High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 30 text:
“
The Cal Dance Team and Cal Band perform during Homecoming Week. This year, spirit was raised with lots of activities for students to partici- pate In throughout the week. Typically sponsored by the California Alumni Association, this year ' s festivities involved a student comittee which has not existed since 1964. Previously. Homecoming Weekend focused on parents with Parent ' s Weekend and the alumni with little emphasis on the stu- dents. In 1997. the California Alumni Associa- tion and the Office of the University Relations worked to bring Homecoming Weekend back to campus after 40 years. In 1999. Parents ' Weekend was added to the Homecoming celebration. The number of activities this year more than doubled, and they were specifically designed to incorporate students into the spirit of Homecoming. To me. if students don ' t have a student experience of something. It ' s almost impossible to expect them to want to come back as alumni and want to experience It again, said Jason Simon, the advisor to the Homecoming Team for the California Alumm Association. It was important to make a big deal about (Homecoming Week] to show students that Homecoming is something that is for them and that when they are invited back for a class reunion, or just to come back to Homecoming in general, they have a picture in the back of their mind, a memory, a fun experience with friends, a free T-shirt that can draw them back in. The California Alumni Association spent SiS.ooo for Homecoming Week and the Student Homecoming Team raised S28,ooo from local businesses and corporations. For me, that ' s the unspoken success story. Simon said. For a first year project, that these 19 student leaders were able to raise S28.000 just blows me away. It shows the real potential that outside corporations and community groups can see with Homecoming. I think it ' s just going to grow even bigger since it is one of the few events on campus that truly strives to bring everyone together. It ' s very rare that there ' s one week of events that can bring everyone together to celebrate this place. The week ' s festivities began with Homecom- ing Kick Off and Fenton ' s ice Cream Giveaway, fenton ' s Creamery donated over 4,000 scoops of ice cream. For Emily Scheele. the publicity and marketing coordinator, and a sophomort majoring in political science, this first event was the most memorable of all of the week ' s events. Every person 1 told before the event happened said, ' Free ice cream? I ' m there! ' Ar I think that sticks in their minds, and they ' ll
”
Page 29 text:
“
ubstantial resources to undergraduate ;ducation and his unprecedented record of und-raising will bear fruit for many years to onne. said Richard C. Atkinson, president of he University of California. Also, among his achievennents is his effort n returning University of California Berkeley ' s ibrary to a nationally recognized, top-ranked esearch facility. ' We w ere not surprised to see that estoration of the library was one of the things le was most proud of. His interest in the ibrary dates to his earliest days on campus. aid Thomas Leonard, university librarian. Other than building restorations. Berdahl las done a number on increasing academic uccess. fund raising and faculty recruitment. Iraduation rates were at a school history high )f 82% of undergraduates graduating within ix years. Average time for undergraduates to eceive their diploma was at an all-time low )f 4.31 years for entering freshmen in the fall )f 1996. From 1998 to June 2003, the school eceived more than Si. 3 billion from private jhilanthropy. another new record. These signs )f success created a very attractive learning nvironment for scientists and scholars around he world, an idea which Berdahl believes is he greatness of Berkeley. The greatness of Berkeley lies in the fact hat. given sufficient resources and adequate acilities. our faculty can recruit the best dentists and scholars In the world. said lerdahl. Berdahl truly made his mark as a great ihancellor of University of California Berkeley, nd the work he has done will forever be nstilled in the campus. ' In my time as chancellor. I have been ortunate to serve with some outstanding ndlviduals. Berdahl said. It has been the ;reatest privilege and honor of my life to serve s chancellor of the University of California at lerkeley. % Berdahl takes time out of his day to drop in on the Homecoming staff- During Homecoming Week. Berdahl was actively involved in meeting and greeting the visitors and welcomed many former students back to campus. (bottom) During Welcome Week. Chancellor Berdahl addresses hundreds of new freshman in an encouraging speech at Memo- rial Clade. Each year, the Chancellor also invited students to a catered reception on the lawn of the University House When I leave in June, I will have com- pleted 18 years in very rewarding, but very demanding positions. It is time for me to return to my academic roots and to the pleasures of teaching and scholarship. Chancellor Berdahl 17
”
Page 31 text:
“
•emember it for next year. Scheele said. Rally Committee and Superb sfiowed Animal ouse In Wheeler Auditorium that night. :hristy Slojo. a sophomore sociology major and s the publicity coordinator for Rally Commit- :ee. said, People were very enthusiastic about omecoming. Some people came to Animal ouse dressed up in togas in the spirit of the novie. Tuesday was the Homecoming Banner :ompetition, which offered a $500 cash prize to ;he student group that won. The banners were ung on the balconies of the Martin Luther (ing Student Union building for the duration )f the week. Tuesday nighthad a colloquium n Anderson Auditorium in the Haas School of Jusiness. sponsored by the Rally Committee. ' I feel the most successful event that we held other than the Homecoming Rally] was our Homecoming colloquium, where we had three )f our Nobel laureates on campus and one of )ur Pulitzer Prize winners speal . Siojo said. It was a really great way to get people spirited bout Cal. Rallies are one thing, but when you ;et some of our prize-winning professors to ;peak about their experiences at Cal and how nuch they love the university, it ' s a different ay of getting people spirited. Late Tuesday night was the California Caba- et at the international House, which featured tudent singers and dancers. Auditions were eld in Morrison Hall a week before the show, bn Sunday, three days prior to the show, there Lvas a rehearsal, where individual students and jroups each performed their own acts. There were 12 acts ranging from singing and dancing to comedy, including a men ' s a capella group jnd a group of Hawaiian dancers. Acts ranged from well-established campus groups to fresh faces that put on their first performance here after just meeting in the dormitory. Thais Zayas-Baz3n, a fifth-year majoring in integra- tive biology, who performed At Last, was disappointed in the turnout of the audience ind felt the program could have been adver- tised better. It was disappointing that a lot of jeople didn ' t show up, Zayas-Bazan said, But. IS a performer. 1 think it ' s not so much the turnout but the experience. But from the audi- ence standpoint, the more people there are. the more the audience thinks it ' s a better show Students found themselves waiting in long Flines on upper Sproul Plaza on Wednesday as lu.SOO free white T-shirts with this year ' s home- coming logo on the front were given away. Simon felt that this was the most successful event of the week because students wore the shirts even weeks after Homecoming. This proved that the culture around Homecoming isn ' t just a one-time thing. Showcase on the Steps. designed to celebrate Cal student performances featured various cultural student groups, such as Cal Wushu. Theater Rice and the Movement. Those groups can go and reserve the steps themselves, but we wanted to highlight several groups, so we facilitated that by reserving the area and setting it up. said Matt Aguiar, a third-year majoring in economics and the chair of the Student Homecoming Team. Thursday featured the Cal Can Creation Competition in which various student groups created constructions out of canned food on lower Sproul Plaza. It was great to see a Creek Week team win the ' construction ' and then be covered in all the major Bay Area newspapers. Through involvement in Homecoming, we were able to increase the expose of the Creek Com- munity in a positive way. showing the Greeks giving back, said Simon. Over 1,840 pounds of canned food was donated to the Alameda County Food Bank. Julia Ungert, a third year majoring in busi- ness, was the assistant chair and felt that this was the most successful event since: It was philanthropic, but it also got so many groups involved, and it was really visible. This was one of the events we were really unsure about, since it was the first year, but it was something that really shone through. The Battle of the Brains, a Jeopardy-like contest between students and faculty, took place was on Thursday night. The questions Proudly displaying their free Hometoming T-shirts, lonaihjn Chun, len Seto, Connie Chou and Justin Uu were Just few of the students who wilted In long lines to receive them total of J.500 free T-shirts were given awiy In a single afternoon. In one of the most popular events of the weel
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.