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Full text of "Southern campus"

once 
saw a man 



isHIMlu 



d off, one 



deac 



1 

k 


9t, 


m ^^^^H 


i 


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nu 





we hove by being 



young 




been betrayed, 



lost our copious notes 
on how the world should be, 



swallowed by the giant christian fish 






H^ttidf-^^, 



in something all too large 
ill too black 

:ill too uncomprehensible 
::ill too possibly beautiful 



'^'. 







to be true 







now having drunk 
drenched our own boptisma 

stagger forth through the desert o 
sum time youth 



take... the. ..crazy... leap- 
do i dare 
to ask a question 

grant enough to say 



DO NOT KNOW 





how this god that flog 
— — I but where great god but where 

■ iHr I "J 

are those moments, 
the moments i tuck to next chance, 
i promised myself 
the time to smell 
orlaughorbreatheordie 
I maybe even cry 

^.- to chew brown gross, 

*'^ I- II- II 

1 asking, calling up oil my senses 



ihatteri 



ng my soul 



a rainbow number times 

feeling 

not just talking for chris' sokes not jus' talking 

man 

a good man a block man jew man cloud man 

i am not a dead man 




x 






0'". 



• » 



-N* 



»--- 




please not that 

after two hundred kaleidescopic centuries in up-tight chairs 

and hard-wood floors topped 

died 

cast and 

layed with plastic squares and 

cigarette butts 

i counted each . . . 





> 



J^- 



*JL* ^'^ 







'^w^ 






afternoons 

when the greenest hop-scotch flowers 

dared to dangle ring cling 



in ttie window 



of lea 



irning •' 




.greater men - 

' '''^-- ^i^fP posing history as trut 



idealistic with thesis 



on war 



9j^ 



:. to dare believe 
this rnegalomanic lilliputian race 



y 






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^^^^T^^^^^^^^^B 


R* 1 




r- 


^tj 


f 


M 


/I 



will blow its race 






facade 

punch and counter punch 
drop the faint breath creature- 
8. ..9.. .fo- 
yer out-stumbling 
vomit self 

beg asylum in a universe 
he'll never understand 

13 



yes is grappled with dem freaks 
jtached turtle necked surfing frater kind, one 



1^ 



X 




^ 





JL 



who cares how long de sit and spew 



rattle 



der cul 



et 'em net a job 



see lite 



when things is really tough, 

ike when i was a kic... 

shall retell my father's stories 




• T 



^1 




why they mark the granite 



(which will lay flat 

on my now dead brown grass 

being easier to cut said the v. a. cemetary caretaker 



all on a beautiful day, 
i missed) 



when life is no longer 

the juice squirting saucy on a hard tangerine, and 





16 




my days become pole yellow winos 
spitting out seeds... 
which will grow nothing 



alone 




17 



/ > 



/ 




/ 



y 



/ 



\ 



/ 



•i\ 





held empty splashing out my red upside down, sucking deep soil thick 



X y 



y j^ 



black and wet where time will grow hot with the earth and done is not dead 

allan wiesblott 







h 



'M 





& 



■WMB^ 




^rtMmV 



jWv' 



southern 
campus 

1969 
50 



vo ume 




the yearbook of the associated students of the university of California, los angeles 



50 years 



the campus 





26 




irnest Carroll Moore 

Director, Southern Branch 
University of California 
1919-1927 

Director 

University of California at Los Angeles 

1927-1930 

Vice-President of the University of California and 
Director of UCLA 1930-1931 

Vice-President of the University of California 
and Provost of UCLA 1931-1936 





K^ f 




/-^ 








Carence 




» 


* 

A 


i 



'rovost ot 



Vice-President of the University and Provost of 
UCLA 1948-1950 




(; 



\i m 



^^ 



^>>>' 





' i. 






..• • ' 



•-*, X. 



ZZZr^rr^^\ 



mond B. Allen 



Chancellor of UCLA 1952-1959 



!^ 



\ \ 



3^i 



A 



1-- 



V 



/ 



///' 




Vern Knudsen 



Chancellor of UCLA 1959-1960 




"The image of change isone of 
youth . . . the old must be pli- 
able enough to yield." 

The University is caught up in 
change, and evolution has its 
upsand downs. Theupheaval 
today is a very real revolution. 
It won't just subside into the 
past. The roleof the Establish- 
ment in the University, in 
business, and in industry 
must be one of activity more 
responsive to the problems of 
young people. We are experi- 
encing vast reforms in the 
areas of racial attitudes, reli- 
gion, and morality. We must 
work to guide the causes of 
the revolt. 

On the university level we are 
seeing a change in curricula 
and a breakdown in orthodoxy. 
Teaching has been too much 
stereotyped; graduate work 
has been more like an appren- 
ticeship. This must be modi- 
fied or we shall be ever closed 
to change. We must come to 
stress the fundamental prin- 
ciples rather than the ortho- 
doxy. The University has 
grown too reminiscent of old 
men. It must break from the 
static mold. 



30 



Franklin D. Murphy 



Chancellor of UCLA 1960-1968 




31 




m 



ucia hosts two inaugurals in a year 



Charles Young, Chancellor of UCLA 
inaugurated May 23, 1969 




Charles Hitch, President of the University 
inaugurated May 23, 1968 



50 years 

the administrator 



1969 



Dr. Charles E. Young is 39 
years old. He has a wife and 
two children. He has studied 
and taught at a variety of 
institutions of higher learning. 
His forehead wrinkles when 
he talks and he rubs his face 
to find the right words. He 
heads one of the largest— and 
most complex — of this country's 
universities. He never stands 
still. 



34 



"There have been some 
changes (between the admin- 
istrations of Chancellors Mur- 
phy and Young). Conditions 
have changed and they have 
changed perhaps more than 
an outsider or even someone 
who is acasualobserver would 
recognize. The tempo of social 
change has increased very 
rapidly in the last year, more 
rapidly in the last year than 
in the five preceding it, and 
I think more rapid in those 
five than in the twenty-five 
preceding that.We'reinasitu- 
ation at the present time in 
which the pace is extremely 



fast. There has been a polar- 
ization which has developed 
over the last few years be- 
tween those who are on the 
active side and those who are 
more in the area of the status 
quo. There has been greater 
tension develop between the 
university, which is by and 
large an institution of doers, 
and the community at large 
which tends to be more or 
less concerned with themain- 
tenanceof the status quo, es- 
pecially the power structure 
within certain parts of the 
community. We have a faster 
moving pace. We have greater 
tension. We have a sharper 
focus of the problems of the 
minority community. We have 
increasing financial difficul- 
ties brought about by thelevel 
of state appropriations and 
the cutback in growth of the 
federal contributions to high- 
er education, bringing about 
perhaps a bigger need for pri- 
vate support. And all of this 
change is occurring at a time, 
as I said, when things are 
happening within the univer- 
sity which make it perhaps 
more difficult for us to obtain 
the kind of support, moral or 
financial, that we are trying to 
achieve in the community. 

I doubt that there will beany 
general trend in (thedirection 
of choosing young men as 
chief administrators in our 
universities). I think we are 
apt to see people selected to 
head universities who have 
had more administrative ex- 
perience than one might have 
expected in the past, but I 
think that they will have had 
both administrative experi- 
ence and be fairly well estab- 
lished members of the faculty 
... At one point in time you're 
going to find one set of condi- 
tions and criteria to be more 
important and others at an- 
other. When I use the word 



administration I'm not think- 
ing in terms of handling the 
business affairs of theuniver- 
sity better. I am thinking of 
administration in the broad 
sense, which I think is very 
creative business: seeing to it 
that issues are identified, that 
potential is recognized, that 
the means of achieving poten- 
tial areobtainedandthatthere 
is follow-through on the 
achieving of the goal. 

I view the increasing focus of 
the university on the minority 
as an absolute necessity. Fail- 
ure to focus attention on these 
areas would in my view bean 
immorality of thegreatest con- 
sequence. Furthermore it 
would be operational insanity. 
The solutions of the problems 
we're confronting intheurban 
situation and especially the 
ethnic-related problems have 
to be the number one item 
on the priority list of this so- 
ciety, and those solutions, in 
my view, cannot be found 
without the full cooperation 
and participation of higher 
education, especially the ma- 
jor universities. They may not 
be found even with that par- 
ticipation, but it's absolutely 
certain that the participation 
of universities-and universi- 
ties like this one-is an abso- 
lute necessitytotheirsolution. 

I don't feel that the relation- 
ship between the administra- 
tion, the faculty, and the stu- 
dents, or my relationship with 
student groups is one of a 
group of pressures that I have 
to worry about. Recognizing 
that there still need to be a 
lot of improvements, there are 
mechanisms of one kind or 
another around here which 
enable people to raise the 
questions that are of concern 
to them, to see to itthat some- 
one pays attention to them, 
and for us to get together and 



dr. charles young 



I 



t 




chancellor 



talk about problems and work 
out solutions. I think a great 
deal of improvement is still 
required in this regard but I 
see us by and large as coop- 
erating to accomplish mutual- 
ly desired goals ... All the 
administration can do (in re- 
gard to student-faculty rela- 
tions) istofacilitatecommuni- 
cation between students who 
are trying tofindwaysto bring 
about change and the mem- 
bers of the faculty, whether 
organized intodepartmentsor 
centers or Academic Senate 
committees, who have to be 
involved if thechangeisgoing 
to be brought about. 

i think (the unionization of 
university faculty) is a very 
great disaster. In the years 
to come faculty will decry the 
fact that this hasoccured. The 
faculty member of the univer- 
sity or college has been given 
very special treatment in our 
society, for good and sound 
reason: the university has 
been the place from which 
much of what we refer to as 
progress has sprung. It is a 
place which has to be open 
and free. The peoplewhowork 
there have to have some spe- 
cial considerationsifthat'sgo- 
ingtocontinue;thesearepriv- 
ileges that they've been given, 
in exchange for their contri- 
butions to society and their 
willingness to give up some 
things that those who don't 
have the privileges have. It is 
not going to be possible for 
faculties to be treated as pro- 
fessionals with special consid- 
eration and all the benefits 
that that includes and to be 
treated like working men 
whole only concerns are their 
own economic betterment and 
who are prepared to sacrifice 
their students andtheuniver- 
sity to obtain those ends . . . 
The university isself-policing. 



There are aspects of the pro- 
fessional guild that are very 
similar to some of the basic 
principles in trade unionism, 
and in a way, tenure is likethe 
concept of seniority. What has 
been happening at least at 
this university over the past 
few years is, in my view, a 
weakening of the concept of 
tenure as a general principle 
... As long as higher educa- 
tion is expanding at the rate 
it is now, so that the need for 
new people is so great, I don't 
think tenure, from a practical 
point of view, is a very mean- 
ingful concept. Psychological- 
ly it's veryimportant;itismen- 
tally tied up with academic 
freedom. 

As I see what has been hap- 
pening, the one segment of 
the university community 
which has not been very heavi- 
ly involved in the past-that is 
the student segment-is now 
beginning to have some voice 
in the management of the en- 
terprise. The faculty has al- 
ways had (a voice), theadmin- 
istration has played its role, 
the community has had its 
voice. The students have been 
viewed as what was focused 
upon and not as having much 
by way of input to contribute. 
Now they are beginning to 
share in the degree to which 
they participate, along with 
the other elements. I don't 
think any one (group within 
the university orthecommun- 
ity) is going to have a domi- 
nant role (in directing the fu- 
ture courseof thisinstitution). 
The role of the administration 
is to pull the groups together, 
to balance the various claims, 
to see to it that what is done 
is not just an adding up of 
the pluses and minuses, but 
to pull everyoneintothebuild- 
ing of a coherent institution, 
to see that the proper ques- 
tions have been raised and 
that the answers are clearand 
understood." 



vice-chancellor 
university relations and public programs 

dr. paul proeh 



"A number of individuals, de- 
partnnents and organizational 
units are contributing to ur- 
ban action programs. My hope 
is to help in coordinating them 
— get the most out of people 
and funding and eliminating 
waste time, while stimulating 
and channeling." Withthisend 
in mind Chancellor Charles 
Young appointed former direc- 
tor of the African Studies Cen- 
ter and professor of law, Paul 
O. Proehl, to the new position 
of Vice Chancellor— University 
Relations and Public Programs. 



36 



"The legislature sees the Uni- 
versity of California as a sort 
of monolith, symbolized by the 
Berkeley state-wide adminis- 
tration and typified very large- 
ly in terms of student-faculty 
and campus situations by 
what goes on at Berkeley-Ber- 
keley catches cold and they 
wait for us to sneeze. While 
we're all a part of one univer- 
sity and one institution, the 
fact is that we havesomewhat 
different needs and some- 
what different programs that 
entitle us to some differentia- 
tion, particularly with respect 
to the problemsof campus un- 
rest . . . When the public be- 
comes vindictive vis a vis the 
university we believe that it's 
important that the legislators 
have the information not just 
as to what goes on at Berkeley 
but astowhatgoesonatUCLA 
and other campuses . . . Part 
of the problem of the univer- 
sity's image in Sacramento is 
the lack of frank communica- 
tion (with the legislators). We 
are standing at arms length 
and we are both working from 
misconceptions . . . The legis- 
lature should see the univer- 
sity as a pluralistic organiza- 
tion which has many partsand 
many needs and many differ- 
ent responses to educational 
needs and urban, state, and 
national problems. Thisdiffer- 
entiation can enhance the ap- 
preciation; you don't havejust 
a factory that's turning out 
certain types of models. We 
can't forget the legislator's 
role as a representative of the 
public which may not under- 
stand what higher education 
is all about. 





Ultimately the preservation, 
the perpetuation, and the en- 
largement of knowledge make 
certain demands on society in 
terms of funding of institu- 
tional arrangements, such as 
state universities, of recogniz- 
ing the necessity of freedom 
of the academic community, 
which must be maintained if 
the mission of the university 
is to be accomplished. The 
mode by which the mission 
is realized changes; the mis- 
sion itself may change; it's 
being changed tosomeextent 
by the demands being made 
upon it by the urban crisis. 
But the basic ultimate objec- 
tive-truth-is not affected un- 
less the thing is politicized. 
If that is politicized, the de- 
mands made by the urban 
community can bejustasdes- 
tructive to the mission of the 
university as impositions of re- 
straints and restrictions by 
the legislature. You get all 
caught up in response to the 
community at the university 
level of performing "peace 
corps" work which can fulfill 
certain felt needs of the indi- 
vidual to work with his hands 
and improve the living condi- 
tions of ghetto or barrio peo- 
ple. This may be very satisfy- 
ing totheindividualsinvolved, 
but it's questionable in my 
mind whether it is the best 
allocation of resources when 
you're using university people 
- students or faculty - who 
should be operating atahigh- 
er level, trying to find out how 
you motivate people in the bar- 
rio or the ghetto to do these 
things for themselves or how 
you tackle city hall togetthem 
done through government . . . 



Anything that diverts theuni- 
versity from its primary mis- 
sion of perpetuating know- 
ledge or enlarging it (in both 
a quantitative and in a quali- 
tative sense, and with respect 
to the people who are privy to 
knowledge, not just an edu- 
cated elite but a broad mass 
of people) from whatever di- 
rection it comes; the legisla- 
ture, the public, even stu- 
dents, in terms of limiting the 
freedom of inquiry, or from 
extraordinary demands made 
upon it that divert it from its 
primary purpose is harmful 
in the long run." 




37 



Dr. Wilson has done extensive re- 
search in the development of business 
organizations and management sci- 
ence techniques. He has done post- 
doctorate work at the Carnegie Insti- 
tute of Technology in the behavioral 
sciences on a Ford Faculty Fellowship 
and he has been an administrative 
fellow at UCLA under the American 
Council on Education where he studied 
university administration and the ap- 
propriateness of computer techniques 
and other planning tools for program 
development and planning. His re- 
search includes a book. Organization- 
al Decision Making, (Prentice Hall, 
1967) and numerous orticles dealing 
with organizational decision making, 
computer simulation, and managerial 
economics. Currently he has an ap- 
pointment in the Graduate School of 
Education where he is pursuing the 
application of management science 
techniques in educational organiza- 
tions. 

In addition to research and teaching, 
Dr. Wilson has been active in com- 
munity affairs. He served on numer- 
ous boards, including a county-wide 
organization that was responsible for 
the development of the poverty pro- 
grams in Upstate New York. In 1965 
he was voted Outstanding Young Man 
of the Year by the Junior Chamber of 
Commerce of Binghamton, New York. 




38 



"The university has been slow to de- 
velop black administrators in the same 
way that it has been slow in developing 
black faculty . . . there's been an am- 
bivalence about the relation between 
social and professional ends ... We 
cannot consistently argue that we are 
doing all that we can because we have 
searched for qualified people when as 
intelligent men and men of good will 
we know that qualified people aren't 
born as such but developed. We have 
to usesomeofourresourcesand energy 
to develop people to meet needs that 
currently exist. There are people from 
the smaller communities (black, brown, 
etc.) who have something tocontribute 
to university life. They may not havethe 
traditional credentials and outlook; our 
problem is to define ways and avenues 
to give due recognition to the kind of 
expertise such people bring to theuni- 
versity. 

"Our goals in the long run and our 
ability to choose them depend on our 
success in serving and achieving some 
very immediate ones. Most human sys- 
tems tend to grow in an imbalanced 
way. It is a mistake to start out with 
something as complex as the commu- 
nity and assume that we must do 
things the "best" way. We do not have 
such know-how. We take action and 
learn from that . . . There's a kind of 
dynamics involved in getting out into 
the community and doing things which 
will ultimately give ussomeinsightinto 
what would be the best way to become 
involved for the university. 

" If we expect integration to be a reality 
in this country, for the time being we 
might havetorecognizethe importance 
of differences. We have to recognize 
that it's important that black people 
have a need to be black. It's important 
that they come into an integrated so- 
ciety feeling verystronglythatthereare 
positive sides to being black. They can 
make a real contribution to an inte- 
grated society, and this is the only way 
an integrated society is going to reflect 
some of the realities and needs of the 
black people ... An integrated society 
reflects a sharing of values." 



"There is a meeting ground between 
innovations and programs in teaching, 
research and action which can be re- 
lated to the new needs of the urban 
scene ... I'm concerned about new 
programs which tend to address the 
needs of thecommunityand encourage 
more creative efforts toward making us 
effective in serving the urban com- 
munity. 

"Any time a black administrator these 
days moves into the hierarchy of the 
university there are certain assump- 
tions made about who he is and what 
he does ... As a black man I feel very 
committed to get the university to re- 
spond to the community, particularly 
to the smaller communities: the brown 
and the black ... My job'is not to in- 
terpret the black community to the 
administration but rather- given my 
experience in the community-to help 
the administration grow and expand to 
meet some of the needs as expressed 
by the black community ... I believe 
in what I am doing as an administra- 
tor; I act and think along the lines ex- 
pressed here not because someone as- 
signed me the role but because this is 
the only kind of administrator I want 
to be. 






assistant vice-chancellor 
educational planning and programs 



dr. ch 



ares wison 




// 



feel very committed to get 
the university to respond 
to the community..." 



39 



gold shield conference 






th 



e a umni 




It may come as a surprise to many stu- 
dents that the UCLA Alumni Association 
is not entirely composed of old cigar- 
chewing millionaires who visit campus once 
a year to show their grandchildren a memor- 
ial plaque commemorating a large tax de- 
ductible donation to the university. In fact 
this is an exception. The the alumni of 
UCLA are definitely not interested in run- 
ning the university by its purse-strings. 
One of the most obvious concerns of a 
group of fifty prominent alumna and alum- 
ni who met at the Arrowhead Conference 
Grounds last January was serving the 
University. 

The University, A Family Affair, the theme 
of the conference, raised the question of 
the channels the alumni could use in len- 
ding their resources for the good of their 
alma mater, (evidently the most satisfying 
relationship they desire). Dissatisfied 
with the relative drift of the Alumni Asso- 
ciation to fund-raising, the majority of 
these alumni are seeking to make their 
Association an effective channel for the 
varied services they can volunteer. Claim- 
ing to be members of the university fam- 
ily they want an association responsible 
to the alumni, rather than the adminis- 
tration, an association they can use as a 
means of communication with the commu- 
nity and the administration through their 
various support groups. 
As one of the moderators, (Dr. Warren 
Schmidt of GBA) pointed out, this repre- 
sentative group of alumni are frustrated in 
the performance of its desires by the com- 
munications problems of the current Alum- 
ni Association structure and by a feeling 
that their services and donations, formerly 
legal tender for university recognition are 
no longer valid. However, how much and 
to whom, can these active alumni relate? 
These people, in listening to administrators 
and alumni association staff and in tra- 
ding ideas among themselves, relate to a 
vague ideal many students and members 
of the present university community of to- 
day cannot even conceive. They are at- 
tached to "UCLA" or to the idea of the 
"university" a thing that had such a rea- 
sonable size even fifteen years ago that 
people could feel some sense of identity 
with it. Whether a well-planned (or even 
creative) program of social activities and 
use of volunteer services can once again 
establish a sense of belonging to UCLA 
for the alumni is the issue that must be 
dealt with before we can even start speak- 
ing of a University "family." Whether a 
revamped Alumni Association can channel 
the good-will and purposef ulness of these 
alumni, and eventually make itself a group 
to deal with on campus is another strug- 
gle by one of many traditional campus in- 
stitutions to reaffirm its right to belong 
to the rapidly-changing university com- 
munity. 





42 





43 



brain research institute 




In the heart of the huge south campus science complex lies one of the 
foremost brain research centers of the world. The UCLA Brain Research 
Institute, founded in the early 1950's under the guidance of Dr. H. W. 
Magoun, is dedicated to research of the brain and subsequent 
educational and informational services. Perhaps no other research 
institute at UCLA better demonstrates the high level of research that has 
made UCLA, in its 50-year history, the home of many prominent 
research scientists. 



The emphasis of the BRI, directed by Dr. John D. French, has been one 
of integration, correlation, and dissemination of research into all 
related areas of a given problem or project. Current members of this 
Institute represent 14 different departments from both the School 
of Medicine and the College of Letters and Science, and investigators 
from many other departments join in active collaborative research. 
Members of the various departments have been encouraged to develop 
closer relationships, thus broadening the scope of investigative 
activities and extending the effectiveness of their educational 
efforts. Fifty to sixty foreign scholars, representing as many as 
28 different countries, join BRI programs each year, thus re- 
emphasizing the attitude of broadly structured participation, 
responding to a growing feeling that brain research today is an 
international mission. 



All members of the BRI must be members of some department at UCLA. 

All academic members of the Institute have teaching responsibilities 

to undergraduate, graduate, and medical students. Members holding 

professional research appointments must also have departmental 

appointments, though their teaching responsibilities are less formalized. 

All members of the Institute devote their main research efforts to 

programs advancing knowledge of the function and structure of the 

brain. They carry all major responsibility in the preceptoral 

education of graduate students and post doctoral fellows for 

careers in brain research. 

The BRI at UCLA is not the only research center of its kind, but it 

ranks with the major centers devoted to basic research on the nervous 

system in the world. The research activities of the Institute fall 

into two major categories: Independent project research is funded 

by grants assigned to individual members of the Institute. Collaborative 

research is upported by program grants assigned to the BRI or groups 

of investigators from different departments. Both project and program 

research are involved in a number of broadly interdisciplinary 

activities. 



44 




Most research experiments are conducted on animals and are designed 

to learn how the environment effects the brain and how the brain works 

to control behavior. Although there is difficulty in extrapolating 

from animals to men, the biologist often sees his research animal 

as a model for man, and research is geared for eventual application 

to humans. The Institute has taken a leading role in identifying and 

equating specific electrical and chemical brain functions with actual 

behavior in individual creatures. All states of being are, in theory, 

susceptible to analysis in terms of brain activity. 




The training of investigators for independent careers in research 

is stressed at the BRI. Students work within a curriculum which 

emphasizes an interdisciplinary science education, and a combination 

of departmental and interdisciplinary experience which characterizes 

the research activities of the Institute. Educational activities 

are organized departmentally and all graduate degrees are awarded 

by departments, but generous interdepartmental experience is provided. 

In the academic year of 1967-68, the Institute contributed to the 

education of 133 graduate students. 



The demanding requirements of research activity create an intensive 

need for resources of unusual sophistication and magnitude at the BRI. 

Operational support draws heavily on government sources, but recent 

restrictions on these funds have limited vital Institute activities in 

critical areas. The Institute is currently in need of attracting 

greater support from private individuals, institutions, foundations, and 

associations. 

The procurement and care of research animals is of major concern and 
expense to the Institute. An enormous range of animals must be 



45 



maintained in highly specialized facilities which can sustain 
environments condusive to normal healthy behavior. Investigators 
must further be supplied with complex and sophisticated equipment. 
The BRI has taken a leading role in the employment of computers for 
biological research and in the amplification of both computer and 
communication's engineering in brain research and medicine. 




Research activities at the BRI have led to significant developments 

in a wide range of areas involving the brain. Much work has been 

recently performed in the study and treatment of patients with 

temporal epilepsy and a great deal has been learned about this 

condition. In another BRI program, the Institute will study 

brain functions in astronaut monkeys orbiting the earth for 30 days, 

to learn how weightlessness and other space environments will 

influence man in longer flights. Still another study has demonstrated 

how the brain induces sleep and wakefulness and what happens to it 

when anesthetics are given. Patient monitoring techniques employing 

telemetry are of current interest at the BRI. Under study conditions 

patients are monitored at home, as they perform normal daily 

activities, by the use of sensor devices and a small telemetry unit 

which transmits brain activity information to the home telephone which 

in turn relays the signal to computers and paper recorders at the 

UCLA Medical Center. Such telemetry and computer methods may, 

in the future, help to alleviate the current overcrowding in hospital 

facilities by allowing patients to be treated through neighborhood 

monitoring centers. A greater access to medical expertise is thus 

brought out into the community. 











46 




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photography by Brad Bjork 

choreography by Carol Scothorn View in Four Dimensions, New Views 

by Al Huang Pliantom Landscape 

by G u s Solomon J r. Freite 

student choreographers; Marc Ozanich, Betty Woodsmall, Diane Fletcher,, 

Carrie Bloom, Les Ditson, Peggy Kucen 

performers are students of the UCLA Dance Department 



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honor seniors 1969 




Lew 
Alcindor 

New York 
History 
Ail-American: Basketball three years. 



John 
Anderson 



Earl 
Avery 

Los Angeles 

Chairman Tutorial Project 
Community Service Commissioner SLC 
National Supervisory Board NSA 




Palos Verdes 

Psychology 

Project Ceylon 

Tutorial Project 

Chairman Elections Board 

Community Service Commission 



Linda 
Golden berg 



Los Angeles 

Political Science 

ASUCLA First Vice President SLC 

AWS Secretary Treasurer 

NSA Congress Delegate 

Mortar Board 



Harold 
Griffin 

Los Angeles 
Political Science 
Varsity Football 
Rhodes Scholar 
BSU 



Kenneth 
Heitz 

Los Angeles 
Economics 
Varsity Basketball three years 



John"Skip" 
Johnson 



Director Teen Opportunities Post 

President BSU 

Chancellor's Summer Task Force 



Andrew 
Kadar 

Los Angeles 

Physics 

UCLA Varsity Gymnastics 

CalClub 

Sigma Pi Sigma 

Undergraduate Research Physics 




Parlier 

Design 

Bruin Belles 

Kappa Alpha Theta President 

Mortar Board 

Uni-Camp Board 

Chimes 

Spurs 

Rudolph 
Lowy 

Los Angeles 

Engineering 

Senior Class President 

Engineering Society 

Student Union Expansion Committee 

Association of Students and Business 

Glenn 
Leichmann 

Van Nuys 

Psychology 

Blue Key 

Uni-Prep Director 

Educational Policies Commission 



Reynaldo 
Macias 

Chairman DMAS 

Chancellor's Summer Task Force 

Director Teen Opportunities Post 



Rosalio 
Munoz 

Los Angeles 

History 

Educational Policies Commission 

Chairman Experimental College 

Pres. Undergraduate Student Assoc 

ASUCLA 
Chancellor's Summer Task Force 

Marsha 
McGaugh 



Riverside 

Pre- Social Welfare 

Varsity Song Girl 

Project India 

President, Spurs 

CalClub 

Alpha Lambda Delta 



Doug 
Neilsson 

Political Science 
Chairman, Board of Control 
IFC President 
Navy ROTC 



Peggy 
Nelson 

Los Angeles 
Anthropology 
Crossroads Africa 
Women's Liberation Front 

William 
Pennington 



Alhambra 

Economics 

Campus Events Commissioner 

Blue Key 

Chairman Finance Committee 

President Acacia 



Lucien 
Plauzoles 

Los Angeles 

French 

Southern Campus Editor 

Alpha Mu Gamma 

Pi Delta Phi 

CalClub 

EAP Bordeaux 

Richard 
Rosenbluth 

Montebello 

Philosophy 

Educational Policies Commission 

Experimental College 

Undergraduate Representative College 

L and S Executive Committee 

Joseph 
Rubinstein 

Bogota, Columbia 

Political Science 

Pres. Undergrad Student Assoc. ASUCLA 

Alumni Assoc. Board of Directors 

Communications Board 

University Policies Commission 

Board of Control 

President Sproul Hall 



Audrey 
Teren 

Lakewood 

Psychology 

AWS President 

CalClub 

Mortar Board 

Prytaneans 

Psychology Honors Program 

Carolyn 
Webb 

Compton 

English 

CalClub 

Homecoming Queen 

BSU 

Uni-Camp Board 

Project Discovery 

Judy 
Wood 

North Hollywood 

Psychology 

Mortar Board 

CalClub 

Prytaneans 

AWS Fashion Board Chairman 



honor seniors 1969 



Rosalio Munoz 
President 





'•SSShfc 



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'^(^- 



Linda Goldenberg 
First Vice President 





Larry Weinstein 

Educational Policies Commissioner 




Harry Sloan 

NSA Representative 





Earl Avery 

Community Service Commissioner 



Jeff Lebow 

General Representative 



board of control 




A. T. Brugger 

ASUCLA Executive Director 



Edward Johns 

Faculty Representative 



Harry Whitaker 
Graduate Students Assn. 



Byron H. Atkinson 
Dean of Students 



Joe Rubinstein 
Doug Neilsson Undergraduate Students Assn. 

Undergraduate Students Assn. Chairman, Winter and Spring 




Donald Bov^man 
Alumni Representative 




Don Allison 
Rosalio Munoz Graduate Students Assn. 

Undergraduate Students Assn. Chairman, Fall and Summer 



James W. Hobson 
Vice Chancellor 




Carl Peters 

Graduate Students Assn. 




graduate students association 




GSA EXECUTIVE BOARD Judy Arraj, Ron Richard, Robert McClure-Second Vice-Pres- 
ident, Harry A. Whitaker-President, Barbara Alvarez- Administrative Assistant, Bill Dakan 
-First Vice-President, Richard LaPointe. 






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board 



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ELECTIONS BOARD Mark Richards, Steve Halpern, Donna Plummer, Drew Zanger, 
Rosemary Wright, Bob Rorkin, Abe Baily, Vance Johnson, Paula Eisenberg— Chairman, 
Terrill Clark, Shelley Gazin, Marie McGaffigan, Devy Doel, Malcolm Pace, Sarah Kins- 
man, Linds Davis. 



70 



a pha phi omega 




1st Row Joey Schwartz, Mark Waterman, Davis Bronson, Noel Diaz, Frank Baker, 2nd 
Row Albert Ting, Cliff Choo, Frank Bonoff, Ken Holland, Robert Cotton, Stuart Draper, 
3rd Row Ron Morton, Earle Herbert, Gordon Baxter, Carl West, Bruce 
Powell, Not Pictured Gary Asbury, Jerry Berger, David Heber, Mark Riesenfeld, David 
Rockwood, Toby Rothschild, Barry Schreiber, Gill Silvers, Gordon Ting, John Zaimes 



fi 



nance commission 



Larry Kohn— Chairman, Ron Spire, Paulo Eisenberg, Les Leider, Barry Schreiber, Elizabeth Jackson 




PRESIDENTS' BOARD FIRST ROW Carole Francis, Linda Goldenberg, Audrey Teren. 
SECOND ROW Rondy Morrison, Rhonda Pieter, Jann Reitter, Nancy Mosher, Judy 
Wood. THIRD ROW Diana Greene, Beverly Bushner, JoAnn Campbell, Jane Meier, 
Cynthia Murray, Ariane Mustad, Cherri Hall. 





AWS EXECUTIVE BOARD Randy Morrison, Secretary-Treasurer; Judy Wood, Fashion 
Board Chairman; Nancy Mosher, Historian-Publicity; Carole Francis, Women's Week 
Chairman; Audrey Teren, President; Linda Goldenberg, ASUCLA First Vice-President; 
Rhonda Pieter, lAWS Chairman, Jann Reitter, Banquet Chairman; Cherri Hall, Activities 
Coordinator. 



associated women students 




fashion board 



FRONT ROW Josie Chan, Mary Leatart, Eileen Semel, SECOND ROW Gretchen Schnei- 
ders, Dona Cohn, Laurie Curran, Jane Hermanson, LAST ROWMary Gibbs, Dianne 
Chiary, Darlene Velicki, Susan Barton. FRONT AND CENTER Judy Wood, Chairman. 
Not Pictured; Susan Benson, Jill Greenberg, Alice Nix, Marcia Knowles, Leah Mittleman, 
Cindy Murray, Catherine Newbauer, Tracy Reed, Marie Rodgers. 



cultural activities 




student 



cu Tura 



commission 




;tudent ri m commission 




Ed Krupp, Kris Samuelson, Jim Ellis in front of, Carol Knoul, Daphne Stannard, Les 
Otis, Doris Curran, Diane Adier, Patti Gunter, Don Gottesman Deanna Nordqulst, 
FRONT, Valerie Oleon, Chairman. 



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counter clockwise (from upper right): Denise Roig, Geraldine Padillc, Charles Miedzinski, 
Paul Boumbullian, Tom Griffin, Renata Landres, Joyce Bennet-Chairman, Marcia Matz, 
Jim Ellis, Tracy Reed, Chuck Strong, Ken Seid. 

* cutura anairs commission 



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left to right: Stephanie Smith, Penny Slater, Charles Strong -Cultural Affairs Commis- 75 
sioner, Mike Soderberg, Ron Picco. 



campus events 



monte carlo night committee 




76 



FRONT, Barry Schreiber, Marsha Watson, Becky Cox, Pat McClure, Gordon Tani, Dave 
Benvenuti, Donna Weisz, REAR, Julie Alperin, Bert Kleinkauf. 



mardi gras committee 




Front row: Dave Silverman, David Mullally, Donna Sloan, Terry Coffee. Back Row: Rhon- 
da Pieter, Bill Pennington, Sherry Frankel, Cathy deHaaff, Steve Adier, (sitting on David 
Mullally's shoulder), Doug Gillies (Chairman), Judi Willis, Howie Brightman, Sue Chus- 
ter. Carman Coustaut. 

bruin week committee 




FIRST ROW, Terr! Robinson, Anno Drumlewicz, Kothy Keone, Rich Morese - Chairman, 
Nancy Shapiro, Jim Wilkins, Becky Cox. SECOND ROW, Sue Schuster, Debby Medoff, 
Marcia Watson, Steve Houser, Paul Sloven, Barry Schreiber, Greg Stoehr, Lani Yasgoor, 
Vicki Harris, Genie Lax, Bill Pennington. 



77 




Student supportof homecomingactivitieshad been dwindling, 
so the tradition of Bruin Week began this year to provide 
a spirit week before the USC football game. Many of the ac- 
tivities were similar to those of past homecomings, such as 
lawn displays between the gyms -more or less non-floating 
floats, a barbeque and street dance, and of course, a queen. 

Miss Carolyn Webb was crowned Miss UCLA at the Canned 
Heat concert in Pauley Pavilion, and reigned over the fes- 
tivities of the week. Unfortunately, even the rally and bonfire 
with Tommy Prothro wasn't enough to pull an upset over 
SC, and defeat dimmed the glory of the other events of the 
week. 

Bruin Week really proved to be no different than past home- 
coming weeks, and the activities did not seem to draw any 
new converts to school spirit. 



78 





79 



monte carlo nite 

A \ 



80 





You reservetheGrand Ballroom fortheevening. 
You fill it with groovy things to hear 

and eat and do. 
You get live sounds from Steve Gilette, Dobie Gray, 

the Sunshine Company. 
People give you $400 worth of prizes. 
You get girls in fishnet stockings and lace garters 

-and you teach them to play games. 
You get dice and cards and green felt tables -and 

dealers' plastic visors to make things look authentic. 
You're working for a good cause: all profits to Uni-Camp. 

And then it rains. . . 

and only half the guests come to your party. 




81 



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m a rd i 



gras 



Mardi Gras is a kind of UCLA week-end fair that happens after 
lent is over, this year on April 25th and 26th. It is also the 
main money-raising activity for uni-camp. Itattracts thousands 
from all over the city with its games, rides, shows . . . and pop 
corn. Whether because of the entertainment it provides or be- 
cause of its philanthropic purpose, it is one of the last suc- 
cessful traditional campus activities. 





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tutorial project 





TUTORIAL PROJECT STAFF Vicki Hayne, Paul Kaufman, Sue Landman, Chris Farmerie, 
Dede Fowler, Earl Avery, Director, Gary Landman, Joellyn Gross, Judee Dawson, Terrell 
Clark, Kothy Stout, Mark Feldman, Pat O'Neil, Randy Mulley, Annelle Jessen. Not 
shown: Geoff Canright, Donna Murray, Randy Townsend. 




exceptional children's tutorial project 




Exceptional Tutorial works with the mentally retarded or emo 
tionally disturbed child who needs a little extra help to learn 








88 



A class in creative movement develops muscular and motor 
coordination and teaches a child to recognize his own body. 
Creative arts help a child to learn about color and form and 
self-expression. 





Every year UCLAmigos go to Mexico and buildwash- 
rooms — at least that's what people seem to think. 

Since 1963, in yearly vacation-time treks south ofthe 
border, UCLA students have constructed -facilities for 
educations and health care in Mexican communities. 
— We gave time and strong backs and eager hands: 
we try, and that's where understanding begins. 

We go to Mexico to build those bonds that will be 
sustained long after the buildings are gone. We go 
to learn and to teach — to give and to gain from that 
giving a feeling for people in some ways different 
from ourselves. —We go in expression of man's 
innate relationship to all men: to give a viable re- 
ality to the word friend. 



90 




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uc amigos 







.4. 





What happens when uni-campers conne back to the 
city? Everybody knows about camps — and those 
glorious mountains — but the city you left is still the 
same when you come home. It's hard to remember 
the love and concern of new-found friendsfrom those 
far-away mountains. 

Keep in touch —that's everybody's promise. So you 
write letters and visit the campus — and go to a real 
college football game. But then you get caught up 
in your own life. You don't forget— buttherejust isn't 
always enough time to let people know you 
remember. 



92 






Mark Greenfield, Alexander White (adviser), Richard Marks (chairman), Susie Walker. 



associated students speakers program 



Eldridge Cleaver didn't just happen to walk into Pauley Pavilion last fall as 
the thousands of UCLA streamed into the large structure. He was among the first of 
more than thirty speakers of international and local importance who came to 
to address the students of UCLA under the auspices of the Associated Students 
Speakers Program, a student (incidental fee)— funded program designed to 
allow the students of UCLA to experience those personalities' words and ideas 
first-hand. In addition to the wide variety of speakers from the international scene, 
the noon programs saw a variety of opinions and solutions proposed to solve 
the urban crisis in the Chancellor's lecture series on crisis and change. 
Three of the candidates for mayor of Los Angeles also made lunchtime appear- 
ances. According to ASSP chairman Rich Marks and adviser Alexander White, this 
is one of the most successful non-athletic programs on campus drawing 
approximately 40,000 students over an eight-month period. 



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bruin publication 



comnnunications board 



Toni Cook Arnold Kaminsky, Chairman 




Dr. Walter Wilcox Mike Levett 



Phil Cogan 




Doug Blagdon 
Craig Cunningham 




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Ray Joiner 




Mike Kahn 




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111 



Mike Godwin 



daily b 



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112 




1 . James Howard 
Faculty Advisor 

2. Pat Weinstein 

3. Larry May 

4. Allison Cross 

5. Susie Walker 

6. Jeff Weiner 

7. Charlotte Vrooman 

8. Tina Nides 

9. Linda Simonds 
10. Jon Kier 

1 1 . Martin Rips 
I 2. Mark Goodman 
1 3. Nina Pinsky 
I 4. Suzy Ferguson 
15. Stephen Rustad 
1 6. Pam Gentry 
I 7. Dan Essin 

18. Narda Zacchino 

19. Jeff Perlman 

20. Debbie Ashin 

21 . Evelyn Renold 

22. Michael Levett 
Editor-in-Chief 

Not pictured 

Ann Haskins 
Arne Norton 
Rick Keir 
John Parker 
Allen Bloom 
Buddy Epstein 
Shelley Presser 
Pam Sellers 
Todd Carter 
Vicki Nadsady 
Lewis Segal 
John Burke 
Joe Hymson 
John Mendelsohn 
Jerry Morris 



7 9 

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10 

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113 






Michael Levett, f 
Editor-in-Chief 



114 



Larry May, 
Senior Editor 







Evelyn Reynold, Editorial Director 
Mark Goodman, City Editor 



115 



Al Wiesblott, writer 



LaneWipff, photographer 




southern campus 



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Vicki Rieber, special assistant 



Dan Tandberg, business manager 



116 



Stephen G. Rustad, art consultant 




a radio 




FAR LEFT: Phil Cogan (general manager) STANDING: Scott Anderson (sales manager), 
Mitchell Cannold (news director), Joanne Cohen (business coordinator), Sharon Weisz 
(publicity and promotions), Doug Kelly (sports director), SEATED: Don Enright (assistant 
program director) BELOW: Steve Abelman (music director), Tom Greenleigh (program 
director). 




asuca photo deportment 




lirkenes-receptionist Stan Troutman-manager 

Wm Schindler-photog, Frank Halberg-asst. manager Liza McDonald-secretary 
Len Hartkemeier-student photog. Stanley Mindel-photog. "Stretch" Hussey-photog. 

Dean Berkus-student photg. Nancy Heller-receptionist 






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120 





This is a humor magazine 
that is trying to relate to 
the campus, (which hasn't 
been done for a while). 

This is a humor magazine 
that is trying to be humorous, 
(which hasn't happened here 
for a while.) 

This is a magazine which aims 
to be financially successful, 
(which hasn't been done 
in a long time.) 

This is a magazine which is 
produced by the same person 
that does most of the art 
work and the lay-out (and 
most of the work too.) 



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121 



project indio 



A girl with red pigtails in a sun dress holds hands with a 

girl with black pigtails in a "sari". It is the custom in India 

for young women who are friends to hold hands, and these two are 

indeed friends. 

An Indian girl giggles and spreads a dab of red paste-like 

substance on the forehead of an American tall blond boy, then pats 

rice into the paste. She ties a thread bracelet around his wrist. 

In India a girl puts the mark on the forehead and bracelet on the 

wrist of her brother or one who is like a brother to her, to 

show her affection on the day of "rakhi". 

The students comprising Project India 1968 left in early July 

to spend 10 weeks in India with the self-determined challenge to 

understand another culture, to build a frame of reference in which 

to view this Eastern country, and to share their own culture and 

themselves with their Indian counterparts -college students. 

The seven American students who formed the Project India team 

studied India and communication processes with other UCLA and 

UC Riverside students who had applied for the project, for six 

Saturdays during the last spring. 
They spent the summer living on or near Indian colleges, 

all over the country. 

They met the student leaders, introduced themselves to 

student bodies in large assemblies and then broke into discussion 

groups in available classrooms, participated in seminars and went 

into homes of newly made friends for tea or dinner. They went 

shopping and sightseeing and on picnics with Indian students. 

And everywhere they talked -about their homes, their college, 

unrest at Columbia, the death of Martin Luther King, Jr., war, 

racism and Black Power and poverty. They found they shared similar 

concerns about their futures and a troubled world tomorrow, set in 

strikingly different, and often subtly similar, environments, where 

the implication of events is sometimes so very different. 

They came up against Indian misunderstandings of things 

American, and against their own American biases, and felt anew 

every day the need for communication, in which they were deeply 

involved. 
Marsha MaGaugh, Project India 1968 



122 





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project cey on 



124 





It hit me at first as a myriad of sensations: hot curry, women 
in saris, the sound of a strange language, ox driven carts 
in the street, and, of course, the oppressive humidity. Some- 
thing important and compeling had brought us clear across 
the world and somewhere within this country of rice paddies 
and tea plantations was hidden a common denominator we 
would uncover which would allow us to break through, to 
reveal the concerns, frustrations and aspirations of these peo- 
ple and enable us to impart something of ourselves to them. 
It's difficult now to recall first impressions. The difficulty 
arises out of the contribution Ceylon imparted to me. . . . 
Ananda is no longer just a Ceylonese dressed in white slacks 
with a white shirt; he is a boy I know to be a sensitive, ques- 
tioning, astute individual. Neither is Nim just a reserved 
Ceylonese girl anymore; she is a gentle girl whose family, 
although quite cosmopolitan, prefers eating with their hands, 
a girl who expresses herself quite effectively in poetry. She 
is concerned that the boy she will probably marry may im- 
migrate to England since as a doctor it may be difficult for 
him to get employment in Ceylon. Not only is she concerned 
because her parents, whom she admires and respects, dis- 
approve, but she is also aprehensive of having to leave the 
country she is so familiar with and so fond of. 

Having transcended the peculiarties which initially identified 
us as different, I am now left with an overriding impression 
of the similiarities between my friends in Ceylon and my 
friends at home. 

Project Ceylon was a pilot project sponsored by the Univ- 
ersity Religious Conferenceand theState Department modeled 
after Project India. 




125 



asuca managers 



A. T. Brugger, Executive Director 




Don Wdlden, Service and Operations 



Ed Kushner, Programs 




126 



John Benham, Assistant to the Director 




Bob Herre, Food Services 

Sandy Hammer, Personnel Officer 



Stan Troutman, Photography Harry Morris, Publications 

Kaye Kaufman, Public Information Officer Ralph Stillwell, Student Store 





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Anyone who read the UCLA football 
pressbook in September could not 
help being somewhat optimistic about 
the probable fate of the 1968 Bruin 
football team. After all, maybe Gary 
Beban was gone, but the coach who 
had nurtured him to greatness was 
still here, boasting a 24-5-2 won-lost 
record in his three years at UCLA. 
And if UCLA was losing 18 lettermen, 
• including All-Americans Beban and 
linebacker Don Manning, UCLA fans 
relied on their memories of a 1965- 
66 season in which Prothro won the 
Rose Bowl with a sophomore quarter- 
back. Before the beginning of classes 
things were fine; the Bruins rolled over 
hapless Pitt by a 63-7 margin drawing 
a host of superlative comments from 
many sources and a good mention 
in the polls. The Bruins just seemed 
unstoppable that warm summereven- 
ing as they scored a dive from the 
five yard line that put them ahead 
to stay culminating their first drive. 
Luck and those all-important breaks 
also seemed to smile on the Bruins 
as Floyd Reese blocked a field goal 
attempt by Pitt on the UCLA 24 and 
the Bruins once again had the boll. 



135 



>> 

Q. 



Bill Bolder) showed his stuff early with 
a 53 yard pass to Ron Copeland, and 
after having possession of the ball 
only twice the Bruins led 14-6. After 
the lone Pitt score the Bruins went 
on a rampage but soon it was without 
their first-string quarterback Bill Bol- 
den who slipped end injured hisshoul- 
der while running a sweep around 
right end that set up the third UCLA 
touchdown. His substitute, Jim Nader, 
threw for the touchdown to Mike Gar- 
rett. Jim Nader started his stint with 
a succession of passes that netted a 
UCLA touchdown and a 28-0 lead at 
the half. Hardly anyone noticed the 
loss of the first string quarterback 
during the second half as UCLA's 
Mike Garrett, Ron Copeland, Gwen 
Cooper, Bob Manning and even the 
defensive backs got into the scoring 
statistics, leaving the Bruins on top 
of lopsided score, 63-7. 

However, the Bruins' troubles wereto 
start with the next game, the start of 
what Bruin fans expected would be 
their second trip to the roses in four 
years of Tommy Prothro's coaching. 
Conference foe Washington State pro- 
mised to be a push-over, or at least, 
dazed by the scoring spectacle of the 
previous week, the sports-writers 
tabbed the Bruins as solid 24-point 
favorites. However, besides an im- 
pressive running display by sopho- 
more back Mickey Cureton and pass 
interceptions by Marc Gustafson and 
Vince Bischof, theUclonsputona show 
that didn't spell Rose Bowl as they 
stammered to a 31-21 victory over 
Washington State. Greg Jones showed 
the strength and form that he was to 
carry throughout the season as he 
amassed a total of 51 yards in eight 
carries in his makeshift role as quar- 
terback sub to Jim Nader. His replace- 
ment at tailback, Mickey Cureton, 
showed his dazzling running style in 
15 carries which netted him 106 yards. 
And so the first Monday issue of the 
Daily Bruin was able to carry a sports 
page covered with the glories of a 
winning football team, surprisingly 
rated fourth in the national polls. 
After the Washington State game. 
Bruin assistant coach Lew Stueck was 
quoted as saying, "If we can't get up 
for Syracuse, we're in trouble." To 
UCLA fans listening on the radio to 
the voice of a freezing Fred Hessler, 
it seemed that the Bruins were suffi- 
ciently pepped up for the game with 



the team that had beaten the highly- 
rated Bruins last year in their season 
finale. On a muddy field in a cold 
rainstorm the Bruin ran into what was 
according to Coach Tommy Prothro 
"the best Syracuse team we've ever 
faced." The Bruins were ill-equipped 
to handle the strong running attack 
of the Orangemen during thefirsthalf 
as the opponents from New York ran 
up two field goals and a touchdown, 
leaving the wet field with a I 3-0 lead. 
However, in true comeback style the 
Bruins woke up in the fourth quarter 
with Greg Jones finally getting over 
the line for a score with little more 
than eight minutes to play in the go me. 
Bruin fans from way back remember 
what a difference a Prothro inspired 
on-side kick did to USC in 1965 and 
in the Rose Bowl in 1966. But this 
time the onside kick didn't work, Syra- 
cuse took it on the Bruin 47, and ran 
through untouched for six more points. 
The Bruins took a dive in the ratings 
as a result, gaining only 56 yards 
rushing, 34 of them by Mickey Cure- 
ton. Daily Bruin Sports Editor Shelley 
Presser quoted a philosophical Jim 
Nader after the game as saying, "It's 
hard to lose any game, but it helps 
that it's not in conference. We're a 
young team and we realized that we 
have o lot to work for; I think we'll 
come back." 

Back under sunny California skies, the 
Bruins came back to host the third- 
rated Penn State Cougars at the Coli- 
seum, but still without the full-time 
services of Bill Bolden who saw Penn 
State's awesome defense only three 
times as the huge white-suited Cou- 
gars beat the Bruins 21-6. Despite the 
big defensive rush and the Penn State 
interceptions and blocked kicks, Greg 
Jones salvaged UCLA's honor, picking 
up 85 yards on 1 7 tries, justtwoyards 
short of Penn State All-American 
Charlie Pittman's game total of 87 
yards (in 21 carries). The UCLA de- 
fense showed some sparkle with line- 
backer Mike Ballou getting credit for 
14 tackles, and tackles Larry Agajani- 
an and Floyd Reese getting 1 1 and 
10 respectively. Against the tough 
defensive front of Penn State led by 
All-American Steve Smear, the inex- 
perienced offensive line of the Bruins 
was snowed under, quarterback Jim 
Nader being smothered by Penn State 
defenders five times before he could 
pass. 






137 



The shadow of two straight losses 
to non-Conference foes was supposed 
to be overcome by a successive string 
of victories over conference foes, cul- 
minating with a revengefor lastyear's 
squeaker by USC. However, the Bruins 
got off to a rough start as they were 
surprised by an aggressive Berkeley 
team in Strawberry Canyon, that not 
only beat them 39-15, but also re- 
injured quarterback Bill Bolden, half- 
back George Farmer and defensive 
end Vince Bischof. Despite many er- 
rors during the first half the Bruins 
left the field at intermission boasting 
a 15-13 edge over the Bears. The 
second half, however, proved to be 
all Cal's, as the Bears held the Bruins 
pointless and piled up sixteen points. 

After three straight losses however, 
the Bruins stormed back in the second 
half of their home game against Stan- 
for ending up with a 20-17 victory 
over the frustrated Indians. Down 14- 
at the half, the Bruins came back 
with the never-say-die Bolden. With 
only a minute elapsed in thenewhalf, 
Bolden passed to Gwen Cooper who 
broke a couple of tackles in running 
over 50 yards for the firstBruinscore. 
Only a couple of minutes later, the 
Bruins came back with a touchdown 
by fullback Rick Purdy. Both times 
Bolden failed in his two-point conver- 
sion attempt. However, after Stanford 
had fattened its lead with a field goal 
at the beginning of the fourthquarter, 
"sub" quarterback Jim Nader hit Ron 
Copeland with a pass that was good 
for a fifty-yard gain to the Indian three. 
It only took Greg Jones one dive in 
perfect form to pull the Bruins ahead 
18-17. Jones took the ball, this time, 
on the two-point conversion and 
jumped in to make the score 20-17 
. . . and that's the way it stood as 
the gun sounded a few minutes later, 
despite Stanford's sophomore quar- 
terback Jim Plunkett and his accurate 
passing. 

The Bruins thought that they had the 
impetus, after that victory, to sweep 
all their opponents out of the Rose 
Bowl, despite the statistical advantage 
that their opponents showed. Given 
what should have been a good scrim- 
mage, a no-count contest at Tennes- 














138 









'"Jjrf/A^'l! 



» *• 




see, the Bruins headed for the Tartan 
turf stadium at Nashville. However 
they were not pleased with the thrash- 
ing that the Vols gave them on that 
sunny Southern afternoon. Despite 
the fact that the Bruins were not ready 
to put out a 100% effort in a non- 
league game, it seemed that they 
weren't even out to play football as 
they blanked in the first half and al- 
lowed the Vols to amass a 35-0 lead 
before Mickey Cureton faked his way 
99 yards up the field to return a kick- 
off and finally put the Bruins on the 
scoreboard. From the comments of 
the players however, it didn't really 
make that much difference, and they 
looked forward even more intensely 
to the following week's game with 
highly-rated Oregon State. However 
six of the Bruins had little to look 
forward to, having been added to the 
unbelievieable list of injuries. John 
Chrestman, reserve center, was car- 
ried off the field with a neck injury 
that left him paralyzed in a Nashville 
hospital bed for many days until his 
return to California. 

In the opening minutes of the Oregon 
State game atCorvallis, it seemed that 
the Bruins had found the key to beat- 
ing the big Oregon State line and 
240-lb. fullback Bill "Earthquake" En- 
yart. The solution was to set the Beav- 
ers off balance. On the first play 
the Bruins took the ball from a "Zero" 
formation and sprang Mickey Cureton 
loose for a 38-yard run. Soon after. 
Bill Bolden had led the Bruins into 
the end zone to draw first blood. 
Then laboriously Bill Enyart battered 
his way into the Bruin end zone after 
Oregon State recovered a fumble 
deep in Bruin territory. But the Bruins 
weren't demoralized, when, only 15 
seconds later Greg Jones decided to 
run the ball out of his endzoneon the 
kick-off and flew into the opposite end 
zone for the second Bruin score. How- 
ever, the strong Oregon line proved 
to be too much for the inexperienced 
front of UCLA in the second half and 
the Beavers pounded out touchdown 
after touchdown, finally coasting to a 
45-21 victory over the Bruins. Not 



139 





only did this loss mean the end of 
Bruin Rose Bowl hopes, but it gove a 
sense of personal defeat to the four 
senior starters on the UCLA team 
who never got a chance to play in 
Pasadena: Larry Agaganian, Mark 
Gustafson, Hal Griffin, and RickPurdy 
(who suffered a shoulder injury in 
this painful afternoon). 

As defensive tackle Agajanian said 
after the game, "It'll be a matter of 
pride, now. If we hove it, we'll win 
the next two games." But it was going 
to take more than pride . . . and the 
Bruins didn't get the breaks. The two 
last games of the season turned out 
to be frustrating for the tired and 
injury-ridden Bruins. Playing in 40- 
degree weather in Seattle the Bruins 
were shut out for the first time in the 
four years of Tommy Prothro's coach- 
ing in Westwood. The Huskies, always 
tough on their own field ran up a 
quick touchdown early in the first 
quarter, and all the Bruins could do 
after that was repeatedly penetrate 
the Huskie 20-yard line and come out 
of it pointless. And of course, to add 
to the frustration, the BruinS picked 
up some more injuries in the tough 
defensive contest. Two minutes before 
the end of the game, Mike Ballou 
came out of the game with an ankle 
injury, and Back-of-the-Game Greg 
Jones who gained 107 yards in 23 
carries ended up with a cut eye-brow, 
a cut lip, a sprained ankle, a charley 
horse and a sprained wrist. 




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:1lh*JSimm 




There was little doubt that the Bruins 
played their best game of the year 
against Rose-Bowl bound SC on a fog- 
gy, moggy afternoon before millions 
of television spectators, but the only 
loss that they handed SC was the 
first-place rating the McKay's boys 
had possessed since the beginning 
of the season. Despite another recur- 
rence of Bill Bolden's shoulder injury 
early in the game, theBruinsmounted 
a new balanced offense that came 
near to taking over the lead late in 
the second half. Only a slippery field 
stopped Jim Nader from passing the 
possibly winning touchdown to Mike 
Garratt after a sustained offensive 
drive. Useless to say, O.J. Simpson 
ran away with the game honors, going 
through and around the Bruins' in- 
spired line time after time, but per- 
haps the best running of the day and 
the best hope the the Bruins' next 
season came from sophomore Mickey 
Cureton who, besides scoring both 
UCLA touchdowns, electrified the na- 
tion-wide television audience as he 
ran back a third-quarter punt back 
68 yards to set up the Bruins deep in 
use territory. 

And so ended the fiftieth year of 
inter-collegiate football at UCLA. All 
the comments, from the football staff 
and players alike since November, 
have been of how much work has 
already been put into next season 
. . . and Coach Prothro hasn't even 
given a definite starting date for spring 
practice yet! 




footba 




a glimmer of hope in tomorrow's varsity 











For the first time since Tommy Prothro took over the football program 
at UCLA, the Brubabes have gone through a season undefeated. 
Coached by former Bruin quarterback Norm Dow, thefrosh fought their 
way past Stanford's frosh 34-6 and the traditionally strong SC contin- 
gent 27-13, and travelled to Berkeley for a winning bout with a huge 
Berkeley squad, 33-20. Their four-game schedule also included a 56-3 
trouncing of UC Santa Barbara. No doubt, these footballers, unaccus- 
tomed to defeat, will be a welcome addition to Prothro's 1969 varsity. 




footb 








144 









Misdf3-^1 









water polo 





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After fifty straight victories, the UCLA water polo team tinaiiy went aown to two succes- 
sive defeats, to Long Beach State and USC. This was in part due to the absence of 
many of UCLA's best who after their victorious ways at UCLA, led the Olympic contingent 
in Mexico City last fall. However, after these two losses, the Polobruins were able to 
come back, and led by Toreey Webb and Jim Ferguson, climaxed the season with a 
victory over perennial challenger USC. All those who watched this team come back 
from its early-season defeats to win the Pacific Eight Crown for the fifth year in a row 
are optimistic about the future of Water Polo at UCLA, especially with the beginning of 

NCAA competition next year, and an undefeated frosh (11-0) waiting to join 

the first team next year. 



146 



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148 





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soccer 



Dennis Storer coaches soccer at UCLA, 
and very successfully. In the past two 
years of NCAA competition his teams 
have been invited to the play-offs in the 
Western Regionals of the NCAA tourna- 
ment and have boasted a 26-3-1 two- 
year record. Last year they were beaten 
in the first round; this year they reach- 
ed the second round in the Western 
Regional (which is considered the 
toughest of the nation) before losing to 
eventual finalist San Jose3-l. This team, 
however, considers its chances for a na- 
tional berth will be bettered next year 
with the coming of Ethiopian star 
Agonafer who has led his nation's team 
in over 50 international matches. Col- 
legiate soccer teams have always de- 
pended on players of foreign origin 
(such as UCLA's Bernard Okoye and 
Tony Nemer) yet English-born Coach 
Storer sees the leadership of his teams 





150 



.J5 





coming from Americans such as Frank 
Marshall in the years to come. He rec- 
ognizes the greatness of the American 
athlete who adds a great sense of com- 
petitiveness to his "technical" skill. With 
the popularity of intramural soccer on 
campus (60 teams last season) and the 
encouraging prospects whocameout for 
a soccer week in April, Coach Storer has 
reason to be confident in the future 
of soccer here at UCLA. 



151 




152 




153 




In virtually every sport UCLA competes 
in, the ultimate test for the Bruins lies 
with the cross-town boys from Troy. 
This year only a few days before the 
final cross-country finale, Coach Jim 
Bush announced, "If we can't beat SC, 
then we don'tdeservetogototheCham- 
pionships." SC went on to eliminate 
the Bruins, winning 24-33 despite the 
first place finish of Bruin Hartzell Al- 
pizar. Bush attributed this last loss by 






the Bruins to their schedule which 
matched the Bruins with both Pacific- 
Eight teams and open competitors. The 
previous Saturday, the Bruins had run 
away with the SPAAU Championship. 
Coach Bush's closing comment of the 
season was one which should encourage 
next year's cross country fans to follow 
the Bruin harriers closely; "We get every- 
one back next year except Preston and 
Husaruk. Mike Mullens who is sitting 
out this year and Dave Smith will add 
new strength to our team." 



154 



cross-country 




155 



wresting 



In a year plagued by injuries and erratic 
performances the Bruin grapplers were 
still able to finish the season with an out- 
standing showing to capture third in the 
Pacific Eight meet and an all-time high in 
the NCAA meet which netted them eighth 
place. Individually, seniors Sergio Gon- 
zales and John Hahn finished second and 
third nationally, in the 115 and 130-pound 
classes respectively. 





156 




157 




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A cindor 

Shackelford Patterson Sweek 
Rowe Farmer Seibert Vallely 
Neilson Walczuk Schofieic 
Wicks Ecker Heitz 




160 



UCLA BASKETBALL SQUAD-KNEELING, George Farmer, John Vallely, Steve Patterson, 
Kenny Heitz, Terry Schofield. STANDING, J. D. Morgan, Athletic Director; Elvin "Ducky 
Drake", Trainer; Bob Maracucci, Student Manager; Lynn Shackelford, Bill Siebert, Lew 
Alcindor, Sydney Wicks, Curtis Rowe, Bill Sweek, John Ecker, Gary Cunningham, Assis- 
tant Varsity and Head Freshman Coach; John Wooden, Head Coach; and Denny Crum, 
Assistant Coach. 




UCLA-94, Purdue-82 
UCLA-84, OhioState-73 
UCLA-88, Notre Danne-75 
UCLA-90, Minnesota-51 
UCLA-95, West Virginia-56 
UCLA-98, Providence-81 
UCLA-83, Princeton-67 
UCLA-74, St. John's-56 
UCLA-96, Tulane-64 
UCLA-93, Oregon-64 
UCLA-83, Oregon State-64 
UCLA- 100, Houston-64 
UCLA-81, Northwestern-67 
UCLA-84, Loyola (Chi.)-64 
UCLA-109, California-74 
UCLA-98, Stanford-61 
UCLA-62, Washington-51 
UCLA-108, Washington State-80 
UCLA-83, Washington-59 
UCLA-53, Washington-44 
UCLA-91, Oregon State-66 
UCLA- 103, Oregon-69 
UCLA-81, Stanford-60 
UCLA-84, California-77 
UCLA-61, USC-55 
USC-46, UCLA-44 
UCLA-53, New Mexico State-38 
UCLA-90, Santo Clara-52 
UCLA-85, Drake-82 
UCLA-92, Purdue-72 



161 




162 





Mrs. Wooden presents Mrs. Shackelford and 
Mr. & Mrs. J. Jackson with orchids in recog- 
nition of the seniors' occomphshments. (Mr. 
Jackson standing in for Lew Alcindor's 
parents.) 



Orchids ore presented to Mrs. Heitz and Mr. 
and Mrs. Sweek, by Mrs. Cunningham and 
Mrs. Crum. 



163 



The United States Basketball Coaches Association presented John 

Wooden with the plaque awarded to the Coach of the Year. 

"Baron" Adolph Rupp, basketball coach at Kentucky quickly changed 

the expression on his face as he sat at the head table. 

It was not that he didn't know that Wooden would be presented 

with the award for the third time in his career, but he could not bear 

to see the presentation. 

The broad grin on his face, cemented there by the 48 hour party he 

hosted just prior to the luncheon, disappeared completely from his 

face. 

For Rupp, this was the signal that the war was lost, for him the 

battle was over. 

Wooden went on to win his fifth NCAA title, his third in a row. 

Rupp, who was previously tied with Wooden at four now has to win 

one just to tie the "Wizard" and he has to start from scratch and 

win three straight to equal that Wooden achievement. 

But why should any man who has four NCAA titles of his own feel 

beaten? 

"From the time Lew came to UCLA," Wooden explained on the bus 

after the Bruins won the fifth NCAA title for him, "Adolph Pupp 

has been bad-mouthing Lew and UCLA. All year he was taiKing 

about how Kentucky was going to beat UCLA in the NCAA finals. 

(Kentucky was downed by Marquette 81-74 in the first round of the 

Mid-East Regional and so they never even advanced to the final 

four.) I think we showed him that we could play good ball." 







p 




0r 



Wooden's coaching record now stands at 714-193. He has won 
roughly four of every five games he has ever coached. 
In 21 years at UCLA, Wooden has never had a losing season. His 
UCLA record of 448-137 is one of the finest in the nation and his 
five NCAA titles (3 of them in a row) is unprecedented. 
But the rift between a John Wooden and an Adolph Rupp is more 
than a contest for NCAA titles. 

It is a contest between diverse ways of thinking and doing 
things. 

While Rupp was conducting his 48 hour party, Wooden was spend- 
ing the time with his wife and his team. 

For the first time, the Coaches Association opened their luncheon 
to their wives. You could count the women on two hands, but one 
of them was Mrs. Wooden. 

Coach Wooden would never say that he was glad to surpass Rupp, 
it's not his nature. Rupp, on the other hand, visibly walked out at 
halftime during the Bruin's championship game with Purdue. 
On the bus leaving Freedom Hall, with the NCAA first place trophy 
aboard Wooden received a tie bar with a gold "5." 
"Maybe I sould send it to Rupp," Wooden joked. 
"I think you ought to send him five bottles of Kentucky bourbon so 
he can drown out his troubles," Lew suggested. He paused for a 
moment and reiterated, "Come to think of it, coach, he's probably 
already finished the second one." 









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Though the Bruins were rated 

Number One in both the AP and 

DPI polls throughout theseason, 

some spectators expressed their 

doubts about the strength of the 

Bruin's guards. Coach Wooden, 

until the end of the season felt 

this too, and heshifted his players 

constantly during the season 

looking for the best combination 

to fill the shoes of Ail-Americans 

Mike Warren and Lucius Allen. The 

first starters were seniors Bill Sweek 

and Don Saffer. After Saffer dropped 

out of the basketball program, 

Sweek alternated at the starting 

role with converted forward Kenny 

Heitz and junior John Vallely. 

Towards the end of the season 

however, when Cal and SC both 

used their deliberate offenses and 

a full-court press, forwards Curtis 

Rowe, Sydney Wicks and Lynn 

Shackelford helped bring the ball 

down the court. The play of these 

men was more than sufficient to win 

a National Championship, however, 

as John Vallely scored 29 points 

against Drake in the semi-final game, 

and Kenny Heitz played thedefen- 

sive game of the year in the final 

forcing Ail-American Rick Mount 

of Purdue to play the worst game 

of his career. 




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If John Wooden had some problems with his guards, the 
strength of the Bruins at the forward positions amply 
compensated for it. Two forwards from Los Angeles, Curtis 
Rowe and Sidney Wicks, in their sophomore seasons com- 
bined with veteran Lynn Shackelford to make UCLA one of 
the strongest teams in the nation on the boards. As if these 
three could not supply the Bruins with sufficient backboard 
strength and inside shooting. Coach Wooden often sent in 
center Steve Patterson to play forward or high-post center. 
Though three of these players were in the first year of varsity 
play, their cool professionalism equaled that of the veterans 
from the start. Curtis Rowe's last-second free throws saved 
the Bruins from defeat in the Cal game up at Berkeley and 
his repeat performance against the Trojans a week later put 
the Bruins into a life-saving overtime. This caliber of play 
impressed the press into naming him All-American in his 
first season. 



174 





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There was the beginning of the basket- 
ball season. Those were the non-league, 
no-count contests where we managed 
to beat people like Purdue in the season 
opener, when neither the Boilermakers 
not the Bruins were very smooth-work- 
ing units. And then the Bruins went to 
Notre Dame for the opening of the new 
field house in South Bend, and they 
beat the Irish who were ranked in the 
top ten. That's about when people star- 
ted believing that someone could win 
the NCAA three times in a row, if they 
had Lew Alcindor on their team, that is. 
But before the Bruins went into league 
play, they traveled to the ECAC Holiday 
Tournament at MadisonSquareGarden, 
presumably to meet North Carolina's 
Tar Heels in the final. But North Caro- 
lina never made it into the finals and 
UCLA had to be satisfied with a win 
over Saint John's. After a few more easy 
home games against now-mediocre 
teams like Houston, the Bruins started 
wading into league play with teamsthat 
from the start seemed to believe that 
they were doomed to defeat. Even the 
slow-down tactics of Oregon State 
lacked enough class to pose a threat 
to the Bruin defense. 
Attendance figures stayed attheirtradi- 
tionaily high level, probably notsomuch 
because anybody thought that Bruins' 
opponents could win, but rather be- 
cause this was the last year that you 
could see Lew at Pauley. Coach Wooden 
couldn't seem to make up his mind 
on who would start the game, and fans 
soon got used to seeing the "starting 
eight" win another game for UCLA. 



177 




After twenty-six regular games, it looked like UCLA was going to 
run up its second undefeated season in three years. Highly- 
rated foes like Notre Dame and Purdue had fallen to the press 
and the impressive defense of Big Lew. When one of the 
"starting eight" was shooting cold, another would take his 
place and pull the team away in typical UCLA style. But the 
last three games of Pacific-eight play, proved to be the hardest 
of the year. Traveling to the over-crowded gym at Berkeley, the 
Bruins were forced into an overtime period against the Bears by 
the combination of a pair of sharp-shooting guards and a de- 
liberate Cal offense. In fact the Bears led most of the game 
and it was only the cool free-throwing of Curtis Rowe that allowed 
the Wooden quintet to go into a winning overtime. The next 
week however was to prove even tougher as the Bruins tangled 
with Bob Boyd's pepped-up Trojans in the Sports Arena. 




I 




An overflow crowd at the Sports Arena watched 

Bob Boyd's boys play a well-executed game of 

keep-away in a renewal of the Trojan stall of 

1967. At the end of the regular game both teams 

were tied. At the end of the overtime with less 

than ten seconds to go the Trojans made good on 

on a two-point jumper. The Bruins called a quick 

time out while the cross-town rivals jubilated 

in their huddle, but the Bruins came back on the 

floor and Lynn Shackelford sank a thirty-foot 

arching jump shot to insure a second overtime 

period. That was all the Bruins needed and they 

quickly outscored the Trojans seven to two in what 

turned out to be the final five minutes. After two 

consecutive close ones, the Bruins went into their 

home den at Pauley confident that USC couldn't 

repeat the previous night's exhausting stall. But 

they did, and Ernie Powell sank a long jumper 

from the right of the key with only six seconds 

remaining that broke the Bruins home stadium 

and the 47-game winning streak dating back to 

the Houston contest last year. 





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Tournaments can be the most exciting 
events of the basketball season, or they 
can be just plain dull. This year's tour- 
nament could have been a real thriller, 
. . . but the Bruinswalked away with the 
trophy anyway. NewMexicoStatewalked 
into Pauley Pavillion talkingaboutawell- 
perfected stall, and they tried it, . . . 
and even led the Bruins for a part of 
the game; but by the time they got 
back into the action after half-time, the 
Bruins had alreadywonthegame. Santa 
Clara, second-rated in the polls, and 
fresh from an overtime victory over 
Weber State watched the Bruins on 
Friday and declared that they would run 
with the Bruins. And run they did; all 
of fifteen feet before the Bruins forced 
them into a succession of turn-overs. 
Five minutes after the game started 
the Broncos were behind by nine points 
and from them on , they never had a 
real hope as the second string played 
a good part of the second half for both 
teams. Lew Alcindor and the three other 
seniors walked off their home court for 
the last time with relaxed smiles of sure 
winners. 









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182 



The Bruins were rated Number One as they 
walked into Freedom Hall in Louisville Kentucky 
for the final round of the NCAA Tournament. 
Surely much of the anticipated excitement had 
disappeared with the early elimination of both 
home teams, Louisville and Kentucky. So had the 
expected showdown between Baron Rupp of Ken- 
tucky and John Wooden, both four-time winners 
of the NCAA trophy. The only real question was 
whether the Bruins would walk away with an un- 
precedented third consecutive NCAA title. A smal- 
ler and faster Drake team tried hard to show the 
basketball world that UCLA could be outrun, and 
they did, almost wiping out in the last two min- 
utes an eight-point cushion the Bruins had stead- 
ily mounted. Lynn Shackelford drew a foul with 
the closing buzzer and gave the Bruins a three- 
point final edge. 



While the Brums ran with tenth-rated 
Drake in the semi-final, a funny thing 
called Rick Mount happened to third- 
rated North Carolina. Favored to beatthe 
Purdue Boilermakers, the Tar Heels lost 
their chances for a revenge bout with 
Lew and Company. As Mount kept North 
Carolina glued to the floor and lobbed 
and gunned the ballintothebasketfrom 
every conceivable place on the court. 
Purdue's easy victory over North Caro- 
lina combined with the Bruins' struggle 
to get pastthesemi-finalround led some 
sportswriters to bet on Purdue for the 
finals. But somebodyforgottotell Kenny 
Heitz that Rick Mount was the hottest 
guard in the tournament, and thesenior 
Bruin, waving his hands in Mount's 
face and blocking a good portion of 
shots, forced Purdue's blond gunner 
into the worst performance of hiscareer. 
Before half-time there was already no 
doubt that the Bruins could do what 
the others had failed to do before.; three 
in a row, and five out of six NCAA 



crowns. 



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183 




184 




Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor was on the UCLA basketball program for four years, 

four years during which he was able to prove to fellow-students, press and the 

basketball world that he was the greatest basketball player that the sport has 

seen. These were certainly not easy years for Lew either; in addition to the expected 

pressure of having to win on the court he also found how hard it was for him 

to be tall and to be black, all in what seemed to him to be an unfriendly land. It 

is somewhat strange that we as students of the school he attended expected 

him to be impermeable to stares, scholastic pressures and the weight of having 

to live up to an image that had been created for him by the press. The greatest 

homage to his greatness on the court has probably been the acceptance by 

all that in any game he will be the dominating player. He has more than lived up to 

his potential as a player. Coach Wooden has summed this up very well by saying 

that even though other teams might have won three NCAA championships with 

Lew, he (Wooden) is the only one who can stand proudly among all coaches as 

being the one who actually did it. 

Very few of the students of UCLA know the real character of Lew Alcindor, yet 
few of the sports fans among us will forget the fact that we were here at UCLA 
at the same time, and not be proud of it. 



185 




186 




This year's freshman basketball 
team probably holdstheanswer 
to who is going to play guard 
on next year's varsity. Led by 
guards Andy Hill (number 24) 
and Henry Bibby (25) the Bru- 
babes showed their scoring po- 
tential in accumulating over 
ninety points in seven of their 
eighteen games. Though often 
playing against much bigger 
and taller opponents forwards 
Carlos Rojas (22), Rick Swortz 
(52) and Curtis Wells managed 
to score their share of points. 

Starting centerMarkWright(34) 
and reserve center Rich Fields 
found the same problems in 
competing with pivot-men four 
and five inches taller. Though 
not blessed with a superstar, 
this year's frosh gavethosefans 
who came to Pauley early an 
excellent demonstration of team 
spirit and play. 




187 



9 






189 



gymnastics 




190 




Though the Bruins only placed fourth in the final 
Pacific Eight standings in gymnastics, they ended 
their regular season with an impressive record that 
included a hairline victory over rival SC. The Bruins 
ended up fourth behind Cal, Washington and SC 
with a score of 151.70 in the league tournament. 
However this rather high total was only one of the 
Bruins' impressive late-season scores. In their first 
meet, the Bruins were only able to score 137 points, 
but they kept improving, with victories over All-Cal 
opponents, UCI, UCSB, and UCD. A pause in their 
winning ways was caused by the Oklahoma Sooners, 
but in their next meet theywere able to romp over 
Stanford. First-rated Cal defeated the Bruins handily, 
but the climax of the season for the Bruins came in 
their one-point defeat of the Trojans. In Pacific Eight 
competition, Larry Bassist did well enough to qualify 
for the NCAA finals in Free exercise and long horse 
and also placed fourth in high bar and fifth in par- 
allel bars. The Bruins closed their season on May 9, 
hosting an invitational featuring the top gymnasts 
in the nation in Pauley Pavilion. 




191 



track 

first year in a home stadium 




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197 



rugby 




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198 





Even though UCLA has fielded a 
rugby team sincethethirties, there 
has never been a club as success- 
ful as the 1968 UCLA varsity side. 
Coach Dennis Storer, "an Amer- 
ican with an English accent," as he 
refers to himself, has led his rug- 
gers to a sweep of the Southern 
California, Pacific Eight and Cana- 
dian World Cup Championships. 



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199 



In addition, the successful coach 
of the nation's top-ranked team 
has brought the National Rugby 
Union's Coach of the Year Award 
to UCLA for the first time ever. 
Including aseverebeatingadmini- 
stered to traditional powerhouse 
Berkeley, and two victories over 
SC, the ruggers have made rugby 
UCLA's most successful outdoor 
sport of the year. Their24- 1 record 
does not betray what Coach Storer 
calls "one of the toughest sched- 
ules inthenation."Besidesthecol- 
legiate teams that they have faced, 
the Bruins have beaten many 
veteran rugby clubs of the area 
and the two top-ranked teams of 
Canada. Theironly defeat came at 
the handsof thetouringAustralian 
champions of Sydney University, 
who, after allowing the Bruins a 
3-0 lead came back late in the 
game to edge the Bruins 9-3. 
Despite their reputation for not 
handing out compliments, the 
Sydney groups wasforcedtoadmit 
that they didn't expect to run into 
anything like this highly-disci- 
plined side from UCLA. The result 
of sound trainingandoutstanding 
team spirit was evident to the last, 
as the Bruins represented UCLA 
against the University of British 
Columbia and the University of 
Victoria on the Canadians' home 
territory. Despite the fact thatfour 
starters were unable to make the 
trip the Bruins swept their three 
encounters and came away with 
the Canadian World Cup, symbolic 
of the North American Champion- 
ship, the first time an American 
side has done so since Berkeley 
accomplished the feat more than 
ten years ago. 




200 




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201 



Some of them are varsity football players, or former 
ones. Some of them look like their size would bar 
them from this rough contact sport. A good number 
of them are graduate students in medicineor law. 
Since rugby is not a scholarship sport, they can't 
spend three hours a day on the practice field in addi- 
tion to an off-season weight-training program. Yet 
Coach Dennis Storer has been abletodrillthem well 
enough to make UCLA's the top "technical" side 
in the nation. In their lasttwogames, against an SC 
side mainly composed of football players "Wetook 
a terrible physical beating" according to Coach 
Storer, but with the well- practiced plays that are exe- 
cuted with apparent spontaneity by a confident 
rugby side, they soundlybeatthebigTrojanclub. The 
rugby player, especially here in America, according to 
Coach Storer, is a true amateur. Not only does he 
receive no scholarship nor tutoring aid, but he 
plays the game for the pure pleasure of the sport. 
In emphasizing a sound training program whilenot 
dismissing the traditional social element of the 
game. Coach Storer has earned the respect of both 
both the coaching and the general university com- 
munity. Some of his admirers go so far as to com- 
pare him to Coach John Wooden such is his 
dedication to the emphasis "the spirit of the 
game," which has led his players to a high level of 
cool, confident, inspired proficiency. Though the 
best games are often more rewarding to theplayers 
than to the spectators, all those attending Bruin 
matches this year can witness to the spectacular play 
of the Bruins, which, combined with their success, 
could well make this sport one of the top draws of 
the UCLA athletic programs. There is no doubt 
that this happy breed of hard-working athletes isout 
to make rugby a well-attended sportat UCLA, and 
in theprocess Coach Storerhas succeeded in making 
his team a champion and in inspiring his players 
accordingly. Storer tells of one of hisfineforwards, 
a former varsity footballer who came up to him after 
the Stanford game. "You know, coach," hesaid, "I've 
been playing against these same guys for 
four years now, but until this afternoon, I really 

didn't know them." 




202 






Coaching baseball is a pretty 
merciless task in a university. 
Coach Art Reichle will attest to 
that fact and over the past 
twenty-five years he has been 
here he has felt this many times 
as UCLA's varsity coach. You go 
out and recruit the best players 
after building up a solid pro- 
gram over the years, and just as 
your players are getting good, 
the pros get them. He has nur- 
tured hopes for a national 
championship many times and 
has come away empty-handed but 
Coach Reichle still turns out a 
club rated in the top twenty in 
the nation. Next year the Bruins 
will get what Reichle has dreamed 
of for years, a home baseball 
diamond on campus; but he 
may never coach on it; the NCAA 
championship which seemswith- 
in grasp this year may just be 
the finishing noteforthecareer 
of UCLA's senior varsity coach. 



204 






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206 



In the five years that Coach Bob Horn has led the Bruin swimmers, his teams have scored 
over 50 points in the NCAA meet at season's end. Along with his colleague Buzz Thayer, he 
coaches both swimming and water polo and thus is responsible for a year-round aquatics pro- 
gram that has seen every frosh and varsity school record fall since his coming to UCLA. Since 
Olympic medal winners Zac Zorn and Mike Burton sat out the year, the Bruins were only able 
to place sixth (102 points) in the nationals in Bloomington in March. However with these two 
world record-holders back on next year's squad the Bruins expect to get back among the top 
five schools in the nation and to move up one notch into the top Pacific-Eight berth currently 
held by USC. 



swimming 




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207 



tennis 



Though the Bruin tennisteam has 
been one of the strongest in the 
nation in dual meet competition, 
they have in the past five years 
found themselves at a great dis- 
advantage when it comes to the 
final NCAA tournament where a 
couple members of USC's star- 
studded team usually reach the 
final rounds. This year to counter 
the strength of the Trojans, led 
by Davis Cupper Bob Lutz, the 
Bruins have found in the Barth- 
Tidball combo a doubles pair that 
just may win the nationals. They 
have already beaten the first- 
seeded doubles team of Lutz and 
Smith and look forward to the 
NCAA trophy that has eluded the 
Bruins for three years. 









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209 



karate 




The objective of Karate is found in the way in which man strives to 
develop, through systematic training, the full potential he possesses. 
Its manifestations are in the expression of movement and power. 
Karate contests are based upon two of the training disciplines- Kumite 
(free-sparring) and Kata (form), under the strict rules that have been 
established for competition. In three Western Regional Tournaments 
held, the UCLA team has placed first and second in Kumite compe- 
tition. The UCLA team is affiliated with the All America Karate Federa- 
tion. It is coached by A.A.K.F. Chief Instructor Yutaka Yaguchi, 5th 
Dan, and 1961-63 National Champion James Yabe, 2nd Dan. 




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J. Bennett (Captain), Joson Yang, Dennis Morrow (Co-Captain), Morrellll Cliance, Dan Abrams, Eric Lawton, Ronald Ellis, 

Joseph Gauthier, Don Fields, Dennis McCain. 



ntra mural 
sports - 









212 




Some people tend to downgrade the 
importance of intramural athletics on a 
campus of 29,000 students. However 
the very successful intramural program 
at UCLA is notonlysupplying"dormies" 
and Greeks with an opportunity to play 
football and-or basketball. Consider the 
soccer program (which fields over 60 
teams). It has played a large role in the 
growth of this sport on campus. Or 
intramural wrestling ... a new thing. 
On second thought, don't just think 
about it . . . intramurals office is on the 
first floor of the men's gym. 



213 



intercollegiate women's athletics 




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For those who believe that there is no such thing as an 
amateur collegiate athlete, let's look at the women's 
intercollegiate athletic program at UCLA. Offering no 
scholarships nor special advantages to those involved, this 
program still draws nearly 100 girls willing to practice 
at least six hours a week in addition to meets, games and 
tournaments. Less than half of them are physical 
education majors, and since they don't compete in NCAA 
their recognition from the campus community is indeed 
small. Next year the participation of the tennis and 
golf teams in NCAA competition may bring this program to 
a level which will cause this sports-minded campus 
to notice the girls at last. 



217 




Last March the UCLA ski team walked away 
with a 1-2-3 finish in a June Mountain ski 
competition with twelve other Southern Cali- 
fornia colleges. The UCLA surfing Team has 
consistently taken the West Coast Intercol- 
legiate Finals in competition with some of the 
highest-caliber amateur surfers of the nation. 
Again in March a city-wide audience packed 
the Wilshire Ebell Theater to see the Aman 
Dancers From UCLA before they went up to 
The University of San Francisco for a per- 
formance before 2500 Bay Area spectators. 
Most weekends when the ocean is clear you 
can see the UCLA Sailing Club boats plying 
the southern California coastal waters, while 
somewhere down below a contingentof scuba 
divers are participating in a lobster hunt or 
training members for scuba certification. In 
the sheer pleasure of exercise, in intercolle- 
giate competition, or with an active social 
calendar, over two thousand students have 
found a special way to identify with the uni- 
versity through the URA clubs, one of the 
programs offered by the Office of Cultural 
and Recreational Affairs. 

Headquarters and mail boxes for the URA 
are located in the sixth floor of Kerckhoff 
Hall, but all that is provided there is the 
official backing and office space for one of 
the most widespread extra-curricular pro- 
grams of the university. This is truly a student- 
run program; except for aquarterly Executive 
Committee meeting, the clubs are autono- 
mous in nature, relying on their own impetus 
for the direction and scope of their activities. 
Most students may be surprised to see the 
size of the URA Sports Car Club at their 
annual campus auto show, since most of 
their activities (such as an auto rally for 
Uni-Camp) are held off campus. 

The impressive showings of the sports 
clubs in competition and the other clubs 
in their demonstrations take the limelight, 
however the simple social contact that these 
clubs offer free of charge to all students 
cannot be under-rated. The accreditation 
granted to the Highly organized Skin 'n' 
Scuba Club by local authorities demonstrates 
the seriousness of these clubs on their well- 
organized attempt to profit to the fullest 
from the opportunities that the university 
offers to students. Besides the fulfillment that 
these clubs have given to many students, 
the have furnished a framework for self- 
improvement to a higher level of proficiency 
in sport or hobby. 



university recreational association 




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219 




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panhellenic 



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officers 





Ariane Mustad 
president 



Marsha Hebden 
treasurer 





Linda Wallin 

first vice-president 



Barbara Manheimer 
second vice-president 



228 



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Panhellenic Council is manythings: an organization which 
is composed of two representatives from each of the 
twenty-one national sororities, a place to work towards 
good intracampus and intersorority relations, a group 
to determine rush procedures, a forum to sound out 
and resolve issues concerning the Greek system, a place 
to relay bits of information-from announcements about 
a sorority's collection for UNICEF of Biafra to advertise- 
ments about new products on the market-or simply, 
Panhellenic is a necessary communication center for a 
large minority on this campus. 



229 



junior 
panhellenic 




Junior Panhellenic is an organization which is sponsored 
within the framework of Panhellenic Council and com- 
posed of pledge representatives from each sorority. It 
serves a dual purpose: to perform services for the Uni- 
versity and Panhellenic and to better acquaint new so- 
rority members with each other. 



alpha delta chi 

This year Alpha Delta Chi emphasized the importance 
of service in its three aspects. The spiritual, social, and 
academic activities bound the girls closer together. 

Many of the girls had worked with churches in under- 
privileged areas during the summer. With a new school 
year and a great pledge class, we dove enthusiastically 
into a flurry of activities. We participated in Bruin Week 
with Triangle Fraternity; then we took the boys from 
Marks' Home for Boys on a playday-picnic. 

At Halloween, we entertained the children at the UCLA 
Medical Center, singing and carving pumpkinswiththem. 
The pledges gave the actives an old-fashioned Christmas 
Party with everyone stringing popcorn and cranberries 
in front of a crackling fire. 

The initiates were formally presented at our annual 
Recognition Banquet. Then, the Alpha Delta Chi and 
Alpha Gamma Omega chapters from all over the South- 
land retreated to the snowy mountains for a weekend of 
fun and spiritual fellowship. This year our chapter spon- 
sored our National Convention, hostessing a conference 
and luncheon. The year was filled with fun and lots of 
fellowship. 




Claudia Norby 
Christine Porsch 
Linda Russell 



Nancy Sanders 
Cindy Soren son 
JeanetteSvendsen 



Sharon Svendsen 
Karen Swanson 
Patti Welles 



Kathy Woodruff 
Elaine Yee 




Pat Anderson 
Jeanne Antablin 
Sandra Ash 



Anne BIgelow 
Chris Depezynski 
Patricia Gee 



Ruth Heil 
AnnelleJessen 
Helen Little 



Emily Lowe 

Lilly Lowe 

Barbara McCormack 




LILLY LOWE 



231 




This moment of silence is brought to you . . . with appri- 
ciation to the brothers of Beta Theta Pi for their rousing 
rendition of "On The Farm"-and the Fijis, for "mill< and 
cool<ies" at our serenade. 

Winner of this year's Boarder's Award is Denise (spon- 
sored by Doesitalot, Obscene Jeanine, Mortunda and Ob- 
tuse). First runner-up is Tootie (sponsored byTom-Tom 
and Beta Theta Pi); and Wulf traversed second place 
(sponsored by P.B., C.F., Deb, Mort, Mel, and other mem- 
bers of Skiiers Amalgamated.) 

Sweet Helen was crowned first annual Taco Belle-and 
close on her trail was Lusty Leish Lopez. Among our other 
queenly aspirants was our own businessman's wishing 
Star. 

The un-Kuhl award was voted unanimously to an unsus- 
pected visitor. 

Congratualations to our Pebble-bearers: Krotz, Burnett, 
Sand, Wierd Tiffany, Barts and Obie from the Big Red. 

And Congrats also to the pledges who were "draughted" 
to maintain Alpha Chi Omega's notoriety at their Phi 
Delt Ditch. 

Then there's pledge Converse who finally announced her 
engagement ... to Mother Goose! 

And Phyllis-in a triumphant repeat of preceding and 
neverending years-kept within the budget again, a heart- 
rending (or, rather, stomach-binding) gesture . . . 

Oh!-and by the way, Ross Hoffman, who is R.F.? 

Affectionately submitted, 
The Munch 



Vicki Bartlett 
Betty Bogomaz 
Ann Brooks 



Pat Brown 
Barbara Burnett 
Jody Carpenter 



Susie Carroll 
Nancy Cherney 
DianneChiary 



Susie Converse 
Lynn Cummings 
Diane Damey 



Maureen Eastwood 
Kathy Erwood 
Sandi Essen 




Julie Fix 
Carole Francis 
Beth Harrison 



Jill Horner 
Linda Johnson 
Chris Kindt 



Sarah Kinsman 
Anita Krotz 
Lora Krotz 



232 







Kathy Kuhl 
Suzi Leishman 
Vicki Lewis 
Janet Love 
Valerie Marlowe 
Laura Martin 
Eriinda Martinez 

Helen McCullough 
Linda McFarland 
Patti Mingus 
Susan Moore 
Kathy Moran 
Lyn Morgner 
Sue Morton 

Michele Movius 
Susie Oblinger 
Debbie Parker 
Kathy Perrine 
Cheryl Perry 
Donna Plummer 
Nancy Ratledge 





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Joan Russell 


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233 




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CHRISTY WILLIAMS 



alpha delta pi 

Alpha Delta Pi represents traditions and friendships over 
one hundred years old. Alpha Chi chapter has perpetu- 
ated many of these traditions while initiating a few of 
our own. With eighteen enthusiastic pledges we began a 
year that was as diversified as our members' individual 
interests. Aside from the traditional initiation party held 
at the Surfrider Inn, formal presents, and Homecoming, 
and the usual round of exchanges and parties the 
pledges displayed their usual fine spirit by kidnapping 
the actives for a memorable night at Griffith Park. The 
Hell's Angel Banquet was another surprise presented by 
the pledge class who familiarized the actives with the 
ways of that famed motorcycle club. These deserving 
pledges celebrated their initiation at the annual Diamond 
Ball held at the Marina del Rey Hotel where fine cuisine 
and a beautiful atmosphere provided a lasting remem- 
brance to each member. But despite our many activities, 
the ADPi's were able to share the most important aspect 
of sorority life-sisterhood and the lasting friendships 
that only a sorority can bring. 



234 




Ann Acton 
Margaret Baretto 
Cathy Carr 
Cindy Cassell 
Gloria Cervenak 
Josie Chan 



Mary Cowett 
Patti Daugherty 
Linda Elegy 
Janis Findlay 
Marsha Frausel 
DeniseGanulin 



Janet Golman 
Barbara Gorton 
Karin Hull 
Sharon Johnson 
Patricia Levine 
Norma Mezin 



Patti Niehaus 
Barbara Noid 
Jerri Ohlsson 
Rosann Ohlund 
Maureen O'Neill 
Luann Overmyer 



Linda Perry 
Linda Rasak 
Arlene Rebrovich 
LaDonna Reiner 
Pam Rettberg 
Lana Riggins 



Connie Ross 
Karen Saul 
Diane Saunders 
RaeShillman 
Michal Stewart 
LisaSumpf 



Linda Linger 
Janis Van Buskirk 
LeeVochko 
Christy Williams 
Alice Yosgott 



235 




Diane Adier 
Lois Aisley 
Julie Alperen 



Kathy Axelrod 
Susie Baskin 
Jackie Blatt 



Adrienne Brown 
Ronda Brown 
Stephanie Cohn 



Laurie Davis 
Ellen Diamond 
Andy Epsten 



Cindy Frazin 
Linda Friedman 
Sheila Friedman 



Sue Friedman 
Alice Friss 
JoAnne Golden 



Judy Golum 
Jill Greenberg 
Barbara Gronsky 



Leslie Gusinow 
Minah Harris 
Maria Harvey 



VickiHibler 
Laurie Holland 
Cindy Kent 



alpha epsilon phi 




Taking the largest pledge class on the row, Alpha Epsilon 
Phi began fall quarter with a new burst of enthusiasm. 
School spirit and pep were demonstrated by our two rep- 
resentatives on the frosh song girl squad, Susie Baskin 
and Sunny Zimmerman and was further exemplified by 
representatives participating in Bruinettes, Bruin Belles, 
Sophomore Sweethearts, Spurs, and Tutorial Project. 

The Phis anxiously participated with ZBT in the new and 
exciting Bruin Week. We received second place for the 
most humorous display, "The Trojans are a 'Bruin' in the 
Pot", and also second place in the skit contest. 

We are especially proud of JoAnne Golden who became 
a princess many times over for Sigma Nu, ZBT 
and Mardi Gras. Marlene Litvak also represented us on 
the AEPi calendar while Jill Greenberg and Tracy Reed 
became members of the AWS Fashion Board. The girls 
also were actively busy in various little sister or- 
ganizations. 

In the outside world Tracy Reed represented UCLA for 
TWA and Cindy Kent was occupied representing AEPhi 
for Mademoiselle Magazine and the Heart Association. 

After a successful retreat in Lake Arrowhead, the house 
staged a triumphant theater party where the proceeds 
from the movie "Oliver!" went to our philanthropy, the 
Well Baby Clinic. 



As a house and as individuals we 
Business." 



Took Care of 



236 




Marie MacKay 
Monica MacKay 
Rosalynn Melnick 
Ellen Miller 
Jill Noskin 
Robin Padorr 



Wendy Pallock 
Donna Penn 
Tracy Reed 
Pat Robinson 
Diane Ross 
Janis Ross 



Sharyne Snyder 

Susan Weinstein 
Heidi Weisbaum 
Beryl Weiss 
Susan Yancher 
Sunny Zimmerman 



237 




alpha gamma delta 

Building a boat in a bottle ... a full-sized sailboat? On 
Sunset Boulevard? Only one of the neat things Alpha 
Gams have done this year! 

Academics? Alpha Gams in Mortar Board, Chimes, Alpha 
Lambda Delta, several departmental honoraries, on the 
Dean's list. 

Kerckhoff? Alpha Gams on Elections Board, Educational 
Policy Commission, Mardi Gras Executive Board, Monte 
Carlo Night Executive Board, AWS Presidents Board, the 
Upstairs Committee, Tutorial Project. 

Hostesses? Alpha Gams in Bruin Belles, SophomoreSweet- 
hearts, Bruinettes, Anchors, Angel Flight. 

Fraternities? Alpha Gams little sisters to Sigma Chi, 
Lambda Chi Alpha, Zeta Psi, Alpha Gamma Omega. 

Athletics? Alpha Gams on the UCLA badminton, golf, 
rifle, volleyball teams, various intramural teams. 

Philanthropy? Alpha Gams volunteering in the Medical 
Center, raising money for cerebral palsy research. 

Fun? Alpha Gams on their pledge retreat, both at and 
after Presents, "Painting the Town Red" at the fall 
pledge party, at exchange dinners, the Christmas buffet, 
the many "spreads," fathers' night, wildly supporting 
Alcindor and Company, at the initiation party, working at 
Mardi Gras, at themothers' tea, at the spring formal, . . . 

In general? Alpha Gams enjoying every minute the 
friendships and good times, studying and trying not to 
study together! 

238 



Marian Barnett 
Susan Blackwell 
Ellie Booth 
Deborah Boughn 
Charlene Burr 
Suzanne Burr 
Stephanie Carr 

Sandra Chooljian 
Susan Coady 
KristineColberg 
Sandy Day 
Michelle Daze 
Kathy Decker 
Carole deVries 

Linda Eaves 
Julie Emmett, 
Christine Frettum 
Janice Furey 
Mary Anne Henry 
AnneHermanson 
Mimi Kelley 




CAROL DEVRIES 




Julie Lowe 
Laura McAvoy 
Mary McGoey 



Marion Miller 
Debby Mills 
Judy Morehouse 



Leslie Paddock 
Taffy Patton 
Sharyn Riggs 



Barbara Russell 
Kay Rustand 
Nikki Jo Sanders 



Christine Savage 
Carol Stewart 
Marsha Stowell 



Shirley Strachan 
Susan Strong 
Barbara Veile 



Emily Wendt 
Madeline Wenters 
Linda Woestemeyer 



Rosemary Wright 
Joanna Zamberlin 





239 




Beryl Arbit 
Maria Baltierra 
Janice Coleman 
Shirley Davis 



Linda Kitching 
Jessica Lane 
Judy Layton 
Mary Ellen Lopez 



Sally Morgan Gould 
Jeannie Griffin 
Donna Smith 
winter pledges 
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Bonnie Whitley 
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GERRI MALOOF 




240 




alpha omicron pi 

The sisters of Alpha Omicron Pi are SYNERGISTIC-we 
work together to accomplish more than we could as indi- 
viduals. The past year was no exception. 

In the community, on the campus, and within the house 
itself AOPi's heeded the call for creative togetherness. 
The Arthritis Foundation gave us envelopes to stuff, 
doorbells to ring, telephones to answer, and stars like 
Glen Campbell to meet. The Tutorial project gave us 
soul food in helping a child to read. Greek Week and 
Mardi Gras gave us the joy (and trophies) of raising that 
hard-to-find scholarship and Uni-Camp money. 

Even as individuals we chose to join with others in politi- 
cal clubs. Anchors, Speakers' Bureau, Campus tour 
guides, English-ln-Action, Sophomore Sweethearts, Shell 
and Oar, Intramurals, and the URA clubs. Our house 
G.P.A. also soared to a 3.0. 

"All work and no play"-AOPi's never heard the phrase. 
From Initiation Formal at the Beverly Hilton, through a 
pancake breakfast, car rally, Christmas tree-trimming 
party, invite-your-professor-to-dinner night, senior break- 
fast, and hayride, to the annual Shipwreck party, we got 
in condition for hostessing the National AOPi Convention 
to be held in Los Angeles this June. 




1968-69 was a year of loving sisterhood reaching out. 



241 




Cindy Audino 
Nancy Austin 
Marilee Bowman 
Sharon Brewster 
Karen Britt 
Mary Ann Bull 



Joanne Campbell 
Terrell Clark 
Anita Dorney 
Judy Ellertson 
Pat Esterline 
Pat Fitzmorris 



Betty Flo 
Candace Fowler 
Sylvia Gutierrez 
Terry Hammond 
Victoria Harris 
Linda Henderson 



Chris Henry 
Jane Hermanson 
Kathy Kleinkauf 
Kathy Kraus 
Leslie Landgreen 
Jean LaTourette 



Carol Leonetti 
Linda Lusk 
Kelley McLin 
Maureen Mosher 
Mary Mudd 
Terry Nowell 



Pam Palmer 
Kathy Perry 
Renee Peyton 
Donna Rae 
Carey Resch 
Laurie Reynolds 




242 



alpha phi 



This year man proved that almost anything is possible. 
Man can now fly to the moon, but he still cannot stop 
Time. Time, that immeasurable element that is to be 
found nowhere in abundance, especially in the academic 
lives of students. However, Alpha Phis this year did take 
time to do those things which they considered both 
worthwhile and enjoyable. 

This year we took time to participate in Spurs, 

Chimes, Bruin Belles, Anchors, Shell and Oar, Angel 
Flight, on the Tennis team and Unicamp Board, Prytane- 
ans, Sophomore Sweethearts, Cal Club, Bruin Week Com- 
mittee, and in various little sister organizations. 

We took time to give to the Heart Fund (our nation- 
al philanthropy), to the Uni-campers, to Tutorial project, 
and to the Muscular Dystrophy Fund. 

We took time to laugh and enjoy .... at our Christmas 
tree trimming party, the Pledge-Active, the Prohibition 
Party, Dad's Night, the Parents' Potluck, Homecoming, 
Mardi Gras, and the Ranch Party. 

We took time to be friendly. 

We took time to be sisters together. 




SUSAN ROSSI 




Kathy Richey 
Sue Rossi 
Nikki Salet 
Sue Scott 
Barbara Sheehan 
Jenny Sheldon 



Joan Staniek 
Jan Sullivan 
Gail Thoreson 
Gayle Tollef son 
Bena Torres 
Linda Vernon 



Patty Wells 
Diane Wiemeyer 
Wendy Wilson 
Vikke Wright 
Analee Wuifkuhle 
Beth Young 



243 




Karen Anderson 
Bonnie Baker 
Laurel Barnett 
Maria Brown 
Sandra Card 
Susan Carlson 
Phyllis Cascade 

Camilla Cassity 
Jamie Criddle 
Anna Drumlewicz 
Janet Duvardo 
Reaunell Eskridge 
Sheila Hoban 



Susan Iseli 
Cheryl Johnson 
Serena Kestenbaum 
Sarah Korda 
Christina Larkin 
Linda Latimer 
Liane Lerner 

Melanie Linder 
DarleneLorenz 
Eileen McGeever 
Nancy Miles 
Melinda Miller 
Leslie Mirman 
Maureen Montgomery 

Dianne Moore 
Thora Orzechowski 
Ann Rankin 
Wendy Rickard 
Wendy Roellick 
Anne Rutherford 
JeannieSchaefer 

Mary Frances Shafer 
Barbara Sharon 
Deborah Smart 
Kimberley Smith 
PauletteWang 
Wendy Westover 
Debby Zarate 



244 




LESLIE MIRMAN 




alpha xi delta 

Talking about e.e. cummings until 3 in the morning . . . 
Listening to my Big Sis's advice about life . . . 
Singing "Rise and Shine" with the Unicampers at 
dinner . . . 

Sweating through an English comp with my roommate. 
A familiar face in a large crowd on campus . . . 
Sharing a sudden joy, a sorrow, a crisis with someone 
who'll stand by my side . . . 
1:00 tea parties on the stairs by candlelight . . . 
Feeling a responsibility for others, not just myself . . . 
Discussing Australia and commercials and soundless 
pianos and food and Kennedy and English humor and 
men . . . 

Praying for a sister who needs help . . . 
Sitting on the floor, singing and feeling warmth and 
friendship all around me . . . 

The challenge of leadership and the promise of 
friendship . . . 

Alpha Xi Delta is Beethoven, the Beatles, Aaron Copland, 
Donovan and Richard Rogers . . . 
Alpha Xi Delta is the growth of self, service and sister- 
hood. 



245 



chi omega 




PAULA PORTER 



The times demand that the Greek system prove the 
worth of its existence. Greeks must demonstrate that 
they can contribute to the University community and 
are not simply living off the fat of the land. With nine- 
teen girls deciding that Chi Omega was quite viable, 
another year of group living began and friendships grew 
quickly. 

Meetings, Monday night entertainment, andaChiOmega- 
Phi Psi pledge ditch added to pledge class unity. Smiles 
wore thin and feet ached on Presents night. Your sham- 
poo was gone and the last time someone borrowed your 
yellow dress she'd spilled coffee on it. Through such 
tribulations, however, pledges had the Fall cocktail party, 
their pledge-active plans, and hopes of eventual initiation 
to sustain them. A mischievous pledge class honored 
their active sisters with a "Go To Hell" party. Then In- 
spiration week loomed ahead; pledge pins were promi- 
nently displayed, scrapbooks were thrown together, and 
lineups were tolerated. Yet, while dancing aboard the 
yacht Mansion Belle to celebrate initiation, it all seemed 
worth it. 

Chi Omega could not be called a lethargic house. Actives 
and pledges combined to show their physical fitness in 
Women's Intramurals. Chi Omegas were represented in 
Bruin Belles, Sophomore Sweethearts, Shell and Oar, 
Project India, and as fraternity little sisters. A number 
of girls found their forte in activism. Some worked on 
political campaigns while others joined CASE to help 
improve housing practices and educational curricula. For 
others, Tutorial Project offered a new way to give. After- 
noons spent in Venice meant helping a child who didn't 
really get that Spot was a dog or who couldn't quite 
grasp what fractions were all about. 

But perhaps Chi Omega's greatest contribution is in 
what she teaches her own members. In the house, 
through conflict and conversation, and understanding 
of one's own, and others, humanity is reached. Patience, 
tolerance, and love are given a chance to grow. 

Anti-establishment radicals may still not be convinced 
of Chi Omega's right to survive, but a place where one 
may find warmth and mitigation of loneliness can't be 
all bad. 



246 




Chris Alberts 
JoAnneAlford 
DenyseAmes 
Judy Armstrong 
SydneeArtti 
Mary Beaubien 
Kay Bradley 

Cheri Broad head 
Carol Christen 
Kay Christensen 
SueCifranic 
Jenna Conwell 
Alice DeBenedetti 
Darlene Doriot 

JoAnn DuFau 
Nancy Dutcher 
CiCi Fisher 
Beth Fortmueller 
Sally Frost 
Bev Gannon 
SueGilcrest 

Sharon Guthrie 

Linda Hagood 

Cheri Hall 

Marianne Harguindeguy 

Linda Hildreth 

Jody Howard 

Sue Jenks 

Fran Kohoutek 
Kathy Landrum 
Jeannie Langmore 
Debbie Lones 
Janet Luedeking 
Judy Lynn 
Kathy Masterson 

Marcie McKerren 
Linda MIeziva 
Cherri Myers 
Nancy Nolan 
Nancy Noziska 
Pat O'Neill 
Linda Osuch 

Sandee Peterson 
Cindy Pollard 
Paula Porter 
Bev Rudolph 
Kris Samuelson 
Helen Scanlan 
Linda Schleh 

Lori Schneider 
Jan Sieg 
Diane Suda 
SueVenturino 
Margie Warden 
Cindy Welch 
Paula Williams 



247 




Martha Baker 
Susan Barton 
Susan Benson 



Christine Bland 
Nancy Brashear 
JuleCottini 



Carolyn Crawford 
Susan Davis 
Susan Ferguson 



Karen Firth 
Julie Francis 
Janet Gaudin 



Patsy Granack 
Chris Hamel 
Marilyn Harris 



Suzanne Haywood 
Nancy Hedlund 
Maryann Hinkey 




Susan Hoy 
Katherine Kiisel 
Lee Ann Little 
Mary Jane Martin 
Suzanne McDermaid 
Annalee McDonough 
EvyMcNitt 

Jane Meier 
Nancy Moore 
Cynthia Murray 
ArianeMustad 
Kathy Neiman 
Carol Nielson 
Linda Nielson 

Jackie Neson 
Susan Nelson 
Marilyn Nix 
Carolyn Noon 
Robin Osborn 
Linda Otto 
Judy Poliquin 



248 



delta delta delta 



In this age of computer business, computer education 
and computer dating, it is easy for one to feel alone or 
lost, merely 1 number in 28,000. College becomes an 
endless search for friends, sharing, smiles, and caring. 
For us, "sorority" means nriore than parties. 

At the same time, we recognize the "UCLA way" of doing 
things, and likewise, we offer our mathematical version of 
the past year. 




SUSAN NELSON 



Formulas for Fun and Friendship 
Strenuous studying - needed sleep + cups of coffee 
equals 3rd on the row with grades 



Suzanne Pulsifer 
Betty Putchkoff 
Monica Robiczek 



Hedlund + Carolyn Crawford equal homecoming 



Nancy 
finalists 



Songs + crepe paper trees + the hula x lOO's of girls 
equal new friends + new pledges 

(Actives X initiation order) + (pledges divided by confu- 
sion) equal midnight in the village 

Candy store + Slave Week equal money for scholarships 
+ headaches for Julie 

Marsha McGaugh + Carol Winters equal Project India + 
Project Ceylon 

Exchanging presents - tree raids equal a happy 
Christmas 

Packed pre-party +midnight in Malibu equal an evening 
with the Salvation Army 

Sue + Crazy Cindy + Barty + Friar Ruck + Craw + Fish 
+ Little + Jackie + Brassiere + McD + Moniczek + Jane 
X enthusiasm equal Belles + Fashion Board + Tutorial 
Project + Bruinettes + Spurs + Songleading + fraternity 
little sisters + Chimes 

Tri Delta Girls + males (no restrictions on this set!) equal 
dancing, ditches, dates infinity 



Caprice Rothe 
Suzanne Rustin 
Terri Silk 



Suzanne Simmler 
Jane Stenehjem 
Kathy Thompson 



Sandra Tripp 
Meta Trout 
Robin Tucker 




Cindy Warf 
Terry Wilkes 



249 




Chris Alderete 
Cathy Alleman 
Eileen Barry 
Buffy Black 
Denice Bierl 
Andrea Booth 



Linda Bradshaw 
Laurel B runner 
Laurie Buffington 
SherrieChestnutt 
Loren Cooper 
Andrea Covert 



Sandy Davis 
Sherry Drake 
Marge Doran 
Marcia Engle 
Carol Fraser 
Kathy Frost 





Hillary Haycox 
Linda Hedman 
Robyn Hickey 
Linda Kako 
Nancy Knox 
Cammie Larson 



Mary Leatart 
Marcia Lemon 
Cindy Lindqufst 
Julie McAndrews 
Sherry McLaren 
Nancy McCallum 



Cookie Miller 
Cheryl Nelson 
SueOlrich 
Tori Palmer 
Cheryl Pond 
Sue Reller 



250 



delta gamma 

Again this year DCs were active in all aspects of campus 
life, participating in Big and Little Sister groups, Fashion 
Board, Sophomore Sweethearts, Angels Flight, Bruin- 
ettes, Anchors, Mardi Gras Committee, Blood Drive Com- 
mittee, Bruin Belles and Tutorial Project. Claudie Fecho 
and Teri Sandison spent their junior year in England just 
as Laurel Brunner returned from Germany. DG's were 
also honored as having Sherrie McLaren as Red Carna- 
tion Queen, Linda Bradshaw as ZBT Queen and Linda 
Kako as a varsity song girl. 

Along with being active on campus, house activities kept 
everyone jumping with preparations for the Halloween 
Party, Christmas Party, scholarship banquet. Mom and 
Dads' Night, Initiation, Winter formal pledge-active, and 
the annual Luau. DG's as a house project also helped to 
collect $2,700 for aid to Biafra. 

As busy as the house was, we were still able to maintain 
a 2.8-^ grade average and maintain second place in 
scholarship rating on the row. 




MARSHA LEMON 




Nancy Rethmeir 
Claire Robinson 
Dian Rodriguez 



Jeanne Russell 
Margie Senechel 
Donna Sloan 



Irish Spradlin 
Kathy Stout 
IVIary Jane Stricklin 



SuzieSwanson 
Roclnelle Thomas 
KrisVicklund 



Linda Wallin 
JanisWeyrauch 
Winkie Wolfe 




251 




Betty Adier 
Shane Adier 
Lynn Ballonoff 



Roberta Berg 
Jacki Everitt 
Stevie Fleming 



Susan Granite 
Roberta Groner 
Alice Handel 



Alison Holtzman 
Caroline Jacobs 
Terri Kaplan 



Linda Klatzker 
Robin Kramer 
MarleneMagenheim 



Barbara Manheimer 
Sharon Marks 
Linda Navin 



Joanne Perler 
Bonnie Rosenblatt 
Steph Rudolph 



Leslie Schermer 
Elaine Schwartz 
Shari Siedorf 



Michelle Siegal 
Leslie Sternhill 
PatTurkel 





252 



delta phi epsilon 

Fall Rush kicked off a busy year at the D Phi E house. 
After Presents, we surprised our new pledges with a 
kidnap breakfast. They retaliated by imprisoning the 
Actives upstairs in a jail of waterfilled paper cups which 
lined the stairs. 



Little Sister Rush saw our girls pledged as little sisters 
to Phi Sigma Delta, TEPS and Theta Xi fraternities. Other 
social highlights included Exchanges, work on our Bruin 
Week Float with T D Phi, which won us a first place 
trophy in the Humorous Division (so what if it fell apart 
right after the judges saw it!), and Intermural Volleyball 
with TEPS. 

With a little bit of luck and a lot of smiles, we raised 
$125.00 for Cystic Fibrosis, our National Philanthropy. 

Our Pledges held a spaghetti dinner, complete with 
checkered tablecloths, candlelight, and stuck-together 
spaghetti, a few weeks after which came Finals and an 
Active "Let's-get-our-minds-off-of-it-all wine-tasting 
Party." 

We opened Winter Quarter with a "You're a good pledge, 
Lucy Brown" Party, a Palm Springs Retreat, and a victori- 
ous Powderpuff Football Team (Average Height: 5'2"; 
Average Weight: 110 lbs.) 

Planned events for the coming year include a Family 
Picnic, more Exchanges, an Alumni Tea, a visit from our 
Vancouver Chapter, our annual Spring Formal, and ten 
summer weddings. 



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253 




AnneAyers 
Gail Borden 
Debbie Boyne 



Marguerite Cardinalli 
Cheryl Chlad 
Kathy Colclasure 



Becki Cox 
Chris Cullen 
Lindy Dickey 



Pat Elley 
Ginger Fulton 
Janet Gimbel 



Barbara Gius 
Diane Grinkevich 
Pam Grobecker 



Jan Harbaugh 
JoAnn Hauch 
Carolyn Hayes 



gamma phi beta 

The Hilgard ivory tower was left behind as Gamma Phis 
entered upon a year of personalawareness, achievements, 
commitment, and spirit. True Bruin enthusiasm produced 
a prize-winning skit before the tensely eager Coliseum 
crowd on November 23rd. The week before efforts turned 
to crepe paper, chicken wire, and a 1st place trophy! We 
had our share of Bruin Belles, Sophomore Sweethearts, 
Shell and Oar, Anchors, and Bruinettes. Gamma Phis 
worked on UniCamp Board, Tutorial Project, Bruin Week 
Executive Committee, and the Academic Research Coun- 
cil. The legacy of our two Phi Beta Kappas '68 was per- 
petuated in Spur's and Chimes' member roles. From 
every point of view the year looked different- Kathy saw 
life from the campus in Bordeaux; Kay was honored as 
a candidate for Young Republican Woman of the Year; 
Cheryl became one of the ten finalists for Miss UCLA. 

But there's more to living and growing than activities 
that look good in black and white. We broke the ice with 
faculty members at dinner. Christmas-time we laughed 
with our Southern-accented Santa, and individually 
brightened the season for families in Mississippi. 




f A f 





Sue Hayles 

Marsha Hebden 
Nancy Hebden 
Chris Hjggs 
Linda Hubbard 
Kris Jenkins 
Kris Lindberg 

Trudy Lynch 
Ebe MacNider 
Denise Mathey 
Debbie Milam 
Donna Milefchik 
Joan Mohr 



Janet Pingree 
Vicki Rieber 
Shari Robinson 
Linda Rodriguez 
Sandi Rygel 
Jenny Sands 
Krista Schmidt 



254 




Sue Schofield 
Jane Simpson 
Christi Snyder 



Linda Stine 
Hollis Stowell 
Nancy Strang 



Marti Templar 
Lani Tliomas 
Heidi Timm 



Lynn Utzinger 
Pat Watts 
Vicki Welch 




Cathy Young 
Judy Zucker 



KATHYCOLCLASURE 




' i^^kC^^k^^^^I^Bk"'^^I^^^^^^^I 


^ 


^si 


HI 



255 



kappa alpha theta 

Theta is Involvement. 

Theta is Uni-camp, Trick or Treating for UN ICEF, Tutori- 
al, a Hell's Angels Party, Project Ceylon, AEPi Calendar 
Queen, Colloquium, Bruin Belles, Student Art Show, 
Attending the National Conventions, Horseshoe Cham- 
pions, Orchid Ball Queen, National Galley Pilot Study, 
Mortar Board, Bob Hope Show, Commission for Confer- 
ence on Social Issues, Miss UCLA princess. Camp Board, 
Stolen Christmas trees, A White Christmas, Honors Pro- 
gram, Mardi Gras Princess, Intramural Volleyball Champs, 
Educational Opportunities Program, Chimes, Spurs. 

A Fiesta, Hostessing for Presidential candidates, A Cap- 
pella Choir, All-American College Show, Sigma Nu White 
Rose Queen, Human Relations Board, Little sisters, AAU 
Track and field, A drive for Biafra, Southern Campus 
Queen, Dean's list, RF's, Bruinettes, ZBT Princess, Soph- 
omore Sweethearts, elections and more. 

We live in an era where it is inexcusable not to take 
advantage of the resources available to us. Self-satisfac- 
tion is obtained when we become aware- whether in a 
concentrated field or a wide expanse of interests. We 
strive not for conformity but harmony. Conflicting opin- 
ions enable a person to better understand, not by turn- 
ing away but by opening up and examining. It is time to 
lay aside masks which impair vision and open not only 
our eyes and ears but our hearts. 




JOANNE KASH I Kl 




Marilee Bankes 
Melody Bankes 
Judie Barrie 
Jackie Bell 
Marty Betzler 
Sue Ann Braithwaite 
Lisa Brungess 

Shirley Buss 
Carol Clinite 
Diane Dearden 
Toni Dickinson 
Lauren Doliva 
Maureen Fitzpatrick 
Cindy Flannery 

Candy Folker 
Carol Gilbert 
Tina Hall 
Janet Hedrick 
Jo Rae Hoffeins 
Maryanne Honnold 
Peggy Ishikawa 



256 



Mary Izza 

Chris Jacobson 

Theresa Jilly 

Jo Ann Kashiki 

Kristen Kelly 

Karen Keys 

Janle Klaustermeyer 

Lanie Larkins 
Sandy La Rue 
Diane Leek 
Cyndy Lengnick 
Sharon Levitt 
Judy Lissner 
Linda Lupac 

Jeannie Matthews 
Marie McGaffigan 
Marianne Mitchell 
Patti Mowrey 
Patty Mulford 
Nino Nicholson 
Debbie Palmquist 

Janice Ragusa 
Sue Randall 
Barbara Raymond 
Judy Reich 
Lou Robinson 
Dorothy Rounsavell 
Mary Rounsavell 

Ann Stiles 
Sharon Storm 
Trudi Sturgeon 
Miriam Teutsch 
Lea Trumbu 
Judy Walker 
Linda Wedding 








CAROL PHELPS 



kappa delta 



The Year '68-'69 proved to be a memorable one for Kap- 
pa Delta as we found ourselves busy with activities, 
studies, and R.F.'s. We literally plunged into the new 
school year when the actives and pledges got acquainted 
with a bar-b-que and swim party at Newport. 

The enthusiastic pledges (The Junior Mafia) got into the 
swing of sorority life with a treasure hunt for Head Start 
and numerous ditches culminating in a pleasant one-way 
trip to Albuquerque, New Mexico for a lucky active! 

Competing with the quarter system, we still managed to 
be active on the campus scene by being represented in 
various organizations such as Angel Flight, Anchors, Bru- 
in Belles, several little sister groups, Uni-Camp, Spurs, 
Tutorial Project and Shell and Oar. 

"A Walk on the Wild Side" would best describe the house 
social functions for the year as we swung into action at 
the annual Diamond Dagger and grooved at the pledge- 
active party which was held at a warehouse in Long 
Beach. We celebrated initiation with a fantastic formal 
at the Pacific Coast Club and ended the year with the 
Spring-fling. The highlight of the football season was the 
Dad's Day brunch and game when we saw UCLA beat 
Stanford and the mothers got into the activities too by 
donating food for the annual Family Pot-Luck Dinner. 

With the onset of summer vacation the KD'sare anxious 
to escape the academic pressures and prepare for anoth- 
er exciting year! 



258 




Victoria Williams 
Lisa Wright 
MarjorieVykouk 
Diana Yarber 
Michele Young 



Kathy Alderson 
Laurie Bagnard 
Caria Butherus 
Donna Casey 
Barbara Gate 
Cathy Chapman 
Chloe Clements 

Sue Day 

Christien DiTullio 
Rica Duff 
Rosemary Dymond 
Les Ewing 
Bette Giles 
Meg Gompf 

Linda Guymon 
Joyce Jesswein 
Kathy Johnson 
Judy Herwood 
Genie Kaiser 
Cyndi Lear 
Collen Lettell 

Phyllis Malcomson 
Terri Manheim 
Mary Nastronero 
Sue Nichols 
Bonnie Nickel 
Pam Patty 
Carol Peifer 

Carol Phelps 
Suzi Reed 
Mary Ellen Sass 
Diane Scherer 
Sandy Schneider 
Sally Sheperd 
Harriet Shields 

Diane Sievers 
Nancy Stephen 
Bonnie Strachan 
Barbara Stanton 
ChristiTannehill 
Linda Tubbesing 
Helen Warren 



259 




Sharon Anderson 
Christine Barker 
Geri Baur 
Di Anne Beard 
Shirley Bergstrom 
Sandy Benards 
Barbara Bohnstadt 

Carol Booth 
Carlotta Brant 
Lynne Brocoff 
Valerie Byrne 
Valerie Church 
Robin Cleary 
Joyce Da Silva 

Mary Dixon 
Dru Doheny 
Louise Egly 
Mary Fawcett 
Kristen Grille 
Cindy Held 
Tinka Hess 

Martha Hummer 
Susan Jennings 
Carolyn Johns 
Chris Keith 
Sally Krueger 
Carole Knaul 
Andy Korkos 



I '"V \ 

kappa kappa gamma 

The Kappas came back to school this fall with the antici- 
pation of another full and rewarding year. It was decided 
that house activities were especially meaningful when 
they combined total house participation with service to 
others. Joining together with the Thetas and the Phi 
Sig Delts, Kappas helped to earn $2,500 for the Trick 
or Treat for UNICEF Drive. In the Greek effort to earn 
donations for Biafra, Kappas also worked hard, while 
having enough time to sponsor a uni-camper through 
Unicamp. 

Kappas were active in many aspects of campus life: 
Chimes, Mortar Board, CASE, Bruin Belles, and Fashion 
Board. The wide spectrum of Kappas ranged from Judy 
Wood, AWS Woman of the Month, to Gae McElhany, 
runner-up for Miss UCLA. 

Despite a busy schedule of studying, community partici- 
pation and campus involvement, Kappas had time for 
intramurals, a winter formal with the SAE's, and profes- 
sor speakers. 

Next year promises to be one of greater involvement, 
innovation, and genuine concern. 




^^isa^^^^ 



it CEF 




260 




BECKY MATTESON 



Marcia Ling 
Louise Litschke 
Sharon Martens 
Janie Matsumoto 
Becky Matteson 
Cathy Matthews 
Molly McKinney 

Susan McWethy 
Linda Miller 
Kim Necessary 
Vickie Neemeyer 
Karen O'Kane 
Desi Pagliuso 
Gayle Power 

Peggy Riggle 
Gretchen Schneider 
Phyllis Sirota 
Betsy Strong 
Penny Wallace 
Annette Wiley 
Judy Wood 






Wl 




261 




H 


^^L "* ^^H 


m 




Anne Adashek 
Barbara Barban 
Lynn Berman 
Karen Brodie 
Bonnie Burns 
Rori Finder 
Trisha Frederick 

Carol Garber 
Cheryl Gelman 
Karen Graff 
Lisa Harris 
Barbara Kadner 
CyndeeKahn 
Kathy Kaplan 

Terri Kaplan 
Mimi Kaufman 
Anne Koppelman 
HelaineKurtaman 
JudieLee 
Roz Lerner 
Joyce Lessor 




Davia Lipton 
Debi Marans 
Joan Michel 
Bev Miller 
Susan Moss 
Nancy Mozur 
Linda Nathan 

Debbie Ollff 
Susan Perlmutter 
Nancy Renkow 
Sherry Rose 
Gayle Rosenberg 
Sandy Schneider 
Karen Schwartz 



262 




Carol Scott 
Diane Seigle 



AUDREY TEREN 

phi Sigma sigma 

This was a Phi Sigma Sigma vintage year, bubbling 
through life at a rapid pace: Unishine, phone calls in the 
lanai, Valentine Formals, car ralleys, candle passings, 
Theda Bara, volunteers at N.P.I., Prelaw Society President, 
twins, retreat, Mardi Gras, preparties, postparties, Para- 
phenalia, matches and change, gardener and assistant, 
Larry's punch, "Funny Girl," pizza runs, firesides, ping 
pong "trips," Family Night, exchanges, "Button up your 
— " AWS President, Position Four, parlor games, "You're 
A Good Man, Charlie Brown," "What a funny bird a frog 
are," father-daughter gambling night, mortar board, - Yes, 
1968-69 was a Phi Sig year of spontaneity, involvement, 
and fulfillment. 





Nancy Shapiro 
Ellen Silverman 





Marlene Sirken 
Heather Stearns 





Pam Stearns 
Livia Stein 





Audrey Teren 
Liz Waisman 





Barbara Weinstein 
Mimi Weisel 





Helena Wigodsky 
Diane Wirth 





263 



pi beta phi 

Sunshine and Rain and Music and Smiles delight a Pi 
Phi . . . 

This year the Pi Phi delight has been spread around a 
big world. We have had six girls studying in foreign 
lands while three more worked or travelled abroad . . . 
and in the air! 

At home, UCLA-world too, provides endless haunts for 
Pi Phi curiosity. 

Through the UCLA Hospital-maze wander future nurses, 
Connie Blair and Pat Howard. Jeanne Wallace will be a 
doctor ... For now she's a Varsity Cheer Leader! Also in 
a land of smiles and sport there are synchronized swim- 
mers and Debbie Rothaus, a Frosh Song Girl. Speaking 
of songs, Dana Dunn, our Madrigal, makes us beautiful 
Pi Phi Music. "Most Beautiful," that was our Bruin Week 
Lawn Float. Of course, our Little Sisters, Spurs, Sopho- 
more Sweethearts, Bruin Belles, Fashion Board, Greek 
and Bruin Week Committee members make the UCLA 
world spin. 

Back from where the action goes, in a quiet and 
thoughtful place, UCLA Coloquium felt the sunshine . . . 
and the rain ... of Sue Smith and Betsy Kimball. Sue 
and Bev and friends bewitch our house activities with 
colors and imagination and make the Sculpture Garden 
their land of enchantment. Speaking of wizardry. Spring 
GPA was highest on Hilgard! Finally, whatsoever things 
are true . . . we love you Eleanor! 





Nancy Allen 
Janis Avery 











Martha Berry 
Connie Blair 




Bev Blout 
Linda Campbell 







y@y^SP@ 






Linda Davis 
Dana de Paolo 



Carole Dische 
Dana Dunn 



Sandy Early 
Betsy Eick 



Joan Fast 

Eleanor Fearman 
Kathy Fields 
Janet Fish 
Anne Fleming 
Jaki Fleming 
Alison Fuller 

Linda Gabler 
Connie Henderson 
Alexis Hix 
Pat Howard 
Barbara Huff 
Sheila Hurley 
Barbara Jack 

JillJensen 
Janet Kerr 
Betsy Kimball 
Lynn Kudio 
Vicky Murphy 
Sue Pebley 
Diane Pirie 



264 



Kristi Rasmussen 
Janie Richardson 
Nancy Rodgers 
Debbie Rothaus 



w y^ m # 





Sigma delta tau 



GayleAbrams 
Eileen Adier 
Noga Amir 
Beth Bennett 
Terri Blachman 
Andrea Bowman 
Margie Braun 

Marsha Brown 
Jan Brownstein 
Nori Cohen 
Sue Colen 
Sherry Frankel 
Felice Freeman 
Linda Gatteg no 

Sandy Gaviola 
Shelley Gazin 
Melody Gelber 
Linda Goldenberg 
Mimi Grey 
Judy Guzik 
Cathy Halperin 

Kathy Hoffman 
Melanie Kempton 
Robin Koosed 
Sylvie Kulkin 
Margo Lessner 
Evanne Levin 
Lorri LeVine 

Carolin Linsk 
Judi Lomkin 
Stacy Mann 
Randi Morrison 
Cathy Nadler 
Cathy Olshane 
PamOringel 




266 



Activities, honors and fun have highlighted another year 
for the Sig Delts. Last Spring was truly exciting as SDT's 
combined with AEPi to carry off the Ma Crandall Mem- 
orial Sweepstakes Award at Mardi Gras. Sandi Gaviola 
was honored as Queen of the event with Sharon Krevitz 
serving as Princess. 

SDT was represented in all phases of campus activities. 
Linda Goldenberg served as ASUCLA First Vice President 
and was named AWS Woman of the Month. Lani Yasgoor 
worked on Bruin Week; and Sherry Frankel and Rhonda 
Pieter were members of the Mardi Gras executive com- 
mittee. Sig Delts could be found in all phases of campus 
organizations: Randy Morrison was AWS secretary-trea- 
surer and Rhonda Pieter served as Intercollegiate Associ- 
ation of Women Students Representative; plus many 
SDTs could be found in the rosters of Bruin Belles, 
Bruinettes, Sophomore Sweethearts, Freshman Council, 
Spurs, Chimes, Prytanean, Communications Board, Mor- 
tar Board and Dean's List. 

Community-wise, the Los Angeles City Panhellenic honor- 
ed SDT by presenting them with a silver cup for the 
highest gpa for any living group at UCLA. This year our 
philanthropy was reading for the Braille Institute. Our 
Fall pledge class, the "Sigma-to-me's" worked for the Los 
Angeles County Heart Association. 

Highlights of our social activities included our "Cowboys 
and Indians" and "Valentines" Parties, and our annual 
Spring Formal. Intramural Softball proved to befun-filled. 
This year our successful retreat was held in rain- 
drenched Big Bear, California. Under the leadership of 
President Sherry Frankel, SDT has truly had an eventful 
and enriching year. 




SHERRY FRANKEL 



Judy Paris 
Rhonda Pieter 
Lisa Raufman 
Nancy Rosen 
Libby Sack 
Sandy Shapiro 
JudySheff 

Alison Singer 
Sue Siraton 
Cathy Sirota 
Shelley Tyner 
Ellie Wasserman 
SueWeingarten 
Gail Weinger 




Roberta Winston 
Lani Yasgoor 
Joanne Yoffe 



267 



Sigma kappa 



For the past forty-four years Sigma Kappas have written 
a paragraph in the yearbook telling about the good times 
they've had. Well, as you can see from the pictures, lots 
of fun still fills our times together. This year, however, 
we'd like to tell about some things these pictures don't 
show! 

One of the girls has been doing volunteer work at the 
Kennedy Child Study Center and has spent her past two 
summers counseling at a camp for functionally retarded 
children. Another volunteered her timeto work with psy- 
chotic children at Camarillo State Mental Hospital. The 
sisters of Sigma Kappa, after hearing of her rewarding 
experience, elected to donate a "jungle-jim" set to the 
children's ward at the hospital. 

The English in Action Program to help foreign students 
learn our language and feel at home here at UCLA has 
still another of our sisters involved. Other philanthropical 
activities to which Sigma Kappas are giving their 
love and time are the March of Dimes, Operation Head 
Start, and Bruin AFS. One of our more artistic sisters 
donated her timeto do the costuming for a musical pro- 
duction of the Knox High School students, thereby sup- 
porting both the kids' morale and their scholarship fund. 

Sigmas are girls who "do their own thing" and share it 
with each other. Whether it be powder puff football, 
mountain retreats, parties, or philanthropical work, we 
strive together for these very rich and rewarding 
experiences. 




LINDA KELLY 





Cherie Baker 
Venita Baldwin 
Jean Baughn 
Ruth Ann Berkness 
Janet Bowman 
AnneCowdrey 



Dolly Englert 
Helen Forkner 
HallieHerndon 
MaryHlghfill 
Linda Johnson 
Carolyn Kaiser 

Linda Kelly 
Maxine Klein 
Michele Lombardo 
Cherry Mitchem 
Diane Newell 
Athena Peralta 



Chris Philp 
Lyn Saver 
Priscilla Sheets 
Paula Skillman 
Sharon Slack 
Stephani Stolarz 




Norma Suffron 
Mary Vineyard 
Linda Ann Wibker 
Rhonda Wilmoth 
Sherry Young 



269 




Judi Arzt 
Linda Ballance 
Cathy Battel 



phi mu 



Debe Berger 
Maurene Bishop 
Belinda BlacK 



Suzanne Bruce 
Wanda Calkins 
Jessica Clark 



Linda Cooper 
Nancy Daugherty 
Debbie Davisson 



Aileen Detering 
r im Linda Harrer 
Jill Hevrdejs 



Janis Jacobson 
Cathy Kehl 
Fran Langfitt 



Enid Lerner 
Maggie Merrick 
Sandi Oliver 



WE CAME ... WE WORKED ... WE ARE GROWING. 
The year of recolonization has been hectic for the new 
girls of Phi Mu. We met the challenge of reworking the 
house with fresh ideas and enthusiasm. Insideour walls 
old traditions such as the Haloween Dinner and the 
Father-Daughter Banquet have been revived. Weinitiated 
sensitivity sessions to air our problems and become 
closer friends. 

Phi Mu girls participated in a variety of outside activities 
such as Bruin Belles, Anchors, Angel Flight, Sabers, 
Spurs, and as little sisters to Lambda Chi, Phi Kapps, 
Theta Xi, AEPi and Sigma Chi. We worked on Mardi Gras 
and UniCamp plus our own philanthropy The Good Ship 
Hope. Our Chapter ended the year by hosting the Phi 
Mu State Day and having a Spring formal. 

We at Phi Mu think of our house as a People-Puzzle; we 
are all individuals working, living and learning together 
as one coherent picture. 





Robyn Palmini 
Chris Pitzer 
Jean Raders 
Jo Anne Robbs 



Fran Thompson 
Virginia Van Osdel 
Janet Wache 
Sandy Zimmerman 



270 




Alpha Omicron Pi 



271 



^^1 




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ft. 



^-^>^r 






CARL YORDAN-VICE PRESIDENT 



w* 



TERRY COFFEE- EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 



interfraternity counci 

The Interfraternity Council is composed of a 
presidents' council and an elected executive 
board, and is a completely self-governed or- 
ganization dedicated to the coordination of 
the activities of the fraternity system as a 
whole. Its judicial board, composed of seven 
members acts on matters of self regulation 
of the fraternities along the lines of the stu- 
dent conduct code. 



#^. 



IS: 



t^r 



DOUG NEILSSON-PRESIDENT 



■^r-'- . 



t>- 



.'}!f;«^wg^iffrimi^ '' 




Harold Moskowitz, Bill Newkirk, Jim Goodman, Bob Larkin, Nardy Samuels, Kevin Pawlik. 




acacia 



Can 50 fraternity brothers find happiness 
when they are surrounded by more than 1000 
sorority women? Well, the Brothers of Acacia, 
with a little help from their neighbors, sought 
collective sanctuary within themselves. Their 
roving eyes were matched only by their wan- 
derlust. Travels included a venture to that 
titilating southern paradise, Tijuana, a Christ- 
mas caravan to Mammoth, and an exciting trip 
to Berkeley for the All-Cal-Weekender. 

Campus interest was not forgotten. Acacia, 
seeking the light, took first place in two Bruin 
Week activities; Best Theme for the lawn dis- 
play and Most Original Skit. After all these 
activities. Acacia even had enough time to 
place in thetop onethird inoverallintramurals. 
With the upcoming parties, Greek Week activ- 
ites, and exchanges, thefastestgrowing frater- 
nity on the UCLA campus is looking forward 
to an enjoyable and rewarding year. 



DOUGZIMMERMAN 



Joseph Achor 
Steven Adaire 
William Adkins 
Randy Allen 
David Anduri 
Richard Baber 
Phillip Berck 

Christopher Bowles 
Gene Bruno 
Richard Collins 
Richard Copeland 
Randy Dante 
John Davis 
James Day 

Kieth Ducote 
Gary Engel 
Roger Parrel 
William Prady 
Grover Gentry 
Dennis Hamel 
Paul Hauck 







m^^ 



274 





Sam Hedgpeth 
Robert Helvey 
Jim Henry 



Richard James 
Peter Lake 
Lindsey Nicholl 



Robert O'Neil 
William Oxiey 
William Pennington 



Riley Ridgell 
Mil<e Rosick 
Drew Rusnak 



Arthur Schmid 
Barry Schreiber 
James Schug 



James Shearer 
Gary Paul Slaven 
Kenneth Stryker 



Ralph Sykes 
Ross Tanner 
Edward Tyber 



Joseph Ward 
Douglas Zimmerman 



275 




JANISBLUMKIN 



alpha epsilon pi 



John Bloom 
Mark Branner 
Bill Eidelman 



Cliff Frieden 
Jerry Cans 
Mark Goodman 



Michael Goss 
Geoff Graham 
Ron Green 



Neal Howard 
Paul Gale 
Arnold Kaminsky 



Don Koblin 
Steve Kuhn 
Barry Levy 



Tim McAuiiffe 
Bill McFadden 
Steve Miller 





276 



This past year the brothers of AEPi were active 
on campus both in adding spirit to the school 
and working on community endeavors. The 
brothers raised over $200 with the women of 
Alpha Epsilon Phi to aid the war victims in 
Biafra. 

We are looking forward to our 5th straight 
Mardi Gras sweepstakes trophy for the House 
of Horrors. This year it was done in conjunc- 
tion with Sigma Delta Tau. 

Brothers active on cam pus include Harold Mos- 
kovitz, I FC Judicial Representative and Chair- 
man of Greek Week; Arnold Kaminsky, Chair- 
man of ASUCLA Communications Board; Mark 
Goodman, Daily Bruin City Editor; and Steve 
Adier, Mardi Gras Executive Committee. 

The brothers wound up their winter social 
season with the Winter Formal at the Wind- 
jammer Restaurant and the crowning of our 
new sweetheart Miss Janis Blumkin. 

Ann Stiles, Kappa Alpha Theta, was chosen 
our 1968-69 CalendarQueen and wascrowned 
by Troy Donahue. She appeared on the cover 
of our 2nd annual school calender with 13 
other girls as the princesses for each month. 




JOESUGARMAN HAROLD MOSKOVITZ 




Harold Moskovitz 
Wayne Napthal 
Mark Peterson 
Brett Price 



Mark Resnick 
Lee Richman 
Richard Schad 
Bob Slever 



Paul Stanley 
Howard Stein 
John Steygleder 
Joe Sugarman 



Mike Ullman 
Steve Tendrock 



Glenn Wallace 
Les Werlin 



"H Marc Wolf sohn 
Rich Wordes 



alpha 



amma omega 



Unique among theGreek organizations is Alpha 
Gamma Omega. Founded at UCLA in 1927, 
AGO is the only national social fraternity whose 
goals are Christ-centered. AGO offersthe basis 
for fellowship so essential to spiritual growth 
on the university campus while also providing 
a wide variety of social and athletic activities. 

AGO had an excellent year filled with memor- 
able experiences. High Sierra pack trips, Little 
Sister fellowships, banquets, football game 
after- parties, intramuralcompetition (1958 All- 
Fraternity Soccer Championship), and com- 
munity service projects enriched the calendar. 
A weekend retreat with ADX Sororityand Mardi 
Gras participation added to the fun, while 
our traditional Senior Banquetand Luau closed 
out the year in style. Yet allot the action didn't 
seem to thwart the studies, as AGO retained 
its very high scholastic ranking. 

Ask any brother, though, and he will tell you 
that the most valuable benefits he received 
from AGO lies in the warm brotherhood which 
creates lasting friendships, provides opportu- 
nity for a personal evaluation of one's faith, 
therefore making the university experience 
complete and meaningful. 




KEN KARLSTAD GUSTAV BURKHARD 



Robert Anderson 
Art Barras 
Rex Boiling 
Monroe Brewer 
William Brizendine 
Gustav BurVard 
David Farmer 

Stan Gryde 
Christopher Hall 
Chester Herbst 
Mark Hoyt 
Cary Johnson 
Ken Karlstad 
Claire Edward Moore 

Jonathan Moore 
Norman Murata 
Jerry Myatt 
Michael Ornee 
Lloyd Osborne 
Steven Pease 
Jim Powell 




278 




Warren Butcher 
William Crum 
Jacl< Fredricl<son 



Dan Himmelstein 
Cliff Israel 
Kevin Kellerman 



Steve Skiles 
MikeSklanowsky 
Brian Stone 



Robert Stumpf 

Mike Walker 
Luther Welch 



delta sigma phi 





In the tradition of Delta Sigma Phi, the past 
year started out in style with our tri-annual 
beer bust. Lazio, our cook, helped tremendous- 
ly in keeping up the fine tradition. 

Through the past year we rocked out at Lionel! 
Barrymore's pad for our annual Carnation Ball. 
As the weeks followed, a Boxer Shorts rebel- 
lion arose with the Delts. But,ourzaniestfunc- 
tion of the year was the tradition Sailor's Ball 
which left many a Delta Sig happy and in- 
vigorated. 

It was a great year, and the next one hopes 
to be better! 



ROBERT PARRISH 



Doug Anderson 
Frank Anderson 
Frank Armstrong 
Dana Ayers 
Steve Ball 
Chris Brittle 



George Chung 
Greg Crockett 
Geoff Daigle 
Dave D'Arco 
Dan Douglass 
Curt Ezell 



PeteGoldbach 
John Goudge 
Bill Halsey 
John Hatch 
Scott How^ell 
Steve Jacobson 




alpha tau ome 

Again the ATO's led in unprecedented campus 
social acitvities. Unfortunately though, the 
homecoming roof display, done with ourtypical 
tongue-in-cheek humor, was disqualified be- 
cause of lighting techniques. We were, how- 
ever, awarded four weeks at IPC's Camp for 
Wayward Degenerates. 

The Mad Dykstra Sniper, angered because he 
wasn't invited to the annual ATO sponsored 
"Take a Dormie to Lunch" banquet at the 
Midnight Mission, continued his siege of the 
House. The score now stands at one dormie 
evicted and six brothers suffering from pot 
shots. 

The football team recovered from last year's 
groin' pains and had an exceptional season. 
The block sliding team had a perilous timedue 
to the unusually large number of cracks in 
the streets this year. 

Individual achievement reached a climaxwhen 
Pete Robb was chosen for D.I.LD.O. (Develop- 
ment of Institutional Leadership and Depart- 
mental Organization), sponsored by a nation- 
ally known mercant's guild. Saltzman and War- 
ren were awarded theH. Molly MemorialTrophy 
for their efforts in the two-man tag team 
competition. 

Y.O.M.F. Heidleberg was a ball for thebrothers 
and their dates; the Jolly Green Giant did his 
thing on the house; and Chung gave back the 
Pueblo. As it looks now, the ATO's will end 
this '69 with a bang. 




CHUCK THOMAS 



280 




Paul Schmidt 
Larry Sein 
Doug Smart 
Eric Smith 
Jeff Snapp 



Al Strong 
Jeff Sunderman 
Chuck Thomas 
Rick Wagner 
Ross Warren 



281 



Bruce Allen 
Mike Armstrong 
John Bergstedt 



beta theta pi 

This year Beta's were blessed with the return 
of an old IVlaster-Beta, the worthless Perry 
Pompador, who now, as in the past, twangs 
the heart strings of many a UCLA coed. The 
exuberance over the Pompador's triumphant 
return was offset by the untimely departure 
of our long established travel agent, Rotten 
Ryan's Travel Agency, which specializes in 
travel by rail, reached new highs this year. 
Single-handedly, the venereable (sic.) Ryan 
turned 581 into Grand Central Station. Mike's 
powerful locomotives did an excellent job of 
keeping the trains coming regularly. Rarely 
was a member of one of the long passenger 
lines disappointed. His all-star group of engin- 
eers include such notables as the Tuna, Rasty 
Judy, Ideal Idell, Mazola Michele, and the Dy- 
namic Duo. 

In an attempt to shape up sorority row, this 
fall's pledge class initiated a new figure con- 
trol program with the Kappa pledges volunteer- 
ing to participate in the premiere session. 
After a brief workout these athletes were lax- 
xed into eating our chocolate cake topped with 
hand-whipped cream (a special recipe pre- 
pared by our gourmet chef. Big George). Also, 
in a search of the forementioned row, we found 
our Baby Chipmunk's nuts at the AXO house. 
In an attempt to atone for their crime (against 
nature), they invited the Beta's over for cake 
and punch. Their entertainment began with 
singing and ended with humming. 

As usual, the major highlight of the year was 
the Beta Weekender. The trip started off with 
weather ideally suited for skiing; the casualty 
toll revealed one broken leg and several stiff. 
Due to heavy snowing that night. Beta activity 
turned from skiing to snowballing, a much more 
productive sport. 

In keeping with tradition we will conclude 
this resume with the selection of theoutstand- 
ing '69 Beta . . . 



Bill Bishop 
Russ Blumenthal 
Mike Bongiorno 



Jerry Brennan 
James Cairns 
Glen Chase 



Steve Col ley 
Vic Copeland 



Bill Cunningham 
Fred Dorey 
Bob Emmet 



Bill Frash 
Carl Fricke 
Dan Gandara 



Kevin Goff 
Bill Goines 
Guy Hansen 



BillHinck 
Bob Kull 
Jim Landis 




282 









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Leeson Leeds 
Larry Leisure 
Kim Lemasters 
Jeff McKinney 
Tom Miles 
Mike Miller 
Lee Newell 

George Nichols 
Mike Nygard 
Jim Poett 
Jim Rodriguez 
Pat Ryan 
Tim Ryan 
Gary Sanserino 

Sam Sibert 
Chris Smith 
Tod Spieker 
Jerry Staines 
Chuck Stratton 
Dave Thomas 
Pete Van Tright 



283 



delta tau delta 




Bob Campbell 
Steve Carpenter 
David Carrol 
Jim Caskey 



284 



"This is Delt Country" echoed across cam- 
pus in 1968-69 asthehibernatingDeltsresur- 
rected the quiet traditions of rape, violence, 
prejudice, and thievery. As our social chair- 
man put it: "If we can't afford exchanges, we 
may as well have a police record." 

Fall rush brought a pledge class totally in 
tune with the ancient customs at 649 Gayley- 
obsessed with ditching, samming, dropping 
trow and hazing actives. 

The polite little women from the Mount came 
to exchange, but went down in a baptism of 
Busch. 

The Chi O's donated their Christmas tree to 
the Delt Breaking-and-Entering Team (as did 
Thetas, D.G.'s, and Gamma Phi's). With some 
regret, the Hilgard lovelies received cold show- 
ers and blue sisters, Delts got ornaments, 
Jena's bird, and unicops. 

The Turkeys of Minerva donated beer bottles; 
Delts rinsed them down the Gayley gutter. 

When the New Year almost washed Mandeville 
Canyon into the Pacific, the men of the purple 
and gold turned out in force to stem the mud. 
But in spite of our gallantry, the French 
Apache, the Delt tree lot, an unlicensed sale 
of Coyote underwear, prejudice against Polaks, 
and the incomperable All-Delt Weekend blos- 
somed into impromptu Delt-LAPD exchanges. 

All in all, the row's largest winter pledge class 
meant more strength, the alums meant money, 
the little sisters meant well, pinnings meant 
Jack Daniels, the LAPD meant business, the 
officers meant nothing, and Deltsmeant broth- 
erhood. 

UC1J\ was Delt Country in '69! 





A.G. Cleveland 
Ken Cram 
Scott Ebner 



David Ferguson 
John Garagliano 
Steve Griswold 



Craig Hamilton 
Rey Harju 
Joe Menkes 



Tom Kikuchi 
Dave Kruse 
Wade Lamson 



John LeGros 
Bob Lesh 
Rob Littlejohn 



Dave McDonald 
Michael Muller 
Paul Nash 



hdTM 



Scott Neely 
John Patton 
Greg Pawlik 
Kevin Pawlik 
Pat Plamondon 
Stephen Rogers 



Vincent Silverman 
John Smoot 
Bert Syms 
JiroTagawa 
Mark Wright 
Gary Yomantas 



285 



lambda chi alpha 




We tried to write about what IT was like at 
Lambda Chi this year, but Southern Campus 
didn't like IT . . . 



Studying IT. 



Getting along with IT. 



Joking about IT. 




George Grihalva 
Steve Hauser 
Udo Helferich 
Mike Inkster 
Ken Jablonski 
Gil Jansen 
Terry Kaspar 

Scott Kirk 
Tom Landers 
John Langpap 
Mollis Lenderking 
Jim Lucas 
Allan Lundy 
Don McGann 

Mike Moody 
Kirk Moon 
Bill Moran 
Rich Morese 
Norm Nelson 
Bob Newman 
Ron Picco 

Bob Pitzer 
John Prentice 
Lance Pugh 
Jeff Raker 
Larry Rinek 
Mike Sod erberg 
Paul Speckman 



Florida Taylor 
Stan Terry 
Mack Thomas 
Danny Wexler 
Tom Wheeler 
Bill Winder 



287 



phi delta theta 




ROBERT LARKIN RON BAYER 



Fall started with Jules and Turkey in Holmby 
Hills' Rat and Beezeon Westgate; Hulk, Nails, 
and Nick gone too; people like Animal and 
Doctor Frank and (don't forget) Dollar were 
in the house; Chof and Gordie were playing 
ball and handling rush, which were equal 
successes this fall; new bro's in the house, 
like Jorgy with his rebellion, Lischon with his 
hair, Krotch with his Krotch; Bird with his 
books and Bubba with his butt moved in too; 
Clark and Phikeia Frank were well-behaved; 
Lumpy led, then Bull took over, with Bud the 
year-long ragman; Porky split, so did Elvis and 
Nancy; Kevin, B.C., O.J., Bits, Ron, and Cousy 
filled in, though, with Little Finley over at 
the Med Center; Dags came back and lived 
with Bernie, who's back with Phyliss; Skeeter 
haunted the Basement, Jocko haunted the 
rest of the house, and Trip and Ho haunted 
the bush across the street; Zorro discovered 
the bush this year, as did Tiny Eddie; mean- 
while. Perry was still leading the hard core, 
with Bouty and Troll going both ways; All- 
Around Dave had a big day in the Super Bowl; 
Shmotie succumbed to what's-her-sister; 
Audino, Randolph, and Clink werethemselves, 
respectively. 



Joseph Audino 
Ronald Bayer 
Vincent Bischof 
Bradford Cullison 
Andrew Daggatt 
Clark Dikeman 
Norman Donaldson 

Douglas Gervasi 
Robert Greig 
Richard Howorth 
Jefferson Jorgensen 
Bruce Kingsbury 
Robert Larkin 
Frank Lee 

Mitchell Lishon 
William Magruder 
Keith Meisenheimer 
Ronald Montgomery 
Alex Mucino 
Joel Ostroff 
William Pardridge 




288 




Pete Peterson 
Terry Polley 
Mark Randolph 
Eric Rosa 
Ed Sauve 
David Simmonds 
Kevin Smith 

Scott Steele 
Jeffrey Sultan 
RickTheirbach 
Terry Vernoy 
Robert Vogt 
Trip Webster 
James Wigle 



phi gamma delta 

With the turning over of the new leaf and ad- 
vent of the new "smooth" image here at the 
FIJ I house, (soon to be recognized officially as 
Folsom Prison Trusteeship Extension), the 
brothers have accepted a rather shakey truce 
with the world about us. This truce is the re- 
sult of our insincere de-emphasis of world con- 
quest through the means of sin, vice and 
perversion. 



While the bros have been taking part in the 
new student activist movement in areas of 
dire importance to the improvement of our 
society, as mentioned above, they have of 
course met their responsibilities, duties and 
obligations to future posterity by keeping alive 
the traditional taste, discretion, and scent of 
humor prevalent at any "FIJ I" function. 

Thus, as expected, highly successful social 
activities have marred the new smooth era of 
this year which has been more accurately de- 
scribed as a "Renaissance of Unacceptability." 

The traditional (?) "Grape Stomp" party was 
held in honor of the viligance of the Delano 
grape pickers. The theme for this fun-raising 
party was thusly rather appropriate- 'Pick 
Your Nose-Not Grapes'-. It was truly a smooth 
function as three girls were graped and nu- 
merous others were introduced to a uniquely 
'FIJI' fermentation process. 

The pledges had a tremendously successful 
ditch with an assortment of Pi-Phi pledgesand 
refugees from the nymphomaniac ward over 
at the med-center. The outing was held at the 
LA County ZOO out at Griffith Park. The 
brothers are still awaiting the release of one 
of our fellow Fiji's from the zoo. It seems as 
though a zoologist and an anthropoligist from 
the zoo trapped our dear bro while he was 
engaged in a coitial undertaking of no small 
measure with one of the zoo's female gorillas 
whom he had reportedly mistaken for one of 
the Pi-Phi pledges. As it stands now, he is still 
in custody and has been classified as the 




KARLENGLERT 

"missing link" in modern evolutionary theory. 
This ditch has since been labled the 'Grovel of 
The Century.' It did manage to strain our 
sorority relations which up to that point were 
blossoming. Pan-Hellenicvoted 22-1 to boycott 
us which is quite an accomplishment and 
show of self sacrifice on their part. IFC also 
decided to do us a similar favor and placed us 
on social probation for theentirewinterquarter 
just to keep us out of trouble. 

The Brothers of Phi Gamma Delta shall surely 
fondly look back upon this year as one of 
Social Prohibition -Not Inhibition! 





Tom Vogel 
Dean Westly 
Carl Wisniewski 
Joe Woo 



John Achuff 
Bruno Bisceglia 
James Block 
Will Clarke 
Joseph Curtis 
Karl Englert 



Philip Flores 
Kip Gray 
Roy Wayne King 
Peter Kranske 
Dennis Lundquist 
Rex Meyer 



Jeffrey Pichel 
James Sayre 
Robert Sbardellati 
Schlitz 

Robert Scurich 
Richard Theis 



291 



Curt Adier 
Doug Anderson 
Ed Bergstrom 



Ed Browning 
Craig Burke 
Mil<e Burton 



Ron Butler 
Paul Curry 
Scott Dattan 



Pat Donohoe 
Dennis Poland 
Gary Gray 



Peter Hoffman 
Steve Krueger 
Brad Langston-Jones 




phi kappa psi 



CHRIS LEE 



The Green Wave has paid gravely for an oversight; parties are now for- 
cibly driven well into the night, no more hustle for filings-Phi Psi's 
driven to despair, yearn for the special privileges the University lends 
to recognized fraternities. Meanwhile the wave continues to waste time 
with such time honored foolishness as Homecoming, Uni-Camp Drive, 
Campus Tommorrow, and Intramurals. Some were even limited enough 
to feel the year was both productive and fun. 

Wags, Sac, Taco, Thin Man, and Raybo off to the wars. . . Burton home 
from Mexico with the gold, the brotherhood brought home everything 
else. . . Smegma, Maddy, Pops, Huck and Big Jeff on the V-Ball circuit, 
with Skunk in Traction. . . Yimmy falls in love and debt-looses car. . . 
Birdman inherits an airborne sireen. . Sneak a co-starring role with Big 
Lew. . . Whittier Alpha is formed. . . Maggot flunks out of wrestling, the 
Tree should of. . . Love blossoms in the spring, all goes up in smoke. . . 
And Bank of America picks up the tab. 



292 




Richard Rayburn 
Dick Sessler 
Jerry Stenenhjem 
Kent Stevens 
Benny Viloria 
Randy Wheeler 
John Zajec 



293 




MIKECARTY BILLSITZ 



phi kappa sigma 



Howe the Carts have changed and the balla's 
have bounced! Things have been poppinatthe 
Phi Kap house and the mirrors show it. The 
Stork has taken his Bush to the beach in 
search of more Bushes. Two ousted big wigs 
followed them and Poppa Zits found his hijo 
in office. 

In an attempt to fill all the rooms an exchange 
program was inaugurated with Tel Aviv Tech, 
Tijuana Tech, and the Betas. As the musical 
HAIR moved into LA., so did T.H.E. FLY and 
B.F. Scrotes move in on us. The two can be 
recognized by their lithe bodies, fiery eyes, and 
olympian hangs as they scour the campus for 
new dogs and new stumps. 

Phi Kap health, both mental and physical, was 
bolstered by a visit from a Santa Monica Nurs- 
ing Complex. Brown helmets led in stylish 
fads and Brer Fos initiated many a wine tast- 
ing, candle making, window peeking grovel. 

All-U Intramural trophies were won in Football, 
pool-emptying, & FAMAC body painting. 
Schwablee, Chumlee, &Lingeeareanticipating 
a fine season in parade competition and the 
pledges are in hard-core training for the Spike 
Marathon. 



Greg Arth 
Bob Bailey 
Bill Battles 

Robert Baum 

Joe Butler 

Al Camarillo 

Lee Currier 

Doug Diebolt 

Ted Elink-Schuurman 

Randy Gregory 

Steve Hanna 
Bob Howe 
Richard Hunter 
Steve Kaufman n 
Phil Klein 
Jim Kok 
Charles Lancaster 

Bob Lear 
Brad Lyman 
Dick Millet 
Louie Miramontes 
Chuck Negri 
Mike Phelan 
Bob Raming 



Yes, Sweat memories and glands overtake a 
Phi Kap's senses as he dozes off to sleep amid 
the sighs of the members & victims of the 
Society of the Royal Lift, the soft tunes of 
Dickies box and the tinkling of Scrotes' bell 
as he chews on his namesakes. 




294 



Pete Richards 
Mike Roane 
Randy Rossi 
Doug Roth 
Steve Seligman 
Tom Shaver 
Tom Shedd 

Bill Sitz 
John Slater 
Randy Slaughter 
Greg Snyder 
Carl Thomas 
Richard Whitton 
Tom Wilson 




295 



phi sigma delta 




RICHARD MAGGIO 



Bob Adelman 
Barry Braunstein 
Jerry Britvan 
Jon Chait 
Joel Davidman 
Mike Drucker 



DickGlucksman 
MikeGottsegen 
Steve Graham 
Alan Halfon 
Mai Hyman 
Steve Kierman 



Alan Klein 
Howie Knee 
Sandy Kronick 
Miles Lenhoff 
Rich Maggio 
Mark Malter 




296 




What can you say about that which has been 
your home, and about those who have been 
your brothers? Phi Sig has been a great home 
to all of us and we find it easy to praise, for it 
has given us all many experiences and has 
permitted us to develop and grow in our own 
ways. But, we haven't forgotten that ourfrater- 
nity has a goal, a constantly changing goal, 
towards which we have to constantly strive- 
Brotherhood. 

On the lighter side of things, we find our- 
selves always active in University activities. 
Led by two Praters who both received our 
House's best athlete award, our varsity teams 
in baseball and football made the playoffs. 
Unfortunately, we had bad games and could 
go no further. 

In addition, this past Halloween, our housedid 
something rather unusual in University circles. 
Instead of throwing eggsor asking for candy, 
our house, in conjunction with Kappa Kappa 
Gamma, and Kappa Alpha Theta, collected over 
$2400 for what we all consider a good cause- 
the bank account of Phi Sigma Delta. Actually 
the money went to UNICEF and it made many 
people very happy. 

Scholastically we again found ourselves rank- 
ing among the top three fraternities in overall 
GPA, and at the end of last school year, we 
had three Praters who were accepted to Phi 
Beta Kappa. 



Bob Marcus 
Gary Michel 
Herb Michel 
Ted Rhodes 
Jeff Ross 
Robert Schermer 



Matt Sher 
She! Sroloff 
Marty Stein 
Bob Susnow 
Bob Switzer 
BobTenenbaum 



Mark Vogel 
Gary Weiss 
Rich Weissman 
Bill Wortman 
Drew Zanger 
Al Ziman 



297 



BillAldrlch 
Tom Apodaca 
Jack Bariteau 
Glenn Barker 
Paul Bickenbach 
Steve Boughton 
Kent Bridwell 

Bob Cockle 
Ron Cornell 
Brian Craig 
Andy DeGeus 
Michael Dorsey 
Dan Downing 
Chuck Dragicevich 

Frank Eldridge 
John Fairweather 
Steve Fletcher 
Phil Fonfara 
Bill Frank 
Gary Godward 
Geoff Groat 



Sigma 




alpha epsilon 




DAN DOWNING 
298 



Eurelnic, a medical rarity . . . took its perverted 
toll this year on several of the Bros. - Phil Fon- 
fara, Drew Sones and Geoff Duncan were the 
first to succumb. 

The two major awards of the year are still 
being contested, the Black Toilet Seat (gross- 
est date of the year) and the traditional Brown 
Helmet (obvious). I predict Tim Kelly to win 
the former and White Bird to take the latter. 

My sincere thanks to the Little Sisters (beauti- 
ful, gracious, and considerate ladies) for bag- 
ging my underwear. 

Next year the house will be sealed and filled 
with water to accomodate ourfishesand Oscar. 

Jeff Oderman is a cradle robber; Drew Sones, 
Dan Downing, Wayne Holland, Frey Heath, 
Howard Shemp and Jim Kaufman are all very 
much whipped; the rest of us are homey; 
Oscar ate Dan Marter; Mike Buscher and Geoff 
Groat are racing their hawgs at Ascot; Terry 
Zamanigan glued Bill Frank's mouth shut with 
Dental Alginate; Paul Bickenbach took a little 
ride with the pledges and can't get back from 
Catalina (he can't swim); and Mike Dorsey 
found out what a prophylactic is. 

Oh yeh, the SAE swimmers are cleaning up, 
intramurals are again shaping up under the 
mighty Lion, the W.C. Fields D.A.F. Club Team 
is as bad as ever, our pledges are studs, our 
parties are the best on the row and other 
typical nice things to say which are appropri- 
ate for a yearbook. 




Gary Gunther 
Greg Hackethal 
Curt Hansen 
Wayne Holland 
Glenn Hughes 
Jim Kauffman 



Steve Kelly 
Tim Kelly 
Mike Kent 
Tom Knaup 
Robert Lind 
Dan Marter 



Bob Mouradian 
Bill Newkirk 
Jeff Oderman 
Terry Palma 
Jim Puffer 
Tom Rosa 



Jim Rosewater 
Rick Rusch 
Jim Schafer 
Howard Shempp 
Roger Siegal 
John Sinclair 



Drew Sones 
Mike Thomas 
Perry Willson 
Randy Willson 
Terry Zamanigan 



299 



Sigma alpha mu 

Sigma Alpha Mu in the past year has excelled 
in academics and has also had a very full 
social calender. In the last year we have had 
two overnight formals, one at Lake Arrowhead 
and one at Laguna. Our other social events 
included our annual SAMcowboysand Indians 
orgy. It was a ball! We also had three stags 
for members of our house who were getting 
married. Another ball was had by all! Along 
with our social calendar everyone in Sigma 
Alpha Mu knows they must keep their grades 
up. Our house G.P.A. for last year and the 
first quarter of this year was 2.81 

Our house has also been active in athletics. 
Our teams excelled in all sports and we hope 
to be at the top by the end of the year. 

We have also had very good rushes and we 
have many young, promising fratres to carry 
on the great traditions of Sigma Alpha Mu. 



Zach Berkowitz 
Bob Blanton 




Ron Block 
Ruben Buchak 
Richard Budnid 
JimCunningha 
Robert Freed ma 
Alan Jarrick 
Bob Klein 

Neal Kutchins 
Steve Levy 
Ed Mankoff 
Norm Miller 
Rene Nava 
Larry Rothman 
Cliff Sabath 

DaveSchiering 
GarySindell 
Don Stambler 
Jaakko Tarvajarv| 
Mark Volmert 
Norm Weir 
Dorm Yoder 




300 



Sigma 



chi 



Sigma Chi's erupted to a climax in '69 style. 
Delnaro proved a stalwart on the basketball 
team. Louise helped Dave's roommate Dave 
to a first. The Arizona Sigs provided verbal 
spice at the Harem Party and the fog finally 
cleared over the Pledge Party. The Freak moved 
in during Christmas and promptly burned 
everybody's reg packets-much to Norton'sdis- 
may. Crowd stayed sober long enough to patch 
the holes in the walls. Rich and Gary are go- 
ing to bed earlier but getting less rest and 
Tys and Bert are eager to follow in their foot- 
steps. Tim and Wade had a contest with each 
other to see who could get the best room 
and wardrobe. Bennie stayed ahead, and the 
White Night stayed up. The ex-WC (water 
closet) left-eliminating the potential problem. 
And Brother Barley came over frequently to 
cheer us up. It may be a dirty year but Sigs 
won't let that stop them. 





David Ackerman 
Gary Anderson 
David Banker 



Jolin Bersinger 
Michael Bettega 
Brian Casserly 



Robert Cuyler 
David Delnero 
Lee Garson 



Scott Heifer 
Joseph Ingalls 
Richard Janssen 



Eric Lawton 
Patrick McClure 
Michael Moran 



James Neil 
Rick Pittenger 
John Riela 



Scott Smith 
Jack Teal 
Bruce Thayer 



Rod Tysdal 
Timothy Wade 
George Wood 



ROD TYSDAL 



301 



Sigma nu 



The Brothers of Sigma Nu were busy at work 
this year in an attempt to take advantage of 
the opportunities this campus has to offer. 
Activities commenced with a successful fall 
rush which resulted in the largest pledge 
class on the Row. After the dust had settled 
from the Fall Bid Nite Dinner the final box 
score read: 

28 stitches 

1 broken watch 

21 Excedrin headaches 

hairs 

Academically we again found ourselves in good 
standing with an overall G.P.A. well above the 
all-University average. Sigma Nu continued to 
excel in intramurals, winning all-U titles in 
golf, cross-country, the Fraternity Invitational 
basketball tournament and going to the finals 
of all-U football. 

The House also kept active this year with a 
successful Big Sister Program. The girls treat- 
ed us to Sunday breakfasts and a surprise 
pre-Halloween meal which included cheese, 
flour, and shaving cream on the menu. (We 
returned the favor!) They also threw a Christ- 
mas party with tree, presents, cookies and all. 
Whoopie! 




Theme parties and exchanges were stylish af- 
fairs. The active Social Calendarwashighlight- 
ed by the White Rose Formal and climaxed by 
the annual Weekender in San Diego. 

Aside from these distractions: Nite Skool, Fran, 
Go-Carts, Nickel Beers, the New Year's Party, 
the return of Sterbo, Camarella, Drapes, Prince, 
and marathon card games contributed to a 
highly productive year at Sigma Nu. 



Jim Arcuri 
Roy Barth 
Larry Benson 



Jim Bowdecker 

Fred Brady 
George Buckley 
Don Burgess 
Darrell Butler 
Jim Cady 
Larry Canarelli 

Steve Cobb 
Mike Cooper 
Jeff Corliss 
Rick DeBeare 
John Downard 
Scott Duyan 
Rich Earl 




302 




Bob Edmondson 
Jim Carol 
Pat Graham 
Doyg Hanson 
Dave Hartschorn 
Alan Hoops 
Jim Ingram 

Jim James 
Jim Johnson 
Roger Johnson 
Wally Kaltenborn 
Ted Kaye 
Mark Kobata 
Ken Kroopf 

Wayne Landis 
Jim Lineberger 
Randy McDevitt 
Harry Montague 
Michael Morrow 
Mark Niederman 
John Ollen 

Tim O'Neill 
Jim Price 
Blake Rankin 
Wayne Redfearn 
Alan Roberson 
Tom Romans 
Mickey Rosien 

Dave Schmidt 
Jerry Schutte 
Dave Stearns 
Jim Sterbentz 
Steve Stephanou 
Dan Thomas 
Mike Thompson 

MikeTindall 
Bob Toolen 
Bruce Voegeli 
Jim Winn 
Jack Wright 
Bill Young 
PeteZanzot 



303 



Sigma pi 



This year has left the usual scars upon the 
minds and bodies of the men of Sigma Pi. 

Our annual Pajama Party, areal bang-up, blow- 
up job, was so satisfying that the chapter 
voted 36-1 to bronze the social chairman in 
order to commemorate the event. 

The Sig Pi's, with the awkward but exuberant 
help of a 16-man pledge class, placed 3rd in 
all-fraternity athletic competition. But due to 
another computer failure the Dean of men re- 
ported our GPA as 1.95 and placed the house 
on scholastic probation. Consequently our real 
GPA of 3.69 went unrewarded. 

Our Little Sister Organization once again sur- 
rendered themselves to the will of the chapter; 
serving us breakfast in bed and polishing our 
furnishings. 

Several bawdy wenches tricked brothers into 
pinnings and engagements, but those of us 
who survived these social diseases look an- 
xiously towards another year at UCLA. 

Jeffrey Altman 
Chris Cochran 
Donald Cox 
George Farina 
James Flack 
Richard Frank 



David Harvey 
Norman Mollis 
Kirk Hyde 
Scot Irwin 
Thomas Kendall 
John Latimer 



John Lindsay 
Franz Miller 
Robert Moore 
James Park 
David Patterson 
Gregory Pigeon 



Charles Reid 
Steven Rogers 
Gregory Scott 
John Seidel 
Thomas Stone 
Kenneth Welshimer 







305 




PAUL HI LEY 



theta delta chi 

Despite the advent of socially acceptable 
pledges, the Theta Delts managed to uphold 
their Campus Community status rating 
through yet another year. Contributing to this 
was the house-wide blood drive, continued 
intramural standing, and the donation of a 
Ciodras Diodora tree to the University. 

Gracing the overall picture (which for unmen- 
tioned reasons cannot appear) were the Little 
Sisters, led on by Red Carnation Queen Sherry 
McLaren (Delta Gamma). 

Concerning social gatherings, there was an 
event aptly termed the "8- Way" at which Greek 
society was well-represented. This matched 
with the yearly "Virgin Islander" keptthehouse 
to a strict party line. 

But even with all these memories crowding 
their brains, who could forget the long mid- 
night conversations with Hank the Hermit? 



306 




m 


i 


mi 


i 






Phil Ajioka 
John Austin 
Eric Biswell 
Garrett Dailey 
Mike Dale 



Larry Duslch 
Russ Estey 
Charley Fielding 
Clyde Harkins 
Paul Hiley 



Sal Kalil 
Bob Leamy 
Herb Love 
Rick Love 
Foster Montalbano 



John Quinn 
DickQuintino 
Bruce Reinik 
Charley Robinson 
Randy Rolfe 



Allan Stratford 
Fernando Suarez 
Jim Sullivan 
Steven Witt 
Carl Yordan 




307 



Joe Allison 
John Annis 
Doug Bald 
Wayne Bartolme 
Dan Christensen 
OIlie Depew 
Steve Eisenman 

Gene Elling 
Leo Germain 
Tom Henning 
Jack Hudes 
Bob Johnston 
Steve Kaplan 
Tom Keith 

Chris Kurasch 
Ken Kuss 
Dean Lane 
Craig Littenberg 
Mark Mehner 
Steve Myatt 
Rick Najarian 






CORT HOOPER 



theta xi 



Fun, Understanding, Cooperation, and Know- 
ledge Yield Our Unusually Aggressive Love 
Lives. 

Now we're not trying to make you all think 
that Theta Xi's are the greatest, but there 
is a message there. And as far as we're con- 
cerned, though we do go through our women 
piece by piece, we make time for other things. 

Like our parties-Yeah, we have some (Luau, 
The Cave Orgy (it really rocked), Knights of 
the Round Table. A lot, too. 

And our grades-Theta Xi maintained a 2.75 
this year, with three brothers over a 4.0. 
(Guffaw, he says.) 

And activities-Mardi Gras, Greek Week-no- 
thing spectacular, just enough to get us out 
of bed. 

And individuals-After we elected Hooper pres- 
ident, he got shipped off to India (courtesy 
oftheNROTC). 

And intramurals-Once again we excelled, prov- 
ing we still have that great ball-playing ability. 

And little sisters - We do a lot with them. 

And brotherhood - He continued to rob from 
the rich and give to the poor. (Horrendous 
laughter.) 

And finally, that good old fraternity spirit, with 
the brothers of Theta Xi wishing you all a 
happy '69. 



308 




Bob Need ham 
Pete Parry 
Jim Pike 
Gene Rinn 
John Seski 
George Short 
Jack Tasoff 
Alex Weir 



309 




triangle 



Tom Bachman 
Phil Bailey 
Marv Blanton 
Rocky Carver 



Joe Chamberlain 
Tim Cyr 
Tom Fletcher 
Joe Genovese 



DougGrabhorn 
Rex Gurney 
Kent Harrison 
Bob Heacock 



Ron Heacock 

Paul Hoffman 
Dave Hooker 
John Howard 



Paul Johnson 
Rick Keller 
Chris Leng 
Jim Lipari 




PAULJOHNSON RICHARD KELLER 



Triangle started 1969 with a starvation en- 
durance run as we lacked a cook for a week. 
As our strength grew, the house was exposed 
to an educational series of 13 flicks in which 
only the most debased remained. As Triangle 
slowly became a world power with our largest 
rooting section in years, Triangle beat all comers 
both on and off the athletic field as we finish- 
ed among the top quarter in the All-Fraternity 
Intramurals. 

Undaunted by our athletic activities, we 
highlighted our social calendar with many ex- 
changes, our P.J. party, the annual Spring 
formal aboard the US Princess, and another 
very successful Mardi Gras as we won the 
Queen's and Mask Trophy with our "Bang 
away. Really put your arm into it" bottle bang 
booth. 

This year, as in every year for overa century, 
we honor brothers in the house with various 
special awards. This year we are giving the 
"Brother Scott Bryan Garbage Mouth of the 
Year" Award to the famous comedy team of 
Cyr and Hoffman for their fantastic dialogue 
at our booth at the 1968 Mardi Gras. 

All of these activities failed to dwindle our 
scholastic record but was certainly hard on 
every thing else. We ended the year in utter 
exhaustion and innumerable neurosis. TheTri- 
angle brotherhood, nevertheless, ended 
anotner most stimulating and successful year, 
nineteen sixty-nine 



310 




Roman Matuszewski 
Joe Nagel 
Mike Novak 
Rainer Otto 
Doug Seapy 
Bob Shank 
Rod Van Orden 

Jim Wasson 
Dave Whitby 
MikeWillis 
Jim Willott 
John Wong 
Bob Wyman 
Alan Zirgulus 



311 




zeta beta tau 



There may be a number of reasons why you 
are looking at this page. Maybe you're in the 
house and want to see your picture in a big 
book. Maybe you want to see who this chick 
you were dating dumped on you for. Probably 
you're just comparing to see who has the best 
looking house. 

Whatever the reason for looking you will still 
be missing ZBT. Because ZBT isn't a group 
of faces it's a group of minds. Individual in- 
tellects holding encounter groups, having 
profs todinner,discussiongroups, soul search- 
ing, with help if you want it. 

ZBT has always meant athletics and parties- 
second in all-U baseball, the stimulating 
Roamin' Organ-and it still does. Now it means 
more. Intellectual expansion, athletics, social 
life, brotherhood, ZBT. 



NARDY SAMUELS 



Larry Bass 
Gary Benson 
Russ Berngard 
Paul Bernstein 
Keith Bregman 
Ken Cain 
Jim Farley 

Jim Feld 
Rick Finkelstein 
Ken Freeman 
Steve Friedman 
Larry Ginsburg 
Mark Greenfield 
NateHalprin 

Bruce Hen sel 
Jeff Jens 
Jules Kabat 
Mark Kahn 
Larry Kaiser 
Buzz Kaplan 
Ted Kruger 

Steve J. Kurzius 
Pete Laven 
Richard Marks 
Mark Meltzer 
Joe Moreno 
Lee Philipson 
Flip Phillips 




312 





?■ Allan Pollchik 
Alan Pyenson 
Marc Richards 
Mark Rosenberg 
Marty Rub 
Nardy Samuels 
Mark Schneider 



Bruce Smiley 
Ron Spire 
Josh Weinman 
Bill Winslow 
Marc Winthrop 
Stuart Winthrop 



313 



Paul Averson 
Michael Baillargeon 
James Barnett 



Aian Beck 
Steve Bellanca 
Brian Bentley 



Louise Cleveland 
Terry Conway 
Michael Coyle 



Michael Denison 
Robert Dye 
John Edwards 



Timothy Gager 
Hector Galindo 
Edward Gallagher 



Mark Hoholowski 
Doug Norton 
William Kahl 



William Marshaleck 
Bob McDougall 
Glen Ota 




The contemporary Zete combines scholastic, 
social and cultural, awareness. About a third 
of the brothers achieved 3.0 or better, while 
maintaining a HEAVY social schedule. Part of 
our intellectual and cultural goals are aided by 
regular visiting speakers. Zetes still retain many 
traditions, but our emphasis is on the future 
in our new house. 



314 





iJoseph Peters 
Earl Plummer 
ohn Rafter 
Lyie Randies 
Kenneth Rich 
Mark Schlffman 
Michael Troughton 
Kenneth Turner 



315 



a new direction 




for the greeks 



316 




As with all organizations with long histories, fraternities have grown and 
changed at UCLA. A look at the 1924 edition of Southern Campus reveals 
the predominance of greek oriented and greek organized social events 
on and off campus. Up to the 1950's it was almost unheard of to elect 
a non-greek student body president. All of the big athletes, the people ad- 
mired on campus, those who led the followers were associated with the 
greeks. However the coming and the subsequent acceptance of the un- 
attached activist to the now-huge campus has, among other things, reduced 
both the desirability and the stature of the greek system. It is still seen by 
many as just a legitimization for drinking wenching and "RFing." The 
fraternities at UCLA have in 1969 finally risen to the challenge. In backing 
and actively contributing to a university administered study of fraternities 
on campus, the IFC has promoted discussion of many of the reviews and 
suggestions needed for the rehabilitation of the fraternity system at this 
campus. 

Greek Week 1969, in essence a large scale community service project, has 
accentuated the belief among the greek community that the fraternities 
must orient themselves toward community service. Surely this is a sound re- 
tort to the liberal-minded group of campus activists and their cry of "white 
establishment" so often hurled at fraternity row. The possibility of ac- 
tivating a single house to the ends of community service has been demon- 
strated by a large number of traditional and newer service and philan- 
thropic projects. The Fijis annual Christmas party for the orphans of 
Nazareth House, the winter flood's sandbagging by the DTD's and the AGO 
involvement in camp for the Junior Blind are the beginning of a long list 
of recreational and fund raising activities in which almost every house in in- 
volved at some time during the year. But caution is the password now, lest 
the service project become a hypocritical self-justification. The project must 
become more than a semi-annual, soothing public relations gesture to the 
community, an amends for 12 months of hell-raising. The IFC, following the 
study of the greek system, cannot simply impose. What is needed is a new 
spirit and an effective implementation of these ideals. Each house, and es- 
pecially each individual, must create its own updated and purposeful spirit 
of brotherhood. Among the ideas that the campus community has expressed 
about the greek system is that of not allowing room for individual growth 
within the house; instead each member is pressed out of the same mould. 
Surely one of the great advantages of greek living is the exposure that stu- 
dents could derive from a broader range of different people. This will prob- 
ably be one of its greatest assets in its new direction. 



The spirit of fall rush 1969 and subsequent activities of the greeks may 
determine the new direction of this group if there is to be a change. The 
leaders of IFC and each house are trying to communicate their ideas to the 
body of the fraternity members. It is encouraging to the campus community 
as a whole to see these men no longer satisfied by the rewards of an 
occasional philanthropic action or service project. 



Whether the fraternity at UCLA is to become a basically service-oriented 
social unit is not yet determined. In the minds of those trying to better the 
greek system at UCLA, the basic question still remains; can the greeks 
transform the ideals expressed at a meeting into a way of life in which 
all members hold a true and positive belief or will these ideals expressed in 
1969 lapse again, as before, into sporadic efforts of compensation for the 
average conduct of the whole fraternity row? 




FIRST ROW Herb Ingle, Bob Golub, Clem Tai, Bob Scott, Lee Kenigsen, Paul Gret.iing, Tom Walker, 
Mel, Todd Carter, Linda, Al Manning, Larry Lavenberg, Rich Schwartz, John Henderson, Brian Hoffman, 
Mark Shrager. SECOND ROW Leonard Werner, Leslie, Dave Snead, James Martin, John Burkman, 
Tom Alborg, Rick Smith, Mikio Mukae, Ray Chin, Rudy Iwasko, Don Slater, Les Birken, Jim Babcock, 
Rich Hoffman, Andy Smith, Tab Stone, Ron Madson. THIRD ROW Ken Schwartz, Tom Gantz, Steve Su, 
Greg Cooper, Les Burt, John Livie, Ron Silverstein, Ken Ray, Jeff Gravits, Kal Kentzlach, Mike Turpel, 
David Angus, Duane Parsons, Roger O'Brien, Mike Fielding, Karen, Wayne Pugh. 



FIRST ROW Jess Garcia, M'chael Rotsie Brogan, Lew Grossman, Bad Ralph Brannen, Dewitt Dawgstile, 
Bill LeBlanc, Mike Andrew, Dave Kinnion, Neil the Stilt Peterson, Woodsey Carlson, Ed Genius Robbins, 
Yeetum Yonumm; SECOND ROW Vichai Chittivaranon, Dave Sutton, Leonn Satterthwaitt, Jim Laker Nih, 
Norman Doust, The Phantom, Eugene Tseng, Gary Newman, Steve Casselpussy, Dale Ahearn, Rick Van 
Adelsberg, Fred Youssof, Tom Newberry, Rich Cardenas, John Pin Meikle, Randy *36 Gaschler, Cheldon 
Levy, Ron Stivers, Chipper Larson, Don Stivers, Jon Ratke, Rick Johnson; THIRD ROW Chris Bear Maack, 
Glenn Rothner, Gory Lee, Bob Rich, Pretty-Boy Swath, Ron Cohn, Ed Scannell, Samson Pun, Mike Wilkinson; 
FOURTH ROW Fat Albert Rosen, Greg "Oggie" Ogden, Chuck H.L.K. Shenk, Dennis Abraham, Dan Graham, 
Sheldon Super Stern, Rich Dontchop Suey, Bob Coach Pruden, Poncho Villa, Yas Ohba, Bill Pereira, Al 
Tiger Tierger, Doc Stratton, Former Patient, Phan Tom Chikn, Jim Lazar, Dave Voleska, John demons, John 
Lind. 



sasi 

.mmett, 




tara house 




FIRST ROW Bonnie Davidson, Jeanne Bennett, Carole Sokolow, Lorraine Essex, Linda Kline, Susie Shuster; 
SECOND ROW Jonie Chung, Robin Lenin, Claire Carlson, Barbara Phillips, Linda Hicks, Andrea Eger, Don- 
ald Dexter Donahue (on lop), Beth Yarnell, Anita Alltounian, Pat Beaumont, Ann Stark, THIRD ROW Candy 
Chung, Jackie Plaut, Wendy Gelbart, Carol Easter, Beckey Speilberg, Joy Longfellow, Rhonda Abrams, 
Kathy James, Susan Moss, Randy Rissman, Roberta Bartel, Linda Weiselthier, Eva Jew; FOURTH ROW Mar- 
rion Harris, Denise Applebaum, Nancy Comstock, Karen Berger, Kathy Klotz, Sue Eisenberg, Susan Weiss. 
Cheryl Smith, Barbara Cherry, Sue Goldbeck. 



FIRST ROW Sue Whittemore,Sandy Kaler, PeggyReinberg.Terry Lukes; SECOND ROW Mary Ann Rebealeti, 
Valeria Parker, Ronni Levin, Sharon Stone, Allison Rackliffe, Nancy Mueller; THIRD ROW Dawn Bostie, 
Leeda Garrison, Carice Murray, Connie Benveniste, Sandy Gerhardt, Gail Thompson, Cecile Gordon; 
FOURTH ROW Janelle Yancey, Kathy Sherritt, Wendy Lance, Lynne Solomon, Lori Gordon, Cheri Borges, 
Barbara McNabb. 




Himalaya house 



. . . many new faces, 

but the unique brotherhood 

of spirit remains. 



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12 13 14 15 16 17 



1. Blaise Evers 2. Steve Karpeles 3. Ralph Trieselmann 4. Jim Berg 5. Dale Castle 6. Tony Hamaguu 
7. Les Katolo 8. Ken Sbutherland 9. Mike Burns 10. Ron Robertson 11. Rex Takohashi 12. Bob Jones 13. Rk 
Richert 14. Charlie Chang 15. Rudy Rivera 16. Dave Hedberg 17. Tom Hall 18. Honk Hewitt 19. Jesse 
Ducay 20. Ken Cawley 21. Rod Engel 22. Russ Reinberg 23. Tony Goodrum 24. Dove Mullaly 25. Brian 
Barstow 26. Barbara McNabb 27. Roy. Campbell 28. Joe Finegold 29. Bob Quinn 30. Jim Banks 31. Larry 
Strahm 32. Vance Johnson 33. Steve Chang 34. John Finioyson 35. Brad Lozares 36. Jeff Courtright 37. 
Scott Anderson 38. Nestor Albano 39. Dave Brown 40. Ken Young 41. Scott MocKillop 42. Greg Apodaca 
43. Chris Bessemer 44. Tom Corbett. 





"**■ ■;Sitlfc>>Mt>- 




:.:jliM<LacA.w.~— , 




»T^ .•«■;■ 



>V" 






-'•^•JlhS** ;»'*• , 




FIRST ROW Joyce Cox, Marsha Solomon, Joanne Fong, Mono Fukudo, Claudia Rossi, Marilyn Becker, 
Eloina Green, Pat Kusuda, Corrine Hintze. SECOND ROW Susan Sponenberg, Deidre Woo, Judy Gray, 
Michelle Terry, Cheri Dunn, Addie Thaler, Ronni Schwartz, Carolyn Chernow, Amy Tabata, Cynthia Soto, 
Sue Bass. THIRD ROW Janet Mortorello, Eileen McGeever, Cathie Keenan, Nedra Handerson, Sue Kelsey, 
Chris Inouye, Lucy Nakono, Deano Babb, Kathy Grossman, Helen Singer, Potty Hare, Diane Tucker, Chris 
Garvey. FOURTH ROW Linda Yonkowski, Leslie Perlis, Chris Doughty, Fay Arfo, Jackie Schwartz, Judy 
Glasser. 



FIRST ROW Nancy Miner, Kris Schultz, Cathy Neimon, Maggie Rinkovsky, Stevi Fleming, Jaki Fleming, 
Anita Mermel, Georgia Stubbs, Lione Fink; SECOND ROW Sue Edberg, Esther Rodom, Jeannie Wade, 
Ko Hsin Chi, Carolyn McGregor, Adria Notkin, Zena Gray, Janet Miller, Miki Matsubara, THIRD ROW Sandy 
Lucas, Mary Ann Granack, G/^en Owen, Lynda Terry, Bonnie Sjostrand, Judy Turner, Emily Blase, Lesley 
Levine, Carolyn AA^rchante. 





FIRST ROW Pam Messer, Sue McTiernan, Suzi Nordlin, Judy Goldman, Cathy Terziam, Lauri Hamamoto, 
Joyce Yuen, Gail Whotley; SECOND ROW Linda Clontz, Carol Settle, Candy Heisler, Gayle Wiegand, 
Wanda Evans, Alice Kubo, Frances Diaz, June Kato, Kelley Wisner; THIRD ROW JoEllen Gross, Barbara 
Weinberg, Janie Connell; FOURTH ROW Darlen Velicki, Nadine Noelting, Carolyn Potter, Barbara Blanco, 
Karen Cole, Debbie Harter, Cathleen Wichmann, Calire Wichmann, Nelly Kirmer, Linda Spinardi, Diane 
Krasovec, Donna Clontz, Pam Von Stein, Lyn Hayhurst. 

FIRST ROW John Sandbrook, Jim "Pig" Cosgrove, Joe Balasco, Mike "Cherry" Cereseto, Bob "Fox" Folk, 
"Normy the Horny Dormie" Dow, Scott "Doc" Casselman, Tom Roggers, John Unger; SECOND ROW Dana 
Ronald, Ernie Prisbe, Tim Hanlin, AAark Delane, Bill Uriate, Perry "Turk" Simmons, Keith Schiller, Cliff Locks, 
Earl Bandy, Bob Hampton, Eric Van Patton, Tom "A/tondo" Norminton; THIRD ROW Rich Buller, Jim Graham, 
Jesse Sandoval, John Winfield, Sandy Komula, Pat "The Mad Stork" Kittel, Rick Pankow, Tony Nahle, Dave 
Bradley, Tim Conely, Chuck Mazouch, Rich Metz, Culley Eaby; FOURTH ROW Paul Dodwell, Bob Kiernan, 
Dane Ramsey, Doug "Iron Man" Dov/, Steve Lesser, Joe Heiserman, Wally "Mr. I.O." Uchida, John Patton, 
Mike "Cools" Jones, Markley Sutton. 





FIRST ROW Rob Kent, Rob Daniels, Cliff Locks, Pat Kittell, Rob Spitzer; SECOND ROW Mary Feeley, Darlene 
Gaul, Geri-Ann Galonti, Kati Sweet, Susie Richardson, Sonja Gurfein, Lynn Ohren, Julie Rosenmayer; 
THIRD ROW John Sondbrook, Mike Cereseto, Fred Barker, Chuck Reince, Marco Alpert, Jeff Schlenenger, 
Terry Molano. 

FIRST ROW Emiko Hanano, Frances Mendenhall, Joan Ruth Kingsburg, Linda Phillips; SECOND ROW Carol 
Enseki, Sue Wenninger, Phyllis Hunt, AAary Davd, Patty Campbell, Stephanie Topliss, Aerin Chu; THIRD 
ROW Margaret Kiley, Susie Wiitmore, Linda Hernandez, Peggy Thomas, Sandy Hebert, Terri Thursyon, 
Karen Simpson, Janet AAanolson, Mrs. Eleanor Phillips. 




ASHER HOUSE 



This was the first year for Asher House co- 
educational living group for Christian Scien- 
tists at UCLA. Suitcases and boxes replaced 
paintbrushes and hammers as the original 
eighteen moved in. The first quarter was high- 
lighted by a Halloween costume party and an 
Oriental theme party given by Prospective 
members to Actives. The second quarter fol- 
lowed with an Asher Film Festival given by 
the men, and a Valentine's Day hayride. 
Asherites have participated in RallyCommittee, 
Mardi Gras, Monte Carlo, Varsity soccer, A 
Cappella Choir, the Christian Science Organ- 
ization, and Alpha Kappa Psi. 
So here we are, Merkie Marilyn and Lady Lou 
wreaking havoc in the artist's quarters. Car- 
oling Carol and Dingle-berry Diana luring un- 
suspecting men to their windows. Mama Cass 
and that floppy hat, Soc-it-to-me-Sharon mis- 
sing ail her eight o'clocks, Richie's Andysleep- 
ing through her twelve o'clocks. 
Then there's Director Dave's mad love affair 
with Bridgett, Lord Nelson King of the slopes, 
Davie Baby looks alike. Etiquette taught by 
Dandy Don, cement mixed by Laboring 
Leonard, Ail-American Guff Guff, Hey Joe, you 
just got a letter from the Daughters of Zan- 
zibar, Chatty Kathy official chauffeur. Gor- 
geous Gail blushing in the pink room, Pepsi 
guzzling Bubbling Bobbie. Rob sends peace 
to the world, bye bye Good By. P.S. We love 
you Mom Grill. 





Andrea Burris 
Kathy Finegan 
Louise Gibbs 
Carol Gladden 



Cassie Hawley 
Diana Morton 
Bobbie Newcomb 
Marilyn Rose 



Joe Applegate 
Robert Applegate 
Nelson Burris 
Leonard Hartkemeier 



Donald Kydd 
David Morton 
David Thursdale 
Byron Walter 



325 



anizations 



i^^^^^^^^^^l 


^r^ 




k ^f'^m. 


J 







AXE is a professional chemistry fraternity lo- 
cated deep in the basement of the chemistry 
building. Future expansion plans depend on 
the sale of our homemade LSD. TheTHC (syn- 
thetic pot) sales weredisappointingsincemost 
of the money was used to bribe the hierarchy. 
Highlights of last year included an Executive 
trophy for Mardi Gras and a Blood Battle in 
a football game with the chemistry faculty 
which ended in a zero-zero tie. Our free chem 
tutoring could not quite rival the Italian De- 
partment's, but as long as the Daily Bruin 
does not expose us, play "stump the tutor" 
will continue. 

Life in chemistry is full of fun . . . and games. 



BenoBudgor 
Peter Cheng 
Chris Fulton 



alpha chi sigma 



Hong Dea 
Gregory Johsnon 
Emil Kalil 
Bill Kim 
Bill Kohn 
Mike Kurtz 
Don Lewis 



Bob Malone 
Larry Mihalas 
Allen Organ 
Greg Roberts 
Don Smith 
Fritz Sunderman 
Gil Tokuhara 




''^-^' 




L-'*' 











Angel Flight is the women's auxiliary to the 
AFROTC on the UCLA campus. As one of 
approximately 140 nationally affiliated Angel 
Flights, we serve the Air Force, the AFROTC, 
the University and the community. Most of 
our activities are coordinated with the Arnold 
Air Society, the honor group of cadets. Our 
projects have included a visit to Norton Air 
Force Base to welcome backveteransfromViet- 
nam, picnics at Griffith Park for under- 
privileged and orphan children, donation of 
blood in response to an emergency call by 
the Red Cross, washing airplanes as a fund- 
raising project, and a spaghetti dinner for 
the Air Force, we hostessfor various Air Force 
business functions on thecampus. An example 
of this service is the reception for foreign Air 
Force officers whooccasionallyvisit UCLA when 
they have a break in the technical training 
they receive from the USAF. After drill on 
Tuesdays, the Angels have a coffee hour for 
the cadets. 



Angel Flight also participates in campus ac- 
tivities such as Bruin Week and Mardi Gras. 
There are numerous occasions for social events 
with the members of the Arnold Air Society. 
Angel Flight takes pledges twice a. year, and 
during the course of rush, pledging, and in- 
itiation, many varied social events arise. A Na- 
tional Conclave is held once a year in a major 
U.S. city. Representatives from Angel Flights 
and Arnold Air Societies across the nation 
meet for one week, this year in New Orleans. 
This provides an invaluable opportunity to 
meet people and exchange ideas, as well as to 
have a good time. 




Kelly Caldwell 
Barbara Gate 



Debbi Davisson 
Martha Farrington 
Jan Furey 
Monette Manning 
Jane Meier 



Margie Miller 
Bonnie Nickel 
Mary Polito 
Carii Rogers 
Lisa Wright 
Ginny VanOsdel 



329 



alpha kappa psi 




Alpha Kappa Psi, the oldest and largest pro- 
fessional business fraternity in the nation has 
had another active year in preparing its 
brothers to take a dynamic and vital role in the 
community at large. Alpha Kappa Psi was 
founded at New York University in 1904 and 
our chapter at U.C.L.A. was chartered in 1926. 

In 1968-69 under the leadership of Michael 
Waechter- Roger Fox and Edgar Stuart-Alan 
Sachs some of our activities have included 
participation in Mardi Gras where we received 
first place for publicity with the help of beau- 
tiful playmate Gwen Wong. 

The fall quarter saw the largest pledge class 
ever to be initiated into our chapter. This 
pledge class filled the vacuum left by our ^ 
graduating brothers of 1968. 

Valentines Day 1969, normally a day honor- 
ing pretty ladies saw us doing that as we 
crowned Catalina Valenica as our queen sur- 
rounded by her lovely court. 

On February 4, 1969 we were proud to pre- 
sent the "Faculty Award for Distinguished 
Service" to Dean George Robbins, G.B.A. On 
April 18, 1969 and May 29, 1969. Mr. Ber- 
nard F. Kamins and Chancellor Charles Young 
respectively, were initiated as honorary mem- 
bers. 




330 




Larry Abramson 
Jerry Boessler 
Sven Book 
Danny Chan 
Kelly Chan 
John Chase 



Phisanu Chonstitvathana 
Roger Rox 
Bill Freschi 
Michael Godwin 
Richard Gunther 
Len Hartkemeier 



John Ivy 
Goran Jakobsen 
Don Kydd 
John Long 
Takeshi Maekawa 
JimMcCourt 



Rolando Reyes 
Alan Rosen 
Chris Rufer 
Alan Sachs 
Joseph Snider 
Ed Stuart 



anchors 



332 



Laurie Bagnard 
Linda Ballance 
Marie Baltieria 
Marian Barnett 
Belinda Black 
Deborah Boyne 
Charlene Burr 

Suzanne Burr 
Stephanie Carr 
Linda Cooper 
Cheryl Crist 
Barbara Geyer 
Janet Gimbel 
Terry Hammond 

Mary Ann Henry 
HallieHerndon 
Holly Hutchins 
Marcie McKerren 
Sharon Meares 
Cherry Mitchem 
Cheryl Pond 

Sandi Rygel 
NIkki Jo Sanders 



Nan Sherman 
Nancy Stephen 



Carol Stitch 
Shirley Strachan 



Sue Strong 
Norma Suffron 



Rhonda Wilmoth 
Cheryl Winslow 




navy r.o.t.c. 





^ ^z^ .^ 




Michael Andrew 
Robert Braddock 
Thomas Breckon 
Dennis Brown 
Kenneth Buzzell 
^q« Oliver DePew 
Wf^ (^^ James Economou 



Robert Franicola 
Stephen Genest 
Frederick George 
Schuyler Krebs 
Rodney Lighthipe 
Edward Little 
\ Douglas Neilsson 

Carl Peters 
Tommy Shubert 
John Snow 
Daniel St. Peter 
Bruce Stanton 
Roderick Steddom 
John Swanson 

Stephen Walker 
Bruce Webster 



Marc Winthrop 
Carlos Yordan 



333 



blue key 




Officers: John Davis, Rush Chairman; Fred 
Douglas, President; Terry Coffee, Legislative 
Vice President; Bill Pennington, ExecutiveVice 
President. 

Blue Key is a national upper division men's 
honorary service organization, with headquar- 
ters located in New Orleans, Louisiana. Two 
annual rushes yield approximately 75 mem- 
bers, selected by application and membership 
vote. Activities include a campus colloquium 
series, and the annual Champagne Party. 




334 




Edouard Andonian 
Roy Barth 
Robert Berghell 
Gene Bruno 
Darren Butler 
Larry Canarelli 



Terry Coffee 
Fred Douglas 
Dan Downing 
William Frank 
Larry Ginsburg 



Bob Howe 
Ted Kruger 
Robert Larkin 
Richard Marks 
Randy McDevitt 



Michael Morrow 
Bill Pennington 
Mark Resnik 
Nardy Siegal 
William Sitz 
Chris Smith 



Michael Soderberg 
Dave Stearns 
Chuck Strong 
Joe Ward 
Josh Weinman 



335 



bruinettes 




26 

28 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 

30 27 17 

29 16 

33 31 15 14 

34 32 38 39 40 41 13 

11 12 

35 42 10 

36 9 

37 43 44 8 

7 
1 2 3 4 5 6 

I. Barbara Gribble 2. Cindy Flannery 3. Shelly Tyner 4. Karen Holt 5. Candy Folker 
6. Marilyn Skiles 7. Robin Tucker 8. Diane Pirie 9. Nancy Rodgers 10. Brenda Stockstill 

II. Cheryl Glancy 12. Marcie Glenn 13. Terry Diamond 14. Vjcki Rieber 15. Susie 
Baskin 16. Fay Arfa 17. Jackie Schwartz 18. Ellen Bloom 19. Elin Frankel 20. Cathy 
Olshane 21. Janice Ragusa 22. Carol Smith 23. Karen Hull 24. Libby Sack 25. Janice 
Finn 26. Barbara Becker 27. Linda Dickey 28. Judy Ellertson 29. Linda Spinardi 30. 
Pam Palmer 31. Analee McDonough 32. Adrienne Brown 33. Jayne Pollard 34. Laurie 
Lavine 35. Janet Love 36. Sheree Hale 37. Louise Kiehl 38. Beth Yarnell 39. Jeannie 
Dodson 40. Sharon Epstein 41. Donna Weisz 42. Diana Greene 43. Miriam Teutsch 
44. Peggy Riggle. 



NORMAN MILLER 



ALAN GREEN 



jEPPW|_lljE MARYTARLOW 

JUDITH WOOD 



SHARON STORM ! 




LUCIEN PLAUZOLES 
VALERIE OLEON 

ANDREW KADAR 
VICTORIA HARRIS 



REYNALDOMACIAS 



ANN RIEBER 



California club 



bruin belles 



Bruin Belles are UCLA's official hostesses. 
Their many activities this year have included 
work with many aspects of campus life. Foot- 
ball recruitment and hostessing visiting foot- 
ball teams for the Athletic Department is al- 
ways more fun than work. Other activities 
such as providing tours for the Royal Shakes- 
perian Company provided an unusal cultural 
experience for many members. Participation 
in Fast for Freedom for Biafra proved most 
rewarding for everyone. UCLA's Open House 
and College Student for a Day are much en- 
joyed events in the Fall. This year's involve- 
ment with Blue Key in Mardi Gras along with 
hostessing the Australian Rugby Team for 
their visit to UCLA all help to keep these girls 
very busy. 

Caria Butheras 
Susie Carroll 
Jose Chan 
Linda Cooper 
Carolyn Crawford 
Laurie Curran 
MicheleDaze 

Joanne Davidson 
Diane Dearden 
Ton! Dickinson 
Betsy Eick 
Mary Ann Fahey 
Susan Fink 
Maureen Fitzpatrick 

Candy Folker 
Carole Francis 
Sherry Frankel 
Linda Golden berg 
Judy Golub 
Robyn Hickey 
Laurie Holland 

Terry J illy 
Carolyn Johns 
Jo Ann Kashiki 
Sunny Kim 
Kathy Kleinkauf 
Sharon Krevitz 
Lainie Larkins 



Nancy Austin 
Marilee Banks 
Margo Barreto 




338 




Cammie Larson 
Diane Leek 
Cyndy Lengnick 
Cynthia Lew 
Judy Lissner 
Trudy Lynch 
Janie Matsumoto 

Cathy Matthews 
Nancy McCallum 
Michele Movius 
ArianeMustad 
Nancy Nolan 
Rosann Ohiund 
Karen Okane 

Susan Pebley 
Donna Penn 
Suzanne Pulsifer 
Barbie Raymond 
Nancy Rethmeier 
Lana Riggins 
Debbie Rothaus 

Melody Shallon 
Lynette Spangler 
Shirley Strachan 
Mary Jane Stricklin 
Susie Swanson 
Mirian Teutsch 
Vicki Tong 



Bobbie Tongco 
Meta Trout 
Linda Wedding 
Barbara Welty 
Wendy Westover 
Connie Wheeler 



339 



chi alpha delta 

The Chi Alpha Delta sisterhood activiated its 
40th year of tradition under the leadership 
of President, Joyce Nishinaga. Welcoming 
eighteen new pledges in the fall, the Chi's 
proceeded to the annual Pledge Presentation 
at the Marina del Rey Hotel, Christmas Dance 
at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, and Formal Initia- 
tion at the Dorothy Chandler Music Center. 
The girls also participated actively in various 
service projects both on and off campus con- 
tributing funds to the physically handicapped 
and Unicamp. Enth u siastically workingto- 
gether in this busy schedule of service and 
social activities, the Chi Alpha Delta sorority 
experienced another successful year to rem em- 
ber. 




Joyce Nishinaga 
President 1968-69 



Catherine Fukui 
Kay Hatamiya 
Carol Hatnaka 
Eva Jew 
Dianne Jue 
Patti Kamoto 
Janet Kaneko 

June Kimura 
Frances Kobata 
Irene Kobayashi 
Peggy Kobayashi 
Sachi Kodama 
Debbie Kubota 
Judy Mar 

Judy Maruyama 
Ann Matsuoka 
Karen Nakajima 
Kay Nakajima 
Joyce Nishinaga 
Julie Nishizu 
Julia Okida 

Shirley Quong 
Susan Sato 
Kyoka Shibasaki 
Susan Shimizu 
Grace Tanihara 
Beverly Tarumoto 
Suzanne Totsubo 




340 



chimes 




Maurjne Ballard 
Barbara Bohnstadt 
Margie Braun 
Susan Carroll 
Sue Coady 



Chris Cullen 
Lousie Egly 
Patricia Frederick 
Barbara Geyer 
Judy Golub 



Sue Hayes 
Beth Johannsen 
Judy Lissner 
Laura Mc Avoy 
Evey McNitt 



Jane Meier 
Vivian Nurenberg 
Kay Rustand 
Krista Schmidt 
Maureen Shea 



Barbara Silvern 
Teri Soeder 
Trudi Sturgeon 
Susan Weil 
Mary Lou Williams 



Chimes, thejunior women's honorary and ser- 
vice organization, selects thirty girls on the 
basis of a 2.75 g.p.a. and recommendations 
from two other major campus activities. Clad in 
gold sweaters and skirts. Chimes experienced 
another exciting year by selling "Ding SC" cow 
bells for the UCLA-USC football game to pro- 
mote spirit and by organizing licorice sales to 
boost funds. Chimes new project for the year, 
providing child care and giving parties at the 
International Students' Center for foreign stu- 
dents' children, was well received and enjoyed 
by all. Participation in traditional service pro- 
jects-the UCLA Open House, theUni-Camper 
Spring Drive, the Uni-Camper Museum Trip, 
and the Women's Week Ice Cream Sundae 
sale were supported enthusiasticallyunderthe 
leadership of President Jane Meier, Vice Presi- 
dent Judy Lissner, Secretary Evy McNitt, Treas- 
urer Beth Johannsen, and Historian Nancy 
Mozur. 



341 




christain science organization 

The Christian Science Organization provides an opportunity for students of 
Christian Science to share their religion with the university public. Christian 
Science scientifically explains to this age the way to experience the all-em- 
bracing care of God. Students of Christian Science join in order to share 
experience and draw support from the application of the teachings of the 
religion. The building is open for regularly scheduled testimony meetings, 
and for the study of the Bible and the writings of Mary Baker Eddy, the 
discoverer and founder of Christian Science. 



english honor society 




Students with a high scholastic aver- 
age in English are rewarded with mem- 
bership in the English Honor Society. 
Patrice Tarsey has led them through 
many discussions with distinguished 
novelists, poets, and playwrights. 

Bottom row: Joyce Yuen, Lisa Dea 
Tarsey, Patrice H. Tarsey (President), 
Michael Gessi, Arthur J. Gee. Top row: 
Terrence Browne, Darrell Harris, Steve 
Jacobson, Bruce Richardson. Not pic- 
tured: Andrea Bass,SusanSmith, Don- 
na Hurst, Donna Clontz, Timothy P. 
Gregory, Jeffrey Sobel, Stephanie 
Peterson 



ph rate res 



This year has been an active one for Phrateres. 
The blood drive and ASUCLA Open House be- 
gan a fun-filled year of service and social ac- 
tivities. 

Phrateres saw many successful events. Among 
them were the Swap-a-pop sucker sale, a 
mother-daughter luncheon, a Bruin Week skit 
which received second prize, a snatch break- 
fast for the pledges, and a father-daugh,ter 
brunch. The highlights of the year were the 
winter formal initiation banquet held at the 
Continental Hyatt House and the spring in- 
formal initiation luncheon. Also, a regional con- 
vention of Phrateres was held at UC Santa 
Barbara. 

In serving UCLA and helpingUni-Camp, Phra- 
teres has participated in Journalism Day, has 
worked as hostesses for Monte Carlo Nite, 
and has operated the pizza booth for Mardi 
Gras. Community projects are also a part of 
Phrateres activities. Is it any wonder our motto 
is "FAMOUS FOR FRIENDLINESS!" 




Anita Alttounian 
Mamye Burkhalter 
Beverly Bushner 
Sharon Chazen 
Carolyn Chernow 
Nancy Conkle 
Devy Doel 

Carolyn Ferkel 
Maxine Gross 
Brenda Harvey 
Candy Heisler 
Linda Held 
Linda Hicks 
CharleneJarvi 

Doris Kumanto 
Edna Kurland 
Cathy Lacoste 
Nadine Lander 
Leslie Langberg 
Miyo Matsubara 
Lois Mori 

Lynn Ohren 
Claudia Reed 
Cathy Terzian 
Pat Usher 
JaneWeisberg 
Sharri Weisberg 
Charlotte Wenke 



343 



nisei bruin club 



The Nisei Bruin Club year got off to a flying 
start, opening with Frosh reception. Due to 
unusual circumstances, the election of officers 
which was to be held before summer, was 
held at the beginning of the Fall Quarter. 
The results of the election saw Gary Furuno 
as head of the "heads". However, despitesuch 
a disadvantage, NBC had a great year. 

Stressed on this year'sagenda was moreschool 
participation and a better opportunity to get 
to know other club members. NBC's activi- 
ties more than meet these goals. 



Participating in two of the school's major 
events. Homecoming and Mardi Gras, NBC 
was phenomenal. Entering a float for only the 
second year, NBC cropped the"MostOriginal" 
trophy as well as the "Queen's Favorite" tro- 
phy, with much of the work load going on 
Carole Doiwchi, float chairman, and Doug 
Aihara. At Mardi Gras, NBC upholding their 
winning tradition cropped "Best Game" booth 
for the third year in a row. 





NBC also didn't do badly in Intramural sports. 
Being quite all around athletically, NBC placed 
three coed teams in the All "U" quarter-finals 
for volleyball with two of them advancing to 
the semi-finals. In basketball, NBC also had 
two strong team contenders in All "U", with 
team member Glenn Osajimasettingtheschool 
Intramural record for freethrows with 49 out 
of 50. NBC also made a good showing in 
football and swimming. 

Other outstanding activities included a bowl- 
ing league, a hayride, parties, Cal-weekend, 
open dances, barbeques, hootenannys, and 
just plain fun get-togethers. 



344 





Doug Alhara 
Gary Furuno 
Joanne Hahn 
Kay Hatamiya 
rene Hiramoto 
Barbara Hiroshima 
Namy lijima 

Dorie Iwata 
Patti Kamoto 
Janey Kanel<o 
Joyce Kawaliata 
Steve Kawata 
Saclni Kodama 
DuaneKubo 



Russell Kubota 
Elizabeth Lai 
Cynthia Lew 
Takeshi Matsumoto 
Ann Matsuoka 



Charles Mayeda 
Kay Nakajima 
Janice Nakayama 
Joyce Nishinaga 
DianneNitta 
Beverly Okamoto 
Julia Okida 

Shirley Quong 
Candi Saito 
KyokoShibasaki 
Susan Shimizu 
Diana Takenaga 
Gail Tanaka 
Grace Tanihara 

Beverly Tarumoto 
Kathy Tokirio 
Suzanne Totsu bo 
Viv Uwate 
Barbara Yamada 
Jacqueline Yip 
Nancy Yoshihara 



345 



nisei bruin club 




346 



prytaneans 





Barbara Welty 
Judy Wood 
Debby Zarate 



Ann Brooks 
Terrell Clark 
Carol Francis 
Linda Goldenberg 
Sylvia Gutierrez 



Victoria Harris 
Jo Ann Kashiki 
Sheila Leventhal 
Evey McNitt 
Jane Meier 



ArianeMustad 
Teri Soder 
Audrey Teren 
Pat Usher 



347 



rally committee 

Once again, Rally Committee produced the 
country's finest collegiate card stunts during 
half-time of UCLA's football games. And once 
again, no other college even attempted to dup- 
licate Rally Committee's enormously success- 
ful night light and sound stunts. 

Special thanks go to overone hundred UCLA 
students who devoted over five thousand work 
hours, many of whose only reward was satis- 
faction in doing something constructive for 
UCLA. This fine group of young men and 
women was led by Chairman Jim Bow, First 
Vice Chairman Rick Impett, Second Vice Chair- 
man Henry Lew, Exec Secretary Les Sternhil 
Social Secretary Joan Ramen, Head Artist Noel 
Yslas, Production Supervisor Jane Privaloff, 
and Section Supervisor Tim Haldeman. 

Sylvia Gregory 
Tim Haldeman 
Catherine Hardesty 
Rick Impett 
Steve Kesilis 
Robin Kosek 



Nadine Behman 
Bruno Bornino 
Jim Bow 



Richard Lau 
Henry Lew 
John Lew 
Janet Martorello 
Pam McElhany 
Richard McGrath 



Lora Mcintosh 
Bernie Morse 
Gay Miller 
Veronica Miller 
Mike Patonai 
Nancy Piastuch 




348 



Jane Privaloff 
Joan Ramen 
John Roberts 
Kathy Roth 
Leslie Sternhill 
Louise Strauss 




1968 RALLY COMMITTEE OFFICERS 

seated: Les Sternhill, Joan Ramen, Jane Privaloff 
standing: Tim Haldeman, Rick Impett, Jim Bow, 
Henry Lew, Noel Yslas 



349 



sabers 



Sabers, the women's hostess group to the 
Army R.O.T.C, came back in the fall under 
the able leadership of President Phyllis Cas- 
cade. First on the agenda the group redesign- 
ed their uniforms. Next they undertook their 
main project for the year- a trip up to San 
Francisco's Lettermen General hospital to visit 
the wounded G.l.'s. To raise money for the 
trip, they sold candy. While up there the Sa- 
bers took in some of the sights of the city. 
Some events of the past year included a beer 
bust, a brigade party, and a picnic. Late in 
February, Sabers held their annual review at 
which time awards were given out for service 
and Anna Drumlewicz was installed as pres- 
ident. The highlight of theyearwasa Military 
Ball held in conjunction with Air Force and 
Navy R.O.T.C. at Long Beach Naval Base. 



Ginger Birkholm 
Debbie Boughn 
Phyllis Cascade 
Paula Davis 
Kathy Decker 
Anna Drumlewicz 



Cheryl Johnson 
Chris Larkin 
Kay Rustand 
Jeanne Schaeffer 
Toni Voris 
Debby Zarate 






350 





DarleneVelicki 
Kathy Vlahakis 
Sue Weil 
Wendy Westover 



Chris Ackema 
Kathy Alderson 
Missy Anderson 
Laurie Bagnard 
Leslie Batavia 
Buffy Black 
Carol Blaylock 

Cheri Broadhead 
Janie Brown 
Ellen Campbell 
Sue Cifranic 
Chloe Clements 
Janis Coleman 
Patty Crow 

Pat Finegold 
Janet Frazier 
Sue Jesse 
Linda Henderson 
Linda Hicks 
JillJensen 
Catherine Johnson 

Linda Lehrer 
Gloria McCauiey 
Terry McConnell 
Marcie McKerren 
Shelley Mynatt 
Hitome Myose 
Marsha Olson 

Pamela Patty 
Carol Peterson 
Donna Plummer 
Janis Ross 
Becky Rosser 
Pricilla Sheets 
Janet Sieg 

Kim Smith 
Pam Stennes 
Laura Stern 
Stephanie Stolarz 
Donna Sullivan 
Lani Thomas 
Ellen Turner 



shell and oar 



351 



sophomore sweethearts 



Beryl Abbit 
GayleAbrams 
Anita Alltonian 
Sharon Anderson 
Laurel Barnett 



Margaret Barretto 
Martha Berry 
Buffy Black 
Sharon Brewster 
Karen Britt 



Wendy Brooks 
Janie Brown 
Joanne Campbell 
Dana Cohn 
Monica Copeland 



Patty Crow 
Ellen Curtis 
Pat Fitzmorris 
Anne Flemming 
Janet Gimbel 



Sophomore Sweethearts have made them- 
selves known on campus again this year. As 
a service group to the university, the girls 
enthusiastically participated by hostessing 
events such as Open House, Bruin Week, Monte 
Carlo Nite and Mardi Gras. The Sweethearts 
also co-sponsored an Easter party for under- 
privileged children, along with theCommunity 
Service Commissioner and Tutorial. A suc- 
cessful candy sale helped raise funds for the 
group. As a spirit organization, Sophomore 
Sweethearts were equally energetic in sup- 
porting UCLA's No. 1 water polo team and 
swim team. In their distinct blue and gold 
outfits, the girls cheered at games and meets, 
provided refreshments presented banners to 
the teams, and hostessed at the Pacific-8 
Swimming Finals. An exchange with theteams 
proved quite entertaining for all involved. En- 
thusiasm and spirit promoted a successful 
year for Sophomore Sweethearts. 




352 




Judy Golum 
Barb Gorton 
Patsy Granack 
Cathy Hailperin 
Beverly Hammer 



Morlie Hammer 
Terry Hammond 
Chris Higgs 
JoHoffeins 



Pat Inadomi 
Susan Jennings 
Linda Johnson 
Carol Klein 
Robin Koosed 



Linda Leber 
Evanne Levin 
Janis Lister 
Gloria McCauley 
Judy Morehouse 



Randy Morrison 
Kathy Nadler 
Vicki Neemeyer 
Jerry Ohison 
Cheryl Pond 



Rhonda Pieter 
Susanne Pulsifier 
Kristi Rasmussen 
Maryanne Rabaleati 
Becky Rosser 



Nancy Strang 
Jennie Tom 
Joan Ulrey 
Darlene Velicki 
Patty Ware 



Winkie Wolfe 
Melanie Yasgor 
Jackie Yip 
Joanne Yoffee 
Beth Young 



353 



;>^/# 



^ 




1<*- 



FIRST ROW, Janelle Yancy, Sara Kinsman, Margo Barretto, Joan Ulrey, Cindy 
Murray, Jackie Nelson. SECOND ROW, Jennie Tom, Jan Brownstein, Mary 
Ellen Soss, Lisa Raufman, Judy Golum, Karen Burgen. THIRD ROW, Paula 
Davis, Sharon Winer, Debbie Davisson, Bette Giles, Ann Jung, Joani Still- 
man. FOURTH ROW, Linda Lusk, Mary Lee, Martha Berry, Anita Mermel, 
Kristi Rasmussen. FIFTH ROW, Cathy Young, Laurel Barnett, Josie Chan, 
Laurie Holland, Vicki Tong. 



spurs 



theta kappa phi 

The Theta Kappa Phi sorority is a relatively new one on 
the UCLA campus, having been founded in 1956 by 11 
valiant Oriental coeds. Mrs. Rex P. Enochs has been an 
enthusiastic and sympathetic advisor for the past 12 
years and is now retiring from her post. The imprint of 
her generosity and warmth will never diminish for those 
girls fortunate enough to have worked with her. For the 
most part the basic concerns of the Thetas have been 
social and scholastic. However, under the competent 
guidance of their sponsors, Dr. and Mrs. Kinsman, the 
members are directing more energy toward cultural and 
campus activities. 



Nancy Fujitiiro 
Mona Fukuda 
Kattileen Furumura 



Merilynne Hamano 
Janice Hatago 
Kattiy Hiramatsu 



Barbara Hirostiima 
Rutti Ido 
Namy lijima 



354 





FIRST ROW, Mary Jane Cooper, Vicki Harris, Maxine Tawney, Georgene Bloodgood, 
Sondie Gerhardt, JoAnn Kashiki, SECOND ROW, Alan Horwitz, Chris Woo, Martha 
Berry, Becki Cox, June Ikemoto, Judy Lissner, Vicki Lewis, THIRD ROW, Sheila Kuehl, 
Frank Baker, Dave Hammons, Jared Cook, FOURTH ROW, Jeff Minaro, Vince Pasquar- 
iello, Luke Fishburn, Charlie Caswell, Steve Strann, Noel Yslas, Bob Carlson. 



uni camp 




Vickee Ikeguctii 
Marstia Inana 
Dorie Iwata 
Mary Ann Kurashita 
Cynttiia Lew 
Priscilla Mio 
Beverly Miyamoto 

Janet Murata 
Janice Nakayama 
Vickie Nakayama 
Evelyn Nowaki 
Beverly Okamoto 
Candi Ota 
Denise Senzaki 

Diana Takenaga 
Jeanne Tashima 
Ki^ttiy Tokirio 
Colleen Towata 
JulieWachi 
Stielley Wong 
Nancy Yostiihara 



355 



« • 



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ni^iSi 


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i 


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^^^' 








Sh 


.^^^^^^^M^^B^^^^^H 





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bachelor and graduate degrees 




ABE, GEORGE ABELL, JEFFREY ABERMAN, 



Pasadena 
AB Mathematics 



Encino 
AB Anthropology 



JUDITH 

Claremont 
AB Anthropology 
tsf: UCSB 
Bruin Democrats 
UCLAHillel 



ACKERMAN, ACOSTA.JOSE' 

DAVID Havana, Cuba 

San Mateo AB Economics 

AB Political ScienceUCLA Cuban Club, 
tsf; Coll. San Mateo EAP Bordeaux 
Sigma Chi Omicron Delta Ep- 

silon 
Cum Laude 



ADAMS, 
CATHERINE 



ABRAHAM, 
DENNIS 

Santa Paula 
BS Engineering 
tsf: Ventura JC 
Marching Band 
Varsity Band 



ADASHEK,ANNE 

Los Angeles 
AB Speech 
Phi Signna Sigma 



ADLER, DIANE 


AGAN, SHIRLEY 


AGGEN, BEVERLY 


AGPALZA, 


Los Angeles 


San Diego 


Northridge 


ADRIENNE 


AB Speech 


AB International 


AB Physical Science Vintar, 1 locos Nor 


ASUCLA Commu- 


Relations 


Mathematics 


te, Philippines 


nications Bd. 


Anchors 


Alpha Gamma Delta MA Anthropology 


Chmn. 




Anchors 


tsf: U of Philip- 


Mardi Gras Exec. 




E.S.U.C. 


pines 


Bd. 






UCLA Samahang 


FilmComm. 






Pilipino Ng 


Spurs 






GSAAnthro. 


UniCamp 








ALBERTS, 


ALDEN, PHYLLIS 


ALEXANDER, 


ALFORD,JOANN 


CHRISTOPHER 


Los Angeles 


PATRICIA 


Tustin 


Malibu 


AB Political Science Montebello 


AB English 


AB Geography 


RieberHall 


AB History 


tsf:UCI 


tsf: U of Colorado Daily Bruin 


tsf: UCSB 


Chi Omega 


Chi Omega 




Kappa AlphaTheta Tutorial Project 


Chimes 






Lambda Chi Alpha 
Little Sister 
Intramurals 


ALFRED, 


ALHANDY, 


ALKOV, LEONARD ALLAN, EDWARD 


JEAN-ROBERT 


ROBERT 


Los Angeles 


Boston, Mass. 


Port-au-Prince, 


Whittier 


BS Engineering 


AB Linguistics 


Haiti 


AB History 




Dykstra Hall, Paci- 


AB Political Sciencetsf: USC 




fic House 


UCLA soccer team 


1 Dean's List 




Dykstra Hall Film 


Upward Bound 


Wrestling 




Commissioner 


Tutorial Project 


Muslim Students 

Org. 

Mountaineers 




Civil Air Patrol 


ALLEN, JAMES 


ALLEWITZ, 


ALPERT, KAREN 


ALTFELD, SUSAN 


Santa Monica 


BARBARA 


North Hollywooc 


1 Los Angeles 


AB Mathematics 


Los Angeles 


AB English 


AB Anthropology 


tsf: Pepperdine 


AB Geography 






Coll. 


tsf: San Francisco 




Tennis team 


St. Coll. 
Ski Club 
Tennis Club 






AMIN, MUT\A/AKIL AMSTERDAM, 


ANDERSON, 


ANDERSON, 




CHARLES 


FRANK 


KATHLEEN 




San Mateo 


San Pedro 


Pasadena 




AB History 


AB Political Science AB Pictorial Arts 




tsf: UCB 


tsf: LA Harbor JC 


tsf: Pasadena CC 






Alpha Tau Omega 


Tutorial Project 






Intramural Sports 


. Uni Camp 
Alpha Tau Omega 
Little Sister 


ANDERSON, 


ANDERSON, TERI ANDONIAN, 


ANDREW, 


LINDASUE 


Los Angeles 


EDUARD 


MICHAEL 


Torrance 


AB Geography 


Los Angeles 


San Bernardino 


AB Political Science 


BS Electronics 


AB Political Science 


tsf: Cal. St. Long 


tsf: L;\CC 


NROTC Battalion 


Beach 




lEE, ESUC, AASA House Adviser 


Pi Sigma Alpha 




Armenian Studies 


; Dykstra Hall 


Dean's List 




Club 


Residence Hall !fb 



Blue Key Building Committee 

Intramurals 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



ANTONIAK, 


APPOLD, KAREN 


ARTERBERRY, 


ASHMORE, 


HELEN 


Los Altos Hills 


RUTH 


WENDY 


San Diego 


BS Nursing 


Long Beach 


Los Angeles 


AB Social Welfare 


AB English 


AB AnthropolOBV 


tsf; U of San Diego 


tsf: Long Beach CCAIpha Lambda" 


Diana House, Pres 






Delta 


Daphne House 






Pi Gamma Mu 


Badminton Varsity 




Masonic Affiliate 


Newman Club 






Club 

Honors program 


ATWATER, 


AYERS,ANNE 


AYRES,JANE 


BACALSKI,DAN 


DONALD 


Chula Vista 


San Marino 


Palo Alto 


Los Angeles 


AB English 


AB English 




AB Mathematics 


tsf: Whittier Coll. 


tsf: Dominican 




Freshman Track 


Gamma Phi Beta 


Coll. of San Rafael 


Kiwanis Award 


Spurs, Chimes 






ROTC 


Dean's List 
SCTA 






BACHMAN, 


BAGU\DI, JULIA 


BAILEY, PHILIP 


BAKER, CHERYL 


THOMAS 


Los Angeles 


Manhattan Beach Fullerton 


Lynwood 


AB Sociology 


BS Astronautical 


AB English 


BS Engineering 


tsf: UCSB 


Engineering 


tsf: Cal. St. Fuller- 


Triangle 


Sophomore Sweet- Triangle 


ton 


ESUC 


hearts 


ESUC 


Sigma Kappa 


American Society 


Anchors 


Frosh Baseball 


Anchors 


of Mechanical En 




Campus Crusade 


Panhellenic Rep. 


gineers 




for Christ 


Homecoming Com 
mittee 


BAKER, 


BALCH,MARYL 


BALDWIN, VENITABALE, SUSAN 


J.MICHAEL 


West LosAngeles Saugus 


Anaheim 


New Orleans, La.AB Theater Arts 


AB Speech 


AB Sociology 


BS Automotive 


tsf: UCSB 


tsf: Indiana U 


Young Democrats, 


Engineering 




Sigma Kappa 


VP 


tsf: LSU 




Alpha Lambda 




Lambda Chi Alph 


3 


Delta 




Tau Beta Pi 




Debate Union 




AIAA, ITTE, ESUC 


Spring Sing Exec 








Committee 




BARAJ AS, ALICE 


BARKLEY, 


BARNA, MATT 


BARNETT, 


Ventura 


SHARON 


Buena Park 


DENISE 


AB Theater Arts 


Arcadia 


AB Pictorial Arts 


Palos Verdes 


tsf: Ventura Coll. 


AB Psychology 


tsf: Fullerton J C 


Estates 


Hedrick Hall 


tsf: Citrus JC 




AB History 


Beaucatcher 


Exceptional Chil- 




Freshman Song- 


Mountain House 


dren's Tutorial 




leader 


Pres.,V.P. 


Project 




Bruinettes 


Newman Club 









BARNETT, KARENBARRICK,ROGERBARRIE, JUDITH BARTOLME, 

Pico Rivera Bel-Air Altadena WAYNE 

BS Nursing AB Political ScienceAB Speech Science Arcadia 

Kappa AlphaThetaAB Economics 



Alpha Tau Delta 


Honors Program 


Chimes 


Theta Xi 




Pi Sigma Alpha 


Bruin Belles 


Young Democrats 




Chess Club 


Zeta Phi Eta 
Exceptional Tu- 
torial 




BASKIN, ALEXIS 


BATOON, IRMA 


BAUGHN, 


BAUM, ROBERT 


Salinas 




MARGARET 


Los Altos Hills 


AB Sociology 




San Bernardino 


AB Political Science 






AB History 


Phi Kappa Sigma, 






tsf: SanBernardinoV.P., Sec. 






Valley Coll. 


Varsity Rugby 






Sigma Kappa 


Lacrosse Captain 
1968 All West Col- 
legiate Lacrosse 
Team 
Blue Key, Kelps 


BAYER, RONALD 


BEARDEN, 


BEBER, DIANE 


BECHER, KATH- 


Long Beach 


BETTIE 


Los Angeles 


LEEN BROOKE- 


AB Economics 


Los Angeles 


AB English 


ELLEN 


Phi Delta Theta, 


AB Design 




Inglewood 


Pres. 


tsf: Briarcliff Coll 


., 


AB German 


IFC Presidents 


New York 




tsf: El CaminoJC 


Council 






Snow Ski Club 


Dean's List 










bachelor and graduate degrees 




BECKER, DOREEN BEHRSTOCK, SUE BEISSER, BEMENT NENA 

PalsoVerdes EDWARD LaMirada 

AB Anthropology Los Angeles AB Design 

AB Political Science Shell and Oar 
Pi Sigma Alpha Mountaineers 
Alpha Mu Gamma Rally Comm. 
Phi Eta Sigma 
Regents Scholar 
Summacum laude 



BENDER, NANCY BENDUDIZ, 

Arcadia SIDNEY 

AB History Casablanca, 

Morocco 
AB French 



URA Soccer Club Flying Club 



BENT, DANIEL BENVENISTE, 

Torrance BONNIE 

AB Psychology Los Angeles 

tsf: El Camino JC AB Philosophy 
Marching Band tsf; SFVSC 



BERG, MICHAEL BERKHEMER, 
Long Beach ELIZABETH 

AB Political Science Ventura 
AB History 
tsf: Ventura Coll. 



BERMAN, BERNSTEIN, 

RICHARD GARY 

Los Angeles AB Geography 

AB Political Sciencetsf: CerritosJC 
Army ROTC Phi Gamma Delta 

Brum Gold Varsity Football 

Distinguished Mill- Rugby, Kelps 
tary Graduate 



BIDERMAN, BETSON, CHERYL BETTIS,JOEK BERSINGER, 

IRENE Long Beach El Monte JOHN 

LosAngeles tsf: Long Beach CC MSW SocialWelfare Santa Monica 

AB Spanish UCLA Symphony AB Geography 

Alpha Mu Gamma tsf: SFVSC 

Sigma Chi 



BIESHEUVEL, BILLS, LINDA 


BIRDSALL, SUSAN BISHOP, 


EDITH 


Pasadena 


CAROLYN 


Sacramento 


AB Linguistics 


Long Beach 


AB Sociology 


Angel Flight 


AB Design 


tsf: Dominican 




Honors at entrance 


Coll. of San Rafael 




Dean's List 



BISHOP, JANICE 


BISHOP, WILLIAM BU\CKWELL, 


BLASDELL, 


Los Altos 


LosAngeles 


SUSAN 


KAREN 


AB History 


AB Political Science Downey 


Long Beach 


tsf: Foothill JC 


Beta Theta Pi 


AB Anthropology 


BS Physical 




Kelps 


tsf: UCSB 


Education 






Alpha Gamma 


tsf: UCSB 






Delta 


Delta Delta Delta 






Dean's List 








Tutorial Project 








Sailing Club 




BLOOM, DAVID 


BLOOMFIELD, 


BLOUT, 


BOARD, VICKI 


Los Angeles 


RONALD 


BEVERLEY 


San Diego 


AB History 


AB Bacteriology 


Carmel 


AB Design 






AB Design 


tsf: San Diego St. 






Pi Beta Phi 








UCLAGraphicArts 








Commission 




BOEHNLEIN, RITABOESSLER, 


BOGAMAZ, 


BOTHWELL, SALLY 


Torrance 


JUERGEN 


ELIZABETH 


Long Beach 


AB Dance 


Los Angeles 


Glendale 


AB Anthropology 


tsf: El Camino JC AB Economics 


AB Psychology 


Delta Delta Delta 




tsf: LACC 


tsf: UCSB 






Alpha Kappa Psi 


Alpha Chi Omega 
Mortar Board 
Chimes, Psi Chi 
Dean's List 


1 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



BRACAMONTZ, 


BRACY 


BELVA 


BRANDT, 


BREELAND, 


D'ARCY 






BARBARA 


VICKY 


Hillsborough 






Alhambra 


Louisville, Ky 


AB History 






AB Sociology 


AB Economics 


tsf: U of Arizona 






tsf: UCSB 




Kappa Kappa 






Delta Gamma 





Gamma 



BREJENSKY, 


BRIGHTMAN, 


BRIGHTMAN, 


ANDREA 


CATHY 


HOWARD 




Los Angeles 


Long Beach 




AB Sociology 


BS Business 




tsf; UCSB 


Administration 

Lambda Chi Alpha 

Mardi Gras Exec. 

Bd. 

Monte Carlo Night 



BRIZOLIS, 
DEMETRIOS 

Miami Beach, Fla 
MA Mathematics 
Pi Mu Epsilon 



BROKER, 



BROOKS, ANN BROWN, BRUCE BROWN, CEOLA 



JEFFREY Riverside Sherman Oaks 

Los Angeles AB German AB Zoology 

AB Political Science Alpha Chi Omega Life Biological 
tsf: UCB Brum Belles Assn. 

Prytaneans 

Chimes, Spurs 



BROWN, DENNIS BROWN, MARION BROWN, 



Los Angeles 
AB History 
tsf: La Verne Coll. 
Alpha Kappa Alpha 



BROWN, SUSAN 



San Diego 
AB Economics 
NROTC 



BRUNNER, 
LAUREL 

Santa Ana 
AB Psychology 
Delta Gamma 
EAP-Gottingen, 
Germany 
Alpha Lambda 
Delta 



BURGESS, 
DONALD 

Alhambra 
AB Psychology 
Sigma Nu 
Crew 



BUCHANAN, 
JOAN LOUISE 

Fullerton 
AB Economics 
EAP-Sweden 
Chimes, Spurs 
Anchors 



PATRICIA 

Los Angeles 
AB Sociology 
Alpha Chi Omega 
Bruinettes 
Powder Puff Foot- 
ball, Capt. 
Anchors 
Shell and Oar 

BUCKLEY, BUNTJER, 

GEORGE DANIEL 

Los Angeles Los Angeles 

AB Political ScienceAB English 
tsf: LACC tsf: SMCC 

Sigma Nu,V.P. 



BURKE, THOMAS BURKHALTER, 
Newport Beach MARY 



AB Philosophy 
Delta Tau Delta 
Masonic Affliate 
Club 



New Orleans, 
AB History 
Phrateres 



BURKARD, 
GUSTAV 

Granada Hills 
AB International 
Relations 
Alpha Gamma 
Omega, V. P. 
URA Exec. Council 
UCLA Men's Glee 
Club 
Ski Club 
BURNETT, BURNETT, BURRIS III, BURROW, BUD 

BARBARA ROBERT NELSON 

Encino San Bernardino Long Beach 

tsf; Pine ManorJC, MS Urban Land BS Business 
Mass. Economics Administration 

Alpha Chi Omega Asher House 

Tutorial Project Ski Club 

Chimes Christian Science 

Organization 
Asher Student 
Foundation 

BURT, BURT, LESLIE BUSHNER, BUTLER, JOEL 

JACQUELINE Long Beach BEVERLY Stockton 

Pacific Palisades AB Psychology- Los Angeles AB Economics 

AB Design Pre Med AB History Varsity Crew 

tsf: U of Conn. tsf; Long Beach CC Phrateres Varsity Rowing 

Dean's List Club 

Christian Science NROTC 
Organization 



La. 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




BUTLER, SHARI BUZZELL, 


BYRD, GREGORY CACIUC, MARRYL 


Los Angeles KENNETH 


Los Angeles 


AB Psychology Sun Valley 


AB Political Science 


Alpha Epsilon Phi AB Psychology 




Prytaneans Theta Chi 




Homecoming Exec. Lacrosse Team 




Committee 




Spring Sing Exec. 




Committee 




CALDWELL, DANA CALLAWAY, 


CAMACHO, CAMPBELL, 


Monrovia JAMES 


DANIEL ROBERT 


AB Psychology 


Encinitas 


tsf: Citrus J C 


AB Economics 




tsf: UCSD 




Delta Tau Delta 



CANARELLI, 


CANNON, KNOX 


CANO, ROBERTO CARR. 


LAWRENCE 


Sunset Beach 




STEPHANIE 


Madera 


AB Political Science 


Cupertino 


AB Economics 


Sigma Alpha 




AB Spanish 


Sigma Nu 


Epsilon 




Alpha Gamma 


Blue Key 






Delta, V. P. 


Army ROTC 






Sailing Club 


CARROLL, 


CARLSON, 


CARRUTHERS, 


CASTLEBERRY 


THOMAS 


LEONARD 


CONNIE 


MARY 


Malibu 


Los Angeles 


Phoenix, Arizona Indio 


AB Philosophy 


AB Economics 


AB Mathematics 
tsf: use 


AB History 



CATCHINGS, 


CAULFIELD, 


CHADWIN, 


CHAIMAON, 


JOAN 


MADELINE 


RICHARD 


MARGARET 


Menio Park 


San Pedro 


Los Angeles 


San Diego 


AB Dance 


AB History 


AB Psychology 


AB Spanish 


tsf: UCD 


tsf: Skidmore Coil Pi Gamma Mu 


tsf: Cal. St. San 


Kappa Delta 


Alpha Mu Gam 


Tia Phi Eta Sigma 


Diego 


UCLA Dance Com 


■ Project Am igos 




Alpha Mu Gamma 


pany 






Dean's List 


Water Ski Club 








CHAMBERLAIN, 


CHAN, DANNY 


CHAN, DAVID 


CHAN, ELIZA 


BOBBY 


TAKTIM 


Los Angeles 


KWOKYING 




Hong Kong 


AB Economics 


Santa Monica 




MS Business 


Beta Alpha Psi 


AB Sociology 




Administration 


Phi Eta Sigma 


tsf: Chinese U of 




tsf: Chinese U 


of Pi Gamma Mu 


Hong Kong 




Hong Kong 


Omicron Delta 


Sproul Hall 




Alpha Kappa Psi 


Epsilon 


Chinese Club 




ASB.AIESEC 


Dean's List 


International Stu- 
dent Center 


CHAN,YEEKAI 


CHANAWATR, 


CHANDLER, 


CHAPMAN II, 




VICHIEN 


SANDRA 


JOHN 




Bangkok, 


Redondo Beach 


Los Angeles 




Thailand 


AB English 


AB Environmental 




AB Economics 


tsf: El Camino JC Design 



CHARNAW, 
ROBERT 

Palm Springs 
BS Electronics 
Sproul Hall 
Chaos House 


CHASE, JOHN 
Walnut Creek 
AB Economics 
Alpha Kappa Psi 
Speech 


CHAVOOR, 

Burbank 

AB Design 


JEAN 


CHAYKOWSKI, 
JON 

Torrance 
BS Electronics 
Engineering 
Colloquium Exec 
Bd. 

Uni-Camp 
Counselor 
Dean's List 











bachelor and graduate desqrees 



CHEN.TSAI HWA 


CHERNEY, 


CHERSON, CHIARY, LINDA 




NANCY 


GRACE Pasadena 




Covina 


Anaheim AB Pre- Social 




BS Nursing 


AB Social SciencesWelfare 




Alpha Chi Omega 


for Elementary tsf; UCI 




Tutorial Project 


Teachers Alpha Chi Omega 




National Student 


tsf: Arizona St. U Dean's List 




Nurses' Assoc, 


San Diego St. Coll. AWS Fashion Bd. 
Model UN 


CHILDRESS, 


CHISHOLM, 


CHO, STANLEY CHUN, CHANG 


MARK 


MICHAEL 


Los Angeles 


La Mirada 


Hayward 


AB Art History 


AB Political ScienceAB Art History 


Dean's List- four 




tsf; UCSB 


quarters 




Dean's List 





CLARK, DAVID CLARK, ELAINE CLINE, SUSANNECLONTZ, DONNA 



Los Angeles 


Manhattan BeachBUCHANAN 


San Diego 


MA History 


AB English Arcadia 


AB Social Sciences 


Project India 


tsf; El Camino JC AB English 


for Elem. Teaching 


CalClub 


tsf; Pasadena 


CC Alpha Lambda 


Golden Bruins 




Delta 


Blue Key 




Model UN 


ASUCLAV.P. 




Sproul Hall, Floor 

Pres. 

University Chorus 


COHEN, ARTHUR COHEN, JEFF COHEN, 


COHEN, TRUDY 




ROBERTA 






Los Angeles 






AB English 






Phrateres 





COKER, LUANNE 


COLE, JANIS 


CONLEY, 


COOPER, PAMELA 




Los Angeles 


YVONNE JANELL 


Washington, DC. 




AB Mathematics 


Los Angeles 


AB Sociology 




tsf; Marymount 


AB French 


tsf; UCSB 




Coll. 


Delta Sigma Theta Delta Gamma 




Tutorial Project 


Daily Bruin 


Frosh and Soph 




Women's Volley- 




Council 




ball Team 




AWS Rep. 
Sailing Club 


COPPERSMITH, 


CORBETT, 


CORBIN,ERIC 


CORE, NANCY 


JANIS 


THOMAS 


Ripen 


Los Angeles 


End no 


Venice 


AB History 


AB Music 


AB Dance 


BS Civil Engineer 






Dean's List 


ing 






Sigma Pi Little 


House Adviser, 






Sister 


Himalaya House, 
Hedrick Hall 






CORMANY, 


CORWIN, 


GOTTEN, ROBERT COWDREY, ANNE 


KIMBERLIN 


CAROLYN 


Los Angeles 


Canoga Park 


Port Hueneme 


Los Angeles 


AB Political Science AB Mathematics 


AB History 


AB Theatre Arts 


Black Students' 


tsf; Pierce J C 


tsf; UCSB 


tsf; Cal. St. LA 


Union 


Sigma Kappa 


Kappa AlphaTheta 


Uni Camp 








Alpha Phi Omega 


COZYRIS, 


CRAM, KENNETH CUMMINGS, 


CURTIN, CAROL 


GEORGE 


San Mateo 


CHRISTIE 


Hawthorne 




AB Economics 


Bakersfield 


BS Nursing 




tsf;UCD 


AB German 


tsf; El Camino JC 




Delta Tau Delta 


tsf; Bakersfield 

Coll. 

Honors Program 


SNAC 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




CURTISS, 
CHARLES 
Riverside 
AB Psychology 
Army ROTC 
UCLA Varsity Band 



CYWAN. MIRIAM DAEWON, KWON DAHLBERG, 



Petaluma 
AB Psychology 
tsf: UCSB 
Tutorial Project 



FRANK 



DAILEY, GARRETT DALLES, 


DAVIDSON, 


DAVIS, RICHARD 


Whittier 


SATERIOS 


JOANNE 


Pacoima 


AB International 




Los Angeles 


BS Nuclear Engi- 


Relations 




AB English 


neering 


Theta Delta Chi 




tsf:SMCC 


Tau Beta Pi 


Air Force ROTC, 




Brum Belles 


Regents Scholar 


Corps Commander 






Phi Eta Sigma 


Distinguished Mil- 






Wind Ensemble 


itary Cadet 






Varsity Band 


Varsity Fencing, 






Arnold Air- 


Captain 






AFROTC 


DAWSON, ROSIE 


DAY, SUSAN 


DEA, HAH SUEY 


DEBAERE, G. 


Los Angeles 


Tustin 




RICHARD 


AB Sociology 


AB Psychology 




Coral Gables, Fla. 


Alpha Kappa Alpha 


1 Kappa Delta 




AB Economics 




Shell and Oar 




Sigma Nu 




Mardi Gras Comm 




Omicron Delta 




Student Relations 
Bd. 


Epsilon 


DE BOLD, JOSEPH DE CASTRO, 


DECENA, DANILODEHAAFF, 


San Diego 


ROSENDA 


Manila, Philip- 


CATHERINE 


AB Psychology 


Batangas, Philli 


• pines 


Sherman Oaks 


Masonic Affiliate 


pines 


MBA Business 


AB History 


Club 


EdD Curriculumin Administration 


Mardi Gras Exec. 




the Elem. School 


tsf: De La Salle 


Bd. 




Dissertation: "A 


Coll., Manila 






Computer-Based 


UCLA Philippine 






Methodology for , 


3 Assn., Committee 






Word Count in 


Chmn. 






Tagalog" 


ASB 




DELEON, 


DE LOUISE, 


DENISON, 


DERSHEM, 


ROMULO 


HARRIET 


MICHAEL 


ELEANOR 


Long Beach 




Sherman Oaks 


Los Angeles 


AB Psychology 




AB History 


AB Geography 


tsf: Long Beach CC 


Zeta Psi 


Alpha Mu Gamma 





^^H 


DEVRIES, 


DHALIWAL, 


DIAZ, NOEL 


DIAZ-GUTIERREZ, 




^^^^ 


CAROLE 


SURINDER 


San Bernardino 


MARIA 




^^^^ 


La Ha bra 




AB Biological 


Bogota, Colombia 


^3P|HE?79 


^^^^ 


AB Art-design 




Illustration 


BA Political Science 


^W <*"" •» 


«^^H 


Alpha Gamma 




tsf: San Bernardino tsf: U Javeriana, 


-« 


^^H 


Delta, Pres. 




Valley Coll. 


Bogota, Colombia 


SB^"-^ 


ul^^l 


Dean's List 




Rieber Hall, 


Latin American 


*^BB 


Tutorial Project 




Torridon House 


Student Assn. 


^^1 


;^ 






Alpha Gamma 




^^^9^. 






Sigma 




nflB^^^ 


DIBLE, 


DILL, GAR 1 


Alpha Phi Omega 
DIPKO, LINDA 




^^^^H 


H 


DITULLIO, 


^^^^^^^1 




FLORENCE 


Topanga 


RICHARDSON 


CHRISTINE 


^^^^I^H 


^^^^ 


Los Angeles 


AB Political Science Van Nuys 


Glendale 


^^^^^^j. 


^^^^ 


BS Nursing 


tsf: Pierce J C 


AB Psychology 


AB Design 


^■"J 


^^^1 


tsf: use 


Ski Team 


tsf: LA Valley Coll. tsf: Occidental 


1^ 


m 


Delta Delta Delta 


UCLA Speaker's 
Union 




Coll. 

Kappa Delta 
Educational Policy 
Commission 
Rally Comm. 
Sports Car Club 

DONIN, 


j^H 


H 


DOBLES, 


DOLIVA, LAUREN DOLL, DONNA 


^^^1 




ROBERTO 


Del Mar 


Bakersfield 


MARSHALL 


■^ 


^^H 


San Jose, Costa AB History 


AB Spanish 


Los Angeles 


^■f^" 


^^^^ 


Rica 


tsf: UCSB 


tsf: Bakersfield 


AB Political Science 


HI ^ 


^^^^ 


BS Industrial 


Kappa AlphaTheta Coll. 




P^o 


^^Kl 


Engineering 


Elections Bd. 


Masonic Affiliates 




L-^^^ 


^ ""^ 


ESUC 


Brum Friends of 


Club 




0^^ 


m. 


Soccer Club 


Biafra 


Project Amigos 




K 


k 




Ed. Policy Comm. 





bachelor and graduate degrees 



DOUGLAS DOUGLAS, DOWNING, DAN 


DOXEY, 


ALFRED PATRICIA Covina 


THEESSIA 


Evansville, AB Social Science AB Economics 


Cleveland, Ohio 


Indiana for Elem. Teachers Sigma Alpha 


AB Political Science 


AB Political ScienceAngel Flight Epsilon, Pres, 




Blue Key, Pres. Blue Key 




Cheerleader Yeomen 





DRAKE, NANCY DRESMAN, JOAN DRUCKER, 



Reno, Nevada 
AB Psychology 
tsf: U of Nevada 



Whittier 
AB Psychology 
tsf; UCSB 
Exceptional Chil- 
dren's Tutorial 
Project 

Sproul Hall, Floor 
President 



BARBARA 



DUDUGJIAN, 
ROBERT 

Brea 
BS Engineering 
Sigma Chi 



DUERBECK, 
HEIDI 

Long Beach 
AB German 
Cum laude 
Dean's List 
EAP Germany 



DUNN, VICTORIA DUTCHER, 
Sarasota, Florida NANCY 



AB History 
tsf: Northwestern 
U., Illinois 
Honors Program 
Sigma Alpha Epsi- 
lon Little Sister 
Dean's List 



EASTWOOD, 



San Leandro 
AB History 
Chi Omega 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 



EATON, 



DUFF, RICA 
San Marino 
AB Psychology 
tsf: CaL Western 
Kappa Delta 
Angel Flight 
Sigma Pi Little 
Sister 

Golden Key 
International 
Relations Club 

DUYAN, PETER 
Newport Beach 
AB Psychology 
tsf: Claremont 
Men's Coll, 
Sigma Nu 



DUDUGJIAN, 
DALE MANOLAKAS 

Whittier 
AB History 
tsf: use 
Kappa AlphaTheta 



DUNN, J GARY 



DWORITZ, 
MITCHELL 

Los Angeles 
AB Economics 
Economics Honor 
Society 

Omicron Delta 
Epsilon 



ECKER,SARITA ECONOMOU, 



LINDA MAUREEN MARGARET Culver City JAMES 

Hollywood San Bernardino AB English Norfolk, Va, 

AB Anthropology AB Sociology tsf: SFVSC AB Political Science 

Alpha Chi Omega tsf: San Bernar- NROTC 
Shell and Oar dino Valley JC 
Anchors 



EDSON, DANIEL 

Palo Alto 
AB History 
tsf: Foothill J C 
Weyburn Hall 



EDWARDS, 
ROBERT 



EIDEM, PHILIS 

Van Nuys 
AB English 



EKERLING, 

DOROTHY Los Angeles 

Los Angeles AB Sociology 
AB Social Sciences 
Elem. Teacher 
tsf: UCSB 
Delta Phi Epsilon 



EIDE, RUTH 

West Covina 
BS Nursing 
University Action 
Council 
Nursing Action 
Council 
REC 
Experimental Coll, 



ELFEND, RENEE ELLEY, PATRICIA ELLIOT, CHARLES 



West Covina North Hollywood 

AB Pictorial Arts AB English 
Gamma Phi Beta 



ELLIOTT, DAVID ELLIS, RONALD 

Long Beach Arcadia 

AB English MS Mechanical 

tsf: Long Beach CC Engineering 



EMERSON, 
NANCY SHIRELY 
Albion, Michigan 
AB English 
bcale Abatement tsf: Central Michi- 
in Saline Water Dis- gan U 
filiation by InjectionSigma Kappa 
of Carbon Dioxide" AWS, Corr, Sec, 
Phi Eta Sigma Greek Week Steer- 

Bd. of Governors ing Comm, chmn. 
Panhellenic Ball 
co-chmn. 



ENGLERT, 
JOSEPH 

Atherton 
JDLaw 
Phi Delta Phi 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




ENGLERT.VICKl ENRICI, PAMELA EPSTEIN, 



KUMP Santa Monica 

Atherton AB Geography 

AB English tsf: SMCC 

tsf: Pine Manor JC, Mountaineers 
Mass. Gifted Students 

Delta Gamma Program 



ERBECK, GARY 



NORMAN San Diego 

Pacific Palisades AB Bacteriology 
AB Psychology tsf: LA Valley Coll. 
PsiChi ThetaXi 

Student Judicial 
Board 

Student Conduct 
Committee 



ERDMAN, 


ERICKSON, EMILY ERWOOD, 


ESKRIDGE, 


RICHARD 


San Marino 


KATHLEEN 


REAUNELL 


North Hollywood AB History 


Sherman Oaks 


Anaheim 


AB Zoology 


tsf: UCB 


AB Sociology 


AB German 






tsf; Cal. Poly., San 


Alpha Xi Delta, Sec. 






Luis Obispo 


Alpha Mu Gamma 






Alpha Chi Omega 


Alpha Lambda 






Sophomore 


Delta 






Sweethearts 


Regents' Scholar 
EAP-Germany 


ESPINOZA, 


ETCHEGARAY, 


ETUKUDO, 


EVANS, JAMES 


SANDRA 


KATHRYN 


UDUAK 


San Diego 


Venice 


Hanford 


Etinan, Uyo, 


AB Psychology 


AB Spanish 


AB Art History 


Nigeria 


tsf; Occidental 




tsf: Coll. of the 


MA Developmental Coll. 




Sequoias 


Biology 


PsiChi 




Tutorial Project 


tsf; Pepperdine 


Pi Sigma Alpha 






Coll. 


American MENSA 
Air Force ROTC 


PAGAN JR., 


FAHEY,MARY 


FAIRBANK, JOHN 


FALBER, SUSAN 


JOSEPH 


Los Angeles 


Sacramento 


Los Angeles 


Whittier 


AB Psychology 


AB Political Science AB Sociology 


AB Political Science Dean's List 


Phi Delta Theta 




Lambda Phi Alph 


a Bruinettes 


Phi Beta Kappa 




Homecoming Con 


•Brum Belles 


SLC, Ski Club 




mittee 




Educational Policy 




Intramural Football 


Comm. 




and Basketball 








FASSIHI, 


FEILER, DAVID 


FEINBERG, 


FELDAVERD, 


MANOUCHEHR 


Ferguson, Mo. 


BETTY 


HELEN 


Tehran, Iran 


AB Film Making 




Cedar Rapids, 


MS Engineering 


Delta Tau Delta 




Iowa 


Structure 


Flying Club 




AB Design 


tsf; Tehran U. 






tsf; LA Valley Coll. 



FENG, AGNES 



FENNING, 
JEROME 

San Bernardino 
AB Psychology 
Psychology Honors 
PsiChi 



FESTA, JANET FEUERLICHT, 

Santa Monica GAIL 
AB Social Sciences Los Angeles 
for Elem. Teachers AB History 

Honors Program 
Phrateres 
Alpha Mu Gamma 
Tutorial Project 



FIELDS, 
KATHLEEN 

Los Angeles 
AB Anthropology 
tsf: UCSB 
Pi Beta Phi 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 
Phi Delta Theta 
Little Sister 



FINCK, DIANA FINDER, RORI FINE, PAUL 

Los Angeles Los Angeles Sherman Oaks 

AB Art History AB Theater Arts AB Political Science 
Dean's List Phi Sigma Sigma Blue Key 

Homecoming Float Mortar Board 
Mardi Gras UCLA Homecoming 

Queen Finalist '57 



FINKELMAN, FINLAYSON, JOHN FINLEY, GEORGE FISHER, CECILIA 

SANDRA Arcadia Bakersfield Del Mar 

Pacific Palisades BS Mechanical AB Economics AB Political Science 

AB Sociology Engineering tsf: Bakersfield tsf: USC 

Alpha Delta Pi Himalaya House Coll. Chi Omega 

Isle of the Tutorial Project 

Damned, Mardi Sigma Alpha Epsi- 

Gras Ion, Little Sister 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



FISHER, JILL 


FISHER, LEIF 


FISHER, MARILYN FLETCHER, 


Glendale 


Canoga Park 


Pasadena STEVEN 


AB Spanish 


AB Mathematics 


AB Psychology Whittier 




tsf: Pierce J C 


tsf: Pasadena CC AB Political Science 




Alpha Gamma 


Sigma Alpha 




Sigma 


Epsilon 

Varsity Water Polo 



FOGWILL, WENDY FOLLETTE, DAVID FONG, HOCHINGFONG. THOMAS 

Costa Mesa Santa Monica 

BS RN Nursing AB Bacteriology 
tsf: UCI Varsity Water Polo 

Sproul Hall, House Varsity Swimming 
Advisor 
Nursing Class 
President 
Uni Camp 
Counselor 

FORBES, CHERYL FORREST, ELMA FORTENBERRY, FOUNTAIN, JR., 



Burbank Los Angeles JUDITH 

AB History AB Sociology Shatter 

tsf: LA Valley Coll. Alpha KappaAlpha AB English 



FOX, ROGER 

New York 
MS Business 
Administration 
tsf: SFVSC 
Alpha Kappa Psi 
Golf Letterman, 
Pierce J C 



FRANCK, JAN 
Walnut Creek 
AB Spanish 
tsf: use 



FRADKIN,JUDITHFRANCIS 
Woodland Hills CAROLE 
AB French 
Rieber Hall, Blar 
ney House 
Sophomore Sweet 
hearts, Hostess 
Chmn. 

AEPi Little Sister 
Mardi 
Chmn 

FRANKEL 



FREDERICK, 
GEORGE,JR. 

Pasadena 
AB Music 
Education 
tsf: Pasadena CC 
A Cappella Choir 



Los Angeles 
AB Linguistics 
Alpha Chi Omega 
AWS Woman of the 
Month 
Brum Belles 
AWS Programs 
Gras Booth and Events Chmn. 
Prytanean 

FRAUSTO. HELEN 
SHARYN Hawthorne 

Tarzana AB German 

AB English Brum Belles 

tsf: use Tutorial Project 

Sigma Delta Tau.UMAS 
Pres. High Potential TA 

Mardi Gras Exec. 
Bd. 
Bruin Belles 

FREITAS, 
BEVERLY 



JAMES 

Newport News, 

Virginia 
AB Economics 
tsf: Cal. St. Fuller- 
ton 

URA Radio Club 
URA Sports Car 
Club 
Brum Veterans 

FRANCIS,JULIE 

Rowland Heights 
AB History 
tsf: Mt. San Anto- 
nio Coll. 
Delta Delta Delta 



FREDERICK, 
DAVID 

Pasadena 
AB Music Educa- 
tion 

tsf: Pasadena CC 
Symphonic Wind 
Ensemble 
Varsity Band 
Football Band 



FREULER, FRISCIA, FRANK 

BARBARA Lakewood 

Los Angeles AB Political Science 
AB Political Science tsf: Long Beach CC 

Freshman Class Karate Club 

Secretary Intramural Football 

Tutorial Project Intramural Track 



FROGUE, JACK 

Los Angeles 
AB Psychology 
tsf: El CaminoJC 



FRY, PATRICIA FUJIMOTO, 

Downey SHARYN 

BS Nursing Monterey Park 

tsf: U of Redlands AB Psychology 
Alpha Tau Delta 



FUJITA, 
SHUNICHI 



FUJITANI 
SACHIYO 

Pasadena 
AB Psychology 
tsf:UCR 
Alpha Gamma 
Omega Little Sister 
PsiChi,V.P.,Treas. 
Honors Program 
UCLjA Med Center 
Auxiliary 

Council for Excep- 
tional Children 



DIANE FUKAYA, 

CHIYUICHI 



FULLER, CLAY FULTON. 

San Bernardino VIRGINIA 
AB Political Science Lancaster 
tsf: San Bernardino AB History 
Valley Coll. tsf: Whittier Coll. 

World Affairs Club Gamma Phi Beta 
Chimes 
Tutorial Project 
Lamdba Chi Alpha 
Little Sister 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




FYBEL, SUSAN 


GARAGLIANO, GARBER, ROD 


GARCIA EDWARD 


REFKIN 


JOHN 


Los Angeles 


Encino 


San Carlos 


AB Psychology 


AB Spanish 


AB Economics 


tsf: LA Valley Coll. 


Tutorial Project 


tsf: Santa Clara U 


Army ROTC 


UCLA Law Wives 


Delta Tau Delta, 




Assn. 


Pres., Treas. 
Varsity Football 
Manager 
Blue Key 




GARCIA, JOSEPH 


GARRISI, DIANE GARRISLJOHN 


GARSON,LEE 




WICKERSHAM Montebello 


Encino 




Glendale AB History 


AB History 




AB English Alpha Gamma 


tsf: UCB 




tsf; Whitworth Coll. Omega 


Sigma Chi 




Alpha Delta Chi 


Frosh Basketball, 




Alpha Gamma 


UCB 




Omega Little Sister 




GARZA, JEROME 


GATZEK. GAUDIN, JANET 


GAYLORD, BEBE 


Susanville 


DEBORAH Alhambra 


Lakewood 


AB History 


North Hollywood AB History 


AB Political Science 


tsf: Lassen Coll. 


AB Economics tsf: Dominican Coll. tsf: CerritosJC 


Dykstra Hall, 


Tutorial Proiect Delta Delta Delta 


Tutorial Project 


Floor Secretary, 


Alpha Lambda Shell and Oar 


Sailing Club 


Floor President 


Delta Ski Club 

Alpha Mu Gamma 

Glencairn House, 

Treas. 

Honors Program 


Intramurals 



GENTRY, GERO, PATRICIAGEORGE, JANE GERSHENZON, 

CAROLYN KEELER ANDERSON Los Angeles MAURIABETH 

Cornoa del Mar Los Angeles AB Political Science Sacramento 
AB Political Science AB English AB Design 

Delta Delta Delta, tsf: U of San Fran- tsf: Sacramento St. 

Treas. CISCO Coll. 



GHESQUIERE, 


GILBERT, CAROL GILBERT, 


GILLICK, OLIVIA 


MARY 


PalosVerdes DOUGLAS 


Los Angeles 


Grosse Pointe 


Peninsula Canoga Park 


AB French 


Farms, Mich. 


AB Psychology BS Engineering 


EAR- France 


AB English 


tsf: Washington U, Tau Beta Pi 


Alpha Mu Gamma 


tsf: Harbor J C 


Missouri IEEE 




Phrateres 


Kappa AlphaTheta 
Election Bd.Chmn. 
Project Ceylon 
Tutorial Project 
Community Ser- 




GILLIES, 


GILLIS, BARBARAGILLIS, SUZANNE GILLON, ALEX 


DOUGLAS 


Los Angeles Los Angeles 


Anaheim 


Tustin 


AB History AB History 


BS Systems Engi- 


AB Psychology 


Rieber Hall, Blar-tsf:USC 


nering 


MardiGrasChmn 


.,ney House, Pres. 


tsf: McGill U 


1969 


Honors Program 


Tau Beta Pi 


Mardi Gras BoothWomen's Choir 




Chmn. 1968 


Sproul Hall House 




Project Upward 


Advisor 




Bound, Program 


Experiment in In- 




Director 


ternational Living 





GILMAN, JUDITH GILSTRAP, GILSTRAP, GINSBURG, 

HOWARD LUANA LAWRENCE 

Los Angeles Los Angeles Lubbock, Texas 

JD Law MLS Library Service AB Political Science 

Moot Court Honors Zeta Beta Tau 

Program-School of Blue Key 

Law 1967-1969 Homecoming 

Exec. Bd. of 1966,1967 
Judges 1968- 
1969 

GLASSER, GLICKMAN, ROY GLIDDEN, GLUCKMAN, 

BARBARA Somerset, N. J. TIMOTHY JAMES BARBARA 

Van Nuys AB Mathematics Hillsborough Los Angeles 

AB Psychology Air Force ROTC AB History AB English 

Arnold Air Society Varsity Rowing tsf: U of Colorado 
Varsity track man- Club Alpha Epsilon Phi, 

ager 3-year Varsity Let- Social Chmn.,Acti- 

ter Crew vity Chmn. 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



GODBE, 


GODBY, LARRY 


GODWIN, 


GOLDENBERG, 


CHRISTINE 


Los Angeles 


MICHAEL 


HELEN 


Fountain Valley 


BS Aeronautical 


Los Angeles 


Orange 


AB History 


Engineering 


MBA Business 


AB History 


tst: UCSB 


American Institute Administration 


tsf:FullertonJC 


Delta Gamma, 


of Astronauticsan 


idAlpha Kappa Psi 




UCSB 


Aeronautics 


Communications 

Bd. 

Sailing Club 














UCLA Band 








ASB 




GOLDENBERG, 


GOLDIN, 


GOLDMAN. 


GOLDSMITH, 


LINDA 


STEPHEN 


DONALD 


HANK 


Los Angeles 




Inglewood 


Great Neck, NY. 


AB Political Science 


AB Political Science AB History 


Sigma Delta Tau 






tsf:HofstraU,N.Y. 


ASUCLAFirstV.P. 






Zeta Beta Tau 


SLC 








AWSSec-Treas. 








NSA Congress De 








legate 








GOODENOUGH, 


GOODMAN, GAIL 


GOODMAN, 


GOODMAN, MARK 


JAMES 


Beverly Hills 


JAMES 


Burbank 


Sacramento 


AB Sociology 


Van Nuys 


AB History 


AB History 




AB English 


Alpha Epsilon Pi 


tsf: American River 




Phi Sigma Delta, 


Daily Bruin City 


Coll. 




Treas. 


Editor 


Karate Club 




Professor Evalua- 


Yeomen 


Honors Program 




tion Survey, Editor Dean's List 






Student Judicial 








Board 








IFC-Treas. 




GOODRICH, 


GORDON, 


GOVENAR, JANET 


" GRAHAM, 


MILTON 


MARILYN 


Van Nuys 


VICTORIA 




New/ark, NJ. 


AB Economics 


Los Angeles 




AB Sociology 




AB History 

tst: Bennet Coll., 

New York 



GRAIS, LYNN GRANACK, 

St. Paul, Minn. MARY ANN 
AB Pre-Social Wei- Whittier 
fare 

Bruinettes 
Spurs 
Tutorial Project 



GRANT, RONNI GRATTON, 
Los Angeles MARILYN 

AB Psychology Pasadena 

AB English Alpha Epsilon Phi AB English 

Sproul Hall House Prytaneans tsf, Pasadena CC 

Advisor Chimes 

Homecoming Exec. 

Committee 

Spring Sing Exec. 

Committee 



GRAY,ZENA GRAZIANI, 

LosGatos JOSEPH 

AB Engish Florence, Italy 

tsf: San Jose State AB Near Eastern 
Tutorials Studies and Lang. 

Ski Club tsf: York Coll., Neb. 

Soccer URA 
Teacher in Hebrew 
Language 
ISA 



GREENSPAN, 
WILLIAM 



GRIFFITH, GROSS, 

HARRY CLAUDINE 

Burbank Los Angeles AB History 

AB Spanish AB Spanish tsf: Valley Coll 

Alpha Mu GammaPhrateres 



GRIFFIN, 
SAUNDRA 
San Diego 
AB Political Science 
tsf: San Diego St. 
Coll. 
Delta Sigma Theta 



GROSS, MAXINE GROSSBERG, 
North Hollywood EGON 

Melbourne, 
Australia 
PhD Business 



GROSSBERG, GRUSINE, 
HARVEY JUDITH 

Whittier Los Angeles 

AB Political Science AB Psychology 
tsf: UCI 



Law 
tsf: Royal Mel- 
bourne Institute 
of Technology 
Summa cum laude 

GUNTHER, GARY GUTIERREZ, 



Temple City 
AB Geography 
tsf: Cal. St. LA 
Sigma Alpha Epsi 
Ion 



SYLVIA 

Whittier 
AB Political Science 
Alpha Phi, IstV.P. 
Prytaneans 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 
Southern Campus 
Staff 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




GUTTMAN, 


HAGAN, ELLEN 


HAGOOD, LINDA 


HAILEY, ROBERT 


HANNAH 


Los Angeles 


San Diego 


Long Beach 


Los Angeles 


AB Anthropology 


AB Psychology 


AB Economics 


AB German 


Sigma Delta Tau 


Chi Omega 


Arnold Air Society 


tsf: Rutgers U,N.J 




Tutorial Project 


Rhum House 


EAP-Germany 




Pan Hellenic 


Rhum House Pres. 


Alpha Mu Gamma 




Phidelphians 


RieberHalLVP 






Greek Week, Co- 


UniCampBd. 






Chmn. 


Phi Eta Sigma 
Pi Gamma Mu 


HALL, KATHLEEN 


HAMAGUCHI, 


HAMAMOTO, 


HAMILTON, 


Mission Hills 


BRUCE 


LAURINE 


CATHY 


AB History 


Brea 


Los Angeles 


San Jose 




AB History 


AB English 


AB History 




tsf: Cal. St. Fuller- 


Brum Christian 


tsf: Fresno City 




ton 


Fellowship 
Upward Bound 
Tutor 


Coll. 


HAMILTON, 


HAMMOND, 


HANDLERY, 


HANDLEY, NANCY 


SHARON 


ALLAN 


BARBARA 


Manhattan Beach 


Palo Alto 


La Canada 


Orinda 


AB English 


AB Anthropology 


AB Economics 


AB History 


Rieber Hall House 


tsf; U of Utah 


tsf: Pasadena CC 


Tutorial Project 


Advisor 


Glencarin House, 






Rieber Hall Honor- 


Pres. 






ary 


Delta Gamma 






Rieber HallJudi- 
clal Bd. 


HANNA, 


HARRIS,JAMES 


HARRIS, SUSAN 


HARRIS, 


ROSEMARIE 




Pittsburgh, Pa. 


VIRGINIA 


Los Angeles 




AB Design 


Los Angeles 


AB Social Science 






AB Sociology 


for Elem. Teachers 








tsf: El Camino Coll. 






Gamma Phi Beta 








Anchors 









HART, SANDRA HARTER, CRAIG HARTMAN 

San Bernardino Seal Beach ESTELLE 

AB Economics AB Psychology 
tsf: San Diego St. Flying Club 
Coll. Tennis team 

Delta Sigma Theta 



HARVEY, BRENDA 
Los Angeles 
Los Angeles AB Political Science 

AB Social Science Phrateres 
for Elem. Teachers Mardi Gras 



HARVEY, GENEVA HASKELL, HENRY HASKIN, MARSHA HASSON, DIAN 



Los Angeles 


Redondo Beach Tarzana Redondo Beach 


AB SSET 


AB Economics AB Sociology MA Political Science 


Alpha Kappa Alph; 


1 Sigma Delta Tau tsf: El Camino JC 




Bruinettes Phi Sigma Alpha 




Sigma Chi Little Hillel 




Sister 


HATELEY,JOHN 


HAUCH, JO ANN HAUSER, STEVEN HAUSMAN, 


San Diego 


Santa Cruz Redlands JUDITH 


AB Psychology 


AB History AB Political Science Riverside 


Theta Delta Chi, 


Gamma Phi Beta Lambda Chi Alpha AB Sociology 


Pres. 


Bruinettes tsf: UCR 


Varsity Crew 


Anchors 


AAWU Honor Rol 


1 


Blue Key 




Varsity Rowing 




Club 




HAYAKAWA, 


HAYASHI,GAYLE HAYES, HAYHURST, 


SUSUMU 


MARIANNE LYNDA 


Hanford 


San Marino Santa Barbara 


BS Business Ad 


BS Physical Edu-AB History 


ministration 


cation tsf: UCSB 


tsf: Coll. of the 


tsf: U. of Santa 


Sequoias 


Clara 


Judo Club 


Mortar Board 


Veterans Club 


Bruin Dolls, V.P. 




{'67-'68) 




Swim Team Capt. 




(•66-'67), Coach 




{'67-'68), Member 




(■68-'69) 




Acacia Little Sister 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



HAYWOOD, 


HEACOCK, 


HEATHERLY, 


HEDBERG, DAVID 


SUZANNE 


RONALD 


MICHAEL 


Santa Ana 


Playa Del Rey 


Alhambra 


Chambersburg, 


BS Electrical 


AB Italian 


BS Engineering 


Pa. 


Engineering 


Delta Delta Deltc 


i. Triangle 


AB Public Rela- 


Himalaya House, 


Chaplain/Stan- 




tions 


Pres. 


dards 




tsf:Penn.St, U 


Tau Beta Pi 






ASB 


Mardi Gras 






URA Sports Car 


Blood Drive 






Club 


Phi Eta Sigma 


HEISLER, 


HELFMAN 


HELLER, 


HELM, JOHN 


CANDACE 


ILENE 


STEPHEN 




Los Alamitos 


San Bernardino 


Burbank 




AB History 


AB History 


AB English 




tsf: UCSB 




tsf: SFVSC 




Phrateres 








Daphne House 








Sproul Hall Con- 








troller 








Hillel 








Honors Program 








HENDERSON, 


HENRICKSON, 


HENRIKSEN, SUE HENRY. 


VALERIE DIANE 


EDYTH 


Riverside 


CHRISTINE 


Whittier 


Los Angeles 


AB Sociology 


Los Angeles 


AB Sociology 


AB Pre- Social Wei 


-tsf:UCR 


AB Political Science 


tsf: UCSB 


fare 


Pi Beta Phi 


Alpha Phi 


Dean's List 


tsf: U of South 
Dakota 







HENRY, PAMELA HENSLEY, DONNA HERNANDEZ, HERNANDEZ, 



Belmont 
AB History 
tsf: Coll. of San 
Mateo 



Lawndale CARLOS EDWARD 

AB English Havana, Cuba 

tsf: Cal. St. Long AB Economics 
Beach tsf: U of NewMexi- 

SnowSkiClub CO 
Mardi Gras Comm Pi Lambda Phi 
Homecoming Army ROTC Cadet 

Committee ISC 

Hedrick Hall 

HICKEY, HICKEY, ROBYN HICKS,JACK 

BARBARA ANN Downey Santa Maria 

North HollywoodAB Social Science AB History-African 
AB Geography for Elem. Teachers Studies 
tsf: LA Valley Coll.Delta Gamma tsf: Allan Hancock 

Bruin Belles, V.P., JC 

Social Chmn. 

Mardi Gras Exec. 

Comm. 



HIGGINBOTHAM, HILDRETH, LINDAHILLER, NANCI HINDMAN, DIANE 



HERRING.JIM 



JOHN Saratoga 

Tucson, Arizona BS Physical Edu- 
AB Classics cation 

Young Americans Chi Omega 
for Freedom-Pres. Bruinettes, V.P. 
Youth for Nixon 
Model UN 



Los Angeles Los Angeles 

AB Social Sciences AB English 
for Elem. Teachers 
Alpha Lambda 
Delta 



HIRAMATSU, 
KATHERINE 

Gardena 
AB Psychology 
Theta Kappa Phi 
Nisei Bruin Club 



HOELLER,JANE 

St. Louis, Mo. 
AB English 



HIRSCH, 
MITCHELL 
Van Nuys 
BS Physics 
Phi Eta Sigma 
Sigma Pi Sigma 
Regents' Scholar 



HIRSCH, PERRY HOADLEY, 

Los Angeles MONNIE 

AB Political Science Rancho Santa Fe 
Honors Graduate AB Anthropology 
Pi Sigma Alpha Rally Comm. 
Daily Bruin Spring Sing '67 

Tutorial Project 



HOFFMAN, PETER HOFFMAN, ROSSHOHNER, 



San Diego 
AB Geography 
Phi Kappa Psi 



Visalia 
BS Physical Edu 
cation 

tsf: Coll. of the 
Sequoias 
Sigma Alpha Epsi 
Ion 
Kelps 



GERARD 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




HOLLE, NED HOLTOM, HOLTZMAN, HORKIN PAUL 

San Diego HAROLD ALISON Van Nu'ys 

AB History San Gabriel Los Angeles AB Bacteriology 

tsf: San Diego St. BS Engineering AB English Life 

Coll. tsf: U of Washing- Delta Phi Epsilon 

ton Tau Epsilon Little 

Sigma Alpha Epsi- Sister 
Ion International Week 



HORN.KOBEY HORN, MARCIA 

Los Angeles Los Angeles 

MBA Business AB Design 

Administration tsf: LACC 
Graduate Research Hillel 
Fellow in Real 
Estate 



HORODAS, 
ROYCE 

Los Angeles 
AB History 
Honors Program 



HORWITZ, JANET 

Los Angeles 
AB Spanish 
Alpha Mu Gamma 



HORNBUCKLE, 
JAMES 

Temple City 
MS Nuclear Engi 
neering 
Cutr Contain- 
ment Vessel-Re- 
actor Structure In 
teraction" 
AEC Traineeship 
ANS, V.P. 

HOSHIKO, 
MELVIN 
Fresno 
BS Chemistry 
Phi Eta Sigma 



HORNISH, CAROL 

Mar Vista 
AB English 
Alpha Chi Omega 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 



HOVSEPIAN, PAUL 

Pasadena 
BS Zoology 
tsf: Pasadena CC 



HOWARD, JOHN HOWARD, ROY HOY, SUSAN 

Montebello Los Angeles Anaheim 

BS Engineering AB Psychology AB Pre-Social Wei- 

tsf: Pasadena CC tsf: LACC, SMCC fare 

Triangle CSPT, Pres. LA tsf: UCI 

American Nuclear Chapt. Delta Delta Delta 
Society 



HSIUNG.YING 
CHUAN 

Santa Monica 
AB Mathematics 
Regents' Scholar 
Pi Mu Epsilon 
Alpha Lambda 
Delta 



HUBIAK.JOHN HUDSON, DENNISHUDSPETH, JOY HUGHES, CARLA 



Los Angeles 
AB English 
tsf: LACC 



Sacramento Ontario 

BS Engineering AB Economics 
Sigma Alpha Epsi- tsf: Chaffey Coll. 
Ion Sigma Chi, V.P. 

Swimming, Varsity 
and Freshman 
Water Polo, Fresh- 
man 

Engineering 
Newsletter 

HULBROCK, HULS, ANN SCOTT HUMASON, 

IRENE Huntington 

Inglewood Beach 

AB German AB English 

Tutorial Project 
English-in-Action 



Newport Beach 
AB English 
tsf: UCSB 



HURLEY, SHEILA 
JAMES Redlands 

North Hollywood AB Bacteriology 
AB Economics Pi Beta Phi 
Rieber Hall 



HURWITZ, MARC HUTCHINS, 


HUTTON, 


HUYBREGTS, 


Los Angeles 


HOLLY 


ELIZABETH 


GERARDUS 


AB Economics 


Alexandera, Va. 


Burlmgame 


Adelaide, South 


tsf: UCSB 


AB History 


BS Zoology 


Australia 


Dykstra and Hed- 


• Uni-PrepExec.Bd 


.tsf:UCD 


AB Economics 


rick Halls 


1967 


Rienda, V.P. and 


tsf: U of Adelaide 


Honors Program 


Spring Sing Exec 


. Pres., Davis 




Men's Glee Club 


Bd.'67 


Weyburn Hall, 




Intercollegiate 


Anchors, Treas. 


Floor V.P. 




Musical Council 


URA Sailing Club, Weyburn HallJud 


i- 


Intramural Sport; 


iSec. 


clary Bd. 




HYMAN, LESLIE 


ANNI,MARY 


1 EST, LINDA 


IKUTA. BARBARA 


Brockton, Mass, 


Hawthorne 


SMITH 


Culver City 


AB History 


,B English 


Ontario 


AB Social Sciences 


Tutorial Project 




AB English 


for Elem. Teachers 


Rally Comm. 




Alpha Phi 
Angel Flight 
Dean's List 





bachelor and graduate degrees 



ISAACSON, 


IVY, JOHN 


JACOBSON, 


JACOBSON, 


LANAE 


Bakersfield 


JEFFREY LEE 


STEVEN 


San Jose 


AB Economics 


Los Angeles 


Burlingame 


MLS Library Sci- 


tsf: Bakersfield 


BS Economics 


AB Economics and 


ence 


Coll. 


(Minor-Accounting 


) English 


tsf: Willamette U, 


Alpha Kappa Psi 


Tau Delta Phi 


tsf: U of Utah 


Salem, Oregon 


Tennis Club 


Omicron Delta Ep- 


Alpha Tau Omega 


Regents' Fellow- 


Sailing Club 


silon 


NSA Rep.. SLC 


ship, 1968-69 






International Pro- 
gramming Comm. 
Educational Policy 


JAFFEE, MARLOU JAMES, JUDITH 


JENKINS, 


JENKINS, 


Bell 


Claremont 


DWIGHT 


KRISTIN 


AS Theater Arts 


AB Mathematics 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 




tsf: UCR 


BS Engineering 


AB Geography 






Kappa Alpha Psi 


Gamma Phi Beta 






ESUC 








IEEE 




JENKINS, TOBY 


JENKS.SUE 


JENSEN, KAREN 


JESSE, SUZANNE 


Los Angeles 


La Canada 


Sherman Oaks 


Woodland Hills 


AS History 


AB English 


AB English 


BS Physical Edu- 


Delta Phi Epsilon 


1 Chi Omega 


Honors Program 


cation 




Tutorial Project 


Acacia Little Sister, 


, tsf: Pierce J C 




Delta Tau Delta 


V.P. and Sec. 


Shell and Oar, Pres. 




Princess 


Brazil Club 


Delta Tau Delta 
Little Sister 


JESSEN,ARTHA 


JEW, PRISCILL;^ 


JOBLIN, MARIAN JOHNSON, LINDY 


Canoga Park 


Rapid City, S.D 


i. Beverly Hills 


Wallace, Ida. 


AB English 


BS Nursing 


AB Pre-Social Wel- 


AB History 


Alpha Delta Chi 


Gamma Phi Beta 


fare 


tsf: U of Oregon 


Tutorial Project 




Hedrick Hall Sec. 


Sigma Kappa 


Baptist Student 




Hedrick Hall Honor 


- 


Union 




ary 

Mardi Gras Gener- 
al, Publicity, Kiddy 
Day Committees 
Tutorial Project 




JOHNSON, 


JOHNSON, PAUL 


JOHNSON, 


JOHNSTON, 


NICELMA 


Pacoima 


VEASSA 


LAWRENCE 


Los Angeles 


BS Engineering 


Los Angeles 


Van Nuys 


AB English 


tsf: Pierce Coll. 


AB Psychology 


AB Mathematics 


tsf: Cal. St. LA 


Triangle 






Delta Sigma Theta 






Dean's List 








JOHNSTON, 


JOHNSTON, 


JONES, BRUCE 


JONES, JOHN 


SALLY 


ROBERT 




Thousand Oaks 


Corona 


Los Angeles 




AB Mathematics 


AB English 


AB Mathematics 






Hershey Hall, Sec. 


Theta Xi 






Mountaineers 


Pi Mu Epsilon 






Project Amigos 


Phi Eta Sigma 






Theta Delta Chi, 


Honors Program 






Little Sister 








Campus Crusade 








for Christ 








JONES, NANCY 


JONES, PAULA 


JONES, ROBERT 


JORGENSEN, 


Arcadia 


Orinda 


Torrance 


KRISTINE 


AB Sociology 


AB Political Scienc 


;eAB Psychology 


Oakland 


Uni Camp 




tsf: Harbor J C 


AB Sociology 


Counselor 






tsf: Cal. St. Hay- 
ward 

Bruin Belles 
Theta Delta Chi 
Little Sister 
Snow Ski Club 
Scuba Club 


JOSEPH, IRWIN 


JULINE, ERIC 


JUSTESON, 


JUSTUS, PETER 


Los Angeles 


Culver City 


CHRISTINE 


Los Angeles 


AB English 


AB Economics 


Bakersfield 


AB History 


tsf.SMCC 


Alpha Tau Omeg 


;aAB Spanish 


tsf: UCSB, SBCC 


Tau Epsilon Phi 




tsf: Occidental 
coll. 






bachelor and graduate degrees 




KADAR, ANDREW KAISER, DANIEL 



Los Angeles 


Fresno 


Glendale 


Woodland Hills 


BS Physics 


AB History 


AB Social Sciences BS Chemistry 


Varsity Gymnas- 


Freshman Track 


for Elem, Teachers Aloha Chi Siema 


tics Team 


Varsity Track, 2 


tsf: UCSB 


Skin n' Scuba Club 


California Club 


Letters 


Delta Gamma 




Sigma Pi Sigma 




Bruinettes 




Daily Bruin Sports 


Varsity Song Girl 




Writer 




Sailing Club 




Physics Under- 




Tutorial Project 




graduate Research 






KALTENBORN, 


KAMBARA, KAY 


KAMINSKY, 


KAMOTO, 


WALTER 


Los Angeles 


ARNOLD 


PATRICIA 


Los Angeles 


BS Nursing 


Montebello 


Los Angeles 


AB Economics 


Alpha Tau Delta, 


AB History 


AB Spanish 


Sigma Nu 


Treas. 


Alpha Epsilon Pi 


Chi Alpha Delta 






ASUCLA Commu 


- Nisei Bruin Club 






nications Bd., 








Chmn. 








ASUCLA Under- 








graduate Teachini 


g 






Awards Chmn. 




KANE, VICTORIA 


KAN EKO, ALAN 


KAPU\N,JOAN 


KAPLAN, 


Pasadena 


Los Angeles 




KATHRYN 


AB Mathematics 


BS Engineering 




Los Angeles 




Tau Beta Pi 




AB Political Science 
Phi Sigma Sigma 
Pi Sigma Alpha 
Lambda Chi Alpha 
Crescents 
Phrateres 
World of Travel 
Exec. Bd., 1966 


KAPPER, 


KARLSTAD, 


KASHIKLJOANN 


KATANICK, 


ROBERTA 


KENNETH 


Parlier 


BARBARA 


Los Angeles 


Sherman Oaks 


AB Design-Art His 


- Woodland Hills 


AB Political ScienceAlpha Gamma 


tory 


AB English 


Bruinettes 


Omega 


Kappa AlphaTheta, Dean's List 




IFC Presidents 


Pres. 


Dykstra Hall 




Council 


Bruin Belles 






Intramural Athlet 


- Mortar Board His- 






ics 


torian 

Uni Camp Bd. 

Chimes, Spurs 




KATOW, LESLIE 


KATZ, ANDREW 


KAUFMAN, GARY KAUFMAN, JAN 


Los Angeles 


Pacific Palisades Los Angeles 


Claremont 


BS Mechanical 


BS Engineering 


BS Chemistry 


AB Sociology 


Engineering 


Tau Delta Phi, Pres Phi Kappa Sigma tsf: UCSB 


Himalaya House 


Distinguished Air 


Dean's List 


Phi Sigma Sigma 




Force ROTC Cadet Frosh Swimming 


Homecoming Pub- 




Arnold Air Society And Water Polo 


licity Committee 




Freshman Gym- 




Uni-Shine 




nastic Letterman 




Dean's List 


KAUFMAN, MARK KAWAI, ANDREA 


KAWASAKI, 


KAWASAKI, 


Sherman Oaks 


Pasadena 


MITCHELL 


STEPHEN 


AB Pre- Social Wel- 


AB Art History 






fare 


tsf: Pasadena CC 







KAYE, 


KAYER, CYNTHIA KAYLAND, JOAN 


KEANE, KATHRYN 


THEODORE 


Pomona 


Los Angeles 


Beverly Hills 


Riverside 


BS Nursing 


BS Nursing 


AB English 


AB Political Sci 


tsf: Mt. San Anto- 


Alpha Tau Delta, 


Monte Carlo Night 


tsf: Riverside CCnioColl. 


V.P. 


Chmn. 


Sigma Nu 


Mortar Board, Sec 


, Regents' Scholar 


Bruin Week Exec. 




and Elections 


UCLA Bowling 


Board 




Chmn. 


League 


Spring Sing Exec. 




Alpha Tau Delta 




Board 

Professor Evalua- 
tion Book Writer 


KELLER, 


KELLY, KRISTIN 


KELLY, LINDA 


KELLY, TIMOTHY 


RICHARD 


Fall brook 


Sunset Beach 


San Francisco 


Santa Ana 


AB English 


AB Philosophy 


AB Economics 


BS Engineering 


tsf: Marquette U, 


Sigma Kappa 


tsf: Santa Clara U 


Triangle, Pres. 


Wis. 




Sigma Alpha Epsi- 




Kappa Alpha Thetc 


1 


lon 




Tutorial Project 







bachelor and graduate degrees 



KENNEYJOAN 



KEOTAHIAN, 
GIOULA 



KERN, FRED 



KERRUISH, 
LAUREL 

Los Angeles 
AB English 



KESTENBAUM, KEYS, KAREN KIELEY, CANDALE KIHARA, BETSY 
JOEL Anaheim Los Angeles Lawndale 

North Hollywood BS Physical Ed u - AB Sociology BS Engineering 

AB Psychology cation Kappa Alpha Theta tsf: El CaminoJC 

PsiChi tsf:UCI Bruin Belles 

Hillel Council Kappa Alpha Theta 

UCLA Song Girl 

Panhellenic 

Greek Week 1968, 

Co-chmn. 

KILGORE, CLYDE KIM, EUNJA KIM, SUNKI KING, JANICE 

Brea MPH PublicHealth Seoul, Korea Taft 

AB History BS Accounting AB Economics 

Alpha Phi Omega UCHA tsf: Bakersfield JC 

Campus Crusade 
for Christ 



KINOSHITA, 
FUMIKO 

Hiroshima- Ken, 

Japan 
AB Spanish 
Alpha Mu Gamma 



KIPNIS,ALAN 
Northridge 
AB Mathematics 
tsf: UCSD 



KIRMER, NELLY 
Panama City, 
Panama 
AB Spanish 
tsf: Canal Zone 
Coll., Balboa, C.Z 
Ice Skating Club 
Pharteres 



KLATZKER, LINDAKLEINKAUF, BERT KLOPP, INGRID 



Orange 
AB History 
Delta Phi Epsilon 
Tau Epsilon Phi 
Little Sister 



San Pedro 
BS Computer 
Systems 
Sigma Chi 
Tau Beta Pi 



KLANE, SUSAN 

Encino 
AB English 
tsf: UCSB 
Delta Phi Epsilon, 
Pres. 

Tutorial Project 
Panhellenic Rep 



KLOTCHMAN, 
JANISSE 



Bruin Young Dem- Phi Eta Sigma 
ocrats Monte Carlo Nile, 

Chmn. 

ESUC 



KLOTZ, KATHLEEN KNEE, HOWARD 

Mission Viejo Los Angeles Los Angeles 

AB Pictorial Art AB Political Science AB International 



KNIGHT, RONALD KOELMAN, HETTY 
Buena Park 
AB German 



Hershey Hall Pres. tsf: UCSB 

Phi Sigma Delta 
Pi Sigma Alpha 
Honors Program 
Frosh Track (UC 
Santa Barbara) 



Relations 

tsf: LA Valley Coll. 

Lacrosse, Capt. 



KOENIG, CLAUDIA 

Van Nuys 
AB English 
Rally Comm. 



KOLSKY, 
BARBARA 
Saratoga 
AB Mathematics 
Cum Laude 
Honors Program 
Computer Club 



KOHN, 
LAWRENCE 

Los Angeles 
AB Mathematics 
ASUCLA Finance 
Comm. Chmn. 
FVofessor Evalua- 
tion Assoc. Editor 
Spring SingAssoc. 
Chmn. 
Homecoming Exec. 

KONDO, LEROY 

Los Angeles 
AB Bacteriology 
Honors at Entrance 
Dean's List 
URA Table Tennis 
Club President 
Intramural Table 
Tennis Champion 



KOHOUTEK, KOJIMA, OSAMU 

FRANCENE Hiroshima, Japan 

Los Angeles MS Business Ad- 
AB Social Sciencesministration 
Chi Omega 
Tutorial Project. 



KOYAMA, 
LORRAINE 

Los Angeles 
BS Nursing 
Alpha Tau Delta 



KRAMER, 
BARBARA 

Los Angeles 
AB Psychology 




bachelor and graduate degrees 








KREBS, 
SCHUYLER 

Los Angeles 
AB History 
tsf: LA Valley Coll. 
Phi Gamma Delta 
Inter-Fraternity 
Council Judicial 
Bd.and Rush 
Brochure 
NROTC Platoon 
KUHTA, 
MATTHEW 

Bellflower 
AB English 
tsf; Georgetown U, 
Washington D.C. 



KREPACK, 
HOWARD 

Los Angeles 
AB Psychology 
Zeta Beta Tau 
Blue Key 
PsiChi 

Uni-Prep Counse- 
lor 



KRUGER, 
THEODORE 
Van Nuys 
AB Economics 
Zeta Beta Tau, 
Trees. 
Blue Key 



KUBIKIAN, 
ARTHUR 



KURIS, EILEEN KURZIUS, 



KUTNER, SUSAN 



Los Angeles STEPHEN Los Angeles 

AB English North Hollywood AB English 

Hillel AB Political Science 

Reader for the tsf: U of Washing- 
Blind ton 

Zeta Beta Tau 

Pi Sigma Alpha 

Pre- Legal Society 



Whittier 
AB Psychology 
tsf: UCSB 



KVAMMEN, 
LORNA 

Downey 
AB Anthropology 
Undergraduate 
Anthropology Assn 
Archaeological 
Survey 



LAMONT, RALPH LANCASTER, 



LABRIE, LINDA LACOSTE, 



LAMB, MARY 



CATHERINE Temple City 

Carpenteria AB Political Science 

AB Economics tsf: Pasadena CC 
tsf: Mt. St. Mary's Model UN 
Phraters International Pro- 

Angel Flight gram Commission 

Pi Gamma Mu Rieber Hall Judi- 
cial Bd., Floor Pres. 



LANDRUM, 



Long Beach 
AB History 
Honors Program 
Tutorial Project 



CHARLES CATHY 

Santa Maria San Marino 

AB Economics AB Psychology 
Phi Kappa SigmaChi Omega 
AFROTC Brum Belles 

Himalaya House Bruinettes 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 



LARUE, SANDRA LAU, HOWARD LAUTERBACH, 

Orinda Los Angeles DIANA 

AB History BS Physics Los Angeles 

Kappa AlphaTheta Physics Honorary AB English 



LARKIN.JR., 
ROBERT 

Dayton, Ohio 
AB History 
Phi Delta Theta, 
Pres., V.P. 
Intrafraternity 
Council Judicial 
Representative 
Blue Key 
Kelps 
LAW, NANCY 



LAWSON, DONALDLAWTON, ERIC 


LECA, LINDA 


LECK, DIANE 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


San Diego 


North Hollywood 


AB Economics 


AB Political ScienceAB Spanish 


ABArt 


tsf: Valley St. Col 


. SigmaChi 


Regents' Scholar 


Kappa AlphaTheta 


Theta Xi 


UCLA Karate team 


Alpha Lambda 


Bruin Belles 




Dean's List 


Delta 






Karate Club, Pres. 


Sigma Delta Pi 
Rieber Hall 




LATIMER, JOHN 


LEE, BENJAMIN 


LEE, 


LEE, HEENVAN 


Glendora 


Buena Park 


CHRISTOPHER 


Los Angeles 


AB Political ScienceAB Geography 


Reseda 


AB Geography 


tsf: Citrus Coll. 




AB English 




Sigma Pi, Pres. 




Phi Kappa Psi 




1 EC Presidents 




Volleyball 




Council 








LEE, HUBERT 


LEE, JAN 


LEE, KENNETH 


LEE,YONG 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 




Seoul, Korea 


AB Economics 


BS Nursing 




BS Accounting 


Theta Xi 


Sigma Kappa 






Mardi Gras 


Homecoming Con" 


- 




Spring Sing 


mittee 

Mardi Gras Exec. 

Committee 







bachelor and graduate degrees 



LEEDS, LEASON LEFKOWITZ, 

Lakewood CARASEL 

BS Structural Los Angeles 

Engineering AB Sociology 

tsf: Long Beach CC Rally Comm. 
BetaThetaPi Sailing Club 

Hillel 



LEFTGOFF, 
SHELLEY 
Downey 
AB Psychology 
Alpha Epsilon Phi 
Prytaneans 
Uni-Camp 
Chimes 

Psychology Honors 
Program 



LEICHMAN, 
GLENN 

Van Nuys 
AB Psychology 
SLC 

ASUCLA Admin. 
VP 

Blue Key 
Dean's List 
Uni-Prep 1968, 
Director 



LEIDER, LEO 



LEISHMAN, 



LEMON, MARCIA LENG.JR., 



Downey SUZANNE Santa Ana CHRISTOPHER 

AB Political Science San Diego AB Sociology Los Angeles 

tsf: St. Michael's AB History tsf; UCI BS Engineering 

Coll. tsf: San Diego St. Delta Gamma Triangle, Treas. 

ASUCLA FiComm Coll. Sailing Team Phi Eta Sigma 

KLA News Staff Alpha Chi Omega 



LEON, LINDA 


LEOPOLD, BETTE LESTER, MONICA LETTVIN, 


Pico Rivera 


New York City 


Beverly Hills 


SHARON 


AB Anthropology 


AB History 


AB Psychology 


Culver City 


Rally Comm. 




Ski Club 


AB Psychology 


Homecoming Com 






Honors Program 


mittee 






Gifted Program 


Mardi Gras Kiddie 






High School Spe- 


Day Committee 






cial Program 
PsiChi 


LEUNG, KIRBY 


LEVAI, MICHAEL 


LEVENTHAL, 


LEVIN, EMILY 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


SHEILA 


San Diego 


BS Engineering 


BS Engineering 


Los Angeles 


AB Spanish 






BS Sociology 


Alpha Mu Gamma 






tsf:UCSB 


Tutorial Project 






Alpha Omicron 


Pi Project Amigos 






Sophomore 








Sweethearts 








Prytaneans 








Bruin Belles 








Uni Camp Cou 


n- 


LEVINE, ROBERT LEVITON, LYNN 


LEVY, HILDA 


LEVY, LINDA 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Santa Maria 


Los Angeles 


AB Political Science AB Economics 


AB Spanish 


AB English 


Hillel 


Alpha Lambda 


tsf: Allan Hancock University Chorus 




Delta 


Coll. 


Hillel 



LEWIS, DONALD 

Los Angeles 
BS Physics 
Alpha Chi Sigma 



LEWIS, GAIL LEWIS, JAMES 

North Hollywood Santa Monica 
AB Bacteriology AB Anthropology 
UCLA Symphony 
Orchestra, 
Life 



LIN,HO-SEN 

Fukien, China 
PhD Control Engi 
neering 



LINBERG, LINCOLN II, 

KRISTIN JAMES 

Jackson, Miss. Los Angeles 
AB Spanish AB Economics 

tsf: UC San Diego Kappa Alpha Psi 
Gamma Phi Beta i-resnnian Basket- 
Lambda Chi Alpha ball, 1965-66 
Little Sister 
Tutorial Project 
Honors-at-En- 
trance 



LINDBERG, JOAN LINGO, 
Whittier MARGARET 

AB English Ventura 

AB Sociology 
tsf: Ventura Coll. 



LIPPINCOTT, 


LITSCHKE, 


LITTELL, LIU, TIEN 


MARY 


LOUISE 


COLLEEN 


Sylmar 


Long Beach 


Pasadena 


AB Dance 


AB Psychology 


AB Political Science 


tsf: Pierce Coll. 


Kappa Kappa 


tsf: Cal. State LA 




Gamma, V.P. 


Kappa Delta 




Anchors, Spurs 


Ski Club 




Tutorial Project 


Sailing Club 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




LOIZEAUX, PAUL 

Monterey Park 
AB Economics 
Phi Eta Sigma 
Omircon Delta Eta 



LONG, JOHN 
Los Angeles 
AB Economics 
Alpha Kappa Ps 
Beta Alpha Psi 
Omicron Delta 
Epsion, Dean's List 



LOW, REGINALD LOWY, RUDOLPH 
Stockton Los Angeles Kowloon, 

AB Zoology BSEngineermg Hong Kong 

Senior Class Pres.BS Chemistry 
Engineering So- tsf; Foothill Coll. 
ciety 

Student Union 
Expansion Com- 
mittee 

Association of Stu- 
dents and Busi- 

LYKE, MARYLYNN LYLE, HEIDI LYON, TONI 



LORD, DENNY LORENZINI,JR 

Taipei, China ARTHUR 
M. Arch. Urban Long Beach 

Design AB Economics 

tsf; Chung-Yuan Alpha Gamma 
Coll. of Scienceand Omega 
Engineering Cheerleader 

Chinese Students Yeomen 
Club Economics 

American SocietyofHonorary 
Planning Officials 

LUK, CAMILLE 



Laguna Beach 
AB English 
Honors 
Dean's List 



Costa Mesa 
AB Political Science 
tsf: UC Santa 
Barbara 
Alpha Delta Pi 



LUPAC, LINDA 

AB Social Sciences 

for Elementary 

Teachers 

tsf; UC Santa 

Barabara 

Kappa Alpha Theta 



LYONS, STEVEN 

Lakewood 
BS Enginnerings 
tsf; Long Beach CC 
Tau Beta Pi 



MACKENZIE, 


MAEOKA, 


MAGEE,JOANN 


MAGYAR, DAVID 


RONALD 


TAKAHIRO 


El Cajon 


Los Angeles 


Ramona 


Tokyo, Japan 


AB Spanish 


BS Mechanical 


AB Zoology 


AB Economics 


tsf; San Diego 


Engineering 


UCLA Marching 


tsf; Aoyama Ga- 


St. Col. 




and Basketball 


kuin U.Tokyo 


Sigma Delta Pi 




Bands 




Alpha Mu Gamm 


a 


UCLA Flying Club 


1, 


Anchors secretary 


Pres. 




Glencairn House 




MALRY, PAMELA 


MARCUS, JOEL 


MARIAM, SUSAN 


MARIN, VICTOR 


Los Angeles 


Denver, Colo. 


Beverly Hills 


Bakersfield 


AB History 


AB Accounting, 


AB History 


AB History 


Delta Sigma ThetaPolitical Science 




Daily Bruin 


Bruin Belles 


tsf; US Air Force 


Intramural Council 


Homecoming 


Academy 




Dogcatchers 


Queen Finalist 


Beta Alpha Psi 






Bruinettes 


Exec Board 
UCLA pre-law 
society, Lacrosse 






MARINELLI,JOHN MARLOWE, 


MARSHALL, 


MARTIN, 


Downey 


GLORIA 


MARIE 


VIRGINIA 


AB History 


Redondo Beach 


San Pedro 


Burbank 




AB French 


AB Psychology 


AB Social Science 




tsf;EI Camino Coll. tsf; LA Harbor J C 


for Elementary 






Pi Gamma Mu 


Teachers 






Psychology Honors tsf; UC Santa 






Summa cum laudi 


e Barbara 
Alpha Delta Pi 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 


MARTINEZ, TED 


MASON, JOAN 


MASTERSON, 


MATSUI, DANIEL 




Hacienda HeightsKATHIE 


Long Beach 




AB English 


Ventura 


AB Economics 






AB Social Science 






for Elementary 








Teachers 








tsf; UC Santa 








Barbara 








Chi Omega 








Bruin Belles 








Tutorial Project 




MATSUMOTO, 


MATTHIAS, 


MAXWELL, RITA 


MAY, LAWRENCE 


CHERYLANN 


MICHAEL 


Riverside 


Lemon Grove 


Gardena 


Los Angeles 


BS Nursing 


AB Political Science 


AB History 


AB Economics 


tsf; Riverside CC Daily Bruin Senior 




Phi Kappa Psi 


Regent Scholar 


Editor 




Varsity Volleyball 


Alpha Tau Delta 


Pi Sigma Alpha 



Freshman BaseballSNAC Div. IV, first 

Omicron Delta Ep- VP 

silon Honor Society Dean's List 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



MAYEDA, 
PHYLLIS 

San Gabriel 
AB English 



MAZER, SUSAN McALLISTER, McCAFFERTY, 

Baltimore, Md. BARBARA WILLIAM 

AB Psychology Bakersfield Mayaguez, 

tsf: Uof Maryland AB History Puerto Rico 

tsf; Bakersfield Coll BS Physical Edu- 
cation, Physiology 
Proiect Ceylon '58 
Hedrick Hall 
Pres. '67-68 
Rec Center Swim 
Club 



McCLURE, 
LINDA 

Tiburon 
AB Theater Arts 



McCONNELL, 
THOMAS 
Glendale 
AB Economics 



Alpha Gamma DeltaBetaTheta Pi 
Josephine Omicron Delta 

Bruin, '67, '68 Epsilon 
Acapella Choir Dean's List 
HughO'Brian Sailing Club 
Acting Awards Con- 
test. Feb. '69 



McCOURT, McCRARY, 

JAMES ELIZABETH 

Kansas City Los Angeles 

PhD Business Eco- AB Anthropology 
nomics 

Delta Mu Delta 
Beta GammaSigma 
Alpha Kappa Psi 
Soc. for Advance- 
ment of Manage- 
ment, Pres. 



MC FARLIN, 
ANNJENNETTE 



McCULLOCH, 
RICHARD 

Sacramento 
BS Engineering 
tsf: UC Davis 
Baseball 
Wrestling 
Ashrae 
Asme 



McKAY, VICTORIA McKINNEY, 



McGAUGH, 
MARSHA 

Riverside 
AB Pre- Social 
Welfare 



McGRATH, 
RICHARD 

North Hollywood 
AB Political Science 
Rally Committee 



Project India 1968 Arnold Air Soceity 
Varsity Song Girl 
Spurs, Pres, 
California Club 
Alpha Lambda Delta 



McMillan, 



MEERSAND, 



Northridge 
AB Pre-Social 
Welfare 

Intramurals rep. 
Tutorial Project 
Surf Club 
Intercampus 
Visitor Progran^ 
Berkeley 

MEGOWAN, 
THOMAS 
Ventura 
AB Mathematics 
tsf; Ventura Coll. 



MOLLY JANET 

La Jolla Los Angeles 

AB Economics AB Music 
tsf: U of Colorado 
Kappa Kappa 



Gamma 
Omicron Delta 
Epsilon 



MEHLER,LYRA 



KENNETH 

Los Angeles 

AB Political Science 

Pre- Law Soc. 

^. .1 1. 1 * Conservation Club 

Sigma Alpha lotag^^j f,,^;^ 

Pres. 

Alpha Lambda Delta 



' Alpha Xi Delta 



MEISTER,ANN MELEIS.AFOF 

Altadena 
AB History 
tsf: UC San Diego 
Tutorial Project 



MENAKER, 
ROLERTA 

Los Angeles 
AB Sociology 
tsf: UC Santa 
Barbara 



McDEVITT, 
RANDY 

Naperville, III. 
AB Economics 
Sigma Nu 
Blue Key 

Omicron Delta Ep 
silon 
Computer Club 



MENZIES, LEILA MERCURIC, MERRELL, 

Fullerton THOMAS ELIZABETH 

AB History Glendale Woodland Hills 

Unicamp BS & MS Engineer- AB Art History 

ing tsf: Pierce Coll. 

tsf: Glendale Jr. 

Coll. 

AEC Fellowship 

Glendale Oakmount 

League Scholarship 

Tau Beta Pi 
MERRICK, MERRICK, MESTHENE, 

ARTHUR MARC LAURA 

Santa Barbara North Hollywood Santa Monica 
AB Political Science AB Political ScienceAB French 
Public Relations tsf: LA Valley Coll. 
Student Soc, Sec. 



MEYERS, CAROL 

Encino 
AB Spanish 



MICHEL, KAREN 

Beverly Hills 
AB Sociology 
tsf: U of Denver 
Sigma Delta Tau 



MICHINO, MILETICH, 

MORIYASU CHRISTINE 

Osaka, Japan Los Angeles 

AB Political ScienceAB English 
tsf: Keio U, Tokoy 
tsf: Keio U, Yokyo 
Snow-ski Club 
Pre- law Society 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




MILLARD, NEAL MILLER, ELLEN MILLER, GARY MILLER, JANET 



North Hollywood 
AB Sociology 
tsf: UC Berkeley 



Beverly Hills 
AB Design 
Alpha Epsilon 
Bruinettes 
Tutorial Project 
Dean's List 



Phi 



Piedmont 
AB History 
tsf: San Francisco 
St. Coll. 

Women's Golf Team 
Tutorial Project 



MILLER, JEFFREY MILLER, JEFFREY MILLER, JOEL MILLER, 



Miami 


San Marino 


Chicago, III. 


MARJORIE 


BS Electrical 


AB Psychology 


AB Geography 


Pasadena 


Engineering 


Delta Tau Delta 


Sproul Hall 
Comptroller 
Sproul Hall Resi- 
dence Staff 


AB Psychology 


MILLER, SUSAN 


MILLMAN, JUDITH MINAMI, VERA 


MINICUCCI,PAUL 




Beverly Hills 


Los Angeles 


White Plains.N.Y. 




AB English 


AB History 


AB English 




Mortar Bd. 








Chimes 








Washington 








Internship Prog. 








Alpha Lambda Delta 






Homecoming '67 








Exec. Bd. 






MIRMAN, LESLIE 


MISTYSYN, 


MISTYSYN, 


MITCHELL, 


Los Angeles 


LAUREL 


ROBERT 


CHARLES 


AB English 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Alpha Xi Delta 


AB Mathematics 


AB Motion Pictures 


, AB Psychology 


Honors Program 


tsf: San FernandOfsfij of Hawaii 


Track 


Prytaneans 


Valley St. Coll. 






Unicamp Drive 








Alpha Lambda Delta 






Hillel 








MOHANDESSAN 


MOHR.JGAN 


MONG,JOHN 


MONKARSH, 


MEHRZAD 


Santa Monica 


Macau, S. China 


lARLENE 


Tehran, Iran 


AB Sociology 


AB Industrial 


Beverly Hills 


AB Psychology 


tsf: Stephens 


Design 


AB Design 


tsf: Compton Coll, 


Coll., Mo. 


tsf: Compton Coll. 


Dean's List 


Univeristy Coope- 


Gamma Phi Beta 




rative HousingAss 








Alpha Gamma Sig- 








ma Honor Soc. 








Psi Chi 








UCHAChmn.of 








MONTGOMERY, 


MOORE,JR. ED 


MOORE, DONNA 


MOORE, 


RONALD 


Santa Paula 


Los Angeles 


JONATHAN 


PalosVerdes 


AB Spanish 


AB Social Sciences 




AB Zoology 


tsf: Ventura Coll. 


for Elementary 




tsf: UC Riverside 


Alpha Gamma 


Teachers 




Phi Delta Theta 


Omega 


Alpha KappaAlpha 




Varsity Track 


Senior class collo 






Freshman V.P. 


quiumchairman 







MOORE, NANCY MOORE, SUSAN MORESE, MORRIS, JR. 

Newport Beach San Diego RICHARD WILLIAM 

AB Graphic Design AB English Covina Lomita 

Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Chi OmegaAB PoliticalScienceBS Engineering 
Historian Shell & Oar Club tsf: Mt. SAC 

Bruinettes Lambda Chi Alpha 

Spurs Bruin Week '68 

Sigma Alpha Epsi- chmn. 

Ion Little Sister Homecoming '67 

asst. chmn. 
Monte Carlo, '68 



MORRISON, 


MORROW, 


MORSE, 


MORTON, SUSAN 


SIDNEY 


MICHAEL 


BERNHARD 


San Jose 




San Pedro 


Los Angeles 


AB Italian 




AB Economics 


AB Mathematics 


Kappa Kappa 




Sigma Nu 


Rally Committee 


Gamma 




Blue Key 







bachelor and graduate degrees 



MOSER, JAMES MOSHER, 
Fresno MAUREEN 

AB Economics Burney 

tsf; Fresno St. Coll. AB History 
Omicron Delta tsf: Mills Coll. 
Epsilon Alpha Phi 

Chimes 
Brum Belles 



MUCHA, ANITA 

Los Angeles 
AB Theatre History 



MUELLER, 
LESLIE 

Belleville, III. 
MBA Graduate 
School of Business 
Administration 
tsf: U of Kansas 
Theta Chi 
Alpha Kappa Psi 
AIESEC 

MURRAY, 
PATRICIA 

Long Beach 
AB Pre-Social 
Welfare 
tsf: Whittier Coll. 



MULUEY, 
PATRICIA 

Canoga Park 
AB Political Sc 
tsf: Pierce Coll. 
Mardi Gras 
'68 Exec. Comm 
Chimes 
Shell & Oar 
Prytanean 

MURPHY, PAUL 

Moorpark 
BS Engineering 
tsf: Ventura Coll. 



MOVIUS, 
MICHEIF 

Long Beach 
AB History 
tsf: UCSB 
Alpha Chi Omega 
Bruin Belles 
Angel Flight 
Shell & Oar 



MUNK, JUDITH MURAYAMA, 

Burbank DENNIS 

AB History Imperial Beach 

tsf: San Fernando BS Chemistry 
Valley St. Coll. UCLA Band 



MUSTAD, AR lANE MUTO, JOHN 



San Diego 
AB Psychology 



NABOR, WILLIAM NADIR, ALLAN 
Azusa Los Angeles 

AB Psychology AB Economics 
Unicamp Classroom 
Collection Chmn. 



Los Angeles 
AB Sociology 
Delta Delta Delta 
Panhellenic Pres. 
AWS Pres. Board 
Bruin Belles 
Prytaneans 



NADLER, SANDRA NAGAI, NOBORU 
North Hollywood Kanagawa, Japan 
AB Spanish MS Graduate 

tsf: UC Irvine School of Business 

tsf: Columbia U 



NAGUCHI, 
KAZUKO 

Beverly Hills 
AB Art History 
tsf: Pasadena CC 



NAKAMURA, NARANJO, 

GEORGE ROSENDO 

BS Public Health BS Engineering 



NARITOMI, 
PATRICIA 
Altadena 
AB Psychology 
tsf: Pasadena CC 



NASCH, NATHON, 

ELIZABETH CARLTON 

Roumania Long Beach 

AB French AB Economics 

Triangle Fraternity 
Little Sister 
CASE 



NAYLON, NELSON, 

PATRICK SUSAN 

Los Angeles Newport Beach 
AB Political ScienceAB Sociology 

tsf: US Naval tsf: UC Santa 

Academy Barbara 

Phi Delta Theta Delta Delta Delta 

Phi Beta Kappa Pres. 
Educational Policy 
Commission 
Ski Club 

NETTLETON, NEWCOMB, NEWTON, NICHOLS, SUSAN 

JAMES BARBARA FRANCIS Fullerton 

Pacific Palisades LaJolla AB English 

AB Political ScienceAB Anthropology tsf: Cal. St. Ful- 

History Zeta Psi lerton 

tsf: UC Santa California State Kappa Delta 

Barbara Scholarship Angel Flight 
Christian Science 
Christian Science 
Organization 
Mardi Gras General 



NIELSEN, JAMES NIKOLOFF, 
Van Nuys ANGELIKA 

AB Physical Vienna, Austria 

Education AB German 

Varsity Basketball tsf: LACC 



NISHINAGA, 
JOYCE 

Los Angeles 
AB English 
Alumni Scholar 
1966-67 
Tutorial Project '66 Spring Sing 
Chi Alpha Delta Newman Club 
Treasurer, 1967 
President, 1968-69 
Nisei Bruin Club 



NOLAN, NANCY 

Santa Maria 
AB Speech 
Chi Omega, Sec. 
Bruin Belles 
Mardi Gras 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




NOON, CAROLYN NORD.JOEL 
Santa Barbara Los Angeles 
AB History 
Delta Delta Delta 



NOSKIN.JILL 
AB Music 



NOZAKIJOAN 

El Cerrito 
AB Psychology 



NOWELL, 
TERRY 

Granada Hills 
AB Political Science 
tsf; Pierce Coll. 
Alpha Phi 
Ski Club 

Junior Panhellenic 
Homecoming 
Comm. 



NUTTALL, DAVID NUTTING, OAKLEY, KAREN 

ElCaion WILLIAM Ontario 

AB English Downey BS Physics 

tsf: Grossmont JC AB Mathematics Sigma Pi Sigma 
Varsity Football Arnold Air Society Angel Flight Com- 
Varsity Baseball mander 

UCLA Commence- 
ment Student 
Marshal 

Daily Bruin Sports 
Feature Writer 



OBLATH, OBLINGER, O'BOURKE, 

ROBERT SUSAN ELIZABETH 

Sherman Oaks North Hollywood Havana, Cuba 
AB Political ScienceAB Art History BS Biotechnology 

Honors Program Alpha Chi Omega, International Acti- 

Dean's List Ass't. 2nd. V.P. vitiesClub 

Pi Sigma Alpha People-to-People Cuban Club 



ODAMA, THOMAS 





Ambassador to 


Triangle Fraterni' 


ty 




Scandanavia 


Little Sisters 






Sophomore Sweet 








hearts, Secretary 






OESER, EDWIN 


OHBA, YAUNOBU OHKI, SUZANNE 


OKAZAKI, 


Chowchilla 


Setagaya-Ku, 


Northbrook, III. 


JAMES 


AB Political Science Tokyo 


AB Design 


Los Angeles 


tsf: Fresno St. Coll. AB History 


Chi Alpha Delta 


BS Engineering 


ThetaChi 


Dykstra Hall 




Omega Sigma Tau 


Air Force ROTC 








Arnold Air Society 






Intramural Ath- 








letics 








Honors Program 








OLEON. VALERIE 


OLIVER, 


OLLEN,JOHN 


O'NEAL, MARCIA 


Los Angeles 


SHIRLEY 


Los Angeles 


Porterville 


AB Political Science San Bernardino 


AB History 


AB Psychology 


CalClub 


BS nursing 


tsf: LACC 




Film Commission 


tsf: San BernardinoSigma Nu 




Chmn. 


Valley Junior Coll 


1. 




AWS Exec. & Pres 








Boards 








Mardi Gras Exec. 








Board 








Uni-prepexec. 








OPTICAN, 


ORGAN, ALAN 


ORTIZ, SYLVIA 


ORTMAYER, 


CANDICE 


Los Angeles 


So. El Monte 


CAROLYN 


Los Angeles 


BS Chemistry 


AB History 


LaVerne 


AB English 


Alpha Chi Sigma 




BS Physical 


tsf: San Francisco President's Under 




Education 


St. Coll. 


graduate Fellow 




tsf: La Verne Coll. 




Cast (NSF) Fellow 


Mortar Board 








Honors Program 


OSBURN, 


OSTRIN, 


OSUCH, LINDA 


PAGE, ALLEN 


EDWARD 


MARILYN 


Altadena 


Houston, Tex. 




Long Beach 


AB English 


M FA Motion Pic- 




ABEnlish 


Chi Omega 


tures 




Chi Omega 


Tutorial Project 






House Advisor 


Spring Sing Exec. 






Hedrick Hall 


Comm. 






Uni-prep counselor 






Spurs, Bruinettes 








Tutorial Project 






PALMER, ALAN 


PALMER, 


PANKOW, 


PAPADIMITRO- 


Sepulveda 


PATRICIA 


MARTHA 


POULOS, 


MPH Public Healtt 


1 Los Angeles 


Fremont 


NIKOLAOS 




AB English 


BS Chemistry 


Kalavryta, Greece 




tsf: LaVerne Coll. 


University Chorus M Arch Urban 




Alpha Kappa Alph; 


i 


Design 
tsf: UCB 
Greek Graduate 
Org. 

International Stu- 
dent Org. 
Pakalavrytinos Org. 
Greek Hellenic Org. 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



PARDRIDGE, 


PATTERSON, 


PATTI, LINDA 


PAUL, AGNES 


WILLIAM 


ALAN 


Long Beach 


Long Beach 


Santa Monica 


Los Angeles 


BS Nursing 


AB Sociology 


BS Chemistry 


AB History 


Project Tutor 


Tutorial 


Phi Delta Theta 


tsf: use 


Project Amigos 


Dorm Floor Pres, 
Rieber 



PEAKE, BONNIE 


PEAKE, DOUGLAS PEARCE, LILLY 


PEASE, STEVEN 


Whittier 


Whittier 


Walnut Ridge, 


Riverside 


AB History 


AB History 


Ark. 


AB Geography 




Phi Gamma Delta AB Psychology 


Alpha Gamma 






tsf: Coll. of the 


Omega, Treasur 






Desert 


and Secretary 






Psi Chi 


Phi Eta Sigma 






Peace & Freedom Pi Gamma Nu 






Party Club 


Alpha Mu Gamn 

Departmental 

Scholar- 


PEDDREW, 


PEERY.JANE 


PEIFER, CAROL 


PENNINGTON, 


LAURA 


Rancho Santa Fe Beverly Hills 


WILLIAM 


Hampton, Va. 


AB Economics 


AB Spanish 


Al ham bra 


AB Social Science Tutorial Project 


tsf: Arizona St. 


AB Economics 


for Elementry 


Rally Comm. 


Kappa Delta 


Acacia 


Teachers 


Spring Sing 


URA Horseback- 


Campus Events 


tsf; Santa Monica Omicron Delta 


riding Club, Pres 


,. Commissioner 


CC 


Epsilon 


Alpha Lambda 


Homecoming 


Alpha KappaAlphi 


3 


Delta 


Chmn. 






URA Sports Car 


Finance Comm 






Club 


Blue Key V.P. 


PEREZ, WALDO 


PERLMAN, 


PERLMUTTER, 


PESKIND, BLI 1 


Los Angeles 


JEFFREY 


SUSAN 


Culver City 


AB Economics 


Squirrel Hill, 


Millbrae 


AB Social Scieno 


tsf: Santa Monica 


Penn. 


AB Economics 


tor Elementary 


CC 


AB Mathematics 


Phi Sigma Sigma Teachers 



Assoc. Students of Honors Program 
Busmess 1957 Homecoming 

Committee 
1969MardiGras 
Committee 



PESTA, BEN 



PETER, LINDA PETERS, SUSAN PETERSON, 



PalosVerdes CURTIS 
AB English Arcadia 

tsf: Long Beach St. AB Philosophy 
Coll. tsf: North Park C( 

Chicago 



San Diego Los Angeles 

AB Political Science AB History 
Circle K,VP 
Arnold Air Society 
Yeomen 

Rieber Hall, Exec. 
Sec. 
Frogs 



PEYTON, RENEE PEYTON, SUSAN PHILLIPS, CONNIEPHILLIPS, 



San Marino 
AB Economics 
alpha Phi 
Masonic Club 
Homecoming Com. 
Sigma Pi 
Little Sister 



Sacramento SHIRLEE 

AB Bacteriology Sherman Oaks 
tsf: American River BS Nursing 
Coll. 

State Scholar 
President's 
Scholarship 



PHI LP, 



PIERRE, DEANNE PIKE, JR. JAMES PILONE, 



CHRISTINE Orlnda San Diego KENNETH 

Los Gatos AB Art AB Economics 

AB English Sproul Hall, Pres. Theta Xi 

tsf: Wesleyan Coll. 2nd Floor Women Housemanager 

Macon, Ga. Mardi Gras 
Sigma Kappa 



PIMLOTT, PINGREE, JANET PINSKY, NINA PINTEL, VICTOf 

ROBERT Alameda San Francisco Los Angeles 

Los Angeles AB Design AB Political ScienceAB Spanish 

AB Psychology tsf: Cal. State Hay- tsf: UC Santa Sigma Delta Pi 

Kappa Kappa Psi, ward Barbara 

Pres. Gamma Phi Beta Daily Bruin, make- 

Marching, Varsity Tutorial Project up editor 
and Concert BandsLambda Chi Alpha 
Intramural Sports Little Sister 




bachelor and graduates degrees 

"^1 




il^ft^e^ J£^ 




PITCAIRN, 


PITTER, 


PLAUZOLES, 


PLOTKIN. 


BRIGIT 


RICHARD 


LUCIEN 


TIMOTHY 


LaJoila 


Yucaipa 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


AT Anthropology 


AB Meteorology 


AB French 


AB History 


tsf: Institute of 


UCLA Band 


Southern Campus 




European Studies 


Kappa Kappa Psi 


Editor-in-Chief 




Vienna, Austria 




1969 

Pi Delta Phi 

Alpha Mu Gamma 

CalClub 

EAP- Bordeaux 




PO, JONATHAN 


POLIQUIN,JUDI 


PORTER, PAULA 


POTTER, 


MD Medicine 


Santa Monica 


North Hollywood 


THOMAS 




AB Design 


BS Physical 


Los Angeles 




tsf: UC Santa 


Sciences 


EdD Education 




Barbara 


Chi Omega, Pres. 






Delta Delta Delta 


Scuba Club 






Southern Campus^heta Delta Chi 






Princess 


Little Sister 






Fashion Board 








Sigma Alpha Ep- 








silon Little Sister 






POVvELL. 


POWERS, 


PRICE, 


PR1VAL0FF,JANE 


VIRGINIA 


VICTORIA 


PAMELA 


Anaheim 


Los Angeles 


Pomona 


Coronado 


AB Psychology 


AB Pre- Social 


AB English 


Alpha Mu Gamm£ 


tsf: Michigan St. U 


Welfare 


tsf: Mt. Sac 


Alpha Mu Gamma 


Rally Committee 


tsf; LACC 




Tutorial Project 


tapeH 


PROEHL, PETER 


PROTCSH, 


QUAN, HARVEY 


QUAN.WILMA 


Santa Monica 


REINER RUDOLF Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


AB Political Sci 


ROBERT 


BS Electrical 


AB Sociology 




Heidelberg, 


Engineering 






Germany 


ESUC 






BS Anthropology 


Dean's List 






tsf: U of Heidelberg 




QUINN, 


QUITTNER, 


QUON, 


RABINOWITZ, 


ILLANA 


MARJORIE 


MICHAEL 


ALAN 


Los Angeles 


Encino 


Los Angeles 


North Hollywood 


AB German 




AB Design 


AB Political Science 


Tutorial Project 




UCLA Art Counc 


1 Intramurals 


Rally Comm. 




Temple Award 




Dean's List 




Daily Bruin 








Mardi Gras Comm 






Satyr 








Laminas 








DePress 




RAMENJOAN 


RAMEY, 


RAMSEY, 


RANDALL, JOHN 


Millbrae 


BEATRICE 


CATHY 




AB Anthropology 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 




tsf: Coll. of San 




AB Enlish 




Mateo 




Alpha Chi Omeg: 


i, 


Rally Comm 




Rush Chmn. 




Hjllel 








RANDOLPH, 


RANK, MARET 


RAUCH, CATHY 


RAY, DENISE 


CAROL 


Pacific Palisades Los Angeles 


Newport Beach 


Hillsborough 




AB History 


AB Pre-Social 


AB Sociology 




Tutorial Project 


Welfare 


tsf: Stephens Coll. 




tsf: Orange Coast 


Columbia, Mo. 






Coll. 

Shell & Oar 
Model United 
Nations 


RAY, MARILYN 


RAZUTIS, 


REA, PAULft 


REED, 


Fullerton 


DANGUOLE 


Trenton, N.J. 


ELISABETH 


BS Public Health Los Angeles 


AB Art History 


Denver, Colo. 


tsf: Immaculate 


AB History 


tsf:UC Santa 


AB Spanish 


Heart Coll. 




Barbara 


Honors Program 


Kappa Kappa 






EAP Madrid 


Gamma 








Bruin Belles 








Sigma Alpha 








Epsilon, Little 








Sister 









bachelor and graduate degrees 



REED, SUSAN 


REEVES, JAMES 


REISCHEL, ERIC 


REITTER, 


Santa Rosa 




Los Angeles 


JANICE 


AB Economics 




BS Engineering 


Long Beach 


tsf; UC Davis 






AB Psychology 


Kappa Delta 






Mortar Board 


Phi Chi Theta 






AWS Exec. Bd. 
AWS Pres. Bd. 
Prytanean 
Monte Carlo Exec. 
Bd.'68 
Chimes 


RESNICK, MARK 


REUSCH, 


REYNARD, 


REYNOLDS, 


Sherman Oaks 


NATALIE 


CAROL 


LAURA 




Inglewood 


Long Beach 


Pacific Palisades 




AB Slavic 


BS Physical 


AB Social Science 




Languages 


Education 


for Elementary 




Alpha Mu Gammatsf: Long Beach CCTeachers 




Honors Program 


Honors Program 


tsf; Cal Western U. 
Alpha Phi 
Women's Tennis 
Team 
Unlcamp 


RICHARDSON, 


RICHMAN,LEE 


RICKMAN, 


RINDGE, 


LYNDA 


Beverly Hills 


DENNIS 


DANIEL 




AB Bacteriology 


Detroit, Mich, 


Los Angeles 




Psychology 




AB Economics 




Alpha Epsilon P 


i, 


Skin & Scuba 




Sec. 




Club 




Rally Comm 








Tutorial Project 








Life 






RINEK, 


RING, MARJORI 


ROANE, 


ROBBINS, 


LARRY 




MICHAEL 


EDWARD 


Arcadia 




Tustin 


Whittier 


BS Engineering 




AB Economics 


AB Psychology 


Lambda Chi Alph 


la 


Phi Kappa Sigma Mathematics 


Arnold Air Society 




Honors Program 


AFROTC 






Dean's List 


ESUC 






PsiChi 


ROBERTS, 


ROBERTS, 


ROBERTS, 


ROBERTSON, 


GREGORY 


JAMES 


LYNNE 


DAVID 


Los Angeles 


Los Altos 




Los Angeles 


BS Chemistry 


AB Zoology 




MA History 


Alpha Chi Sigma 






Delta Sigma Phi 
California State 
Fellowship 
Recipient 



ROBIM, ROCKLIN, ROCKOFF, RODRIGUEZ, 

KENNETH NEIL SHARON JAMES 

Oceanside Hacienda Heights Milpitas 

AB Psychology AB Political ScienceAB Psychology 

tsf: UC San Diego tsf: SFVSC tsf: Foothill Coll. 

PsiChi Beta Theta Pi 

Honors Program Varsity Baseball 



RODRIGUEZ, 


ROLLER, 


ROMAN, 


ROMANO, JERRY 


LINDA 


LINDA 


DONNA 




Long Beach 


El Cajon 


Los Angeles 




AB Social Sciences 


i AB English 


AB Theatre Arts 




for Elementary 








Teachers 








Gamma Phi Beta 








Shell & Oar 








ROMO, 


RONSON, 


ROSACK, 


ROSENBAUM, 


LINDA 


MARIJANE 


CHARLENE 


MARLENE 


Redlands 


San Francisco 


Bakersfield 


Los Angeles 


ABArt 


AB Sociology 


Sigma Kappa 


AB History 


tsf: UC Santa 


Freshman Activi 


JtyAB Political Science 


Barbara 


Council 

Tutorial Project 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 








bachelor and graduate degrees 




ROSENBERG, 


ROSENBERG, 


ROSENTHAL, 


ROSS, GARY 


DORA 


PHILIP 


LOUISE 


Beverly Hills 


Los Angeles 


Arcadia 


Los Angeles 


AB History 


AB English 


AB Economics 


AB Social Sciences Varsity Track 


Honors Program 


NROTC 


for Elementary 


Pre- Legal Society 


Alpha Lambda Delta 


Teachers 








tsf: LACC 




ROSS, 


ROUBIDOUX, 


ROUBINIAN, 


ROUSSO, HENRY 


CHARLENE 


REBECCA 


BERGE 


Los Angeles 


Bakersfield 


Hawthorne 


San Francisco 


BS Engineering 


BS Nursing 


AB French 


AB Zoology 




tsf: Stanford U 


tsf: El Camino JCtsf: LACC 








Armenian Studies 






Club, Sec. 








Veterans Club 




ROZZEN, 


RUBIN, FRANK 


RUBIN, RONALD 


RUBINSTEIN, 


CHERYL 


Hawthorne 


Ontario 


JOSEPH 


Van Nuys 


AB Public Lan- 


AB Psychology 


Bogota, Columbia 


AB Fine Arts 


guage & Politics 


tsf: Chaffey Coll. 


ABPoliticalScience 




tsf: El Camino JC 


ASUCLAPres. 




Tau Delta Phi 




Board of Control 




Bruin Young 




Communications 




Democrats 




Bd. 




Student Film 




University Policies 




Making 




Comm. 

Alumni Assn. Bd. 


RUDAMETKIN, 


RUDY, ROSALINDRUMSEY, ROGER RUSH, ESTELLA 


LYDIA 


Brooklyn, N.Y. 


Altadena 


North Hollywood 


Los Angeles 


AB Pre-Social 


AB History 


AB Latin American 


AB Pre-Social 


Welfare 


tsf: UC Santa 


Studies 


Welfare 


tsf: LACC 


Barbara 


tsf: LA Valley Coll. 


tsf: Cal State LA & Mabel Wilson 




Dorm "J" Bd. 


East LA Coll. 


Richards Scholar 




House Advisor 


Chimes 


ship 






Tutorial Project 








Campus Crusade 








for Christ 








RUSSELL, 


RUSSELL, 


RUSTIN, 


RUTKIN, STUART 


BARBARA 


JEANNE 


SUZANNE 


North Hollywood 


New Cyama 


Glendale 


Santa Maria 


AB Political Science 


AB Political ScienceAB English 


AB Geography 




tsf: Pitzer Coll. 


Delta Gamma 


tsf:UofthePacifi 


c 



Alpha Gamma Delt Alpha LambdaDelt Bruin Belles 
Sabers Tutorial Project Dean's List 

Spurs 



RYAN, 
EDWARD 

North Hollywood 
AB Mathematics 
Hedrick Hall 
Residents Assoc. 



RYGEL, SANDRA SACHS, ALAN 
Newport Beach Los Angeles 
AB Political ScienceMBA Business 
tsf: U of Colorado Administration 
Gamma Phi Beta 
Anchors 

Christian Science 
Organization 



SACKS, ELISSA 

Los Angeles 
AB History 
tsf: use 



SAGGESE, 
NICHOLAS 
Cypress 
AB Economics 
tsf: Rider Coll. N.J. 
Alpha Kappa Psi 
AIESEC 
Residence Hall 
Constitutional 
and Judicial Com ra 

SAN,ALI 

Ankara, Turkey 
MFA Theater Arts 
Television -Radio 
Prod. 



Alpha Kappa Psi, 
VP 
ASB 
AIESEC 
Society for the Ad- 
vancement of 
Management 
SAMOW,ALAN 



SAMIRAD, SAM 

Tehran, Iran 
MS Engineering 
Structures 
tsf: Michigan 
State U 



SANDERS, MARK SANDLER, 



Chowchilla 
AB Mathematics 
tsf: Fresno State 
Coll. 

California State 
Scholar 
Bowling League 



MICHAEL 

Encino 
AB Mathematics 
University Coop. 
Housing Assoc. 
Cum Laude 
Pi Mu Epsilon 



SAMUELS, 
BERNARD 

Los Angeles 
AB political Science 
Zeta Beta Tau, Pres. 
General Rep. '66 
Blue Key 



SANDS, 
JENNIFER 

Long Beach 
AB Sociology 
tsf: Whittier Coll. 
Gamma Phi Beta 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



SANDY, LANETTE 

El Cajon 
BS Public Health 
tsf : San Diego 
St. Coll. 



SARRIS, 
JUDITH 

Riverside 
BS Business 
Admin., Quantita 
tive Methods 

tsf: UC Riverside pr^aneans 
Bruin Belles 



SASS, ROSALEE 

Tujunga 
AB Design 
ASUCLA Cultural 
Affairs Commis- 
sioner 



SATO, STEPHEN 

Gardena 
AB English 
Sigma Alpha 
Epsilon 
Army ROTC 
Omega Sigma Tau 



SAUER, LINDA 

Whittier 
AB Sociology 
tsf; Chapman Coll. 
Sigma Kappa 
English in Action 



SAVAGE, JEAN 
Beverly Hills 
AB English 



1967 NSA Conven- 
tion Representative 
for UCLA 
SAVE, STEPHEN 

Ventura 
AB Music 



Alpha Gamma Deltatsf: UC Santa 
Mardi Gras Comm. Barbara 
Panhellenic Coun.AROTC 
Ski Club 



SAYRE, JAMES 

Los Angeles 
AB Economics 
Phi Gamma Delta 
Rugby 

Varsity Football 
Flying Club 
Scuba Club 



SCALES, BONNIE SCHAEFFER, 
Glendale SHEILA 

Long Beach 
AB English 
URA Mountain- 
eers Club 
Rieber Hall 
Judicial Bd. 



SCHECHNER, SCHERMER, 
TOBI VICTORIA 

Beverly Hills Beverly Hills 

AB Political Science BS Nursing 
Phateres tsf: UC Santa 

Barbara 
Life 



SCHALLON, SCHARING, 

MELODY MARGO 

Los Angeles Arcadia 

AB Political Science AB Art 
Alpha Chi Omega tsf: UC Berkeley 
Prytaneans Tennis Club 

Bruinettes Latin-American 

Frosh Class Exec. & Students Assoc. 
Senate 
Greek Week 
Exec Bd. 



SCHIFFER, 
ANNETTE 

Los Angeles 
AB Spanish 



SCHIFFER, 
MICHAEL 

Los Angeles 
AB Anthropology 
Phi Eta Sigma 
Regents Scholar 
Honors Program 
Woodrow Wilson 
Designate 1969-70 



JEMESON, SCHMIDT, DAVID SCHUBERT, 

DIMITRI Lakewood MARGARET 

Hollywood Economics AB Lawndale 

BS Engineering tsf: Long Beach CC AB English 

Sigma Nu tsf: Cal St. Long 

Beach 

Snow-Ski Club 
Mardi Gras Comm 
Hedrick Hall, 
Homecoming 
Comm. 



SCHULTZ, 
ROCHELLE 
La Habra 
AB Economics 



SCHUTTE, SCHWARTZ, 

JERALD CAROLYN 

Los Angeles Glendale 

AB Psychology &AB Psychology 
Sociology 
Sigma Nu 



SCHWARTZ, SCHWARTZ, 

ELAINE KAREN 

North Hollywood Los Angeles 

AB Spanish AB Economics 

Delta Phi Epsilon Phi Sigma Sigma 
Omicron Delta 
Epsilon 
Dean's List 
Mardi Gras 
Sophomore 
Sweethearts 



SCHWARTZ, 
KENNETH 

Los Angeles 
BS Chemistry 
Alpha Phi Omega 
Phi Lambda 
Upsilon 
Honors Program 



SCOTT, SUSAN 

San Gabriel 
AB English 



SCHWARTZ, 
RICHARD 

Los Angeles 
BS Chemistry 
Alpha Phi Omega 
Phi Lambda 
Upsilon 
Honors Program 



SEBOURN, 
PATRICIA 
Downey 
AB English 
Tutorial Project 



SCOTT, LEEANN 

La Jolla 
AB Design 



SCOTT, 
OLIVETTE 

Los Angeles 
AB History 
tsf: LaVerne Coll. 
Alpha KappaAlpha 



SEIGLE, DIANE SEKERA, 
Sierra Madre MICHAEL 
AB English Los Angeles 

Phi Sigma Sigma BS Chemistry 
Phi Eta Sigma 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




SENECHAL, 


SERBER, 


SESAR, DENNIS 


SESAR, JO-ANN 


MARJORIE 


ROCHELLE 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Redondo Beach 


Los Angeles 


MS Computer 


AB American 


AB Social Sciences AB European 


Sciences 


History 


for Elementary 


History 


"Definition of the 


Teachers 


tsf: SMCC 


Errors Associated 




Delta Gamma 




with a Digital Im 




Rituals chmn. 




plementation of the 


Dean's List 




Flowgraph Ap- 




Sophomore 




proach to Circuit 




Sweethearts 




Design/Analysis" 




SEVERSTONJR., 


SHAMBAUGH, 


SHANE, MICHAEL SHAPIRO, SUSAN 


H.RICHARD 


LINDA 


San Bernardino 


North Hollywood 


Sparta, 


Palo Alto 


AB Geography 


AB Pictorial Arts 


New Jersey 


BS Nursing 


tsf: San Bernardino 


AB Mathematics 


Alpha Gamma DeltValley JC 




tsf: use 


Spurs, Anchors 






Kappa Sigma 


University Chorus 




Varsity Crew 


Womens' Choral 






Team, USC 


Society 






Surf Team "B" 








Team Capt., UCLA 






SHAPIRO, 


SHAPIRO, 


SHARP, BEVERLY SHATTUCK, GARY 


WENDY 


WILLIAM 


La Canada 


Manhattan Beach 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


AB English 


AB History 


AB English 


AB History 


tsf: UC Santa 






Sigma Alpha Mu 


Barbara 






Varsity Football 








Manager 






SHATTUCK, 


SHAW, KEMPER 


SHAW, PAMELA 


SHELL, SUSAN 


VIOLET 


San Francisco 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Manhattan BeachAB Economics 


AB Art History 


AB Psychology 


MA Spanish 


Lambda Chi Alph, 


a 




Alumni Assoc. 


Distinguished 






UCLA 


Military Student 








Sunset Recreation 






Center Advi- 








sory Bd. 








Tutorial Project 






SHEPARD, 


SHERMAN, 


SHERMAN, 


SHEWEY, 


ALBERT 


MARILYN 


PATRICIA 


DONALD 


Los Angeles 


San Francisco 


Los Angeles 


Denver, Colo. 


AB Political ScienceAB Spanish 


AB History 


AB Economics 


tsf; Cal State LA 


tsf: SFCC 


Honors Program 


Tau Delta Phi, 


Bruin Veterans 


Hedrick Hall 


SoCam Staff 


Soc. Chmn. 




Alpha Mu Gamma Alpha Mu Gamma 


1 Arnold Air Society 






EAP-Bordeaux 


Air Force Drill Team 

Homecoming 

Comm. 


SHIGEKAWA, 


SHIGETOMI, 


SHINDEL, SUSAN SHIPLEY, 


LINDA 


TERESA 


Canoga Park 


RANDOLPH 


Anaheim 


AB Psychology 


AB History 


Long Beach 


BS Nursing 


tsf: Pasadena CC tsf: LA Valley J C 


AB Zoology 


SNAC 


Exceptional Chil- 
dren's Tutorial 
Project 




tsf: UC Berkeley 


SHOWS, 


SHUBERT, 


SHULMAN, 


SIBAYAN, 


WINIFRED 


TOMMY 


RENA 


ARACELI 


Los Angeles 


North Hollywood 


Los Angeles 


Baguio City, 


AB English 


AB Mathematics 


AB English 


Philippines 


tsf: Mt. St. Mary': 


sNROTC 




Samahang Phili- 


Coll. 


Frogs 




Samahang Philipi- 




Skin-and-Scuba 




noNGUCLft, 




Club, Sailing Clufc 


1 


Sec., Treas. 




Flybin, Club 






SIEGEL, ROGER 


SIFFERMANN, 


SILBERMAN, 


SILLMAN, 


El Segundo 


JANICE 


JUDITH 


ARNOLD 


AB Psychology 


La Habra 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Sigma Alpha 


AB Sociology 


AB Psychology 


PhD Zoology 


Epsilon 


tsf: Fullerton JC 






Varsity Water Polo 


URA Horseback 






Varsity Swimming 


r riding club. 






Blue Key 


instructor 






Kelps 









bachelor and graduate degrees 



SILVER, JUDY 


SILVERMAN, 


SILVERMAN, 


SIMPSON, 


Los Angeles 


DAVID 


LINDA 


MARY LOU 


AB English 


La Habra 


Sherman Oaks 


Los Angeles 




AB Economics 


AB Psychology 


AB English 




Phi Epsilon Pi 


Psi Chi 


Alpha Chi Omega 




UCLA Band 








Mardi Gras 








Exec. Comm 








Spring Sirg 






SIMS,VENITA 


SINAY, 


SIRES, BRUCE 


SI ROTA, LEA 




SHARYN 


Gardena 


New York City 




Culver City 


AB Economics 


AB Hebrew 




AB English 




tsf: Hunter Coll. 




Alpha Phi Omega 


New York 




Little Sister 








Shell & Oar 








UCLA Bowling 








League 







SISTO, FRANCES SITZ, WILLIAM SITZER, SUSAN SIU,TSUN-PUI 

Burbank La Crescenta Van Nuys Hong Kong 

AB French AB Economics AB Bacteriology BS Physics 

Alpha Mu Gamma Phi Kappa Sigma.Alpha Lambda Dell tsf: East LA Coll 
Pres. Honors Program Sigma Pi Sigma 

Blue Key NSF Summer Re- Director of Acade- 

search Grant mic Affairs/LA Fel- 

Vista DelMarTutor lowshipof theChi- 
nese Language 



SKLANOWSKY, 


SKOPiCKI, 


SLACK, SHARON 


SLOSSER, R. 


MICHAEL 


ELIZABETH 


Bakersfield 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


San Jose 


AB English 


AB Motion Picture 


BS Computer 


AB Political Sciencetsf; BakersfieldCollProduction 


Science 


tsf: San Jose St. 


Sigma Kappa Rush 


Delta Sigma 


Coll. 


Chmn., Soc.Chmn 


1. 


Phi.V.P 


Pi Sigma Alpha 


University Panhel- 




Uni-prep couns 


Honors Program 


lenic Delegate 




Computer club 




Lambda Chi Alphj 


1 


Order of the 




Little Sister 




SQUID Tres. 








SLOWSKEI, 


SMITH, ALAN 


SMITH, 


SMITH, GAYLE 


SLAWKO 


Inglewood 


CHRISTIAN 




Los Angeles 


AB Economics 


Studio City 




AB Economics 




AB Economics 




tsf: LACC 




Beta Theta Pi, 
House Manager 
Blue Key 
Omicron Delta 
Epsilon 




SMITH, 


SMITH, PENINA 


SMITH, SANDRA 


SMITH, 


KELLEN 


La Habra 


Burbank 


STEPHANIE 


Encino 


AB Psychology, 


BS Chemistry 


LaJolla 


AB Spanish 


Pre- Law 


Ice Skating Club 


AB Art History 


Honors 


tsf: FullertonJC 


Ski Club 


Student Cultu- 




Summa CumLaudeConservation Club ral Comm | 




Dean's List 


Spring Sing 






Pi Gamma Mu 








Psi Chi 








Flutist-Hillel Fest 


i- 






val Orchestra 






SNYDER, 


SOBKOWSKA, 


SODERBERG, 


SOOHOO, 


SPENCER 


IRENE 


MICHAEL 


JOANNE 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Pasadena 


Compton 


AB Fine Arts 


PhD 


AB International 


AB History 






Relations-African 


EAP 






Studies 


Tutorial Project 






tsf: Pasadena CC 


Oriental Concern 






Lambda Chi Alphi 


3 English-in-Action 






ASUCLA FiComm 








ASUCLA Cultural 








Affairs Comm. 




SOSA, ROSA 


SPRADLIN, 


STACK, RICHARD STEARNS, DAVID 


Pasadena 


PATRICIA 


Van Nuys 


Long Beach 


Spanish AB 


Fullerton 


AB Political Sci 


AB Economics 


tsf: Pasadena 


CC AB Psychology 




Sigma Nu 


Neuman Club 






Blue Key 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




STEELE, STEIN, BRENDA STEIN, MICHAEL STEINBERG, 

KATHLEEN Los Angeles Los Angeles CAROLYNN 

Sherman Oaks AB Psychology AB Art History Antioch 

AB Psychology tsf: LA Harbor Coll. tsf: LA Harbor Coll. AB Psychology 
Alpha Chi Omega tsf: Diablo Valley 

Tutorial Project Coll. 

Exceptional Chil- 
dren's Tutorial 
Project 



STENEHJEM, 


STERNHILL, 


STEWART, 


STICH, CAROL 


JANE 


LESLIE 


SUZANNE 


Woodland Hills 


Corona Del Mar 


Sepulveda 


Del Mar 


AB Psychology 


AB English 


AB US History 


AB English 


tsf: LA Pierce Coll. 


tsf: Stephens Coll 


., Delta Phi Epsilon Tutorial Project 


Alpha Omicron Pi 


Miss. 


Rally Comm 


Mardi Gras Comm 


1. Anchors 


Delta Delta Delta 


Pan hell 


Project Amigos 


Uni-prep counselor 




Panhellenic 


Rally Comm. 
Sproul Hall, 








Persephone House 


STIVERS, 


STIVERS, 


STONE, 


STORM, 


DONALD 


RONALD 


LAWRENCE 


SHARON 


Three Rivers 


Three Rivers 


Los Angeles 


Santa Ana 


BS Zoology 


AB Geography 


AB History 


AB English 


tsf: Coll. of the Se 


- tsf: Coll. of the Se-tsf: UC Berkeley 


tsf: UC Irvine 


quoias 


quoias 


Honors Program 


Kappa AlphaTheta 


Varsity Track 


Dykstra Hall 




Tutorial Project 


Life 






Cal. Club 


STRACHAN, 


STRATHMAN, 


STRASBURGER, 


STRAUS, JOEL 


SHIRLEY 


RANDY 


RITA 


North Hollywood 


Los Altos Hills 


San Bernardino 


Long Beach 


AB History 


AB History 


BS Physical 


AB Art History 


Titan House, Pres. 


tsf: UC Davis 


Education 


tsf: Cal St. Long 


ASUCLft Rep. '68 


Alpha Gamma Delta tsf: San Bernardino Beach 




Bruin Belles 


Valley J C 


Newman Club 




Anchors 




Bruin Young 
Democrats 




STRAUSS, DAVID STRONG, SUSAN 


1 STUBBS, 


STURGES, 


Porterviile 


Santa Ana 


GEORGIA 


CHARLES 


AB 


AB Geography 


Rosamond 


Los Angeles 




Alpha Gamma DeltaAB Mathematics 






Anchors, Pres. 


tsf; AntelopeValley 




Anchor Drill Team JC 






Sophomore 


Athena, Treas. 






Sweethearts 


Intramurals 
Sports Week 
Tutorial Project 





STUZ, SHARON SUGANO, DAVID SUGANO, GAYLE SUGETA.AMY 
Sherman Oaks Long Beach Los Angeles Los Angeles 

AB Sociology AB Mathematics AB Social Sciences AB Design 

Mardi Gras Commtsf: Long Beach CC for Elementary 
Bruinettes University Chorus Teachers 

BCF, Pres. tsf: LACC 

Nisei Bruin Club 



SUSNOW, 


SWENSON, TAI, STEVEN 


TAKASAKI, 


ROBERT 


SUSAN Manhattan Beach ROBERT 


San Francisco 


Hicksville, N.Y. 


Reedley 


AB Economics 


tsf: Boston U. 


BS Engineering 


Phi Sigma Delta 


Kappa Kappa 


tsf: Reedley JC 


Mardi Gras Comm 


L Gamma Gamma 


Sproul Hall 


Homecoming 


Monte Carlo 




Comni 


Homecoming 




Ethnomusicology 


Mardi Gras 
Spring Sing 




TAMMINGA, 


TANAKA,TAKASHI TANG, JOHN 


TANNENBERG, 


ERNEST 


MBA Business Los Angeles 


JOHN 


Chicago, III. 


Administration BS Physics 


Studio City 


AB Sociology 


Sigma Pi Sigma 


AB Political Science 


tsf: BakersfieldJC 


Judo Club VP 


tsf: UC Santa 


Alpha Gamma 




Barbara 


Sigma 






Mensa 






Phenomenon of 






Man Project 







bachelor and graduate degrees 



TARLOW, MARY 


TASOFF,JACK 


TATOR, STEVEN 


TEAL, JOHN 


Portland, Oregor 


1 Whittier 


Sherman Oaks 


Fullerton 


AB Social Science AB Political ScienceAB Economics 


AB Sociology 


for Elementary 


Theta Xi 




tsf: UC Irvine 


Teachers 


Mardi Gras Enter 




Sigma Chi 


tsf; UC Davis 


tainment Booths 






Communications 


Chmn. 






Bd.Sec. 


KLA Promotions 






CalClub 


Director 

Mardi Gras Publi 

city Comm 






TEITELBAUM, 


TEMPLAR, 


TENENBOM, 


TEREN, AUDREY 


CYLI 


MARTHA 


MARCIA 


Lakewood 


Palm Springs 


Arcadia 


Phoenix 


AB Psychology 


AB Social ScienceAB Design 


AB Geography 


Phi Sigma Sigma, 


for Elementary 


tsf: UC Santa 




Pres. 


Teachers 


Barbara 




AWS Pres. 




Gamma Phi Beta 




CalClub 




Dean's List 




Mortar Board 
Prytaneans 
Psychology 
Honors Pgm 


TESHIMA, JANICE THERRIEN, 


THOMAS, 


THOMAS, 


Oxnard 


SUZANNE 


CHARLES 


DANNY 


AB History 


Oxnard 


Whittier 


Tarzana 


tsf: San Jose 


AB English 


AB Economics 


AB Zoology 


St. Coll. 


Cultural Con> 


Alpha Tau Omeg; 


i,tsf: PiercJC 




missioner, Sproul 


Pres. 


Sima Nu 




Hedrick Hall 


Kelps 


Dean's List 




House Advisor 




Frosh Track 
Cross Country 
Intramural Sports 


THOMAS, 


THOMAS, HELEN 


THOMPSON, 


THOMPSON, 


DAVID 


Orange 


BRENDA 


CHARLES 


La Crescenta 


AB English 


Los Angeles 


Fresno 


AB Mathematics 


tsf: WestmontColl. BS Nursing 


BS Mechanical 


Beta Theta Pi, V.P. Gamma Phi Beta 


Alpha Tau Delta 


Engineering 


Dean's List 


Lambda Chi Alpha SNACC Rep. 


tsf: Fresno St. Coll. 


Fresh Baseball 


Little Sister 


Nursing Recruit- 


Tau Beta Pi 




Shell and Oar 


ment for Minority Engineering Soc. 






Students 


ofUC 






Student Health 


ASME 






Project '68 




THOMPSON, 


THOMPSON, 


THORSEN, CAROL THRIFT, JAMES 


LAIRD 


REBECCA 


Santa Cruz 


Ventura 


Mission Hills 


Fresno 


AB History 


BS Mechanical 


AB Astronomy & 


AB Pre-Social 


tsf: Cabriilo Coll. 


Engineering 


Physics 


Welfare 


Anchors 


tsf: Ventura J C 


Phi Eta Sigma 


tsf: Fresno St. Coil. 




Sigma Pi Sigma 


Phrateres 






Computer Club 









THURSDALE, TICKER, NEIL TIMSON, 

DAVID Los Angeles ELAINEA 

Rochester AB Political Science Westchester 

AB Motion Pictures Ski Club AB English 

tsf; Oakland U. Surf Club 
Asher Student 
Foundation 
CSO 

Roger Kyes Scho- 
larship, University 
Scholar, Oakland U 



TOLENTINO, 
LUCIO 

Montebello 
BS Chemistry 
Pershing Rifles 



TOM,SUEY 
Los Angeles 



TOMALAS, ROGER TOMKE, 
Reseda MELISSE 

AB Political Science Los Angeles 
AB Geography 
Alpha Delta Chi 
Pi Gamma Mu 
Dean's List 
Honors Program 



TORGAN, 
SHERMAN 

Los Angeles 
AB Sociology 
tsf: LACC 



TORKELSON, 
LANAII 

Garden Grove 
AB Economics 
tsf: UC Berkeley 
Rally Comm 
UCLA Computer 
Club 



TORRES, BENIVA TOUGH, BEVERLY TOWE,JOE 

Los Angeles Scottsville, Ken. 

AB Political Science AB Mathematics 

tsf: SMCC tsf: SMCC 

Alpha Phi 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




TOWNSEND, 



TOYAMA, 



RANDY RONALD 

Bakersf leld Los Angeles 

AB Mathematics AB Design 
tsf: Bakersfleld JC Omega Sigma Tau 
Tutorial Project Nisei Bruin Club 



TRIMBLE, FAY TRUAX, 



Los Angeles 
AB History 



RICHARD 

Los Angeles 
BS Business 
Theta Chi 
Distinguished 
Military Student 
Army ROTC 
Varsity Rifle Team 



TUNG, FRANCIS 



TRUESDELL, TULLY, 

aviva MARGARET 

Ottawa, Canada San Gabriel 
AB Public Service AB Zoology 
Delta Phi Epsilon 
Treas.,Asst. House 
Mngr. 
Phrateres 
Mardi Gras Co- 
Chmn. 
Homecoming 

TURNER, ELLEN TURNER, JUDY TYSDAL, ROD 



Los Angeles 
AB Sociology 
tsf: UC Santa 
Barbara 



Bakersfleld Santa Ana 

AB Matemtics AB Economics 
tsf: Bakersfleld JC Sigma Chi, Pres. 
Sproul Hall, Resi- Varsity Baseball 
dence Assoc. 
Campus Crusade 
fo Christ 



TURCHEN, 
GERALDINE 
Los Angeles 
AB Psychology 
tsf: Cal. St. LA 
AWARE 

Award of Merit for 
Outstanding 
Achievement 
June, 1967 

TZENGMING, 
CHEN 

Los Angeles 
PhD 



UNO, SANDRA 

Los Angeles 
AB History 



UYEMURA, 
NANCY 

Los Angeles 
AB Design 
Chi Alpha Delta 



VADNAIS, 
THOMAS 

San Mateo 
BS Economics 
Coll. of San Mateo 



VALDES, DORA 
Los Angeles 



VANBUSKIRK, 


VAN COTT, 


VAUPEL, 


VIA, SUZANNE 


JAMS 


CAROLINE 


MICHAEL 


Santa Ana 


Encino 


Santa Monica 


Whittier 


BS Nursing 


AB History 


AB Zoology 


AB Economics 


tsf: NA 


tsf: Los Angeles 


Life 


tsf: UC Santa 


ISC Folk dancing 


Valley Coll. 




Barbara 


Mountaineers 


Alpha Delta Pi V.P. 








Blue Key Princess 








Ten Best Dressed 








AWS Fashion Bd. 








AEPi Calendar Girl 








VIGIL, ROBERT 


VOGEL, RICHARDVORIS, TON! 


WAECHTER, 


San Diego 


Oceanside 


Inglewood 


MICHAEL 


AB Psychology 




AB Geography 


Berlin, Germany 


Sociology 




Sabers 


MBA Management 


Sigma Chi 






Alpha Kappa Psi, 


6 years & 22 thou- 






Pres. 


sand for this? 









WAKALOPULOS, 


WALKER, JUDY 


WALLACE, PENNY WALLET, DOREEN 


GEORGE 


Red! 


lands 


Palos Verdes Fresno 


Monterey Park 






AB English AB Psychology 


BS Systems 






tsf: Colorado Coll. tsf: Fresno St. Coll. 


tsf: East LA J C 






Kappa Kappa 


AA Degree/Honors 






Gamma 


Dean's List 








WALTHER, 


WAN, 


HO-PONG 


WANG, WARD, PAMELA 


SUSAN 


Los Angeles 


PAULETTE Los Angeles 


Pasadena 


MS 




Pacific Palisades AB History 


AB Psychology 






AB Political Science tsf: U of Washing- 


tsf: UC Riverside 






Alpha Xi Delta ton 


Psi Chi 






Angel Flight Alpha Chi Omega 

ISC 

Alpha Epsilon PI 

Calendar Girl 

Uni-prep counselor 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



WATSON, JANE 


WATSON, NANCY WATTS, 


WEBB, CAROLYN 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


JEANIE 


Compton 


AB linguistics 


AB Economics 


La Canada 


AB English 


Alpha Mu Gammc 


i tsf: SMCC 


AB Geography 


tsf: U of Redlands 


Sailing Club 


Omicron Delta 


tsf: Glendale Coll.CalClub 


Water Ski Club 


Epsilon 


Alpha Delta PI 


BSU 


Folk Dancing 


Phi Chi Theta 




House Advisor 
Project Discovery 
UniCamp Bd. 


WEBB, DENNIS 


WEBB.WALLIS 


WEBER, LENORE 


WEBER, 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Beverly Hills 


TIMOTHY 


BS Electronics 


AB 


AB Art History 


Arcadia 






tsf: SFVSC 


AB History 


Theta Xi 






Alpha Gamma 
Omega 



WEBSTER, 


WEINER, 


WEINGARTEN, 


WEINHOUSE, 


BRUCE 


IRENE 


SUSIE 


DONALD 


Anaheim 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


Los Angeles 


AB English 


MLS Library Service A B Geography 


AB English 


NROTC 


Chmn.of Drop-Ins 


Sigma Delta Tau 

Treas. 

Sophomore 

Sweethearts 

Student Welfare 

Comm 


, tsf: UC Berkeley 


WEINSTEIN, 


WEISBERG, 


WEISS, LOREN 


WEISSMAN, 


ILENE 


LAUREN 


Riverside 


SUZANNE 


Los Angeles 


Encino 


AB Psychology 


Detroit 


AB Geography 


AB History 


Blue Key 


AB Sociology 


Phi Sigma Sigma tsf: SFVSC 


MardI Gras 


tsf: Michigan St. U 


Bruinettes, Spurs 


Exec Comm. 




Dean's List 




Kelps 




WELLS, SUSAN 


WENDT, 


WEXLER, 


WEXLER, 


San Diego 


EMILY-ANN 


GARY 


HAROLD 


AB Sociology 


Arcadia 


Culver City 


Los Angeles 


PI Beta Phi 


AB Philosophy 


AB Economics 


AB Psychology 


Honors Program 


Alpha Gamma DeitaPhI Eta Sigma 


tsf: SFVSC 


Dean's List 


Sophomore 

Sweethearts 

Sabers 




Tutorial Project 


WHANG, JAMES 


WHATLEY, 


WHITE, ALICE 


WHITED, ELLEN 


Los Angeles 


CORELLA 


Los Angeles 


Pasadena 


BS Physics 


South Pasadena AB History 


BS Nursing 




AB Design -Pictorial 


Bruin Belles 




tsf: Pasadena CC 


Homecoming 








Queen Finalist '67 








Alpha Tau Omega 








Little Sister 


WHITEHEAD, 


WHITELOCK, 


WHITMER, 


WHITNEY, 


DANIELLE 


HELEN 


GAYLE 


JANET 


Long Beach 


Long Beach 


San Diego 


Los Angeles 


AB Spanish 


AB Geography 


AB English 


MLS Library Service 


Gamma Phi Beta Dean's List 


Alpha Delta Chi 


Delta Phi Epsilon 


Project Amigos, 


Women's Choir 


Bruin Christian 




REC 


Southern Campu 


s Fellowship 




Shell and Oar 


University Chorus 




Water Ski Club 








Sigma Chi 








Little Sister 








WIBKER, LINDA 


WICHMAN, 


WICHMANN, 


WIEMEYER, 


Van Nuys 


CATHLEEN 


CLAIRE 


DIANE 


AB Business 


Saugus 


Saugus 


Hollywood 


Economics 


AB Psychology 


AB Psychology 


AB Sociology 


tsf: San Jose 




tsf: UC Irvine 


Alpha Phi, 


St. Coll. 




Sproul Hall 


Record. Sec. 


Sigma Kappa 






Theta Delta Chi 
Little Sister, Pres. 




bachelor and graduate degrees 




WIESBLOTT, 


WIGODSKY, 


BUNNI 


HELENA 


La Jolla 


Whittier 


AB Design 


AB Dance 


Kappa Kappa 




Gamma 




Bruin Belles 




Blue Key Queen 





WILHELM, JAMES 



WILD, EDGAR 
Los Angeles 
BS Engineering 
tsf: lACC 
Tau Beta Pi 
Rally Comm 



WILKES, PAMELA WILLIAMS, WILLIAMS JR., WILLSON, PERRY 

Pacific Palisades CAMERON ROBERT Piedmont 

ABArt Los Angeles Long Beach AB History 

tsf: UCSB JDLaw AB Psychology Sigma Alpha 

Kappa Alpha Theta UCLA Law Review tsf: U of Santa Clara Epsilon 
Phi Beta Kappa Kelps 

Pi Gamma Mu Blue Key 

UCLA Rugby 



WILSON, JACK 


WINDON, 


WINTERNITZ, 


WISDOM, 


Troy, Michigan 


CHARLES 


JENTA 


MARJORIE 


AB Economics 


Hollywood 


Los Angeles 




Theta Xi 


AB Political Science MA 




Surf Club 


tsf: U of Texas 

CalClub 

Unicamp 

8SU 

Bruin Young 

Democrats 






WITTKOPP, 


WITUS, 


WOESTEMEYER, 


WOJAK, 


GARRETT 


CHARMAINE 


LINDA 


WALTER 


San Jose 


Bakersfield 


Yorba Linda 


Reseda 


BS Engineering 


AB Psycholggy 


BS Physical 


AB Economics 


Sigma Alpha 


tsf: Bakersfield JC Education 


Alpha Kappa Psi 


Epsilon, V.P. 


Alpha Chi Omega tsf: UC Riversid( 


2 


Varsity Swimmini 


g 


Alpha Gamma Delta 


Varsity Water Polo 


Badminton Team 




Blue Key 




Sabers 

Bruin Christian 
Fellowshp 




WOLFUS, 


WONG, HELEN 


WOOD, 


WOOD, JUDY 


DANIEL 


Los Angeles 


GEORGE 


North Hollywood 


Los Angeles 


AB Psychology 


Pasadena 


AB Psychology 


MBA Finance 


tsf: El CaminoColl.AB Psychology 


Kappa Kappa 


Associated Stu- 




tsf: Pasadena CC Gamma 


dents of Business 


Cal St. LA 


Mortar Board 


Association 




BCF 


California Club 


Blue Key 




Bible Study Pres. AWS Fashion Bd. 








Chairman 








Prytaneans 


WOODS, 


WOOLSTEN- 


WORSWICK, 


WRIGHT, 


NANCY 


CROFT,JANICE 


ANDREW 


CHESTER 


Palm Springs 


Glendale 


Palm Springs 


Los Angeles 


AB History 


AB Political Science BS Engineering 


MSW Social Welfare 


tsf: Dominican Coll. 


tsf: Coll. of the 





YANG, GARY 
Los Angeles 
MBA Business 
Administration 



YORK,TRUDI 

Portland, Oregon 
AB Political Science 
Pi Sigma Alpha 
Pre- Law Society 
Bruin Young 
Democrats 



Desert 
Golf 



YANG, YEE, ELAINE 

YING-CHUAN Los Angeles 

Hsinchu, Taiwan AB English 
PhD Physics Alpha Delta Chi 

"Algebraic Method 
in the Study of 
Relativistic Two- 
Body Problems: 
Part I Bethe-Sal- 
peter Equation, 
Part HOuasipoten- 
YOSHITOMI, YOUNG, JANETTE 
SANDRA El Centre 

Los Angeles BS History 
BS Nursing tsf: Cal. Western 

Alpha Tau Delta 
Bruin Christian 
Fellowship 



YEUNG, EMILY 
Arcadia 



YOUNG, JUDY 

Coalinga 
AB Pre- Social Wel- 
fare 

tsf: Coalinga J C 
Bruin Christian 
Fellowship 
Amigos Tutorial 
Project 



bachelor and graduate degrees 



YOUNG, MICHELE YOUNG, 


YOUSSEF, 


YUEN, JOYCE 


North Hollywood 


SHERRYLYN 


FREIDOUN 


Los Angeles 


AS English 


Taft 




AB English 


tsf: LA Valley Coll. 


AB Psychology 




Sproul Hall 


Kappa Delta 


Sigma Kappa 




Alpha Mu Gamma 


Free Student 


Research Assist. 




ChiDelt»Pi 


Union, V.P. 


to Dr. P.R.A. May 






UCLA Young Re- 


Delta Tau Delta 






publicans 


Little Sister 






Coast Federal 


State Scholar 






Savings Student 


Volunteer Ther 






YUNGER, 


ZAKIAN, 


ZAMARIN, 


ZAPTIFF, CARL 


BARBARA 


KATHLEEN 


RONALD 


Artesia 


Ojai 


Los Angeles 


Sherman Oaks 


AB Pictorial Arts 


AB Sociology 


AB English-Elem. 


AB Psychology 


Delta Sigma Phi 


tsf; U of Santa 


Education 


tsf: U of Iowa 




Clara 


tsf: SMCC 


PhiEpsilonPi.Soc. 


Alpha Chi Omega 


Rally Comm. 


Chmn. (Iowa) 




Anchors 




Bruin Young 




Phi Gamma Delta 




Democrats 




Little Sister 




Project Aid 
Intefraternity 




ZARETT, RUSSELL ZEIMER, JODY 


ZIDE,GAY 


ZIKRATCH,ALEXA 


Los Angeles 


San Mateo 


Ventura 


Riverside 


AB 


AB Design 


AB English 


AB History 




Alpha Omicron Pi 


1 


tsf: UCSB 




Anchors 




Pi Beta Phi 




Shell and Oar 




Bruin Belles 




Spring Sing Exec 








Committee 








Mardi Gras Comm 






ZIMAN, ALLAN 


ZIMMERMAN, 


ZOLEN,GAIL 


ZUNINO, ELLEN 


Beverly Hills 


KURT 


Los Angeles 


Duarte 


AB Economics 


Red lands 


AB Anthropology 


AB Political Science 


Phi Sigma Delta 


MS Operations 
Management 
Phi Eta Sigma 
BSCum Laude 
UCLAEngr. 
Tau Beta Pi 
UCLA Football, 
Letterman (3 yr.) 


tsf: LACC 


Tutorial Project 




subject index 

Acacia, 274 

Administrators, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32. 
33,34,35,36,37,38,39 

Alpha Chi Omega, 323 

Alpha Chi Sigma, 328 

Alpha Delta Chi, 321 

Alpha Delta Pi, 234 

Alpha Epsilon Phi, 236 

Alpha Epsilon Pi, 276 

Alpha Gamma Delta, 238 

Alpha Gamma Omega, 278 

Alpha Kappa Psi,330 

Alpha Omicron Pi, 240 

Alpha Phi, 242 

Alpha Tau Omega, 280 

Alpha Xi Delta, 244 

Alumni, 40,41,42,43 

Anchors, 332 

Angel, Flight, 329 

Asher House, 325 

Associated Students Speakers Pro- 
gram, 94-109; staff 94 

ASUCLAManagers, 126, 127 

Athena House, 322 

Basketball, 158-189 

Baseball, 204, 205 

Beta Theta Pi, 282 

Blarney House, 322 

Blue Key, 334 

Board of Control, 68 

Brain Research, 44, 45, 46, 47 

Bruin Belles, 338 

Bruinettes, 336 

Bruin Publications, 110-121 

Bruin week, 78,79 

Cal Club, 337 

Campus Activities, 76,77 

Campus Scenes, 24, 25, 26, 27 

Chancellor, 32, 34, 35 

Chi Alpha Delta, 340 

Chimes, 341 

Chi Omega, 246 

Christian Science Organization, 342 

Communications Board, 110,111 

Cross-Country, 154, 155 

Cultural Affairs Commission, 74 

Daily Bruin, 112-115 

Dance, 48,49,50,51 

Daphne House, 323 

Delta Delta Delta, 248 

Delta Gamma, 250 

Delta Phi Epsilon, 252 

Delta Sigma Phi, 279 

Delta Tau Delta, 284 

Dykstra Hail, 318, 319 



Elections Board, 70 
English Honor Society, 342 
Exceptional Children's Tutorial Pro- 
ject, 87,88,89 
Finance Commission, 71 
Football, 130-145 
Gamma Phi Beta, 254 
Graduate Students Association, 69 
Gymnastics, 190,191 
Hedrick Hall, 319-321 
Himalaya House, 320 
Hydra House, 323 
Interfraternity Council. 272 
Intramurals, 212, 213 
Junior Panhellenic, 230 
Kappa Alpha Theta, 256 
Kappa Delta, 258 
Kappa Kappa Gamma, 260 
Karate, 211 
King Memorial, 52, 53 
KLA Radio, 118 
Lambda Chi Alpha, 286 
Living Groups, 226-325 
London House, 319 
MardiGras, 82,83 
Monte Carlo Night, 80,91 
Navy R.O.T.C, 333 
Nisei Bruin Club, 344 
Organizations, 326-355 
Panhellenic, 228,229 
Phi Delta Theta, 288 
Phi Gamma Delta, 290 
Phi Kappa Psi, 292 
Phi Kappa Sigma, 294 
Phi Mu, 270 
Phi Sigma Delta, 296 
Phi Sigma Sigma, 262 
Photographic Department, 119 
Phrateres, 343 
Pi Beta Phi, 264 
Project Amigos, 90, 91 
Project Ceylon, 124, 125 
Project India, 122,123 
Prytaneans, 327 
Rally Committee, 348 
Rieber Hall, 322 
Rugby, 198-203 



396 



Sabers, 350 

Seniors and Graduates, 356 
Shalimar House, 319 
Shell and Oar, 351 
Sierra House, 318 
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 298 
Sigma Alpha Mu, 300 
Sigma Chi, 301 
Sigma Delta Tau, 266 
Sigma Kappa, 268 
Sigma Nu, 302 
Sigma Pi, 304 
Soccer, 150-153 
Sophomore Sweethearts, 352 
Sports, 128-224 
Southern Campus, 116,117 
Sproul Hall, 332,323 
Spurs, 354 
Stevens House, 324 
Student Activities, 54-127 
Student Body President, (undergra- 
duate) 62, (graduate) 69 
Student Cultural Commission, 75 
Student Legislative Council, 62-67 
Swimming, 206,207 
Tara House, 318 
Tennis, 208,209 
Theta Delta Chi, 306 
Theta Kappa Phi, 355 
TheteXi,308 
Track, 192-197 
Triangle, 310 
Tutorial Project, 84, 85, 86 
UCLA Amigos, 90,91 
Uni-Camp, 92,93 
Uni-Camp Board, 354 
URA, 218-225 
Volleyball, 210 
Water Polo, 146-149 
Weyburn Hall 323, 324 
Weyburn Student Council, 324 
Women's Inter-collegiate Athletics, 
214-217 

Wrestling, 156, 157 
Zeta Beta Tau, 312 
ZetaPsi,314 



name inaex 



d. 



Abe, George, 358 

Abell, Jeffrey. 358 

Abelman, Steve, 1 1 8 

Aberman, Juditfi, 358 

Abrofiam, Dennis, 318. 358 

Abroms, Gayle. 266, 352 

Abrams, Rhonda, 319 

Abramson, Larry, 330 

Actior, Joe, 274 

Achuff, John. 290 

Ackemon, Chris, 351 

Ackerman, David, 301, 358 

Acosto, Jose, 358 

Acton, Ann. 234 

Adair, Steven, 274 

Adams, Catherine, 358 

Adashek, Anne, 262, 358 

Adelmon, Bob, 296 

Adkins, Wilham, 274 

Adier, Betty; 252 

Adler, Diane, 236, 358 

AdIer, Eileen, 266 

Adler, Shane, 252 

Adler, Steve, 77 

Agon, Shirley, 358 

Aggen, Beverly, 358 

Agpolzo, Adrienne, 358 

Aheorn, 31 8 

Aihara, Doug. 345 

Aisley, Lois, 236 

Ajioka, Phil, 306 

Albano, Nestor, 320 

Alberts, Chris, 246 

Alberts, Christopher, 358 

Alborg, Tom, 318 

Alcindor, Lew, 1 60 

Alden, Phyllis, 358 

Alderete, Chris, 250 

Alder. Curt, 292 

Alderson. Kathy. 258, 351 

Aldnch, Bill, 298 

Alessini, Paul. 284 

Alexander, Patricia, 358 

Alford, JoAnn. 246, 358 

Alfred, Jean Robert, 358 

Alhandy, Robert, 358 

Alioto. Joseph. I 04 

Alkov, Leonard, 358 

Allan. Edward, 358 

Alleman Cathy. 250 

Allen. Bruce, 282 

Allen. James, 358 

Allen, Nancy, 264 

Allen, Randal, 274 

Allewitz, Barbaro. 358 

Allison. Don, 68 

Allison, Joe, 308 

Alpcren, Julie, 76, 236 

Alpert, Karen, 358 

Alpert, Morco, 324 

Altmon, Jeffrey, 304 

Altfeld, Susan, 358 

Alttouwian, Anita, 319, 343. 352 

Alvarez, Barbara, 66 

Ames, Denyse, 246 

Amin, Mutwakil, 358 

Amir. Nogo, 266 

Amsterdam, Charles, 358 



Andersen, Robert, 278 
Anderson, Doug, 280 
Anderson, Doug, 292 
Anderson, Frank, 280, 358 
Anderson, Gary, 301 
Anderson, Koren, 244 
Anderson, Kathleen, 358 
Anderson, Linda, 358 
Anderson, Missy, 351 
Anderson, Pat, 231 
Anderson, Scott, 1 18, 320 
Anderson, Sharon, 260, 352 
Anderson, Teri, 358 
Andonian, Edouord, 334. 358 
Andrew, Michael R., 318, 333, 358 
Anduri, David, 274 
Angus, David, 318 
Annis, John, 308 
Antablin, Jeanne, 231 
Antoniak, Helen E., 359 
Apperson, John, 284 
Applebaum, Denise, 319 
Applegate, Joe, 325 
Applegate, Robert, 325 
Appold, Karen, 359 
Apodoco, Greg, 320 
Apodoca, Tom, 298 
Arbit, Beryl, 240, 352 
Arcuri, Jim, 302 
Arfc, Fay, 322, 336 
Armstrong, Frank, 280 
Armstrong, Judy, 246 
Armstrong, Mike, 282 
Arroj, Judy, 66 
Arterberry, Ruth, 359 
Arth, Greg, 294 
Arth, Sydnee, 246 
Arzt, Judi,270 
Ash, Sandra, 231 
Ashin, Debbie, 1 13 
Ashmore, Wendy, 359 
Atkinson, Byron H., 68 
Atwater, Donald, 359 
Audino, Cindy, 242 
Audino, Joseph, 288 
Austin, John, 306 
Austin, Nancy, 242, 338 
Avery, Earl, 64, 65, 84 
Avery, Janis, 264 
Axelrod, Kathy, 236 
Ayers, Ann, 254, 359 
Ayers, Dona, 280 
Ayres, Jane, 359 

Babb, Deana, 322 
Babcock, Jim, 318 
Baber, Rick, 274 
Bacalski, Dan, 359 
Bachmon, Tom, 310, 359 
Bagger, Jerry, 286 
Bagladi, Julio K., 359 
Bognard, Laurie, 258, 332, 351 
Boily. Abe, 70, 71 
Bailey, Phil, 310, 359 
Bailey, Robert, 294 
Boillargeon, Michael, 314 
Baker, Bonnie, 244 
Baker, Cheryl L., 268, 359 



a 



397 



b- 



c 



Baker, Frank, 355 

Boker, J. Michoel, 359 

Baker, J. Michoel. 359 

Baker. Martha, 248 

Boker, Mike, 286 

Bolosco, Joe, 323 

Bolch, MorylLinn, 359 

Bold, Doug, 308 

Boldwin, Bob, 284 

Baldwin, Venito. 268, 359 

Bole, Susan, 359 

Boll, Steve, 280 

Bollonce, Linda, 270. 332 

Baltord, Maurice. 341 

Bollonoff. Lynn, 252 

Baltierio, Morie, 332 

Boltierra, Morio, 240 

Bondy, Eorl, 373 

Bonker, Dovid, 301 

Bonks, Jim. 320 

Bonkes, Marilee, 256, 338 

Bonkes. Melody, 256 

Borojos, Alice, Lorroine, 359 

Borbon, Borboro, 262 

Boriteou, Jock, 298 

Borker, Christine, 260 

Borker. Fred, 324 

Borker, Glenn, 298 

Barkley, Suson, 359 

Borno, Matt, 359 

Bornes, 62 

Barnes, Patrick L.. 63 

Bornett, Denise. 359 

Bornett. Koren, 359 

Bornett, Lourel, 244, 352, 354 

Bornett, Morion, 238, 332 

Borros, Art. 278 

Borreto, Morgoret, 234, 338, 352, 354 

Borrick, Roger, 359 

Borrie, Judith, 256, 338, 359 

Barry, Eileen, 250 

Bortel, Cathy, 270 

Bortel, Roberta, 319 

Borlh, Roy, 302, 334 

Bortlett, Vicki, 232 

Bortolme, Woyne, 308. 359 

Barton. Suson, 73, 248 

Borstow, Brion, 320 

Baskin, Alexis Karen, 359 

Baskin, Susie, 236, 336 

Bass, Lorry. 312 

Boss, Sue, 322 

Botovio, Leslie, 351 

Botoon, Irmo, 359 

Battles, Bill, 294 

Baughn, Jeon, 268 

Boughn, Margaret J., 359 

Bourn, Robert, 294, 359 

Baur, Geri, 260 

Baxter. G., 71 

Boyer, Ronald, 288. 359 

Beard. Di Anne. 260 

Bearden, Bettie. 359 

Beoubien, Mary, 246 

Beaumont, Pot, 319 

Beber, Dione, 359 

Bedier. Kothleen Brooke-Ellen, 359 

Beck, Alan, 314 

Becker, Borboro, 336 

Becker, Doreen, 360 

Becker. Marilyn. 322 

Behmon, Nodine. 348 



Behrslock. Sue. 360 

Beisser. Edward, 360 

Bell, Jockie. 256 

Bement, Nana, 360 

Bender, Noncy Suson, 360 

Bendudiz, Sidney, 360 

Benhom. John, 126, 127 

Bennett, Beth, 266 

Bennett, Jeanne, 319 

Bennett, Joyce, 75 

Benson, Gory, 312 

Benson, Lorry, 302 

Benson, Suson, 73, 248 

Bent. Daniel R.. 360 

Bentley, Brion, 314 

Benveniste, Bonnie, 360 

Benveniste, Connie, 319 

Benvenuti, Dove, 76 

Berck, Phillip, 274 

Berg, Jim 320 

Berg, Michael, 360 

Berg, Roberta, 252 

Berger. Debe, 270 

Berger, Karen, 319 

Berghell, Robert, 334 

Bergstedt, John, 282 

Bergstrom, Ed, 292 

Bergstrom, Shirley, 260 

Berkhemer, Elizabeth, 360 

Berkness, Ruth Ann, 268 

Berkowitz, Zoch, 300 

Bermon, Lynn, 262 

Berman, Richord, 360 

Bernords, Sandy, 260 

Berngord. Russ. 312 

Bernstein. Gory Dovid. 360 

Bernstein. Paul. 312 

Berry. Mortha. 264. 352, 254, 255 

Bersinger, John, 301 . 360 

Bessemer, Chris, 320 

Betson, Cheryl Eloine, 360 

Bettego, Michoel, 301 

Bettis, Jack, 360 

Belts, William, 284 

Belzler, Morty, 256 

Bickenboch, Paul, 298 

Bidermon, Irene, 360 

Bierl, Denice, 250 

Biesheuvel, Edith, 360 

Bigelow, Anne, 231 

Bills, Linda, 360 

Birdsoll. Suson. 360 

Birken. Les. 318 

Birkholm, Ginger, 350 

Bisceglio. Bruno, 290 

Bishof, Vincent. 288 

Bishop, Bill, 282, 360 

Bishop, Carolyn, 360 

Bishop, Janice O., 360 

Bishop, Mourene, 270 

Biswell, Eric, 306 

Blochmon, Terri, 266 

Block, Barbara, 352 

Black, Belindo, 270, 332 

Block, Butty, 250, 351 

Blockwell, Sue, 238, 360 

Blogdon, Doug, 1 1 

Bloir. Connie. 264 

Blanco. Borboro. 323 

Blond. Christine. 248 

Blonton. Bob. 300 

Blonton. Morv. 310 



Blosdell. Koren. 360 
Blase. Emily, 322 
Blott, Jackie. 236 
Bloylock. Carol, 351 
Block, Jomes, 290 
Block. Ron, 300 
Bloodgood. Georgene, 355 
Bloom, Dovid. M.. 360 
Bloom. Ellen. 336 
Bloom. John. 276 
Bloomfield. Ronold, 360 
Blout, Bev, 264, 360 
Blumenthal, Russ, 282 
Boord, Vicki Anne, 360 
Boehnlein, Rito, 360 
Boessler, Jerry, 330 
Beossler, Juergen, 360 
Bogomoz, Elizobeth, 323, 360 
Bohnstodt, Borboro, 260, 341 
Boiling, Rex, 278 
Bonoff, F., 71 
Book, Suen, 330 
Booth, Andreo, 250 
Booth, Carol, 260 
Booth, Ellie, 238 
Borden, Goile, 254 
Borges, Cheri, 31 9 
Bornino, Bruno, 348 
Borniorno, Mike, 282 
Bostie, Down, 319 
Bothwell, Solly, 360 
Bottjer, Fritz, 284 
Boughn, Debbie, 238, 350 
Boughton, Steve, 298 
Boumbullion, Paul, 75 
Bow, Jim, 348 
Bowdecker, Jim, 302 
Bowles. Christopher. 274 
Bowmon, Andrea, 266 
Bowmon, Donald, 68 
Bowmon. Janet, 268 
Bowmon, Marilee, 242 
Boyne, Debbie. 254, 332, 338 
Bracomonte, D'Arcy Jane, 361 
Bracy, Belvo, 361 
Broddock, Robert L., Jr., 333 
Bradley, Dove, 323 
Brodley, Kay. 246 
Bradley. Tom, 109 
Brodshow, Linda, 250, 338 
Brody, Fred, 302 
Bergman, Keith, 312 
Braithwaite, Sue Ann, 256, 338 
Brandt, Borboro, 361 
Bronnen, Rolph, 3 1 8 
Bronner. Mark, 276 
Brant, Corlotto, 260 
Brosheor, Noncy, 248 
Broun, Morgie, 266, 341 
Braunstein, Borry, 296 
Breckon, Thomos, 333 
Breelond, Vicky, 361 
Brejensky, Andreo, 361 
Brennon, Jerry, 282 
Brewer, Monroe, 278 
Brewster, Sharon, 242, 352 
Bridwell, Kent, 298 
Brightmon, Cathy, 361 
Brightmon, Howord, 71, 286, 361 
Britt. Koren. 242. 352 
Brittle, Chris, 280 
Britvon, Jerry, 296 



398 



Brizendine, Williom, 278 

Brizolis, Demetrius, 361 

Broodheod, Cheri, 246, 251 

Brocoff, Lynne, 260 

Brodle, Karen, 262 

Brogon. Michael. 318 

Broker. Jeffrey. 361 

Bronson. D,. 71 

Brooks, Ann, 232, 338, 347, 361 

Brooks, Wendy, 338, 352 

Brown, Adrienne, 236, 336 

Brown, Bruce, 361 

Brown, Dove, 320 

Brown, Dennis. 333, 361 

Brown, Gory, 286 

Brown, Jonie. 351, 352 

Brown, C. Louise, 361 

Brown, Marion, 361 

Brown, Mario, 244 

Brown, Marsha, 266 

Brown, Pot, 232 

Brown, Patricia, 361 

Brown, Rondo, 236 

Brown, Suson, 361 

Browne, Terrence, 342 

Browning, Ed, 292 

Brownstein, Jon, 266, 354 

Bruce, Suzanne, 270 

Brugger, A.T., 68, 126 

Brungess, Lisa, 256 

Brunner, Laurel A., 250, 361 

Bruno, Gene. 274, 334 

Buchok, Ruben, 300 

Buchanan, John L., 361 

Buckley, George, 302, 361 

Budgor, Beno, 328 

Budnick. Richard, 300 

Buffington, Lourie, 250 

Bull, Mary Ann, 242 

Buller, Rich, 323 

Bunche, Ralph, 1 02 

Buntjer, Daniel K., 361 

Burgen, Karen, 354 

Burgess, Don, 302, 361 

Burkord, Gustov, 278, 361 

Burke, Craig, 292 

Burke, Tom, 284, 361 

Burkholter, Moyme, 343, 361 

Burkmon, John, 318 

Burnett, Borboro, 232, 361 

Burnett, Robert, 361 

Burns, Bonnie, 262 

Burns, Mike, 320 

Burr, Chorlene, 238, 332 

Burr, Suzonne, 238, 332 

Burris. Andrea, 325 

Burris, Nelson, 325, 361 

Burrow, Bud, 361 

Burt, Jocqueline, 361 

Burt, Leslies., 318, 361 

Burton, Mike. 292 

Bushner, Beverly, 72, 73, 343, 361 

Buss, Shirley, 256 

Butcher, Warren, 279 

BuHierus, Carlo, 258, 338 

Buller, Dorr ell, 302, 334 

Butler, Joe, 294 

Butler, Joel W., 361 

Butler, Ron, 292 

Butler, Shori, 362 

Buzzell, Kenneth, 333, 362 

Byrd, Gregory P., 362 

Byrne, Volerie, 260 




Caciuc, Marry I, 362 

Cady, Jim, 302 

Cain, Ken, 312 

Cairns, James, 282 

Caldwell, Dana, 362 

Caldwell, Kelly, 329 

Calkins, Wanda, 270 

Calloway, Jomes, 362 

Camacho, Daniel, 362 

Camarillo, Al, 294 

Campbell, Bob, 284 

Campbell, Ellen, 351 

Campbell, Joanne, 72, 73, 242, 352 

Campbell, Linda, 264 

Campbell, Patty, 324 

Campbell, Robert, 362 

Campbell, Roy, 320 

Canarelli, Lorry, 302, 334. 362 

Cannold, Mitchell, 1 18 

Cannon, Knox, 362 

Cono, Roberto, 362 

Carlson, Susan, 244 

Card, Sandra, 244 

Cardenas, Rich, 318 

Cardinolli, Marguerite, 254 

Carlson, Bob, 318, 355 

Carlson, Claire, 319 

Carlson, Leonard, 362 

Carpenter, Jody, 232 

Carpenter, Steve, 284 

Carr, Cotliy. 234 

Corr, Stephanie, 238, 332, 362 

Carrol, David, 284 

Coroll, Linda. 348 

Carroll, Susie, 232, 338, 341 

Carroll, Thomas, 362 

Carruthers, Connie, 362 

Carver, Rocky, 31 

Carter, Todd, 318 

Coscode, Phyllis, 244,350 

Casey, Donna, 258 

Caskey, Jim, 284 

Cassell, Cindy, 234 

Casselman. Scott, 323 

Cosselpussy, Steve, 318 

Casserly, Brian, 301 

Cassity, Camilla, 244 

Castleberry, Mary Jean, 362 

Castle, Dale, 320 

Coswetl, Charlie, 355 

Cotchings, Joan, 362 

Cate, Barbara, 258, 329 

Cauifield, Madeline, 362 

Cowley, Ken, 320 

Cereseto, Mike, 323 

Cervenok, Gloria, 234 

Chadwin, Richard, 362 

Choimson, Margaret, 362 

Chait, Jon, 296 

Chamberlain, Bobby, 362 

Chamberlain, Joe, 310 

Chan, Danny T.T., 330, 362 

Chan David, 362 

Chan, Eliza Kwok-Ying, 362 

Chon Kelly. 330 

Chan, Josie, 73, 234, 338, 354 

Chan, YeeKai. 362 

Chanawoter, Vichien, 362 

Chandler, Sandra, 362 

Chang, Charlie, 320 

Chang, Steve, 320 

Chapmon, Cathy, 258 

399 



c 



Chapmon, John W., 362 

Charnaw, Robert F,, 362 

Chase, Glen, 282 

Chose, John, 330. 362 

Chovoor, Jean, 362 

Choykowski, Jon E., 362 

Chozen, Sharon, 343 

Clien, Tsar Hwo, 363 

Cheng, Refer, 328 

Cherney, Nancy, 232, 363 

Chernow, Carolyn, 322, 343 

Cherry, Barbaro, 319 

Cherson, Grace. 363 

Chestnut!, Sherrie. 250 

Chi, KoHsin, 322 

Chiary, Dionne L., 72. 232, 363 

Chikn, Tom, 318 

Childress, Marks.. 363 

Chin, Roy, 318 

Chisholm, Michael, 363 

Cho, Stanley, 363 

Christen, Carol, 246 

Christen, Corol, 246 

Christensen, Kay, 246 

Chittivaranon, Vichoi, 318 

Chlod, Cheryl, 254 

Christensen, Don, 308 

Chongstituathono, Phisanu, 330 

Choo, C, 71 

Chooljian, Sandra. 238 

Chu, Aerin, 324 

Chu, Morgan, 62 

Chun, Cheng, 363 

Chung, Carol, 319 

Chung, George, 280 

Chung, Jonie, 319 

Church, Valerie. 260 

Ctfranic, Sue, 246. 351 

Clark. David Lee. 363 

Clark, Elaine, 363 

Clark, Jessie. 270 

Cline, Susanne, 363 

Clark. Terrell, 70, 71,84,85,242,347 

Clark. Will. 290 

Cleory, Robin, 260 

Cleaver, Eldridge, 99 

Clements, Chloe, 258, 351 

demons, John. 3 1 8 

Cleveland, A.G., 284 

Clevelond, Louise, 314 

Clinile, Carol, 256 

Clontz. Donna, 323, 363 

Clontz, Donno, 323 

Clontz, Lindo, 323 

Coody, Sue. 238, 341 

Cobb, Steve. 302 

Cockle. Bob. 298 

Cochran, Chris. 304 

CoHee, Terry, 77, 272, 286. 334 

Cogan, Phil. 110. 118 

Cohen, Arthur. 363 

Cohen, Joanne, 1 I 8 

Cohen, Jeff, 363 

Cohen, Nori, 266 

Cohen, Robert. 363 

Cohen, Trudy, 363 

Cohn, Donno, 73, 352 

Cohn. Ron, 318 

Cohn, Stephanie, 236 

Coker, Luanne, 363 

Colberg, Kris, 238 

Coklasure, Kothy. 254 



Cole, Jonis, 363 
Cole, Keren, 323 
Coleman. Janis, 240, 351 
Colen, Sue, 266 
Colley, Steve. 282 
Collins, Richard, 274 
Comstock, Nancy, 319 
Conely, Tom, 323 
Conkle, Nancy, 343 
Conley, Yvonne, 363 
Connell, Janie, 323 
Converse, Susie, 232 
Conv^'oy. Terry, 314 
Conwetl, Jenna, 246 
Cook, Jared, 355 
Cooke, Toni, I 1 
Cooper, Greg, 31 8 
Cooper, Linde, 270, 332, 338 
Cooper. Loren, 250 
Cooper, Mary Jane, 355 
Cooper. Mike. 302 
Cooper. Pomelo J.. 363 
Copelcnd, Monica, 357 
Copeland, Richard. 274 
Copeland, Vic, 282 
Coppersmith, Jenis Lee, 363 
Corbett, Thomos. 320. 363 
Corbin, Eric, 363 
Core, Nancy J., 363 
Corliss, Jeff. 302 
Cormony, Ktmberlin, 363 
Cornell, Ron. 298 
Corral, Ed. 286 
Corwin. Corolyn. 363 
Cosgrove, Jim, 323 
Cotten, Robert, 363 
Cottini, Jule, 248 
Cotton, R., 71 
Courtright, Jeff. 320 
Coustant, Carman, 71 
Covert. Andrea. 250 



Cowdrey, Anne, 268. 363 
Cowett, Mory. 234 
Cox. Becki, 76, 254, 355 
Cox, Donald, 304 
Cox, Joyce, 322 
Coyle, Michael, 314 
Cozyris, George, 363 
Craig, Brian. 298 
Craig, Don, 286 
Cram. Ken. 284, 363 
Crawford. Carolyn, 248. 338 
Crist, Cheryl. 332 
Criddle, Jomie, 244 
Crockett. Greg. 280 
Cross. Alison, I 13 
Crosthvs^oite, Ron, 282 
Crow, Patty, 351, 352 
Crum, Denny, I 60 
Crum, Williom,279 
Cullen, Chris, 254. 341 
Cuilison, Bradford, 288 
Cummings, Christie, 363 
Cummings, Lynn, 232 
Cunninghom, Bill, 282 
Cunningham, Craig. I 1 
Cunningham. Gory, 160 
Cunningham. Jim, 300 
Curran, Doris, 74 
Curron, Laurie, 73, 338 
Curran, Steven, 286 
Currier, Lee, 294 
Curry, Poul, 292 
Curtin, Carol, 363 
Curtis, Ellen, 352 
Curtis, Joseph, 290 
Curtiss, Charles D., 364 
Cuyler, Robert, 301 
Cyr, Tim,310 
Cymon. Miriam I., 364 




K 



\ 5 



400 





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n.^t.^. 



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:n 



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*-^^^- J%'* 



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*#*"■ 



401 



d 



1 



Daewon, Kwon, 364 

Daggott, Andrew, 288 

Dahlberg, Frank, 364 

Daigle, Geoff, 280 

Dalles, Salerios, 364 

Dailey, Garret C, 364 

Doiley, Garrett, 306 

Dakon, Bill, 66 

Dole, Mike, 306 

Damey, Diane, 232 

Daniels, Rob, 324 

Dante, Randy, 274 

D'Arco, Dave, 280 

D'Arcy, Edie, 348 

Da Silva, Joyce, 260 

Dattan, Scott, 292 

Daugfierty, Nancy, 270 

Dougherty, Potti, 234 

Dovel, Mary, 324 

Davidson, Bonnie, 319 

Davidson, Joanne, 338, 364 

Dovidmon, Joel, 296 

Davis, John, 274 

Davis, Laurie, 236 

Davis, Linda, 70. 71,264 

Davis, Paulo, 350, 354 

Davis, Richard, 364 

Davis, Sandy, 250 

Davis, Shirley, 240 

Davis, Suson, 248 

Dovisson, Debbie, 270, 329. 354 

Dav/son, Judee, 84-5 

Dawson. Rosie, 364 

Day, James, 274 

Day, Sandy, 238 

Day, Sue, 258, 364 

Doze, Michele, 238, 338 

Deo, Hoh Suey, 364 

Deo, Hong, 328 

Deorden, Diane, 256, 338 

De Bokey, Michoel, 103 

Debeore, Rick, 302, 364 

De Benedetti, Alice, 246 

DeBold, Joseph Francis, Jr., 364 

de Castro, Rosenda, 364 

Decena, Danilo, 364 

Decker, Kothy, 238, 350 

De Geus, Andy. 298 

deHooH, Catherine J., 77, 364 

Delane, Mark, 323 
deLeon. Romulo L., 364 

DeLwero, David, 301 

De Louise, Harriet, 364 

Denison, Michael, C. 314, 364 

De Paolo, Dana, 264 

De Pew. Oliver, 308, 333 

Depezynski, Chris, 231 

Dershem, Eleanor, 364 

Detering, Aileen, 270 

deVries. Carole. 238. 364 

Dholtrvol, Surinder. 364 

Diamond, Ellen. 236 

Diamond, Terry, 336 

Diaz, Frances, 323 

Diaz. Noel, 71,364 

Diaz-Gutierrez M., 364 

Dible, Florence, 364 

Dickenson. Tont. 338 

Dickey, Linda. 254, 336 

Dickinson, Toni. 256 

Diebolt, Doug. 294 

Dikeman, Clark. 288 



Dill, Gori. 364 

Dipko, Linda Richardson, 364 

Dische, Carole, 264 

Di Tullio. Christine, 258. 364 

Dixon, Mary, 260 

Dobles, Roberto G.. 364 

Dodson, Jeannie, 336 

Dodwell, Paul. 323 

Doel, Devy, 71,343 

Doheny, Dru. 260 

Dolivo, Lauren, 256, 364 

Doll, Donno Lee, 364 

Donaldson, Norman, 388 

Donin, Marshall, 364 

Donohoe, Pot, 292 

Doron, Morgo, 250 

Dorey, Fred, 282 

Doriot, Darlene. 246 

Downing, Don, 298 

Dorney, Anita, 242 

Dorsey, Michael, 298 

Doughty, Chris, 322 

Douglas, Fred, 334, 365 

Douglas, Pat. Ellen, 365 

Douglass, Don. 62.62. 280 

Doust, Norman, 318 

Dow, Norm, 323 

Dow, Doug, 323 

Downard, John, 302 

Downing, Don, 334, 365 

Doxey. Theessia, 365 

Dragicevich, Chuck, 298 

Drake. Elvin, 160 

Drake, Nancy, 365 

Drake. Sherry. 250 

Draper, S., 71 

Dresman, Joan D., 365 

Drucker, Barbara, 365 

Drucker. Mike. 296 

Drumlewicz, Anna, 76, 77, 244. 350 

Ducay, Jesse. 320 

Ducote, Keith. 274 

Dudugjian. Dale, 365 

Dudugjian, Robert, 365 

Duerbeck, Heidi. 365 

Du Fau. Jo Ann, 246 

Duff, Rico. 258, 365 

Dunn. Cheri. 322 

Dunn, Dana, 264 

Dunn, J. Gory. 365 

Dunn, Victoria, 365 

Dunnogon, Steve, 286 

Dusich, Larry, 306 

Dutcher, Nancy, 365 

Duvardo, Janet, 244 

Duyan, Scott, 302, 365 

Dworitz, Mitchell, 365 

Dye, Robert, 314 

Dutcher, Noncy, 246 

Dymond. Rosemary. 258 




402 




403 



1920 

BEING A RECORD OF 
THE COLLEGE YEAR 

1919— 1920 

HnttiFrHttg nf QIalifDrnm 



VOLUME ONE 



This volume is the first of what we hope will be a long series of Annuals. 
It is intended to be a record of the students and the student activities in the 
Southern Branch of the University of California during the first year of its 
existence. 



404 



-f 



Eoby, Culley, 323 

Earl, Rich, 302 

Early, Sandy, 264 

Easter, Corel, 31 9 

Eastwood, Linda M., 365 

Eastwood, Maureen, 232 

Eaton, Margaret, 365 

Eaves, Linda, 238 

Ebner, Scott, 284 

Ecker, John. 160 

Ecker, Sarito Beth, 365 

Economou, James L.. 333, 365 

Edberg, Sue, 322 

Ed mo nd son, Bob, 302 

Edson, Daniel J., 365 

Edwards, John, 24 

Edwards, Robert, 365 

Eger, Andreo, 319 

Egly, Lousie, 260 

Eick. Betsy, 264, 338 

Elde, Ruth. 365 

Eidelman. Bill, 276 

Eidem, Philis A., 365 

Eisenberg, Paula, 70, 71, "76 

Eisenberg, Sue, 31 9 

Eisenmon, Steve, 308 

Ekerling, Dorothy, 365 

Eldridge, Frank, 298 

Elegy, Lindo, 234 

Elfend. Renee, 365 

Elink-Schuurmon. Ted, 294 

Ellertson, Judy, 242,336 

Elley, Pat, 254, 365 

Elling, Gene, 308 

Elliot, Charles, 365 

Elliott, David, 365 

Ellis. Jim, 74. 75 

Ellis, Ronald, 365 

Emerson, Nancy J.S., 365 

Emmett. Bob. 282 

Emmett, Julie, 238 

Engel, Gary, 274 

Engel, Rod. 320 

Engle, Marcia, 250 

Englert, Dolly. 268 

Englert, Korl, 290 

Englert, Joseph, 365 

Englert, Vicky, 366 

Enrici, Pamela, 366 

Enright, Don, I 18 

Enseki, Carol, 324 

Epstein, Normon Bruce, 366 

Epstein, Sharon, 336 

Epsten, Andy, 236 

Erbeck, Gary, 366 

Erdmon, Rcihard, 366 

Erickson. Emily, 366 

Erwood, Kathleen, 366 

Erwood, Kathy, 232 

Eskridge, Reunell, 244, 366 

Espinoza, Sandra, 366 

Essen, Sandi, 232 

Essex. Lorraine, 319 

Essin, Don, 1 1 3 

Esterline, Pat, 242 

Estey, Russ, 306 

Etchegoray, Kathryn E., 366 

Etukuo, Uduak, 366 

Evans, Bob. 286 

Evans, Jzmes, 366 

Evans, Wanda, 323 

Everitt, Jackie, 252 

Evers, Bloise. 320 

Evers, Charles, 102 

Ewing, Les, 258 

Ezell, Curt, 280 




'O 






^^ 





r^ 




Fagan, Joseph, 366 
Fagan, Tom, 286 
Fahey, Mary Ann, 338, 366 
Foirbank, John, 366 
Foirweother, John, 298 
Falber, Susan G., 366 
Farina, George, 304 
Farley, Jim, 3 12 
Farmer, David, 278 
Former, George, 160 
Formerie, Chris, 84-5 
Forrell, Rodger, 274 
Forrington, Martha, 329 
Fossihi, Monouchehr, 366 
Fast, Joan, 264 
Fowcett, Mory, 260 
Feormon, Elenoor, 264 
Feeley, Mary, 324 
Feiler, David, 366 
Feinberg, Betty, 366 
Feld, James, 3 12 
Feldaverd, Helen B., 366 
Feldmon, Mark, 84-5 
Feng, Agnes, 366 
Fenning, Jerome M., 366 
Ferguson, David, 284 
Ferguson, Susan, I 13, 248 
Ferkel, Carolyn, 343 
Festo, Jonet Marie, 366 
Feulerlicht, Gail, 366 
Fielding. Charley, 306 
Fielding, Mike, 318 
Fields, Kathleen L., 264, 366 
Finck, Diana, 366 
Finder, Rori, 262, 366 
Findlay, Jonis, 234 
Fine, Paul, 334, 366 
Finegon, Kathy, 325 
Finegold, Joe, 320 
Finegold, Pot, 351 
Fink, Liane, 322 
Fink, Susan, 338 
Finkelmon, Sandra, 366 
Finkelstein, Rick. 312 
Finlayson, John W., 320, 366 
Finley, George, 366 
Finn, Janice, 336 
Firth, Karen, 248 
Fish, Janet, 264 
Fishburn, Luke, 355 
Fisher, Cecilia, 246, 366 
Fisher, Jill W., 367 
Fi her, Leif C, 367 
Fisher, Marilyn, 367 
Fitzpatrick, Maureen, 256, 338 
Fitzmorris, Pat, 242, 352 
Fix. Julie, 232 
Flack, James, 304 
Flannery, Cindy, 256, 336 
Fleming, Anne, 264, 352 
Fleming, Jaki, 264, 322 
Fleming. Stevie, 252, 322 
Fletcher, Steve, 298,367 
Fletcher, Tom, 310 
Flo, Betty, 242 
Flores, Philip, 290 
Fogwill, Wendy Jo, 367 
Foland, Dennis, 292 
Folk, Bob, 323 

Folker, Candy, 256, 336. 338 
Follette, David, 367 
Fong, Ho-Ching. 367 



Feng, Thomas, 322, 367 

Forbes, Cheryl, 367 

Forkner, Helen, 268 

Forrest, Elma, 367 

Fortenberry, Judith, 367 

Fortmueller, Beth, 246 

Fountain, James R., 367 

Fowler, Candoce, 242 

Fowler. Dede, 84-5 

Fox, Roger Bennett, 330, 367 

Frodkin, Judith, 367 

Frady, William, 274 

Francis. Carole, 72, 232, 338, 347, 367 

Francis, Julie, 248, 367 

Franck, Jan, 367 

Franicola, Robert, 333 

Frankel, Elin 336 

Frankel, Sherry. 11. 266, 338, 367 

Frank. Bill. 298, 334 

Frank. Richard, 304 

Fraser, Carol, 250 

Frash, Bill, 282 

Frausel, Marsha. 234 

Frousto, Helen R., 367 

Frozier, Janet, 351 

Frozin, Cidy, 236 

Frederick, Dovid, 367 

Frederick, George Jr., 367 

Frederick, Trisho, 262, 341 

Fredrickson, Jack, 279 

Freeman, Feece, 266 

Freeman, Ken, 31 2 

Freeman, Nancy, 244 

Freedman, Robert, 300 

Freitos. Beverly, 367 

Freschi. Bill, 330 

Frettum, Christine. 238 

Freuler, Barbara. 367 

Fricke, Carl. 282 

Frieden, Cliff. 276 

Friedman, Linda, 236 

Friedman, Sheila. 236 

Friedman, Steve, 312 

Friedman, Sue, 236 

Friscia, Frank, 267 

Friss, Alice, 236 

Frogue, Jack, 367 

Frost. Katiiy, 250 

Frost, Sally. 246 

Fry, Patricia Ann. 367 

Fujihiro, Nancy, 355 

Fujimoto, Shoryn Aiko, 367 

Fujita, Shunichi, 367 

Fuiitoni, Diane, 367 

Fukoya, Chiyuichi, 367 

Fukuda. Mono, 322, 354 

Fukui, Catherine, 340 

Fuller, Alison, 264 

Fuller, Clay, 367 

Fulton, Chris, 328 

Fulton, Ginger, 254, 367 

Furey, Jon. 238, 329 

Furumura, Kathleen, 

Furuno, Gory, 345 

Fybel, Susan. 368 



405 



-h 



Gobler. Linda, 264 

Gager, Timothy, 314 

Galanti. Gerl-Ann, 324 

Gale. Paul. 276 

Golindo. Hedor. 314 

Gallagher, Edward, 314 

Gandoro, Don, 282 

Gannon, Bev, 246 

Gons, Jerry, 276 

Gantz, Tom, 318 

Ganulln, Denise, 234 

Goragllono, John, 284, 368 

Garber. Carol, 262 

Garber, Rod, 368 

Garcia, Edward, 368 

Gorcia, Joseph J., 368 

Garcis, Jess, 31 8 

Gornett, Paul, 286 

Garol, Jim, 302 

Garrisi, Diane Wickershom, 368 

Garrisi, John, 368 

Garrison, Leeds, 319 

Garson, Lee, 30! , 368 

Garvey, Chris, 322 

Garza, Jerome, 368 

Gaschler, Randy, 318 

Gottegno, Linda, 266 

Gotzek, Deborah, 368 

Gaudin, Janet M.. 248, 368 

Gaul, Darlene, 324 

Gaviola, Sandy, 266 

Gaylord. Bebe. 368 

Gazin, Shelley, 71.266 

Gee, Arthur, 342 

Gee. Patricia, 231 

Gelbart, Wendy, 319 

Gelber, Melody, 266 

Gelmon, Cheryl, 262 

Genest, Stephen, 333 

Genovese, Joe, 310 

Gentry, Carolyn Keeler, 368 

Gentry, Grover, 274 

Gentry, Pom, 1 1 3 

George, Frederick L., 333 

George, Jane, 368 

Gerhardt, Sandie, 319, 355 

Germain, Leo, 308 

Gero, Patricia, 368 

Gershenzon, Maurio B., 368 

Gervosi, Douglas, 288 

GessI, Michoel, 342 

Geyer, Borbor, 332. 341 

Ghesquiere, Mary, 368 

Gibbs, Louise, 325 

Gibbs, Mary, 73 

Gilbert, Carol J., 256. 368 

Gilberl, Douglas, 368 

Gilcrest, Sue, 246 

Giles, Bette, 258. 354 

Gillick. Olivia D.. 368 

Gillies, Douglas C, 11 . 368 

Gillis, Barbara, 368 

Giilis, Suzanne, 368 

Gillon. Alex, 368 

Gilman, Judith, 368 

Gilstrap, Howard, 368 

Gilstrap, Luana, 368 

Gimbel, Janet. 254. 332, 352 

Ginsburg, Lawrence, 312, 334, 368 

Gius, Barbara, 254 

Glodden, Carol, 325 

Gloncy. Cheryl. 336 



Glosser, Borbaro, 368 

Glosser. Judy, 322 

Glenn, Marcie, 336 

Glickman, Roy, 368 

Glidden, Timothy, 368 

Glucksman, Barbara, 368 

Glucksman, Dick. 296 

Godbe. Christine, 369 

Godby, Larry, 369 

Godward, Gary, 298 

Godwin, Mike, 1 1 0, 330, 369 

Goff, Kevin, 282 

Geines, Bill. 282 

Goldboch, Pete, 280 

Goldbeck, Sue, 319 

Golden, Harry, 106 

Golden, JoAnne, 236 

Goldenberg, Helen, 369 

Goldenberg, Linda, 61, 72. 73, 110, 266, 338, 

347, 369 
Goldin, Stephen, 369 
Goldman, Donald, 369 
Goldmen, Judy, 323 
Goldsmith, Honk, 369 
Golman, Janet, 234 
Golub, Bob. 318 

Golub. Judy, 236. 338, 341 , 352, 354 

Gompt, Meg, 258 

Goodenough, James, 369 

Goodman, Donno, 348 

Goodman, Gail. 369 

Goodmon, James, 273, 369 

Goodman, Mark. 113, 115. 276. 369 

Goodrich, Milton, 369 

Goodrum, Tony. 320 

Gordon, Cecile. 319 

Gordon, Lori, 319 

Gordon, Marilyn, 369 

Gorton. Barbara, 234, 352 

Goss, Michael, 276 

Gottsegen, Mike, 296 

Goudge. John, 280 

Govenor, Janet, 369 

Gozin, Shelley, 70 

Grobhorn, Doug, 310 

Graff, Karen, 262 

Graham, Geoff, 276 

Graham, Jim, 323 

Graham, Pat, 302 

Graham. Steve, 296 

Graham, Victoria, 369 

Grais, Lynn, 369 

Gronockm, Mory Ann. 322. 369 

Gronock, Patsy, 248, 352 

Granite, Susan, 252 

Grant, Ronni, 369 

Grotton, Morily. 369 

Grovits, Jeff. 318 

Groy, Gory, 292 

Gray. Judy, 322 

Gray. Kip, 290 

Gray, Zena, 322, 369 

Graziani, Joseph, 369 

Green. Elaina, 322 

Green, Ron, 276 

Greene, Diana, 72, 72, 336 

Greenberg, Jill, 73, 236 

Greenfield, Mark, 94. 312 

Greening, Poul, 318 

Greenleigh, Tom, 1 18 

Greenspan, William, 369 

Gregory, Randy, 294 



Gregory, Sylvia. 348 
Greig, Robert, 288 
Grey, Mimt, 266 
Gribble, Borbora, 336 
Griffin, Saundro, 369 
Griffin, Tom, 75 
Griffith, Harry. 369 
Grihalvo, George. 286 
Grillo, Krislen, 260 
Grinkevich. Diane, 254 
Griswold, Steve. 284 
Grobecker, Pom, 254 
Groat, Geoff. 298 
Groner, Roberta, 252 
Gronsky, Barbara, 236 
Gross, Claudine, 369 
Gross. Joellyn, 84, 85, 323 
Gross. Maxine, 343, 369 
Grossberg, Egon, 369 
Grossberg, Harvey, 369 
Grossman, Kathy, 322 
Grossman, Lew, 318 
Grusine, Judith. 369 
Gryde, Stan, 278 
Gunther. Gory, 289. 369 
Gunter. Potti. 74 
Gunther, Richard, 330 
Gurfein, Sonja, 324 
Gurney, Rex, 310 
Gusinow, Leslie. 236 
Guthrie, Sharon, 246 
Gutierrez, Sylvia. 242, 347, 369 
Guttman, Hannah, 370 
Guymon, Linda, 258 
Guzik, Judy, 266 




406 



Hackethal, Gregg, 298 
Hagan. Ellen, 370 
Hagood, Linda, 246,370 
Hailey, Robert, 370 
Hailperen. Cathy, 266, 352 
Haldemon, Tim, 348 
Hole, Sheree, 336 
Holey. Alex, 99 
Halfon, Alan, 296 
Hall, Cherri, 72, 73,246 
Hall, Christopher, 278 
Hall, Kothleen, 370 
Hall, Tina. 256 
Hall, Tom, 320 
Halpern, Steve, 71 
Halprin, Nate, 312 
Holsey, Bill, 280 
Hamoguchi, Bruce, 370 
Homoguchi, Tony, 320 
Homamoto, taurine, 323, 370 
Hamano, Merilynne, ???? 
Hamel, Chris, 248 
Homel, Dennis, 274 
Hamilton, Cathy Ann. 370 
Hamilton, Craig, 284 
Hamilton, Sharon, 370 
Hammer. Beverly, 352 
Hammer, Morlie, 352 
Hammer, Sandy, 126, 127 
Hammond, Allan, 370 
Hammond, Terry, 242, 332, 352 
Hammons, Dave, 355 
Hampton. Bob, 323 
Hanomo, Enrico, 324 
Handel, Alice, 252 



Handlery, Barbara. 370 

Hondley, Nancy, 370 

Honlin, Tim, 323 

Hanna, Rosemarie, 370 

Hanna, Steve, 294 

Hansen. Curt, 298 

Hansen, Guy, 282 

Hansen, Doug, 302 

Harbaugh, Jan, 254 

Hordesty, Catlierine, 348 

Hare, Potty, 322 

Horguindeguy, Marianne, 246 

Horiu. Rey, 284 

Harkins, Clyde, 306 

Horrer, Linda. 270 

Harris, Darrell. 342 

Harris, Jomes, 370 

Harri , Lisa, 262 

Harris, Marion, 31 9 

Harris, Minah, 236 

Horris, Marilyn, 248 

Horris, Suson, 370 

Horris, Victoria, 76, 77, 242, 347. 355 

Harris, Virginia, 370 

Harrison, Beth, 232 

Harrison. Kent, 310 

Hart, Sondro, 370 

Harter, Debbie, 323 

Harter, Craig, 370 

Hortkemeier, Leonard, 325, 330 

Hortmon, Estelle, 370 

Hortschorn, Dove, 302 

Harvey, Brendo, 343, 370 

Harvey, David, 304 

Harvey, Geneva, 370 



Horvey, Maria, 236 
Haskell, Henry, 370 
Haskin, Marsha, 370 
Hasson, Dian, 370 
Hotomiyo, Kay, 340, 345 
Hatanoko, Carol, 340 
Hotogo, Janice, ???? 
Hatch, John. 280 
Hateley, J.Michael. 370 
Hauch. Jo Ann, 254.370 
Hauck, Paul, 274 
Mauser. Steve, 76, 17. 286. 370 
Hausmon. Judith, 370 
Hov/ley. Cassie. 375 
Hoyokawa, Susumu, 370 
Hoyashi, Gayle, 370 
Haycox, Hillary, 250 
Hoyes, Carolyn, 254 
Hayes, Marianne, 370 
Hayes. Sue, 254. 341 
Hayhurst, Lynda, 323,370 
Hayne, Vicki, 84, 85 
Haywood, Suzanne, 248, 371 
Heocock. Bob. 310 
HeocockRonald, 310, 371 
Heotherly, Michael, 371 
Hebden, Marsha, 254 
Hebden, Nancy, 254 
Hebert, Sandy, 324 
Hedberg, David J.. 320, 371 
Hedgpeth, Sam, 274 
Hedlund, Nancy, 248 
Hedmon, Linda, 250 
Hedrick. Janet. 256 
Heil, Ruth. 231 




Heiserman, Joe. 323 
Heisler, Candy. 323. 343, 371 
Heitz, Kenny, 160 
Held, Cindy, 260 
Held, Linda. 343 
Heifer, Scott, 301 
Helferich, Udo, 286 
Helfman, llene, 371 
Heller, Stephen, 371 
Helm. John, 371 
Helvey, Robert, 274 
Henderson, Connie, 264 
Henderson, John. 318 
Henderson, Linda, 242, 351 
Henderson, Nedro, 322 
Henderson, Valerie, 371 
Menkes, Joe, 284 
Henning. Tom. 308 
Menrickson, Edyth, 371 
Henrickson, Sue, 371 
Henry, Christine, 242. 371 
Henry, Jim, 274 
Menry, Mory Anne, 238, 332 
Henry, Pamela Ann, 371 
Hensel, Bruce, 31 2 
Mensley, Donna, 371 
Herbert. E.. 71 
Herbsf, Chester, 278 
Herdon. Hallie, 268, 332 
Hermanson, Anne, 238 
Hermanson, Jane, 242 
Hernondes, Linda, 320 
Hernandez, Carlos, 371 
Hernandez, Edword, 371 
Herre, Bob, 126, 127 
Herring, Jim, 371 
Herwood, Judy, 258 
Mess. Tinko, 260 
Hevrdjs, Jill. 270 
Hewitt, Hank. 320 
Hibler. Vicki, 236 
Mickey. Barbara. 371 
Mickey, Robyr^ 250,338, 371 
Micks, Jock, 371 
Micks, Lindo, 319, 343, 357 
Higginbothom, John, 371 
Higgs, Chris, 254, 352 
Highfill,Mary, 268 
Hilberman, Joe, 334 
Hildreth, Linda, 246, 371 
Hiley, Paul, 306 
Miller, Nonci, 371 

Himmelstein, Don, 279 

Hinck. Bill. 282 

Mindmon, Diane, 371 

Minkey, Mary Ann, 248 

Hintze, Corrine, 322 

Hiromotsu, Katherine, 355, 371 

Miramoto, Irene, 345 

Hiroshimo, Barbara, 345, 355 

Hirsch, Mitchell, 371 

Mirsch, Perry, 371 

Mix, Alexis, 264 

Moadley, Monnie, 371 

Hobon, Sheila, 244 

Hobson, James. 68 

Hoeller, Jone, 371 

Hoffeins, JoRoe, 256, 352 

Hoffman, Brian, 318 

Hoffman, Kathy. 266 

Hoffman, Paul, 310 

Hoffman. Peter, 292, 371 



407 




h-k 



Hoffman, Rich, 318 

Hoffman, Ross, 371 

Hofstadter, Richard, 100 

Hohner, Gerard, 371 

Hoholowski, Mark, 314 

Holland, K., 71 

Holland, Laurie, 236, 338, 352, 354 

Holland, Woyne, 298 

Holle, Ned, 372 

Hollie, Normon, 304 

Holpern, Steve, 70 

Holt, Karen, 336 

Hollom, Horold, 372 

Hollzmon, Alison, 252, 372 

Honnold, Maryanne, 256 

Hooker, Dave, 310 

Hoops, Alan, 302 

Horkin, Paul, 372 

Horn, Kobey, 372 

Horn, Morcio. 372 

HornbucUe, James, 372 

Horner, Jill, 232 

Hornish, Carol, 372 

Horodas, Royce, 372 

Horwitz, Alan, 355 

Horwitz, Janet, 372 

Hoshiko, Me.vin, 372 

Hovsepion, Paul, 372 

Howard, James, 1 13 

Howard, Jody, 246 

Howard, John, 310,372 

Howard, Neol, 276 

Howard, Pat, 264 

Howard, Roy, 372 

Howe, Bob, 294, 334 

Howell, Scott, 280 

Howorth, Richard, 288 

Hoy, Susan, 248, 372 

Hoyt, Mark, 278 

Hsuing, Ying, 372 

Hubbard, Linda, 254 

Hubiak, John, 372 

Hudes, Jack, 308 

Hudson, Dennis, 372 

Hudspeth, Joy, 372 

Huff, Barbara, 264 

Hughes, Carlo, 372 

Hughes, Glen, 298 

Hulbrock, Irene, 372 

Hull, Karen, 234, 336 

Hulls, Ann, 372 

Humason, James, 372 

Hummer, Martha, 260 

Humphrey. Hubert, 104 

Hunt, Phyllis, 324 

Hunter, Richard, 294 

Hurley, Sheila, 264, 372 

Hurwifz, Marc, 372 

Hutchins, Holly, 332, 372 

Hutton, Elizobeth, 372 

Huybregts, Gerardus, 372 

Hyde, Kirk, 304 

Hymon, Leslie, 296, 372 



lonni, Mary, 372 
Ido, Ruth, 355 
lijimo, Nomy, 345 
Ikeguchi, Vickee, 355 
Ikemoto, June, 355 
Ikuto, Borbaro S., 372 
Impett, Rick, 348 



408 



Inodomi, Pot, 352 

Inana, Marsha, 345 

Inana, Marsha, 355 

Ingalls, Joseph, 301 

Ingle. Herb. 318 

Ingram, Jim, 302 

Inkster.Mike, 286 

Inouye. Chris, 322 

Irwin, Scot, 304 

Isoocson, Lanoe, 373 

Iseli. Susan. 244 

Ishikawa, Peggy, 256 

Israel, CliH, 279 

luy, John, 330 

Ivy, John, 373 

Iwasko, Rudy, 318 

Iwoto, Dorie, 345 

Iwata, Dorie, 355 

Iqzo, Mary, 256 

Jablonski, Ken, 286 

Jack, Barbara, 264 

Jackson, Elizabeth, 76 

Jackson, Elizabeth, 76 

Jacobs, Caroline, 252 

Jacobson, Chris, 256 

Jocobson, Janis, 270 

Jacobson, Jeffrey, 373 

Jocobson, Steve, 343, 280, 373 

Jaffee, Marlou, 373 

Jokobson, Goran, 330 

Jomes, Judity, 373 

Jomes. Kothy, 319 

Jomes. Richard, 274 

Jansen, Gil, 286 

Janssen, Richard, 301 

Jarrick, Alan, 300 

Jarvi, Chorlene, 343 

Jemeson, Dimitri, 395 

Jenkins, Chris, 254 

Jenkins, Dwight C. 373 

Jenkins, Kristin, 373 

Jensins, Toby Lee, 373 

Jenks, Sue, 246, 373 

Jennings, Susan, 260 

Jennings, Susan, 352 

Jens, Jeff, 312 

Jensen, Jill, 351 

Jensen, Jill, 264 

Jensen, Karen, 373 

Jesse, Sue, 351, 373 

Jessen, Annelle, 84-5, 231 , 373 

Jesswein. Joyce, 258 

Jew, Eva, 319, 340, 373 

Jilly. Theresa, 256 

Jilly, Theresa, 338 

Jcblin, Marian, 373 

Johcnnsen, Befh, 341 

Johns, Carolyn, 338 

Johns, Caroly, 260 

Johns, Edward, 68 

Johnson, Cory, 278 

Johnson, Catherine, 351 

Johnson, Cheryl, 244, 350 

Johnson, Gregory. 328 

Johnson, Jim, 302 

Johnson, Kathy, 258 

Johnson, Linda. 352, 232 

Johnson, Lindy, 268, 373 

Johnson, Nicelma. 373 

Johnson, Paul. 310.373 

Johnson, Rick, 31 8 

Johnson. Roger, 302 



Johnson. Sharon, 234 
Johnson, Vance. 70 
Johnson, Vance. 71, 320 
Johnson, Veossa G., 373 
Johnston, Bob, 308. 373 
Johnston, Lawrence, 373 
Johnston, Sally, 373 
Joiner, Roy. 1 10 
Jones. Bob. 320 
Jones, Bruce, 373 
Jones. John D., 373 
Jones. Mike "Cools," 323 
Jones, Nancy Ellen, 373 
Jones, Paulo Ann. 373 
Jones, Robert A., 373 
Jorgensen, Jefferson, 288 
Jorgensen, Kristine, 373 
Joseph, Irwin H., 373 
Joyce. Eric. 280 
Jue, Dianne, 340 
Juline, Eric. 373 
Jung, Ann 354 
Justeson, Christine, 373 
Justus, Peter, 373 



Kabat, Jules. 312 

Kador, Andrew, 374 

Kadner, Borbar, 262 

Kahl, Wlliom, 314 

Kahn, Cyndee, 262 

Kahn, Mark, 312 

Kahn, Mike. 1 10 

Kaiser, Carolyn, 268 

Kaiser, Daniel, 374 

Kaiser, Genie, 258 

Kaiser. Larry, 312 

Kako, Linda, 374, 250 

Kaler, Sandy, 319 

Kalik, Emil. 328, 374 

Kalik, Sal, 306 

Koltenborn, Wolly, 302 

Kombora, Kay, 374 

Kominsky, Arnold, 1 10, 374, 276 

Kamoto, Potti, 345, 374 

Kane, Victoria, 374 

Koneko, Alan. 374 

Koneko, Janet, 340. 345 

Kaplan, Buzz. 312 

Kaplan, Kathy, 262 

Kaplan, Joan, 374 

Kaplan. Kathryn, 374 

Kaplan, Steve, 308 

Kaplan, Terri. 262 

Kaplan, Terri, 252 

Kapper, Roberta, 374 

Karengo, Ron, 1 00 

Karlstad. Ken. 278,374 

Karpeles. Steve, 320 

Koshiki. JoAnn. 355. 338, 347, 374, 256 

Kospor. Terry, 286 

Katonick. Borbar, 374 

Kato. June. 323 

Katolo, Les, 320 

Katow. Leslie. 374 

Katz. Andrew, 374 

l^oufman, Cory, 374 

Kauffman, Jim, 298 

Kouffmann. Stan, 98 

Kaufman. Koye, 126 

Kaufman, Koye, 127 

Kaufman, Mork, 374 



Kaufman. Mimi, 262 
Kaufmon, Paul, 84-5 
Kaufmonn, Steve, 294 
Kawahoto. Joyce, 345 
Kawoi, Andrea, 374 
Kawasaki, Mitchell, 374 
Kawasaki, Stephen, 374 
Kowota, Steve, 345 
Koye. Ted, 374, 302 
Koyer, Cynthia, 374 
Kay land, Joan. 374 
Keone, Kathy, 76. 374, 11 
Keone, Kathy, 372 
Keenan, Cathie, 322 
Kehl, Cathy. 270 
Keith. Chris. 260 
Keith. Tom, 308 
Keller. Rcik. 310 
Kellermon, Kenin. 279 
Kelley, Mimi. 238 
Kelly. Doug, 118 
Kelly. Kristen, 256,374 
Kelly, Linda, 268. 374 
Kelly. Steve, 298 
Kelly, Tim, 298. 374 
Kelsay. Sue, 322 
Kempton, Melanie, 266 
Kendall, Thomas. 304 
Kenigsen, Lee, 31 8 
Kenney, Joan. 375 
Kent. Cindy. 236 
Kent. Mike, 298 
Kent. Rob. 324 
Kentzloch.Kal, 318 
Keotahion, Gioula, 375 
Kern, Fred, 375 
Kerr, Janet, 264 
Kerrvish, Laurel. 375 
Kesilis, Steve, 348 
Kestenbaum. Joel, 375 
Kestenbaum, Serena, 244 
Keys. Karen. 256. 375 
Kieckhoefer, Bill, 280 
Kiehl, Louise. 336 
Kieley, Condace, 375 
Kier, John. 113 
Kiernan. Bob. 323 
Kiermon, Steve, 296 
Kihara, Betsy, 375 
Kikuchi, Tom, 284 
Kiley, Margaret, 324 
Kilgore, Clyde, 375 
Kim, Bill, 328 
Kim, Eunja, 375 
Kim, Sunki, 375 
Kim, Sunny, 338 
Kimball, Betsy. 264 
Kimer, Nelly. 323 
Kimuro, June, 340 
Kindt, Chris, 232 
King, Janice, 375 
King, Roy Wayne, 290 
Kingsbury, Bruce, 288 
Kingsburg, Joon, 324 
Kinnion, Dove, 318 
Kinoshita. Fumiko, 375 
Kinsmon, Sara. 7 1 
Kinsman, Soro, 354 
Kinsman, Sarah, 232 
Kinsman. Saeoh, 70 
Kipnis, Alan, 375 
Kirk. Scott, 286 



Kirmer, Melly, 375 

Kilching, Lindo. 240 

Kittell, Pot, 324 

Kittel. Pat, 323 

Klone. Susan, 375 

Klatzker. Linda, 252. 375 

Klaustenmeyer. Jonie. 256 

Klein, Alan, 296 

Klein, Carol, 352 

Klein, Bob, 300 

Klein, Maxine. 268 

Klein. Phil, 294 

Kleinkouf, Bert. 76, 375 

Kleinkouf, Kathy. 242 

Kleinkauf, Kthy, 338 

Kline, Linda, 319 

Klopp, Ingrid, 375 

Klotchmon, Janisse, 375 

Klotz, Kathy. 319,375 

Knaul. Carole, 260 

Knoup, Tom, 298 

Knee. Howie. 296. 375 

Knight, Ronald. 375 

Knoul. Carol. 74 

Knox, Nancy. 250 

Kobata, Frances. 340 

Kobayashi, Irene, 340 

Koboyoshi. Peggy, 340 

Koblin, Don 276 

Kodomo, Sachi. 345 
Koelmon. Hetty. 375 
Koenig, Claudia, 375 
Kohn, Bill, 328 
Kohn, Lorry, 62, 375 
Kohn, Lorry, 7 1 
Kohn, Larry, 76 
Kohoutek. Fran. 246. 375 
Kojima, Osamu, 375 
Kok. Jim, 294 
Kolsky, Borbaro, 375 
Komula. Sandy. 323 
Kondo. LeRoy, 375 
Koosed, Robin. 266 
Koppleman, Anne. 262 
Kobata. Mark. 302 
Korda, Sarah, 244 
Korman. Royce. 236 
Korkos. Andy, 260 
Kosek, Robin, 348 
Koosed. Robin, 352 
Koyama. Lorraine, 375 
Kramer, Borboro, 375 
Kramer, Robin, 252 
Kranske, Refer, 290 
Krasovec, Diane, 323 
Kraus. Kathy, 242 
Krebs. Schuyler, 333, 376 
Krepock, Howard, 376 
Krevitz, Sharon, 338 
Krevoy, Penny, 236 
Kronberg, Jeon, 236 
Kronick, Sandy, 296 
Kroopf, Ken. 302 
Krotz. Anita, 232 
Krotz, Loro, 232 
Krueger, Sally, 260 
Krueger, Steve, 292 
Kruger, Ted, 334,376,312 
Krupp. Ed, 74 
Kruse, Dove, 284 
Kubikian, Arthur, 376 
Kubo, Alice, 323 



409 



k- 



o 



Kubo, Duone, 345 
Kubota. Debbie, 340, 345 
Kudio, Lynn, 264 
Kuehl, Sheila. 355 
Kohl, Kathy, 232 
Kuhn, Steve. 276 
Kuhla. Motthew, 376 
Kulkin, Sylvie. 266 
Kull, Bob, 282 
Kumomoto, Doris, 343 
Kurosch, Chris, 308 
Kurishlta, Mary, 340 
Kurland, Edna, 343 
Kuris, Eileen. 376 
Kurtz. Mike, 328 
Kurtzmon, Helaine, 262 
Kurzins. Steve, 312 
Kiisel, Kotherine, 248 
Kushner. Ed. 126 
Kuss. Ken. 308 
Kusuda. Pat. 322 
Kytchins, Neat, 300 
Kutner. Susor^ 376 
Kwizius, Stephen, 376 
Kvommen, Lorna, 376 
Kydd, Donold. 325,330 

LoBrie. Linda J.. 376 
Lacoste, Cathy. 329, 343. 376 
Ladine, Wray, 280 
Lai, Elizabeth, 345 
Lake, Peter, 274 
Lamb, Mary C, 376 
Lomden, Carol. 236 
LoMont. Ralph R., 376 
Lamson, Wade, 284 
Loncoster, Charles, 294. 376 
Lonce, Wendy, 319 
Lander, Nodine, 343 
landers. Tom, 286 
Landgreen. Leslie, 242 
Londis, Jim, 282 
Land is. Wayne, 302 
Landman. Gary, 84-5 
Landman, Sue, 84-5 
Land res, Renata. 75 
Landrum, Cathy. 376 
Landrum, Kathy, 246 
Lane, Dean, 308 
Lane, Jessie, 240 
Lone, Judy, 236 
Longberg, Lesley. 343 
Longfill, Fran, 270 
Longmore, Jeonnie, 246 
Langpap, John, 286 
Langston-Jones, Brad. 292 
LaPointe. Richard, 66 
Larkin, Christina. 244, 350 
Larkin, Robert, 273, 288. 334. 37 
Larkins, Lainie. 256, 338 
Larson, Chipper, 318 
Larson, Commie. 250, 338 
LoRue, Sandy, 256, 376 
Latimer, John, 304, 376 
Latimer, Lindo, 244 
LaTourette. Jean, 242 
Lau, Howard S., 376 
Lou, Richard. 348 
Lauterboch, Diono, 376 
Loven, Pete, 312 
Lovenberg, Larry, 318 
Lavine, Laurie, 336 



Law, Nancy, 376 

Lawson, Donald, 376 

Lowton, Eric. 301.376 

Lox, Genie. 76. 77 

Loyton. Judy. 240 

Lazar, Jim, 318 

Learn y. Bob, 306 

Lear. Bob, 294 

Lear, Cyndi, 258 

Leotort, Mary. 73. 250 

leBlanc. Bill, 318 

Lebow, Jeff, 64. 65 

Leco, Linda, 376 

Leek. Diane, 256, 338, 376 

Lee, Benjamin. 376 

Lee. Chris. 292, 376 

Lee, Frank. 288 

Lee, Gory, 318 

Lee. Heen Von, 376 

Lee, Hubert A., Jr., 376 

Lee, Jan B., 376 

Lee, Judie, 262 

Lee, Kenneth, 376 

Lee, Linda, 236 

Lee. Mary, 354 

Lee, Yong, 376 

Leeb, Deborah, 236 

Leeds, Leeson, 282, 377 

Lefkowitz. Carasel, 377 

LeGros, John, 284 

LeHjoH. Shelley, 377 

Lehrer, Linda. 351,352 

Lehtmon, Shoron, 236 

Leichmon, Glenn, 61 , 377 

Leider, Leo M., 377 

leider, Les, 71, 76 

Leishmon, Suzi, 232, 377 

Leisure, Lorry, 282 

Lemosters, Kim, 282 

Lemon, Marcio, 250, 377 

Lenderking, Holiis, 286 
Leng, Chris, 310 

Leng, Christopher. 377 
Lengnick, Cyndy, 256. 338 
Lenhoffm, Miles. 296 
Lenin, Robin, 319 
Lent, Nancy. 236 
Leon, Lindo, 377 
Leoneiti, Carol, 242 
Lepold, Bette. 377 
Lerner, Enid, 270 
Lerner, Liane, 244 
Lerner, Roz, 262 
Lesh, Bob, 284 
Lesser, Steve. 323 
Lessner, Morgo, 266 
Lessor, Joyce, 262 
Lester, Monica, 377 
Lettvin, Sharon. 377 
Leung. Kirby T., 377 
Levoi, Michael, 377 
Leventhol. Sheila. 347, 377 
Levett, Michael. 110, 113, 114 
Levey. Karen. 236 
Levin. Emily, 377 
Levin, Evanne, 266, 352 
Levin, Ronni, 319 
Levine, Lesley, 322 
LeVine, Lorri, 266 
Levine, Potricia, 234 
Levine. Robert E., 377 
Leviton, Lynn, 377 



Levitt, Shoron, 252 
Levy, Barry, 276 
Levy, Linda, 377 
Levy. Ruth. 377 
Levy, Steve, 300 
Lew. Cynthio,338, 345, 35- 
Lew, Henry, 348 
Lew, John. 348 
Lewonkowski, Al, 292 
Lewis, Don, 328, 377 
Lewis, Gail B., 377 
Lewis, James P., 377 
Lewis, Vicki. 232, 355 
Lichty, Bill, 280 
Lin, Ho-Sen, 377 
Linberg, Kri . 254. 377 
Lincoln, James. 377 
Lind. Robert, 298 
Lindberg, Joan M., 377 
Linder, Melanie, 244 
Lindquist, Cindy, 250 
Lindsay, John, 304 
Lineberger, Jim, 302 
Ling, Morcio, 260 
Lingo, Margaret, 377 
Linsk, Caroline, 266 
Lipori, Jim, 310 
Lippincott. Mary C, 377 
Lipton. Dovio, 262 
Lisbon, Mitchell, 288 
Lissner, Judy, 256, 338. 341. 
Lister, Janis. 352 
Litschke, Louise. 260.337 
Littell, Colleen. 258, 337 
Littenberg, Craig, 308 
Little, Edward. 333 
Littlejohn, Rob., 284 
Little, Helen, 231 
Little. Lee Ann, 248 
Litvok, Morlene, 236 
Liu, Tien, 377 
Livie, John, 318 
Locks. Cliff, 323, 324 
Loizeaux, Paul C, 378 
Lombordo, Michele, 268 
Lomlcin, Judi, 266 
Lones, Debbie, 246 
Long, John, 330. 378 
Longfellow, Joy, 319 
Lopez, Mary Ellen, 240 
Lord. Denny D., 378 
Lorenz, Darlene, 244 
Lorenzini, Arthur, 378 
Lowe, Julie, 238 
Low, Reginald, 378 
Love, Herb, 306 
Love, Jonet, 232. 336 
Love, Rick, 306 
Lov^y. Rudolph J. 378 
Lowe, Emily, 32 1 
Lowe, Lily. 231 
Lozores, Brad. 320 
Lucas. Jim, 286 
Lucas, Sondy, 322 
Luedeking, Janet, 246 
Luk. Camille, 378 
Lukes. Terry, 319 
Lundquist, Dennis. 290 
Lundy. Allan, 286 
Lupac. Linda I., 378 
Lusk, Linda, 242. 354 
Lupac, Linda, 256 



Lyke, Mary Lynn, 378 
LyIe, Heidi, E., 378 
Lyman. Brad, 294 
Lynch. Trudi, 254, 338 
Lynn, Judy, 246 
Lyons, Steven H. 378 
Lyon, Toni, 378 



Mac Key, Marie, 236 
Mackenzie, Ronald, 398 
Mack, Karen, 236 
Moc Kay. Monica. 236 
MocKillop, Scott, 320 
Mocnider, Ebe, 254 
Modson. Ron, 318 
Moekawa, Takeshi, 330 
Maeoko, Takohiro, 378 
Magee, JoAnn, 378 
Mogenheim. Morlene. 252 
Moggio, Rich, 296 
Magruder. William, 288 
Magyar, Dovid. 378 
Molcomson, Phyllis. 258 
Molone. Bob, 328 
Maloof, Gerrie, 240 
Molry, Pamela. 378 
Molter, Mark, 296 
Manheim, Terri, 258 
Manheimer. Borborz. 252 
MonkoK, Ed, 300 
Mann, Stacy, 266 
Manning. Al, 318 
Manning, Monette. 329 
Manolson, Jonet, 324 
Mar, Judy. 340 
Marocucci. Bob, 160 
Morons. Debi, 262 
Morchonte. Coroly, 327 
Marcus, Bob, 296 
Marcus, Joel, 378 
Marks. Richard, 334 
Marks. Richard, 312 
Marks. Richard, 94 
Marks, Sharon, 252 
Moriam, Suson, 378 
Marin. Victor, 378 
Marinelli, John. 378 
Marlowe, Gloria, 378 
Marlowe, Volerie, 232 
Marshall. Morie. 378 
Morsholeck, Williom, 314 
Martin, Jomes, 318 
Martin, Laura, 232 
Martin, Mary Jane, 248 
Mortens, Sharon, 260 
Martin, Virginio. 378 
Morter. Dan, 298 
Martinez, Eriinda, 232 
Martinez, Ted, 378 
Mortorello, Janet. 322 
Martorello, Janet, 348 
Moroyomo, Judy, 340 
Mason, Hohn, 378 
Masterson, Kathy, 246. 318 
Matsui. Daniel, 378 
Motsumoto, Cheryl, 378 
Matthev/s,Cathy, 260 
Mathews, Jeonnie, 256 
Mothey, Denise, 254 



Monhios, Mike, 292 
Malsubora, Miyo, 343 
Molsuboro, Miki, 322 
Matusmoto, Janie, 260 
Motsumoto. Jonie, 338 
Motsumoto, Tokeshi, 345 
Matsuoko, Ann, 340 
Motsuoka. Ann, 345 
Matleson, Becky, 260 
Matthews, Cathy, 338 
Matuszewski, Roman, 310 
Motz, Morcia. 75 
Maxwell, Rita, 378 
May, Lorry, 1 13 
May, Lorry, 378 
Moyedo, Charles, 345 
Mayedo, Phyllis, 379 
Mazer, Susan, 379 
Mozouch, Chuck. 323 
McAndrews. Julie, 250 
McAllister, Borbarz, 379 
McAvoy, Laura, 341, 238 
Mc Auliffe, Tim. 276 
Mc Cofferty, William. 379 
Mc Couley. Gloria, 357 
McClure, 379 



410 



Mc Callum. Nancy, 338 
Mc CoHum, Nancy, 250 
McClure, Pot. 76 
Mc Clure, Patrick. 301 
Mc Clure, Robert, 66 
McConnell, Terri. 240. 351 
Mc Connell, Tom, 379 
McCormock, Barbara. 231 
Mc Court, Jim, 330, 379 
Mc Crary, Elizabeth. 379 
Mc Cullough. Helen, 232 
Mc Culloch, Richard, 379 
Mc Dermoid, Suzanne, 248 
Mc Devitt, Randy, 302. 334, 379 
McDonald. Dave, 284 
McDonough, Anolee, 336 
McDonough. Annalee, 248 
McElhony. Pom, 348 
McFodden. Bill, 276 
Mc Farlond. Linda, 232 
Mc Farlin. Annjennette. 379 
McGoffigan, Marie, 70 
McGoffigan, Marie, 71 
McGoffigan, Morie, 256 
Mc Gonn, Don, 286 
McGough, Morsha. 379 
McGeever, Eileen, 322 
MeGeever. Eileen, 244 
McGoey. Mary, 238 
McGrath, Richard, 379, 348 
McGregor, Carolyn, 322 
Mcintosh, Lora. 348 
McKay, Victoria. 379 
McKenno, Brain. 280 
McKerren, Morcie, 251 
McKinney, Jeff, 282 
McKinney, Molly, 379 
McKerren. Marcie, 332, 246 
McKinney. Molly, 260 
McLaren, Sherry, 250 
McLin, Kelley, 242 
McMillan, Janet, 379 
McNabb, Borboro, 319. 320 
McNite, Evey. 347. 248, 341 
McTiernan, Sue, 323 
McWethy, Susan, 260 
Meores. Sharon, 332. 254 
Medoff, Debby. 76 
Medoff, Debby, 11 
Meersono, Kenneth, 379 
Megowan, Thomas, 379 
Mehner, Mark. 308 
Mehler, Lyra. 379 
Meier. Jane. 248, 347, 341, 72-3, 
Meikle. John, 318 
Meisenheimer. Keith, 288 
Meister, Ann, 379 
Meleis, Afof, 379 
Melnick, Rosalynn, 236 
Meltzer, Mork, 312 
Menoker, Roberta, 379 
Mendenhall, Frances, 324 
Menzies, Leila, 379 
Mercurio, Thomas. 379 
Mermel, Anita, 322 
Mermel, Anita, 354 
Merrell, Elizabeth, 379 
Merrick Arthur, 379 
Merrick, Maggie, 270 
Merrick. Marc, 379 
Messer, Pom. 323 
Mesthene, Laura, 379 
Metcalf, Bob, 292 
Metz. Rich. 323 
Meyers, Carol, 379 



Meyer, Rex, 290 
Mezin, Norma, 234 
Michel, Gory, 296 
Michel, Herb, 296 
Michel, Joan, 262 
Michel, Karen, 379 
Michino, Moriyosu, 379 
Miedzinski, Charles, 75 
Miholas, Lorry, 328 
Milan, Debbie, 254 
Milefchik, Donna, 254 
Miles. Nancy. 244 
Miles. Tom, 282 
Miletich, Christine, 379 
Millard, Neal, 380 
Miller, Bev,262 
Miller, Cookie, 250 
Miller, Ellen, 236.380 
Miller, Franz, 304 
Miller, Gary, 380 
Miller, Gay, 348 
Miller, Janet, 322. 380 
Miller, Jeffrey, 380 
Miller, Jeffrey. 380 
Miller. Joel, 380 
Miller. Linda. 260 
Miller. Margie, 329 
Miller, Marion, 238 
Miller, Morjorie, 380 
Miller, Melindo, 244 
Miller. Mike. 282 
Miller. Norm, 300 
Miller, Steve, 276 
Miller, Susan, 380 
Miller, Veronico, 348 
Millet, Dick. 294 
Millman, Judith, 380 
Mills, Debbie. 238 
Minami, Vera, 380 
Minaro, Jeff, 355 
Miner, Nancy, 322 
Mingus. Potti. 232 
Minicucci, Paul, 380 
Mio, Priscilla, 340 
Miromontes, Louie, 294 
Merman, Leslie, 244, 380 
Mistysyn, Laurel, 380 
Misty syn, Robert. 380 
Mitchell, Janice. 240 
Mitchell. Charles, 380 
Mitchell, Marianne, 256 
Mitchem, Cherry, 332 
Mitchem, Cherry, 268 
329 Mitterond, Froncois, 98 
Mittleman, Leah, 73 
Miyamoto, Beverly, 340 
Miyamoto, Bev. 345 
Mteztvo, Linda, 246 
Mohondesson, Mehrzod, 380 
Mohr, Joan, 254, 380 
Molono, Terry, 324 
Mong, John, 380 
Monkorsh, Arlene, 380 
Montague, Harry. 302 
Montclbano, Foster, 306 
Montgomery, Maureen, 244 
Montgomery, Ronold, 288, 380 
Moody, Mike, 286 
Moon, Kirk, 286 
Moore, Claire, 278 
Moore, Dionne, 244 
Moore, Donna, 380 
Moore, Edward, 380 
Moore, Jonathan, 278, 380 
Moore, Nancy. 248. 380 



Moore, Robert. 304 
Moore, Susan, 232, 380 
Moron, Bill, 286 
Moron, Kothy, 232 
Moron, Michoel, 301 
Morehouse, Judy, 352, 238 
Moreno, Joe, 312 
Morese, Rich, 286. 76, 380, 77 
Morgon, George, 280 
Morgon, J.D., 160 

Morgan, Neil, 292 

Mori, Lois, 343 

Morris, Horry, 127. 110. 126 

Morrison, Rondi, 366, 352, 73 

Morrison. Rondy, 366, 352, 72-3 

Morrov^, Michoel, 334. 302 

Morrow, Michael, 334, 302, 380 

Morse, Bernie, 348 

Morse, Bernhord, 380 

Morton, David. 325 

Morton, Diana, 325 

Morton, Susan, 232 

Morton, Susan, 232. 380 

Moser, James, 381 

Mosher, Maureen. 242, 381 

Moss, Susan, 262 

Mosher, Nancy, 72-3 

Murayomo, Dennis, 381 

Moskowitz, Harold. 273 

Moss, Susan, 3 1 9 

Mourodion. Bob, 298 

Movius. Michelle, 232. 381 

Mowrey. Potti, 256 

Mozur, Nancy, 262 

Mucho. Anita, 381 

Mucino, Alex, 288 

Mudd, Marry, 242 

Mueller, Nancy, 319 

Mueller, Leslie. 381 

Mulford, Potty, 256 

Mulloly. Dove, 332 

Mulloly, Dove, 320 

Mullally, Dovid. 77 

Muller, Michoel, 284 

Mulley, Rondy, 84-5 

Mulvey, Patricio. 38 1 

Munk, Judith. 381 

Murota, Janet, 340 

Muroto, Normon. 278 

Mustod. Ariane. 72-3, 248. 338 

Murphy, Paul, 381 347. 381 

Murphy. Vicki, 264 

Murray, Cynthia. 248 

Murray, Cindy, 73 

Murray, Cindy. 354 

Murray, Corice, 3 19 

Mustod, Ariane, 72-3. 248 

Munoz, -Ralph, 60 

Munoz, Rosollo, 60 

Muto, John, 381 

Myott, Jerry, 278 

Myott, Steve, 308 

Myers. Cherrie, 246 

Mynatt. Shelley, 351 

Myose. Hitome, 351 

Murphy. F.D.. 31 



Nobor, William, 381 
Nodler, Kathy,352 
Nadir, Allan. 381 
Nodler, Sandra, 381 
Nogai. Noboru, 381 
Nagel. Joe, 310 



Noguchi, Kazuko, 38 I 
Nohole, Tony, 323 
Najarion. Rick. 308 
Nakajimo. Karen, 340 
Nakojimo, Kay, 340, 345 
Nokomuro, George, 381 
Nokono, Lucy, 322 
Nokoyama, Vickie, 355 
Nakoyoma. Janice, 355 
Nokoyama, Janice, 345 
Nakayomo, Vickie, 345 
Napthol. Wayne. 276 
Noronio, Rosendo. 381 
Naritomi, Patricio, 381 
Nosch, Elizabeth, 381 
Nosh, Paul, 284 
Nastronero, Mary, 258 
Nathan, Linda, 262 
Nothon. Carlton. 381 
Novo, Rene. 300 
Novin, Linda, 252 
Noylon, Potrick, 381 
Necessary, Kim, 260 
Needhom, Bob, 308 
Neely. Scott, 284 
Neemeyer, Vickie, 260 
Neemeyer, Vickie. 352 
Negri, Chuck, 294 
Neil, James. 301 
Neilson. Douglas C. 333 
Neilsson, Doug, 68 
Neilsson, Doug, 272 
Neiman, Kothy, 248 
Neimon, Cathy, 322 
Nelson, Cheryl. 250 
Nelson, Jockie, 248 
Nelson, Jackie. 354 
Nelson. Norm, 286 
Nelson, Susan, 38 1 
Nelson. Susan. 248 
Nettleton, Jim, 292, 381 
Newbury. Cotherine, ??? 
Newberry. Tom. 318 
Newcomb, Bobbie, 325,381 
Newell, Diane. 268 
Newton. Frances, 381 
Newell. Lee, 282 
Newkirk. Bill, 298 
Newkirk. Bill. 273 

Newman, Bob, 286 

Newman, Gory, 318 

Nicholl, Lindsey, 274 

Nichols, George, 282 

Nichols, Sue, 258, 381 

Nicholson, Nino, 256 

Nickel, Bonnie, 329 

Nickel, Bonnie. 258 

Nides, Tino, 113, 115 

Niedermon, Mark, 302 

Niehous, Potti, 234 

Nielsen, James W., 381 

Nielson, Corol, 248 

Nielson, Linda, 248 

Nielson, Mark, 280 

Nikirk, Noncy,240 

N<koloff. Angeliko, 381 

Nichinogo. Joyce, 340, 345, 381 

Nishizu, Julie, 340 

Nitta. Dionne, 345 

Nix, Alice, 73 

Nix. Marilyn, 248 

Noelting, Nodine, 323 

Noid, Barbara, 234 

Nolan, Nancy, 338 

Nolan, Nancy. 246. 381 



Nomura, Don, 280 
Noon, Carolyn, 248, 382 
Norby, Claudia, 231 
Nord, Joil, 382 
Nordlin, Suzi. 323 
Nordquist, Deonno, 74 
Norminton, Tom "Mondo", 323 
Normington, Tom, 62 
Normington, Tom, 62 
Noskin, Jill, 236, 382 
Notkin, Adria, 322 
Nowell, Terry Lou. 382 
Novak, Mike. 310 
Nowaki, Evelyn, 355 
Nowell, Terry, 242 
Noziska, Nancy. 246 
Nozaki, Joan, 382 
Nutting, William G.. 382 
Nurenberg, Vivian, 341 
Nuttoll, David S.. 382 
Nygord, Mike, 282 



Oakley. Koren, 382 
Obloth, Geoff, 64 
Obloth. Robert, 382 
Obloth, Vol, 240 
Oblinger, Susie, 232. 282 
O'Brien, Holly, 240 
O'Brien, Roger, 318 
O'Bourke. Elizabeth. 382 
O'Connor. Eddy, 110 
Odomo. Thomas, 382 
Odermcn, Jeff, 298 
Oeser, Edwin, 382 
Ogden, Greg. 318 
Ohbo, Yosunobu, 382, 318 
Ohki, Suzanne, 382 
Ohisson. Jerri, 234, 352 
Ohiund, Rosann, 234 
Ohiund, Rosann, 338 
Ohren, Lynn. 324. 343 
Okazoki, James, 382 
Okamoto. Beverly, 345, 355 
O'Kone, Karen, 260. 338 
Okido, Julio, 340, 345 
Oleon, Valeria, 74, 382 
OMH, Debbie, 262 
Oliver, Sandi. 270 
Oliver, Shirley, 382 
aien, John, 302.382 
Olrich, Sue. 250 
Olshane, Cathy, 266, 366 
Olson. Morsha, 351 
O'Neal, Morcio, 382 
O'Neil, Pat. 84, 85 
O'Neil, William, 274 
O'Neill, Maureen, 234 
O'Neill, Pot, 246 
O'Neill, Tim, 302 
Opticon, Candice. 382 
Orgon, Alan, 328. 382 
Oringel, Pom, 266 
Ornee, Michoel. 278 
Oritz, Sylvia. 382 
Ortmeyer, Corolyn. 382 
Orzechowski, Thoro, 244 
Osborn, Robin, 248 
Osborn. Lloyd, 278 
Ostroff, Joel, 288 
Osburn, Edward, 382 
Ostrin, Marilyn. 382 



o-s 



Osuch, Linda, 246. 387 
Ola, Candy, 355 
Otis, Les, 74 
Olio, Linda. 248 
Olio, Rainer, 310 
Overmyer. Luonn, 234 
Owen. Gwen. 322 
Oxiey. William. 274 

Pace. Malcolm. 70. 71 
Poddock. Leslie, 238 
Podilla. Geroldine. 75 
Podorr. Robin, 236 
Page. Allen. 382 
Pogliuso, Desi. 260 
Pallock, Wendy. 236 
Polmo, Terry, 298 
Palmer. Alan. 382 
Palmer. Pam. 242. 336 
Palmer. Palricia. 382 
Palmer. Tori. 250 
Polmini. Robyn. 270 
Polmquisl. Debbie. 256 
Pankow. Rick, 323 
Papadimilropoulos, Nikolaos. 382 
Pankow. Morlho. 382 
Pardridge. William. 288. 383 
Paris, Judy. 266 
Park. James. 304 
Parker. Debbie. 232 
Parker, Valerio, 319 
Parry. Pete. 308 
Parsons. Duane. 318 
Pasquariello, Vince, 355 
Polonoi, Mike, 348 
Polterson, Alan. 383 
Pollerson. David. 304 
Polterson. Sieve. 160 
Polti, Linda. 383 
Pollon. John. 284, 323 
Pollon. Taffy, 238 
Patty, Pam, 258, 351 
Paul, Agnes, 383 
Powlik, Kevin. 273. 284 
Powlik. Gregory. 284 
Peoke. Bonnie, 383 
Peake, Douglas, 383 
Pearce, Lilly B., 383 
Pease. Steven, 278, 383 
Pebley, Sue. 264. 338 
Peddrew, Laura. 383 
Peery. Jane. 383 
Peifer. Carol. 258. 383 
Penn, Donna. 236. 338 
Pennington. Tom. 64 
Pennington, William. 64, 76, 77. 
383 274, 334, 

Peralta, Atfieno, 268 
Perez, Waldo. 383 
Perkins. Jofin. 292 
Perler, Joanne. 252 
Perils. Leslei. 322 
Perlman. JeHrey. 113. 115.383 
Permulter, Susan, 262, 383 
Perrine, Kolhy, 232 
Perry, Cheryl, 232 
Perry, Kalhy, 242 
Perry, Linda, 234 
Peskind, Belty, 383 
Pesta, Ben, 383 
Peter, Linda, 383 
Peters, Carl, 68. 333 



Pelers, Josepy. 314 

Peters. Susan. 383 

Peterson. Corol. 351 

Peterson. Curtis. 383 

Peterson. Mark. 276 

Peterson. Neil. 318 

Peterson. Pete. 288 

Peterson. Sendee. 246 

Peyton. Renee. 242. 383 

Peyton. Susan. 383 

Phillips. Connie, 383 

Phillips, Shirlee, 383 

Philp, Christine, 383 

Piastuch, Nancy, 348 

Picco, Ron. 74. 286 

Pichel. Jeffrey. 290 

Pierre. Deanne, 383 

Pieter, Rhonda, 72-3, 77, 266, 352 

Pigeon, Gregory, 304 

Pike, James, 308, 383 

Pilone, Kenneth, 383 

Pimlott, Robert, 383 

Pingree, Janet, 254, 383 

Pinsky. Nina. 113.383 

Pintel. Victor. 383 

Pirie, Diane, 264, 336 

Pittenger, Rick, 301 

Pitzer, Bob, 286 

Pitzer, Chris, 270 

Phelon, Mike, 294 

Phelps, Carol, 258 

Philipson. Lee. 312 

Philips. Barbara. 319 

Phillips, Eleanor, 324 

Phillips, Flip. 312 

Phillips. Linda, 324 

Philp, Chris, 268 

Pitciorn, Brigit, 384 

Pitter, Richord, 384 

Plamondon, Pot. 284 

Plout, Jackie, 319 

Plauzoles, Lucien, 116, 337, 384 

Plotkin, Timothy, 384 

Plummer, Donna, 70, 71, 232, 351 

Po, Jonathan, 384 

Poett. Jim. 282 

Poliquin, Judy. 248. 384 

Polito. Mary. 329 

Pol land. Joyne, 336 

Pollard, Cindy, 246 

Pollchick, Allon, 312 

Pol ley, Terry, 288 

Pond, Cheryl, 250, 332, 352 

Porsch, Christie. 231 

Porter, Paula. 246. 384 

Potter. Thomas, 232, 384 

Powell, B., 71 

Powell, Jim. 278 

Powell. Virginio, 384 

Power, Goyle, 260 

Powers, Victoria. 384 

Preminger, Otto. 103 

Prentice. John. 286 

Price. Brett. 276 

Price. Jim. 302 

Price. Pamela, 384 

Prisbe. Eruie. 323 

Privalotf, Jane. 348. 384 

Proehl. Peter. 384 

Protsch. Reiner. 384 

Pruden. Bob. 318 

PuHer. Jim, 298 



Pugh, Lance, 286 

Pugh, Wayne, 318 

Pulsifer, Suzonne, 248, 338, 352 

Putchkoff, Betty. 248 

Pyenson. Alan. 312 

Quinn. Bob. 320 
Quinn. Illona. 384 
Quinn, John, 306 
Quintino, Dick. 306 
Quittner, Marjorie. 384 
Quon, Michael, 384 
Quon, Horvey, 384 
Quon, Wilmo, 384 
Quong, Shirley, 340, 345 



Robin. General. 99 
Rocklitfe. Allison. 319 
Robinowitz. Alon. 384 
Radom. Esther. 322 
Raders. Jean. 270 
Roe. Donna. 242 
Ratter. John. 314 
Raguso. Janice. 336, 256 
Raker, JeH, 286 
Ramen, Joan, 348, 384 
Roming, Bob, 294 
Romey, Beatrice, 384 
Ramsey, Cathy, 384 
Ramsey, Dane. 323 
Rondoll, John, 384 
Randall, Sue, 256 
Rondles, Lyie, 314 
Randolph, Mark. 288 
Randolph, Carol, 384 
Rank, Moret. 384 

Rankin. Ann. 244 

Rankin. Blake. 302 

Rosok. Londa. 234 

Rasmussen. Kristi, 352, 354, 264 

Ratke, Jon. 318 

Rotledge. Nancy. 232 

Rouch, Cothy, 384 

Roufmon, Lisa, 354 

Raufmon, Lisa, 266 

Roy, Denise, 384 

Roy, Ken, 318 

Roy. Marilyn. 384 

Rayburn. Richard. 292 

Raymond. Barbara. 338. 256 

Rozutis, Danguole, 384 

Reo, Paulo, 384 

Reboleoti, Mary Ann, 352 

Rebeolleli, Ann, 319 

Rebrovich. Arlene. 234 

Redfearn. Wayne. 302 

Reed, Cloudia, 343 

Reed, Elisabeth, 384 

Reed, Jason. 126. 127 

Reed, Tracy. 236 

Reed. Tracy, 75. 73 

Reed. Suson. 385 

Reed. Suzi. 258 

Reeves. James, 385 

Reich, Judy, 256 

Reid, Charles, 304 

Reinberg. Russ. 320 

Reince, Chuck. 324 

Reiner. La Donna, 234 
Reinik, Bruce, 306 
Reischel, Eric, 385 



Reitter, Jonn, 72-3, 385 
Reller, Sue, 250 
Renkow, Nancy, 262 
Resch, Corey, 242 
Resnick, Mark, 276 
Resnik. Mark. 334. 385 
Rethmeir. Noncy. 250 
Rethmeier. Nancy. 378 
Rettberg, Pom, 234 
Reusch, Notolie, 385 
Reynard, Carol, 385 
Reynold, Evelyn, 113, 115 
Reynolds, Laurie, 242, 385 
Reyes, Rolando, 330 
Rickord, Wendy, 244 
Rich, Bob, 318 
Rich, Kenneth, 314 
Richardson. Lynda. 385 
Richardson. Susie, 324 
Richardson, Janie, 264 
Richardson, Bruce, 342 
Richards, Pete. 294 
Richards. Mark. 70 
Richards, Marc, 312 
Richmon. Lee, 276 
Richord, Ron, 66 
Richert, Rick, 320 
Richey, Kathy, 242 
Rickmon, Dennis, 385 
Richmon, Lee, 385 
Ridgell, Riley, 274 
Rielo, John, 301 
Rieber, Vicki, 116 
Rieber, Vicki, 254 
Rieber. Vicki. 336 
Rieber. Ann, 1 1 6 
Riggs, Sharyn. 238 
Riggle, Peggy, 336 
Riggtns, Lono, 234 
Riggins, Lono, 338 
Rindge, Daniel, 385 
Rinek, Lorry, 385 
Ring, Morjori, 385 
Rinn, Gene, 308 
Rinkovsky, Maggie, 322 
Rinek, Lorry. 286 
Rips. Martin. 1 13 
Rissmon, Rondy, 319 
Rivera, Rudy, 296 
Roone, Mike, 294, 385 
Robb, Pete, 280 
Robbins, Edword, 385 
Robbs, Jo Anne, 270 
Roberson, Alon, 302 
Roberts, Greg, 328, 385 
Roberts, Jomes. 385 
Roberts. Lynne, 385 
Roberts, John, 348 
Robertson, David, 385 
Robem, Kenneth, 385 
Robinson, Claire, 250 
Robinson, Charley. 306 
Robinson, Lou, 256 
Robertson, Ron, 320 
Robinson, Terri, 76, 11 
Robiizek, Monica, 248 
Robinson. Pot. 236 
Robinson. Shari. 254 
Rodriguez, Dion, 250 
Rocklin, Neil, 385 
Rockoff, Sharon, 385 
Rodrigquez, Jim, 282 



412 



Rodrigues. James, 385 
Rodriguez, Linda, 254 
Rodgers, Marie, 73 
Rodgers, Nancy, 336 
Rodgers, Nancy, 264 
Roel, Devy, 70 
Rogers, Carl, 329 
Rogers, Stephen, 284 
Rogers, Steven, 304 
Roggers, Tom. 323 
Roig, Denise, 75 
RoKe, Randy, 306 
Roller, Linda, 385 
Roellick, Wendy, 244 
Roman, Donna, 385 
Romans, Tom, 302 
Romano, Jerry, 385 
Romo, Linda, 385 
Ronald, Dana, 323 
Ronson, Jorijane, 385 
Rorkin, Bob, 71 
Rorkin, Bob, 70 
Rosa, Eric, 288 
Rosa, Tom, 298 
Rosack, Chorlene, 385 
Rose, Sherry, 262 
Rosenbaum, Morlene, 318 
Rosenbaum, Morlene, 385 
Rosenberg, Dora, 386 
Rosick, Mike, 274 
Rosen, Alan, 330 
Rose, Marilyn, 325 
Rosen, Nancy, 266 
Rosenberg, Gayle, 262 
Rosenberg, Mark, 312 
Rosenberg, Philip, 386 
Rosenblatt, Bonnie, 252 
Rosenmoyer, Julie, 324 
Rosenthal, Louise, 386 
Rosewater, Jim, 298 
Rosien, Mickey, 302 
Ross, Cory, 386 
Ross, Charlene, 386 
Ross, Connie, 234 
Ross, Diane, 236 
Ross, Jonis, 351 
Ross, Janis, 236 
Ross, Jeff, 296 
Rosser, Becky, 351 
Rosser, Becky, 352 
Rossi, Claudia, 322 
Rossi, Randy, 294 
Rossi, Sue, 242 
Roth, Doug, 294 
Roth, Kalhy, 348 
Rothaus, Debbie, 264 
Rothe, Caprice, 248 
Rothaus, Debbie, 338 
Rothmon, Larry, 300 
Rothner, Glenn, 318 
Roubidoux, Rebecca, 386 
Roubinion, Berge, 386 
Rounsavell, Dorothy, 256 
Rounsovell, Mary, 256 
Rousso, Hensry, 386 
Rowe, Cirtis, 160 
Rozzen, Cheryl, 386 
Rub, Marty, 312 
Rubin, Frank, 386 
Rubin, Jerry, 106 
Rubin, Ron, 386 
Rubinstein, Joe, 68, 386 



Rudametkin, Lydio, 386 
Rudolph, Bev, 246 
Rudolph, Steph, 252 
Rudy, Rosalind, 386 
Rufer, Chris, 330 
Rumsey, Roger, 386 
Rush, Estello, 386 
Rusnok, Drew, 274 
Rusch, Rick, 298 
Russell, Barbara, 238, 386 
Russell, Jeanne, 386,250 
Russell, Joan, 232 
Russell, Linda, 231 
Rustod, Steve, 116, 113 
Rustand, Koy, 341 
Rustand, Kay, 238 
Rustand, Kay, 350 
Rustin, Suzanne, 248, 386 
Rutherford, Anne, 244 
Rutkin, Stuart, 386 
Ryan, Edward, 386 
Ryan, Pot, 282 
Ryan, Tim, 282 
Rygel, Sandy, 254 
Rygel, Sandra, 386, 332 



Saboth, Cliff, 300 
Sachs, Alan, 386 
Socks, Elisso, 386 
Sock, Libby, 266, 336 
Sachs, Alan, 330 
Soggese, Nicholas, 386 
St. Peter, Daniel J., 333 
Saito, Condi, 345 
Solet, Nikki, 242 
Saltzmon, Jeff, 280 
Somirad, Sam, 386 
Somou, Alan, 386 
Samson, Pun, 318 
Samuels, Bernard, 386 
Samuels, Nordy, 273, 312, 334 
Samuelson, Kris 74, 246 
San, Ali F., 386 
Sondbrook, John, 323, 324 
Sonders, Mark, 386 
Sandler, Michael, 386 
Sandoval, Jesse, 323 
Sanders, Nancy, 321 
Sanders, Nikki, 238, 332 
Sands, Jenny, 254, 386 
Sandy, Lovette, 387 
Sonserino, Gary, 282 
Sorris, Judity, 387 
Soss, Rosolee P., 387 
Sass, Mary Ellen, 258, 354 
Sato, Cynthia, 322 
Sato, Stephen, 387 
Sato, Susan, 340 
Sotterthwoitt, Leonn, 318 
Souer, Linda L., 387 
Sauer, Lyn, 268 
Saul, Karen, 234 
Sounders, Diane, 234 
Sovoge, Christie, 238 
Savage, Jean, 387 
Sauve, Ed, 288 
Saye, Steve, 387 
Sayre, James, 290, 387 
Sbordelloti, Robert, 290 
Scales, Bonnie, 387 



Scanlan, Helen, 246 
Scannell, Ed, 318 
Schad, Richard, 276 
Schoefer, Jeonnie, 244, 350 
Schafer, Jim, 298 
Schoeffer, Sheila, 387 
Schallon, Melody, 232, 387 
Schallon, Melody, 347, 338 
Schoring, Morgo, 387 
Scherer, Diane, 258 
Schermer, Leslie, 252 
Schermer, Robert, 296 
Schechner, Tobi, 387 
Schermer, Victoria, 387 
Schiering, Dove, 300 
Schiffmon, Mark, 314 
Schleh, Linda, 246 
Schiffer, Annetle, 387 
Schiffer, Michael, 387 
Schiller, Keith, 323 
Schlenenger, Jeff, 324 
Schlitz, 290 
Schmid, Arthur, 274 
Schmidt, Dove, 302, 387 
Schmidt, Kristo, 116, 254,341 
Schmidt, Paul, 280 
Schnieder, Gretchen, 260 
Schneider, Lork, 246 
Schneider, Mar, 312 
Schneider, Sandy, 258 
Schneider, Sandy, 262 
Schneiders, Gretchen, 73 
Schofield, Sue, 254 
Schofield, Terry, 160 
Schrieber, Barry, 76, 274 
Schubert, Margaret, 387 

Schug, James, 274 
Schultz, Kris, 322 
Schultz, Rochelle, 387 
Schuster, Sue, 76, 77 

Schutte, Jerry, 302, 387 

Schwartz, Carolyn, 387 

Schwortz, Elaine, 252, 387 

Schwartz, J., 71 

Schwartz, Jackie, 322, 336 

Schwartz, Karen, 262, 387 

Schwartz, Ken, 318, 387 

Schwartz, Rich, 318 

Schwartz, Ronni, 322 

Scott, Bob, 3 1 8 

Scott, Carol, 262 

Scott, Lee an n, 387 

Scott, Olivette L., 387 

Scott, Sue, 242, 387 

Scott, Greg, 304 

Scurick, Robert, 290 

Scopy, Doug, 3 10 

Sebourn, Patricia, 387 

Seid, Ken, 75 

Seidel, John, 304 

Seigle, Diane, 262, 387 

Sein, Lorry, 280 

Sekera, Michael, 387 

Seligman, Steve, 294 

Semel, Eileen, 73 

Senechel, Margie, 250, 388 

Senzoki, Denise, 355 

Serber, Rochelle, 388 

Seski, John, 308 

Sesar, Dennis, 388 

Sesar, Jo-Ann, 388 

Sessler, Dick, 292 



Settle, Carol, 323 
Shackelford, Lynn, I 60 
Severtson, H. Richard, Jr., 388 
Shofer, Mary Frances, 244 
Shambaugh, Linda, 388 
Shane, Michael J., 388 
Shank, Bob, 310 
Shapiro, Nancy, 76, 77, 262 
Shapiro, Sandy, 266 
Shapiro, Susan, 388 
Shoprio, Wendy, 388 
Shapiro, William, 388 
Sharon, Borboro, 244 
Sharp, Beverly, 388 
Shottuck, Gary, 388 
Shattuck, Violet, 388 
Shauer, Tom, 294 
Show, Kemper, 388 
Show, Pomelo G., 388 
Shea, Moureen, 264, 341 
Shearer, James, 274 
Shedd, Steve, 294 
Sheehon, Barbara, 242 
Sheets, Priscilla, 268, 351 
Sheldon, Jenny, 242 
Shell, Susan, 388 
Shempp, Howard, 298 
Shenk, Chuck, 318 
Shepord, Albert, 388 
Shepord, Sally, 258 
Sher, Matt, 296 
Sherman, Marilyn, 388 
Shermon, Non, 332 
Sherman, Patricio, I 16, 338 
Sherritt, Kathy, 319 
Shewey, Donald, 388 
Shields, Harriet, 258 
Shigekawo, Linda, 388 
Shigetome, Teresa, 388 
Shillmon, Roe, 234 
Shindel, Susan, 388 
Shipley, Randolph, 388 
Short, George, 308 
Siebert, Sam, 282 
Siboyan, Aroceli Bella O., 388 
Shibosoki, Kyodo, 340 
Shibasoki, Kyoko, 345 
Shimizu, Susan, 345 
Shimizu, Susan, 340 
Shows, Winifred, 388 
Schroger, Mark, 318 
Shubert, Tom, 388 
Shubert, Tommy, 333 
Shulman, Reno, 388 
Shuster, Susie, 31 9 
Sieberl, Bill, 160 
Siedorf, Shori, 252 
Sieg, Jan, 246, 351 
Siegel, George, 388 
Siegol, Michelle, 252 
Siegol, Roger, 298, 334 
Siever, Bob, 276 
Sievers, Diane, 258 
Siffermonn, Barbara, 388 
Silberman, Judity, 388 
Silk. Terri, 248 
Sillmon, Arnold, 388 
Silver, Judy, 389 
Silverman, Dove, 11 , 389 
Silverman, Linda M.. 262 
Silverman, Linda M., 389 
Silverman, Vincent, 284 



Silvern, Barbara, 341 
Silverstein, Ron, 318 
Simmler, Suzanne, 248 
Simmonds, David, 288 
Simmons, Perry "Turk", 323 
Simonds, Linda, 1 1 3 
Simpson, Karen, 324 
Simpson, Mary Lou, 389 
Simpson, Jane, 254 
Simpson, Mary Lou, 232 
Sims, Venita, 389 
Sinoy, Sharyn D., 389 
Sinclair, John, 298 
Sindell, Gory, 300 
Singer, Alison, 266 
Singer, Helen. 322 
Siraton, Sue, 266 
Sires. Bruce. 262 
Sires. Bruce. 389 
Sirota, Cathy, 266 
Sirota, Leo, 389 
Sirota, Phyllis, 260 
Sisto, Frances, 389 
Sitz, Bill, 294, 334, 389 
Siu,Tsun-Pui, 389 
Sjostrand, Bonnie, 322 
Sklonowsky, Mike, 279, 389 
Skiles, Marilyn, 336 
Skiles, Steve. 279 
Skillmon. Paula. 268 
Slater, Don, 318 
Slater, John, 294 
Slater, Penny, 74 
Slock, Sharon, 268, 389 
Sloven, Paul, 76, 77 
Slaughter, Rondy, 294 

Sloan. Donno. 77 

Sloan, Donna, 250 

Sloan, Harry, 64 

Sloan, Larry, 64 

Slowskei, Slawko, 389 

Smart, Deborah, 244 

Smart, Doug, 280 

Smiley, Bruce, 3 1 2 

Smith, Alan, 389 

Smith, Andy, 318 

Smith, Carol, 336 

Smith, Cheryl, 319 

Smith, Christion, 389 

Smith, Chris, 282, 334 

Smith, Don, 328 

Smith, Eric, 280 

Smith, Gayle, 389 

Smith, Kelleen D., 389 

Smith, Kevin, 288 

Smith, Kimberley, 244, 351 

Smith, Penina J., 389 

Smith, Rick, 318 

Smith, Sandra, 301 

Smith, Sandra, 389 

Smith, Stephanie, 74, 389 

Smith, Susan, 264 

Smoot, John, 284 

Snapp, JeH, 280 

Sneod, Dave, 31 8 

Snider, Joseph, 330 

Snow, John, 333 

Snow, Mornie, 240 

Snyder, Christi, 254. 264 
Snyder. Greg. 294 
Snyder. Sharyne. 236 
Snyder. Spencer, 389 



413 




s-z 



414 



Sobkowsko, Irene, 389 
Soderberg. Mike, 334, 389 
Steder.Teri, 341, 347 
Sokolow, Carole, 319 
Solomon. Lynne. 319 
Solomon, Marsha, 322 
Somers. Margery, 232 
Soohoo, Joanne, 389 
Sorenson, Cindy, 321 
Soso, Rosa M., 389 
Soutlierland, Ken, 320 
Spongier, Lynette, 232, 338 
Spradlin, Patricio, 389 
Speckmon. Paul, 286 
Speilberg, Beckey, 319 
Spieker, Tod, 282 
Spinordi, Linda, 323. 336 
Sp.re. Ron, 71, 76, 312 
Spitzer, Rob, 324 
Sponenberg, Susan, 322 
Spradlin, Trish. 250 
Sones. Drew, 298 
Sorloff, Shel, 296 
Slack, Richard, 389 
Staines, Jerry, 282 
Stambler, Don, 300 
Staniek, Joan, 242 
Stanley. Paul, 276 
Stannard, Daphne, 74 
Stanton, Barbara, 258 
Stanton, Bruce, 333 
Stork, Ann, 319 
Stearns, Dove, 302, 334, 389 
Stearns, Heather, 262 
Stearns, Pam, 262 
Steddom, Roderick C. II, 333 
Steele. Kathy. 232, 390 
Steele, Scott, 288 
Steidley, Sue, 264 
Stein, Brendo, 390 
Stein, Howard, 276 
Stein, Livio, 262 
Stem, Marty, 296 
Stem, Michael. 390 
Steinberg, Corolynn, 390 
Stenehjem, Jane, 248, 390 
Stenehjem, Jerry, 292 
Sternhill, Leslie, 390 
Stennes, Pam, 35 1 
Stephen, Noncy. 258, 332 
Stephanou, Steve, 302 
Sterbentz, Jim, 302 
Stern, Laura, 351 
Stern, Sheldon, 318 
Sternhill, Leslie, 252, 348 
Stevens, Kent, 292 
Stewart, Carol, 238 
Stewart, Michal, 234 
Stewart, Suzanne, 390 
Steygleder, John, 276 
Stich, Carol, 390 
Stiles, Ann, 256 
Stillman, Jooni, 354 
Stillman, Joanie, 264 
Stillwell, Ralph, 126, 127 
Stine. Linda, 254 
Stitch, Carol. 240, 332 
Stivers, Don, 318, 390 
Stivers, Ron, 318, 390 
Stockstill, Brenda, 336 
Stoehr, Greg, 76, 11 
Stokes, Carl, 104 
Stolorz. Stephanie, 268, 351 
Stone, Brian, 279 
Stone, Lawrence, 390 



Stone, Sharon, 256, 319, 390 

Stone, Tab, 318 

Stone, Thommos, 304 

Stout, Kathy, 84-5, 250 

Stowell, Hollis, 254 

Stowell, Marsha, 238 

Strachon, Bonnie, 258 

Strachan. Shirley, 238, 332, 338. 

Strahm, Larry, 320 

Strang, Nancy, 254, 352 

Strann, Steve, 355 

Stratford, Allon, 306 

Stratton. Chuck, 282 

Strotton, Doc, 318 

Strauss, Louise, 348 

Stricklin, Mary Jane, 250, 338 

Strong, Al, 280 

Strong, Betsy, 260 

Strong, Chuck, 62, 74, 75, 334 

Strong, Sue, 238, 332 

Stryker, Kenneth, 274 

Stuart, Ed, 330 

Stubbs, Georgia, 322 

Stumph, Robert, 279 

Stuppy, Betti Jane, 240 

Sturgeon, Trudi, 256, 341 

Suorez, Fernando, 306 

Suda, Diane, 246 

Suey, Rich, 318 

Suffron, Norma, 268, 332 

Sugarmon, Joe, 276 

Sullivan, Donna, 351 

Sullivan, Jon, 242 

Sultan, Jeffrey, 288 

Sullivan, Jim, 306 

Sunderman, Fritz, 325 

Sunderman, Jeff, 280 

Su, Steve. 318 

Sumpf, Lisa, 234 

Susnow, Bob, 296 

Sutton, Morkley, 323 

Sutton, Dove, 318 

Strosburger, Rita, 390 

Strathmon, Randy, 390 

Straus, Joel, 390 

Strauss, David, 390 

Strong, Susan, 390 

Stubbs, Georgia, 390 

Sturges, Charles, 390 

Stutz, Sharon, 390 

Sugono, David, 390 

Sugano, Gayle, 390 

Sugeta, Amy, 390 

Susnow, Robert, 390 

Svendsen, Jeanette, 321 

Svendsen, Sharon, 231 

Swan. Sherrill, 232 

Swanson, Karen, 231 

Swanson, John R., 333 

Swanson, Suzie, 250, 338 

Sweek. Bill, 160 

Sweet, Kati, 324 

Swenson, Susan C, 390 

Switzer, Bob, 296 

Sykes, Ralph, 274 

Syms. Bert. 284 



Tabata. Amy, 322 
Tagawa, Jiro, 284 
Toi, Clem, 318 
Toi, Steven, 390 
Takahashi. Rex, 320 
Tokasoki, Robert, 390 



Takenaga, Diana, 345 

Takenaga, Diana, 340 

Tammingo, Ernest, 390 

Tomura, Sharon, 348 

Tanoka, Gail, 345 

Tanoka, Takashi, 390 

Tandberg, Daniel, 1 1 6 

Tong, John, 390 

Tani, Gordon, 76 

Tanihara, Grace, 340, 345 

Tannehill, Christi, 258 

Tannenberg, John, 390 

Tanner, Ross, 274 

Torlow, Mary, 391 

Torsey, Lisa, 342 

Tarsey, Patricia, 342 

Torumoto, Beverly, 345 

Tarumoto, Beverly, 340 

Tarvajorvi, Jooko, 300 

Toshino, Jeanne, 340 

Tasoff, Jack, 308, 391 

Tator, Steven, 391 

Towney, Maxine, 355 

Taylor, Florido,, 286 

Teal, Jack, 301,341 

Teitelboum, Cyli, 391 

Templar, Martha, 391 

Templer, Marti, 254 

Tendrock, Steve, 276 

Tenebaum, Bob, 296 

Tenebom, Morcio, 391 

Teren, Audrey, 72-3, 262, 391, 347 

Terry, Lynda, 322 

Terry, Michelle, 322 

Terry, Stan, 286 

Terzian, Cathy, 343 

Terziam, Cathy, 323 

Teshima, Janice, 391 

Teutsch. Mirion, 256, 336, 338 

Thaler, Addie, 322 

Thayer, Bruce, 301 

Theis, Richard, 290 

Thierbach, Rick, 288 

Therrien, Suzanne, 391 

Thomas, Corl, 294 

Thomos, Chuck, 280,391 

Thomas, Danny, 302, 391 

Thomas, Dove. 282, 391 

Thomas, Helen, 391 

Thomas, Lani, 254, 251 

Thomas, Mock, 286 

Thomas, Mike, 298 

Thomas, Peggy, 324 

Thomas, Rochelle, 250 

Thompson, Fran, 270 

Theompson, Brendo, 391 

Thompson, Charles, 391 

Thompson, Gail, 319 

Thompson, Kthy, 248 

Thompson, Loird, 391 

Thompson, Mike, 302 

Thompson, Rebecca, 391 

Thoreson, Gail, 242 

Thorsen, Carol, 391 

Thrift, James, 391 

Thursdale, David, 391 , 325 

Thursyon, Terry, 324 

Ticker, Neil, 391 

Timm, Heidi, 254 

Timson, Elainea, 391 

Tindall, Mike, 302 

Ting, A., 71 

Ting, Gordon, 348 

Tokirio, Kolhy, 345, 340 

Tokuhara, Gil, 328 



Tolentino, Lucio, 391 
Tollefson, Gayie, 242 
Tom, Jennie, 352, 354 
Tom, Suey, 391 
Tomolos, Roger, 391 
Tomke, 391 
Tong, Marcelia, 348 
Tong, Vicki, 338 
Tongco, Bobbie, 338 
Toolen, Bob, 302 
Topliss, Stehonie, 324 
Torgon, Sherman, 391 
Torkelson, Lonoii, 391, 348 
Torres, Bena, 242 
Torres, Beniva, 391 
Totsubo, Suzanne, 340, 345 
Tottesman, Don, 74 
Tough, Beverly, 391 
Towota, Colleen. 340 
Towe. Joe, 391 
Townsend, Randy, 392 
Toyama, Ronald, 392 
Trieselmann, Ralph, 320 
Trimble, Fay, 392 
Tripp, Sandra, 248 
Troughton, Michael, 314 
Trout, Joyce, 232 
Troul, 248, 338 
Troutman, Ston, 126 
Troutmon, Stan, 1 27 
TruQx. Richord, 392 
Truesell, Aviva, 392 
Trumbull, Lea, 256 
Tseng, Eugene, 318 
Tubbesing, Linda, 258 
Tucker, Diane, 322 
Tucker, Robin, 248 
Tucker. Robin, 336 
Tully, Margaret, 392 
Tung, Francis, 392 
Turchen, Geroldine, 392 
Turkell, Pat, 252 
Turner, Ellen, 392 
Turner, Judy, 322, 392 
Turner, Kenneth, 3'4 
Turpel, Mike, 318 
Tyber, Edword, 274 
Tyner, Shelley, 266. 336 
Tysdal. Rod, 301. 392 
Tzeng-ming Chen. 392 



Uchida, Wolly, 323 
Ullman, Mike, 276 
Ulrey, Joan, 354 
Ulrey, Joan, 352 
Ung, Mary, 340 
Unger, John, 323 
Unger, Linda, 234 
Uno, Sandra, 392 
Uriate, Bill, 323 , 
Usher, Pat, 343, 347, 348 
Utzinger. Lynn, 254 
Uyemura, Nancy. 392 
Uwote, Viv. 345 



Vodnois, Thomas. 392 
Valdes, Dora, 392 
Voleska, Dave, 318 



Valley. John. 160 
VanOrden. Rod. 310 
Von CotI, Caroline, 392 
VanOsdel. Virginia, 270, 329 
VanPatton. Eric. 323 
VonTright. Pete, 282 
Vaupel, Michael, 392 
Veile, Barbara, 238 
Velicki, Darlene. 73, 323. 352 
Venturing, Sue, 246 
Vernon, Linda, 242 
Vernoy, Terry, 288 
Via, Suzanne, 392 
Vicklund, Kris, 250 
Vigil, Robert, 392 
Vineyard, Mary, 268 
Viloria, Benny, 292 
Vlahakis, Kathy, 351 
Vochko, Lee, 234 
Voegeli, Bruce, 302 
Vogel, Mark, 296 
Vogel, Richard. 392 
Vogel. Tom. 290 
Vogt, Robert, 288 
Volmert, Mork, 300 
VonStein, Pom, 323 
Voris, Ton!, 350, 392 
Vroomon, Charlotte, 1 13 
Vykouk, Marjorie. 258 



Woche, Jonet, 270 
Wochi, Julie, 355 
V^ade, Jeonnie, 322 
Wade, Timothy, 301 
Woechter, Michael, 330. 392 
Wagner, Rick, 280 
Woismon, Liz. 262 
Wckalopulos. George. 392 
Walden. Don, 126 
Walker, Caroline, 264 
Walker, Judy, 256, 392 
Wolker, Mike, 279 
Walker, Stephen, 333 
Walker. Steve, 282 
Walker, Susie, 94, 1 1 3 
Walker, Tom. 318 
Wallace, Glenn. 276 
Wallace, Jeanne. 264 
Wallace, Penny, 260, 392 
Wallet, Doreen, 392 
Wallin, Linda, 250 
Walter, Byron, 325 
Walter, Susan, 392 
Won, Ho- pong, 392 
Wont, Poulette, 244, 392 
Word, Baxter, 109 
Ward, Joe. 274. 334 
Ward, Pamela, 232, 392 
Warden, Morgie, 246 
Ware. Patty, 351 
' Wort, Cindy, 248 
Warren, Helen, 258 
Warren, Ross, 280 
Wossermon, Ellie, 266 
Wesson, Jim. 310 
Waterman. M,. 7 I 
Watson. Jane, 393 
Watson, Marcio, 76. 77 
Watson, Noncy. 392 
Watts, Jeanie. 393 
Watts. Pot. 254 
Webb. Corolyn. 393 
Webb. Dennis, 393 
Webb, Wallis, 393 



Weber, Lenore. 393 
Weber. Timothy. 393 
Webster. Bruce. 333. 393 
Webster. Trip. 288 
Wedding, Linda, 338, 256 
Weil, Susan. 341,232 
Weinberg, Borbara, 323 
Weiner. Irene. 393 
Weiner. Jeff, 113 
Weingarten. Susie. 266. 393 
Weinger, Gail, 266 
Weinhouse, Donald, 393 
Weinman, Josh, 334, 312 
Weinstein, Barbara, 262 
Weinstein, llene, 393 
Weinstein, Lorry, 62 
Weinstein. Pot. 1 13 
Weinstein. Susan. 236 
Weir, Alex, 308 
Weir, Norm, 300 
Weisboum, Heidi, 236 
Weisberg, Jane, 343 
Weisberg, Lauren, 393 
Wei berg, Sharri, 343 
Weisel, Mimi, 262 
Weiselthier, Linda. 319 
Weiss, Beryl, 236 
Weiss, Gory, 296 
Weiss, Loren, 393 
Weissmon, Rich. 296 
Weissman, Suzanne, 393 
Weisz, Donna, 76, 336 
Weisz, Sharon. 118 
Welch, Cindy, 246 
Welch. Vicki. 254 
Welles. Polti. 231 
Wells. Potty. 242 
Wells, Susan, 319 393 
Welsh, Luther, 279 
Welshimer, Kenneth, 304 
Welty, Barbara, 338. 347, 256 
Wendl. Emily, 238, 393 
Wenke. Charlotte. 343 
Wenninger. Sue. 324 
Wenters, Madeline. 238 
Werlin, Les. 276 
Warner. Leonord. 318 
Wertz, C, 71 
West, Vicki. 264 
Westly. Dean. 290 
Weslover, Wendy, 338, 244, 351 
Wexler, Danny. 286 
Wexler, Gory, 393 
Wexler, Harold, 393 
Weyrauch, Jonis, 250 
Whang, James. 393 
Whatley, Corella, 393 
Wholley. Gail. 323 
Wheeler, Connie, 264. 338 
Wheeler. Rondy. 292 
Wlieeler. Tom. 286. 334 
Whitoker, Horry, 66. 68 
Whitby. Dove. 310 
White. Alexander. 94 
While, Alice. 393 
Whited. Ellen. 393 
Whitehead. Danielle. 393 
Whitelock. Helen, 393 
Whitley, Bonnie, 240 
Whitmer, Gayle, 393 
Whitmore, Sisie. 324 
Whitney. Janet, 393 
Whillemore. Sue. 319 
Whillon, Richard, 294 
Wibker, Lindo. 268, 393 



Wichmonn, Colhleen, 323. 393 
Wichmann, Claire, 323, 393 
Wicks, Sydney, 160 
Wickstrom, Linda, 256 
Wiegand, Goyle, 323 
Wiemeyer, Diane, 242, 393 
Wiesbloott, Al, 116 
Wesblott. Bonni, 394 
Wigle, James, 288 
Wigodsky. Helena. 262.394 
Wiley. Annette, 260 
Wilcox, Walter, 110 
Wild, Edgar, 394 
Wilhelm, James. 394 
Wilkes. John. 282 
Wilkes. Pom, 256, 394 
Wilkes, Terry, 248 
Wilkins, Jim. 76, 77 
Wilkinson, Sharon, 264 
Williams, Cameron. 394 
Williams, Christy, 234 
Williams, Mary Lou, 341, 256 
Williams. Paulo. 246 
Williams, Robert, 394 
Williams, Steve, 282 
Williams, Tomi, 232 
Williams, Victoria, 258 
Willis. Judi, 77 
Willis, Mike, 310 
Willott. Jim. 310 
Willson. Perry. 298. 394 
Willson. Randy. 298 
Wilmoth. Rhonda, 268, 332 

Wilson, Jock, 394 

Wilson. Tom, 294 
Wilson, Wendy, 242 

Winder, Bill. 286 

Windon. Charles, 394 

Winer, Sharon, 354 

Winlield, John, 323 

Winn. Jim, 302 

Winslow, Bill, 312 

Winston, Roberto, 266 

Winternitz, Jenlo, 394 

Winthrop, Marc, 312,333 

Winthrop, Stuart, 312 

Wiptt, Lane, 116 

Wirth, Diane, 262 

Wisdom, Morjorie. 394 

Wisner. Kelley.323 

Wisniewski. Carl. 290 

Wilkopp. Garrett, 394 

Wilt, Steven. 306 

Wilus, Chormaine. 232, 394 

Woeslemoyer, Linda, 238, 394 

Wohl. Carol, 240 

Wojak, Waller, 330, 394 

Wold. Nancy, 264 

Wole, Winkie. 250. 352 

Wollsohn. More. 276 

Wolfus. Daniel. 394 

Wong. Helen. 394 

Wong, John, 310 

Wong, Shelly, 340 

Woo, Chris, 335 

Woo, Deidre, 322 

Woo, Joe, 290 

Wood, George, 301,394 

Wood, Judy, 72, 73, 260, 347, 394 

Wooden, John, 160 

Woodruff, Kathy, 231 

Woods, Nancy, 394 

Woolslencroft, Janice. 394 

Wordes. Rich. 276 

Worswick, Andrew, 394 



Worth, Randy, 282 
Wortmon, Bill. 296 
Wrighl, Chester, 394 
Wright, Jack, 302 
Wright, Lisa, 258, 329 
Wright, Mark, 284 
Wright, Rosemary, 70, 71,238 
Wright, Vikke, 242 
Wulfkuhle, Analee, 242 
Wymon, Bob, 310 

Yomoda, Barbara, 340. 345 
Yancey, Jonelle, 319, 354 
Yancher, Susan, 236 
Yang, Gory, 394 
Yang, Tien-Tsoi, 394 
Yankee. Suenell. 264 
Yankowski, Linda, 322 
Yarber, Diano, 258 
Yormus, Judy, 348 
Yarnell, Beth, 318, 336 
Yasgoor, Loni, 76, 77. 266. 352 
Yee. Elaine. 231.394 
Yeung, Emily. 394 
Yip. Jacqueline, 345, 352 
Yoder, Dorn, 300 
Yoffee, Joanne, 352, 266 
Yomontos, 284 
Yonumm, Yeetoum, 318 
Yordon. Carl, 272. 333. 306 
York, Trudi, 394 
Yorty. Sam. 103 
Yosgott. Alice. 234 
Yoshihoro. Nancy. 345. 355 
Yoshitomi, Sandra, 394 
Young, Beth. 242, 352 
Young, Bill, 302 
Young, Bob, 282 
Young, Cathy, 254, 354 
Young, Chorles, 102 
Young, Jonette, 394 
Young, Judy. 394 
Young, Ken, 320 
Young, Michele, 258, 395 
Young, Sherry, 268, 395 
Youssor, Freidoun, 318, 395 
Yuen, Joyce, 323. 342. 395 
Yunger, Barbara, 232, 395 
Yslas, Noel, 349, 355 

Zocchino. Nordo. 1 1 3 

Zokion. Kathleen, 395 

Zojec, 292 

Zamorin, Ronald, 395 

Zomberlin, Joanna, 238 

Zamanigan, Terry, 298 

Zonger, Drew, 70, 71. 296 

Zonl, Casey, 256 

Zonzot. Pete, 302 

Zoptitf, Carl, 395 

Zorote, Debby. 244. 347. 350 

Zarett. Russell, 395 

Zeimer, Jody, 240, 332, 395 

Zide, Gay, 395 

Zikrotch, Alexa, 395 

Ziman, Al, 296, 395 

Zimmerman, Douglas, 274, 334 

Zimmerman, Kurt, 395 

Zimmerman, Sandy. 270, 332 

Zimmerman, Sunny, 236 

Zirgulis, Allan, 310 

Zolen, Gail, 395 

Zrake, Jim, 302, 334 

Zucker, Judy, 254 

Zunino, Ellen, 395 




photography by; lane wipff, al wiesblott, 
lucien plauzoles, ellen Shapiro, the 
asucia photo department; norm 
schindler, luther d. hussey.stanleymin- 
del, dean berkus, len hartkemeier, brad 
bjork. Stan troutman, manager, portraits 
by frank halberg, campus studio, 
typography by asucia printing and du- 
plicating; art atkinson, marion crocker, 
al fisher, (and scott, cathy et al) 

lithography by am erican yearbook com- 
pany, a division of josten's 

representative James powell 

SOUTHERN CAMPUS YEARBOOK IS 
AN ANNUAL PUBLICATION OF THE 
ASUCLA COMMUNICATION BOARD 



In October this editor, returning from a year of study in Europe, 
returned to UCLA laden with dreams. Dreams of a magnificent graphic work 
worthy of its place among the 50th anniversary publications 
of the university. This was going to be a volume filled with contro- 
versial interviews, in-depth editorials and probing journalism about 
the events of the year. If you the reader, have pored through it now, 
you see that it falls short of this. Unluckily the yearbook has a cer- 
tain number of inherent handicaps; it is made with and about 

people; people who miss appointments; retract statements etc. and it only 
comes out in June six months after the first deadline. V^e ore proud 
of our product. Ann and I feel that it is quite an improvement 
over the one we did two years ago. We also believe that you can do 
better, Krista, if all goes well. Danny, thank you for your last- 
quarter-that-I'm-working-this-hord labors. As we finish the book, we 
realize that it wouldn't have come out without those hours of hard work. 
That doesn't mean we're forgetting all your groundwork Pat; and 
we thank you for it. Vicki, all our good thoughts for the indexing when 
it counted. Al and Lane, I'm sorry we couldn't have four-hundred 
pages of color and good words. And last but not least, thank you Steve, 
for your art work and especially for the friend next door. 

Many People not on the yearbook staff contribute heavily to 

the effort required to put out a 416-page book. Our thanks to the 

photo department, especially to Stan who got me into this whole thing 

and Norm who kept me going all through the year with his superb 

work. Our thanks to Craig and Al who came down from the third floor 

to solve problems and suggest solutions every time we called. 

Frank, your portrait work was on time this year, and I'd bet we could 

get it early next year. Art, I left a madhouse in '67, and now Socam has 

no reason to complain about typesetting today. And to oil the people 

who came in to keep us sane. Zero, Ox, John, Andy, thank you. 

April 25, 1969 



30 




A<_ 



Copyright 1969 
by Lucien Plauzoles 



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