn&lt;llionilllunch in the man tournanwnt in the dorm
Union Center. Other activities
. a morning conversation and
include spe&lt;lkers forums. cup of coffee in the cafeteria
movies, tri\·i&lt;J howls, or tht~ Student life is abundant. All
hi)!'hh acclaimed holidaY one has to do is look
spt•ci~ls . "T"'lw Hallowef'~

����Phones keep ringing as

Alumni Pledge Support
The 1982 Phonothon, the fifth
an nual Phonothon, raised a
pledged total of $116,468 for the
university. The three-day event
- October 17. 18 and 19 - was
overseen by John Lucas, Director
of the Annual Fund. It brought
students, faculty, s taff, administrators and alumnae
together in an effort to contact
friends nationwide.
The Union Center was the site
of the phoning for the second
year. Unli k e p r evio u s
Phonothons, howeve r , all
volun teers were at the scene of
the act ion. whether they were

:::~·=e w:in~:heR=~~~~
f~ce.

,
I

1~-

Phonothon

1/

-r.
j

•

calling or doing the paperwork .
During the three days, eight ·
round tables were set up in the
middle of the building, each
equipped with five phones and
five en thusiastic callers. Around
these tables were others with people busily sorting pledge cards in·
to the various time zones, noting
refusals and sending thank-you
envelopes to pledgers.
Besides the ri nging of the large

~~ft~~rh~dwr~~~f~~~eas~d~~~~~:
Union Center was filled with ex·
cited voices of volunteers greeting
old college pals, asking about the
weather, the job, the kids and the
possibility of "a donation of $10 a
month for a total of $120 a year,
which will make you a member of
the 1885 club.'" There were also
several calls for "more beer" a!
the thirsty volunteers continued
dialing those numbers.

�Coordin.~lor John luco~s h..lndl~ OM of
lhl"fl"wCollkrl"quiringspl"cUlo~lll"nlion.

Phonolhon - 13

���Students stonned the st~ge to give D.11ve
Rudolf .11 well-deserved hug ~Her his
comiul-musiul perfonn.11nce.

lfl

~hm-Conrt'ru

�And now . .

Live From
The ReUnion
ey~rs ~~~~~r~~~~~ ;ai~~~~r~

the Atrium. you would spot
the advertisements for th e

~;:~~~~ ~~~h~n~~~!~~~~~

tivities Council (SAC). Most
of the pe rformances were
held in the form of miniconcerts. They gave students
saturated w1tll studies a
chance to relax and enjoy
tim e with friends and a cold
brew.

The crowds were entertained by up and coming
stars from the local scene. including Lisa Gilkyson. who
performed her hit, "Don't Go
To Strangers," and Dave
Rudolr, who coo rdin ated
comedy with song - "Go
Play in Traffic" was only one

~~~~ i~f ~!~;hf:r~oire -

for

a

m~~~~~ th~reu~~~~5by";,~~~

formers on the national col lege circuit. One such per-

former was Barry Drake, a

~~~-r-o~~~~t~iiH~~o: !~~

cian and comedian, perform ed with Sidney the Skunk.
This master of laughter had

~~~vi~~~ran~.urae~d

'g:d ~-~~
peared on television. dazzl ing his audience with his
tricks and jokes.
A multi-image concert entitled "I Saw the Wind" com bined the musical talents of
Mark Thompson with the
photographic talents of Bob
Jamieson, taking the audience on a trip to the
Rockies, South America, the
Yukon, Alaska and British
Columbia .
Besides professional performers who g raced the

!\~g0e, }~~~r~i~h~~; m0~~
talented students in "Open
Mike Nights." Each semester
was highlighted by a night of
such talents.

Min i-Concerts - 17

�The gospel siogets closed out the mo nth
with their spiritu&lt;~IS illumin01tiog the
power, the strength 01nd the eodur01nce of
thebl.il ck culture.

SAC presents a look at

Black Culture
The month of February was

bf:~k ~i~~o0~~n~ ~~~ks~~1fur~~

The purpose of this month-long

~~d~~~~~ 0facui~s a~d s~cr?~:~~

the rich heritage of the blac ks. It

~as f~~t ~~c~:~veles~o~ ~~ac~;

everyone's benefit. ~y transgressing cultu ral barriers hopefully some gaps ca used by
misconceived preconcept ions
and ignorance we re bridged.
The coordinated efforts of the
Soul Society and Student Activities Counci l provided a wide
range of events. The opening
ce remonies featured a sraech
trrd;.ity a l;oou~cil~raofes';o:rl~~
Houston-Tillotson . The re-

~~0ndt~itT::~d:~e~g~~ t~1 ~h1;

diversity of black music. whic h

;~~th~d~o:~dHa~fi~~~hof ~~:
community-sponsored radio station KAZI rapped with students

be~~~ :re~:· J~~Wnr!~~~vi~'

~~ed~~~ b;~d rx~:~~~~e~r.

completing a survey of black
mus1cal expression.
The prominent black actor.
Charles Pace. presented an in-

~~~~t~e f~ 1 Biagk~·f~:;d~Je~

�. -

.20 3

~
,
~~~COME l&gt;AV ... THR!
1\.II'UOJ:;~'

O~N t

TM DJ from KAZI, Owen H.lmilton,
c.a~ to the ReUnion to r.11p with
stuMnl$ .o~Oout Regg.uo, • unique
.ound of IM Uribbe.11n.

atackJ-Ii.'ltOry Month - 19

��Tht' po~nel o f fo~culty/sto~ff members
discussed 11\c roles of Womt'n in society
o~nd the effects of their w&lt;Hicing.

Women
Highlighted
OiHiculties and triumphs of
working women were the focal
points of the SAC-sponsored
Women's Week in March. A

~h~~'t;~~e~~n:h':d~fr~~~~~~~~

portunt1es available for women
in the working world. The
awareness cultivated was not
exclusively for women: men
were encouraged to offer their
viewpoints. encouragement and
criticism.
A panel composed of male
and female faculty and starr
members discussed the affects
of women working in business.
family and women and men as
ind ividua ls. The panel addressed such issues as the double burden of the two-career
family, sexual harassment of
both sexes and women's future
roles. Because men and women

~~ed~~~~i~~~it~~f!o~~~~e~~v~~

were offered on each issue.
Father Clem mentioned that
even the Church is trying to find
a place for women in the traditi onally mal e- dominat ed
hierarchy.
Myra McDaniels. general

counsel to Texas Governor
Mark White. spoke on how she
broke into another predominately male fi eld - politics.
She is a successful woman who
has never been the victim of
discrimination, she said. She in·
formed her oudience of the

:~~!~ti va~d is~hees n :~f~;/in0~
women in the CapitoL
Two mini-concerts were per-

~~bo~~~~~O::r~~ ~!~~~~~he0~':.

dience with the warmth of her
voice. Three local female musicians, Ruth Huber. Pat Mears
and Lisa Cilkyson, all hoping to
la un ch s uccessfu l musical
careers. came to entertain us.

~f~~prhirN~e;~:fist~! ~h~ble
The movie Daughter Rite
summarized the intention of this
week devoted to the roles

~~~i~~s~i1;i·w~m:~P!~r:untt~~
~if~~u~g~erii 1s~t~r~dm~~~e~~~i

helped women explore their
lives and their opportunities by
identifying their roles in society.

Women'sWeek -21

�Student talent shows in

Annual Student Revue
Have you wondered about
the scope of talent here? It was

h~b~:~~~~"~hee"!c~0n~83a~5n~~j

Student Revue. Anyone with
talent and a willingness to have
fun could audition for this
vaudeville production, which
would have given Zeigfield
competition.
The Student Revue should be
classified unique. It might have
been a SAC-sponsored event
but it was entirely a student effort written, performed and
directed by students. Everyone
in the huge cast contributed
ideas to make the review a
smash hit.
Because of the nature of the
show, there was room for exploration. Talents which are not
usually utilized on stage were
evoked, giving the performers a
chance to stretch, such as Maggie Connelly's male impersonation. The show was largely written and directed by Sheila
Stansbury, allowing her to ex-

plore these creative areas, plus
perform. The "News" was a
product of the imagination of
the performers. The number
one priority of the show was
having fun . This attitude
resulted in a show performed
out of love, desire and commitment. Everyone felt comfortable
and worked hard so it would be
a polished success.
The hour-and-a-half of entertainment was fun for the audience, too. The skits included a
spoof on some of the faculty and

~~~fk~o!hPr~~~!r ~~~~ek ~~~

a fasc inat ion for memo
writers?], a beauty pageant. a

~~~~~~~ ~~~:!,1~ss~tJne1n h~:J

covering - the hooded look.
Anothe r favorite was the Omni

~~r:f~.T~k:n~~:~J~bfa~~~ho~~

It." Once again the Student
Revue was a success, so look for
Ms. Grotto to return in 1984.

Miss Ufeteri.l (Michelle Rose) di$pbyed
her t~enl fOf stuffing .11 p~e of r.tow
hotdogs lnto her mouth. She wu the
dKiOed
ol the be.touty ~e.11nt.

wn-

wttO woukl w~l to meu with herr

P.llndemonium broke out Bluft Broltten'
style.u tl'ltriotinCdb&amp;ockNUI'I'II:terNine
w.uinc:i1ed.

ZZ- Student Revue

�lntMgr•cefulP.c.M.Inb•tletG•ryC•dw•ll•def wu munched by the yellow
video monster.

Student Revue - 23

�The lunior (l&lt;i§S §truggled to pull
themselve§ into first pl&lt;l(e • nd the
(h&lt;lmpionship.
Aiel&lt;~ Brentley in &lt;In &lt;~llempl to 1dd point§
to the Senior Cl&lt;i.ss score gobbled her
portion of punut buller.

The fourth .annu.ol He.. tth Aw .. r~ll)jo?
c~ b y IM Hfo..llh Center,.
SAC, w.u to rnD e ..v.Mbi;Me to 11~
f.l( ult y ..nd ll .. ff inlonn.. tion .abCJIII
v.ariout Molllh conc~nw.

�With the sunshine and blue bonnets

Spring Begins for
the Campus
Bl oo min g

b lu e bonn e ts

fi eld to compete in the second

t~e strength, stamina and

stress. They also had the chance
to leorn something at Heritage
Day that would not be on any
test.
The week drew to a close
w ith the semi-forma l dance.

pride in the pursuit of victory.
The events included a clothes

~;~'balfr~~~mro~erh':ti~~ ~~d

~~:"tf:,~ ~~esh~\~~~e: ~~:i~' ~~t~e\f~ c~~hf~ti~ly~~i~!iit~~~
year when

stu~ents prefer play-

tested

~~e~~ a5'SXE~s~;~~;! e~~~r Th~ry'l~ead ~~ rj~k life~rltf~Ca;~d

was a cele bration of the sights.
sounds. smells of spring. It off e r ed a r ep ri eve fr om
academics and a chance to bask
in the glory of the warm Texas
sunshine a rter be ing cooped up
all winte r. The featured events
were Crazy Olympics, a semiformal dance to c rown the King
and Queen, Health Fair. a
barbeque and a Name-the-Man
Contest.

w~~~in~~linf~u~e~fa!3 ?:!~~
gathered on the track/soccer

At every~ W.IICMd IM King .1nd
Quefllled IM court in IM roy&lt;~l d.lnc:e.

~~~a(~a~e~ ~~~~oall\~~vr, ~~~t~~~~·,e~ ~ucfO~c~~h~u~~a~:~~~eHe~~~~

dragon's-totl,

pean ut -butter

~=~~g~~Jr~~e~0~~ai:h:a;;~?~~~

could stuff marshmallows and
toss eggs ddtly. The freshmen
disployed their nimbleness in
dressing and eating peanut butter. But the juniors were overall
champions.
During the week students
were made aware of their
heolth. They could have their
vision checked and their blood
pressure read, and be informed
of the potential dangers of

in the court were: Freshmen
Robert Cavazos and Lori Ba nfield. Sophomores Jose Guerrero and Kathy Lind, Juniors

~~1~e aLnodeSe~~~r~~fnfe5~~~~:
onder a nd Maureen Ryan.
Everyone enjoyed the chance to
dress up and dance to the music
of The Current. The dance a lso
served as a farewell for Vern
Earl Equinox, the name given
the cartoon character who
served as mascot. No one
'"Flipped" over his new name.

SpringFling -25

�-

:e

\

l !nlnnC..-nttor

�and security requirements. It
contained an indoor rifle range,
gun room and supply room.
Sup pli es on h and we r e
, when a

~Is~e!~J~,ht!~ec~d;ta~~~~ r~~

b~~k~~ 1r~~ ~dip~enr~g~~~OI~rb~~etb~O
Trainof the
wooden

w~;nltf
come by and

~~eD~1:1eBA~1i
fot,o''A~1 ,"m"o'1 icyon;!s1 ~~itr~~~·et
Department equipment

court with spectator seating.
The State Guard became obsolete in 1946. Since the forties,
the Armory, later called the

~o~h0~h~e'h\~~ h~h~~ina~de~~flege. Another gym was built for

~~cof~~g~h~n ~~O·o}e~h~n\l~h

school.
In the late sixties, when worn-

en were admitted to the college,
the Union Center was converted to a gymnasium for
women .
Due to its size of 9,700 square
feet. with a cei ling height of 38
feet. the Union was used as an
aud itorium for many events, in-

clu~~~:nsttl~get~~odJ~~~onnsCenter
was also a temporary home for
the library. It served in this
fun ction for approximately
one-and-one-half years. During
renovation of the old library,
books were taken to the Union

;oe~~~ti~~d ofk~~~ ~~~:e ml~J:i~
million

Phillips Library.
Most recently the Union
Center served as the center for
j~~i~~ _ha0c~ ~vi 1}:~·, i vi~1~1 u~i~~
Heritage Day celebrations.
However, recent graduates will

l:~0n~~~ 1be~ir:::%~e~l~~~ ~h~~~

they danced into the night to the
music of rock and country
bands.
The structure was torn down
after structural engineers determined it was not sa fe and the
administration decided repair
costs were too great.
-Patricia Lafuente

dollar ScarboroughU nionCen ter -

27

�To deserving stude nts, faculty and staff.

Honors Night Brings Recognition
About -100 students were
awarded certificates of recognition and special awards at the

~i~nn~al ~~n0o~~ N:t~t C~~~or~~
presented were certificates for
the Dean's List. several Student
Scholarship Board scholarships.

~~ucd0~n~~t\~nva~i~us0 ~!I~~d~g~
Employee Recognition Awards.

~~i~~ec~f1 ~h~e ~iU::hoenr;::~~;
Academic Team comprised of

d~ri~~d~h!s ~~~~2~sfa~~~tea~~~
year in a conference sport while
maintaining a grade point
average of at least 3.0.
Several students received
distin ction for outstanding
service to student organizations.
SAl Senator of the Year was

Ted Stavinoha. Denise Klod nicki was honored by the Student Activities Council fo r her
contributions and work as SAC
Films Coordinator. Edsman of
the Year was bestowed upon
Rose Shul er. Publications
awards went to AI Puente for
the Hilltopper. Richard Ginn
for the Tower and Anna Marie

F\Tt:ah~ fhr 1~i~F~f~~:~;~ning
came witt t~e recognition of the
Man and Woman of the year
finalists. The large audience impatiently waited for Br. Stephen
Walsh to read the winners'
names. The announcements
that Willie Alexander and Anna
~:~iea~~n~~~~~d0reth~ vy~~~

were greeted with enthusiastic
applause.

Other awards included thE
nominations of Willie Alex·
ander, Mary Mader and Jud it~
Robinson to the Kappa Gamma
Pi National Honor Society
David Giles for the
S

�A deserving Emmo~~ lou linn wo~~s surprised
when Dr. Hinkle o~~nnounced lho~~l she ho~~d
been voted the recipie nt of the 198]
Tuchi ng h cellence Aw•rd

't

Vondro~~k proved lho~~l one could
o~~n esuy for lhe writing proficiency
worthy of the elu~ive8.0.

H onorsNight - 29

�M~ri.uhi Rebelde se ren~ded
theufe teri.J~tdinner.

El

diners in

�Cele brali ng unity on

Cinco de Mayo
-

th~~g~o~theM:~f~~· a~d 0 ';"h~
Southwestern United States as
Cinco de Mayo was a Mexican
holiday or authentic
si!$niricance and a celebration
w1th a real identity problem.
Cinco de Mayo was often
mistakenly called Mexico's in dependence commemora ti on;
but th e battle that Cinco de

~a~a~e~e1~gr~~mt~o3~ ~~~cr~

after Mexico won its freedom
from Spain. Cinco de Mayo was
a ce lebrat ion of a hard-won national unity for all Mexicans.
Benito juarez. Mexico's Zapotec
Indi an president. symbolized an
era of reform where the nation

~fs~~d ~b~~ws;a~~z~:~g~~l!~~7s
dereated the ;rench in Puebla
on May 5, 1862, Mexico not only
won a battle against a foreign
enemy, but also celebrated a
new nati onal reality, where the
military was used on ly against
outsid ers and Mexicans were
governed by a rule of law.
- Ter ry Ne w ton

CincodeMayo - Sl

�Stude nts ma ke the best of

Living in the
Dorm
A dormitory was more tha n
just a place to hang your hat it was n second home to almost
one- rifth of the students. Life in
the dorm consisted of more than
sleeping. studying and eating in
an institutional-like buildin~. It

r~~~~:~p;h~ha~as;!n/0~u~p0~r~
~h!~~~ lt~~;hs r~~~hs~\Je~\vhhea~
you were on top of the world
and that were just there for 3
heart-to-he&lt;lrt chat no matter

respect each other could a dorm
be molded into a cohesive unit
and be a pleasant environment
in which to live.
The resident &lt;Jssistan ts and
the dorm governments worked
together to create an e nvironment cond ucive to both studying and socializing. Both
p lanned intra-dorm social activities as well as get-togethers
with th e other dorms sudi as the
fajita cook-outs. Th e dorm
governments lobbied for improvements such as carpeting in

w~~~imdo~~say ~~u'llh~e d e}~~d~~~l~in~h~;oi~~~~- ¥~~"~!:~
~~i~~~ a:s aif~el~~p~~tg f~~~ dent
assistants were the keepers
every race. creed and lifestyle
g raced the hallways. The
residents soon learned the

of the rules and regulations.

acknowledging rights of others.
On ly after residents learned to

Lo ri Bo~nfield on o1 procr;u tin.ition bre.1k
from studying u lled o1 friend.

~~hc!or~s.

1bs:J7! r~r

;o~dati~f

Liso1 Tepe curled Trish• D illon's ho~ir oiS
they prepo~red to go out 01'1 the town

l_

llunni..Jft

��M uch time is spen t

Preparing for Class
Making the grade involved more
than occasionally attending class

~~ntdi~~,~~ eh~~r~~~~h~ltlib:aa~~
staying up air night to finis h

~ping

~~~p~da~p ~~~tabafc:ki~;~hro~~~

Typing wn one of the essenti01ls for m• k-

~"J~:dt~~o~yh .'~~~1e•~~~,S: ;.~~ ~~~~
it lor you.

Sometimes the only w•y to effectivel y
study wu to find •

quiet secluded pl• ce.

a microscope at cells on a sunny
afternoon. just why d id students
torture themselves with this self·
inflicted pain? It was all in pursu it
of knowledge and to bring
themselves closer to the glorious
moment of graduation .

ev~~~~~n~a\dahi: g:~soi~~i:~i~:/

style for preparing for class. There
were those who planned ahead
how much lime was needed for a
given task to accomplish it on time.
Others never seemed to meet their
deadlines and to the irritation of
many students not all professors
upheld the same policy for late
papers. When exam time rolled
around there were two general
methods employed by the populace

�Openins • rcturnfll ~ boo'! to ~« the
m.uto: wu one of the me»! .tpprehemive
e.ocpetien&lt;:H in • col~e fl~t's life.

Studying - 35

�After a hard day's work it is

Time to Relax
The term college student did
necessarily equate with
bookworm. For those students

not

fortunate enough to have taken
an Evelyn Woods speed reading
course. to have been born
brilliant or to have the means to

~~:.pe ~~~ksth~~dud~~~eo~~~t
there were plenty of opportun ities to expend all that excess
energy either on campus or off.
or just to slip off into the plane
of relaxation. Taking life easy

~~r~i~~~~;ou;!~ 0~~~~d c~11!~:
students learn the art of it

before graduation day.
Without ever leaving the
hilltop one could easily find
somewhere to snatch some rest
and relaxation. There were
plenty of quiet places on campus, such as beneath a shady
tree if one preferred solitude for

~~ui~",t;\eiJ~i~~eoff:f:Ji~h!

perfect atmosphere for friends
to gather and socialize over a

beer or two to ease the tensio~t
of the day. SAC-sponsorel
events and activities provida:
people with a break in tt.
mono t ony of sc h olas ti1
endeavors.
Austin also offered man:
routes by which the main pur
pose of attending college cou•
be momentarily left behin
The many fine restaurants pro
vided a change of pace e ithe
from the Caf or those throwD
together meals that often maio
up an off-campus student's die
along w ith a bit of pampering II
help one relax. For the footbal
fans Austin might not have a ~
team, but the Longhorns were
more-than-adequate substitute

1 ~d:;rVt~1;h,n~a~!rbeneo~ b~~

~epping on

the infamous Sixt
Street. Or if your prefereno
leaned toward communing will
nature, the Hill Country alii
surrounding lakes were enougl
to leave one breathless.

��Books are put away while students

Dance the
Days Away
We may not be as big as UT,
but most of the bands that came
to play thought we were much

more fun. A good rapport was
bands. They offered a wide

ion and Moody Atrium.
For the first time in several

to new wuve. including ex-

~k~i~~~~~whe~~e~i~~~ inb~u:t7~

~~~~J's~~f~~:~:Ca8n~~r:t!"~1Jb

one would have to fork-out $3 to
$7, yet SAC provided them for

free.
There was not one set location where the dances were
held. In the fall. dances such as

the

I"

nation. From then on d ances

alternated between the ReUn·

variety of music ranging from

"

~~rr~~rC~~~r'~~~ifl,~c~o~de'~~

formed with many local Austin

country/western to rock 'n' roll

D~n&lt;ing, ~ fun form of uercis-e, kept your
legs in sh.lpe ~ ~~ yur long.

Carnival. S kunks and Christmas

Beach

Bash.

Halloween

years the dances were well at·

~~~te~m~:t1!~ !fih~~s ~e~~g~~

Back dance featuring Sunrise
The Beach Bash was a smash
and the Toga Party was a sue·

~h~· ~0~~ i ~~rressh~~~ th~~
weekend. The freshmen and
jun ior classes co-sponsored
wilh SAC the two semi -formal
extravaganzas.

�ko~thy Und .11nd Tony Cut o~ioll d.lnc~d the
nightnuy.

I

tool! off their m~m dothes
u the Rom.~ns did .111.11 fun-fill~d
po~rty in tne R ~Union.
Oa n ce~ - 39

�OmniAdds
Choreography
The Omni Singe rs added
choreography to their music this
year and appeared before the
annual conventi on of the Texas
Catholic Conference in the

~~~~i~~~ :rg~dl~vJ;s~~~~~t~h,hi~

federal prison near Bast rop in
th e fall . They gave repeat per·

~~~~7~ehi~hr~ft~~~~u;n~I ~1':

generosity of administrative of·
ficials, the singers were able to
afford new tuxedos for the men
and bright red dresses for tht
women in the ensemble. Th~
resemble the best and most
famou s choir in the world - thr
Swedish Radi o Choir. whc
recently toured the United

~~:~~~~-eB~; hef~~~~rr~rh: ,~:ir:

local appearances in Austin.
Special manuscripts had to be

diences. The singers espec ial~

ing

It."

ch~fcfr~~~n f~~o~ ~i~~ ~;r~~g~~ g~~ia~~e,d ~:v~~di~~i~h a:h~
ment of '"Brothers and Sisters"
- the choir's opening and clos- ~~~dci·~:k~~~~njobr a'~\d'h~h~'

onC' of ~~
Omnl S.~~n·
chor~,,.~~from thf!oor"Jto;l

Ourons

-1•1

1

hun

oflrO.Idlo&lt;to~yShow ,~ '",.onulohnw:wl .... u
boi&lt;~M up by t~r~\1 of I~~~

numbe r

Through

the

�Hilltopper Chorale
Monthly
Performances
~~i\I:~Sftf~n~~o;~~~~~~:

in December 1982, by
Menotti's "Amah!
Visitors" to
ndi,ng-,coo&lt;n -only audiences
Northe n

a t the firth Annual Texas Christia n Inte rsch olastic League
festival in April with high
school choirs performing with
the Chorale. The £inale brought

~~:~gho. ~T~~~~earn~~-'!.~~~:r~

in the Mary Moody Northe n
Theatre during May. Soloists

and ensembles were selected

g~~ ~?~h;~~~~~endb~s~e~:!;~
~us~gi~ro~~d~irffc~kb~i ait~~
~~"! ~~~~~~~ 8 it 1~vasbo~hauti~~~
formers and audiences. ~he
year closed with Hayd n's
"Missa Brevis Honoring St.
John of God" for Baccala ureate

Mass and a performance at

Commencement

in

Pa lme r

Aud itorium.

Virgini.l }ohnJOn

pr•dic~

fOf upcomins

chor.J ennis.

Cholrs - 41

�M.lrlh.o~

P.o~tino,

Mich.o~el

Goehring

.o~nen l ively w.o~tched
Sus.o~n loughr.o~n demonsl r .o~ted how 10

Chris Silvestri
pl y liquid

l.o~te•

to IJroduce

onSus.~nH.o~ldem.o~n'sf.o~ce.

I h

llhr'W

Ml

.o~n .o~ging

.o~nd
.o~s

&lt;IIJ·
effect

�Students learn techn iques, secrets

Behind the Scenes
ca h~d Y.fh!s b~~fa;Se::r~ ~~~~~e~
cannot be considered a ··pure·· art
form like painting. music or
literature. Not just one sense was

~~E~:~e~ ~?a~u::~!y ao~~~~~~\~~r~

utilized to complete its whole The
actor did not simJlly get up on stage
and act - he needed a script, direction, a setting. costumes. li~hting

~fdaftu;h~~!t~nec~~~~Ti~~::;d~~~~~

created the theatre. When mixed in
proper proportions, the resu.It may
be classified as good theatre
In college theatre, unlike professional theatre. the students major-

:~~ei~l~~~~t~~:~~c~i~r: b:JN~id~~h~~

scenes work in addition to performance work Even though the
students who helped to create the
grand illusion on the set were not
offered the crowd's appreciative
applause. they felt a great satisfaction in knowing that they were a

part of it alL Also in college theatre,
a great number of theatre-related
courses were re&lt;1uired to provide
students the basic training and
education necessary for the pursuit
of potential theatre careers in either
professional. educational or com·
munity theatres The stude nts were
e ncouraged to study such a rt forms
as drawing. literature, music and
dance. as well as the history of art
in preparation to launch their
careers. Under the theatre course
load the students were introduced

~~~~t~,:~~~i~~s~;~~~~~~~n~t~ ~~~
h~!i~n~ ~r ,,:~~~~e sr~~~~· t~~ ~~~

plicatiOn of make-up to create illu·
sions. An added dimension was the
observation and association of
theatre professionals brought in as
guest stars. All of this together
classified the accomplishments of
Mary Moody Northen Theatre as
great theatre productions.

Michul ~hring ob~rved Jim C.rroccio
while wO!ting on the set construction fOf
"C•meklt."

llehindtheScenes - 43

�Arthur ch.lrmt'd Gut&gt;nt'VI'rl' with ,.
H't'l'n.ldl'o#C..mt'4ot'ipluwrl"l&gt;."'Thf'rl'"t
t.imply not .1 mofl' c&lt;~n~rni.al spot for R.l.p·
pyl'•"l'f•.lfl~ltwtl inCamt'loi.N

M«J.m

~qul'tl,
l l' ft)
WOVf'hl'flo\oic:k~tiOt'fllr.apArlhurlr

AI Mordrl'd't

La~
viWtt'd~MVt'ff'inhl'fCNmbl'f"l.

lht f'ftCtwtllt'd forffi whlie

�Camelot
Moody Theatre endeavored
to re-enact the le~end of
Camelot with all of 11s gaiety

~~~ ,h:~~d1~~:ei~~~~= ~~~~:;£

M edieval England. Lyrical
music illuminated Arthur's
dream of a peaceable world
where might served right and
the ill-fated love of Queen
Guenevere and the young
French Knight Lance lot.
The ta le unfolded as Arthur
and Guenevere each respec-

:~~~~1es~xf,h:fo~th~hoe:in~~=~:
riage. When Arthur descended

[~~:. ilh~ashtig!"~rsf~f~~ ~~ 1~7~
eyes on his ProsPective bride.
who was considering dissolving
the betrothaL He persuaded her
to s tay by outlining th e
pleasures of Camelot. When
they revealed to each other the ir
identities. all rese rvati ons
dissipated and they were happily married .
While Arthur had been in the
woods. he spoke with his men-

~?~a~e~~~Si~~~ mT~~~~nh fohi~

teachings Merlin still:;:? within
Arthur the wisdom (I{ peaceful

::Js; ~~~~r 1~roh~h~t~~"a~~i'br

Round Table. The Table's fame
spread to France. intriguing a
young. arrogant knight with the
highest of morals. Upon first impression thought to be insufferable. he won the court's
respect by reviving fallen Sir
Lionel by his strange power of
purity and faith.
Lancelot fell deeply in love
with Guenevere and she with
him . In an age of chivalry. infidelity was an unpardonable
sin. for it brought into conflict
their respect for and admiration
of Arthur. Their Jove could not
be concealed. though Arthur ig·
nores the situation to preserve
the peace. The inaction of
perpetual peace and Mordred's
scheming stirred the Knights of
the Round Table to discontent.
forcing Arthur to confront
Guenevere and Lancelot. Arthur saw his noble idea ls

~~~~~~ l~s b~r~e~~~h~e st~k!

for treason. Lancelot may have
rescued her but not the peace.
for war ensued. Before the fin al
battle in a touching scene Arthur forgave them. A young
stowaway was knighted by Arthur and endowed with the
responsibliity to tell posterity of
Camelot's ideals.

establishi ng the celebrated

Art hur
Guenevere
La nce lot
Merlin
Pellinore
Mordred
Morgan Lc Fey
Sir Dinadan
Sir Sagramore
Sir Lione l
Lady Anne
Lady Catheri ne
Lady Sybil
Squire Dap
Guilliam
Clarius

Cast

Bob Treasure

Pepg:~i~~~~~

Evan Kelly
Craig Kanne
Lance Smith.
Virginia Johnson!
M ichael Goehring
Robert M uir
David Reynolds
Helena Lyczak
Julie (irousek
Deborah Harris
Chris Silvestri
john Eagan
Patrie Stillman
Gary Cadwallader
Robert Long
Chris Janovsky
Castor
John Eagan.
Lords and Ladies of the Court
Chris Janovsky,
Robert Long, Dawn Watson.
Angela Rodriguez, Marie Holtz,
Maia Forstchen. Claudia Lively.
Elise Wagner, Margaret Connelly
john Schouitz
Tom of Warwick
Page I
Gary Cadwallade'
Paul Contreras
Page II
De borah Hnrris
Vo ice of Nimue

~~:~=~:~ce

�Cor~ looked o o w i lh gr~ ve coocern ~ s

Rubin to ld her how he lo sl hi s job to
techoo logy ~nd why he did oot check ioto t he motel.

�The Dark at the
Top of the
Stairs
The Twenties has been
nostagically characterized as a
carefree era. one party after
another. Was there another side
to the story? Beneath all the
hoopla ran a swift flowing
undercurrent of anxiety min·
gled with fear because of the
tension between the traditional
and the modern approaches to
life. The strained social ethics
and familiar morals of the times
were encapsulated in the play
and vibrantly portrayed by the
cast under the guidance of guest
director Richard Ramos.
"The Dark at the Top of the
Stairs" was the story of the

r~~~ f~~ilyol~li~~oi~aa s:na~l
floundering in a wave of
change. Each family member

5 ~~M~~dei1th;:s~}i~h

hi~~r:trn~~

society . Rubin Flood. an
unyielding, proud man, strove
to make sense of his world - an
ccupation out-dated by
technology and a fractious famt-

~~ra:~euste~~~~o~~n!eal~~t~h:i
she suffocates her children with
her excessive affection and protection. Their troubled marriage
as filled with misconceptions
nd problems threatening to
estray it. Mama's over-

protected boy, Sonny. escaped

~he~~~~r~f 1t'h~t e~:a~ii~:

b; h~~~~

in the dark movie houses.
Reenie's shyness left her
isolated in a world of the public
library and her piano. Her admiration of her wayward father
further misconstrued her
outlook.
The catalyst of the conflict

~a,h: r~~ls~~~~;i~~~g~k~bl~
flew off the handle and out the
door when his hard-earned
money was spent on a frilly party dress for Reenie. She felt
pressured into attending and
uncomfortable with the prospect of a Jewish escort. Aunt
Lottie and Uncle Morris drive
out from nearby Oklahoma City
for Friday night dinner. relieving some of the tension . They
provided further insight into the

~~~:u~~nd~~~~~e~e;~~~~· ~~~

~~~ s~1~~Je.dXt~h1~~i~g~~~g~~i~~

the characters grasped that the ·
old way of doing things had
become outdated and a
reorganization became

gfcr~~J?· m~~~fsilfo~~d crC:S~1l~~

~g~ii~~~1~ ~~~!~~~cia! mores

Cast
Don Seay
Julie Jirousek
John Shoultz
Rob Muir
Margaret Johnson
Karen Korzenko
Craig Kanne
Virginia Johnson
Grey Woodyear
Christopher Silvestri
Bob Long, Michael Goehring,
Rod Ritchey, David Reynolds.
Gary Cadwallader

The Dark at th e Top of th e Stu irs - 4i

�-

The r•ebroh loo!.e

wilhin~.ah.ulhe

dem.anded th.ll they not

c~

in the

f..ceoll~truc~Ntu.~tion. Het"li'l

ol • • w.u too imporf.lnl to be

W ordt ,..trt lntlftctu• l, ~1ron1tr
me.u.~n1 lud to be IAtn. ~.ih ""'" •

domtttk ~e not • rdloek-r.
Sfw: .... .uMiick'• •

�The Wall
Between
The grippin~ tragedy of
racial strife in the American
South was the focus or the

~~li;v~~e ,h:~~~pe~w~d6f
the press and eloquent ora·

:'aWi~rs~~~Jf~~- :'Zdri~~ :~~~s of0.~~ L~~C;v~r~: ~~ii1~:
stol)' on the Braden case of

1954. "The Wall Between··
was the first of the new
Women's Plays and
Playwright Prosram designed
to expand the guest artist prom. This play was ap-

only to learn that words are
meaningless in opposition to
deep-seated prejudice. The
couples were aware that action had to be taken in order
to impact the system. The
white couple purchased the
home next to theirs in a
white. working-class subdivision in Sarah's name. then
sublet it to Eddy and Fronie.
By forcin~ the integration of
their netghborhood, even

~K~r:f· ~r i! ~~~~~ b~~
focuses on a strong American
eroine delivering a poignant
essage by way of her
ctions.
The heroine in "The Wall
etween" was Sarah. a
a
oung. idealistic, white. lions creatin8 lifepper.-class woman struggl- threatening situahons. On
g to reconcile her fervent Fronie's and Eddy's wedding
dealism with the cruel
alities or life in the South.
e play dealt with inter- beginning a life together. a
cia! problems encountered
two young couples. one
hite and one black, trying to murderers went unertum segregation jn Ken- prosecuted. but Sarah was
cky. Sarah drew up a list of char~ed and convicted for
ings she would like to see sed ition.
Bingham"s message was
ha~t~· r~~c~era~o m~k~'h~~~ clear.
The fights for peace.
ng with Fronie. ~er best
"end and maid, without :iuus~litE;~ a~~s~fn~~{sirgt~t!
ronie's having to wait in the ground won in the Sixties
r. Charles. Sarah's hus- and Seventies is not to be
nd. and his black friend lost.

~~~f~ blh;~~a~{~=~i~f· r~~~~~

~ha:~sh~jd ~~~~ei~r=dho~:

~~!. r~m~~~ ~~~n~~~ .;~:

Cast
Margaret Connelly
Christopher Silvestri
John Hawkins
Chalethia Williams

A bond begun durWls childhood tt\lt
withstood MKieto~l prHJUre cutmin.~ttd
when S.UMI stood .u Fronie' s ~Iron ol

Honor o~nd ~t her off into tile r~.Jm ol
equ,~lity .

�.

\

'

An tWusted Reverend

H.o~lt

begged

Deputy GoYemor DAnforth for mot"t
time. He w•nted to spend it with the

prisoners before their ue&lt;u tion "' sunrise

pe~.o~lk &lt;1! lt.115! ~ IO con;:~~ confeu, thc'rril y defendinstheir

noping IO

�The Crucible
"An exciting drama about
Purilan purge of witchcraft in
old Salem. A play which is both
a gripping historical play and
time ly parable of our contemporary society. A terrifying story

~fCl~~,"~ !~d d~~!::?us course
The script was set during the
famous Witchcraft trails of 1692
that swept Salem. Mass. The
play was inte ntionally written to
ra~e against the
McCarthy hearmgs on onAmerican activities in the fif.
ties. The cast has an aura of professionalism. The guest star,
Tim O'Connor, and James
Daniel's special appearances
added to th1s quality.
When the stage lit up, the
Reverend Parris was kneeling

vent Miller's

~0e~~~~~s ~:r~~~~:;:;:3 :~i1n~

cn ight in the woods of dancing,
flying and conjuring spirils in

the charge of witchcraft they
named respectable citizens as
mistresses of Lucifer.
The plot took an ironic twist
as the accused became the ac·
cusors. The Proctors. a decent
couple, soon found themselves
in the midst of the anarchy
which had taken over the town.
John Proctor knew that only he
could discredit the saintliness of

~~i¥~~ ~~~t;n~~ i~fhe~Yh:;~atl~

the court. Before fohn could
walk to town to lift the veil of
deceit, a strange turn of events
occurred and Goody Proctor
was arrested for possession of
poppets and attempted murder

~e:~:~iif~ ~~~~ioann~f ~hhe~~

senses tried to persuade the
court of the deception . Proctor
had convinced Mary Warren.
his servant and a member of the
court, to tell the truth- that all

~~~e~i~~i~~li~h8e G~~Je~;~'~£ ~~~~~~J~~~~r~r=x~~\nsJti~~inbgY

Goody Putnam's babies left Bet·
ty "bewitched." Talk of witch·
craft spread like fire through the
town.
The Reverend Hale, a famous
exorcist, was brought in to rip

Deputy Governor Danforth, she
faltered. When Abigail was at·

in an effort to extradite the
devil. To save themselves from

refusing to yield to pressure to
confess and save their necks.

~~k~d r~rra~:~!'h~·;v~~~~~;:~·~
betrayin~

Proctor. handing him

f~e[h~ ~ned";},~rcp~~~~~e f~~;~
~~~~ir~bi~~iJ daenv~J'sTft~b~ ~~
con fess their nighttime activities ~~j~~~:~ve:ndn ~:r;:Jo~ tg;

Cast
Reverend Parris

~~~b:arris
Abigail Williams
Susanna Walcott
jennifer Walcot!
Mrs. Ann Putnam
Thomas Putnam
Mercy Lewis
Mary Warren
John Proctor
Rebecca Nurse
Timothy Nurse

~~~~:r~~JHale
Elizabeth Proctor
Francis Nurse
Ezekiel Cheever
Marshall Willard
Herrick
judge Hathorne
Deputy Governor Danforth
Sarah Good

Michael Goehring
Angela Rodriguez
Chalethia Williams
Martha Patino
Karen Korzenko
jenny Huston
Maia Forstchen
Craig Kanne
Maggie Connell
Margaret johnson
Rob Muir
Rozanna Ward
Timmy Corkery
Christopher Cho
james Daniels
Marie Holtz
Christopher Silvestri
Chris Janovsky
Brian Blumthal
Bob Treasure
Evan Kellex
Tim O'Connor
Virginia Johnso
The Crucible - 51

�T"e f•mily submissively listened to
Oe.ante's boring uSHsment of T.lrtuffe's
ch.ar.act er to 1~ disrn&lt;~y of M.ad.lme

Pemene.

�Tartuffe
Moliere's masterpiece of
hypocrisy, "Tartuffe," written in
1664. brought to a close the
1982-83 Mal)' Moody Northen
Theatre season by turning the
clock back to 17th century
France The audience enjoyed
the travel through time into the
home of Orgon a wealthy Frenchman where they witnessed the
hilarious antics of his family
with regards to Tartuffe. a "ho-

~·; m1 h~ b~r~~~~~tj~~he0 ~a"!~~

family's faith. Throughout
France during this era tensions

':;re hi~;rv~~:~ee~eli~~~: ~~d
those who were defamed as

;::J;
d~~~~ifa~i~:;o~f m~:~:,
there arose the practice of hiring

clergymen to reside in their
households to serve as private
"directors of conscience." Not
surprisingly. this fashion opened
the door for a number of
pretenders who pleasured
themselves with the benificence
of wealthy families by posing as

~~lr m~~h r;u~tf 1 i'n c?~~~:.

r~~:. ~~0~~ds~ 1e'l\~h~~j7~b.
~ned ~~!~u~~~e~~~=:~~~~ai~
~~~s r:~hl~ti~~r~~i~~-M:~u~~;

created by Susan Loughran and
sewn by her assistant Doris
Lindbolm. and the hand-made

"pouf" (a rounded ottoman]
designed by Dennis Christi lies.
The show had ils audiences

~~~;h~~~~~;ir1 !!d~s0 ~~~!l 8 ~~;

plot centered around gullible
Organ's desire to betroth his
daughter Mariane to the "holf

~~nil~~ ~~ke00h~m efs:rt i~f :h:
household approved of the
match, not even Tarturre
because he loved Organ's wife,
Elmire. Everyone except Organ
and his bubbling mother,
Madome Pernelle, saw through
Tartuffe's facade of
righteousness and anempted to
revent this odious marriage,
eaving Mariane free to marry
Valere, her true Jove. Dorine, the
wise-cracking maid. soothed the
distraught Mariane and tried to
persuade Orgon to see the truth.
Organ was too blinded by the
"goodness" of Tartuffe to see
that he should have left the bum

f.

~~~~:S"~~;o~h~~~~d ~il10~,h1~

property over to TartuHe and
disinherited his son. Dam is. On-

Ze~~r~~e!n rWm1re :!:Jc+i~~
tuHe did Orgon pert:eive the error of his wa~s. Just be fore the
final curtain tl looked as if all
hope was lost when TartuHe
came to take possession of
everything. But French law
prevailed and the impostor was
taken oHtojai l.

Cast

TARTUFFE
................... GRAHAM JARVIS
MADAME PERNELLE. Orgon's mother .
. HELENA
LYGZAK
DORINE .
. MAlA FORSTCHEN
MARIANE. Orgon'sdaughter; Elmire's
stepdaughter .
. GEMMA CIRANNI
ELM IRE. Organ's wife
... SHARON ROUND
DAM IS. Organ's son; Elm ire's stepson ......... ROB MUIR
CLEANTE, Elmire's brother .
. . BOB TREASURE
VALERE.
CHRISTOPHERSILVESTRI
FLIPOTE,(Mute) .
. ROZANNE WARD
ORGON .
JAMES DANIELS
MR. LOYAL .
CHR ISTOPHER CHO
AN OFFICER TO THE KING .
BRIAN BLUMTHAL
THE OFFICERS MEN ................. CRAIG KANNE.
EVAN KELLEY

Tartuffe-53

�The clubs and organizations
existing here offer a variety of
opportunities for students to
become involved in extracurricular activities. Organizations
range in purpose from educational. to service. to social or a
combination of all three. The
educational organizations provide their members with opportunities to learn more about
their chosen professions by attending lectures and
workshops and taking field
trips. They also serv' the ri!St of
the uni\'ersity by in\·itin~ outsidt• speakers to discuss perti
nPnt topics in public lectures.
Sen·ice o~.miz.1tions run
rampant on this cumpus and
ran~t&gt; &lt;mywhert• from ~AC, to

.. ·...:...'_

the Edsmen, to Student
Publications. Students who
belong to these organizations
do everything from coordinating social activities on
campus to serving university
needs in general, to producing
the ne\-\'Spaper and yearbook
and work many long hours to
accomplish these tasks.
Although the term "social" is
not used to describe many of
these organi;;:alions. a lot of
sociali~:ing occurs. both in and
out of the work area Bt~causn
of the friendly atmospht!re,
man\' studt~nts addlv seek out
thf~st~ organizations." C\'en if
their offices arP some\\· hat hid ·
den in the t\tain Buildin)o!.

..

��Acade my of Scien ce
Accounting Club

The Academy o£ Science was
organized to accomplish three th~~~~~:sth~f'ethl·s club also
main goa ls: to stim u late
research in all branches of ~a~~i~~mf:: J~r"tv ~tndhB~~;hny~~f~
science: to promote scientific in- - an end-of-the-semester picterest and education; and to nic - which is usually held off
contribute to the personal and
professiona l development of its ~:~f~~tud~~~ ~~-pen to the
members.
Students who join the AcThese goals are reached counting Club learn about
real-life accounting practices~~~ou~~;~~~oud~r~~~it:h~ wyh~~~ public, private and non-profit
Activities in c lude g u es t - through the club's speakers
spea kers and rield trips to the forum. In addition. several field
trips bring accounting majors
~c~~~e;:iaen~r aTSxaa: A~~~~1i~ into the actual practice of
San Anton io Zoo and Port Aran- various local companies.
sas Marine Science Center. In
order to fund these activities.
Academy of Science members During !I'M- yur m.~ny issuH wt~ vol t-d
held several plant sa les on by I I'M-nwmben of !he StrYit .

�Accounting Club - 57

�Behavioral and Social
Sciences Club
Big Brothers/ Big
Sisters

J

�::

Membership in the Be·
havioral and Social Scie nces
Club is open to all st ude nts who

see k to promote academic.
cult ural a nd soc ial eve nts on
cam pus. to act as a liaison with
an

e mplo yme nt

pla ceme nt

agency, to invite speakers addressi ng topics related to th e

behav ioral and social sc ie nces
and to conduct seminars.
After a h ectic s tart, the Big

~~~!~e: 1a81r~a\~~~ 1 ;rhe p;~a~~a~

social interaction. to familiarize

~~;~~~~r;ts :~'S ~~~ hil~~~r:!
dedicated i ndi v idu als with
freshmen in a personal way.

Br~~h:~s~~i~he ~fs1ti::!iese~~~g~~
th e mse l ves in included a
welcoming committee a t the
d orms. an opening M ass and a

barbeque CO· sponsored with the
St ud e nt Activit ies Council
(SAC).

th e program are to promote

Pe te Porr.u, SAl vke-pre~enl , helpc-d
out with I~ boo61drop provided fOf
sludenltoill~ ~inning of the ~~sl er.

BigBrothers/l]igSisters - 59

�To establish unity among
CAMP stud ents and oth er
students. CAMP Club was
formed. Membership is open to
everyone. however. the majority
of members are CAMP
stude nts.
CAM P Club was active in a

~j~~~~g b~t~~~~t~yt~~~~~ra~d

~~rd~~~ak~~egntf~r e~h~ts~l~bm~t~~
year was helping the South
Austin Mu lti purpose Center

~~t; Tr~~~k~~if(~~~ rgrrd ab~~~k~~
and !on a ted the proceeds to the
Center.
In other activities. CAMP
Club participated in Fiesta

~~h~afl~\~~~~tioc::ni~:r. ;h~

CAMP Club
Cheerleaders
De lta Sigma Pi

groups· participation in these
activities shows their will ingness to share and rejoice in
the cultural differences as well
as the similarities present on
this campus. and to promote
un+~ ~mon~ ~~~ ~t~~en~.f the
ChccrleaSe rs is to encourage
the faculty, staff and students to
support intercollegiate athletics.
As an organization they hold
fund raisers to support their activities. They travel to out-oftown games when possible.

Men's and women's basketball
games are the major functions
attended by the squad. although
they someti me s attend
volleyball games and baseball
games.
Delta Sigma Pi is a profes·
sional fraternity organized to
foster the study of business in
universities; to e ncourage
scholarship, social activity and
the association of students for
their mutual advancement by
research and practice; to promote closer affiliation between
the comme rci al world and
students of commerce and to
further a higher standard of·
commercial ethics and cult ure
and the civic and commercia l 1
welfare of the commun ity.
To carry out their purpose.
Deltasigs held many events.
Besides sponsoring the first
dance of each semester. they
planned various other sma ller
social events. They also invited
several speakers to campus and
took a trip to Dallas. For the
community they provided their
services for Phonothon and the

I

~~scO~anrce~h~~~P~r aA=ii~;
~~~~~e ~t~~en~r~~Je~hey0 s~~:

!unities for students to app}y for
a Sears credit card.

�Della Sigma Pi - 61

�The International Club has
two objectives stated in its constitution: a] to foste r friendship
and assistance among foreign
and American students to promote in ternational exchange
and coopera tion: and b] to promote academic, cultural and
social eve nts of an international
nature, both on our campus and
other campuses sponsoring
foreign student clubs.

A~~:icfnurc:'uden~f A~~~ci~~~~

is three-fold. Primarily, it strives
to bring forth the in terests of
Latin American students and
thereby encourage contributions to campus life. Secondly, it
provides cross-c ultu ral

~~~~=~~;,an~~~~ty a~nodng st:N.

Finally, those students in LASA
assist other campus organiza tions with their events in order
to bring th e community closer

International Club

LASA
S.A.I.

to¥~~er Students'

Association,
Incorporated (SAJ}. the student
government organization, works
as the link between the students
and the administration. The e ntire student bod y composes the
membership of SAL Govern-

mental officers are the presi-

~~~ber~i~f"t~~e~:n~~~- Ea"c~

membe r of the Senate has a
voice and vote in bi-monthly
meetings.

ul~J S~~~~~n~;:t~~~~r~nd~~dt

tiona! class meetings. SAl
strives to meet several goals: to
encourage students to actively

re~d~r~hi;n~ual1t~:sel\~~ic~h~!~
~:~~~1Jat!c~r:~~a~n~"~/r~~f!;

functions that provide an oppor-

}~~~7ty r~; i~~~ac~t~~~~~e a,h~

classroom: to offer students the
opportunity to voice their ideas
for the betterment of the ed uca tional curriculum of our campus; and to provide channels for
stude nt input into other areas of

h~~~f~~i~nJi~h·e ::fena,:hgc:~~~
to the actua l operation of the
university .

Delluig Eddie lope~: e•~ined the W'f
to fill oul ~ Se~rs credit urd appk~tioft
toR.aylohnMMek.

..

~u~~~~· ~= ~C=~·c=. ~

Soo.o, ~l..

Ltd. row

MoiN

Gu..acWupe AIMC:Ll.
0&lt;'!11\U,

I~

''*-

�S.A. I. - 63

�Members of Soul Society join
together to make the campus
and the Austin commu nity
aware of black cu lture and
ideas. Soul Society does th is by

~f~;i~he p:~~~i~a~J:cki 0Hfs!~~

Soul Society
Student Scholarship
Board

Month. which takes place in
February. During this month
speakers, performers. films and
othe r activities featuring the
past. present and future of
Blacks in America are scheduled. In orde r to sponsor many
of these activities. Soul Soc iety
members hold frequent bake
sales and car washes.
In order to reward those
students who are actively involved in campus affairs and to
encourage others to become active. several students worked in
conjunction with the Develop-

ment Office to establish the

~~edSS1s ~c~t~1:rr:Siby : 0£~~~~
membe r committee. which
works close ly with the Development Office to solicit scholarships from Austin merchants, to
organize volunteers to visit mer·
chants. and to award schola rships to active students.

ss~1·~h~~~~nd1 h~~a~~ th~\o!~d

raised $22,700 and awa rded
$15,500 in schola rships. AI an
annual reception. the recipien ts
meet the donor compan ies'
represen tatives and can thank
them personally.
AI the coodusion of • mee ting o f Dell•
Sigm.~ Pi, officers llobHt l ope z, Bill flynn
.ind Eddie l opez wro~pped up the busineu
lOt the week.

�Student Scholafllhip Boord - 65

�The Stude nt Activities Council
(SAC) coordinates most activit ies as
well as or~anizations on ca mpus.
The coun ctl is composed of five
volunteer coordinators and commit·
tees in the five areas. Gina Frigault
serves as director of studen t activit ies and coordinates the committees with the assistance of Deborah
Yan ko, program coordinator.
Planning and scheduling videos
and film features are the basic tasks
of the Films Committee. Headed by
sophomore Denise Klodnicki, the

~o!~i~~~ne~;~~~~s ~;~~ea~~

Student Activiti es
Coun cil

01dinary People as well as fun
movies like Animal House and
Airplane. Besides planning
features, the committee also provides cartoon series, film festivals
and slide shows.
Contemporary issues are the
focus of the Speaken/ Social Issues
Committee. Committee members
plan debates, forums and local and

~~~~o~~e ~~~~!re~b~~e:~~~

help provide faculty members with

classroom speakers. Rose Shuler
along with her committee ~lanned

~;;~!rs f~~~r~8c sc~~~;:pon1~~~:

Bettin a Gregory. A couple of
forums were 1teld oHering anyone
the opportunity to express his or her
ideas on a certain topic.
The Pe rforming Arts Committee
reviews, recommends and selects
singles, duos and bands to provide
entertainmen t at Friday happy
hours, Thursday nigh t mini·
concerts, lunch-hour programs and
dances. Not only are musicians
sponsored by this committee, but
also comedians, magicians and student performers. Headed by Gary

Ji~'::dloc~i ~~:: ~~c'h~!t:h: ~=~~~~

and Extreme Heat and such national acts as Barry Drake and
David Willis. Open Mike Nights,

~~S:videl~[~e~r ~~r~~:e~tt~~

out let to show their talents.
Planning and implementation of

~ho:'~~~~~!ek~~n~ay~l~~tts~ed~~~~S

�E05MEN

FOOD DRIVE

You Can ~e.IP Bv Donll.ttnc. Any

Goods tha.t Will &amp; Dtstnbuied

To Nedy FArni lies Throughout
Ausbn.

During the Th.inksgiving seuon m.~ny
boles .a~o~red MOUnd u.mpus for food
for the needy. The event wu sponsored
by the Ed~n who distributed tiM- goods
toloulf.amilies.

S tudent Acl:vities Council - 67

�Publications Photography Staff'

I

�Everyman Reaches
New Heights
Everyman is gifted.
Every man is gifted
in different ways.
Though many may
hide in the protective
anonymity of darkened

co rn e r s. c raft e d
facades. and foreboding
office doors. Everyman
aims to draw out these
ofte n missed
individuals.

So wrote editor Anna Marie
Flaniga n in the fall issue of
Everyman. an issue which took
the publication to new heights
o f artistic qualit y and
sophistication .
Flanigan. an art major. had
been art and layout editor for
the 1982 Everyman.
which won the magazine's first
First Place honor rating from
the Columbia Scholastic Press

(:r t~:i~11s;eai[~st1 ~~~

~~~dti~~· ~~:~~~l~r;h~~ r~;

give of themse,ves. The
gift they gave to you in
the pages past and
turned.

1982-83.
Early in the year she began
soliciting literary, artistic and
photographic contributions for
the magazine. As the publication date came closer. fliers suddenly appeared around campus:
"Everyman is coming!"
The spring issue. which took
readers on a quixotic journey
through its pages of poems.
photographs. prose and artwork,
was hailed by some critics as
one of the best issues the cam-

byr

~dsh~~~e~eJ;~s~~a.~~:~ebf~l~~~~
The reward is the re for you to
discover.''

a1:0°~~~~~ia~~~ ~~~=/~~b~fs~

sions by organizing a contest. AI
Puente won £irs! prize for his
photograph of the skiral stair-

~~~~!~J~~ ~~~ ~~~~~r:f· :~~~
for a drawing and LaDonna
Rushing won third prize for a

phStt~f{~eh~bers for 1982-83 in -

~~ue~h~rd~~~iShe~~i~~a1~sb~~

In lhe f.all semeuer .as .a per!IOIUIIouch,
fl.anig.an signed every issue of the
m.aguine.

Everyman - 69

�MMiy contAC:I " - ' ' Wft~ prin!H MMt
rtviewflt. All"uen!~ uMtH with the pk:l~.ntdKtioft.

\"'

ll~

�ill topper
Wins Awards
Puente a nd Rob Wood were
named associate editors after
Shephard's resignation.
Staff members were honored
at the second annual e nd-ofthe-year picn ic-behind-the-gym
with a\vards selected by a panel
of four judges.
First place winners and their
categories included: John Cer-

I

~~~~~5Sto~e~~d ~~~is ~~~f~~

Anna Marie Flanigan. News
Featu re and Cartoon: Eric
Shephard. Editorial. Review
and Entertainment Feature: Rob
Wood. Commentary; and
George Nichols. Human Interest
Feature.
Also. Robert Castillo, Sports
News: Ted Stavinoha, Sports
Feature: AI Puente. Rob Wood
and Phil Thomas. Photo Essay
and News Photo: John Shep-

~~~~: ~~d 1 L~~:'Pr~~~1ea~~~~
Photo.

Hilhopper - 71

�Tower Soars
With Ingenuity
The Tower literally helped begin
the 1982·83 academic year by being
ready for distribut ion during fall
registration - for the first time in
several years.
Students were greeted with a
white book proclaiming the oneness
and diversity of life on the Hilltop.
Staff problems had made it diHicult
to get the book out on time in recent
years. Richard Ginn. ed itor of the
1982 Tower. had been determined,
however. in spite of the small size
of his staff. to get out a clean. we \I·
organized book and to get it out on
lime.
Many individuals said they fell
the early arrival of the Tower
helped spur student en thusiasm for
activities throughout the yea r.
Ginn also took on editorial
responsibilities for the 1983 Tower.
Only a few days after meeting his

deadline for the 1982 book, he was
on h is way to a workshop to begin
planning the 1983 Tower , which he
hoped would be the best one ever.
However, Ginn, an accounting rna·
jor, could not be persuaded to ac·
cept the editorship for a third year.
Staff members for the 1983
Tower who received spec ial
recognition during the honor
awards presen tat ion in May were
Rose Shuler and Ted Stavinoha for
copy writing: Pete Porras for sports
lay-out; and Colleen Cole for
editing the student life section.
Colleen Cot e, Student Life editor,
cropped pictures for ..n up&lt;o mif"lg

dc•dtine.
St.. ff member Thercu M.ldcr u si sted
M.lry M•dcr with • l.lyoul for the Student
lifese&lt;tion.

�Front row TherH• M.IOO, Rose Shuler.
S..ckrow Rich&lt;lrdGinn, Pele Pon'u.
Ann.~~ H11ni~.m

discussed lhe

q~al!ty

.md choice of p+ctures fOf • S.youl wtlh

Rich&lt;lrd Cinn.

�durin~

ThP I!IH:!-H:J yP.tr in sporl!-i wo~s

legt&gt; hall

hoth difficult and fun for tiw

St'llli'Sit•r,

llilltoppt&gt;r communi!\. Dt'spitt•
tou,lo!h chaiiPngt•s .md lossps to

In adtlilion to \'.Jrsitv o~thlt•tics,

tht&gt;ir first

Big St.tlt• Conft·n~ncP compdi· our community t•njti~t&gt;d a \'ast
lion, tlw studt•nts. f.tcnll\, .1nd intr.nnnr,tl progr.tm. Some
st.tff supporlt·d lht• \·.trsit~ rt•crp,ttion.d spnrts which \\'t'ft'
\\'Unlt'I\.S tlnd lllt'n·s lt·~uns oiS prtl\'idPd indudt•d lht• )II~HIIM
till'~ rosP up tn f.u:c such op1
1
1

!J.tvlor,

}Oflf'lliS

~IS

t\1,tr)

H11rdin

I't•xns l.11thr-ran
Coril"ge. lluston Tillotson, Eo~st

Tex.1 B.tpl st end
Sl \!.try'•·

arch ri\.11.

Th1s \t•ar s..1w suveral nt'"

on

~~~~~~t~ s 'i~~~~'k';.,f!~ fi ~~~:\ ~o\~~

\olleyh.ill. B siclt•s 1t•.1m spor1s.

olht·r ocllvitit~ sponsured were
c1 fc~cult\ stwlt·nltcnms tourn.l

mt·nt, d.l\\0 milt" fun run .md .1
fn•ethrnw r.ompf•lition. Them
tr,1mur.1l staff 1lso

roordint~ted

f,l PS
I he VOIIP) balJ, me,'s 0:1 "'J'adcs tournamt•nt .md a
h.tskt&gt;thall ilnd b~tsebolliPdrrs. backgammon lourn.tmcnt
T • sc freshmt•n and Jumor
o m.111 r \\ h1ch sports "Pre
college tr msfcrs spark• d a
ne" spm: mil 'hu tc,Jms of l.1st CJl)O l'(l, \\:C CXfWTI nt;ed I e
y ar The men s h kelball thr of fun md omellmt"":S YIC
h .tm tddt d 1 JtmJOr \ Br.!ll) ~ra)'~~ n \Cf 1ht• I ta) IJ,.'Ony
squ td y.hu..;h • n 1hh
th 1r
f "
men to c (M!r•• net
1l

.

,
t;

. . . '..,

.

~

... • ·.·.;.·'"'''

~~~-' ·:'::_~~~J,""

'

•

"'..:_,

•

.

��Hilltoppers Fall
One Game Short of Championship
ba~k!tb!rletea~~n;~e ~:;~~8~nd~~~~ft~e! ~~~~~~n~~~o~~hg~~ ~~~iacs~n~~lfe~ ~~;

loss in the final round of the NAIA Division IV Tournament. St. Mary's of San An tonio defeated the Toppers in San Antonio
to end any hopes the Hilltoppers had of
further tournament play.
This season was one of the strangest in

~ei!~o~h ~~toa6~n~~~c~a:C ~~j~~td ;~d

potential. Many people felt the Toppers
would make a strong run at the con ference
title. The Hilltoppers never lived up to the
high expectations both they and their fans
had held for them. The men did not win a
conference title - they never even came
close. Their season record fell well below
the .500 mark at 13-20. What was hoped to
be a spectacular campaign turned into a

vi~:~~ifa~~~~r;Ontributed to the Toppers'

f:r~i:~d;7!au;;sK~~!u:~d~~~~eB:~~~t~~~
guards Ellis Monte! and Jerry Farias out of
play for some time . The status of Head
Coach Dan Montgomery's contract was

I

1

•

b.D

season. More troubles mounted when two
of the top scorers were removed from the
team due to academic policies.
The good news for the '82- '83 Toppers

o:~:ne 8!~~t f~J ~!nfi~rshLaar';y foK7~~
Davis was named Second Team All Big
State Conference, and Kruse. a 6'4• forward. was pegged for first-team honors.
These two men were the leaders of a
talented squad that included Chris Collins.
Brayde McClure and Gus Benson.

th~Tst~~ee:shdi~a~~~t1 ;on a~h}!t~~~~e~e(~i
they could have. After realizing the
number of problems this team survived
was high. it makes one wonder how the
Hi! hoppers did as well as they did.
,.,Mns1

Forw,.td Utry ""'- .Uded I ~ Toppef"J uun
Hutlon-TIIolson with ''-" drivinJ l.lyup ~~w~n two
R,.mdef~.

��trn't

IroN

1-wu". AIM! (.11.a-. (loft\ ~~
(hN (~ ~nrw:t

...,., Dooo" . ....

'-"&lt;"-"'"

IU"' '-toNI~ lhud •-"'~ ~"''" ~
lM"I'!
YIA~~ I . . MOo'olf1

I I . . _ , .,._

Oo~ •tcl l.l(

f"~j .l "••l o~ ""COUI'I) I

dll

1-I•H

�~-.....-d~l.n....,...._olllot,..~-••.,.oll.....,....ulolt&gt;l.

bflro&amp;inlllotW_.....,_ ...,....,.,ollotopfft....,.IO&lt;u. . _

.

Season'sResullll:
W-T

Opponent

61-65
71-78
79·96
75-77
68·69
85·77
79-72

TEXAS WESLEYAN
McMURRY
HOWARD PAYNE
TARLETON
OUR LADY OF THE LAKE
McMURRY
Tarleton
SOUTHWEST TEXAS
CONCORDIA
TexasA&amp;I
HOWARD PAYNE
Texas A&amp;!
SAM HOUSTON
SOUTHWESTERN
Mary Hardin-Baylor
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
Texas Lutheran
ST. MARY'S
Huston·Tillot5on
TEXAS WESLEYAN
SOUTHWESTERN
Mary Hardin-Baylor
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST
TexasLutheron
ST. MARY'S
Huston-Tillotson
Hardin Simmons
PAN AMERICAN
Southwestern
East Texas Baptist
ST. MARY'S

......
58-66

88·77
71·74
76-69
73-76
83·84
88·72
81·91
97-65
55-75
113·102
69-75
67-69
65·60
73-78
68·67
66·61
94-67
67-64
74·69
67-65
65· 58
68-62

Men's Basketball -79

��Brrors and Injuries Keep
Lady Toppers Out of Playoffs
It \·vas with optimism ;:~nd confid e nce
that Head Coac h Sharon Mc ilroy and her

b!~k~tbalf:~:on.1 ~~ve 1~~~i~~en \~~~~;~~

Brow n, Cindy Cavazos. Lu pe Ga rzn. Ginny
Green a nd Ka ren Poole - and a tra nsfe r
from Texas Tech - Patti Mcferren combin ed h eight and ta lents w ith the five
returning Lady Toppers to provide a strong
tea m.

Captains Marina Tijerina and Li z Her·
nand ez prov ided the leadership and en couragemen t for the ir tea mmates as they
all participated in drills, n ve -on -five,

~~~~ea~!~n~~~~hi: ~~~g~n~~~~)~~:fon: ~f
the Big State Conference. Tough it was. as

th e Toppe rs lost man y close gam es and a

few not-so-cl ose ones.
The women dropped the opene r to

~~~~l ~~~e;l m~i~lt~Jder~;r~v:h!:'~ri~~!da~~
again and aga in throughout th e season to
ha unt th em. Besid es recurring errors,
recurring ill nesses a nd injuries kept the

11
stable was
spirit - both from the tea m and from th e
d edicated fans. Sophomore Sonya Binge r
kept the spiri t high on the floor as she
played her way to All-District honors.
The Lady Toppers ended the season on a
low note, not qualify ing for the confere nce

l inQ~~ cf:,~~~; ~h~,h~~~~r~ed

f11~~~t 01~h~i 1~e~~~~~n~~d~~ ~it~h:y 1~~~
won-lost record.

Women"s Baskerball- 81

��Season's Results
W-T

Opponent•

63-60
54-63
46-71
76-46
60-75
73-78
62·74
82-75

DILLJ. RD
TEXAS WOMEN'S
SAM HOUSTON STATE

86·41

59-84
69-55
71-52
56-73
61-70
57-64
66-41
76-71
60-70
72-54
89-92
60-76
6S-S9
57-62
49-50
56-96
59-79
54-66
62·63

~~~;fv~~E~kN

T EXAS C H RISTIAN
EAST TEXAS STATE

Schreiner
Concordia
SOUTHWEST TEXAS
STATE

~~;a';\~::tet~.~ Lake

SOUTHWESTERN
MARY
HARDIN - BAYLOR
EAST TEXAS BAPTIST

Concordia
Texas Lutheran
St. Mary's

~r~n~!foN-TJLLOTSON
SOUTHWESTERN

~;Slf~f:~~S':ffi:~tsT

SCHREINER
TEXAS LUTHERAN
TEXAS WESLEYAN
ST. MARY'S
H USTON-TILLOTSON

Wo me n 's Basketball - 83

�Baseball Team Posts a Winning Season
The baseball team posted a season record of
29-24. Coach John Knorr was assisted in
coaching this season by two alumni: Dave Luc-

zkTh'!~~~1!7!~~~~ :"s~~~y1 ~t~il1~:;~9~~~ference tournament playoffs a fter ~acing third

in the conference. The baseball season ended
as the men lost the rirst game of the playorfs to
archrlval St. Mary's in San Antonio
The majority of the team consisted of
freshmen. tncluding such outstanding players
as Ed Cinek, Rusty Cowman, Ricky Guzman.
WesTumeyand A. I. Waznik

co~evl~;h~ r~~~la:ea:~so~n£:\!ch%~!J h~;
200t~ victory within six years of coaching the
llilltoppers Senior pitche r Kyle Casburn broke

~~:rt!dh~l ar~~~~e 0~~~n."S~n~~ ~u~;!:

Richard Schache r! broke the school strikeout
record for a single season. Outfielder Greg
Trlicek, a junior college transfer. broke the
school record for doubles hit in a single season.
In addition to records being broken, three
players were named to the All-Conference
teams. Trlicek and senior Steve Seale were
named to the first team while sophomore lim
Shelton was named to the second team. Trlicek
also took honors of being voted MVP of the conference and MVP of the district.
- Kelly Cote

�Do~vid Lo~genfeld •wo~iled

the throw for o~n out •I second

b•se.

Baseball - 85

�~ &lt;Mf Rk h.ord S&lt;l\4cfwofl

would be~

~l fil.t .

wound up lOt wh.ll ~lAy

��Inexperienced Toppers
Find the Going Tough
The 1982-'83 L&lt;~d y Toppers finished the
volleyball season with a 13-25 won-lost
record. Although this record brings the
team well below the .500 mark, it is not ind icative of a poor season overall. Head
Coach Diane Daniels had three returning
players - Julianne de Ybarrando, Janice
Thurman and Kathy Midd leton - and a
slew of talented freshmen who were inex·
perienced in college competition. The new
plnyers - Lupe Garzn. Linda Ambrose.
Gin ny Green. Pam Dilworth, Kitty
O'Keefe. Freda Salyers and Cathy Olson

;kil/~r~;iti~dT~~g~~s ;~~\i~~d:dn~vi~ts~:~~
~~u~hw:~te~~~ni~8x~aLu:~:~~~~-B~~~~~~

Christian and others.
The women fought hard to take fourth

place in the 15-team Rice Tournament.

~~~h~V1~,La~ 1~~d S~e0ph~nu~~t~us~i~1.1 ~,e~
~~~ds:~t~h~0~f~~~fG~~.c/)iJ~:rHl~,~~t~

Tillotson against the Toppers before they
advanced to face conference-winner Mary
Hardin-Baylor.
One drawback for the Toppers was injuries. An ankle injury claimed senior
Marty Binder for the season, robbing the
team of valuable leadership as well as ex·

:~;i1~~~~ ~~~~0c~D~n~~~:~~njl~~~e: ~~~tl~~

llopkins to conlinually change the lineup.
This inconsistency had an effect on the
players, although they kept the spirit up
throughout the year.

�lulio~one de Vb.ilff.ilndO spiked this shot off the Jet from
tumm.111e K.11thy Middleton.

With this sp ike, Kitty O'Keefe helped the
defe...l crou towo riv.11l Huston-l illo t mn.

Topper~

VolleybPII - 89

��sT. EDWARD'S

HILLTOPPERS

Freihm.11n P.11m Dilworth bumped the b.11ll, on
• tumm.11te to se t up for • sptke.

.11

M-rve, to

CONCORDIA
Bobca t Classic
Southeastern Louisiana
ANGELOSTATE

~T'k~t1-1 ~~i~--~lr~~I N

Season's Results

TEXASLUTHERAN

15· 11.10- 15.3-15

TEXAS A&amp; I

13- 15, 15-7, 11-15

TEXASWESLEYAN
SOUTHWEST TEXAS ST ATE
S"':. ~ARY'S
Trlnt\y

15·7.13-15.11-15
15·8. 13-15.5-15
15-9.7·15.4·15.7-15
15·11.15-6,13-15,15·6

Rice ln vlta llonal Tournamenl
TEXASA&amp; I
SOUTH WESTERN
Alvin
Nicholls

15-11,7· 15.6·15
17-15. 5· 15.4·15
15-8, 15·6
15·10.15-1 2

~~~~S"~·E~~sJ~;~~e

~~i~~ 3 !;5 5.16·14

MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR
ST. MARY'S
Southweste rn

Te:/~R~~~~l~~rfO~Sment
~~~~S WESLEYAN
STEPH EN F. AUST IN
STATE
NorthTexasState
TEXASLUTHERAN
H uston- Tillotson
Big State Conference
Tournament
1-\uston-Tillotson
TEXAS LUTHERAN

15-9.5-15, 15-Z
S-15,6-15

:~::~: :~:~~9-ts

9-15,12-15,10-15
4-1 5,6-15
5- 15. 15·13.2·15

Js-tz. 9-ts. a-ts

~ 5~~: ~ 5 ~~

5-15 11-15
'
10-15,7-15
6·15.0-15,7·15
15·0.15·1, 15·6
15·5.15·1.15·11
6-15,9-15.3-15

RICE
5-15,8·15
MARYHARDIN-11AYLOR
8-15.12-15.15-13, 11·15
ST. PHILLIP'S
15·7. 14-6.8-15
CONCORDIA
15-13.14-16, 13·15
TEXAS W ESLEYAN
14·16. 13-15
EAST TEXAS STAn :
15- 13 4-1 5 7·15
Huston-T1llotson
15·4..15·3. '15-2
SOUTH WEST TEXAS STAT E7-15, 11-15, 11·15
Volleybllll - 91

��Men Carry on the Winning Tradition
For the 22 nd time in 23 yea rs, the men's
tennis team captured the Big State Conference team championship. In addi tion to
the team title. netters Kevin Mullins ond

Karl Jauhiai ne n wo n individual honors.
Mullins ga rn ered the BSC singles Iitle and

later le&lt;Jmed with Jauhiainen to take the
men'sdoubles crown.
Besides the always tough conference opponents. the men. coached by Br. Emm ett

Strohmeyer. faced teams from Baylor.
Texas Christian Unive rsity and Lamar.
This tough non-confe rence schedule
proved beneficia l to th e tea m's play as the
men fini shed BSC pla y with a perfect 6-0
mark.

Beca use of their fin e season showing,

~ha~i~~~~~ ~~~~f~~~~r~~~~~~~hh~lgJi~{ ~~n~~~
City.

The long hours of pr&lt;lctke p•id off 101' \l'niOI' Kevin
Mulliru .u ht won both the BSC ting1l"s .1nd doubles
lillt:"t.

M en'sTennis - 93

�Women letters Win First Ever BSC Title

���With Little Recognition,
Golfers Remain Dedicated
Said coach Jim Koch in retrospect "They
were fun to work with ... a good group of

gufh~ gold team finished their season with

a third place Big State Confe re nce [BSC)
trophy. The Conference was held this year
in Longview at the Alpine Country Club
April17, 18. 19.
" I'm proud of the team," he sa id . "They
played about as well as I expected in the

~~~~~~~~n~e~i·~sT~e f~~~d~sr:'~~rXe&amp;gb;r_:

Calgary, Canada: Joe Beck - Austin; Joe
Fenton - Lewisburg. Pa.: Steve Tonsi St. Louis. Don Campbe ll - Round Rock
a nd Kevin Hannes - Austin played in the

re~~!~~:e8~~" 1?k~:"~l id~~~ 8c~~~h

in the
sense of funda menta ls," a nd "golf is one of

.....

Sophomore Tom B.Jg.by IT'Ielhodiuly unk this snort

those sports where you either have it or
you don't." are the e pitome of Koch's
coaching style. He found the right players
~h'!'1a1~~yug0tg!stt.eam and he let the m do
The team's performance over the year

:i:t~n~c~~~;~:ftiv~~tf~a7~!n~sCn~ou~~~:

ment f1rst round. the e ntire team shot in
the low 70's. The second round showed a
five to ten stroke increase over-all except
for Joe Beck who shot the lowest in the
Tournament with a 66. The average of the

:~~~~.thb~hi~odn~a~-~~~~t ~ey~~pr:;J
T~~~h!"ut~e:d~ ~~~!~e. progress over the
year," koch said of his players. Looking
a head this could extend to next year and
a n ot h e r c han ce at a Con fe r e nce
championship.
- Andy L yon

�Soccer Club Enjoys Action

.......

���,

I

lntramurals Provide Reeded
Break From Books
In looking for a chance to get away from
the routine of every day. faculty, sta rr and
students turn to intramurals for exercise
and relaxation. As seen by the n umber of

~~~~1~e~~~~ir~:i~~~ i~r~;:a~.b~~ed~';~h;

d irectiOn of Sharon Mcilroy wilh assistant

~~!m~8!n ~1ff~ci~1ein~~~s~Jr~irsJ:}r~~(fth~~

activities sponsored were a te nnis tournament, free-throw competition a nd fun run .
For the not-so-athletic, the sta ff sponsored
a backgammon tournament and a spades
tournament.
Besides gettin.e: a team together. pa r-

~~·~re8~?r~~~d~~\:i~~o;~5e~~~et~u:h!~~0t1~ ~~ii~~~tsn~~Oe~o~~e~~~m~~ltv~f ~h~rf~~v~f

get involved.
Included in the program were the

=~\~tYs~ftb~Jl 1 arour;~=m~0n°t~ba~~·r ~!~e~~~~
women. Returning this year for the second
time was the very popu lar and enjoyable
co-ree soh ball tournament and barbeque.

vo~~b~¥1. ~~~ ~e~;, ~~~~~~~5of\~jf e~~-~~~

intramurals. Some were runny. others had
no meaning, while others had meaning only to the team members. Among the most
creative were Bachelorettes. Dwa rfs.
Misfits. Spacely Sprockets and Thornton 's
RA RAs.
Winning was not everything. Though
some teams were very determined to win,
most teams were just there to have fun.
Relaxation and en~oyme nt were wha t in-

~~~~;~~si~~~~d~dt ~obefri~~he aa~~ ag~~~
During IM mt"n'~o O..sl:e lb.lll c h•mpionship, A-CutAbove's Mike )ones b&lt;~llled lw&lt;~el Gu.11rdio~ of Sp.11nish
F~s. Gwrdiol.l w on this b.11llle .u M scored IM b.lskl"l,
bY! A -Cu t-Above ultirTU!ely w on ! l'le ch.1mpiOI'lship .
Lesi.1 Hunl er drilltd Two poinl s during .1 w omen's roundb.lll pl.1yotf gJme.

Dickson in badminton. Bachelorettes in
women's softba ll a nd A-Cut-Above in
men's basketball.
Through the numerous activities, sporting and/or cha llenging, the intra mural
sta ff provided fun for everyone who took
the time to participate.

)

�)u.ln CMYnli, vklory wilnin nis I'.IS9 •nd on hh fM:e,
m.~dt •n •ttempllo utch lri.ln S..:.rl u he m.1de hh cut.

�Dennis Roser~ eludflt the sr.up of Mitch Zuk.
Rick Ti!NfO forced the blit.l.u R~ bur• fired off to

tMsrecelverJSriinSuri•ndRichCl.vk.

l ntramurals - 103

�.

'

�--·

&lt;::M:IYI~

Junior

lobeti Cutilo put tM t~ on V1 opposing tum

~tw

M.ldt'r diSi)lay~ Mf fine pitching form
'" ~ IC'd Mf tum, The fvc~, to • victory over the

o.r:s..

l nll'llmural.s -

105

�A

vns1 .,rrdy of pcopltt grace m1xturo• of people is both

our c.ampu d.uly Because we
currt•nth h.tvt~ stud nts t•nroll
ed from H st.Hcs and ovur 20
countrie , y,;o can brag that the
pot pourrl ol people IS 'x&gt;t':1 n
tore tmg and &lt;XCII. g
Tho pe •pie here are our
In nd our peers urlatmly
\\ e share this campus wuh
so man) people
) oung old
rettred e.mplo) d Th1 nmqne

bent·ficial and rewarding. We

all can share in the ex·
pcr~enccs ol others gl\1ng us 8
hroador vio•" of tho \\Orld
around
Although n 1 the laJE I or
most famous untverstty around
we
n certllnl) be
lied 8
peovle unl\erslty Peopl make
u great

�People-107

�..

�Alphonsllll Aguh
Eugenia Agui rre
BolaAkinn iranye
Mohamed Al·K halifa

Dorothy Alexander
Lewis Alexander
Willie Alexander
Lindy Allen

VincentAmadioha
lanieArman
Alicia Arredondo
Pablo Bonilla

AletaDrentley
William Cabiya
luan Canavnli
AlanCatalani

Seniors - 109

�Mills Supports Student Efforts
When asked the question: "Who is Or. Jimmy Mills?."
most students and fa culty would simply answer. " He's a

bi~~~~~f?~~~h

more. however. I le is an avid supporter of the stud en ts a nd events on ca mpus. When
many faculty members would rather re lax at home.
away from thei r st ud e nts. Or. Mills returns to the
campus.

He most often ca n be see n in the a udie nce of a choir
or theat re production or sharing in the fun at oth er
university activities. such as the Ha lloween Ca rni va l

fo~h~a~r ~~~u~W~~n~: ~~!,~rl~~gf~r0~~ ~~~~~-~;ni~

nice to see many fellow stud ents participate in the
activity.
The rewards seem doubly good. however, when faculty members a lso support the siUd en t body in its meager
efforts.
Thanks. Dr. Mills!

"'

�Domingo Davalos
Donald Dawkins
Eudelia DeLeon
Dora Escalanle

Maria Esquivel
MireyaEslrada
Anna Marie Flanigan
Agnes Fuccello

Gregory Calle
Marie Garcia
SanlaCarcia
Michael Goehrins

Willie Gomez
lorgeGorordo
lohnGuardiola
Michael Guerra

Seniors - lit

�Theresa 1\ e rrer.~
Patricia !linton
Marie lloltz
Anna Mae !lowe

Woel j•nq
/1.\a'llaretjohn.on
Vl'llinlajohn.on
Surachal Kambhu

Coiro\ ).; ~ng
Lim. Krus.

J•mi!IIUndry
El.ubt-th L..wton

[lrnt11

UnJbloal.

RINidUP'«-

1.........

otlll.ambf.n

�Esther Luna
Mary Mader
Elias Maldonado
Raymond Marek

Thelma Martinez
MauhewMerkle
LouisMestier
Kathryn Middleton

As an art major, Anna Marie Flanigan put her talents
to work in several areas. Flanigan was active in all fa cets
of st ud ent publications - 1-lilllopper, Tower, and

~J.e;{a~f;a;;;:s~e~~~~r~b~~oer ~~u,i~".~.:~~~~.i~:~~du~~
the Hi/Jtopper staff as a writer a nd edited the Everyman
magazine for two years. In SAC. Flanigan created
numerous posters, banners a nd sundry forms of public~1::~~~hed ~a1l{i 5~~en~itrro~s1~~dy~Jr;.he organizat ion.
Besides utilizing 'her artistic talents, Flanigan also
demonstrated leadership capabilities by serving on the
Stude nt Sc hola rshi p Board Steeri ng Committee this
year. She was an instrumental factor in the estab lishment of the Big Brother/Big Sister program.

na~:di~~~·th8e b~~~9seB~tidu~i~~n~~vj~"~for":~iJe~e;;~~
years. In addition. she a lso received one of the first
scholarshi ps awarded by the St ud ent Scholarship Board
in recognition of her serv ice.

Seniors- 113

�Kevin Miller
Manuel Miramontes
Patricia Molin•
Pablo"-·lonsant

MarwueriteMontlque
Michael Montonen
Jimmy Moreno
Ann Marie Motet

..

�Elyse Mueller
OswaldoNira
joachim Nmerem
Shannon Noble

RobertNunis/1
RalphsNwosu
PatriciaO'Bryan
Mary O'Connell

Evelyn Ogbogu
Adrian Ort ega
SusinOwensby
Veronic11Pacini

Cynthia P11ntuso
Edie Phi llips
MongkolPongpPins kul
Minerva Ramirez

Seniors - 115

�Sandra Ramirez
IILidaReza
lud •th Robinson
Lindy Rogers

Maurf't'nRyim
I~Sdhnul ll

Ridt.lnl Sdw:ht&gt;rl
Rub)·~ra

. .._
.. r •....,.

r..th«UN T.na•
t.th-n.-.

t

�Seminars Provide Information
It is 3:30p.m. on a Friday a ft ernoon and Fleck Hall

~e~ub:~~1 te;~~o e~~~~=~~n~.le~~u1~~~~h~~do~!l~~~

st ud ent paces the ~allway, nervously trying to co llect
his thoughts for the last time.

w~~~h:r~e~~~sfet~~otal~~~~ni~ ~~~::r~i~~~ ~~~e~~do~r
the week? They are anxiously wa it ing for a Sen ior
Seminar to begin.

All studen ts who major in one of the physical or
biological sciences must present a seminar on a topic

JJs;::.
c~~ichi:h~~se ~~~~i~fc~iryr:;~:::.chcidm~~h"Od~~
Whatever the topic, the seminars are interest ing.

fe~~~h~i~~~~a~: a~~~b!~~fi~~4 t~ib~t~i~h1e ~~~d~~~!

~h~y f~~~~'{d ~~~~d~~~~~{v~~~~~~~~~~~~ f~~~s ~~d~~~~~
~i~ ~i~~~~~!:c!1h~;~~~iill"h:,i,~ i~r~r,:rrif~,~~~ ~~~:!~s~

~{~~~J~~clg;:;::e~~~f~i~h!i~t f~ei~:. them stay abreast
As the clock ticks closer to 3:45, the scheduled
starting time, the studen t presenting the seminar
slowly wal ks into the classroom. Friends and fe llow
students give an encouraging sm il e as a sign of sup·
port. These students support one another because

~~~a'e~~~~~h0eu~\~~~~:~ 8crn~hewhhail~~? are the lone

Robert Treasure
Lucia Urrutia
WilfredoVe!asquez
Gilberta Villalpando

Ruth Villareal
Paula Watrous
ChalethiaWilliams
fudithWoodnrd

Seniors - 117

�Juniors

..

_

�AliAI-Sarrar
Emmanuel Alisi~e
Javier Arellano
Ralph Anar~
James!J.'lgan
Salehlleruwin

KristaBockoven
Belinda Bonilla
Becky Bradshaw
Charles Brash
)11mesBrocu1o
UrsulaBrumskine

Markllulpin
Pamela Cochran
Anne Conroy
MarinCorlinas
BridgeiCole
Kelly Cole

Brenda DeSh11~
Debbie Deu tsch
[ames Dirks
Tom Edge
Edwin Eke
lg boajuchi Eh•uribe

Sandra Ekwuribe
lrmai:-:SCoOC'&lt;:Io
Lori Fagan
Joseph Fenlon
Frederick Fernandez
Ken Fesler

MaiaForslchen
M erriFriese nh ahn
[onnllmnFree
BenitoGnrcln
Mal)' Garcia
llillaryGarren

Juniors

119

�Tina lo GamJOtl
Richard Ginn
Diane Glowacki
Armo~ndoGonza le.

RudyGonzale.
David Gran

Lm.sGutkrre&lt;~:

Oeborah llarri•
Elizabeth llemande&lt;~:

Sara llllgers
David larrell
P11tric•a luare-z

Crlllfi K•nne
Ronaldi.IJl•ec
Robt-11 L.ongonl lr
Edua.rdol.opez
l.uiMl.opez
Robt-11 Lopez

Library Celebrates First Year

-

�Senior Seeks Prison Reform
Don Taylor is n ot the typicnl college senior.

a ~~~k01~~~~ 8~t~~;·~~ 0t~~i~~:~c~6',~~1n~ 0~pr.~~~!~
prisons.

For nnother. he's a buyer for Tracor Aerospace.
lie also hns received a full pardon from Texas Gov.

Bill Clements - a pnrdon for the offenses that kept

hi~~~~~:t~~~~1 ~e'J~~~~ds /~;~no~~~~0~1n~1 6::;~0min

drug problem. Taylor says

~c

a

began following tt e

criminal justice reform movement.

He has become a leader in several state boards and
'

o rganizat ions dedicated to improving cond itions in

the state's prisons. Since 1980 Taylor has been

~~~~bf1~~~~~o~f~PEr~~1~~s'[CU~E[ ;~~i~~~~~i&lt;~e"l~bi:.or

The Dallas native is mnjoring in criminal justice
through New College.

lik·~~~~ ~~~'··fr~o~t;,iht~id~~~:!th criminal iustice.·· he

Andrew L~·on
Theres."I Mader
Dianafo.larquez
Rodney Marsh
AdrinnaM;•rtinez
Raulfo. lartinez

Greg McCord
Anna Medina
RobinMick
Cheryl Monroe
Kevin Montgomery
EllisMontet

Michacl Montonen
Kevin Mullins
MnrciaMunn
Eva Munoz
Timothy O'Keefe
Tirnolh)· Pierce

juniors ~

121

�Adults Learn With New College
One of the

~uiet

ways we reac h out to the wo rld is

:g~o~J~It~:~~ne~~lege- a uniqu e degree program for
More than 600 persons - about o ne -fourth of the
student population - ranging in age from 22 to 80. are

ea~/"fe~~d~~~?e~~a~=~0eg~fe~~~~oC~~~~~~,, ;~.~e~e~

alternative degree program seeks to mare a coll ege
education available to aduhs who have not had the

op/fe~~~c~~'l!~;~rfe~'fnd:~~s;.'~ls"~,1 irh~~~~hmfull-time

responsibilities as famili es a nd ca reers a rlexi ble
system of se lr-paced indh•idua lized st udy courses.
credit for prior learning experiences. transfer credi t
and regula r classes.
The news of New College has been carried to
various parts of Texas largely by \\ ord of mouth
AI! hough the majority of stud en ts a re from the Central Texas area, manv a lso commute from the Vallev,
Houston a nd the norih 111 35 corrid or
·
Still not quite 10 yenrs o ld , Ne\\ College has
become a tradition, proving its ability to meet the
needs of a chnnging world

�fim Thomas
DoraTrislan
l.'lfeanyiUche
Coromo!oValderrama
CynlhiaValenzuela
Arlene Vila

Janie Villarreal
Elise Wagner
DawnWalson
OianneWcndl
ValettaWilson
faimeZilueti

UY A Students Servej Learn

m~~ens~~~~1~~o~s.0Ju~i~~e~S:~~~fo~i~~~~~~h~o;~
reduced to practice. IVhen theories. grounded

~~se"s ~?!;f~mentk,n~;~e~~li,ehde~ 0b~~:;mn;~nrtfa/f;
useful."

- Thomas Jefferson
U YA, the University Year for Action, has been

~~~ ~~~op~s~~h~e~r ~i~5r~~{j;~~~d~~8a~~s~heci~~~~~

or

la nce service-learning, the deliberate linking of
community development and personnl development. The service-learning concept proposes that a
successful ed uca!ion includes experience beyond
the classroom.
Six other institutions - West Virginia Institute of
Technology, University of Californ ia at Berke ley.

~;.~~~~si2'oiJ:geG~~t~a~~~di~l7T ~ ~~;grf)~~~

~:~f::e~~n ~~~r~n~~ d:b~g~~~~a~C~rrg~e~~,~~11r~~~

Selected students participated for two semesters or
12 months in a full-tim e service-learning intern-

ship assisting the low-income South Austin communith Placement sites included the South Austin

~e~tel~;~o·~~r~~nut~'~i~~e(;~~~ge~t~~~. ~hee~:Y~;

Ciub, the Senio r ~unch program and the South
Austin Neighborhood Association. Due to lack of
funding, th1s year's students represent the last of
the UYA volunteers in the nation. It must be
agreed that each volunteer benefit ed pe rsona lly at
least as much from the service-learning experience
as did the community which each served .

]uniors - 123

��fuanAiatorre
MurtazaAIIy
HuSilllin AI-Raggal
AnicctoAionzo
AugustineAnazia
TanyaArcaya

Santiago Arias
Frances Ayala
Thomas]l.'lgby
Chris Bentley
AnaBerain
Cecilia Beszborn

Leticia Rivas
Brian Blum thai
Kirk Bond
Marlin Brown
[osephCampi
Rudy Carlin

Antonio Castellanos
fohn Cernohous
ClementChidi
joel Childress
ChristopherCho
Brent Christensen

Chris Collins
Margaret Connelly
Christina Contreras
Susan Cunningh11m
Tony Cutaia
Stephen Davis

S!llvPdorDeLaGarza Ill
L~·dia DeLaRosa
Verna DeLeon
Ronald Derrick
ArturoDiaz
MelyndaOillarrl

Sophomores - 125

�Reginald Duval
Edwin Eke

lus!m Emeodi
Linda Ervin
lerryFartas
Patrick Farrell

There:aa Felfe
Wllliamf1ynnlll
William Foley
Carol Foriin
Ed Folia
Eudella Fraus1o

VJvt.nC1lan
Mart.Caltndo
le.eCarcla
G•lbertCan.a
MlchaeiC\anolll
MilrtiCilarranz

O.vldCiiM
llruce(;•lltone
Eale-vanGomez
R01U11dC~\

M•klr.cf(;nffin
Nt.l~oGu.rn
lo~ld•:e.tlnCUfii'n'11

1.-C;u.n.ro

.........

(~(­

RkbudH.U

''-''-"'-

�Jesusiral le rrc ra
Chunllon
C rcgory llonesro
Jcrry llol'. a rd
Edwa rd Ickes
Cary lies

o .m iellloh
Pa ul t;!tte )e mal
)ose )imcnez
Michae l jones
Guillerm o Ju arez
Khalid)uman

Parri cia Kea ring
Edna Kelley
1-tong Kim
Michael Kin sey
De nise Klodni cki
David Koch

Video Mania Strikes

th:~~~!~Je \e~~~ti~e tee~~10tnmt~~'\:n

Sandra Ku ykend all
Cha rles Lamberl lll
Karh eri neLi nd

have fa ll en prey to vid eo mania .

ni;h~~oup;~:t1ic~hega1h~~ ~,nndd in~~d~~:

~~~~~~fd~!fr~~ ~~mci~bb~~s~~i~go~;~~
~hee0 ~a~:!J0fro1~eth~8c!~t~h~~n6r fhefb~;
ape.

qu~;~~~!" 8ori;inacJJ;'\~~:~dedPr~; ~~!

laund ry into the e lectronic wonders, the
competitors expe ri ence th e thrill of vic~:Jod~~f du:f!!t.through the agonizing

Kimberl y Lives.'ly
Rober! Long II
Roland o Lopez

Whether it be Don key Kong, Pac Ma n
or Foosball. stud ents {and even admis-

sion's officers) cluster to hone the ir
skills. vastly improving hand-eye
coordination.
Fads come and fads go, but video
mania, contagious in nature, has spread

~h~,i~~~i~g~o~f~~~~~~~e~a~" bhe~ ~~~
~rah;fn~~~~igt~'!"~uufri~~se ~~~ica~d~~~

NnraliaLuno
llumphrey Marr
Jgno cio Marlin ez

up.

Sophornores - 127

�lulieMar11nez
Leroy Martmez

C.riiMIIChell
l•cldeMoniO)il
I larry Moreno
loeeMunoz
l•me.Neal
Rld,..n!N1ra

�[actJuetineRobmson
L.1nceRodgers
Carmen Rodriguez
Maria Rodriguez
~laryRodrig~•ez

RenaeRoio

LourdesRuiz
Susan Sailer
Moses Salas
Cynthia Saldana
MariaSalido
WalidSalim

Deanne Sanchez
Tom Shindell
Marsha Silberman
Amber Silguero
Laura Simerolh
Bill Smith

CetrinaSmith
L.1uraStone
TamyraStriegler
MarkThuran
D11nielTrevino
Rosie Uriegas

Carlos Valadez
Raul Valdez
Rosa Valencia
LaurannVasek
foe Vega
[ort~eVelasco

MnrkVcncrling
Robert Waldron
fohn Walters
LoraLecW:~rd

RoUer\ Washburn
[oel Ysla

Sophomores - 129

��Felici£moAcevedo
LinusAchilike
Patricia Adames
ObaoyeAdekanye
Glenda Aguilar
AbeerAkbari

Mohammed AI·Busmail
WafaAI·Khalifa
Mohammad Al·Seihati
Scoi!Anthony
Patrick Arata
Irene Arteaga

Sylvia Arteaga
ChristianAsoluka
Ana Avila
MariveiAvila
Lori Banfield
Martha Barrera

Rud y Bayardo
MauriceBecneljr
David Benz
Ofelia Betancourt
Oralia BetancourT
Joseph Bock

Gregllourgeois
Jacquelinelloyer
David Brash
Grace Bravo
Edward Bright
Inger Brown

Steve Burg
Lisa Burke
Donald Campbell Jr.
Jeff Canaday
Robert Castillo
Nina Castro

Freshmen - \31

�Cynth ia Cavazos
Melissa Cavazos
Robert Cavazos
Victor Cega rra
foe-foe Chan
Ed"AardCinek

Trouble Clayton
Colleen Cole
Paulo Contreras
Mariso) Curiel
Danica Dailey
Shannon Dailey

facq ueline Davis
foyce Davis
Rosa linda Det\ lva
Diane DeChant
Simona DeLeon
Pctchada Dha mcharoen

Paulino DiVece
Patricia Dillon
forge Duran Cruz

Christian Duruii
fohn Eagan
RhondaEhrle

par::~7o~~i~fn:!:rs~~rd working individual and a neces5ilry
EliseoEiizondo
AliceE.Jpana
CynthiaEstrnda

She is Communications Supervisor -

in charge of the

IW~~;~;ct}::~:~f'5mCJ~r1r"~a:~1n°s~~~ing the phone
an.~! io~~~~~··c:h"~e:a:ra~~:~ear'i~:~-~r ::~'(:~~e here until
th~~~:~:h:,u~n workmg here. her workload has in·

creaJed as a result of the growth of the univef'Sity. Mf'5. Chrr
IS extremely
busy ''But."' she lilid. "tt doe5rl't bother me. 1 just take it as 11
comes."
She said she loves pe&lt;tple So she likes the fact that her
position entitles her to come in contaCI with many different
people. either over the phone or m the Communications
Center. when! people constantly come and go

5i1KI that the work can be frustratmg when it

132- Freshmen

�Bend, Twist, Stretch
... nnd 8. and 9. and 10. and rest!"'
Bend ing. twisling and rlexing are easy to
do unless you were participating in one of
the aerobics classes offered by senior Agnes
Fuccello.
Fuccello rigorously commandeered sluggish bodies through a strenuous slate of fat reducing. muscle-toning, body-relaxing.
tension-releasing exercises for an hour every
Tuesday and Thursday evening in the Union
Center.
After completing the \0 weeks of thf'
aerobics program. which was sponsored by
SAC. the participants were able to go home
feeling beucr about themselves - no more
sore muscles.
·· . . . and bend. and stretch. and hold

Emilio Fernandez
]esusFernandez
Susanna Fernandez

Arthur Flores
Sui Foo
Virginia Ford

MarleneFor1Una
EulogioFraire
Pault"ujimoto
Karla Galle
Cynthia Gallegos
Patricia Garcia

Rene Garcia
ApolinarGar7.."1
Maria Gal'7.."1
Melinda Garza
Gretchen Gilley
Marguerite Glover

Patricia Gomez
PedroGonzales]r.
Gabriela Gonzalez
Lucy Gonzalez
Diane Gran
Israel Guardiola

Freshmen - 133

�RoeiGuerra
Raul Guerrero
Sonia Guerrero
CAA1na Gutierrez.
'-•lanue!Gutlerrez
Maria Gutierrez.

Riclr:Gu~man
Gret~Ha'llreave.

Tom1let&gt; Harkennder
Tracyllamey
Kathleen I tarn•
RUIIeiiH.uru

t.;11th) ll•n n•f'mer
Ehul)f1h llan..ood
lohn llil~km•
Tul') llf'ndrleth
(~lii)I·M llf'rf'ltiiJ
Lnnllf'mande:&amp;

Rnl-.nii"""""'Jf'&amp;
Snn~o~ll,.motnoJ!'~

'·

�Karen Korzcnko
Dilshan Kulalunga
Iulie La)&gt;eyre
Megan Lawlor
leanclleLee
Cheryl Leighton

M e nglim
Eugeniolimonla
Claudia Lively
Ronald Lod:ridge
Anna Longo
lose Lopez

Aide Luna
llildal.una
TonyeMncsuku
Adbcel ~ larlinez
Alex~ lartinez

luanMala

Save a Life With CPR

Noerni Mazuca
MerryAnn~lcCrary

The Student Hea lth Center, unde r the

Rebecca McCurry

1~r~~~~~~-~~~~~~&gt;;~~~~s~,lfc~~~~~~(~p~~~~

the students, faculty and staff.
The classes were initially offered weekly
and were held in the Health Center. Ap-

~r~5~~r:~~~~y ~00 ~eoJ~!~td~J~1din~;~i~tl~l~~~

participated .
Severa l courses were offe red and were

~~~;~u~~~i~~-h~~~t 1:~~5!~:. ~~l~r:~r~~l~;~rf~

two two-hour sessions. This segment of the
program included one-man CPR as well ns
aiding a choking victim.
T he second segmen t was basic life savin~. which incorporated the first course
wtth the addition of infant CPR and chok-

P&lt;tlricia ~lcFcrren
Paull\lcllugh
MnrbeliaM(:ndoza

int\&gt;:.o;;~~s~~e:iso led a two-hour refresher
course for those who had earned a certiricate previously.
RcnccMick
fnckie 11- lonlo~'a
]arno:s ~loorc

Business Admioistr~lion lnslruclor C&lt;~lhy Weber pr&lt;~&lt;:­
lkes reviving &lt;11 hu rt in one of the d01sses on u rdiopulmonuy resusdl&lt;~lion (CPR) sponsored by the StudentHe.allh Cenle r.

Freshmen

135

�High Schoolers Try College

:V~~tJr~~~eJ~~~~h.3w~3i~;ti£~bv~heh~~mi~~

sions Office staff to introduce colleJ(e lire in
general, and our life in particular. to Texas high
school seniors.
Dorm ·residents greeted and \\Cre hosts to the
visitors. They shared their e)(l&gt;ericnces and
knowledge of university life. as we I as their dorm
rooms for the night. with the prospt.octive students
Besides the initial introduction, events of the first
day included cnmpus tours. a "delicious dinner in
the Caf' (to quote admissions counselor Shelly
Holly). a movie - "~l y Bod)'guard"
and an

~:~"~ o~~~u~~~J:~tte~:,\~~~~C~~~cc~I\}S~Cf",;
was a Jay designed to provide visitors a taste of

va~~:r~i~~~~r d~~d~h~ 1 ~ish" :h~lusseniors

ot

first-hand experience in the college classrOOf!' ~)

~~n~,i~~e~~se ~~~'h0ad1~~o~n~~~~i~i\~
their majors" bdore they left ror home.

~~v~~~~:t

�MnrinaPerez
Oralia Perez
Alma Placencia
Karen Poole
UsaPopp
Kimberly Poulin

Norma Ramirez
Maria Ramon
Mary Alice Ramon
Thelma Reyna
Edwani Riccio
Rodney Rilchey

Robert Rivas]r.
LaSonia Roberts
Angela Rodriguez
Arnold Rodriguez
Robert Rodriguez
]ulioRojas

Austin M eans Theatre, Music, Picnics on t he Lake- Growth

Although we come from different parts of the nation and
world. we are all impressed wilh
Austin in some way.
Maybe it's the scenery - the
sun setting as we jog a long Town
Lake ...
perhaps the educational resources of our own and the

u~~v~h=i~~!t~:.x:~t~ ~~d historical

wea lth . .
the music -

rock and roll.

opera. folk. baroque. country and

A umer&lt;~'S eye view of (KK home- Ausl in.

~he~~:r,n~e\!~~e~~~:·

rockabilly. - - - - - - - - -- or the miscellaneous fun pains - desperately holding on to
swimm ing at Barton Springs. nights 1ts naivete. dedicated to preserving
on Sixth Street. Lake Travis pic- its individuality and unique comnics. the ballet. rock-climbing, plexity. We criticize it, complain
Wurstfest and Aq ua Fest ...
about it, d e fe nd il.love it
And on the list goes. Whatever
Austin.
the reason, we fee l attnched to this
ndolescent city, sitting [sometimes
uneasily} between child ond
odulthood. We monitor its growing

Freshmen - 137

�CregRo"in
Juanita Salat
MariaSalat
Maria Saldana
Ricky Sanders
Chria Sandoval

M ~ehelleSchultz

AllenSear1
Brian Senn
JerryStl\·u
Francbco Solis
AndretSoA

VIlli So.
]1m South" ell
C.:..ri.St~mer

Patnc Stillman
Olga'Tap~

N•ncy Tl) lnr

C.blf'tttoTtopt"

UuTPJW
(~I)Thr-lj{lll
lMTn~.lllr

0

TuttM

~l.o~rwTr~mo

'' r--.

A..lrirno•T~

•..,...., •IU»

1.-auo\1\'M
lctha\-tr;l
\\.)... \\.ahl

�Gabriel Cabre ra
Hugo Estrada
Ender Fuenmayor
Jesus Guerre ro

Sedat Hashas
Cha rles Hassen
Benito Lopez
Dorothy Martinez

DerrickMontique
CarlosOrtiz·Gil
Glenn Pille r
Edwa rdQuiiada

Graduate Students - 139

�President- Br. Stephen Walsh, C.S.

�Vice Prntdenl Roy Tlolley of Mobil Oil Corpor•lion prHrnl~ • gift of
Sl.OOO lo IM univ~y for lhe women's pl.ly md pl.iywrighl prost.Am.

Presidenl - 141

�Academic Dean

.

~

-

4-

�Associate

Associ11te Academic Deans - 143

��Administrators - 145

�Chairpersons

Emma Lou Linn
Dr. Emma Lou Linn, Associate Pro-

~~~h; ~~:r;~~1ffe·hi:v\~~a&lt;f~~~pse~fal
Sciences. She received her Ph.D. from
the University of Texas at Austin in 1966
after attending UCLA and the University of Houston . She is a licensed
psychologist and a member of the Texas
Psychological Association and the
American Psychological Association .
Dr. Linn previously was Associate
Director of the Child Development at
the University of Texas, where she
directed the Eva luation of Headstart in

~oeut~~!~~T!~!~i~~:::rJ~~;r~~c::.is~h~
is a past recipient of the Teaching Excell ence Award here . Her other
achievements in clud e the fohn Ben
Sheppard Award for Historic Preservation and the American Associa tion of
Architects' Medal of Honor Award for
outstanding communi ty contributions

Boyd Collier
Dr. Boyd D. Collier is Dean of the
Center of Business and Public Ad·
ministration and Professor of
Managerial Economics here. He is also
a Ce rtified Public Accountant and has
assisted individuals and businesses suc·
cessfully e ngaged in financial and ta x

pl~~~id~i~~~n°~oeh!ei~~ah~ld

faculty and
adm inistrative positions at the Universi·
ty of Houston and the University of
North Carolina, Dr. Collier has been the
chief financial officer with Execucom
Systems Corporation and chi ef operations auditor for G lastro n Boa t
Company.
Professor Collier was vice president
of finance of the Austin Chapter of the
Planning Executives Institute and is vice
president of communication of the
Aust in Chapter of the National Accoun·
ting Association.
Dr. Collier has published monographs

~nu~tf~ti(:~~hf!Ou~~fl h:~ds~~~~ 0a~t~~: fi~~~~~i-c~: b~~b~~~ ~nn a;;~~~t~N~~~
member of the State and National
Democratic Parties.

HI-~

at numerous court proceedings. He a lso
holds an appointment as senior lecturer
with the University of Texas at Austin
Department of Economics. He is cur·
rently an editorial advisor for The Jour·
nol of Accountancy.

�Anne Crane
Anne Crane, Associate Professor of
1lglish, has been here since 1972 and
~s been the Chairperson of the Divi·
non of Humanities smce 1974.
She holds a B.A. in English from

1\ 1 a1~~lrsh c~~~~e f~eoe(f~l~e~~ityM.~f
lichigan and is a Ph .D. candidate at the

~~ve~~~?~Je~: 5·teaching

here, she

~~~~t.Enl~i!h h!sM:JI~r~~~g~~ll~re 8o~

:0m~~~~~\~~o~Jh~\~~i~d ~i~~m~h~~il~

\' college in the metropolitan Detroit

ll'ea.

~h~~ ~~~pb~{~~~~n:~e0 ~~~"~:i~~!

Glenn Hinkle

John D. Lewis

Dr. Glenn Hinkl e. Professor of Education. has been here since 1970. He is
currently the Dean of the Center for
Teaching and Learning.
Dr. Hinkl e received both his B.A. and
M.A. degrees from Kearney State College. He also holds an Ed. D. from the
University of Nebraska.
Before coming here, Dr. Hink le held
many positions in high schools and

Dr. J. D. Lewis is an Associate Pro·
fessor of Chemistry and Chairman of

~n~~~~;i:~e~u~~r~~~~~r~~~a c~~dh!~s a~
superintendent in Loomis. Nebraska .
He also has been an instructor at the
University of Nebraska and Chairman
of the Department of Education at
Doane College.

'Conference on Communication and
Composition, the National Council of
feac~e_rs of English and the Association

sio~~·l ~~~~ra:fo~~~i~~~h moathi~r~f~:k
~::n~:~g fou~~r~e~:;adrc~ei~ath~e~:~~~~

lf Wnhng Program Administrators.

teaching and educa tion .

b

~~e~~~~~iiTe ~a:~~~i~a~ ~~'!n~!~ 1 ~f\h~

faculty since September 1975.
Dr. Lewis is a native Texan . He

r:c~v:~i:t~af~~~ 0fe~~s5 t~th~~a~eg~l~

lege in 1969. He received his Ph.D.
degree in Physical Chemistry from
Texas A&amp;M University in 1974. After
receiving his Ph.D .. he did post-doctoral
study and taught at the Un iversity of
Nebraska - Lincoln until coming here.
Dr. Lewis and his wife. Karren. have
two children, Mark and Heather. He
and his family are members of Abiding
Love Lutheran Church in southwest
Austin .

Chairpersons-1 47

���Center for Business Administration

��Br John Perron

! 52 -

Faculty

Br James HanlOn

�Department of Humanities

Faculty - 153

��Faculty - 155

��Center for Teaching and Learning

Faculty - 157

��Br.MarkRufe

�s
t

a
f
f

160 - Siaff

�AdrrvsSKJn's. Froot row ~ &amp;ur("ll, Shrlly Holly. Secood row: P.un Husloo, )C'o~n Fro~nz, Muth..l Mutinez. Back ro w Rex Je rden ,
MlnU('I)\arez, C..roleJones.
Sta ff -

161

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lr't'ntley. 8.K1c row· u"'Y Gvrilon, }.ly rll'ldel, Cindy to~
pet, Roclney M.Inh, l"eO-o t"el"l.l.

Aid franc row SM.u Giru. Noro~ u.nbref&amp;.
row Mitzi Thomu, Doris Conllo~.~~l~-

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Bond. Kuk 16. 63. 1l5
Bon1IW. Behl'ld~ 119
Bon•llol. Pablo 109
Bounnua., Ruth !1. 148

US. I

US

"

�Estrada.Cynthia132
Eslrada, Hugo 139
Estrada. Mireya 111
Fagan.Lori40, 41 ,\19
Forias.Gerardo76. 78.79.126
Farrell. Patric k4 ,86,126
Felfe.Theresa126
Fenec h.Poult50
Fenton, joseph 119
Fernandez. Emilio 133
Fernandez. Frederick67.69.tl9
Fernandez.]esus133
Fernandez. Susanna 133
Fesler, Ken 11 61,63,118.119
Flanigan. Anna Marie 28. 38. 65. 69. 71. 73. Ill,
11 3
Florek. Tony22. 155
Flores. Arthur 133
Flynn,William lll61 .63.126
Foley,William\26
Follin. Ran ly 160
Foo. Sui 133
Foran.Carol126
Foni. Virginia 133
Forstchen,Maia45.51.52.53.119
Fortuna.Marlene133
Fotta.Edward86,126
Fraire, Eulogio 133
Fran klin,Vemon78
fran z. ]ean161
Frausto. Eudelia126
Free.]onathan 119
Friesenhahn. Merri 119
Frigauh.Gina31.66
Fritsch. Robert 101. 145
Fuccello.Agnes111,13J
Fuenmayor. Ender139
Fu jimoto, Paui1J3
Galan,Viviant26
Galindo,Maria126
Galle,Gregory25.39.86.94.111.160.170
Galle. Karla 133
Gallegos.Cynthia67.13J
Garcia. Benito\19
Garcia.1Jrendal63
Garda.[esse126
Garcia.Maria111
Garcia.Mary1 19
Garcia. Patricia 133
Garcia. Rene 133
Garcia. Santa 111
Garrell.ltillary119
Garrison.Larryl62
Garrison.Tina]o61,63,116,120
Garz.1.Apolinar 133
Gar~. Gi lbert 86. 126
Garza. !lcctor62
Gat7..a.Maria63.90.133
Gat7..a,Melindat33
Garza.Robbie86
Gat7..a,Santa 162
Gaytan,Rey3 1. 155
Gianoni.Michael31.126
Gilarranz.Marta126
Giles. Oavid28. 126
Gillette.!3ruce126
Gilley.Gretchen13J
Gillies. Lynne 57
Gilmore. Becky 163
Ginn. Richard26,59,61,63. 72,73,116.120
Glover, M&lt;H~uerite133

Glowacki. Diane 120
Goehrin~. Michae13, 42, 43. 45. 47, 51. 111
Gomez,J..:Stevan126
Gomez.Maria60
Gomez. Purticia60. !33
Gomez,Wi !lie59,1 1\

Gonzales. Armando 120
Gonzales. Rud y 120
Gonzales,Pedro]r 5.133
Gonzalez. Gabriela \33
Gonzalez. Lucy60, 133
Goronlo.]orge 111
Graham.Cullen 170
Graham. Sherry 57
Gran. David 120
Gran.Dianel33
Green, Virginia61,63.88.89.90
Gressel.Ronald 126
Gnffin, Mildred 126
Guanliola.lsrael t07.133
Guardiola. ]ohn\11
Guanliola.Pat9
Guerra. Adalberto 126
Guerra.Michaelt\1,168
Guerra.Roel t 34
Guerra.Victor126
Guerrero.]esus139
Guerrero.]ose25.63,126
Guerrero. Rau16J.J30,\34
Guerrero. Sonia 134
Guseck.Darlene59,126
Gutierrez.Cristina134
Gut1errez. Luist20
Gu tJ errez.Manuel134
Gutierrez.Maria60.134
Guzman. Rick84.86.134
Haldeman.Susan42
Hall, Richanl\26
llannes, Kevin97
Hanson.DavidJJ
Hanson.Br ]ames\0,11.152
Happ, Kelly 126
Hargreaves.Greg134,17J
l larkenrider.Tomileet34
1-iarney,Tracy134
l larris.Deborah21.24.J6.40.41.45.120
Harris. Kathleen 2.23.40.41
Harris. Russel164.134
llartensteiner. Kathyl34
Harwood. Eli7.abeth \34
Hashas,Sodat 139
llassanie,l lass.1n126
Hassen.CharlestJ9
!la...,kins.]ohn 19,48,49.134
Hendrieth.Tory76,134
!leredia.Gilbertl34
!lernandez.Elizabeth81.8J.IZO
Hernandez. Fred 163
!lernandez.Lori\34
Hernandez. Robert60. 134
l-lernandez.Sonia62.JJ4
llerrera.Georginar.sa. 134
l-lerrera.]esusita127
llerrera. Thcres.'l\12
l-lcrzik. Kathy 163
llilgers.Saral20
l-lil l.Melissa134
l-linklc.Glcnn29,147
llinton,Jlatricial12
Hixson. DaniciJJ
llocs.Charlie63.76,1J0.1J4
Holcombe. Donna 162
llolly,Shelly161
lloltz.Marie 40,41 .45,50,51.112
llon.Chun 127
llonesto.Gregory127
llop kin s. Kath ryn 11 .63,66,90
llopper. Mariannel26,149
!l ouse. Doris 163
Howard. ferry 127
1/owe.Annamael\2
Hughes. Richard 149
llunt.Br. Edmund 154

Hunter. Br.Eagan 157
Huntcr.Lesia101
Huston. fenny 51
lluston.Pam161
Ibarra, Ru ben \OJ. \34
lckes.Edwanl127
!kec hi, Benjamin 134
lles.Gary\ 1.1 27
lloh. Daniel127
Irvin. Stan 152
]ackson-]ohnson.D 162
]alomos.]ose\34
]anovsky.Chris45.50,51
Jarrell, David 120
]arvis.Graham52.5J
]auhiaincn, KariJ3.9J
]emai.Paulette127
]enkins.Marce11al63
Jerden. Rex 161
]imenez.]ose127
)inq.Woeil\2
]irousek.[ulie45.46,47,J34
Johnson. Alfred \63
]ohnson.Margaret42.47.51.112.16J
Johnson. Virginia40.41.44.45,46. 47.51.108.
112.171
]ones.Carole161
)ones.Michael24.101.127
]uarez.Carmen 134
]uarez.Guillermol27
[uarez.Manuel161
[uarez. Patricia 120
[uman. Khalid 127
)umbo.Christopher134
Kambhu.Surachai68.99.112
Kane.Dennis24.6J.68.1\8
Kanne.Craig44,45.46.47.51.53.120
Karam.Michael134
Keatmg.l'atricia31.127
Kelbaugh. Dolly 160
Kelley. Edna 127
Kelley, Evan40,45.51.53
Kennedy.William26.15J
Kim.llong 127
King.C~~rol112

King.)ohn86
Kinsey.Michael127
Rinsey.Richard 144
Klodnicki.Denise28.66.67.127
Knorr.)ohn84.86.156
Koch. David 127
Koch. james 149
Kocmpel. David61.68
Korzenko. Karen47,51.1JS
Kouba.Tamara6J
Kruse. Lawrence76. 76, 79,112
Kulatunga.Dilshan62.135
Kuykendall.Sandnl \27
K11 0h.ShciiuShing63
Labry.Robert26.71
Lafuente. Patricia27
Lagcnfeld.David64.66
Lambert. Charles Ill 127
Landis. Mar k 53
L1ndry,]ames57,59.63,106.112
Lnpeyre.) uli e135
Lasseter.P,·oo·16J
L1t1Z, Kelly64 ,66
Lil&gt;llor.Megan67,135
Lawson.Cecil122.152
Lawson. Eli7~1beth 112
L"e.Alan40,41.64
Lf'e, Diane71
Lcc.]eanette135
Leighton.Cherylt35
Lepore, Lindu 162
Lcwis.[ohn 147
lndex-165

�Lim.Mengl35
Limon.Oianel63
Limonta. Eugeniol35
Lmd. Katherine 25. 39, 57. 59. 63. IN. 127. 160
Lindblom. Dori.s\12
Lmn, Emma Lou 21.28. 29.146
Lipiec.Ronald 112.120
Lil:ely.Claudia39.45.135
Lives;1y, Kimberl)· 127
Lock. Joy 149
Lockridge. Ronald 135
Loest.Darra94
Londo.Gigi 163
Long. Rober111 40. 45. 47. 67. 127
Longo. Anna 135
Longoni. Robert Jr 120
Lopez. Benito 139
Lopez.Eduardo25.61,63, 120
Lopez. jose 135
Lopet.. Luisa 120
Lopez. Robert61. 62. 63. 67. 120
Lopez. Rolando 127
Loth.]ohn63.112
Loushran. Susan 42. 43, 53, 153
Lucas. )ohn\3
Luct.kowski,Dave84.86
Lugo.]ose 117
Lum.Maria120
Lumbrera.Nora112.162
Luna. Aide 135
Luna, Hllda135
Luna. Esther59.113.160.168
Luna.Natalia59.127
Lyc:wk. Helena41, 45.52.53
Lynch. Br Daniel159
L)·on,Andrew71,97,121
Mackie.Patrick63
Macsuku.Tonye135
Mader.Mary28.63.72,1 13.t68
Mader. Theresa 28,3 1,59.72.73, 105,121
Maldonado.Ehas1 13
Malone.Brian97
Marek.Raymond]r 62.113
Marengo. Br Don 10,59
Marquez.Diana\ 21
~larr.llumphrey127

Marsh. Rodney121.162
Marlin. Rebecca 40. 41
Marlin.S1eve78
Marlmez. Adbeel135
Martinez.Adriana121
Marlinez.Alexl35
Martinez,Dorothy\39
Martinez, lgnacio127
Marlinez.]ulie128
Martinez.Leroy57,61, 128
Martinez.Martha\61
Marlinez.Raul\21
Marlinez,Thelma113
Mata.)uanl35
Malheus,)orgel28
Mouger.Marie-Lucie \ 63
Mauk.Cherry159
Maultsby.Charlotte\32
Mawa nde.Ennie\63
Mazuca.Noemi\35
McClure.13rayde76.78.160
McCord.Greg56.121
McCrary.MerryAnn61,94.95.135
McCullough. Br Thomas 158
McCur ry, Rebecca 135
Mct'erren.Palricia33,81,83.135
Mcllugh.Pa ul17, 135
Mcllroy.Sharon81.83.101.158
McKey.David78
McWilliams. Perry \48
Mechaley. Mike \63
166 - lndex

Medina.Anna61.121
Mendoza.Amelia30.128
Mendoza. Marbelia 135
Merkle.Matthew\13
Mesher. Louis\13
Meyer.)ean\45
Mtck.Renee\35
~lick, Robm 160. 121
Middlf'IOn, Kathryn 88. 89. 00, 113
Milam.Ka)·68
Mtller.Kevinl3.114
Mtll.s.Bud 163
Mill.s.)immy56.110.158
Mmton, Pepper 5. 23. 44,45
Mltamonles.Manuel\14
Mltchell.Cara128
Molma.Pa!ncia\14
Monro.Victoria161
Monrue.Cheryl121
Monsant.Pablol\4
Montet.EIIi.s76.78.121
Montgomery.Dan71.76.78.156
Montgomery, Kevin 40. 41 ,121
Monti&lt;jue.Derrick139
Monhque. Marguente 114
Montonen,Michael\14.121,169
Montoya.)ackle128,135
Moore. james135
Moore.Marial36
Morales.joste163
Moratmos.)uan\36
Moreno.llarry128
Moreno. )tmmy114
Moreno.Maria60,136
Motes.AnnMarie57,114
Mueller.F.I)'se\15
Mugerauer. Rober136, 142
Muir,Rober\51,52.53
Muller.Br Gerald 14.41.15~
Mullins.Kevin93.121
Mungia.Grace l36
Mungla,Rene130
Munsuia.Olga\36
Munn .Man:::ia121
Munoz.Evangelina\1 , 121
Munoz. )ose128
Murrar. Brenda40, 41
Muskrella.Michael11.136
M)·sliwiec. Br jeremiasl63
Navarro, Paul136
Neal.]ames\28
Negrete. Rolando 60. 136
Neumann, Margaret 56
Newton,Julle31,7 1
Newton.Terry154
Nic hols.Goorge34,71
Nic hols, Lo uri 60. 136
Nino.P..Hguel62
Nira. lnez\63
Nira. Oswaldo 115
Nlra, Richard 128
Nmerem. joachim 115
Noble. Shannon 115
No len.Claude 149
Nolen. Robert163
Noll, Deb 160
Nova k.Gail163
Nsiegbu.Siephen 136
Nunis, Robert 1111 5
Nutbrown.Steve24
Nwachukwu. lfeynwa 136
Nwachukwu. lke nna\28
Nwosu, Rol)lhS I I5
Nzeribe, Thelma 128
O'Bar,LauraU
O'Bryan. Patricia 11 5
O'Conneii,Mary115

O'Connor. Palrcia 152
O'Connor. T1m 50. 51
O'Keefe, Katharine 88. 89, 90
O'Keefe.Timothy61,63.121
Odette. Br Philip 163
OUor.Ann 136
Ofokaire.Nkemakolaml28
Ofor. Precious\36
Ogbogu. Evelyn 115
Ol.sen.Cindy63.71.128
Olson. Cathya8. 90, 136
Olson,Mtchae1 4,86
Onti,.eros. Rebecca 128
Onwuma. Odozieaku 136
Opiela.David136
Orlega.Adrian59,115,168
Ottega.jairo 128
Orliz-Gil.Carlos139
Osborne. Hov.arcl\28
Oster.Mark86
Osterhaus,Le&lt;IISO
Oveisi. Hadi 151
o.... ensby.Susm3ti,t15
Pacini. Veronica59.115
Page.Lori3.58,128
Pantuso.Crnthia63.108. 115
Patino. M11r1ha 42.51
Patterson. Leon 128
P11ulson.Ann le163
Pauva. Larry 163
Payton,Doroth)' 163
Pena. Beatrice128
Pena. Pedro 136.162
Penn,Wilham29.153
Pennington, W Blaine68, 71
Pepper.Cynthia59.162
Perales. Yolanda 136
Perez.Charlene156
Perez. Mann1160, 137
Perez.Oralial37
Perron.Br john29,152
Peterson.Merryl58
Petro. Nuzha 128
Pforr. Mlke71
Phi11ips.Edie19.115
Phi1\ips.Pamela71
Pien:::e.Timoth)'11,121
Piller, Glenn 139
Pippin.Melissa60
Pi.tehke, Lori 128
Placencia.Aima83. 137
Pongpainskul. Mon ko11 15
Poole. Karen8 1.82.83. 137
Popp.Lisa36. 137
Porras, Peter7,59.63.67, 12. 73, 122
Poth.)ohn61, 122
Poulin. Kimberl y 137
Presto, jan lcet35
Puente.A l 28.70, 71
Pulley. Connie 163
QuiJada. Edward 139
Ramlrez.Esmeralda 128
Ramirez, Fernando57, 122
Ramirez.Minerva115
Ramirez.Normat37
Ramirez., Sandra 116
Ramiret.. Pedro] r 40,41,128
Ramon.Maria l 37
Ramon, MaryAiice t 37
Ram05, Roy60. 122
Rand le. janice 154
Ran helm, Robert 35. 128
Render, Tammy 128
Reese. Robert 159
Reres. Jorge 122
Reyna. The lma l 37
Reynolds. O.vid 45, 47

�Rez.a. Hilda 116
Rhodenbau.gh. OouglAsiZ, 40, ~ I. 59. 63. 67,
124. 126
Ricdo. Edward 137
Ricketts.Scott66
Rincones. Larry21
Rios.Christine61
Rippee. Edward ~1 . 59. 63, 126
Ritchey. Rodney 33. 40. 47. 137
Rivas. Leticia 125
Rivas, Robert jr 137
Roberson.Cliffl46
Roberls. LASonia 137
Robinson. jacqueline60, 83.129
Robinson, judith28. 116
Robinson, Tim 153
Rodgers. Lance 3. 66. 129
Rodriguez..Angela 40. 41. 45,50.51. 137
Rodriguez.. Amoldo 137
Rodriguez.. Carmen 129
Rodriguez.. jose 56
Rodriguez.. Maria 129
Rodriguez.. Mary 129
Rodriguez. t..·like 163
Rodriguez.. Robert63. 130. 137
Rogers. Dennis\03
Rogers, Lindy ll6
Rojas.julio 7S. 9Z.93,137
Rojo. Renae l29
Romero.Gerardo 122
Rose, Mic helleZ2
Round, Sharon 52. 53
Rowin. Gregory 136
Rufe, Br Mark159
Ruiz.. Bennie 163
Ru.iz.Lourdes 7.59, 129
Rushing. LADonna 69
Ryan. MaureenZ5,56. 116
Saari. Brian 103
Sage.jim6Z
Sahtoe, Geoffrey 62
Sailer, Dorothy l39
Sailer. Susan 123,129
Salas. juanita 138
Salas. Maria 136
Salas, Moses lr 129.160
Saldana. Cynthia 129
Saldana. Maria\36
Salido.Maria 129
Salim.Walidt29
Sa\inas. jose \11 57,61, 116
Salinas.Maricela122
Salyers. Freda 88.90
Samilpa, Dolores 122
Sanchez,Deanne30.33.60.129
Sanchez. Herlinda59
Sanchez. Yolanda 122
Sanders. Ricky138
Sandovai,Chris 138
Santeliz. 11e ly86
Sawyer, Eugene 122
Schache rl, Richard84, 86.116
Schoultz. john 45, 46,47
Schultz, Eartha 64
Schultz,Michelle138
Scott, Fred 13
Scribner. Br. Simon 152
Seale,Steve84.86
Sears. Allen !38
Seay, Don21. 42,46, 47, 153
Segura, Ruby 116
Scnn.Brian 138.173
Shehon, james 86
Shenk. Leland 116
Shephard. Eric 64.70. 71.116
Sheppard. john jr. 68.7t
Shindell.Tom23.40,41,67.129

Shocketi.Eileen 163
Shuler. Rose 28, 30. 63. 65. 66. 72, 73
Silbermnn. Marsh11 \29
Silguero.AmbMina 129
Silvas. jerry 138
Silvestri.ChristopherZ3,42. 43,45, 47. 48. 49.
51.53
Simeroth. Laura 59, 90,129
Simon. Bernard 151
Smith.Bi\1129
Smith.Celrina 129
Smith. Lance45
Solis. FranciscoJI, 55. 61. 63. 66. 136
Solis. Maria 9. 56. 62. 67. 122
Sornorf. RacheiiZZ
Sosa.Andres63.138
Sosa. Miguel 116
Sosa. Valli 138
Soto, Ra&lt;tuc162
Southwell. james 138
Sparks, Letha 151
Sprug. Joseph 163
S1 Romain. Martha 25, 30, 59, 122. 160
Stack.t..lichael40. 41. 122
Stansbury.SheilaZ2.36,41,69.116
Stavinoha. Theodore 26. 63. 68. 71, 72. 100. 122.
\60

Steele, Viclor173
Steiner. Carla 138
Stcinocher.Cecilia61
Sterns.Russell93
Stillman. Patric 45, 136
Stone, Dick 13
Stone. Laura 129
Stou.t.Frances12Z
Slreet, Leanna 163
Striegler.Tam}·ra \29
S1ucznski.Pau.la 10
Sukthankar.Deepak 139
Sullivan. Debbie It, 160
Sylvester.jane122
Tabera.joann 116
Taku,0Tang99
Tamayo, Ricardo103
Tapia,Olga\38
Taylor. Donald 121
Taylor.Nancy138
Teich. Randal 57
Tennie.Catherine116
Tepc.Colcne3t.138
Tepc.Lisa32. 36.136
Terrero.Luisl22
Thomas. Eliz.abeth 30. 61, 63, 65, I 16
Thomas,)ames122
Thomas. Kenneth 116
Thomas.Milzi\62
Thomas. Philip71,160
ThomJ&gt;SOn.Cary61,66
Thornton.Br. john 145
Threadgi11,Cary76. 138
Thuran.Mark75.129
Thurman, ]anlce 88.90
Tijerina.Marina11.59.63,6!,83,1 18
Tijerina. jorge ]r. 66
Tindel. ]ames 162
Tipton. Frances 16l
Tob!lr. Lisa 138
Tobin. Timothy 102
Tonsi.Steven97
Torres.Olgal38
Trcka.john93
Trcpsure, Rober\5, 41, 44, 45,50,51,52.53,\08.
117, 168
Trevino, Oanic1 129
Trcvino, Maria60, 136
Tristan. Oora62, 122
Trlicek.Creg84.86

Tucker,Syt hcria64
Tumey. Wesley 84. 66. \36
Turman. Adricnne \36
Tyson. Diane 163
Uche.L'Ifeanyi 122
Uriegas.Rosie62.129
Urrulia,Lucia1 17
Uwazie.Emest136
Valadez. Carlos 129
Valderrama. Coromoto 122
Valdez.Rau\129
Valencia, Rosa 11.129
Valenzu.ela.Cynthia12Z
Vallejo.Aifonso\39
Vargas, Debbie 163
Vasek.Laurann 129
Vesa.)ose129
Velasco. Jorge 129
Velasquez. Wilfredo 117
Vetterling,Mark129
Vila.Arlclle\22
Villafranca.Miguel 162
Villapando. Gilberlo 117
Villareai. Ruth57. 117
Villarcal, janie12Z
Vondrak, john 29. 138
Wagner.E\ise45,122
Wahi.William138
Waldron, Robert 129
Walsh. Sr Marie Andre 157
Walsh,lkStcphen28.29.140. 141.171
Wahen.john\29
Ward, Lora 129
Ward.Roz.anne51,53
Washburn. Robert 129
Watrous,Paula\17
Watson.Dawn40, 45,63,122
Waznik,Allen4.84.86. 138
Weber, Cathy 134. 150
Weber. Sr. Madeleine Sophie 149
Wells,Melonneise30.138
Wendt,Oianne\22
White,\Vandat38
Wilbourn. Rober\ 78
Wi11iams.Chalethiat9. 48. 49.51, 64,67. 117
Williams. David 145
Wllson, Valetta\22
Wise,Rev.Neal\48,170
Wood. Rob71
Woodard, Judilh 57, 117
Woodyear. Grey 47
Wrighi.David159
Wrighl.[anet64
Wright.[immy76
Wright.Michae\37
Yost. Brian86
Ysla,]oe\129
Yzaguirre. Laura83.94
Zajac, )onetta 138
Zamardi, William 153
Zilucti,)aimel22
Zm~cha , Phi\68. 138
Zuk.Mitchellt03
Zuniga, Margic\38

lndex - 167

�Commencement Brings Forth
Memories and Dreams
Commencemen t represented a
fare~ell to the ClaY of 1983 - an
acknowledgement of the univer·
sit)·, appreciation for man)· hours
spent in academic endeavors and
..-anous areas of student life
It ""as a tame for the Claa of '83
to gather for one last t1me to th.tnk
the facul and staff for the man)·
hours of ecrures and counselhng.
the man) \\Ords of praise and en·
couugemf!nt and the man)'
ch.llenges and opportunltl
II 'h&amp;J 1lto a t1me for members of
tha cla.u to share the memorle. acquared through their four )'Nrl
here That one l.ur Y.a\l around
Old Main brought back thr
thoughts of good 11m and MOOd

friends. There are memoria of
Sixth Street. dances and camlvala.
athletic events and person1l
achievements With thua
memone. alto come hopM and
fears of .... hit lies ahud in the
future

The future hoktJ the promiM of
new friends 1nd families. tai"H:I'I
and opportumties and chlllen
and pla. It ia the I"Mli.ution of the
four)" arstpe_nt wllh thl.t communi·
f) It ia on!) the b@glnnlng of lhe
fulfillment of a hfet1me of drNnu
And JO, comm n ment e,;ercb.M ha\·e been completed. markIns another .t1 e In our h\·• Vel
ahhough \\8 m•)' n~· r tee old
fri ndt
ln. th lr tp1nU \'olll ,...
matn •lwe In our memon"
Ahhough "'• may never ,.. the
tm•ll quiet amput
ln. the
"'ord• of "'udom pqiM and
cnttdtm \\Ill echo In our h.rta
Although one challen In our hv•
hu bMn mf't. "' ""'' I cont1nu. ld
.cn.. e !Of" th. h h.c
hfe
off rs

,._It

�Oi"'ctor ol Cov~enl AHH'$ CrM
Bindrt posed wilh his cUughtet M..rty for
.I

po51"8t.ldu.llion pkt~.n.

Comm ence ment - 169

�Ctot.ibe:Met

durin«

Ctq

G,ale ~ lhfo pro&lt;:e.

a.cu~.M.re•le ~ hetd 1tw
~bft'"p.cluofriori •ISt. rp.riw..

lion

�Homilisl Cullen Gr.1h.1m, founder of lilt'
Teu5 C.1lholk Confe rence, inspired lhe
congrt&gt;g.1lion.

Commencement - 171

������Colophon
The 1983 edition of th11 Tower \\iiS

b~~~~ ~~2:~Y~JJP~r~~i~~~n~~~d~~~~~~~
ing offwtlithography
Paper stock is 100 J&gt;Ound cream whitl'

enamel. Endsheet

!'!lOCk

is 65 pound

vellum printed in two designs

~soove~~~~t~rod~~Li'!~e ~~r~w~o~~~:d.
backed and smyth stitched
Body copy is 10 point MPiior: captions arf'
6 point Optima Bold Type faa for
headlines: Stud1·nt Life
Windsor.
Organizations
Tiffany. Sports
Pharoah, People
Korinna

Class pictun~s Wf~m taken by Varrlf'n
Studios of Texas

~tre~~~~~oB~c"~trndj.~~ion pages and endThe 1983 Towe r includes 176 Jh1Rf'S and
ran 500 COJlif!s Oi!ilrihution was in Allf(USI
1983

����</text>
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                    <text>��THE 1982 TOWER
Volume 52

�������������������Phoning Friends for Funds
The St. Edward's University fourth
annual Alumni Phonothon raised

$116,000 in 1981 -$ 16,000 over the
set goal. The Phonothon is sponsored
by the University Development Office,
which coordinates the volunteer efforts
of students, faculty, staff, and alumni.
This year's fund-raiser was directed
by 1980 graduate, Tina Kelbaugh. The
student steering committee was composed of senior Jim Franz, and juniors
Terri Lopez and Mike Guerra. Faculty
chairpersons were Sf. Marie Andre
Walsh and Br. William Dunn.
At the culminat ion of the week, the
top donation-getter was awarded a
grand prize. Freshman Tony Cutaia won
a Spring Break trip to Port Aransas. Dick
Stone, from the class of 1967, was the
leading person from t he alumni
volunteers.
Chairpersons Bt. Dunn and Sr.
demonstrate 1981 "phone power.''

Marie

Andre

Wals

Dolly Kelbaugh shows surprise at rapid success of Phonothon.

20

Terri lopel watches donation temperature
rise.

�1981 Phooothon OirectOI'", T ina Kelbaugh, r eaches out t o student
c:oordinatOI'"S, Jim Franz, Terri lopez and Mike Guerra.

Tnomasine Walraed listens for tips as Tony Cutaia contacts alumni.

"

�The Hill's a Poppin'
with
Spooks 'n' Spirits
Spooks, ghosts, witches, clowns-not what you usually find on
a college campus, is it? Well, St. Ed's on Halloween eve isn't the
usual college campus. On this night strange beings were seen, as
students, faculty, and staff participated in the costume contest .
The contest was part of the Halloween Carnival. which was
sponsored by the Student Activities Council (SAC). Besides the
costume contest, there were many booths-kissing (always
popular at St. Ed's!), pie throwing, marriage-and of course,
divorce, fortune telling, and many ot hers to add excitement.
The Halloween Carnival is an annual event, but each yea r holds
its own ''treat .·· The country band ··southern Rain'' provided music
for Halloween 1981, as everyone two-stepped around the Union
Center. The evening ca me to a close with the showing of the horror
movie " Friday the 13th."

�23

�The Littlest Circus

St. Edward's University proudly presents the Royal
Lichtenstein Ouaner-Ring Circus .
Clown stunts, magic, animal acts, juggling feats,
and incredible acrobatics made "'The World's
Smallest Circus'' a big hit on campus. The troupe,
founded by Father Nick W eber, began its unique
ministry in California and has since performed in
churches and on school campuses all over the
country. Father Nick serves as the-ringmaster of the
show. J ens Larsen, Robert Lee. Stephen De
Saulniers and Nancy Oleson were Nick 's young

accompanists.
' 'Kids .. of all ages enjoyed the stunts.- mimes and
stories performed in the open arena behind the Main
Building, November 19. The event was sponsored by
the St . Edward's Campus Ministry.

"

�Animals also perform in the circus.

25

�A Rainbow of Culture
Wednesday, November 4, 1981 , was set aside as a
special day to celebrate the presence of the many
international students attending St. Edward's. International Day was an opportunity for students from the
multitude of nations represented here to exhibit aspects of
their native cultures. Exotic dancers, interesting music, and
cuisine from other lands were available to make
International Day a festive occasion for all students.
Along with the food and entertainment portions of
International Day, three St. Ed's students, Shahida Nigar,
Zuhmia Kuzbar and Arlette Vila- participated in an
international women's forum. The three discussed the
customs and traditions of women in their countries, and
answered questions from the audience about women's
roles around the world .
International Day was an informative, interesting, .and
colorful day for all of the students and fa culty who joined
in celebrating the broad spectrum of foreign students and
customs of which St. Edward's is so proud .

Amaya demonstrates the intricacies of belly dancing.

"

�A Prayer for Peace

Father Bryan Hehir pauses during his lecture on W011d Peac;:e.

The futing ended as Jim Franz, Mike Guerra and Dave Koempel eat a
hamburger.

27

�Coffeehouses
Thursday nights proved to be popular as the Student
Activities Council sponsored a variety of live performers
in the ReUnion. These Coffeehouses offered tired students
the opportunity to get away from the books and enjoy cold
beer and fine music.
Of the many Coffeehouses, folk singers Mike Williams
and Lindsay Haisley electrified audiences with their high
energy and original brands of music. Tish Hanley and David
Rodriguez entertained students with songs they could
identify with.
The Coffeehouses were a welcome relief to studied-out
students. Their popularity demonstrated by the large
audiences proved that the Coffeehouses were
appreciated.

"

�Wake Up With Mike and Bob
Every Friday morning from 8 to
12 , the St. Edward's campus
heard the best of the old and new
tunes on ' 'FM Wake-Up."
This novel idea brought out two
DJ's-Mike Guerra and Bob
Treasure . Added later in the year
were two more DJ ' s - Denise
Klodnick i and Carol Foran .
A budget of$ 100 and borrowed
equipment and albums put the two
guys in business . Before long , they
were getting praise and fame
for
their
around
campus
··wake-Up " music and Friday
morning banter . FM Wake-Up was
a good way to start the weekend
at St . Ed 's.

Music filled the air on Friday mornings during ; he fall as people talked. read th e Hilltopper. or waited for class to begin .

�lights
Upon the Hill
Carrying on a two-year-old tradition, 01' Main
was once again brnliantly aglow throughout the
Christmas season. Once again, the St. Edward's
Edsmen organized the setting up of the lights
and the ceremony that took place the evening
the lights were first unveiled. On Friday,
December 11 . the Omni Choir gathered on the
steps of the Main Building and entertained the
large crowd with Christmas music both old and
new. Finally, the switch was thrown, turning the
multi-colored array of decorative lights on in full
splendor. The audience responded with initial
oohs and ahhs that quickly turned to hearty
cheering. Christmas is herel
The Celebration of Lights, while still a
relatively new tradition here, is one of the most
beautiful and moving ceremonies St. Edward's
offers. The glory and splendor of the lights,
combined with the happiness, love and good
cheer of Christmas •. helped us all to realize t he
significance of this, the most Holy of all
seasons.

t..ura Simeroth, Ingrid Koopm•n •nd M elody Bennen easisted in the pt"e~retion of the luminano..
30

�How To Succeed In Business
Without Really Trying
The Cast
Finch ...................................................................... Richard Lemen

Gatch .............................................................................. Eric Abbon
Jenk1ns ...................................................................Viet()( Steele
Mathews .......................................................................LanceSmith
Tackaberry .....................................................Kevin Montgomery

Peterson ..................................................................... Roben long II
J .B. Biggley ..............................................................Fred Zimmerman
Rosemary . ................................•.... ..................... . Jacqueline MOJdue
Bratt ..............•...•............................................ Raymond Roben Lee
Sminy ................................•....•.............................•..Deborah Harris
Frump .................. ..••...••.... ...................... . ..•.......... Michael Goehring
Miss Jones .........................•...•....•...........................•....• Pepper Minton
Mr. Twimble ..........•...•...••...............................•......•............. Rob Muir
Hedy ........•....•...•............................ ....•......................... Rozanne Ward
1st Scrubwoman ........................................................... Dawn WatsOfl
2nd Scrubwoman ................................ ................ Thomas1ne Walraed
M iss Krumholtl ..•.........................................•............. Marian Albnght
Toynbee ...•.......................................•....................... ...•• Ed Rippee
Ovington ........................... . . . ...............................•......Lance Smith
Policeman ......... ... ........................................................Lance Smith
Womper . . ............................... . .... .. . ............................. Ed Rippee
Davis ..
... . .......... Ed Rippee
Johnson . . .
. ........ Roben Long II
W icket and Wickettes ...... . ... .....•... . .................. . ...... Roben L011g II
Dawn Watson
Manha Patino

Chorus
Marian Albright, Jill Israel, Kathie Krooss, Diana Ojeda, Manha Pauno, Stacie
Pyrch, Thomasine Walraed. Dawn Watson. Eric Abbott, Rob MUif, Lance
Smith. Victor Steele. Ed Rippee, Kevin M011tgomery, Roben Long II.
Finch, Smitty and Rosemary in a musical number.

TM large c.ut diacu nes one of t he many pointa brought out in the ahow .
31

�Brown
Bag

Series
The Student Activities Council realized that many students prefer
daytime programs. Scheduling activities around the lunch hour
provided more students, staff and faculty a chance to enjoy guest
speakers, musicians and comedians. The cafeteria arranged to
have students reserve brown bag lunches (SAC lunches!) . This
way, anyone in the St. Edward's community could enjoy fine
entertainment and, well, cafeteria food.
Dave Rudolph, a music and comedy talent much like Martin Mull,
kicked off the Brown Bag Series in the Union with such renditions
as "Go Play in the Traffic" and the Catholic theme song ' 'I've Got
Rhythm (and Ten Kids)." Local mime and juggler Mario Lorenz
dazzled and baffled his audiences on the Patio, in the Cafe and at
the Reunion. lorenz also incorporated into his act many SEU
··volunteers, " enabling students to see their peers make (in many
instances) complete fools of themselves.
Other than singers and comics, SAC provided guest speakers on
such topics as Rape Prevention, Reaganomics and legal Issues and
the College Student .

�Black
History
Month
Wilhemina Delco.

Once again, February was set aside as Black History Month. On the St. Edward's
campus, that meant a myriad of speakers, films and assorted other related

activities.
One of the most popular guest speakers was poet Rayfer Earl'e Mainor. Mainor
was the receipient of Cambridge, England's International Who· s Who Bronze Medal
in Poetry. Mainor performed some of his works and conducted two workshops
on publishing .
Another favorite guest was Yolantha Harrison , actress and graduate of The
University of Texas and Pennsylvania State University, where she taught theater
for three years. This multitalented mime and actress presented a glorious
one-woman show, "From a Black Woman's Heart ."
Black History Month is also the time when the struggles and prejudices everyone
fi ghts are highlighted with a togetherness theme . That perspective was not lost
at St . Edward's . A special Mass was held February 28 focusing on the love and
faith it takes to overcome prejudice. The over-all theme for Black History Month
1982 was a simple Swahili saying : "Upendano, Umoja , Na Kusaidiana ."
Translated , it means : " l ove , Togetherness and Devotion ."

33

�New Library
Unveiled
More than 300 people were present February 14,
1982 as the new $3 .5 million Scarborough-Phillips
Library was dedicated . New York Public Library
President Vartan Gregorian was the keynote speaker at
the Sunday afternoon ceremony . Also present were
State Senator Lloyd Doggett and the Most Reverend
Vincent M . Harris , Bishop of Austin. Doggett and Harris
both addressed the audience briefly.
The new library is named for Inez Scarborough Phillips
and Loyce Phillips. Their daughter, Lavon Phillips,
donated $ 1 million to St. EdwarC' s in memory of her
parents to build the library .
The Hilltopper Chorale, under the direction of Brother
Gerald Muller, C.S.C., provided music for the
dedication . Karol Anne Badget. assistant music
director, arranged the piece "Exultet: Rejoice" under
special commission for the dedication .
The Sunday dedication was only a part of the hectic
weekend of library activities. Also included was a
gathering Friday evening for faculty , staff, senior class
members , Austin Alumni and student leaders . The Omni
Choir performed and a reception followed .
Saturday evening, Brother Stephen Walsh , University
President, was host to more than 200 people, including
major donors, trustees , and Austin business people .
The new library, completed five months ahead of
schedule, provides services for students and faculty
alike . New additions include a typing room, lounge ,
conference rooms and rooms for group study.

John Ben Shepperd spoke In remembr~nc;:e of the Phillips' .

Keynote speaker

V~rum

Gregorntn.

�Role of Women
Celebrated
From March 21 to March 26, 1982, St. Edward's
University celebrated t he role women play in society as
well as spotlighted the difficulties women still face, as
SAC sponsored Women's Week. The week was
highlighted by different events each day, beginning with
an opening Mass, prepared by women and all lay
portions performed by women.
During the week of activities such problems as
prejudice and stereotyping were dealt with candidly.
Martha Cetera, Austin Chicana leader, presented a
seminar on ''T he Chicana Presence.·· M s. Cetera spoke
of the ethnic and sexual barricades many women
face.
Ot her activities during the week included a Brown Bag
Rape Prevention d iscussion. Also, Janie Milner. Director
of Career Planning for the St. Edward's Educational
Planning Center, held a workshop designed to enlighten
women on the ways they can market the skills they
possess. Women·s Weekended Friday. March26. That
day, female musicians and singers from St . Edward's
held a ··women in Music"' concert on the Patio. On
Friday evening, sophomore Liz Hernandez and faculty
member Sharon Mcilroy were the featured artists at a
Coffeehouse. The duo performed a variety of music
much to the delight of the small, but appreciat ive
audience.

35

�A Shakespearean m ood was set by the Society for Creative Anac hro ni s m as they performed Elizabethan dance s.

Frolic Flings Campus into Spring
From March 28 to April 3, 1982 , St. Edward"s
community was engulfed by a madness known as Spring
Fling . Spring Fling Week, a SAC sponsored event, featured
a Crazy Olympics , a dance with the crowning of Miss SEU,
and a Name the Man contest
The Crazy Olympics featured grueling athletic
competition between members of the four classes. After
such trying events as egg toss, marshmallow stuffing, and
the dreaded three-legged race , the sophomore class, by
vinue of its overall success on the day, was declared
champion .
Saturday night, April3 , the Student Union was the place
to go as the Sophomore class and SAC sponsored the
Spring Fling Dance. Weary students were given a chance
to unwind and dance to he music of The Holidays. Senior
Agnes Fuccello was crowned Miss SEU, as voted by her
peers . Senior Laura Lynn Makay was named princess,
while junior Aleta Brantley , sophomore Maria Solis, and
freshman Kathy Lind were all proclaimed duchesses .

Rebecc. Menin end Ken Fesler in

otympies

wrnni~

fotm el the Cre;ry

Vern Earl Equinox was the name junior Dave Koempel
created to capture the personality of the Spring Fling
Mascot, a canaan character created by junior Anna Marie
Flanigan . Other activit ies included a Madrigal dinner and
local Mime-juggler Mario Lorenz .
The first annual Spring Fling Week provided students and
faculty the chance to relax and prepare for the final stretch
of classes .

�T"htt Cleartigh1 W ait e$ provided music for the Madrigal otooet.
37

�Potpourri
of
Talent
Outside the air was cool and misty, but inside
the energy flowed as a crowd of 150 gathered for
the First Annual Student Review. Under the
direction of Richard Lemen, the cast of 23 dynamic
performers transformed the gymnasium atmosphere of the Union Center into that of an
off-Broadway stage . From the first moment when
the lights went up and the opening performer's
foot hit the stage, the electricity never stopped .
The Review was an ensemble production- there
was no one star . The audience was entertained by
the Roche Sisters and the graceful Jaws Ballet , and
kept in stitches with the spoof of the faculty and
administration in the Family Feud sequence .
T he motley group of dancers was galvanized into
a well synchronized, classy taste of the Broadway
sparkle in .. All That Jazz ... "The Pirates of
Penzance" showcased the talents of duo Richard
Lemen and Deborah Harris .
The success of the Review and the positive
reactions of the audience have insured the return
of the student Review in years to come.

�Heritage Around the Globe
April 28 was a day of cultural
excitement as the Student Activities
Council sponsored Heritage Day '82.
The activities of the day were centered
around the lunch hours, and the cafeteria
crew supplied an array of international
cuisine for the hungry students. Among
the many dishes served during the
two-hour event in the Union Center were
beef curry, egg rolls, sausage and
enchiladas. Also on the agenda for
Heritage Day were the songs -and
dances of many nations.
Guitarist Scott Cain provided the
audience with a beautiful mixture of
tunes from around the globe. SEU
students Steve Gomez. Jesse Garcia
and Peter Tovar performed native
Spanish music. The Ballet Folklorico
Aztlan de Tejas and the Folk Ethnic
Dancers displayed dances native to
Mexico, Germany and Poland.
In today' s diverse world, Heritage Day
highlighted the similarities among
people and emphasized the need for
mutual acceptance.

Women in their

n~~tive SJN~ni•h

dre.. perform dances of their heriUge.

39

�Dorm
Life

..

�Tom Shindell in Premont Hall.

StucSent. use new volleyball nets outside Teresa Hall.

���Student Activities

SAC comminee chairpersons standing (1-rl : W illie Alexander. Gina Frigaolt (Directorl. Ot1ve Koempel. Ro.e Shuler. Seated !l·rl:
Kinsella. Mike Guerra.

�Council (SAC)

�Edsmen

Back row: Bro. Don Marengo, Tom Bagby, Melody Bennett, Tony Cutuia, Fred Scott. Pete Porras. Doris Constantine. Middle row: Eddie Lopez, Richard Ginn,
MIChael Guerra. Dave Koempel, Doug Rodenbaugh, Rose Shuler, Gordon Markley, Aleta Brentley, Dawn Watson. Teresa Christo, Theresa M&amp;der,laura Simeroth.
Eva Munoz. Margaret Kmsella. Usa Delaney, Josie Lun11 Barrett. Front row: Tom Shindetl, Kathleen Kroos. Carol Foran, Yvette Yanez. Willie Alexander. John
CaniU, Denise Klodn1cki.

Behavioral and Social Sciences Club

..

�Honors Program

Back row {1-r): Alan War.g, Sandra Wason, Ann Canwright, Stuan Dudley. Edith Robison, K1m Bradshaw. Pauy Sull•van, John Stavast. Terry Sweeney, JeHLee.
Middle row {1-r): La Donna Rushing. Usa Delaney, Cheryt Kulewicl, Patricia Molin8, Janllil Arman, Angela Nixon, Elyse Mueller. Judith Robinson. Mananne Hopper.
Seated {1-r) : Bonna Cummings, Gordon Markley. l aura Makay. Estl'ler Luna. Sus•n Owensby, Wolhe Alexander, Debra Conley. Kneeling (1-r): Un1denttfied, Judy

Moore. Crets Gehan. Tim Tobm.

�International Club

(1-r) : Shahida Nigar. M unaza Ally, Suha DaJani.

Camp Club

S.Ck ~tw Gregory Honesto Mtddle row (k) Esther Gate... Roullndl Rodnguel. ~
Larry~ Front row (k) Noe CldlcN F

Roc:tvnond. Jrnuan• Hener• M4l M¥1..-...r.
Gerl• _.._ Gercoa

�Art Guild

Standing (1-r) : M ichael Kinsey , Rey Gay1an. Middle row (1-r): Genoveva Ancer, Tori Monro, Leslie Graham. Jacques
Feuooh, Jeremias Myslu viec. Eric Abbott. Front row (1-r): linda Cisneros. Cheryl Payne. Tony Meza. Serg1o Maninez,

Gerardo Rometo. Stan Irvin.

Texas
State
Education
Association
In tree (1-r) : Jube O' Neill. Rob1n Buck-Smnh, Carne Matlage. Sara

Hilgers. Standing {1-r): Elsa Nell•gan, Cheryl Payne, Jos1e
Chambliss. Rose Shuler. Barbara W1lhams , Kathy Lopez. Seated

{1-r): Diane Tristsn. Yvette Yanez. Cathy Seeds. Pat Boy&amp;f,
Jenny O'Connor.

�Soul
Society
Standing (1-rl: Henry C urtis, Tim
Pierce. Bryan Hunter, Willie Alexander. Seated {1-r): Cha lethe ia
Williams, Rebecca M artin , Av is
Hobby. Aleta Brantley.

Pep Club

..

Back row (1-rl: Julia Martinez. frances Ayala. Susanna Guena. Rebecca Martin. t..ura Lynn Maby, CMiethia Williams. Middle
row (1-r): Oawo Watson. Ellubeth lawson. Aleta Brantley. Front row (l· rl: Carotyn Perry, Cetrina Smith, Avis Hobby.

�Omni Singers

�The Center for Creative Ministry

Eddie l.opel. , Tereu Christo. Irma Escobedo and Br. Don Marengo have their evening meal.

�Secretary(Treasurer M elody Bennen .

Students'
Association
Incorporated

G·~I : ChubbyOiivarez. Rose Shuler. RichardGinn •.Pete Porra s. Patty Sullivan. Jim Landry, Teresa Christo, Lisa Delaney, Twila Heiser . Marty Binder. Marina
TiJerina. M elody Bennen. John M cFadden, Gordon Markley. Ken Fesler. John Cemohous.

53

�Cheerleaders

�Delta Sigma Pi Business Fraternity

Back row (1-r): Don Dawkins. Gordon Markley, Ann Marie Motes, Ron Upiec. Gary Thompson. T im O'Keefe. Dorothy Alexander. Front row
~-r): Ken Fesler, Caren Colley, Beth Thomas. Cindy Valenzuela. Richard Ginn. Bill Block. Oave. Koempel.

Spring Initiates (1-r): Eddie Lopez. Aoben Munday. Beth Thomas. Jan Thurman. B•ll Flynn.
Vice President Dave Koempel.

55

�Publications
Photography Staff

Cloc;;kw1se from left AI Puente, fred Fernandez. L•sa Delaney. Edd18 Lopez. Eva Mur'IOz, Sus~e Man•nez. Rochard G1nn, Sla•ne Penn.ngton (head photographef), Sandrl
Guerra

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TltrHII Acosta assists the editOI'"I with literary editing.

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~------------~

�����STICKS
AND
BONES
The Cast

���The Cast
Baptista

Hart Sprager

Kate
Bianca

Sheila Stansbury
Martha Patino

Petruchio

Tim Matheson

Lucentio
Gremio
Hortensia
Vincentia
A Pedant
Biodello
Grumio

Fred Zimmerman
Joel Citty
Clay Goodwin
l eroy Clementich
Ray Lee
Rob Muir
Chris Janovsky
Mark Vetterling
Chuck Pulliam
Elise Wagner
Bob Treasure
Thomasine Walraed

Curtis
A Tailor
A Widow
A Priest
M ops a

The Chorus
Christopher Cho

Marie Holtz

Tina Jo Garrison

������Roundballers Have a Good Season

Badt row (1-rl: Gu• Ben.on, Chris Bentley, Steve Martin. Robert Wilbourn, Jimmy Wright, Uiny Kruse, Chris Collins, Alan Caulatni. Ak:k S.ndera, Den
Montgomery !coach). Front row fl·r): Brayde McClure. Marcus Jonas, Jerry Farias.

�----

&lt;

Brayde McClure fights through the defense.

Q

75

�Alan Catalani pa..es the ball to Bryan Hunter.

Season's Results
62
99
66
79
51
90
60
57
61
96
59
71
64
65
52
55
73
73
61
85
70
65
94
83
81
52
74
75
81
85
69
74
69

SEU-Le Tourneau
SEU-Our lady of the l ake Univ.
SEU-Howard Payrie Univ .
SEU- Texas Wesleyan Univ.
SEU -Southwest Texas State Univ.
SEU - Tarleton State Univ .
SEU - Houston Baptist Univ.
SEU- Te)(as A&amp;M Univ .
SEU- Texas A&amp;l Univ .
SEU- Tarleton State Univ.
SEU-Hardin-Simmons Univ.
SEU-Howard Payne Univ.
SEU-Angelo State Univ .
SEU- Texas A&amp;l Univ .
SEU-Stephen F. Austin Univ.
SEU-Sam Houston State Univ.
SEU-Southwestern Univ.
SEU-Ma.rv Hardin-Baylor Univ .
SEU-East Texas Baptist College
SEU- Texas Lutheran College
SEU-St . Mary's Univ.
SEU-Huston· Tillotson College
SEU-Texas Wesleyan Univ .
SEU - Southwestern Univ.
SEU-Mary Hardin-Baylor Univ .
SEU - Stephen F. Austin Univ .
SEU-East Texas Baptist College
SEU- Texas Lutheran College
SEU-S! . Mary's Univ.
SEU-Hus1on-Tillotson College
SEU-Easl Texas Baptist College
SEU-Southwestern Univ.
SEU - Sam Houston State Univ.

61
82
79
76
59
59
73
104
69
64
80
72{ot)

70
62
64
66
69
65
72
93{01)

73
67
90(01)

70
68
59
68
76
80
76
64
66
72

,~,
~"

Gus Benson •ttempu • jump •hot

"

�Breyde McClure demonstretes his dribbling ability.

Chria Collins shoot:8 en a. .y layup.

Manr. Bird attempts to shoot above the defenders heeds.
Gus Benson scores enother b. .ket for St. Edwerd's.

17

�"

�. The 1981-82 Hiltopper basketball team, young and
Inexperienced at the beginning of the season, worked hard
and combined talent s to head down the road of the Big State
Conference Playoffs. By defeating East Texas Baptist by five
and Southwestern by eight, the Toppers w ere then eligible
fo_
r the NAtA District IV Playoff game. This tough game ended
With St. Ed's down by three, for a 16- 17 record. Included in
this final posting was a 9-5 Conference stand.
Instrumental in the Toppers' season were senior Marcus
Jones and junior Jimmy W right. Both players were named to
the First Team All-Conference, an honor that has eluded St.
Edward' s players for the past two years. These two players
Wrote the books for individual single game highs for this year.
~ones had the most points (40 vs. Texas Wesleyan), most
field goals (19 vs. Texas Wesleyan) and most assists (7 vs.

Mary Hardin-Baylor). Wright led in most free throws (10 vs.
St. Mary's) and most rebounds ( 19 vs. Southwestern). They
also led the team in points per game average with 17.2 for
Jones and 17. 1 for Wright.
Four players - J erry Farias, Jones, Wright and Steve
Martin-played all 33 games of the season. Farias led his
teammates in free throw percentage for the year with 72.9.
He also led in assists w ith 115 for a 3.5 per game average.
Martin was second behind Larry Kruse in rebounds with 164
for an average of 5.0 per game.
The Tower salutes both Marcus Jones and Mark Bird, the
only seniors on the squad. Bird played the first nine games
of the season before he was sidelined with an injury that kept
him out of the line-up the rest of the year.

�Baseball Team Posts a Winning
Record

Fl,..t row (1 -rl: Richard Kraw czyk, Rick Berggren . Faron Fowl er, JOf"ge Tijerina. Second row (1 -r): Joe Vega, Tarry Pecha, Randy Ga1U, Heory
Thames, Tony Garibay, Greg Galle. Thi rd row ll· r): J im Shelton. Hely Santaliz, Ma rio Floral, Se•n Fennema, Tim COfben, Von Breaux, Mart
Cyriar. Fourth row ll· t): J amaa Elli1011 (coach). Tar.y Ebner. Kyle Casbum . Mike Oh10n, Richard Schacherl, Steve Seale, Jeff Gan1ka, Pat
httall, John Knorr (co.cN.

Season ' s Results
0. 4
3. 5
6, 6
3, 6
2, 6
4, 5

5. 7
4, 7
4
4, 0 , 2

10
1, 4
7, 10

3, 3

8. 4

.

SEU - Hardin-Simmons Univ .
SEU- Texas Christian Univ .
SEU- Concordia Lutheran College
SEU-Hardin-Simmons Univ .
SEU-Wichita State Univ.
SEU-louisiana Tech Univ .
SEU-Rice Univ .
SEU-Sam Houston State Univ .
SEU- Texas lutheran College
SEU - Phillips Univ.
SEU - Mankato State Unrv.
SEU-Rice Univ .
SEU- Trinity Umv .
SEU - Huston-T•IIotson College
SEU-Sam Houston State Un•v .

0. 6

2 , 17
0, 0

2, 5

7, 7

7 , 14

1, 11

3, 7
5, 4
3. 11
5, 3
1

9. 14, 6
6

3, 4
10, 7

22
7, 15
14, 14
1, 10
4, 3
4

0, 7
1, 5

5, 9
7, 7

4, 4

5, 0 , 6

7, 5

2. 7

7, 2
SEU-East Texas Bapt ist College
4, 3
SEU-Baylor Univ .
SEU - Paul Quinn College
0, 0
4, 6
SEU-St . Mary ' s Univ.
SEU-Southwest Texa s State Univ .
5. 5
SEU-Huston-Tillotson College
2
1, 3
SEU-Paul Quinn College
0, 4
SEU-Concordia College- Nebraska
2, 4
SEU - Tnnity Umv.
5, 2
SEU- Texas lutheran College
SEU-St . Mary 's Un1v.
SEU - Concord1a lutheran College
SEU -Southwest Texas State Un1v .
0. 0
SEU -Southwestern Un1v .
3. 5, 7 I
7, 5
SEU - Mary Hard•n-Baylor Umv.

2.;I

�Richard Schacher! conc::entrates on t hrowing a strike.

�T~ St•v4I"'CCM. tM voice of tM
Hiltt09t)ers.

"

�,.

M ario: Cyrier swings at a curve ball.

�Tim Corbett slides safety into homeplate.

C~ch

..

Knot'l" and Coach Ellison.

Tim Corben anempts to tag teammate during practice.

The team congr11tulates Tony Garibay on his homerun.

�Soccer-An International Flair

�BSC Champs Again!
April30, 1982 HILLTOPPER Page 4

Men capture titles in BSC tourney
Kevin Mullins, Mangus Rosen,
Mark Platt, and Mark Bennett represented the St. Edward's tennis
team April 19th and 20th in the Big
State Conference tournament held
in Beaumont. Mullins and Rosen
combined their talents to win the
doubles' title while Bennett and Rosen were to have faced each other
forthesinglestitleearlier thisweek.
Each player was placed in a division according to his ranking on the
team. Mullins played in the first division, Rosen in the second, Platt in

the third, and Bennen in the fourth.
In each division, the men played
three matches , then were paired
against another division winner.
The pairings of Divisions I-IV
put Mullins and Bennett against
each other while Rosen opposed the
Division III winner. This winner
achieved his position d ue to the defaull of Platt who was injured and
unabletooontinueplay.
In the Mullins-Bennen match-up,
Bennett came out ahead with scores
of 2-6,6-3, 6-2. Rosen upset his East

Texas Baptist foe handily by scores
of6-J, 6- 1.
Coach Emmett Strohmeyer said
his players, "played spectacularly
in singles and doubles." He noted
the move of the tournament from
the o utdoor surface to indoor concrete courts, bm said the change
didn't seem to bother the players.
Earlier this week, the SEU team
was also to have played Southwest
Texas State for a chance to go to the
national competition.

(1-rl: Julio Roj••· M•gnu• Ra.en. M•rtt Thu111n. M •rtt Pl•tt. M•rtt Ben.Mtt, John Ttck• . Kevin Mullin•. Allen Hanlin.

..

��SEU golfers prepare for upcoming
Big State Conference tournament
TM 811 Sute Conftrma Golf
Thurrwnmt u tchcdulcd (Of Apnl
19 and 20 1n Ksllcu. Fht St
Edwatd\ l()lftrl ...u pt.ll.aptllt,
'"'h the four bHI: .ooru of nch
d.ayr«&lt;fdcd
Coach J•m Koch uy1, " Joe
8cd and Joe ff'nton
prot.bly
pta« fint fCH v•. folaowcd by Me
Mtyft and T1m Tobin " Tobin, IK·
COfdU!.IIO Koch, badn't btta pla)
~~~~. dll~~tr '" the .M'b()ft, "bul b
ptt}'1n, now and 1houk1 do wc:U "
JvlliOI' Ouy Thomi)IOn and (ra.h·

••II

•

·-

man Tom B.laby round out the: SEU

KOC"h conunucd, ltauna tbllt
'"Tau luthcr.n u fa,orcd 10 w,n
"-'t •aU be Y)1UI •nh Muy Hardin·
Bayk»r for teCOnd pbcc: \\c bli¥c a
aood chance. but TLC 11 ra~orrd
JOiftl Into the: tournament "
AttOfdiRI 10 lhc: coach, 5c
Mary\l.houldtalethlrdOJ fcxolllh
~ Tuu B&amp;pu.tt and South"'m·
ttn w\11 tMuUc few the not apoc and
HUlton Tlllouon •111 PJobabfy talc
the We poldJOn

Golf Team
Strokes Its
Way to Third

�Golf Team Hopes
For A Top Place
The St. Edward's 1982 golf team
is a promising young team which
should take a top spot in the Big
State Conference tournament, according to its optimistic coach, Jim
Koch.
In a tournament which included
Mary Hardin-Baylor, Texas Lutheran, and Southwest Texas State,
Joe Beck, whom Koch says is "the
number one player," shot a 76,
while Joe Fenton and Mike Meyer
The seven teams in the Big State
were close behind in the upper 70's. Conference battled for the golf
" By April," says Coach Koch, championship recently. This tourna"we'll have five guys in the 70's go- ment saw the Toppers place third,
ing to the conference tournament." behind Texas Lutheran and Mary
The team consists of three fresh- Hardin-Baylor.
men - Beck, Meyer, and Tom
The leading golfer for the SEU
Bagby: two sophomores - Fenton
and Gary Thompson: and one jun- team was freshman Joe Beck, who
ior- Tim Tobin.
shot a 75 on the first day of play and
Koch state5, "We should do well a 77 on the second for a tournament
this season. We lost to Texas Lu- score of 152. Following Beck was
theran by 8-10 strokes, which isn't sophomore Gary Thompson with a
too much to make up."
I 56 total, shooting a 79 and a 77.

Toppers place third in BSC standings
Sophomore Mike Meyer and junior Tim Tobin both brought in final
scores of 161. Meyer's first and second day standings were 80 and 81,
respectively. Tobin had the same
scores in reverse for the Toppers'
cause. The other team member, Joe
Fenton, shot an 81 and an 82 for a
163tournamemtotal.
Fifty-four holes of golf were
scheduled, but hard rain, cold wind,
and lightning shorten«! the second
day to only nine holes for a total of
36inthe decisivematch.

Of the tournament rounds,
Coach Jim Koch said: "We shot very
well as a team. Beck was outstanding. Thompson was a surprise because he had never shot that well
over the season."
Of the season, an optimistic Fenton said, "We will be a deciding
force in the conference next year and
the year after. We had a young team
this year and we did well. Everyone
is returning and Tim will be the only
senior."
-RouSh1.1{~r

�That's the Way the Ball Bounces
Stephen F. Aust•n Un!V
Texas Wesleyan Un1v

10- 15, 12- 15, 10-15
7- 15, 11 - 15, 20-22

Rice lnvitatlonal Tournament
Texas A&amp;l Un1v

l ee Un1v
St Phillip's Umv
Tr1n1ty Un1v
lncarmue Word Un1v
Concordttt lutheran College
Texas A&amp;l Umv
Hardm· S•mmons Un1v

Howard Payne Unw
Concord1a lutheran College
Southwest Texas State Umv
Te){as A&amp;l Un1v
Tnnny Umv
Southwest Texas State Ur11v
St Mary' s Umv

..

15- 13, 15-7
1 4~ 16. 5 - 15
1 HS, 15- 17
12- 15, 16- 14, 14· 16
15-8 , 15-8
15-9 , 15-5
15-3 , 11 - 15, 15- 10, 15- 10
8 - 15, 13- 15
15- 12, 15-8 , 14- 16, 15-5
15-7, 15-8
6- 15, 15- 10, 16- 14
15-5 , 10-15, 15- 17
10-15, 17- 15, 7- 15, 7- 15
15-8 , 15-6 , 15-6
5- 15, 10.15
6 - 15, 5- 15

St PhiH1p' s Un•v.
St . Mary' s Un1v.
T exas W esleyan Tournament
Southwestern Umv
West Texas State Umv
Rtee Untv
East Texas State Untv
Howard Payne Un1v
Big State Conference Tournament
Mary Hardtn-Baylof Urnv
St Mary' s Untv
Southwestern Untv

7- 15, 5- 15
13- 15, 13- 15
3 - 15, 8- 15
15- 13. 10-15, 9- 15
6- 15, 15- 11, 6- 15

7- 15, 10-15
15-5, 15-12

9 - 15, 8- 15,
15· 10,
15- 17, 13- 15,
2· 15. 5- 15,

15· 1
10-15
13- 15
11- 15

�&lt;J

Rhonda Dilworth practices her spike.

The Lady Toppe,.. cooperate to return the ball.

"

�•

... ,.,..,

-

..:~;&lt;

�Julianne deYbarrando demonstrates her winning form .

93

�Uz Hernandez

•hoot• a ahot egelnst Concordia.

Sharon Mcilroy encour11gea the teem during • time-out.

Season' s Results
114
58
60
69
67
64
87
73
68
53
66
72
49
59
60
59
67
2
66
60
44
87
90
63
2

..

SEU- Our lady of the lake Univ.
SEU-Texas lutheran College
SEU- Pan American Univ.
SEU-Texas A&amp; I Univ.
SEU-Incarnate Word Univ.
SEU- Mary-Hardin-Baylor Univ.
SEU- Our lady of the lake Univ.
SEU- Concordia lutheran College
SEU-Southwestern Univ.
SEU-St. Mary's Univ.
SEU-Pan American Univ.
SEU-Huston-Tillotson College
SEU- East Tell:as Baptist College
SEU- Southwestern Univ.
SEU- Tell:as lutheran College
SEU- St. Mary's Un1v.
SEU-Concordia lutheran College
SEU- Tell:as A&amp;l Univ.
SEU-Mary-Hardin-Baylor Univ.
SEU- Southwest Texas State Univ.
SEU- East Teli:SS Baptist C&lt;Miege
SEU-Hustoo·Tillotson College
SEU- Trinity Un1v.
SEU-Incarnate Word Un~v .
SEU- Tnn11y Univ.

23
77
44
80
56
61
35
54
78
51
62
83
55
68
67
68
63
0
76
79
60
92
76
68
0

,,

Unde Vaughn enempta • right-han6ed layup.

�Women's Team Puts Forth Great Effort

Ladies Receive BSC Honors
by LISA DELANEY

Editor
SEU Head Coach Sharon
Mcil roy was named Coach o f the
Year. and th r ~ Lady Toppc'rS were
awarded mem~uhip on the All Confere nce Team , as the Rig State
Conference annou nced its awards
for the l98J-82basketball sc:a.son.
Mcilr oy, a seco nd -year coach
from
Lubb&lt;x k, Texas.
,.-as
"s hocked" when she heard the
news. "'It is hard formetocomprehend.sincr ,.·efinishedlastinconferenceplaythi syear:"shesays.
" Butlam•·ery honored ."'
The SEU coach tied for the
awa rd with Southwestern Uni•·crsity's Coach Reda Clay. Coaches
from all participating conference
teams nominate and •·ote for the
oumandingcoachofthescason.
"The a-..·ard is indicati•·e of the
pastt,.·o scasonsand thc progrru
wehavemade."'stat&lt;"S Mcilroy. "It
isanhonorthattheothercoaches
recogniud our progress in this

Mcl lroyreceived her B. S.inEducationfro mTexasTechUni•·ersity,
and cont inued at Tech for her M a~­
ters in Publ ic Health and Physical
Education. She taught health and
biologyandooachedgirls'bas ketball.tennis.nack,golf,andvolleyball at the high school k•·el ~fore
assu ming her position as head
coachinScptembcr.1980.
" I am proud and honored (hat I
canrepre5entSt. Edw ard '5i na pOS·
itivemanner."saysMcllroy.
Fresh man Angie Neal was
named to the All-Conference First
Team. Neal. who came to St.
Edward'l; from Reagan High
School in Au stin, averaged 16
paimsi)C'rgamein her first sc:ason
o f college ball. She was sc:cond on
thcteaminrebounds.withasc:ason
total of I%.
The freshman starte r was also
named to the NAJA Dis1rict IVAII Dimictteam. District IV includes
the school s in the BigState ConferenceandtheLoneStarConfcrencc.
Al so named to the first team was
sc:nior Kathryn Hopkins. Hopkins

hasleneredinvolleyballandbasketball each o f her four year~ at St.
Edward's. and was named to the
BSC All-Conference Volleyball
team for the l9S l -S2 ~ea~on
Hopkins was top rebounder this
year for the women. with a sc:ason
total of 226, an d also led in assi~ts,
sc:ninganewscasonrecordwith62.
She,.·asrecruitedfromAustinAn·
derson HighSchool
Membcrshiponthesc:condteam
from the Lady Topi)C'rs "·as
awarded to Sonya Binger. a freshman from Man sfield High in Man s·
field. Teus. Binger sat out much of
the sc:ason with inJur ies and illnesses. but wa~ sti ll able to average
tenpOinapc-r game and rack up 54

Mcllroyis'"pleascdthat"ehad
as many players on the All-Conference teams as we did . The t\\"0
freshmen that were s-elected arc indicati•·c of the pOtential that thts
team will have in future)·ears,"she
continues. "All three players are
"·ell-dcs.cr&gt;'ing of the a"·ard .~

95

�Team Plays With Unity

..

Kethryn Hopkin• concentrate• on • free thmw .

�J

Sonya Binger goes in for a layup .

•

97

���Women Netters Break Even
St. Edward's women bring record to 7-7
Over theEasterbreak,the Lady
Toppers saw plenty of tennis action,
but were unable to come up with
any victories. They dropped their
matches against East Texas Baptist,
Texas A&amp;l, and Southwestern,
bringing the season record to an
even7-7mark.
Facing East Texas Baptist, the
women found themselves on the
short end of the 5-l score. The only
win was recorded by the doubles
combirlation of sophomore Laura
Yzaguirre and junior Barbara Sollohub.
The SEU team once again was
overpowered by the opposition as

Texas A&amp;! won by a 4-2 margin.
The singles play of Yzaguirre combined with the doubles win of Margaret Cooper and Michelle Jackson
gave the Toppers their set victories.
Cooper's usual partner, Leisia
Hunter, was unable to play, but the
Cooper-Jackson team proved itself
able to handle the pressure.
The Big State Conference (BSC)
match-up of St. Edward's and
Southwestern saw the Georgetown
women blank the Austin ladies as
the Toppers were handed a 0-6 defeat.
As a result of this match, the
Southwestern team will be the representative of the BSC against the
winner of the Lone Star Confer-

]1-r]: lesia Hunter. Barbara SoUohub. laura Yzaguirre, Jeanne Law, Ma rgaret Coope r. Michelle J ackson.

ence. The winner of this pairing will
goon to the nationals.
Earlier this week, the ladies were
to have played Concordia Lutheran
College to close out their season.
Looking back on the season,
Coach Diane Daniels stated: "It
was a good season. There was a lot
of improvement. Laura (Yzaguirre)
improved tremendously, becoming
more consistent and aggressive.
Barbara Sotlohub and Jean Law
added some depth, too, this year.
Barbara played the number two singles spot very well. Sheisanaggressiveplayer."

�Hardin·Baylor has only one re!Urning player, so, according to the
coach, it is hard to tell how they will
compare when it comes time to return serves and volleys." Coach
Daniels continued, "Huston-Tillotsonisnot thatstrongthisyear."
The conference playoff is between the winner of the conference
round robin 10urnament and the
winner of the lone Star Con feren ce.
Daniels is optimistic about this seaSenior veteran Margaret Cooper
shares some of her coach's enthusiasm. She noted that "the team is
very competitive among itself. We
do well because we are all at the
same level for the most part. Nobody is way behind anybody else."
The next women's home match

Sports

HillTOPPER
April2, 1982

Lady Netters To Oppose
BSC Foes Southwestern, MHB
The Lad y Neners will soon be
starting their Big State Conference
matches.
To start play off, on Monday,
April 5, the women travel to Belton
to face Mar y Hardin-Baylor. On
Wednesdayat2p.m.,theladieswil1
host Southwestern of Georgetown.
Thursday, the team hosts Texas A&amp; I
inanon-conferencetennis match.
The women are optimist ic about

their chances at the conference title.
Although seven teams are in the
conference, only three compete for
thewomen's title.
"We have been able to boost the
team's confidence by only losing
twomatchesthisyear," says Margaret Cooper. "That's a good feelin g
to have with conference play starting."
Seedings for the si ngles are
pretty much determined . Playing in
March 5, 1982
the No. 1 position will be Lesia
- - - - - - - - - Hunter, followed by- in order of
ranking - Barbara Sollohub. Margaret Cooper, laura Y~aguirre,
Jeanlaw,and Michelle Jackson.
As for doubles ran kin gs the No.
1 and2teamsarestill upintheair.
The Lady Netters will play two At present, Sollohub and Yzaguirre
homematchesthisweek.
share the No. I spot, with Hu nter
OnSaturday,March6,atlp.m.,
and Cooper playing in the second
the team will face John Brown Uniposition.
versity of Arkansas. On Monday,
"Our doubles play has been the
March 8 at 10 a.m., they will play
strong point of team play this
against a conference opponent, St
year," feels Cooper. "In challenges
Mar y's of San Antonio.
against each other, we have both
lnamatchlastweekagainst Trinwon about the same amount of
times."
ity, the team lost 6- 1. The only team
win came from the second-rated
Rankings for conference play
will more than likely depend on the
doubles team of Laura Yzaguirre
and Barbara Sollohub, 6-4 and 6-1.
Concord ia and the Texas lutheran
matches
played earlier this week.
"Trinity is probably one of the
The team faces Southwestern
bestteamsweplay,"Yzaguirresaid.
University on Wed., April 7, at 2
When asked about the teams
p.m.
overall play, she stated, "We didn't
-Liz H erna ndez
play badly for the start of the season , but our inexperience really
showed. We only have two players
back from last year's team."
She added that "teamwise, there
isalotofenthusiasm. We just need
to really concentrate on individual
performances in singles. Right now
ourdoublesteamsarethestronger."
The women were to have faced
Concordia earlier this week.

Netters See
Action Here

-Ll:;e

"' winning retum s hot

by

H~m andu

Ma rgare t Cooper

'"

�Chris O:tan:ak hits the ball during Co-Ree softball.

Time-Out

for
lntramurals

Marina Tijerina
softball.

pitches

during

Co-Ree

The quarterback releases the ball just in time.

102

�,03

�All players keep their eyes on the ball during Intramural football action.

A Co-Ree softball player hits the bali.

Ceur Cardenas anempts to grab his OJ)Jl'Onents' flag.

,.,.

�The referee signals a touchdown during intramural action.

All easy layup is scored against the Oblates.

Two players fight kH" the rebound .

,.,

���(from leh )

President- Laura Makay
Senators- Patty Sullivan
Diane Gackle
Vice-President-Diane Hill

,,.

�Marian Albright

Ethel Allen

Fahad AI M ogbel

Juan Alvarez

Theater Arts
Galveston, Texas

Sociology/ English
Lawton, Oklahoma

General Business

Criminal Justice

Soraya Aponte
Management
Cara cas, Venezuela

Alicia Arredondo

Kenneth Asbill

Belinda Barnhart

Bilingual Education
Austin, TelCas

Education

Management
Immokalee, Florida

..

...-....-....-....--

Rebecca Beck

Debbie Bennet

Rosario Bermudez

Jose Bernstein

Criminal Justice
lago Vista, TelCas

Theater Arts
Honolulu, Hawaii

Computer Science
Brownsville, TelCaS

Marketing
Austin, Texas

�Shirley Bruch

Euphemia Brumskine

Gerontok&gt;gy
Aust1n, Texas

Biology
Monrovia, Llbena

Paul Bullard
Psychology
Ham1lton, Texas

Daniel Butcher
Health Care AdrrwnlstratiOfl
Cleveland, Ohio

�Wendell Butcher

William Cabiya

Rafael Cabezas

Juan Canavati

Psychology

History/Bilingual Ed.
Austin, Texas

Computer Science
San Salvador, El Salvador

Accounting
laredo, Texas

Guadalupe Cano

Ramiro Cardenas

Sandra Cardenas

Rene Casanova

Noe Castilla

Jaime Cavazos

Ida Chavez

Joel Citty

Marketing
laredo. Texas

Business Management
Santa Monica, Texas

Elementary Ed.
Austin, Texas

Theater Arts
Odessa, Texas

An

�'"

Health Care Administration
Austin, Te)(as

Marketing
Laredo, Te)(as

Management /Theater Arts
Pa)(ton, M ass.

Administration
Del Valle, Te)(as

Julieta Cuellar

Judy Cummings

Henry Curtis

Everett Cutting

Biology
Laredo, Te)(as

Theater Arts
Ashuelot, N. H.

General Studies
Waco, Te)(as

Criminal Justice
Austin, Te)(as

-------.

�Patri cia D ' Ange lo
Secondary Education
Bangor, Michigan

raylor. TeKas

Elizab e th D e Angelo
Psychology /Social Work
El Paso, Texas

Marketing
Austin. TeKas

M a ria m Da nie ls
Management
Austin, TeKas

Finance/Marketing
Austin. TeKas

Dan D e i g hto n
Biology/Pre-Med
Cleveland, Ohio

Do r a Escalante
A ccounting
Austin, Texas

'"

�Luis Farias

Delia Flores

Mary Foley

Jim Franz

Finance
Alice, Texas

Health Care Administration
Eagle Pass, Texas

Psychology
Salina , Texas

Social Work
Tulsa, Oklahoma

,.....-----,·-~

Charles Frizzell

Pete Fuccello

Diane Gackle

Kenneth Gambles

Health Care Administration

Marketing

Criminal Justice

Austin, Texas

Austin, Texs. _ . - -- - Dickey, North Oakota

Criminal Justice
Pompano Beach , Florida

Jeffery Ganske

Maria Garcia

Jimmy Gifford

M argaret Glennon

Physical Education
Baytown , Texas

History
T apachulachis, MexiCO

An
Hermleigh, Texas

Theater Arts
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

I

�Udia Gonzalez

Paul Gonzalez

Clay Goodwin

Dwayne Gordy

Management
Caracas, V enezuela

History

Theater Arts
Conroe, Tell:as

Computer Science
Austin, Tell:as

David Gorecki

Leslie Graham

Barry Green

Jay Griffin

Finance

Art Education

Marketing
Houston, Tell:as

Criminal Justice

Sandra Guerra

Elizabeth Gutierrez

Joe Guzman

Catherine Hatcher

Marketing
Mission, Tell:as

Criminal Justice
El Paso, Tell: as

Physical Education
Crystal City, TeMs

Criminal Justice
Guiney, Massachusetts

�Julia Hernandez

Diane Hill

Jon Hoover

Kathryn Hopkins

Criminal Justice
Eagle Pass, Texas

English
St. James, Minnesot a

Environmental Studies
Houston, Texas

Physical Education
Austin, Texas

--~· ~--~~--·

~~--~--~

Emilie llle

Jia- Hua Huang

Bryan Hunter

Suzanne Hyatt

Administration
Austin , Texas

Computer Science
Taipei, Taiwan

Marketing/Finance
Omaha, Nebraska

Cnminat Justice
San Antonio. TeKas

Debra J asinski

Debra J enkins

John Juliano

Su rachai Kam bhu

Computer Sc1ence
Ausun, TeKas

Mark eting
Lake Placid, Flonda

Cnm1nal JustiCe
W atenown, Massachusen s

Markeung/ Management
Bangkok , Thailand

�Nina Karick

Evart Kennedy

Nabil Khayat

Carol King

Theater Arts
Maryland

Accounting
Austin, Texas

Management
Beirut, lebanon

Administration

Reid lamb

James lancelot

Reid lange

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Psychology
Austin, Texas

Computer Science
Austin, Texas

Accoun ting/ Management
Trimble, Missouri

Computer Science
Aus tin , Texas

�Priscilla l eal

Robert Lindem ann

Kathlyn l opez

Criminal Justice
Alice, Texas

Finance
Bardett. Texas

Psychology/Education
McAllen, Texas

lr'!lll!llr.::;:Jr.;r-.......---

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Selia lopez

Francisco lossada

Elinos l owsley

Lau ra M akay

Psychology
Amanllo, Texas

Admin•stration

Psychology

Theater Ans

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Gordon M arkley

J anie M artinez

M ark M assimi

ManagementfMarkettng
Columbus, Ohto

Bd1ngual EducatiOn

English
Washngton, Connecucut

Ausun, Texas

Fatima M anar
An

Manama, Batva111

�Claudia McCall

Sandra M cGann

Tomas Medina

Manuel Miramontes

Theater Ans
Austin, Texas

Psychology
Austin, Texas

Crimmal Justice
Roma, Texas

Educat•on
El Paso, Texas

~~--~

Maria Molina

~~--~-~--~---,,~

J ohn Moore

Andrew Morin

Health Care Administration

Marcia Munn
Health Care Administration

Rosalio Munoz

Hanna Nader

Simon Najm

Jerardo Navarro

Cnminal Justice
Del RIO, Texas

Management
Austin, Texas

General Bus1ness
Aust1n. Texas

Cnm•nal Just•ce
Asherton, Texas

'"

�David N aworski

Jeanette O' Connor

John Nira

Sharon O' Brien

Salvador Ochoa

Religious Studies
Austin, Texas

Administration
Temple, Texas

Psychology
McAllen, Texas

Ayodele Odion-Esene

Chukwudozie Okafor

Soheila Omrani

Julie O' Neill

Diana Ojeda

Maria Ovalle

Chris Ozarzak

PhysiCal EducatiOn
AuStin, Texas

Theater Ans
Aust1n, Texas

B1hngual EducatiOn
Santa Rosa. Texas

F1nance/ Martteung
l1beny Center. Ohto

�Cheryl Payne

Monica Pesoli

Daniel Petit

Timothy Pierce

Art Education
Waco, Texas

Psychology
A ustin , Texas

Psychology
Warwick , Rhode Island

Marketing/finance
Washington, D. C.

Carol Pool

Barbara Price

Bradley Priest

Peggy Ramirez

Psychology
McAllen, Texas

Math/ Education

Accounting/ Management
Austin. Texas

Elem. Ed./Phys. Ed.
Premont, Texas

_ ..,.,..,...,.,.....-...

....-- ....---

Donna Reed

Hilda Reza

James Rice

LaVa e Riddle

Management
Austin, Texas

Computer Sc~ence
San Benne, Texas

Health Care Admm1strat1on
Round Rock , Texas

Gerontology
Georgetown, Texas

"'

�"'

Francisco Segura

Egberto Seiffert

Stephen Shallenberger

Kyle Shukis

General Bustness
Aust•n. Texas

Computer Sctence
Ausun, Texas

General Bustness
Balt•more, Maryland

Htstory
Albuquerque, New MexiCO

�Sandra Skowronek

Pedro Silva

Paul Simmons

Eduardo Simon

Computer Science
Austin, Texas

Computer Science
Austin, Texas

Art
Mexico City. Mexico

Computer Science
Austin, Texas

,..-.,...-,.-- - - - -

Raquel Soto

leslie Staser

Elizabeth Steere

Wanda Steward

Physical Education
Del Rio, Texas

Theater Arts
Martindale, Texas

Theater Arts/ Hist ory
Louisville, Kentucky

Marketing
Killeen, Texas

Doug Studer

Patty Sullivan

Teresa Sweeney

Enrico T arga

Computer Science
Kalamazoo. Michigan

Psychology
Prince Frederick , Maryland

A ccounting
Corpus Chnsu. Texas

Finance
Managua, Nicaragua

123

�Usa Totah

Anita Tovar

Daniel Tre vino

Bthngual EdocatiOfl
Waelder. Texas

An

Vlctona, Te11as

Alan Wang
Comput• Sctence
Aust.n. TexiS

,,.

Sandra Wamer
,.....,.

Janise White
CrWTWWII Ju.-t.ce
K.,.lkM_

ano.s

Edward Valenzano Jr.

............

Neiel W ohlers

lN VttgH Nhldl

�Barbara Wolf

Deborah Wood

Janet Wright

English

Social Work
Austin , Texas

Criminal Justice
West Palm Beach, Florida

San Juanita Zarate

Casey Hector

Ray l ee

M ary McPhaul

Carol Pool

Biology
Austin, Texas

Theater Ans

Social Work
Austin, Texas

Psychology
M cAllen , Texas

"'

��Erssmo Acevedo
Mohsmmsd Ahmsdisn
Rashid AI-Amin
Dorothy Alexander
Willie Alexander
lewis Alexander

Alberta Alford
lawrence Alguesseva
Khalid AI-Khalifa
Fadhel AI-Satfar
Vincent Amadioha
Mark Amerson

linda Andresen
Tony Anthony
Ralph Attara
Saad Basri
Ruben Bautista
Clark Beach

Melody Bennett
Piya Benyasam
lawrence Blackwell
Kimberly Bradshaw
Aleta &amp;entley
Steven Brill

Mark Bulpitt
Bruce Burns
Cindy Bustamame
luis Csntu
Kyle Casburn
Alan Catalani

Oliver Chan
Tommie Chaney
Wsng Cheng
John Cobb
Debra Conley
Charies Cooper

�Ros1e Corona
Brygida Craver
Boona Cummings

Marl&lt; Cyrier
Marl&lt; Cz1gan
Patnck Da1ley

Dom1ngo Davalos
Donald Daw kms
Eudelia Deleon

Jean Deloach
Roben DeKter
l1nda DICk$00
Mancela Duque
David Dvorak
David Dyess

Irma Escobedo
Rumaldo hpinoza
Patr1Ckf1achler
Anna Mane Flanigan
James folkner
Vlfgtn•a Frankl.n

Armando Fuentes
LeoneiG.I'C13

M aryGan::1a
Robetto Garc1a
Santa Garc11
Glowack1

o.-

"'

�Michael Goehnng
Willie Gomez
G1lda Gonlalel
Jos1e Gonzalel
Jorge Gorordo
Carolyn Graham

Diane Griffin
John Guardiola
Elilabeth Guedez
Michael Harris
Hassan Hassanie
Twila Heiser

Patricia Hemandez
Theresa Herrera
Charles Hofstaedter
Re11.ine Howell
Leonard Hurtado
Maria Irion

Alan Jones
Mabel Kekeocha
Fouad Khayyat

Jamshid Khalenoe
Paul Kieschnick
Christopher Klaphaak

David Koempel
James Landry
Thomas Langston

129

�Elizabeth lawson
PriSCilla leal
Jeff lee

RIChard Lemen
Grac1e Lewis
Mercedes Limon

Doris L1ndblom
Ron L1piec
Pamela long
Guadalupe lopez
Patricio lopez
Teresa lopez

John loth
Mansour lozi
Unda Luckie
Maria luna
Shelton Mackey
Mary Mader

El1as Maldonado
Markham Manning
Tony Marquez

Rodney Marsh
Gregory Marshall
Thelma Martinez

130

'-'---------

---

�Carrie Matlage
Shinya Matsukubo
Gwendolyn McKinney

Kevin Mendenhall
Kevin Miller
Leonard Mills

Patricia Molina
Victoria Monro
Ellis Montet
John Moran
Jimmy Moreno
Elyse Mueller

Catherine Mulhall
Kevin Mullins
Lien Nguyen
Frederick Norton II
Mary O'Connell
Michael Oldfather

Santos Olivarez
Lynn O'Neal
Adrian Ortega

Terry Pacha
Cynthia Pantuso
Robert Paramo

131

�Harry Pearson
Ed1e Phillips
Mookol Pongpa1nskul
Rodolfo Quijada
luz Qumtero
H1lano Qunoga

Raol Quiroga
Sandra Ram1rez
Roy Ramos
Mohammad Razav1
Ronald Re1schl
Carmen Rodr1guez

M1r1am Rodriguez
Denn1s Rogers
M1chelle Rose
James Ru1z
laDonna Rushmg
Hocme Sa1d

Ja1me Salmas
Jose Salinas Ill
Theo Sanders

Tony Sanchez
Y ol&amp;nda Sanchez
Richard Schacher!

Steve Seale
Cherral Sefc1k
Ruby Segura

132

�Victor Serrano
Leland Shenk
Enc Shephard

John Shotwell
Miguel Sosa
Mary Spencer

Sheila Stansbury
PaulaStuczynskl
JoAnn Tabera

Elizabeth Thomas
MaryAnn Thompson
Timothy Tob1n
Steve Tons1
Robert Treasure
Dora Tristan

Daniel Vega
Wilfredo Velasquez
RicardoVerhoseJr.
Ruth Villareal
Robert Whtll
Robert Wilbourn

Chalethia Williams
Jena WiNiams
Valetta Wilson
Hattie Woodard
Margoth Zubillaga
Joann Flores

"'

�"'

�Enc Abbou
Oswaldo Abou1aoude
Mllud Abulgasem
Gerardo Aguilar
Bolanle Ak1nn1ran ye
Yetunde Ak 1nmranye

Farrah A ldari
Zaki A I-Far&amp;g
Muhsin AI-Jibouri
Ali AI-Saffar
Wael AI-Saffar
Youssef Amr

Ricardo DelaRosa
Javier Arellano
Celia Arriola
Gilbert Barron
Saleh Beruwin
Krista Bockoven

Pablo BonWa
Charles Brash
Von Breaux
Dolores Brzozowski
Darson Bullard Jr.
Timothy Bullard

Franc1sco Cantu
Norma Cantu
Donald Carter Jr.
JoAnn Cerda
Soo Cheong
Albert Cipolla

l mda C1sneros
Aldea Cla1remont
Mary Clem
l ese Conroy
W ill1am Coppedge
Elizabeth Corona

�Janet Correa
Mana Cortmas
Bndget Cote
Kelty Cote
Yasena Cnspin
Eduardo Cuellar

Mary Dav1s
Debbie Deutsch
Rudy D1az
Bel1nda Otck1ns
Damel O.er
Rhonda Dilworth

Jerm1fer Durst
Cheme Edwards
Richard Egan
M1reya Estrada
Lor1Fagan
Joseph Fenton

Melante Ferguson
Fredenck Fernandez
Ken Fesler
Wi•1amfoley
Ma1a Forstchen
Eude~a Frausto

Sane Frede
VIVIIJn Galan

Benito~

-

,,.

Go&lt;ao

�Ramiro Garcoa
Richard Garcoa

Christina Garrisoo
laura Gatewood

Mary Gerstner
Richard Ginn
Maria Gomez
Armando Gonzales
Rudy Goozales
Sanad Salem

Hillary Garrett
Francisco Gonzalo
David Gran
Della Green
Adalbeno Guerra
Eloy Gutierrez

Idalia Gutierrez
Mae Hajjaj
David Hansoo
Rose Hardeman
Deborah Harris
Varick Harris

Ceci~a Hendrix
Elizabeth Hernandez
George Hernandez
Glenda HICkS
Donald Hoban
Avos Hobby

�Jorge lrldalec10
Roger lssa
Tim Janowski

David Jarrell
Carmen Jolley
Patnc1a Juarel

Yihad Kade
Cr1119 Kanne
lsmaeel Karimi
Colleen Keegan
Colleen K1stner

Vtetor Krakue Jr.

Kathleen Kroon
Ono lev1ne
Oesptna Lambros
Maunce Lange
Anuro Leora
Roben longoni

Eduardo Lopez
LUIP Lopez
Rolando Lopez
Ford Lowcock N
Andrew lyon
Greg McCord

JoM Mcfa6den
Patnck

Mack~&amp;

ThereN Madef'

0..0.

MllfQUel

Patnck MenJ91181!i
RebecC41 Mar11n

,,.

�Steve Manin
Helen Maninez
Onesima Maninez
Sylvia Maninez
Karim Masri
Jane Mayo

Anna Medina
Louis Mestier
Michael Meyer
Robin Mick
Pepper Minton
Homar Mireles

Anuro Molina
Cheryl Monroe
Michael Montonen
Roben Moore
Jacqueline Mordue
Debra Munoz

Evangelina Munoz
Jose Munoz
Ronald Nauen
Mary Navarre
Mario Novoa
Elia Nunez

Roben Nunis II
TimothY O'Keefe
Jose Olea

Michael Olson
Sylvester Onyejiaka
Enrique Onega Ill

"'

�Michael Onegon
O'Shea
Manna Patino
Cynthia Pepper
Carolyn Perry
Eric Pickle

E~:abeth

PeteJ Porras
John Poth
Terri Preston
Stacie Pyrch
Fernando Ramirez
Reg1naldo Ramon

Matthew Ready
Allison Reimer
Husse1n Rida
Juan Rivera
Joyce Robinson
Jose Rodriguez

Jose Rodnguez
Gerardo Romero
AlyurOO Romo
M anha St. Romam
Cynthia Saldana
Mancela Sabnas

Gumerclndo Serna
Larry Serrano

01111 Sharp

PatnCII Shaw
Therese Sil

s.ndra Sornmona

...

�Lance Smith
Maria Solis
Barbara Sollohub

Michael Stack
John Stephenson
Frances Stovt

Jane Sylvester
Ricky Tamayo
Gary Thompson
Janice Thurman
Anne Toner
Celia Tovar

Mary Jo Urbani
Cynthia Valenruela
Anna Vargas
Leonor Vazquez
Leonard Vigorito
Arlette Vila

Janie Villarreal
Elise Wagner
Thomasine Walraed
Aozanne Ward
Dawn Watson
Dianne Wendt

Wai Choi Wong
Grey Woodyear
Janie Yanez
Mary Yanez
Laura Yzagu•rre
Dionicio Zamora

��Khalid Abdulla
Orlando Aboujaoude
Erana Adams
Sarah Adams
Far1lad Alghahi
Lyn Agbakuru

Augustine Alaka
Asama AI-Arrayedh
Mohammed AI-Busmait
AliAighafri
Hamdan AI-Ghafri
Abdulla AI-Ghamdi

Ali AI -Hunaidi
Abdulwahed Aljanahi
Nahed Ahmed
MunazaAIIy
EttikharAimustafa
Ali AI-Khalifa

Khalid AI-Khalifa
Rashid Alkhalifa
AdeiAI -Majdall
GhaliAI-Mashali
Mohamed AI·Masahali
Terra Almogabar

Abdalla AI-Najjar
Aniceto Alonzo
Ghazi AI-Rahwan
Sail AI -Rashdi
Yagoob Alrefaei
Abdulla AI-Shanfari

Abubakar AI- Theeb
AugustineAnazia
Jorge Aodonie
Patrick Aniekwana
Guillermo Anor
Hanan Anwar

,.,

�Tanya Arcaya
Frances Ayala

Thomas Bagby
Meredy Baldridge

Joe Beck
Bridget Bell
Patricia Benavidez
Larissa Benetua
Chris Bentley
Ana Berain

Lissette Bemstorlf
Ceci~a Beszborn
Sonya Binger
Enriqueta Bocanegra
Oltvia Bocanegra
Kirk Bond

Jacqueline Boyer
Risa Boyle
Susanna Brady
Kristi S..own
Man1n S..own
Clvlstma Buettell

Oanoel Cabello
Oatia Cadena

Scot Campbel
Eugene Carey
Marit Carroll
Oagobeno Casare•

�Fernando Cestillo
Deborah Cesies
Irene cas111non
Tomes casotelert

Isaac Cestilo
Mary C.eceres

.JoM

c.mooou.

Paul CerQUII

Jo Hong Chang
LetiCie Chavema
Chnstopher Cho
Edmundo Cntre

Gemme Cwaooi
"""""' Cloy

Cerol Cley

Kethy Cleland
SheheCle~

caren Coley

Owls Collins
Margaret Comely
Cristlnll Contreras
Timothy comen

Cretg Crowell
~Cuervo

Tony Cut818
Marthe Oeiley

&amp;.No• ..,.;
Joyce OevtS

"'

�Stephen DaviS
L&amp;anel DeAnda
Mark DeAnda
DeAngelo
Montea Deeu1re
Salvador DeLaGana Ill
N~eson

Lyd.a DelaRosa
Mark Deleon
Cesar Delgado
Jul~eanne

Doreen Dev1u
de Ybarrondo

Petchada

Ohamc~roen

Tubooeml Olk1bo
Melynda O.llard
MIIUI'een Dobbins

C•olvn DuL.Ir.
Regonald Duval
Ton~

E•eh¥1

MlchMIEc~

Ea...~

Ekl

John O.stW'I
Valet~e Elder
Jusun Emeodl

LondiErvn

,_

GlonoE-

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Adollltlue(~e

J.nyF-s
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...

�Patrick Farrell
Theresa Felfe
Sean Fennema
Maria Ferdin
Domonique Ferguson
Daniel Flores

Homero Flores Jr
Juan Flores
Renae Floyd
WittiamFiynnUI
Beverly Fondren
Carol Foran

Frank Friday
Francisco Fuentes
Anuro Fuentez

Betty Gallegos
Dennis Garcia
Eleazar Garcia

Esther Garcia
Francisco Garc1a
Francisco Garc1a
Jesus Garc1a
Oscar Garc~a
Patricia Garcia

Aldo Garu
Amy Garza
Ricardo Garza
laura Gender
Mohamad Ghaddar
Mana Gilarranz

�Bruce Gillette
Arlene Glover
Emma Godoy
Aryani Sohar

Estevan Gomez
George Gonzalez
Billy Gotcher
Angela Griffin

Jose Guerra
Susana Guerra
Victor Guerra
Jose Guerrero

Malik Guetami
Darlene Guseck
Carlos Gutierrez
Jacinto Guillaume
John Guzman Jr.
Carol Hackbanh

Ashraf Hafez
RicNlrd Hall
Allen Hanlin
Kelly HaPf'J
Andre Haywood
Hamoon Hedayat

Tricia Heileman
Canice lfeobu
Vickie Hernandez
JesusitaHefrera
Daniel Hixson
Gregory Honesto

"'

�Jerry Howard
Andrew Howell
SaMra Huey
Lesia Hunter
Edward Ickes
Leslie Inman

Jill Israel
Michele Jackson
Chris Jaoovsky
l eslie Janzen
Mohamad Jarbooa
Antonio Jimenez Ill

Jose Jimenez
Terry Jimenez
Misti Jones
Guillermo Juarez
Fadi Karam
Eid Kezim

Patricia Keating
Rendall Kemper
Hovik Khodad&amp;di
Michael Kinsey

Denise Klodnicki
Ingrid Koopman
Greg Kopniske
Tamara Kouba

Betsy Ann Kuan
Kelly Lankford
Benha Laya
Ana leal

"'

�Rene LeBiariC
Anne Lasso
Kim-Man Li
Katherine Lind
Kimberly Livesay
David Lockie

Quenten London
Robert Long II
Laurie Longoria
Fernando Lopez
Guadalupe Lozano
Stella Lucio

Natalia Luna
Kim MacAuley
Armando Magallanes
Wei-Han Man
Jeff Mantia
Humphrey Marr

Ignacio Martinez
Jose Martinez
Lori Martinez
Sergio Martinez
Yassir Maskati
Ahmed Masn

Susan Massey
Jorge Matheus
Sean McGinty
Dawn McLandric
Elvira Mears
Danny Medina

Alfredo Mejorado
Amelia Mendoza
Tony Meza
K1p Milosevil;;h
Anne M1tchetl
Khatid Mohamedsaleh

�Rosie Molina
linda Molnar
Teri Montalvo
Jackie Montoya
Carmen Morales
Emilio Morales

Marc Morales
Marie Moreno
Raul Mosqueda
Nagib Mousharrafoe
Robert Muir
Jorge Munoz

Viola Munoz
Aysha Murad
Marianella Nass
John Ndiangi
James Neal
Angela Neal

Shahida Nigar
Richard Nira
laura O' Bar
Carlos Ochoa
Noe Ochoa Jr.
Gov1nd Patel

'"

�John Ofoegbu
Nkemakolam Ofokaire
Clifford Ohueri
Adedotun Otawole
Leonard Olivarez
Debora Oliver

Cindy Olsen
Anthony Omeaku
Rebecca Ontiveros
Daniel O'Rahilly
JairoOrtega
Saud Osailan

Pius Oyibo
Lori Page
Koog Yan Pak
Kelly Danzer
LarryParXs
Silvano Pena

Manha Perales
Albano Perez
Maria Perez
Melissa Perez
Jean Petsch
Michael Pforr

"'

�Deborah Pike
Lori Pischke
Emesto Ponillo
Abraham Posadas
Juan Puebla
Atfonso Puente

Esmeralda Ramirez
Jose Ramirez
Roben Ranheim
Montira Raveejarudon
Tammy Rentler
Gilben Reyes

Hector Reyes Jr
Ruben Reyna
Douglas
Rhodenbaugh
Robin Richards
Maricela Richmond
Edward Rippee

Hector Riquel
Jacqueline Robinson
Tina Rocha
Carlos Rodriguez
Carmen Rodriguez
Eliza Rodriguez

laura Rodriguez
Mary Rodriguez
Rosalinda Rodriguez
Renae Rojo
Cindy Romo
lourdes Ruiz

Michele Sacco
Cathyleen Salas
Arnold Saldivar
Fatima Salem
Walid Salim
Mike Salinas Jr

�Deanne Sanchez
Juan Sanchez
Lupe Sanchez
Jose Sandoval
Susan SanfOfd
Hely Sante~z

Alejandro Sarmiento
Roben Schneider Jr.
Sheryl Scholl
Eanha Schultz
Carlos Scott
Renee Senn

Mikhaded Shauban
James Shelton
Ambarina Silguero
Chris Silvestri
laura Simeroth
Teresa Sitterle

Cemna Smith

John Smith
Eduardo Somoza
Valeriano Soto
Roben Stauring
Ted Stavinoha

liMJI'a Stone
Tamyra Striegler
l1sa Stutzman
P1nya Suwan
Chi Hung Tang
Hazel Thomes

Mark Thlxen
Jotge Ti,enna Jr
Mark Tomasek
Nestor Torres Jr
Eulalio Tovar
Peter Tovar

'"

�OoiOJes Trevino
John Trevino
Rosie Uriegas
Ruben Urista
Fermin Urteaga
An.drew Uzuegbunam

Carlos Valadez
Raul Valdez
Reynaldo Valdez Jr.
Laurann Vasek
Gilbert Vega
Holly Vega

Joe Vega
Juan Vela
Jaime Velasquez
John Velazquez
VictOf Vera
Marl&lt;. Vetterling

Francisco Vicent
Mario Viesca
Miguel Villafranca
Jesus Villalobos
Laura Vivas
John Walker

John Walters
Candi Wahher
Lurline Webb
Stephen Wilcock
JeniferWilliams
Jimmy Wright

Christine Young
Cyrille Young
Kevin Young
Joel Ysla
Mitchell Zuk
Vema Deleon

"'

���President
Brother Stephen Walsh, C.S.C .

...

�Vice President
Brother Henry Altmiller, C.S.C.

"'

�Admin is

Robert Fritsch and Staff-University Relations

160

Sr. Jean Burbo-Dean of Students

�tors

�Library Staff

Joseph Sprug- Head librarian

Connie Pulley - Assistant
162

Barbara Stock-Assistant

�Chairpersons

Boyd Collier- Business Administration

Sr. Madeleine Sophie Weber- Behavioral and
Social Sciences

"'

�Department of Behavioral

Joy Lock -Instructor

Claude No&amp;en- Professor

...

E~

lou l.ft1-Anoc Prof

Rev. Neal Wise-Asst. Prof.

�and Social Sciences

James Koch- Assoc. Prof.

Ruth Bounous- lnstructor

,.,

�Center for Busi
\

...

Bro Cornelius Ccwcoran- ProfnSOf

�ness Administration

Leo Osterhaus- Professor

167

�Department of

Bfo. Andrew Angermeier- Professor

Welte Coooly-Assoc. Prof.

Rev LeRoy Oement iCh -klstructor

Bro

...

w~

Dunn- Professor

�Humanities

William Kennedy-lnstruct Of

Bro. Edmund Hunt-Professor

Dorothy Knight- Instructor

�William Penn- A sst . Prof.

Timothy Aobtnson- lnstNC10f

Edward

M.tng~MT~-Profestor

��Center for Teaching

-

Daniel Montgomery-Asst. Prof.

5I' Mane Andre Walsh- ProfesSOf
112

Bro Eagan Hunter- Astt Prof

�and Learning

..1oM Knorr-Asst. Prof.

Ch&amp;rlene Perez- Asst. Prof.

~rl

W iliams- Asst . Prof.

�Department of Physical

Merry Peterson-Asst. Prof.

Bro. l ouis Coe-Asst. Prof.

�and Biological Sciences

Robert Reese-Assoc. Prof.

175

�Staff
Staff
Staff

"'

�Registrars Office {1-r): Rebecca Erie. Phyllis Rieser, linda Lepore

Financial Aid Office back {1-r): Nora Lumbrera, Mitli Thomas . Front {1-r): Santa Garza , Lorrie Rob inson, Doris Constantine.

�Security Back row {1-r) M1ke Groffll'l,larry Garnson, Man Cano Cemer TOfly Blancas FrOfll row {1-r) Torn Earehan, OarleoeGuseck. J~tt~~se
Whole

�Cafeteria St aff back row (1-r): Bennie Ruiz. Dorothy Bibbs, Steve Moore. Terry Colben, Vicki Smith. Mike Rodriguez. Tony Preston. Roben Kolen. Bill Letteru.
Manuel Reyna Sr. , Manuel Reyna Jr .. Jose Llanas. Front row (1-r): Ruby Andrews. Onetha Dickerson, Ennie Mawande, Pam McGrew, Gloua Williams.

�������Editor: Richard Ginn
Staff: Paul Cerqua, Fred Fernandez, Dennis
Kane. Mary Mader, Theresa Mader, Rose
Shuler
Cover Designer: Fred Fernandez (cover
dedicated to Melodee Nixon)
Chief Copy Writer: Ted Stavinoha
Artist: Anna Marie Flanigan
Photographic Supervisor and Faculty/
Staff Photos: W. Blaine Pennington
Photo Staff: Lisa Delaney, Fred Fernandez,
Sandra Guerra, Surachai Kambhu, Susie
Martinez. A I Puente, Marke Webbe

Special Thanks to Photo Contributors:
Many Binder, John Cernohous, Jim Franz,
Richard Ginn, Eddie l opez, Clayton
McCord, Eva Munoz, Julie Newton, Chris
Ryan, Br. Simon Scribner, Ted Stavinoha
Special Thanks: Sr. Jean Burba, lisa
Delaney and Jim Frarzfor their support and
assistance
Adviser: Julie Newton

THE
TOWER

186

�Index
Abbott. Eric 31.49.135
Abdulla . Khalid 143
Aboujaoude. Orlando 143
AboujaouM.Os waldo135
AbYiguem.Milud135
Acevedo. Erasmo 127
Acosta. Teresa 57
Adams. Erana143
Adams. Sarah 143
Afghahi . Farhad 143
Agbakuru . Lyn 143
Aguilar. Gerardo135
Ahmadian . Mohammad 127
Ahmed , Nahed 143
Akinnlranve . Bolanle 135
Akinniranye , Yetunde 135
AI -Amin. Ruhid127
AI-Arrayedh. Aaama1 43
AI -Busmait . Mohammed 143
AI -Farag.Zaki 135
AI·G hafri , Ali 143
AI·Ghafri . Hamdan 143
AJ-Ghandi. Abdulla 143
AI -Hunaidi. Ali 143
AI -Janahi.Abdulwahed 143
AI -Jibouri. Muhsi n 135
AI-Khalila . All143
AI ·Khalifa, Khalid 127
Al·Khalifa. Khalifa 143
AI-Khalifa. Ras hid 143
AI-Majdali,AM1143
AI -Mnahali. Mohammed 143
AI -Mas hali . Ghali 143
AI-MogbetFahad109
AI -Munafa.Eftikhar 143
AJ -Naij11r. Abdalla 143
AI· Rahw an. Ghazl143
AI·Ras hdi , S•if143
Al ·Satfar, Aii 135
AI· Satfar.hdhel127
AI·Satfar. Wael 135
AI ·Shanfari . Abdullilh 143
AI·Theeb. Abubaker 143
Al11ka . Augustine 143
Albright , M•rian31 ,7 1.109
Aldari. F11rr11h 135
AlexanMr ,Dorothy55.127
AJ..ander. Lewls47, 127
Alexander. Willie 26. 44. 4 5. 46 , 47.50.127
Alford. Alberta 127
Alguesev11 . Lawrence54.127
Allen . Ethel 109
Ally . Murtua 48
Almog abar. Terr• 143
Alonzo. Anlceto143
Alrefaei . Vagoob 143
Allmille&lt;, Br. Henry 159.182
Alv11rez . Juan 109
Am• diotla . Vincent127
Ameraon. Mark127
Amr.Vounef 135
Anuia. Augustine 143
Anc:er. Genoveva149
Anderson.Janelle 47
Andonie , Jorge 143
Andreaen. Undi1127
Anittkwena. Patrick 143
A.-. Guillermo 143
Anthony, Tony 127
Anw•r. Hanan 143
Aponte . Sor•y•109
Arc:aya . T•nya144
Arellano. J•vier 135
Arman,Jenie47
Arredondo. Alici• 109
Arriola . Cali• 135
AsbilL Kenneth 109
Attara. Ralph 127
Ayalll . Frances 50, 144
Bagby. Thomas 46. 89. 144

B•ldridge. Meredy144
B11rnhart. Belinda 109
Bartet.Josieluni146
Barron. Gilbert 135
Buri. Saad 127
Bautiata.Ruben127
Beach. CI•rk45. 1 27
Beck. Rebecca 109
Beck. Joe Jr . B9. 144
Belt. Bridget144
BenaviMz.Patricia144
Benetua. L-arissa 144
Bennet, Debbie 109
Bennett, Mafk88
Bennett. Melody46. 53.127
Benson, Gus74. 78,77
Bentley,Chris74. 144
Benyasern. Piy a 127
Berain. Ana 144
Berggren. RickBO
Bermudez. Rosario 109
Bernllein.Joae109
Berstorlf. Unette 144
Beruwin.Saleh 135
Bes.zborn. Cecilill 142.144
Binder. M•rty53
Binger. Sonya 95. 97. 144
Bird,Mar1177.110
Bishop. Patricia110
Blackweii.Lawrern::e127
Blancaa.Gerardo 110
Blening, Car101110
Block. Bill 55
Blottin. P11u1110
8oc11negra. Enriqueta 144
Bocanegra.Oiivia144
Bockoven. Krista135
Bond. Kifk 27. 144
Bo..quez, Abelardo 110
Boyer. Jacqueline 144
Boyer. Pat 49
Boyle. Ris• 144
Bradahaw.Kimberly47, 127
Brady. Susanne144
Brash. Charlea135
Breault, Von80.125
Brentley, Aieta48 , 50. 1 26 , 127. 130
Brilt, Steven127
Brown. Eula 110
Brown. Kriati 144
Brown. Martin 144
Brown. William 110
Bruch. Shirley 110
Brumskine. Euphemia110
Brzozowski. Oolores 135
Buck -Smith. Robin49
Buenell. Christina144
Bullard. Oarson135
Bullard. Timothy 135
Bulpitt.Mark127
Burbo. Sr. Jun 160
Buma. Bruca127
Burns. Patrida
Bustamante, Cynthia127
Butcher. Oanlel110
Butcher. Wendell111
Cabello. Oaniel144
Cabeus.Rafael111
Cabiya. WilliamSr. 111
Cadena. Oalia144
Campbell. Scot144
Canavati. Juan111
Cano. Gu11dalupe 111
Cano. Matthe w 22
Cantu, Francisco 135
Cantu. John46
Cantu , Luia127
Cantu. NO&lt;ma 135

C•rdenas. Cesar 104
Cardenu. Romlro111
Cardenas. S11ndra111
C11rey. Eugene144
Carlisle. Sandi 95
Carroll. Mafk 144
Carter. Donald Jr. 1 35
Cartwright.Anne47
Casanova. Rene111
Casares, Oagoberto 144
CnbYm , Kyle SO. 82. 1 27. 133
Cnias. Debor11h 145
Castanon. lrene145
Castelan. Tomas145
Castilla, Noe 111
Castillo. Fernando 145
Castillo. Isaac 145
Catalani. Alan 74. 78.127
C11vazos.Jalme111
Cerda, JoAnn 135
Cereceres. Maria145
Cemohous , John 9. 53. 58. 59, 142. 145
Cerqua. Paul61 , 145
Chamblin.Josie49
Chlln. Oiiver127
Ch11ney. Tommie 127
Chang, Jo Hong 145
Chavarria. Leticia145
Chavez. Ida 111
Cheng.Wang127
Cheong. Soo 135
Cho, Christopher13. 145
Christensen. Brent22
Chriato. Tereaa21.46. 52. 53.126, 132
Cinua , Edmundo 145
Cipolla. Albert
Cir•nni.Gemma145
Cisneros, Unda49. 135
Ciny , Joel67 . 68. 111
Clairemont. Aldea 135
Clafke. Jettrev 112. 184
Clary , OavidJr. 112
Clay, Bonnie 145
Clay, Carol145
Cleland , Kathy145
Clem. Mary135
Clementich. Fr. LeRoy22 . 68
Cleveland. Sh-etie 145
Clouse. J11me a 112
Cobb, John 127
Colley , Caren55. 145
Collins , Chri s 74. 77. 7B. 145
Conley, Debra 47. 127
Connelly. Margaret145
Conroy , Tese135
Constantine. Doris46
Contrera•. Christina 145
Cooper, Charles112, 127
Cooper. Matg11ret 100. 101 . 112
Coppedga. William 135
Corban. Timothy 80. 82. 84. 145
Corona. Elizabeth 135
Corona. Rosie
Correa. Janet136
Cortina s . Fredrlc:o 112
Cortinas. Maria136
Cote. Bridget 136
Cot e. Kelty136
Craver. Brygida 128
Crisma n. Sandra112
Crispin. Yau-na136
Crowell. Cralg145
Cruz, Arturo112
Cruz. Jon 54
Cuelle r. Edua rdo 136
Cuellar. Julieta 112
Cuervo. J uana145
Cumm ing• . Bonna 47. 68. 1 28
Cummin,a. Judy112
Curtis. Henry SO. 112

�Cuula. Tony21.27 . 48. 145
Cutting. Ev«•n 112
c,n... MM11 80. 83. 128
Crlgen. Meril.128
O'AI&gt;eelo, P1tri&lt;;la 113
o.iley, Merthe 145, 149
O.lley, Petric:a 128
O.jenl, Suhe 48 , 145
Denlele. Mirilm113
0....,.,, Kelty 1152
o....~. Domingo 128
Oe'IMI . Bob 13
Oavte . .Joyc.145
Devh, Mery138
o.M, Stephen 148
Oewttinlo, Ooolld 155, 128
O.Andl, l.-1 148
O.Andl. Men.. 148
O.AngMo. Elizebeth 113
0.AnoM, Nia1M111148
O.liO..ne , S.lvldor 111148
O.liAoN, Lydie 148
O.l1Aow, Nelidi47 , 11J
O.liAoN, Alelrdo 135

Fllf•. Tl!.er... 147
F..,__, S.en 80, 147
F~t~ton, Jo. .pn 89, 138
F~tdin , Meril147 , 148
FlfliJUIMIII, eo..-.iqU1147
Fergu~M~~~ . Melenla1 38

hmendlz . Frldlfick 58, 81 , 138
FINer, 1(.., 38, 47 , 53, 55, Ill
Fllc:hler. Petridt121
Filnlgen, Anne M1ri1 44 , 57, 128
Flot... O.m.t 14 7
Flot11, Della 114
Flot... Hom4ro 147
Flot... JoAnn 1 33
Flotii, Juen147
Flot11 , M1 rio80, 125
Flovd. A~n~e147
Flynn, Williem Ill 55. 59. 103. 147
Fot.y, Mery114
Fot.y, Williem 40, 138
Foli&lt;nef', Jeme•l28
Fondr.., , 81111fty 147
FOten, Cerol45 , 48 , 147
Fontc:hen, Mila 88, 138

O.~. Eudella128

Fowl~t , Feron80

O.~ . Mar11148

Duffy , Alc:hlfd

Frlf'llllin, Vlrglnie128
FriiUt, J...,.. 21 , 27 , 58, 59, 114, 184
Freusto. Eudelil138
F.-., S.III138
Fticlly, Fr... l49
Ftigeuh, Glnl44
Frlueii, CherMte 114
Fuc:c:ello, A(lf'Ht83 7
Fuc:callo, P1t1&lt; 114
,......,,.,, Annendo 128
F.....,t... Arturo 147
FU1niii, Fflnclsc:o 147
G.ckle. ~ 108, 114, 184
Oelen, VMen 138
Della, O.eg80, 81
O.llagoe.. S.ny tO , 95. 147
O.mblle, K enn~th 114
o.~&gt;~~o.e. Jett....,eo. 114
Gltc:la, a.nko 138
GMc:la. Dinnll1 4 7
Glrc:II, EIMurl47
Gltdl. Elth« 48. 147
Gltdl, FrMC:Isc:o 147
O.rde. Fr ii"'C:h.oo 147
O.rde.J"ue48 , 147
O.rde. l.-1128

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O.rde.~ 4 7

0.~. V...,..155

O.Lool&lt;:h. J•en 128
O.Vblnvndo, Jull••nne 93. 148
O.Culr•. Monlcl148
Deighton, O.nlel113
Oeleney, UH48 , 47 , 53, 58, 58. 59
Oeleon, Eudella
~. c .... tee
o.utaeh. Debbie 1 38
o-m. Oor.... 148
0.1111&lt; . Aoblft 128
Ot..mo::herden. P•tc:hedl148
OW , Audy138
DktUn., e.llndl138
Okluon, Unde 128
Ollf , Oenlel138
Dikl0o, Tvbonlfnl148
Oilllrd, M«yndl148
~ Ahondl tO. 91 , 138
~. Me..,..,.148

Ooblll,

Anthony 113

Oor•. Ouv113

on.co.. o.nr.ls 11 3
Dudl.y, $1_,47
113
Ice
Dunl•p. Mktw.l1 13
Dunllp, $1ll)ftlfll13
o..-.. .. WiiHim 20

c..-,.

O..C,U., M.nc.Y 121

O....t. J..wt..1 31
0....11, 111~148

0Yor .... Or.ld128

ev-.. 0.¥1G 121

[lfiNn. ToN 148

£.,._,

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fctw~tdi.Chlfrioe

138

E.-, A1cfwotd I l l
Eic:toMmenn.Mic:tw.ll48
[ b ,[ofwinl 48
[lletlln. Joftn1 48
o.s.. v-.n. 141

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lmlodl. JoNtln 141

Gltdi.Miril114
GMc:la, M....,I 38
GMc:la, M....,I 21
Gltdl. o.c.. 14 7
O..CU. Petrld.1 4 7
O..CU. AMnlro137
Olrcll, Akhlnl 137
O..CU. Aobeo1o121
o..cu, ._. 121
OlriNy y_.,. to. 12 84
Oen9n.
137
GM"'-, ChrildN.Jo47 &amp;8, 137
Gln:eAldol 4 7
a.n. Anry 147
Den• Ftolh41

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btt.ct.M0r.yel31
[¥-~1 41

f_.., . . .. 7
[w~lvr-1 41
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t.lrlie ,_..., 141
F..-,.LeriiH
fiN• ~ u 71 141
F..W.~II 4

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Oil'too1!JioNft\lll 4
Ol&amp;owt"IN MM\1 14 7
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Olnft. .._.. ... 1J II M 11 134 137
oa..w-~114

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0.., r-141

Griffin, A~I148

Griffin, Die,.129
Griffin, Jey 115
Gue&lt;dioi.I, Joftn 129
G.-ltoz . Eliublth 129
Gue&lt;Ta . Adllblno 137
a......... Jon t48
Gu..re Mic:hHI21 , 27. 29, 44 , 48
au.rre. Sendre23, 58. 1115
GUiorrl, SuHN 50, 148
a .......e . VIctOt 148
Glll"lfO. Jon 148
0UI11ml , Mel* 141
GuilliUfni. J ec:int o 148
GuMdt. o.n.n. 148
GV1 .....1l, Eiiubelhll5
Gu!llf&lt;ll, (loy 137
Gu!..,..u, ldllll137
Gu!..,..., , c.no.1c8
Guzmen, John 1 41
Guzmen, Jo. 115
H..:t.t..nh, Cwoi148
Helaz, Aalwell48
Hejii). M14 2t, l 37
HMdlfnln. Su..., ee
Heii , A ~d1 48

HeNin, Allen IS, 141
Hlfll0ti, Divldl37 , 138
Hepp,
148
HMdlmln, Row 137
Hlnil. Dlb0tlhl1 , 4 5 , 137
Hlnii. Mic:h141129
Hlnil. Vlric:k 137
H .......... HIIUn 12t
Hetc:fl&lt;lr , Celhlrirw 115
H41ywood, Andlrll43
Hlc:tor, c• .., 125
Hldiyll, Hlmoon 14 8

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H&lt;M- . TwiiiS3. 129
Hlfodri.o.,Cec:IIM 137

Hlmlftdu. Elii.Wih 315. 94 , 9S 98 t l 137
H~a-gtol37
~«.Julie

Ill

Hemlndw l"etridl 12t
~VIdde141
H&lt;etrlfa. ~411 4l

Hilrfen. ..... 4l
Hill. OieN lot Ill
...,._, o.niall41
HoMft. o--w 137
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HohCHctl., a-t.. 1U

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Hoollw.Jooo 4 7111
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Gfln, O.llid47 , 137
Gr..,., Oelie137
c;,..,., Beny 115

Hodl 01anoM 131

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o.m.tt.C.-.u 4 7
a..- MM,137

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Goror6o. Jor~129

GOI:c:Mr. Billy 148
Grahlm, Cerolyn 129

o..n.m. Lelli.e 49 , 115

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O.tiWOOOII. t . - . I J1

(Mn, UnoM 14 1

Gomez. Merie13 7
Gomel, Willi• 129
Gon.tells. Armando 137
Gon.t• ..• . Jo.ia129
Gon.telft; , Audy137
Gon.telaz. Geof9• 148
Gonzelu, Gildl 129
Gonzelaz . 1Jdi1115
Gonulal , Peul 115
Gon.telo, Frenclsc:oll7
Goodwin. Clly68 , 11 5
Gordy. Dw...,...115
Go&lt;Kitl, Oellid 115

141

........

~....... 141
.._.,

Ill

�Hunt, Br. Edmund 47
Hunter. Bryan 50. 76. 116
Hunter, L..la 100, 149
Hurtado, Leonerd 129
Hyan. Suzanne 1 16
lckn, Edward 149
lfeobu. Canice 148
lbrd. Paul142
llle.Emilie116
lnda1ecio.Jorge138
trvnan. Leslie 149
lrion,Maria129
1Mn.Sun 49
lsraei.Jill31. 149
1.... Roger 138
Jeck.an. Michele 100. 149
Janovt.ky. Chris68, 71 . 149
Janow.kl. Tlm 138
Janzen. Leslie 149
Jarbooa. Mohemad 149
Jarrell, Oavid 138
J ..inski, O.bra 116
Jenkins. O.bra116
Jimenez. Antoniolil149
Jimeoez,Jole149
Jimenez. Terry149
Jimenez. Antonio Ill
John.an.Gay1e54
Joh.n.an, Margeret71
Johnson. Richerd 65
Jotmaon.Virginia65
Jolley. Carmen 138
Jones. Alan 129
Jones,Marcus74
Jones, Misti 149
Juarez, Guillermo 149
Juarez. Patricl.e138
Jullano. John116
Kade. Yihad 138
Kembhu. Surechei 116
Keoe. O.nnis 47, 60. 61
Kanoe. Cralg65.138
Karam. Fedi149
Karick, Nin.11 71.117
Kariml.lsmaeel 138
Kezim. Eid 149
Keating. Patricia 59, 149
Keegan. Colleen 57. 65. 138
Kel&lt;eoche.Mabel129
Kelbaugh, Dolly20
Kelty.Evan71
Kemper. Randell149
Kenr&gt;&amp;dy. Evart117
Khayat. Nabit117
Khayyet. Fouad 129
Khazenie.Jamshld 129
Khodadadi. Hovik 149
Kleachnick. Paul129
Klng, Carol117
Kinsella, M ergaret32, 44, 46, 52.117
Klnsey, Micheel49,149
Killner, Colleen 138
Klaphaak, ChristCJ9her 129
Klodnicki, O.niae45. 46. 149
K.-r. John 80. 82. 84
Koempel, David 27. 44, 45, 46, 55. 129
Koopman, Ingrid 149
Kopnislte, Greg 149
Kouba, Tamare95. 149
Krekue, Victor Jr. 138
Krawczyk, Richard 80, 117
Kroos. Kathleen31 . 46. 136
Krun. lerry74. 78
Kuan. Betsy149
Kulewlcz. Cheryt47
Kw:bai.z. Zutwnia26
lebry, Robert 117
Lefine. FochJr. 117
Lembroa. O.spin.~~ 138
Lencelot. James117
Lendry, Jemes 52. 53. 129
Lene.Carol47
Lange. Reid 11 7
Le~. Ma1Hice138

Langston. n-nu 129
Lankford. Kelty 149
Lew, Jeanne 100, 11 7
Lew.on. Eli.zabeth 50. 130
Leya. Bertha 149
LeBlanc. Rene150
Leal. Ana 149
Leai,Priscilla1 16. 130
Lee. Jetfery47.130
Lee. Ray31 . 67. 68, 125
Lemen, Richard 31 , 130
Leoni, Ronald 118
Le11o. Anne 150
levine,Ot1o 138. 141
LewK. Gracie 130
U , KinMan 150
Umon. M ercedes 130
Und, Katherine142, 150
Undblom. Doris 38, 130
Undernann. Robert 118
Upiec, Ronald 55. 130
Uveuy. Kimberly 150
Ulckle. David 150
Loera, Arturo 138
London, Quenten 1 50
Long. Pamela130
Long, Robert II 31 , 38, 46, 1 50
longor&gt;i, Robert 138
~. Leurie150

Lopou. Eduardo46, 52, 55,56. 138
lopez, Fernando 150
Lopez, Guadalupe 130
Lopez.Kathlyn49. 118
Lopez.Luisa138
lopez, Patricio130
Lopez, Rolando 138
Lopez, Selia118
Lopez. Taren 20. 21. 52, 130
Lolsada. Franclaco118
Loth, John 130
Lowcodl. Ford 11 138
lowsley, Ell,_ 118
Lozano, Guadalupe 150
Lozi.Manaour130
Lucio. Ste1LI150
Lucitie, Uncle 130
Lun.~~. MariaEsther47, 130

Luna. Nautla150
Lyon, Andrew136
MacAuley, Kim 150
Mackey, Shehon 130
Mackie. Patrick 138
Msder, M ary 60, 130
Mader, Theresa46, 61 , 138
Msgallsnes, Armando 150
Msby, Leura47, 50, 67, 68, 108, 118, 162. 184
Maldonado. M aria 130
Man, Wai·Han 150
Manning, M sritham 130
Mantia, Jeff 150
Maranto, Uu86, 137
Marengo. Br. Don 48, 52
Mar1tley, Gordon46, 47, 53. 55, 118
Marquez. Oisna136
Marquez. Tony 130
Marr. Humphrey 150
Marsh. Rodney130
Marshall, Gregory 130
Martigoetti, Patrick 138
Manin, Rebecce 36. 50. 65. 138
Manin, Steve 74 , 139
Manioez, Helen 54, 139
Martinez, lgnacio150
Martinez. Jsnifl118
Martinez. Julia 48, 50
Martinez. Jon 150
Martinez, Lori 150
Manioez. On. .irno139
Manioez. Sergio49
Martinez. Susan.~~ 56.59
Martinez, Sylvia
Martinez. Thelma 130
Mas.bti. va..ir 150
Me.,, Ahmed 150

Ma..ey, Susan 150
Ma..imi.Man.118
Malheua. Jorge150
Matlage.Carrie 49. 131
MeUukubo, Shinya 131
Metur, Fatima118
MllyO.Mary139
McCati.Ciaudia119
McClure, 8rayde 74, 75, 77
McCord, Greg 136
McFadden, John 53. 134, 138
McGann, Sandr~47, 11 9
McGinty, Sean 150
Mcilroy, Sharon 35. 94.95, 97
McKinney, Gwendolyn 131
Mclendric.Oawn150
McPhaul, M ary 125
M ..n . Eivira150
Medin.~~, Anne139

Medi,.., Danny 150
Medl,.., Tomaa119
Meiorado, AifTedo150
Mendenhall. Kevin 131
Mendol:a, Am•ll• 145. 150
Me•tier.Louie 139
Meyer. Michael88, 89. 139
Meu, Tony49. 150
Miclt. Robin139
Mill•r. Kevin 131
Milll,leonetd 13 1
Milosevick, Kip 150
Minton, P•pper31 , 71 , 139
Miramontet. Manuel 119
Mireles, Homar 139
Mitchell. Anne 150
Mohamedsaleh. Khalid150
Molina.Arturo139
Molina, Maria119
Molina, P•tricia 47, 131
Molina. Roai• 151
Moln.llr, Unda151
M onro.VIctoria 49. 131
Monroe. Cheryl139
Monuolvo. Tari151
Montet, Elli1131
Montgomery. Can 74
Montgomery. K•vin 31 , 4 7.71
Montonttn, Micha•l47 . 139
Montoye, Jacltie 151
Moore. John 1 1 9
Moore.Judy47
Moore, Robert139
Morales. Carmen151
Morales. Emilio 151
Moralu, Marc151
Moran. John 131
Mordue. Jacqueline31.139
Mor•no. Ca1101
Mor•no, Jimmy 47, 57, 131
Mor•no. M iria1!i1
Morin. Andr•w119
~eda, Raut59, 151

Motes. Ann Marie 55
Mousharrafi•. Nagib 151
Muellet, Eiy.. 47, 131
Muit, Rob31 . 38, 68, 15 1
MulheiJ,Cath•rine131
Mu11er, 8r. G•rald23
Mulllna, Kevin86, 87. 131
Munday. Bob 55
Munn, MarcLI119
Munoz. o.br•139
Munoz.Evangelirwo22, 46, 56, 136. 139
Munoz.Jorge151
Munoz.Jole 139
Munoz. Routio119
Munoz,Viole 151
MIKtd, Aylhe151
Myllllviec. J• rtmlu49
Nadet, Henna119
Najm. Simon 1 19
Nan, MarianeiLI 151
Nauert, Ronald 139
Navarre, Mary139
NavarTO.Jertrdo 119

189

�N11wonki, DIIW:I 120
Ndi11ngi. John 151
N.-I.Ang&lt;tlll95, 96, 97,98, 99, 151
Ne•I.J•me•151
Nelllg11n. Elf..l49
N~oo.Julie57.58

Nguyen. Uen 131
Nigllr.Shlohidll26.48, 151
Ni,., John 24. 120. 184
Ni,., Richerd
NU.oo, Angel• 47
Norton. Frederick 111131
NOYOII,MIIrio139
Nunez. EIU.139
Nunil, Robert 11139
o·s.r. Lllure151
O'Brien,Shloron120
O'Connell, Mllry46,131
O'Connor, Junene 49. 120
O'Keefe. Timothy 55, 139
O'Neiii,Weber131
O'Neiii,Julle49, 120
O'Rahilly. Oaniel152
O'Shea. Elizabeth 140
O&lt;;hoe, Ceno. 151
O&lt;;hoe, NoeJr. 22.48,151
O&lt;;hoe, Salvador 120
Odion-Eune, Ayodele120
Ofoegbu, John 152
Otok.ire.Nkemllkolllm152
Oh~.~eri, Ciitford152

OJeda. Oiana 31 , 120
Okafor, Enyeribe 120
Olawole, Adeotun 152
Oldtather,Mio;hloel131
01.-.Jose139
Oliv•rez,laon•rd152
Olivarez. San10121. 53, 126. 132
Oliver. Debora 152
Ol. .n.Cincty 152
Ol.on. Mich.llel80. 83, 139
Omnku. Ant._,., 152
Omr11nl, Sohell• 120
Ontivero., Rebecca 152
OnyejU.ka. Sytvelter139
&lt;Mega, Adrian 131
Ortega.Jairo152
Orteg11.Enrique111139
Ortegon. Mich.llel140
OwHen, S.ud 152
Ovelle, M11ria 120
Owenlby, Susin47
Oyibo, Pius 152
OurzM, Chris 102. 120. 183
PKI&gt;II, Terry80,131
PKini, Votronice48
Pege, L.Dri152
PM, Kong Yen 152
PantuiiO, Cynthia 131
Paramo, Robert 131
ParQ, LII...,.152
P•tei.Govind151
P11tino, Mllrtl&gt;ll31 , 68, 140
Pi1.,....,Cheryt49, 121
p_.._,, He...,.132
P -.Stlvllno152
Pennlngt0fl, 81alne68, 59
PIII9P'f,Cynthill140
P8fllln, MIIrth.il1 52
P8fel, .uberto152
P8fel, MIIrilo152
Perel, MeltiHHil
P.,e,, r - 4&amp;
P..,.,., CII&lt;'Oiyn 60, 140
PHOM, Moniclo121
Peti1.o.nlel 121
Peud&gt;, JNII 1 52
Pfotr, M+eheel152
PhiiiiP11. Edie132
Pielde. Eric 140
Pief'u, Tlmmhy 13, 45. 50.121
Pike, Oeboreh 153
PiscNte.lori 153
Platt.Mer1&lt;18 17
Pongpaoinlkul Monkol 132

&gt;90

Pool, Carol121, 125
POtTIII, Pete 45, 48, 53, 134, 140
Portillo, Emesto153
Poe.aQt.Abrehlom153
Poth, John 140
PreltOfl, Terri 67, 140
Price. Barbara 121
Priest, Bradley 121
Puebla, Juan 153
Puente, Alfonll056. 153
Pulli11m, Chuck68
Pyrcll, S!Kie 31 , 140
Quijada, Rodolfo132
O...intero, Luz132
O...irog11. Hil11rio 132
Ouirog11, R11ul 132
Raiford, Brenda98
Ramirez,Eimeraldll153
Ramirez. Fernando 140
Ramirez, Jose153
Ramlrez, Peggy121
Ramirez.Sandra132
Ramon, Regin11ldo 140
Remoti,Roy132
Renhelm. Robert 153
Raveejarudon, Montira 153
Razevi, Mohamm11d 132
Ready, M11nhew 140
Reed, Donne 121
Reimer. Allison140
Reischl. Rooald 132
Rantler.T• mmy153
Reyn.Gilbert22.153
Reyes. Hector Jr. 153
Reyna, Ruben153
Reza. Hildll121
Rhodenbaugh, Ooogln 45. 48. 153
Rice. Jame1121
Richllrds. Robin 146. 153
Ric""-"1. Maricela48, 153
Rida. Hu. .ein 140
Riddle, LIIvae121
Rlncones. Lll...,. 48
Rippee. Ed 3 1, 153
Rique!. Hector 153
Rivera, Ju•n140
Robin.on, JIIcquelioa95. 1 53
Robin.on, Joyce140
Robinson. Judith47
Robison, Edith47. 122
Roehl!. Tina 153
Rodriguaz.C•riot; 153
Rodriguez. C•rmen 132
Rodrig~.~ez, C11rmen 153
Rodriguez, Elizll153
Rodriguez. JOia140
Rodrigues, JoH 140
Rodrig~.~ez. LIIura153

Rodriguez, Mary153
Rodriguez. Rlta122
Rodriguez. Roulinda 48, 1 53
Rodriquez. Ceur 122
Rodriq~.~ez. Miriam 132
Rogers. Oenni1 132
Rote•. Julio88
Rojo. Renae147, 153
Romero. Gerardo 49. 140
Romo, Alyurdio 1 40
Romo, Ctndy153
RoM, Michelle53.129, 132
ROHfl, Megoo.88. 8 7
RuQ:, Jamn132
Ruil:, Lourdes 153
Rullohing, LIIOonna 47. 132
5ac&lt;oo.Mid&gt;elel53
Saguinilln, Cerohoe 122
SeOd. Hodne 132
S&lt;tlii•. C•thyleen 153
Saldana. Cynth'a 140
Saldivar. Amok! 153
Salem. Fatlme 153
Salem, Sanad 137

Salinas. Mike Jr. 153
S.li.,.s, Joselll 1 32
Saling. Oavid 122
Sanc:he~. Oe11nne 54, 1 54
Sanchez. Ju.an 154
Sanchez. Lupe 154
Sanchez. Tony 132
Sanchez, Yolanda 132
Sanders, Ride
Sanders. Theo 132
Sandov11l, Edward 122
S.ndoval. JoH 154
Sanford. Suun 154
Santeliz. Hely 80, 1 54
S.ntos, Ju•n 1 22
S.rmiento, Alejandro 1 54
Sawaya,lsnm122
Sche&lt;:her1, Richllrd80. 81 , 132
Schneider, Robert Jr. 154
Scholl. Sheryl 1 54
Schultz. Earthll154
Scon. c.no. 154
Scon, Fred46
Scribner. Br. Simon 47
Seale, Steven 80. 131 . 132
Settds, Cathy 49
Sefcik, Cherral 1 32
Segurl, Francisco 122
Segur11, Ruby 132
Seiffert. Egberto 122
Senn. Renee 154
Serna. Gumercindo 140
Serrena. Lll...,.140
Serr11no, Vi&lt;:1or1JJ
Shllllenberger, Stephen 122
Sh11rp, Dan 140
Shlluban, Mikhllded 154
Shaw. Patrici11 140
Shelton. J 11mes 80, 1 54
Shenk, Lel11nd 133
Shephard. John 47
Shephard. Eric 71. 133
Shindell. Tom 1 2 , 34, 38. 41 , 46
Showroneh, S11ndra
Shotwell. John 133
Shl.tkis. Kyle 122
Shuler, Rose 44. 4 5 , 46, 49, 53, 58. 59
Silguero, Amberine 154
Sill. There. . 140
Silva. Pedro123
Silvestri, Christopher 87. 68, 71 . 142. 154
Simeroth. Lllur1 48. 154
Simmons. Paul 123
Simmons. Sandre 1 40
Simon, Eduardo 123
Siner1e. Tereu 1 54
Skowronek, Sandra 123
Smith, Cetrioa 50, 154
Smith. John 154
Smlth. LIInce31 . 141
Sohar. Aryani 148. 151
Solis. Meria22, 141
Sollohub, Barber• 100, 141
Somo.u. Eduardo 1 54
Soaa. Mig,..l133
Soto. Raquel123
Soto, Valeriano 154
Spencer. M•ry 1 33
St. Aom.in. Menhll140
Stack..Micheel 7 1. 141
Stanabury, Sheil•87. 68. 133
Sta.... lealie 123
Stauring, Aobert 154
Stav81t. John 47
Stavinoha, TN 60. 82. 154
Steele, VICtor 31
St-a. Eiizabeth123
StepfleN.on, John 141
St-erd. WIINM 123
Stone, Leur• 154
Stout.Ftancft48. 141
Sfrie91er. T..,.,..a 141. 154

Se~;m.Walld153

s~. Peula133

SaiNI, Jeime 1 32
SalON•. MarieN 140

Studer. DougiM 123
Stutzman, U... 154

�Sulliven, P•tricl• 47, 53, 95, 108,123
Suw•n, Piriy• 154
S~,Ter ... 47,123
Sytv..ter,J•ne 141
T•bef•,Joenn133
T•m•vo, Ricilrdo 141
T11ng, Chi Hung 154
Terp, Enric:o123
Tedesco, Antl»ny 124
Tetch, R•ndlol124
n..m.., H11nry 23, 80, 124
Thcwn.., Eliubeth45, 55,133
Thorn••- Hnel 154
Thorn.., Ken 71
ThomJ*)II, a • ..., 55, 88, 89,140, t41
Thomp.an, M•ry•nn 133
Thurlln, M•rk 86, 154
Thurm~~n , J11niu 55, 91,141
TijerifWI, Jorge Jr. 80. 83. 95, 154
TijerifWI, MIIriiWI53.95,96,102.134
Tobin, Tlmothy47,89,133
Tom••ek. M•rk 154
Toney, Hurc:eyJr. 124
TonetSteven 133
Tonee,NeelorJr. 154
Touh. Uu124
Tovar. Aniu 124
Tov11r. Celia141
Tov11r, Eulelio 154
Tov•r. Peter 154
Trclui.Joton86, 87
Trueure. Robert24, 29.87. 68,126.128. 133
Trevino. D•niel124
Trevino. Dolores155
Trevino. John 159
rn.t•n, Di•ne49
Trietlln. Dono 133
Urbllni, M•ryJo 141

Urieglll, Roeie 155
Urietll , Ruben 155
Urte~~g~~. Fermin 148, 155
Uzuegbu"'lm , Andrew 155
V•l•dez, Ceriot;155
Valdez. R•ul155
Valdez. Rey~W~IdoJr.155
V•lemllno. Edward Jr. 124
V•lemuei•,Cynthi•55. 141
Verpe,An~W~141

Vaeek.laurenn 155
V•ughn.Undlo94
Vnquez.leonor137,141
Veg•. D•niel133
Veg•. Gilbert 155
Veg•. Holly 155
Veg11, Joe 80. 155
v... ,Ju•n 155
Vel•squez.J•ime155
Velllsquez.Wilfredo133
Vere, Vic:tor155
Verhoee, Aic:hllrd Jr. 133
Venerting.M•rk68,71,155
Vic:ent.Frenc.ieco155
Vielc:a.Mario155
Vigorito, Leonerd 141
Vii•.Arlette28
Vill•ft8nca.Miguel155
Vill•loboe.Jeeue155
Vill~~real. Ruth 133
Villarre•I.J•nie141
Viv.. ,laur•155
W•gner,Eii.. 68.141
W•lker,Joton155
W•lraed. Thom..ine21. 3L 68.141
W•lsh, Sr. M•ri• Andre 20
Wllllh,8r.Stephen158
W•lte.s.Joton40.155
Wlllther.Candi155

Wang, Al•n 47,124
Ward, Rounne 31, 141
Warner, S.ndre 124
Wa.an.S.ndno47
W•uon. Dawn 31. 46. 50. 68. 141
Webb,Uorline155
Wendt,Dianne47.141
Whita,JaniN92.124
WhiU, P11mel11 95, 98
Whitt,Aobert133
Wilboum, Robert 74, 133
Wilcock,St~155

Williame, Barbllre 49
WiUiams, Chalethia 50. 65, 133
Williams.Jena133
Willi•m•,Jeniter155
Wil.an. V•letta133
Wohlere,Neie1124
Wolf.8arbllre125
Wong,W•ICho/141
Wood.Deborllh125
WOO&lt;hrd.HIIttie133
Woody..r,Grey65,71,141
Wright,Janet125
Wright. Jimmy 74. 77. 155
Y•nez. Janie 54. 141
Y•nez. M•ry141
Yanez, Yvene 48. 49
Young,Christine155
Young.Cyrille155
Young. Kevin 155
YsLe.Joel155
Yz'iJuirre.lllur11100.141
Zamora, Dionic:io141
Zllrate.SanJuanita125
Zimmerm11n, Fre-d 31. 68
Zubill•ga.M•rgoth133
Zuk, Mttc:hell13, 155

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                    <text>����THE TOWER
1980-81
St. Edward's University
3001 S. Congress
Austin, Texas
Editor
Pam Whitt
Assistant Editor
Robin Mick
Advisor
Jerry Barrett

���A Lot To Look Back On

Many things over the past year have had a definite impact on the way
we think and feel. From the death of singer/ songwriter John Lennon
and the b1rth of the Reagan Admmistration to changing the requirements
of RCM and soaring inflation prices. Other things. minuscule as they may
seem. have and will contmue to change our lives. and looking back on
them will only remind us of the hard work and ever-changing facets o f
our lives we have had to endure this year.

����6th Street Fun
Sixth Street offers many interesting shops and places
ofentertainment. When things became too dull on campus.
students retreated to Sixth Street for some different

excitement.

��Mystical St. Ed"s from
afar.

One of many places m Austm to lose
yourself and get closer to God.

10

�The state cap1tal

I

The Frank EfWifl CMter houses many events popui;Jr With Austntes Several concerts. exhlbtt1ons. and
UrwverSity of Texas basketbal games are dtsplayed

�The last three Wednesday nights of the semester, Brother John made possible for beer and hotdog
roasts. The events brought out students who never came out of their dorm room. Robin Mick and
Dan Butcher, who is complaining to Kyle Shukis that the guy before him got two hot dogs, so why
couldn't he, help rhemselves to the free food.

12

�Students enJOY tht!
hotdog OU(IflB.

And of couru. aNer som~ beer and tun.
tt's ttm~ to nvent som~ new fvn

�Students take time our from studies to pose for a sneaky photographer.

�Martha Safnt RomiJitl studres qwetfy ,., East Hal Lobby

"

�Dorm Lifers one of college's greatest rewards. but there
not always. but sometimes.

"

IS

one facet that IS a true exception Well.

�Andy Sanchez, head reSident of Premont d01f18
head reSident buSiness

"Sorry Mom, 1 don't have tii'M to dean my room "

"

��"

�Dance . ..

20

�Dance ...

"

�Dance ...

�23

�Dance ...

�25

�Snow at last! Even though Austm gets cold enough to snow. it never does. There hasn't been snow m
Ausrm smce 1973. and students not accustomed to 1t frolicked (I{ two a.m. The next mornmg. many
snowmen were seen around the campus.

26

����The beloved John Lennon. former Beatie. was
maliciously killed in the fall by a Beatle-obsessed fan.
His death brought tears and anxiety to millions of
people from all walks of life who so dearly loved his
music and his philosophy. Many tnbutes like these
were made in Lennon's honor all over the world.

30

�Interested students tstened as MiJrtlfl Luther Krlg. Jr 's, daughter, Yolanda K1f18. gave a speech at Sr Edward's

31

�32

�John N!ra, Hilltopper Editor, was 1n1ured m a tramjcar colfiSJOn. and 1t looks as tf the only
way to solve h1s problem IS to amputate.

33

�1980-'81 Cheerleaders

.. .

\ I .'

Jon Cruz-Capta1n. Lawrence Algueseva-Co-Captam, Adrien Romo {Middle), Mary Allee Garcia. Helen Martinez. Not
pictured: Monrca Pesoli. Roy Ramos

�'
35

�Student finds an easy way
pnvacy.

to carry his phone and enjoy some

�It's Friday rnght and Gorden Markley IS caught domg his laundry aga1n m
his TopSiders.

37

�Edsmen Support Grand

38

�Celebration of Lights

The Celebrat1on of L~ghts was made poSSible by the Edsmen-Students Orgamzed for ServiCes Candles
pi.Jced m sandbags along the front of the Mam Bwldmg were a beautiful s1ght to celebra te Chnst"s
birth

"

�p
H

0
N

0
T
H

0
N

'8
0
Marg1e Kmtz. and Gordon Markley look over Phonothon

"

mater~als

to ensure a smooth-flow1ng operat1on.

�Vic tory!

The 1980 Phonothon was an
outstanding effort by alumn1. students.
faculty. staff. and fnends of the Umvers1ty.
The goal of 135.000.00 was ach1eved
pnor to the completiOn of the Phonothon.
In fac t. the strong sp1r1t of the volunteer
forces rema1ned and pushed the final total
up to 147,000.00
The Phonothon. whiCh has become the
UnwerSJty's ma1n fund dnve m the fast
three years, has certamly earned a
welcome place on campus. The success
of the Phonothon IS Significant and
necessary, but there 1s someth1ng much
more 1mportant. The Afumm offiCe has
caught on to something that IS a true
diSplay of commumty effort. The second
floor of the ReUmon, where the
Phonothon takes place each year. has

really become an annual meet1ng place
for old fnends. £ ven more so. 1t has
become a t1me when alumn1 meet new
friends and have an opportumty to meet
present students. Th1s poSitive S1tuat1on
becomes even more eVIdent for the
students mvolved. Freshman Jackt
Mordue expressed a very common
feelmg m a qwte conCise manner: "I
absolutely loved the Phonothon. ''
The Alumm offiCe. whiCh readtly adm1ts
1ts need and apprectafiOn for the student
help. should be commended for an
outstanding act1v1ty whiCh has broadened
the scope of many students and. 1n turn,
has strengthened the bonds between the
students and Un1Vers1ty Marg1e K1ntz.
Dlfector of Alumm Programs. saKI the
success of this year's Phonothon IS "all

due to the volunteers. ··She further added
that. "Th1s IS the best group of student
volunteers we 've ever had. ..
The mcentiVe pnze of an all expenses
paid tnp to the coast was not JUSt ''won.··
but deservedly earned by M1ke Guerra
The funds ratsed will go to support the
Umvers1ty's operating budget to help
better the lives of all members of the St.
Edward's commumty.
All students. faculty. and staff who
partiCipated 1n thiS worthwhile acttVIty
should feel the sense of pride that was
an ever-present fac tor m mak1ng this
year's Phonothon such a huge
success
-Gordon Markley
courtesy of H1lltopper

�Twtla Hetser and Margaret Ktnse/la smg out lhetr parts tn a mtxture of beautiful harmonies.

�Looks Back

�Both the Hilltopper Chorale and the Omni Singers
brought
exciting
and
excellent musk: to the SEU
campus this past school
year. The Omni Singers
culminated a busy spring
term with performances of
"CELEBRATE LIFE!" in Our
Lady of Peace Chapel.
Brother
Dustan
Bowles,
playwright, director, and
theatre critic, coordinated
the entire production, making massive banners of the
Four Evangelists, and sett1ng
up an unusual blocking and
lighting of the show. Costumes came from
the
Theatre Department. Excellent musicianship was shown
by Karol Ann Badgett and
Tina Jo Harris who played
piano and flute , respectively.
The dramatization of the life
of Christ was a beautiful
experience for both singers
and
audiences.
Mark
Sassman was the Christus.
The Hilltopper Chorale
spent three months in
r ehearsal for the most
spec tacular musical event of
their history-two performances
of
Carl Orff's
" CARMINA BURANA. " Written in 1937, the hour-long
setting of Latin and German
p oems found in a monastery
in 1841 is one of the most
difficult works written in this
or any century. May 9 saw
a magical perfor mance 1n
Moody Hall of the entir e

work without a single cut.
Soloists taken from the
Chorale
included
K1m
Benson, Laura Makay, Twila
Heiser, C.P. Glennon, Chuck
Caudill,
and
Fred
Zimmerman. The Learning
Resource
Center
staff
recorded the performance
and made cassettes and
reel-to-reel tapes of the
performance that, according
to some San Antonio Mastersingers 1n the audience,
was better than two of their
performances
with
the

symphony.
Joseph Haydn's lovely
"Missa brevis Sancti Joannis
de Deo" closed the year for
both Omni and Hilltopper
performers with three string
players from the Austin
Symphony, Richard Lemen,
pianist,
and Karol Ann
Badgett at the organ. It was
a fitting climax to a year
enriched by performances of
Handel's Chandos Anthem,
"0 Praise the Lord with one
Consent," and Brahms' "LiebesiJeder Walzer, " Opus 52.

�Brother Gerald Muller. C.S.C.. IS the man who has made
the success of the H1lltopper and Omro cho1rs posSible. W1th
a little push1ng and pull1ng here and there. and the help of
a grac1ous admm1strat1on. the Carnage House now IS fully
carpeted and eqwpped w1th a1r cond1l!Orong. Members of the
cho1rs will no longer have to suffer through smoldermg days
and excruc~at1ng heat.

Brother Gerald conducts the cholf at the Chnstmas concert
Atflum

A Cont:Ht preSMred
Hal

~t3S

lfl

lfl

Moody

Theres.J

en,oyNJ by al

..

�1980·'81 HONORS PROGRAM

The Honors Program enables students who are
academically talented as well as highly motivated to
plan their own course of study. The first Honors
Program student to graduate was Barbara Slaughter.
a transfer from Austin Community College and a
Criminal Justice Major.

�Man and Woman of Year
Ryan, Smyth

Chns Ryan. from Ho-Ho-kus. New Jersey, was a
recipient of Who ·s Who Among Students tn AmeriCan
UroverSJttes and Colleges. Chns has wntten for both
Hilltopper and Tower staffs. and was sports
mformat10n d1rector of the Un1verstty Chrts was also
a member of Alpha Ch1 along w1th be1ng a freshman

mtern
F1rol1sts for Man of the Year were Jon Herron, Andrew

Pelegreen, and Steve Shadowen

MJry A/fen Smyth, from Anaheim, Califorma. was
a rectp1ent of Who ·s Who Among Students m
Amencan UrnversttJes and Colleges She has been on
the Oe;,m's List and very act1ve throughout her colfege

career tn student government She served as Vtee
President of her semor ci.Jss Servmg as a cha1r
person lor Women's Concerns Committee and a seat
on the AcademiC Counctl add to her other

ach,evements
F1nal,sts for Woman of the Year were Cathryn
Clack, Maureen Dugan. and CI.:Jre McFadden

�..

�Coffee House Entertainment

It 's Friday mght, you have no date, your check book reads
$0 00, so the best thmg to do 1s mosey to the Reun1on and
Its ten to some of Austtn's, as well as Sr Ed's. finest talent, Beer.
tnends. and great musiC make for a fantastiC t1me at the
Reumon

..

�lntramurals
fntramura/s is for those who want to stay away
from the pressures and tiresome workouts of varsity
athletics. School pressures can be tough to handle
and with a little bit of exercise and good times, those
pressures can be somewhat al/eviat~.

��52

����51. Edward's University

presents

YVONNE
DECARLO
starring in
BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE
By Leonard Gershe

Designed and Directed
by
PETER O'ROURKE

S6

�CAST

Don Baker
M Tanner
Mrs &amp;ker
Ralph Aust,r,
Understudy for
Understudy for
UnderstWy for
UnderstWy for

Don
)II . .

Mrs &amp;ker
Ralph

Terry Evans
Rachel Jones
Yvonne DeCarlo
Chuck Caudill
Chuck Pulb.am
Debbie Bennet
Sue Constan McMJhn
VICtor Steele

PRODUCTION STAFF
Stage Manager
AsSistant Stage Manager
Box OffiCe Manager
Sound Operators
Props Supervtsor
Wardrobe M1stress

Nina KariCk
Bob Lowe
Llflda Collman
Clark Beach
Cra'll Kanne
M:Jrgaret Johnson
Dons Ltndbbum

"

�St. Edward·s University
presents

OUR TOWN
by
Thornton Wilder

Staged by
EDWARD MANGUM
Costume Design by
SUSAN LOUGHRAN
Set Design by
C LARK BEAC H
Light Design by
ROBERT LOWE

�Cast
Fred Z1mmerman
Mrs Gibbs
Vrgn.:J Johnson
George Gibbs
Terry J Evans
Rebecca Gibbs
... •••• .. .... • ....
DebbH! Czarnowsk1
Mr Webb
L P Glennon
Mrs Webb
Sue Constar McMdhn
Laura Lynn Makay
Emily Webb
Wal)' Webb
Ken Svejkovsky
Ho~ Newsome
. ..... .... .... .. . ....
Hilary GJrrett
Joe Crowel
KeV1f'l Monrgomery
Professor WAJrd
Lance A Sm1th
Canst~ Warren
CraliJ Kanne
Mrs Soames
K~m V Benson
Sam Cr&amp;ll
Joel C1tly
Joe Stodd.Jrd
Chuck CJudtl. Jr
Miss Corcoran
LeW L St;ner
Mr Stwrt
MIChael Goelrlf'IB
Mrs Forrest
Dons Lindblom
St Crowell
MK:hiJel Stack
Eddie Morgan
D. J Carter
ernestine
Deborah Gaughan
Mr Fersuson
'8ob Treasure
~ge 's l.h:Jerstudy
Ctvck Ciwdtl. Jr
FnMCJs and Netghbors
Tri!ICy SherfTJlJfl,
L.xld..1 Colman. .AJdy Cumtm1gs. AtJrgaret Johnson. Susan Hakieman,
JaM Poth. D«Jra K~. Jane Syf\lester. rna Jo Garnson. Em C
W.:tgr'lt!f'", PeptH&gt;rMinton. D.awn Watson, Deborah Hams. Martha Patno,
KiJth~ Krooss. lob.! Forstchen, Thomasna waraa:t. Co~Hn K~an.

Or. Gibbs

~ Mar~- Robin

Produc t ion S taff
AsSistant to Director
Stage M:mager
Box OffiCe M&lt;Jnager
Sound Oper-ators
AsSistant Stage Managers
House Manager
Ltght Board Oper-ator
Prop SuperVIsor
ASSistant Costumer

K1m V Benson
M.Jr~ HoiU
Ltnda Colman
Grey Goodye&lt;Jr,
Durw! N&lt;Jthey
M.Jrg.:Jret Johnson,
Joel C1tly
Chuck Caudfll, Jr
Robert Lowe
Lor' Fagan
Dons Lndblom

Davrs

..

�A/4/i;
St. Edward's University
presents

4o

~
;.c

SANDY DENNIS
IN

&gt;

z

=
=
-..
::z:

g THE LADY'S NOT FOR BURNING zr'2

=
::£

BY
Chris topher Fry

-..

::z:

~

"In the past I wanted to be hung. It was worth while being hung
to be a hero, seeing that life was not really worth living."
-A convict who confessed falsely to a murder, February 1947

Staged by
NOEL HARRISON
Costume Designed by
SUSAN LOUGHRAN
Light Design by

BILL Mc MILLAN
Set Design by
PETER O'RO URKE

~

=

r'2

�Cast

RIChard
Thomas Mendlp
A.kton Hot
MchoJas Deii!Le
Margaret Deii!Le
Humphrey DeiiiLe
Hebb«! Tyson
).)net Jourdema~

The Cha,..,
Edward Tappercoom
Matthew Slupps
Miss ~ · Understudy

.......... Clay A. Goodwtn
.. Fred Ztmmerman
.. Margaret Johnson
. .... ..... Chuck Pulbam
... . .. She«a Stansbury
Michael S Mac ~uley
C. P Glennon
Sandy De&lt;ns
Chuck Caudtl
Cra~g Kanne
RICh Johnson
Constance Campbel

Produc tion, Staff
ASSistant to fltrector
Stage Mahager
ASSIStant Stage Managers
Box OffiCe Manager
AsSistant Costumer

KeWJ Pfw'lney
Nina KariCk
Vlfp11a JohnSOfl,

John Poth
Lnd.J Colman

DortS LJndblom

"

�~,.~

~'"

~

)~

6

A(4/i

nti&gt;W.®~f UNIIJ{R{ITY')'~

$MARY MOODY NORTUtN TWTRC ~
f-.,

~

2

Presents

NO~L AA~RI(ON
in

~

:Z::

~ THE ROAR or Tllr :
~

5
~

GREA8AIII7 ;;
lHE SMEll

Of 1Ht CROWD
by
Anthony Newley &amp;
Leslie Brieusse
Musical Director

Brother Gerald Mulle r
Choreographer
Renillta Sanford

Costume Coordinator

Dwight Richard Odie
Director &amp; Designer

Pe t e r O'Ro urke

62

=

i:

�Cast
Urclw'ls
Marun (Red)
Jane tOrarweJ_
Martha (Yelow)
OJwn (Green)

L.nda

(8~) .

.bclu (frtdt&amp;o)
Rcuarne (VIOlet)
Rae~ (Pink)
Tna (Aqua)
(Gray)

Produc t i on Staff
Stage Mamger
••
• • M.JrJiNJ Albnght
.. .. . .. •.. . .bne Sylvester
M;Jrthd PatinO
Dawn IVJtson
Linda Colman
)dcquellne Mordue
Ro.zanne Ward
Rae~ Jones
Ttna Jo Garnson
Mna Kanck

ASSIStant Stage MJnager

Llgtlt Board Opeator

•

M:JiiJ Forstchen
Wahed
Chdlethla W._,ms,
Debbie C.zarnowsJu

Thoma~ A

-... -

Noel Harflson
Laura Lynn MJk4y
ChuCk Caudtl. .Jr

to S..
to Cocly
to Qrl
to Kid

KM Thomas
CMstoph&amp;" StJiey
Brad Dun/..er
Jeff Rose
O.,wn Watson

"-'- s.m.t

113

�THE
2nd ANNUAL
STUDENT FESTIVAL
THE FROGS
A Semor Duectmg Recital
by
KIM V . BENSON

2

=
=
=
~

rr.l

2

~

~ STEALTHEBROOM~
BUT NOT
•,
~

::E:

~

THE SCENE
A Sen10r Acting Recital
by
DEBBIE GAUGHAN
ond
TRACY SHERMAN

'

=
~
=
rr.l

f"J..

0
_

DARING TO BE DIFFERENT
A Senior Actmg Reota!
by

KATHY A POLK

�STEAL THE BROOM BUT NOT THE SCENE
Tracy Stwman
Agnes
Gertrude

CJebble G.Jugh.Jn
Stage M.:Jroger

THE FROGS

Production StiJff

The Cast
Bob Treasure
Ken 111omas
C/r1SIO~ St•y
JaM Sytvestt!f'

Doony&gt;o•
x.:tnrtw,u:
H~MVes

CD'ps.

Chon4 ,....,.

~OS

the j¥JIIOf" of H~S

Hostess ol

,.,..,_,
""'""""

0rrKUX

ASSIStant 0trKttX
Stage AOI'Idger
ASSIStant Stage M.ln.lgH

Kim Y. Ben1on
wasnrt"
Lon Fagan
Renee PrHton

em

Craw KJt('l()e

rIN

"""'"'

-,.,,.

Andrew R Peiegreen, •

Jo Garmon,

Judy Cumm.-ws. Robin D.Jvrs, Lon Fagan
Evan Kefey_ HII.:J,ry G.Jrret
Chns Klaphooli
Renee Preston
EtseW~

m

wa..M'd
Chuck Cavdtl, Jr

ThomaS~¥

D J_ CMter

Agchyt~s

LIJI'IU A SITIIth

DARING TO BE DIFFERENT
Kathy A Polk

Stage M.:mager

Plano Player
Able VCHCe
Ll8hts
Sound

Costumes
Props
Drum•

Conl'lle Campbelf
RIChard Allen Lemen

Ken Thomas
Chalethla WII&amp;.Jms

Sharon Round

Lesbe Staser
Dons Llfldblom
Renee Preston

Ken Thorrus

..

���5
T
A

F
F

Admission 'sOffice: clockwise-John Lucas. JocieLuna, Tina

Rocha, Aurora Guevara. Jean Franz, Carole Jones

Business Office: front row-Oofls Yow. Teresa Senne. Juan Sa/mas. Dolores MaCias, back
row-Fred Scott. Barbara Booher, Linda Carver, Helen McCord. Maolyn Beaman. Roger
Hernandez

68

�Libr~ry: back row-Barbara Stock, Joe Sprug, Eileen
Shocket, Conroe PuNey, Diane Tyson, front row-Paulette
Jackson, Kathy Herztk. Brenda Garcta, Brother Phlfhp
Odette

..

�Financial Aid Office: smmg down I. -r. -Francisco Martinez, Arturo Cruz, Doris
Constantme, Nora Lumbrera, stand1ng I. -r. -AitCJaArredondo, 8ef1ndaBamhart,
Santa Garza, MitZI Thomas. Tina Ramos

70

�R•ristr•r's Offic•: 1.-r. -Phyllts

Re~ser.

Janet Yokum. Diane Hardy, lJnda

Donna Holcomb,

L~por~

11

�Reunion: Dave McElroy. Rick Garcia

Bookstore: I. -r. - Maribel Moriada. Maryrose

Hightower. Mary Pat Helton

M.aifroom : David Flores, Dorothy Mills

72

�L e~rning

Resource Center -Burt Long

73

�A
D

M
I
N
I

s

T

'

Brother Stephen V. Walsh, C.S.C.
President

R
A
T
I

0
N
Brothe r He nry Altmi ll e r, C.S.C.
Execvt&lt;ve Vice Presldent/ Academoc Dean

�Robert Muaer•u•r
AsSOCI.Jtl! Ac4dtmlc Dull

Rlch.,.d KlnMJ'
Assistant to ttw Ptes.d«!t

Sislet&gt; .kan Bur bo, I.H. M.
DNn ot Sfl.ldMrs

"

�Jean M eyer
Dean of New College

Dave Dickson
Vk:e PreSident

Financ~al

Dr. John Knud sen
Vice PreSident for /JnlverStty Relatums

Affairs

�Bob Strona
Orec:tor FtststvtiOf!lll RttRMch

Ft. l et"oy c...-n.n1ic.h. c .s.c .
Or.ctor o1 CMnpus AWI!stry

Sftlet" M.O.Ieinto So9hie Weber
01....-mM!. o.p.rtrWit of

s.t-...._.6 .wJ Socul Soetlcots

n

�,... I

.:J}

Or. Glenn Hinkle

Cfla,rman_ Center for Teachmg and Learmng

JoHph Sprug
Librar&lt;.Jn
78

-

�F

A

c
u
L
T

y
Genld e-rett

hstructor of (npsh

C. l • Atm1tro"'
• HMirll

c.. AdmnsiT.Ir.otl

"

�Mari e loui5e Bittner
Instructor of H1story

lizanne Bran n
Lecturer 111 Theatre Arts

Pe ter Buhmann
Art Instruc tor

80

�____,,.
'I

)

Brolher l oul• Co., C.S.C.
AsSIStMir Prof~ of AU~tiCJ

..

t;
(/

-"

�William D. Coffey, Jr.
Professor of Busmess Admrrnstrat1on

Jamn M. Cor bett, Jr.
AsSistant Professor of Educatron

�13

�Paul M. Fe nech
AsSistant Profeuor "' AccotXIt"''f

,•.

~~ '
'

·~
Mona Fultz
hstructor "' Theatre Arts

Raul Garcia
Lecturet" "' Philosophy

Reyn.ldo C.)'bn
lecturet""' Art
85

�flo, deH•rt
Assocsate ProfeS5or of Ecb:at1on

.

Brother Wi1H11m Dunn, C.S.C.
Professor of HtStory

�Raul Garci.J
Lecturer in Phrlosophy

85

�II

\
Brother Jamu Han.on, C.S.C.
Assoc~te Profl!ssor of ~gy

Paul Hlltpold

86

��M11rc: l11 Kinny
L«tur~ .n [ngtsh

I '.
', \ ' ...

Jamel C. Koc:h
Assoc0te Professor of Econorrncs

Jilek K. Larabee
L«tur~ .n Accourttlfltl

88

I

,

�,,

I

N•ncy Leff
Lecturer "' Social Work

89

�Joy lock

�Brother Don Marengo, C.S.C.
Campus Muwstry

Edward Mangum
Professor of Theatre Arts

"

�J immy T. Milll
Assoc.ate Professor of 81ology

LIUril Modrey
92

�Claude Nolen
Professor of H1story

Terry Newton
lnstriJCtor"' Enghsh

�Brother Philip Odette, C.S.C.
ArchMst

..

Peter O"Rourke
A SSIS!oltllt Prof~ssor

of

ThNtr~

Arts

�95

�96

�Brother Mark Rufe, C.S.C.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics

97

�..

Ke'lin R. Stowert
AssiStant Prol~ssor ol

[nV~ronmMtal S~s

�C11thy Weber

Instructor

ltl

Bussness Admtn1s trat10n

�David Williams
New Cohge F~y/Advlsor

100

����Improvement was

Row 1 L to R ../MIIH Whit~. JcM O'NHI, .Janice
T'I'H.rmsn, Vsnessa)DIV!son, M3rty81ndf!r. Top Row
Suavan. ~ Brqeos, RhondiJ

Manag~-Piltty

DtJworth.

Kathryn

Hopll~ns,

Coach-Diane~

104

Jaclue KrJcham

�the key word
Debbie Budges. Marty Binder, and
Vanessa Johnson await Concordia's

Improvement was the key word for the 1980 Women's Volleyball team. because
thiS was the firsr-winning season the team and Coach Diane Daniels had ever
experienced. There was the usual lack of height. but with consistent playing and
no prominent injuries. the Toppers were able to pull it off. This year 's team also
had a bit more experience under its belt Freshmen Vanessa Johnson. Janise Thurman.
and Rhonda Dilworth came off the bench to contribute to the team's victories.
Returning this year were JUniors Kathryn Hopkins. Julie 0 'Neal. and Janice White.
sophomores Jackie Kirkham and Marty Binder, and transfer student from Concordia.

Debbie Bridges.

Sophomore
Marty
Binder
prepares to serve tile Toppers to

a wctory.

"'

�Kltfhryn HopltlfiS UKUfH 1J
s,W..~ Oliff

opponents

fr~shmMI

V.-nes.s.J Johnson re-

turnstJbkx:k

106

�SEU (W-L)

w

w
w
w
w
L

w
w

w
w
w
w
w

w
L

w

w
L
L
W
L

Stephen F. Austrn
Concord1a
Bee County
Season Record: 18-17-1

w
w

�Kathy Crow shoots for two
wtN/e MyrtiS Jorden and l.Jz
HttrnandeL set ready for t~

next move

Improvement was
Kathryn Hoplons rebouncls
and
shoots
over
Huston- rllotson defense

108

�An outside shot by Hopkins helps
the Toppers to an Incarnate Word
victory.

...

�Hop shoots lor two dvrlfV tn.
NA.I.A ~~~o~l pqy-otts
[MSI T•us BMPl&lt;Sl Co~• Ill

•z•111s1

CorSJCM~.

110

T•~t•s

�The Toppers get exp1K:1t
game plans from Coach
Mcilroy.

Over tough defense. Manna
Tijenna adds two pomts to
the Topper score.

Despite a losing season, the 1980-81 Women's Basketbaff team
improved in other areas. New coach Sharon Mcilroy. a graduate of Texas
Tech where she played varstty basketball. brought about a sudden change
that kept the SEU fans coming back even though the losses outweighed
the wins. During the Christmas break the Toppers lost their 5'11'' center.
Linda Vaughn, but they were able to take up the slack and keep up
the hard work. Returning to the Topper lineup were seniors Cathy Crow
and Sandi Carlisle: JUniors Kathryn Hopkins and Sandra Cardenas: and
sophomore Myrtis Jorden. Freshman members were Betty Glover, Ltz
Hernandez. Vanessa Johnson. and Manna Tijerina. Lmda Vaughn was
a junior transfer and Pam Wh1tt. also a jumor, was new to the team.
With the backbone th1s year's team bwlt, a promismg future awa1ts
them.

Season Record: 11 -15

�Basketball

Senior Jerry Ha1nes hustles down the court to prepare for a
Topper score.

112

�Greg Marshall dnb·
bles around Texas
Lutheran defense to
set up the Topper
offense.

Andre Glo ver, center, outjumps opponen t during a
battle against T.L.C.

"'

�Larry Krus~ puts up an easy
two for the Toppers.

RK:k Hawktns goes up for two
With a JUmper.

�Team
Texas Wesleyan
Tarleton State
Sam Houston State
McMurray
Sui Ross
Texas Wesleyan
Baylor
Trinity
Howard Payne
Texas A&amp;l
Tarleton State
Southwest Texas
Houston Bapt1st
Howard Payne
Le Tourneau
Texas A&amp;/
Huston-Tillotson
East Texas Baptist
Texas Lutheran
St. Mary's
Southeastern
Mary Hard1n-Baylor
East Texas Bapt1st
St. Mary's
Texas Lutheran
Mary Hardm-Baylor
Southwestern
Hard1n-S1mmons
Huston-Tillotson
Season Record: 13-16
Conference.· 7-5

SEU(W-L)
L

w
L

L

w
w
L

w
L
L

w
L
L

L

w
L

w
L

w
L
L

w
w
L

w
w
L

L

v

Senior Johnny Campbell shoots over defense to boost
the Topper score.

Coach Dan Montgomery's Hilltoppers finished in third place in the
Big State Conference posting a respectable 7-5 conference record,
and a 13-15 season record. The Toppers remained in contention for
a playoff bid until/ate in the season. losing heartbreakers to St. Mary's
(70-69) and Southwestern (77-71) at home. St. Mary's went on to
win the conference with a 12-0 record. Guard Johnny Campbell. forward
Marcus Jones. and post Andre Glover were selected second team All-Big
State Conference.

'"

�Marcus Jones puts m an easy two pomts off the
backboard.

116

�A loose ball makes its way to Texas A&amp;/ hands.

Front row: Coach Dan Mont·
gomery. M1ke Jones, Johnny
Campbell, Jerry Hames, Greg
Marshall, Alan Catalam, Bob
Wilkes: back row: Marcus Jones,
J1m Jaegar. Robert Wilburn, Andre
Glover.
Larry
Kruse.
RICk
Hawkms

117

�Lady Netters '81

Coach Damels and seroors
Clare McFadden and Cindy
Brown take time out from
practiCe ro Share a JOke.

C1ndy Brown executes her
forehand shot.

118

�Freshman Laura Yzaguirre
displays a fine backhand
against her opponent.

Margaret Cooper. third year letterwoman. makes an intense shot to her opponent.

~----------------------------------------------------------

------

"'

�Margaret
Coof)6 and
Coach Daniels talk about
the upcomlf"lg mat~s.

L. to R.-Ciare McFadden, Margaret
Cooper, Cindy Brown, Uz18 Sliva, Laura
Yzagwrre, and Clare Guerra

120

�The 1980 -'81 Women's Tennis team came out o f the season with only three wins and eight
losses. With a little more consistency and with fewer team problems. the Lady Netters would
have been able to pull it off. Returning netters were seniors Clare McFadden and Cindy
Brown-most valuable and most improved-respectively; and junior Margaret Cooper. Clare
Guerra. Lizie Silva. and Laura Yzaguirre made up the freshman squad. With such a young team.
improvement is definite.

Lizie Silva practices good
form with her forehand.

MA TCHES
TEAM
Trinity
Southwest Texas
Texas Lutheran
Texas A&amp;/
Mary Hardin-Bay/or
St. Mary's

SEU
Lost
Lost
Won I: Lost
Lost
Lost
Won

2
2
I
I
2
2

Season Record 3-8

'"

�Soccer

�St. Ed"s receives trophy from
Brother Stephen

Toppers
after the

The 1980-'81 Men's Soccer Team can be called
anything but rookies. which. in a sense. they really were.
But that did not stand in their way. Led by Coach Adolfo
Sanchez. the Toppers were able to puff off an excellent
first-year season. They won a trophy for their
performance.

123

�Men Netters

Freshman John McFadden
displays a strOflg forearm.

Durmg tenms there
baseball game.

'"

1s t1me

to stop and check out the

�Brother Emmet Strohmeyer watches with a
concerned eye over the progress of his
players.

"'

�PractiCe makes for a Topper
VICtory.

Mark Pla t t executes his
forearm durmg an 1mportant
match.

126

�The Men's tennis Team inevitably won the Conference title with an
undefeated. unscored-upon 6-0 conference record. The championship
marked the 20th such title for the Hilltoppers in 21 years, all under
the direction of Brother Emmett Strohmeyer. C.S.C. Paul Weber.
Team co-captain, died in a tragic accident two days after the
Hilltoppers won the Conference Championship and was later named
the BSC most valuable player. Other SEU All-Conference selections
were freshman Luis Stephens and sophomore Kevin Mullins. Mullins
was the BSC Tournament singles champ. Mark Platt and Mark Pringle
were the BSC doubles champions.

Team
Sam Houston State
Lamar
Rice
Southwest Texas State
Mary Hardm -Baylor
Sam Houston State
Southwestern
East Texas Baptist
St. Mary·s
Concordia
Huston -Tillotson
Texas Lutheran
Umverstty of Texas at Dallas

SEU
3
9
9
9
0

6
0
0

0
1

0
0
0

6
0
0

0
6
3
6
6
6
7
6
6
9

127

�Baseball Fever

�Close call for first baseman.

Sophomore catcher. Mark Cyner. warms up
before a game.

�lUtter, llutJM JMtwv;s tr~s for
• Nu trt to ,.,., ttt. ro~

JCor•

T

-·
8Hides

tll'yo)"'Y

ttt.

ptn#.

sp«Utors CM• time to munch on

130

�Ed Vallenzamo and Mark Cyner confirm the next pitches.

131

�Myron Gknortt. SMIOr. pcltS hts ., lrltO

• s-w Gknortt w.u

cho~ 1r1

tJw

ftlhtHnth round by Toronto 8AJe

Jays

�At the end of the fifth inning, the game was called due to the ten point rule. The
toppers chalked up another victory.

The Basebafl Team racked up a solid 35-16 overall record and a 10-7 Conference
record. good for a third place finish in the seven team field. The team received outstanding
performances from Myron Gilmore (batted .389. knocked 14 home runs, stole nearly
30 bases. and accumulated over 50 runs batted in), Henry Thames (clouted 10 home
runs while playing with a hampered leg) and Morgan Lartch (threw a no-hitter against
Huston-Tillotson en route to an 8-2 overall record).

133

���Freshmen
Alphonsus A.guh
Tank Ahmed
F?ashldAI·Amm
Mohammed Alamn
Jauregut Alberto
Ahm«i Al·Farag

Zakt AI·Farag
Mohamed AI·Hay
Khaled AlkhaMa
Ktoabd Al·Khahfa
Khaltfa AI·Khaltfa
Munlra Al·Khahfa

Sha/Jer Almoussa
Wessal AI·Orrayed
Haytham A/oahtany
Wael AJ.Saffar
A wad Alshlhry
VaStgh Amtr

"'

�Dearw Ammons
Mohle/din Atrach
James Bagan

Everett Barker
Eduardo Berrones
Robert Beyers

Kflsta Bockoven
Xwnrara Bolroiquez
Belinda Bonilla
Pablo Bonrl/a
Dolores Brzozowski
Mohammed Bude1n

Ja1me Cabrera
RICardo Campos
JoAnn Cano
Francisco Cantu
Norma Cantu
Richard Candews

MiChael Carrell
Donald Carter. Jr.
JoAnn Cerda
Martin Chapa
Loveday Chikwendu
Albert Cipolla

Laa Cifelli
Lmda Cisneros
Aldea Clmremont
Elizabeth Corona
Janet Correa
G/ona Cortez

Mana CortlfliJS
Thomas Crawford
Eduardo Cuellar
Eajilrao Dagnmo
PatriCk Da1/ey
Abbie DaVIs

�Mary £MVIS
Angela DeAngelo

Elle Debs
Jorge Df!Ciermont
RICardo De La Rosa
)uarla De La Torre

Isabel

De La Vega
DeLeon

F8~

Brenda DeShay

Joyce Doherty
Jerlfllfer Durst
Chene Edwards

RIChard Egan
MIChael [ICI!elmann
LOUIS Eilts• ..lr
Scot t Englehardt
Lor1 Fagan
Marguer1te Fallon

John Farrow
Joseph Fenton
Fred FernandeL
Serg10 Fernafl(hl:
Ken Fesler
Gary F1tzs1mmons

BelmaFLores
Gustavo Flores
Forstchen
Laura Foster
E/JdelliJ Fraust o
CNstn Ho-Wa1 Fu
Ma~

138

�Steve Gajeak
Grace Galvan
Eduardo Garces
Bentto GarcJa
Mary Alice GarcJa
Ramiro Garcia

Hillery Garrett
Tlfli:f Jo Gamson
LetJCJa Garza

Patricia Garza
Sergio Garza
Laura Gatewood

Mary Gerstner
Richard Ginn
Jaime G/orJa
Betty Glover

Arm1ta Gohary
Armando Gonzales
Rudy Gonzales
Silvia Gonzales

Vicente Gonzalez
FranciSCo Gonzalo
DaVId Gran
Adalberto Guerra
Clar~ssa

Guerra

Oralia Guerra

Scmtos Guerrero
E/oy Gut~errez
Mae Haua1
Hazem Hamadeh
Shelley Hampton
DaVId Hanson

139

�Debor.Jh HarriS
Randy HarrtS
MOfiiQ!Je Hff&gt;ert

Hamoon Hedayat
Cec!IJa Hendrtx
LIZ Hernant:lu

Franctsco Hernandez
Orlando Hernandez
Lu~Herrera

Glenda HIC!t.S
AI'IS Hobby

Tamara Hogg

Annett~

Hostalt.

Kq Fill Hvng
Cheryl Hunt~y
AnntriCt! Inman

Roger fssa
Dal'ld J.arrel

[®ardo .Jaur~l!IJI
kff Johnson
Va~ssa )~son

RacheJ

Jo~s

PatriCIB Jwuu

Maydel Kamennnd

Dentvs KaM
CriJlll Kanne
fsmaee/Kaflmt
C~ Keegan
M.iJrgar~tK~ugtl

N&lt;KJe.em Khan

Dwaynt! Krley
.)ac~

Krlt.ham

CharlesK~g

.JudyKOCIBn
Cher~e

Kowalczyk
Vctor Kralt.ue

,..

�Shen Krenek
Kathie Kroos
Oesp~na Lambros
Maurice Lange
Chns Langley
Carlos Lara

John Lara
Merry Lara
Manuel Ledesma
Wilhe Lesane
Otto Levine
Olga Licea

Marg~ Ligarde
Roberto Lsra
Senalda Ltscano
Yen Shah L111
David Lockie

John Lohmann
Rober t Longoro
Eduardo Lopez

Lu1sa Lopez
Rolanda Lopez
Mansour Loz,

Jeffery Ludwick
Hilda LUIS

Andrew Lyon

Mike MacCauley
Palr~ekMxk~e

Theresa Mader
Arturo Molina
Ltsa Maranto
Ana Marallilo

�Pete MarceNus
Diana Marquez
PatriCk M.:Jrt'B'"'f!ttl

Rebecca Martlfl

Gudelto MartJI'IU
Helen

Mart~z

OneS/1710 M.:JrtlfleZ

Susana M.:Jrtnez
Sylvia

Mart~nez

H1t0s/ll Masuda
Jorge M.:Jtheus
Shlnya M.:Jtsukubo
Diana Mazuca
Greg McCord
Jolri McFadden

Edith McKendr~
Amy McKenna
Anna Me&lt;&gt;na
Pepper Mlflton
Ho~rMireles

Allee Mokarram

Cheryf Monr~
Pablo Monsant
KeWI Montgomery
MIChael Montonen
Robert Moore
Me/Ydad MoosaVI

Jacqueline Mordue
Ram~ro Morlfl
Sharon Momson

-·Munoz

Evangelifla Mvnoz
Jose Munoz

142

�Mille Myba
Donna Najarian
Afif Zah1 Nasr
Euas Nasr
Li/1 Nasr
Dianne Nathey

Mary Navarre
Jose Navarro
Arthur Nichting
Anthony Njollu
Elia Nunez
Anthony Nwolle

Jose Olea
Timothy O'Keefe
Debora Of1ver
Michael Olson
Sylvester Onyejialla
Enrque Ortega

MIChael Ortegon
Saud Osailan
Elizabeth O'Stlea
Sharon Paez
George Parma
Mana Pastrana

Martha PatinO
Araceli Pedraza
Guadalupe Pena
Gary Penta
Cynthia Pepper
Carolyn Perry

'"

�Amy Person

Clint

P~te

Mark Petty
(riC PICkle
~ahPike

Mary Pfat/J

Pete Porras
.JoiVt Poth

Terr~

Preston

Chuck PIAam

Stac~

Pyrch

Regmaldo Ramf!rl

FerfllJndo Ram~ez
Matthew Ready
ANison Re~mer
DominiC Revet/hac

HUSSHI At Rlda
SuzatVle Riley

RICMdo R10s
.JaunRivera
Joyce RobHlson
Marcus Robtnson

EW Rodrlgl.lf!L
Norma RoOnguez

Vlfgrrwa Rodr'811fi'L
Gerardo Romero
Ale}IJnoro Romo

Aks.andro Romo
Jeff Rose

John RoSinshJ

�Debbie Rowley
Hector Ru~
Shervin Sadeghi
Hocine Said
Sanad Salem
Juan Salinas

Maricei&lt;J Salinas
Javier Sanchez
Tim Savins
David Schott
Connie Seale
Fadi Semaan

~

Gumercinde Serna
Larry Serrano
Massoud Setayesh
Dan Sharp
Patricia Shaw
Mohammed Shaya

John Sheppard
Marsha Silberman

Elizabeth Silva
Mark Simard

Brenda S1mmons
Sandra Simmons

Letha Simpson
Chns Sm1th
Lance Sm1th
Mana Sol/a
Jose Sotelo
Valer~&lt;~no Soto

�Lws StevMs
Frances Stout
Martha St Roma¥1

Coleen 5u&amp;ov30
KMneth Sve,Kov'SIIy
Jane Sylvester

Rteardo Tamayo
Manna TiJerlfl8

Gary Thompson
JaniCe Thcxman

Ann&lt;'"""
Ce/0 Tovar

Renee Trenholm
Hermna Tymlft$1U
Bill TySJnger

Chukwunyere Uaochukwu

"""Uch&lt;
Cynthia

Va~Mzveia

Rlffldy Vara
Arturo Vasquez
OsclV Vera

Mana VettJencourt
Leonard Vtgonto
Ar/6tte VIla

'"

�Joe Villalon
Ju/1a Villan~.~eva
Jame Villarreal
M1ke Villarreal
David Villasana
Elise Wagner

Faysal Wahab
Julie Wallis
Thomasme Walraed
Rozanne Ward
Dawn Watson
Lon Wayrynen

Lisa Weber
Dldnne Wendt
Marcvs West
Greg Wetegrove
Mark Wheeler
Jemfer Williams

Valetta Wilson
Henry Wong
Wa1-Ch01 Wong
Grey Woodyear
Alejandro Yanes
Janie Yanez

Ceceil Ybarra
PatnCia Young
Laura Yzagv1rre
D10mC1o Zamora

�Sophomores

�Eric J. Abbott
Vic tor Abijaoudi
Oswardo F. Aboujaouda
Remigio Alberto Jr.
Lewis V. Alexander
Lawrence E. Algveseva

Sami J. A/Wiaimani
Youssef 1. Amr
Javier B. Arellano
Ralph M. Attara
Cindy Averyt
Homero Ayala

Clark E. Beach

Ahi 0 . Benkraiam
Melody M. Bennett

Jose T. Bernstein
Beatriz M. Betancourt
Kimberly D. Bradshaw

Eileen M. Braun
Mark J. Bulpitt
Cynthia N. Bustamante

Ramivo Car denas
Kyfe W. Casburn
Hiram A. Castro

Chr;s 5. Cas tillo
Alan D. Ca talrl
Arvla M. Cazares

149

�Mark A. Cyr~er
O«JrJJ F C.urnowW

Dotmwo F DavaJos
D«xxJJh r Oavrs
Mark D. Davrs
DonJJid 8 Dawk.-JS

El.ldeb S D«.eon

D«Jbbe

~tsch

l.bil A DiaL
Br/Jd J DvnkerD6vld G Dvorak
Mohamf!d A. Eldvtt»

~~L

Dora

Erwer-

Esabnt~

M&amp;Csp~nD.U

SuSJJnC

c~en

John P FowterJonJJthan D Frett

KtlfVIeth L

GJJm,.s

LeoMI GJJrcy

150

�Mary A. Garcia
Rick A. Garcia
Santa T. Garcia
Michael R. Goehring
Willie L. Gomez

Gilda 0 . Gonzalez
Josie Gonzalez

Jorge L. Gorordo
John P. Guardiola
Michael G. Guerra
Sandra Guerra

Jan 8. Hardman
Michael J. Harris
Twila R. Heiser
Barbara L. Heming
George M. Hernandez
Oralia Hernandez

"ff!eresa Herrera
Charles A. Hofstaedter
Marie£. Holtz

Fu SIHI Hl.li
Jim 8. Jaeger
Edward M. Jaramillo

Margaret A. Johnson
Macy L. Jorden

Myrt1s Jorden
Val E. .Juve

Suraeha1 Kamt:Jho

�Detxa Kdy
Fored S. Khayyat

ChostopMr W. Klap/Yak
RolN!rt E. Klase

Randy S Foltlfl
DaVKJ L Koempel

Larry H. Kruu
Andrew J. Kubena

U&gt;ta D. Lanz
Cindy lAra
MorglJ/1 S. Urtch
RIChard A. Lemen

Mer~

c

Umat!

Dons E. I.Jnddom
Ronald D. l.JP«
Guadalupe Lopez
Patnc~ot Lopez
Tereu A. Lopez

John C. Loth
RubMLuc10
Mana E. Luna
Ricardo C. Luna
RaymOfld J. Marek Jr.
Sarah M. Maron

Feb T. Martnez

Thelma A. Martnez
Alfredo Matheus
Rod R. Marsh
Fellc~ot M.artii'IU
Leslie J

152

McCt*u

�Michael D. McCoy
Walter A. McGowen
Kevm J. Miller
Rachel C. M1retes
Patricia Molina
Sergto Montemay or

Jukka H. Montonen
Robert A. Moreno
Eddie L. Moore
Enrique A. Novoa
Elyse A. Mueller
Kevin T. MuHins

Paul W. Murphy
Dor;s F. Nickel
Rita 0. Nwokeji
Ralphs-xeydz Nwosu
Venantius Ochaya
Santos Olivarez

Soheila Omrani
Adrian M. Ortega
Terry W. Paella
Denise C. Panek
Ctndy Pantuso
Andrew P. Parma

Fariba Payervand
Cesar A. Prato

Ahcta M. Perez
Manceta Perez

Edie C. Ph/Mips
Lenora D. Post

"'

�St~pt~arw Pullen
Luz M QIMlt~o

HW10 Quiroga
Raul Quiroga
Elva Ramtru

Minerva

Ram~r~z

Sandra Ramr~z
Roy Ramos
N ff H RH!d
Rita H R~ta

Jorp A R~yes
S Rodnjfvu

Jo~

Otana Romo
Miehellf! C RoH

Sharon Round
James P RIN
Moh/Jm«&lt; A

Ru~nl

NormaL. Salas
Mnfa 5.tlaur
MaurHn B. Rym

Ro~ Saldtvar
JorgtJ £ Sanc~z
Tony Sanchez
Yolarld4 Sanchez

Sousan Sarabf

WUI&lt;am A

..

,

~ymour

�Mastane/1, Sh.3rlfpovr
Leland C. Shenl&lt;
Er~c A. Shephard
Kathy C. Shukts
Rose M . Shuler
Candace R. Shupack

Raymond L. Stacey
Leslie L. Sta ser
Bob L. Stewart
Tammy R. Stones
Kenny V. Stroud
Paula M. Stuczynskt

JoAnn Tal&gt;era
Edward W. Tersero

Ken Thomas
M . Elizabeth Thompson

Tim Tobin
Steven TonSI

Robert R. TreaS{J(e
LvCJa R. Urrut~a
SJ/v1a ValdeZ
Datllel Vega
Wilfreda Velasquez

Rtcllard A. Vet"losa

EtYtQVe J. Vtvas

Sandra D. Warner
Karon K. Wiedemann
Robert C. Wilburn
Ch.3/ethla Williams

Alejandro F. Zambrano

"'

�Juniors
Darrel W Abercrombie
RliChel Acosta
P Adamopoules

Georg~

Manari R Abr/Bht
DorothyJ
Michael J.

Ale~
Ale~

Aberta L Alford
..Jcdth D. Ahy
Fahad A A/Moglul
Monam M AI·Shartf

Juan R

Alvar~z

Ruben Amaya

Soraya Aponle

Salah M.

BalchashwW~

Faek Barakat

Belinda Barnhart
PatriC.a M. BeaVHS
Carlos B«~}lJrmn Jr

Rosaflo A Bemudez
Mark C. B..d
Geardo A. Blancas
Carlos A. BleS5Iflll
Bella Boca~gra
Abe/.ardo 0 Bosquez

E!lla M Brown
PatriC.a F Burns
Dafllel F Butcher
Wendel 0 Butcher

Juan E Canavatt
Guadalupe Cano

Matthew 8 . Cano
JoM D. Cantu
Sandra Cardenas
Joe CaSias
Noe Casttb
Jo~ C8stro

156

�Jamie Cavazos
Jen..Di Chao

Fanny A. Ch~qi.Jm
Jeffery 8. Clarke

Laura G. Clay
Ronald M. Clevenger

Charlie E. Cooper
Sandra L. Crisman
Arturo Cruz
Javier Cruz
Jvdy L. Cl.immings
Edmund K. CIJflllingham

Henry W. Curtis
Elizabeth A. DeAngelo
Dan A. Deighton
Nefida G. DeLaRosa
TerriL. Del.itsch
Sol.imaya E. Diab

Anthony 0 . Dobias
Guy 8. Oore
James L. Drcury
Dennis 0. Driscoll
Richard A. Duffy
Stephen A. Ol.inlap

Tommy J. Faulks

Glenn A. Fl«iier
DeliaAores
Michael Flores
Agnes Fuccello
.Juan C. FI.Jefltes

"'

�~E Gaclde
.hffery L. Gans}(e
Ruben E. Gdrc/8

Greta A. Geiger
Jtmmy E. Gfford
Margaret M. Glennon

Elizabeth R.

~s

Clay A. Goodwwl
{hmd Gorec:ld

Leslie A. Graham
.hws E. G#Jerrero
Elizabeth GutJeffez
Svsan N. Haldeman
C~tsey D. Hector
Julia G. Hernandez

Diane E. Hill
Knsma G. Holman
Jon K. Hoover
KlfTiber~y

Howard

..118-Hua Huang
Bryan M. Hunter

RoMrt M. Hvtton

A. Hyatt
Emilie L. lie
Jo~ R. Jatib
DelNlt L Jenklf!S
Charles D. .Jenn/flgs
Su.z.a~

Woei-Wen .Jioq
Lef8h A. Jones
Marcus E. JaMs
Judy L. Karcher
NrnlJ F. Kane/&lt;
Maher M Kharrat

..

,

�Robin M. Killian
Margaret M. Kinsella
Rich F. KrawczyK

Reid A. lamb
G. Reid lange
Debbie A. Lasseigne

James C. Lee
Robert C. Lindemann
Cindi 5. Linenberger

Ana M. Llano
Pamela A. Long
Kathy 5. Lopez
Francisco Lossa&lt;Jo
Laura Lynn Makay
Gordon M. Markley

Celia G. Martinez
Luis J. Martinez
Mark A. Mass.iwi
Mark E. McCord
Sandra M. McGann
Sara M. McGonegle

Stacy K. Meador
Tomas Medina
Eduardo 5 . Meinhard

Manuel 8. Miramontes
Wison M. Mo kobla
Mana D. Molrla

"'

�Martha L Monn
Andy Monn
Ann Marie Mot~s
Rosa~o Munoz
Hanna A. Nader
Elsa Y. Nelligan

Jo~ Obu
Salvador H. Ochoa
.hannett~

M. o·c~
Tony N. OgtxJe
C. BertJBmlll Okafor
Mana A. Ova/Je

Ctvts M. Ozarzak
Juan PaiZ
Ann C. Pa/lse
Chery( A. Payr~e
Melissa M. Pederson
MtxiiCaA. P~~

Cynthls G. PeterB

Ttmot/ly C. Pierce

E/lza~thA.

Polk

Barbara E. Pnce

160

�Marie C. Pringle
Hilda Reza
Richard R.
Robinson. Jr.

CeSIJr Rodriguez
Martha Rodriguez
Rita A. Rodriguez

S. Saguinian
David H. Saling
Patricia L. Sanchez

Caroline

Juan F. Santos
Steve C. Seale
Kyle N. Shu/cis

Eduardo M. Simon
Shanlynn R. Skinner
Raquel So ro
Wanda M. Steward

Douglas A. Stvder
Patricia M. Sullivan

TereSIJ Sweeney

All H. Taan
Ota ng J. Talcu
Henry E. Thames
Hurcey N. Toney
LiSIJ R. To tah

John W. Trclca
De D. Trent
Daniel A. TreVII'ID
Table C. Tucker
Mar ie A.
Heyden
LJnda K. Vaughn

vanoer

Stella I. Villanueva
Philip A. Wa/c10Cic
./anise A. wnre

Nelei W. Wohlers. Jr.
PatVIZ Yazdanpanaht

8atJer H. la/:Man

"'

���Ki m Benwn

.•.

~atreAriS

Paul Blottln
ManagemMt

Adalberto Bo'quez
M.:m agement

Adriana Botello
B~Cducatoon

�Mich ael Boyer
Psychology

Tr11c y Brown
Enghsh/HISfory

M11rion Bullard
Psychology

165

�..

,

Jeanln Cain

Sllvl• Calderon

Chuck Caudill

Bu~ss

&amp;llngr.sal Edvc8twn

Thutre Arts

Admnstr8t/On

�S.ndi Carlisle
Phy SK:al Educat/Ofl

"'

�...

�C•thy Crow
Cnmina/JustiCe

Edw•rd Curry
Cnmlflal JustiCe

169

�Jamn Dale

Beth Dean

'""""
170

�Chuy De La Garza

John Deitchman

Management,/M.lrketing

Psychology

Danny De La Rosa
MarkefJnB

Teina Deliganis
Accounttng

�Pbocoqraph
Not A-..allable

�Timothy C.P. Glennon

Theatre Arts
Deborah L. Gau&amp;hiln

Theatre Educatron

�174

�"'

�Photoqrapb
Not AY&lt;Iilable

Ronll.ru..ltf

176

�J~r
R•lph Lymu
Pflys.cal£ctJcar.on

FlU• M•hll•vi
Compvrer Sc&gt;I!&lt;IC"

Mark Martin
Pflyslc&lt;JI£ctJcar.on

�Clare McFadden
HIStory

178

�Vince

Mezz.~~poelle

Psychology/ Math

Cecilil Middleton

l Menzo Moncev1il

Gr1ci1 Mont.lvo

Psychology

CrimlfliJI..JuSitce

Management

179

�Marcia Munn

Health Care Admlfli-" '-" -'M.,..-

William Norri'
Bu~n

Saad Murt.ta:a

...,, ...-...;._

_ _. , .. . ._

Daniel otbo&amp;u
BUSIOess Management

Lu.,. Nira
Religious Studies

180

Computer SciMCe

�Andre w Pelegreen, Ill
Tf)eatre Arts

�182

Ana Rodrlauez

Guadalupe Roules

Abel Rub:

'""""'

BilltwuM

Adminlstr/Jt/Ofl

Educ~tt/Ofl

��.

,

Judy Smoke
English/ Psychology Educat1on

�Bahman Vasigh

Computer Science

Ke nneth Watson

Soc10/ogy

�Sunn Kindy•
Cflmfllal JustiCe

186

�In Mem ori am

"'

�Graduation-always

...

�looked back on
Father Neal Wise was selected by the seniors to speak to them
at graduation. His humorous and philosophical implications were
enjoyed by all.

Vince Mezzapelli, a native of San Jose, California, was the 1981
valedictorian. He graduated with degrees in Psychology, Computer
Science. and Mathematics with a G.P.A. of 4.0 . Vince wiflbeginhisgraduate
work a t the University of New Hampshire to do research in experimental
psychology.

"'

�Kathryn Clack. cames a b~g sm1/e as she receives her d1p/oma
from Brother Stephen.

190

�Danny De La Rosa talks with
friends and family after
graduation

Clare McFadden. Sandt Carltsle. and Maureen Dugan rush
away from photographers to htt happy hour at the Ftlftng
Stauon.

�Class of '81

�I

I

__ j

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                <text>The Tower [1981]</text>
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                <text>College Yearbook--Texas--Austin</text>
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                <text>St. Edward's University--Students--Yearbooks.  </text>
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                <text> St. Edward's University--Periodicals.</text>
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                <text>Covers University administration, faculty, students, activities, and athletics.</text>
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                <text>Copyright St. Edward's University. The materials in this collection are made available for use in research, teaching and private study. Images and text may not be used for any commercial purposes without prior permission from St. Edward's University.</text>
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