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Epilogue: UNLV Yearbook, 1972

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Date

1972

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

man000537

Physical Identifier

LD3745 .C6
    Details

    Citation

    man000537. Epilogue: UNLV Yearbook. 1972. [Periodical] Retrieved from Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d1z032g37

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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

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

    Digital Processing Note

    OCR transcription

    Language

    English

    Format

    application/pdf


    Copyright © 1972
    by
    Helen Barnett
    on behalf of the
    Consolidated Students of the
    University of Nevada, Las Vegas
    ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
    No part of this book may be reproduced
    in any form or manner without the
    express written per-mission of the
    editor.
    Printed in the United States of America
    by
    Taylor Publishing Co.
    Covina, California
    CONTENTS
    \
    1 I
    Educators
    Educated
    Literary
    Greeks
    1
    *
    !5#;:-
    llfti : •
    Pot-Pourri
    Activities
    Sports
    Supporters
    "Snow Clad'9
    Friends
    I •
    The
    Last
    Yearbook
    This book is people. People are you. Through
    the pages you think and daydream. You,
    through frustration, work, care and play. From
    page to page you live today for today. You
    anticipate the next, still remembering the last.
    Beyond the pictures find yourself leaving
    impressions on others as they do on you.
    This book is you, for you.
    HB
    FRIENDS


    I
    *r
    13

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    "SNOW-CLAD"
    "Home means Nevada, Home means the hills, 9 9
    50 51
    1
    "Home
    53
    "Out where the trucky silvery rills,Out where the sun always shines,
    54 55
    -.JL.? -r^'-.- SHsBP
    a That is the land that I love the bestr
    56
    Fairer than all I can see/9
    "Out in the heart of the golden west,"
    59
    "Home means Nevada to me."
    Bertha Roffetto
    60
    September 3, 4, 5
    September 10, 11, 12
    December 3, 4, 5
    December 10, 11, 12
    HOBBIT HOBBIT

    John Kerry
    September 22
    CSUN
    at the movies
    Homecoming
    November 5, 6
    i•*
    -
    Cal Poly 13
    UNLV3
    Delaney and Bonnie
    November 5
    iilitt®


    Mason Williams
    December 70
    Governor Mike O'Callaghan
    January 20
    ? " v :
    BHHI
    Florynce Kennedy
    February 8

    Opening — Judy Bailey Theatre
    William Rusher
    m
    m*

    LITERARY
    Marilyn and me
    From the wharf
    To Coit Tower
    Smiling, huffing
    The hill
    Way up.
    People of many
    Kinds —
    Sometimes
    Smoking and
    Laughing
    Finding blocks
    Of fun and some
    Of fear
    Forgetting
    Las Vegas
    And Kevin
    (left for better)
    The hill
    Way up.
    Barbara Becker
    IlliS
    Rain
    A drop — running, rounding, following in —
    Hangs, growing large on a level place,
    A drop trickles in a tear and shades are shut
    On planned hopes lost and dismalest forlorn.
    The small face is unmoved, unwrinkled;
    its cheeks are glossed by damp reflections;
    Thought is slow, resigned, and sad,
    With the lower lip lax on an understanding thumb.
    Michael Gordon
    I don't love him because he buys me nice clothes
    Because he doesn't.
    I don't love him because he takes me nice places
    Because he doesn't.
    I don't smile when I see him because of the gifts that he might bring
    My love smiles just for him.
    I don't answer his call anticipating an event
    Because events don't move me.
    I don't travel with him because of his new car
    Because it's not.
    I don't stay with him because he promises me the world.
    I love him.
    Doreen hox
    You should have been here by now.
    I know you're not coming,
    And
    My anticipation has lost its willing.
    Like a child
    I waited
    With my nose
    Pressed up
    Against the window.
    I'm doubting,
    No . . .
    Not you,
    Or the love
    I think you should hold for me,
    But if we were going to get together. .
    And on time.
    Marty Dominguez

    if!! sis
    with the return spirit I welcome thee
    homing back in the matter of things
    like a snowstorm overdue
    For the clouds were long brimming with the pledge
    of your return
    the doors are open
    long I have awaited this day
    now it finally comes
    and, like the sad silent sorig
    it plays on my mind
    and dances in the soul of my senses
    Std Paul
    '5o O.F\:
    O. :
    fJwjt !4
    sjf ^
    I
    I••
    If there wasn't hate or greed, what would the world be like?
    If there weren't so many poor in need, what would the world be like?
    It competition and tribalism ceased to exist, what would we do for kicks?
    If battles among individuals stopped, where would we play?
    If wars were no longer necessary, how many lives would pay?
    If expectations and desires no longer controlled this material world,
    what would we do for comfort?
    And what would we do if the birds stopped singing,
    And the flowers quit growing,
    If the wind stopped blowing,
    And if the rivers stopped flowing.
    Could we then, perhaps, love?
    Tell me, what is it like to love.
    Debi Steffan
    wsteafeaHl
    i
    To my wife, the dancer
    When I can write a line that matches strength
    And beauty with the lines you shove in space:
    As if the air were spinning clay, your length j
    Of limbs a potter's fingers finding place —
    Bands of gold bind shrewder buyers; past the
    Watchman of desire I've typed and sent a
    Final message: I have found at last the
    Bella donna delta mia mente.
    Why, now my words can tie a knot so strong
    No Alexander's sword could cut it through
    No Socrates could argue you were wrong
    To keep me near enough to breathe on you
    Bruce Bebb
    .
    Why do I see-me as others see me?
    They don't know who I am,
    And Neither do I,
    But at least I know what I'm not,
    I'm not a thing to be passed about,
    I'm not a clown to be laughed at,
    And I'm not one of the crowd
    to be misconstrued with others,
    I am myself! Can't you see me?
    I am myself, what I was born
    to be,
    Different from the rest of you.
    You are the circus of life,
    I am the surface beyond you,
    You are the clowns
    to be painted each day,
    I am of another time, another way,
    I am human, can't you feel me?
    I guess you can't, you're dead!
    I am alive.
    Smoke i
    101
    Child of God,
    shimmering gardens
    beckon you.
    Life be cruel
    and whisper sweet
    endless journey
    the soul to treat.
    Hands cradled
    quick but slow,
    rippling silver
    truth will show
    Reflections seen
    memories flee
    hope in hand
    the truth to see.
    Michael Wheat
    Colors and auras merge, and melt-
    The coming together of people.
    Divergencies are there in full circle, but
    Similarities are the rule, the "human condition."
    Touching, physically, yes; but more
    Real selves transcending the outer surface,
    Virginal surfaces touch where contact has never before occurred.
    The footsteps of others in the secret "I."
    Beauty becomes booty, and a void beneath
    Plain-ness becomes plane-ness, and beauty shows in each facet.
    Age, status disappear, "boxes" dissolve,
    Real selves refuse to stay in their neat pigeon-holes,
    Labels become worthless.
    Strength emerges in unexpected places,
    Perception shines from quiet corners.
    "I" and "Thou" touch our secret selves, and loathe to leave
    The rending of psyche's maidenhead brings pain —
    It becomes reified in the group, is felt and shared.
    The group has suffered and found
    Joy! together, an experience unique.
    Never before or again is this experience.
    The group grows,
    And each person grows,
    But the experience is Now and Forever as a part of each of them.
    Toni Perry
    At the still point of the turning
    world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;
    Neither from nor towards; at the
    still point, there the dance is,
    But neither arrest nor movement.
    And do not call it fixity,
    Where past and future are gathered.
    Neither movement from nor towards,
    Neither ascent nor decline. Except
    for the point, the still point,
    there would be no dance, and there
    is only the dance.
    I can only say, there we have been;
    but I cannot say where.
    And I cannot say, how long, for
    that is to place it in time.
    The inner freedom from practical desire,
    The release from action and suffering,
    release from the inner
    And the outer compulsion, yet surrounded
    By a grace of sense, a white light still and moving,
    Erhebung without motion, concentration
    Without elimination, both a new world
    And the old made explicit, understood
    In the completion of its partial ecstasy,
    The resolution of its partial horror
    Yet the enchainment of past and future
    Woven in the weakness of the changing body,
    Protects mankind from heaven and damnation
    Which flesh cannot endure.
    Time past and time future
    Allow but a little consciousness.
    To be conscious in not to be in time
    But only in time can the moment in the rose-garden,
    The moment in the arbour where the rain beat,
    The moment in the draughty church at smoke fall
    Be remembered; involved with the past and the future
    Only through time time is conquered.
    T. S. Eliot
    Through this land of ours we smile
    beauty in our souls
    High above all words we float
    Don't worry about the goals
    Farther than the farthest star
    still deeper than the sea.
    Ignore the prison of our sphere
    Within our souls, we're free.
    Just live our god composed of love
    no church, we fake no prayer,
    no place below or high above
    by color, creed or hair.
    Control no lives, yet part of all
    why games or meager roles?
    No social disillusions
    too busy loving souls.
    Happy being powerless, not selfish
    too many loves one shares
    These free lives see others watch
    dark eyes with frightened stares.
    Pray one day all man shall come
    though now we're very small
    patiently we love and hope
    even if we later fall.
    We've been here now some million years
    and in that shed eternal tears
    together now there are no fears
    forever we will stay
    forever we sill stay.
    George Sherman
    there was a fine feathered bird
    who lost his wing feathers
    in a fight with an eagle . . .
    no longer could he fly the
    skies ... no longer did he
    assume the magnificence
    which was his . . . so
    throughout his life he walked
    the eye can see just how
    the man in youthful lulls.
    remembered the sea gulls
    encourage the motion of the plow
    with the down-soft wind of their
    sun-worthy, salt-white wings.
    but the sun wills the things
    that will will, and seeds grow into care,
    then the eyes sees through
    to the tainted street,
    sees the gull there, too
    on bony concrete
    The edge of insanity H
    What frustration, VVhat- adventure.
    To dance along th,e frilly...fdzzy timet
    To stumble, to grope, -
    To thrill to the sourc.d in the dc|fi! %
    The animal self, of starkiear
    What endlebs depth^of tR&'-mirnd
    "What black pitshof blinding light
    Such distortion within reality, that
    realities slip one into the other.
    How harsh "
    Hovy, brujal ""X f|
    An^"The escfepe ip urj^fe'yym
    for even the insane are not free
    b MG o l d e n , ,
    I know I don't love you
    It's much too soon for anything like that
    It's strange though
    I think of you often
    I see you and say hi
    Nothing more, if that.
    But this feeling in me is you.
    I know I want you
    Oh, you'll move on one day
    Or I'll go away
    A heartache for awhile.
    I want you now
    Tomorrow might never come
    I'll wait till tomorrow if you ask
    Next week if I must but don't ask
    Me to wait anymore
    When something is born it must be fed
    I'm only a man
    Nothing more
    You're a woman
    And to be yourself is all I ask
    Give this new life a chance to grow
    And flourish
    If it must die, it will
    But don't sell us short
    Be mine for a day
    A month
    A year
    But be mine now
    And let me be yours.
    Jim Farnham
    '
    i am an indian
    my name is morning sun
    my blood is red and true
    my children are golden brown
    and hair like a horses mane
    bay red, black stallion
    i am an indian
    my brothers are the sons of america
    my sons are the ways of nature
    my people are the good rich soil of this land
    the great plains and the corn fields
    prairie for their graveyard
    i am an indian
    and the buffalo are the bread of my table
    rain the love-fed breast milk of my mother nature
    but love like regret sorrow and pity
    came too late
    did little good
    i am an indian
    tired and hungry, broken
    i am AN INDIAN
    my tears
    are the tears of ages
    Bulls
    113
    The Civilized
    (A travesty, he said teasingly.
    Your majesty, she said pleasingly.
    A tragedy, he said pleadingly.
    Have faith in me, they heard sneeringly.)
    It's an uptight, slight morality
    That leads us to the fray
    And once we are committed,
    All you can do is pray.
    Now, just choose a victim
    Follow it to the end.
    When it soars, you soar along,
    When it bends, you bend.
    Feel the care man blood thirst oozing,
    Like snakes uncoiling, freed?
    Like hurricanes just spinning,
    Like the sprouting of a seed?
    Can you hear the cosmic whispers,
    The power of witchcraft chants?
    It's the force behind our politics,
    The rhythm of our dance.
    It's in the roar of engines,
    Doing unnatural acts
    Like piling stone ten stories high
    Clicking, transmitting facts.
    You can hear Shakespeare's witches
    Cackling at our tricks
    They prophesy a dismal day
    When we burn our world like sticks.
    Dale Mead
    My hair is long and I have brown eyes
    Oh yes by the way I am a man
    My stomach is empty
    But my soul is hungry
    My hair is long and I have thick brown eyebrows
    And oh yes by the way 1 am a man
    I cry out love
    They only want money
    My hair is long and I have brown skin
    And oh yes by the way I am a man
    I need a job
    The soul lives and the body dies
    My hair is long and I have hard callouses
    And oh yes by the way I am a man
    Time grows short
    They must not push too long
    My hair is long and I have a hard back
    And oh yes by the way I am a man
    My heart is strong, yet despair creeps in
    After all I am a man
    Jim McNulty
    The Signs of Boredom
    In the hours of idleness,
    Signs of boredom begin to appear.
    The clock paces itself slowly
    against the hands of time.
    Climbing into obligation
    and escaping the crevices,
    Man's life is devoured by mindless fingers . . .
    and timeless minds.
    Jumbling throughout the decour,
    he discovers oblivion,
    slipping into idle hands.
    Fall sweetly my life,
    Into unwashed days,
    thought naught discovered.
    Blend into the feeling,
    and map out o your course,
    But lo, think not that you could guide its course,
    For if idleness, should it find you worthy . . .
    directs your course.
    In the early morning hours of his soul,
    Man dreams of sketches of his life which meant much
    more,
    More than the immediate hours
    passing before his oblivious eyes.
    A rendezvous with life,
    typing out a meager existence,
    to satisfy his soul.
    Realize the mindless time,
    Seek not the timeless mind!
    Seek its justice, the hours of idleness
    . . . t h e s i g n s o f b o r e d o m . . . w i l l d i s a p p e a r .
    Kathy Pearce
    I am an evil man
    I destroy my world,
    I love a soft life,
    And nature dies all around.
    Man bares a destruction nature,
    And beauty dies,
    The dirt is all I see,
    Stone and naked ground.
    Once I was happy in a world all my own,
    Life was pure,
    Nature was safe,
    And destruction was impossible.
    Then my being was conceived,
    And a new world materialized,
    And I was born,
    And I received my just reward.
    Bill Jones
    The infant born to live
    Whether he realizes it
    struggles to open his eyes to the
    fascinating things around him that exist
    The child you know so well
    is this infant with eyes open
    he fills his mind with knowledge
    learning about the truth and wrong of sin
    Of age he is shown to
    expand his learning knowledge
    and the child goes to school
    he learns and understands with age
    Now, we have the exciting
    years of realization
    the child is no infant, he is directly
    headed to contribute to our growing nation
    The time comes for many decisions
    will this young adult retreat
    from the good things in life and the
    trials he has learned to meet
    As the years progress
    he has become of respected age
    the right route has been chosen
    he puts to use his expanding knowledge
    Coming to the closing years
    of this human life we find
    the age of hoping that the generation
    after will come ahead from behind
    We see an infant
    he will make tomorrow
    it's his destiny to bring about
    pleasure to life and little sorrow.
    Terry Guarino
    while wind blew seeds from the husks
    (go scatter, blow, sow, the valley floors)
    and gray from the morning air
    (comes day, rolling, flowing,
    past fields of timothy hay)
    while i sit quilt wrapped
    curled, chilled with the still gray air
    hunched up in a wooden chair
    steam crawling slip from the coffee mug
    when up from the valley floor
    roars, pours down the mountain side
    rides in a crest
    past the rest of the farm
    slams, rams, red and yellow past the window sill
    and: morning happens
    (oh joy, beauty, oh fortune)
    while love stumbles sleepy
    down the back stairs to the kitchen
    Ron Salisbury
    119

    Our
    75th Anniversary
    Special
    Cutlass
    Hardtop Coupe
    The car with the Tiffany
    The limited edition
    Ninety-Eight Regency.
    It's Oldsmobile's
    5th Anniversary,
    A great time to
    step ahead at
    Las Vegas
    '2Cf6e>ie "Tfou "Suf
    3024 BOULDER HWY. *457-1021
    150
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    1 • U Wi IiUjUj^UL
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    BEVERAGE CO.
    2416 West Desert Inn Road
    735-1 185
    SMMAf LAS VEGAS-NEVADA
    PROPERTY OF A DEL E. WEBB CORPORATION SJBS DIARY
    Salute to the
    Students of
    UNLV
    Phone 384-3530 Custom Framing
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    SOUTHERN NEVADA'S COMPLETE ART
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    148
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    146
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    820 Lake Mead Blvd.
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    I 162 Twain
    Maryland Square
    LAS VEGAS, NEV.
    MALE — LEVIS — A-l
    KENNINGTON SHIRTS
    Phone 735-5983
    We salute the students and faculty
    of the
    University of Nevada, Las Vegas
    LANDMARK
    HOTEL
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    142
    'dazey TRAVEL SERVICE Inc.
    4973 PARADISE RD. - LAS VEGAS
    BEST
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    143
    Head for bargain deals.
    LAS VEGAS
    H O T E L A N D C O U N T R Y C L U B
    Valley Bank of Nevada
    15 branches statewide to
    serve you.
    a member of F.D.I.C.
    141
    WORK
    WORK IS MAN'S GREAT FUNCTION
    He is nothing, he can do nothing, he can achieve nothing, fulfill
    nothing, without working. / If you are poor—work. / If you are
    rich—continue working. If you are burdened with seemingly unfair
    responsibilities—work. / If you are happy, keep right on working.
    Idleness gives room for doubt and fears. / If disappointments
    come—work. / If your health is threatened—work. / When faith
    falters—work. / When dreams are shattered and hope seems dead
    —work. / Work as if your life were in peril. It really is. No matter
    what ails you—work. / Work faithfully KORK-TV^
    —work with faith. / Work is the
    greatest remedy available for
    mental and physical afflictions. LAS VEGAS H i
    BEST WISHES
    American Home of the Folies Bergere
    138
    427 Fremont St.
    MR. B CLOTHES
    Congratulations
    UNLV
    STUDENTS
    Introducing Southern Nevada's
    Newest Title Insurance and Escrow Firm . . .
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    Fountain and Bar
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    1200 E. Foremaster Lane
    642-1999
    SHOWBOAT HOTEL & LANES 2800 E. Fremont • Phone:382-7575
    Lee Vegas, New.
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    Coach Gordon Edwards
    LAS VEGAS, NEV, — Five school records
    fell as the University of Nevada, Las Vegas
    track team ended the 1972 season with a 10-9
    dual meet record.
    Senior sprinter Angelo Stefanelli broke the
    only track event as he ran a 22.1 220 yard
    dash to eclipse the old mark of 22.3.
    The four field events broken for Dr. Gordon
    Edwards' squad were the shot put, discus,
    javelin, and triple jump. Senior John Morgan
    heaved the shot 52-7% for a new mark while
    junior Kyle Nelson threw the discus 155-6,
    Barry Hammon sent the javelin 198-9 and junior
    college transfer Kevin Patterson soared 47-
    7 in the triple jump.
    Winning eight of their last 11 meets, the
    Rebel spikers were led by three-event specialist
    Patterson who scored 202 points in dual
    meets this season. He also had the team's best
    mark of the year in the long jump (22-3) also
    tied for the top mark of 6-2 in the high jump
    with Craig Falk.
    Stefanelli, who scored 162 dual meet
    Coach Bill Scoble
    points, had the best time in the 100 along
    with Larry Wright of 10 seconds flat. Mel
    Turner, third in dual meet points with
    111%, ran the best time of the year in the
    440 with a 49.6.
    In the distances, Ed Brown had the best
    880 of the season for UNLV, 1:59.0. Doug
    Clarke ended his track career (four years at
    UNLV) with a 4:29.9 mile and Blaine Clarke
    had the best three-mile time of 16:22.4.
    In the hurdles Carson Madison ran a
    15.5 120 HH and Ruben Perez ran a 60.5
    in the 440 IH.
    The 440 relay team of Stefanelli, George
    Sherman and the Turner twins, had a 43.3
    clocking and the mile relay team of Brown,
    Doug Clarke, and the Turners had a best
    time of 3:23.5.
    It's on to next season for the University
    of Nevada, Las Vegas, football team as the
    Rebels finished the year with a whomping
    63-6 victory over the National University of
    Mexico for a 5-4-1 season record.
    Coach Bill Ireland's Rebels finished their
    fourth year in history and it was also the
    fourth straight winning season for UNLV.
    High point of the season for the youthful
    program was a game against a major college
    opponent — Utah State. The Aggies
    won 27-7 in Logan but it was a giant step
    for the progressive program the Rebels
    have established.
    Next season's schedule will see the first
    11 -game slate highlighted by a trip to the
    Orange Bowl to play the University of Miami
    on Nov. 4.
    Coach Ireland and his staff have recruited some 30 junior college transfers to fill the vacancies in le
    starting lineup.
    Most to be missed on offense will be the record-setting wide receivers for the Rebels — Greg Brown
    and four-year veteran Nathaniel Hawkins. Hawkins became the first player in the school's history to be
    drafted into the pros as he went to the Pittsburgh Steelers in last season's annual college draft.
    Brown was the leading receiver this year with 38 catches for 626 yards and five touchdowns. He also
    returned nine punts for 270 yards and one more six-pointer.
    The Hawk was the leading scorer on the team with eight touchdowns for 48 points. He caught 35
    passes for 456 yards and seven TDs.
    Also missing next season will be offensive stars fullback Charles Cooper (402 yards) and linemen Dan
    Morrison and David Neff.
    The tough Rebel defense will also lose some key players in linemen Bill Booker, Grant Fawcett,
    Tommy Rowland, Shayne Skipworth, linebackers Bruce Gray and Ken Mitchell and defensive backs
    Milton Leonard and Jim Farnham.
    With records falling galore, the University of Nevada, Las Vegas freshman basketball team finished the
    1971-72 season with a 16-5 record and a player who could be the number one frosh scorer and rebounder
    in the nation.
    Jim Baker, 6'9" from Olney High School in Philadelphia, Pa., single-handedly rewrote the frosh record
    books as he scored 733 points for a 36.7 average and ripped off 448 rebounds for a 22.4 per game
    average. QoaCh gm Scoble's yearlings won their last 13 straight as Baker really came into his own.
    The freshman tied the single-game scoring mark in their 137-57 triumph over Palo Verde JO.
    Baker was sensational. He scored 51 points (second high in frosh history), was 20 of 28 from
    the field, 11 for 11 at the charity stripe, grabbed 40 rebounds (a frosh record) and added 15
    assists (another frosh record) to his brilliant performance.
    For the season Baker was .495 from the field (275-556) and .817 from the free throw line
    (183-224) and although those are both excellent percentages, he did not lead the team i
    either category. Speedy little Eddie Taylor, a teammate of Baker at Olney High, was 121 :>f
    148 from the charity stripe for an .818 accuracy rate and 6-11 Dan Cunningham, from Alisal
    High in Salinas, Calif., carried a .535 field goal percentage to lead the young Rebels.
    There were four scholarship players on the freshman team this year and all four lived up to
    Scoble's expectations. Besides Baker, Taylor averaged 22.3 points a game, Cunningham 14.4
    rebounds each game and added 15.1 points and 6-9 Don Weimer, from Chula Vista, Calr .
    High, picked up 13.1 rebounds and 11.1 points for same.
    Baker has seven high scoring games that are second through eighth on the all-time frosh
    list. Besides his 51 point effort, he had one game of 50 points, three of 48, one of 47 and
    another of 45. This was a great rebounding team for UNLV, getting 58.8 each outing. Baker
    now heads the all-time list while Cunningham is sixth and Weimer eighth in the record books.
    Weimer had a high rebounding game of 29 while Cunningham's best effort was 26. Cunningham's
    316 points places him 10th on the books while Taylor's 469 markers put him in the
    number five spot.
    Although the 1968-69 frosh team had an 18-4 record, Scoble feels that this was the best
    team in UNLV cage history (freshman team). The schedule this year was the roughest ever for
    a UNLV team and the five losses were early in the year when the squad had not begun to play
    together. The best example of the improvement made would be the two games with highly
    regarded Arizona Western JC. Early in the year the Rebels lost to them 94-78 and then near
    the end of the season the young Rebels ended AWC's 28-game winning streak, 93-80, behind
    Baker's 47 points and 25 rebounds.
    With players like these, it's easy to appreciate the optimism Rebel coaches have for the
    future. *
    Coach Bill Ireland
    The tennis team, directed by assistant basketball coach Bill Scoble, posted an 8-5 record
    and finished fifth in the WCAC meet. The tennis team's top performer was senior Mike Roe.
    The Rebel racketmen shut out five opponents this season, and the only time they were shut
    out was by college division champion U.C. Irvine early in the season.
    Also on this year's tennis team were Alex Nash, junior, Bob Berg, junior, Lyn Boozer, junior,
    Harry Byrge, junior, and Ron Johns, sophomore.
    UNLV
    3
    5
    9
    0
    2
    9
    7
    THE RECORD 8-5
    Cal State, Fullerton
    So. Colorado State
    Weber State
    U. C. Irvine
    Long Beach State
    No. Arizona
    Grand Canyon
    OPP. UNLV
    6 1
    4 5
    0 2
    9 9
    7 9
    0 9
    2
    Long Beach State
    U. C. Riverside
    Arizona State
    Phoenix College
    Grand Canyon Col.
    No. Arizona
    OPP.
    8
    4
    7
    0
    0
    0
    ' • VM&M,
    .
    126
    Coach John Bayer
    The team pitching marks established included most
    complete games (29), lowest ERA (3.23), most hit
    batsmen (25), and fewest walks allowed (132 in 384
    innings pitched).
    23 victories also tied a school record.
    Three Rebel hitters finished the year over .300 led
    by sophomore rightfielder Jim DiFiore, of Las Vegas.
    DiFiore led the team with a .320 batting average (49
    of 153) and also led the team in runs scored (30),
    home runs (6), and RBI (30).
    DiFiore was third in WCAC batting for UNLV with a
    .333 average.
    Freshman thirdbaseman Randy Grigg was second
    in hitting for UNLV both for the year and in league
    play. Overal he hit .309 and in conference he batted
    .338. He also tied the school record for doubles with
    11. He was only struck out seven times in 165 official
    plate appearances.
    Senior leftfielder Mike Lombardi was the third Rebel
    to hit over .300 for the year with his .308 average.
    Lombardi was the team's leading hitter in WCAC play
    with a .350 average (21 for 60).
    The other regulars for the team this year included
    centerfielder Art Platanitis (.290 for the year and .283
    in league), secondbaseman John Hogan (.277 and
    ,323), firstbaseman Tom Crine, (.238 and .234),
    shortstop Pat Leary (.230 and .176) and catcher
    Jerry Eklund (.181 and .263).
    The other starting pitchers for University of Nevada,
    Las Vegas this season, besides Pryor and Chambers,
    were juniors Jim Bonnell, 7-4 with a 2.89 ERA and
    Jack Lazzarotto, 4-5 with a 4.13 ERA.
    Coached by athletic director Michael Drakulich, the
    UNLV golf team posted a 13-9 dual match record and
    finished third in the eight-team West Coast Athletic
    Conference championships.
    Only one player on each squad will be lost by
    graduation, and he is Bob Cork, who led the golf
    team with a 79.8 average round.
    Two freshmen were the number two and three men
    for the golfers as Terry Webber, who finished fourth
    in a tield of 46 golfers in the two-round WCAC tourney,
    carried a 80.1 average and Leonard Walch, who
    finished the season with a one-under-par 71 against
    Northern Arizona, finished the year with a 81.0 aver
    age.
    The other members of the golf team this season
    were junior Frank Cork, 82.3, sophomore Hollis Barnhart,
    83.0, and freshmen Scot Kallsen, 85.9, and
    Mark Bailus, 88.8.
    As a team, the average individual score for the
    Rebel linksters was 82.5.
    Coach Dr. Bob Doering
    Sophomore southpaw Herb Pryor, who quit
    the team because of personal reasons with six
    games left to play, single-handedly accounted
    for five new pitching records and tied one
    more.
    The 6-0 Coos Bay, Ore., product set records for
    innings pitched (109), most complete games (10),
    most wins (8), most hit batsmen (9), and lowest
    earned run average (2.22). He also tied the mark for
    -ppearances with 16, and would have set the record
    lad he remained with the team because he had two
    starts remaining.
    The other individual record set for assistant coach
    Fred Dallimore's hurlers was for fewest walks allowed,
    18 in 72'/3 innings by senior Dennis Chambers. Pryor
    was also good in that department, giving up only 21
    free trips in his 109 innings worked.
    Coached by John Bayer, the varsity basketball team finished the season with a 14-12
    overall.
    Bob "Phantom Phenom" Florence, a 6-4 forward from Des Moines, la., led the Rebels
    in scoring with a 22.1 average while another super sophomore, Jerry Baskerville, a
    6-7 forward from Philadelphia, Pa., led the squad in rebounding, getting 11.3 a game.
    Florence made .584 of his field goal attempts for the YEAR (209 of 358) and was the
    second-leading field goal shooter in the West Coast Athletic Conference with a .618
    percentage rate (118-191). On January 13, the Phantom set a new single-game fieldgoal
    percentage record for both UNLV and the WCAC as he hit 16 of 18 while scoring
    his seasonal high of 37 points against Pepperdine University.
    Florence led the team in scoring on 13 occasions and used his timing and leaping
    ability to pace the squad in rebounding 10 times. For the year he got 9.3 rebounds a
    game, 10.3 per contest in the WCAC, and will finish as one of the top three scorers in
    the league with a 23.6 average for the 14 league battles.
    In the narrow, 84-81 loss to nationally ranked South Carolina this season, Florence
    was the leading scorer and rebounder in the game with 23 points and 12 rebounds.
    South Carolina coach Frank McGuire likened Florence's moves to those of Earl "The
    Pearl" Monroe of the New York Knicks.
    Jerry Baskerville just completed his second year of organized basketball (he did not
    compete until his senior year at Thomas Edison High School in Philadelphia). During
    the 1971 Las Vegas Holiday Classic he rewrote the rebounding marks by getting 24 in
    one game and 37 for the two-game tourney.
    Jumpin' Jerry led the team in rebounding with 11.3 per game (11.6 per WCAC tilt)
    and chipped in 13.4 points each outing (14.4 in league). He paced the team in rebounding
    in 11 games and was the top scorer in four. His high scoring games were 34
    against Southern Illinois, 23 against Nevada, Reno, 20 against Loyola (Cal.), and 31
    against WCAC champion University of San Francisco. Baskerville had a fine shooting
    touch as he hit on 51.2 per cent of his shots in league action (84-164).
    The end of the season also brought the end of a brilliant three-year career of super
    guard — Booker Washington. Booker averaged 21.2 points a game (20 in league) and
    was the top scorer in 10 Rebel games. Booker finishes his college career as the thirdhighest
    all-time scorer in Rebel cage history with 1,190 points for a 17.5 per game
    scoring average for the 68 games in which he saw action. The Book was a tremendous
    outside shooter and would have shot better than .423 from the field this year if he had
    not been double and triple-teamed.
    UNLV used three centers this year with a 6-9 junior Toby Houstone of Des Moines
    starting most of the games. Toby averaged seven rebounds and scored five points a
    game while alternating with 6-8 Loverd Coleman (six rebounds and 6.3 points) and 6-8
    sophomore Warren Walk (3.1 rebounds and 3.9 points). Al Clise, a 6-2 hustler from
    Bellevue, Wash., closed out his college career with 251 points for a 9.7 per game average
    while starting at the other guard position.
    Florence was first team all WCAC and co-sophomore-of-the-year for the league while
    Washington snared second team all-league and Baskerville received honorable mention.
    Walk was selected to the all-Jewish basketball
    team of America.
    LAS VEGAS, NEV. — Setting 13 school and
    individual records, and tieing two more, the
    University of Nevada, Las Vegas baseball team
    finished the 1972 season with a 23-24-1 overall
    record and a 7-11 record in the West Coast
    Athletic Conference.
    Ten of the new records, and both ties, were
    set by the UNLV pitchers, while the only other
    individual mark was established by junior centerfielder
    Art Platanitis who stole 16 bases during
    the season. The two team hitting standards
    that were rewritten were most doubles (64)
    and most times struck out (286).
    Coach Mike Drakulich
    Athletic Director


    AVERAGE
    79.8
    80.1
    81.0
    82.3
    83.0
    85.9
    88.8
    THE RECORD 10-9
    U. C. Riverside
    Azusa-Pacific
    Palomar J. C.
    Montana State
    Chapman
    Montana State
    Western Montana
    Glendale C. C.
    Dixie J. C.
    So. Utah State
    Cal Lutheran
    So. Utah State
    Mesa, Colorado
    Dixie J. C.
    Cal Poly Pomona
    Weber State
    So. Utah State
    Azusa-Pacific
    Stanislaus State
    OPP.
    W
    W
    86
    84
    16
    82
    66
    75
    30
    59
    56
    60
    41
    14
    95
    91
    50
    69
    76
    Bob THE RECORD 13-9
    PLAYER
    Bob Cork
    Terry Webber
    Leonard Walch
    Frank Cork
    Hollis Barnhart
    Scot Kallsen
    Mark Bailus
    UNLV
    L
    L
    58
    57
    97
    62
    69
    59
    87
    80
    87
    84
    95
    108
    39
    49
    70
    72
    61
    GOLFERS (L-R) Mark Bailus, Leonard Walch, Holis Barnhart, Terry Webber,
    Cork, and Coach Mike Drakulich.
    TOP ROW: Milton Leonard, Mel Turner, and Ruben Perez.
    118
    \ V - v : . < \ •n \- £ - : ; v ^ v X : >
    119
    •M.-v x--> v'
    " %f ;'vi|T
    % %rk. • . . -
    ;
    • ' • i
    - • ;
    THE RECORD 23-24-1
    U. of Utah
    U. of Utah
    U. of Utah
    Northern Arizona
    Northern Arizona
    Northern Arizona
    So. Utah State
    So. Utah State
    Weber State
    Weber State
    U. C. Irvine
    U. C. Irvine
    Air Force Academy
    Air Force Academy
    Loyola U.
    Loyola U.
    Loyola U.
    Gonzaga
    Gonzaga
    St. Mary's
    St. Mary's
    St. Mary's
    U. of San Francisco
    U. of San Francisco
    U. of San Francisco
    U. San Diego
    U. Santa Clara
    U. Santa Clara
    U. Santa Clara
    So. Utah State
    So. Utah State
    U. C. Irvine
    U. C. Irvine
    U. C. Irvine
    Northern Arizona
    Northern Arizona
    Pepperdine U.
    Pepperdine U.
    Pepperdine U.
    U. Nevada Reno
    U. Nevada Reno
    U. Nevada Reno
    So. Utah State
    So. Utah State
    Weber State
    U. of Utah
    Brigham Young
    So. Utah State
    OPP.
    3
    0
    8
    3
    3
    5
    5
    1
    3
    2
    2
    1
    6
    2
    2
    4
    4
    1
    2
    3
    8
    4
    1
    8
    7
    4
    11
    2
    12
    4
    5
    5
    4
    3
    25
    4
    9
    1
    11
    4
    6
    5
    1
    2
    4
    4
    5
    3
    UNLV
    5
    1
    5
    2
    14
    3
    7
    13
    0
    4
    5
    1
    3
    0
    0
    1
    5
    2
    1
    0
    10
    7
    0
    2
    2
    7
    1
    3
    5
    10
    16
    7
    5
    1
    2
    7
    10
    11
    8
    9
    0
    4
    7
    3
    2
    3
    0
    2
    'PPPY vV, " - •• SB"• ' •' ' •'

    BOTTOM ROW (L-R) Mark Herdt, Dennis Clarkson, Paul Ortiz, Don Sanchez, Art Plantanitis, Tom Quinlin, Herb Pryor, and Mark Conley.
    MIDDLE ROW: Jack Lazzarotto, Steve Johnson, Dan Larson, Tom Crine, Jim DiFiore, Rick Stanley, Jerry Eklund, and Dave Lockridge.
    TOP ROW: Fred Dallimore, assistant coach Rick Eckert, Mike Lombardi, Dennis Chambers, Dennis Anderson, James Bonnell, Randy Grigg, Pat Leary,
    John Hogan, and head coach Dr. Robert Doering.
    112
    :
    UNLV
    72
    90
    102
    97
    74
    74
    79
    91
    82
    50
    69
    92
    101
    93
    95
    109
    99
    76
    96
    81
    108
    87
    75
    70
    81
    83
    THE RECORD 14-12
    Cal State Long Beach
    N.W. State
    No. Michigan U.
    Portland State U.
    U. of Puget Sound
    U. of Corpus Christi
    Baylor U.
    So. Illinois U.
    U. of Pacific
    U. of Santa Clara
    U. of San Francisco
    Pepperdine College
    Loyola U.
    U. of Nevada, Reno
    Cal State L.A.
    Seattle U.
    St. Mary's College
    U. of Nevada, Reno
    U. of So. Mississippi
    U. of So. Carolina
    St. Mary's College
    Seattle U.
    Loyola U.
    Pepperdine College
    U. of Santa Clara
    U. of San Francisco
    THE RECORD 16-5
    U. Arizona Frosh
    San Diego St. Frosh
    Texas, El Paso Frosh
    Yvapai JC
    Arizona State Frosh
    Arizona Western JC
    Antelope Valley JC
    H Phoenix JC
    San Bernardino JC
    Phoenix AAU
    Pendleton Marines
    So. Utah State JV
    Pepperdine U. Frosh
    Cal State, LA Frosh
    UNLV Alumni
    Central Arizona
    Las Vegas AAU
    So. Utah State JV
    Arizona Western JC
    Palo Verde JC
    Pepperdine U. Frosh
    Ed Taylor — Guard
    in


    Norman Knowles
    Forward
    6' 7"
    230
    Junior
    Oakland, California
    6 ' 8 "
    240 lbs.
    Junior
    Alamogordo, New Mexico
    Warren Walk
    Forward
    6' 8"
    225 lbs.
    Sophomore
    Miami Beach, Florida
    105
    Ed Carman
    Guard
    6' 3"
    200 lbs.
    Junior
    Beverly Hills, California
    Mike Whaley
    Forward
    6' 7"
    Junior
    Las Vegas, Nevada
    Booker Washington
    Guard
    6 ' 1 "
    195 lbs.
    Senior
    Birmingham, Alabama
    Jerry Baskerville
    Forward
    6' 7"
    190 lbs.
    Sophomore
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    Gary Radunich
    Guard
    6' 2"
    175 lbs.
    Junior
    San Jose, California
    Robert Florence
    Forward
    6' 5 "
    190 lbs.
    Sophomore
    Des Moines, Iowa
    Toby Houston
    Center
    6' 9"
    210 lbs.
    Junior
    Des Moines, Iowa
    Al Clise
    Guard
    6' 3"
    200 lbs.
    Senior
    Seattle, Washington
    Rebel Squad
    Greg Brown 5
    Jim DiFiore 7
    Dan Arana 10
    Jim Starkes 11
    Pat Welding 14
    Vince Hart 15
    George Bedich 20
    Patt Medchill 21
    Milton Leonard 22
    Garey Washington 24
    James Massey 25
    Ron Husband 26
    Denny Robinson 27
    Larry Trosi 28
    Floyd Toliver 29
    Ira Porter 30
    Charles Cooper 31
    Joe Gallia 32
    Bob Galli 34
    Calvin Washington 35
    Benny Rose 36
    Daniel Woodly 40
    Larry Wright 41
    Steve Frostick 43
    Jim Farnham 44
    98
    i Vv\ .' niv:: ••' • YsSYA V *
    54 David Neff
    55 George Braddock
    56 Shayne Skipworth
    58 Greg Mitchell
    60 Ken Mitchell
    61 Bruce Gray
    62 Mike Lee
    63 Ray DeShane
    64 Frank Souza
    66 Jim Valline
    67 Bill Schlaupitz
    68 Gary James
    69 (65) Flarold Lerz
    70 James Branch
    72 Steve Custer
    73 Keith Young
    74 Julius Rogers
    75 Kyle Nelson
    76 Marty Macy
    77 Tommy Rowland
    78 Grant Fawcett
    79 Wayne Cleveland
    80 Nathaniel Flawkins
    81 Bill Booker
    82 Robert Crimmel
    83 Kent Bouldin
    84 Steve Jenkins
    86 Scott Orr
    87 Ken Irwin
    88 Dan MacNaughton
    89 Cary Mitchell
    45 David Woodly
    50 Bill Ftayes
    51 Robert Braner
    52 Benji Ansolabehere
    53 Mike Gutowski


    * .yi ' >•': ^• :. ' .yyv . -. ;
    UNLV
    38
    THE RECORD 5-4-1
    Adams State
    Utah State
    Santa Clara
    No. Arizona
    Weber State
    New Mexico Highlands
    Cal Poly (SLO)
    No. Dakota
    U. of N. Reno
    Nat'l U. of Mexico
    A total of 660 students graduated
    from the University of Nevada,
    Las Vegas during the weekend.
    Here is a listing of the graduates,
    their academic majors and
    degrees earned:
    Bachelor of Arts
    Patty Abraham, psychology; gee A ien
    social sciences; Jack R. Andetson, sociology,
    V. Diane A rules s, anthropology sociqio
    gy; KathleevAtchley, English, Bert S,
    Babero, Jr., speech arts; Eugene R. Bach,
    anthropology.
    Sharon t. tarber, psychology, Michael
    Wayne Barozzi, pontics science; Larry A
    Baum, psychology; Bruce Arnett 8e~o
    English;-Toby Bennett, anthropology; Rita
    Ann Btanton, sec'-ai services; Ba- ;<-rs M.
    Biytnir, sDeech arts Jose Botetlo oo '.i
    science, Catherine S Bridges,' sociology
    Marvin H Brooks, Jr., sociology; Seymo**e
    H Brown, sociology; Suzanne Pace Br pre
    English; Dorothy L Bryant, social services
    Sue Ann Kuuipo Burt, psychology.
    Judith Ellen Butler, political science;
    Nathan Byers, psychology; Margaret Louise
    Carter, psychology • Michael James Cevetfe,
    psychology; Willie B. Cikeman, sociology
    Garry Woicott CordIII, music; Ronald if
    BemanCounce, psychology Adrienne b' r.i
    Cox, sociology Sharon l Cranca soci
    gy; Corryn Crosby, history; A-nie Lyr<" §
    Cunningham, English; Mary L CO
    ham, sociology, Virginia M, Dew ng, hist
    ry; Deborah Lee Epkes, psychology; Her
    berta Carolyn Ewmg, psychology, Howard
    Hobbs Fancher, political science, Donna
    Rae Florence, music.
    Cynthia R. Fotlis ''cology; R C.
    Ford, sociology. Steveh D. Forst, psvchoh
    gy, Phi oLawrenceC - "<jr ' ,
    Margaret A Glenn. English; Wayne n
    Gorcey, English Lillas Smith Gor m, E
    lish; Sharon K Gravert, sociology; Care we ,
    D.W. Barker, speech arts, Harold Dw.cni
    Harshman, sociology; jeanette C. Mayes,
    social services; Richard James Mealy, English;
    Robert rJ, Mealy, political science;
    Deborah J. HetM, psychology; Saundra C
    Heiiman, social services; Dawn K. holton,
    social services;RosemaryMcGee Howe
    speech ^Hs. Kathleen F. Humphries, ps
    educational administration; Ruth Robinson,
    elementary education; James D. Schlude,
    school guidance; Biliie F. Shank, student
    personnel services; Doris Ann Shipp, elementary
    education; Yvonne M. Smith, eie
    mentary education; Jean A. Spaulding,
    elementary education; Penelope Lynne
    Stirling, physical education; Sam Robert
    Swanson, educational administration; Ja
    nice E. Swartz, educational administration.
    Christine Lee Tigrett, elementary education;
    Carol JeannieJ Van Ausdal, special
    education; Joyce Ann Walker, elementary
    education; Richard H. Whitehead, educa
    tional administration; Lorana Christine
    Young, elementary education; Robert i
    Zaletel, educational administration.
    F i r e Science Technology
    Paul B. Ford, Richard J . Lescenski,
    James E. Pull i s and Reuel M. Williams
    Law Enforcement
    Thomas W. Biggs, S r . , Sylvai A. Chaney,
    Richard J . Dunn, Walter R. Earp, J r . ,
    Harold Dwight Harshman, Saundra C. Hel
    Iman, Gregory K. Jolley, Louis Francis
    Kalish, Richard L. Macklin, Terrence
    George Mayo, John Donald McCarthy, Cla
    rence B. Mr.Dade, Thomas Francis Mi'dren,
    James D. Page, and David M. Sweikert
    Medical Records
    Christine Beecroft, Coralie Fay Bell, Te
    resa D'oy'p, Linda G. Milam, Denise M.
    Morrran
    science;. .Mass
    science, Conn.i
    Scott Barton JO
    ick D. Jones,
    Turnquest J one
    -V' : \ \ N
    SPORTS
    a te
    A total of 660 students grad
    ated from the University of N
    vada, Las Vegas during the we
    kend.
    Here is a listing of the grad
    ates, their academic majors ai
    degrees earned:
    Bachelor of Arts
    P atty Abraham,. psycho! ogy; Lee At!
    social sciences;. Jack R. Anderson, socle
    gy; V. Diane Anness, anthropoibgy'-sdeft
    gy; Kathlee ? Afchley, English, Bert
    Babero, Jr., ipeech arts, Eugene:ft, Sa
    anthropology.
    Sharon L. barber, psychology; Mich
    Wayne Barozzh political science; Larry
    Saum, psychology; Bruce Arnett Be
    English; Toby Bennett, anthropology, *
    Ann Btsntcm, social services; Barbara
    Biythin, sp^ch;'arfe; Jose Botello, f§Ilf;
    science; OafheiJhe/S. Bridges/ sociofS
    Marvin H. Brooks, Jr., sociology; Seym
    H. Brown, sociology; Suzanne Pace Brur
    English; Dorothy L. Bryant,socialservic
    Sue Ann Kuulpo Burt, psychology.
    Judith E
    Nathan Bye
    Carter, psyc
    psychology;
    Garry Wol
    Be man Coui
    ham, soapl
    ry; Debora
    berta Card
    Hobbs Fan
    Rae Fiorem
    Cynthia f
    Ford, socfof
    gy; Phillip!
    •Margaret j A
    Gorcey, Ent
    Itsh; Sharon
    i.D,W. Harb;
    Barshman,
    social servi
    fish; Robe?
    Deborah J.
    Hell man, s<
    social serv
    speech arts
    master of Education
    Fred C. Albrecht, physical education;
    Durenda Sue Cooper Allison, secondary
    education; Kathryn Sue Augspurger, educa
    tional administration; Carol McCracken
    Ault, elementary education; Patricia Barrows,
    Counseling and Related Personnel
    Services; Verl Lyle Bell, elementary education;
    William G. Bobier, educational administration;
    Elizabeth Jane Boudreau, counsel
    ing and related personnel services; Jack W.
    Brailsford, student personnel services; Willie
    Bell Brown, elementary education, Mar
    tha J. Campbell, secondary education.
    Kenneth E. Carter, elementary education;
    Carole Howey Castaldo, student personnel
    services; Roger F. Chapel, educational
    administration; Lawrence H. Clark, second
    ary education; Elizabeth Amm Coombs,
    elementary education; Geraldine L. Crisci,
    elementary education; Mary A. Crosby,
    elementary education; Narduccio Benton
    Domenici, special education; Nadine I.
    Dooley, elementary education; Arthur E.
    Dyck, educational administration; Phyllis
    Fetcho, special education.
    James Howell Fincher Jr., special educa
    tion, Eleanor Loreen Harris, counseling r.nd
    related personnel services, Elva Jean Hau
    gen, elementary education; Dale Wilcox
    Hunt, counseling and related personnel
    services; Retha Jean Hawkins, elementary
    education; Nancy Belle Holloway Howery,
    elementary education; Kent Hale Hunst
    man, educational administration, Marilyn
    Ingram, student personnel services; Marga
    ret Jean Johnson, secondary education;
    Judith Dee Kandel, secondary education;
    Marianne Rose Kenney, counseling and
    related personnel services; Mary B. Kieser,
    educational administration; Lee Henry
    Leake, elementary education.
    Vincent L. Leavitt, educational adminis
    tration; Lamfat Lo, secondary education,
    Sharon J. Lowes, elementary education.
    Lunda Fulcher Marr, elementary education;
    Judith Wolper Massa, educational adminis
    tration; Steven Donald McCoy, Sr., educational
    administration; Enid Diane McFor
    land, elementary education.
    Frank Anthony Nails, educational administration,
    Romola S. Nellis, elementary
    education. Robert Lee Prince, educational
    administration; Florence B. Robinson,
    85
    special education
    Charles Lawrence Weir, physical education;
    Yvonne L. Wert, mathematics-English;
    Helen Jo Larrison Wilgue, elementary
    education; Merideth Joyce Wilkins, special
    education; Michael E. Williams, special
    education; Gertrude Woods, elementary
    education; Charles Fredrick Wright, mathematics.
    Bachelor of Science in Hotel Administration
    Jacob Avneri, Lawrence William Bar
    khuff, Arvid J. Barnhart, Saul J. Belloff,
    Richard M. Cane, Tung-Cheong Chan, 6.
    Edward Crispell, Larry S. Crowton, William
    Brandon Duncan, Gregory J. Eakins, Donald
    Eugene Fagan, Barry Arthur Fearn,
    John H. Feldkamp, Edward A. Flenkenstein,
    Donald R. Goldstein, Richard Alan Goodman,
    Larry T. Hines, Robert Andrew
    Jacobs, James Lester Jallo.
    Douglas Earl Jensen, Kenneth Jay Kaufman,
    Michael Patrick Kearney, Christie
    Knerr, William Allen Kreitlow, Keith M.
    Letman, Vincent R. Lopez, Dennis J. Lovely,
    Gregory V. Lutz, James T. Maggio, Daniel
    Campbell Melarkey, Myron Steven Mendelow,
    Stein E. Moen, Edward Neidich,
    Stephen E. Nelson, Rory John O'Leary,
    Lawrence I. Ostrowsky, Harry Pagan, Gary
    Jerome Paquette, Lawrence Adam Pilarz,
    Kenneth Plummer, Edward William
    Qulnlan II, Ronald Lee Schnell, Arne
    Shehadi, Charles G. Speno, Gordon G.
    Sutherland, Joseph A. Tardiff, James
    V;5 -AVS.W
    General Stuu es
    Carolyn Burke Snow and R chaici b
    Vincent
    Master of Business Administration
    Robert C. Auerbach, Leon R. Baron
    Bradley M. Bourn, Joseph J. Buschy, Harold
    Wayne Cooper, Richard Charles Cunning
    ham, Michael V. Festor, John Keith Gordon,
    David Lawrence Graf, Stephen Carl Graves,
    Kenneth w Hammer, John 0. Hanford,
    Philip Hicks, John Frederick Houghland,
    Thomas S. Irwin, Jerry J. Klein, Rex W.
    Lundberg, James K. Magruder, Noel Leo
    pold McFarland, Jerad Wages Morris, Timothy
    O'Donnell, Howard Steven Pashlin,
    Robert E.G. Rushforth, Joseph Leonard
    Santoro, Richard M. Stoddard, Russell S.
    Sugimura, Richard Paul Swanson, and Robert
    Wilev.
    William Tlghe, Gary Woodrow Turner, John
    M. Wright, Nelson Andrew Zager, Richard
    A. Zurburg.
    Master of Arts
    Michael Ray Anderson, history; Elfriede
    J. Formann, German; John D. Harington,
    English; Adalberto Manuel Meneses, Span
    ish; Gwyneth Michele Hoskin Newyear,
    English; Janice Reid, English; George Ed
    mund Rohrmann, political science; Maryel
    len Vallier Sadovicj, history; Shirley W.
    Sandin, English; Michael Jay Scher, psy
    chology; Annie Shevach, Spanish; Ronald L.
    Snyder, psychology; Lillian J. Sondgeroth,
    psychology; Martha Lou Olliff Wandel,
    English; Charles Weingarten, French; and
    Jenny Helene Weingarten, French.
    Master of Science in
    Vocational Counseling
    Daniel F. Ranney.
    Specialist in Education
    Leo Paul Dvorak, educational administration;
    Paul R. Goodwin, educational ad
    ministration; Cecil R. Jackson, educational
    administration; and William Edward Os
    torski, educational administration.
    Associate Degrees
    Electronic Technology
    John Howard Diehl, Gary Galen Good,
    Mervin Carlton Hogge, Robert Morrison
    Kennard, Jr., Sidney E. Powell, Jeffrey
    Kennington Shove, John Vernon Steele,
    Roger Dale Tyndall, and Guy Robin Wil
    liams.
    Charles Weingarten
    Jenny Weingarten
    Jerry Truax
    y
    mm
    Earnestine Washington
    John Wright
    80
    US it".
    Florence Anderson
    Sally Anderson
    Arlene Atkinson
    Terry Audia
    Don Barclay
    Helen Barnett
    Joan Clary
    John Cocks
    Joe de Beauchamp
    Ann Drumwright
    Phillip Ernst
    Doreen Fox
    Michelle Gabler
    Mary Gaffney
    Silvia Hendricks
    Honey Hind
    Teri Husted
    Arlyn Jette
    Marilee Kuenzi
    Kris Lewis
    Patsy Maixmer
    Dan Manion
    Ruth Mayes
    Shirley McNeal
    Gerry Mihalko
    Tom Papagna
    JoAnn Phipps
    James Pitchford
    Shirley Reed
    Shirley Satterfield
    Jane Starr
    Helen Wilgus
    h .iSfesi
    r, Kicnard cnanes cunning
    V Festor, John Kerfn Gordon,
    >ce Graf,.Stephen Carl Graves.
    Hammer, John C Hartford,
    inftn F r p r i f r l r k W n u Q h l a n d .
    ex W
    Leo
    Ftmoihlin,
    tnard
    sseif S,
    no Robucaflon;
    -eondary
    •r, eduta-
    Cracken
    fcta bar
    ersonnel
    'y educa-
    3l admin-
    , counsel-
    , Jack W.
    ces, Wilton;
    Marort.
    ducaHon,
    oersonne!
    secondoomtts,
    . Crisci,
    Crosby,
    Bentor
    adine I.
    rthur E
    Phyllis
    81
    John Sengo
    Audrey Skabelund James Skomal Theresa Smith
    Ron Shlisky Rona Shore
    John Morgan Edward Neidich
    Shirley McNeal
    Stein Moen
    Florence McLure
    William Meyers
    Ren6 Mathis
    John Moran
    Shirley McRae
    James Knieling
    Connie Jackson
    Sharon Kamp
    Brenda Klatti
    Dawn Holton
    Arlyn Jette Kathryn Kinnaird
    James Jallo
    Adrienne Cox Robert Curley Sandy Curtis
    Nelson Deason Virginia Dewing Nadine Dooley
    Gregory Eakins Candace England Donna Florence Jeanette Hayes Christine Hodgkins James Hodgkins
    Cindy Follis Doreen Fox Sherrill Givens
    Joanne Harvey
    George Bean David Beck
    V 'V ;.•'' A v v;
    Sherry Angell Connie Ault Gisela T. Bahlo
    Helen Alyce Barnett Arvid J. Barnhart Larry Baum
    Coralie Bell Barbara Berry
    S. H. Brown
    Judy Butler Richard Cane
    Jose Botello
    Charles Blake
    Burdetta Robeck
    geography; Shirl Ray Naegle, biology-zoology;
    George Patrick Noakes, mathematics;
    Lavonne Odegaard, engineering; James R.
    Olson, mathematics; Larry J. Paulson,
    biology; Pamela Helene Ptashne, geography;
    James Michael Ray, geology; Lloyd L.
    Rehm, physics; Fred B. Rosenfeld, geology;
    Richard H. Slick, radiologic technology;
    Dorothy Loyise Smith, zoology; Robert L.
    Summers, chemistry; Edward Drew Sweeten,
    Jr., zoology; Samuel Michael Thompson,
    engineering; John William Trimble,
    geology; and Kenneth Wayne Zellers, mathematics.
    Master of Science
    Edwin Allen Horn, mathematics; Bobby
    Ray McDuffie, education; Linda S. Moon,
    education; Sushil Kumar Sachdev, mathematics.
    aacnelorof Science in
    Business Administration
    Mark Jay Anderson, general business;
    George A. Bean, accounting; Phillip C.
    Beaver, management; Richard Addisor.
    Benbow, general business; Billy G. Bergan,
    accounting; Lee Bernhard, general business;
    Charles Kenieth Blake, general business;
    Daniel J. Bode, accounting; John C.
    Brekke, general business; Winston S. Burbank,
    general business; Robert Wayne Campbell,
    accounting; Susan L. Carithers, accounting;
    James J. Chaisson, accounting;
    John W Christian III, accounting.
    John V. Clements, general business; Ronald
    Lee Collins, general business; Rodney
    S. Conant, accounting; Dwain Richard Cooper,
    general business; Robert E. Curley,
    general business; John C. Darrah, accounting,
    Milo F. Dearmey, general business;
    Nelson J. Deason, Jr., general business;
    Michael A. DeHart, general business; Richard
    deHeras, management; David Carl
    DeMarco, general business.
    Robert E. Dill, accounting; Milan Joseph
    Drakulich, Jr., management; Joel Phillip
    Driver III, management; James Francis
    Dropp, accounting; Louis Andre DuBois,
    accounting; Richard Ivan Duke III, accounting;
    Kurt R. Dykema, general business;
    Michael N. Emigh, accounting; Timothy L.
    Farrell, management; Paul B. Ford, accounting;
    Newton Wiljiam Freeman IV,
    accounting; Donald G. Fulwider, accounting;
    Terry E. Gabby, accounting; Dorothy
    Lanell George, accounting; James Fredrick
    Geyler, economics; John David Gibbons,
    management; Richard Michael Gonzales,
    general business.
    Claudette Goodman, management;
    Eduardo A. Gutierrez, management; Kenneth
    W. Hammer, general business; Niles
    Fabyn Hanson, general business; John F.
    Hawkins, accdunting; Nathaniel Alfred
    Hawkins, general business; John Daniel
    Higley, accounting; Christine Maple Hodgkins,
    accounting; Laura Ann Holt, accounting;
    John Frederick Houghland. general
    business; Stephen D. Huffman, general business;
    James Hunter III, accounting; Michael
    C. Hutchens, general business; Dennis P.
    Jaeger, accounting; Dean Condie Jensen,
    general business.
    Chipper D.B. Johnson, general business;
    David Vance Kachele, general business;
    Thomas J. Kemp, general business; Clement
    L. King, general business; Glennon E.
    King, accounting; Brenda Joyce Klatt, general
    business; David J. Klem, general
    business; Pui Chung Kong, accounting;
    Richard D. Kostelac, accounting; Edward S.
    Kukis, general business; Young U. Kwon,
    accounting; Jeffrey Eldon Margolin, management;
    Constance Ann Mart, general
    business; Kenneth William Martin, economics;
    Sandra Lee Martin, general business;
    Denzil R. Mauldin, general business.
    Vincent Phillip Mauro, general business;
    Charles H. McCrea, Jr., general business;
    William John Meyers, accounting; Douglas
    L. Michael, general business; Dennis R.
    Milk, general business; Allan Vincent Mino,
    accounting; Daniel S. Mosley, general business;
    J. Richard Meyers, general business;
    Henry Stephen Nelson, accounting; Steven
    Kenneth Nield, general business; Ernest
    Anthony Pantuso, accounting; Carla
    Frances Parker, general business; Thomas
    V. Paul, general business.
    John S. Pickard, general business; Arley
    V. Poling, Jr., management; Sydney B.
    Rabin, general business; Carter D. Rapp,
    general business; James Donald Roach
    general business; David L. Russell, general
    business; Patrick N. Rutherford, general
    business; Michael D. Ryan, management;
    Michael J. Santongue, general business;
    Francis S. Sawyer, general business; Frank
    Leonard Sealetta, finance.
    Margaret Lynn Sievers, general business;
    Ronald Gary Schiisky, general business,
    Charles Howard Smee, management; William
    F. Sparks, management; Angela F.
    Sugimura, economics; Kenneth S. Thomas,
    accounting; Jerry Ryan Truax, Jr., general
    business; Charles R. Trueworthy, account
    ing, Jack Valero, general b"siness; Adrien
    K. Verbruqghen, general business; Kenneth
    L. Wahlert, economics, John Paul Wanderer,
    general business; Douglas Alan Wat
    kins, accounting; Howard Wesley Williams
    Jr., general busmess; Joseph H. Williams,
    accounting; Lester Louis Wisbrod, general
    business; Hubertus Woywod, general busi
    ness; and Johnny M. Zero, general business.
    Bachelor of Science in Chemistry
    David Bruce Beck.
    Bachelor of Science in Education
    Sally Michero Anderson, elementary education;
    Sherry Layne Angell, physical education;
    Bernard Thomas Ansolabehere, Jr.,
    physical education; John Del Apperson,
    physical education, Stephen William Augspurger,
    English; Gisela T. Bahlo, German;
    Shirley L. Baker, elementary education,-
    Cbnald L. Barclay, Jr., elementary education;
    Bonita Joan Blanchard, English;
    Phyllis J. Blaney, elementary education;
    Colet Kiefer Boothby, elementary educa
    tion; Edward Anthony Borla, physical edu
    cation.
    Connie Lynn Brandt, special education;
    Grant Ogilvie Brown III, special education;
    Mozelle Juanita Buckles, elementary educa
    tion; Janet H. Chladek, elementary education;
    Alan Keith Clabeaux, speech; Eliza
    beth Crane, mathematics; James D. Cun-
    'H
    ningham, mathematics, Sandra Curtis, business
    education; Sarah Emily Daley, business
    education; Loren F. Davis, physical
    education; Rodney P. Davis, art, Joseph
    Louis deBeauchamp, elementary education;
    James Price DeMint, Jr., mathematics-
    Spanish; Raymond DeShane Jr., physical
    education.
    Peggy M. Diedrich, elementary education,
    Mary Ann Donoho, business education-
    English; Georgia Poynor Dunn, elementary
    education; Joyce A. Dutton, elementary
    education; Laquetta Antinoro Farnsworth,
    physical education; Thomas A. Farnsworth,
    physical education; Margie Pauline Florer,
    elementary education; Lawrence Glen Freeman,
    physical education; Barbara C. Friedel,
    elementary education; Tom H. Froistad,
    physical education; Harold D. Gibson,
    physical education; Sidney Goldstein, political
    science; Christie Lee fcethea Green,
    elementary education; Michael Gutowski,
    physical education.
    Joni Marie Hanna, special education;
    Pamela Ann Hardin, elementary education;
    Joanne Harvey, English; Margaret Ann
    Hoag, special education; Linda Hofer, special
    education; James Michael Hollowood,
    special education; Arlyn Jette, elementary
    education; Amanda Jane Jones, music;
    Donald Preston Kennedy, physical education;
    Thomas Khamis, speech; Kathryn
    Anne Kinnaird, elementary education;
    Charlotte Mae Kruis, art, Marilee Jean
    Kuenzi, elementary education; Laura Kutscher,
    elementary education; Hazel Stembridge
    Lamoreaux, elementary education.
    Patsy C. Msixner, elementary education;
    Daniel Nelson Manion, elementary educa
    tion; Carol Suzzette Marshall, elementary
    education; James Norris Mathis, special
    education; Renee Fortier Mathis, special
    education; Sylvia Knappenberger McCo
    wan, elementary education; Shirley J.
    McNeal, elementary education; Charles
    Houston Mercer, political science, Michael
    Stephen Messner, physical education; Ida
    Christina Michie, special education; Gerry
    Mihalko, elementary education.
    Karen L. Milk, elementary education;
    Daisy L. Miller, special education; Marsha
    Kay Miller, special education; Richard
    Edward Morgan, physical education; Claire
    R. Naples, special education; Carolyn
    Neighbors, elementary education; Michael
    Allen Neighbors, history; James M. Nelson,
    physical education; Olivia Simone Newsome,
    special education; William Michael
    O'Dea, special education.
    Margaret Ann O'Hara, elementary education;
    Frances Darlene Oliver, business education;
    Michael Lee Ornelaz, physical education,
    Michael L. Palmira, English; Pamela
    A. Parnelle, elementary education;
    Louise L. Papile, elementary education; Jo
    Ann Phipps, elementary education George
    William Powell, physical education;
    Marilynn Pyles, business education physical
    education; Andrea Catherine Quartararo,
    elementary education; Ivan Andrew Ray
    nor, elementary educahon. Shirley A. Reed,
    elementary education- Lillie Fay Feeves,
    business education, Lonnie Paul Richardson,
    elementary education, Berdetta M.
    Robeck, elementary education.
    John Ronald Ross, physical educationearth
    science; Ghita M. Shaw, special
    education; Gary Alexander Sherrill, art,
    Jerri L. Shilling, special education, Audrey
    Jenkins Skabelund, elementary education;
    James Edward Skomal, social science;
    Susan Kav Sligar, elementary education;
    Theresa Catherine Smith, special education ;
    Duane M. Solomon, history; Nancy A.
    Stenger, physical education; Carla J. Ste
    ver, elementary education; Lola Stiborek,
    elementary education; Jeanie Tarr, elementary
    education; Arthur Lopez Torres,
    physical education; Vicki A. Turner, business
    education; Earnestine P. Washington,
    (continued pg. 82)
    .* \ s wgmmmammmmm.
    660 Graduate From UNLV
    A total of 660 students graduated
    from the University of Nevada,
    Las Vegas during the weekend.
    Here is a listing of the graduates,
    their academic majors and
    degrees earned:
    Bachelor of Arts
    Patty Abraham, psychology; Lee Allen,
    social sciences; Jack R. Anderson, sociology;
    V. Diane Anness, anthropology sociology;
    Kathlee t Atchley, English; Bert B.
    Babero, Jr., speech arts; Eugene R. Bach,
    anthropology.
    Sharon L. barber, psychology; Michael
    Wayne Barozzi, political science; Larry A.
    Baum, psychology; Bruce Arnett Bebb,
    English; Toby Bennett, anthropology; Rita
    Ann Blanton, social services; Barbara M.
    Blythin, speech arts, Jose Botello, political
    science; Catherine S. Bridges, sociology;
    Marvin H. Brooks, Jr., sociology; Seymore
    H. Brown, sociology; Suzanne Pace Bruner,
    English; Dorothy L. Bryant, social services;
    Sue Ann Kuuipo Burt, psychology.
    Judith Ellen Butler, political science;
    Nathan Byers, psychology; Margaret Louise
    Carter, psychology; Michael James Cevette,
    psychology; Willie B. Cikeman, sociology;
    Garry Wolcott CordiII, music; Ronald
    Beman Counce, psychology; Adrienne Dryce
    Cox, sociology; Sharon L. Crandatl, sociology;
    Corryn Crosby, history; Arnie Lynn
    Cunningham, English; Mary L. Cunningham,
    sociology; Virginia M. Dewing, history;
    Deborah Lee Epkes, psychology; Herberta
    Carolyn Ewing, psychology; Howard
    Hobbs Fancher, political science, Donna
    Rae Florence, music.
    Cynthia R. Follis, sociology; Richard C.
    Ford, sociology; Steven D. Forst, psychology;
    Phillip Lawrence Gitelman, psychology;
    Margaret A. Glenn, English; Wayne Alan
    Gorcey, English; Lilias Smith Gordon, English;
    Sharon K. Gravert, sociology; Carolyne
    D.W. Harker, speech arts; Harold Dwight
    Harshman, sociology; Jeanette C. Hayes,
    social services; Richard James Healy, English;
    Robert J. Healy, political science;
    Deborah J. Hecht, psychology; Saundra C.
    Hellman, social services; Dawn K. Holton,
    social services; Rosemary McGee Howe,
    speech arts; Kathleen F. Humphries, psychology;
    Carolyn Ann Hunady, political
    science; Masayoshi Ichihara, political
    science; Connie Jackson, social services;
    Scott Barton Johnston, psychology, Frederick
    D. Jones, political science; Iris E.
    Turnquest Jones, social services; Richard
    William Jones, French; Mark Katz, psychology;
    James Sparger Kenerson, history;
    Thomas J. Kenne, sociology; Katherine
    Louise King, theatre arts. Susan Knoll,
    sociology; Jeff Scott Kriske, music; Paul V,
    Kubiak, music; Sherrie Randi Ann Langford,
    sociology; Michael Dan Lassiter, history;
    Nancy Dara Lebolt, social services;
    Robert Donald Lemmon, Spanish; Rita C.
    Lucas, social services; Peggy Wood Lyon,
    music; John Byrne Martin, political
    science; Florence E. McClure, sociology;
    John H. McDaniel, political science; Fred
    Maikai McGowan, psychology; Marlene J.
    Mehner, psychology; Lou Ellen Miller, art.
    Mohammed Mirfassihi, political science;
    James A. Moore, mathematics; John
    Thomas Moran, Jr., psychology; John Powell
    Morgan II, psychology-sociology; Sharon
    C. Neilson, Spanish; Cynthia J. Odell,
    English; Martin Hcrold Parelman, political
    science; Ruth Bonnie Pearson, social services;
    Garline Cline Perry, Jr., history;
    'AaKlda Toni Perry, political science; Robtyt'W.
    Piute, English; Donald N. Popovich,
    political science; Paul Martin.Porter, philosophy;
    Jeni Pryor, political science; Ar
    thur Rader, history; Fritz Reeze, anthropology.
    Eric Joseph Robichaud, psychology;
    Achel Ira Robison, history; Brian James
    Rockwell, anthropology, Michael E. Rowe,
    political science; William Fredrick Schneider,
    history; Colleen Gaye Schreck, threatre
    arts, John M. Seago, Spanish; DanaeMarie
    Barnes Serbu, political science; Thomas D.
    Shelton, history; Rona Bari Shore, sociology;
    Diane K. Shove, English; Nancy E.
    Smith, psychology; Bernard Alton Sorofman,
    anthropology; Nancy Jackson Sorofman,
    anthropology.
    Michael James Stanfield, speech arts;
    Robert M. Steinberg, sociology; Billy Rex
    Taylor, social services, Wayne Gerald
    Thompson, speech arts; Mark Mitchell Toscher,
    psychology; William Ueckert, social
    services; Albert J. Walp, sociology; Martia
    Rae Weinstein, anthropology psychology;
    Jack F. Werner, Jr., political science;
    Claude F. Whitmyer, psychology.
    Bachelor of Fine Arts
    Gregory Allred, art; Lenore t.\. Bevan,
    art; Grace Marie Hunter; art; Katalin N.
    Radnoti, art; Steven J. Staresinic, art;
    Andrew Ross Wickman, art; Constance
    Loraine Williams, art.
    Bachelor of Arts
    in Education
    Jacqueline A. Banner, mathematics; Candace
    D. England, Spanish; Nancy Dunbar
    Frazier, mathematics; Sherrill L. Givens,
    history; Linda Kinn, history; Bettyann Maguire,
    English; Betty C. Monteiro, art;
    Marsha Anderson Morgan, elementary education;
    Alyce A. Nickell, special education;
    Benjamin Portillo. English; Sylvia M. Rodriguez,
    business e ucation; Barbara Jean
    Ralf Rowland, social science; Ursula Vasilko
    See, English; and Dione E. Zale,
    speech.
    Bachelor of Science
    Patrick J. Apfel, zoology; Mary Scherkenback
    Baker, biology; Christopher W. Barth,
    zoology; James Andrew Bell, engineering;
    Barbara C. Berry, geography; Candace
    Ellen Bosze, biology; Grant L. Brandt,
    radiologic technology; William Michael
    Brown, chemistry; John Eugene Cuance,
    engineering; Michael J.L. Connolly, physics;
    Edward Lowell Dibble, physics; Kirk
    Norman Ellis, engineering; Ann Marie
    Evans, zoology; Jack Campbell Fisher, Jr.,
    botany; Richard George Good, zoology.
    William G. Gripentog, physics; Larry E.
    Gregerson, zoology; James T. Harris, zoology;
    James Robert Hodgkins, engineering;
    James T. Hogan, biology; Robert Einar
    Johnson, mathematics; Sharon M. Kamp,
    zoology; Greg Robert Kennedy, biology;
    Gregory Elliott King, biology; Joseph Pierre
    King, biology; James Arnold Knieling,
    geography; William Jeffrey Lansing, mathematics;
    Lily Lee, zoology; Sheldon Levy,
    mathematics; Michael C. Lloyd, zoology;
    James L. MacFarland, engineering.
    Bruce W. Miller, zoology; Blair W. Mitchell,
    engineering; Conrad Stephen Mudery,
    Everyone seems to be coming under more and more psychological
    stress. And I think our whole educational process, emphasis, everything
    is aimed more and more towards the social sciences in general,
    psychology in particular, away it seems, from technology at present.
    Behavior modification, the application of learning principles to
    changing behavior, modifying behavior, is the applied approach I favor.
    This approach is being greatly felt in that we do have the means
    now to generally change behavior. And, often what are classified as
    psychological or behavioral problems simply means that a person is
    exhibiting behavior that is, by some standard, classified as other than
    normal; we can through learning principles change it to normal behavior.
    Behavior modification is the area that I'm concerned with as beneficial.
    People get frightened by it because the technique will allow the
    modification of behavior in any direction that the organism is capable
    of. So then, laymen suddenly think that the therapist wants to play
    God, and gets concerned about control. Behavior modification is no
    different from the traditional Freudian approach, except we get better
    results. When you do as poorly as we have traditionally, no one's concerned
    with the control, because you don't do very well anyway.
    I look as my role as beneficial to the purpose of the university, this
    university in particular, because I'm the only experimental psychologist
    in Southern Nevada. And a university by its nature should represent all
    approaches. If nothing else I'm presenting a viewpoint that students
    are just not going to receive otherwise. I think the main way in which
    my role is beneficial is probably in one-to-one interactions with students
    — not as a teaching device, but as a model. Most good learning
    probably comes about by modeling, and in doing research, one-to-one
    relationships.
    I think that any knowledge is good in and of itself. It does not have
    to be practical; it does not have to be applied. And, in fact, a good
    deal of our most practical knowledge was first gained, first discovered
    from a very basic kind of research that no one could see any application
    for. I think we're way overdoing directionality nowadays, the practical
    approach. Everything has to be for this purpose or this purpose
    or this purpose.
    The students and faculty are mouthing words that what is needed
    are inter-disciplinary courses and particular kinds of interaction. Traditional
    lecture methods are probably outmoded and this is nonsense. It
    may be true in certain cases, but there certainly are cases in which
    the traditional methods are more appropriate than newer ways, of doing
    things. This emphasizes goals rather than means.
    Richard Titus, Chemistry
    The problems facing us are almost all chemical.
    There's no doubt about that. Even wars are fought
    because of limited chemical resources of raw materials
    or food supplies. The analysis and extent of
    pollution today is determined by chemical means.
    And of course the big problem, that is solving pollution
    problems and some ecological problems, all
    involve chemistry. As far as the most fundamental
    problem in the world today, I personally view it as
    over-population, but I don't think you could strictly
    call that a chemical problem. I think the study of
    chemistry is very pertinent to the world we have
    today. Not only that, many of the decisions involving
    solutions of the so-called pressing problems
    are decisions which will have to be made involving
    chemical matters.
    So I think our students today, graduating from
    the program here in chemistry, are much better
    off than I was. They're better equipped to deal
    with the real problems facing the world than I was
    when I graduated. Chemistry, per se, is not going
    to directly benefit the university. What chemistry
    does do for the university is supply the courses
    essential for the training of many people such as
    chemists, biologists, pre-meds, physicists, geologists,
    and pharmacists.
    Educated
    64
    Robert Tarte, Psychology
    . .- V V mtm mmm
    Boyce Phillips, Hotel
    Truthfully, I can't see where hotel administration will solve any of the
    problems facing the world today. It just isn't a part of our role. Our
    purpose is to offer hospitality, food and shelter to large groups of people.
    Our job here is to educate others to continue and expand this
    role.
    As far as my personal role, I feel I have helped to create both a
    national and international flavor on the campus because of our large
    number of out-of-state and foreign students. This exchange of ideas
    and thoughts is vital to university life.
    62
    Dr. Lon Spight, Physics
    I feel that my purpose at the university is to pass on as much of the basic culture as I possibly can to the new generation.
    What is the good of mankind is the basic problem from Socrates up to modern man. Whatever you believe in really, provides the limits to what you
    would call good. There is hierarchal structure to what is good. Evolution dictates that it's good for giraffes to have long necks. I think physics is good, but
    that is a prejudiced viewpoint.
    Pollution is not a problem with science, this is a problem with people, convince them to do things, for their own rights and self-interests. Convince them
    not to use electric toothbrushes, use a little hand-power. If you use less electricity, you need less elefctricity, and you don't have to add as many plants,
    belching smoke into the atmosphere . . . nuclear power plants can be made as pollution free as anything conceivable at this time.
    I think the pollution-ecological crisis is really a crisis that has its basis in science. Technology has produced this, but it's the people who wanted the
    technology; we've never developed the type of demand.
    One thing that has changed is family structure, that sort of social structure, has changed radically just within my short memory. Things have changed
    quite rapidly — dating habits, marriage habits and customs, these sort of things have changed radically.
    Erik Gronborg, Art
    If we look at the world around us, the primary evidence of most cultures or
    civilizations in the past has been in the works of art, and I find that the same
    could be true today. Unfortunately artists are given a very secondary role in our
    society; however, I believe that if our artists were given the proper opportunity
    they could to a very-great extent help improve our condition.
    If we generally had a greater response to our visual environment, as only art
    can teach it, we would not be satisfied with our present world. We can see from
    the great examples of the past, such as Italian Renaissance cities, the whole
    concept of how they looked at their city as compared to the way we look at our
    cities.
    Everyone demands that his place is unique, and what happens to the street
    does not matter.
    Dr. John Irsfeld, English
    If the question means English so far as it exists as a department of academic endeavor, I don't
    know. If it means the study of literature, I think that is humanizing rather than dehumanizing. I think
    that literature is humanizing in the good sense of the word. The study of literature is valuable on a
    much more simple-minded level. We are creatures who desire pattern and form. Our very biological
    make-up as bilateral beings casts us in a formal mode. And we don't find the kind of form, to the
    extent that we wish it, apparently, in the natural world. This may be one of the explanations for the
    desire to create a pattern in the sort of model world that literature provides; a world in which the
    chaos of life as we live it is absent. It is replaced instead by some kind of order that makes meaning
    where no meaning exists naturally.
    I think people who don't want to communicate won't, no matter how many English classes they
    take. And don't be misled; just because someone talks a lot, that doesn't mean he is communicating
    or even that he has communication on his mind. There are different qualities of communication effect
    and intent, too. Some I think desirable. Some I don't. Some things are better not said, it seems to me.
    Too much honesty, for example, can be brutal, and not good at all.
    In the best of all possible worlds, I suppose all classes would be pass-fail; perhaps pass-fail and
    pass with honors. I think that it would work. I think that grades are as big a pain for most teachers as
    they are for most students. I think the best competition is with oneself, and not with other people.
    There is nothing wrong with competing with others, except some people just don't like to do it. I
    don't think competition in the classroom is bad when students are spurred on by one another; that
    kind of competition is good. But I'm against the idea of ribbon-awarding and ribbon-counting; you
    know, 'I got an A, what did you get?' On the first day of class when I'm telling the students how the
    class is going to be, there are always some who ask, 'How do you grade?' And I never know what to
    say.
    Dr. Fred Kirschner, Education
    I think that if we do an examination of those in the Field of
    Education you would find many who are quite capable of discovering
    and testing out novel expressions in principles and
    theoretical issues.
    Even today there are those individuals who look upon others
    applying facts and data to solve problems (simple to complex)
    as being technicians. In essence it is the physician, the business
    practioner, the politician and the teacher who have to synthesize
    from what has been given to them by the discipliner.
    The problem beset professional educators is that they must
    relate the knowledge or subject matter in its logical form to the
    learner who operates on an infralogical or psychological basis.
    It is my opinion that while knowledge generation is necessary
    and teachers must acquire knowledge the generation and acquisition
    operations are hardly sufficient to promote learning at
    the levels where knowledge is related to the learner (dejure education).
    M. A. Finocchiaro,
    Philosophy
    Herbert Derfelt,
    I would say that in my teaching I try to help my
    students to acquire a critical understanding of the
    world in which they find themselves.
    I began studying physics. I had gone to MIT to
    become a theoretical physicist, but during the
    first year of my studies there, I found myself asking
    certain questions about physics, its aims, and
    its methods. Most of my science studies were
    concerned with physics, most of my humanities
    studies were concerned with philosophy. Originally,
    I became interested in philosophy in an attempt
    to solve some of my religious problems.
    Philosophy helped me to deal with the status of
    religion and the question of whether or not God
    exists.
    58
    Education
    I feel that we are making adjustments probably
    better than any other segment of the areas in which
    people are involved. We are making intensive
    studies, developing programs, we have changed
    methods of teaching, and we have changed methods
    of administrators. You see, I have served 28
    years in public schools as principal, superintendent
    and in administrative work before coming to the University.
    So I have seen all the changes.
    After 46 years in the field, I wonder how many
    people I have helped, how many I have affected adversely
    — hoping none. The only thing a person
    can rely on or think about and absolve their conscience,
    or whatever it is, is when you get up every
    morning you say two things to yourself. You remind
    yourself the entire day: "Am I sincere in my work, do
    I really want to be of help?" The second one is "Be
    opened minded and remember that my idea may not
    always be right, that there are two sides to the story,
    and am I willing to listen to the other side, I'm not
    going to be stubborn." Yes I do this over and over
    again. I've had a good life. Oh, I never made a lot of
    money, but I personally had a good life. I just hope I
    gave it to others.
    I'm involved this semester in what is called A-X, which is an experimental
    program. It is my hope that through the experimental
    program, which incidentally uses no text at all, the students will be
    able to write and come out of it with not only the feeling that
    they've done all right, but with the-confidence that they are doing
    well and with the ability to demonstrate that they can.
    I don't think one should teach prescriptive, you know — just
    say "Do it." One should have the understanding that lies behind
    it, so that when he does something he knows why he's doing it.
    He is confident in what he's doing and he is accurate in what he's
    doing.
    I think traditionally, the image of the teacher carried with it almost
    inherent restraints but I think that the barriers, the restraints
    are being broken down rather gradually. And I think there is an increasing
    emphasis on the human aspect as opposed to the purely
    academic side. I think the professor should be aware of the individual
    goals and purposes of students. And I think that he should
    be able to take all of these, arrange them (mentally at least, if not
    on paper), and say, "All of these things seem to have this area in
    common and all students perhaps, need to work with and know
    about this area. But because each of them is an individual I should
    structure, I should permit, I should be able to get from them those
    things that emanate from the common body to the personal body
    so that each person can come out of it with a common core of understanding."
    Pat Geuder, English
    59
    Dr. Richard Byrns, English Tom Cassese, Education
    i consider my field to be very beneficial in terms of understanding
    problems facing the world today because the theatre
    encompasses all aspects of life. I don't view theatre as
    just an entertainment medium. It is that and more! By entertaining
    it is something that grasps and holds a variety of attentions!
    I am arguing an old argument that goes back to
    the Greeks which maintains that theatre has an instructive
    element, a social element evolving beyond its entertainment
    value. Theatre both pleases and teaches in its best form as
    far as I'm concerned. I believe that the actor is key to the
    process. He makes a script work through improvisational dialogue
    and pantomime or he takes a written text and improves
    upon it to project it to an audience. I have personally
    worked in the theatre in all these capacities — playwright,
    director, and actor —; and I believe that I have contributed
    to my field as well as to my society and my fellow man.
    My work as a theatre artist and professional educator
    combines with the work of all my fellow artists to give us a
    most meaningful, vital, educational, and cultural tool for society.
    I include in this both the university community and the
    community at large.
    It would appear to me that education is our major hope in successfully coping with
    the problems facing our world today. The primary stumbling block we all encounter
    seems to be a lack of communication and understanding among people, whoever they
    might be. Education has the responsibility to promote better communication and understanding,
    particularly among the young who will be the future leaders of our society.
    We must serve as models to our students so that they will see us as living examples
    of individuals who can communicate and are willing to understand regardless of the
    nature of the problem. If they do not see us in this light, they will probably view us as
    hyprocrites who, in no way, intend to practice what we preach.
    We in the College of Education must view ourselves as an integral part of the entire
    University community. We are all striving to accomplish one goal, to provide the best
    education possible for the students who come to us seeking a degree. Our reward will
    be the satisfaction of knowing that we have contributed to a better future. I personally
    know of no greater reward.
    Dr. Jerry Crawford,
    Theatre
    57
    % •-
    Judy Morris, Student Placement
    Human beings are our world's most valuable resource. Many of the human beings within the university world
    are attempting to improve themselves and their universe, whether it be esthetically (more relevant values, ecology),
    economically, or by improving the systems within which we live.
    Sometimes the difference between a student remaining in school or being forced to leave and temporarily or
    permanently abandon his goals is simple — money. At this point, a student can come to our office to begin
    interviewing for a part-time job which, if secured, will enable him to finish school and pursue his goals.
    Interviewing for part-time jobs is in itself good experience and will prove especially valuable when a student
    is ready to interview for that Career Job he wants so badly. Each day approximately 50-75 students come to
    the placement office seeking information and employment counseling which will partly determine their life's
    direction. My contribution to the students' growth and development is to help them secure the economic wherewithal.
    54
    *
    Board of Regents
    MRS SMOHINT MR HUMPHREY MR JACOBSIN WiK m WfUAOW
    James Bilbray
    Las Vegas
    Molly Knudtsen
    Austin
    Helen Thompson
    Las Vegas
    Louis Lombardi
    Reno
    Archie Grant
    Las Vegas
    Paul McDermott
    Las Vegas
    Proctor Hug
    Attorney
    William Morris
    Las Vegas
    Neil Humphrey
    Chancellor
    Melvin Steninger
    Reno
    Fred Anderson
    Reno
    Harold Jacobson
    Chairman
    Clark Guild Jr.
    Reno
    Dr. James Love, Psychological Services
    Muriel Parks, Registrar
    Developing, protecting and utilizing student records are
    primary responsibilities of a registrar; and many opportunities
    to become acquainted with students have resulted
    from the service aspects of this position. I have been particularly
    fortunate in being able to share in the enthusiasm
    and efforts of those students pioneered in establishing
    UNLV and of those who are now working diligently
    toward developing our university.

    Robert Lam kin, Personnel Administrator
    The Personnel Administrator and his office does not ordinarily deal directly with the student body. However,
    this office does work to develop a quality staff of employees that act as a support work force to the faculty and
    the administration. I would have to assume that this support would have a direct relation to the effectiveness of
    both the administrative and teaching faculty. The recipients of the effectiveness being the students. Our objective
    is to provide an excellent staff and maintain an atmosphere that preserves and develops the quality in each staff
    member. If our efforts provide a pleasant and effective office atmosphere and free the faculty from problems
    other than those that are directly related to a student's education, then I feel the student is going to ultimately
    benefit from this office's efforts.
    Dr. Robert Stephens, Dean of Men
    In the past, the Dean of Men and Women have generally been regarded
    as disciplinarians with primary responsibility for the enforcement of institutional
    rules and regulations designed to "protect the student from evil influences."
    Unfortunately, while the functions of the individual's holding these
    positions changed considerably, the archaic stereotyped image of "the
    Deans" lingers on. In the modern university of today, the Dean of Men and
    Women are members of an educational team dedicated to the personal, social,
    and intellectual development of the student which it serves. It is their
    responsibility to insure that the personal environment of each student is
    such that he is able to obtain maximum benefit from the programs and experiences
    the University has to offer.
    48
    Students are people to me, and surely we are all students as long as we live. I am a student while I grow, and if I should
    cease to grow, then I would begin to die. I would no longer be a student, nor a person, but a thing.
    As I see it, there is no such thing as my "role." A role, to me, is a game. I don't like playing games. When I become aware
    that I am playing games (which I sometimes do), I stop. It's not always easy. People create "roles" or "Images" for me to fit
    into, but that is their problem, not mine. I try not to be concerned about the expectations of others. I am a wife. That is one of
    my roles in the world, but I don't stop being a wife or feeling like a wife when I come to work in the morning. I am a full time
    grandmother. I'm an artist (painter). I practice Yoga. I fish and hunt and sew and play the organ. I am a counseling Psychologist
    and concur with the Humanistic school of thought.
    Dr. Nell Jeffers, Dean of Women
    Mark Hughes,Director — Office of Information
    My office publishes
    the University's academic
    catalogs which I believe
    have been written
    and assembled in a
    manner which allows
    nearly everyone to comprehend
    our requirements
    and offerings easily.
    I edit and print brochures
    and newsletters
    which carry important
    information to each person
    on campus, people
    in the community and
    prospective students in
    the region.
    I am constantly in
    touch with members of
    the news media —
    newspapers, television
    and radio — answering
    their questions on our
    activities and placing articles
    in the public domain
    on the accomplishments
    of our students
    and faculty.
    An open and aggressive
    information service
    cannot help but create
    an attitude of good will
    toward UNLV among the
    public. And only in such
    an atmosphere can a
    university prosper and
    develop the kinds of faculty,
    programs and facilities
    worthy of a top-flight
    institution of higher education.
    As is true everywhere,
    things run
    smoothly as long as
    people understand one
    another. But when communication
    breaks
    down, frustration normally
    follows.
    46
    Dr. K. Dean Black,
    Director Moyer
    Student Union
    The present tempo of the Moyer Student Union is such
    that a high percentage of a director's or assistant director's
    time is spent in crises work. Thousands of dollars of student
    fees are being spent each year replacing stolen furniture,
    broken windows and damaged equipment. Consequently
    the goal of developing student intellectual and humane
    growth has become secondary to that of attempting to control
    the building and the budget. Presently we are working
    toward making many of these time consuming problems exceptions
    and not the rule. The new thrust of our programming
    is educational. The purpose of the program is to expose
    students and faculty members to noted authorities in
    various fields. The authorities attending the numerous conferences
    in Las Vegas will be brought to campus at a nominal
    fee. Hopefully this type of programming will alter our
    image and assist students as well as the faculty members realize
    that committees and a building designed for co-curricular
    activity can still play a vital role in stimulating students.
    The office of admissions is in a position of evaluating records that a student has developed either through his high school experience or by work in a college,
    perhaps a junior college or a four year institution before transferring to UNLV. The function of the Admissions Office is to determine whether that student is
    qualified for regular admission or must by necessity be admitted for some kind of probationary status or perhaps a qualifying status to make up any background,
    improve any study skills, undertake growth that is needed in order to go forward with his academic work. The office is very much involved with the interests
    and the measurement of the intellectual and the human growth of the student as it has developed prior to his entry into this Institution. Our evaluation is
    in terms of available records and test scores and we provide advisors assigned to the student with information of this kind, in order to properly assist the student
    in reaching the goals that he has set for himself. This area permits a measurement of human growth that is ordinarily not available to an office of admissions,
    but is of a real importance to the students involved.
    Dallas Norton, Director of Admissions Jack McCauslin, Dean of Students
    Students know what they need and what they want; our job is to get it for them or to help them to get it. I believe that this direction
    requires a staff which is flexible and non-judgmental in helping diversified students — with disparate needs. We accept other human
    beings without their sharing all of our value judgments, our behavior patterns, or our life styles, and we hope students will learn to
    share this acceptance, too many student personnel administrators, acting as over-protective parents, made decisions for students.
    Now we are concerned with stimulating students to make their own decisions so that they can become self-directed, self-actualizing
    human beings. We are all products of our experiences, real or imaginary. If we can create the environment for students to have rich
    human relationships in which they can experience interest, fascination, acceptance and even love for other people, then their own
    lives are more free and more full.
    .

    Dr. Don BVaPe pFolerr ,A cademic Affairs
    I think my chief function is to try to provide an atmosphere where faculty can work together with
    students in developing innovative curriculum. I think that the curricular changes that we have now
    in progress are some of the most exciting things that this University has attempted. We have
    achieved an environment at UNLV where students have direct input into major policy decisions at
    departmental levels as well as at the University level. Increasingly, students have input on personnel
    items such as hiring of faculty and administrators. Students have been invited by the Regents, and
    are even funded by the Regents, to conduct a student evaluation of the faculty, and I think that this
    is a very productive project and that it indicates that we have an academic community where students,
    faculty and administration are represented at various levels, particularly at the University
    Senate where many facets of the University are discussed.
    EDUCATORS
    41
    Dedicated to Student Government
    "SMOKE IN YGOEUTRS EYES
    "Nothing exciting ever happens on
    this campus." — It's a familiar quote,
    have you said it? Many students were
    thinking this during the abruptly
    ended CSUN Forum last Wednesday
    before Student Government offices
    went up in flames.
    On the third floor, in the secretaries'
    offices, Jeanne Hall was busily
    typing the agenda for this week's
    Senate Meeting. Smelling something
    foul in the air prompted her to investigate
    the source. She rushed into
    President Levine's office, discovered
    that the curtains and the carpet near
    the outer door were on fire. Out of
    control, the flames were too much for
    her to handle alone.
    Jeanne ran out the door and yelled
    over the rail to the second floor for
    help. Bill Dennie, a maintenance
    man, rushed up and broke the glass
    on the fire box. He grabbed the hose
    and together he and Jeanne tried to
    fight the blaze. The smoke from the
    fire, blowing out into the Union
    proper, caught the attention of
    several students who took it upon
    themselves to pull the fire alarm.
    Pete Calas, Curt Winslow, and
    Dean Montgomery were up immediately
    helping the duo to fight the fire.
    At first no one moved — just another
    false fire alarm. And down in
    the first floor TV lounge, students
    who had gathered to rap with CSUN
    officers just continued to rap. Jeff
    Margolin, CSUN VP was on the Public
    Address System trying to gather
    people to come to the forum as they
    were rushing out to safety. "Where's
    everyone going?" He yelled. It took
    everyone a few seconds to come to
    the realization that there actually was
    a' fire. But within five minutes Donald
    C. Moyer Campus Student Union was
    empty.
    On to the scene came the firemen.
    Up their ladders they carried Scott
    Packs and hoses to fight the flames.
    Within two hours all but the clean-up
    was over.
    The only casualties were six Clark
    County firemen who suffered from
    the acrid fumes and smoke. They
    were Captain Jim Barret, Captain
    Butch Snider, Ed Sollie, Bob Warn,
    Ed Stephen and Carl Murray.
    At about 4 pm firemen told Dr. K.
    Dean Black, Union Director, that he
    could reenter the building. Black and
    other authorized personnel entered to
    assess the damages. On the first
    ing to Black, "Reconstruction should
    only take about two weeks."
    Temporarily Student Government
    offices will be located in the second
    floor Fireside Lounge. Phone messages
    will be taken on 739-3221 or
    campus extension 221.
    PIE has moved to the chemistry
    Building.
    Publications, the YELL and the EPILOGUE
    have been moved to the
    sixth floor of Tonopah Hall (dorm)
    lounge. Their telephone numbers will
    remain 739-3477 and 739-3478 (university
    extensions 477 and 478).
    floor everything was black from
    smoke. Up on the second floor,
    lounges suffered from broken glass
    and everything had a deeper grey
    smokey look. The third floor was
    pretty bad. President Levine no
    longer had an office. The only wood
    paneling left on the wall was that
    which was behind the burnt gavel
    plaques. Her secretaries' office received
    a crisp ceiling, a burnt "sentimental
    ballot box'' and extensive
    smoke and water damages. The office
    of Public Information on the Environment
    (PIE) suffered only from
    smoke pollution.
    Moving around the corner, the
    Publications Offices were washed
    out. The ceiling was burned and destroyed.
    All over everything were
    pieces of charred wet ceiling.
    According to the fire insurance investigators,
    the damages are estimated
    at $20,000. Black though said,
    "I think they may be a little low, after
    they figure in the cost of some of the
    furniture which we lost."
    The fire was described as a "typical
    office fire — cause unknown."
    Plans to rebuild the third floor are
    being handled by the Student Union
    Board which met last Friday. Accord|'"
    V
    34
    Locals in National Pageants
    35
    WHO'S WHO AMONG
    STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
    AND COLLEGES
    This is to certify that
    Larry Apple
    Helen Barnett
    Rhonda Blair
    lolanthe Bruton
    Winston Burbank
    Douglas Clarke
    Thomas Cook
    Joel Driver
    Blair Friedman
    Sidney Goldstein
    Rita Haddad
    Jeanette Hayes
    Earl Hedges
    Saundra Hellman
    Dawn Holton
    Joni Hurst
    Thomas Kenne
    Jill Lawn
    Rochelle Levine
    Cathy Littlejohn
    Len Zarndt
    William Manard
    Jeffrey Margolin
    Olivia Newsome
    Larry Paulson
    Richard Slick
    Bernard Sorofman
    Nancy Sorofman
    Nancy Stenger
    Mark Toscher
    Claude Whitmyer
    32
    has been elected to 1971-72
    WHO'S WHO AMONG STUDENTS I N
    AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES & COLLEGES
    in recognition of outstanding merit and
    accomplishment as a student at
    University of Nevada, Las Vegas

    ^
    *3
    wmwSM « > ' - 3$ 33 "JS"'
    £jyr sy&SSli fflM
    Marilyn Dondero
    Mickey Angell Ellen Van Buren
    26
    Wmmmm

    POT-POURRI
    Ken Barns
    Shawn McNamara
    Bill Schuster
    iijft - / V* v
    *MT n
    Linda Skurinski
    Jordie Nordhagen
    Leonard Sena
    Mark Ballenger
    Jeff Schneider
    Craig Sirianni
    Mike Schneider
    Mark Sirianni
    Willie Bennett
    Mike Skurinski Chris Spano
    Mark Sugden Gordie Sutherland Eric Rasmussen Jack Redievo Mike Riorden
    Char Roudebush Cheryl Roudebush Connie Whaley John Whitehead Joe Wilcox
    20
    Kevin McCabe
    Helen Barnett
    Gill McCrib
    Gary Craden
    Tom Shelton
    Dave Cunningham
    Russ Sancerino
    Debbie Hoffard John Innes Robert Lamkin
    Friendship, justice, and learning; these are the three principles on which Sigma was founded. One can see at first glance that the Zeta Chi Chapter of Sigma
    Chi on UNLV campus well exemplifies these principles.
    Beginning as Chi Sigma Chi, this local fraternity held nearly every athletic title the Inter-Fraternity council offered, always keeping in mind their goal of becoming
    a chapter in Sigma Chi International.
    Zeta Chi's charter was granted on March 23, 1969. Since that date, Sigma Chi has made many achievements and contributions to the campus as well as the
    community. Easter Seal drives, Christmas parties for the orphans at Child Haven, voter registration, to mention a few, are the actions that typify Sigma Chi's
    community involvement.
    Their newly-acquired house has inspired the brothers and Little Sigmas to reach for even bigger achievements.
    Plans for the coming year include the Sweetheart Ball, the annual Greek Orgy, theme parties, concerts with name groups for charity and community projects.
    The "Spirit of Sigma Chi" reads, "men of different temperaments, talents, and convictions, sharing a common belief in an ideal which produces a hearty
    cross-section of men in the Zeta Chi Chapter."
    21
    Sandy Simshauser
    Shiela Schumacher
    Lynn Elliott
    Rita Blanton Jill Snyder
    Yvonne Wert
    Sandy Pushard
    Phi Mu, the second oldest national sorority, was founded March 4, 1852 in
    Macon, Georgia. Phi Mu has 126 chapters in the United States and abroad, all active
    in national philanthropy and local social service projects. One of the national
    philanthropy supported by Phi Mu is the hospital ship SS HOPE, the ship travels all
    over the world giving medical care to those that have no other means of medical
    aid or support.
    On the local level, the girls participate in such projects as giving their time to the
    JERRY LEWIS TELETHON and collecting food and gifts for the deprived at Christmas
    time.
    A man's help is always needed at homecoming and other activities. To solve this
    problem, a selection of men friends (Greek or Independent) of the sorority girls,
    were chosen and organized for this purpose. They became the only BIG BROTHERS
    ORGANIZATION on campus! This creation has strived to foster and make
    stronger the Greek bond of friendship.
    Other activities that Phi Mu is active in are: the Drill Team, Social Service Club,
    Little Sister, and Phi Gamma Nu.
    Highlights of PM's year include the Big Brother Back-to-School-Get-Together,
    the annual Spaghetti Dinner held at Homecoming, Picnics, Annual Preference Ball,
    . Most Preferred Man contest, Hope Week, and the Piethrow.
    Loretta Smyth
    Nancy Kelly
    Ruth Howard
    Bev Adams
    Sandi Samson
    Dee Dee O'Hara
    Sandy Cooper
    Pat Conrad
    Gai Loper
    Glenda Goulette Lucia Kanig
    Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity is a young and aspiring fraternity, one not bound by old traditions. Although it is the smallest fraternity on campus, it considers
    itself to have the most motivation and drive.
    Lambda Chi feels that the fraternal experience offers to its members growth and fulfillment in what has been termed "the University life," that essential learning
    which is part of not only the classroom, but also cultural and social environment. The learning spectrum of college life is not limited to classroom study. It is
    broadened through contact with one's peers, all bearing similar and deverse interests. The fraternity offers the chance for a complete and well-rounded college
    education. Lambda Chi Alpha gives students a stronger connection to the university through academic and sports participation, social awareness and other
    areas, such as fund raising activities.
    Though small, the brothers are striving for a prosperous future. They have recently acquired their house, which will serve as a meeting place for various
    functions, such as a residence for Brothers and pledges, and a general gathering for all the Lambda Chi's in the area and for those who come to visit.
    16
    17
    Dave Anderson Mike Ashe Sharon Boje
    Chipper Johnson George Johnson Steve Johnson
    Scott Johnston Dennis Kammeyer
    Craig Miller Denny Robinson
    Tom Robinson Mike Roe
    7,
    Gordie Saiger
    Frank Bruno
    Neal Johnston
    Terry Busch
    \
    Bob Conway Joe Copeland Doreen Fox Kathy Grady
    I < «
    Danny Gutierrez Chris Hanseman
    3MMH
    It is truly difficult to convey the real meaning of Kappa Sigma without the use of foul language, yet over the past four years at UNLV, this beloved fraternity
    has evolved to a new highpoint. With a unique blend of sports minded football players to a typical Vegas bum, the Kappa Sig's have formed a type of human
    race of their own. When you try to think of the all American Kappa Sig's whom the Las Vegas chapter models after names like Glen Campbell, Donald C.
    Moyer, Lance Rencel and Robert Redford come to mind.
    Their new house has become the home for the brothers who are on the ball. Brotherhood comes first, but they don't consider themselves blind loyalists to
    and Kappa Sig's whims. The brothers believe their fraternity to be the best on campus, and that's all that matters and counts to them.
    Sheryl Stansberry
    14 15
    . i•
    Sharon Hughes Chris Dukes
    H
    Debbie Bossi Debbie Hoffard
    The sisters of Delta Zeta enjoy their sisterhood while at the same time participate
    in many other activities — cheerleaders, little sisters, student government, drill
    team. The DZ's are seen in all campus groups. Not all their time is taken up in
    these activities though. Time is found for painting, drama and dancing. All of these
    talents and activities combine to form the perfect picture of a DZ. The greatest time
    is in sharing the joys of sisterhood. They are a blend of friendship, spirit and several
    personalities. They are proud of their sisterhood and proud of their sorority.
    Vicki Schneider
    Laurie Hotop
    Jill Novak
    Kathy Pearce Sherry Totman
    Shawn McNamara
    13
    Ray Rieche Jim Row Tom Sinclitico
    Max Stuhff Tim Tarter Jerry Truax
    Delta Sigma Phi Brothers know that working together provides the basis for the brotherhood upon which the fraternity was built. Every weekend the Delta
    Sigs find time to get together and have a party. From Founders Day to the gully parties, and the Carnation Ball to the mountains, anywhere and anytime they
    know how to have fun. This year like before, the brothers have become active in community and campus organizations. For Homecoming they purchased tickets
    for the children in St. Jude's orphanage and treated them to the game. Delta Sig's cannot be held to a typical fraternity image though. In a time of fraternity
    evolution, Delta Sig has kept in step with the trends. Below the superficial conformity ever present in fraternities, the brotherhood consists of real individuals.
    Delta Sig's character is further shown in the willingness of each brother to work for each other and especially for the house.
    Pati Zane
    Frank Di Sanza Geno Di Sanza
    Larry Apple Richard Benbow Doug Clarke John Cocks Dave Cook Tom Cook Sandy Cooper
    Allan Goldberg
    Diana Ventura
    Ibsen Dow
    Mike Brooker
    Lynn Elliott John Garrison
    Jill Lawn Bill Manard
    mm
    Jeff Margolin
    Barbara Apple
    Barbara Deems
    Bob Brandt Richard Damron
    Debbie Koning
    Richard Hainsworth
    Ken Yerike
    p
    Rick Aniello Doug Brewer Jim Dropp Ray Everard Jerry Freedman Ray Gonzales
    Patty Kelly
    Bob Lapp
    Bruno Mark
    Tom Klopack
    Vince Lopez
    Tony Mark
    Bob Kopp Tanya Kuhn
    • • >.. >i
    Jack McDanials David Moen
    Marcia Spangler Dave Walsh Mark Weber Ken Wilson
    .SPISlSi
    Steve Greco Dawn Green Lynn Hampton Cindy Jones Connie Jones Bill Kaercher
    Alpha Tau Omega is a name well known to this campus for fun and good parties, however its real nature
    is known only to that select few who pride themselves in its membership. To outsiders, it is a
    strange assortment of men who are better known for their individuality rather than some collective identity.
    These are men with more differences than similarities, yet they have a commonality that is strong as
    life itself. They have agreed to care and take care of one another.
    This is no burden, for ATO's are men who delight in their differences and their opportunity to share
    this life, and together make it unique, something more than it could ever be individually. They know that
    all the riches that they might ever possess would be worth the sacrifice of the Brotherhood to which
    they now belong.
    Cathy Littlejohn
    Diana Ventura
    Marsha Barkhuff
    Nancy Stenger
    Vicki Stewart
    Pati Zane
    Claudia Shapiro
    Patty Spila
    Sharyn Cooke
    Since May 4, 1968 the Epsilon Rho Chapter of Alpha Delta Pi has been
    working hard at achieving what they consider to be a great goal. This year it
    happened. They became the first sorority at UNLV to move into their own
    house.
    Alpha Delta Pi girls devote their time and energy not only to their chapter
    affairs, but campus and community activities alike. They work to help college
    women develop perfection in the fields of leadership, scholarship, talent
    and beauty.
    The sisters get involved in almost anything or rather everything. Some of
    their favorites and annual events are fraternity exchanges, Homecoming,
    house dances, Christmas events, student government, registration, Founder's
    Day, Queen Contests, Greek week, Province Day, Scholarship dinners,
    Easter Seal Drives, etc. They are a close-knit group which love to get together
    and have fun.
    "We live for each other" is the motto that each sister learns as a pledge.
    This in short is what their goals are and what they become as Alpha Delta
    Pi's.
    Sharon Marett
    Bonnie Webb
    7

    GREEKS
    5
    CONTENTS
    Literary
    Pot-Pourri
    Educated
    Educators
    2
    ":;-X' • , - • • . ' v.- \ x

    Copyright © 1972
    by
    Helen Barnett
    on behalf of the
    Consolidated Students of the
    University of Nevada, Las Vegas
    ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
    No part of this book may be reproduced
    in any form or manner without the
    express written permission of the
    editor.
    Printed in the United States of America
    by
    Taylor Publishing Co.
    Covina, California
    ... . •