Although General Hershey's influence may have caused the number of Hanover Indians at Stanford to be somewhat smaller than last year, the numerical cut has failed to dampen the quality of participation at all, with club activities taking place on several fronts.
Coached and quarterbacked by Allan("It's my ball") Anderson '66, the Big Green entry in Stanford's intramural league continually left onlookers gasping with such innovations as the Blind-I formation and the Survival Scramble. Utilizing favorite receivers Dan Morgan '65 and Noel Augustyn '68, stinging defeats were also inflicted on local contingents of Princeton and Yale alumni, while Harvard evaded the challenge by failing to locate sufficient numbers of physically fit competitors.
Enrollment work has been proceeding at a brisk pace in recent weeks under the coordination of Steve Lanfer '66, especially in the recruitment of minority students, where Steve and Bill Pratt '60 have received assistance from Jim Simmons, former director of the Independent Schools Talent Search Program at Dartmouth and now at Stanford as Assistant Provost for inter-group relations.
Highlights of the fall were Dartmouth Night, spent in San Francisco with the Northern California club, and the hosting of Professor Henry Terrie, chairman of the College's English Department. Professor Terrie's news of Dartmouth and its directions of change were of great interest to those of us for whom higher education is still a central part of our lives.
Secretary, 636 Lomita Court Stanford, Calif. 94305