Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA)

 - Class of 1997

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Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 1997 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 182 of the 1997 volume:

I Upmn n e Doot . . , 7 9 9 6-1997 7 n e. u ce o Aoumni Relations at f ve eof a e y, ( o elvef A cunni nou.e FJiet ton, Ca tpf nia 92834-6826 wm VMTLM Club page — 1 _ . . . Graduating Clai i kTMl ■J jj i Aorj JIB new doors . . . r r ; Opening New Doors . . . College provides the keys. George G. Golleher Alumni House (left) and Library North (top). Doors opened Fall 1996. Campus life 5 pcenes from campus -Two students shop for jewelry between classes. -Elsewhere, a student has a leisurely lunch with a textbook. -Another student makes sure not a spot of makeup is out of place. -Meanwhile, someone is more concerned with the grade on his upcoming midterm exam. -In the food court, classmates debate how to spend their weekend. -A swimmer is spending her day getting closer to nature. All of these things happen every day at California State University, Fullerton. All of these people are you, your best friend or the stranger who caught your eye from a distance and you never saw again. These pictures and this book are about all of us, alumni and soon-to-be alumni, and what we did while we were here. 3ll the old fairdliar places. . . II • « K.i ggg TTr 3Jnjs -! ■ ■ TSi H H L iAr Q ' PU v. ' ,r7— i-.-- ' j8 o much to learn, so little time. . . Whether it is math, English, anthropology or engi- neering, the classroom is definitely the place to learn. It is in these rooms that we learn what a hyperbole is and why the square root of 1 00 is always 1 0. Often times we enter a class- room with no idea of the subject matter at hand and walk away frb ' m that same class with a better under- standing of why knowledge is power. I 1 Campus Life 1 1 CUhen class is out Everybody knows that learning is preeminent at Cal State Fullerton, but not all learning takes place in a classroom. Sitting at a desk all day would drive anybody crazy. That is why getting out of the classroom and doing other things is important. Talking with friends during a break between classes, listening to tunes at the weekly concerts or catching up on homework are all integral parts of campus living. Passing the tests of life can be just as important as a history or math test, and the only way to study for life ' s tests is to have a ij ;:ii:4 .,. - - . , ■ J MJ . H L OPEI mc NEW . . - 1 2 g tHe Bills Starving student may be a cliche, but it holds true. To many students, it seems that life consists of two things; school and work. No matter what a person does, money from the job - never seems to stretch far -i. enough. '  ™ - Cal State Fullerton employs 1? over 600 students. From Athlet- ics to the University Center, the • i opportunities to help the univer- ' r sity and earn extra money in the mean time are endless. Juggling Z school, a social life and a job is Z sometimes difficult. Many students agree that they often . t ' times feel overextended. •■ T Alumni Relations, student ' I assistant, Carey Serrano summed it up by saying: The .• experience is great and knowing Jr the end results makes it all seem ' worth it! Opening New doors 14 Campus Life 15 Time spent working and learning often provides a stark contrast to the precious time spent playing. Since striving for a higher education can be exhaust- ing, time to relax and unwind is always well deserved. Whether it consists of blowing up asteroids in the arcade or participating in intramural sports, play time is the best time. WORLD BEAT NATIONAL I 5 The U.S. Army issues strict new policies for drill instructors and female trainees, as hundreds of complaints of sexual harassment are revealed in Nouember. Drill instructors are now required to leave their doors open if a female is inside, and women must travel in pairs. Binti Jua. a gorilla at Chicago ' s Brookfield Zoo. becomes a hero when she rescues a 3-year-old boy knocked unconscious after falling 1 8 feet into the ape enclosure. The boy suffers brain contusions but soon recovers. _ Former U.N ambassador Madeleine Albright is nominated for Secretary of State by President Clinton on December 5. Confirmed in office in January 1 997, Albright is the first vuoman to head the State Department. Robert Allison. Contact Press Images After thousands of veterans complain of illnesses since the 1 991 Persian Gulf War, the Pentagon warns they may have been exposed to chemical weapons. The Pentagon reveals that up to two tons of sarin nerve gas may have been released. Six-year-old beauty pageant queen JonBenet Ramsey is found murdered in the basement of her parents ' Colorado home the day after Christmas. Her death raises a nationwide awareness of controversial youth beauty pageants. Speaker of the House Nevirt Gingrich (R-Georgia) is fined $300,000 in a bi-partisan vote after the House Ethics Committee ' s year-long investigation into alleged financial improprieties. J Seven-year-old pilot Jessica Dubroff IS killed when her Cessna airplane crashes shortly after take-off in bad weather from the Cheyenne, Wyoming airport. Her flying instructor and her father the plane ' s two passengers, are also killed in the April 1996 crash. WAmA - - -r - One of the T longest armed stand-offs in U.S. history occurs outside Jordan, Montana between the FBI and members of an anti- government group calling itself the Freemen. The 81 -day siege ends peacefully in June. C Theodore Kaczynski, alleged 1 to be the Unabomben who killed 3 people and wounded more than 20 others with mail bombs since 1978, is arrested in Montana in April 1996, Information provided by Kaczynski ' s brother leads to the arrest. On August 1 1 , a boater rescues 1 0-year-old Taylor Touchstone from the snake- and alligator- infested waters of a Florida swamp 1 4 miles away from where he disappeared August 7. Although exhausted and badly scratahed, the autistic boy recovers fully Af-;Wide Wufiu William Jefferson Clinton defeats Republican Bob Dole and Independent H. Ross Perot to become the 42nd president of the US, and the last president of the 20th century, Clinton IS the first Democrat since Franklin Roosevelt to be reelected to a second term. - A civil |ury finds former football T star 0- J Simpson liable for the June 12. 1994 wrongful deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole Brovun Simpson, and her friend. Ronald Goldman, In a unanimous verdict, the jury awards $8,5 million in compensatory damages to Goldman ' s parents. The Brown and Goldman families are each awarded $12 5 million in punitive damages. tKoftfe mgestaTies sny,S, ctarsnilsJs Mrtana itietHani SI J Nationwide, f forest fires ■lacken more than «ice the acreage lost 3 fires in an average ear California, lontana and Oregon ire particularly hard hit. cuncy guara Hichard Jewell investigated as a suspect in the July Olympic Park bombing. After three months of media frenzy, during which Jewell is a virtual prisoner in his home, the U.S. Justice Department admits there is no evidence against him. X Carolina ' s traditionally alknale military academy, admits four women, including Petra Loventinska (left) and Jesnie Montavlos Montavlos and another female cadet later drop out. citing harassment and sadistic hazing. All 110 people aboard a r ValuJet DC-9 are killed in May 1 996 when a fire breaks out in the cargo hold The plane, en route from Miami to Atlanta, crashes and disappears almost completely into the Florida Everglades, making it difficult for workers to retrieve wreckage. - Topsail Beach, a town on an T island off the coast of North Carolina, is one of many Eastern locations hit hard by Hurricane Bertha in July Six powerftjl hurricanes, all with winds over 110 miles per hour, made 1996 a near-record year doing $3,5 billion in damage in the U,S, [-year-old first ipy,, grader Johnathan Prevette is suspended from his Lexington, North ' Carolina elementary school , ' for violating the city schools ' sexual conduct guidelines— he kissed a female classmate. Prevette is quickly reinstated after a nationwide controversy over the sus - ' ■■■■ ' - ' ' P p NATIONAL g8HBm 1 SCIENCE flash A 9,300-year-old skeleton discovered in July near Richland, Washington is the oldest and most intact set of human bones ever discovered in North America. Research is suspended, however, as the tribes from the Native American grounds vuhere it is found claim the skeleton as an ancestor and vuant the bones buried. American T astronaut Shannon Lucid (right) spends 1 88 days in space, breaking American space endurance records after |oining the crew of the Russian space station Mir. Trauma Seal, a new medical adhesive that is applied like a lip-balm stick, is in clinical trials at 10 hospitals and health care institutions nationwide. The biodegradable adhesive could eliminate stitches and return visits. New York Police Department canines begin wearing three- pound, infrared cameras, scouting out potentially dangerous areas before police officers enter the scene. Handlers are developing bullet-proof vests for the dogs to wear. A new category of animal is discovered in the form of bacteria that live on the lips of lobsters. Symbion pandora, which lives on food scraps from lobster lips, is called the zoological highlight of the decade. Videogame giant Nintendo T releases its long-awaited Nintendo 64, a new hardware system that draws players into the game and moves three times faster than any existing system. A An expedition to raise the t Titanic, the legendary unsinkable ocean liner that sank on Its maiden voyage in 1912. from its North Atlantic grave more than two miles deep, ends in failure in August due to rough seas. ■ ' . ' ■• .- ' ■:„ - I .Wa • ' h ' .- - ' 4 I The Mars - - Surveyor Trolley named Sojourner is carried on-board Mars Pathfinder, an unmanned spacecraft launched in December Sojourner a free-roving probe the size of a child ' s wagon, will photograph the Martian surface and determine the composition of rocks on Mars. X In August, scientists T ' discover evidence of bacteria-like life on a meteorite found in 1 984 and believed to be part of the crust of Mars 4.5 billion years ago. It is the first possible proof that life is not unique to Earth. Satellite dishes become one of the year ' s hottest-selling electronic consumer products. Owners find the savings of not paying for cable services cover the cost within a few months. EchosWf Communications Coip KD Wean Jrasii tallngttl i California ' s T Monterey Bay Aquarium opens a new wing in March 1996 The million-gallon indoor ocean showcases Che marine life of the outer reaches of Monterey Bay. 5 to 60 miles offshore - The Hubble Space Telescope captures new images of quasars, the universe ' s most powerful and baffling phenomena. Previously thought only to exist in colliding galaxies, new pictures indicate quasars can also exist in undisturbed galaxies — causing astronomers to revisit their theories. 1996 Monlerev Bav Aquaiium, Pliologfapliy by Randy WildeJ [tie Mare 1jvbp ' Ti  | iDtoani !W() f,ai edsfBcecraft Jinteamliff BT.aterc. ' : fPAVideWorlo nMars. % Steam and ash ' from Iceland ' s Lokl volcano blast 33,000 feet In the air on October 9. Molten ly; rock from the volcano ' s : 5-mlle-wide fissure melts through more than 2,000 feet of glacial Ice, threatening the island with widespread flooding. Id ' s largest flower, the um, also known as the corpse flower, blooms in London ' s Kew Gardens for the first time 1963. The flower is nicknamed its strong stench when in blooi ' earch gests that hon. can keep middle-aged men stronger and more youthful. A testosterone- releasing s called Androderm is; prescribed by many doctors to supplement natural hon ¥ - An oxygen bar in Toronto, Canada allows patrons to pay $1 6 to spend 20 minutes breathing pure oxygen. The owners of the Oj Spa Bar claim the treatment is a healthy way to reinvigorate the body and offer fruit flavors to liven up the experience. Paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey, shown with husband Louis Leakey in a 1 959 photograph, dies in December Discoveries by the Leakeys throughout their careers are some of the most important in paleoanthropological history Her greatest discovery was a trail of 3.7-million-year- old footprints, which proved that hominids walked upright far earlier than previously believed The Smithsonian Institution celebrates the 1 5Qth anniversary of its founding with a nationwide tour of prize exhibits. including this stovepipe hat worn by Abraham Lincoln. UPl ' Corbis-Betlmann SCIENCa FACES Former NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle dies on December 6. Rozelle is credited with transforming professional football into America ' s top spectator sport, and with inventing the Super Bowl. Basketball megastar Michael Jordan launches his own cologne: Michael Jordan Cologne. Demand for the fragrance is so high that manufacturer Bijan Fragrances limits sales to 1 2 bottles per customer The ever-present Cindy Crawford releases a book on applying make-up. Basic Face enjoys a long run on the best-seller lists. The National Women ' s Hall of Fame opens in Seneca Falls, New York, inducting 11 women, including author Louisa May Alcott, and Oveta Culp Hobby, the nation ' s first female colonel. Archbishop of Chicago, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin dies of pancreatic cancer in November Bernardin was known for being a reconciler in churches torn between tradition and modern culture, as well as for speaking out against physician- assisted suicide. ' phane Cardinaie Svgni,i ' % In a small, secret ceremony on an island off the coast of Georgia, John F Kennedy Jr. marries Carolyn Bessette, a Calvin Klein publicist, in September. Kennedy who dated Bessette tor two years, had long been considered one of the world ' s most eligible bachelors. - New York Yankees fan Jeffrey 1 Maier interferes with a fly ball during game one of the American League Championship Series on October 9. The hit is ruled a home run. tying the game 4 to 4 In the eighth inning and making Maier New York ' s hero for a day m SHC e ' iJht ■Muhammad Al Etlie final athlete to Hiear the Olympic [torch, lighting the [Olympic flame at the opening of the ft, ' ' Olympics in Atlanta Ln July 19. ■■ Miss , Kansasjr JQf ftL Tara DavMn k ;!j bH Holland, is crowned Miss America at the H ' 1 996 pageant on L « September 14. k V Angela Lansbury appears in her final season as mystery writer Jessica Fletcher on CBS ' s Murder, She Wrote. The hugely successful show ran for 18 seasons. Basketball player Kobe Bryant joins the Los Angeles Lakers straight out of high school, signing a multi- million dollar contract during the team ' s 1 996-1 997 season. inedy Liliraiy ' More than 4,CXD0 items owned by former First Lady Jacquelyn Kennedy Onassis and President John R Kennedy are auctioned off in April 1996, including a necklace of simulated pearls shown in this 1 962 photograph. The fake pearls, valued at $500 to $700. sell for $21 1 ,500, bringing the auction total to $34.5 million. 1 nuk ■ Ti r Tj l yR Wmk J, m Lee AfchivePhoios J M ' m y - Veteran comedian George Burns T dies in March 1 998, |ust weeks after reaching the age of 100. The legendary Burns won an Oscar, an Emmy ind a Grammy Award in an illustrious career dating back to vaudeville. As a stand against the invasion of his privacy, George Clooney, star of NBC ' s ER, boycotts Paramount ' s Entertainment Tonight after its sister show Hard Copy runs unauthorized footage of the actor ' s private life. « ' ■ FACES ENTERTAINMENT flash Torn Cruise stars in Jerry Magure, a romantic comedy about a sports agent who decides to change his shallow ways, and spends the rest of the movie trying to regain his success. It is a breekthrough role for Cruise, who is normally depicted as a cocky winner. To honor the SOth anniversary of its release, producer George Lucas issues a remade Star Wars, with new scenes, computeriied special effects and soupedmp animatian. Lucas ' grand plan calls tor a nii film cycle, including prequels. EngKsh actor director Kenneth Branagh plays Hamlet in hts star- studded remake of Shakespeare ' s ciasstc Despte running fbur hours. the movie is a critical and faoiM ffics s u ccess . NBC Thursday night drama ER features television ' s first HIV- positive prominent charecter. Jeanie Boulet, a physician ' s assistartt played by Gkirw Reuben, is relatiiMly open about her cortdition and helps confront the stigma olAIDS. wm Patrick Stewart (left) and Brent Spiner (right] star in Star Trek: First Contact, a movie featuring cfiaracter s from the TV show Star Trel : The Next Generation. Ifwft.«k scon w Scott Adams ' Dilbert. the T comic strip about office politics, captures the nation ' s imagination In book form, The Dilbert Principle becomes a national best-seller. ■The Draw Shotti a zany sk-com about; workingclass Wamer Bros. TV from Shooting spmr ElEB _ Actors Winona Ryder and Daniel Day-Lewis star in The Crucible, which opens in December The screen adaption of Arthur Miller ' s famous play about the Salem witch trials is written by Arthur Miller himself. -. Academy Award- r winning actor Tom Hanks ' first effort at directing receives critical praise when That Thing You Do!, a movie about the meteoric rise and fall of a 1960s rock band, opens in October 201(1 Centurv Fox Ifom Shooting Slai : fan Model Brooke Shields [center] moves to television in NBC ' s Suddenly Susan, a sit-com premiering in September Shields plays a columnist opposite magazine editor Judd Nelson (far right]. ' Sherry Stringfield, Dr Susan Lewis on NBC ' s ER, leaves the show at the peak of her character ' s popularity. In her final episode, when Dr Mark Greene, played by Anthony Edwards, declares his love for Susan, the show garners Its highest ratings ever r I _ Author Michael I Crichton 1 publishes The Lost World, a I sequel to I Jurassic Park. the colossal novel and movie The new book promises to generate just as much hype, with a movie already in the works. iSiKi« - « featinug I neralm ' i. . Explosive special T effects rivet audiences to ther seats as tfiey watcfi Independence Day. one of summer ' s blockbuster movies. fc Bugs Bunny and Chiicago Bulls basketball star Michael Jordan basketball star Michael Jordan share top billing in Space Jam. a partially animated feature film that opens in late November 4 MinnjacIDf rts ' freteSrt o,|, cenlury Fox from Shooting Star Actors Brad Pitt (left) and Jason Patric star in Sleepers, a film about four men and iieir extraordinary scheme to evenge the abuse they experienced as boys The controversial movie also stars Dustin Hoffman. Robert De Niro and Kevin Bacon. ibtttte tree ami fi )siw to September, nardo prio and Claire ines star as the classic star-crossed in the film I and Juliet. Tom Cruise stars in Mission: Impossible, based on the 1 9BOs and ' 70s television series of the same name. Despite critical put-downs, the movie is a huge box-office hit. _ v John Lithgow (front right) T earns both an Emmy and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Comedy Series in NBC ' s 3rd Rock From the Sun, a sit-com about a family of aliens living in contemporary America. , America ' s favorite sit-com T father. Bill Cosby en|oys the success of his new CBS show, Cosby In January 1997, however tragedy strikes as Cosby ' s son Ennis is killed in Los Angeles in an apparent random robbery ENTERTANMEN MUSIC ■- British pop T superstars Liam (left) and Noel Gallagher cancel the remainder of a U.S. concert tour in September amid rumors that their band. Oasis, is breaking up. Denying the reports, the brothers announce they will release a new album in the summer of 1 997, mm i Guitarist Slash of Guns N ' Roses forms his own band. His new group, Slash ' s Blues Ball, is a six-man blues band grounded in the blues- based hard rock of the 1970s. Rocker Sheryl Crow joins the ranks of musicians who hav e had their albums banned from Wal-Mart. The retail giant objects to a lyric alleging that kids kill each other with guns they obtained from the store. Canadian pop artist Celine T Dion tops the charts in 1 996 with the album Falling Into You, which sells more than 1 6 million copies worldwide. - After 10 years of separation, members X of the band Van Halen are reunited with their former lead singer David Lee Roth (right), at the MTV Video Music Awards in September Roth later claims he though t he was rejoining the band, who chose a different lead singer. - Heavy metal band Metallica T IS the headlining act for the summer concert Lollapalooza. traditionally an alternative-rock show. Metallica remains high- profile, winning an MTV award for the year ' s Best Hard Rock Video in September ■336 G TO of 1997 e Jennings LGI Vih- ' , The hit T single Where It ' s At kicks off the new ' Beck album Odelay. which is released to popular and critical acclaim. Spin magazine ' awards Beck Artist of the Year. - No Doubt, fronted by lead 1 singer Gwen Stefani. releases Tragic Kingdom, which includes such chart-toppers as Just a Girl. Spiderwebs. and Don ' t Speak. : |. Counting Crows ' second album, T Recovering Che Satellites, is released in October The long awated follow-up to 1 993 ' s August and Everything After debuts at number one on the charts W C George Strait is honored by the T Country Music Association in October with three ma|or awards — Single of the Year for Check Yes or No. Album of the Year for Clear Blue Sky. and Male Vocalist of the Year. e Hashimoto ' NGI irom LGI InMosenfelder, LGI mge ' snrt .,- ' i:r 4. Aianis Morisseties Jagged Little Pill reigns the charts. 2coming the all-time top-selling bum by a female artist, tonssette also dominates the 996 Grammys by winning four wards, including Best Album. f gangsta rap, begins distancing himself from hard-core rap. Been There, Done That, his brealt-away anthem, premieres on JVITV in September. R.E.M. ' slSth album. New Adventures in HhFi, the group ' s first recording . since 1994 ' s Monster, ' is released by Warner Bros, in September. -X Fourteen-year-old singing T sensation LeAnn Rimes is ' lominated for the Country Music Association ' s Horizon Award after Ithe breakthrough success of her ■single Blue. The popular new star lis often compared to country Imusic legend Patsy Cline. v Die Wallflotwers, with , Jakob Dylan, son legendary folk artist Bob Dylan, release Bringing I the Horse, which features singles One Headlight and 61 Avenue Heartache. - Tom Braxton ' s second album. 1 Secrets, is released in summer 1 996 Braxton wins R B Single of the Year for Let It Flow at the Billboard Music Awards in the fall. Uitja -j , The music world is stunned in 1 September by the death of rapper Tupac Shakur. killed in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. Speculations as to the killer ' s motive abound, but the year ends with no answers and no arrests. MUSIC SPORTS Tennis pro Pete Sampr wins the eighth grand- slam title of his career at the U.S. Open in September. Steffi Graf wuins the U.S. Open Women ' s title, beating Monica Seles. Pro boxer Mike Tyson loses his Heavyweight Champion of the World title to Evander Holyfield in a November match. Holyfield, a former tvwHime worid cf mpion, reclaims his title in tfie surprise win. - I Chicago Bulls star Dennis Rodman furthers his controversial reputation by kicking a photographer in the groin during a game against the Minnesota Timberwoh es in January 1997. Rodman is suspended for up to 1 1 games without pay, costing him more than $1 million, in addition to a $25,000 fine to the NBA, as well as a reported S200.000 settlement with the photographer. Baltimore Orioles second baseman Roberto Alomar is suspended for five games, deferred to the 1997 season, when he spits on an umpire during a heated argument over a questionable call in the National League play-offs. Controversy ensues over the leniency of the punishment. m i HB- The New York T Yankees win the World Series, beating the Atlanta Braves in a four-game sweep, after losing the first two games. It is the first series title for the Yankees since 1978 _ V Team USA wins the World 1 Cup of Hockey, beating Canada 5-2 in the final. Eight teams from Canada, Europe and the U.S. participate in the World Cup. which replaced the Canada Cup. « Belio, Allsport Twenty-year-old golfing I phenom Eldrick ' Tiger Woods turns pro in August, making the transition from exceptional amateur goiter to well-endorsed professional, including a deal with Nike worth an estimated $40 million. Al Bello. Allsport Paul Molitor of the 1 Minnesota Twins becomes the 21st player in major league history to reach 3,000 career hits. The milestone is reached in September, when Molitor triples against Kansas City Royals rookie pitcher Jose Rosado. Race car driver Terry Labonte wins NASCAR ' s Winston Cup championship with a total of 4,657 points after finishing fifth in the final race, the Napa 500, at the Atlanta Motor Speedway ,| Led by quarterback Brett Favre. the Green Bay Packers beat the New England Patriots 35-21 in Super Bowl XXXI at the Louisiana Superdome It is the Packers ' first Super Bowl since 1 988, Craig Jones, Allspoil H f 1 ' , ' iefcrh sraig7g 9 6 USA Totlay feonnled with permission The U.S. T women ' s gymnastics team takes the gold at the Summer Olympics. Kern Strug, second from right, is the heroine of the competition, landing her final vault despite a dislocated left ankle j , US. swimmer Amy Van Dyken wins the women ' s 1 0O-meter butterfly event at the Olympic Games with a time of 59.13 seconds. Van Dyken wins a total of four golds. ' .w C ,  ■ r - Thp Chicago Bulls win their I fourth NBA championship in six years as they defeat the Seattle SuperSonics in game six of the NBA finals on June 16. •U ? ii lesrate! ' Motor l! )iio Olympic swimmer Tom Dolan captures another id for the U.S. as he wins e 400-meter individual medley July 21 Dolan wins with a neof 4 14 90 - kethe gold medal in the decathlon, a ■■ , lOevent jL April 1996 marks the I 1 0Oth running of the Boston Marathon. More than 38,000 contenders participate. fH ' X. Jean Driscoll (front right) of the I U S. takes the silver in the women ' s 800-meter wheelchair race, a demonstration sport, at the Summer Olympics. Driscoll. seven-time winner of the Boston Marathon, retires at the end of 1996, after setting several world records during her career. AP Wide World - Minnesota Twins star ' centerfielder Kirby Puckett iinounces his retirement from iseball in July A serious eye llment forces Puckett to give up le game, but he manages to laintain his upbeat attitude at ' ess conferences and interviews. Michael Johnson wins the 200-meter final in a world-record time of 19.32 seconds. Johnson ' s triumph comes three days after he wins the 400-meter race, making him the first man to win both events in one Olympics. ] 2370 m «. Reulers Arcfiive Photos K -Jt Basketball star Shaquille O ' Neal 1 jumps from the Orlando Magic to the Los Angeles Lakers in July The deal is the richest in NBA history, paying O ' Neal $1 20 million over 7 years. SPORTS LIFESTYLE ■:m I flash Helping consumers maintain privacy, marketers promote home AIDS tests. Consumers draw their own blood and then send it away to be tested confidentially. Advancing technology means more options on telephones, including Caller ID, which becomes more common than ever in 1996, The display unit allows people to see the name and number of their caller before even answering the phone. Authors Ellen Fein and Sherrie Schneider release The Rules, a controversial manual teaching women strategies for getting a man to propose marriage. While the book draws criticism from both sexes, it is a best-seller The U.S. Postal Service issues stamps commemorating Hanukkah, the first non- Christian religious holiday ever featured on a stamp. Casual Fridays become more and more widespread in American work culture. Businesses allow employees who normally dress in professional clothing at work to wear more comfortable, casual clothing on Fridays. r Campus life 17 Wim i-.: ... I — , ' - Partici pating in sports at the college level is a dream come true for every athlete who hopes of being a Heisman Trophy winner, an All-Ameri- can or an MVP. ' College athletes are different than professional or recreational athletes because they understand that sports j are no longer just fun and games and they know their only compensation will be personal satisfaction. A collegiate ._ . athlete understands that hard work opens doors to a profes- sional career. College sports are truly about dedication and the love for the game r- .: : :: : . EEK SQUAD ' m Before the summer of 1994 thecal State Fuller- ton Cheer Squad was not very active. Despite little financial support from the university, members of the squad have performed well and represented CSUF to the best of their abilities. Each year the squad travels to different cities to compete in a national tournament. Previous tournaments have produceQ outstanding results for the Titan team. In 1995 the cheer squad placed 7th in Dallas and the next year in Daytona the squad finished 9th. Other accomplishments include a first place finish in dance cheer at the 1994 Cheerleading Camp. Members of the squad feel that their unity helps to form strong friendships and deliver strong performances. -A The CSUF Cheer Squad has won multiple awards, including a 1st place in dance at the 1994 Summer Cheerleading Camp (below left). Being a member of the squad means spending many hours together living, being friends and eating (below right). % Fall 1 996 was a season of firsts for the Cal State Fullerton women ' s volleyball team. They established a high winning per- centage with a 16-13 record and i von a school record six confer- ence games. The team narrowly missed a trip to the Big West championship, despite being one Df the top teams in this very tough conference. ' This team worked really lard all year, Coach Murchison said. ' They were committed to turning this program around, and [hey did. Senior outside hitter Heather Bassett was named to :he all-conference first team. leading the Big West with 4.58 kills per game and finishing sec- ond with 3.12 digs per game. Five players finished their Titan careers in 1996: Bassett, Shelly Smith, Heather Humphreys, Jennifer Adeva and Jennifer Erickson. The Titans will have six returning players in 1997, includ- ing setter Melissa Blackler, middle blocker Stephanie Cargill, and outside hitter LaCretia Smith. This year ' s success will help make recruiting top players easier and the resurgence of the volleyball team should continue into the future. Whoever feels that fall sports are uneventful because there is no football program, hasn ' t experi- enced the excitement of Cal State Fullerton soccer. Once again the men ' s soccer team finished another spectacular year. An early season victory over national champs Wisconsin and a 2-2 tie against No. 1 Virginia helped Fullerton to achieve a No. 2 national ranking, the highest in the program ' s history. This season fulfilled all of our pre-season ex- pectations, says head coach A! Mistri, who is in his 1 7th year. The team came together and we set a record with the fewest losses in a season. They finished the season with a 1 1-4-5 record, and gained a NCAA bid. The first round game matched the Titans up against the top-ranked UCLA Bruins. Senior. Tom Helmer broke a 1-1 tie as the Titans advanced with an incredible 2-1 victory. The season came to an end in the second round, with a heartbreaking 4-2 penalty kick loss to Creighton. ' ' ' .;C ; , ' - -« lttWli ■ ' Junior transfer, Sheldon Thomas lead the Titans with 1 7 goals and earned na- tional recognition as a second team ail-American. Other top players were sopho- mores, Brian Dunseth and Joey DiGiamarino who will both play with the U.S. national team in the spring.! ,,- „. ■. s ; .. The 1 996 season saw the women ' s team take another giant leap towards ' na- tional recognition. By winning their section of the Big West Conference, the women not only played in but hosted the first ever Big West Conference Tournament. Although they did not win the tournament Coach Mistri considered it a success. The tournament, due to it ' s great attendance and the money it brought in, was a success, he said. This will ensure that this will become an established tournament and source of recognition. The Lady Titans compiled an impressive 1 3-6-2 record this season. The team, was led once again by the goals of Dolores Browning (1 7) and t he dominant f goaltending of senior Suzy Strazulla For the 1 997 season Mistri expects to have the best recruiting year in a long time. Early predictions are that 7 top players will join the men and 4 for the women. v } s : ' -- ' ■■ ««i Sports 22 s| Amber Dickey has her eyes on the Cal Poly Eugene Brooks goes for a defensive sUde-tackle Defense (above). in a game against Creighton (above). ; i- I Tom Helmer attacks with a burst of speed (below). For both the men ' s and women ' s basketball teams the 1996-97 sea- son featured impressive wins and improved records at the begining. The end results, how- ever, may not of have been what either team hoped for. The men ' s team opened the season with three incredible road wins, the first being a 75- 67 victory over Brigham Young and the next two being narrow wins over Montana and Loyola Marymount. After jump- : • 1 _Jf ' V MM | J| .•! jB ■ -■ spoi J 2 ' T ing to a 9-6 record the Titans suffered their worst loss of the sea- son when leading scorer and rebounder John Williams frac- tured a bone in his right wrist. The Titans won four of their re- maining games to finish with a 13-14 record. Coach Bob Hawking believes that this season was a major step forward and is convinced that next year ' s team will be even better. Al- ready recruited and signed for next season is a 6 11 center to add to the solid play of juniors Chris Dade and Chris St. Clair and freshmen Josh Leighton and Dane Plock. The Lady Titans experienced early season success with pre-season wins over Georgia State and Eastern Washington and bursting to a 5-1 record. Unfortunately, inexperience led to a mid-season 8-game losing streak. The Lady Titans finished with an overall record of 10-18. The season did provide the Lady Titans with great wins over Long Beach State, the first in six years, and they ended a five year drout with a win against New Mexico State. Sophmore Dee[ confei Keyrt ledthi Kris Sigg goes for two of her 212 season points (opp. page, top right). Junior Chris Dade started 25 of 27 games this season for the Titans (opp. page, lower left). Dee Braxton led the Big West with 50 steals in 1997 (top left). Dirk Rassloff showed his determination by playing in every game this season for the men (above). Andrea Thieme fights with Long Beach State defenders for a rebound (left). Mark Richardson tries to make his way around the defense for two of his 117 season points (below). ice led itreak. overall ;Lady Beach ley in ifnore Dee Braxton led the Lady Titans and the conference in rebounding and steals, earn- ing her all-Big West Conference recognition. Coach Deborah Ayers feels that the signing of three top players will compensate for the loss of the only senior Kim Cram. Key returners will be Andrea Thieme, who led the conference in scoring and assists, as well as Braxton. :¥ Coach John Elders had high expectations at the beginning of his 9th year as head coach of the Cal State Fullerton cross country team. Unfortunately, due to the loss of the top three competitors for the men and a late season flu bug that attacked the women ' s team, those expectations were not completely fulfilled. It was an up-and-down season for the women, said Elders. The first half of the season was great but sickness and health were big problems towards the end. The men ' s team suffered from lack of depth and experience. The pre-season loss of three major runners kept the men from finishing in the top five of the Big West conference. Through all of the hardships both teams still managed to compete well. The women finished 6th in the conference and the men finished 8th. Top runners for the women were Sara McDougall, Sonia Perez and Teresa Santana. Top runners for the men were Luis Baca and Stuart Gonzalez. mM Elders expects good recruiting and three full-ride scholarships for the men and five for the women to help solidify the team. With the right amount of scholarship money and re- cruits, we can dominate the Big West next year and every year, Elders said confidently. Sara McDougall led the way for the women (top). Phil Sitner strides on (left). Denisha Dendz focuses on the finish (right). ■ - 26 1 fe I (depth ingin m sBaca ivefof I 1.-- . - vi - Hidden away and secluded on the top floor of ' = the gymnasium, Coach Heizabura Okawa and his ; Cal State Fullerton fencing team may possibly be the schools best kept secret. Although on campus the fencing team is out of the public eye, the rest of the Big West confer- ence can ' t help but notice them. This past season the men ' s team finished first in overall competition and the women finished the season second overall. The men ' s fencing team features such outstanding individuals as Brian Clawson, who was the top epee fencer in the conference and finished 15th at the national champion- ships, and Renato Gates, who competed and placed first in the conference in the foil division and 24th at the national championships. The women ' s team also produced talented individuals like Karen Lieu, who finished first in the conference in the foil divi- sion but was unable to compete for the national title because of one loss, the only blemish on her record. Coach Okawa did not expect such good results out of a team that doesn ' t have the benefit of scholarships and relies on talent of first-time fencers and coaching ability. Everyone on the team is a j walk-on and many team members join after an en- joyable experience in the fencing class. Coach Okawa is confident that he can teach people how to become good fencers as long as they have the drive and dedication. The epee-wielding Brian Clawson fenced his way to the national championships this season (top). Fencer Karen Lieu takes a break OPENING NEW DOORS between matches (left). :ii«rl •,- - 27 Titan baseball struggled somewhat this season, but held its own against such top as teams Stanford, University of Arizona and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. The Titans won seven of their first nine in a pre-season schedule that included five nationally ranked = - ' - ■ — ' — — - — teams. Cal State Fullerton opened the season against Stanford, taking two out of three from the Cardinal. In the subsequent series, CSUF swept Arizona, outscoring the Wildcats 51-28 at Tucson. The Titans opened Big West Conference play at Long Beach State, dropping two of three to the 49ers, but they bounced back to sweep San Luis Obispo a week later. In the middle of the season, the Titans hosted the Anaheim Angels at Titan Field for a fund-raiser that offered CSUF players a thrilling experience to play with the big-leaguers. M Pitcher John Alkire was recruited from Tennessee this season to help solidify the Titan pitching staff (top right). CJ. Ankrum takes an aggressive lead on the basepath (below). Nakia Hill is greeted by teammates after hitting home-run against Pepperdine (below). 4 After a rocky start, the Cal State Fullerton Softball team is getting into the swing of things mid-way through the season. The team started off losing five of the first seven games and turning in a disappointing performance at the Tournament of Champions, where they lost four straight games. The team did, however, strike back and provide a glimpse of the future when they hosted the Pony Invitational. The team had impressive wins over Georgia State, USL and Florida. While students celebrated their spring break, the Softball team was hard at work. Over the break the team found their form, posting a 5-1 record against number 28 Tennessee, number 10 Long Beach State and UC Santa Barbara. The team then stood poised and ready to take a shot at con- ference-leading New Mexico State. Led by the strong arms of pitchers Jana Oetgen and Donna Coombes and the solid hitting of Dara Marzolo, Rachel Olvera and Niki Hart, the Titans appeared well pre- pared to put together a good finish to the 1997 season. The team will try to gain ground in the conference to earn an opportunity to par- ticipate in post-season play. Inf ielders take a time out for a conference on the mound (top). Pitcher Jana Oetgen led the team in wins with an 8-6 record in early April (middle). A bird ' s eye view of the Titan softball complex (left). OPENING NEW DOORS 29 §4 USTg Tomas Montoya, who was unbeaten during the 96-97, is down only temporarily (above) •- : t - For the 1 997 Cal State Fullerton wrestling team, this year ' s season was focused on gaining experience and rebuilding for next year. A limited budget and the transfer of a top returner, hampered the team ' soverall outcome. Al- though the team struggled through the Pac-10 and was unable to win a dual meet, the season did however provide some individual highlights. Orlando deCastroverde as well as Steve Duran were both NCAA qualifiers. Head coach Ardeshir Asgari in his fifth year feels that although the team ' s goals were not met, that many individuals performed well. Asgari is confident that goo d re- cruiting will provide the team with the talent they need to compete in the Pac-10. ■■-- -- Off the mats, the wrestling team continued its academic excel- lence. The team was once again ranked amongst the top in cumula- tive grade point averages. -• -• . i .. i ' -. Orlando de Castoverdi (above) and Steve Duran (right) prove that they were worthy of being recog- nized as 2 of Cal State Fullerton ' s best wrestlers. The 1 997 Cal State Fullerton track team was off and running. Despite the ups and downs associated with long track season, coach John Elders was confident that his team would be ready for the Big West Conference meet held May 23-24. The team performed well in a number oftoplnvitational meets. Early in the season the team traveled north to the Stanford Invite where the distance team competed very well. Not to be outdone the sprint team had their best meet of the season at the Mid West Challenge Invitational. Obi Obadike won the 100 meters and in the 200 meter, after pulling out to commanding lead, suffered a pulled ham- string muscle. Coach Elders feels that despite nag- ging injunes his team was consistently improving, as evidenced by the increasing number of personal records being set. Elder had confidence in the dis- tant teams pulling through and was very excited about the potential of the women ' s 4x400 relay team. ? 4 Top athletes were Sara McDougal and Sonia Perez in the s 5000m, Krsytal Harris and Takiesha McNeill in the 400m and Zaylor ,,- Stout in the triple jump- and high jump. - j 99 -J 5 1 , injuries kept Titan run- ners from leading the pack most of the season (right). Despite intense setbacks and competition, the Titan track team always kept its sights aimed high (left). __ rr iv —= . Alejandra M Arredondo lunges M ' -- for a shot (right). M MM Brooke Lacey poised and ready for a return (above). OPENING NEW DOORS 32 The Titan women ' s tennis team was having a rough year as of late April, suffer- ing a 6-14 record. They were winless against their Big West Conference competiton on the season to that point, posting a dismal 0-4 record. The Titans fared quite well however in doubles as No. 1 doubles team members seniorJenniferCanfield and junior Debbie Vonusa dominated in most of their matches throughout the Spring 1997 sea- son. The duo earned a 1 5-5 record in their doubles matches, creating a brilliant mark on what was, overall, a markless team. The team started the season with two seniors, Canfield and Denise Wilson, but lost Wilson half-way through due to per- sonal problems. Canfield, however, hung in and, along with others, helped the team hold its own in tough matches. Vonusa, too, assisted in strenthening the team, but unfortunately the competi- tion proved to be too much for most of the season. A few freshman showed their strengths as well and, as a result, the future of the tennis team looks bright. ; I Courtney Bogart slinks through the floor exercise (top). Sara Taylor strikes a pose on the balance beam (above). Katy Maty lunges toward the vault (right). Coach Lynn Rogers had high expec- tations for his 1996-97 gymnastic team, including a conference championship and an appearance at the national meet. The factor he did not expect was the uncommon strength of the conference competition and late season injuries. r ■■ -J y- ' The nemeses for this year ' s team were the Boise State Bron- cos. Cal State Fullerton was unable to score more points than Boise State in any of the three meets in which both teams ap- peared. The Lady Titans were at their best during the conference championships, recording their best overall score all season with a school record breaking 193.45 points. But the Broncos played the role of spoiler scoring just a few points more. It ' s pretty sad when you score a season high and break the school record and only finish third in a meet , says Rogers. Individual performances took center stage this year. Fresh- man Grade Millard developed into a good all-around gymnast. Sophomore Courtney Bogart produced a no fall season on the balance beam, most likely the most difficult event. Sophomore Katy Maty, if not for a late season knee injury, could have been the first Titan gymnast to compete in the national meet since 1995. Coach Rogers expects to bring in four to five new gymnasts next year to improve the depth of the program. Next year ' s team will be led by seniors Alexis Lott and Michelle Lotta, who both showed improvement this year. The Arts 34 1 Art is perhaps the purest form of expression, but it is also the most complex. It is unfiltered emo- tion, though its meaning often remains hidden. A creator of art has the opportunity to pour their soul into their work, giving it intense personal meaning, which may translate through to the observer or may come across as nothing more than swirls of paint or a few dance steps. Cal State Fullerton helps stu- dents open the door to expressing themselves as best suits them. Starring Lucina Guerrero, Riley Haynes, Hostetler and Jennifer Adams. EASTER With Misty Reams and Ryan Jacobson. FAIJi DANCE THEATre With(l-r) RIMERS OF ELDRITCH With Michael Martinez, Czarina Hizon, Chad Serna and Dannine Consoli Johnson, Kerri Underwood, J.J. Fagan, and Melissa Caywood. SAME DRESS Shannon Mahoney, Keri li(l-r) :iia(i -agan, HAIR With Emily Mitchell, Tom Proprofsky and Danielle Bisutti. COMPANY With Geordie MacMinn (center) and (clockwise) Angela Allen, Rosemary London, Erin Mosher, Heather Cole and KatWeen Gilbert Last Spring ' s production of the 1 960 ' s musical Hair went on to fame beyond the limits of the 1995-1996 school year. The Theatre and Dance Department ' s performances of the musical caught the attention of Michael Butler, who produced the show origi- nally. He chose the Fullerton cast to perform in Chicago over the last month of summer, overlapping with the Demo- cratic National Convention, held August 26-29. The entire cast, though prasied nationwide for its performance, contin- ued rehearsal before heading to the Windy City to perform in the New Ath- enaeum Theatre. Butler donated a portion of the profits from the perfor- mances to AIDS research organizations. THE KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE Starring (1-r) Danielle Bisutti, Laura Raynor and Hilary Russell. SPRING DANCE THEATER Featuring the talents of Kerri Underwood and Shannon Mahoney The Arts 38 THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF NICHOLAS NICKELBY Starring Stephen R. Ohad (left) and Tom Loeprich. te ' • - • ' : ' i ,--7 ' P- ;?},. roduction R6E nd Performed and written by the CSUF Kaleidoscope Players. GIANNI SCHICCHI A one-act opera starring Karen Kudinoff and Brad McMurray. Alex Trinca and Melodic Henderson in WHEN YOU COMIN BACK. RED RYDER? OPENING NEW DOORS 39 The creation story lives on within the walls of the Visual Arts building, where stu- dents mold, fire, paint, carve, even point and dick into tangible form the visions that dance within their heads . This year marked the first time students had the op- portunity to have their work displayed, evaluated and purchased through an on-campus show and competition. Students entered pieces in an exhi- bition that was on display for several weeks and was included as a stop on the bus route for the annual Night in Fullerton cultural event. Tyler Stallings, director of programs for the Huntington Beach Art Center and an important figure in the local art market, came to campus to critique students ' pieces and name winners of the show. Finally, four artists ' works were chosen to be purchased by the University Center and added to its collection. The Arts 40 PENING NEW DOORS 41 Music The Cal State Fullerton had a busy and exciting 1996-1997 school year. Perhaps the most exciting event was the trip taken by members of the Fullerton Jazz Band to Greeley, Colorado in April. The band took part in a na- tional festival in which they played and competed with high school and college jazz bands from across the United States. This year also saw the resurrection of the Barber- shop Extravaganza and the first Percussion Ensemble Festival. The Barbershop event was put on by music fraternity Phi Mu Alpha to raise money for the Paul Woestemeyer Memorial scholar- ship, giving aid to Cal State Fullerton music students. The Per- cussion Ensemble came together on April 12 to host a workshop and performance. The yearly Jazz Un- Festival, in which young mu- sicians perform and have their work critiqued, was held March 22, and the Wind En- semble put on a performance May 16. Next year, the music [ department will put on its first Men ' s Chorus Festival and some CSUF musicians will have the honor of being the only Americans invited to take part in a workshop in Japan. 1 ' ' ■ %. Music students hold their dress rehearsal for the Wind Ensemble concert, held May 16, 1997 (all). ( OPENING NEW DOORS 43 nipersity Stents The most exciting and anticipated things about university life are the events. Attending class, taking mid-terms or writing reports are the reasons we have to go to school. Special events are the reason we want to come to school. This year ' s events included guest speakers Micheal Eisner and Spike Lee as well as yearly cel- ebrations like Greek Week and Springfest. Let ' s not forget events that helped open doors to the future like Communications Week and Commencement. With all of these different events stu- dents have many opportunites to get involved with school. They are, after all, what make school fun. Welco me Week - Building off tine theme The Adventure Continues. . . , Cal State Fullerton spent the first two weeks of each semester wel- coming students to the campus. Sponsored by the Office of Stu- dent Life, Welcome Week actually con- sisted of two weeks in September and two more in February dur- ing which students were overwhelmed with information about opportunities for learning and fun available on and off campus. Spring of this year marked the first time Welcome Week ' s most visible events, ClubFest and DiscoverFest, merged into one huge two-day festivity. Hundreds of students filled the Quad, milling over tables of information about everything from the Greek system to the Catholic Newman Club, from the Discovering Your University Center table to the free tacos courtesy of the Off-Campus Pub. Everyone who came walked away know- ing more about what Cal State Fullerton has to offer. Students filled the Quad during ClubFest DiscoverFest, February 10-11 (top). During this event, various clubs distributed informa- tion to potential members (middle). Students flocked to the free tacos handed out courtesy of the Off Campus Pub (left). Opening New Doors 45 Concert ndef the Stars r-- Open Students, faculty, staff, alumni and members of the community gathered on September 20 for the 1 3th Annual Concert Under The Stars. It was a night of entertainment, compli- ments of The University Wind Ensemble, directed by Mitchell Fenell, and an alumni quartet, under the supervision of Dean Hess. Attendees also enjoyed a fireworks display as they picnicked and mingled on the performing arts lawn. 46 1 The Greek system came together on November 1 5 for its annual Songfest char- ity fundraiser. Over $7,000 was raised for AIDS Service Foundation of Orange County and The CSUF Children ' s Center. This year ' s theme was SoAr?e Enchanted Evening, The Music of Rogers and Hammerstein. Jennifer Kropke of Sigma Kappa was honored as Greek Woman of The Year and Jim Flint of Sigma Pi, Asif Kazi, of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Kevin Sammelman of Pi Cappa Phi were named Greek Men of the Year. Best Overall Performances: 1st- Alpha Chi Omega sorority with Tau Kappa Epsilon and Kappa Sigma fratemities (also won Best Song Portrayal of The Theme). 2nd - Zeta Tau Alpha sorority with Sigma Pi fraternity ' 3rd - Alpha Delta Pi sorority with Pi Kappa Phi fraternity (also won Best Choreography). Best Female Vocalist: Amy McHatton (Gamma Phi Beta) Best Male Vocalist: Andres Mendoza (Sigma Pi) Events 47 J ront and Center For the second year in row the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim hosted Cal State Fullerton ' s Front and Center benefit event. Last year ' s com- manding performance by retired General Colin L. Powell left this year ' s speaker with huge shoes to fill. Those shoes were filled by Michael Eisner, Walt Disney Co. Chairman and CEO. In front of 3,000 guests, Eisner spoke of the new Disney ' s California Adventure theme park and other resort expansions estimated to create 14,500 jobs and generate $25 million in new yearly revenue for the city of Anaheim. Eisner also took the time to ac- knowledge Cal State Fullerton students, saying, Thousands, really thousands of our cast members are students from Cal State Fullerton. Over $250,000 was raised by the event to help fund scholarships. Larry Zucker, Associate Vice President for University Advancement explains, The advantage of having Eisner and Powell and next year (Walter) Cronkite is that we can get any speaker in the world to consider our offer because they know it ' s a legitimate event. Events 48 Michael Eisner speaks about his experi- ences with failure and success (above). Orange County Person of the Year George Golleher (far right) with President Gordon, MC, Elizabeth George and Lt. Governor Gray Davis (top left). Each special guest was introduced in song by the Theatre and Dance Department (above). J few Jj brary Opening Cal State Fullerton ' s commitment to keep up with tine technological demands of the 21st century has been affirmed with the opening of the new Library-North. Our success depends on the proper education of everyone who expects to acquire and apply these high- technology applications, as well as on state-of- the-art equipment, says unversity president Dr. Milton A. Gordon. Uni- versity Library-North will give us the opportunity to meet the information needs of our faculty and students more effec- tively. University Library-North facilitates integrated and expanded access to in-house electronic informa- tion through the Internet. Study space is increased from 650 to over 3,000 reading stations. The new four-story building almost doubles the size of the existing library. Both wings are connected by a three- story high, glass and blue-steel atrium with east and west entries. Faculty and students alike enjoyed the exhibits that helped usher in the new library (top). A view from the east of the atrium connecting the old and new wings of the library (left). Astronaut Buzz Aldrin came to dedicate the expanded library (right). 49 Grad-J est The class of 1997 was aided in their graduation efforts by the induction of Grad- Fest. This one-stop shopping event provided all graduation information and apparel in one easy location. Grad-Fest was a first time event held April 8-10 and was sponsored by the Titan Bookstore administration and Alumni Rela- tions. In order to make the shopping hassle free, the second floor of the bookstore was reserved for the event. Graduating students were able to purchase all of their regalia, graduation announcements and class rings. Information regarding the Alumni Association, insurance programs and the Commencement ceremonies was also provided. The idea of making shopping conve- nient proved to be a success due to the fact that over half of the class of ' 97 participated. This year ' s success and atten- dance may make Grad-Fest a school tradition. I- 1 f It ' s always easier to smile when you are on your way out (above). Looking for the perfect fit during Grad- Fest (below). Many bookstore employ- ees and other outside people were available to help with all of the student ' s questions (right). Events 50 ' a The IK flag football team celebrates a touchdown (left). The Greeks congre- gate at the Becker Ampitheater to watch the lip sync contest (below). A TKE brings down a pass during the first round of flag football (below right). Greek Week Greek Week, the biggest event for the Greek community, takes place every spring when all of the university ' s fraternities and so- rorities come together to compete with and against one another. The week is filled with events such as chariot races, a lip sync contest and the pyra- mid. This year ' s winners for overall competition were Alpha Delta Pi and Sigma Pi. Greek Week is designed to celebrate and have fun, but the ultimate goal is to raise money for Camp Titan, providing underprivi- leged kids with an opportunity to leave the problems of the inner-city behind and learn about nature. kS 1 k . - m n OPENING NEW DOORS 51 Springfest After a long week of events during Greek Week and preceding the Alumni Relations ' Night of the Pachyderm, what could be better than a celebration? Spring-Fest a third year event was designed to bring closure to Greek Week and welcome back alumni before watching the Cal State Fullerton Baseball team take on New Mexico state. Spring-Fest was held AphI 19 in parking lot A. The event was sponsored by the Student Alumni Association. Some of the activities that people could participate in included a dunk tank and relay races. Food was provided by Off Campus Pub and a beer garden was set up for beverages. Local radio station KEZY was on hand to supply music and entertainment for over 300 guests. Among the activities at SpringFest were a eat £2!fe whistle relay (top), a dunk tank (right) and a lip-sync A 1 1 P ° y KEZY FM radio ( c w ■ %. iK The Off-Campus Pub was on hand to feed Spring-Fest participants (right). : w Events 52 Communications Week The 19th Annual Communication Week, Plug into the World gave Cal State Fullerton stu- dents a chance to learn from the pros. The School of Communications provided guest speakers with backgrounds in the areas of PR advertising, television film and radio to discuss experiences and unique situations they encounter in their field. Other Communi- cation Week activities included workshops that addressed a variety of business skills in addition to a special Meet the Business Day , where businesses and corporations were on campus to provide information and possible employment opportunities in their field. The purpose of Communications Week is to provide communications students with a forum for networking and gaining exposure to information and knowledge that only business professionals can provide. Dr. Rick D. Pullen, Dean of the School of Communications believes that Communica- tions Week is positive experience for stu- dents. The strength of the week is the inter- action between the students and the professionals. It is a great opportunity for students to isk questions and gain a better understanding of what to expect in their fields of work, says ullen. Some guest speakers in attendance were news reporter Stan Chambers, weather nan Christopher Nance, CEO ' s of major companies and movie directors. Pulitzer Prize-winner Kim Christensen from the Or- ange County Register speaks about his experience investigating the UCI fertil- ity scandal (above left). Forensics team members Jeremy Saylor and Ramir Hernandez demonstrate their debate skills by argu- ing over the contributions of jet engines to pollution (left). OPENING New Doors 53 Club Every student at Cal State Fullerton has a different idea of what school has to offer, from receiving a higher education to preparing for a career of your choice. What ever the differences, the one thing every student has in common is a need to fill their free time. When all of the study- ing and test taking is done, it is time to see what else school has to offer. In this next section you will see some of the clubs and organizations students join to fill their time. Cal State Fullerton has many doors to choose from. Behind each one lies something different. Behind door 1 : making new friends; behind door 2: playing a club sport and; behind door 3: networking for the future. It ' s all offered on campus and every door has something for every person. There is more to college than cramming for tests and registering for classes. You just have to open the right doors. miL f ssociatacf Stacfants Heith Rothman President Associated Students is a corporation of, for and by the students. It is funded by student fees and the A.S. programs set up to benefit the students directly. The fees that students pay come back to them in the form of entertainment put on by Associ- ated Students Productions, academic clubs, intercultural clubs, the Children ' s Center and many other rograms. Associated Students has a motto that they adhere to: We make things hap- pen. A.S. funds up to $33,000 in scholarships for books as well as annual awards such as the Puzo Memorial, Richard M. Nixon and Virginia McGarvey scholarships. These scholarships are designed to assist students with the costs of their education. Mary Collins Executive Vice-President Kyle O ' Brien Vice President of Finance William Archer Director of Administration ■ ' 3 Kevin Sammelman Director of Advancement Kimjera Euler Director of Public Relations Caroline Garcia Director of Statewide Affairs OPENING NEW DOORS 55 The members of the Asso- ciated Students Productions (A.S.P.) since 1977 have been the people who make coming to school just a little more exciting. A.S.P. provides the campus with film presentations, concerts and special events that include per- formances in the Pub and guest speakers. During the semester every Wednesday at noon in the Becker Amphitheater students can enjoy their lunch while listening to local bands perform free of charge. Some bands that A.S.P. were able to bring in this year have been One Eye Open, Los Infernos and Schleprock. The Pub and Pavilion, located inside of the Uni- versity Center house live entertainment with this year ' s highlights being The Henry Rollins show and guest speaker Spike Lee. A.S.P. also pro- vides quality films for students and faculty to view at the Titan theater. Movies such as Mis- sion Impossible, Shine and Sling Blade were just a few of the pictures shown this year. Student who participate in A.S.P gain experience in the operations of the entertain- ment industry. Many members have gone on to pursue jobs in the fields of record promotions and publicity for well known groups or entertain- ment companies. A variety of bands, from the modern jungle sounds of Critters Buggin ' (above) to rockabilly to rap, come to perform at the Becker Amphitheater courtesy of ASP. Directors of ASP laughing it up at the bowl- ing alley (left). I In 1969, a group of concerned students from Cal State Fullerton began a philanthropic program to improve community relations. The students chose as their beneficiaries the abused and underprivi- leged children of Orange County. Today, Camp Titan is a program sponsored by the Associated Students, Inc., and is accredited by the American Camping Association. The staff in- cludes 50 students who serve as both counselors and friends. For one week in the month of June, Camp Titan provides activities for the 150 campers that are designed to help establish self- esteem and introduce them to nature. These activities include a nature and craft program and outdoor events like hiking, swimming and canoeing. The overall benefits are positive and long-lasting for the children as well as the counselors. Camp Titan director Nicole Thomas with one of her campers (above left). Counse- lors take some of their campers for an after- noon canoeing trip (left). OPENING NEW DOORS 57 Student f)fumni fissociation The Student Alumni Asso- ciation has been on campus for over a decade and for many students it has been a great way to make fhends and network with alumni. The Student Alumni Asso- ciation plays a major role in sponsoring and volunteering at campus events such as the Concert Under the Stars, Night of the Pachyderm and Springfest. This year, S.A.A. collected over 200 gifts for Or- ange County children with their campus wide philanthropy, Opera- tion Santa Claus. Another way S.A.A. got involved, was at the Alumni Appreciation Basketball Game. Members donated and handed out 400 bags of peanuts to returning alumni at the February game. CLUBS 58 Student Alumni Association members at the Alumni basketball game (top). S.A.A. collected toys for underprivileged kids at Christmas (above). Presidents Scholars ivel. The 1997 school year marked the 18th year of the President ' s Scholar program. Each year at least ten outstanding high school seniors are chosen to become President ' s Scholars based on their academic record. This year, fifteen lucky stu- dents received the award bringing their total number to 50 scholars. As a group, the scholars form an important part of the university and surrounding community. The scholars attend many social events such as the annual roundup at the El Dorado Ranch where President Gor- don brings together students, associ- ates, alumni and prominent commu- nity leaders for a chance to network. Equally as impor- tant is their commitment to community service. Once each year they host a dinner at the Ronald McDonald house and in the spring host a year-end reception for the Fullerton Boys ' and Girl ' s Club Shoot for the Stars tutoring program. President ' s Scholars gather with Presi- dent Milton Gordon at the western- themed Round-Up At The Ranch in October (above). Mychelle Nguyen serves food at the Ronald McDo nald OPENING NEW DOORS House (left). gg Intramural The Cal State Fullerton Intramural Sports Program spon- sors a number of dif- ferent activities and events during the academic year. Some of the sports featured during the intramural season are flag foot- ball, soccer, basketball and volleyball. All organizations or teams that enter events are competing against the others for the title K- Team of the Year . Individual awards can also be achieved, the highest being the Athlete of the Year . This year ' s intramu- ral high- light was the flag football success of Pi Kappa Phi. The fraternity won the intramural champion- ship on campus and after winning the regional champi- onship in San Diego earned a chance to compete for the national title. The team was flown to New Orleans com- plements of Nike and al- though they did not win the national championship they represented Cal State Fuller- ton, the intramural program and Pi Kappa Phi to the best of their abilities. r ! I Volleyball is just one of many sports that students have the opportunity to play and compete against other in throught the intramural sports program (above middle). The OKO flag intramural football team was sponsored by Nike to compete in the national championship in New Orleans (right). CLUBS 60 . ! Baifcj Titan Student fYsoyspaper Four days out of the week, The Daily Titan student newspaper gives CSUF students news important to them from both the university and local community. Student journalists report not just on the daily goings-on within the confines of the campus but also gather news from places like a burning apartment complex up the freeway or Santa Ana when President Clinton visited during the 1996 campaign. In addi- tion to being informative, the paper provides journalism, public relations and advertising students with practical job experience before they enter the work force. The student reporters whte all the stones that go into the paper and all of the advertising is solicited by a team of students. The paper has won mul- tiple awards for overall layout and design as well as individual excellence awards for news writing and copy editing, adding to the paper ' s credibility and the strength of its presence on students ' re- sumes. Many students have gone straight to work for The Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register Uom their experience on The Ti tan. Sports editor James Meier goes over page layout with assistant Heather Gripp (top). Reporter Janeth Hernandez hacks aways on the com- puter to make her deadline (right). OPENING NEW DOORS 61 The Cal State Fullerton Catholic Newman Club was established in order to build a Catholic Christian community on campus. The Newman Club strives to organize events that will bring mem- bers together for socializing, education, service and prayer. Members of the club feel that service to others is an important way to give back to the community and fulfill their obligations to help other people. The club ' s major event is a semi-annual trip to Mexico to provide food, shelter and clothing to the needy. The Newman Club also sponsors a weekly mass on campus. Ultimately, the Newman Club hopes to provide its members with a climate where they can develop 111 111 ■■■tiif ' - ?r ' ' ' .0 ,-. -.jwMi M ■P|p|.J H WM S 1 f ' sj l f . M m n .fm i km t - ' fh mm Am rtM ' m ' ' ' ' C ' ' ■ ♦• Wm mh t s 1 M HF ■] i 1 CLUBS 62 What ' s for dinner? Rosalee Wood asks Steven Brunasso during a camping trip at Big Bear (above). friendships and share struggles, questions and joys with one another Newman Club president Kristen Donner, Brian Day and Jeff Evans tend to the club ' s information table (top). Group members find fun and friendship at a weekly meeting of the Newman Club (above). WO CRQ JSSE Life Choices is a stu- dent-run organization which promotes tradi- tional family values. It is a biblically-based, non- denominational group with members from many different churches. Life Choices is the first organization of its kind on a college campus. Since its formation at CSUF, sister groups have been established at Cal State Long Beach and Stanford University. The group ' s activities include a weekly educa- tional table on campus from which thousands of pamphlets are handed out every semes- ter. Life Choices also features speakers and weekly videos addressing family value issues. Kathy Bates, a member of Life Choices says, The group hopes to save people from AIDS, the pain and embar- rassment of sexual diseases and the tragedy of abortion. )ay klembers of Life Choices distribute literature in support of their auses at a table every week (top). (1-r) Member Kathy Bates and presi- lent Tara Bishop meet with Norma McCorvey, a.k.a. J ne Roe of the amous Roe v Wade case. OPENING NEW DOORS 63 Child Rduocaccj and Public Paficcj Student fissociotion Members of the Child Advocacy and Public Policy Student Association in only it ' s second year of existence, feel that they have the ability to make a direct impact in the lives of children and families. The club ' s main goal is to advocate and make the public aware of legislation bills regard- ing the welfare and education of children. Dr. Ellen Junn, professor of child develop- ment at Cal State Fullerton is the founder and main adviser of CAPPSA. Locally, CAPPSA is involved in many special events including the making and selling of ornaments at Christmas, with all proceeds going to the Boys and Girls Club of Santa Ana. Members also participated in the Soup Kitchen Project which provided Thanksgiving dinner for the homeless. Through their letter-writing campaigns to legislators, club president Denise Quintero be- lieves that the club really makes a difference. Quintero adds, We get real results because we are able to go straight to the source. Members of CAPPSA on their annual trip to Sacramento (above). Members celebrate the holidays together (below). CLUBS 64 Delta Sigma Pi is a co-ed professional business fraternity that has been on campus since 1986 and is a nationally affiliated organi- zation with over 250 chap- ters across the nation. Open to undergraduate business majors, Delta Sigma Pi offers a number of services including network- ing inside the business community, finding intern- ships, providing scholar- ships and hosting profes- sional activities such as seminars and guest speak- ers to help students pre- pare for the job market. Delta Sigma Pi regularly volunteers for community service. Joining the frater- nity means that students will have the opportunity to make the most out of their college experience. Delta Sigma Pi members dressed for success (above). Members Enjoying a week- end retreat at Big Bear Mountain (left). OPENING NEW DOORS 65 Mesa Cooperatioa Mesa Cooperativa is the council winicii incorpo- rates all the Chicano Latino organizations on campus. Mesa works with each individual organization to orga- nize events such as Chicano Latino heritage month which involves a month-long celebration of culture and heritage. Other events include Dia De Los Padres and Cinco De Mayo festivities. Mesa was organized to provide a meeting place for the Chicano Latino organizations and to strengthen the unity and solidarity between them. Mesa encour- ages the recruitment of all Chicanos Latinos on cam- pus in order to help them complete their goal of gradu- ation. Working hard together, the members of the Mesa council hope to establish a united front of all of the Chicano Latino organizations. Mesa chairman Michael Felix and co-chair Marisol Mendoza with Tatiana Bolafios, a young mariachi singer who per- formed as part of Mesa Culture Week (above right). Mesa Cooperativa council members (right). CLUBS 66 :=: AXX 7 Lamda Sigma Chi is a co-ed Latino fraternity which was estab- lished in 1992. They have the proud distinction of being the only fraternity of their kind on campus. The members of the fraternity em- brace the sense of familia, which helps to bring them together with a common focus. The purpose of the fraternity is to provide Latino leadership by involving members in various lead- ership roles on campus. Lamda sigma Chi has a strong commitment to serving the community. The fraternity hosts 1 junior high school-age conference on campus in which students from low income ireas are provided with positive role models and school experiences. Members of MX co-ed Latino fraternity (above). OPENING NEW DOORS 67 Mixing surf and turf, the Cal State Fullerton Surf Team is comfortable on eitiier surface. For over five years members oftheCSUFSurf Team have been making big waves. The college tour for surfing is very competitive. Each member must be able to compete at the national level. This year ' s team had an impressive showing at the NSSA, finishing 7th out of 16 teams. The team ' s highest placing came at the La Jolla Shores competition where they were 4th. The 1997 Surf Club (above). Surf Club member making it look easy (right). Jason Bean shows why he was 2nd overall in body boarding (below). Spanisf) C a6 The Spanish Club is an academic and social organization that aims to expose its mem- bers and the campus community to the beauty and richness of the Spanish speaking culture. The club is comprised of students, faculty and staff. The Spanish Club has been on campus for five years. Each year they sponsor or partici- pate in events on campus to educate and in- volve others with the Spanish culture. This year such activities include meringue and salsa dance lessons, Spanish poetry recitals and the Dia de los Padres a school orientation for Span- ish speaking students and their parents. The Spanish Club also sponsors live enter- tainment in the quad area during lunch such as mariachi bands and singers. Spanish Club members pre- paring for class registration and orientation for Spaninsh speaking parents (above). Members of the 1997 Spanish Club (left). OPENING NEW DOORS 69 AAn Diversity, commitment and sister- hood are just a few words to describe the nation ' s oldest sorority. Alpha Delta Pi was founded in 1851 at Weslyan College in Georgia and has been at Cal State Fullerton since 1970. The Fullerton chapter of Alpha Delta Pi has raised close to $3,000 through special events this year. The sorority holds two major fund-raising events annually: a Broom Ball competi- tion in which all sororities participate; and the rocking chair Rock-A-Thon. All proceeds from these events go directly to the Ronald McDonald House. This year was an award winning year for Alpha Delta Pi and its mem- bers. The sorority won best choreography and third place overall in Songfest. Alpha Delta Pi was also awarded the Panhellenic Spirit Award for attending the most philanthropic events throughout the semester. i Sigma Pi intramural soccer team (above). I ' Members of Sima Pi and dates at Winter Formal (below). Sigma Pi chapters all over the country this year celebrated the 100th anniversary of the founding of their fraternity. Chapters from the west coast celebrated with an awards dinner held at U.C. LA. Sigma Pi is associated with many service projects including the annual Easter egg hunt, co-hosted with Alpha Chi Omega sorority. In the spring the fraternity hosted their an- nual World Series softball game, in which all western region chapters spent a weekend in Fullerton to com- pete and raise money for their philan- thropy. Multiple Sclerosis. Outside of their service to the community and their philanthropy, members of Sigma Pi take pride in the fact that they are well rounded both academically and athletically. Andres Gaitan and his Sigma Pi brother Clint Smith hanging out (above). OPENING NEW DOORS 71 Sigma Kappa was founded at Colby College in Waterville, Maine on November 9, 1874. Since their colo- nization here at Cal State Fullerton in 1970, Sigma Kappa has been one of the most dedicated sororities on cam- pus. Members of Sigma Kappa feel that close sisterhood and a strong devotion to their philanthropy are the most important aspects of their soror- ity. Sigma Kappa ' s annual Lollipop Sale raised over $300 this year for the fight against Alzheimer ' s Disease. Sigma Kappa ' s devotion to the community and philanthropy does not end with their own events. The soror- ity also participated in Pi Kappa Phi ' s quarter race and Tau Kappa Epsilon ' s food drive for Orange County. Sisters celebrate together during Bid Day (right). CLUBS 72 Active members and alumni come together to support the Memory Walk (above). 4 In 1869 at Virginia Military Insti- tute, what was called the Legion of Honor became known as Sigma Nu. Since that point in time 256 chapters have colonized throughout America. Members of Sigma Nu here at Fuller- ton still believe that the honor system is the key. We try to do everything as honorly as we can. We use it as our guide, says member Kim Khauv. Sigma Nu has dedicated itself to community service. They donate over 1 50 hours a semester to the adopt-a-school program. Members of the fraternity help with after school sports and serve as tutors at Kraemer Jr. High and Ruby Elementary school. This year ' s National Convention was held in San Antonio, Texas, and of the current 40 active members, three were selected to attend and discuss fraternity policies and activities. liiP qilllllllll w? s i Wi ihrfl 05 ' , ' m K ni Kim Khauv and Nathan Wilson give a lift to Sigma Nu brother David White during their trip to Europe (above). Sigma Nu held its Fall 1996 formal at Harrah ' s Hotel Casino in Laughlin (above). SN executive director Moe Littlefield (in tux) with Fullerton ' s (1-r) Rodney Stewart, Brian Guziak and Kim Khauv at the national convention in Texas (above). OPENING NEW DOORS 73 Twenty-nine years ago, Alpha Chi Omega was the first sorority to colonize at Cal State Fullerton. Since their origi- nal founding at Indiana ' s Depauw Uni- versity in 1885, Alpha Chi Omega has maintained a tradition of excellence and dedication. This year the sorority expressed their devotion to their philanthropy, do- mestic violence, by planting 100 trees to serve as a reminder of how tragic do- mestic violence is. Members of Alpha Chi Omega were involved with the Boxer Breakfast, an open house and breakfast for the community. Proceeds from the ticket sales went directly to helping the fight against domestic vio- lence. Alpha Chi Omega performed well both in and out of the classroom this year. The sorority won Songfest and earned the highest G.P.A. amongst all sororities. AXQ sisters planted 100 trees in memory of domestic violence victims (above). Sisters raised money for their philanthropy by hosting a Boxer Breakfast (above). AXQ sisters showed their spirit at Greek Week (right). Pi Kappa Phi fraternity was founded in Charleston, South Carolina in 1904. Since their colonization at Cal State Fullerton in 1990, the brothers of Pi Kappa Phi have made their mark as athletic and academic leaders. This past year the Pi Kappa Phi flag football team won the on-campus intramural championship. That victory advanced them to the Western Regional Finals held in San Diego. After winning the Finals, Nike provided the team with an all expenses paid trip to New Or- leans to play in the national tournament. Brothers of Pi Kappa Phi also excelled in the classroom as the fraternity won the award for the highest GPA among CSUF fraternities. The fraternity also made time to volunteer over 100 hours to their philan- thropy. People Understanding the Severely Handicapped (PUSH). The philan- thropy was created and is maintained solely by the members of Pi Kappa Phi. riKO brothers and friends take part in an event for their philanthropy, PUSH (above). Members of the FIKO flag football team were sponsored by Nike to play in a national tournament in New Orleans (above). OPENING NEW DOORS 75 Zeta Tau Alpha was founded at Longwood College in Virginia in 1898 and at Cal State Fullerton in 1979. Even though Zeta Tau Alpha is the youngest sorority on campus, they have still played a major role in the campus community. For over five years the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation has been Zeta Tau Alpha ' s national philanthropy. Every year the sorority hosts the Bid for a Bachelor date auction where fraternity men are offered to the highest bidder along with restaurant gift certificates and movie or theme park passes. This year ' s auction brought in over $2,000. An additional $450 was raised by the sale of St. Patrick ' s Day grams. Members of ZTA are involved on campus in Associated Students, intramurals, Adopt-A-School and several other organizations. tear, Ine! The sisters of ZTA pose together at their White and Violet Ball (right). CLUBS 76 --A Since their establishment at Cal S tate Fullerton on IVlay 13, 1995, the dedicated members of Tau Kappa Epsilon have made giant leaps for- ward. Not only is TKE the second largest house on campus, the 48- member fraternity recently won the award for most improved chapter nationally. Dedication to the community and their philanthropy, the Special Olym- pics, are very important to the mem- bers of TKE. Their annual canned food drive, which donates food throughout Orange County, was nee again a success. Tau Kappa Epsilon also sponsored several fund-raisers this rear, the most significant of which was a raffle in which the winner won paid tuition for (me semester. Fifty percent of that fund-raiser went directly to the Special Olympics. Other highlights of the 1996-1997 school year include winning Songfest with Jpha Chi Omega. TKE brothers bond at a luau party (left). OPENING NEW DOORS 77 roB Founded in Syracuse, New York, in tine Fall of 1874, and colonized here at Cal State Fullerton in 1971, Gamma Phi Beta has a long tradition of excellence through leadership and education. This year service to the community was a top priority to the members of Gamma Phi Beta. Sorority sisters volunteered as judges for the Orange County High School Academic Decathlon held at Cal Poly Pomona. Gamma Phi Beta also worked in conjunction with the Chapman chapter in a major fund-raiser and a children ' s camp called Camp Gamma Phi. Other activities included working with the brothers of Sigma Phi Epsilon to clean-up graffiti in the local area and the sup- port of the Titan Baseball team in their game against the Angels. CLUBS 78 Sisters of Gamma Phi Beta and their dates at a formal in November (top). Sisters welcome new members at the sorority house (above). I D( mi On June 17, 1967 Delta Chi was granted the opportunity to become an active fraternity at Cal State Fullerton. Since that time Delta Chi has provided stu- dents with great opportuni- ties to serve the community and at the same time get the most out of campus life. Each year members of Delta Chi work together with the Los Angeles Dodgers to raise money for Cystic Fibrosis. Other community service activities include the Multiple Sclerosis bike and walk-a-thon. Delta Chi donates their time to orga- nize and man the rest stops for both events. Members of Delta Chi describe themselves as diverse but as a whole the fraternity considers itself a big family. Delta Chi brothers at a banquet (top). Eight cha pters of Delta Chi met at this year ' s regional conference (middle). Delta Chi brothers man a rest stop at the Multiple Sclerosis Bike-A-Thon (above). OPENING NEW DOORS 79 Sigma Alpha Epsilon has continued its long stand- ing tradition nationally and here on campus as being a community serving and brotherhood oriented frat- nity. President Michael Orme says, Guys in our fraternity do things for their brothers that other fraterni- ties just don ' t do. SAE activities this year included staffing the NCAA sponsored semi- final wheelchair basketball game at Cal Poly Pomona. Brothers of SAE provided the staff, hosted the half- time laser light show and served as cheerleaders for the competing teams. The frater- nity also took on local fire and po- lice departments April 5th in a char- ity Softball game to support the D.A.R.E. program. There are currently 50 activ e SAE brothers here on campus. Orme feels that if not for the tightness of his other brothers, his college experience would not be as memorable. It ' s what col- lege life is all about, Orme concludes. CLUBS 80 SAE members show off their pin stripes and feather caps (right). Founded in Virginia at Richmond College in 1901, Sigma Phi Epsilon has a long and well-known tradition for leadership and success. In November of 1994 six men decided that they to wanted to be a part of great tradition and so Sigma Phi Epsilon was colonized here at Cal State Fullerton. Members of the fraternity work hard in the areas of academics and sports. Community service is also a top priority. Their phi- lanthropy, Project America is a program that requires mem- bers of the fraternity to go out into the community and try to make it a better place. Mem- bers also volunteer hours at the woman ' s shelter and for pediatric aids center. The fraternity has over 200,000 alumni nationally. Fratenity brothers gather at Tri-City park for Bar-B-Que and games during installation weekend (left). OPENING NEW DOORS 81 None of us can possibly see everything tliat liappens on campus through the course of the | year. There are many events in far corners or at odd hours that few students have knowledge | of or time for. So we are going to share with you some of these . . . . . . irreplacable moments.! -j ' ¥h m M Former Titan and ex-Dodger Tim Wallach was honored at Visions Visionaries (above). Heith Rothman is lifted by support- ers after being elected to a third term as AS president (below). A few days after school ended in the Spring, No Doubt gave a free show on the PA lawn (above). Campus Crusade for Christ employed legal aliens to pass out fliers about a special speaker on cults (below). JM I Y ' ' liini ' Vft j Baseball slugger Mark McGwire came to Titan Field to film a No Fear commercial (left). Cow- boy lizards drew strange looks at the Fullerton Arboretum ' s annual ArborFest (above). New baseball head coach George Horton greets Ana- heim Angels manager Terry Collins before a benefit baseball game between the two teams at Titan Field (right). Students protest Proposition 209, a ballot measure eventually passed by Cali- fornia voters, ending Affirmative Action (below). ON PR«P 2i ilini ai] c G NEW DOORSirV YllAlU A pair of successful soccer seasons, the best volleyball record ever and a dramatic finish to the baseball season high- lighted the 1996-1997 year of intercollegiate athletics at Cal State Fullerton. Coach Al Mistri ' s women ' s soccer squad (13-6-2) posted an un- beaten record in the first year of Big West Confer- ence competition, going 5- 0-1 despite a siege of injuries that finally caught up to the Titans in the post- season tournament, aqtg Sophomore Dolores - Browning was the Big ' 1 West Player of the Year and was joined by Michele Rice in earning third-team All-West region honors. The men ' s squad (11-4-6) again gained national rankings and a spot in the NCAA playoffs. The No. 18-ranked Titans beat No. 1 -ranked UCLA before tying Creighton, only to lose in an overtime shoot- out. Junior Sheldon Tho- mas was selected as Player of the Year in the Pacific Division of the Mountain Pacific Soccerfe- : - s Year-End 84 WIMP Federation and earned second-team Ail-American honors. Meanwhile, Coach Mary Ellen Murchison was guid- ing the Titan volleyball team to its best record ever at 16-13. Heather Bassett was the first Titan selected for first-team all-conference and the team just missed qualifying for the Big West post-season tournament. A new era began in Titan baseball as George Norton replaced Augie Garrido as head coach. The Titans got off to a good start but then struggled and W ■ W- ' ' ° ' ' y ° ' - ' Q iT GS over .500 in mid-April. But jj[ ■ down the stretch the Titans won 11 of their last 13 , , ' regular season games and then came out of the sLi fciL ' lZi losers ' bracket to win the Big West Conference Tour- nament and Championship at Long Beach, giving them an automatic berth in the NCAA Tour- nament. It was the team ' s 19th regional in 23 years but their luck ran out in the third game of the tournament as they lost to Fresno State, 8-7, and settled for a 39-24-1 season. Sophomore gymnast Katy Maty and an improved men ' s basketball team captured the most headlines during the winter. Maty won the Big West Conference all-around champion- ship and athlete of the year honors only to suffer a f knee injury on the dismount of her final event. She missed the NCAA regionals but escaped the need for surgery. The men ' s basketball team had an outstand- ing 7-3 non-conference record with rare wins at ., Brigham Young and Montana. The Titans had Ji hopes of challenging for first place in the Western Division of the realigned Big West Conference standings. But the loss of top scorer and rebounder John Williams left them with an overall 13-14 record and fourth-place finish. Cal State Fullerton was represented in NCAA championship competition by individuals from the fencing and wrestling programs. Brian Clawson -j % placed 14th in men ' s epee and Renato Gates,. .c J placed 24th in men ' s foil. Both Orlando ' ' ' ' deCastroverde at 118 pounds and Steve Duran at 158 pounds qualified for the NCAA wrestling tour- nament. Absent was the Titan softball team, which missed NCAA play for the first time in the program ' s 18-year history as the senior-less team ; opening new d«ors . compiled a 29-26 overall record. ' 85 DRM qjgCIF presidEnt As graduating students you have worked long and hard for this moment. You have striven for the best you could be and you have labored for knowledge and opened your minds to new ideas. You have done all of this and you have succeeded in completing your degree programs and are now ready to make your mark in your respective professions as well as meet your responsibilities to our society. We are proud of you and your accomplishments as Cal State Fullerton ' s newest alumni and we are also proud that Cal State Fullerton continues to be the university where learning is preeminent. Our under- graduate and graduate programs have provided you with the best of current practice, theory and research. With 86 percent of our 120,000 alumni living and working in South- ern California, Cal State Fullerton ' s greatest contribution to this region has been and will continue to be the quality of our graduate ' s perfor- mance in the area ' s business, educational, professional and governmental arenas. We hope that your graduation from Cal State Fullerton will be the beginning of lives that are produc- tive and satisfying for you. We hope that you will always use the knowledge that you have obtained from Cal State Fullerton for the betterment of not only your life but those of your fellow human beings. We hope that the days you have spent at Cal State Fullerton will be but the prologue for happy and fulfilling days yet to come. Your graduation from Cal State Fullerton denotes not severance from the university but your union with it. Commencement does not mean, as many wrongly think, the breaking of ties and the beginning of life apart. Rather it marks your initiation in the fullest sense into the fellowship of Cal State Fullerton as bearers of its torch, as centers of its influence, as promoters of its spirit. Wherever you go, Cal State Fuller- ton goes with you. Wherever you are at work, there is Cal State Fullerton at work. We want to encourage you to see this campus as yours, to be active alumni, discovering for your- selves the personal benefits of continued involvement with Cal State Fullerton. We wish you luck, success and much happiness to you in all your future endeavors. Sincerely, Xyfc O. . 4o yoL Milton A. Gordon President . ilTH ROTHMAN dissociated Btudcnts president produe dfrom Vehops daysy in as Fuller- our- luccess As President of the Associated Students, Inc. it is my pleasure to congratulate you on earning your degree from Cal State FuUerton. Being a fellow classmate 1 realize the pressures and hard work you have had to endure in order to achieve this most honored accomplishment. In the past few years you have studied, explored, grown, matured, and met many objec- tives in your academic career. You have also contributed to the educational foundation of this institution by testing concepts and theories in your classwork, participating in campus groups and interacting with faculty and staff members through projects or campus jobs. Throughout your academic struggles you have shown strength in discipline, dedication, and achievement. It is my hope that these qualities along with your personal experiences at Cal State Fullerton will aid you in your future endeavors. Again, I extend to you my sincere congratulations and hope that success follows as you strive to reach many niore career and personal goals. Sincerely, ' M Heith Rothman OPENING NEW DOORS 87 ® I Iver 5,000 graduates participated in Cal State FuUerton ' s 38th annual Commencement ceremonies held the weekend of May 30 through June 1, 1997. Commencement signifies the closing of one door and looking over one ' s shoulder at the memories and friend- ships that will last a lifetime. It is also about attaining the key to the door of a brighter future. Commencement 88 Lim fj s. (left) has been in charge of production of the Cal State Fulle ton yearbool for the past two years. He will graduate with a B.A. in journalism in the Spring of 1998, after which he hopes to go to work as a reporter for a major newspap or magazine. In his two years working for the CSU yearbook, Nathan has done several things related to the production of the book: orga nization, writing, photography and layout. His favorite part of the job was the ability to be creative with layout design and the chance to come in contact with many people all over campus. This is his last year working on the yearbook. Besides working on the yearbook, Nathan also works for the Daily Titan cam- pus newspaper, is involved with President ' s Scholars and Student Alumni Association and works in the Titan Student Union. igti iani Mf 111 (right) spent his last semester at Cal State Fullerton working on the yearbook. In his time at Fullerton, he was a standout on the successful men ' s soccer team and this year helped organize Communications Week. He graduated in May with a B.A. in public relations. Damien ' s contributions to this yearbook in- cluded spending many hours interviewing clubs, researching sports teams, writing copy and laying out pages. We thank him and wish him well in his new job in public relations with the Anaheim Splash. The staff 94 Pat Pai iid JOi Ro B Jin Kai rep Bu ■eas Da ;om ■Pa m has been the staff advisor on the yearbook for the past two years, and is I |he Assistant Director of Alumni Relations. She is a graduate of Cal State Fullerton (B.A. Comparative Literature, 1995) and is currently pursuing her master ' s degree in public ad- ministration. Thanks to all who helped us eFulle ■ Hew ithe IS to go eCSUI things c orga jyou ' iitytt -ROM THE EDITOR: MEL. I WANT TO THANK YOU FOR THE GREAT EXPERIENCE ND THE GREAT FUN I HAVE HAD WORKING FO R YOU THESE PAST TWO YEARS. :OULDNT HAVE ASKED FOR A BETTER BOSS OR A BETTER FRIEND WITH WHOM wspapE rO GO THROUGH THIS YEARBOOK ORDEAL. IF WE EVER SPEND OUR ENTIRE SPRING BREAK TOGETHER AGAIN. LET ' S MAKE SURE WE SPEND IT IN A PLACE A ITH LOTS OF WAVES AND SAND, f oocf es There are many people who need to be thanked for their help and contributions to the ompletion of this year ' s book: he -Ml the photographers and writers from the Daily Titan without whom there would have been noth- ly ig to fill many of our pages: Miguel Vasconcellos, James Meier, Erin Wiiiteside, Eric L.| flantucci, Yuiciko Fujisawa, Bryan Ventura. rMei Franks and tiie staff at Sports Media Relations for providing valuable statistics, informa- ook, Idd and photos about Titan athletic teams. ncam- 5jjjgf t ' f at O ' Donnell for providing many of the photographs of various campus events. iaton .Paula Selleck, Director of Media Relations, for loaning us pictures, keeping us informed of events n. pd answering tons of questions. ! loe Ochoa, whose artistic talents adorn the cover of this book. Roland Madrid, Public Affair ' s Student Assistant, for his graphic expertise in creating a cover age out of a drawing. lim Volz for his photographs of CSUF ' s award winning theatre, and dance performances. Kathy and Stacey from Portraits by Kathy Inc. for photographing the class of ' 97, Commence- lent, and other events. t Buzz Ponce, Carlos Mejia and Carol Cooper of Jostens, for being flexible with deadlines and f passuring through our shortcomings. ii. l plash Perkins and the staff at Scholastic Advertising for acquiring ads from the surrounding )mmunity. itricia Boggs, Director of Alumni Programs and Services for all of her encouragement and sup- ort. OPENING NEW DOORS 95 Alumni Association Board of Directors Pictured L-R: Carlos Leija, Skip Wells, Bill Cark, Lisa Labrado, Adrienne Robbins, Mike Eubanks, Guy Knuf, Ramona Schneider, Mary Louise Hlavac, Ralph Guirgis, Jerry Minsky, Brad Kissler, Tim Holland. Not pictured: Doug Ireland. The mission of the Cal State Fullerton Alumni Association is to provide 120,000 CSUF alumni with services, benefits and opportunities for continued affiliation with the university community. By doing so, the Association encourages alumni to promote and support the image, activities and programs of the University. The 1996-97 Board of Directors consisted of 13 members and one young alumni representative. In addition to hosting such events as Night of The Pachyderm for basketball and for baseball, the Association also dedicated a painting ( The Moment ) to the Cal State Fullerton Library and awarded two $2,000 scholarships . The Alumni Association president Michae Board also presented a $200 cash award to an outstanding Eubanks unveiis The Moment, a Graduate student and an outstanding senior at the 1 997 painting depicting the Titan basebaii . team ' s NCAA championship victory o UOnVOCatlOn. 5 The painting was donated by th Association and hangs in the new Library South (above). L-R: 1997-1998 Association president-elect Carlos Leija; Alumni Assoc. Scholarship recipients Chris Watts and Jennifer Peavy; 1996-1997 Association president Mike Eubanks (left). Nasri B,A,1 School of The Arts Dean Jerry Samuelson isky, }] Nasrin Akhavan B.A. Theatre Arts Nadia Barreda B.A. Art Education Larissa Brown B.F.A. Fine Arts Ya-Hui Chang Connie Coe M.A. Graphic Desigii B.F.A. Illustration Jason Crelencia Michael Crivello B.F.A. Graphic Design B.F.A. Illustration David Cureton Melissa Dalton Cecily Davis .M. Composition B.A. Theatre B.A. Theatre Arts OPENING NEW DOORS 97 Yvette Delgadillo B.A. Art Education Lisa Hobbs B.F.A. Illustration Chong Lee B.A. Music Alexia L. Deligianni Nancy Diaz DeLeon Kimberly Kazumi Hama B.A. Tl-ieatre Education B.F.A. Graphic Design Dominguez B.A. Graphic Design B.A. Photography Leslie Holland Shinae Kim Mia Ko B.A. Theatre Arts B.E.A. Grapliic Design B.E.A. Grapliic Design George Lee B.F.A. Grapliic Design Shannon Koss B.F.A. i ! Irene Lee Lois Hsiu Ling Lew Pele Liemena B.A. Music B.F.A. Graphic Design B.F.A. Grapliic Design Ying-Chou Lin B.F.A. Grapliic Design GRADUATES 98 Robert J. Metoyer B.F.A. Grapliic Design Natsuko Mukai B.M. Music Kozo Nagatomi B.F.A. Art David Nelson M.M. Music Composition Jeffrey Charles Nichols B.A. Music El Rick Smith M.A. Art Steve Pablo B.F.A. Grapliic Design Henry M. Pless B.F.A. Painting Drawing Michael D. Rodriguez B.F.A. Drawing Painting Aroonsawat Sawat- Chuto B.F.A. Grapliic Design Robynsue Smith B.A. Theatre Arts Wen-Chyi Sun B.A. Music Bonnie Vigil B.A. Theatre Arts Siam Xutima B.F.A. Fine Arts Su-Mei Yang Rie Yashima B.F.A. Grapliic Design B.F.A. Grapliic Design OPENING NEW DOORS 99 School of Business Ailniinislratioii and Economics Dean Ephraim Smith Dee L. Adam B.A. M anagement Caroline Adinegoro B.A. Accounting Michael Agresti B.A. Accounting Naureen Ahmed B.A. Management Hakan Akdeniz B.A. Management Laura Albers B.S. Management Agripino Alonso B.A. Accoimting Carrie R. Alves B.A. Management Information Systems Ken Anderson B.A. Business Jesus Aquino B.A. Business Administration GRADUATES 100 3 Saengseri Agnes Arcos Julianna Argyrakis Lanny Arifin Bruce Bagley Arbhbhirama M.S. Accounting B.A. Finance B.A. Marketing B.A. International B.A. Finance Business Eric Bailey B.A. Marketing Nancy L. Balch- Sorrells B.A. Management Information Systems Tiffanie Baramy B.A. Finance Claire Beaulieu B.A. Accounting Diane Bochenski B.A. Marketing Matt Bode B.A. Management April Boos B.A. Management Stacy Lynn Brault B.A. Management Jennifer Bengtson B.A. Marketing Daniel Brede B.A. Management Yvonne Bright B.A. International Business John Bristol B.A. Management Michelle Bryant B.A. Marketing Joan Burt B.A. International Business Carla Cacananta B.S. Management Information Systems OPENING NEW DOORS 101 Francisca Cahaya B.A. Finance Elisabeth A. Caimona B.A. Business Administration Swades Chakrabarti B.A. Accounting Marc Carr B.A. Management Imelda Carrillo B.A. Finance Jessica Chang B.A. Finance Shyoe Chang M.B.A. Finance Wen- Yuan Chang B.A. Accounting Patricia Castaneda B.A. Management Ruby K. Charasvirojna B.A. Finance i Phillip Chavez B.A. Management Bi-Hui Chen B.A. Finance Chien Chen B.A. Finance Huikum W. Chen B.A. Business Administration Shih-Hsueh Chen M.B.A. Finance Alice Chen B.A. Finance Belle Cheng B.A. Business Adminstration Caroline Cheng B.A. Management Information Systems Cheung Cheng B.A. Management Information Systems Mei-Sha Chieh M.B.A. Marketins GRADUATES 102 Hsin-Yi Chiu ' t ■ B.A. Finance nee . Helen S. Cho B.S. Management Agnes Chong B.A. Marketing Lei Chou B.A. Accounting Rita Christiana Chiaping Chuang B.A. Finance B.A. Finance Chun-Chiao Chung M.B.A. Management Science Jason Citro B.A. Accounting Stephanie Cohen B.A. Marketing Carrie A. CoUett B.A. Accounting Jennifer Couch B.A. Business Administration Jeffrey W. Cowan B.A. Finance Christiana Christiana B.A. Business Christina L. Cody B.A. Accounting Eduardo Cruz B.A. Economics Jacqueline M. Cruz B.A. Accounting Lisette Cruz B.A. Accounting Violet M. Cullors Thuvan Dang John de la Garza B.S. Management B.A. Management B.A. Management Information Systems Information Systems Information Systems OPENING NEW DOORS 103 Enrique R. Devera B.A. Accounting Eduardo Diaz B.A. Financial Management Noemi Diaz B.A. International Business James Dickinson B.A. Finance Susan Diep B.A. International Business Hoa Dieu B.A. Accounting Jade Dieu B.A. International Business Jacqueline Do B.A. Accounting Rachel Dominguez B.A. Operations Management Finance Vi Thuy Duong B.A. Accounting Zakarya H. Elkazzaz B.A. Operations Management Marxeting Ted Enache B.A. International Business Sylvia Evans B.A. International Business Stela M. Ferreira B.A. Marketing Psychology Michele D. Florence B.A. Marketing Wing Hang John Foo B.A. Accounting Kuniko Fuse B.A. Accounting Rostik Dukhovny B.A. Accounting Si Hong Fang B.A. Accounting Sandra J. Gagnon B.A. Marketing t GRADUATES 104 m 1 Gloria E. Garcia B.A. International Business Marketing Joe Garcia, Jr. B.A. Finance Marketing Jocelyn C. Garcia B.A. Accounting kM.; Lawrence Garcia B.A. Finance Man Gu B.A. International Business Reena Gutierrez B.A. Management Information Systems Stephanie D. Ha B.A. Accounting Theresia Hadiwijono B.A. Finance Kimberly Hagedorn B.A. Management Science Aye Han B.A. Finance Tri Handojo B.A. Operations Management Peter B. Hargittay B.A. Economics Cheryl L. Hastings B.A. Accounting Yukari Hata B.A. International Business Adam Wade Hattan B.A. Marketing Susan Gilford Held B.A. Marketing Gregory V. Henderson M.B.A. Finance Alex Hendratno B.A. Finance Alma E. Herrera B.A. International Business Heather Hickman B.A. Management OPENING NEW DOORS 105 Shima Hiraiwa B.A. International Business Uan-U Hsiao B.A. Accounting Shawn Hiromoto B.A. Accounting Richard J. Hoegler B.A. Management Elizabeth Hojnacke B.A. Operations Management Shu Chen Hsieh B.A. Accounting Chia-Min Huang B.A. hiternational Business Glen Hubbard B.A. Entrepreneurial Management Jeff Hosfeld B.A. Finance Sottar Hun B.A. Management Lucky E. Irenen B.A. Operatons Management Anjali Iyer B.A. Management Farahnaz Jadali B.A. Accounting Fung Shan Hui B.A. International Business Abed Al Moomen Jlelati M.B.A. Accounting I Evi jodjana B.A. Marketing Richard Scott Jordan B.A. Business Administration Yenny Kamsir B.A. Business Administration 1 1 1§S 1 Ching-Hui Kao B.A. Finance Nimesh Kharva B.A. Finance Economics GRADUATES 106 Keith E. Killinger B.A. Finance Jong Yon Kim B.A. Accounting Mikuyung Kim B.A. Accounting Minhee Kim B.A. Management Science Yan King B.A. Marketing William E. Koczwara B.A. Finance Ling-Chi Kung B.A. International Business Yi-Ling Kuo B.A. International Business Michael Lachberg B.A. Accounting Teresa Wai Chan Lai B.A. Management Information Systems Anita V. Larco B.A. Finance Chai-Pay Lau B.A. Finance Mylinh T. Le B.A. Accounting Nancy Nhung Le B.A. Management Information Systems Jennifer LeBouf B.A. Marketing hatva nee, ' lies Chaw Lee B.A. Business Administration Jinhee Lee B.A. Economics Wai Yu Lee B.A. Management Information Systems Yi-Ching Lee B.A. Finance Yin-Cheung Lee B.A. Finance OPENING NEW DOORS 107 Alice Liao B.A. Finance Amy Lien B.A. Accounting Chun-Yi Lin B.A. International Business Wei-I Lin B.A. Finance Chang-Ming Liu B.A. Marketing Ming-Shu Liu B.A. Management Information Systems Connie Lo B.A. Management Lu-Chen Lo B.A. Marketing Stephen Loreto B.A. Management Information Systems Chien-Long Lu B.A. International Business Utomo Lukman B.A. Finance Maria Martinez B.A. International Business Henry Luong B.A. Finance Josephine Mabotja M.A. Econoniics Jenafur Mahr B.A. Economics Ifran Malik B.A. Management Information Systems Nancy C. Mason B.A. Accounting Todd McClare B.A. Accounting Gaynelle T. McGauley B.A. International Business Jeffrey S. McGehee B.A. Management i GRADUATES 108 J Liu Elizabeth A. McGrath B.A. Marketing Leticia Meza B.A. Accounting Jennifer Michaelis B.A. Business Administration Anne S. Miller B.A. Finance Juan M. Mora B.A. International Business gh Joyce Morfe B.A. Accounting Anthony D. Morrow B.A. Marketing Hsiao-Ping Mou B.A. Finance Karolin M. Muktiar B.A. International Business Muliadi Muliadi B.A. Management Information Systems Svsims Christy Kate Myers B.A. Business Administration Jeff Myers B.A. Accounting Todd Nacey B.A. Economics Keisuke Nagata B.A. International Business Vida L. Nelson B.A. Accounting IcGehw Chui-Wan Ng B.A. Management BaNgu B.A. Accounting Jassey Nguyen B.A. Management Information Systems Kevin Nguyen B.A. Management Information Systems Loan Nghi Nguyen B.A. Management Information Systems . OPENING NEW DOORS 109 Lynn Mei Nguyen B.A. Accounting Trang Nguyen B.A. Finance Tuyet-Mai Nguyen B.A. Management Information Systems Jalon O ' Connell B.A. Finance Talin Ohanoglu B.A. International Business Orlando Olano B.A. Marketing Management Gilbert Padilla B.A. Finance Danniel T. Paing B.A. Management Information Systems Tony Pan B.A. Marketing Yu-Fong Keri Pan B.A. Finance Management Jason K. Paul B.A. Marketing Maria Paz B.A. Marketing Ching-Hui Peng M.B.A. Management Information Systems Ching-Wen C. Peng B.A. Marketing Ying Zhou Peng B.A. Accounting Annalisa Pepe B.A. Finance Lince Perwata B.A. Finance Leon Pham B.A. International Business Long Pham B.A. Management Information Systems My-Linh Pham B.A. Finance GRADUATES 1 10 Plain ian« Vi Phan Leonard F. Polak Wirote Prasitworanan Lydia Pulido Oliver Quirante ■A. Finance M.B.A. Business Administration M.B.A. Finance B.A. Finance B.S. Operations Management Carol A. Ragognetti B.A. International Business Shahriyar Rahmani B.A. Accounting Roger Ravelo B.A. Finance Julie A. Richards B.A. Marketing Jeanette Rizo-Smith B.A. Operations Management Christopher B. Rodwick B.A. Marketing Michael Routt B.A. Finance Anita Rubio B.A. Accounting Rose E. Salais B.A. Finance Maria Salazar B.A. Accounting Carla M. Salcido B.A. International Business Irma Rebecca Sanchez B.A. Finance Ray Rivera B.A. Finance Alan H. Ruggles B.A. Marketing Gurtar Singh Sandhu B.A. Management OPENING NEW DOORS 1 1 1 David Sandidge B.A. Finance Lenny Satya B.A. International Business Elsa Saucedo B.A. Finance Cristina A. Saucedo-Garcia M.B.A. Management Robert W. Schultz B.A. Management Information Systems Bryant Schumacher B.A. Marketing Adolfo M. Serrano B.A. Accounting Mohamad K. Shakhshir B.A. Finance Chris Shararian B.A. Human Resources Management Edward Sherlock B.A. Management Yuko Shibata B.A. International Business Ryan Smith B.A. Accounting Stefanus Simangasing B.A. Accounting Finance Sharon Sims B.A. Marketing Saowanee Sirinopwongsagon B.A. Finance Suzanne Sitton B.A. Management Sean Smith B.A. Finaiice Boedi Cahyadi Soenarjo B.A. Finance Mario Soenarjo B.A. Finance Nichole Soffel B.A. Finance GRADUATES 1 12 ' Jicki L. Spurr Daynette L. Steward Chen Ju Su Kai Chun Karen Su Christine Pai-Ya B.A. Finance B.A. Management B.A. Finance B.A. Business Administration Sung M.B.A. Finance Andy Susanto B.A. Marketing Salah Michael Tahan M.B.A. Management Miyuki Taira B.A. Accounting Management Megu Takahashi B.A. Accounting Linda S. Tep B.A. Management Information Systems Heather L. Terhune B.A. Management Inna M. Thamrin B.A. Finance Emmanuel Tiongson B.A. Accounting Lillian Tonnu B.A. Accounting Kitinan Toomngern M.S. Management Information Systems Sai Truong B.A. Marketing Alice P. Tsai B.A. Accounting Noviawati Tan B.S. Management Surcendrawat Tjandrasa B.A. Business Administration Kathleen Tsai B.A. Accountine OPENING NEW DOORS 1 13 Wai-Kei Tse B.A. Management Information Systems Pi-Hsiu Tseng B.A. Finance Babette L. Turk B.A. International Business Jose Urizueta B.A. Economics Erika R. Urbani B.A. Accounting Ricky Usman B.A. Finance Alvin Utama B.A. Finance Oscar Valdivia B.A. International Business Trang Van B.A. Accounting James Van Nyhuis B.A. Marketing i Andrea Varela B.A. Marketing Anthony Vargas B.A. Finance Economics Pilar Villasana B.A. International Business Singthong Viraphandath B.A. Finance Ka-Vai Vong B.A. Management Information Systems Thu Mong Vu B.A. Management Information Systems Marcela Vykopalova B.A. Accounting Patricia M. Wakai B.A. Marketing Li-Huei Wang B.A. Marketing Teresa Wang B.A. Finance GRADUATES 1 14 Nyhuis Jing-Shin Wen B.A. Finance Linda Wibisono B.A. Finance r.i.n Danny Widjaja B.A. Finance Hedy Widyastuti B.A. Finance Keith Woodford B.A. Finance Amy Wu Christine Yamano Paul Yang Sharon Yee Lai-Lai Yu B.A. Accounting B.A. International Business M.B.A. Finance B.A. Business Administration B.A. Marketin Vong Svstems Hui-Tzu Yuan M.B.A. Finance Kirsta S. Zipfel M.B.A. Finance OPENING NEW DOORS 1 15 I School of Communications y r vP Dean Rick PuUen Salma Abdullah B.A. Advertising Amanda Adams Martha I. Aguilar Judith Amaya Shelly Amezcua B.A. Advertising B.A. Public Relations B.A. Public Relations B.A. Public Relations Charlene Antenorcruz B.A. TV Film GRADUATES 1 16 Tony Arriola B.A. TV Film Joe Ascencio B.A. Con municatioiis Scott Barajas B.A. Journalism Maria Bautista B.A. TV Film Baiili [ Sheri S. Behbahani B.A. Broadcast Journalism Denise Benavidez B.A. TV Film John A. Biondo B.A. TV Film B.A. Management Jennifer Bishop B.A. TV Film Demian E. Brown B.A. Public Relations Zachary A. Bushnell B.A. Communications Cynthia Bustamante B.A. TV Film Elma R. Castillo B.A. TV Film Robert B. Cole B.A. Speech Communications Deborah Council B.A. Communications Joshua R. Dale B.A. Communications Fay David B.A. TV Film Anne Dieterle B.A. TV Film Denise DiGiovanni B.A. Public Relations Jeannette Duvall-Ward M.A. Communications Christina Leigh Edier B.A. Public Relations Amanda G. Blake B.A. Radio TV Film Bryan Cole B.A. Photo Communications Rowena Dhingra B.A. Advertising Jon Edwards B.A. TV Film OPENING NEW DOORS 1 17 Aimee R. Faulhaber Hilda Fuentes Yukiko Fujisawa Lana Kim Fulford Travis Fusi B.A. Public Relations B.A. Public Relations B.A. Communications B.A. Communicative B.A. TV Film Disorders i Heather Gripp B.A. Journalism Jose Gutierrez B.A. Public Relations Georgia E. Halias B.A. Advertising Jennifer Hanscom B.A. Public Relations Vivian Hawkins B.A. Communicative Disorders Maki Hirano Greg Horspool Kevin M. Hoyle Katherine Iniba Diana R. Isbell .A. Journalism B.A. TV Film B.A. Advertising B.A. TV Film B.A. Speech Communications Kristen N. Isom Catrine Johansson Sheri Kamakani B.A. Public Relations B.A. Journalism B.A. Public Relations Kelly Kanawah Jenna J. Keegan B.A. TV Film B.A. Commm-dcations GRADUATES 1 18 I Kim Khauv B.A. Advertising Wei-Min Lai M.F.A. Advertising Nathan S. Kieta B.A. Broadcast Journalism Kyongmin Kim B.A. Advertising Ahmad M.S. Koulakani M.A. TV Radio Jennifer Kropke B.A. Journalism Michael Lamar B.A. Broadcast Journalism Tiffany M. Leyva B.A. Public Relations Adam Lin B.A. Speech Communications Jennifer F. Liu B.A. Public Relations Kai-Yin Luu B.A. Public Relations Melis Malki B.A. Public Relations Tiffany Marino B.A. TV Film Deanna Martinez B.A. Public Relations Katherine A. McGrath B.A. Public Relations Adriana Mejia B.A. TV Film Tiffany R. Merkel B.A. Advertising Wanda K. Moore B.A. Advertising Marcella Morimoto B.A. Communicative Disorders Robert J. Moss B.A. Advertising OPENING NEW DOORS 1 19 Karin Murdock B.A. Public Relations Gina M. Nani B.A. Communications Steven P. Nessel B.A. Public Relations Craddock Nguyen B.A. Public Relations Mary Ann Orate B.A. Broadcast Journalism Tangelique Parker Eric Penta B.A. Public Relations B.A. Communications Kelly H. Poffenberger B.A. Public Relations Jennifer Pulcini B.A. Advertising Leroy Rawlings B.A. TV Radio Film James Reed B.A. TV Film Ronee Salter B.A. Advertising Julio Sanchez B.A. Advertising Jennik Sarkissian B.A. TV Film Christopher L. Shelby B.A. TV Film B.A. Andrew Snider B.A. TV Film James Soeffner B.A. Communications Anna Songco B.A. Public Relations Michelle Soto B.A. Communications Brandi Stampe B.A. Advertising I GRADUATES 120 ' •■: r Tamatha Stanley Sheri Steiner Angela D. Strange Gregory Taravella Rona Tennis B.A. Public Relations B.A. Photojournalism B.A. Communications B.A. Communications B.A. Public Relations wlings Nicole Thomas B.A. Speech Communications Megumi Tokumura Cristina Travaglini M.A. Journalism B.A. Speech Communications Daniel L. Unger B.A. TV Film Susan M. Valot B.A. Broadcast Journalism ' Film Drake Williams Sarah Wue B.A. Pubhc Relations B.A. Communications Deborah K. Lowery B.A. Communications OPENING NEW DOORS 121 School of Engineering and Computer Science Acting Dean Kolf O. Jayaweera Obada Abushakra Willbert Aguirre Abid All Sebastian Alvarez Edmund Beronc B.S. Civil Engineering B.S. Electrical Engineering B.S. Computer Science B.S. Civil Engineering B.S. Electrical Engineering Hulya Botas B.S. Electrical Engineering Lauren R. Brown B.S. Computer Science Chao Chen M.S. Electrical Engineering Chia-Chien Chen M.S. Computer Science Yen-Hong Chen M.S. Computer Science GRADUATES 122 Yi-Jen Chen M.S. Electrical Engineering Myles Cheng B.S. Mechanical Engineering Ji-Ming Chi M.S. Computer Science Tania Dagher M.S. Computer Science Steven Evans B.S. Electrical Engineering r{ K IP ' is .l L ' .i Eric L. Gilfand M.S. Computer Science Ehab Hakeem B.S. Electrical Engineering Chia-an Hu M.S. Computer Science Wen-Yen Huang M.S. Electrical Engineering Bradford W. Johnson B.S. Civil Engineering John E. Kidd B.S. Electrical Engineering Desi J. Kiss M.S. Mechanical Engineering Robert L. Kramer B.S. Computer Science Melani K. Kusumo M.S. Computer Science Tzu-Te Liao M.S. Electrical Engineering Qen Thuan Liong Tung-Mei Liu B.S. Computer Science B.S. Computer Science Steve M. Lusa B.S. Mechanical Engineering Wahidallah Lutfy M.S. Computer Science Melissa Masinsin B.S. Electrical Engineering OPENING NEW DOORS 123 Susan T. Nachawati M.S. Electrical Engineering Mai Nguyen B.S. Computer Science Ma. Carmina Pagkalinawan B.S. Computer Science Amarish Patel B.S. Electrical Engineering Raul Rasay B.S. Electrical Engineering Timothy B. Richter Mohamad J. B.S. Computer Science Shakhshir B.S. Computer Science Michael G. Stripliu John Suk Syanna Syanna B.S. Computer Science B.S. Computer Science M.S. Computer Science Yu-Yuan Tai Ulyses R. Tamayo Tan Trinh Hoang Vo Robert C. Wang .S. Computer Science B.S. Electrical B.S. Electrical B.S. Electrical M.S. Computer Science Engineering Engineering Engineering Yu-Chen T. Wang B.S. Mechanical Engineering Wing Wilson Frederick J. Wolfe B.S. Computer Science M.S. Civil Engineering GRADUATES 124 say w School off Human Deuelopment ind Communitu Senrice Dean Soraya M. Coley Angieli C. Alano B.S. Child Development Daniela Alvarez B.S. Human Services Maribel Arquero B.S. Nursing Sondra A. Baker B.S. Human Services Ashley Barber B.S. Human Services Edward Berbiar M.S. Counseling Christa Boothroyd B.S. Child Development Merritt M. Brandt B.S. Kinesiology Kimberly Brennan B.S. Child Development Barbara Brewer M.S. Education OPENING NEW DOORS 125 Camille Brewer B.S. Child Development Kelly Bussey B.S. Kinesiology Monique M. Caimi B.S. Child Development Kimberly Carranza B.S. Child Development Rodney Castellanos B.S. Human Services Salvador Castellanos B.S. Human Services Sophan Chea B.S. Child Development Ester Y. Chough B.S. Child Development Cynthia A. Cole M.S. Counseling Susan M. Costantino B.S. Human Services Sandra de Groes B.S. Child Development Louisa De La Ossa B.S. Kinesiology Cynthia Detweiler B.S. Human Services Tricia M. Dillenbeck B.S. Child Development Tom Dillon B.S. Kinesiology Lisa P. Eckert B.S. Child Development Nadda Elhaj B.S. Child Development Michelle Esparza B.S. Child Development Tamara Esparza B.S. Human Services Shirley Faulkner B.S. Child Development GRADUATES 126 Kendra C. Forney Karla Franco Dolores Garcia Colin R. Gawronski Irene Gonzalez B.S. Child B.S. Child B.S. Human Services B.S. Kinesiology B.S. Human Services Development Development Lisa A. Gould B.S. Child Development Sheri Gurske B.S. Child Development Dawn Haag B.S. Kinesiology Erik Hartl B.S. Human Services Piper S. Harvey B.S. Child Development Laurie Hendrickson B.S. Child Development Sandra L. Hilsinger B.S. Child Development Sean Hoch B.S. Kinesiology Karen Hoge B.S. Child Development Karen Hostetter M.S. Kinesiology Sheng Hu B.S. Child Development Catherine Jayasuriya M.S. Counseling Jennifer Bonneau- Jefferson B.S. Child Development Michelle Johansen B.S. Child Development Heidi M. Kaufmann B.S. Child Development OPENING NEW DOORS 127 I Cathy Kelley B.S. Human Services Sharlene Kessler B.S. Child Development Michelle Kezeor B.S. Child Development Anna Kim B.S. Child Development Jiyoung Kim B.S. Child Development Gary King B.S. Nursing Stacy Kinsey B.S. Child Development Renee Kleen B.S. Nursing Deborah E. Klein B.S. Kinesiology Kristine L. Kobzeff B.S. Child Development Alania Kroeker Thavery Lay Jacqueline Levine Lisa Liu Nathan Longcrier B.S. Child B.S. Human Services B.S. Child B.S. Child B.S. Kinesiology Development Development Development Cvn Terry Lopez B.S. Child Development Colleen A. Lyon B.S. Human Services Lucila Macias B.S. Child Development Jenny R. McLane B.S. Child Development Barbara Mendoza B.S. Humaii Services GRADUATES 128 iment I Holly Morris Michelle C. Morris Ana L. Munoz Elizabeth M. Navarro B.S. Human Services B.S. Human Services B.S. Human Services B.S. Child Development Ericka L. Nelson B.S. Child Development Rezelda Nora Cecilia Oceguera Kyung Oh Elizabeth Ortiz B.S. Nursing B.S. Child B.S. Child B.S. Child Development Development Development Patricia Osorio- Zainos B.S. Child Development Cynthia M. Parulan M.S. Education Cari Pavek B.S. Child Development Lisa Pedroza B.S. Child Development Jacqueline A. Perez B.S. Human Services Rosemarie Perez B.S. Human Services Brian Pfiffner B.S. Kinesiology Danielle Pugh B.S. Human Services Denise Quintero B.S. Child Development James Raneri M.S. Education Gabriela Rivera B.S. Human Services OPENING NEW DOORS 129 Sharon Rodriguez B.S. Child Development Jennifer Rogers B.S. Child Development Stephanie Rouse B.S. Child Development Lucy Ruvalcaba B.S. Child Development Pamela B. Samy M.S. Education t Carla M. Sauls B.S. Child Development Eva M. Savela B.S. Child Development Leesa L. Scheuchl B.S. Child Development Michelle M. Scordato B.S. Human Services Maria E. Segura B.S. Child Development Maria G. Seguy M.S. Education Sylvia Shafik B.S. Human Services Paul Sinn B.S. Human Services Jennifer Slayman B.S. Child Development Julie A. Slope B.S. Child Development Robin Stinson B.S. Child Development Chele Strunz B.S. Kinesiology Chris Tavares B.S. Kinesiology Kristen Thomas B.S. Child Development Nesredin A. Turfu B.S. Human Services GRADUATES 130 Carol Tweedt Mali Vang Lynette Villa B.S. Child B.S. Human Services B.S. Child Development Development Nancy Villarreal M.S. Counseling Diana C. Villegas B.S. Kinesiology Cara Vincent Jayne Vo Mary Ann Walker Jason D. Watts B.S. Human Services B.S. Child B.S. Child B.S. Kinesiology Development Development Cheryl Weaver M.S. Education Jennifer Wickam B.S. Human Ser ' ices Andrea Williams Ellen Wood B.S. Human Services B.S. Human Services OPENING NEW DOORS 131 School off Humanities and Social Sciences Dean Donald S. Castro Robert Aban B.A. Psychology Christina M. Aboy B.A. English Peggy Abrahamian Gina Ahern Robin Albert B.A. Psychology B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Liberal Studies Teresa Alleman Heidi Baurmann Pamela J. Beach Laurelle Bednar Teresa A. Bell B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Liberal Studies B.A. Sociology B.A. Anthropo logy B.A. Liberal Studies GRADUATES 132 Leanne Bessey B.A. Liberal Studies Rebecca Bickmeier B.A. Psychology . i Karen Blake Bernadette A. Brady Juan Carlos Boiorquez B.A. Sociology B.A. English B.A. Psychology Criminal Justice Tena M. Brancato B.A. Criminal Justice Katherine M. Brannen B.A. Sociology Lori C. Brenny Randy W. Bristow B.A. Liberal Studies B.A. Criminal Justice Erica Brunasso B.A. English Daniel Bryant B.A. Criminal Justice Jeremy M. Buel B.A. Philosophy Pedro Carbajal B.A. Psychology Rita M. Carlos Lauren A. Carlson B.A. Anthropology B.A. Liberal Studies t y- ' - -J: Lilibeth J. Carreon B.A. Criminal Justice Claudia C. Castillo B.A. Sociology Griselda Castillo B.A. Sociology Karin Celikian Delores Chambers B.A. Psychology B.A. Criminal Justice OPENING NEW DOORS 133 Harmeet K. Ghana Emily Chong B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Religious Studies Political Science Sharon Clare B.A. Philosophy Cheryl Clayton B.A. Criminal Justice Anthony Cloyd B.A. Psychology Joshua Cohen Mary H. Collins B.A. Psychology B.A. Political Science Tracy A. Collins B.A. Liberal Studies Marie C. Conley B.A. Spanish Ivonne Contreras B.A. Liberal Studies . na David Kim B.A. Criminal Justice Jason R. Davis B.A. Liberal Studies Christie R. Diep B.A. English Denise Donadio B.A. Liberal Studies Yolette Doucet B.A. Liberal Studies Ul Erin Drake B.A. Psychology Melody Dumford Dawn R. Dunlap Brent A. Duque B.A. Liberal Sti.idies B.A. Religious Studies B.A. Political Science Laura C. Egan B.A. Liberal Studies Angel GRADUATES 134 Cloyd lOlog) ' Deborah J. Engelhard Kathy Espino Wendell E. Etherly Raoul Eusantos B.A. History B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Political Science Theresa Falcon B.A. Psychology mtreras j| Anastasia Fiandaca Michelle A. Fields IStudies fi B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology William Fifield B.A. English Leigh Fischer-Lantz B.A. Liberal Studies Karl J. Florence B.A. History Doucet slStafc Diana Fredrickson B.A. Liberal Studies Alexandria Galkin B.A. Anthropology Freddy J. Garay Shane T. Garcia Shirley Garcia- B.A. Psychology B.A. Criminal Justice Calderon Sociology B.A. Liberal Studies Angela A. Garrisi B.A. Psychology Anthony R. Goel B.A. History Leticia C. Gonzalez B.A. Psychology Wendi Gorsuch B.A. Criminal Justice David P. Goto M.A. History OPENING NEW DOORS 135 Jonathan M. Goto Michael Graef Michael J. Gruber Jason Guevara Jill Hackerd B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Political Science B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice I Q B.A. Elem Dana Hall Trea Hall B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Political Science Shevonne Hana B.A. Psychology John Harbaugh Rachelle Hargreaves B.A. Political Science B.A. Liberal Studies Kimberly Hayes- Bryant B.A. Criminal Justice Melissa Helf B.A. English Karen Henson B.A. Sociology Paul Hernandez B.A. Liberal Studies Martin Herrera B.A. Liberal Studies Kathleen B. Heuser B.A. Sociology Cynthia M. Holmes B.A. Psychology Christina Hurtado B.A. Liberal Studies Nancy E. Isom B.A. Anthropology Renee Ivy B.A. Psychology Ven: B.A. GRADUATES 136 CoUette Jackson B.A. Liberal Studies Elementary Education Erica jacquez Ryan A. Jara B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice Kinesiology Rafael Jimenez B.A. Liberal Studies Karen Kaye B.A. Psychology Jennifer E. Juell B.A. Psychology Darin Kaylor Steven B. Kelman Hassan Z. Khouri Grace K. Kim B.A. History B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Political Science B.A. History Yvonne Kim B.A. Sociology Monica M. Kirste B.A. Geography Voula Kokkalis Lawrence R. Labrado, Wendy Lai B.A. Anthropology Jr. B.A. Psychology B.A. Political Science Venia Lavender B.A. Psychology Rossana M. LaVigne Christopher LePage Annie Leal B.A. Liberal Studies B.A. Political Science B.A. Spanish Brian Licuanan B.A. Psychology OPENING NEW DOORS 137 Ching-Hsiu Lin B.A. Japanese Elizabeth M. Little B.A. Spanish Michael R. Lodyga B.A. History Patricia Lowe Mario Lucio B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice Romarico C. Macapagal B.A. Criminal Justice Deborah G. Maestri B.A. Psychology Conrad Magana B.A. Geography Alinne Majarian Simi Bobbie Mann B.A. Sociology B.A. Political Science Jodi A. Marden Craig Markwald B.A. Sociology B.A. Criminal Justice Jana M. Marsh Shannon M. Marta Sergio Martinez B.A. History B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. English Maria R. Marti ns B.A. Liberal Studies Joseph Mayo B.A. Criminal Justice Cynthia Mazzocco B.A. Linguistics Nathaniel McCormack B.A. Criminal Justice Darren McDermott B.A. Anthropology B.A.I GRADUATES 138 UCIO al)ustice Kristina McGorman LaTonya McGowan B.A. Liberal Studies B.A. Sociology Colleen McGuckin B.A. Sociology J. Barbara McNiel B.A. English Trisha Menald B.A. Political Science leiwami ■ Jennifer Mercier jlScience | B.A. Psychology Angela Miller B.A. Sociology Tara A. Mims B.A. Criminal Justice Mayumi Miwa B.A. Japanese Koh Mochizuki B.A. English laituiez agfch Cheryl Moon B.A. Liberal Studies Linda K. Moore B.A. Liberal Studies Kelli K. Mullins B.A. Sociology Victoria E. Neal B.A. English iropol«Sy Shelley K. Nichols Carmela M. Ocampo B.A. Geography B.A. Sociology Lorena Padilla B.A. English Diana Nebel B.A. Psychology Treena P. Palmer Leo Paredes B.A. Liberal Studies B.A. Criminal Justice OPENING NEW DOORS 139 Anne M. Pena B.A. Political Science Wan-Yi Peng M.S. TESOL Sandra Pennett B.A. Spanish Sandra Perez B.A. Psychology Cozette Petitt B.A. English Thomas W. Preston Patricia F. De Pulles B.A. Political Science B.A. Anthropology Lisa Radziminsky B.A. Sociology Armando Ramirez Debra L. Ray B.A. Spanish B.A. Criminal Justice Lorraine Rea B.A. Criminal Justice Erin N. Reintjes B.A. Liberal Studies Troy K. Reist B.S. Geology Laura P. Reyes B.A. Psychology Rocky Reyes B.A. Political Science Lizett Rivas Danny Robinson Benjamin Rodriguez John Rodriguez B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Psychology B.A. Sociology Jennifer Rohrig B.A. Sociology GRADUATES 140 Andrea Rose jlish I B.A. Criminal Justice Sociology Kristina Ross B.A. Liberal Studies Rosalba Ruiz B.A. Spanish Stefanie Sake B.A. Sociology Diana Sales B.A. Spanish LRay | Marilyn Salgado Sean Sanders Stephanie Sapper Ross Savino Gregg Schlappy lal Justice 1 B.A. Psychology B.A. Criminal Justice M.S. Environmental Studies B.A. History B.A. History LjI Reyes calSaffltt Tania R. Seitel Edgar Sillas Todd Singelyn B.A. American B.A. Psychology B.A. Sociology Studies Criminal Justice Ok Kyeong Skinner Kelley Skipper M.A. English B.A. Liberal Studies Amy Sommo B.A. Liberal Studies Diann D. Sorbel B.A. Sociology Erica M. Sotelo Dennis Strangeland Gina Stockton B.A. Liberal Studies M.A. English B.A. Psychology OPENING NEW DOORS 141 Anne Summers Abdul Tehrani Thanyarath Richard S. Torres Lori Totosz B.A. History B.A. Criminal Justice Toomngem M.P.A. B.A. English B.A. Liberal Studies 1 Vianne Townsend B.A. Japanese Stephanie Trejo B.A. Psychology Jonathon Trumbull Ernesto A. Valdez, B.A. Philosophy Jr. B.A. Psychology Lourdes Valencia B.A. Psychology B.A. Yvette Valles Roy D. Vaughn Talin Venk Rosalba Vera B.A. Sociology B.A. Political Science B.A. Psychology B.A. Sociology Andy J. Vigil B.A. Psychology Philosophy M.S.£ R.F. Wagner, Jr. B.A. English Annette Wallenburg B.A. Liberal Studies Tammy Wang B.A. Linguistics Rene L. Washebek Tim Wayne B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Criminal Justice GRADUATES 142 Katrina Wightman Patricia Williams Donna C. Wolf Christine Wu B.A. English B.A. Criminal Justice B.A. Liberal Studies B.A. Sociology Nelida M. Yanez B.A. Sociology Valencia Jennifer Yeon diolosv i B.A. Political Science logv; Shan Cai Giovanna M.S. Environmental Tsouloufas Studies M.S. Environmental Studies OPENING NEW DOORS 143 School off Matural Science and Mathematics Dean Kolf O. Jayaweera Amelia M. Alves Nahid A. Ameri M.A. Mathematics B.S. Cliemistry Levon Atarian B.A. Biological Sciences Holly J. Cantley B.A. Biology Connie Chang B.S. Biochemistry Victoria Denkler B.A. Biological Sciences Sang Do B.A. Biology Mark Forsyth B.A. Biology Jocelyn Frago B.A. Biology B.S. Chemistry GRADUATES 144 nanda Gerrard Rhodora P. Jonathan Halili Douglas Irwin Sheryl Jucker B.A. Biology Guevarra B.S. Biology B.A. Biology B.S. Physics B.A. Biology Danielle Kenfield- Long B.A. Mathematics Michelle Law B.A. Biological Sciences Rosalie Maniago B.A. Biology Mandana Moghadam B.S. Biochemistry Roya Mokri B.A. Biological Sciences Marjan Nadimi Holly Nguyen Monica O ' Blenes Esther Park Connie Shubash B.A. Biological B.A. Biology B.A. Mathematics B.A. Mathematics B.A. Biology Sciences Martin Strauss B.A. Mathematics Nadia G. Tavakkoli B.A. Biology Linda Tran B.A. Biological Sciences Lisa Uyeda B.A. Biology Vanessa Valverde M.S. Chemistry OPENING NEW DOORS 145 1 Soledad R. Villanueva B.A. Mathematics James P. Walker B.A. Biology Scott P. Warrick B.S. Chemistry GRADUATES 146 essages to the Graduates, . . . . fro nfrienaSj faniiJu ano Joueo ones tocfaif and a ioays ia to he happcj saccess a in everything cjoa da. 8, bad 9 f HERN- Qe oioafd ike to oiish the heat offacft for a healthcj and peroaa fatare. die are very proud u( (lie loue (joa, n, Bad 8t Joy mR(£f LMR - Youhaoe mpliahed goala you have aet for aeff ' Eapana, for example. You can ny thing! bon ' t (oorry he happy! ove you! %m, bad S Ju ie ViELf) PiLOf)R£Z- (lie have (patched kirooi from an adorable hahy to a itiful young oioman both in ide and Congratulationa, God fileaa and 2 you aldyays. die love you. n 8t bad RLENEf . RNTEmRCRUZ- iratulationa (-ynn on your great ivement! fi ay you find happineaa fulfillment in everything you do Hope for. (lielcome to the real ! Love you: I, Mom, Grace 8t Janet f CENUG- Oavaldonote ' inaa coma eatoy orgulloaa de ti, ) se como podre expreaarte cuanto iero y lo importante aue erea para ama L E fMLEY ' Congratulationa Eric, t a hieaaing to aee the accompliah- ' a you ' ve made ute are proud of Love, 0, bad Eamily KmmE (lECKER Congratulationa. (lie are very proud. May all of your future dreama come true. Love, ' bad. Mom, lionnie and findy LM REUE aEblYM ' die love you. (lie are excited for you. You hung n there through thick and thin. You did it and aye re proud of you. ' Mom, bad (lihole Eamily mREN Pim (iLtMCE- Congratulationa! You have accompliahed a great goal in your life, done oyith dedication and apirit (lie oyill alioaya aupport you. (liith love altiiaya, ' Your Eamily TEm ME)RIE ( Rf)NCf)rC ' die are so proud of you. Your peraeverance and hard Giork are proven by your aucceaa. (lie are bleaaed to have you for a daughter. Mom, bad Lynaey Lf)R(8Sft J. MOdilY ' Congratula- tiona! diorda can not expreaa hoo) proud I am of your accompliahmenta. diatching you groio aa a peraon and into my favorite artiat. Love aloiays, -bad from: LPtURENR aRC(dN ' Thanka Phil, Mom, bad, Oal, John, Charlie, Betty, Lea, Bob, Eileen, Ken, br. Eriel, br. I(atz, br. Miller, Gary, Lynn, Mike, ((riatina, Carolann, bennia St all o)ho cared. -Lauren KEUYRYE nBL SSEY Kelly your hard oiork haa finally come true. Have faith in your dreama youraelf and your future, bur love and aupport uiill aliaaya be mith you. -Mom St Ron LfiUREN CPiRL CN- Congratulationa Lauren. You did it in four. 6Je are proud of you! You (nill be a great teacher, -bad S, Mom EU E BEW Ptm CPtRMCNEi- Con- gratulationa Lia me are so proud of you. You did it Through marriage, pregnancy, raiaing little Jeaaalyn. May God Bleaa you and guide you. (lie love you. -Mom S, bad YI ' JEN CHEN ' May my Lord Jeaua bleaa me and the loved one forever. ' Taylor Loyalty HIH ' H8EUH CHEH ' The greateat happineaa ia poaitive cash fiobis. Steven Chen SETH MEiTTHEdi C OEEfiRI- bear Seth, aye are ao very proud of you. (lie love you and utiah you the beat of happiness and health. Love you aloyays, -Mom, bad, Tanya and Grandmom MTHOHYCLOYb- Congratulation Tony! Cm very proud of you. f knooi hooi hard you have struggled, but it has made you a stronger person. I love you very much! -Your diife, Julie CfiRRIE H COLLETT Congratula- tions on your graduation. You have (liorked hard for thia. May your reo ards be many. -Mom bad OPENING NEW DOORS 147 compfeted an important milestone in life. Higher education complements many personal attributes. May God continue blessing you through life. 6)e are proud of you. Congratulations, -Mom S bad Sl SM M. COIVSTMTfm- Congratu- lations to you on this high achieoement and honor. 4)e oiish you the best in this neoi endeaoor to obtain your masters degree. Love, ' Mom 8i Bllof our family b£mRf)H b. CQUNUL- bebbie, you have blazed neu trails and scaled neoi heights. I am so uery proud of your achievements. Your Loving Husband, ' John Jf)SCH CRLLEHCIf) ' Congratulations to our son Jason and all graduates. Thanks to the faculty officials and em ' ployees ofCSC f for making the gradu- ation possible. ' Mom, Oad Brothers CECIL O OLM BMrn- Congratulo ' tions Cecily on your Magna Cumme Laude graduation! You are such a fine human being. I love you! ' Mom JftSOH OflO S ' It is uiith great pride and Joy that Jamie and I extend our congratulations and best oiishes to you on your graduation from C Uf. Love, Mom Dad from: Qf mRf) M. 0£ GRO£ ' To my beloved father., oihom aloiays inspired my education... Thank you Oad( (made it. laloiays told you loiould. Keep flying (liith the angels and oiatch over me in heaven. You ' II see a success story you mould have been proud off In Memory...Your Daughter f997CSaf College Graduate, Sandra M. de Groes RL£KmLCICR£TmD£L Gmmi ' Dear- est fileKia congratulations, die are proud Opening New Doors 148 of you and your accomplishments. May the Lord Jesus bless, keep and prosper you aloiays. die love you. -Mom, £mmanuel family OICTCRIf) D£HI(L£R ' You gave me my inspiration to continue on in my life, hopefully this diploma mill be your inspi ' ration to continue on in your endeavors. Congratulations! I love you. -Mom OICTORIf) D£Hl(L£R ' Congratulations dearest daughter. You did it, and am bursting ayith pride, (liishing you ec ual success as you pursue graduate stud- ies and live a regarding life. Love you, -Dad QIC TORm D£HKL£R ' Time is irrelevant in the educating of a beautiful mind as in the creation of a lasting relationship! doth can never be taken from us. Con ' gratulations! I love you, ' filbert ftvila OICTCRIf) D£HI(L£R- Your determina- tion and dedication has brought you this far. Your inspiration has touched me. filuiaysgo aH er your goals, keep peace, Joy and love in your beautiful heart Love, -Ount Loretta £HRIOU£RC£LD£l)£Rf)- Congratula- tions good luck and (lie oyish you success in all of your future undertakings, die love you and are very proud of you. God bless and take care, -Mom 8, Dad JGSfPH f L£Kfim£R Dlf Z- die are proud of you, God (Mess you, ' Mom 8, Dad LfiURflfi. D(f)Z- Congratulations Laura you finally did it me are so proud of you me mish you the best in anything you do in the future, ' Mom 8, Dad JCHN DUGfiN ((( ' Congratulations son me are very proud of you. Good luck in your future education and through out your life, die love you John, -Mom, Dad Chris fdU k lOl If dJ dm at I r owhi TfCDDR £NOCH£- Thanks to ya, efforts, faith in God and in yourself ut have accomplished your dream, die a very proud and me love you. -Mom, Dad 8t (brother (WC£NTYDUNG£NCfiRNf C(CH- 1 love ciou Oince. Trust God he never fai . Congratulations and keep up the goi mark. God (iless you, -Mom, Dad Merv, Milli, Menard 8, Tf. M(CH£aM£(YD(iZf £SPfiRZB ' (ta a very long road you traveled to achin your goal The mhole family is oi proud of you. 6Je all love you a lot. ' Mom 8 The family Tf)Mf)Rf L f PORZf)- 6Je are alio proud of you. die love you. -Mom, Dad Tiff 8, Todd SYLim fOf HS ' Dear Sylvia, you an example to all of us on the meaning hard mork and persistence. May continue to bless you in every may. love you. ' Mom, Dad Deb Dan ((£HDRf) fCRNfY ' Congratulatior your success! ou re a special daug sister mith a special giff to make a di ence in the morldi die ' re proud of ((endral -Mom, Mike 8 Damon JDCfLYN fRflGC- Congratulatio your great achievement. Good Jo being first to graduate, keep up the mork. 6Je love you and God Bless ' Dad, Mom, Jenny, Judith Jimr D(ft(Vf) fR£DR(C((SOr(- Congra tions, Diana. You ' ve marked very he obtain this degree, die ' re very pro you. -Mom, Dad 8, Sis Mf)RY CfiRMfN GftRC(fi- Pane. have achieved a milestone in yout We are all very proud. Look forme your next goal and keep on going, d almays be there for you. Un (iesc ' Tu f a Desde Brriba CDUH RfiYMCND Gf (dR(iHS«( Colin, The kind of son all parents s i kfi, i jjtttanil flmi ;c.(i)e ' Jflarft ' mtrtii fiartt idki ' ' ssec (oitf). Congrnfufatinns nn %ll iioar future endeaoora. Q G£RRf)kb- RmanHa, One •e hurd e over oiith. Congratu ationaf are so proud of you, m Dad q R C£GO( LD fif.fi.O. be darDf ed did it. (lie are proud, face! m 8t Bad HELLE fim Sft GROSS- die are f proud of you your accomp isfy- tk fmk i if. Gie oiisf) that your long road of .ess (liiffconrtmence upon your gradu- Looe, d, Mom 8t Ted % ' i{(nmi) CM- Congratulations from sand miles aoyay. (i)e are proud of coe love you. r louing Mom Dad ' fi M. GUTIERREZ- To our dearest hate, best wishes on your big day N may all your tomorroois be bright tof JrfAUffl beautiful and filled oiith lucki 71, Bad, Joy 8i Oennis fi f f LL- This road is at an end but -eal Journey is about to begin. (i)e y ou and are proud of the successes haue achieved. 1, Nana 8 Mom mi Wjjfl y iJ. UfildimS- Ourt ish is that ifeiCf f . Journey brings you happiness and flflfluooi ' ggg (lie are proud of you daughter, oiill love you aloiays. ■n Dad ITIIY f ERRERD- Martin, you ' re the in your family!! Your brother Jose, sister Liz, and the toxins Edith and ith, and your parents (Bonifacio and tbeth are as proud as can be!! God sing you Martin. Congratulations, 7)8, bad HY HEUSER- Dearest Kathy. an mplishment earned biith grace, hard and perseverance, f chieved ugh heartache and sorrobi, triumph joy. Congratulations! (liith respect Were ifcfeie ' ' 01 fssJ . and utmost pride, -Your Loving familcj CHRISTINPt HURLfibO- I am proud of you for your determination to folloiii your goals. Strive for happiness, peace and balance. I uiish you success and love, -Carlos Sandoval LdCICf IRENEN- Congratulations, your concept of higher education inspired you to press on. Therefore, you studied untiringly 8t achieved your goal, we sa- lute you. God filess you. die love you. -Mom Papa OOI GLBS S. (RdMfi- Congratulations OougH 6Je were richly blessed by God to have you in our family. May all your dreams come true! Love aloiays, -Mom Omm RfiE ISMLL- Congratulations to my college girl You ' re my inspiration and the Oiind beneath my utings. Love, -Mom KRISTEN ISOM- die are eo proud of you. Grab that gold ring and hold fight and discover your dreams coming true. -Dad, Mom, Bave 8t Kim ff RfiHmZ Jf)Cif)Lf To my dear a ife, you are the best, (love you forever, you and the JoJo baby congratulations and I oyish you the best of everything in life. - Hamsareto ERIK PETER JENSEN- You can accom- plish more in one houru ith God than one lifetime without him. Take him oiith you Erik and chase your dream. Love You! -Mom, Bad Leif 8tlngrid from: CDTRINE JONMSSON- To my family: Your support is crucial and invaluable! Mom: You give me oiings Uihen I utant to fly and strength oihen I am (lieak. -Catrine JOHf)N mRLSTROM- In the big league of life, Jo, sport hits a grand slam! Perhaps the next Chick, Oin orRomie. Oi gratulerar fill en fin framtid. -Mom, Bad, Bog 8t Cats JOHN EBdiMB KIBB- (de are not only proud but it ' s a pleasure and an honor that God blessed us C6ith you as our son. die love you, -Mom 8, Bad STfiCEY P NN KINSEY- You have reached your first goal! Just remember you can do anything if you set your mind to it. You ' ll be a great teacher, die are so proud of you. You are so special Love, -Mom 8, Bad Lf)(iiRENCE R LMRftBO JR.- Larry you make us proud, die knoui you mill continue to accomplish your goals laifh style and humor and a commitment to do the right thing, -Mom Bad MICHf)EL LftMfiR- die are so proud of you for completing your degree in four years, (lie love you and knooi your future looks u onderful! -Mom, Bad 8, Michelle CHRIS LEPfiGE- I see the sun son and it shines to illuminate the distance, illus- trate the difference, indicates right. Chris, thank you for shining! -Mom Bad STEVE LUSfi- You never gave up no matter hooy hard it uias. You never complained no matter hooy bad it got. You never let us dooin, we are so proud of you. die love you! -Your family COLLEEN LYON- You ' re full of dedica- tion, beauty and love. You are the child every parent dreams of Our hearts are filled laith love and pride. Congratula- tions princess! Love, -Mom 8, Bad JOSEPHINE KdiENf) MPtOOTJPi- diarmest congratulations and all good (liishes too, in honor of the graduation occasion, in honor of you. May God Opening New Doors 149 6 ess you in all your deliberations. -Mom, dad, Penny Nare mmaiCM C. mCOPf)Gf)L its excit- ing to see you came this far and a Joy to u ish you more success in the years ahead, die re proud ofuou. Loue, -bad 8, Mom CRFilG MFtROIN MDRKCdBLb- Craig, you knoiii hoiii proud I am of you. Just (liish you father o ould haoe been able to see you achieve your goal( Love almays, -Mom 8t Scott JMf) MMf£ MftRSf - (lie are very proud of you forgetting through school (lie love you and are happy you are our daughter. -Mom Bad IVMCr MfiSOlY- You toiled au ay for graduation day, adversities took their toll But you reached your goal God guides you in all you do, I am so very proud of you. -Mom mrmNia MCCGRMICK- Nate, con- gratulations on your success, die are all proud of your achievements and look foroiard to a bright and fulfilling future. Great odork! -family friends CGdaNMLGUCKIN- You are our pride and Joy! Much hardoiork has gone into getting your degree. Good luck in your teaching profession, die love you, -Mom, Bad (brothers RfhYMGNb R M£m£Z- Ray we are very proud of you, your hard oiork and effort paid off -bad. Mom, Brother 8 Sister RGMRTMETGYLR- die love you and (lie are all very proud of your accom- plishments. Congratulations and keep God in (jour heart and your future uiillbe successful -Mom, bad family diOmi) im MGCRL- Thank you Kevin, Sean and Corey. I never could Opening New Doors 150 have done this utithout all your support and encouragement. Thanks for your help guys. I love you all very much. Love, -Mom f NTHGNY bOOIb MGRRGdi- Con- gratulations 97 grad, finthony Morrout. die ' re very proud of your accomplish- ments and dedication in receiving your Bfi degree, lots of love and support aloiays, -bad. Mom 8t Richard «£a( «f)THL££N MUIIINS- die are so proud of your accomplishments and the person you have become. You bring Joy and love to everyone u ho knoois you. Love, -bad. Mom Brian J£ff£RYMY£RS- die are so very proud of you. (lie aliiiays knediyou u oulddo it. -Mom, bad Mike family J£ffR£YNICH(iLS- Jeff may you have the music of laughter, the (oarmth of friendship and the spirit of love. Here s to a successful music career. Love, -Mom. bad, Kent bebbie SH£a£YKR(STI( £NICHGLS- Shelley congratulations! God Bless you abun- dantly mth every good and perfect gify He has for you. die are very proud of you! -Mom, bad Family Tf)UH GHamGLU- bearest Talin, aye ' re all so very proud of you 8t utish you a life filled (liith happiness, success, luck dreams come true in everything you do! Congratulations best oiishes al- (liays! Love, -Hovsep family ST£()£ GUTI£RR£Z Pf BLO- Loving graduation a ishes. -Mom, Brother Sister Jf)COU£UH£ f lb££ P£R£Z- die are very proud of you, of everything you have accomplished and hope all of your dreams come true. -Mom bad SMbRf) £ P£R£Z- Sandra, another air •A milestone achieved and other goals a to attain and you shall e are proud. you and your accomplishments and 6 ' ' love you. -Mom bad £UG£N£ M. P£T£RS (I- Gunnar, cob gratulations! fis you begin to open ntff doors and explore neo) paths, olfW strength in knooiing I ' ll be by your sidmf support and encourage you aloiays. )6| ' fc oiife, Jm) -Monica ijW J£m(f£R PULCINI- Jen, you diMk £ven through the toughest times, m ' are so very proud of you. You are tni wis an inspiration to us all 6Je love yoo -fill your family b£H(S£ M. OUIHT£R(i- Congrato tions. (lie are so proud of you. 6Je « fie you benise, -bad Mom, bi Reba L(iRRfl H£ R£fi- Lori, your hardoiotjk fi dedication has made us proud of i congratulations! You deserve the b Reach for the stars! -Pop, Mom, Monica findy Lfl( Rf)PR£Y£S- CongratulationsLa. you have cdorked so hard for this. I very proud of you and ( love you i much. Love, -Brett LBURf) P R£Y£S- My Laura, it ' s be, long road for you. I am so proud of . God Bless you and may He grant yo your Oiishes. Love, -Mom SH£RI£ fiOOlY RObG£RS- Congr r,i fa lotions to a beautiful daughter and rageous uioman. May you achieve i goal (liith God ' s blessings. Love, -Mom KRISTim fi. ROSS- Tina, congrai « tions on a huge achievement The Toorvald Child to graduate from coi (tiith honors! Your dad Uiould be proi love you, -Kelly IRMfi R£B£CCfi SBNCHfZ- For t ffl6 mhL T km vmoi t y, to men, leji ifoopj let) ports, j iKf fifties, p, )tK((ire KSpfl ■Ml of ' womli, o dream, there is no uch c6ord aa ' ' ' ffu ooRRiMe. CiiiRhincj ijoci a chance to WftiMfsa,,! M all your dreams, hoping they mill ng got! happiness, am, Bad, Lissa S Carlos mt ff)m8f)LC£- Ste anie Sake, i e re Iproiidofgour accomplishment. You ked real hard to achieoe gour goal i goa did it( So nooi go out and take the utorld. Loue, am S dad cm SPimibGE- Dave, a definite i a specific deadline, these are the ' s to achieving one ' s destingi The jreisgours. Challenge it. Congratu- ons! Ide love gou, im The Gang (m w £PHf)ni£ SflPPER- Dearest m. tie phanie, gou oiorked to(oard the at- iment of this success all gour life, iching gour goal is emotionallg re- ding for gou and gour familg. Love, tm Dad MRT IsMLLIFiin SCHULTZ- Your u ' lg shares this moment of gour )„ lievement laith great pride. Con- ' iiUmiff ' otions Rob, gou have made us proud indeed. m Dad filSTCPHER L SHELBY Proud of , remember love is the most pou erful .e. God loves gou, love gourself, gour  a) men, gour skills. You 11 live to gour est potential m 8) Dad df)RD R SHERLCCIC To a loving 1 ( j„w band, father 8t grandfather- Con- l tulations on gour much deserved ,j,ij( cess, e are all verg proud of gou. e, Cindg, Diane, Kirk Natalie ZPtNNE R SITTCN- Congratula- s Suzi, as aluiags, gou continue to jf j I ' (e gour parents verg proud, find as jgs, (oe love gou verg much, m 8, Dad TTHEliS ERIC SITZmN- Youngest, not least, we have saved the best for WftrfAis, I ' 3f isifljl ' IsioDC, ) - frC last You still make us proud, as so manu times in the past. -Your real parents JULIE f)mE SLOPE- Congratulations Julie! (lie kneoi that gou could do it God liless gour efforts idith success. -Mom 8 Dad PtmRECd LEE SNIDER- (de are proud to be gour parents. (i)e loish ijou a happg, healthg and prosperous future. Love, -Mom 8, Dad ERICM M. SCTELC- Satisfggour intel- lect and continue to contribute as a Hispanic Moman for self familg and others. I(nooy gou bring talent, pride and much love. Con carina, -Dad Mom mC ( SP( RR-MCMMfGSL- Congratu- lations IVicki! (i)e re proud of gour perse- verance in accomplishing gour degree goals bg gourself Just one of gour Oionderful qualities! die love gou and God (iless! -Dad, Mom, Staci, Tim, Kaitlgn TfiMfiTL fi STMLEY die are so verg proud of gou. You have given us morejog than gou u ill ever knooi and oie count it a blessing that gou are our daughter and friend. -Mom 8, Dad DDYNETTE Lf)TREECE STEG DRD- Congratulations! You have fulfilled a 22 gear dream. Mag God continue to keep gou in his care, die love gou, -Mom 8, Dad f)P DUL H. f). TEHRPtM- Hassan, con- gratulations on earning gour fi ). Liie all love gou and are verg proud of gou. Can ' t mait until gour next degree. Love, -familg RICHfiRDSCOTTTORRES- Congratu- lations on gour achievement. You have oiorked so hard, die are all so proud of gou! die love gou so much. -Monica, Jeff Robert, Stephanie and most of all Dad Mom GlOOf nm TSOHLOI ffiS- Cur heart and love for gour great accomplish- ment, filoiiags live up to gour goals, gou make us feel verg proud and happg. -Mom. Dad. f lan 8, Sam CRRCL H. TIdEEDT In valuing real estate, it ' s location, location, location. In graduating from college, it ' s persever- ance, dedication, betterjob. more moneg. proud, proud, proud, utag to go! -The firobin Hear THUBHDPiC UCNG- (de are so proud of gou. Thuani Let this be a good start for an exciting and meaningful future. Congratulations! -Mom 8, Dad LCURDES Of)LEHCIf)- Congratulations on gour great accomplishment. I ' m so verg proud of gou. Mag all gour dreams and (Irishes come true babg. You deserve it. -Ddrian PtHDREf) DflRELf)- e have (patched gou grou) from our little girl to a beauti- ful, goung Lioman. die are verg proud of gou and gour accomplishment Love gou, -Mom, Dad 8t Sergio LCUfS f). OECCHICNE III- Louie, gou almags made us proud to be gour par- ents. God Mess gou aloyags. Psalm 27: fV, Mattheoi 2S:23, John fS: 1- 18 8t I Corinthians fS:S8. Love, Mom Pops ROSftLfifi OERf)- Congratulations Rosalba, gou finallg achieved gour goals. Remember patience, persistence and determination equals success. You have and aloyags oiill be a precious Rose in the garden of our lives. 6Je love gou and aye are greatig proud of gour achievements! Your familg, -Dad, Mom, firaceig 8t Maricela f CNHIE L OIGIL- (Bonnie, on this dag gou have succeeded to overcome so mang obstacles anddiOIY. 6Je couldn ' t be more proud. Love, -Mom 8t Robin DON-A-YEE JEEP CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH EAGLE of P I a c e n t i a Jeep. Eagle 777 W. Orangethorpe Placentia, CA 92670 (714)879-5337 (714)528-5337 (714)528-7001 Fax Congratulations to the Fullerton Graduates of 1997! $400 Rebate to all College Graduates! Chrysler TjS Plymouth ...to be the oM ofiS97 W 85 ' uea ? o aeauxiled e ' r uice KJon raiuJalions, Syraouaies! We re J rouo io (buppori KJaJiforma (biaie Unwersiii , JuJlerlon! OCARGILL FOODS 550 North Gilbert Fullerton, CA 92633 (714)449-6700 Fax (714) 871-8058 FULLERTON 800 North Harbor • Fullerton (located just south of Berlteley, off of Harbor, in the city of Fullerton) Featuring Complete Professional Detailing Window Tinting Express Lube Texaco Gas Station (714) 871-7087 Use your Student I.D. card and get 5 OFF Any Car Wash Service OX Mon-Sat 8am-6pm Sun Sam-Spm tO% OFF Detail Shop Service, Window Tinting or Lube Express (Good for the whole year) J T ' AFFERENT DEGREES OF SUCCESS I Always Wanted To Run My Own Business. So I Joined Enterprise. Fred Fortun BA, Communications CSUF 1995 Enterprise only hires hard-working, entrepreneurial individuals. People who want to learn every aspect of running a business, from customer service to personnel management. Enter our fast-paced business as a Management Trainee, and we ' ll reward your dedication and sales ability with raises, promotions and the opportunity to go as far as your talent will take you. Sales Management Trainee $26,000 • A BS BA Degree ' Strong communication skills, en thusiasm and drive • Customer service, management or sales experience a plus If you want to learn all aspects of running a business while enjoying full pay and benefits, join the Enterprise team. Call (714) 841-5779 or send r6sum6: 18151 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, California 92648, Attn: Donna Miller. An equal opportunity employer. http Zwww.erac.com Enterprise rent-a-car L.A. CELLULAR. Los Angeles Cellular Telephone Company Southern California ' s premier cellular telephone service provider offers excellent employment opportunities. With locations throughout Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties, we seek energetic and career- minded individuals to join our dynamic team. As a proud Equal Opportunity Employer, we are committed to providing competitive salaries and an outstanding benefits package. If you want to be part of a winning team, make the call to L.A. Cellular. Job Information Hotline: (562) 403-8519 SSi WANTED!! Want To Sell Your Furniture, Appliances or Electronics? Usually, Same Day Pick-Up! CASH PAID FAST !! m We also sell new used fiimiture every Tuesday night at 6:00 pm aU COUNTIES SUCTION, INC. 601 S. State College Blvd. • Fullerton, CA 92631 1-800-738-8270 YORBA LINDA KUMON CENTER KUMON MATH READING CENTERS Lcarnins How To Learn Call Today! 714-572-6133 1 8200 YORBA LINDA BLVD. yORBA LINDA, CA 99886 N, BASTANCHURY RD FULLERTON FOOD FUN FOR HUMANS™ V Open Daily for y Lunch G. Dinner Full Menu Served Late Cocktails • Take Out Service 1401 S. Harbor Blvd. • Fullerton between Orangelhorp the 91 Frwy. 879-9324 M S( efuf6cd f Tteed x, itde X76 GLAZING CONTRACTOR Lie 589450 Proud to have participated in the Library Seismic Upgrade at Cal State Fullerton 135S. EUCLAAVE. SANDIMAS, CA 91773 909 ' 394-4849 FAX 909 ' 394-4850 SETTING THE STANDARDS OF QUALITY SERVICE (Best WisHes to tk 1997 graduates Phone: (714) 835-4300 Fax; (714) 543-0443 1900 East 17th Street Santa Ana, CA 92705 CONGRATULATIONS! I.A ' ;.4m!l CLASS OF 1 997 DAYS INN FULLERTON 1500 S. Raymond Avenue Fullerton, California 92631 Phone (714) 635-9000 ' Graduation Recaptions and Hotel Accommodations paS SJaifiastrugg lloni ;,|5f0 Mechanical • Service • Sheet Metal li M Ca( State. FJie ton Oh fft if EiectMcao nnd TeoecommaAioatms U S910 Lakeshore Drive Cypress, California 90630 (714]Ba -0490 Fax C7ia) asi -3639 n CO SERVICES, INC. Partners in construction with CSU Fuilerton COM Services, Inc., is engaged in the nstallation, rearrangement, repair and maintenance of Voice, Data and Image Cable Network Systems. Tomorrow ' s Technology is Ineffectual Without Quality Telecommunication Cable Installations Copper and Fiber Optic Cabling Services CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1997 H LFTTRRISG CONCEPTS Signage Fabrication Installation We are very proud to have been associated witfi Calif omia State University, udertonfor the past 5 years. T ' ftaniQjoufor tfk opportunity of satisfying your sign requirements tftrougfiout the entire campus. 17822 Georgetown Lane Huntington Beach, CA 92647 ■printing printing printing printing FREE PICK UP DELIVERY • BUSINESS CARDS • STATIONERY • ENVELOPES • BROCHURES •CARBONLESS FORMS • FAX SERVICE • FLYERS • PHOTOS • TYPESETTING • AND MUCH MORE.. INUTEMAN Call Now for Your Free Estimates • Ask about our FREE Color Days! 1139 S. Placentia Ave. Fullerton,CA 92831 (714) 680-6690 Fax ( ' M) 680-6544 • • • itfCT u Jjoartl Cjhob • Fine Sfcaietoards. Sntwhtards and apparel (714) 256-9464 ■ 330 North Brea Blvd., Ste. B • Brea, CA 92621 V GM ASSOCIATES Gene Miles Architect Gene Miles 1 51 E. Chapman Fullerton, CA 32831 C714) 73B-11B1 ARCHITECTURE PLANNING ENGINEERING rVlANAGEMENT Congratulations, Cal State Fullerton Renick Cadillac INCORPORATED e iJi€ l ylh€ ' t u iale of ' 97 1 100 South Euclid Fullerton, CA 92632 (714)871-9300 Bob ' s UNOCAL® Services Complete Auto Repair Propane, Diesel, 76 Gas 24 Hr Road Call Assistance Smog Ctteck Products Company Limited Warranty Camille Awad Service Manager Five Star Dealei 1133 East Commonwealth Fullerton, California 92831 Telephone (800) 600-0155 (714)871-5424 Voice Mail (714) 301-7618 SUPERIOR GUNITE GUNITE CONSTRUCTION • ENGINEERING CONSTRUCTION est Wishes to the graduates 12306 VAN NUYS BOULEVARD LAKEVIEW TERRACE, CALIFORNIA 91342 (818)896-9199 • (213)877-4861 FAX (818)896-6699 EXPERT REPAIR ON ALL BIKES FINANCING AVAILABLE BICYCLES We Proudly Support CSU Fullerton 424 E. Commonwealth Fullerton, CA 92832 (714) 879-8310 Tel (714)879-8901 Fax 10% Ojf with Student LD. MR WATERBED SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 24 YEARS TINE T3EDROOM TURNITURE 3 1 37 E. YORBA UNDA BLVD. FULLERTON, CA 92831 2 ELKS. EAST OF 57 FWY HRS. M-F 10-8 SAT 11-6 SUN. 12-5 (714) 996-9240 OVER 1500 SPECIES 714-828-4298 OPEN 6 DAYS 9-5 PM CLOSED MONDAY ONLY. 10580 BEACH BLVD. STANTON, CA 90680 est. 1983 Inland Transmission You will find personal and professional attention given in the SMALL BUSINESS TRADITION 225  A W. Truslow Fullerton, CA 92832 (714) 526-7288 Rick Jaeger Fax: (714) 526-7296 Owner ;i E IK lij inwealtli i 92132 310Tel 901 Fix : 11-! in « _


Suggestions in the Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) collection:

Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 1992 Edition, Page 1

1992

Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 1993 Edition, Page 1

1993

Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 1994 Edition, Page 1

1994

Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 1996 Edition, Page 1

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Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 1999 Edition, Page 1

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Cal State Fullerton - Titan Yearbook (Fullerton, CA) online collection, 2000 Edition, Page 1

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