.
1973 SOUTHERN CAMPUS
.
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THE 1973
UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA
at
LOS ANGELES
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Let all of us foce the facts. The yeorbook, that one time valuable instrument of memories is on its woy to its own grove memory.
It is true that the value of the yeorbook is ot its lowest point at the time of its purchase. But the longer it is with you the more value it has. These days, very few people are willing to experience the long-term joy that a yearbook is capable of giving.
/ wos looking at the 1938 Southern Campus the other day and it was a highly unusual and amusing experience. When you look at a yearbook that old, you seem to acquire a flavor of the era, even though it was before your time. You can see how the rapidly changing modes of dress looked at that juncture. You can see how minute the campus was in comparison with today's sprawling university. You can see when the word apathy was hardly used because it couldn't be properly applied to any section of the campus. If you were interested in sports you could look up players that you used to read about and ask yourself where have they gone. And if you were going to school in 1938 you would have the opportunity to see how you looked (provided of course that you were in the book). As the old cliche goes: "you've come a long way, baby."
This yeor as in years post, the yearbook staff is en- deavoring to bring to all in- terested parties a photographic and journalistic chronicle of the 1972-73 school year. You may even want to look at it in this light. For many people, the yearbook is the only way to recall all those events and all those good times that you never par- ticipated in.
Didn't your mother ever tell you that you were supposed to have fun in college because you were going to have to support yourself and all other hanger's on for the rest of your life?
People always seem to be complaining about being known only as a series of letters and numbers. Of course these people would be the first to tell you of their fate as well as who they really are. A camera was provided with remote control for self- portraits and people were given the opportunity to describe their own uniqueness in words and photographs.
'Pinocchio who?"
"Vulnerable and I miss my mommy and daddy."
' U
G,
"I eat nothing but chocolate yogurt.
'Wanna coofeie?'
"Show me the way to the nearest lobotomy. "
'J see myself as a huge blob of potential.
"A man of taste, discrimination, and discernment. The feind of man who reads PLAYBOY."
"A pickle in every chicken and a 2$ corned beef in every pot."
"I see myself as a kindergartener who can't find the bathroom."
"Now that we're divorced 7 miss our Friday nite fights."
"I'm a student of the arts. Watch out for mv smile.'
"Eye to you, bub."
'We see ourselves as the campus couple."
"Honesty, integrity, and a whole lot of bullshit."
"I'm a half Negro-Mexican with black curly hair. I wear an earring in my left ear. I have a very rotten personality and I love music. But even though that's what's wrong with me, I'm as cool as hell."
'Three friends questioning their own reality.
"Charming, intellectually brilliant, all personality, sensitive, and black is beautiful baby."
"J have no choice. I'm a ten thumbed pastie. "
'We are the committee for the abolition of committees."
"A Pragerism."
"J'ma member of the better half— Right on?"
V- *
-
"This is what happens when the sky opens and 3,000 pounds of lime jello falls."
"I have put aside my world travels to complete my major here. I am also studying the ladies."
"I'm a college student con- cerned with the utility of discipline and other bullshit. "
'Jaded blue!"
"I didn't come to school just to eat lunch."
"One out of 29,651 students is me. The odds are bad, but I think it's worth it despite. "
"Heavy is as heavy does . . . therefore I am the heaviest of them all. I weigh therefore I am."
"Monsters.
"I am a unicorn at the edge of the woods. Do you see me, or do you just think you do? Does it matter?" 1 1
"7 am a combination of a half-assed student, yogi, dancer, businessman, and I am 95 per cent vegetarian. "
•
"The answer to a girl' dream."
"A sudden tree or standing stone, that none have seen but I alone."
"I love my bike.
"Help! My soul has been captured by this evil machine of the University."
'I'm Danny, fly me to anywhere you damn please.
"lam sly, slick, and wicked, and crazy as a mother .
"Looks are deceiving. I'm an erotic beast.'
"It's a nice day on the UCLA campus. No smog. Barometer readings down."
13
'Ace photographer with ripod. "
14
"I'm an animal husbandry graduate looking for an animal husband."
"Only as long as we can laugh at ourselves are we nobody else."
'Forever on a diet."
'I'm extra vivaristtc."
"What, me worry? After all those funky parking tickets, aspirins from Student Health, tear gas from spring, upset stomachs from the Terrace Room, bad grades and incompletes, gee, I guess UCLA can be fun."
"Why did the turfeey cross the road? ... He thought he was a chtcteen."
"Some have described me as forward, some say I'm back- ward; my friends think of me as generous, my enemies probably try hard not to thinfe of me at all."
"Cool breeze."
"lama new student on campus but 7 assure you you're going to hear from me. I may be your next president."
15
"Basically, an intelligent but sel/-crttical optimist suffering from delusions of grandeur."
'I'm out to lunch.
"I wake up on many a Saturday morning not knowing where I am or what I did the night before. "
"How do 7 sec myself? Most of the time by looking at my reflection — otherwise there's not too much there."
"I find myself living happily in mental fantasy since the realization of practical aspirations is necessarily bound to disappointment. The entertainment of one day's dream is pinned and flattened by one analytic introspection. "
"Rally committee is a blast.'
"One of the most important movements of our time, and one to which 7 dedicate myself, is that of women's liberation."
"Right now / feel used, abused, and tossed aside."
Awhile back, the Southern Campus office received a small white envelope slipped under the door. The message inside was cryptic but simple. It instructed us to answer the phone at 4:38 pm. The staff was mystified but when the phone rang at that time the editor answered the phone to a handkerchief laden, stuffy-nosed voice. With curt poiliteness the voice instructed us to include a tribute to the great LaFong. After finding out about LaFong and his accomplishments we consented to include this tribute. In addition, the here-to-fore anonymous LaFong softens up a bit as, in his own words, he lets us verbally peek at some of his closely guarded secrets.
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UCLA vs Citadel, in concert
1965
1966
1967
IS&to
1969
So Long, LaFong
The forty-nine cent Sanford Sharpie that has been providing cartoons for the Daily Bruin since 1965 is dry. The show is over, the monkey is dead.
I was an enigma. Even though I had more sports cartoons reproduced than anyone in the history of the school paper less than a dozen folks knew my true identity. For several reasons I signed my drawings with the name of a "chump" mentioned but never seen in the 1934 W.C. Fields movie It's a Gift: LaFong, Carl LaFong. Primarily, I did not want a certain portion of the faculty to know that I was doodling for the Bruin.
My first cartoons were labored. Each was drawn differently. And each one took me all night to complete. I wanted every line and gesture to be perfect. Often I would write the same caption 30 or more times before I pasted down the one I thought was printed best. My Bruin first looked like a grizzly, then Snoopy, Pooh, Mickey Mouse, and eventually the Hathaway shirt man. I gave him his eye-patch on October 22, 1966. I figured my drawings would be very forgettable if I didn't give my bear a gimmick, or trademark. A year or two earlier Sally
i Brown of the Peanuts strip had sported an eye- patch to clear up emblyopia. Snoopy naturally .swiped the patch and wore it for several days
1973
masquerading as a pirate. Charles Schulz soon abandoned the patch, when Sally's vision improved, so I seized it. Consequently, though my drawing style was different each year, the patch remained the same, and it always identified a LaFong cartoon.
Cartoons for Friday's paper were always due on Wednesday. Every Tuesday night I sat with a stack of paper and watched sweat pop out of my skin while I went through the stack making unusable drawings. Eventually I became satisfied with the appearance of the Bruin and settled down to quicker applications of my wit. My drawings were always immaculate and well composed but often the sports editor treated them like Sweeny the butcher. They hacked them and rearranged them and reversed them.
LaFong is finished. After ten years of drawing, I may have seen my last printed cartoon. Two years before I entered UCLA I was the Conestoga cartoonist at Greenhills (Ohio) High School. In 1965 I won the Dayton Daily News trophy for Ohio High School Cartoon of the Year. For 8 years at UCLA tens of thousands of folks have followed my little Bruin, perhaps more than will ever see my nudes and landscapes and field hares. I want to earn a living with my drawings because I love to draw.
But LaFong is gone
22
Saul Roe, Gary Leonard, Dennis Fried, Phil Neel, Sue Sparling, Mark Rubin, Terry Col v in
OUT ON ASSIGNMENT:
Glen Winans, Margaret Audet, John Schroeder Saul Shapiro, Clark Conard, Joyce Finzi, Leigh Jellison, Heather Harris, Faren Bachelis, Rufus Baker, Steve Brower, Ed Goto, Susie Hatago, Henry Neugass, Steve Rubin, Dave Schiering, Paul Serrano, Ann Solomon, Jim Stebinger, Craig Andrews, Ed Burgart, Marc Dellins, Mike Kagen, Jamie Krug, Charlie Mathews, Scott Brock, Mason Buck, Debbie Gobble, Joan Weinstein, Diane Ainsworth, Leslie Tedrow, Charles Solomon, Craig Smith, Roes Zoes-Robinson, Administrative Assistant.
John Sandbrook, Ken Peterson,. Dave Cislowski, Steve Ainsworth, Cassy Mahoney Cohen, Irwin Bornstein
Jeff Weber, Shelley Presser, Nina A. Pinsky (Technical Advisor), Tom Humphreys, Dave Peden, Ken Ward, Ron Rawson
Dave McNary, Kenn Guernsey, Gary Clark
23
Greg Johnson Glen Winams Paul Callahan Jack Lewis
Middle: Cathy Worthington |
Bottom :
Muffet Schwartz
Cynthia
McCollister Nancy
Van Home Nancie
Naylor
Top:
Dorothy Wood
Nancy Hatakeyama
Mari Seki
Iris Yoneda
Jean Myose Front:
Barbara Beezy
Susan Harada
Pam Clark
Beverly Stoll
24
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CAMPUS STUDIO
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Left to Right: Terry O'Donnell Norman Schindler Karen Birkenes Waly Vilenica Stan Troutman
student legislative Council
l i >« •••••••••'••
TOP ROW FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
Wilo Nunez - - Community Service Commissioner, Rick Tuttle - - Administration Representative, Steve Halpern — Student Body President, Chip Morrow — Alumni Representative, Bob Holt — FinancialSupports Commissioner, Jim Powlesland — Finance Committee Chairman, Don Findley — Executive Director, ASUCLA.
BOTTOM ROW:
Lita Betita — Administrative Assistant to the President, Heidi Hilb — Student Educational
Policy Commissioner, Kathy Kerr — Cultural Events Commissioner, Bob Losey — Campus
Events Commissioner, Sam Okimoto — Student Welfare Commissioner, Esther Valadez -
national Students Association Representative, Suz Rosen — Student Facilities Com-
missioner.
MEMBERS ABSENT:
Ross Arbiter — Administrative Vice-President, Greet Zohar — Administrative Vice- President, Loren Lewis — General Representative, Stu Needman — General Represen- tative, Carol Felton — General Representative, Murray Leaf — Faculty Representative.
Programming
T. Row L-R
Donald Leutz, Tom Pinto, Jerry Avery, Jeff Werthan, Jack
Hamann, Larry Balmagia, Mike Wagner, Doug Drew. Middle Row L-R Tom Germany, Bob Rogers, Evan Wright, Doug Easton,
Rick Jones, Howard Sisko, Dave Dreyfuss, Mike Stern. Bottom Row L-R Scott Bowhay, Brian Lane, Larry Miles, Eric Doctorow,
Steve Stern.
Management:
Donald Leutz — General Manager, Sylvia Borough —
Traffic Secretary, Mike Wagner — Program Director,
Bob Rogers — Music Director.
Not Pictured Don Zimring — News Director
News:
T. Row L-R
Dave Campbell, Jeff Werthan, Jack Hamann, Wayne
Friedman, Jerry Sink, Rob Krimsky, Rick Jones. Bottom Row L-R Evan Wright, Jerry Avery, Laurie Rittenberg, Sheri Perlin,
Denise Kurtzman, Bob Andrati.
COMMUNICATIONS BOARD
Left to Right: Arnold Peyser (Alumni), Chairman Scott Shurian (Journalist), Carol Schneiderman, Harry E. Morris (Publications Manager), Mary Jane Krebs (for Dean Atkinson, Administration), Michael Granfield (Faculty), Richard Nuanes, Bill Scanlon, James Patch, Robert Bam berger
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THANK YOU HARRY E. MORRIS
Harry E. Morris is retiring offer o 48 yeor relationship with UCLA. At the age of sixty-five Mr. Morris will be leaving in May.
Mr. Morris was a UCLA student from 1929-1932 when the school was still located on its old Vermont Ave. campus. In his junior year he began serving as event manager of UCLA basketball games at the Olympic Auditorium, handling every aspect of the arena management, from tickets to ushers. In 1933 he was made Ticket Manager, a position he held for ten years. Since 1944, Mr. Morris has been Director of ASUCLA Publications, supervising the Daily Bruin, Southern Campus and all other student and sport program media.
The Yearbook staff would just like to say thanks and express our appreciation for all the support that Mr. Morris has given us. Countless times, Mr. Morris spoke out in favor of Southern Campus, and in many ways, was responsible for the yearbook lasting this long.
Lunchtime was never boring while the speakers program was operating. Countless times during the school year one's bologna sandwich was garnished with the thoughts of Cesar Chavez, Ramsey Clark, the Credibility Gap and many other notables. This past year saw a national election take place and Jeff Grunfeld, Speakers Program Chairman couldn't be happier. His job as a recruiter was never easier. Many candidates were eager to accept Jeff's in- vitation and as a result the noon schedule of the speakers program was constantly filled. But political figures were not the only ones to appear on the campus. The en- tertainment and sports world were well represented and as it turned out, this year's program was one of
.the most successful ever.
L • ^A
34
Daniel Ellsberg
Teddy Kollek
Ramsey Clark
i
Alan Cranston
Dr. Ben Spock
Candice Bergen
Mike Shapiro
Mrs. Medgar Evers
The Committee
S
Jess Unruh
Steve Allen
-
Joan Rivers
/W^^"
The Credibility Gap
s
Herb (Herblock) Block
/• •
/
OAh,
Bill Farr
& Joseph Benti
,
Stokely Carmichael
L
Cesar Chavez
Birch Bayh
Carol Burnett
Cal Worthington r-v*,
x.
Tom Bradley
54
It was a very embarrassing year.
There were so many events of every conceivable type, choosing which
55
Japanese Puppet Theater
"Puooets & Mime"
Janda
Buc
iteroj
from Taiwan
BOBBY IIUTCIICRSOn
1
Cal Tjader versus Schoenberg Hall Schoenberg Hall was the undisputed victor. The Cal Tjader Quintet never had a chance. The combination of distorted amplification and horrid acoustics obliterated any sense of balance, subtle harmonic manipulation, and even melody line. A gross injustice to a fine ensemble.
Let's hear it for featured soloist Mike Wolfe who came back to play well for all his old classmates.
R.S.
THUR
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Selected and played by
William Windom
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Silver hair, surly jowls, and stiff wrists. Malcuzynski mangled Liszt. Franck, and Chopin with an astounding lack of sensitivity, lyricism, phrasing and on and on.
1 managed to sneak out before Malcuzynski could begin his encores (4).
R.S.
Keyboard
'
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ISIDOR
Great Artists Series
Vladimir Ashkenazy
Nelsova- Johannescn
Ethnic Dance
fcopcng
dance Cheater
of Bali
AMAMK
Classical Music & Dance of Korea
&
TKc Art of Dance Series
UCM D4NCE CO/MR4NY
One weekend, the UCLA Dance Company presented three new choreographies and one recreation of "Partita V," 1942 Doris Humphrey dance. "Partita V" was directed here by Marion Scott, who was among the original cast of "Partita V." Doris Humphrey describes "Partita" as "a bit of whipped cream." It appeared that this whipped cream was either one day old, or it was vintage seven- teenth-century whipped cream.
"Events and Reverberations" by UCLA Dance Company director Carol Scothorn was definitely twentieth century and a good deal beyond. The entire piece was dramatically cohesive, and each movement, even the flicking of a finger, was fully motivated for the dancers.
In "Events" Kathe Coperman's duet with cellist Denis Brott was not only articulated excitingly and honestly by Miss Copperman, but it was a fine example of the possibilities in combining two artistic disciplines in an on- stage situation. The musician was not just providing music for a dance, but became an integral part of the choreography when a relationship was established between musician and dancer by Miss Copperman's physical contact with his chair.
"In The Beginning" life was pure and innocent, and if anything like Margalit Oved's choreography, probably
extremely humorous. It was so refreshing to see human life celebrated instead of criticized. The performance by Keith Marshall as Adam and Andrea Harriston as Eve was sensitive and humorous as well as technically strong.
"Requiem for Jimmy Dean: Search for a Hero" was surprising, to say the least. Picture thirteen girls all dressed identically in Black (against a black background) all performing the same movements around an idol. Ob- viously the dancers represented the faceless masses paying homage to a false idol (this idol happened to be Jimmy Dean).
The movements of the thirteen women were erotic, yet tightly controlled and were motivated by force and en- joyment of the movements. Yet Keith Marshall's movements were slow, almost pre-meditated, rationally controlled, and he sat beneath the idol, immune to its power, throughout most of the dance. One wonders what Jack Cole was trying to say. It would have been more ef- fectively left in its Broadway musical style minus the message.
As a whole, the UCLA Dance Company program was exciting and dramatic, and extremely varied; with effort and commitment displayed by all those involved.
— Nanette Deetz
LAR LUBOV
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DANCE COMI
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Descartes once said that "motion is the expression of the spirit." Whether he spoke of human movement or celestial movement is unimportant; he did understand the ability to communicate through motion. Last Saturday night UCLA was privileged to watch Descartes theory in practice when the Jose Limon Dance Company performed four pieces in Royce Hall. Unfortunately, the program was dedicated to the memory of Jose Limon who died Dec. 2, 1972; but it was apparent throughout this program that his spirit will endure.
The living example of Limon's spirit is embodied within each of his dancers. Not only is their technical ability articulate and dramatic, but it is rare to discover so many powerfully controlled and individual men in one company. "The Unsung" was a showcase for each man's talent and style. Not only is it technically perfect, but it is an effectively dramatic piece of choreography, with no music except the rhythm of the dancer's feet striking the stage, and the rhythm of the human body in motion.
In direct contrast to "The Unsung" is the piece entitled "Orpheo." It is Limon's last peice of choreography before his death, and it is a tribute to his artistic talents. Extremely romantic in style (music by Beethoven) it manages to remain honest without becoming "corny."
If "The Unsung" was a showcase for the men, "Dances For Isadora" was equally succesful for the women in the company. Almost as romantic in style as "Orpheo" (music this time by Chopin), "Isadora" contained more psychological motivation. It is choreographed as a group dance, yet its form is a sequential unfolding of five personalities of Isadora Duncan (if you so choose it) or else a short history of the psychological growth of modern dance (also your choice).
Whatever one's interpretation is, the dance as a whole is entertaining. Each role appears to be perfectly fitted to the dancer; and each dancer's emotional interpretation gives life to the role.
The weakest piece in the program was "The Emperor Jones." Limon's "Emperor Jones" does not follow precisely the original O'Neill play, rather it attempts to explore another dimension of the main theme. But if the men were superb in "The Unsung" they were disappointing as an ensemble in "Emperor Jones." Their timing was slightly off in the beginning and unfortunately never became harmonized. The music was (as in other pieces) romantic, but this time obviously dated, bordering on melodramatic. The set and lighting conceptions saved the piece because of its sparse and abstract quality.
Limon's decision to create either all male or all female dances (with the exception of Orpheo) may appear strange or unsatisfying, however his choice is obviously a conscious one and must be considered as such. Perhaps Limon wanted to celebrate the essential differences between man and woman; or perhaps he has a definite conception of man and his particular movements which differs from his conception of woman and her special movement patterns. Thus, he chose to dramatize men and women separately dealing with the universal problems and pleasures of living. Whatever his reasons, his spirit will continue to speak for dance.
- Nanette Deetz
JOSE UMOIM
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Powell Library, that student haven, where the days reflect thfe noisy . bustle dl »busy beehive and at nights the graveyard silence is dig&irbedV only by^the gentle gnawing of well bred bookworms, now heard a dif- ferent 1 ind of 4sound.
The I otun<Jf£reverberated to the beat of a classical guitar, capably played y the knowing fingers of Steven Elster, a student of thelpusic^ departr ent bege.
Elste , performing before a capacity audience of 400 plus, got o|f to a^, slow sti rt with Suite in D-Moll and Gavotta, but either he got o*r his "<"•""•" lessor warmed up his fingers, for from the beginning of Eptudio, ile of Tarantella he played with verve, expertise and
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|ing sound was accentuated and off-set by an of itten»$^ Paul Reale, assistant professor of music, entitlj us Death of the Ma^ic Realist and performed.by. a qu, that a£e to be praised for their mastery«^fej|jj^^e see jrprejtaUon of
ollow;ec[was an e?jpellent rendition, by Doroth>™Zeavki, of ig the program with Vases yepez jttle Prelude and Tarantella. | ier^fe was H IveninM of excellenl 'music, J play ly weMlby all, bnt basicall^t was a snap c#ae for ijthe U
his classical gui».
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The number of great productions that appeared on the UCLA campus during the past year was so great that Southern Campus couldn't possibly display them all. Instead we have decided, in the next 3 pages, to give just a verbal hint of the talent that the students and the public had the pleasure of seeing during 1972-1973.
Tom P.ine..
Loudon Woinwright III
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UCLA "TEXTURES
Die Briieke Returns
to UCLA in 'Woyzeek
and 'Der Frieden
"Graphic Art of Vallotton"
"Yankee Sails 'Round the World" on Armchair Series
Roger Wagner Chorale Joins Chamber Symphony
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pianist
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Orgonisf David Craighead
NURIA ESPERT'S "YERMA1
John H
FheaJer Presents "Les Huguenots
Senof sky-Mack-Lesser Trio Performs
'Dracula'
7-te%*°
Peter Schwarz Opens "Organ Trilogy" Series
SPORTS INDEX
Football
Basketball
JV Football
JV Basketball
Dr. Ralphe Bunche Mem.
Cross Country
Water Polo
Soccer
Wrestling
Gymnastics
Crew
Rugby
In Memory
Baseball
Track
Swimming
Tennis
Volleyball
Lacrosse
Ice Hockey
Women's Intercollegiates
Spirit & Band
IM Sports
UCLA
UCLA
Michigan
UCLA
UCLA
UCLA
UCLA
UCLA
UCLA
Washington
use
20 38 26 65 42 37 49 35 28 30 24
1972 FOOTBALL RESULTS
Nebraska 17
Pittsburgh 28
UCLA 9
Oregon 20
Arizona 31
Oregon State 7
California 1 3
Washington State 20
Stanford 23
UCLA 21
UCLA 7
8-3-0
reflections...
From the first game of the season when we defeated last year's national champs, the University of Nebraska, to the SC game when we lost to this year's national champs, if was one exciting season.
A lot of people have called it the year of the Wishbone. I prefer to call it the year of com mitment. Our coaches and players were com- mitted to making UCLA the most improved football team in major college ranks, from a 2-7- 1 losing season in '71 to a 8-3-0 winning cam- paign this year. How sweet it is. The only thing that would have made the year better, of course, would have been a win over the greatest Trojan team of them all. Unfortunately we can't always have everything that we want, but there will be another year for UCLA.
There were many stars on this year's football team, but the players that we will miss most are obviously those seniors who gave us so many exciting moments. We will miss Randy Tyler ano Gary Campbell in their fine runs from the fullback position. The fine offensive line play of Lassner, Walton, Leal, and Gasch/er will be sorely missed as without their fine blocking up front UCLA would not rank as the greatest running team in Pacific-8 history. And who can forget Brad Lyman, Terry Vernoy, and Reggie Echols contributing so much to our success. One of the true heroes was Rob Scribner, who gave up a starting defensive secondary job to help where he was needed most at quarterback. Rob gained 498 yards rushing and averaged 7.7 yards per carry. What a great year for our of- fensive seniors.
Fortunately we only lose one defensive senior, but he was a great one, and that is Allan Ellis. He played regularly for three years and did a greaf job all three years, but saved his best for last. Bruce Barnes, the leading Conference punter for three years and Paul Moyneur, who played many positions well, are just some of our seniors, but we will miss each and every one of them.
We are looking forward to a great year in 1973 with McAlister, Johnson and Harmon returning in the backfield that broke every UCLA offensive record plus some outstanding of- fensive linemen, but most important we return 10 of 11 defensive starters so it should be another exciting year for Bruin fans.
I want to thank all the members of the 1972 Bruin team as well as all the many fans of Bruin football and their support throughout this year. Sincerely, /•"' ""X
Rally Committee no longer plans rallies and isn't really a committee.
Rally Committee is a feeling.
Rally Committee is when the autumn sun sets over the graceful sweep of the Coliseum and the ground shudders before the unleashed vocal energy of students and air horns and your friends are there and suddenly all your work is worth it.
Rally Committee is an art form; drawing and writing and changing and worrying until finally amplified voices boom out over a canvas as big as your house and our school once again has the best card stunts and the only light stunts anywhere.
Rally Committee is the satisfaction of making UCLA a better place; spirit, service, lines at Pauley, and improved relations with alumni and taxpayers.
But mostly Rally Committee is people; an astonishingly diverse bunch creating and laughing together and becoming involved In a way few of today's anomie-afflicted students can understand.
Rally Committee is.
Top: Hugh Stegman, Karen Johansen, Sunny Spergel, Brian Young Bottom: Ed Schiavone, Jeff Benesch, Rich Herczog, Larry Rodriguez
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DECEMBER 25, 1972
SPORTSMAN OF THE YEA
COLLEGE ASKETBALLS OHN WOODEN
I97Z-1973 The
25th
Wo o d e n Year
The Bruins celebrated Coach John Wooden's silver anniversary at UCLA with an unprecedented ninth NCAA Cham- pionship in the past ten years and ex- tended the Bruin win streak to a record 75 games in a row, in addition to numerous other records that were established at the same time. BELOW AND RIGHT - Head Coach John Wooden with Assistant Coach Gary Cunningham.
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Coach John Wooden accepts game ball from Notre Dame Coach Digger Phelps upon defeating the Irish 82-63 to establish a new record for the most consecutive games won by a college basketball team. Thus the Bruins erased the record of 60 straight set by USF's Bill Russell- K.C. Jones team in the mid 50's. Playing amongst a hostile South Bend crowd, Wilkes hit for 20 points, Walton and Farmer had 16 apiece with Walton grabbing 15 rebounds. Hollyfield and Farmer were the only two Bruins on the last UCLA team to lose a game — to Notre Dame, when All-American Austin Carr accumulated 46 points giving the Irish an 89-82 victory. Along with Wooden, both were more than overjoyed with the record breaking victory over the Irish.
reflections... 1972-1973 UCLA Basketball In Retrospect
A mild heart problem which caused me to miss my first game in thirty-eight years of coaching, the problems involved with the maintainment of a long consecutive game winning streak which has now reached an unbelievable total of seventy-five, the normal pressures that are to be expected from being "at the top" for such an unprecedented period of years, and the ad- ditional burden brought on by the publication of several books pertaining to UCLA basketball and my personal life all con- tributed to making the 1972-1973 season one of the most "trying" in my experience.
However, the end result was extremely gratifying and made this one of the most cherished of all of our championships.
How can I ever forget — the magnificent performance of Bill Walton in the championship game against Memphis State, the inspirational and effective play of Tommy Curtis on many oc- casions and especially in the tournament games against USF and Indiana, the always smooth and often brilliant play of Keith Wilkes, the fine all around and consistent performances of Larry Farmer, the many brilliant steals and outstanding plays of Larry Hollyfield, the beautiful lob passes of Greg Lee to Walton and Farmer, the steady improvement and productive play of David Meyers, the good humor and fine touch of Sven Nater, and, although their game time was limited, the often overlooked but extremely important daily practice contributions of Vince Carson, Casey Corliss, Ralph Drollinger, Gary Franklin, Pete Trgovich. and Bobby Webb, the efficient managerial staff headed by Les Friedman, and the loyalty and intelligent cooperation of my assistants, Gary Cunningham and Frank Arnold.
Yes. this 1972-1973 UCLA basketball team not only compiled a perfect season record culminating in the NCAA championship, they also provided many exciting and memorable moments that will be reflected upon for years to come by UCLA alumni and friends, our opponents, and all who are truly interested in the wonderful sport of basketball
John Wooden
Gary Franklin
Larry Farmer
Vince Carson
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Dave Meyers
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Tommy Curtis
Larry
Greg
UCLA INDIVIDUAL HIGHS FOR THE SEASON Most points 44 by Bill Walton against
Memphis State, 3/26/73. Most field goals --21 by Bill Walton against
Memphis State, 3/26/73.
Most free throws — 9 by Larry Farmer against
Illinois, 12/30/72. Most rebounds - - 27 by Bill Walton against
Loyola (Chi.), 1/25/73. Most assists — 14 by Greg Lee against Stanford,
1/12/73, and Memphis State, 3/26/73.
UCLA TEAM HIGHS FOR THE SEASON Most points — 101 against Providence, 1/20/73. Most field goals -- 43 against Arizona State,
3/15/73
Most free throws — 24 against Oregon, 2/22/73. Most rebounds — 68 against Washington State,
2/17/73.
UCLA TEAM LOWS FOR THE SEASON Fewest points -- 51 against Stanford, 3/3/73. Fewest field goals 20 against Stanford,
3/3/73.
Fewest free throws -- 4 against Notre Dame, 12/23/72, Stanford 1/13/73, and USF 3/17/73. Fewest rebounds — 29 against USC, 2/3/73, and Stanford, 3/3/73.
UCLA's WIN STREAKS
75 team victories in a row, going back to the 89- 82 loss to Notre Dame during the 1970-71 season. 43 wins in a row in Pacific-8 play
35 wins in a row on the road
49 wins in a row at home (Pauley Pavilion)
36 wins in a row in NCAA tournament com- petition
Pete Trgovich
M>73 UCLA BASKETBALL KKSULTS
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NCAA West Regional Playoffs UCLA °8 Arizona State
UCLA 54 USF
NCAA Finals UCLA TO
UCLA «7
Indiana Memphis State
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1972 JV Football Results
UCLA 24 USC 7
Pierce 26 UCLA 19
UCLA 62 Cal 34
UCLA 42 Cal Poly (SLO) 12
Dick Tomey — Head JV Coach
Greg Cockanye executes roll-out pass against SC.
Mike Lindle gets stopped short.
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Top Left - In a race with the refs, Greg Williams re- turns the kick-off for a TD. Left - Greg Willaims gets stopped short. Above - Greg Cockanye romps for a
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Head Junior Varsity Coach Frank Arnold
Ralph Drollinger (left), Assistant JV Coach Terry Schofield (center) and Head JV Coach Frank Arnold (right).
1973 UCLA JV Basketball Results
UCLA 75
UCLA 80
UCLA 67
UCLA 75
UCLA 78
UCLA 99
Moorpark 69
UCLA 107
UCLA 85 Allan Hancock 75
UCLA 60
Cypress 96
UCLA 92
UCLA 96
UCLA 81
UCLA 86
UCLA 80
Pierce 62
Long Beach CC 70
Orange Coast 41
Santa Ana 73
USIU 56
College of Canyons 59
UCLA 56
UCI 45
CSSD 58
UCLA 49
USC 59
UCLA 86
Whittier 50
Mira Costa 68
West LA 59
Cal State Fullerton 82
USC 41
Keith Billington
Both Ralph Drollinger and Casey Corliss had the distinction of practicing with the Varsity, how- ever, playing mostly with the junior varsity team.
Ralph Drollinger
Greg Johnson
Casey Corliss
UCLA ALUMNI ^ ELGIN BAYLOR PROSTARS
UCLA ALUMNI
PLAYERS
BOOKER KENNY FREE AGENT
GOODRICH. GAIL
LOS ANGELES LAKERS
ROWE. CURTIS DETROIT PISTONS
PATTERSON STEVE CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
JABBAR. KAREEM MILWAUKEE BUCKS
WICKS. SIDNEY PORT. TRAILBLAZERS
VALLELY JOHN HOUSTON ROCKETS
Mil WAUKEE BUCKS
SCHOFIELD. '.^
FREE AGENT
RAHMAN. ABDUL BUFFALO BRAVES
BIBRY. HENRY NFW YORK KNICKS
SLAUGHTER. FRED MCI A LAW SCHOOL
KFNNY WASHINGTON COACH
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reflections...
Cross Country is a season for the true enjoyment of the pleasures of running as well as a time of preparation for the important spring to come.
The UCLA cross country team had to be rated un- derdogs in their first two competitions against the East Los Angeles Track Club and the University of Arizona. Even though they lost both com- peititions the team led by Ron Johnson, Ruben Chappins, Jim Salcido and Ruben Mejia had made a strong showing and spirits were high in an- ticipation of a successful Hal Harkness, Coach season.
Just before their third meet against Cal Poly Pomona, Ron Johnson and Ruben Chappins fell ill. Freshman Jim Salcido moved up to the number one spot and Gary Nitti, Gordon Innes, Tony Veney and Greg Higgins all helped take up the burden and led the Bruins to a 21-36 win over Cal Poly. The following week, the team still without Johnson and Chappins, finished 6th in the USTFF Cross Country Championships.
The Bruins went on to place 3rd in the Southern Division Pac 8 meet and 5th in the Pac 8. Johnson and Chappins never
really came back to their full strength, but Jim Salcido and Gordon Innes proved that they have potential for the future, coming on very strong at the end of the season.
Gordon Innes
11
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This was the last season for Seniors Ruben Chappins and Ruben Mejia.
Ruben Mejia
reflections...
UCLA Water Polo Team was blessed with superior talent along with overall team depth. The 1972 season found six experienced seniors carrying the weight of competition for UCLA. Five of those six seniors were starters. Included within this high caliber group were Eric Lindroth, the only collegiate athlete to compete in water polo at Munich, and goalie Kevin Craig both of whom were Ail-Americans.
The success of Bruin Water Polo teams In becomming 1972 NCAA Champions was not just based entirely on having a talented squad. Many of the opponents UCLA faced during the season, especially those in the Pac-8, had an equal number of adroit players. What gave our team the winning edge was the players willingness to exert extra effort in the pre-season conditioning program which generally consisted of two-a-day workouts, at the beach and on campus. The psychological advantage also fell to our Bruins by a series of unique events. Early in the season our obvious strength gave us a surplus of over-confidence which culminated in our defeat at the hands of our cross/own rival USC. The effect of this defeat was not what I or any of our supporters expected. Rather than weakening our team, this failure eliminated our over- confidence and replaced it with an attitude of unity within the team and controlled egression against our opponents.
In essence our psychological attitude, physical condition and gifted ability combined to give us the Championship.
Robert AA. "Bob" Horn, Head Coach
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Howard "Buzz" Thayer, Assistant Coach
1972 UCLA WATER POLO RESULTS
UCLA 12 Alumni 11
UC IRVINE TOURNAMENT UCLA 17 UC Davis 2
UCLA 8 UC Irvine 3
UCLA 7 USC 6
UCLA 10 New Mexico 4
UCLA 10 UC Santa Barbara 5
USC 14 UCLA 11
UCLA 5 California 3
UCLA 5 Cal State Fullerton 2
UCLA 16 Stanford 0
UCLA 12 California 8
UCLA 6 UC Irvine 4
UCLA 8 Cal State Long Beach 5
UCLA 10 Stanford 5
UCLA 7 USC 5
UCLA 10 Cal State Fullerton 5
UCLA 11 Cal State Long Beach 6
NCAA TOURNAMENT
UCLA 21 Yale 3
UCLA 15 UC Irvine 10
UCLA 10 San Jose State 5
1 9 Wins— 1 Loss
IRVINE TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS PACIFIC-8 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS NCAA CHAMPIONS
AWARD WINNERS
1
Outstanding Freshman Player, Rick Coyle Most Improved Player, Andy Keene Most Inspirational Player, Scott Massey Outstanding Player, Kevin Craig and Eric Lindroth Outstanding Scholastic Record, Steve Doyle
1972 VARSITY ROSTER
Bill Anderson
Tom Barry **Garth Bergeson
Ron Clark
Rick Coyle *Kevin Craig — Capt.
Steve Doyle
Andy Keene
Kurt Krumpholz *Eric Lindroth — Capt. ** Scott Massey — Capt.
Tim McDonnell
Brian McKinley
Ken Montgomery
Bob Neumann
John Rees
Ward Sounders
Bernie Stenson
Jeff Taylor
Mike Verity
NCAA All-Tournament Tear
*First Team ** Second Team Most Valuable Player — Eric Lindroth (UCLA)
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Coaches Bob Horn and Buzz Thayer, both 10 years as Head Coach and Assistant Coach, respectively, are credited with 9 straight Pac-8 Championships during 1964- 1972, and in four years of NCAA water polo tournament play, NCAA Championships in 1969, 1971, 1972, and runner up in 1970.
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Kevin Craig - - four-time All- American goalie , MVP
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Eric Undroth - - Ali-American, member 1972 US Olympic Bronze Medalist water -polo team
Steve" tJoyle
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Scott Massey
John Rees
Garth Bergeson'
reflections...
The role of runner-up to St. Louis in the 1972 N.C.A.A. Soccer Championship shouldn't cloud the season that preceded that dramatic night in Miami, but it will inevitably do so.
Perhaps we tried so hard and wanted that national title so badly, we tend to forget the things that made 1972 so momentuous for UCLA Soccer. If so, I want you to remember your accomplishments as well as your loss.
For All Americans Shoo Agonafer and Fesseha Wo/de- Emanuel it ended four seasons of sheer brilliance as in- dividuals, tacticians and leaders. Thank you too Shoa for all your help in coaching the team.
There were some great moments in 1972. Defeating the University of Mexico is always a triumph. Then who can forget that glorious night in San Jose when you fought back for a win that blotted out the midseason mishaps? Remember too the drama when we played Stanford ? We found ourselves 4-0 down, only to come back and score 7 goals and achieve an apparently impossible victory. Yet our finest game was surely the N.C.A.A. Western Final, the third battle with San Jose which sent us to Miami — it certainly was our most complete team performance.
Our program is only six years old yet we've been the N.C.A.A. runner-up twice and in the play-offs five times. To those of you who are leaving • Steve Burnside, Solomon Terfa, Carlos Trevino, John Henderson, Ken Garrick — you can be proud of what you've achieved. To those who are s toying — did you know UCLA was in 9 N.C.A.A. play-offs before they won their first
championship ? so
until next year I
Sincerely,
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1972 UCLA Soccer Results
Dennis Storer, Coach
NCAA REGIONAL PLAY-OFFS
UNIVERSITY OF MEXICO
UCLA ALUMNI
SAN DIEGO STATE
WESTMONT COLLEGE
SEATTLE PACIFIC
SAN JOSE STATE
U OF WASHINGTON
CAL STATE, FULLERTON
SAN JOSE STATE
UCLA
BIOLA
U OF SAN FRANCISCO
STANFORD
use
UCLA 5
UCLA 3
NCAA FINALS — MIAMI UCLA 1
ST. LOUIS 4
WASHINGTON SAN JOSE STATE
CORNELL UCLA
FAR WEST CHAMPIONS 2nd place, NCAA
Coach Dennis Storer and assistant Hugh McCracken observe from above.
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Front row, left to right: Ruben Ochoa and David Atkinson. Second row, from left to right, seated: Ken Garrick, Solomon Terfa, Fesseha Wolde- Emanuel, Jose Lopez, Shoa Agonafer, Carlos Trevino, Manuel Meza, Tekeda Alemu. Top row, from left to right: Manager Ric Ronseca, Cherif Zein, Hector Salcedo, Steve Burnside, Girma Belay, Mark Otsea, Sigi Schmid, Terry Lippman, John Henderson, Bernardo Ortiz, Armano Franco, Coach Dennis Storer.
Fesseha Wolde-Emanuel
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reflections...
The Bruin wrestling squad was loaded with young inexperienced wrestlers. Having only three seniors, one of whom was a regular starter, Jimmy Rodriguez, was team captain along with another senior Ed King.
With a sophomore dominated team with individuals such as, Mark Black, Craig Deane, Brady Hall and Gilbert Mendez, the Bruins had a slow start. Our inexperience was very evident at the annual Arizona Tournament which draws the nations top wrestling powers west of the Mississippi.
With the great help of newly acquired assistant coach Dave Auble, we finally got the team on a win streak just prior to Christmas, downing four opponents in a row.
We had some improvement and our young team, although being beaten in total points quite badly; made some very fine individual showings.
The greatest satisfaction came when the underdog Bruins handed Cat Berkeley a solid whopping, 36-6, in Pauley Pavilion just before the Pac 8 Championships.
At the Pac 8 Tournament in Corvalis, Oregon the Bruins qualified 6 out of W wrestlers for the NCAA Championships. "Come thru" performances were shown by Steve Weiss, Terry Gorman and John White.
Dave Hollinger
Assistant Coach Dave Auble
Coach Dave Hollinger
Top - Left to Right: Ken Ratliff - Mgr.. Brady Hall. John White, Chuck Seefeldt. Terry Gorman, Grant Barthalomew, Frank Staggers, Jim Cunningham, Craig Deane. Bottom - Left to Right: Coach Dave Hollinger, Jim Rodriguez, Steve Weiss. Dan Naritoku, Gilbert Mendez, John Abad, Mark Black, Assist- ant Coach Dave Auble.
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Gilbert Mendez
Gymnastics caoch Art Shurlock
reflections...
The 1973 UCLA Gymnastic Team is the team that I am most proud of, in the nine seasons / have been coaching at UCLA. The team this year was outstanding. It was characterized by its toughness and determination to succeed. We came back from a dual meet deficit of 1-4 to finish the season at 6-6.
Among the team victories this year that are most memorable, were wins over NCAA college division champions Cal State Fullerton (15 1.30-150. 10) and USC (155.35-150.20).
The Pacific-8 Gymnastic Championships, which UCLA hosted, was our final team competition and one that best exemplified the drive and winning spirit of the team. In this competition, every UCLA gymnast gave a maximum effort for the success of the team. The optional routine session of the PAC-8 Championships was the the top meet of the year for the team. We had a seasonal high score in 9 positions on our way to a 154.05 total. In the individual finals, we qualified 6 men wifh Sfeve Ger/ach winning the PAC-8 in floor exercise and Mark Sherwood placing 2nd. on the rings. The com- bined compulsory and optional team results of the PAC-8: 1. California, 315.15; 2. Washington, 305.25; 3. Stanford, 297.65; 4. UCLA 292.25; 5. Washington St., 287.60; 6. USC, 287.20; 7. Oregon 282.70.
The UCLA PAC-8 team members: floor exercise — Gory Casfner, Sfeve Ger/ach, Leo Germain, George Govednik; pommel horse — Germain, Govednik, Shawn Miyaki, Leroy Saenz; rings — Casfner, Mike Moser, Mark Sherwood; vaulting — Davie Freed/and, Ger/ach, Govednik, parallel bars — Dave Cook, Freed/and, Germain; high bars — Ken Easfman, Govednik, Shawn McClenahan; assistant coach — Paul Roggenkamp; team manager - Fred Osfaorne.
This is a group of men if was my pleasure to work with, a group that represented UCLA well.
Steve Gerlach, Pac-8 floor exercise champion.
Mark Sherwood
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Top — left to right: Gary Yetter, Barry Berkett, Alex Frasco, Rob Justus, Warren Dykstra, Tom Meyer, Steve Bohlmann, John Jensen. Middle — left to right: Alex Fielding, O'Rouke Swinney, Keith Peters, Mark Breeding, Kurt Kohler, Joel Coster,
Kevin Curran, David Wohlstadter. Bottom — Left to right: Eric Perkowski, Rod Johnson, Kurt Boyd, Pete Robinson, Sam Glasband, Steve Hokoda, Jim Everett, Bruce Kroyer, Mark Ellis.
reflections...
An open letter to the 1973 Rugby team:
Congratulations on a fine season. Considering the number of novices on the varsity team, you exceeded all expecations, (except for one 6-7 loss to Berkeley — we let that one slip through our fingers I)
A special well done to those newcomers who had to accept the responsibilities of varsity rugby in their first season — Greg Pearman, Paul Moyneur, Steve Hookano, John Sciarra, Clay Gallacher, and also the many newcomers playing for the Greyhounds (the seconds).
The big games were again our traditional rivals Berkeley, Stanford, and U.S.C. and apart from Berkeley we had no problems. Our end of the season tour to Canada made up for the minor desappointments before. Winning the World Cup 4-3 against the University of British Columbia had to be the high point of your efforts this year, although it was achieved by defensive guts rather than the usual formula of piling up the points.
For the Captain, Rob Scribner, M.V.P. Skip Neibauer, Best Back John Williams, Best Forward Wade Killefer, it was an especially fine season.
On to 74!
Coach Dennis Storer
I P I PI I I I 1 ••
1973 UCLA Rugby Results
UCLA 54
UCLA 27
UCLA 36
UCLA 21
UCLA 27
UCLA 15 Bats Rugby Club 14
UCB 7
UCLA 12
UCLA 38
UCLA 16
UCLA 46
UCLA 46 University of Victoria 7
UCLA 4
UCLA 24
UCSD UCD
Kings (Australia)
Cal State U, LA
Occidental
LA Rugby Club
UCLA
UCLA
Stanford
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Santa Monica Rugby Club
Cal State U, Northridge
SF Rugby Club
UCLA
U British Columbia
Vancouver Rep XV
Southern California Tournament
UCLA 24 Long Beach R.C.
Bats R.C. 3 UCLA
UCLA 22 Santa Monica R.C.
UCLA 12 UCSB
3 3 4 7 9 4 3 6 6 4
16 7 0 6 3
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Shortly before his death on October 24, 1972, Jackie Robinson celebrated, at the 1972 World Series games in Cincinnati, the 25th anniversary of his start in major league baseball. On acceptance of a plaque commemorating the event he said, "I am extremely proud and pleased, but I will be more pleased the day I can look over at third base and see a black man as manager." A man never without a cause, Jackie Robinson was the first Black athlete to break into major league baseball with the then- Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. At UCLA Jackie starred in football, basketball, track, and baseball. He is the only Bruin athlete in history to earn letters in four varsity sports. A Football Ail-American in 1939, he also set a Pacific Coast Conference record in the long jump and led in basketball scoring in 1941. Jackie left UCLA in 1941 and went on to subsequent fame in baseball.
The Reverend Jesse Jackson, a close friend of Jackie Robinson, eulogized, "This man turned a stumbling block into a stepping stone."
Jackie with Wife Rachel
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Kenny Washington never received the national recognition that his former Bruin teammate Jackie Robinson did after leaving Westwood. Yet, there are many Bruin fans who still remember Washington, the fleet and record-setting tailback, as UCLA's greatest football player of all time. He became UCLA's first all-around star with the 1937 football season and then teamed with Robinson in 1938 and 1939 to nearly take UCLA to the Rose Bowl. The two parted ways after Kenny's graduation in 1940, but UCLA shall never forget his exploits. Ironically, Kenny, who had graduated one year earlier than Jackie, succumbed one year earlier than his former teammate, June 24, 1971.
reflections...
My pre-seoson predictions came pretty close to what really happened to the 1973 Bruin Baseball team. The Bruins would battle the Trojans and the Stanford Cardinals for the number one spot. The pitching area was our weakest spot, and our strength was our defense with Luis Gomez and Dave Guerrero providing one of the top double play combinations in the Pacific Eight.
Centerfielder Bob Adams led the Pacific 8 in batting and was a big plus on offense. Greg Zail, John Rouse and sophomore Frank Panich carried the pitching load, with the bull pen in great shape with senior Bruce Baronick putting out the fire in the late innings.
Six out of the seven pitchers recruited for the '73 campaign, with signed letters of intent, said good-bye to campus life by signing professional contracts. Money seems to be more important than the book league.
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reflections...
The 1973 UCLA track and field team has come through so far on all my predictions that were stated last January before the season ever started. I stated at that time that we would have the greatest field event team in collegiate history, and that our runners would also surprise. Also stated was this could be the greatest dual meet team of all-time. As this goes to press we have become the greatest dual meet team of all-time, winning the NCAA "Dual meet" title for the third time in the last four years.
The team has also collected two thirds of its hoped for "grand slam" of dual meets, conference, and NCAA championships.
To explain this team's greatness would be very hard. There has been vast improvement by man, surprises, and also what was expected. The biggest sur- prise was the great improvement of sophomore Tony Veney. Tony ran 1:52.0 last year in the 880 and has already run 1:48.5 for third in the Pac-8 chamipnships. The improvement of all the distance runners was a very pleasant surprise. The credit must be divided between the excellent attitude on the athlete's part, and the great coaching by our new distance coach, Hal Harkness.
The field event men have been sensational all year. The high jumpers with life time bests, both discus throwers with life time bests. Roger Freberg with a new discus school record. All three shot putters with life time bests, and especially the very outstanding job Dave Schiller has done. Dave, up to this date, has improved from 55' 3 3/4" to 62' 2 1/4" — that is quite an improvement for the smallest "big time" shot putter in the nation! The pole vaulters have been very consistent when needed. The long jumpers and triple jumpers have been outstanding all year, with all four rated at the top of the U.S. National list. Rory Kotinek has done a great job in our one thin event, the javelin.
The hurdlers, sprinters, and 440 ment have been outstanding all year. Benny Brown is now regarded as the greatest quarter miler in the world, and our four hurdlers are rated near the top on the national list.
To sum this up, I can say this has been a very confident team, rising to the
occasion whenever needed, and just winning when the opponent was easy! In my
^ mind this is the greatest team ever assembled, and many people agree, but the
hour of decision will be the NCAA Championships at Louisiana State University,
June 7, 8, and 9 — we want that "Grand Slam .'"
Head Track & Field Coach Jim Bush
Assistant Coach Tom Tellez handles all Bruin field event per- formers.
Assistant Coach Hal Harkness be- sides being Head Cross Country also handles the distance runners for track.
Assistant Coach Len Dodson has assisted with the sprinters in 1966-71-72 when the Bruins the NCAA, team championship and now in 1Q73
.
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ABOVE-Rory Kotinek, last year's decathlon man has decided to concentrate on the javelin, long jump and high jump this year. Last year Rory placed fifth in NCAA decath- lon competition. TOP RIGHT-Shot-putter Dave Schiller has improved from a 55 footer to a consistent over-60 footer. RIGHT-Roger Freberg broke the school record in the discus throw at the Bruins first meet against ASU, taking it from 184' to 194' 10".
RIGHT-Gordon Peppars and Dotson Wilson, both timed at 9.7, ran first and third in a tri- meet with Tennesse and Kan- sas. BELOW-Soph. transfer Tom Guerrero, last year's State JC IH Champ (52.4), fol- lows in the footsteps Bruin 440 IH performers Wayne Collett and Roger Johnson.
OPPOSITE: TOP-120 HH, Charles Rich (center of photo) and Clim Jackson run 1-2 at 13.7 and 13.9 respectively. OPPOSITE: BOTTOM-Maxie Parks (left) and Benny Brown (right) figure to sustain UCLA dominance in the 440.
Distance runners (left to right) Gordon Innes, Ron Johnson, Jim Salcido, and Ricco Sanchez. At the beginning of the season Gordon Innes set a school record in the steeplechase of 8:55.8 and freshman Jim Salcido ran a 13:52.6 3-mile.
\
UCLA
ELD STADIUM NAMED FOR "DUCKY" DRAKE
The UCLA track ami field facility has been named the Drake Track and Field Stadium in honor of long-time coach and trainer Elvin C. "Ducky" Drake, it was announced last September, 1972, by Chancellor Charles E. Young following action by the Board of Regents.
rake, who retired last June, 1972, had been a coach and trainer at UCLA for 43 years and had served as head track coach for 18 years, lough retired because of mandatory retirement age, Ducky Drak>«tilt. serves as trainer for the Bruin football and basketball teams on a contractual basis.
Following his graduation from UCLA in 1927, he became assistant varsity track coach (1929-46), cross-country coach (1935-42), fresh- man track coach (1935-45), head varsity track Coach (1947-64) and head athletic trainer ( 1942-72).
One of his proudest moments came in the 1960 Olympics at Rome when two of his decathlon stars, Rafer Johnson and C.K. Yang, fin- ished 1-2 in one of the most dramatic duels in Olympic, history. Another Olympic medalist was Cy Young, winner of the javelin throw in the 1952 games at Helsinki.
One of Drake's track teams won the NCAA championship in 1956, and he was named track and field "Coach of the Year."
Drake, however, may be best known for his work al athletic trainer for the past 30 years, a position in which he guided athletes in Bruin
ers' Hall of Fame in 1964.
The stadium named in his honor seats 12,000 spectators and was' first used in February, 1969. It has an all-weather nine-lane Tartan ' : one quarter mile in length and an infield which accomodates all field events.
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The experience of coaching superior college athletes is often a diffi- cult position for any individual to hold. Coaches are required to be diplomats, psychologists and sociologists in reference to their partici- pants which can make coaching a giant pressure cooker.
This was not the case for the 1973 Bruin swimmers who represented a group of nineteen very mature and stable young people. The attitude of devotion on the part of this year's team made this season a fun and rewarding experience for myself as a coach. Our swimmers were quite young seeing the team consisted of only one senior, five luniors. four sophomores, and nine freshmen. Steve Doyle was the team's captain being our only senior and definite All-American choice. His leadership helped to develop and motivate many of our younger members by presenting a good image to follow.
UCLA also became me first major men's intercollegiate sports team to have a female member. Susie Kincade, one of our freshman divers, proved herself to be a major contributor to our success in dual meets. Susie's grace and superior style made her a consistent scorer for the Bruins this year.
Much of our success was based on the fact that our people who had no reputations gained them by superior performances, plus our big names improved over their performances from previous years. All of this was created by hard work.
At this time I'm confident that the Bruin teams of the next few years will develop the depth to compete and defeat the swim powerhouses like USC and Indiana at the NCAA's. Like all the teams at UCLA we are shooting for the moon in the form of NCAA Championship. It appears to me that we are very close to our goal and this year's recruiting pro- gram should help boost our team into reacing our mark in '74.
Bob Horn, Head Coach
Buzz Thayer, Assistant Coach
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Tom Bruce wins the 200 yard breaststroke for UCLA against USC.
OOD
reflections..,
UCLA TENNIS 1973
This year's edition of the tennis team is vastly improved over the 1972 team. It is a team that has excellent depth and strong singles and doubles play. UCLA is a strong contender for national and conference titles.
Following is a sketch ot each player:
1 Jeff Austin, senior from Rolling Hills. 1972 All-American. Number 23 ranked in U.S. Has excellent all around game.
2 Bob Kreiss, senior from Bel Air. Two time All- American. Number 4 1 ranked in U.S. Has great backhand and best doubles player on team.
3 Steve Krulevitz, senior from Baltimore. Transfer from Utah. Ranks number 38 in U.S. Fastest player with fine ground strokes.
4 Rayno Seegers, sophomore from South Africa, where he ranked number 5. Strongest player on team and has a lot of talent.
5 Brian Teacher, frosh from San Diego. National Junior doubles champion. Best potential on team.
6 Steve Mott, frosh from La Jolla. National junior doubles champion. Excellent doubles player.
!.
Bob Kreiss
Brian Teacher
**•
Steve Mott
Rayno Seegers
reflections...
Af the time of publication, the Bruins are one game out of first place in the tough Southern California Volleyball Association. They are going for their fourth straight NCAA Championship.
Three starting seniors who joined the team as junior college transfers after their freshman year 1 973 captains Ron Coon, Ken Freeman and Jeff Jacobs. Jeff started as a sophomore and junior. Ken and Ron saw a lot of action as first and second men off the bench during the past two years. Coon is the most improved spiker on the squad and setter Ken Freeman directs the quick Bruin attack quite capably. Senior Tom Chamales is a first year man with the potential to break into the starting line-up before the end of the season. Tom has demonstrated great ability during the summer beach volleyball circuit and is adaptin well to the six man game. Other starters are juniors Mike Nor- mand, Bob Leonard, Jim Menges, and sophomore John Bekins.
I •*
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U.S. Ail-Star Women vs South Korean Women
UCLA Men vs South Korean Men
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Women at UCLA are competing successfully in numerous intercollegiate sports— Volleyball, Tennis, Basketball, Swim- ing, Gymnastics and Track. Ever since the NCAA ruling allowed coeds to compete in certain varsity sports, more and more have been doing so. In fact, Crew Coach Johnsen has enough girls out for the sport he can run two frosh fe- male shells. Also, he notes coed coxswain have a definite weight advantage since they have to be light.
At right is freshman diver Susie Kin- cade, the first coed to compete on a varsity squad.
-
•
Top - left to right: Marilyn Joshua, Nancy Gahn, Rosie Shimrosu. Middle - left to right: Josephine Bruin (Baret Fejar), Marty Hatem, Wall Uchida, Jay Ornelus, Barry Jetton, Mike Losey, Rhonda Manning, Joe Bruin (Dave Stewart). Front - left to right: Nan Olson, Linda Toussant, Meg Meager, Evelyn Lambert, Betty Henerson, Diane Winslow, Jackie Grier.
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Why aren't fraternities dead here? The UCLA DAILY BRUIN has been predicting their doom for sometime and it seems that one fraternity house after another has gone to the auction block according to the newspaper. So why is it, that names such as Sigma Nu, Sigma Chi, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon still exist at UCLA?
Fraternity life has changed, and changed drastically. Four years ago, it appeared that the Fraternity System was dying. However, this year, fraternities stand stronger than they have in any year in the past decade, and this is because of the changing lifestyle evolving within the system. Gone are the days of regular Friday Afternoon Beer Busts, Wednesday Night Ex- changes, and Sorority Raids. That is not to say that a varied social calendar does not still exist, but it is not longer the focal point of the system.
The fact that the Fraternity System has a grade point average above the UCLA All Men's Average, that many of its members are leaders within- the student government, or that it devotes thousands of man hours to such charitable activities as Mardi Gras or Multiple Sclerosis is not what is fundamentally important.
What is important is that each fraternity house, and its members, are able to come together within a lifestyle that is mutually beneficial. Woodrow Wilson stated that, "Coming together is a beginning; working together is progress ; living together is success.", this is the goal that the Fraternity System is constantly trying to improve upon. As long as the bond of mutual respect and cooperation exists within the UCLA Fraternity System, it will remain a strong and viable part of the campus community.
UC Ifl Inforfrateriutif Council
Front Row-left to right
Tom Tabor, Woody Walker, Dean Riskas, Jeff Lapham, Kurt Skarin, Bob Dischner, and Bob Sosey
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Rich Pagan, Larry Griebenow, Torrey Wulff, Mark
Spiro, Greg Petrie, and Chuck Locko
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Top Right, Left to Right; Zim Zimmerman, Dave Atkinson, Carol Moser, Mary Johnson, Wal- ter Snell, Paul Reist, Tim Cater, and Earl Terry. Top Left, Left to Right; Henry Porter, Sharon Forester, Dale Wu, Dave Toda.
Alpha Gamma Omega
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Shayna Munson, Bob Andersen, Dave Fierce, Vida Smith, Gretchen Bostwich, Zim Zimmer- man, Henry Porter, Carol Edwards, John Krieger, Roxanne Bessette, Lloyd Osborne, Carol Moser, Tim Brewer, Bruce Byers, Jerry Rothman, Tim Cater, Mary Johnson, Sue Galpin, Linda Tube- sing, Sharon Forester, Dale Wu, Donna Casey, and Jim Powell.
Left to Right: Melvin Lira, Paul Reist, Dave Toda, Walter Snell, Barry Burnett, Dave Atkinson, Jim Yost, Doug Douglass.
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Jon Middloton > Roger O'Brien Jeral Rosati Steve Regele Joanie Mather Tom Meyer Dave Dapper Dea Holt Kurt Kohler Hector Barrera T.C. Hyde Kric Carlson Jim Mitchell Keith Young Buzz Adams V.D. Adams Mary Abhors Robbin Smith Barry Berkett Judy Henderson fort Haymond Pat Sankey Tom Thomas Dicey Mitchell Ray Paul Louie Sprague Nancy Kanzler Kmi Kawasaki Kathy Espinoza Gil Martinez
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Maryln Luzano Margaret Brown Patii Short
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Top Row L to R
Bowen, Jack Muckey, Steve Efron, Edward Leonard, Bill Locko, Chuck Cook, Richard Mansoor, Jeff Green, Tracey Puffer, Jim Bergeson, Garth Clark, Robby Clark, Ron Walker, Woody
Middle Row L to R
Keisel, Jeff Kudo, Rich Morze, Mark Knupper, Max Jack, Dave Sinclair, Bob Larson, Ky Pierro, Don Strauss, Charlie Rothstein, Pat
Sigma Alpha Epsiion
Bottom Row L to R
Peters, Keith George, Jim Hughes, Brian James, Ken Daniels, Scott Pickle, Ken Webb, Robert Biswell, Kevin
Not Pictured
Adelson, Gary Allison, Bill Davis, Bob Dragicevich, Joe Keene, Andy Krumpholz, Kurt McDonnell, Tim Parker, Scott Souza, Mel Tahti, Nells Westmoreland, Paul White, Steve Woods, Doug Townsend, Barry Bloy, Richard Kublins, Dusty Barry, Bob Wright, Tom
NOT PICTURKU Dean Isaacs Jim Martin John Dosta
Jim Piotsch Ste?e Elmer Hacmon
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Stra Skip (iraef (top Rich Tahiti ^ Mwrty Cohen iv-nnis Cannona
Jan
Tom Stei'enoni Gary Cook B%n Kn;
Chris Marshall Bill Adams Jeff Bowen Steve Mettler k Thomas om Met/ger ieunesse
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Chuck 41 John Dvorak Ricfl WUliu
Don Lchmaun Israel Bcnner akcr
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Sigma Nu
left to right
row 1. Scott Bowhay, Ron Jurgensen, Gary Steele, Sam Nicholson, Jeff Lapham, Dean Riskas, Dave Colton
row 2. Dan Bayerd, Marc Reid, Tim Meager, Bob Blair, Kent Ellis, Rick Bocci, Ron Martin
row 3. Chris Patton, Bob Losey, Tom Tabor, Doug Kaewert, Jim Sterbentz, Mike Losey
row 4. Jim Riskas, Rich Docherty, Steve Sunshine, Skip Barchan, Mike Perry, Mark Perry, Mark Humter, Dave "Gleep"
Hartshorn, Bob Savluk row 5. Bob Dischner, Bruce Brodie, John Piini, Dan Guidera, Blake Woodward, Al Pulsifer, Steve Dean, Andy Bergh
.
Standing, left to right : Larry Dusich, Tim Bowman, Terry Conklin, Kevin Charles, Larry Land,
Bill Hodgman, Glen Fichman, Bob Case, Al Apodaca, Glenn Owen, Gary Bliss, Lance Eldred'
Pete Manoukian. !
Sitting, left to right! Vic Neally, Hal Yada, Mike Weiland, Rich Fagan, Chris Anicich Jose
Lopez, Charley Green, Dave Lockwood, Pat Perry.
Not pictured: Ed Brewer. O. C CartllPWWIMMB^M^^PP^IaniS Skip
Palmer, Randy ZeDfer, Tom Balderrama, Al Crandall, Gary Garcia.
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Seated (left to right): Mark Lavin, Ed Lasman, Mike Ravel, Gary Green, Jay Eisenberg, Kevin Allen, Mark Yokumizo, Mike Lyons, Paul Lavin, Bill Bernfield, Mark Tamarin.
1st Row (left to right) : Ted Hankin, Jeff Levine, Lee Goldman, Ken Berg, Louis Sorger, Jerry Saliman, Rick Lesch, Jamie Weiss.
2nd Row (left to right): Marty Moss, Howard Brand, Al Trump, Larry Friedman, Craig Streit, Tom Jones, Don Browning, Chris Walker, Sherman Dang, Mark Weisberg, Dave Noskin, Dave Bramson, Bob Kreuger, Lenny Mintzer, Ilan Just Ron Glousman, Steve Smith.
3rd Row (left to right) : Irv Chase, John Simon, Zane Averback, Greg Hirsh, Jack Bradley, Bob Decker, Ken Kaushansky, Mark Constant, Peter Margolis, Steve Friedman, Jerry Katz, Jerry Greenberg, Rich Gerringer, Chris Harvey, Ian Fleish- man, Murray Soloman.
SOROR1 ES
Continually re-evaluating ourselves and thinking in terms of survival, we have found ourselves questioning Greek tradition. The necessity for integrating original ideals of sorority living with contemporary needs of college women has emerged as the dynamic force behind the Greek system. Communal living develops individuality, which enhances one's capacity to con- tribute to the group, and as a group to the community. We have begun to realize the potential in a sorority to increase each woman's awareness of expanding avenues of commitment. The experience of living among and sharing oneself with diverse personalities forces each of us to be flexible and open. It is this flexibility that has allowed the sororities to adapt to changing demands and insures their future strength.
Abbitt, Robin Barakova, Luba Binkowski, Linda
Brosius, Linda Caton, Nancy Chase, Carol
Faisant, Kathy Finger, Ruth Hildebrand, Jan
Bloesser, Bonnie Bowen, Debbie
Chooljian, Diana Cotton, Cindy
Alpha Chi Omega
Hvidt, Peg Johnson, Kathy Keeton, Dana
Laws, Laurie McMahon, Pat Parnkopf, Anne
leton, Debbie Randolph, Diane Rawlings, Roz
Reel, Karen Robnison, Barbara Schmidt, Danielle
Solinger, Wendy Teaford, Anne Walker, Debbie
"To live is not to live for one's self;
let us help one another."
— Menander of Athens
Ahramson. Denise Anthony. Joanna Armstrong. Linda Baba. Beverly Balph. Jeanne
Barnes. Jeri Behm. Kristen Benson. Debbie Benz. Mitzi Brandt. Anne
Brown. Patty Burns. Pam Caldwell. Kvelyn Coplen. Susan Crenshaw. Melissa
Alpha Delia Pi
Doughty. Ann Ghormley, Lyn
(iurola. Michele Hayek. Diane lletrick. .lane
Holdam, Margaret Hybl. Carol lida. Celeste Jackons. Marybeth Kastel. Candy
Kastel, Judy Kessen. Karen Klock. Becky Kopitzke. Janet MacBride, Chris
McCorkell. Kieran Martini, Esther Meyer. Jackie Michels. Cindy Nutt. Carla
B
Robinson, Kathy Scholar, Julie Shirey. Eileen Signer, Cathy Sohni. Vera
Soto. Yvonne Stern, Dawn Unland. Holly Vague. Pam Van Osdel. Marv
Abrams, Debbi Avchen, Patty Berger, Wendi Bernstein, Honi Boatwright, Pat
Cloper, Debi Copalman, Phillis Dinnerstein, Kim Eglin, Carol Fellows, Dede
.
Fisher, Debbie Freed, Nancy Glucksman, Vivian Hodes, Cathy Holland, Maria
Kanter, Sue Kiser, Cindy Kroft, Patty Leiter, Gloria Leonard, Arlene
_
Alpha Epsiion Phi
Levi, Lonnie LeVine, Randi Lewis, Cindy Lind, Patty Lippett, Linda
Lovus, Yvonne Mann, Stephanie Marshall, Jaime McGuire, Carolyn Perlin, Sherry
Pincus, Karen Richmond, Nancy Richtel, Heidi Rittenberg, Diane Schiffman, Gail
'
Schneiderman, Caro Smith, Beth Sockolov, Debbie Solomon, Donna Speizer, Charolette
••* r
Steinberg, Bonnie Tarcher, Carol Tonkin, Sue Walmark, Robin Weiner, Madeline
Abbott, Tukey Allen, Julie Beran, Sue Bonifield, Lucy Boyd, Colleen Brown, Kathy
Choate, Clare Crandall, Cathy Daehnert, Joan Daze, Denise DePrang, Roma Drake, Laurie
Ellis, Kim Estey, Janice Finwall, Carol Foley, Terri Goodman, Gayle Grabel, Lori Jo
Guttierez, Pat Hatem, Martie Hausrath, Janet Heiser, Cathy Henderson, Judy Hernandez, Alim
Higgins, Irene Johnson, Laurie Jones, Jessica Keller, Robin Kelley, Cheryl Kubota, Sophie
uritson, Christ! Lee, Nancy Lewis, Aleta Lynch, Connie Marshall, Marcie Mather, Joan
McCloud, Sally McNally, Mary Jo Morgan, Ann Needham, Jeanne Needham, Nancy Oh, Stephanie
Olson, Jeannie Pitts, Debbie Riley, Sue Riley, Vicky Rodewald, Kathy Salisbury, Nancy
Sankey, Pat Schmidt, Judy Smith, Pat Soulis, Nicki Soulis, Paula Stoll, Bev
Sullenberger, Jan Tayler, Leslie Taylor, Barb Upp, Susan
Buik-y, Sandy Bickel. Jana Brown. Charlon Fishburne. Kathv
Frost, Jacqueline (iaml)k1, Constance (iardner. Kandy (Jrell. Carolvn
Griffin, Katie Huskey. Marie Kawartani, Kay Morgon. Pam
Paddock, Nancy Pollit. Suzie Winters, Madeline Vudkin, Jackie
llDlia Gamma Delia
David, Lynn Pass. Alice Fo'.dman, Nancy Fichelson. Gayle Freisleben. Marilyn
Gumbiner, PYancie Izenstark. Sue .Jacobs. Linda
Lazarou, Karen
Levin. Paula Marks. Lisa Miller. Judy Moss. Sue Rich, Melanie
Schmier, Saree Schulman. Carol Schwartz. Claire Wise, Helena Yolfee. Karen
Sigma Delta lau
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Chi Alpha Delia
1. Ann Yokoyama
2. Anne Kokawa
3. Ellyn Abo
4. Teri Nitta
5. Judy Kuwahara
6. KathyUota
7. Candi Lew
8. Lynn Hiji
9. Karen Kitani 10. Pam Fukumoto
11. Masa Nomura
12. Grace Mak
13. Sue Ouchi
14. Sheila Shinsato
15. Janet Iwatsubo
16. Paula Jung
17. Karen Fujihara
18. Jean Kubota
19. Naomi Naito
20. Shirley Koda
There is a destiny
that makes us sisters
None goes her way alone.
All that we send
into the lives of ofhers
Comes bock info our own.
Aucott, Susan Bonner, Cindy Carbaugh, Chris Elmer, Cathy Fulmis, Candi Goforth, Lynnel
Hammargren, Debbie Heirs, Pat
Hildebrand, MaryBeth Kelly, Jayme Klessig, Karen Krouss, Janet
Langford, Marianne Meyers, Nancy Mitchell, Diane Moehring, Karen Palmer, Julie Pulec, Marilyn
Robinson, Linda Saunders, Kathy Stone, Terry Tinsley, Nancy Trani, Sharon VanderLinde, Laurie
Woodard, Gail Zittrich, Valerie
Kappa Delia
Delia Gamma
lower row, left to right:
Eliza Kubota, Marguerite Pollitt, Tracey Pate, Dawn McCracken, Cara Grieve, Terri Kallshian, Judi Reich, Lynda Watson,
Polly Stocking, Karen Gardner, Kim Haycox, Coquette MacKay, Sue Dalberg, Linda Johnson, Rumi Taira, Katie Low middle row, left to right: Melinda Hrachovy, M'Liss Jones, Mary Ann Mueller, Margie Wallace, Debbie Palfreyman, Gayle Huggs, Carol Martin, Dea
Holt, Debbie Kracht, Cherry Cotter, Sue Hollywood, Terry Covington, Marie Egan, Carolyn Dedman, Nancy Woolf, Maria
Easum, Jenny Geary, Barbara VanDerhoof top row, left to right: Paula Schneider, Margaret Brown, Dicey Mitchell, Maryann Wells, Jeanne McConnell, Nancy Kanzler, Janey McFerran, Pam
Miller, Marilyn Luzano, Gayle Nelson, Sue Clarery, Barbara Heartt, Julie Mclntyre, Joyce Loewy, Anne Kane, Holly Michels
rt.
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Andrews, Janet Baker, Robin Ballain, Jo Bankes, Marcia Bartels, Janet Benham, Lonnie
Chalson, Cindy Coke, Tina de Lorimier, Ginger Emerson, Susi Flanagan, Jill Gaudin, Lori
Gilroy, Karen Graf, Ellen Guthrie, Gerel Hallahan, Barbara Hamm, Debbi Hammond, Vicky
Holt, Lea Izu, Joni Kerr, Kathy Kistler, Lisa Knapp, Robin LaHaye, Laura
Delta Delta Delta
Lance, Pam List, Karen Loy, Melanie Maiers, Cindy Martin, Nanette McAdams, Linda
Meyer, Debbie Neff, Chris Neff, Gail Osborn, Mona Ousman, Lori
Prichard, Liz Reasoner, Valerie Riley, Patty Roundtree, Sue Sheffer, Linda
Shepphird, Carolee Short, Patti Smith, Carla Spindler, Emily Spindler, Stephanie
Tannenberg, Laura Vrabel, Debbie Walters, Sally Wass, Pam Winslow, Diane Wyman, Debbie
\
Ik
This is Delta Zeta; singing, studying, eating, and thinking about what this sorority means. We enjoy mixing the social with the sensuous. Last year, Delta Zeta was scholastically at the head of fhe row. We plan to carry on our tradition of contributing to campus life with many new projects and interests.
Delia zeta
*
Alpha Hi Delta
h
In our time the family unit is considered to be a social group with an uncertain future. But here at Alpha Xi Delta we hove o family with a positive outlook, a cohesive unit with each member an essential contributor to the group. Love, help, un- derstanding, and social activities are some of the ingredients which we feel contribute to the viability of our family. In essence, our sorority is a tightly-knit group whose congenial atmosphere encourages sharing joys or problems, and a unit which extends itself to benefit others.
Burnett, Karen Richards, Lynn
Hardenbrook, Mariane Rose, Kathy
Hardenbrook, Peggy Stanberry, Sharon
Larkin, Mary Twilegar, Judy
Malloy, Sandy Yamauchi, Linda
Mata, Darling Zomar, Vickie Okitsu, Ann
Birmingham, Kate Blickensderfer, Nancy Briggs, Lauchlin Brock, Wendy Cannon, Patty
Cooch, Deb Covington, Carol Cuen, Terri Davis, Diana Distaso, Madeleine
Farris, Linda Freeman, Marilyn Freeman, Sue Hildt, Janie Howard,, Liz
Jackson, Kathy Jensen, Rita Keliher, Betsy Keller, Melodie Kernkamp, Carolyn
Kernkamp, Laura Kilgore, Ann King, Madelaine Kohler, Libby Kreider, Lynn
Livesay, Karen Lopez, Carol McCarthy, Melinda Milam, Debbie Montes, Gary
Morishita, Lynne Peterson, Connie Phillips, Cindy Poffenroth, Patty Puls, Maureen
von Mizener, Gayle Weber, Jane Weller, Wendy
Reed, Valerie Roush, Jeannie Skov, Sascha Torres, Cindy von Mizener, Donna
•
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Kappa Alpha Theia
1) Debbie Kabuss
2) Marilyn May
3) Cindy Rankin
4) Colleen Fitzhenry
5) Wendy Howard
6) Denise Belfry
7) Luisa Figueras
8) Mary Ann Ward
9) Debbie Messenger
10) Suzanne Teixeira
11) Debbe Pill
12) Cyndi Cramer
13) Cindy Bolcom
14) Janice Mooney
15) Leslie Broadbelt
16) Carrie Handy
17) Judi Woodward
18) Kathleen Flannery
19) Patti Fitzpatrick
20) Debbie Wills
21) Sherri Willson
22) Mrs. Ruby Long
23) Kim Delaney
24) Susan Williams
25) Sue Ulix
26) Holly Lawson
27) Shanon Carrell
28) Marcia Gravette
29) Meg Meager
30) Karen Kenny
31) Bobette Nelson
32) Vicki Vance
33) Robyn Fainer
34) Terry Murphy
35) Janet Johnson
36) Lisa Steinbrenner
37) Pam Clark
38) Carole Hall
39) Susanne Pearce
40) Ann Harmon
41) Debbie Samson
42) Beth McClure
43) Chris Scherdel
44) Melanie Knoth
45) Debbie Amos
46) Lynn Crosby
47) Nancy Ghan
48) Sally Cote
49) Diane Duncan
50) Betty Henderson
51) Non Ohlson
52) Robin Dearden
53) Marianne Moyn
Not pictured:
Cathy Adams Mia Gilberg Jody Hammond Marsha Milton Andria Pill Janice Pierson Doreen Gordon Nancy Fyson
Bear. Kendel Merry. Marky Bigetow, Tish Blanke, Marcia Burdsal. Vicki Chiang. Frances
Cook, Melanie Denmes. Pam Dennies. Paula Hinders. Diane Fischer Michele Franklin. Jean
Futrell, Jan Garcia . Marisel (lilcrest. Kathy Head Betsy Heil, Lynn Hinds Anita
Hnllenbeck, Shelley Kossar. (rert Lewis, [{ohm I.loyd. Sii7y Mahoney. Barbara Masaki, Stephanie
Kappa Kappa Gamma
McCann, Mary Elle McConnell, Karen McCrory, Denise McGoldrick, Ann O'Brien, Karen Quimby, Chris
Quimby, Pam Peterson, Jackie Rasak, Val Riley, Debby Riordan, Monica
Romero, Maggi Russell, Ann Sammons, Connie Slotemaker de Bruin
Delight Stalwick, Dawn
Stenen, Pam Stoops, Janis Tracy, Bridget Trask, Leslie Vickers, Nancy
Weed, Laurie West, Shauna Whitehouse, Sheri Yeager, Jane Young, Anne Zimmerman, Terry
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Adachi, Man Akazawa, Elaine Fujimoto, Kathy
Ida, Harumi Ikeuye, Moreen Iriye, Diana
Jung, Wendy Kakehashi, Kris Kujubu, Dianne
Kujubu, Leah Louie, Sharyn \Iiura Marsha
Miyamoto, Jeanne Mochizuki, Eimee Nakagiri, Karen
f. ':•-•.'- ,'
Then Kappa Phi
Nakamura, Janice Noda, Keiko Obita, Janice
Okumuto. Diane Oshinonu. Vicki Ota, I'andi
Suyetsugu, Elaine Suzuki. Lynne Takenaka, Owen
Kong, M. Toy, Susan Wong, Cindy
Wong, Lana Ynmada. JoAnne Vumaguchi, Marianne
Baver, Jeanine Benjamin, Chris Cooley, Laurel Cost, Shelley Davis, Christine Down, Susan
England, Steve Carman, Paul Greenwood, Richard Hall, Jeffery Higgins, Kathy Holloway, Craig
Kaleth, Jeanne Men sing, Millicent Miller, Charlene Robinson, Nancy Scherff, Rand Shiftman, Norman
Sirola, Margaret Smith, Cecile Snively, Carol Spencer, Paul Thompson, Naomi ( Housemother) Wilson, Warren
Wright, James Young, Janet
Asher House
Alpha Lambda Delia
Beels, Clarisse Geary, Virginia
Greenspan, Sylvia Margolies, Dany McCullough, Barbara
Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Lambda Delta are national honoraries recognizing men and women who attain scholastic excellence in the freshman year. The board members pictured here are responsible for organizing the social-service activities of the organizations.
Phi Eta Sigma
Redmond, Dorothy Schneiderman, Carol Weisel, Linda Weselman, Marian
Berlin, Brad Finerman, Matthew
Melendez, Dennis Stiles, Charles Ting, Albert
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Front row L to R Roberta Becker Denise Daze Kendel Bear Chris Quimby Carmen Rexach Pam Lance
2nd Row L to R Cindy Cotton " Mancy Paddock
Look . TPain Quimby. .. Marisel Garcia Lynn David. . _ . . Dawn T. Evans Joanne Ishimine Charlene Lewis
3rd Row L to R Linda Carpenter Debbie Eindlay .. Michele Gurrola Lisa Kistler Kathy Porter Tali de la Tor Betsy Head Bridget Tracy Mary Donahue Nancy Needham
Barbara Mahoney
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Karen O'Brien Lai Wong Rory Gayrtor Laurie Drake Pat Saukcy Shelly Bowers Marcie Marshall
Jeannie Rouch Karen Livesay
5th Row L to R Karen Kay Ellen Custer Debbie-Riley Ann Russel Mary Ann Mueller Melinda Hrachovy Kare Siehl Sue Clarey Linda Johnson Terry Ann Zimmer Gayle Nelson
6th Row L to R Leslie Trask Robin Smith Geri Molina Michele Jani Jane Yeager
Debbie Urabel Barbara Hallahan Melanie Loy Kathy Kerr
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Bergh, Andy Bliss, Gary Colton, David Dischner, Bob Docherty, Rich Ellis, Kent
Fagan, Rich George, Jim Haymond, Cort Hughes, Brian Jurgensen, Ron Klosterman, Steve
Kudo, Rich Lapham, Jeff Losey, Bob Parker, Scott Perry, Mike Petrie, Greg
Piini, John Ramirez, Bob Reynolds, Bradley Rinehart, Jess Riskas, Dean Riskas, Jim
Rothstein, Pat Sinclair, Bob Skarin, Kurt Steele, Gary Steinbrenner, Neal Tabor, Tom
Walker, Woody Wulff, Torrey
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photo contest
Grand Prize
James Horton - Grad Econ. Reflection of Royce Hall on a puddle in Royce Quad.
Grand Prize - Jams Morton
Still
Mark Rubin - Skip the linesman was shot during the UCLA vs Oregon football game with a Minolta SRT- 101 using a 200 mm f3.5 Rokkor lens and Tri- X film at ASA 400.
James Horton - Royce Hall shot from inside of Powell Library.
Ron Ramus - Statue in front of the University Research Library was shot using high contrast film, ASA 50, at f2.8 and 1/60 sec.
First Prize - Mark
Second Prize - Jams
Third Prize - fa
Action
Rick Becker - UCLA ski class was taken with a Minolta SRT 101 using a 135 mm £2.8 Rokkor lens and panatomic-X film.
t
Silas Lum - Little children with Josephine Bruin was shot during the Varsity Preview with a Nikon Photomic-FTN using Tri-X film.
Bill Jack - Fountain in front of Macgowan Hall shot using a Pentax SPII at 1/1000 sec.
First Prize - 2
Second Prize - Ms
Third Prize-
Special Effects
Randolph Tokuda - Picture of his daughter shot with a Mamiya C-
33, 135 mm lens. Background dropped out with a mask.
Howard Waxenberg- Statue near Dickson Art Center taken with a
Canon FTb using infrared film.
* x
r
Elie Gindi - Face of statue at Schoenberg Hall superim-
posed on the wall of Kerckhoff Hall.
Tokuda
I II!
I
1 1 I I I
Second Prize -
Third Prize - Efo
Congrats.
As a graduating senior you have
— been around the sun about 22 times — spent 17 years in the educational process, or 4,590 days in class — counting time off for weekends, holidays, summer, and bad moods, or 34,560 hours in class taking off for lunch, recess and sleeping late, or close to 50,000 hours studying counting homework.field trips and cramming, which is roughly 2,080 times longer than it took God to create a new world from scratch.
with
you i
HONOR
BEVERLY ABRAAAS -- Director-Tutorial Project
ROSS ALAN ARBITER - - SLC, Administrative Vice President,
Student Faculties Commissioner
KENDEL BEAR — Alumni Hostess, President — Bruin Belles COLLEEN BOYD — Women's Intercollegiate Volleyball NANCY LYNNE GHAN — Bruin Be//es, Song girl KEVIN ROGER CRAIG — Superlative contributions in Water Polo LARRY CLINTON FARMER JR. - - Superlative contributions in
Basketball RICKI JILL FELDMAN -- Tutorial Project, Mardi Gras, Alpha
Lamda Delta
LESTER FRIEDMAN -- Varsity Basketball Manager MARISOL GANDARILLAS — Director — Choicano Youth Barrio
Program, U.A.C.
STEVEN JOEL HALPERN Student Body President, Ad-
ministrative Vice President, Bruin Bear
LARRY HOLLYFIELD — Superlative contributions in Basketball HILARY JOHNSON — Women's Intercollegiate Volleyball MARILYN BEATRICE JOSHUA — Head Cheerleader CAROLYN ELIZABETH KASTEL -- Alpha Lamda Delta, Mortar
Board President, Volunteer Tutor for LA. City Schools WENDY LEE KOUT — Alumni Scholarship, Honor English Student JEFFERY CHRISTOPHER LAPHAM Campus Events Com-
missioner, (FC President, U. P. C. LESLIE ELLIS LATNER — Varsity Football Manager, Mardi Gras
Publicity Chairman
DONALD ERNEST LEUTZ — KLA General Manager, Disc Jockey ELIZABETH MCCLURE — Panhe//enic President, Volunteer worker for Red Cross, LA. Chamber of Commerce Student Achievement Award
SENIORS
GLORIA MENESES — MEChA Chairman
JANE LOUISE MURRAY — Student Health Intern
BRUCE SHERMAN NELSON -- Daily Bruin Cartoonist, Student
Committee for the Arts Chairman, Student Intern MICHAEL RICHARD OLSSON — Administrative Intern Director,
Freshman Orientation Program ESTHER MORENO PEREZ — Communications Board BENNET BRIAN RODILITZ -- Dorm President, Letters and Science
Intern, Tau Beta Pi
LESTER STEVEN ROSEN — SLC, Genera/ Rep, U.P.C, Yell Leader DEBORAH JEAN ROSS — California State Scholarship, Medicus
Club
MAUREEN RUTH SIEGEL — /Ward/ Gras, Clean Air Council ALBERT CHIA TING — Blood Drive, UAC, Alpha Phi Omega Car
Pool, Phi Eta Sigma President KAYE ELLEN TUCKER - - Women's week steering committee,
Women's Resource Center
BRUCE EDWARD WALTON — superlative contributions in Football HOWARD WAXENBERG -- Director — Tutorial Project, Southern
Campus JEFFREY RANDOLPH WEBER — Southern Campus Editor, Daily
Bruin Book Review Editor, Staff Writer, KLA, Satyr, Sigma
Delta Chi JOAN WEINSTEIN — Dai/y Bruin Index Editor, staff writer, honor
student
NATHANIEL WILLIAMS -- Academic Honors, Student Govern- ment
DIANE VALENTINE WINSLOW — Head Song Girl LILLARD MONROE WOOTON — BSU Chairman, Board of Control
Aarons, B.A.,
Abbors, B.A.,
Abrams, B.A.,
Abshier,
Be .0.,
Adachi, B.A.,
Kathy
Sociology
Mary
Art History
Beverly
History
Thomas L.
Engineering
Mari
Public Service
Adams, Alayne
B.A.. French Adams, Jeane R.
B.A., History Adams, Mortimer
B.A., Political Science Adelson, Stuart
B.A., Political Science Agarwal, Satishkumar
B.S., Electronic Engineering
Aguilar, Louis
M.A., Latin American Studies Allewitz, Phyllis
B.A., SSET Allison, Anthony
B.A., Political Science Amandus. David
B.S., Chemistry Amankulor, James Ndukaku
M.A., Theater Arts
Amid, Shahab
M.S., Chemical Engineering Anderson, Christian B.
B.A., Zoology Anrade, Esperanza
B.A., History Anrade, Rosaura
B.A., History Andree, Thomas
B.A., Political Science
Anglin. Sandra
B.A., History Arao, Alan
B.A., Biology Araki. Sachiko
B.A., Economics, Mathematics Arbiter, Ross
B.A., Political Psychology Arlen, Martie
B.A., Pictorial Arts
Armstrong, Robert
B.A., Economics Arnoff, Joseph
B.A., Psychology Arnold, James
B.S., Nuclear Engineering Arroyo. Edward
B.A.. Philosophy Asher, Isabella
B.A., Italian
Atkins, Rebecca
B.A., Music Auerbach, Janet
B.A., Psychology Austin, Kay
B.A., Spanish Austin, W. Jeff
B.S., Economics Avery, Jeromye
B.A., History
Bam, Rebecca Leigh
B.A., English Baker, Marsha
B.A., SSET Baker, Nathaniel
B.S., Engineering Ball, Marcella
B.A., Psychology Bank, Carol
B.A., Sociology
Banks, Koy
B.A., History Barber, Judith
B.A., History Bardwil, Steven
BA, Psychology Barngrover, Mary Ann
B.A., Political Science Barnston, Anthony
B.A.. Psychology
Barthel, Frederick
B.A., Mathematics Bass. Geraldine
B.A., Art History Baumann. Richard L.
B.A.. Neurophysiology Bautista, Norma
B.A., Sociology Bayer, Paula
B.A.. Spanish
Bear, Kendel
B.S., Sociology Beezy, Barbara
B.S.. Environmental Health Bell. Jacquelyn
B.A., Political Science Bell, LaRoyce
B.A., Sociology Belzer, Nancy
B.A.. Political Science
Benmosche, Moss
B.A.. Mathematics Benton. Karen
B.A., Psychology Beran, Susan
B.S., Kinesiology Berg, Ronald
B.A., Political Science Bernstein, Laura
B.A., Dance
Bernstein, Robert B.S., Psychology
Berrin. Gail B.A., Sociology
Berry, Byron
B.S., Psychobiology Bessette. Roxann
B.A., English Bigelow, Tish
B.A., Political Science Big Pond, David
B.A., Sociology Bird, Laura
B.A.. Mathematics
Birznieks, Inese
B.A., Political Science Blair, Robert
B.A., Economics Blickensderfer, Nancy
B.S., Kinesiology Bliss, Gary
B.S., Economics Bloom, Jeanne
B.A., Political Science
Boadi Siaw, Samuel
C. Phil., History Boddington, Claudia
B.A., Mathematics Borden. Chet
B.S., Mathematics Borden. Constance
B.S., Nursing Borden, Ken
B.S., Economics
Bostwick, Gretchen A.
B.A., Sociology Bowen, Deborah Ann
B.A., Theater Arts Boyd, Timothy Allen
B.A., History, African Studies Bramson. David
B.A., Political Science Breckow, Dale
B.A., Political Science
Brewer. Edward
B.S., Economics
Brewer. Jesse A.
B.S., Psychology
Brewer, Timothy
B.A., Sociology Bronstem, Robert
B.A., Zoology Brough, Judy
B.A., Political Science Brown, Earlene
M.N., Nursing Browne. Gail
B.A., History
Brown. Joan
B.A., Music Brown, Terrence
B.A., History Brownstein, Robert M.
B.A., Political Science Buck, Robert
B.S., Biochemistry Burdeos, Ann
B.A., Philosophy
Byron. Herbert B.A., Political Science, History
Caballeio. Ibis
B.A., Psychology Cadar, Katherine
B.A., Scandinavian Languages Calhoun. Cheryl
B.A., History Calkins, Linda M.
B.A., Psychology, Sociology
Calkins, Louise E.
B.A., Pictorial Arts Campbell, Gary
B.A., Sociology Campbell, Tom
B.A., Economics Candy, Thomas
B.S., Political Science Cannon, Patricia
B.A., Bacteriology
Card, Carrie
B.S., Nursing Carlin, Nancy
B.A.. Political Science Carlisle, Russell
B.S., Individual Carrell, Shanon
B.S., Psychology Castillo, Joel
B.A.. Psychology, Mathematics
Castillo, Nancy
B.A., American Literature,
Sociology Chan. David
J.D. Chang. Sharon
B.A., Chinese Chang, Tiffany
B.A., Mathematics Chang, Yu-Sa
B.A., Sociology
Chapirson, Cheryl
B.A., English Chapman, Leslie
B.A., Political Science Chase, Leanna
B.A., Sociology Chernock, Debra
B.A., Political Science Chevalier, Cole
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science
Chiang. John
M.B.A., Management Chickota, Ruth
B.A.. Theater Arts Chihak. Cindy
B.A., Psychology Childs, Joy
B.A., Individual Chin, Amy
B.A., Mathematics
Chin, Wilford
B.A., Psychology Chong, Kenneth
B.A., Philosophy Chong, Lanceford
B.S., Premed, Public Health Chow, Kan (Ken)
B.A., Bacteriology Chow, Ronald
B.A., History
Ciruli. Floyd
B.A., Political Science Cirksena, Mary Kathryn
B.A., Motion Pictures Cislowski, David
B.S., Physics Clark, Ann
B.S., Kinesiology Cohen, Martin
B.S., Biochemistry
Collins, Ellen
B.S., Kinesiology Compas, Bruce
B.A., Psychology Conway, Jill Marisa
B.A., Sociology Cook, Allison
B.A., Sociology Cooper, Greg
B.A., Economics
Cooper, Janie
B.A., History Cooper, Jannell
B.S., Nursing Copalman, Phyllis
B.A., Art History Corber, Sharon
B.A., Mathematics Cotton, Cindy
B.A., Political Science
Covington, Carol
B.A., History Cox, Leland
B.A., Psychobiology
Craig, James
B.A., Political Science Craig, Kevin
B.S., Kinesiology Crandall, Cathleen
B.S., Kinesiology Cummings, Beverly
B.A.. Economics Curtis, Jane
B.A., Psychology
Curtis, Robert
B.A., Zoology Custer, Ellen
B.A., Pictorial Arts Czer, Lawrence
B.S., Physics DaOay, Elizabeth
B.S., Political Science Damalas, Jim
B.A., Political Science
Dana, Deborah
B.A., Psychology Dance. William Forest
B.A., Theatre Arts Delfs. Deborah
B.A., Psychology Delgado, Jr., Antonio J.
B.A., Political Science Delgado, Nelly
M.A., Spanish
DelValle, Robert A. Jr.
B.A., Motion Pictures/TV Dersh, Cynthia
B.A., Political Science Dershem. Larry
B.A., History DeSantis, Mark
B.A.. History Diamond, Jeffrey
M.A., Sociology of Educatior
Diano, David
B.A., Psychology Diawaku. Noe
Ed.D., Education
Dickms, Isabella
M.A.. Nursing Dietrich. Anthony
B.A., Psychology Dirstme, Hugh
M.S.. Finance Dischner. Robert
B.A.. Political Science Donahue. Denise
B.A., English
Donahue. Mary
B.A., History Dong. Low
B.S., Electrical Engineering Dome. Elise
B.A., History. French Dormsch, Walton
B.A.. Motion Pictures/TV Dragicevich. Joseph
B.A., Economics
Duarte. David
B.A., Engineering Duke, Carrie
B.A.. Psychology Dulganan, Dean
B.A.. Economics Dunkle. Michael
B.S.. Economics Durr. Lillie
B.A.. Psychology
Duxbury. Janet
B.A., Political Science Dybens. Bruce
B.A., Economics Edell. Marsha
B.A.. History Edgerton, Eileen M.
B.A.. Geography Edmgton. Mona
B.A.. English
Eisenberg, Arnold
B.A., Mathematics Eisenstadt, Jill
B.A.. English Eisfelder. Elise
B.A.. History El Adli, Fouad
B.A., Biology Elem, Gary
B.A.. Public Management
Elkin. Debra
B.A., Psychology Elkins. Gordon
B.A., Psychology Ellis, Kimberley
B.A.. English Emerson, Susan
B.A.. Sociology Enders, Diane
B.A., Anthropology
Eng, Richard
B.S., Engineering Enomoto. Amy
B.A., Philosophy Enrici, Pamela Lee
M.A., Geography Essex, Lorraine
B.A., Ethnomusicology Estey, Janice
B.A., Geography
Estrada, Henry
B.A., Political Science, Philosophy Estrada, Hugh
B.A., Spanish Eu, Adeline
B.A., Art Ewing, II, Robert W.
B.A., Motion Pictures Fainer, Robyn
B.A.. History
Farber. Carol
B.A.. History Farcau. Biuce
B.A., History Fawcett. Henry
B.S., Biology Fekjar, Berit
B.A., Mathematics Feldman, Ricki
B.A., Spanish
Fellner, Patricia
B.S., Nursing Fellows. DeDe
B.A , Theater Arts Field, Susan
B.A., History Fields, Pamela S,
B.A., History Findlay, Debra
B.A., English
Finerman, Matthew
B.A., Bacteriology Fisher, Lawrence
B.S., Engineering Flynn, Ellen
B.A., Psychology Fogelman, Mitchell K.
B.A., Mathematics Forcier, Jim
B.S., Political Science
Forssen, Eric
B.S., Chemistry Foster, Michael
M.B.A., Management Fox. Barbara
B.A., Psychology Francisco. Gordon R.
B.A., Political Science Franklin, Betzi
B.A.. Political Science
Frankman, Janice B.A., Sociology
Fredholm, Carol B.A., Psychology
Freeman, Honoria
B.A., Mathematics Freisleben, Marilyn
B.A.. English Frieda. Dennis
B.S., Physics, Mathematics Friedman, Larry R.
B.A., Psychology, Mathematics Fritz, Annette
B.A., Economics,
Business Administration
Frowner, Joyce
A.B., History Fujimoto. Jeffrey
B.A., Zoology Fujiura, David
B.A., Economics Fullmer, James
B.A., Economics Galef, Franklin
B.A.. Biology
Gam, Sharon
B.A., Psychology Garabed, Khajak
M.A., Urban Planning Garcia, Ernest L.
Ed.D.. Education Garcia, James
B.A., Psychology, Philosophy Garrick, Kenneth
B.A., Design
Gatlm, Dolores
B.S., Mathematics Gee, Mona
B.S., Bacteriology George, Susan
B.A., Sociology Germain, Leo J.
B.A., Economics, Geography Ghan, Nancy
B.S., Health Education
Ghirelli, Marilyn B.A., Psychology
Giannelli, Michael A. B.A., Psychology
Giarratano, Susan
B.S., Health Education Gibson, Stephen
B.S.. Kinesiology Gilbert, Lawrence
B.A., Mathematics Gilcrest, Kathleen
B.A., Psychology Gillan. Kim
B.A., Psychology
Givicti, Kenneth
B.A., Bacteriology Givner. Bruce
B.A., History Glass, Annie
B.A., Theater Arts Glimp, Richard
B.A., Zoology Glucksman, William
B.A., History
Goldstein, Charles-Terry
B.A.. History Goldstein, Gloria
B.A., Political Science Gonzalez, Ilia
B.A., Sociology Goodman, Ellen
B.A., Economics Goodman, Gayle Lynn
B.A., Economics
Goodman. Irene
B.A., Psychology Gooze, Mitchell
B.S.. Engineering Goranson, Greta
B.A., Political Science Gordon. Kenneth
B.A., Political Science Gorman, Eileen
B.A., Art History
Goulding, Philip
B.A., Psychology Graifer, Linda
B.A., Spanish Grant, Darryle
B.A., Political Science Grant, Setha
B.A.. Political Science Gray, James
B.S., Chemistry
Gray. Kathleen
B.A., English Green, Theopilus
B.A., History, Sociology Greenberg, Caren
B.A., Sociology Greenberg, Ellynn
B.A., Sociology Gregory, Jeannine
B.A., French
Grimes. Gloria
B.A.. History Gross, Brian
B.A., Psychology Grupp. Jessica
B.A., Mathematics Gudunffa, Abate
M.P.H., International Health Gurcay, Gulden
B.A., Theater Arts
Haber, Shari
B.A., English Haberman, Ruth
B.S., Mathematics Hair, Dan
B.A., History, Political Science Haley, Carla
B.A., Sociology Hall. Mamie Lee
B.A., Speech
Hall, Thomas
B.A., Bacteriology Hallahan. Barbara
B.A., English Hal pern, Steven
B.A., Political Science Hamano, Margie
B.A., Psychology Hammargren, Debra
B.S., Nursing
Hammond, Jody
B.A.. History Hamre, Cathryn
B.A., Psychology Hamrell, Michael
B.S., Biochemistry Hamrick, Linda
B.A., Political Science Handel, Judi
B.A., Psychology
Handley, Gail L.
B.A., Political Science Harm. Dwight
B.A.. Mathematics, Computer Science Harris, Karen
B.A., History Harvey, Georgina
B.S., Nursing Hashimoto, Chizuko
B.A., Mathematics
Hashimura, Linda
B.S., Nursing Hatakeyama, Nancy
B.A., Sociology Hawkins, Ronald
B.A., Psychology, Pre-med Hayashi, Robert
B.A., Economics Hefty, Robert
B.A., Political Science
Heil, Lynn
B.A., Sociology Heiser, Cathy
B.S., Kinesiology
'
Helland, Gregory D.
B.A., Public Administration Henderson, Patricia
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science Heney, Paul
B.A., Economics Henry, Antoinette
B.A., Theater Arts Henry, William H.
B.A., Economics
Hernandez, Alin
B.A., Economics Herrera, Michael
B.A., English Hicks, Barry M.
B.A., Linguistics Hildebrand, Janice
B.S., Zoology Hill. Anita
B.S., History
Hine, Michael
B.S., Biology Hirshberg, Monica
B.A., Zoology Ho, Rosaline
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science Hobart, Terry
B.S., Engineering Hodge, Charles W.
B.A., Geography
Hoehmann, Jane
B.A., Spanish Hoffman, Kristine
B.A., Political Science Hogan, Mary
B.A., Sociology Holender, David
B.A., Mathematics Hollander, Melanie
B.A., Art History
Holt, Carlyn Dea B.S., Psychology
Holt, Lea B.A., Psychology
Honsberger, John
B.A., Zoology Hori, Susan
B.A., English Horowitz, Edward Alan
B.A., Mathematics House. Barbara
B.A., Economics House. Michael
B.A., History
Howard, Cheryl
B.S.. Mathematics Howard. Samueletta
B.S., Sociology, Public Health Howard, Wendy
B.S., Health Education Hrachovy, Melinda
B.A., History Hsieh. Mildred
B.A., Bacteriology
Hvidt, Margaret
B.A.. Political Science Hyde, Stephen
B.A., Political Science Israel, Albert
B.A., History Ishimine, Joanne
B.A., English Isserman, Karm
B.A.. English
Italiano, Michael
B.S., Zoology Iwanaga, Douglas
B.A., Psychology Iwata, Stephen
B.A., Geography Jackson, Jeannine
B.S., Psychology Jackson, Karen
B.A., Psychology
Jaffe, Anne
B.A., Sociology Jaffe, Ken
B.A., Economics Jarvis, Judianne Marie
B.A., French Jenkins, Carolyn
B.A., History Jerand, Douglas
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science
Jetton, Barry
B.A., Psychology Jick. Dorlene
B.A., Political Science Johnson. Brad
B.A., Mathematics, Economics Johnson, Cara
B.S., Psychology Johnson, Erik
B.A., Psychology
Johnson, Roderick
B.A., Psychology Jones, Deborah
B.A., English Jones, Jessica
B.A., Spanish Jones, Shirley
B.S.. Psychology Jordan, Charles
B.A., Psychology
Jordan, Marsha
B.A., Psychology Jorgensen, Linda
B.A., Mathematics Joshua, Marilyn
B.A., Psychology Jung, Betty
B.A., Economics Jung, Wendy
B.A., History
Kabuss. Deborah
B.A., Economics Kajita. lams
B.A., Psychology Kakehashi, Colleen
B.S., Nursing Kambara, Kary
B.A.. Linguistics Kanagawa. Celia
B.A., Political Science
Kaneko, Kevin
B.A.. Psychobiology Kannas, Thelma
B.A., Psychology Kapitanoff, Nancy
B.A., Political Science Kappner. Christhart H.
B.A., Linguistics Karr, Donna
B.A., Psychology
Kastel. Carolyn
B.A., Spanish Keefe, Helen L.
B.A., Spanish Kelly, Jayme
B.S., Physical Education Kemp, Jane
B.A., History Kennedy, Katheryn
B.A., History
Kernkamp, Laura
B.A., Political Science Kessen, Karen
B.S., English Kestenbaum, Barbara
B.A., Hebrew Kiesel, Geoffrey
B.A., Russian Kilgore, Ann
B.A., English
Kimmy, Raymond B.A., Psychology
King. Edward B.S., Kmesiology
King, Sandra
B.A., Pictorial Arts Kisylia, Joan
B.A., Mathematics Kiuchi, Harriet
B.A., History Klein, Eric
B.A., Psychology Klosterman, Steven
B.A., Political Science
Knapp. Robin
B.A.. Political Science Koenekamp, Lynn
B.A., Psychology Koh, Kong-Hwa
B.A.. Economics Kokawa, Anne
B.A., Mathematics. Psychology Kovacic, Gary
B.A.. History
Koyanagi, Karen
B.A., Political Science Kracht, Deborah
B.S., Nursing Krause, Robert
B.A., Bacteriology Krieger, John
B.S./M.S., Electrical
Engineering Krpan, Margaret
B.A., English
Kubilins, Edward Jr.
B.A.. Political Science Kudo, Richard
B.A., Psychology Kuhta, John Christian
M.A., Industrial and
Environmental Design Kurtzman, Denise
B.A., Sociology Kuwahara, Sachi
B.A.. Design
Lamer, Elizabeth
B.S., Nursing Lane, Barbara
B.A.. Theater Arts
Lane, Brian
B.A.. Theater Arts Lane. John F.
M.F.A., Theater Arts
B.A., Political Science Lapham, Jeffrey
B.A., Political Science Lare, John M.
B.A., Economics Later, Deborah
B.A.. History
Latner, Leslie
B.S., Kinesiology, Pre-dental Lau, Georgina Oi-Ping
B.A., Geography Lau, Jack
B.A., Psychology Lau, James
B.A., Bacteriology Lauritson, Christi
B.S., Kinesiology
Lee, Emmeline
B.A., Design Lee, Gene
B.S., Computer Science Lee, Jeanette
B.A., SSET Lee, Sue Ann
B.A., Mathematics Lee, William
B.A., History
Lembersky, Randy
B.A., Sociology Leonard, Gary
B.A., Motion Pictures Leone, Lawrence
B.A., Political Science Leong, Carol
B.A., Oriental Languages Lessner, Diane
B.S., Psychology
LeVeque II, Roland
B.A., Political Science Levinson, Andrew
B.A., Music Lew. Eugene
B.S., Kinesiology Lewis, Aleta
B.A., Anthropology Liban, Irene
B.S., Nursing
Lichtenstein. Terry
B.A., Anthropology Lieu, Lily
B.A., Mathematics.
Computer Science Lighten, Annette
B.A., English Lightsy. Jack K.
B.A., Sociology Lim, Jeanne
B.A., Mathematics
tipper. David A.
B.A., Meteorology Livesay, Karen Ann
B.A., Anthropology Loeb. James
B.A., Political Science Longo. Robert
B.A.. Political Science Look. Rose
B.A., History
Lopaty, Kayla
B.A., English Lopez, Sheila
B.S., Psychology Lowenstein, Michael
B.A., Economics LOrsch. Frederick
B.A., Political Science Lorsch, Nancy
B.A., Psychology
Losey, Robert
B.A., Economics Lovus, Yvonne
B.A.. Sociology Louie, Ming
M.S., Engineering Louie, Sid
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Sciences Low, Katie
B.A., History
Loy, Melanie
B.A., History Luber. David
B.A., Political Science Luk, Jeffrey T.
M.B.A. Mack, Suen-Pok
B.A., Economics Mackey, Steve J.
B.A., Italian, Economics
Maddox, Mary Ellen
B.A., Psychology Major, Susan
B.S., Psychology Mandel, Arthur
B.A., Psychology Manheimer, Ann
B.A., English Marcot, Linda
B.A., History
Marks Kout, Wendy
B.A., Creative Writing Marks, Richard Edward
J.D. Marks, Steven
B.A., Political Science Marshall, Christopher
B.A., History Marshall, Valerie
B.A., English
Martin, Douglas
M.A., Geography Martin, Jack
B.A., Political Science,
Economics
Martin, Marcme
B.A., Geography Martinez, Esperanza
B.A.. Sociology Martinez. Robert
B.A., History Martz II, Robert
B.A., Latin American Studies Mathon, Shelley
B.A., English
May, Marilyn
B.A., Political Science Mayekawa, Patricia
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science Mayfield, Robert
B.S.. Physics Maynord, Theodore
B.A.. Economics Mazner. Rene
B.A., Sociology
McCardy. John A.
B.A., Economics McClennan, Jessie
B.A., History McCloud, Sally
B.A., Sociology McClure, Elizabeth
B.A., Latin American Studies McConnell, Rod
B.S., Engineering
McCrystal, Karen
B.A., Economics McDade, Charles
B.S., Chemistry McDonald Jr., Don
B.A., Political Science Mclntosh. William J.
B.A., Biology Mclntyre. Julie
B.A., History
McKewen, H. Glenn B.A., Zoology
McKinley, Mary B.A., History
McLean. Charles
B.A., History McMahon. Michael
B.A., English McNamee. Stephen
B.A., Mathematics McNulty, Candy
B.A., Anthropology Meager, Timothy S.
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science
Mecenas, Maria Teresa
B.S., Nursing Medugbon. Andrew K.
M.A., Geography Medway, Sandra
B.A., SSET Meerson, Gayle
B.A., Art History Meggers. Albert
B.A., Spanish
Meikle, John K.
B.A.. Bacteriology Melendez, Dennis
B.A.. Political Science Metz, Arthur
B.A., Mathematics Meyer, Roxanne
B.S., Zoology Milam. Deborah
B.A., Linguistics
Miles. Betty
B.A.. Sociology Miller, Karen R.
B.A., Psychology Miller, Mark
B.A., Mathematics Miller, Michael
B.S., Engineering Miller, Richard
B.S., Zoology
Miller, William
B.A., Political Science Mills. Paul
B.A., Biology Milton, Marsha
B.S., R.N.,
Nursing. Public Health Mmter, William
B.A.. Sociology Mifisch, Anne
B.S.. Sociology
Miroff. Matey
B.A., Political Science Mitchell, Jr., Denver C.
M.S., Physics Mitchell. Donald
B.A.. Geography Miura. Marsha
B.S., Public Service Miyamoto, Steven
B.S., Structures
Mizuno, Harriet
B.A., Psychology Monk. Sally
B.A.. Sociology Montalbano, Mark
B.A., Sociology Montgomery, Gary
B.A., History Montoliu, Enric
M.A., Spanish
Moore. Katherine
M.A., Nursing,
Community Mental Health Moore, William
B.A.. Political Science Morimoto. Jane
B.A., History Morris. Roblin
B.A., Economics Morrison, Mark
B.A., Political Science
Moss, Dorothy
M.S., Psychiatric Nursing Moster, Barbara
B.A., Political Science Mozur, Lissa
B.A., Public Affairs.
Individual Major Mueller, Lance
B.A.. Economics Muller. Magda
B.A., History
Munsey, Stephen
B.A., History Murray, Jane Anne
B.A.. Sociology Murray, Jane L.
B.A.. Individual Major Murray. Marilyn K.
B.A., History Myers. Jim
B.A., History
Nadel. Michael
B.A., Design Nakagama, Nancy
B.A.. Psychology Nakashima, Donna
B.A., Economics Nambu. Karie Lynn
B.A., Psychology Nareshni, Dora
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science
Nava, Josephine
B.A., Spanish Naylor. Catherine
B.S.. Kinesiology Needham. Nancy
B.S.. Political Science Neel. Philip
B.A., Motion Pictures/Television Neemeyer, Bonnie
B.A., Political Science
Nelson. Bruce
B.A., Urban Studies Ng. Hoover
M.S.. Engineering
Ng, Peter
B.S., Business, Economics Ng, Rebecca
B.A.. Oriental Languages Nikaldo, Dorothy
B.A., History Nishi, Martin
B.A.. Psychology Nishio, JoAnne
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science
Nocciolo, Albert
B.S., Kinesiology Norman, Edith
B.A., History North. William
B.S., Engineering Ochs, Robert M.
B.S., Kinesiology Oda, Nancy
B.A., History, E. Asian Studies
Ogulnik, Charles
B.A., Political Science O'Kelly, Kathleen
B.A., Philosophy Okitsu, Ann
B.S., Nutritional Sciences Olch. Ronald
B.S.. Engineering,
Computer Science Oliver, Janice
B.A., English
Osborne, Robert
B.S., Engineering Oshinomi, Craig
B.A., Economics Page. Guy S.
B.S., Bacteriology Page, Sandra J.
B.A., Spanish Palazzo, Robert
B.A., Economics
Palmer, Michael B.A., Economics
Pannell, James W. B.A., History
Paperny, David
B.S., Biochemistry Parker. Elizabeth
M.N., Nursing Parnkopf, Anne
B.A., History Parrish, Lawrence
B.S., Biochemistry Paskal, Estelle
B.A., Sociology
Patay, Andrea
B.A., Mathematics Patton, Bert
B.S., Engineering Patton, Beverly
MA, History Pawlak, Carol
B.S., Biochemistry Pellinger, Rae Lynne
B.A., Psychology
Perez. Elvira Lorraine
B.A., Spanish Pesich. Andy
B.A., Music Petrie. Gregory
B.A., Economics, Political Science Pettit, Joe
B.A., Psychology Pinkney, Mary
B.A.. Sociology
Pinto, Ellen
B.A., Sociology Pitts, Debra
B.A., History Plaskoff. Richard
B.A., Political Science Platzer, Meril
B.A.. Geography Polly, Zena
B.A., Psychology
^1 f^
Portilla. Eleanor
B.A.. Political Science Post. Barry Jay
B.A., Political Science Prince. Charlotte
B.A., Psychology Quan. Barney
B.A., Psychology Quon, Ward
B.A., History
Quon, Yen-Ting
B.S., Mathematics Rabin, Debra
B.A., English Radiai, Sadegh
B.S.. Chemical Engineering Rae. Gwenneth
Ed.D., Developmental Studies
in Early Childhood Raley. Richard
B.A., Bacteriology
Ramirez, Bob
B.A.. Psychology.
Political Science Ramos. Gilbert C.
B.A.. Spanish Ramos. Leopoldo
B.A., Political Science Ramsey, Andrea
B.S.. Nursing Ramsey, Robert
B.S., Psychology
Randies, Sharon
B.S.. Nursing Rankin. Lucinda
B.S.. Physical Education Rawlmgs. Roslyn
B.A., English Rawson. Ronald Craig
B.A., Motion Pictures/TV Redke. Bruce
B.A., Mathematics
Redmond, Dorothy
B.A.. Political Science Reel, Karen
B.A.. English Reichman. Ronald P.
B.A., Psychology Reilly, Bonnie
B.A.. History Reiss. Mitchell
B.S., Computer Science
Remba. Ronald
B.S., Physics Reyes. Joe
B.A., Psychology Rhodes, Lynn
B.A., Psychology Rice, Cathy
B.A., Sociology Richards, Stephen
B.A., Political Science
Richardson. Barbara
B.A . Psychology Riley. William
B.A., Philosophy Rmehart. less
BA, Psychology Riskas, Dean
B.A., Economics Riskey, Cynthia
B.A.. Sociology
Rissman. Sheila Siegel
B.A., Sociology Roberts, Roy
B.A.. English Roberts, Vonme
B.A., Pictorial Arts Robertson, David
B.A., Psychology Robertson, Michael
B.A., Political Science
Robinson. Barbara B.A., Linguistics
Robinson, Joseph B.S.. History
Reno Ids. B. BA, Hist.
Rodewald, Kathie
B.S., Kmesiology Rodgers, Jill
B.A.. English Rodriguez, Richard
B.A., Social Sciences
(or Elementary School Teachers Roop, William
B.S., Zoology Rose. Irv
B.A., Psychology
Roseman, Felisa
B.A.. History Rosen, Barbara
B.A., Art History Rosen, Glenn
B.A., Political Science Rosen, Les
B.A., Economics Rosenblot, Julienne
B.A., Sociology
Rosenthal. Robert
B.A., Psychology Ross, Doris
B.A., Political Science Ross, Jon
B.A., English Ross, Paul
B.A., Psychology Ross. Stephen
B.A., Political Science
Rosser. Bill
B.S., Zoology Rosson, Dan
B.A., History, Political Science Rothman, Jerome
B.A.. Psychology Rubin, Steve
B.A., History Ruiz, Gustavo
B.A.. Psychology
Ryals, Elizabeth B.A., English
Rydell, Sharon B.A., English
Sabatte, Frank
B.A., Pictorial Arts Sahle Mikael. Andreas
B.A., Economics Sakamoto. Carol
B.A., Japanese Sanchez, Lydia
B.S., Kinesiology Sanchez, Mercedes
B.A., Spanish
Sands. Alan
B.A., Zoology Saunders, Kathryn
B.A., Sociology Schaefer, Dorothy
B.A.. French Scherff, Rand
M.B.A., Business Schiavone, Edward
B.A., Zoology
Schiffman, Gail
B.A., Math Schleppenbach, Peter
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science Schlesinger, Paula
B.A., English Schroeder. Consuelo
B.A.. Spanish Schuber, Jean
B.A., Business Economics
Schulz, Robert
B.A., Zoology Schwartz, Frederick Lee
B.A., Philosophy Sears, Karen
B.A., Anthropology Sedgwick, Ann
B.S., Psychology Seeger, William
B.A., Economics
Segel, Cindy
B.A., English Seigle, Richard
B.S., Individual Seitz, Karl
B.S., Economics
and Political Science Seki, Mariko
B.S., Mathematics Selbst, Lois
B.A., Economics
Shanafelt, John
B.A., History Shahraray, Mehrnaz
B.A., Psychology Shaw, Robert
B.S., Biology Sheffer, Linda
B.A., Art Shilkoff, Sharon
B.S.. Nursing
Shiozawa, Alice
B.A., Psychology Shiroma, Rosemary
B.A., German Shocket, Neil
B.S., Psychobiology Shohara, Jane
B.A., Oriental Languages Short, Patricia
B.A., Art
Short, Ronald B.A., Economics
Shupe, Linda B.A., Sociology
Sibley, Linda B.A., Political Science
Simon. Philip Alan B.A., Anthropology and Political Science
Simoman, Susan B.A., Pictorial Arts
Singer, Carol
B.A., History Singer, Melody
B.A., Psychology Skarin, Kurt
B.A., Psychology Small, Ava
B.A., Psychology Smith. Craig
B.A., Political Science
Smith Joseph
G.A., Geography Smith. Larry
B.A., Zoology Smith, Larry
B.S.. Biochemistry Smith. Patricia
B.S.. Kinesiology Smith, Randall
B.A., English
Synder, Martin
B.A., English Soblick, Martin
B.A., Political Science Sola, Marc
B.A., Anthropology Soil, Jack
B.A., Speech Sornoff. Robyn
B.A., Art History
Soto, Yvonne
B.A., Music Sparage, Laura
B.A., Theater Arts Sparling. Susan
B.A., Economics Spergel, Sunny
B.A., History Spindler. Emily
B.A., Economics
Stack, Kevin
B.A.. Political Science Stanga, Jeffrey
B.A., Economics
Stark. Robert
B.A.. Television Steele, Gary
B.A., Political Science Stegman, Hugh
M.J., Journalism Steinberg, Bonnie
B.A., History Stephens. Gail Marie
B.S., Psychology
Stephenson. Lynne
B.S., Nutrition Sterling, William
B.A., English Stern, Steven
B.A., Mathematics,
Computer Science Stoor, Marlaine
B.A., Linguistics Strauss, Charles
B.A., Psychology
Strong, Elizabeth
B.S., Nursing Stroud, Stephen
B.A.. Music Stufflebean, David
B.S., Engineering Sugerman. Allen
B.A., Political Science Sumner. Claudia
B.A., Design
Sung, Bafee
B.S., Nursing Sung, Balin
B.S., Chemistry Sunshine, Steven
B.A., Economics Sutcliffe, Robert
B.A., Political Science Suter, William Charles
B.A., History
Suyetsugu, Elaine
B.S., Nursing Swanson, Patricia
B.A., Political Science
Sweet, Eileen
B.A., Spanish Swaryn, Monty
B.A., Psychology,
Mathematics Tabash, Eddie
B.A., Political Science Tabor, Thomas
B.A., Public Service Tagawa, Koshi
B.A., Psychology
Takata. Margaret
B.A., History Takata, Susan
B.A., Geography Tanaka, Doris
B.S., Nursing Tanaka, Robert
B.A., Economics Tempest, Tamara
B.A., SSET
Teplitz, Marc
B.A., History Teteris, Zigurds
B.A., Economics Thiederman, Sondra
B.A., Political Science Thiergood, Sanford
M.A., Africa Area Studies Thomas, Everett
B.A., English
Thomas, Linda
B.A., Psychology Thompson, Joanne
B.A., Psychology Thornburg, Kathryn
B.A., Sociology Tiao, Jim
B.A., Mathematics Tinberg, Nalsey
B.A., Mathematics
Toister, Dror
B.A., Political Science Tosti, Angela
B.A., Psychobiology Tse, Nancy
B.A.. Mathematics Tucker. Kaye
B.A., Philosophy Tucker, B. Stephany
B.A., Sociology
Tunick, Steven
M.S., Chemical Engineer Turetsky. Maxine
B.A., Psychology Turner, Barbara
B.A., History Tullius. Thomas
B.S., Chemistry Twilegar, Judy
B.A., History
Tydlaska, Darlene
B.A., German Uba, Laura
A.B.A., Psychology.
Sociology Uchida. Wallace
B.A., History Udell. Ruby
B.A., History Updike, Douglas
B.A., Biology
Uriu. Gary
B.S., Zoology Uy, Pauline
M.B.A. Vacek, Milan
B.A.. Motion Pictures Valdez, Robert
B.A., Sociology Vandries. Eudora
M.A., Chinese
Troughton, Mike BA, Econ
Van Sickle, John
B.S.. Political Science Van Smaalen, Louis
B.A., Biology Van Willigen, Jan Hendrick
B.S., Engineering Van Willigen, Pauline
B.A., Psychology Van Wyhe, Michael
B.A., Sociology
Van Zak, David
B.A., Psychology Visser, Lynn
B.A., Anthropology Vogt, Stephen
B.A., Economics Von Mizener, Gayle
B.A., Psychology Vuoso, Pasquale
B.A., Zoology
Wachtel, Harry
B.A., Political Science Walker. Warren
B.A., Psychology Walker, Wenfred
B.A., Political Science Wallace, Marjorie
B.A., Psychology Wallace, Patricia
B.A., Political Science
Walsh, Darlene
B.A.. Philosophy Ward. Margaret
B.S., Nursing Wardle, Virginia
B.A., English Ware, Sharon
B.A., Sociology Washington, Anita
B.A., Psychology
Watanabe, Hisae
B.A., Political Science Weathersby, Belinda
B.A.. Psychology Webb, William
B.A.. Economics Weber, Jeffrey
B.A., English Weinstein, Janet
B.A.. Psychology
Weiss. Mitchell
B.A., Psychology Wellman, Marian
M.S.W., Social Work Wendt. Suzanne
B.A., Dance Wenick, Nancie
B.A., Psychology West, Kathleen
B.A.. Public Service
Wexler. Gary
J.D.. Law White. Charles
B.A., History Wiawecki, Thomas
B.A., Political Science Wiggs. Larry
B.A., Political Science Williams. Gary
B.A., History
Williams, Phyllis
B.A.. Sociology Wilson, David
B.S.. Geology Wilson. Florence
B.A.. Linguistics Wmard. Deborah
B.A., Hebrew Wmckler. Kurt
B.S., Engineering
Wmett, Carole
B.A., Psychology Wmn. Brian
B.A.. History Winslow. Diane
B.A.. Psychology Wishner. Robert
B.A.. Mathematics.
Computer Science Wolff, Janet
B.S.. Kmesiology
Wong, Amy Fu-Tak
B.S.. Chemistry Wong. Judy
B.A., Design Wong. Marion
B.A., History Woo, Fung
B.A., Mathematics Woo. Mamie
B.A., Mathematics
Wood, Stephen
B.A., Theater Arts Wong. Lai Jing
B.A., Biology Wong. Linda
B.A.. Public Service Woo, Gene
B.S., Bacteriology Woodworth, Courtney
B.A.. Economics
Woskow. Robert B.S.E.E.. Electrical Engineering
Wu. Julie
M.P.H., International Health Yahiro, Robert
B.A.. Economics Yallowitz. Anita
B.A.. Political Science Yamada. Marion
B.A., Anthropology Yang, Julia
B.A., English
Yarber, Sharon
B.A.. Sociology Yetter, Gary
B.S., Physics Young, Beverly
B.S.. Speech Young, Brian
B.A., Political Science Young Melvin
B.A., History
Yuen, Gay
B.A., Chinese Zakowski. Jack
B.A., Economics,
Biochemistry Zelman, Martin
B.A., Mathematics Zimmerman, Wayne
B.A., History,
Sociology Zimring, Donald
B.A., History
Zwart. Catherine B.A.. English
I
n
u
D
veijo uski
sports editor
.;••'• •• "
' "
jeff weber
editor-in-chief
dan rossoti
associate editor
A Yearbook requires an extreme amount of work. It takes many kinds of talents to produce a yearbook. The following people gave their time and efforts in order to produce the 1973 UCLA SOUTHERN CAMPUS.
LAYOUT and PASTE-UP Veijo Uski Liz Engh Jeff Weber Susie Hatago
SECRETARIES Dorothy Wood Kay Rickardson Rhea Bullock
PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST SPONSORS Tim Bailey -
ASUCLA Students' Store Frank Ponder - Bel-Air Camera and Hi-fi
ADVERTISING and FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
Dan Rosson
Jeff Weber
ARTWORK Craig Smith
COVERS and PRINTING
Conzett and Huber - Zurich,
Switzerland (covers) American Yearbook Co. -
(Jim Powell) ASUCLA Printing -
(Art Atkinson)
OTHER ASSISTANCE Lee Monteleone Harry Morris Joyce Fresh Joane Jubileer Student Committee
for the Arts Communications Board Mike Losey Campus Ticket Office
(Mrs. H, Kathy, Ann)
WRITERS John Sandbrook Dan Rosson Nanete Deetz Rusty Sheinkopf Veijo Uski Jeff Weber
PHOTOGRAPHY
Veijo Uski
Howard Waxenberg
Gary Leonard
Rick Becker
Susie Hatago
Dave Cislowski
Dennis Fried
Ed Greer
Gordon Campbell
Sheila Williams
Jeff Weber
Elie Cindi
Fred Phillips
Mark Rubin
Larry Olson
Dan Rosson
Dean Berkus
Karl Dean
ASUCLA Campus Studio Stan Troutman Norm Schindler (Terry, Wally, Karen)
302
The yearbook does strange things to many people.
To many of the students it is just another means of extracting the money from their wallets and putting it into the university pie. Their pictures are not in the book for the most part and therefore they can see no useful purpose for its existence.
For the few students who shell out the required money for its purchase, the yearbook is to look at once and then cover up that unsightly stain on the coffee table. Only five or so years later do the students pick up the book and earnestly look for themselves and their friends and recall all those memories that they could never seem to remember on their own.
For the various athletic coaches on the campus the book serves as a sort of family album recalling the victorious as well as the lean years. It starts the coach thinking what he would do differently if he only had a second chance. If the coach was lucky he had the pleasure of coaching an athlete who has gone on to the pro ranks. There is indeed that singular moment of pride.
For the seniors pictured in the book, it is a certain way of proving that they did indeed graduate. In the day of fake signatures, fake term- papers, fake diplomas, the yearbook is the only item that people are too smart to fake. It also makes for good bed-time yarns that will put any child into instant slumberland.
For the many administrators it is a quick way of telling just how long they have been at the university. Almost every administrator has a yearbook for each of his years here and the more he has the older he is.
To the various committee members who decide whether or not there is to be a yearbook, the fact that each receives a complimentary copy does not sway their minds. The committee can only see through dollar-sign eyes and it is obvious to them that the yearbook is not holding its own, so in the eyes of the committee the yearbook should be laid to rest. I suppose that's the way it should be. At least Darwin thought so.
For the people in the publications office, the staff was often one that would steal the secretaries as well as the envelopes and any other such movable items. Mr. Harry Morris, Manager of all the publications, has won our "Who has the most yearbooks?" contest. He has a copy of every yearbook from 1938 on. At the end of this year he will be retiring from the battle.
To the people in the Campus Studio, the staff of the yearbook wants but will not give We want their photo passes but we won't give them all our other photographic business. So it goes.
The campus organizations choose to ignore us while the fraternities prefer to ignore us and the sororities forget to remember us. It's that simple. Many people believe that with the demise of the Greek system, there goes the bulkof concentrated school spirit, and since it takes a lot of spirit to buy a yearbook . . .
The Sports Editor is also the Photo Editor and the yearbook is just one massive jungle of proof sheets, negatives, eight by tens, and statistics. In addition he is the book's major photographer. He is the only person besides the editor who has a say in the actual production of the book. He doesn't sleep very often.
TheAssociate Editor is the Business Manager. He stalls the creditors, plays musical accounts with our money, and takes all the dribble from everybody trying to decide whether or not to buy pages in the book. It is his job to keep our financial heads from going under water and to ver- bally sell people on the book. Cruel and barbarous punishment to say the least.
For the Editor the book is a headache most of the time. It is his job to worry. He has to worry about everybody else doing their job as well as his own. He doubles as Staff Writer, Layout and Pasteup Clerk, Copy Editor, and All The Little Things That Have To Be Done Editor. He also appeases all the committee members, pays the staff, and with the help of the Sports Editor handling his own portion, produces the book.
Basically, it's been just the three of us, and we're exhausted.
UOOK CMVPU9 f IK
TIT^IC
This is a publication of the Communications Board of UCLA- © 1973.