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GORDON  DARRELL  SOKOLOFF 
Editor-in-Chief 


NATE  LEE 
STAN  MULVIHILL 

Associate  Editors 


TANYA  HUERTA 
Administrative  Assistant 


WENDI  SCHNEIDER 
Art  Director 


LEELEVINE 
Copy  Editor 


SAM  SILVERSTEIN 
Layout  Editor 


MARKSINDLER 

ROB  SHOSS 

ANDY  BOYD 

ARMISTICE  R.  LUNCHMEAT 

ROB  SHARPSTEIN 

Photography  Staff 


HOWARD  BROMLEY 

TOM  LEE 

DAVID  GRIMALDI 

FRANCISCO  ALECHA 

STEVE  HORTON 

JOHN  READY 

DUDLEY  SHARP 

STACY  MORRIS 

A.  SOKOLOFF 

Contributing  Photographers 


DR.ANDYANTIPPAS 
Faculty  Advisor 


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1 


To  my  mind,  a  yearo 
to  stand  as  testimony  t( 
what  we  make  of  our  li 
soon  enough.  More  prq 
an  effort  to  bind  down  tii 
us  over  the  course  of  foi 
years  we  shall  ever  kno\ 
have  Iciid  down  is  only 
the  myriad  thouscinds 
and  passed  irretrievably 
of  our  words  and  some 
help  to  remind  you  of  thi 
lost,  we  must  moum  for  tl^ 


3k  is  not  necessarily  meant 
our  educational  e}q)erience: 
es  will  bear  witness  to  that 
>rly,  I  think,  a  yearbook  is 
>  images  that  dcinced  before 
of  the  longest,  yet  shortest 
Each  word  and  picture  we 
ne  word  and  one  picture  of 
ich  have  already  eluded  us 
ito  the  void  Perhaps  some 
»f  our  pictures,  though,  will 
js  found  —  as  for  the  things 
>se  forever. 

Gordon  D.  Sokoloff 
Editor 


Joseph,  my  friend,  had  the  virtue  of  relating  anything  to  a  personal  experi- 
ence: 

"Student  life?  Yeah,  some  of  my  better  days,  you  might  say.  Work  always 
seemed  to  melt  into  play.  Learning  and  having  fiin  at  the  same  time.  Nice  ar- 
rangement, huh?  The  best  thing  about  college,  though,  is  not  the  experience  it- 
self, but  remembering  the  experience.  Me?  Always  at  the  parties  .  .  .  drinking, 
talkin',  seducin',  bullshittin'  till  five  or  so.  Seems  like  the  memory  of  all  that  beats 
the  real  thing.  I  don't  remember  all  the  times  I  got  sickly  drunk ...  or  got  arrested 
...  or  almost  foiled  some  of  my  classes  —  at  least  I  try  not  to  remember  those 
times  —  Even  the  times  that  weren't  so  great . . .  now  they  seem  alright.  It's  better 
that  way,  you  know.  The  older  you  get,  thfe  more  fun  you  have  just  remembering. 
Yeah . . .  some  of  my  better  days. 


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12 


13 


MAR 


RAS 


bySTANMULVIHILL 

UphiU. 

DownhilL 

No  hill  at  ail. 

New  Orleans  Jives  on  an  even  plateau.  People  move 
over  the  flatness  in  daily  routine  while  gentle  highs  are 
mellowed  by  gentle  lows.  It  is  an  anti-inventive  city,  even 
with  its  own  traditions.  Mild  complacency  reigns. 

Then  Rex  appears  and  the  season  belongs  to  car- 
nivorous appetites.  Unleased  fury  breaks  upon  the  cres- 
cent, upsets  life's  careful  balance,  and  removes  the 
frustrations  impounded  over  a  year's  time. 

A  Tulane  student  checks  his  calendar  for  holidays, 
and  finds  Mardi  Gras  conspicuously  placed  in  the  middle 
of  his  semester.  There  is  little  disagreement  over  what  to 
do  —  only  the  question  —  will  it  be  done? 


14 


Curving  with  the  River,  the  better  parades  flow 
along  St.  Charles  Avenue,  rolling  to  their  downtown 
destination.  As  each  float  passes,  new  discoveries  reward 
those  who  indulge  in  trinket  activity.  It  is  not  enough  to- 
observe;  participation  is  the  necessity. 

The  crowds  who  line  the  street  several  rows  deep 
gesture  the  parade  onward,  like  so  many  jockeys  whip- 
ping their  thoroughbreds  to  the  finish.  The  parade 
gathers  intensity.  Heightened  senses  and  blurred  vision 
...  a  nauseated  stomach  and  a  mind  that  does  not  care 
.  .  .  parched  mouths  and  a  half-full  wineskin  that  leaks 
over  the  back  ...  a  torn  pants  leg  and  bulging  pockets  of 
doubloons  .  .  .  smells  of  drunkeness  and  the  relief  of  a 
urinal  .  .  .  perspiration  infects  the  faces  of  nameless  in- 
dividuals as  the  madness  mounts.  The  convoy  approach- 
es its  mark  and  just  past  the  twist  of  a  street  comer, 
Canal  Street  is  sighted.  Cheers  rise  as  the  rabble  scram- 
ble to  take  their  positions  atop  light  posts,  barricades, 
and  boyfriends.  The  wealthy  remove  their  gloves  and  dip 
over  the  balconies  adorned  with  wreaths  tinted  purple 
and  gold.  They  are  excited  as  only  curistocrats  can  be. 


16 


All  the  while,  Bourbon  Street  massages  the  rowdy 
with  her  massive  ripoffe  as  barkers  announce  prices  that 
have  tripled  since  last  Monday.  Chris  Owens  is  as  over- 
worked as  the  N.O.P.D.  and  Papa  Joe's  has  a  block  long 
line  of  revelers  anticipating  the  purchase  of  another 
fifth.  The  Lucky  Dog  Man  is  doing  a  brisk  business  and 
decides  that  life  without  mustard  would  not  be  worth 
living.  Pat  O'Brien's  queue  draws  the  attention  of  eight 
mounted  policemen.  An  apartment  house  courtyard 
party  further  down  the  street  rages  until  the  ice  runs  out, 
and  guests  manage  to  drift  off,  in  search  of  a  daiquiri. 

There  is  laughter  and  astonishment  with  all  fields 
of  sensation.  Strutting  by  one  of  the  Quarter's  back 
streets,  a  group  spills  its  noise  over  from  Bourbon. 
Throwing  a  defiant  scream  in  the  direction  of  an  aged 
apartment  that  is  mysteriously  boarded  up  with  shutters, 
the  structure  laughs  back.  A  hardened  city's  mood  has 
seen  it  all  before  and  is  somehow  unimpressed. 

From  Claiborne  overpass,  its  roof  dominates  the  city. 
Yet  once  inside  the  city,  crossing  Canal  Street  to  locate 
the  trolley,  the  Superdome  glimpses  at  the  crowds  gath- 


17 


aNTHEFtAMESl 
loF  HEU  FOR! 

\etewiity^^ 

hERE  BETtERl 
fOUHlkOHEVER 
.  BEEN  BORN.l 
IREPEHT  TOOWf. 


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k  ikm  sti  (III ; 
n  limit  III  WW] 
MI  »  III  iiiu. 


fir  ^. 

[don't  60"  TO 

[hell.  jesus  i 
:hrist  has  a' 

TETTER  LIFE 

m  YOU  THIS 

W.  HE  DIED 

HE  J?".?  SINS. 

££hlJ?  HIM. 


ered  for  Mardi  Gras  from  behind  closer  skyscrapers.  It 
doesn't  seem  to  fit  and  the  Dome  knows  this  as  it  squats 
over  New  Orleans,  the  living  symbol  of  ambitions  mis- 
guided. Huge  ventilation  systems  wheeze  from  its  lungs 
the  Superdome's  polluted  breath  of  scandal  and  politics. 
A  few  blocks  away,  the  bricks  form  Quarter  buildings  a 
century  old  or  more  regenerate  their  mortar  and  con- 
tinue to  bond;  they  are  indifferent  to  the  Dome  and  re- 
main ignorant  of  its  aluminum  and  steel  wonders  of  con- 
struction. 

Cresting  on  Fat  Tuesday,  the  fever  breciks  when  the 
grease  paint  and  masks  are  removed.  The  masses  be- 
come individuals  again,  routines  are  resumed,  and  the 
world  sinks  to  its  former  flat  plain. 


FAISTAFF 

Jfie  0\dieestJ^ro(inct^tk3rm-£rsy\n. 
'Enjoyed  JHrmqliout^Jtie  World  skice  iS7o. 


19 


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[<» 


THE 
LOUISIANA 

& 

HERITAGE 

FESTIVAL 


But  there  are  other  hills  in  Spring. 
When  the  weather  turns  noticeably  warmer,  when 
insects  take  to  the  air,  when  live  oaks  drop  their  sap, 
when  moss  turns  a  shade  greener,  the  Louisiana  Jazz 
and  Heritage  Festival  unfolds  its  tents,  tunes  its  guitar 
strings,  and  sets  the  water  on  the  fire  to  boil. 
The  Creole  tradition  is  reborn.  The  city  scoops  up  its 
newborn  from  a  suckling  routine,  and  embraces  the  in- 
fants with  realities  that  were  always  apparent  but 
missed  in  tranquil  times.  The  Festival  is  a  mother's 
reminder,  and  a  welcomed  refresher. 
Everyone,  including  the  native  of  five  generations, 
is  at  once  a  tourist  being  reintroduced  to  home  culture. 
But  the  senses  have  been  trained,  enough  to  draw  a  true 
sigh  of  appreciation  from  sucking  the  head  of  a  crawfish. 
It  is  a  time  when  ties  that  unite  people  are  shared  anew. 
Common  denominators  lose  their  mathematical  mean- 
ings and  instead  become  foods,  music,  and  arts. 


22 


23 


Stepping  onto  the  grassy  infield  of  the  Fairgrounds, 
just  past  a  gunbo  tent.  Earl  King  can  be  seen  on  Stage  2, 
partially  blocked  from  view  by  an  impromptu  art  ex- 
hibition. Thousands  have  turned  out  to  soak  up  the  sun, 
but  there  is  room  for  thousands  more  under  an  expansive 

sky. 
Everywhere  people  guzzle  the  last  ounces  from  a  can 
of  Schlitz.  Some  have  brought  their  own  refreshment,  in 
jugs  they  carry  from  tent  to  tent  while  inspecting  the 
pottery  artists  from  around  the  country  proudly  display. 
Feet  are  tapping  with  the  music  in  the  air  as  the  SUNO 
Jazz  Ensemble  works  through  a  number  composed 
especially  for  the  Festival.  Magicians  of  culinary  crea- 
tions are  stirring  the  air  with  odors  of  Creole  cooking; 
some  festival  goers  simply  sit  in  the  shade  with  friends 

and  take  it  all  in. 


24 


Occasionally,  emancipated  yells  from  the  Gospel 
Tent  indicate  a  new  group  has  arrived.  The  tent  is  the 
fair's  largest,  with  hundreds  of  wooden  chairs  bearing 
the  weight  of  two  persons  each.  The  Masonic  Songs 
launch  into  their  repertoire  of  favorites  and  in  two 
minutes  have  the  atmosphere's  temperature  ten  degrees 
higher.  God's  Chosen  Few  come  to  attention  and  grab 
the  crowd's  spirit.  There  is  celebration  on  this  fine 
Sunday  afternoon. 

While  two  Turkish  gypsies  occupy  the  attention  of 
passersby  with  their  simultaneous  trumpet-and-congo 
curangements,  a  netu-by  jewelry  dealer  finishes  his  latest 
creation,  a  two  hundred  dollar  silver  and  polished  stone 
necklace.  This  one  has  been  shaped  into  a  spider's  web, 
complete  with  a  spider.  Someone  says  that  Frogman 
Henry  is  getting  ready  to  begin  on  Stage  4,  and  a  few 
admirers  head  off  in  that  direction,  while  others  rush  to 
get  another  helping  of  red  beans  and  rice  before  the 
show.  Under  the  Jazz  Tent  the  New  Leviathan  Oriental 
Fox  Trot  Orchestra  plays  on. 


SGARLiT 


} 


iORi 


X, 


XI 


McCOY 
TYNER 


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28 


PEG  LEG  ^. 
SAM 


29 


■i 


As  the  sun  makes  its  way  across  the  simmering  skies, 
the  "Fess"  puts  in  an  appearance  on  Stage  1.  The  crowd 
is  obviously  tired  from  the  day's  activity,  but  excitement 
begins  to  pump  In  time  with  the  drummer's  floor  toms 
and  people  rise  to  their  feet.  There  is  mild  protest  from 
bodies  that  are  sore  from  movement;  it  is  suppressed 
by  the  music  directly  ahead.  Humidity  takes  on  a  vocal 
quality,  and  sweat  pours  with  the  first  sounds  of  singing. 
Lightin'  Hopkins  played  the  same  stage  only  two  hours 
before.  Same  results.  Elsewhere  Tulane's  Dr.  Bill  Malone 
and  the  Hill  Country  Ramblers  are  strumming  through 
their  tunes.  The  notes  from  a  straining  banjo  can  be 
heard  from  the  direction  of  Stage  3  where  the  Copas 
Brothers  are  said  to  be  appearing.  During  the  day,  the 
great  Natchez  vs.  Delta  Queen  Steamboat  Race  has 
ended,  the  Natchez  again  the  victor.  Hundreds  have 
watched  from  the  Mississippi's  banks. 
The  hills  begin  to  sink  with  the  Festival's  closing 
moments,  the  folks  return  to  their  lives,  once  again  dis- 
tracted by  the  routines  of  life  on  level  ground.  Satis- 
fection  lingers  through  another  year,  when  traditions 
will  be  repeated.  And  enjoyed. 


30 


31 


NEW  ORLEANS  UPTOWN  AREA 


Because  of  its  treatment  of  the  New  Orleans  uptown 
area,  The  Underground  Guide  to  the  College  of  Your 
Choice  is  a  book  that  should  not  be  tossed  aside  lightly 
—  it  should  be  thrown  with  force.  Susan  Berman's 
popular  handguide  was  written  in  1971  and  looks  it.  So 
dated  is  the  slang,  so  archaic  the  political  attitudes,  that 
one  can  have  a  fairly  good  time  laughing  at  it.  Few  stu- 
dents actually  relied  upon  it  in  choosing  the  college  of 
their  choice,  but  Miss  Herman's  book  remains  of  interest 
because  if  for  no  other  reason,  it  misjudges  the  relation 
of  the  Tulanc  student  vis-a-vis  the  uptown  community. 
It  envisions  him  (or  her)  as  a  force  apart  from  the  city, 
fickle,  patronizing  bars  and  restaurants  noted  only  for 
their  lack  of  longevity.  In  the  words  of  Susan  Herman: 
"Hip  hit  The  Raven'  for  beer  and  'Eddie  F*rice's'  for  ham- 
burgers near  campus.  Straights  hang  at  the  'Hob  Nob 
Inn'  (beer)  and  the  'Maple  Hill  Restaurant'  (big  meals). 

Of  these  four  "local  hangs"  (as  the  book  refers  to 


byLEELEVINE 

them),  only  one,  the  last,  exists  today  with  the  same 
name.  As  for  the  rest,  they  have  all  changed  shape  in  one 
way  or  another.  The  Raven  is  long  defunct;  Eddie  Price's 
has  become  the  Boot;  and  the  Hob  Nob  Inn,  Tin  Lizzie's 
—  now  out  of  operation  because  of  last  year's  fire.  This 
one  might  conclude  (inaccurately)  that  Tulanians  fre- 
quent only  the  so-called  'college  joints'  —  the  ones 
which,  for  want  of  intrinsic  merit,  rely  solely  on  gim- 
micks and  are  segregated  according  to  age  and  student 
affiliation. 

Happily,  this  is  not  the  case.  For  all  the  narrowness 
of  life  at  college  —  and  it  is  narrow,  be  it  at  Berkeley  or 
Southwestern  —  students  from  Tulane  and  Newcomb 
comprise  nonetheless  an  integral  part  of  the  uptown 
community.  They  are  a  force  to  be  reckoned  with.  So 
strong,  in  fact,  that  popularity  with  the  Tulane  clientele 
has  capitulated  to  fame  many  an  establishment  created 
without  students  in  mind. 


32 


33 


34 


p 
I 

c 
o 
u 


A  case  in  point  is  Picou's  bakery.  Though  not  up- 
town by  location  (Bayou  Road  off  Esplanade),  its  clien- 
tele, composed  largely  of  the  young,  give  it  consideration 
in  this  article.  No  one  ever  questions  why,  with  the  price 
of  gasoline  and  the  proximity  of  doughnut  shops  close  to 
campus,  students  continue  to  make  the  twenty  minute 
drive.  One  Tulane  senior,  Andy  Colando,  used  to  go  to 
Picou's  every  night.  Some  go  more  often. 

Yet  tdl  this  is  fairly  recent.  In  business  for  neeurly  thirty 
years,  Picou's  first  received  the  uptown  crowd  in  any 
appreciable  degree  through  the  most  ameizing  of  coin- 
cidences. If  the  following  story  sounds  too  good  to  be 
true,  it  was  confirmed,  nonetheless,  by  John  Trietler  and 
his  wife,  in-laws  to  the  Picou  fcunily,  during  a  very  plea- 
sant tour  of  their  bcikery.  It  concerns  a  Newcomb  co-ed 
named  Gail  who,  four  years  ago,  kept  coming  to  the 
bakery  night  after  night.  It  seemed  she  had  developed  a 
schoolgirl  crush  on  Mr.  Picou  and,  as  he  failed  to  notice 
her,  took  to  assuaging  her  frustration  through  food,  an 
tdl  too  common  remedy.  Much  to  her  credit,  however, 
she  liked  the  hot  glazed  doughnuts;  found  them  a 
refreshing  change  from  beignets  —  and  told  her  friends. 
These,  of  course,  were  the  magic  words.  One  thing  led  to 
another  and,  during  the  last  four  years,  Picou's  has 
become  the  late  night  spot  on  everybody's  agenda.  It 
shows  no  signs  of  stopping. 


"Fd  like  to  shcike  the  hand  of  the  last  person  who 
held  us  up"  Mrs.  Trietler  confided;  and  should  he  ever 
reappear,  she'd  have  to  greet  him  —  like  everyone  else 
—  through  the  bakery's  bullet-proof  windows.  Though 
her  comment  sounds  somewhat  odd,  it  all  makes  sense 
in  the  right  context:  for  Picou's  having  been  held  up  just 
once  too  often,  installed  its  famous  windows  in  the  sum- 
mer of  seventy-four.  Far  from  cdienating  customers,  this 
protection  has  assured  their  safety  and,  according  to  Mr. 
Tietler,  increased  business  to  the  nth  degree.  The  shield 
is  impregnable;  for  he  showed  us  a  sample  portion  of 
the  window  used  for  target  practice.  And,  sure  enough, 
bullets  from  a  44  Magnum  failed  to  penetrate  at  close 
range.  Their  worries  gone,  the  Trietlers  can  go  on  serving 
good  food  forever. 

Apropos  of  Picou's  and  all  other  such  establish- 
ments, there  exists  a  durable  nunor  that  public  kitchens, 
should  they  be  seen,  would  scture  off  all  but  the  heartiest 
souls;  that  they  lodge  incredible  filth;  and  that  bakeries 
are  particularly  notorious.  If  so,  Picou's  is  the  rule- 
proving  exception.  "Spotless"  is  the  only  word  to  des- 
cribe it;  the  floors,  no  doubt,  are  cleaner  than  those 
found  in  many  on-campus  dorms.  Thus  when  uptowners 
head  away  from  home  base,  they  have  a  knack  for 
choosing  the  right  places. 


35 


The  Domilise  Bar  and  Sandwich  Shop  resembles 
Picou's  only  in  that  both  are  situated  in  poor  neighbor- 
hoods and  have  caught  on.  over  a  period  of  time,  with 
the  more  affluent  uptown  clientele.  Tom  Wolfe,  exponent 
of  the  New  Journalism,  has  popularized  the  phrase 
"nostalgia  de  la  boue"  (French  for  "nostalgia  for  the 
mud"  but  more  commonly  known  as  a  term  for  "slum- 
ming") which  he  considers  an  explanation  of  this 
phenomena  —  the  college  student  who  frequents  a  work- 
ing class  establishment.  But  are  most  people  even  aware 
of  such  motivation?  Probably  not.  So  we'd  prefer  to 
think  that  these  places  were  really  on  to  something  and, 
even  if  their  informality  was  part  of  the  initial  attraction, 
deserve  their  good  reputations. 

Domilise's  has  no  atmosphere  in  the  accepted 
sense  of  the  word  —  or,  for  that  matter,  in  any  other 
sense.  The  tables  and  fixtures  are  old.  So  are  the  wall 
hangings.  So  is  the  lighting.  So  is  the  juke  box,  rarely 
played,  and  featuring  such  singers  as  Carol  Channing. 
But  few  of  the  Domilise  patrons  —  students  and  faculty 
alike  —  have  any  objections.  Domilise's  serves  one  thing 
and  one  thing  only  —  poor  boys  —  well  enough  to  be 
attracting  its  second  generation  of  uptown  New 
Orleanians. 

Mrs.  Domilise  claims  that  she  was  surprised  by  the 
influx  of  students  to  her  restaurant  during  the  fifties  — 
she,  unlike  Mrs.  Trietler,  had  no  romantic  tale  to  explain 
her  sudden  popularity.  Because  she  originally  intended 
to  serve  the  workers  along  the  river  front  (Annunciation 
being  but  a  short  distance  from  the  warehouse  district), 
she  has  made  no  concessions  in  decor  to  her  changing 
clientele;  no  Art  Nouveau  posters  or  fake  Tiffany  lamps 
clutter  the  walls.  When  hurricane  Betsy  hit  New  Orleans, 
just  eleven  years  ago,  and  wreaked  havoc  with  Domi- 
lise's as  with  everyone  else  (hurricanes  being  sadly  in- 
discriminate in  their  wake  of  damage),  customers  pro- 
tested when  Mrs.  Domilise  attempted  to  make  repairs, 
let  cilone  renovations.  Her  wry  conclusion:  They  liked 
the  place  the  way  it  was  before." 

Of  course  they  did.  Though  not  boastful,  Mrs.  Domi- 
lise contended  that,  edthough  her  restaurant  lacks  what 
one  commonly  considers  an  uptown  ambiance,  it  carries 
something  much  more  unattainable;  something  money 
and  fresh  paint  rarely  buy.  She  spoke  of  the  "pleasant 
memories"  she  shares  with  the  students,  many  of  whom 
come  back  to  visit  after  graduation.  "We  treat  them  as 
family."  Though  she  and  her  workers  rarely  venture  out- 
side the  counter  area,  particularly  during  the  rush  at 
lunch,  her  point  is  still  apt  She,  like  the  best  of  families, 
offers  loving  neglect  —  of  the  sort  which  functions  by 
word  of  mouth  and  without  advertising. 

It  is  with  the  Camellia  Grill,  perhaps,  that  this  article 
properly  begins,  for,  by  location,  it  is  as  uptown  as  up- 
town can  be.  The  Grill  caters  to  but  is  not  dominated  by 


students  like  Picou's  or  Domilise's.  After  10  PM.  how- 
ever, 90/6  of  its  customers  are  under  twenty-five.  Those 
older  fecur  for  their  safety  —  a  sad  reality  in  the  uptown 
area  and  one  that  did  not  exist  in  1946  with  the  Grill's 
opening. 

These  and  all  other  relevant  facts  were  supplied  by 
headwaiter  Harry  Teverlon;  suffice  it  to  say  that  he  has 
been  with  the  Grill  from  the  start.  "Our  clientele  is  the 
greatest  in  the  world"  he  admits;  and  he  especially  favors 
the  students,  through  whom  he  keeps  his  own  youth. 
"They're  .  .  .  genuine"  he  says,  grasping  for  a  term  that 
might  likewise  explain  the  Grill's  vast  appeal.  For,  in 
spite  of  the  fact  that,  during  the  last  few  years  alone,  Jim 
Nabors,  Pierre  Salinger,  Burt  Reynolds  and  Dinah  Shore 
have  visited  the  restaurant  (a  testament  to  its  repu- 
tation in  that  it  does  not  advertise)  and  numerous  local 
millionaires  have  become  regular  customers  (Harry 
declined  to  mention  names,  but  added,  with  a  dry  laugh, 
that  his  were  probably  the  only  stools  these  men  had 
sat  on  since  infancy),  the  Camellia  Grill  operates  on  a 
first-come,  first-serve  basis  —  irksome,  perhaps,  to  an 
actual  celebrity,  but  perfectly  democratic  to  the  rest  of  us. 

As  for  the  Tulane  community,  they  started  arriving 
"the  very  first  day  we  opened  shop."  Harry  recalled  his 
encounters  with  the  more  affluent  crowd  who  took  all 
their  meals  at  the  Grill  —  the  ones  given  a  meal  stipend 
of  $10  a  day  which  musfve  gone  far  indeed  at  a  time 
when  the  Grill  charged  thirty  cents  for  hamburgers  and 
twenty  for  pie.  Doubtless,  they  could  have  eaten  else- 
where, yet  something  kept  pulling  them  back. 

Has  the  Grill  continued  to  prosper  because  or  in 
spite  of  changing  times?  If  s  hard  to  tell,  of  course,  and 
Harry  had  no  ready  answer,  but  the  fact  remains  that, 
except  for  paint  and  minor  repzirations,  the  building  has 
not  altered  noticeably  over  the  years.  This  very  per- 
manence sets  a  standard  by  which  can  be  judged  the 
world  outside  South  Carrollton.  During  the  sixties,  a 
surprise  to  the  waiters  was  not  the  more  casual  attire  of 
youth  —  which  was  external  —  but  the  trend  to  casual- 
ness  in  manners  —  which  was  not.  One  has  to  be  of  a 
certain  generation  to  comprehend  the  confusion  of  the 
waiters  when  males,  while  at  the  Grill  with  a  date,  began 
telling  them  their  order  first  —  and  not  that  of  the  girl's. 
Before  they  schooled  themselves  to  expect  this  im- 
propriety, the  floor  became  littered  with  tom-up  checks. 

When  asked  if  the  Grill  has  suffered  because  of  the 
rise  of  fast-food  industry,  blessedly  absent  in  1946,  Harry 
answered  with  a  smile;  one  that  signalled,  though  by  no 
means  unkindly,  the  idiocy  of  the  question.  This  is  a  com- 
mon illusion,  he  explained;  for  the  chains,  like  the  bullet- 
proof windows  at  Picou's,  have  only  helped  business.  The 
implication  was  that  these  upstarts  pcde  by  comparison, 
and,  since  people  continue  to  crowd  the  Grill's  twenty- 
nine  stools,  he  may  be  right. 


36 


37 


Halfway  between  the  Grill  and  Tulane  in  location  is 
Bruno's  —  one  of  Maple  Street's  oldest  bars  and  with  a 
history  of  which  few  people  are  aware.  Its  founding  date, 
1934,  is  significant;  it  marks  the  end  of  Prohibition  in 
New  Orleans.  Bruno's  at  any  rate,  unlike  the  other  up- 
town establishments  thus  reviewed,  has  changed  loca- 
tion several  times  before  occupying  its  present  site.  It 
moved  from  the  area  of  the  Lemon  Tree  to  the  Maple  Hill 
Restaurant,  with  the  final  switch  in  1955.  Since  all  three 
face  each  other  on  the  comer  of  Maple  and  Hillary,  this 
is  simpler  than  it  sounds. 

It  might  astound  the  students  population,  who 
rarely  venture  there  before  dark,  to  know  that  the  bar 
still  services  an  aiftemoon  crowd  of  businessmen.  The 
two  groups  —  students  and  locals  —  are  largely  un- 
aware of  each  other.  This  older  set  clings  to  bartender 
George;  he  is  to  Bruno's  what  Harry  is  to  the  Grill:  a 
mainstay  with  an  inexhaustible  supply  of  reminisces. 
Many  of  his  more  amusing  tales  must,  perforce,  remain 


"off  the  record,"  but  they  attest  to  the  solidarity  of 
Bruno's.  This  is  the  sort  of  bar  which,  during  the  owner's 
lifetime,  used  to  conduct  its  own  Mardi  Gras,  complete 
with  Krewe  (The  Babbling  Bastards  of  Bruno's"),  and 
parade  through  the  streets  of  the  uptown  area. 

With  Leo  Bruno's  death,  several  years  back,  the  bar 
underwent  some  subtle  changes.  Beer  began  to  be  served 
after  7  P.M.  Which  may  seem  like  a  minor  point,  but  it 
was  a  break  with  tradition,  and  it  turned  the  bar  from  a 
date  spot  to  one  in  which  singles  (the  term  used  loosely) 
went  to  meet.  As  with  the  Grill,  Bruno's  changed  also 
because  of  pressures  beyond  their  control.  There  was  a 
time,  not  so  long  ago,  when  unescorted  females  thought 
twice  about  entering  bars.  Girls  who  did  that  had  gener- 
ally been  stigmatized  by  a  term  that  caused  the  New- 
comb  co-ed  to  shudder  ...  to  her  genteel  way  of  thinking 
it  was  the  most  distasteful  of  insults  . . .  cheap.  However, 
those  days  are  long  gone. 


38 


39 


40 


They  never  really  existed  at  Eddie  Price's.  This 
years'  senior  class  will  be  the  last  to  remember  the  Boot 
when  under  former  ownership,  and  perhaps  it  is  just  as 
well.  Michael  Conner,  bartender  at  the  Boot,  denies  that 
the  predecessor  was  anything  special:  "It  was  sleeizier  — 
if  you  can  imagine  it."  Sleaziness  seems  to  have  been  the 
most  distinguishable  characteristic  of  Eddie  Price's, 
which  serviced  the  rougher  element  of  the  uptown  crowd 
and  was  itself  allegedly  the  site  of  a  shootout  and  mur- 
der. Whatever  the  truth,  few  mourn  its  passing.  Its 
successor,  however,  caters  almost  entirely  to  students. 
Three  of  them,  when  questioned  separately,  praised  the 
Boot  for  its  ability  to  create  a  "relaxed  atmosphere." 
Conner  spoke  of  it  surpassing  Bruno's  because  of  its 
"lack  of  structure."  He  replied,  when  asked  to  project 
further:  "You  can  walk  in  here  and  get  stinking  drunk 
without  feeling  conspicuous." 

The  same  feeling  of  hospitality  extends  to  yet 
another  uptown  establishment,  perhaps  the  best  of  its 
type  in  the  city.  Says  its  owner:  "It  gives  me  a  pleasure  to 
see  people  relcix  . . .  Kids  from  other  cities  who  come  to 
New  Orleans  feeling  strange  can  stay  here  for  hours 
without  being  hassled  .  .  .  We're  geared  to  what  people 
want,  and  we  make  everyone  feel  comfortable."  Thus 
spoke  Rhoda  Faust;  her  shop,  the  Maple  Street  Book 
Store,  is  an  anomaly  in  a  review  thus  filled  with  bars 
and  restaurants.  Perhaps  her  stock  in  trade  is  the  only 
one  that  can  compete  with  the  attractions  of  the  latter 
two. 

Rather  than  laud  the  shop  with  a  lot  of  glittering 
generalities,  it  is  fair,  nevertheless,  to  say  that  a  glance 
at  its  shelves  reveals  some  interesting  aspects  of  the  up- 
town sophistication  —  if  only  because  of  what  is  miss- 
ing. Those  whose  tastes  run  to  pornography  (hard-core 
or  soft).  Harlequin  romances,  Jacqueline  Susann,  penny 
dreadfuls,  and  the  like  will  have  to  search  elsewhere. 
Few  would  deny  the  saleability  of  such  writing  —  it 
sells  very  well  indeed  —  but  Rhoda  Faust  will  have  none 
of  it.  "It's  sort  of  depressing  to  walk  past  the  book  sec- 
tion of  a  drugstore  and  see  so  much  crud."  Her  shop  is 
in  all  ways  a  delight,  and  proof  against  the  old  adage, 
credited  to  P.  T.  Bamum  and  H.  L  Mencken  alike,  that 
"No  one  ever  went  broke  underestimating  the  taste  of  the 
American  people." 

What  meanings  are  we  to  take  from  all  this?  The 
most  prevalent  is  that  popularity  with  the  students  can 
boost  a  moderately  thriving  business,  such  as  Picou's 
or  Domilise's,  into  the  status  of  a  near  cult  or  shrine.  It 
is  equally  true  that  uptown  patronage  can  blend  together 
varying  types  of  age  groups  and  classes  —  successfully, 
as  one  might  not  think  possible.  Finally,  the  uptown 
establishments  prove  that  word  of  mouth  is  stronger 
than  advertising,  and  perhaps  a  better  indicator  of  a 
satisfied  clientele. 


41 


AUDUBON  PARK 


42 


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47 


LINDA 


by  JIM  COBB,  JR. 


I  don't  know  exactly  why  I  write  this  article.  I  don't 
know  that  what  I  say  will  have  meaning  for  anyone  else 
but  me.  But  I  do  think  that  love  —  a  man  and  a  woman 
in  close  and  intimate  communication  with  each  other  — 
is  a  subject  too  infrequently  talked  about.  It  is  the  cause 
of  great  joy  and  great  pain.  Yet  we  seem  to  shrink  from 
the  idea  of  exposing  our  thoughts  on  the  subject  to 
others  —  afraid  that  what  we  think  might  be  considered 
trite,  or  sentimental,  or  too  hard,  or  too  pessimistic,  or 
too  something!  Perhaps  it  is  because  love  is  an  intensely 
personal  thing,  usually  restricted  to  two  people  at  a  time. 
(I  choose  not  to  write  on  the  many  variations  of  that 
"two  people  at  a  time"  theme,  making  no  value  judg- 
ment in  that  decision  as  to  whether  such  variations  are 
good  or  bad).  Perhaps  it  is  because,  sometimes,  we  be- 
come too  involved  in  the  "game"  aspects  of  love,  and  to 
show  how  we  really  feel  would  be  considered  a  sign  of 
weakness  or  some  other  comparable  tault.  More  prob- 


ably, we  do  not  express  ourselves  on  the  subject  be- 
cause we  just  don't  know  how  we  feel.  We're  not  "sure." 
Perhaps  that  feeling  of  not  knowing  says  something 
about  love  itself. 

College,  we  are  told,  is  a  time  when  one  learns  how 
to  think.  If  you  are  a  liberal  arts  student,  you  learn  the 
process  of  critical  evaluation  from  your  exposure  to  the 
many  different  disciplines.  If  you  are  in  architecture,  you 
leam  how  to  think  creatively,  but  with  a  watchful  and 
learned  eye  to  the  practical  and  cost  aspects  of  a  par- 
ticulfur  project  If  you're  in  FHiblic  Health  and  Tropical 
Medicine  then  I  have  no  idea  as  to  either  how  or  what 
you  think  about,  and  as  such  can  offer  you  in  this  article 
very  little.  But  the  point  here  is  that  we  are  all  involved 
in  learning  —  learning  how  either  to  think  or  to  do  some- 
thing in  a  particular  field.  This  is  what  we  are  here  for, 
this  is  what  we  pay  our  money  for,  this  is  our  curriculum. 


48 


During  the  years  we  are  learning  to  learn,  we  ex- 
perience our  most  intense  period  of  learning  how  to  love 
—  learning  how  to  communicate,  honestly  at  times,  with 
another  human  being.  Unfortunately,  perhaps,  there  are 
no  requirements  in  learning  love,  no  clearly  set  course 
of  experience  or  study  upon  the  completion  of  which  one 
could  be  said  to  have  "learned  Love."  One  can't  earn  a 
Bachelor  of  Love,  although  there  are  many  bachelors, 
to  be  sure,  who  have  attempted  to  earn  "a"  love.  Instead, 
we  are  saddled  with  feelings  —  feelings  of  love,  tempered 
by  a  thought  process  that  in  some  way  seeks  to  define 
how  we  should  feel,  and  the  kind  of  person  to  whom  we 
would,  ideally,  direct  and  express  these  feelings.  You  add 
to  these  complexities  that  most  volatile  of  ingredients, 
emotion,  and  one  can  easily  see  how  problematic  love 
can  become.  The  emotion  in  holding  one's  heart  in  hand 
and  offering  it  to  another.  The  joy  in  having  it  accepted 
and  returned.  The  emptiness  of  being  separated  from  the 
one  you  love.  The  pain  and  deep  hurt  when  the  one  to 
whom  it  was  offered  says,  sometimes  casually,  "No 
thanks."  The  misunderstanding  that  is  always  generated 
when  two  people  seek  to  communicate  and  communi- 
cate intimately.  The  problem  of  coming  to  terms  with 
one's  own  sexuality  and  how  that  relates  to  the  one  we 
love.  (There  are  thousands  of  volumes  on  this  aspect 
alone).  And  on  and  on . . . 

There  are  no  courses  or  degree  in  the  area  of  love. 
I'm  not  sure  if  anyone  would  be  qualified  to  teach  such  a 
course.  Certainly  not  1. 1  can  say  that  thinking  about  love 
is  important,  that  experiencing  it  is  even  more  so.  But 
like  Joni,  I've  looked  at  love  from  both  sides  now  —  up 
and  down,  give  and  take,  win  and  lose  —  and  still  some- 
how, "I  really  don't  know,  what  love's  about  at  all . . ." 

Still,  there  are  those  bright  and  sunny  days  in  the 
Pcirk.  Days  free  from  problems,  devoted  to  love  in  bloom. 
Days  when,  without  thinking,  one's  heart  pounds  with 
excitement  from  being  alive,  from  being  together,  from 
being  in  love.  These  are  the  "learning"  days  of  love,  the 
beautiful  days,  the  ones  we  choose  never  to  erase. 


To  Professor  E.P.:  Heartfelt  Thanks 


49 


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50 


fy^y 


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■ . ''i;flw^»MSi(f*as/fi; 


The  first  year  in  new  surroundings  is  bound  to  be  a 
bit  confusing,  a  chaos  of  unfemiiiar  sights,  sounds, 
smells,  tastes,  people  and  events.  Sensations  bombard- 
ing mind  and  body  for  365  days . . .  and  nights.  Pleasant. 
Gratifying.  Ecstatic.  Tense.  Embarrassing.  Joyful.  Ex- 
hausting. Painful.  Never,  never  dull.  I  know  1  am  alive 
and  in  a  great  place  because  the  experience  is  so 
intense. 

And  the  people.  Open.  Warm.  Supportive.  Angry. 
Earnest.  Relaxed.  Active.  Interested.  Olive  and  Blue. 
All  ages  and  persuasions  linked  together  by  the  ex- 
perience of  Tulane.  Us  meaning  may  differ,  but  the 
feeling  is  the  same:  belonging. 

Images  of  Tulane  days.  Friends.  Study.  Games. 
Sunbathing.  Talk.  Parties.  Increasing  awareness  of  the 
world  around  us.  Becoming.  Exploring.  Welded  to  this 
place  for  life  by  sentiments. 

The  particulars  of  the  year  lie  jumble  in  my  mind. 
The  Superfest,  a  handmade  minicamival  that  brightened 
the  day  and  compensated  for  a  losing  effort  on  the  foot- 
ball field  at  Homecoming.  Getting  "installed  in  office" 
on  the  Newcomb  steps  on  a  warm  and  carefree  October 
afternoon.  A  football  season  characterized  by  close 
games  going  the  wrong  way,  but  good  parties.  I  would 
be  glad  to  make  a  swap  there.  Basketball  succeeds,  but 
not  as  much  as  the  team  hoped.  New  faces  and  new 
promise  on  the  sports  scene.  Acrimony  surrounds  the 
athletic  budget  as  my  powers  of  persuasion  fail  to  con- 
vince everyone  that  Tulane's  destiny  of  academic  dis- 
tinction is  best  achieved  in  concert  with  a  successful 
intercollegiate  athletic  program.  The  ingredients  are 
present:  academic  excellence.  New  Orleans,  and  the 
Superdome.  The  jug  strike  at  the  Superdome  leads  to  an 
evening  of  nostalgia  in  Tulane  Stadium.  Warm  spirits 
on  a  warm  night.  The  pains  of  transition. 

The  Medical  School  grows  by  $50,000,000  worth 
of  bricks  and  mortar,  carrying  the  University's  future 
with  it.  The  Business  School,  with  a  new  dean  and  a 
new  undergraduate  degree  program,  begins  a  healthy 
revival.  Something  new  is  being  added  to  the  Dean  of 
Students  office,  a  woman  as  dean,  to  complement  the 
new  structure  of  the  students  services  organization. 
Finding  a  new  Provost  and  several  deans.  Progress.  A 
new  administration  begins  to  take  shape. 

The  Woman's  Film  Festival  a  fantastic  success, 
flooding  the  campus  with  people  from  afar  and  two 


52 


-.j^.H^: 


score  provocative  films.  Direction  '76  bigger  and  better 
than  ever.  King  Hussein's  visit  focuses  our  attention  on 
the  conflict  in  the  Middle  East  and  on  how  much  we 
disagree  about  it,  a  model  occasion  of  free  inquiry  and 
dissent  in  the  University. 

Travelling  to  make  contact  with  farflung  alumni. 
Carrying  Tulane's  colors  to  speaker's  rostrums  cill  over 
the  city.  Getting  the  University  organized  for  the  big 
effort  to  come.  Working  with  Administrators  and  student 
leaders  and  enjoying  it.  Teaching  again  Good  Students. 
Many  new  friends,  young  and  old.  Medical  School  stud- 
dents,  on  their  own  initiative,  pledge  gifts  to  annual 
giving,  a  dramatic  gesture  and  a  vote  of  confidence  in 
the  School.  The  senior  class  in  A&S  establishing  an 
award  for  teaching  excellence,  putting  their  money 
where  their  values  are. 

The  cumbersome  academic  decision-making 
machinery  creaks  and  groans  as  it  is  pushed  and  pulled 
into  motion.  Undergraduate  politics  learned  that  you 
can  make  the  system  respond  from  within  —  with 
patience,  persistence,  and  a  willingness  to  compromise. 
Medical  School  students  bargain  for  a  degree  certificate 
tailored  to  their  desire  for  continuity  with  the  School's 
glorious  past.  The  uptown  calendar  altered  to  make  Yom 
Kippur  a  University  holiday  and  to  include  a  study 
period  between  the  last  day  of  classes  and  examinations. 
Visitation  rules  change  and  the  availability  of  co- 
residential  housing  increases.  The  move  to  the  Dome, 
regarded  with  suspicion  at  best  by  students,  was  eased 
by  a  University-financed  bussing  system.  Most  pleasing 
of  all  was  the  emphasis  placed  by  student  leaders  on  the 
need  for  academic  excellence  and  to  stimulate  a  more 
intense  intellectual  life  on  campus.  The  cascade  of  films 
and  special  events  during  the  Spring  term  convinces  me 
that  we  have  a  good  start  on  that  problem. 

A  rich  year.  A  good  start.  A  great  place.  Having 
gotten  to  know  so  many  members  of  the  Class  of  1976, 
I  only  regret  that  I  did  not  join  them  sooner  in  their 
academic  careers,  but  we  have  a  lifetime  of  association 
ahead  of  us.  I  am  happy. 

SHELDON  HACKNEY 
PRESIDENT 


53 


54 


55 


tti 


56 


57 


THE  ROYAL  UCHTENSTEIN 
CIRCUS 


'SHAKESPEARE 
ON  THE 
QUAD' 


59 


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SUPERFEST 


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63 


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64 


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65 


HUSSEIN'S 
VISIT 


66 


67 


RALPH  NADER 


PETER  W.  RODBMO  JR 


69 


MARGARET  MEAD 


70 


71 


roosevelt 
;ykes 


JIMMY  BUFFETT 


T 
H 
E 


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I 

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73 


THE  BOSTON 
TEAPARTY 


74 


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DA 

QC 

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75 


CARLOS 
MONTOYA 


76 


'MEET 

THE 

PROF 


ANDYANTIPPAS 


PAUL  HOOPER 


77 


DICK  CAVETT 


"I  remember  when  I  had  Salvidorc  Dali 
on  the  show.  He  walked  on  stage  with  an 
ant-eater  and  threw  it  on  the  lap  of  one 
of  the  guests  without  saying  a  word  —  I 
guess  that's  the  classy  way  of  throwing  an 

ant-eater I  read  novels  for  the  story, 

watch  movies  to  see  how  they  come  out, 
and  think  that  the  deep  mystics  value  of 

sex  is  that  it  feels  good We  had  all 

the  fun  a  fraternity  has  in  getting  nude 
and  drinking  and  throwing  up  all  over 
each  other." 


78 


VINCENT  PRICE 


79 


BLACK  ARTS  FESTIVAL 


80 


81 


THETULANIANS 


82 


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86 


87 


CAMPUS  NUE 


89 


There  is  always  something  offhanded  about  the 
way  panelists  walk  onto  a  stage:  some  linger  behind, 
stunned  at  the  inevitable  confusion  of  who's  sup- 
posed to  sit  where;  some  casually  scan  the  audience; 
no  one  looks  very  concerned  about  the  possibility  of 
saying  something  stupid  in  front  of  1500  people.  They 
simply  end  up  in  their  chairs,  so  easy  is  their  walk  to 
them. 

Bill  Monroe  booms  out  introductions  of  Nelson 
Polsby,  Julian  Bond,  and  Eugene  McCarthy.  These 
three  in  consort  would  not  make  up  the  quantity  of  his 
voice  the  whole  evening.  Monroe's  opening  is  straight, 
even  with  a  tinge  of  candid  exasperation:  "what  are 
we  going  to  do  with  that  office?"  I  knew  that  everyone 
was  primed:  McCarthy  with  that  studied  offhanded- 
ness  about  him,  the  perfect  picture  of  the  citizen  poli- 
tician, smacking  of  the  earth  of  the  populists,  with 
that  Will  Rogers'  delight  in  presidential  tomfoolery; 
then  Polsby,  the  pudgy  academic  with  the  face  of  a 


THE  PRE 


DIRECTION 


boy  and  the  body  of  a  gourmand,  pushing  his  glasses 
back  onto  his  nose  with  an  impish  finger;  finally.  Bond, 
the  archetypal  southern  black  who  looks  and  speaks 
neither  black  nor  southern,  quiet,  the  picture  of 
Reason.  Monroe's  question  elicited  a  litany  of  ills: 
The  imperious  man  in  the  Office  and  the  imperial 
Office  itself,  the  weak  people  in  Congress  and  the 
weak  Congress  itself,  weak  partisans  and  a  weak 
party  system.  McCarthy  carried  on,  usurping  the  plat- 
form to  talk  about  Presidents  usurping  power. 

Polsby  warmed  up  to  a  question  about  the 
Imperial  Presidency  and  to  McCarthy's  jocular  prop- 
osition that  the  Office  requires  rapture,  revelation,  an 
anointing  with  oil  before  one  can  assume  it.  Upon 
reading  Richard  Nixon's  Six  Crises,  Polsby  recalled 
his  distinct  impression  that  Nixon's  greatest  chal- 
lenge was  simply  getting  through  the  day.  McCarthy 
remembered  how  Nixon  began  to  use  the  royal  "We" 
and  wondered  who  "we"  was.  Gerald  Ford,  he  con- 


90 


JIDENCY 


tinued,  began  as  "my  own  man"  moved  on  naturally  to 
"everybody's  man,"  and,  upon  pardoning  Nixon, 
opted  for  "God's  humble  servant."  "It  seems  to  me 
quite  natural,"  McCarthy  intoned  with  mock  gravity, 
"for  a  President  to  move  into  this  broader  range  of 
competence."  Bond  had  noticed  that  the  candidates 
began  to  assume  the  pontifical  robes  with  the  first 
primary.  I  began  to  think  that  everyone  was  talking 
about  Kings. 

But  there  followed,  after  this  jibing,  some  cura- 
tives for  the  Kingly  malaise  of  office.  They  were  hardly 


by 

Gerald  H. 
Snare 


original:  look  at  the  record  of  the  candidate,  tell 
political  parties  to  be  reasonable  and  consistent  and 
conscionable,  be  interested,  and  on  and  on.  Polsby, 
rising  to  as  great  a  height  as  an  uncomfortably  snug 
chair  would  allow  him,  responded  as  from  the  Fort- 
ress of  Reason  to  McCarthy's  cry  about  the  want  of 
political  passions  in  the  electorate.  Polsby  preferred 
sobriety  to  passion,  and  would  guide  the  wavering 
multitude  with  reasons.  McCarthy  ignored  these  high- 
minded  pronouncements  to  get  in  a  few  proposals. 
He  was,  after  all,  running  for  President. 

There  was  something  ironic  to  me  in  the  just  of 
this  exchange,  in  the  direction  of  thought:  from 
political  evils  to  jokes  to  political  gbods  everybody 
already  knew  about  to  a  little  politicking  at  the  end. 


92 


Monroe  would  check  the  inevitable  disposition  of 
McCarthy  to  stump  a  litde.  Yet  it  was  as  if  we  should 
see  the  old  political  philosophers  end  their  talk  of  the 
Good,  the  True,  and  the  Beautiful  with  some  back- 
room bctnter  about  how  to  win  a  precinct  in  Pough- 
keepsie.  I  could  picture  Thomas  More  snickering, 
knowing  that  after  someone  finished  his  Utopia,  he 
ivould,  for  reliefs  sake,  turn  on  the  television  and, 
maybe,  eat  a  banana. 

There  could  be  no  doubt  about  it  —  Their  de- 
meanor said  too  much  about  them.  William  Rusher 
presented  himself  as  that  happiest  of  all  people,  a 
poor  man's  Isaiah  of  Conservatism,  John  the  Baptist 
as  piker,  looking  forward  to  a  verbal  martyrdom. 


93 


MEDIA:  THE  FOURTH  ESTATE 


surrounded  (as  he  himself  was  to  point  out)  by  liberal 
Pharisees.  Nick  Johnson  was  bespoke  by  being  tele- 
vision trim  and  handsome.  I  could  imagine  him  only 
at  boardroom  bars  talking  with  leggy  and  tanned 
blondes,  taking  intellectual  positions  with  a  kind  of 
Madison  Avenue  sprezzatura.  Ben  Bradlee  was  the 
opposite.  Beer  was  his  drink.  He  was  indeed  what  he 
seemed,  tough  talking,  whiskey-voiced,  and  hard- 
assed,  with  the  enormous  charm  of  a  man  who  speaks 
in  sentences  with  concrete  verbs  in  them.  Rusher  was 
the  champion  of  the  relative  clause,  Norman  Cousins 
of  dogmatic  rhetoric,  Geraldo  Rivera  of  dock-side 
diction,  Johnson  of  corporate  elegance  in  spite  of  himself. 

Rusher  had  all  the  questions  written  down,  but 
seemed  to  have  a  good  deal  of  trouble  getting  them 
out:  What's  the  Media's  biggest  problem?  Is  it  biased? 
Is  it  too  powerful?  What's  its  next  target?  What  should 
it  not  report?  I  wasn't  surprised  at  the  direction  of  his 
questions.  I  knew  he  had  answers  to  them,  answers 
that  would  get  lost  in  the  verbal  thickets  between  his 
subject  and  predicate.  The  others  were  quicker.  There 
is  something  curious  in  answering  (or  even  putting) 
questions  when  you  have  to  modify  every  idea  and 
explain  every  implication.  Don't  say  anything  you 
can't  modify  out  of  existence:  Rusher  the  Artful  Dod- 
ger; Bradlee,  Johnson,  Cousins,  and  Rivera  shooting 
liberal  arrows  made  of  straight  sentences.  Everybody 
loved  it.  But  the  questions  had  been  put. 

The  media  men  'fessed  up.  Bradlee  admitted  that 


:liP7 


94 


newsmen  had  not  really  changed,  that  they  had  not 
been  able  or  (maybe)  willing  to  sort  out  the  truth  from 
the  lies.  Johnson  allowed  for  the  charges  of  a  com- 
mercialized media  and  corporate  censorship.  And 
Cousins,  whose  tendency  was  to  universalize  a  limited 
topic  into  a  cosmic  topic,  chided  the  media  for  organi- 
zing news  and  history  as  if  they  existed  in  24-hour 
segments,  interspersing  deodorant  ads  between 
twenty-second  stories  of  significant  events.  There  was 
litde  wonder  governments  and  their  people  were  so 
badly  informed. 

Rusher  paused,  with  that  kind  of  hauteur  that 
comes  from  knowing  you're  right  and  knowing  as  well 
that  no  one  knows  the  right  better  than  you  do, 
licked  his  chops  and  asked  whether  the  news  was 
biased.  I  groaned  inwardly.  Yeah,  the  media  men 
allowed,  money  makes  for  bad  news.  But  Bradlee 
reminded  us  that  a  supposed  liberal  press  hounded  a 
liberal  Lyndon  Johnson  out  of  office  over  Vietnam 
as  it  did  Conservative  Richard  Nixon  over  Watergate. 
If  anything,  pressmen  hate  power  abused,  from  the 
left  or  right. 

Rusher  bit  his  pen  and  editorialized,  "What's  the 
press'  next  target?"  Everybody  smirked.  Bradlee 
thought  they  should  aim  at  the  stockmarket,  Cousins 
at  the  rude  mechanicals  who  subvert  foreign  govern- 
ments, Johnson  at  the  CIA.  Rusher  was,  predictably, 
sarcastic  and  bemused. 

Geraldo  Rivera  arrived  on  stage  late,  having 
witnessed  a  local  rally  of  the  Klan.  Young  thighs  did 
nothing  if  not  flex.  There  he  was,  one  of  the  18-year- 
olds.  He  really  wasn't,  but  few  in  the  young  audience 
would  have  him  to  be  a  real  adult:  jeans,  open  collar, 
boots,  long  hair,  mustache  —  a  television  bohemian, 
a  pubescent  Walter  Cronkite.  Though  he  said  things 


95 


that  denied  that,  the  image  was  too  sweet  to  deny. 

He  talked  about  media  responsibilities,  one  of 
which  was  to  expose  the  vicious  racists  he  had  just 
come  from  interviewing.  There  was  no  little  vin- 
dictiveness  in  his  impressions.  He  spoke  in  "the" 
language:  the  Klan  rally  "blew  my  mind"  and  etc. 
I  cringed  a  little  at  the  fantasy  of  a  newsman  with  an 
idee^ixeof  the  moment.  Rivera  returned  to  remark 
on  this  continually,  as  if  pre-possessed  with  a  frightfi 
vision.  I  could  understand  that. 

The  formal  panel  wore  on  only  to  be  revivified  b 
a  question  from  the  audience:  "Where  were  the  con- 
servatives during  Watergate?"  The  aim  was  perfect 
Rusher  sputtered,  spun  out  a  hundred-word  sentence 


96 


invoked  his  lawyer's  instinct  for  impartiality,  palpable 
truth,  and  evidence.  We'd  all  heard  that  before.  The 
audience  murmured.  Bradlee  broke  in,  unable  to  stand 
it,  "Answer  the  question!"  Rusher  bumbled  on,  reach- 
ing for  clarity.  He  was  had.  They  were  uninterested, 
uninformed,  and  didn't  care,"  Bradlee  roared.  The 
arrow  struck  center.  There  were  cheers.  Rusher  was 
not  composed.  There  was  something  unfair  about  that. 
But  the  irony  was  abundant:  The  Isaiah  of  Con- 
servatism was  caught  in  his  own  resplendent  image. 
In  a  curious  way.  Rusher  liked  it,  enjoying  the  martyr's 
delight  in  being  martyred. 

It  was  feiscinating.  It  was  odd.  But  1  got  the  sense 
that  we  had  come  to  see  not  an  exchange  of  views, 
but  a  morality  play.  There  was  James,  and  John,  and 
Andrew  in  modem  dress,  speaking  the  homilies  of 
newspaper  and  Television  and  magazine.  The  char- 
acters were  known  and  so  was  the  denouement.  But 
the  play  was  the  thing  —  no  anxieties  here  about  who 
is  good  and  who  is  bad.  The  actors  enjoyed  the  roles. 
We  all  applauded. 

One  might  have  suspected  that  the  third  night  of 
DIRECTION  would  be  odd.  It  was.  Five  satirists/ 
activists  on  one  panel  doesn't  make  for  consistency. 
You  can't  homogenize  five  independents.  There  was 
one  other  irony  as  I  thought  about  this  group  as  they 
adjusted  their  chairs  on  stage.  Was  this  to  be  a  Satur- 
day night  of  jokes  and  jibes,  or  a  discussion  coherent 
enough  so  I  could  write  about  it?  The  evening  was,  in 
fact,  for  fun.  It  took  about  five  minutes  to  establish 
that,  five  minutes  for  one  to  realize  that  if  someone 


97 


THE  LOYAL 
OPPOSITION: 
SOCIAL  SATIRE 
IN  AMERICA 


tried  to  intellcctualizc  (even  rationedize)  satire,  the 
satire  might  evaporate.  At  the  very  least,  much  of  the 
fun  would  be  gone.  Everyone  seemd  to  sense  that, 
though  I  heard  grumblings  about  some  of  the  unkind 
(inevitably  unkind)  comments  coming  fom  the  stage. 

Russell  Baker  began  as  a  sort  of  Friars  Club 
moderator,  alternately  insulting  and  praising  his 
companions  for  the  evening:  there  was  some  acid  in 
the  accolades.  There  were  warnings  about  sticking  to 
the  discussion.  He  brought  along  a  baseball  bat  to 
make  the  point.  Baker's  forte  is  to  give  the  com- 
pliment with  the  right  hand  and  take  it  back  with  the 
left:  he  deflated  everything  in  this  longish  and  rather- 
too-cute  monologue.  He  finally  got  to  putting  the 
question.  "Do  any  of  you  write  for  the  sake  of  being 
funny,  or  must  you  make  funny  social  comments?" 
The  first  answers  showed  the  oddly  associative  think- 
ing of  these  five.  Dick  Gregory  recounted  stories  of 
breaking  into  the  "business,"  how  his  social  com- 
mentary was  the  thing  that  packed  the  night  club.  He 
thought  the  satirist  a  socizd  commentator.  Art  Buch- 
wald  said  he  preferred  being  a  chameleon  —  "I  mix 
them  up,"  mostly,  he  allowed,  for  the  sake  of  fore- 
stalling expectations.  Robin  Tyler,  pert  and  cute 
(though  she  would  loathe  those  terms)  showed  a 
cantankerous  disputativeness:  Baker  was  wrong  to 
talk  about  comedy  past  as  comedy  just  for  fun.  Tyler 
was  to  be  the  satiric  social  commentator  for  the  rest 
of  the  night.  Her  dialogue  was  distracted  enough  to 
lose  sight  of  the  question.  Baker  fiddled  with  his 
glasses  and  tried  again:  "H.  L  Mencken  said  that 
anyone  creative  shouldn't  abuse  himself  by  becoming 
political."  Jimmy  Breslin,  looking  every  bit  the  arche- 
typal, garrulous  Irishman,  agreed.  Certain  stories  or 
anecdotes  are  simply  funny  by  nature.  "I'd  rather  read 
them  than  some  about  stzuving  kids  in  Harlem." 
Breslin  gave  a  couple  of  those  stories,  leaning  forward 
in  a  chair  too  small  for  his  bulk.  The  question  seemed 
to  die.  Baker  picked  up  another  one.  Gregory  ignored 
it  to  upbraid  Mencken  with  "We  can't  laugh  problems 
away."  Gregory's  satirist  was  the  activist.  Baker  tries 
a  question  about  Republicans.  Buchwald  wants  to 


98 


talk  about  humor  as  hostility:  "Most  people  in  this 
business  are  hostile  people.  The  more  you  Ccin  turn 
hostility  into  humor,  the  more  money  you  can  make." 
He  went  back  to  a  question  about  why  he  was  a  sati- 
rist. Buchwald,  predictably,  said  he  started  as  a  kid. 
As  this  short  history  went  on,  replete  with  self- 
inflicted  jokes,  1  got  the  impression  that  Buchwald 
wasn't  really  answering  a  question  at  tdl.  Rather,  he 
was  making  fun  of  Baker's  question  —  the  futility  of 
asking  a  jokester  why  he  jokes.  In  some  way  it  struck 
me  that  his  line  was  brilliant.  He  was,  in  fact,  demon- 
strating the  thing  itself,  not  really  talking  about  it.  It 
seemed  to  me  that  none  of  the  others  quite  caught 
this  line  of  thought,  except  maybe  Breslin.  Tyler  and 
Gregory  could  not  see  beyond  their  comic  diatribes 
which  so  clearly  showed  a  grim  social  messianism. 
The  contrast  was  palpable.  Buchwald  would  impishly 
smile.  Tyler  would  get  raunchy  and  strident.  Gregory 
would  lean  forward  in  his  seat  and  remonstrate  with 
anyone  who  could  accept  the  less  bad  of  two  bad 
candidates:  "What  do  you  want  me  to  decide?  to  vote 
for  the  guy  who's  been  a  Klansman  for  two  years 
over  the  guy  who's  been  one  for  five?"  Breslin  turns 
him  aside:  "Well,  vote  for  the  one  you  know!"  Gregory 
laughs.  But  sides  had  been  drawn.  The  activists  got 
upset.  The  satirists  laughed  and  jibed  at  them  for 
being  activists.  The  remarkable  thing  was  to  see 
satire  turned  on  the  satirist.  Breslin  and  Buchwald 
enjoyed  the  turn.  Tyler  obviously  did  not.  Gregory  was 
sensible  enough  to  chuckle  at  his  self-seriousness. 

What  was  said  didn't  get  at  defining  "The  Loyal 
Opposition"  at  all.  But  the  give-and-take  of  the  dis- 
cussion did.  The  point  was  simple:  You  saw  it  and 
heard  it.  The  "Loyal  Opposition"  lashes  the  dogma- 
tists, the  self-important  and  the  self-serious,  the 
powerful,  the  arrogant,  and  the  foolish.  If  a  satirist 
himself  were  any  of  these,  they  would  lash  him  too. 

There  they  were.  People  in  the  news,  people  of 


99 


news  passed:  Jesse  Jackson  looking  a  trifle  too  "hip", 
but  with  a  voice  that  reminds  you  he  is  a  preacher  and 
an  advocate;  William  Colby,  very  smart  in  grey, 
trimmed  and  neat,  with  rehearsed  responses,  looking 
from  clear-stemmed  spectacles,  at  ease;  Robert 
McKay,  the  epitome  of  deanly  elegance,  demonstrable 
rationality,  and  superb  finger-nails;  Alger  Hiss,  some- 
what old  and  quiet  with  an  after-the-war  reflectiveness 
about  him.  Buchwald  stayed  on  to  moderate  in  place 
of  Daniel  Schorr,  who  couldn't  come.  Dan  Schorr 
became  the  hero  of  the  evening,  the  Captain 
Courageous  of  the  free  press,  sacked  for  "leaiking" 
(that  detestable  vulgarism)  the  House  report  of  the 
CIA  to  the  ViUage  Voice.  Buchwald  started  with  this 
cause  celebre,  and  asked  Colby  about  it.  I  could  smell 


100 


101 


THE  LAW: 

THE  INDIVIDUAL 

AND  THE  STATE 


the  temperate  answer  before  it  came:  "Schorr  de- 
cided according  to  what  he  saw  as  his  duty  as  a  news- 
man according  to  the  Constitution."  A  wonderful 
example  of  beaucratic  syntax  —  compound  preposi- 
tions until  the  sense  fodes  to  obscurity.  But  it  was 
temperate.  There  were  a  few  straight  answers  this 
evening,  but  there  was  also  the  distinct  calm  that 
comes  from  having  to  deal  with  vast  generalizations. 

The  vast  generalizations  were  about  the  press, 
and  I  got  the  sense  that  I  was  hearing  ancient  argu- 
ments clothed  in  the  verbiage  grown  out  of  Watergate: 
"National  Security"  and  the  media,  unfriendly  nations 
in  glee  over  public  revelations  of  private  matters, 
"guidelines"  for  a  responsible  Fourth  Estate. 

Jackson  spoke  for  the  anti-establishment:  "Un- 


clear people  can  cloud  up  clear  guidelines."  We  could 
forgive  the  bad  metaphor  for  what  he  had  meant  to 
say.  But  the  quandry  remained.  When  should  you  shi 
up?  And  when  should  a  government  shut  you  up?  His 
universalized  the  subject:  "Without  an  enlightened, 
interested,  and  believing  public,  the  beaucracy  will 
not  be  responsive  to  the  people."  One  could  have 
added,  as  Jackson  was  later  to  suggest,  that  without 
an  interested  public,  neither  will  the  press.  McKay 
agreed  that  both  should  be  scrutinized.  I  began  to 
wonder  where  the  good  guys  were  or  who  was  lookin|| 
at  whom.  Buchwald  bespoke  a  skepticism  that 
seemed  like  the  only  path  through  the  calm  fog  of  th( 
discussion. 

He  turned  abruptly,  however,  to  law  and  the 
"movements"  —  civil  rights,  anti-war  and  the  rest. 
Everyone  hugged  intellectually.  Hiss,  who  gave  me 


102 


the  sense  that  he'd  been  through  it  all  for  more  years 
than  I  can  count,  offered,  "The  way  to  end  bad  laws  is 
to  break  them  and  then  stand  the  consequences." 
Colby  agreed,  precisely.  And  Jackson  as  one  who  had 
thought  the  question  out  like  an  ancient  Schoolman, 
distinguished  between  the  "universal  chciracter  of 
law,"  laws  made  by  a  majority  to  apply  to  all,  and 
another  unnamed  kind,  made  by  some  group  to  apply 
solely  to  a  minority.  You  keep  the  first  and  break  the 
second.  McKay  took  up  the  abstraction  and  spoke  of 
"The  voice  of  Reason".  Buchwald  called  us  back  from 
the  empyrean  of  high  thought  and  suggested  that  the 
threat  of  violence  made  that  disembodied  "Voice  of 
Reason"  respond  reasonably.  Jackson  demurred, 
having  seen,  as  he  said,  a  few  pistols  elicit  many 
machine  guns.  He  went  on,  in  a  Idnd  of  homilectic 
peroration,  to  call  for  a  "disarmament  movement  from 


103 


the  mind  and  heart,  not  from  the  hip." 

If  the  language  had  been  better,  one  might  think 
he  had  been  heciring  a  modem  rendition  of  Aristotle's 
Ethics  or  the  dynamics  of  Plato's  Dialogues.  We 
hadn't  got  closer  to  answers.  But,  then,  in  a  dialogue 
such  as  this,  we  didn't  have  a  Socrates.  And  even  if 
we  did,  as  Buchwald  in  his  infinite  good  sense  knew, 
Socrates  himself  would  only  have  smirked  at  our 
presumption  that  dialogues  which  propose  questions 
should  also  have  the  decency  to  answer  them. 


104 


ART 


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106 


m-'it  «/4** 


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110 


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111 


THE 

WOMEN'S 

INTERNATIONAL 

FILM 
FESTIVAL 


112 


113 


"Atliletics?  Yeah  ...  you  mean,  sports.  I  was  an  athlete  myself,  once.  Now, 
just  a  sportsman.  It  was  nice  being  an  athlete  . . .  everybody  watching  you.  Some- 
times, it  really  didn't  matter  if  you  lost  -  as  long  as  people  were  there  to  watch 
you.  That  was  nice  . . .  it's  nicer  being  a  sportsman,  though  ...  not  so  grueling, 
not  so  hard  on  the  body.  The  sportsman's  the  guy  up  in  the  stands  watching  . . 
with  two  women  and  two  jugs.  Sportin'  around,  gamblin',  playin'  poker.  Now 
poker  -  that's  a  damn  good  sport.  Talkin's  another  good  one.  Makin'  women 
laugh,  that's  my  favorite  sport.  Me?  Not  much  of  an  athlete,  anymore  . .  damn 
good  at  sports,  though. 


117 


by  Val  Perkins 


1975-76  may  perhaps  be  remembered  as  one  of  the 

most  important  school  years  in  the  long  history  of 

intercollegiate  athletics  at  Tulane  University. 

A  new  (though  not  so  sweet)  home  in  the  Dome 

...  a  new  president  with  some  changing  attitudes 

towards  the  Green  Wave's  athletic  enterprises ...  a  new 

football  coaching  stciff ...  a  new  basketball  coaching 

staff. . .  and  finally  a  new  athletic  director  all  of  these 

events  and  more  in  the  one  year  alone. 

And  interestingly  enough,  the  year  began  in  relative 

stability.  Oh,  there  was  some  concern  about  the  move 

out  of  historic  Tulane  Stadium  into  the  newly  opened 

and  still  troubled  Louisiana  Supcrdome,  and  of  course 

there  was  the  problem  of  Title  9  and  the  effects  it  would 

have  on  the  school's  programs,  but  at  Tulane  all  seemed 

well. 

Football  Coach  Bennie  Ellender  was  early  into  his 

long  contract  (reported  to  be  as  long  as  a  decade)  and 

despite  a  disappointing  5-6  season  the  year  before  was 

still  enjoying  the  glory  of  his  9-2  season  in  1973  and  that 

memorable  14-0  victory  over  Louisiana  State. 

Elsewhere,  Basketball  Coach  Charles  Moir  was 

looking  to  improve  on  a  fine  16-10  season  with  Phil 

Hicks  and  a  host  of  newcomers  to  be  relied  on,  while  Joe 

Brockhoff  (baseball),  Dick  Bower  (swimming),  and  the 

other  Spring  sports  coaches  looked  to  continue  the 

excellent  low-budget  programs  which  had'been  built  up 

in  their  sports. 
But  almost  from  the  opening  moments  of  the  ath- 
letic season,  trouble  flared  up  and  much  of  it  would  be  a 
result  of  the  Wave's  football  move  to  the  Sports  Palace 

on  Poydras  Street. 


ONE  YEAR  FOR  ATHLETICS 

1975-1976 


119 


120 


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121 


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THE 
DLEL 


After  years  of  political  and  legal  haggling,  and  at  a 
cost  of  some  163  million  dollars,  the  Louisiana  Super- 
dome  finally  opened  officially  in  August  of  1975  to  very 

mixed  reviews. 
There  was  litde  question  concerning  the  beauty  of 
the  edifice;  the  Dome  is  very  spectacular  indeed.  Loom- 
ing out  over  downtown  New  Orleans  some  275  feet  over 
Poydras  Street  and  covering  52  acres  of  land,  the  Super- 
dome  is  a  monument  to  the  modem  imaginations  of  its 
creators,  designers,  and  builders. 
Inside  the  cavernous  building,  the  Dome  features 
multi-colored  seats,  a  lovely  playing  surface,  four  score- 
boards, and  the  much  bally-hooed  Instant  Replay  TV 
screens  which  hang  from  the  roof. 
No,  the  problems  did  not  concern  the  building  it- 
self, but  rather  those  who  ran  and  operated  the  Dome, 
and  the  hassles  associated  with  the  (some  said)  untime- 
ly, poorly  planned,  and  unproductive  move  of  the  Wave's 
football  program  off  the  Willow  Street  site. 
And  there  were  innumerable  problems. 
Due  to  a  foul-up  at  the  Tulane  ticket  office  caused 
by  that  office's  unfamiliarity  with  the  Dome's  seating 
plans,  a  greater  number  of  students  ended  up  without 
their  correct  seats  down  close  to  the  action.  Somehow  i1 
did  not  seem  right  that  the  students  of  the  University 
were  forced  to  sit  an  eagle's  flight  away  from  the  field 
that  their  team  was  playing  on. 
There  was  also  the  immediate  problem  of  getting  all 
the  way  from  campus  to  the  building.  Buses  were  pro- 
vided from  Claiborne  Street  to  the  Superdome  for  the 
students,  but  their  departures  and  arrivals  were  ill  timed 
and  it  just  didn't  seem  right  to  have  to  wait  around  for 
hours  after  the  ballgame  before  getting  back  uptown  for 

those  after-game  parties. 

But  if  you  didn't  take  the  bus  downtown,  you  had  to 

put  up  with  the  parking  problems  at  the  edifice,  which 

were  compounded  by  the  prices  charged  and  the  way 

you  were  handled  after  you  paid  the  king's  ransom  to  get 

into  the  lovely  garages. 

That  problem  of  course  boiled  down  to  the  biggest 

headache  at  the  Superdome,  the  incredibly  incompetent 

SSI,  otherwise  known  as  Superdome  Services, 

Incorporated. 


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For  though  it  was  a  nice  gesture  to  put  black 
politico  and  Edwin  Edwards  protege  Sherman  Copelin 
in  charge  of  nearly  all  Dome  services  in  payment  for  his 
long  support  of  the  Louisiana  Governor,  it  would  have 
been  a  little  more  efficient  to  have  hired  people  who 
had  some  idea  of  what  it  took  to  run  a  playground,  much 
less  the  world's  third  largest  building. 

Simply  put:  the  employees  didn't  have  any  idea  of 
what  they  were  doing  or  what  they  were  supposed  to  do. 

The  parking  lot  attendants  didn't  know  where  to 
have  you  park  your  car,  the  seating  ushers  didn't  know 
where  you  were  supposed  to  sit,  and  the  security  people 
didn't  know  what  they  were  supposed  to  keep  secure,  if 
anything. 

Things  were  pretty  chaotic,  and  no  one  seemed  to 
give  a  damn.  In  the  course  of  the  year,  however,  the 
Dome  management  did  indeed  act  often  and  effectively 
to  clean  up  the  mess  they  had  created. 

It  seemed  that  the  reeil  problem  was  not  the  Dome 
or  its  people,  but  the  fact  that  Tulanc  "had"  to  move 
down  there. 

To  a  student  body  accustomed  to  simply  walking 
across  Willow  Street  on  a  beautiful  New  Orleans  fall 
night,  and  being  able  to  watch  a  college  football  game  in 
one  of  the  "grand  old"  stadiums  of  the  sport,  it  was  folly 
to  move  into  a  modem  arena  far  removed  physically  and 
spiritually  from  the  college  campus,  especially  when  the 
student  congregation  had  voted  overwhelmingly  against 
the  proposed  move  a  year  earlier. 

The  students  were  told  that  Tulane  had  to  make  the 
move  to  the  Big  Dome:  Tulane  Stadium  was  falling  down 
almost  miraculously  as  the  Dome  was  building  up;  the 
Dome  had  offered  the  Wave  a  good  deal  to  make  the 
move;  it  would  help  recruiting  for  all  sports  a  great  deal; 
etc. . .  etc. . .  etc. . . 

And  most  probably,  the  arguments  were  correct.  It 
would  simply  not  do  for  the  Green  Wave  to  refuse  to  play 
in  one  of  the  great  wonders  of  the  world,  located  only  20 
minutes  away.  In  terms  of  publicity,  economics,  recruit- 
ing, and  all  the  etc.'s,  it  would  simply  not  be  feasible. 

And  yet,  it  certainly  did  appear  strange:  sitting  in  a 
giant  artificial  studio  atmosphere  when  we  all  could  have 
been  lounging  on  those  hard-but-homey  benches  in  that 
beautiful  Willow  Street  stadium,  watching  a  football 
game  on  a  crisp  fall  night  under  a  full  moon. 

Well,  as  they  have  always  said,  that's  progress. 
And  of  course,  there  was  one  more  problem  with 
the  Dome:  somebody  forgot  to  tell  the  football  team  that 
it  was  their  home  park,  and  that  they  had  an  advantage 
playing  there. 

For  Bennie's  Bunch,  it  was  a  hard  life.  The  Green 
Wave  went  1-6  in  the  Worid's  Eighth  Wonder  while  win- 
ning three  of  four  on  the  road.  Oh  for  the  days  of  yore. 


123 


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125 


126 


1S)i(i*&«^4i 


FOOTBAU 
1975 


1975  was  to  be  a  year  of  rejuvenation  for  Tulane 

Football. 

Following  a  near  disastrous  5-6  mark  in  1974  which 

saw  a  hapless  Wave  team  lose  its  final  six  contests. 

Coach  Bennie  EUende  and  his  staff  were  dedicated  to 

returning  the  club  to  glory  as  in  the  year  of  1973  when 

Tulane  had  celebrated  a  9-2  regular  season  with  its  first 

victory  over  the  hated  Bengals  up  the  river  in  the  past  25 

years,  as  well  as  a  visit  to  the  prestigious  Astro-Blue- 

bonnet  Bowl  in  Houston. 
And  Bennie  certainly  did  appear  to  have  the  talent 

necessary  for  the  task. 

Men  like  Mark  Olivari,  Jim  Gueno,  Jaime  Garza, 

and  Brian  Alexander  led  a  list  of  14  returning  starters, 

and  the  supposedly  blue  chip  recruiting  years  of  1972 

and  73  would  bring  a  host  of  talented  youngsters  into  the 

Wave  fold. 
And  thus,  when  camp  opened  up  for  the  athletes  on 
August  21,  a  sense  of  anticipation  pervaded  the  soon  to 
be  abandoned  Tulane  Stadium. 
Unfortunately,  it  did  not  take  long  for  that  feeling  to 
head  to  the  lockeroom.  By  the  end  of  what  seemed  like 
an  eternal  football  campaign,  the  entire  football  pro- 
gram was  in  shambles. 
Everything  went  wrong. 
The  downfall  began  quite  suddenly,  as  both  Olivari 
and  starting  quarterback  Terry  Looney  were  injured  in 
the  team's  first  hard  scrimmage  on  August  30  as  the 
players  worked  out  on  a  wet  Tulane  Stadium  turf.  Maybe 
playing  inside  wasn't  such  a  bad  idea  after  all. 
Though  Olivcuri  would  return  mid-way  through  the 
campaign,  Looney  would  be  out  for  the  duration;  though 
he  gave  100%  all  season  long,  replacement  Buddy  Gil- 
bert just  couldn't  get  the  job  done. 
Just  as  in  74,  things  got  off  on  a  suspicious  right 
foot  in  the  1975  season,  as  a  touchdown  underdog  Wave 
team  came  up  with  a  super  effort  and  upset  Clemson 
Tigers  in  South  Carolina  on  September  13  by  a  17-13 

score. 

The  Wave  scored  all  17  of  its  points  in  the  game's 

second  period,  as  comerback  Wyatt  Washington  raced 

76  yards  with  an  intercepted  pass  for  one  touchdown, 

Gary  Rudick  scored  another  on  a  three  yard  burst  to  cap 

a  61  yard  drive,  and  David  Walters  added  both  points 

after,  while  also  finding  the  distance  on  a  33  yard  field 

gotil.  The  defense  forced  eight  turnovers,  as  Gilbert's 

debut  produced  a  5  for  16  day  with  the  pass  and  only 

one  offensive  drive. 

But  Tulane  had  won  its  opener,  a  victory  few  had 

expected,  and  excitement  was  rampant  as  the  Wave 

approached  its  Dome  opener. 


128 


129 


The  excitement  was  dampened  by  a  mysterious 

ticket  screw-up  which  say  a  large  number  of  season 

ticket  holders  not  receiving  their  seats  in  time  for  the 

contest  with  Old  Miss,  but  nonetheless,  50,000  partisans 

were  still  on  hand  on  September  20  as  the  Wave  won 

another  sweet  victory,  14-3  over  the  Rebels  who  would 

finish  the  season  among  the  leaders  in  the  Southeast 

Conference. 

Again,  the  Wave  relied  on  the  big  play  in  gaining 

victory,  as  Gilbert  connected  on  a  52  yard  scoring  bomb 

to  Garza  for  one  touchdown. 
Things  were  looking  bright. 
But  the  roof  collapsed  on  the  team  the  following 
Saturday,  and  Tulane  went  on  to  lose  its  next  two  Dome 
encounters,  when  offense-minded  Syracuse  grabbed  a 
31-13  decision  and  Vanderbilt's  6-3  win  left  neither  team 
impressed.  A  crowd  of  only  31,000  sat  through  the  latter 
game  and  by  the  final  gun,  that  once  exhuberant  enthu- 
siasm had  obviously  died  out  on  Willow  Street.  But 
adversity  brought  out  the  best  in  the  club. 
Two  astonishing  upsets.  The  first  came  in  a  spec- 
tacular come-from-behind  win  over  Eastern  powerhouse 
Boston  College  as  a  52  yard  strike  for  six  and  Walter's 
kicking  efforts  outshone  the  Eagle's  defense.  Then  the 
following  weekend,  Tulane,  in  one  of  the  true  "snakepits" 
of  college  football,  defeated  a  tough  West  Virginia. 
Thus,  all  appeared  well  for  a  fine  ending  to  the 
Wave  season.  Four  of  the  final  five  games  were  to  be  held 
at  home,  and  the  rejuvenated  Wave  appeared  ready  to 
treat  the  63,000  who  showed  up  the  next  Saturday  to  a 
great  game  with  a  fine  Georgia  Tech  Squad. 


130 


Instead,  one  of  the  weirdest  turnarounds  since  1974 
season  occurred,  as  the  Yellow  Jackets  of  Coach  Pepper 
Rodgers  pelted  Tulane  23-0.  The  Wave  was  never  in  the 
game.  There  followed  an  embarrassing  loss  to  a  Kentucky 
club  wracked  with  internal  dissension  and  charges  that 
star  running  back  Sonny  Collins  was  involved  in  a 
bizarre  kidnapping/murder  case,  tied  to  the  Mafia  and 
drugs  no  less. 

The  Wave  returned  home  with  hopes  of  a  winning 
season  intact,  however,  as  the  Wave  would  host  three 
admittedly  awful  teams  in  Air  Force,  North  Carolina, 
and  LSU. 

After  dropping  the  Air  Force  game,  Tulane  faced  a 
weak  North  Carolina  team  (2-7  at  the  time).  It  was  a 
losing  effort,  but  the  real  story  was  not  in  the  Superdome 
that  night,  but  at  good  ol'  Tulane  Stadium. 


131 


For  up  on  Willow  Street,  some  2000  students  put  on 
a  well  organized  and  entertaining  Dome  Boycott,  pro- 
testing the  team's  movement  downtown. 
Tulane's  band  played  its  regular  football  program 
at  the  protest,  the  game  itself  was  broadcast  by  WTUL 
over  special  loudspeakers,  and  the  Business  School 
and  Sigma  Nu  Fraternity  played  an  intramural  football 
game  on  the  field  below  for  the  fans. 
In  terms  of  overall  effectiveness,  the  protest  was 
relatively  futile  though  widespread  among  the  student 
body  (only  about  100  showed  up  downtown);  but  while 
the  rest  were  suffering  through  all  the  hassles  and  losses 
at  the  Superdome,  the  2,000  were  having  a  fine  time 
uptown,  proving  that  guerrila  theatre  did  not  die  out  in 

1970. 
They  got  to  drink  whatever  they  wanted  as  well. 


132 


FOOTBALL  TEAM 

Bryan  Alexander 

Joseph  Jacobi 

Mark  Olivari 

Keith  Alexander 

John  Jolin 

Mike  Price 

Brent  Baber 

Mark  Jones 

William  Roeling 

Nathan  Bell 

Cleveland  Joseph 

John  Ronquillo 

Kit  Bonvillian 

Donald  Joyce 

Gary  Rudick 

Paul  Brock 

Mike  Korf 

Gerry  Sheridan 

Robert  Brown 

Bill  Kramer 

Hank  Tatje 

Miles  Clements 

Eric  Laakso 

Glenn  Thomas 

Kenneth  Daniel 

Charles  Lapeyre 

Steve  Treuting 

Rene  Faucheux 

Don  Lemon 

Bill  Van  Manen 

Gene  Forte 

Arthur  Liu77a 

Cliff  Van  Meter 

Jaime  Garza 

James  Long 

Harold  ViUere 

Cameron  Gaston 

Jay  McGrew 

Cliff  Voltapetti 

Buddy  Gilbert 

Howard  McNeill 

David  Walters 

Arthur  Green 

Martin  Mitchell 

Wyatt  Washington 

Charles  Griffin 

Zack  Mitchell 

Darwin  Willie 

James  Gueno 

Stewart  Nance 

Blane  Woodfin 

Jack  Gullison 

Bill  Nix 

Alan  Zaunbrecher 

Bennie  Ellender/Head  Coach 

133 


LSU 


LSU  week  finally  rolled  around,  and  all  the  frustra- 
tions and  dismay  of  the  past  season  came  to  the  surface 
early  in  the  week  when  rumors  hit  the  papers  announc- 
ing the  imminent  fulng  of  EUender,  despite  the  greater 
part  of  his  contract  still  to  be  paid  off. 
The  rumors  persisted  all  week  as  Bennie  tried  to  get 
his  group  ready  for  the  Tigers  and  Tulane  officials  con- 
tinued their  silence. 
Whether  it  was  the  uncertainty  of  who  their  head 
coach  would  be  or  the  lack  of  confidence  after  four 
consecutive,  miserable  performances,  Ellender's  charges 
pretty  well  determined  the  coaching  decision  in  a  de- 
meaning 42-6  loss  the  worst  LSU  team  in  many  a  year. 
Tulane  ground  up  only  164  yards,  threw  six 
interceptions,  and  gave  up  over  430  Tiger  yards  in  the 
rout  in  a  series  that  was  finally  supposed  to  be  even. 
Tulane  closed  out  a  4-7  year  and  Ellender's  tenure  at  the 
Dome's  contest.  Bennie  was  fired  two  weeks  later, 
reportedly  after  a  group  of  wealthy  alumni  finally  stepped 
up  and  agreed  to  pay  off  his  and  his  staff's  huge  salaries. 
And  so  the  EUender  era  was  over  at  Tulane.  He  had 
amassed  a  not  very  impressive  five  year  record  of  27-29 
with  the  Greenies  and  had  suffered  through  three  losing 
seasons.  But  he  had  given  the  Wave  a  super  9-3, 1973 
season,  a  Bluebonnet  Bowl  Bid,  and  the  first  victory 
over  LSU  in  a  quarter  of  a  century.  For  that  he  should 

be  remembered. 
The  search  for  a  replacement  began  almost  im- 
mediately, with  the  rich  alumni  doing  the  bankrolling 
and  apparently  the  recruiting  as  well.  Finally,  on 
December  19,  the  Wave  signed  a  very  excited  Larry 
Smith  to  the  job  and  the  former  Assistant  Head  Coach 
at  Arizona  (and  assistant  to  Bo  Shembechler  at 
Michigan)  began  his  work. 
When  some  32,000  people  showed  up  in  the 
Superdome  in  early  April  to  see  an  evenly  matched 
Spring  Game,  it  was  obvious  that  Tulane  fans  all  over 
New  Orleans  were  reacting  positively  to  the  program 

Smith  was  putting  together. 


134 


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138 


a»    t 


ii'lji 


1 975  SEASON  RECORD 

(4-7) 

Tulane 

17 

Clemson 

13 

Tulane 

14 

Mississippi 

3 

Tulane 

13 

Syracuse 

31 

Tulane 

3 

Vanderbilt 

6 

Tulane 

17 

Boston  College 

3 

Tulane 

16 

West  Virginia 

14 

Tulane 

0 

Georgia  Tech 

23 

Tulane 

10 

Kentucky 

23 

Tulane 

12 

Air  Force 

13 

Tulane 

15 

North  Carolina 

17 

Tulane 

6 

Louisiana  State 

42 

139 


BASKETBAU 
1975-76 


Tulane's  1975-76  Basketball  program  ended  up 
with  a  new  coaching  staff,  but  by  the  choice  of  Charles 
Moir  rather  than  the  University,  and  the  season  con- 
cluded on  much  happier  tones  than  did  football,  despite 
a  disappointing  opening  round  loss  in  the  Metro-Six 

Basketbcdl  Tournament. 
The  team  finished  the  year  at  18-9,  the  best  record 
for  a  Wave  unit  since  1948,  while  setting  a  number  of 
marks  during  the  season  as  well.  The  Wave  won  outright 
the  final  City  Series  Basketball  Tournament,  finished 
second  to  a  super  Tennessee  team  in  the  prestigious 
Sugar  Bowl  Tourney,  won  aU  nine  games  it  played  in 
historic  Tulane  Gym,  and  played  one  of  the  finest  bas- 
ketball games  ever  against  the  North  Carolina  Tar  Heels. 
All-American  Phil  Hicks,  a  fourth  round  choice  in 
the  summer's  NBA  draft,  returned  to  school  to  set  a  new 
Tulane  czireer  scoring  record  with  1,586  points  in  two 
and  a  half  years.  The  native  Chicagoan  finished  the 
season  with  20.6  points  a  game  and  10.8  rebounds,  lead- 
ing club  scoring  in  12  of  the  season's  games,  including 

most  of  the  important  ones. 
Jeff  Cummings,  Pierre  Gaudin,  and  Arthur  Bibbs 
all  finished  the  campaign  scoring  in  the  double  figures, 
the  first  time  four  Wave  starters  had  done  that  in  any- 
one's memory. 


140 


141 


On  March  15,  only  ten  days  after  the  close  of  the 

basketball  season  with  the  loss  to  Georgia  Tech  at  the 

Metro-Six  Meet,  Coach  Charles  Moir  announced  that  he 

was  leaving  the  New  Orleans'  school  to  become  head 

coach  at  his  alma  mater,  Virginia  Tech. 

Moir  had  guided  three  Wave  teams  to  records  of 

12-14, 16-10,  and  18-9,  and  had  definitely  turned  around 

the  Tulane's  program.  Echoing  the  footbeill  situation  a 

few  months  before,  top  alumni  stepped  in  and  brought 

some  very  class  people  to  look  over  the  new  opening, 

finally  settling  on  one  super  coach,  Roy  Danforth  of 

Syracuse. 
Danforth  had  guided  his  last  six  Orangemen  teams 
to  post  season  tournaments,  including  four  NCAA  bids 
in  a  row.  Over  an  eight  year  span,  he  also  posted  a  148- 
71  record.  Danforth's  1974-75  club  reached  the  semi- 
finals of  the  NCAA  Tourney  before  bowing  to  Kentucky. 
And  with  Cummings  (19.7),  Gaudin  (15.4),  Bibbs 
(11.3),  and  Tommy  Hicks,  who  had  an  amazing  208 
assists,  all  returning,  Danforth  and  Tulane  fans  can  look 
forward  to  continued  success  on  the  basketball  court, 
even  with  the  loss  of  one  of  Louisiana's  finest  players, 

Phil  Hicks. 


142 


BASKETBALL  TEAM 

Arthur  Bibbs 

Keith  Houston 

John  Bobzien 

George  Kloak 

Marcellus  Bonner 

Terry  McLean 

Jeff  Cummings 

Marty  Prendergast 

Marc  Fletcher 

Richard  Purtz 

Pierre  Gaudin 

Greg  Spannuth 

Phil  Hicks 

John  Thompson 

Tom  Hicks 

Paul  Yungst 

,                    Charles  Moir/Head  Coach 

143 


1 975-  76  SEASON  RECORD 

(18-9) 

Tulane 

87 

S.  Dakota 

81 

Tulane 

100 

Denver 

86 

Tulanc 

96 

Rice 

63 

Tulane 

101 

Citadel 

85 

Tulane 

65 

LSU 

79 

Tulane 

59 

So.  Miss 

67 

Tulane 

55 

Arkansas 

67 

Tulane 

107 

SUNO 

72 

Tulane 

91 

Ole  Miss 

88 

Tulane 

99 

Xavier 

85 

Tulane 

90 

Cornell 

72 

Tulane 

84 

Richmond 

79 

Tulane 

80 

Ohio  State 

65 

Tulane 

86 

Dillard 

80 

Tulane 

73 

Tennessee 

97 

Tulane 

94 

Samford 

77 

Tulane 

97 

UNO 

102 

Tulane 

106 

North  Carolina 

113 

Tulane 

92 

Duke 

82 

Tulane 

63 

Marquette 

75 

Tulane 

69 

Kansas  State 

81 

Tulane 

82 

UNO 

81 

Tulane 

111 

So.  Miss 

86 

Tulane 

95 

Ga.  State 

63 

Tulane 

59 

Georgia  Tech 

58 

Tulane 

68 

Ga.  Tech 

74 

Tulane 

77 

Air  Force 

64 

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146 


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In  spite  of  the  loss  of  a  slew  of  players  due  to  freak 
injuries,  Tulane's  Baseball  team  enjoyed  its  third  con- 
secutive twenty-win  season,  and  had  a  helluva  time 
doing  it,  spending  eight  days  on  the  island  of  Oahu  in 
Hawaii  playing  the  University  of  Hawaii  Rainbows. 

Coach  Joe  Brockhoff,  whose  team  won  24  in  his 
first  year  in  1975,  led  the  club  to  a  sweep  of  Louisiana 
State  by  2-1  and  5-1  scores  -  the  first  time  a  Wave  team 
has  done  that  since  1971.  He  also  managed  to  keep  the 
team  ranked  among  the  nation's  top  thirty  clubs  all 
season  long. 

Individually,  righthanded  pitcher  Steve  Mura  had 
his  second  outstanding  season  in  a  row,  breaking 
Tulane's  all  time  strikeout  record  of  136.  Mura  thus  ends 
his  career  at  Tulane  (though  only  a  junior,  Mura  is  avail- 
able for  the  pro  draft  this  year  and  reportedly  will  go 
very  high  in  the  proceedings)  by  breaking  or  tying  every 
major  pitching  mark.  Vince  De  Grouttola  and  newcomer 
Joe  Tkac  both  had  fine  seasons  as  well. 

Center  fielder  John  Foto  meanwhile  dazzled  fans 
all  year  long  with  his  batting  average,  hovering  around 
the  .400  level  and  ranking  in  the  top  ten  in  the  NCAA, 

Foto  set  a  new  record  for  hits  in  a  season  by  be- 
coming the  first  Wave  player  to  get  50  base  hits  in  one 
season.  He  also  led  the  team  in  runs  scored  and  stolen 
bases. 

Another  junior  who  should  leave  New  Orleans  for 
professional  baseball  next  year,  catcher  Jim  Gaudet, 
came  on  strong  with  the  bat  towards  the  end  of  the  year. 
Setting  new  Wave  marks  with  seven  home  runs  and  over 
40  runs  batted  in,  Gaudet  broke  the  record  for  most 
putouts  in  a  season. 

Designated  hitter  Gary  Roney,  infielder  R.  J. 
Barrios,  first  baseman  Frank  Steele,  and  catcher  Steve 
Pumilia  also  closed  out  their  Tulane  careers,  all  of  them 
four  year  lettermen. 


147 


BASEBALL  - 

-  1 976  SEASON  RECORD 

(22-13-1) 

Tulane 

1 

Spring  Hill 

0 

Tulane 

20 

Spring  Hill 

4 

Tulane 

21 

St.  Bernard 

5 

Tulane 

4 

St.  Bernard 

0 

Tulane 

4 

Illinois  St. 

0 

Tulane 

4 

Illinois  St. 

2 

Tulane 

4 

Hawaii 

5 

Tulane 

0 

Hawaii 

1 

Tulane 

1 

Hawaii 

0 

Tulane 

0 

Hawaii 

4 

Tulane 

1 

Hawaii 

2 

Tulane 

2 

Hawaii 

8 

Tulane 

5 

Southwest  La. 

4 

Tulane 

0 

Southwest  La. 

2 

Tulane 

2 

Bradley 

3 

Tulane 

3 

Princeton 

3 

Tulane 

1 

Princeton 

0 

Tulane 

1 

Princeton 

0 

Tulane 

9 

Western  Mich. 

0 

Tulane 

4 

Western  Mich. 

2 

Tulane 

14 

Western  Mich. 

1 

Tulane 

9 

Centenciry 

3 

Tulane 

11 

Centenary 

0 

Tulane 

2 

South  Alabama 

4 

Tulane 

8 

South  Alabama 

12 

Tulane 

2 

Louisiana  St. 

1 

Tulane 

10 

La.  College 

0 

Tulane 

6 

La.  College 

1 

Tulane 

5 

La.  College 

7 

Tulane 

2 

Delta  St. 

3 

Tulane 

7 

Delta  St 

6 

Tulane 

3 

New  Orleans 

6 

Tulane 

5 

Louisiana  St. 

1 

Tulane 

4 

Southern  Miss. 

5 

Tulane 

9* 

Southern  Miss. 

1 

Tulane 

4 

New  Orleans 

3 

Tulane 

4 

Cincinnati 

1 

Tulane 

6 

Louisville 

2 

Tulane 

1 

Memphis  St. 

15 

148 


BASEBALL  TEAM 

Bill  Babin 

Chris  Bamet 

R.  J.  Barrios 

Barry  Busada 

Barry  Butera 

Brian  Butera 

Larry  Cabeceiras 

Doug  Caldarera 

Neal  Comarda 

Vincc  DcGrouttola 

John  Foto 

Alan  Foxman 

Bill  Gaudet 

Jim  Gaudet 

Pierre  Gaudin 

Dan  Gerson 

Barry  Herbert 

John  Kuhlman 

Mark  Maher 

Ron  Marcomb 

Steve  Mura 

Mike  Pamon 

Dave  Pickering 

Steve  Pumilia 

Mickey  Retif 

Gary  Roney 

Jackie  Snell 

Frank  Steele 

Joe  Tkac 


Joe  Brockhoff/Head  Coach 


149 


150 


15. 


1 


SWIMMING 


Coach  Dick  Bower's  Swimming  team  was  torn  by  a 
host  of  internal  problems  during  the  1975-76  year,  prob- 
lems which  resulted  in  the  dismissal  from  the  squad  of  a 
majority  of  the  scholarship  swimmers,  including  several 

top  stars. 

As  a  consequence,  the  Swimming  team  fell  to  a  6-7 

record  this  year,  by  far  the  worst  season  a  Bower 

coached  group  has  had  in  the  Monk  Simons  Pool. 

Bower's  son  Billy  did  represent  the  University  at  the 

NCAA  and  AAU  National  Tournaments  in  Providence, 

Rhode  Island  and  Long  Beach,  California. 


liiiiiilliliillllliiiiiiiiilliliilliliiiiiiiiiiliiiliililiiiiiii^ 


152 


SWIMMING  TEAM 

Brian  Beach 

William  Bower 

Brian  Burke 

Charles  Carmichael 

Scott  Cowand 

Ben  Goslin 

Scott  Handler 

Dann  Jung 

George  Mattingly 

David  O'Leary 

Matt  Padgett 

Terry  Owens 

C.  Richard  Bower/Head  Coach 


1 


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153 


TENNIS 


Coach  Duane  Bruley  continued  his  outstanding 

rejuvenation  of  the  Tulane  Tennis  Squad  in  1976, 

leading  his  charges  to  a  super  16-3  record  by  the  end 

of  April.  The  nctters  captured  eleven  matches  in  a  row 

at  one  point,  defeating  such  clubs  as  Louisville,  South 

Alabama,  Southern  Mississippi,  Georgia  Tech,  and 

Eastern  Michigan. 

Number  one  player  Davis  Henley  won  14  of  his  first 

16  matches,  and  was  joined  in  the  winners  circle  most 

of  the  time  by  Marc  Bernstein,  Robb  Bunen,  and  Alan 

LeBato. 


154 


^f.--lH,         -Ht^-nfiV. 


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TENNIS  TEAM 

Marc  Bernstein 
Steve  Buerger 
Robb  Bunnen 

Ed  Gaskell 
Davis  Henley 
Alan  Le  Bato 
Curtis  Moslcy 
Charlie  Rast 

Jim  Smith 

Duane  Bruley/Head  Coach 


155 


TRACK 


Tulane's  Track  Team  didn't  set  the  world  on  fire  in  the 
1976  year,  but  they  were  there  with  all  the  big  time 

teams  across  the  nation. 

Coach  Johnny  Oelkers  took  his  track  stars  to  indoor 

meets  throughout  the  South  eeirly  in  the  season  and  the 

NCAA  Indoor  Championships  in  Detroit,  Michigan.  The 

squad  also  traveled  to  outdoor  relay  meets  in  Florida, 

Texas,  Iowa  (at  the  famed  Drake  Relays)  and  to  the 

Metro-Six  and  NCAA  Championships  in  Memphis  and 

Philadelphia  in  May  and  June. 


TRACK  TEAM 

Nick  Anderson 

Martin  Bailkey 

Roger  Campana 

Warren  Chandler 

Leonard  Culicchia 

Jeffrey  Davis 

Rene  Facheux 

Steve  Foley 

Dennis  Gordon 

Gary  Hahn 

Don  Joyce 

John  Morrisette 

Tom  Pond 

Lance  Rydberg 

Tom  Stephenson 

James  Stoyanoff 

Peter  Taylor 

Johnny  Oelkers/Head  Coach 


'd 


156 


GOLF 


Coach  Jim  Hart  provided  his  relatively  dormant 
Golf  Tecun  with  some  nice  trips.  The  golfers  journeyed  to 
Tallahassee,  Florida  to  participate  in  the  Florida  State 
University  Invitationals  early  in  the  year.  Traveling  to 
Guadalajara,  Mexico  to  play  in  the  Bing  Crosby  Col- 
legiate Invitational  Tournament  on  the  famed  San  Isidro 
Golf  Course  were  Al  Bartelstein,  Tab  Neblett,  Steve 
Brown,  and  Rick  Gnust. 


GOLF  TEAM 

Alan  Bartlestein 
Steve  Brown 
Mike  Doppelt 
George  Durot 
Nell  Freewin 
Scott  Greiner 

Rick  Gunst 
Herb  List 

Henry  Mull 
Tabb  Neblett 

Jim  Hart/Head  Coach 


157 


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WOMEN'S  SPORTS 


The  year  saw  yet  another  innovation  in  college 
athletics  hit  the  Tulane  campus:  female  athletes. 

Under  the  guidelines  of  Title  Nine,  a  congressional 
decree  directing  the  nation's  colleges  and  universities  to 
spend  much  more  on  women's  sports,  Tulanc  fielded 
teams  of  girls  in  tennis,  basketball,  and  volleyball. 

Kay  Metcalf  led  her  Volleyball  tetmi  all  the  way  to 
the  state  championships  in  Baton  Rouge  and  victory 
over  the  best  of  the  rest  in  Louisiana.  The  volleyball  girls 
also  participated  in  the  Texas-Louisiana-Arkansas 
Regionals  in  Natchitaches. 

Tulane's  Basketball  club  under  Karen  Womack  and 
the  Tennis  club  under  Jean  Shapiro  Stewart  didn't  fare 
quite  as  well,  but  it  was  a  giant  step  in  the  right  direction 
to  see  Tulane's  female  athletes  finally  being  allowed  to 
showcase  their  skills. 

And  it's  only  a  beginning. 


159 


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♦        i 


160 


161 


TURNOVERS 


Amidst  all  of  the  changes  and  events,  perhaps  two 

personnel  turnovers  stood  out  above  all,  one  made  at  the 

beginning  of  the  school  year,  the  other  when  all  sports 

had  concluded  their  seasons. 

From  the  beginning,  Tulane's  athletics,  as  with  the 

rest  of  the  University  community,  had  to  deed  with  a  new 

head  man.  President  F.  Sheldon  Hackney. 

When  the  former  Princeton  Provost  was  announced 

as  the  successor  to  Herbert  Longenecker,  many  at  the 

sports  end  of  the  campus  shuddered  at  his  age  and 

"academic"  demeanor.  But  fear  was  soon  replaced  with 

confidence. 

As  most  found  out  from  the  start.  Hackney  realized 

better  than  anyone  else  just  what  place  athletics  should 

have  at  the  private  university.  He  appeared  to  approach 

problems  with  a  very  realistic  and  objective  point  of 

view,  handling  major  dismissals  and  selections  —  all  in 

his  first  year  at  Tulane. 
Hackney  refused  to  be  manipulated  by  big-time 
sports  interests,  but  also  refused  to  knuckle  under  to 
those  who  saw  no  place  for  the  "jocks"  in  a  modem 
academic  setting.  Between  the  coaching  changes  and 
other  problems  generated  by  staff  disagreements,  he 
showed  a  remarkable  dexterity. 
It  wasn't  that  athletics  was  not  a  friend  to  the  new 
President;  it  just  wasn't  his  ONLY  friend. 
And  at  the  end  of  the  year,  Tulane  learned  that  it 
would  have  yet  another  new  face  in  the  Athletic  Depart- 
ment as  Athletic  Director  Dr.  Rix  Yard  announced  his 
resignation  after  guiding  Tulane's  sports  program  for 

some  13  years. 

It  seemed  that  time  and  progress  had  simply  caught 

up  with  the  59  year  old  Yard,  and  his  leaving  had  been 

rumored  for  months  as  more  and  more  power  slipped 

from  his  grasp.  Yard  had  little  input  in  the  decisions  to 

fire  EUender,  hire  Smith  or  Danforth,  as  Tulane's  alumni 

and  a  group  of  promoters  became  more  and  more 

prominent  in  the  Athletic  Department's  business. 

Some  of  these  men  felt  Yard  was  too  rooted  in  the 

past  to  steer  the  program  effectively;  he  didn't  appear 

able  to  understand  the  promotion  and  hoopla  which 

must  go  with  modem  day  athletics  on  a  college  level  if 

they  are  to  survive.  And  so  the  New  Jersey  native  was 

pressured  into  moving  on. 


162 


163 


It  appears  that  athletics  at  Tulane  has  assumed  a 

new  posture.  It  is  a  welcomed  transition  and  one  that 

finds  the  strength  to  stand  with  a  straight-forward  and 

considerate  attitude  towards  the  rest  of  the  University. 

New  ideas  and  ways  of  doing  things  are  coming,  and  just 

possibly,  in  a  few  years,  Tulane's  name  may  again  be 

known  among  the  elite  circles  of  college  athletics.  And 

academics. 

Tulane  now  has  the  money  and  the  people  to  become 

really  Big  Time.  It  will  be  an  interesting  couple  of  years. 


*m^ 


164 


165 


167 


"Faculty  Professors,  teachers;  they  all  had  grey  beards,  you  know.  It's 
amazing.  Seems  to  just  go  with  professors.  Kind  of  like  the  hard  hat  of  the  intel- 
lectual world.  Skinny,  too.  Professors  must  suffer  a  lot.  I  know  mine  did.  The 
fiinny  thing  about  teachers,  is  they  always  seem  to  teach  you  something  you 
didn't  realize  you  were  learning.  This  one  teacher  I  had  for  instance.  Dr.  Gilling- 
ham.  Looked  exactly  like  Don  Quixote  ...  a  littie  eccentric,  too.  Most  people 
think  being  eccentric  is  the  same  as  being  senile.  Gillingham?  He  wasn't  senile. 
He  was  sharper  than  Caesar  . . .  Sharp  and  just  a  little  crazy  ...  like  most  pro- 
fessors. 


169 


DRCLEANTH 

BROOKS 

MELLON 

PROFESSOR 

SPRING,  1976 


ANTHROPOLOGY 

John  L  Fischer 
Munro  S.  Edmunson 
Arden  R.  King 
Robert  Wauchope 
Victoria  E.  Bricker 
Harvey  M.  Bricker 
Chesley  S.  Lancaster 
Elizabeth  S.  Watts 
Francesca  C.  Merlan 


ARCHITECTURE 

Bernard  Lemann 
Lloyd  Bray 
Humberto  Rodriquez 
Frank  Smith 
Stephen  Jacobs 
Bob  Dean 
Brand  Griffin 
James  Lamantia 
Eugene  Cizek 
Bill  Morton 
John  Rock 
Richard  Powell 
Dean  Turner 
Leo  Oppenheimer 
John  Morris 
Camille  Newton 
Bill  Calougne 
Georgia  Bizios 

Not  Pictured: 
John  Clemmer 
Bob  Schenker 
Bob  Helmer 


ART 

Russell  Sale 

Donald  Robertson 

Greer  Farris 

Caecilia  Davis 

Jessie  Paesch 

Elizabeth  Langhome 

Pat  Trivigno 

Arthur  Kern 

James  L  Steg 


ASTRO-PHYSICS 
R.  D.  Purrington 


172 


Peter  E.  Volpe 
Stuart  S.  Bamforth 
D.  Eugene  Copeland 
Harold  A.  Dundee 
Joseph  A.  Ewan 
Milton  Fingerman 
Gerald  Gunning 
Richard  D.  Lumsden 
Merle  Mizell 
Alfred  E.  Smalley 
Royal  D.  Suttkus 
Arthur  L  Welden 
John  T.  Barber 
Leonard  B.  Thien 
Joan  W.  Bennett 
Erik  G.  Ellgaeird 
David  R.  Fredericksen 
Clayton  R.  Page  III 
Robert  Tompkins 
Gerald  Bresnick 
Mary  Z.  Pelias 


173 


CHEMISTRY 

Marcetta  Y.  Deirensbourg 

Jan  Hamer 

Gary  L  McPherson 

Harry  Ensley 

Joel  T.  Mague 

Larry  Byers 

Eugene  Hamori 

William  L  Alworth 

Donald  J.  Darensbourg 

Not  Pictured: 

Hans  B.  Jonassen 

Thomas  F.  Fagley 

Charles  J.  Fritchie  Jr. 


k^ 


'"#*   ff* 


♦4 


»^* 


174 


CIVIL  ENGINEERING 

Robert  Nolan  Bruce  Jr. 
Peter  Y.  Lee 
Terence  McGhee 
Walter  E.  Blessey 
Frank  W.Dalia 
Barry  A.  Benedict 


CLASSICS 

Hillel  A.  Fine 
R.  M.  FrazerJr. 
James  J.  Buchanan 
Martha  Beveridge 
Sanford  G.  Etheridge 


175 


ECONOMICS 

Paul  Hanley      I 

John  M.  Trapani  III      ! 

Edwin  Fujii      ' 

J.  Ernest  Tanner 

Richard  Zecher 

Frank  L  Keller 


176 


Melvin  L  Gruwell 
Thomas  L  Patrick 
Louis  E.  Barrilleaux 
Eldridge  J.  Gendron 
Jacyra  F.  Abreau 
Marguerite  B.  Bougere 
Shuell  Hamilton  Jones 
James  E.  Quick 
Ansley  H.  Shuler 
Rita  G.  Zerr 
Gray  S.  Garwood 


177 


ENGUSH 

Richard  P.  Adams 

Andy  P.  Antippas 

Michael  M.  Boardman 

Purvis  E.  Boyette 

Dale  H.  Edmonds 

Earl  N.  Harbert 

Joseph  P.  Roppolo 

Larry  Simmons 

Gerald  Snare 

Lamarr  Stephens 

Phillip  Bollier 

Richard  Finneran 

Marvin  Morillo 

Edward  Partridge 

Maaja  Stewart 

Gardner  Taplin 

James  Quick 

Not  Pictured: 

Thomas  J.  Assad 

Peter  Cooley 

Huling  E.  Ussery 

Samuel  McNeely 

Joseph  Cohen 

Robert  Cook 

Donald  Pizer 


FRENCH  AND  ITALIAN 

FRENCH 

Catharine  Brosman 

Paul  Brosman 

Weber  Donaldson 

Simonne  Fischer 

Francis  Lawrence 

Jeanne  Monty 

Harry  Redman,  Jr. 

William  Woods 

Thomas  Zamparelli 

ITALIAN 
Ann  Hallock 
Victor  Santi 


178 


GEOLOGY 

Eileen  Gollander 
M.  John  Kocurko 
Ronald  Parsley 
Emily  Vohes 
Mike  Fogarty 
James  Cooke 
Joachim  Meyer 
Dave  Dockery 


179 


ISO 


GERMAN 

George  M.  Cumniins 
Bodo  Gotzkowsky 
Ann  R.  Arthur 
Marianne  Whitmore 
Michael  Porter 
Andrew  Leblanc 
Susan  Layton 
Yvette  Uoyd 
Karlheinz  Hasselbach 
Thomas  C.  Stames 


GRADUATE 
BUSINESS  SCHOOL 

F.W.Bennett 
Edward  C.  Strong 
Lanv  R.  Arnold 
Nicholas  A.  Muley 
Evan  E.  Anderson 
Elizabeth  R.  Casellas 
Irving  H.  LaValle 
David  W.  Harvey 
Kenneth  J.  Boudreaux 
Hugh  W.  Long 
James  T.  Murphy 
Daniel  B.  Killeen 
Jeffrey  A.  Barach 

Not  Pictured: 
Harper  W.  Boyd  Jr. 
Richcird  Bechwith 
Seymour  Goodman 
Stephen  Zeff 
Richard  Hays 
James  Linn 


181 


HISTORY 

Francis  G.  James 
Peter  T.  Cominos 
Gertrude  Yeager 
Charles  H.  Carter 
C.  MacLachlan 
Richard  Latner 
W.  Burlie  Brown 
Raymond  A.  Esthus 
Nels  M.  Bailkey 
George  Carpenter 
Hugh  F.  Rankin 
T.  Yeager 
Charles  T.Davis 
Radomir  V.  Luza 
O.  Edward  Cunningham 
Richard  J.  Batt 
Robert  E.  Greenleeif 
Bill  C.  Malone 
Samuel  M.  Kipp 


182 


Thomas  J.  Andre,  Jr. 
Mack  E.  Barham 
Rodolfo  Batiza 
David  A.  Combe 
Harvey  C.  Couch,  III 
Robert  Force 
Hoffman  F.  Fuller 
Leon  D.  Hubert,  Jr. 
Alain  A.  Levasseur 
William  A.  Lovett 
Luther  L  McDougal,  III 
Cecil  Morgan 
Leonard  Oppenheim 
Christopher  Osakwe 
Vernon  V.  Palmer 
Billups  P.  Percy 
John  L  Peschel 
Cynthia  A.  Samuel 
Ferdinand  F.  Stone 
Joseph  M.  Sweeney 
Wayne  S.  Woody 
David  A.  Combe 
James  M.  Walley 


MATH 

J.  Thomas  Beale 
Charles  B.  Bell 
Mark  Benard 
Frank  T.Birtel 
Patrick  Brockett 
A.  H.  Clifford 
Edward  D.  Conway 
John  Dauns 
Maurice  J.  Dupre 
Ronald  A.  Fintushel 
Laszlo  Fuchs 
Jerome  A.  Goldstein 
Bill  Greene 
Pierre  A.  Grillet 
Karl  H.  Hofman 
Ronald  J.  Knill 
Terry  C.  Lawson 
Arnold  Levine 
John  R.  Liukkonen 
Michael  W.  Mislove 
Jennie  B.  Mullin 
William  R.  Nico 
Shashi  Phoha 
Frank  D.  Quigley 
James  T.  Rogers 
Steven  I.  Rosencrans 
Albert  Vitter 
William  Zame 


183 


184 


MEN'S  PHYSICAL 
EDUCATION 

Harvey  M.  Jessup 
Leonard  Pruski 
Bruce  Bolyard 
Richard  Bower 
Nobuo  Hayashi 
Peter  J.  Maua 


WOMEN'S  PHYSICAL 
EDUCATION 


POLITICAL  SCIENCE 

Douglas  Rose 
Michael  P.  Smith 
Warren  Robeils 
Henry  L.  Mason 
William  B.  Gwyn 
Paul  Freedenberg 
James  D.  Cochrane 
George  C.  Edwards 
William  W.  Shaw 
Robert  S.  Robins 


187 


PSYCHOLOGY 

Elizabeth  Henrick 

Chizuko  Elzawa 

Dairs  J.  Chambliss 

EIna  Lilodeau 

Tom  Kodera 

Lawrence  Dachowski 

Edgar  C.  O'Neal 

William  P.  Dunlap 

Terry  Christensen 

Jefferson  L  Sulzer 

Arnold  Gerall 

Jerry  L  Fryrear 

Barbara  E.  Molly 


PHYSICS 

Frank  E.  Durham 
Allen  M.  Hermann 
Michael  King 
R.  D.  Purrington 
Robert  H.  Morriss 
Salvatore  G.  Buccino 
Joseph  J.  Kejame 
Timir  Datta 
Ronald  J.  Deck 
Karlem  Riess 
Michael  Collier 
Patrick  Callahan 


MECHANICAL 
ENGINEERING 

Stephen  C.  Cowin 

Robert  G.  Watts 

Allan  M.  Wcinstein 

Harold  H.  Sogin 

Hugh  A.  Thompson 

Louis  P.  Orth 

David  W.  Wicting 

Wm.C.VanBuskirk 

Kenneth  H.  Adams 

DeWitt  C.  Hamilton  Jr. 

Henry  F.  Hrubecky 

Edward  H.  Harris 


190 


MUSIC 

Egydio  de  Castro  c  Silva 
Peter  S.  Hansen 
John  Joseph  Joyce 
Robert  Elwyn  Preston 
Francis  Leonard  Monachino 
John  William  Baur 
Meneve  Dunham 
John  Marinus  Kuypers 


H.  LONDON 


192 


SPANISH  AND  PORTUGUESE 

Almir  Bruneti 
James  C.  Maloney 
Norman  Miller 
D.  W.  McPheeters 
Thomas  Montgomery 
Otto  Olivera 
Gilberto  Paolini 
James  Pontillo 
William  J.  Smither 
Alberto  M.  Vazqu' 
George  Wilkins 


THEATER  &  SPEECH 

Kevin  Hoggard 
Lee  Waldron 
George  W.  Hendrikson 
G.  Carr  Gamett 
Jack  Cowles 
Bruce  Podeu/ell 
Pam  Jackson 
Milly  S.  Barranger 


193 


195 


"Organizations?  You  bet ...  I  was  in  several  clubs.  I  prefer  the  word  club,  you 
know.  A  lot  of  people  thought  clubs  were  a  waste  of  time  . . .  funny,  I  sometimes 
thought  studying  was.  It  seems  like  I  learned  more  from  the  clubs  I  was  in  than 
from  the  books  I  read . . .  practical  experience,  if  that's  what  you  call  it.  That  goes 
hand  in  hand  with  the  books.  I  joined  several  clubs  . . .  What'd  we  do?  We  offered 
the  student  body  an  entirely  different  dimension  of  education  ~  but  without  the 
exams,  of  course. 


«>  **» 


197 


CACTUS 


ffKlkMl^!^9m     ^ 


198 


199 


tuvac 

TULANE  UNIVERSITY  VIDEO  ACCESS  CENTER 


200 


ACTIVE  VOLUNTEERS 

Charles  Albert 
Phil  Anderson 
Marc  Blumenthal 
Jennette  Brickman 
Richard  Chesnick 
William  Condon 
Greg  Crittenden 
George  Durant 
Anne  Espenan 
Susan  Foster 
Tom  Geiseler 
Diane  Greenspun 
Charles  Hettema 
Robert  Leeson 
Lauri  Makela 
Farell  Meisel 
David  Merryman 
Bob  Moir 
Debbi  Ravich 
Jean  Roysden 
Michael  Saag 
Rick  Shepard 
Christine  Westfeldt 
Gregory  Wilson 
Mitch  Wood 


EXECUTIVE 
COMMITTEE 

William  Maiman     .  .  .  ■^ .  .General  Manager 

Ernest  Lynch Production  Manager 

AlexLafargue    .  .  .  .CACTUS  Representative 

Lorin  Henry     Production  Manager 

Robert  Quinn     Operations  Manager 

Larry  Sokolic Member-at-Large 


201 


DIRECTION  76 


Phyllis  Karsh 
Kenneth  Katzoff 
Jeff  Turner 
Lawrence  Fleder 
Jaymi  Bachman 
David  Waller 
Neil  Lichtman 
Gordon  Sokoloff 
Susan  Moore 
Susan  Horowitz 
Susan  Lapidus 
Jeff  Matson 
Sherri  Garland 
Francie  Oberfest 
Jef  Farley 


202 


CENTER 


PROGRAM 


TULANE  UNIVERSITY  CENTER 
NEW  ORLEANS,LA.  70118 


203 


STUDENT  SENATE 


204 


205 


KARATE 


KARATE  AND  JUDO 


Matt  Segal 
Jo  Ellen  Franken 
Steven  J.  Sensibar 
Mark  Beuhler 
Cary  Hirsch 
Bill  Thornton 
Jose  Vazquez 
David  Yap 
Elizabeth  Lennep 
Virginia  Bitzer 
Paul  Andrade 
Michael  Rubin 
Martin  Kay 
Richard  Menendez 

JUDO 

Mr.  Hayashi 
Otto  Mehrgut 
Gene  Novack 
Rene  Carballo 
Jonathan  Buka 
Karl  Ellens 
Richard  Knight 
Cynthia  Luckie 
Cissy  Pcumell 
Peria  Seludes 
Pam  Sweene 
Ed  Throop 
Kathy  Vincent 
Steve  Windthorst 


206 


ROTC 


207 


TUIANE  CHOIR 


•  V  >i 


208 


INTERFRATERNrrY  COUNCIL 


209 


SOCCER 


■>,■»■'    •^  /■ .  "i     e  sr^tf 


210 


A.C.T. 


Ronald  McGowan 
Angela  Stewart 
Melody  Carter 
Cindy  Ernest 
Paul  Mitchell 
Lorenzo  York 
James  Smith 
Michael  Thompson 
Ron  Malone 
Terron  Sims 
Verel  Washington 
Gregory  Harrison 
Edward  Patterson 
Anne-Renee  Heningburg 
Sherman  Jones 
Genelle  Anderson 
Sonya  Rogers 
Winifred  Wallace 
Selarstean  Mitchell 
Earl  Williams 
Nadine  Ramsey 
Nina  Thomas 
Cheryl  White 
Glen  Gex 
George  Long 
Steve  Hawkins 
Eric  Cager 
Janice  Terry 
Juliet  Guillory 
Debbie  Reynolds 
Kimball  Octane 
Kirk  Jackson 
Moses  Williams 
Keith  Wolfe 
Raoul  Rodriguez 
Oran  Williams 
Lynn  Bemal 
Virgil  Wilkerson 
Claire  Knighten 
John  Sanders 
Clarence  Davis 
Feral  Sterling 
Ernest  Lynch 
Walter  Willard 
Brian  McConduitt 
Kenneth  Nash 
Steve  Jones 
Horace  Cornish 
Cameron  Gston 
Martin  Mitchell 
Barry  Morris 
Gerilyn  Wilson 
Thaderine  Dolliole 
Seenea  Fulton 
Claude  Gasper 
Kevin  Johnson 
Anthony  Johnson 
William  Washington 
Arthur  Green 
Wyatt  Washington 


211 


SAILING 


212 


LACROSSE 


Mike  Mariorenzi 
Paul  Musco 
Henry  Spicer 
Phillip  Niddrie 
Mark  Muller 
Robert  Strini 
Jeff  Butler 
Philip  Hanlon 
John  McMillen 
David  Matcizar 
Lloyd  Whitley 
Mark  Weiderlight 
Philip  Rodgers 
Ken  Lotze 
Peter  Hitt 
Peter  Spann 
Eric  Dublier 
Conrad  Johnson 
Paul  Spanbock 
Dirk  Van  Hoogenstyn 
Jake  Aldredd 
John  Mcintosh 
Ned  Braman 
Patrick  Connell 
Ran  Coleman 
Joe  Verscheuren 
Dominic  Tamburo 
Vic  Darbieri 
Gordon  King 
Tom  Wylie 


213 


RUGBY 


Steve  Bumpus 

Scott  Deter 

Randy  Wyckoff 

Lynn  Parry 

Tad  Daniels 

Al  Foley 

Doug  Watkins 

Ray  Hunting 

Henry  Hahn 

Bill  Schwartz 

Gary  Hahn 

Frank  Brill 

Jack  Adams 

Steve  Leikin 

Bob  MacDonald 

John  Walsh 

Steve  Crane 

Bill  Alpaugh 

Jim  Richeson 

Rick  Roselli 

Randy  Dalia 

Jim  Summerour 

Jon  Shaffer 

Tom  O'Neil 

Warren  Hutton 

Vincent  Dobbs 

Sam  Dixie 

Bill  Merritt 

Doug  Walton 

Dan  Anderson 

Tony  Lombardo 

Chip  Warshaw 

Mike  Rinella 

Bob  F*reston 

Mitch  Woods 

Roger  Temperlake 

Ron  Quinton 

Lee  Baron 

Ed  Sheinis 

Bill  Daniels 

214 


215 


MEDIA 


216 


217 


TUL>4NE 
HULL>4B>4LOO 


218 


DanFishbein      £ditor-in-chief 

Robin  Buckner      Part-time  Associate  Editor 

Jim  Fazzino      Business  Manager 

Nate  Lee News  Editor 

Greg  Ptacek     JSews  Editor 

Brad  Steitz Asst.  News  Editor 

Marjorie  Myers Asst.  News  Editor 

Stan  Mulvihill      Arcade  Editor 

Al  Benner     Associate  Arcade  Editor 

Larry  Dumont Asst.  Arcade  Editor 

Skipper  Scott Asst.  Arcade  Editor 

TomKerins Sports  Editor 

Mike  Johnston      Sports  Editor 

Peter  Holt Asst.  Sports  Editor 

Andy  Boyd Photography  Editor 

Eric  Jones     Cartoonist 

Amy  Conner     Illustrator 

Sally  Lam Advertising 

AndyAntippas     Faculty  Advisor 


NEWS  REPORTERS:  Rusty  Smith,  Marty  Ross,  Margie 
Loeb,  Susan  Moore,  Leslie  Andelman,  Keith  Astuto,  Farifax 
Fullerton,  Mark  Lemer,  Jerry  Earnest,  Carolyn  Shoulders, 
Paul  Allen,  Virginia  Levert,  Jim  Peifer,  Larry  Tendler,  Gail 
Bonner,  Cindy  Perrone,  Thorn  Jurkovich,  Maury  Siebs, 
Marian  Enochs,  Jennifer  Matz,  Arnold  Schoenberg,  Gary 
Cohen,  Patti  Cammack,  Alicia  Castilla,  Wynn  Howard,  N. 
Trinsic  Binnifits. 

PHOTOGRAPHERS:  Mark  Sindler,  Rob  Shoss,  John 
Ready,  Graham  Anthony,  Rob  Sharpstein,  and  Francisco 
Alecha. 


219 


U 


Michael  Longman General  Manager 

Bryan  Melan     Program  &  Music  Director 

James  Gilbeau Chief  Operator 

Roy  Clay .Technical  Director 

Bob  Dabney     Public  Relations  Director 

Kathy  Fischman      J^ews  Director 

JoryKatlin Sports  Director 

Maurice  Roe Production  Director 

TomPlanchard      Asst.  Chief  Director 


Al  Breitstein 
Mark  Carron 
Charles  Driebc 
Jordon  Faerman 
Linda  Caller 
Kevin  Grant 


Rob  Heidt 
Jay  Hollingsworth 
Len  Marino 
Stan  Mulvihill 
Steve  Rappaport 
Shepard  Samules 


Mike  Schwartz 
W.  David  Simon 
Alan  Smason 
Doug  Smith 
Bruce  Wall 
Gregory  Wilson 


Gordonius 

Sam  'Wholeftus' 

Crazy  Nate 

Stan  the  Montana  Man 

H.Lee 

Howie  Bromley 

and  of  course  —  Tanya 

NOT  PICTURED: 

(because  they're  taking  the  picture) 

Shoss 

Marcos 

Armistice  R.  Lunchmcat 

Redman 

Shopstein 

Andy,  and  Wendi  —  the  artist. 

Also  not  shown:  Our  favorite  faculty  advisor: 

Dr.  Andy  Antippas  (he's  in  the  library  reading 

Keats) 


222 


223 


224 


227 


"Fraternities?  I  never  could  understand  what  all  those  Greek  letters  meant 
I  joined  two  frats  . . .  nobody  in  either  of  them  knew  what  those  letters  meant.  Of 
course,  nobody  in  either  of  them  knew  I  was  in  both  . . .  must  have  been  a  lack  of 
communication.  I  never  could  decide  which  frat  was  better.  Great  parties,  good 
food,  nice  women,  alright  guys  .  .  .  You  know,  1  never  really  could  tell  the  dif- 
ference between  those  two  frats.  All  that  Greek  stuff  .  .  seems  like  it  was  just 
traditional  secrecy.  I  always  did  enjoy  those  parties,  though, . . .  twice  as  many 
as  anyone  else,  you  know.  That  really  gets  to  you  after  a  while  ...  I  never  could 
understand  that  Greek  stuff,  though. 


229 


M 


230 


231 


232 


ALPHA 

DELTA 

PI 


Leticia  Alejandro 
Margaret  Bauer 
Barbara  Bcrchielli 
Jean  Bettis 
Clara  Currie 
Jeanne  Farmer 
Roberta  Jo  Hawk 
Paula  Kelly 
Martha  Milbum 
Courtney  Moore 
Kathleen  Peixton 
Cynthia  Sharer 
Marguerite  Smolen 
Venezia  Webber 
Patricia  Wright 


233 


ALPHA 

EPSILON 

PHI 


Julie  Adier 
Ruth  Adler 
Stefi  Allweiss 
Jaymi  Bachman 
Sherie  Baer 
Holly  Berkowitz 
Betsy  Bernard 
Jenny  Birge 
Ann  Blumberg 
Johanna  Brand 
Susan  Braverman 
Debbie  Cowan 
Debbie  Crown 
Hallie  Dworkin 
Jolie  Eisenberg 
Kathy  Epstein 
Jane  Feingerts 
Olga  Feldman 
Patti  Fisher 
Lou  Ann  Flanz 
Bonnie  Flesher 
Lolly  Friedman 
Sherrie  Garland 
Joanne  Gold 
Barbara  Goldberg 
Debbie  Goldstein 
Sherrie  Gordon 


Debbie  Grossman 
Margot  Gruman 
Valerie  Habif 
Debbie  Hein 
Jane  Horowitz 
Debbie  Jarett 
Amy  Kahn 
Kathy  Kahn 
Sue  Katten 
Cindy  Katz 
Judy  Kent 
Jodi  Kodish 
Susan  Lapidus 
Judi  Lapinsohn 
Traq/  Lees 
Maria  Lemer 
Pam  Lewis 
Penny  Lichtman 
Gloria  May 
Ede  Mathes 
Julie  Marcus 
Jennifer  Matz 
Karen  Meister 
Carolyn  Mintz 
Julie  Optican 
Lisa  Perlmutter 
Leslie  Pick 


Judy  Plotka 
Cheryl  Pollman 
Diane  Rapaport 
Jody  Raduns 
Jill  Reikes 
Karen  Robinson 
Ava  Rosenberg 
Celia  Rosenson 
Lisa  Rosenstein 
Julie  Saul 
Janet  Schendle 
Louise  Schwartz 
Cindy  Shapiro 
Susan  Shainock 
BJZ.  Simmons 
Leslie  Spanierman 
Sara  Speer 
Leslie  Stein 
Jodi  Stone 
Amy  Weil 
Laurie  Weiss 
Bettsie  Wershil 
Nancy  Weingrow 
Usa  Wolff 
Sheree  Yablon 


234 


ALPHA 

TAU 
OMEGA 


Bruce  Adams 
Scott  Boudreaux 
Kevin  Bowman 
Guy  Brierre 
Frank  Bruno 
Brian  Buendia 
Charles  Caldwell 
Edward  Casals 
Taylor  Casey 
Guy  Conata 
Mike  Chappuis 
David  Chidester 
Frank  Clark 
Steve  Crane 
Randy  Dalia 
Luis  Del  Valle 
Randy  Dent 
Mark  Drapanos 
Richard  Eason 
Toby  Eason 


Richard  Ellis 
Randy  Eustis 
Chris  Ewin 
John  Finzer  III 
Jeff  Forbis 

Constantine  Georges 
Jim  Grady 
Andrew  Hague 
Scott  Handler 
James  Hardy 
Dan  Herrmann 
Dan  Housey 
Eric  Hurbst 
Keith  Jacomine 
Thomas  Kingsmill 
Robert  Kohler 
Howard  Leach 
Pat  McCullough 
Brian  McSherry 
Burke  Madigan 


Thomas  Manson 
Mark  Mantese 
Rene  Martinez 
Richard  Mayer 
Richard  Melton 
Ned  Mogabgab 
Harry  Molaison 
Thomas  Nice 
Bill  Parsons 
Henry  Pfeffer 
Paul  Porter 
Mark  Randall 
James  Rodriguez 
Robert  Ryan 
Carl  Sturges 
Bo  Trumbo 
Gary  Turibio 
Mike  Walsh 
Stewert  Yee 


235 


^'^S 


236 


BETA 

THETA 

PI 


Mike  Ansani 
Anthony  Graham  III 
John  Herbert  Ashe 
Kevin  Beamish 
George  F.  Bryant  Jr. 
Tom  Buckner 
Bradley  Bums 
Andrew  John  Chopivsky 
Lawrence  Kevin  Coleman 
Mark  Cullen 
Daniel  Patrick  Dalton 
Scott  Osbom  Dash 
Carlos  M.  DeSalazar 
Robert  Ellyson 
Andrew  E.  Ericson 
Ed  Gill 

Grant  Gilliam 
Steve  Hans 
James  Harrison 
Daniel  P.  Hefron 
Sean  M.  Kelly 
Richard  F.  Little 
Steven  G.  Little 
Chris  M.  Maher 
Mike  Mehan 
Alton  F.  Martin 


Henry  Mercer 

William  L  Molony 

Rick  Moycr 

Mike  McKinly 

Paul  S.  Noble 

William  F.  Nolden 

Mike  O'Day 

David  Orr 

John  L  Ott 

Mark  P.  Patterson 

Rodney  A.  Poling 

Powell  Richardson  Kammeyer 

Donald  G.  Quirlan 

Bob  Redman 

Bob  Rentjes 

Michael  M.  Schomstein 

Bob  Shepperly 

David  Sims 

George  P.  Sotiropoulus 

Gary  Spevack 

Jeffrey  Lawrence  Stanton 

Glenn  Tarsky 

Bennett  Tavar 

John  Tobin 

Lawrence  M.  Wald 

Tim  Woodruffi 


237 


CHI 
OMEGA 


Martha  Adkins 
Kimberly  Austin 
Leslie  Austin 
Julie  Barnes 
Anne  Bleakley 
Clara  Branch 
Leslie  Brennan 
Virginia  Carswell 
Debbie  Gates 
Cathy  Christian 
Mimi  Colledge 
Nancy  Collins 
Courtney  Cooper 
Anne  Delery 
Vivian  Deschapelles 
Renee  Downing 
Carol  Duke 
Elise  Dunits 
Diana  Durham 
Kathy  Elliot 
Beth  Fergusen 
Shauna  Fitzjarrell 
Nancy  Foster 
Sarah  Fox 
Jo  Ellen  Franken 


Holly  Good 
Debbie  Gooscns 
Carol  Graham 
Cindi  Grenrood 
Sally  Guider 
Claire  Hammett 
Ellen  Hauck 
Dawn  Herrington 
Marie  Higgins 
Virginia  Holbrook 
Peggy  Hopkins 
Julie  Jones 
Bonnie  Kaplan 
Kay  Klotzman 
Kim  Kronzer 
Deborah  Lamensdorf 
Ann  Law 
Lou  Lemert 
Deedi  Littleton 
Cacky  Mabiy 
Helen  Mange 
Michele  Martz 
Pamela  Martz 
KayMcArdle 


Trish  Meginniss 
Mary  Gay  Moloney 
Leslie  Muller 
Genny  Nottingham 
Catherine  O'Brien 
Gwen  Palmer 
Cindy  Phillips 
Terryl  Propper 
Jeanne  Rader 
Susan  Ragde 
Cathy  Reynolds 
Gina  Rinella 
Melissa  Ruman 
Donna  Rushton 
Sally  Shaw 
Belle  Stafford 
Cynthis  Stephenson 
Melanie  Taylor 
Mary  Tull 
Margaret  Weese 
Mossie  Wheeler 
Beth  Winn 
Anne  Wynn 
Margaret  Zink 


238 


239 


KAPPA 
ALPHA 


Dan  Anderson 
Bill  Bell 
Jim  Bemey 
Jim  Beskin 
Brian  Boutte 
John  Bretz 
Hank  Brothers 
Ed  Bush 
Tad  Daniels 
James  Davis 
Richard  Deichman 
Gary  Dent 
Brian  Fitzgerald 
Tom  Gandy 
Joe  Garmer 


Gene  Gibson 
Ron  Goodwin 
Gary  Hahn 
Tom  Hopkins 
Bob  Horseley 
Jeff  Howland 
William  Howard 
Giady  Hurley 
Bnice  Kuenhle 
Greg  Manion 
Guy  Matelli 
Bobby  Moore 
Brian  Morissette 
Rob  McNielly 
Noland  Davis 


Dickie  Palfrey 
Mike  Rinella 
Reid  Senter 
Ted  Shepard 
Mark  Simon 
Brian  Sloan 
Mike  Smith 
Tom  Stuart 
JeffTeleghany 
Mark  Thalheim 
William  Thalheim 
Bill  Thornton 
Gene  Troter 
Tom  Wallace 
Jim  Wisner 


240 


KAPPA 
ALPHA 
THETA 


Palmer  Alexander 
Laurel  Allen 
Cathy  Arcaro 
Jane  Auzine 
Beverly  Baker 
Celia  Baker 
Terri  Benson 
Jeanne  Bonner 
Julie  Brown 
Molly  Carl 
Carol  Clarke 
Shawn  Cook 
Dierdre  DiGiglia 
Amy  Dillon 
Cathy  Douglas 
Mary  Dow 
Ann  Dnimmond 
Mcirina  Elliott 
Emily  Ellis 
Marian  Eyraud 
Cathy  Fondren 
Maryann  Gaherin 
Paula  Gish 
Suzie  Haik 
Michele  Hava 


Nancy  Heausler 
Kate  Herman 
Donno  Hines 
Alice  Hinton 
Anne  Holmes 
Karen  Horan 
Diane  Hudock 
Margaret  Innis 
Sissy  Jackson 
Melanie  Justice 
Kim  Keller 
Lyn  Keller 
Kctfen  Kilgore 
Dawn  Klemow 
Mary  Mayhcw 
Loma  McMullen 
Kelly  Merritt 
Leslie  Miles 
Kathy  Morris 
Kimberly  Morris 
Mcutha  Mullins 
Susan  Murr 
Phylis  Nachman 
Patti  Nierman 
Eileen  Niesen 


Jenny  Niesen 
Dody  O'Connor 
Melissa  Ogden 
Janie  Pace 
Anne  Ponton 
Jeannine  Powell 
Vickie  Reggie 
LarkRenz 
Cciria  Ross 
Sally  Savic 
Helen  Schull 
Debbie  Server 
Kim  Shaw 
Jan  Smith 
Leesa  Suddath 
Mariann  Teachnor 
Lisa  Thomas 
Peggy  Treuting 
Kathy  Van  Buskirk 
PatVanBuskirk 
Cati  Wilcox 
Diana  Williams 
Liz  Williams 
DeeDee  Zink 


241 


KAPPA 

KAPPA 

GAMMA 


Joann  Aicklen 
Diane  Andrus 
Celeste  Bertucci 
Sarah  Blanchard 
Brenda  Bland 
Lucie  Bostick 
Margaret  Broadus 
Debbie  Broadwell 
Louise  Brown 
Maureen  Burke 
Elvige  Cassard 
Ann  Churchill 
Beth  Cloninger 
Michelle  Coiron 
Robbie  Colaluca 
Ann  Collins 
Janet  Daly 
Mary  Davidson 
Kathy  Edwards 
Janice  Eittreim 
Sally  Elghammer 
Betsy  Freidt 
Lesa  Hall 
Lou  Hobson 
Chris  Hoemer 


Shawn  Holahan 
Mary  Preston  Horn 
Katie  Hovas 
Diane  Howard 
Ruth  Howell 
Jennifer  Jericho 
Caroline  Jones 
Karen  Keil 
Dee  Dee  Kenworth 
Liz  Kilgore 
Shirley  Landen 
Sheryl  Larson 
Nancy  B.  Lawler 
Sue  Lynch 
Beth  Maenner 
Mimi  Malizia 
Lisa  Mason 
Alison  Miller 
Kathy  Miller 
Caroline  Moore 
Muffin  Moran 
Brenda  Myers 
De  De  McFayden 
Libby  McLean 
Anne  Oldfather 


Kim  Perrone 
Priscilla  Pumphrey 
Ccuroline  Robertson 
Marta  Rose 
Alice  Rush 
Pud  Sanders 
Kathy  Shelton 
Katie  Shirkey 
Carolyn  Shoulders 
Joan  Simms 
Laurie  Smith 
Rebel  Story 
Sue  Taylor 
Louise  Texada 
Margaret  Texada 
Madelain  Turegano 
Cynthia  Turley 
Amanda  Tuttle 
Gladys  Van  Horn 
Abbie  Van  Nostrand 
Clarissa  Walker 
Sally  Warren 
Pat  Zaiduando 
Leigh  Zeigler 


242 


\^..^^^-   .- 

■  ■=~4:'.-- . 

:^<*v  •?■ 

-■ 

1         ^^.  "'-^-.. 

"^            \   *■ 

m^  .  ■ 

— *» 

11 

,,  -.s^^- 

.  -                 f 

--"->■< 

1^ 

Scott  Bickford 

Steve  Hacker 

Chuck  Pohl 

Tom  Breard 

Dan  Hagspette 

Sciint  Provosty 

Rick  Brown 

Jeff  Ignatuk 

Geoff  Rose 

Harry  Brownett 

Dean  Jameson 

Dan  Rozyskie 

KAPPA 

Ward  Cammack 
Steve  Corso 

Borr  Jeter 
Gray  Johnson 

Rob  Sapp 
George  Satkowski 

Bill  Daley 

Kurt  Lang 

Tom  Smith 

SIGMA 

Mike  Dalton 

Chris  Lyons 

Breck  Speed 

Glenn  Darden 

Pete  Mani 

Ronnie  Stewart 

Paul  Doolittle 

Jay  McGrew 

Gene  Taylor 

Dan  Draper 

Larry  Nadel 

Jay  Texada 

Bob  Edwards 

TabbNeblett 

NedVoelker 

Jim  Fox 

Marc  O'Brien 

Neil  Walker 

Dan  Gerson 

Scott  Paden 

243 


244 


245 


246 


PI 

BETA 
PHI 


Grace  Agresti 
Stacy  Alver 
Sharon  Anderson 
Bonnie  Baine 
Daina  Bennett 
Julie  Bethell 
Claire  Blaine 
Susie  Boland 
Tricia  Bowen 
Bobbie  Boyd 
Lindsay  Brice 
Becky  Brock 
Susie  Brown 
Julie  Burrill 
Leslie  Buttram 
Mary  Cassilly 
Catherine  Chisolm 
Joanie  Cleary 
Karen  Cochran 
Dru  Crabtree 
Li2  Cranston 
Debbie  Crawford 
Suzy  Crouere 
Debbie  Darnell 
Andrea  Derks 
Shelley  Devlin 


Denise  Downing 
Mina  Eagan 
Lindsay  Ellis 
Marian  Enochs 
Nancy  Fellman 
Mary  Jane  Fenner 
Betsy  Field 
Debbie  Frederick 
Usa  Hall 
Linda  Hinrichs 
Catherine  Howell 
Cyndy  Ittner 
Madaline  Johnson 
Shannon  Johnson 
Eleanore  Kuhn 
Kayne  Lanahan 
CarieLow 
Bridget  Moloney 
Bonnie  McClain 
Cornelia  McDonald 
Susan  McGrael 
Kathy  McUyar 
Laurie  McRoberts 
Mciry  Anne  Meadows 
Laura  Melacon 


Marian  Mitchell 
Paula  Mitchell 
Coleen  Miller 
Caria  Oden 
Ann  Patteson 
Zane  Probasco 
Louise  Ragsdale 
Sue  Richard 
Helen  Marie  Rodgers 
Jodee  Sanditz 
Janise  Schrader 
Polly  Sartor 
Mary  Schutts 
Holly  Sharp 
Leigh  Spearman 
Bitsy  Stewart 
Martha  Talbot 
Lili  Tebo 
Susan  Tober 
Bowman  Turlington 
Charlotte  Waguespack 
Owene  Weber 
Julie  Willis 
Amelia  Zuras 
Nancy  Kistler 


247 


SIGMA 

ALPHA 

EPSILON 


Lee  Alig 
Bill  Almond 
Joe  Amberson 
Dee  Archer 
Johnny  Bransford 
Ed  Breland 
Steve  Buerger 
Rob  Burns 
Ricky  Calhoun 
Jeff  Carter 
Frank  Davis 
Joe  Fitzgibbons 
Buck  Forcum 
Don  Gott 
Dick  Hoffman 
Britt  Howard 
Steven  Jacobs 
Brian  Kolowich 
Cary  Kerstein 


Chuck  La  Peyer 
Tony  Laplaca 
John  Lively 
AlLoche 
Robert  Lupo 
John  McBrayer 
Tom  McGrail 
Wayne  Meinheart 
Brad  Moore 
Bob  Moskowitz 
Michael  O'Conner 
Ted  Orihel 
Jay  Pehues 
Curtis  Pellerin 
John  Pratt 
John  Reed 
Lloyd  Schweyer 
Jay  Scott 
Jimmy  Silverstein 


Clint  Smith 
Mike  Stoltz 
Jack  Taylor 
Vick  Thomas 
Robert  Tomlinson 
John  Wallace 
Doug  Walton 
Steve  Wilhoit 
Clyde  Williams 
Tom  Wyllie 
Buck  Wynn 
John  Zimmerman 
Philip  Bertucci 
Mark  Boyce 
Burgess  Chambers 
Phillip  Lapeyer 
Joe  Liberate 
Tom  Jobin 
Kevin  Ward 


248 


^    ,  r 

V 


249 


(  '- •'?^' 


SIGMA 
CHI 


Bill  Abemathy 
Peter  Alfaro 
Chris  Allen 
Jeff  Al  vis 
John  Bovaird 
Paul  Brock 
Ed  Burr 

Warren  Chandler 
Greg  Collins 
Don  Cosby 
Rick  Crevoiserat 
Kim  Davis 
Steve  Deamlow 
Oliver  Delery 
Todd  Eckert 
Paul  Frederick 
Sam  Gentles 
Stewart  Given 
Neil  Glenn 
Anthony  Gregorio 


Friedrich  Gurtler 
Michael  Gurtler 
Harry  Gutfreund 
Dan  Baker 
Warren  Bourgeois 
Wayne  Brewster 
Jeff  Brown 
Craig  Burkert 
Tim  Cronin 
Charles  Travis 
Ken  Gutzeit 
Mark  Harmon 
William  Heausler 
Robert  Hoy 
Scott  Johnston 
Anthony  Kieman 
Gordon  King 
David  Knight 
Ira  Krottinger 
Charles  Kurzweg 


Kevin  Lx)ngenecker 
Stephen  Menzies 
John  Miner 
John  O'Donnell 
Tim  Peglow 
Bill  Place 
Robert  Pospick 
Mark  Schrader 
Mark  Shina 
Pete  Terminie 
Mark  Tipton 
Peter  Thompson 
Pat  Toole 
Wes  Esterbrook 
Richard  Gibson 
Jim  Lockard 
Bill  Rogers 
Mark  Ruben 
Lance  Rydberg 
Fred  Wagner 


250 


%!l':t^^-tSJ&ii*--  .>*-- 


SIGMA 

DELTA 

TAU 


Marti  Benjamin 
Kcuin  Elkis 
Gail  Fenton 
Debbie  Fladen 
Betsy  Freund 
Linda  Friedman 
Cindy  Galston 
Paige  Gold 
Bobbi  Gollin 
Carolyn  Hirsch 
Jamie  Jacker 
BarbLinz 
Carol  Miranda 
Nancy  Meyers 
Kathy  Newman 
Lisa  Novick 
Ellen  Patterson 
Barbara  Rachlin 
Judy  Packler 
Maty  Touff 
Susie  Wedlan 


Joni  Weinstock 
Linda  Yefsky 
Nancy  Young 
Linda  Zipperman 
Sylvia  Bauman 
Cindy  Beerman 
Linda  Fantus 
Susan  Feldman 
Deanie  Fischman 
Fulie  Freund 
Susan  Kellman 
Jcin  Leone 
Robin  Gordon 
Lynn  Lowenstein 
Stacey  Mayo 
Stacey  Morris 
Stephanie  Morris 
Paula  Nowalsky 
Michele  Oper 
Ruth  Rabin 
Margaret  Rosemore 


Laurie  Rosen 
Roseanne  Sacks 
Simone  Saidman 
Nicole  Solomon 
Laura  Saphier 
Nancy  Schoenberg 
Amy  Simon 
Mindi  Singer 
Ricki  Slacter 
Dori  Teplitzky 
Debbie  Weinfeld 
Done  Zessin 
Rachelle  Zoller 
Nancy  Bomstein 
Dina  Burke 
Liz  Frankel 
Staicy  Fogel 
Marcia  Diamond 
Mona  Heckman 
Jony  Hyman 


251 


PI 

KAPPA 
ALPHA 


Wilson  Andrews 
Clyde  Banner 
Ronald  Barrios 
Charles  Barton 
Richard  Bedford 
Kenneth  Berlanti 
John  Bilyi 
Patrick  Bloomfield 
Timothy  Bloomfield 
John  Boudreaux 
Ned  Bramon 
Andrew  Broaddus 
Paul  Bronstein 
Rick  Brown 
Tommy  Brown 
Robert  Buesinger 
Max  Cannon 


Michael  Carbo 
Michael  Chavin 
Curtis  Cowan 
Pete  Dalacos 
Piet  De  Groot 
Greg  Gardiol 
Michael  Gordon 
Jon  Guben 
David  Hartzell 
Bryan  Hawkins 
Michael  Heine 
Richard  Hyams 
David  Indorf 
James  Kynsey 
Timothy  Lathe 
Mark  Munoz 
Randall  McKey 


Fred  Nagel 
Thomas  O'Neil 
Markham  Oswald 
John  Peterson 
Mitchell  Pivor 
Curtis  Radford 
Mark  Scharre 
Corey  Scher 
Alton  Schultz 
Kurt  Schwartz 
Robert  Scott 
William  Smith 
Paul  Soulges 
Thomas  Stallings 
Stephen  Turner 
Paul  Heyden  Vender 


•  3* 


252 


*«flM?ftr   i^ 


PHI 

MU 


Coco  Allberg 
Amy  Amon 
Leslie  Andelman 
Annette  Armstrong 
Linda  Barker 
Mary  Ann  Blalock 
Leona  Bums 
Sylvia  Burson 
Ann  Cathrall 
Mary  Ann  Creekmore 
Alice  Dacy 
Mimi  Daniel 
Liz  Dietrich 
Rosemary  Dozier 
Barb  Easley 
Judy  Ferry 
Leslie  Gaitens 
Christie  Gaudet 
Margarethe  Gay 
Janice  Garfield 
Jil  Gebert 
Meg  Greene 
Heather  Guttenberg 
Mary  Guyton 
Penny  Halter 
Adee  Heebe 


Sara  Huebner 
Jill  Ingram 
Heidi  Junius 
Cyertie  Kalnow 
Karen  Kruebbe 
Page  McClendon 
Karen  McLafferty 
Yvonne  Montes 
Susan  Moore 
Gail  Morgan 
J.  Morrell 
Muffy  Muella 
Shelly  Picard 
Martha  Pierce 
Simone  Pilie 
Pam  Poole 
Maureen  Quinn 
Holly  Randle 
Allison  Raynor 
Sue  Regan 
Shirley  Richardson 
Miriam  Richter 
Kristin  Ridenom 
Mary  Anne  Rodgers 
Dee  Rourkes 
Kyle  Rovira 


Sara  Sandrock 
Susan  Savage 
Janice  Simmons 
Becky  Six 
Liz  Smith 
Marcia  Smith 
Julie  Stephens 
Linda  Stjernholm 
Patty  Scallet 
Ginger  Strate 
Nancy  Sullivan 
Cynthia  Taggart 
Marcia  Teitgen 
Lori  Trimper 
Ann  Troitino 
Margaret  Wade 
Kyle  Walker 
Winnie  Waltzer 
Cathy  Wattley 
Laurie  Weiss 
Ann  Welch 
Ellie  Williams 
Liz  Willis 
BJ.  Wyatt 
Martha  Wyatt 


253 


s 
I 

G 


N 


M     U 
A 


Steve  Ableman 
Len  Adoff 
Mark  Armstrong 
Ed  Baldwin 
Mike  Bannett 
Chris  Bamet 
Tom  Bamett 
Roger  Bell 
Rob  Boubie 
Bill  Bohn 
Jim  Bolch 
Ken  Brown 
Tom  Brown 
Charlie  Calderwood 
Hampton  Davis 
Hawkeye  Deter 
Bayne  Dickinson 
Marshall  Duane 
George  Durot 
Gene  Edwards 
Skip  Eynon 
JeffFendler 
Richard  Feryaomi 
Fred  Flandry 
Greg  Florian 
Dave  Gange 
Nelson  Gibson 
Scott  Greiner 
Dave  Gutterman 
Jon  Harbuck 
Brian  Hill 
Cameron  Hilton 
Peter  Holt 
Gil  Hutchinson 
Brent  Katzmann 
Scott  Katzmann 
Tom  Kerins 
Mark  Kinder 
Dan  Kohm 
Bob  Ladd 
Al  Levin 
Herb  List 
Mike  Lopresto 
Steve  Lux 
Joe  Maloney 
Charlie  McCain 
Graig  McGee 
Jim  McGowan 
Dave  McKissock 
Richard  McPherson 
Tim  Miotti 
Bowden  Moorer 
John  Moser 
Stan  Mulvihill 
Dave  Nelson 
Kerry  Nickerson 
Tillman  Pearce 
Goode  Price 
John  Raber 
Steve  Reiss 
Mike  Rhea 
Brad  Rowberry 
Andy  Salk 
Rocky  Scanlon 
Pete  Scarpelli 


Tim  Schoeffler 
Bill  Scholz 
Paul  Sciortino 
Dane  Sheldon 
Bill  Shell 
Tom  Sherrel 
Steve  Triozzi 
John  Turner 
Glen  Vereen 


Lenny  Verges 
Bob  Warren 
Jim  Wallerstedt 
Howard  Waugh 
Mark  Weisburg 
Rick  Williams 
John  Youngblood 
Scott  Greg 
Mark  Hanudel 


254 


ZETA 
BETA 
TAU 


Bill  Barnard 
Larry  Bassel 
Richard  Senator 
Larry  Bieler 
Lance  Borochoff 
Steve  Brodie 
Larry  Brownridge 
Jim  Cohen 
Stan  Cohn 
Scott  Crystal 
James  Cummings 
Danny  Danzinger 
Bennett  Davis 
Marc  Dorian 
Ronny  Draluck 
Jerald  Enslein 
Clayton  Epstein 
Mark  Epstein 
Jon  Erblich 
Stuart  Feldman 
Rick  Femholz 
Art  Fishman 
Ron  Fox 
Stuart  Fridman 
Howard  Gandler 
Jerry  Gardner 
Matt  Geller 
John  Ginsberg 
Rick  Goldbatt 
Alan  Gottleib 
Harold  Graham 
Robert  Green 
Robert  Greenbaum 
Lou  Gurtwitch 
Michael  Habif 


Jay  Harberg 
Dan  Hodin 
Jack  Itzkowitz 
Doug  Jacobs 
Jim  KruU 
Marty  Kooperman 
Jim  Kutten 
Brandon  Leeds 
Eric  Leibsohn 
Bill  Lester 
Peter  Levy 
Howard  Lippton 
Marc  Magids 
Harvey  May 
Jon  Miller 
John  Naschek 
Lee  Osiason 
Paul  Orshan 
Buddy  Palmer 
Flip  Parker 
Mark  Prigoff 
Bruce  Rickoff 
Too  Rosenthal 
James  Robinson 
Doug  Roth 
Paul  Rubin 
Peter  Rubnitz 
Michael  Saag 
Neil  Schact 
Brad  Schandler 
Ed  Shapiro 
Richard  Scharff 
Ed  Shenis 
Steph  Sharlach 
Stan  Shoss 


Mike  Siegel 
Sam  Silverstein 
Neil  Speer 
Bruce  Spizer 
Jay  Tanenbaum 
Chuck  Tills 
Randy  Treadway 
Jeff  Trenton 
Neil  Wasser 
Robert  Weber 
Bob  Wegusen 
Jeffrey  Zoub 
Sergio  Bak 
Gary  Baskin 
Gregory  Bloom 
Richard  Bressler 
Michael  Bronska 
Bruce  Campbell 
Craig  Cavalier 
Robert  Chumey 
Edward  Cohen 
Jeff  Cohen 
Gary  Mark  Cohen 
Dan  Costello 
Bruce  Eisenberg 
Steven  EIrod 
Neil  Faggen 
Avrum  Gaynor 
Art  Gilberg 
Edward  Goldberg 
Samuel  Goldberg 
Bern  Goodman 
Gary  Gordon 
Harlan  Gottleib 
Barry  Haft 


Steven  Helfman 
Eric  Horwitch 
Keith  Issacson 
Morris  Kahn 
Marc  Kanchuger 
David  Keyes 
Richard  Kootman 
Joseph  Lang 
Keith  Lamer 
Michael  Levin 
Dennis  Levine 
Paul  Lux 
Scott  Mexic 
William  Miranda 
Mark  Nachbar 
Doug  Parker 
Marc  Pearl 
James  Perlick 
Gary  Pinsley 
Alan  Raphael 
Andy  Robinson 
Harvey  Robbies 
Arnold  Rubens 
Mark  Rubin 
Andy  Schiffman 
Jeffrey  Shapiro 
Michael  Silberstein 
Rich  Tanker 
John  Vreeland 
Robert  Wilensky 
Joel  Wishnick 


255 


257 


"Classes?  Personally,  I  was  never  too  crazy  about  either  kind  of  class.  In  the 
classroom  class,  the  professor  would  always  save  the  important  parts  until  the 
last  five  minutes  of  the  lecture . . .  then  he  would  rattle  them  off  faster  than  anyone 
could  understand.  Sort  of  a  climactic  effect,  you  know.  The  other  kind  of  class?  It 
was  always  hard  to  tell  the  difference  between  a  freshman  and  a  senior.  Seems 
like  an  instant  metamorphosis  . . .  zap,  you're  a  senior.  Maybe  its  that  fear  of  the 
unknown  future  lurking  around  . . .  makes  you  a  bit  more  sophisticated.  I  always 
looked  forward  to  being  in  a  'higher'  class.  Maybe  thaf  s  why  universities  have 
their  own  class  system . . .  kind  of  an  incentive  to  get  you  to  come  back  the  follow- 
ing year.  Always  something  to  look  foiward  to . . .  rising  expectations.  Nope,  I  was 
never  too  crazy  about  either  kind  of  class. 


.258 


259 


THE 

FRESHMAN 

ClASS 


M,.  ■-,.    vJSi  *.i*i'41i 


Coco  Ahiberg 

Tori  Alf  ord 

Sherri  Alpert 

Miguel  Alvarez 

Sharon  Anderson 

Wilson  B.  Andrews 


Omar  H.  Araim 

Keith  Astuto 

L.C.  Austin 

Robert  Badiloi 

Michele  Baer 

William  G.  Barry,  Jr. 


Robert  Bartlett 

Joseph  E.  Vavarie 

Harlan  Beck 

B.  L  Berchielli 

SA.  Bergeron 

Jeffrey  L.  Berman 


J.W.  Berney 

Philip  Bertucci 

R.  Betancourt 

Bradley  M.  Birns 

B.L  Bland 

R.  Blaylock 


Gregory  A.  Bloom 

Kenny  M.  Blum 

Ann  Blumberg 

Walter  Bohm 

Jim  Boich 

Gregory  A.  Booth 


L.G.  Boquet 

Howard  Borger 

KJ.  Borgschulte 

J.M.  Boutte 

Karen  Bowman 

Sheile  Brady 


Bunnie  Branch 

Richard  Bressler 

John  Bretz 

Frank  Brill 

Carl  Brondum 

HJ.  Brothers 


Bruce  Brown 

D.T.  Buckingham 

Dana  Buntrock 

Thomas  M.  Burke 

C.L.  Burkert 

Timothy  G.  Burns 


Louis  Caldwell 

Lawrence  Cabeceiras 

C.C.  Carmichael 

LM.  Carron 

Olivia  Carter 

Edward  Casal 


261 


Robert  Casanova 
George  Cenac 
Jane  Cheeseman 
Wah  Kou  Chin 
Joseph  L  Chow 
Robert  B.  Churney 


Christopher  Clabaugh 
S.  Coffing 
LA.  Cohen 
William  Commack 
Tig  Conger 
Courtney  Cooper 


Mary  Couturie 
Randall  J.  Dalia 
Gabirel  Daroca 
O.G.  De  La  Luz 
Richard  Deichmann 
A.H.  Delery 


Dierdre  DiGiglia 
Marcia  Diamond 
Barbara  Dirr 


J.K.  Donahue 
David  Didka 
Linda  K.  Dunn 


Steve  Einbender 
Kathy  Elliot 
Steven  Elrod 


D.  Epstein 
G.  M.  Esparza 
Geoffrey  Eustis 


R  J.  Falotico 
Ned  Faurox 
Susan  Feldman 


Vivian  L  Fellom 
Jeff  Fendler 
JA.  Ferry 
262    Catherine  Fondren 
Joey  L  Ford 

l^ft. C? i_ 


G.L  Frazier 

AM.  Freedman 

Charles  Freeland 

Nancy  Freeman 

Julie  V.  Freund 

Michael  C.  Fricke 


R.E.  Fridley 

Mindy  Friedmann 

Gregg  Frischhertz 

Matt  Fry 

Fairfax  Fullerton 

John  Furman 


MM.  Gahagan 
Debra  Gaitz 


Linda  Galler 
Robert  J.  Galterio 


Thomas  Gandy 
Edwards  Garmor 


Thomas  Gamier 

Horace  Gilbert,  Jr. 

Ed  Gill 

Amy  E.  Goggins 

J.M.  Gold 


David  Goldhagen 

F.D.  Goldman 

S.B.  Goodman 

Robin  Gordon 

Lisa  Diane  Gradman 

Lynn  Greenebaum 


David  Greespon 

Mary  E.  Guyton 

Michael  J.  Haas 

Valerie  Habif 

Joseph  Hagmann 

GA  Hall 


Janice  Hallet 

Thomas  W.  Hanson 

Edwin  S.  Harbuck 

H.Harmuth       263 
Ollie  M.  Harton 
R.K.  Hawkins 


D.  Hebert 
Edward  A.  Hirs 
Karen  Hirschberg 
Anne  R.  Holmes 
Eric  D.  Horwitz 
J.E.  Horwitz 


Jeffrey  A.  Hurdus 
John  W.  Hurley 


Keith  Isaacson 
M.Y.  Issenberg 


Elizabeth  Jackson 
Meredith  James 


264 


David  Jee 
Dann  J.  Jung 
David  Kaskel 
Cindy  Ann  Katz 
James  Keegan 
MP.  Kehoe 


Robert  J.  Kelley 
Paula  Kelly 
Emile  Keppler 
GA.  Keyes 
Thomas  King 
Dorienn  Klairmont 


Claire  Knighten 
Daniel  Kohm 
Ricky  M.  Kootman 
Mindy  Kort 
Eleanor  Kuhn 
Sheryl  Larson 


Rebecca  A  Latta 
Bill  Lazarus 
Alan  LcBato 
Karen  Robinson  Lee 
Peter  Legum 
J.D.  Lehrer 


John  Lennox 
Jan  Leone 
PM.  Leong 
Dennis  Levine 
Pam  G.  Lewis 
DM.  Licciardi 


J  A.  Liggett 

Charles  Lincoln 

Lynn  Loewenstein 

Cynthia  Luckie 

Paul  Lux 

C.R.  Macias 


Lauri  J.  Makela 

Brad  Marks 

Benson  T.  Massey 

Jose  F.  Mauricio 

Patricia  Mavromates 

William  Mayfield 


Paul  A.  Mazzuca 

Bonnie  McCallin 

Cornelia  McDonald 

Patricia  L.  McVadon 

S.B.  Mexic 

Charles  Miller 


C.  Miller 

J.D.  Milto 

Richard  Mire 

Lynnette  Montero 

J  A.  Montgomery 

M.D.  Moore 


Jeannie  Morris 

Stacey  Morris 

R.D.  Moyer 


Martha  A.  Mueller 

Martha  O.  Mullins 

James  Murphy 


Richard  G.  Myers 

Mark  Nachbar 

Crystal  Nazzaro 


John  P.  Neglia 

Allen  Nelson 

Paul  Noble 


Michael  O'Day 

M.  Oesterreicher 

Melissa  Ogden 

Catherine  Ohlsson 

S.E.  Orihel 

Robert  Palmer 


265 


Michael  Parnon 
G.I.  Pasternak 
CD.  Paternostro 
Tillman  Pearce 
MH.  Pearl 
Marc  Pereira 


E.  Peron 
LK.  Perrone 


Steve  Pierce 
Nancy  E.  Potter 


Richard  Powers 
Sam  Rafidi 


Morey  Raiskin 
Alan  S.  Raphael 
J.  Ray  buck 
C.  Reagin 
Jonathon  Remer 
RJ.  Rengel 


Tomas  Rengifo 
Leslie  Reskin 
Michael  Richarme 
Lael  Richter 
J  J.  Rodriguez 
F.R.  Rodwig 


M  J.  Roe 
Helen  Rogers! 
William  A.  Rogers 
Juan  L  Romero 
M.  Rosemore 
J.G.  Rosen 


Carla  Ross 
Arnold  E.  Rubens 
Mark  Rubin 
Mark  D.  Ryan 
Magnolia  Sahba 
Andrew  E.  Salk 


Peria  M.  Saludes 
Joseph  Sander 
B  J.  Sandler 
266       '^en  Sandler 
Mark  D.  Ryan 
Nancy  Scheinholtz 


.^ 


■^''^!P% 


267 


N.F.  Schepps 
Eric  Schmidt 
T.  Schoeefler 
Marcie  Schott 
FJ.  Schouest 
Ira  A.  Schwartz 


AJ.  Scislowicz 
Anne  Segest 
H.G.  Sharp 
William  Sheldon 
Robert  Shepperly 
Sarah  Shields 


Raquel  Shpilberg 
Morris  Silberman 
Angle  Smith 
David  R.  Smith 
BJVI.  Snyder 
KJ.  Sosne 


Brian  Spencer 
LM.  Stjernholm 
Jodi  Stone 
JeffTaleghany 
Darrell  Talley 
EN.  Throop 


Deborah  Thurston 
Nancy  Thurston 


Roger  Timperlake 
Bruce  A.  Tinker 


M.S.Tishler 
Juan  R.  Tomiella 


268 


Larry  Tortorich 
Scott  Touger 


Tracy  Trimper 
OM.Trujillo 
Anne  Turlington 
Amanda  Tuttle 
Anne  Underwood 
B.  Von  Rosenberg 


Leslie  Wade 

BA  Waldman 

LD.  Waldman 

Robert  C.  Wallace 

Louis  Washington 

Mark  Whatley 


Mark  Wilde 
Robert  Wilensky 


Sarah  Willard 
Walter  L.  Willard 


Williams 
Nerissa  Williams 


Oran  W.  Williams 

Jeffrey  M.  Wolf 

R.  Wong 

Craig  Wooldridge 

BJ.Wyatt 

Martha  E.  Wyatt 


269 


THE 

SOPHOMORE 

CLASS 


M.  Abramson 

Patricia  Adams 

J.F.  Adler 

Mark  Alexander 

Laura  Allen 

Eddie  Anderson  Jr. 


G.V.  Anderson 

Daniel  Aronstein 

DA.  Aspiazo 

Patrice  Barattini 

MA.  Barinbaum 

J.B.  Barkate 


LS.  Barker 

LJ.  Barnes 

E.M.  Barraza 

Sylvia  Bauman 

H  J.  Bauman 

Nancy  Jo  Beck 


David  Beckman 

AM.  Bennett 

Wendy  L  Bermant 

BJ.  Bernard 

Cindy  Bernstein 

Seth  Beroz 


Laura  Berry 

Scott  R.  Bickford 

LA.  Bistrow 

Daniel  Bivins 

Nancy  C.  Blodgett 

Jeanne  S.  Bonner 


Warren  R.  Bourgeois 

Bobbie  A  Boyd 

Edward  Breland 

Lindsay  M.  Brice 

Steve  Brodie 

Howard  Bromley 


Lee  J.  Bronck 

G.B.  Brown 

J.D.  Brown 

TM.  Brown 

Susan  E.  Browne 

Jim  Bruckart 


Rebekah  S.  Bryan 

BA  Buckingham 

Robert  Buesinger 

Jonathan  Buka 

Maureen  M.  Burke 

T.R.  Burke 


Steven  Burr 

E.  Byrne 

Doug  Caldarera 

RJVI.Cambre        271 
Keith  Cangelosi 
Enrique  Carballo 


Leslie  J.  Cardin 
Rosie  Cartaya 
Joe  Casper 
Maiv  Cassilly 
Sherry  Chapman 
Jimmy  K.  Chow 


CN.  Clarke 
F£.  Coco 

Christy  Coggeshall 
Lauri  Cohen 
Lisa  Y.  Collins 
Sharon  L  Conyer 


Shawn  Cook 
Andy  L  Corwin 
R  A  Couto 
James  K.  Cox 
LN.  Cranston 
Af .  Craven 


F.  Crescent 
Scott  Cristal 


Thomas  Crosby 
Robert  Dabney 


Deidre  J.  Digel 
Denise  D.  Downing 


Charles  J.  Driebe 
Keith  Dugas 


C.L  Duke 
M.  Earnest  II 


Robert  Edwards 
Lisa  Eldredge 
Karin  Elkis 
272      Elizabeth  Ellaby 
Gene  Elliot 
Lindsay  Ellis 


Bercher  Endres 
Debra  S.  Engel 

Jon  Erblich 
Michael  Farley 
Jeanne  Farmer 

J.P.  Famen 


Jim  Fazzino 

Bruce  M.  Fedor 

Mary  J.S.  Fenner 


W.L  Ferguson 

Elizabeth  Field 

Paul  Finger 


Deanie  Fischman 

Brian  Fitzjarrell 

G.B.  Fitzjarrell 


N.R.  Foster 
Debbie  Fox 
R.  Frieberg 


Gerald  Fretz 
Mindy  Fridken 
Leslie  Gaitens 


Jerry  1.  Gardner 

John  Garth 

Elizabeth  Gellatly 

Hanna  S.  Gerone 

Norman  Getz 

Bruce  Giaimo 


Don  W.  Gibbs 

Robert  Gilmore 

Lisabeth  Glick 

Randall  L  Glidden 

Robert  Gold 

B  A  Goldberg 


Gay  M.  Gomez 

Dianna  Gorbach 

Sherrie  Gordon 

Thomas  F.  Graham 

Susan  Grant 

Allen  Graves 


'V"-^i 


E.  Greene 
Robert  Greenbaum 
D.L  Grossman 
S.R.  Guider 
Juliet  Guillorv 
Richard  M.  Gunst 


Gary  A.  Hahn 
Clark  T.  Hancock 
Jonathan  Harbuck 
Buzzy  Heausler 


BJ.  Hickman 
Virginia  Holbrook 
Joy  Holzman 
M.L  Hoover 


Susan  A.  Horowitz 
S.V.  Horowitz 
V.C.  House 
Wynne  E.  Howard 


Robert  H.  Hoy 
Tanya  M.  Huerta 
Marsh  Jill  Ingram 


Jules  Ivester 
KJVI.  Jacomine 
Q.B. Johnson 


Scott  G.  Johnston 
Jewel  Jurovich 
M.L  Kahn 


274 


Gary  D.  Kallman 
Christy  Kane 
Glenn  Kaplan 


Mark  A.  Kaplan 
Paul  R.  Kenul 
Thomas  J.  Kerins 
Karl  Kesser 
John  Kirk 
Femin  Koch 


111  » 


Suzan  K.  Kobey 

George  E.  Kock 

CM.  Koors 

Blake  Krass 

K  A  Kruebbe 

Wayne  D.  Kuizner 


James  A.  Kutten 
Harolyn  S.  Landon 


Chas  M.  Lanes 
TJ.  Uthe 


Sheldon  Latos 
Leslie  N.  Law 


A.  Lawrence 
G.  LeBlanc 

Mike  Lender 
Robert  Levenstein 
Keith  G.  Liberman 
Penny  J.  Lichtman 


Herb  List 
G.Long 


Carie  Low 
Sottie  Macpherson 


Richard  Macpherson 
William  L  Maiman 


Marie  Malizia 
Mark  Mantese 
M.  Mariorenzi 
Steve  S.  Mathes  275 
D£.  Matics 
Jeff  A-Matson 


Gloria  Mayi 
Page  McClendon 
Alice  McRoberts 
Lori  Mia  Melin 
Jerry  M.  Melone 
C.R.  Mintz 


Robert  Mitchell 
Charles  R.  Moir 
Hector  Molina 
Eleanor  Montague 
Rosa  Y.  Montes 
M£.  Moret 


Howard  P.  Morris 
KA  Morris 


Paul  Mosco 
D.L  Moses 


J.G.  Mosko 
KM.  Murphy 


M.  Nachman 
P£.  Nachman 


276 


Lawrence  B.  Nadel 
Clifton  Mary 
Jerry  Newcombe 
Kathy  Newman 
James  E.  Nix 
LS.  Novick 


Dorothy  O'Connor 
M.V.  Oehsen 
Charles  T.Orthel 
Judy  A.  Packler 
Lynn  A.  Parry 
E.L  Patterson 


J.R.  Peterson 
Paul  Piazza 
Shelly  Picard 
David  H.  Pickering 
Gene  Pilcher 
Simone  M.  Piiie 


l^\ 


iMl^^^ 


277 


Charles  Pizzo 
W£.  Place 
Robert  Pospick 
Mark  E.  Powell 
M.  Quinn 
LH.  Rehrer 


David  D.  Reinmuth 
James  Reuter 
Louis  J.  Reynolds 
Bruce  D.  Rickoff 
Mike  A.  Rinella 
Elizabeth  Roberts 


Kim  M.  Roesler 
Debby  A.  Rogoff 
Lisa  Rosenstein 
Deidre  Rourke 
Melissa  Ruman 
Robin  A.  Rushton 


John  Ruskin 
Robert  Ryan 
Ruke  Sanna 
Alfred  Aurage 
Pam  S.  Scanlon 
Susan  Schimnol 


A.B.  Schoenberg 
J.D.  Schuster 


Donna  A.  Schwartz 
Gregory  R.  Scott 


LL  Seig 
R.G.  Sellers 


H.G.  Sender 
Cindy  Shapiro 


Kim  Shaw 
S.L.  Shaw 
William  W.  Shea 
278   D.I.  Shelton 
E.K.  Shepard 
Jesse  Sherrod 


■  ''■^         »-** 

M 

Randy  Silverstein 

Samuel  Silverstein 

P.  Simon 

wk 

PH 

Ricki  P.  Slacter 

A  .. 

I 

P.Sloterdlijk 
HA.  Smallzman 

Bf .  Smith 


James  K.  Smith 


M.C.  Smith 


Nathan  R.  Snell 


Scott  Snyder 


Larry  J.  Sokolic 
G.L  Spevack 
John  Stanley 
Robert  F.  Stanley 
J  A.  Stephens 
TJ.  Stephens 


A.D.  Stewart 

Pamela  S.  Strider 

Jay  Tanenbaum 

Jack  Taylor 

Susan  Tebeleff 

Mary  E.  Thomas 


Joseph  C.  Tkac 

Pat  C.  Toole 

Kathy  Townley 

Jeffrey  Trenton     279 

MM.  Treuting 

MJS.  Urioste 


Susan  VanHees 
S.  Vasalech 
Eric  T.  Vinokur 
F.  Von  Rosenberg 
FJ.  Wagner 
John  C.  Walker 


Craig  M.  Ward 
Joseph  Warren 
M.  L  Watson 
Stewart  Wechsler 
Amy  Weil 
Lisa  Weil 


Lois  T.  Weinfield 
Emily  Weinstein 
G.G.  White 
AM.  Wierman 
CM.  Wilkins 
Elizabeth  Williams 


George  Williams 
W.P.  Williams 
J.  E.  Wisner 
Richard  M.  Wolkin 
Richard  C.  Wong 
Kam  Blow  D.  Yap 


LM.  Yore 
Stan  Zent 
Lisa  L  Zingaro 
Juan  Zuniga 
C.I.  Zwerdling 
G.S.  Zwicky 


**#* 


280 


281 


THE 

JUNIOR 

CIASS 


282 


Bill  Abernathy 

Frank  Adelman 

Carlos  Alderson 

Lillie  Alexander 

Neil  Alig 

AJ.Alpar 


Paul  Andrade 

Julian  Angel 

Alvin  Aramburo 

Cindy  Arata 

Bernadette  Arroyo 

Jaymi  Bachman 


Beryl  Bachus 

Donald  Bagert 

Richard  Baker 

John  Ballman 

Clyde  Banner 

Laura  Barber 


Oscar  Batson 

Robert  Becker 

Jaime  Beingolea 

Karen  Bell 

Richard  Benator 

Leonard  Berges 


Mark  Bermudez 

Leonard  Bertucci 

Charles  Bibbins 

Karen  Bishoff 

Ivan  Blasini 

Bruce  Bordlee 


Whit  Brangle 

Steve  Bumpus 

Nicole  Burke 

Henry  Bush 

Neil  Bush 

Melody  Carter 


Michael  A.  Cenac 

James  Chafey 

John  Chaubin 

Catherine  Chisolm 

Robert  Clark 

Glen  Clouse 


Mary  Colledge 

Hector  Colon 

Lauren  Cooper 

Don  Cosby 

Ellen  S.  Coulter 

Kevin  Cowens 


William  Crockett 

Suzanne  Cruere 

Sheldon  Dam 

Kirk  Dameron     283 

Scott  Dash 

Randy  Davidson 


Sara  Davison 
Robert  Dawson 
Oliver  Delery 
Robert  Denstedt 
Carlos  De  Salazar 
Cartrecia  Di  Maggio 


Marc  Dorian 
Gordon  Dusell 
Mina  Eagan 
Richard  Eason 
HM.  Edward 
Karl  Ellins 


Clifford  Enten 
Robert  Fately 
Barbara  Faure 
Olga  Feldman 
Paul  Feinstein 
Gail  Fenton 


Shauna  Fitzjarrell 
Joni  Fitzpatrick 
Lawrence  Fleder 
A]  Foley 
Rita  Freiden 
Linda  Friedman 


Mitch  Frumkin 


William  Furlong 


Rebecca  Furr 


Armando  Garcia 


284 


Paul  Garland 
Jorge  Garza 
James  Gaudet 
Patrice  Gendel 
Constantine  Georges 
Janis  Girer 


Paige  Gold 

Martin  Goldin 

Amy  Sue  Goldin 

Carol  Goldstein 

Keith  Goldstein 

Mark  Goldstein 


Carlos  Gonzales 
David  Graham 


Andy  Green 
Margaret  Greene 


Dee  Dee  Greespun 
Stephen  Grinton 


Ronald  Gumina 
Marco  Gutierrez 


Kenneth  Gutzeit 

Stephen  Hacker 

Greg  Han 

Frank  Hayes 

Phyllis  Hecht 

Connie  Heinis 


Anne  Renee  Heninburg 

Lorin  Henry 

Linda  Hinrichs 

Richard  Hoffman 

Shawn  Holahan 

James  Hollingsworth 


Peter  Horowitz 

Kevin  Hughes 

David  Indorf 

Doug  Jacobs 

Debra  Jarrett 

Madeline  Johnson 


Jack  Kaplan 

David  Katner 

Steven  Katz 

Karen  Keil 

Stephen  Kern 

Diane  Kessler 


285 


Wanda  Kimbro 
Laurie  Klayman 
Isaac  Kowler 
Judith  Kron 
David  Krost 
Steve  Lanster 


Judi  Lapinsohn 
Larry  Largent 


Mary  Lawrence 
Verna  Lee 


Brandon  Leeds 
Lee  Levine 


286 


Alan  Levith 
Anne  Lespinasse 


Hannah  Litman 
Alan  Littlejohn 
George  Long 
Kathleen  Long 
Kit  Lozes 
Bruce  Lurie 


Kenneth  McBrrom 
Elizabeth  McCarte 
David  McKinsey 
Daniel  Mackel 
Marc  Magids 
Kathleen  Mahoney 


Lyn  Mandel 
David  Masche 
Rachel  Maurer 
Robin  Maxwell 
Harvey  May 
Doug  Mayberry 


Craig  Meaux 
Kelly  Merritt 
LA.  Middleton 
Simon  Mireles 
Steve  Moll 
Courtney  Moore 


'^x^ 


i 


w 


y 

B  i  J 

,"^i     1^^;  12^1  imiiKfiJi  (^1  ^1  '%g^ 

»ji!  Him  wk  mi  'wM""!  ^1 91  iHi 


287 


Joel  Morris 
Mark  Murphy 
Frederick  Nagel 
Nora  Neidermeier 
Karen  Noer 
Feargus  O'Connor 


David  O'Learv 
Rebecca  Olivera 
Thomas  O'Malley 


Victor  Ovalle 
Michael  Palatas 
Sandra  Paternostro 


Lisa  Pcrlmutter 
Andy  Peters 
Steven  Pincus 


Dana  Popovich 
Barbara  Rachlin 
Keith  Ranna 


Connie  Richardson 
Stephen  Richardson 
Paula  Rinehart 
Rick  Ripberger 
Eva  Rodriguez 
Charles  Romans 


Robert  Ross 
Michael  Rubin 
Peter  Rubnitz 
George  Sacks 
William  Sadlier 
Shari  Scharfer 


Janet  B.  Schendle 
Steve  Schlifc 
Edward  Schmitt 
Steven  Schwabish 
LR.  Schwartz 
Paul  Ciortino 


Edward  Sheinis 
S.  Shoss 
J  A.  Simmons 
Carol  E.  Sisson 
Gordon  D.  Sokolofl 
Greg  Spannuth 


Robert  Wilbourn 

E.F.  Williams 

Nancy  Williams 

R.F.  Wykoff 

Janet  Zenlin 


Ann  Spicer 

B.R.  Springstein 

Lance  R.  Stone 

Lisa  J.  Strauss 

Leesa  J.  Suddath 

Nancy  Sullivan 


Martha  Talbot 

NP.  Thomas 

Joan  Thompson 

John  Thompson 

Betty  Tieckelman 

Shelly  Toranto 


Bruce  Trusty 

B  A.  Turner 

Jeffrey  Turner 


Steve  C.  Tyler 

Frances  Ulmer 

Chip  Valente 


DJ.Veta 

Clarissa  Walker 

Constance  Walker 


Tore  Wallin 

Edward  Walsh 

Winnie  C.  Waltzer 


Virginia  Warren 

Neil  Wasser 

Walter  W.  Watson 


289 


JUNIOR  YEAR  ABROAD 


Susan  Jean  Acord 
Khan  Anjum  Akmal 
Kathleen  Julia  Amrock 
Mark  Beidel 
David  B.  Bernstein 
Joanne  Brinberg 


Claire  Blaine 
Cynthia  K.  Blank 
Jomara  Villeponteaux 
Gregory  I.  Boertjem 
Oscar  W.  Boultinghouse  Jr. 
Gloria  M.  Bravo 


Mac  Burt 

Mary  Campbell 

Joseph  Carvin 

Charles  Cohen 

Douglas  Cohen 

Theodore  Cominos 


Helen  Debutts 

Ron  Domin 

Jan  Durwood 

Emily  Ellis 

Michelle  Flora 

Lynn  Gebrowsky 


Margaret  Haise 

John  Hickey 

William  Murphie 

Loma  Hipwell 

Robert  Hofmann 

Beth  Houghton 


Robin  Kump 

Abbe  Levin 

Rebecca  Malek 

Robert  Martin 

Cynthia  Miller 

Eugenia  M.  Mueller 


Mary  Mullaney 

Jill  Mullin 

David  O'Day 

Robert  Orshan 

Jonathan  Paine 

Elizabeth  Perwin 


Ross  Pottschmidt 

Mathew  Powell 

Thomas  Reinsch 

Lark  Renz 

Larry  Rothenberg 

Richard  Sabalot 


David  Sage 

Olga  Santiago 

Bruch  Schluter 

Cynthia  Sharer 

Julie  Slattery 

Christopher  Smith 


Suzanne  Stanfill 

Barbara  Stewart 

Peter  Trapolin 

Julie  Treacy 

Barbara  Woodley 

Mimi  Vollstedt 


291 


THE 

SENIOR 

CIASS 


009     f^^'^'S^^  "^  ^'^^^Tr^fffj^  ^ 


Jm 


Tulane  would  be  an  apt  name  for  any  University.  College  should  be  a  two-lane 
experience,  one  lane  being  what  the  school  offers  to  the  student,  the  other  lane 
being  what  the  student  puts  into  and  takes  out  of  the  University.  I  have  made  a 
two-lane  experience  for  myself,  and  I  will  always  look  back  with  fondness  on  these 
days. 

Larry  Dumont 
Arts  and  Sciences 


293 


Imagine  spending  four  years  in  a  place  where 
there  aren't  any  hills. 

Nick  Vaccaro 
Arts  and  Sciences 


R.  F.  Aaron 
Scarsdale,  New  York 
James  W.  Abrams 


Nick  Accardo 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Julie  Adier 
Meridian,  Ms. 
C.  B.  Albrecht 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Rufus  Alldredge 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Roy  Altum 
Gulfport.  Ms. 


J.  S.  Anderson 
New  Orleans,  La. 


M.  M.  Anderson 
Clarksdale,  Ms. 


Diane  Andrus 
Springfield,  N.J. 


S.  Arias 
Panama 

Annette  Armstrong 
Groves,  Texas 
Herbert  John  Ashe 
Mexico  City,  Mex. 
Lauren  Atlas 
McAllen,  Texas 


294 


David  E.  Baker 
New  Orelans,  La. 
Nancy  M.  Bames 
Nashville,  Tenn. 
Jaime  Barraza 
Cristobal,  Colombia 
K.  M.  Bates 
Manopac,  New  York 


B.  C.  Beach 
Metairie,  La. 


John  Beatrous 
New  Orleans,  La. 


C.  R.  Beckwith 
New  Orleans,  La. 


William  Bell 
New  Bern,  N.  C. 


G.  A.  Benner 
Miami,  Fla. 
Daina  Bennett 
Lonoke,  Ark. 
Major  Bennett 
Hammond,  La. 
Les  Berenson 
Metairie.  La. 
Louis  F.  Berlanti 
St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 


When  all  the  degrees  are  distribulted,  "Cogito 
Ergo  Sum"  is  still  the  greatest  proof  of  education. 

Christopher  N.  Barrilleaux 
Arts  and  Sciences  if 


295 


S.  M.  Biber 
Gainesville,  Fla. 
David  I.  Bienn 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Thomas  Bienvenu 
LaPlace,  La. 
Lisa  P.  Binder 
Jackson,  Ms. 


L  A.  Blasiol 
Houston,  Texas 
David  A.  Blau 
New  York,  N.Y. 


Lucia  Bloodgood 
RosweU,  Ga. 
Patrick  Bloomfield 
Shreveport,  La. 


K.  S.  Blumenfeld 
Glencoe,  IH. 
G.  L  Blundell 
Metairie,  La. 


Eric  J.  Bocage 
Gretna,  La. 
W.  Boldizar 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 


Richard  Bordell 
Springdale,  Pa. 
Charlotte  Bordenave 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Lance  Borochoff 
Atlanta,  Ga. 
P,  M.  Bowen 
Lcirchmont,  N.  Y. 


"All  I  know  is,  I  know  nothing.** 

-Socrates,  449  B.C. 

Andrea  Kislan 

Business  School 


296 


Alma  P.  Braun 
New  Orleans,  La. 
S.  C.  Braverman 
Wilmette,  111. 
Andrew  Breffeilh 
Shreveport,  La. 
Robert  Briggs 
Dallas,  Texas 


Thomas  K.  Brocato 
Alexandria,  La. 
Janette  Brown 
New  Orleans,  La. 


J.  D.  Bruce 
Tulsa,  Ok. 
Thomas  Brutting 
New  Fairfield,  Ct. 


Sharon  L.  Buchaltar 
Memphis,  Tenn. 
Robin  Buckner 
Great  Neck,  N.  Y. 


R.  R.  Buescher 
Baytown,  Texas 
Robert  A.  Burkes 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Harold  Burkert 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Andrew  Burkman 
Terrace  Park,  Oh. 
Todd  Burley 
Coral  Gables,  Fla. 
Edward  C.  Bush 
Lytle,  Texas 


College,  it  seems  to  me,  should  do  at  least  two  things:  it  should  teach 
you  how  to  think  and  at  the  same  time  show  you  how  ignorant  you  really  are. 

Frederick  Philip  Heisler,  Jr. 

Engineering  School  , 


297 


The  wayfarer 

Perceiving  the  pathway  to  truth 

Was  struck  with  astonishment. 

h  was  thickly  grown  with  weeds. 

"Ha,"  he  said, 

"I  see  that  none  has  passed  here 

In  a  long  time." 

Later  he  saw  that  each  weed 

Was  a  singular  knife. 

"Well,"  he  mumbled  at  last, 

"Doubtless  there  are  other  reads." 
—  Stephen  Crane 
Michael  Leumas 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Susan  Butterman 
Franklin  Square,  N.  Y. 
J.  R.  Butner 
New  Orleans,  La. 
David  R.  Byrd 
Jacksonville,  Fla. 
Sharon  Campbell 
Denver,  Colorado 
William  Campbell 
Lancaster,  Pa. 
Guy  Cannata 
Morgan  City,  La. 


David  J.  Cardon 
Harvey,  La. 
Carol  A.  Carp 
New  Orleans,  La. 


L  D.  Cartwright 
Houston,  Texas 
Diane  Casanueva 
Tampa,  Fla. 


Taylor  J.  Casey 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Kenneth  Cevjanovich 


298 


Kenneth  Chadwick 
Metairie,  La. 
W.  L  Chandler 
Albuquerque,  N.  M. 


Siracha  Charoempanij 
Bangkok,  Thailand 
G.  J.  Chatagnier  111 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Darrell  Cherry 
New  Orleans,  La. 
A.  J.  Chopivsky 
Zion,  III. 
Gale  Clayton 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 
Cynthia  Cloninger 
Tulsa,  Ok. 


Barry  Cohen 
Miami,  Fla. 
J.  C.  Cohen 
Glencoe,  111. 
Ron  Cohen 
Scotch  Plains,  N.  J. 
Ann  Collins 
La  Grange,  111. 
Francis  Collins 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Doctor  R.  Connelly 
i      Washington,  D.  C. 


G.  D.  Coursey 
Drucilla  Crabtree 
Nashville,  Tcnn. 


Education  for  me  has  been  a  continuation  of  the  past.  The  worth  of 
it  lay  not  in  the  years,  but  in  the  experiences,  and  in  the  extent  to  which 
I  have  been  able  to  exploit  the  available  resources,  both  immediate  cind 
potential.  While  I  have  not  travelled  every  path,  I  have  crossed  many 
avenues  and  have  extended  my  own  horizon;  in  so  doing,  I  have  grown 
within  myself. 

Lynn  J.  Stone 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Richard  Cranford 
Scottsdale,  Az. 
Jeanette  A.  Crook 
Coral  Gables,  Fla. 


Michael  Curcle 
Clara  C.  Currie 
Houston,  Texas 


Karen  J.  Curtin 
Fort  Mill,  S.  C. 
B.  M.  Cymerman 
Bayside,  New  York 


Etteen  Daech 
Austin,  Texas 
Maureen  D'Agostino 
Pompano  Beach,  Fla. 
Pete  S.  Dalacos 
Palm  Harbor,  Fla. 
R.  L  Dalby 
Deer  Park,  Texas 
K.  P.  Daniel 
Lafayette,  La. 
Daniel  Danik 
Rahway,  N.  J. 


299 


M.  M.  Daniel 
McLean,  Va. 
Debbie  A.  Darnell 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Tom  Davies 
Metalrie,  La. 
Frank  C.  Davis  III 
San  Antonio,  Texas 


K.  R.  Davis 
Rocky  River,  Ohio 


Ken  D.  Davis  Jr. 
Homewood,  Alabama 


Ask  not  what  Tulane  can 
do  for  you;  Ask  what  you  can 
do  for  Tulane.  And  they  will 
probably  answer:  "Send 
Money." 

Richcird  Wiggers 
Architecture  School 


Linda  Davis 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Ricardo  V.  DeBcmardi 
Cciracas,  Venezuela 


R.  Defraites 
Arabi,  La. 
Celcne  C.  Delgado 
New  Orleans,  La. 
David  D.  Delgado 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Lucas  De  Leo 
New  Orleans,  La. 


300 


Joseph  DeLise  III 
Manhasset,  N.  Y. 
Edwin  Dennard 
Atlanta,  Ga. 
William  Denson 
Gadsen,  Alabama 
Vivian  Deschapelles 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Eduardo  Diaz 

Hato  Rey,  Puerto  Rico 


I.Diaz 

Roosevelt  Hato  Rey,  PR. 


^  There  is  tragedy  in  miss- 

ing by  a  narrow  margin. 

—Anonymous 


Mary  Dierdorff 
Crownsville,  Md. 


A.  C.  Dillon 
Tulsa,  Ok. 


Samuel  L  Dixie 
Tallahassee,  Fla. 
Fred  Dixon 
Salisbury,  N.  C. 
William  Domico 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Robert  Donachie 
Dallas,  Texas 


301 


d 


I  could  raze  a  thousand  cities 

with  ease. 

But  to  raise  a  single  village 

Is  more  difficult. 

And  a  nobler  deed. 

Edwin  Dennaro 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Kordice  Douglas 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Renee  S.  Downing 
Monroe,  La. 
R.  S.  Dozier 
Kalamazoo,  Ms. 
Kenneth  Dryden 
Plantation,  Fla. 


Chris  Duckett 
Charbondale,  111. 


Paul  Dudenhefer 
New  Orleans,  La. 


T.  Dufrene 
Marrero,  La. 
Larry  Dumont 
Metairie,  La. 


David  W.  Dunkle 
Biloxi,  Ms. 


LJ.Eddins 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Michael  Elder 
Houston,  Texas 


A.  R.  Ellins 
Miami,  Fla. 
Jerald  Enslein 
Prairie  Village,  Ks. 
Susan  L  Epstein 
Miami  Beach,  Fla. 
Andrew  Ericson 
Sioux  City,  Iowa 
Brian  Emstoff 
Great  Neck,  N.Y. 


302 


E.  G£scalante 
Bayamon,  Puerto  Rico 
RJ.Falk 
Arcadia,  Cal. 
Jill  Farber 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 
Joseph  E.  Farley 
Grosse  Pointe  Farms, 
Michigan 


T.  L  Famey 
Springfield,  III. 


Donna  Fassio 
New  Haven,  Ct. 


ATTENTION:  Tulane  Philosophy 
Department.  "Bird  life  is  the 
highest  form  of  civilization." 

—Anita  Loos,  Gentle- 
men Prefer  Blondes 
Lee  Levine 
DrofMJut 


Brian  Faucheux 
Metairie,  La. 
J.  Feingerts 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Barry  S.  Feldman 
Glencoe,  111. 


Roger  Ferland 
Pawtucket,  R.  1. 


J.  M.  Fernandez 
Gainesville,  Fla. 


Orlando  Fernandez 
San  Juan,  P.  R. 
Frank  Ferrante 
Bronx,  New  York 
Steven  Fink 
Roslyn,  N.  E. 
Diane  Finkelstein 
Morgan  City,  La. 
Daniel  Fishbein 
Long  Grove,  111. 


303 


"Any  woman  will  do,  just  give  her  a  bath  and 
send  her  to  a  dentist." 


Louis  XV 

Mark  Holt 

Arts  and  Sciences 


M.  E.  Flynn 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 
S.  M.  Folse 
Gretna,  La. 


H.  Ford 

Robert  Freeland 

Rio  de  Janeiro,  Breuil 

A.  Fregosi 

Norcross,  Ga. 

S.  E.  Freund 

S.  Salvador,  El  Salvador 


LAIJXDI 

FOU  1 

TlJLAiN 

Pi:  US 


Nell  Frewin 
Rockford,  III. 


Paul  Gaiser 
Bethesda,  Md. 


M.Galler 

New  Orleans,  La. 


J.  M.  Garcia 
Spring  Valley,  N.Y. 


Janice  Garfield 
Skokie,  III. 
Laurie  Garrett 
Tampa,  Fla. 
Charles  Garrison 
Houston,  Texas 
Jaime  Garza 
San  Antonio,  Texas 


Cameron  Gaston 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Timothy  Geiszler 
Knoxville,  Tenn. 


304 


Affection  is  contagious;  Let's  start  an  epi- 
demic! 

Jcunes  C.  Sammartino 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Joseph  E.  Gibson 
Palmetto,  Fla. 
Stewart  Given 
El  Paso,  Texas 
Kyla  Goff 

St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 
Richard  Goldblatt 
Hiohland  Park,  111. 


Sandee  Goldman 
Houston,  Texas 


R.  Gonzalez 
Metairie,  La. 


Stephen  Goodman 
Encino,  California 


Daniel  Gordon 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Dennis  Gordon 
Geneve,  Switzerland 
Susan  F.  Gordon 
Newport  News,  Va. 
S.  M.  Gorman 
Hallandale,  Fla. 
Gary  J.  Goss 
Woodland  Hill,  Gal. 


305 


Harold  E.  Graham 
Houston,  Texas 
T.  J.  Graham 
Jefferson,  La. 
Kevin  Grant 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 
Gary  Greenbaum 
Laredo,  Texas 


D.W.Grimaldi 
Up  Saddle  River,  N.J. 
Ronald  Grooms 
Prattville,  Alabama 


Graham  R.  Greene 
Indianapolis,  Ind. 
Jay  Grossman 
Glencoe,  III. 


Sanford  Grossman 
Tamarac,  Fla. 
Michael  Habif 
Atlanta,  Ga. 


Suzanne  Haik 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Robert  Hale 
Tampa,  Fla. 


Sandra  Hallet 
Columbus,  Ohio 
R.  M.  Marling 
Natchitoches,  La. 
Greg  Harrison 
Grand  Chcnier,  La. 
Debra  Hart 
Midland,  Texas 


Attending  Tulane  is  like  wearing  a  new  pair  of  shoes.  At  first  the  going 
is  stiff,  but  after  a  while  one  becomes  broken  in  and  finds  the  fit  superb. 

Darrell  Cherry 
Arts  and  Sciences 


306 


"When  a  girl  goes  bad,  men  go  right  after  her." 

Mae  West 
Newcomb 


Kim  L  Harvey 
New  Orleans,  La. 
N.  M.  Haskins 
Marcon,  Ga. 
Ann  Clark  Hayes 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Bryant  E.  Hazard 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Nancy  Heausler 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Mark  Hecht 
Norfolk,  Va. 


S.  L  Hecht 
Cape  Girardeau,  Mo. 
Robert  Heidt 
Lincroft,  N.  J. 


Michael  D.  Heine 
Riverside,  III. 
Susan  Hemard 
New  Orleans,  La. 


K.J.Heniv 
New  Orleans,  La. 
William  P.  Herklots 
Danielson,  Ct. 


S.  A.  Herlands 
Shaker  Heights,  Ohio 
John  Herlihy 
Jefferson,  La. 
Charles  Hettema 
North  Riverside,  111. 
Raymond  Hicks 
Stone  Mountain,  Ga. 


307 


You  start  at  square  one  and  you're  the  most  philosophical  slob  around 
because  you're  scared. 

You  become  complacent  and  bored  around  square  five,  and  by  square 
seven  you've  got  it  all  in  your  head  and  you're  pretty  smug. 

By  square  ten,  you've  been  knocked  back  to  square  one  and  you're  the 
most  philosophical  slob  around  because  you're  scared . . . 

. . .  it's  the  college  garni 

Devin  G.  Thombcr 

Arts  and  Science 

(Superstai 


J.  Hildebrand 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Alice  A.  Hinton 
Nashville,  Tenn. 
Cary  Jay  Hirsch 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
R.T.Histed 
Glover,  Utah 
Mary  L  Hobson 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Daniel  P.  Hodin 
Scranton,  Pa. 


Thomas  K.  Hofer 
New  Orleans,  La. 
P.  Hogerton 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Nancy  L  Holbrook 
New  Orleans,  La. 
William  J.  Homer  HI 
Philadelphia,  Pa. 


S.  C.  Horton 
Houston,  Texas 
Penny  Hoxter 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Philip  Hubbard 
Weston,  Ct. 
M.  Huddleston 
Chalmette,  La. 


Rodney  Huddleston 
Clyde,  Texas 
Michael  Huete 
New  Orleans,  La. 
William  S.  Huey 
New  Orleans,  La. 
James  Hunter 
Sonyea,  N.  Y. 
Grady  Hurley 
New  Orleans,  La. 
C.  L  Hyde 
Lakeland,  Fla. 


308 


Freshman  Year:  The  naive,  innocent  little  girl . . . 

Sophomore  Year:  The  "Know-it-all"  woman  of  the  world,  happy-go-lucky 

ady . . . 

Junior  Year:  The  apathetic  junior . . .  inspired  academically  by  a  semester 

abroad  in  Florence. 

Senior  Year:  The  studious  young  woman  devoted  to  the  Italian  culture  and 

anguage . . . 

'  would  also  like  to  thank  my  advisor.  Miss  Hallock,  for  the  awakening  of  my 

educational  experiences. 

Ellen  Patterson  -- 

"^ewcomb 


N.H.Imlay 
Houston.  Texas 
M.  W.  Innis 
Houston,  Texas 
Matthew  Irwin 
Great  Neck,  N.  Y. 
J.  R.  Itzkowitz 
Olivette,  Mo. 
Thomas  O.  Jack 
Metairic.  La. 
Jamie  Jacker 
Surfside,  Fla. 


Linda  Jacobs 
Metairie,  La. 
R.  K.  Jeffries 
Jefferson,  La. 


A.  R.John 
Surrey,  England 
Karen  K.  Johnsen 
Atlanta,  Ga. 


Gray  W.  Johnson 
Houston,  Texas 
E.  R.  Jones 
Benton,  Ar. 


Jeffrey  E.  Jones 
Kingsville,  Texas 
Maura  S.  Jones 
Beillwin,  Mo. 


R.  L  Jung 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Amy  M.  Kahn 
Baton  Rouge,  La. 
Richard  E.  Kaplan 
Manchester,  Ct. 
Nina  Karlen 
Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
Robert  M.  Karp 
Gainesville,  Fla. 
John  B.  Keenan  Jr. 
Metairie,  La. 


309 


Pamela  Kessler 
Miami,  Fla. 
Virgil  Riser  Jr. 
Natchez,  Ms. 
Nancy  Kistler 
Toledo,  Ohio 
L 1.  Klein 
Acapulco,  Gro.  Mexico 


Albert  L  Kline 
Marietta,  Ga. 


B.  J.  Konrad 
Glendale,  Wise. 


Quand  on  n'a  pas  ce  que 
Ton  aime,  il  faut  aimer  ce  que 
Ton  a. 

Andy  Colando 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Kurt  O.  Dosack 
Florence,  Alabama 


Sheree  L  Komman 
New  Orleans,  La. 


D.J.Krebs 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Gail  Kringold 
Miami  Beach,  Fla. 
Frank  Kronberg 
Miami.  Fla. 
Barbara  Krugman 
Holliswood.N.Y. 


310 


Lesley  Kushner 
Lake  Charles,  La. 
A.  F.  Lafargue 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Thomas  Landry 
Lake  Charles,  La. 
Spencer  Landsman 
Evanston,  111. 


S.  Lapidus 
Bowling  Green,  Ky. 


C.  S.  LcBlanc 
Arabi,  La. 


TULANE:  Good  friends, 
firsbee,  library.  Chemistry 
labs,  football,  last  minute 
cramming,  the  Bureau, 
squeshy  ice  cream  in  the  Rat, 
beebopping  (in  general)! 


S.J.Leikin 
Randalls  Town,  Md. 


Michael  J.  Lcumas 
Metairie,  La. 


R.  H.  Levenstein 
Teaneck,  N.  J. 
Peter  D.  Levy 
Glencoe,  III. 
G.Lewis 
Memphis,  Tenn. 
John  Lippincott 
Rye,  New  York 


311 


ll 


The  frustration,  worry,  laughter 
and  the  tears. 

The  ups  and  downs,  the  work  and 
my  peers. 

The  classes,  the  profs,  the  friends 
and  the  fears. 

Make  up  the  very  fondest  memo- 
ries of  these  four  college 
yecurs. 

But ....  All  things  must  end!  So 
do  you  hear. 

You  start  college  one  day,  and 
before  you  know  it,  gradua- 
tion is  here! 

Barbara  Stavis 
Newcomb 


J.  M.  Lockwood 
Evanston,  111. 
Lila  Loewenthal 
Shaker  Heights,  Ohio 
C.G.W.Loker 
Matalee  Lyle 
Call,  Colombia 


Scott  McCaul 
Dallas,  Texas 


M.  McConnahy 
Satellite  Beach,  Fla 


Ronald  McGowan 
Mobile,  Alabama 
K.McKean 
Plantation,  Fla. 


W.  G.  McMullen 
Bartow,  Fla. 


Richard  McShan 
Patterson,  La. 


S.  Magee 

New  Orleans,  La. 


Lawrence  Mann 
Rockaway,  N.  Y. 
Leon  Margules 
Springfield,  N.  J. 
Corinne  Masur 
Washington,  D.  C. 
Lee  Matotan 
Albuquerque,  N.  M. 
Paul  Medellin 
San  Antonio,  Texas 


312 


M.  Meneghini 
New  Orleans,  La. 
J.  O.  Mennen 
Tujunga.  Cal. 
Tim  Mescon 
Atlanta,  Ga. 
James  Miller 
Houston,  Texas 


J.  C.  Miller 
Santa  Ana,  Cal. 


"All  of  us  who  are  worth 

anything. 

Spend  our  manhood  in 

unlearning 

The  follies,  or  expiating 

the  mistakes 

Of  our  youth." 

—  Shelley 

This  is  posted  over  my  desk. 
I  make  myself  look  at  it  just  about 
every  day. 

John  B.  Keeneui 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Patricia  Miller 
Jefferson,  La. 
Tfiomas  Miller 
Houston,  Texas 


E.  A.  Moises 
New  Orleans,  La. 


'^^'^►©^'•'t 


2()     m     "2^     '23     ^ 


*li%®^ 


William  L  Molony 
New  Orleans,  La. 


A.  A.  Moon 
Houston,  Texas 


Dennis  B.  Moore 
Piano,  Texas 
F.  E.  Morrissey 
Bennington,  Vt. 
J.  L  Moyer 
Dayton,  Ofiio 
M.  A.  Murphy 
Hurst,  Texas 
Nicfiolas  Musmeci 
Metairie,  La. 


313 


Nancy  E.  Nolan 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Francine  Oberferst 
Miami,  Fla. 
E.  G.  Ocampo 
Angeles  City,  Philip 
M.  D.  Oswald 
Randolph,  N.J. 


Jane  M.  Pace 
Houston,  Texas 


Mariam  Paganini 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Rosy  Palm 
Warrenton,  Va. 


Gwen  V.  Palmer 
Edina,  Ms. 


L  C.  Palmisano 
Metairic,  La. 
Paul  Parker 
Arabi,  La. 
William  C.  Pates 
Metairie,  La. 
Ellen  Patterson 
Atlanta,  Ga. 


O  O  O  O  that  Shakespeherian  Rag  - 

It's  so  elegant 

So  intelligent 

'What  shall  I  do  now?  What  shall  I  do?' 

-T.S.  Eliot,  The  Waste  Land 


314 


Timothy  Peglow 
Munster,  Ind. 
H.  P.  Perkinson 
Chevy  Chase,  Md. 
D.  M.  Peterson 
Dallas,  Texas 
Dennis  Phayer 
Chester,  N.  J. 


Wendell  Phillips 
San  Antonio,  Texas 


Carlos  Piad 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Caria  Pierce 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Douglas  Pooley 
Denver,  Colorado 


^i^  i 


Lindsay  Porter 
Caracas,  Venezuela 
Stephen  Pumilia 
Gretna,  La. 
Mary  Puissegur 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Steven  Quarls 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Jeffrey  Quinn 
Baton  Rouge,  La. 
Fcu-ahmand  Rafatjah 
New  Orleans,  La. 


I  came  to  Tulane  to  find  myself,  if  for  no  other  rea- 
son. I  thought  the  search  would  be  answered  in  books, 
so  for  four  years  I  crawled  through  millions  of  pages.  In 
the  process,  I  found  a  four-point  average  and  a  slew  of 
Dean's  lists.  I  even  found  a  magna  cum  laude  with 
honors.  So,  please  tell  me  why  I  feel  even  more  lost,  now. 


—Anonymous 


M.  L  Ragsdale 
Martinsville,  Va. 
D.  Rapaport 
Glencoc,  III. 
Linda  Raspolich 
Ft.  Lauderdale,  Fla. 
Janice  A.  Rauch 
Metairie,  La. 


M.T.Ray 
New  Orelans,  La. 
Tom  G.  Reich 
Birniingham,  Alabama 


J.  A.  Reikes 
Hattiesburg,  Ms. 
Luis  Remus 
Lake  Charles,  La. 


James  Richeson 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Miriam  Richter 
Merrillville,  Ind. 


Ellen  Robinson 
Wilmington,  Del. 
P.  L  Rockwell 
Fairhope,  Alabama 


W.  P.  Roeling 
New  Orleans,  La. 
L  A.  Rogers 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Tom  Rogers 
Gary  Roney 
Jericho,  N.  Y. 


316 


Reasons  that  I  came  to  Tulane:  Mardi  Gras,  a  big  city  like  New  Orleans, 
and  to  "get  away." 

Reasons  that  I'm  looking  forward  to  leaving  Tulane:  Mardi  Gras,  a 
big  city  like  New  Orleans,  and  to  "get  away." 

Paul  Stephenson 
Arts  and  Sciences 


M.  K.  Rose 
Wayne.  III. 
Harris  R.  Rosen 
Laverock.  Pa. 
Ava  S.  Rosenberg 
New  Orleans.  La. 
Caren  Rosner 
Scarsdale,  N.  Y. 


Marty  Ross 
Houston.  Texas 
Carolyn  E.  Rossi 
St.  Thomas.  Virg.  Isl. 


^^^V''"'^!     '^ 

»1 

Robert  Rothenberg 

^^f  -^9^ 

1 

Houston.  Texas 
Kyle  Rovira 

pi 

1 

Metairie,  La. 

\ 

Ullia  E.  Roy 
Marksville,  La. 

^      jj«L 

1 

Paul  L  Rubin 

Atlanta,  Ga. 

tS^^ 

JN 

1 1 

Susan  Ryder 

Wf  -"     'T?  1 

■ 

St.  Louis.  Mo. 

^  -s^ 

r 

M.  R. Sagus 

Osh  Kosh.  Wise. 

Scott  Salk 
Flossmoor.  III. 
James  Sammartino 
Elizabeth.  N.J. 
L  Sanders  III 
New  Orleans.  La. 
Sara  Sandrock 
Sarasota.  Fla. 


As  the  sun  sets  slowly  in  the  East  for  the  last  time,  I  realize  that  I 
should've  joined  the  Columbian  Nose  Computer  Society  after  all. 

Armistice  R.  Lunchmeat 
Arts  and  Sciences 


317 


After  years  of  observations  and  calculations. 
After  years  of  trial  and  error. 
After  hundreds  of  misspent  hours. 
The  Thought  has  occurred  to  me: 

Nobody  told  me  Electrical  Engineering  was  so  hard. 

Mike  Huete 
Engineering 


Adrian  Santos 
Yonkers,  N.  E. 
Julie  M.  Saul 
Tampa,  Fla. 
S.  L  Savage 
Morgan  City,  La. 
Peter  Scarpelli 
Winsted.  Ct. 
L  Schloss 

Jackson  Heights,  N.  Y. 
Anita  Schneider 
Great  Neck,  N.Y. 


Paul  Schneider 
Westwego,  La. 
David  Schoenberger 
Livingston,  N.J. 


Roger  Schultz 
Rutherford,  N.J. 
Mike  Schwartz 
Canajoharie,  N.  Y. 


R.  L  Scott 
Neptune  Beach.  Fla. 
Vonni  Serbin 
Edina,  Md. 


318 


R.  L  Shepard 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Jayeshkumar  Sheth 
Leicester,  Utah 


Kathryn  K.  Shirkey 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Lawrence  Shore 
Phoenix,  Ariz. 
Debbie  Simmons 
Sarasota.  Fla. 
John  Simmons 
Jacksonville,  Fla. 
Donaldson  Simons 
Comwells  Heights,  Pa. 
David  Singer 
Riverdale,N.Y. 


Looking  back  at  these  years  spent  at  Newcomb,  I  see  myself  going 
through  a  rather  typical  routine:  a  freshman  thinking  the  day  for  a  decision 
on  "what  to  do  after  college"  would  simply  never  arrive,  a  sophomore  still  en- 
joying herself,  a  junior  spending  an  enriching,  indescribable  year  abroad,  and 
a  senior  stepping  onto  the  threshold  of  those  days  thought  to  never  actually 
arrive.  I  now  see  the  value  of  a  good  education.  It  costs  but  it  pays.  This  marks 
an  end a  continuation a  beginning. 

Nancy  Meredith  Barnes 
Newcomb 


Michael  Smith 
Plantation,  Fla. 
R.  Smith 
Laurie  M.  Snow 
Miami,  Fla. 
Alan  M.  Spiwak 
Jacksonville,  Fla. 
David  Spizcr 
New  Orleans.  La. 
Michael  Springmann 
Metairie,  La. 


Edward  L  Stack  Jr. 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Philip  W.  Stagg 
Houston,  Texas 


Thomas  Stallings 
Westwego,  La. 
Gordon  Starling 
Morgan  City,  La. 


Barbara  Stavis 
New  Orleans,  La. 
F.  D.  Steele 
New  Orleans,  La. 


E.  Stefanakis 
Metairie,  La. 
Richard  Stein 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Paul  Stephenson 
Fayetteville,  Ark. 
Feral  Sterling 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Robin  Stem 
Miami  Beach,  Fla. 
Janet  M.  Strider 
Tokyo,  Japan 
P.  R.  Swartz 
Warminster,  Pa. 
Lauriston  Taylor 
Silsbee,  Tenn. 


319 


"Yesterday  is  already 
a  dream  and  Tomor- 
row is  only  a  vision. 
But  Today,  well  lived. 
Makes  every  Yester- 
day a  drecmi  of  Hap- 
piness, And  every 
Tomorrow  a  vision  of 
Hope " 

Tulane  has  provided  me  with 
dreams,  visions,  and  hope. 

Michael  K.  Springman 
Arts  and  Sciences 


Pete  Tenninc 
Arabi,  La. 
A.  H.  Thibodaux 
Metairie,  La. 
Robert  Thomas 
Woonsocket,  R.  I 
Ruth  Thomas 
Cincinnati,  Ohio 


George  Thompson  III 
New  Orleans,  La. 


Devin  Thornburg 
Scottsdale,  Ark. 


Randall  Torres 
New  Orleans,  La. 
J.  D.  Touby 
Miami,  Fla. 


David  L  Townsend 
Bayonne,  N.  J. 


Joseph  V.  Trahan 
Chalmette,  La. 


Nicholeis  Vaccaro 
Stamford,  Ct. 


K.S.VanBusklrk 
Shawnee  Mission,  Kan. 
P.  D.  Vanderheyden 
Huntsville,  Alabama 
J.  Varnau 
Metairie,  La. 
J.  Vassilakos 
Queens,  N.  Y. 
J.Vidaurrazga 
Negros  Dec.  Philip. 


320 


C.  Von  Rosenberg 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Guy  Earl  Wall 
New  Orleans,  La. 
J.J.Walsh 
New  Orleans,  La. 
Michael  Walsh 
Barrington,  111. 


Elizabeth  Ward 
Alexandria,  La. 


Dear  Ma, 

Sure  Tulane  is  a  camp.  I 
learned  about  the  birds  and  the 
bees  here.  (Or  is  it  the  bees  and 
the  birds?)  I  learned  how  to  pitch 
my  own  tent,  to  read  the  stars  and 
that  moss  grows  on  the  north 
side  of  professors  that  don't  rock 
and  roll.  I  learned  about  skinny 
dipping,  spying  on  the  girls' 
Ccimp,  and  how  to  read  text  books 
in  bed  after  lights-out.  I'm  having 
fun  here.  I  don't  want  to  go  home. 
I  think  I'll  come  to  Law  School 
here  and  become  a  counselor. 

Love  your  son, 
Botsworth 


Kenneth  Walters 
Metairie,  La. 
T.  V.  Webb 
Houston,  Texas 


Linda  Weber 
Jackson,  Ms. 


Debra  G.  Weiner 
New  Orleans,  La. 


C.  F.  Weintraub 
Albany.  Ga. 


Edward  Weiss 
St.  Louis,  Mo. 
A.  A.  Welch 
Charleston,  S.  C. 
Ann  Weller 
Roanoke.  Va. 
Mae  West 

Chattanooga,  Tenn. 
Joseph  Wharton 
El  Dorado,  Ar. 


321 


Mostcller  Wheeler 
Eugene,  Or. 
J.C.White 
McClean,  Va. 
D.  M.  Weider 
Shaker  Heights,  Ohio 


^y^^Btter  grades  start  here^^^^ 
^CliffiSiJfotes^ 


3» 

■  I 


Having  spent  four  yecirs  interacting  with 
people  of  different  walks  of  life,  I  am  certain  of 
one  fact  —  Tulane  is  a  peculiar  institution.  If 
Tulane  is  a  microcosm  of  the  "real  world"  then  I 
am  prepared  to  deal  with  the  world's  peculiarities. 

Lorenzo  York 
Arts  and  Sciences 


R.  H.  Wilde 
Senickly  Heights,  Pa. 
Billie  Willis 
Frederick,  Md. 


B.H.Wilson 
Metairie,  La. 
Gregory  Wilson 
St.  Pete  Beach,  Fla 


David  Winer 
Flushing,  N.  Y. 
J.  D.  Withers 
Houston,  Texas 


Mitchell  Wood 
Singapore 
W.M.Wood 
New  Orleans,  La. 


S.  G.  Yablon 
Augusta,  Ga. 
Stephanie  Yeonas 
Arlington,  Va. 


Lorenzo  York 
Prichard,  Alabama 
Paul  Yungst 
Circle  Union,  N.J. 


MM^\ 


//  .^ 


Ligia  C.  Zecca 

San  Jose,  Costa  Rica 


322 


"~1* 


"Reticence,  therefore,  hardly  having  a  place  in 
I  document  of  this  kind,  it  seems  as  good  a  time  as 
my  to  make  an  end." 

— Wcilker  Percy,  The  Moviegoer 
Rembert  Donelson 
Architecture 


323 


LAW  SCHOOL  -  1st  YEAR 


324 


Lorraine  L  Abela 
Henry  L  Adkins,  Jr. 
Edward  C.  Amrock 
Roy  C.  Anderson 
Jeffrey  M.  Aquilante 
Philip  N.  Asprodites 
Richard  D.  Austin 
Deborah  S.  Bahn 
Mary  Ann  Baker 
Jose  L  Banos 
Mary  L  Beck 
Virginia  B.  Bitzer 
James  F.  Booth 
Nancy  A.  Bomeman 
John  C.  Boudreaux 
William  H.  Boustead 
Robert  C.  Brack 
Robert  C.  Brandt 
Elizabeth  L  Brigman 
Marion  D.  Broussard 
Reginald  T.  Brown,  III 
Joseph  M.  Bruno 
Marilyn  H.  Burgess 
George  M.  Butler 
William  W.  Campbell 
James  R.  Carter 
Pamela  T.  Casey 
Camille  M.  Cherbonnier 
James  A.  Cobb,  Jr. 
Robert  Dale  Cohen 
William  H.  Collier,  Jr. 
James  M.  Colomb 
Anna  Kristina  Cook 
Rebecca  S.  Copeland 
John  H.  Craft 
Arta  K.  Creamer 
Steven  Jay  Cuda 
Mark  D.  Cullen 
Mark  J.  Davis 
Steven  C.  Davis 
Winifred  M.  Delery 
Marylouise  E.  Dione 
August  E.  Doskey 
Claudia  Sue  Dunn 
Angelee  DuPree 
Rosa  H.  Edwards 
Sanford  M.  Estroff 


David  M.  Falgoust 
Robert  Neal  Fielding 
David  R.  Fine 
Debra  Jean  Fischman 
Nancy  J.  Fisher 
Brenda  Fluker 
Marian  Flynn 
David  B.  Foltz,  Jr. 
Valerie  P.  Ford 
Richard  A.  Eraser,  111 
Stuart  A.  Fredman 
Gregory  J.  Gapsis 
Henry  P.  Gamer,  Jr. 
Evangeline  J.  Greek 
Elizabeth  A.  Griffin 
Donald  G.  Gross 
John  H.  Guinan 
llene  J.  Hamburger 
Claudia  J.  Harris 
Norman  H.  Haydel 
Donald  C.  Heckman 
Frederick  R.  Heebe 
Christopher  A.  Helms 
Aubrey  B.  Hirsch 
Peter  Cooper  Hitt,  Jr. 
Harry  R.  Holladay 
Shepton  F.  Hunter 
Paul  Ley  Hurd 
Michael  Jacobwitz 
Steven  A.  Jacobson 
Miriam  H.  Johnson 
Oliver  F.  Johnson 
Claude  E.Johnston 
Ann  S.  Jones 
Clare  F.  Jupiter 
Mark  H.  Kaplinsky 
Janet  R.  Kay 
Suzanne  P.  Keevers 
Maria  P.  Kelker 
John  F.  Kessenich 
Doublas  A.  Kewley 
Jerrold  S.  Klein 
Susan  M.  Knight 
Victoria  L  Knight 
Robert  J.  Koch,  Jr. 
Alan  E.  Krinzman 
Janice  R.  Lachance 


Stephen  L  Laiche 

Nan  Maira  Landry 

James  M.  Lapeyre,  Jr. 

Michael  H.  Laufer 

Lisa  D.  Leach 

Martin  J.  Leibowitz 

Alan  P.  Loeb 

Steven  M.  Lozes 

Thomas  E.  Magill 

Anthony  J.  Mavronicolas 

Betty  A.  Mcixey 

James  K.  McNary 

Bernard  W.  Messer 

Robert  B.  Mitchell 

Vivienne  Monachino 

Leland  D.  Montgomery 

Ronald  L  Mora 

James  D.  Morgan 

Jo  L  Morgan 

Carl  E.  Muckley 

Joseph  W.  Murphy 

AnnMurry 

Robert  B.  Neblett,  III 

Bruce  H.  Neuman 

Joe  B.  Norman 

William  J.  O'Brien,  III 

Glenn  P.  Orgeron 

Gregory  P.  Orvis 
Gregory  L  Peyla 
Louis  B.  Pick 
Alan  James  Pinner 
Robert  J.  Pisani 
Conrad  C.  Pitts 
Gary  B.  Pitts 
David  J.  Plavnicky 
Michael  A.  Pollack 
Douglas  Pooley 
Kathryn  F.  Prechter 
Susan  F.  Prospere 
Kenneth  C.  Raphael 
William  L  Rawson 
Daniel  G.  Rectanus 
Martha  D.  Rhea 
David  R.  Richardson 
William  F.  Ridlon 
Tandy  B.  Rinehart 
Edrena  J.  Ritchev 


Sandra  M.  Rudloff 
Roger  D.  Russe 
Barbara  S.  Sale 
Lavalle  B.  Salomon 
Keith  R.  Sanford 
Kathleen  A.  Santi 
Alan  F.  Schoenberger 
William  R.  Scruggs 
Marc  Gene  Shachat 
Edward  Z.  Shcifer 
William  G.  Shofstall,  Jr. 
Robin  M.  Shulman 
Scott  Eric  Silbert 
Barry  I.  Silverman 
Terron  D.  Sims 
Gerald  F.  Slattery,  Jr. 
Mark  J.  Spansel 
James  W.  Start 
Arthur  W.  Stout,  III 
Bemey  L  Strauss 
Stephen  R.  Sugrue 
Stephen  M.  Sullivan 
Lorraine  L  Summers 
John  W.  Tavormina 
Martha  C.  Taylor 
Seth  S.  Tieger 
Francis  McKie  Tilton 
Mary  J.  Tutelian 
Patricia  A.  Underdahl 
Sarah  S.  Vance 
Shelley  A.  Van  Geffen 
Richard  A.  Wagner 
Robert  Neal  Wagner 
Cambell  E.  Wallace 
Janice  E.  West 
James  M.  Westfall 
Gary  James  Williams 
Ronda  J.  Winnecour 
William  W.  Young  III 
Brian  D.  Zeringer 
Michael  R.  Zsembik 
Gary  M.  Zwain 
Note:  Those  not  pictured 
were  doing  research. 
Editor 


325 


LAW  SCHOOL  -  2nd  YEAR 


326 


-1^       > 


Jeffrey  T.  Agular 
Lawrence  J.  Aldrich 
Richard  E.  Anderson 
Jorge  I.  Ardura 
Neil  Ann  Armstrong 
Neal  Hertzcl  Atterman 
Joseph  Baggett 
Michael  Baham 
Helen  C.  Bailey 
William  Bailey 
Gordon  O.  Bartage 
David  V.  Batt 
Carmel  D.  Bauer 
Steve  Bauman 
Ropert  Baumgartner 
Franklin  D.  Beahm 
Rudolph  B.  Becker 
Terry  Allen  Bell 
Ann  Bennett 
Leo  A.  Bisson,  Jr. 
Kurt  S.  Blankenship 
Hollis  Q.  Boone,  Jr. 
Van  R.  Boyette 
David  H.  Bramson 
William  Branum 
William  T.  Bringle 
Louis  P.  Britt 
Constance  E.  Brooks 
Deborah  L  Brown 
Ellen  Brown 
Michael  Brown 
Thomas  Brown 
Mary  Sue  Campbell 
Benedict  Capelle 
Robert  A.  Caplan 
Thomas  Chester 
Pat  Christofferson 
James  F.  Clark 
Robert  C.  Clotworthy 
Philip  Cohenca 
John  W.  Colbert 
Jackson  M.  Cooley 
Charlotte  Comeil 
Thomas  Cowan 
Gail  Alice  Crowell 
Carole  F.  Cukell 
David  M.  Culpepper 
Scott  D.  Cunningham 
William  V.  Dalferes 
John  J.  Dalton 
Wolfgang  A.  Dase 
Cary  McLaurin  Davis 
Cary  Joseph  Deaton 
Joseph  F.  Defino 
Peter  Derbes 
Darryl  Derbigny 
Cynthia  Eckert 
Fernando  Estopinal 
Melinda  F.  Falgout 
Philip  Fant 
MatthewJ.  Farley,  III 
David  R.  Flowerree 
Donald  L  Foret 


John  L.  Forrest,  Jr. 
Robert  B.  Fougncr 
John  F.  Frederickson 
Judy  A.  Gainsburgh 
James  E.  Galagan 
Gary  Gerson 
Joseph  Giarrusso 
Robin  Giarrusso 
Joseph  Giglio,  Jr. 
Lawrence  Gill 
Gilbert  Godfrey 
David  Gotschall 
Kendall  Green 
Richard  Griffin 
Patricia  Hakes 
George  B.  Hall  Jr. 
Geraldyne  P.  Hall 
Dennis  Hauge 
Marie  Healey 
John  C.  Herbert 
Jonathan  Hergert 
Steven  Herron 
Peter  L  Hilbert  Jr. 
Kerry  Clare  Hogan 
Wendell  H.  Holmes 
Frederocla  Homberg 
Ralph  S.  Hubbard,  III 
Morris  H.  Hyman 
Carmine  A.  lannaccone 
David  Johnson 
Donald  Johnson 
Steven  Jones 
Stephen  Juge 
Laura  Junge 
Bruce  Kahn 
Kristine  Kendrick 
John  C.  Kilpatrick 
Benjamin  C.  King  Jr. 
Christopher  Kosciuk 
Albert  Koury 
Stuart  Kramer 
Charles  Krueger 
Stephen  Kupperman 
Gregory  Laborde 
James  Lance 
Jude  Landrum 
Christopher  Latsios 
Jeffrey  Lazarow 
Lawrence  Lehmann 
Joseph  Lemelle 
Earl  T.  Lindsay,  Jr. 
David  C.  Locb 
John  Long 
Katherine  Lozes 
Maida  Magee 
Miles  Mark 
Howard  Marks 
Jonathan  McCall 
Robert  McClay 
David  McCroskey 
James  L.  McCulloch 
Stanley  McDermott 
Marian  McPhaul 


Karen  Meador 
Jack  Mensching 
Joseph  Mole 
Edgar  Moore,  III 
John  Neuhoff 
Russell  J.  Nunez,  Jr. 
Linda  S.  Pack 
Gordon  S.  Patton 
Harvey  Paulsen 
Carol  Doskey 
Stewart  Peck 
Gary  Pendergast 
Alberto  Perez 
Phyllis  Pollack 
Tyler  Posey 
Warren  Puneky,  Jr. 
Jack  A.  Quarles 
Taweep  Qunfoong 
Rudolph  Ramelli 
Margaret  A.  Restucher 
Claude  Favrot  Reynaud,  Jr. 
Arnold  Richer 
Paul  Richert 
Kevin  Robshaw 
Edward  A.  Rodrigue,  Jr. 
Robert  S.  Rooth 
Joseph  S.  Rosenbaum 
Candyce  M.  Scherer 
Regina  M.  Schmidt 
John  L  Shapiro 
Jane  E.  Shatten 
Karen  Sher 
Harry  Sherman 
Uoyd  Shields 
Carl  D.  Silverman 
David  R.  Simmons 
Daniel  A.  Smith 
Gary  W.  Smith 
Katie  B.  Smith 
William  D.  Stiehl 
Hugh  Taylor 
Carol  Ann  Telford 
Charles  F.  Thensted 
Gregory  C.  Thomas 
Gordon  K.  Travers 
Evan  F.  Trestman 
Douglas  V.  Uhles 
Glynn  F.  Voisin 
Roger  A.  Wagman 
Bumice  G.  Weeks 
Bruce  Weinstock 
Richard  Weiss 
Frederick  Wild,  III 
Constance  Willems 
Scott  Williamson 
Mark  Winer 
Sherry  Wise 
Steven  Wolkin 
Nagatomo  Yamaoka 
Marc  Yellin 
Min  Zo  Yoon 
Deborah  Ziegler 


327 


LAW  SCHOOL  -  3rd  YEAR 


328 


Carolyn  L  Aiken 
Robert  D.  Albergotti 
Stephen  C.  Aldrich 
Lynn  Allain 
Michael  Allweiss 
Yvette  Amedee 
Jeffrey  Aminoff 
Edward  J.  Armbruster 
James  A.  Babst 
Michael  C.  Bagge 
David  S.  Bahn 
George  Ballun 
Dawn  M.  Barrios 
Stephen  E.  Bauer 
Fred  J.  Berger 
Margaret  Bezou 
Daniel  Blackman 
Gwendolyn  Bole 
Richard  Bordell 
Gerald  Bos 
Donal  Botkin 
Julius  Boyar 
Charles  W.  Bradley 
James  F.  Branch 
Margaret  Anne  Brannon 
Andrew  L  Breffeilh 
Seth  H.  Briliant 
Douglas  W.  Buchanan 
Linda  A.  Burke 
Donald  R.  Burkhalter 
Eric  N.  Busurelo 
George  Cain 
James  Cain,  Jr. 
Charles  Caine 
Janet  Capron 
Michael  Cavagrotti 
Jean  H.  Charles 
Siracha  Charoenpanij 
William  Z.  Christoff 
PhylisC.Coci 


Stephen  K.  Conroy 
Donald  A.  Cox  Jr. 
Richard  A.  Cozad 
Archie  B.  Creech 
Robert  J.  Cudone 
Charles  T.  Curtis,  Jr. 
Linda  Dantzler 
Timothy  Desmond 
Glenn  Dismukes,  Jr. 
Brian  Dolan 
John  Dotterrer 
William  J.  Dutel 
Thomas  R.  Edwards 
Benjamin  S.  Eichholz 
Paul  Ellis 
Norman  Ershler 
Charles  Escher 
Kathleen  Faccini 
David  Fassnacht 
Bernard  Fensterwakd  III 
Louise  Ferrand 
Michael  Florie 
Stephen  A.  Flynn 
Robert  E.  Fontenelle,  Jr. 
Kurt  W.  Franz 
David  G.  Galkin 
Harry  P.  Gamble 
Anthony  Gargano 
Charles  Gilfeather 
Nancy  Gilliland 
Barry  Glenn 
Robert  Goodwin 
Charles  Grady 
John  Grant 
Geoffrey  Gross 
Linda  Grove 
Douglas  Grundmeyer 
James  Gulotta 
Mary  Halpiir 
Fort  T.  Hardy 


Robert  Marling 
Ruth  Harper 
Eric  Harrington 
Robert  D.  Hendrickson 
Ann  Higgins 
Morris  G.  Hill 
Robert  C.  Hinckley 
Mitchell  Hoffman 
Shetyl  Hopkins 
James  Hourin 
William  C.  Hudson,  III 
Daniel  C.  Hughes 
Charles  H.  Johnson 
Stephen  S.  Johnson  IV 
Eric  R.  Jones 
Timothy  A.  Jones 
Owen  W.  Joyner 
Frank  O.  Kendrick 
Jay  Kern 

Randall  Kleinman 
Efrem  Krisher 
Kenneth  Krobert 
John  M.  Landis 
Sylvia  Landry 
James  Larre 
Rose  M.  LeBreton 
Walter  J.  Leger,  Jr. 
Richard  H.  Levenstein 
Denise  D.  Lindsey 
Edgar  J.Litchfield 
Eugene  B.  Livaudais  III 
Lillian  S.  Loewenbaum 
Joseph  W.  Looney 
Carol  A.  Lundquist 
Charles  L  Mackie 
Allan  A.  Maki,  Jr. 
Linda  L  Maki 
Karl  E.  Mailing 
Anthony  L  Marinaro 
Bernard  T.  Martin 


John  P.  Massicot 
Dave  A.  Matison 
Robert  H.  Matthews 
Nancy  P.  McCarthy 
Jo  E.  McMillen 
Michael  J.  McNulty  III 
Richard  K.  Mersman 
Michael  J.  Mestayer 
John  R.  Miller 
Stephen  R.  Morgan 
Rudick  J.  Murphy  II 
John  J.  Myers 
John  M.  Nelson 
Douglas  L  Nicholson 
Alan  L  Offner 
Marvin  Opotowsky 
Felix  C.  Orsini 
David  R.  Paddison 
Brett  R.  Patton 
Robert  B.  Phelps 
Eari  G.  Pitre 
Emily  J.  Poriss 
Mary  C.  Porter 
Robert  J.  Pratte 
Evelyn  F.  Pugh 
Robert  R.  Rainhold,  Jr. 
Bethany  A.  Ralph 
Linda  K.  Raspolich 
Tipchanok  Ratanosoth 
Joe  T.  Ray 
John  M.  Robin 
Courtney  R.  Robinson 
Kenneth  W.  Rogers 
John  A.  Rouchell 
Leon  Sanders  III 
John  J.  Sandlin 
Mark  R.  Schlomer 
Raymond  F.  Schneider 
Richard  M.  Scholnick 
Paul  A.  Schouw 


Warren  M.  Schultz,  Jr. 
Leopold  Z.  Sher 
Patricia  L  Sherman 
William  A.  Sherwood 
Kerry  E.  Shields 
Michael  B.  Shteamer 
Larry  A.  Siegel 
Frank  A.  Silvestri 
James  M.  Slattery 
David  M.  Sloan 
Scott  Slonim 
Lafe  E.  Solomon 
Mitchel  Sommer 
Paul  A.  Sprowls 
George  L  Stevens,  Jr. 
Jefferson  D.  Stewart 
John  H.  Stibbs,  Jr. 
Richard  B.  Stricks 
Mark  A.  Sucher 
Clay  J.  Summers 
GailH.Telleysh 
Ruth  J.  Thomas 
James  D.  Thrasher,  Jr. 
James  A.  Tramonte 
Carey  R.  Vamado 
Irving  J.  Warshauer 
Gordon  Webb 
Kandy  G.Webb 
Michael  Weinstock 
Theon  A.  Wilson 
Cheryl  E.  Wingo 
Barry  F.  Wisor 
Siu  L  Wong 
Paul  L  Zimmerman 
Humberto  I.  Carrion 
Leslie  M.  Crall 
Mahmud  Ali  Elburawi 
Maria  Jimenez-Cordinach 
Sathit  Limpongpan 
Thomas  J.  Malik 


329 


BUSINESS  SCHOOL  1st  YEAR 


Neal  Kenneth  Adler 
Barbara  Gail  Albers 
Raul  Aleman 
Lisa  Masko  Amoss 
Raymond  C.  Attanasio 
Mark  Emmert  Baldwin 
Robert  Max  Bittenbender 
Adair  Bcokout 
Marti  A.  Breen 
Donald  Sims  Brownlee 
David  Cademartori 
David  Forbes  Cammerzell 
Fidel  N.  Carcizo-Nunez 
Javier  Castillo 
Winslow  J.  Chadwick 
Stuart  Gaither  Clark  IV 
Terry  L  Clark 
Victoria  Ann  Clyde 
George  Crain 
C.  Curkin 
Marcia  F.  Curtis 
Drew  Stephen  Debrey 
Charles  Bell  Dewees  III 
Diana  Dippel 
Michael  Edward  Driscoll 
Norman  Lee  Duncan 
Donal  Smith  Durham 
Andrew  Martin  Edwards  III 


Jorge  M.  Escalante 
Charles  J.  Fcchtal 
William  K.  Flowers 
Edward  John  Frost 
Richard  Lee  Gilmour 
Zane  A.  Goff 
Mario  Gonzalez 
Arnold  Goodman 
Janet  Farrar  Greenwell 
Mark  A.  Hanudel 
Warachat  Herabat 
John  B.  C.  Hill 

Kenneth  N.  Hollander 

Charles  M.Johnson  III 

Diane  R.  Jones 

Kevin  Herbert  Kane 

Andrea  W.  Kislan 

Adolph  Joseph  Klein,  Jr. 

Anne  Cameron  Kock 

Nina  C.  Koltun 

Andrew  Charles  Korontjis 

John  F.  Leblanc 

Gladys  Fenner  G.  Lebreton 

Elizabeth  Lcnnep 

Randy  William  Lewis 

George  Robbins  Lipscomb 

John  N.  Uttle 

Joseph  K.  Lota 


Michael  Peter  Lundquist 
Frank  P.  Lunn  III 
John  W.  Marcus 
Maura  C.  Marshall 
Jack  Hairston  McCollum,  Jr. 
David  John  McNeil 
Manuel  Menchaca 
Richard  Alan  Mink 
Andrew  Modrall 
Nathalie  Jane  Mongeau 
Rodolfo  Montemayor 
Deborah  S.  Morse 
Cameron  John  Morton 
Sherman  John  Muller 
Finina  Gueca  Ocampo 
Jacobo  Ozover 
Nancy  Glaser  Fadhi 
Melvin  P.  Paret 
Edgard  Jose  Poveda 
Alvin  Theodore  Prechter 
Brenda  Leigh  Price 
Michelle  C.  Pusey 
Vijay  Rangraj 
Corbett  Bruce  Ray 
Douglas  Franklin  Rebert 
David  E.  Richards 
Philip  H.  Rogers 
Jean  Roysden 


John  Raymond  Runningen 
Thomas  C.  Satoro 
John  Garic  Schoen,  Jr. 
Terrv  R.  Schumann 
Thomas  F.  Schuster 
Mary  E.  Slatten 
Dudley  J.  Smith 
Warren  Randolph  Smith 
William  S.  Smith  III 
Jane  Beckwith  Sosnow 
James  Frederick  Spencer 
Robert  E.  Spierer 
John  William  Spotts 
Charles  Wesley  Stewart  II 
Charles  R.  Swanson 
Mark  Andrew  Thalheim 
Phyllis  Ann  Thomas 
Enrique  F.  Torres 
Robert  William  Uly 
Roland  T.  Von  Kumatowsky 
Lee  Waguespack 
Kenny  Werhan 
Paul  T.  Weyrauch 
Lucy  Clyde  Williams 
Michael  Wise 
Felipe  Battistini  Woll 


330 


BUSINESS  SCHOOL  2nd  YEAR 


Walter  Antin.  Jr. 
Gerard  Emile  Babst 
Ernest  M.  Back 
Thomas  T.  Bittenbender 
Frederic  Bonnefant 
Marion  F.  Borowiecki 
Donald  B.  Butkin 
Leroy  K.  Branch,  Jr. 
John  Michael  Burbidge 
Shannon  B.  Burchett 
Cris  N.  Capo 
William  Carpenter  111 
Stephen  G.  Danner 
David  J.  Desmarais  11 
Elizabeth  C.  Duplantier 
David  J.  Eddy 
Juan  C.  Fabrega 
Alan  Lee  Fensin 
Joseph  M.  Flumerfelt 
Gary  K.  Freedman 
Robert  J.  Freimark 


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Edwin  A.  Geoghegan 

Vladimir  Lanitis 

Thomas  J.  Rochefort 

Frank  A.  Glaviano 

Richard  Thompson 

Adrian  J.  Santos 

Jay  A.  Grable 

William  Macknight 

Ellen  Miller  Schwartz 

Robroy  J.  Graham 

Anil  Makhija 

Joseph  R.  Selman 

Robert  L  Greene 

Earl  Leslie  Manning,  Jr. 

Donald  E.  Simmons 

Paul  Lyman  Gregory 

Kenneth  L  Martinez 

Oscar  W.  Simmons 

Gerald  E.  Herrmann 

John  Paul  McGlynn 

David  Malcom  Sims 

Douglas  J.  Hertz 

Carlos  A.  Mejia 

Reginald  H.  Smith,  Jr. 

John  A.  Heyman 

Edward  B.  Milton,  Jr. 

Johnsen  Caroline  Steen 

Susan  E.  Hobbs 

James  Phillip  Merrell 

Farhad  Subjally 

Bruce  O.  Hunt 

John  L  Meyer 

George  B.  Sundey 

Richard  M.  Ireland,  Jr. 

Jeffrey  Alan  Miller 

Jack  D.  Swetland 

Gregory  G.  Johnson 

Francis  E.  Morrissey 

Chastian  Taurman  111 

Janet  H.Johnston 

Dale  J.  Newman 

Lawrence  A.  Tieman 

Scott  J.  Krenz 

Evita  G.  Ocampo 

David  M.  Tierney 

Pradeep  Kumar 

Lawrence  P.  Oertling 

Christopher  J.  Timken 

Melanie  Barbara  Kusin 

Pedro  Padiema-Bartning 

Arthur  W.  Tower  111 

Dianne  Lynn  LaBasse 

George  L  Plaeger  111 

Carlos  V.  Vargas 

Paul  George  Lacroix  111 

Robert  J.  Raich 

Douglas  M.  Wieder 

Harold  J.  Lagroue  111 

Mark  Joel  Rapaport 

Charles  Briant  Wolfe 

James  B.  Lane 

Jafar  Rasheed 

William  A.  Wood 

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331 


THE  MEDICAL  SCHOOL 


332 


THE  FRESHMAN 

CLASS 


Susan  E.  Abdalian 
Thomas  C.  Abshire 
Ricki  A.  Alpert 
Janet  B.  Arrowsmith 
Mary  C.  Bajo 
Daria  I.  Bakersmith 
Gwenesta  M.  Bamum 
Benjamin  Bashinski  III 
Steven  R.  Bates 
M.  Use  Bauden 
John  Mark  Bayliss 
Thomas  N.  Bernard  Jr. 
Sarah  A.  Birss 
David  M.  Black 
Peter  S.  Brown 
James  B.  Bumgamer 
Dcregal  F.  Burbank 
James  R.  Burnett 
Barry  Laura  Burwasser 
Kathryn  L  Bushart 
Stephen  A.  Carlson 
Dennis  N.  Carter 
Nancy  O'Neil  Carter 
Robert  P.  Cassingham 
Franklin  M.  Chu 
William  D.  Coco 
Barbara  L  Cohn 
Jason  H.  Collins,  Jr. 
Janis  D.  Cooley 
Gerard  Coulon 
Claude  C.  Craighead  III 
Harry  Manning  Curtis 
Larry  P.  Dana 
Carolyn  B.  Daul 
William  D.  Davis  III 
Marie  A.  Delcambre 
David  S.  Dinhofer 
Peter  B.  Dinhofer 
Martha  Walton  D'Spain 
John  L  Dupre 
Michael  J.  Dupuy 
Joseph  R.  Durham 
Bernard  H.  Eichold  II 
Nathan  R.  Elson 
Pierre  A.  Espenan,  Jr. 
Philip  R.  Farris 
Harry  H.  Ferran,  Jr. 
John  J.  Farrell 
Richard  J.  Field  III 


Raph  W.  Fitz 

Stanley  E.  Foutz 

Elaine  Francis 

Paul  N.  Fuller 

Robert  H.  Funke 

Susan  P.  Gordon 

Gregory  Grant 

Dale  C.  Grantham 

Dwight  A.  Green 

John  L  Guarisco 

Thomas  S.  Guillot,  Jr. 

Linda  Harris 

William  B.  Hart 

Thomas  E.  Hendrick 

Michael  A.  Henry 

Anne  M.  Hermida 

Jorge  D.  Hernandez 

Richard  D.  Hindes 

Mark  J.  Hontas 

Thomas  P.  Hughes 

Diane  M.  Irvine 

Adrian  J.  James 

Wallace  E.  Jeanfreau,  Jr. 

Kevin  T.  Kalikow 

Dickie  Kay 

Ray  F.  Keate 

Edward  C.  Keith,  Jr. 

Dana  G.  Ketchum 

Ronald  H.  Killen 

Peter  M.  Klara 

William  R.  Ladd 

James  V.  Langie,  Jr. 

Cindy  A.  Leissinger 

Walter  Lemann  III 

Clifford  D.  Lynman 

Thomas  C.  Madden 

Robert  Markenson  1 

Joseph  Marrazzo  III 

Fernando  J.  Martinez,  Jr. 

Robert  T.  McAfee 
Christopher  J.  McEwen 
Stephen  R.  Meyer 
Alexander  Michael  III 
Charles  W.  Miller,  Jr. 
Denbo  H.  Montgomery 
Charles  E.  Moss 
Nick  M.  Moustoukas 
Lynn  C.  Murphy 
Thomas  E.  Niesen 


Mims  G.  Ochsner,  Jr. 
Maureen  A.  Olivier 
Richard  Paddock 
Lorrin  W.  Pang 
Jesse  P.  Penico 
Michael  W.  Propper 
Louis  J.  Prevenza 
Brian  M.  Rees 
Paul  D.  Richards 
Deborah  K.  Richardson 
Julia  J.  Robinson 
Lamar  B.  Robinson 
David  B.  Rogers 
Bruce  K.  Rubin 
Charles  R.  Salisbury 
Walter  I.  Scott  III 
Stephen  A.  Shoop 
David  R.  Silvers 
C.  Christopher  Smith 
Charles  D.  Smith,  Jr. 
Gary  A.  Solomon 
Robert  A.  Steiner 
William  G.  Stevenson 
William  L  Striegel 
Daniel  G.  Stroud 
Scott  K.  Swanson 
Adele  R.  Sykes 
Charlie  J.  Talbert 
Judith  J.  Temple 
Clifton  R.  Tennison,  Jr. 
Stephen  W.  Tibbitts 
Bob  Meng-Wu  Tsou 
Joseph  E.  Tusa 
Paula  M.  Verrette 
Gregory  R.  Vorhoff 
William  O.  Walker,  Jr. 
Kevin  K.  Wall 
Richard  B.  Watson 
William  C.  Weiderman 
Gary  N.  Weiss 
Cherral  J.  Westerman 
Sandra  J.  Wicks 
Mark  E.  Wilchinsky 
Morgan  S.  Wilson 
Gary  M.  Wiltz 
Barbara  T.  Wizer 
Brandon  M.  Wool 
James  F.  Wright 
William  A.  Young 


333 


334 


THE  SOPHOMORE  ClASS 


Aldour  G.  Adrouny 
David  W.  Aiken,  Jr. 
James  H.  Allender 
Larry  B.  Amacker 
Douglas  M.  Anderson 
Michael  F.  Artman 
Steven  S.  Baker 
James  G.  Barbee  IV 
Jane  O.  Barnwell 
Thad  J.  Barringer,  Jr. 
William  F.  Beacham 
James  T.  Bennett 
Paul  M.  Benson 
Tomas  Birriel  Salcedo 
Stephen  J.  Bishop 
William  G.  Boliek 
Roger  A.  Bonomo 
William  H.  Bordelon 
Karen  R.  Borman 
Keith  Bradley 
John  E.  Brandon 
Tim  D.  Brewerton 
Robert  I.  Brock 
Kenneth  M.  Brooks 

Lisa  R.  Brothers 
Gerald  B.  Broussard 
James  R.  Bruce 
Thomas  C.  Buchanan 

Ellen  M.  Buchbinder 

Thomas  W.  Burke 

Vincent  Burke 

Clifford  B.  Bums 

James  C.  Butler 

William  A.  Byrd 

Benny  Allen  Camel 

Donald  P.  Cerise 

Emmett  B.  Chapital,  Jr. 

Lawrence  W.  Christy 

Michael  B.  Cohen 

Patrick  Connell,  Jr. 

William  Warnell  Craig,  Jr. 

Martha  H.  Crenshaw 

John  T.  Cumes 

Peter  C.  Czuleger 

James  R.  Daniel 

Geoffrey  W.  Daugherty 

L  Dana  DeWitt 

Janice  Butler  Donahue 

James  H.  Donnell 

Michael  E.  Dunham 


Elaine  M.  Ellis 
Leigh  S.  Ende 
Kenneth  E.  Engelhart 
Ronald  L  Fellman 
Thomas  C.  Fenzl 
Joe  R.  Ferguson  III 
Nathan  H.  Fischman 
Grahame  W.  Fitz 
John  E.  Flemming,  Jr. 
Norman  R.  Freeman 
Aubrey  C.  Galloway,  Jr. 
Gary  F.  Gansar 
William  T.  Garland,  Jr. 
John  P.  Gavin 
Paul  M.  Goldfarb,  Jr. 
Lolita  C.  Gonzalez 
Thomas  E.  Goodwin 
Charles  C.  Griffin 
Dennis  G.  Gruwell 

Lidonna  M.  Guillot 

Edward  M.  Hallowell 

Daniel  Halpren  Ruder 

Kenneth  C.  Hancock 

Vicky  S.  Hebert 

Arthur  A.  Hellman 

Stephen  A.  Helwick 

Gerald  B.  Hickson 

Alan  S.  Hieshima 

William  L  Hilbert 

Gary  S.  Hirsch 

Steven  R.  Horn 

Clifford  F.  Homback 

Kurt  E.  Jacobson 

Daniel  K.  Jens 

Mark  D.  Johnson 

Gary  P.  Jones 

Thomas  C.  Kelly 

Ronald  J.  Kerr 

JohnW.  King,  Jr. 

Lucie  M.  King 

Theodore  A.  Koerner,  Jr. 

Oliver  R.  Lambert,  Jr. 

Andre  C.  Lapeyre  III 

William  R.URosa,  Jr. 

Doris  E.  LeBlanc 

Robert  D.  Lesser 

Randall  K.  Ullich 

Gordon  L  Love 

Stephen  J.  Lupin 

Gregory  K.  Lux 


Paul  A.  Mahlberg 
Michael  J.  Maloney  III 
Richard  H.  Marshall 
Jon  D.  Mason 
Susan  J.  May 
Thomas  E.  McCall,  Jr. 
David  F.  McNeeley 
Kenneth  Melton 
Guy  B.  Mioton,  Jr. 
Betty  A.  Muller 
Ruston  Y.  Pierce 
L  Kathleen  Posey 
Valerie  A.  Purvin 
Gary  R.  Ripple 
James  A.  Robbins 
John  C.  Robichaux 
Neil  H.  Robinson 
Michael  Ruthrauff 
William  M.  Ryan 
Kenneth  A.  St.  Andre 
Henry  W.  Savery 
Robert  E.  Sayers 
Michael  S.  Schur 
Shirley  B.  Scott 
William  Sear  II 
Deborah  Shackleton 
David  J.  Simmons 
Jacqueline  A.  Slaughter 
D.  Scott  Smith 
James  D.  Strickland 
David  P.  Taylor 
Rufus  M.  Thomas.  Jr. 
David  M.Tibbs 
Warren  E.  Trask,  Jr. 
Steve  G.  Venturatoa 
Ronald  G.  Victor 
John  M.  Vitter 
EdwardJ.Waitt,Jr. 
Wilbur  G.Walker,  Jr. 
Richard  B.  Wallace 
Clark  A.  Ward 
Earl  Washington,  Jr. 
William  D.  Weiss 
Stephen  K.  Westly 
Johnny  B.  Wheelock 
Larry  A.  Wooden 
Paul  J.  Wotowic 
Romel  C.  Wrenn 
Donna  M.  Zivalich 


335 


I 


THE  JUNIOR  CLASS 


Jennifer  C.  Allen 
Robert  Charles  Allen 
Robert  Lynn  Ammarell 
Genaro  Felix  Arriola 
Charles  Frederick  Bahn 
Susan  Baker 
F.  Michael  Barry 
Alfred  V.  Bartlett 
J.  Allen  Behling 
Andrew  Ernest  Benson 
Bruce  M.  Berger 
Marvin  Laurence  Bonham 
Theodore  Robert  Bonner 
Stephen  Anthony  Boudreaux 
Michael  James  Boulter 
William  Randolph  Bradford 
Chris  Catherine  Campbell 
Idah  Mary  Cannon 
Kimbroe  John  Carter 
Steven  Jay  Cavalier 
Nona  Patricia  Chiampi 
Thomas  Joseph  Cornell 
Evita  Maria  Currie 
Richard  Seelig  Davis 
Adejunti  Dawodu 
John  R.  M.  Day 
Frank  Theodore  Dienst 
John  Eljon  Dietrich 
Thomas  Paul  DIugos 
George  Saba  Ellis,  Jr. 
George  D.  England 
Steven  Joseph  Eskind 
George  Leonard  Ettel 
Blackwell  Bugg  Evans,  Jr. 
Richard  H.  Feuille,  Jr. 
Dennis  Eugene  Franklin 
Marc  Anthony  Fritz 


Christopher  Robert  Gilbert 
Mateo  Go,  Jr. 
Marilyn  Rose  Goepfert 
David  I^e  Golden 
Annie  Dawn  Maria  Graham 
Lloyd  Joseph  Gueringer,  Jr. 
Manning  Harold  Hanline,  Jr. 
Charles  Stakely  Hachette 
Roger  K.  Hatchette 
R.  Frederick  Hebeler,  Jr. 
David  Reese  Hicks 
Steven  Irish  Hightower 
Julian  Bryant  Hill 
Richard  William  Houk 
Julianne  Patricia  Huber 
Robert  G.  Hutcheon 
John  Wesley  Hyslop 
Douglas  William  Johnson 
Kenneth  Allan  Jones 
Wayne  Edmond  Julian 
Larry  Robert  Kaiser 
George  Stephen  Kantor 
Richard  Fred  Kay 
N.  Kevin  Krane 
Michael  Lam 

John  Joseph  L2iMartina,  Jr. 
Samuel  J.  Lassoff 
Kenneth  Hillard  Lazarus 
Pamela  Cummins  Levenstein 
Marc  Mailer 
Joseph  Thomas  Mason 
Charles  C.  Matthews 
Michael  Henry  Mayer 
Joseph  Francis  Mayo,  Jr. 
Carl  Zalokoski  McAllister 
Alan  Boyer  McDaniel 
Michael  Thomas  McDermott 


Christopher  Bouton  McDougal,  Jr. 

Kathleen  McGrady 

John  Joseph  Meyers 

Karen  Joyce  Miller 

Orderia  F.  Mitchell 

Christy  Anthony  Montegut 

J.  Glenn  Morris 

Michael  Wayne  Morse 

Michael  Harry  Moses 

Alan  Richard  Murphy 

Melvin  Murrill 

Kenneth  Gordon  Nix,  Jr. 

Charles  Loren  O'Brien  III 

John  Joseph  Olivier 

Pamela  O'Neal 

Roger  Martine  Orth 

Barbara  Woodruff  Palmisano 

Edward  Lansing  Parry 

Peter  A.  Patriarca 

Arnold  Ray  Penix 

James  Louis  Perrien 

Nicholas  F.  Picariello 

Michael  Kenneth  Pinnolis 

Jonathan  Brent  Prather 

Gary  Charles  Prechter 

Ralph  Merrill  Prows 

Charles  Lawrence  Pucevich 

Susan  Elaine  Puis 

Dallin  Teresa  Randolph 

Marilyn  Claire  Ray 

Kathleen  Marie  Reardon 

Larry  Leigh  Redden 

William  Henry  Reinbold,  Jr. 

John  Martin  Reinsch 

Atwood  L  Rice  III 

Richard  William  Richoux 

Ceuy  Nobles  Robertson 


Joseph  Edward  Ronaghan 
Michael  Joseph  Rooney 
James  Arthur  Salisbury 
John  Clark  Sams 
Mark  Isaac  Sanders 
Lawrence  Paul  Sarafyan 
Celia  Satterwhite 
David  Anthony  Schenk 
Judd  Albert  Shafer 
Donald  Joseph  Sharp 
George  Willard  Sledge,  Jr. 
Peter  Lewis  Sosnow 
John  E.  Stephenson 
Charles  Ray  Stewart 
Loretta  Sullivan 
Thomas  Joseph  Sultenfuss 
W.  Lee  Terrell 
Samuel  Joseph  Tilden 
A.  Roger  Tsai 
Maria  Elena  Valiente 
Herbert  Wood  Van  Horn  III 
Peter  Van  Trigt  III 
Michael  Felix  Wasserman 
H.  Elizabeth  H.  Watt 
L  Rebecca  Weber 
Thomas  Evans  Weed 
William  Lesley  Wells 
Loyd  George  Whitley,  Jr. 
Charles  Everette  Wilkins 
Alan  Cox  Woodward 
John  Alan  Wright 
Dean  Takao  Yamaguchi 
Charles  H.  Zeanah,  Jr. 
Anne  K.  Zimmering 
Wayne  Cruz  Zwick 


336 


337 


THE  SENIOR  CLASS 


338 


Salpi  Adrouny 
John  Henry  Agnone 
Paul  Kenneth  Anderson 
William  Frederick  Ajiderson 
William  H.  Bailey 
George  Allen  Ball 
James  Robert  Barron 
David  Charles  Bauman 
David  Bell 

Charles  Markham  Berry  III 
Rcifael  William  Blanco 
Anthony  J.  Bouligny 
Robert  Bourgeois 
Sheila  Balot  Brown 
Thomas  Henry  Burguieres 
James  Frederick  Bushart 
Thrassos  Stephen  Calligas 
Daniel  Irwin  Caplan 
John  Nereus  Carter 
Tilden  Lafayette  Childs  III 
Stephen  McLarty  Cobb 
Bernard  Martin  Cohen 
James  Carl  Cook,  Jr. 
Kenneth  Herbert  Counselman 
Branch  Craige  III 
Charles  M.  Creasman 
Carter  Craig  Crouch 
Anna  Christine  Davis 
Daniel  Thomas  Davis 
Diane  Joan  Deveines 
Wesley  Thomas  Dobrian,  Jr. 
Jemies  Carlisle  Dodson 
Robert  Alan  Dorwart 
Gregory  Allen  Dwyer 
Neal  Nelson  Faux 
David  Meadow  Ferriss,  Jr. 
Richard  Wade  Finley 


Mark  Howard  Forman 
Thom  Arthur  Franklin 
Holley  Galland 
Leonard  E.  Gately  III 
Ted  Wayne  Gay 
Jacqueline  Almeda  Going 
Michael  Goldberg 
James  Ragan  Gosey,  Jr. 
William  Michael  Gottwald 
Pamela  Groben 
Richard  Paul  Guess 
Stephen  Owen  Harkness 
Friedrichs  Henry  Harris,  Jr. 
Michael  William  Harris 
Roderick  E.  Harris 
Walter  David  Harris 
David  B.  Hebert 
Glenn  Derald  Hedgpeth 
Philip  Harold  Henderson 
Adriaan  R.  J.  Kerklots  II 
James  Patrick  Herrington 
Michael  Wayne  Hewson 
Michael  Steven  Hickey 
Leslie  Ray  Hightower 
Minas  C.  Joannides  III 
Janet  B.Johnson 
Marc  P.  Kahgan 
Joseph  Hainsworth  Kandiko 
Roger  Everett  Kelley,  Jr. 
John  Edward  Kelly 
William  Trimble  Kepper 
Robert  Henry  Kitchen,  Jr. 
Jeffrey  Leon  Kupperman 
Barry  Joseph  Leader 
James  Edmond  Lemire 
Lillian  Lesser 
Thomas  E.  Levy 


Robert  Joseph  L'Hoste,  Jr. 
Stanton  Lee  Longenecker 
Laurence  H.  Lotz 
William  Herman  Luer 
Barbara  Lynne  Lukash 
Harry  Adams  Luscher 
Caroline  Lee  MacLeod 
Ricardo  A.  Manganaro 
Mary  Camilla  Martin 
Katherine  Ellen  McArthur 
James  Hollis  McCrory 
Robert  Reagan  McLeroy 
Karl  Walter  Metz 
Curtis  Richard  Miles 
Carolyn  Stevens  Mohr 
John  Lee  Moss 
George  Robert  Murphy,  Jr. 
Michael  Lee  Mycoskie 
Michael  Edward  Neuland 
Kenneth  William  Olander 
Glenn  Paul  Palmisano 
Gerlie  Lee  Papillion 
John  Hogeland  Pemberton 
Uwe  Pontius 
Ann  Lisabeth  Price 
Ronald  Ray  Quinton 
Bruce  Edmond  Razza 
Hollis  Theodore  Reed 
Marleta  Reynolds 
Robert  Alan  Rice 
Steven  Nicholas  Rice 
Samuel  Pettigrew  Robinson 
George  Rodgers 
Lee  Patrick  Rodgers 
Katherine  Adele  Royer 
Brian  Chester  Rydwin 
Edward  Harold  Sacr  III 


Cynthia  Mabe  Sandlin 
Frederick  Howard  Sands 
James  Henry  Scheu 
Donald  Alfred  Schexnayder 
Norman  Michael  Scott 
Cecile  Marie  Sherrod 
Flora  B.  Shoaf 
Dennis  Gerald  Shoff 
Willis  Madison  Simmons,  Jr. 
Candace  D.  Smith 
William  Dayton  Smith,  Jr. 
Gary  W.  Snell 
David  L  Spencer 
John  Clement  Stallworth 
Jeanne  Annette  Stangle 
Charles  Mallon  Stedman 
Albert  Louis  Steplock,  Jr. 
Richard  McBee  Stewart 
Richard  Martin  Sugar 
James  Andrew  Sumner 
Phil  Harry  Synar 
Lauralee  Ann  Thompson 
Ronald  Gary  Tompkins 
Lewis  Franklin  Townsend  III 
Robert  Reid  Townsend 
Robyn  Tyler 
Elaine  Uninsky 
Gerald  William  Vocke 
Rand  Marcel  Voorhies 
Michael  Wall 
Charles  Hunter  Watts 
Robert  Franklin  Welch 
Elizabeth  Deering  Westly 
Bruce  Ross  Wheeler 
Harold  Stanley  Williams 
William  Michael  Yarbrough 


339 


THE  GRADUATE  STUDENTS 


ENGINEERING 


CHEMICAL  ENGINEERING 

Ronald  S.  Artigue 
Stephen  D.  Cook 
Danny  W.  McCarthy 
Kenneth  McEIrath 
James  McKinion 
Kalyan  K.  Sarkan 
Clint  W.  Williford 
F.  H.  Skipper  Yokum 


ELECTRICAL  ENGINEERING 

David  Brown 
Ernesto  Cespedes 
Albert  Dobbins 
George  Drouout 
William  Freeman 
Javier  Gonzalez 
David  Huges 
Robert  Kilgore 
Enayatollah  Nikravesh 
Alberto  Parra 
Dominic  Tusa 


MECHANICAL  ENGINEERING 

Richard  Arias 
Arthur  A  Arseneaux 
Jay  F.  Bennett 
Joseph  C.  Bonner 
Timothy  P.  Brennan 
Robert  A.  Brossette 
Loring  F.  Bugbee 
Alan  Buitekant 
John  W.  Catledge 
Ronald  G.  Chauvin 
Randy  Dickmann 
Byron  J.  Eiermann 
Moustafa  El-Sayed 
Fraidoon  Faridnia 
Beshara  Harb 
Robert  L.  Heath 
Eluin  B.  Hyall 
Menardo  L  Jimenez 
Jean-Pierre  Martinez 
Patrick  McGhee 
Dennis  C.  Mclhtyre 
Stephen  Meade 
Alan  Nierenberg 
Warren  Page 
Lester  P.  Palliser 
Oscar  Pipkins 
Bruce  Printz 
Robert  Eldon  Ryan  III 
Etienne  Senac,  Jr. 
Felix  Thibault 
Kenneth  Watkins 
Iraj  Farhi 

Surendra  Ganeriwala 
Henry  Glindmeyer 
George  C.  Green 
Ronald  Hosey 
Eric  Houin 
Hsin-Sun  Lin 
Morteze  Mehrabadi 
Charles  Waugaman 
Thomas  Yearwood 


340 


341 


nE«r\L.li~l 


ANATOMY 

Charles  Bahn 
M.  Blair  Clark 
G.  Michael  Clark 
Elizabeth  H.  Cottrell 
George  Dmytrenko 
Curtis  J.  Gravis 
Samuel  Kennedy 
David  S.  Knight 
William  H.  Bailey 
Craig  Knox 
Ira  Kupetz 
Carmen  Paleizzo 
James  Robertson 
Cheryl  Sawatzke 
Barry  Simon 
James  Van  Pelt 
Steve  Westly 
Dean  Yamaguchi 
Elizabeth  Cottrell 


BIOCHEMISTRY 

James  Cairo 
P.  Lea  Doerr 
Sandra  Guthans 
Peter  R.  KastI 
Edward  L  King 
Yrka  Laseter 
Clifford  P.  Murray 
Kenneth  Solarz 
Barton  L  Warren 
Robin  A.  Weinberg 
Steven  Yevich 


BIO  STATISTICS 

Ruby  Jackson 
Bonnie  Pohlmer 
Janet  Diem 


PARASITOLOGY 

David  Abraham 
Dwight  Bowman 
Frank  Cogswell 
Laura  Cunningham 
Mark  Eberhard 
Allison  Fischer 
Momo  Horace 
Roberto  Quintal 
Jeff  Smith 
Jon  Yates 


MICROBIOLOGY 


342 


James  C.  Holmes 
Donald  Giger 
Thomas  Davis 


\  i  \ 


PHARMACOLOGY 

Timothy  Bohan 
Stella  Cech 
Darrell  Davidson 
Michael  Goldberg 
Richard  Graeff 
Carl  Gruetter 
David  Jarrott 
Robin  Krieg 
Michael  Murphy 
Peter  Kim  Nelson 
John  Rothman 
William  Sewell 
LuAnn  White 
Darlene  Yao 

PHYSIOLOGY 

Carl  W.  Christianson 
Karen  Green 
Patricia  Kokoshis 
Samuel  Lassoff 
Gordon  Love 
Tomos  Sick 
Thomas  Stege 
Rickler  Whitfield 


SPEECH  PATHOLOGY  &  AUDIOLOGY 

John  Adams 
Pamela  Berton 
Frances  Billes 
Maureen  Croman 
Gayle  Denegre 
Kyle  C.  Dennis 
Stephanie  Ellis 
Claudia  Gyorek 
Linda  Jacobs 
Linda  Jacobs 
Madenna  Jett 
Jerri  Lick 
Janet  McLelian 
Jill  Meltzer 
Sarah  Richter 
Ann  Zorthian 


LIBERAL  ARTS 


ART  HISTORY: 
Chevin  Adams 
Nancy  E.  Benedict 
Harriet  P.  Bos 
Margaret  Campane 
Charlotte  Chamberlain 
Helen  Dorko 
Martha  Eickman 
Jean  Famsworth 
John  Ferguson 
Elizabeth  Fox 
Senan  Gallagher 
Gyuri  Hollosy 
Cynthia  Hudnall 
Guiliano  leronimo 
Frances  B.  Heldner 
Mary  Kahn 
Jean  Kanski 
Mark  Knierim 
Alan  H.  Lorber 
Anne  McArthur 
Louis  McFaul 
Melinda  McGough 
Janet  McGregor 
Maureen  McKenna 
Jane  Meneray 
Maty  Moore 
Leslie  Nottingham 
Maryvelma  OTSeil 
Lynne  Ossick 
Dale  I.  Perry 
Donna  Pierce 
Debbie  Ravich 
Gail  Reina 
William  Riley 
Jan  St.  Denis 
Sammie  Schenker 
Mardelle  Schwenke 
Jerry  Scott 
Margaret  Smith 
Michelle  Trivigno 
Gypsie  A.  Van  Antwerp 
Cynthia  Wayland 
Elizabeth  Wedemeyer 
Robert  D.  Whitehurst 
David  Wortman 

CLASSICAL  LWGUAGES: 
Knight  Showalter 
Alison  Thomas 

ENGUSH: 
Dominic  Amatore 
Randy  M.  Bates 
Lynda  Boren 
Stephen  Brennan 
Ccirolyn  Brown 
Gillian  Brown 
Barbara  Carpenter 
Philip  Castille 
Kenneth  Chandor 
Ahmed  Choudhury 
Laura  Claverie 
Marilyn  Cohen 
Lois  Conrad 
Melanie  Cummins 
Dane  Joseph 
Ellen  Day 
Richard  Dietrich 
Ann  Ebrecht 
Annabelle  Fersch 
Mary  Foster 
Claude  Gasper 
Elizabeth  Gibbens 
Lynn  O'Brasky  Goldberg 
Susan  Goldin 
John  Goyak 
William  Greenway 
Cathy  Harvey 
Marsha  Healy 
Frank  Jaster 
Mary  P.  Jones 


Louise  Kaltenbaugh 

Jack  Kent 

Susan  Koch 

James  Krefft 

Andre  P.  Lacoste 

Marjorie  Lancaster 

Jon  Latson 

Gary  Libby 

Keith  Luis 

Thomas  Lynch 

Sam  Mabry  III 

Jim  Marvel 

Capt.  Lawrence  Mazzeno 

Richard  McDowell 

Sue  Mclnemey 

David  Miller 

David  Moore 

Janice  Mosier 

David  O'Dell 

Susan  Podzamsky 

Janet  Polansky 

Steve  Pocre  • 

Mary  McKinnon  Price 

Cynthia  Ratcliffe 

Mrs.E.J.  Rathke 

Mrs.  Bryce  Reveley 

Patricia  Roger 

John  Rudolph 

Alice  Rusbar 

Margaret  Smith 

Katherine  Soniat 

Harriet  Spanierman 

Beri  Swain 

James  Swinnen 

David  Swords 

Retta  Taney 

Dan  Todd 

Betty  Tootle 

Eric  Trethewey 

Craig  Turner 

Barbara  Vasterling 

Sue  Walker 

William  Walker 

Benjamin  Weathersby 

Virginia  Weaver 

June  Wells 

Tom  Wiseman 

Tom  York 

Sura  P.  Rath 

Ann  Trahan 

FRENCH: 
Mary  Bell 
Dolliann  Hurtig 
Helen  Lancaster 
Claire  Picheloup 
Linda  Scott 
Alice  Tibbits 

ITALIAN: 
Giovana  Hedel 
Caroline  Richardson 

GERMAN: 
Andrew  Leblanc 
Ivette  Lloyd 

MUSIC: 
Ann  Baker 
David  Faust 
Debra  Hirsch 
Richard  Montalto 

SPANISH  &  PORTUGUESE: 

James  E.  Brown 

Frank  Crothers 

Elena  De  Jongh 

Margarita  Diaz 

Barbara  Encinas 

Sharon  Glatz 

David  Goldin 

Mauricio  Gonzalez 


5?  - 


t. 


'-%''^\ 


Maria  E.  Gutierrez 
Noemi  Leon 
Lydia  Melendreras 
Adna  Menendez 
Armando  Montes 
Claire  Paolini 
Flora  Pfeifer 
Katheline  Randall 
Ramiro  Rea 
Jorge  Reyes 
Mirta  Valdes 
Peggy  Watson 
AnnWhited 
Donna  Williams 
Altagracia  Leon 

PHILOSOPHY: 
Frank  Paul  Arcoleo,  Jr. 


--•      .     'i.' 


344 


Janine  Klabe 
Joseph  LeFevre 
Joel  W.  Udz 
John  G.  McCarron,  Jr. 
Thomas  A.  McKay 
Mary  Helen  Matlick 
David  Mazorol 
James  G.  Mazoue 
Jack  E.  Miller,  Jr. 
Arthur  Monday 
J.  Alan  Moore 
James  Donald  Moss 
Michael  E.  Peeples 
Martha  J.  Pelaez 
Rebecca  Quitt 
Juan  Rebolledo 
Daniel  James  Rollins 
Rosa  Maria  Rourich 


Judith  Lee  St.  Clair 
Robert  D.  Sullivan 
James  W.  Summers 
Father  Terry  J.  Tekippe 
Phillip  Arthur  Wallace 
Diane  C.  Watson 
Ms.  Diane  Zimmerman 

THEATRE  &  SPEECH: 
Madeleine  Adams 
Larry  Deckel 
Virgil  Ford 
Gayle  Goodwin 
Rosemary  John 
Steve  Larson 
Ken  Lowstetter 
Patrick  Maloney 
Michael  Sullivan 


,r^ 


S^: 


George  Edwin  Bagley 
Lamont  J.  Bassett 
Jcimes  R.  Beattie 
George  A.  Benner 
Robert  J.  Becker 
William  A.  Bishcoff 
George  Allen  Cox 
Joseph  Anthony  Donnelly 
John  D.  Eatman 
Barry  Joel  Ferst 
Steven  G.  Garrett 
David  P.  Gontar 
Edward  Arthur  Guldenzopf 
Don  T.  Gunnin 
Kathleen  Mary  Haney 
Malcolm  E.  Hess 
John  R.  Hofer 


345 


SCIENCE 


BIOLOGY: 

Susan  Allport 

Gantt  Boswell 

Anne  Bradbum 

Scott  Brown 

Joseph  Browne 

Samuel  Clifford 

John  V.  Conner 

Geoffrey  Davis 

Austin  Fitzjarrell 

Hayne  Forman 

Kathleen  Gilbert 

Howard  Grenier 

Francis  Gress 

Donald  Hart 

Robert  Heath 

David  Heins 

Richard  Helman 

Ira  Herman 

Arthur  Johnson 

Drew  Lambert 

David  Lesley 

Lynn  Loftin 

Randall  McMillan 

Rafael  Martinez 

Delia  Martinez 

William  A.  Myers 

George  Newport 

Jane  Panzer 

Pamela  Rayburn 

Peter  Rosenbaum 

Carmen  Rossy  Valderrama 

Lynne  Roy 

John  Schadd 

Janet  Smith 

Michael  Sobczak 

Patrick  Sorensen 

Robert  Specian 

Bruce  Thompson 

Steven  Tinling 

Edward  Weiss 

David  White 

Mary  Wilke 

Richard  Wyeth 

William  Murphy 

CHEMISTRY: 
Mary  Frances  Dove 
John  Ewen 
Joe  Froelich 
Vishwas  Ganu 
Jerry  Heuiison 
Fahfu  Ho 

Guang-Ti  Selina  Hu 
Jere  Hebert 


Martin  H.  Kay 
Christine  Kelly-Castle 
Achyut  Kukade 
Jim  Leming 
Philip  Linz 
Mike  Nutt 
Katherine  Talluto 
Peter  Ts'ao 
AlfinVaz 
Julia  Wang  Yu 

GEOLOGY: 
Taylor  Blood 
James  C.  Cooke 
David  Dockery 
Jerry  Dominey 
Dennette  Farwell 
Michael  Fogarty 
William  Furlong 
Eileen  Hollander 
Debby  Robertson 
Mark  Strider 
Jerry  Trigo 
Williams  Wiggins 
William  Wilbert 

MATHEMATICS: 
Celal  Alper 
Hendrick  Angad-Gaur 
William  Bany 
Frank  Beatrous 
Peter  Brown 
Wolft-am  Buttner 


Betty  Carriere 
Thomas  A.  Cornelius 
Janet  Diem 
Michale  Frame 
Simon  Frias 
Perry  Haaland 
Tucker  C.  Hathorn 
Bill  Jones 
Victor  Medina 
Ken  Messa 
Jaime  Nino 
Edward  W.Noel 
Dalton  Orr 
Kuong  Lin  Ou- Young 
Richard  Palmer 
Ann  Petrus 
Edward  Pick 
Tony  Przygocki 
Wayne  Powell 
Thomas  M.  Ropke 
Sherman  Shand 
Thomas  C.  Spangler,  Jr. 
Michael  J.  Spurr 
Fred  Watkins 

PHYSICS: 
John  Michael  Collier 
Patrick  Collahan 
Timir  Datta 
Marvin  Jones 
Michale  King 
Cha-Shih  Lee 
Mohammed  Zaii 


I 


SOCIAL  SCIENCE 


ANTHROPOLOGY: 
Ricardo  A.  Agurcia 
Beverly  E.  Bastian 
Richard  Beavers 
Nancy  E.  Bohan 
Margaret  C.  Brewer 
Kathleen  Carlin 
Helen  Sorayya  Can- 
Ann  Collins 
Richard  Crane 
Christine  Crane 
Joan  Davlin 
Barbara  Edmonson 
Marjorie  Esman 
Carol  Ann  Fiedler 
Eugenia  Georges 
Marco  Giardino 
David  W.  Harsha 
Marian  Hires 
Barbara  Holmes 
Edward  H.  S.  Huff 
Kenneth  R.  Jones 
Claude  Jacobs 
Homer  Edwin  Jackson 
David  B.  Kelley 
Barbara  Anne  Kidd 
Nancy  Klepper  Kilgore 
Laurence  Krute 
Robert  Lozano 
Randall  Lyie 
Rick  Marksbuty 
Kathi  Marksbury 
Suzanne  McCormick 
Rosemary  Mudd 
Michele  Nathan 
Gayle  Nett 
Maurice  Onwood 
David  Passikoff 
Patricia  Plunket 
Anatole  Pohorilenko 
Robert  Prudence 
Eugenia  Robinson 
Janice  L  Stockard 
Philip  Thompson 
Marcia  Thompson 
Maxine  Wachenheim 
Jim  Stratton 
Richard  Wade 
Charles  Webb 
Roger  Ward 
Randy  Wong 


ECONOMICS: 
Michael  Cox 
Rickey  C.  Kirkpatrick 
Bluford  Putnam 
Frank  Lopez 
Charles  Smithson 
Ronald  Ayers 
Richard  Dennis 
Ed  Baldwin 
Albert  Link 
Ralph  Scott 
Frank  Martin 
Wayne  Kelly 
Vince  Olson 
Sykes  Wilford 

HISTORY: 
Emannuel  J.  Abston 
Edward  A.  Allen 
William  F.Allen 
Wayne  F.  Anderson 
Daniel  L  Bailey 
Jcunes  T.  Bain 
Rudolph  Bauss 
Jerome  L  Bias 
James  W.  Bingham 
Lawrence  Black 
Hans  S.  Borov 
Jerrold  L  Brooks 
David  Keith  Brown 
Donald  C.  Brown 
Edgar  M.  Brown 
Donald  S.  Brownlee 
Frederick  A.  Bruton 
Richard  E.  Burt 
Joe  L  Caldwell 
Joseph  D.  Castle 
David  Bruce  Christian 
Charles  W.Conley 
Mortimer  C.  Covington 
William  C.  Crawford 
Mary  M.  Culver 
Light  Cummins 
Michael  E.  DeFrange 
Emil  R.  Diamond 
Prescott  N.  Dunbar 
Patrick  J.  Dunne 
Thomas  Fiehrer 
Frederick  T.  Fisher 
LeRoy  C.  Gaston 
Charles  V.  Genco 


Gloria  B.  Glass 
Patricia  A.  Green 
Bemice  F.  Guillaume 
Eugene  W.  Harrell 
Victoria  M.  Hennessey 
Ann  Sumner  Holmes 
Stanley  M.  Hordes 
Allen  McTavish  Johnson 
John  A.  Jones,  Jr. 
Ivy  L  Kaplan 
Sandra  Karp 
David  T.  Keams 
Virginia  A.  Kerth 
Robert  C.  Kneip 
Peter  J.  Lampros 
Paul  M.  LeBas 
Jay  T.  Lees 
David  R.  Lennox 
Lancelot  S.  Lewis 
Robert  Lippman 
Michael  Lodwick 
Mary  L  Loose 
Donald  E.  McNabb 
Ann  Malone 
Barbara  L  Martin 
Richard  C.  Mason 
John  Melzer 
Judith  A.  Mollere 
Kim  H.  Moyer 
John  E.  Neithammer 
Melissa  Payne 
Jack  Peebles 
John  Pitcher 
Linda  E.  Prucha 
Raphael  J.  Rabalais 
Richard  Rabbe 
Bruce  Boyd  Raebum 
Lawrence  Rohlfes 
Maren  Rudolph 
Jules  G.  Sabrier 
Thomas  M.  St.  John 
Judith  K.  Schafer 
Patricia  B.  Schmit 
Martha  C.  Searcy 
Mcuy  H.  Seavems 
Russell  L  Stockard 
Roger  H.  Sublett 
William  E.  Temple 
Dexter  A.  Thompson 
Lariy  J.  Thompson 
Patrick  Michael  Valentine 


Christina  Vella 
Jo  Anne  Weaver 
Stephen  A.  Webre 
John  M.  Wheeler 
Arthur  W.White 
Barbara  C.  Wingo 
Michael  S.  Wohl 
Ronald  C.  Young 
Russell  M.  Young 

lATIN  AMERICAN  STUDIES: 

Gary  Clark 

Alice  Conradi 

Gladys  Coppola 

Douglas  Crawford 

Margarette  Dupont 

Jon  Edwards 

Bctfbara  Frausto 

J.  Shelby  Hollingsworth 

Marina  Kaplan 

Martin  Lefstein 

Alfred  E.  Lemmon 

Otilio  Miranda 

Elise  Piazza 

Elizabeth  Rauld 

Linda  Skirvin 

Maty  Anne  Smith 

Lucia  Wolff 

Dennis  Young 

POUTICAL  SCIENCE: 
Abdi  M.  Sahba 
Robert  Earl  Bender 
Michael  Joseph  Boughton 
Mary  Anne  Bryant 
Felix  Anesc  Chinwuba 
Richard  J.  Collings 
Rex  V.  Darling 
Robert  Allan  DeVille 
Martha  Dolan 
WUIiam  LeRoy  Dowdy  III 
Rose  Drill 
Don  L  England 
Manfred  H.  Ernst 
Georgianne  Farley 
David  P.  Fridovich 
Margaret  E.  Gates 
Edward  D.  Grant  III 
Paul  Herrick 
William  N.  Hink 
Herman  Hooker  Cabrera 


Julie  Irwin 
William  J.  Johnson 
Joseph  E.  Kopsa 
James  A.  Meader 
Julieta  Alves  De  Melo 
Robert  L  Miller 
Zahra  Moazami 
Lawrence  W.  Moore 
Darrel  Napier 
Peter  Pardo  De  Zela 
John  A.  Pecoul,  Jr. 
Bernard  Gray  Pyle,  Jr. 
Paul  Redkovich  II 
Lawrence  M.  Romans 
George  Rubert 
Nini  Ryning 
Richard  Grant  Schuldt 
Karen  Mary  Urban 
Darlene  Walk 
Wilhelm  E.  S.  Wulf 

PSYCHOLOGY: 
Elliott  Albers 
John  Axelson 
Michael  Bamett 
Terry  Beavers 
Mark  Behar 
Bruce  Bleichfeld 
Sharon  Carlton 
Sudie  Carroll 
Karen  Elkind 
Alice  Farrell 
Craig  Feldbaum 
James  Fishback 
Christine  Franklin 
Sara  Garrison 
Ken  Goist 
Alice  Gordon 
William  Gordon 
Hannah  Gottlieb 
Stanley  Grantham 
Martha  Hahn 
Shirley  Hammond 
Craig  Harston 
Charles  Hennig 
Dan  Hopkins 
Randy  Hori 
James  Hyams 
Robin  Jemison 
Lany  Kachclries 
Mike  Kellev 


Ted  Konnerth 
Larry  Lampros 
David  Lane 
Jeanne  Legault 
Margaret  Long 
Rosalinde  Lyman 
James  McDaniel 
Peter  McDonald 
Beverly  McElrath 
Jeff  Mason 
John  Morrison 
Therese  Ouimet 
David  Page 
Robin  Paulsen 
Richard  Powell 
Tom  Prager 
Mark  Pratt 
Lucy  Reckseit 
Barry  Schwartz 
Marianne  Segal 
Kurt  Skarin 
William  Sonntag 
Lynn  Standridge 
Charles  Turkelson 
Dennis  Twiggs 
Larry  Walker 
James  Zadina 

SOCIOLOGY: 
Flora  A.  Blackstock 
Rose  Butler 
Noel  Cazenave 
Sandra  French 
Lillian  Kerth 
Tupper  Lampton 
Vema  Lee 
Paz  Marquez 
Carlos  Martinez 
James  Reynolds 
Maureen  Richoux 
Klaus  Schurz 
Don  Strickland 
George  Thompson 
Susan  Whittington 
Beth  Willinger 

URBAN  STUDIES: 
Gregory  P.  Ridenour 
William  B.Ziff 


349 


351 


"Honoraries?  Yeah  ...  always  nice  to  get  recognition.  I  once  won  the  certifi- 
cate of  Good  Citizens  , . .  the  you  are  now  a  member  of  the  society  of  good  citi- 
zens' kind  of  thing . . .  Really  flattering.  Some  people  seemed  to  spend  a  lot  of  their 
time  trying  to  get  that  'name-on-a-plaque'  recognition.  Well,  my  name  was  never 
put  on  a  plaque  but  afterall  —  awards  just  don't  seem  necessary  to  show  what  you 
know,  or  learned,  or  whatever.  I  don't  have  to  show  my  certificate  of  Good  Citi- 
zens to  be  a  good  citizen , . .  But  if  s  nice  to  be  honored  once  in  awhile  though." 

Joseph,  my  friend,  had  the  virtue  of  relating  anything  to  a  personal  experi- 


ence. 


353 


354 


I 


ALPHA  OMEGA  ALPHA 


Paul  Kenneth  Anderson 
William  Frederick  Anderson 
Charles  Markham  Berry  III 
Rafeel  William  Blanco 
Charles  M.  Creasman 
Branch  Craige  III 
Gregory  Allen  Dwyer 
Jacquelyn  Almeda  Going 
Pamela  Groben 
Friedrichs  Henry  Hcirris,  Jr. 
Philip  Harold  Henderson 
Minas  C.  Joannides,  III 
Jeffrey  Leon  Kupperman 
Michael  Thomas  McDermott 
J.  Glenn  Morris 


John  Hogeland  Pemberton 
Hollis  Theodore  Reed 
Scunuel  Pettigrew  Robinson 
Michael  Joseph  Rooney 
Cynthia  Mabe  Sandlin 
Frederick  Howard  Sands 
William  Dayton  Smith,  Jr. 
John  Clement  Stallworth 
John  E.  Stephenson 
James  Andrew  Sumner 
Ronald  Gary  Tompkins 
Peter  Van  Trigt,  III 
Rand  Marcel  Voorhies 
Dean  Takao  Yamaguchi 


ORDER  OF  THE  COIF 


Robert  Dew  Albergotti 

Lynn  McHugh  Allain 

James  Anthony  Babst 

Linda  Suzanne  Adams  Burke 

George  Emory  Cain,  Jr. 

Kathleen  Margaret  Faccini 

James  Charles  Gulotta,  Jr. 

Robert  David  Hendrickson 

Robert  Craig  Hinckley 

Mitchell  J.  Hoffman 

John  Michael  Landis 

Lillian  Shaw  Loewenbaum 

Michael  John  Mestayer 

John  Jay  Myers 

Richard  Mark  Scholnick 

Warren  Menning  Schultz,  Jr. 

Lafe  Elkas  Solomon 

Jefferson  Dugger  Stewart  II 

Paul  Lewis  Zimmering 

Judge  Fred  J.  Cassibiy 

David  A.  Combe 


357 


/• 


,.r— N. 


i- 


> 


fa 


eo 


Ifl 


a.' 


• 


f 


358 


BETA  GAMMA  SIGMA 


Walter  Antin,  Jr. 

Gerard  Emile  Babst 

Ernest  Martin  Back 

Marion  F.  Borowiecki 

Donal  Beelunan  Botkin 

Cris  Nichols  Capo 

Rob-Roy  James  Graham 

Susan  Elizabeth  Hobbs 

Jan  Patricia  Patterson  Jumonville 

Pradeep  Kumeur 

Dianne  Lynn  La  Basse 

Darwin  Charles  Fenner 

James  Benjeimin  Lane 

Anil  Kumar  Makhija 

John  W.  Moreland 

Kishore  N.  Nankcmi 

Lawrence  Peter  Oertling 

Robert  Joseph  Raich 

Oscar  Walton  Simmons  III 

L  Clay  Spencer  III 

George  Barton  Sundby 

David  Mark  Tiemey 

Larry  R,  Arnold 


359 


OMICRON  DELTA  KAPPA 

Richard  Benator  Douglas  Mayberry 

Edward  Burr  Lamar  Riley 

Barry  Cohen  Michael  Saag 

Kirk  Dameron  Stanford  Shoss 

Rembert  Donelson  Paul  Stephenson 

Kordice  Douglas  Myron  Tanenbaum 

Francis  Ferrante  John  Tavormina 

Daniel  Fishbein  Bruce  Thom«is 

Charles  Hettema  Ann  Troitino 

Steve  Katz  Jean  Veta 

Andrea  Kislan  Mark  Weisberg 

President  Sheldon  Hackney 

Professor  Joan  Bennett 

Professor  Sylvia  Frey 

Professor  Gerald  Snare 


360 


KAPPA  DELTA  PHI 


Janoies  L  Beskin 

Eric  R.  Harrington 

Jack  Hildebrand 

Albert  Letch  Kline 

Neil  Lichtmcin 

Mark  H.  Olivari 

Hugh  F.  Rankin 

Gordon  D.  Sokoloff 

Paul  W.  Stephenson 

Bruce  J.  Thomas  II 

Michael  P.  Walsh 


361 


PHI  BETA  KAPPA 


Charles  Hansford  Adams 
Herbert  John  Ashe,  Jr. 
Wilbur  Lochrie  Baird 
Alison  Stevens  Barbee 
Jaime  Jose  Barraza 
Gordon  Lane  Blundell,  Jr. 
Charlotte  Grandpre  Bordenave 
Claudia  Gail  Borman 
Sharon  Lynn  Buchalter 
Ronald  Ray  Buescher 
Edward  Lynn  Burr 
Barry  David  Cohen 
Jcimes  Charles  Cohen 
Robbie  Meripol  Colaluca 
Richard  Matthew  Cranford 
Karen  Jean  Curtin 
Daniel  William  Danik 
Linda  Lirette  Davis 
Christine  Lucile  Day 
Stuart  Walter  Dean 
Robert  Francis  DeFraites 
Edwin  William  Dennard 
Cynthia  Drew 
Larry  Edward  Dumont 
Elise  Marcia  Dunitz 
Francis  Michael  Ferrante 
Morris  Daniel  Fishbein 


Mark  Stephen  Fleming 
David  Kristian  Fussell 
Janice  Diane  Garfield 
Laurie  Susan  Garrett 
Carol  Ann  Graham 
Arthur  Russell  Gerber 
Alan  Jay  Gottlieb 
Michael  Alan  Habif 
Genevieve  Ann  Harris 
Summerlynne  Solop  Harrison 
Anne-Renee  Henningberg 
Kenneth  Lee  Herring 
Steven  Curtis  Horton 
Lin  Joseph  Hymel 
Lyndall  Leuer  Keller 
Frank  Gary  Kronberg 
Lucy  Madeleine  Leonowens 
Michael  Joseph  Leumas 
Lila  Jame  Loewenthal 
Robert  Mark  McLeod 
James  C.  Miller 
Edward  Roddy  Mogabgab 
Charles  Joseph  Nunez 
Francine  Oberfest 
Nancy  Joy  Pelaez-Uribe 
Arthur  Valentine  Perkins 
Mary  Lynn  Puissegur 


Michael  Thomas  Ray 
Victoria  Lynn  Reggie 
Randee  Wynne  Reichman 
Mary  Lamar  Riley 
Paul  Leslie  Rubin 
Wendy  Kinar  Sarafyan 
Jon  Von  Schellack 
Sandra  Elaine  Schwam 
Roger  Edward  Schultz 
Lawrence  Israel  Shore 
Mark  Jeffrey  Sindler 
Michael  R.  Smith 
Joseph  Thomas  Spalitta 
David  Bruce  Spizer 
Paul  Waine  Stephenson 
Randall  Gerard  Torres 
Jill  Diane  Touby 
Ann  Rader  Troitino 
Louise  Brownell  Van  Meter 
Elizabeth  Virginia  Ward 
Mark  Weisberg 
Ann  Carter  Weller 
Billy  Holder  Wilson 
Billie  Vincent  Willis 
Sheree  Gay  Yablon 
Stephanie  Patricia  Yeonas 
Mary  McGehee  Zutter 


363 


PHI  ETA  SIGMA 


David  J.  Alley 
Jcimes  E.  Alver 
Wilson  Andrews 
Charles  Arceneaux 
Jeffrey  Berman 
James  R.  Bolch 
Robert  Bonney 
Howard  E.  Borger 
Karen  Borgschulter 
Jeffirey  Breaux 
Mark  A.  Brunault 
Craig  T.  Burkert 
Timothy  G.  Bums 
James  S.  Butler 
Michael  Carifio 
Charles  C.  Carmichael 
Roberto  Casanova 
Alicia  Castilla 
Elizabeth  Cathrall 
Louis  M.  Ching 
Anne  Christopher 
Stephen  Coffing 
Bruce  Curran 
Richard  Deichmann,  Jr. 
Dierdre  DiGiglia 
Jonathan  E.  Donner 
Stephen  Einbender 
Marion  Enochs 
Colleen  B.  Farrell 
Judith  A.  Ferry 
Arthur  M.  Freedman 
Lauren  A.  Friedman 
Matthew  G.  Fry 
Fairfax  FuUerton 
Maiyann  Gaherin 


Linda  Galler 
Cynthia  L.  Goddard 
Paul  G.  Goerss 
Edward  Jay  Goldberg 
Cary  I.  Goldman 
Arnold  Goodman 
Steven  B.  Goodman 
Michale  Haas 
Joseph  B.  Hagmann 
Thomas  Hanson 
John  Hargett 
Mark  M.  Harris 
Bryan  J.  Hawkins 
Eileen  Healy 
Darrell  Hebert 
Louis  R.Hildreth 
Edward  A.  Hirs 
Karen  Hirschberg 
Daniel  Housey 
Jennifer  Jericho 
Christopher  Johnson 
Mark  Jurkovich 
Suzanne  Keddie 
David  B.  Keyes 
George  A.  Keyes 
Richard  Kohnke 
Andy  Lasseigne 
Austin  C.  Leslie 
DoUeen  Ucciardi 
Benson  T.  Massey 
JR.  Mayer,  Jr. 
Stcohen  McCollam 
Michael  McCullough 
Cornelia  McDonald 
Susan  L  McGrael 


Patricia  McVadon 
Carolyn  Miller 
William  Miranda 
Larry  L  Murray 
Mark  D.  Overman 
Robert  L  Palmer 
Mitchell  Pivor 
Rodney  A.  Poling 
Jeffirey  Posta 
Joseph  Powell  III 
Jarma  L  Ray 
Jos  H.  Raybuck 
Mary  C.  Reynolds 
Orlando  Ricalde 
Michael  Richarme 
Mark  D.  Ryan 
Ncuicy  Schepps 
John  Thomas  Scott 
Jon  Senkowsky 
Theodore  Shepard 
Barry  M.  Snyder 
Alan  Soskel 
Brian  K.  Spencer 
Christopher  Steidle 
Carey  Stiss 
Pamela  A.  Sweeney 
Gary  Toribio 
Byron  VonRosenberg 
Marysue  Vossen 
Leslie  A.  Wade 
Jcimes  Wallerstedt 
Howard  Warshaw 
Jill  Weinstein 
Steven  Wolfman 
Paula  K.  Woodson 


WHO'S  WHO  IN 
AMERICAN  COLLEGES 


Brent  Russotto  Allan 
David  Alan  Blau 
Timothy  Patrick  Bohan 
Edward  Lynn  Burr 
Scunuel  Rembert  Donelson 
Randolph  Jay  Falk 
Lawrence  Edward  Fleder 
Eric  R.  Harrington 
WaiiamP.Herklots 
Anne  Biouin  Higgins 
Grady  S.  Hurley 
Richard  M.  Ireland 
Jack  Russell  Itzkowitz 
Eric  Robert  Jones 
Albert  Letch  Kline 
Kenneth  Benj£unin  Krobert 
Alexander  Lafargue 
Alan  Bruce  Levin 


Gareth  CI  Leviton 
Neil  Phillip  Lichtman 
George  A.  Long 
Marc  McConahy 
Tim  Mescon 
Earl  G.  Pitre 
David  Singer 
Gordon  D.  Sokoloff 
Paul  Alan  Sprowis 
Paul  W.  Stephenson 
Bruce  Joseph  Thomas  II 
Robert  E.  Thomas 
Devin  G.  Thomburg 
Joseph  V.  Trahan 
Robert  Warren 
Robert  D.  Weber 
Kandy  Gregg  Webb 
Mark  B.  Weisberg 


TAU  BETA  PI 


Anthony  James  Ard 
George  Robert  Bartlett 
Gilbert  Joseph  Chatagnier  III 
Cecil  Curtis  Clements 
Kirk  David  Damcron 
Eduardo  Diaz 
Kerry  Matthew  Dooley 
Clement  C.  Eisworth,  Jr. 
Paul  Sebastian  Gary 
CcirlOs  Marcos  Gonzalez 
Michael  Patrick  Gordon 
Freidrich  W.L.  Gurtler 
Evans  McLellan  Hadden 
Dana  Allan  Hagen 
Kim  Lyle  Harvey 
Charles  Dean  Hettema 
Raymond  Keith  Hicks 


Rodney  Lynn  Huddleston 
William  Lawrence  Molony 
Nicholas  Michael  Musmeci 
Martin  Karl  Pepper 
Carlos  Alfredo  Piad  II 
James  Francis  Pinner,  Jr. 
Gary  Joseph  Piron 
Stephen  Michael  Pumilia 
Lawrence  Marshall  Riddles 
Richard  Anthony  Ripberger 
Jayeshkumar  Shashikant  Sheth 
Mark  Argyle  Stephens 
John  Charles  Telotte 
Juan  Jose  Vidaurrazga,  Jr. 
Conrad  Michael  Vigo 
John  WiUiam  Youngblood 
Thomas  Vaughn  Webb 


1 


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TAU  SIGMA  DELTA 


Maria  Carolina  Bargas 
Rodrigo  Antonio  Carrion 
Kenneth  Louis  Cvejanovich 
Gary  Allen  Dent 
Ivan  Horacio  Diaz 
Samuel  Rembcrt  Oonelson 
Patrick  Allen  Flory 
Robert  Adams  Ivy,  Jr. 
David  Murrie  Leake 
Clemens  Bruns  Schaub 
Paul  Raph  Swartz 
Richard  Carmichael  Wiggcrs 
Ronald  Haiward  Wilde 
Dorothy  Alice  Wright 


,  *  J 1^    '  r. 


370 


I*  .  •  »  .  I  j_k 


371 


GRADUATION 


Mm. 


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372 


373 


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374 


375 


376 


377 


378 


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379 


380 


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381 


PHOTOGRAPHY  CREDITS 

FRANCISCO  ALECHA:  84B,D;  85A;  87A;  86B,C,D. 
ARMISTICE:      13C;      35A      59A;      58C;      113B.C; 

158A;    169A    173A,B;    177C;    176B;    179B;    180A, 

182B;    183B;    184A;    189C,    192A;    198A;   207B,C; 

208B;  209B;  242A;  248A;  250A;  252A;  267B;  274B; 

276A;    277A;    289A;   292A;   293A;   294A,B;   298A, 

303B;   310B,C:   323A;   324A;    332A;    334A;   342A; 

344A;  347A  360A  377B. 
ANDY  BOYD:  11;  14;  15;  20;  21;  22A;  25C;  28C;  47A; 

52B;  52A;  56A;  57A,B;  60B;  67B;  66C;  71A,B;  70A; 

77B;  83A;  84A;  96B;  lOlB;  lOOA;  112A,B;  USA; 

121A;  125B;  127A;  130A;  131A,B;  136A,B;  142A; 

143A;  146A  147A;  148A;  150A;  151A,B;  154A;  155A; 

159A;   160A    161A;    163A;    171A.B;    174B;   176A; 

178A;  181A,B;  182A;  183A;  187A;  191A;  202B;  217A; 

216B;  224B;  234A;  235A;  236A;  260A;  263A;  264A; 

266A;  269A;  270A;  273A;  274A;  281A,B,C;  290A; 

300B;  301A  362B;  374-5;  377B,C;  378A,B:  379A,B. 
HOWARD  BROMLEY:  42A;  164A;  197A;  267A;  301B. 
DAVID  GRIMALDI:  12A;  210A;  287D;  325B. 
MARK  HARMAN;  44A;  50A 
STEVE  HORTON:  180B;  188A;  190B;  340A 
TOM  LEE;  lOlC. 

STACY  MORRIS:  37A;  127C;  206B. 
JOHN  READY;  202A;  203B;  255A;  319A;  330A;  331 A 
DUDLEY  SHARP:  1;  73A,B;  188B;  190A;  204C;  207A; 

208A;  214A,C;  229A;  237A;  238A;  243A;  287B;  293B; 

336A-  353A 
ROB  SHARPSTEIN:  13A;  12D;  58A,B;  61A;  60A;  69A, 

B;  72A,B;  76B;  80B;  84C;  88A  92B;  93A;  95A,B;  96C; 

97B;  99A  98BA  99B;  lOOB;  103B;  104B,C;  108C; 

113A:  121C;  125C;  153A;  172B;  177A;  179A;  178B;  187 

B,C;  189A;  191B;  192B;  201A;  240A;  247A  253A; 

254A;  259A;  262A;  267C;  272A;  275C;  279A;  284A; 

287A;  295A  309A;  328A;  346A;  356A;  362B;  367A; 

370A 


ROB  SHOSS:  lOB;  12C;  13B;  12B;  14B,C;  15A,B,D; 
22B;  34A,B;  37B,C;  39B,C;  41A;  40B;  63C;  65A 
64A,B:  66B;  67A  74C;  86A;  89A,B.C;  88B,C;  89D; 
90B;  91A;  32A;  103A;  107C;  106A,B;  IHB;  llOA 
120B;  121B;  122B;  124A;  125A;  127B;  126B;  129B, 
C;  139A  157A;  170A,B;  189B;  192C;  193A;  198B; 
199A.D;  205A;  204B;  212A,B;  214B;  217B;  216A 
219A;  223A;  224A,C;  225A;  230A,B;  233A;  236B; 
239B;  277B;  285A;  296A;  297A;  302  A;  306A  308A; 
311A:  315A;  320B;  329B;  337A,B;  338A;  339A;  341A 
343A;  346B;  348A;  355A;  357B;  372A;  373A;  376A, 
B  C 

MARK  SINDLER:  23A,B,C;  25A;  24BA  25B;  26;  27 
28A;  29A,B,C,D;  28D,B;  31A,B,C;  30A,B;  33A,B 
34C;  38A;  39A,  40A;  40C;  44B;  45A,B:  46A,B,C 
48A;  49A;  50B;  54B;  55A.B;  54A;  61B;  62A;  63A 
B;  64C;  66A;  68B;  70B;  72C;  74A,B;  78A;  79A,B 
80A,  81A;  82A;  83B;  82B;  91B;  92A;  94A;  96A;  97A; 
lOlA;  102A,B;  104A;  105A,B;  107B;  106C;  107A; 
108A,B;  109A,B;  IHA;  117A;  122A;  124B;  126A,C 
129A;  130B;  132A;  133B;  134A;  135A,B;  137A;  138A, 
B,C;  139C;  156A;  163B;  172A;  174A;  175A;  184B 
185A,B;  186A.B;  193B;  200B;  201B;  203C;  204A; 
205B;  206A;  21  lA;  215B;  215A;  216C;  220A;  224D 
230C;  231A,B;  232A;  239A;  244A;  245A;  249A,B; 
251A;  268A  278A;  282A;  286A;  287B;  288A;  299A 
304A,B;  305A;  307A;  310A;  312A.B;  316A;  314A,B 
318A;  320A;  322A;  323B;  325A;  329A;  341B;  344B 
345A;  349A,B;  354A;  357A;  358A;  359A;  362A 
364A;  366A;  368A;  369A;  372B,C;  377A;  380A,B,C. 

A  SOKOLOFF;  43A  246A. 


SPECIFICATIONS: 

Printed  by  Delmar  Printing  Company 
Charlotte,  North  Carolina 

Trim  size:  9  x  12 

Pages:  384 

Press  Run:  2300 

Cover:  Designed  by  Wendi  Schneider;  160  pt.  Binders  Board 
Material  Holliston  Mill's  Silver  Cordoba 
Operations  Embossed  and  Hand  Rubbed 

Endsheets:  Simpson  Lee  Teton  65  lb.  Cover  Text 

Paper  Stock:  80  lb.  Champion  Javelin  Gloss  Enamel 

Duotones:  Black  and  PMS-425 

Body  Copy:  Souvenir  Medium  —  8  pt.,  12  pt.,  24  pt.,  36  pt. 

Portrait  photos:  Stevens  Studios,  Maine 


382 


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 

The  color  slides  on  pages  44A  &  50A  are 
courtesy  of  Mcirk  Hcurman. 

The  drawing  on  page  10  is  courtesy  of  Charles 
Roger  Macias. 

A  hearty  thank  you  to  Wendi  Schneider  for  her 
beautiful  art  work. 

My  most  sincere  gratitude  and  appreciation  to 
Tanya  Huerta  for  cdl  of  her  time  and  dedication  to 
the  annual. 

Special  thanks  to  Stan  Mulvihill,  Nate  Lee,  Rob 
Shoss,  and  Mark  Sindler  who  'stuck  with  me  till  the 
end.' 

The  drawing  on  page  77  is  courtesy  of  Eric  Jones. 

Good  luck  to  next  yecir's  editor,  Stan  Mulvihill. 

Special  thanks  to  Lcirry  Marshall  and  the  folks 
at  the  Delmar  Printing  Compciny  for  their  patience 
and  efforts. 

Finally,  I  wish  to  express  my  most  sincere  ap- 
preciation to  Dr.  Andy  Antippas  who  has  not  only 
served  as  faculty  advisor  to  the  Jambalaya,  but  as  a 
dear  friend  as  well. 


383 


EDITOR'S  PAGE 


It  is  yearbook  tradition  that  the  editor  of  the 
yearbook  gets  his  own  page  at  the  end  of  'his* 
book.  Unfortunately,  I  don't  know  what  to  do  now 
that  I've  finally  reached  'my  page.' 

Rather  than  give  you  a  banal  description  of 
this  year's  hardships  and  struggles,  let  me  just 
say  that  the  experience  for  me  has  been  unique, 
worthwhile,  and  rewarding. 

Enjoy  the  book. 


384 


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