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This is ttie day of ttie expanding man
That shape is my shade
There where I used to stand
It seems like only yesterday
I gazed through the glass
At ramblers, wild ramblers
That's all in the past
You call me a fool
You say it's a crazy scheme
This one's for real
I already bought the dream
So useless to ask me why
I'll make it this time
I'm ready to cross that fine
line
3
HE
H
P^
S^H
Vi
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_ii^
m
Wi
^H
Drink scotch whiskey all
night long
And dine behind the wheel
They got a name for the winners in the world
I want a name when I lose
rbfl^na^a Room Lm
Rose
B urgund
Li * us
Kcn~:»
Sangria
U, 1.60
in''{S^.85
Afy 6acAr to the wall
A victim of laughing chance
This is for me
The essence of true romance
Sharing the things we know and love
With those of my Idnd
Libations, sensations
That stagger the mind
/ crawl like a viper
Through these suburban streets
10
Make love to these sweet women
languid and bittersweet
11
77/ rise when the sun goes down
Cover every game in town
12
A world of my own
I'll make it my home sweet home
111 be what I want to be
13
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15
16
Academics Changing with the 1980's
The attitude of the University of
Maryland administration toward students has
changed since the decade of the seventies
began. At that time, Route 1 was shut down
by protesting students and the National
Guard was brought in. Students demanded
changes in the University and in the country.
Administration tailored programs for the
ideals of human relations. Aesthetic learning
was encouraged and classes were designed for
the new students.
Now students are demanding courses to
help them compete in the ever-increasing
competition of the job market. As the ranks
of the unemployed swelled at the turn of the
decade, students demanded job security after
graduation.
In the academic section, college adminis-
trators discuss with you how the University
of Maryland is responding to the changing
role of the institution, to prepare us for our
future, to expand our perimeters.
17
Division Of Agriculture And Life
Sciences
18
/
l-i.
19
"There is a great difficulty in keeping up with modern
scientific technology because of limited references. Of
course, agriculture has become a very dynamic industry and
we have always attempted to keep course work in time with
currency. The college has added courses and programs to
meet the changing needs of the society.
In this day, finding jobs is difficult for college
graduates. There is generally a good market for agriculture
majors in their chosen field."
Associate Dean Paul R. Poffenberger
College of Agriculture
20
£a»
21
Division Of Arts And Humanities
22
23
"We are trying to keep up with
the changes set by inflation and
advancement in technology. The
College has recently purchased new
electronic equipment. It is expensive,
but we need the equipment to
maintain a competitive program. We
are better off than most schools in the
country. That is why our enrollment
went up this year by 100.
Technology is growing fast, and
this enhances the chances of a
Journalism graduate securing a job in
a related field. Communication is so
critical and the field needs skilled
people because of the advanced
technology. Public relations is the
fastest growing field."
Dean Benjamin Holman
College of Journalism
"The stress now is in the energy
conscious design. The field also deals
with rehabilitation and adaption of
used buildings to save rather than
replace them.
We have instituted a new
graduate program as a result of the
increased demands of an architect.
Although the program has gone
through some financial cuts, architec-
ture at Maryland has adjusted with
American society; however we are
nervous about the future of the
nation's economy and its effect on the
program.
Because architecture firms are
still busy in the area, we perceive no
problems by graduates in getting jobs.
Most graduates go into professional
private practices or work with
developers and government agencies."
Dean John Hill
School of Architecture
(not pictured)
24
25
Division Of Behavioral And Social
Sciences
26
27
"The College of Business and
Management has been successful in
striving to keep up with the changes in
society by revising the MBA program. The
revisions should be sufficient for the next
two decades.
The undergraduate program is also to
be revised in the near future. We are
updating the program because the
practical advancements must correspond
with advancements in learning. We are
not preparing students for the next few
years, but for the next few decades. We
hope to establish an honors program and
teach interdisciplinary skills. The updating
is just beginning.
Graduates who are really serious in
this field, who do not hope to start their
own businesses or step into family
operation, must work for their MBA to
remain competitive in such a rapidly
expanding area. We are also expanding
our MS degree program.
Major changes have taken place in
the business world in recent years. There
has been an explosion of employment
opportunities for graduates. I want to
stress that the opportunities will still exist,
but the explosion will not continue."
Associate Dean Neil Palomba
College of Business and Management
28
29
Division of Human
and Community Resources
30
"The College of Education had
attempted to integrate changes in society
in the curriculum as well as in the
mechanical aspects. The law recently
passed to mainstream the handicapped has
had an effect on all of the departments.
With more mothers enrolling as students,
programs for young children have been
developed, and in this way, the College has
kept up with the changes in society.
Because the job market is tighter
than it used to be, students have to be
more mobile. If they are willing to
relocate, more opportunities will be open
to them.
The most popular course in the
department is taught by Doris Sands.
Probably the reason that Health 477 (Sex
Education) is so popular lies in the fact
that it is an excellent course, ranked this
year in the ten top of courses covering this
subject in the nation. Apparently, even the
students who thought they knew every-
thing have learned a lot in this class."
Dean Louise Berman; College of Education.
31
"The College of PHED is going
through a three-phased program. The first
and second phases are finished. We have
acquired a 50 meter aquatic center, a
gymnasium, and additional research
laboratories. There are several new lab
experiences for our classes, especially
upper level courses, with 8 new labs we
are now one of the better schools for
research.
"According to a recent poll of the
American Academy, our program has
been rated ninth in the country. That
rating probably would have been higher if
the five University of Maryland professors
that are on the 123-member board had
sent in their responses. As it turned out,
only one of the teachers turned in their
evaluation. If the rest had, we might have
gone up a peg or two in the poll.
"Our faculty and our students are of
high quality. The instructors are compar-
able to any in other state institutions. They
have increased the quality of education by
a substantial amount. On the Dean's list
last semester there were 86 students from
our department. That is an increase of
15-18 over last year.
"Graduates move on to community,
public and school of health, recreational
therapy, hospitals, and some go on to
teaching. Although our program does not
alone qualify a graduate to teach, it does
offer state certification under teacher
preparation.
"To keep the quality of education at
a high level, we are considering limiting
enrollment. The increases in faculty
cannot keep up with the increases in
enrollment.
"The graduates of the field move on
to promising jobs with salaries starting
between $ 1 8-25,000 a year. It is rewarding
when the students you work with become
successful on their own. That is what this
game is all about."
- Dean Marvin Eyler (not pictured). College of
Physical Education, Health and Recreation.
32
Dean John Beaton; College of Human Ecology
"Although the College of Human
Ecology was founded in 1917, it has kept
pace with the changes in society through
new research.
"We have moved into a new building
this year. Our laboratory instruction has
vastly improved. Our new teaching
techniques involve closed-circuit television,
lab instructions, and computer terminals.
"More emphasis has been placed on
changing lifestyles and consumer econ-
omics and nutrition. Also community
services, which were non-existent in the
past, have come into being.
"Employment rates for graduates
from the College of Human Ecology are
above average in the industry and in
government. Many go on to do graduate
work.
"Probably our most popular course is
Nutrition 100, which draws 800-1,000
students per year. This is reflective of
increased awareness by students of the
importance of good nutrition, as well as
they should be. Our course offering of
Consumer Economics and the Law also
draws students from all majors."
33
Division of
Mathematics &
Physical Sciences
And Engineering
Dr. Cyril Ponnamperuma, Chemistry.
34
"The employment opportunities for
an engineering graduate are unlimited.
There is a shortage nationwide, and the
usual graduate finds himself with a choice
between four or five job offers. Corpora-
tions are turning jobs away because they
cannot find the engineers to fill the
positions. The businesses are thousands of
employees short.
Any engineer will get a job unless he
or she does not want one. We do have a
few who join the Peace Corps or hitchhike
across Europe, but the others who want a
job get one right away.
Our undergraduates receive starting
salaries that range, according to Time
magazine, from $20,000 and $27,000. The
salaries do not rise with the amount spent
on education, so many students do not go
on to do graduate work. That could mean
two years of lost salary that will not be
made up for a long period of time.
The program has expanded in
enrollment over the past years. Since 1966
our enrollment has almost doubled, from
2,309 students to 4,136. This is a jump in
almost 500 students annually.
Our research dollars from outside the
University has risen from $2.3 million in
1976 to $3.9 million in 1980. External
funding comes to us from the Department
of Energy and the National Science
Commission as agents of the Federal
government. From the State, we receive
funding from the Department of Natural
Resources about the State Highway
Associate Dean Richard McKuen; College of Engineering.
Administration. About half of the campus
funds come from such external funding.
"The Ladsat satellite is one of the
projects of the department. It is a satellite
that circles the earth, coming back to the
same point once every eighteen days. The
remote sensory project senses pollution,
land use, and other world-wide conditions.
The project saves a lot of manpower and
money that it would take to do the project
individually. The solar energy research
laboratory is another project of external
funding that the University uses with the
students."
35
I'Tir
36
37
The Division Of Individual
General Studies
And
38
"The Individual Studies Program
offers the students a chance to draw their
own personal curriculum based on their
own perspectives. This helps students who
cannot get what they want in any other
program.
Some students relate this program to
employment. One of the first graduates of
the program designed a major of Golf and
Architecture Courses, then graduated to a
fantastic job. There are various counseling
fields available in this division: women's,
health, and general counseling. It allows
a student the opportunity to explore in
depth a particular interest. This program
pioneered the field of Archeo-Astronomy,
which studies the beliefs by other cultures
regarding the stars and planets that they
saw. There are probably 150 students
enrolled at this time.
The General Studies Program is
simply a degree without a major. Students
with certain limits can set up a curriculum
any way they choose to. We usually have
about 550 students in this program.
We usually have a lot of returning
students in both of these programs. People
who want to expand after graduating
school can return to this program. Older
students, and by that I mean students over
25, make up about 33 percent of the
students in Individual Studies and about
20 percent in the General Studies
Program. This is compared with a school
average of 13 percent. Students make
extensive use of internships that are work
related or volunteer. There is an emphasis
on experimental learning in both fields.
This expansion of the program is very
much a product of the 70s. It uses both
individual interest and knowledge that can
be related to the working world."
Dean Robert E. Shoenberg
Undergraduate Studies
39
Allied Health
"In the early seventies, Allied Health had
one program - nursing. For the most part that
has not changed. The Allied Health is different
from the others in that it is only a two year
program. We offer no courses, emply no faculty,
and conduct no research. We are basically an
advising center for students seeking health
degrees. The students spend two years here
taking liberal arts and general science courses;
except in the three year old pre-pharmacy
program. After this, they go on to another
campus.
"Although the enrollment figures have
shown a general decline, we have expanded our
program; adding dental hygiene, medical
technology around 1970, and radiological
technology since then. The program also offers
courses in nursing, pharmacy, and physical
therapy. Because of the wide range of courses
that we borrow from the other divisions, there
is an opportunity to specialize even further than
these fields.
"We encourage students more than ever to
participate in more practical work of internships
and volunteer work. Since the course work is
so varied, there is no other way to find out what
the job will be like.
"We are adding a new library that will be
career-related for the health professions and a
big plus for our department.
"After our graduates finish the entire
program, usually at UMBC, they must pass a
national exam to receive a license. In most
programs Maryland graduates perform at an
average or above average level as compared
with the rest of the nation. Some continue on
to medical school."
- Daryl G. Stewart, Coordinator
Allied Health
40
41
43
Freshmen's First Fleeting Reflections of University
Life. Red Tape, New Friends and Thumper Games
Fill Days of Freshmen Orientation
^■i^ifi^-
45
Armory Registration
^^ ^*^^ Newly admitted, reinstated and readmitted stud*
Information
Newly admitted, reinstated and readmitted students who were unable to preregisler and
those students meeting the criteria for Schedule II will have priority admission to the
Armory This priority access is designed to 1) help eliminate the overcrowding in the
Armory, 2) enable students who really need courses (new registrants and people with partial
schedules) the opportunity to register first, and 3) encourage students to take advantage of
preregistration and thus avoid the necessity of going to tfie Armory
SCHEDULE I — NonpreregistM'ed newly admitted, readmitted, and
reinstated students
Monday, January 14 — 8:30 a.m. to 3:55 p.m.
Thisschedulewillapply to newly admitted, readmitted, and reinstated students who did not
preregister Students in this category should report directly to Reckord Armory accord-
ing to the alphabetic schedule Newly admitted students and reinstated students must
present their Letter ot Admission/Reinstatement signed by their Provost. Oean. or desig-
nated representative, to be permitted to enter the Armory Readmitted students must
present their Letter of Readmission to be permitted to enter the Armory While advisement is
not a prerequisite for Armory admission lor readmitted students, these students are
strongly urged to take advantage of campus advisement offices. Only students wtio had
no opportunity to preregister may register according to tMs schedule.
8 30
Jart-
Jona
8 35
Jonb —
Kami
840
Kami —
Keil
8 45
Kelm —
King
8 50
Kinh —
Kob.
8 55
Kob| —
Krei
900
Krei —
Lamb
9 05
Lame —
Ledg
9 10
Ledh —
Levi
9 15
Le»|-
L.11
9 20
Lilg-
Luch
9 25
Luc. —
Maie
9 30
Mail -
Ma's
9 35
Mart —
Mayn
9 40
Mayo —
McLa
9 45
McLb-
Meas
9 50
Meal —
Milh
9 55
Mill —
Moel
10 00
Moem-
-Mor.
10 05
MO'S-
Mye>
10 10
M,es-
Nice
10 15
N.cl-
Ocon
10 20
Ocoo —
Ossb
10 25 Ossp — Pars
10 30 PaM — Perr
10 35 Pe's — Plos
10 40 Plot — Pfic
10 45 P'ld — Rand
10 50 Hane — Rem
10 55 Peni — Ri"
1 1 00 Ri'u — Roma
1 1 05 Romb — Roya
1 1 10 Royb — Same
1115 Sam( — Schi
11 20 Sch) — Scol
11 25 Scom — Shap
1 1 30 Shaq — S.eb
11 35 Siec — Sloa
11 40 Slob — Snow
1 1 45 Snox — Stev
1 1 50 Stew — Suer
1 1 55 Sues — Thorn
12 00 Then — Trea
12 05 Treb— Wagn
12 10 Wago— Walk
12 15 Watt— Wile
12 20 W.if — Wmi
12 25 w.nu — Zebo
12 30 Zebp- Zz
12 35 Aa — Aikh
12 40 Alki — Apoz
12 45 Appa — Bagw
12 50 Bag«— Baff
12 55 Bars— Beet
1 00 Becu — Berf
1 05 Bers — Biat
1 10 Biau — Botz
1 15 Boua — Bren
1 20 Breo— Brow
1 25 Broi — Burn
1 30 Buro — Cann
1 35 Cano — Cale
1 40 Calt — Chin
1 45 Chio — Coal
1 50 Coau — Cong
1 55 Conh — Cove
2 00 Covf— Cun
2 05 Curu — Davi
2 10 Davi — Deni
2 15 Deni — Dobs
2 20 Dobt — Droi
2 25 Drpa— Ecke
2 30 Eckt — Enne
2 35 Ennf- farr
2 40 Pars— Finn
2 45 F'no— Fors
2 50 Fori — Fr.«
2 55 Frit— Garl
3 00 Garm — Giib
3 05 Gilc — Gold
3 10 Gole— Gran
3 15 Grao — Grol
3 20 Grom — HaM
3 25 Malm — Harf
3 30 Hars — Hedg
3 35 Hedh — Meys
3 40 Meyt — Moti
3 45 Hoig — Howa
3 50 Howb — Hyla
3 55 Myib— Jare
SCHEDULE II — PartlaHy Scheduled Pr»r»9istrant«
Monday, JaiMiary 14 — 4:00 p.in. to 6:00 p.m.
This schedule will apply to students who request 9 or more credits in preregistration but
receive 8 or less and to students who request 8 credits or less and do not receive the num-
ber they request. Students in this category will be notified of their eligibility for Schedule II
by a message on their Preregistration Schedule Card This schedule containing the mes-
sage indicating eligibility and the semester Registration Card will permit students to enter
Reckord Armory according to the alphabetic schedule printed below Excluded from this
category are students who requested 8 or less credits and received the number of credit
hours they requested
5 05 3ag« -
5 10 Biau-
5 15 Bfo«-
5 20 Ch.o -
5 25 Govt -
5 30 Oobt -
5 35 Ennl-
SCHEDULE III — All ottwr studwtts
Wodnasday, January 16 — 6:30 m.nu to 6:00 p.m.
This schedule will apply to all other students not included in the first two categories. Students
who were registered for Fall 1979 but did not preregister for Spring ISSO.'will be included in this
category Students under this category should report, according to alphabetic schedule, to the
Armory They should present their Photo ID and Fall Registration Card or Fall Grade Report to
gain admission to the Armory.
400
Kinh —
Ledg
4 >5 Hen, -
Same
4 05
Ledh —
Luch
4 40 Sami —
Sieb
4 10
Loci-
McLa
4 45 S.ec -
Sue.
4 15
McLb-
Moel
4 50 Sues -
Walk
420
Moem -
-Ocon
4 55 Wall —
Zz
4 25
Ocoo —
Per.
5 00 Aa -
Bagw
4 30
Pers-
Hen,
Blal
5 40 Frit -
Gold
Brow
5 45 Gole -
Hafr
Chin
5 50 Hars -
Holt
Cove
5 55 Hofg —
Jona
Dobs
6 00 jonb —
King
Enne
Frie
8 30 Mill -
MftC
8 35 Mitd-
Mora
8 40 Morb —
Moye
6 45 Moyf -
Myer
8 50 Myes -
Neuw
8 55 Neu« -
Nort
9 00 Noru —
Ohee
9 05 Oket -
one
9 10 OttI -
Park
9 15 Parl-
Pear
9 20 Peas -
Peto
9 25 Pelp -
Plat
9 30 Piau -
Powe
9 35 Pov^ -
Pulf
9 40 Pulg —
Happ
9 45 Flapq-
fleii
9 50 Reim -
flich
9 55 n.ci -
Robe
10 00 Robt —
Roma
10 05 Romb-
-Roth
10 10 Roll —
fluih
10 15 Ruti —
Sand
10 20 Sane -
Sche
10 25 Sent -
Schu
10 30 Schv —
Seir
10 35 Sets-
Shap
10 40 Shaq —
Ship
to 45 Sh.q —
Simm
10 50 Simn -
Smea
10 55 Smeb —
11 00 Sm.u —
11 05 Spaj-
11 10 Sloq —
1115 Slew —
11 20 Stri —
1 1 25 Swao —
1 1 30 Taym —
11 35 Thon —
11 40 TomI —
11 45 Tugc —
1 1 50 Vane —
1 1 55 Wago —
12 00 Wars —
12 05 Weio —
12 10 Whin —
12 15 Wilm —
12 20 Will —
12 25 Wues —
12 30 Zeci-
12 35 A —
12 40 Aiey-
12 45 Ands —
12 50 Aves —
12 55 Bare -
1 00 Baio —
1 05 Beno —
1 10 Bid -
I 15 Biov —
Smil
Spai
Stop
Siev
Sifi
Swan
Tayl
Thom
Tome
Tugb
Vand
Wagn
Warr
Wein
Whim
Will
Wilk
Wuer
Zech
Zz
Alex
Andr
Aver
Barb
Bail
Benn
Bick
Blou
Bous
1 20 Bout -
1 25 Bree —
1 30 Bfov —
1 35 Burd -
1 40 Cale —
1 45 Carq —
1 50 Chan -
1 55 Chyv -
2 00 Cohb -
2 05 Conn —
2 10 Covj —
2 15 Curs —
2 20 Davi -
2 25 Del) —
2 30 Did -
2 35 Doom -
2 40 Dump -
2 45 Eges —
2 50 End -
2 55 Favb-
3 00 Fino —
3 05 Fore —
3 10 F'ei —
3 15 Gall —
3 20 Gene —
3 25 Gjaa-
3 30 Gole —
3 35 Grao -
3 40 Gnh-
Bred
Brou
Bufc
Caid
Carp
Cham
Chyu
Coha
Conm
Covi
Curf
Dave
Dell
Dick
Oool
Oumo
Eger
Erie
Fava
Finn
Ford
Frei
Gaih
Gend
Gm
Gold
Gran
Gng
Hahn
3 45 Haho —
3 50 Hare -
3 55 Hauh —
4 00 Hene —
4 05 Higi —
4 10 Hol| —
4 15 Ho«a —
4 20 lacb —
4 25 Jars —
4 30 Joho —
4 35 Kaho —
4 40 Kaum —
4 45 Kers —
4 50 Kiah —
4 55 Korb —
5 00 Hule-
5 05 Lanh —
5 10 Leed —
5 1 5 Levt -
5 20 Linu -
5 25 Loua-
5 30 Mad —
5 35 Mano ~
5 40 Marw —
5 45 McAs —
5 50 McCb -
5 55 McK| —
6 00 Mert —
Hard
Haug
Hend
High
Holi
Howl
laca
Jarr
John
Kahn
Kiag
Kora
Kuld
Lang
Leec
Leve
Lint
Lotz
Mack
Mann
Marv
McAr
McCa
McK>
Mere
Milk
Studenis are expected to enter the Armory according to the schedule published in this Schedule of
Classes Any student attempting to enter the Armory at a time other than the one assigned will be
considered to be violating General University Regulations, specifically, the General Statement —
Student Responsibility ' The University Regulation states Students are expected to conduct
themselves at all times in a manner consistent with the University s responsibility of ensuring to all
members of the University the opportunity to pursue their educational obiecttves and of protecting
the safety, welfare, rights, and properly of alt members of the University itself ' Such cases wUI be
referred to the University Judiciary Board for appropriate action.
46
New Faces,
Same Lines and Frustrations
■:t
47
48
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49
Welcome
The first week back to school at
Maryland is always one long ordeal.
The first confrontation is moving in, the
traffic jam caused by frustrated parents
and students, all trying to park in the
front of the dorm to unload their
cramped cars. Every car is packed with
suitcases, crates of books, boxes filled
with plants and records, a stereo system
with 2 - four foot high speakers, a
television set, bags filled with groceries
accompanied with cooking equipment,
and extra attractions such as posters,
memoboards, and shelves.
Once one has received a key, the
10 milhon trips of unloading begins.
The finale is unpacking and organizing
one's side of the room, until one's
roommate arrives to re-do everything
that was done.
Finally settled into the dormitory
room and dining hall cuisine, the
dreaded visit to Reckford Armory
arrives. When registering there, one is
confronted with the infamous beginning
of university line syndrome. There are
lines to get inside, lines to pay bills,
to the Beginning
lines to the department sections, and
lines to the drop and add stations. An
example of frustration felt is standing in
line for a class necessary to graduate
only to find the person in front of you
just took the last space available.
After the registration game of lines
one moves to the mass confusion at the
University Book Center (formerly
known as the Umporium) and the Book
Exchange, also accompanied by lines.
Many times in searching for books a
professor has failed to reorder the books
and so one must learn to make friends
in the class in order to borrow the
books. From there one moves onto the
lines at the bank. Here, there are two
things taken care of; first, to deposit
more money and second, to withdraw
for partying that is desperately needed.
Many students can't get enough of
lines - they're addicted. For this reason
many head towards the 'Vous' to await
entry into the sticky floor paradise of
drinking and relaxing. Other Maryland
students, who prefer the open air attend
the mixers at La Plata Beach, South
Chapel Hill, and Frat Row. At these
outdoor parties there are lines in
existence. One line is for beer tickets
and then the ultimate line of receiving
the beer. These seem to be the only
lines that nobody has complaints about.
And so ends the fun of summer and
begins the school year at U of M.
The August weather makes it
unbearable to stay inside and start
studying. Many students prefer to study
outside and enjoy the last few warm
days. However there are those who can
ignore what exists outside to sit in the
cubby desks at the libraries consuming
the contents of their courses. Everyone
begins to settle down to their routine of
last year. But freshman and transfer
students are not so easily inclined. They
can be easily spotted with their trusty
maps turning them every which way -
completely baffled. They finally give up
and ask a veteran student for directions.
They should have stayed with the maps,
because veteran students enjoy giving
cock-eyed directions, remembering
when they were new to the campus.
51
52
53
54
55
New Kent Hall Residents Initiated
With Cheers, Jeers, and Beers
Joseph Gormely and Marc Good-
man began lining up their new
residents on the dormitory steps
promptly at 6 PM. As hallmate, Greg
Robinson stepped back to get their
photograph, the older members leaned
out from the windows upstairs and
soaked them with the water that filled
the dorm's trash cans. The Kent
Freshman Chug, the oldest annual chug
on campus, was finally under way.
The RA's had to chug first, out of
the liter mug. Joe-Joe lost easily to
Mark, who drank his beer in only a few
seconds. Richard Soloman came next,
the first freshman to tackle the
foreboding foamy beer. He drank the
first few inches from the top, then
gasped in pain for air. After one more
try with the same results, the men of
Kent handed him the "Whimp Mug."
Soloman could not finish this one
either. He left the stage amid the jeers
of the audience and headed for his 6:30
class.
The next new resident of Kent
Hall, Evan Feldman, has been going to
Maryland for a year and has been
taught a little more about the fine art
of the chug. He downed his mug quickly
and easily. With the same speed,
Feldman ran inside and the audience
realized the beer would not stay down
much longer. When he came back
outside he said he was "ready to do
another one!"
Tom Krocheski was the only
freshman of the thirty in Kent Hall who
was able to finish his beer. Unlike
Feldman, he was the only one who was
able to hold down the huge chug. "More
beer! More beer!", he cried, as he ran
around the dorm steps looking for the
culprits who had poured beer all over
him while he had chugged.
The annual chug brings together
many old friends and former residents
of Kent Hall every year. Tom Day, the
founder of the chug in 1974, was on
hand to see that the tradition was
properly executed, and to grab a few
free beers, as well. Matt Kenneke,
another former hallmate, swore "I
wouldn't miss this for the world."
Meanwhile, the untried freshman
were waiting on the sidelines, while
some older men were taking an
honorary chug. The novices made no
attempt to hide their nervousness. "I
have never chugged that much beer
before," said freshman, Tom Dwyer. "It
is gonna be disgusting."
56
57
Campus Crab Feasts Spice Up
As the days of summer wane and the nights grow colder,
students bid their farewell to the season with crab feasts
around campus. Dorms, teams, and other groups sponsor these
gastronomic events, selling tickets and tempting everyone's
tastebuds with the idea.
Bushels of hot steamed crabs are lined up on the lawns
of Baltimore Hall, Cambridge Complex, and Ritchie
Coliseum. The shells are covered with Old Bay seasoning,
begging to be cracked open with the hard "whack" of a mallot.
Bowls of melted butter are available to dip the white crab
meat into.
Other necessities to add to the feast are dozens of freshly
picked corn on-the-cob, kegs of foamy beer and good music,
all to be shared with good friends. It is a meal that cannot
be duplicated at any other time of the year.
58
End of Summer
59
60
61
Rocky Horror Picture Show
Inspires Denton's
Transvestite Party
)2
63
B52's Attract Crazed Punk Rockers
64
to Ritchie Coliseum
At 8' o'clock sharp the Hghts
dropped in Ritchie Coliseum and the
crowd that came to see the B52's began
to cheer. The mob pushed hard against
the security guards and the barricades
that stood between them and the stage.
The Plastics, a new-wave band
from Japan, opened the show with their
bizarre form of techno-pop. The crowd
danced and clapped to "I am Plastic,"
"Don't Know," and "Yummy for the
Tummy" and were called back for an
encore.
But the punked-out crowd was
really waiting for the B52's. When the
band came on stage the crowd pushed
aside the barricades by shoving the
front line of people into them. Security
guards jumped on stage and tried to
keep fans away from the group. One fan
was successful in climbing the stage, but
was immediately moved back to the
floor.
The band opened the set with
"Lava" from their first album. The
remainder of the set was from their
second release, "Wild Planet." When
the band played "Rock Lobster" and
"Dance This Mess Around" the crowd
jumped and cheered in recognition of
these two songs.
As more people moved toward the
back area for room to dance or rest,
security guards made a futile attempt to
keep them in front of the stage. One
guard said, "I have never seen a crowd
like this before." The only concert that
came close was the Root Boy Slim
concert.
65
72 Hours of Perpetual Motion
With bright, bursting balloons,
cheers from fellow collegiates and
dynamic dancers. Phi Sigma Delta's
Annual Dancers Against Cancer Mar-
athon began "72 hours of perpetual
motion." Continuing the campus tradi-
tion of 11 years, 58 couples danced for
the charity benefit.
The Marathon proved to be the
largest fundraiser of its kind on the East
Coast. Surpassing last year's record
donations, the 1980 marathon raised
over $75,000.
The dancers began at Ritchie
Coliseum on Thursday, October 16 at
10 p.m., and concluded on Sunday,
October 19 at 6 p.m. Dancers were
allowed to sleep from 1 a.m. to 6 a.m.
The female dancers boarded at Alpha
Chi Omega, the sorority that assisted
Phi Sig Delt with this year's marathon.
Alpha Epsilon Pi opened their doors to
the male dancers.
Greeks, dorms, commuters and
special interest clubs were involved in
the event. Chairman Robert Black
explained, "We try to emphasize a total
campus experience. The marathon is
not just a Greek affair anymore."
Kevin Lefcoe, couples chairman,
said the dancers were cooperative and
unified. "It was a tough job and the
dancers did it well."
Local merchants and businesses
made donations to the dancers. Hungry
Herman's and McDonald's gave the
food that the dancers ate during two
fifteen-minute breaks each day. Over
140 businesses supported the marathon
through advertisements.
The University of Maryland Busi-
ness Department loaned the program
coin-counting machines that were used
to tabulate change collected during the
month by dancers and volunteers. The
University police also donated time to
guard the money while it was being
totaled.
Besides cannister collecting, a
phone room was set up in Ritchie
Coliseum. Volunteers called campus
and local residents to solicit donations.
Chairman Black said that they
began working on the marathon since
the ending of the dance last year.
Choosing a date for the event that
would correspond with the local
businesses and organizing committees
was one of the tasks that Black was
responsible for. "I have gained more
practical experience from organizing
the marathon than I have from any of
my classes," stated Black. "Watching
this event grow from start to finish has
been very rewarding."Preceeding the
actual marathon was a kick-off banquet,
organized by Gary Greenberg, and Eric
Grusken. The dancers and their parents
and the members of Phi Sig Delt and
A Chi O attended the dinner, joe
Cipriano, disc jockey on official
marathon radio station Q107, was the
master of ceremonies. Among the
speakers at the banquet were Francis
Howard, sister to the late Herbert
Humphrey; University President Toll
and Chancellor Gluckstern.
Phi Sig Delt President, Neil Billet,
exemplified the importance of the
marathon during his speech at the
banquet. "If one person can fight the
battle against cancer and win because
of the money that we have raised, then
every minute of those painful 72 hours
was a worthwhile one."
67
Dancers Squirm, Wriggle and Step
68
To The Beat Of The Cancer Marathon
69
Maryland Partying To Facedancer
70
As a burst of light, smoke and color
filled the stage in the Student Union
Grand Ballroom, the suspense that had
built up in the audience climaxed as the
music of Facedancer vibrated the room.
Facedancer opened the set with a
well-recognized Treggs tune, "Wild
Thing." Most of their songs were from
the recently released album, ABOUT
FACE, but the live performance was a
considerable improvement of the vinyl
version. The band ran through cuts
from the album, injecting the songs with
the magic of their stage presence and
the mastery of their instruments.
Fans danced, bounced and clapped
around the stage to the music (Shakin'
It," "Gotta Get Out," and "When I Get
Rich"), obviously delighted that a group
of local boys, who had played at our
own Varsity Grill, became national
celebrities. The crowd enjoyed the song,
"Forever Beach" when the band really
let this song rock.
As the rumors of the band breaking
up remain to be realized, the absence
of the keyboardist, Michael Milsap
reminded the audience of the band's
hope for bigger and better success. The
rest of the members; Scott McGinn, Tim
Tanner, Jeff Adams and Billy Trainor
may soon be on their own.
After an encore of "My Saxo-
phone" the band parted the stage with
thanks. "We love you," McGinn said,
"goodnight."
71
^CdcUen. O^ 74e 'RtK^
A sole fiddler sat atop a roof in a
poverty-ridden shack, playing a sweet,
yet mournful tune. A rather chunky
middle-aged man on stage dressed in
traditional Jewish garb and sporting an
untrimmed, shaggy grey beard. "A
fiddler on the roof, the old man, Tevye,
speculates, "Sounds crazy, no?"
A play cannot be realistic unless
the characters are, and Tevye, played
by sophomore theatre major David
Joseph Schuller, made sure of that.
He pranced around the stage and
had the audience in stitches. His
rendition of "If I Were a Rich Man"
was original, tiptoeing up and back on
stage like a small, hopeful child.
The play, put on by Tawes Theater,
with Rudolph E. Pugliese directing, was
what chorus member Cheri Mengle
called a "great success."
The production was performed
from Thursday til Saturday nights and
on Sunday afternoon, for two week-
ends. Due to the high demand for seats
an additional Sunday performance was
added.
The costumes were realistic as was
the scenery. All main characters were
chosen perfectly for their parts.
"We have several people here who
could compete with any of the talent of
Broadway," Pugliese says proudly.
"They could fill in for anyone in the
country."
TOP; Motel (Brad Van Grack) sings "Miracle of Miracles" to Tzeitel (Mary Jean King) rejoicing about
announcing their love to her father.
BOTTOM: Tevye (David |oseph Schuller] debates about the "Tradition" of his people in dealing with
the marriage of his daughter, Chava (Kathryn Silvia) to a Russian.
72
TOP: Granma Tzeitel (Cindy Iay| appears in Tevye's
dream. She says that Motel, the Taylor will make
a wonderful husband for their daughter. Tzeitel.
BOTTOM: Tevye (David [oseph Schuller] reveals
his nightmare to his wife, Golde (Karen Russo) and
they both become frightened when envisioning
Fruma-Sarah, the butcher's wife.
73
This Homecoming Masquerade
74
Warm, Wild and Victorious
"Sack the Pack" was the saying of
the week for Homecoming 1980.
Beautiful, fall weather provided the
perfect setting for the festivities.
The Terrapin Trot opened the
week's celebration with a ten-meter jog
around the campus on Saturday,
October 25.
On Monday, the Popular Lite Tug
O'War was sponsored by the Miller
Brewing Company. The "tug and chug"
took place on the South Chapel Lawn,
where the distributor gave hats and
tee-shirts to the winners and par-
ticipants.
The Arts and Crafts Fair that was
held on the Undergraduate Mall had
something for everyone. Local busin-
esses manned their stalls, providing
purchases from hot dogs to precious
Brazilian agates, from pottery to plants
to pumpkins. A local bluegrass band
provided the major attraction during the
two-day fair.
A little bit of Vegas came to the
Student Union on Casino Night on
Wednesday. Novices mingled with the
pros in a night of slick dress, big wheels
and Black Jack.
The Homecoming Parade, due to
start at 4:30 p.m.. finally left the Lot 1
starting point one hour late. Although
the parade was primarily composed of
Greek floats, many organizations man-
aged to participate. The Gay Communi-
ty sparked some controversy when they
drove past the Grand Marshall stand.
Their car sported the slogan, "Someone
in Your Life is Gay." Tim Brant,
University of Maryland alumni and
disc jockey at radio station WKYS was
the Grand Marshall of the parade.
At 6:30 p.m. people began assem-
bling on Denton Beach to motivate
themselves and the Maryland football
team. Football coach Jerry Claiborne
made a speech as the bonfire and the
crowd gained momentum.
75
Scott Woodside of radio station
WPGC was also on hand to generate
some excitement from the crowd. Dale
Rickenbach of FI)! started off the
cheers from the stage that had been
built for the event. The cheerleaders
and the band added lots of their own
kind of noise and spirit.
The players appeared, but left early
to catch some sleep for the next day's
game against North Carolina State. The
crowd moved closer to the stage to hear
the announcement of winners for the
decoration contests that had been going
on all week.
The overall winner, receiving the
President's Award, was the team of
Alpha Tau Omega and Alpha Phi. Fiji
and tri-Delt won the Grand Marshal
Award, for originality and creativity of
idea; Alpha Gamma Rho and Alpha Chi
Omega won This Masquerade Award
for best theme.
Pi Kappa Alpha won the Terrapin
Award for their artwork. The spirit
Snappin' Terp trophy went to Zeta Psi
and Phi Sigma Sigma. Although Pi
Kappa Alpha's car was not as amusing
as the entry by Annapolis Hall, the
fraternity won the Antique Car event.
Montgomery Center Hall won with
the best Homecoming window decora-
tions, and Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha
Gamma Rho won with their trimmings
in Greek competition.
76
i
n
Students Gouled-Up
Halloween spirit filled the campus
on the cool, clear night of Friday,
October 31. It was the night before the
Homecoming game, and students
turned out in large numbers and
outrageous costumes.
The Homecoming Committee spon-
sored a mixer at Ritchie Coliseum
from 9 P.M. to 1 A.M. A crowd flocked
outside the door in the usual Playboy
bunnies, punk rockers and quaaludes
costumes. An incredible hulk and some
drag queens added some interest to the
party.
Most of the dorms and Greeks got
together and sponsored small parties of
their own. The nearby bars were visited
by the costumed and jean-clad students
after the parties and the trick-
or-treating.
For Halloween Spirit
The Gay Community sponsored
their seventh annual costume ball. It
was billed as "the show you would
rather not see and wish would go
away." Ella Fitzgerald, Connie Francis,
Mitzi Gaynor and Bella Abzug provided
the entertainment; some of these men
are regulars at the Rogue, a Washington
club that regularly features female
impersonators. Impersonator, Jennifer
Warren portrayed the stunning emcee
of the ball.
79
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81
Rick Danko and Friends
Rick Danko and a Band of Friends
were joined by Washington, D.C.
groups Bill Hollands Rents Due and
Billy Price's Keystone Rhythm Band in
the Student Union Grand Ballroom.
The three bands provided a long night's
worth of rhythm and blues entertain-
ment.
Billy Price and the Keystone
Rhythm Band opened the concert. The
band specializes in their musical
interpretation of soul classics; old hits
by such artists as Clarence Carter, Jerry
McCain and O.V. Wright. Keith Grimes
on guitar, Tom Valentine on bass and
Dave Dodd on drums all played their
best; but the two men on saxophones,
Eric Leeds and Jim Emminger, injected
the jazz sound into the songs that the
audience responded to. The group
played local favorites such as "Pour it
Up," "I Don't Want No Woman" and
for an encore played "Keystone Soul
Gumbo."
Rent's Due followed as the next act.
The five-man band played vocal songs,
and that is where they have outstanding
strength. Holland's voice soothed
through all of the numbers, and even
the graphic sex in "Ernie's Place"
sounded mellow. Holland described
their music as a blend of many types,
having "roots in rhythm and blues, soul
and rock music, with a touch of jazz
influence."
During "April Fool" the blues from
the instruments began to shine. Keith
Grimes from Rent's Due appeared again
82
Rhythm and Blues
to play with the group during the last
numbers, but the spothght showed
Larry Strother playing first sax, then
clarinet, to draw the loudest cheers
from the crowd.
Danko and his Band of Friends
high-lighted a show that could have
stood on its own. Blondie Chaplin on
guitar played solos that were energetic
and unique. The performance drew the
last of the audience to their feet.
Danko, now separated from his
popular group, The Band, began with
the song, "I Never Felt so Alone
Before." Between songs, one particular-
ly drunk member of the audience yelled
his request to the group. "I wanna hear
'Brainwash'!"
"You got it," Danko replied, and he
cranked up his Band for the hard
rockin' tune.
Like all the other bands, Danko
came back by popular demand for an
encore. "Watcha' Gonna Do" polished
off an evening that was one of the best
meetings of D.C.'s finest jazz, blues and
rock music that has ever vibrated the
Grand Ballroom.
83
7<^e TO^Oc 70 ^<k^
84
/4^ 7<^ SU PC<t(fen.
The scene was set with no curtain
or raised stage. The seats for the
audience are wooden classroom desk
chairs, Mary Jean King and Karen
Wells are the sole performers in the
experimental plays, THE WHITE
WHORE AND THE BIT PLAYER and
LEMONADE.
Both actresses did the play as a
project for Theater 499, independent
study. "We like these plays; they were
about two interesting women," said
Mary Jean.
THE WHITE WHORE AND THE
BIT PLAYER was set in a sanitarium
room of a famous star. "She is a
combination of Marilyn Monroe, jean
Harlowe, and any star that made it,"
Miss Wells explained. Although the two
characters played two aspects of the
star's personality, there was no "split
personality". "Every woman has a
whore and a nun inside. The characters
symbolized the pleasure seeker and the
guilty consicious."
The play begins as the woman has
strangled herself on the cross in her
room. It continues until the woman dies,
and elongated her seconds laters.
During this time the character develops
into the nun that she saw herself to be
and the whore flesh that the world saw
her to be. Through flashback effects, the
characters reveal the life of the actress.
Karen Wells, as the white whore,
was scantily clad in fishnet stockings, a
body suit and camisole. Mary ]ean King
was clothed in a habit-like black gown
and a man's cap.
Wells said the star in the play had
been changed by society and by the
people that used her. "She is a
small-time actress, who at some point
changed the direction of her life. She
destroyed herself. The two parts of her
were so carried away that the guilt from
the nun aspect of her personality was
too strong." commented Miss Wells.
Miss King explained further,
"The woman couldn't live with the guilt
or without it."
LEMONADE (not pictured) des-
cribed two old women as they remin-
isced about their lives. The play was set
on a highway at the edge of a small
southern town on Memorial Day in the
late 1960's.
Miss Wells and Miss King proved
their versatility as believable char-
acters, covertly sullen women out to sell
lemonade and waste time.
The two women talked about their
past lives gayfully, but inside neither
was pleased with their accomplish-
ments. Each woman revealed inner
secrets to impress and to insult the
other. The lines were often funny and
yet there was a note of sadness to them.
All the time they searched for
passing cars shouting "Lemonade."
"The plays are about the woman's
condition," said Miss Wells. They live
their lives through husbands and
fantasies. Not that all women are like
that but this life does not meet their
expectations. These women are des-
troved."
85
Elvis Costello stepped on stage to
meet the roar of the sell-out crowd in
Ritchie Colosseum.
He opened the evening with "Black
Sails in the Sunset" and continued to
play all of his favorites, with barely a
pause between each tune. "Accidents
will Happen," "Alison," and "Love is
War", sent crowd heads bopping
"punk-style" up and down. The beat
was so fast that the standing crowd was
exhausted before the encore. Costello's
show lasted approximately two hours, a
rarity for the performer who usually
plays for under an hour because he
doesn't enjoy public appearances.
Elvis Costello
Squeeze
The opening group was "Squeeze",
a local five man band, consisting of
preps and punks. The band teased the
crowd at times by playing offstage, and
out of the crowd's reach. Their music
was a popularized brand of punk that
covered, "How Long (Has This Been
Going On)," and "If I Didn't Love You
I'd Leave You."
86
87
Freewater
88
"Which one is Milton Freewater?"
None of the members of the five
member band carries the name, yet they
were bombarded with the question so
often that they changed the name to,
simply, "Freewater."
The five musicians, are really Doug
Percizal on bass, Ira Katz on drums,
Sharon Gnatt on keyboard and vocals;
and the two original members of the
band, now married, Dave Jacobson,
lead guitarist and Bonnie Wilner, lead
vocalist.
The Pikesville, Maryland mu-
sicians are a favorite on campus with
their Grateful-Dead style performances.
Freewater sold out Ritchie Colosseum
twice during the year, and was the
featured act for this year's annual South
Hill Aprilfest celebration.
The group has become well known
on the East Coast. The reputation for
this growing band is blossoming across
other parts of the nation. Freewater
released a 45-record in September, with
two originals, "Rock Me, Roll Me," and
"Love the Night Away." with their
growing popularity, the group has
ventured out to produce more of their
own songs.
89
Paul Winters
91
'^€iOt
Hair was finally performed at
Tawes Theatre after a ban that lasted
over a decade.
The emotionally-charged play was
cancelled in the late sixties at the
command of James Kehoe. Although the
controversial anti-war theme and nudit>'
upset parents and faculty, the play had
a lot to say to students on campus. Like
Kent State, Maryland was occupied by
the National Guard during the nation-
wide protest movement.
Even co-author James Rado, a
former University of Maryland theatre
student of the fifties, could not bring his
famous play to his campus until
February of 1981. Rado attended the
premier performance on February
fourth.
Hair is filled with a special kind of
patriotism felt by those that understood
the protests. The "tribe," a group of
young draft-dodgers in Central Park,
New York, sing in the praises of God
and their country. Their problems are
ones experienced by all youths - parents,
drug experimentation, sex, and friend-
ships. But their troubles climaxed with
the draft, and the waste of young men's
lives in a war whose purpose was alien
to them.
In Hair. Claude (Floyd D. Starnes),
the most innocent of the tribe members,
receives his draft notice. He must decide
whether to serve his country or his
conscience. This decision tears him
apart from the tribe and causes conflicts
within himself, but familiar to many.
92
93
Nighthawks
94
95
The Student Union Has It All
At the University of Maryland, the
place to witness students in their best
form does not necessarily involve
attending a mixer or concert. It is much
simpler to go to the Student Union. It's
the place for students to eat, drink,
shop, socialize, study, and sleep.
Downstairs is the Food Co-op for
those who are avid health food fans,
with shelves of nuts, raisins, and dried
fruit snacks. At a counter along the back
wall, orders are taken for sandwiches.
But for those who are into the fast food
places, there is Roy Roger's, Dory's Ice
Cream, Bayside Seafood, Chateaux
Gateaux (bakery), and the Pizza
Shoppe. There is also the Tortuga Room
which serves lunches and dinners;
students are allowed to use their meal
cards to cover their dinner costs. Not far
from the Tortuga Room is a place where
some people prefer to drink their lunch
away, "The Hole in the Wall," and is
mainly used by commuters. Beer-
drinkers are usually spilling out into the
hallway due to the small size of this
establishment. And last but not least, for
those who prefer the vending machines,
the Macke room is the place to vend.
In this room people can select their
sandwich, beverage, and dessert with
the drop of a coin(s) and the push of a
button. Then can continue to the
microwave oven to heat up their
delicacy. And to keep these machine
lovers entertained, pinball machines
are provided.
Pinball machines aren't the only
means of entertainment at the Student
Union. Downstairs from the Macke
Room is the bowling alley and billiard
room. These are open during the day as
96
well as at night. However, the night
entertainment offered by the Student
Union doesn't end downstairs. There is
the Hoff Theater, which provides
movies Tuesday through Sunday. These
range from foreign films to classics of
the 1930's and 1940's to the most current
films. But the best movies are the
midnight movies on the weekends. The
crowds are always the rowdiest. But,
since a night movie isn't for everyone,
there is the Glass Onion. Here is a place
for beer drinkers, music lovers, and
those who want to dance.
During the day hours, those who
have nothing to do may simply stroll
through the Student Union. Some
people prefer to mill through the
Record Co-op, looking at the newest
released albums on sale. Right next to
the Record Co-op is the Ticketron
where one can find out about the
upcoming concerts in the area and
purchase tickets to these and other
events. Then there is the Union Shop,
for magazines, candy, cookies, or
cigarettes. Lastly, sits the University
Book Center. There are text books,
books for enjoyment, Maryland wears
(T-shirts, sweatshirts and pants, shorts,
socks, knapsacks, hats, and accessories),
school supplies, cards, snacks, and little
knick knacks (calendars, mugs, glasses,
stuffed animals, posters, and toiletries).
After doing all of this browsing there is
a place for every student to sit, sleep,
or study known as the lounge.
The Student Union is full of
conveniences - stamp machines, the
information desk, copy machines, legal
aid office, and the Star Center. The Star
Center is for the serious students who
would like to receive tutoring and tests.
The Student Union is just what it
states in the title, a place for everyone.
98
99
V^iiiiiiiii
100
101
Where We Have
The Grill
On Friday, January 13th, the
Varsity Grill Backroom opened for its
first Happy Hour.
It was a year of firsts for the Varsity
Grill, as it completed one year without
its Front Room. This part of the bar on
Route 1 was sold to Crown Books.
The Grill attracts students, who
enjoy the crowded dance floor, prompt-
ed by the common dance contests,
known as "no skin, no win."
Although the Grill has undergone
changes, a portion of the former crowd
of the old Backroom still return. A
rough group, they enjoyed the bands
that performed, such as Root Boy Slim
and the Slickee Boys. For this crowd
fights, were a common occurance and
is probably an attraction that keeps
them returning. For others, the dancing
and the Schaeffer Beer keeps them
coming back.
102
The Pub
On election night, 1980, after a two
year absence for a trial run as a disco
nightspot, The Pub returned to campus.
Advertising all-the-beer-you-can-
drink-for-$l, on opening night the door
by the Main Dining Hall saw its fi
Mezzanine.
Since the inaugaration of the Pub,
special nights, special deals and good
local bands have revived the failing
club. Happy Hours on Thursday and
Friday nights have become increasingly
popular.
The Pub is one of the few places
close to campus where students and
their guests can dance. It boasts a larger
dance floor than the Grill and a lower
cover than Italian Gardens. Once again,
Maryland partiers are staying on
campus when they go out to have a good
time.
A Drink or Two
The Cellar
Although the Cellar has been
below the Paragon in College Park for
twenty years, the nightspot did not
adopt the new title until the summer of
1980. After the closing of the Front
Room of the Varsity Grill, students who
did not want to wait in line at the
overly-crowded Route 1 spots, wan-
dered till they found that the pleasant
atmosphere of this bar was within
walking distance of campus.
General Manager Ray Bednar sees
his recent success of the club from
catering now to students. "Even faculty
come in here for a drink," he said. "We
also serve mixed drinks, unlike the
other bars close to campus."
The Cellar also serves Italian food,
so the midnight munchies are satisfied
without the surly service of the all-night
purple pizza shop across the street.
The Cellar has helped the Interfra-
ternity Council in their effort to raise
money for the Children's Hospital in
Washington, D.C., and was the scene of
the Barroom Olympics this year.
The Omega Pub
The Omega Pub, which opened in
June, quickly attracted a college crowd.
Manager Mark Woodward has tried to
develop a more personal atmosphere
than in the other bars. "The Omega Pub
is advantageous over other College Park
nightspots because it offers students a
new, different atmosphere from the
standing-room-only of many other
college bars," WoodwaM said. "Apart
from the weekends, it is not usually
crowded."
However, too many people have
been attracted to the small, quiet bar
which is quickly becoming crowded
and noisy. The building is an old house,
complete with an elaborate, winding
staircase and a cozy, burning fireplace.
The management is planning to extend
the converted house with an addition on
the back, which should seat another 250
people.
103
The Rendezvous Inn
The Rendezvous Inn, the famous
and notorious College Park bar known
as the Vous, is the most popular place
for cheap beer and good music around
the University of Maryland. Lines
outside the door that back up for hours
start at Tuesday's Ladies' Night and
continue through Saturday night. The
floor is covered with something that all
hope is beer, and the music, ranging
from old Mowtown hits to new
rock-and-roll, new wave and disco, is
always played loud. Some people will
always try to dance, but it is impossible
to do the popular "bump" with just one
person; strangers are forced into the act,
too. When the floors become crowded,
patrons pile onto table tops.
The Vous has a reputation as an
"anything goes" type of place that caters
to students. In the year of the blizzard,
January 1978, students danced the
can-can on the bartop, and rumor has
it that wilder stunts have happened on
the sticky black counter.
104
R.J. Bentley's
R.J. Bentley's opened three years
ago as a quiet restaurant and a bar
consisting of beer. It is a unique place
with the decor done in an antique car
theme. But in the fall of 1980, they
received their liquor license, and
became a strong competitor to the other
Route 1 bars. Now the Grill and Vous
weren't the only places that had lines
on the weekends. Due to the decor,
food, and a atmosphere that one tends
to find in Georgetown, Qui Magazine
ranked Bentley's among the top ten in
"Best Bars in the Nation."
Bentley's has expanded their busi-
ness by opening a carry out as an
addition to their restaurant and recently
acclaimed bar with "Parts and Ac-
cessories" keep their automobile theme,
and features such things as picnic
baskets, and desserts.
105
Weekends Were Made for Special
You Make a Weekend?
Recipe Card # 1
Cruising, Snaking and Road Trips
Special note: Begin on Thursday
and continue till Ladies' Night ends at
midnight on Tuesday. This recipe takes
days to complete!
Ingredients: First the shower.
Blow-dry the hair - a necessity if you
want fingers of the opposite sex to run
through it. Pack an overnight bag and
hope you'll need it.
Follow with a generous amount of
Clearasil, and make-up if desired.
Clothes must be chosen with care —
otherwise you will come out overdone,
or worse, underdone. Boys are out with
the boys and girls are out with the girls,
and if you're not careful, you could go
home with the people that you came
with.
Add some joints, and a six-pack for
the road. Don't forget to save a beer to
sneak into the bars. Then you won't
have to buy so many once you get
3
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106
Friends . . . How Can
inside. Avoid police officers.
Yield: Over-expectations, auto ac-
cidents, and good times. (They are not
mutually exclusive.)
Variations: Whether you want to go
to for sophistication of Georgetown, the
wet and wild of white-water, the slopes
of Western Maryland or for the sands
of Ocean City, Maryland has a place.
Annapolis is full of college boys, and
Baltimore's Block can entertain you if
you are sick of college girls. Ft.
Lauderdale is the obvious "must"
during spring break.
For most of us. weekends were
made for Miller, Michelob, Molson and
the Route. At the Greek GIGIF's the
beer is free. You don't have to miss
today's "General," it is on the TV at
Happy Hour at the Vous.
Skiing, sunning or sinning —
weekends at College Park are the thing
Mom warned you about the day you
graduated from high school.
107
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108
Trendy 1981
109
110
Ill
Election
Few would venture to predict the
outcome of the Presidential race of
1980. Every poll contradicted another
one. Regardless, on November 4th,
Ronald Reagan received 489 electoral
votes and incumbent President |immy
Carter received 49 votes. The Repub-
lican Party won its first Senate majority
in 26 years, with the capture of 53
Senate seats, and made strong gains in
the House of Representatives.
Reagan's win over President Carter
marked the first loss an elected
president has suffered in a reelection
bid since President Herbert Hoover's
loss in 1937. An assemblage of Senate
Democratic strongmen joined Carter in
defeat. Liberal Birch Bayh of Indiana,
Frank Church of Idaho, and George
McGovern of South Dakota lost as
conservatives won elections nation-
wide.
Reagan swept into both the blue
collar and the southern wings of the old
New Deal Democratic coalition. He
carried 44 states, although only 51
percent of the popular vote. Carter won
41 percent of the popular vote and six
states, including Maryland and the
District of Columbia. Reagan received
43 million votes. Carter 35 million and
John Anderson 5.5 million.
THE CAMPAIGN
Carter succeeded in making
Reagan the issue of debate until the
final days of the election. However, in
the campaigning process, as in his
presidency. Carter left little reservoir of
public optimism and confidence about
himself.
Carter campaigned, not by offering
the people his agenda for the 1980's, but
by trying to scare the country with the
Reagan agenda from the 1960's. His
attempts to persuade Americans that
Reagan was a tired old actor looking for
a new role failed, as did attempts to
discredit him by ridiculing his associa-
112
1980
tion with a pet monkey in Bedtime for
Bonzo, an old Reagan film.
ELECTION DAY: WORLD REACTION
The election was decided almost as
soon as the earliest returns were
tabulated. Carter conceded defeat in a
public statement one hour before the
polls closed on the West Coast, causing
thousands of Democrats there to stay
away from the polls during the last hour
of the election. Democratic Party
officials contended that this was
responsible for the narrow defeats of
several Democratic members of
Congress from California, Oregon, and
Washington.
The world greeted the election
results with caution. The Paris news-
paper France-Soir placed under a
front-page headline, "American has
Chosen," a photograph of a gun-toting
Reagan from a 25-year-old Western
Movie.
One Soviet diplomatic source
called ours "a very sobering" election,
and shared a concern with Soviet
politicians over the SALT II treaty,
which Reagan has promised to aban-
don.
The stock market celebrated the
Reagan victory on November 5th with
the heaviest trading day in Wall Street
history, marked especially with heavy
buying in defense and old stocks.
Carter had received a slim majority
of support on campus as well as
throughout Maryland and D.C. Many
members of the University of Maryland
Young Democrats adorned with "An-
derson" buttons, registered voters until
the last day in a booth outside the
student union. Nationwide, the registra-
tion program suffered; only 48 percent
of eligible voters went to the polls on
November 4, 1980. Reagan was elected
to office by less than 25 percent of the
nation's eligible voters.
113
The Homecoming
November 4. 1980, the anniversary
of the seizure of 52 Americans by
Iranian students, was a major contribu-
tor to the loss of incumbent President
Jimmy Carter. Iranian terrorists protest-
ed CIA and American military invol-
vement in their country by a take-over
of the American embassy in the capital
city of Tehran. One year later, only
Richard Queen, suffering from multiple
sclerosis, had been released since black
and women prisoners had been freed
shortly after capture.
On January 20, seconds before
President-elect Ronald Wilson Reagan,
took the oath of office a plane left from
Tehran airport with the newly-freed
hostages. New York welcomed them
home with a parade of yellow ribbons,
the symbol of solidarity and support
while the hostages were captive. Wa-
shington held a fireworks display that
surpassed even the Bicentennial cele-
bration. Some hostages told stories of
severe treatment. One man had been
kept in solitary confinement for about
one year. But most suffered
psychologically and from poor nutrition
and not from brutal treatment.
New President Reagan greeted the
hostages at the White House, and the
University of Maryland welcomed home
one of their own, Alan Golacinski, a
1972 alumnus.
Alan Golacinski. a 1972 University of Maryland graduate, returned to Maryland holding an American
flag and new hopes for the future.
114
115
Exit Student, Enter Professional
Seniors Leave, Testudo Remains
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119
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121
Air Force Reserve
Detachment 330,
Freshmen
Sophomores
Accorti, Linda
Amann. Nick
Bauest. Paul
Banks, [acaiyn
Berdensk>', Amy
Biorstad, Kurt
Bollinger, Carroll
Brooks, [ulios
Buckley, |ohn
Denegal, xx
Devaughn, Paul
Dieman, Charles
Douglass, Ollen
Douglass, Robert
Eans, John
Ellertbeck. Mike
Floros, Nick
Gates, Eric
Ginsberg, Andrew
Grays, Cheryl
Grenchik, Martin
Gunzelman. Eric
Hannasch, Virginia
Kaheirne, Leslie
Kennedy, D
Kinsler, Rob
Kley, John
Komorowski, John
Lamar, xx
Laureano, Juan
Leepa, Chuck
Lewis, Percy
Lonsbury, Maria
Lucas, Synora
Lyle, Edward
Lynch, Eileen
122 MacDougall, Stewart
Miller, Phil
Morel, Rich
Neilon, Bob
Northam, Clifton
Osborn, Wayne
O'Donnell, Patrick
O'Leary, jerry
Packwood, Tyler
Parra, Angel
Pelosi, Ronnie
Penn, Michael
Pernicorn, Victor
Pierre-louis, Fritz
Pugliese, Steve
Reuinger, Allen
Rivera, David
Roberts, Paul
Robey, Terry
Ross, Mike
Russo, Chris
Sadler, Ted
Salmon, Randy
Sasdelli, Ed
Savage, joe
Selock, Kevin
Shamblin, William
Singletary, Ricardo
Sodipo, Aki
Sowle, Paula
Sparks, James
Uranski, Dominik
Watlsack, Paul
Wilcox. Linda
Wilkins, xx
Williams, jim
Zurmuhlen, Lisa
Anvill. Wesley
Anderson. Brian
Anderson. Rowland
Bauckman. Tom
Beard. Ronald
Behnke, Mark
Breidor, John
Budzik. Anthony
Calhoun, Francine
Cephas, Barbette
Chin, Cyi
Corbett, Michelle
Costa, John
Craft, Dean
Davidson, D.
Davis, Larry
Denestral, Hubert
Duffy, Sean
Ellis, Arthur
Pitts, Clift
Fitts, Clifford
Garrison, John
Herr, Richard
Milliard, Rick
Holbert, xx
Iruri. John
Jones, Richard
Karlin, David
King, Bruce
Komorowski, John
Kosloski, Caroline
Levine, Alec
Logan, Colleen
McKeoun, Everetl
Milton, James
Milway. James
Monahan, John
Morris-jr., Wayne
Olson, John
Olson, John
Patrick. Douglas
Pinover, Scott
Hedinger, Allen
Shih. Kitty
Smith. Kevin
Stanford, Eric
Stuart. Richard
Sutton. Mike
Taylor, Jeffrey
Taylor, Mike
Uy, Emmanuel
Vanderhoven, John
Wagner, Alan
Ward, Michael
Washington, Kelly
Weinbach, Jenifer
Williams, Rodney
Wright, Kelly
Young, Harold
Juniors
Seniors
Ahner, Ronald
Bakke, Karen
Ballou, Sondra
Beck, Chris
Blankinship, Brian
Brown, Shirley
Bryant, Michael
Carey, Kenneth
Cartillo, Francis
Catano, Richard
Chamberlain, |eanette
Clark, Cathy
Classen, Brian
Cole, Mark
Cole, Mark
Cooper, Mark
Cornet, John
Cromartie, Marcus
Davis, Duane
Delcozo, Raymond
Early, Ken
Eichorn, Frank
Evans, Karen
Evans. Karen
Fales. MaDonna
Fallin, Victoria
Fallin, Z
Fallin, Zachary
Federanto, John
Fernstrom, Suzanne
Floyd, Marie
Fowler, James
Freeman, Freddie
Gipson, Robert
Harrison, Davis
Harvill, John
Hawkes, Gregory
Jones. Linwood
Kaplan, David
Karn III, Bradley
Kearns, Michael
Keder, Daniel
Kia, Michael
Krause, Keith
Lee. Myong
Lo. Darren
Lynch, David
Mamilton, Susan
Mchale. Lawerence
Meyer. Stephen
Mooiarty. Timothy
Moon. Norman
Morris, Henry
Murin, Leonard
Murphy, Jeanine
Myers, Cynthia
Nostrand, Michael
Perry. Brady
Postosky, Andrew
Reiley, Stephen
Roberts, James
Rosenthal, Stuart
Shelton. Frank
Somarrita, Chester
Stalnaker, Marc
Waddell, Betty
Wills, Vincent
Wyatt. Kershner
Alfier. Jeff
Arata. Harold
Bacon, Kevin
Bentz, Kenneth
Berkenkemper. Richard
Bruno, Robert
Chernega. James
Cobb. Allan
Dale. Audrey
Edwards. Larry
Eslocker, Larry
Finch. Quanda
Furran. Francois
Geiger. Bill
Gennaci. Tore
Hahn, John
Heath, Peter
Hiebert. Mark
Howe, Mike
Kelley, Tim
Kobren. William
Kummer. Kevin
Lohr, Vondrekle
Malmbero, Kenric
Mansfield. Michael
McDonald. Colleen
Mcneil. Joseph
Melucas. Marc
Miller. Warner
Peoples. Robert
Phelan. Michael
Radley, Ken
Robbins. Timothy
Sabotka. David
Shaffer. Martin
Shafran. Thomas
Straub. Debbie
Timpanaro. Dennis
Troeschel. Jim
Turner. Eric
Velez. Victoria
Vogel. Frank
Watson. Sharon
Wayson. Michael
Woodward, Stephen
Zagorski, James
Officer Training Corps
University of Maryland
SEa*MaK*i'»eatar^ r^jSftJS* «*^i -*«fff "Ste?^!*^^
The Maryland Book Exchange 123
Maryland AFROTC
AFROTC Detachment 330 is one of
the largest non-military Air Force
ROTC Detachments in the country.
Officer training for the U.S. Air Force
takes place here. The Corps is struc-
tured in much the same way as the Air
Force, itself. Cadets learn leadership
and management techniques and use
these skills by actually administering
them in the corps. The faculty, are all
Air Force officer advisors. Along with
this training, the corps holds annual
social events such as: the military ball,
a Dining out, a Field Day, and other
various activities. Four, three, or two
year scholarships are offered to those
who qualify academically.
Corps sponsored organizations in-
clude the Arnold Air Society, Angel
Flight, Society of American Military
Engineers, and the Maryland Honor
Guard. In all, these cadets are the Air
Force leadership of the future.
124
R. Dobie Langenkamp addresses the University of Maryland Student Post of the Society of American
Mihtary Engineers.
Cadet Marc Meluses inspects a cadet on the Armory
Cadets battle it out in tug-of-war and wheelbarrel races during Field Day
floor
The Maryland Book Exchange 125
Student Government
126
Association
The Maryland Book Exchange 127
Denton Area Council
128
Ellicott Area Council
Shelley Horn |Treasurer|. Harvey Waxman (President], Eileen Beecher (Vice President), and Matt Horowitz (Secretary)
As one of the campus's five area
councils, the ElHcott Area Council
serves as a student run social program-
ming and policy/advisory board for the
residents of the Ellicott Community.
Comprised of four elected officers,
several chairpersons, and representa-
tives from each floor of LaPlata, Ellicott
and Hagerstown, the EAC strives to
bring the community a little closer
together through friendly competitions
and dorm mixers. The Skin the Wildcats
MagaMixer, a New Years Eve Party
held in February, a Cupid social and a
Moonlight Cruise left the residents
partying long into the night. Floor Feud,
Survival. The Roomate Game, and the
Beach Week Olympics and Treasure
Hunt challenged each floor to compete
for cash prizes.
The EAC's newsletter, The Stall
Street Journal, published every two
weeks and displayed in every bathroom
stall keeps the residents informed of the
Area Council's involvement with the
Resident Life contract, RHA's Mixer
Noise Policy, Dining Services's Student
Consumer Advocacy Group programs,
and other issues affecting the communi-
ty-
The Maryland Book Exchange 129
Panhellenic Council
130 The Maryland Book Exchange
Architecture Association
Ground level: Dave Fogle (Asst. Dean], Ken Stuart, Doug Fowler. Bonnie Likens, Loreen Highley, Cynthia Boyle, Robert Ahmuty. Top Level: Frank Gambino.
Glenn Wing, Gordon Stewart, Skip Lowney.
The Maryland Book Exchange 131
Hang Gliding Association
In alphabetical order Heidi Cayouette. Bill Irowe, Terry Lee, Paul Lemar, Robbin Lowenbraun, Seung Dae Moon, Richard Morris, Mike Nostrand, Mark
Owens, Bruce Ross, Fred Viers, Mark Wangel, Glen Worrell, Keith Yager.
The University of Maryland Hang
Gliding Association is a non-profit
student organization geared to teaching
its members how to safely hang glide so
that once certified proficient by a
representative of the United States Hang
Gliding Association, they may par-
ticipate in intercollegiate compeitition
and recreational soaring.
The Association participated in the
intercollegiate competition held at the
University of New Hampshire in
September 1980. During the three days
of competition members demonstrated
their skills in precision flying. Ronald
Gallahan, former Flight Director, took
first place pilot and the Association won
the first place team trophy.
132 The Maryland Book Exchange
Left: Hanging in glider: Glen Worrell. Below:
Hang Gliding Club Officers (L-R| Mark Owens,
Flight Director: Glen Worrell, Treasurer; Mike
Nostrand, President; Heide Cayouette (nor
shown). Vice President.
The Maryland Book Exchange 133
Intramurals Inspire Students To Interact
134 University Book Center
if*
University Book Center 135
AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION
First Row: |L to R|: Suzzie Sedden, Dave Meyers, Eva Newman, Barbara Shiels, and Tammy
Damicio Second Row: Bob Everett |Advisor), Donna Garito. Mike Kurtz, and Kurt Kumagui Third
Row: Mike Dana, Rodger Greif, Steve Ekovitch, and Hank Aldage
136 The Maryland Book Exchange
Delta Sigma Pi Business Fraternity
First Row: (L to R|: Pat Hale, Bob Johns, Elaine Saunders, and Rayane Workman Second Row: Matthew Scire, and
Gail Tyeryar, Third Row: [ohn B. Haber, Aleda Corydon, Chris Drews, and Wendy Lozinsky Fourth Row: Sam Trevino,
and Patricia Oser Fifth Row: Gary Hall, Susan Meizlish, Karen Freeman, Suzanne Witasik, and Damon Ehrlich Sixth
Row: Tom Collins, Norbert Wendlandt, and Sue Wald Seventh Row: Suzanne LaCross, Tracey Cohen, Randy Berkow,
and Elisa China Eighth Row: Sandy Haas, Gail Tseng, Robin Neighly, and Dawn Schoemeir Ninth Row: Rodger Greif,
Jim Rehill, Jim Kochowicz, and Mike Warner
The Maryland Book Exchange 137
Alpha Zeta Honorary Fraternity
138 Good luck Terps from the Pizza House
Mortar Board Senior Honor Society
(Left to Right]: Shelley Kosisky, Curtis Hatch, Mar>' Jane Inglesby (Vice
President], Stephen Giannetti, Ruth Goldfinger, Pam Tontodanato |Historian],
Erica Fisher, Dr. Helen Clarke (Advisor], |ulie Pragg, Ann St. Aubin (Treasurer),
Michelle Pogust, Margaret Hoyert (President]. Dean Robert Shoenberg
(Advisor] Not pictured - Karen Kessler (Secretary]
Mortar Board is the senior honor
society that recognizes scholarship,
leadership, and service both on campus
and in the community. The society's
purpose is to provide for cooperation
among honor societies for seniors, to
support the ideals of the University, to
advance a high spirit of scholarship, to
recognize and encourage leadership,
and to provide the opportunity for a
meaningful exchange of ideas as
individuals and as a group.
Among other activities, Mortar
Board sponsors the Senior Honors
Convocation in April and the spring
lecture serfes, "celebration of learning."
Pizza House 779-3059 139
Alpha Delta Pi
First Row: (L to R|; Irene Gardella, Valerie Donohoe. Caryll Stout, Lori Wilson, Theresa Mussari. Second Row: Leslie Gromis, Gina Bezkurt, Carrie Ruffo.
ludy Lebet, Caria Bozlevich, Betsy Lauder, Risa Olasson, Carol Metzner, Anita Grieten, Susie Waters, Jennifer Parsons, Linda Serter, Dale Sloan Third Row:
Bethann Hersh, Bonnie Howard, Nancy Cameron, Kathy Monohan, Sharon Wong, Andrea Mager, Kathy Kazlo, Helen Hayes, Barbara Kopera, Kim Robinson,
Mary Riggs, Diane Guariglia, Karen Rogers, Terri Griffies, Michelle Straub, Laurie Macturk. Tricia Garza. Fourth Row: Deanne Black, Amy Shapiro, Karen
McRenney, Katie Keybold, Kathy Merachnik, Betsy Bellewill, Susan Hollonan, Kim Revene, Sandy Taylor, Kathy Egbert, Denise Bilger. Joanne Padion, Mary
Desautels, Jane-Marie Cowndjeris, Dee Uiecol, Kim Revision, Tina Sante, Jenniger Robbins,
140 The Pizza House 779-3059
Delta Gamma Officers. Bottom Row: (L to R): Cevin Melozuglu (Treasurer]. Pam
Duckett (Recording Secretary], Karen Pulver (2nd V.P. Pledge Trainer], Kim Clark
(1st V.P. Chapter Relations], Debbie Robinson (President], Jennifer Rood (Scholarship
Chairman), Rebecca Medina (Panhellenic Rep.] and Dana Goldman (Foundation
Chairman]. Top Row: Aldona Stachitas (Social Chairman], Anne Greswell (House
Manager), Eileen Mahoney (Rituals Chairman], Mary Lanzi (Rush Chairman & 3rd
V.P.], [oanne LaMantia (Corresponding Secretary], Jeanne-Marie Etkins (Public
Relations).
Left to Right: Pam Crown, Fidelia Martino, Kathy Mason, Laura
Dawson, Mary Jane Inglesby, Elizabeth Scales, and Beth Bellamy
Delta Gamma
First Row: (L to RJ: L. Scales, P. Duckett, M. Walsh, D. Robinson. Second Row: C. Siegel, J. Carl, L. Dawson, A. Greswell, M. Lanz, K. Foley. Third Row:
N. Porter, L. Walker, C. Scanlon, K. Mason, S. Coughlin, P. Crown, P. Davis, and S. Schmitt. Fourth Row: D. Ghoporis. M. Hossick, D. Beaumont, M.
Murrow, R. Robertson, M. Rankin. T. Sarlass, B. Reed, K. Pulver, S. Woodfield, C. Mason, and G. Schmidt. Fifth Row: M. Kennedy, D. Goldman, J. Etkins.
Sixth Row: B. Edwards, M. Shaw, C. Melezoglu. M. Inglesby, M. Burns, R. Eugene, L. Welsh. M. Wellington, B. bellamy, L. Bowman, J. Rood, B. Kemp,
S. Scheidel, C. Purbaugh. Seventh Row: S. Shriver, B. Halada, S. Hwang, E. Albanes, J. LaMantia, T. LaMantia, S. Ayers, C. Cassidy. A. Amorim. F. Martino,
B. Medina. K. Stemler, M. Crow.
The Pizza House 779-3059 141
Delta Phi
Epsilon
ABOVE: First Row: Emily Gordon, Adriene Diamond, Stacy Kaminsky,
Nancy Goldstein, Julie Goldberg, Lois Scrota. Jill Waldorf, Michele
Ellman, Lynne Pass. Ellin Swartz, Risa Eisenberg. Second Row: Sue
Adato, Dina Bamberger, Eileen Berl, Marlene Bernstein, Leslie Blanck,
Lori Blum, Debbie Braun, Susan Bressler, Susie Cadeaux, Brenda
Eisdorfer. Shari Epstein, Terri Friedman. Third Row: Wendy Feurman,
Robyn Fuchs, Susan Futrovsky, Leslye Goldberg, Rhonda Goldsteen,
Ann Green, Faith Grossman, Diane Horowitz, Debbie Klein, Ev Kosow,
Karen Wachs. Fourth Row: Lisa Levy, Amy Oroshnik, [ill Weinstein
(Advisor), Lori Pavon, Gale Pritz, Kathy Schnaper, Andrea Steinfeld,
Cathy Thomas, Arlene Ungerleider, Michele Waxman. Karen Ehrlich.
Jenny Norinsky, Lori Sarason. Fifth Row: Debbie Henderson, Karen
Peterson, Jamie Waxman, Amy Stapler, Barbara Rosenthal, Stephanie
Bordenick, Beth Futrovsky. Susan Koricki. Debbie Layton. Missing: Traci
Baiter. Marcy Goldstein. Lauri Rodin. Sharon Fass. Alison Sherman.
Marlene Wertheim. Florri Wasserberger. Joan Lourie. Caren Perlman,
Lynne Zeller. LEFT: Officers. First Row: Julie Goldberg, Nancy
Goldstein, Michele Ellman, Risa Eisenberg, Ellin Swartz. Second Row:
Jill Waldorf, Stacy Kaminsky, Lynne Press. Third Row: Lois Serota,
Adriene Diamond, Jill Weinstein (Advisor), Emily Gordon (President).
142 Thanks for stopping by Varsity Grill Backroom
DELTA DELTA DELTA
(In Alphabetical Order]; Denise AUia. Anne Marie Altobelli. Tracy Anderson, Chris Baronoski, Susan Bigler, Sarah Bonner. Carolyn Brown, Kristen Buckel,
Jennifer Buran, Kathleen Butler, Alice Conn, Lisa Conn, Pam Courtney, Margaret Davies, Debra Deacon, Kim Detrick, Valerie Devaris, Becky Devlin, Minoo
Eslami, Wendy Ewbank, Sara Falk, Maura Gavigan, Suzanne Giannetti. Stacey Cleave, Kathryn Golden, Nancy Hammel. Ann Henry, Diane Hill, Leslie Hirsch,
Lori Hunt, Cyndee Hurd, Catherine Jackson, Elizabeth Jackson, Kimberly Kal (President]. Wende Keefe. Pamela Kehayias. Catherine Kratz, Christina Kratz,
Laura Kruse, Monica Laspia, Phyllis Lee, Amy Lewellyn, Treacy Mallon. Lillian Manning. Valerie Martin. Maribeth McCarthy. Celeste McCee. Patricia Meehan.
Martha Mileur. Cathy Miller, Katherine Nee. Sheri Nield. Hilary Osborn. Laura Page. Lisa Page. Deborah Palmer. Julie Pati. Lisa Poese, Diane Prier. Michele
Randazzo. Valerie Reichert. Julie Richards. Susan Richards. Becky Riley. Susan Rose. Lori Scarcia. Mary Jane Scarcia, Sandy Scott. Maureen Snee. Julei
Sorantino, Deborah Stear, Rhonda Sturgill, Daine Trease, Jill Turek, Noreen Turyn, Karen Vargo, Wendi Wickland, Jody Winkler, Brenda Young, Jayne Adams,
Mindy Adams, Laura Slyman, Donna Wurfl, Icey Jenkins, Jennifer Leimbach, Lindsay Sherrard, Jody Sommers, Stacey McCarn
Varsity Grill Backroom 143
Delta Sigma Phi
First Row: |L to R|; David Juris, Joe Renna, |oseph Keyser, lohn Zierot, Stephen Lucas. Second Row: Pete Polkiewicz, Peter Mascone, |ohn Yetman, David
Apriceno, Dale Walter. Fifi Levine, Mitchell Gray. Third Row: Doug Witt, Mike Milan, Mike Fischer, |oe Clemm, Bill Metzler, Pete Bickmore. Tony Notaro,
Bobby Barranco, Mike Jump. Fourth Row: Alan Liddell, Matt Yetman, Gary Walter, Vic Pascoe, George Neill, Ron Zaleski, David Schilpp, Barrett Oxley,
Craig Wilson, David Avery, Bob Wunderlick, Jeff Brennan.
144 Varsity Grill Backroom
Gamma Phi Beta
First Row: (L to R): Lori Scialabba, Cathy Sybil, Beth Orr, Marci Peters. Tricia Lopez, Jackie Schlenger, Mary Casamento, Dian Hianes Second Row: Margaret
Woo. Chris Choe. Katie Colvin, Cathy junghams, Lisa Chase. Debora Clark, [ulie Natheson, Sue Gross, Suzanne Gignoux Third Row: Colleen Sweeney (Alumni
Advisor), Laura Rekucki. Amy Holland. Angie Johnson. Anneli Rock. Ceci Carmichael. Cathy Glaser. Robbie Robinson, Pam Trickett, Marybeth Golden Fourth
Row: Simmi Moos, Vanessa Lash, Ginny Truit, Martha Ough, Kim Trickett, jean Novak, Andi Pilitt.
University Book Center 145
Kappa Kappa Gamma
(In Alphabetical Order) Gina Abruzzo, Denise Anderson, Ginger Ankerbrand. Lori Balentine, Rosemary Bassett, Martha Helen, Beth Bernheisel, Bonnie Blair,
Kimberly Book, Shelly Cagley, Diane Carlson. Anne Craeger, Susan Danielson, Betsy Dobrin, Bethanne Dressel. Mary Dubinsky, Judy Dwyer, Janet Dyer,
Jill Earp, Nancy Edler, Ann Eisinger, Laurie Evans, Mary Jane Fingland, Nancy Finley. Pam Foss, Denise Grantham, Joyce Gregorius, Haidee Hanna, Colleen
Harkins, Joan Hisauka, Jenny Hodge, Anne Hoffman, Barbara Holcombe, Susan Hunt, Margaret Irvine, Jana Johnston. Jill Johnston. Lynne Jones. Tracy Jung.
Karen Kestel. Chrissy Keys. Laura Koepsel, Erica Kravitz. Lee Ann Lloyd. Cathy Lumpkin, Melanie Mack. Sandy Maier. Ann Manders, Kathy McCarl. Heidi
Meitzler, Pam Menne, Michelle Meyers, Nancy Murtaugh. Jeanne Obendorfer, Lisa O'Briant, Brenda Old. Tracy Packard. Sally Painter. Kathy Pearce. Cheryl
Pierpont. Sally Porter. Michele Randzio. Tammy Ray. Becky Rea. Sharon Ridgway. Susan Ridgway. Stephpanei Santos. Mandy Schmidt. Susan Schwab. Tammi
Smith. Susan Stellman, Jennfier Stickley. Mary Suarez-Murias, Marlene Tessier. Cathy Teti. Toni Thevenot. Lesley Thomas, Christine Toth, Laurie Tuminello,
Debbie Villano, Carolyn Vogel, Lisa Wallace, Laura Walsh. Karen Walther, Missy Wiedman. Pledges: Colleen Ricker and Renee Wilder.
146 University Book Center - One stop shopping 454-3222
Phi Sigma Kappa
Captain Girz. Hohn Larkin, Tim Murders, Gordan Seltzer, Tony Becker, joe Mastranna, Todd Hoffman, |oe Criscerole, Todd Lange, Bill Hamilton, ). T.,
|ohn Schneider. Bob Smith, |ay Ostaffe, Mark Knoblack, Mike Miller. Greg Young, Steve Baker, Bert Stultz, Mike Reid, Dave McGlyren. Corky Cappola,
Stud Hnatyslyn, Dave Lamolinara, Roberto Wright. Not Pictured; Paul Miller, Eric Hogan, Ernie Rodriguez, |ohn Gutterie, Mike McGowan. John Wright,
Morgan Wilkes, and Russ Hollrah
University Book Center 147
Phi Sigma Sigma
Center Front: Shelley Pogust First Row: (L to R|: Robyn Heilbronner, Michelle Green. Sherri Wagman. Traci Levine, Debbie Richman Second
Row: Michelle Herman. Donna Loyola. Ilene Hirshfeld, Lynn Barnett. Wendy Gelfand Third Row: Robin Berg. Ellen Boginsky. Melissa Klein.
Linda Fritz, Wendy Lawrence Fourth Row: Fern Mendelsohn. Laurie Williams, Ilene Tyroler. Cathi Fox, Ginni Fox. Nancy Rhodes Fifth Row:
Sue Beloff, Carol Elias. Elise Nieberg, Ellen Maurer, Lisa Kessler.
148 University Book Center
Pi Kappa Alpha
Why Pi Kappa Alpha
Like any other question in life,
"why pledge?" Pi Kappa Alpha de-
serves a satisfying answer.
Several good answers come to
mind. There is a highly beneficial
academic climate; there are parties;
there are inroads into politics and
business worlds, both on campus and
after graduation; and last but not least
there is prestige.
These answers, taken separately or
collectively, are impressive. But they
are not enough.
An outstanding freshman can ferret
out a quiet study hall in the library, if
he wants to. Likewise, there are many
independent university students who
hold respected offices on campus. And
prestige may come to a person. Pike or
otherwise, who displays enough cour-
age and sweat to earn it. In short,
concerning such an important question
as "why KA," these answers fall far
short of being substantial.
Perhaps the best possible answers
are found in knowing why we the men
of Pi Kappa Alpha want you to pledge.
We want a strong brotherhood
beyond reproach. We have always had
it, and we shall have it in the future.
We do not pledge scholars, or
partyers, or top athletes, or big names.
We pledge brothers; who are also
scholars, athletes, and big names.
We do not pledge people who need
us. We want men who can do without
us or any other college group to prop
them up. We want faithful, hardwork-
ing, independent "thinking men", men
we can be proud of and call brothers.
These are the men who will keep our
fraternity from becoming, in future
years, nothing but a hollow cliche.
We firmly believe that these people
will make the best friends as well as the
best brothers. The kind of friendship Pi
Kappa Alpha offers is unique and that
is what makes our brotherhood unique.
Mutual concern and respect, motiva-
tion, and an interest in the benefit of
others, are some of the qualities that
render us unique. That is why we, the
men of Pi Kappa Alpha, want you to
pledge.
As a man seeking friends for four
undergraduate years, and for a lifetime
afterwards, you should want it no other
way.
University Book Center 149
Sigma Nu
150 University Book Center
Zeta Psi
First Row: (L to R): Norman (Mascot] Second Row: Brian Cox. Tom Simpson, Herb Frymark, Dan Helfrich, Dave Young, Bob Cunningham. Third Row: John
Sulhvan, Matt Vastano, Dave Fletcher. Bob Sowers, Keith Latham, John Brocious, Dave Morris, Rich Haskett, Fourth Row: Tony Figieuras, Mark Scott, Mike
Kraztek, Tom Sewell Not Pictured: Mike Chilvers, Bob Nowak, Dan Oroho, Bill Jordan, Brian German, Paul Cowles, Fred Springer, and John Suttora.
University Book Center 151
Left to Right: Martin Rodden, Jim Brady, Debbie Gertler,
Bill Burton, Willem Scheltema, Mark Sullivan, David
Simon, Steven Zerby. Face down, center: Dakota Carp.
lXi.idr.>-
152
?.T iDFNT MONTHLt FEATURE MAo*ZINE
MAIN DINING HALL
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
COLLEGE PARK. MD 20742
lynn marie
mjcheol overturf
dakoto corp
I. p. everett
pot Carroll
debbie gertler
scott bolgiono
■ - ••^^'?*i-'»
^.!<>.i^
<^i^""
cor^tributlng editor
contributing editor
contributing editor
contributing editor
humor editor
chief photographer
editor-in-chief
Above: Scott Bolgiano. Editor-in-chief Left: Debbie Gertler, Photography
Editor.
* -"^ •** .»»*; *^il.
153
BLACK EXPtOSION
Founded In 1970
Denlse E. Tann
Editor
Paula C. Johnson
Managing Editor
Margaret T. Spencer
News Editor
Delphlne Gross
Features Editor
Howard Miller
Copy Editor
Kevin C. Johnson
Photo Editor
William Castronuovo
Graphics and Design
154
Far left; Denise Tann. Black Explosion editor, says the best part of the job is editting copy. Above: Paula C. Johnson, managing
editor, talks over news copy with Howard Miller, copy editor. Left: First Row: Aveline Allen, reporter; Margaret T. Spencer,
news editor; Denise E. Tann, editor-in-chief; Theodore Shadding, reporter; John Yates. 2nd Row: Renee Tann, advertising
personnel; Eric Hendrix, photographer; Howard Miller, copy editor; Paula C. Johnson, managing editor. 3rd Row: Brian
Williams; Karen Moody, reporter; Trena Watts, advertising personnel; Sharon Fries, administrative asst.; Lorraine Lee; Dwight
Horsey, photographer, not shown; Danita HoUingsworth, reporter; Gregory Amiker, photographer; Kevin C. |ohnsan,
photography editor.
155
Above: Willem Scheltema, editor Right: [ennifer LaRue, fiction editor
Calvert
Review
poetry
fiction
graphics
photography
156
/.
157
Above: First Row: (L to R): Steve Gorman, David Mills, Barbara Galicia, Rick Buck. Tony Pipitone, Carl Korn. Suzy Chan. Second
Row: Javier Aparisi, Debbie Gertler, David Simon, Shana Potash, Kayle Tucker, Laura Outerbridge, Linda Shrieves, John
McNamara, Karen Gardner. Third Row: Scott Bolgiano, Greg Kandra, Pam Hinden, Dwight Sullivan, Steven Humphreys, Tim
Kelly, Don Lee, Pete Bielski, Margo Kranz. Fourth Row: Brad Hamlin. Chuck Holahan, Carl Hamilton, Jim Brady, Mark Sullivan,
Ralph Thrash. Fifth Row: Dana Pallotto, Robert Zimmet, Sherry Conrad. Aneece Holland. Hal Schmulowitz. Steve Zerby. Below:
Mark Sullivan, Dwight Sullivan, Kayle Tucker.
158
Top: Tim Kelly, editor-in-chief Left: Lisa Gallant, Steve Gorman Above: Rick Buck, Myriam Marquez
159
diamondback
An Independent Student Newspaper
Diamondback Photography Staff: 1st Row: Peter Tung, Pam
Hinden, Sherry Conrad, Thomas Nunemaker. Robert Zimmet, | TCQ. APPRni/Fn RY FRIRI ISM II
Steven Zerby, Martha Rhoades, Debbie Gertler, Clive Carnie, ILL. J J Ml 1 HUVLU Ul I IMUUvJII..
Below: Donovan, a self-portrait.
160
Mike Kurzrock busy selling ads.
i
Advertising Staff
k \
Elyse laying the paper out.
Todd Sorrin, advertising manager
L to R: Elyse Tavin, Mike Kurzrock. Joe Lamberti, Marci Peters, Todd Sorrin, advertising manager. Front and Center: Nancy
French, business manager. Salespeople not shown; Robert Aronson, Cheri Einbinder, Nancy Kass, Todd Street, Dave Citron. Colleen
Sullivan, Wayne Crawford, Dave Reiner, Mike Stern, Frank Weiner, Carol Kaminsky, Cindy Master, Amy Perlman, Stuart Acker.
161
(P.S. -H's Pronounced Ha-KOH-ach)
WE^STRENGTH
HAKOACH
University of Maryland's Independent Jewish Student Newspaper
Vol. VI, No. 7
April 1981
Editor-in-Chief
Karen Silberfarb
Assistant Editor
Judy Katzoff
Photo Editor
Hal Schmulowitz
Art Editor
Jeanne Jordan
Advertising Manager
Steffi LIchtman
Graphics & Design
William Castronuovo
Above; Production night for the monthly pubhcation. Right: Hal Schmulowitz, photography editor.
162
Top left: Karen Silberfarb. editor-in-chief. Above: The brains
behind the HaKoach in their office. From left to right: Hal
Schmulowitz, photography editor; Karen Silberfarb, editor-
in-chief: [udy Katzoff, assistant editor; and Stephen Silberfarb,
reporter.
163
Terrapin
Yearbook
Above: John Kammerman Top left:
Stacy Cushner Top right: Mindy
Berman Middle: Andrea Chamb-
lee Middle right: Mindy Berman,
Linda Fritz. Andrea Chamblee
Bottom left: Kirk McCoy, Geoff
Baker, Alan Kresse, Martin Rod-
den. Debbie Gertler; the photo-
graphers Bottom right: Sherry
Conrad, the photography editor
^^H^ ^ ^ a^^P^^^^^I
1
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t ^^^ ^^^^^^HP*
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164
k. . '. < -^ if '- "•• '•:• 'v ''-'^l '-■
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^}pu$^^ '■
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'^■^■■'J^'*
n^ ^ ^
affy^@ffi](oj
^o
a^O[n£o
Ira Allen
president
Tim Kelly
Denise Tann
Mindy Berman
Will Scheltema
Scott Bolgiano
Karen Silberfarb
editors-in-chief
Selena Almazan
student-at-large
David Falk
Barbara Mines
faculty members
Pat Wheller
Bob Mondello
lay members
Nancy French
business manager
Michael Fribush
general manager
diomondbock, orgus, colvert,
hokoQch, block explosion, terropin
six independent student publications
university of moryiand — college pork
165
166
Top Left: Dr. Goodfoot and Chuck Roast of the
rock group - Dr. Goodfoot & the Toxicsox, talking
with Bob Becker, general manager. Left: John
Chambers and Martin Drake. Above: Betti-|o
Cohen, program director.
167
.*,,J1^..'"..^.
^
E
169
Squad Surpasses 20 Game Barrier
BASEBALL
24-10
Md
Md
8
Pembroke
1
7
Duke
1
2
American
7
2
Wake Forest
1
6
East Tennessee
5
7
Wake Forest
6
4
Georgia Southern
5
10
Catholic
1
5
Virginia
4
8
East Carolina
6
8
Yale
6
11
Georgia Tech.
9
1
South Carohna
3
9
Georgia Tech.
5
13
Fordham
5
0
Clemson
1
14
North CaroHna
13
2
Clemson
5
8
Baltimore
5
9
Georgia Tech.
2
3
Virginia
7
4
Clemson
9
7
Towson
3
2
North Carolina
7
3
N.C. State
4
6
George Mason
7
14
N.C. State
1
14
Howard
3
17
Catholic
1
6
Howard
0
27
Delaware St.
1
7
V.C.U.
1
10
Duke
2
12
Baltimore
11
>^'Z
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-'^"^^-^■l
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170
The 1980 baseball squad enjoyed
one of tbe best seasons ever by
achieving 24 wins and only 10 defeats.
This is the third time in Maryland
history that the Terps won 20 games in
a single season.
Coach Jackson and the squad
opened the season with a 15-5 record.
The team displayed an unbelievable
streak winning all home games and five
Atlantic Coast Conference Games. In
mid-season, the Terps put together an
impressive 11 game winning streak
when they outscored the opposition 122
to 34. The streak began with a 14-1 win
at North Carolina State. However, the
streak ended while playing a double-
header against Clemson.
The ACC Tournament was a home
game against Georgia Tech. Maryland
was triumphant, winning 9-2. In the
next two games the Terps traveled
down South, first to play Clemson,
losing 9-4 and then to play North
Carolina, losing 7-2. This resulted in the
Terps' elimination from the tour-
nament.
Maryland bounced back to close
out the season with a four game winning
streak, outscoring their opponents 39 to
15. So they completed the season with
an overall score 24-10 and an ACC
record of 9-6.
Six records were ellipsed in the
record book during the 1980 season.
Tony Larioni had 12 consecutive hits
over a three game stretch that included
six singles, four doubles and two home
runs. Larioni also tied the record for
best single game performance when he
went 6 for 6 against Catholic University
making three singles, two doubles and
a home run.
The 1980 squad made 52 home
runs setting a record for the most runs
this season. Senior, Mark Poehlman set
two records; 434 bats in a career and
most hits in a career with 137. John
Brisee also set a record for the most
home runs in a career by hitting 19
round triples.
The season highs for the team
were; most runs in a game - 11 against
Delaware State; most runs in an inning
- 9 in fourth against North Carolina,
most runs in first inning - five against
Georgia Tech, and most runs in ninth
inning - four against North Carolina
which gave them a 14-13 victory.
Maryland's pitching record was
incredible this year, Pete Sinopoli
posted a 7-1-1 record and a 2.84 E. R.A.
and Alan Act, posted 4-0-2 record with
2.68 E.R.A. Overall the pitching squad
in 34 games and 268 - a innings gave up
144 runs posting an impressive E.R.A.
of 3.45. Opposing pitchers gave up 266
runs and had an E.R.A. of 6.85. During
the entire 1980 season, the Terrapins
were undefeated at home with 12
victories against 0 defeats.
Coach Jackson lost two players to
the pro draft when his top hitter, junior,
Neal Herrick, who posted a 404 batting
average signed with the Baltimore
Orioles. Junior, Steve Jordon, was also
delegated to the pros.
171
172
II
•
HfV^
^ -iV \
First Row; (L to R): Scott Smith, Jim Sinopoli, Mark Poehlman, Robert Payne, Bob Zavarick, John Brisee, Jeff Schaefer, Rick Furr, Mark Ciardi, Steve
Johnson, Rich Dennis, Kevin Wilson. Back Row: (Head Coach) "Jack Jackson", Steve Jordon, Scott Venturelli, Steve Johanson, Jim Hudik, Mike Lupia,
Joe Lynch, Tony Larioni, Tim Gordon, Pete SinopoH, Paul Cox, Dave Stuart, Monty Kickert, Alan Alt, Neil Herrick, (Asst. Coach) Ruffing.
173
Women's Lacrosse Maneuvers
The 1980 Women's Lacrosse squad
experienced their best season ever by
achieving a school record of 16
consecutive games and finishing second
in the nation.
The team started the season with
two victories over Harvard and Towson
gaining confidence for their next game
against Ursinus. The Terps avenged
last season's one goal loss to Ursinus
with an impressive game of 8-7. It was
an unbelievable game due to the fact
that five of the Ursinus' players were on
the 32 member United States Lacrosse
Team. With this victory, confidence
and energy were soaring through the
team for the upcoming game against the
tough West Chester team. The Terps
rose to the occasion to defeat West
Chester, 11-7. With the adrenalin and
spirit high, the team had a dream to
make the National Championships.
After compiling an 8-0 record, they
entered the three-day state tour-
nament. The team outscored their
opponents 54-8; over UMBC, 16-2,
Salisbury State, 27-4, and Towson, 11-2
in the championship game.
Nine Terps who tried out for the
All-State team won positions. For the
first All-State offensive, selected were
Judy Dougherty, Sandy Lanahan, and
Sally Schofield along with the defensive
players; Laura LeMire, Lynn Frame,
Joanne Lindblades, and Dawn Goodall.
The second team selections were
Sharon Watson and Denise Wescott.
The three victories increased their
record to 11-0, with the Terps now only
needing to defeat Penn State, Essex
Community College and Rutgers to
complete their first perfect season ever.
The biggest thrill of the season was
defeating Penn State with a score of
7-6. The reason was Penn State has
been the National Champions for three
times and had an unbeaten 38 game
streak. This win enabled the Terps to
advance to the National Tournament
with an unblemished 14-0 record and at
the top for the first time in history.
In the National Tournament, the
Terps defeated the University of New
Hampshire, 6-1, and outlasted the
University of Pennsylvania team, 5-4 to
move into the title match against Penn
State. In a defensive struggle, the Lions
handed the Terps their only defeat of
the season by a score of 3-1.
Four Maryland players placed on
the select All-Tournament team. They
were Sharon Watson, Sandy Lanahan,
Laura LeMire, and goalie, Denise
Wescott. Lynn Frame was also chosen
as an honorable mention selection.
In all, there were eight records that
were broken this year. The Terps scored
most goals in a game, 27 against
Salisbury; most goals scored in a season,
200 in 17 games; least defeats in a
season, 1; most consecutive victories, 16;
and longest unbeaten streak, 16.
The Terps also made their fourth
appearance at the National Lacrosse
Championship Tournament; they were
National Runner-up for the second
time in the last three years; and were
Maryland College Women's Lacrosse
Association champions for the fourth
consecutive year.
174
To Second In Nation
\
\
\
■\
WOMEN'S
LACROSSE (16-1)
Md
8
Harvard
4
16
Towson
5
8
Ursinus
7
11
West Chester
5
15
lames Madison
7
11
Princeton
1
12
Delaware
5
8
William & Mary
5
16
U.M.B.C.
2
27
Salisbury
2
11
Towson State
2
7
Penn State
6
25
Essex Comm. College
4
13
Rutgers
7
6
New Hampshire
1
5
Univ. of Pennsylvania
4
1
Penn State FINALS
3
First Row: (L to R): Sandy Lanahan, Sharon Watson, Sally Schofield, Gigi Daley, Dawn Goodall, Michelle O'Connell. Second Row: Judy Dougherty, Tracie
Duncan, Barbara Martin, Susan Brown (Capt.), Denise Wescott (Capt.), Laura LeMore, Joanne Lindblade. Third Row: Linda DeColo (Asst. Coach), Teri
Black (Trainer), Sue Tyler (Coach), Ginny Adams (Asst. Coach), Susan Finn (Manager).
175
Lacrosse Team Started Hot,
Fizzled, Missed Playoff Bid
This year's lacrosse team held high
hopes of reaching the national cham-
pionship due to the return of Ail-
American mid-fielder Barry Mitchell
and the 1979 outstanding attackman,
Bob Boneillo; but they had an upset in
mid-season dampening their dreams.
Head Coach, Buddy Beardmore
was entering his 11th season with an
outstanding record of 102 wins against
26 losses. He had taken his teams to
nine previous NCAA playoffs; winning
two championships, losing four years in
the finals and reaching the semi-finals
in the other three years.
The team started hot with a 20-2
win over South Florida. In the next
game, against North Carolina State, the
Terps jumped to a quick lead, N.C.
State fought back closing in the gap.
However, the Terps were sizzling, which
resulted in a 16-12 victory. This meant
that Maryland had won their first ACC
Conference Game.
The Terps then opened their home
schedule with a game against unranked
Rutgers. The Terps opened the game
with a quick lead to excite the home
crowd, only to have Rutgers fight back
to tie the score. At halftime, the team
tried to regroup, but Rutgers' deter-
mined team set the pace in the final
period resulting in Maryland's first loss
of the year, 8-9. The Terps rebounded
with a victory over Duke of 16-7. This
win was achieved by a good defense and
a superb offense. The Terps needed to
win the next game which was against
North Carolina. Maryland put on a fine
showing to overcome the Tar Heels by
a score of 18-12. This victory was
accredited to a 10 point effort by
Boneillo.
The next game was at home against
number one ranked Virginia. They had
the Terps flying high in the hopes of an
upset. The team played it's hardest only
to come up one point short. The final
score was Virginia 8-7. The loss
shattered any hopes of the Terps
capturing the ACC title.
The next two games of the season
weren't much better for the Terps.
First, losing to Navy 11-9, and then to
Johns Hopkins, 15-6. Now the Terps
needed a strong showing in the last two
games of the season to have an outside
shot for a NCAA playoff bid. They
came back with a solid performance
against Penn State with a 21-6 victory.
Going into the final game, the Terps
found themselves ranked eighth in the
country, possibly resulting in receiving
a playoff bid. The team played the
Baltimore Bees, who possessed a 6-6
record. With the Bees determined to
upset the ranked Terps and with
Boneillo unable to play, the game
created an air of anxiety. As anticipated
the lead see-sawed but Baltimore
became the victor, 11-10. This loss
destroyed any hope the Terps had for
a post season berth. It was the first time
since the playoffs had begun that the
Terps failed to make the post season
playoff for a bid at the National
Championship.
The Terps did produce three
all-Americans: Pete Worstell, who made
first team; Bob Boneillo, who made
third team, and Don Sadler, who made
honorable mention. These three players
also received All-ACC Honors as well.
Bob Boneillo closed out his college
lacrosse career with a record of 231
points which included 88 goals and 143
assists.
MEN'S
LACROSSE
5-6
ME
).
20
South Florida
2
16
North Carolina State
12
8
Rutgers
9
16
Duke
7
9
Mt. Washington
14
18
North Carolina
12
7
Virginia
8
9
Navy
11
6
Johns Hopkins
15
21
Penn State
6
10
Baltimore
11
First Row: (L to R): Saunders D., Burdett M., Martinello R., Worstell P., Manis N., Ebmeier J., Boneillo B., Farrell M., Mitchell B., Moyer R., Shassian
R. Second Row: Duffy M., Johnson K., Blair M., Thompson J., Huyghue R., Sadler D., Foster W., Wenzel C, Claborn J., Pritchett W., Grace S. Third
Row: Ruppert M., Schnitzer M., Rountree C, Parker D., Francis J., Hughes D., Garland T., O'Shea D., Wikerson J., Wheeler M. Fourth Row: Roy
Zeldman, Lou Zeldman (Managers), DlBenedetto T., Brouse J., Muhly €., Lacey C, Dubick, M., Bilger K., Boddery L., Aiello R. Fifth Row: Hubbard
C., Beardmore C. (Head Coach) Mattessich D., (Asst. Coach).
177
Tennis Team Volleys Through Season
The 1980 Tennis squad produced a
very respectable season with a 15-9
record but fell short of their goal for an
ACC championship. Head coach Doyle
Royal, considered the "Dean of ACC
Tennis Coaches," was coaching his last
season after 34 years with a dual match
record of 357-136.
The team fared well in individual
matches winning 15 of 24, while never
really getting blown out by any school.
However, the team found the going
tough, in the ACC championships,
finishing a disappointing eighth.
Gary Kittay finished the season
with
a 20-6 match record. Kittay carries a
very strong backhand and concentrates
well under pressure. Hard working Craig
Hardenberg finished the season with a
13-11 dual match record. He is very
dedicated and shows constant im-
provement. Ken McKay was an excel-
lent doubles player finishing with an
impressive 8-1 record. He shows good
raquet control and is a very valuable
doubles player. Blase Keating was a
part-time starter on the doubles team.
He is credited with playing an aggressive
game with a strong serve being his chief
asset.
Front Row (L to R): Coach Royal, Paul Morgeethau, Nausher Madan, Craig Hardenbergh, Gary Kittay,
Ken McKay. Back Row; John Olson, Blase Keating, John Frank, Robert Weise.
MEN'S TENNIS
15-9
Md
6
V.P.O.
3
7
Georgia
2
6
Columbia
3'/2
2
Rollins
7
3' 2
Flagler
512
7
Jacksonville
2
1
Clemson
8
8
George Mason
1
5
Swarthmore
4
8
Washington & Lee
1
9
George Washington
0
6
Brown
3
4
North Carolina
5
2
Duke
7
1
Wake Forest
8
9
Richmond
0
5
Virginia
4
2
N.C. State
7
3
Old Dominion
6
8
Howard
1
8th
ACC Championships
8
Towson
1
6
Penn State
3
9
West Virginia
0
3
Navy
6
178
179
Women's Tennis Goes
Through Shaky Season
The 1980 women's fall tennis team
improved their spring season, posting
five wins and eight losses in addition to
placing sixth in the ACC Tournament at
Virginia.
Wendy Fine and Karen Denison
placed the team with identical records
of 9 wins against 4 losses. Gail
Edenbaum, playing in only three
matches, was the only undefeated
player. Mary Prebil had somewhat of a
successful season winning 6 matches
against 7 losses. In overall singles
competition, Maryland players won 37
matches while their opponents won 41.
Doubles competition seemed to be
an area of major concern for the
University's team that had only 15
victories against 24 defeats. The team of
Wendy Fine and Mary Prebil had the
only winning season with six victories
against two defeats.
In the ACC Tournament Karen
Denison had the best showing of
two-wins-to-one-loss record, finishing
third overall. Following closely behind
was Wendy Fine in fourth place and
Laura Davis, in sixth. In doubles
competition, once again the team of Fine
and Prebil prevailed with a fourth place
finish and Denison and Davis finished
sixth.
In team matches, the squad started
out in fine fashion with a victory over
Richmond, but the next three matches
were very disappointing. The team was
whitewashed by William & Mary, Duke,
and Wake Forest before rebounding for
a victory over N.C. State. The next three
matches all proved distasteful, soundly
beaten by Yale and North Carolina
while narrowly losing to Syracuse, 4-5.
Penn and Virginia also prevented
Maryland from having a winning season.
Both teams won by narrow margins of
5-4. However, the end of the season
finished, much to the liking of Head
Coach Sylvia Feldman, with the Terps
beating Rutgers and Pittsburg by
identical scores of 9-0.
Front Row: (Left to Right): Sylvia Feldman (Coach), Caryn Schindler, Verna Schneider, Norma Cherner, Karen Denison, Diane Dunning, Lisa Magarill
Back Row: Mary Beth Keil, Randi Smith, Kristen Schoek, Greta Laughery, Cynthia Hoddintoo, Mary Prebil.
180
WOMEN'S TENNIS
5-8
Md.
5
Richmond 4
1
Wilham & Mary 8
1
Duke 8
1
Wake Forest 8
5
N.C. State 4
4
Syracuse 5
0
Yale 9
1
North Carolina 8
4
Univ. of Pennsylvania 5
9
American 0
6th
ACC Championships
9
Rutgers 0
9
Pittsburg 0
4
Virginia 5
181
Women's Track Acheives A Pace
The 1980 women's track team had
one of its' most stellar performances by
setting 27 new team records. Among
these records the team won indoor and
outdoor EAIAW Championships,
placed tenth in the AIAW Outdoor
Nationals and sixth in the Inaugural
AIAW Indoor Nationals
The first match was against Penn
State and good teamwork contributed
to the Terps winning 81-60. Then came
the big event, the EAIAW Champion-
ships, and the Terps walked away with
first place.
Debra Pavik set five individual
Maryland records during the season
and was rewarded with a trip to the
AIAW Nationals. Jalene Chase, a
highjumper, received fourth place in the
indoor and outdoor AIAW Champion-
ships. Sophomore Leola Toomer set two
indoor records, the 50 and 60 yard dash,
and tied in the 200 meter outdoor run.
She also ran on four record-breaking
relay teams. Mary Walsh another
sophomore, set three new records, the
two mile, 5,000 meter, and 10,000 meter
run, all by breaking one of her own best
times.
Two pleasant additions to the
squad were freshmen Juanita Alston
and Marita Walton. During their first
season, both helped to rewrite Mary-
land record books. Alston broke the
records in both the indoor pentatalon
and long jump. Walton, broke the
records of both indoor and outdoor shot
puts and discus. Both received invita-
tions to the AIAW Nationals. Walton
did extremely well, taking third in the
shot put and fifth in the discus outdoors
in addition to finishing fifth in the shot
put indoors.
Paula Girven set a record in the
high jump at the indoor nationals by
jumping 6'2", while also turning in a
stellar performance in the AIAW
Outdoor Championships. Girven was
also an All-American and former
Olympian. Linda Miller, Leslie Palmer,
Leola Toomer, and Beverly Roman
comprised the relay team which set
many records during the course of the
1980 season.
WOMEN'S TRACK
81-60 Penn State
1st EAIAW Championship against Pitt.
182
Placing Among Top Ten
First Row: (L to R): Karen Lage, Debbie Pavik, Paula Girven, Linda Miller, Susan White, Jalene Chase. Second Row:
Mary Walsh, Marita Walton, Terri Ellis, Nancy Fitzgerald, Margaret Eckles. Third Row: Pat Walker, Diana Huntress,
Lou Isenberg, Bev Roman, Denise Taylor, Beryl Roman. Fourth Row: Leslie Palmer, Lynn McNamara, Sally Orzechowski,
Dawn Peterson, Juanita Alston, Dawn Gagle. Fifth Row: (Head Coach) Stan Pitts, (Spring Coach) Joel Harris, (Weight
Coach) Susan Visconage, (Jump Coach) Walter Walls.
183
Track Began On Bad Foot
The 1980 track team started with
much controversy and the resignation
of the heralded Nehemiah dampened
the hopes for a successful season. With
Nehemiah and Head Coach Costello
having their difficulties, the team found
themselves behind in practices. Once
Nehemiah quit the team, in order to
give full time to prepare for the
Olympics, Head Coach Costello, himself
handed in his resignation.
The first meet of the year was the
ACC Championship of which the Terps
had won the last 29 years. However, the
team was under a tremendous amount
of pressure and finished second. Strong
performances were shown by Chip
McCarthy and Danny Lamp, who
finished first and second respectively in
the pole vault. Also, Cornelius Cousins
and Bo Vent finished first and second
respectively in the triple jump. And
Alan Baginski won the discus title, with
a 172'8"toss.
In the following meet the Terps
played Navy. With the adrenalin
flowing, Maryland swept the meet with
a 108-55 score. The final meet of the
season was one of the finest dual track
and field meets ever held in Byrd
Stadium. This meet placed Maryland
against Tennessee who had placed third
in the NCAA Indoor Championship and
were predicted to be strong contenders
for the outdoor title. In this meet the
Terps as a team were considered the
underdog, however each individual
competition was unpredicted.
While Tennessee was extremely
strong in the distance events, they
found themselves against strong oppon-
ents in the hurdles, sprints and the
weight events. The Terps were in rare
form for the matches in the triple jump,
pole vault, and high jump. However, the
Tennessee team was the victor by a
margin of 93-69. Despite the scores, the
match was considered by many to be
much closer than the score represented.
Members of the Terps also par-
ticipated in the annual Penn relays.
Once again, Maryland's performances
in individual competition came through
in the jumping events. In the high jump,
Bill Theirfelder reached T 1%" fol-
lowed by Ted Robinson, who also
cleared seven feet. The triple jump was
performed by Cornelius, who achieved
a showing of 51'7'4".
The season came to a momentus
end when Head Coach Costello re-
turned to denounce his resignation to
resume his position.
184
Ended on Stable Ground
Mens' Track
2nd ACC Championships
108-55 Navy WON
69-93 Tennessee LOSS
First Row: L to R)MAsst Coach) Stan Pitts, Chris Person, Bo Kent, Andre Lancaster. Dave Ungradv, Mike Corbin, Jim Hage, Mike Peniston,
Charl.e Lester (Head Coach) Frank Costello. Second Row: Tim Moore, Ray Oglesby, Kevin Wilson, fed Robinson, Bill Theirfelder, Dan Lamp,
N?Zn rr'' w ' ^r Greg Towe Mark Lucas, Dave Saunders, Jim Green, Dave Crimmons, Joe Belyea, Martin Davis. Fourth Row: Dan Friedman,
Nubon baley, Wayne Morns, Glen Wh.teley, Jay Kelchner, Ward Wilson, Rob Klatzkin. Fifth Row: Terrance Browne, Rafael Sencion, John Cornwell,
eornehous Cousms, Eugene McCarthy, Chns McGorty. Sixth Row: Alan Bagmski, Pat Halev, Eduardo Rivera, Carleton Richardson, Kip Hurley,
ureg Ihompson, Bob Dorsey. ' . h j.
185
Terp Five
Turns-Over Season
The 1980-81 men's basketball team
opened their season in a storybook
fashion. The preceding year the team
compiled an average record of 24-8
overall and ranked eighth nationwide,
with all five starters returning. What
more could Head Coach Charles
"Lefty" Driesell ask for? In pre-season
rankings the Terps ranged from second
to ninth.
The season opened in Cole Field
House against Navy. The Maryland
team looked fine, winning 86-64 with
Williams tossing in 27 points with 18
rebounds. The following game proved to
be no problem as Maryland easily
out-muscled American University,
95-65. Graham was the high scorer for
the Terps, with 21 points. Maryland
then traveled to New York to play in
the Carrier Classic. The team won the
opening round against Wagner, 96-73,
Manning leading with his career high of
29 points. The first real challenge was
present in the championship game
against Syracuse. Once again Manning
lead with 21 points as the Terps won,
83-73.
The second challenge of the year
came against Louisville, the defending
NCAA Champions. The Terps came out
strong and although Williams tried with
his best of 27 points, 22 rebounds,
Louisville came away with a 78-67
victory. It seemed as though the team
was headed into a tailspin as N.C. State
invaded Cole Field House. N.C. State
controlled the entire game, only to have
Maryland come back and send the game
into overtime. Here, Albert King,
entered the show and propelled Mary-
land to an 82-75 victory. He led the
team with 29 points. In the next ACC
game Maryland played Georgia Tech.
and had an easy win of 66-55. Once
again, King led all scores with 28 points.
Over the winter break, Maryland
hosted the Annual Maryland Invita-
tional Tournament. In the opening
game against Marshall, the entire team
got ino the show with the Terps easily
winning, 114-89. Graham led all scorers
with 29 points followed by King with
26. Dutch Morley put on quite a show
handing out 12 assists. In the cham-
pionship game against St. Joseph's,
MEN'S
BASKE'i'BALL
(21-10)
Md.
86
Navy
64
95
American
65
96
Wagner College
73
83
Syracuse
73
109
Fairleigh-Dickinson
83
67
Louisville
78
82
N.C. State
75
66
Georgia Tech.
65
114
Marshall
89
74
St. Joseph's
57
69
William & Mary
64
66
North Carolina
75
94
Duke
79
64
Virginia
66
68
Clemson
62
81
U.M.E.S.
65
70
Notre Dame
73
69
Pittsburg
66
72
Georgia Tech.
64
60
Wake Forest
67
54
Duke
55
72
Clemson
70
63
North Carolina
76
94
Wake Forest
80
76
N.C. State
72
63
Virginia
74
56
Duke
55
85
Virginia
62
60
North Carolina
61
81
Tennessee-Chattanouga
69
64
Indiana
99
Maryland won, 74-57. King, with 20
points and 12 rebounds in this game
was named the Tournaments' MVP for
the third consecutive year, something
no one else has done.
With an 11-1 record, Maryland
invaded Chapel Hill hoping to keep
their ACC record intact. The Terps
jumped on top taking as much as a ten
point lead. However, by halftime the
lead had dwindled to one. The second
half went in U.N.C.'s favor, with the
Terps losing by as much as 10. They did
draw back to within four, with just over
a minute to play, before losing the
contest 75-66. The team then traveled
back home to get ready for Duke. With
a balanced scoring attack; Williams, 24;
Graham, 23; and Manning, 20; they
easily won 94-79. For the following
game, Virginia came to Cole Field
House a highly publicized confronta-
tion. As usual, Maryland jumped right
on top, but by the end of the game, the
186
score was close. Head Coach Driesell
summed the game up very well, "With
21 seconds left we had the game won,
when there was 10 seconds left in the
game it became tied, and with 6 seconds
left in the game, we lost." The final
score was 66-64 in favor of Virginia, the
first loss in Cole Field House since
March of 1979 when the Terps did to
Clemson what Virginia did to them -
stopped a homecourt winning streak.
The game was 68-62.
The next challenge was against
Notre Dame in a nationally televised
game. Once again Maryland took an
early lead only to take the game to the
wire. Neither the home court advantage
nor the psychological effect of playing
on national television could pull out a
victory for the Terps, as they lost their
second game, 73-70. The only break of
the month was when Maryland played
Pittsburgh, but even then it took an
extra period before the Terps could win.
At this, the Terps became suspect and
everyone got down on the team.
Maryland could not respond to the
pressure. They traveled to Wake Forest
and lost 67-60. An upstate road trip to
Durham couldn't help the Maryland
team as they lost to Duke, 71-70, a team
they had earlier whipped. The season
was not what the country and fans had
expected but was a successful one by
any record standpoint.
During the season, Dutch Morley
tied the assist record collecting 12
against Marshall. Greg Manning set an
ACC record by making 15 consecutive
field goals over two games.
187
Kneeling: Ed Bush, Steve Kassel, Sherman Dillard, David Laton. Sitting: Pete
Holbert, Reggie Jackson, Greg "Dutch" Morley, Gregory Manning, Stephen Rivers,
Jon Robinson. Standing: Neal Eskin, John Kochan, Nick Kniska, Albert King,
Ernest Graham, Charles "Buck" Williams, Taylor Baldwin, Charles Pittman, Mark
Fothergill, Herman Veal, Tommy Lyles, Coach "Lefty" Driesell, Tom Abatemarco.
189
190
Women's Season Has Ups and Downs
WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL
19-9
Md.
82
Georgia Tech
64
87
Howard
55
75
Georgetown
54
61
Clemson
64
79
West Virginia
67
86
Minnesota
74
72
Old Dominion
75
85
Duke
68
91
Tennessee
93
76
Long Beach St.
85
91
Wake Forest
60
83
Pittsburgh
72
80
N.C. State
60
57
Virginia
71
80
Rutgers
69
64
Seton Hall
65
75
North Carolina
70
72
Duke, ACC
Tournament
49
50
Virginia
ACC Tournament
47
64
N.C. state
ACC Tournament
63
77
Montclair State
53
74
St. Joseph's
56
69
Cheyney State
71
69
Seton Hall
68
72
Rutgers
69
56
Cheyney St.
64
83
Kentucky
82
67
Tennessee
79
192
The 1980-81 women's basketball
team opened its year with hopes of
another top ten national ranking.
Maryland looked destined for another
run at a EAIAW Championship with
seven players returning from last year's
squad of nine.
Returning this season was senior
guard/forward, Pam Reaves, who start-
ed every game last year with Myra
Waters, Lydia McAliley and Debbie
Lyre. Debbie Lyre will supply the team
with opportunities at the point/guard
position.
The season started out in fine
fashion with a 82-64 victory over
Georgia Tech. McAiley was the high
scorer with 23 points and 15 rebounds.
The next two games proved to be no
problem as the lady Terps came away
with two easy victories against Howard
and Georgetown. Waters was the high
scorer in both games with 19 points and
25 points, respectively. Next Maryland
would find the going not so easy as they
traveled to South Carolina to take on
Clemson. Although they kept the game
close, they could never overtake the
Tigers with the final score of 64-61.
They got back on the winning track
as they soundly defeated West Virginia,
79-67 and Minnesota, 86-74. Then a
game against top-rated Tennessee
would prove just how good the team
could be. Both teams battled tooth and
nail with no team prevailing in the first
40 minutes. In the overtime period, the
Terps would fall one bucket short but
prove to the nation that they could play
with the big teams. The next game
would also not be to the liking of the
Terps, as they battled Long Beach
losing 85-76. As long as the Terps could
stay close, they could prove to be a best
to all opposing teams no matter how
highly talented.
Maryland got back on the winning
track against Wake Forest by soundly
beating them, 91-60. A good balanced
attack was responsible for the overall
performance. Pittsburgh and N.C. State
also fell prey to the lady Terps losing
83-72 and 80-60, respectively. Jasmina
Perazic was high scorer in the Pittsburg
game with 24 points while Marcia
Richardson was high scorer in the N.C.
State game with 24 points. Virginia has
been the only team to soundly defeat
the Terps, 71-57, but it might be said
the team was looking ahead to Rutgers.
The big buildup for that game was a
former Terp, Kris Krichaner, who
transferred to Rutgers to play her
senior season. Rutgers was then ranked
number two in the country, but a great
second half effort by the Terps proved
unstoppable as they prevailed 80-69.
193
Fencing
<.
"^
■ '■
1 ,
, 1
1
1
1
1
1
-J , L ,
t
1
t i
!
!
1
1
194
Volleyballers Vault Through Season
The 1980 women's volleyball team,
under the leadership of Head Coach
Barbara Drum, had a successful year
posting a 24-19 record. The loss of three
seniors didn't detour the team. Third
year starters Carol Thompson, Barb
Donlon and Mary Ann Marley returned.
They were all looked upon for their
proven volleyball skills, and also for
their leadership. Lucy Gall will also be
of great assistance having worked out
with the U.S. National Team.
The season started out with the
Pittsburg Invitational. However, the
Terps came away with their spirits
down, losing three out of four matches.
Next, the team traveled to Temple
Invitational and came away much
better, losing in the quarter-finals to
Pittsburg. The team then traveled to
Penn State for a tough tournament.
They opened up against Temple beating
them in straight games: 15-10, 15-10; to
avenge their opening season loss.
However, they lost two out of the
next three to George Washington and
Penn State. The team did make it to the
quarter-finals. In the next tournament,
George Washington once again proved
the spoiler as the team finished in 7th
place in the Delaware Invitational.
The following weekend, Maryland
hosted their own tournament having 19
competitive teams come in to invade the
Reckord Armory. The host team made
it to the quarter-finals before losing to
Rutgers in straight games: 8-15, 3-15.
The ACC Championships followed, but
the team had its troubles trying to bring
the trophy home with consecutive losses
to N.C. State and Clemson. The Terps
did get a birth in the EAIAW Regional
Tournament, but could not make the
best of the opportunity. The team
avenged one of their losses defeating
George Washington, but Pittsburg,
Providence, and Rutgers proved to be
too much to handle.
Front Row (L to R): Nancy Hensler, Sue Lombardi, Michelle Steffen, Doris Wood, Veronica Vogel,
Tammy Buckley Back Row: Head Coach Barbara Drum, Lucy Gall, Carol Thompson, Ann Marley,
Sue Vance, Barbara Donlon, Assistant Coach Ann Lanphear
VOLLEYBALL
24-19
Md.
0,0
Temple
15,5
18,8,8
N. Kentucky
16,15,15
8,10
Miami
15,15
5,9
Michigan State
12,10,7
15,15,15
Catholic
13,15,10
15,12,15
Colgate
15,15
13,11
Rutgers
8,3
15,15
Lehigh
13,14
15,16
Syracuse
15,8,15
4,15,13
Pittsburgh
17,15,8
15,8,15
George
Washington
9,15
15,12,11
Georgetown
5,15,15
15,15
Temple
10,10
9,16,15
Laurentian
15,14,4
4,12
George
Washington
15,15
6,10
Penn State
15,15
9,15,15
Rhode Island
15,11,7
15,15,15
Delaware
5,9,12
15,15
Temple
8,12
15,9,15
S. Connecticut
5,15,11
6,15,15
Hofstra
15,8,8
16,7,19
George
Washington
14,15,15
15,9,16
James Madison
13,15,18
15,15
S. Connecticut
8,9
15,15
West Virginia
10,12
15,9,16
George
Washington
8,15,14
15,12,15
South
Carolina
10,15,8
15,15
Duke
12,8
8,3
Rutgers
15,15
16,15
Navy
7,15,8
15,15
Wake Forest
7,4
15,15
Virginia
4,3
15,11,4
North
Carolina
10,15,15
14,8,10
N.C. State
16,15,15
7,15,6
Clemson
15,10,15
13,15,15
Georgetown
15,10,4
10,12,11
George
Washington
15,15,15
5,8,12
Penn State
15,15,15
12,8
Pittsburgh
15,15
9,14
Providence
15,16
15,15
George
Washington
13,5
15,8,8
Rutgers
12,15,15
195
Men's Swimming Dive Through Year
The male men's swimmers took on
a different look this year due to the
graduation of most of the squad. The
team will be led by Greg Blasic, George
Carpuzis, and John Cunningham, the
captains who are strong in the free-style
event. To accompany them are R.J.
Schlecht in the butterfly and Willie
Kaarid as a diver. Three high school
All-Americans were recruited by Head
Coach Hoffman who hopes they will be
an integral part of a rebuilding
program.
In the opening match, Maryland
took on Old Dominion and came away
the victor, 69-49. George Carpozis won
both the 1,000 and 500 meter free-
styles. Bob Neusndorf took the 100 and
200 meter free-style. John Cunningham
won the 500 meter race, while the relay
team took the 400 meter event. The
next match pitted the team against
American University and won that by
a 73-40 count, posting only one double
winner but winning 8 out of 72 events.
Kirk Sanocki won the 200 breaststroke,
setting a new pool record by more than
three seconds, in addition to taking the
200 individual medley. The team was
up against some tough competition
winning only four of their next seven
matches. Then meeting with Penn State
MEN'S
SWIMMING
10-4
Md.
69
Old Dominion
44
73
American
40
40
North Carolina
73
7012
LaSalle
42>/2
47
West Virginia
66
68
Duke
45
42
N.C. State
71
60
Bucknell
53
80
Syracuse
33
67
Villanova
46
72
Navy
41
53
Penn State
60
64
Virginia
49
75
Johns Hopkins
36
5th
ACC Championships
the Terps tried to avenge the previous
year's loss, the first to Penn State in the
last 13 attempts.
The Men's Swim team closed out
the season meeting Virginia, a match
that has become a rivalry over the past
few years, and Johns Hopkins, a team
which has lost 8 out of 9 matches
against the Terps.
196
Row 1: (Left to Right): J. Sheridan, W. Kaario, R. Masse, J. Stewart Row 2: S. Remoud (Manager), D. Welsh, George Schmieler, G. Goldhirsh,
J. Cunningham, G. Carpoutis, M. Izumi, M. Alderson, S. Heineman Row 3: P. Murtagh (Assistant), J. Hanuah (Assistant), J. Karsher, B. Bartle,
R. Neuendori, M. Gillies, G. Blasio, K, Sanocki, D. Destardins, J. Wenhold, B. Tobias, S. Shinholser (Dive Coach), C. Hoffman (Coach) is also
pictured on left.
197
Women's Swimmers Stroke Through Season
The 1980 women's swim team
opened the season with plenty of
confidence and 17 members returning
from the previous season.
The standout sophomore duo of
Kathy Smith and Barbara Schmidt led
the team. Smith finished third in the
Eastern Freestyle Championships in
1979 and Schmidt is the team's top
individual medalist.
Steve Shinholser, a former Mary-
land Diver, took over the job of
Women's Diving Coach and thus
inherited the talent of returning Kelly
Ciabaton, Hope Cullen, Melanie Gillet,
Casey Warner, and Sue Wigetman.
The season started off in fine
fashion, defeating Old Dominion, 71-59.
Gillet and Stillwell turned in double
victories, Gillet winning the one and
three-meter dives and Stillman winning
the 100 and 200-meter butterfly. The
season continued by beating American
University, 71-37, winning almost every
event except the 400 freestyle. Stillwell
captured both the 200 individual
medley and 200 butterfly. The victory
gave the team a 3-0 record.
The lady swimmers then went on
to win three out of their next five meets
to give a 6-2 record. This account is
before meeting Penn State, Virginia,
and Johns Hopkins. The women have
never beaten Penn State in the six
times they have met and have lost all
WOMEN'S
SWIMMING
9-4
Md.
71
Old Dominion
59
99
Towson
41
71
American
37
83
William & Mary
57
70
West Virginia
61
68
Duke
63
44
N.C. State
96
39
Pittsburgh
110
126
Navy
67
126
George Washington
47
45
Penn State
86
61
Virginia
79
88
Johns Hopkins
42
6th
ACC Championships
three meets against Virginia. However,
Johns Hopkins has not been so
fortunate, losing both of the times
played with the Lady Terps. Last year
the women defeated Johns Hopkins,
133-31, the largest margin victory ever
in the history of Maryland women's
swim team.
' . ■mtki\\ "ij- 1°-
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Row 1 (L to R): K. Warner, S. Wigetman, H. Cullen, M. Gillet, K. Ciabaton. Row 2: S. O'Hara (Asst. Coach), C. Stillwell, B. Schmidt, A. Buyer, R. Mayhen,
J. Lease, S. Hope, V. Corrallo, D. Tricarico. Row 3: A. Bachkosky (Man.), J. Hannah (Asst. Coach), W. Shoyer, E. Nason, E. Buswell, C. Hunger, J. OBrien,
K. Smith, H. Goss, S. Shinholser (Dive Coach)
198
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199
Injuries Can't Keep
Them Down
WRESTLING
12-6-1
Md.
39
American
11
32
Morgan State
8
24
Virginia Tech
18
24
Bucknell
18
31
William & Mary
9
24
Millersville State
19
8
Navy
26
31
Yale
22
6
N.C. State
33
9
North Carolina
27
33
Towson
11
28
East Carolina
22
18
Penn State
30
36
George Washington
12
23
Virginia
19
30
George Mason
15
21
Lycoming
23
21
Duke
21
20
West Virginia
23
2nd
ACC Championship
Despite being saddled with injuries
throughout the season, the University
wrestling team repeated last season's
impressive 12-6-1 performance and went
on to a second-place finish in the
Atlantic Coast Conference tournament.
In the ACC tourney, Terps Kevin
Colabucci (158), Tom Jones (167), and
Randy Thompson (177), completed
successful season by reaching the finals,
but unfortunately couldn't bring in
titles. Nevertheless, Colabucci and Jones
were offered bids in the NAA tour-
nament.
Entering the season, Head Coach
John McHugh felt that his team was as
good as any in the league, and the Terps
responded by winning their first six
matches, before falling to tough Navy.
But subsequent injuries to Jones
and 134-pounder Todd Camel hurt the
squad. Coupled with a pre-season injury
to 126-pounder, Mark Dugan, the Terps
were struggling to find replacements and
were forced to forfeit six points in each
of their last ten matches.
This was Colabucci's final season at
the University of Maryland after
compiling a 91-13 record, the best in the
history of Terrapin wrestling.
vs
wfM''M^^
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mBSSmmu
200
Football Teams Runs
Through The Year
At the start of the season the Terps
were considered a top contender for the
Atlantic Coast Conference Football
Championship and had hopes of
participating in a bowl appearance.
Despite the lack of experience in their
interior offensive line, the Terps had an
experienced and superior defensive
unit, talent on the skill positions on
offense, and a strong kicking game.
The season started with two
consecutive home victories against
Villanova, 7-3 and Vanderbilt, 31-6.
The squad traveled to West Virginia to
play the Mountaineers before a sell-out
crowd. Despite West Virginia having
one of the most potent offenses in the
country, the Terps prevailed 14-11, to
boost their season record to 3-0.
As seems to be a standard story for
the Terps, they fell into a mid-season
slump, losing their next game against
ACC power North Carolina, 17-3, a
game in which North Carolina used a
strong defense to hold the Terps
without a touchdown. The following
game proved to be no different as the
squad traveled to Pittsburgh to play the
national powerhouse before a sellout
crowd of 56,500. The Panthers also
carried a 3-0 record and not a single
touchdown had been scored against
them. The Panthers held their national
ranking intact against the Terps, 38-9.
The only highlight was when Maryland
scored a touchdown, the first of the year
against the Pittsburgh team.
The Terps next game was at home
to play Penn State. The Terps hoped
for a great upset since a Maryland
football team has not beaten Penn
State since 1961. The team held tight
and went into halftime with a 3-3 tie,
a delight to the packed crowd at Byrd
Stadium. In the second half the Terps
quickly took a 10-3 lead which sent the
home town crowd into hysterics.
However, the Penn State defense closed
202
FRONT ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): Bruce Byrom, Todd Benson, Mike Tice, Lloyd Burruss, Eric Sievers, Pete Glamp, Coach Herry Claiborne, Sam Medile,
Steve Trimble, Dale Castro, Jan Carinci, Ralph Lary, Brad Senft and Chris Havener. SECOND ROW: Mike Carney, Bob Larkin, Mark Sobel, Joe Wilkins,
Pat Zillman, Louis Weeks, Darnell Dailey, Marlin Van Horn, Scott Fanz, Ed Gall, Rick Fasano, bob Milkovich, Sam Johnson and Charlie Wysocki. THIRD
ROW: Greg Vanderhout, Les Boring, Bob Gioia, John Tice, Mike Sheridan, John Kreider, Bob Mattis, Brent Dewitz, Joe Niederhelman, Wayne Wingfield,
David Taylor, Howard Eubanks, John Simmons, and Mike Lewis. FOURTH ROW: David Pacella, Ed Aulisi, Vince Tomasetti, Joe Aulisi, Mike Corvine,
Gurnest Brown, Phil Glamp, Chris Barbiasz, bill McFadden Brian Riendeau, Todd Wright, Jeff Rodenberger, and Tim Whittle. FIFTH ROW: Rodney
Caldwell, Andrew APaffenroth, Jethro Senior, Tyrone Furman, Russell Davis, Spencer Scriber, Joe Brkovich, John Nash, Steve Anderson, Steve Adams,
Mike Collins, Martin Green, Frank Kolencik, and Harry Venezia. SIXTH ROW: Mark Duda, Cedric Williams, Jim Joyce, Paul Gentzel, Dave D'Addio,
Norman Esiason, Pete Antonelli, Shawn Bendon, Gary Goines, Mike Miller, Mike Muller and Bill Pugh. COACHING STAFF: Terry Strock, Gary Petercuskie,
Gib Romaine, Farrell Sheridan, John Misciagna, Dick Redding, John Devlin, Tommy Groom, Jerry Eisaman, Rod Sharpless, Jake Hallum and George Foussekis.
MEN'S
FOOTBALL
8-3
Md.
7
Villanova
3
31
Vanderbilt
6
14
West Virginia
11
3
North Carolina
17
9
Pittsburg
38
10
Penn State
24
11
Wake Forest
10
17
Duke
14
24
N.C. State
0
34
Clemson
7
31
Virginia
0
the door on the Maryland offense, while
the Maryland defensive squad let down
as the power running of Penn State
prevailed for a 24-10 victory.
The Terps then went on to defeat
Wake Forest, 11-10, to get back on the
winning track. However, an injury to
senior quarterback Mike Tice seemed
to dampen the day. The following week,
the Terps played Duke in a regional
televised game. Second string quarter-
back Bob Milovich got the starting nod.
In a rain-drenched first half, Duke
powered its way to a 14-10 lead. In the
second half, head coach Jerry Claiborne
sent in his third string quarterback who
powered the offensive unit behind a
superior passing attack to bring the
Terps out of Wallace Wade Stadium
with a 17-14 victory. Senior Dale Castro
was once again on hand to kick the
winning field goal. Charlie Wysocki also
•Vf
played a very important role, carrying
the ball 50 times for a total of 217 yards.
The squad then came home to play
N.C. State before a homecoming crowd.
The Terps, fired up and determined not
to let the crowd down, triumphantly
won 24-0. Defensive end Wilson
delighted the crowd by intercepting a
pass by the N.C. State quarterback in
the end zone for a touchdown. The
Terps followed this game with two
victories; one over Clemson, 34-7,
followed by a 31-0 victory at Virginia.
The final season record of 8-3-0 was
good enough for a second place finish
in the ACC along with an invitation to
the Tangerine Bowl.
Halfback Charlie Wysocki led the
Maryland team once again through the
season, leading in offensive plays with
334 and carrying the ball for 1,359
yards. This yardage ranked as the third
1(1
best record in the history of the ACC.
He also shares the NCAA record for
most carries in a half, 32 versus Duke,
and holds the ACC record for most
carries in a season, in a game, and in
a half. In the last two seasons, Wysocki
has rushed for over 100 yards in 13
games. He also has achieved more than
200 yards three times.
Havener, Sievers, and Lewis led the
team in receiving 29, 19, and 10
respectively. Lewis also had the longest
offensive gain of the season with a
46-yard pass reception. Wilkins led the
team in defense with 131 tackles,
followed by Gail with 99, and Van Horn
with 81. Defensive back Burross led the
team in blocked field goals, recording
one against North Carolina, and one
against North Carolina State, bringing
his career total to six. Burross also led
the team in interceptions with three.
205
206
207
Football Team Finds Fun But
On December 20th the Maryland
football team traveled to sunny, warm
Orlando, Florida to meet Florida in the
Tangerine Bowl. Five four-year letter-
men along with 16 other seniors were
playing their last game in a Maryland
uniform. The Bowl was the seventh
appearance in the last eight years for the
Maryland team. The team consisted of
three All-Atlantic Coast Conference
members who were also named Honor-
able Mention All-Americans.
The pre-bowl festivities set up a
showdown between the Terrapins and
the Gaters. The last time these two met
in the 1977 Gator Bowl, Maryland came
away with a 13-0 shutout victory.
The game started off as expected
with the lead switching hands many
times. Florida came away with a
halftime lead of 17-14. Starting the
second half, the Maryland team took a
20-17 lead. Florida bounced back to take
a 24-20 victory. Maryland tried its
hardest, but came out on the bottom
finishing the season on an unhappy note.
The Terps didn't have anything to be
ashamed of compiling an overall record
of 8-4-0 to give Coach Claiborne his 9th
winning season in as many tries. In nine
season with Maryland, he has compiled
an overall record of 73 wins, 30 losses,
2 ties and in the ACC competition
winning 42, losing 9, and tieing one.
No Satisfaction In Tangerine Bowl
209
210
;:?
ii
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211
Field Hockey Team
Drives Through Season
After achieving third place in the
National Field Hockey Tournament in
1980; Laura LeMire, Sandy Lanaham,
and Judy Dougherty returned for
another season.
The team started out in fine
fashion with a 3-0-1 record and placed
first in the Longwood Invitational. The
team was led by Dougherty scoring four
goals, one assist, and a stellar defensive
performance. The lady Terps were well
on their way. In the following two
games, Maryland easily defeated Amer-
ican University, 3-0; and Virginia, 2-1.
The team was once again led by Senior
Dougherty as she recorded two goals in
each game.
The next game pitted the Terps
against LaSalle. The Lady Terps came
away on the bottom half for the first
time all year losing 2-1 while outshoot-
ing their opponents 17-7. However, the
team rebounded against Ursinus 2-1, to
build up their confidence again. During
the next three games, the ladies did not
fare as well, losing to Penn State, 1-0;
Delaware, 2-0; and Temple, 5-4. The
Terps had plenty of opportunities to
score, but were unable to get the ball
in the net. The team finally managed
a 1-1 tie with Salisbury State, before
unloading on Towson State, 12-0. Once
again, the Terps were led by Dougherty
with five goals and one assist. Two
other outstanding plays were performed
by Sophomore Lynn Frame and Junior
Debbie Swanson, each recorded two
goals along with one assist.
At the season's end, Maryland had
compiled a 9-4-3 season, good enough
to be propelled into the EAIAW
Regionals. Fate was not with the team
as they played against Ursinus, a team
they had beaten once during the
Regional's season. Ursinus was pumped
up for revenge and put together an
excellent defensive effort holding the
Terps to seven shots and failing to
relinquish a goal going on to win 2-0.
Judy Dougherty led the team with
17 goals and two assists for a total of
19 points. She was followed by Laura
LaMire with four goals and eight assists
for 12 points along with Lynn Frame,
who finished the season with five goals
and four assists for nine points. The
1980 women's field hockey team set a
few records along the way by scoring 12
goals in one game against Towson;
scoring seven goals in one half.
Individual records set were: most goals
by an individual in a game; five by Judy
Dougherty and Laura LeMire set two
records; most assists in a season, eight
and most assists in a career, 13.
Dougherty closed her career with most
goals, 53.
Front Row: Mary Bernard, Debbei Faktorow, Debbie Swanson, Diane Swanson, JoAnn Salvory, Melodie Palmer, Karyn McGarrie Baclc Row: Coach
Sue Tyler, Trainer Sandy Worth, Lynn Frame, Judy Dougherty, Jackie Williams, Tracie Duncan, Celine Flinn, Laura LeMire, Lori Moxley, Gigi Daley,
Sharon Watson, Linda DiColo (Asst. Coach) Sue Finn (Manager)
212
FIELD HOCKEY
9-5-3
Md.
3
Appalachian State
0
1
Clemson
1
2
Longwood
0
2
Davis & Elkins
1
3
American
0
2
Virginia
1
1
LaSalle
2
2
Ursinus
1
0
Penn State
1
0
Delaware
2
4
Temple
5
1
Salisbury
1
12
Towson State
0
1
West Chester
0
3
James Madison
0
2
William & Mary
2
0
Ursinus
(EAIAW Regionals)
2
Soccer Team Loses Balls - Fails To Score
The 1980 soccer team opened the
season with a very strong defensive unit
and an experienced goal keeper, but
lacked firepower in scoring positions.
That lack of firepower proved to be the
difference between winning and losing
throughout the season.
The squad was shutout in nine of
15 games through the season while
scoring one goal in three others, and two
goals in the other three games.
The season started off with a 2-1
loss at the hands of Virginia. Next came
a 4-0 loss to American before a 2-1
victory over Navy. Following this
victory, the team took a 2-0 victory over
James Madison and hopes for a
successful season were brought forth.
However, after losing the next three
games while only scoring one goal, those
hopes appeared to be over. A 2-1 victory
was the last hurrah for the squad, after
which the team scored one goal in a 3-1
losing effort to Catholic. The team then
closed out the season with six straight
shutout loses.
As a result of this season and the
previous one. Head Coach Jim Dietsch
was forced to relinquish his helm. The
lack of respect from the players and
their attitudes also forced this decision.
(L to R). Front Row: Gary Millette, Graeg Millette (ballboys). 2nd Row: Kirk Miller, Kevin Darcey, Craig Jackson (capt.), John Carlson (capt.), Sid
Kaufman (capt.), Ihioma Nzeadibe, Kenan McCoy, Tim Reynolds, Patrick Nelson. 3rd Row: Ed Gauss, Mo Goldfarb, Steve Bennett, Mark MacLaughlin,
Drew Cross, Tony Denikos, Chris Karvellas, Brian Feeney. 4th Row: Cardo Travis, G.A. Reid, John Fink, Tony Martella, Roberto Martin, Mark Mahone,
Pete Bourne, Brian Barbazette, Jim Hudik. Last Row: Brian Blatchley (trainer), Joe Grimaldi (asst. coach), Joe Cryan (asst. coach), Jim Dietsch (head
coach).
214
•iiw."^' ■-•'.'■?*©■.■ .T«*fr.
SOCCER
3-12
Md.
1
Virginia
2
0
American
4
2
Navy
1
2
James Madison
0
0
George Washington
1
0
N.C. State
6
1
Wake Forest
2
2
Penn State
1
1
Catholic
3
0
Towson
2
0
Baltimore
1
0
Duke
2
0
North Carolina
2
0
Clemson
1
0
Old Dominion
4
215
Lady Aerialists
Enter Top Ten
The Terrapin varsity gymnastics
team has improved by leaps and bounds
this year. With last year's top performer
maturing and a lot of new talent, the
eleven member team edged it's way into
the top ten on the east coast.
Bob "Duke" Nelligan led his team
from 14th at the end of last season to
seventh overall on the east coast this
season.
With this being the first season in
many years for Terp gymnasts to reign
victorious, Coach Nelligan has high
hopes of defeating more of the competi-
tion next season and edging his way into
the honorable ranks of the top five
teams on the east coast.
Junior Holly Morris assisted in
making this year the most successful for
the gymnastics team in ten years, with
the help of her awesome double-twisting
layout in her floor exercise.
Sophomore Jill Andrews and Heidi
Cayouette drove hard bargains with the
judges, with incredible new and daring
uneven bar moves.
The new talent of today is '^omor-
row's future champions thou^ . and
Coach Nelligan has a well of potential
in new gymnasts Kathy Richardson,
Donna Mosely, and Sarah McNeil.
Bob "Duke" Nelligan is finishing
his second year as the University's
varsity gymnastic coach. Coach Nelligan
is from Dobbs Ferry N.Y. where he
taught at the Masters School of
Gymnastics.
Coach Nelligan has worked with
many nationally ranked gymnasts and
Olympian Roxanne Pierce of the
MarVaTeens in Rockville, Maryland.
GYMNASTICS
9-7
Md.
118
Pittsburgh
136
118
Alabama
135
123.8
North Carolina
122.95
122.6
Navy
101.7
128.1
George
Washington
92.8
134.6
East Carolina
113.1
129.55
Hofstra
117.9
122
New Hampshire
129
130.55
Duke
132.85
130.4
James Madison
Rutgers
124.55
129.25
West Virginia
133.85
129.25
Temple
106.8
129.25
Penn.
131.4
Front Row (L to R): Holly Morris, Pat Mohelski, Heide Cayouette, Donna Mosley, Jill Andrews. Back Row (L to R): Cindy Carapellucci, Kathy
Brantl, Amy Obregon, Kathy L. Richardson, Julie Kane, Sarah McNeill.
216
217
Cheerleaders Rally Terp Followers Into A Frenzy
218
^
n
221
Events and Issues of 1980
Bryan P. Aaron
Silver Spring, MD
Mathematics
Eileen Nan Aarons
Baltimore, MD
Journalism
Debbie Abrams
Potomac, MD
General Studies
Sandi Lea Abrams
Churchton, MD
Criminology
James S. Adelberg
Baltimore, MD
Kinesiology Sci
Carole Adler
Silver Spring, MD
Dietetics
Cheryl Ann Aiello
Cockeysville, MD
Theatre
lam Elena Alberding
Kensington, MD
History
Rosanne Abel
Alexandria, VA
Textile Sci
Sidney W.
Abel III
Laurel, MD
Water Resource
Sheila Abramsur
Silver Spring, MD
Chemistry
Mitchell Scott
Adelman
Fairlawn, N]
Textile Marketing
Fatemeh
Afkhami
Rockville, MD
Business
Nancy S. Ahn
Hyattsville, MD
Computer Science
Francis X. Albert
College Park, MD
Gen. Biology
John Albora
Plainview, NY
Fire Protection
222
Shape 1981 Seniors' Future
Jacqueline D.
Albrecht
Greenbelt, MD
Criminology
Karen M. Albright
Ocean City, MD
Economics
Khalid El Allam
Marrakech, Morocco
Electrical Engineer
Michael C. Allen
Beltsville, MD
Annabella Silva
Amorim
Bethesda, MD
Elementary Education
Kathleen E.
Amrhein
Baltimore, MD
Accounting
Laura Anderson
Takoma, MD
Urban Studies
Mary Clare
Anderson
Oxon Hill, MD
lournalism
Howard W. Aldag
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Valerie Alexander
Huntingtown, MD
Accounting
Juli E. Alter
Rockville, MD
Music Education
James Townley
Alvey Jr.
Rockville, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Marci Ancel
Baltimore, MD
journalism
Glenn T. Anderson
Queenstown, MD
Finance
Ginger D.
Anderbrand
Bel Air, MD
Accounting
Theresa
Annthibault
Gaithersburg, MD
English
223
Kelvin Antill
Hagerstown, MD
Economics
Omar Anwar
Potomac, MD
Accounting
Brian Lewis Armstead
Baltimore, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Daniel L. Arnold
Bowie, MD
Fire Protection
Janice Lynn
Applegate
Rockvielle, MD
Textile Sci.
Ray Aragon
Bethesda, MD
Economics
Louise Aronne
Lanham, MD
Special Education
Michael A.
Arroyo
Silver Spring, MD
f .iJk Criminology
Cuban Refugees Flock to America
Robert A. Arsenault
College Park, MD
Law Enforcement
Deborah A. Asmar
Danbury, CT
lournalism
Douglas Avison
Paramus, NJ
Marketing
Sally Await
Baltimore, MD
Therapeutic Rec.
WilHam Wallace
Babcock
Bethesda, MD
Business Management
Ilene Bachman
Jericho, NY
Marketing
Linda Ausch
Virginia Beach, VA
Family Studies
Debbie Averbach
Silver Spring, MD
Labor Relations
Rebecca Peggy
Ayanian
Silver Spring, MD
Finance
Shari Azus
Roslyn, NY
Fashion
Merchandising
David J. Bailey
Oxon Hill, MD
Electrical
Engineer
Paula Ann
Bailey
Hagerstown, MD
Childhood Education
224
Cynthia Lynn
Baitch
Baltimore, MD
Family Studies
Colleen Patricia
Baker
Smithtown, NY
Animal Science
Patricia Barbera
Cockeysville, MD
General Studies
Karen C.
Barland
Baltimore, MD
Speech
Communication
Dave Bakshi
Adelphi, MD
Chemical Engineer
Donald Eugene
Barber Jr.
Hyattsville, MD
Chemistry
Michael Barna
Greenbelt, MD
Public Relations
Audrey Michell
Barnes
Laurel, MD
journalism
on Massive Boatlift Plane 4-80
Douglas M.
Barnett
Greenbelt, MD
Marketing
Steve Barr
Bethesda, MD
English Literature
Patricia Barron
Adelphi, MD
General Studies
Margaret A.
Barrows
Hyattsville, MD
Recreation
Jamie L. Barry
Potomac, MD
Textiles
Ron E. Bartell
Silver Spring, MD
Management
225
Karen N. Bassoff
Ocean, NJ
Business
Lisa Patrice Battle
Harwood, MD
Biochemistry
Rebecca Suzon
Beason
Silver Spring, MD
Journalism
Karen Beauregard
Laurel, MD
Biological Science
Anthony D. Becker
Bethesda, MD
Economics
Carla Beth Becker
Bowie, MD
Accounting
Robert Howard
Becker
Poulesville, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Kyle Becraft
Laurel, MD
General Business
Kristi Michele
Bedois
Indian Lake, PA
Business Education
Ronald I. Beegle
Kingsville. MD
Chemical Engineer
Paul Bradford Begin
Niantic, CT
Civil Engineer
Lawrence Brook
Behner
Phoenix, MD
Civil Engineer
^1
Antoinette
Denice Batts
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Lisa Baverman
Randallstown, MD
ournalism
Robert A.
Beavan
Chaptico, MD
Agriculture Education
Mary Beavers
Laurel, MD
Marketing
Mpl^
Police Brutality Against Miami
Z26
Alex T. Beland
Jericho, NY
Horticulture
Gordon Frederick
Belcher
Oxon Hill, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Neal Bellet
Bloomfield, NJ
History
Kim Bender
Beltsville, MD
Sociology
Margo Lorraine
Berard
Germantown, MD
Special Education
David 1.
Berenhaus
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Mindy Diane
Berman
Baltimore, MD
journalism
Tracy Berman
Potomac, MD
Psychology
Beth Bellamy
Cheverly, MD
Hearing & Speech
Diane Beller
Bowie, MD
Anthropology
Richard Bennet
Gaithersburg, MD
Government
Karen Benson
Fair Lawn, Nj
Civil Engineer
Marcie Carol Berger
Baltimore, MD
Hearing & Speech Sci.
Eileen H. Berl
Union, N)
Dietetics
Melissa Bernahrdt
Baltimore, MD
Economics
Debbie Berry
Silver Spring, MD
General Business
Blacks Leads to Rioting 5/80
227
Mt. Saint Helens
Julie Bertoni
Columbia, MD
Criminology
David Bettinger
Arlington, VA
Accounting
Denise Lynn Billings
Gaithersburg, MD
Business Management
Kathleen M. Bilz
Rockville, MD
Economics
Jerome Anthony
Bivens
Baltimore, MD
Pre-Law & History
Robert I. Black
Potomac, MD
Marketing
Jennifer Blaine
New Carrollton, MD
Education
James W. Blake
Silver Spring, MD
Civil Engineer
Martin B. Bleetstein
Roslyn, NY
Criminology
Patricia Blessing
Rockville, MD
Nutrition
Denise A. Blow
Hyattsville, MD
Speech Communication
Sharon Blum
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Rosanne Beyer
Valley Stream, NY
Speech
Communication
Harry Bickford
III
Adelphi, MD
Industrial Technology
John Bishop
College Park, MD
Government
Becky Bitzer
New Carrollton, MD
Dietetics
Michael D.
Blackman
Westminster, MD
Gov't. & Politics
Eric L.
Blackmont
Lumberton, NC
Law Enforcement
Richard A.
Blankman
Baltimore, MD
Chemical Engineer
Greg Elastic
Silver Spring, MD
Civil Engineer
Jeffrey H. Block
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Leon Joseph
Bloom
Silver Spring, MD
Labor Relations
William J.
Bobesink
Bowie, MD
Urban Studies
Pamela Boddie
Washington, DC
Special Education
228
Erupts 5/80 & 6/80
Joanne Christine
Bohnet
Silver Spring, MD
General Studies
Lawrence S.
Bonnett
Silver Spring, MD
Mathematics
Kias Borsas
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Celeste M.
Boucher
Lanham, MD
Consumer Studies
Lisa Bowers
Hagerstown, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Stuart Bowers
Butler, MD
Government & Politics
Doriam Maria D.
Bowie
Camp Springs, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Joyce Bowles
Wheaton, MD
Special Education
Helen Box
Severn, MD
Marketing
Alan Martin Boyd
Silver Spring, MD
Economics
Jacqueline Bradley
Rockville, MD
Chemistry
Deborah Brain
Potomac, MD
Marketing
Kathy Boyer
Bowie, MD
Psychology
Andrew Kirk
Brackett
Silver Spring, MD
Economics
Mark Eugene
Bradus
Rockville, MD
Geography
Beth Marie Breen
Hyattsville, MD
Economics
229
Supreme Court Rules Abortion
Anne Marie
Breitenberg
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Sara Breitman
Bethesda, MD
Zoology
Elsa Brisson
El Paso, TX
Dietetics
Mary Kelly Brock
Laurel, MD
Wildlife Management
Yvette D. Brooks
Columbia, MD
Broadcasting- TV
[effrey H. Brougher
Hagerstown, MD
Government & Politics
Michelle Brown
Gambrills, MD
Nancy Brown
Lanham, MD
Family Studies
230
Steven Bridfs
Cabin )ohn, MD
Recreation Therapy
Nancy C.
Briganti
Severna Park, MD
Special Education
Paul Broderick
Ann Arbor, MI
Physical Science
Linda Brody
Silver Spring, MD
Government
Cynthia L.
Brown
Bowie, MD
Elementary
Education
Shelley L. Brown
College Park, MD
Communication &
Theatre
Robin R. Brown
Suitland, MD
Biochemistry
Debra Kay Bruce
Sykesville, MD
Advertising Design
Not Covered By Medicaid 7/1/80
Joseph Brucker
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Mark Bruder
Baltimore, MD
Animal Science
Kenneth G. Buch
Laurel, MD
Advertising Design
Lisa Buckner
Nev^ Carrollton, MD
Special Education
Theresa A. Burian
New Carrollton, MD
Government
Janine R. Burik
Linthicum, MD
Childhood Education
David Louis
Burriss
Bowie, MD
Information Svstem
■ Mgt.
Rhea Morgan
Burrow }r.
Fall Church, VA
Electrical Engineer
jim Brueggeman
Cheverly, MD
Criminology
Kirk Stewart Bryant
Baltimore, MD
Sociology
Patricia Elaina
Buelken
Washington, DC
Psychology
JacqueUne M. Bunty
Adelphi, MD
Psychology
Denise Burne
Clarks Summit, PA
Criminology'
Kenneth Crawford
Burr
North Babvlon, NY
Radio-TV & Film
Usa M. Busse
Beltsville, MD
Physical Education
^l Anne Porter
f(jL Butcher
Gaithersburg, MD
Economics
231
Catherine Lynn
Butler
Gaithersburg, MD
American Studies
Eileen A. Butler
Crofton, MD
Middle School Educ.
Arthur Cadeaux
Wheaton, MD
Advertising Design
Chris Caffrey
Silver Spring, MD
American Studies
Russell Paul
Butler
Morningside, MD
Government & Politics
Ann Kathleen
Byrne
Cockeysville, MD
Criminology
Carol A.
Calswel
Annapolis, MD
Fire Protection
Tia Calomeris
Wheaton, MD
Advertising
Beach Boys, Smoke in, Fireworks
Moira Jean Cameron
Gaithersburg, MD
Zoology
Granville L.
Campbell
Bladensburg, MD
Civil Engineer
Susan R. Campbell
Potomac, MD
General Studies
Joni M. Capuid
College Park, MD
Sociology
Brendan Ryan
Carney
Potomac, MD
Psychology
Donna Jeanne Carr
Reisterstown, MD
General Business
Ron Campbell
Commack, NY
Accounting
Susan Campbell
Webb City, MD
Journalism
Eric Caren
Spring Valley, NY
Business
Andrea Carlson
Rockville, MD
Elementary
Education
232
Ana L. Carrillo
Silver Spring, MD
Biochemistry
Harry R. Carroll
Silver Spring, MD
General Business
Maxine L. Carter
Atlantic Beach, NY
John Caruso
Burke, VA _^
Graphic Design
Jonathan M. Carson
College Park, MD
Finance
Jennifer Carter
Rockville, MD
Chemical Engineer
Steve Casbarian
University Park, MD
Transportation
Steven E. Cascio
Olney, MD
Computer Science
at D.C. for Independence Day 7/4/80
Mary Anna Cece
Lanham, MD
Interior Design
Ruby K. Chang
Gaithersburg, MD
Finance
Edward P. Charick
Baltimore, MD
Economics
Helen L. Charshee
Phoenix, MD
Mathematics
Li-Chuan Chen
Severn, MD
Electrical Engineer
Jon L. Cherney
Allentown, PA
Journalism
233
Deborah Chernin
Bethesda, MD
Recreation
Denise Cherry
Baltimore, MD
Economics
Mat Chibbard
Milltown, NJ
Fire Protection
Richard Chiostri
Eliicott City, MD
Electrical Engineer
Ahce B. Church
Riverdale, MD
Childhood Education
Teresa Marie
Ciorciari
Highland Park, NJ
Management Sci.
Jeanmarie Clancey
Farimington, CT
General Studies
Arthur E. Clark
Adelphi, MD
Zoology
loyce Laverne Clark
Washington, DC
Accounting
Susan Clark
Spark, MD
Zoology
Lesley Beth Clayman
Baltimore, MD
Dietetics
Denise Clearwater
College Park, MD
Zoolog\'
Steven Alan
Cheskin
Amherst, NY
Marketing
Elizabeth Chew
Silver Spring, MD
Mathematics
Maring D.
Chrisney
Bethesda, MD
Economics
Hostage Richard Queen Released from
Z34
Ann Cleary
Rockville, MD
Horticulture
Angela Maria
Clements
Hyattsville, MD
Animal Science
Catherine
Cogswell
New Carrollton, MD
General Business
Betti-Jo Cohen
College Park, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Mindy Cohen
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Robert N. Cohen
Fairlawn, NJ
Accounting
Stessa B. Cohen
Silver Spring, MD
American Studies
Eileen Colclough
Baltimore, MD
General Studies
Sheila Mary Clifford
Bethesda, MD
Marketing
Christine Clouser
Tamaqua, PA
Computer Science
Brian Cohen
Silver Spring, MD
Chemistry'
Helene Cohen
Hazlet, N]
lournalism
Sharon L. Cohen
Greenbelt, MD
Recreation Therapy
Stanley Cohen
Rockville, MD
Zoolog>'
Nelson B. Cole
Towson, MD
Zoology'
John Joseph Coleman
Gaithersburg, MD
Economics
Iranian Terrorists With Multiple Sclerosis
7/21/80
235
Women Not Included in Draft
Sara Coleman
Crofton, MD
Interior Design
Michael Collins
Bowie, MD
Criminology
Pamela Compart
Silver Springs, MD
Microbiology
Michael K. Compton
Joppa, MD
Engineering
Carlotta A. Conley
Essex Falls, NJ
History
Michael J. Conley
Damascus, MD
Economics
Cecelia Ann Coon
Port Tabacco, MD
Zoology
Mary Cooper
Kalamazoo, MI
General
Barbara Corcoran
Fulton, MD
Labor Relations
John M. Cordis
Fidstburg, MD
Horticulture
Valerie Cotter
Senerra Park, MD
Family Development
Pamela Covington
Seat Pleasant, MD
Business Management
Elizabeth Ann
Colliver
Frederick, MD
English
Michael A.
Colucciello
Arnold, MD
Business
Diane M.
Congdon
Caldwell, NJ
English
Susan M.
■^ Congour
Accokeek, MD
Animal Science
Sherry Conrad
Silver Springs, MD
Photo Journalism
Gordon D. Cook
Bowie, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Susan Cooper
Baldwin, NY
Business Administration
William K. Cooper
Greenbelt, MD
Respir. Therapy
Terry L. Cornett
Parkton, MD
Agricultural Education
Michael A.
Cornish
Pikesville, MD
Civil Engineer
Tonya Cowan
Smithsburg, MD
Production
Management
Anthony Cox
Bethesda, MD
Mechanical Engineer
236
Plan by Supreme Court 7/21/80
Mary Beth Cox
Cumberland, MD
Marketing
Dionne M.
Crawford
Greenboro, NC
Business Management
Jim Crenca
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Angela E. Groom
Washington, DC
Electrical Engineer
Nina Antionette
Crowe
Washington, DC
Health Education
Kimberly Ann
Crutchfield
Advertising Design
Glen Charles
Culbertson
Hyattsville, MD
Chemical Engineer
Marianne G.
Culbertson
Silver Spring, MD
Labor Relations
Marie Curcio
Haworth, NJ
Journalism
Phyllis Curtis
Marlow Heights, MD
Elementary Education
Richard Gordon
Daeschner
Towson, MD
Accounting
Joan Dall'Acqua
Mclean, VA
Advertising Design
Jay P. Cyr
Rockville, MD
Theodore N. Dacy
Silver Spring, MD
Computer Science
Asha Veena
Dandeker
Adelphi, MD
Special Education
Michael Dannessa
New Carrollton, MD
Zoology
237
Deposed Shah of Iran
Helen Dantsker
Hyattsville, MD
Math
Denise Monca
Darnell
Clinton, MD
Chemistry
Louis J. Dash
Pasadena, MD
Horticulture
Gregory K. Davidson
Millersville, MD
Production Management
[essica Leigh Davis
Ft. Meade, MD
Art Education
Lisa Davis
College Park, MD
Sociology
Thomas D. Day
Bethesda, MD
Labor Relations
Mingon de la Puente
Rockville, MD
General Studies
Susan A. Darragh
Allison Park, PA
Accounting
Dale M. Darwin
Bowie, MD
Government &
Politics
Paul S. Davidson
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Cynthia Davis
W. Hyattsville, MD
Criminology
Patricia E. Davis
Annapolis, MD
Government & Politics
Sharon Davis
Tow^son, MD
Graphic Design
Kathryn Deacon
Laurel, MD
Recreation
Cynthia Ann Dean
Clements, MD
Government &
Politics
238
Dies in Egyptian Exile 7/27/80
David William
Decker
Bethesda, MD
Kinesiological
Thomas Deegan
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Susan Mary
Delinsky
Bowie, MD
Business
Craig Delsack
Bethesda, MD
Finance
Stephen V. DePalo
Baltimore, MD
General Studies
Edwin Der
Washington, DC
Marketing
Robert Charles
Devestine
Wheaton, MD
Accounting
Thomas S.
Devilbiss
Uniontown, MD
Geology
ymiji
Mary Louise
Deguire
Silver Spring, MD
Speech Communication
Robert J. Delcoco
Oxon Hill, MD
Electrical Engineer
Lola Demma
Silver Spring, MD
Journalism
William Dennis
Kensington, MD
General Studies
Rajiv R. Desai
Sea Brook, MD
Accounting
Denise Devaney
Bowie, MD
Government & Politics
Raymond E. Deyton
Thurmont, MD
Personnel Management
Phyllis J. Diamond
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
239
Jeff Dickerson
Bethesda. MD
Government & Politics
Deborah L.
DiGiovacchino
Gaithersburg, MD
Finance
Brian Disher
Chev>' Chase, MD
Microbiology
Daniel P. Dittmar
Cherry Hill, N]
Graphic Design
John Dimarzio
Rockville, MD
Geology
George B.
Dines |r.
Silver Spring, MD
Psychology'
Mary EHzabeth
Divver
Silver Spring, MD
Family Community
Dvpt.
Cynthia P.
Dladla
College Park, MD
Dietetics
Billy Carter Charged
Pamela Jean Doe
Frederick, MD
Interior Design
Joan Doniger
Bethesda, MD
journalism
Charles Doring
Garrett Park, MD
Agriculture
Kevin Dougherby
Silver Spring, MD
Microbiology
Carolyn B. Doyle
Bethesda, MD
Family Studies
Anne Draddy
Tarrytown, NY
English Language
240
Margaret E.
Donnally
Annapolis, MD
Labor Relations
David Francis
Donnelly
Rockville, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Donna Doweary
Mt. Airy, MD
Horticulture
Johnny W.
Dow^ning
Biklyn, NY
Chemical Engineer
Michael L.
Drago
Edgewood, MD
Journalism
David Drahozal
E. Stroudsburg, PA
Marketing
Lynne M.
Draper
Lanham, MD
Marketing
Sharon Joy
Dreyfuss
Rockville, MD
Gov't. & Politics
Mary A.
Dubinsky
Rockville, MD
Textiles & Apparel
Caron Debbie
Dubyn
Roslyn, PA
Radio-TV & Film
Lori Renee Drozdow
Vineland, NJ
General Studies
John Kneller Drury
Greenbelt, MD
Economics
Mylan Duckett
Riverdale, MD
Microbiology
Edward Anthony
Duffy
Bowie, MD
Biochemistry
as Libyian Agent 8/5/80
Patricia Ann
Dugan
Arnold, MD
Criminology
Robert E. Duley
Derwood, MD
Accounting
Tracie Duncan
Baltimore, MD
Accounting
Kenneth Joseph
Dunn Jr.
Columbia, MD
Chemical Engineer
Diane E.
Dunning
Annapolis, MD
Information System
Mgt.
Richard Dunshee
Glen Burnie, MD
Finance
241
Charles P. Durbin
Waldorf, MD
Economics
Becky L. Dwojeski
Timonium, MD
Law Enforcement
Deborah Ann Eason
Lanham, MD
Mathematics
Charles R. Eastwood
Beltsville, MD
Geography
Howard Edelson
Silver Spring, MD
Agriculture
Gail A. Edenbaum
Bethesda, MD
General Studies
Larry Edwards
Cheltenham, MD
Labor Relations
Ralph Weller
Edwards Ir.
Baltimore, MD
Computer Science
Walter Paul Edwards
Lanham, MD
Animal Science
Katherine Anne
Egbert
Lexington Park, MD
Advertising Design
Richard Egerman
Yonkers, NY
Psychology
Damon Ehrlich
Potomac, MD
Marketing
Joseph M. Dwyer
New Canaan, CT
Physical Science
William B.
Easley Ir.
Silver Spring, MD
Photo Journalism
Actors Strike For Higher
242
Brenda }.
Eisdorfer
East Brunswick, NJ
Journalism
Steven M.
Ekobich
Baltimore, MD
Marketing l
M. Susan Ellis
Baltimore, MD
Accounting
Yvonne R.
Ellwood
Marakin-Sabot, VA
English
Denise Carol
Ensor
Fulton, MD
Personnel Adm.
Ann Enterline
Hagerstown. MD
Special Education
Margaret E.
Eschbach
Adelphi. MD
Business Management
Lawrence Edward
Eslocker
Oxon Hill, MD
Computer Science
Meharan Eliassian
Gaithersburg, MD
Chemical Engineer
}ohn C. Elliott
Camp Springs. MD
General Studies
Gerard Emig
Wheaton, MD
Economics
Connie Engle
Silver Spring, MD
Special Education
Jody Epstein
Rockville, MD
Family Development
Alan David Ernstein
Silver Spring, MD
General Studies
Jeffrey Noel
Ethridge
Bel Air, MD
Physics - Math
Glenn Richard Evers
Oxon Hill, Md.
Chemical Engineer
Wages to Backstage Workers
243
Former Nicaraguan President
Eva M. Fabregas
Colonia, N|
General Business
Michael Paul Galba
Kensington, MD
Zoology
Brian T. Fanning
Wheaton, MD
Business Administration
Janet Lynn
Fashbaugh
Ft. Meade, MD
Advertising Design
Sarah C. Feeney
Cumberland, MD
Accounting
Debra L. Feld
Springfield, PA
Special Education
Patrick K. Fennell
Potomac, MD
Marketing
James Ferraro
Derwood, MD
Accounting
Wendy Feuerman
Fair Lawn, N]
Psychology
Thomas P. Feulner Jr.
Baltimore, MD
Architecture
Jonathan Hal Finglass
Baltimore, MD
Accounting
Craig L. Fischer
Potomac, MD
Economics
Michael J.
Fanaroff
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Steven L.
Fanaroff
Bethesda, MD
Finance-Business
Stacey Ann
Federline
Bethesda, MD
Journalism
Dawn Feeley
Fairfield, CT
Government & Politics
Beth Felder
Bethesda, MD
General Studies
Morgie E. Felper
West Orange, NJ
Special Education
Karen Marie
Ferris
Glen Burnie, MD
Theatre
Diane Marie
Festino
^ Arnold, MD
English
Wendy Beth
Fielding
Rockville, MD
Psychology
Nancy Joan Fields
Glifton, NJ
Marketing
Darlene A. Fischer
Massapequa Park, NY
Information System
Mgt.
Gary B. Fishbein
Rockville, MD
Accounting
244
Somoza Assassinated 9/18/80
Erica Jay Fisher
Wheaton, MD
Urban Studies
Sandi Fitzwilliam
Rockville, MD
Childhood Education
Maureen Flaherty
Adelphi, MD
Secretarial Education
Shaun P. Fleming
Lanham, MD
Computer Science
Darlene F.
Flemion
Oxon Hill, MD
Criminology
Susan Floyd
Potomac, MD
Special Education
Daniel C. Flynn
Greenbelt, MD
Microbiology
Nancy Flynn
Bethesda, MD
Health Education
Mark Thomas
Foley
Baltimore, MD
Agriculture
Pat Fong
Silver Spring, MD
Electrical Engineer
Vincente E. Fort
Rio Piedras, Puerto
Rico
Zoology
Robin A. Foster
Wheaton, MD
Advertising Design
Mark Forrester
Wheaton, MD
Zoology & Computer
Science
Patricia L. Forry
Reading, PA
Advertising Design
Cheryl Fotheringham
Bel Air, MD
Special Education
Anne Elizabeth
Fowler
Daytona Beach, FL
Accounting
245
War Breaks Out
Lloyd Fox
Gaithersburg, MD
Biology
Janet Franco
Miami, FL
Finance
Bernard Freed Jr.
Bowie, MD
Business- Marketing
Mark A. Freedman
Hunt Valley, MD
Chemical Engineer
Karen Louise French
Germantown, MD
Textile Marketing
Bruce E. Friedman
Baltimore, MD
Psychology
Craig Brian Froede
Baltimore, MD
Microbiology
Erich G. Fronck Jr.
Glenndale, MD
Animal Science
Barbara Frank
Floral Park, NY
General Studies
Mark E. Franklin
Adelphi, MD
Recreation
Karen L. Freeman
Columbia, MD
Economics
Nancy Paula
Freiman
Livingston, N)
' Journalism
Marcia Beth
Friedman
Silver Spring, MD
Elementary Education
Marne Friess
E. Northport, NY
journalism
Carol J. Frost
Laurel, MD
Architecture
246
Between Iran and Iraq 9/21/80
Debora Adreana
Fruman
Silver Spring, MD
Microbiology
James Earl Futrell
Savage, MD
History
John Patrick
Gallagher
Silver Spring, MD
Journalism
Pamela Dee
Gallagher
College Park, MD
Accounting
Kathryn A. Galvin
Bowie, MD
Special Education
Eugene Gamble Jr.
Ft. Washington, MD
Civil Engineer
Deborah M.
Garling
Gaithersburg, MD
Criminology
Michael L. Garrett
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Karen Marie
Galdieri
Potomac, MD
Psychology
Gregory Sean
Gallager
Ridgewood, NJ
English
Rosanne L. Galleta
Laurel, MD
Hearing & Speech
Laurene Ann Gallo
Silver Spring, MD
Journalism
George J. Gannon
Brentwood, MD
Psychology
Linda Gardner
Rockville, MD
Math Education
Carol Garsh
Gaithersburg, MD
Spanish
Paul D. Garver
Bethesda, MD
Economics
247
Jeffrey A. Garyn
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
William L. Geiger
Chevy Chase, MD
Chemistry
Deana Gelman
Edison, NJ
Psychology
Roy H. Gerardi
Baltimore, MD
Institution Administration
Carolyn S.
Geindrod
Millersville, MD
Family Development
George Gellrich
Port Deposit, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Deborah
Gewisgold
Silver Spring. MD
Psychology
David Paxson Jr.
Gibson
Oxon Hill. MD
Civil Engineer
Recession Slides
Kathleen J. Gidley
Potomac. MD
Special Education
Joan Giebel
Bethesda. MD
Dietetics
Francie Gill
Bethesda. MD
Accounting
Tracy A. Gill
Annapolis, MD
Resource Development
Keith I. Gilmore
Washington, DC
Radio-TV & Film
Lawrence A.
Ginsberg
Greenbelt, MD
Industrial Psychology
Gail Gilbert
Woodmere. NY
Criminology
John Tucker
Gilfrich
Bethesda, MD
General Business
Deborah Ann
Gillespie
Beltsville, MD
Childhood Education
Judith Gillespie
Derwood, MD
Textile Marketing
Salvatore Girgente
Bayonne. N]
Law Enforcement
Paula Darcel
Girven
Dale City. VA
General Studies
248
Ellen Beth Gitter
Bellmore, NY
Hearing & Speech
Caryl Gladskin
Wayne, N]
Hearing & Speech
Kim B. Glover
Camp Springs, MD
Microbiology
Carol Glucksman
Jericho, NY
Community Study
William L. Jr. Glenn
Glen Burnie, MD
Architecture
James Glickter
Upper Marlboro, MD
Transportation
Eric Glushakow
Baltimore, MD
English
Glenn Alan Godfrey
Bowie, MD
Accounting
Slowly to End 9/21/80
Avis H. Gold
Lanham, MD
Childhood Education
Audrey Goldberg
East Hills, NY
Sociology
Kenneth M.
Goldman
Wheaton, MD
Marketing
Lisa Goldskin
Potomac, MD
Advertising
Administration
Marcy L.
Goldstein
Silver Spring, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Carol L. Good
Gaithersburg, MD
Journalism
249
Jeffrey S. Goodman
Pikesville, MD
Zoology
Marc R. Goodman
Armonk, NY
Recreation Management
Stephanie E. Gorman
Severn, MD
American Studies
Vicki Goss
Silver Spring, MD
Special Education
Ira Jay Gottlieb
Greenbelt, MD
Microbiology
Barbara Gould
Baltimore, MD
Dance
Patricia Gray
Kensington, MD
Accounting
Aileen Grebow
Randallstown, MD
Special Education
Stuart A. Greemburg
Syosset, NY
Accounting
Joyce A. Green
Greenbelt, MD
Family Studies
Rhonda Gail Green
Cedar Grove, NJ
Special Education
Susan Leslie Green
Family Studies
Robert Gordon
Lawrence, NY
Marketing
Cindy Debra
Goren
Baltimore, MD
Gov't. & Politics
Carol Gottesman
Gold Prices Triple in
250
Jay Harris
Greenberg
Potomac, MD
Accounting
Ingra Greene
Upper Marlboro, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Stacy Greenspan
Randallstown, MD
Psychology
Joann Greenwald
Melrose Park, PA
Marketing
Joanne P. Greway
Philadelphia, PA
Therapeutic
Recreation
Jane A. Grill
Arnold, MD
Experiment Food
Daniel Michael
Gropper
Silver Spring, MD
Economics
Craig Gross
Greenbelt, MD
Aerospace Engineer
Patricia Greene
Aberdeen, MD
Program Recreation
Robin L. Greenhouse
Cherry Hill, N]
Labor Relations
Frances Grega
Glen Burnie, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Rodger K. Greif
Potomac, MD
Marketing
Gregory Grindstaff
Arnold, MD
Chemical Engineer
Dennis Griswold
Beltsville, MD
Government & Politics
Norman Gross
Glen Burnie, MD
General Business
One Year, Reach $700 an Ounce
251
John Bonham of Led Zepplin
Faith L. Grossman
Chevy Chase, MD
Ceneral Studies
Michael Jay
Grossman
Rockville, MD
Marketing
Cynthia Gordon
Grover
Ellicott City, MD
Government
Nancy Gruenebaum
Silver Spring, MD
Psychology
Janet L. Guinn
Oxon Hill, MD
Microbiology
Regina Marie
Gunzelman
Burwin, MD
Conservation
JuHan David Gutin
Baltimore, MD
Mechanical Engineer
John Anthony Guy
Rockville, MD
Kineisiology
Jennifer Haaser
Silver Spring, MD
Zoology
Jonathan B. Haber
Chevy Chase, MD
Business Management
Rossice Haith
Columbia, MD
Microbiology
Gary Alan Hall
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Robert Grossman
New Rochelle, NY
Business
Sharon Grossman
Yonkers, NY
Marketing
Sally Guentner
Catonsville, MD
Conservation
Anna M. Guido
Rockville, MD
French Language
Pamela L. Gusoff
Woodmere, NY
Psychology
Glaudia Gutierrez
Silver Spring, MD
Spanish
Mary Rose Guy
Annapolis, MD
Family Development
Tineke B. Haase
Rockville, MD
lournalism
Jennifer Lynn
Hahn
Riverdale, MD
Special Education
Jiyon Hahn
Rockville, MD
Electrical Engineer
Rachelle Una Hall
Oxon Hill, MD
Finance
Effie S. Hallas
Bethesda, MD
Elementary Education
252
Found Dead in Page's Home
Paul L. Hallberg
Wheaton, MD
Animal Science
Bruce W. Helper
Potomac, MD
Accounting
Maureen Halpert
Bethesda, MD
Recreation
David Alan Ham
Rising Sun, MD
Recreation
Judith Suzanne
Hamblen
Columbia, MD
journalism
Steven Owen
Hamill
Monnale, NJ
Finance
Ann K. Hamilton
Silver Spring, MD
Advertising Design
Barbara J.
Hamilton
Orlando, FL
Communication &
Advertising
Mary Elizabeth
Hampton
College Park, MD
Marketing
Shin Young Han
Silver Spring, MD
Dietetic
Riaz Haqqi
Silver Spring, MD
Finance
Linwood R.
Harcum
Mardela Springs, MD
Theatre
James S. Hanessian
Rockville, MD
General Business
Virginia Hannah
New Carrollton, MD
Special Education
Lynn Michele
Hardwick
Baltimore, MD
Nursing
Carrie Lou Hardy
Silver Spring, MD
Law Enforcement
253
Shogun Captures Largest Audience
Kimberly E. Harps
Rockville, MD
Art Studio
Abbe Harris
Roosevelt Island, NY
lournalism
Todd Allen Harrison
Hagerstown, MD
Microbiology
Kathleen D. Hartman
Wheaton, MD
Special Education
Carol Eileen Harvey
Boulevard Heights, MD
Psychology
Keith Sherman
Harvey
Baltimore, MD
Urban Transportation
Shirley Lee Hauch
Columbia, MD
English
Laurie P. Hawkins
Hyattsville, MD
Microbiology
254
Adrienne M.
Harris
Bowie, MD
Special Education
Stephen J. Harris
Severna Park, MD
Transportation
Terri S. Hartman
Potomac, MD
Labor Relations
Esther M.
Hartstein
APO, NY
General Business
Marvin Keith
Harvey |r.
Oxon Hill, MD
Aerospace Engineer
Bruce T. Hashim
Rockville, MD
Microbiology
Jerry Hawks
Churchville, MD
Chemical Engineer
Ruthann Hay
Garwood, NJ
Theatre
i
of Any TV Series 10/80
Christopher E.
Hayden
Woldorf, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Stephen P.
Hayleck
Hyattsville, MD
Kinesiology
Glendon L. Heard
Silver Spring, MD
Civil Engineer
Judy A. Hearring
Silver Spring, MD
History
Daniel H. Hecht
Colesville, MD
Chemical Engineer
Mark Alan Heim
Ellicott City, MD
Electrical Engineer
Michael P.
Hepner
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Robert A. Herbert
Haddonfield, N]
Marketing
Gail Anne Hazelrigg
Bethesda, MD
Criminology
Christopher Paul
Healy
Columbia, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Mark Hebner
Flintstone, MD
Electrical Engineer
Bennett Lowell Hecht
Verona, NJ
Accounting
Roland Hellmann
Garrett Park, MD
Geology-Chemist
Ann Marie Henry
Chotham, NJ
Marketing
Amy K. Herrmann
Severna Park, MD
Graphics, Art
WilHam J.
Hersey III
Baltimore, MD
Electrical Engineer
255
Heidi Hess
Severna Park, MD
Psychology
Gwendolyn M.
Hickman
Germantovvn, MD
Government & Politics
John Patrick Higgins
North Bergen, MD
Government & Politics
Bradford E. Hill
Lutherville, MD
Industrial Education
Eileen M.
Higgins
Riverdale, MD
Jamie Ann
Higgins
Kensington, MD
■] Criminology
Judith A. Hill
Derwood, MD
English
Leslie J. Hill
Alexandria, VA
Interior Design
Professor Hsu Spends Longest Jail
Sandra K. Hill
Laurel, MD
Labor Relations
Dorothy E. Hilton
Hyattsville, MD
Criminology
Caroline Hitch
Adelphi, MD
Spanish
Michael G. Hitch
Salisbury, MD
Electrical Engineer
Alisa Hockstein
Springfield, NJ
Special Education
Gregory S.
Hodgkinson
College Park, MD
Law Enforcement
i^/.' ^
Jeffrey C. Hilton
Laurel, MD
Botany
Ellen M.
Himmelstein
Randallstown, MD
History
Jocelyn Hite
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Lisa Hochstein
Kensington, MD
Criminology
Joann E. Hoelk
Hyattsville, MD
Library Science
Stephen
Hoffman
Mt. Rainier, MD
Radio-TV & Film
256
Gary Andrew
Hogue
Mechanicsville, MD
Mechanical
Engineer
Barbara Hoheisel
Kensington, MD
Textile Marketing
Steven M.
Hollidge
Lanham, MD
Physical Education
Beverly Hollis
Accokeek, MD
Mathematics
Aneece Holland
Bethesda, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Ilze M. Holliday
Greenbelt, MD
Accounting
Richard Harvey
Hollis
Accokeek, MD
Electrical Engineer
Heather L. Holt
Severna Park, MD
History
Term for Contempt of Court 10/80
Rolla B. Holt
Silver Spring, MD
Law Enforcement
Eileen Theresa
Honlon
Washington, DC
Journalism
Arlene Home
Greenbelt, MD
Business Education
Al Horowitz
Layhill, MD
Marketing
John Clinton
Hossick
College Park, MD
Mechanical
Engineer
Jay Martin
House
Jefferson, MD
Economics r.
257
Bonnie Howard
Bethesda, MD
Government & Speech
Bonnie L. Howatt
Pasadena, MD
Accounting
Cornelius J. Hughes
Oceanport, N|
General Studies
Peggy Cornelius
Hunter
Baltimore, MD
Zoology
Glen E. Huston
Germantown, MD
Business
Amy Hutcheson
Bethesda, MD
General Studies
Linda Hyatt
New Carrollton, MD
Business Administration
Valerie R. lanieri
Whitehall, PA
Nutrition
Judy Marianne Idas
Randallstown, MD
Textile Marketing
Patricia Iger
Fort Lee, NJ
Marketing
Rex Uchenna Iko
Chillim, MD
Finance
Barbara Jeanne
Ilchuk
Laurel, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Diane Frances
Hrozencik
Rockville, MD
Consumer Economics
Mark Andrew
Hrozencik
Rockville, MD
Economics
Michael C. Hurley
Baltimore, MD
English Education
Nancy C. Hurt
College Park, MD
Law Enforcement
Toxic Shock Syndrome
258
Virginia Carol
Ingle
Oxon Hill, MD
Labor Relations
Mary lane
Inglesby
Silver Spring, MD
English Literature
Madeline M.
Iselin
McLean, VA
Journalism
Christine Ann
Issing
College Park, MD
Elementary Education
}oyce Michelle
Jackson
Baltimore, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Jill Mara Jacobs
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Pamela Brooke
Jaffe
Hyattsville, MD
Studio Art
Ricky Lee Janisch
Rockville, MD
Journalism
Lisa Isaac
Baltimore, MD
Elementary Education
Theresa Isaman
Silver Spring, MD
Textile Marketing
Jed C. Ivory
Gaithersburg, MD
Psychology
David Jabarnezhad
Rockville, MD
Electrical Engineer
Judy Jacobs
Wilmington, DE
Art Education
Dawn L. Jacobson
Westminster. MD
Radio-TV & Film
Louise Janus
Takoma Park, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Linda Sue Jarrett
Potomac, MD
Criminology
Remains Unsolved Plague 10/80
259
FBI Abscam Leads to Arrest of
George H. Jelly
Wheaton, MD
Transportation
Ann Whitney
Jennings
Rockville. MD
Business Administration
Andrew W. Johnson
Rockville, MD
Urban Studies
Carolyn R. Johnson
Suitland, MD
Labor Relations
Letitia Johnson
Washington, DC
English
Mary Catherine
Johnson
Hyattsville, MD
Labor Relations
Charles Eldon Joiner
Waynesboro, PA
Accounting
Paula K. John
Potomac, MD
Childhood Education
Donna Lynne Jones
Landover, MD
Law Enforcement
Elaine Jones
Temple Hills. MD
Government & Politics
Michael Jordan
Baltimore. MD
Law Enforcement
Shannon P. Jordan
College Park, MD
General Studies
Joseph C. Jenson
East Hanover. NJ
Mechanical Engineer
Angela Jiggetts
Silver Spring, MD
Fashion
Merchandising
Jennifer J. Johnson
Hustle, VA
Art Education
Kristen Kay
Johnson
Bowie, MD
Biochemistry
Paula C. Johnson
Landover. MD
English
Ross C. Johnson
Monkton. MD
Marketing
Ma Ming Jon
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Cameron R. Jones
Silver Spring, MD
Business
Mary Lou Jones
Falls Church. VA
General Studies
Maureen A. Jones
Cheverly, MD
Marketing
Sheila M. Jordan
Timonium, MD
Interior Design
Violet Joseph
Tobago. West Indies
General Studies
260
U. S. Congressmen for Bribery 10/80
Fernando A.
Josephson
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Soyeun Ju
College Park, MD
Home Economics
Michael A. Junge
Laurel, MD
Nuclear Engineer
Linda M. Just
Rio Piedros, Puerto
Rico
Spanish Literature
Harry F.
Kabernagel Jr.
Millersville, MD
Accounting
Kathleen R.
Kaluzienski
Camp Springs, MD
Computer Science
Daniel Kane
Westminster, MD
Marketing
Nancy A. Kane
Silver Spring, MD
Consumer Studies
Thomas Kane
Bryn Mawr, PA
Economics
Elliot Kantor
New City, NY
Marketing
Michael Kapust
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Alexander
Karavasilis
Cockeysville, MD
General Studies
Amy Sue Kaplan
Livingston, NJ
Industrial Technology
Robert M. Kaplan
Mt. Washington, MD
Geology
Abdo E. Kardous
Laurel, MD
Civil Engineer
Steven Karmel
Massapequa Park, NY
Pre-Dentistry
261
Holmes TKO over All in 10th
Carol A. Karpa
Silver Spring, MD
Fashion Photography
Nancy Kass
Woodmere, NY
Marketing
Sidney A. Kaufman
Spring Field, N]
General Studies
Shari Kayhettick
Butte, MT
Music
Stephen Keefe
Adelphi. MD
Electrical Engineer
Charles L. Keeney Jr.
Rock Ridge, MD
Business & Finance
Kathleen L. Kelley
Fort Washington, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Douglas B. Kelsey
Silver Spring, MD
Transportation
Martin Kastner
Olney, MD
History Education
Steven B. Katz
Bayside, NY
Marketing
Kathryn Ellen
Kearney
Laurel, MD
Psychology
Barbara Keating
Lanham, MD
Recreation
Judy Keilsohn
Potomac, MD
Accounting
Lori A. Kellaher
Greenbelt, MD
Law Enforcement
Karen Stephanie
Kenny
Severna Park, MD
Deaf Education
Marian Hillary
Kera
Potomac, MD
Elementary Education
262
Round
Michael J. Kerich
Bethesda, MD
Chemistry
Kevin Eugene
Kerley
Chevrly, MD
Accounting
Leslie M. Kern
Potomac, MD
Special Education
Lisa Kesten
Bedford, NY
Liberal Arts
James Stephen
Kim
Seabrook, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Kyung B. Kim
Columbia, MD
Computer Science
Cheryl King
Silver Spring, MD
Health Education
Deborah King
Aberdeen, MD
Textiles
Michael Paul Kerley
Greenbelt, MD
History
Martin Joseph Kerlin
Boyds, MD
Business Administration
Charlotte M. Keys
Lanham, MD
Government
Kathy Keys
Seat Pleasant, MD
Childhood Education
Sae Woong Kim
Wheaton, MD
Chemistry
Sung D. Kim
Potomac, MD
Electrical Engineer
Wilbur King III
District Heights, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Karyn King
Silver Spring, MD
Criminology
263
Mary Jean King
Friendly, MD
Theatre
Timothy King
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Suzanne Annette Kirk
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Sally Kish
Evergreen, CO
Advertising Design
Joanne Leslie
Kinney
Beltsville, MD
Microbiology'
Donna Kinzie
Troutville, VA
Recreation
Judith M. Kissel
N. White Plains, NY
Family Studies
Sandra M.
Kitsoulis
Rockville, MD
Textile Marketing
Philadelphia Phillies Win First
Margaret Ann
Kitzinger
Rockville, MD
Elementary Education
Robert Louis Klatzkin
Sykesville, MD
Accounting
Laurie Klier
N. Woodmere, NY
Marketing
Kelly Kline
Short Hills, N]
Business
Margaret S. Knutson
Columbia, MD
Economics
Christina Ko
Upper Marlboro. MD
Math
Paul Klein
Bowie, MD
Journalism
Joyce Renee
Kleinberg
Rochester, NY
lournalism
Barbara A. Knight
New Carrollton, MD
Sociology
Lesa C. Knowlton
Stratford, N)
Interior Design
Paul Koenigsmark
Lutherville, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Andrea Koeppel
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
264
Judith C. Kohlberg
Mamaroneck, NY
Marketing
Christopher J.
Kohlway
Catonsville, MD
Experimental Food
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arin Rose Korzec
Pikesvilie, MD
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Tiani Marie
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Kramer
WW^4
District Heights, MD
Marketing
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Brian Kopp
Rockville, MD
Criminology
Steven R. Korman
Bethesda, MD
Radio-TV & Film
PhylHs Krankowski
Friendly, MD
Government & Politics
Laurie E. Kraus
New York, NY
lournalism
Series Ever, Against Royals 10/22/80
Erica Kravitz
Trenton, NJ
Visual Design
Jean Marie
Krebs
Fallston, MD
Kinesiology
Ilene Kreisberg
Silver Spring, MD
Psychology
Neal Kreitman
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Frank F.
Kretschmer III
Laurel, MD
Marketing
Scott A.
Krichbaum
Wheaton, MD
Elementary Education
265
John Krol
Baltimore, MD
Civil Engineer
Kim Kunenetz
Towson, MD
Elementary Education
Lisa Andrea
Kupetzky
Baltimore, MD
French
Brenda J. Kurihara
Bethesda, MD
Accounting
Simcha Laib Kuritzky
Columbia, MD
Accounting
Michael Kurtz
Livingston, NJ
Marketing
Roger Reed Kurtz
Oxon Hill, MD
Philosophy
Wilham Lachance
Riverdale, MD
Interior Design
Babette Lacovey
Seabrook, MD
Elementary Education
David M. Ladson
Maryland Park, MD
Accounting
Karan Lage
Baltimore, MD
Physical Education
Edward Lai
Glen Burnie, MD
Psychology
Heidi Ehzabeth
Kuntz
College Park, MD
Family Studies
Scott S. Kuperman
Pikesville, MD
Zoology
Alan S. Kuritzky
Silver Spring, MD
Nuclear Engineer
Redskin McClinton Dies
266
Carrie Laken
North Hills, NY
Criminology
Rhona Joy
Lambert
Coral Springs, FL
Speech
Communication
Beth R. Land
Randallstown, MD
Sociology
Debbie Landau
Teaneck, NJ
Textiles
Nina D. Lansky
Coltsneck, NJ
Recreation
Thomas
Lantz-Cashman
Glen Burnie, MD
Kinesiology
Ralph L. Lary III
Potomac, MD
Aerospace Engineer
EUzabeth Juanita
Laumann
Ellicott City, MD
Accounting
■ft
LA
Thomas E. Lambert
Baltimore, MD
Physical Science
Lisa Lambei
W. Hyattsville, MD
Food Science
Joan Theresa Lane
Rockville, MD
Speech Sciences
Linda Mikel Lanier
Ellicott City, MD
Russian
Jac Steven Lapham
Wheaton, MD
Government & Politics
Marlene Larach
College Park, MD
Labor Relations
Marie Launi
Bethesda, MD
Finance
Sharon Sue Lavine
Yardley, PA
Dietetics
of Accident Wound 10/31/80
267
College Park Ranked 5th in FBI
Carol S. Lawrence
E. Northport. NY
General Studies
Cheryl A. Lawrence
McSherrystown, PA
Dance
Frances Lebo
N. Woodmere, NY
Radio-TV & Film
Maurice J. Lebrun III
Owings Mills, MD
Physics & Math
James E. Lee
Wheaton, MD
Physical Science
Robin A. Lee
Beltsville, MD
Elec. Engineer
Jennifer Leite
Bowie, MD
Community Studies
Terese Marie Lejk
Oxon Hill, MD
Accounting
Barbara Gwen Lerner
Bethesda, MD
Nutrition
Powell James Leslie
College Park, MD
Mech. Engineer
Robert G. Levin
Forest Hills, NY
Accounting
Barbara E. Levine
Silver Spring, MD
Family Studies
Albert Laws
Salisbury, MD
Finance
Robert H.
Leathers
Fairview Park, OH
Business Admin.
Carol Ann
Lechner
Ellicott City, MD
Studio Art
Lorrie Ledesma
Potomac, MD
Theatre
Sharon Anne Lee
Bowie. MD
Marketing
Ruby Leffel
Silver Spring, MD
General Business
Laura Lemire
Towson, MD
Civil Engineer
Paul L. Lenker
Rockville, MD
Voca. Tech. Ed.
Lisa Beth Lessans
Silver Spring, MD
English
Brian S. Lev
Wheaton, MD
Zoology
Cindy A. Levine
Mclean, MD
Elec. Engineer
Cynthia Sharon
Levine
Silver Spring, MD
Recreation
268
Nation-wide Campus Crime Report
David Levine
Silver Spring, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Isobel S. Levine
Potomac, MD
Textiles
Sharon R. Levine
Ocean, NJ
Nutrition Research
Hermene Beth
Levy
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Jonathon Levyn
Melrose Pk., PA
Microbiology
Charles Leu'is
West Orange, N)
I.F.S.M.
Shirley M. Lewis
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Deborah Li
Rockville, MD
Horticulture
Liho Li
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Mark Liberman
Silver Spring, MD
Zoology
Pamela Lori
Liddell
Federalsburg, MD
Conservation
Michael Sanford
Lifson
Baltimore, MD
Microbiology
Kenneth Light
Oceanside, NY
Marketing
John Henry Limpert
Catonsville, MD
Phvsical Science
269
Quake Leaves Southern Italy in Ruins
Julia Lin
Silver Spring, MD
Zoology
Joann Lindblade
Baltimore, MD
Physical Ed.
Jennifer Little
Galena, MD
Biology
Thomas A. Lively Jr.
Bowie, MD
Microbiology
Robert Edward
Lockhoff
Edgewood, MD
Finance
Cindy Ann Loeb
Silver Spring, MD
General Studies
Kevin Loftus
Rockville, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Timothy J. Loftus
Annapolis, MD
Marketing
Stuart R. Lisabeth
Syosset, NY
Marketing
Teri Lee Liss
Rockville Centre, NY
Psycholog>'
Kathleen A. Lloyd
Lanham, MD
Criminology
Sabrina Lloyd
Districts Heights, MD
Business Management
Claire M. Loferski
Succasunna, N}
Marketing
Cindy Loffler
Potomac, MD
Journalism
Vondreele Lohr
Oxon Hill, MD
Aerospace Engineer
Robert F. Long
New Carrollton, MD
Agronomy- Soils
270
Kills 1.000; Aftershocks Triple Death
Toll 11/80
Ursula Santymire
Loos
Gaithersburg, MD
Elementary Education
Ana Lopez
Adelphi, MD
Psychology
Tracy Anthony
Lott
Wheaton, MD
Psychology
Shron Loube
Silver Spring, MD
Kinesiology
John Steven
Lowitz
Baltimore, MD
General Biology
Marybeth Lucco
Union, N]
Business
Michael Lupia
Virginia Beach, VA
Business Administration
Lisa A. Lusby
Virginia Beach,
Virginia
Physical Education
Ramona Marie Lopez
East Providence, RI
Family Studies
Mindy Lorell
West Hempstead, NY
Criminology
Deborah Low
Riverdale, MD
Criminology
Randi F. Lowenthal
Randallstown, MD
Psychology
Andrew Luck
Takoma Park, MD
Europe History
Gary Michael Luczak
Baltimore, MD
Civil Engineer
Torchin A. Lynne
Potomac, MD
Community Study
Kathleen Lyon'
Bel Air, MD
Textile
271
Robert F. MacDougall
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
John Christian Mace
Millersville, MD
Animal Science
Melanie R. Mack
Potomac, MD
Theatre
Linda J. MacKenzie
Timonium, MD
Recreation
Mary Ann
Macfarlan
Bowie, MD
Recreation
Carolyn Diane
Mack
Silver Spring, MD
Gov't. & Politics
Ginny Macneil
District Heights, MD
Special Education
Gerard Madden
Bethesda. MD
Zoology
Reagan Wins Presidential Bid,
C. Kenzie Magdon
Silver Spring, MD
Advertising
Khalid Mahmood
Potomac, MD
Chemical Engineer
Hazelton Leo III
Majors
Cambridge, MD
Microbiology
Jodi Diane Malin
Baltimore, MD
Elementary Education
Stephen Joseph
Maltese
Catonsville, MD
Conservation
David Mancini
Rockville, MD
Finance- Pre-Law
Michael S.
Maier
Potomac, MD
Marketing
Jeffrey A. Main
Frederick, MD
Horticulture
Michael Mallinoff
Lanham, MD
Geology
Michael D.
Mallon
Bowie, MD
Mechanical
Engineer
Catherine Frances
Mand
Silver Spring, MD
Foreign Language
Gail Lynn Mann
Baltimore, MD
»#*• lournalism
272
Stuart Manoff
Short Hills, N]
Psychology
Carol Marantz
Silver Spring, MD
Biochemistry
David Wayne
Marquardi
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Donald Eugene
Martin
Columbia, MD
Math- Statistics
Barbara Ann March
Bethesda, MD
General Studies
Sally Marin
Adelphia, MD
Transportation
Fidelia Martino
Silver Spring, MD
Recreation
Karen A. Martino
Damascus, MD
Geography
Republican Senate Majority in 26 Years
10/4/80
Michael J.
Martirano
Frostburg, MD
Biology Education
Christian F.
Mascaro
Temple Hills, MD
Math
Michael A.
Mascia
Flushing, NY
Labor Relations
Ann Maslow
Baltimore, MD
Childhood Education
Cindy Master
Huntingdon Valley,
PA
Marketing
Elizabeth Andrea
Masucci
Chevy Chase, MD
Housing
273
Carol Marie Mathes
Silver Spring, MD
Fashion Merchandising
Dorothy G. Mattingly
Chevy Chase, MD
Animal Science
Donald M. McCall
Liverpool, NY
Law Enforcement
Mark McCall
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Judi McCort
Rockville, MD
Foreign Language
Kenan Shawn McCoy
Trenton, NJ
Recreation
Nathan Dale
McCrary
Severn, MD
Physical Science
George McCubbin
Baltimore, MD
Civil Engineer
James P. McDermott
Silver Spring, MD
Criminology
Elizabeth McDonald
Silver Spring, MD
Criminology
Eileen R. McDonnell
Alexandria, VA
Business
Margaret T. Mcgrath
Silver Spring, MD
Psychology
Cheryl May
Wyndmoor, PA
Fashion
Merchandising
Maura McCafferty
Silver Spring, MD
Transportation
Janine Marie
McCombe
Ocean City, MD
Advertising
Tammy Frances
McCorkle
Fallston, MD
Wildlife Management
Maryland Representative Robert Bauman
Loses
274
Kathryn Ann
McGuire
College Park, MD
Physical Education
Richard B. II
Mclntire
Silver Spring, MD
Advertising
Kathy McKinley
Williamsport, MD
journalism
Eunice McKoy
Silver Spring, MD
Special Education
Eileen McLucas
Rockville, MD
Physical Education
Susan McMillan
Laurel, MD
Government & Politics
Sally Meadows
Potomac, MD
Chemistry
Nancy L. Mebane
Dayton, MD
Labor Relations
Lynn McKee
Upper Marlboro, MD
General Science
jane McKenna
Boynton Beach, PL
Government
Kirk McKoy
Hyattsville, MD
Advertising Design
Deborah McLean
Rockville, MD
Nutrition
Gordon E. McPhee
Bel Air, MD
Accounting
Beth Gay Meader
Upper Marlboro, MD
Animal Science
Jeffrey Mechanick
Baltimore, MD
Zoology
Jan Van Der Meeren
Mississauga, Ontario
Secondary Education
Election as Alcoholic Homosexual 11/4/80
275
Hostages Spend One
Gary L. Melhuish
Philadelphia. PA
History
Elias R. Mendoza
Urbana, IL
Psychology
Mary Messersmith
Silver Spring, MD
Elementary Education
Deborah Messina
Silver Spring, MD
lournalism
Dorothy Michaels
Rockville, MD
Hearing & Speech
Stephen Michaels
Rockville, MD
Zoology
Norman Miller III
Harwood, MD
Conservation
Jane Louise Miller
Kingsville, MD
Botany
Bernadette T. Mills
Baltimore, MD
Sociology
Edu'ard Miniaci
Hanthorne, N]
Physical Education
Barry Molofsky
Baltimore, MD
Electrical Engineer
Michele Ann
Montague
Bowie, MD
Business Administration
Eileen Marie
Meren
Bowie, MD
Criminology
Elizabeth Sarah
Mervi^in
Silver Spring, MD
Anthropology
Joseph
Mevoratt
Bowie, MD
Economics
Mark L. Mevot
Adelphi, MD
lournalism PR
Ronald Miezis
Olney, MD
Electrical Engineer
Elizabeth Hunt
Miller
Rockville, MD
Fashion Merchandising
Kim Michele
Miller
New Carrollton,
MD
Computer Science
Sharon Ann
Miller
Takoma Park, MD
Electrical Engineer
Hafiza Mohammed
Rockville, MD
Gov't, & Politics
Andrea Rose
Mohr
Baltimore, MD
Studio Art
Katharine Ann
Moore
Rockville, MD
lournalism
Timothy Joel
Moore
Greenbelt, MD
General Studies
276
Year With Iranian Captors 11/4/80
Linda Moosher
Huntington Valley. PA
Home Economics
Louis Moray
Dunedin, FL
Psychology
Peter Moreland
Annapolis, MD
General Studies
Wendy Anne
Morello
Adelphi, MD
Biochemistry
Paul Morgenthal
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Keith Morison
Potomac, MD
Business Administration
Charles Edward
Jr. Morris
Middletown, MD
Electrical Engineer
Martha Morrison
Silver Spring, MD
Linguistics
Deborah A.
Morrissey
Crofton, MD
Geography
Sally Morrow
Owings Mill. MD
lournalism
Patricia Moss
Baltimore. MD
Psychology
Gary Moulton
Kensington, MD
Chemistry
^'
Kim Marie
Mortenson
Berkeley Heights, NJ
Fashion Merchandising
?'
Carolyn Morton
Washington, DC
Psychology
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Krista L. Mowle
Annapolis, MD
Computer Science
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Deborah Ann Moyer
Takoma Park. MD
Accounting
277
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Joseph Jr. Mudano
Gaithersburg, MD
Criminology'
)oy Mullen
Poolesville, MD
Art Education
Robert Murphy
Bel Air, MD
Kinesiology
Timothy C. Murphy
New Carrollton, MD
Chemistry
Cathy A. Muse
Kensington, MD
English
Nina Nadash
Columbia, MD
Sociology
Sharon Linda Nelson
Gaithersburg, MD
Computer Science
Terri Nevins
Annapolis, MD
Psycholog^
Barbara Ann Muller
Littlestown. PA
Psychology
Barbara Murphy
Seaford, NY
Animal Science
Everton G. Murray
Silver Spring, MD
Mechanical
Engineer Tech
Sharon A. Murray
Bryans Rd, MD
Economics
Lynn Nagin
Lake Worth, FL
Marketing
Leon Thomas Needle
College Park, MD
Accounting
Michael Joseph Newell
Riviera Beach, MD
Horticulture
278
New Life To Campus Nights
Ronald S. Newlin
Adelphi, MD
Finance
Jeffrey Newman
Fair Lawn, NJ
Marketing
Teresa Nicro
Rockville, MD
Family Studies
Deborah A. Nielson
Bowie, MD
Accounting
James Howard III
Norris
Severna, Park, MD
Marketing
Edward Robinson
North
Holmdel. NJ
Computer Science
Barbara Jo Novasatka
Randallstown, MD
Recreation
Sally Jane Nuessle
Ellicott City, MD
Zoology
Binh Si Nguyen
Stockton, CA
Nuclear Engineer
Tuyetamai Nguyen
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Diana Jane Nikoloff
Arnold, MD
Journalism
Matthew L. Noble
Silver Spring, MD
Speech Communication
Michael Nostrand
Wanamassa, NJ
Criminology
Lori K, Novakovich
Silver Spring, MD
Finance
Wade Mickey Nye
Shippensburg, PA
Finance
Jayne Ellen O'Donnell
Hamden, CT
Journalism
279
Suzanne O'Hara
Greenbelt, MD
Kinesiology Science
Peter J O'Neill
Severna Park, MD
Finance
Dennis Patrick OBrien
Adelphi, MD
Criminology
Alicia Christen Ocando
Hyattsville, MD
Interior Design
Allsion Odenthal
Bowie, MD
Zoology
Alice Susan Odonnell
Hyattsville, MD
General Business
John Robert Onda
Lanham, MD
General Business
Margaret M. Opalski
Lanham, MD
Childhood Education
Donna Orlove
Bethesda, MD
Psychology
Marian Oroshnik
Rockville, MD
Individual Studies
Voyager Discovers
Over 300 Braided
Kevin O'Reilly
Chevy Chase, MD
Civil Engineer
Clare O'Toole
Gaithersburg, MD
Hearing & Speech
Brenda Josephine
Ocando
Hyattsville, MD
Interior Design
Eillen Denise Odell
Rockville, MD
Criminology
Eileen J. ODonnell
Hyattsville, MD
General Business
Nancy OKeefe
Severna Park, MD
Interior Design
Kathleen M. Orlik
Oxon Hill, MD
Microbiology
Alise Susan Orloff
Silver Spring, MD
Elementary Education
Elizabeth Orr
Elkridge, MD
Agricultural Chemistry
Patricia Oser
Potomac, MD
Business Management
280
Scott Charles Osgood
Rockville, MD
Transportation
Dana S. Ostendorf
Silver Spring, MD
Fashion
Merchandising
Julie L. Owens
Kensington, MD
Business
Frances M. Ozur
College Park, MD
Electrical Engineer
Pam Osterwell
Bala Cynwyd, PA
Family Studies
Larry Outten
Baltimore, MD
Animal Science
Barbara J. Packs
Baltimore, MD
Accounting
Michael Paczkowski
Rockville, MD
Geology
Rings of Snow and Ice
Around Saturn
Denise J. Pagello
Pleasantville, NY
Dietetics
Hyang Sook Pak
New Carrollton, MD
Accounting
Bennie Allan Palmer
Laurel, MD
Microbiology
Debra L. Pano
Westboro, MA
Government
Sung Y Park
Silver Spring, MD
Computer Science
Kathleen M. Parry
Laurel, MD
Geology
281
John Paskalides
Greenbelt. MD
Mechanical Engineer
Man,' C. Paszek
Baltimore, MD
Chemistry
Debra L. Pavik
Lutherville, MD
Accounting
Lori Pavon
Fair Lawn, NJ
Textiles
Cathy Pechnik
Rockville, MD
Elementary Education
Christian Peek
Bethesda, MD
Sociology
Darlene Peisach
Baltimore, MD
Program Recreation
Graziella P. Pellicci
Hyattsville, MD
Languages
|anie Marie Peloquin
Kensington, MD
Law Enforcement
Robert S. Peregoy
Salisbury, MD
Agronomy
Kathryn M. Peregrim
Union, N|
Business-Finance
Steven L. Perlman
Norfolk, VA
Psychology'
Dianne L. Patterson
Greenbelt, MD
Agronomy
Michael Paul
Oceanside, NY
Marketing
Kathleen D. Pearce
Wheaton, MD
Journalism
Michael Vernon Pearl
Phoenix, MD
Electrical Engineer
Terps Crush Clemson, On
Allen Perper
Silver Spring, MD
Geology
Jeffrey Kevin Perry
Laurel, MD
Journalism
Robyn Peterson
Upper Marlboro, MD
Government
Susan J. Peterson
College Park, MD
Special Education
Elizabeth C. Petzolo
Wheaton, MD
Marketing
Beverly J. Phillips
Stevensville, MD
Public Relations
Brian Pickett
Clarksville, MD
Resource Economics
Donald Pierce
Wheaton, MD
Economics
Ronald D. Perry
Waldorf, MD
Law Enforcement
James K. Peterson
Bethesda, MD
Economics
Joseph Petrillo
Holmdel, NJ
Business Administration
Randall J. Pettko
Temple Hills, MD
Business Administration
Karen L. Phillips
Bel Air, MD
Art History
Cindv A. Piazza
Staten Island, NY
Animal Science
Doug Jr. Pindell
Hyattsville, MD
Transportation
Devera A. Pine
Valley Steam, NY
Journalism
To Tangerine Bowl 11/15/80
283
Seigel Nips Kramer in
Election Run-off
nil Pitasky
Yardley, Pa
Dietetics
Cindv Pitfenger
Rockville. MD
Microbiology
Patrick Poell
Camp Spring, MD
Elementary Education
Lisa Anne Poese
Bridgeton, NJ
Criminology
Robin G. Polansky
Baltimore, MD
Family Studies
Robert Polito
N. Lindenhurst, NY
Civil Engineer
Manoo Poosuthasee
Province, Thailand
Chemical Engineer
Randy Popick
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Christopher Porter
Silver Spring, MD
Computer Science
Joan Marie Porter
Rockville, MD
Interior Design
Aaron Stuart Potior
Baltimore, MD
Computer Science
Edward S. Potskowski
Takoma Park, MD
Soviet Studies
Samuel John
Placanica
Silver Spring, MD
Mathematics
Mary E. Pleasant
Elkridge, MD
Secretarial Education
Brian Lee Pogar
Gambrills, MD
Zoology
Rochelle L. Pogust
Vineland, NJ
Special Education
Steven L. Poole
Rockveille, MD
Fire Protection
Anita Jennifer Poon
Elmhurst, NY
Family Studies
Frances K Popper
Silver Spring, MD
General Studies
Benjamin L. Porter
Severna Park, MD
Civil Engineer
Susan Lyn Portney
Baltimore, MD
Animal Science
John A. Posey
Laurel, MD
Marketing
Kenneth Powell
Lanham, MD
Government & Politics
Mary E. Pratt
Bethesda, MD
Microbiology
284
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Betsy Ann Price
Adelphi, MD ^
Kinesiology
Gary P. Price Jr.
Reisterstown, MD
Finance
James W. Primrose
Upper Marlboro, MD
Geology
Andy Pusey
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Kyung-Sook Pyo
Beltsville, MD
PsychologV'
Michael Raab
Greenbelt, MD
Marketing
Marilyn P. Rachap
Annapolis, MD
Marketing
Joseph L. Raeden
Hyattsville, MD
Journalism
Ann E. Ragland
College Park, MD
English
Doris Frances Rahn
Baltimore, MD
Horticulture
Cynthia R. Ramirez
Glen Burnie, MD
Advertising Design
Alexandra Carole
Ramo
Chevy Chase, MD
Accounting
William F. Ill Raines
Oxon Hill, MD
Accounting
Nina Ramo
Chevy Chase, MD
Accounting
Laura Randell
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
285
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Under Pressure,
Carrie E. Rande
Chatham, N]
Animal Science
Chris Rando
Baltimore, MD
Animal Science
Daniel Bruce Rawlings
Laytonsville, MD
)ames A. Rawlings Jr.
Hyattsville, MD
Accounting
Monica Cecilia Rebosio
Cressdill, NJ
Recreation
Charles Reese
Hanover, MD
Electrical Engineer
Andrea Reid
New Carrollton, MD
Recreation
John Michael Reid
College Park, MD
Marketing
286
Susan Raulston
Bowie, MD
Dietetics
Cheryl R. Raum
Leonardtown, MD
Animal Science
Jamie L. Ray
Joppa, MD
Criminology
ill Reber
Adelphi, MD
Law Enforcement
Bruno Vaughn Reigh
Adelphi, MD
Architecture
Valerie Reichert
Woobury, NJ
Nutrition
Phillip Reid
Greenbelt, MD
Accounting
Arthur Reine
Jericho, NY
Finance
David Scott Reiner
Spring Valley, NY
Marketing
Bruce Reinhold
Rockville, MD
Marketing
Thomas Rhatigan
Bethpage, N.Y.
Political Science
Gregory Martin
Richards
Lanham, MD
Mech. Engineer
Robin Richter
Brooklyn, NY
Marketing
Robert S. Rider
Rockville, MD
Chemistry
Wade Hampton Ritchie
III
Gambrills, MD
Accounting
Norman D. Rivera
Silver Spring, MD
Urban Studies
Terp Band Goes To
Tangerine Bowl
William A. Reinike
Gambrills, MD
Trans./Market
Jefferey S. Revzin
Greenbelt, MD
General Studies
Julie Ann Richards
Severna Park, MD
Government & Politics
Craig Riche
Rockville, MD
Marketing
Susan Ridgway
Silver Spring, MD
Fashion Merchandising
Leonard Righter
Hyattsville, MD
Advertising Design
Zaida M. Rivera
Bowie, MD
Spanish Literature
287
Marc David Rize
Bowie, MD
Labor Relations
Kimberly Robbins
Bethesda, MD
Advertising
Gregory Paul
Robinson
Severna Park, MD
Economics
Pamela S. Robinson
Silver Spring, MD
Childhood Education
Thomas Robbins
Severn, MD
Electrical Engineer
Timolthy }.
Robbins
Severna Park, MD
Computer Science
Mario Roca
Silver Spring, MD
Business Administration
Neil M. Rofsky
Massapequa Park. NY
Biochemistry
Kristen Shot JR on
Deborah A. Rogers
Greenbelt, MD
Studio Art
Tanya E. Rogers
Baltimore, MD
Animal Science
Peter S. Rose
W. Long Branch, NJ
Economics
Roberta S. Rose
Cherry Hill, N]
Zoology
Cynthisa A.
Rosenberg
Gaithersburg, MD
Childhood Education
Joseph B. Rosenberg
Westbury, NY
Accounting
Robert A.
Rogowski
East Hanover, N]
Transportation
Kathleen K.
Rooney
Gaithersburg, MD
Therapeutic
Recreation
Cindy Jaye Rosen
Beltsville, MD
General Business
Louis Aaron
Rosen
Rockville, MD
Jewish Studies
Susan Eileen
Rosenberg
Potomac, MD
Economics
Yuri Rosenberg
Takoma Park, MD
Electrical Engineer
288
Sherrie L.
Rosenblatt
Takoma Park, MD
Family Studies
Martin J.
Rosenstock
College Park, MD
Communication Arts
Dan Ross
Annapolis, MD
Special Education
John C. Ross
New Carrollton, MD
Marketing
Wendy M. Rosenthal
I'air Lawn, N|
Special Education
Karen Rosenzweig
Westbury, C NY
American Studies
Sherri Lynn Rossman
Wantach, NY
Hearing & Speech
Gail P. Roth
King of Prussia, PA
lournalism
TV Series DALLAS 11/21/80
Paul John
Rothenberg
Laurel, MD
Food Science
Susan Rothstein
Franklin Square, NY
Fashion
Merchandising
Avis Rouson
Oxon Hill, MD
Marketing
Edward F. IV
Rowzee
Silver Spring, MD
Business Management
Siwanny Roy
Silver Spring, MD
French Literature
Helene Gail Rubin
Silver Spring, MD
Radio-TV & Film
289
Lynn Rubin
Fairfield, CT
Biolog>'
William Spencer
Rubin
Silver Spring, MD
Hearing & Speech
Rory D.
Ruppersberger
Baltimore, MD
Interior Design
Ronald V. Russell
Seat Pleasant, MD
Transportation
Mark D. Sachs
Silver Spring, MD
Advertising Design
Beverly Salvail
Gaithersburg, MD
Accounting
Elizabeth Salvatore
Hillcrest Heights, MD
Advertising
Elyse Salzman
Brooklyn, NY
Journalism
Roger C. 'Samek
Cresskill, N]
Accounting
John
oseph Sample
Forestville, MD
Government & Politics
Kevin B. E. Sample
Suitland, MD
Political Science
Cynthia L. Sampson
Beltsville, MD
Criminology
Glenn Evan
Rudowitz
Fair Lawn, N]
Business Management
William G. Rudy
Catonsville, MD
Geography
Patricia L. Ryan
Rockville, MD
Textiles
Timothy P. Ryan
Bethesda, MD
Business
Sugar Ray Leonard Wins WBA
290
Sharon Samuels
Bowie, MD
Zoology
Jesse Sandlin
Kensington, MD
Zoology
Eliazbeth Saulsbury
Ridgely, MD
Accounting
David C. Saunders
Manitasset, NY
General Business
Ronald Alexander
Saxton
Ellicott City, MD
Accounting
Donna M. Scalise
Bowie, MD
Linguistics
Joan Schelfe
Hyattsville, MD
Kinesiology
Cynthia D. Scher
Goldens Bridge, NY
Journalism
Stephanie Santos
Bowie, MD
Advertising Design
Julie A. Sartori
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Julie Marie Savell
Bethesda, MD
Government & Politics
Catherine Saxon
Chevy Chase, MD
Economics
Donald Schaffer
Crofton, MD
Industrial Tech.
James G. Scharff
Rockville, MD
Philosophy
Judi Scher
Westfield, NJ
Dietetics
Wayne Schifrein
Greenbelt, MD
Business
Title, When Duran Quits 11/25/80
291
David Seaton Shot By Mysterious
Pamela Schleicher
Rockvilie. MD
Elementary Education
Gary Schneider
Randallstown, MD
Law Enforcement
Francine Schnur
Randallstown, MD
General Studies
Ellen Schwartz
Rockvilie, MD
Accounting
Freddie S. Schweitzer
Wheaton, MD
Finance
Mathew ]. Scire
Bowie, MD
Finance
Susan M. Seddon
Riverdale, MD
Marketing
Lawrence E. Sefcik
College Park, MD
Law Enforcement
Rachel Anne Seifert
Bethesda, MD
Animal Science
Stuart Seigel
Chevy Chase, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Priscilla Seivers
Baltimore, MD
Marketing
Lenny Selfon
Silver Spring, MD
Government & Politics
Darlene Schneider
Edgewater, MD
Government
Renate Schneider
Ashton, MD
German & Education
Shana L Schwartzberg
Bethesda, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Kurt Gordon Schwarz
Potomac, MD
Biochemistry
Kathleen Scott
Laurel, MD
Health
Jeanne Lynn Sears
Davidsonville, MD
Advertising
Mollis Seidell
Rockvilie, MD
Information
System Mgt.
Marian T. Self
Pikesville, MD
General Studies
Janice A. Seipp
Seaford, DE
Radio-TV & Radio
Ruth Seitz
Gaithersburg. MD
Criminology
Ruth A. Seligson
Rockvilie, MD
Sociology
Jordan Seltzer
Wantagh, NU
Mathematics
292
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Franklyn Louis Selzer
Fairfax, VA
Political Science
Carla Benoit
Senseman
Gaithersburg, MD
Art Education
George R. Senseman
Gaithersburg, MD
Agriculture
Richard H. Jr. Serra
Baltimore, MD f
Resource Development
Karen E. Settembrini
Annapolis, MD
Business Administration
Steven W. Setzer
Seat Pleasant, MD
lournalism
Eileen Shalowitz
Randallstown, MD
Accounting
Lynn Marie Shanks
Crovi/nsville, MD
Water Resources
Kevin Shannon
Levittown, NY
Labor Relations
Charles Shapiro
Great Neck, NY
Accounting
Mark A. Shapiro
Baltimore, MD
Accounting
James W. Sharbaugh
Lanham, MD
Speech
Gommunication
Ellen Joanne Shapiro
Baltimore MD
Dietetics
L. Adam Shapiro
Bethesda, MD
Accounting
Catherine Shaw
Great Neck, NY
Business-Marketing
Lenoir Rosilyn Shaw
v^^ Charleston, SC
. ^ Journalism
293
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Deborah E. Shawver
Gaithersburg, MD
Family Development
Stephen Shea
Massapequa, NIJ
Business Administration
Sandra Lee Sheck
Gaithersburg, MD
Speech Sciences
Moira Sheeham
Hydes, MD
Microbiology
Harold B. Sheppard
Odenton, MD
Electrical Engineer
Angela Venetia Sherman
Baltimore, MD
Government & Politics
Lindsay jane Sherrard
Cummerland, MD
Psychology
Barbara Shiels
Washington, DC
Marketing
Thomas Lee Shea
Arnold, MD
Horticulture
Carol Susan Shear
Edgewood, MD
Music Education
Andrea Shefrin
Randallstov^n, MD
Costume Design
Joyce Markeeta
Shellman
Capt Heights, MD
Finance
Brenda Lee Sherman
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Susan Debra Sherman
Huntington, NY
Math Education
Bryan Keith Shipley
Laurel, MD
Wildlife Mgt.
Regina Marie Shock
Baltimore, MD
Music
294
of 1979 Murder
of 5 Communists 11/29/80
Leanne S. Shoemaker
Hagerstown, MD
Kinesiology
David A. Shurr
Fair Lawn, N|
Accounting
Gregory S. Sigler
Bethesda, MD
Economics
Nancy Lynn Sigler
Highland, MD
Recreation
Robert I. Silverman
Wheaton, MD
Economics
Judith Lynn
Silverstein
Springfield, NJ
Zoology
Carol A. Simonds
Cherry Hill, NJ
Chemistry
Robert Simpson
Wheaton, MD
Family Development
Elizabeth C. Sickels
Bowie, MD
Economics
Stephanie P. Siegfried
Stroudsburg, PA
Marketing
Barry Evan Silver
Baltimore, MD
Zoolog\'
Leslie Silver
White Plains, NY
Communications
Kathryn Marie Silvia
Lanham, MD
Theater/Recreation
Donna J. Simmons
Cherry Hill, NJ
Journalism
Stephanie Beth Sinar
Baltimore. MD
Childhood Educations
Trish Sindallm
Silver Spring, MD
Law Enforcement
295
Robert G. Singer
Baltimore, MD
Chemical Engineering
Michael Howard
Singerman
Annapolis, MD
Communications
Sarah B. Slechter
Rockville, MD
Spanish
Debra Small
Vineland, NJ
Recreation
Stephanie Sinsky
Takoma Park, MD
Family Development
Holly Skolnick
Little Neck. NY
Marketing
Darla E. Smallwood
Washington, D.C.
General Studies
Barbara Angel Smith
Washington, D.C.
lournalism
Jean Harris Murder Trial of
Bonnie Smith
Roslyn, NY
Government & Politics
Cynthia Lou Smith
College Park, MD
Childhood Education
Keith B. Smith
New Carrollton, MD
General Studies
Kevin Lovett Smith
Ellicott City, MD
Aerospace Engineering
Patricia Smith
Wheaton, MD %
Mathematics
Ricky D. Smith
Forestville, MD
Economics
Darcy Leah Smith
Timonium, MD
Radio TV & Film
Deborah C. Smith
Potomac, MD
Horticulture
Mark Craig Smith
Baltimore, MD
Chemistry
Nancy Claire Smith
Rockville, MD
Animal Science
Susan ). Smith
College Park, MD
Geography
Susan Leah Smith
Silver Spring, MD
Spanish
296
Vicki Smith
Laurel, MD
Radio & TV
Wendy Carol Smith
Rockville, MD
Dramatic Arts
Joseph F. Snee JR.
Bel Air, MD
Government & Politics
Daniel E. Snow
Wheaton, MD
Zoology
William Smith
Cliffwood Beach, NJ
Geology
Diane Marie Smutniak
Dunkirk, MD
Chemistry
Pete Sokowski
Hyattsville, MD
Law Enforcement
Dorothy Solga
Bethesda, MD
Business
Scarsdale Medical Diet's Doctor
Turnover 11/12/80
Adrienne Mary
Solomon
Bowie, MD
Outdoor Recreation
Michael R. Solomon
Temple Hills, MD
Architecture
Richard S. Solomon
Silver Spring, MD
Biological Sciences
Wendy Soloway
Beltsville, MD
Special Education
Cathleen Joan Somich
Hyattsville, MD
Chemistry
Larry Soroka
Oceanside, NY
Accounting
297
Todd Sorrin
North Woodmere, NY
Marketing
Scott M. Sosnix
Fiar Lawn N|
Accounting
Susan Spenadel
Westfield, NJ
Psychology
Margret T. Spencer
Neptune, N|
lournaHsm
Susan Mary Spillman
Hagerstown, MD
Journalism
Frances R. Spiro
Silver Springs, MD
Computer Science
Larry R. Spriggs
Washington D.C.
Journalism
Robert Srour
Potomac, MD
Mechanical Engineer
Elwyn Stafford
Greenbelt, MD
Computer Science
Elizabeth Stanley
Bowie, MD
Special Education
Amy Carol Statter
Baltimore, MD
Food Science
Michelle Maria Staymates
Hagerstown, MD
Physical Education
Jody C. Souder
Beltsville, MD
Journalism
Paul E. Sparks
Rockville, MD
Law Enforcement
Carol Spicer
Clark, NJ
Family Studies
Sara Stephanie Spicer
Woodsboro, MD
Childhood Education
't*,... If
Mao Tse-Tung's Widow Stands
298
Charles A. Stedman
Lanham, MD
Government & Politics
Ellen S. Steinberg
North Brunswick, N]
Speech
Communication
Kelly L. Stephenson
Temple Hills, MD
Criminology
Sareen Stepnick
Silver Spring, MD
Dietetics
Leslie Stimson
Silver Spring, MD
journalism
Craig D. Stoeber
Hagerstown, MD
Marketing
Carol Ann Storm
Silver Spring, MD
Agronomy
Kathleen Storms
Dobbs Ferry, NY
English
Teresa M. Steiner
Potomac, MD
Special Education
Joanna Stepanian
Silver Spring, MD
Psychology
Charles Steppe
Millersville, MD
Computer Science
Linda A. Stiger
Boca Raton, Florida
Recreation
Margret K. Stohlman
Bethesda, MD
Recreation
Steven T. Stoller
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Darrell D. Stover
Landover, MD
General Studies
Glenn Strauber
Lanham, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Trial For Treason 11/2/80
299
Poland Strikes, Democratic Reform
Evalyn Strauss
Bethesda, MD
Architecture
Thomas Strawbridge
Baltimore, MD
loumaHsm
Lori Sulcov
Merrick, NY
Advertising
James Michael Sullivan
Lanham, MD
Urban Planning
Lora Szmidt
Baltimore, MD
Special Education
Steven J. Tabor
Baldwin, NY
Marketing
Kenneth Charles Taitano
Oxon Hill, MD
Economics
Lavi/rence Taite
Suitland, MD
Transportation
Laura Ann Tang
Kensington, MD
Chemistry
Willie Tanner
Orange, VA.
Anthropology
Renee Tarullo
E. Brunswick, NJ
Economics
Bonny Taylor
Oxon Hill, MD
Law Enforcement
Rhonda R. Sturgill
Beltsville, MD
Family Studies
Michael Edward
Sucher
Greenbelt, MD
Elec. Engineering
Paul Lawrence Sulsky
Wheaton, MD
Mechanical Engineering
Elisa Swiller
Roslyn Estates, NY
Marketing
Bong Soo Tai
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Dennis John Taitano
Oxon Hill, MD
Business Management
Sharon Tanavage
Hyattsville, MD
Law Enforcement
Paul Joseph
Tanenbaum
Bel Air, MD
Mathematics
John E. Tarcza
Baltimore, MD
Chemistry
Harold Lloyd Tarpley
Jr.
Rockville, MD
Govt. Politics
Joe H. Taylor JR.
Seabrook, MD
Marketing
Melanie A. Taylor
Temple Hills, MD
Computer Science
300
Threatened by Russian Troops
at Border 12/80
Michael Jerry
Terebuch
Baltimore. MD
Radio-TV & Film
Steve Terle
Olney, MD
Urban Studies
]ack Terpstra
Rockville, MD
Engineering
Marlene E. Tessier
New Canaan, CT
Marketing
Susan A. Thayer
College Park. MD
Special Education
Thomas Allen Thayer
Bethesda, MD
Marketing
Bruce R. Thomas
District Heights, ME
Microbiology
Debra Gail Thomas
Bowie, MD
Criminal lustice
Paul M. Thomas
Bowie, MD
Microbiology
Robin A. Thomas
Washington, DC
Urban Geography
Sally L. Thompson
Severna Park, MD
Special Education
William M. Thompson
Chestertown, MD
Agriculture
John A. Thompson
Bethesda, MD
Accounting
Greta L. Thomsen
Baltimore, MD
Journalism
Ralph Thrash
Silver Spring, MD
Advertising
1 » mi m
301
Governor Hughes Cuts
School Budget 6.5%
Carl R. Thyberg
Annapolis, MD
Radio-TV & Film
James Tise
Bethesda, MD
lournalism
William A. Toeller
Hyattsville, MD
Finance
Pamela Tontodonato
Hyattsville, MD
Criminology
Lynne Torchin
Potomac, MD
Community Study
Jeanne Claire Toth
Rahway, NJ
Hearing-Speech
Cheryl Ann Trainque
Westminster, MA
Psychology
Nancy Jean Trapani
Bowie, MD
Human Development
Laura Tise
Bethesda, MD
Economics
Mark H. Tise
Fort Meade, MD
Geography
Diane Toothman
Bowie, MD
Microbiology
Carolyn Ann Torbert
Bethesda, MD
Health Education
Kevin B. Townsend
Hyattsville, MD
Business
Administration
Laura Townshend
Brandywine, MD
Animal Science
Henry R. Trapnell
Federalsburg, MD
Computer Science
Michael Trappen
Boyds, MD
Civil Engineer
JR.
302
Tuition Increases By
23% 12/04/80
Neil Trenk
Lauderhill, FL
Accounting
Janet K. Trent
Wheaton, MD
Labor Relations
Dana Trupp
Rockville, MD
Recreation
Carol Tucher
Bridgewater, NJ
Russian
Gail Tyeryar
College Park, MD
Marketing
Eileen F. Uber
Hvattsville, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Timothy Upton
Glen Burnie, MD
Aerospace Engineer
Aldona Vaiciulaitis
Bethesda, MD
Psycholog\'
Pam Trickett
Oakland, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Brent M. Troutman
Annandale, VA
Conservation
Teresa C. Tuthill
College Park, MD
Special Education
Nguyen Tuyetnga
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Stacey Ugel
Silver Spring, MD
Criminology
Gary Ultee
Glastonbury, CT
Radio-TV & Film
Amy Vaillant
Arnold. MD
General Studies
Linda Valentine
Washington, D.C.
Economics
303
Larrv Van Orden
College Park, MD
Physical Education
Julie Marie Vanderslice
Accokeek, MD
Fashion Design
Alberto Vega
Union City, N|
Economics
Dean Velasco
Beltsville, MD
Chemistry
Susan Jean Vanniel
Potomac, MD
English
Christopher |.
Vazquex
Waldorf, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Victoria Velez
Waldorf, MD
General Studies
Matthew Venable
Rockville, MD
Accounting
Russian Invasion of Afghanistan
Diane Vernon
Silver Spring, MD
Government
Diane Vescovi
Silver Spring, MD
Economics
Gary Martin Vitee
Glastonbury, CT
Radio/TV & Film
Gary Louis Vogel
Greenbelt, MD
Journalism
Hanh Due Vu
Mt, Rainier, MD
Electrical Engineering
Van Vu
Mt. Rainier, MD
Computer Science
iM w k
Carrie Frances Vettel
Washington D.C.
Health Education
John Cooper Vice
Laurel, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Grethchen Gayle
Vogel
Lockeysville, MD
Kinesiolog>'
Julia H. Voneiff
Bethesda, MD
Journalism
William Michael
Vucci
Hyattsville, MD
Law Enforcement
Barbara Wachnik
Wheaton, MD
Nutrition
304
Ellen M. Wachter
Rockville, MD
Sociology
Arthur B. Waganheim
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Alan Walcoff
Bethesda, MD
Finance
Susan Lynn Wald
East Brunswick, N|
General Business
Cathy Lee Wagner
Randallstown, MD
Zoology
Steven Wais
Baltimore, MD
Kinesiology
Kathy Walde
Allison Park, PA
Business Administration
Dehra S. Waldman
Rockville, MD
Special Education
Causes Olympic Boycott Embargo
Jean M. Waldman
Kensington, MD
Linguistics
Robert Walker
Jersey City, NJ
Accounting
Adrienne Linette
Walker
Baltimore, MD
Dance '
Douglas Walker
Huntington Station, |
NY "
Zoology
Joanne Wallis
Wilton, CT
Textiles
Mary Elizabeth Walsh
Silver Springs, MD
Home Economics
305
Thomas Walston
Salisbury, MD
Business
Stephen O. Walter
Greenbelt, MD
Astronomy
Diane C. Ward
Adelphi, MD
Arts Education
Kevin Gordon Ward
Adelphi. MD
General Studies
Jon F. Warner
Gladwyne, PA
General Studies
Joseph Wascavage II
Adelphi, MD
Aerospace Engineer
Helene R. Wash
Savage, MD
Marketing
Cheryl Wassel
Baltimore, MD
Psychology
Amy Wasserman
Merrick, WY
Marketing
Michele J. Waxman
Baltimore, MD
Urban Studies
Anne M. Weaver
Oxon Hill, MD
Animal Science
James Weaver
Silver Spring, MD
Law Enforcement
Deborah Lynn Walters
Timonium, MD
Zoology
Eugene Walton III
Silver Spring, MD
Accounting
Tyler E. Ward
Severna Park, MD
Journalism
Eric Warneke
Upper Marlboro, MD
Finance/Economics
John Lennon Assassinated in
306
Andrea Kay Web
Mount Airy, MD
Animal Science
Eric J. Weeks
Adelphi, MD
Civil Engineer
Caren F. Weiner
Albany, NY
Labor Relations
Paul Russell Weiner
Kensington, MD
Microbiology
Tammy S. Weinstein
Oceanside, NY
Marketing
Eddy Weiss
Westport, CT
Radio/TV & Film
Steven M. Weiss
Fairlawn, NJ
Journalism, PR
Brian Edward Welp
Rockville, MD
Chemical Engineer
David H. Weinstein
Randallstown, MD
Government & Politics
Diane Weinbaum
Columbia, MD
Psychology
Helen Weinrauch
Silver Spring, MD
Secondary Education
Susan Weinreb
Potomac, MD
Advertising Design
Faye A. Weiss
New Carrollton, MD
Elementary Education
Michael Weiss
Morrisville, PA
Economics
Bruce David Wenger
Potomac, MD
Physical Science
Joanne Dee Werner
Malibu, CA
Studio Art
New York by
Mark Chapman 12/08/80
307
Mandel Serving Sentence
Lisa C. Westermeyer
Baltimore, MD
Hearing & Speech
Jane Westland
Tracyslanding, MD
Accounting
Robert ]. Wheeler -
Hulmeville, PA
Fire Protection
Mack W. White
College Park, MD
Economics
Diane Wickre
Severna Park, MD
Business
Mitchell Wieder
Dix Hills, NY
Radio-TV & Film
Aldrenna P. Williams
Baltimore, MD
Physical Education
Aurelia A. Williams
Suitland, MD
Labor Relations
Jean M. Williamson
Landover, MD
Computer Science
Lori Willingham
Greenbelt, MD
Studio Art
C. Marshall Jr. Wilson
Greenbelt, MD
Finance
Kathy Jane Wilson
Rockville, MD
Kinesiology
Laurence D. Wexler
Potomac, MD
Education
Lori Denise Whalen
Greenbelt MD
Accounting
Susan Carole Whitley
Silver Spring, MD
Economics
Paul C Whittemore
Silver Spring, MD
Marketing
Matthew Wilkinson
Silver Spring, MD
Economics
Ann C. Williams
Lewisdale, MD
Biology
Cedric Aaron
Williams
Rockville, MD
Recreation
Gilbert Harris
Williams
Potomac, MD
Chemistry
Bonnie L. Willis
Greenbelt, MD
Horticulture
Vanessa K. Willson
La Plata, MD
Hearing & Speech
Kevin Wilson
Inglewood CA
Computer Science
Kevin Glenn Wilson
Rockville, MD
Zoology
308
For Fraud and Racketeering
Donna Michelle
Windrow
Rockville, MD
Economics
Jodi Winkler
Galesville MD
Interior Design
Johnny E. Wiseman
Washington, DC
Information System
Mgt.
Cheryl R. Wishner
Monsey, NY
Criminology
Pava M. Wodiska
Potomac, MD
Journalism
George I Wolfand
Bethedsa, MD
Information System
Mgt.
Sylvia Wong
Derwood, MD
Finance
Henry Y Woo
Adelphi, MD
Finance
Moon Ja Woo
Hyattsville, MD
Studio Art
Stacey Wood
Rockville, MD
Computer
Stephen D. Woodward
Bowie, MD
Microbiology
Rayane S. Workman
Cockeysville, MD
Business
John J Woodruff
Silver Spring, MD
Electrical Engineer
Barbara Ellen Wright
Ashton, MD
Economics
John Cabot Wright
Owings Mill, MD
Computer Science
309
Leane Wright
Edgewater, MD
International Relations
Michele Wright
Washington, DC
Journalism
WilUam D Yascavage
Hunlock Creek, PA
Electrical Engineer
Kimberly M Yashek
Reading, Pa
Accounting
Barbara J. Wyble
Adelphi, MD
Economics
Robin Yablokoff
Brooklyn, NY
Law Enforcement
Barbara Yeatmen
Wilmington, DE
Business
WilHam Yeatmen
Potomac, MD
Government
1981 Graduates Leave U of M
Joseph Yetterman
Bowie, MD
Finance
Kyung Ae Yi
Upper Marlboro, MD
Dietetics
Raymond Yslas
College Park, MD
Governme nt & Politics
Yuan Liang Yuan
Potomac, MD
Production Management
Jonahthan Zastrow
Millburn, MD
Chemistry
Scott Zegas
Bowie, MD
Criminology
JacqueHne Youden
Gaithersburg, MD
English
Connie Young
Greenbelt, MD
Animal Science
Glenn Zagoria
Fair Lawn, NJ
Radio-TV & film
Elyse Zangwill
Silver Spring, MD
Psychology
Jordene Lynn
Zeimetz
Gaithersburg, MD
Government & Politics
Susan Zeller
N. Bellmore, NY
Computer Science
310
David Zemsky
McLean, VA
General Business
Rose Anne Zettl
McLean, VA
Computer Science
Mark Zobrisky
Silver Spring, MD
Law Enforcement
Carol Elise Zovrko
Silver Spring, MD
Advertising
Diane Ziolkowski
Joppatown, MD
Aerospace, Engineer
Richard Kenneth Zuerlein
Rockville, MD
Civil Engineer
to Broaden Their Perimeters
Stacy Zupnik
Potomac, MD
Radio-TV & Film
Danielle M. Pallotto
Moorestown, NJ
Journalism & Anthropology
GUWlRtGUimiRI
^m'
BRflT
Getting Better
It's getting better all the time
I used to get mad at my school
The teachers that taught me weren't cool
You're holding me down turning me round
Filling me up with your rules.
I've got to admit it's getting better
A little better all the time
I have to admit it's getting better
It's getting better since you've been mine.
Me used to be a angry young man
Me hiding me head in the sand
You gave me the word
I finally heard
I'm doing the best that I can.
I've got to admit it's getting better
A little better all the time
I have to admit it's getting better
It's getting better since you've been mine.
I used to be cruel to my woman
I beat her and kept her apart
from the things that she loved
Man I was mean but I'm changing my scene
And I'm doing the best that I can.
I admit it's getting better
A little better all the time
Yes I admit it's getting better
It's getting better since you've been mine.
Lennon/ McCarthy
312
/ Used To Get Mad At My School
313
You Gave Me The Word
314
Isaac Asimov. self-proclaimed "futurist" ar>d science
fiction writer.
/ Finally Heard
315
I'm Doing The Best That I Can
316
■as
A Little Better All The Time
/|
^^H ^^r3r \
^^^B^^4^%3v-^i^^^HR^^^M^^^^^^^^^^|^^
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^^^^^^^^H ^Hi J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l
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5teny Hoyer. congressional candidate in Maryland's 5th district "special election'
317
TERRAPIN 1981
Stacy Cushner, managing editor
Sherry Conrad, photography editor
John Kammerman, sports editor
Andrea Chamblee, copy editor
BUSINESS STAFF:
Tammi Abramson
Ann Cacciatore
Renee Calagna
Linda Fritz
Linda Gateau
Rosemarie Hicks
Debbie Hirsh
Cindi Richards
Patricia Serrano
Sheryl Southerland
NataHe Tiratch
Linda Weaver
COPY/LAYOUT STAFF
Sandi Abrams
Paula Boyd
Roblyn Buchanan
Karen Deeney
Cherita Fisher
Linda Fritz
Monica Mah
]ill Schoor
Susan Wolfe
PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF
Geoff Baker
Aneece Holland
Kirk McKoy
Dan McMann
Michael Mallinoff
Dave Marsden
Thomas Nunemaker
Dana Pallotto
Martin Rodden
Ralph Thrash
Steven Zerby
Robert Zimmet
318
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PHOTO CREDITS
Cover: Ty B. Heston
Title Page: Kirk McKov
Genff Baker: 16. 60. U9k. 112abd. n4a, 115h. 17()a. 172abc. 173a. 182al). 183a.
184ab. 185ab. 186a. 191c. 265. 275
Senator Howard Baker: 109b
Mindy Berman: 49alK:d
Scott Bolgiano: 153b
|im Brady: 313c
Clive Carnie: 217abc
Sherry Conrad: 2b. 4a. 5b. 6a. 7bc. 8. 10. 13b. 14abde. 15abcde, 20a. 21a.
24a. 28a. 30abc. 31ab. 32abc. 33ab, 44abc. 45abc. 50ab. 51a. 52abc.
53abcd. 54c. 55a. 56, 57ab. 59abc. 61ab. 62ab. 63ab, 64b, 65abc. 68d. 69e.
74d. 75abc, 76ab, 77b, 82ab, 83abc. 86abc. 87abc. 97b. 98acd. inOa. 101a.
Ifl3a. lOSabc. lOOcd. 107bc. 108cd, 114b. 115c. 116ab. 117ab. llSabc,
llQabc, 122, 123, 126abcd, 127abc, 128. 131. 136. 139. 152. 154ab, 155a.
156ab. 157a. 158b. 159abc. 162ab. 163a. 164abcd. 165abc. 179ad. 187abcd.
188c. 189c. 190ac. 191b. 200abcd. 201abcde. 204c, 206c, 207b. 208abcd.
209abc. 210abc. 211abc. 223. 235. 237, 238, 250, 251, 263, 267. 270, 291,
295, 299, 305, 306, 309, 318, 320
Larry Grouse: 173c, 175b. 177c, 178a, 180b, 183b, 185c, 188d. 195, 196b, 198b,
202b, 214b, 212, 216
Department of Information and Publications: 18a
Ted Dickerson: 274
Michael Gately: 3b, 50c, 233, 298, 301, 316a
Debbie Gertler: 79abc, 153a, 277, 314d, 315e
Aneece Holland: 6b, 7a, 22abc. 23abcd, 24b, 25abcd, 77a, 78ab, 80bcd, 81b,
106b, 108b, 241, 316b
David Kapenstein: 171, 173b
Kirk Kirby; 58
Alan Kresse: 64a
Kirk McCoy: 1, 9b, 11, 13c. 46. 47ab. 48ab. 51b. 68a. 81cd, 92a. 93abcd. 107a.
108f. 114c. 178b. 179bc. 181b. 197ac. 203a. 206b. 215c. 227. 234. 282. 283
Dan McMann: 14c. 34ab. 35ab. 36ab. 37ab, 96ab, 98b, 100b, 102ab, 103b, 129,
149, 279, 287, 315a
Michael Mallinoff: 3a, 5a. 26abc. 27abc, 28bc, 29abc, 84ab, 85, 107d, 231, 242,
247, 269, 286, 313a
Dave Marsden; 94abc, 95ab, lOSae, 132, 133ab, 142ab, 143, 146, 147, 150. 151.
194abc. 196a. 197bd. 198a. 199ab. 260. 290
NASA: 21. 110b
Tom Nunemaker: 130abc, 141abc, 145, 166abc, 167abc, 317d
Dana Pallotto: 17. 18bc. 19ab. 20b. 2lbcd, 72ab, 73ab, 112ce, 113ac, 115a,
174ab, 175a. 176ab. 177ab, 181c, 188b, 189ad, 192ab, 193ab, 202a, 204a,
205ab. 207c. 213abcde, 214a. 249. 257. 297. 314bc. 315bc. 316cd. 317abc
Chris Ray: 66ab. 67, 68c, BOae, 81a, 180a, 181a
Martin Rodden: 70bc, 71a, 74ac. 109acd. 113b, 158a, 160a, 163b, 170b, 186b,
188a. 189b. 190b. 191ad. 203b. 204b. 205c. 207a. 209d. 218b. 254. 258. 259.
262, 273, 285. 289. 293
Hal Schmulowitz: 99b, 206a, 215a, 240. 266, 313b
R| Spalding: 54A
Ralph Thrash: 54b, 55b, 70a, 74b, 77c. 90a, 91abc, 99a, 138, 160b. 161abc.
226. 229. 278. 302, 303, 314ae
Steven Zerby: 106a, 107e, 222, 255
Robert Zimmet: 4b, 9a, 12a, 13a, 38abc, 39ab. 40a. 41abc, 55c. 68b. 69acd.
71b. 78c. 88abc. 89ab. 97acd. 100c. 104abc. 137. 140. 144, 148, 199c, 215bd,
218a, 225, 230, 239, 245, 246, 261, 271, 281, 307, 315d
COPY CREDITS
Sandi Abrams: 75, 103
Mindy Berman: 50, 96
Andrea Chamblee: 17, 32, 35, 39, 40, 50, 56, 58. 65. 71. 75. 78. 79, 82, 86.
89, 92, 96, 102, 103, 104. 105, 106, 114
Alan Cobb: 124
Karen Deeney: 28, 31, 33, 75, 103
Ellicott Area Council: 129
Cherita Fisher: 75
Margaret Hoyert: 139
)aime |arado: 112
John Kammerman: 171, 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184, 186. 192. 195. 196. 198.
202. 208. 212. 214
Michael Nostrand: 132
Cindy Posner: 89
Wendy Reinitz: 216
Jill Schoor: 20. 24. 72. 85
Susan Wolfe; 67
The Terrapin is an independent student publication of the
University of Maryland, College Park and an affiliate of
Maryland Media, Inc.
The 1981 Terrapin was printed and bound by Walsworth
Publishing Company; Marceline, Missouri. PRESSWORK:
Offset lithography utilizing a 150 line halftone screen from
camera-ready layouts. COMPOSITION: Fototronic typesetting
using Lydian Bold Italic (opening, closing) Times Roman
(academics), Century (sports), Melior (student life groups,
seniors) and Brush (play heads).
PAPER STOCK: 80 pound dull matte white manufactured by
Mead Paper Company. COVER: Four-color lithograph glutone
on white millband.
Senior portraits were taken by Yearbook Associates; Millers
Falls, Massachussetts.
Special thanks go to Greg Nygard, Al Thurston, Michael
Flibush and to Nancy French for contributing so much more
than a job description could ever tell.
OPPORTUNITY, FATE, EFFORT
For those who try are the ones who make it. And how do I
know? I don't, but they do — and that's all that matters.
SUCCESS - it's all in your mind.
To the graduates:
Do it.
Then do it again better.
After all, we did it and are still trying.
Sherry and Stacy Lee
319
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UNIV OF MD COLLEGE PARK
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WALSWORTH
PUBLISHING
COMPANY
MARCELINE. MlSaOUHr. USA