Jambalaya
I
Table of Contents
OPENING 1
Jenny Dunn, Editor
FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION 18
Bill Dillingham, Editor
ORGANIZATIONS 50
Sigal Shapira, Editor
SPORTS 94
Bob Kottler, Editor
NEWS SECTION 146
Ira Rosenzweig and Sarah Schmidt, Editors
STUDENT LIFE 154
Amy Pepper, Editor
GREEKS 234
Eleanor Comer, Editor
CLASSES 290
Ed Esposito, Editor
ADVERTISING 354
SENIORS 361
Jenny Dunn and Bob Kottler, Editors
HONORARIES 369
Peter Urbanowicz and Bob Kottler, Editors
INDEX 385
Ed Esposito
The 1982 Jambalaya Staff
Jennifer Juge Dunn
Editor-in-Chief
Ira Rosenzweig
Copy Editor
Mindy McNichols
Media Advisor
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Mazin Abu-Ghazalah, Armand
Berlin, G. Andrew Boyd,
Katie Brucker, Liz Cravens,
Fran Dubrow, Jenny Dunn,
John Foley, Ozgur
Karaosmanoglu, Pamela
Keller, Greg Kinskey. Bob
Kottler, Lon Lazar, Dale
Levy, Carl Lineberry, Byron
Lohman, Andy Pellar, Victor
Rodriguez, Suzanne Saussy,
Peter Sacopulos, Seth
Strauss, Sigal Shapira, Joe
Silvershein, Dan Thiel, Tom
Weil, Brad Nirenblatt, Mark
Unverzagt.
Ozgur Karaosmanoglu
Photography Editor
Ed Esposito
Business Manager
Edward Rogge
Faculty Advisor
WRITERS
Julie Brackenridge, Danny
Broh-Kahn, Heidi Davis,
David Dunn, Bill Gould,
Gretchen Harper, John
Herring, Jeff Kahn, Susan
Kalishman, Joshua Katz,
Larry Korn, Ted Kruckel,
Dale Levy, Paul Mugnier,
Darin Portnoy, Michelle
Rooney, Ira Rosenzweig,
Steve Rosoff, William Sabo,
Sarah Schmidt, Joel
Silvershein, Susan Strauss,
Carla Sylvester, Peter
Urbanowicz, Lisa Vaughn,
Linda Weil, Michael Yanuck.
Leadership
If I were to characterize my phi-
losophy of leadership — what I hope
to instill in students, faculty, staff
and administrators — it would be
the need to strive for personal excel-
lence.
I believe each of us should be free
to achieve at a level consistent with
our ability and imagination; to de-
fine goals which stretch us intellec-
tually; to reject complacency and
stagnation; to cultivate our natural
curiosity no matter what our job.
In short, we should all be able to
work in an environment where high
expectations are encouraged and
where a job well-done is rewarded.
To achieve this objective, I favor a
decentralized administration based
on the assumption that those most
closely connected to a particular
area of Tulane — academic or ad-
ministrative — are most knowl-
edgeable about its needs and prob-
lems. However, I am ever mindful
that we are a university, and that
designation implies a singleness of
purpose.
One of my personal challenges,
therefore, is to reconcile the legiti-
mate interests and concerns of our
separate academic and administra-
tive divisions with the overriding ne-
cessity to function as one education-
al institution, to seek accommoda-
tion rather than confrontation
wherever possible.
As President, I believe that chief
among my responsibilities is setting
a clear example of my own commit-
ment to Tulane and communicating
what we are about to alumni and
friends, faculty and students, staff
and administration, corporate lead-
ers and foundation heads.
Warmth and hospitality are
woven into the fabric of life here,
and I believe that this supportive en-
vironment is one of our greatest as-
sets. Accordingly, I try to demon-
strate the spirit I feel for Tulane to
all of our constituents; it is a task I
enjoy immensely.
— Dr. Eamon Kelly
President of the University
ASB President, Andy Werth, and VPA Pete Edwards
are among the leaders of student government.
Meyer Feldberg, the new dean of the Business School,
instructs a student in the finer points of supply-side
economics.
Tulane President, Eamon Kelly, was inaugurated in
October, 1981, at an outdoor service on the steps of
Gibson Hall.
Leadership
,JP
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Student Involvement
This year Tulane students were
busy singing, tutoring, debating,
partying, planning, helping, and
generally enjoying themselves.
Campus organizations thrived
this year with increased member-
ships. The leaders of these organiza-
tions were generally a close group
who provided a positive and enthusi-
astic attitude towards student in-
volvement.
The largest (and probably most
visible) diversion was the Greek sys-
tem. About 40 percent of the under-
graduate student body belongs to
these spirited groups.
They participated in a variety of
activities: Greek Week, mixers.
Children's Hospital Fair, campus
service activities. Fall and Spring
formals, painting (and repainting)
local elementary schools, and rais-
ing money for their national chari-
ties.
There seemed to be no doubt that
going Greek was once again "the
thing to do."
Membership in fraternities and
sororities, and other campus organi-
zations, was definitely on the in-
crease. CACTUS had a record year
and TUCP increased its member-
ship. The Direction staff's early ad-
vertising and preparation paid off
when they sold out every night for
the first time in years.
Involved students debated the
student salaries issue, recognition of
the young Americans for Freedom
and stadium site utilization. It was
gratifying to see students arguing
and caring about these and other
problems that arose on campus. A
college experience should be more
than academics because much
knowledge can be learned outside of
a classroom, and at Tulane it was.
— Susan Kalishman
Panhellenic Council Chairman
Kappa Alpha Theta members Mari Ofe Rodriguez and
Michelle Mirrabelli are among the fifty-one percent of
Undergraduate students who belong to greek
organizations on campus.
Crowds of freshmen and transfer students pack the
Riverboat President to listen to the Cold during
Orientation weekend.
5,000 balloons were released before an early season
football game, part of the ASB sponsored spirit drive.
Involvement
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Competition
Competition is a difficult word to
define, primarily because it means
different things to different people.
For those in the business communi-
ty, it may simply mean the conflict
that two opposing parties may expe-
rience in an effort to secure the busi-
ness of a third party. Competition
arises for students as we strive to
attain higher grades or academic
honors than those of our peers. With
unemployment figures soaring, we
realize that we will someday be
forced to compete in the "job mar-
ket." Nevertheless, usually the first
thing one ponders with the mention
of the word competition, is sports.
College sports and the competi-
tion therein, plays such a large role
in our college education that it
would do well for each of us to un-
derstand the competitive forms that
college athletes encounter. Athletic
competition can be described suc-
cintly as a contest between rivals.
Little debate exists as to whether or
not competition can be positive, but
it can adversely affect some athletes.
Whereas intense competition causes
some to perform at peak levels, oth-
ers fail to cope with the competitive
pressure, and are not able to dupli-
cate the performances that they give
when the pressure to win is mini-
mized.
Besides providing a challenge,
competition allows the athlete to
test his skills against others in an
effort to determine which individual
(or team) has achieved a better mas-
tery of the specified skills. In college
sports today, this testing of skills,
termed a contest or game, often re-
sembles a small scale war.
As students who desire excellence
from our athletic teams, possessing
a "win at all costs" attitude surely is
not the answer. Hopefully, college
athletics will soon provide an envi-
ronment where the way in which one
competes supersedes the actual win-
ning or losing.
Daryl Moreau
Business '83
House decorating is a traditional activity during
Homecoming weekend festivities.
Huddled together. Coach Ned Fowler gives instruc-
tions to members of his winning basketball team.
Walking off the field after the Tulane-Maryland foot-
ball game, player 98 signals that the Wave just
drowned .Marvland's team.
Competition
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Entertainment
A convoy of cars leaves the Tu-
lane campus for Baton Rouge or
downtown New Orleans or a local
bar. Students stay on campus and
rush the doors of McAlister, Dixon
Hall, or the Cram Room.
Everybody seeks some form of en-
tertainment and New Orleans and
the surrounding area provide plenty
of it! Most shows are sold out well
before showtime whether it be the
well known Rolling Stones in the
Superdome, a Broadway show in the
Saenger, a Riverboat concert, or the
lesser known Joan Armatrading in
Tulane's own Auditorium.
The past year has been the best
for entertainment in New Orleans
because innovative promoters tried
many new ideas and brought proven
forms of entertainment, on a large
scale, to the area.
All of this activity is in addition to
the more established forms of enter-
tainment already in existence such
as Mardi Gras and The Jazz and
Heritage Festival. Top Broadway
shows came to the Saenger; the Or-
chestra and Ballet enjoyed in-
creased popularity within the Tu-
lane Student Body.
The Fine Arts committee of the
Tulane University Center Program
presented Marcel Marceau as part
of its series. Riverboat concerts had
a temendous revival this past year in
addition to the many bars which
brought national talent to Uptown
New Orleans.
The center for entertainment in
the Uptown area is still the Tulane
Campus. In addition to the many
student productions, the nationally
known Direction program takes
place each spring on campus. Tu-
lane University Center Program
provides the rest of the entertain-
ment from a Pretenders concert to
the Frank Holder Dance Company
to the many parties highlighting lo-
cal talent.
This was the best year for enter-
tainment that New Orleans has had
in quite a while. Now established as
one of the primary entertainment
markets in America, even better
years should follow for New Or-
leans.
— Jeff Kahn
TUCP Chairman
Count Dracula, University Players' spring theatrical
production, starred Jamie Burks as Count Dracula,
Jennifer Grindell as Mina, and Bryan Brinkman as
Jonathan.
Joan Armatrading's dynamic style captivated a large
•audience in her fall semester performance, sponsored
jointly by WTUL and TUCP.
Covered by a canopy, the New Jazz Quintet performed
Saturday afternoon as part of WTUL's annual Rock-
on-Marathon; most of the weekend's program was
forced inside the University Center due to rain.
8
Entertainment
Academic Excellence
Tulane University has changed its
curriculum. We have structured it
more firmly and added greater vari-
ety to make it more stimulating and
useful to you.
The new curriculum will also
mean your bachelor's degree from
Tulane is more valuable in the com-
petition for jobs and for professional
school admission that you will face
in 1985.
The university has stiffened its
proficiency requirements in math,
English, and a foreign language.
These standards will ensure that ev-
ery graduate meets a specific level
of competence in each of the areas.
This is a bold step but one which,
we are convinced, is bound to be
widely emulated by other leading
universities and colleges. We have
already received a favorable re-
sponse from representatives of pro-
fessional schools and prospective
employers.
We have also instituted a new
general curriculum. That means ev-
ery student will have some knowl-
edge about the natural world, cul-
tures and societies, aesthetics, and
values, in addition to intensive study
in a major field.
We have changed Tulane's cur-
riculum ... to make it better for
you.
— Reprinted with permission from
the Admissions Brochure,
"Why We Made Tulane Tougher"
Linda Bohanon flips through one of the millions of
books that are housed in the Howard Tilton Memorial
Library.
The diploma and other certificates of membership in
honorary organizations are symbols of successful
completion of academic programs.
Richardson Hall, recently renovated, is home to the
campus' larger lecture classes during the academic
year.
10
Academic Excellence
Fiscal Responsibility
The importance of support and
involvement of Tulane and New-
comb graduates cannot be overem-
phasized. The financial support of
the university through giving to the
Alumni Fund is vital to the oper-
ation of Tulane.
The unrestricted gifts we receive
go directly to support the operations
of the university. This is the money
that pays salaries, cuts grass, and
lights buildings. It's the lifeblood of
the university and its importance
cannot be overlooked by adminis-
trators, alumni, or students.
One of our major goals at the
Alumni Fund Office is to communi-
cate a feeling of responsibility to our
alumni — a desire to invest in the
future of the university so that Tu-
lane can provide generations of stu-
dents the same opportunities it has
offered to its students for nearly 1 50
years.
Often many students are involved
in the solicitation of alumni through
our Student Foundation or student
phonathons, and they learn, even
before the first letter arrives from
our office following their gradu-
ations, the importance of commit-
ment and ongoing support of the
university.
Programs like our student phon-
athons, "Hotline" and "Spring
Ring," make students (future alum-
ni) aware of the importance of an-
nual support in the functioning of a
private institution. Through insight
gained by working on the other side
of the fund raising fence, these stu-
dent volunteers often become some
of our most dedicated and generous
alumni.
Their support continues long
after their evenings in the phon-
athon room in the back of the Alum-
ni House are over and our gratitude
to them continues long after they
have graduated.
— Terry Jones
Director of Alumni Fund
Tulane Booster Club, an organization within tlie Green
Wave Club, frequently travel with and support the
football game.
Hotline volunteers man the telephones at the Business
School night at Spring Ring, a student volunteer pro-
ject to raise money for the school.
Budget review committee of the University Senate met
in April to discuss financial plans for the 1982-83
academic year.
12
Fiscal Responsibility
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Residential Living
Throughout the years, students
living in campus housing have pro-
fessed to do so for one of two rea-
sons: that either the convenience or
the established friendships
outweighted the problems of the
residence halls.
But recent changes and renova-
tions have made living on campus
just a litle bit nicer.
For the first time at Tulane an
experimental hall program was
started. Residents in one floor of
Warren House and two floors of
Sharp, planned, painted, and select-
ed carpeting for their living areas.
Residents on a floor in Butler en-
circled their hall with a graphic.
Students were allowed to paint mu-
rals in their rooms, and build lofts.
In many cases, once permission was
granted, it was "anything goes"!
And in a move that affected even
more residents, the Newcomb and
Tulane Resident Councils were
again made stronger, and began
participating jointly in projects.
Pressure was taken off the resident
advisors as house councils took a
more active part in programming.
An even more visible change was
the start of maintenance that had
been long-planned by the Depart-
ment of Residential Life. Furniture
in Josephine Louise House was re-
finished, many residence halls re-
ceived new lounge furniture, rooms
got new blinds and furniture, and
painting programs were begun.
Living in a dorm still was not like
home, but it was on its way.
— Linda Franke
Department of Residential Life
Women's dorm bathrooms are especially crowded be-
fore 9:00 a.m. classes and before Friday and Saturday
night dates.
Painting the 8th floor wall of Butler Hall was part of
the Residential Life Department's Experimental Hall
program.
Sunbathing on Irby's second floor balcony is a favorite
spring semester pastime.
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14
presidential Living
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Graduation
Having been a Tulane "faculty
brat" for most of my growing-up
years, I first saw Tulane through a
child's eyes, without really under-
standing its significance nor its
reputation.
I remember coming on campus at
age six with my father and marvel-
ling at those tall and mature men
and women with heavy, thick books.
I never thought I could be one of
them. Yet, a long but short twelve
years later, I finally became one of
those "kids" my parents were al-
ways talking about.
I felt more than mere satisfaction
at reaching adulthood. I wanted to
draw out from my college years as
much as I possibly could.
One of the most important things
I learned is that I know so little. It
was at graduation, while listening to
the speeches about "my turn to en-
ter the real world," that I began to
feel so dwarfed by those who had
preceeded me.
I identified with the same senti-
ment Mark Twain expressed about
his father: "when I was 1 8, 1 thought
how little my professors knew.
When I was 21,1 marvelled at how
much they had learned in three
short years."
Nevertheless, just as Tennyson's
Ulysses postulated, "I am part of all
that I have met," so too I feel that all
of my experiences at Tulane have
molded me into the individual I am
today; I cannot forget either New-
comb or Tulane because they are
now part of my being.
— Angela Paolini
Newcomb '82
Packed on a bench, graduating seniors enjoy some live-
ly music provided by the Radiators at the first event of
Senior Weel«.
Dr. Paul Roman smiles as the new graduates file by
immediately after Newcomb's graduation.
With champagne in hand, a senior celebrates a long
awaited day.
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16
Graduation
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Academics
18
Academics
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"My teachers have given me an
interest in the subjects I've
studied and the thinking process
itself."
— Kevin VVilhams
Arts & Sciences '82
Acedcmii
c. 19
A Message from the President
One year ago, writing of my aspi-
rations from Tuiane, I stated my
personal commitment to insuring
Tulane's primacy among Southern
private universities and to securing
its position as a national resource.
In the intervening twelve months,
there have been many encouraging
developments at Tuiane, and I be-
lieve that we are well on our way to
achieving these goals.
Through its Five Year Plan, Tu-
iane has committed itself to work
for dramatic improvement in vital
areas desperately in need of atten-
tion.
Our faculty remains seriously un-
derpaid, and our library acquisitions
lag far behind comparable universi-
ties; moreover, the University cur-
rently suffers from a backlog of de-
ferred maintenance totalling about
$17 million.
Over the next five years, there-
fore, we are committed to raising
the average faculty salary to the me-
dian level of the American Associ-
ation of Universities and we are
committed to improving our li-
brary's position relative to our peer
institutions.
We can point to some successes.
No summary can capture an entire
year. A broad stroke at best suggests
the complete portrait.
For some, I suspect the two high-
lights of the year were a drubbing of
LSU in football and in basketball
four months later.
For others, the highlights may
have been visits to our campus by
Jorge Luis Borges, Polish poet Czes-
law Milosz, John Kenneth Gal-
braith and William F Buckley; and
Robert Massie, a noted biographical
historian who taught and lectured at
Tuiane during the fall semester.
Tuiane is many different things to
its alumni and friends, staff, stu-
dents, faculty, and administration.
The University is complex.
Next year, we will shift our atten-
tion to long-range concerns: What
will Tuiane look like in the 1990's
and into the year 2000? This focus
compels us to ask the most funda-
mental questions about the nature
of society and what it means to be
educated.
Such planning cannot be com-
pleted in a month or in a year, or
even in five years, but rather looking
outward to insure that the institu-
tion remains responsive to society's
needs.
1
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Eamon M. Kelly
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Eamon Kelly, President of the University
John Phillips, Chairman of the Board
20
President /Board of Administrators
I
Board of Administrators
111
t toiiictii fi'ii'iv
21
Architecture School
Dean Ronald C. Filson
Arts & Sciences
Dean Joseph E. Gordon
Business School
Dean Meyer Feldberg
Engineering
Dean Hugh Thompson
Law School Medical School
Dean Paul R. Verkuil Chancellor John Walsh
Newcomb College
Dean Ravmond Esthus
University College
Dean Louis BarriUeaux
22
Deans
Deans
"Being a dean is more chal-
lenging and demanding than
teaching. A teacher is a self-start-
er, whereas a dean must deal with
external stimuli."
Paul Verkuil told that to The
Hullabaloo in September, 1978,
shortly after he was named dean
of Tulane's Law School. Since
that time, Verkuil has met the
challenges and demands rather
well.
The Law School is one of the
foremost in the country, accord-
ing to Verkuil. He boldly makes
this claim in spite of a cramped
Law School building and recent
national budget cuts.
Based on admissions scores and
grade point averages Verkuil
places Tulane in the country's top
twenty-five law schools. "Only 21
other schools have a higher
GPA," he said.
Productivity of the faculty in
terms of published works and a
library with over 700,000 vol-
umes also bolster Verkuil's claim.
An important member of the
cadre of deans who form the top
echelon of Tulane's administra-
tion, Verkuil is well aware of the
threat posed by budget cuts and a
declining college age population.
To help continue the Law
School's academic success, Ver-
kuil hopes to draw more money
into the school through alumni
donations, particularly in the
form of scholarships. These schol-
arships will be necessary to at-
tract high quality students as gov-
ernment loans become scarce.
And despite national trends,
the Law School's admissions ac-
tually increased by 1 5 percent last
year. This makes Verkuil optimis-
tic for the future.
"I feel we're on the right
track," he said. "If we can receive
continued support from our alum-
ni as well as the administration, I
see no reason why we can't main-
tain the level that we have
achieved thus far."
Verkuil believes that Tulane's
reputation for teaching Civil Law
is a major attraction to perspec-
tive students, although some peo-
ple are turned off by the dual cur-
riculum.
"The reality, of course, is that if
you come here from out of state
and have no desire to practice in
Louisiana, you can be educated
just as well anywhere," he said.
"But," maintained Verkuil,
"being exposed to another legal
system is an important bonus stu-
dents receive at Tulane."
Verkuil has been dean just
slightly longer than most students
attending the school, but he can
point to a job well done. He has no
immediate plans for leaving Tu-
lane, he is quite content with his
job here. And needless to say, Tu-
lane Law seems quite content
with him.
Dean Meyer Feidberg points to a graph of the Busi-
ness School's financial standing while on a tour of
selected Louisiana cities to meet Business School
alumnae.
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js dean of ihc School of Busi-
ness He received his B A from
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rand. his MBA, from Colum-
bia, and his Ph.D. from Ihc Uni-
versity of Cape Town. Fcldberg
formerly held ihe post of direc-
tor of Executive Education and
professor of Business Policy at
Northwestern University.
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BIOLOGY — Richard Lumsden, Alfred Smalley. Milton Fin-
german, Steven Darwin, Merle Mizell. Stuart Bamforth, Har-
old Dundee. Gerald Gunning, Claudia de Gray, David Freder-
ickson, Joan Bennett, Erik Ellgaard, Leonard Thien.
m Wiifi
CHEMISTRY — Front Row: D J. Darensbourg, Gary
McPherson, Joel T. Mague, John Jacobus, Harry Ensley,
Charles Fritchic, Mark Sulkes, Roy Auerback, William Al-
worth; Back Row: Larry Byers, Jan Hamer, Melvyn Levy,
Marcetta Y. Darcnbourg.
Research
PHYSICS — Robert Purrington, Joseph Kyame, Robert
Morriss, Ann McKay Yards, Karlem Riess, Salvatore Buc-
cino, Mike Norman, John Perdew, Ronald Deck.
PSYCHOLOGY — Front Row: Chris Wilson, Chezuko
Izawa, Lee Hoffman, Lawrence Dachowski, S. Gray Gar-
wood; Back Row: Krista-Stewart-Lester, Jeff Lockman, Hal-
sey Matteson, Ina Bilodeau, Jeff Sulzer, Jay Hansche, Janis
Dunlap, Davis J. Chambliss.
24 Rcsc,
•arch
"The history of sponsored re-
search at Tulane closely resem-
bles the history of the Titanic,"
according to Gene D'Amour, di-
rector of sponsored projects at
Tulane.
In 1 960, Tulane ranked 22nd of
all universities in the amount of
external funding received for re-
search and development. By
1979, Tulane bottomed out at
116th.
D'Amour believes the Univer-
sity simply lost its entreprenural
spirit. In fact, the office of spon-
sored research was actually elimi-
nated at one point in the late 70s.
Another crucial factor in Tu-
lane's decline was that the Medi-
cal School began construction of
a new hospital. This activity
drained much of their resources
and severely affected Tulane's
search for research funds because
the Medical School usually
brings in the majority of research
monies.
Since these funds are so impor-
tant to the University, Tulane de-
cided to re-establish the Office Of
Sponsored Projects. In the fall of
1980, D'Amour went to work.
"The idea was for this office to
pick itself up by the bootstraps,
but we didn't even have the boot-
straps," D'Amour recalled. "Not
only was there nothing here, but
there were all kinds of barriers to
doing research. We had to tear
down the barriers and start con-
structing systems to help faculty."
The job of helping the faculty
can be divided into two areas, pre-
award phase, D'Amour has estab-
lished a grants information sys-
tem. Through this system the fac-
ulty is made aware of available
grants through newsletters, spe-
"The idea was for this
office to pick itself up
by the bootstraps, but
we didn't even have
the bootstraps."
cial announcements, consultant
services and workshops.
And once a faculty member has
decided to seek a grant,
D'Amour's office has developed a
new proposal routing procedure
to help them apply for the money.
D'Amour and his staff have
been working on an extensive
post-award program to help fac-
ulty through the red tape of ad-
ministering research funds.
Although he still has much
more work before him, D'Amour
can happily point to impressive
results from his efforts. He re-
ported that 128 faculty members
requested 222 grants for $14 mil-
lion in 1980-81. This is dramati-
cally up from 1979-80, when only
88 faculty members placed 137
applications for $9 million.
The application rate is holding
steady in 1981-82, he added.
(jcnc D'Amour
•^-^ '
mm
Oene Albtrrl U'Amoui i> iu-
dni-s <)iff<i(,r ul Ihi- Oflice ot
■>pon40fed Ptoiedi He has i
8 A in MalhenulKs and PWos-
'jphy from 5>l Mary S Colege
dm) a Ph D n Phdknophy (rom
thf Uni\ef4ilv ol MnneMHa Be-
'■ore coming lo TiJane. D' Amot*
held teaching portions at the
UniverMlv ol vtmnevxa and at
West Virginia He ha* aKo serk ed
ds curriculum consullani lo
iweniy univenjttes, nainrnvide.
Rrsr:-
25
.
BUSINESS SCHOOL — Front row: James T Murphy,
Kenneth Boudreaux, William Mindak, Lillian Gibbs,
Christine Lentz, Meyer Feldberg. Irving LaValle, James
Linn; Middle row: John Ingersall, Joni Steinberg, Robert
Dailey, Jeffery Barach, Stuart Wood, Larry Arnold, Richard
Kelsey. Soliman Y. Soliman, Gerard Watze; Back row: Lee
Thomas, Don Fogal, Frank Jaster, Walter Burnett. Victor
Cook, Beau Parent, Seymour Goodman.
LAW SCHOOL — Front row: Rodolfo Baliza, Joseph
Sweeney, William Lovett, Elizabeth Cole, Deborah Riess;
Second row: Luther McDougal, Charlotte, Meriwether, Jane
Johnson, Suman Neresh; Third row: Harvey Couch,
Catherine Hancock, Sarajane Lowe, David Combe,
Christopher Osakwe. Bradley Gater, Vernon Palmer, Thomas
Carbonneau; Back row: George Striklen, Thomas
Schoenbaum. Robert Force, Paul Verkuil, Konstantinos
Kerameus, Paul Barron, Joel Friedman, Richard Pierce,
Robert Peroni, A.N. Yiannopoulos, Oliver Houck.
MATH — Front row: William Green, Albert Vitter lU,
Donna Mohr; Second row: Jackie Boling, Meredith Mickel,
Hester Paternostro, Maurice Dupre, J. Thomas Beale,
Michael Mislove, Morris Kalka, Ronald Fintushel: Third row:
Ava Holliday, Martin Guest, Karl Hofmann, Frank Quigley,
Michael Rose, John Liukkonen, Terry Lawson, Edward
Conway III, Laszlo Fuchs; Fourth row: Phuong Lam, Ronald
Knill, Gary Sod, Martha Mark, Jerome Goldstein, Frank
Tipler, John Dauns, Steven Rosencrans; Back row: John
Diem, Weichung (Joe) Shih, Arnold Levine.
26
Business School
School of Business
Early in its history, Tulane's
School of Business acquired a
reputation for being innovative,
lively and a magnet for the area's
best and brightest students.
Founded in 1 9 1 4 by Dean Mor-
ton A. Aldrich, the school offered
a Bachelor of Business Adminis-
tration Program and, beginning
in 1 940, a Master of Business Ad-
ministration Program.
The Bachelor of Business Ad-
ministration, discontinued in
1964, was reinstated in 1976 as
the Bachelor of Science in Man-
agement (BSM).
"The school is now graduating
more students than in the 1950's
and '60's," said finance professor
Dr. James Murphy.
"In fact, the post-war graduat-
ing class was the only time the
number of students has been
greater than it is now."
The application rate is the
highest ever and extra classes
have been added to meet the
growing demand.
The school's first graduating
BSM class after reinstatement to-
talled 40. That number has
jumped to 111 graduating this
year and 150 students are being
admitted for next year's class.
"It's growing by leaps and
bounds," says academic programs
coordinator Martha Little,
"which shows we made the right
decision in reinstating it. It looks
like it'll be a stable, steady pro-
gram."
Little said the undergraduate
business major is currently the
most popular one on campus.
Now, as it has always been, the
school is interested in innovation.
Computer games are utilized and
though they may seem new to the
rest of the world, they're actually
old hat at Tulane.
Way back in 1963 Tulane was
holding one of the first symposia
on the subject; there is a Commu-
nication Skills Center, a comput-
er laboratory and a Decision
Room, which houses video screen
computer terminals for various
projects and course work.
The intensive two-year pro-
gram which every BSM candi-
date takes is so varied and wide-
ranging in its appeal that students
from a number of different back-
grounds are beginning to find
their way in.
It's not unusual to find former
art majors in accounting classes
and former English students go-
ing into finance.
"We're attracting a variety of
really bright students," said Mar-
tha Little. "And companies are
beginning to woo our undergrad-
uates — they're able to get jobs
all over."
"We're on the cutting edge of
business knowledge," Assistant
Dean Chastian Taurman, III says
of the school. Murphy believes
the school is "always asking ques-
tions" and that, in a way it's never
been before, it's now poised to
meet the needs of a growing city
and a burgeoning South.
Norman Mayer Hall, home for Tulane's School of
Business, will undergo a facelift before the 1982-83
academic year.
J
Chrisluphcr
( hriMophcr «>\ak»< u Crulcsvjr
of I j» jnd Dircdof of ibc Tu-
lane Intiiiulc of Comparaiive
Law He holds a LL B . L L.M..
and Ph.D. from Moscow Slale
L'niversiiy School of La* and a
J.S.D. from ihc L'niversiiy of Il-
linois College of Law. Since
1970 he has held (caching posi-
tions al several universiiia.
Pusineii
< , 27
BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING — William Van Buskirk,
Moshe Solomonow, Joon B. Paik, David Rice, Cedric Walker.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING — Front Row: Henry Luttrell,
Aysel Atimtay, Young G. Kim, Kyriakos Papadopoulos; Sec-
ond Row: Danny McCarthy, Ray V. Bailey, Bert Wilkins; Back
Row: Richard Freedman, Sam Sullivan.
Engineering
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING — Paul Duvoisin, Robert
Drake, James Cronvich, S. T. Hsieh, Edward Williamson.
Charles Beck, Daniel Vliet.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING — Kamal-Eldin Hassan,
Chester Peyronnin Jr., Robert Watts, Paul Lynch, DeWitt
Hamilton Jr., Harold Sogin.
28
Engineering
The Tulane Engineering school
has just emerged from a decade of
sustained growth. If the market is
indicative, the Tulane Engineer-
ing school has a good record. The
average salary for an Engineering
Graduate is a staggering $27,000.
This growth is due to an in-
crease in the academic quality of
the students. The school searches
for 245 high quality freshmen to
enroll in the Engineering School.
Fully 25 percent of the class is
female. The Engineering school
has provided excellent career op-
portunities for women as well as
men.
According to Engineering
Dean Hugh A. Thompson, soci-
ety is moving towards the devel-
opment of a postgraduate engi-
neering program. Right now
graduates cannot afford to con-
tinue their education and go right
into the job market.
This has led to a shortage of
faculty. There will be no solution
to this problem until society pays
faculty more. It takes six years to
produce a PhD, six years of not
being employed.
The only answer, it seems, is to
increase faculty salaries to the
point where the University pays
more than industry for a PhD.
This way the investment made by
the professors will be repayed.
Currently, the Engineering
school is divided into six major
divisions. These are Biomedical,
Chemical, Civil, Electrical, Me-
chanical and Computer Science.
The school's goal is to graduate
35 seniors in each field.
Mr. Thompson notes that Tu-
lane's size is optimal for interac-
tion between the divisions, and
the Engineering school interacts
well. For example. Engineering
students often go on to Law or
Business school. If Tulane was a
larger institution, he added, there
would be administrative barriers
between the divisions.
What lies in the next decade for
the Engineering School? Dean
Thompson points out that the
technological rate of progress
staggers the imagination. The ad-
vancements in artificial intelli-
gence and robotics are as unbe-
lievable as landing a man on the
moon was a few years ago.
Growth has actually been cur-
tailed by lack of classroom space.
But hopefully, fundraising will
add more space, expand oper-
ations, and provide new pro-
grams. The Tulane Engineering
school will have more growth in
research, and rise in National sta-
tus, he said.
Eleanor Comer, Larry Korn and Bill Dillingham
examine University Center displays during Engi-
neering Week in March.
Hugh Thompson
Hugh A. Thompson . ,••• -i
sef-i-s as dean ot the School oJ
Engineering and professor o(
Mechanical engineering He
earned his B S m Mechancal En-
gineenng from Aubom and his
MS and PhD n Mechanical En-
gineenng from Tulane Thomp-
son has held several teach^g
posiiions at Vtonlana State and
at Tulane and serves as a coos«i-
tant to many pfonwienl oi com-
panies
Engtneenng
29
ARCHITECTURE — Front Row: Leo Oppenheimer,
Robert Helmer, Errol Barron, Timothy Culvahouse,
Ron Filson, Christopher Young; Back Row: William
Mouton, Humberto Codriguez-Camieloni, Malcolm
Heard, Bruce Goodwin, Eugene Cizek, Mark Denton,
Stephen Jacobs, Mark Shajiro, John Rock, Susan
Ubbelohde, Wilford Colongue.
CIVIL ENGINEERING — Charles Grimwood,
Robert Bruce Jr., Frank Dalia, Walter E. Blessey, S.C.
Das, Walter Sherman.
EARTH SCIENCE - George Flowers. Elizabeth
Seale, Ronald Parsley, Hubert Skinner, Robert
Horoyski, John McDowell, Harold Yokes, Emily
Yokes.
EDUCATION — Rita Zerr, Nancy Nystrom, Gene
D' Amour, Kippy Abroms, Jean King, Marguerite
Bougere, Bob Wimpelberg.
30
Architecture
Architecture
Since it takes Architecture stu-
dents five years to get the same
degree that other students get
after four, you'd expect them to
be doing something special —
and they are.
Under the guidance of Dean
Ronald Filson, Tulane's School of
Architecture has been plotting
the future of the University. Fac-
ulty members and students have
completed the beginning of a four
phase plan designed to utilize the
stadium site, and improve exist-
ing facilities and grounds.
Original plans, formed by an
outside architecture firm in 1978,
advised the development of con-
dominiums on the stadium site.
Concern over that kind of a rec-
ommendation led Tulane's ad-
ministration to look within the
University. The School of Archi-
tecture was hired to design a plan
for Tulane that would have the
objectives of the university in
mind.
A project team composed of
five faculty members and six stu-
dent members immediately went
to work, evaluating the condition
of existing campus structures,
conducting numerous interviews
with students, faculty, and ad-
ministrators, to find out what
they perceived as the most critical
problems, and prioritizing the
needs of the growing university.
Although using resources with-
in the university seems to be a
sound idea, it is not a common
practice. "It's a very progressive
idea," stated David Walter, one of
the students involved in the pro-
ject. "Tulane is one of the first
schools to use its architecture
school in this capacity."
Filson and his task force ob-
served that Tulane had been con-
stantly expanding and changing
with no real plan for the future.
"Part of the problem," explained
Filson, "was the lack of a day to
day, comprehensive planning pro-
cedure. There had been no guide-
lines." Filson's group determined
to create a plan for Tulane.
The students involved in the
project were instrumental during
the preliminary work. "We did a
lot of the basic things; interview-
ing faculty and surveying build-
ings," Walter said.
Yet the way that the team was
set up, both faculty and students
had input into the planning
stages.
"The way we arranged it,"
Walter explained, "there was a lot
of wide-ranging discussion. We
had as much input as any faculty
member."
Although the four phase plan
has been completed, Filson is not
sure just how much of the plan
will be followed by the university
in the future. He does believe,
though, that Tulane will take ad-
vantage of the work of its own stu-
dents and faculty, and possibly in-
clude them in future plans.
Sophomore architecture student, Alan Thomas,
constructs a design lab project.
Ronald Filson
Ronald C Hbon, Dean oi the
q( Archilecli*e. hokh »
B Arch Irotn Yale and a dpionu
from (he Amencan Academy in
-ome Whde at UCXA. Ffcoo
' <-ld teactwig and adrrwMralive
.lovliom Among fus recent ai-
hiieclural (xoiecls t, the Piafza
: liaba in New Orleans.
.•Vncniicfture
31
ENGLISH — Front row: Cohen, Ballier. Weber. Stewart;
Middle row: Edmonds, Ussery, Suare, Young, Marillo; Back
row: Toulouse, Baum, Simmons, Trethevvey, Rizer, Kreyling.
HISTORY — Front row: Latner, Bailkey, Bernstein, Carter;
Second row: Molir, Maney, Woodward, James; Third row:
Brown, Hunter, Ramer, Greenleaf; Back row: Hood, Davis,
Powell, Malone, Harl, Luza, Cinel, Rankin.
POLITICAL SCIENCE — Henry Mason, C.S. Kaplan,
William Gwyn, Jean Danielson, James Cochrane, Paul
Stekler, Tim O'Neill, Guy Peters, Warren Roberts, Paul
Lewis, Stephen Linder.
Public Policy
PUBLIC POLICY — Mark McBride, Steve Linder, B. Guy
Peters, Don England.
32
Public Policy
Since its inception in 1978, the
Center for Public Policy Studies
has been a special branch of Tu-
lane's academics.
One of only eight such centers
in the United States, and one of
three in the south, the Center ex
amines the implications of gov-
ernmental policy.
The department grants degrees
in public policy, with many of its
students enrolled in other studies,
especially in political science and
economics.
The study of public policy
found its birth at Tulane in a
group of faculty members which
met and garnered funds for the
center from the Sloan Founda-
tion. In July, 1978 the Center was
established.
Besides interest in government
workings on the national level,
the Center for Public Policy Stud-
ies has become involved in city
politics. In the heat of the New
Orleans mayoral contest, the
Center co-sponsored a televised
debate between incumbent Er-
nest N. "Dutch" Morial and chal-
lenger Ron Faucheux.
Guy Peters, head of the Center,
stated that "There needed to be
some sort of televised confronta-
tion." Because of election laws,
television stations were prohibit-
ed from sponsoring the debate.
"It became clear that we should
sponsor it." Peters explained.
In addition to the debate, the
Center for Public Policy Studies
held Metropolitan Leadership
programs — six sessions for up-
and-coming leaders of the com-
munity. At the workshops, cur-
rent city leaders were available to
give new leaders insights and in-
formation.
Through programs like the de-
bate and leadership seminars, the
Center for Public Policy Studies
plans to become more involved in
the public policy of New Orleans.
Faucheux smiles in response to one of Mayor Mor-
ial's pointed comments.
Mayor Morial addresses a Kendall Cram audience
and live television audience at the second Tulane-
sponsored mayoral debate.
Rohtri K. M;issi(.'
Moning author of Prirr ihr
'real Hn Lifr and World, and
'Nicholas and Alexandra, held
he Mellon Profcvvirjhlp al Tu-
.inc and was formerl) a Ferris
l'rofc^wr of journalism at Prin-
ceton Maiiic received hit bach-
cliir's degree from Vale and al-
L-ndcd Oaiford Lnivcrsjl) as a
Rhodes Scholar. He has Moricd
n the staff of Collier's. Nrvs-
raper. USA*I and The Soiur-
Jay Evening Post
i
a«^-
u •/
r-..-
-1 -^
ART— Front Row: Jessie Poesch, Barbara Barletta, Arthur
Kern, Donald Robertson, Pat Trivigno, Caecilia Davis.
Norman Boothby; Back Row: Hal Carney, Gyuri Hollosy,
Gene Koss, Mike Witzel, Richard Tuttle.
CLASSICS - Sanford Etheridge, Richard Frazer, |oe Poe, James
Buchanan.
MUSIC — John Joyce, Reed Hoyt, John Baron, Deborah
Drattell, John Dillcey, Robert Preston, Patricia Hollahan, Ted
Demuth.
Hooked on Classics
PHILOSOPHY— Front Row: Robert Whittomoro, Donna
Burger, Graeme Forbes, Louise Roberts, Radu Bogdan; Back
Row: Donald Lee, Michael Zimmerman, Andrew Reck,
Harvey Green.
34
Classics
To some Tulane students the
term "Hooked on Classics" con-
jures up images of Bach, Beetho-
ven, Bernstein, and a hit record.
But to chairman Joe Park Poe and
the rest of the Classics Depart-
ment, the saying reflects their in-
terest that they are sharing with
others at Tulane, New Orleans
and the rest of the world.
The Department received city-
wide acclaim and international
publicity in late 1981 when it
sponsored along with the New
Orleans Museum of Art an exhib-
it of ancient Greek vases from col-
lections across the South.
The Department continued
their promotion of Classics in the
community by sponsoring an
open symposium on Alexander
the Great, which tied in with the
extremely popular NOMA
"Search for Alexander" exhibit.
Working jointly with the Muse-
um, former Mellon professor
Alan Shapiro initially formulated
the idea of an exhibit of Greek
vases presently held in regional
collections.
The NOMA show followed two
similar regional shows; Greek
vases from New England Collec-
tions (held in Boston), and Greek
vases from Mid-Western Collec-
tions (in Chicago). The exhibit
showcased examples of Greek
pottery, while at the same time
providing publication of a catalog
of the works.
This catalog, together with
those of other regional exhibits,
will be used as research material
in most every major library in the
world and will represent many of
the most significant Greek vases
in the United States.
The show was especially well
received in the New Orleans area.
"As far as I could see, the re-
sponse in the city to the Greek
vase show was spectacular," said
professor Poe.
Coming on the heels of the vase
exhibit, NOMA — sponsored
"Search for Alexander" exhibit
generated popular interest, spur-
ring the Classics Department to
sponsor a series of public lectures
on the great Greek conqueror.
The lectures were held in April
and focused on the importance
and tradition of Alexander, espe-
cially his impact on the cultures
that followed him.
Although the department has
increased its visibility city-wide,
the core still remains a small, co-
hesive group of professors and
students. Interest, though, has
been generated by an increased
number of courses that are being
offered through cross-registration
with other departments. Classics
courses are now being offered
through the History, Art History,
and Archeology departments.
Because of this, more students
tnan ever are taking Classics
courses, exposing themselves to
the history of different cultures,
and finding out, like members of
the community have, what it
means to be "hooked on classics."
Robert G. Cook, Professor of English, spoke in
Richardson Auditorium at the first lecture in the
Legacy of Alexander series, spring semester.
Fran Lawrence
^^ancn I. Liwienct, '~.!''v-fl \(j-
X Pfovosi lai( Fal. hn iervtrd n
-f posii of Depotv Provo« and
'Sisldnl V<e-pf«ident fof Aw
:«mK Affairs iince 1979 An ac-
jmpliihed linguist. Lawrence
nolds a bachelor s degree in
French and Spanish from Si
Louis Umversrtv. arxJ Ph Ds n
FrerKh and llahan from Tiiane
Lawrence has held various
teaching positiorK at NIewcomb
and Tulane. and seived as Actng
Dean of Newcomb College
•'om 1976-78
Cltsacs
35
INTRAMURAL SPORTS STAFF — Front row: Joe
McCarthy, Micky Graff, Earl Adorno; Back row: Ben
Abadie, Ann Thierot, Gary Mehrtens, Claud Madera.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION — Front row: Michael Bah,
Glenn Dismukes, Adele Smith, Elizabeth Delery; Back row:
Julia Yeater, Heidi Hertz, Ernie White, Minnette Starts,
Beverly Trask.
36
Athletics
Athletics
"The admission procedure any
Tulane student must complete
holds true for all varsity sports
athletes, contrary to what many
believe," says Michael Thomp-
son, Associate Director of Admis-
sions at Tulane.
Many of the athletes are ad-
mitted to University College to
pursue majors in Physical Educa-
tion where there is a lower entry
level. For admission, an athlete is
also placed in a special category,
along with alumni children and
other special interest individuals.
A problem some athletes en-
counter is making the grades to
remain eligible in their sport.
Mike Thompson explained that
the major problem occurs when
an athlete, recognized as possess-
ing superior talents has been
"channeled through a system that
allows them just to go through
school and not develop needed
study skills before coming here."
Thompson cited other disad-
vantages for an athlete being the
length of practices as well as road
trips and special workout ses-
sions.
Ken Wenn, Academic Advisor
of University College Students
and employed part-time by the
Athletic Department to advise all
athletes, reported that motivation
and lack of attendance in class are
reasons for poor performance.
To counteract academic prob-
lems there is a required study hall
for two hours Sunday through
Thursday at which tutors are pro-
vided
The basketball program, to en-
courage better academic perfor-
mance, requires its players to
have a form filled out by their
teachers commenting on aca-
demic progress and class atten-
dance.
With all these safeguards for
good academic performance
some athletes still are put on aca-
demic probation. Mike Thomp-
son explained that "There is not a
difference here between a student
and an athlete regarding proba-
tion, only that an athlete stands
out more."
Tulane is designed so probation
is a warning the first time to im-
prove. If improvement is not
made an athlete can lose his eligi-
bility to participate in his respec-
tive sport.
In regard to this Savlny ex-
pressed that "We're concerned
but not ready to push the power
button," and that the "summer
budget is set and we are not going
to send those (players) to summer
school everytime they get in trou-
ble." The budget does not allow
for players to take classes this
summer.
Savlny did point out that "In
the last 20 years only 2 players
have not graduated and we are
not going to let that percentage go
down, and the players know this."
Paul Thompson, varsity basketball player, attends
night-time University College courses, allowing
him to attend the many hours of day-time practice.
Hindnian Wall
llindman \^ill hd> been Alhiclic
DircvUjf of Tulanc »incc July
1976. He graduated from Au-
burn L'niversit) with a bache-
lor's degree in Industrial Man-
agement. Wall was formerly an
administrative supervisor for
Pratt and Whitney Aircraft Re-
search and Development Center,
and on the Kansas State Univer-
sity and the University of Cin-
cinnati athletic staff.
Athltlic!^ J/
. 3:
FRENCH and ITALIAN — Front Row: Elizabeth Poe, Cath-
erine Brosman, Simone Fischer. Harry Redman; Back Row:
George Rosa. Weber Donaldson, Hope Glidden. Linda Car-
roll. Ann Hallock.
GERMAN and RL'SSLAN — Jessica Diaz (secretary). Ann
Arthur, Thomas Starnes, Ingrid Hasselbach, Karlheinz Has-
selbach, William Brumfield, George Cummins.
SPANISH and PORTUGUESE — Front Row: Margaret
Stock, James Brown. Lydie Melendrerg; Second Row: Juen
Barroso, George Wilkins, Gilbert Paolini; Back Row: William
Smither, Francis Ferrie. Alberto Vazquez. Frank Crothers.
Daniel Heiple, Norman Miller, Thomas Montgomery, Almir
de Campos Bruenti, Marine Kaplan.
ANTHROPOLOGY — Victoria Bricker, Dan Healan, Ed
Edmonson. Anden King, Bertrand Masquelier, John Fischer,
E. Wyllys Andrews, Harvev Bricker, Dave Davis, Elizabeth
Watts.
38
]YA
Junior Year Abroad
"No man can really understand
his own country until he looks at it
from the outside, nor understand
another country until he some-
how gets inside it."
This is what Dr. John Hubbard
had in mind when he initiated the
Junior Year Abroad program for
Newcomb juniors twenty-eight
years ago.
Dr. Hubbard, then Dean of
Newcomb College, believed that
"living in another culture is im-
portant, but what we were equally
concerned with was what the
American student would learn
about his own country and his
own individual self."
Students have varying reac-
tions towards their experiences
abroad. Some comment on the
different perspectives that JYA
provided them while others stress
the enrichment of their educa-
tional and cultural lives.
One Newcomb senior, com-
menting on her Junior year in
Spain, explained that "while
some of the facilities are not the
cleanest in Europe, the total expe-
rience was incomparable."
In fact, some JYA'ers have been
so taken with the program that
they later went back to live. Some
even just stayed overseas. While
these cases are few, a little bit of
the country studied in never
leaves the JYA student.
Fresh off the plane, in a new
world, the JYA student is imme-
diately oriented into a new cul-
ture before having to deal with
academics.
In all countries except Great
Britain, language proficiency is
required and tests are given dur-
ing this orientation period to as-
sure that students understand
what is being taught.
This obviously does not apply
within the British empire; howev-
er, standards for admittance are
much tougher.
To be accepted to the JYA pro-
gram, a student must have at least
a 3.0 GPA and pass a series of
stringent interviews.
To be accepted to the Great
Britain program (including Brit-
ain, Scotland, Wales and now Ire-
land,) the applicant must have at
least a 3.3 GPA. Applications are
not even given to those not meet-
ing these requirements.
Interviews are conducted by
Tulane faculty members and Sen-
iors who have participated in the
program. Once past these inter-
views, the applicant is accepted in
December of his Sophomore year.
Students must maintain their
grade point average the second
semester, or be rejected.
Returning to school at Tulane
after spending a year abroad can
be as alien as going away. Even a
culturally-rich city such like New
Orleans seems an eternity of dif-
ference when compared to the
moors of Wales or the mountains
of south France.
A former JYA student best
sums up the program. "Perhaps
different perspectives are the key
words. Adapting to a different
culture cannot help but cause a
re-evaluation of the past, affect
the present, and perhaps restruc-
ture future ideas and actions."
1\A students Katie Brucker and Ellen Epstein pose
in the Luxemborg Garden during one of many Eu-
ropean excursions.
/"'"
'y. ' '■.
f ;>^. ;*■ ,;
^^^^-^
Marcelle Saussv
>
>^** . .
Marcelle 0 Aquin >Ju^s^
been clireiior nl lh»-
Newcomb Mikk ^ear ^ijfoad
program smce 1977. and ha*
worked in varKxis leachng and
adminisiralive posl> al TiAine
since IS6 1 She has a B A Irom
Newcomb Coiege ivith a ma)or
In French and a mnor n |ournal-
nm, and a maMef's «i French
"om Tulane
y
*,
^^^ ^ ^ n '
fillU|§^
^ fV^^^^^^^^Hi^n
^H
i
^!
,vv'.><:^
^" "w ^H!m
'^nW
39
COMPUTER SCIENCE — Lee Becker, Frederick Petry,
Mark Benard, Johnette Hassell, Victor Law.
LIBRARY EXECUTIVE BOARD — Front Row: Cecilia
Montenegro, Ruth Olivera, Jeannine Eckholdt, Laura
Williams; Back Row: Jerome Anderson, Susan Plante, Larry
Romans, Mary Leblanc.
THEATRE and SPEECH — Front Row: Cree Rankin, Buzz
Podewell, Geselle Dover; Back Row: Chip Hunter, Gary
Bailard, Ron Gural, John Rouse, Ellen Ryba.
Computerization
SOCIOLOGY — Front Row: Kenneth Bailey, Richard
Turdanico, Shelley Coverman, Dwayne Smith; Back row: Joel
Devine, Tom Ktsanes, Joe Sheley, Edward Morse.
40
Computerization
Death and taxes are inescap-
able facets of life, and, at least at
Tulane, so are computers.
The university's first computer
was installed at the School of
Business in 1958 and since then
Tulane's system has grown and
multiplied to astronomical pro-
portions. University officials esti-
mate that 50 per cent of the stu-
dents who attend Tulane will use
computers in some academic
form, and every student will be
touched by the system in some
way or another.
In fact, students are "in the sys-
tem" before they attend their first
class. The Tulane and Newcomb
Admissions offices use computers
to screen potential applicants.
And after a student is accepted,
he becomes further mired in the
system.
The Financial Aid Office also
makes extensive use of the com-
puter. At any time, the Office can
scan any file and determine all
the important information it
needs. The system can even deter-
mine the amount of a student's
aid package, according to pre-
programmed instructions.
There is a direct line between
the Financial Aid Office and an-
other important office of Tulane,
Accounts Receivable. This office
has been using computers since
1960, and is now in the process of
updating its system.
The billing office will no longer
sag two months behind, and fas-
ter billing means faster payment.
The Accounts Receivable Office
can now also prepare reports for
other offices, such as Financial
Aid or the University Registrar.
Before the age of computers,
transcripts were kept in files.
Each new semester meant pulling
out all the files, sticking on a new
transcript label, and refiling the
transcript. Now, transcripts are
updated every night, and new re-
cords can be available the next
day.
The Registrar's Office contains
students' records for all 1 1
schools, and holds the permanent
records for all but the Law
School. Terminals are even in-
stalled in the deans' offices.
In fact, the system does much
more than hold records. It can
calculate who is taking too many
classes, and who is not taking
enough. In fact, the computer can
do anything that would be re-
quired by officials, including the
production of federal reports to
let the government know where
funds are being allocated.
The administration is not the
only beneficiary of the comput-
ers. The library is also in the pro-
cess of installing a new computer
system. It is specificially adapted
for the library's special needs, and
the medical library, law library,
and the business library will even-
tually all be connected.
Dialing from home has become commonplace after
the implementation of 1 0 dial-up lines. Students do
not even have to come to the computer center to do
their homework.
Eriing
Hammarslrom
Kriing \^. Htmmarslrom »a4 rc-
ccnil) appoinicd Mcc-prcsidenl
for business at Tulanc He holds
a B.S. degree in Civil engineer-
ing from Fairleigh-Dickenson
University and was formerly
project manager for the William
L. Crow Construction Company
In New >brk, Nc* ^'ork
Computeniaiion
41
STUDENT ACTIVITIES— Regina Adams, Einar Pederson.
Leland Bennet, Mindy McNichols, Lou Ross, Jane Rushing,
Gary Fretwell, Melodye Mitchell, Joe Gordon.
CAREER PLANNING and PLACEMENT— Front Row: Pat
Nicosia, Lynn Brien, Fay Hunter; Back Row: Cindy Vita,
Mason Webster, Kelly Herr.
COUNSELING CENTER— Dorothy Perkowski, Janet
Hansche, Janie Beers, Karen Ricard. Janet Limouze, George
Hopper, Cherril Rudd.
Tulane: a Better Place to Be
REGISTRAR'S OFFICE— Front Row: Peggy Williams, Eva
DiBartolo, Anna Gallassi, Sylvia Major; Back Row: Dee
Hook, Diane Plauche, Jackie Dragon, Gayle Rothstein, Mike
Pokosnik, Ann Salzar, Earl Retif.
42
Student Services
The goal of the Division of Stu-
dent Services is to create an envi-
ronment for students which pro-
vides maximum opportunities for
personal, social, cultural and
spiritual maturity as a comple-
ment to the structured intellectu-
al experiences offered in the class-
room.
This enriched environment is
provided through programs, ser-
vices, and less structured learning
experiences in the following
areas: Student Activities, Student
Government, Career Planning
and Placement, Club and Intra-
mural Sports, Community Action
Council of Tulane Students
(CACTUS), Counseling and
Testing Center, Dean of Students
Office, Fraternity Affairs, Fresh-
man Orientation, International
Student Center, Residential Life,
Student Records and Registra-
tion, and Tulane Dining Services.
The theme "Making Tulane a
Better Place to Live" was heard
often this year as Student Ser-
vices' Departments underwent re-
decoration, renovation, and self-
evaluation. Physical facilities im-
provements occurred in the
Residence Halls, University Cen-
ter, Rathskellar, Cafeteria, Deli,
and Bruff Commons.
Dr. Bananas' Patio Oasis
opened its new location in the
University Center in April. The
stadium field received new artifi-
cial turf and lights were installed
to expand field usage.
Creation of a sense of commu-
nity, belonging, and self-determi-
nation of residents was the pur-
pose of the Experimental Project
conducted through the Office of
Residential Life.
This year, hall residents on the
third and eleventh floors of Mon-
roe and second floor of Warren
considered the physical, social
and programmatic needs of the
residents of their respective
floors, developed plans for
changes, and became involved in
the implementation of those
changes.
In other areas, a new Director
of the Counseling and Testing
Center was appointed and a doc-
toral intern added to the staff.
A major "first" was accom-
plished by the production of the
Tulane Index, a comprehensive
student handbook. The Index will
be an important information
source for students on all phases
of University life.
The Tulane Emergency Medi-
cal Service (TEMS) was created
through an innovative joint effort
of the Dean of Students Office,
CACTUS, Health Services, Se-
curity, and Student Foundation.
Staffed entirely by student volun-
teers who are professionally
trained and certified in emergen-
cy medical and rescue proce-
dures, TEMS responded to health
related emergenices on campus
and provided ambulance service
to local hospitals.
Student Services embarked on
an ambitious, self-evaluation pro-
gram designed to assess its status
and needs, develop goals, and
plan its future direction. A Task
Force was established to inter-
view Student Services staff, stu-
dents, faculty, deans, and other
administrators, and to finalize a
plan of action for the future direc-
tion of Student Services.
Demonstrating a lacrosse move, Dr. Rix Yard
hopes to improve on Marty Wells' goal attacking
moves.
i)onal(i R. Moore
'-Pre«deni jnd Dean ot
■ ■"""^■"•"•-^wvreliiv W'6
Ooruld R. Moore. He pre
• tvHd d vaneiv o( pow-
1 adomMraiion ai TUIane
"10 Emory Univerirties Moore
"oWs a B A degree and a L I B
■fom Emory
SJurffitf Sfivkrs 43
PHYSICAL PLANT — Front row: Walter Schleh, William
E. Pollard, Charles E. Gilbert, John C. Bendler, Ken
Symonette; Second row: Henry Fry, Marydlain Walker,
Geneva Peck, Cynthia Swan, Argentina Acosta, Dianie
Albert, Nga Van Nguyen, Alanson Arnold, Sura P. Rath;
Back row: Michael Artus, Archie B. Berger Sr, Edna M.
Love, George L. Weigh, Lorraine D. Palmer, Michael P.
Jester, Tom Armitage, Michael White.
RESIDENTIAL LIFE — John Watton, Richie Amsler, Alan
Davis, Linda Franke, Joe Snee, Brian Hughes.
SECURITY — Front row; Alan Jefferson, Israel Diaz, Jeron
Maquie; Back row: Johnny Van Buen, Louis McWilliams,
Fred McGee, Phillip Elsy, Larry McKinney, Stan Casper,
Dave Roberts, Tony Lawson.
44
Residential Life
Making Tulane a Better Place to Live
For years, the concept of resi-
dential living was a narrow one.
Residence halls were referred to
as dormitories and students
moved in buildings with the ex-
pectation that they would simply
have a place to sleep and eat.
Tulane's Department of Resi-
dential Life supports a much
more extensive definition of resi-
dential living. They believe that
an individual's experience in a liv-
ing environment on campus
should complement the academic
sector of the University.
Residence halls at Tulane are
places where students can develop
intellectually, socially, physically,
and culturally. It is a time for in-
dividuals to examine and evaluate
their present needs, morals, val-
ues, career objectives, friend-
ships, etc.
The Residential Life staff fa-
cilitates this development
through the services and pro-
grams it offers. The past year fo-
cused on physical improvements
within the residence halls.
Extensive maintenance and
custodial work was done over the
summer to prepare for the stu-
dents' return to campus. Many
areas were painted, furniture was
refinished, windows were steam
cleaned, blinds and furniture was
reupholstered, carpeting was in-
stalled, etc. This commitment
continued throughout the year
with the establishment of 3 Ex-
perimental Areas.
The Experimental Areas are
located on the second floor of
Warren House, and on the fifth
and eleventh floors of Monroe.
Residents living in these areas
were given an opportunity to initi-
ate and implement improvements
within their area.
For the coming year. Residen-
tial Life intends to continue to en-
hance residence halls physically
and also to enhance the program-
matic aspect of Residential Life.
Resident Council will have a
fresh, new image next year as all
1 6 residence halls will be joined in
their efforts to program for the
residence hall community.
Resident Council will coordi-
nate House Council programs
and will also initiate and imple-
ment programs of their own de-
signed to bring the entire resident
population together.
The major change in campus
living, and one which will have a
significant affect on the system
will be the change in personnel
and structure within the Residen-
tial Life Office. Next year the po-
sitions of the Director of Men's
Housing and Director of Wom-
en's Housing will be combined
into one position — Assistant Di-
rector for Residence Life.
In addition, 3 professional peo-
ple will be hired as Area Coordin-
ators. They will live in the resi-
dence halls thereby providing im-
mediate and continuous
accessibility and professional ex-
pertise to the residents, and stu-
dent staff.
The addition of live-in profes-
sionals will greatly enhance Tu-
lane's Residential Life program
by enabling students to be in-
volved in many aspects of residen-
tial living presently untried. The
Residential Life Staff is commit-
ted to providing an atmosphere
conducive to effective group liv-
ing.
Watching TV in Sharp Hall's renovated television
lounge became a favorite pastime of many fresh-
men male dorm residents.
Man H. DunIs
Min B. I)i«tv hat been in that
(Hjsiiion since Jul) 1979 He
holdi a B A in PolKical Science
and an M.A in Guidance and
Counseling, both from Slelwn
Lniversiiy Davjj previously
worked in other residential life
adminislatise positions for bo4h
Tulanc University and Georgia
Southern College
Resdential Lift
45
ALUMNI FUND — Front row: Aida Sanford, Charlotte
Colomb; Second row: Dolly Chisholm, Lydianne Barousse;
Back row: J. Terry Jones, Betty Hilliard, Malida Sanchez,
Judy Fretwell, Sarah Chesser, Stan Retif.
ALUMNI RELATIONS — Front row: Jeanne Edell, Rita
Cass, Diane Banfell; Second row: Toni Averna, Helen
Jackson, Theresa Sanders, Dot Gueldner; Third row: Rosie
Mitchell, Varsha Ladd; Fourth row: Cherry Phillips, Alice
McCausland; Back row: Christine Kreyling, Camille Burger,
Jim Schneider.
46
Development
Development
Money — it's the key to Tulane
reaching its potential as a Univer-
sity par excellence. The Universi-
ty has made fund raising one of its
major activities in the past few
years, and results are pouring in.
Tulane has been receiving more
money from alumni, individuals,
corporations and foundations;
consequently the University is on
the way to overcoming its low en-
dowment and is no longer operat-
ing on a deficit.
Tulane's budget was balanced
in 1979-80 for the first time in 25
years, and has stayed balanced.
According to Vice President for
development and alumni affairs
Warren Johnson, University Pre-
side Eamon Kelly's unflagging
enthusiasm and managerial ex-
pertise have created a climate fa-
vorable for fund raising.
Making people aware of Tu-
lane is the first step toward in-
creasing donations. The Alumni
Fund pursues this goal by remind-
ing graduates — from the mo-
ment they receive their diplomas
— that Tulane cannot prosper
without their financial support.
Alumni are asked to donate
through the mail, in person and
during annual phonathons. Ac-
cording to Alumni Fund Director
Terry Jones, the fund runs on a
network of volunteers from each
graduating class, located in major
cities.
Jones is optimistic about reach-
ing campaign goals. "Now that
our budget is balanced, we can
tell alumni they're helping Tulane
grow, not just helping cover defi-
cits. It changes the whole tenor of
what we write and say," Jones
said.
The public relations arm of Tu-
lane, the Office of University Re-
lations, affects development by
making Tulane visible to the city
and the nation through the news
media.
Direct inputs come from the
Office of Development, headed
by Warren Johnson, which co-
ordinates all facets of fund rais-
ing. The office is split into
branches that work separately to
achieve the common goal of rais-
ing money. These branches work
with major donor prospects, cor-
porations, foundations, and local
businesses, and other areas.
The funds alumni donate will
strengthen the University in a
more direct way. Kelly and the
Board of Administrators have
outlined specific plans for the in-
come. Kelly wants to improve the
quality of the student body, which
means pouring more money into
existing academic programs and
creating new ones. He hopes to
raise faculty salaries and improve
the library, also to upgrade camp-
us maintenance by taking care of
all the projects the University had
put on hold.
People are looking at Tulane
differently. If the University is
successful in getting the money it
needs — and the prospects look
promising — Tulane will be well
on the way to fulfilling its dreams.
The crowning of the queen of Homecoming, Bar-
bara Bauman, is traditionally done by the Presi-
dent of the Alumni Association, Robert Young.
Wurrcn lohnson
i ^
VVarrrn \. JuhR>un. » i».c-Htr»i-
icni for Dcvclopmcnl and
Mumni AfTam. has Tilled ihal
.1 since May 1981 He pre-
• jously worked at the Lniversily
of Chicago and Si Cloud Suie
Lniversil) in adminislralivc po-
sitions Johnson holds a bache-
lor's degree in business from St
Cloud State and a nvasler's de-
gree from the Lniversil) of Min-
"csoia He guided Tulane's most
^uccessful fund raising effort
ever in fiscal year 1981. raising
more than S2I million
^
Development
47
V
NEWCOMB ADMISSIONS — Front Row: Joan Ferro,
Marilyn Hernandez, Carolyn Meyer; Second Row: Laurie
Lagonegro, Melissa Blanco, Susan Chapin, Pauline Smelcer;
Back Row: Patrice Gaudin, Nancy Schoenberg.
TULANE ADMISSIONS — Mike Thompson, Carol Morris,
Jill Jonker, Midge La Porte, Chris Frost, Doug Gilbert.
ECONOMICS — Front Row: Rodney Falvey, Donald Koran,
John Newman, Dagobert Brito, Mary Thomas, Tracy
Saunders, Alice Slutsky (dog), Carroll Smith, Yutaka Hor-
iba.
48
Admissions
Admissions
Things were not necessarily
looking up in Tulane's Office of
Admissions.
Fred Zuker, the young director
of that office, resigned over the
summer, part of a large exodus of
top administrators.
But there was some reason for
optimism. First of all, Tulane had
a powerful new selling point, a
new curriculum.
Realizing that universities
must continually reassess their
programs to meet the demands of
students buying a more expensive
education, the faculties of Arts &
Sciences and Newcomb overcame
years of debate and agreed on a
joint curriculum.
The Admissions office stressed
the good points of the new cur-
riculum, but also that the joint
curriculum did not mean the two
colleges had neglected the special
interests of their different con-
stituencies.
Newcomb College reaffirmed
its commitment to women's edu-
cation, the University Honors
Program supported the needs of
superior students who wish to ac-
celerate their studies or explore
certain topics in greater depth,
and Project Talent had a wide
range of opportunities open to ad-
vanced students.
High school seniors seemed to
like what the Admissions office
was telling them. This past year
was one in which Tulane accepted
the highest quality entering class
in recent history, screened from
the greatest number of applica-
tions ever received.
In fact, the American Council
on Education rated Tulane among
the 24 most highly selective pri-
vate universities in the nation.
One index of academic excellence
among applicants is S.A.T.
scores; last fall's entering students
averaged thirteen points higher
on these examinations than their
immediate predecessors.
Towards the end of the year Jill
Jonker was appointed Director of
Admissions, selected as the out-
standing applicant from among
30 candidates.
President Eamon Kelly said,
"She performed with competence
and integrity as Acting Director
of Admissions, and Tulane is for-
tunate to retain a person with her
skills and dedication in this im-
portant position."
Things were looking up by the
end of the year.
Walking around campus Mike Thompson takes a
perspective freshman student on a tour and draws
attention to the places on campus that interest
each individual student.
I ois V. Conrad
I on V. Conrjti
•.•tiof o! At- _■ •.•.-.
comb College wnce Unujr>
1977 Before her jppanmem
ID the poMnn. the wts » fw(d
represeflidiive lor the Ahxnni
Fund oil ice Conrad hokh *
bachelor v degree n EngMi Ircn
Ceorgeiown UnrverMv and *
master's degree in Engkth from
TuUne
-tleSMiMO
49
Organizations
50
Organizations
Orgamzalions
51
52
Newcomb Dance
FliK^
Emotions in Motion at
The Newcomb
Dance Club
"No experience necessary, just a
liking of dance"sums up the qualifi-
cations for membership in the New-
comb Dance Club. This organiza-
tion, founded over 40 years ago by
Frances Bush, exists solely to pro-
mote dance on the Tulane campus.
The club is divided into two
groups, one for modern dance and
the other for ballet. Both sections
work together throughout the year
on the Spring Concert, the main ac-
tivity of the organization. In the
concert, dancers perform numbers
choreographed by established danc-
ers and even some developed by
group members.
In addition to the Spring Concert,
the group sponsored Dance .Aware-
ness Week. This well-received pro-
Pickin' and Grinnin' — Modern dancers cxpcrimcnl
with new techniques of body communication
ject demonstrated and explained
various aspects of dance.
This year, the group benefited
from a Dance Outreach grant re-
ceived by Newcomb College. The
grant allowed Newcomb to bring in
professional dancers to conduct
workshops on campus.
Dan Maloney. the director of the
Mary .Anthony Company and a for-
mer member of the Martha Graham
company, was one of the guest art-
ists. He taught a group of avid par-
ticipants his own choreographic
piece, "Boppin." "
The Newcomb Dance club is not
just for future Baryshnikovs. but
also for people who \sould rather
watch dancing from a comfortable
theater chair.
SpringinK into iclion. these girls express rrtcdom in
Newcomb Danci
V 53
■s
Controversy Dominates the ASB
Controversial topics dominated
the Associated Student Body's
agenda in the 1981-82 school year.
One of the most controversial is-
sues was the recognition of a new
student group, the Young Ameri-
cans for Freedom. Members of this
organization, a conservative politi-
cal action group, sought approval
from the ASB to operate on campus.
In a heated and close vote, the Sen-
ate said no.
But the group, bolstered by sup-
port from national figures such as
William F. Buckley, appealed their
case to the University Senate. Even
without the ASB Senate's nod, this
body overwhelmingly approved the
YAF
The ASB wrangled with student
salaries — again. The issue seemed
dead last year when the Senate ap-
proved a resolution in favor of sala-
ries. But a last-minute, year-end
grass roots effort dredged salaries
up again, this time abolishing them.
Debate concerning salaries was
no less confusing this year. Numer-
ous proposals were considered,
agreed upon, and then not agreed
upon.
Finally, the Senate agreed to es-
tablish a "motivation and recogni-
tion" fund to be divided among the
six boards of the ASB. This would
be the only compensation students
could receive for work in a student
activity.
Students tried their hand in Uni-
versity planning when the ASB con-
sidered a proposal for an intramural
sports center. The idea was for stu-
dents to fund the construction of a
student-operated sports center, with
building plans to be developed by
architecture students.
Of course, the ASB addressed less
controversial topics also. The ASB
answered complaints concerning the
University's new phone system, and
established a special Spirit Commit-
tee. The highlight of the commit-
tee's activities was blowing up 5000
green balloons which were released
at the Tulane-Vanderbilt football
game.
Dave Schneider was president for
most of the year. Cindee Schreiber
was vice president for administra-
tion, Lou Ann Atlas was vice presi-
dent for University affairs, Mauri
Cohen was vice president for aca-
demic affairs, and Pam Hochberg
was ASB Trustee.
Andy Werth was vice president
for finance until Spring elections
when he captured the ASB's top
spot. His cabinet consists of Pete
Edwards, VPA; Amy Pinsker,
VPUA; Michelle Burkett, VPAA;
C.W. McGowan, VPF; and Scott
Ratchick, TRUSTEE.
Dave Schneider and Lou Ann Atlas listen attentively to
a different view point for the student salary issue.
ASB President Dave Schneider and Trustee Pam
Hochberg take a break from their daily duties as ASB
executives.
54
Student Government
SivJenI Cottntmfnl
55
^w
Media Works to Keep
ents Informed
Media. No longer is distance a
factor. We communicate across con-
tinents as easily as across a dinner
table, face to face in full color and
stereo sound.
Technology has been wonderful in
its gifts to communications: tele-
phones, wirephotos, radio, televi-
sion. A President is shot, seconds
later the world hears about it, mo-
ments later the world sees it.
Media means glamour, excite-
ment, danger, long hours, low
wages. Publicity, becoming famous
for reporting, capturing, and com-
menting on the events that shape
our lives, this is what attracts people
to the media.
Tulane has no journalism school,
no academic credit, no affiliation
with the classroom or any degree.
Why then is the media such a large
part of the university's life?
Why do people wait on the U.C.
steps for the arrival of The Hullaba-
loo every Friday? Certainly there
are other things to read, other radio
stations to listen to.
Why do students spend their lives
writing, editing, taking photo-
graphs, reading news, engineering
radio programs, answering tele-
phones, and running endless er-
rands? Or dealing with budgets,
bills, rules, regulations, forms, pro-
posals, headaches, responsibilities,
deadlines, and missed deadlines?
All this work is at the expense of
grades, friends, and sleep. To what
end one might ask? A job at The
New York Times, NBC-TV, Warner
Bros, records. Hardly. No one walks
into that kind of job right out of
college, with or without a journal-
ism degree. Dues must be paid at
small town papers, radio stations,
and the like.
Jambalaya photographer, Dale Levy gets his prints
ready before the February deadline.
Dedication, hard work, and lots of
personal sacrifice provide Tulane
with a good radio station. Literary
Magazine, Yearbook, Video, and
Newspaper.
After four years those who choose
to pursue careers in their respective
medium can expect to work week-
end nights, and holidays at salaries
of $200 a week. In time, after years
of hardwork, failure, frustration,
those who strive to be best, not satis-
fied with good enough, can make it
to the top.
In recent years, it has become
clear that doors are not closed to
Tulane grads. Everyone who had
disguised the talent, drive and dedi-
cation has broken into entry level
positions, and some have even risen
quickly. Maybe in a few years we
will see them on TV. Then we can
say, "I went to school with him."
And what of those who choose
other directions? Leadership expe-
rience at The Hullabaloo must cer-
tainly have benefited powerful Lou-
isiana Congressman T Hale Boggs.
(Lindy Boggs was also Editor of the
Newcomb Arcade.) Others have
gone on to become lawyers, doctors,
artists, and numerous other occupa-
tions.
If nothing else, someone who
worked in the media can pick up a
newspaper and appreciate the mo-
mentous effort it represents, as well
as the profit potential to its readers.
Or, these former workers have the
ability to watch the six o'clock news,
appreciate the hours of tape edited
down to llVi minutes, absorb the
facts presented, the questions not
answered, and questions of objectiv-
ity.
56
Media
II \A( incMitJcts Uaviu Hrii-c .inO C rj) Hcnr> upc
the Foolball Iniramural Champioiuhip.
In till [iroduciion office, Pcier L'rbancmicz prepama
fall i:>!>uc ul the Hullabaloo
Disc jocke> Vicki Murray spins albums while on ibe
air al W Tl 1.
Jambiila\i <>(iffor, Sigal Shapira. enjoys a momcnl o(
\c\\\\ ilurini: mmik hard work
Media 0/
Choir Travels to London
After months of arduous plan-
ning, fund raising and personal
economy, twenty-eight members of
the Tulane Choir arrived in London,
England, on January '4, 1982.
They were accompanied by Win-
nie Trevillian, Music Department
program director, Ann Bryant, and
of course, choir director Michael
Howard.
Although this group was billed as
a choir, the nature of the trip was
mostly for pleasure. Yet somehow,
amidst all of the fun, sightseeing
tours, gourmet dining, and theatri-
cal outings, the choir actually found
time to sing.
The weather in London was un-
seasonably cold and severe, but
58
Choir
most of the group survived the bliz-
zards. Streets blanketed with snow
served as an added attraction for
those choir members from the deep
South who rarely see the fluffy stuff.
Among the highlights of the tour
were trips to Stratford-Upon-Avon
and Windsor Castle, the hit musical
"Cats," and the choir's concert at
St. Mary's in Hammersmith.
There the choir sang a selection of
sacred choral music before a small
congregation of elderly ladies. After
the concert they obliged the group
the traditional cup of tea. The choir
finally broke into choruses of "Dix-
ie," impromptu Jazz, "When the
Saints Go Marching In," and "God
Save the Queen."
Personal sightseeing was slightly
more extensive. Excursions ranged
from trips to Porta Bella Road, Pet-
ticoat Lane, Lercester and Picadilly
Squares. One group made a com-
parative study of all the pubs in the
South West district while another
(the Tulane Cat) graced the stage at
the New London Theatre.
Some people explored the British
Museum and the Victoria and Al-
bert, while others visited Madame
Toussaud's. And of course, some
members went on shopping sprees at
Harrod's.
Houses of Parliament located on the Thames in Lon-
don, England, was one of the many places choir mem-
bers toured while on their trip.
Student Productions
Are Well Received
frrJs!;f?hf''''"^ ''^ !""' ^'P°^' '^ mesmerized by the
irresistable powers of Count Dracula olaved hv I»™
Burks ,n the University Players' adaptaln of cZ
The Angels, Tere Willen, Barb Hodin, Erin Eriich
th U s's'f ""^ 'Z ''^ Photographer'as they board
tne u.s.s. for an adventure-filled cruise in Camn„Q
N.te's production of Cole Porter's AnylngGo^'
Jeanne Collins pla>-s a member of the "perfect" locicl)
in ihc Lniversuy Players' version of I9S4 She i» <ml>-
draun after having been interrogated b> the ihoughl
police for suspicion of conspiring with rebcb to over-
throw Big Brother
( harlic BroMn, played by Nalty Killeen. lislens »ilb
.imazemeni as the rest of the Peanuts gang. Gary Rob-
erts. Lori Crow-son. David Miller. Susan M Cone.
Sieve Vaughan. sings his praise in TLCP's productrao
Jhttlrt
61
Progressive Radio Thrives at WTUL
"Are you tired of the same old
sound? Want something new? Tune
in the Progressive Leader, 91.5 FM,
WTUL." — WTUL Promotional
Advertisement
Not only is WTUL New Orleans'
Progressive Leader, it is New Or-
leans' only progressive radio station.
Sabrina Bunks, General Man-
ager of WTUL, claimed the label of
"progressive radio" because 'TUL
"exposes the listener to a wide vari-
ety of music that no other radio sta-
tion plays." This variety includes
classical, blues, jazz, folk, reggae,
New Wave, rock 'n' roll, and older
commercial releases not frequently
played on commercial stations.
WTUL is a non-commercial pub-
lic radio station run by the students
of Tulane that serves the city of New
Orleans.
In addition to playing great mu-
sic, WTUL presents educational
features such as "News Blimps" and
"The Culture Report." News and
sports can be heard five times each
day, as well as a half-hour sports
digest on Sunday nights.
Over the last three years, WTUL
has grown significantly. Bunks cited
the Rock-On Survival Marathon as
a major reason for the recent suc-
cess.
"The Marathon has brought the
station enough revenue to purchase
a new mixing board and to improve
our production studio," she noted.
The improvements of Studio B,
the station's production studio,
made WTUL better equipped to
promote their own special presenta-
tions and other campus events.
This improves public relations,
which is another source of WTUL's
tremendous growth over the last
three years.
Vox Humana, the 'TUL newslet-
ter, is another major facet of the sta-
tion's public relations program. The
Vox offers information about 'TUL
programming and also on what's
happening in the city.
Bunks expects future increase in
special t'calurcs such as interviews
with local bands and personalities.
The news department also plans to
present more local and in-depth re-
ports.
In addition, WTUL will heighten
its antenna to increase their broad-
cast range to include more oi' the
city.
Overall, WTUL is a special orga-
nization on campus. It is a cooperat-
ive effort on behalf of each and ev-
■ery member of the staff. The Jox,
the tech staff, and everyone else all
contribute to that well-known TUL
sound.
Disc jockey. Carta WestcotI spins albums for tier week-
K show.
\i .\n \s|i Svnaii mrriing Sabrina Bunks. General
Mjn.i^'cr III V> III. cmphatizcs ihc need for tludeni
salaries.
In ilu iKttsrimm Nina Camacho reads Ihe AP wire
bcfurc her ncuscasl.
Bizzarre Radio gives students a chance to air unusual
rclc.iscs.
Med
13 63
TUCP Tunes in Tulane
Bringing musical entertainment
to the Tulane campus is no easy
task. Working with limited facili-
ties, coordinating shows around the
multitude of musical events in the
city, and catering to the diverse de-
mands of students, is a constant
challenge.
The TUCP Concert committee,
comprised of almost thirty con-
cerned and dedicated individuals, is
responsible for all of Tulane's con-
cert programming.
Committee members coordinate
all aspects of concert events from
contract negotiations and technical
riders to publicity, ticket sales and
hall management.
Student volunteers do all the
stage crew work as well as security,
ushering and ticket handling jobs,
while the TUCP Technical staff
runs spotlights and provides sound
equipment for smaller shows.
The development of a good work-
ing relationship with local promot-
ers and major national and interna-
tional booking agencies has played
an important role in the committee's
ability to book outstanding artists.
Shows this year included the
comedian Gallagher, the Pretend-
ers, Toots & the Maytals, Steve
Hackett, Gil Scott-Heron, Joan Ar-
matrading, Ralph Towner/John
Abercrombie, Al DiMeola and Jaco
Pastorius, and the Word of Mouth
Band/ the Dregs. In addition to
shows staged in the 1800-seat McA-
lister Auditorium, TUCP Concerts
promoted blues guitarist Roy Book-
binder, folksinger Tish Hinojosa,
and the New Jazz Quintet in der
Rathskeller and also did the produc-
tion for Homecoming in the Hyatt
with the Nevilles.
Special projects this year includ-
ed compiling an extensive New Or-
leans directory for the internation-
ally recognized Performance Maga-
zine. Additionally, assistance was
provided for the balloon special ef-
fects used in the Rolling Stones
show.
All things considered, it has been
a great year for music at Tulane
with the committee successfully
booking an array of outstanding
musicians and fulfilling its goal to
provide entertainment and a musi-
cal education for the students.
Bill Gould and Glenn Schulman assemble the sound
system pieces backstage, hours before the Dregs'
concert.
Tech crew members and TUCP Concerts Chairman,
Bill Gould, wait on the McAlister Auditorium loading
dock for pieces of equipment to produce the Dregs'
Concert.
64
TUCP
■'^i^i
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V-
.y \
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Omnipotent Providers
The early morning hours found
me stumbling into my room — a lan-
guishing vestige of "Quarter-Beer
Night."
I came in, passed out and lay co-
matose for five minutes before a
rather boisterous knock was issued
upon my door. I fetched my last
waning reserves of energy and
raised the blinds only to find myself
glaring at an equally mindless in-
toxicant.
With listless abandon, he mut-
tered those nerve-cringing, pester-
ing, festering words which all RA's
ultimately hear — "Will you please
open my door?"
To be sure, a football player in one
dorm lost his key no less than twelve
times. By paying for duplicates he
had funded two study breaks and a
new Softball bat.
Resident Advisors perform hand-
fuls of important duties around
campus and in the Halls. To resi-
dents, an RA becomes emulated as
the noble, omnipotent provider of
information, advice, wisdom and ex-
perience.
Perhaps a little less disheartening
is the RA's role as floor supervisor,
programmer, and organizer. Here,
an RA's duties run the gamut from
disciplining pranksters to conjuring
up creative programming activities
like the "I Love Lucy" party where
everyone came dressed as Fred or
Ethel Mertz.
For many RA's, the job offers not
only a number of enjoyable activi-
ties, but also some of the fondest
memories of college life.
There is weekend duty (usually
acquired after several trade-offs
within the staff) where one RA is
condemned to a night in the dorm,
alone and with little to do.
There are the notorious "work-
shops" which drag RA's away a
week early from the beaches in the
summer and the ski slopes in the
winter. Actually, they allow RA's to
acquire the best mattress, chair, and
There is no glory,
there is no glamour,
just a bunch of
lightbulbs to be
replaced . . .
desk on the floor before any resi-
dents arrive.
In all honesty, it seems an RA
earns his pay primarily through on-
going battles with "Maintenance."
In fact, the most reliable measure of
an RA's competence, efficiency and
ability pivots around his/her ability
to wield influence over maintenance
and repairs in the dorm.
There is no glory, there is no
glamor, just a bunch of light bulbs to
be replaced, doors to be unlocked,
and repairs to be reported. More im-
portantly, though, there are friends
to be made and good times to be
shared.
■■y»-««r;i,i, i,« „mfmtf,
66
R.A.'s
t-
r .
CuitarUl (and Roidcnl Advisor) Andy Schroth UKO
a break from school and perfects his musical abilities
Kindlng a place on iht door, I2lh Floor R.A. Andy
Rccs posts a notice about the "I Love Lucy" party.
KA
s 67
Student Foundation Works for Tulane
The Tulane Student Foundation
is the link connecting present and
past students of the University. It is
the only organization at Tulane in
which students work directly with
alumni in various functions. Student
Foundation also strives to bring stu-
dents and faculty closer together.
Student Foundation's primary
concern is providing the students,
staff, and alumni of the University a
real look at Tulane. The hard work
of the organization's members, led
by their president, Robert Ratelle,
was reflected in functions like Su-
perfest, the Homecoming Dance,
Hotline, Spring Ring, and Senior
week.
The Homecoming dance on Fri-
day, November 13, 1981, kicked off
Student Foundation's busiest week.
Everyone at the sold-out dance boo-
gied to the music of Jubilation! as
this year's court was presented. Su-
perfest, the homecoming extrava-
ganza, was the next day, game day.
Irma Thomas, New Orleans' own
Queen of Soul, highlighted the day
with a high-spirited concert. Every-
one enjoyed the Fest, except maybe
President Eamon Kelly and a few
others who found out they were all
wet by being on the receiving end of
three wet sponges for 25 cents.
Student Foundation sponsors an
annual fundraising phonathon, Hot-
line, during three weeks in the Fall.
Spring Ring is the next semester's
phonathon. Terri Margolin chaired
Hotline this year, and Amy Pepper
organized Spring Ring.
Hotline raised over $65,000 in
pledges, making it an important
source of alumni funds. The stu-
dents or groups that raised the most
money were awarded a prize as in-
centive to help. The prize this year, a
color television set, went to the Kap-
pas. Pi Phi placed second and SAE
came in third.
Amy Pepper explained that
"Spring Ring is not run on the same
scale as Hotline. It is only open to
the different schools in the Universi-
ty which compete against each other
to raise funds from their own alum-
ni."
The remaining members of the
Student Foundation board this year
were Chris Borah, vice president of
student affairs; Missy Cohen, vice
president of administration; Marga-
ret Gavel, treasurer; Peggy Basic,
secretary; and Dolly Chisholm, staff
advisor. Terry Jones, director of Tu-
lane's alumni fund, helps coordinate
the phonathon.
68
Student Foundation
Students enjoy the music of Irma Thomas at Supcrfc.M Member* of Z*ti P« Fratcmily axnpctc lo get the
'{i{ most contributions at Hotline
Student Foundation
CACTUS
Lends A
Helping
Hand
Escorting a friend, Lisa Schohan participates in a field
day.
Running outdoors, Marie Juneau watches at Croker
Elementary school.
70
Cactus
"The students eoniing every week
is the only thing a lot of us have tu
look forward to to break the mono-
tony of being caged like a legless
cockroach. "
— A prisoner in
Parish Prison
The Community Action Council
of Tulane University Students
(CACTUS) is a volunteer organiza-
tion that attempts to reach out to the
members of the Tulane and New
Orleans community and lend a
"helping hand."
Though CACTUS is an impor-
tant and influential force in New
Orleans schools, health care facili-
ties, prisons, and youth homes, (to
mention a few areas), the impact it
has on the Tulane campus should
not be overlooked. CACTUS affects
every student, faculty, and staff
member in some way.
CACTUS volunteers have hccn
fundamental in the development ot
the Tulane Emergency Medical Ser-
vice (TEMS), the Peer Tutoring
program, and the Tulane University
Blood Replacement and Insurance
Program (TUBRIP).
If yt)u need medical care on
campus, help with a class or blood
insurance, CACTUS is there. Help-
ing the fraternities and sororities
find community service projects,
and working with the religious orga-
nizations to run a food drive makes
CACTUS a vital part oi Tulane.
But what is CACTUS? The orga-
nization is the volunteers in it
volunteers who want to help, to
learn, and to be needed. The\ ha\e
the opportunitN to work on campus
and coniiiuiiiilN pro|ccis. I hese pro-
icct> range from tutoring children o\'
all ages to helping run a blood drive.
Working in a hospital, counseling
juvenile dclinqucnls. running a re-
cvcling center. cxpaiKliiis: I ouisi-
Tutoring local students, this volunteer provido a need-
ed service
Concerned lotunteer Lou Ann Atlu watches over a
friend
ana"s "Reading Is Fundamental"
program - the list of projects is
limited only by the imaginations of
the volunteers.
The obvious goal of CACTUS is
to aid people who need help, but the
benefits to the volunteer are even
more. For the Tulane student CAC-
TUS otTers an alternative to the
path between Gibson and Newcomb
Hall, \olunteers have the chance to
experience in an active way people
with dilTerent backgrounds, values
and problems. No liberal arts edu-
cation should be complete without
this sort o\' interaction.
Important to the CACTI'S e.xpe-
rience is developing friendships —
both with the clients and the volun-
teers. Friendships will last or be re-
membered beyond college years be-
cause so much caring and concern
for others is involved. These are the
l\pe o\' friendships that make col-
lege reward inn.
C»c1us
71
Female Cadet
Reaches For the Stars
"Oh, but you're so little!"
That's the response Wendy Willis
hears when she tells people she's go-
ing to be a pilot in the Air Force. A
slender 5'6", the soft-spoken civil en-
gineering senior is a far cry from the
stereotype husky, cold-hearted fe-
male drill sergeant. But she's not to
be dismissed lightly, either. Willis
was one of the first 22 Air Force
ROTC women in the nation to be
selected as pilot candidates.
As such, Willis is one of nearly 50
Tulane students enrolled in the Air
Force Reserve Officers Training
program. All branches of the armed
forces are represented on the Tulane
Campus.
Willis admits that it seems "a lit-
tle unusual" for a girl to be in
ROTC. "It's fairly rare for women
to be interested in the military." She
noted, however, that this attitude is
changing. "Each year we get more
girls in the freshman class. In my
senior class, three of the 10 cadets
are women. I would say a class gen-
erally has 20 to 25 percent women."
She finds little difficulty in being
accepted by the male cadets. "If
you're competent, they'll treat you
that way, and if you're incompetent,
they'll treat you that way, too. I
think they're really willing to accept
you for what you can do."
Willis has not only chosen an un-
usual profession, but she has her
"perfect career mapped out. If I
could, I'd complete pilot training,
then I'd become an instructor pilot
in a T-38, which is a high-perfor-
mance aircraft."
She smiled when she thought
about flying a craft faster than the
speed of sound. "Then, after one
tour as an instructor pilot, I'd fly an
A- 10, which is a close air support
aircraft, and I'd be stationed in Eng-
land."
She admits that she couldn't fly
the A- 10 now because women are
not legally permitted to serve in
combat positions. "It would be four
years from now before I could fly. A
lot of officers have told me that
women may be able to fly in combat
in the near future."
Eventually, Willis dreams of en-
tering the astronaut program.
"Maybe I'll walk on the moon," she
chuckled.
Many setbacks might occur along
the way, she noted. "For one thing, a
pregnancy during pilot training
would be a big obstacle. You can't
fly when you're pregnant and hav-
ing morning sickness."
There are also pressures to leave
the military and marry. "I guess
marriage and family plans at some
point may conflict with my career
plans in the Air Force."
Other than commercial flights,
she has flown only once. This was
during a four-week field training
camp that cadets attend between
their sophomore and junior years.
The flight was in a T-37 high-perfor-
mance jet trainer.
"We had to wear a bulky para-
chute and a helmet and oxygen
mask." One memorable portion of
the flight was the barrel roll, which
involves a 360-degree roll of the air-
craft.
72
Female Cadet
"All 1 rciiicmbcr is you pull ;i cou-
ple of 'G-forccs,' " she said. "Il
pushes your head againsl the seal
and you feel your face flailcning
back towards your spine.
"I didn't get sick; I didn't think I'd
hear the end o\' it if I did." But a lot
of the pilot candidates did get sick,
she added, attributing this more to
the extreme heal at the beginning
and end of the Hight than to the air-
craft maneuvers.
Willis wondered if women should
be allowed in combat. "I think the\
should have a limited selection pro-
cess to have women in combat. 1
don't think women have a place in
the inlantry with men, but I don't
see any reason that uomen can't be
combat pilots. Not all women
should be combat pilots but now,
not all men are combat pilots, ei-
liier."
-lust as combat wouki not be lor
e\er\one Willis does not believe the
military or ROTC is either. "I don't
think ROTC is for everyone, but for
an\one who's at all interested in the
military and who realizes there are a
lot of rules, it's a good experience."
'W lot of people rebel against be-
iniz told what to do," she continued.
"There are people who rebel against
standard dress codes and haircut
regulations, people who have difTer-
eni behavior paltcrns than what the
Air Force wants. Some like to ex-
periment with drugs, for instance.
and don't think the Air Force should
tell them what to do."
"There's a lot of pride involved in
having a uniform and a haircut
that's sharp." she said. "It looks pro-
fessional to have a neat, short hair-
cut. It all has to do with pride."
SiandinK 't illenlion. Wendy Willit givo her oom-
miind) as ihc TirM female Cadel Comnamler of Air
Force ROTC. Delachmcnl 320
Who Cares?
This is a story about four people
named Everybody, Somebody, Any-
body, and Nobody.
There was an important job to be
done, and Everybody was sure that
Somebody would do it. Anybody
could have done it, but Nobody fi-
nally did it.
Somebody got angry about that
because it was Everybody's job. Ev-
erybody thought Anybody could do
it, but Nobody realized that Every-
body wouldn't do it. It ended up
that Everybody blamed Somebody,
and Nobody accused Anybody.
I didn't want to do this story, but
then neither did anyone else. Apa-
thy runs high everywhere, yes, even
on a yearbook staff. Apathy is very
prevalent at Tulane.
Why? Nobody really knows, but
then again, no one really cares. At
Tulane, the general idea is that stu-
There was an important
job to be done, and Ev-
erybody was sure that
Somebody would do it.
dents are content to wallow in a sea
of mediocrity.
Yet constantly, student politicos
assail this mediocrity. They want
"Leadership for a change" or
"Thorns in the side of indifference."
They seek to "Experience the differ-
ence" and to generally "Make Tu-
lane a better place to live."
Generally, the student leaders
have fallen victim to the assured
comforts of mediocrity.
From an incredibly bad dinner at
Bruff Commons to an unresponsive
and bureaucratic administration "^
Tulane students are daily asked to '""'
do battle with a monolith of indif-
ference. There is little to prevent
them from acquiescing and accept-
ing this university of Southern
charm and efficiency.
But this university really seems to
be merely a microcosm of the coun-
try. Now we are not merely into a
"Me" decade, we are altogether in
an era of selfishness.
People no longer want to hear
about the problems in the Third
World, or in the carcinigenicy of
their water. They want to hear about
the rate of inflation, the prime inter-
74
Apathy
rj
.»■■
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^
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•^
'.;^:
■■■■'^i-<
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i'
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as
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i..#V'
;f8.
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. -'■>•'!-■
'^''
'$
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$t
l;;-;".'
^
■'-4/.
and unemployment statis-
k-LlXilane, these interests trans-
I late into students who want to know
about the job market, who want to
know if they will ever be able to af-
ford a house, or if they will merely
be able to keep food on the table and
clothes on their back.
Yet amid the muck of all this me-
diocrity there were some memora-
ble movements this year which tend-
ed to disprove the apathy theory.
Out of a normally underdog football
team came a game against LSU
that was unrivaled in Tulane history,
and that left the Crescent City
jumping for days.
To a basketball team besieged by
years of problems, came a man from
a small town in Texas who not only
led the Wave to the National Invita-
tional Tournaments, but incited over
a thousand students to march on
No. 2 Audubon Place. It was the
first time, however, that they
Somebody finally did
something, and Nobody
blamed Anybody. Ev-
erybody was better off.
marched in ordered revelry, not in
riotous protest.
Not only did the athletic depart-
ment do some stirring this year, the
administration did enough of its
own. A new telephone system, guar-
anteed to save money, wreaked hav-
oc with service. The new system
caused mass student protests de-
manding back the more expensive
efficiency of Ma Bell.
Phone Director Judy Halterman
tried to soothe tempers as the Uni-
versity's spokesfKrson. but she soon
became the jeering students' nem-
esis— proving beyond a doubt that
the best way to get through to stu-
dents was through the telephones.
A proposed honorary degree for
President Ronald Reagan to coin-
cide with September's presidential
visit also caused a well publicized
stir among students, who felt that
the University Senate should he
little more prudent with the handing
out of sheepskins.
Somebody finally did something,
and Nobody blamed Anybody. Ev-
erybody was better olT.
.... 75
AFRO-AMERICAN CONGRESS
OF TULANE
Front Row:
Karl Doss
Therron Foley
Ernest Goodly
Jacinta Noel
Mike Jones
Paul Barns
Second Row:
Catrell McCullouch
Hank Burrel
Travell Williams
Kim Tucker
Lisa Perez
Maureen Joseph
Kim Wright
Alicia Roberts
Back Row:
Darrell Morris
Arlen Langs
Nick Goodly
Kip Lazard
Pat Morris
Mike Williams
Ronald Winged
Camille Carrere
Kevin Williams
Daryl Simian
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF
CHEMICAL ENGINEERS
Front Row:
Winston Lacayo
Harry Assmusen
Second Row:
Alfred Freudenberger
Elie Vasquez
Michael Judd
Kathryn Inouye
Denise Muckley
Lilly Ugaz
Lizette Jimenez
Jaqueline HafTner
Back Row:
John Wallaz
Robert Caire
John Kapeles
Robert Bocock
Steven Schenker
Joe Roman
Steve Murphy
AMERICAN SOCIETY
OF CIVIL ENGINEERS
Front Row:
John Hess
Calvin Hoppmeyer
Gerard Gillen
William LeCorgne
Jeffrey Garon
Second Row:
Steven Bontempo
Gregory Gillen
Leonard Quick
Ghassan Kawash
Claudia Montero
Back Row:
Burt Adams
Ignacio Irrerien
Daniel Mikulak III
76
ACT/AICE/ASCE
Il
AMf-RICAN SOCIETY OF
MICHANICAL ENGINEERS
Juc Olivier
Djvid Code
Rj> lee
filen Green
Mike Shapiro
I conard Yanuda
( amillo Kalozdi
Jim Molak
Hccky Jardinc
I arolyn Daigrc
Siuarl Lob
John ^red^clL.t
Hugh t»fTer>
Suun Kron
Mandcl Rolh
Paul McKcc
David Grc|;crily
Gary Lindcrmann
Karen Cofield
Dtanc Murphy
Victor Tokath
Tern Magolin
i
ANCHOR AND CHAIN SOCIETY'
Front Ron:
Robert Clark
Pal Ryder
Robert Vince
Tim Dorscy
Karl Koch
Tim Durst
Bruce Bommer
Second Row:
Victor Macone
John Fahsbcnder
Carl Powe
Paul Palydorcs
Sieve Main
George Hams
Chan Swallow
Keith Ansic)
Back Row:
Ignatius Libeno
Paul Kreichmcr
Joe Fish
ARCHITECTURE SENATE
Gcorfie Hero
Melonic
Hcrgen Dossel
David Wallers
ASML, Anchor & Chain/Architecture Seivaic / /
A&S SENATE
Front Row:
Billy Kirkikis
Ricky Chanon
Vin Gandrucio
Second Row:
Rod Eisenberg
Phil Jaffe
Rob Shankerman
Ken Silverstein
Gary Cohn
Back Row:
Jim Morrison
Mike Case
Mike Sacks
Fred Axelrod
Ozgur Karaosmanoglu
Terry Jones
ASSOCIATED
STUDENT BODY
Sitting:
Ricky Chanon
Greg Tendrich
Phil Jaffe
Fred Axelrod
Andy Werth
Amy Pensker
Front Row:
Vicki Alvarez
Gary Cohen
Susan Kalishman
Cindee Schrieber
Kevin Williams
Mauri Cohen
LouAnn Atlas
Dave Schneider
Jill Pender
Pam Hochberg
Second Row:
Jeff Kahn
Billy Kirkikis
Burgin Dossett
John Rickets
George Hero
Xavier Vitteri
Stuart Loeb
Ozgur Karaosmanoglu
Fonda Magids
Lynn Foster
Elizabeth Reynolds
Dave Mignatti
Back Row:
Maurice Rosenbaum
Steve Shakno
C.W. McGowen
Lee Waldman
Michelle Burkett
Jim Morrison
Stephanie Klein
Paul McDonald
Dr Tim O'Neill
Ron Sachs
Karen Starnes
ASB EXECUTIVE
BOARD
Dave Schneider
Mauri Cohen
Lou Ann Atlas
Paul McDonald
Cindee Schrieber
Pam Hochberg
Andy Werth
Bryant Cohen
Kevin Williams
Jeff Kahn
Billy Kirkikis
78
A&S Senate/ASB/Executive Board
ASB TRUST
I- runt Ron:
Mike Balkilii
Icrrcncc franklin
l'.im Zjhier
Back Row:
Wa>nc Jcncvcin
fjfcgg l.otgcrbaum
Pam Hochbcrg
Scott Ratchick
Dave Schneider
BALLET
Front Ron:
Chrlstj Gordon
Mar> Ann Buchanan
Back Ron:
Kathy Fleck
Theresa Willen
Lisa Bolot
Tar>n Shclton
Trina Espinola
Richard Silverman
Rebecca Mercer
BAND
Roster
Terry Adirim
Bryan Ballot
John Bauer
Raul Biancardi
\ndy Blankenan
Tom Blutc
JcfT Boudreaux
Dan Buchollz
K C Caldwell
Dave Coleman
Bill Cook
Gay Craft
Steve Craft
Bob C/ochara
(.)nie Dc Vallec
Carol Dclahunly
Cathy Dye
ludah Flum
David Frank
Sandy Gay
llarlcv Ginsberj
SlarkGoldbcrs
I ric Griemann
(ircg Guth
Bruce Holmes
Riikv Howe
lim Hyland
Stephen Johnson
Bruce Johnston
I isa Josvai
Cliff Juan
Dan Kahn
I ric Katj
Dan Kahn
I nc Katr
Dan Kal/ner
Mike Kelly
Cluries Kiiimilter
April Kotsar
Paul LeCat
Ed Levinc
Linda Little
Cleveland Mack
Dan Mallin
Larry Marks
Dave McCord
Richard Mel/ger
Sheryl Miller
Tom Mutclctta
Marty Moeller
Ken Nehan
Tom Oberic
Jim Peacock
Joe Pearl
Terry RagoMn
Brad Ray
Barry Resnik
Rich Rhodes
Dave Roberts
Becky Robertson
Barry Rogers
Maurice Rcocnbium
Dennis Ruello
Jon Sands
Marc Samow
Jim Skiba
Luke Sojka
Gary Stephenson
Mitch Supler
Phil Teel
Ed tiloa
Koenraad VanOinUc
Sarah Willtrd
Jim Wraihall
Fred Zcnx»
ASBIVvut/Ballel/Band /
CACTUS BOARD
Front row:
Dave Barondess
Wendy Scheier
Karen Landsberg
Beth Ryan
Anne Wolfe
Second row:
Bonnie Hirschberg
Jennifer Heller
Gretchen Harper
Chris Cooper
Lisa Shohan
Mark Lowell
Linda Saron
Tracy Mizell
Back row:
Seth Grant
Tom Cross
Paul McDonald
Regina Adams
Sean Appleyard
Joe Gordon
CHOIR
Sopranos
Katherine Brucker
Beatrice Blake
Leslie Castay
Leslie Curry
Kathleen Dahill
Elizabeth Dana
Monica Grosz
Lynne Holt
Mary Knill
Naomi Lawrence
Anna Litwin
Christie Metcalf
Jenny Knight
Margaret O'Keefe
Gayle Peacock
Lisa Reed
Susan Skinner
Altos
Philis Andrews
Mary Armstrong
Erica Beaner
Melissa Black
Karen Blankenbaker
Julie Emig
Jan Estus
Victoria Finke
Missy Gallagher
Eunice Kim
Tracey Lazarus
Meg Leake
Anne Muth
Laurie Offenberg
Lisa Perez
Cassie Steck
Tracy Trupman
Linda Zablotesky
Tenors
Eric Aukee
Andy Blankenau
Glenn Dismukes
John Hardie
Jim Karlsberger
Brian Kim
Ricardo Leon
Tim Mearig
Paul Morris
Kyle Pennington
Jamie Reily
Gary Roberts
James Simonette
Basses
Miles Bingham
Fred Boorgeois
Mike Biunno
Paul Farinella
George Fletcher
Tom Foley
Mike Friedman
Peter Gillis
Robert Harding
Keith Harmeyer
Paul Kircher
Roland Lambert
Jack Milne
Allen Reynolds
Stephen Rosoff
CIRCLE K
Front row:
Marc Kline
Susan Winchester
Junesse Viril
Ana Rios
Nicolas Moniz
Middle row:
Lorraine Pivornik
Travell Williams
Ken Slossberg
Maggie Curras
Linda Matthews
Back row:
Irving Escalante
Joe Skeens
Susan Winchester
Rabah Seffal
Rei Gonzalez
Phil Stanley
Ray Peters
80
Cactus Board, Choir, Circle K
f
CLUB SPORTS COUNCIL
I ronl run:
■Siujrl Borne
Shannon Killiica
Carol Ricwc
Judy Saltil/
Amy Goldtmilh
Diane Blumbcrg
Howard Grody
Billy Kirkikis
Salvador Sanchez
Back row:
Bart Mcrkcl
Ru Yard
Tom O'Conner
John RuotKy
Maurice Taquino
Andy F.Kotar
Sieve Mylha
Tim Slale
Mike Schnber
Nelvon Trujillo
Glenn Schulnun
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS
Eric Bradley
Elizabeth Whilmore
Rolando Gucrra
COMMODORES
From row:
Sandy Hipplcr
Sharon Mador^ky
t-orcna Dumas
Jane Nakamura
Second ro«:
Tin.i P.ico
Juncwe Viril
Pam Patrick
Beth i'duardi
Kim l.chio
Back row:
Sheila Fine
Mandy Wood
Shcri OsgoiMj
Tanya Stayer*
Li/ Whitnwre
Michele L^ccheo
Judi Franklin
Fllen Lyoftt
Not Piclarttf:
Fileen BroMcr
Monique DcQuay
Patty HufT
Tama Meyer
Ccorgu Talbot
I
C/ufc Sporf*, RtpMKtns. Commodorti
81
ENGINEERING SENATE
Joe Olivier
David Code
Ray Lee
Glen Green
Mike Shapiro
Leonard Yamada
Cumillio Kalozdi
Jim Holak
Becky Jardine
Carolyn Daigre
Stuart Lob
John H.M. Fredricks
Hugh Caffery
Susan Kron
Maridel Roth
Paul McKee
David Gregerity
Gary Lindemann
Karen Cofield
Diane Murphy
Victor Tokash
Terri Margolin
Rick McMillan
David Vining
Al Simons
Joe Cunningham
Susan Kron
Karen Cofield
Jeff Balser
Jeannie Smith
Ed Strobel
Xavier Viteri
Lily Ugaz
Stuart Lob
Kim Priebe
Maurice Rosenbaum
Lauri Hackett
Terri Lewis
Jerry Gianoli
C.W. McGowen
Jonathon Rickets
Joan Jackman
Charlene Hill, President
FINANCE BOARD
Front Row:
Andy Werth
C. W. McGowen
Amy Pinsker
George Conyne
Chris Soger
Second Row:
Kevin Williams
Gretchen Harper
Donald R. Moore
Xavier Viteri
Howard Gody
Back Row:
Jeff Kahn
Leland Bennett
Rix Yard
Charles Patin
Tom Ktstanes
Joe Gordon
Not pictured:
Melodye Mitchell
Paul McDonald
Mindy McNichol
Lou Ross
Barry Grodski
CIndee Schrieber
HULLABALOO
Front Row:
Alan Gainsburgh
Mary Brett
Lorri Pavornik
Mac Forysite
Nancy Levin
Back Row:
Peter Urbanowicz
Carl Lineberry
82
Eng. Senate, Finance Board, Hullabaloo
INSTITUTE OF
I l,ECTRONIC AND
i I.FCTRICAL ENGINEERS
J.
1 roQl Roo:
Ikird Ho»:
I'lcrrc I rickey
Dj.c I'r.^c
Michelle Mano
Duug Male
< .irmen Lgaz
John Marling
N.idi.i folic
Emile lanni
Second Ro«:
Hcclor Mum
\rmand Pcrkm»
Joe Wa/
Kc%in Schoil
Mark Utamofid
lim Peacock
Rick Townley
Kcnnv Robichaux
Clay Henry
I )C Smith
Steve Shirl)
Mike Pcarcc
Mall Shertnann
Calhv Boquel
Dr Paul Duvouin
JAMBALAYA
Kroni Row:
Back Row:
Jcnn\ Dunn
Juli tjardig
l.arr> Korn
Suzzane Sauuy
Steven
Sigal Shapira
Josh kat/
Eleanor Comer
Middle Row:
Cat Weil
Id EspOMtO
Sclh Strauu
1 ran Dubrow
Am> Pepper
O/gur KaraosmaiK>glu
Miuiot:
Rill Dillingham
Ira Roscnzvng
Marc Mauser
Patncia Lanier
Mazin Abu-Ghazalah
Joel Silvenhcin
Bob Kottlcr
John Folc\
B\ron Lohman
Dale Lc«
Sarah Schmidt
Peter Lrtxanowicz
LATIN AND AMERICAN
STUPFNTS' ASSOCIATION
hruni Row:
\n.i Morandeira
Patricia dclos Herat
I ourdcs Soto
Rack Ro«:
s.ira I icha
l.>« F Nalcr
\na Ncrcida Lope/
Bcatnz Blanco
I crnando Campo
Sol Pictured:
Ncssini H.ivvin
MickcN Rivera
\\cl Rivera
Jennifer Kohler
I.EEE, |amb«Uya. LASA
83
Brian Treacy
Scott Griner
LEGAL AID
Denise Fox
Piauche Villere
Fred King
LITERARY MAGAZINE
Quinto Espira
Jean Marc Levy
George Johnson
Heidi Leibman
Doug Powell
Mary Vaughn Williams
Susan Meinert
Kate Oehlschlaeger
Jamie Flaxman
Susie Etchevery
Jim Clark
MEDIA BOARD
Front row:
Lance LaBauve
Alan Gainsburgh
Kevin Williams
Jenny Juge
Mindy McNichols
James Weinberg
Juli Hartig
Sabrina Bunks
Back row:
Second row:
Gary Fretwell
Jerrv Richie
Paul McDonald
David Lerner
84
Legal Aid, Literary Magazine, Media Board
MODERN DANCE
1 f')nt ru»:
Jjnc (jilbcrt
Tara Wilion
( Icvcljnd Mack
Bick row:
McUnic Marclund
Megan Byrd
Rmcman Roou
Car la Co(u«ay
Shcilc> Miller
l.tu Gilbert
Jamo McConoell
NATIONAL SOCIETY
OF BLACK ENGINEERS
kim Tucker
Tia Fcrrouillct
Vcrlinda Allen
Linda Scoll
Brian Ranuon
Dana Walker
Emcsi Goodly
Therron Foley
JcfTenr Rugon
Chandra Robinson
Melanic Marchand
Sharon Lawrence
Gerald Lagardc
Kevin Taylor
Ell Brown
Mike Williams
Darrcll Semien
Mark Ricard
Joseph Hams
Ronald Wmger
Darry Molcuoo
Lisa Ptrtz
NichoUs Goodly
Sam Sullivan. Jr.
NEVVCOMB SENATE
Kroot row:
londa Magids
'udy Bans
Caki Collat
Robin Krams
Cccc Smilh
111! Pender
S.ir.ih \>crT
S«ond row:
H.illic Smith
Anna I ou
Debbie Tancnbaum
Barbara /cnisk>
Kath> Enunuclson
Kitly KIcruk
Leslie Finkelsletn
CaroUn Higgi
Robin Rcagkr
Back row:
Karen Kravtin
Cindy Gee
SharvOT DoMood
Sand) Lee
Michelle Burkeil
Bam Vilona
Barbiari Baumao
Fran Dubrow
Lucy Canoa
Kaihy Fleck
Artdrea Cabell
Soty Smilli
Modern Dtinit, Bl»ck Eng. Soorty. Setpeomb Sentle
85
RESIDENT ADVISORS
BUTLER
Front row:
Lynn Maddox
Second row:
Marcy Michael
Third row:
Barb Schumann
Leslie Broome
Fourth row:
Bea Maldonado
Missy Cohen
Back row:
Nancy Marra
Karen Ibach
RESIDENT ADVISORS
DORIS / JOHNSTON
Front row:
Terri Margolin
Chapman Taylor
Dawn Urbanek
Mark Lowell
Back row:
Theresa Lippert
Julie Rosser
Diana Minardi
Gail Feldman
RESIDENT ADVISORS
IRBY / TATE
Front row:
Gary Wortham
Back row:
Jon Straggas
Linn Foster
Eric Guenther
Michelle Rooney
J.F. Poupeau
Missing:
Holly Bates
Maria Lebron
Andy Schroth
86
Butler, DorisI Johnston, IrbylTate
RESIDENT ADVISORS
lOSEPHINE LOUISE
^roiil torn:
Back ro«:
Hridgci Whelan
Pam Aihlcr
Caria Conaway
Kim Barren
Mar) Krancet Kell>
Tara Wibon
Joan Hcrt
RESIDENT AD\'ISORS
MONROE
Front row:
Bob Sanderj
Bun Plaster
Third ro^r
Mike Sylvester
Bob Weber
Joe Fernandez
Cookie Abadin
John Boltaro
Jim Odra
Second ro*:
Back row:
Martv Wiarda
Ell Vaiqucs
Rick Cuichin
Mike Shapiro
Ed Strobel
Jim Robinson
Rick Snvder
Ted Pcrr)
Andv Rees
No« pictwtd:
Mike Larson
Doug Mills
Paul Bookman
C J Lono
RESIDENT ADX'ISORS
PHELPS
Front row:
Fim Mcjut
Sieve Dukes
Irjvcll Williams
l)rcv» Donnelly
Back row:
Da^c Reynolds
John Hardie
Michcal Pcarce
Tom GifTrcs
/i_ Monwr. Phelfi
87
RESIDENT ADVISORS
ROBERT SHARP HALL
Front row:
Bert Fisher
Prime Lomsardi
Larry Page
Ron Sachs
Second row:
David Barondess
Chris Margisti
Marc Sarman
Bill Welch
Joe Hegener
Third row:
Kurt Finke
Wayne Frei
Merrill W. Reutar
Paul Weisman
Mack Staadowers
Steve Frank
Back row:
Steve Rasm
Hector Murra
Alan J. Stone
Rick Smite
RESIDENT ADVISORS
WARREN
Front row:
Antigoni Pappas
Leslie Stanford
Pam Hochberg
Back row:
Arline Bragan
Andrea Aarons
Tammy Schiff
Karen Keyes
RESIDENT ADVISORS
ZEMMURAY HALL
ALUMNAE HALL
PATTERSON
Front row:
Nancy Graboyes
Frank Sterneck
Alice NusI
Kevin Williams
Back row:
Debbie Katzner
Monica Fried
Mindy Kornberg
Mary Jane Smart
88
Sharp, Warren, Zemmuray I Alumnae I Patterson
J
AIR FORCE ROTC
^r«h^«•ll:
S.indr.i Adam
Angcl.1 Bartholomew
William Dillingham
Daniel Ldmitlon
Hauler (ioodly
Susan (jilbcrl
I auri Hackcll
Sandra Janui
lames Johnson
\^ayne Johnson
Nicholas Kunish
Icreia Lewis
Douglas l.ogue
trika Polcschner
Mark Siglcr
Brian Smilh
Michael Twcdl
Marcu Wink
SoptMnwrn:
(^iu);l.i% ( ashman
Rich C ashman
Christopher Connelly
Kathryn D'Amico
Jijve (iucvara
Mike Millon
Blake Jackton
Melissa Janning
Byron Lohman
Joseph McMurray
Jack Moliuni
Leiitia Murray
Richard Painler
Michael Ray
John Scorvinc
Andrew Stein
Thomas Virner
iwaion:
RSooda Coocr
Robcn Gargiulo
F.dward Maun
Didicr Opotomky
filcn Pap(>u
Thomas Parks
Jamo Rcintch
Caria Sylscttcr
Senior*
Samuel Barber
Suun Bontly
Timdhy Mcang
FrarKis Noll
Janci Smith
Wendy Willn
MARINE ROTC
FreshBCK
Tod Briggs
Robcn Johnson
James Jones
Michael Jones
Paul Polydorcs
Sophomores:
John Bear)
James Bremer
Stephen Ferrando
Bruce Harrison
Ignatius Libeno
William Morgan
Michael Wcsiman
Iwoor.
Robert Amend
Terence Nolan
Gary Wortham
Staion:
Keith Ansley
William Foi
Roger Machut
NA\ ^ ROTC
Seniors:
Daud Abrahamson
Jc(Trc> Anderson
Keith Ansley
Brian Bourgeois
John Buriak
David Chin
Ricardo Cuchelto
William F"o\
Hugh Hcmstreet
Bnan Looney
Roger Machut
Ros Mustelicr
TcJ Naeckei
Carl Powe
John Roooey
Robert Sanders
Mack Sigman
Richard Townley
^nd^eJ TunKr
Juseph Was
Dasnd Wcnner
AFROTC. MROrC. NROTC
89
SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM
ENGINEERS
Front row:
Dr. Maynard Stephens
Sandy McKaan
Charleen Sullivan
Janet Olsen
Joe Cunningham
Back row:
Hugh Caffery
Rick Smith
Michael Caruso
James Stefanic
Martin Mouton
TULANE UNIVERSITY
CENTER PROGRAMING
Front row:
Mike Schement
Lou Ross
Dirk Angevine
Second row
Carrie Heinen
Rob Beatty
Jane Gross
Derek Schwenke
Herb Scher
Brad Schur
Back row:
Gary Mandelblatt
Garrick Prejean
Bill Gould
Gordon Wood
Jeffrey M. Kahn
Einar Pedersen
TULANE BIO-MEDICAL
ENGINEERS
Front row:
Dr Cedric Walker
David Vining
David Mayer
Maria Lebron
Michael Angerman
Hector Murra
Second row:
Eugene May
Carl Poe
Michael Silber
Chuck Collins
Bud Fields
Bob Reinhart
Rafael Martinez
Third row:
Carla Conaway
Burgess Schulz
Lois Stark
David Lake
Tom Weidman
Neal Beals
Back row:
Carl Westerhold
Greg Lambert
Sharon Livingston
Michael Mailhes
Josefina Pelaez
Bill Young
Marc Prezios
90 Petroleum Engineers, TUCP, Bio-Medical Engineers
TULANE ENGINEERING
SOCIETY
I'lcrrc (ricke
llhkc Bracado
Suun Kron
ficrry Oianoli
Mfrcd Simom
'icrry .Shcirman
K.ilph ScMl/
ll<)b Croi«cr
K.1V I cc
Frank Ellw*
Gil Slock
David Code
Emitc lanni
BUkc Moore
Launc /abclny
Calh) Boquct
Karen C'oricid
Joan Jacknun
STUDENT FOUNDATION
Kronl row:
Mjriha Tcslcr
CaroKn Earl
Stcond row:
Chris Borah
Missy Cohen
Ann McCullum
Beatrice Maldcnado
Lon Nelson
Alan Liebowiiz
Bonnie Karpa
Sieve Colelli
Alan Kramer
Back ron:
Neil Kualincte
Caria Marcenaro
Amy Pepper
Josh Kat7
Mandel Rolh
Jackie Forlc
Ira Rotcn/wcig
Heidi Pohl
Scon Brown
Sarah Schmidt
Diana Calalano
Pat Ryder
Susan Cone
Rachel Dacey
Sonia Maduro
Terri Margolin
Chruli GnnfTi
Dolly Chisholm
Peggy Gavel
Robert Ralellc
TULAMANS
Kronl ro«:
Charlie Sleek
Julie Goldstone
Lee Waldman
Cassie Sleek
Rich Rh.xJes
1 re M.Whirter
Scvood row:
Kenny Weil
Adncnnc Petite
Doug Shifter
Julie Fmig
M.lc Kelly
rhird row.
Riiky Ho«>x
Jane Rushing.
Advisor
Larr> Marks
Joel Livingston
Back turn:
led Talbol.
Director
Many Boiloa
Laura Weber
Bruce Holmct
Barry Rogers
Mbsiag
Carol Scbdcnbaum
David Abraham
Jay D'Lugin
Eddie Lcvine
John Bauer
Barrv Rcsnick
Lnsintenng Sonrty. Sluilcnt FnirJjlicn. Tuls-.urf
91
J-
TUCP TECH STAFF
Front Row:
Thane Bozos
Bruce Jacoby
Barry Mendeloff
Back Row:
John Buziak
Pete Silton
Gordon Wood
TUVAC
Front Row:
Mike Gerberich
Janice McKirgan
Carrie Heinen
Phyllis Andrews
Dave Raphel
Mont Fennel
Jackie Maiman
Bill Maiman
Dan Skelton
Back Row:
Cray Henry
Alicia Grimes
Mindy McNichols
Gary Hurwitz
Edward Hall
Not pictured:
Stephanie Skylar
WOMEN'S FORUM
Front Row:
Michelle Burkett
Christine Bogar
Diana Minardi
Christie Grizaffi
Betsy O'Brien
Back Row:
Suzanne Harris
Fonda Magids
Laura Ouverson
92
TUCP Tech /TUVAC /Women's Forum
WTUL
I ronl Rom:
' ilcnn S4:hulman
Njnc) Anfangcr
\\jfd Ni»on
Neil (J»Hinclt
I)jvc ilurigin
iiimbo Schwarz
J'lhn (olc>
"M-cond Row.
K.iiic HLiLk
Nancy Pjllcrton
Uk\ SiUcr»hcin
Kale Ochcwhlaftcr
David Simon
I he Dulchcu
Michael Yinuck
^lbrl^.1 Bunks
I bird Ron:
Mark Kckcrle
Mom Fennel
\ ickie Murray
Michelle Mooch
I li/abeih Wilson
fourth Row:
John Goldberg
Sieve Walsh
Doug Grills
Andrea Titnun
Dofina let VanCoit
Burl Geraci
Pally Oannemillcr
nrib Row:
Bcih Vungc
Spcncc MchI
Jon McMugti
CarU WeticMi
Kevin PhMlncr
John Uallaoc
Sixlb Rom:
I lu \jughan
Back Ro«:
Dennt% Bouiillier
Robin McCani
John Rodwig
Kaly Cara»ay
Mike Mannu
Barney Kitpalnck
Mike C'aiucy
Joe Lubow
Martin Towrucnd
Wayne Nelpioo
Rami Dievasti
Roy Nucs
DIRECTION
Kronl Row:
David Rubin
1 .iura WolIT
I'aul Sullivan
I ran Dubrow
Kenny Weil
Second Ro»:
Uilly Kirkikis
Mark Alexander
Third Ro»:
Blake Bailey
Tish Star
(iary Sircus
Mariha Steele
Back Roh:
Wayne Frci
Craig Click
Dovic Gorman
V^rrUL/Dtrection
93
94
Sports
LiLinr football c^nd
basketball teams
S|v>
MJ^
Riding the Crest
Of a Winning Season
The year 1981 was supposed
to bring another good season for
the Green Wave football team.
But instead, injuries and other
frustrations marred a roller
coaster season of victory and
disappointments.
Head Coach Vince Gibson's
task would be a difficult one this
season due to the loss of 22
graduated players, including
All-American quarterback
Nickie Hall and standouts Mar-
cus Anderson, Marty Wetzel,
and Frank Robinson.
In addition, three coaches,
defensive coordinator Jim Ve-
chiarella, offensive coordinator
Charlie Davis, and defensive
secondary coach Greg Blache,
left Tulane before the season
started. They were replaced (re-
spectively) by Dennis Fitzger-
ald, Ken Meyer and Bill Mas-
kill.
August arrived and practice
began. There was a sense of op-
timism on the Tulane practice
field. However, during a scrim-
mage the Wave's best wide re-
ceiver, All-American Robert
Griffin, seriously injured his
knee and was out for the season.
This and other injuries added
to the problem of a lack of play-
ers and forced many starters to
get their experience the hard
way. However, whatever these
younger players lacked in expe-
rience, they made up in size,
strength and enthusiasm.
Won 6 Lost 5
Tulane 18 Ole Miss 19
Tulane 5 Clemson 13
Tulane 3 So. Miss 21
Tulane 16 Rice 20
Tulane 14 Vanderbilt 10
Tulane 13 Air Force
Tulane
Tiilane
Tulane
Tulane
Tulane
27
13
14
24
48
Georgia Tech
Cincinnati
Maryland
Memphis State
LSU
96
Football
'. HOW
^ \
.-*^
"' ^w ' ..
IV
'iT'
:/
a>
r^4
*' i|^4«i3('.ij445*'-1^5^
.Tron^
I^Tron^ row: Bill 1 ichlcnsichi. D.ilc K.u!). KirK Robi' i inc- s.iaduri. Mik.« Jonc»
" (sr). JcIT Robcrti, Brian D.uil'I,!', PjuI ( .iirincse. M.itn - I cwis. SK McCircw,
11 Rodney Holman. David llilu>n, (Iciirge neishoUMT. \ni.lrc Kobcrl. Bobb) Moses.
••' Terry Daflin; Second ro»: Dale Steele. \ innic T'riorich. IXm.iM Ka\ Thomas. J<C^
Wen/cl, Mike Jones (I r ).Ton\ WWxl.Ted TUmey. Benny Burst. Lionel Washington.
Greg Rice. Tim McCray, Dave Psliscak. Ricky ColT. Kyle Pennington. Earl
.lenkins. Frank Roberts, Joey Kischcr. Heail Coach. Vfajtc (iib.son. Third ro<*: Krank
Monicc. Ken Meyer, Mike Fcducciit. .Mike McKay. JclT Wcnhold. Greg Stophcr.
Leo Janson. Vic Pcre/. Wade Elmore, fing Lj^gctl. Mike Hunlcr. Paul Crow.
I cnny Quick. Jamie Sitnm";. Oini ^'cn/cl. Carl Ambrose. Toniiin Rose, D.nid
Jackson, Ted Heath, Fourth row: Dennis (it/gerald. Pete Dunn. Sam H. illy, Jim
Slill, Kyle Thompson, Sieve ikhiiiid. Jim Barkey. Reggie Reginclli. Vincc Manalla.
^Und\ J3fV.ty. Larry t.'peland. lo
■^ooriguei, Vic FviImM, Ken G
ni^l iPciK', St
flh row: Tir
Reggie Bu'i T'. : Smith. Rand> Htibbcll, Wayne
Hyde. Rol Ntikc Popko, Darryl Tipton. Z*
Gerald Bn>u.ssafi'. Melvin Cormier. Ronald D.ivn. Charii _
Gciss. Kyle r^nningnam, Charlie Dunn. Don Mag^s.Turk Mat
Kevin Boyd. Jajon Whittcn. Mike Burnett, Ronald P»rker s
Seal. Ken Mackey. Chris Cannon. Hirole McGrou, Bill M.is'
Olcjack, Deno Jeter. Ji>hn AlTgelo, Har\c> C o\, Trcg S^-rr '
Mem. Den^l^ Bryant. Rodney Cooke, Jerry Baker, Regg
Cedrick Colemen, Jmimy Slater, Caicy Howard. T— ■■ ^
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The quarterback has to be the
leader on offense and the Wave
had three. Paul Catanese, Wade
Elmore and Mike McKay all
saw playing time as Gibson ro-
tated his backs.
Elmore was the Wave's first
starting quarterback. He made
his debut in the second half of
the opener against Ole Miss,
and brought Tulane back from a
13 point deficit to take the lead
late in the fourth quarter. Only
a "Hail Mary" touchdown gave
the Rebels a victory and spoiled
Elmore's effort.
Gibson was impressed with
Elmore's performance, and
gave him the starting call
against Clemson and Southern
Mississippi, two of the top
teams in the country. Nervous-
ness about playing two ranked
teams, caused Elmore to make
mistakes. Unfortunately, these
turnovers cost Tulane these
games.
Catanese, the senior who ori-
ginally started the Ole Miss
game, replaced Elmore for the
fifth game of the season against
Vanderbilt. Catanese led the
Wave to its first victory, a 14-10
win over the Commodores.
Against the Air Force, in Colo-
rado Springs, his leadership
98
Football
qualities brought the Wave to
another victory, 31-13. The fol-
lowing week, Catanese threw
for 163 yards and led the Wave
to victory against Georgia Tech,
27-10.
With the Wave in striking dis-
tance of the .500 mark, morale
was high because Tulane had a
starting quarterback.
Tulane visited Cincinnati to
try and even up their record.
Catanese started, but injured
his shoulder early in the first
quarter. Elmore replaced Ca-
tanese and was ineffective. Gib-
son went to his bench and put
his third quarterback, Mike
McKay, into the game.
McKay had seen some action
in the Rice game, after Elmore
broke his nose, and led the
Wave to a touchdown against
Cincinnati late in the game.
However, that score came too
late for the Wave, for they lost
the game 17-13.
With McKay moving the of-
fense, there was little confi-
dence lost. The maturing of the
offensive line helped a great
deal, but McKay's bold deter-
mination led the Wave to victo-
ries over Maryland and Mem-
phis State. .
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Although the improvement of
the quarterbacks and offenseive
line contributed to the Wave's
comeback in 1981, it was the
running game which started the
rebirth of the offense.
Led by Marvin Lewis, the
running game became one of
the prime factors in Tulane's of-
fense. Lewis tied a Tulane re-
cord by running for over 100
yards in three consecutive
games (Vanderbilt, Air Force
and Georgia Tech), including
143 yards against Air Force.
When Lewis was not carrying
the ball, junior Reggie Reginelli
was. The day when Lewis had
143 yards, Reginelli himself
rushed for 116 yards. He was
also the top punt returner, aver-
aging 8.3 yards.
Depth was one of the key fea-
tures of the running back corps.
While Reginelli and Lewis were
on the bench, Mike Jones, a
freshman from Neptune Beach,
Florida, and sophomore Kelvin
Robinson were in the lineup.
Jones impressed Tulane fans
with his great speed and ability
to get to the outside. Tim
McCray and Mike Jones also
made contributions.
Breaking upfield, freshman running back Mike
Jones springs along the sidelines in the Mem-
phis State win.
100
Football
^•#^
^^:
\\ hilt itu uffiMsi.- vNas luokin;;
for a solution to its probknis.
thi- difcnsf was the i;lui- ihul
luld ihf team together. U-c: :::c
course of the season, ihe de-
fense only gave up 144 points.
the least amount in recent histo-
ry.
Senior defensive tackle Brian
Douglas led the team in sacks
ill) and tackles Tor loss (12).
loining Douglas on the line
were junior nose guard Kirk
Robb and junior nose tackle
lames Sanders.
Leading in tackles were in-
side linebackers Daryl Tipton
.ind Ricky GofT.
In I'JSl the secondary was
>ne of the strong points. Junior
safety Tyrone Smith led the sec-
ondary in tackles with 69 and
;he team in interceptions with
ihree. Lionel Washington had
•.he longest interception of the
'.ear. taking an errant .-Vir Force
Mss hs yards for a touchdown.
^.\cral freshmen also saw
.ciion during the course of the
season. Tackles Harvey Cox
md Lester Lavalais. along with
defensive backs Benny Burst
.md Treg Songy were all mipres-
sivc on defense and special
arming around the Georgia Tech back, delen.sivc lacklc Brian Douglas and
b.Lcker .lelT Robcrt.s combine lo make ihis play a loss.
Foolhin
101
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With a 5-5 record, Tulane
needed a victory in the final
game of the campaign for its
third consecutive winning sea-
son. Standing in Tulane's way
was their arch-rival Louisiana
State.
Tulane won the toss and elect-
ed to receive. LSU kicked off to
Reggie Butts, who returned the
ball 46 yards. Nine plays later,
McKay threw a 24 yard touch-
down pass to give the Green
Wave a 7-0 lead.
The defense created the next
score when linebacker Ricky
Goff recovered an LSU fumble
on the Tiger 17 yard line. Soon
after, McKay found Rodney
Holman in the end zone, and led
Tulane 14-0.
The Green Wave ended the
first half with two field goals by
freshman Tony Wood, giving
Tulane a lopsided 20-0 lead.
Tulane's only mistake oc-
curred when Reggie Reginelli
dropped a punt, which was re-
covered by LSU on the Green
Wave 35 yard line. The fumble
led to the Tiger's only score of
the night.
LSU had already encoun-
tered a lot of problems by the
time they had to punt next.
Freshman Benny Burst had
blocked an LSU punt, and Ti-
ger punter James Wagner had
dropped a snap which Tulane
recovered. This time Burst ran
through the LSU line, blocked
the kick into the endzone where
another freshman, Lester Lava-
lais recovered the ball for a
touchdown. Tulane led 41-7.
After a Catanese drive
stalled on the LSU 33 yardline,
barefooted place kicker Vince
Manalla trotted out onto the
field to attempt a 50 yard field
goal, or so it seemed. McKay,
who was the holder, took the
snap and threw a completion to
Manalla over the middle. Man-
alla, with only one shoe, hob-
bled to the LSU 1 yardline.
On the next play, Tim
McCray hurdled over the goal
line for the final score of the
night. Tony Wood's extra point
was good, and the Wave won the
game 48-7.
This win gave Tulane a 6-5
record, and their third winning
season in a row, the first time
since 1948-50. The 48 points
was the most scored by any
Green Wave squad against
LSU in the history of the series.
Surefooted placekicker Vince Manalla
did both placel^icl^ing and punting dur
ing tlie season.
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Cheerleaders Urge
Wave on to Victory
What is green and blue, has
28 legs, and travels with the Tu-
lane football and basketball
teams? The answer is, of course,
the Tulane Cheerleaders.
From August to April, the
cheerleading squad raises the
spirit of every Green Wave fan
with its fancy acrobatics and
traditional Tulane cheers.
Led by advisors Betsy Dyer
and Gary Fitzgerald, the cheer-
leaders do everything from
waking fans up on local televi-
sion at 6:30 AM during the foot-
ball season to sponsoring cheer-
leading competition for high
school students. The cheer-
leaders have also been known to
aid the Green Wave basketball
team by scaring Green Wave
opponents out of the cozy Tu-
lane Arena.
The Tulane cheerleading
squad is helping to keep the
Symbolizing the sentiments of Wave
fans, Karin Pedersen and Peggy Basic
lead a Hullabaloo cheer.
spirit of the Green Wave and
the city of New Orleans alive
and kicking.
Top Row: Lori Little, Cathie Piazza, Peggy
Basic, Karin Pedersen. Julie Sincoff,
Cheryl Nickerson. Bottom Row: Jeff Por-
itzky, Derek Cagnolotti, Rich Conte, Jeff
Broekman, Gene Bagot,
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Lady Wave
Drowns Opponents
After two years as the AIAW
Louisiana State Champions,
the Tulane's Women's volleyball
team joined the NCAA and fin-
ished the 1981 season with a re-
cord of 21-1 1.
The 1 1 player squad was led
by first year coach Kathy Tros-
clair. Her enthusiastic coaching
style led Tulane to first place in
the UNO Invitational tourna-
ment and a third place finish in
the Metro Conference Champi-
onship.
On the floor, the Tulane
squad had a good mix of youth
and experience with Brenda
LeBlanc and Cathy Schroeder
leading the offense.
Melina Gerfers and Terry
Harvey were the top servers for
the Green Wave. Gerfers also
led the defense with 69 digs.
Front Row: Brenda LeBlanc, Liz Kinsley, Terri Harvey, Melina Gerfers, Patti
Boerner; Back Row: Head coach Kathy Trosclair, Tia Newsom, Jerry Modenbach,
Marda Kapp, Karla Seals, Kathy Birdwell, Cathy Schroeder, Assistant coach Ann
Bruder
106
Going for the block Marda Kapp and
Elizabeth Kinsley get ready to stuff an
opponent's shot.
Women's Volleyball
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Siiulhcrn L nivcrsilv W
Sviulhcm VliMiuippi W
Stephen F. Austin W
Southeastern I ;i W
New Orleans W
L NO Invitational Ivi
Ne« Orleans L
South Alabiima \V
Southern Mississippi W
Nicholls State W
Southwestern la w
Kentucky L
Iniversiiy of Houston L
North Texas Slate W
Illinois State I
New Orleans I
U.,i III
S^Miih CarolinA
Rutgers
Ole Mijs
Miami
i cnif.i' f l.-nda
V'u'.i'.c.'.'.tcrti I .«
isoulh Maluma
Southwestern l,a
Souihwcsiem La
Nichols Stale
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Mississippi State
Memphis Stale
Olc MiV4
Ole Mivs Toumc .
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Batters Reach
Regionals
Like many spring sports, the
Tulane baseball team was
rained out for most of the sea-
son's first games.
After four rainouts, the Wave
opened the season in Baton
Rouge against the LSU Tigers,
returning home with a record of
0-1.
Several northern schools
came down to New Orleans to
visit Tulane, and all went home
without a win. The Wave boost-
ed its record to 18-3 by mid-
March, before the all-important
Riverside Tournament.
Victories over California-
Riverside and Washington gave
the Wave a taunting chance to
make the finals of the tourna-
ment. They beat Wisconsin 1 1-
4, but it was not enough to reach
the finals.
After the California trip, the
Wave had a 21-6 record, and
were ranked 28th in the Colle-
giate baseball poll. Four more
victories were accumulated, be-
fore the LSU Tigers visited the
Tulane Diamond. The Wave
turned the tables on the Tigers,
taking the game 8-3, and Tulane
moved into the number 17 spot
in the top 20.
Going into the Pelican Cup
Series with the tenth ranked
UNO Privateers, the Wave
boasted a 33-6 record and had a
15 game winning streak. How-
ever, the Privateers took the
game in the Superdome by a
score of 7-5, breaking the
streak.
The next day on the Tulane
Diamond, Marc Desjardins, the
only lefthander on the Tulane
pitching staff, raised his record
to 7-0 with a 12-5 revenge win
over the Privateers. UNO won
the series when they trounced
the Wave 1 1-2 later in the sea-
son.
Swinging through the ball, Greg Diion hits
a double.
108
Baseball
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Fronl row: Hector Garza, Glen Fourmaux, Mike
Klou. Rodney Lenfani. John Zelenka. Chris
Caballero. Scoil Barbier Second row: Gregg
Barrios, Vincc Manalla. David Oslrau. Greg
Delaunc, Jack Calancse, Can\ilc Lefort, Paul
Glass. Reggie Rcginelli. Third row: Mill Retif. Joe
Brockhofl. Brian Migliore. Bill Kampen. ■>
Murphy. Tommy Malthewi, David Shcpard. Mire
Dcsjardms. Trainer John Ji'scph Baci row: Ji^ey
Brockhofl'. Sieve Riley. Mike Aloe. Bri.tn
Sherman. Paul Migliorc. Eric Lane, Paul (-itch
Miohey Rclif
/ /
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In \
■^■\
■•^1
Metro Champions!
Tulane pushed its season into
extra innings by capturing the
Metro Conference tournament
in May.
The Wave downed four oppo-
nents in Tallahassee, Florida, on
the way to an automatic bid to
the NCAA regionals.
Louisville was the Wave's
first victim, Losing a 10-7 after-
noon bout. The next day, Tulane
went an extra inning to slip by
Virginia Tech, 8-5.
These two victories set up a
grudge match between the
Wave and rival Memphis State.
A week earlier, Memphis State
swept three straight games
from the Wave on Tulane's
home field.
It looked like history would
repeat itself as the Wave trailed
for most of the game. Starting
hurler Jack Catanese stumbled
into trouble early, giving up two
home runs in the fifth.
Tulane charged back from a
9-5 deficit in the seventh, belt-
ing in five runs. The rally as-
sured another dramatic come-
from-behind victory for the
Reaching for the ball, a double play is com-
pleted by the Tulane second baseman.
110
Baseball
Wave, outlasting Memphis
State 10-9.
The win over Memphis State
propelled Tulane into the cham-
pionship game, a familiar spot
for the Wave. The team has ad-
vanced into the finals five times
in seven years, winning the big
game in 1979.
Florida State University ad-
vanced to the finals to challenge
the Wave for the championship.
Tulane manhandled FSU and
brought home the Metro trophy
in an 11-7 decision Sunday
afternoon.
The victory was a team effort
as Tommy Matthews, John Ze-
lenka, and Gregg Barrios also
smashed home runs.
Tulane's record after the vic-
tory was 40-14, the best ever for
the Wave.
Bringing home the Metro
championship gave Tulane an
automatic bid in NCAA region-
al competition. The Wave only
had to travel to the New Or-
leans Lakefront for this compe-
tition, hosted by cross-town ri-
val UNO.
Pitcher Scott Murphy hurls a fastball
against Memphis State.
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Scholarship, Surprize
Bolster Track Team
A surprise return for the
Wave was Marcus Anderson.
After a season with the Chicago
Bears of the NFL, Anderson re-
turned to Tulane to run. Unfor-
tunately, an early season mini-
camp called Anderson back to
Chicago before the Metro
Championships.
Lionel Washington, also a
football standout, was the
Wave's most consistent sprinter.
Other football players who
helped the track team were Nat
Dorsey, Lindsey Cooper, Vince
Manalla, Treg Songy, and Vic
Perez.
The resurgence of the Tulane
track team continued in 1982
with the return of all but four
lettermen.
Under the guidance of coach
Danny Thiel, the Wave finished
in 5th place in the Metro Con-
ference.
One of the bright spots this
season was freshman Jay Pen-
nington, the first track athlete
on scholarship in 10 years.
,1
Front row: Kurk Hill, Henry Miles, Dan
Sullivan, Charles Collins, Karl
Kallacher, Lionel Washington. Bill
Hammarstrom, Treg Songy. Middle
row: Don Noe. Jerry Pennington, Tim
Peterson, Brian Daily, Marcus
Anderson, Keith Mazeurk, Gerald
Broussard, Danny Mikulak, Vince
Manalla, Al Acelio, Back row: Coach
Dan Thiel, Nat Dorsey, Steve
Metzinger, Lindsey Cooper, Curtis
Baham, Carl Ambrose, Jeff Wenzel,
Jim Still, Rodney Cooke, Tim McCray,
Ken Graff.
112
Track
Hurdlers Danny Miklauk and Lionel Wash-
ington race Florida State to the finish line
of the 100 meter race.
Sailors Wave Competition
Consistently among the top five teams in
the nation, the Tulane Sailing team once
again placed high in competition.
For the past several years, the Tulane
Sailing team has placed higher nationally
than any other Tulane team competing on
an intercollegiate level.
This year, Ail-Americans Jens Hooken-
son and Ralph Kinder led the way to a third
place finish at the National Intercollegiate
Regatta at Annapolis, Maryland.
Important in Tulane's high ranking were
two first place finishes in home regattas. In
December, the Wave held off arch-rival
Texas to grab the top spot in the Sugar Bowl
Regatta.
During Mardi Gras, the Windjammer
Regatta brought schools from the North-
east — Tufts and Hobart — and schools
from as far away as Michigan, Washington,
and California to participate in an 18 race
competition.
A last minute charge by Tulane sailors in
the final race gave the Wave a slim one
point victory over a competitive Tufts team.
An important support group of the sail-
ing team is the 245 member Tulane Sailing
Club. The Club provides an organized pro-
gram to introduce, improve, and promote
the sport of sailing.
From the membership, top sailors are
chosen to compete on the intercollegiate
level.
Hiking out, this sailor tacts upwind toward the finish
line in the Sugar Bowl Regatta.
Rounding the point, two Tulane sailors race by the
Lake Ponchartrain lighthouse.
114
Sailing
SaOmg 1 1 ?
Lacrosse Rallies
in Championship Win
Under the guidance of coach Rix Yard,
who will be retiring after 40 years at Tu-
lane, the Tulane Lacrosse Club finished the
1982 season with a record of 14-3. Winning
the Southwest Lacrosse Association Cham-
pionship for the second year in a row.
In league play, the Wave compiled a
record of 11-1, losing only to Texas A&M
by a score of 12-11 late in the season. Tu-
lane went right to the semi-finals, squeak-
ing by Texas Tech 7-6 to advance to the
finals.
The Wave's familiar opponent in the final
game was Texas A&M. Down by a score of
6/2 in the half, the Wave rallied and pulled
out a 9-8 win and the SWLA championship.
Attackman George Kelley led the Wave
in points with 47 (28 goals, 19 assists), while
midfielder Jim Zullo led in goals with 31.
Defenseman Dave Sanzo and goalie Ben
Gershoqitz were the defensive stars for Tu-
lane.
Front row: Faith Ostrow, Elizabeth Jayes, Sandy
Rosenberg. Second row: Dr. Rix Yard, Gary Wortham,
Steve Hoggard, Dave Sanzo, Marty Wells, Dan
Daddario, Kelly Burnett, Andy Wetzler, Eric Fitch,
Dan Ravner. Back row: Ed Wachtel, Jeff Streich,
Bruce Baumgartner, Jim Zullo, Ben Gershowitz, Pete
Hamilton, Colie Matheson, Steve Dixon, Andy Siegel,
Morey Dubelier, George Kelley, Harris Jones, RJ.
Brooks, Tim Rhodes.
116
Lacrosse
J
Ruggers Defeat LSU in Fall Season
Beset with injuries, the 1981-82 Tulane
Rugby Club finished the season with a less
than perfect record.
Although the fall season was highly suc-
cessful: even defeating archrival LSU, in-
juries took their toll in the spring season.
Captain Billy Eckert led the 30 member
team to a fourth place finish in the Tulane
Mardi Gras Tournament in February.
After defeating Franklin-Marshall in a
triple-overtime match, the team was visibly
drained. Obviously exhausted, the same
afternoon Tulane lost to Duke, and the next
day to the McQuendrie football club.
This finished Tulane in fourth place in a
Tournament they were expected to win.
Later in the season, the Rugby Club took
third in the Pensacola Tournament. A very
physical set of matches led to several injur-
ies and some hospitalizations. Wing Roger
Ervin was knocked out for the remainder of
the season, requiring facial surgery.
After all was said and done, however, the
Rugby Club finished with a 10-17 record.
Not quite a banner year, but considering
the injuries and the difficult schedule, the
Tulane Rugby Club performed brilliantly.
Fighting for possession of the ball, Tulane Rugby
players manage lo hold on. They went on to defeat
LSU 1 2-0 in a game that was the highlight of the fall
and spring season.
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Six Named All- American
A successful season in national competi-
tion placed the Tulane Swimming team
among the powerhouses of the sport in
1982.
Under the guidance of second-year coach
Scott Hammond, the women's squad fin-
ished fourth in the nation, thanks to a
strong finish at the AIAW Division II meet
in Moscow, Idaho last March.
With only 10 swimmers, eight of whom
are freshmen, six swimmers were still
named All-American.
Missie Kelley, a freshman from Newport
News, Virginia, won all seven of her events
at the AIAW meet, and was named Ail-
American in all of those events. She also
won the Dorothy Webb Haller Award as the
most valuable athlete in women's athletics.
On the men's side, Hammond coached
Tulane to a second-place finish at the
Southern Intercollegiate Championship in
Athens, Georgia, and took two swimmers,
Jimmy Flowers and Wayne Viola, to the
NCAA Division I Championships later in
the year.
Flowers, finished 19th in the nation in the
120
Swimming
200-yard backstroke. He broke his best
1981 time in the 200-yard individual Med-
ley with a 1:56:08 in the Wave's one point
loss to arch-rival LSU.
There were successful freshmen on the
men's squad as well. Scooter Aselton was
the Wave's ace in the butterfly, and was a
member of the Tulane relay squads. Todd
Barry added depth in the 200-yard and
500 — yard freestyle.
Although both teams finished with losing
records in the dual meet season, due to an
extremely difficult schedule, the success in
national competition made up for all the
losses.
Front row: Diana Leng, Women's captain; Chuck
Wolfe; Flora McConnell; Terry Lewis; Scooter
Aselton; Martin Boles, Men's co-captain; Mark
Schremmer; Dave Spitzler Second row: Berit Amlie;
Jody Moore; Karen Eslinger; Wendy Thai; Reed
Dunne; Peter Freiberger; Todd Barry; Andy David;
Bill Bond. Third row: Jodi Solomon, Manager;
Marilyn Morse, Carlin McCoy; Missie Kelly; Keith
Mason; John Reichenbach; Wayne Viola; Richard
Bates, Assistant coach. Back row: Kevin Switzer;
Marian Barber; Jimmy Flowers; Mike
Hochschwender, Men's co-captain; Danny Callen; Ted
Kruckel; Marty Berger; Howard Rosenberg; Scott
Hammond, Head coach.
I caninj; a»a\ from llic starting blocks. Wave ( iirn;rjlulaiiiins jrc in order «flcr All-Amehcan
swimmers take a first lap lead during the backstroke swimmer Jimmy Row-crt nniihed firJI agmiitti irch-
cvcnl against Alabama, rival LSV
Men's Swimming
Womcns Swimming
W
on 4 Lost 7
Won 4 Lost 7
Tulanc
54
\andcrbilt
58
Tulanc
72
Vandcrbill
75
Tulanc
87
Tcnn. Slate
15
Tulanc
44
A&M
15
Tulanc
92
Lcc College
16
Tulanc
87
Brcnau
42
Tulanc
51
Northeastern LA
62
Tulanc
50
Auburn
84
Tulanc
36
Cicorgia
59
Tulanc
54
So. Illinois
77
Tulanc
43
Texas A&M
51
Tulanc
ii:
.Arkansas LR
18
Tulanc
87
Rice
40
Tulanc
50
Georgia
72
Tulanc
40
Alabama
71
Tulanc
40
Houston
92
Tulanc
39
Auburn
49
Tulanc
75
Rice
56
Tulanc
33
Houston
84
Tulanc
59
Texas A&M
71
Tulanc
56
LSU
57
Tulanc
55
LSU
84
Sictmming
121
Wave Swamps LSU
in Post Season Play
After 52 years of trying, the Tulane
Green Wave Basketball team finally par-
ticipated in a post-season tournament when
they were asked to play in the National
Invitational Tournament. It seemed like ev-
erything would be against them, though, as
they were seeded next to last in a field of 36
schools. Not only that, the first game was to
be against arch-rival LSU at LSU's Deaf
Dome with only 3500 seats available for
Tulane fans.
But there were several factors going for
the Greenies, the strongest probably being
revenge. Last year LSU Tiger coach Dale
Brown insulted Tulane by dropping Tulane
from their season schedule because Brown
claimed "Tulane was not good enough to
play the tigers." The Tulane players were
itching to prove them wrong. And prove
them wrong they did, as Paul Thompson led
the Wave with 1 9 points and 1 0 rebounds to
a final score of Tulane 83, LSU 72. The
victory was decidedly sweet.
From Baton Rouge, the Wave travelled
to the University of Nevada-Las Vegas
where they took on the Road Runners, one
of the most explosive offensive teams in the
country. Under the direction of veteran
coach, Jerry Tarkanian, UN-LV fought con-
Front Row: Arthur Triche; Tom Green; Ned Fowler,
Head Coach; Mike Richardson; Kirlc Saulny. Back
Row: Bobby Thompson; Reggie Duke; Tony Wallace;
Oliver Manuel; Paul Thompson; Curtis Wallace;
sistently as the game lead went frustrating-
ly back and forth throughout until the
Wave took control in the last five minutes of
the game and overcame the Road Runners,
56-51. Immediately following the game at
about 11:00 pm, over 1000 ecstatic stu-
dents came out of the dorms, marched
around campus and assembled in front of
University President Eamon Kelley's resi-
dence in probably the greatest show of
school spirit the whole year. Kelley was car-
ried on the shoulders of cheering students
amid plenty of yelling and firecrackers.
With the "Final Four" one game away,
the Wave next met the top-seeded Bradley
Braves in Peoria, Illinois. The Greenies
built up an early five-point lead but were
unable to retain it for long as the Braves
finally eliminated Tulane from the tourna-
ment with a 77-61 win. The talented Brad-
ley team proceeded to New York where
they achieved the N.I.T. Championship
with a three-point win over Purdue.
But for a team that was supposed to be
crushed in the first round, strategy and
heightened enthusiasm almost led Tulane
to the finish line. And this time "almost"
felt pretty damn good!
Micah Blunt; John Williams; Clyde Eads; Elton
Webster; Shai Scharf; Joe Holston; Ralph Davis;
Daryl Moreau; Gary Delph.
122
Men's Basketball
Kiipini; ihc ball away from LSU. giurd Daf>l Mocean
iniiuici >ij|| UCUC5 to hold off LSU in ibe cloung
tninulcs of ihc Wjvc'i NIT opener
Hiaching loward the rim. Paul ThompuMi Icipj m-cr
the block of Howard Carter
Men'!
123
New Coach Wins Fans' Hearts
Five years have passed since the Wave
has had a winning season, and never in its
52-year history have the Greenie cagers
been invited to a post-season tournament.
The 1981-82 season however, brought an
end to their losing streak.
The major reason for the success of the
Tulane basketball program took place after
the 1980-81 basketball season when Ned
Fowler was hired as the new basketball
coach. No one knew who Fowler was, but
once the season got started, people began to
know that the Murchison, Texas native was
a first-rate coach.
At the beginning of fall practice, there
was some skepticism about Fowler and his
coaching. There were several complaints
about the simplicity of his coaching philos-
ophy and style, but once the season began,
the critics began to favor Fowler's system;
playing basic slow-down basketball. Al-
though it may not be exciting to watch, it
brought joy to every Tulane fan. for the
Wave was playing a style of basketball
which frustrated opponents and won
games.
Four Junior College transfers aided the
transition to Fowler "s system. From his pro-
gram at Tyler. Fowler brought two for-
wards, Elton Webster and Curtis Wallace.
Webster was a 6'6" JUCO Ail-American
who earned a starting berth with his good
defensive ability and deadly perimeter
shooting.
Tony Wallace, a swingman who helped
Three Rivers Junior College make the
JUCO National Tournament his two years
there, and Ralph Davis, a defensive special-
ist from Seminole Junior College, were the
other transfers. Wallace occasionally start-
ed, and helped the Green Wave offense with
his fine shooting.
Other new faces, such as Clyde Eads,
Shai Scharf, and Oliver Manuel, also
joined the Tulane basketball squad, but it.
was a 6'9" freshman center by the name of
John "Hot Rod" Williams, who contributed
to the Green Wave's progression. This Sor-
rento. Louisiana native was the Most Valu-
able player in Louisiana AAAA in 1981.
However, coming off the bench, Williams
scored 19 points and dominated the boards
against Rice in the first game of the season
Directing movement on the court, head coach Ned
Fowler is flanked by assistant coaches Mike
Richardson. Tom Green, and Kurt Saulney.
Men-
; Basketball
Won
19
Lost 9
Tulane
11
Yugoslavia
86
Tulane
58
Memphis State
54
Tulane
11
Australia
56
Tulane
49
UNO
50
Tulane
69
Rice
60
Tulane
66
Florida State
53
Tulane
54
Louisville
55
Tulane
56
Louisville
61
Tulane
48
New Hampshire
50
Tulane
59
UNO
53
Tulane
82
Nicholls St.
67
Tulane
53
Cincinnati
39
Tulane
118
Roosevelt
58
Tulane
62
Florida State
61
Tulane
59
Indiana
77
Tulane
81
St. Louis
57
Tulane
71
Univ. Texas SA
64
Tulane
74
So. Miss.
62
Tulane
60
Cincinnati
58
Tulane
62
Memphis State
64
Tulane
33
Bufffalo
43
Tulane
63
Virginia Tech
58
Tulane
60
So. Miss.
58
Tulane
49
Florida State
54
Tulane
64
Virginia Tech
65
Tulane
83
LSU
72
Tulane
106
Sewanee
57
Tulane
56
NLUV
51
Tulane
56
St. Louis
52
Tulane
61
Bradley
77
124 Mens Basketball
A.
T
and it was then that Fowler put Williams in
the starting lineup, and put three year start-
er Micah Blunt and Curtis Wallace on the
bench.
With Fowler's new system Thompson
was not scoring or rebounding at the same
level he was the previous two years. Howev-
er, by the time the conference games had to
be played, Thompson had returned to his
previous high performance. Thompson
made the points when the Wave needed
them, especially during key conference
games and in tournaments. Along with Wil-
liams and Webster, Thompson formed the
domineering Tulane front line.
Two players who had an easier time ad-
justing to the new system were guards
Daryl Moreau and Joe Holston. Moreau be-
came the key to the team when Fowler picked
him as his starting point guard. Although
he did not shoot often, his playmaking pro-
duced points for the Green Wave. On the
foul line, Moreau led the nation in shooting
percentage, making 94.7% of his shots. Hol-
ston had to earn his starting spot back from
Ralph Davis,; but once he got it back, he
kept it for the duration of the season. The
only senior in the starting lineup, Holston
made his mark with a good perimeter shot,
and an excellent move to the basket.
Perhaps the most important contribution
A smiling Ned Fowler displays the Pelican cup trophy
after the Wave dumped UNO 58-53 on UNO's
home court.
to Tulane's excellent season was its strong
showing in the Metro Conference. The
Green Wave, for the last five years in the
conference, generally came in last place
with a 2-10 record. However, the Fowler
system frustrated opponents and gave Tu-
lane a conference record of 8-4, and a sec-
ond place finish in the Conference. Louis-
ville was the only team to beat the Wave
twice, at Louisville and at a Tulane "home
game" at the Wendy's Tournament in Bowl-
ing Green, Kentucky. A heart breaking two
point loss to Memphis State prevented the
Conference Championship.
By the end of the regular season, Tulane
had a record of 1 8-6, (8-4 in the Metro) and
took the Pelican Cup from crosstown rival,
UNO. Ned Fowler coached the Wave to its
first winning season since 1975-76, broke
Cliff Welles record for wins by a first year
coach, set in 1945-46, and was Coach of the
Year in the Metro Conference and in Bas-
ketball Weekly Magazine. John Williams
was named to the All-Metro, and All-
American teams as a freshman, while Paul
Thompson, with a second half rush, was
named to the second Ail-American team as
well.
126
Men's Basketball
Mrn's BttskelK
Cagers Rebound at Season's End
A slow start signalled a tough season for
the Tulane Women's Basketball team.
Julia Yeater became the Lady Wave's
third head coach in three years. Without a
summer training program, and with the late
hiring of Yeater, the prospects for a winning
season were diminished greatly.
In addition, there was a lack of recruit-
ing. Mary Gilligan, a transfer from Virginia
Tech, was the only new face.
In the beginning of the season, Yeater
unsuccessfully searched for the right com-
bination for the starting five. As a result,
Tulane got off to a 3-10 start.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Won 12 Lost 15
Tulane
83
Southwestern LA
83
Tulane
66
Grambling State
80
Tulane
66
Southern Miss.
84
Tulane
60
Xavier
63
Tulane
52
LSU
87
Tulane
72
William Carey
83
Tulane
69
Brigham Young
61
Tulane
50
Louisiana Tech
103
Tulane
72
Penn State NMS
77
Tulane
60
Southeastern LA
56
Tulane
69
Nicholls State
63
Tulane
63
Memphis State
78
Tulane
75
Southern Miss.
57
Tulane
81
New Orleans
80
Tulane
54
Univ. of Florida
52
Tulane
55
Nicholls State
49
Tulane
59
Cincinnati
81
Tulane
72
Virginia Tech
64
Tulane
58
Southeastern LA
63
Tulane
65
New Orleans
89
Tulane
70
Florida State
89
Tulane
49
Xavier
71
Tulane
75
Southeastern LA
67
Tulane
55
Spring Hill
59
Tulane
71
William Carey
65
Tulane
52
Virginia Tech
62
128
Women
s Basketball
However, Yeater then turned the team
around after the poor start, winning four of
the next five games.
Included in this winning streak were a
one point win over crosstown rival UNO, a
last second victory over Florida, and a 72-
64 trouncing of Metro Conference foe Vir-
ginia Tech.
Sparking the Wave's offense were All-
Metro forward Sherri Fuqua, All-City
guard Daryl Kimche, and center Teresa
Heike. Bernadette Williams and Ellen Tup-
per led the rebounding effort.
Although this late rally salvaged the sea-
son for Tulane, playing national power-
houses such as national champion Louisi-
ana Tech and Metro Conference Champion
Memphis State, took its toll on the Green
Wave.
Jumping and releasing the ball, Darryl Kimche sinks a
shot from the top of the key.
Front row: Sue Rose, Sharon Towry, Susan Owens,
Sherri Fuqua, Sharon Hill, Mary Gilligan, Darryl
Kimche. Back row: Head Coach Julia Yeater, Jill
Shotnick, Ellen Tupper, Teresa Heike, Bernadette Wil-
liams, Sarah Haiederer, Assistant Coach Michael
Fisher.
r:.
ding for the basket, Shcrri Fu
.convert a three point play agi
J
'^2
« f
J
r
!
Y
W v»
<l
1
Women Win Metro
When Katheryn Boustany read the com-
ic strip from her piece of bubblegum the
fortune on the bottom read "Your team will
win." She never thought that prediction
would be correct.
But, when Boustany and her doubles
partner Meg Meurer won the number three
consolation doubles match at the Metro
Conference Tournament, the victory gave
Tulane the Metro Conference champion-
ship in 1982.
Coach Peter Curtis used a combination
of freshmen and transfers to rebuild the
team for an 18-9 record in the 1982 season.
Boustany and Sandy Sachs, both juniors,
came to Tulane from LSU, and added tre-
mendous depth to the team.
Lisa Askenase, a nationally-ranked ju-
nior played in both the number one and
number two position for the Wave and com-
piled an unbelievable 21-4 record. She also
won the Metro number two singles champi-
onship and, along with Sachs, the number
two doubles championship.
Katy Jo Graddy, at Tulane on an aca-
demic scholarship, also had an excellent 1 8-
6 record, and won the number six singles
championship at the Metro Tournament.
"The fortune on the
bottom read, your
team will win ..."
Other winners at the Metro Champion-
ship include Boustany at number four sin-
gles, and Meurer at number five singles.
Singles winner Meg Meurer sewed up the Women's
Metro championship with a doubles victory. She also
won her singles match.
Back row: C. Clay, L. Arkanase, S. Sacks, D. Gauer, T.
Pallet, A. Tribuwitz, L. Amdur, Coach P. Curtis. Front
row: K. Boustany, M. Meurer, K.J. Graddy
130
Women's Tennis
f-.
UOMliNS TENNIS
W
on 18 Lost 9
lulane
9
NAV. Louisiana
0
Fulanc
1
Rice
-
lulane
1
Houston Baptist
■>
Tulane
8
Nicholis State
0
Tulane
4
Vanderbili
<;
Tulano
9
S,E. Louisiana
0
Tulane
3
Alabama
6
Tulane
9
LNO
0
lulane
9
McNccsc Stale
0
Tulane
■>
Houston
7
Tulane
4
Arkansas
5
Tulane
^
Memphis Stale
3
Tulane
5
So. Illinois
4
Tulane
7
Notre Dame
5
Tulane
7
S.E Louisiana
2
Tulane
b
New Nfcxico State
3
Tulane
9
S E Louisiana
0
Tulane
4
Flarvard
5
Tulane
5
Iowa
4
Tulane
6
South Florida
3
Tulane
9
Nicholis State
0
Tulane
g
Spnnghill
0
Tulane
4
South Alabama
5
Tulane
8
S W Louisiana
4
Tulane
Q
N \V. Louisiana
0
Tulane
5
Mississippi State
■*
Tulane
0
Mississippi
0
Isl
Place
Mciro Tournamen;
0 ^
Tulane
Matches
Nation's
Top Teams
It seemed as though rain fell on the pa-
rade of the Men's tennis team as five out of
23 matches were washed out.
In the games they played, the team did
compile a respectable 7-1 1 record against
some of the top teams in the country, finish-
ing fourth in the Metro Conference.
The Wave only had one Metro Champi-
onship in 1982 as the number two team of
Lloyd Desatnick and Karl Ingard took the
number two doubles title against Memphis
State.
Bob Harford, the number five seed, and
Larry Weiss, the number six seed, boasted
the most successful season in 1982. Har-
ford, a junior, piled up 1 3 wins against eight
losses. Weiss, also a junior, was undefeated
at number six until the Metro Champion-
ship. He finished the season with a 10-4
record.
Jon Klorfein, playing at number four sin-
gles, also posted a winning record. Along
with partner Bill Morris, they compiled the
best record at doubles, 49-58.
Working with only one-and-a-half schol-
arships, in contrast to the eight given the
women's team, the Men's team finished a
strong fourth at the Metro Championships,
one point behind Florida State.
132
Men's Tennis
^
M
;.i^.j.. ; ■.^j^j.'atg-
!S^
t
\ \ \ \
\ \ \ \ ^
\ \ \ \ \ X \ .
\ \ \ \ \ \ \
. \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ^
\ \ \ \ \ \ \ v>
\\\\\ \\\
i\ \ i\ \ \ \ \ \ X
\ \ \ \
Karl Iii>;ard won the number l»o doubles lille »iih
I loyd Dcsainick al ihc Metro Champiotuhip
Backtunding i volley. Bob Harford compilcd 1 3 *in
during the scaion
I'ulanc
Fukinc
I'ulanc
I'll lane
Fulanc
I'ulanc
Fulanc
Fulanc
Fulanc
MbNS TENNIS
Won 7 Lost 1 1
Nicholls I Tulanc
Louisiana Tech 6 Tulanc
Northwestern LA 9 Tulanc
Butler 0 Tulanc
Western Illinois 0 Tulanc
Pan American 8 Tulanc
Texas Tech 1 Tulanc
Nicholls 1 Tulanc
New Mexico State f> Tulanc
5 Georgia State 4
2 Northwestern 7
2 Louisiana Tech 7
5 Southern Miss 4
3 Mississippi State 6
2 South Alabama 7
8 Southeastern LA I
4 Mississippi 5
2 ISL 7
Mtn's Thtna
133
Golf Team
Sinks Last
Putt
Teeing off at Audubon golf course, Jav Burnstein
swings through the ball.
Out of the trap, Jay Burnstein tries for a birdie.
134
Golf
Kroni row: llarrv Mollub. K,«llv hr.icassa. Ja> Vdcwdocil. Kcnn Wenn^ Coach Mi%«iag: Bobb)
Burnsicin. Rene Pn\s>e. Dave Mon.ihjn Colm Rcfcn! Srih K'ui-lcr
'J-**.^!-
-vkrt^^f^.*'—
■I
BARRACUDA Front row: Sarintha Buras, Diane Bloomberg, Cori Foreman. Sec-
ond row: Ellen Artopoeus, Marilyn Morse, Jura Zibas, Julie Rosser. Back row:
Noemie Merrick, Jeanny Neilson.
CANOE Front row: Steve Gure, Dale Nequin, Koenraad Van Ginkel, Chris Brizzo-
lara. Back row: Gerry Deegan, Tim Rice, Glenn Green. Rich Searle, Charles
Swannack.
Fencing
This year's young fencing team was one
of the most successful in recent history.
The twenty-five member team led by
Captain Nelson Trujillo, racked up an
amazing season in intercollegiate play.
In the Rossier Collegiate Tournament,
Tulane won the cup by upsetting three-time
defending champion LSU by an 1 1-5 score.
The fencing club's successes are due to a
young group of fencers, eager to learn the
art and more eager to demonstrate what
they've learned against opponents.
The club's mentor and faculty advisor,
Dr. Eugene Hanori, practices his team on
the basics of the sport. This, he says, is the
main catalyst behind the fencing club's suc-
cess.
Thrusting gains two points in fencing.
Barracuda
Contrary to popular belief, the Barra-
cuda Club does not reside in the Gulf of
Mexico.
The twelve-member club is coached by
Jeanny Neilson and is the second oldest
Newcomb club on campus. This fact, how-
ever, does not exclude men from joining.
The Barracuda Club rehearses and pro-
duces a water ballet show every year. Their
136
Club Sports
latest production, entitled "That's Enter-
tainment!" graced the waves of Monk Si-
mon pool in March.
Writing and producing "That's Enter-
tainment!" turned out to be an extremely
long, time-consuming process. The fruits of
the Barracuda's labors proved to all present
at the show that it was well worth the effort.
Performing are Jura Zibas, Cori Foreman, Sarintha
Buras, Diane Bloomberg, Ellen Artopoeus, Julie
Rosser, Marilyn Morse.
FENCING Tracy Swedlow. Von Rcidbord, Nelson Trujillo, Lisa Leech, Laurie
Rosen, Doug Loguc.
IC K. IKK KKA Kroni row: JcIT Sund. Sliun BorrK. iay Bunlcin. tXmn Lot. Dave
Kovacik Back row: Dan Mahoncy, Rob Albancki. Dan Wagner. Sieve Neunun.
Rob Pollard, Tom O'Connor. Scoll Brtntn
Ice Hockey
The Tulanc Hockey Club skaied to a 7-8
record in the 1982 season.
Led by top scorers. Left wing. Don Lun;
Goalie, Jay Bursicin; and Dcfenscman Rob
Pollard, the hockey team provided stiff
competition for such national ranked pow-
ers as SMU and Auburn.
Late in the season Tulane lost to SML 4-
3 in a heart-breaking defeat that cost the
team a trip to the Blue Hockey National
Championships. SML. the Southwestern
Collegiate hockey league champs, went on
to place second in the National Tourna-
ment.
In the coming season the Hockey Team
will expand in quantity and quality. .Al-
ready a team to be reckoned with in compe-
tition, the team hopes to become a top con-
tender in the near future.
('hrcklnK againti (he boards. Don Lux knoclu the
puck loose.
C/i* ^ivfl
,137
PKr
-TT^^^^I^^SS^iB
Bffii^egB^^^r : .
' '■:.
^J<^3'Ji^ 6.
^BBBKtS^
IbiJ
K^i
■/*^
^%\:'
^'-P^^^ :^,
|OKnj|g|^^'
^^
wm
W^^iW
JUDO
KARATE Front row: Jody Salsilz, Slcphan Douglas. David Gcrslcl. Jini Bicncr.
Conrad Van Ginkcl. Korachi Ota. Back row: Andy Itscobar. John Adams. Mike
l-.dcli. Sieve Hytha. Les linkel, Gerhardi Rosier. Manuel Rodriguez. Lucien Mur-
/vn.
ORIKNTKERIN(. From row: David Whiddon. Jeff Le»i». Brun AI»orth BmI
row: Mary .Martha Armstrong. Marc Dcrrickion. Gewgu Talbol. Koenrud Voo
Ginkcl. Chris Bri/zolara. Barbara Conma
Orienteering
One of the more interesting but obscure
clubs at Tulane is the Orienteering Club. The
sport of orienteering combines skills used in
scavenger hunts and hiking in intense competi-
tion.
Both recreational and competitive, the club
is aclise in intercollegiate competitions
throughout the South. In 1981. Tulane »as
ranked sixteenth in the nation.
This year, the club took several individual
and team trophies.
The Orienteering Club sponsored its first
regional meet, at the Homochitto National
Forest in Southern Mississippi.
President Brian .Mworth and the other four-
teen members of the club hope to improve
(heir national ranking and also further expose
the sport of orienteering to Tulane students.
( hcckinc b«iring% is r^scnlia! in oricniccnng
Gymnastics
Vaulting its way to success, the Tulane
gymnastics club. 20 members strong.
provides an opportunity to sia\ in shape
and learn new skills for gymnasts at all
.ibilily levels.
\\ hile the club has no competition per
^c. they do perform at various sporting
events throughout the year. For instance.
the highlights of the 1982 season included a
halflime show at the televised Tulane Florida
State basketball game in February.
The Gymnastics club wants to compete
against other schools next year Accomplish-
ing this, however, would take a good deal of
patience and persistence on the part of the
members of the Tulane Gymnastics Club.
\\ ilh Iocs poinird, Marjonc Forbc» performs on
the mat.
C.'l.^ S|V'/s
139
SOCCER Front row: John Peteis, Jim RufTer, George Williams, Marc Schwartz,
Doug Ari, Robert Scharker, Larry Moser, Hugh Sharkey. Back row: Luigi Sanchez,
Jim Goff, Jim Smith, Harold Ethrington, Sam Joiner, Buster Connelly, Bruce, Pat
Sweeney, Sean Simmons, Peter Kettler, Billy Witz.
Scuba
The 45 members of the Tulane Scuba
Club were proud recipients of the 1981
Friedrich Award for the most progress of
any club sport.
This was due mostly to the work of
Founder/President/Treasurer Jon Able-
mann, who also founded the Skeet and Trap
Club.
The scuba club, with all certified divers,
travels to Florida, including places such as
Fort Walton and Key Largo. The group has
also explored the Crystal River in search of
the rare Manatee.
In its short existence, the Scuba Club has
become enormously popular This is due a
great deal to New Orleans' proximity to the
Gulf of Mexico.
The club hopes in the near future to trav-
el to the Caribbean and dive among the
reefs there. After an extremely successful
beginning, almost anything of that nature
seems possible.
Testing his vest, this scuba diver prepares to dive.
Soccer
Sliding into the ball, a possible goal is broken up by
Tulane.
140
Club Sports
SPORT PARACIIl'TE Front row: Ram Wilson. Chuck "Bubba" Taylor Back row:
Mel Grc^^c, Ivx-s Kcnl, John Rooncv.
Parachute
Druppin): from above, an unseen cro«nl aaaiU (hit
jumper on (he V.C. M)uad
-. 141
w
Soccer Third
in City League
The women's soccer team finished the
season with a second semester record of 5-5-
1 , a record which placed them third place in
the 10-team city league. The team also re-
ceived an invitation to participate in three
tournaments, at Tuscaloosa, Tallahassee
and Austin — earning fourth place stand-
ing in the Austin Tournament.
The year's team was plagued with coach-
ing problems. The second semester saw
them without a coach, as first semester
coach Eddy Young was forced to step down
due to a lack of time. However, Carol
Riewe, team president, assisted by Robert
Courier, was able to coach the team to its
commendable record.
In addition to Riewe's talents, the team
was graced with the abilities of Renee
Punzi and Lisa Leydon. Team officers in-
cluded Riewe, president; Judy Bard, Vice-
President, and Martha Tester, Treasurer.
Front row: Renee Punzi, Lisa Leydon, Blaine Leory,
Katherine Jordon, Martha Tester, Marian Bose. Back
row: Carol Riewe, Sophie Don, Susan Decker, Gigi
Beller, Amy Bader, Kathy Farrell.
142
Women's Soccer
I'assing off to (he uing, Carol Riewe evade} •
Jc fender.
Through Ihe middle — a burst of speed takes Lisa
Leydon toward the goal.
Along the sidclinc<i, two players Tight Tor possession.
(Vmnm's Sccctr
143
I ■
1st Place
Chabad
House
2nd Place
Law
School
Campus League
Intramural
3rd Place
ACT
144
Intramurals
Dorm Loap:ue
Football
1st Place
Ayres
House
2nd Place
Derickson
House
3rd Placo
Menuet
House
Inlrtmurth
143
146
Headlines
Tulane Installs President Kelly
Weekend, accepted a blue t-shirt uith
his picture printed on the back in dark
green, and presided at a pep rally lor
football players and coach Vince
Gibson, who would lace the Vanderbilt
Commodores in the Supcrdomc the
following e\ening.
Making a quick change into black tic,
Kelly headed for his next stop
dinner at the Plimsoll club in honor of
his inauguration. In the presence of 300
special guests, Kelly was toasted by
board of administrators chairman John
Phillips as "a sincere man who has
instilled trust and confidence in those
around him, a man who has
demonstrated a herculean capacity for
work, and a man who is fierce on the
racquctball court. May your good
nature and good sense ever be united."
In his talk to the dinner guests. Kelly
shared his vision for the future of the
university. "Today, Tulane is a good
uni\ersity which boasts several areas of
true distinction; in five years 1 want a
uni\ersit>' which is exceptional in many
disciplines and programs," he said.
Friday night, a bit of rain came which
meant that each of those 3,000 chairs
had to be dried by hand early Saturday
morning. But the installation day was
sunny, with temperatures ranging in the
upper 80s for the natural en\ironment
and much higher inside academic robes.
rhe audience numbered something
over 1000, leaving plenty of shady seats
available when an original choice came
into direct line of the sun— a pattern
referred to by Kelly during the
ceremony as "solar seating."
I he processions began promptly al
10:30 a.m., with faculty members,
representatives of other universities,
and specially invited guests walking
from the I'niversity Center to the back
of Gibson Hall, their colorful academic
gowns adding to the pageantry.
The platform party, including board
members, administration, speakers,
and past lulane presidents Rufus
Harris and Herbert Longenecker, came
from Gibson Hall.
Kelly recei\ed greetings from ASB
president David Schneider on behalf of
the student body, .Alumni Association
president James A. Moreau on behalf of
the alumni, and vice-chairman of the
I ni\crsity Senate Robert Cook on
behalf of the faculty. The Tulane
Uni\ersity Band and Tulane's Choir
provided music for the ceremony.
Special speaker Vanderbilt
Chancellor Alexander Heard, urged
that "universities, as the central
thinking organs in our society, have to
know the future, to know where we are
going, and to help steer the best course.
Uni\ersit\ research. in\ention. training,
and teaching are the principal sources
for the dynamism that propels our
civilization into the future."
The N'anderbilt chancellor, who also
chairs the board of trustees for the Ford
Foundation, cited the economic
disparity between industrialized nations
and Third World countries, the chance
in living standards in the I'nilcd Stales
itself, and revolutions in micro-
electronics and biotechnology as some
of the issues universities must explore.
After Kelly was formally msiallcd as
lulane president, receiving the
Presidential Medal from board
chairman John Phillips, he spoke of
higher education's role in preserving the
diversity of American society.
Following the installation cercmons.
a reception was held on the quad with
punch and cookies served by the Tulane
I'niversity Women's .Association.
And at a small luncheon after that,
Kellv celebrated the occasion with his
family and close friends. His mother,
who emigrated to Nev* York from
Ireland as a young woman, was there
So was his brother Fred, who is dean of
the Business School at the Uni\«rsity of
Baltimore.
And so was his nephew Brian
O'Hara. who left New ^'ork in the late
summer to hike down the .Appalachian
Trail, ride a bus across Tennessee, and
paddle his way down part of the
Mississippi River in a canoe to reach
New Orleans in time for the installation.
And of course, his wile Margaret and
teenaged sons Martin, Paul. .Andrew,
and Peter were there also.
That evening, Kelly received an
installation present. The Green Wave
chalked up its first gridiron win of the
1981 season by defeating Vanderbilt in
the Superdome.
Ceremonies For Hackney, Too
Former Tulane President F. Sheldon
Hackney was inaugurated as the lop
man at the Dniversitv of Pennsvhania
October 23, 1981.
Hackney resigned as I ulaiie's twellili
president last year to accept his position
at Pennsylvania.
He was selected after an intense
search by Penn's presidential search
committee. He was not the choice of
manv of the students and much of
Penn's inner circle of administrators,
and met with much protest when his
selection was announced
Upon obtaining office, one of
ll.ickney's first objectives was the
reorganization of Penn's admini-
stration.
He introduced a number of change^
in non-academic committees, the most
controversial ol which involved
changing the responsibilities of the
University's Budget Review Committee
into an academic Planning and Budget
committee.
This meant a reorganization of majoi
staff personnel and the introduction of a
new executive vice-president
F, Sheldon Hackney
14;
Morial Re-elected
NEW ORLEANS — Ernest
"Dutch" Morial added another page
to the history books by winning re-
election in March as mayor of New-
Orleans.
The race for the city's top
government post quickly became a
three man contest. Morial faced two
challengers from New Orleans' state
congressional delegation.
Morial's biggest threat was from
Rep. Ron Faucheux. Sen. William
Jefferson proved a strong third
candidate.
The campaign kicked off before
Januan.- with Morial stressing how
well he has handled a tough job.
Faucheu.x disagreed in a slick media
campaign, attacking Morial as a {
combative, divisive leader. Jefferson ■
was an articulate spokesman who
addressed the issues.
Jefferson. howe%er. was never able
to get his campaign going, and in the
first primary only captured
approximately ten percent of the vote.
Morial and Faucheux made it to the
run-off by closely splitting the rest of
the votes.
Morial then comfortabh" defeated
Faucheux after some of the toughest
campaigning the city e\er witnessed.
Rescued
P.ADU.A. Italy — Skillfully
executing a daring, high-risk
operation. Italian police commandoes
rescued kidnapped U.S. Brig. Gen.
James L. Dozier in January as he was
being held at gunpoint by a terrorist at
the Red Brigade's hideout. Dozier was
in good condition when he was found
The General expressed gratitude to ,
the quick action of the police who
arrested five suspects — two women
and three men.
Dozier said ".A.t the moment I was
rescued, a gun was pointed at me and I
didn't know whether that was my last
moment. You must realize how great
was my feeling of relief when I was
taken in hand by Italian authorities."
Budget Cut
W.^SHINGTON — The alarm was
sounded throughout the nation's
colleges and universities after
President Ronald Reagan's 1982-83
budget proposed massive cuts in the
money earmarked for higher
education.
Reagan requested slashes in direct
research grants given to universities,
and also proposed tremendous cuts in
the numerous federal loan programs.
The measures sparked waves of
protests from students, admini-
strators, and congressmen.
.A decision on the cuts was
postponed until late in the summer as
both houses of Congress debated the
budget.
I Murdered
I PARIS — An assistant U.S.
military attache. Lt. Col Charles
Robert Ray. 43. was shot and killed
outside his Paris apartment in late
Januarv-. The unknown attacker shot
Ray once in the head and fled on foot,
police said.
Sources said there was ver}' little
evidence to help trace Ray's killer.
PLOOK
MOSCOW — In a strong new sign
of support for the Palestine Liberation
Organization, the Soviet Union has
awarded the PLO's Moscow office
"official dipilomatic status." Arab
diplomatic sources in Moscow-
considered the move a Soviet response
to the strategic military alliance
between the United States and Israel
announced in September. 1981.
Resigned
WASHINGTON — Sen. Harrison
A. Williams (D — N.J.) resigned his
seat in March, avoiding the stigma of
becoming the first United States
senator expelled in more than a
centun.-.
Williams was con\-icted in May.
1981. on nine indictments including
bribery, conspiracy, and conflict of
interests folio w'ing an FBI
in\estigation into his dealings. The
Senate Ethics Committee recom-
mended his expulsion shortly
thereafter.
The Committee's recommendation
finally reached the Senate floor in
March. In a dramatic, six-day trial.
Williams doggedly defended himself,
w-arning his colleagues that the FBI
"framed him and that "It happened to
me. It can happen again." Williams
resigned just before the Senate was to
vote an almost certain expulsion.
Auto Woes
DETROIT — United Auto
Workers at a Ford Motor Company
plant voted in November for non-wage
contract concessions in hopes of
averting layoffs or a factory shutdow n.
Ford requested the concessions to
attack what it considers high labor
costs.
In asking for the concessions. Ford
said its U.S. w'ork force is becoming
incapable of compteting economically
with overseas plants. Ford and
General Motors said they face an S8-
an-hour domestic labor cost
disadvantage as compared with their
Japanese competitors.
World Leader Slain
CAIRO — In a hail of bullets.
Egyptian President and Nobel Peace
Prize w inner .Anwar Sadat was gunned
down on October 6. 1981.
Sadat was assassinated as he
watched a military parade
commemorating the 1973 war against
Israel. Fanatic gunmen leaped from a
military truck in the procession and
attacked the viewing stand where the
Egyptian leader sat.
Hosni Mubarak. Sadat's lieutenant,
took over the reians of the arie%-in2
country. Most of the world mourned
the death of the courageous leader,
although some arab sta*e rejoiced. The
United States sent three former
presidents. Richard Nixon. Gerald
Ford, and Jimmy Carter, to the
funeral.
But Libyan strongman Muammar
Qadhafi ominously warned that "no
one after this day will be able to
proceed along Sadat's course, and the
end of whoever tries to do so will be
like Sadat's end."
148
Headlines
New Phones Put Campus on Hold
I Ik- c.iil) \sci.kM)l Augiisi. I9S1, ma\
M)incda\ he rcincmbcrcd as ihc da\s i>l
the (ircat I'lionc Fiasco on lulanc's
campus.
IVrhaps it was inevitable that the
more than 2. ()()() telephone hnes
installed during the summer months to
accommodate what has been called
"one of the largest computeri/ed
systems in New Orleans" would ha\e
problems that needed to be ironed out.
During the first days of the massive
changeover to the new tele-
communications system, phone
workmen were ITooded with requests,
complaints, and work orders to repair
bux/ing. blinking, bungled, and broken
phones.
Complaints ran the spectrum from
olTiees not receiving calls to phones
mcess.intlv ringing without ans means
ol answering them to lines that buzzed
so loudly that conversation was difficult
if not impossible.
Repairmen worked full time in the
beginning of the fall semestercorrecting
the service problems. By the end of
September, things were settling down.
Telecommunications manager Judy
Haltcrman said "the first week was
pretty bad. but now I'm getting some
sleep at night again."
The problems stemmed from the
installation of a brand new SI .2 million
telecommunications system designed to
replace the University's aging and
increasingly expensive South Central
Bell system.
Appro.ximately 2000 phone lines
were installed for the svstcm. both in
student housing and atlminislratne
offices.
The telephones arc actualiv
manufactured by a subsidiary of
Cieneral Dynamics, which provides the
equipment to the Southwest Utilities
system. Southwest is responsible for the
installation and maintenance of the
telephones, although the system is
owned by Tulane.
Director of Procurement Scr\iccs
Larry Guichard said the system "will
probably save Tulane over S5 million
within the next 15 years."
He pointed out that phone-related
expenses have been the third largest
monthly bill for the university.
surpassed only by salaries and energy
costs.
Campus Paper in Turmoil
For the campus newsbreaker. The
Tulane Hullabaloo, the 1981-82 school
term meant staff upheavels and
administration conflicts. Winner of the
Associated Collegiate Press Pacemaker
award for two consecutive years, 1979
and 1980. The Hullabaloo was more a
newsmaker than a newspaper in 1982.
The troubles for The Hullabaloo began
early in September. Editor-in-Chief
Alan Gainsburgh fired News Editor
Sarah Schmidt in what Gainsburgh
referred to as "differences in
management styles."
Upon Schmidt's firing, five other top
editors walked out. Vacating staffers
said that their mo\e was not one to
destroy the paper but rather to remove
Gainsburgh.
For the remainder of the semester, the
newspaper continued with limited staff
and lack of adequate editorial
experience in top editorial positions.
Adding to these problems was the
rescinding of student salaries in April
1981.
For Gainsburgh, February 1982
marked his departure. Citing a
continuing set of "unresolv able
differences" between himself and Media
.Advisor Mindy McNichols. concerning
editorial control. Gainsburgh filed his
own resignation. Following
Gainsburgh in departure, stressing
unrelated causes, were five other top
editors.
With the advent o\ the annual ASB
Billy Witz, Editor-in-Chief of
controversial parody issue.
elections, it seemed as if the university
was without a newspaper. Only a joint
venture between Media Board and .ASB
Senate members manning editorial,
production, and clerical positions
allowed an election issue.
I wo weeks later remaining staffers
elected Sports Editor Billy Witz as
Editor-in-Chief. Still plagued by an
acute staff shortage and a lack of
experienced editorial position heads.
Witz moved to complete the publication
vear.
f'or The Hullabaloo, however, the
tfie final issues, including the
troubles were far from over. The end of
the publication year is traditionally
marked with a parody issue. This year.
Witz published an issue entitled The
Helhivasconh. but the Media Board
saw it as no joke. Feeling that the
majority of the publication was
"offensive" an in "poor taste." the
Board voted to censor the issue and
destroy all remaining copies.
For the newspaper-inclined in the
1981-82 term, it was certainly a
"helluva" watershed vear.
149
Headlines
Kelly Juggles Administration
Tulane students returned in the Fall
and discovered a virtual exodus of staff
members from the University's top
administration.
It wasn't known at the time but this
was the beginning of a massive overhaul
of Tulane 's administrative structure by
new president Eamon Kelly.
With all the students and faculty back
on campus, rumors circulated that
Kelly was in the midst of a systematic
purge of his top advisors. At the very
least, some people worried about the
changes.
"Life is change, that's true," Vice-
President for Academic Affairs
Frederick Starr said in September. "But
stability is important. These changes
have shifted a lot of responsibility on to
other peoples' shoulders."
Outspoken political science professor
William Gwyn said the changes "make
one apprehensive as to whether the
University is doing enough to hold its
administrators. It hasn't yet done us
extreme harm, but it's certainly not
doing us any good."
Kelly defended the changes,
attributing them to the "normal
turnover in an educational environment
plus some changes that are inevitable
when a new administration takes over."
"I'm pleased that I have the
opportunity to make a number of major
appointments so early on," Kelly added.
"I think it's generally agreed that the
appointments that have been made have
been excellent ones."
The first administrator to go was
Newcomb Dean Susan Wittig. She left
in the summer, 1981, to accept a
position as dean of graduate studiesand
research at Southwest Texas State
University. History professor Ray
Esthus took over as acting dean until a
search committee recommends Wittig's
replacement.
Another dean, Wavne Woody of
University College, also resigned over
the summer. Woody moved to San
Francisco to become dean of the
Hastings Law School. The chairman of
Tulane's education department, Louis
Barrilleaux, was quickly named
Woody's successor.
Tulane's director of Admissions,
Fred Zuker, left Tulane and accepted
the job of dean of admissions and
financial aid at Pomona College.
Jillinda Jonker, the associate director of
the office, took over as acting director.
Later in the year, Jonker got the nod
over 30 applicants and was confirmed as
director of admissions.
One of the most important and
surprising resignations was that of
Provost Frank Birtel, a long-time
faculty and university government
member. His move was triggered by a
memo in early May from President
Kelly outlining a new academic
administrative structure.
All the President's Men
Kelly's new line-up of top administrators
Clarence Scheps
Secretary of the
Universiiv
Franrfs' Ia wrence
Acadeniic ¥iee- Preiideni
andTrfyyc
Helen Kitzman
Affirmative
Anion Officer
Hindman Wall
Director of
Intercollegiate Athletics
150
"Wc IkhI a ycntlciii.inls ilisiigiccnu-iii
()\cr nianaLiL-nicnl slslc," Hiiicl saiil. Ik-
liitk-rxd with Kcll\ "s tciirgani/jtionand
offered 111 resign. His offer was
accepted.
Francis Lawrence, pre\ iDUsly dcputs
prcnosi. was promoted to acting
proNosi. Ihis saga was completed in
May, 19N2. when Ixiwrencc was named
academic \ ice-president and prtnost ol
the university, becoming the chiel
academic officer ot tlie Llni\ersity.
1 he business side of the University
was also restructured. It was still just
one week into the school year when it
was announced that Paul McKarland.
the University's vice-president for
business and finance, would lea\e in
November and accept a position at
l.ovola Uni\ersit\ in Chicago.
Kelly used Mcl-arland"s departure to
un\eil his new non-academic operating
structure.
.A senior \ i c e - p r e s i d e n t I o r
operations was created to o\ersee
university budget and finance, overall
business management, and fundraising
and external relations. The position
combined the duties of the executive
"/ think it's generally agreed that
the appointments made have been
excellent ones."
-Eamon Kelly
vice-president and the \ ice-president for
university relations and resources.
Immediatelv a search was launched
to fill this new postion, and also for
McFarland's old job, now just the vice-
president for business.
As part of the reorganization.
Warren Johnson turned in his old title
of acting vice-president of university
relations and resources and became
Tulane's vice-president for
development and alumni affairs.
By .lanuary. 1982. Kelly had named
Eriing W. Hammarstrom, a top officer
of the William I.. Crow Construction
Company in New York, as vice-
president for business.
Shortly afterwards. Charles B.
Knapp. a lacultv member at George
Washington University and a high
ranking Labor Department official in
the Carter administration, was named
the senior vice-president for opera lions.
Kellv's vast overhaul ol the
administration was now almost
complete. KLijor appointments on the
business side ot the Universitv were
complete, and with the exception of the
vacant Newcomb deanship. the
academic ranks were shored up.
Hkadlines
Frats Clean Up Act
With 8-Point Plan
Members of the Lulane Inter-
Iraternity Council agreed on an eight-
point plan that they believe will go far
toward solving some of the problems
between Tulane fraternitv chapters and
the local residential communitv.
The plan, which IhC chairman
Bryant Cohen called "something that
should have been done a long time ago."
was a response to dramatic
developments that caused ripple effects
throughout the uptown campus.
The nighttime shooting of the two
cement lions in front of the Sigma
.Mpha Epsilon house at 1200 Broadway
in late October caused a boiling-over of
angry feelings of many permanent
residents of nearby houses.
According to the New Orleans Police,
nine rounds were fired at the lions about
4 a.m. Sunday morning. October 25,
1981. Four rounds missed and struck
the residence ne.xt door. Police believe
the shots were fired from an automatic
v\ capon.
As part of the eight-point plan,
fraternities in violation of "established
and reasonable" standards of behavior
relating to noise, trash, or garbage will
be subject to social or athletic probation
lor a period that can range from a week
to si.x months or a fine of S50 to S250.
Noise is defined by the IFC as
including loud parties, late-night
stereiis played loudlv. and obscenities;
trash includes party debris and old
furniture; and garbage encompasses
kitchen refuse, among other things.
Since the beginning of the Spring
semester, fraternities were supposed to
clean the .ire.i troiii .St. Charles to
Willow .Street everv other Sund.iv
.ilternoon.
This strip has proved to be an area of
tension between the half-do/en
Iraternity houses there and nearby
residences.
Under the plan, chapter presidents
will be required to attend monthlv
meetings with presidents of other
Iraternities. and beginning in the Fall of
I9S2. chapter presidents will be
required to live in the fraternity houses.
Other provisions of the plan call for
the University's environmental and
health officer to make periodic
inspections on an advisory basis, for the
IFC to publish stale and local fire and
health codes once each semseter. and to
make sure each house manager has one.
Also, the IFC Judicial Committee
must inspect the houses periodically on
an advisor) basis. The fraternities must
submit a typed self-evaluarion to the
IFC at the beginning of each semester
including major accomplishments and
major problems. The Council
recommended that each chapter invite a
Universitv dean to speak at a chapter
meeting.
IFC's Cohen a*marked that "a lot of
thought has gone into this piece of
paper. It won't solve everything
overnight, but a lot of the Iraternity
members are more concerned now than
ever beloa*. So there's hope."
Donald Moore, vice-president and
dean for student scniccs. look a "wail
and see" .ittitude towards the plan.
"No eight-point plan or twentv-point
pl.in is going to solve anything," he s.i id.
The onl> thing that will solve anything
is the intentions behind the proposals. If
the fraternity membersdecide loaci like
responsible and caring adults, then
we're going to have a good plan. If not.
then we're right back when.- wc were
before."
151
Dixon Hall Gets a Face-Uft
Dixon Hall. Tulane's music building
and performance center, sported a
newly renovated look this year.
Renovation of Dixon's auditorium
began August 3. 1981, thanks to an
anonymous donation of one million
dollars. The donor instructed that the
money was to be used specifically for
the renovation of Dixon Hall.
According to Ann Bryant, Director
of Music Programs at Dixon Hall,
renovation was only the first step in a
four-phase plan to improve Tulane's
Music Department.
Phase I of the plan included the
painting of the interior auditorium and
lobby, refinishing and recovering the
seats, installing new light fixtures in the
lobby, and carpeting the inside of the
auditorium. Phase 1 renovations were
completed by the George Leake and
Associates firm.
Work on Phase II of the plan began
shortly after. These plans made better
use of the old music library in Dixon
Hall by converting the high-ceilinged
room into two separate floors.
The first floor now serves mainly as a
recital hall for the Tulane Orchestra.
The newly created second floor will be
used for additional office space.
The Maxwell Music Library moved
to spacious new quarters in the
basement of the Howard-Tilton
Library.
Phases III and IV of the Dixon Hall
renovations are still in the planning
stage. These phases call for the
construction of a small theatre adjacent
to Dixon Hall, to be used by the Tulane
Band and Choir, and construction of a
larger theatre with a seating capacity of
several thousand.
Bryant says the purpose of the
impro\ements is to upgrade the Music
Department at Tulane, while at the
same time clustering all music-related
projects in one section of the campus.
Geology Gets
Grant of
One Million
Will improve salaries, facilities
Tulane's Department of Geology has
received almost $1 million to help
develop its faculty and facilities.
The W. Kent McWilliams Endowed
Fund for Geology, named in honor of a
founder of McMoRan Oil and Gas
Company who was one of the first
geology majors at the University, will
devote initial efforts to the purchase of
scientific equipment and improvement
of faculty salaries.
The fund was established by James
Moffett, currently president of
McMoRan-Freeport Oil, who founded
the original McMoRan company with
McWilliams. Additional donations
have been made by Tel-Midland Pipe
Corporation president William Hines,
independent oil producer C.T. Cardin,
and Mr. and Mrs. McWilliams
"We want to help develop the
Department of Geology at Tulane,"
said McWilliams, who is also a member
of the University's Board of
Administrators. "We may build the
funding until it's large enough to spill
over and help other areas, too, but we
plan to concentrate on geology first."
In the past six years, the number of
geology majors receiving under-
graduate degrees from the University
has quadrupled, jumping from three in
1975 to 12 in 1981. A dozen seniors and
19 juniors are currently majoring in the
subject.
Tulane geology graduates are in
demand, particularly by oil companies
in the area.
University Boasts Second Straight Surplus
Tulane posted its second budget
surplus in a row with audited results
from the 1980-81 year showing a
positive balance of just over S2 million,
according to University Controller Ray
Menier.
Tulane's total budget, which includes
monies restricted to specific research
accounts as well as unrestricted funds,
adds up to more than SI60 million.
About SI. 4 million of the surplus
came from operations of the uptown
campus, Menier said, with S669,000
flowing from the Medical Center
operations.
The controller pointed out that $1.1
million of the funds were transferred to
the University's endowment with
S993,000 going to reduce the deficit-
fund balance in unrestricted operations.
Among the factors contributing to
the University's financial health is an
endowment stock and bond portfolio
whose 21.3 percent return for -calendar
year 1 980 ranks in the top ten percent of
all non-profit institutions.
Over the past five years, the portfolio
has increased in value by almost 17
percent a year, putting its performance
in the top one percent of all non-profit
institutions.
Return on equities, which make up
about 80 percent of Tulane's portfolio.
was up 26 percent for the year, besting
the Standard and Poor's 500 stock
average of 20.6 percent. Bond return
totalled eight percent, a record again
ranking in the top one percent of all
non-profit institution performance.
152
Hkaoi.ines
Early Morning Fire Wakes IVIonroe
A campus-wide tire Lilarni clicck was
the first order of business for physical
plant employees foliosving an oii-
buming electrical fire in the first floor
c(.|iiipment room of Monroe dormitory.
On Sunda\. February 7. 1982. llllane
^^.■^.'u^it\ . tol lowing two separate reports
YAF Battles For Campus OK
ol a strong burning odoi cunnng luini elct.iiic.il ec)uipnici>t luom uii ilic
air conditioning \enls in Old Warren norlhcuM side o( the firM floor of
and Doris residence halls, responded to .Mi>nroc. The New Orleans Fire
the general alarm. Department dispatched units to the
Raymond Hampton, a Residential scene.
Life building supervisor, reportedly An immediate evacuation of the
observed smoke cominu from the building was supervised by Tulane
security. It v*as later learned that Ihc
electrical power to Monroe was losiand
the fire alarm system had been rendered
moperable as a result of the fire.
Fllecls ol the fire, which was caused
Ihc Associated Student Body twice
turned thumbs down on the >'oung
Americans for Freedom, but the
conservative political group won
campus recognition anyway.
Ihe first time the group sought
recognition from the ASB Senate they
were turned down. Most senators
probably thought that was the end of
the issue, but they were wrong.
YAF president Richard Pope
brought the group before the Senate a
second time on November 17, 1981. He
again explained the purposes of the
group and detailed their stands on
various issues.
Pope claimed the group was
nonpartisan and educational, and is in
favor of free enterprise and national
defense. He said President Ronald
Reagan has been associated with the
group for over 18 years.
Ihc group provided the senators with
a \ .\\' information packet and also
circulated a letter of support from U.S.
Congressman from Louisiana Bob
Livingston. Members of the New
Orleans conimunitv also spoke in favor
of ^AF.
Still, in a secret ballot, the group was
denied recognition by a slim margin.
The senate voted 21 to 20 against the
\\\\
Having failed in student channels.
Pope took his group before the
I niversity Senate Committee on
Student Affairs. This bodv ,iw.irdcd the
■^ AF recognition on campus
by electrical equipment failure, were fell
by Monroe residents for several days.
Although partial power had been
temporarily restored by an emergency
generator, residents were asked to
conserve energy by limiting their use of
lighting, heat, hot water, hair dryrrs,
and cooking appliances.
WITT, radio, whose antenna is
located atop Monroe, also experienced
a power outage and was forced to go off
the air until sufficient power could be
restored. The station wasableioresume
transmission Wednesday .after Physical
Plant and New Orleans Public Service
installed connections with NOPSl
power lines.
Repairs were made and the Tulane
transformer was back in operation iwo
weeks after the incident.
Tulane Board Adds New IVIembers
New Orleans business and civic
leaders Sybil M. Favrot, W.K.
McWilliams .Ir.. and .lohn G.
Weinmann were named to Tulane
Fniversiiv's Board of Administrators
during the I981-S2 school year.
Favrot, the owner of a local interior
design firm, is active in both Universitv
and civic affairs. President of the
Newcomb .Mumnae .Association for
1978-81, she also served on the I ulane
President's Council.
A member of numerous civic
organizations. Favrot was chosen one
of the Outstanding Persons of 1981 by
the Institute for Human I nder-
standing.
An investor and independent oil and
gas producer. McWillianis is .i co-
founder of McMoRan Oil and das
Company. He now serves as director ol
that company.
McWilliams received a bachelor ol
science decree in sieolosiv Irom I ulane
McWilliams
Favrot
Weinmann
in I94.T He now serves on ihe
President's Council, several I'nivestiy
athletic support groups, and the
McWilliams Cieology Fund Advisory-
Boa id.
Weinmann graduated with a
bachelor of arts degree in 1950, and a
law degree in 1952. He is now a partner
of the prestigious linn ol Phelps,
Dunbar, Marks, Claverie.and .Simsand
is currently director of the Eason Oil
Company.
On the Board of Govrrnors of the
Tulane Medical School, Weinman-
co-chair along with his wife of the ■
81 Tulane Parents Fund
153
^
Student Life
154
Student Life
i
SludeM Li- I
Toby Baldenger and Debbie Fine take in the sights
outside Newcomb Hall.
156
Candids
ml
ilall wmcstcr\ end is a cauic for cclcbraiion. and
v>ticrc cKc bu! ;hc .icadcmic quad
Vi ■ Wolfe linds the park the pcrl'ccl place lor a
C< c bike ride or just studying in solitude.
Candid)
» 15y
i^
158
Candids
Cullon cand) .uiJ ciiiJicJ jpplo lake ituJcn;^ L'atk to
ihcir childhoods at Supcrfcsl.
Ihc lonR walk lo cUssts U much caiier when thartd
with d friend.
\n onlcrprising bicyclbl cats his luiKh in transit.
A.
CanMs
159
Yes, Dad, Fm Constantly Studying.
Referee Kenny Sadowsky judges a grueling arm-wres-
tling match in the Rat between worthy combatants
Stephanie Skylar and Jody Salsitz.
Passing the time of day outside Dixon Hall, two female
co-eds discuss such topics as their dates for the week-
end.
160
Candids
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exiling an ancient Viking tradition, two inventive Halloween brings out the -weird" in people is inr
udcnls consume libations on the quad. human golf ball illustrates.
Candid:
sl61
l|
The Phone Only Hums
'Cause It Doesn't Know The Words
Trying to make a telephone call to
or from the Tulane campus has been
about as much fun as midterms.
With the installation of the new
Southwest Utilities phone system,
calling across campus has become
not just a job but an adventure.
Whether or not Tulane saved
money on the new "modernized"
system is questionable because it ap-
pears we will be paying for the new
phones for years to come. The prob-
lems with the system, which were
evident from the first day of oper-
ation, have become almost insur-
mountable obstacles for the belea-
gured caller.
For instance, the average phone
call (on or off campus) takes at least
three attempts until a connection
can be reached. This is caused by
the typing-up of various "inside
trunks," "outside trunks," "tree
trunks," etc. But of course, this is
bound to happen when too many
people try to use a phone system
that was just not meant to hold a
substantial number of calls.
The problems, of course, do not
cease with finally getting a connec-
tion. In fact, this is only the begin-
ning. Getting cut off is an occur-
rence that happens almost as often
as not. At times when talking on a
campus phone, the caller hears
strange voices in the background.
This situation is not always
caused by huge parties going on at
the other end, but actually someone
else's conversation. This could prove
embarrassing for both ends depend-
ing on whose conversation is picked
up.
In mid-November, Residential
Life, and Southwest Utilities circu-
lated a survey among dormitory
Fed up with the telephone, Michele Lacchao vents her
frustrations by stabbing it.
dwellers asking for their opinions on
the new phone system. Needless to
say, the responses were less than
positive.
Some replies were wonderfully
sarcastic while others were bitterly
antagonistic. Most residents under-
stood that any new system was
bound to have problems, but nobody
imagined problems as terrible as the
ones that have plagued the Tulane
phone system. Previously, the Asso-
ciated Student Body has tried to al-
leviate the problem by collecting
complaint forms from the students.
This also, proved to be useless. In
any case, improvements were made
throughout the year, and even
though the system still has a long
way to go, it is much better.
Making a phone call is only a
small inconvenience now, even
though completely problem-free
phone calls are few and far between.
Or, to quote Paul Newman in the
classic film. Cool Hand Luke,
"What we have here, is a failure to
communicate."
162
Telephones
Gibson Hall in
less than four tries?
Wow! "
tulane telephone
Cross -campus is the next-best thing to campus mail
' Comedian Gallagher brought his -one man- ,
show of bizarre gadgets and pff-lherwall hu- '
mor to McAlister Auditorium in Septem-
ber.
The
Pretenders
Toots
and the
Maytals
The Pretenders, whose unique hiend ol' power pop Master of (he regKae sound, veterans Toots and the
lopped the charts this year, perrornied to a selKiut Maytals played their Jamaican rhythms to an adoring
crowd in McAlistcr Auditorium. crowd.
Concert
sl65
Record Crowd Rocks With Stones
166
Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones played to 87,500
fans, a world's record for an indoor concert.
Joan Armatrading songs are por-
traits rockin' on the hard edge be-
tween love and hate; solitude and
companionship. Her sold-out con-
cert at McAlister Auditorium was
as moving as her records. The twen-
ty song set featured main crowd fa-
vorites such as "Love and .AlTection"
and "Rosie." .Armatrading closed
he emotional show with the haunt-
ingly beautiful rendition of "Wil-
low." It was truly a night to remem-
ber for hundreds of people there.
167
Jaco Pastorius
Jaco Pastorius, jazz musician, together with the Word
of Mouth Band, opens the Dregs concert in- April
sponsored by TUCP Concerts Committee
Al DiMeola, Jazz Rock guitarist, performs before a
McAlister Auditorium audience in March in a concert
sponsored by TUCP.
168
Concerts
Al DiMeola
^'t
Professor Robert Cook, a specialist on Alexander the
Great in Medieval literature, spoke in conjunction
with the Alexander the Great spring lecture series
sponsored by the Classics Department of Tulane.
Graham Chapman of Monty Python showed film clips
and entertained questions in November; the title of his
TUCP Lyceum sponsored show was "An Evening of
Total Insanity."
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Notable First: TUCP Fine Arts Series
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Master Mime, Marcel Marceau, the main attraction
of the series, entertained a capacity ci-owd with his
silent antics.
»i
Theatre Productions
Keep Tulane
Entertained
174
Theatre
^
on't Have To Be a Theatre Major To Be a Star
Iniicniity Players brought lo Tulane Julie Sipo* as a
seductive Sybil and Brian Brinkman as an unwilling
Jonathan in Count Dracula.
Student Prcducthmf
17
Video is in Control
In many respects the word "col-
lege" has become synonymous with
crazes. From hula-hoops to stuffing
forty people into a phone booth, col-
leges have always been the starting
point for, to say the least, interesting
ideas.
Tulane is no exception, for it is
within these hallowed walls of aca-
demia that a new craze/addiction
lies. One need venture no further
than the University Center base-
ment to find bugged-eyed, hand
twitching students of higher educa-
tion standing mesmerized in front of
what is affectionately called a "vid-
eo game."
The word "video" seems harmless
enough, but the word "game" is
definitely questionable. One gets
the same feeling when talking of
war "games." People don't pound
frustratingly upon the glass shield of
a "game." No one smashes their fist
on a scrabble board and jumps up
and down in disgust, but they do
with video games.
Few people fill their pockets so
full of change that they sound like
Santa's reindeer team or are forced
to the ground by the awesome
weight of the silver needed to play a
game. And few Monopoly addicts
get their entire weekly allowance
changed into quarters at the Bur-
sar's Office just to play a few games
of "do not pass go."
It seems strange to think that a
reasonable human being can stand
in front of a few circuits and transis-
tors pressing buttons that will "kill
the men from outer space." It seems
even stranger to think that this fan-
tasy of mortal terror is little more
than a reconstructed version of
"Bobby-Joe's fifty-five Chevy that
squealed out on Flatbush Avenue."
But maybe the strangest thing of
all is that men, supposedly well edu-
cated men, sit in small, musty rooms
trying to devise ways for giant con-
dors to come down and eat a space
ship on a 1 2-inch technicolor screen.
And people said that the space pro-
gram was worthless.
Nowhere in the annuals of re-
corded history has such a passive
machine made such a nonpassive
impact. Man has discovered a new
fire. It is a fire that will burn in the
mind of any person tall enough to
put a quarter in the slot. One can
remember when a mother sat her
child in front of the "Three
Stooges," only to come back later
and find the couch on fire and the
dog covered in shaving cream be-
cause "little Johnny saw it on T.V."
Now, it seems better to pack
Johnny up with a load of quarters
and send him to a sandwich shop for
some harmless entertainment.
Something harmless like being at-
tacked by seven tanks or having his
spaceship smashed by killer aster-
oids. Anything more harmless
would make Johnny a paranoid
schizophrenic before the age of
twelve. And how long will it be until
an ad for G.I. Joe pops up before
every play?
Here, in 1982, Tulane has only
seen the beginning of the video
craze. Someday these machines will
be placed in the White House or the
Capitol Building for a little "recrea-
tion." One can imagine Alexander
Haig walking into the White House,
pants bulging with change, wasting
the day away by really "being in
charge." And thirty years from now,
when the video generation is in pow-
er, pressing the "button" may be as
easy as killing a one-inch flying sau-
cer.
It seems as easy to dismiss this
craze as it was the hula-hoop,
(which had a half life of two years).
This is not, however, Billy-Bob fidd-
178
Video
■jiiS:
•••
hi\r
VMM Gums have become a natioaal cimie ihai piaoe
a burden on yourmiiid, your nnten, aad yoar ptidKl-
book.
lin" with a garden hose: this is big
business. This is multi-million dol-
lar conglomerates fighting over who
had the "screaming meemees" first.
Soon, if the I'nivcrsity is a bit
short of cash, it doesn't seem unrea-
sonable for the administration to
put a machine in ever) dorm room.
.■\n a\'erage of five games a da\ nuil-
tiplied by each resident equals 600
big ones per >car per room. Not an
untid\ sum of money.
Some people have suggested that
video games are a plot to o\erlhrou
the U.S. of .A., and drain the coun-
try's wealth. College students m.i\
stop attending classes, executives
may take three game lunches, \ ideo
will be taught to elementar\ school
children, and the PrcMdeiU will
promise a game m c\er\ li\ing
room.
Pla\ing a few ganio ol asteroids
in the I'.C.. the Bool, or T.L.'s is jusl
the lip of the iceberg. Fanlas> Island
begins at home. The eighties are a
lime of RaiJers of the Losl Ark and
Studio 54. It has become a lime
w hen all good men can bu\ a feeling
of fantasy and power. Reniemhcr.
onl> I.'^ cents will give you a chance
to kill hundreds of beings from other
planets.
179
4
WBM
TGIF Offers
Time to Unwind
Quiet moments can be found amid the raucous
partying of TGIF.
Frisbees fly freely every Friday afternoon.
Cutting loose or "cutting the rug," TGIF'ers dance to
the funky sounds of the Uptown All-Stars.
180
TGIF
Alumni and Students
Get Together for
Homecoming on the Bayou
Irma Thomas highlighted Superfest with her own hits The crowning glory of Barbara Bauman's Homecom-
and some rhythm and blues standards. ing Day was her coronation in the Superdome.
182
Homecoming I Superfest
I
Hdb Kciiilir and Bvcki I. rimes revel in ibe excilemcnl
I ihc dance as A & M recording anuU (he Neville
Brothers play on.
Hometommj: Su;'rrf<->
183
INS . . .
Sony Walkmans
Old Money
San Francisco 49'ers
Polish Unions
Funk
Defender, Facman, Centipede
Atari
William Hurt, Timothy Hutton
Elizabeth McGovern
Australian Films
Potato Skins
Miniskirts
Weddings
Law School
. . . OUTS
Dallas (the TV show)
Ghetto Blasters
Social Welfare Programs
Dallas Cowboys (football team)
American Unions
Punk
Missile Command, Space Invaders
Home Movies
George Burns, Chevy Chase
Brooke Shields
Richard Simmons
Lacoste
Am.erican Cars
Times -Picayune
184
Ins
Music
Movies
The Cold
Absense of Malice
The Radiators
Chariots of Fire
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
Reds
The Go'Gos
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Rick James
Ratime
The Neville Brothers
On Golden Pond
The Police
Victor/ Victoria
Rolling Stones
Arthur
Kim Carnes
Richard Pryor Live on the
Sunset Strip
Television Shows
Hill Street Blues
Dynasty
M*A*S*H
Taxi
60 Minutes
Lou Grant
General Hospital
SntMk Pre\-ic\v<;
Walkman-inducled siupor oycri.ikcs Mark Jack5i>n
while stuil>ing in hi> dorm room.
Another g«me of P«c M«n mcaiu another week ol
dirty laundry for Ed Esposiio.
Prices
Newspaper
.15
6-pack Beer
3.00
Gasoline (per gal
Ion) L30
Mo\'ie
4.50
Albumn
7.00
Coke (per can)
.50
The jambaUna
20.00
Tuition
5,706.00
Outi
185
Beaux Arts' Lost Causes
186
Chastit\ doesn't stand a chance in the arms ol a New NRBQ proided the tunes for the Architecture
Orleans poMceman. , School's annual extravaganza.
Beaux Arts Ball
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187
r ^
Mardi Gras
Must Have Been Made For Tulane
Proud as a peacock, this seasonal queen displays his A street front window provides an entertaining view of
■■oy^' ^""•=- the Mardi Gras crowd.
188
Mardi Gras
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Audubon Park Offers
Nearby Escape
■golf coarse in the middle-'Of the
great training for pre-med students.
They All Axed for You
When Tulane students deserve a
break from jungles of books and pa-
pers, they can get up and get away to
the African Wildland, just by walk-
ing a few blocks to the Audubon
Zoo.
Over one million people a year
visit the Audubon Zoo to view more
than 1,000 animals. These animals
are housed in several major exhibits
including the Asian Domain, the
Grasslands of the World, the World
of Primates and the Sea Lion Pool
and Aquarium.
The zoo has developed diverse en-
vironments which allow animals of
different species to roam together,
just as they would in their natural
habitats.
The Dixie Beer Garden is not a
hallucinogenic paradise envisioned
by soused Tulane students. The
multi-level picnic area is a delight-
ful place for zoo visitors to relax.
Coming in 1982 and 1983, the
Audubon Zoo has several renova-
tions and expansions planned to fur-
ther enhance the beauty and popu-
larity of the zoo.
Today, the Audubon Zoo is one of
the top five zoos in the nation be-
cause of its landscaping, architec-
ture and freedom for the animals.
True Love thrives at Audubon Zoo, even among these
elephants.
Rhinos catch a quick nap in the summer sun.
192
Audubon Park
1»«
■■■■■■I
I
Central Business
District: A
Shopper 's
Paradise
Contrasts of old and new are strikingly evident in the
architecture of the CBD.
Canal Place Brings Fine Stores to New Orleanj
Students who sport the Brooks
Brothers' Golden Fleece or the Saks
Fifth Avenue label need no longer
migrate to other large metropolitan
areas to buy their coveted clothes,
thanks to Joseph C. Canizaro.
He is the mastermind behind a
half-billion dollar development
complex known as Canal Place, lo-
cated on Canal Street a few blocks
up from the river.
Canizaro launched the first phase
of his multi-million dollar hotel/re-
tail/office complex in 1975 and
completed the 25-story office build-
ing in 1980. The most famous ten-
ant — Brooks Brothers — occupies
the first three floors.
The second phase of the develop-
ment is already mapped out. It's a
63 million dollar project including a
270,000 square foot retail mall, an-
chored by a 78,000 square Saks
Fifth Avenue and a 29-story, 500
room hotel. The mall and hotel
would be built adjacent to the exist-
ing structure, if Canizaro has his
way.
But he is battling Vieux Carre
property owners and the Louisiana
Landmark society who are trying to
block the monumental develop-
ment. The preservationists fear the
20th century skyscraper might over-
shadow the 18th century Vieux
Carre. They also want to insure that
riverfront access roads to Canal
Place will not be built, and that the
riverfront will stay open to pedestri-
an use.
Canizaro finds no difficulty ap-
peasing these demands. He hopes to
maintain the Vieux Carre's heritage
while providing an economic stimu-
lus for downtown New Orleans.
Canizaro claims the second phase of
his development will provide that
stimulus.
The retail center planned in the
second phase is designed to draw
trade from the tourist and conve
tion market and residents. Accor
ing to Canizaro, stringent standan
for high fashions have been impose
on tenants for Canal Place retailei
Canizaro has letters of commitme
from The Limited, Kreeger's ar
FAO Schwartz.
Along with these large store
two-thirds of the retail space h;
been designated for specialty shop
and 20 percent of the space is ea
marked for a food court featurir
gourmet and festival food outlets
The new 500 room luxury hot
will allow the city to attract exti
conventions, a further boost for tl
economy. The hotel will be manage
by the exclusive Trust Houses For
chain and is slated for completion :
1984.
Canal Place is one of the Crescent City's new
shopping meccas.
194
CBD I Canal Place
I hr I'll/I D'lutta oRtcn a peaceful brctk froin iIk
jikI tMitilc of New Orieim' Ceniral Bsmbcu
( inc >heH squrr. (he ullcM buildinf in toa-n. hxam
vxr Lc l^villoa and the Pan-Amenciii BwMinf.
CBD/C^aal P>*'
195
The Night Life
is the Right Life
Tipitina's, named for the Professor Longhair song, fea-
tures local bands and some class national acts with a floor
crying to be danced on.
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Haunts
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TuUiH- Mudmu lokc lu go to Pat O'Bncm lo dfiok
M.i(:nums jnd to mingle »iih tourulv
10
bar
Nick's olTcrs friendly bartenders and potent drinlu
ihc discerning drinker, but don'l lr> logel near the b
on a Thursday night.
Karl) morning drinking rslablishnwnt. 1 .ii HarryVil-
tracts people of all types.
Hmmt*
197
Port of Call, famous for its hamburgers and baked
potatoes, is a popular eatery for Tulane students.
For the iron-clad stomach, Popeye's represents the
piece de resistance and the onion rings are not to be
missed.
MMWgnm'
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198
Haunts
Moll\'> Irish I'ub, Limous lor it.'. Irish collcc. i^ n'v.ntu
in the French Quarter and a great place for lale nighl
conversation
Cafe du Monde is the spot for those »ilh a lalc-nighl
sued tiMih I'.iirons can munch bcigncls and waich
the ships go b> the Moon Walk.
Haunts
199
French Quarter: Peaceful Charm
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Ornate iron (rcllis work adds charm lo I rcnch Quarlcr
residences
Street enlerlainnieni Hows in all styles in Jackson
Square.
Jackson Square
Offers Many Diversions
Pigeons, painters, musicians,
jugglers, and more pigeons can all
be found at Jackson Square.
Comfortably nestled in the
French Quarter near the river,
Jackson Square remains one of
New Orleans" most picturesque
spots. On sunny days, the Square
is populated with every manner of
artisan. For spare change you can
hear your favorite tune on a saxo-
phone, guitar, or kazoo.
Every "squante" had a story
more interesting than the next;
and they're all anxious to tell
them to you. If dancing is your
pleasure, ask "Hanelbelle" to do a
number for you. Or if you'd pre-
fer to soak up the local color, just
stand around looking at the work
of the artists hawking their wares.
In fact, Jackson Square is one
of the few places left where you
can get a portrait painted on birch
bark.
As the grand shadow of St.
Louis Cathedral looms majesti-
cally, the Square turns into a
walking mall with numerous
eclectic shops. Kites, fine dresses,
and even ice cream are all avail-
able there; or one can simply sit
on a park bench and gather in all
the sights . . .
but watch those pigeons.
The Pigeons usual calm is nifTled by a hot-rod baby
slrollcr
Ihe lea Room, .nJj.iccnl lo ihc l.ilxriv l.i.illci'>. .-
located in a quaint French Quarter courtyard.
French Quarter
201
A Jazz Funeral gives people the chance to send their
friends off in style.
Louis B. Armstrong Park is one of the City's most
beautiful night sights.
The Saenger Theatre offers entertainment ranging
from Broadway shows to new wave groups to
comedians.
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Even a Funeral Has Fun in it
A Hurricane is a Killer
If you asked a meteorologist
about the ingredients of a hurricane,
he'd tell you: "100 mile per hour
winds and water." If you asked a
New Orleanian, his answer would
probably include rum, passion fruit
juice, and a lot of crushed ice.
Either way, a hurricane is a killer.
The Crescent City takes its drink-
ing seriously, and many Tulane stu-
dents follow the tradition. Area bars
are known for their alcoholic con-
coctions with names almost as color-
ful as the drinks themselves. Many a
Tulane student has wrestled uilh a
"Green Dragon" or a "Purple Peo-
ple Eater," downed a "Golden
Spike," or iTirted with a "Blue Ha-
waiian."
Carrie Nation would be appalled,
but to New Orleans drinking is a
way of life. It is a major part of the
economy, both for the merchants
\\ ho make ihc money, and the unfor-
tunates who spend it. Taaka. Dixie,
and even the long-departed Jax are
as much a part of the city's histor\
as the Louisiana Purchase. So Re-
lax. Order a hurricane, and let the
whirl-winds drop you whore the>
may.
Rainbows conic right along »iih ihc Cvcloncs jl Pal
O's
EntertttinmenI
203
Thousands Attend Jazz Fest
Craftsmen exhibit their technique and wares during
the Jazz Fest.
Clarence "Frogman" Henry shakes his tambourine at
the audience.
lazz Festival
jmKKf- jmrn.
mSKIKBKhi
.A3
fW^
#
itt
*!>>
• >»
Irsinj; to bial the heal, this face painler wears a hat-
umbrella to protect himscir rrom the sun's rays.
t
i
:ill 111 Hull crowds liilcd ihc fairgrounds eatii li.u lo
• ten to the nurlad selection c( local musical
tcrtainmcnt.
fazz Festival 207
Direction '82: Your Future
<
I
Science and Technology
We stand on the edge of being able
to create life, but still not conquer
diseases . . .
Jules Bergman
208
Society and
the Individual
The history of our
country has been one of
assimilation, that we have
different groups come to
our shores and for the
most part, those groups
have joined in.
Leon C. Martel
Direction
Dn^,.- 209
Foreign Policy
Does the United States have an obligation to
try not to support the bastards or do we
support who ever is in our best interest?
George Herman
The Great Debate
If ever I became so diluted
as to believe . . . that all
American life should be
centralized in one organi-
zation, I would vote for Di-
rection '82 anytime.
William F. Buckley
210
Direction
Direction
Newcomb Programs
Provide Fun and Information
Barbara Bauman contemplated purchasing some
artwork at Spring Festival,
^i-Z. Neivcomh Progr.
. "fore marriage in^her speech. "Living Together, a
Exisicnec."
Groups Sponsor Educational Weeks ^
BLACK ARTS WEEK- An African fashion sbo».
held in ihc Anderson room »aN a feature prc^cniation
INTERNATIONAL WEEK— Booths from diffcrcnl
countries «ere set up in the UC lobby during Intcrnu-
liiinal Week.
Educational Meeki
arathon Rocks on in the Rain
216
WTUL Marathon
11
Kain kept m;iny people away from ihc Vlaralhun ihis B>ron Lohman lakci advanlafic of the racililm \cl up
^c.ir. but WTUI.'s sialT conlinucd ivilh ihc weekend's for the Ihouvind* ciprcici) i./ Imm i.> ihr M <ralhon
plans inside the LC bands on the quad
WTUL Marathon
217
■I'
H^U
I t
II
A On the Road Again .
I'lic prevailing alliUuic altoul
road trips is thai Ihcv arc best when
spontaneously inspired. This may be
so, but by following these few basic
|ioinlcrs \ou can prevent that
■'dream weekend in Pensacola" from
becoming that "nightmare in a l^a-
ton Rouge jail cell,"
Make an itinerarx'. You won't
slick b\ it, but it will make you feel
productive and efficient, something
necessary since you are probably
blowing off a term paper or mid-
term and thus lowering your GPA
two points.
Here is a sample itinerary:
Friday night: Go to Tin Lizzie's in
a Hawaiian shirt, tell all your
friends you are going to Florida, and
try to get a date.
Saturday morning, 8:00 a.m.:
Wake up uith hangover, go back lo
sleep.
IO:UU a.m.: This time reallv get
up and take a shower.
10:30 a.m.: Go to Bruff .Slull
( don't forget your charge card ). bu\
no food, just Moosehead beer.
10:45 a.m.: Open first beer at gas
station ( kill tuo birds . . .).
11:00 a.m.: Head south, use a
fu// buster, and don't stop at Crys-
talburger, no matter how hungr)
you are.
5:00 p.m.: Arri\e at beach. You've
already missed a whole day of sun,
but don't despair — you're just in
time for happy hour.
Sunday morning, 1 1 :00 a.m.: Get
up, have breakfast, and try to locale
the garage your car was towed to.
3:00 p.m.: Write the check for
$42.50 and don't act smarl lo the
short policemen.
4:00 p.m.: Go home you have
school tomorrow.
Only go with friends who: a. have
a lot of money, b. have a car, c. don't
talk too much or listen to country
music.
Don't wear anything thai says
"Tulane" (we're trying lo upgrade
our image, and don't want drunks
like you representing us out in the
real world).
Travel accommodations: If you're
too poor for a Hilton, or loo classy
for the Let the Sun Shine Inn, camp
out' However, beaches, parks,
mountains, and any other scenic or
romantic places are always illegal.
Stick lo highway di\iders and Burg-
er King parking lots.
/.eta I'si liitic sister lixiks with anticipalion as the fratcrni- ( ro»dinc around :i table. Tulanc
t> drives lo meet wiih another Zcta Psi chapter in Texas. Hogs Breath Saloon in Dcslin.
ctvcds enjoy a meal at
I'lorida
Road Tnpi
219
What to bring: Hawaiian Tropic,
towel, clothes, alcohol, cash, frisbee,
and tunes.
What not to bring: Your room-
mate without a date, toilet kit.
Christian Dior silk shirt, the com-
plete works of Sophocles, or one of
those aluminum foil mats to tan you
faster (National Enquirer says you
might melt; besides, they're tacky).
Be friendly to strangers, but don't
tell them your real name. Also, if
you're from New Jersey, don't tell
that either.
Telling your parents would be
nice, but Dad will worry that you
got the money by dealing drugs, and
Mom will just worry. Remember,
what they do know can hurt you.
Don't take road trip advice from
someone you don't even know.
m0
Drinks in hand, students toast the freedom of spring
break at Hog's Breath Saloon, Destin, Fla.
•«*«*S^
^
220
Road Trip
RocdTnp 221
h^
222
Road Trip
"ninncllinK the ptTimclcr. Iiislonc \ on Morgan arches
fascinate sludcnl's eves
Fori Morgan sets sights of pcaccrul romance for Jenny
and D.ivid Dunn on a spring weekend
I he Zcla Psi road trip comes (o a tiresome end for tvko
frat brothers.
Road Trif
223
In Search of
The Perfect
Po-Boy
My name is Mertz, Fred Mertz.
I'm a writer by profession; to be spe-
cific, I'm a music critic. I work for
the UPI (un-precedented igno-
rance) News Agency and I'm a ca-
reer man, or was until last week.
Now, as I lay back in my bed in
Oschner Hospital, I question my en-
tire existence. Am I just a foot sol-
dier on the journalistic battleground
spurting out non-sequiturs and cli-
ches trying to make some artificially
imposed deadline by some uncaring
demagogue? Do I write run-on sen-
tences?
My ordeal began not more than a
week ago in the newsroom. My edi-
tor, Joe Conrad, called me into his
office. A large room sparsely deco-
rated with portraits of the Marquis
DeSade, Machiavelli, and Conrad's
pet german shepard Fluffy, the room
was cold and smelled of olive oil
from the three day old Muffaletta
on his desk.
"Come in Mertz," he said, beck-
oning me to the cane chair next to
his huge wooden desk. "We have an
assignment for you. You're a good
man, Mertz, and we have a very spe-
cial job that requires intelligence,
nerves of steel, tact, and above all,
gullibility. Needless to say, you're
perfect for the job."
"Your mission, which you must
accept, is to find the perfect Po-Boy
and consume it. You leave tomor-
row."
"What!" I screamed in disbelief.
"Yes, so you'd better pack your
things and say goodbye to Ethel.
You might as well say goodbye to
Lucy and Ricky too, you may never
see them again."
I left his office and began my sor-
did journey. My first stop was Guido
the Squealer. He'd been around and
eaten sandwiches all over town. If he
didn't know where the perfect Po-
Boy was, no one did.
Unfortunately, it seemed the
word had already gotten around and
the streets were tighter than a Newc
. . . — oh, never mind.
Then it hit me; it was a small rock
that struck just above the shin. On it
was a note that said, "You're in this
alone. You'll never destroy it, it will
destroy you." There was also a 100
off coupon for Barqs.
I took this as a sign. Going over
my checklist, I decided it was time
to pound the pavement. Annuncia-
tion about 3 blocks from Jefferson I
encountered a quiet, unassuming
bar named Domilise's.
Walking up to the counter, I
caught the eye of an elderly woman
with a stubborn look. I slipped her a
twenty and said, "Tell me about
your fried trout po-boy."
"Well," she said tucking the twen-
ty into the brasiere underneath her
worn house dress, "We use only ket-
chup, French bread, and fresh trout
filets and . . . hey what do ya wanna
know 'bout dis for?"
"I'm a journalist and I've ..."
"Get out filthy pig, we don't serve
journalists, especially Jewish look-
ing ones."
224
Food
Parking my vehicle on Prytania
and Tliird Street, a comfortable dis-
tance from my target, I proceeded
up Third Street. Grabbing Parasol's
screen door forcefully.
I tried to open the inner door.
Damn. They knew I was coming and
had barricaded themselves in. I took
the revolver I always carried with
me and shot the door handle.
.'\s I swung the door open, I found
two women in brown aprons cower-
ing under the round wooden table at
the end of the room. "Today's Tues-
day," they said shaking their mayon-
aise encrusted hands at me, "we're
closed."
Defeated, discouraged, and more
than a little hungry, I decided to
make Mother's my final stop. ,A.s I
wandered aimlessly through the
Domilises' serves a fantastic shrimp po-boy and has
one of the funkiest jukeboxes in town.
Streets of downtown, strange
thoughts began to creep into my
troubled mind.
Then, it all became clear to me.
Why had Conrad sent me on this
godforsaken task? Why did he have
200 loaves of French Bread on the
back of his BMW and two cases of
Blue Plate Mayonaise in his office?
I knew it wasn't "just decoration" as
he'd liked to have me believe. No, he
was going to open a po-boy stand
and he wanted to eliminate the com-
petition.
1 got out of my car and headed for
the door of Mother's. As I was about
to enter it a woman stopped me.
"Where y'at," she bellowed. "I'm
.^nna May. hooyd ya looking faw da
perfect po-boy. I know the place,
falla me. dawlin."
We went across the street to the
Time Saver. She guided me to the
upright refrigerator with display
shelves and glass doors. On the third
shelf was a long inviting package
that said. "The perfect po-boy." I
knew what 1 must do. taking the
hatchet from m\ back pocket. I
smashed the Icee Machine and the
display case. Then I reeled around
and raised my a.xe over .Anna May's
head.
The next thing I remember is
standing in the balcon\ of the Pry-
tania Theater shouting "the horror.
the horror," as Fellini's Amarcord
played on the screen.
Needless to say, ne.xt stop was
here at Oschncr. Was it all a dream
or was it a bad story that pretentious
movie directors and sadistic English
teachers force upon you. We may
never know.
Time .S«>cr. ihe po-boy mecca ii open l»*niy-four
hours a da\
Food
225
r
Quality Inn Blue
I
Coming home late and having to
get up early do not complement
each other well.
There is only one time then, that
the dorms are filled with people.
This is 12 o'clock noon, and it is the
best time for a fire drill.
RRRIIING!! RRRIIING!
"Hey, there is that guy who's al-
ways in front of the TV."
"Check out that girl again. She's
always here."
"Did you go to Psychology?
really need the notes."
"No, did you?"
"No."
The days get warmer and warmer
in New Orleans, and people don't
like to emerge from their havens be-
fore the witching hour. The result,
the Ponchartrain Pallids, otherwise
known as the moon tanners. There is
always someone on the tennis courts
at midnight.
Sometimes in Sharp, the fresh-
man party-monger dorm, people
start yelling insults out the window
to Monroe Hall. It gets pretty loud
on the Loyola gym side. Occasional-
ly, one smart kid will say something
slightly profound (a tidbit from a
philosophy course) but no one will
notice.
There are those groups of dorm
residents, each with their own style.
There are the productive ones who
buy carpets, build shelves for their
amp and receiver, and have the linen
service.
Then, there is the "Sparse is art"
crowd. They accentuate institution-
alization by folding their clothes
and getting them out of sight. Their
only decoration is a budweiser light
with one bulb missing. Inspection is
on Tuesdays.
The last group are the
"trugglers". Unwilling to expend
any energy, they just endure, math
book under the fridge to keep the
door closed. They tie the Venetian
blind cord around the book shelf
arm since it never sticks. The only
cooking done in these style rooms is
hot-pot Chef-Boyardee and cold
beer.
I'd write more, but I'd get a 25-
doUar fine from Residential Life.
Just one question, why the "Qual-
ity Inn" blue?
Surrounded by cluttered walls Vic Tokach and Charlie
Herbert relax with nearly all the comforts of home.
Frustrated Russell Shaddox, expresses his feeling to-
wards another money hungry coke machine.
226
Dorm Life
Dorm Utt- 2.2.7
'EMS Provides
Emergency Care
for the Student
in Need
Tulane Emergency Medical Ser-
vice (TEMS) began operating this
September, funded by a two thou-
sand dollar donation from the Stu-
dent Foundation.
An extension of the Mardi Gras
Coalition, TEMS was designed to
meet the needs of Tulane students
by providing emergency medical
services on a round-the-clock basis.
The program is run by Senior
Merrill Reuter and sixteen other
students. All have previously
worked with the Coalition and don-
ate a great deal of time to TEMS.
Sixteen of them, including Reuter,
have been certified or are awaiting
certification as Emergency Medical
Technicians (EMT'S).
The headquarters of TEMS is lo-
cated in a third floor room of the
University Health Center. TEMS is
considered part of Tulane's Health
Service and is monitored by an advi-
sory board of Tulane administrators
and health officials.
But TEMS is not funded from the
University budget.
Reuter has continually requested
funding from the University, but ar-
guments as to whether TEMS
should be classified as a student ac-
tivity, a University service, or part of
Tulane Medical Center has delayed
response to the proposals. The only
funds TEMS receives come from
donations.
Yet in the first two months' of op-
eration, TEMS has responded to
seventy-two calls. Most calls con-
cerned recreational and other minor
accidents. However, with training
and instruction from advisor Dr.
Winston Riehl, the EMT's have suc-
cessfully handled over twenty major
medical emergencies, ranging from
overdoses to serious falls.
In the past, Tulane Security han-
dled on-campus emergencies. The
average response time for the pri-
vate ambulances they contacted was
about a half-hour.
The average response time for the
TEMS ambulance (a donation from
Tulane's Medical Center), is only
about three minutes. This difference
is a crucial factor in saving lives, and
the EMT's strive to reach an emer-
gency situation as quickly as possi-
ble.
Shift supervisors direct other vol-
unteers to emergencies near or on
campus by way of hand radios bor-
rowed from CACTUS.
Daily on-campus emergencies are
TEMS' main concern. However, on
occasions such as the New Orleans
Jazz Festival, Autumn in Arm-
strong Park, and, of course, Mardi
Gras, TEMS works with the NOPD
and the Mardi Gras Coalition.
As of now, the group's main prob-
lem is getting money for radio and
medical equipment. Regardless,
TEMS volunteers continue to per-
form valuable and needed medical
services.
228
TEMS
•• ^ 4
r*-*. "^ ■^
..L\
ri^'
ni^^
Now Comes Laundry Time
A fallacy exists in the minds of
the anti-world of nonacademicians
that needs to be corrected.
The average man on the street
firmly believes that college is all fun
and games. He doesn't realize that
"Now comes Miller time" is inevita-
bly followed by "Now comes laun-
dry time" and "Weekends are made
for grocery shopping."
It's all part of the nature of things
and there's nothing we can do about
it. Unless we keep well-stocked
vegetable gardens and livestock
barns, we will have to engage in
these dreaded domestic chores.
Granted, those of us who live on
campus can forego the grocery ex-
perience and eat at any of the sever-
al, uh, fine dining facilities nearby.
But even the lucky ones have to deal
with the money-chomping products
of technology commonly known as
coin-operated washers and dryers.
The university area is a veritable
Las Vegas, dotted with small casinos
displaying these frustrating games
of skill and chance (mostly chance).
The atmosphere of a laundromat
can be equalled only by that of a bus
station, or maybe the New Orleans
Public Library. It's best to run in,
throw your clothes in a machine,
dump quarters, and run back out
again, all in the space of thirty sec-
onds. That way, the vague mood of
melancholy and hopelessness that
prevails in the thick air won't over-
take you and crush that lifelong
hope of becoming a doctor or a law-
yer. Or an Indian chief.
Washing clothes at the Maple
Leaf can be fun, but there's a certain
amount of skill needed: a novice
once lost half his clothes after drink-
ing an equal volume of beer. The
trick is to drink no more beer than
the volume of clothes you bring; or
drink no beer; or drink gin.
If you would rather risk waiting
in the laundromat, there are a few
fun distractions designed to keep
you amused. Throwing a handful of
quarters in the air and counting to
see how many you get back is always
good for killing a few seconds.
At the Sycamore St. Laundro-
mat, a favorite pastime is attempt-
ing to see how many small children
you can fit in a jumbo washer. And
of course, that old standard, sprin-
kling your laundry with a risque as-
sortment of anachronistic under-
wear to see how many Puritan eye-
brows can be raised.
Even after your clothes have all
been neatly put away, there is al-
ways the second worst domestic cri-
sis to face. When the cockroaches in
your kitchen get an aggressive,
bloodthirsty look in their eyes and
start to gnaw on your refrigerator,
you know it's time to restock your
food supply.
There is no rest for the weary; and
even less for the busy, hardworking
student on the go. So buy a few
Milky Ways instead, and blow off
going to the grocery store till tomor-
row. Or the next day.
When you finally do get to the
grocery store, be sure and have a
lump in your shirt that looks suspi-
ciously like a gun. Hang around the
front of the store for a while, glanc-
ing nervously at the security guard.
When he looks sufficiently interest-
ed, walk toward him quickly, and
when you get within range, draw
your hairbursh and clamly brush
your hair.
When you have stopped guffaw-
ing enough to get up off the ground,
ask the guard to please take the
handcuffs off so you can do your
shopping. Select a cart and begin
your journey into urban surrealism.
People in a grocery store move
much more slowly than in real life;
their expressions are completely
deadpan and they mill about like au-
tomatons. The floor and ceiling are
just beyond your peripheral aware-
ness and after you've left, all you
can really remember is a dull glow
under your feet and over your head.
It's as if Stanley Kubrick were
just about to step out from behind a
stack of bananas and yell, "Cut!"
But alas, he doesn't, and so the cy-
borgs keep plodding around, getting
in your way, and staring at cans of
baked beans.
You can drop by the meat depart-
ment and will not be too surprised to
see the major facial components of a
pig's face wrapped in cellophane,
just like hamburger. No one really
knows what these are for. Even the
very few people who buy them don't
know what to do with them once
they get them home.
Two professors in the anthropolo-
gy Department believe that the pig
jowls, ears, and snouts that we see
are the remnants of an ancient cul-
tural festival whose reason has been
lost through generations, though the
ritual of buying the pig's face, or
hogae fascae, persists.
If you have a few spare minutes,
hang around the fresh produce sec-
tion and brush up on your rhetorical
questions. Join in with the crazy old
ladies in saying silly things like,
"What sad times are these when ar-
tichokes are ninety-nine cents?" and
"How come no rutabagas?"
230
Laundry and Grocery
When you finally get into a
check-out line, there is really noth-
ing to do except read People maga-
zine and drum your fingers on the
candy bars. But, the ordeal is soon
over, and thankfully, you pay your
way out and emerge from the store,
wondering whether you should have
bought more tequila or fewer limes.
Now you should be able to go
home and sit in the relative peace of
accomplished duties, ignoring your
next door nieghbor's barking about
your loud music. Oh, what difficult
lives we all lead.
You meet the strangest people at the laundry. This
Tulanc student has been living inside a BrulT dryer
since his Freshman year.
Langenstein's, mecca for uptown gourmets, is a good
place to stock up for any impending natural disaster.
I
V,
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i fifm
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l1
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XMNI'LClLii^
V^TTviWvir'}
-1
.^i^.iia^
i8i».'
t
-^?^-
\
ll^l
Candids
-4.
No. ii\ not the flting Uallendas but it is an inleresling
wa> 10 gel in the ycarbook.
Thcron Furr is a senior in Electrical Engineering and.
.imazingl). still eats at BrufT.
Candida /.30
T
Greeks
234
Greeks
Its all Greek
to me."
Eleanor Cohilm-
Newcomb >i4
4
Crrekf ZjD
il
Greeks Don't
Want No Freaks
There was beer all over the dance
floor,
And the band was playing rhythm
and blues.
You got down and did the gator,
And half an hour later you were
Barfing all over your girlfriend's
shoes.
— The Eagles
Actually, barfing on your girl-
friend's shoes is not a prerequisite
for being in a fraternity or sorority.
In fact, the Greek system of Tulane
is essential for advancing brother-
hood and sisterhood for those stu-
dents wishing to broaden their social
horizons.
While the song says that the
Greeks don't want no freaks, in re-
ality there is a fraternity and soror-
ity for all types of people or things —
even freaks. With all of the various
types of people attending Tulane it
certainly is an advantage to have a
Greek system that consists of a di-
verse number of organizations.
The Greeks provide necessary re-
lief from the heat of the academic
jungle known as college. As the stu-
dent cuts through the overgrowth of
classes and work, he or she soon
reaches the oasis known as the fra-
ternity or sorority house. In spite of
declining neighbor relations, the
Greeks' social activities continue to
thrive.
Some of the best parties on cam-
pus take place over on Broadway or
Zimple streets. Frequently, carous-
ers can be found enjoying them-
selves and making use of the vast
opportunities available to them in
college. Fraternities and sororities
provide most of those opportunities.
Being in a fraternity or sorority is
more than just sitting in special sec-
tions at the football games. Joining
the Greeks is joining a group of
friends that will stand by you for
life. The comradeship among the
brothers and sisters of the Greek
system is a bond that is permanent
and everlasting.
The Greeks stress togetherness in
social activities, living, and athlet-
ics. Teamwork is the key to success
among fraternities and sororities at
Tulane. Working, eating, partying,
and living together is what it is all
about. Brothers and sisters of Tu-
lane, unite!
Kappa pledge Suzanne Saussy and Chi O pledge Marj
Forbes share their excitement on joining new
sororities.
23^
Theme
S(u Mclaughlin and lodd Kellt cross the UC quad on
their way lo the SAE house.
Sigma Nu «cli»e, Keith Hornc shows off his pitching
abilities during a t'ralcrnit\ soflball came
Theme Loi
238
Frateniity Rush
Fraternities Provide
Seven Day Spree
Rush 1981 proved exciting for ihc IicmhucIi hard uork and planning
frutcrnilics. Beer and val provided the on ihe pari of the Rush chairman.
makings for the drunken se\en-da\ Little Sisters and fellow actives
spree. Party themes ranged from Luau help to "wine and dine" prospec-
to Casino, casual to formal.
Behind all the fun and frolic
tive members throughout the
sleepless week.
The partying aspect of Rush is
important and influential in the
decision making process, yet the
single most important factor is
the rushee's relationship towards
the fraternity of his choice.
On the final night of Rush the
rushee joins the men with whom
he will parly during his college
career. W ith bloodshot eyes and
weary bones, actives and pledges
alike rellect upon the jo\ sand ter-
rors of the past fralernitv Rush.
Kar>l Doko> and Mike Schcmenl cnjoy a luau par-
■'. c.irU in Ru^h Wcck
/cla ISi member. Mjrk McL ullouiiti. cntcnrns \lpha liu Onu■^:»■^ «ili..-v • - i>.-.,. ., >. ■.....,.
rushco NMih hi> rendition of Sieve M.irtm\ famous Hard\. together »nh ihcir Luilc Sister Karen Killecn.
"arrow through the head" act. gather to enjo> annual Rush partici.
F'J'--
KuJi 239
Sorority Rush
Sees Most
Girls Ever
This year the Panhellenic Coun-
cil planned the largest and longest
Rush in Newcomb history. It was,
perhaps, the hardest Rush for the
actives to participate in, for there
were so many names and faces to
remember. After three weeks of ac-
tivities, a record 285 girls pledged
the seven sororities. Almost 49 per-
cent of the freshmen class and 39
upperclassmen joined sororities.
Rain hovered above the houses
during the first two weekends of
parties. It finally broke loose on the
last and most formal set of parties,
sending actives and rushees inside
the houses to sing and chat. In a
mixture of enthusiasm and exhaus-
tion, Sorority Rush 1981 ended on
a high note. New friendships were
formed between upperclassmen and
freshmen, and the process of regen-
eration began anew.
Rushees, Lisa Gutman, Tracey Carlton, and Laura
Pearce, discuss sorority choices on the way to sign
their preference cards.
Alpha Epsilon Phi actives, Vicki Rabin, Karen Bot-
nick, Fran Dubrow and Cheryl Goodfriend, welcome
rushees to third series parties.
240
Sorority Rush
Pi Beta Phi sislers, Rcncc Sanditz, Libby Grace. Eliz-
abeth Robcrison. Julie Thurner and Elizabeth Reyn-
olds, pose for ihc yearbook photographer before the
final set of parties begins.
Pledges Screech First Night as Sorority Girls
Maple Street is a site worth in-
vestigating on Screech Night. So-
rorit\' pledges march down Maple
Street, paraphernalia in hand,
singing and screaming newly
learned songs and cheers.
i'ledgc classes compete against
each other with emphasis placed
on breaking the decibel scale. .As
\oiccs uear thin and throats must
be ucued, the taste o( alcohol i>
iMi c\cr\ one's lips.
riic onl\ com toning thing
.lu ailing them .is the\ trudge
b.ick to iheir dorms in the earl>
hours o\' the morning is a trash
can by the bed.
Kappa \lph« Thcti f;irls, Jamie Saucer, Ruth
Mcchcr. Porti.i Bcrr> ,>nd Katy Jo Graddy, enjoy
S..Tccoh Night fcstlMllc^
Somritv Rie*
241
Pledging
So Happy Together
Shortly after rush, at the begin-
ning of each semester, there arises
into the air a loud cry of "STUPID
PLEDGE!!" Yes, it's pledging time
again and open season on new mem-
bers. Some lesser informed students
around campus might not clearly
understand exactly what the impli-
cations of this ritual are. In fact,
they might be even less understand-
ing when they find out that "stupid"
is the mildest of adjectives used to
describe pledges.
But to understand pledging, one
must first realize that fraternities
and sororities are not by nature, sa-
distic. It just seems that way. Actu-
ally the art of hazing is considered
illegal and frowned upon by all
Greeks. However, pledges are ex-
pected to undertake certain "re-
sponsibilities."
Among these responsibilities are
pledge community projects which
benefit certain organizations such
as the leukemia society, house clean-
ups, the learning of fraternity and
sorority lore, and. of course, other
responsibilities which may or may
not be considered "hazing."
This is where fraternities and so-
rorities part and go their separate
ways. The most vicious hazing that
Newcomb women get is having the
pledges dress in greek letter jerseys,
sweatpants and visors, and take
them to AT IPs and force them to
(gasp!) socialize. The fraternities,
on the other hand, tend co partake in
hazing, at least to some extent.
To define exactly what hazing is
would be nearly impossible. For in-
stance, one fraternity was placed on
six months suspension for taking
their pledges to Baton Rouge on a
road trip. The Inter-fraternity
Council considers this to be hazing.
There are less subtle methods of
hazing. One fraternity pledge train-
er said, "We here at (frat name de-
leted for legal reasons) are com-
pletely modernized. We have dis-
carded whips and chains in favor of
electric cattleprods."
In any case, pledges are not sub-
mitted to anything that endangers,
threatens, or physically harms
them. Or at least nothing that would
be admitted to in court.
When entering a Tulane fraterni-
ty or sorority, the pledge encounters
a moderate amount of trouble learn-
ing the actives' names. For instance,
one sorority has one hundred plus
members (actives and pledges) and
learning names can be more difficult
than physics for engineers. Some so-
rorities have the pledges collect all
the actives' signatures to help them
learn the actives' names. On the oth-
er hand, some fraternity pledges
don't meet everyone until their Ju-
nior or Senior year.
The basic purpose behind the
whole pledging system is to unify
the group of individual men and
women into a single entity, which
then becomes part of the fraternity
or sorority. The Greek system relies
on this principle to survive. If unifi-
cation is not achieved, then a frater-
nity or sorority functions not as a
single, efficient unit of social activ-
ity, but as several separate small
groups with no efficiency or unity of
action. In this respect, pledging is
not only a desirable function, but a
necessary one as well.
Dan Babineau paints walls for his project.
242
Pledging
") 1 ">
Nimble fiiimTs pass raw eggs in Ihc first cvcnl of the
(ircck \Sci;k games.
I'lico Rudcrigucz leads Bela Thela Pi to victory in the
grueling beer ehug relay.
Tulanc's fraternities and sorori-
ties kicked ofT Greek Week 'X2 on
Wednesday, March 3, with a cock-
tail party at the Alumni House.
Representatives from all Cireek
organizations attended coat and lie
and all, to consume the many drinks
and finger sandwiches that graced
ihe tables of the Alumni House. A
relatively calm evening, the cocktail
party was a mere fore-shadowing of
the events to come.
A more casual atmosphere was
evident the following night at Shan-
ahan's as the local saloon held its
annual Greek Nite. A good time was
had by all, but the evening ended
early, of course, because of classes
the next day.
The main event of Greek Week
'82 took place the next afternoon on
Zimple Quad. Although marred by
rain at the closing of the games, all
three events were held until the
thunderstorms began.
The first event, the egg toss, left
several men and women drenched in
yolk as the eggs flew back and forth
across the quad.
The next event demonstrated the
coordination (or lack thereof) of the
Greeks, as participants in the three-
legged race proved to be extremely
athletic. Nearly every competitor in
both the fraternity and sorority
races almost finished.
The dreaded beer chug relay, the
third and final event, got under way
just as the rain began to descend.
The most difficult and grueling of
the events, the B.C.R. was reputed
to have claimed several lives in pre-
vious years. Fortunately there were
no casualities this year as the games
wound down to a halt.
At the day's end. the final tally
placed Beta Theta Pi on top of the
fraternities, capturing first place in
both the egg toss and the beer chug
relay, while the Phi Mu's took the
top sorority spot after winning the
egg toss and placing third in the beer
chug.
The IFC Dance proved a suitable
climax to the festivities, as the
Greeks adjourned to the Grotto for
the annual event and thus ended
Greek Week '82.
.Spcclalors cheer on their ravorites as the g»me
compclilion becomes nerce.
Greek We
. 245
Little Sisters
irother 's
Best Frieni
A freshman rushee steps into
the Alpha Tau Omega house to
meet the brothers and check out
the fraternity. To his surprise, two
young women wearing ATO
nametags walk up to him, singing
the praises of fraternity life.
This friendly scene is repeated
yearly in most of the fraternity
houses. These social affiliates en-
dearingly called Little Sisters are
perhaps the best rushing tool that
Tulane fraternities have.
But Little Sisters do much
more than help out during rush.
They have been known to kidnap
and feed pledges, throw parties,
provide companionship, and add
a welcome relief to the generally
all-male fraternity system.
Although the addition of Little
Sisters to fraternities has been a
phenomenon of the last decade,
most every fraternity has its
group of female affiliates, and
some traditions have already
sprung out of Little Sister pro-
grams.
Many fraternities have a Little
Sister rush, and then pledge and
initiate their little sisters in cere-
monies reminiscent of their own
pledging and initiation rites.
Little sisters have become an
important aspect of the fraternity
system. The friendship and cama-
raderie they provide maintain the
spirit of Greek life.
AS* Little sisters, Kelly Mihm, Liza Landess,
Nancy Maio, and Suzanne Cambreo, support their
fraternity brother, Russell Koster at a spring rush
party.
246
Little Sisters
Uil
UllleStfif-^ 247
Frat Houses
Living Dirt Cheap
The first questions every fraterni-
ty man asks is inevitably "Is it feasi-
ble to live in the fraternity house?"
or "Is it safe to live in the house?"
The answers to these questions are
"yes" and "sometimes" (in that or-
der).
Living in a frat house is both an
advantageous and an adventurous
experience. While the social activity
in the house cannot be beat, cock-
roaches have been known to grow
rather large and swoop down and fly
off with one of the smaller pledges.
Being in the center of things cer-
tainly doesn't hurt one's social life at
all. In fact, it has been known to help
flunk a frat resident right out of
school. Studying in the house can
get somewhat difficult. The party-
ing atmosphere might be too great a
temptation. Succumbing to joviality
is not difficult when the choice is
between having a couple of beers
and doing chemistry homework.
One might be curious why these
conditions are not the same for the
Newcomb sororities. Under the bi-
zarre Napoleonic law in force in
New Orleans, any house with four
or more unrelated women living in it
Cramped quarters necessitate building a loft in this
room of the Delt house.
constitutes a "house of ill repute,"
and God knows Newcomb sorority
girls aren't like that.
In any case, probably the biggest
advantage of a frat house concerns
rent, which is about half of the cost
of living on campus. And, even if the
cockroaches are the size of large
bats (which they are all over New
Orleans anyway), the money left
over from rent can be used to hire an
exterminator. Dirt cheap, maybe,
but living in the house of a fraternity
does not have to be dirty or cheap.
248
Frat Houses
Studying in his room, Howard Cirody finds il diflicull
to conccnlrale.
Relaxing in the Beta house, Roger Ervin. Dixon Hall.
Terry Nolan and Larry Fox, enjoy a cold beer and a
good magazine.
Fraternity
Sports
Batter Greg Barr and catcher Larry Korn
concentrate on the next Beta Theta Pi pitch.
250
Frat Sports
Sigma \u quarterback Mark Newman scrambles out AEPi^ congratulate star player. Joel Kahn. as he
of ihc piKkcl durint! a plaxuff match auainsi /HT ciimpletcs a home run
Football
1.
IN
1
ZBT
3.
AEII
W
1.
'restlin
IX
1
II KA
3.
XT9.
Greek Champions
\olIevbali
1. IN
2. AKE
3. IIKA
Basketball
1. AKE
2. IIKA
3. IX
Swimming
1. IIKA
2. IN
3. ATA
Racquctball
1. AEII
2. IIKA
3. I AM
Soccer
1. IN
2. lAM
3. AKE
Irack & Field
1. KI
2. IN
3. Fin
Howling
1. I\
2. TE'1>
3. ZHT
Ping Pong
1. ATA
2. lAE
3. IN
(Jolf
1. ATA
2. 1^1'
V AKK
Pool
1. IN
2. I\
3. AKK
Soft ha II
1. AKll
2. KA
3. IN
ill
Ruthie Bolvig embraces Kappa Sister Leigh
Harrington on Greek Night at Shanahans.
Love on the Rocks
SM- member Jay Ball lends a shoulder of alTcction 10 Kiippa Mplu lluu nivmbtr-. I limbclh Huddlcslon.
\ltlKM Harlinal ihc annual SAE Cane Cutlers Party. Tnsha Bowers. Li>j M>cri. and Sara Agrcsli cnjo> a
few beers while spccuiing Greek games.
^1
Let the Good Times Roll
Every year in mid-April stu-
dents may be perplexed somewhat
when they see people walking
across campus wearing only a loin-
cloth and screaming JUNGLE!!!
The Beta's Jungle Party is only
one of the many parties, mixers, and
formals hosted by the Greeks at
Tulane. Every weekend, Broadway,
Zimpel, and Audubon streets light
up with merriment and carousing.
Formals are the major events of
the fraternity and sorority social
season. While most Greeks have
their formals at some downtown
hotel, the Sigma Chi's and Sigma
Nu's travel to Florida for a week-
end. For Beta Theta Pi, Jungle is
considered their formal.
Mixers are a great device for
meeting members of other sorori-
Drinks in hand, Carrie Lewis, Dawn Davis and Bran-
dy Broome party Hawaiian style.
ties or fraternities. A mixer is a
party held by one fraternity that
invites a sorority (or vice versa) to
their house for a friendly little get-
together.
Old South is another annual for-
mal event. Sponsored by Kappa
Alpha, it consists of one week of
solid partying. It culminates in a
ball, with the members dressing in
Confederate army uniforms and
their dates in antebellum hoop
skirts. They then parade around
campus on horses.
In all, the Greeks at Tulane are
creative and excessive partiers. Al-
most always getting a tad out of
hand, but never skyrocketing out
of proportion, fraternity and soror-
ity parties provide probably the
best in Tulane social life.
Dreaming of far away beaches, Sigma Nu's, Robert
McMurrey, F.K. Day and Mike Ray, anticipate win-
ning a weekend in Cancun.
254
Greek Parties
Grttk Pdrtir- 255
Pi Phi Renee George takes advantage of Greek Week
parties at Shanahan's as she mingles with friends.
SAE's cut up at the annual canecutter's party held in
their basement.
Mudbugs meet their match in Sandra Jansa and Bar-
bara Steen at Phi Mu"s annual spring Crawfish Party.
256
Social
Social
257
Inter-Fraternity Council
Thomas Jefferson said, "If men
were angels, there would be no need
for government." Unfortunately, with
a few isolated exceptions, most frater-
nities are not composed of angels.
Therefore, Tulane's fraternity
system is regulated by the governing
force of the Inter-Fraternity Coun-
cil. The IFC is made up of one repre-
sentative from each fraternity, along
with the presidents of every fraterni-
ty. This group then selects officers
and committee members.
Aside from pronouncing judicial
decisions on delinquent fraternities,
the IFC is responsible for the annual
Greek Week and Greek games, as
well as the IFC dance. Intramural
sports competitions are also spon-
sored by the IFC.
The IFC also has the honor of
dealing with the sometimes "irate"
residents along Broadway. These
neighbors have a tendency to form
associations and file suits against
the fraternities, particularly after
one shooting incident in front of the
SAE house this year.
Neighbors called for the revoca-
tion of all fraternity charters. Like
the U.S. cavalry, the IFC came to
the rescue and produced a plan to
restraintment of fraternities that
successfully pacified both the Uni-
versity administration and the
neighbors.
Tulane's Interfraternity Counci
provides the necessary governance
to a group of fraternities that migh
otherwise run wild and out of hand
This does not imply that Tulane'
fraternities are by nature a bunch o
drunken animals; however, withou
the IFC, the distinct possibility o
alcohol-crazed greeks runninj
around might become reality.
IFC Judicial Board: Ken Bubes, Michael Dawahare, Mike Niktakis, Bob Morris, and Russell Rhea. Missinj
John Daley.
Front row: IFC Representative, Bob Gallagher, Steve
Ravosa, Gary McNamera, Greg Carwie, Bob Udolf,
Stan Terry, Paul Fineberg, Dave Friedman. Back row:
Mark McCullough, Ken Bubes, John Gonzales,
William Kearny, Greg Barr, IFC Representative,
Bryant Cohen, Dr Karlem Riess, Michael Dawahare,
Moss Davis, Russel Rhea, Mike Nictakis, Bob Mori
Steven Wolfe, Ira Guttentag, Sam Halley
258
IFC
Newcomb Panhellenic Council
In the original Greek, llie icrni
"Panhellenic" lileralix means "all-
greek," and at Newconih thai trans-
lation holds up well.
With combined membership o\'
all seven Newcomb sororities, the
Panhellenic Council serves regula-
Panhcllcnic Officers: L>nnSpcclor. Kalhy Bmmanucl-
son. Cheryl Cunningham. Lisa Twill.
lory and governmental riiiiclions.
and supports the activities ot sorori-
ties sponsoring events of their own.
The Panhellenic Council is com-
posed of delegates from each soror-
ity. This representative delegation
oversees all sorority events, coordi-
nates important rush information
and promotes unity among Greeks.
Just as important, Panhellenic
gets involved in the Tulane commu-
nity by sponsoring events for both
Greeks and independents.
This past year the group spon-
sored or assisted many activities, in-
cluding annual blood drives. Direc-
tion, a walkathon for the benefit of
Leukemia research, the Spring Arts
Festival, and in conjunction with
CACTUS, Christmas stockings and
Easter baskets for underprivileged
children.
Panhellenic fulfilled its most im-
portant function this year during
Fall Rush. Amid allegations of
"dirty rushing" against one sororit\.
Panhellenic enforced penalities in
order to ensure the fairness of the
traditional, formal selection week.
Spirit and u n i I > \^ c r c the
keywords of the 1 98 1 -82 Panhellen-
ic council. This spirit culminated
during the annual Spring Greek
Week where members proudly
showed off the colors and pins of
their sororities. Greek Week, co-
sponsored by Panhellenic Council
and Inter-fraternity Council, culmi-
nated in a day of games and frivol-
ity.
The joint IFC/Panhellenic dance
was one of the high points of Greek
Week. .At the dance, members of
each fraternit\ and sorority were
able to socialize with friends in the
true spirit of brotherhood and sister-
hood.
A successful rush, combined with
involvement in campus activities,
and the fun of Greek V\'eek. contrib-
uted to make 1981-82 a fine year for
the Newcomb Panhellenic Council.
Front row: \tinii King. Liz Masters. Jean Simion.
Catherine Shoup. Leigh .Xnn Blackwcll. Jeanne
Collins, Lisa Twill. Back ro«: Julie Sloan, Cheryl Rochman. Lynn Spcctor. Kalhy EmmanueUon.
Cunningham, Shcri Norman, Tammie Scllman, Julie
Ptnhellenic
259
AEn
Louie Abramson
Kenneth Ackerman
David Albert
Edward Bases
Caray Bauer
Howard Bendell
Steve Berkowitz
Stephen Bilkis
Jeffrey Birnbaum
Robert Blechman
Mark Bradley
Howard Brenner
Mark Brinker
Ross Brown
Alan Bulbin
Jeffrey Cohen
Joel Cohen
William Crooks
Lawrence Davidow
Mark Davis
Mark L. Davis
Jeffrey Epstein
Paul Feinberg
Stephen Felton
Leonard Fischer
Bruce Forrest
Bruce Frazier
Glenn Geffner
Michael Findel
Jonathan Ginsberg
Lawrnece Gladstone
Jeffrey Gold
Richard Golden
Kyle Green
Ira Guttentag
William Harris
Noah Heftier
Michael Heller
Edward Henkin
Bruce Herman
Craig Hershkowitz
Robert Jaffe
George Johnson Jr.
Howard Kirshenberg
Eric Kono
Steven Kranz
Andrew Kurland
Eric Lazarus
Scott Lazarus
Michael Levitt
William Lewin
Mark Lowell
Richard Mandel
Lanny Marks
Marc Mauser
David McDowell
Adam Menkes
Jason Miller
Jeffrey Miller
Andrew Mills
Laurence Moser
Adam Persky
Mathey Rosengart
Andrew Rosenzweig
Neil Ross
Morris Sandler
David Sausner
Jonathan Scher
David Schneider
David Schwartz
Russell Schwartz
Jonathan Siegler
David Speizman
Steven Steiner
Lawrence Stempel
Warren Struhl
Jeffrey Tannenbaum
Sanford Weinberg
Herschel Weisfeld
Paul Weisman
Barry Weiss
Jeffrey Wolf
StevenWolis
Donald Zerivitz
Thomas Zilahi
260
AEn
AE$
Amy Arno
Deborah Aronoff
Judith Baris
Lynnc Bernstein
Rebecca Bernstein
Linda Brcggin
Nancy Byck
Jill Carmcll
Mauri Cohen
Catherine Collat
Maxinc Coppersmith
Laurie Dollin
Fran Dubrow
Shcrric Edelman
Leslie Finkelstcin
Susan Frank
Monica Fried
Andrea Golden
Ellen Goldfarb
Jill Goldman
Jane Goldsmith
Lauren Gotlieb
Nancy Graboyes
Jamie Grapin
Jill Greenberg
Nancy Habif
Mclanie Heintz
Any Hertz
Barbara Hodin
Lisa Huberman
Joanne Hujsa
Judith Isdancr
Stephanie Kalmans
Nancy Kaplan
Andrea Katz
Elaine Koby
Joan Kohn
Maria Kropman
Amy Lcvinc
Beth Levinc
Laurie Levy
Terri Levy
Wendy Levy
Shari Lipschutz
Judy Lischkoff
Patricia Loeb
Laura Magazincr
Fonda Magids
Sherri Marblestone
Deborah Mesirow
Sheryl Mesirow
Nancy Mills
Sally Mintz
Jacquelyn Myers
Cari Nathanson
Suzanne Nochumson
Beth Osiason
Toby Pallet
Shari Pcnncr
Lynettc Perlman
Amy Pinskcr
Vicki Rabin
Edith Rosen
Gail Rosenbaum
Peggy Rubens
Michelle Sainer
Patti Sandbcrg
Lisa Sandler
Dcnna Schcnckcr
Tammy Schiff
Cindee Schriebcr
Lynda Schwalb
Simonc Schwob
Tami Scltman
Debbie Shaw
Bonnie Sheilclman
Shari Shcitclman
Lisa Shcrins
Juliet Sincoff
Sari Slivneck
Suzanne Smith
Ivy Sokol
Mindy Spar
Harrictle Spcctor
Clarissa Star
Karen Stein
Laurie Stein
Laurie Swoff
Pamela Tizcr
Randi Tompkins
Amy Trubowitz
Lcc Waldman
Susan Wiener
Pamela Zahlcr
Shara Zakarin
Roberta Zarkowski
Lisa Zicr
Shcril Zimmerman
Randi Zinbcrg
AE*
261
George Burnett
Perry Chapman
Howard Clery
Richard Colon
Owen Cooper
Charles Cusumano
Michael DePaul
Mark Donachie
Andrew Donnelly
Clyde Eads
David Engel
William Gould
Bruce Harrison
Gary Hoffman
Timothy Hui
Robert Israel
Sam Israel
Ian Karr
Jay Kaufman
Ira Keselman
Russell Koster
Arthur Lapidus
Fred Martin
Christopher Marziotti
Patricio Montero
Joshua Most
Jeffrey Parkinson
Eric Paul
Mark Preziosi
Khaled Rabie
Thomas Rose
William Schifino
Ralph Scholtz
Marc Siegel
James Simonette
Stephen Sparacio
Frederick Stuck
Alan Stone
Anthony Sylvester
Mark Tobias
Thomas Turri
Dean Vandiver
Pedro Veiguela
Eric Wagner
Evan Wetzler
Timothy Wright
262
A2*
ATQ
Michael Armilagc
Thomas Hughs
Shepard Perrin
Michael Ault
Jeffrey Johnson
David Quinn
JcfTrey Bcntley
Quentin Johnson
Hugh Randolph
James Burks
Leonard Killeen
Raymond Reggie
Volney Campbell
Larence Klein
RusscI Rhea
Anton Cangelosi
Christopher Lawrence
Rex Roberts
Charles Carr
Walter Lebrcton
John Roddey
James Day
Paul Lecorgne
Kent Ryan
Brugin Dosscll
Bret Levy
Michael Schmidt
Kent Dussoni
Cyril Lowe
Stephen Schonbcrg
James (■edcrofr
David Mayer
Mark Sigler
William Fonlcnot
Martin Mayer
Lugene Simon
Anionic f'ranco
Gary McNamara
Paul Sterbcow
Keith Goodfcllow
Stephen Met/ingcr
John Truett
Carter Guice
Robert Montague
Robert Truett
John tiadden
Michael O'Brien
Daniel Wagner
John March
Rene Paysse
James Wilson
Kuri Hcumann
William Perrault
James Zullo
ATO
263
Ready For Any Occasion
Daniel Babineau
Kevin Limp
Christopher Ballenger
Richard Lustig
David Balsam
Daniel Mahoney
Andy Berger
Clarence McGower
Dan Bucholtz
Robert Mendoza
Marcus Bowers
David Miller
Kevin Carroll
Thomas Oberle
Michael Durden
James Odza
Timothy Durst
Jim Ranee
Ricky Feller
Paul Schulman
Seth Grant
Mark Sallinger
Scott Hayward
Keith Schwaner
Drew Hyde
Steve Sandler
James Hyland
Nicholas Smith
Kraig Kessel
Howard Tee
Jeffrey Klein
Michael Tiemann
Eric Lane
David Vining
David Lerner
Andrew Werth
264
I'aul Schulman, ScuK lla>Kard. ( hrts IjoII, Oan Uu-
choli/. and JimOdza reach nc» highs at ihcy head into
I igi> sccund year al Tulanc
This year the Fiji\ celebrated their Ist year anniveru-
T\ al Tulanc
ll^<llu»i-«n IS celcbraied in traditional fonn by Andy
Acrih, Scott Hayward and Jeff Klicn.
♦r^ 2b D
5HLEY SCOTT MELISSA BOGART ElEHNOR COMEB
Tracy Baker
Robert Barber
Norman Beck
William Bilden
Peter Bloom
Robert Bocock
Christopher Cathcart
Laurence Fox
Thomas Frank
Chris French
Robert Garvey
Arden Grover
Dixon Hall
Andrew Hurwitz
Howard Jacobs
Mike Judd
Howard Katz
Lawrence Korn
Michael Lenhartz
Jerome McCarthy
Terence Nolan
Joseph Olivier
Francisco Rodriguez
Frederick Schuler
Mack Sigman
Steven Sloan
Roland Sosa
David Spratt
Erik Weinstock
Stephen Wolf
Lawrence Yarborough
Seymour Young
266
Ben
AKE
William Aconib
Kevin Aldcrson
Bryan Batt
Jonathan Bean
John Bcndcrnagcl
Thomas Bcron
Charles Bcthcll
Joseph Brewer
Christian Brown
John CafTrcy
Brodie Cobb
Craig Colomcs
Anag Dc La Fuenle Hcrce
John Denegre
Fdward Diennes
William Dossctl
Robert Gallagher
Charles Gamburg
John Georges
George Gsell
Crawford Hindermann
James Jackson
William Kearney
Thomas Kilby
Lowell KrafT
Wesley Lambert
Marc Lauricclla
John Leach
William Lccorgne
James Levinson
Bruce Levy
Brian McCarthy
Edwin McMullcn
Jeffrey Meckstroth
Charles Morse
Jonathan Mulkin
Michael Owens
Matthew Pattcson
Charles Patton
Raoul Rodriguez
William Rudolf
Gerard Ruth
Parks Shackelford
William Slattcn
Christian Smallcy
Douglas Sprunt
Manfred Sternberg
Jeffrey Streich
Frank Toye
Ross Turner
Archer Vandcnburgh
John Weinmann
Carey Winder
David Young
AKE
267
268
Up' m^jM
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Michael Andrews
Andrew Gardner
Matthew Parker
John Argenti
David Gordon
Michael Paton
Steven Ballinger
Howard Grody
Charles Peterson
Bradley Barnhill
Jeffrey Gum
John Reichenback
David Bell
Jack Gutman
Peter Riccobene
Benjamin Bohlmann
Bruce Hamilton
Timothy Rood
Alan Brackett
Tod Hanna
Michael Rosenberg
Scott Brown
Kent Heck
Arturo Salow
Frederick Burns
Gregory Henderson
Vincent Santomassimo
James Carnley
Jeffrey Hodd
Earnest Seller
Richard Chin
George Koclanes
Steven Shaffer
Clay Christiansen
Larry Lipkin
Raymond Silverstein
Bryant Cohen
Charles Marsala
Stephen Simion
Daniel Daddario
John McKenzie
Allen Tafel
Clair Davis
Paul Mellblom
Christopher Tobe
Kenneth Degot
Frank Miller
E. Peter Urbanowicz
Mont Echols
Joseph Morris
Rhett Weiss
William Eckert
Mark Nelson
Andrew Wetstone
Mark Felger
John Nicosia
Derek Winebrenner
Bruce Ficken
Michael Nictakis
William Woodworth
Russell Friedman
ATA
ZBT
Michael Abi
Scoll Agran
Michi;! Angcrman
Scott Avcrbuch
Frederick Axelrod
Harry Bass
Michael Berkowitz
Daniel Bernstein
lee Bressler
Steven Brown
Jay Burslcin
Michael Case
Richard Chanon
Stweart Cohn
Randal Colon
I.loyd Desatnick
\\illiam Donohoc
Robert Egcrman
Rod Eiscnbcrg
Daniel Epstein
Robert Fererman
Mark Feldman
Samuel Feldman
Jeffrey Fine
Scott Fine
John Fisher
Steven Frank
Andrew Friedman
David Friedman
Stephen Friedman
Kenneth Gad
James Gansman
Richard Garber
Jeffrey Ginsberb
John Goldberg
Steven Goldin
Peter Goldstein
Robert Goldstein
Bradley Gordon
Clifford Greenbaum
Michael Greenfield
Andrew Greiff
Eric Gruman
David Hellman
Gary Herskowitz
Kenneth Herskowitz
George Hirsbcrg
Michael Hirxch
Stewart Homier
James Horowitz
Philip Horwitz
Phillip Jaffe
Jonathon Kadis
Marc Karetsky
Jonathan Katz
Scott Ka^dan
Robert Kiem
David Kleiman
Scott Kleinberg
Jerome Lamensdorf
Bryan Levey
Steven Levin
Terry Levine
Steven Lieberman
David Lonner
Lance Lourie
Donn Lux
Barry Malkin
Jeffrey MankolT
Robert Mann
Bradley Marcus
James Meyer
Bruce Miller
Bruce Morel
Steven Neuman
Bradley NirenblatI
Leon Nowalsky
Steven Pearl
Charles Pearson
Stuart Peskin
Samuel Pinosky
Stuart Posnock
James Quicksilver
Jonathan Rachlin
Scott Ratchick
Matthew Reich
Bruce Rciter
Ronald Resnick
Cary Robinson
David Robinson
Alan Roos
Richard Rosenberg
Mark Rubenstein
Peter Russin
Ronald Sachs
Michael Sacks
Simon Satcr
Edward Schcidi
Douglas SchitTcr
Mark Schild
Herbert Schwartz
Michael Sesan
Steven Shakno
Robert Shankcrman
Jeffrey Shear
Howard Shifkc
Mark ShiHcc
David ShmucI
Alan Siege!
Jeffrey Siegel
James Sigman
Charles Silverman
Gregg Silverman
Kenneth Silverstein
Gary Sircus
Zachary Solomon
Michael Sosnow
Stuart Spcer
Andrew Starr
Marlon Stan-
David Stem
Robert Stein
Scott Stein
Frank Siemcck
Gregory Tendrich
Brian Thum
David Tucker
Jonathan Tunis
Robert Ldolf
Michael Wadler
Kenneth Weil
James Weinberg
Kenneth Weisman
Bryan Weiss
William Wellons
George Wells
Martin Wells
William Wilcnsky
James Wolfson
Scott Zahlcr
ZBT
269
P M
Ross Alexander
John Bauer
Chris Borah
Donald Cheney
Andy Cherry
Peter Cook
Kevin Donohoe
Paul Fleck
Brian Geiger
Stephen Halperin
Philip Heineman
John Hess
Jim Hughes
Mark Jackson
Michael Jaklitsch
Steve Joost
Ozgur Karaosmanoglu
Terrence McCormick
Tony McCormick
Mark McCullough
William McGinn
Dana Mcllwain
Richard Myers
Robert Ostrov
Bret Paris
Edward Parrott
Gavin Ray
John Rooney
Fransisco San Miguel
Michael Schement
Jim Shaffer
Peter Sloss
Louis St. Calbre
Pop Talalak
Randy Wheller
270
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lj»^^
KA
William Akcrs
Douglas Bell
John Bcllan
John Bcllan
Ernest Bic
David Binder
Carl Bonham
John Carwic
Edgar Chauvin
James Churchill
Michael Cleary
Clarence Clifton
John Cox
Guy Curry
John Daly
Douglas Dillon
Martin Kcldman
Brent Finlcy
Brian Fitzpatrick
Evan Fogclman
Mike Garey
Paul Gauthier
Bay Ingram
Philip Ingram
JclTrcy Irle
Julian Kelly
Barry Kern
Robert Killeen
Dan Kindel
Mark Kline
Donald Legarde
Robert Liljebcrg
John McGinity
Paul McKee
Michael Miller
Michael Moorhead
Christopher Muckerman
John Nelson
Frederick Newburger
Peter Nikonovich
Eric O'Neill
Steven Pelleriti
Felix Rabito
Neil Rapmund
John Robinson
Bruce Ross
John Rowland
William Sabo
John Santacruz
Lawrence Smithson
Edward Stauss
David Sussman
Victor Teumcr
Steven Van/andt
Hugh White
Waller V\hilehursl
Arthur Wisdom
Charles ^oung
John 'ibung
KA 271
Carolyn Agresti
Sara Agresti
Susie Albright
Donna Alexander
Teresa Barnes
Anne Barrett
Denise Bartizal
Christina Basso
Mary Bendernagel
Cynthia Berglund
Portia Berrey
Kimberlie Birdwell
Allison Brandt
Harriette Burns
Mary Burton
Jennifer Carl
Lisa Chamberlain
Elizabeth Churchill
Monique Sohn
Elizabeth Cravens
Judith Dalton
Heidi Davis
Kimberly Dutton
Sharon Eller
Jane Faia
Sharon Fenno
Pamela Felmming
Amy Giordano
Judith Gladson
Kathryn Graddy
Danella Hero
Katherine Hetherwick
Christine Hoffman
Elizabeth Huddleston
Elizabeth Hudson
Cynthia Huger
Kim Jenkins
Pollard Johnson
Sharon Jones
Vicki Jones
Caren Knuchenhauer
Alma Kombargi
Melissa Kotler
Joy Landman
Virginia Leece
Laura Leitch
Suzanne Lemay
Theresa Lippert
Anna Litwin
Margaret McCullough
Suzanne McGlone
Sara McNeil
Diana Milichar
Marcia Miller
Laura Miskovsky
Anne Morris
Lisa Myers
Tia Newsom
Robin O'Bannon
Karen Patterson
Adrienne Petite
Regina Reed
Marina Rodriguez
Mary Rossi
Lynn Sargent
Jamie Saucer
Amy Shafer
Jean Simion
Jean Smooke
Lesley Stanford
Ruth Stecher
Elizabeth Sullivan
Margaret Thorne
Elizabeth Watts
Elizabeth Weintraub
Alor White
Anne Wolfe
Elizabeth Woods
272
KA0
KS
i
Peter Adubalo
Pclcr Albert
Andrew Barclay
j Christopher Bclairc
I Doric Capsis
1 Andrew Citrin
I David Connelly
i Pierre Conner
) Abner Cornwell
I John Cottingham
Walter Davis
I Lawrence DeBuys
I Rhett DeBuys
: George Diniitri
' Criag Dupleix
: Richard Idler
' Joseph tischer
Arthur Fullerlon
Harry Geismar.
Robert Grainger
Stephen Hall
Alec Hirsch
Gregory Holcombe
Charles Jacques
Robert Jarrett
Daniel Johnson
Gregory Jung
Richard Jurisich
Steven Kushnick
Daniel Ladd
James Ladd
Roger Landry
Douglas Lister
Roland Livney
James Marks
Charles McGowan
David Miller
Robert Miller
Michael Mollow
David Monahan
Scott Morrell
Guy Nielsen
Paul Osteen
John Parnon
Eric Philer
Thomas Rebman
Robert Regent
Kenneth Reidbord
Ray Rhymes
(•rank Scroggins
Steven Shore
Rufus Smith
Adam Speclor
(iregory Sladtlander
Burton Vincent
Robert Williams
Ki
273
Dara Altshuler
Leiand Baldwin
Eugenia Barnard
Alice Barnes
Jessie Barr
Ruth Bulvig
Eva Branisa
Tracey Brice
Brandy Broome
Ruth Calhoun
Tenley Carp
Lucille Carson
Katharine Chamberlain
HoUey Chant
Margaret Cleary
Kathy Coman
Colleen Costello
Anne Crews
Elizabeth Dana
Kelly Daniel
Felicia Davis
Lauren Dessommes
Jane Dickson
Maja Dimitrijevic
Mary-lynne Eagan
Susannah Evans
Elisabeth Fox
Larisa Franzheim
Alyssa Gaines
Dana Galler
Stephanie Gambino
Barbara Gibbons
Diana Gonzalez
Jean Grelier
Christine Grizaffi
Lora Groton
Mary Gruenbaum
Althea Harlin
Leigh Harrington
Laura Harriss
Rene Hedges
Susan Howell
Joanne Jacobs
Susan Kemp
Karen Killeen
Nancy King
Jill Levy
Sarah Lowman
Katherine Martin
Elizabeth Masters
Celia McDaniel
Michele McNair
Diana Merkel
Bridget Meyer
Marie Miller
Elizabeth Padwee
Carolyn Peterson
Mary Pinkerton
Adele Plauche
Kathleen Pratt
Melinda Rainey
Nancy Rowland
Suzanne Saussy
Jody Schuring
Julie Sherman
Brenda Sibille
Sharon Spence
Mary Spilker
Caroline Stevens
Georgia Talbot
Margaret Trice
Marietta Van der Meer
Patricia Weeks
Laura Wolff
Edith Yarborough
4
274
KKF
Kappa pledge, Dawn Davis, gets her first taste of soror-
it\ lili: ;il Screech Nile
Carrie Lewis, Kappa Kappa Gamma pledge, smiles
briphiK on an early Saturday morning pledge day
f'arolinc Sle»eas, Ntncv Kinf. Kalfa; Mirtio and \i
thia llarlin enjoy a peaceful afternoon on the Kappa
PiTch
KKI"
275
Eileen Allan
Berit Amlie
Sarah Anderson
Christine Arthur
Karen Baker
Virginia Barron
Laura Bennett
Leigh Ann Blackwell
Elizabeth Boh
Geri Bosworth
Marilyn Clements
Wendy Dehan
Sarah Derr
Gloria Dobbs
Margaret Downing
Kris Dreisker
Frances Durcan
Catherine Emanuelson
Elizabeth Erdreich
Adrienne Fetkowitz
Linn Foster
Jennifer Gandy
Paige Garner
Lisa Renee George
Theresa George
Gina Gibson
Page Giddings
Elizabeth Grace
Pamela Hansen
Suzanne Harris
Nancy Harrison
Nancy Hill
Monique Hocking
Loren Hurst
Kathleen Jordan
Catherine Kehoe
Leslie Lanier
Elizabeth Lathan
Julia Litvak
Susan Low
Mary Mackie
Lynn Maddox
Karen Markham
Carolyn McConnell
Flora McConnell
Naomi McCrocklin
Rachel McHale
Rebecca Mercer
Margaret Meurer
Lisa Moore
Page Morris
Kelley Morsman
Margaret O'Keefe
Margaret O'Malley
Barbara Pearlman
Jennifer Pharr
Marianne Rapier
Elizabeth Reidy
Christine Riggs
Elizabeth Robertson
Renee Sanditz
Dina Schefler
Charlotte Schoel
Elizabeth Schreier
Leslie Schwarz
Ashley Scott
Ann Sellman
Madeleine Sheahan
Susan Shiver
Catherine Shoup
Shelley Skiles
Stephine Slatten
Lea Mary Smith
Tracey Smith
Virginia Sommer
Elena Soto
Margo Tennis
Julia Thurner
Pamela Turner
Camille VanSant
Erica Westfeldt
Margaret White
Elizabeth Williams
Marie Wolfe
Marguerite Young
276
IIB*
nKA
James Albrccht
Randolph Haycb
Gary OscrolT
Richard Bates
Tim Hcffron
William Pappas
Desmond Bell
David Hertz
Stephen Ravosa
Lcc Brauer
Daniel Katzncr
Barry Rogers
kcnnelh Bubes
Jonathan Kaufman
Steven Rubin
Chrislophcr Campbell
Patrick Kennedy
Lang Ryder
Richard Cohen
Thomas Kern
John Scruggs
kcvm Connell
Paul Kllbourne
Christopher Seymour
Thomas Davis
Mark Komberl
Patrick Staves
Kcnnelh Dunlap
Joseph l.eaviit
Barry Stevens
Wayne Frci
Steven Lindcnbaum
Charles Thomas
Man Gahagan
Ghent l.ummis
James Weinberg
JefTrey Garon
Eric McWhirtcr
William Wolf
Marc Golden
Paul Morris
Steven ^'ates
Robert Gotfricd
David Nachman
Dong Uoong \\
John Grccven
William Omara
Robert Youngblood
HK
A 277
Jon Amberson
Stephen Armstrong
John Bailey
George Blackwell
John Brasher
Thomas Cashel
John Chilton
Quintard Courtney
Timothy Cruger
Moss Davis
Michael Dawahare
Richard Diehl
James Dillard
Dennis Dorsey
James Dyer
Eugene Ely
Edward Field
Brendan Geraghty
Monty Glorioso
Michael Goodrich
Arthur Gorling
Otis Gorman
David Gray
Thomas Hardy
Edward Holthouse
John Huck
William Hunter
Thomas Jackson
Leslie Jacobs
Harris Jones
Kyle Keese
George Kelly
Garland Knight
John Lancaster
Allan Lavin
Robert Levy
Kenan Loomis
Richard Mackie
John McHale
Stuart McLaughlin
Peter Michaelis
William Oshaughnessey
Andre Perron
David Porter
Thomas Potter
Francis Roche
Alfred Rufty
Patrick Senne
Clifton Smart
William Spears
Andrew Sperling
Charles Steck
Robert Stephenson
Paul Sullivan
James Swanson
John Taylor
Thomas Varner
John Waddell
Glen Wallace
Henry Watkins
Gordon Watt
Thomas Wharton
278 z
SAE
SAM
Ronald Ballcstas
Christopher Connelly
Thomas Correia
James Klaver
Mark McDougal
Man Rotlman
Milehell Rubcnstein
Michael Singer
Paul Speyerer
1AM 279
-
Laura Applebaum
Marcia Arnheim
Roby Baldinger
Carol Beerman
Jodi Bel!
Elana Bildner
Betsy Birnbaum
Lisa Brazel
Leslie Broomer
Stephanie Brown
Lilias Butterman
Brenda Choos
Bonnie Cohn
Mindy Dimenstein
Ellen Epstein
Kim Geign
Debra Fine
Jacqueline Finger
Corinne Foreman
Pamela Forrest
Kyle Foster
Melissa Freeman
Jayne Friedland
Melanie Fuss
Jodi Geduld
Dana Gerbie
Dana Gervis
Nancy Ginsberg
Pamela Ginsberg
Cindy Glaser
Lynn Goldblum
Elizabeth Green
Karen Greenberg
Elisa Gruman
Nancy GuUer
Lauren Haas
Jill Henkin
Rosemary Hirsch
Julia Hoffman
Cheryl Hollander
Jean-Anne Horowitz
Susan Kalishman
Suzanne Kane
Andrea Karns
Kathy Kernoff
Michelle Klafman
Stephanie Klein
Suellen Krieger
Cheryl Krovetz
Karen Landsberg
Deborah Leiter
Susan Lewis
Terri Lustig
Laurie Mandel
Gariann Morguelan
Denise Nathanson
Aplene Nussdorf
Sharon Poritzky
Beth Portnoy
Susan Pusar
Shari Ravner
Jodie Recht
Jan Rineberg
Julie Rochman
Alison Rosenberg
Debra Ross
Kimberly Ross
Jill Rubinton
Elise Sand
Caroline Schwab
Minda Schwartz
Tina Segall
Beth Silver
Elisa Silverstein
Leslie Singer
Elisa Slater
Jill Smiley
Jan Sokol
Lisa Soloway
Cindy Speiser
Cathy Steinberg
Erica Streisand
Deborah Tanenbaun
Lisa Tawil
Susan Touff
Michele Wahlder
Lisa Walsey
Lori Weiner
Ellen Weinstein
Pandi Weisman
Susan-Ellen Yurmai
Dana Zale
Robin Zeilberger
280
2AT
SN
Marc Alexander
Charles Anderson
Scott Andres
Darryn Band
JcfTrev Bchr
Bill Blair
Albert Bolton
Jcrald Bowman
Joseph Brown
Laurence Carmichael
George ClitTord
Thomas Clifford
Andrew Crowder
Bradley Crown
Kenneth Davidov
William Davies
Frederick Day
Edward Deutsch
Jeffrey Dilallo
John Fern
John Gonzalez
Campbell Griffin
Peter Hamilton
Ries Hansen
Christopher Harbuck
Reid Harrell
Jay Hirsch
Frederick Hoffman
Joseph Holcomb
Bernard Hoppenfcld
Keith Home
James Hurson
Saul Hyalt
William Jasionowski
Thomas Johns
Jeffrey Jonas
Gregory Jordan
Allan Kamenskv
John Kapcles
Roy Kenney
William Kirkikis
Michael Kirkpalrick
Bruce Kirsl
David Kovacik
Kenneth Krawcheck
Richard Lane
Scott Lanham
James Ledbetter
Joel Livingston
Timothy Lux
Peter Lalcolmson
Colvin Mathcson
James Mayer
Matthew McCormick
Robert McMurrcy
Craig McNamara
Garv Meyers
David Mignatti
William Morris
David Mulmat
Peter Mulmat
Robert Murphy
David Mussafcr
Douglas Nani
Anthony Newman
Joseph Nolan
Craig Norris
Kyle Norris
Christopher Olson
Steve Porter
William Raiford
Michael Ray
Bradley Rossway
Kenneth Sadowsky
William Schmid
Alexis Smislova
Peter Sobcl
Joe Stecn
Stephen Straughan
Kent Siruble
Charles Sullivan
Philip Tingle
Thomas Troitino
William Troitino
Gregory Valladad
Michael Vanpctlcn
Anthony Van\lict
Michael Wilensky
Clayton Williams
Gregory Wisdom
Jonathan >cllin
Thomas York
John Young
IN 281
David Aboud
Donald Adams
Enrique Arias
Michael Baricev
Bradford Barp
Gregory Barr
Matthew Barlett
Christian Bernegger
Harry Bernstein
Caesar Bottone
Mitchell Boult
Sean Bowen
Scott Brown
Thomas Connolly
Rodney Crevoiserat
David Daponte
James Dwyer
Edward Feldman
Jay Felser
Douglas Friedman
Gregory Gelderman
Samuel Giberga
Thomas Glaser
David Goettler
Keith Goldman
William Goldstein
Randolph Gumenick
Brian Hechinger
Edward Heffernan
Timothy Heffernan
Stephen Heun
Daviel Hunt
Ignacio Iribarren
Charles Joffe
Douglas Kaufman
Konrad Kennedy
William Klein
Theodore Kruckel
Robert Lachapelle
Andrew Lazarus
Robert Lazarus
Dale Levy
Bruce Margolin
David Margolin
Michael McKinney
Richard Mitchell
Mark Morel
Sean Otolle
Peter Phelan
James Rankin
Nelson Reed
Andrew Rees
Daniel Rees
Joseph Saenz
Scott Salisbury
Mark Schiller
Bruce Smith
Gary Stein
Sidney Steinberg
Philip Stire
Gregory Sunkel
Michael Tierney
John Tillotson
Eric Trattner
Matthew Voelkel
Thomas Wald
Paul Watson
Cameron Weber
Thomas Weil
Gregory Weiss
William Welch
Thomas Winn
Davis Wood
Arthur Woolverton
282 2x
TE$
Douglas Armslrong
Bruce Hartman
Frederic Oltarsh
Ncvin A^hc
Michael Hayt
Steve Patrinick
Michael Biunno
Robert Heller
Jeffrey Pollock
Michael Century
Jefl'rey Hochberg
Daniel Ravncr
Stuarl Chirls
Brian Krakowcr
Maurice Rosebaum
Andrew Cohen
Louis Kraselskv
Steven Schcnkcr
Robert Cooper
Jeffrey Kruft
Herbert Schumann
Michael Criscito
Michael Landy
Bradley Scnslbar
Robert Deal
Kenneth Lane
Jordan Sensibar
Richard Biscnberg
Jon Leader
David Shaw
Steve Fcrrando
Geoffrey Less
Robert Talbot
Michael f'ine
Stephen Lewis
Stanfor Terry
Keith F'inger
Leonard Lubit/
Michael Todoro
John Foley
Luis Martorell
Lawrence Weiss
Marc Frenkel
James McDcrmott
Timothy Wilkinson
JelTrev Goldsmith
John Miller
Ja\ Williams
Paul Graller
Samuel Menroff
Mark Wynne
TE*
283
#KS
William Bermingham
William Caldwell
Daniel Catlett
Geoffrey Daniels
Selden Dickinson
Rodd Garfinkel
Jody Goldstein
Adam Greene
Michael Hefferman
Benjamin Hopkins
Timothy Hunt
Geoffrey Isles
Warren Jones
Peter Leuhusen
Michael Levin
John Mahoney
Robert Mason
Edward McShane
Colin McVey
Craig Menker
John Mobley
Paul Morison
Robert Morris
Frederick Nixon
Louis Owen
Stanley Perelman
Michael Pinney
Curtis Rudbart
Anthony Ryan
Gerry Scheirman
John Schenken
Pablo Schor
Richard Searle
James Shearman
Harry Shekhel
Andrew Shenkan
Jonathan Simpson
Jonathan Small
Jeffrey Thornton
Robert Wartelle
Michael Weinman
Dennison Wolfe
Jeffrey Youngman
284
*K2
#M
Jodie Baldwin
Melissa Corcoran
Monica Grosz
Stacey Mitchell
Bonnie Schmid
Tahnya Ballard
Wendy Crandall
Karen Gruesen
Kate Moore
Holly Schymik
Angic Bartholomew
Amy Currin
Bonnie Hoguc
Tissie Nedcr
Cynthia Scnlcr
Becky Bel lord
Rachael Dacey
Karen Ibach
Jeanne Pappas
Jayc Seymour
Shari Berke
Louie Darmstadter
Kathy Johnson
Gaye Paysse
Jodi Snyder
Slacey Bialkin
Cesnic Davis
Laura Kittok
Gayle Peacock
Nalalee Staals
Betty Black
Patricia Dayton
Nancy KIcvan
April Peppe
Barbara Stccn
Mitzie Black
Susan Decker
Kelly Klocsel
Ginny Phillips
Joyce Slcin
Kare Blankenbaker
Mary Dietrich
Jennifer Kohler
Danielle Pilie
Susie Thomas
Stacey Boutte
Ann Druffner
Liza Landess
Stephanie Pipkin
Lisa Twill
Joyce Budowsky
Michelle Dubee
Patricia Lanier
Donna Prados
Stacy Tyre
Michelle Burketl
Jenny Dunn
Hcdda Lautenschlager
Ann Prevail
Lily Lgaz
Lydia Butler
Elaine Eagle
Susan Lauterbach
Ellen Rancy
Melanie Waldman
Eve Cahill
Jeanice Gcrfcrs
Annie Lawrence
Michelle Rcid
Shannon Wall
Lynn Carley
Teri Gioia
Michael Ann Lederman
Ellen Riccobenc
Penny Warriner
Jeanne Collins
Melissa Gordon
Mindy LotT
Lydia Rollo
Catherine Weil
Eleanor Comer
Hale Gork
Diane Machell
Michelle Rooncy
Debbie While
Susan Cone
Dcnise Gray
Jennie McNeill
Pal Ryder
Elizabeth Whiimoix
Robin Conklin
Jill Griffin'
Diana Minardi
Emily Sailers
♦M
285
Mar>' Aicklen
Elizabeth Amdur
Karen Andressen
Elizabeth Argus
Mary Martha Armstrong
Susan Arnold
Lou Ann Atlas
Dorothea Atwater
Tracie Aycox
Cynthia Bacher
Robin Bailey
Susan Bates
Elizabeth BenhofT
Kellie Bobbitt
Linda Bohannon
Michelle Brown
Andrea Cabell
Daonna Cahill
Dawn Callaway
Alane Carlson
Cheryl Cunningham
Corre Curtice
Ragnhild Daasvand
Marline Davis
Tanya De La Vergne
Ann Draper
Carolyn Earl
Elizabeth Engman
Ellen Epstein
Gretchen Everett
Jennifer Field
Leslie Fine
Kathy Fleck
Marjorie Forbes
Sharon Fuqua
Catherine Gardner
Mary Gonzalez
Empress Grantham
Karen Hagan
Lori Hahn
Kerri Holdsworth
Susan Hughs
Tara Kattine
Mary Lee Kinman
Marlyn Lausen
Tracey Lazarus
Nicole Leblanc
Lori Little
Sabrina Little
Mary Livaudais
Kelley Lozes
Edith Lussky
Nancy Marra
Force McCauley
Harriet McClain
Nancy McCornack
Christina Metcalf
Marguerite Meyer
Marion Mock
Julie Moise
Frances Montgomery
Ruth Morris
Susan Morrow
Mary Mouton
Amy Nash
Ketti Neil
Laura Pearce
Jeanne Perry
Julie Procell
Carol Redman
Margaret Riess
Rosemary Roosa
Linda Rosier
Kelly Ryan
Elizabeth Salzer
Linda Saul
Wendy Schubert
Kathleen Simon
Mary Jane Smart
Suzanne Smith
Jeanne Smits
Catherine Steck
Margaret Stewart
Ann Stone
Kathleen Stone
Liliana Story
Susan Sullivan
Nancy Turkel
Julianne Tyson
Marie Vickers
Trudy Waguespack
Leigh Anne Wall
Jessica Waters
Marion Welborn
Mary Wieland
Elizabeth Williams
Anne Wolfe
Margaret Woolverton
Maria Yiannopoulos
Anne Young
Ann Zemenak
286
xn
')'/('///('/7/('('(//S/s/('/7/()()(/
We Are Family
Hciaiiciiu-. Mike Lcnhartz gives Bob Garvcy an afTcc- Grc«ks Chris Sc>'mour. Michelle Oubec Jan Hawiey. Jen-
lionalc, brotherly hug. nifcr Kohlcr iind Ellen Raney enjoy a cold beer during
Greek Week activliics.
•-)o-
BrollieHioodlSisteTkood ^O/
Jerseys
Coat of Many Colors
i^yD/yf^i
Pikes Ken Bubes, C. J. Thomas, Jim Sakelaris and
Tim Heffron take a study break on their fire engine.
Regina Rogers and Susie Allbriglit show Byron Leh-
man their sisterly love.
288
Jerseys
/Bl uKoibtri, Michael Widlcr
.ind David Stein clown around
on ihc ZBT porch
Jentti:
> 289
lasses
290 Classes
I was told that mv four \'ears
in college would be the best
years of my life. I agree no\v —
ioo%."
— Lynn Maddox
Newcomb '82
Classci
. 291
shmen
Daniel Abrams
Louie Abramson
Susie Albright
Brenda Alexander
Linda Alexander
Elizabeth Argus
Amy Arno
Seth Aronson
Scooter Asekton
Amy Bader
Gina Bagneris
Curt Baham
Blake Bailey
Karen Baker
William Balch
Scott Ball
Paul Ballou
Eugenia Barnard
Tracy Barnes
Diana Barrett
Taylor Barry
Angela Bartholomew
Pam Bartholemew
Denise Bartizal
Bryan Batt
Jeffrey Behr
David Bell
Georganne Beller
Michelle Senile/
Krica Benner
M.irl> Bcrger
\Un Berk
Becca Bernstein
Ilarr\ Btrnsiiin
Siacev Biatkin
Irvini; HifT
Melissa Black
Patricia Blanco
\ndri>* Bhinkcnau
I hnmas Hlutc
I .lurk' Bolch
Juhn Bulton
liihn Blinds
Mark Bourne
Marcus Boxers
C harli-s Bowie
Kailh Bo>kin
Jodi Bnnncr
Inhn Hrrtlil
Hcrnicc Brijiht
i..ilc> Britii
J..scph BrockhofT
Diiuylas Broph)
Ross Bro»n
Michael Browne
(.iri Bruckner
Marco Brunicclli
lUlh Buntin
*>.irin(ha Buras
I i^.t [Uirihart
< h.trUs Burns
JcfTrc> Bush
I ilias Bultcrnian
N.iric* Bvck
Kinneth ( ald»oll
Kichard ( amcron
H.irr> ( antin
John ( ardcn
Jennifer < arllon
lcnlc\ ( .irp
I ouis Carrizales
Rohin ( arronski
Michael ( aruso
(.regor) (arxie
Maria (asas
DiinicI ( utlctl
I isa ( haiklin
J.
Ian Chait
Deborah Chandler
Gulrajaney Chandur
Arthur Cholodofsky
Christopher Clifford
Gary Cohen
Rachel Cohen
Bonnie Cohn
John Cohn
Christie Coleman
Steven Coletti
William Colomb
Melissa Corcoran
Cesar Corzandus
Rebecca Cotler
Tim Crawford
Chris Creedon
Charles Crockett
Christopher Crolu
Andrew Crowder
Bradley Crown
Timothy Cruger
Deborah Curry
Malcom Davidow
Andrew Davis
David Ben Davis
John DeCell
Don Deford
Lourdes DelaGarza
Christine Delgado
Jim Dillard
William Dillingham
Brian Doffmann
Michael DuBon
Lorena Dumas
Michael Dummett
Sharon Dumond
William Duncan
John Dunn
Reed Dunne
Kent Dussom
Tamela Eady
Mont Echols
Wesley Ely
Julie Emig
Robert Emmick
Elizabeth Epstein
Lucy Etheridge
Robert Farley
294
Freshmen
Jj> Fclsor
( hrivlophcr Krsta
Jami Hnrbcrjt
Kobcfl Kink
I t-slii- Hnkelsicin
J^mir Mavman
Judah hlum
Stt-pbcn fcjlsom
Jant' fran/
John fra/tr
Marc l-nnkcl
\rlhur fulkrlon
Jacquclini' dallarl
Michael Garbirino
I ourdt-^ (.ard/
Hector Cirza
Ban Ccraci
Jeanice (Icrfcrs
\ndrcw (liambarha
Mark CiibMin
Suvan (lilbcrl
( l»\ (.illilind
llcnr> CiB
John (•imbarf
John C.ilrlman
William lAts.s
Monl> (iloriaso
Jill (.oldman
Bcairi; donzalcj
Fnshmr
r 295
Jose Gonzalez
Jose Gonzalez
Lauren Gotlieb
Barbara Graboyes
Madeleine Graham
Denise Gray
Jill Greenberg
Karen Greenberg
Eric Greimann
Cam Griffin
Elise Gruman
Nancy Guller
Mark Gunning
Gus Gutierrez
Jill Haagenson
Jerry Haggerty
Carol Hand
Pamela Hanson
David Harrison
Douglas Hart
Angela Hartsock
Darrin Harvey
Jan Hawley
Elton Haydel
Melanie Heintz
Gregory Henkel
Howard Herman
Michael Herman
Steven Herman
David Hertz
Dean Hickman
Robert Hindt
Julie Hoffman
Harry Hollub
Scott Griffith ^
Samuel Grissom
Karen Gruesen
296
Freshmen
Kjiin Kiuach
Maria Krupman
Karon Kulnan
Veil Kwalinol/
Sabrina I adclK'ck
(■ran( 1-am
Ihiu- llorrican
I isa I lubt-rman
l:in lluRhcs
Jamt-s Mujiht-s
[odd Hunter
Iam(.■^ Murson
Saul ll>all
Jami-s I h land
Sharon Israel
Sandra Jansa
Michael JefTers
IX-novian Jeler
Jimes Jit;arjian
Jimes Johnson
Kalherine Johnsii
Bruce J'lhnslnn
Mark Jont-^
Sharon Jones
\driennc Joseph
Su/anne Kane
Ronald Kaplan
Kalh) Kcmoff
Pamela Kal/
IVjwn Kell>
Missie Kell>
I ranceN Kemp
Ijwrence Kerr
Poler Keliler
Sanaa Khan
I eonard Killecn
\Vend> Kim
Hilar) Kimmelman
liniuih> Kirkendall
Michael Kirkpalrick
IVnise Kirsehner
(.re):nr> Kishivama
Michelle Klapman
\ndre» Kligerman
IVhorah Knighl
Mar> Knill
I ■mis Kong
l>aiid Kiiracik
L
Freshmen Z,y/
Suzanne Lamm
Lon Lane
Michelle Papuyade
Hedda Lautenschlager
Robert Leboyer
Paul Lecat
Kenneth Lee
Kellie Leieux
Ricardo Leon
Bryan Levey
Lisa Levin
Joe Lcvine
Nancy Levine
Bret Levy
Teresa Lewis
Douglas Lister
David Litman
Cesareo Llano
Mindy LofT
Douglas Logue
Madeline Lopez
Sherri Low
Mike Lowenstein
Terri Lusting
Diane Machell
Suzanne Mahen
Steven Main
Victor Malone
Darryl Malonzo
Robert Mann
Arthur Maples
Gregory Marks
Jose Marquez
Rolando Martinelli
Frank Mathes
Mary McArdle
Ted McCann
Force McCauley
Leslie McClung
Flora McConnell
Maria McConnie
Rachel McHale
Karen McLaughlin
Susan Meinert
Jonathan Meizler
Ricardo Mejia
Barry MendelofT
Estelito Mendez
Ann Meneley
298
Freshmen
M
f hrislinj Melcalf
Michail Miller
l)ais> Mills
Nam> Mills
Had Midhill
\nna Modi-lska
Julii- Nluisf
k.iti M.",r.
Mi-a M..ril..ck
k(ibtTi Muriarl)
Katii' MiTris
l.*nnis« Morris
John Morro"
kii> Moiichi-k
I'lliT Mullcr
Jnsiph \1urphv
Kokrl Murph>
Ihiiid Mu\'vafcr
Jane Nakamura
kolli Noil
I on Nelson
1 rank Nespral
^tiun Nenni.in
Hi/ahe(h N.^elke
Fr^m^r 299
Andrew Normand
Kyle Norris
Arlene Nussdorf
Michael O'Brien
Michael O'Brien
Kate Oeltlschlaeger
Yinka Oguhleye
Margaret O'Keefe
Mark Stein
Mark Olensky
Peggy O'Malley
Toby Pallet
Foster Parsons
Bob Partain
Nancy Patterson
Stephen Pearl
Marilyn Pelias
Scott Penrod
Anne Perron
Nettie Peterson
Paul Pfreiberge
Adam Phillip
David Pieniazek
Judith Pike
Mary Pinkerton
Lori Pivornik
Jerry Plough
Betsy Poe
Erika Poleschner
William Poling
Timothy Ponseti
Graham Poor
Steve Porter
James Pratt
David Price
Nellie Quirez
Germaliel Rabell
Minerva Ramos
James Ranee
Steve Ravosa
Kenneth Reab
Regina Reed
Michelle Reid
Barry Resnick
Bryan Renter
Georffrey Rigg
Nijme Rinaldi
Carrie Robinson
David Robinson
300
Freshmen
\lv\ RcKil
MiyufI Rrxiri^ui'/
k;i(iul KiKJriKut/
Roscmar) Rtxjsj
'.uinihir Ropp«l
Maurici- Rost-nbaum
John R.jss
Vdam Rijlhi-nbur^
CegC* Ruhvl
NIark Rubvnstcin
Iris Rui/
Jiihn s.iihhr
I'fU-r Sacopulos
\!ark Nallingcr
IVira ^an(ia£0
Andrew Sasla>*sk>
Robcrl Schankir
Flkcn Schcid(
(irelchi-n "^chilKii-de
^\end^ Schub^rl
Porn Scbwalb
Su/anne Sccucin
Scnii Shanrvon
Sicicn Shank
IHtid Sliarpe
Datid Shcpard
Brcnda Sihille
Mark Meier
''Tcgg *^il>erman
Marcarel SImak
Nina Sirelius
Jame-. Skiba
Robcrl NialofT
Jacquol>n Smilr)
\nne Mane ^milh
Bradlc> Smith
Brian "^mith
I K'nn.ih n Snitt h
I a r r ^ s ni 1 1 h
■shernll "sniilh
Bci:k> SobocI
I uke SojWi
Jan Sokol
I re\ S*-)nK>
Stuarl Spccr
Mark Spirer
0»en Spii/lcr
Rnbtri ^larhird
|^m
Frtshmtt: ^Ui
Andrew Starr
Jacqueline Starr
Marlon Starr
Lesley Sleil
Christopher Straka
Seth Strauss
Su Studley
Mitcehll Supler
Shaynee Sussman
Robert Swallow
Howard Swarzman
Tracy Swedlow
Patrick Sweeney
Earl Tai
Lisa Twill
Patricia Thompson
Jeffrey Thornton
Toshikazu Toyaza
Denise Troeder
Vincent Turner
Edgar Ulloa
Lisa Underwood
Mark Unverzagt
Peter Urbanowicz
Alberto Valcercel
Keenradd Van Cinkel
Allison Vaughan
Alberto Vega
Marie Vickers
Andrea Vidrine
Maureen Vontz
Michele Walalden
Lee Suzanne Waldman
Douglas Walker
William Wallerstein
Kathy Walsh
Tom Walsh
Robert Walters
Gregory Washburn
Joy Washington
John Watkins
Kim Wayne
Linda Weil
Linda Weil
David Weissman
Jonathan Wesely
Andrew Wetzler
Terry Whatley
Richard Wheeler
302
Freshmen
Mi.ra Uhili-
\nitj W iiland
I tiin-sa \\ illtn
( 1.1-. Inn \\ illiams
iMirdun N\ iKon
Ki-*in \\ imbk-N
I ri^in \^ inchcslcr
■^usun SS inchcNlor
Mjrt.u \\ ink
\rihur NNoobrrlon
( rrcc NKixil^crlon
^ dilh ^ar^Hlr^luKh
\l;4ria \ iannnpoulos
1 h"nui>. ^"rk
Freshmen 0\JJ
Christopher Abbott
Jon Abelmann
Thomas Abrams
Sandra Abreu
Kenneth Ackerman
Nanette Albert
Verlinda Allen
William Anderson
Laura Applebaum
Douglas Armstrong
Mary Martha Armstrong
Diane ArnofT
Susan Arnold
Joanne Bagley
Adele Balthazar
Greg Barr
Luis Barrero
Kimberly Barrett
Christina Basso
Daniel Baumann
Bruce Baumgardner
Jorge Bean
Norman Beck
Christopher Belaire
Judith Bernstein
Donna Bernstock
Mitzie Black
Karen Blankenbaker
Marl> (iijllon
Julii' Brackrnridgr
Ihinni Hrnh-Kihn
( li Hrown
I li/abflh Hrri«n
\liihclU Un.vtn
Ihind Mruncr
Kart-n Burnt-lc
Manli) ( alien
Harr> ( aUi(
Nina ( amacho
Vnn C arr>
(hark-. ( arr
Ki->in ( arroll
Michail ( critso
( >prian C asadaban
ki'un ( as*>
Koin f as«)
IViug ( a^hman
Kich.ird ( .i^hni.in
Ucndill f hjmblisN
I i^.t ( ha^i-n
Hill* ( hi-n
lni;nd ( hi-n
KimtH-rl) ( ht»ninc
Joseph ( hi
Kenneth ( Urk
\!.ir.;.irei ( Iran
(.la> ( oilier
\rlhur ( ollin-
I \ .innr ( omer
^Lis.in ( one
Ij/ ( raicnv
( hc^^ I ( unnini;h,ini
1 ejh I uriis
1 ouie IHrmMadter
Hr.id n.iiiv
ILi.ti D.iHs
Nt^rk IVjMN
Koberl IKIe^kiexii:;
Miehjil Dil'.iul
I juren IV^^nnur^
( harli-s l)illeha>
Maja l)inii(ri»ic
I jurie lX'>llin
\nene IVinoian
Michrll IKi>el
I
Ann Druffner
Gerald Dublier
Robley Dupleix
Rod Gisenburg
Sharon Eller
Adam Elyachar
Sam Emory
Robert Erbs
Jan Esthus
Susie Etcheverry
Arlene EtzU
Yueh Eugenio
Isabel Evans
Jeanine Ewart
Sarah Fasterling
Steven Feinstein
Luis Ferrer
Victoria Finke
Leslie Fine
Caroline Fish
Lisa Fleck
Paul Fleck
Jacqueline Forte
Judih Franklin
Wayne Freider
Audry Friedman
Stuart Fuller
Melanie Fuss
Paulette Gardy
Brian Gciger
Bryan Gill
Randy Goldberg
Ellen Goldfarb
Jody Goldstein
Diana Gonzalez
Melissa Gordon
Thomas Gordon
Jamie Grapin
Douglas GriUs
Margaret Groh
Monica Grosz
Van Grundmann
Brian Guess
Nancy Habif
Steve Halperin
Mark Hanks
Christopher Harbuck
Angela Hardage
Robert Harding
306
Sophomores
lifuci- Harrison
' raig HarriMjn
Jiihn Hjtih
l':iul lliKcniT
Sjrah IK-idi-rcr
Miki IKIInMn
kostmari Hi-lMick
( "tnsl.tnti- lli-ndiTvun
ftfci^ Hi-ndi-rson
Sti-phcn Hron
Mcurlhur IKviiri
Kirk Mill
Bonnit- llogui-
Kirri lUildworlh
fAnlhia Hull
limuihN Mdwcs
Hlakv Jackson
Mark Jackvrjn
\nn Jami-s
\Ulissa Janning
^'^-irnt-r Janof
( harles Joffc
Kaih)i Johnson
\ Itanora Johnson
I'jul Jonfs
(■nc Jordan
Jonathan Kadis
\ndria Kahn
•su-an Kaighn
Nanc> Kaplan
ii/cur Karaosmanoglu
I l^a Kasni-r
I inda Keller
Pamela Keller
Knnrad Kcnnedv
H}^n Kinl
Barr> Kem
l>ar>l Kimch*
t >a Kisiler
I iiwrencc Klien
Kelh KliK-d
Nichiiljs Kcital
I a»rcnce Korn
< hnsilan Knud-cn
JcfT KraoseUk^
( her) I KraiLs
1 >nn Kummert
(iar\ K<«a»cr
U inslon l^ca\o
Sophomorrs
307
Patricia Lanier
Michael Larson
Kip Lazard
Susan Lecliner
Kim Lehto
Michael Lerner
Nancy Levin
Jill Levy
Laurie Levy
Joel Livingston
Peter Lorson
Edith Lussky
Richard Lustig
Judv Love
Andrew Loverud
Sara Lowman
Bryant Magee
Nancy Magh
Rosaland Maiman
Laszio Mark
Laurie Mandel
Sherri Marblestone
Coria Marcemaro
Melanie Marchand
Michelle Mark
Laura Martin
Robert Martin
Marc Mauser
Christopher May
Mark McCullough
Richard McDaniel
David McMaster
Sara McNeil
Marina Melser
308
Sophomores
f lirnnc Mreua
Ntark \Ii-rcnda
Nick M.-.lr.h
l'j(rick Mil/
Silli Min/
Iran Mi/cll
lo,l Mi>di>rllc
Jack Molisani
Shane M«>od>
Mike Mixjrhi-ad
Ton) Marak-N
\nj Miirandicra
Jamt-N Morgan
Sianlc\ \lurris
I Van \1orro»
Kranct-NCa Mi»Ncafelli
Josh Must
Nichtilav \luni/
Jala \!unr<i
IHanv Nlurph>
John Nakrusis
Jost Nalcr
(.corge Nelson
(ii-orje Ni-shiir
Robin < >hannnn
Michael d'dea
I- ailh (Kirox
Kd>*jrd I'arrol
Nhari I'enner
\m> Pepper
Ihiniel I'erron
lid Tern
\dani f'ervk*
( arol>n l'elervnn
Roger I'eler-son
I ru I'hifer
\m\ Pinsker
lUidi fohl
Rui I'onli
l>j<id l'os(
IV.uj:Us P.mcl
1 J Rankin
R >hin Reagler
I isa Ree-d
Maek Kicard
( hcric Ricmer
H'>nnic Rixlrigue/
lorcc R<>dricuc/
H^l■.^ R,K-hr
Sophomorti S^U '
Elizabeth Rogers
Sheri Rosanski
Bruce Ross
Debra Ross
Robert Rote
Steven Roth
Carol Rudo
Alice Rybicki
Kenneth Sadowsky
Rosemary Sale
Salvador Sanchez
Lisa Sandler
Rafael Santiago
Suzanne Saussy
Hermane Schellstede
Anne Schiele
Barry Schiff
Kyle Schneider
Andy Schroth
Fred Schuler
Mindy Schwartz
Susan Schwartz
Holly Schymik
Jaye Seymore
Thomas Sheflied
Andrew Shenkan
Scott Shepard
Terence Sinclair
Leslie Singer
Julie Sipos
Jill Smiley
Hallie Smith
Lea Mary Smith
Reed Smith
Stephanie Smith
Gregory Smoika
Zack Soloman
Mark Speciner
Lynn Specter
Paul Speyerer
Francis Stabile
Sid Sternberg
Caroline Stevens
Palmer Stevens
Ashley Stone
Nancy Storm
Benjamin Strauss
Marjorie Strauss
Valentin Suazo
310
Sophomores
Mill) Wil/
H.bccca WolfT
Marfiarcl Woolicrlon
I iiwroncc \arhriiuch
K:ircn /«cij;
Susii- Sulli>an
JtfTiT'. Ian
llalbl l^rck
l.riKor) U-ndrich
\l.tn I hr)mu\
kh.Kia ilshlcr
l>.i>ld Irt-llin
Nilscin Irujillo
Njnt.\ lurkt-l
I. UK lurrur
I 1^.1 |v.ill
I -iwrt-nct 1 hdi
I .>n \idj|
I'-iui Mning
I jnes'vo \ iril
\.i>itr \ iiiri
K.if4il \ i/carrondi)
MiLinu Uaidnun
^lunniin Ujll
Knhin Wahtin
Mallh.x Uarmr
I'.inicllc WarkinN
Mrvnda Waft-*
( .illuruu \Viil
H.ind) \\ hcrlff
I li/abclh \\ hirmoro
Uri nl \\ iiss
Vnn U illjani'-nn
lorn \V inn
I. Hid Uinlcrs
3,
Sophomorc<
311
I u mots
Ken Abrams
Ramin Ahmadi
Asma Ahmed
Bill Akers
Timothy Alford
Eileen Allan
Libby Amdro
Michael Angerman
Dora Atwater
Youssef Baalbaki
Robert Bagnetto
Tahnya Ballard
Noreen Barbella
Denise Bardas
Matthew Bartlett
Kurt Bauke
Neil Beals
Beth BennofT
Martin Berger
Michael Berkowitz
Lee Berry
Miles Bingham
Carolyn Blaine
Diane Bloomberg
Kwasi Boateng
Olga Bobadilla
Patti Boerner
Lynda Bohannan
Miguel Bonini
( alherim- Btxjutl
\ido (torKr*"
J:)n Hnrn
\nn [I'lWfii.in
I aura Mrudham
Krri Hradli\
lirian linnknuinn
J.tmi-N Hrosjiu
Hrjdti.') Brnwn
lav lor Brown
^chul/ BurEcs
Fredrick Burns
l*aul Burnv
Mi-gan B>rd
\ndrta C abell
RnhtTi C aire
I'tltr ( ampfltld
Riisf C a^ano^a
\nlonia ( ebrian
Bcrnjdcitf ( hijs-.n
Ml phui ( hi.-Ntnut
! arr\ ( hilhm
Janu-s ( lark
\ndriH ( knutson
MiNs\ < iihtn
RarulN ( nlin
( aria ( nnavs js
liiik% ( nrnian
\hncr ( ornwi'll
Itinmn ( rovs
[tradlcv ( ro»n
\ i.ki ( Lihcr
Duniu Damica
(.rc£or> I>andridi;c
\lain Ik-lVr^a
Palrick Dillnn
Karl l>..ss
1 1 nil if cr lUmn
I ininihv DursI
( dniitnd \ htric
Wtuvk I i! J man
I u-.iu f 1%
Vndres h>cohar
I d^ard KAposito
1 tN^ildo Kujardo
Mivrhaoi ^edlICcia
s.im \ I Idman
Monte Fennel
Jaime Fernandez
David Finch
Micliael Fisher
Brian Fitzpatrick
Elizabeth Bohrman
Therron Fole>
Nadia Folic
William Fontenot
Sharon Fortier
Edwin Fricke
Beth Furr
Alan Gainsberg
Tracy Gallagher
Dana Galler
Bruce Gasarch
Jerry Gee
Tony Gelderman
Dara Gerbie
David Gereighty
Elizabeth Gerfers
Ben Gerslowitz
Beverly Gibson
Jonathan Ginsberg, Jr.
Pam Ginsberg
Randi Glorsky
Julie Goldstone
Eduardo Gomez
Gregorio Gomez
Jose Gohzalez, Jr.
Seth Grant
Becki Grimes
Jane Gross
Oxcar Guerra
Jerrcy Gum
Edward Hall
John Hardie
314
Juniors
Rr)bi-rt Marford
\m> Harrison
Jull llarlig
( harlt-s Hibvrt
TiToa llcike
Kobtri IK'ller
Burrel Henr>
\m\ Hertz
Pam Hochbcrj
Elizatveth iluddiNi.m
Semmes Hughe-.. Jr.
Karen Ibach
Jhalima Ibrahim
Jcffro> Irle
Sponeer Jachson
rha>«ki Jammal
i I'.ftle Jimenez
(^)uenlin Juhnson
Konrad Jonne^on
Hame^ Kalordi
Daniel Kaplan
Tara Kalline
Brian karana^u
Jon Kelh
Jennifer Keni
Junior- J) 1 D
Laura Kittok
David Kleinman
Stephanie Klein
April Kossar
Wendy Krivitzsky
Alejandro Kuprian
Steven Kushnick
Michele Laccheo
Gregg Lambert
Michael Landry
Eric Lane
Kenneth Lane
Arlen Langs
Michael Ann Lederman
Felix Lee
Allison Lenk
Martha Leshine
Jean-Marc Levy
Robert Lilteberg
Lori Little
Anna Litwin
Laurie Lobel
Primo Lonbardi
C. J. Lorio
Anna Lou
Soto Lourdes
Itwin Machinroth
Fonda Magids
316
Juniors
l>anji'l Malljn
(.ar> Mandilhlatl
\1arlha Mark
Nanc\ Marra
Kric Mar\
Kdward Mauri
James Mavanado
f ariilvn Mcf onnc-
f , U. Mcf.owtn
John McHugh
Kdward McShane
Thomas Mct-han
[)aiid Mihta
lania Mc\er
Bcnjjmin Mihn
Shri Miller
( laudia \lontcra
I 1/ McinlEomer)
\\ illiam NIorrls
MurRarel Mnii
Mar> Moulon
Hcclor Murra
Am> Nish
fliers I Sickerson
Tfrrencc NoUn
Filccn Nugcnl
Molli O'Brien
Vgnes Ocasin
i HIS ( )li*ares
Frederic Oliarsh
(Ticrie O^Eood
Brel Paris
Ijncaslcr Parker
Stephen Pcllerili
Mr .
Junior:
.< 317
Gabby Pepper
Jane Pere
Shepard Perrin
Elizabeth Peterson
Paul Peyronnin
Wendell Pfeffer
Robert Polishook
Jeffrey Poritzky
Karen Post
Jean Poupeau
Kate Ravin
William Reed
James Regan
Gregg Rein Heimes
David Reynolds
Russell Rhea
Ana Rios
Chandra Robinson
Marina Rodriguez
Edith Rosen
Andrew Rosenweig
Maridel Roth
David Russell
Pat Ryder
Scott Salisbury
Martha Sampson
Demetrios Sapounas
Jon Sawyer
John Schenken
Tammy Schiff
Sarah Schmidt
Leslie Ann Schwartz
Mark Schwartz
John Scorsone
Robert Shankerman
Andrea Shapiro
Evan Shapiro
Jill Shopneck
Joel Silvershein
Steven Simerlein
Susan Skinner
Steven Sloan
Clifton Smart, III
Bruce Smith
Richard Smith
Tyrone Smith
318
Juniors
Richard Sn>di-r
l.ukt- S<jjkil
(.ar> Slcphtnv'jn
DctKjrah Siralford
( aria S\l*t-sior
IK'hiirah laninbaum
'>UNan loufT
Sharon Io*»r>
\r(hur Irtchc
[- Ik-n luppi-r
R.ibirl t dolf
I'alrick \^•rl■r^
l).i>id \ initiE
Mkhail Wadlcr
Damcin Wailc
I cieh \nnc N^all
Mark Wanlhal
Kim Warner
Ktnnilh Wiil
Marion Wtlborn
\ndri» U(-rth
lonias \S harinn
Jiihn W illums
kiA -f
IiilHrl Williain
lara \\ iUon
Susan Will
( harli-N Wolfe
Peter Wone
MichelK- Witki.fT
Michael Canuck
I auric /.ab«ln«
L,
juniors
319
f
Vincent Andrews
Paris, France
Liz Arky
Canterbury, England
Scott Barnard
London, England
Kenneth Bigg
Manchester, England
Edel Blanks
London, England
Tamara Bloch
Paris, France
Alice Brittin
Madrid, Spain
Gail Brownfeld
London, England
David Burt
Manchester, England
Trey Cochran
Sussex, England
Susan Cohen
Sussex, England
Gerard Creedon
London, England
Priestley Cummings
Madrid, Spain
Henrietta Currier
Aberdeen, Scotland
Anthony Daniel
Sussex, England
Damon Dimauro
Paris, France
Judith Dodd
Fife, Scotland
Rachel Epstein
York, England
Carlos Esteve
Newcastle, England
Jane Foy
Newcastle, England
Tony Franco
Madrid, Spain
Thomas Frank
Aberdeen, Scotland
Mary Ellen Gerone
Newcastle, England
Debra Goldberg
Reading, England
Philip Greenberg
Reading, England
Klainc licrrinK
P.inv, I r.incc
ShenI Israel
London. England
\Mlllani Jurdan
Kcni. England
Bridget Klein
Paris. France
Daiid Lawson
London. England
Barbara Markle>
Madrid. Spain
Maria Martinez
Madrid. Spain
Michael Nlasur
I ondon. England
MariUn Mcd>ed
Paris, franco
Lauri Meizler
Madrid. Spain
Alon McCormick
London, England
Kalhr>n Mislrclla
London. 1-ngl.ind
Damaris Moore
St Andrews. Scotland
Bradle> Peterson
Oxford. England
Rodger Pielei
London. England
Aida Ri<era
P.iris. I'rancc
Mallhcn RufTing
Noiiingh.ini. England
Linda Schulti
London. England
Karen Sogar
Pans. Lrancc
Ellen Sha\man
Reading. England
Robert Sihey
Pans. Lrancc
Rick SUdke>
Ncwc.isilc. l-ngland
Susannah Thomas
P,..r>. I -.,■■,..■
Mark Walson
NLidnd, Sp.iir
Sanford \\ctnbcrg
London. England
I
emots
David Aboud
ElPaso, TX
Al-Sharif Abdulrahman
David Abrahamson
Dayton. OH
Mazin Abughazalah
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Robin Aibel
Briarcliff, NY
Mary Aicklen
New Orleans, LA
Ala Al-Sharif
Barbara Akins
New Orleans, LA
Marie Alamo
Bayamon, PR
Stuart John Alphaugh
New Orleans, LA
Eloisa Alvarez
Miami, FL
Robert Amend
Ocean Springs, iJS
Genell Anderson
Charleston, SC
Jeffrey Anderson
Doylestown, PA
Katherine Anderson
Ft. Worth, TX
Phyllis Andrews
New Orleans, LA
Dirk Anbevine
Keith Ansley
New Orelans, LA
Enrique Arias
Madrid
Shirley Arnold
New Orleans, LA
f'
l!
Xndrea \sirons
WcM ILiriford. CT
Scoll Adier
SKromlcysbcrg, PA
I'hillip Ariz
Hc.i^lm.».(i, OH
llarrv Asmusscn
I : Pa Ml. I \
I iiu Ann Alias
I 'uisvillc. KV
h ric \ubirl
Chicago. IL
Eric .-^uker
\Va>nc. Ml
Michael Aull
\c« Orclans. L\
Ingrid Bachmann
Bradford BjfT
I dvsard Hahjrit
Mcl.inc. I. \
I lo>d Bailc>
Dunaldsonvillc, L.\
Jud> Baris
Si Louis, MO
Da>id Barondess
La^rcnccMllc. NJ
Bradford Barr
Wilmeiic. IL
Pegg> Basic
Si Charles. IL
\nlhon> Bass
Houslon. TX
Elias Bassan
Panama
Ruben Bcaii\
New Orleans. 1 \
Theresa Becker
New Orleans. L.\
Carol Bcerman
\tlanta, (i \
Oesmond Bell
\V\colT, N.I
Michael Bell
Nc« Orclans. I \
M:ir> Bendcrnagel
Nc" Oric.ins. l.\
Kric Ben/er
Nc« ^brk. NY
Krik Berg
Mi.inii I akcs. IL
John Bcrnal
Sunrise. \l
Nanc) Bt-rnslein
\VLX>dnicrc. NV
Jeanne Berlin
\c\v Orlc.ins. I \
James Berlrand
Circtna. LA
324
Caroline Biller
Balharbor, FL
David Binder
Chattanooga, TN
Jeffrey Birnbann
Hollywood, FL
Larry Blackwell
Pine Bluff, AR
Beatrice Blane
Kellie Bobbitt
Kensington, MD
Cynthia Bogin
Orlando, FL
Benjamin Bohlmann
Miami, FL
Susan Bontly
New Orleans, LA
Paul Bookman
Wayne, PA
Beth Boston
Murray, KY
Karen Botnick
Atlanta, GA
Lori Botnick
New Orleans, LA
John Bottaro
Norristown, PA
Keith Boulet
Larose, LA
Alan Bracket!
Seekonk, MA
Paul Bradley
Savannah, GA
Allison Brandt
Deridder, LA
Gwen Bright
Waco, TX
Mark Brinker
Woodmere, NY
Leon Brisbin
New Orleans, LA
Harvey Brodzki
Ft. Lauderdale. FL
Margaret Broom
Little Rock, AR
Leslie Ann Broome
South Charleston, WV
Peter Brown
Bay Head, NJ
Katherine Brucker
Webster Groves, MO
Sabrina Bunks
New Orleans, LA
Theresa Burke
Enid, OK
Paige Burns
San Antonio, TX
Charles Burris
Baton Rouge, LA
Seniors
f
Ja\ Burslein
^•lkln^ Park. PA
Linda Byron
Londonvillc. NY
Hugh C afTerv
Bridge Cily. LA
Derek Cagnolalli
New Orleans. L.\
Mope Caldwell
Vero Beach. FL
TrOY Campione
Lafavcuc. LA
^abrinu (, amcron
San Anlonio. TX
Jane Cantin
Jill ( urmell
GlcnciK. IL
James Carnley
Canlonnicni. (I
Diana C'atalano
Cynthia ( aubarrraux
M.inNur.i
Mike C enlury
Normal. IL
I is.t ( h.inibirl.iin
I c.inul Ciro\c, fL
I ric Chanko
\ ^v 'lork. NY
H.irbara C hal/
llighl.ind P.>rk. II
Richard Cheadle
Nc« 'lork. N'S
Connie Chen
Thibodaux. L.-\
Stnior> J)*.0
David Chin
E. Norwich, NY
Lorenzo Chen
Lenner, LA
Richard Chin
Metairie, LA
Wah Kou Chin
New Orleans, LA
Joseph Chow
New Orleans, LA
Jade Chow
New Orleans, LA
Marlt ChudacofT
Glencoe, IL
Wendy Chukerman
Glencoe. IL
Elizabeth Churchill
Northfield, IL
Michael Cleary
Milton, MA
326
Seniors
Alex C'obo Call
Colombia
Karen Cofield
Mclean. V'A
Andrew Cohen
Scarsdaic. NY
Br>an( Cohen
New Orkans. LA
Richard Cohen
Ambler. PA
Caki Collal
Birmingham. AL
Charles Collins
New Orleans. LA
Chris Comfort
Los Alias. CA
William Conchewski
Philadelphia, PA
James Conklin
Lauderdale. MS
Ketin Connell
New Orleans. L.A
Datid Co^s^ance
Marrero. LA
Barbara Cordne;
Carlisle. P\
Quinlard CourlneN
Korl Worth, T\
\Iicia ( ou^ins
New Orleans. LA
N!ar> Louise Coulourie
Jo\eelin Coutillon
\e» Orleans. L.\
\lar\ C reck
( alherine Crews
New Orleans, I \
Joseph Cunningham
Mctairie. LA
Senior;
. 327
Amy Currin
Sarasota, FL
Rick Cutchin
Cheraw, SC
Margarita Currans
Miami FL
David Curtis
New Orleans. LA
Kathleen Dahill
New Haven, CT
Brian Daley
Rumson, NJ
Juli^ Dalia
Harahan, LA
Terry D'Angelo
Gulfport, MS
Carey Dalton
Orlando, FL
Andrew Daniels
Yvette Dapremont
New Orleans, LA
Kenneth Davidow
Bethesda, MD
Donna Davis
Eustis, FL
Floyd Davison
Theodore, AL
Susan Decker
Rockville, MD
Monica A. DalaPaz
El Paso, TX
Peter Demb
Scarsdale, NY
Sarah Derr
Memphis, TN
Mary Dietrich
Chicago, IL
Donald Dietze
Metairie, LA
Jose Dela Fuent
Mark Donnachie
Dallas, TX
Kevin Donahoe
Metairie, LA
Michael Donald
Covington, LA
Michael Doran
Metairie, LA
Ann Dramer
Tampa, FL
Fran Dubrow
Dallas, TX
Pimolrat Dulyanant
Bangkok
Carolyn Earl
New Orleans, LA
Anthony Edwards
New Orleans, LA
328
Seniors
Richard F.hrel
W ilmlngion. DE
F'riscilla Kll»
Ncvs Orlcan>i. LA
\udrey Elrod
I incolnwood. II.
Leslie F'ilingcr
Atlanta, GA
Priscilla Ellis
New Orleans. LA
David Englcs
Little Rock. AR
Ellen Epstein
Miami. FL
Ramon Escriba
Guayanabo. PR
Trina Espinola
Tampa. FL
F.rika E.squitel
Gretna. LA
Mlison E\b>
llunl.sville. AL
Jane Kaia
Ellen Kirbcr
Philadelphia. PA
Jill Earbcr
Highland Park. IL
Cray ten Far);ason
Baton Rouge. L.\
Jill Farker
Jack Fanner
Chicago. IL
Joseph Farrell
Irvingion. N^
Seniors
329
Mark Feldman
Highland Park. IL
Ke\in Felman
Bille Mead. NJ
Stephen Felton
-Atlanta. GA
Edgar Fields
Jacksonville. FL
V. Filippo
Jeffrey Fine
St. Louis. MO
Margaret Fink
Brooklyn. N'^'
Joseph Fischer
Manhattan. KS
Alison Fishman
Santa .Monica. CA
Paul Fitch
Houma. L.A
George Fletcher
Mobile. AL
Evan Fogelman
New Orleans, L.A
John P. Foley
Scarsdale, NY
Laurie Foley
St. Petersburg. FL
Kwaku Fordjour
330
Seniors
I^c Foriana
1 ■• cl.ind. I I
Mi:ir\n Ko\
Mounlainsidc. NJ
Thomas Frank
Jamaica Plain. MA
Nolan Franz
New Orleans, LA
Kllzabclh P'raser
Shrcvcpon. LA
Bruce Frazier
Conroc, TX
John Fredricks
New Orleans. L.'\
Mona Frcidin
Potomac. MD
Lisa Friedman
Laurence. N>'
Michael Friedmann
Kansas Cits. MO
Wavne Frei
Ft. Lauderdale. FL
Sherri Fuqua
.Slidcll. LA
Richard Furr
Norfolk. \ \
Nalalie Caganidc
Baltimore. MD
Bruce Candle
Fairlawn. NJ
Jennifer Candy
Corpus Chrisli. T\
Angus Carfield
Princeton. \\A
Br>an Car)-
Anaheim Hill. CA
Barbara Call!
White Plains, NY
John Cchlback
Elkhart. IL
Ceorge Ceishauser
Alloona. PA
Car) (Jerber
P,;!ni Beach. FL
su/annc (Berber
li.irdcn Cits. N'l'
Michael (Icrbcrich
Corpus Chrisii. T\
Jennifer Ciddcns
Ncs* Orlcan.s. L.\
Uihurah (iinshurc
l\;;s'.nirgh, P\
Charles (nraud
Melainc. 1 \
Ke>in Clanc)
Nc« ^ork. N>-
Craig (Jlick
Houston. T\
Stc»cn Clorsk)
Plantation, FL
Senior/- OO
1
Lynn Goldblum
Stamford, CT
Steven Goldin
Gulfport, MS
Amy Goldsmith
Northbrook, IL
Boris Gonzalez
Vero Beach, FL
Cheryl Goodfriend
Nicholas Goodly
Lake Charles, LA
Michaelo Goodrich
Ft. Worth, TX
Hank Gordon
Plainfield, NJ
Doyle Gorman
Greenville, SC
Richard Gramming
Indian Harbor Beach, FL
332
Thomas Gray
San Jose, CA
Jon Grazer
■Corona Del Mar, CA
Seniors
♦7- 4^ '^
L
AIILson (ircen
MaplcttCHxl. NJ
Dai id Green
Akron. OH
Martin Grcenbla((
\VaH;rbur\. CT
Susan Greenspan
Louisville. K">'
Lace> Cre> field
James Grill
Christie GrizafTl
River Forcsl. IL
Howard Grodv
Wc.M Hartford. CT
Cina Guastclla
Pen Richc>. ft
Rolando Guerra
Tampa. FL
Carter Guice
Mctairie. LA
Lydia Guillot
Nc\^ Orleans. LA
Jacqualine Haffncr
Sarasoia, [L
Robert Hagani
Great Neck. N^
Frederic Halperin
W'oodsburgh. N'l'
Paul Hamel
Port Orchard, \\A
Eileen Hammill
Haworih. NJ
Grelchen Harper
Overland Park. KS
John Harrington
Shawnee Mission. KS
Randolph Ha>es
\inincs. Ci.\
Brian Hechincer
Chicago. II
Carrie Heinen
Chagrin Falls. OH
Erica Hekler
High Point. NC
Mar> Helo»
Jacksonville. FL
Seniciri- OvDO
Cray Henry
San Carlos. CA
George Herd
Belle Chasse. LA
Johnell Hernandez
Danella Hero
Belle Chasse, LA
Patricia Heros
Marsha Herron
New Orleans, LA
Craig Hershkowitz
North Woodmere, NY
Kenneth Herskowitz
Miami. FL
Joan Herz
East Amherst, NY
Anne Hesson
Memphis, TN
Carolyn Higgs
Richardson. NC
Charleen Hill
Metairie, CA
Cynthia Hillman
Thibodeaux, LA
Jeannie Hinton
Metairie, LA
Michael Hirsch
White Oak, PA
Bonnie Hirschberg
Stamford, CT
Richard Hirschhaul
Knoxville, TN
Michael Hobby
New Orleans, LA
Gary Hoffman
St. Louis. MO
Kevin Hogan
Marrero, LA
Jim Holak
Hammond, LA
Anna Holley
Augusta, GA
Joe Holston
Washington, DC
Dori Barrenholtz
Jens Hookanson
Virgin Islands
Caroline Hoover
New Orleans, LA
Javier Huerto
New Orleans, LA
Patrick Hunt
. Miami Beach, FL
Calvin Huppmeyer
Michael Hurvvitz
Costa Mesa, CA
334
Seniors
J
Siiphen Ihiha
' ' I l'
I iHili l.inni
N , .1 > )ticjn>., LA
Siftcn Inglis
Nc« Virk. \V
( hri') Jammal
\sht.ibulj. OH
Kli/abcth Jayes
'irccnwich. CT
JclTrev Joe
tlark!,dal(;. MS
Hunter Johnston
McLean. VA
JefT Kahn
Beach vnwd. OH
Lllen Kaiser
Susan Kalishman
Cla\lon. MO
Bill> Kampeni
Mclairic. \ \
\anc\ Kaplan
Waukcgan. IL
Andrea Korns
Miami. FL
Bonnie Karpa>
Tampa, f I.
\Icrnl Kasher
Westl'ield. NV
(ilcnn Katz
North Woodmere. N^'
HoMard Katz
Soulh Lawerancc. N.I
Ja> Kaufman
Belhe^da. \H)
(Ihassan Ka»a>h
New OrleariN. L \
Arthur Ka>ne
( iirnelia Kean
Hedlord. N>
\lidgette Keill>
Teaneck. N.l
Mar) Fran Kcll>
New \crnon. NJ
Kick Kell>
Bruce Kenncd>
Indi.inap.'li'-. IN
IK bra Keslcr
Nanc) Kevslcr
N.irbcrth. PA
Bctt\ Ke>e*
Nc" Orleans. L\
Karen Killcen
New Orleans. L.-\
Brian Kim
Ran Polas Vcrdc. CA
Seniors JJO
336
Eunice Kim
New Orleans. LA
Greg Kinskey
Washington, PA
William Kirkikis
Shreveport, LA
Amy Kisher
William Klein
New Orleans, LA
Karen Kleinpeter
Gretna, LA
Seniors
I!
Mark Klini
\iLk-.burt;. "^IS
\ul Knighlen
Kc> West, Fl.
Karl Koch
Baliin Rouge, LA
Jennifer Kohler
Kohlcr. \\\
Barn Kolsk>
Viorristown. NJ
Mind> KornlKTE
Durham. NC
Stan Kollcman
Mclairic. LA
Alan Kramer
Dover. DE
Paul Krcgling
Slratford. CT
Sleten Krieger
Woodmcrc, NY
I. Kurjan
Neil Orleans. L.-\
Rene LaBru>ere
River Ridge. LA
Daniel Ladd
Cnslal Lake, IL
Donald Legardc
Covington. L.-\
Datid Lake
Pensacola. FL
Tri Lam
Nev\ Orleans, LA
Scott Lanham
Si. Michael's, MD
James Lanier
Columbia, MD
Jollv LaRuc
Fric I askcr
Lanham, MD
Viulrea Idwrcnec
H,;!.:-, R.'Uge, 1 A
1 on I ;i/ar
Mcriph:^, TN
Hrendn LeBlanc
I ,1|',1>CI1C. I \
Maria Lrbron
I'uerlo Rieo
Diana Leng
llunlinjiion. NV
Datid Lcmer
\shcvillc, NC
Keith Lrscale
Nci> Orleans, L,\
Richard Ixson
Millord, CT
ljrr> Ixtlck
Nmonllo, T\
Steien Lc»in
Highland Park. IL
I
-1 -> —
Seniors 33/
mmn
Amy Levine
Oceanside, NY
Andrew Levine
Potomac, MD
Michael Levitt
St. Louis, MO
Alisa Levy
Deerfield, IL
Dale Levy
Pepper Pike, OH
Susan Lewis
Charleston, WV
Randy Lippert
Sands Point, NY
Stuart Lob
Metairie, LA
Steven Loeb
New Orleans, LA
Brian Looney
Pensacola, FL
Gregg Lorberbaum
Hewlett Harbor, NY
Lance Lourie
Columbia, SC
Susan Low
Dallas, TX
R. Sandlin Lowe
New Orleans, LA
Mark Lowell
Commarck, NY
Gary Lucks
Wilmington, DE
Inez Luke
New Orleans, LA
Ghent Lummis
Houston, TX
Donn Lux
St. Louis, MO
Jenet Macdonald
New Orleans, LA
Mike Mack
Lynn Maddox
Louisville, KY
Sharon Madorsky
San Antonio, TX
John Mahoney
Beaufort, SC
Michael Mailhes
New Orleans, LA
Bradley Marcus
Atlanta, GA
Glenn Markenson
St. Louis, MO
Larry Marks
Miami, FL
Stephen Marks
Kenner, LA
Kevin Marler
Pineville, LA
338
Seniors
( ha^le^ Marsala
Mclairic. I A
Luis Marlorcll
New Orleans. LA
Roger Malhis
Baylown. T,\
Eugne Ma\
New Orleans. LA
James Mayer
Mclairic, LA
Andy Maynard
Greensboro. NC
K. S. Muzurek
West Orange. NJ
Sherman McCall
Jacksonville. FL
Michael McCarthy
New Orleans. LA
Harriet McClain
Dade Cilv. FL
Daiid McCord
Harahan. LA
Paul McDonald
Tulsa. OK
Paul McDowell
Nc« ^ork. N^'
Robert McElwec
Mclairic. LA
Nora McHale
Gailhersburg. MD
Jennie McNeill
New Orleans. L.A
Tim Mcaul
Ocean Springs. MS
Raymond Medina
Bndgcpiiri. CT
Pal Mendosa
New Orleans. LA
Spence Mehl
Wavnc. N^-
Daniel Meyer
Pompano Beach. FL
John Meyer
New Orleans. LA
Marcella Michael
Ballimore. MD
John Michel
Houston, T\
Daniel Mikulak
Mctairic. L.\
stu-llc> Miller
New Orlc.ins, 1 '
Shcryl Miller
Plantation. II
Andrew Mills
Highland Park. I
Jack Milne
Lcwisburg. PA
Diana Minardi
Northridgc. C A
Seniors OOj
Adrianne MitcheSl
New Orleans, LA
James Mitchell
Jerrye Modenbach
Jefferson. LA
Cabal Modesto
Timothy Mooney
Seniors
I.i<>a Moore
Memphis. TN
Susan Morgan
Nc« Orleans. LA
Meredith Morris
\\.illingford. PA
I'aul Morris
I, nivcrsil> Heights. OH
Michael Morse
\c» Orlc.ins. LA
Robert Moses
n.iii.is. T\
Michelle Mouch
r.inip.i. II
IVnise Muckle\
Puerto Rico
Eric Mueller
Icncho. N'l'
Kathleen Murph>
New Orleans. L.'V
Seniors.
341
Vicki Murray
Hewlett, NY
Anne Muth
Clarendon Hills, IL
Jonathan Myers
Hollywood, FL
Melissa Nachman
Jacksonville, FL
Mark Nelson
Kingston, PA
Thuan Nguyen
Wilfredo Nieves
Jayuya, PR
Ward Nixon
Chicago, IL
Suzanne Nochumson
Atlanta, GA
Jacinta Noel
New Orleans, LA
Francis Noil
Gulfporl, MS
Francis Novembre
Trenton, NJ
Joseph Nystrom
New Orleans, LA
Tom Oberie
Laytonsville, MD
Elizabeth O'Brien
St. Croix, VI
342
Seniors
i liJ
I ;iurK- OfTi-nbiTg
Ossminf, N>
(ircgor) Oli»icr
Lake Charles. LA
Su/annc Oli»er
Mciainc. LA
Kric O'Neill
Huuslon. TX
Paul Osteen
I 1 Pierce. FL
I duard O'Sullltan
Seneca Falls. NN'
Leslie 0»erman
Planlation. FL
Louis Owen
Ke\ BIscayne. FL
Angela Paolini
\c« OrlcLins. LA
Linda Parkhurst
Belhesda. NID
Eric Paul
Miami Beach. FL
(iladvs Pajsse
\cw Orleans. LA
Jiinm) Peacock
Val Praise. FL
Jill Pender
Mbniic Highland.
.1. P. Perera
\von Park. FL
Lori Perlman
Worcester. MA
Charles Peterson
Schcneclad\, N'l'
Diane Peterson
C incinnali. OH
Tim Peterson
McLiine. LA
Jill Peyton
.S Orange. NJ
Mien Pham
New Orleans. LA
Peter Phelan
1 o«M \.lllc\. NY
Kli/abeth Pierce
,Si I oiiis, MO
Danielle Pilie
Nc" Orlean.s. L^\
Chip Pills
Houston. T.X
\dele Plauche
\c\^ tlrlc.ins. L \
John Polera
Scarsdalc. N'H'
Miguel PorlcU
Miami. Fl
Stuart Posnock
Clark. \J
( arl Po»e
lluntsMllc. AL
NJ
Seiuon
343
Donald Prados
Metairie, LA
Marian Presberg
Norfolk. VA
Robert Proctor
Reno, NV
Mary Kay Provenzano
Harvey, LA
Nancy Quintero
Marcaibo
Ellen Raney
Boca Raton, FL
Alan Rapoport
Canton, MA
Jill Rapperport
Miami, FL
Douglas RatclifTe
Maywood, NY
Robert Ratelle
Dallas, TX
Andrew Rees
Lafayette, LA
Lisa Reitnauer
New Orleans, LA
Anne Ressie
Merrill Reuter
Plattsburgh, NY
Nancy Reynolds
Oklahoma City, OK
Timothy Rice
Metairie, LA
William Richardson
Brookline, MA
Bruce Richards
Greenbelt, MD
Robert Riggs
New Orleans. LA
Barbara Roome
Greenwich, CT
Martha Robertson
New Orleans, LA
Kenneth Robichaux
New Orleans, LA
Joseph C. Roman III
Chalmette, LA
Larry Ramans
Richard Ronga
Tappan, NY
John Rooney
West Newbury, MA
Ira Rosenzweig
New Orleans, LA
Stephen RosofT li
New York, NY
Neil Ross
Skokie, IL
Julia Rosser
Cedar Rapids, lA
344
Seniors
r-4
N;irK> kuiilatid
\c'A (Jrlcjas. l.A
I. auric Rozamkv
H-,hc,d.!, \\\) '
DuMd Rubin
' • - ■,,l(Jc;, NV
I ll.ri Rubin
I '. Pierce. II
Mcun Rubin
Saicllilc Beach. FL
Jnhn Ruskin
Nc.v Orleans, LA
William Sabo
Planlation. FL
Kalisle Saloom
Lafayctlc. LA
Vngelicia Sal>ador
New Orleans. LA
John Sahaggio
New Orleans. L.-\
Robtrl Sanders
\ilanta, GA
James Sander
Atlanta. G.-\
Morris Sandler
Windham Center. CT
Daiid Sanzo
Mcridcn. CT
Marc Sarnott
Kce^c^ ilic. N'*
lame* Scaico
Hirminiiham. .\L
(.refiorv Scanfe
t.ordon Schall>
McMinc. I \
Slocn Schcnkcr
I incolnwixxi. IL
Scolt Schff
Ro^Un. W
William Schifino
Tampa. FL
Seniorf 345
I
Keith Schiller
Syosset, NY
Peter Schloss
Roanoke. VA
Bonnie Schmid
Santa Ana. CA
Douglas Schoninger
iManhasset. N'^'
Cynthia Schreiber
Lafayette Hill. PA
Cindee Schreiber
Brunswick. GA
Catherine Schroder
Metairie. LA
Barbara Schumann
Blue Island. IL
Keith Schwaner
.Vietairie, LA
Bill Schwennesen
Venice. FL
Michael Scott
New Orleans. LA
Russell Sears
Lima, Peru
.\lva See
New Canaan. CT
Jon Seibert
.Somenille. NJ
Cynthia Senter
New Orleans. LA
Marcello Serra
Metairie. LA
Michael Sesan
New Orleans. LA
Robert Sethre
St. Paul, MN
Su Seto
Mark Shadowens
Fort Worth, TX
Adrian Share
Wilbraham, MA
Sarah Sharp
New Orleans, L.A
Taryn Shelton
Betliesda, MD
Steven Sibel
Baltimore, MD
.\lan Siegel
Miami, FL
Carol Siegel
Great Neck. N>'
Michael Silber
Encino. CA
Joel Silberman
Atlantic Beach. NY
Ken Silverstein
Charleston. WV
Al Simons
Pensacola, FL
346
Seniors
J
I
Julie Sincofl
Si. Louis. MO
Nancy SinRcr
Miami. Tl.
Cary Sircus
\ \li.imi Beach, FL
Kchtriia Siufd
Sli-phanii- Sk>lar
SlKikcr llcigliu. Oil
l)(inald SkcfTington
I'rincclon. NJ
t lisa Slater
Miiimi. FL
I'llir Sloss
IKcrln;ld. IL
( hrislian Smallcy
Nlw Orleans. LA
Kllon Smith
Montgomery. AL
Norma Smith
Mat.iiric, I \
.iamcs Smith
\\L■^lbuno, \1 \
Janet Smith
No« Orleans, LA
Jeanne Smith
New Orleans. LA
Robert Smith
New Orleans. LA
Suzanne Smith
Columbia. MO
Troy Smith
New Orleans. LA
Melanie Smyihe
New Orleans. I \
lnd> Snyder
SiUer Sprinc. MD
Raphael Spindola
New Orleans. L.\
Michael Spratley
Gullrvrt. MS
Geoffrey Squilicro
Toledo.'oil
Marc Starer
Johnstown. N'l
Timothy Slater
Briiv'-els. Belgium
Nanc> Straus
|i.Miiarc>l. NJ
( harlie Sleek
New Orleans. I V
Kathryn Steeneck
I ^eriircen. CO
James Stefanic
lorreon. Ci\ihuil
Mison Steicr
Kew garden. NY
C al»in Sicin
Metairie. LA
Seniors
347
igPHQ
Frank Sterneck
St. Louis, MO
Martha Stwarrt
Randolph, NJ
Kathleen Stone
Daphne, AL
Edward Strobal
Decatur, IL
Lyle Stone
Birmingham, AL
Paul Sullivan
Montgomery, AL
Jami Summergill
Monroe, LA
Gregory Sunkel
Winnetka, IL
Laurie Sussman
Meadowbrook, PA
Scott Sylvester
Alexandria, VA
Mathew Tagett
Grosse Isle, MI
Georgia Talbot
Hammond, LA
Larry Tapiin
Fred Taylor
Falls Church, VA
Kevin Taylor
New Orleans, LA
348
Seniors
|!
I'alricia Ia>lor
ll.irlan. KY
(■usiato Ta«are<>
S.inlo IJomingo
Jc)> Thaler
C hi-rie I homas
Hil.iM. MS
Alton Thompson
Grclna. LA
lulii- I hurbiT
Richard Townley
Nc» Orleans. LA
L>nn Traband
Tulsa, OK
Trac> Trupplman
New Orleans, L.-\
Lily L'gaz
Miami, FL
drcgors I pliin
\!L-\.indri.!, I \
Juan L rrea
Dallas, T.\
rrac\ L'r>
Highland' Park, IL
Kent L'tsey
New Orleans. LA
\allnda \aldez
Santa Domingo
Donna Lee \anCott
Ucslon. NL\
Dean \anditer
Forrest Cii\. AR
Lisa \aughn
Dublin. OH
Daiid Mgh
Marsville. TN
Louise \inueza
\alle> Forge. PA
Daniil \ lilt
I dwjrd \Nachlf
r.icific Palisades. C.\
Lrudy Waguespock
Nc« Orleans. LA
Wade ^^l!k
\c« Orleans. LA
Su;annf Wallber
Joseph Wis
( iahanna, OH
Lisa Walrom
Slanilord. CT
Eiiubclh Watts
Nashville. TN
Michael Wcaicr
\.« Orlc.'.n^. 1 \
John Wcinmann
Nc« Orleans. L \
Seniors
349
M^m
150
Andy Weiss
Woodemere, NY
Bryan Weiss
Potomac, MD
William Welch
Peabody, MA
Martin Well
Fayetteville, NY
Deborah Wells
New Orleans, LA
Milo Werthheimer
Rosenberg, TX
Nancy Wertheimer
Sarasota, FL
Carl Westerhold
Artesia, MS
Evan Wetzler
Seaford, NY
Elizabeth Whalen
Windham Center, CT
Gary Wheeler
Hollywood, FL
David Whiddon
Austin, TX
Walter Whitehurst
Birmingham, AL
Marty Wiarda
Wayne, NJ
Elizabeth Williams
New Orleans, LA
Kevin Williams
Baton Rouge, LA
Ford Willoghby
New Orleans, LA
Elizabeth Wilson
Danvers, MA
Thomas Wilson
Anne Wolfe
Davenport, lA
Laura Wolff
Shawnee Mission, KS
Steven Wolis
N. Miami Beach, FL
Ronald Wonder
Louisville, KY
Gordon Wood
Orlando, FL
Timothy Sright
Woodcliff Lake, NJ
Alan Yacoubian
Bethesda, MD
Majid Yamin
New Orleans, LA
Steven Yates
Sante Fe, NM
Alan Young
Monica Zakrozewski
Mobile, AL
Seniors
lK'>na y.araooia
Ponce. Pucno Rico
1 cian 7.areni
Nc» Orlcjns. LA
IXinald Zeri»it2
Maiiland. FL
Jan ZrutscM
Mctjiric. LA
1 eigh Z»en
L
Scnici- \J\D 1.
sdusfe
Timothy Aboh
Benue State
Peter Adubato
Essex Fells, NJ
Jose Alvarez
Rio Piedras. PR
Barry Ashe
Metairie. LA
Katherine Bailey
Johnson City, TN
Walter Becker
New Orleans, LA
Lee Bressler
New Orleans, LA
Steven M. Brown
Malibu, CA
Dimetry Cossich
Buas, LA
Randy Dalia
Harahan, LA
Rhett DeBuys
New Orleans, LA
Robert Decker
New Orleans, LA
Ghassan El-Solh
New Orleans, LA
Rene Favo
Ronald Gee
Metairie, LA
Dene Golditian
Skokie, IL
Andrew Hague
Miami, FL
Sharon Hess
Pensacola, FL
Katherine Hoffman
New Orleans, LA
Robert Hughes
Metairie, LA
J
Irene Kell>
New Vernon. NJ
Bob Kottler
Shaker Heights. OH
Maurice I^garde
New Orleans. I, A
Van l.e>>
Richard l>man
Chapel Hi'll. NC
( ilcsli- Matthews
New Orleans, L.\
.lames Maasour
Cireeniilie. MS
.Scott Mexic
New Orleans. LA
(jlad>s Portela
Miami. F"l.
Allen Po»ell
New Orleans, LA
Fmil\ R. Richard
\lex Ruiz
Metaine. L.A
Kli/abcth .S/>murski
New Orleans. L.\
\hdul Ijsan
Jud> Wallers
New Orleans. 1 \
Kimbtfrle) Wash
BiloM. MS
Jorge Wong-Chen
Panama
Bagels @ggs Shampoo cold cereal tuna fish taco mix Cho^^ Mein candy
Ice cream soups imported beer feminine needs pancake mix frozen
food cakes cookies deoderant frozen vegtables soft drinks cheeses
dips milk pretzels soap steak sauce Tobasco hamburger meat
detergents hair conditioner bleach po^^dered drink mix crackers
Pop Tarts donuts bread canned meat bagels eggs shampoo cold cereal
tuna fish taco mix Cho'w mein candy ice cream soups imported beer
feminine needg. <^^-^'^<^^ *>«s^ e^^^^^^^^^^j^^t, ^^ ^^^g^g deoderant
frozen vegt/^^^ tf%tf% .^flH^^ ^N. soap steak
sauce Tohj
pcwderetl
Bagels eg
ice cream
food cake^
dips milk
detergents
bruff
stuff
vier bleach
lined meat
ein candy
lix frozen
^iks cheeses
i^urger meat
hair conditioner bleach po^vdered drink mix crackers
Pop Tarts donuts bread canned meat bagels eggs shampoo cold cereal
tuna fish taco mix Cho^v mein candy ice cream soups imported beer
feminine needs pancake mix frozen food cakes cookies deoderant
frozen vegtables soft drinks cheeses dips milk pretezels soap steak
sauce Tobasco hamburger meat detergents hair conditioner bleach
po^vdered drink mix crackers Pop Tarts donuts bread canned meat
Division of Student Services
^
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. 1
I
—^ — i -^ X — ■-
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Helping to make Tulane a
better place to live...
DEPI OF RESIDENTIAL LIFE
OD-± Aivtrlising
Good Luck to
Seniors *82
from a friend
BEST WISHES
FROM
TIN LIZZIE'S
7130 Freret Street
861-2442
Aiivtrli$iii
.v.- 353
Tulane
C.A.C.T.U.S. RECYCLING DAY
(^nm
ttiGH LfFC BfiEfl
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
OOti Advertising
Congratulations
Class of '32
Professional Food Management
Serving the finest student around
BRUFF THE RATHSKELLER U.C. CAFETERIA
The Green Wave Club is pleased to be pan
of the 1982 Jambalaya.and congratulates the
staff for an excellent production.
The Green Wave Club has been an impor-
tant part of the Athletic Department since
1970. The sole purpose of this organization is
to help underwrite the costs of grants-in-aid
for all student athletes at Tulane.
Contributions from alumni, students, and
friends have recorded a steady growth: from
$-■^5,000 the first vear to more than S'OO.OOO
in 1981.
Continued growth is imperati\e to stay
abreast of annual intlation. I'he cost of a
grant-in-aid for the 1980-81 academic year
was S9,400. An increase of 5 9f to I'^'c is
anticipated for 1982-83.
Should you have an interest in helping the
Green \\'a\e Club in their efforts, please
request complete information by writing to:
The Green Wave Club
Monk Simons Athletic Center
Tulane I niversity.
New Orleans, LA 70118
Be a part of building a future for luiane
Siudem Athletes.
Advcrttiint
357
kw^
lane alumni
association
tulane alumni
association
tulane alumni
association
The Tulane Alumni Association is the link
between alumni and Tulane. It is a channel for
communication and a clearing house thatallows
the University and its alumni to be a service to
each other. Some of the programs sponsored by
the Association appear on the next page. Other
services include: The Tulanian, a quarterly news
magazine mailedfreeof charge to a II alumni, and
alumni ID cards for the use of campus facilities.
For more information, please contact:
Office of Alumni Affairs
6319 Willow Street
New Orleans, LA 701 18
(504) 865-5901
tulane alumni
association
Robert H. Young (A '51)
of Dallas, Texas, 1981-82
President of the Alumni Association
Outstanding Alumni 1 981 (left to right): Angela Gregory (AR lb, N '40), Lester Reed (A&S '43), Harry J. Blumenthai(B
'39), Pierre E. Holloway (E 49), Ruth A. Falcon (G 71 ), John Allen Dixon (L '47), Wallace H. Clark (M '47), Lanier A.
Simmons (N '59), Jonathan Roberts (PH '68, 71 ), Werner W. Boehm (SW '41 ), Myldred Masson Costa (UC '34), and
Harry McCall, Jr. (L '39).
358
Advertising
J
On the Bayou
5. 1981 D 7:30p.m. D Open to public
University D No admission diarge
Adverlising
359
ce\ Marccau srf'::^:^Z
wm The Uptown /^^ |
Aistars (j rahaiTi
Altered /^^ ^
States Chapman
Steve Heickett *
^' The Uptights
TGIF's ?h"c\'id The Dregs
JoanArmatrading '^^^Zr.
Gil Scott-Heronw j • i |
czesiaw Miiosz insatiaoie
College Bowl '82
Stripes Arthur Toots and the Miivtals
r-ii . u ( * Ordinary People Pre-Game Parties
Oktoberlest ^ ■ ^ V? A' i^
Jeremy rSh J fUTlGS OOllCl Thurber
You're a Good Man Charlie Brown
When you remember the .1981-82 school year,
remember these events from
OOU Advertising
Professor Streeter shares the parents' en-
thusiasm of ihe recent college graduates.
Senior:
s 361
irn
Senior Week
')'Oa: Graduation Jraditior
1
Y
I
J ,,'M*"
•r
f
f
•.•-ir
.^M
Graduation
1
An
H[onoraries
ts and Sciences
Bachelor of Arts
Ma/in H. Abu-Cih.i/alah
Bruce B. Ficken
Gregi; Lobcrbaum
William R. Acomh
Juan R. F. Matla
luinec D l.ouric
Scoti J. Adicr
Joseph O. Fischer
John A Maicn/a
J. Sluarl Alpaugh
Bruce 1. Flammey
Christopher V Maick
Jon C. Ambcrson
Evan M. Fogelman
Bradley S. Marcus
Jeffrey C. Anderson
John P. Foley
Bruce J. Margolin
Jerald N. Andry. Jr.
William A. Fox III
Glen R. Markcnson
Kenneth S. Ardoyno
Michael D. Friedman
Lawrence H Marks
Frederick C. Aycrs. Jr.
Angus L. Garfield
Luis J Marlorcll
Daud A Barondess
John R. Gehlbach II
.Michael A McCarthy
Bradford S. Barr
Jeffrey 1. Ginsberg
Paul H McDonald
Harry A. Bass
Craig's. Glick
Paul H. McDowell
Elias A. Hassan
Steven L. Goldin
William A. McGinn II
Richard G Bates. Jr.
Boris Ci. l.obo
Shawn M. McKinncy
1 honias R. Beard
Sidney J. Goodreaux Jr.
Timothy G. Mcaul
Richard Bciner
Michael S. Goodrich
Rasmond Medina
Eric J. Ben/er
Otis Doyle Gorman Jr.
Keith W. MeiscI
Steve Berkowit?
Keith AG. Rodrigue?
Michael R. Mendel
Christian M. Bernegger
Paul D. Graller
John G. Michel
David M. Bernstein
Richard P. Gramming
Jack L. Milne
James J. Bertrand
John M. Gra/er
Paul C. Morris
Richard Birkc
Robert C. Grien
Eric P. Mueller
Jeffrey U. Birnbaum
Ardcn R. Grover Jr.
Charles F Mulligan
Stephen A. Black
Rolando G. Gucrra Jr.
Richard G. Mscrs
Benjamin D. Bohlmann
Carter K.D. Guice Jr.
Norman C Nelson Jr.
Carl S. Bonham
Elliot W. Gumaer 111
Anthony M. Newman
Keith J. Boulct
Robert M. Hagani
Frederick W. Nixon
Rcber M. Boult
Frederic T. Halperin
Christopher G. Olson
Alan G. Bracken
Brian M. Hechinger
Eric F. Q-Neill
Mark R. Brinker
Michael J. Heffenan
Francis M. Dc Carrera
Christian 1 . Brown
Philip A. Heineman
Louis F. Owen III
Brian A. Buckingham
Richard S. Hirschhaut
Matthew C. Paltcson Jr
Robert S. Buhrcr
Gary R. Hoffman
Aithur Pavoni III
James W. Burks IV
Edward H. Holthousc
.^fdre R. Perron
James H. Cad/ow*
Patrick M. Hunt
Steven N. Pcskind
John P. Caffrcy
Karl A. Ingard
Kevin T Phaycr
James W. Carnley, Jr.
James H. Jackson
Peter M Phelan
Thomas W. Cashel, Jr.
Robert D. Jarrett
Joe W Pitts III
Richard K. Chanon
Norman H. Johnston
Stuart E. Posnock
Mark R. Chudacoff
Jelfrev M. Kahn
Robert L. Pratt
Michael K. Cleary
Dale R. Karrh
Robert G Procior Jr
Andrew W. Cohen
Glenn L. Kat/
Richard T Radcliffe Jr
Richard E. Cohen
Irislam R. Kidder
James V. Regan
Quintard P. Courtney III
Brian G. Kim
Bruce J Richards
Andrew R. Davis
Ralph M. Kinder
Werner A Ficfling
Floyd E. Davison
Paul A. Kircher
Aniceto J Roche III
l.ancc B. Davlin
Marc A Kline
Francis X P Roche II
Laurence F. Du Buys IV
Mark B. Kline
Richard D Ronga
John G. Denegrc
.Man T. Kramer
Ira J Rosen/wcig
Robert A Diab 11
Steven Kricgcr
Stephen M Rosoff II
Selden R. Dickinson
James A. Lanier
Michael H Rowe
Michael B. Donald
Eric J. Laskcr
John M Rowland
Lloyd E. Drumm
Christopher F. Lawrence
David M Rubin
John E. Duplantier
Lon D. l.a/ar
Curtis S Rudbart
Frank D. Durham
Thomas C Lee Jr
William M Sabo
Bruce C. Edelman
Dav.d Ci. I.erner
James .-V Sanders
Anthony N. Edwards
Neil S. Lcrncr
Crai; W Saunders
Richard B. Ehrel
Larry A. I.cvick
James R Scjico
Glenn A. Eisenberg
Steven G. Levin
Scoll A Scher
Thomas C. W. Ellis IV
Andrew S. Lcvinc
William J. Schifino II
Crayion A. Fargasor.. Jr.
Dale R. Levy
Peter A Schloss
Dcvin S. Felman
William 1. Lichtcnslcin
Wiltia.n S Schmid
John D. Fern
Randy S. Lippcrl
David R Scncidcr
William A. Schwennesen
Robert T. Sethre
Samuel H. Sharpe
Steven M. Sikich
Charles M. Silverman
Kenneth F. Silverstein
Samuel R.T. Singer
Peter C. Sisson
Donald J. Skeffmgton Jr.
Pcler B. Sloss
James M. Smith
Timothy M. Stater
Charles' H. Steck
Gary J. Stein
Manfred Sternberg Jr.
Frank M. Sterneck
Paul D. Sullivan
Scott C. Sulli\an
Gregory A. Sunkel
Scott M. SyUester
Gustavo T. Kelner
John R. Taylor 111
James E. Townsend II
Gregory B. Upton
Michael D. Van Petten
Reginald L. Vicks
Walter J. Voros
Thomas B. Wahlder
Jeffrey K. Walker
James M. Weinberg
Kenneth L. Weisman
William M. Welch
Gary A. Wheeler
Walter R. Whitehurst IV
Scott T. Whittaker
Timothy J. Wilkinson
Brian C. Wille
Kevin W. Williams
George T.B. Williamson
Ford A. Willoughby Jr.
Dennison J. Wolfe
Ste\en E. Wolis
Ronald L. Wonder
Alan J. Yacoubian
Anthony R. Zucker
I
1
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Martin H. Bailkey
Carlos J. Cambo
Zachary A. Casey
Edward F. Dattel
Mark C. Douglas
William B. Fedoroff
Robin A. Gagneau.x
George W. Geishauser
Arthur A. Kaye
Ignatz G. Kiefer Jr.
Robert M. Levy
Michael L. Martin
Patrick A. McDavid
Bruce L. Morel
Robert D. Mrlik
Lawrence G. Pugh 111
Pedro Rodrique?
Gregory R. Rusovich
Marc N. Siegel
Mack A. Sigman
Robert J. Stephenson IV
Lyle P. Sweeney
Daniel H. Vliet IV
Thomas W. Wilson Jr.
Bachelor of Science
Jose M. Abadin
David D. Abrahamson
Colin M. Adendorff
Sean B. Appleyard
Philip A. Artz
Eric J. Aubert
Lloyd E. Bailey
Charles R. Baker
David A. Barondess
Bruce M. Bathurst
Paul R. Beatty
Erik E. Berg
Charles A. Bishof
Paul K. Bookman
Paul S. Bradley
Patrick A. Brett
Harvey L. Brodzki
Steven M. Brown
Jay M. Burstein
John P. Buziak
Laurence c. Carmichael
Michael N. Century
Eric H. Chanko
David R. Chin
Har\ey P. Cole III
Richard C. Cutchin
Gerald A. Cvitanovich
Brian J. Daley
Donald D. Dietze Jr.
Sinloriano J. Echeverria
Daniel M. Epstein
Irving E. Escalante
Crayton A. Fargason Jr.
Jeffrey S. Fine
Robert M. Finlaw
Michael A. Fountain
Kelly M. Fracassa
David J. Freeland
Wayne T. Frei
Elliot S. Freid
Edward C. Furner
Bruce Gandle
Bryan D. Gary
Donald J. Gaudet Jr.
Steven L. Glorsky
Mark S. Goodman
John C. Greeven
Randolph J. Hayes Jr.
Philip \. Heineman
Craig M. Hershkowitz
Kenneth Hershkowitz
Michael S. Hirsch
Philip M. Horwitz
John B.R. Huck
Michael B. Hurwitz
Steven R. Inglis
Michael T. Jaklitsch
Jeffrey Joe
Bruce W. Kennedy
William S. Kirkikis
Howard L. Kirshenberg
William B. Klein
Rene A. LaBruyere II
Donald E. Lagarde III
Tri Thanh Lam
Richard J. Leson Jr.
Brian T. Looney
R. Sandlin Lowe 111
Mark J. Lowell
Gary A. Lucks
Richard J. Lusk
Andrew T. Maynard
Mario Menda
Stephen E. Metzinger
Joseph J. Mike Jr.
Jason Harry Miller
James C. Mills 111
Terrell H. Mixon
Joseph J. Mora
L. Mark Nelson
Wilfredo A. Nieves
Francis G. Noll
Francis J. Novembre
Joseph W. Nystrom
Thomas L. Oberle
Thomas J. O'Conner III
Angel M. Paredes
Jorge P. Perera
Charles C. Peterson
Tim G. Peterson
Burton C. Plaster
Jeffrey M. Pollock
Douglas F. Ratcliffe
Jean-Michel J. Rault
Andrew P. Rees
Merrill W. Reuter
William S. Richardson
John J. Rooney
Mark K. Rosenbloom
Neil E. Ross
John J. Salvaggio
Morris A. Sandler
Gregory F. Scarfo
Gordon R. Schally
Keith E. Schiller '
Michael A. Schmidt
John W. Scruggs Jr.
Earnest E. Seller III
Mark T. Seitz
Alan R. Siegel
Joel A. Silberman
Richard B. Silverman
Gregory R. Swift
Matthew G. Tagett
Fred C. Taylor
Juan L. Jlrrea
Kent B. Utsey
Michael T. Weaver
Andrew D. Weiss
Bryan M. Weiss
Evan S. Wetzler
Timothy L. Wright
(Degree con/erred December 31. 1981)
Loren/o H. Chen
Joseph B. Farrcll
Daniel .1. Kimlcl IV
Lawrence I. Kopf
Charles A Young
Jamn C. Mayer, Jr.
Stephen C. Meyer
limoihy J Mooney
David W Mullin
Scan C. O'Donovan
Robert T Qualtroechi
Curtis S. Rudbarl
Matthew R. Scoggin
School of Engineering
Bachelor of Science in Engineering
Charles 1.. Collins
Da\id P. Constance
Dennis C. Dupont
Edgar M. Fields III
Kavin R. Hogan
David F. Lake
Maria E. I.ebron
John O. Lovretich
Devin D. Marlcr
Michael S. Morse
Biomedical Engineering
Rafael S. Martinez Jr.
Roger S. Mathis
Eugene F. May
David C. Mayer
Sandra M. McCann
Richard W. McDanicI
Patrick F. Molligan
Carl M. Powe III
Mark P. Pre/iosi
Robert S Riggs
John I. Ruck
Burgess M. Schul/
Michael K. Siblcr
iv!;."- I. Starcr
Dana D. Vandivcr
Thomas H. Wcidman
Carl E. Westcrhold
Willbm K. Young Jr.
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Huyen T. Nguyen Thuan T. Nguyen
Richard I. Scopp
Harry E. Asmussen
Kathryn S. Bloomndd
Theresa M. Burke
Troy J Campione
Keith D. Gaupp
David H. Green
Jacqueline Haffncr
John T. Harrington
Chemical Engineering
Kathryn M. Inouye
Inez M. Luke
Sandra M. McCann
Richard S. Mcdeiros
Mirna P. Mendo/a
Dcnisc R. Muckley
Steven M. Murphy
Roy H. Mustelier
(Degree conferred December 31. 1981)
Joseph C. Roman HI
Steven N. Schcnker
.Mfred M Simons
Diana C.S. Audler
Liliana C. Uga/
Eligio Va7c|ue;
John V Wal7 Jr.
Steven M Yaics
Gary E. Dorfman
Calvin LeBeouf
Ala Eddin A. Al-Sharif
Robert S. Bagnetto
Jeffrey S. Bentley
Camille M Carrerc
Ale.x A. Cobo
Carolyn H. Earl
Bruce P. Frazlcr
Jeffry Garon
Wendy E. Willis
Civil Engineering
Gerald J. Glllcn III
Gina M. Guastclla
John C. Hadden
Hugh R. Hemslrecl
Charlene M Hill
Calvin C. Hoppmeyer Jr.
William R I.eCorgnc Jr.
Robert L. Lombardo Jr.
Mark I Woodward
Roger R .Machul
Daniel Vikulak III
.Adrian B. Shart
.Man H. Simon
Norma J Smith
Kevin Taylor
Dawn A. I'rbanck
Edmond W Walk
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Joseph L. Chow
Derek J. Commander
John S. Knowlton
Richard K. Macjutay
Eli/abelh A Salvalorc
Luis O. Sierra
Computer Science
Barbara G. Kellogg
Electrical Engineering
Tracy H. Baker
Brian S. Bourgeois
Gwen E. Bright
William S. Conchewski
Timothy A. Daniels
Ruben Esparza
Cray J. Henry
Randall F. Lewis
John L. Mitchell
Arno T. Naeckel Jr.
Jimmy L. Peacock
Michael O. Pearce
Hien Q. Pham
Kenneth G. Robichaux
Robert L. Youngblood
Matthew W. Schirmer
John S. Shirley
Michael A. Spratley
Abdelkader Tlemsani
Richard W. Townley
Judeth G. Trapani
Joseph E. Was Jr.
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Juan E. Diaz-Garcia
Richard T. Purr Jr.
James M. Andrews
Eric G. Vyntkier
Charles C. ArtdSfson
Luis A. Aranguren
Samuel T. Barber
Andrew B. Barclay
Matthew L. Brown
Peter S. Brown
Donald J. Butler
Hugh F. Caffery
James N. Chafe
Tso-Ming Chou
Engineering
John M. Farmer
Mechanical Engineering
Dirk Wright
Russell A. Kutzman
Paul K. Kregling
Williams. Lob
Charles E. Marsala
Robert L. Perez
Margaret I.B. Riefling
Douglas J. Schoninger
Jordan R. Sensibar
Gary M. Sircus
J. Alan Speaser
.James M. Stefanic
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Ronald Eickhoff David A. Wenner
Bachelor of Science in Computer Science
Diana Catalano
Christopher C. Clabaugh
Yvette M. Dapremont
Michael V. Doran
Pimolrat Dulyanant
John T. Egnatchik
Mark B. Shadowens
Andrea R. Lawrence
John F. Meyer III
Deborah V. Pidgeon
Danielle M. Pilie
Calvin J. Roussell
Robert D. Sanders Jr.
Deyna Zaragoza
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Benjamin V. Cody 111
Vincent W. DiFilippo
Thuha Thi Nguyen
Eric S. Olaes
Pablo F.S. Santos
Rabah Seffal
Vincent F. Cottone,
B.S., M.B.A.
Robert P. Currier. B.S.
Richard E. Deubert, B.S.
Lyndol L. Dew, B.S.
Foster L. Wade, B.S.
Master of Engineering
Ghassan A. El-Solh, B.S.C.E.
Paul C. Fredericks, B.S.
Ronald E. LeTard, B.S.Ch.E.
Fadel A. Obed, B.S. .
Anil K. Pahwa, B.A., B.E.
Judith A. Walters, B.S.
Emile F. Schilling IM,
B.S.C.E.
Amarnath Sinha, B.Sc, M.Sc.
Henry R. Varner Jr., B.S.C.E.
Franklin D.V. Jimenez, P.E.
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Mansour S. Almalik, B.S.
Walter O. Baumy Jr., B.S.E.
Douglas A. Caro, B.S.E.E.
Abraham G. Cassis, B.S.
Michael A. Cenac, B.S.E.
Haythem S. Chaleby, B.S.M.E.
Randall P. Cohagan, B.E/C.E.
Abel A. Collins, B.A.
Khalid K.. Durrani, B.S.
Lisa L. Eldredge, B.S.E.
Robert W. Yokum,
Christopher L. Gann, B.S.M.E.
Michael Flozell Harness,
B.S.M.E.
Raymond W. Kong, B.S.
Robert M. Martin Jr., B.S
Lowell R. Martinson, B.S.
Nicholas M. Musmeci, B.S.E.
Albert P. Olivier, B.S.E.
Timothy G.. Osborne, B.S.
Glenn J. Richoux, B.S.E.
B.S.E.
Jorge A. Romero, B.S.E
Amir Shahkarami. B.S.E.
Boris G.S. Diaz, B.S.M.E.
Ram T.S. Sohal, B.Sc.
Shashikant M. Suthar,
B.S.C.E.
Majid Tabatabai, B.S.E.
Tun Tun Win, B.E.
Chien-Hsiung Yeh,
B.S., M.S.
The Sophie H. Newcomb
Memorial College
Bachelor of Arts
Robin A. Aihcl
Muri, F. Aicklcn
Barbara 1.. Akins
Monica 1.. Allen
Siaccy R. Alperl
Eloisa V. Ah are?
.lane A. Anderson
Phyllis A. D. Andrews
Andrea Arons
l.ouAnn Alias
.lanel S Barelli
Susan M. Bales
Sara B. Bauman
Margaret M. Belt/
Mary A. Bendernagel
Nancy Bernstein
Valerie A. BestholT
Julie A. Biggar
Caroline E. Billcr
Catherine F Black
Beatrice N. Blake
Cynthia A. Begin
Beth M. Boston
Karen A. Botnick
Fori N. Bo' lick
Allison Brandt
Fva N. Branisa
Carrie IcDelle Bratton
Margaret R. Broom
Michele J. Browning
Katherine A. Bruckner
linda Byron
Hope Caldwell
Dalrenc L. Cantrclle
Jill N. Carmell
Lucille R. Carson
Lisa Chamberlain
Barbara A. Chat/
Wendy A. Chuckerman
Elizabeth Churchill
Barbara J. Cofley
Mauri A. Cohen
Sharon A. Cohen
Catherine A. Collat
Amy C. Conner
Carol L. Conway
Barbara C. Romo
Anne C. Crews
Carey J. Dalton
Kelly L. Daniel
Donna J. Davis
Patricia M.
de los Heros
Susan E. Decker
Mary Dietrich
Ann C Draper
Fran B. Duhrow
Audrey M EIrod
Fllen B. Epstein
Susannah S, E\ans
Jane A. Faia
Jill L. Farbcr
Nancy Feldman
Lourdes M. Fcrnande/
Jacqueline D. Finger
Margaret J. Kink
Alison D Fishman
Amelie SV. Fleming
Elisabeth C. J. Fox
Sharyn D. Fox
Elizabeth Fraser
Lisa F. Friedman
Natalie L. Gaganid/e
Alyssa C. Gaines
Ann F. Gairing
Su/anne K. Gerber
Debra L. Ginsberg
Deborah B. Ciinsbftrg
Pamela J. Glindmeyci
Lynn S. Goldblum
Arpy L. Goldsmith
Allison J. Green
Stacey I Greenfield
Susan E. Greenspan
CIclic C. Gurley
Eileen R. Hammill
Gretchen M. Harper
Melinda J. Har\ey
Carrie S. Heinen
Erica N. Hekler
Mary M. Helow
Danclla L. Hero
Joanne M. Hershkowii/
Joan A. Her/
Carolyn K. Higgs
Bonnie S. Hirschberg
Patricia A. James
Elizabeth A. Jaycs
La Rue H. Jolly
Dianne E. Joos
Susan G. Kalishman
Bonnie S. Kaplan
Nancy 1. Kaplan
Andrea S. Karns
Ellen S. Keiser
Bridgette A. KelK
Mary F. Kelly
Susan K. Kemp
Nancy L. Kessler
Elizabeth A. Kcyes
Karen A. Keys
Mary T. Kill
Karen E. Kitlcen.
Eunice Kim
Mary L. Kinman
Jennifer A 1 . Kohlcr
Mindy R. Kornbcrg
Marisella V. Lacayo
Annabellc C.
Lcnderink
Marci L. Levin
Amy D. Levine
Karen J I incoln
Lynn D. Maddox
Judith E. Mannis
Sarah H. McCool
Nora A. McHalc
Jennie L McNeill
Moira 1. McNully
KareivS Millet
Shelley D, Miller
Diana L. Minardi
Lisa K Moore
Sus.in M Morgan
Meredith Morrit
Shelley R Moskowilz
Kathleen A. Murphy
Vicki I.. Murray
Melissa A. Nachman
Mar>- E. Nice
Suzanne Nochumson
Elizabeth A O'Brien
Laura P. O'Conncr
Leslie C. Overman
Angela J Paolini
Diana G Palalano
Julie M. Pearlman
Jill F Pender
Sophia L J. Perr>
Jill L Peyton
Elizabeth O Pierce
Maria del Pilar Pigna
Adcle K Plauche
Lucy C. Powers
Kathleen C. Pratt
Mary C. Price
Mary K. Provenzano
Jill E Rapperport
Jenny E Reisner
Susan A. Richcy
Martha R. E. Robertson
Barbara S. Roome
Julia E. Rosscr
Ellen Rubin
Willa E Ruckcr
Elizabeth J. Salzer
Bonnie J. Schmid
Carol E. Schoenbaum
Cindce L. Schreibcr
Cynthia N Schreibcr
Deborah L. Scroggins
Jaryn V. Shelton
Carol N. Sicgel
Juliet G Sincolf
Nancy Singer
Jiunne B Skalet
Stephanie M. Skylar
Elisa J Slater
Suzanne E Smith
Jods N Snyder
Alison J. Sieier
Martha I Stewart
Nancy C Strauss
Jami A SummerNgill
Lauri N Sussman
Patricia A. Taylor
Pen S. Toland
Margaret M. Trice
Stacy E lyre
Tracy l^ry
Donna L Van Coti
Lisa J \aughan
Louise M Vinueza
Karin Cecile Vitre
Katherine E Von Wahldc
Gail D Walker
Susan I Warshaucr
Liisa Waslrom
Elizabeth J Watts
Ellyn Weinberger
Deborah C \\ ells
Deborah C. Wendel
Elizabeth A. Whalen
Anne E. Bakkila
Elizabeth S. Bierrie
Ann Blaeliwood
Katherine B. Bliss
Elizabeth R. P. Bowen
Carolyn M. Bradley
Jane E. Cantin
Johnell S. Fernandez
Maria Correa
Tracie L. Aycox
Mary E. Ballestas
Judith A. Baris
Aline P. Bass
Kellie A. H. Bobbitt
Susan Bontly
Bari L. Boshes
Leslie A. Broome
Deborah A. Bynum
Sabrina A. Cameron
Laura K, Carr
Connie M. Chen
Alicia T. Cousins
Margarita C. Curras
Kathleen M. Dahill
Monica A. DeLaPaz
Sarah L. Derr
Roberta Dircks
Priscilla M. Ellis
,
Elizabeth V. Williams
Laura M. Wolff
Elizabeth A, Wilson
Cheryl L. Youtsey
Jan L. Zeutschel Ann M
Zimmerman
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Mary K. Finocchiaro
Mary F. Sailors
Melissa L. Fox
Nora C. Scott
Cheryl B. Goodfriend
Diana Seder
Therese J. Guderian
Dawn Michelle Spears
Debra M. Kesler
Patricia K. Wafer
Linda J. Kingsbury
Sandra M. Walsh
Carey M. Mann
Suzanne C. Walther
Echo L. Olander
Erica S. Wesfeldt
Marie M. Wolfe
Bachelor of Science
Trian E. Espinola
Mona M. Freidin
Elizabeth M. Graves
Pamela E. Hava
Anne M. Hesson
Cynthia S. Hillman
Caroline M. Hoover
Bonnie H. Karpay
Cornelia T. Kean
Nancy L. Konter
Marilyn F. Kraus
Virginia C. Leece
Michele L. Levan
Alisa R. Levy
Sheryl R. Miller
Jerrye A. Modenbach
Anne E. Muth
Katherine 1. Ochsner
Joan Optican
Antigoni Pappas
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Mary L. Couturie
Lydia M. Guillot
Monica L. Allen
Jeanne M. Bertin
Jennifer K. Giddens
Susanna L. Seto
Kaylin S. Henderson
Karen S. Kovack
Cindy Siegel
Linda A. Parkhursl
Cathleen C. Piazza
Marian S. Presberg
Nancy J. Quntero
Vicki R. Rabin
Elizabeth D. Radaj
Ellen M. Raney
Lisa J. Reitnaucr
Helena S. Riesel
Barbara F. Schumann
Janet M. Smith
Laura S. Sparks
Eileen O. Stanley
Margaret M. Stewart
Cherie A. Thomas
Veronica C. Trau
Valinda M. Valdez
Suzanne B. Wikberg
Elizabeth B. Wynne
Elizabeth A. Zolfoghary
Susan B. Lewis
Elizabeth C. Martin
Bachelor of Fine Arts
Kathleen A. Trapolin
Marsha H. Herron
Elinor F. Leach
Marjorie M. Leake
Leigh V. Zarem
Melissa D. J. Long
Laurie Offenberg
Martha R. E. Robertson
School of Architecture
Bachelor of Architecture
Abdulrahman F. Al-Sharif
Genell V. Anderson
Eric V. Aukee
Martin H. Bailkey
Nancy Barrett
Lance M. Blake
Laura L. Burley
Richard E. Cheadle
Karl H. Clifford
John H. Conkerton III
David C. W. Curtis
Andon P. George
Brian J. Gille
Peter F. Green
Christopher A. Gunn
Daniel L. Hagstette
Brad A. Hastings
Frederick W. Hoag HI
David E. Hunt
Kathy A. Kornman
Lloyd E. La Prairie
Bruce Stephen Levin
Steven B. Loeb
John A. Maienza
William L. Mason Jr.
Frederick J. Mayer IV
Robert J. McElwee
Clark M. MIeynek
Suzanne C. Oliver
John M. Parnon
Carol G. Penninger
Richard k. Phillips
John B. Pittman 111
Jose M. Portela
Cari M. Reeves
Jorge B. Rodriguez Reyes
Joan M. Rudolph
Neal A. Schofel
Russell A. Sears III
Barry R. Smith
Maria A. S. Kodesh
Evelyn B. Stanicek
Joyce M. Sugg
Ramon A. Sweeney
Marcie L. Weisberg
Charles N. White II
Kevin E. Wittnam
Monica L. Zakrzewski
School of Business
Bachelor of Science in Management
DiiMvi .1. Ahoiid
Rofccrl M.Ackcrman
Marc A. Alexander
Sarah K. Anderson
Enrique B. Anas
Michael 1.. Ault
Dori F. Barenholw
Carol I . Bcerman
l)a\id 1. Binder
Sean A. H. Bow en
Joseph 1.. Brown Jr.
Cvlhia A. Caubarreaux
Bryant B. Cohen
Christopher J. Comfort
James T. Conklin
Kevin P. Conncll
Daniel M. Daddario
Mark L. Davis
Mark R Donachie
David B. Engel
nien B. Farber
Alan Fcrnade/
Stephen P. Ferraro Jr.
Steven D. Frank
Thomas M. Frank
Kenneth S. Gad
Ceorge M. Gaither II
Jennifer L. dandy
James E. Gansman
Charles A. Giraud 111
James H. Golden
Linda S. Godstein
Ingrid C. Bachman
William A. Baker III
George L. Blackwell ill
Mary A. Creekmorc
Martin Cirecnblall II
Christie R. (iri/affi
Howard B. Grody
Rosemary K. Hirsch
Jens P Hookanson
Stephen F. Hytha
Kate W. Jewell
Kathryn V. Jurney
Meryll.. Kasher
Howard I.. Kat/
Bruce W. Kirst
Barry F. Kolsky
Jonathan Kurjan
Daniel A. l.add
Scott A. I.anham
Paul S. I.eCorgne
Michael B. Levitt
Robert A. Librach
Susan Low
Ghent G. Lummis
Donn S. Lux
John M. Mahoney
Harriet A. McClain
David A. McCord
Marguerite C. Meyer
Marcella Micahel
Kyle A. Migdal
Robert E. Moses
Jonathan S. Myers
Peter J. Nikonovich
Melissa O'Meara
William J.
(Degree conferred December 31. 1981)
Andrew \V. Daniels
Ellie S. Fox
Rodrigo A. G. Castro
Kazuko Goto
CShaughncsw) III
Paul A Olccn
Eric M Paul
l.ori-Beth I'crlman
Daniel G Perron
John C Polcra
Kenneth J Rciif
Nancy E. Reynold*
Margaret L, Ricss
Laurie L. Ro7an.sky
Lucy Rus«cll
David 7 . San?o
Simon S Satcr
Mclba M Schwcgmann
Michael J. Scsan
Steven J. Sibel
Rufus B Smith
Ivy Lynn Sokol
Geoffrey L. Squilicro
Kathleen Stone
Julia E. Thurncr
Mark S. Tobias
Andre Turner
John G. Weinmann Jr
Bcatri/ M Weiss
Martin Wells
Nancy L. Wertheimer
Bndget E. Whelan
Anne L. Wolfe
Gordon F Wood
John B. Young III
Donald Zcrivit/
Michael A. Kahn
Penny A. Mathernc
Robert S. Montague
Philip R. Stirc
Master of Business Administration
Andrew D. Abroms. B.A.
Steven G. Ackerman, B.A.
Renato A. Delcore. B.S.
Jose M. Amaya, B.S.M.
Brian S. Andrews. B.S.
Mark P. Andrews. B.A.
Jeff B. Armstrong B.F.A.
Nessim E. Bassan. B.S.E.
Eric P. Beaudru. ME.
Janet Born. B.A.
Arlina M. Bragan. B.A.
Lee M. Bressler. B.A.
Donald M. Caire, B.S.M.
Wayne S. Clark, B.S.M.
Dennis P. Connors, B.S.
Mario A. Cordero, B.S.
Llewellyn H.
Cox 111, B.A., MLS.
Andrew L. Crowson, B.A.
Randall J. Dalia. B. Arch.
Linda M. Dodenhofl. A.B.
Stephen G. Duncan. B.S.
George A. Fioto. Jr , A.B
Eleanor D Foster. B A
Barbara A. Frausto, B.A..
Mary G. Freeman, B.A.
MA.
Spencer J. Gagnet, B.S.
Michael V. Galclla. B.B.A
Luis L. Gon/alc/, B.S.
John T. Greening, B.S.M.
Brian R. Greenstein, B.A
Erie A. Guenther. B.A.
Margaret Gulotta. B.B.A.
Karl C. Han. B A
Robert O
Hitchcock, Jr , B A.
Lawrence H. Hoskins. B.S.
Jave K. Ingerman. B A
Anne L. Jaffe. A.B
Susan L. Jannetta. B.A.
Marc C. Jonas. B.S.
Patrick M. Kchoe. B A
Edour.id J. Kock 111. B A
Kathleen A. I.aitala, B.A
Deborah S. Lamensdorf. B.A.
Curtis H. Leathers, B A
Ewe C Lee. B S
Jay A. l.ivey. B A . M I I R
Gary I . Lono, B.A
Richard D M Lyman. B.S.
.^nthonv Macaluso IV, B.S.
James W. Marks. B.S.. MS
Susan L McCoy. B A
Kelley G Mclcndon, B S B A.
.lonalhan M. Medwin, B S.
Stanton L. Middlclon ill. B Arch
Timothy X. Moore. B A
Brian K. Murray. B.S
Marcia F Niedcr. B A , MA
Margarc N Null. B.B A
Scan P O'Donncil, B S
Miguel A Orti/. CPA
Jose R P Dencke. BS
Robin F Pcppc. B S
James M Peterson ill. B.S
Garv S Pinsly. BS M
Linda P Pinsly. BS M
Eugene F Poilinguc. Jr .
B A. JO.
Richard Pollack. A AS. B S
Gary F Presiopino. B.A
Andrew Rados/c*ski. B.S.
Carmen R Strong. O D.
Jane Kelleher Riess. B A
Andre J Robert. B A
Eli/abcth I. Rosen. B B A
Amy J Rosenberg. BS
Alciandro Sada Madcr- B *i
kJHilHHIII^H^HHiii^HH^Hi^^^^^^HIHHIiii^^HIHI
^^^^^^^^^ — ^^^^^^^^
Jeffrey D. Schmidt. B.A.
Patricia L. Stern. B.A.
Carlos A. V. Villanueva,
Eric M. Sclnneider, B.B.A.
Eugene B. Stouse. B.S. B.A.
Actuario
Mark R. Schumaclier. B.S.
Laurie W. Strong. B.A.. M.S.W.
George Y. Vogt. B.S.M.E.
Bartholomeus A.R.T. Siermann,
Kathy A. Summers, B.A.
Stuart Waugh. B.A.
Engineer
Carol S. Swindle. B.A.
Frederick C. Westphal. B.S.
James K. Smith, B.S.
Joseph W. Thoni. B.A.
Catherine A. Woynarowski. B.A.
Cicero Sneed. Jr.. B.B.A.
Thomas N. Tone, B.A.
Richard N. Yelen. B.S.
Michael Stearns. B.A.
Mark K. Upperco, B.S.M.
Debra L. Young. B.S.
Melanie Stern, B.A.
Marjories F. Utsey. B.A., M.A.
Alan M. Zimmcr. B.B.A.
(Degree conferred December 31
198 h
Jeffrey M. Anderson. B.F.A.
Shigefumi Kagawa. B.A.
Marie Delsa O'Neill. B.B.A.
Rodrigo Azcarate. B.S.
Arioto Manrique, Jr., B.S.
Fran S. Randall. B.S.
Debabrata Ghosh. Bachelor of Tecl
nology Geoffrey T. Marshall. B.S.
Angela D. Redmond. B.A.. M.L.S.
Peter R. Gillespie, B.A.
Steven C. McNeal. B.S.
Sandra R. Rosenthal. B.A.
Samuel F. Coble. B.S.
John G. Moore. B.A.
Paul F. Sacher. B.S.
Da%id D. Holton, B.A.. M.S.
Constantino O. Zarate. B.A.
Jon E^Strobel. B.A.
Schoo
1 of Public
Health
and T
ropical M
e
dicine
Master of Public H
ea
th
Hamza M. Abdulmajid
Joan F. Hilton. B.S.
Mark J. Rabito. B.S.
Al-Abbasi. B.S.
James M. Hogan. B.A.
Andrew Radoszewski. B.S.
Mustafa Abdullah Al-Akeel.
Eric P. Holsapple,
Amy J. Rosenberg. B.S.
B.S.
B.A., M.S.W.
Lesley O. A. Sabajo. M.D.
Mohammad Abdul W. Al-Firikh.
Stephen R. Hough. B.A.
Diana E. Schaffter, B.Sc.
B.S.N.
Anne L. Jaffe, A.B.
Timothy D. Schaffter. B.Comm.
Rashed H. Al-Rashoud.
Mohammad A. Joesoef. M.D.
Jeanne E. Slagel. B.S.N.
M.B.B.Ch.
Richard J. Kisner.
Jeffrey W. Smith, B.S.. M.S.
Richard D. Ball, B.S.
B.S., A.S.
Whitney R. Snowman. B.A.
Susan F. Becker. B.A.
Evelyn Landry. B.A.
Julius D. Spears Jr.. B.A.
Mary E. Boes. B.S.. M.S.W.
Louis P. E. Laugeri,
Darlene G. Stafford. B.S.N.
Freida N. Brooks. B.S.N.
B.A.. M.B.A.
Melanie Stern. B.A.
Mozhdeh B. Brus. B.S.
Robert A. Leston. B.A.
Judith M. Swanson. B.A.
Dennis P. Connors. B.S.
Joan M. Libby. B.S.
Prayong Temchavala,
Seth J. Corey, B.A.
Lenora F. Long,
B.Sc. M.D.
Frank E. DimmocK. B.S.
B.S.W.. M.S.W.
Marjorie C. Voss,
Thomas E. Dunn. B.A.
Claire C. Magowan. B.S.
A.A.S. B.S.N.
James R. Foster. B..A.
Gillian M. Moalosi. B.A.
Amv S. Wasserman,
Pamela D. Frankel. B.A.
Reuven E. Nalhonson. B.S.
B.A.. B.S.. M.S.W.
Russell O. Gee. Jr.. B.A.
Jill S. Novak. B.S.
James G. Wetrich, B.S.
William D. Guy. MB.. Ch.B.
Dumisile N.xumalo. B.A.
Mary G. Whelan. B.A.. M.S.W.
Annemarie C. Heideck,
Barbara H. Ortique, B.S.
Matthew Yee. B.A.
B.A.. M.S.W.
Cvril E. Pervilhac, B.A.
Hung-Chuen Yeung. M.D. Hani S. Zaki, B.A
(Degree conferred December 31
198h
Bahgat R. Abdalla, M.D.
Sverre Evensen, B.S.
B.S.N.
Tajaldien H. Abo. B.A.
Vera J. Haddadin. B.S.
Raghda K. Shukri, B.Sc.
Pornisee .Amornwichet, B.Sc.
Karen J. Harrington. B.A.
Mustapha A. Smith,
1-Jen Chen B.M.
Jin-Chan Hsu. B.D.
B.Sc. M.Sc. D.D.S.
Mohamed .Abdel R.
Anand R. Joshi, B,A.
Chukwuemeka Ude. B.S., M.S.
El Musbah, MB.BS.
Ibrahim E. Mahmoud. M.D.
Maria LC. Vinzon.
Mohamed El Mahdi B.
George G. Ngatiri. MB.Ch.B.
B.S.. M.D.
Elnour. MB.BS.
Christine J. Schmitthenner.
Luann E.. Wenthold. B.S.
Kathleen M. Zelman, B.A.
(Degree conferred August 31,
1981)
George D. .Armstrong. B.S.
Christopher J. Austin.
Janet Banda, B.Sc. MB.CHB.
Cheryl C. Atkinson, B.S.
B.S.. M.S.
Laura B. Boyd, B.S.N.
^ ^ 1
■Hlii^HiHHiiH^HIJJ^H^HHHiJ^^H^HiiHilHlHHl
Martins N. Chukwutnj.
B S.. P MO
Mary I*. Dignan.
B.A . M SAV.
I.usamba N. Dida>sa. M.D
MohamcJ Bahaa F-ldin A R.
Elmongy. MB Ch B.
Chinycrc II. Emolc. B.Sc.
Kerns R, Kox II.
I.inda M Zaicskl. BS
MS. I'h 1)
Jean .1 Ircrc. M D.
Auhrcy V Harrison,
BS . n V.M
.lams E. Jacobi. B.S.
Eric I' Jensen. B.S.
Boonson)! Kaigalc.
B Se.. M Eng.
Somporn Ku/lcrchariua. M.D.
Ahmad Z I. Zamil. B.S.
Mary A Ijub. B S
Xavicr C. Marcl.
Commercial Eng.. MBA
Bcbra S Morion. B S N
Marg.ircl C \oyc», B A
William I O'Neal.
H A . BS\
Nancy R PricM. B S
Jill f SpilLin.- M s
" ■- ■■ '-Jillll. D..->.
Master of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
Dwight C. Babcock. M.D.
Kernande B Blemur. M.D.
Roberl F. Bousquct.
B.A.. M.D.
Reginald C.P. Boulos.
M.D.
Vance J. Diei/.
A B . M D.
Robert P. (irilfin.
B.A.. M.D.
Jeffrey K. Grifnihs.
A.B
Harrs I Hcrscv.
A.B.. M.D.
Margrcthc Junckcr. M I).
George [.. Leonard.
B S . M D
Bharathi Pandit. B.S. . MB BS
(Degree conferred December 31. 198/ J
Marcella C. Scalcini. M.D. Victor M. Chilombo. M.D.
Sylvic B. Guermonpre/. M.D.
Pinan Dangharn. M D
(Degree conferred August 31. 1981)
Sameh R. Abul-Ezz.
M.B.Ch.B.
Mohammad A. Ibrahim.
B.S.. M.D.
l.eendcrt ME. Jo/ef/oon. M D
John J Naponick.B A . M D . CM
Master of Science in Public Health
Abdulrahman M. Al-Tassan. B.A. Richard K. Bartholomew. FIMLS
Mohammed Ali Al/ahrani. B.S. Sandra A. Branham. B.S.
Roberta J. Smith. B.S.
Jon B Brus. B S
Glen H Midtbo. A.A . B.A
(Degree conferred December 31. 1981)
Mohammed A. Al-Sekait. B.Sc.
James A. Brewer. B.A.
Jacquelyn R. Clarkson. B.S.
James N. Davis, B.A., M.Ed.
Madi T.A Jaghabir. M 8 B S
Riddhi G Vaidva. B Sc
(Degree conferred August 31, 1981)
Nasser A. Ajaji. B.S. Saad H. Al-Buslany. B.S. | mda M Gcrhie. B S S
Said O. Moussa. B.S. James E. Wichen. B.S.
Doctor of Public Health
Franklin C. Baer.
B.A.. M.H.S.T M.
Hassan I Gha/naui.
MB BS . M P H
(Degree conferred December 31. 1981)
Stuart A. Capper.
B.S., MP H.
Louise M. McFarland.
B.S.. M.S.Hyg.
Suing Suwan. MP H
Ongarj Viputsin.
B.S.. M.D.. MP H
(Degree conferred August 31. 1981)
I eon Ci. I ighiscv.
B.S.. M P H
Charles J Monle/un,
M S W . M Sc . M.P.H
School of Law
Richard S. Ackerman, B.A.
Charles L. Adams, B.A.
James F. Adams, B.A.
Helen J. Alford, B.S.
John A. Alice, B.A.
Majorie E. AUebach,
B.A., M.A.
Jose J. A. Maldonado, B.S.
David Amoni, B.S., MS.
Martha H. Ayres, B.A.
William A. Barkan, B.A.
William A. Barnard,
B.A., M.B.A.
Patrice M. Barron, B.S.
Rachel I. Becher, A.B.
Walter F. Becker Jr., B.A.
Christina A. Belew, B.A.
Beverly Bell, B.A.
Mark P. Berstein, B.A.
Gregory P. Beron, B.F.A.
Carolyn M. Berra, A.B.
Steven K. Best, B.G.S.
Cherry J. Beysselance,
B.A., M.Ed.
Scott R. Bickford, B.A.
Raymond C. Bigelow
Bruce A, Blaylock, B.A.
Rita M. Boger, A.B.
William K. Bowers, B.S.
David B. Bradley, B.A.
Kathleen Brame, B.A.
Robert J. Bridger, B.A,
Stephen P. Bruno, B.S.
Donna A. Budenski, B.S.
Donna A. Byrne, B.A.
Daniel N. Cadra, B.A.
Nanette H. Cagney, B.A.
Thomas A. Casey Jr., B.S.
Linnie W. Causey, B.S.
Scotty E. Chabert Sr., B.A.
Matthew P. Chametzky,
B.A., M.S., M.B.A.
William T. Chapman, B.A.
Lisa R. Cheatham, B.S.
Fevronia M. Chirgos, B.A.
Susan F. Clade, B.A., M.A.
Elizabeth F. Claiborne, B.A.
Laurence D. Cohen, B.S.
Jeffrey C. Collins, B.A.
George R. Conyne, A.B.
John C. Cresham, B.S.
David A. Dalia, B.S.
Janet A. Daly, B.A.
Marilyn H. David, B.S., M.A.
Christopher N. Davies, LL.M.
David P. Daye, B.P.E., B.Ed.
Charles G. DeLeo, B.A.
Ruck P. Deminico, B.A.
Leland F. Dempsey, B.A.
James E. Diaz Jr.
Caleb H. Didriksen IH, B.S.
Philip J. Dinhofer, B.A.
Ram I. Djerassi. B.A.
Michael T. Dolan, A.B.
James S. Douglass, B.A.
David M. Dubin, A.B.
Warren S. Edelman,
A.B., M.A.
Lawrence M. Einhorn, Arch. .
Edwin A. EUinghausen III
Jo Ann Ellison, B.A.
Juris Doctor
Beth Ann Ferguson, B.A.
William T. Finn, B.S.
Anne M. H. Foley, A.B.
Maranda E. Fritz, B.A.
Connie M, Genovese, B.A.
Edward C. Gill, B.A.
George R. Gillette, B.S.
Suzanne Glade
Michael L. Glass
Peter H. Graber, B.A.
Eric D. Grayson, B.A.
Martin L. Grayson, B.A.
John H. Gregory, B.B.A.
Scott P. Greiner, B.A.
Barry H. Grodsky, B.B.A.
Margaret M. Groome,
B.A., M.S.W.
David W. Gruning, B.A., M.A.
Gary G. Guichard, B.A.
Gregory D. Guth, B.A.
John G. Hackney, A.B.
Brigid M. Hagerty, B.S.
Andrew S. Hague, B.S.
Susan L. Hamilton, B.A.
Linda S. Harang, B.S., M.S.
Holly A. Harmuth, B.A.
Ballard E. Harris, B.A.
Julia A. Heintz, A.B.
Erik S. Hildinger, A.B.
Jonathan N. Holhnger, B.A.
Mark S. Holmes, B.A.
Anne B. Holton, B.A.
Robert S. Hough, B.A.
David E. Hudgens, B.A.
John P. Hutchings. B.S.
Dorothy S. Jacobs, B.A.
Christopher D.M. Johnson, B.S.
Stephen L. Johnson Jr., B.A.
Peter S. Julian, B.A.
Lynn J. Kaplan, B.A.
John F. Keating Jr.,
A.B, M.A.
George F. Kelly HI, B.A.
Ignatz G. Kiefer Jr., B.A.
Liane C. King, B.A.
Richard V. Kohnke, B.A.
Kip Konigsberg, B.S.
Stan C. Kottemann Jr., B.S.
David J. Krebs, B.A., M.A.
Dan A. Kusnetz, B.A.
Mark D. Kuss, B.A.
Sheila M. Lambert,
A.B., M.B.A.
Frank P. LeBlanc HI, B.A.
Alison R, L.ee, A.B.
Jay R. Levine, B.S.
Julie D. Livaudais, A.B.
Bryan M. Lloyd Jr.. B.G.S.
Ira M. Long Jr., B.A.
Jeffrey M. Lust, A.B.
Charles R. Lyman, B.A.
Michael W. Manger, B.A.
Walter F. Marcus III, B.A.
William A. Marshall, B.A.
Carla M. Martin, B.A.
Olivia W. Martin, B.A.
Judy P. Martinez, B.S.
Paul A. McKenna, B.A.
William D. McKissack, B.S.
Mildred H. Meng, B.A.
Nancy J. Metcalf, B.A.
Carrington M, Miller, B.B.A.
Gary H. Miller, B.A.
John W. Miller, B.B.A.
Jeanie A. Mioton, B.A.
William J. Mize, B.A.
Kathy A.M. Morrow, A.B.
William G. Muller,
B.A., M.Ch.E.
Nancy Al Nungesser, B.A.
Charles A. Nunmaker, B.A.
Arthur E. Olmstead,
B.A., M.B.A.
Russell M. Olson, A.B.
Wendy A. Olum, B.A.
Bonnie L. O'Niell, B.A.
Wallace Al OVerton, B.A.
John F. Parker, B.A., B.S.
Connie E. Parks, B.A.
Hunt A. Parry, B.A.
Patricia J. Paxton, B.A.
Bryan S. Pedeaux,
B.A, M.A., Ph.D.
Richard M. Perles, A.B.
Pamela R. Perron, B.A.
Paul E. Pesek, B.B.A.
Cynthia K. Phillips, B.A.
Emilie D. Porterie, B.A.
Jonathon S. Pratt, B.S.
Todd A. Price, B.A.
Gary M. Pridavka, B.A.
Michael F. Rafferty, B.A.
Morey Raiskin, B.A.
Gregory F, Reggie. B.S.
Warren H.K. Reynolds, B.A.
Michael D. Rhea, B.A.
Carol T, Richards,
B.S., M.A.
Lael B. Richter, B.A.
Andrew Rinker, Jr.,
B.S, M.B.A,
Gayle P. Roberts, B.A.
Martha E.F. Rodriguez, B.A.
Joseph G. Romano, B.A.
Robert M. Rosenberg,
B.A, M.S.W.
Martha E. Ross, B.A.
Andrew N. Rothseid, B.A.
Joseph P. Rumage Jr., B.A.
James V. St. Raymond,
B.A, M.B.A.
Todd M, Saudners, B.A.
Elizabeth D. Scheer, B.A.
Anne W. Schneider, B.A.
Daniel A. Shapiro, B.S.
Marc S. Sigalow, B.A.
Peter T. Skov, A.B., M.D.
Kenneth L. Slack, B.A.
Elizabeth C. Slater, B.A.
Mary A. Sloan, B.A.
Benjamin D. Smelcer, B.A.
James K. Smith, M.B.A.
Donald E. Snyder Jr., B.S.
Patrick J. Stapleton III, B.A.
Adele L. Stern, B.A.
Joyce Y. Tan, B.A.
Richard J. Tanker, B.A.
Holly E. Taylor, B.A.
Lucie E. Thornton, B.A.
Bernard H. Ticer, B.A.
Lisa M. Tompkins, B.A.
PhilliD J. Wagner, B.S.
4 r
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]
KL-ilh J. Waldm;in. A.B John M Willis. A.B
Irene B Wo/ny. B.A
Morgan W. Walker III. B.A Andrew C. Wilson. B.A
Mark J Zanch'clli. B.S.
Wade P. Webslcr. B.S. Stephen .). WindhorM. B.A.
John G. Zingarclli. B.A.
Stacy L. White. B.A. David M. Wolf, B.A.
Rachellc R /dlkr H S
Jaymi B. Zwain. B.A.
(Degree con/erred December 31. 1981)
H. Craig Cabral. B.S.S. Paul H. Dooliltlc. B.A.
Keith S Larncr. B.S.
Carlos D dc la Vega, B.A. Kathleen O. Keldbaum. A.B.
Margaret E. Meyer. B.A.. M.S.
Alton W. Obee Jr., H.A. julia E. Taylor. B.A., MA.
Master of Laws in Ad
mirality
George R. Alvey. Jr..
Takaya Nailo. LL.B.
B.S. J.D.
Joaquin Osegucra Jr.,
Kerry J. Anzalonc.
LL.M
B.A.J. .J.D.
Peter <j. 0^t^sl^;ct.
Lawrence D. Bailey,
B.A. J.D.
B.A.. J.D.
Kitti Pintavirooj,
Sanford E. Balick.
LL.B.. M.C.L.
B.B.A.. J.D.
Isabclle B. Roux,
Jenny Barmawi,
Maitrisc en Droit
Sarjana Hukum
Mary E. Slatlcn,
Sara M. Barton.
B.A.. MBA. J.D.
B.A. J.D.
Virgilio A. Trujillo.
Freddy B. Capclla,
Law Degree
Abogado
Charles A. Vcrderame.
Yelba C. Bcrrios,
B.A. J.D.
l.icendiada en Derccho
James C. Wilbcrt,
Christian Biermann-Ratjcn,
B.A., J.D.
Juristische Staatsprufung
Li— xing Zhang
(Degree conferred December 31. 1981)
Wan-I.i Chang, LL.B. Hsin-Fa Lin. LL.B.
Jon A. Gegenheiver. J.D.
John F. Nevarcs. J.D.
Master of Laws
Omar F. Alkholy, Hiromi Hirat, LL.B.
Satit Maneerat. LL.B.
Licence en Droit Clara E. Hutt, J.D.
Valerie Naud. Master of Law
Mohamed Abdullah Al-Nafea. Francoise A. Dorb.
Gerhard Rosier. Refcrndar
Legal Studies Diploma Matrisc en Droit
Said Saleh-Mohamed Schwaigi.
Rafael A. Chiari. Prachya Kosaiyaganonth.
LL.B.
I.iccnciate in Law M.C.L.
Nakorn Silparcha, LL B
Jean-Jacques Chriqui. Rainer A. Magold.
Osami Sumida, LL.B.
D.E.A. First State Exam
Hans-Joachim tcsmcr. J D . J S.D.
(Degree conferred December 31. 1981)
Majed N.S. AL-Shammari, l^anil Jolikasthira,
1.1 B
LL.B., Sharia
Master of Comparitive Law
Sylvia E. Cancio Gon/alc/.
B.A.. J.D.
1
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>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ !<
The Graduate School
Master of Arts in Teaching
Laura J. Branlon, B.A.
Lucille T, Brinz, B.S.
Vincent F. Cuellar. B.A., M.Ed.
Gloria J. Magee, B.A.
Marjorie B. Cambon. B.A.
Kim M. McMahon, B.S.
Deanna P. Miciotto, B.A.
Patricia H. Morico. B.S.
Elizabeth B. Mumford, B.A.
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Mary P. Gouaux, B.A.
Paula G. Nowalsky, B.A.
Miriam A. fleggie. B.A.
Georgia C. Roudeze. B.A.
Deborah A. Schell. B.A.
Ronit Weingarden, B.A.
Master of Education
Barbara A. Chapman, B.A. Terry L. Glynn, B.S.
Joyce G. Eisen, B.F.A. Bernie C. Hambrice, B.S.
Jeanne D. Smith, B.S.
Francesca Monachino, B.A.
Jean E. Secor, B.A.
Master of Fine Arts
Kristen Struebing-Beazley, Darrell A. Brown,
B.A.. M.A.T. B.F.A. , M.A.
Jacqueline K. Bishop, B.A. Joan Fitzpatrick, B.F.A.
Nancy E. Wyllie. B.F.A., M.A.E.
Jan Gilbert. Assoc, B.G.S.
Keith A. Harmeyer, B.M.
Patricia A. Thompson, B.A.
Master of Science
Ramadan A. Abusen. B.S.
Hugo A. Diaz-Barreiro
-Pimentel, B.S.
Ramadan M. El-Mehdawi. B.S.
Saad F.M. Farag, B.S.
Abdullah A. Hareb, B.S.C.E.
Marcus A. Kester, B.S., B.S.
Richard E. Luedemann, B.S.
James M. Taylor, B.S.C.E.
Alison D. Cooke, B.S.
Martin G. Donofrio, B.S.
Jeanne S. Farmer, B.S.
Muhammad-Zuhair A. Gutub, B.S.
Alison G. Hartman, B.A.
Dawin 1. Herrington, B.S.
Mustafa A. Abulgasem, B.S.
Cynthia P. Gilmore, B.A.
Julia H. Ingraham, B.A.
Eva A. Sjoberg Lamothe. B.A.
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
David Hoberman, B.A., M.Ed.
Kinga J. Kovacs, B.A.
Linda Leal, B.A.
Mohamed D. Hussein Mohamed,
Cesar M. Roca y Munoz, B.A.
Robert B. Rogers,
B.A., B.S.C.E., M.S.
Thomas Struppeck, B.S.
Rafael A. Ovalles, B.S.
Oscar O. Rojas, B.S.
Bo-Chang Ru, B.S.
Lori S. Slater, B.S.
James R. Beattie Jr., B.A.
Serge Brethe, M.A.
Patricia D. Crosby, B.A.
Frances J. Ellsworth, B.A.
B.Sc.
Issac L. Yan Ng, B.S
Michael J. Spurr, B.S.
Stefan Wolfenstetter, Vordiplom
Master of Arts
Patricia D. Leaird, B.A.
John H. Linden Jr., B.A.
Deborah L. Martin, B.A.
Dennis D. Miller, B.A.
(Degree conferred December 31, 1981)
Antonio L. Garcia, B.A.
Cynthia L. Keppley, B.A.
Sanguansri Khantavichian, B.A.
Xavier C. Maret, ICN, M.P.H.
riand, B.A.
John G. McCarron, B.A.
Alfredo M. Menezes, B.A.
Patricia M. Naranjo, B.A.
Ronald A. Pen, B.A.
^ f
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^1
1 1
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H
onorary ^
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Cl(
Sties
Ph
i Beta K
appa
Barbara L. Akins
Stephen 1.. Glorsky
Joe W Pillv III
Judith A. Baris
Cheryl B. Goodfriend
Burton C Plaster
Thomas R. Beard
Elizabeth M. Graves
Lawrence G. Pugh III
Carl !^. Bonham
Craig M. Hershkowitz
Vicki R Rabin
Paul S. Bradley
Kenneth Herskowitz
Andrew P. Rcc»
Chritaltn T. Brown
Patrick M. Hunt
Mark K. Rusenhluum
John G. Brown
Paul A. Kircher
Morris A Sandler
James H. Cadzow
l.arry A. I.evick
David R Schneider
Zachary A. Casey
Stephen G. levin
Robert I. Selhre
Richard K. Chanon
Andrew S. Fevine
Alan R. Siegcl
Barbara A. Chat?
Mark J. Lowell
Joel A. Silbcrman
Mauri A. Cohen
John G. Michel
Samuel R.I. Singer
Mary L. Couturie
Joseph J. Mike Jr.
Elisa J. Slater
Richard C. Cutchin
Shervl R. Miller
Paul D. Sullivan
Monica A. DeLaPaz
James C. Mills III
Gregory B. L'pton
Daniel M. Epstein
Susan M. Morgan
Kent 8. I'tsey
Crayton A. Fargason Jr.
Norman C. Nelson Jr.
Donna Van Colt
Robert M. Finlaw
Angela J. Paolini
Deborah C. Wells
Michael D. Friedman
Charles C. Peterson
Brian C. Wille
Kevin W. Williams
Marie M. W
olfe
Tau Sigma
Delta
Eric V. Aukee
David E. Hunt
Bruce S. Lev in
John H. Conkerlon III
Kathy A. Kornman
Clark M. M ley nek
Brad A. Hastings
Lloyd E. La Prairie
Richard K. Phillips
Kc\in
E. Wittnam
Tau Beta P
•
1
Burt A. Adams
Emile P. lanni
Philip M. Rickman
Sonipoon Akomsooniorn
Kathryn M. Inouye
Jose A. Rodriguez
Harr> F. Asmussen
Micael C. Jackman
Joseph C. Roman III
Robert S. B.tgnetio
Susan M. Kron
Kevin P. Schoii
Miles B. Bingham
Gary S. Lindermmann
Burgess M. Schuiz
Brian S. Bourgeois
Eugen F. May
Michael K. Silber
Hugh F. Caflerv
David C. Mayer
Alfred M. Simons
Iroy J. Campione
KeKin P. McDaniel
Gary M. Sircus
James N. Chafe
J. Blake Moore
Norma J. Smith
Iso-Ming Chou
Hector A. Murra
Marc J. Starer
Robert S. Fgerman
Michael O. Pearcc
James M. Stelanic
tdwin P. Fricke Jr
Juan C. Pere
Eligio \azquez
Cierld J. (iianoli
Lisa T. Perez
John V Walz Jr
John C. Hadden
Robert 1 . Petez
Joseph E Was Jr
John 1. Harrington
Hien Q. Pham
Dirk Wright
Bnon P. Heaney
David .^. Price
Steven M Vales
Order of the
Coif
Marjorie I-. Allehjch
David F. Mudgens
Irj M 1 ong. Jr.
Martha H. Ayres
Dorothy S. .laeobs
Olivia W Martin
Cherry J, Beysselanee
Peter S. Julian
William J. Mize
1 awrence M. Einhorn
Ignatz G. Kieler. Ir.
Andrew Rinker. Jr.
Maranda V Frit/
David J. Krehs
Mary A Sloan
IXivid W. (iruning
Dan A Kusnetz
Hcnjamm H Ticer
Anne H Hollon
Sheila M. 1 anibcrl
Jaymi B. Zuain
^ 1
HHJIHHHII^H^^Hil^HHHHI^^HHHHIHH^HIHB
Omicron Delta Kappa
Michael Angerman
Judith A. Barris
Kwasi D. Boateng
Elizabeth A. Boh
Catherine A. Collat
Wayne T. Frei
Andrew D. Wcrlh
Susan Kalishman
Lynn D. Maddox
A. Mark Newman
Michael J. Schement
Clifton M. Smart 111
Kevin Williams
James J. Wolfson
Fonda C. Magids
Joe W. Pitts 111
Walter L. Smith
Paul D. Sullivan
Laura Weber
Kappa Delta Phi
Jose Abadin
Bryant Cohen
Frank Culicchia
Michael Dawahare
Wayne Frei
William Kirkikis
Kevin Williams
Paul McDonald
Mark Shifke
Andrew Werth
Alpha Sigma Lambda
Tuhin K. Roy
Marie Ruddermann
Barbara E. Adams
Daniel F. Lawless
Timothy G. Brewster
Ailcen H. Kennedy
Virginia Van Wart
Robert J. McNeil
Brett J. Berry
Edward J. Gleason
Wayne E. Kreider
Beta Alpha Si
Bachelor of Science in Management
Carol L. Beerman Linda S. Goldstein
Joseph L. Brown. Jr. Howard L. Kat?
Ellen B. Farber Donn S. Lux
Nancy L. Wertheimer
Bridget Eileen Whelan
Peter J. Nikonovich
Laurie L. Rozansky
John F. Weinmann. Jr.
Andrew D. Abroms
Mark P. Andrews
Janet Born
Lee M. Bressler
Donald M. Caire
Wayne S. Clark
George A. Fioto
Barbara A. Frausto
Mary G. Freeman
Spencer J. Gagnet
Master of Business Administration
carol S. Swindle
Michael V. Galella
Debabrata Ghosh
Luis L. Gonzalez
Brian R. Greenstein
Eric A. Guenther
Margaret Gulotta
Frank B. Jordan
Ewe C. Lee
Richard D. M.'Lymann
Geoffrey T. Marshall
Anthony Macaluso IV
Susan L. McCoy
Kelley G. McLendon
Brian K. Murray
Marcia F. Neider
Linda P. Pinsley
Eugene F. Pollingue, Jr.
Amy J. Rosenberg
James K. Smith
Patricia L. Stern
Beta Gamma Sigma
Carol L. Beerman
.loscph L. Brown, Jr.
Mary A. Creekmore
Bachelor of Science in Management
Ellen B. Farber
George M. Gaither 11
Linda S. Goldstein
Kathryn V. Jurney
Donn S. Lux
Peter J. Nikonovich
Lori-Beth Perlman
Bridget E. Whelan
Mark P. Andrews
Janet Born
Andrew L. Crowson
Randall J. Dalia
Stephen G. Duncan
George A. Fioto, Jr.
Barbara A. Frausto
Master of Business Administration
Spencer J. Gagnet
Susan L. Jannetta
Marc C. Jonas
Ewe C. Lee
Richard D. M. Lyman
Susan L. McCoy
Kelley G. McLendon
Marcia F. Nieder
Marie D. O'Niell
Sandra F. Rosenthal
Bartholomeus A.R.T. Siermann
Carol S. Swindle
Marjorie F. Utsey
Carlos. A. Villanueva
. ►
Bi^BiHHHHHHH^Hi^Hiii^HHHHIHHIHri
Sumrna Cum L
aude
Arts and Sciences
.lames H. C'ad/ow
Richard K. C'hanon
Michael I). Friedman
Steven 1.. Cilorsky
Kenneth llerskowit/
Brian C. Willc
Patrick M Hunt
Steven (i 1 eiin
James C-. Mill- III
Joes W. Pitts 111
Burton C. Plaster
Business
C .iroi 1 \nnc Bccrm.in
Engineering
Bruce J Richards
Da%id R Schneider
Robert 1 Sclhrc
Alan R. Sicgcl
Gregory B. Upion
Brian S. Bourgeois
Matthew 1 Brown
Newcomb
Michael O. Pcarcc
Mauri A. Cohen
Monica A. Del.aPa/
Cheryl B. Goodfriend
Elizabeth M. Graves
Sheryl R. Miller
Susan M. Morgan
Angela .1. Paolini
M
agna Cum
Laud
e
Art and Sciences
Benjamin D. Bohlmann
Carl S. Bonham
Paul S. Bradley
Christian T. Brown
Zachary A'.'Cascy
Daniel M. Epstein
Kent Bjeiin L'tsey
Dcvin S. Felman
Jeffrey S. Fine
Robert M. Finlaw
Boris G. Lobo
Paul A. Kirchcr
Andrew S. Lcvinc
Business
Mark J Lowell
Joseph J. Mike Jr.
Norman C. Nelson Jr.
.Andrew P. Rces
William A. Schwcnncscn
Samuel R.T. Singer
Joseph 1 Brcnsn. Jr.
Ellen B Farber
George M. Gailhcr II
Donn S 1 iix
Engineering
J so M. Chou
Beniamin V. Cody 111
Pimolral Dulyanant
Laurie A. Foley
John C. Hadden
Andrea R. Lawrence
Eugene F. May
David C. Mayer
Michael S Morse
Rabah Seffal
Alfred M Simons
Marc J. Slarcr
James M. Stcl'anic
John
Newcomb
Y. Wal/. Jr
Barbara 1.. Akms
Eliosa V. AKare/
Judith A. Baris
Beth M. Boston
Barbara A. Chat/
Mary I.. Outurie
Ellen B. Epstein
Deborah C Wells
Ann F Gairing
Siaccy I . Greenfield
Patricia A James
Mary F. Kelly
Susan B. Lewis
Melissa A. Nachman
Aniigoni Pappas
Marie
M. Wolfe
Vicki R Rabin
Lisa J. Rcilnaucr
Barbara F. Schumann
EhsJ J. Slater
Suzanne E. Smith
Jody N. Snyder
Donna L. Van Coll
Cum Laude
(
with
departiner
ital [
lonors)
Arts and Sciences
David A. Barondess
Frederic T. Halperin
Terrell H. Mixon
Mark R. Brinker
Philip A. Heineman
Thomas J. O'Conner III
Jay M. Burstein
Rene A. LaBruyere II
Merrill W. Reuter
Lance B. Davlin
Christopher F. Lawrence
David M. Rubin
John G. Denegre
Richard J. Leson Jr.
Timothy M. Stater
Richard B. Ehret
Timothy G. Meant
Newcomb
Jeffrey K. Walker
Katherine A. Brucker
Margarita C. Curras
Cathleen C. Piazza
Deborah A. Bynum
Beborah B. Ginsburg
Nancy J. Quintero
Lisa Chaberlain
Joan A. Herz
Lauri N. Sussman
Amy C. Connor
Karen A. Keys
Cum Lauc
ie
Stacy E. Tyre
Arts and Sciences
Jeffrey C. Anderson
Glenn L. Katz
Richard D. Ronga
Sean B. Appleyard
Ignatz G. Kiefer Jr.
Mark Keith Rosenbloom
Thomas R. Beard
Steven Krieger
Steven M. Rosoff 11
Richard Beiner
Thomas C. Lee Jr.
John J. Salvaggio
James J. Berirand
David G. Lerner
Morris A. Sandler
Eric H. Chanko
Larry A. Levick
Scott A. Scher
Mark R. Chudacoff
Randy S. Lippert
Michael A. Schmidt
Richard C. Cutchin
Gregg Lorberbaum
SamueJ H. Sharpe
Donald D. Dietze Jr.
Gary A.- llucks
Marc Neir Siegel
Mark C. Douglas
Glenn R. Markenson
Joel A. Silberman
John E. Duplantier
Raymond Medina
Peter C. Sisson
CraytjOn A. Fargason Jr.
Bruce Gandle
Steven C. Meyer
Peter B. Sloss
John G. Michel
Frank M. Sterneck
Craig S. GMck
Eric P. Mueller
Paul D. Sullivan
Mark S. Goodman
Richard G. Myers
Fred C. Taylor
Rolando G. Guerra Jr.
Anthony M. Newman
Michael D. Van Petten
Robert M. Hagani
*
Francis G. Noll
Thomas B. Wahlder
Randolph J. Hayes Jr.
Francis J. Novembre
Scott T. Whittaker
Craig M. Hershkowitz
Charles C. Peterson
Kevin W. Williams
Michael T. Jaklitsch
Lawrence G. Pugh III
Business
Alan John Yacoubian
Cynthia A. Caubarreaux
Marguerite C. Meyer
John C. Polero
Mary A. Creekmore
Peter J. Nikonovitch
John G. Weinmann, Jr.
Linda S. Goldstein
Lori B. Perlman
Engineering
Nancy L. Werlheimer
Robert S. Bagnetto
Hugh R. Hemstreet
Richard Scopp
Troy J. Campione
Kathryn M. Inouye
Mark B. Shadowens
James N. Chafe
Kevin D. Marler
Michael K. Silber
Michael V. Doran
Huyen T. Nguyen
Norma J. Smith
Johan T. Harrington
Hien Q. Pham
Eligio Vazquez
Jose
ph E. Was Jr.
Steven
Newcomb
M. Yates
Phyllis A. D. Andrews
Cynthia S. Hillman
Elizabeth D. Radaj
Susan H. Bates
Susan G. Kalishman
Ellen M. Raney
Sara B. Bauman
Andrea S. Kams
Jill E. Rapperport
Margaret M. Beltz
Susan K. Kemp
Jenny E. Reisner
Elizabeth S. Bierrie
Nancy L. Kessler
Susan A. Richey
Beatrice N. Blake
Mindy R. Kornberg
Martha R. E. Robertson
Margaret R. Broom
Marilyn F. Kraus
Julia E. Rosser
Catherine A. Collat
Marci L. Levin
Bonnie J. Schmid
Barabara C. Romo
Amy D. Levine
Cynthia N. Schreiber
Carey J. Dalton
Alisa R. Levy
Deborah L. Scroggins
Jill L. Farber
Anne E. Muth
Taryn V. Shelton
Mary K. Finocchiaro
Elizabeth A. O'Brien
Carol N. Siegel
Natalie L. Gaganidze
Joan Optican
Martha I. Stewart
Threse J. Guderian
Laurie Offenberg
Patricia A. Taylor
Lydia M. Guillot
Linda A. Parkhurst
Lisa Jo Vaughan
Melinda J. Harvey
Marian S. Presberg
Susan L. Warshauer
384
Subject Index
A
D
K
Ac.iilcmlc Ixalk-niL- 10
AC I 76
A.lniisviiiiiN JS
\1 KOIC «')
AlCI 7(.
Alph.i l-psil.in I'i 2M)
Alph.i Ipsilnn I'lii 2f.2
Alph.i Sicm.i I'hi 261
Alph.i I. Ill OiiKt;.! 26.1
Alumni luiiil 46
.Miinini Rcl.ilioii> 46
AiK-hiir & Chain Socicly 77
Aiilhiopol«i:\ Ocp.iitmcnl .'S
.\ii\lhini; (liics 60. 176
Ap.ilhs 74
\ii.hiicL'turc School .10
Anhitotlviic Scnjlc 77
Arni.nr.idini;. .loan 167
•\il l)L-p.iiimcnt -■'4
■\SH 54. 7K
\SB IriiM 7^)
ASCi; 76
A&S Senate 7S
Aihk'liL Dcparlmcnt .16
Aii.liihon Park & Zoo 196
B
B.illcl Club 7')
B.inJ 74
B.irr.ieud.is 1-16
Bascb.ill I OS
B.iskclh.ill-Mcn's 122
B.i-kcth.ill Women's I2S
Be.uix Arf. Ball IS6
Bcl.i 1 hd.i Pi 266
Bioloux Dep-iruiiL-nl 24
Bionu-Jie.il tngincLTinj; 2X
BumiccJical SocicIn ')()
Bl.ick Arts Week 214
Bl.ick r^njiinecring Sociel\ X5
Bo.ir.J ol .•\ijmlnisir.itors 21
Business Sehool 26
c
CACTI'S 70. XO
Canoe Club 1.16
Career Pl.inning & Pl.ieemenl 42
CBI) 194
Ch.ipm.in. Grah.im 170
Cheerlea.Jers KM
Chemic.il I'ngineerini;; 2X
Che mist r\ 24
Chi Omega 2S6
Choir SX. SO
Circle K SO
Civil Engineering .10
Classics nepartmcnl .14
Club Sports Council XI
College Repuhlic.ins SI
Commoijorcs XI
Competition 6
Computeri/.ilion 40
Computer Science Hepl.
Concerts 164
Cook. Robert 170
Counseling Center 42
Count nnKula 60. 177
Curriculum 4X
Curse of the Starving Clas
40
Dtiins 22
Holla K.ipp.i I psilon 267
Delt.i l.iu Delt.i 26X
Dvelopmeiit 46
Dimcola. Al I6S
Directin •S2 9.1. 20X
Dorms 226
Dottnlown 194
Drinks 202
[-.arth Science .10
Economics ncp.irtmeni 26
Electrical 1 ngineering 2X
Engineering School 2S
Engineering Senate X2
Enuinccring Week 214
English .12
Enterl.iinmenl S
lencing 1.16
Eialkowska. .lanina 17.1
Finance Board S2
Fine Arts Series 172
Fiscal Responsibility 12
Football 96
Fraternity Houses 250
Fraternity Rush 2.1X
Fraternity Sports 252
French Dep.irlment .IS
French Qu.irtcr 200
Freshm.in 292
Ci.illagher 164
Geologv Dep.irtmcnl .10
Goll 1.14
GraiJu.itc Siinlcnts .152
Gradu.ition 16. .161
Greek Week 244
Grocery 2.1(1
Gvmn.isiics 1.19
H
175
II. units 196
Headlines 146
Mistorv Dcpirtment .12
Hockey 1.17
Holder Dance Company 17.1
Homecoming 182
Hullabaloo X2
IEEE S.I
IFC 25S
Ins Outs 1X4
lntcrnation.il Week 214
Intramur.il Ch.impions 144
lntr.imur.il Ollice .16
Invohement 4
Italian Department .IX
.lamb.il.iya X.I
.in/? & Hcril ago FoMival 204
Jorseys 2XK
Jesus Christ Superstar 176
.luniors .112
.IV A .IX. .120
Kappa Alpha 271
Kappj Alpha Thcia 272
Kappa Kappa Gamma 274
Kappa Sigma 273
Karate Club 137
L
Lacrosse 1 16
LASA 83
Laundry 230
Law School 26
Leadership 2
Lectures 170
Legal Aid 84
Library 40
Literary Magazine 84
Little Sisters 246
M
M.ir.ithon 216
Marceau. Marcel 172
Mardi Gras IXX
Math Department 26
Mechanical Engineering 28
Media 56
Media Board X4
Modern Dance Club 52. 85
MROTCS9
Mullcr. Robert 171
Music Department 34
N
Newcomb Senate 85
Nineteen Eights Four 61. 174
NROTC89
o
Omiiipolont Providers 66
One Canal Place 194
Orienteering 139
Panhellenic 259
Parachute 141
Paslorius. Jaeo 168
Phi Gamma Delta 264
Phi Kappa Sigma 2S4
Philosophv 34
Phi Mu 285
Physical Education .16
Physical Plant 44
Phvsics 24
Pi Beta Phi 276
Pi Kappa Alpha 277
Pledging 242
Po-Boys 224
Political Science 32
Pretenders 165
Psychology 24
Public Policv 32
R
Registrar s Ollice 42
Research 24
Resident .Advisors 66
.Alumnae Hall 88
Bullcr 86
Irbv laic 86
JL 87
Johnston 86
Monroe 87
Pjllrrson 88
Phcip* 87
Sharp 88
Warren 88
Zemmutay 88
RcMdcnlial Lilc Dcpi 44
RcMjcniijI Living 14
Road lrip» 218
Rolling Slonn 166
ROFC 89
Rugby 118
RuMian Ocpartmcni 38
Sailing 1 14
Scuba 140
Seniors 322
Senior Week 362
Sigma Alph-i Pp^ilon 278
Sigma Alpha Mu 279
Sigm.1 Chi 282
Sigma Delta Tau 280
Sigma Nu 28!
Soccer-Mons 90
Soccer- Women'* 142
Society of Petroleum Engineer* 90
Sociology 40
Sophomores 304
Sororiiv Rush 240
Spanish Dcpanmeni 38
Spring Festival 213
Student Activities 42
Student Foundation 68. 91
Student Services 42
Superfoit 182
Swimming 120
Tau Epsilon Phi 283
Telephones 162
Icnnis-Men's 132
Tennis- Women's 1.30
TEMS 228
TGIF 180
Theatre liepartmcnt 40
1 heal re Productions 60. 174
loots & Ihc Mavtals 165
Track 112
TUCP 64. 90
TUCP lech Staff 92
Tulanc Engineering Society 91
Tulanians 91
7LVAC9;
Video Cra/c 178
Vietnam War Stones |7|
Vollevball 106
w
W indom. W ilium 173
Women's Forum 92. 212
WriU. 62.93
You're a Gm>d Man. Charlie
Brovkn6L 175
Zela Beta lau 269
Zctj Psi 270
385
/\
Jose Abadin 87, 158
Christopher Abbot 304
Jonathan Abelman 304
Timothy Aboh 352
David Aboud 282, 322
David Abraham 91
David Abrahamson 89, 322
Daniel Abrams 292
Kenneth Abrams 312
Thomas Abrams 304
Louie Abramson 260, 292
Sandra Abreu 304
Kippy Abroms 30
Michael Abt 269
Mazin Abu-Ghazalah 83,
322
Kenneth Ackerman 260, 304
William Acomb 267
Sandra Adam 89
Burt Adams 76
John Adams 139
Ronald Adams 282
Regina Adams 42, 80
Terry Adirim 79
Scott Adler 322
Peter Abudbato 273, 352
Scott Agran 269
Carolyn Agresti 272
Sara Agresti 253, 272
Jonathan Agri 232
Ramin Ahmadi 312
Asma Ahmed 312
Robin Aibel 322
Mary Aicklen 286, 322
Bill Akers 271,312
Barbara Akins 322
Maria Alamo 322
Robert Albanesi 137
David Albert 260
Nanette Albert 304
Peter Albert 273
James Albrecht 277
Susie Albright 272, 292
Kevin Alderson 267
Brenda Alexander 292
Donna Alexander 272
Linda Alexander 292
Marc Alexander 93, 281
Ross Alexander 270
Timothy Alford 312
Eileen Allan 276, 312
Verlinda Allen 85, 304
Stuart Alphaugh 322
Abdulrahman Al-Sharif 322
Ala Al-Sharif 322
Dara Altshuler 274
Eloisa Alvarez 78,322
Jose Alvarez 352
Brian Alworth 139
William Alworth 24
Jon Amberson 278
Carl Ambrose 97
Elizabeth Amdur 130,
286, 312
Robert Amend 89, 322
Berit Amlie 120, 276
Charles Anderson 281
Genell Anderson 322
Jeffrey Anderson 89, 322
Jerome Anderson 40
Sarah Anderson 276, 322
William Anderson 304
William Anderson 304
Scott Andres 281
Karen Andressen 286
E. Wyllys Andrews 38
Michael Andrews 268
Phyllis Andrews 80,
92, 320
Vincent Andrews 320
Nancy Anfanger 93
John Angeloa 97
Michael Angerman 90,
269, 312
Keith Ansley 77, 89, 322
Laura Applebaum 280, 304
Sean Appleyard 80
Joha Argenti 268
EKzabeth Argus 268, 292
Enrique Arias 281, 322
L, Arkanese 130
Michael Armitage 262
Douglas Armstrong 283, 304
Mary Armstrong 80, 139,
286, 304
Stephen Armstrong 278
Marcia Arnheim 280
Amy Arno 261, 292
Shirley Arnold 322
Susan Arnold 286, 304
Deborah Aronoff 261, 304
Andrea Arons 322
Seth Aronson 292
Ann Arthur 38
Christine Arthur 276
Ellen Artopoeus 136
Philip Artz 323, 367
Scooter Akekton 120, 292
Barry Ashe 352
Nevin Ashe 283
Harry Asmussen 76, 323
Ergin Atimtay 28
Lou Ann Atlas 54,71 ,
78,286, 323
Dora Atwater 286, 312
Eric Aukee 80, 323
Roy Averback 24
Michael Ault 263, 323
Scott Averbuch 269
Frederick Axelrod 78, 269
Tracie Aycox 286
B
Youssef Baalbaki 312
Daniel Babineau 242, 264
Cynthia Bacher 286
Ingrid Bachmann 323
Amy Bader 142, 292
Bradford Baff 323
Joanne Bagley 304
Gina Bagneris 292
Robert Bagnetto 312
Gene Bagot 104
Roy Baham 112, 292
Edward Baharet 323
Gary Bailard 40
John Bailey 93,
278, 292
Katherin Bailey 352
Lloyd Bailey 323
Robin Bailey 286
Jerry Baker 97
Karen Baker 276, 292
Tracy Baker 266
William Balch 292
Toby Baldinger 156, 280
Jodie Baldwin 285
Leland Baldwin 274
Robert Ball 292
Tahanya Ballard 285, 312
Christopher Ballenger 264
Ronald Ballestas 279
Steven Ballinger 268
Bryan Ballot 79
Michael Ballotti 79
Paul Ballou 292
David Balsam 264
Barbara Balser 82
Faustina Balthazar 304
Darryn Band 281
Noreen Barbella 312
Mariam Barber 120
Samuel Barber 89
Robert Barbero 266
Andrew Barclay 273
Denise Bardas 312
Dori Barenholtz 334
Michael Baricev 282
Judith Barris 85,
182,261, 323
James Barkey 97
Barbara Barletta 34
Eugenia Barnard 274, 292
Scott Barnard 320
Alice Barnes 274
Teresa Barnes 272
Tracy Barnes 292
Bradley Barnhill 268
John Baron 34
David Baroness 80,
88,323
Bradford Barr 282, 323
Gregory Barr 250,
258, 282, 304
Jessie Barr 274
Luis Barrero 304
Anne Barrett 272
Diana Barrett 292
Kimberly Barrett 87, 304
Errol Barron 30
Virginia Barron 276
Juen Barroso 38
Taylor Barry 292
Todd Barry 120
Angela Bartholomew 89,
285, 292
Pamela Bartholomew 292
Denise Bartizal 272, 292
Matthew Bartlett 282, 312
Edward Bases 260
Peggy Basic 104, 323
Harry Bass 269, 323
Elias Bassan 323
Nessim Bassan 83
Christina Basso 272, 304
Richard Bates 120, 277
Susan Bates 86, 286
Bryan Batt 267, 292
Jay Batt 253
John Bauer 79, 91, 270
Kurt Bauke 312
Sara Bauman 46,
85, 182,212
Daniel Baumanr 304
Bruce Baumgardner 1 16, 304
Curt Bayham 17
Neil Beals90, 312
Jonathan Spangler 267
Jorge Bean 304
Erica Beaner 80
John Beary 89
Paul Beattv 90. 323
Charles Beck 28
Norman Beck 266, 304
Lee Becker 40
Theresa Becke 323
Walter Becker 352
Carol Beerman 280, 323
Janie Beers 42
Jeffrey Behr 281.292
Christopher Balaire 273,
304
Becky Belford 285
David Bell 268, 292
Desmond Bell 277, 323
Douglas Bell 271
Jodi Bell 280
Michael Bell 323
John Bellan 271
Georganne Beller 142, 292
Mark Benard 40
Howard Bendell 260
John Bendernagel 267
Mary Bendernagel 272, 323
Elizabeth Benhoff 286, 312
Michelle Benitez 293
Erica Benner 293
Laura Bennett 276
Leland Bennet 42, 82
Jeffrey Bentley 263
Eric Benzer 323
Erik Berg 323
Andrew Berger 264
Martin Berger 120,
293, 312
Scott Berger 175
Cynthia Berglund 272
Alan Berk 293
Shari Berke 285
Michal Berkowitz 269, 312
Steve Berkowitz 260
William Bermingham, 284
John Bernat 323
Christian Bernegger 282
Daniel Bernstein 269
Harry Bernstein 282
Judith Bernstein 304
Lynn Bernstein 261
Nancy Bernstein 323
Rebecca Bernstein 261, 293
Donna Bernstock 304
Thmas Beron 267
Portia Berrey 240,
241,272
Edwin Berry 312
Jeanne Bertin 323
James Bertrand 323
Charles Bethell 267
Stacey Bialkin 285, 293
Raul Biancardi 79
William Bie271
Irving Biff 293
Kenneth Bigg 320
William Bilden 266
Elana Bildner 280
Stephen Bilkis 260
Caroline Biller 324
Ina Bilodeau 24
David Binder 271, 324
Miles Bingham 80, 312
Kathy Birdwell 106
Kimberlie Birdwell 272
Betsy Birnbaum 280
Jeffrey Birnbaum 260, 324
Michael Biunno 80, 283
Elizabeth Black 285
Melissa Black 80, 293
Mitzie Black 285, 304
George Blackwell 278, 324
Leigh Ann Blackwell 259,
276
Carolyn Blaine 312
Bill Blair 281
Beatrice Blake 80
Beatriz Blanco 83, 324
Melissa Blanco 48
Particia Blanco 293
Andrew Blankenau 80, 293
Karen Blankenbaker 80,
386
Index
2K5, 304
Idcl Hl.niks .12(1
Kobcrl Hk-cliMi.m 2('l)
W.ilicr Bk-sscv M)
1.1111,11.1 Hloch .120
IVu-r Hlooiii 2(i(i
I)i;inc BloDiiibcrj; XI,
\M). .3 12
I\imcl;i Bkuvcn .305
Micah Blunt 122
Tluimas Bkitc 79. 293
Ku.isi BiKitcng 312
t)li;.i B.ibadilla 312
Kcllu- Bohbitl 286. 324
Riilu-il BocoL-k 76, 266
I'.ilncia Bocrncr 312
flins Bogar X2. 92
R.kIu Bogdaii 34
CMilhi.i Bogin 324
1 ii/abclh Bnh 276
l.inda Boharinon 10, 286,
304. 312
Benjamin Bohlmann 268.
324
la in 10 Bolch 293
Martin Boles 120
Albert Bolton 91.
28 1 . 30.S
John Bolton 293
Roth Bolvig 274
William Bond 120
John Bonds 293
Carl Bonham 271
Miguel Bonini 3 13
Stephen Bontempo 76
.Susan Bontlv 89. 324
Paul Bookman 87. 324
Norman Boothby 34
Catherine Boquet 83.
91.313
Robert Borah 91. 270
Aldo Borges 313
Janet Born 313
Stu Borne 81. 137
Marian Bose 142
Beth Boston 324
Geri Bosworth 276
Karen Botnick 240. 324
Lori Botnick 324
Lisa Botos 79
John Battaro 87. 324
Ceasar Bo t tone 282
M.irguerile Bougerc 30
Keith Boulet 324
Mitehell Boult 282
Brian Bourgeois 89
Frederick Bourgeois 80
Mark Bourne 293
Mark Bourne 293
Katheryn Boustany 130
St.iees Boutee 285
Dennis Boutillier 93
Sean Bo wen 282
Patricia Bowers 253
William Bowers 264, 293
Charles Bowie 293
Ann Bowman 313
Jerald Bowman 281
Ke\in Bovd 97
Favth Bovkin 293
Jim Boyle 97
Nicholas Bo/os 92
Blake Bracado 91
Julia Br.ickenridge 305
Alan Bracket! 268. 323
Marv Bradham 313
Eric BradlcN 8 1
Mak Bradley 260
Monique Bradlc\ 313
Paul Bradlev 324
D.iniel Hucholt/ 79. 264
.ioyce Budowsky 285
AlanBulbin 260
Sabiino Bunks 63.
84. 93. 217. 324
Beth Bunten 293
Anthons Buras 136
S.I rim ha Buras 293
1 isa Burehard 293
Donna Burger 34
Schul/ Burges 3 13
Theresa Burke 324
Michelle Burkett 78.
85,92, 285
James Burks 8
(ieorge Burnett 262
Kelly Burnett 116
Karen Burnett 305
Mike Burnett 1 17
Charles Burns 293
Frederick Burns 268.313
Harriette Burns 272, 324
Paul Burns 313
Henrv Burrell 76
Charies Burris 324
Bernard Burst 97
Jav Burstein 134,
135, 137
David Burt 269,
320, 325
Mary Burton 272
Jeffrey Bush 293
Lydia Butler 285
Lilian Butterman 280,
293
Reginald Butts 97
John Bu/iak 89. 92
Nancy Byck 261.293
Larrv Byers 24
Megan Byrd 85. 313
Linda Byron 325
c
Andrea Cabell 85.
286. 313
Hugh Caffcrv 77,
82.90. 325
John Caffrey 267
Derek Cagnolatti 104.
325
Donna Cahill 286
Eve Cahill 285
Robert Caire 76, 313
Hope Caldwell 325
Kennth Caldwell 79,
293
William Calwell 284
Ruth Calhoun 274
Dawn Callawav 286
Daniel Callen 120
Stanely Calvert .305
Nina Camacho 63. 305
Susanne Cambrc 246
Richard Cameron 293
Sabrina Cameron 325
Christopher Campbell 277
N'olncv Campbell 263. 287
Peter Campfield 313
Troy Campione 325
Fernando Campo 83
Anton Cangelosi 263
Barry Cantin 293
Jane Cantin 325
Doric Capsis 273
Katv Carawav 93
John Carden 293
Allison Brandt 177.
272. 324
Eva Branisa 274
John Brasher 278
Lee Brauer 277
Lisii Bra/el 280
Linda Brcggin 261
James Bremer 89
Howard Brenner 260
Jodi Brenner 293
Lee Bressler 269.
.304. 352
Marv Brett 82. 304
John Brettel 293
Joseph Brewer 267
1 racev Brice 274
Harvey Bricker 38
Victoria Bricker 38
L\ nn Brien 42
Tod Briggs 89
Bcrnice Bright 293
Gwen Bright 324
Mark Brinker 260. 324
Br\an Brinkman 8.
177. 313
Leon Brisbin 324
Dagobut Brito 48
Galo Brito 293
Alice Brittin 320
Christopher Bri//olara 139
James Brocato 313
Joseph Brockhoff 293
Harvey Brod/ki 324
Jeff Broekman 104
Daniel Broh-Kahn 305
Kvle Brooks 116
P.J. Brooks 116
Margaret Broom 324
Brands Broome 254.
274. 293
Leslie Broome 86,
280, 324
Douglas Brophy 293
Catherine Brosman 38
Gerald Broussard 97
Eileen Browcr 81
Bradley Brown 313
C, Michelle Brown 286.
305
Christian Brown 267
Eli Brown 305
Elizabeth Brown 305
Elliot Brown 85
J. Rogert Brown 38
Joseph Brown 281
Peter Brown 281
Peter Brown 324
Ross Brown 260. 293
Scott Brown 91.
137. 268. 282
Stephanie Brown 280
Ste\en Brown 269
l.ivlor Brown 313
Michael Browne 293
Stephen Browne 352
Gail Brownfield 320
Robert Bruce .30
Katherine Brucker 28.
304, 324, 80
Geri Bruckner 293
Ann Briider 106
W illiani Brunilicld 38
Da\id Bruner .305
Marco Brunicclli 293
Dennis Bryant 97
Kenneth Bubes 242.
258. 277. 287
SaUatore Buccino 24
James Buchanan 34
Mary Buchanan 79
Jennifer Carl 272
Lynn Carley 285
Alanc C"arKon 286
Jennifer Carlton 293
Traccv Carllon 240
Jill Carmcll 21. 335
(.aurencc Carmichacl 281
Hal Carney 34
James Carnlcy 268, 325
Tenley Carp 187.
274. 293
Charles Carr 263. 305
Camille Carrere 76
Luis Carri/alcs 293
Kevin Carroll 264. 305
l.inda Carroll 38
Robin Carronski 293
Ann Carry 305
Lucille Carson 85. 274
Howard Carter 122
Michael Caruso 90.
293. 305
John Carwic 258.
271. 293
Cyprian Casadaban 305
Rose Casanova 313
Maria Casas 293
Michael Case 78. 269
Kevin Casey 305
Thomas Ca'shel 278
Douglas Cash man 89. 305
Richard Cashman 89. 305
Leslie Castay 80
Diana Caialano9l. 325
Paul Catanese 97
Christopher Cathcarl 266
Daniel Catlelt 284
Cynthia Caubarreaux 325
James Causey 93
.Antonia Cebrian 313
Michael Centurv 283. 325
Lisa Chaiklin 293
Lian Chair 294
Katharine Chamberlain 274
Lis.1 Chamberlain 272. 325
Da\id Chambliss24
Wendell Chambliss 305
Gulrajaney Changdur 294
Deborah Chandler 294
Eric Chanko 325
Richard Chanon 78. 269
Holley Chant 274
Susan Chapin 48
Perrv Chapman 262
Lisa'Chascn .305
Barbara Chat/ 325
Edgar Chauvin 271
Richard Cheadle 325
Betty Chen 305
Connie Chen 325
Ingrid Chen .305
Loren/o Chen 326
Donald Chencv 270
Philip Cherry 270
Stephen Chesnut 313
Kimberlv Chewning 305
Joseph Chi .V15
Bernadette Chiasson 313
John Chilton 278. 313
Lias id Chin 89. 325
Richard Chin 268. 326
Wah Chin 326
Stuan Chirls 283
Dollv Chisholm91
Arthur Cholodofsky 294
Brenda Choos 280
Jade Chow 326
Joseph Chow 326
Mark Chudacoff 326
Wendv Chukcrman 326
lnd^x
387
Elizabeth Churchill 272,
326
James Churchill 271
Tony Cibello 17
Andrew Citrin 273
Eugene Cizek 30
James Clark 263, 313
Kenneth Clark 305
Robert Clark 77
C. Clay 130
Margaret Cleary 274,
305
Michael Cleary 271,
326
Marilyn Clements 276
Andrew Clemetson 313
Howard Clerv 262
Christopher Clifford 294
George Clifford 281
Brodie Cobb 267
Alex Cobo 327
David Code 77,
82,91
Karen Cofield 77,
82,91.327
Andrew Cohen 283, 327
Bryant Cohen 78,
258, 268, 327
Gary Cohen 294
Gary Cohen 78
Jeffrey Cohen 260
Joel Cohen 260
Mauri Cohen 78,
182, 261, 367
Melissa Cohen 86,
91,313
Rachel Cohen 294
Richard Cohen 277, 327
Susan Cohen 320
Bonnie Cohn 280, 294
John Cohn 294
Monique Cohn 272
Stewart Cohn 269
Cedric Coleman 17
Christie Coleman 284
Randel Colen 269, 313
Steven Coletti 91, 294
Catherine CoUat 85,
261, 327
Glay Collier 305
Arthur Collins 305
Charles Collins 90,
112, 327
Jeanne Collins 61, 285
William Colomb 294
Craig Colomes 267
Richard Colon 262
Wilford Colongue 30
Kathy Coman 274
Eleanor Comer 28.
57,83,285, 305
Christopher Comfort 327
Carla Conaway 87,
90,263, 313
Willian Conchewski 327
Susan Cone 61.
91,285, 305
Rhonda Coner 89
James Conklin 327
Kevin Connel 277, 327
Christopher Connelly 89,
279
David Connelly 273
Pierre Conner 273
Thomas Connolly 282
Lois Conrad 49
Daid Constance 327
Richard Conte 104
George Coyne 82
Peter Cook 269
Robert Cook 34
William Cook 79, 117
Rodney Cooke 97, 112
Christopher Cooper 80
Lindsey Cooper 1 12
Owen Cooper 262
Ronald Coopersmith 283
Lawrence Copeland 97
Maxine Coppersmith 261
Melissa Corcoran 285,
294
Bernice Corman 313
Melvin Cormier 97
Abner Cornwell 273.
313
Thomas Correia 279
Barbara Cortinez 139,
327
Cesar Corzantes 294
Dimetry Cossich 352
Joyce Cossich 313
Colleen Costelo 274
Passalacque Cot 294
John Cottingham 273
Quintary Courtney 278,
327
Mary Louise Coutourie 327
Alicia Cousins 327
Harvey Cox 97
John Cox 271
Gay Craft 79
Steve Craft 79
Wendy Crandell 285
Elizabeth Cravens 272,
305
Timothy Crawford 294
Mary Creek 327
Christopher Creedon 294
Gerard Creedon 320
Rodney Crevoiserat 282
Anne Crews 274, 327
Michael Criscito 283
Charles Crockett 95, 294
Christopher Croly 294
James Cronvich 28
William Crooks 260
Jacob Cross 80, 313
Robert Grosser 91
Frank Crothers 38
Paul Crow 97
Andrew Crowder 281, 294
Bradley Crown 281,
294, 313
Lori Crowson 61
Timothy Cruger 278, 294
Ricardo Cuchetto 89
Timothy Culvahouse 30
Vicki Culver JJ3
Jeanne Cummings 320
George Cummins 38
Cheryl Cunningham 259,
286, 305
Joseph Cunningham 82,
90, 327
Kyle Cunningham 97
Margarita Curras 80, 328
Henrietta Currier 320
Amy Curris 285, 328
Deborah Curry 294
Guy Curry 271
Laurie Curry 80
Corre Curtice 286
David Curtis 328
Leah Curtis 305
Richard Cutchin 87,
328
Daniel Cutlett 293
George Curtis 328
James Curtis 328
Robert Czochara 79
D
Ragnhild Daasvand 286
Rachel Dasey 91, 285
Lawrence Dachowski 24
Daniel Daddario 116, 268
Terrance Daffin 97
Kathleen Dahill 80
Carolyn Daigre 77, 82
Brian Daley 328
David Dalia 352
Frank Dalia 30
Cheryl Dalpossal 177
Carey Dalton 328
Judith Dalton 272
John Daly 271
Donna damico 313
Kathrun D'Amico 89
Gene D'Amour 30
Elizabeth Dana 80, 274
Gregory Dandright 313
Terry D'Angelo 328
Anthony Daniel 320
Kelly Daniel 274
Andrew Daniels 328
Georffrey Daniels 284
Patty Dannemiller 93
David Daponte 282
Yvette Dapremont 328
D.J. Darensbourg 24
Lisette Darmstadter 285,
305
S.C. Das 30
Andy Davis 120
Kenneth Davidov 281,
328
Lawrence David ow 260
Malcolm Davidow 294
John Davies 260
William Davies 281
Andrew Davis 294
Bradley Davis 305
Caecillia Davis 34
Cesnie David 285
Clair Davis 268
Dave Davis 38
David Davis 294
Dawn Davis 254. 275
Donna Davis 328
Felicia Davis 274
Heidi Davis 272, 305
Marline Davis 38
Mark Davis 305
Mark Davis 260
Moss Davis 258, 278
Ralph Davis 122
Ronald Davis 97
Thomas Davis 277
Walter Davis 273
Floyd Davison 328
Michael Dawahare 258,
278
Fredereick Day 254,
255, 281
James Day 263
Patricia Dayton 285
Robert Deal 283
Lawrence DeBuys 252,
273
Rhett DeBuys 273
Almir deCampos Bruenti 38
John Decell 294
Lawrence De Buys 273,
352
Almar Decampos 38
John Decell 294
Ronald Deck 24
Susen Decker 142,
285. 328
William Decker 352
Alain Dedelva 313
Don Deford 294
Gerry Deegan 136
Kenneth Degot 268
Wendy Dehan 276
Jose De LA Fuente 328
Anag De La Fuente 267
Lourdes De LA Garza 294
Carol Delahunty 79
Monica De U Paz 328
Tanya De LA Vergne 286
Robert Deleskiewicz 305
Christine Delgado 294
Patricia De Los Heros 83
Gary Delph 122
Peter Demb 328
Theodore Demuth 34
John Denegre 267
Michael Depaul 262, 305
Monique Dequay 81
Sarah Derr 85,
276, 328
Lloyd Desatnick 269
Lauren Dessommes 274,
305
Edward Deutsch 281
Ome DeVallee 79
Mark Diamond 83
Seldon Dickinson 284
Jane Dickson 274
Richard Diehl 278
Mary Dietrich 285,
328
Donald Dietze 328
Rami Dievassi 93
Jeffrey Dilallo281
John Dilkey 34
James Dillard 278,294
Charles Dillehay 305,
313
William Dillingham 28,
83, 89, 294, 304
Douglas Dillon 271
Patrick Dillon 313
Damon Dimauro 320
Mindy Dimenstien 280
George Dimitri 273
Maja Dimitrijevic 274,
305
Glenn Dismukes 80
Stephen Dixon 1 16
Zachary Dixon 17
Jay Dlugin91
Gloria Dobbs 276
Judith Dodd 320
Laurie Dollin 261, 305
Sophie Don 142
Mark Donachie 262, 328
Kevin Donahoe 270, 328
Michael Donald 328
Andrew Donnelly 87, 26
William Donohoe 269
Lanette Donovan 305
Michael Doran 328
Brian Dorfman 294
Dennis Dorsey 278
Nathaniel Dorsey 1 12
Timothy Dorsey 77
Karl Doss 76,313
Burgin Dossett 77,
78, 263
William Dossett 267
Brian Douglas 97, 101
James Douglass 139
Jean Dovel 305
Geselle Dover 40
Margaret Downing 276
188
5 Index
Jackie Dragiin 212
Robert Drake 2K
Ann Draper 2S6, 32«
Deborah Dratlel 34
Kris Dreisker 276
Nanev Drever .105
Ann Drutlner 2S5. .■^06
Michelle Diihee 285. 287
Morev Diibelier 1 16
(ierald Dubilier .106
Michael Diibow 294
Fran Dubrow 8.1, 85.
9.1. 240. 261. .128
Reginald Duke 122
Steven Dukes 87
Pimolrat Dulyanant 328
l.orena Dumas 81. 291
Michael Dummet 294
.Sharon Dumond 85, 294
William Duncan 294
.lanis Dunlap 24
Kenneth Dunlap 277
Charles Dunn 97
David Dunn 304
•Icnnifcr Dunn 57, 83,
84, 223, 285, 313
.lohn Dunn 294
Peter Dunn 97
Michael Dunne 120, 294
Craig Dupleix 273, 306
Frances Durcan 276
Michael Durden 264
Timothv Durst 77,
264, 3l'3
Kent Dussom 263, 294
Kimberly Dutton 272
Marc Du\oisin 28
Paul Duvoisin 83
.lames Dwver 282
Cathleen Dye 79
.lames Dyer 278
E
Clyde Eads 122, 262
Tamela Eady 294
Marv Eagan 274
Elaine Eagle 285
Carolvn Earl 91,
286, .128
Edmond Eberle 313
Mont Echols 268, 294
Mark Eckerle 93
William Eckerl 268
.Icanine Eckholdt 40 ■
Michael Edell 139
Bruce Edelman 313
Sherrie Edelman 261
Dame! Edmislon 89
Ed Edmonson 38
Anthony Edwards 328
Elizabeth Edwards 81
Peter Edwards 2
Robert Egerman 269
Richard Ehret 329
Richard Eisenberg 283
Rod Eisenberg 78,
269, 306
Sharon Filer 272, 306
I eslie Ellinger 328
Frank Elliott 91
Priscilla Ellis 328
Wade Elmore 97
Audrey Elrod 328
Ghassan El-Solh 352
Eugene Ely 278,
294,313
Adam i:iyaeh.ir 306
Catherine Emanuelson 85
259, 276
Robert Fmmick 294
Samuel I'morv 306
David Engel 262
David Engles 328
Elizabeth Fngman 286
Harry Ensley 24
Daniel Epstein 269
Elizabeth Epstein 294
Ellen Epstein 28,
182, 280, 286,328
Greg Epstein 175
Jeff Epstein 260
Rachel Epstein 320
Robert Erbs 306
Elizabeth Erdreich 276
Roger Er\in 248
Irving Escalante 80
Andres Escubnar81.
139. 313
Ramon Escriba 328
Karen Eslinger 1 20
Trina Espinola 79, 328
Mr. Ed Esposito 83.
184, 185, 313
Erica Esquisel 328
Carlos Esteve 320
Jan Esthus 80, 306
Suzanne Etcheverry 263,
306
Lucy Etheridge 294
Sanford Etheridge 34
Harold Etheringlon 140
Arlene Etzig 306
Vic Eumont 97
Isabel Evans 306
Susannah Evans 274
Gretchen Everett 286
Jeanine Ewari 306
Allison E.xby 328
Alan Exkovich 304
F
John Fahsbender 77
Jane Faia 272, 328
Osvaldo Fajardo 313
Robert Falvey 48
Ellen Farber 328
Jill Farber 328
Cray ton Fargason 328
Paul Farinella 80
Jill Farker 328
Robert Farley 294
Jack Farmer 328
Joseph Farrell 328
Kathryn Farrell 142
Sarah Fasterling 306
Alexander Fedoroff 263
Michael Feduccia 97, 313
Kim Feigin 280
Paul Feinberg 260
Da\id Feinstein 306
Meyer Feldberg 12
Edward Feldman 282
Gail Feldman 86
Mark Feldman 269, 330
Samuel Feldman 269, 313
Mark Felcer 26S
Richard Feller 264, 272
De\in Felman 330
Jay Felser 282. 295
Stephen Felt on 260. 3.10
.UiMiis 1 ennel 92. 93.
314
Sharon Fenno 272
Sheila Fcnion 12
John Fern 281
Jaime Fernandez 314
Steve Ferrando 89. 283
Luis Ferrer .106
Francis Ferrie 38
Joan Fcrro 48
Tia Ferrouillet 85
Christopher Fesia 295
Adrienne Fetkowitz 276
Bruce Fieken 268
Edward Field 278
Jennifer Field 286
Edgar Fields 90, 3.10
Glen Filippone 330
Ronald Filson .10
Debra Fine 156,
280, 314
Jeffrey Fine 269, 330
Leslie Fine 286. .106
Michael Fine 283
Scott Fine 269
Sheila Fine 81
Jami Fineberg 295
Paul Fineberg 258
Jacqueline Finger 280
Keith Finger 283
Margaret Fink 330
Robert Fink 295
Kurt Finke 88
Victoria Finke 80. 306
Leslie Finkel 1.19
Leslie Finkelstein 295.
291,85
Brent Finley 271
Joseph Fiscar 330
John Fischer 38
Joseph Fischer 273.
97
Simone Fischer 38
Caroline Fish 306
Albert Fisher 88
John Fisher 269
Michael Fisher 3 14
Alison Fishman 330
Erie Fitch I 16
Paul Fitch 3.10
Bart Fitzgerald 97
Brian Fitzpatrick 314.
271
Jamie Flaxman 263. 295
Kathv Fleck 79.85
286
Lisa Fleck 306
Paul Fleck 270. .106
Pamela Fleming 272
William Fletcher 80.
3.10
George Flowers 30
James Flowers 120.
121
Judah Flum 79. 295
Evan Fogelman 271. 330
Elizabeth Fohrman 314
John Folev 83.93
282. 330.
Laurie Foley 330
Therron Folev 76.85
314,
Tom Folev 80
Nadia Folic 83
Stephen Folson 295
William Fontenot 263.
314
Graeme Forbes 34
Marjoric Forbes 236.
286
Corinne Foreman 136.
280
Lee Forian 330
Bruce Forrest 260
Pamela ForrcM 280
Maurice Forsyih 82
Jacqueline Forle 91.
306
Sharon Foriicr 314
Kyle Foster 280
Linn Foster 78. 82
331
Ned Fowler 122.
124. 126
Elisabeth 274
Dcnisc Fox 84
I-aurcncc Fox 249. 266
Sharvn Fox 331
William Fox III 89
Jane Foy 320
Kelly Fracassa 135
Antonio Franco 320.
263
David Frank 79
Staven Frank 88. 269
Susan Frank 261
Thomas Frank 320,
331.266
Judith Franklin 306.
81
Terrancc Franklin 79
Jane Franz 295
Nolan Franz 97. 331
Larisa Franzheim 274
Elizabeth Eraser 331
Richard Frazer 34
Bruce Frazicr 260. 331
John Frcdricks77. 82
331
Melissa Freeman 280
Wayne Freeman 88,
277.331
Peter Frcibcrger 120
Mona Freidin 331
Christopher French 266
Marc Frcnkcl 283. 295
Gary Frctwell 42. 84
Alfred Freudenbcrgcr 76
Pierre Frickcy 83.91
Monica Fried 88. 261
Jaync Friedland 280
David Friedman 258
Douglas Friedman 282
Lisa Friedman 331
Michael Friedman 80. 331
Russell Friedman 268
Stephen Friedman 269
Charles Fritchie 24
Chris Frost 48
Stuart Fuller 306
.Arthur Fullerton 273.
295
Sharon Fuqua 128. 286
331
Elizabeth Furr 314
Richard Furr .131
Thcron Furr 233
Melanie Fuss 280.
306
G
Kenneth Cud 269
Tom Gaflrcs 87
Natalie Gaganidze 331
•Alan Gahagan 277
Alyssa Games 274
Alan Gaincsburgh 24. 82.
314
Anna GalbassI 42
Elizabeth GallaRher 80
Indt:
389
■ft!
Robert Gallagher 258,
267
Tracy Gallagher 314
Jacqueline Gallart 295
Danna Caller 274, 314
Stephanie Gambino 274
Charles Gamburg 267
Bruce Candle 331
Jennifer Candy 276, 331
James Gansman 269
Michael Garbarino 295
Andrew Gardner 268
Catherine Gardner 286
Paulette Gardy 306
Lourdes Cardz 295
Michael Carey 271
Angus Garfield 330
Rodd Garfinkel 284
Robert Carguilo 89
Paige Garner 276
Jeffrey Garon 76, 277
Robert Carvey 266, 287
Cray Garwood 24
Bryan Gary 330
Hector Garza 295
Bruce Gasarch 314
Barbara Gatti 330
Patrice Gaudin 48
Vincent Cauthier 271
Margaret Gavel 91
Sandra Gay 79
Jodi Ceduld 280
Cynthia Gee 85
Jerry Gee 314
Ronald Gee 352
Glenn Geffner 260
John Gehlbach330
Brian Geiger 270, 306
George Geishauser 330,
97
Harry Geismar 273
Buddy Geiss 97
Gregory Gelderman 282,
314
Lisa George 256, 276
Theresa George 276
John Georges 267
Bart Gerachi 93, 295
Brendan Geraghty 278
Gary Gerber 330
Suzanne Gerber 330
Michael Gerberich 92, 330
Danna Gerbi 280, 314
David Gereighty 77, 182
314
Elizabeth Gerfers 106,
314
Jeanice Gerfers 285,
295
Marvelen Gerone 320
Benjamin Gershowitz 116
David Gerstel 139
Dana Gervis 280
Andrew Giambarba 285
Gerard Gianoli 82, 91
Barbara Gibbons 274
Samuel Giberga 282
Beverly Gibson 314
Gina Gibson 276
Mark Gibson 295
Vince Gibson 17, 103
Jennifer Giddens 330
Page Giddings 276
Doug Gilbert 48
Jane Gilbert 85
Lisa Gilbert 263
Bryan Gill 306
Gerard Gillen 76
Mary Gilligan 128
Joseph Gilliland 295
Peter Gillis 80
Henry Gillman 295
Debra Ginsberg 330
Harley Ginsberg 79
Jeffrey Ginsberg 269
Jonathan Ginsberg 260.
314
Nancy Ginsberg 280
Pamela Ginsberg 280,
314
John Ginsberg 295
Teri Gioia 285
Amy Giordano 272
Charles Giraud 330
John Gitelman 295
Judith Gladstone 272
Lawrence Gladstone 260
Cindy Glaser 280
Thomas Glaser 282
William Glass 295
Craig Click 93, 330
Hope Glidden 38
Monty Glorioso 278,
295
Randi Clorsky 314
Steven Clorsky 330
David Coettler 282
James Coff 140
Richard Coff 97
Jeffrey Gold 260
Debra Goldberg 320
Fred Goldberg 306
John Goldberg 93,
269
Mark Goldberg 79
Lynn Goldblum 280,
332
Andrea Golden 261
Marc Golden 277
Richard Golden 260
Ellen Coldfarb 261,
332
Steven Goldin 269,
332
Ilene Goldman 352
Jill Goldman 295
Keith Goldman 282
Amy Goldsmith 81, 332
Jane Goldsmith 261
Jeffrey Goldsmith 283
Peter Goldstein 269
Robert Goldstein 269
William Goldstein 282
Julie Goldstone 91,
314
Eduardo Gomez 314
Jose Gonzales 296, 314
Beatriz Gonzalez 295
Boris Gonzalez 332
Diana Gonzalez 274,
306
John Gonzalez 281, 258
Mary Gonzalez 286
Reinol Gonzalez 80
Keith Coodfellow 263
Cheryl Goodfriend 240,
332
Baxter Goodly 89
Nicholas Goodly 76, 85
332
Michael Goodrich 278,
332
Bruce Goodwin 30
Charlotte Gordon 269
Christa Gordon 79
David Cordon 268
Howard Gordon 332
Joseph Gordon 42,
80,82
Melissa Gordon 285,
306
Thomas Gordon 306
Hale Cork 285
Arthur Corling 278
Doyle Gorman 93, 278,
332
Robert Cotfried 277
Lauren Cotleib 261 ,
296
William Gould 64,
90, 262
Sophie Coy 12
Barbara Graboyes 296
Elizabeth Grace 241 ,
276
Kathryn Craddy 130,
241, 272
Ken Graff 97, 112
Madeleine Graham 296
Robert Grainger 273
Paul Graller 283
Richard Cramming 332
Seth Grant 80,
314, 264
Empress Grantham 286
Jamie Grapin 261, 306
David Gray 278
Denise Cray 285, 296
Thomas Gray 332
Jon Grazer 332
Allison Green 332
David Green 332
Elizabeth Green 280
Glenn Green 77, 136
Harvey Green 34
Kyle Green 260
Tom Green 122, 124
Clifford Creenbaum 269
Jill Greenberg261, 296
Karen Greenberg 280,
296
Martin Greenblatt 332
Adam Greene 284
Michael Greenfield 269
Susan Greenspan 332
John Greeven 277
Andrew Creiff 269
Eric Greiman 79, 296
Jean Grelier 274
Mel Grewe 140
Campbell Griffin 281,
296
Robert Griffin 97
Scott Griffith 296
James Grill 338
Douglas Grills 93,
306
Alicia Grimes 92
Becki Crimes 183,
304, 314
Charles Grimwood 30
Jennifer Grindell 8
Scott Criner 84
Samuel Grissom 296
Christie Grizaffi 91,
182, 274, 333,92
Barry Grodsky 82
Howard Grody 81, 82,
248, 268, 333, 249
Margaret Groh 306
Jane Gross 90, 314
Monica Grosz 80,
285, 306
Lora Croton 274
Arden Crover 266
Karen Gruesen 285, 296
Elise Gruman 280, 296
Eric Gruman 269
Van Grundman 306
George Gsell 267
Gina Cuastella 333
Eric Guenther 86
Oscar Cuerra 314
Rolando Guerra 81, 333
Brian Guess 306
Joe Guevara 89
Carter Guice 333, 263
Lydia Guillot 333
Ruth Culler 280, 296
Jeffrey Cum 268, 314
Randolph Gumenick 282
Mark Gunning 296
Ron Cural 40
Steve Cuoe 136
Gus Gutierrez 296
Jack Gutman 268
Lisa Gutman 240
Ira Cuttentag 258, 260
H
Jill Haagenson 296
Lauren Haas 280
Nancy Habif 261, 306
Lauri Hackett 82, 89
John Hadden 263
Jacqueline Haffner 33,
76, 363
Bob Hafford 130
Karen Hagan 286
Robert Hagani 333
Gerald Haggerty 296
Andrew Hague 352
Lori Hahn 286
Douglas Hale 83
Charhe Hall 97
Dixon Hall 249, 266
Edward Hall 92, 314
Stephen Hall 273
Samuel Halle 258
Ann Hallock 38
Frederic Halperin 333
Stephen Halperin 06,
69, 270
Paul Hamel 333
Jan Hamer 24
Bruch Hamilton 268
Pete Hamilton 116, 281
Eileen Hammill 333
Scott Hammond 120
Carol Hand 296
Mark Hanks 306
Tod Hanna 306
Janet Hansche 24, 42
Pamela Hansen 96,
276
Ries Hansen 281
Christopher Harbuck 281,
306
John Harch 263
Angela Hardage 306
John Hardie 80, 87
314
Robert Harding 80, 306
Jamie Hardy 239
Thomas Hardy 239, 278
Robert Harford 315
Althea Harlin 253,
274, 275
John Harling 83
Keith Harmeyer 80
Cretchen Harper 80,
82, 333
Charles Harrell 281
John Harrington 333
Leigh Harrington 187,
252, 274
George Harris 77
390
Index
X(!^
.loscpli Harris S5
Su/aniK- Harris 276,
92
William Harris 260
Ams Harrison .1 15
Hrucc Harrison H9. 262
.107
C'raij; Harrison .107
I)a\ii.l Harrison 296
Nancy Harrison 276
l.aura Harriss 274
.luliana Harliu S3.
.115
Bruce Hartman 283
Angela Hartsock 296
Darrin Har\cy 296
Tcrri Har\cy 106
.lolincllc Hasscl 40
IngrcJ Hassclhach 38
Karllicin/ Hassclbacli 38
.lohn Hatch 239
.land HawlcN 14.
287. 296
[^Iton Ha\dcl 296
Randolph Haves 277.
333
Michael Hayt 283
.Scott Ha> ward 264
Han Healan 38
Malcolm Heard 30
Ted Heath 97
Charles Hebcrt3l5
Brian Hechinger 282,
333
Kent Heck 268
Rene Hedges 274
Edward Helternan 282
Michael HclTernan 284
limotln Heffcrnan 242.
277, 282. 287
Noah Heftier 260
Paul Hegener 88. 307
Sarah Heiderer 128. .107
Icresa Heike 128. 315
.lohn Hcin 97
Philip Heineman 270
Carrie Heinen 92.
333. 90
Melanie Hcint/ 261 .
296
Darnel Heiple 30
Erica Hekler 333
.lennifcr Heller SO.
295
Michael Heller 260
Robert Heller 283.
315
I")a\id llcllniaii 269
Mich.iel Hcllmen 307
Robert llelmer 30
M.iry Helow 333
Roscmar\ Hclwick 182,
307
Hugh Hcmslrcct 89
Constance Henderson .107
(iregor\ Henderson 268,
307
Ciregory Henkel 296
Edward Henkin 260
.lill Hcnkin 280
Burrell Henrv 315
Crav Henrv S3. 92
334
Cieorge Herd 334
Bruce Herman 260
Howard Herman 296
StcNcn Herman 296
■lohnell Hcrnande/ 334
MarriKn llernande/ 4S
Oanclla Hero 272. 334
George Hero 77, 78
Patricia Hero 334
Kelly Herr 42
Eliane Herring 321
Craig Hershkowit/ 2(i().
3.14
Gary Herskowit/ 269
Kenneth Herskowit/ 269.
3.14
Ann Hen/ 261. 315
David Hert/ 277. 296
Joan Herz 87.
270, 334
.lohn Hess 76
Sharon Hess 352
Anne Hesson 334
Katherine Hetherwick 272
Kurt Heumann 263
Stephen Heun 282
McArthur Hewitt 306
Dean Hickman 296
Carolvn Higgs 85. 334
Kirk Hill 112. 307
Nancv Hill 276
Sharon Hill 128
Cvnthia Hillman 334
Da\id Hilton 97
Michael Hilton 89
Crawford Hindermann 267
Robert Hindt 296
Jeannine Hinton 334
Sandv Hippler 81
AlecHirsch 273
Jay Hirsch 281
Michael Hirsch 269.
334
Bonnie Hirschberg 80.
3.14
Richard Hirschhaut 334
Michael Hobbv 3.14
Jeffrey Hochberg 283
Pamela Hochberg 54.
78, 79, 182, 315
Monique Hocking 276
Michael Hochschwender 120
Barbara Hodin 177. 261
Christine Hoffman 272
Frederick Hoffman 281
Gary Hoffman 262, 334
Katherine Hoffman 352
l.ce Hoffman 24
Julia Hoffmann 280, 297
Kavin Hogan 334
Ste\en Hoggard 1 16
Bonnie Hogue 285, 307
James Holak 77, 334
Joseph Holcomb 281
Gregorv Holcombe 273
Kern I'loldswiMth 2S6,
307
Patricia Hollahan 34
Chervl Hollander 280
Anna Hollev 334
Harry Hollub 135. 297
Rodnev Holman 97
Brueh Holmes 91, 79
Gyuri Hollosy 34
Joseph Holston 122.
127, 334
Cynthia Holt .107
l.ynne Holt SO
Edward Holthouse 278
Stewart Homier 269
Jeffrev Hood 268
Dee Hook 42
Jens Hookanson 3.14
Caroline Hoo\er 334
Benjamin lli>pkins 284
Bernard Hoppenleld 281
Cieorge Hopper 42
Calvin Hoppmcver 76
Yalaka Horiba 43
Keith Hrone 2.17,281
.lames Horowitz 269
.lean-Ann Horowil/ 280
Robert Horovski 30
David Horrigan 93. 297
Philip Horwit/ 269
Casev Howard 17
Ricky Howe 79, 91
Susan Howell 274
William Howes 307
Reed Hovl 34
Randolph Hubbell 97
Lisa Huberman 261,
297
John Huek 27S
Beth Huddleslon 253.
272,315
Eli/abeih Hudson 272
.la\ier Huerta 334
Patricia Huff 81
Ian Hughes 297
James Hughes 270, 297
Robert Hughes .152
Susan Huuhs 286
Ihomas Hughs 263, 315
Timothy Hui 262
Joanne Hujsa 261
Daniel Hunt 282
Patrick Hunt 334
Jimothy Hunt 284
Chip Hunter 40
Fay Hunter 42
Michael Hunter 97
Todd Hunter 297
William Hunter 278
Cal\in Huppmeycr 334
James Hurson 281,
297
Loren Hurst 276
Andrew Hurwit/ 266
Gary Hurwit/ 92
Michael Hurwit/ 334
Saul H\att 28 I. 297
Drew H\de97. 264
James Hyland 79. 264
Stephen Hvtha 39,
8 1 , .135
I
Emile lanni 335,83, 91
Karen Ibach S6, 285, 315
.Ihalima Ibrahim 315
Karl Ingard 133
Philip Ingram 271
Kalhryn Inouye 76
Ignacio Iribarren 282
Jeffrey Irle 271, 315
Judith Isdancr 261
GeolTrev Isles 2S4
Robert Israel 262
Sharon l.srael 297
Sheryl Israel 321
Chi/uko l/iivvu 24
J
Thomas Jackson 278
Howard Jcobs 266
Joanne Jacobs 213. 274. 364
Leslie Jacobs 278
Sicvcn Jacobs 30
John Jacobus 24
Bruce Jacoby 92
Charles Jacques 273
Phillip Jaffe 78. 269
Robert Jaffe 260
Randy Jaffe 97
Michael Jaklilsch 270
Ann James .107
Christopher Jammal 335
Shawki Jammal 315
Melissa Janning 89. 307
Warner Janof 307
Sandra Jansa 89. 256
296
Leo Janson 97
Rebecca Jardine 77. 82
Robert Jarrett 273
William Jasionowski 281
Eli/abelh Jayes 116, 335
Wayne Jenevein 79
Earl Jenkins 97
Kim Jenkins 272
Deno\ian Jeter 97. 296
James Jigarjian 296
Lisciie Jimenez 76
Jeffrey Joe 335
Charles Joffc 282
Thomas Bradford 281
Daniel Johnson 273
Eleanora Johnson 306
George Johnson 260. 263
Hunter Johnson 335
James Johnson 89. 297
Jeffrey Johnson 263
Katherine Johnson 297
Kathrvn Johnson 285. 306
Pollard Johnson 272
Quenlin Johnson 263. 315
Robert Johnson 89
Stephen Johnson 79
Wayne Johnson 89
Bruce Johnston 79. 297
Sam Joiner 140
Jeffrey Jonas 281
Harris Jones 116. 278
James Jones 89
Mark Jones 297
Michael C. Jones 97. 76
Michael S. Jones 89. 97
100
Paul Jones 306
Sharon Jones 272. 296
Terry Jones 78
Vicki Jones 272
Warren Jones 284
Konr.id Jonneson 315
Jill Jonker 48
Stephen Joost 270
Gregory Jordan 281. .106
Kathleen Jordan 142. 2''6
William Jordan 321
Adrienne Joseph 296
Maureen Joseph 76
Lisa Josvai 79
John Jovce .14
MichaelJudd 76. 266
Marie Juneau 70
Gregory Jung 273
Richard Junsieh 273
Joan Jackman 82. 91
Blake .lackson 89. .107
Da\id Jackson 97
.lames Jackson 267
Mark Jackson 185.270. .107
Spencer Jackson 315
K
Jonaihan Kadis 269.
306
Index
391
Andrea Kahn 306
Daniel Kahn 79
Jeffrey Kahn 78, 82,
90, 335
Joel Kahn 251
Susan Kaighn 306
Allan Kaiser 335
Karl Kalbacher 112
Susan Kalishman 280,
335
Stephanie Kalmans 261
Hames Kalordi 315
Janos Kalodzi 77, 82
Allan Kamenshy 281
William Kampen 335
Suzanne Kane 280, 296
John Kapeless76, 281
Daniel Kaplan 315
Marina Kaplan 38
Nancy G. Kaplan 261.
306
Nancy I. Kaplan 335
Ronald Kaplan 296
Marda Kapp 106
Brian Karangu 3 15
Ozgur Karamanoglu 78
83, 279, 306
Marc Karetsky 269
Dale Karh 97
James Karlsberger 80
Andrea Karns 280, 335
Bonnie Karpay 69,
91, 335
Ian Karr 262
Meryl Kasher 335
Lisa Kasner 306
Andrea Katz 261
Eric Katz 79
Glenn Katz 335
Jonathan Katz 269
Joshua Katz 83, 91
Micheal Katz 266
Pamela Katz 296
Daniel Katzner 79,
277
Deborah Katzner 88
Jay Kaufman 262,
335
Jonathan Kaufman 227
Ghassan Kawash 76,
335
Scott Kazdan 269
Cornelia Kean 335
William Kearny 258
Kyle Keese 278
Catherie Kehoe 276
Midgette Kelly 335
Linda Keller 306,
315
Dawn Kelly 296
Eamon Kelly 2, 20
George Kelly 1 16,
278
Jon Kelly 315
Julian Kelly 271
Margaret Kelly 296
Mary Kelly 87, 335
Micheal Kelly 79, 91
Rick Kelly 335
Todd Kelly 237
Francis Kemp 296
Susan Kemp 274
Bruce Kennedy 335
Konrad Kennedy 177,
282, 306
Patrick Kennedy 277
Roy- Kenney 281
Ives Kent 140
Jennifer Kent 315
Arthur Kern 34
Thomas Kern 277
Kathy Kernoff 280,
296
Lawrence Kerr 296
Ira Keselman 262
Debra Kesler 335
Kraig Kessel 264
Nancy Kessler 335
Peter Kettler 296
Elizabeth Keyes 336
Sanaa Khan 296
Robert Kiem 269
Paul Kilbourne 277
Thomas Kilby 267
Karen Killeen 239,
274, 335
Nalty Killeen 263,
274, 335
Robert Killeen 271
Shannon Killiea 81
Barney Kilpatrick 93
Brian Kim 80, 335
Eunice Kim 80
Wendy Kim 296
Daryl Kimche 128,
306
Hilary Kimmelman 296
Dan Kindel271
Anden King 38
Fred King 84
Jean King 30
Marjorie King 258
Nancy King 274, 275
Mary Kinman 286
Elizabeth Kinsley 106
Paul Kircher 80
Timothy Kirkendall 296
William Kirkikis 78,
81,93, 281. 295
Micheal Kirkpatrick 281,
296
Denise Kirschner 296
Howard Kirschenberg 260
Bruce Kirst 28
William Klein 282
Douglas Kleinberg 269
Kathryn Klepak 85
Nancy Kleyan 285
Andrew Klingerman 296
Marc Kline 80
Mark Kline 271
Kelly Kloesel 285. 306
Deborah Knight 296
Mary Knill 296
Caren Knochenhauer 272
Elaine Koby 261
Nicholas Kocal 306
Karl Koch 77
George Koclanes 268
Jennifer Kohler 83,
28, 287
Alma Kombargi 272
Mark Kombert 277
Louis Kong 296
Eric Kono 260
David Korachic 296
Donald Koran 48
Lawrence Korn 28,
56, 83, 266 306
Mindy Kornberg 337
Gene Koss 34
April Kossar 79, 317
Russell Koster 246,
262
Karen Kotach 296
Stan Kotteman 337
Robert Kottler 83,
183, 304. 322
David Kovachick 137,
281
Jeff Kraeselsky 306
Lowell Krall 267
Brian Krakower 283
Alan Kramer 337
Robin Krams 85
Steven Kranz 260
Louis Kraselsky 283
Cheryl Kraus 213, 306
Karen Kravtin 85
Kenneth Krawchick 280
Paul Kregling 337
Paul Kretchner 77
Christine Kreyling 46
Sue Krieger 280
Wendy Krivitsky 316
Jeffrey Kroft 283
Susan Kron 82
Stewart Kron 77
Cheryl Kroveta 280
Theodore Krunkel 120
282
Maria Krupman 296
Tom Ktsanes 82
Karen Kulivan 246
Alejandro Kuprian 316
Jonathan Kurjan 337
Andrew Kurland 260
Steven Kushnick 273,
316
Neil Kwatinetz 296
Gary Kwawer 306
L
Lance LaBauve 84
Rene Labruyere 337
Winston Lacayo 76
Michelle Lacheo 162,
318
Robert Lachapellc 282
Daniel Ladd 263, 337
James Ladd 273
Varsha Ladd 46
Sabine Ladebeck 296
Donald Lagarde 337
Gerald Lagarde 85
Maurice Lagarde 322
Laure Lagonegro 48
David Lake 337
Grant Lam 296
Phuong Lam 26
Tri Lam 337
Gregg Lambert 316
Roland Lambert 80
Jerome Lamersdorf 319
Suzijnne Lamm 298
John Lancaster 278
Catherine Landess 246,
285
Michael Landry 316
Roger Landry 273
Karen Landsberg 80,
280
Michael Landy 283
Eric Lane 264, 316
Kenneth Lane 283, 316
Laura Lane 298
Richard Lane 281
Diana Lang 120
Mark Lang 97
Kristine Langdon 183
Arlen Langs 76, 316
Scott Lanham 337, 280
James Lanier 337
Leslie Lanier 276
Patricia Lanier 83,
285, 308
Arthur Lapidus 261
Midge LaPorte 48
Michael Larson 308
Jolly LaRue 337
Eric Laskcr 337
Elizabeth Latham 276
Marc lauricell 267
Marlyn Lausen 286
Hedda Lautenschlager 285.
295
Susan Lauterbach 285
Lester Lavalais 97
Andrea Lawrence 285. 337
Christopher Lawrence 85
Francis Lawrence 35
Naomi Lawrence 80
Sharon Lawrence 85
David Lawson 321
Terry Lawson 26
Lon Lazar 337
Kip Lazard 76. 308
Andre Lazarus 282 ,
Eric Lazarus 260
Robert Lazarus 282
Scott Lazarus 260
Tracey Lazarus 80. 321
John Leach 267
Jon Leader 283
Marjorie Leake 80
Joseph Leavitt 277
Brenda LeBlanc 106.
107. 337
Nicole LeBlanc 286
Robert Leboyer 298
Reggie Le Bray 97
Walter Lebreton 263
Maria Lebron 337
Paul Lecat 79. 298
Susan Lechtner 308
Paul Lecorgne 243
William Lecorgne 267.
76
James Ledbetter 280
Michael Ann Lederman 285,
316
Donald Lee 34
Feli.x Lee 316
Kenneth Lee 298
Ray Lee 82
Sandra Lee 85
Lisa Leech 137
Michael Lehnartz 266
Kim Lehto 81. 308
Heidi Leibman 84
Deborah Leiter 280
Kellie LeLeu.\ 298
Mike Lenhartz 287
Diana Leng 337
Allison Lenk 3 16
Ricardo Leon 80, 298
Dayid Lerner 84.
264. 337
Michael Lerner 308
Blaine Leroy 142
Keith Lescale 337
Martha Leshine 316
Richard Leson 337
Geoffrey Less 283
Peter Leuhusen 284
Bryan Levey 298. 319
Larry Levick 337
Lisa Levin 298
Marci Levin 367
Michael Levin 284
Nancy Levin 82, 308
Steven Levin 319. 337
Amy Levine 261. 338,
367
Andrew Levine 338
Arnold Levine 26
Beth Levine 261
T
392
Index
I il W.I III I in I IK- 7'>, ')l
II. U-riy I,c\inc .119
Joseph I cN inc 29S
.l.iiiK's I OS insoti 267
Miclua-I I cvill 260,
.VIS
Alisa 1 cvv .VtS
Brd Levy 26.V 298
Bruce Levy 267
C'lavton Levy 322
Dale Levy 8.3.
282. .3.18
Jean Lew 84. 316
Jill Lew '274. 308
Laurie lew 261. 308
Rohcrt Le\y 278
I erri Lew 261
Wetidv Lew 261
William lewin 260
Carrie Lewis 2.'i4.
27.";
Flovd Lewis 21
Jelf Lewis 1.19
Mar\in Lewis 97
Stephen Lewis 283
Susan Lewis 338. 280
Teresa Lewis 298.
82. 120
Ignatius Liberto 77
Sara Licha 83
William Lichtenstein 97
Gregory Liggett 97
Rohert Liljeherg 316
Janet l.imou/e 42
Ke\in Limp 264
Gary Lindemann 81. 77
Stexen I.indenhaum 277
Carl Lineberry 82
Ijry Lipkin 268
Randy lippert 338
I heresa Lippert 86
.Shari Lipschut/ 261
Jody Lischkolt 261
Douglas Lister 273.
298
David Litman 298
April Little 316
Linda Little 79
Lori Little 104. 286
Sabrina Little 286
Anna lilwin 80.
272. 316
Gene Lit/ 296
.lohn l.iukkonen 26
Mary I,i\audais 286
Joel Li\ingston 91.
28 1 . 308
Roland livney 273
Cesario Llano 298
W illiam Lob 77. 82.
338.
I jurie Lobel 3 16
Patricia Loeb 261
Steven Loeb 338
Stuart Loeb 78
Mindy 1 off 285, 298
Dougl.is 1 ogue 137.
298
Bvron I ohmaii S3.
217, 288
Prinio Lomb.irdi 3 16
Da\id lonner 319
Kenan I nomis 278
Bn.in 1 ooney 338
Madeleine I ope/ 298
Gregg 1 orherh.nim 79.
338 '
Charles Lorio 316
Peter I orson 30S
Anna 1 ou S.'^, 3 I 6
Solo Lourdes 3 U-
Lance Lourie 319. 338
Judy Love .108
Andrew Lo\erud 308
Sheri Low 298
Susan Low 276, 338
Cyril I owe 263
R. Sandlin Lowe 338
Mark Lowell 80.
86. 260. 338
Mike l.owenstein 298
Sarah Lowman 274. 308
Kclley Lo/es 286
Joe Lubow 93
Gary Lucks 338
Ine/ Luke 338
Ghent l.ummis 277. 338
Edith lussky 286. .108
Richard 1 us'lig 264.
308
Tern l.ustig 280, 298
Henry l.uttrell 28
Donn Lux 137.
338. 319
Timothy Lux 281
Richard Lvman 322
Paul Lvnc'h 28
Ellen Lyons 81
M
Janet MacDonald 338
Diane Machell 285. 298
Cleveland Mack 85. 79
Mike Mack 338
D. Irwin Mackenrolh 316
Kenneth Mackey 97
Mary Mackie 276
Richard Mackie 278
Lynn Maddox 86.
276. 338. 367
Sharon Madorsky 338, 81
l^ura Magaziner 261
Bryant Magee 308
Don Maggs 97
Nancy Magh 308
Fonda Magids 78,
85,92, 261, 316
Su/anne Maheu 298
Daniel Mahonev 137,
264
John Mahonev 284, 338
Michael Mailhes 338
Bill Maiman 92
Jacqualine Maiman 92
Rosalind Maiman 308
Steven Main 77, 298
Nancy Maio 246
Sylvia Major 42
Las/lo Makk .108
Peter Malcolmson 281
Beatri/ Maldonado 86,
213, 317
Barrv Malkin 319
Daniel Mallin 79, 317
Victor Malone 298
Darryl Malon/o 298
Vincent Man, ill. i 97.
102, 112
l.;uirie NLmdel 2"0, 308
Rich.ird M.inde .»
JelTrev Mank. 19
Robert Mann 2-.8, 319
Michael Mannis 91
.lames Mansour 353
Oliver Manuel 122
Arthur Maples 298
Sherri Marblcstone 261,
308
Caria Marccnaro 308
Caria Mareenaro 308
Me la me Marchand 85. 308
Bradley M.irciis 319. 338
Bruce M.irgolin 282
David Margolin 282
I erri Margolin 8 I. 86
Martha Mark 26. 317
Michelle Mark 308
Karen Markham 276
B;irbara Marklev32l
Ciregory Marks 298
James Marks 273
I.;innv Marks 79. 260
Larry Marks 91
Jose Marque/ 298
Nancv Marra 86. 286
317
Charles Marsala 268.
339
Turk Marthel 97
Fred Martin 261
Katherine Martin 274.
275
Laura Martin 308
Robert Martin .108
Rolando Martinelli 298
Mari.i Martine/ 321
Luis Marlorell 283,
339
Eric Marx 317
Chris Mar/iotti 261
Michelle Mar/o 83
Bill Maskill97
Keith Mason 120
Robert Mason 284
Elizabeth Masters 243,
259,274
Michael Masur 321
Frank Mathes 298
Colvin Malheson 1 16,
87
Roger Mathis 339
Celeste Matthews 353
Linda Matthews 80
Edw.ird Mauri 317
Marc Mauser 83,260.
308
Christopher May 308
Eugene Mav 339
Da\id Maver 263
James Mayer 281.3.19
Martin Mayer 263
Tanva Mavers 81
Andrew Ma\nard 339
Keith Ma/iirek 112.
339
Marv McArdle 29N
Sherman McCall 339
Ted McCatin 298
Brian McCarthy 267
Danny McC.irthy 28
Jerome MeC,irth\ 266
Michael MeCarlliy 3.19
Force McCauley 286, 298
Alice McCausl.md 46
Harriet .McClain 286,
339
Leslie McClung 298
Carolyn McConncll 276.
317
Flora McConnell 120.
276, 298
James McConncll 85
NLirie McConnie 298
Da\id McCord 79, 3.19
Alon MeCormick 321
Anthony McC"oimick 270
Maiihew MeCormick 281
Terry MeCormick 270
Nancy McCornuck 286
Carlin McCoy 120
Timmy McCray 97. 112
Naomi MtCrocklin 276
Catrcll McCulloch 76
Marg.iret McCullough 272
Mark McCullough 238.
259. 270. .108
Cclia McDanicl 274
Richard McDanicl 308
James McDcrmott 283
Mark McDougal 279
David McDowell 260
Paul McDowell 339
Robert McElwcc 339
William McGinn 270
Su/anne McGlonc 272
Clarence McGowan 55
78.82.264. 273.317
Harold McGrew 97
Sylvester McCirew 97
John McHale 278
Nora McHale 339
Rachel McHale 276.298
Jonathan McHugh 93. 317
Dana Mcllwain 270
Michael McKav 97
Paul McKee8l.77
John McKen/ie 268
Janice McKirgan92
Karen Mclaughlin 298
Stuan Mclaughlin 237.
278
Darin McMasier30S
Richard McMillan 82
Edwin McMullen 267
Robert McMurrev 254.
255. 281
Michele McNair 274
Gary McNamara 259.263
Tracy McNamara 281
Sara'McNeil .108. 272
Jennie McNeill 285. 3.19
Mindv McNichols 42.
82. 84.92
Edward McShanc 284. 317
W. Kennon Mc Williams 21
Colin McVe\ 284
Eric McWhirlcr9l.277
Timothy Mearig 80
Timothy Meaut 339
Jeffrey Mccksiroih 267
Raymond Medina 339
Marilyn Med\ed 321
Thomas Meehan 317
Etienne Megiia 308
Spence Mehl 93. 338
Day id Mchla 317
Susan Meincrt 84. 298
Marina Meiser 308
I juri Mei/ler 32 I
Jonathan Mcizler 83.
298
Riciirdo Mejia 298
l.vdic Mclendreg 38
Diana Mclichar 272
Paul Mellblom 268
Barrv Mendcloff93.
298
Estcliio Mcndc/ 298
Mirna McndoAi 264.338
l.ca Ann Mcnclcy 298
Craig Menker 284
Adam Menkes 260
Rebecca Mercer 79.
276
Mark Mercnda 308
Bart Merkel 81
Diana Merkel 274
Index
393
Debbie Mesirow 261
Sheryl Mesirow 261
Nicholas Mesloh 308
Christina Metcall" 80. 286.
298.
Patrick Metz 308
Richard Metzger 79
Stephen Metzinger 112.
263
Marearet Meurer 130.
276"
Scott Mexic 353
Bridget Meyer 274
Carolyn Mever 48
Daniel Mever 338
Harold Meyer 21
James Mever 319
John Meyer 338
Ken Meyer 97
Marguerite Mever 286
Richard Mever'270
Tania Meyer 81. 317
Gary Meyers 281
Marcella Michael 86
Peter Michaelis 278
John Michel
Merideth Mickel 26
David Mignatte 78. 281
Kelly Mihm 246
Daniel Mikulak 76.
112. 339
Benjamin Milam 317
Henrv Miles 112
Bruce Miller 269
David Miller 174.
264. 273. 312
Dennis Miller 61
Frank Miller 268
Jason Miller 260
Jeffrey Miller 260
John Miller 283
Marcia Miller 272
Marie Miller 183
Michael Miller 274,
299
Robert Miller 273
Shellv Miller 85.
338
Sherri Miller 311.
338
Shervl Miller 79
Andrew Mills 260. 338
Daisv Mills 299
Nancv Mills 261. 299
Jack Milne 80.
176. 338
Diana Minardi 86.
92. 285. 338
Sally Mintz 261. 308
Michele Mirabelli 41
Laura Miskovsky 272
Michael Mislo\e 26
Kathryn Mistretta 321
Max Mitchell 97
Melodve Mitchell 42.
203. 82
Richard Mitchell 282.
299
Rosie Mitchell 46
Stacey Mitchell 285
Louise Mizell 80. 308
John Mobley 284
Marion Mock 286
Anna Modelska 299
Jerrve Modenbach 106.
340'
Joel Modisette 308
Marty Moeller 79
Julie Moise 286. 299
Danny Molezion 85
John Molisani 308
Michael Mollow 272
Vanessa Monconduit 135.
273
Frank Monice 97
Robert Montague 263
Claudia Montero 76. 313
Patricio Montero 262
Frances Monteomer\ 286.
317
Thomas Montgomer\ 38
Michelle Mooch 93
Shane Moody 308
Katherine Moore 285. 299
Lisa Moore 276. 340
Nicky Moore 321
Michael Moorhead 308
Antonio Morales 308
Ana Morandeira 83. 308
Daryl Moreau 123. 127
Mark Morel 282
Bruce Morel 269
Alea Morelock 299
James Morgan 308
Susan Morgan 340
Gariann Morguelan 280
Robert Moriart\ 299
B. Paul M orison 284
Scott Morrell 273
Anne Morris 272
Carol Morris 48
John Morris 308
Joseph Morris 268
Kathryn Morris 299
Lennise Morris 299
Meredith Morris 340
Page Morris 276
Patricia Morris 76
Paul Morris 80.
277. 340
Robert Morris 258. 284
Ruth Morris 286
William Morris 58.
281, 317
James Morrison 78
Dean Morrow 308
Errel Morrow 97
John Morrow 299
Susan Morrow 286
Charles Morse 267
Marilyn Morse 120. 136
Michael Morse 340
Kelley Morsman 276
Francesca Moscatelli 308
Laurence Moser 140. 260
Robert Moses 97, 340
Joshua Most 262. 308
Kety Motichek 299
Margaret Mott 317
Michelle Mouch 340
Mary Mouton 286. 310
Denise Muckley 76. 340
Eric Mueller 363
Jonathan Mulkin 267
Peter Muller 299
N
David Naehman 277
Melissa Naehman 342
Jane Nakamura 81. 299
John Nakrosis 308
Doug Nani 287
Dale Naquin 136
Amy Nash 286. 317
Jose Nater 83. 308
Cari Nathanson 261
Denise Nathanson 280
Eddie Neal 97
Cynthia Neder 285
Ken Nehan 79
Ketti Neil 286. 299
George Nelson 308
Mark Nelson 268. 342
Lon Nelson 299
George Nesbitt 308
Steven Neuman 137.
269, 299
Anthony Newman 381
John Newman 48
Mark Newman 252
Tia Newson 106, 272
Thu Nguyen 342
Chervl Nickerson 104,
317'
John Nicosia 268
Patricia Nicosia 42
Michael Nictakis 258, 268
Guy Nielsen 273
Wilfred o Nieves 342
Bradley Nirenblatt 269
Ward Nixon 93, 284, 342
Suzanne Nochumson 261,
342
Donald Noe 112
Jacinta Noel 76, 342
Elisabeth Noeike 299
Joseph Nolan 281
Terence Nolan 249,
266. 285.317
Francis Noll 342
Sheri Norman 259
Andrew Normand 300
Craig Norris 281
Kyle Norris 281. 300
Leon Nowalsky 269
Roy Nues 93
Eileen Nugent 317
Arlene Nussdorf 280,
300
Joseph Nystrom 342
o
Robin Obannon 272,308
Thomas Oberle 79,
264. 342
Elizabeth OBrien 342
Elizabeth OBrien 317
Micheal OBrien 263. 300
Micheal OBrien 300
Agnes Ocasio 316
Tom OConner 81
Laura OConner 174
Thomas Oconner 137
Micheal Odea 308
James Odza 264
Marv Oehlschlaeger 84.
93. 300
Laurie Offenbera 80.
343
Yinka OGunleve 300
Mareeret OKeefe 180.
276. 300
Gregorv Olejack 97
Mark Olenskv 300
Greg Oliber 343
Luis Olivares 316
Suzanne Oliver 343
Joseph Olivier 77,
82, 266
Christopher Olson I7'7,
281
Frederic Oltarsh 283,
316
Margaret OMallev 276
Martin OMalley 3'00
William Omara 277
Eric ONeill 343
Dr. Tim ONeil 78
Gary Oseroff 277
Cheryl Osgood 81, 316
William OShaugnessey 278
Beth Osiason 261
Paul Osteen 273, 343
Faith Ostrow 116, 308
Edward OSullivan 343
Korati Ota 139
Sean OToole 282
Laura Ouverson 92
Leslie Overman 342
Louis Owen 284, 343
Micheal Owens 267
t
P
Tina Paco 81
Elizabeth Padwee 274
Joon Paik 28
Tobv Pallet 130,
261. 300
David Paliscak 97
Angela Paolini 343. 366
Gilbert Paolini 38
Kyriakos Papadopoulos 28
Michelle Papuyade 298
Jeanne Pappas 285
William Pappas 277
Bret Paris 270. 316
Lancaster Parker 3 16
Matthew Parker 268
Ronald Parker 97
Linda Parkhurst 343
Jeffrey Parkinson 262
John Parnon 273
Edward Parrott 270.
308
Foster Parsons 300
Robert Partain 300
Hester Paternostro 26
Charles Patin 82
Micheal Paton 268
Pamela Patrick 81
Steve Patrinick 283
Karen Patterson 272
Nancy Patterson 93.
300
Matthew Patteson 267
Charles Patton 267
Eric Paul 262, 343
Gladys Paysse 285,
343
Rene Paysse 135, 263
Gayle Peacock 80, 285
Jimmy Peacock 79, 343
Laura Pearce 240,
285, 286
Micheal Pearce 83
Joseph Pearl 79
Stephen Pearl 269, 300
Barbara Pearlman 276
Charles Pearson 269
Einar Pederson 42
Marilyn Pelias 300
Stephen Pelleriti 316
Jill Pender 78,
85, 343
Shari Lvnn Penner261,
308
Jay Pennington 1 12
Jerry Pennington 112
Kyle Pennington 77, 80
394
Index
Scott Pcnrod .100
April IV-ppc 2S5
Amcli.i Sue tVppcr H}.
M)H
Ckibnclki I'c-ppcr .IlK
Bill Pcnuilt 2S7
.hi;in I'crc .^IS
Stanley Pc re I man 2X4
Jorge Percra 343
Lisa Pcrc/ 76.
80, 185
Victor Pcrc/ 97. 112
Dorothy Pcrkowski 42
I.ori-Bcth Pcrlman M?>
Lyni-ttc Pcrlman 261
William Pcrrault 26.^
Shcp.ird I'crrin 26.1,
Andre Perron 278
Anne Perron 300
Daniel Perron 308
Theodore Perry 158
Adam Persky 260
Stuart Pcskin 269
.lohn Pelais 140
Ray I'eiers 80
Roger Petersen .308
Bradley Peterson 321
Carolvn Peterson 274,
308, .310
Charles Peterson 268,
343
Diane Peterson 343
Elizabeth Peterson 310
Nettie Peterson 300
Tim Peterson I 12
Adriennc Petite 272
Chester Pevronnin 28
Paul Pllueger 300
Jennifer Pharr 276
Peter Phalen 282
Eric Philer 273
Adam Phillip 300
Cherry Phillips 46
John Phillips 20
\irginia Phillips 285
Cathleen Pia«a 104
Rodger Pielet 321
David Peinia/ek .300
Judith Pike 300
Danielle Pilie 285
Marv Pinkerton 274
300
Micheal Pinney 284
Samuel Pinosky 269
Am\ Pinsker 55.
78. 82, 261. 308
Stephanie Pipkin 285
Lorraine Pivornik 180,
300
Adele Plauchc 274. 343
Diane Plauchc 42
Ke\in Plotlner 93
Gerald Plough .100
Martha Poe 38. .300
Jessie Poesch 34
Heidi Pohl 308
Mike Pokosniki 142
John Polera 343
Erika Polcschner 300
William Poling 300
Robert Polishook 318
Robert Pollard 137
JelTrey Pollock 283
Paul Polydores 77
Timothy Ponseti 300
Rui Ponte 308
Graham Poor 300
Micheal Popko 97
JelYrev Porit/ky 204.
Sharon Porit/ky 280
Gladys Portela 353
Jose Portela 343
David Porter 278
Steve Porter 281, .100
Beth Portnoy 280
Stuart P OS nock 269,
343
David Post 308
Karen Post 213. 318
Thomas Potter 278
Jean Poupeau 318
Carl Powe 77, .343
Allen Powell 353
Douglas Powell 84.
308
Donald Prados 344
Donna I'r.idos 255
James Pratt .300
Kathleen Pratt 274
Marian Presbcrg 344
Robert Preston 34
Ann Pre\att 285
Mark Pre/iosi 262
David Price 83
David F. Price 300
Kimberlee Priebc 82
Julie Procell 286
Robert Proctor 344
Mary Provenzano 344
Renee Punzi 142
Susan Pusar 280
Q
Leonard Quick 76. 97
James Quicksilver 269
Frank Quiglev 26
David Quinn'289. 363
Nancy Quintero 344
Nellie Quiroz 300
Neil Qwatinetz 93
R
Gamaliel Rabell 300
Khaled Rabie 262
Vickie Rabin 240.
261, 285
Jonathan Rachlin 269
Teri Ragosin 79
William^Raiford 281
Melinda Raincv 274,
344
Minerva Ramos 300
Bryan Ramson 85
James Ranee 264, .100
Hugh Randolph 287.
363
Ellen Rancy 285, 287
Melinda Ranev 243
Crec Rankin r74-75
James Rankin 282. 308
Dave Raphcl 92
Mari.innc R.ipier 276
.■\l.in R.ipoport 344
Jill Rapperport 344
Scott Ratchick 55,
79, 269
Douglas Ratclille 344
Robert Ratelle 344
Kate Ravin 318
Daniel Ravncr 116. 283
Shari Ravner 280
Stephen Ravosa 259,
277. .300
Bradford Ray 79
Gavin Ray 270
Micheal Ray 255,
287. 285
Kenneth Rcab 300
Robin Reagler 85.
308
Thomas Rebman 273
Jodie Recht 280
Andrew Reck 34
Jodie Recht 280
Carol Redman 286
Harry Rodman 38
Lisa Reed 80, 300
Nelson Reed 282
Regina Reed 272. .100
William Reed 31. 318
Andrew Rees 64.
282. 344
James Regan 318
Robert Regent 273
Raymond Reggie 263
Reggie Reginelli 97
Matthew Reich 269
John Reiehenbach 120.
268
Michelle Reid 285. .300
Kenneth Reidbord 137
273
Elizabeth Rcidy 276
James Reilv 80
William Reilv 21
Greg Reines'318
Bruce Reitt;r 269
Lisa Rcilnauer 344
Ronald Resnick 269
Barrv Rcsnik 79.
9 1 . 300
Ann Ressie 344
Stan Retif46
Brian Reuter .100
Merrill Reuter 242.
342
Allan Reynolds 80
David Reynolds 318
Elizabeth Reynolds 78
Elizabeth Revnolds 241.
344
Russell Rhea 58.
258, 263, 318
Richard Rhodes 79. 91
Ray Rhymes 273
Karen Ricard 42
Mark Ricard 85. 308
Ellen Riccobene 285
Peter Riccobene 268
David Rice 28
Greg Rice 97
Timothy Rice 136. 344
Emily Richard 353
Bruce Richard 344
Mike Richardson 122.
124
William Richardson 344
Jerry Richie 84
Jonathan Ricketts 78,
82
Chcrie Ricmcr 308
Dr. Karlem Ricss 258
Margaret Reiss 286
.Carol RicwcSI.
142, 143
Geoffrey Rigg 300
Christine Riggs 276
Robert Riggs .144
Nijme Rin'aldi 300
Jan Rineberg 280
Ana Rios 180,
2L3, 318
A.\cl Rivera 83
Miguel Rivera 83
Charles Robb97
Andre Robert 97
Alicia Roberts 76
Dave Roberts 79
Frank Roberts 97
Gary Robens 80,
174-75
Jeff Roberts 97
Louise Roberts .34
Re.\ Roberts 263
Beck Robertson 79
Donald Robertson .34
Elizabeth Robertson 241
Martha Robertson 344
Kenneth Robichaux 83. 344
Carrie Robinson 269. 300
Chandra Robinson 85, 318
David Robinson 269, 300
Kelvin Robinson 97
Alejandro Roca .301
Francis Roche 278
Julie Roehman 259. 280
John Roddey 363
John Rodnig 93
Bonnie Rodriquez 308
Francis Rodriguez 266
Jorge Rodriguez .308
Manuel Rodriguez 137
Marina Rodriguez 41
272.318
Miguel Rodriguez 301
Pamela Rodriguez 245
Raoul Rodriguez 97. 267
Mary Roehr 308
Barrv Rogers 79.
91,277
Elizabeth Rogers 310
R. Bradford Rogers 288
Lydia Rollo 285
Joseph Roman 76. 344
Ijwrence Romans .144
Richard Ronga .344
Timothy Rood 268
Barbara Roome .144
John Roonev 81,
141. 270,344
Michelle Roonev 213.
285
Alan Roos 269
Rosemary Roosa 85,
286. .10 r
Guenther Roppel 301
George Rosa 38
Sheri Rosanski 310
Micheal Rose 26
Sue Rose 128
Thomas Rose 97, 262
Edith Rosen 261. 318
Liurie"Rosen 137
Gail Rosenbaum 261
Maurice Rosenbaum 78,
79, 82. 283. .101
Alison Rosenberg 280
Howard Rosenberg 120
Micheal Rosenberg 26«
Richard Rosenberg 269
Sandra Rosenberg 116
Steven Rosencranlz 26
Mathen Roscngart 260
Andrew Roscn/wcig 260.
3i8
Ira Roscnzvvcig 83,
.104. 344
Linda Rosier 286
Gerhard Rosier 139
Stephen Rosoff 80, .144
Bruce Ross 310
Debra Ross 280. 310
Index
395
John Ross 301
Kimberly Ross 280
Micheal Ross 301
Neil Ross 260, 344
Julia Rosser 136,
186, 344
Mary Rossi 272
Bradley Rossway 281
Robert Rote 310
Maridel Roth 82. 318
Steven Roth 310
Adam Rothenberg 301
Gayle Rothstein 42
Alan Rottman 278
Micheal Rowe 220-21
Nancy Rowland 274, 345
Laurie Rozansky 345
Peggy Rubens 261, 301
Mark Rubenstein 269
David Rubin 93, 345
Ellen Rubin 345
Robert Rubin 345
Steven Rubin 277
Doric Rubinstein 301
Jill Rubinton 280
Curtis Rudbart 284
Sherril Rudd 42
Carol Rudo 310
William Rudolf 267
James Ruffer 140
Matthew Ruffing 321
Alfred Rufty 278
Jeffrey Rugon 85
Alex Ruiz 353
Iris Ruiz 301
Jane Rushing 42, 91
John Ruskin 342
David Russell 318
Peter Russin 269
Gerard Ruth 267
Anthony Ryan 284
Kelly Ryan 286
Kent Ryan 263
Mary Ryan 80
Alice Rybicki 310
Lang Ryder 277
Patricia Ryder 77,
285,318
s
William Sabo 345
Jonathan Sachar 30!
Ronald Sachs 78, 269
Sandra Sachs 130
Micheal Sacks 78
Peter Sacopulos 301
Kenneth Sadowsky 28,
160,310
Joseph Saenz 282
Michelle Sainer 261
Jim Sakelaris 243, 288
Rosemary Sale 310
Emily Saliers 285
Scott Salisbury 282,
318
Mark Sallinger 264, 301
Kaliste Saloom 344
Arturo Salow 268
Jody Salsitz 81,
137, 160
Angelica Salvador 344
John Salvaggio 344
Ann Salzer 42
Martha Sampson 318
Malida Sanchez 46
Luigi Sanchez 140
Salvador Sanchez 81,
310
Elise Sand 280
Patti Sandburg 261
James Sanders 97, 344
Robert Sanders 344
Therese Sanders 46
Renee Sanditz 240, 276
Lisa Sandler 261, 310
Morris Sandler 260, 344
Steven Sandler 264
Jon Sands 79
Aida Sanford 46
Fransisco San Miguel 270
Dora Santiago 301
Rafael Santiago 310
Vincent Santomassimo 268
David Sanzo 116, 344
Demetrious Sapounas 318
Lynn Sargent 272
Marc Sarnow 79, 344
Linda Saron 80
Andrew Saslawsky 301
Simon Sater 269
Jamie Saucer 241, 272
Linda Saul 286
Kirk Saulny 122, 124
Tracey Saunders 48
David Sausner 260
Suzanne Saussy 41,
83, 237, 274, 310
Mark Savini 97
Jonathan Sawyer 318
James Salco 345
Gordon Schally 345
Robert Schanker 301
Yesaayahv Scharf 122,
214
Dina Schefler 276
Edward Scheldt 269, 301
Gerry Scheirman 284
Gretchen Schellstede 301
Hermane Schellstede 310
Micheal Schement 239, 270
Deena Schencker 261
John Schenken 284, 318
Steven Schenker 76,
283, 345
Scot Scher 345
Anne Schiele 310
Barry Schiff 310
Tammy Schiff 261, 318
Douglas Schiffer 269
William Schifino 262,
345
Mark Schild 269
Keith Schiller 346
Mark Schiller 282
Mike Schiment 239
Peter Schloss 346
Bonnie Schmid 285, 346
Steven Schmid 97
William Schmid 281
Michael Schmidt 263
Sarah Schmidt 304, 318
David Schneider 54,
78, 260
Jim Schneider 46
Kyle Schneider 310
Charlotte Schoel 276
Carol Schoenbaum 91
Lisa Schohan 70
Ralph Scholtz 262
Stephen Schonerg 263
Douglas Schoninger 346
Pablo Schor 284
Kevin Schott 83
Cindee Schreiber 55,
78, 82, 160, 261, 346
Cynthia Schreiber 78, 346
Elizabeth Schreier 276
Mark Schremmer 120
Mike Schriber 81
Catherine Schroder 106,
346
Andy Schroth 67, 310
Wendy Schubert 80,
286, 301
Frederick Schuler 264,
310
Glen Schulman 93
Harold Schulman 64, 81
Paul Schulman 264
Linda Schultz 321
Barbara Schumann 86, 346
Herbert Schumann 283
Jody Schuring 274
Caroline Schwab 280
Lynda Schwalb 261
Perry Schwalb 301
Keith Schwaner 264,
346
David Schwartz 260
Leslie Schwartz 318
Mark Schwartz 140, 318
Mindy Schwartz 280,
310
Russel Schwartz 310
Susan Schwartz 310
Leslie Schwarz 276
William Schwennesen 346
Simone Schwob 261
Holly Schymik 285, 310
John Scorsone 41, 318
Linda Scott 85
Michael Scott 342
Susanne Scovern 301
Frank Scruggs 277
Karia Seals 106
Richard Se'arle 136,
284
Russeal Sears 346
Alva See 346
Rabah Seffa 80
Tina Segall 280
Karen Segar 321
Jon Seibert 346
Earnest E. Seller 268
Ann Sellman 276
Tami Seltman 259, 261
Darrel Semien 85
Patrick Senne 278
Bradley Sensibar 283
Jordan Sensibar 283
Cynthia Senter 285,
346
Marcelo Serra 346
Michael Sesan 269, 346
Robert Sethre 346
James Setzer 346
Christopher Seymour 277,
287
Jaye Seymour 285, 310
Parks Shackelford 267
Russell Shaddox 221
Mark Shadowens 346
Amy Shafer 272
James Shaffer 270
Steven Shaffer 268
Steven Shakno 78, 269
Robert Shankerman 78,
269,318
Dwayne Shannon 30!
Sigal Shapira 57, 83
Andrea Shapiro 318
Evan Shapiro 318
Michael Shapiro 77, 82
Adrian Share 342
Hugh Sharkey 140
Sarah Sharp 342
David Sharpe 301
David Shaw 283
Debbie Shaw 261
Ellen Shayman 321
Madeleine Sheahan 276
Jeffrey Shear 269
James Shearman 284
Thomas Shefield 310
Bonnie Sheitelman 261
Shari Sheitelman 261
Harry Shekhel 284
Taryn Shelton 79, 346
Andrew Shenkan 310
David Wakefield 301
Scott Shepard 310
Lisa Sherin 261
Julie Sherman 274
Matt Shermann 83
Doug Shiffer91
Howard Shifke 269
Mark Shifke 269
Weichung Shih 26
John Shirley 83
Susan Shiver 276
David Shmueli 269
Nancy Schoenberg 48
Lisa Shoham 80
Jill Shopneck 128, 318
Steven Shore 273
Catherine Shoup 259,
276
Brenda Sibille 274,
301,346
Alan Siegel 1 16,
269, 346
Carol Siegel 340
Jeffrey Siegel 269
Jeffrey Siegel 262
Jonathan Siegler 260
Mark Sigler 263, 301
James Sigman 269
Mack Sigman 266
Michael Silber 346
Joel Silberman 346
Peter Silton 93
Beth Silver 280
Charles Silverman 269
Gregg Silverman 269, 301
Richard Silverman 79, 177
Joel Silvershein 83,
93, 318
Elisa Silverstein 280
Kenneth Silverstein 78,
269, 346
Raymond Silverstein 268
Robert Silvey 321
Margaret Simak 301
Mario Siman 345
Steven Simerlein 318
Jean Simion 259, 272
Stephen Simion 268
Sean Simmons 140
Jamie Simms 97
David Simon- 93
Eugene Simon 263
Kathleen Simon 286
James Simonette 80, 262
Alfred Simons 82
Jonathan Simpson 284
Terence Sinclair 310
Juliet Sincoff 261, 347
Leslie Singer 280
Michael Singer 279
Nancy Singer 347
Steven Sipan 318
Julia Sipos 60,
177,310
Gary Sircus 93,
269, 347
Nina Sirelius 301
Joseph Skeens 80
Inde
Donald SkclTington 347
D.in Skcllon 92
l.imcs Skih.i 74, 301
Shcllcv Skilcs 27(1
Susan Skinner «0, 3IS
Stephanie Skvlar 160,
347
John Sladkey 321
Elisa Slater 97
Robert S la to IT 301
William Slatlen 267
Sari Sli\ nick 261
Julie Sloan 259
Steven Sloan 266
I'eter Sloss 270, 347
Kenneth Slossbert 80
Alice Slutsky 48
Christian Smalley 267,
347
Clifton Smart 278, 318
Mary Smart 286
Pauline Smeleer 48
.laequeKn Smilev 301
Jill Smiley 280, 310
Alexis Smiskna 281
Annemarie Smith 301
Bradley Smith 301
Brian Smith 301
Bruce Smith 282, 318
Carol Smith 48
Cecelia Smith 85
Donnalyn Smith 301
Elton Smith 346
Hallie Smith 85, 310
James Smith 140, 347
Janet Smith 347
Jeanne Smith 82, 347
Joseph Smith 83
Larry Smith 301
Lea Smith 276, 310
Nicholas Smith 264
Norma Smith 347
Reed Smith 310
Richard Smith 318, 347
Rutus Smith 273
Sherrill Smith 301
Stephanie Smith 310
Su/anne Smith 85, 261
Su/anne Smith 286
Tracey Smith 276
Troy Smith 347
Tyrone Smith 31,
97, 319
Wayne Smith 97
Lawrence Smithson 271
Jeanne Smits 286
Gregory Smolka 310
Elain Smooke 272
Melanie Smvthe 347
Jodi Snvder'285, 347
Richard Snyder 319
Peter Sobel 281
Gary Sod 26
Bcckv Sehoel 301
Harold Sogin 28
Luke Sojka 79, 319
Ivy Sokol 261
Jan Sokol 280, 301
Jodi Solomon 120
Moshe Solomonow 29
Zacharv Solomon 269,
310
Lisa Soloway 280
Virginia Sommer 276
1 reg SongN 97,
112,301
Roland Sosa 266
Michael Sosnow 269
Elena Soto 276
Lourdes Soto 83
Mindy Spar 261
Stephen Sparacio 262
Mark Speeiner 3 10
Harriette Spector 259,
261
Lynn Spector 3 10
Ross Spector 273
Stuart Speer 269. .301
Cindy .Speiser 280
Da\id Spei/man 280
Sharon Spence 274
Andrew Sperling 278
Paul Speyerer 279. 310
M,ir\ Ann Spilker 274
Raphael Spindola 347
Mark Spirer M)\
Owen Spit/ler 120. 301
Micheal Spratlev 347
David Spratt 266
Douglas Sprunt 267
Geot'trey Sqitiero 347
Natalee Staals 285
Francis Stabile 3 10
Gregory Stadtlander 273
Lesley Stanford 272
Philip Stanley 80
Clarissa Star 261
Robert Slarbird 301
Karen Starnes 78
Thomas Starnes 38
Andrew Starr 269. 301
Jaqueline Starr 301
Marlon Starr 269. 301
Tim State 81
Timothy Stater 347
Edward Stauss 271
Mark Stave 347
Patrick Staves 277
Louis St. Calbre 270
Ruth Stecher 241.
272, 285
Catherine Steck 80, 278
Charles Steck 91,
278, 347
Dale Steele 97
Martha Steele 93
Barbara Steen 285
Joe Steen 281
Kathryn Steeneck 347
James Stefanic 347
Alison Steier 347
Lesley Steil 301
Calvin Stein 347
David Stem 269. 289
Gary Stein 282
Joyce Stein 285
Karen Stein 261
Laurie Stein 261
Mark Stein 300
Robert Stein 269
Cathy Steinberg 280
Sidney Steinberg 282
Steven Steiner 260
Lawrence Stempel 260
Gary Stephenson 79.
278
Paul Sterbcow 263
Manfred Sternberg 267
Sid Sternberg 310
Frank Sierneck 269, 348
Barry Stevens 277
Caroline Stevens 274,
275, 310
Palmer StcNcns 310
Margaret Stewart 286
Martha Stewart 348
James Still 97
Maragaret Stock 38
Alan Stone 262
Ann Stone 286, 310
Kathleen Stone 286,
347
Lylcw Stone 348
Greg Slopher 97
Nancy Storm 310
Liliana Story 286
Christopher Straka 302
Deborah Stratford 319
Stephen Siraughan 281
Benjamin Strauss 310
Marjorie Strauss 310
Nancy Strauss 348
Seih Strauss 83, 302
Jeffrey Strcich 116,
267
Erica Strisand 280
Edward Stroble 82. .348
Kent Struble 281
Warren Siruhl 260
Susan Studley 302
Valentin Sua/o 310
Charles Sullivan 287
Daniel Sullivan I 12
Elizabeth Sullivan 272
Paul Sullivan 83,
278, 348
Sam Sullivan 28. 85
san Sullivan 286, 311
Jami Summersgill 348
Jeff Suas 137
Gregory Sunkel 282, 348
Mitchell Supler 79, 302
David Sussman 271
Lauri Sussman 348
Shaynee Sussman 302
Robert Swallow 77, 302
Charles Swannack 136
James Swanson 278
Howard Swar/man 302
Tracy Swedlow 137, 302
Patrick Sweeney 140,
302
Kevin Switzer 120
Laurie Swoff 261
Anthony Sylvester 262
Carla Sylvester 319
Scott Sylvester 348
Elizabeth S/vmurski 353
T
Allen Tafel 268
Matthew Taggelt 348
Earl Tai .302
Tirana lalalak 270
Georgia Talbot 81 .
139, 274, 347
Robert Talbot 283
Jeltrey Tan 311
Deborah Lanenbaum 280,
319
Jeffrey Tannenbaum 260
Larry Taplin 342
Maurice 1 .iquino SI
Hallal Tarek 311
.•\bdulrahman lassan 352
Lisa Tawil 280
Andrea Ta.xman 93
Chapman Laylor 86
Chuck Taylor 141
Kevin Taylor 85. 348
Patricia Taylor 349
Saleh la war 349
Howard Tee 264
Philip Tecl 79
Gregorv Tcndrich 78,
269"'. 3 i I
Marv Icnnis 276
Siantord lerry 283.
259
Martha Tester 142
Victor Tcumcr 271
Wendy Thai! 20
Joy Thaler 349
Danny I hcil 112
Alan Thomas 30, 31!
Charles Thomas 243,
277. 288
Cherie Thomas 349
Donald Thomas 97
Mary T homas 48
Susannah Thomas 28S.
32!
Alton Thompson 347
Kyle Thompson 97
Mike Thompson 48
Patricia Thompson 302
Paul Thompson 122. 123
Robert Thompson 122
Margaret Thorne 272
Jeffrey Thornton 284.
302
Julia Thurner 241, 276
Micheal 1 ieman 264
Micheal Tierney 282
John Tiilotson 282
Philip Tingle 281
Frank Tipler 26
Darrvl Tipion 97
Rhoda Tishler3ll
Pam Ti/er 26!
Christopher lobe 268
Mark Tobias 262
Micheal Tod ore 283
Victor Tokach 77.
82. 226
Lisa Tompkins 261
Victor Tortorich 97
SusanTouff 280, 319
Richard Townley 83,
349
Martyn Townsend 93
Sharon Towry 128. 319
Frank Toye 267
Toshikazu Toyama 302
Lynn Traband 349
Eric Trattner 282
Brian Trcacy 8!
David Ireltin 31 I
Winnie Trevillian 58
A. Tribuwit/ 130
Margaret Trice 274
Arthur Tnche 122.
319
Pat Trivigno 34
Denisc Trocder .302
Thomas Troiino 281
.Amy lrubo\vii7 261
John 1 ruell 263
Robert Trueii 263
Nelson Trujillo 81.
137. 311
Tracv Truppman 80
David lucker 269
Kim Tucker 76, 85
Jonathan Tunis 269
Margaret Tuppcr 128.
319
Nancy Turkel 286. 311
Jane Turner 31 1
Pamela Turner 276
Ross Turner 267
Vincent Turner 300
Ted Turncy 97
Thomas Turri 262
Richard Tultlc 34
Lisa Twill 259.
285.302. 311
Index 397
in
Stacy Tyre 285
u
Robert Udolf 259,
269, 319
Liliana Ugaz 76,
82, 83, 285, 349
Lawrence Uhde 31 1
Edgar Ulloa 79, 302
Lisa Underwood 302
Mark Unverzagt 302
Gregory Upton 349
Dawn Urbanek 86
E. Peter Urbanowicz 82,
268
Juan Urrea 349
Tracy Ury 349
Kent Utsey 349
V
Alberto Valcarcel 302
Valinda Valdez 349
Gregory Valladad 281
Donna Van Cott 93, 349
Archer Vandenburgh 267,
349
Marietta Van Der Meer 274
Dean Vandiver 262
Koenraad Van Ginkel
79, 302
Micheal Vanpetten 281
Camille Van Sant 276
Anthony Van Vliet 281
Steven Van Zandt 271
Thomas Varner 278
Allison Vaughan 302,
349
Lisa Vaughan 93
Steven Vaughn 61, 174
Alberto Vasquez 38
Alberto Vega 302
Pedro Veiguela 262
Patrick Veters 319
Marie Vickers 286,
302
Lori Vidal311
Andrea Vidrine 302
David Vigh 349
Plauche Villere 81
Bam Viloria 85
Robert Vince 77
Burton Vincent 273
David Vining 82,
264, 319
Louise Vinueza 349
Philip Viola 120
Junesse Viril 80,
81,311
Xavier Viteri 78,
82, 311
Albert Vitter 26
Rafael Vizcarrondo 3 1 1
Daniel Vliet 28, 348
Matthew Voelkel 282
Maureen Vontz 302
w
Edward Wachtel 116,
349
John Waddell 278
Micheal Wadler 269,
289, 319
A.J Waechter 21
Daniel Wagner 137,
287
Eric Wagner 262
Trudy Wagespack 286,
349
Michele Wahlder 280
Damon Waitt 319
Michele Walalden 302
Thomas Wald 282
Lee Waldman 78,
9 1 , 26 1 , 302
Melanie Waldman 285,
311
E. Wade Walk 349
Cedric Walker 28
Dana Walker 85
Douglas Walker 302
Leigh Wall 286, 319
Shannon Wall 285, 311
Curtis Wallace 122
Glen Wallace 278
Tony Wallace 122
Will Wallerstein 302
Lisa Walsey 280
Kathleen Walsh 302
Kimberlv Walsh 353
Steve Walsh 93
Thomas Walsh 302
David Walter 77. 349
Ivan Walters 302
Judith Walters 353
Robin Walton 31 1
Mark Wanthal 319
Pauline Warriner 285
Robert Wartelle 284
William Washburn 302,
349
Joy Washington 302
Lionel Washington 97,
112
Liisa Wastrom 349
Jessica Waters 286
Henry Watkins 278
John Watkins 302
Mark Watson 321
Paul Watson 282
Gordon Watt 278
Brenda Watts 311
Elizabeth Watts 38,
272, 349
Robert Watts 28
Kimberly Wayne 302
Micheal Weaver 349
Cameron Weber 282
Laura Weber 91
Elton Webster 122
Mason Webster 42
Patricia Weeks 274
Catherine Weil 83,
285. 311
Kenneth Weil 91,
93.269. 319
Linda Weil 302
Thomas Weil 160, 282
James Weinberg 269,
277
Sanford Weinberg 260,
321
Lori Weiner 280
Micheal Weinman 284
John Weinmann 21 ,
267, 349
Ellen Weinstein 280
Erik Weinstock 266
Beth Weintraub 272
HtTschel Weisfeld 260
Kenneth Weisman 269
Paul Weisman 260
Randi Weisman 280
Barry Weiss 260
Bryan Weiss 269, 350
Gregory Weiss 282
Elizabeth Wilson 93,
350
Gordon Wilson 303
Jonas Wilson 350
Pam Wilson 141
Tara Wilson 85
Kevin Wimbley 303
Erinn Winchester 303
Susan Winchester 80,
303
Carey Winder 267
Derek Winebrenner 268
Ronald Winger 76, 85
Marcia Wink 303
Thomas Winn 282, 311
Todd Winters 311
Gregory Wisdom 281
Susan Witt 319
William Witz 140, 311
Mike Witzel 34
Jeffrey Wolf 260
Stephen Wolf 266
William Wolf 277
Anne Wolfe 80, 157
Anne M. Wolfe 272,
286, 350
Charles Wolfe 120,
319
STeven Wolfe 258
Uura Wolff 93,
274, 350
Rebecca Wolff 311
James Wolfson 269
Steven Wolis 260, 350
Ronald Wonder 350
Peter Wong 319
Jorge Wong-Chen 353
Anthonv Wood 97
David Wood 282
Gordon Wood 93, 350
Elizabeth Woods 272
William Woodworth 268
Arthur Woolverton 282,
303
Gregory Woolverton 303
Margaret Woolverton 286,
311
Gary Wortham 116
James Wrathall 79
Kimberly Wright 286
Timothy Wright 262
Michelle Wvckoff 319
Mark Wynne 283
Lawrence Weiss 283
Rhett Weiss 268
David Weissman 302
Marion Welborn 286, 319
William Welch 282. 350
William Wellons 260
Deborah Wells 350
Deborah L. Wells 350
George Wells 269
Martin Wells 43.
116. 269. 350
Jeffrey Wenhold 97
Kenn Wenn 135
Jeffrev Wenzel 97. 112
John Wenzel 97
Andrew Werth 2.
55. 78, 82, 264, 319
Miles Wertheimer 350
Nancy Wertheimer 350
Jonathan Weseley 302
Carla Westcott 63, 93
Carl Westerhold 350
Andrew Wetstone 268
Evan Wetzler 262, 350
Philip Wetzler 302
Elizabeth Whalen 350
Thomas Wharton 278,
319
Terry Whatley 302
Gary Wheeler 350
Randal Wheeler 270
Richard Wheeler 302
David Whiddon 139, 350
Alora White 272, 302
Debbie White 303
Hugh White 281,285
Margaret White 276
Walter Whitehurst 271,
350
Elizabeth Whitmore 81,
271, 311
Jason Whitten 97
Robert Whittomore 34
Martin Wiarda 350
Mary Weiland 286, 303
Susan Weiner 261
Brent Weise 311
Micheal Wilensky 281
William Wilensky 269
Bert Wilkins 28
George Wilkins 38
Timothy Wilkinson 283
Sarah Willard 79
Theresa Willen 60,
79, 303
Joseph Willey 303
Bernadette Williams 128
Clayton Williams 281, 303
Elizabeth Williams 286, 350
EUzabeth A. Williams 276
George Williams 140
Jav Williams 283
John Williams 122.
127. 319
Kevin Williams 76,
78, 82, 84, 350
Mary Williams 84
Micheal Williams 76, 85
Peggy Williams 42
Robert Williams 273
Travell Williams 76-, 80
Ann Williamson 31 1
Edward Williamson 28
Wendy Willis 72, 73
Ford Willoughby
Y
Alan Yacoubian 350
Leonard Yamada 82
Majid Yamin 350
Michael Yanuch 93,
319
Edith Yarborough 274,
303
Lawrence Yarborough 266,
311
Rix Yard 43,81, 82
Steven Yates 277, 350
Mary Yazgi 303
Jonathan Yellin 281
Tony Yelovich 97
Maria Yiannopoulos 286,
303
Elizabeth Yonge 93
Margaret Yonge 276,
350
Thomas York 281, 303
Anne Young 286
David Young 267. 274
398 /.
dex
John V(iiiii(: :"i. :m
I'ctcr Youny 30.^
Kohiit ^■ollllg 46
Scynioui ^ luiiig 266
KohiTl ^ iMiiiyhloiKl 277
.lctlic\ ^ iiiiiiyni.m J^4
Sus.m >'urni;in 2X0
l.aurn.- /.ihcliu .^19
Rohcrl /ccc.i M)}
Panu-hi /.ihkr 74. 2(il
ScDll /all Id 2M
Monica Zakr/cwskl .VSU
Dana Zaic 2X0
Dcyna Zarago/a 350
Ixigli Zarcm 350
Roberta Zarkowski 261
Robin ZcilbcrgL-r 2S0
Claudia Zcldcn 303
Ann ZaniL-nak 286
H-irhara Zcnisky 85.
303
Donald ZcriMl/ 260.
350
Krcdric Zcr\t>s 79
.Ian Zcul^clH■l 350
.1 urate Zibas 136
Lisa Zicr 261
Thomas Zilahi 260
Michael Zimmerman 34
Sheril Zimmerman 261
Randi Zinbcrg 261
l.inda Zoblolsky 303
f-rcd Zuckcr 48
James Zullo 1 16. 263
Karen Zucig 311
Editor's Note
Tulane has had another great year, con-
tinuing to demonstrate both its desire and
its ability to rank among the nation's top
schools. New academic programs and stan-
dards, extensive renovations of the campus,
and winning athletic teams are only a few of
the most obvious indications of our upward
movement. I hope that this yearbook pre-
sents a fairly complete picture of these
trends and occurrences.
I want to thank my entire staff who
helped complete all 400 pages of this book,
basically on time. Special thanks go to Bob
Kottler, our resident editor emeritus, who
was always around when I needed to know
the answer to a question or the solution to a
seemingly impossible chore — he was even
around when I didn't need him. My special
thanks also go to Ed Esposito, the only per-
son at Tulane who actually "wanted" to edit
the classes section of the yearbook. Little
did he know that anyone who was foolish
enough to seek that position would also be
foolish enough to seek the Editor-in-Chief's
position. Good luck with ne.xt year's book.
Ozgur also deserves special recognition for
his willingness to round up photographs
only three days before a major deadline,
while simultaneously maintaining his un-
ending interest in females. Ira, our other
editor emeritus, brought us invaluable an-
swers to our university-related questions,
and was willing to provide 24-hour copy
editing service to our sometimes "ailing"
stories.
The award for design ability (with no pre-
vious yearbook experience) goes to both El-
eanor and Amy. Eleanor's added willing-
ness to type, made deadlines a little more
possible to meet. Bill, our staff nice guy,
made my job a whole lot nicer because it
was always nice to know that someone on
the staff would not only listen to me, but
would follow through on our discussions.
Sarah made everyone's job a little easier by
always helping with whatever had to be
done, and Larry was always willing to write
or rewrite a story on short, short notice.
To the myriad of people w ho helped us do
small tasks over the course of the year,
whether it was stuffing envelopes or index-
ing hundreds of names, thank you! \\c real-
ly couldn't have made it without you —
especially the die-hards who stuck around
until the last page was turned in.
Mindy. good luck in your future law ca-
reer and thank you for your help and sup-
port over the year.
To the endless string of university admin-
istrators and faculty who helped us in what-
ever way they could, thank you. Diana
Pinckley deserves an award for willingncis
to help us way above and beyond the call of
duty.
Frank Myers and Sherry Smith at the
Delmar Company were always patient with
me and my million questions about small
technical details.
Most importantly, 1 would like to thank
(and finally get to know) my husband, Da-
vid, for his amazing tolerance with me and
all of the time spent putting the book to-
gether. Not too many marriages start o(T
with the couple together only after 10:00
p.m. "Thank you" also go to my parents
w hose support has never ended and was es-
pecially strong this year.
LZfyrtyOAJ
Ak^Orryyu
Index
399
Credits
nters
Julie Brackenridge
pl93 ...They All Axed for You
Danny Broh-Kahn
p28 Engintfring
p40 Computeii/ation
Heidi Davis
p22X TEMS Provides Emergency
Care
for the Student in Need
David Dunn
pl42 Soccer Third in City League
Bill Could
p64 TUCP Tunes in Tulane
Gretchen Harper
p7() CAC1 US Lends a Helping
Hand
John Herring
p2M) Now Comes Laundry Li me
Jeff Kahn
p8 Entertainment
Susan Kalishman
p4 Student ln\oi\ement
Joshua Katz
p200 Jackson Square Offers Many
Diversions
p202 A Hurricane is a Killer
Larry Korn
p22 Deans
p I 1 6 Lacrosse Rallies in
Championship Win
pi 18 Ruggers defeat LSU in Fall
Season
pl34 Golf Team Sinks Last Put
pi 36 Club Sports
pl62 The PhoneOnly Hums 'Cause
it Doesn't Know the Words
p236 Greeks Don't Want no Freaks
p242 Dirtv Deeds
p244 Greek Week
p246 A Brother's Best Friend
p24X Living Dirt Cheap
p254 Let the Good Times Roll
p258 IPC
Ted Kruckel
p2IX Tulanians Hit the Road in
Mass
p226 Quality Inn Blue
Dale Levy
p62 Progressi\e Rock Thrives at
WTLIL
Daryl Moreau
p6 Competition
Darin Portnoy
p36 Athletics
Michelle Rooney
piy4 Canal Place Brings Fine
Stores
to New Orleans
!ra Rosenzweig
p24 Research
p54 Controvery Dominates the
ASB
plOH Batters Reach Regionals
pi iO Metro Champions!
Steve Rosoff
p58 Choir Travels to London
Susan Strauss
p68 Student Foundation Works for
1 ulanc
Caria Sylvester
p72 Female Cadet Reaches for the
Stars
Peter I'rbanowicz
p74 Who Cares?
Lisa Vaughn
p46 Dexelopment
Linda Weil
p52 Emotions in Motion at the
Newcomb Dance Club
Michael Yanuch
p4S Admissions
Sarah Schmidt
p30 Architecture
p32 Public Policy
p34 Classics
p246 A Brother's Best Friend
p259 Panhellenic
Joel Silvershein
p96 Riding the Crest of a Winning
Season
pi 04 Cheerleaders Urge Wave to
Victory
p 1 0 6 Lady Wave Drowns
Opponents
pi 12 Scholarship. Surprise Bolster
Track Team
pi 14 Sailors VVa\e Competition
pl20 Six Named All American
pl22 Wa\e Swamps LSU in Post
Season
Photographers
Ozgur Karaosmanoglu 4a. 4b, 4c,
12b, 14a. 14b, 18a, 20a, 22b, 32c,
42a, 43b, 45a, 45b, 48c, 49a, 50a,
52a, 54a. 55a, 56a, 56b. 57b. 62a.
63a, 63b. 66a. 68a, 69a, 69b, 70b,
76a, 78c. 79c. 80a. 80b. 81b. 81c.
82c. 83b. 84b, 85b, 87b. 87c. 90b.
90c. 91b. 92a, 93a, 93b, 94a, 154a,
158a, 160a, 162a, 164a, 172a, 182a. 184b, 185a. 188a,
189a. 189b, I9la, 196c. 198b. 208a. 209a, 210a. 21 la.
214a, 218a, 223a, 226a, 234a, 236a. 236a. 238a, 239a,
239b, 240a, 240b, 241a, 242a. 246a, 248b. 248c. 257a.
259a, 259b, 269a, 271a. 273a, 275a. 276a. 278a, 281a,
284a, 285a, 287a, 287b, 288a, 289a. 290a. 353a, 363a.
Mazin Abu-Ghazalah la, 2b, 6c,
I Ob, 24c, 30a, 34b, 34c, 38d, 43a,
46a, 46b, 48a, 77c, 83a, 92c, 107b,
1 14a, I 14b, 1 15a. 1 18a. 1 19a, 119b,
120a, I3la, 132a, 133a, 134a, 134b,
136a. 136b. 136d. 138c. 139a. 166a.
166b. 171a, 173a, 180a, 190a, I9lb,
192b. 194a, 195a. 195c, 201a, 202a,
203a, 204b, 221a, 221b, 223b, 232a. 233b, 286a, 303a.
31 la, 322a, 326a, 329a, 336a. 348a.
EBob Kottler 2c. 16a, 17a. 23a. 23b.
tf^i^ 33a. 35b. 37b. 81a. 96a. 98a, lOla,
iPH^g 102a, 104a, I04b, 107a. 108a. llOa.
^1H| Ilia, I 13a, 116a, 1 16b, 120b, 122a.
"" -^^^ '22*'- '■^^^- '^^"^ '^^''- '^■'''- '^^'''
=^JhH 128b, 129a, 130a, 135a, 137c, I40b,
■f^^h I40d. 142a, 142b, 143a, 143b, 182b,
~ .^M 183a. 222b. 240c. 250a. 351a, 357a,
361a, 364a, 364b, 365a, 366a, 367a, 368a.
Byron Lehman 6a. 6b, lOa, 20b,
21a, 22L 25a, 27b, 28b, 28c, 28d.
29a. 29b, 30b. 31a. 35b, 37a, 40a,
41a, 60b, 61a, 68a, 72a, 73a, 86a,
89a, 138a. 139b, I39d. 140a, 177a,
195b. 196b. 202b. 203b. 217b, 219a,
220a, 228a, 231a, 254a, 260a, 26.3a.
267a. 272a, 282a, 288b, 295a.
John Foley 12a, 13a. 16b, 53a, 78b,
82a, 84c, 97a, 99a. 100a, 159a,
165b. 167a. 167b. 167c, 169a, 178a,
183b, 196a, 199a, 205a, 224a, 225a,
248a, 261a, 270a, 274a, 280a, 283a,
362a, 362b, 363b, 366b, 368b.
Seth Strauss 22d, 26c, 27a, 30c,
35a, 40d, 42b, 44a, 47b, 136c,
137a, 137b. 141b. 170a. 204a. 207b,
2l2a,2l2b.215a,2l5b, 237a, 251a,
253a, 256b, 258a, 258b, 292a, 330a,
340a, 342a, 345a.
Greg Kinskey 22e, 26b, 30d, 32b, 32d, 34a, 38a, 38b,
40b, 42d, 44b, 156a, 160b, 186a, 186b, 186c, 187a,
197c, 232b, 232c.
Dale Levy 24b. 25b, 32a, 36a, 36b, 41b, 42c, 57c, 63c,
64a. 65a, 76c, 77a, 88b, 141a, 216a, 217a, 227a, 287c.
Suzanne Saussy 2a, 1 5a, 22h, 24a, 33a, 39b, 6 1 b, 9 1 a,
138b, 177b, 2I3a, 243a, 252a, 256a, 262a, 264a, 296a,
308a, 315a.
Carl Lineberry 60a, 76a, 78a, 79a, 87a, 88a, 90a, 1 68a,
174a.
Joel Silvershein 24d, 28a, 34d, 38c, 70c, 71a, 188b,
356c. 357b, 357c.
Mark Unverzagt 48b, 67a, I57b, 192a, 193a, 279a,
299a, 318a, 332a.
Fran Dubrow 22g. 3 1 b. 77b. 80c. 84b, 85a, 86b, 89b,
89c, 91a.
Pamela Keller 40c, 74a, 99b, 165a, 176a, 198a, 198c,
199b
Liz Cravens 49b, 200b, 201a, 250b, 253b.
Jenny Dunn 175a, 206a. 218b, 222a, 304a.
Andy Pellar 26a. 70a, 182c, 192b, 200a.
Peter Sacopulos 79b, 161a, 180a, 254b, 325a.
Armand Berlin 22a, 47a, 358a, 358b.
Katie Brucker 58a. 320a, 321a.
Brad Nirenblatt 158b. 158c. 159b.
Tom Weil 22c. 180a, 184a.
Lance LaBauve 83c, 124a.
Sigal Shapira 89b, 89c.
Dan Thiel 112a. 112b.
G. Andrew Boyd The Times- Picayune, The Slates
Item 1 03a.
Victor Rodriguez23lb.
r-