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Epilogue: UNLV Yearbook, 1969

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Information

Date

1969

Description

Yearbook main highlights: schools and departments; detailed lists with names and headshots of faculty, administration and students; variety of photos from activities, festivals, campus life, and buildings; campus organizations such as sororities, fraternities and councils; beauty contest winners; college sports and featured athletes; and printed advertisements of local businesses; Institution name: University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Digital ID

man000535

Physical Identifier

SCA Periodicals LD3745 .C6
    Details

    Citation

    man000535. Epilogue: UNLV Yearbook. 1969. [Periodical] Retrieved from Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d1pv6fd6m

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    This material is made available to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. It may be protected by copyright, trademark, privacy, publicity rights, or other interests not owned by UNLV. Users are responsible for determining whether permissions are necessary from rights owners for any intended use and for obtaining all required permissions. Acknowledgement of the UNLV University Libraries is requested. For more information, please see the UNLV Special Collections policies on reproduction and use (https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/research_and_services/reproductions) or contact us at special.collections@unlv.edu.

    Standardized Rights Statement

    Digital Provenance

    Digitized materials: physical originals can be viewed in Special Collections and Archives reading room

    Digital Processing Note

    OCR transcription

    Language

    English

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    application/pdf

    to,
    ,( t "' .f .
    ... And the creator gave her to Man so that the earth should be
    p pulated.
    A few days later Man went to Ridjalu l'Ghabib and said:
    'Lord, the woman you gave me poisons my life. She chatters
    without a pause, she wastes all my time, she wails of every little thing
    and she is constantly ailing.'
    Thereupon the Creator took back his gift in order to punish Man.
    llardly a week passed and the Man appeared again, saying: 9
    'Lord, I am most desolate since you took back the woman. She
    was always singing and dancing. Now I cannot help remembering all
    the time how sweetly she looked upon me, how skilled she was in
    k1 sing me, how delightfully we played together and how she sought
    m r protection ... '
    The Creator gave him back the woman.
    Not even 3 days had passed when Man was once again standing in
    front of the Creator to complain.
    'Lord,' he said, 'I simply cannot understand this - but if I strike a
    careful balance, woman causes me more annoyance than pleasure.
    Please, rid me of her.'
    But the Creator said: 'Do what you consider best. In order to live
    in peace with your wife and be able to bear her presence, she shall owe
    you obedience from now on.'
    But Man replied hopelessly: 'I cannnot live with her.'
    'Can you live without her then?' asked the Creator.
    Whereupon Man hung his head and said sadly: 'Alas for me! I can
    live neither with nor without her!'
    10
    E
    John Bailey 1968
    Lecturer in Social Services
    B.S. Utah State University M.S. University of Utah
    Sheilagh Brooks 1966
    Associate Professor of Anthropology
    B.A., M.A., Ph.D. University of California
    Bruce Burger 1967
    Instructor in Sociology
    B.S. University of Pennsylvania M.A. New School for Social Research
    Paul Burns 1963
    Assistant Professor of History and Chairman of the Department
    B.A. Miami University M.A., Ph.D. Indiana University
    Robert Davenport 1964
    Assistant Professor of History
    B.A. Pomona College M.A., M.S. University of California
    Robert Fitzwater 1967
    Assistant Professor of Anthropology
    A.A. Long Beach City College B.A. University of California at Los Angeles
    Bernard Greenblatt 1967
    Associate Professor of Social Services Coordinator, Helping Services Program
    B.A. University of Missouri D.M.D., M.A., Ph.D. University of Oregon
    Harrie Hess 1961
    Professor of Psychology and Chairman of the Department
    B.A., University of Nevada M.A., Ph.D. University of Colorado
    Ronald Jack 1967
    Instructor in Political Science
    B.S., M.S. University of Utah
    Albert Johns 1967
    Associate Professor of Political Science
    B.A. Chapman College M.A., Ph.D. Claremont Graduate School
    Antonio Lapitan 1964
    Associate Professor of Political Science and Chairman of the Department
    A.B. University of Philippines M.A. Lehigh University Ph.D. University of Oregon
    Scott Locicero 1968
    Lecturer in History
    B.A., M.A. University of New Hampshire
    Thomas Logan 1968
    Lecturer in Psychology
    B.S.E., A.M. University of Michigan
    Edward Lovinger 1968
    Professor of Psychology
    B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Michigan State University
    Rosemary Masek 1965
    Assistant Professor of History
    A.B. Hastings College M.A. Denver University A.M., Ph.D. University of Illinois
    Roger Miller 1966
    Assistant Professor of Sociology and Chairman of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology
    A.A. Graceland College B.S. Northwestern Missouri State College M.A. University of Missouri
    Ronald Parton 1967
    Assistant Professor of Sociology
    B.A. Idaho State University M.A. University of Idaho Ph.D. University of. Missouri
    Jo, eph Raney 1968
    As..:istant Professor of Psychology
    A. ~ San Jose State College M.S. University of Utah Ph.D. University of Nevada
    G v Roberts 1966
    Lt urer in History
    B .. University of Nebraska
    R, h Roske 1967
    Pr J essor of History and Dean of th~ College of Social Science
    B. DePaul University M.A., Ph.D. University of Illinois
    Harriett Sheldon 1968
    As 1stant Professor of Social Services
    B.S Ohio State MSW Syracuse University
    Ar ' ·ew Tuttle 1968
    As tant Professor of Political Science
    B.A. M.A. University of California Ph.D. Claremont Graduate School
    Al do Villanueva 1967
    As. 'rnte Professor of Political Science
    B.t. University of Manila M.P.A. University of Philippines Ph.D. University of Minnesota
    Jo] r Wright 1956
    Pre t ssor of History
    B . ...- . University of Illinois M.A., Ph.D. University of Chicago
    Rk trd Wright 1968
    In~ 1ctor in Political Science
    B.i M.A. University of Utah
    3
    AI
    v1
    11


    1
    Rita Abbey 1967
    Assistant Professor of Art
    B.F.A., M.A. University of New Mexico
    William Bradford 1963
    Assistant Professor of Art and Chairman of the Department
    B.F.A., M.F.A. University of Southern California
    Howard Chase 1965
    Associate Professor of Music and Chairman of the Department
    B.M., M.M., Ph.D. University of Michigan
    Jerry Crawford 1962
    Professor of Drama and Chairman of the Department of Speech and Drama
    B.F.A. Drake University M.A. Stanford University Ph.D. University of Iowa
    Paul Harris 1959
    Professor of Drama and Dean of the College of Fine Arts
    16 B.A. University of Colorado M.A., · Ph.D. Stanford University
    Larry Kakkeler 1968
    Instructor in Speech and Drama
    B.S. Dickinson State College M.A. Colorado State University
    Jo Ann Meswarb 1966
    Instructor in Speech and Drama
    B.A. Texas Technological College M.A. State University of Iowa
    Keith Moon 1967
    Assistant Professor of Music
    B.M.E., M.M.E. Wichita State University
    Ray Obennayr 1968
    Lecturer in Art
    B.S. Milwaukee State Teachers College M.S. University of Wisconsin
    Douglas Peterson 1967
    Assistant Professor of Music
    B.A. Grinnell College B.M.E. Florida State University M.A. University of Iowa
    Gerald Pfaffl 1965
    Assistant Professor of Art
    B.A., M.A. San Jose State College
    Allen Weitzel 1966
    Instructor in Speech and Drama
    A.B. Bradley University M.S. Southern Illinois University
    Richard Wist 1967
    Lecturer in Art
    M.A. San Jose State College
    17
    --.
    ' \ '
    ·~~ ~ \ ~/},
    ~- \'
    HUMANITIES
    Charles Adams 1960
    Professor of English and Dean of Graduat~ S~dies . .
    B.A. Michigan State University M.A. Umvers1ty of Illmo1s Ph.D. University of Oregon
    Richard Byrns 1966 ..
    Professor of English and Dean of the College of H u1!1am~1es . . . .
    B.A. Colorado State College M.A. University of Califorma Ph.D. Umve1s1ty of Edmburgh
    Felicia Campbell 1962 ..
    Assistant Professor of English and Director of Composition
    B.S., M.S. University of Wisconsin
    Cynthia Cunningham 1968
    Instructor in English
    B.A. New Mexico State University M.A. Nevada Southern University
    Richard Davis 1968
    Instructor in English
    20 B.A., M.A. Brigham Young University
    Christian Dolin 1963
    Lecturer in French
    B.A., M.A. University of Utah
    N anelia Doughty 1966
    Instructor in English
    A.B. Stanford University M.A. Arizona State University
    Richard Fitzpatrick 1967
    Instructor in Philosophy
    B.A. Maryknoll Seminary M.A. Notre Dame University
    Patricia Geuder 1966
    Instructor in English
    B.A. State College of Iowa M.E. University of Nevada
    William Hodges 1967
    Instructor in English
    B.A. Sacramento State College, Leningard University M.A.T. Indiana University
    Dan Larson 1967
    Instructor in English
    B.A. Moorhead State College M.A. University of Oregon
    Rosalie Larson 1968
    Instructor in English
    B.A., M.A. University of Oregon
    John Lindberg 1967
    Associate Professor of German and Chairman of the Foreign Language Department
    B.A., M.A., Ph.D. University of California at Los Angeles
    Sigrid Moe 1956
    Professor of English
    B.A. Olaf College M.A. University of Chicago Ph.D. New York University
    Alfred Nelson 1968
    Associate Professor of English
    A.B., A.M. Wayne State University Ph.D. George Washington University
    Cyrill Pasterk 1967
    . Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Chairman of the Department
    Classical Gymnasium M.A., Ph.D., M.A. Universidad de Madrid
    Robert Pearsall 1967
    Professor of English and Chairman of the Department
    B.A. Umversity of Puget Sound M.A., Ph.D. Cornell University
    Jea~ Jacques Rousseau 1967
    Associat( Professor of French
    Diplc 1e University of Paris
    Dona' ::l Sr:hmiedel 1965
    Assis t rof essor of Spanish
    B.A. , l: State University M.A., Ph.D. University of Southern California
    1vis 1968
    in Philosophy
    A Boston University
    Hart egner 1968
    Leet in Comparative Literature
    B.A .A. University of Utah Ph.D. Harvard University
    Jere " lhams 1968
    Insti JC' r in English
    B.A mingham Southern College M.A. Tulane University
    Hert VanBetten 1967
    Inst r in English
    B.A ·versity of Texas M.A. University of Southern California
    mek 1964
    n Spanish
    niversity of Southern California
    23IT[VIAMUH
    21


    26
    SCIENCE
    Donald Allen 1967
    Assistant Professor of Physics
    B.A. Ohio Wesleyan M.Sc., Ph.D. University of Colorado
    William Alsup 1967
    Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Chairman of the Department
    B.S.M.E., Ph.D. University of Wyoming
    George Austin 1967
    Instructor in Biology
    B.S., M.A. Nevada Southern University
    Bert Babero 1965
    Professor of Zoology
    B.S., M.S., Ph.D. University of Illinois
    Edward Billingham 1965
    Associate Professor of Chemistry
    B.S. Lebanon Valley College Ph.D. Pennsylvania State University
    Glen Bradley 1958
    Associate Professor of Biology
    A.B. Humboldt State College M.A. San Francisco State College Ph.D. University of Arizona
    Mao Chao Chen 1967
    Associate Professor of Physics
    B.S.E.E., Chiao-Tung University M.S.E.E. University of Wisconsin Ph.D. Stanford Univer ity
    James Deacon 1960
    Professor of Biology
    B.S. Midwestern University Ph.D. University of Kansas
    Harry Fechter 1966
    Professor of Physics and Chairman of the Department
    B.S. University of Washington M.S., Ph.D. Stanford University
    Stanley Grenda 1967
    Assistant Professor of Chemistry
    B.S. DePaul University M.W. University of Arizona Ph.D. Lehigh University
    Rodney Griffin 1965
    Instructor in Geography and Geology
    B.S., M.S. Brigham Young University
    Frane Marcelja 1967
    Associate Professor of Physics
    B.S., Ph.D. University of Zagreb
    Chad Murvosh 1963
    Associate Professor of Biology
    B.S. Kent State University M.S., Ph.D. Ohio State University
    Wesley Niles 1968
    Assistant Professor of Botany Ph.D. University of Arizona
    B.S ., M.S. New Mexico State University Ph.D. University of Arizona
    Donald Pennelle i968
    Assistant Professor of Chemistry
    B.S. DePaul University M.S . University of Wisconsin Ph.D. University of Colorado
    Robert Smith 1961
    Professor of Chemistry and Dean of the College of Science and Mathematics
    B.S. Wheaton College Ph.D. University of California
    Leonard Stonn 1967
    Associate Professor of Botany and Chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences
    B.S. University of California M.S., Ph.D. University of Arizona
    Richarcl Titus 1967
    . Assistant Professor of Chemistry
    B.A. DE 2aul University Ph.D. University of Michigan
    Herbei Wells 1961
    Lectur m Engineering Science and Chairman of the Department
    B.A., 1 . University of California P.E. State of Nevada
    Fried"' lt Winterberg 1968
    Profes of Physics
    Dipl01 Physicist J. Wolfgang Goethe Universitat Ph.D. Universitat Gottingen
    Anne 1man 1966 ·
    Lectm in Geology and Geography
    A.B. \ tern Reserve University M.S. University of Michigan
    Moha1 l Yousef 1968
    Assista Professor of Biology
    B.S., 1 Ein Shams University M.S., Ph.D. University of Missouri
    J erzy 1orski 1967
    Lectu in Geography
    B.A. 7ill University M .A. Universite d'Ottawa
    Gary es Graduate Assistant
    3Jl/13IJ2
    27


    MATH
    Paul Aizley 1968
    Assistant Professor of Mathematics
    A.B. Harvard University M.S. University of Arizona
    Michael Golberg 1967
    Lecturer in Mathematics
    B.S. McGill University
    Malcolm Graham 1965
    Professor of Mathematics
    B.S. New Jersey State College M.S. University of Massachus tts Ph.D. University of Oregon
    Norman Jens en 1965
    Lecturer in Mathematics
    B.B.A. University of Minnesota M.S. Purdue University
    Chester Landaker 1962
    Assistant Professor of Mathematics
    B.S. U.S. Military Academy C.E. Cornell University P.E. State of Hawaii M.S. Purdue University
    Lloyd Neitling 1967
    Associate Professor of Mathematics
    B.A. St. Mary of Plains College B.S. Aquinas College M.A. University of Michigan
    Lewis Simonoff 1966
    Lecturer in Mathematics
    A.B., M.A. Syracuse University
    Sadanand Verma 1967
    Professor of Mathematics and Chairman of the Department
    B.S., M.S. Bihar University M.A.(applied), Ph.D. Wayne State University
    33
    HTAM

    36
    EDUCATION
    David Baker 1968
    Lecturer in Education and Director of Upward Bound
    A.B., M.A. University of Nevada
    Robert Boord 1963
    Associate Professor of Education
    B.S., M.S., Ed.D. Indiana University
    Eva Bortman 1966
    Lecturer in Education
    B.S. New York University M.A. Newark State College
    William Carlson 1953
    Professor of Education
    B.E. St. Cloud State Teachers College M.A., Ph.D. University of Minn ota
    William Dakin 1967
    Lecturer in Education and Coordinator, ISED Program
    B.S. Mount Union College M.S. Ohio State University Ed.D. Arizona tat University
    Herbert Derfelt 1956
    Professor of Education
    B.S., M.S. Kansas State College Ed.D. University of Arkansas
    Robert Gelhart 1968
    Associate Professor of Education and Coordinator, Special Education
    B.A., M.Ed. Central Washington College of Education Ed.D. Univ rsity of outh rn alifornia
    Holbert Hendrix 1956
    Professor of Education
    B.S., M.S. Indiana University Ph.D. State University of Iowa
    Dwight Marshall 1966
    Lecturer in Education
    B.S., M.A. State College of Iowa
    Ben Owen 1965
    Associate Professor of Education
    B.A. Central Michigan University M.A., Ph.D. Columbia University
    Leonard Phillips 1966
    Assistant Professor of Education
    A.B. University of California M.A. Humboldt State College Ed.D. Michigan State University
    George Samson 1968
    Lecturer in E?ucation and Chairman of the Department of Educational Administration
    A.B. Assumption College M.E.D. Springfield College Ph.D. University of Connecticut
    Anthony Saville 1967
    Professor of Education and Dean of the College of Education
    B.S. Illinois State University M.Ed., Ed.D. University of Missouri
    Floyd Scritchfield 1959
    Professor of Secondary Education
    A. B. Washburn College M.A., Ph.D. University of Kansas
    John Standish 1965
    ·I nstructor in Education
    B.A. University of Toronto M.A. University of Oregon
    Verdun Trione 1966
    Assistant Professor of Education
    B.S. Illinois State Normal University M.B.A. University of Michigan
    John Vergiels 1968
    Assistant Professor of Education and Coordinator, Secondary Education
    B.E., ME., Ph.D. University of Florida
    Pat Dilh gham Graduate Assistant
    li10IT AJUG3
    37


    42
    EALTH
    Roger Barnson 1968 . . .
    Lecturer in Health, Physical Education and Recreat10n and Assistant Varsity Football Coach
    B.A. Arizona State University M.A. Northern Arizona University
    Steuben Betterton 1968
    Lecturer in Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Director of Sports Information
    B.A. Fresno State College M.A. University of Iowa
    William Daniel 1968
    Lecturer in Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Assistant Varsity Football Coach
    B.S., M.A. University of Nevada
    Robert Doering 1966
    Assistant Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Varsity Baseball Coach
    B.S. Valparaiso University M.S. Washington University ·
    Michael Drakulich 1957
    Associate Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Varsity Golf Coach
    B.S., M.Ed. University of Nevada
    Willis Ireland 1967
    Associate Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Varsity Football Coach
    B.A., M.Ed. University of Nevada
    Alice Mason 1957
    Assistant Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation
    B.S. Tufts College M.S. University of Colorado
    Nancy Scoble 1967
    Assistant Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation
    B.S. Wisconsin State University M.S. University of Washington
    William Scoble 1967
    Assistant Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Varsity Track Coach
    B.S. Wisconsin State University M.S. University of Washington
    John Starr 1965
    Associate Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Chairman of the Department
    B.S., M.Ed. University of Wyoming Ed.D. University of Southern California
    Rolland Todd 1965
    Assistant Professor of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and Varsity Basketball Coach
    A.B. Fresno State College M.S. University of Washington
    43
    HTJA3

    BUSINESS
    George Bussell 1967
    Lecturer in Hotel Administration
    B.A., M.S. University of New Hampshire
    Gertrude Cunningham 1962
    Instructor in Office Administration
    B.S. University of Idaho
    Monroe Fischer 1963
    Associate Professor of Economics
    B.A. Duke University M.A., Ph.D. American University
    Erling Forland 1967
    Lecturer in Accounting
    B.A., M.B.A. Stanford University
    Beverly Funk 1963
    Assistant Professor of Office Administration
    46 B.A. Idaho State College M.Ed. Idaho State University
    Rex Johnson 1963
    Lecturer in Business Administration
    B.S. Brigham Young University M.A., Ph.D. George Washington University
    Lothar Kreck 1968
    Assistant Professor of Hotel Administration
    B.S.B.A., M.S.B.A. University of Denver
    Kenneth Lipner 1967
    Instructor in Business Administration
    B.S. Florida State University M.B.A. Memphis State University
    Reuben Neumann 1962
    Associate Professor of Accounting
    B.S. Jamestown College M.S.B.A. University of North Dakota CPA North Dakota, Nevada
    Ira Nissen 1967
    Associate Professor of Accounting
    B.S. Minot State College M.B.A. University of Denver CPA North Dakota, Minnesota
    Boyce Phillips 1967
    Lecturer in Hotel Administration
    A.B. Wofford College M.S. Florida State University
    Robert Rieke 1963
    Associat~ Pro~essor of Busi?ess Administration and Chairman of the Department
    B.A. Umvers1ty of Washmgton M.B.A. University of Arizona
    Andre Simmons 1963
    Professor of Economics
    B.S. University of London M.A. Michigan State University Ph.D. University of London
    Richard Strahlem 1963
    Professor ·of Business Administration and Chairman of the Department of Accounting
    B.S., M.S. Indiana University CPA Indiana, New Mexico, Nevada
    Ruby Tripp 1967
    Assistant Professor of Business
    B.S. Illinois State Normal University M.B.A. University of Michigan
    Jerome Vall en 1967
    Professor of Business and Director of the Hotel Administration Program
    B.S. Cornell University M.Ed. St. Lawrence University
    Carl Wade 1965
    Lectm er in Economics
    B.S. 1\, arshall College M.A. West Virginia University
    Willia 1 White 1967
    Profe. ')r of Economics and Dean of the College of Business
    B.S. t iversity of Arizona M.S. Columbia University Ph.D. Georgetown University
    Robe1 Willard 1966
    Assist t Professor of Economics
    B.S. J. zona State College M.S. Arizona State University
    223li1I2U8
    47

    Fred Anderson, Reno
    A. C. Grant, Las Vegas
    Proctor Hug, Jr., Reno
    Harold Jacobson, Carson City
    Albert Seeliger, Carson City
    Molly Magee, Austin
    Richard Ronzone, Las Vegas
    Juanita White, Boulder City
    Tom Bell, Las Vegas
    James Bilbray, Las Vegas
    Louis Lombardi, Reno

    I /
    t
    60
    /
    I
    I 61
    , - I
    I
    • I
    ~ I

    Dan Stegemann
    Carlos Brandenburg, Larry Zervas, Ron Garman
    Larry Cook
    Robert Verchick
    Dale Bowes
    70
    Marcia Faunce
    Lillian Sondgeroth
    Dennis Wood
    Thomas Valdov
    Foster McDonald Kathryn Augspurger
    Richard Lansford
    Carol Utz
    7
    Edward Ringgold
    Jerry Bianco
    Chaker Suidan
    Dolores Kelly
    Jerry Swor
    William Ressler
    Bruce Layne
    75
    Dianne Bierwirth
    Carolyn Hoff
    Pat Dibble
    Nomalee Tilman
    Gerard Nucera
    Marilyn Harding Tonny Crow
    Ferruh Koroferye
    Edward Terwilliger
    Geraldine Jennings
    Connie Carter, Doris Cullen, Nancy Campbell
    Judith Hanlen
    William Terry
    Ron Carter
    ..
    79
    Ele r Harris
    Linda Wright Sana Jackson
    Harry Pagan, Ken Hammer, Harvey Drubin, Bill Hammer
    Steve Duesing, Farley Anderson
    Charles McLaughlin
    John Turner

    1 Yvonne Sims
    2 Patt Parsons
    3 Jill Lawn
    4 Sue Sligar
    5 Sandy Searles
    6 Linda Dopico
    7 Marilyn Hall
    8 Jeni Pryor
    9 Cathy Scherkenbach
    10 Nancy Stenger
    11 Sherie Singer
    12 Helene Fiore
    13 Val Zupsan
    14 Frances Ruiz
    15 Sharon Walter
    82 16 Melanie Kunz
    17 Nancy Rittman
    18 Gail Horch
    19 Cathy Littlejohn
    20 Linda Clark
    21 Darlene Workman
    22 Sandy Ansell
    23 Shelli Lowe
    24 Erin Beesley
    25 Pam Drenner
    26 Karen Jenson
    27 Linda Cox
    28 Connie Fortier
    29 Sandy Cowan

    ALlII
    Cathy Zervas 1
    Kathy Quinn 2
    Rochelle Worthen 3
    Dee Anderson 4
    Mary Hanna 5
    Debbie O'Keefe 6
    Kathy Crosato 7
    Karin Borgman 8
    Sharon Cleveland 9
    Marsha Anderson 10
    Jackie Gulbransen 11
    Linda Wolever 12
    Kris Killian 13
    Sally Moore 14
    Linda Boje 15
    Barbara Lindsey 16
    Lorri Patera 17
    Gloria Dronet 18
    Joann Aleshi 19 85
    Michele Bonnee 20
    Linda Kinn 21
    Terry Spino 22
    Sandy Kemp 23
    Moni Witte 24
    Janie Crosato 25
    Patty Abraham 26
    Linda Norcross 27
    Susie Joy 28
    Bonnie Smith 29
    Marie Gross 30
    Nancy Joy 31
    Connie Boich 32
    <PfN
    Beverly Funk np
    JoAnn Crinite
    Martha Fontaine 1
    Margarita Wright 2
    Mila Casuga 3
    Sandy Curtis 4
    J oAnn Janes 5
    Kathy Hougen 6
    Dianne Dibble 7
    Savannah Brown 8
    Connie Carr 9
    Margaret Foy 10
    88
    1 Melissa Kramer
    2 dog
    3 Pam Craft .
    4 Jayni Sambnana
    5 Christie Thomas
    6 Sharon Gravert
    7 Janie Hurt
    8 Yvonne Wert
    9 Debbie Petroff
    10 Toni Smith
    11 Diane Lynch
    12 Marie Emmens
    13 Marilyn Simpson
    l4 Ethel Barina
    15 Bonnie Byrne
    16 Kathy Blake
    17 Melanie Thornton
    18 Marlene Froid
    19 Sherri O'Neil
    90 Colleen Bell ;l Candy Schumacher
    90
    1 Larry Brown
    2 Ron Haworth
    3 Larry Doig
    4 Jan Weintraub
    5 Bill Brown
    6 Bob Dickinson
    7 Jerry Gordon
    8 Mike Toscher
    9 Warren Kroeger
    10 Bob Jasper
    11 Neal Schwartz
    12 Roger Rivkin
    l3 Mike Melnick
    14 Barry Zweig
    15 Ivan Braiker
    16 Chuck Collins
    AEII
    AK'¥
    Rex Johnson 1
    William White 2
    Monroe Fischer 3
    Richard Strahlem 4
    Carl Wade 5
    Ray Baxter 6
    Robert Rieke 7
    Jim Whitney 8
    Lynn Waring 9
    Dave Schaffer 10
    Robert DeMichele 11
    Steve Nelson 12
    Bill Haviluk 13
    Ray Causey 14
    Ken Worthington 15
    Ken Hayden 16
    Ronald Lawrence 17 93
    Richard Kostelac 18
    Greg Johnmann 19
    Lyle Hamiter 20
    Mike Duffy 2l
    Larry Swaneiger 22
    Dick Fontaine 23
    Tom Irwin 24
    Ronald Fulton 25
    Larry Dungey 26
    Paul Kleifgen 27
    Claude Gooch 28
    Rex Lundberg 29
    1 Steve Duesing
    2 Farley Anderson
    3 Tom Donnelly
    4 Terry Leggett
    5 Dick Lansford
    6 Mike Reigler
    7 Doug Wilstead
    8 Lester Wisbroad
    9 Mike Rogers
    10 Del Haderly
    11 Steve Seidman
    12 Steve Forst
    13 Mike McClean
    14 Vince Lopez
    15 Ray Gonzales
    16 Ken Thomas
    17 Greg Nelson
    18 John Osborne
    19 Earl Borbeau
    20 Bill Hammer
    94 21 JoJo Morrow
    22 John Cook
    23 Ken Webb
    24 Jan Haase
    25 Tom Johnson
    26 Joe Anderson
    27 Steve Weiner
    28 Ken Hammer
    29 Dickie Price
    30 Roger Emboden
    31 Ron Barta
    32 Denny Duesing
    33 John Pacheco
    34 Bob Hoen
    35 Ron Schnell
    36 Tom Polano
    37 Joel Davies
    38 Denny Peterson
    39 Gary Reitz
    40 Bud Miller
    41 Harvey Drubin
    42 Leighton Duer
    43 Ellen Samuels
    44 Vickie Donnelly
    45 Jackie Gilbranscn
    46 Joy Marcheson
    47 Janie Crosato
    48 Sharon Cleveland
    ' .. '
    ATQ
    •·
    • a - . . -... _
    Ken Ashworth 35
    Jim Chivers 36
    Jack Melvin 37
    Rick Damron 38
    Dan Worthen 39
    Len Zarndt 40
    Rob Lloyd 41
    Bill Manard 42
    Larry Apple 43
    Mike Barton 1
    Randy Upton 2
    John Cevette 3
    Bill Bowman 4
    David Laca 5
    Jerry Bianco ff
    Tom McRae 7
    John Cocks 8
    Rory O'Leary 9
    John Denning 10
    Steve James 11
    Alan Weiss 12
    Dick Myers 13
    Gene DiSanza 14
    Curt Thompson 15
    Rich Benbow 16
    Pat D elmore 17
    Max Stuhff 18
    Dick Goodman 19
    Russ Masek 20
    Bill Miller 21
    Dave Cook 22 97
    . Jim Smith 23
    Mike Mulligan 24
    Mike Jones 25
    Tony Vetere 26
    Gaiy Hoover 27
    Dave Oliver 28
    Pat Dibble 29
    Chris Barth 30
    Je ny Truax 31
    Tom Jones 32
    Jeff Margolin 33
    Jerry Walthers 34
    1 Rich Stephenson
    2 Danny Pitts np Ernie Dornanico
    3 Randy Klien Roger Foley
    4 Dave Larson Tony Montoya
    5 Bill Bailey Gary Amundson
    6 John Baker Bruce Boles
    7 Jim Tener Rick Gammel
    8 Bill Sanderson Marc Goldfarb
    9 Larry McMahan Larry Griewisch
    10 Gordon Saiger Danny Gutierrez
    11 Dave Beck Lee Houghton
    12 Mike West Dennis McKinney
    13 Chuck Kenerson Bill Paules
    14 Ed Ringgold J oh!1 Porter
    15 John Kammeyer Mike Worthen
    16 Tom Froistad Steve R emy
    17 Danny Roman Russ Peterson
    98 18 Tom Rittman Tom Harkenridcr
    19 Tig Latham Gary Rutzel
    20 Frank Bruno Ricky Smith
    21 Scott Johnston Val Zupsan
    22 Mac MacDonald Nancy Stenger
    23 Ron Drake Patty Abraham
    24 Tom Brooks Nora Allen
    25 Mike Roe Dee Anderson
    25 Mike Stuart Marsha Anderson
    27 Ken Jochim Connie Fortier
    28 Neal Johnston Mary Hanna
    29 Ron Ingram Nancy Rittman
    30 Chip Johnson Terry Spino
    31 Winged Victory
    100
    1 Jim Mathis
    2 Mark Siriani
    3 John Moran
    4 Steve Turner
    5 Kurk Dykema
    6 Judy Mathis
    7 Bruce Layne
    8 Rich Landreth
    9 Suzy Schaffer
    10 Mike Riordan
    11 Colleen Bell
    12 Drew Anguish
    13 Joe Quatuccio
    14 Joe Lupo
    15 Jeff Dick
    16 Jill Kam
    17 Hany Kam
    18 Russ Farrell
    19 Dick Morgan
    20 Fred Demick
    21 Kenneth Barnes
    22 Joe Spitcle
    23 Tommy Rowland
    24 George Peraza
    25 Tim Westhouse
    26 Gary Wallace
    27 Bill Bennett
    28 Alex Sugden
    29 Joe Karaff e
    30 Joe Cavanaugh
    31 Kathy Crosato
    32 John Lundquist
    33 Craig Knutson
    34 Alan Wills
    35 Ed Plawski
    36 Ron Wielochowski
    37 Rich Live1more
    38 Jim Nike
    39 Bill Knerr
    40 Bob Zaun
    41 Dan Bode
    42 Russ Dazzio
    43 Roby Bennett
    44 Bill Terry
    45 Judy Fleishman
    46 Steve Ducharme
    47 Linda Cox
    48 Mike O'D ea
    49 Dave Cunningham
    50 Toilet #1
    51 Toilet #2
    ! 4
    0 A•
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    · ,. r-alents.;.aq'd. -'corivictr~ns-.
    .. ..
    TKE
    Dennis Wood 1
    stewardess 2
    Steve Krueger 3
    John Lund 4
    Leonard Arcad·1 pane 5
    Larry Chester 6
    M ~at Mortenson 7
    aunce Thompson 8
    stewardess 9
    Dwane Solomon 10
    Cliff Ball 11
    Mike Hoydis 12
    John Green 13 103
    Bob Bobbett 14
    Bob Butler 15
    Hugh Davis 16
    Leroy Newman 17
    Andy Czaplewski 18
    Chan. chh.1 Bu nnag 19
    Jim Thompson 20
    Wayne Hewitt 21
    Terry Grady 99
    Scott Peterson ;;
    Richard Puzlisi ;4
    Ulysses 25
    1 Mark Larson
    2 Ron Haworth
    3 Jim Whitney
    4 Joel Baker
    5 Jim Rhoades
    6 Bert Babero
    7 Dave Katzman
    8 Ridge Frew
    9 Don Lytle
    10 Joel Harris
    11 Steve Nield
    12 Johnny Clark
    104 13 Mike Mullaley
    14 Craig Knutson
    l5 Terry Lindberg
    16 Randy Frew
    l 7 Scott Devitte
    18 Chris Kelly
    19 Pete Gilbert
    20 Jerry Gordon
    21 Warren Kroeger
    22 Bob Jasper
    23 Jim VanWinkle
    24 Bruce Adams
    np Ed Terwilliger
    Jim Christ
    John Daleske

    -
    1 to r Val Zupsan, Pam Craft, Colleen Bell, Sharon Cleveland, Karin Borgman, Connie Boich seated James Wike, Joe Anderson, Jerry Gordon, Bob Dickinson, Steve Weiner standing John Kammeyer,
    Mike West, Steve James, Ron Haworth, Jeff Dick, Cliff Ferris, Mr. Schofield
    I to r Jof). Thiriot, Shauna Gibson, Joy Leavitt, Ken Barnum, Beverly Leake, Janice Rasband, Lynne
    Pulsipher, John Turner, Shauna Rollins, Steve Rhoades, Gladys Whitehead, Dean Leavitt, Jeannie
    Gibson, Vern Barnum, Susan Lewis, Floyd Oviatt, Chris Zockoll, Dennis Jones, Calvin Black, Shana
    Finch, Dorothy Zettler, Charlene Adams, Dennis Anderson, Ga1y Krausman, Marilyn Lee, Ron
    Haycock
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    seated visitor, Leo Lewis, Bruce Baltin, Boyce Phillips standing Pat Moreo, Bob DeMichael, Thomas Poland,
    Jim DeMarais, Nicholas Suta, D'arcyJ iLme MTiurteh ill, Dave Oliver, Maria Valenzuela, Frank Watts, Dave Brown, Lanny Adams,
    left Margaret Martin, Betty Young, Dianne Miller, Elizabeth Wilhelm center
    Karen Johnson, Dorinda Clark, Rose Fessler, Roberta Smith right Sally Mc-
    Queen, Sandra Stoika, Constance Connell, Melanie Kunz, Jerri Taylor
    J
    Kathryn Augspurger
    Janet Aytes
    John Ball
    Barbara Burgwardt
    Michael Carlson
    Diane Cayce
    Doris Cullen
    Patricia Darnold
    Merlynn Esplin
    Janice Fallman
    I
    I
    I
    Claude Gooch
    Billy Hammer
    Judith Hanlen
    Eleanor Harris
    Dan Heinrich
    Peggy Hutton
    Gary Jaeger
    Margaret Johnson
    Gene LaFasto
    Jean Leser
    Phillip Loiliadis
    Pat Moreo
    Larry Payne
    Douglas Ponn
    Janice Reid
    Barry Shinehouse
    David Stibor
    Judy Wagner
    James Wickliffe
    Linda Wright
    l to r Steve Salaets, Coryn Crosby, Dave Johnson, Jim Ness, John Thayer, Bob Anderson, Chris Kaempfer,
    Pat Boyle, Larry Dungey, Wesley Parks, Mike Duffy, Barbara Hodler, William Haviluk, Cathryn Littlejohn,
    James Roach, Victoria Thome, William Tucker, Richard Healy, Jackie Banner, Judy Peterson, Mary Ainsworth;
    James Fagin, Nicki Zeigler, Jill Sneed, James Avance, Margaret Martin
    118
    row I Jim Thompson row 2 Curtis Watson, Jeff Dick, Dave Tepper, Bruce Gray, Walt Christy,
    David Neff, Jerry Beavers, Mike Gutowski, David Bittle, Mark Larson, Ron Nix row 3 Jim Mathis,
    Rene Arceneaux, Robert Haynes, Michael Forch, Nathaniel Hawkins
    I
    .·:Jii· f. . /f/ ~. ,, ,;
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    r to 1 Carol Steele, ~ary Killough, Pennie Bailey, Catherine T
    Hoff np Joy Leavitt, Jeanne Marie Libotte ram, Tonny Crow, Suzanne Struthers, Carolyn seated Tonya Stanworth, Jeanne Williams, Kathy Porter, Kathleen Monda, Glenda Beahm, Pennie Bailey,
    Jo Christensen standing Judy Peterson, Mrs. Marshall np Frances Wright
    seated Bruce Cecil, Mike Mullaley, Randy Frew, Lloyd Granger, Terry Lindberg, Frances Wright,
    Russell Harvey, Bob Anderson standing Pete Gilbert, Ed Terwilliger, Val Terwilliger np Rita
    Haddad

    REBEL YELL
    Joe Warpinski, business manager· Joanne D h . . .
    Guimer, Pete Howells Rod R ' D L 1o na ue, ass1~tant editor; Jim Christ; editor; Barbara
    Bob Leavitt and Greg 'Allred, po hsoe t, ograopn h ersy t e np Ron Hiltbrand, Martha Mullich ' Rudi Suckman
    EPILOGUE
    Ron Hiltbrand, assistant editor; Bob Leavitt, empiricist; Claude Whitmyer, copy editor; Julie Jones,
    editor and guardian angel; Sandie Whitmyer, business manager np Val Terwilliger


    132
    Freedom is a habit
    and a coat worn
    some born to wear it
    some never to know it.
    Freedom is cheap
    or again as a ga1ment
    is so costly
    men pay their lives
    rather than not have it.
    Freedom is baffling:
    men having it often
    know not they have it
    till it is gone and
    they no longer have it.
    What does this mean?
    Is it a riddle?
    Yes, it is first of all
    in the primers of riddles.
    "People commonly speak of a
    'social problem' when something
    in society does not work the
    way it is supposed to according
    to the official interpretations."
    """fiN'e must preserve the universities.
    But beware of the Fatal
    Friendliness. When universities
    serve the status quo, they must
    be changed. There should be
    continued ferment, demonstrations,
    education, enlightenment. Of
    course there are things which are
    not planned - forces, mechanisms
    . . . The best students are
    Socialist but not Marxist. They
    don't want a Stalinist bureaucracy.
    They want a transvaluation of
    values - social protest on a high
    level of prosperity and comfort,
    but against that high level of
    prosperity and comfort. The price
    of freedom is high! But they
    refuse the state of total
    domination by goods and comfort."
    ":E;ecause we are well acquainted
    ,'i,1th the social institutions that
    'li\l'"Wund us, our perception of them
    1: rnprecise and often erroneous."
    . ""v'V'hen man's capacity to be
    . -r,. ~;,tively aggressive has been frustrated
    ~, ,; blocked by the ideologies of
    .'nhnnity, adjustment and achievement as
    ,iv of life, humanity becomes
    .t i ional, society totalitarian, and the
    , ir tt:ise of power pornographic."
    Tbe sh·eets of our country are in
    tt: nnoil. The universities are full of students
    ,.,L Aling and rioting. Communists are
    '.t-·{ king to destroy our country. Russia is
    thri,atening us with her might and
    f Republic is in danger.
    Y os, danger from within and from without.
    ~'-, ueed law and order. Without law and order
    c- .r •iation cannot survive.
    Elect us and we shall restore law and order.
    ''fe ·will be respected by the nations of the world
    i 1-r law and order. Without law and order,
    ,.. f f republic will fall."
    "P eace means loving the cops too."
    "Self assured societies, confident of their
    wisdom and secure in their purpose are not afflicted
    v.rith rebellion from their young."
    "There is nothing, in this day of America, that
    c;:m inflict greater harm upon her cause than
    <lissension and strife, contention, estrangement and
    apathy among her people."
    135
    136
    In dedication . . .
    We are the people of this generation, bred in at least modest comfort, housed in universities, looking
    uncomfortably to the world we inherit.
    Our work is guided by the sense that we may be the last generation in the experiment with living.
    But we are a minority - the vast majority of our people regard the temporary equilibriums of our
    society and the world as eternally-functional parts. In this is perhaps the outstanding paradox: We
    ourselves are imbued with urgency, yet the message of our society is that there is no viable alternative
    to the present. Beneath the reassuring tones of the politicians, beneath the common opinion that
    America will "muddle through", beneath the stagnation of those who have closed their minds to the
    future, is the pervading feeling that there simply are no alternatives, that our times have witnessed the
    exhaustion not only of Utopias, but of any new department as well. Feeling the press of complexity
    upon the emptiness of life, people are fearful of the thought that at any moment things might tbr ist
    out of control. They fear change itself, since change might smash whatever invisible framework seem<;
    to hold back chaos for them now. For most Americans, all crusades are suspect, threatening. The fant
    that each individual sees apathy in his fellows perpetuates the common reluctance to organize for
    changes. The dominant institutions are complex enough to blunt the minds of their potential criticc;, ri::cl
    entrenched enough to swiftly dissipate or entirely repel the energies of protest and ref mm, thus liu.1 ting
    human expectancies. Then, too, we are a materially improved society, and by our own improvenwnts
    we seem to have weakened the case for change.
    Some would have us believe that Americans feel contentment amidst prosperity - but might il u >t
    better be called a glaze above deeply felt anxieties about their role in the new world? And if these an.neties
    produce a developed indifference to human affairs, do they not as well produce a yearniIJg .,.o
    believe there is an alternative to the present, that something can be done to change circumstances 1 '
    the school, the workplaces, the bureaucracies, the government? It is to this latter yearning, at once the
    spark and engine of change, that we direct our present appeal. The search for truly democratic ulternatives
    to the present, and a commitment to social experimentation with them, is a worthy and fulfilliM;
    human enterprise, one which moves us and, we hope, others today . . .
    Making values explicit - an initial task in establishing alternatives - is an activity that has betn
    devalued and corrupted. The conventional moral terms of the age, the politician moralities ("free world',
    "peoples democracies") reflect realities poorly, if at all, and seems to function more as ruling myths
    than as descriptive principles. But neither has our experience in the universities brought us moral
    enlightenment. Our professors and administrators sacrifice controversy to public relations; their curriculums
    change more slowly than the living events of the world; their skills and silence are purchased by
    investors in the arms race; passion is called unscholastic. The questions we might want raised - what is
    really important? can we live in a different and better way, if we wanted to change society, how would
    we do it? - are not thought to be questions of a "fruitful, empirical nature," and thus are brushed
    aside.
    Unlike youth in other countries we are used to moral leadership being exercised and moral dimensions
    being clarified by our elders. But today, for us, not even the liberal and socialist preachments
    of the past seem adequate to the forms of the present. Consider the old slogans: Capitalism Cannot
    Reform Itself, United Front Against Fascism, General Strike, ~.11 Out on May Day. Or, more recently,
    No Cooperation with Commies and Fellow Travelers, Ideologies Are Exhausted, Bipartisanship, No
    Utopias. These are incomplete, and there are few new prophets. It has been said that our liberal and
    socialist predecessors were plagued by vision without program, while our own generation is plagued
    by program without vision. All around us there is astute grasp of method, technique - the committee,
    the ad hoc group, the lobbyist, the hard and soft sell, the make, the projected image - but, if pressed
    critically, such expertise is incompetent to explain its implicit ideals. Jt is highly fashionable to identify
    ('neself by old categories, or by naming a respected political figure, or by explaining "how we would
    vote" on various issues.
    Theoretic chaos has replaced the idealistic thinking of old - and, unable to reconstitute theoretic
    order, men have condemned idealism itself. Doubt has replaced hopefulness, and men act out a defeatism
    that is labelled realistic. The decline of utopia and hope is in fact one of the defining features of
    social life today. The reasons are various: The dreams of the older left were perverted by Stalinism and
    never recreated; the congressional stalemate makes men narrow view of the possible; the specialization
    .~t human activity leaves little room for sweeping thought; the horrors of the twentieth century, sym-
    ~ olized in the gas ovens and concentration camps and atom bombs, have blasted hopefulness. To have
    110 serious aspirations, on the contrary, is to be "tough-minded".
    In suggesting social goals and values, therefore, we are aware of entering a sphere of some disre-
    -pute. Perhaps matured by the past, we have no sure formulas, no closed theories - but that does not
    .1nean values are beyond discussion and tentative dete1mination. A first task of any social movement
    ;~ to convince people that the search for orienting theories and the creation of human values is complex
    hut worthwhile. We are aware that to avoid platitudes we must analyze the concrete conditions of social
    Pider. But to direct such an analysis we must use the guideposts of basic principles. Our own social
    values involve conceptions of human beings, human relationships, and social systems.
    We regard men as infinitely precious and possesed of unfulfilled capacities for reason, freedom and
    love. In affirming these principles we are aware of countering perhaps the dominant conceptions of
    man in the twentieth century: That he is a thing to be manipulated, and that he is inherently incapable
    of directing his own affairs. We oppose the depersonalization that reduces human beings to the status
    of things. If anything, the brutalities of the twentieth century teach that means and ends are intimately
    related, that vague appeals to "posterity" cannot justify the mutilations of the present. We oppose, too,
    the doctrine of human incompetence because it rests essentially on the modern fact that men have been
    "competently" manipulated into incompetence. We see little reason why men cannot meet with increasing
    skill the complexities and responsibilities of their situation, if society is organized not for minority participation
    but for majority participation in decision-making.
    Men have unrealized potential for self-cultivation, self-direction, self-understanding, and creativity.
    It is this potential that we regard as crucial and to which we appeal - not to the human potentiality
    137
    for violence, unreason, and submission to authority. The goal of man and society should be human
    independence: A concern not with image or popularity but with finding a meaning in life that is personally
    authentic; a quality of mind not compulsively driven by a sense of powerlessness, nor one which
    unthinkingly adopts status values, nor one which represses all threats to its habits, but one which openly
    faces problems which are troubling and unresolved-one with an intuitive awareness of possibilities, an
    active sense of curiosity, an ability and willingness to learn.
    This kind of independence does not mean egotistic individualism; the object is not to have one's
    way so much as it is to have a way that is one's own. Nor do we deify man - we merely have faith in
    his potential.
    Human relationships should involve fraternity and honesty. Human interdependence is contemporary
    fact; human brotherhood must be willed, however, as a condition of future survival and as th;;,
    most appropriate form of social relations. Personal links between man and man are needed, especially tu
    go beyond the partial and fragmentary bonds of function that bind men only as worker to worker, em
    ployer to employee, teacher to student, American to Russian.
    Loneliness, estrangement, isolation describe the vast distance between man and man today. Thef•:
    dominant tendencies cannot be overcome by better personnel management, nor by improved gadgetc;;
    but only when a love of man overcomes the idolatrous worship of things by man.
    As the individualism we affirm is not egoism, the selflessness we affirm is not self-elimination. 0,,
    the contrary, we believe in generosity of a kind that imprints one's unique individual qualities in the
    138
    relation to other men, and to all human activity. Further, to dislike isolation is not to favor the abolitim1
    of privacy; the latter differs from isolation in that it occurs or is abolished according to individual wil'.
    In the last few years, thousands of American students demonstrated that they at least felt the ur
    gency of the times. They moved actively and directly against racial injustices, the threat of war, violations
    of individual rights of conscience and, less frequently, against economic manipulation. They succeeded
    in restoring a small measure of controversy to the campuses after the stillness of the McCarth)I,
    period. They succeeded, too, in gaining some concessions from the people and institutions they opposed
    especially in the fight against racial bigotry.
    The significance of these scattered movements lies not in their success or failure in gaining objectives
    - at least not yet. Nor does the significance lie in the intellectual "competence" or "maturity"
    of the students involved - as some pedantic elders allege. The significance is in the fact that the students
    are breaking the crust of apathy and overcoming the inner alienation - facts that remain the
    defining characteristics of American college life.
    If student movements for change are rarities still on the campus scene, what is commonplace there?
    The real campus, the familiar campus, is a place of private people, engaged in their notorious "inner
    emigration." It is a place of commitment to business-as-usual, getting ahead, playing it cool. It is a
    place of mass affirmation of the Twist, but mass reluctance toward the controversial public stance. Rules
    are accepted as "inevitable", bureaucracy as "just circumstance", irrelevance as "scholarship", selflessness
    as "martyrdom", politics as "just another way to make people, and an unprofitable one, too".
    Almost no students value activity as a citizen. Passive in public, they are hardly more idealistic. in
    arranging their private lives; Gallup concludes they will settle for "low success, and won't risk high
    failures." There is not much willingness to take risks (not even in business), no setting of dangerous
    goals, no real conception of personal identity except one manufactured in the image of others, no real
    urge for personal fulfillment except to be almost as successful as the very successful people. Attention
    is being paid to social status (the quality of shirt collars, meeting people, getting wives or husbands,
    making solid contacts for later on); much, too, is paid to a9ademic status (grades, honors, the med
    school rat-race). But neglected generally is real intellectual status, the personal cultivation of the mind.
    Look beyond the campus, to America itself. That student life is i:nore intellectual, and perhaps
    more comfortable, does not obscure the fact that the fundamental qualities of life on the campus reflect
    the habits of society at large. The fraternity president is seen at the junior manager levels; the sorority
    1p1een has gone to Grosse Point; the serious poet bums for a place, any place, to work; the once serious
    rnd never-serious poets work at the advertising agencies. The desperation of people threatened by
    imces about which they know little and of which they can say less, the cheerful emptiness of people
    o;:ving up all hope of changing things, the faceless ones polled by Gallup who listed "international af-
    : -;.irs" fourteenth on their list of problems but who also expected thermonuclear war in the next few
    ,·, ars - in these and other forms, Americans are in withdraw! from public life, from any collective
    t dmt at directing their own affairs.
    Some regard these national doldrums as a sign of healthy approval of the established order, but
    1~ it approval by consent or by manipulated acquiescence? Others declare that the people are withdrawn 139
    : cause compelling issues are fast disappearing; perhaps there are fewer breadlines in America, but is
    f:rn Crow gone, is there enough work and is work more fulfilling, is world war a diminishing threat, and
    what of the revolutionary new peoples? Still others think the national quietude is a necessary consequ"'
    nce of the need for elites to resolve complex and specialized problems of modem industrial society.
    r\ut. then, why should business elites help decide foreign policy, and who controls the elites anyway,
    .,;,fl are they solving mankind's problems? Others finally shrug knowingly and announce that full de-
    .. r1cracy never worked anywhere in the past - but why lump qualitatively different civilizations to-
    !; 'ther, and how can a social order work well if its best thinkers are skeptics, and is man really doomed
    fu:cver to the domination of today?
    There are no convincing apologies for the contemporary malaise ... The apathy is, first, subjechv€..
    - the felt powerlessness of ordinary people, the resignation before the enormity of events. But subtcctive
    apathy is encouraged by the objective American situation - the actual separation of people from
    pov;er, from relevant knowledge, from pinnacles of decision-making. Just as the university influences
    the student way of life, so do major social institutions create the circumstances in which the isolated
    c1Lizen will try hopelessly to understand his world and himself.
    The very isolation of the individual - from power and community and ability to aspire - means
    the rise of a democracy without publics. With the great mass of people structurally remote and psychologically
    hesitant with respect to democratic institutions, those institutions themselves attenuate
    140
    and become, in a fashion of the vicious circle, progressively less accessible to those few who aspire to
    serious participation in social affairs. The vital democratic connection between community and leadership,
    between the mass and the several elites, has been so wrenched and perverted that disastrous
    policies go unchallenged time and again . . .
    The first effort, then, should be to state a vision: vVhat is the perimeter of human possibility in this
    epoch? ... The second effort, if we are to be politically responsible, is to evaluate the prospects for obtaining
    at least a substantial part of that vision in our epoch: vVhat are the social forces that exist, or that
    must exist, if we are to be successful? And what role have we ourselves to play as a social force?
    "Students don't even give a damn about apathy," one has said. Apathy toward apathy begets a
    privately constructed universe, a place of systematic study schedules, two nights each week for beer,
    a girl or two, and early marriage - a framework infused with personality, warmth, and under control
    no matter how unsatisfying otherwise.
    Under these conditions unviersity life loses all relevance to some. Four hundred thousand of ou1
    classmates leave college each year.
    But apathy is not simply an attitude; it is a product of social institutions, and of the structures ai, •
    organization of higher education itself. The extracurricular life is ordered according to in loco parent/
    theory, which ratifies the administration as the moral guardian of the young. The accompanyfog "let ·
    pretend" theory of student extracurricular affairs validates student government as a training ccnt(•r fc r
    those who want to spend their lives in political pretense, and discourages initiative from more articulatf.
    honest and sensitive students. The bounds and style of controversy begins. The university "prepare-;"
    the student for "citizenship" through perpetual rehearsals and, usually, through emasculation of wlrnl
    creative spirit there is in the individual.
    The academic life contains reinforcing counterparts to the way in which extracurricular life is o
    ganized. The academic world is founded in a teacher-student relation analogous to the parent-child n··
    lation which characterized in loco parentis. Further, academia includes a radical separation of studen~
    from the material of study. That which is studied, the social reality, is "objectified" to sterility, clividin'.'
    the student from life - just as he is restrained in active involvement by the deans controlling studm1t
    government. The specialization of function and knowledge, admittedly necessary to our complex technological
    and social structure, has produced an exaggerated compartmentialization of study and under-·
    standing. This has contributed to: An overly parochial view, by faculty, of the role of its research an,1
    scholarship; a discontinuous and truncated understanding, by students, of the surrounding social orde1,
    a loss of personal attachment, by nearly all, to the worth of study as a humanistic enterprise.
    There is finally, the cumbersome academic bureaucracy extending throughout the academic as well
    as extracurricular sh·uctures, conh·ibuting to the sense of outer complexity and inner powerlessness that
    transforms so many students from honest searching to ratification of convention and, worse, to a numbness
    to present and future catastrophes. The size and financing systems of the university enhance the
    permanent trusteeship of the administrative mentality within the university. Huge foundations and other
    private financial interests shape the under-financed colleges and universities, making them not only
    more commercial but less disposed to diagnose society critically, less open to dissent. Many social and
    physical scientists, neglecting the liberating heritage of higher learning, develop "human elations" or
    "morale producing" techniques for the corporate economy, while otheiis exercise their intellectual -skills
    to accelerate the arms race.
    The university is located in a permanent position of social influence. Its educational function makes
    it indispensable and automatically makes it a crucial institution in the formation of social attitudes. In
    an unbelievably complicated world, it is the central institution for organizing, evaluation, and transrn;
    tting knowledge ... Social relevance, the accessibility to knowledge, and internal openness - these
    t-o,~e-ther make the university a potential base and agency in the movement of· social change.
    1. Any new left in America must be, in large measure, a left with real intellectual skills, committed
    t,\ deliberativeness, honesty, and reflection as working tools. The university permits the political life to
    I ,t· an adjunct to the academic one, and action to be informed by reason.
    2. A new left must be distributed in significant social roles throughout the country. The universitif\;'.\
    'lre distributed in such a mannner.
    3. A new left must consist of younger people who matured in the post-war world, and must be
    ected to the recruitment of younger people. The university is an obvious beginning point.
    4. A new left must include liberals and socialists, the former for their relevance, the latter for their
    •,f ise of thoroughgoing reforms in the system. The university is a more sensible place than a political
    , ,·u ty for these two traditions to begin to discuss their differences and look for political synthesis.
    5. A new left must start controversy across the land, if national policies and national apathy are
    J be reversed. The ideal university is a community of controversy, within itself and in its effects on
    .._ ''mmunities beyond.
    6. A new left must transform modern complexity into issues that can be understood and felt closenp
    hy every human being. It must give form to the feelings of helplessness and indifference, so that
    ti• ':lple may see the political, social, ·and economic sources of their private troubles and organize to
    hcJ.nge society. In a time of supposed prosperity, moral complacency, and political manipulation, a new
    l, tt cannot rely on only aching stomachs to be the engine force of social reform. The case for change, for
    ,ttc,rnatives that will involve uncomfortable personal efforts, must be argued as never before. The uni-
    ,,-ersity is a relevant place for all of these activities.
    To turn these possibilities into realities will involve national efforts at university refonn by an alliance
    of students and faculty. They must wrest control of the educational process from the administrative
    bureaucracy. They must make fraternal and functional contact with allies in labor, civil rights,
    and other liberal forces outside the campus. They must make debate and controversy, not dull pedantic
    chant, the common styles for educational life. They must consciously build a base for their assault
    upon the loci of power.
    As students for a democratic society, we are committed to stimulating this kind of social movement,
    this kind of vision and program in campus and community across the country. If we appear to seek the
    unattainable as it has been said, then let it be known that we do so to avoid the unimaginable.
    141
    • • • • • •
    Come gather round people
    where-ever you roam
    and admit that the waters
    around you have grown,
    And accept it that soon
    you'll be drenched to the bone.
    If your time to you is worth savin'
    then you better start swimmin'
    or you'll sink like a stone,
    for the times they are a-changin'.
    • • • • • •
    • • • • •
    144
    Blossoms of indigo.
    Spring breezes sigh.
    But-
    Brown, green, red
    And
    Yellow still are.
    Spring flowers
    Nor breezes hide
    The effluvium of war.
    I
    All I have is a voice
    To undo the folded lie,
    The romantic lie in the brain
    Of the sensual man-in-the-street
    Aud the lie of Authority
    \Vhose buildings grope the sky:
    TLere is no such thing as the State
    A,l,l no one exists alone;
    Ifonger allows no choice
    T,, the citizen or the police; "''r, must love one another or die.
    The free man willing to pay and struggle and
    die for the freedom for himself and others
    K1 iowing how far to subject himself to
    di'>cipline and obedience for the sake of
    an ordered society free from tyrants,
    t:'xploiters and legalized frauds-
    Thn free man is a rare bird and when you
    meet him take a good look at him and try
    to figure him out because
    Some day when the United States of Ea1th
    gets going and runs smooth and pretty
    there will be more of him than we
    have now .
    .... •)ok around I say,
    Lr_ok around and see
    Hu,v man,
    !n little but a day
    P'.,; made this green
    Em.th of ours
    A place, afraid to be.
    Humanity i love you
    because you would rather black the boots of
    success than enquire whose soul dangles
    from his watch-chain which would be
    embarrassing for both
    parties and because you
    unflinchingly applaud all
    songs containing the words country home and
    mother when sung at the old howard
    145
    For liberty and authority they die
    though one is fire and the other water
    and the balances of freedom and discipline
    are a moving target with changing decoys.
    "Civilization declines in relation to the increase
    in bureaucracy."
    ~y specialty is living said
    a man (who could not earn his bread
    because he would not sell his head)
    ~oney is power: so said one ...
    Money is ... freedom, a cushion, the
    root of all evil, the sum of blessings
    ...
    Money buys food, clothes, houses, land,
    guns, jewels, men, women, time to be
    lazy and listen to music ...
    Money buys everything except love,
    personality, freedom, immortality,
    146 silence, peace . . .
    Where the carcass is the buzzards gather.
    Where the treasure is the heart is also . . .
    Money talk is bigger than talk talk ...
    Money is welcome even when it stinks . .
    Money is a great comfort.
    Every man has his price.
    Come senators, congressmen
    please heed the call.
    Don't stand in the doorway,
    don't block up the hall.
    For he that gets hurt
    will be he who has stalled.
    There's a battle outside and its ragin'
    It will soon shake your windows
    and rattle your walls,
    for the times they are a-changin'.
    Humanity i love you because you
    are perpetually putting the secret of
    life in your pants and forgetting
    it's there and sitting down
    on it
    "
    ' \.,.
    The line it is drawn,
    the cmse it is cast.
    The slow one now
    will later ·be fast,
    as the present now
    will later be past.
    Th~ order is rapidly fadin'.
    And the first one now
    will later be last,
    for the times they are a-changin'.
    ,., .' . ,,
    L,
    I 149
    I
    ' "
    Take it from me kiddo
    believe me
    my country, 'tis of
    you, land of the Cluett
    Shirt Boston Garter and Spearmint
    Girl with The Wrigley Eyes (of you
    land of the Arrow Ide
    and Earl &
    Wilson
    Collars) of you i
    sing:land of Abraham Lincoln and Lydia E. Pinkham,
    land above all of Just Add Hot Water And Servefrom
    every B.V.D.
    let freedom ring
    amen. i do however protest, anent the un
    -spontaneous and otherwise scented merde which
    greets one (Everywhere Why) as divine poesy per
    that and this radically defunct periodical. i would
    suggest that certain ideas gestures
    rhymes, like Gillette Razor Blades
    having been used and reused
    to the mystical moment of dullness emphatically are
    Not To Be Resharpened. (Case in point
    if we are to believe these gently O sweetly
    mf~ ancholy trillers amid the thrillers
    the• e crepuscular violinists among my and your
    s1..•. cn,pers - Helen & Cleoptra were Just Too Lovely,
    Tr1,- Snail's On The Thorn enter Morn and God's
    In His andsoforth
    do . ou get me?) according
    to ..,uch supposedly indigenous
    throstles Art is O World O Life
    a [,mnula: example, Turn Your Shirttails Into
    Drn.\\ us and If It Isn't An Eastman It Isn't A
    K( lak therefore my friends let
    u~ ~1ow sing each and all fortissimo AInf',.
    i
    ca I
    lo,,e,
    Y,ru, And there're a
    hu .. drc-d-mil-lion-oth-ers, like
    ah d you successfully if
    <lf..bcately gelded (or spaded)
    gentlemen (and ladies) - pretty
    littleliverpillhearted-
    Nu jolneeding-There' s-A-Reason
    americans (who tensetendoned and with
    upward vacant eyes, painfully
    peIJ)etually crouched, quivering, upon the
    sternly allotted sandpile
    -how silently
    emit a tiny violetflavoured nuisance: Odor?
    ono.
    comes out like a ribbon lies flat on the brush
    151

    Dee Williamson
    Shawn McConnick
    Randy Soard ·
    Jeff Dick
    Dan Roman
    Mike Riley
    Mike Stuart
    Rene Arceneaux
    Mike Mullaley
    Bill Bowman
    John Cevette
    Bob Jasper
    Scott Devitte
    Bob Ruff
    SENATE
    JUDICIAL BOARD
    Steve Duesing, Jerry Chandler, Mike Devere, chairman; John Yeager np Bill Cunningham
    STUDENT UNION BOARD
    Bob Anderson, Loma Chang, Jack Starr, Connie Bonaffini, Randy Frew, Teny Lindberg, chairman; Gary
    Roberts, Lisa Jones, secretary; Mary Manning, Joe Lupo, Jack Abell np Gifford Proctor, union director
    158
    CSUN Presid it
    Bill Ter y
    First Vice-President
    John Daleske
    Tr- irer
    Jo. y Clark
    np Second Vice-President
    Secretary
    JoAnn Prim
    160
    Cf) \ ~ z ~ > ~
    ~
    ~
    u~ •4'
    ~
    ~
    Cf)
    famdy Fi"ew, Second Vice-President; Joy Marcheson, Russell Harvey Val Terwilliger
    Rita Haddad

    164
    "The man of Destiny"
    by
    George Bernard Shaw
    directed by
    fr edd Simpson
    SCT
    Giuseppi Grandi . . . . . ......... Eugene Texa~
    Napoleon . . . . .... . .. George Mazzara
    Sub-Lieutenant . . . . . . .. Larry Lambeth
    Strange Lady . . ......... Lizz Wilson
    166
    "Circus in the Wind"
    by
    Durand Harris
    directed by
    Robert Burgan
    Children's Theatre
    Two Silent Clowns . . . . . . . . . . . Cindy Trudell l
    Jacko .
    Ringmaster .
    Kathy .
    Acrobat .
    Fritzy.
    Johnny
    Grandpa .
    Grandma . .... .. . .
    Baby .
    Dinky Doodle .
    Dancing Clown .
    David Bozarth
    . .. . Josh Abbey
    Lanyard Williams
    Wendy Levine
    . . . Melanie Hopkinson
    Sue Ferguson
    .. Jim Hansen
    . ..... Dan Zumar
    . . Becky Adams
    Diane Jacques
    Ziggy
    . . .. Laurie Day
    168
    "The Happy Prince"
    by
    Oscar Wilde
    Director
    Bernice Runkle
    Reader's Th eat re
    Narrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... Pam Hicks
    Happy Prince . . . . . . . . . . . . ... Lon Schleifer
    Swallow. . . . . Larry Lambeth
    Men's voices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... Ed Borasky
    Women's voices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lee Strange
    170
    ''The Ice Wolf"
    by
    Joanna Mraus
    Director
    Robert Burgan
    Children's Theatre
    Storyteller .
    Kiviog .
    Karvik .
    Arnaqik .
    Atata .
    Lokoshi.
    Tarto .
    Shikikanaq .
    Motomiak .. .
    Anatou . ... . . . .. . . .
    Wood God.
    Fox .. ... . .. .. . ... .
    Beaver.
    Ermine.
    Harry Hambley
    Josh Abbey
    Mike Daines
    Julie Schnur
    . ... Tim Crader
    Kendra Sheff er
    . ..... Jim Hansen
    . Diane Jacques
    Mark Mieczkowski
    Julie Artman
    Harry Hambley
    Mike Daines
    Julie Schnur
    Kendra Sheff er
    Registration
    172
    FREE
    FROSH
    ORC SM
    SAT

    - - Lis~-· ·-~--=~©sii
    NEVADA SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY
    -=- YtslT
    DUCAT.ION
    i: I r .:.ENT RA .NCE·-
    .:
    • •
    0 • r
    • !
    0 ·, 0
    .; ...
    _, -
    I
    (

    / ; / ,
    182
    - -::- -
    I
    184
    Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart
    .. "\ ~,... . ..l'<I
    I I~, ,
    "

    Russell Baker Bill Russell

    untv 203
    ~ C) ~ >-. ""'I C'ij <..... . C)
    ~
    ~ 0 • ..-I > ~ ~
    '-<: C'ij
    (D ~
    a filet of soul

    March


    214
    April 1-30
    Esther and Robert Robles Art Exhibit
    April 6
    Dr. Howard Stein
    Playwright, motion picture and TV writer;
    speaking on "Lysistrata-the Chief of Peace
    goes to War"
    April 7
    UNL V Debate - George Franklin
    "The Role of Teenage Informers in Combating
    Narcotics Use"
    April 13
    University Chamber Singers
    Conducted By Douglas Peterson
    "Te Deum" by Haydn
    April 16
    Cinema X - Bruce Baille
    Film-maker and lecturer; showing his films
    University of Southern California Concert
    Choir
    April 17
    Allen Kaprow, Art Critic/Performer
    Author of Assemblage, Environments, and
    Happenings; staging events to engage the
    surrounding environment (a happening).
    UNL V Student Dance Recital
    "Da nce , D ance, D ance . . ."
    Fine Arts Festiv ·I
    An Evening of Electronic Music
    Music of the Avant Garde with the
    Electronic Arts Group
    April 17-19
    "Lysistrata"
    Drama production of Aristophanes's famo s
    anti-war comedy with modern rock mw c
    Cinema X
    Janus New Cinema Program
    April 18
    Lecture-demonstration by the
    Electronic Arts Group of electronic mus ',
    open forum on previous evening's cone t
    April 18
    Oral Interpretation Recital
    by Speech and Drama majors;
    "America Today Through the Eyes
    Of Literature"
    April 18&19
    Concert Rehearsal
    Keith Moon, conductor
    Students invited to observe rehearsal of
    concert program
    April 20
    University Chamber Orchestra
    Keith Moon, conductor
    Patty Abraham
    Cotillion Queen
    Kathy Crosato
    Sno Ball Queen
    .I.:.<..) a,
    Colleen Bell
    Winter Carnival Queen


    223
    John Cevette

    SEPTEMBER
    13-14 "The Man of Destiny"
    "The Fantasy"
    13 Freshman Orientation
    Howdy Dance
    14 Football - St. Mary's
    OCTOBER
    5 Football- Southern California
    State College
    23 Nicholas Nyaradi
    26 "An Experience in Sight
    and Sound"
    Football - Cal-Tech
    28 Confrontation (Bible vs F1 e)
    29 Utah Symphony,
    Maurice. Abravanel
    NOVEMBER
    2 Football-
    College of Southern Utah
    8-10 U Days ·
    13 Alex Haley
    16 Football - San Diego
    17 Marv Koral - Jack Hollam
    Jazz Workshop
    20-22 "The Good Woman of Setzua 1"
    23 Football-California Luther n
    Preference Ball
    27 Russell Baker
    30 Basketball - Hastings Colk ,e
    DECEMBER
    1 James Mulidore and the
    Jazz Underground
    5-7 "The Investigation"
    6 Winter Carnival
    8 Christmas Vesper Concert
    University Chorus
    20-21 "Winnie the Pooh"
    13 Basketball - SW Louisiana
    15 Rick Davis and
    His Triple Quartet
    16 Basketball -
    Southern Michigan
    20 Basketball - Hiram Scott
    21 Sno Ball
    23 Basketball - Loyola
    28 Basketball - San Diego State
    Holiday Classic
    30 Basketball -
    Texas Christian University
    JANUARY
    2 Basketball -
    Creighton University
    4 Basketball -
    Denver University
    5 "Barton Gray Ensemble"
    11 Basketball - Portland State
    12 University Wind Symphony
    13 Basketball -
    College of Southern Utah
    19 Bobby Shew and His
    Orchestra
    25 Basketball - Reno
    Orchestra
    31 Basketball-
    Northern Arizona University
    'EBRUARY
    14-18 Homecoming
    Marvin Gaye
    Pajama Rally
    Parade
    UNLV vs Reno
    Queen Coronation
    Homecoming Dance
    20 Harrison Salisbury
    21-22 "The Ice Wolf"
    "The Happy Prince"
    22 Florence Clifford, Pianist
    MARCH
    2 Basketball -
    University of Albuquerque
    Two Chamber Operas
    Tommy Vig and His
    Orchestra
    APRIL
    1-30 Fine Arts Festival
    1 William Rusher
    5 Solo Vocal Festival
    11 Talent Show
    12 Andres Pompondreaou
    20 University Chamber Orchestra
    29 Dr. John Searle
    MAY
    2 Cotillion
    6 Bill Russell
    11 UNL V Wind Symphony
    15 Honors Convocation
    15-17 "Don Juan in Hell"
    17 Bishop James Pike
    30-31 "Circus in the Wind"


    REBEL FOOTBALL
    UNLV OPPONENT
    27 St. Mary's 20
    29 Azusa Pacific 8
    23 U of San Francisco 7
    27 Westminster 7
    25 Southern Colorado State 21
    69 Cal Tech 0
    26 College of Southern Utah 17
    27 U California San Diego 6
    13 Cal Lutheran 17
    C )ach Bill Ireland
    232 1\ ME POS NAME POS
    J n HALL qb Jesse SCOTT th 233
    l\ J io AGUERO qb Kevin SEWELL lb
    S ve RUSSI dhb Bruce GRAY lb
    J TY BEAVERS dhb Mel CREEL C
    E 1 CASEY qb Bill BAILEY og
    J '1 VINSON dhb Mike BROOKS C
    J m ACKERLEY tb Mike GUTOWSKI lb
    J n THOMPSON qb David NEFF C
    I ch LOGAN fl Dale NISSON og
    l ::,bert HAYNES tb Dick MORGAN og
    ( eorge HEDRICK fl Lee WRIGHT lb
    J arry HODGES tb Lee BATES og
    l harles COOPER fb Leighton DUER mg
    arry TROSI dhb Willie DAVISON C
    L teve STARESINIC fl George MAWSON og
    ~ erry SUTTON dhb John WRIGHT og
    Vernon CRAWFORD lb Bernie CARTER dt
    Jim MATHIS lb Rick SCHAFF ot
    Mack GILCHRIST de Chris BAIR dt
    Victor CALVIN te Jim VALLINE dt
    Bill MYERS lb Michael FORCH ot
    Steve BUZICK fb Ron NIX ot
    George POWELL fl John DENHAM ot
    George SAPHIRE fb Tom ROWLAND dt
    Frank PROVENSAL de Lanny LITTLEFIELD dt
    Walt CHRISTIE de Nathaniel HAWKINS se
    Bill PRIEST dt Shirl NAEGLE de
    Mark LARSON te David BITTEL de
    Sam BRADFORD se
    Ma rn Hall
    Ma a Goodwin
    Co 1 e Boich
    He e Fiore
    Do 1a Moore np
    Kathy Crosato
    Terry Spino
    Shannon Fitzgerald
    Kathy Lacy
    Dave Tepper
    John Denning
    Pete Gilbert
    Ed Terwilliger


    NAME G FG FT REB TP AVG.
    Curtis WATSON 28 234 121 58 589 21.0
    Bruce CHAPMAN 28 231 93 239 555 19.8
    Don LYONS 28 220 88 310 528 18.9
    Tom WATKINS 26 218 61 142 497 19.1 Cliff FINDLAY 28 136 76 317 348 12.4
    Robert RILEY 28 67 40 162 174 6.2
    Mark LARSON 23 23 15 34 61 2.7
    David WEBB 11 4 6 16 14 1.3
    Ed PLAWSKI 13 5 1 6 11 Gene COLLINS .8 6 3 2 3 8 1.3 Larry LISBY 5 1 0 2 2 .4 Jim ARRINGTON 3 1 0 0 2 .7 Pat DEELEY 1 0 0 1 0 .o R_: BEL BASKETBALL
    Coach Roland Todd
    UNLV OPPONENT HIGH SCO , E ·
    93 Hastings 72 Chapman -22 103 U Okalhoma 84 Watkins 23 106 Oklahoma City 113 Watkins· 34 240 82 U SW Louisiana 84 Lyons- 24 102 Northern Michigan 73 Watkins- 29 126 Hiram Scott 116 Chapman- 31 119 Loyola New Orleans 96 Watson- 28 101 San Diego State 74 Chapman, Lyons- ).3 ,82 Southern Illinois 85 Chapman- !4 99 Texas Christian 97 Findlay- '.7 109 Creighton 99 Chapman- .9 118 Denver 94 Watson- .8 115 Portland State 82 Lyons-' 5 125 College S Utah 91 Chapman- 7 98 College S Utah 96 Watson- ~2 96 Reno 95 Chapman-26 121 Northern Arizona 100 Chapman, Watson-28 91 Long Beach (O T) 86 Watkins-27 97 Houston 118 Findlay-22 90 Loyola New Orleans 86 Watson-32 79 Centenary 91 Watkins-23 99 U San Diego 76 Lyons-22 95 Reno ,84 Watson, Watkins- 24 87 Northern Arizona 76 Chapman-21 82 Long Beach 111 Lyons-24 118 Albuquerque 105 Watson-39 84 U Cal Davis 81 Watson-30 72 San Francisco State 77 Watson-22

    BASEBALL
    Travis Bonneville
    Harry Karn
    Bill Anthony
    Fred Demick
    Jerry Beavers
    Chris Zockoll
    George Peraza
    Rich Gonzales
    Dan Worthen
    Joe Quartuccio
    Ernie Acevedo
    Bill O'Keefe
    Lou Cabrera
    Mike Lombardi
    Paul Azneras
    John Johnson
    Jeff Dick
    Russ Farrell
    Ralph Garcia
    John Lundquist
    Mike Karstead
    Rich Martin
    Charlie Dowd
    W 24 L 17 T 1
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    Reno
    Bob Cummins
    Steve Schroeder
    Mel Hemsley
    Richard Panico
    John Apfel
    Jim Dropp
    Mark Michaels
    Tom Mildren
    GYMNASTICS
    Bill Spencer
    Nat Hawkins
    Robert Haynes
    Bill Jones·
    Harold Staff
    Gary Elam
    Juan Moser
    Tom Davies
    Doug Clarke
    Gene Kendricks
    Tom Ferroah
    Joe Baccari
    Melvin Creel
    Hoot Gibson
    John Morgan
    Bill Bailey
    Doug McCollum
    Jim Thompson
    Mike Forch
    Mac MacDonald
    Jim Dropp
    Larry Trosi
    Pete Gross
    Don Lyons
    Dave Tepper
    Dan Biggs
    TRACK

    250 GOLF
    Don Speer & Steve Turner
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    John Huber
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    Mike Ro
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    Bob Anderso
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    262
    EPILOGUE 1969, volume xiii
    A publication of the Confederated Students of
    the University of Nevada, Las Vegas
    page 131 Baha-u-llah
    page 132 Carl Sandburg
    Peter L. Berger
    Herbert Marcuse
    page 133 Herbert Marcuse
    page 135 Peter L. Berger
    Lionel Rubinoff
    Adolph Hitler
    Joan Baez
    Robert F. Kennedy
    Claude F. Whitmyer
    136-141 Excerpts from the Port Huron
    Statement, 1962
    Students for a Democratic Society
    page 143 Bob Dylan
    page 144 Fenton Kay
    page 145 W. H. Auden
    Carl Sandburg
    Fenton Kay
    E. E. Cummings
    page 146 Carl Sandburg
    Victor Yanuacone
    E. E. Cummings
    Carl Sandburg
    Bob Dylan
    page 147 E. E. Cummings
    page 149 Bob Dylan
    page 150 E. E. Cummings
    Than.
    Mimi Du, 1
    Gary Crad 1
    Mike Ceve
    Brian Sto ~
    Greg Allr 1
    Jim Byr
    BRUCE BURGE
    Gilbert Parmele, RCA Recording Compa1
    Tina Komp:
    Terri Barbor '
    Dan Tor
    Reuben Neuma
    cover and artwork by Chris Von Spen<
    Hail the mighty Leica
    Hail the mighty Leicaflex
    A chapter in time written in New York,
    August 1968
    adversity, with its onion breath
    casts the mold
    for all who would speak after him
    and we, who are left here to remain
    in the wake of his tasteless odor
    can but lift our heads in song
    . . . and so we sang
    and the eagle sadly shook his head
    then turned and coughed
    as if to die
    old friends like law and justice
    quarreled then parted
    left alone, the flop haired secretary
    pausing to take the last and careful notes
    . . . and still we sang
    laboring, under the search
    for the lost passage of truth
    hampered by the visions
    from the eye of a lone assasin
    whom, in one second ·
    equaled the violence
    of a thousand black streetcorners
    on a thousand days
    . . . and still we sing
    immersed in the quest for love
    sealed by the fears of lonely frustration
    heated by steaming tears
    thoughts unanswered
    and his notes still float in our minds
    as not, my friends
    for gentle is not yet the way
    and still, we sing.
    Sid Goldstein