Scripps College - La Semeuse Yearbook (Claremont, CA)
- Class of 1926
Page 1 of 172
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 172 of the 1926 volume:
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,Ll Y Wu V m W .M A IEA W . W W ,Wx ,mmm '. EWHWM W My I'- W I WMANEWZ -QW ,WM ww mc. Ef,ZjQMQ'7Q?Ok . - I '.1X41-xlg TI Y 1 The Weekly N ews-M a gazine 4 , I 00.101 1000 53 3 1 1 LFOTRL 4!'TW.z. I XIXIIX lllillki 196 556i QR L 1 P 0 ?E Q o 70 QQ' G58 N1 SS l'll.l.l-IN SCRIPPS In v 'lj H 'f,. H . . . urnvlh-'fUyfurJr1.vr.- 'Q '. Q . I 22, 2 ' nm vm- nm ry! . :-P 4,2 4 Y, xy A I aifgrf. . 5 YH 33 . ' W 'I I - Y 1 . . - Bm.- gy, I ug -.Q - r Y' - -I -..- -I ' 'Q 1 A 'litre 5 lf 4 '. fd ,H ... n f. . 4 13 4 1 ,: vp ' -I ' 3 , 1' ' ,niq- 5,1 x '- ,- X x ' ' 1 gi ' 5 'sfff . -Q ' Y l i - 4 15 221 - 3 , uf - : s ,4 H , I ...lbw- '- ,'f ' Mb- 1.41 r-1 f fi- . - -1. . , -,L .1 .aq f uy 5 , 13 S, W, .,,. M,-f ., M wifi, tl I , .I ti vs n -'fm-' Xa. mgsw. , :.,..,' A, - if' ,NY K ' bigafiizgqcnal 'anna i1qsf?i3zgard1 bf TrusisiQsg.,1une 15.-T1 Q2615 V Q Vai :HH if lu? L 5 ? 55 'WM 'J ' 1 I , I 4 . . I .g , ' ,-4 5 R - ' 1 , A J A --5 .Ng , fi' gf: -. mf ,QW rf.-45,3 we 550, . .-Y' asf.. ' ,IQEYQ 'Tad' '- ' ' ' 8' 'Q '15-4, '25-QEE'- ' P3 is b7.'?g.fi2'.Q-55.5 - 1-AH ' 1 1' . -- . Gngnur W , . . ' avg QQ -JW F15 - .,4.-1V'- f .4 , - -Q- I- g f . -, - ,I-?5jf'?1f5'S , vw- . .R 7.25.2 -- ,.. -126,15-fggffwgg, I .V,,, ,J 4. Q .- ww, bg ' , - - 2 ,..'f'-. . - Gyoundfngeakihg for-fnehrsz.BualanQg2 Fali. 1926 H--......,,,.. -'-'14-.... .4 ,, 1----xy. '-..,,. N w-.... --1... N JBJJ :M 415, 5- ' X ' ,.- Simply stated, the whole intellectual and social fabric of Scripps is built upon the theory of individual responsibility for accomplishment. . .The intellectually curious and vital spirit is certain to thrive under such treatment. -Earnest J. Jaqua, 1927 Scripps College President Eucalyptus Court. Balch Hall, 1934 Balch Hall, dedicated September, 1929 I f ' I m y Wm-rm 5 Students on campus. 1931 - , f , -we Y R. V 1 u'Y,..'-' . 1' fl., - , 1 . - , 1 V, . -. -L. Toll Hall. 1927 Another thing l have hoped we might have at Scripps is a certain type of simplicity of living. . .a naturalness and simplicity about the buildings and about the instruction and about fellowship will inevitably so release the mind from the superficial elements of life that the student must be able to see clearly and naturally. -Pres. Ernest J. Jaqua 1 927 -V. ,NHL I A wgjk ls., f '-Fm . .il 1 - uf. 1 my FQ- K . f , ' ,wg 1 t 313 i' 145.1 w,51W,' Jmfflzi , 4 yy -1 .. , Ai -W , X jf 511-'5' V - 2: iii ' Y' S, ui - X . X , I ' L 1 V, vf , . . .. , Lai? V X . 'N ,raw -f A ..c . , . e ' f V q ,hw Fill' ng 1 ,Vp ,H - w jr nn wi-BQ-'i.1w. Y Vx, V' K - up L, ' ' Wx 'fi5 f 1' lip Q X ,. - . ,W sw :- '5'5f:f-5. Efcsgmgvicg fi 1 - y -Y .31 .H I .k,, , ,. 'HM ,, Pfum-ls.. - Mt.. JI, 4- 4 , f.J'i37'f1: Pwmliygn Eb -QT:-' -ze . ,1,,,. P Av, gp! . , ' -s 5 Q . w Q'. 1: ' ' x 'vr me, ,D , afP92-V we, ff' , 'if' ,L nnbqiyl Q, X-H,-,..f f. ,.-VE. 7 bf 1.2 'lx is i ,i.A 'Q' Q ,....- - . ' ,X 1316 K r 4 ,.-v' '7? I Q -' W' 4 f .-, w a i I P. .., A ' I -V Agm , M , ,u.,.' x ' v' ,1- f . ? N E x P E 1 .jj '.-Lx. . wig' A ,- 1 I - -an Q 'I . f L a .,', Vx -s .dy ,fm .1 :'v 9. - .N riff? K, 'A A N 1 '-'i-5-' i mx fx --....,.E,..,..,..,,-mm. ' w 1 Ji? f -- . P 4. Q 'fin KR -..-fl, '5565'!K!'5?.:5'otw 5 ,gg . 'yy ..MiL,.i.3,,A,! - 1 ,w A ...k . x, .hx , a :x xx X ' 1 X ff, .. F -. Y... flaw 1 .. ,, V V x , Jun xfw .,-W. 1 1 Q A - . -- 6 I ,Nr N ,f 'iw' . rw. 5 'CA J, Q Tg1'r. d ' ' 75 f ' . .. 1.. . ., , 4 9' .gk 4 'T '--, .. .-f v, 'va . , .,-Q' 'Valli ,' A-45,6 . . Pl fn, Yi 1 A. ff' ., ,. as ff ,.4,f'.,9, '-A rf .. 1. 1 ' , I, ., . :- . M L. .M . . .5 X.. Il X ..1.,NxVY A, ,T . . Sgr. IDG 459174, 1' I Z, Painting class. 1933 College is a creative experience, not merely a receptive one. -Scripps College Catalog 1 Ceramics studio. 1936 I 1 V , x -' ds ,gi ,LM jk? Q, J. SGT 4... QC 7' N w K 1 ,gi 1' P LJ U EQ: 55:11. X :Eb i l if En: 'Q 4 i i W ,.., se., A woman's college has not always been considered a great opportunity. The tendency for many years has been the desire to share the advantages which men enjoyed. And this was natural in the days when the struggle was being made to secure larger opportunities for women: when women were aching for admission to schools of higher learning for admission to professions, for political rights, rights to their own children. rights to their own persons: - in the noise of that battle one heard but little about the greatness of being a woman. The emphasis was all placed upon woman's resemblance to man, how and in what particulars women equaled men. and the demand was stressed that women be placed on a parity with men. Now that women have gained those rights and privileges: now that they suffer but few social and legal disabilities, women of today are concerned more and more as to how women shall be advanced as women - how they shall perform the women's task. -Mrs. Joseph Sartori Toll Hall Dedication, 1927 992' ,, LF. .,z ., ?- -- J-,'-v 'L: : . K ,g In . , 1 , , V ...it if W .. I' . k amz? ' 1,3 V.15g-gg'.:iQf:- si ...,, P-.. ,, an do ,W ,- .YW ,, -. . ff, , 1 dwg, . :- V - - J ' ':'t':-,funn 5.fs..'4: .,,.f,wn' ' V 5 , ! ' l A - Lg: ilvj fr '., - - . lfguliifb. ' ' J nc, , ' ' J ff- 'T ' ' . -' f fi' . - ' W f 2 - - -A f .13 in 4 1 in s J5,Q5.bf.ngf.,-Lfqfg X A I ,. if H s '-,Qi gr X ,Q 'J 4vyi.n , . V- . TIN' 1--W 6' -, . ' -vi -Qrf ., -, . 1- f' ., - 3 ., '. ' f- .1 V ' ' ' 1: , if Y-Qfjga-,5 'fm - 1-1115 fr -3 -- ,,,,-g '-yihf!-' ,f' . . 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A,--2.1 -Q.s 1fvv N as , . i :fLJ-IZ Ag ,. .bf -lv- T, 54 A far-seeing woman, Ellen Browning Scripps, has. among her many benefactions for the improvement of human life seen fit to make this her crowning contribution - a tribute to the education of young women. -Dr. Susan M. Dorsey 1927 4: J 3 . iff 5?:1?3iii..f2+w- -'C -. . ff - L' z..--Y,..e 7: I 4 .n11T'. v'Ur'1- - H-'7- - U , -1, 5534: si- .-.Q -. u , 'g'E?i1:1 F:-51 Sig? P 5 ' -1 f '-', iff.-sa U-fag 14'-3 ' 1352'- ,,...-- ,,,,, x r - f-if -- L, v- . f- - - ...',., Y c.4,- K .f E3 -'tw , . f -.45 ,, U Q , gr- - 51.5 - 1, , 4 E. ,I in M ' z '- f- 'A 7 , ,, 2 'J QT -,.--'- J ' f ,Y I have believed in California. . .An immense population will need educational opportunities far beyond anything we now have. . . My own very deep hope is that instead of one greatj undifferentiated university. we might have a group of institutions divided into small colleges - somewhat on the Oxford type. . .ln this way I should hope to preserve the inestimable PERSONAL values of the small college while securing the FACILITIES of the great university. Such a development would be a new and wonderful contribution to American education. , -In ei letter from Dr. J.A. Blaisdell to Ellen B. Scripps. October 3, 1923 I - 11 :ff 1 E I 3 I v 5' i 4 .1 1-4. ,- f.,!:','4:-:Y a 'T.1-rx. ,' .. .t . F, .1 ,A z.. SRA -, - '-AW. xy, . u - .ug w 3+ 141. n.. he ' .A ', ,UL ' 1 :fn A4 K. V14 V N' I 'il ig 'fe V. 'J gix, ' '.Jj.'- 1j ',s. - .pm . f '!. ' vs.Q.,k ' F' .? 1Q' yr:-4 'Z..- f. ,, hm .f -, 4-' gf .,f Nj! V , '. -' .,: 1, ,gag :- 11152 fqxdt x..,fqg-f-1,,:1h,- 1 1 . - . ., hw.- M15 - .. ', f-...MP .3 ' ' fr .,:1 u ' , fmfafaw 1 If 1 1-Slszvv -' - '7i5 ? ,,., , 7 ug snug Annually M!! 'N-A , f 3, , H ,mm f- Ljggqz 19 X' 1 ft, . w?' M msxwm oxigcgq We ww L ev SLM im NNN Q? ,aff s .P r ampus re am for I azz The Iaggm :ann ctmg lhc 1 hulls th -'ugh lhp paved four! nv u 1 'r yumor year that pre-w,ca- lin a orxprc-prnfeeab . sulzifcls atv inlmdu-ml. Here are .vffcnrd mah roursrs Ibn! irfnn yf-'mg w 0 m e n in profs'-mndl fields pccu'larly azhg-fed lo their srx-- -soffnl wud. public lrramz. mu:ry: -ci- cnce, prrmnnurf ariminzs luiinn. Tun oihca g:!1av-ynf eduranon nn' alm In-ing dfvvlr-ped. one iw an lhtl nlciesl telling' u' unmmn- kmd. lxomr--n1.1H'zu. nn- othrr if in then. fx'-H :.-'r.-.- ...U --- vim- ggn-1.3-xl.m place ol' infinite beauty and clunn: nn ncldeinic retreat andipundiae: an adventure in what could ln allud inti- mate !dllClll0ll.h - All ovbr tlle United Staten greil universities are spring- lng up. In their doors coriie hordes of young people. cram- ming tlielcluurqomx. their brains. the campuses and tlm fontbhll stadia. Like everjlliing che in America. the mu: Idea is winning out in eclucatiunf , , Faqtnrieg for efficient educuliun are tliese Mini - iitirs. lritotlic hopper goes n nw freshman. lrfnuz- n he is spilled out, a finished prdducyliis brain full of Yearly- made lore and learning, his hand clupinl n diploma, hid 'being xaturated with education, No time hu been lost. Tln minimumnl cqst hu been attnined. 'nie utmost efficiency ln llie 'mal:ing of I college irnduate' hu been lcliievuir , 7 California hu three ol, tliele great educational factories. The L-nirersity of Clliffzitrillivilli its l8.000 students. in biggest and most ellicienl. U. C. ia. in hcl. the biggest universitfin the United States. The classes that file fmt from Berkeley why are more numerous in indunles than whole-Colleges used to ln. : -. f ' l STUDENT graduating from Berkeley hu no opportu- J- nity of becomingicquainteizl with more than a fric- tion ol his clan. To know the majurity of his college niatn is an utter impossibility. - Stanlbrd University. though limited in number. in also getting so lrlge and unwielay that President Ray Lyman .Wilbur is urging it -l:-e made into I graduate and research tollrln only. -' 4 . -A ln southern C zlifornia, U. S. C. is growing into an- glllfl' lf, C. . Likewise. I southern segment of the State fllniiersity al Lon Angeles is growing into n size that some clay muy l'n.'C0mQl!lbl-1 with its parent at Berkeley. K lm, mnvemnnts er-e afoot in California that represent 3'w,Xpli qgainwthe 'Tactory university. One is the junior Cf-iii-ge System. that ful-grbwing offshoot of the lille lyr trm. :ww nunilnering 33 colleges that take the pressure from tin- ,ure :university and give student:-A chance for two yeln ot milrgr study neu' home. The other is Clarembnt Collelu. k'!.iieinont Colleges were begun with one ifleq-taxlme llir cmplmsis on quality instead 'ol qunntily. To do in it wif it-:mnined lo form a group of 'small Colleges. ,each lmntrcl 'in number ol stuclenug and each. to a great degree, si-gun llr' in mannggmen! and tndilibn. 5 ' K IKE the English gznivenities of Oxford ana Cambridge. Claremont Colleges were to be built upon the unit- - tullege idea. The campus of old Pomonnwu. selected lm ri--e ol itg natural beauty. its isolation from big-city life, ttf quart ll'1'lllflllOfl of llie. hills at whine lee! ? leiilet, f-l.-iv: than 500 acres were secured, And some Sl0.000.0W went in rlmsx building: and dormitories., 4 liking' Claremont College: comislx nl Iwo unlll. One in ,Qld l'iimuna College, n unit cb-ezlucdlional rolleie of some 750 mm and women. with rnunel thai adhere So llie regullr rt:-::-'ala Af the large unnersitirn' The other-is Sfrippl l -.5-gr I-1, Wwyrtrn. an institution ittenclczl by 200 lllll llld 'lnffftffl U JAP' tn lx- one of the most famous girls' col' inf- in tlir x-nrld.. A third collcgelu alsolprojecled. . li'l:2nd fu-ry azgnilinnt human movement Iliff be l --inri .i -.nrlr pm- innlity whose idea! the movement repu- viri. , 'lhr pr-is'-n.ility behind Scripps College il difficult 11- ln- -'f-. l-v. -i:- slirinlu from anything savoring ol pub- I,. .sy lr! Nw it-ulrl l'llll9l.kIlDN' that it in Min Fllen Scripps willy- I 'unw .1 making tlu- dream nfs Sgnppl College n lf.l llX , . f . - ' 1 lt 1' tl... .i.-eil nndtrfinf-rl llttlr urntlrv- vman nl Li lolln, un. .xggn iile u 1 working woqm in the tiny newspaper l ro bl brnesl I. laquaflifiut left, youthful prexiefinl of Scripps Cnllele- Toll Hall. belon. I. C. HGYPU. rllllfllllll ol UN V - conlbmu with the new ideq QI comrnunilyllivinf IQ student-1. . A U bw! ol WNW- .,,. ., , Q office of ne: Brother. the late E. W. Sbrippl. launiier of Scripps-Hpwnrd newspapers, wlw has endowed the new eollegeg and wlible idealism is gradually expressing itself in beautiful buildings. in libontorieq and claumgms. in shaded bridledpallu and tennis courts. in joyouk healthy young womlnliopd. A - I X - ' ln, l926 Scripps College was opened will! qproprinle ceremonies presided over' by 1. CL Harper. clnirlu of ilk board of tnngees mul Min Scripps' personal represenmive. :mul group , L for religious services offers also ICCGIHIDJIUOI lol The aspiration of1.lh,Mv college vm Nicol Bulb! f'-1'-' uma Ami. Aman. mum - Y-11.86191 calm wan 1 1-not gran. life Topoy. into,a,lt9r'lle-Pohl of l0Dd09Cl'lPl rjtruczurea unrelnted to n single Klfl- I ': Sunlitwourtymla plgnted in olive rica.-5-IN. CDIUFM ilirubbefy and flowers ue surrounded by- maroon! lllll ue miall. iiirimre and eorforulsle. .ln dal lhebglfhftx hr. . . . . . u t viii elm' 'ii' Pm 'ali hgh fx.-. A huulihl lin!- lunatic parfarpnces. . Tai' buhllilll. I R flush .Ho Newt D.B I .f 7 hcl ' ' l lllelf NNI' Qllb., 3 N 3'3'5g::,gi3i,:g5,:r.r:. r 'r f l . .grs ,Z , 'f 1i'1' 5-HW if 'I' 'W' v'+fPf4'4'- o'i' -'.lf,.'l'.'..?!'.g f.'3'.Lr 2 7s'fl'-2 515.405 tr-- W M- -mr M- Tl ...W uesullttoellllvlfv st i N H had-.5'bm.-qouhihdy. . 5 ',,'l'9l f 'N' nw' 1 'du' ' ' calls! living non. ltbnryxnd ner of nun, url Inu-on ol th H wm..humn..5ni- ms - I hone of lurmng. or Ill hte. Ugg:-i.-,1., to 'hhdu havuwhuthh mmwmumk' vntclhetlieibrgvceufisdi In New M -'-. .4f:4i:4r-.,m,lgleqlled'tinpowuofnncinllifann8nnnnerl- .. ' ' I '. ' 'A ' -- 7 . . . . Latin otilllie College seal. Rndlnew 5L Biff-5 The MIM lllllllq all 'Hill ll ll' d '7 M' ha In tbe.i00 fortunate who enter lla portals ll - ' eunly us trees Liu! rilgcjlxe college wall. ln outward appearance Scripps Colleq is typically Cali- fornian. ll.: buildings adhere In llie Medllernnun uchitecf turr which in being Adopted ll IOC! sincerely fitting into Calilornifa hills, lier unyonn and valleys. The essential build-inn were plnnned before I lpdelul ol nd yu turned. lh clulroorns ' lk I dx 'ff I 5uipCnll tl-ieuiodenAneriulr' an A- tion :n vocational istielftllvrl K0 ll! ltlcilfwll- EAW lion here in conceived of an Iundnmentally eultnnl-U Hill'- for the first two yearn :nunes 1: offered in Ehzflinli. lap- , 'I , ' , at emnticu. PIR' ogy. re i- glvlltnhhlliiliyilgliphxiglcfdnilsnlizn. lxylienr and the lin: IN- Srrlppw and llffmona Uti- legee. An czha ur lmlx 3,-4-M2 work 1-ntitlo: tire sluclenl tu .1 nr-isles? de- ?rce. mnlrzrcrl iw l'l-'fr'- mont faiira:-s. The l.ila'i' llsfl l0'llfA5 li l'lffl . Stressing :ig.iin qual- ity mll1rr llian quqrzixly, Scripps Cnllege faculty includes A score of Iflllwlf noted men and womrn w lt u s e aElxicvi:ments in their e u b j e c t 4 lzave brought them renown in Hall. A llxe acaclemic -world. Tie dmmf loom of Clark HE penonality ol President jaqua typilirs the institu- - lion. Tall. handsome. refined. yet gcvial. 5it'Il'F' Collegei pray ia. like moot ol the faculty. ynulhlul and idealistic. He is one of the gmup'ot' l'Tl ?B1'll young college presidents who are writing educational history. He conceive: llie lim of cdutllion to be implicit in the word itself. vghicli means 'lo lead forth. Hence. instead ol simply pouring Uldllklkd facts into youthful brainl. ffl!!- cltion should Ieul the individual to his but expression. Iii-lp him to become his highest sell. lo think. adiusr himself. ln: . n beautiful and n nomplete life. - Dr. Jaqna lbelieves in co-iducation. But lie says the cui- riculum in the :vermin co-educational coll:-ge is wmkedl out from n male lllndpoint. The new vocation: for wulnm. are not metal. although 57 pet cenllol all high alma! graduates an dtli. ' N , ' Wann, ln un. 'lun come into great social and economic power within A few yearn. No one seems to Lnuw what in the proper eurriculumlor women. We have limrly uken over the men'n euniculn and modified them some- what. l have been in llama co-eclucntienal colleges, and in all of them llte coins offered were framed with men in mind. - E PROPOSE lk!! lc develop :nurses peculiarly 6 G flied to VIOmtn'l new professional c.1.r:i-. 'llheic will be olfercd. lmwexer. in tlle lilil l-vi yearn of college. College life. Ilan! beam of every child. means ruin'- tliing quite rosente in Sctippu. Mon of the girls .ire fit-in well-to-do homes. bu! live ln each plus are hi-re nn at !ml.i.- sl'nips.',Poorer iirla may also hip work their-.way tlnliugah eollefe by wnrkinr-writing on uble. being hella girls. doing administrative and cluical work. The-re are nn iorori- lien. There i ln lnolaliety. The college encourages simplicity in dress .ind in spend- ing. Al it frovms upon rnnu ecluiation. so it lion-na upon lla athletics. Competitive games have given wiy tu sim- ple To develop the body. n course in exercise is the order. in which llie girls dress in :ami-Greek costume for develop- ing ence ns well u muscle. Scientific dirt is adapted to cull 1irl'a physical ieedx. ' . - All ncill life in hr lrom lacking. The xwaina from Psion College nearby are welcome. Long hikes and rides for stuly and recrellion. bud work and joyous play in the open sunshine in the very pnndiu of America. plain hung and high lllinlinj. and ldlilllbl that menu not grind and drueljetn lwl ulfnldillj-welt is, urnllege lil:-'X at Claremont. ' Surely herc is an lntidole for iau. a sul1lmi.iti.-n lnr the pen!-up energies ol 'Young Amevic.i7 , .in idx--.itur-: m culture as inspiring as anything in l.'mtcd buzu. V r 5' , 5 if -Lg wif 31-. ' ff2'f ' f-hw.-wa. . -1 N -fm VL:- Je gg uw ml.. Mm K .. 5, D. 5 QW av 3 xii 'il?t:- ' rv V ' Q' NM ' 55 ,S gig if 'Nm Ya-.Q ii ,, ,'V2-M5 f -in V Q- , E :AI Xl ,, m M fs., - Q YE es? if E ass .S mfg. W5 wi: ,W 'm 3 2 Q S A fm-.. 1135-... M.. saga 5:15, 1 aff W ' L22 an we Ji- sy. E922 2-E Fi E, Q ai ww, Q fa: Lis. N2 an ii 'H . E M 2 rs, ii m Q , fi. ir if 5332 EF-'A 5535 ..,,, M 54 53, HE- Q 3 H Qf ? Li-53 255 'S Q E Ha: Li 'W' ' Q B an M M if-2 QE ,Q xi- ,, E4 'E ' , 52311i1i9ih15?',:E.ci'3,1: W fi if -5 Y 2-L E 2 X g 1'-1.4 i - Z 131 E 1 4 1 '.',. NBER Y .nl -: by 5-3? ' xl 'il Cf. . 1' Y l l- 'X 8 ' . U I v I , A 4 Liz 1 X I wg ' ' 'H - - 1 E f . a ll -1 AM? -, xa-.K 'I J, - -?'r':k qi 4 -f2 J'iPy T L-V V 5.1- 1'l I sg, I , g K P3 23 , Bi ,r Q f . , v ' I v.. - V , U:-A L ,. 1 A , ev fs, I f I f 5 'g 1' S. I L, In v sm 'Q J It 3 .V 1.-9 ' 4 3-1. ' s , l I ',, V. 4 n J J' LA N Q 741.12 Ya? I Ac 'N Q4 if ix are - Q' -+15 BU Row 1 QL-Rl: Jane Tannehill, Amy Murch, Barb Willi, Ann Laughlin. Susie Baker. Row 2: Beth Dixon.Barb Hertz.,Cathy Lydon. Cindy Morrison, Sari Pinto. Row 3: Joanne Gomez. Mina Marmol, Betsy Barker lRAl. Roberta Peirce. Linda Lebenbaum. Joanne Wright. Chris Gallagher. Barb Swane. Francene Ho, Gloria Long. Lisa Ledwell. Missy Peterson. Flow 4: Brenda Battey, Robin Newman. Julie Leftwich. Miki LeProhn. Carol Patejdl, Tracey Borst, Cathy Latsen. Julie Wright, Terry Canningsteller, Cindy Wilkenson. Alli Chambers, Hope Le Bore, Francine Farr, Caroline Nichols, Tracy Nichols. Chris Paup. Nancy Stidham, Connie Stanley. Jo Goeldner. Marni Sanbourn, Lollie Goodwin, Betsy Offitt. Julie Otto. 26 :M jf .!-Y- qi 1. -,., Y. A 1 -H ' 1 1' 3'iedS1.spz5i i'::j,. I r, 3 f 'aiu f L syn Ja, Row 1 lL-Rl: Cindy Morrison. Sari Pinto, Gloria Long. Susie Baker. Amy Murch. Row 2: Abbie Cogan, Peggy MacDonald, Tracy Nichols, Brenda Battey, Connie Stanley. Coki Gray, Caroline Nichols. Row 3: Mina Marmol, Lark Reagan, Barb Swane. Laurel Larrick, Martha Johnson. Tracey Borst, Denali St. Almand, Katherine Sweeney. Barbara Brunner. Row 4: Carol Patejdl. Cathy Larson, Roberta Peirce, Diana Lee. Maria Gregory. Betsy Barker iRAl, Beth Stein. Marnie Sanbourn. Emily Rothrock. Miki LeProhn,Julie Leftwich. 27 Ei... ff' YL' al A A tjfv. .ah F3 . N, J J' L 352 gm Row 1:Jackie Spaulding. Terri Gullo. Merritt Duff, Cheryl Loman, Melanie Lardner, Avis Walters. Flow 2: Leslie Maizlish, Linda Ellis. Katie Mack, Shelley Mulhern Barbara Danin. Row 3: Kathy Jenes, Luann Lovejoy, Yolanda Burzycki, Linda Kawaratani. Row 4: Beverly Harrell. Lisa Buckley, Ann Laurenson, Jan Ross, Amy Wind, June Konoya. Row 5: Jean Tower, Debbie Danwood, Candy McKenna iRAl. 28 Row 1: Denise Rust, Nancy Leibenson, Patricia Packard. Lucy Rollo, Paula Dqrenbach, Margaret Nebenzahl. Lydia Selby, Debbie Bertolet, Debbie Hutchisson. Kam Youell. Row 2: Maria Aguilar, Katie Mack. Lisa Buckley. Lucia Meredith. Donna Dibb,Jackie Spaulding. Pam Hunt, Lisa deFaria, Carrie Holmes, Dennie Chaney, Lauren Cornell. Ceresse Nada, Kim Schutte, Mimi Brewster. Sarah Towne. Juli Wolfgram. Row 3: Margaret Speaker, Mary Parker, Teri Carpenter, Frances Harden. Mary Moore. Jennifer Holland. Patty Jones. K. Simpson, Lisa Carmack, 29 F 1 -...+- T'Q7M ' -qw N -Q ll - N xl Ai In AIM 1 , 4 ,.. IA I llrl N mimi, 6. Q ll1BlllQCDllefis' Ill! is Gi Fleclined: Cathy Green. Row 1 lL-Rl: Cathy Blum. Carol Berry. Tina Starkey. Christi Sallas, Deborah Garvey, Vicki Armour-Hileman. Row 2: Andrea Johnson. Margaret Hess. Gigi Rosen, Leslie Lassiter, Kristi Nilson, Kathy Ogren, Debbi Black, Diane Herbert. Mary Fatland. Row 3: Teri Rothl, Sheri Hawlsy, Laurel Bonham, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' b F Od .Mar aret Helms. Row 5: u.f.o.. Myra Gutterman, Ilisa Wine, Kyle Guersey. Hae Won Lee. How 4. Stephanie Smith. Laura Bleiburg,Jennifer Ro erts. rances a g Nina Shapiro, Penny Nichols. Angela Dickie. Felita Richardson, Ginny Edwards. Cheryl Cormia, Ginger Payne. 30 Flow 1 CL-Rl: Kristi Nilson, Pam Whitney, Gigi Rosen. Stephanie Smith,Jennifer Becker, Vicki Chow, Imelda Aguirre, Penny Nicl1oIs.Vatana Isarra. Patti McN3II Cathy Pyke, Beth Fry. Eve Ben-Ora, Deborah Garvey. Row 2: Julie Dart, Pam Radcliff, Wendy Gauntlett. Audrey Perel, Robin Kohler, Jackie Gabrielson. 31 .,,..-4.fv ' Row 1 lL-Rl: Jennifer Engel. Toni DeBeaubien, Carol Bineau, Maura Corrigan, Jamie Person, Sally Raddell, Ellen Rissman. Flow 2: Cathy Coman, Robin Durant. Debbie Shoenfeld, Liz Leach. Row 3: Olga Bonilla, Tracey Jacobs, Liz Miles. Robyn Dependahl. Carolyn Pollack. Row 4: Laurie Pugh, Valicia Lawson, Lisa Reis, Chris Beck, Laura Loving, Anne Selle iRAl, Joanne Ward. Alison Schink. Gale Ebesugawa, Meggan Lexalt. Row 5: Ellen Rosenthal. Catherine Schuster. Katie Silbergh, Susie Brant, Professor Gerald Eyrick, Kari Vasey. 32 I L1 Row 1 lL-Rl: Cathy Coman. Robyn Dependahl. Row 2: Jane Wileman, Lisa Kristal. Sara Tholen, Jenny Morris. Susie Brant. Tracey Jacobs. Row 3: Ellen Rosenthal, Ellen Zucker, Ellen Rissman, Alyssa Popeil, Carrie Bolster. Rose Odera. Kari Vasey. Gale Besugawa. 33 I W lil ll! 3 1 , ' ll l l if - I nllSlX 5 All VA -..T IW ina. L.. I-nl uv 1 1 1f'4'f5f'kr: 3. f, :eq H ij, '. li .:'- Z ' H je: r ' ' V1-f3'i5 V 555 QL K- f , 2-ik Q A,gw1f. , -rhj-5 E' Ig. 1'-.J 'lff if' 'zfivr' , fr, 'D Row 1 lL-Rl: Georgia Gallanopoulos. Christine Nonini, Nancy Storm, Linda Horne. Tina Kirkpatrick. Nancy Katyama, Sarah Stanely, Carnetta Jones. Jean Herrah. Carol Opatrny. Wendy Tooker. Row 2: Cathy Webster, Jane Tubman, Sally Steiner, Karen Stolte, Cathy Gomez. Row 3: Laurie Horan. Susan Jones. Janet Doty, Elise Frankenheimer, Jodi Henninger. 34 Row 1 lL-Rl: Lisa Dozier, Mary Madinger. Mary Beth White, Kari Karlsgodt, Mary Jean Neault. Mindy Lazer. Marlene Hsi. Judy Lim. Flow 2: Rebecca Kvederis, Sarah Kelley. Michi Kobayashi, Marilyn Haas. Nan Miyauchi,Susan Harrison, Debbie Patton. Claire Crowley, Shelly Miller, Bunny Cahouet, Michelle Gonsalves. Katie Hanrahan. Nancy Oleski, Diane Ternullo. Cindy Nicholson. Row 3: Cathy Hubbell, Isabelle Selby. Lori Boyd. Rhonda Hall, Margaret McAfee. Pam Selleck. 35 Ou Row 1 lL-Rl: Audi Berry, Judy Jones, Mina Flores. Diana Kuan. Ellen Parker, Kathleen O'Leary. Row 2: Sophia Kim, Maria Luevano. Alice Willoughby. Thersa Luian Virginia Revero, Susan Briggs, Eleanore Yasui, Diane Ballerino. Robin Wright, Ruth Trotter, Holly Roth. 36 Row 1 iL-Ri: Ingrid Shutterman, u.f.o.. Renee Fieesha, Anna Rios.Jan Galitz, Lisa McLain, Donna Lee Mason, Terri Cahill, Row 2: Cherrie Caldwell. Cynthia Wooley, Dana Frye. Row 3: Cynthia Cannell, Holly Roth. Cristelle Baskins, Lydia D: Moch, Stephanie Yates. Denise Markham, Patricia Brainard, Winnie Pao. 37 lllll MIC R111 X llllllllllllilill'M'7llllilllllllllllllllllllllllil' first!! 'D vwi, -25 few I -f'Q:g?i'zkf Q! I IQQPQQQEQVX ,416 1 , -'S 5831 - M Q 0 ft 'i ,:..:.-2'-'ML--f ' a V ,!Wp52i5f2-Iifwifiit -,. .J 1 . J. 51' fail 'lryiwiiigi 3 y', 4 W M ii 1 iv' , f Y-.nuns---J. him, .uh .wi 53,3 -rffaflk ' 'f'f5!g'rig-Q5-gr,,r4y.vf:fiJgr, '3, mf I 51,1 W if WN -'-2-'.'12X:f.zkf:fau1-.f 4. .,.t'if': emsiifls .' Iii: WXFYIJ. swim? Row 1 lL'Rl: Barb Ybarra,Jeannie Lundsford, Martha Knuuen, Nancy Stimpson, Annie Higgins,Beth Hook, Andrea Ligouri, Gloria Bravo. Debbie Farrington, Molly Fox. Row 2: Anne Matteson. Charlotte Moore, Marie Ostman, Maureen Williams, Hoi-san Chong, Debbie Procel, Naomi Maddox, Monica Lehman, Tracey Knight. Kim Van Dyke. Row 3: Tracy Green, Betsy Stolaroff, Ann McNelly. I 38 f Z -A -4 - 1' 'f -. ', .1 - . i N , -- '. . -J' v' . - ..-4-.A-.. w f A ,..' Q ' . -- -Lf ' 1'-'N - :, 1 ' - 4 ' 4 -' . '. , ' .r A 55:1 'Q 5 ' .- N :E uf.-L. 4-- - .- er P- 'f.. .. B. .,-I ,- ,.,4 lu. . , , . K ,x 9 l, s , -,.i ,, . ,I .ds ii . ,. qi. 1 xl'V i :i- !1'f'!'p! Zuutbi -,Ile ish' ':m?!qTxi A +1.45 Fiow 1 iL-Rl: Eileen Hugueny. Laurie Lewis, Marily Moore. Nina Spray, Susan Brigham, Hanh Keiy Hoang,Joanna Salinas, Kim Reents. Row 2: Emily Schneider. Sherry Baker. Nancy Garland. Caridade Sanchez, Bretta Applebaum, Susan Beam, Kim Shelton. wow 3: Debbie Biggs. Anna Marie Villalobos, Sarah Higgins, Debbie Erickson, Karla Downs. 3 39 . s-W HJC k'Q S . ll Tx.. A lvlif 13?'f-I nf ,fu Y, ,,, . Q L- ,Mfg ',..a-.x:.:.r-. 6- li 1 ', u. , J gmt 1, I -. . , Q,ig:g.'., , We . . - u .,, .., W- '15 . . . .- ,. X . at Ai. M I ,-um. ,fx ,, V-LM Il x I 'Vt' l D V.,-. 4 4 'wa -'- 4 ' ' ' 2-1 , Mn? It fs ,,.- A - wf-'eww 4 T A u af 2 af - -. ggi I A ,V '. wh? vp A ' A . , . ,- x'.. 5 r . 5L'j ', -- 31. .- - fv mo., , V A F135 -f.Q 3?-a . ' ..- K 7 ,1 41 - -. 'A x 'ME ' f' 3-9 '31, 4 . lk' I 'fuk-afalllmllll. ' -,ff Aft' , :dy ff!! -' mf ' . - Q, -3 as-1..m1 H, .us,. -vjmf Q ,,-- ,ravi Xu., .th V, , --9 ,r .1 .-ii! ,-4, s - 1 , I! lfwf. I-js ls' mx 'll I -A , ER, 9.1 44? 1 . Q si - . - A' - 5 n 'nn va- .. X In. TU, .. 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' v ,. - Q 47' ,w 1' , ,,.-. - . iQ? ff31E 121,-lfnf-r-Mews-'1g.1 wx- 355 1 1 1 1' . -sr ' - -fi-ff - ,-1f:3i 'f?- H 1' ' - '- -' ,J 12' -wi ' ' 'Twl i7'iv-:E-V. ffl: V' I Q '1 I I I 'L K I will 'Q rm u ' ' 'V ef, wa- , z 511 .- 5155 f 1- - - Qikgi gaaf , ,- ' X A L-A: Q:-.wiki v v A 1' - gl ai 'iff 7 :Z -1' L L fn. ' :I -,T ge K af: an N2 Sea 3, 5 41321 . , nv Q.: A. VI 5. X, JR i fi. Eh' X 5 5: Q. 1 I 1- , , A'.L.,,A . W, S Q ' 22 'X my 9 95 A , , , , .1 ,W Q K ,V ,eww wawszzamz, ,X 1.,5,.,f, 1, ,, A.,A if , . 3 Qs, M,,2M,,,, , . . iswbivwkxzgn .,'?u Y - -f X., are ' RMS? Efiii W-,z,,m,m:,y ,, ' pgs V ,MU , N , P 'gi V M ' .im Q P K K Q K ,, ., 1 , -H A ' - ,f mg :gm .L ,, ,, nw . wwf www iffl fn 5'e,- , my I Ky Jaw gym 2' l f 'IE- x ir KX l Development Office Cathy Wilson, Pam Mars, Patty Kennet, Laura Avery. Vice President Floyd C. Ethridge, Margaret Fay. Janice Banno. Marion Winne. President's Office President Curtis, Robin Trozpek, Mary K. Post. rf 59 Dean of Students Dean Daryl Smith. Phyllis Helm. 60 Reg istrar's Office Sharon Cox. J. Lynne Barrows. Registrar Betty Hare. Shirley R. Troxel. Publications Office Helen Eisworth, Virginia Hodell. ' ',.-d- '1 Assoc. Dean of Students Assoc. Dean Joanne Javonovich, Marjorie A. Bixby Admissions Office Jalnet Hill, Libby Williams. Director Marilyn J. Blum, Dolores Finn. Janet Hill. Erlinda Leyba. 62 'I .ai F 47- 5:33 rl, . ' N. -L.: fmri Q: ii L, A ,T A 1, T 'q,35- -..,4., MZ: , 'D' ' Liu-M., wi r - div Til Financial Aid Office Bonnie Godfrey, Pat Martin. Director Elizabeth Johnson: gan of Faculty Nancy Burson, Helen Ketchum, Dean Anne Fuller, Ass't. John Lilley, Jennie Kamenicky NIS i Director of Business Affairs Director Jay Gerber, Mary Varnado. Director of Housing Mildred Berger Career Planning Office Frances M. Brayfield. Ellen Warmbrunn. ,nina-1 - , , -I Alumnae Office Esther C. Werner, Nancy Farrel, Diane Ternullo. xx, MW -c ,L.'..4ge fie.. 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T, , mn -1mf314:N, .. 1 ,W M, K:ff223:f. ,, Jia 11 -, rl:-f m.zAf2iXs119 , K 1-.4 , - Y, iw E25 .Q M , F mes , ,zfegp ' V 1Q:'t,'f5 f' Z iff' , 1 Q ,,X.,,5Qk5Zlm V W' 'IW mgf55,5gg,W 2 ' ' f' rem, mm ww mm Roxanne Wilson Los Angeles, CA History The last few fleeting moments have passed. But the warmth and serenity will last To provide a new strength throughout And give courage in moments of doubt. -R.W. 1. .1 Pamela Selleck Whittier, CA Studio Art Lose your dreams, and you will lose your mind Mick Jagger 'X Deborah A. Brauer Toledo, Ohio Social Studies Where does discontent start? You are warm enough. but you shiver. You are fed, yet hunger gnaws you. You have been loved, but your yearning wonders in new fields. And to prod all these there's time, the bastard Time. The end of life is not so terribly far away. You can see it the way you can see the finish line when you come into the stretch - and your mind says, Have I worked enough? Have l eaten enough? Have l loved enough? All of these. ofcourse, are the foundation of man's greatest curse. and perhaps his greatest glory. What has my life meant so far, and what can it mean in the time left to me? And now we're coming to the wicked. poisoned dart: What have I contributed in the great ledger? What am l worth? And this isn't vanity or ambition. Men seem to be born with a debt they can never pay no matter how hard they try. It piles up ahead of them. Man owes something to man. lf he ignores the debt it poisons him, and if he tries to make payments. the debt only increases, and the quality of the gift is the measure of the men. - -John Steinbeck Lisa J. Sanderson Cardiff, CA International Relations 3 Carolyn M. Williams Chicago, Illinois Educational Psych. Cherish your visions: cherish your ideals: cherish the music that stirs in your heart, the beauty that forms in your mind: of these. if you but remain true to them. your world will at last be built. James Allen i I Felita Yvette Richardson Oakland, CA Social Studies l Diminish Myself If l define myself as my thumb l deny myself my fingers. lf l define myself as my fingers l deny myself my hand. If I define myself as my hand l deny myself my arm. lf I define myself as my arm I deny myself my body. lf l define myself as my body I deny myself my universe. l diminish myself. Huey P. Newton Xu-Vw E Janet Laurie Ackerman San Bernardino, CA European Studies No wonder kids grow up crazy. For maybe a hundred thousand years or more, grown-ups have been waving tangles of string in their children's faces. A cat's cradle is nothing but a bunch of x's between somebody's hands, and little kids look and look and look at all those x's. . And? No damn cat. and no damn cradle. Peculiar travel suggestions are dancing lessons from God. K.V., Jr. Carrie Bolster Princeton. N.J. History Personne au monde n'etait aussi riche qu- eux justement parce qu'ils ne possedaient rien et ne desiraient pas davantage. Joseph Kessel 93 Pamels Jean Bales Ontario, CA. Studio Art Shall the home be our world. . . or the world our home? Charlotte Perkins Gilman Linda Ramsperger Portland, Oregon History It matters so little to the majority of living beings what the minority, that calls itself human. desires or decides. E.M. Forster Denise K. Nelson Los Angeles, CA. Social Studies Why do I dance? Dance is my medicine. It's the scream which eases for awhile the terrible frustration common to all human beings. who, because of race. creed or color are 'invisible' . . . Instead of growing twisted like a gnarled tree inside myself. I am able to dance out my anger and my frustrations. . . Pearl Primus Cydney Bernard Beverly Hills, CA. French Literature Penser fait souffrir Diderot Le grotesque des evenments de tous Les jours vous cache le vrai malheur des passions. Barnave Naomi Alma Maddox Riverside, Ca. Psychology So faith, hope, love abide, these three: but the greatest of these is love. l Corinthians 13:13 Education is something a person gets for himself, not that which someone else gives or does to him... The education of even a very small child, therefore, does not aim at preparing him for school, but for life. John Holt: Maria Montessori .tl s, 1. Cl me li: ft, lfctfe-rival'-' . . , , Bc -P git- s img lfilw' fickle yo gi' Pc .Lge Fired? 651,31 'il 5 U Vg ,- ':m,XN , Z- 'fs lifter wtf' il , l malzitff IM! ff 'l Ann Matteson San Mateo, Ca. Art History Have you ever seen an inch worm crawl up a leaf or a twig, and then clinging to the very end. revolve in the air, feeling for something to reach something? That's like me. l am trying to find something out there beyond the place on which l have a footing. Albert Pinkham Ryder iw, mf, . - 47 f 2' e-A , .' i if 5 'W ' . x N A , l ,, ,Q , rfb 1 Y E. 4 5: '1 ,, -'Qi ' we ' fe - 73, L.--an ' L- ',k d . fx!W J 25- ' ,, -af' I of sv l g ' Q.. f ,--. if , if J RQ' ty ' . Q .' :gs f' 4 x rm, , , ji wx f Q Lydia lHeIenl Selby Tucson, Arizona Art History l have measured out my life with coffee spoons. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock T.S. Eliot Ying fi i Melanie April Lardner V1 Sepulveda. CA. German Studies Ich heb' mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren. . . Betsy Barker Los Altos Hills, Ca. Asian Studies lChinal It is useless - Sir Joseph's attentions nauseate me. I know that he is a truly great and good man, for he told me so himself, but to me he seems tedious, fretful. and dictatorial Yet his must be a mind of no common order, or he would not dare to teach my dear father to dance a hornpipe on the table. From H.M.S. PlNAFORE by Gilbert and Sullivan 98 .,f,,,,,a ,W . , Q , Margaret Anne Hess Los Angeles l History A friend is someone who leaves you with all your freedom intact but who, by what he thinks of you. obliges you to be fully what you are J. L.'Heureux Thank you. my friends. M.A.H. 3' , Jeanne Henderson Fallbrook, CA Artificial Intelligence But somewhere, beyond Space and Time. Is wetter water. slimier slime! Rupert Brooke Margaret Speaker San Diego, CA French Offices held: Curator, Toll Hall Wild Animal Park and Nesting Ground Motto: Fays ce que vouldras Ubo: Et bien, capitaine. avez-vous bien dine? Capitaine: Fort bien, monsieur, sauf la merdre. Ubu: Eh! La merdre n'et- ait pas mauvaise. A Mere Ubu: Chacun son gout. Jennifer D. Morris Long Beach, CA Studio ArtlArt History Psychopathy has become endemic among artists, in whose company the moral idiot is tolerated as perhaps nowhere else in society. 0 J., Coren B. Kittredge Yorba Llnda, Ca. European Studies As I pinch myself and look back on my memories, I am still tempted to think that l am me. Moliere looking forward into the past or backward into the future, i walk along the highest hills and i laugh about it all the way. e.e. cummings Jane Campbell Tubman La Canada. Ca. Psychology 7 I A i . ,dx v --f - - ,Irv .5 ' - 'J' ,-l fi? S if X X I' A 1 TH ws N455 i lim: .vw Karen Phillips Long Beach, CA. Human Biology A Drink, and dance and laugh and lie. Love, the reeling midnight through, For tomorrow we shall die! lBut, alas, we never do.i Dorothy Parker Cynthia A. Winter Highland Park. Ill. Studio Art Joanne Marie Ward Arcadia. CA. Studio Art Time is an illusion-you experience only what is right now. EST The worst thing is losing when you don't even play the game. Art Garfunkel Susan Jean Saper Palo Alto, CA. American Studies Melinda Tracy Storch State College, Pa. History Time it was. And what a time it was It was. . . A time of innocence, A time of confidences. Long a9o..it must be. . I have a photograph. Preserve your memorie They're all that's left you Paul Simon Bookends Except for the diploma. MTS A , 1. 1 X '51-gsiltip Qi Charlotte Elizabeth Kresl Long Beach CA Music It is better to know some of the questions than all of the answersl 11,1 12,1 LQWSSQQ - s James Thu rber HPC Y 1, ill, Michelle Eileen Devich Anaheim. CA Vocal Music Where words leave off music begins. Heinrich Heine Peas, peas, peas Eating Goober peas. C.K. 105 O6 Francesca MacArthur Medford, Oregon French Civilisattion Catherine Mclntosh Claremont Studio Art!PsychoIogy To do a common thing uncommonly well brings success. -Sister Mary Corita ff H , 'J is f I ' 'f 11, iv -: 1 w 7 , ' 3: K1 V :. ' 1 1 Lora Helen Pethick Monrovia, CA Art History Knowing others is wisdom, Knowing the self is enlightenment. Mastering others requires force: Mastering the self needs strength. He who knows he has enough is rich. Perseverance is a sign of willpower, He who stays where he is endures. To die but not to perish is to be eternally present. Lao-Tzu Roberta Peirce LaOuinta, CA Art History If I'm lonely it's with the rowboat ice-fast on the shore in the last red light of the year that knows what it is, that knows it's neither ice nor mud nor winter light but wood, with a gift for burning from Song by Adrienne Rich 0 I am Duchess of Malfi still. DUCHESS OF MALFI IV. ii 160 John Webster ' Julie Helen Otto Ontario, CA Creative Writing I am more afraid of making a fault in my Latin than of the Kings of Spain, France, Scotland, the whole house of Guise, and all their confederates. Queen Elizabeth l. Did you hear a fly? Clive T. Miller Q Candace McKenna Stuido City, CA Classics!Comparative Literature . . .the sooner he can achieve a syntheses among intellect. intuition. emotion and instinct, the sooner his work will be integrated. Anais Nin .. ,, Anita Jennifer Snow Chicago. ILL ArtlPsychology There's so much time and so little to do J.O., The Sensual Liver R3 0 Leslie Gail Jaffe Glencoe, Illinois Literature So. It is finished. -Amadeo Magini, THIS PASSING NIGHT, by Clive Miller Gloria Bravo Riverside, CA Psychology Most noble is that which isjustest. and best is health: But pleasantest is it to win what we love. -inscription at Delos lfrom Aristotle's Ni- comachean Ethics , I I I L,t....,... ,, Vins.-t-- Q ,i'in1..,.:v .Ss ' Ann Elizabeth Waste Piedmont. CA Art History and Studio Art Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in, l drink at it: but while I drink I see the sandy bottom and detect how shallow it is. Its thin current slides away, but eternity remains. I would drink deeper: fish in the sky, whose bottom is pebbly with stars. I cannot count one. I know not the first letter of the alphabet. I have always been regretting that l was not as wise as the day I was born. -Henry Dayid Thoreau EQ' Monica Boubion Los Angeles. CA Modern French Studies Hang on to your hopes, my friend. That's an easy thing to say. But if your hopes should pass away Simply pretend that you can build them again. Look around: The grass is high, The fields are ripe: It's the springtime of my life. -Paul Simon. Remember: it isn't dress rehearsal. -RF .4-' .ao ,, 0.0. '.': ,,.. ' fo log 'fl U' CO 'ea'r,v 0 v ac 'f.' 1 for Ill' lf ll 9 0 I O IO Patty Lu mbert Alhambra, CA History We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except the memory of the smell of smoke and the presumption that our eyes once watered. Tom Stoppard -.S ! 'lx i fl q Y ,A Cindi Scarlet Wilding Pomona, CA Theatre Arts 8: Literature The end is the end, or it isn't. -Werner Erhard Diane Ternullo Garden Grove. CA Mathematics Nur Sachschaden. Vielleicht Gestesschaden He is the Way. He is the Truth. He is the Life. -W.H. Auden Evanne Marie Christian Anaheim, California Theatre! Literature Horticulture? You can bring a horticulture, but you can't make her think. -Dorothy Parker Don't bet on it. -me. 114 Barbara Ruth Bixby Guilford. Connecticut Asian Studies Julie Simon Los Angeles, California Music Performance-Piano You've gone to the finest school all right, Miss Lonely. But you know you only used to get Juiced in it And nobody's ever taught you how to live onthe street And now you're gonna have to get Used to it. . . -Bob Dylan, Like A Rolling Stone You've buttered your bread, now lie on it! -Gogol Renu Orapinsansin Bangkok, Thailand Psychology To be able to preserve joyousness of heart and yet to be concerned in thought: in this way we can determine good fortune and misfortune on earth, and bring to perfection everything on earth. , 115 1- fl 9 ,M - '1..,,,q!a Q There as no pleasure In having 'im nothnng to do 'Q 3-Q.. ,J- ,yi ga El- r . I i lf 3 Bretta Applebaum Kelowna, British Columbia Canada Modern European History My purpose is to pass the remainder of my life pleasantly and not laboriously. There is nothing for which I would care to rack my brains, not even the most precious of knowledge. Essais-Montaigne See ya kid. . . ,I x. .,,.. e J 'I A 'X s 'EL' V ' v-. L. W .fr .1 . Y J sf 'w .r n, fb -xx- .eff- .-.,W ...Q 11 'v A J Cheryl Ann Cormia Los Angeles, CA. French Civilization Avoid the reeking herd Shun the polluted flock Live like that stoic bird The eagle of the rock Elinor Wylie ,lv Pe ' -v- fyxx . 1 ,'. gnba 1 X i ff -5? l s s 'u-27 2 Aa' QL.. .ri . L ' -:pez ,J s- I . lx .jf K . f x il. l r '-' is 1 l ,, 1 1 Elf, ' flags f I-.5--6,1 L-fx.: K.-x-, . T37-'T V . -, . ..,. , ..4. .li . . 11 . V .1 .- J-I l . ' fi' Katherine Schwab La Jolla, California Ancient Greek Civilization As you set out on Your way to Ithaca Wish that the road Be long Full of adventure Full of wisdom. -K.P. Kavafy 118 -E' 'H Nancy J. Storm Pacific Palisades, Ca Latin American Studies l began my education early-immediately upon leaving colIege. -Winston Churchill 9'-P . -- 4 :TE -. Q XX. Elizabeth H. Kersten San Bernadino, California International Relations I love the man that can smile in trouble, that can gather strength from distress. and grow brave by reflection. 'Tis the business of little minds to shrink. but he whose heart is firm, and whose conscience approves his conduct, will pursue his principles unto death. -Thomas Paine Ellen Zucker Nashua, New Hampshire Jewish Studies In watermelon sugar the deeds were done and done again as my life is done in watermelon sugar. Richard Brautigan 120 Judith Jones Compton, CA. Accounting!Economics Mil gracias y profunda grati- tud a los que me han inspirado: mi querida familia I Daniel, mi principe azul California State Scholarship and Loan Commission Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. We are living in an Eternity, the time to be happy is Now. A Fortune Cookie ,,.. fe ff 1 to if wf Jan M. Kawabata Honolulu, Hawaii Studio Art!Art History I believe only in what I cannot see and only in what I feel. My brain and reason seem ephemeral and doubtful to me: my interior feeling seems the only thing that is eternal and incontestably certain. Gustave Moreau Debra Denise Nichols Los Angeles, CA American Studies There are two ways of spreading light: To be the candle or The mirror that reflects it. Edith Wharton -441 Q ff ILNQI , ,,4,,,' L I En e x A x 11 ,Qi xii'- - 17' f l VK ,. ., 1 I ,-Q. ,VF .-.5 Sioux Walker Claremont, Ca. Studio Art Words realize nothing, verify nothing to you, unless you have suffered in your own person the thing which the words try to describe. Mark Twain f iff' Aida Reed . Minneapolis. Minnesota Comparative Literature Onevwas a ship, another was a house. 1 another was a flower. Cooks rats in your soup, he appetisingly added, V the Chinese does. Kathryn Coffey Baldwin Park, Ca. British and American Literature I want to be sure he sees all the wild possibilities. I want him to know it's worth all the trouble to give the world a little goosing when you get the chance, He is a laugher. and Iaughers are rare. . .He sees street jokes, he has the good eye. he sees subway farce and crosstown-bus humor and all the cartoons people make just by being alive. Herb Gardner James Joyce francine farr Inglewood, CA Studio Art!Art History just because you cant see d stones dont mean im not building. you aint no mason. how d f ---- would you know. Ishmael Reed 1 M, ',..-127. W 'Lik e V. 2 :Q J - :Y ' ,Q I.,-.Q-f:,'1::s1e . pt' . , A ' K ' lv I5 If ,tx A ' 1 if A N 5 ,M i 'XI -ex I k L ITL? K fl i .. -2:5 'ullff ' l I I I ' f M v , ,,,, Q . if FY A J 9' ,-' ,U I gs. - K -' I V, N m., . pf I, ,- eq I ,-Sf' -ww Avis Walters Compton, CA Biology I am a part of all that I have met Yet all experience is an arch where through Gleams that untraveled world whose margin fades Forever and ever when I move. Q Ulysses Tennyson y 123 Nanette Ferguson 4 Brawley, CA American Studies A grapefruit is just a lemon that made good. Oscar Wilde Deborah Ann Hutchisson Montclair, CA German Literature Calmness of Soul and happiness with oneself are wonderful things Goethe .ass Kim Schutte Appleton, Wl French Literature!Theater Arts Wanting to do it for you is no less a want than wanting to do it for me. Hugh Prather Thanks is too small a word for all of the personal growth that I have experienced. Unknown May gave way to a beautiful mixture of emotions. At the beginning, one of us faltered, And at the end, the other. That put all together, made us even stronger. Known I .1 A 'l Lisa Farber Denver.CoIorado British and American Literature ln the time of your life, live. . .so that in that wondrous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it. William Saroyan 125 iff?-'Id 6 wg E55 ' A 535: Lg. ' R : , 'fslg 5 gh, 1 YQQ4 Lx V My 'F' Z 1 i7 A., .'g uh V .'. 5 tm- 'j-P .i 3. '-if f 126 Cynthia Nicholson V Qkollotiar, Saudi Aratia- 'L Ancient History Si Culture Mere man - his days are numbered Whatever he may do, he is but wind. Gilgamesh Do not be evil, iforl kindness is good. Make thy monument to be Middle Kingdom Egyptian Proverb 'vit 'Eu-. 491 Maytini Orapinsansin Bangkok Thailand Studio Arts Keep your face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadows . . .and joy in all things shall be reflected. lasting through the love of thee . . . Elizabeth Hook Whittier, CA Studio ArtfLiterature ELEN SiLA LUMENN OMENTILMO a star shines on the hour of our meeting. J.R.R. Tolkien, THE ELVES X 'wr' f f 'V j-gi -3- 3. N hi: if ' X 1 ,iflxx 'f A 3. , 'Q t lf, th L 'fs E Q li .i si, -3-' Vg , V' i I al 'wi ff '- A 3 Q t4ifCI1tf? ' i 4, k Y f a:-' X . 'A fl-.,.! A , i 7 uw' ' - Qu.. -e Sr'-La. Diana Sauter Columbus, Ohio Studio Art If,then, there is anything that is a gift of the gods to men, it is surely reasonable to suppose that happiness is a divine gift, and more than any thing else of human things, as it is the best. Angelika Braehler Fulda, West Germany Art!EngIish Gegen Infamitaten des Lebens sind die besten Waffen: Tapferkeit, eigensinn und geduld, Tapferkeit starkt, eigensinn macht spass und die Geduld gibt die Ruhe. Hermann Hesse w. 'I 3,5 Sylvianne Gruet -' Q' W I Paris, France g French Assistant if ww' Ne fait pas aujourd'hui ce que tu peux faire demain. - Ki 1- f f' , u 1, .g. si :gf . em, 1 .. France Oda Pomana, California Political Science . .so many things I've always wanted to say, The thoughts arrive catch me dreaming, they steal my time away. -anonymous H ii Linda Lebenbaum Newport Beach, California American Studies So we beat on, boats against the current. borne back ceaselessly into the past. F. Scott Fitzgerald 0 Kari Vasey Honolulu, Hawaii Social Studies Keep your face to the sunshine and You cannot see the shadow. -Helen Keller Carolyn Rogers Claremont, CA Political Science Only the fire-born understand Blue. -Carl Sandburg Sara Tholen Shawnee Mission, Kansas Comparative Literature .2 I ,- 'I 1 .. I 1 i e 4 '5 ' .hun .-- . I5 W ,. X - V 'L f ii f., -'i ii i C .H Laurie Tresnon Brussels, Belgium Philosophy Joanne Louise Wright Redondo Beach, CA Studio Art Don't ever let anyone hand you a wooden nickle. -Angelo Restaino Christine L. Gallagher Rey. New York Art History To see the spirit is like watching a bird cross your vision: the faster it flies. the greater the spirit. 74 ' f '-19' -lm Wvf2MW1 1' 1- 1 Q r . Cathy Ann Lydon Hollywood, CA Studio Art Once I had brains And a heart also, So having tried them both I should much rather Have a heart. Woodman, The Wizard of Oz wg 4 -1 4? .f ff . , . I ' ' 1 . ,f 0 6 ffl 1 J , 9 If I I Paula Werlein Lake Forest, ILL French Civilization Life goes around in merry, unconcerned circles. It dances and it dies. It reaches out and retreats. It laughs to conceal what cannot be hidden. P.W.G. fff.rgroe.- - ' A-.gl-A A. Diane Steinmetz-Beverly Hills-Environmental Studies Wrinkles should only indicate where smiles have been. Mark Twain. Karen Theresa Stolte Covina, CA Studio Art Nature I love, and next to nature, art. W.S. Landor . ,EA- b 1. , 44. +13 I sl A Lf-' Anne M. Selle Brookline. MASS Asian Studies -JZ 135 if-4 XY 1 ?5..i'3i V fi ,zz ig r if vig' . few-'riff K 5 Gail Harvey San Diego, CA American!British Literature we each must individually recognize and create an inner outer union balance within mind body harmony with the living realization that behind the illusion of separateness we are one body mind. Robyn Dependahl Bernard Gunther San Mateo. CA 136 Studio Art Chase the clouds away. Chuck Mangione Betsy Bildsoe La Mesa. CA Philosophy l grve my heart paper to eat as though it were a goat. Nikos Kazantzakis 2 Sandra Fettes Pasadena, CA European Studies To be is to do. Jean-Jacque Rousseau To do is to be Jean Paul Sartre Do be do be do. Frank Sinatra Ronda Vernice Oden San Bernardino and The World Psychology , Just as our ancestors, our grandparents. and our parents have struggled and fought, we and our children MUST continue the battle to free Black people in America and around the world because As long as one of us is in chains. then none of us is free. '1 H Q 'v I 3 B4 if E . 5,6 , ,- iff? f Q ge! 1 - AJ 5,1-ill' U Q -I br f if HQ E, A Deborah Renee Procel Fontana, CA British and American Literature No one can tell me. nobody knows, Where the wind comes from. where the wind goes. A.A. Milne 138 mfg, Jill Keen Parkesburg, PA Psychology L'73me evaporee at soufrante, L'5me douce. I'a'me odorante Des lis divans que j'ai cueillis Dans le jardin de ta pensee, Ou donc les vents I'ont-ils chassee, Cette :-ime adorable des lis? N'est-il plus un parfum qui reste De la suavite celeste, Desjours oh tu m'enveIoppais D'une vapeur surnaturelle. Faite. d'espoir d'amour fidele. De beatitude et de paix? Paul Bourget fi . 7 -. .-.wx ww. - - 'W .1 :V-1.-ab Jackie Lee Oakland, CA BioIogy!Pre-Med iam a BIack!woooOOOOMAN my face my brown bamboofcolored blackfberrylface will spread itself over this western hemisphere and be remembered be sunnnNNGG for i will be called Queen, and walkfmove in blackfqueenlylways and the world shaken by my Blackness will ChannnNNGGEE colors, and be reborn BLACK, Again. sister Sonia Sonchez frq'jflTN... ' J ll Q gig. 'I' 1. 'ill ll 'f.. .1 S 'rs A , l v Q- - . .5 .MY A W f -,,,,,x:.-. ' x +I :' . ,,.AL, l .v h i W ' - ' ' V n f , . .. ' . . ' 'ln Lisp iw Barbara Ann Bruner Pasadena, CA Human Biology ' ' 43, - 1.-1'-VJ' V, '. V, -Y. . - - ,.,- .V ,.,,., .-. x . rl will .' e. .' ,I ,f, G. 'i T . r ,.. , f . 1 ., Y. -,...-x. K., :E-'.::E-'gsfiill ' .. fl. P: :J . , . ,. lW s.4 T- i,'-Qyf ifggfir : 5 ,.,.i.,E f .n - - v-- .. is 139 Juli Bliss Rancho Palos Verdes. CA British and American Literature l have a simple philosophy. Fill what's empty. Empty what's full. And scratch were it itches. - Alice Roosevelt Longworth 4 Patricia Sue Callan, Hacienda Heights, CA Modern European Studies The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom. William Blake ,.- , Melinda Moeur Tempe. Arizona Biology l think success is defined in terms of whether or not people get to do what they perceive as their work. There are so many persons who are females who have not been able to do their work. -Jo-Ann Evans Gardner 141 42 Ruth E. Fisher Littleton, CO BritishfAmerican Literature Nobody can be exactly like me. Sometimes l even have trouble doing it. Tallulah Bankhead If the Aborigine drafted an LQ. test, all of Western civilization would presumably flunk it. Stanley Garn The basis of optimism is sheer terror. Q Oscar Wilde Nancy Harris Woodland Hills, CA French Civilization Adventure is not in the guidebook and Beauty is not on the map. Jerry 81 Flenny Russell Life has always been An eyesore to society. Mason Williams Margaret Kelly Downey Palos Verdes, CA 'Biology lt is only because of rational women that the world survives. M-M,K.P.D. ' Kitty?-Garrett Storage Unit, Montclair, CA Studio Art!French Lit. Those Seniors unable to be included due to circumstances beyond our control: Ann Alexander Marilyn B. Ayenew Nancy Bless Harriet Doerr Jane Eliason Darla Foshee Ann Higgins Suzanne Kovacs Mary R. Loomis Doree Webb 14 his di Q. iii 22 1 --L1 ,wffx x.- 1 mg -1 1 x -?- w. k 'dy -1. . 1 . 1 ' i -b ' Ar A -fry V, t, r, xv. , I px r rx -4-4 X -4.9 I x', 1' - fi -'-sg. X- ---,yy ,QC7 Vx A xx xx . . ' - ,. - X .Al I '5 ' 'FA , .,,JJ 5 jiri' Ln V'- 1 ,L - Ah-J ,-I,-vfxkqx ,P-u. ,. , -f 1' 4 14 46 af' I 'Y' Ffa fit ' -5 ' ' Q E' XV? , -V - 'Y ff ' ' . ? s K ' I ig ' 1 4 lv A 3? , ' F t N , Q T Qi . . 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A - H 'S- ' 157 A2 ffl ..1,Q-31, .- -Aw, ..w.-1-:fi-2 V ' -.---V- N me I 4 H i I r J I f A 1 5 Vi 1 i Melinda Storch, editress Catherine Mclntosh, editress Senior Section Coren Kittredge, editress Carolyn Pollack, assistant Francesca MacArthur, copy Sara Stanley, copy Lisa Reis, copy Robert Herrick, photography Faculty Section Coki Gray. photography Lisa Carmack, photography Lydia D'Moch. illustrations Jenny Morris, illustrations Pam Selleck, illustrations Isabelle Selby, illustrations Student Section Julia Mandeville, organization Anne Kuiper, illustrations Joni Fraser, lettering Cathy Blum photography Cathy Hubbell. photography Introductory Pages Leslie Maizlish, copy Cover Lydia D'Moch General Assistance Brad Lucas Jazan Higgins '75 Tshport, a.d. CCLSKC Keg 661-up Spe,ci0.li5T6 Bamk of Cahfornm HIL 2585 Nliare Porno 'J-9-'f5'M THE CASK AND KEG SET-UP , Youn F'AVORlTv j TAP N R 7' BEER: ., ICED DOWN BUDWEISER TO STAY COLD OLD MILWAUKEE MICHELOE ' sc:-n.l'rz MALT .' 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