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Page 27 text:
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Biggest Monexjrrakec Visitors from all over the world came to UCLA throughout the year, eager to get a closer look at our famous campus. According to Jack Revoyr, director of Licen- sing and Tourism at UCLA, the tour second only in popularity to Disneyland included Uni- versal Studios, Beverly Hills, Santa Monica and UCLA. Once at UCLA, visitors had several options; they could head straight for Bearwear or they could tour the campus either alone or guided, led by a campus guide from the Visitor ' s Center. Visitor ' s Center tours were specifically directed toward general vistors to the university, including families and international groups. Tours were given twice-daily on a drop-in basis. Peak demand was during intersessions. The Visitors Center tour guide staff included a core of thirty volunteer docents and ten paid stu- dent guides. Guides were given a script which in- cluded information about UCLA ' s history, current research, and cultural events on campus. The tours left from the land- mark Bruin Bear statue and covered the core of campus including Royce Quad, North Campus, the Sculpture Garden and South Campus. In addition to regular tours, the Visitors Center provided special tours of the Botanical, Japanese and Sculpture Gardens. A large group of the summer visitors were made up of East Coast high school juniors travel- ing around the United States on Teen Tours, checking out different universities to see which ones to apply to. Japa- nese tourists also abound- ed, and were a c - comodated with Japanese signs posted in several places in the Ackerman Union, encouraging those tourists to use ASUCLA eating facilities. -Melani Unitt Tourism 23
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Page 26 text:
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A busload of tourists, op- posite page, top, enthusiastical- ly await their final destina- tion-UCLA. Two tourists cap- ture their visit on film, op- posite bottom. Tourists brought in 40 percent of Bearwear ' s revenues each year, as shown top right. Bottom left is an example of the signs printed by ASUCLA to assist foreign tourists. In one final pose before beading home, tourists are pictured bottom right. Photos by Stewart Kume and Roland Pasion. ASUCLA 7-K tf- iACKERMAN STUDENT UNION (7 -v X a-r TREEHOUSE VJ- ( . ?:- ) COOPERAGE 7-7Vv ( !, Jr. - 3f4it. ? -? arj-rX- SANDWICH ROOM 1 - )-. T -f 7.? ) - - A - L- u -A KERCKHOFF COFFEE HOUSE ' - 7 3-t- ( V ' I TY 3-t-. r- -1- NORTH CAMPUS STUDENT CENTER -ae -B iE -1889 fl- 10SS-I5SJ -a BOSS -H BBC r JAMES E. LU VAU.E COMMONS AX A IrH. 3 (T- ' J. K-f y . t ,; ?. JMMV8 IvJ-X) BOMBSHELTER DELI A ,)t ' f - . D -B BIB 4 7M30-I7M -B 918 -B NIB 22 Tourism
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