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Summer 1980 In this issue: Charlie Monroe of the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division ...... page 8

Baccalaureate/Commencement 1980 The.photographermanaged tofind these members of the 1930 class all in oneplace. About thir- ty came back to campus for their reunion, and were added to the Golden Year roster. ICU salutes the Class of 1930 The Golden Years Club didn’t need the sun shining to celebrate! The Club, including the class of 1930,is made up of all those graduating fifty years ago or more. Activities included a dinner on Friday night, May 16; a brunch on Saturday morning, complete with an of- ficial welcome; a sing-along with the deputation team, Sonlight; roll call of classes; a memorial tribute; remarks by President Sease; the seminar series after lunch; the awards banquet Saturday evening; and an open house in the presi- ?’ dent’s home later that evening. There was rain on the parade, but it didn’t dampen any spirits! I

2 Alumni News Summer 1980 Vol. 31 No. 4

The ICU Alumni News Editor: Rolf-Peter Noot 71 Assistant Director of Publications

ALUMNI BOARD OFFICERS President Contents 'Robert B. Hanni '50,Monticello. IN.

Vice President 'Robert L. Jeweil '56. Indianapolis Secretary-Treasurer From the President'sDesk ...... 4 'Effie Brown '54, Indianapolis

Past President Clyde D. Fields '63, Indianapolis Danforth leads list of conferees...... 5

William J. Raspberry: The 1980 Distinguished Alumnus ...... 6 ALUMNI BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Term ending 1981: John C. Adams '73,Columbus, OH New Board members announced ...... 7 Lee Harman '66, Churubusco Mervin Holzhausen '41, Greenfield *Sandra B. Lawlis '62. Indianapolis Richard Reasoner '57, Indianapolis Charlie Monroe of the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division ...... 8

Term ending 1982: James Glass '74 PeopleonCampus ...... 12 George E. Jacobs '42, Freeport. IL. 'Donald Ray '50, Indianapolis Annerte L Savill '72. Indianapolis Dennis E Stone '67, Columbus, IN Greyhounds migrate to Red Bird ...... 14

Term ending 1983: Richard K Elmore '66,Indianapolis Bienvenidos a Indiana, Victor! ...... 15 Julia V. Holloway '78, Indianapolis Anne Kay Michel '76, Angola, IN. John William Ransburg '67, Indianapolis Harry A. Tilson '69. Indianapolis On teaching: One of the supreme activities in a civilized society ...... 18

Term ending 1984: Rose Williams Adesiyan '67. Chicago Can a liberally educated person support capital punishment? ...... 20 Marguerite Albright '28.Cayuga. IN Donald L. Armstrong '58, Columbia City, IN Harley Griffith Jr. '50.W. Lafayette. IN Larly G. Thompson '63, South Bend, IN. Center studies E.U.B. contributions ...... 23

ALUMNI BOARD OF TRUSTEES Sports ...... 24 MEMBERS To 1981: Gene W. Lausch '60. Indianapolis To 1982: Sherman Cravens '42, Indianapolis GettingPersonal ...... 27 To 1982: William Kiesel '63. Indianapolis To 1983: Lloyd Hiatt '40 To 1983. Effie Brown '54. Indianapolis

'Executive Committee

James L. Brunnemer '66 Director of Alumni Relations 4 This year, for the first time, Baccalaureate and Commence- Member, Council for Advancement and Support of ment exercises were combined in one 21/2-hour ceremony. Education The two ceremonies will be combined again next year. The ALUMNI NEWS (USPS 015- 700) is published in Spring, Sum- mer, Fall, and Winter by Indiana NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICIES Central University, 1400 East Hanna Indiana Central University admits students of any race, color and national and ethnic origin Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana to all rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to 46227. students at the University. It does not discriminate on any such basis in the administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and Second class postage paid at other school-administered programs. Indiana Central is further committed to compliance Indianapolis, Indiana with Federal Title IX legislation prohibiting sex discrimination in education. Indiana Printed in U.S.A. Central also makes all of its educational programs available to the handicapped. From the President’s Desk 2

The 75th A nnive0 rsary Class

Carole Woods and Diane Dnscol are jubilant after receiving their diplomas. This article is being written shortly after our Bac- education received will be maintained and improved with calaureate/Commencement program. Senator John C. Dan- each year. Both faculty and administrators are concerned forth of delivered a forthright statement and with retaining the historic values and commitment of the in- challenge to graduates and their family members. Nicoson stitution as new and expanded program areas are pursued. Hall was filled to capacity and a host of proud graduates has Prospects for Fall 1980 are encouraging. Alumni continue joined the ranks of the ICU Alumni Association. to assist us in encouraging promising youth to attend In- The day preceding Graduation Day, alumni from various diana Central. A year ago, 28 “distinguished admit” previous classes gathered for a delightful day of reunion with freshmen students (those who rank at the very top of their friends, despite the rain. Some 50-year class members from class and whose SAT scores are very high) were enrolled; at the Class of 1930 were back for the first time since gradua- the same date this year, 46 are enrolled in the incoming tion. They could not believe the changes which have taken freshman class. The quality of our graduates will be directly place! Others who were back for a ten, twenty-five, or forty- proportional to the quality of our incoming freshmen. That year reunion were equally amazed. Without exception, is why the Alumni SUCCESS program is of such critical im- alumni spoke genuine appreciation for the growth, stability, portance! We hope you will help us search out and enroll the expansion, outreach, and contemporary relevance of their best! . alma mater. Obviously, this is gratifying and rewarding to Twenty-five years from now, at the 100th Anniversary of those of us involved in planning and implementing the in- ICU, what will be said of these years? You and I, and many stitution’s present and future directions. others, are now writing that history! May the next quarter When members of the Fifty Year Class (1930) graduated, century be the most dramatic yet! 0 their larger group brought to 440 the number who had graduated from ICU during the first 25 years of its history. By contrast, 439 degrees were awarded this year-just one fewer than the grand total for the first twenty-five years. While we are pleased that our outreach has grown so dramatically, we are concerned that the quality of the President

4 Danforth leads list of conferees Six honorary degrees were conferred Branigan and Bowen. She was elected by ICU at the Baccalaureate/Com- “Woman of the Year” by the Indiana mencement on May 18, and Senator Republican Mayors Association and by John C. Danforth of Missouri delivered the Indianapolis Professional Chapter the Commencement address. of Women in Communications. Mrs. Senator Danforth, a fifth generation Lacy has been a trustee of Winona Missourian, captured 57 per cent of the Memorial Hospital in Indianapolis, vote in 1976 in his successful bid for the Goodwill Industries Foundation; the U.S. Senate and became the first YMCA Foundation of Greater In- Republican elected to the Senate in 30 dianapolis. She is a member of the years. In the Senate, Danforth serves on Board of Directors of Starlight the Finance, Commerce, and Govern- Musicals; the Indiana State Symphony mental Affairs Committees. Society; United Way of Greater In- Danforth received a bachelor of arts dianapolis; Indiana vocational degree, with honors, from Princeton Technical College; Associated Colleges Senator John Danforth University. In 1963 he received a of Indiana, Board of Governors; In- bachelor of divinity degree from Yale dianapolis Chamber of Commerce; In- Support of Education (CASE). He Divinity School and a bachelor of laws dianapolis Goodwill Industries; Wright previously held the position of Vice degree from . He is Institute of Otology; Community President for Financial Development at believed to be the only person to have Hospital of Indianapolis; Citizens Butler University. In 1966 he moved to received these two degrees from Yale Forum; Indianapolis Center for Ad- Carnegie-Mellon. University on the same date. vanced Research; and the Corporate Another honoree, William R. Val- He is an ordained clergyman of the Community Council. entine, is currently the Secretary of the Episcopal Church, and has served as Ralph Harvey was presented an Cabinet and Superintendent of the In- Assistant or Associate Rector in several honorary doctor of laws degree. Mr. dianapolis Southeast District of the churches in New York and Missouri. He Harvey is the founder and President of United Methodist Church. While serv- is an Honorary Canon of Christ Church Harvey’s Variety Stores. He is a trustee ing in this capacity he has been in- Cathedral, St. Louis, and Honorary of Indiana Central University, and the strumental in the appointment of Associate of St. Albans Church in Indiana Foundation of the United several women pastors and clergy Washington, and a member of the Methodist Church. He is past president couples. He is presently a member of the governing board of the National of the Chicago District Nazarene Young Board of Directors of the Franklin Cathedral. People’s Society and has served on the United Methodist Home and member of Danforth has received an honorary Board of Directors of Wesley Manor in the Board of Trustees and the Executive master of arts degree from Yale, and Frankfort, Indiana. Harvey is a member Committee of Indiana Central Universi- seven honorary doctoral degrees from of the Valparaiso United Methodist ty. He serves on the Board of Directors universities across the country. Indiana Church where he serves on the Board of the Indiana Pastoral Care and Central conferred an honorary degree and is Chairman of the Building Com- Counseling Center; Metropolitan Com- on him as a part of the commencement mittee. mission of the Church Federation of In- program. In announcing Danforth’s ac- John G. Johnson, President of dianapolis; and the Southeast Multiser- ceptance, President Gene E. Sease said, Butler University, was honored by being vice Center of Indianapolis. Honorary “Senator Danforth is one of the Senate’s presented the honorary doctor of laws degree recipient W. Leon Hartman is most articulate and dynamic speakers. degree at the annual Indiana Central currently Chairman of the North In- He is both a scholar and an able Trustee and Faculty Dinner on May 15. diana Conference Cabinet of the United spokesman for the values and principles President Johnson, prior to his appoint- Methodist Church; a member of the which have made America great.” ment at Butler, was Vice President for Board of Trustees of Indiana Central; a Development at Carnegie-Mellon member of the Board of Directors of the Edna B. Lacy received a doctor of University. He has had a variety of ar- Indiana United Methodist Children’s laws honorary degree. She is President, ticles published on alumni relations and Home; and a member of the Board of Treasurer, and Chairman of the Board educational fund raising, particularly in Wesley Foundation of Ball State Univer- of the Lacy Diversified Industries. She the publications of the American Alum- sity. The Reverend Hartman is a has been named as a Sagamore of the ni Council and its successor organiza- graduate of Asbury Theological Wabash by Governors Handly, tion, the Council for Advancement and Seminary. 0

5 Mr. Raspberry prepares to make some comments on Alumni Day, flanked by outgoing Board President Clyde Fields (left) and Alumni Director Jim Brunnemer. William J. Raspberry The 1980 Distinguished Alumnus

From the remarks of Dr. Larry Axel, by Professors McBride, Cramer and ment: among all social classes, among Chairman of the Honors and Recogni- Fouts. After serving in the Army, he all races, and among older people and tions Committee, upon introducing joined in 1962, children alike. Mr. Raspberry on Alumni Day, May where he worked his way up from He knows that the first steps to 17. library assistant to teletype operator, to answering a problem are hard work and The Distinguished Alumnus Award is general assignment reporter, to copy treating people like human beings. the highest honor bestowed by the In- editor and assistant city editor. We at Indiana Central are not the diana Central Alumni Association. In 1965, he was named Public Affairs first to recognize Bill Raspberry’s com- Through the Award, we seek to Columnist for the Post. From there, his mitment and ability. He has won the recognize an alumnus whose life is truly rise was meteoric. With his column now Capital Press Club’s “Journalist of the marked by a spirit of humanitarian ser- syndicated in papers all through the na- Year” Award. The WashingtodBalti- vice, who embodies the ideals nourished tion and read by millions, Bill more Newspaper Guild has judged his by an education in the liberal arts, and Raspberry currently is perhaps our most columns the best interpretive writing of whose professional performance is well-known graduate. Our committee the year on several occasions. He has judged extraordinarily noteworthy. believes that today he is counted among just been elected to the Pulitzer Prize This year we are pleased to honor a col- the half-dozen or so most prominent Board. A few years ago, he was featured umnist of national and international print journalists in the country. and pictured in Time magazine, where renown, a member of the class of ’58, He is not an ideologue; he refuses to he was praised for his independence and William J. Raspberry. substitute labels for thought: he knows for his ability to thoughtfully analyze Bill Raspberry was born in Mississippi that words, like books and friends, provocative and complex issues. Time in 1935. Coming to Indiana Central in ought to be few and well-chosen; he is magazine could have also stressed what the early 1950s, he worked his way versatile, writing highly respected col- we know, that Bill Raspberry is a through college by serving as a reporter umns on economics, politics, religion, gracious and humble man. for the Indianapolis Recorder, a black urban affairs, education, and family It is with great pleasure that we con- weekly. life. Throughout this work, he has been fer upon Bill Raspberry our highest He graduated in 1958, with a major a sensitive crusader for human dignity, honor, the Distinguished Alumnus in history and having been influenced human rights and human empower- Award. 0

6 Alumni Day meeting New Board members announced The Alumni Day version of the Alum- ni Association Board meeting both wraps up the year ending and launches the coming year. Committees do not President Elect: Bob Jewel1 '56 meet individually; thus, committee '40 reports were generally brief. Board of Trustees: Lloyd Hiatt Effie Brown '54 Alumni/Student Relations Commit- tee - Bill Kiesel discussed plans for the Directors: Larry Thompson '63 AlumniBtudent Career Day to be held Marguerite Albright '28 in the fall. Also, the new snack bar for Schwitzer Center, an idea presented to Don Armstrong '58 the Board last year through student Harley Griffith Jr. '50 representative Bob Bogardus, will become a reality. Rose Williams Adesiyan '67

I *James Glass '74 Area Clubs Committee - George Jacobs discussed the development of *Upon the resignation of Ronald Boyd from the Board, James guidelines for the convenience of hosts Glass, being the unelected candidate with the most votes, was and hostesses of area club meetings. Dr. named to complete the unfinished term. Jacobs expressed the hope that these guidelines would enhance the growth and development of meetings in other areas of the country.

Constitution and By-Law Commit- tee - Sandy Lawlis discussed the orien- tation meeting for new members and the plans for continuing orientation for all members through visits by ICU ad- ministrators and faculty to Board meetings.

Honors and Recognitions Commit- tee - Larry Axel spoke of resolutions which would be offered commending individuals for their contributions to the * betterment of ICU and reviewed the qualifications of the 1980 Distinguished Award winner, William Raspberry.

L ed of faculty members to discuss ideas each alumnus and to make the informa- Publications Committee- Gene brought by the Publications Commit- tion available to department heads and Lausch reported that the committee tee. faculty members. identified goals and compared the various publications which go out to the Special Category Alumni Commit- Student Recruitment Commit- alumni. Alternatives to the present tee-The recommendation of the com- tee-The major business of this com- publications schedule and format are mittee is that the work of their commit- mittee during the year was assisting in being examined. Dean Youngblood is tee be merged with another. A need was the development and implementation of selecting an ad hoc committee compos- expressed to expand the data base of the SUCCESS program.

7 gather any information on Chinese ac- tivities.” This was only a few years after the Communists had taken over Charlie Monroe: mainland China. “It was a very restless period in China, a period in which the U.S.needed to know what was going on. You find out through sources who tell you things, through a lot of social From Story Bear development, by listening to what they’re telling you through their normal commercial radio or by monitoring their military radio. We did a lot of monitoring activities and translating to a life of crime- and interpreting. We also had some fly- ing activities where we would fly along the coast and see what we could on the mainland, as well as their reactions to us; whether they would scramble fighting airplanes to harass us, which they did occasionally. We were trying to obtain as much information as possible about this ‘sleeping giant,’ which we didn’t “ Probably the most important thing I After Charlie graduated from Em- know much about in 1954 or ’55.” It was ever did was join the Air Force on a merich Manual High School in In- difficult for the Air Force to maintain a whim-in a moment of anger ac- dianapolis, he and several friends rather low profile. “We lived on top of a moun- tually- then accidentally getting into rashly joined the Air Force for a four- tain for six months in tents. When I the Chinese language. The combination year term. Once there, he found that he watch ‘M*A*S*H’ it looks awfully of the two kind of matured me and led couldn’t qualify as a pilot because his vi- familiar.” Charlie worked undercover me down the path that I’ve gone.” sion wasn’t good enough, and he was generally, but claims that “Day-to-day That path, if illustrated, would seem short on mechanical aptitude, so a life was pretty routine.” to meander for a time, and then sud- maintenance job was out. Tests showed, denly rise almost straight up off the though, that he had a propensity for page. For after Charlie Monroe ’62 join- languages. The Air Force chose 35 men After Charlie left the Air Force, ed the FBI, he rose rapidly through the of 25,000 to go to Yale for language several friends recommended he attend ranks. Sixteen years ago, after a stint in classes, and Charlie Monroe was among Indiana Central. Charlie had been in- the Air Force and four years at Indiana them. He spent a year learning Man- fluenced by two English teachers at Central, he was accepted by the FBI as a darin Chinese, earning 24 credit hours Manual High School, and had decided special agent, and has moved up stead- (“I may be the only Indiana Central he wanted to be an English teacher ily until his present post, Deputy Assis- graduate with a bachelor of arts degree himself. He spent four active years at tant Director of the Criminal In- who satisfied his language requirements Central, involved as member and presi- vestigative Division. As such, he has na- with Mandarin Chinese from Yalel”). dent of the English Club, a staff tionwide responsibility for investigating After a year of studying Chinese, “I member of the first year of Tusztulu’s all terrorism, personal crimes such as was sent to the Far East, and spent publication, and, not surprisingly, also kidnapping, property crimes, civil almost two years in intelligence work us- held the vice presidency of the Interna- crimes on government reservations, and ing my Chinese in Okinawa, Japan; tional Relations Club. Not indicative of is also responsible for investigating Hong Kong, and Formosa, in ac- his future was his job with a local televi- presidential appointments. It is a post comodation with Intelligence sion station’s children’s show, in which which ranks him 25th of 20,000 jobs-some of which were very routine, he appeared as the Story Bear, reading employees of the Federal Bureau of In- some of which were a little risky. Our stories to the kids from inside a bear vestigation. primary activity in the Far East was to costume. After he graduated in 1962, having been elected to Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities, he went back to his high school alma mater to teach-and found out that teaching b wasn’t what he wanted to do after all. Another friend from ICU, Steve McVey ’62, told Charlie that the FBI was in- terested in people who spoke Mandarin Chinese and other exotic languages. “So I applied, knowing they weren’t going to hire me, because I had been told that the FBI hired no one but lawyers and accountants. They were interested in .my Intelligence background and the fact that I spoke Chinese, and shortly thereafter they took me in. I had thought what I had learned would never be practical again, except for perhaps trying to order a meal in a Chinese restaurant. Then a year after I’d been in the FBI (he spent the first year in Dallas, working on the continuing in- vestigation of the Kennedy assassination and was stationed for a time in Paris, Texas) they sent me to Chinese language school again for one solid year of a very intensified course. I was sent loaded with too much danger. I don’t who had fled mainland China after the then to San Francisco for five years. want to belittle the job and say that it’s revolution in 1949, and who many times Three and a half years of that I worked not dangerous, because it certainly is, still had people there that the U.S. was in Chinatown, in Chinese counter- but on a day-to-day basis it’s relatively interested in. Later, when trouble intelligence activities, and used my safe. The key word is relatively. When it began escalating across the river at the Chinese quite a bit then.” does get dangerous, it’s very dangerous. University of California in Berkeley, he Charlie had few misconceptions When you walk in to arrest one of the was sent to the campus for a year to about what to expect in the Bureau. “I top ten fugitives in the United States, work on problems of rioting, anti-war had seen the usual television and movie that man has already decided, general- demands, the burning of ROTC portrayals of the FBI and other ly, that he is going to kill you. Most of buildings, and searching out such detective-type organizations, but I think those people have killed before and will groups as the Weathermen. “I spent you’d have to be a fool if you wanted to kill again. When you walk into a ter- about a year smelling tear gas. I look walk into any organization where you rorist situation where you’re going to try back at the period with mixed emotions. kick in doors and spread machine guns to arrest a member of a terrorist I can certainly understand the feelings all over the room. That image is all too organization, who is doing the violence of some of those people, but I cannot frequently portrayed. Any professional for the patriotism he feels, is willing to condone their methods.” law enforcement organization is made die for his cause and perhaps take you in “When I was working on the anti-war up of a lot of people who have to do a lot the process, it’s a very tough period. It’s investigations and the violence con- of routine investigation, until you reach something that no one relishes; you do nected with the anti-war movement in the point where you do solve the case, your planning in advance and hope that the late 60s, I interviewed many, many where you do have to make an arrest your planning goes well and that you people who were bitterly opposed to the and get into some crisis situation-at have some luck on your side.” government, bitterly opposed to the which time you will have some kind of Charlie relates that his job in FBI. They hated me because I was a plan, so you don’t walk into a situation Chinatown dealt with the intelligentsia member of the FBI. Many of them real- ly knew what they were interested in. complicated in that my terrorist may be They were dedicated to changing our your patriot. It just depends which side ‘‘ One document we bought for government; they were very articulate of the political fence you’re on.” $500, any one of our enemies and had done their homework. They Has experiencing the “nether world” knew their political ideology. I could of crime for sixteen years resulted in a would have paid $5million.for., , deal with those people, because I at lesser opinion of humanity? “Law en- least knew where they were coming forcement seems to have a large percen- from. However, I also spent a lot of tage of cynics. I guess it comes from see- pany’s alleged security abuses, and those time talking to misguided people who ing the ugliness of life, man’s inhumani- people are now in jail for that. They were just caught up in a movement and ty to man. I personally have not become claimed that they were so concerned were out there doing things that were very cynical. I become more concerned with the laxity of security there that they seriously affecting their lives and had for society because I see all its problems were going to commit this extreme act some long range consequences. They on a day-to-day basis. Maybe I use an of destroying the nuclear fuel rods really hadn’t thought things out and escape mechanism so I don’t get too (about $6 million worth), to get the at- were being used. Those people I really concerned with it, because it can tention of the company and the public. . . felt sorry for.” become depressing when you look at all We had to do some quick self-education. Charlie’s career has been improving the ugliness that does go on.” steadily from his days as a special agent There is, on the other hand, a great in San Francisco. The list of positions deal of satisfaction inherent in perform- “The second one happened in the last held includes squad supervisor, super- ing a job successfully, and Charlie has six months at the Pentagon, where a visor of the Domestic Intelligence Divi- had his share of good moments: “Like young Navy man was coming near the sion, Section Chief in the External Af- when you get involved with a kidnap- end of his enlistment, and he decided he fairs Division (the FBI’s top public rela- ping investigation and you’re able to needed some money, so he stole thirty- tions post), special agent in charge of resolve it and give back some loved one, five of the most classified documents the the Alexandria, Virginia, field office, to some child, back unharmed. Those are U.S. government has. It’s unbelievable which he was appointed last July. Then personally very rewarding. There’s the material he stole. He made one bad as quickly as last February, he was nothing better than to walk in to the mistake: he decided to sell them, and elevated to FBI Headquarters in mother and bring back the child in the first person he went to was an FBI Washington, D.C. good shape. I can still see the faces of informant. It was pure luck that the Now, he says, “There’s no way to real- some happy parents.” person he chose happened to be one of ly plan my days; my problems are our informants. The informant came to literally one telephone call away,” Two cases especially have made an us with the story, and in less than two although “it has to be a case of major impression on Charlie Monroe during weeks we were able to completely resolve importance before it reaches my level. his career, both of them occuring in the the matter. We had every one of the For example, this month we’ve had past eighteen months. “We had gotten documents, no one else got copies of the three bank robberies with three bank word that the Virginia Electric Power documents, and we have the man in jail tellers killed. This comes to my atten- Company (VEPCo), a nuclear doing eight years. But the damage that tion immediately because we try to see if generating facility, had been sabotaged could have been done, had those there’s a pattern so we can stop this per- in Surry, Virginia. Here’s a situation documents gotten into any enemy son before more people are killed.” As where we really didn’t have a lot of hands, is unbelievable. There was one there are approximately 6,000 bank preparation and training. As far as I point where I was actually looking at robberies a day in the United States, on- know, it’s the first sabotaging of a documents that I had no classification ly those needing special treatment are nuclear facility. We had to go in there or clearance to look at. But it was a channeled through the Deputy Assistant with very little expertise, and attack a Catch-22 situation. I had to look at Director’s office, especially since bank problem that was fresh, and under cir- them to determine if I was eligible to robberies are only one form of the cumstances where we were in danger look at them or not. We used an under- crimes under Charlie’s jurisdiction. from radioactivity, and come up with a cover agent to buy some of the “The area of terrorism is the one that solution. And we did; we found the peo- documents for $500 apiece, but one that concerns me the most. It’s become a ple who did it, we found the motivation, we bought for $500 I’m sure any one of clicG6 to say this, but the problem is which was unhappiness with the cam- our enemies would have paid $5 million “Becausecrzme has become more com- plex, just as society has, we have to develop experts. Each field office has experts in most of OUT problem areas, such as bombing experts, who know ex- plosives; a hostage negotiator who would understand the Psychology to use in a hostage situation; experts in for, and would have been glad they got terrorism-at least one 6-member SWAT team able to han- it for that. It was that type of a dle the most dangerous situations; we have pilots, linguists, case-very rewarding. “At that point, you’re dealing with computer experts, and so on. People at my level are not ex- the highest level of government, the pected to know all the answers, but weare expected to know highest level of sensitivity, the highest where to get the answers. 99 level of national defense: you’re dealing with the possibility of all kinds of inter- national ramifications. That’s despotic director. Charlie, maintaining this opened up some opportunities that pressure.” his interest in literature, reads a lot, and probably would not have been there. has edited a book of poetry, “Daddies Also, I was fortunate to have some in- Pressure is also evident in such cases Cry Too,” written by Max Smith. vestigations that went very successfully, when the agent returns to his family. He is also clearly happy with the FBI. and my superiors were aware of some of “One of the real frustrations of law en- “One of the best things that’s happened my accomplishments. A certain amount forcement is you’re frequently wrapped to law enforcement is that it’s become of luck was involved, and I think I had up in a very sensitive investigation, at professionalized. I think the FBI is the some ability to do the job when the op- such a point that you just cannot talk most interesting area of law enforce- portunities came up. I’ve also paid the about it, either because it’s highly ment, and perhaps the best to be in. We price. I’ve moved a lot, ten times in the classified or because it’s very sensitive. have a wide variety of investigative last 16 years. You don’t have all the pieces put jurisdiction. It’s an area where, by the “I’m 45 right now, and I’d hate to together yet, and you just can’t talk time it gets to be a federal case, it’s think I’d reached the top of my profes- about it. I’m sure that’s how ulcers hap- usually a little bit more complex, a little sion. There are at least 24 notches above pen; it’s tough, and sometimes the fami- more dangerous, a bit more challeng- me. I’d like to move up one or two more ly doesn’t understand that. Luckily I’ve ing. You can sink your teeth into some notches before I retire. never had that problem. I read some of our investigations. It’s nice because “I’ll say it up front that the type of statistics recently that in law enforce- the FBI pays the best salaries of anyone education I got at Indiana Central, the ment there’s an extremely high percen- in law enforcement. Our beginning FBI opportunity to try things, to fail, to try tage of suicides, alcoholism, and agent starts at about $23,000. Certainly leadership, to try athletics, to try public divorce, and this is most likely due to the satisfaction is there. You can speaking, to try debate, the personal the stress of the job.” definitely say, ‘I have contributed to relationships, the intimate class sizes, Such frustrations are not restricted to making society a little bit better.’ An the give and take with professors, it all the home. Everyone from time to time idea that I like I’ve stolen from Clarence paid off. It gave me a big part of what I confronts the ubiquitous bore who pro- Kelly, the second director of the FBI: needed.” fesses to know all the details on a sub- ‘Being in the FBI is a way of doing ject, and agents are not immune. something special with your life.”’ “There are times when there’s a tempta- He also has no false modesty regar- tion to say, ‘Hey, that point you made ding his own accomplishments in his His favorite area of FBI work? “ES- isn’t right; I know because I just saw field. “The rise has been rapid. I’ve pionage. I think it’s a big challenge to such-and-such information.’ These are been in fewer than sixteen years and I’ve try to figure out what the espionage ap- 1 the times when you just take another sip gone from one of about 7500 agents to a paratus of another country is doing and of your coffee, sit back and stare at the position where I’m in the top twenty-five try to thwart it. For instance, with the ceiling.” of the 20,000 employees of the entire KGB in Russia, which is our major These frustrations do not seem to af- FBI. I won’t belittle that because I’m counterespionage problem, we try to fect Charlie Monroe much. A quiet, proud of the accomplishment. Part of figure out who their agents are, what friendly man, he does not fit the movie it’s been a matter of timing, and I say their goals are, what their techniques stereotype of the G-Man, which that in all honesty. We were affected two are, who their contacts are. To use a presents the brusque, deathly serious years ago with a new retirement bill sports analogy, you’re playing in the big agent, his mind solely on the elimina- where we were hit with age 55 man- leagues at that point, for big stakes. tion of crime, one of an army of clones datory retirement. This meant that a lot You’re playing literally with the future methodically obeying the orders of a of people with seniority had to retire, so of your country.” -RPN 0 People on Campus JrnS

**Assistant professor A1 Brinson of the business department addressed two Billy Keller named groups last month; the State Secretarial Conference (“Putting Polish in Your Performance”) and the Business head basketball coach Teachers Conference at Indiana University. * *Dr. Herbert Cassel, Professor in the Raines-Mueller Chair of Philosophy and Religion, taught a three-week series in March on “Issues in Theology” at Sheridan United Methodist Church. He also made a presentation on that theme to the United Methodist ministers of the Southeast District of the South Indiana Conference. **Dr. Richard Clutter of the history and political science department this month addressed the Sons of the American Revolution on the subject, “Religion in the American Revolution,” and spoke at Westminster Village South on “Changing Styles in Presidential

Campaigns. ” **Dr. Pat Cook and Dr. Nancy O’Dell of the Miriam Bender Diagnostic Center were featured recent- ly by Callie Crossley on Channel 13 with information about the Center and about learning disabilities, and ap- peared again later discussing sugar-free diets and the implication of food to lear- ning and behavior. **Dr. Donald R. Cushman of the In- structional Media Services has been honored by the Wa Pa Ha District of the Boy Scouts of America as the Award of Merit Winner. He has been involved in < scouting for 26 years, is an Eagle Scout, and holds the Silver Award and the God and Country Award. He is currently ser- ving as the Scout Training Chairman. He attended the National Convention of Billy Keller, now sporting the ZCU tie that President Sease bestowed on him, pats the Association for Education Com- new associate Timothy O’Toole, Central’s mascot. Bill Bright, left, who had been munications and Technology a month handling coaching duties, will continue as athletic director and physical education ago. Dr. Cushman, whose interests in- clude traveling, has camped in every department head. The announcement was made at a May 13 press conference. See page 25. U.S. National Park.

12 **The Marion County Medical Socie- been elected as Member at Large to the faculty of the new Indianayolis Opera ty honored the late Dr. Charles Dill Executive Board of the Central Indiana Company Academy, teaching diction. and Dr. Robert Briggs with the Psychological Association. **Carolyn Sfreddo, Director of Medical Society’s Community Service **Dr. Phyllis Lan Lin of the Public Relations, recently addressed the Awards. Dr. Dill was the team physician behavioral sciences department has had Indiana University Student Union for the ICU athletic department until three booklets released in Taiwan: A Seminar on “Public Relations his sudden death last fall. Dr. Briggs is Workshop Model for Couple Com- Attitudes.” She also represented ICU at a trustee of the university. munication, A Workshop Model for the Indiana Intercollegiate Press Parent - Child Communication, and Association Convention in South Bend, Marital Relations and Adjustment. She Indiana. also received a grant recently from the **Earl Snellenberger, associate pro- Consortium for Urban Education for fessor of art, is featured in a one-man developing a handbook for the 4-S show of textiles, wall hangings, and Service-Learning Project Practicum. sculpture at the Indiana State Museum **Dr. Kiyoshi Miyamae, who Art Gallery through June 22. This is on- teaches Spanish, attended the annual ly the fourth time the museum has Central States Conference on the featured a living artist. Teaching of Foreign Languages, April **Mr. Richard Wiehe of the 10-12, held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. behavioral sciences department recently The theme of the conference was “New spoke on “The Achievement Motive in Frontiers in Foreign Language Children” at a workshop for the 23rd Teaching.” Annual Conference of the Indianapolis **Dr. James Riggs of the history and Council of Preschool Cooperatives. political science department did the **Mrs. Florabelle Wilson, Krannert research for the film, “America Lost Memorial librarian, has been asked to and Found,” a film distributed to public serve on the Indiana Historical Society television stations by PBS as part of the Library Committee. The society’s Or. Robert Briggs series “Nonfiction Television.” Rex librarian and his staff report to this Reed of the New York Daily News called committee on the activities of the **Associate professor of philosophy the film “a remarkable study of Historical Society Library. and religion Adolf Hansen has provid- America in the Depression,” and Varie- **Associate professor of mathematics ed leadership at a number of seminars ty said the film “catches the contradic- Nuel Wooden directed the Central In- this semester. He has led weekend tions of the decade, both the fun of it diana Regional Science Fiar on ICU’s seminars in Vincennes (“Coping With and the disastrous insanity.” campus. Hundreds of exhibits were Struggles of Life”), in French Lick **Assistant professor of art Dee displayed, and several science depart- (“Death and Dying”), and at Broad Schaad had an exhibit at the 5th An- ment faculty members assisted in the Ripple United Methodist Church nual Ceramics Exhibit at Millersville judging, while student assistants in the (“Coping With Loss Experiences”). He State College, Millersville, Penn- department did the “footwork’ involved has also led a six-week seminar in sylvania, last month. in the project. CI Anderson (“Introduction to the Old **David T. Searles of the music Testament”), a four-week seminar at department sang the role of the Abbot North United Methodist Church in Benjamin Britten’s opera, Curlew (“Rethinking the Roots of our Faith”), River, which was produced in March at as well as a six-week seminar at Univer- Christ Church Cathedral, Monument sity Heights Methodist church (“Coping Circle, with members of the In- With the Struggles of Life”). dianapolis Symphony Orchestra and **Dr. Michael Holland of the Joseph Frank of the Metropolitan behavioral sciences department has Opera. Mr. Searles also joined the

13 Sbnng break at work camp_ Greyhounds migrate to Red Bird

by Marshall W. Chambers and patch-painting the church, working These are some of the comments that Director, Church Relations on the garage, tearing down a fence, students offered upon their return to On Saturday morning, April 12, and grubbing out kudzu vine from the campus: “Getting away from ‘civiliza- seven students (all girls - three fellows mountain side. Those seven girls got a tion’ was a wonderful relief after the dropped out) along with Chaplain Dave lot of opportunities to flex their muscles pressures of finals week. None of us were Owen, and Director of Church Rela- and believe me, they did a good job and exactly ready to leave this new world. tions, Marshall Chambers, piled into completed a lot of work. Saturday mor- The mountains, creeks, buildings, no- the university van, along with nine ning we said our sad farewells to Gerry pressure lifestyle, were lovely and held a sleeping bags, nine suitcases, and boxes and Gladie and headed for Berea, magnetism to us.” Jessica Dean of food, to head for Red Bird Mission where we spent the night in the United “One of my goals on this trip was to near Beverly, Kentucky. On Saturday Methodist Church. Luck was on our meet and learn about people from a dif- night we bunked down on the hard side as the women of the church were ferent American culture and about floors of a mission church on the having a bake sale. (It’s just possible some of my fellow ICU students. This southside of Lexington. The pastor, that we were among the best was well accomplished through the Woodie Church, was a seminary customers.) Again, we snuggled down in sharing of thoughts, experiences, classmate of Dave’s. We attended our sleeping bags in the church for a families, problems, songs, prayers, church there on Sunday morning, then good night’s rest . . . well, some of us meals and work during the nine days of literally wound our way down into the were so full of rich experiences, love for our trip with members of our ICU group Appalachian region, arriving at our group, and a desire to share that ‘and with people living in southeastern

Queensdale around 4:OO p.m. our discussion went into the wee hours Kentucky. ” Virginia Gin Our work at Mill Creek was about ten of the morning. But, then, that’s what a “We shared our skills (and lack of miles from where we stayed, where work camp is all about. them) and desire to help with the people Reverend Gerry Klinefelter and his This was my first trip to Red Bird, of the Red Bird area. They, in turn, wife, Gladie, pastor a small congrega- but among others, there were two out- shared their priceless wisdom and tion. Gerry and Gladie soon earned a standing convictions that came to me. culture with us.” Sonia Goltz warm spot in our hearts, as they opened One is that when I see our university “Perhaps the most fascinating fact their hearts and home to us. All the way and church at work in a place like Ap- was the amazing faith of these people. down, on our trip from Indianapolis, palachia, I am proud to be associated The churches, where we had the and for two days after we arrived, it with ICU and the United Methodist privilege to worship, were very excited rained and rained and rained, but the Church. And secondly, when I see the and enthusiastic about their faith in God weather on the last four days was simply dedication of our works there, and the and being able to share that with a new gorgeous. We worked inside the first joyous way they go about their work, I group of young people. I would not give couple of days and completely painted take my hat off to them. up that week of work and learning for the interior of the fellowship room of any week in Florida.” Maria Woods the church. When the sun came out, we came out and worked outside scraping Bienvenidos a Indiana, Victor! by Yvonna C.Jones Fleximester can have some unex- pected benefits, and pay off later in some of the nicest ways! Nine ICU Memories of I students spent May in Mexico for Flex- imester 1976, and this year one of the Mexico friends they met in Mexico spent Easter Victor Clark in Indy. Alfaro, Linda While in Mexico, the group stayed at Caine, and Vonna Casa Gonzales, a beautiful home in the Jones look over a heart of the Zona Rosa, Mexico’s book about Mex- ‘famous Pink Zone. Also staying at the ico from a library Casa were two men working with the display in April. Mexican government, Victor Clark Alfaro, and Jaime Alcocer y Madrid. Having the room directly across from Dave and Steve, Victor and Jaime became acquainted with everyone in is rigid; it reflects the conservatism of diana vacation included the State the ICU group during their first few the people of Indiana.” He lunched Museum, Art Museum, and Children’s days in Mexico. Together with another downtown at the City Market with Museum, “experiencing” the Para- friend, Mauricio Coutolenc, they Linda and Vonna, saying that it mount Music Palace with its huge “adopted’ the ICU group, deciding to reminded him of places he’d seen in. theater organ, playing miniature golf at show them Mexico City like it should be Europe. (Both girls, however, think it is the Southport Putt-Putt, and dining at seen. Because of the hospitality of Vic- more like places they’d seen in Mexico.) some of the nicest spots Indy has to of- tor, Jaime, and Mauricio, the ICU Impromptu planning resulted in many fer. One lunch even found the three of group spent a very enjoyable Flex- varied activies for Victor during his them with the fire chief and his wife, imester in Mexico. The group had vacation; from seeing a Checkers hockey dining in the restaurant at the top of the classes two hours a day, and the rest of game, to attending the Easter Sunrise tallest building in Indiana. Thirty-five the time was “Tiempo libre” -free time service with Vonna at the Zion United stories up afforded Victor a grand view -to experience and enjoy Mexico and Church of Christ in New Palestine. He of a typical Indiana April shower as it its people. Victor, Jaime and Mauricio became an Honorary Volunteer of the moved across the city. (Luck did pro- accompanied many of the group during Sugar Creek Township Fire Department vide that it was only a shower, and not a different excursions. in New Palestine, a department that tornado!) Correspondence was maintained be- Linda works for as an EMT (Emergency Victor returns to Mexico to finish tween Victor, Linda Caine, and Vonna Medical Technician) and Vonna as a work on his master’s of anthropology Jones, and this year Victor cancelled his CPR (Cardio-pulmonary Resuscitation) degree, and begin work toward a doc- vacation plans to Cuba, deciding in- instructor. He also accompanied Linda torate in the same field. He will spend stead to visit Indiana. “I didn’t even during her work with the Seasonal three months living with the “squatters” know where Indiana was,” he said. “I Migrant Farmworker Program, travel- in Baja California, studying their thought it was two hours from New ing to migrant camps in Southern In- customs and the reasons for their migra- York!” Despite this last minute change diana and observing what services need tion to the border. He plans to return of plans, and having to spend the night to be provided for migrant families. again to Indiana in August and also to in Harlingen, Texas (wherever that is!), Both Linda and Vonna are CPR in- tour New York and Washington D.C. at Victor thoroughly enjoyed his vacation in structors, and during Victor’s visit had a that time. Indiana, and was introduced to that CPR class scheduled. Victor went (Editor’s note: Yvonna Jones graduated very special phenomenon called along, and while the rest of the students in 1977 with a B.A. in Spanish educa- “Hoosier Hospitality.” were taking their tests, the girls in- tion. A former Reflector news editor, Victor’s first impression of downtown structed Victor in the techniques of she now resides in Indianapolis and. is Indianapolis was a cautious observa- CPR, talking him through it in Spanish. employed by the American Fletcher tion: “The architecture of the buildings Some other highlights of Victor’s In- Mortgage Company.) 0

15 A busy weekend

The weather normally cooperates on the Having the distinction of being the oldest alums attending Alumni Day 1980 Alumni Day/Commencement weekend, but were Clarence Liechty '26 and Bertha Keesecker '24. this time, folks like John Swank, above, had to tote umbrellas.

Free, take one? No, not really. The alumni who belong to this apparently abandoned baby are actually only inches away.

Graduation can seem a little overwhelming sometimes.

16 May 17 8c 18, 1980

Merrill Underwood proudly hosts alumni kiting the Archives displays.

President Sease (right) chats with philosophy and religion professors Adolf Hansen (left) and Herb Cassel.

Sure, Deb Sargent is happy to graduate, but the other reason she's smiling is she's only a month away from herJune 14 wedding toJohn Carlile '77.

Well, somebody has to take charge!

17 On teaching: “One of the supreme

Editor’s note: Dr. Gregory, associate by Marshall Gregory ’62 moments of contact are the highest kind professor of English and Coordinator Describe myself as a teacher? Why do of education for both teachers and of the Liberal Arts, was this spring I teach? The questions come easy, but students, lifting them out of the boun- named as a winner of the 1980-81 the answers, which involve accounting daries of the narrower existence they Faculty Open Fellowship sponsored by for those things about which one feels were enclosed in only a moment before, the Lilly Endowment. The competi- passionate and committed, come hard. and placing them into the sphere of an tion was open to scholar/teachers who At the emotional level trying to say why enlarged existence which they forever wanted to take a break from academic I chose teaching over other jobs is like share a moment after. I also love talk- routine to pursue individually design- trying to say why I chose to marry one ing; I love words. I love the heat of ed programs. The following are com- person rather than another. It’s not that closeness; being near enough to feel the ments Dr. Gregory made in response one makes these kinds of choices jolt of rejection or the stroke of accep- to requests by the Endowment to thoughtlessly (there are times when one tance as personalities mix and flow in describe himself as a teacher, to ex- hardly thinks about anything else), but the classroom. At the emotional level plain why he is a teacher, and what the sort of thinking done in these in- teaching offers all these kinds of ex- will be the next stages in his evolution stances is so suffused with extra-rational periences and many more, but, depen- and growth as a teacher. The many elements (not irrational) - our feelings, ding heavily as these experiences do on teachers among our graduates and the imaginings, hopes, and longings for intuited perceptions and responses, they alumni at large should find Professor fulfillment and happiness- that no are, obviously, the most difficult to Gregory’s remarks of special interest. straight-forward, linear, sequential ac- describe or analyze. He will spend the coming academic count of such thinking can ever hope to At the intellectual level one is not in year reading extensively in the areas catch its full complexity or emotional the desperate position of trying to of philosophy, history and philosophy evocativeness. It is simply impossible, in describe the indescribable. At this level of science, and theology, in an effort other words, to give a full account of of explanation I chose teaching because to develop an improved understanding one’s motives when they are colored by teaching seems to me one of the and relationship between scientists love and committment. supreme activities in a civilized society. and humanists. Education is for wisdom, and it seems to A shared intimacy me that the acquisition of wisdom If the truth of this observation is kept depends on two things; first, the in mind, however, and the incomplete- development in students of the special ness of one’s account of motives acknow- powers that make them human-the ledged beforehand, then even at the powers of reason, ethics, beauty, and emotional level there are some things language-and, second, the use of their that one ought to be able to say. For me, developed powers for the creation of a teaching was not simply a choice of pro- society in which the means of develop- fession, but a declaration of love. I love ing and employing those powers in learning and when I teach I learn, thus others is not only a privilege equally coming in for the double blessing of available to all, but a responsibility creating and sharing at the same time. I equally sought by all. The cultivation of love the meeting of minds that occurs powers and the development of society when I see the flush of recognition or in- are not in themselves wisdom. Wisdom sight on a student’s face as a point I itself is the ability to integrate ex- have been handling like a dead weight is perience and knowledge into some kind seized by the student’s sudden understanding, given the breath of life, and thereby made a living thing existing in both our minds. The human contact at such moments transforms the mechanical act of communication, mere mouthing of words, into a shared intimacy, words becoming logos. Such

18 activities in a civilized society” of ordered response to life that satisfies society as we would like them to be, not The teacher plays a complicated and at once the body, mind, and spirit: the as they are, and second, the power of subtle role in helping students develop ability, in short, to see life whole. But criticism, the ability to analyze, discuss, these powers. On the one hand stands there can be no sustained pursuit of or expose the values, assumptions, and wisdom, pursued by learning the arts of wisdom either by individuals or by practices that keep everyday life in mo- imagination and the skills of criticism. societies unless it is recognized that the tion. My educational background and On the other hand stand the students, grounds of such pursuit are the cultiva- the evolution of my professional in- who come to the whole educational pro- tion of human powers and the lifting of terests illustrate clearly the interest I cess with a completely unpredictable arbitrary social bonds. Education leads have in developing these two powers range of attitudes, ambitions, abilities, to wisdom, therefore, indirectly, by within myself. My interest in literature and expectations. In the middle stand cultivating human powers and social specifically and the arts generally are the teachers, who must act as culture- freedom directly. grounded in their power to cultivate the bringers, stimulators, and models. life of the feelings and the power of the Given that teachers cannot operate as Goal: Transvaluation imagination (the Romantics are par- teachers outside the boundaries of what In The Anatomy of Criticism Nor- ticularly profound about this), and my they know (their disciplines), what they throp Frye says that “the ethical goal of interest in literary theory is grounded in are allowed to teach (their academic education,” by which he is referring to its power to cultivate the critical programs), and what they are (their education’s power to form ethos, or faculties. character as moral agents), it follows character, “is transvaluation, the ability that improving any of these factors-if to look at contemporary social values only by learning to think more clearly with the detachment of one who is able about how they operate- will enhance to compare them in some degree with what teachers do. 0 the infinite vision of possibilities presented by culture. One who possesses such a standard is in a state of intellec- tual freedom. One who does not possess it is a creature of whatever social values get to him first: he has only the compul- sions of habit, indoctrination, or pre- judice.” This definition implies that the educated person possesses a whole com- plex of attributes or powers, all of which may be subsumed, first, under the power of imagination, the ability to create a social vision of the world or

19 entt

Editor's Note: The following One trait of a liberally educated political persuasion are two entirely represents an abbreviated form of the individual should be his or her interest separate concepts. At the risk of over- presentation made by Academic Dean in a variety of subjects, many of which simplifying it, let me indicate that my Lynn Youngblood on Alumni Day. have no direct relationship whatsoever definition of a liberally educated person Dr. Youngblood's presentation was to the profession in which they are is simply an individual who has been im- one of several seminars given on that engaged. So it was with some excite- bued with the love of learning, who has day by various members of the faculty. ment that I took this opportunity to bet- many interests in a variety of areas and ter inform myself about an issue which disciplines, who is able to adapt to a has long festered within me; not to imp- changing society, and above all, is an ly, however, that I have kept my individual who is tolerant of persons thoughts entirely to myself. As the whose thoughts differ radically from his academic dean at this university, I have own. Therefore a flaming liberal a natural interest in assuming and politically who will not listen or attempt assuring that not only are our present to understand the loyal opposition does students educated in the best of the not meet my definition of a liberally liberal arts tradition, but that our alum- educated person. But then neither does ni, the most visible products of this pro- an elitist who subscribes solely to the cess, represent the epitome of what it Great Books curriculum without at- means to be a liberally educated in- tempting to see its practical applications dividual. I have no doubts that a meet my definition of a liberally liberally educated person can oppose educated person. But 1 fear that the capital punishment, so I am not sug- discussion of the proper definition of a gesting that all liberally educated per- liberal education will only sidetrack us sons will have to eventually take one from the issue of a responsible position position or the other. toward capital punishment. Before I get myself into too much hot Suffice it to say that it has been a per- water, let me clarify that having a sonal concern to me that many persons liberal education and having a liberal for whom I have much respect and

20 66 Depending upon which side of this issue you take a position, there is no data to support your contention that the death penalty is or is not a deter- rent. ” whom I consider to be liberally way for the reinstatement of the death educated, are definitely opposed to penalty. capital punishment- a position which I One of the real frustrations for the have not shared. However, prior to my casual research of this question is the research on this issue, my feelings about unavailability of solid data which reflect capital punishment have been essential- on the critical issue of whether or not ly a gut feeling, if you please, one which the death penalty is a deterrent. The may not stand up to serious inquiry. early amounts of substantial research Before proceeding, allow me to make indicated that the death penalty or its a disclaimer. I am not a behavioral absence had no effect upon the murder scientist, I am not a criminologist, I rate in states where it was practiced or have no background in corrections, and not practiced. The most notable am not a philosopher. I do have a few research of this type was done in the graduate hours in political science, but mid-60s by Thorsten Sellen, who made only enough to make me dangerous, comparisons of the murder rate in and not an expert. I simply approach neighboring states, some of which had this issue as a person who is, I hope, the death penalty, others of which did liberally educated, as one who espouses not. His conclusion was that the death Christian beliefs, and as a concerned penalty, in law or in practice, did not citizen within our society. But candidly, influence the homicide death rates. more than anything else, I approach the Those who attacked Sellin’s study issue as a person who is concerned that claimed that his assumption that ad- his beliefs in support of capital punish- joining states were homogeneous in ment have not coincided with those of their population makeup was a false many individuals for whom he has a assumption. Those of us who have lived great deal of respect and admiration. in Indiana for some time, for example, could argue that there is a vast dif- Dr. Lynn R. Youngblood I It is probably appropriate at this ference within the boundaries of this point to review the history of the death state with regard to our sub-cultures, to 6.8/100,000 while executions by the penalty with regard to its status with the what we value, what motivates us, etc. state were being phased out. So you may United States Supreme Court. On June But more recent data significantly take your pick. Depending upon which 29, 1972, in the case of Furman v. clouds this issue. side of this issue you take a position, Georgia, the highest court in the land there is no data to support your conten- set aside the death penalty for the first &ending upon whose studies we tion that the death penalty is or is not a time in history. This was essentially read, the homicide rate in the country deterrent. For the abolitionists (those done because it was deemed that juries as a whole has not changed or has risen who support the constitutional elimina- had too much discretion, that they were dramatically since the effectual elimina- tion of the death penalty) it is a moral too arbitrary in their application of the tion of the death penalty. While Sellin’s issue. But it is to be hoped it is a moral death penalty. This action forced many study is the best known of those espous- issue for each of us as we deal with this states to rewrite their death penalty ing the former, King and Sendak in question. The abolitionists would claim statutes in order to assure that juries separate studies present some data to that the state morally does not have the were more consistent. The Supreme the contrary. King claims that between right to take the life of any of its citizens. Court actually acknowledged that this 1950 and 1969, while the number of ex- Those who support capital punishment, problem had been remedied when four ecutions in the country declined from 82 on the other hand, convinced that there years later (July 2, 1976) in the case of to none, the number of criminal is some deterrent value, feel that from a Greg v. Georgia they held that the death homicides increased from 7,020 to moral perspective we are protecting and penalty was not cruel or unusual and in 14,590. Sendaks study deals with a saving the lives of many unsuspecting the process upheld the death penalty shorter time period (1963-68) during persons as a result of the existence of the laws of Florida, Georgia, and Texas. which the murder rate within the death penalty statutes. I must admit This 1976 decision essentially paved the population increased from 4.5/100,000 that I personally have some difficulty

21 “ Those of us who conscientously struggle with this issue take our respective positions on the basis of what we consider to be the most human alternative.” accepting the statements of such aboli- there was a 17% likelihood of a black time I found that those of us who don’t tionists as Charles Bloch and Hugo who killed a white being given the death necessarily “favor” capital punishment Adam Bedau, who have been quoted as penalty, while at the same time there but nevertheless believe in its deterrent saying that they would still favor the was a 0% chance of a white who killed a value have no reason to apologize for abolition of the death penalty even if black being given the same! These facts our views. I would agree that the killing such abolition could be proved to in- greatly disturb me, as they should of anyone, even the most grisly of all crease the homicide rate by 1000 per- disturb all of us. I suppose that my posi- murderers, is not a pleasant scene in our cent! Former Attorney General Ramsey tion here would be that even if society. But it is much more tragic for Clark has been quoted as saying, discrimination can be proven, which the innocent to lose their lives to those “Nothing could persuade me to favor seems likely, it would be a mistake to who may have been deterred by a the death penalty- however deterrent it argue that we should abolish the system capital punishment statute! Hopefully might be.” Such logic defies this writer because it contains a defect within it all of us who are alumni of ICU believe even though each of the aforementioned that could be remedied. New York in the sacredness of human life and persons are generally recognized and State, for example, since 1930, has ex. revere life. But it is foolish for us to conceded to be distinctly humanitarian. ecuted a number of persons, but 71 % of assume that everyone in our country can The tide of public opinion in this those have been white and 23% black. or ever will assume those same values1 country has changed over the years. There is some evidence, by the way, The issue is how those persons can best Public opinion polls in the mid-60s which suggests that minorities in the be convinced of the sanctity of human showed that fewer than half of all USA decidedly favor the death penalty life. I believe that the existence of the Americans supported capital punish- in that minorities are being killed more death penalty can accomplish that for ment. Ten years later (1975) when the often. at least some. number of murders had doubled, the Frequently when this issue is argued, great majority of Americans’ sentiments the abolitionists add to their list of con- Perhaps of all the arguments had changed to a position favoring cerns the possibility that an innocent which I researched on this issue, that of capital punishment. One argument, by person might be executed. On a recent James Wilson, Shattuck Professor of the way, which is used effectively by the National Public Radio broadcast, Government at Harvard, best summed abolitionists is that while a majority of Philadelphia District Attorney Arthur up all that I read when he stated: the public may support capital punish- Shuman stated that there isn’t one legal “With regard to deterrence there is ment, if they were on a jury, they would documented case in the centuries of virtually no serious study that in- have great difficulty assuming the American jurisprudence of an innocent dicates that the death penalty is a responsibility of sentencing a person to person being executed. Even Bedau, an deterrent above and beyond life death. In fact these same individuals ardent abolitionist, has stated that this imprisonment; but none of these argue that when juries appeared to have is a weak argument for opposing capital studies is sufficiently rigorous to no choice but to find the accused guilty punishment. Both sides appear to agree prove beyond dispute the absence and subsequently impose the death that wrong part execution is a non-issue of deterrence; and it is most unlike- penalty or to find them innocent, they here. ly we shall ever have a study that have chosen the latter alternative even Those of us who conscientiously settles the matter one way or the though convinced of the accused’s guilt1 struggle with this issue take our respec- other .” tive positions on the matter on the basis Please recall that the title of this For me, without question the most of what we consider to be the more presentation was, “Can a Liberally serious allegation by the abolitionists is human alternative. There was a time in Educated Person Support Capital that the death penalty discriminates this country when stealing a shilling, Punishment?”, not “Mwt a Liberally racially, that blacks are much more blasphemy, and witchcraft were Educated Person Support Capital likely to be given the death penalty than punishable by death along with 165 Punishment?” In light of Professor whites, or that murderers of whites, other different violations. Public hang- Wilson’s statement, it should be obvious whether black or white, are much more ings were commonplace. In com- that there is considerable room for likely to receive the death penalty than parison, we have progressed con- liberally educated persons of good will murderers of blacks. Take for instance siderably in the reasons why we ad- on both sides of this issue, and as the fact that never in the history of the minister capital punishment and the liberally educated individuals, we are state of Mississippi has a white been ex- ways in which we do so. While I come obligated to continue our study of this ecuted for killing a black! Or the fact away from my research having greater issue so that we can support our views, that in Florida, between 1973 and 1977, respect for the abolitionists, at the same regardless of what they may be. 0

22 Center studies E.U.B. contributions

by Sylvia Henricks . The Advisory Board of The Center for the Study of Evangelical United Brethren met on the ICU campus April 14, 1980. The Center was established in 1978 by United Theological Seminary in Dayton, , to help preserve the distinctive contributions which the E.U.B. Church brought to the 1968 union with the Methodist Church to form the present United Methodist Church. Elmer J. O’Brien, librarian at United Seminary, is the director of the Center. The archives at United Seminary con- tain several thousand volumes of U.B., Evangelical, and E.U.B. books and periodicals. The Center encourages research using these materials, and hopes to add significant documents to the collection. Indiana Central, which shares in this tradition through its United Brethren heritage, has a modest collection of E.U.B. books, shelved in the second Or. J. Bruce Behney, left, has co-authored “The Histoy of the Evangelical United floor conference room in the Library, Brethren Church. ” Dr. Fred Hill, nght, is a member of the Advisory Board of the and in the Rare Books Room. The col- Center for the Study of Evangelical United Brethren. lection, begun in the 1950s by former librarian Edna Miller, includes histories, disciplines, annuals, and con- ference proceedings of the church, and L books by and about ministers and SLICCI:SS gathers steam laymen and women of the church. The As Project SUCCESS begins to un- of outstanding students, hosting a stu- ICU archives house the K.K. Merryman fold, more and more alumni continue to dent for a campus visit, or acting as a collection of commemorative plates pic- volunteer as participants in the program liason between ICU and their local turing E.U.B. churches (Alumni News, designed to assist the university in conti- church. Winter 1980), and 60 volumes, from nuing to enroll superior students. A group of alumni that will be more 1845 to 1922, of the Religious Tele- In a joint effort, the Office of Admis- involved with time-consuming activities scope. sions and Alumni Relations are utilizing of recruitment are the newly founded At the Center’s April meeting Dr. the talents and involvement of alumni Alumni Admission Ambassadors. These Fred Hill, ICU history professor and a to refer prospective students from their Ambassadors will be contacting pro- member of the Advisory Board, communities. These alumni have spective students, assisting at informa- presented a copy of The Histoy of the volunteered through a “SUCCESS Par- tior. sessions, and hosting summer send- Evangelical United Brethren Church, ticipation Card’ sent to all ICU alumni off parties for incoming freshmen published in December 1979 by Ab- in May by the Alumni Association. students. ingdon Press, to Krannert Memorial Several of these dedicated alumni are To find out how you can become in- Library. He is shown with Dr. J. Bruce serving the university in their areas by volved in Project SUCCESS, contact the Behney, professor emeritus of United submitting names of prospective Office of Admissions or Alumni Rela- Seminary, who co-authored the book students, watching newspapers for news tions. 0 with Paul H. Eller.

23 Sports

1979-80 Award Winners Named Herman Bueno- Winner Brian Ehrsam Kelso Reid Mental Attitude Award Baseball’s Most Valuable

Herman Bueno, cross country and Golf - Most Valuable, Dave Vlasic. track star from Southport, has been Tennis - Most Valuable, Mark named recipient of the 1979-80 Kelso Fellmeth. Mental Attitude, Mike Reid Mental Attitude award for all Donovan. sports at Indiana Central University. Wrestling - Most Valuable, Tony Three other all-sport awards and the Starks. Mental Attitude, Dan Lut- winter and spring awards were an- gring. nounced by athletic director Bill Bright. Baseball - Most Valuable, Brian Bueno, winner of the Little State and Ehrsam. Mental Attitude, Scott Heartland Collegiate Conference cross Lockhart. country meets as well as many invita- Softball - Most Valuable, Julie tionals, and the No.1 finisher in Herdman. Mental Attitude, Julie numerous track events, is a senior. Hackman. The other all-sports award winners: Men’s Track - Most Valuable, Her- Dr. Robert M. Brooker Outstanding man Bueno. Mental Attitude, Herman Athlete Award-Dennis Young, a junior Bueno. from Southport, football and track. Women’s Track - Most Valuable, Parker P. Jordan Academic Achieve- Maureen Gallagher. Mental Attitude, ment Award-Frank Vormohr, a junior Mary Peoni. from Portland, football. Men’s Basketball - Most Valuable, Indiana Central Alumni Randy Mutschler. Mental Attitude, Businessmen’s Award- Karla Springer, Jim Wernke. a senior from Kokomo, track. Women’s Basketball - Most Valuable, Also announced were winners of Kim Epler. Mental Attitude, Sue awards in nine winter and spring sports: Workman.

24 Keller to set pace for Greyhounds

Billy Keller, the assistant coach at Purdue University, has been named the new head basketball coach at Indiana Central. Keller, a former Indiana Pacer in the old ABA, and a great at Purdue during the late 60s, returns to make his home in Indianapolis where he played prep ball at Indianapolis Washington. He was named Indiana’s “Mr. Basket- ball” leading the 1965 Washington Con- tinental basketball team to its first state championship. Keller went on to be known as “a scrappy play-making guard’ at Purdue where he was a starter on the 1969 Purdue team that won the Big Ten Championship and was a finalist in the NCAA Tournament. Keller, a 1969 All-American, still ranks in Purdue’s top twenty leading all- time scorers with a career record of 1056 No, Or. Sease didn’t have to lasso Billy. He’s jut helping the new Hound put on his points (14.0 average in 75 games). He is ICU tie. also Purdue’s all-time leading career free throw shooter at .859 (262 of 305), a tireless worker and is certainly one of hoped that he would remain as my a trait he carried to the pro ranks by the most popular coaches in Indiana. number one assistant. But it’s an oppor- winning the ABA free throw champion- He’ll get the job done.” tunity for him to get a head job and I ship in 1973. Keller, while playing for the Indiana know that he’ll do well. He’s been super Upon leaving Purdue, he was the first Pacers, played on three championship the few weeks that we’ve worked recipient of the coveted James Naismith teams (1970, ‘72, ’73) in his seven pro- together and we couldn’t have signed Award for excellence in players “under fessional seasons. the players we have without Billy’s hard six feet tall.” After retiring from pro basketball, work. He’s a credit to Purdue and to Purdue’s Director of Intercollegiate Keller has coached a pro team in the In- coaching. I wish him all the luck in the

Athletics says of Keller, “I’m certain that dianapolis area, been involved with world. ” time and space would not permit me to many basketball clinics for young peo- The Indiana Central campus is swell- say everything about Billy Keller that ple, and has run the Billy Keller Basket- ing with pride in the naming of Keller as I’d like to say. He’s a winner at ball Camp. He spent one year at its seventh basketball coach in the everything he does. Billy will make a Brebeuf Preparatory School as girls’ seventy-five year history of the universi- successful head coach. He was a big basketball coach. ty. At a press conference on Tuesday, reason for our success this past season. The newly named head basketball May 13, President Gene Sease and the And he is partially responsible for the coach at Purdue, Gene Keady, says, “I Indiana Central faculty and staff for- recruiting class that we’ll have coming was impressed with Billy Keller the first mally announced Keller’s appointment to Purdue next fall. He has proven to be day that I met him. Selfishly, I had and welcomed him to the ICU family.

25 Higher gift annuity rates now available

Indiana Central University may now offer new higher annuity rates to donors as a result of the Conference on Gift An- nuities held in Kansas City on the 7th and 8th of May. Indiana Central is a member of the Committee on Gift An- nuities which sponsored the Conference. Who would you choose? The Committee functions to coordinate Thesefour ladies, Terri Deal, Cathi Dempster, Kathy Hamill, and Brigette McClain, annuity rates paid to donors by member all vied for the title of Miss ICU. Ifyou picked Kathy Hamill, you picket the winner. If institutions. you chose one of the others, you should be readily forgiven. It wasn’t easy for the New higher rates were approved at judges, either. the Conference. Although some institu- tions will offer higher rates in an at- I II tempt to outbid those who belong to the I II Committee on Gift Annuities, the rates I I, 11 II set at the Conference are recommended Keep those cards and letters as those which may ethically be offered, I I I )d,, are fair to the donors, and are economically feasible for the charitable comin’ ! institutions. Drop a line to the Alumni News, and keep your For more information about the new classmates informed about weddings, births, deaths, annuity rates, and how charitable gift promotions, career changes, hobbies, new homes, annuities can allow you to make a and any other news you’d like to share. You enjoy charitable gift and receive a lifetime in- reading about your classmates; give them a chance to come (a major part of which is tax free) contact the Office of Development. The read about you. address is Office of Development, In- Also, please respond to issues raised in the Alumni diana Central University, 1400 East News for inclusion in a Letters section. Make the Hanna Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana News a forum for 2-way communication! 46227. You may also call (317) 788-3201. -Dan Nicoson 0

26 Getting Personal O&

church. Her husband, Leslie, is minister when I didn’t show up the first week, he of the Springfield U.M.C., in Jackson- came up and talked to my parents. By Keeping ville, Florida. the time I got home that day, my bags were packed and I ended up riding back ’36 to Indiana Central with Good.” In Touch **After a 35-year pastorate in Kokomo, Indiana, Dwight L. Patterson and **Dyson W. Cox was awarded an M.A. wife, Esther (Fry), retired to their home in management at Claremont Graduate at Winona Lake last September. A School on May 17. It is his fifth earned ’20 month later they were on the large degree, including a Ph.D. from the **Roy H. Turley has published 300 jungle base of the Wycliffe Bible same school, in Claremont, California. copies of an 84-page book, “Never Translators, 135 miles east of Quito, **TheIndianapolis News featured Gor- Wanting Any Good Thing.” The book Ecuador, pastoring about 25 missionary don Geiger upon his retirement in May. is the story of Roy’s life, written for his families. From this base, accessible only Gordon, principal of the Burkhart children, grandchildren, and friends, so by plane or river canoe, six Indian tribes Elementary School in Perry Township, that they may know what life was like in were served. They so much enjoyed based his job on love for the kids, with the early 1900s and across the years. their four-month stay at the location, 20 excellent results. The article says “Most ’24 miles south of the equator on the head- of Burkhart’s 420 students own waters of the Amazon, that they have T-shirts-silkscreened by the art in- **Bertha (Palmer) Keesecker, at 90 accepted an invitation to return for four structor- that display a heart-encircled years of age, is again a coed. She tells us months next September. Dwight says it’s Geiger caricature with the caption, ‘I her grandnephew persuaded her to the bird sanctuary of the world and a love Mr. Geiger.”’ Gordon says, “I real- enroll in the Community College in garden of Eden. ly owe a lot to Indiana Central,” as the Ambler, Pennsylvania, where he also at- ’37 school offered him a “go-now-pay-later’’ tends. They are both taking a course in loan, without which he wouldn’t have ceramics, and she modestly reports that **LeGerald Burrus retired from the ministry on May 31 of this year. “God gone to college. “He is doing exceedingly well - I, not so good.” has blessed Janice and me, and our six children, in allowing us the privilege of ’40 ’28 preaching the Grace of Christ for the **The American Bibliographical Center and Clio Press have awarded the **The Fall, 1979 Pledge Class of Alpha past 40 years.” Half of that time has Phi Omega was dedicated by the Na- been spent in the U.S. Navy Chaplain- ABC-Clio Award of Merit to Dwight L. Smith in San Francisco last April. ABC- tional Board of Directors to HowardR. cy, and half in the United Brethren, Clio’s president said, in presenting the Patton, Sectional Chairman Emeritus Methodist, and United Methodist award, “Your life bears witness that of New Jersey, in honor of his Churches. They plan to do some travel- scholarship, bibliographical commit- distinguished history of service to APO. ing, photography, shell collecting, ment, inspired teaching, and concern He had been associated with the Boy woodworking, gardening, fishing, and for students are compatible.” Scouts from 1930 to 1969, when he golfing, as well as some volunteer work retired. in a Ministry to the Inactive Church Members. ’48 ’34 **The South Bend Tribune recently **Dr. Robert E. McBride has been **Harry J. Harman, Indianapolis at- featured an article about John E. named the nineteenth president of torney, became Potentate of Murat Byers, recently retired as principal in Simpson College in Iowa. Dr. McBride, Temple on January 21. He had been ap- the South Bend Community Schools. who from 1954 to 1966 alternately pointed Outer Guard in 1971, and had The story relates how John’s late- taught philosophy, served as dean of served continuously in various commit- blooming athletic ability got him into students, and helped plan and then tee capacities while in line, in addition college and then to a successful career in head the graduate division at Indiana to his extensive involvement in the In- the South Bend School System. Accor- Central, had been academic dean and dianapolis community. ding to the article, “Despite being then vice president for academic affairs **Grace (Adams) Shirley is working on somewhat gawky, Indiana Central at Albright College until the spring of producing a cloth booklet for children coach Harry Good took an interest in 1979. He has also held interim four to six years of age, entitled “My him. ‘He talked to me that summer pastorates in Indianapolis and Penn- Church.” She is also involved in Church (1933) and I think he was convinced sylvania, and has served on the church’s Women United, as well as her local that I was going to enroll in the fall. But Commission on Higher Education for

27 the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference, department, has, along with her D.C. The Henrys have a daughter, as consultant to the Office of Higher parents, opened a shop called “Odds Brenna, 5 years old. Education for the U.M.C., and as a and Eads,” selling “experienced’ books, member of various task forces. Dr. art glass, and collectibles. However, ’73 McBride has maintained many com- Ellen says of greatest importance is her **Kermit Berg exhibited his art in munity and professional memberships. single parent adoption of a nine-year- April at the Theatre Building Gallery at In addition to his earned doctorate from old daughter, Darla Elizabeth, in Chicago. Kermit’s loft studio is located the University of Chicago, ICU awarded September. She writes, “She’s the best in downtown Chicago, and his him an honorary doctor of letters thing to happen to me-ever . . . A real BERGWORKS materials are now degree. He and his wife, Luella, have dream come true . . . This experience represented in the Merchandise Mart. three children: Judith Kaye, Ronald has had a greater effect on my life than Some recent works of art have been pro- Wesley, and Steven Edward. any other single event. Yes-it’s great. duced under a grant from the Illinois No-it wasn’t easy. Yes-it was worth Arts Council. the wait. Yes-it interferes with ’49 **Ellen E. Otto has taken a position teaching and the business. More info on with Silver King Mines, Inc., in Edge- **Sylvia (Fitzgerald) Wepking proudly request.” mont, South Dakota, as an engineering announces that daughter Amy is in **Barbara (Huttsell) Morris, director geologist dealing with uranium mining West Berlin on a scholarship from of public relations for Methodist and milling. Georgia Tech, where she is a Evangelical Hospital in Louisville, Ken- **Douglas M. Seminick, head football mechanical engineering student, and a tucky, has a first place “Louie” in the coach at Fairdale High School in member of Who’s Who in American seventh annual Louisville Creative Louisville for the past two years, is join- Colleges and Universities. Competition. The award was presented ing the University of Louisville staff as for a series of newsletters for expectant the strength and conditioning coach ’62 parents in the category of external and also as coach of the kickers and publications. **Gloria (King) Rix of Winston- punters. He says it’s really a graduate Salem, North Carolina, is teaching art assistantship, but doesn’t plan to return ’7 1 I and continuing to paint and exhibit in to Fairdale, from which he has taken a the area. **David L. Henry became a founding leave of absence. He will work on his master’s degree at U. of L. ’65 partner in the firm of McNaughton & Henry, Attorneys at Law, in November ’75 **James L. Hull had a one-man show of 1978, with offices in Angola and Fre- at The Gallery in Bloomington, In- mont. Last October, the firm expanded * *Terri Rae Chattin has graduated diana, in March. Jim also won the Cer- to four attorneys, and a third office in with a master of divinity degree from tificate of Excellence Award and his the county is now planned. In Wesley Theological Seminary. She “Casey at the Bat” illustrations were December, 1978, Dave was appointed serves as assistant pastor of the Brooklyn selected for their exhibition. by Governor Bowen to the post of Heights United Methodist Church in Steuben County Prosecutor for a Tour- Baltimore, Maryland. ’70 year term beginning January 1, 1979. ’76 Susan (Bunge) Henry has been **Donald A. Cravens has joined Af- substitute teaching and is working on **Carrie S. Reinking is teaching filiated Agencies, Inc., an Indianapolis her master’s degree at 1.U.-Purdue in elementary school at the American independent insurance agency. He was Ft. Wayne. Both are active in the School of Kuwait, in Hawalli on the previously a senior underwriter with Angola United Methodist Church, and Arabian Gulf. Last summer she Aetna Casualty & Surety Company for serve as counselors of the Senior High backpacked through Europe, and this four years. Fellowship. Last spring they served as summer will be doing graduate work in **E. Ellen Eads, who has completed counselors for a North Conference trip Great Britain. In late August, she will her tenth year of teaching at Arsenal to New York City, and this year will visit the U.S. before returning to teach Technical High School in the English travel as counselors to Washington, for a third year in the Middle East.

28 '77 '76

**Elizabeth (Heininger) Rasmussen **Craig A. DeMyer and wife, Libby, **Timothy J. and Terri (Stucker) has a teaching position at Indianapolis announce the birth of their daughter, Coats '78 have a brand new son: Robert Public Schools #2 and #61 in elementary Alissa Jane, on January 8, 1980. She Thomas Coats, born on May 8, 1980. music. Tim has graduated from United weighed 8 lbs. 7 oz. They are residing in He weighed 10 lbs 8 oz. at birth. The Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio. Walkerton, Indiana. Coats' are living in Cincinnati. **Rick J. Haas and wife, Becky, an- **Rex Allen and Vicky (Bailey) Mad- nounce the arrival of Kambria Jo, born dy announce the birth of a son, Craig March 25, 1980. Kambria Jo weighed 9 Allen, born January 19, 1980. lbs. 4 oz., and joins brother Darren, age **A daughter, Jaine Lynn, was born to 5. Stephen and Rebecca Rasmussen on **Sandra (Bowser) Huffman and Easter Sunday morning of this year. Michael had a new arrival last summer: Karen Lynn, born on July 17, 1979. The '77 I Births Huffmans live in Honolulu. **Jeffrey Charles Thorpe was born on **Dennis E. Miller and wife, Cathy '65 November 22, 1979, to Cheryl (Peter- (Thomas), announce the birth of their son and Jeffrey Edward Thorpe. son on February 26, 1980. Joshua Isaac **On August 23, 1979, Sallie Jeane Par- Miller weighed 7 lbs. 11 oz., and was **Gary D. Judy and his wife, Maryann 3/4 rott was born to parents Ron and Karen 20% inches long. (Mastandrea) '74, are proud to an- (Kleinknight) Parrott. Her proud nounce the birth of their first child, sister and brother are Kristi Noel, age 6, Garry Christopher, born on March 17, and Shane Andrew, age 4. 1980. Garry weighed 8 lbs. 9 oz. and '66 was 20% inches long. The Judy family is **Pat Wheeler Haehl and husband, now residing in Blue Point, Long Brian, have a new baby boy, Ryan **Stephen Maple and his wife, Sarah Island, New York. Wheeler Haehl, born March 31, 1980. (Hiatt) Maple '69, are pleased to tell us He weighed 6 lbs. at birth. of the arrival of Ethan Lloyd on '75 February 19, 1980. He weighed 9 lbs. 8 oz . **Gerald "Jerry" Allgood and his wife, Alicia, proudly announce the arrival of '67 their daughter, Alicia Marie, born Fri- day, April 4, 1980. Alicia Marie weigh- **John and Rebecca (Horen) ed 9 lbs. 6% oz., and was 21 inches Ransburg '68 announce the birth of Ian long. I Weddings Bertram, who arrived on March 22, **Amanda Marie Everhart was born to weighing 7 lbs. 3 oz. Douglas and Nancy (Schell) Everhart on March 20, 1980, in Grants, New **On October 6, 1979, Geneva '72 Mexico, where Doug is employed by Shewmaker was married to Carl Anaconda Company. **Bree Elise Emsweller was born to Nonweiler. They are currently living in Laona (Coddington) Emsweller and **David Lee Ivory and Janis have Booneville, Indiana. her husband, Gary, on April 11, 1980. another addition to the family: Danielle She joins brother Drew Evan, who is two Marie, born November 13, 1979, '74 this year. The Emswellers live in Terre weighing 9 lbs. 11 oz. Dave has been Haute, where Gary is youth agent for promoted to Sales Manager for A.B. **John W. Tremain and Beth Elaine Vigo County. Dick in Peoria, Illinois. Hunt were married on March 22, 1980,

29 in Irvington United Methodist Church. band and wife. Christina is working as a Mr. Tremain is the brother of Bob Tre- registered nurse. central bereaved main, the baseball coach at ICU. **Teresa Ann Johnson and Charles Bruce Huels were married on May 4, at loss of '75 1980 in Southport United Methodist Church. Theresa is employed by St. **On March 8, 1980 Anne Hathaway Francis Hospital in the Intensive Care Mrs. Hathaway married Donald J. Hennenfent. Don is a Unit. market analyst for Eli Lilly- Agricul- The university community was sad- tural Chemical Division. Anne is work- dened on the seventh of April by the ing in pediatrics and finishing a master's death of Mrs. Marilyn G. Hathaway. degree in nursing at Indiana University. Mrs. Hathaway was the secretary in the The couple will be residing in Dallas, ICU development office and had been Texas. an employee of the university for sixteen '76 years. She was 52 years of age. Among her many duties, Mrs. **Holy Name Catholic Church at Beech Hathaway processed all contributions to Grove was the setting for the April 27, Indiana Central, helped many donors 1980 wedding of Donna Jean Reuter '23 claim matching gifts from employers, and Bruce Paul Graham. and managed daily processing for pro- **The Alumni News has received word grams such as the ICAP's library pro- '77 of the death of Mrs. Dorothy Fields 1 ject . **Dean Parham was married Brown in December, 1979. December 29, 1979 to Linda Perrett of Mrs. Hathaway became ill over the I '34 Christmas holidays and was hospitalized Pontiac, Michigan. On May 9, 1980, he 1 will receive his master's degree in *James Ferrier '70 has informed us of on the second of January with what was religious education from Grand Rapids the death of his mother Mary Guthrie first believed to be pneumonia. She died Baptist Bible Seminary. He is working Ferrier on February 3, 1980. a little over three months later from the as director of Christian Education at the effects of cancer. Riverdale Baptist Church in Flint, '35 Mrs. Hathaway was a member of the Michigan. **Sylvia Hardesty Parks passed away Christ Church Episcopal Cathedral and suddenly in early February in Braden- was formerly a member and Sunday **Karen L. Willson became the bride ton, Florida. Rev. Parks was one of the school teacher at the University Heights of Bradley Ray Swick on May 4, 1980 in first women ministers of the United United Methodist Church. She was also Fishers, Indiana. Mr. Swick is a Brethren Church. a member and past president of the graduate of Ball State University. Manual High School PTA. '78 '37 A former student of Southwestern **Julia Velosia Holloway was married **On April 29, 1980 the Alumni News College in Kansas and Valparaiso on May 4 to Charles Franklin Hud- received word of the death of John University, Mrs. Hathaway was further- dleston 11. The bride, a member of the Chambers. Rev. Chambers was semi- ing her studies at Indiana Central. She Alumni Board of Directors, is a retired and serving part-time a con- is survived by four children, all of whom graduate of St. Francis School of gregation in Montpelier, Indiana. He have attended Indiana Central. Medical Technology. Her husband is an was the brother of Dr. Marshall Survivors are daughters Mrs. Don alumnus of General Motors Institute Chambers, Director of Church Rela- (Anne) Hennenfent and Linda, and is working on a master's degree tions at Indiana Central University. Hathaway; sons Laurence and David: from I.U. -P.U.-I. parents The Reverend and Mrs. '67 Laurence Green: sister Mrs. Bruce '79 **Thomas M. Crump died on April 26, Pearson. Memorial contributions may **On May 4, 1980 Christina Semenick 1980 in Methodist Hospital in In- be sent to the Office of Development at and William Dirk Bentley became hus- dianapolis. Indiana Central University. 0

30 Are there alumni in your area?

Get together !

STATE TOTAL STATE TOTAL Plan a meeting of ICU alumni living ALABAMA 14 NEBRASKA 9 in your area! The map indicates the ALASKA 4 NEVADA 4 ARIZONA 66 NEW HAMPSHIRE 2 concentration of IC alumni living in ARKANSAS 6 NEW JERSEY 32 CALIFORNIA 208 NEW MEXICO 47 each state. If you could arrange a din- COLORADO 63 NEW YORK 78 CONNECTICUT 12 NORTH CAROLINA 29 ner, coffee, or tea in cooperation with DELAWARE 3 NORTH DAKOTA 1 alumni near you, the alumni office is DISTRICT OFCOLUMBIA 11 OHIO 241 FLORIDA 205 OKLAHOMA 15 available to send letters of invitation to GEORGIA 42 OREGON 12 HAWAII 11 PENNSYLVANIA 61 those in your region. Reservations could IDAHO 3 RHODE ISLAND 2 be arranged in the mailed announce- ILLINOIS 360 SOUTH CAROLINA 19 INDIANA 6310 SOUTH DAKOTA 5 ment. For a delightful time, be a host or IOWA 33 TENNESSEE 28 KANSAS 15 TEXAS 65 hostess for an ICU alumni area club KENTUCKY 52 UTAH 9 1 a LOUISIANA 7 VERMONT I meeting! And remember, represen- MAINE 4 VIRGINIA 41 tative of the ICU alumni office would MARYLAND 24 WASHINGTON 20 MASSACHUSETTS 6 WESTVIRGINIA 6 also be glad to attend! MICHIGAN 107 WISCONSIN 58 MINNESOTA 43 WYOMING 7 George Jacobs, Chairman MISSISSIPPI IO PUERTO RICO.VIRGIN ISLANDS 1 MISSOURI so PACIFIC ISLANDS 0 Area Clubs Committee MONTANA 8 FOREIGN 43

31 The 1st Annual Central Cyclerama

1. 2.

3.

4.

May is Race Month in Indy: the proof is in the pictures, above, of the 1st An- nual Central Cyclerama. 1. The winners of the race around the “horseshoe” (Hanna Avenue was blocked off) go for a ride in President Sease’s pace car, which is from that other race. The winners are Marc Adams, Phil Martin, Dean Rich, and Bob Albright. 2. A biker gets the checkered flag. 3. A racer bikes by in a blur. 4. This team, sponsored by McDonald’s, does its best to simulate the Golden Arches. 5. Tim Davis and Dan Sease congratulate each other after the race.

5.