University of South Florida - Aegean Yearbook (Tampa, FL)

 - Class of 1973

Page 1 of 152

 

University of South Florida - Aegean Yearbook (Tampa, FL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 152 of the 1973 volume:

What many say is the nation's most beautiful uni- versity sprowls across 1700 acres of the Florida Sun- coast. When the University of South Florida opened in 1960, it was the first state university to be com- pletely planned and constructed in this century, and since then it has become one of the fastest growing educational institutions in the United States. By the fall of 1972, credit course enrollment had reached 18,988, making USF the third largest of Flo- rida's nine state universities. USF is located in the heart of a metropolitan area of 1.5 million persons who comprise 25 percent of Florida's population and is the only public university serving them. It has thus been called a prototype of the future e the urban university. Sixty-five percent of the student body are commut- ers and 45 percent are employed either part of full- time. Married students comprise 36 percent of the total population. The Tampa campus consists of 1,690 acres, includ- ing an 18-hole championship golf course and 0 rec- reation area on the nearby Hillsborough River. The St. Petersburg campus consists of 11 acres of buy-front land on Bayboro Harbor and is within walking distance of downtown St. Petersburg. The University consists of nine colleges: Business Administration, Education, Engineering, Fine Arts, Language Literature, Medical, Nursing, Natural Sci- ence, and Social and Behavioral Science. Together they offer degree programs in 111 academic areas, 82 of which are offered at the graduate level. the Ph.D. degree is offered in biology, chemistry, educa- tion, English, mathematics and psychology. Entertainment is provided in the forms of theatrical productions, concerts, lectures and films. Facilities are also provided for billiards, table tennis and other table games. The hub of campus leisure life, the Uni- versity Center, includes lounges, a cafeteria, dining rooms, a snack bar and craft and photography areas. Student organizations run the gamut from the social ifraternities and sororitiesi to the religious, service, honorary and special interest. Comprehensive health care is available to full-time students through the University Student Health Cen- ter. The Center, staffed with doctors and registered nurses, provides a 14-bed infirmory and 24-hour service seven days a week. Professional services are also available to USF stu- dents in the areas of reading-study skills, vocational guidance, personal counseling, psychiatric consulta- tion, tutoring, speech and hearing and career place- ment. USF teams, called the itGolden Brahmans, cur- rently compete intercollegiately in baseball, basket- ball, golf, swimming, soccer and men's and women's tennis. M i x: $11 $.me among? - $ THE GRADUATE University of South Florida Tampa, Florida 1973 - Volume 1 Sherry Mason - Editor Marion Myers - Assistom Editor Robert Colmer - Photo Editor 6d SOUQ 'Q UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA 10195946 TAMPA . ST.PETERSBUHG OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT TAMPA, FLORIDA 33620 813: TILTIOI Congratulations. . . . You are now -- or soon will be -- a member of a growing fraternity of men and women called college graduates. The name of this publication testifies to that fact and indicates that you have completed another step in the process of your formal education. Indeed, the word graduate is derived from the Latin word gradus, meaning step or level. But graduation is only a beginning -- the commencement of the next step in the process of education many people call life. Whether you continue on into graduate school, enter or reenter the labor force, devote full-time to family or social responsibilities, or whatever, your education -- your graduation from one level of development to another -- hopefully, will continue. So, as you leave the University, remember that what you have learned here are not the answers but some of the questions to ask; not the solutions but ways to analyze the problems, and continue to be a student of life, living the words of Tennyson's Ulyssees -- to strive, to seek, to find and not to yiel . Only if the educated continue to grow and uneducated begin to grow in mind and spirit can we as individuals and as society dare to hope for the future of man on this planet. The burden of The Graduate is great, therefore, but one, I am confident you can shoulder. In the effort, you have the continued support and concern of the entire University Community. Good luck. . . . Cecil Mackey President CONTENTS Ndfdeg Professors F'eatUres ...... 7 Business IAdImIIInI I ' Education I I , Engineering I ,.- ;. I , ,, 3. .4 Fine Arts. . . . LanguagelLIterqure 4 Medicine 4 . . . .. I NurSIng. . . . . .4.. . Natural Saence. . . SchaI dndI BehavmmI Saence . .- . . Orgqmzahons n. MIsceIIaneous . CredIIs M mmOMMm-nOm-U f N Whols Phat glib fellow who actually gets his students to lead the class discussions voluntarily? '3 Dr. Donald G. Ferguson teaching his Intro- duction to Guidance class. How boiler can a young person starting cu? in the guidance field learn lo undersiand kids better, than by involving himself in outside projects and learning about such controversial issues as homosexuality, reli' gion, the Feminist Movement, Black Student Prob- lems, etc, in order to better understand why kids feel the way they do. Dr. Ferguson doesnlf guide the class, he's a member of if, tossing out queSo lions and answel's to his llfellow classmates. One thing sure they can count on -- he'll always be around the corner ready to assist any student who may need his help. Dr. William D. Stevens has been in the busi ness of building images for a long time. Aher graduating from Harvard with a Ph.D. in beha- vioral science, he spent a good part of his life on glittering Madison Avenue working for Young 8: Rubicam. An equal portion of his professional career has also been spent in universities around the nuiion teaching principles of marketing, advertising and public relations. In an effort to apply behavioral science disci- plines to modern corporate structure in order to understand people and build images, students in his MKT 403 class present completed marketing programs to one unolher, much like they would have to do in a real-life sifuoiion. Dr. Stevens also keeps busy teaching ENV 301 and supervising mulfi-discipline readings of studenls in his Bachelor of Independent Studies program. Somehow he even finds lime to spon- sor Pi Sigma Epsilon fraternity and whenever requested, counsels young business hopefuls of the fob prospecis awailing them. r I encourage all of you to drop this course at once - you will not be able to pass it - some students come to me for a soft shoulv der, but all I give them is a bony elbow. So begins Dt. John Parker, Jr., fondly known by all of his students as Knocky Parker. His silent and sound film classes, offering glimpses of 250 classic tilms from his private collection, have long been favorites of students from all over the university. He claims D. W. Griffith's Intolerance and Charlie Chaplin's Gold Rush as his favorite movies. Often, one will find him on the tenth floor enioying his favorite pastime - listening to fine musicians. He himself has been playing the piano since I922, perform- ing all over the United States, England and France. Knocky wants everyone to know that USF has the best students in the world . . . oh they are nice! We think the same of you Knocky. ROLL 'EM J. R.! J r N Her speciality is WHAT? Performing the Hopie lndlan's rain dance? Oh . . . and she's also great at mimicking the Tubctulabal vocabulary? Oh yes, I know her, she's Mrs. Patricia Waterman, tram the Anthropology department. Her enthusiasm and vivociousness are car- ried over to her students, as shown through their class discussions and questions of inter- est about the comparative study of man. OPPOSITE LEFT: Interns at the Day- care Center. OPPOSITE RIGHT: A future Picasso. OPPOSITE MIDDLE LEFT: Colette Trump and Chuck Bohac on their boat at the campus dock, which becomes the scene of weekend parties. OPPOSITE MIDDLE RIGHT: Annual Christmas charity drive. OPPOSITE BELOW: Students gather at B building. LEFT: Daily vol- leyball game between faculty and students. BELOW LEFT: Students at bay campus art sole. iNiVERSiTY OF SOSTH FLORIDA ST PETERSBURG The University of South FIoridais bay campus, located in St. Petersburg, is described by Wayne Hoffman, Dean of Student Affairs, as No campus with a small college atmos- phere having the resources of a large university. Students are pleased with the per- sonal attention they receive from the faculty and staff. With an enrollment of 1,650 strangers are hard to meet since most of the students know each other. The St. Petersburg campus is a commuter school. The average age of the students is 26. Most of the students focus their attention on completing their degree requirements and less on community involvement. Eighty-five percent of the students work, 60 percent are married and 60 percent have children. The upper level college offers courses in marketing, management, accounting, English, psychology, mathematics, education, sociology, history, and engineering. The hub of activity is found in 3 building where general student affairs are carried on, and a rushed student can grab a quick sandwich and cup of coffee in between classes. The Recreation Center serves during the week as a discovery room for preschoolers called the Daycare Center. On weekend nights it moonlights us the Mushroom Coffee House providing live entertainment and swimming for its patrons. The three buildings that comprise the St. Petersburg branch have been under constant renovation in an effort to upgrade its facilities. A spacious auditorium was refurnished in building A to provide room for lecture classes, meetings, and movies. A snack bar was installed in building B and a typing room and microfilm room were recently added to the library. New office and classroom space and recreation areas were also made ready for use recently. Volunteer Services FEATURES DORM LIVING ' i POTPOURRI UNIVERSITY GAME Floridd Center for The Arts Give 0 Damn it W N WOMEN'S STUDIES PROGRAM $1.; L 12 Florida Center For The Arts One outstanding example of a multitude of opportunities USF offers the Tampa community, is the Florida Center for the Arts. This tremendously valuable tin the sense of offering loy- men personal experience with highly professional and cre- ative talentt creotive-educotionaI-culturol unit at USF pro- vides an appropriate atmosphere where the arts are prod- uced, learned, discussed and disseminated. Functioning since 1968 as the Arts Management Unit for the College of Fine Arts, a staff of professional arts admin- istrators originate, manage and publicize seven maior arts programs: the USF Artist Series, Dance Residencies, two Film Series, the Summer Chamber Music Series, the Art Bank, Galleries and Exhibitions, and the GRAPHICSTUDIO. Its contributing purpose to USF students and the Tampa community is its sponsorship of quality programs which people normally wouldn't be exposed to, which appeal to non-mass audience tastes. Its publics are afforded the opportunity to observe the work of performing and studio artists and to associate personally with them in conference and workshop situations. The USF Artist Series sponsors nationally and interna- tionally known performers, performing both in the Univer- sity Theatre and in oft-campus ouditoriums. Outstanding artists such as Julian Bream, British classical guitarist and lutenist; the Julliard String Quartet; the New York Pro Musica; Siobhan McKenna, Ireland's leading actress; and the Polish Mime Ballet Theatre, oward-winning avant-garde troupe, are a small fraction of the superb per- formances offered throughout this program. The Dance Residencies program retains talented dance troupes who reside at USF for short periods while conduct- ing classroom seminars, public lecture-demonstrations, pub- lic performances and master classes for USF and other interested dance students. The troupes have included Louis Falco and Dance Company, the Alwin Nikolais Company and the Jamie Cunningham and Acme Dance Theatre. The Film Art Series, presenting 12 films quarterly, cho- sen for a combination of technical, photographical and directional uniqueness, and the free Afternoon Film Art Series, consisting of 100 short, experimental film presenta- tions yearly, comprise the Center's two Film Series Proe gram. Concerts, free Iecture-demonstrotions and master classes by some of the world's foremost interpreters of chamber music, are provided by the Summer Chamber Music Series. Pianist Jacques Abram, cellist Bernard Greenhouse, violinist Davis Nadrin, and violist Walter Trampler are some of the artists who have appeared in this series. The Art Bank, alias museum without walls,' is a part of the University's permanent art collection containing ceramic, graphic and photographic works by major con- temporary artists, which are grouped into travelling exhib- itions loaned out to Florida educational institutions, librar- ies, museums, ort organizations and businesses who pro- vide these displays as a cultural service to the public. Approximately 30 free, public exhibitions are staged yearly in three university galleries on campus, displaying the works of students and faculty members, additions of the Art Bank collection, and travelling exhibitions from maior national galleries and museums, as part of the Gal- leries Exhibitions program. The Centerts GRAPHICSTUDIO is a professional work- shop where visiting American and European artists produce graphic works while in residence at USF. Those artists who have used the workshop include James Rosenquist, Gold Light, and Robert Rauschenberg, Cardboard Construc- tions. OPPOSITE: English guitarist, Julian Bream. ABOVE: Polish Mime Ballet Theaire: Labyrinth. BELOW, LEFT: Janus: Piec- zuro in Polish Mime Ballet Theatre's Departure of Faust. BELOW, RIGHT: Irish actress, Siobhan McKenna in her one woman show, Here Are Ladies. University Volunteer ServiceslUVSl University Volunteer Sewices is an unstructured service organization consisting of 500-600 volunteers lUSF students and staffl dedicated to improving their community and world through the unselfish giving of their time to worthwhile pro- grams and projects. The program affords volunteers a realistic evaluation of their maior and the opportunity to receive actual experience outside the classroom, in expressing skills learned in the class- room. By involving themselves with the community, they not only help the receivers of their effort, but also themselves. Sixty programs are now in operation, however, UVS will gladly create and develop programs designed to fit any potential volunteer's specific maior or special interest. UVS's belief is that everyone has a desire to participate in a particu- lar area of interest and they can satisfy that desire by provid- ing a working environment for the volunteer to practice his skills and knowledge in. Just a few of the programs volun- teers are now involved in are: Adopt-a-Grandparent e volunteers provide companionship lpersonal visits, letters or phone callsl to elderly people in three area nursing homes. Special Education e a tutorial service with the emotionally disturbed, physically handicapped, blind, mentally retarded, slow learners, and the deaf. Pollution e under the guidance of U. 5. District Attorney, Dr. Blasingame, volunteers compile evidence of pollution around the Tampa area for possible court use. Juvenile Homes - tutorial and recreational guidance given to young delinquents at the Lake Magdaline and Seffner iuve- nile homes. Migrant Program e allows students the opportunity to work with the United Farmworkers in speaking, mailing, and making contracts for the main office. Social Programs e participants in the Proiect Aware program take a lower socio-economic child out of his home environment and befriend him. Intensive Tutorial 00 USF students help others as well as themselves as they volunteer their time each week to young people who have academic difficulty, in the Intensive Tuto- rial llTl program. The 500 tutors in the program meet at least two hours per week with youngsters 3-18 years of age on a one-toeone basis, in an effort to instill upon the pupils a positive self-image; a feeling of success; an increase in learning achievement and an ability to read and comprehend materials. To IT, the key to tutoring is the establishment of rapport. They stress the devel- opment of a relationship between tutor and pupil as well as academic content and skills. Tutors are assigned a child for a quarter at a time. They work with the student trying to build hislher academic capabilities through the use of games and sto- ries ttutors have taught math by shooting basketball and reading by spelling with M Ex M'sl, and develop the student's own personality and sense of worth by paying particular attention to the child's culture, interests, special problems, and achievements. Teachers at individual schools are available as consultants as are trained IT staff members. Educational Resources on campus and the IT library offer the tutors special materials and information should they desire it. l'l' sums it up better than anyone could in their guidance booklet to tutors: What is more to the point is what he thinks of himself and his world, what he thinks of you and your world, and what he thinks you feel about him. Your student may not think much of himself. His blackness, his poverty, his inability to succeed in the classroom may fill him with shame and deep sense of chronic, personal failure. He may think that you think of him in those terms and he may be suspicious and defensive, resentful of you, your motives, and your attempts to get close to him. like all children, he desperately needs to feel accepted and to respect himself e but he might not see much about himself to love. You may be warm, sensitive, and sincere - you should be e but he may not believe you at first. Be patient. Don't push. But keep trying. Off-Compus Term iOCTi Bring relevance to the college campus! is, and always has been a com- mon cry of interested students. USF's unique Off-Compus Term iOCTi Program is attempting to do so with its unusual approach to education. Students who are sick and tired of the same old routine of going to classes, seeing professors, and doing homework every day can now turn to OCT tor a break. And the world, at least a great part of the world, is open to students with plans, or desires, or questions. Israel, Brazil, California, Frostproof, Flo., Ybor City . . . all provide the same opportunity tor students to get away from the sometimes confining University walls and see what the real world is like. The discovery that the real world of Brazil can be as similar as the Hreal world at Tampa in many respects, as well as different in many others, might be enlightening to many day-dreamers. All students are eligible to ioin the program which offers between 1-18 hours credit per quarter. The only restriction to the program is that the experience, in some way, be of an educational nature. Programs are bus- ically studenteoriented and student-designed with the help of an OCT Pro- gram Adviser. The opportunities available to students fall into four major categories: Social Action Projects: An option enabling students to participate as volunteers in a social or community activity, much like VISTA volun- teers, where agencies pay living expenses during the term in exchange for tuIl-time commitment. Independent Study: Special investigation in a student's maior field of study or field of interest with the freedom and flexibility not available in a quarter of scheduled classes; International Programs: A grand opportunity to acquire credit iust by living, traveling or studying abroad. A special environmental studies pro- iect is conducted twice annually in Jamaica during quarter breaks. Special Proiects: Really special projects which are individually designed relevant to a student's own educational goals. These have run the gamut from living in communes in Canada, to participating in street evangelism in St. Louis, to studying youth subcultures in Boston, to experiencing what Russia is like by living in a Russian convent in New York. In addition, OCT coordinates the National Student Exchange Program , through which students can become better acquainted with different social and educational patterns in other areas of the United States by attending one of 20 state universities from Maine to Hawaii, with all credits trans- : ferring back. in OCT . . . l the world is our campus ' reality is our obiective ' experience is our teacher OCT is for those students who t'don't let schooling interfere with their education. Cooperative Education iCo-opi A major change in the Cooperative Education Program at USF this year was its consolidation with the Placement Center in an effort to alleviate expansion needs and better serve USF students. Simultaneous relocation of services to the Andros Classroom Building came with the consolida- tion. Adding realistic subsistence to the aphorism, Experi- ence is the best teacher, the Co-op program, open to majors in all disciplines, allows a student to relate his aca- demic learning to practical experience through participat- ing in alternate quarters of employment and study in his major field. The advantages of the program to students are endless: through alternating patterns of combining work-training experience with the theory of the classroom, the student finds greater meaning in his studies; motivation is increased by close coordination of training assignments and study; most students accrue more than a year of professional experience when they receive their degrees, thereby allow- ing them to command a better salary at graduation; stu- dents earn partial, and in some cases, total funds to sup- port their education; and perhaps most importantly, the training experience contributes to a greater sense of responsibility, maturity and confidence in their own judge- ments. The Co-op personnel invite all students interested in bet- tering themselves professionally and increasing their poten- tial as a productive work-force, to ioin Co-op and reap its benefits. Women's Study Program , ew non-degree undergraduate program was initiated last i USF. Its subiect was women. 7 of approximately 36 established nationwide Women's Programs, it is designed to extend knowledge about an courses dealing with historical, sociological and psycho- aspects of woman's role and the female experience were as electives to USF students this year. uanita Williams, program director, believes the issue, m V en as well as with blocks, involves the development of ' ytential, and the academic community must help these 7 ich are becoming aware of their identity and need to past, present and future. and quarter, a two-day symposium, New Direc- i en, was held at USF and the Bay Campus far tures and discussions dealt with women: matried and working, single and working, with childre bands, alone; the liberated woman,- and ende identity inventory. Dr. Williams said there's so much heat and concerning women's liberation, that many indi tive ideas as to what it is about. She defined . en's liberation as equal pay, opportunities advancement, fteedom of choice concerning freedom from sex role stereotypes. She calle tion, adding that when we see the day w liberated, then men M be liberated too. USF hosted its first Women's Week black attorney Flarynce Kennedy, a worn career night, a debate on the Equ Women in Arts program, and a pa 562? IQ? WCQWB W yyxiztw' ;r,r W;TH iljl' .I.'8w-o . :V .1 flxlllll;l om Wm CCEAStHQ Md om copy and we con exaggerate just a little bit. The point we are trying to make, however, is a valid one. At USF Housing, you do enioy a way of life that it more complete o and more private o than any you could experience off campus or anywhere else in the urea. USF Housing is your own private bedroom and study in all new, multi-level buildings that ARE complete in every way. So maybe it doesn't have turrets, a moo? and an Imperial Guard; but, it is ready now with . . . ' Recreaiion building and lounge with snack bar, cafeteria and study room. ' Swimming pools ' Shady areas and bicycle paths. ' Parking by your room. ' The closest location on campus. Rent by the school year of $160.00 per quarter. By the calendar year $480.00. University of South Florida Housing Located .us! norih of the Schlitz Brewery, behind Vhe Education buildmg on USF grounds. You must see them to beheve 'hem. 19 Potpourri 20 OPPOSITE, ABOVE, lEFT: Library gallery. ABOVE, RIGHT: Cathy Sanders at the Health Center. BELOW, LEFT: Loyd Clayhom and Nurse Nelson. BELOW, RIGHT: Rue McKenzie. ABOVE, LEFT: UC bullevin board. ABOVE, CENTER: lazy day. 2! inued .Cont 22 OPPOSITE, ABOVE, RIGHT: Robbie Maliz. OPP., ABOVE, LEFT: Karen Roberts. OPP., BELOW, LEFT: Dean Mountain. OPP., BELOW, RIGHT: Ted Cannedy. ABOVE, LEFT: Maxine Meidenberg. ABOVE, RIGHT: Karen Truutman. BELOW, LEFT: Abe Azcr. BELOW, RIGHT: Meanie Sawyer. 23 24 GO Uf only takes about 4 yearsy Pick up class schedule during lunch. You register last hour of last day. 2THE UNIVERS You demonstrate against . Ace Law Exam varmint-ridden vending Won 0 bet With your Flunk CBS quiz machines - nothing roommate. dose furny happens. Mhead oney Check mailbox. Rules of the game: Bank statement 1. This game should be played with no lea. 1h says you're $55 2. Don't play if you are in a hurry - some p1 overdrown. 3. No cheating - or we'll tear up your fe. c: 4. Carry a checkbook with you of all fimes N PRIZE 8 X 10 off-whih ve rGo back fivey rforfeit next furnJ SCREAM! Sangria and you Q ll Your parents found out don't mix. RE you are living together. Go back three rand A Find a job. fake a cold showed Advisor is never in. Figure out your own schedule and radvance oneJ Go bGCk M0 spaces ONd Advisor still not in. Another prof signs your PiCk UP extra schedule Uusf wait a couple more hoursy schedule. sheets. rAheod 1on 51w GAME? Library says you owe $8.89 Back to dorm. Kill roaches Buy 50 pg. paperback book for $14.65 BB pgs. are blank for on book you didn't check doodlingL out. under bed. mack twoy K30 back threey Mdvance 0nd All Psy. and Soc. closed-ouf: Must fake modern dance or Japanese linguistics. less than 18,000 people, otherwise it becomes too confusing. ame people never finish playing it. fed card. wes. Next to air, you need it most to survive. wite vellum certificate with gold embossing, worth $.49. Getting a headache. Hose furny Look for a iob. Don't advance. Receive your diploma. Keep looking Don't stop 2 go. Advance one or two Keep looking Don'f collect or three steps. Keep looking D. Ianything.hl K Iookin Ip oma wort ess 0 eep g0 Wou IosH Complete your activities card. yMove ahead oney Free Space 264-1 9-3821 3Ul' Have I.D. but lost fee card? 5i? down and cry, no, go back twoy The Registrar never heard of you. Hose one turny 25 26 Dr. Kemper W. Merriam, Acting Dean Changes in the outside world and even in the inside world of USF occur every day. What current changes have taken place within the College of Business Administration? The most significant trend or change embracing both stu- dents and faculty is the growing interest in various forms of interaction between the College and University community with the 'ioutside world. As one form of this involvement, the students of the Col- lege of Business Administration, in increasing numbers, are eagerly assisting disadvantaged individuals and enterprises that otherwise could not afford semi-professional or technical services. Interested faculty members are voluntarily acting as coordinators of these programs and valuable encouragement, cooperation, and assistance is being received from the U. 5. Internal Revenue Service, the Small Business Administration tSBAi, the Service Corps of Retired Executives tSCOREi, the West Coast Chapter of the Florida Institute of Certified Public Accountants tFICPAi and other agencies or associations. The services rendered include tax return preparation, accounting systems and control, financial statement preparation, for loan assistance, management and employee training, improvement of layout and merchandising techniques, and many more selected activities. From an academic viewpoint, the College is becoming increasingly interested in expanding the horizons of both the students and the faculty through interaction with distinguished visiting professors and colloquiums. The current year has included Dr. Gardiner Means, a pioneer economist; Dr. Doug- las Vickers, a visiting professor from Western Australia; Dr. Howard Ross, visiting professor from the Baruch School; Drs. McClelland, Boyatsis and Burham, behavioralists from He'- vard; Mr. Ezra Solomon from Washington, D. C. mmmZ-mCUU ZO-Hjsm-im-Z-ZUJe 27 28 Allen, Gerald N.; 7605 53rd 51., Tampa, Fla.; Manage- ment,- Befo Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi. Amon, Paul J.; Jr., 3203 E. Debazan, St. Petersburg Beach, Fla.; Manage- ment; Senior Accounting Organization; Management Asso- ciation, President,- 51. Pete Campus Baseball Club. Ander- son, Luther 0.; 7009 N. Orleans Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Man- agement; USF Sports Car Club. Arbuckle, Daniel T.; 2516 Sheridan Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; Marketing; Pi Kappa Alpha, Historian; Council of Fraternities and Sororities. Ayers, J. Yasuyuki; 6015 N. Thatcher, Tampa, Fla.; Man- agement,- Cooperative Education. Baier, Barbara G.,- USF 351241, Tampa, Fla.; Management; Phi Chi Theta; ASPA. Bailey, Bradley K.; P.O. Box 11974, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Business Administra'ion; M.A. Barrett, John R.; 3817 Tudor CL, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting; Delta Sigma Pi. Bauer, John T.; 920 Lakeshore Rd., Grosse Poime Shores, Mich; Marketing; Delta Tau Delta; USF Karate Club, Trea- surer. Biggan, Wayne H.,- 2555 12111 Ave. S. W., Largo, Fla.; Accounting; Senior Accounting Organization; USF Fly- ing Club. Boian, William F.; 3700 59th 51. No., St. Peters- burg, Fla.; Management; Senior Accouniing Association; Management Association, Secretary. Bork, Martin F.,- 881 Candyce Ave., Lakeland, Fla.; Management. Boyd, David M.; 2410 Watrous Ave., Tampa, Fla.; AccounIing; Delta Tau Delta. Brewer, Steven C.; 2310 E. 112th Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Marketing; Alpha Tau Omega; Themis, USF Sports Car Club. Brooks, James C.; 13701 N. 24th $1., Apt. C, Tampa, Fla.; Finance. Calfee, John P.; RI. 1, Box 581-M-1, Vclrico, Fla.; Marketing; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Awards Chairman. Corneal, Mack M.; 5548 Terrace Ct, Apt 1, Temple Ter- race, Fla.; Marketing. Chandler, Cynthia D.; 32 Denfon Blvd., Apf. 19, Fort Walton Beach, Fla.; Marketing; Pi Sigma Epsilon. Chostoin, Dennis G.; 4943 E. Hillsbro Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Marketing. Coffey, Marilyn J.; PO. Box 1607, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting. Collin, Richard J.; 6729 Azalea Dr., Miramar, Fla.; Accounting; Senior Accounting Organization; Phi Gamma Delta. Connolly, David L; 5601 2151 Ave. No., St. Peters- burg, Fla.; Marketing. Crosby, Stephen L,- 1820 Hills Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Management. Cundiff, Richard A.; 9315 Memorial Hwy and 301 Greenvale, Tampa, Fla.; Market- ing; Phi Kappa Phi. Cur1ee, William N.; 159 92nd Ave. N. E., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Finance. Daniel, Pope L; 418 Royal Poinciona Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Management. Davis, Jeff R.; 5506 Terrace Pk, Apt. 1, Temple Terrace, Fla.; Marketing; Phi Gamma Delta, President, Treasurer, Pledge Trainer, Delegate 10 Convention; Inter-Fraternify Council, Secretary, Executive Vice-President. Dennis, Kenneth R.; 3018 351h Ave. No., Apt. 2, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Manugemen'; Management Association, Vice-President, Social Activities Chairman. Dunn, Dianne J.; 8148 Schoen Dr., Indianapolis, Ind.; Mar- keting; USF Women's Bowling; Marketing Career Develop men! Program. Dvoravic, Frank T.,- 14300 661h $1. No., Apt. 504, Clearwater, Fla.; Management; Student Account- ing Association; Management Association. Eades, louis H., Jr.; 919 19th Ave, No., St. Petersburg, Fla.,- Management; Management Association. Easton, Deborah 5.; 1515 Lake Ave., Clearwater, Fla.; Accounting; Phi Chi Theta,- Intramu- rals. Eisen, Ellen B.,- 6513 Glenwick CL, Baltimore, Md.; Market- ing; Phi Chi Theta; Pi Sigma Epsilon. Fumbee, Daniel C.; 4243 41h Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Management,- Monugemeni Association; USF Flying Club. Fechter, Aaron; 2025 Stryker Ave., Orlando, Fla.,- Finance; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Rush Chairman. Fendenfz, John H.; 3631 College Park CircIe, Apt. 3, Tampa, F10.; Accounting; Tau Epsilon Phi; Student Accounting Organization, President, Treasurer. Fernandez, Jorge L; PO. Box 1269, Panama 9-A, Repub- lic of Panama; Accounting; Pi Sigma Epsilon. Fiersios, Edward L.; 143 19th Ave. 50., Apt. 3, $1. Peiersburg, Fla.; Management,- Managemeni Association, President. Flohr, Alphonse L,- 105 9th $1., Belleuir Beach, Fla.; Manage- ment; Campus Advance, ch-President. Furer, Charles W.; 4528 W. Henry St, Tampa, Flo.; Accounting; Veierans' Club; COOP Council; Senior Accounting Organization. Gabor, Randolph 5.; 2307 W. Robson, Tampa, Fla.; Man- agement and Finance; Delta Sigma Pi. Gaffney, Mary Alice E.; 119 S. Clark Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Morkeiing; Kappa Alpha Theta, Rush Chairman, Activities Chairman; Phi Chi Theta; German Club; Themis. Gatliff, Robert H.; 3129 W. Powhanan Ave., Tampa, F1a.; Management; Delta Sigma Pi; COOP Program. Glass, Roy L.; 6550 4151 Ave. No., Apt. 2A, Sf. Peiersburg, Fla.; Finance; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi,- USF Debate Team,- Dean's Award for Academic ExcelIence. Gogguns, Michael; 11310 Pine CL, Apt. 3-202, Tampa, Fla.; Finance. Gum, Charles F.; R1. 6, Box 4582, New Pod Richey, Fla.,- Finance. Hall, Regan E.; 13643 Florida Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Management. Humlyn, Stephen R.; 12220 N. 16th St, Apt. 436, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting; Senior Accounting Organization,- Veterans' Club; Flying Club,- Young Republicans. 29 30 Hcrdenbergh, Dorothy R.; Box 278, Keystone Heights, Fla.; Finance. Heglund, Nancy E.; 214 N. 3rd Ave., Lake Worth, Fla.; Marketing; Phi Chi Theta, President; College of Business Student Advisory Board; SecreCary. Hillsl Thomas E.; 510 E. Valley Green Rd., Flourtown, P0,,- Mar- keting. Horn, Peter F.; USF $?358, Tampa, Fla.; Marketing. Horn, Robert C.; 6846 19th St. 50., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Management. Hoyman, Charles W.; 2845 Bayeaux Ave., Melbourne, Fla.; Accounting. Huntley, Steven E.; 604 Lex- ington $1., Dunedin, Fla.; Management. Ingram, James F; 527 Marion $1., Dunedin, Fla.; Management,- ASPA. Jackson, Edward M., Jr.; 115 S. Lois Ave., Apt. 207, Tampa, Fla.; Marketing; Delta Sigma Pi. Jamieson, Mary E.; 15 No. Cirus Ave., Clearwafer, Fla.; Finance; Windiam- mers; Co-operaiive Education. Jamison, Robert 1.; 2201 19th Ave. W., Bradenton, Fla.; Management. Johnston, Diana L; 4136 N. W. 13th Ave., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Management; Phi Chi Theta, Vice-President, National Coun- selor; College of Business Student Advisory Board. Jones, Earl L., Jr.; 8470 52nd Way No., Pinellas Park, Fla.; Accounting; S.A.O.; USF Flying Club. Jones, Thomas F., Jr.; 7018 Yule Lane, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting. Kane, Patricia A.; 9715-0 Polak Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Marketing. Kelly, Noel H.; 3102 Emerson, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting. Knighton, Alfred 0.; 3204 W. Cleveland, Plant City, Fla.; Accounting. Knox, Kent E.; 28501 S. W. 144th CL, Apt. 1, Leisure City, Fla.; Finance; Intramural Football, Softball, Basketball, Track. Kudler, Rony J.; 10 Rabenu Tam, Ramat- Hasharon, Israel; Economics Management; Phi Chi Theta; Women's Varsity Tennis Team. LaGrow, Kenneth D.; 9459 Sunset Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Markefing. Lamb, Jack H.; 14032 Holsiead C1,, Apt. 444, Tampa, Fla.; Finance. Lemley, Stephen J.; 6270 S. W. 18m $1., Pompano Beach, Fla.; Finance. Lester, Dennis J.; 13411 Mike Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Management; Dover Boys Organi- zation. levin, Spencer H.; 3011 5. West Shore BIvd., Tampa, Fla.; Accounting,- Lambda Chi Alpha, Rush Chair- man. LEFT: Complete exhaustion oHer a low exam. Levy, Stanley J.; 6355 4151 Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Accounting; Tau Epsilon Phi; Student Accounting Organiza- tion. Lewis, Margaret M.; 18555 S. W. 2951h Terr., Home- stead, Flu.; Finance. Lichtenstein, Robert; 1245 Rodman 51., Hollywood, Fla.; Management; AlESEC-LCP; Manage- ment Student Advisory Council, Chairman. Lilienfeld, Rob- ert J.; 741 N. E. 1515' 51., Miami, Fla.; Accounting; Intra- mural sports. Lindemann, James A., Jr.; Accounting. Lindsey, John J.; 5940 N. E. 19th Ave., Ft Lauderdale, Fla.,- Morke1ing; Pi Sigma Epsilon, Vice-President; USF Sports Car Club; Intra- mural sports; Argos Program Council; Beta Social Chair- man; Beta Delta Alpha. Loaiza, Fernando; 1410-A 137th Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Markeiing; Club Los Venados. Lundy, Richard; 13919 N. 19th $1., Apt. A, Tampa, Fla.; Account- mg. Maloney, Robed P.; 3712 Saplin Dr., Holiday, Fla.; Mar- keting. Markham, Robert E.; 11 Tudor $1., Waltham, Mass.; Marketing. Marrocco, John P.; 5331 E. Causeway Blvd., Tampa, Fla.,- Accounting; Delta Sigma Pi, Secretory; Student Advisory Board; Student Disciplinary Board. Mar- tin, Robert 8., JL; 3639 College Park Circle, Apt. 1., Tampa, Fla.; Finance. Martino, Joanne M.; 2515 Si'mms Blvd., Tampa, Fla.; Man- agement Matthew, Timoihy 0.; 129 Buena Vista Dr., Dunedin, Fla.; Management; Sigma Nu,- S.G. Senator, Bus- iness, District 11; USF Flying Club; University Board of Stu- dent Publications; Oracle, Advertising Sales Manager; UPI Wire Editor; Business Council. McMahon, Arthur G.; 14403 Leah Villa Ct, Apt 123, Luiz, Fla.; Economics. Mendels- sohn, Paul E.; 6911 Bonair Dr., Apt. C, Tampa, Fla.; Eco- nomics; Phi Gamma Delta, Treasurer. 31 32 RIGHT: Lory Sogolow feeds data into a computer in the Science Cen- ter. Middlebrook, Mariorie 5.; 8010 Lynn Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Vocational Office Education. Miranda, Rodolfo; 2220 N. 61st Terr., Hollywood, Fla.; Management. Morgan, Karen 5.; R1. 3, Box 16553, Lufz, Fla.,- Finance. Mueller, Francis J.; 4020V2 Marguerite, Tampa, Fla.; Marketing. O'Donnell, Thomas J.; 4512 N. Jamaica Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Marketing. Oliveri, Vincent, Jr.; 879 N. E. 1581h 51., North Miami Beach, Fla.; Management. O'Malley, Michael H.,- 1001 57th $9. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Accounting; Senior Accounting Organization; Management Association. O'Neill, Carol A.; 7910 9th Ave. 50., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Accounting. Ortiz, Alina R.; 8422 Bedford Lane, Tampa, Flu.,- Market- ing; Delta Zeta, Recommendation Chairman, Parliamenta- rian; FIJI Little Sisier. Patten, Gerald D., Jr.; 58 W. 58th 51., Jacksonville, Fla.; Management,- Tau Epsilon Phi. Pecora, John D.; 4716 Dewey Ave., Apt. 6, Rochester, N. Y.; Management. Peil, Glenn A.; 14405 N. 22nd $1., Apt. 117, Lutz, Fla.; Management,- Alpha Phi Omega, Corre- sponding Secretary. Peterson, Kenneth A.; 316 U. S. 92 West, Seffner, Fla.; Accounting; Phi Kappa Phi. Petford, Vaughn; 1170 N. E. 1361b 31., North Miami, Fla; Accounting; Beta Alpha, Recording Secrefury; Student Accounting Organization. Pfeffer, Jeffrey E.; 23-11 Rae CL, Apt. C-5, Lutz, Fla.; Marketing; Tau Epsilon Phi, Corresponding Scribe; USF Basketball Team, Manager. Phillippy, Steven W.; 1570 Barry Rd., Clearwater, Flo.; Business Administration; M.A. Phillips, Donald W.; 3819 Tudor CL, Apt. 116, Tampa, Fla.; Management Pickinson, Thomas G.; Rt. 2, Box 361 Williams Rd., Thonofosassu, Flu.; Accounting; Beta Alpha Psi; Senior Accounting Organization. Pineda, Raymond E.; 14011 N. Nebraska Ave., Lot 59, Tampa, Fla.; Finance; Bar Benders, Treasurer. Ramirez, Robert W.; 2519 VWsteria $1., Sarasota, Fla,- Marketing. Rashid, Roger A.; 307 Penna. Ave. W., Warren, Pa.; Finance; Circle K; Student Accouming Organization; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi; 1972 USF Honor Student; lniramural sports. Rivenburk, Richard R.; 1503 Sinclair Hills Rd., Lutz, Fla.; Economics; Delta Sigma Pi, Treasurer; Stu- denf Advisory Board; Student Disciplinary Board. Robinson, John 5.; 1361 Brunswick Dr., Clearwater, Flc.; Manage- ment Rowe, Deborah 8.; 6221 4111 Ave. No., 51. Peters- burg, Fla.,- Marketing. Rowe, Paul 5.; 6221 41h Ave. No., St. Pe1ersburg, Fla.; Business Administrufion. Rumph, Bruce A.; R1. 1, Box 311, Lakeland, Fla.; Finance. Ryan, Terrance; 9 Conklin Ave., Peekskill, N. Y.; Marketing; Dorm Aihletic Chairman; Intra- murals; USF Sports Car Club. Sanders, Ronald P.; 11501 S. W. 72nd FL, Miami, Fla.; Management; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi. 33 34 :3 E $1, a ll -2wW Scavone, Anihony P.; 2650 Madison 51., Hollywood, Fla.; Finance; Student Accounting Organization. Schellig, Alan D.; 309 N. Marie Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Managemem; USF Flying Club; Intramural sports. Schwartz, Richard L.; 10922 29th St, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting; Student Accounting Organizaiion; Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi. Sexton, Martha F.; 4413 Oklahoma Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Accounting; Phi Chi Theta; Student Account- ing Organization. 35 36' Shearer, J. Michael; 2052 River Dr., Dunnellon, Fla.; Man- agement; Delta Sigma Pi. Smith, Bill T., Jr.; 701 N. E. 2nd St, Boca Radon, Fla.; Finance; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Presi- dent, Vice-Presidem, Pledge Trainer, Historian; IFC Judicial Board. Smith, David F.; 6815 12th St. 50., Apt. 93, SI. Pemrsburg, FIG.; Managemeni; Management Association. Smith, Ronald R.; 1215 N. E. 14111 51., Gainesville, Fla.; Finance. Stiles, Charlotte L.,- 2633 5th $1. $0., St. Petersburg, Flo.; Accounting; SAO. Swoine, Roger P., Jr.; 1231 l2fh C1. 5. W., Largo, Fla.; Management; Management Association. Taggari, Gary J.; 425 Milwaukee Ave., Dunedin, Fla.; Marketing. Tanglin, Gary E.; 5534 Terrace CL, Apt. 3, Temple Terrace, Fla.; Accounting; Beta Alpha Psi. Tanyapongparnich, Tanya; P.O. Box 16055, Temple Ter- race, Flu.; Marketing. Taylor, Christine C.; 16224 Living- ston Ave., Lutz, Fla.; Finance. Thompson, William A.; 2016 131st Ave., Apt. 2, Tampa, Fla.; Accounting,- Student Accounting Organization,- Beta Gamma Sigma; Dean's List. Thornion, John J.; 1425 Hillside Ln., Apt. 1, lutz, Flu.; Management; Graduate Business Association, Vice-Presi- dent, Treasurer; Student Advisory Board; Student Dean's Search Committee; Graduate Assistant; M.A. Thurman, Robert 8.; 4603 Cifrus Cir., Apt. 13, Tampa, Fla.; Management; Delta Sigma Pi; Aegean Staff Photogra- pher. Toops, Allan D.; 2584 Sunnyside $1., Sarasota, Fla.,- Management. Van Fleet, R. Bruce,- 3018 W. Powhamm Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Marketing. Waller, Rebecca R.; 6319 Lafayette Rd., Brudenton, Fla.; Accounfing; Student Accounting Organization. Secretary; Phi Chi Theta, Parlia- mentarion. Ware, Allen L; 2327 Liberty St, Tampa, Fla; Accounting; Delta Sigma Pi, Vice-President; Beta Alpha Psi; Phi Kappa Phi. Welch, Scott D.; 6513 Saline St, Tampa, Flo.,- Man- agement; Delta Sigma Pi. Westfall, David P.; Rt. 4, Box 815, Lufz, Fla.; Accounting and Finance; Beta Alpha Psi; Siuden! Accounting Organization; Dean's List of Scholars. Wilburn, Suzanne; 1600 Hastings 81., Orlando, Fla.; Accounting; Student Advisory Board, Treasurer; Universify Chapel Fellowship, Board of Directors. Williams, Gregory A;,- R1. 1, Box 205A, Odessa, Fla.; Management; Veterans' Club. Williamson, James B.; 2380 World Parkway Blvd., Apt. 40, Clearwater, Fla.; Manage- ment; Delta Sigma Pi, President; College of Business Stu- dent Advisory Board; Intramural spom. Wilson, Terry C.; 1517A 139th Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Economics; M.A. Wood, Carter J.; 6043 IHh CL 15., Bradenton, Fla.; Management; Delta Tau Delta; Aero Club, Treasurer. MASTER'S Quarter I John Frank Bauder, Jr. Stephen M. Bevry Howard Franklin Bond Daniel Browning Burton Charles H. Connev, Jr. James Stewart Fovd Geraid Alan Henderson Vieiliang Loh ganald Robert McCreury Gary L Prophin Charles B. Thompson Walter W. Wisniewski BACHELOR'S Gerald Phillip Ademy James Michael Anderson John Tobias Anderson Luther Oliver Anderson Richard Allen Astor J, Yasuyuki Ayers .Donald Louis Baigier Philip Lewis Barker 5David M. Borzler prey L. Beaten Edgar A. Benhard Walter l. Blacker William F. Boion Gary Randolph Bosfic William Rynbran' Bowman Thomas J. Bremer James Christy Brooks Donald R. Brown Ronald Bruce Bunnell Edward N. Childers Michael Abe Cohen Lessley R. Collins SOephen Laurence Corcoran Roger L. Corn Kenneth Lee Coykendall Arlen lee CruHenden CharIes Michael Cunningham Pope Lifsey Daniel Ronald A. De Lama Gene Dalton Deleo Donald F. Dolron Herber? Bruce Dore Ill Douglas J. Edwards Peter Josef Egg Frederich H, Endres pnnie Jerome English Larry Eugene Enos iDavid Larry Fohnestock ffbomas J. Ferlita gruce Ingram Fifer Norman J. Fitzgerald Joseph Forlizzo Robert L. Foxworth Alice J. Funderburke Sheldon Jay Golkin Stephen Roy Gcllaher Larry M. Geiger Russell Scan Givens Roy leonard Glass Robert Masher German William Terence Grace William Earl Grantham Ronald W. Greene William Arvhur Groux William Frank Guy, Jr. Jay L Guzman Charles F. Haag, Jr. Michael Charles Harhai Michael Travis Harrell Nicholas Robert Henderson III Kevin William Herbert Thomas E. Hills Bronda Darlene Hirth Sober? Redmond Hire $ayle L Holbrook wichael Darell Hopkins Rbbert C. Horn Vorold Thomas Howard Ill Jane Speer Howlund Joseph M. Hugharr III Clinton Connell Humphrey: Robert Earle Hunter, Jr. John Thomas Jackson ll Robert I. Jamison Pamela Kane Pairicia Ann Kane Jeffrey Marc Kass Deborah Jo Kearly J. W. KeIley David Austin Kendall David D, Kenneth Jr. Kenneth Wayne Killgore James Richards Knox Robert Weiien Koo Timothy Clark Langford Robert Gregory Lavolle Patrick Thomas Lee Spencer Howard Levin Margaret Mary Lewis Robert Lichtenstein Keith Marco Lindgren John Joseph Lindsey Richard A. Monk Herber1 Lewis Marschang Gory Alan Martin Joanne Marie Martino Randall Comer Mason Jessee L. Mossingill Donald Roy Drury McGregor, Jr. Steven Joel Menninger Muvphy Miller, Jr. Douglas Manhew Nesius Lilly King William Joseph Nordstrom Chades Allen Nuzum, Jr. Thomas James O'Donnell Jack Elton Owens Larry Russell Pennington William C. Pe'ers Vaughn Pevford Donald Wayne Phillips Mark Mathew Piacenti David Muyes Pilcher Gordon Lawrence Plummer Charles T. Powell Larry B. Randall Rogers Reed Deane Manhew Regis Robert Michael Rehmer Robert L. Reid Deborah Ann Richardson Kenneth Neal Richter Albert Rodrigues Richard Carl Ronnlof Peter Allen Roos Deborah Bean Rowe William A Rowse, Jr. Mariorie Jane Royster Dwain Dupree Sanders Henry R. Santos John Scardino Jr. Peter Charles Schotzel Mary L. Searls Frederick Howard Sheely Robert Fenwick Sfarford Richard L. Strickland Thomas L. Sturm Roger P. Swaine, Jr. Blaine Sweet? I Joe C. Taylor Nelson Peter Thieriung Paul Lowell Thilem William Leo Thole Phillip Mark Thomas David Allen Thompson Robert B. Thurman Byron Alfred Tidd, Jr. Edward A Torok Leary Aldecn Twiggs, Jr, Wayne L. Vigil Byron Bryant Wade Jefrey Robert Walker Steven D Wiley Jackie L. Wilson Carter J. Wood David Robert Wright John Michael Wuckovich Craig Lee Yeury MASTER'S Quarter II Bergen F. Brokaw, III James Rossi Decker Charles Di Moscio Warren D. Fletcher Luis Garcia John William German David Clyde Harper Donald James Kemerait Gregory Alan Koenig Robert E. Monz Arun Mehra David Eldon Moore Ronald Keith Poidevin Joseph A. Remsa, Jr. Eugene Hemmington Ryan Timothy James Schulfz Peter Swan John Jibb Thornton J, Owen Weber Tedd Taylor Wilson, Jr. BACHELOR'S Calvin C. Adams Gerald Norman Allen Paul Joseph Amon, Jr. Raymond Keith Anderson Philip Rolf Augusfine Gregory Frank Baker David Ross Barmore Frederick Allen Baumbach James Crawford Beefy Richard L. Bellairs Henry Campbell Bevis Gerald J Boswell Robert Wayne Brown Henry Keith Bruce Josh A. Buchanan Paul J. Brynes, Jr. Harold Glenn Chaney Charles Palmer Church Bobby L. Collier George Douglas Davis Enrique A. De La Rosa Donald Mark Derruh Alan J. P. Deshayes Andrew F. Dixon Glenn D. Doughty Robert Lynn Dudley Robert Heald Dunn Frank Thomas Dvoravic Louis Harry Eodes, Jr. Thomas J. Eddy Ellen Barbara Eisen Ernest S. Etheridge Aaron FechVer Frank J. Fernandez, Jr. Bradford Por'er Flanders John H. Fowler Jeffrey Raymond French Charles William Furer Anthony Fusillo, Ill Charles Fletcher Gabriel David Prentice Gouldin Robert Charles Goldfingev Alan F. Gonzalez Thomas W. Green, Jr. Charles F. Gum Regan Eugene Hall Stephen Robert Humlyn Dorothy R. Hordenbergh Edyih Marie Hargis Malcolm K. Hayes Robert Glenn Henry Richard H. Hester K. Bruce Hickman Michael David Hicks Steven EvereH Huntley Robert Bryan Hutchinson Richard Fenwick JenneHe Raymond M. Johnson Bruce Wayne Judkins Russell A. Kay David Edwards Koylor Bonney Knapp A. William Lafferly Kevin Thomas Lakins Mark Alan Leber Stephen Jock Lemley Michael Allen Lentz Rick leonard James A. Lindemann, Jr. John L Lister Maurice E. Mogly, Jr. 8. Scott Magowan Robert E. Markham Paul Ralph Murtuus Sami Aref Masry Wilisa Marie McCormick Arthur Gilbert McMahon Michael Anthony Mead John S. Melko, Jr. Paul Edward Mendelssohn Charles Winthrop Merrill Robert R. Miller William Bishop Miner Billy A. Moreen Brian Deith Morgan Terry L. Murlaugh Roland C. Myles J. T. Newsom, Jr. John E. O'Brien Vincent Oliveri, Jr. Larry Steve Owens Stacy Webster Payne, Jr. Jeffrey Elliot PfeHer William R. Fischer James Fla, Jr. Ronald James Quick Scofi Francis Radar Thomas H. Reid Bernard David Reilly Bill J. Rice Richard Lee Risher Paul Scott Rowe Russell Lovelace Ruck: Daniel Joseph Rush Douglas Sebastian Sager Danny Lee Sands C. David Schultz, Jr. Richard Lee Schwanz David Adams Scott Martha F. Sexton James S. Sidmon Richard D. Smith Robert H. Smi'h, Jr. Roberi L, Smith, Jr. Edward John Strube Paul Arnold Terrence Malcolm Paul Thomas Charles Thompson William Allen Thompson Robert Douglas TipIon Warren Melvin Tschickordt R. Bruce Van Fleet, Jr. Allen L. Ware Roy Michael Worfield Walter L Watson George Francis Weiskopf David Pearson Westfall Dale Robert Weyam Larry A. White David Whitney Donald J. Whmemore Marian Alvarez Wilkinson David James WiIIiams Orville L. Wright Robert L. Wright, Jr. 37 Dr. James C. Dickinson, Acting Dean Do you foresee any major new trends in secondary or elementary education appearing within the near future? The transition from teacher shortage to teacher surplus has taken place within the last two years. It is a combination of a number of factors including a lowered birth rate and the relative unwillingness of tax payers to support a larger number of teachers for the same number of children. In Florida, many of the small, rural communities down the center of the state, must repeatedly request exceptions to the Florida certification laws in order to fill teacher vacancies with people who do not even meet the minimal standards of the teaching profession. And certain specialities in teacher education still are in ahort supply including areas in special education, early childhood and mathematics and science in junior high szhool. In the face of the general teacher shortage, col- leges of education in Florida will be asked to iustity their maintenance of programs which produce more and more teachers. In response to this kind of pressure from the state miversity system, colleges of education will become in-reasingly selective in their admissions practices. A second trend in teacher education that will be more 1apparent will be the development of competency-based mcher education programs. This implies preparation of teachers will no longer be described simply as the comple- tion of a number of courses, specified by the state depart- ment, but rather, teacher candidates will have to display functional teaching skills as well as the mastery of appro- oriate concepts within their academic disciplines. Under a competency-based teacher education program, twill be possible for students to take examinations and 'eceive credit for the skills which they already possess. It should be possible, therefore, to have some students com- plete a teacher certification program within two years, while others will be unable to complete the work because they could not pass the competency test which will be established Coupled with competency-based teacher edu- mtion will be an increasing emphasis upon the supervised teaching experience which teacher candidates will be tequired to have. We will also see, developing hand-in-hand with the move toward extended internship experiences, greater opportunity for students to become paid employees of the tchool system while they are obtaining professional skills and information essential for teacher certification. One thing that can be said about the paid internship that dimin- ishes its attractiveness is that it is difficult to coordinate the academic side of teacher preparation at this time,; with the paid internship. in short, students have to spend a long period of time working for their degree in the paid intern- ship. i Part of the trend toward more realistic preparation of teachers will be the increasing involvement of local school personnel in the teacher training programs. These profese sional-education ipeople, curriculum supervisors, and as supervisors of our interns placed in their schools. Another important trend in teacher education is a grow- ing awareness at the need to provide adequate pre-school experiences for youngsters, not only those from the so- called economically deprived areas, but for all youngsters. I do believe there will be a growing demand for trained personnel in public and private sectors to provide the kinds of professional educational experiences that parents will begin to demandifor their children. Teacher education programs will begin to look at ways in which schools can organize themselves to help people who are changing careers in middle age or people who have completed a so-called lifetime of productive work and are now wondering what to do with themselves. There is a large department of vocational education divisions in the state department of education. I expect to see growing emphasis in this area. Another trend in teacher education is the growing emphasis upon career-long education for teachers. Now people in teacher education are talking about a kind of unified educational program for teachers that begins at the time they enter a teacher education program and continues beyond formal graduation and certification. Colleges of education faculties will be much more intimately involved in providing non-course based in-service education for teach- ers. College of education personnel will find themselves being asked to serve special tasks as consultants, as train- ers, as teachers. Lite long education for the teacher is cer- tainly an aspiration. There will be changes in the structure of elementary and secondary education. In Florida, we now have an emerging group of school; called middle schools. They are to take over the abandoned functions of the iunior high. The junior high school hasjbecome more and more like a high school - its curriculum has become more departmentalized into academic disciplines. The middle school seeks not only to redress the curriciilum's imbalance, but it has also been organized to bringitogether kids of like development. One of the intentions of the middle school theorists is to organ. ize a school in such a way so the kids are not so devel- oped mentally out of phase with one another. So the mid- dle school would bresumably be for kids in grades 5-8. Another structural change in teacher education will be a growing emphasispn the part of the state to build special kinds of schools for youths which have experienced diffi- culty with the law. We cannot overlook what is to happen to faculty who work in the teacher education programs in the colleges and universities. We will begin to identify our responsibilir ties to work as consultants and partners with people in the local schools. I don't think we can continue to justify our existence iust merely by teaching courses to so many stu- dents every year. Many of us on the faculty will find our- selves in a variety of activities, perhaps spending a consid- erable amount of time working hand-in-hand with teachers and administration attempting to unravel some of the dilemmas of our educational process. Many will spend their time doing field studies. We will have a more unified, less incoherent pattern of teacher preparation more closely related to the needs of school people, more dependent on them to complete the educational process, and more open to feedback. 50 our curriculum will be more easily changed in light of the needs of school personnel. HJeOCUr-n 39 40 Abegglen, C. Diane; 824 S. Chillicothe, Aurora, Ohio; Dis- tributive Education; Delta Delia Delta, Rush Chairman, Song Leader; DECA, Secretary. Acosta, Lydia M.,- USF it 2752, Tampa, Fla.; LibrarWAV. Adams, Suzanne M.; Apt. 303 750 N. E. 40th 31., Boca Raton, Fla.; Elementary Edu- cation. Aikey, Tanya R.; 3922 Hudson lane, Tampa, Fla.; Early Childhood Education; ACEI, Historian. Alpaugh, Sandra M.; 4820 Ivy CL, Apt. 7A, Tampa, Fla.,- Early Childhood Education. Arnold, Virginia 5.; 3012 Gates Dr., Apt. 152, Tampa, Fla.; Varying Exceptionalities; Kappa Kappa Gamma; M.A. Austin, Alma L; 13808 N. 215' St, Apt. C, Tampa, Fla.; Elementary Education; Alpha Kappa Alpha; Ivy leaf Reporfer; Afro-American Gospel Choir; Afro-American Society, Secretary. Austin, Eugene; 13808 N. 2151 51., Tampa, Fla.,- Elementary Education; Alpha Phi Alpha, Secretary; Afro-American Gospel Choir, Vice-Presidenl. Awis, JoEllen T.,- 118 S. W. 57th St, Cape Coral, 1:10.; Physical Education. Bacon, Linda A.; ll Kingsport, Coach House, Palmetto, Fla.,- LibrarylAV; LEAVO, Secretary,- Phi Kappa Phi. Bagwell, Cathy J.; 553 72nd Ave., St. Peters- burg Beach, Fla.; Physical Educaiion. Baker, Elaine J.; 5271 40th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; SpeecMEnglish. Baker, Judy A.; 1850 33rd 51., Sarasota, Fla.; Special Education,- Afro-American Society,- EI'HOS; Universify Cen- ter Fashion Committee; Co-operutive Education Council; Student Career Employment Center. Balser, Patricia A.; 1013 Huwkes Ave., Orlando, Fla.; Elementary Educalion; Kappa Alpha Theta, Service Chairman. Barnes, Sandra F.; Rt. 8, Box 53, Lutz, Fla.; Elementary Education. Barnett, Carol A.; 604 Cleveland $1., Saginaw, Mich.; Social Sci- ence7American Studies; Phi Kappa Phi. Barry, Ar'hur J.; 97-37 63rd Rd., Rego Park, N. Y.; Ele- memory Education; Phi Delta Theta,- lntensive Tutorial. Bas- sler, Connie A.; 3429 Carlton Arms Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Ele- mentarWLibrary Education. Bazata, Judith A.; 263 Willow Lane, Lutz, Fla.; ElementaryAibrary Education; Delta Gamma. Beato, Margaret A.; 3516 N. W. 23rd CL, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Early Childhood. Behl, Michael D.,- 138 Washington Ave., Indialantic, Fla.; Mathematics; Delta Tau Delia, Pledge Educator; USF Judo Team; USF Sports Car Club. Benitez, Irma M.; 2606 Fogarty Ave., Key West, Fla.,- Early Childhood. Benner, Jean F.; 7805 52nd St, Tampa, Fla.; Social Science Direc- tor7History; History Community,- lntensive Tutorial. Benson, Mary H.; 2960 S. W. 381h Ave., Miami, Fla.; Gifted Edu- cation; M.A. Broadbelt, Susanne T.; 1257 Northside Villa Dr., Ape. 4, Lulz, Fla.; Elementary,- NEA. Bromby, Carol H.; P.O. Box 17004, Tampa, Fla.; Early Childhood. Bromby, Philip M.; PO. Box 17004, Tampa, Fla.; LibrarwAV; LEAVO. Broo- kins, Alana R.; 613 E, Main 51., New Port Richey, Fla.; Eiementary. hown, Barbara L; 1920 S. Saddle Hill Rd., Dunedin, Fla.; Reading; Graduate Assistant with Right to Read; M.A. Icewn, Deborah P.; 10 Melrose Tern, Middletown, N. J.; SpeecMEnglish; Kappa Delta,- Speech Productions; Wind- iammers. Brown, Kathryn 5.; 862 Pineapple Rd., 50. Day tone, Fla.; Elementary. Bruggeman, Harold J.; 3194 57th 5?. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Prof. Physical Education; Phys- iml Education Association; Kappa Delta Pi; WCOA. Bruno, Lisa; 3919 Sierra Madre Dr., Jacksonville, Flu.,- Eng- lishmbrary Science; LEAVO. Buechling, Kristine A.; 1335 Swwbriar Rd., Orlando, Flu.; Elementary,- Floor President Bollard, Johnnyce 8.; 2532 Walnut 51., Tampa, Fla.; Spe- cici Education; lbadu Interest Group. Burger, Ginger D.,- 3935 Veneiian Dr., Tampa, Fla.; SpeechXEnglish; Phi Kappa Phi; Kappa Delta Pi,- Campus Crusade for Christ; Navigators; Southern Speech Communication Association; Florida Speech Association. Bernstein, Allyn G.; 1171 N. E. 166111 51., North Miami Beach, Fla.; Mafhemaiics; Tau Epsilon Phi Little Sister, Pres- idenf; Fontana-Desoto Residence HuH Council. Blockman, Georgene M.,- 5328 lbth Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary. Blanchard, Walter J.; 5730 82nd Terr. No., Pinellas Park, Fla.; Elementary. Borowicz, Joel D.; 313 Magnolia Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Special Education. Bostock, Marsha A.; 40 Fern 51., Burlington, Vt; Mental Reiordaiion; Studeni Council for Exceptional Children. Bowen, Charles A.; 11911 N. Gomez Ave., Tampa, Flu.,- Guidance; Student Guidance Organization; UC Committee; M.A. Bowman, Donna R.; 7401 17th Way No., St, Peters- burg, Fla.,- Elementary. Bracken, Linda J.; 1423 S. Hercules Ave., Clearwaier, Fla.; Social SciencelHis'ory; History Community. Bradley, Macie A.; Rt. 2, Box 767, Dover, Fla.; Elemen- tary,- College of Education Association, President; Florida Student Education Association; Student Organization Advi- sory Board. Brannon, John P.; 2301 7th Ave. S. W., Largo, Fla.; Physical Education; USF Soccer Club; USF Gymnastics Club; Physical Education Intramurals Depart- ment. Breodner, Patty; 5045 Chalec CL, Apt. 903, Tampa, Fla.; Special Education; Kappa Alpha Theta, Secretary, Vice-President; Phi Kappa Phi; Kappa Delta Pi. Brenn, Charlotte 1. T.; 5053 Jersey Ave. 50., Gulfpon, Fla.; Ele- mentary. 41 42 Burke, Eileen G.; P.O. Box 976, 306 N. Shore 50., Anna Maria, Fla.; Early Childhood; NFEA. Burke, Gene- vieve H.; 13469 Las Palmas Dr., Largo, Flo.; Elemen- tary; Student Adivities Council, Representative. Burke, Timothy M.,- 1630 29th Ave., Vero Beach, Fla.; Elemen- tary; Kappa Sigma. Burwell, John W. II; 6511 IOth Ave. No., St. Petersburg, F104 Elementary. Caccictore, Yvene M.; 4401 Lynn Ave., Tampa, Fla.; English; Delta Zeta, Recording Secreiary; Panhellenic Council; Orientation Leader. Calderoni, Sarah J.; 3303 Seville, Tampa, Fla.; Elementary; Kappa Alpha Theta. Canllon, Katherine T.,- RFD $tZ, Harrison, Maine; Early Childhood. Carlyle, Elaine A.; 8717A Mandarine PL, Tampa, Fla,- Guidance; College of Education Associa- tion; 50 Senator,- M.A. Corneal, Nancy F.,- 5548 Terrace CL, Apt. 1, Temple Terrace, Fla.; Mental Retardation. Causey, Martha A.; 860 72nd Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary,- Kappa Alpha Theta; USF Basketball Hostess. Ceika, Irene H.; 3322 Marlin Ave., Tampa, Flu.; Special Edu- cation. Cherry, Brenda J.; 4912 E. Hanna Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Chirichella, Linda A.; 5645 4th Ave. No., St. Peters- burg, F10.; Physical Education; Physical Education Asso- ciation. Chorney, Kenneth; 13129 19th 81., Apt. 120, Tampa, Fla.; Physical Educaiion; Cross Country Team; M.A. Chrimes, Charles R.; 3506 Azeele 51., Am. 212, Tampa, Fla.; Mathematics. Ciccarello, Cheryl A.; 322 Wes? Crest Ave., Tampa, Flu.; Business; Alpha Delta Pi, Guard. Cirioli, Nancy J; 1244 Coral Lane, Hollywood, Fla.; Ele- mentary; Resident Assistant,- Dorm Officer. Clovis, Melinda M.; 1529 W. Linbaugh, Tampa, Fla.; Elemenfary. Cohen, Judith L; 879 N. E. 153m 51., North Miami Beach, Fla.; Art Coker, Charles T.; 1109 141h St. W., Bradenion, Fla.; ElementaryXLibrory Science; LEAVO. Collins, Patrice A.; 1450 E. 23rd Cir., Jacksonville, FILL; Special Education,- Alpha Kappa Alpha; ETHOS; Afro- Americun Gospel Choir. Corwin, Linda S.; 1955 Alton Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Elementary; Delta Delta Delta; Sigma Mpha Epsilon LiHIe Sister of Minerva. Crowell, Deborah J.; 111. 8, Box 211, Tampa, Fla.; ElementarWEarly Childhood. Cruger, linda 5.; 1531 Caribbean Dr., Eau Gallie, Fla.,- Physical Education; Physical Education Associaiion; Swim Team,- Intramurals. Cumbo, Theresa M.; 1905 Carmen St, Tampa, Fla.; Eng- lish. Cunningham, Paula J.; 6419 Debbie Ln. $0., 51. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary; Kappa Delta, Presideni; Kappa Delta Pi,- Monar Board, President. Daeger, Anna L; 308 W. Tever 51., Plant City, F111; Elementary2Ear1y Child- hood; SFEA; College of Education Association, Secretary, Treasurer; Phi Kappa Phi. Danley, LeVofu A.,- 2325 29th St. 50., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Elemeniary. Davis, Jeffrey P.; 2033 Dawn Dr., ClearwaOer, Fla.; Physi- cal Education; Physical Education Associaiion, Executive Council; Baseball Team, Captain. DeBlois, Virginia F.; 1017 W. Woodlawn Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Reading; MA. Decker, Xavier L; RR 1112, Box 2352, lnnes 51., New Port Richey, Fla,- Language. Denison, Linda W,; 3004 Barcelona 51., Tampa, Fla.; Varied Exceptionalifies; Research Assistant; M.A. 43 44 Dixon, Wanda L; 417 W. 61h $1., Sanford, Flo.; Ele- meMary; Tau Omega Chi. Douglas, Marilyn J.; Rt. 1, Box 372, land O' Lakes, Fla.; Library Science7AV; Phi Kappa Phi; M.A. Drake, Debra E.; 6131 Laurelwood CL, Orlando, Fla.,- German; Delta Delta Delta, Rush Chairman; Sigma Alpha Epsilon Little Sister; German Club. Dulabahn, Cynthia K.; 2815 Berkeley Ave., Lake- land, Fla.; Social Science; Epsilon 2E President. Duncan, Nancy L,- P.O. Box 695, Vero Beach, Fla.; Ele- mentarymb. AV; Kappa Alpha Theta, Scholarship, Aih- Ielic, Archivist; UC Program Council, Tour Chairman, Outstanding Committee Member, lnfruservice Chairman; SEAC Cultural and Educational Arts Program Associate. Dunlevy, Pamela A.; 821 S. E. 13111 Ct, Pompano Beach, Flu.; Mental RetardationlSpecial Ed.; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Punhellenic Representative, Rush Chairman; Delta Tau Delta Little Sister; USF Sports Car Club. Dur- bin, Doris J.; 1203 N. Lime $1., Plant City, Flu.; library English; Phi- Kappa Phi. Edwards, Craig K.; R1. 3, Box 543, Mount Airy, Md.; Physical Educalion. Egan, Denise F.; 1717 3151 St. N. W., Winter Haven, Fla.; Early Childhood; ACEI. Ellison, Rhonda 0.,- 110 Reidgate Rd., Auburndale, Fla.; Elementary. Emerson, Sharon A.; 6751 Ralston Beach Cir., Tampa, Fla.; Ele- mentary. Esterow, Judith E.; 67-66 108111 51., Forest Hills, N. Y.,- Elementary. Fain, Alton A.,- 616 West Pine 51., Arcadia, Fla.,- Ele- mentary. Fargnoli, John F.; 8942 Temple Terrace Hwy., Temple Terrace, F10.; Physical Education. Farrell, Susan M.,- 1575 Brookside Blvd., Largo, Fla.; Early Childhood; Women's Intramurals; Karate Club. Fekete, Sharon L; 306 W. Wellington Dr., Tarpon Springs, Flc.; Elemen- lury. OPPOSITE: Ava Meinke and Janet Keykendall use educational resources available to them through the lnsfmciional Materials Center loaned in the Educa- tion building. 45 46 Feldman, Candice D.,- 5335-57th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Mathemaiics. Fellows, Karen L; USF 111-1484, Tampa, Fla.,- ElementarylEarly Childhood; USF Bowling League, Secretary; Kappa Dorm Resident Assistant. Flashman, Ronna J.; 6025 S. W. 64th PL, 50. Miami, Fla.; Elemen- tary; Alpha Epsilon Phi. Flynn, Deborah J.; 827 Susan Dr., Lakeland, Fla.; Elementary; Delta Gamma. Fogel, Sharon 13.; 12098 E. Holland 51., Tampa, FILL; Ele- mentary; 56 Senator,- College of Education Association, Board Member; SFEA; Jewish Student Union; Hamugsh- imim. Foster, Janet 8.; 10914 Bourbon C1,, Apt. 47, Tampa, Fla.; Elemeniary; Kappa Delta; Lambda Chi Alpha Little Sister,- Sfudent Council for Exceptional Children. Fosr fer, Suzanne R.; 4607 Bay Villa Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Ele- mentary; Alpha Delta Pi; Pi Kappa Alpha Little Sister. Fox, Pattie J.; USF $191100, Tampa, Fla.; EnglishlLibrary. Freed, David H.; 10510 Nebraska Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Biol- ogy. Galberaifh, Kay E.; R1. 1, Box 362, Mulberry, Fla.; Social Science. Garcia, Evelyn 8.; 2414 Gordon 51., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Gilmore, Steve A.; 717 No. E 51., Lake Wor1h, Fla.; Physical Education; Physical Educa- tion Association, President; Trot-o-thon; 12 hour Marathon. Giordano, Gary J.; 1046 Chinaberry Rd., Clearwater, Fla.; Social Science. Gober, Larry W.; Rt. 4, Box 56, Milton, Fla.; Social Science. Gonzalez, Sylvia; 5858 451h Ave. No., Sf. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary. Goodman, Gloria J.; 12055 E. 139th Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Gordon, Ellyn F.; 7910 W. Dr., Harbor Island, Miami Beach, Fla.,- Special Education; Council for Exceptional Children, Secretary. Gray, Gary M.; 91 Elysian Ave., Nyack, N. Y.,- Physical Education. Green, Ann F.; 5806 401h 51., Tampa, Flu.; SpeecMEnglish. Grimes, Alma J.; 5872 60th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary. Haasl, Kayleen; 2202 CoIlins, Tampa, Fla.; Elementary; Phi Kappa Phi. Hamlyn, Linda M.,- 735 Hillcrest Dr., Bradenton, Fla.; Elementary. Hannon, Margaret A.; 1010 Ohio Ave., Palm Harbor, Fla.; LibrarWAV; M.A. Harper, H. Yvette; 911 12111 Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Mental Retardation. Hartley, Diane E.; 3333 Higel Ave., Sarasota, Fla.,- Ele- mentarylSociologyA Harvey, Robert 5.; 630 Hudson Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Elementary; M.A. Hauck, Janine 8.; 704 E. Orange Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Haydis, Samuel; 6123 Liberty Ave., Temple Terrace, Fla.; Physical Educa- tion. Head, Mattie L.; 1401 Roosevelt, Clearwater, Fla.; Busi- ness; Alpha Kappa Alpha; Phi Beta Lambda; Afro-Ameri- can Gospel Choir. Heaih, Randy 5.,- RR 11:13, Blooming- ton, Ind.; Fine Arts; National Ari Education Association; Desoto Hall Social Commihee Representative. Heufhfield, Sandra 8.; 1239 Cardinal Lake Dr., Cherry Hill, N. J.; Ele- mentary; Chi Omega. Higgins, Dennis R.,- 1519 Rosemont Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Special Education; USF Karate Club. 47 48 Hilmer, Yvonne E.; 764 Thomas Barbour, Melbourne, Fla; Early Childhood. Hirsch, Avis M.; 2984 Moreland Ave... Oceanside, N. Y.; French. Hirsch, Michael N.; 5593 4011i Ave. No., Apt. 319, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Special Educa tion; Siudem Council for Exceptional Children, Vice-Presi: dent. Hoffman, Marcia K.; 128 8. Owen Cir., Auburndale. F111; Early Childhood. Houston, Deborah 5.; 304 6th Ave. N. W., Ruskin, Fla.; Mathematics. Howard, Eva A.; 1822 Home Ave., Orlandc, Fla.,- Psychology; M.A. Hoyman, Roberi D.; 2845 Bayeux Ave., Melbourne, Fla.; ElementarWSpeciaI Ed. Ippoliw Angela,- 2905 Mitchell 51., Tampa, Fla.; Foreign Language; Italian Club, Secreiary. lvey, Betty J.,- 1341 Palmwood Dr., Eau Gallie, Fla.; Physi- cal Education; Physical Education Association,- Intramural: Jeske, Charlotte 8.; R1. 1, Box 51, Odessa, F1a.; Elemen- kzry. Johnson, Debra D.; 2310 Melrose Ave. 50., $1 Petersburg, F1u.,- Elementary; Afro-American Society, Chaf- man of Academic Affairs. Johnson, Harold L; 13925 85?? Terr. No., Seminole, Fla.; Elementary. Johnson, Janet K.; 3912 W. South Ave., Tampa, Flo.; Eng- lisMLibrary Science; LEAVO; Baptist Campus Ministry. Johnson, Mary K.; 11320 142nd $1. No., Largo, Flo.; Bus;- ness. Johnson, Susan E.; 14712 N. 16m 5L, Luiz, Flo..- Social Science. Jones, Daniel T.; 1485 Linharf Ave., F1, Myers, Fla.; Early Childhood; Lambda Chi Alpha, Treo- surer; M.A. Jones, Herbert L; 315 N. W. 121h St, Box 506, High Springs, Fla.,- Early Childhood,- Afro-Americun Society, Sec- retary of Internal Affairs; Afro-American Gospel Choir; SAGA; UC Program Council; 56 Representative. Judkins, Brenda M.; 1804 6th St, Palmetto, F1a.,- Elementary,- Koppa Delta Phi; Phi Kappa Phi. Jurek, Judy A.; 138 Tahiti Cir., Naples, Fla.; Physical Education; Delta Delia Delia, Marshall, Social Chairman; Student Organizations Advisory Board; Physical Education Associaiion. Kaplan, Allen 1.; 14701 Livingston Ave., Lot 16, Lufz, Fla.,- Physical Educa- tion; College of Education Association; DEA; USF Karate Club. Kavin, Paul E.,- 3810 Anvers Blvd., Jacksonville, Fla.; Art. Kay, Paula R.; 5333 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, Flu.; Ele- men'cry; Alpha Epsilon Phi; Jewish Student Union. Kim- brell, Patricia E,- R1. 1, Box 34, Odessa, Fla.,- Elemeniury; M.A. Kingery, Barbara K.,- 3118 S. Canal Dr., Palm Har- bor, Fla.; Early Childhood. Klepac, Barbara A.; Rt. 1, Box 470, Brooksville, Fla.; Ele- mentary. Klukkeri, Linda M.; 6022 15'th $1. No., St. Peters- burg, Fla,; Elementary; Alpha Delta Pi, Philanthropies Chairman; Pi Kappa Alpha LiHle Sister; Phi Kappa Phi; Kappa Delta Pi. Knox, Barbara A.; 13624 N. 15111 51., Apt. 204, Tampa, Fla.,- Elementary. Kobel, Arthur H., Jr.; 881 65th 51. $0., $1. Petersburg, Flo.; Mental Retardation; Zeta Beta Tau, Treasurer; CEC. Koldewey, Elaine F.; 4002 E. Pocahontas, Apt. 22, Tampa, Hm,- Special Education; M.A. Komotz, Connie L; 175 Mel- rose Ave., Ormond Beach, Fla.; Special Education; New- man Club; Council for Exceptional Children. Krunforod, linda M.; 403 551h Ave., St. Petersburg Beach, Fla.; Early Childhood. LaBrant, Kenneth R.; 3301 Yale Sl. No., Sf. Peiersburg, Fla.; Elementary. 49 50 Laivo, Carol J.; 1011 Spencer Ave., Clearwater, Fla.; Ele memory. Lansford, Linda 1.; 4651 '23rd Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Spanish. Laria, Mamig A.,- 2529 Palmetto 51., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Lorkin, James J., Jr.; 290 N. W. 190th 51., Miami, Fla.; Elementary; Senior Class Presi- dent,- USF Convocation Committee,- Sfudem Organizations Advisory Board; lnferfrafernity Judicial Board; Phi Delta Theta, President, Vice-Presidenf, Alumni Secreiary, Pledge- masfer, Wardenf; 50 Senator; Omicron Delta Kappa; CEA Board,- Homecoming Committee. laRoso, Denise; 1962 Ralph Ct, Wesrbury, N. Y.; Elemen- tary. Lawson, Marie A.,- USF 41-1269, Tampa, Fla.; Special Education; Afro-American Society; Afro-American Gospel Choir. layfield, Nancy 5.; Rt. 1, Box 49, Trenton, Fla.; Early Childhood. legg, Brenda K.; 1019 Highland Ave., Dunedin, Fla.; Elementary. Leibovifz, Beverly R.; 227 Fairway Dr., Ormond Beach, Fla.; Elementary. Lemmel, Connie L.; 6740 Keystone Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; Library Science. Levin, Suzanne L,- 8015 33rd Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary; Kappa Delta, Social Chairman; Panhellenic Representative; Kappa Delta Pi. Linder, Jody C.; Rt. 1, Osprey Ave., East Quo- gue, N. Y.; Physical Educaiion. Lindsey, Lora A.; 4112 Ohio Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Spec1al Education. Little, Cynthia L,- 14511 N. 22nd $1., Lutz, Flo.; Special Education,- Baptist Campus Ministry, Missions Chair- man. Lozano, Gladys; 9145 S. W. 56111 Terr., Miami, FILL; Elemeniary; Kappa Delta Pi. Magee, K. D., Jr.,- 3107 N. Mitchell, Tampa, Fla.; Physical Education; FIJI; M.A. Marchese, Minnie K.; 1810 Park Cir., Tampa, Fla.; Speech Pathology; Kappa Alpha Theta, Corresponding Secre1ary, Social Chairman; Panhellenic Representative; M.A. Mark- man, Karen W.; 1101 Farragui Dr. No., 51. Petersburg, Fla.,- Elementary. Marsh, Stephen W.; 3907 Bayshore Blvd., Tampa, Fla.; Ad; Kappa Delta Pi,- FAEA; NAEA; USF Sports Car Club. Martin, Susan M.; 6017 Flora Vista Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Muslin, Marfha C.; 907 Knollwood Dr., Dunedin, Fla.; LibrarWAV. Mason, Sara A.; 657 Jordan Park, St. Peters- burg, Fla.; Early Childhood; Afro-American Society,- Afro- American Gospel Choir. McCaIpin, Jo E.; 936V: 18th $1. 50., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Early Childhood. McChrisfiun, Les- Iee R.,- 1340 Cordova Rd., F1. Lauderdale, Fla.; Early Child- hood; Kappa Alpha Theta, Marshall, Vice-President, Rec- ommendation Chairman; Resident Assistant. McCoy, Roger SA; 14404 N. 22nd $1., Apt. 166, Lulz, F1a.; American History. McDonald, Deborrah L.; 4333 81h Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary. McElroy, Greg J.; 4808 E. Sligh, Tampa, Fla.; Physical Educciion. McKendree, Charlotte L; R1. 3, Box 646, Dade City, Fla.; Mental Retardation. 51 52 McNeese, Katherine R.; 2109 Oakhill Dr., Valrico, Fla..- Elementary. McNeil, Stanley P.; 682 Bougainvillea Rd., Naples, Fla.; Distributive Education. Menendez, Celeste C.; R1. 2, Box 650, Dude City, Fla.; Special Education. Menu, Gloria F.,- 1406 Southridge Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Early Childhood. Meredith, Ka1hleen; 13044 Oakhursi Rd., Seminole, Fla.- Music. Mikos, Patricia J.; 105 Mission Hills Dr., Temple Ter- race, Fla.; Elementary; Kappa Delta Pi. Milani, Sandra Li 3025 Samara Dr., Tampa, FILL; ElementarWEarly Child: hood; Delta Gamma, Scholarship Chairman. Mills, Man; A.; 707 N. W. 151 Ave., Mulberry, Flo.; ElemenfurWEurlf Childhood. Molony, Judiih L,- 3402 W. Ellicoft 51., Tampa, Fla.; 1an-l lisNFrench. Montofo, Irene; 3318 W. Woodlawn, Tampa, Flu.; Elementary; Phi Kappa Phi. Moidy, Judith A.; 1355; Vesper Dr., Ft. Myers, Fla.,- Mental Retardation; USF Honor Convocation; Dean's list Moore, Nina-Jo; 2551 N. E; 195th St, North Miami Beach, Fla.,- SpeecMEnglish; F0111 tana Hall Floor President; Fontona Hall Resident Assistant; USF Debate Team. Mofyka, Ronald J.; 1305 43rd St. 50., St. Petersburg, Fla. Elementary. Murphy, Janet E.; 25911 S. W. 152nd Ave Homesceud, Flu.; Special Education. Nabcvi, Mohammada 13104 Livingsfon Ave., Apt. 1, Tampa, Fla.; Physical Edu; cation; World Affairs Council; Professional Physical Educaa. tion Association; Iranian Club, President,- Who's Who 1r; American Colleges and Universities. Neale, lynda K.,- 406 Sun 51., Kissimmee, Flo.; Early Childhood; Kappa AlpHa Them. Newkirk, Karla R.; 2323 Dora Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Physia cal Education; Physical Education Association; Track and, Field lnframurals. Newton, Rebecca J.; 972 Golf 51., Rock-L ledge, Fla.; Elementary. Nicolette, Blanche R.; 3404 111111 51., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Novofny, Sue A.; USF ?t- 1283, Tampa, Fla.; Mental Retardation,- SCEC; USF Fenc- ing Club. Nurnfhong, Boonler1;5904 Mortar Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Administration; M.A. Oldham, Pamela M.; 3445 Almond Dr., Apt. D-5, College Park, Ga,- Elementary. Oliver, Conv stance D.,- 3621 E. North 51., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Owens, Paula J.; 1306 Cornell Dr., Panama Cify, Fla.,- Mental Retardation. Parkinson, Carol J..- 3020 N. E. 561h CL, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Elemenmry. Purmer, Sonia J.; 603 Orange St, Auburndale, Fla.,- Business; Phi Kappa Phi. Parr, Christine E41856 Bellemeade Rd., Clearwater, Fla.; Rehabilitation; 111mb, 56 Senator; Residen' Affairs Committee; Dorm Ruidant Assistant; Focus Orientation Leader; M.A. Pelser, Ngncy M.; 210 E. Kings Way, Winter Park, Fla.,- Special Education; SCEC. Pony, Randolph M.; 7916 Manatee SL, Sarasoia, Fla.; Distributive Education,- Sigma Nu; Kappa Delta Pi; College if Education Association; Resident Assistant Peters, Sally A.; 6751 Lenox Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.; Elementary,- Kappo Doha Pi. Pe'erson, Carol A.; 1517 Carlotta Rd. W., Jhduonville, Fla.; SpeecM English. Font, Ammo F.; 60 Washington Ave., Williamstown, N. 1.; Business; Phi Beta Lambda, Secretary. Poduro, Roberta K.; 758 43rd Ave. N. E., St. Petersburg, 110.; Elementary; Alpha Delta Pi, Historian,- Kappa Delta Pi, Phi Kappa Phi. Postel, Nancy C.; 7365 S. Waterway Dr., Miami, Fla.; Early Childhood; Delta Gamma. Prowlocki, Michelle; 1095 N. W. 32nd FL, Miami, Fla.; Elementary,- Continuous Labovafory Experience Program. Racoff, Gerald 4.31301 Miami Gardens Dr., North Miami Beach, Fla.,- Spd'ciol Science. Ramil, Alice M.; 1107vE Chelsea, Tampa, Fla.; Spanish; Doha Zeta, 151 Vice-President, Rush Advisor, Rush Choir- mon, Social Chairman, Publicity Chairman; UC Program Council, Secretary. Ransom, Sharon 0.; 5260 Hih Ave. 13th., 5'. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary; Kappa Delta Pi; Phi Kbppo Phi. Redmond, Cheryl E.; 2303 Kingsway Rd., Seff- npr, F104 Elementary. Reeves, Patricia M.; 2826 Del Rio Dr., Largo, Fla.; Social Science; Kappa Alpha Theta. 53 Physical Education is a port of the education field which is sometimes forgotten about. Nonetheless, it is just as important and interesting. ABOVE, RIGHT: loop Barre in weight room. BELOW, LEFI': Coach Wright instructs beginning swimming class. BELOW, RIGHT: Charon Johnson Inioys using the gym. ABOVE: Joy Birchfield works out in he weigh! room. LEFT: Shayne Tygon keeps running on the tread mill. RIGHT: A routine in action. 9, ; g E x 55 56 Reina, Mary H.; Rt. 5, Box 123 BB, Tampa, Fla.; Distrib- utive Education. Richardson, Fred P.; 178 Fleetwood Tern, Silver Spring, Md.; Elementary. Rizer, Ronald L.; 1916 Ave. P S. W., Winter Haven, Fla.; Distributive Education; FAME; Phi Beia Lambda; DECA. Roberts, Zelda L.; R1. 1, Bell, Fla.; Special Education. Rodriguez, Patricia 6.; 25 N. W. 64th Ave., Miami, Fla.; Early Childhood; Delta Gamma, Treasurer. Rogers, Linda; 6.; 4520 N. W. 361h $1., Apt. 402, Ft. Lauderdale, Flo., Business. Rooks, Barbara J.; R1. 3, Box 270, Zephyrhills, Fla.; Early Childhood. Royals, Beverly . D.; 915 N. W. 41:11 51., Miami, Fla.; Menial Retardmion. Rubottom, James D.,- 511 W. Juneau 51., Tampa, Fla.; Vocal Music; Music Educators National Conference, Presi- dent; College of Education Association; Repertory Ensem- ble. Rusher, F. Inez; 10208 Cliff Cir., Tampa, Fla.; Elemenr fury. Rzonca, Rifa M.; 1212 Engehill Ave., Spring Hill, Fla.; Elementary; Florida Student Education Association. Saland, Lois B.,- 13136 N. 20th 51., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Sanders, Mary Anne; 4641 61h Ave., No., 51. Petersburg, Fla.; Elementary. Santiago, Mugali C.; 1523 Fourth 51., Key WesI, Flu.; Early Childhood. Schenkel, Susan R.; 123:7 Frederica FL, Jacksonville, Fla.; Mental Retardation Schneider, Cyrie A.; 521 Nantucket Dr., Temple Terrace. Fla.; Business. Seymour, Wendy V.; 1100 N. E. 16011! 51., Miami, Fla.; Elementary; Tau Epsilon Phi Little Sisier. Shane, Karen L.,- R1. 3, Box 1075, Lutz, Fla.; Music; Sigma Alpha Iota, Presi- dent. Shumafe, Claudia M.; 5104 Longfellow Ave., Tampa, F104 Elementary; Kappa Alpha Theta. Silverberg, Judy P.; 1913 13151 Ave., Apt. 106, Tampa, Fla.; EnglishUournal- ism; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Corresponding Secretary, Social Chairman. Simmons, Ronald J.,- 7300 Talia Ferro Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Elemenrary. Smith, Beverly P., 504 lst $1., Polk City, Fla.; Hememary; Collegia'e Civinehe Club, Secretary, Treasurer. Sparks, Scott 5.; Box 211, Yankeetown, Fla.,- Special Edu- catdon. Specie, Linda K.; 396 Herron Rd., North Ft. Myers, Hm; Elementary; Kappa D2110 Pi. Stafford, John M.; 37 Pelican Dr., New Port Richey, Fla.; Iiobgy. Stanger, Elsie M.; Box 1, Port Salerno, Fla.; Men- tal Retardation; Kappa Delta, Vice-President; Student Council on Exceptional Children. Stannage, Linda L; PO. Box 661, Wauchulu, Fla.; Elementary; Kappa Delta Pi. Shnnage, Sylvia L.; P.O. Box 661, Wachula, Fla.; Elemen- Gary. Stevens, Joel K.; 912 E. 122nd Ave., Apt. B, Tampa, Fla.,- Physical Educa'ion; Physical Education Association; Varsity Soccer Team. Stober, Eric 8.; 4116 Okara Rd., Tampa, FE.;Ar1; Kappa Delta Pi, Treasurer. Stockhausen, Jane A.; 6303 S. W. 43rd 51., Miami, Fla.; Social Science; Visual Am Commiflea Sullivan, James R.; 507 E. Knollwood, tampa, Fla.; Elementary. 57 58 Taormina, Mary J.; 301 N. Bardford, Tampa, Fla.; Early Childhood. Taiman, Mary Ann; P.O. Box 419, Balboa, Canal Zone; LibrurWAV; University Community Chorus. Tatum, Joe L; 1130 N. W. 761h $1., Miami, Fla.; Early Childhood. Taylor, Barbara A.; 7151 Fairway Blvd., Mira- mar, Flo.; Business70ffice; Phi Beta Lambda; Tau Kappa Epsilon Little Sister; Student Financial Aids CommiHee. Taylor, Deborah J.; 2651 Hibiscus CL, Dellona, Fla.; Ele- mentary. Thomas, Craige M.,- 579 Seventh Ave. No., Naples, Fla.; Business; Phi Beta Lambda; Softball and Vol- leyball lntramurals. Thomas, Susan M.,- 210 N. Kent 81., Orlando, Fla.,- Social Science; Alpha Phi Omega Little Sis- ter; Anthropology Club; SRL Kappa Dorm; Intramural Staff. Thompkins, Old 1.; 925 E. Henderson Ave., Apt. 8, Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Thorsen, Gail M.,- 24 Franklin PL, Great Neck, N. Y.; Ele- mentarylEurly Childhood; 50 Election Rules CommiHee; Tau Kappa EpsiIon Little Sister; Alpha Phi Omega Little Sis- ter; Orientation Leader; Kappa Hall Standards Board; Col- lege of Education Association. Tittle, Martin L; PO. Box 294, Silver Springs, Flu.; English. Twine, Barbara J.; 2919 2151 81., Tampa, Fla.; Biology; Alpha Kappa Alpha, Presi- dent, Corresponding Secretary,- Senior Class Treasurer; ETHOS; Student Organimtions Advisory Board; Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. Valenfy, James M.; 5440 Bayshore Dr., Seminole, Fla.; Elementary. Van Wagner, Joyce; 7800 S. W. 115m 51., Miami, Fla.; Elementary; Resident Assistant Vaughan, Gerald A.; 1814 Candlewood Dr., Holiday, Fla.,- Music; M.A. Vickers, Kay; 957 West 64m P1,, Hialeah, Flu.; Business; Kappa Delia,- Panhellenic Representative,- Phi Beta Lambda. Violene, Donna G.; 7809 Ridein Rd., Tampa, Fla.; Elementary. Wa1lace, Jeanie; 7315 Egypt Lake Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Ele- mentary. Walton, Carolyn L; 402 W. Louisiana Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Elementary; Kappa Delta Pi. Waters, Barbara J.; 315 W. Venture, Clewisfon, Fla.; Elementary. Watkins, CharloHe F.; 822 Glendale 51., Lakeland, Flo.; Englishl Library $cience7AV; LEAVO, Secretary. Watkins, Patricia A.,- P.O. Box 794, High Springs, Fla.; Ele- mentary; Black Student Union,- Afro-American Gospel Choir. Weicherding, John F.; 5410 Santa Monica Dr., Tampa, Flo.; Distributive Education; M.A. Weich, Diane C.; 108 Lake Allen Rd., Lutz, Fla.; ElementarWEarly Child- hood; Phi Kappa Phi. Wells, Mary J.; P.O. Box 491, Pal- meno, Fla.; Elementary. Whalen, Paula J.; 2532 Hibiscus $1., Sarasota, Flo.; Elementary. Whiflock, Martha A.; 711 W. Hickory, Arcadia, Fla.; Early Child- hood. Wildermuih, Sandra 5.; USF $151272, Tampa, Fla.; Elemen- tary; Kappa Delta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi; Alpha Phi Omega Little Sisier. Wilkie, Sandra L,; 1527 Beach Dr. S.E., St. Petersburg, Fla.,- Profes- sional Physical Education; Physical Education Association; Kappa Delta Pi; lnframurals. Wilson, Pamela A.; 1517-A 13?th Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Urban Research. Wismer, Janice D.; 2141 N. E. 53rd 51., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Physical Education. Woods, Shirley C.; Rt. 2, Box 791, Plant City, Flo.; Ari. Yeary, Patricia; 508 Vernon PL, Orlando, Fla.; Music; Circle K; SMENC. Yellin, Gary L,- P.O. Box 8929, Tampa, Fla.; English; Intensive Tuto- rial, Coordinator, President; Advisory Board; Proiecf Student Con- cern, Campus Coordinator,- Volunteer Services; Martin Luther King Film Committee. Zopf, Ken A., Jr.; 3464 79th Way No., St. Peters- burg, Flo.; Guidance; Student Guidance Organization, President; M.A. Students study and use materials in the I.M.C. 59 60 MASTER'S Quarter l Edward F. Abernathy Hurry T. Albertson Barbara Bayne Baldwin James Michael Barker Mary H. Benson Marilynn Keller Bielen Donna Adele Blaess Howard Eugene Blair Vella H. Boley Helen Suzanne Bolton Praserf Boonrarw Douglas Sheetz Brown Lynne Milia Cashon Selwyn Thomas Chalker Ill Pasco A. Chancey, Jr. Chaweewan Chingtin Phyllis Follo Coles Edward R. Cunningham Lawrence B. Evans Michael joseph Fuller Gloria Garcia Michael Gonzalez John A. Grossi Zeni'a Cunha Guenther lorry Marshall Hamlin Jean Delegal Homage Leni Crumer Hassell Raymond David Hirshorn Mary Josephine B. Hurley Steven Iachini Susan Marie O'Connor Jennings Tongyoo Kaewsaiha Mark D. Kaplan Howard Carr Leming Katie 3. Lorenzo Jack I. Mangione Robert Edward MaroHi William Benjamin Matthew Lester N. Mensch Margaret Y. Monaco Alice Joyce Noble Boonie Nurnthong Ar'hur E. O'Donnell Robert Lee Park John A. Phillips Karen M. Pierce Thanom Pisespongsa Boonliang Polarwufh James T. Rogers II Nelson Edgardo Santa Ana Phong Senavai Frank Ernest Sloup Vera Dupree Snow Alice Elaine Sewards Johonno Homendorf Stagge Sally Anne Rossiau Swan D. Lawrence Team Joyce Lee'h Willis Eugene D. Word Marguerite Smith Wurster Robert M. Zenor Jan Graham Zimme' BACHELOR'S Julie Ann Adcock Carol Ann Alberegts Andrea Solis AlbriMon Gail E. Atchison Saralyn Bivens Afherfon Michele Lynn Atwell Roberi Wayne Babcock Janet Hoover Baker Albert B. Baptis? Carol Ann Barnett Lynne Barry Eric Paul Bartels Diane Constance Baskovich Julie Elaine Bates Marianne Christine C. Beck Barbara Ann Benzin Rebecca Lolene Bess Mary Helen Bodimer Rita L BoyeNe Maureen C. Brady Barbara Ann Braun Manha Gail Brewer Janice Lou Britt . Karen Smith Brown Tracy A. Brown Derrel James Bryan Phyllis Ann Bullard Sarah Jane Calderoni Darlene Marie Calzon Catherine S. Carswell Montague Rayford Chancey, Jr. Margaret Fay Chapman Brenda Janice Cherry Susan Joy Clair Graham Alloway Coe Carolyn Clay Coleman Claudia S. Conner Mildred C, Cook Patricia ONeaI Copeland ' Mary Josephine Copia Margaret Ricks Corr Martha M. Crawford Glenn C. Crosby, Jr. Theresa Mary Cumbo Laura Anne Dandar Clint Davis Daisy Collins Dawsey Caroline L. Daywalf Cecile M De Leon Paul Raymond Denarski Linda Lee Dewein Richard Vance Dickerson John M. Ditto Virginia Lucille Dobbins Mary Louise Dodge Larry Austin Dokken Kerry M. Drake Ava Wiggins Dukes William Clark Eakes Jo Ann Edwards Victoria A. Fellows Leroy L. Flemmings Jr. Helen Marie Foster Lora Allyn Foster Rita R. Fowler Robert L. Friederich Ronald Sylvan Fry Patricia Mary Fuller Sandra E. Funkhouser Mary Louise Schweppach Galeo Barbara Ann Geariety Debra Fletcher Glover Pamela D. Goodwin Luisa Consuelo Gregan Victoria Mario Gregory Gary D. Haines Anne Eulalie Harrison Hall Eugenio Friday Honke Frazier Jerone Hardy David Wood Harlow Deborah A. Jones Harris Susan S. Hatfield Virginia Wozny Hausled Madeline Nelson Hayes Yvonne Elaine Hilrner Johnna Cavhcan Himrod Paul Michael Hirsch James R. Hollins Flora Lynn Holston Donna Louise Hooks Manly Bryan? Hudson Lois Jean Hufchcraff John Eric Jacobsen Charlene Becrafi Jeske June? Elain Johnson Deborah Deal Jordon Susan P. Joseph George R. Jung David Arthur Katz April J. Kelley Paula M. Kelly Gale Elizabeth Kennedy Pameia W. Kennedy Joseph F. Kinvzel Gloria Calofell Kolka Elwood R. Kotil Jane! Diane La Barca Barbara Jeanne Lacer Carla Lillian Lacrampe Susan L. lange Lizabe'h Ann Lapierre Eric; Victor Larson Sharon Marie Lausman Candace Lederer Richard J. Legave Carol Jean Lewis Linda Louise Lilly Shirley Foxworrhy Linne Richard C. linthicum Brenda Darlene Little Dona Jean Lorello Jonni L. Lumpp Mary Sue Mucar Glenn A. Manfrin Russell Frank Mantovoni Karen W. Markman Mary Jane Masters Barbara Ellen Maxwell Sarah Baldwin Mayer Margaret 5. McCartney Candace Gail McConnell Bryan Kendrick McCuIIars Jun Davis McDonald Priscilla Ann McMullen F. Lucile Meek: Linda Gail Mile Denise Munoz Linda McNeer Murrell Carlene Arnold Murvin Catherine Irene Musil Willie Mae Mutcherson Nancy Jane Nelson Wendy Lynne Newhard Martin O'Halloran Pamela Sue Pallas James L. Palmer Marion Zambito Parks Sonia Jones Farmer Carolyn L. Pearce Valerie W. Pendegraph Marina Amelia Perna Patricia P. Petersan Geraldine Doyle Phillips Julie A. L. Phillips Frances Winfree Pope David Douvros Quarles Suzanne E. Quesada Susan Annens Randall Amarilys G. Rassler Cecile Jones Reagan Martha Paul Roberts Susan MacWiihey Robinson Barbara Joyce Rooks Kathleen Marie Ryder Jvdith B. Sellers Ira George Show Lenie Jewell Sherer Pauline Shane Claudia Rose Mari Shuma'e Grace Sierra Richard F. Sierra Nancy Lynn Simons Delores Chrisiine Sing Shirley Lynn Snyder Barbara McMullen Sorenson Sadie M. Southers Linda Louise Sfannage Joyce Rice Sweeter Marsha Strong David H Stuart Susan Lee Surene Cynthia .l. Sunle Cynthia Bea'rice Taylor Deborah J. Taylor Stellene Elizabeth Taylor Euratho Territo Connie L. Thompson Regina WinneHe Thompson John Alden Thorson Martin Lee Tittle Mark Chris'opher Todsen Edward Toppino, Jr. Nancy C. Unger Katherine Hawlery Vickers Susan Juiie Victor Donna Gail Violette Beth Greenlee Walls Pmricia Diane Wargo Pamela Warrix Carl Victor Wafers, Jr. Charlotfe Frances Watkins Marilyn Phyllis Waugh Helen Linda Weiner Susie Ross Welden James S. White Arlene Furfanle Williams Wade Collins Williams Nancy Ann Wolle Shirley Carlson Woods Gail Bonnie Yosl Eleaine Everett Young MASTER'S Quarter ll William Joseph Alexander Richard Asbell Mavis H. Baigier Domenico Mickey Rumore Benton Henry J. Benvenuti, Jr. Daniel James Bordeaux Mary C. Boslrom Charles A. Bowen Linda M. Bremer Susan Brennan Bren Cheryl Marie Brock Alma S. Brown Lieba FruchIer Brunhild Doris Burrell Lena Arlene Burrows Mary Sue Brawn Clemons Dorothy Cleonlis Cowden Carolyn Ann Davis Kathleen Ryan Eubonk Caroline Houston Fenderson Margaret Thornton Fefherman Evelyn B. Fowler Shirley Ann Frank Karlin Fayne Gasihoff Brian R. Girvin Susan A. Reynolds-Greenless Shirley Dening Grubbs Joseph J. Haber, Jr. Florence Truey Henderson Gail Thompson Hie Charles B. Hill Harold Carl Hillcher Patricia Phillips Hitchcock Jacquelyn Larson Holmes GIenn Douglas Holstmun Wilma Carroll Howell M. Lois Johnson James Warner Kellogg Svephen Kinner Mavy Armstrong Kleiderer Anne E. Murphy Knight Kathleen G. Lane Lee Bird Leavengood Alison Lewis David Deon Lichtenfels Martha Hail Little Steven Lawrence Marcus Carolyn Ends Marsh Marian Lee Martin Stephen Michael Mar'in Mildred M. Manhews Jeffrey Charles McKuIIip Linda A. McMillan laidia Merhige Morgan! J. Mitchell Virginia L. Monica Suwn Kathleen Moore Julianne V. Nelson Tim Odisho Nwea John Franklin O'Rourke David William Olsen Wendy Louise Osborne Mary l. Patterson Eorline Virginia Pearcey Theresa Tamborello Puleo Sally M. Pullin Sherry l. Randolph chce Matis Rebholz Goorge A. Reidl Jr. Gknda 5 Schules Judy M. Schosser Joseph Richard Scionvi, Jr. Apichart Seraneviiaiki'karn Steven Wayne Smith Carol Nicholson Socash Thomas Nevin Soufhard John W. Tayior James D. Trnher Helen F. Vacher lost Gilberlo Valdes Iavbaro Bane Ward Shven Albert Weinstein Cavol Lynne Wespiser Alice Elizabeth lowrey Wheeler Mary Gloeckner Whitesides William Zoyd Wise Mary Catherine Woods BACHELOR'S C. Diane Abegglen Craig Robe Anderson Dianne Dale Atkinson Eugene Austin Mary Joanna Bahmiller leonard Buiistreri, Jr. Karen Bang 'Ieny Eileen Barrels Peggy Lee Baxter Candace North Bean Sharon Diane Benton Michael Dennis Behl Richard P. Behrens, Jr. Kalhleen Lucille Bican Diane Fox Black Walla! J. Blanchard, Jr. Toma D. Blessing Mane Marie Bohcnnon Iarbara J. Boston Barbara Eruce Bowman Nacie Alma Bradley Charlene Ilene Tippy Brenn Jun Lee Lasseter Britt Joyce H. Broadwell Marvin Beecroft Brown Pamela Lee Brown Elizabeth O'Connell Buell Timothy Michael Burke John William Burwell, II Douglas A. Butler Catherine Agnes Caddell Terry Ann Calcutera Cheryl Lynn Campbell Gerald Fredrick Cannon Katherine Theresa Cuntlon Dianne Cardinaie Cynthia Jean Carlberg Renee Marie Casali Michael David Cassuw Mary Lynne Casiellano Judy Tawney Caufman Robert J. Cavuofi Irene Hi'o Ceiko Hershel Alan Chancey, Jr. George Stephen Chromy Herman A. Clark Patricia Ann Coleman Linda Meredith Colson Vicki Cluirese Cook Paula Jean Cunningham Geraldine Danna Mildred E. Day John DeSylvester Claudia Jane DiBenedeYto John G. Dimitry Wanda Lee Dixon Doreen Vivian Duncan Brian Lee Dyak Patricia Winger? Eckert Susan Kachel Eidschun Wanda K. English Judith Ellen Esterow Karen Lee Fellows Randi 5. Fields Denise A. Fillmon Jeanne Marie Flanagan Ronna Jane Flushman John King Flynn Marie A. Fontana Terrie Ann Forester Mary Jane Fournier Anna Daeger Fronta Marianne Franus Renee Joy Fried Levota Arelia Fuller Kay Elizabeth Galberaifh Ann Carol Garcia Joyce L. Garcia Edwina H. Gates Anamaria Miranda Ghahremani Carolyn S. Gonzalez Pamela Joyce Grant Ann Frances Green Stanley Joy Greenstein Ctherine Reinharf Greer Jacqueline Guthrie Alfred H. Ham, Jr. Debra Ann Hardin Peggy Kise Hardin Jill Beth Harris Diane Lee Harvey Janine Bellini Hauck Irene Marie Hay Mamie Louise Head James H. Herndon Pixie Linton Hester Patricia Jean Hill Sara Louise Hoover Robin Scott Hopwood Gabriel Hom Carol Runey Howze Brenda Karen Hubbard Kenneth Allen Hughes Gregory Calvin Hunsinger Marilyn Lee Hunsinger Colleen Ann Hyer Martha Imfeld Pearl E. James Marguerite Jean Jamieson Loretta LyneNe Jensen Robe Jaquess Johnson Brenda Marin Judkins Quida Davis Kader Sharon L. Kalle Alice Sue Kempter Abbey Sue Kessman Cecilia Ann King Juania E. Kirksey Dione Christena Klamer Barbara Joan Koroknay Carol J. Krawczak Anthony LaBarca, Jr. Kenneth Richard Labranf Thelma Catherine Henschen lacy William Joseph LaFrance Sharon l. Lox Carol Sue Laycock Brenda leuh Lee Brenda Kay Legg Beverly Rita Leibovitz Mary Pairice Leousis Lora Anne Lindsey Judy Marie Lis John Terry LiNIepoge Marcia Ann Llanes Gladys Lozano Mary Kathleen Lundy George William Maranc Deanna Elaine Matheny Louise Williams McAllisver Ruth Louise McDowell Maureen Ann McGrafh Beverly P. Medaglia Gloria Ford Mentz Nikki Anne Merchant Patricia Joy Mikes Ann Gail Millenson Judith Louise Melony Carol L. Moody Covoline Christie Moore Allen Mortham Ronald Jo Mo'yka Rebecca Bailey Mulrennan Marcia Lynn Munchick EI-Donna Bean Mylrea Lynda Kaye Neale Clayton Samuel Newman Linda Beth Oakley Nell Elizabeth Oren Carol Jo Parkinson John Marshall Perry Marvin L. Pinkerfon Natalie V. Poppens Brenda Joyce Porto John David Poucher Judith Ann Wollschloger Powell Kim Bradford Preston Heidi Linda Quigley Joyce Louise Rodemacher Charles W. Redford Sharon Dorothy Ransom Charles Cornelius Recher Willard P. Reynolds II Gail Marsha Rifkin Ronald Lamar Rizer Terry L. Rose Lawrence Carl Rotolo Mary Osborne Ruiledge Mary Anne Sanders Katherine Mitchell Sauve Frank Paul Schuffer, Jr. Kristine Ann Schmidt Leighton McRue Schroder Philip L. ScoN Joel Thomas Sea'on Wendy Valin Seymour BeHy K Smith Sandra Lei'mer Smith Deborah Jo Sonneborn Jeffrey L. Southwonh 5:0 Steven Sparks Leonor L. Spafola Linda Kay Specie Ann Patterson Steed Cynthia Darlene Sfahl Diane M. Slolba Sylvia Lee Stannage Beverly W Stentz Sandra Breece Stewart Keven Thomas Stone Mollie A. Strawn Marion Cohen Slrober Elsa Agnes Sweat? Thomas Warren Swedine Kathleen Ann Sykes James W. Taylor, Jr. Barbara Jean Thomas Jan Burts Thompson Dawn Marie Tibbits Karen Ann Tilley Patricia Anne Tornwall Manuel Charles Tsakrios James Earl Ulmer, .lr. Victoria Lynn Upson Andrea Usher Vita J. UIh James Michael Vulenty Myra Loraine Varn Routh Bourlay Vickers Nancy Lee Walker Wendy Lee Warren N. Jeanie Wallace Diane Carolyn Weich Alice Loraine Wells Frances A. Wheatley Kathryn Ann Whitaker Samuel Ray Whitfen Sharon Louise Wicker Gerald Roy Wicker, Jr. Kathleen Eileen Wierichs George Ronald Wilcox, Jr. Julie A. Williams Peggy B. Williams Cynthia Marshall Willis Linda Sue Wilson Ralph Herman Wyatt, Jr. Patricio Yeory Barbara Phyllis Zarek 61 62 -Ancn BY: N notional ATIDNAL SOCIETY cu: P darn- Dr. E. W. Kopp, Deon How would you compare a typical engineering stu- dent with students majoring in other disciplines at USF? Engineering students at most universities tend to orient differently than other students on campus for several reason. There have been national studies on the back- ground and profile of engineering students which show that many tend to come from families who have not had the benefit of a college education. They tend to come from families with a strong work ethic where industrial employment or at least skilled trades have been the important means of livelihood. As a consequence, work attitudes seem to be well developed. This is a real asset in that an engineering program does require a considerable amount of work. The nature of an engineering program tends to select the type of individual who is willing to pursue a problem solving laboratory oriented experience. In many areas of the academic world, the ability to read and understand what is read is the determinate to success. In engineering, this is only a putt of the effort for it requires accumulation of a mathematical and physical science background that is integral with the reading ability. You do not read a thermody- namics text or an advanced fluid mechanics report. While there is an optional class attendance program . at the University, it is rare that an engineering stu- dent misses classes for he soon finds himself unable to follow the material without explanation. Thus, the engineering student for fout or five years is absorbed in his studies. He tends to be rather seri- ous and has little time for outside diversion. We do find unique individuals who have the capability for extra curricula activities as well as studies, but they are few. OZITI mmmZ 63 64 Arbizu, Ralph, Jr.,- 5030 Ave. 309, Goshen, Culif.; Electri- cal; USF Photo Club. Bagge , Homer T., Jr.; 14420 Renee CL, Apt. B-H, Lufz, Fla.; Indusiriul; Co-Op Student Advi- sory, Chairman; Florida Engineering Society. Bennington, Jim R.; 268 Robin Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; Technology. Berle, Ronald F.; 324 Leeward Isl., Clearwater, Flo.,- Electrical. Bly, Richard A.,- 1207 E. Flora St, Tampa, Fla.,- Electrical,- lnsfitule of Electrical and Eledronic Engineers; International Society for Hybrid Microelectronics, Treasurer. Bobbin, Richard 5.,- 2109 Poinciona Dr., Clearwaier, Fla.; Technol- ogy. Dent, Margie A.; 1407D Lancewood Dr. N. W., Huntsville, Ala.; Electrical; Delia Sigma Theta; M.A. Dorf, Sanford N.; USF $$1694, Tampa, Fla.; Technology. Garbrick, Donald T.; 1011 N. 32nd Ave., Hollywood, Fla.,- Civil; Florida Engineering Society. Gonzalez, Jesus; Calle 86 $t7-31, Bogota -8- Colombia, 5. A.; Engineering. Havel, Robert E.; 4835 Gulf of Mexico Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; Engineering; Sigma Nu. Hazelwood, Walter C.,- 8606 Chi- naberry Dr., Tampa, Flo.; Industrial Systems; Florida Engi- neering Society. Hunt, Linda D.; 863 Kings Post Rd., Rockledge, Fla.; Tech- nology. Kelso, Glen M.,- 707 Hugh 51., Tampa, Fla.; Tech- nology; USF Flying Club; Public Relations Office. Knowles, Frank R.; 3902 Bay Villa Ave., Tampa, Fla; Elecirical; IEEEE; FES. Knowles, George E.; 3902 Bay Villa Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Engineering; Engineering College Association, EE Representative; FES, Secretary,- IEEE. Krishnan, lyengar N.; 13725 la Manchu CL, Apt. 55, Tampa, Fla.; Engineering Science; Phi Kappa Phi,- Phi Sigma Epsilon; PhD. Kwafra, Subhash C.; 8703 461?- St, Tampa, Fla.,- Systems Engineering; Ph.D. Marsh, Charles E.,- 2040 Arlington St, Sarasota, Fla.; Technology. Morgan, Edward A., III; 1655B Rt. 3, Luiz, Fla.; Technology. Pasken, Stanley J., Jr.; 3951 N. W. 5h 51., Miami, Fla.; Technology; Engineering College Association Council; Engi- neering Technology Representative. Phillips, Eugene L; 6335 30th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Engineering,- Flo- rida Engineering Society; Engineering Council Association. Richardson, Louis 3., II; 2804 W. Peherson St., Tampa, Fla.; Engineering; Amateur Radio Club, Treasurer; World Affairs Club; IEEE. ScoH, Bentley N.; l404-A 137th Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Industrial. MASTER'S Quarter I Wiley David Cunagin Richard J. Kessler Jorge R. Rodriguez Perry R. Sporber Robert William Thompson William R. H. nsdale Rene L. Valdes BACHELOR'S Ralph Arbizu, Jr. William Andrew Boilie Richard Logan BeaHy Way L Bryinglon Emil Dennis Caborga James Bevan Cobb Hector Miguel De Souza, Jv. Lewis E. Foster Ill Jones Paul Fulford David Arthur Goldy Theodore John Granger Howard William Hawkins John Gustav Hlavac ?uul Munin Hlavac Glen Allen Jenkins George Alan Keselowsky Richard J. Kessler Stephen Lane Kincaid Ftank Raymond Knowles George John Kondelin, Jr. Ruben Wayne Lewis John Day'on Longocve Anmny John Mangione, Jr. Pablo Manuel Miquel Herbert Andrew Phillips Siephen Charles Quina James A. SeHIes Thomas Swan Simack Charles Raymond Snipes Michael Felton Sumner Richard Dudley Tabbun Jorgt Alberto Vasquez M. Dale D. Williams Ronald Stanley Woiewucki MASTER'S Quarter ll Richard A. Busfelo Charis: Edwin Copeland, Jr. Rodney D1 Ghiom German H. Gonzalez Joseph Burton Jenne, Jr. Robert Lawrence Miller James Kevin O'Malley John E. O'Reilly, Jr. William E. Packer Richard Adeeb Thomas Ludovicus C. Van den Bogaen BACHELOR'S Homer T. Baggen, Jr. Richard Michael Baker Richard Allan Bly Richard S. Bobih Brian Kenneth Carlson Michael Thomas Compefiello Charles Edwin Copeland, Jr. Samuel Wells Covert Roy W. Crichton, Jr. Kenne'h Alva Fiallos Vicoor W. Fcrmby Massoud Foroughi Rodney D. Ghioto German H. Gonzalez David Warren Graff Raymond Eugene Hancock Walter Claude Hozelwood Linda Darlene Hunt Joseph Burton Jenne, Jr. Richard Andrew Jones George Edward Knowles Thomas Michael Knox Kenneth D. McMillan Joseph Raymond Miller John E. O'Reilly, Jr. William Jennings Redford, Jr. Frank Paul Ripo Lee G. Schuster Hemanf Hiralal Shah Rober? Edward Taylor Timothy John Tomes Robert Michael Walker Jon Christopher Wall Donald Eugene Winters Shah, Hemant H.; 11 Ashwin Society, Ahmedabad, India; Chemical; Tau Beta Phi. Silverman, Jeffrey J.; 1166 N. E. 160th Tern, No. Miami Beach, Fla.; Technology; Track; Volleyball. Spechf, Steven J.; 1214 Lorie Cir., Brandon, Fla.; Mechanical; USF Sports Car Club, President. Sullivan, Paul J.; 6035 11th 59. E., Bradenlon, Fla.; Technology; Intensive Tutorial. Thursby, Reed 5.; 2907 Rockaway CL, Tampa, Fla.; Civil. Tinnen, Michael; 2702 Campus Hill Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Engi- neering. Tomes, Timothy J.; 4412 Watrous Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Electrical; Florida Engineering Society, Vice-President; IEEE. Toppino, Charles P.; 10204 Altman 51., Tampa, Fla.; Industrial,- Florida Engineering Society. 65 66 fr '3 Di 5.! 5w 5-: 'ua-i O . iiileiX Dr. Donald Saff, Dean Do you feel the quality of education available to studenis at USF is compara- ble to what you received at college? HThe education available to students at the University of South Florida in the arts is as varied and as qualitative as one could find anywhere in The country. As the function of art is in pan based on consistent change, to respond to a ques- tion relating to the relative merits of pro- grams in different points of time would be impossible. m-Imib 67 68 Basseft, Richard C.; 1690 N. Broadway, Barfow, Fla.; An. Brown, Mary L; 2118 Ivory PL, Sarasota, Fla.; Visual Arts,- Deltu Delk: Delta, Sponsor Chairman. Constantine, Tony C.; 40 Oakland Ave., Deer Park, N. Y.; Dance; Dance Club; Entertainment Committee; USF Theatre Productions and Dance. Davenport, Suzanne G.; 2880 67th Way No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Dance; Dance Club; Themis; Dance Merit Award. Herb, William J.; 1906 Sionehursl Rd., WinIer Park, Fla.,- Fine Arts. Hood, Barbara J.; 503 Fairview Rd., Sebring, Fla.; Visual Arts. Manning, Betty L.,- 130 Mendoza Ave., Apt. 21, Coral Gables, Fla.; Visual Arts; Women's Tennis Team Alternate. Sanders, Juanita 5.; 922 McBerry St, Tampa, Fla.; HumaniiiedVisual Arts; Italian Club,- Euro- pean Study Program. Strawn, Jarret W., 13710 N. 20th St, Tampa, Fla.; Visual Arts; Fine Arts S'udeni Advisory Board; Visual Arts Refue- seniative; Represenfafive to College Councils; M.F.A.. Wil- liams, Anne M.; 9140 Caribbean Blvd., Miami, Flo.,- Art. MASTER'S Quarter l Robert Walter Glendon BACHELOR'S Sonnie Jean Adams Kahleen Marie Archer Dale Alvin Becker Peter B. Coalson Earl Slephen Estes Jose Forns, Jr. Mark SIephen Gilbert Kathryn Lella Deits Gliozzi Michael Godey Alan T. Hopper Mildred Haines Larson Suzanne M. Lunny Betty L. Manning Mary Jane Molheny James J. McCabe Michael Risk Miller Paul Franklin Palmer Eileen Grace Papariello Charhas Loihrop Purkhill Charles Edward Sands Richard Leroy Strong Shannon Lynn Forester Sfroud Rundee Ellen Supmn Helene W. Wiley Lorry Vincent Wilson MASTER'S Quarter ll Robert Paul Polzer BACHELOR'S Nancy E. Alcorn Guillermo Cuellar Suzanne Gail Davenport luciano Franchi De Alfaro Ill Jennifer Joyce Dyer Curl Fels Richard lee Geller John Michael Gonzalez Gecrge Mitchell Kalogridis Frances Beth Kant Mary T. Kroepel Kathleen Ewing Ladue Paul B. Row John B. Reynolds Kathleen Allison Ricks Paul Anthony Robenson Cheryl Ann Bleed Russell JoAnn lininer Ryer Candace C. L. Schippnick Diane Eilber Schweicken Sandra Lee Seiler Armando Sierra Walter Raymond Smelling, Jr. Gary H. Tapper James Townsend William Bosman Tuhle Juanita Rey Wharton Margarec Hartley Wolfe ABOVE, LEFT: Peggy Costello and David Cipolloni working with clay. ABOVE, RIGHT: Gayle Rodes oi the poner's wheel. 69 Dr. Philip M. Rice, Dean In your opinion what qualities are found in a competent instructor? i will direct my answer to the instructor in the Humani- ties and Social Sciences since I believe there is a good deal of difference between them and instructors found in the sciences. The key to competency in an instructor is first of all his enthusiasm for the subject, his enthusiasm for communicat- ing his ability to motivate the student to read, his ability to draw out the student, not in lecture style, but in actual class participation; in a sense to teach the student as the student is engaged in classroom activity. Knowledge of subioct is important and security in that knowledge is important at the same time. It is often true that the exciting instructor is the one teaching something not in his own field, but something that he himself is involved in learning something ahead of his students. An instructor ought to be clear in his presentation, clear in his questions. He should have good delivery and good style. He must be aware of the student, aware of individu- als' differences. He must not expect all students to approach a problem in the same manner. lthink there is sometimes a problem with new instructors that they tend to rely too much on a given type of knowl- edge. They have thevmistaken concept that all students are going to absorb knowledge in the same way and over the same length of time. There's a tendency in different levels of students for some instructors to pick up the brighter students in the class, and the rest of them are iust left out in the dark. It takes a good deal of knowledge on the part of the instruc- tor as to how he can draw those students who appear less able, although they may not be less able. I think a good instructor can, in a classroom situation, conduct the class and can come to some kind of an evalu- ation about the students without what we normally think of as examinations. This could be best realized in a situation where student interplay is predominant and not iust a lec- ture class. Grades are not that important. It won't always work, but if an instructor is relatively good, each student should at least pass. An instructor has got to make himself available to indi- vidual students. It's difficult to know what an instructor's iob is; whether he's supposed to relate knowledge or not. I'm not so cer- tain that most students are so attuned to oral reception that the reception of knowledge from the instructor is near as valid as the reception of knowledge from reading. You don't teach people to think but you can stimulate the think- ing process. It takes a tremendous amount of work on the part of an instructor to individualize his teaching; the easiest thing to do is to walk into a classroom and talk. I think many of the best instructors are people who aren't even in academics. I've never been convinced that a college or university is the best place without some kind of chaos developing. There's always the concept in a university that an instructor is stimulated because he's constantly finding out something new about his topic. But he can't teach that topic to a class. The only spill off I see is enthusiasm. Research in the sense that an instructor's reading and explaining things himself is good. The worst thing that can happen is the instructor who has stopped learning himself. 71 72 Apfheker, Eve; 5731 Heston Rd., Jacksonville, Fla.; Mass Comm; Advertising Club. Arline,. Albert L.; 1218 Griffin Rd., Orlando, Fla.; Religious Studies,- Areopagus Club. Bliz- zard, Betty P.; 1208 Culbreuth Isles Dr., Tampa, Fla.,- Mass Comm; Chi Omega; Public Relations Student Society of America; Advertising Club, Secretary. Bolifho, Charles TH Jr.; 311 E. 7th, Uhrichsville, Ohio; Public RelafionslPhiloso- phy; USF Chapel Fellowship, Sunday Chairman; Fencing Club. Bolfen, Angela; CMR Box 3131, APO N. Y. 09223,- Ger- man; German Club. Bolten, Rea; CMR Box 3131, AFC N. Y. 09223,- GermanXFrench; German C1ub. Brinckerhoff, Kathryn L; 6720 S. W. 132nd 51., Miami, Fla.; Muss Comm; Delta Gamma, Historian; Public Relations Student Society of America, Treasurer; Dean's List. Castle, Mark R.; 4100 Fleicher Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Speech. Chaitkin, Joseph D.; 133 Allamanda Ave., Port Richey, Fla.; American Studies; 56 Senator,- University Senaie, Senator. Chestnut, Patricia A.,- USF 11:12:38, Tampa, Fla.; English; Ibada. Colmer, Robert C.; 880 Mandelay Ave., Clearwater, Fla.; Mass Comm; Tau Epsilon Phi; Photo- graphic Editor of The Graduate. Cook, Lorraine; 12415 N. ch St, Apt. D, Tampa, Fla.; American Studies. Cooper, Edward, Jr.,- P.O. Box 1349, Avon Park, Fla.; Mass Comm; Afro-American Society. Cornwall, James T.; 3916 Azeele, Tampa, Fla.; Public Relations. Crosby, San- dra J.; 2018 80111 St. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; American Studies; 50 Senator; President Pro Tempore of Senate; Chairman of Constitution Revisions; Secretary of CBS Coun- cil; Resident Assistant; Kappa 2W President; New Mobiliza- iion; ACLU; Committee on Women, President; Young Dem- ocrats. Cutler, Daniel T.; 14009-A Candy CL, Tampa, Fla.; Philosophy1Psychology. Damon, Duane C.; 6532 Albicore Rd., Jacksonville, Fla.; Mass Comm. Donaldson, R. Grant, Jr.; 3310 71st St. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Mass Comm; Editor of The Oracle; ODK, Vice-President; USF Press Club. Eastman, Dianne J.; 200 79th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Ha.; English; M.A. thier, Jorda H.; RI. 5, 8 Amber Dr., Lufz, Fla.; American Studies; Language Literature Council; American Sfudies Representative. Fletcher, Jefferson C.; 1801 B E. 142nd Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Philosophy. Ford, Ray 6.; P.O. Box 354, Canal Point, Flu.; Mass Comm. Garcia, Maria C.,- 2195 S. W. 14th Tern, Miami, Fla.; Mass Comm; Sigma Delta Chi. Gardner, James C.,- 803 5. Missouri Ave., Apt. 2, Lakeland, Fla.; Mass Comm. Ginn, Emily 12.; USF $HO33, Tampa, Fla.; English; Univer- sify Community Chorus. Gould, Stanton R.; 1646 251h Ave., Vero Beach, Fla.; Speech; Sigma Nu; IFC Represent- ative,- SG Senalor; Desofo Hall Council Represeniafive. Guido, Geraldine M.; 1516 Renfrew 51., Tampa, Fla.,- Mass Comm; Delta Zeta, President, Treasurer, Recording Secretary; UC Program Council. Hack, Darlene 8.; 1408 Orange 51., Clearwater, Fla.; Mass Comm1 Public Relaiions. Haass, Diane J.; 605 Kihredge Dr., Orlando, Fla.; Broad- casting. Haisten, Mary K.,- 226 S. Aflonlic Ave., Cocoa Beach, Fla.; Mass Comm; Resident Assistant; Gamma Health Planning Board. Hole, Joanne W.,- 103 E. Stone 51., Brenham, Tex.; GermanAinguiincs; German Club, Secre- tary. Heathfield, James E.; 13111 N. 23rd $1., Tampa, Fla.; American Studies. 73 74 Herskowifz, Paul 5.; 800 No. Fiske Blvd., Apt. 305, Cocoa, Fla.,- Mass Comm; Public Relations Student Socie: of America. Hilton, Kenneth C.; R1. 1, Box 548, Thonofo- sassa, Fla.,- Mass Comm; American Civil Liberties Union, Chairman. Hoyt, Stephen C.; 4660 $$21, Ocean Blvd., Sar osola, Fla.; French; French Club, President. Johnson, James A.; P.O. Box 264, Cottondale, Flo.; Mass Comm; University Chapel Fellowship, Vice-Presideni, Board of Direc'ors; Beta Ground West, Social Chairman; Argos Program Council. Johnson, William L; 4915 30th Ave. No., 81. Petersburg; Fla.; Public Relations; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; IFC. Jones, Patricia M.; 7018 Yule Lane, Tampa, Fla.; Philosophy. Kelly, Mark F.; 5120 22nd Ave. 50., Gulfpod, Fla.; Broud-v casting. Kelly, William M.; 404 Golden Beach Blvd, Vew ice, Flo.; English; Phi Kappa Phi; Navigators; Baptist Stu dent Union, Missions Officer. Kernick, Max P.; 13150 20th 81., Apt. 1, Tampa, Fla; English. Klum, Sandra L; 5204 S. Himes Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Public Relations; Public Relations Student Society of America. Kobres, E. Karen; 2911 El Prado, Tampa, Fla.; Mass Comm; Delta Zeta; Public Relations Student Society of America, Secretary,- The Oracle. Kraemer, Nancy 11,- 3620 5. W. 1001b Ave., Miami, Fla.; German. lEFT: Mr. Bishop instructs students in winding film in the Mata Comm photo lab. ABOVE: Dori Rockerfeller works on her typog- raphy proiecf. LEFT: Debra Johnson claps to the music. BELOW: Type Lab Instructor, Steve Shapiro, and Tina Moyse at the Compugraphic. W ..:m- 1m $716 . dog Kronz, Patrick A.; 403 Driftwood Ave., Melbourne Beach, Fla.; Spanish; Spanish Club; SPEBSQSA; Andros Council Representative. Lake, Lenora J.; 1024 E. Comanche, Tampa, Fla.; Mass Comm; Press Club; Oracle Staff Writer; Sigma Delta Chi. Lundy, Shelley H.; 13919 N. 19th 5L, Apt. A, Tampa, Fla.; Mass Comm; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Trea- surer; Oracle Advertising Staff. Lynch, John J.; 1402 Sec- ond Ave., Cresiridge Gardens, Tarpon Springs, Flo.; Ameri- can Studies; Oracle, Make-Up Editor. Marsh, Bonnie; 3907 Bayshore Blvd., Tampa, Hm; Russian; Phi Kappa Phi; Russian Club, Vice-President, Treasurer. Marsh, Leonard A.; 20330 N. E. 2nd Ave., Nor'h Miami Beach, Fla.; Mass Comm. McAfee, James E., Jr.; 10108 N. Ashley 51., Tampa, F10 - English. McCann, Colleen M.; 780 N. E. 146th 51., North Miami, Fla.; English; SEAC. 76 McMahon, Cundance R.; 1616 Fifth 51., Daytona Beach, Flu.,- Public RelationVMass Comm; Public Relations Student Society of America. Miles, Marguerite G.; 5428 Nutmeg, Sarasota, Fla.; French; French Club; Italian Club. MonOgom- ety, William L, 11; 1283 N. W. 72nd 51., Miami, Fla.; Phi- losophy. Morissehe, Rene D.; 1444 Hillside Lane, Apt. 1, Lutz, Flo.,- French. Morrison, Louellu R.; 638 Lakeshore Dr., Maitland, Fla.; Mass Comm,- Delfa DelIa Della, Publicity, Pledge Trainer; USF Advertising Club. Munson, Luther S.; 10481 Imperial Point Dr., E., Largo, Flo.; English. Nader, Joyce A.; 403 Berwick Ave., Temple Terrace, Fla.; FrencMSpeech; Phi Kappa Phi,- Readers' Guild Association, President. Nader, Robert J.; 403 Berwick Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- Speech; Speech Communication Organization,- M.A. Nichols, Alphens K.; 12237 N. 1511: 51., Tampa, Fla.; Pub- lic Relations; Public Relations Student Society of America. O'laughlin, Mary L.; 3301 N. W. 42nd 51., F1. Lauderdale, Fla.; Mass Comm; Studen' Government; Secretary of Public Relations. Petros, Georgann; 2638 Monroe 51., Hollywood, Flu.; Public Relations,- Delfu Gamma, President, 3rd Vice- Presideni; Senior Class Secretary; Focus Student Leader. Pilcher, Dawn W.; 4026 Huntington 51. N. E., St. Peters- burg, Fla.,- English; Flying Club. Pizzella, Barbara E.; 908 S. W. 3rd Ave., Hcllandule, Fla.; English; Young Democrats; SEAC, Calendar Coordinator. Pohley, Cheryl A.; 1845 Rainbow Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; EnglisMLibrary Science; Library Science Audio Visual Asso- ciation, Treasurer; Phi Kappa Phi. Presser, Brian J.; 3018 59th St. $0., Gulfport, Fla.,- English. Provenzano, Jerome T.; 4407 W. Minnehana, Tampa, Fla.; Mass Comm; Public Relations Student Society of America. OPPOSITE: A typical USF stu- dent after six hours of classes! RIGHT: Oracle :10- dent helper, Jane Biales. 78 Pucci, Cheryl L,- 2406 Summerlin Dr., Clearwater, Fla.,- Advertising; Delta Gamma. Ramsberger, Katie A.; 5114 20th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Mass Comm. Raven, Lollie; 6324 Pine Summit Dr., Jacksonville, Fla; EnglisM Sociology; Chi Omega, Treasurer; Student Affairs Advisory Board. Robinson, Isaac, Ill; 12240 N. 16th 51., Tampa, Ha.; Mass Comm; Baske1ball. Ross, Ellen J.; 17620 N. E. 8111 CL, North Miami Beach, Fla.; SpeechlBroadcusfing; Alpha Epsilon Phi, President,- Panhellenic Council, Treasurer; Resident Assistant. Russ, Diane M.; 317 West Hanna, Tampa, Fla.; Spanish; Beta Sigma Phi, Treasurer; UC Dance Committee; Spanish Club. Ryan, Ruth A.; 625 W. Olympic Ave., Punta Gorda, Fla.; SpeecMBroadcasting; WUSF TN. and Radio. Saifer, Frank- lin D.; 5919 Driftwood Ave., Sarasota, Fla.; Mass Comm. Sanson, Christine M.; 4460 Nautilus Dr., Miami Beach, Fla.; Muss Comm; Sigma Delta Chi. Schneider, Paul 6.; 2199 Academy Dr., Cieorwater, Fla.; Religion; Classical League, President; Areopagus; Rugby Club; Undergraduate Evaluation Committee,- FOCUS Student Leader; University Disciplinary Board; Transfer Resource Committee. Shapiro, Steve D.; 18912 N. W. 7th CL, Miami, Fla.; Mass Comm; USF Advertising Association, President, Secretary, Trea- surer; Mass Comm Siudent Advisory Council. Sheehan, Joyce K.; 6400 S. W. 1351b Dr., Miami, Fla.; Mass Comm; Press Club; Advertising Club; Radio Club. Slavicek, Thomas D.,- 3501 56th $1. No., St. Petersburg, Flo.; Speech. Slazinski, Carol; 1631 Kay Dr., Largo, Fla.; German; Language Club; Intramural sports. Sneider, Laura 8.; 810 N. E. 171 s? Terr., North Miami Beach, Fla.; Public Relations. Sodikoff, Steven D.; 13015 Leeds CL, Apt. D-2, Tampa, Fla.; Speech; WUSF Newscaster; Oracle Photogra- pher. MASTER'S Quarter l Robert Joseph Nader Elenora Rose Sabin James Ru. Saunders Mary H. Trice John William Walfers BACHELOR'S Andvew Mark Burton Michael Leonard Berger Poong-Jin Bradley Paul Parker Burroughs Movk R. Cas'le Thomas Michael Chipser Thames A. Condron Thomas Alan Daniel Jorda Anne Hille thier Ray Gorham Ford Joseph Anthony Gallagher Mitchel Ira Glanzbergh Nancy Carol Campbell Hall Merle Hanan, Jv. Cynthia R. Highsmifh Suphcn A. Hill Harry Michael Hipler Helen M. Howay David C. James Diane Kathryn Kambos JonaOhun Kamer Robe Alan Kelzer Luvhu Roy Kirk Dorothy Joan Leidiger Vincent SOanley Malkinski Loonard Allen Marsh James Edgar McAfee, Jr; Robert J. McClure Charles Raymond Miller Mithael Charles Noronu 2...... Debra Sue Owen Danie Andrew Pansa Nicholas Terry Daniel Perrik Roberta Campbell Pummen Thomas C. Reed Laurel Lee Reeve Eric H. Richey Linda Roberts Stephen David Santos John Edward Smith Stewan Sockol Jose Ignacio Suarez Done Ame Sumberg Robert George Trehy Jane Ann Van Liew Mark Bradford Wellman Martha Elizabeth White Robert Arthur Yanez Stephen V. Yovino MASTER'S Quarter ll Wilma Beverly Haeck James C. McKillop Karen l. Spadacene BACHELOR'S Janice Teresa Abernethy Ann Marie Austin Robert J. Austin Robert Barber, Jr. Mary Louise Barnich Margreth Barre Ronald Carter Bedgood Donald Kennard Bell Edward Donald Bodden David Thomas Bond Wanda Cardule Brudle Kathryn Louise Brinckerhoff Jennifer Brock Vice-President. Taylor, James A.; 97048 141h 5?. No., Tampa, Flo.; Film; University Film Association, Secretary; German Club. Tru- jillo, John V.; 1802 S. MacDill Ave., Tampa, Flu.; Moss Comm7Public Relations,- Public Relations Student Society of America. Ward, Charles D.; 2810 York Ave., Cleveland, Ohio; American Studies. Wenz, Barbara J.; 1417 Citrus SL, Cleamafer, Fla.; SpanisWSociology; Spanish Club, Whifehurst, Robert 3.; 9724 Orange Grove Ave., Tampa, Fla.,- SpeecMBroadcasting. Wilder, Andrea P.,- 3922 Pine St, Tampa, Fla.; SpeecMDramu. Wilensky, Donny F.; 2212 Smullian Terr., Jacksonville, Fla.; Mass Comm; USF Debate Team,- Jewish Student Union. Susan Clark Stephen Howard Corbin James Tully Comwell Luis Donovan Coton Robert Eugene Coulter Mary Susan Denley Rober? F. Dobrzanski James Daniel Finkbiner Debra Anne Fulghum James C. Gardner Clifford Sam Gibbons Stanton Reed Gould Carole A. Grosch DorIene Bernadine Huck David A. Higginson Richard Graham Hulse William L. Johnson Bruce Clifford Katz Rosalie Elaine Kiefer Robin Lee Klemm Susan Holly Lapidus Jon Harold Lavine Jane? Irene Lehman William Eugene Martin Jeffrey Louis Mauck Carl Douglas McCIendon Cindu L. McNeil Sheila Margaret Meehan Richard Lee Merrick James Leonard Mignerey William Woodrow Miller, Jr. Irene Ann Miskela Nancy Lucas Mitchell William Leafonzo Montgomery ll Mina Jone Morgan Maureen Marcelle Mullee Richard Charles Norcross Terence O'Connor Dennis Michael O'Shea Norman Anthony Palumbo, Jr. Donna K. Parkin Denise Marie Pastor Gary Richard Plomik Edwin Everin Potter Ill Pamela Susan Price Fave A. Radakovich Judith Fleming Rainer Pamela Llyn Reese Edilh Ruth Richman Steven George Robertson Alan L. Robins Therese A. Rosati Ellen Jane Ross William John Ross Diane Marie Russ Ruth Alice Ryan Ralph R. Scoglione Linda Leilani Schappals Carlton Parker Schowe Kathleen Shea Scussel Raul Sentenaf Joyce K. Sheehan John Edward Smith John Lawrence Stephens Janice B. Taylor Danna Rue Teicheira Halsay Taft Tichenor IV Kenneth Earland Tozier Leslie Manin Tucker, Jr. Ned R. Turner Benjamin Waksmon Vincen' Paul Walsh Mark Stephen Weiner Melanie Marguerite Woodland Charles F. Wright Glenn Lee Zeigler 79 What are some of the advantages of being the direc- tor of a new and developing school? The opportunity to work with a very able student body and a dedicated medical faculty in the creation of an area of excellence in medical education must be geen as an enormous opportunity. While a healthy sense of challenge pervades this fledgling institution, and calculated risks of every kind must be undertaken, the opportunity which exists oversha- dows any potential disadvantages. The advantages embodied in this opportunity are very significant, and the disadvantages are of singu- larly small magnitude. What are some of the motives of women and men in choosing nursing as their occupation? Nursing is a profession which attracts those who wish to enter a stimulating and challenging field as contributing mem- bers of the community through service to others. The practice of nursing involves problem-solving and decision-making based on knowledge from the humanities, physical, biological, social and behavioral sciences. The opportunities in profes- sional nursing are almost limitless. The demands for health care services in this country have increased much more rapidly than the health manpower resources lphysicians, dentists, nurses, pharmacists, and a host of other health care profes- sionals and paramedical personnell needed to provide essen- tial services. Consequently, there has been not only a short- age of qualified personnel, including nurses, but there have also been changes in functions and responsibilities with the result that nursing practice is becoming increasingly complex and demanding in terms of knowledge and responsibility. Nurses may function as members of health teams composed of representatives of many health disciplines in planning and providing health services, or they may function in highly responsible and complex patient care settings, such as inten- sive care and coronary care units. Nurses have a wide range of choices in selecting career goals; caring for the physically or the mentally ill, the young or the old, the acutely or chronically ill. Or health mainte- nance, preventive or rehabilitative services may provide chal- lenges not found in caring for the acutely or chronically ill. Professional nurses also serve as leaders of nursing teams in hospital units, in community health clinics, in industry, in visiting nurse services, in physicians' offices, in nursing homes, and a variety of other health services. There are also opportu- nities to serve as officers in military health services, in govern- mental agencies at home and abroad, in the American Red Cross. As health care services expand and change, new opportunities are arising in expanded roles, such as pediatric nurse practitioner, midwifery, family nurse practitioner, and so on. These professional roles generally require specialized preparation at the graduate level, as do positions in teaching, administration, and research. As the most recent College within the University to imple- ment 0 program of study, the College of Nursing will admit its first class to the upper-division maior in 1973. The curriculum llfOUl academic years in length with the first two years pri- marily devoted to foundation courses in liberal arts and sci- ences. Nursing courses and additional science background are provided at the junior and senior levels. Bl 2 8 M Dr. Theodore A. Ashford, Dean Along with the remarkable development and expan- sion of USF, what growth patterns have you observed in its students? We decided in the fall of 1960 to meet the same high standards that are expected of any high stand- ard university. Not all of the students fell into that pattern, but the maiority, I would say, did; which was proved several years later when our graduates were accepted into some of the top schools in the country. We have not noticed any particular pattern except a steady growth of the quality of students we have trained and sent elsewhere and the quality of stu- dents we are attracting. Most undergraduates do very well, and many go into graduate work. We do not spend as much of our resources for undergradu- ates as we do for graduates, however, they do get a quality education. 83 84 Acosta, Miguel; USF $992752, Tampa, Fla.; Chemistry,- M.A. AkEulul, Ural; 4314 Fletcher Ave., Tampa, Flu.; Chemistry. Amuse, Philip T.; 2843 DeSoIo Rd., Sarasota, Fla.; Microbiology. Argyros, Hurry, Jr.; 6708 lbfh Terr. No., Apt 357, St. Petersburg, Fla.,- Zoology. Barnthouse, Stephen E.,- 7322 Walnut St, Kansas City, Mo.; Zoology; USF Wafer Ski Team. Beifelshees, Glen W.; 6919 22nd St. W., Bradenton, Fla.; Physics; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Bolfon, H. Suzanne; 2421 So. Dinwiddie St, Arlington, Va.; Zoology; American Society of Zoologisfs; Graduate Representative for Department Curriculum Com- munications; M.A. Boss, Alan P.; 2268 Habersham Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Physics; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Mu Epsilon, Vice-Presidenf; Sigma Pi Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa. Bowen, Sherry L; 2302 S. 19th 51., F1. Pierce, Fla.; Zool- ogy. Bricker, Michael J.; 15101 151h 51., L01 9, Lutz, Fla.; Clinical Chemistry; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Pre-Medicol Society. Buxton, Shari L; 4241 S. W. 99th Ave., Miami, Fla.; Zool- ogy; Marine Biology Club. Carlson, Stephen D.,- 4651 23rd Ave. No., 51. Petersburg, Fla.,- Zoology. Conti, James A.; 1721 Seminole Dr., Sarasota, Flo.; Zool- ogy; Pre-Med Society. Conti, John J.; 1721 Seminole Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; Zoology; Pre-Med Society. Crowell, Ruben W.,- R1. 8, Box 211, Orange Grove Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Industrial Natural Sciences. Deutschman, Patricia A.; 13138 N. 2011i 51., Apt. 21, Tampa, Fla.; Clinical Chemis- try,- Gamma Hall, Coordinating Council. Doyle, Thomas J.; 6504 Cobalt Ave., Jacksonville, Fla.,- Zoology. Eckhardf, Cynthia J.; 5933 Quantrell Ave., Apt. 204, Alexandria, Va.; Chemistry Education; USFSCC. Erwin, Kevin L.; 530 N. W. 1361b $1., Nor'rh Miami, Fla.; Zoology; Wonder Wharthogs; Marine Biology Club; UCF, President Fleming, James C.; 403 Aruba CL, Satellite Beach, Fla.; Physics,- National Physics Honor Society. Frame, Carl K.; Rt. 11, Box 1669, Lakeland, Fla.; Psychol- ogylPre-Med; Pre-Med Society. Fredrick, Bruce W.,- R1. 2, Box 817, Lu1z, Fla.; Mathematics; Pi Mu Epsilon; USF Water Ski Team. Goforl'h, Hal W., Jr.,- 3010 Gates Dr., Apt. 157, Tampa, Fla.; Zoology; M.A. Greenslein, Stanley J.; 13814 N. 22nd 51., Apt. B, Tampa, Fla.; Mathematics; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Mu Epsilon. RIGHT: Robbie Maliz looks at rock specimens in the chemistry building showcase. Harper, Duane; 12213 151h 51., Tampa, Fla.,- Physics; Pi Mu Epsilon. Hatzell, Hilda H.; P.O. Box 4671, Clearwater, Fla.; INSKEeology. Hegen, Heimut E.,- R1. 1, Box 591-K9, Valrico, Flu.; Zoology; Marine Biology Club, Editor. Henke, Eileen M.,- 9248 50111 Ave. No., St. Pelersburg, Fla.; Micro- biology; Phi Befa lambda; Pre-Med Society,- American Chemical Society; USF Sports Car Club; Collegiate Inferna- fional, President; Student Senate; Undergraduate Teaching Assistant, Chemistry. Herrera, Cosme N.; 1304 281h Ave., Tampa, Flu.,- Zool- 09y; Lambda Chi Alpha, President, Treasurer; Pre-Med Society, Publicity Chairman; IFC Judiciary Board. Hiff, David 5.,- 7105 Silver Lake Tern, Jacksonville, Fla.; Chem- istry. Horvafh, Karen A.; 14 Westmore PL, Binghamton, N. Y.; Botany; Marine Biology Club. King, Deborah E.; 12308 N. 52nd 81., Tampa, Fla.; Botany. Kulczycki, George R.; 8 Dolphin Dr., Vero Beach, Fla.; Zoology; Intramural spans. Laping, Jane L.,- 5155 47th Ave. No., 51. Peiersburg, Fla.; Microbiology. Little, Paul R.; 14511 N. 22nd $1., Apt. 228, lutz, Fla.; ZoologWBader- iology; Baptist Campus Ministry; Young Republicans; Rus- sian Club; Pre-Med Society. Machworf, Robert J.; 5823 Frontage, Temple Terrace, Fla.; Zoology. Manzoli, Michael J.; 600 Pin Ave., Clearwater, Fla.; Zool- ogy; Tau Epsilon Phi, Chancellor, Vice-Choncellor, Commit- tee Chairman. Marcus, Penny R.; 880 W. 47th St, Miami Beach, Fla.; Microbiology. McGuire, Richard; 13703 San- cho CL, Tampa, Fla,- Zoology; M.A. McIntosh, Debra K.,- I I716 Moffaf 51., Tampa, Fla.,- Microbiology. McPherson, Nelson L.; RD. 1, Box 590D, Land of Lakes, Fla.; Biology. Munroe, Kathleen A.,- 3316 S. E. 13th 51., Ocola, Fla.; Zoology; Marine Biology Club; Windiammers. Perez, Antonio; 302V: E. Virginia Ave., Tampa, Flo.; Biol- ogy. Penenod, Douglas A.; 5l2 Hughes 51., Nor'hvale, N. J.; Astro-Physics; NASA Co-Op; Flying Club; Windiammers; Astronomy Club; SEAC. Pom, David C.,- 71 Martinique, Tampa, Fla.; Zoology. Sha- piro, Diane; 7 Winani Rd., Kendall Park, N. J.; Zoology; Jewish Student Union, President; Tau Epsilon Phi Little Sis- ter, Vice-Presidenf; World Affairs Council. Solis, Annabelle D.; 6316 S. Renellie CL, Tampa, Fla.; Mathematics; Inten- sive Tutorial. Stover, Michael E.,- 121 Neving Dr., Tampa, Flo.,- Mathematics. 87 Allan Truesdel looks of life's secrets. Taber, Benjamin E.; 9362 90m St. No., Largo, Fla.,- Chem- istry. Tapia, Larry F.; 3808 Hih Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Sci- ence Education. Todd, Suzanne D.; 1043 N. 15th Ave., Jacksonville Beach, Fla.; Botany. Truchtenberg, Carl H.,- 159 Wisner Ave., Middletown, N. Y.; Interdisciplinary Nut- ural Science. Walker, William C.; 5021 Oxford Ave. No., St. Peters- burg, Fla.; Chemistry; Phi Kappa Phi; Pre-Med Society. Webb, Kenneth D.; P.O. Box 143, Gonzalez, Fla.,- Geol- ogy; Natural Science Council; University Disciplinary Board. Wehle, John R.; 1024 17th Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Geology. Welch, Rebecca N.; 560 Harwood Ave., Satellite Beach, Fla.; Mathematics; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Mu Epsilon. MASTER'S Quarter I Dori Son Chu Warren Georg: Clary Frederick W. Fallon John Ross HaII Richard Jonph McGuire, Jr. Alba Edward Run II! Swan Lao Sonics John Lewis Wilson BACHELOR'S Jonnihr May Augustin! Mack Soaphen Barber Jane Ann Iamu Mary Churner Ben: Marvin A. Bavgor Richard D. Bowman, Jr. Donaid Jouph Burch, JI. Joseph F. Campbell Mar: 5 Cohen F. Donald Calaman Philip Como! Cuddoback William Clark Cuvry, Jr. William Jeffrey Dam Richard Gary Dicks Richard AIlon Elbmcht George W. Ellswonh, Jr. William Fuenle Rob ! Cons'anlinc Garcia Randolph A. Hagan Koi'h l. Harri: Edward Everett Johmfon Ill Philip E. Jordan Konndh Mark Kan ! Daborah Elain- King Blythe Ann Lodarmeiu linda Kmherine Lurz Robon Jarnu Madman John Craig Mareum Michall John Marshall Janice D McCulley David Iwco Minor Gail Rosalyn Moralu Joyce Diana Morulu Mithdll Joseph Mulholland Rodney H. Nuhon Gerald Allen Nichols Elilabolh Ann Oak: Siaphon Leon Pnacnck Georg. Michael Porn Sievan Paul Frauen Linda S'irk Pryor Fred-rizk William ROIS F150: Schmid Walter Schmidt Jerry Siuples Senna! Ronald Bruce Shambaugh Chris'ophor Allon Skinnnr David A. Slier Phillip E. 5nowhi1e Annaballu D. Solis Judith Dian. Stul- Michuol R. Suda Linda S. Thomas Warnn P. Wagner Joseph Huvold Woimraub Rebecca Nancy Weld- John Cunis Whiricur Dewey F. Wonh m Richard Kenneth Wynn; MASTER'S Quarter ll David louis Bullaminn Halon Suxanne Bcllon Joseph T. Capmo Carey Ching-Jing Chang David Lao Clyde Cecil D, Finn Alhed Alton Fronklm, Jr. Robert Mills Fruland Chrisriphur B. Geargu Chnnophu Alvin Hurvol Manha Siegal Monk Donald David Moon: Richard Wurnar Pm Jon P. Reyniars Alb ! Edward Run III Henry James Schnaider, Jr. Gregory hum Smith lama! Ward BACHELOR'S Manha E. Abolaim Sam Jowdef AmmcurirAlkhoury Doboruh Faye Andrews Bonnie Lee Bulnavd Jumu ll. Bronson Tony Spearmun Burnside Maren: Ellen Carolan Darlene L Dushilll Dominic Andrew Danoli Robed Edward Dennelly Michael F. Duffy Guvy Edward Exnu Richard 5. Farm: David Jahn Fa Wiiliam Alan Fink Granary Alan Fisher HV David Fonenbarry John Gnsquo Jamal Ed Hammershin Richard L. Huvkim Hilda H. Hmull Helmu' Edmund Hagan John C. Helms Larry Read Helplcr William S. Hitchcock Anhw K. Hulband, JV. Thoma: Raymond Kannady, Jv. Gnome M. Kaplu Rab ? Smmon Kilcoursn, JI. Danni: Williams Kramer Piorro Rene LaJeuneue Larry Dale Lawrence David Michael let William Machuki Dela Warren Markln Daniel Alan Marvin Ellen lohuu Martin Suxonm Mm: Fernando B. Nave: Marian Raye Newbavry Suven A. Oronsky Svophen David Parks Thoma: Dwight Patton Douglas Arihuv Penenod Sec V, Peters Eugen. V. Pinion Thoma: Joseph Rohdorph Jouph C. Rumm- Ronmarna Sspanik Robe C. Shamblin Deno John Shunialx Rohun Allan Smith Monica Sylvain Carl Harris Trachvenberg William D. Van Gordvr Joel Bradshaw Warner Jack M. Webb, JL Dole Day Welling Martha A. Westbrook Judy Slallinus Whilhilo Louis. L. Winhuhn Dr. Thomas A. Rich, Dean Success as defined by the older generation has not been accepted by the younger generation. What do you believe the young people of today believe success is? Your assumption is that success has been defined by a group of people called the older generation and I'm not sure that that's correct to begin with. What's your older genera- tion? Say 35? The old success model iust may not have been what most people had thought. Maybe we've had a miscon- ception all this time of what the goals were or criteria were for success of older people. We have some studies of success- ful middIe-aged people - more concerned with goals and seIf-utilization, becoming competent, being the best in their field. Primary goals are personal. Remember we're in a new cycle - we're getting a constant upgrading of educational level and general background. What were the goals of today's older populations when they were 16-20? I'm sure at that time they were less con- cerned with what is usually stereotyped as being success. When you have bills to pay and responsibilities to greet you, money becomes a little more important. It's only when they're responsibilities that you move into a new stage in life that you change your own goals. I really don't think it's a generation versus a generation. I think it's in an individual's life stages of development to go through a process of new and challenging goals depending on his own need systems. Closer to the reality of the situation, I don't see any real changes in college students' goals myself. At graduation you find most of them looking for jobs that pay the most money. Setting goals lower and being more security conscious is almost a protective way of saying I'm not going to compete with this world that I don't understand. Some people do that. 91 92 Abboh, Robert 6., Jr.; 14201 Mariorie Ct, Tampa, Fla.; Gerontology; M.A. Alpert, Steve D.; 14035 Hulsiead Ct, Tampa, Fla.,- Psychology; Tau Epsilon Phi, Vice-Chancellor. Amuso, Kathy L.; 2843 DeSoto Rd., Sarasota, Fla.; Psy- chology; Phi Kappa Phi. Anderson, William R.,- 1122 Hart- sell Ave., Lakeland, Flo.; Sociology. Astor, Richard A.; 4200 E. Fletcher Ave., $214, Tampa, Fla.,- Sociology; Phi Delta Theta, Secretary; Forensic Soci- ety; M.A. Baker, Deborah A.; 6855 Bay 51., St. Peiers- burg, Fla.; Psychology. Bannisier, Michael E.; 13150 2011! St, Apt. 1, Tampa, Fla.; History; The History Community, Vice-President. Bardolf, Ann E.; 1848 Oak Park Dr. No., Clearwater, Fla.,- Sociology. Barnes, Barbara C.; 3837 Birchwood Rd., Falls Church, Va.; Sociology. BarneH, Anthony L,- 604 Cleveland 81., Saginaw, Mich.; Geography; Sigma Nu. Bauman, Shelley A.,- 4081 N. 3811: Ave., Hollywood, Fla.; $ociologY; Off- Campus Term Advisory Board; Gamma Resident Assistant; Jewish Sfudent Union. Bede , Rebecca L.; 3020 Nancy 51., Orlando, Fla.; Sociology; Delta Gamma, Corresponding Secretary. Best, Kelvin R.; USF 4:1452, Tampa, Fla.; Sociology. Black, Richard A.; 1348 San Marcos, Fort Myers, Fla.; Political Science; Alpha Phi Omega, 2nd Vice-Presideni, Recording Secretary, Corresponding Secretary; Young Republicans. Blair, Janet A.; 9 Azalea Dr., Cocoa Beach, Fla.; Sociology. Boloc, Charles B.; 5558 Park Blvd., Pinel- las Park, Fla.;l Psychology. Boland, Michael W.; 15 Ashlcnd 51., Manchester, Conn.; Criminal Jusiice; Rugby Club. Bofhwell, Laura L; 159 17th Ave. No., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Psychology; Rap Cadre, Co- direcfor. Brook, Sharon 6.; 923 So. 13m Ave., Hollywood, Fla.; PsychologylSociology; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Rush Chair- man; Psi Chi. Brown, Robert J.; 2544Vz 161h Ave. 80., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Poli'ical Science. Bufler, Cheryl D.; 1104 22nd Ave. W., Palmetto, Flo.,- Sociology; Windinmmers; Campus Crusade for Christ. Campbell, Rth H.; 2505 Fountain Blvd., Tampa, Fla.; Soci- ology. Canosa, John R., Jr.; 14005A Coral C1,, Tampa, Fla.; Sociology; Alpha Phi Omega, Vice-President, Trea- surer; Tau Kappa Epsilon; CBS Representative; Chairman of Election Rules; Freshman Orientation Leader. Casanueva, Darryl C.,- 3920 Bay Villa, Tampa, Fla.; Political Science; World Affairs Council, Program Chairman; Debate Team; Young Democrats. Case, Frederick M.; 4822 Mendenhull Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Political SciencNSociology. Chandler, Peggy A.; 1451 Mitchell Ave., Tallahassee, Fla.; Speech Pathology; Chi Omega, Treasurer; Phi Kappa Phi; Lambda Chi AIpha Little Sister; Panhellenic Council; Sigma Alphs Eta, Vice-Presi- dent,- Bay Players; Tau Kappa Epsilon Calendar Girl; Chamber Theater Productions; M.A. Chunzes, Michael P.; 13411 Mike Dr., Tampa, Flu.; Political Science; Dover Boys Organization,- AIESEC International; Intramural sports. Chennault, Shirley A.,- 2807 E. McBerry $1., Tampa, Fla.,- PsychologY; Alpha Kappa Alpha; Manor Board, Vice-Presi- dem; Proiect Upward Bound, Advisory Board. Church, Gaylord 5.; 1724 Sunset Dr., Clearwater, Fla.; Criminal Justice; Psi Chi. Connor, Carole M.; 321 Miles Ave., Staten Island, N. Y.; Anthropology. Cooney, Robbie L; 199 Lake Howard Dr., Winter Haven, Fla.; Sociologw law; Chi Omega, President, Pledge President, Social Chair- man,- Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities; Student Organizations Advisory Board; Radio Committee Advisory Board; Vice-President of Senior Class. Coher, Nancy J.,- 4000 12111 St. N. W., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Soci- ology; University Band. D'Arezzo, Vivian P.; 917-A E. 123rd Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Anihropology. Dawson, Dennis M.; 4310 S. Grady, Tampa, Fla.; Political Science; World Affairs Council, Trea- surer. Dean, Donald R.; 255 Bold 51., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; Geography; Gamma Theta Upsilon; USF Flying Club. DeCosfa, VWIliam J.; 2816 S. W. 65111 Ave., Mira- mar, Fla.; Sociology. 93 94 DiBella, Thomas A.; 2383 Motor Pky., RonKonKoma, N. Y.; Political Science; Young Republicans, President. Dickerr sheet, James R.; 3501 Westfield Dr., Brandon, Fla.; Politi- cal Science. Feld, Fred 5.; 2734 7th Ave. No., $1. Peiers- burg, Fla.; Gerontology; Tau Epsilon Phi; Hillel; Gerontol- ogy Club; M.A. Ferrera, Laura; 110 E. Keyes, Tampa, Fla.; Psychology. Flood, James F.; 6405 Santa Monica Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Sociology. Fridriksson, lngimundur; Hamorsstig 18, Aku- royr, Iceland; Economics; Economics Club, VIce-President. Friend, Merry A.; 1350 East Main 51., Pahokee, Fla.; SocF ology; Delta Gamma, 3rd Vice-Presidenf, Rush Chairman. Fribche, James H.; 460 Prospect Ave., Liffle Silver, N. .l.; Sociology. Gabriel, Donna; 312 N. W. 104th Terr., Miami, Fla.; Police Administration. Gentry, Richard; 121 Forest Ave., Verona, N. 1.; Psychology; Photo Club. Gessner, Judith R.; 1806 N. J. Rd., lukelund, Fla.; Interdisciplinary Social Sci- ence,- Psi Chi, President; German Club, President,- Themis; Woman's Programming, President; Woman's Newsletterl Edifor; Mortar Board; Liberal Arts Board, Representative; Residence Complex Planning Council; Dorm Floor Officerl Gibson, Theo L; 123 Lake Allen Rd., Lutz, Fla.,- Criminal Justice. GiHer, Lenore 5.; 18121 Miami Gardens Dr., North Miami Beach, Fla.,- Sociology; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Vice-Presidem, Secretary, Historian,- Phi Kappa Phi. Grafz, Honey F; 17031 N. E. 21st Ave., Apt. 11, North Miami Beach, F111,; Psychology. Griffin, Ward E.; 1160 71h Ave. N. E., Largo, Fla.; Psychology. Grimes, Jerald D., Jr.,- 1606 Wonen Ave., lakeland, Fla.; Rehabilifution Counseling; Alpha Sigma Phi; Alpha Phi Omega; Humanics Club, President; Cross Country Team; M.A. Guelker, Melody K.,- 240 39th $1. $0., St. Petersburg, Fla.,- Psychology; Kappa Delta, Editor, Press. Haberman, Jill J.,- 6260 291h $1. $0., $1. Peiersburg, Fla.; Political Science. Hull, Lloyd E.; 13138 2011i 51., Apt. 19, Tampa, Fla.,- Inter- disciplinary Social Science; SEAC, Budgetary Officer; Omega Delta Kappa; Young Democrats,- Social Science College Council. Hamilton, James E.; 6010 El Dorado Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Political Science; World Affairs Council. Harnois, Donna R.; 1456 Dakar 51., Jacksonville, Fla.; Interdisciplinary Social Science. Harrell, Adrianne M.; Rt. 4, Box 471, Gay Rd., Lakeland, Fla.,- SocioIogy. Harrell, Charles C.; R1. 4, Box 471, Lakeland, Fla.; Sociology. Heard, Marguerite 6.; 219 Burr Rd., San Antonio, Tex.; Anthropology; Anthropology Club; Sailing Club. Heufhfield, Cynthia A.; 1239 CurdinaI Lake Dr., Cherry Hill, N. .I.; Interdisciplinary Social Science. Hernandez, Daniel M.; 508 N. Glen Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Pre-Law; Phi Kappa Phi; Intensive Tuiorial. Herndon, Holly L; 16145 S. W. 1051h Ave., Perrine, Fla.; Psychology; MA. Hicks, Charlotte; 11500 Summit West Blvd., Apt. 5F, Temple Ter- race, Fla.,- RehabiIifation Counseling; Delta Tau Delta Little Sister,- M.A. Hill, Preston K.,- 1401 Atlantis Dr., Apopka, Fla.; History. Hover, Sandra K.,- 175 St. Mary's Lake, Battle Creek, Mich.; Political Science; USF Sports Car Club; USF Bowling league. Hull, Nora; 6900 Oakwood Dr., Jacksonville, Fla.; Social Science. Hulcheson, Philip C.; USF $9502, Tampa, Fla,- Political Science. Hyslop, Peyton 3.; 4812-0 Vuldu Ave., Tampa, Flc.; Geography. Jacks, Judy K.; 11720 N. 151h 81., Tampa, Fla.; Psychology. James, John M.; 3931 Rodby Dr., Jack- sonville, Fla.; Sociology. Junzer, Karen D.; 9319 Highland Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Psychoiogy1$ocio1ogy; Sialus of Women Committee; Social Science Advisory Council. Jeffords, Barbara A1,- R1. 1, Box 366, High Springs, Fla.; Sociology. Johansson, Gail A.; 10005 N. 29th 51., Tampa, Fla.; Psychology. Johnson, Catherine; P.O. Box 113, Law- tey, Flc.,- Sociology; Afro-American Society,- Afro-American Gospel Choir. Jones, Timoihy; 1337 GaspariHa Dr., F1. Myers, Flu.; Political Science; Oracle, Advertising Sales Manager, Advertising Salesman. 95 96 Kennedy, Kathleen A.; 413 Retford Ave., Staten Island, 12 Y.; Psychology7$ociology; Intensive Tutorial. Kennon, CG? olyn L; 1351 23rd $1., Sarasota, Fla.; Criminal Justice. King, Tony M.,- 5118 Mb Ave. 50., St. Petersburg, Fla.; Sociology. Kondelin, Mary E.; 1636 Sims Pl., Lakeland, Fla.; SociologWAnthropology. Koppel, Marshall A.; 2401 Williams Dr., Clearwater, Fla, History; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Social Chairman, Pledge Educa- tor. Lane, Barbara J.; 7115 N. Tampania, Tampa, Fla, Hisiory. Latal, Rick H.; 6716 Crooked Palm Tern, Miurm Lakes, Fla.; Psychology. Law, Claude R.,- 1 1716 Moffaf St, Rt. 6, Tampa, Fla.; Economics. Leacock, Thomas J.; 14201 Joanne CL, LuIz, Fla.; Sociol- ogy; American Speech and Hearing Association,- USF Bicy- cle Club; USF Archery Club,- Speech Pathology and Audio:- ogy Club, Treasurer. leopold, Sharon L.; 17400 N. E. 1311 Ave., North Miami Beach, Fla.; Latin American Studies, World Affairs Council. Lesnik, Beth; 1367 Riverbinch Lane, Jacksonville, Fla.; Sociology. Levine, Alan; 67 Kent Dr., Ormond Beach, Fla,- Polifical Science; Screaming Beaver: Sports Inc. little, Pamela M.; 4431 Atwaier Dr., Tampa, Fla.,- Sociol- ogy; Student Government Finance Committee; Afro-Ameri- nan Society. Luhanos, Mary Paula,- RR 4H, Box 245l, Flo- ral Ciry, Flo.,- Social Science Interdisciplinary. Markiewicz,' Joanne L; I 1500 Summit West Blvd., Apt. 5F, Temple Ter- race, Fla.; Rehabilitative Counseling; Intensive Tutorial; MA. Marshall, linda 8.; 29950 S. W. 169th Ave., Home- stead, Fla.; Sociology. Martin, George 3.; P.O. Box 1636, Tampa, Fla.; History. Mafhis, Ronald D.; 4515 North A $1., Apt 3, Tampa, Fla.; Sociology; Alpha Eta Rho, Chaplain. McCracken, Douglas C;; 9606 N. mm 81., Tampa, Fla.; Law Enforcement; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Secretary. McIntyre, James L; 260 Locust Ave., Peekskill, N. Y.; Sociology; Tau Kappa Epsi- Ion. McNeese, Static J.; 6 Grey Rock Rd., Thonotosassa, Fla..- Political SciencelSociology. McNuH, Melanie J.; 1519 lynn Ave., Clearwater, Fla.; Interdisciplinary Social Science. Mikelaii, Barbara A.; 70 W. 58m St, Hialeah, Fla.; Math Psychology. Miller, Denise 5.; 2351 Hoople SL, Ft. Myers, Ha.; Law EnforcemenVCriminal Justice; Beta Sigma Phi. Million, Peter B.; 3570 South Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach, Fla.; International Relations; Social Science Sfudenf Coun- cil. Misru, Induprava; 3209 San Jose St, CIearwater, Fla.,- Sociology; M.A. Moore, Mary L,- 1400 Bell Tern, Tilusville, Fla.; History; History Committee; Iofu Alpha Theta. Moore, Rita D.; 6918A Sociefy Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Sociology. 97 98 Morris, Carolyn Y.; USF 01129, Tampa, Fla.; Sociology; lbada, Secretary. Mueller, Irene L; 2313 Rue CL, Apt C4, Lufz, Fla.; History,- Delta Zeta, Scholarship, Recording Sec- retary, Historian, Lamp Editor. Myhre, Steven J.; 107 W. WheeIer Rd., Seffner, Flu.; Psychology; Lambda Chi Alpha, Treasurer. Myles, Mary E.; P.O. Box 78, Summerfield, Fla.; Criminal Juince; Alpha Kappa Alpha, Vice-Presiden'; ETHOS; Ponhellenic. Mystic, Nick 6.; 70 W. 58111 St, Hialeah, Flu; Psychology. Noble, Scott R.,- 7120 Woodfield Dr., Tampa, Fla.; Psy- chology. Norton, Darlene M.; 804 Curew Ave., Orlando, F104 Sociology. Null, Isabelle K.; 1013 Stadium Dr., Parkesburg, W. Va.; Sociology. Nuffall, Kevin E.; 1705 127th Ave., Tampa, Flo.; Political Science,- Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Eminent Warden; Delta Delta Delta, Mascot; USF Rugby Team; USF Karate Club. Padgett, Duane L; Rt. 1, Box 235R, Land O' Lakes, Flo.; Sociology. Punkowski, Mary J.; USF $H220, Tampa, Fla.; Psychology. Prapuphan, Santhana; 13704 La Mancha CL, Apt. 70, Tampa, Flu.; Sociology. Prenovost, Tina L.,- 416 Acorn CL, Clearwater, Fla.,- Sociol- ogy. Reel, Joe R.,- 111 Eloian Dr., Thonotosusso, Flu.; Rehabi1ilution Counseling; M.A. Riley, Kaiharine B.; 101V: E. Hamilton Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Anthropology; Themis; Anthropology Club; Phi Kappa Phi. Riley, Ray T., Jr.; 56 Kenwood Rd., Garden City, N. Y.; History; Sigma Phi Epsi- Ion. Robinson, Harold A., Jr.,- 5711 Troy CL, Apt. 206, Tampa, Fla.,- Sociology. Robles, Ed M.; 3814 Fig 51., Tampa, FIa.; Psychology. Rogers, G. Michael; R1. 1, Box 160, Thonoto- sassa, Fla.; Sociology. Roper, Janice L; P.O. Box 691, Key Largo, Fla.; Speech Pathology; Baptist Sfudent Center Choir; South Florida Review, Assistant Editor; Sigma Alpha Eta; M.A. Ruddy, James; 19200 N. E. 2nd Ave., Miami, Fla.; Psy- chology. Ryan, Adrienne L; 511 Magellan Dr., Sarasota, Fla.; PsychologylSociology; USF Volunteer Services. Sak- son, Marsha L.; 213 Tom '0 Shanier Dr., Palm Springs, Fla.; Criminal Justice,- Alpha Epsilon Phi, Secretary; Zeta Beta Tau Liifle Sister. Saland, Eric P.; 13136 N. 20911 51., Tampa, Fla.; History; Intramural Baseball, Football, Basket- ball; USF History Community,- USF Basketball Team, Man- agen Silverberg, Jeffrey 5.; 7400 Sun Isle Dr., Apt. 801, St. Petersburg, Fla.; History. Smith, Elinor P.; 1807 lnman Ave., Tampa, Fla.; Political Science. Smith, Rebecca l..; 11212 Birchcrest Rd., Richmond, Va.; Psychology. Spitler, Hugh D.; 175 Pine Island Rd., North FL Myers, Fla.; Soci- ology; Psi Chi, Vice-President; Hall Governor of Beta 1E; Phi Them Kappa; Omega Tau Delta; Intramural sports. 100 Singer, Sheryl 0.; 15400 N. E. 61h Ave., North Miami Beach, Fla.; Sociology. Stein, Stanley J.; 301 Velarde Ave., Coral Gables, Fla.; Political Science. Sullivan, Patrick R.; 13107 Taliaferro 51., Tampa, Fla.; PsycholoQYi USF Fencing Club; USF Photo Club. Tandet, Mitchell C.; 203 Wykagyl Tern, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Liberal Studies; Alpha Phi Omega; USF Basketball Team, Statistician. Trump, Colette A.; 5320 45th Ave. No., 51. Peiersburg, Fla.; Psychology; Psi Chi; Student Activities Assistant. Tucker, George H., 111; 1616 E. Main $1., Pahokee, Fla.; Political Science. Van Meter, Cynthia A.; P.O. Box 541, Arcadia, Fla.; Sociology; Kappa Delta. Vidrine, James V.; 1345 Vesper Dr., Ft. Myers, Fla.; Psychology. Wahle, Elizabeth A.; 5500 Denver 51. N. E., St. Peters- burg, Fla.; Psychology; Psi Chi. We'herington, Wanda G.; 1010 Kentucky Ave., St. Cloud, Fla; Sociology; Social Sci- entists Club of America; Dorm Officer. Westridge, David P.; 2400 N. Magnolia Ave., Pensacola, Fla.; Anihropol- ogy; Sigma Phi Epsilon. White, Pamela 1.,- 13008 Firth CL, Apt. F10, Tampa, Fla.,- Sociology; Chi Omega, Personnel. Whitlock, Orion P.; PO. Box 742, Arcadia, Fla.; Political Science. 'Williams, Ronald J.; Rt. 1, Box 322, Thonofo- sassa, Flc.; Criminal Justice. Wilson, Juliette T.; 108 Drift- wood lane, Largo, Fla.; Sociology; OCT Advisory Council; Mortar Board, Treasurer; University Community Chorus. Wingate, Donald A.; R1. 1, ZolfoSprings, Fla.; Psychology. Wright, Thomas D.; 211 Quay Assisi, Box 97, New Smyrna Beach, Fla.; Psychology. MASTER'S Quarter I John C. Bullinger Donhy Elaine Brown Nancy Danie Bus'elo Viiale Michael Casiellano Dione Elizabeth Crow Geraldine Daria Anhur T. Eckard Roben Louis Eppelein Mb Warriner Fohy Sharon T. Goskin Vincent P. Gerlock Jerald David Grimes, Jr. Debra Dione Guest Susan Mavlone Harlan Andrew W. Hoge Christine E. Kelly William E. Klein Judy Smock leach Mary E. Mahon Minnie Kay Marchese Joyce C. Mollis Potick B. Moore Charles Ross Ogle Barry Lynn Pendry Aiexonder G. Rappaporf John Charles Rushbrook Karen 5. Savage Deborah Avery Scluvokis James V. See Jr. Cary Richard Shodkoff Doris Laverne Slade Linda E. Staffovd James Mooney Young BACHELOR'S Jeffvey T. Ackerman Randall Harold Ammon Frank Deon Austin Ann Stover Azdell Rebecca J. Baker Vanda Yvonne Bayliss Antonio Beniiez Richard Arthur Bezdecny laurence Gray Biggs Gail Kan! Blacker Louis Bonino Roben R. Brinon Natilee Marsha Brown lobar? Jackson Brown Harbor? McCoy Bryant, Jr. Slaven Jeremy Buck Delradge Hamlin BuIIock Robert C. Burneffe Margama Cabezus John Richard Candsa, Jr. Joe D. Cafhey Mary Elizabeth Chever Michael Bruce Cowan Timolhy Crowley Eugen: Clement Francis Dinon lawronce V. Dowd, Jr. Linda Darnell Ehle Marvin Joseph Elgison Tum Anne Fiedler Shidey Jean Nysfrom Fisher Cheryl Ann Flaxman Julian Garcia, Jr. Eugene Paul Gold Karen 3. Gouge Michael Edward Gray Hnlon Mary Growney George William Gruber Ill Kari Gustaf Allan Hoige Fred T. Hanzelik David Sfonley Harrington Myron Anthony Harvey Mark Francis Hogan Fredevick R. Huck Rose A. Huff! Ruben Fugale Johnson, JI. Timothy Jones Ieverly Ann King William Ralph Kirk, Jr. Thomas Marvin Kirkland Richard W. I'r'nighl Kenneth R. Kramer William Warren Lange Michael A. Ledbener James Houston Lennard Justin E. leviiov Steven A. Logan David Gil! Longendyke Ray Edwin Markham Thomas Grier McBride Loraine lea McCoy Hurry Lee McDonald Leroy Merkle, Jr. Sylvia Lynn Miley Renald Wayne Moredock Chvosiopher J. Mulvaney Daniel W. Murphy Manuel Deiusus Mumez Wanda Jean Dehlert Mun: Lindsay Oliver Dennis L. Phipps Richard Earl Post Thomas David Powell James Ronald Ra'liff Howard Charles Rau, Jr. Richard K. Reber Gary Kevin Rober'rson Harold Alonzo Robinson, Jr. Irene Rodriguez Earl A. Roney Larry Cur! Sadler Charles Anthony Sands Larry Douglas Smith Kenneth R. Snippel Beniie Steven Sperling Jack Edward Steeley, Jr. Siemley Joel Stein Jacquelyn Elleen Sieinberg Lee George Stevens Edward Wilson Stewart Harald Eugene Shanon, Jr. Gayle Irene Sunderland John W. Talone Currie L. M. Taylor Gerald M. Taylor Teresa Jan Thornton Suzanne Brown Wakefield Robert Washington, Jr. Barbara Jean Wen: Alene Nancy Wesigaie Hellen White Kenneth D. White Joyce Ann Willis David Marvin Wilson Ronald Edwavd Wilson G. Andrew Wincey Betty Jane Woodard Christina E. Wright Gary Joseph Zeigler MASTER'S Quarter ll Janice S. Bennett Carolyn MacMillan Buby Donald Andrew Butler Joan H. Coll Edward Joseph Conway Edward M. Covington, Jr. Dana Stephens Deboskey Thomas E. Gerberding Mark Glusman Cynthia Non Holley Kathleen M. Kessler Richard Michael Krieg Ann Engle McLaughlin Karen Marie Meyers Joyce Lynn Peifer Mickey D Penix Be'h Stearns Fiocente Anthony Quaglieri John William Reidenbach, Jr. John Douglas Richards Sister Maureen Francis Rowe Hugo Santiago-Ramos M. Patricia Sinkiewicz Jesse Steve Sliger Judith Ellen Smith Leslie Reicin S'ein Anthony Van Wezel Stone Salvatore Terriro Briman V. Townsend BACH ELOR' 5 William W. Albough Linda Diana Anderson William Roben Anderson Otis R. AnOhony Diane Gene Arthur Sarah A. Baker Edwin H. Barker William Price Barr Joe B. Bazemore Mary Kathleen Beam Michael Jean Beam Edward S. Beresh Hildy Be'h Berk Kelvin R. Desi Charles J. Dicker Janet A. Blair J. Philip Boller, JL John Carl Bonner Rod Brooker Frances Eve Brown Jacquelyn Elaine Brown Amy Aileen Brush B. E. Caldwell Linda Ruth Cannon Donald R. Carlson Charles Crawford Caro Larvy L Carpenter Jeremiah C. Carter III Cass Michael Cas'illo David C. Cipolloni Charles P. Closshey Robert Joseph Collington Lillie Hunmr Cooper Mary Elizabefh Coyle William Lewis Cumow Dennis Martin Dawson Donald Robert Dean Gerald L. Desalvo Karen Friscia Dial Michael R. Dibenedeno George M. Drafter, Jr. Mufiie B. Dudley Susan Bradley Dyak Debrah Deroche Elbara Gail E. EMenman Gregory L EIhingDon Mary Alice Evans David Robert Farbsfein Clinton Lewis Fisher James H. Fritsche Michael E. Galvin Catherine M. Gay Richard Howard Gentry Richard T. Gillespie IV John Arnold Godfrey Frederick Reynolds Goodrich James K. Graves Gary M. Guthrie William Caner Hambley, Jr. George Thomas Hanson Charles Cavlfon Harvell John D. Harris Vivian C. Harflage William J. Hellard Charlotte Hicks Dorothea Pollock Hillpof John 3. H099 Ronald Kelly Hood Rob. Home, Jr. Robert R. Hoyv Judy Kim Moore Jacks Donald Scott Johnson Leonard Allen Johnson Stephen Paul Jones Sandra Lee Jordan Clifford Lee Kindel T. Michael King Robert Charles Lang Henry Wallace Lavandera Paul Samuel Lawless Bruce Lazarus Kathleen M. Lee Beth Lesnik Jon Richard Lewis Ruse Ann Lozowski Holly R. Molecol Richard Thomas Mannion Laurie J. Bolivar Murino J. Richard Marriner Norman Ellis McCall Jeanene L. Poliie McDougal Margaret Ashley McKee Melanie Judith McNu Jan Melczarek Tris'on Gustavo Meucci Patricia Ann Meyer Patricio Cone Mikell Victoria Marie Milne Anselmo Silvio Montero Rita Dear Moore Gregory Lynn Munson Philip R. Nose Rebecca Ann Nciherscn Sidney Lawrence Neal Daniel Thomas O'Shea Gary Douglas Oldridge Michael O. Parnell John Russell PaHerson Richard King Peck Ill William Warren Platter Valerie Ann Prodor Charles Bryon Pullen Carol Ann Ransone Linwood David Richards III Louis J. Rinaldi Thomas Rocco Richard Glenn Romine Sharon J. Sawyer Margarei E. Schaffnev Charles D. Schauer Bob David Schiller Gordon Samuel Schoen Eric A. Schutz Richard B. Scott Alan Serkin Andrew Ronald Sicone David Edward Silver Richard John Smith Edgar Inmun Smith, Jr. Edwin Douglas Stanfield John D. Stewart Paul Michael Tabio Nancy Lynn Thomasson Mary W. Tichenor Linda Sue Timmons Janis lynn Turner Harris Willen Van Hillo James Michael Vardon Anna Lea Varchinsky Gloria Jean Vigil James l. Watson William L. Wam, Jr. Donna M. White Joel P. Whife Earl J. Wilcox Clara M. Wilder Beverly D. Williams Linda Diane Williamson Juliette Thorne Wilson Mark lewis Yosf, Jr. IOI 3 o 104 ABOVE: The sisters of Kappa Delta are: ROW 1, left to right: Peggy Suozzo, Cindy Van Meter, Janet Foster, Paula Cunningham, Pixie Brown. ROW 2: Anita Whitaker, Vicki Wullentels, Judy Patterson, Elsie Stanger, Mary Suhr, Nury Rodriquez, Alice Julia, Leslie Amerine, Melody Guelker, Nancy Corces, Linda Pilsbury. ROW 3: Carol Ondomisi, Debbie Clarke, Calhy Rohrbacher, Ellen Lopez, Jody Tudor, Debbie Pettigrew, Kathy Dismukes. RIGHT: KDs from left, Kathy Dismukes, Cindy Van Meter, and Pixie Brown participate in the traditional candlelight ceremony. Kappa Delta Kappa Delta reaches out to others by aiding crip- pled children, giving awards to orthopedic surgeons, and working with the Tampa Day Care Center. Within the sisterhood, Kappa Deltas have estab- lished an honor society. There is also great encour- agement for participation in intramurals. Social activities encompass the famous Ho Ho, the KO Kapers and the White Rose Ball. Kappa Deltas see as the key to friendship, the ability to go out of one's self and appreciate what- ever is noble and loving in another. Our motto is l'a destiny which makes us sisters, none goes his way alone, all we send into the lives of others comes back into our own. ABOVE: Kappa Delta and its brother fraternity, Sigma Nu, get together for pizza and beer at Master's Pizza. lEFT: Vicki Wallen- fels steps up to be? for Kappa Delta during intramural softball. 105 Delta Zetus at USF are members of the largest national sorority. Among the club's accomplishments are the Phi Delta Spirit Award and the Lambda Chi Kidnap Award. In the field of community involvement, members of Delta Zeta collected 1,100 cans of food for the orphans and the Children's Home in Tampa. Also, they gave four Christmas trees at St. Johns and Tampa General Hospitals. Social functions are very much a part of Delta Zeta. The road rally, the Thanksgiving dinner and the annual formal, the Rose Ball, are among many such activities. To be a Delta Zeta is to be an individual, and by adher- ing to basic standards of truth and love we find our best selves. ABOVE: DZs enjoy a game of charades at one of their parties. RIGHT: The sisters of Delta Zeta Sorority. OPPOSITE ABOVE: The Thetos showed their Greek spirit at the Phi Delt Derby as displayed by their sorority kite. OPPOSITE BELOW: The Thetas give the Tri Delts a run for their money at the Greek basketball game for Homecoming. 106 The University of South Florida Delta Rho Chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta was established in June of 1969 and continues to be active in all facets of Uni- versity lite. Thetas are involved on campus in student organi- zations and intramural sports, as well as several hon- orary organizations. In addition they support the Institute of Logopedics in Wichita, Kansas and quar- terly community proiects. Among the community projects in quarter one, they held an afternoon picnic for the kids at the Tampa Children's Home. Also, they gave 0 Thanks- giving dinner through community services. Their social activities for this year included a party remembering the 1950's and a cocktail party aboard the Tom Sawyer. Kappa Alpha Theta is the oldest Greek letter fro. ternity for women. PHI DELT DERBY ABOVE: Lucy De La Cruz, left, and Lea Crites decorate the Alpha Delta Pi wagon for the Chariot Race. ABOVE RIGHT: Partici- pants in the Chariot Race at the Phi Delt Derby. RIGHT: Members of Alpha Delta Pi cheer their sorority in the Chariot Race. 108 0W: If you think looking for a needle in a haystack is impossi- you ought '0 try it when youWe covered with molasses! HT: Dennis McKenzie has three minutes to change from a man I woman in the Dress-Up Contest BELOW LEFT: Participants in Devby play tug of war and the loser gets a mud bathl BELOW HT; Vicki Oppenheim gets prepared to look for a needle in a Hack. HO ABOVE LEFT: The Tri Delts are tough to beat as they take on Kappa Alpha Theta in a Greek basketball game. ABOVE RIGHT: Tri Delts do a duetl RIGHT: The members of Delta Delta Delta put on a skit at one of their rush parties for new members. OPPOSITE ABOVE: The members of Alpha Kappa Alpha show their sister- hood as they get together for a little clowning around. OPPOSITE BELOW: The sisters of Alpha Kappa Alpha are: FRONT, left to right: Alma Austin; Shiriey Chennault; Carolyn House, Vice-Presi- dent; Sandra Terrell, Treasurer; Ophelia House; Patricia Collins, Secretary. BACK, left to right: Wilma Lennon, Dean of Pledges; Tanya Lucas, President; Jackie DeLaughter; Mary Myles; Barbara Twine. Becoming a part of Delta Delta Delta introduces pledges to a world filled with surprise kidnaps, care packages for exam week, Pansy breakfasts and the Crescent Ball. The pansy, pearl, and pine are three symbols that take on special meaning for every new initiate, for 88,166 Tri Deltas the world over. Working together at the Special Olympics, for scholarships to USF students and at Lake Magdalen's Juvenile Home we have learned how to give of our- selves, the true meaning of our motto let us stead- fastly love one another. Our strength lies not in many who are alike but in many who are different and share a like belief. Alpha Kappa Alpha The USP chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha lives up to the organization's national motto of service to all mankind. Members of the group work with the New Place as their yearly service proiect. The group also gives a Thanksgiving basket to a needy family in the area. This year the National theme for Alpha Kappa Alpha is Personal Involvement Now and is con- cerned with three basic areas: scholarships, civic responsibility and community service. Alpha Kappa Alpho's constant purpose is to improve the Black race and keep alive within its members an interest in college life. ill 112 ABOVE: The sisters of Chi Omega are: ROW 1, left to right: Lauri SmiOh, Cindy Schwessinger, Penney Robin- son, Robbie Cooney, Ann Benning, Carol Rosenberger, Pam Groves. ROW 2: Mary James, Debbie Mitchell, Kathy Deputy, Terry Roberts, Rose Raimondi, Marcie Van Demon, Bev Edmondson, Leslie Williams, Pam MevriH, Jon Shoemaker, Jeanne La Pointe, Betty Bliz- zard, Cathy Gillespie, Diane Eskenas, Mary Sigman, Susan Spech', Lollie Raven, Debbie Tesoriero, Kim Lockard, Pam Schlin. ROW 3: Sandy Heathfield, Barb Reiss, Babs Langford, Peggy Schaefer, Jan Thompson, Frances Nie'o. NOT PICTURED are Liz Cromwell and Pam While. RIGHT: The Executive Board in session con- sists of, leH 10 right: Susan Specht, Secretory,- Debbie Tesoriero, Treasurer; Barb Reiss, Pledge Trainer; Jon Shoemaker, President; Marcie Van Demon, Vice-Presi- dent; Cindy Schwessinger, Chapter Correspondent. OPPOSITE ABOVE: Chi Os give a proud salute in their homemade chario! at 'he Phi Deli Derby. OPPOSITE BELOW: Past President, Robbie Cooney, leads the Chi Omegas in a song and dance. The Theta Theta Chapter of Chi Omega Sorority is very proud of its great sense of sisterhood and their individuality. Chi Omegcls range from prelaw maiors to art maiors; they combine ambition for leadership, 0 sense of responsibility and involvement and a fun loving spirit to unite a in the beautiful and everlast- ing bonds of friendship and sisterhood. Every quarter the members work with the Children's Home on Hillsborough. The services range from Halloween parties to Valentine's Day visits. Social activities range from the Eleusinian Formal Ball to hayrides and riverboat rides. H3 HA Delia Gamma's primary purpose is to create an environ- ment for its members in which lasting friendships ore estab- lished and in which the members find the processes, the experiences, and the disciplines which will stimulate clear thought. Its aim is to foster an atmosphere in which women will assimilate a deeper love and consideration for mankind. The club's purpose is accomplished through planned col- legiate and alumnae programs which provide training and opportunity to practice the art of graciousness in daily liv- ing, as well as intellectual motivation and educational background which will enrich the lives of members and ins- till in them a respect for enduring values to be gained from Delta Gamma. Delia Gamma offers to each new college generation a rich heritage, a continuity based on sound and tested prin- ciples . . . personal integrity, personal responsibility, and intellectual honesty. Pi Kappa Alpha Pi Kappa Alpha is changing in the 70's. The new Educational Membership Program with its no pledges system and their social inter-fraternal activities are but a few examples of that change. The Educational Membership Program allows associated members, formerly known as pledges, to sit in on our meetings without having to go through the rigors of a pledging system. Among our social activities Pi Kappa Alpha can list: our Alumni Picnic, our April formal and the Founders Day Dream Girl Ball. Pi Kappa Alpha has been around for more than a century and during that time we have success- fully worked to improve in our work for human involvement. So, if you are thinking of fraternities, think of Pi Kappa Alpha. You can be sure we are thinking of you. OPPOSITE ABOVE: At the Phi Delt Derby it's a fight to the finish as far as the 005 are concemed. OPPOSITE BELOW: The sis- ters of Delta Gamma sovority. ABOVE: Pi Kappa Alpha throws an informal party. LEFT: Party-goers take a breather from their dancing and get together on the dock. H5 H6 Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity, Lambda Mu Chapter, was chartered on Feb. 12, 1968. Lambda Chi Alpha Colony was the first national Fraternity on the University of South Florida campus. Lambda Chi Alpha has always upheld the finest traditions in scholarship, athletics, and the practice of true brotherhood. Lambda Chi Alpha believes that service to the community of which it is a part is a necessary function of the organization. The brothers of Lambda Chi Alpha can be seen as active partici- pants in all phases of student activities within the University community. They have served as IFC Presidents, SA Senators, Oracle correspondents, and chairmen and members of almost every student committee. Founded in 1909 at Boston University, Lambda Chi Alpha is the fourth largest and, we believe the finest, college fraternity. With more than 220 chapters in the United States and Canada, 100 alumni associations, and more than 120,000 initiated members, Lambda Chi Alpha's strength, stature, and stability are assured. Of course, accomplishments of a group are not a true guide to character of the group. The men of Lambda Chi Alpha feel that the individual and his individual contributions to the total group make a fraternity great. Lambda Chi Alpho's character lies in the character of its broth- ers, all of whom it is proud. OPPOSITE: The brothers and little sisters of Lambda Chi Alpha. ABOVE: The brothers became gangsters for the day as they par- licipaied in the annual President Kidnap. LEFT: WARNING: Don'f mess around with the women of Lambda Chi Alpha! 117 Sigma Alpha Epsilon The proud heritage which Sigma Alpha Epsilon enioys is filled with many firsts and achievements, including being the largest national social fraternity. Sigma Alpha Epsilon was also rated the number one fraternity by the Gallup Poll and by Playboy magazine. The fraternity has established the first student loan fund ever sponsored by a national fraternity. It has also been the first to establish leadership in the school and the first little sister organization. Sigma Alpha Epsilon is changing with the times. But the changes, along with the ideals and the heritage give us the ability to provide for the individual and show that it does have something more to offer in college life. 118 OPPOSITE, ABOVE: The brothers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. OPP., BELOW: SAE members include: FRONT: left to right: Bob Brewer, Jock Lambert, leonord BriHen, Jim Evans, Bill Fennell, Laurie Gordon, Jerry Freeman. BACK: Dan Smith, Chip Yonge, Steve Mathews, David Giglia, Mike Harkey, Bill Smith, Kevin NuHall, Linda Corwin, Mike Cortes, Ann Benning, Pete Popeioy, Gary Kaczmarek, Tom Lewis, Val Nettles, Doug Evans. ABOVE: SAE pulls another iob for the syndicate! LEFT: The little sisters of SAE include, left to right: Diana Olmo; Ann Banning; Peggy Schaefer; Paula Humphries; Laurie Wood- ward, Sponsor; Porn Williamson; Sandra Davis; and Janice Robinas. H9 120 Tau Epsilon Phi Tau Epsilon Phi is the first fraternity that unites social functions with brotherhood. Besides band parties, barbeques, and Super Bowl Sundays, another trip to Disney World and Weekend Founder's Day Banquet, the TEPs held a weekend communal second quarter that was the highlight of brothers working together. Dolphin-maniacs to New York Knicks fans, TEP has within its ranks a unique variety of men. In sports, in leadership, and in each man's desires within the fra- ternity, it is one of the most diverse groups on cam- pus, yet united in the common bond of brotherhood. ea an Emmy OPPOSITE ABOVE: Dave Gursky xeems very proud of his donationl OPPOSITE BELOW: The brothers and little sisters of Tau Epsilon Phi. ABOVE: TEPs win a softball game, which calls for u celebrationl LEFT: Jeff Kohler receives a blood test. I22 ABOVE: The offlcers of Sigma Phi Epsilon include: Dan Crile, Controller; Bob Miller, Vice-Presidenf; Joe Askew, President; and Max Brown, Recorder. NOT PICTURED is Doug McCrocken, Secretary. BELOW: Sig Eps hold a Card Party as pan of the Homecoming activities. OPPOSITE ABOVE: It looks like there mighl be some foul play going on here since the dealer seems to have all Ihe moneyl OPPOSITE BELOW: The brothers and little sisters of Sigma Phi Epsilon fralernily. Sigma Phi Epsilon xxwh Twink? Today's man . . He's changed. His values and priorities are differ- ent now. Sigma Phi Epsilon is a fraternity for today's man; but we are more than that. We are looking to the future, your future and our future. Sig Eps understand that men should be treated as men, with respect and dignity. After all, isn't that what brotherhood is all about? Times have changed . . . and so have we! Tomor- rowts fraternity for today's man. Sigma Phi Epsilon . . . Tomorrow's fraternity, today! 123 124 An International Student Social, an interfraternity Bounce-a-Thon, a Senior Class Buffet, and LSU vs. USF - all of these events, and MORE were part of the festivities exhibited at USF's first Homecoming, Jan. 6-13. Exciting programs were planned for students, faculty, alumni and the university community to enioy and partici- pate in, while celebrating USFis first Homecoming. The entire week was packed full of busy programs. Bouncing a ball never did so much before! IFC hoped to net $1,500 to go to the USF Scholarship Fund by dribbling from USF to St. Petersburg and Clearwater and then back again. The Alumni Association held their inauguration din- ner at Curtis Hixon while pro-basketball star, Bill Russell, was also on hand to talk to fans in the Gym. Seniors got together for lunch one day and discussed their hopeful endeavors. The highlight of the week came Sunday night at Curtis Hixon, when USF triumphed over LSU 69-64 at the Homecoming game. The night was capped when Walt Disney World's Gabriel's Brass serenaded students and guests into the wee morning hours. Yes e it was a great week! One which makes the establishment of 0 Homecoming tradition at USF more than worthwhile. HOMECOMING '73 OPPOSITE ABOVE: USF cheerleaders cheer the Golden Brahmans on 90 victory over Louisiana State University. OPPOSITE BELOW: Spirit soared high during the Greek Cced Basketball Game. BELOW LEFT: President Cecil Mackey gen ready to toss the jump ball to begin 'he Homecoming Game. BELOW: USF was honored '0 have Bill Russell us iis guest during the Homecoming adivi'ies. BELOW RIGHT: All organizations portrayed Meir school spirit as USF hosted its first Homecoming. V $135 v95 , , Iota A , 1'5: Ky a r49 ,a 2A 92.91: L'Ah .. g 2' '49:.:: a 9,9 $3. x I26 Alumni Association The USP Alumni Association is open to any graduate or former student of the University who makes an annual contribution to the school. In January of 1972 the Alumni Service Office was established as a separate function of USF. Their goals this year are to increase their member- ship to 25,000 by December and to add two more chapters. Among the accomplishments for the year 1972, the Association can list: Alumni Century Club e 45 alumni are cur- rently giving $100 annually to USF. Alumni Athletic Recruiting Program - 30 alumni across the nation refer outstanding athletes to USF. Brahman Placement Network - over 100 alumni serve as contact resource-persons for grad- uating seniors who visit their cities during iob interviews. Teacher Relations Programs - USF graduates who teach volunteer their time to aid the school's Intensive Tutorial Program. As for future plans, the Association will con- tinue fostering a spirit of loyalty and fraternity among the graduates, former students and friends of USF. Morfc: r Board In April, 1972, Aihenaeum, a local senior wom- en's honor society, gained admittance to National Mortar Board. Mortar Board is the highest national honor organi- zation for college women. Membership is based on outstanding scholarship, leadership, and service e as individuals, as students, and as responsible citi- zens. Members are tapped in their iunior year to serve as the active chapter during their senior year. Each year the Mortar Board Award for Teaching Excellence is given to a faculty member who has demonstrated superior performance as a teacher in the classroom. OPPOSITE ABOVE: Mr. J. L. Richards presents the Century Club plaque to the new Presidem, Mr. Michael Sierra. OPPOSITE BELOW: Mr. Terrell Sessums, speaker of the Florida House of Representatives, introduces 'he new officers at the Alumni Association inauguration dinner. ABOVE, lefv to right: Virginia Fablinger, Paula Townsend, and Paula Cunningham participate in initiation ceremonies. BELOW: The Mortar Board execu- tive meeting consists of: Ieh to right: Carol Spring, Adviser; Anifa Whitaker; Paula Cunningham; Shirley Chennaul'; and Juliehe Wilson. NOT PICTURED are Roxanne Dow and Carole Binerman. I28 ABOVE: The members of Kappa DaIVa Pi ore: FRONT, leff to right: Lynn Merhige, Gayle Markwifh, Becky McMurray, Betsy Starman. BACK, left to right: James Chambers, Adviser, Eric Sfober, Joel Seafon, Richard Dearoff. RIGHT: An initiation ceremony was held and the following become members of Kappa Delta Pi: ROW 1, left to right: Cathy Rohrbacher, Honey Brooks, Pal Jenkin, Wendy Warren, Anna Fron'a, Barbara Sor- enson. ROW 2, left to right: Randolf Percy, William Dom, Robert Panerson, Dan Zuber. Kappa Delta Pi Lambda Tau Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi is an hon- orary society in Education. Its purpose is to encour- age excellence in scholarship, high personal stand- ards, improvement in teacher preparation and disfinc- tion in achievement through coniributions to educa- tion. USF Karate Club The USF Karate Club was organized in Sep- tember, I963 and since then has enioyed a steady rise in popularity. Today it has 200 members. The Club belongs to the Japan Karate Asso- ciation, which is the onIy Karate entity in Japan accredited by the Japanese Ministry of Educa- tion. The Club is also a member of the All America Karate Federation, which is affiliated with the American Athletic Union and the Olympic Committee. The USF Karate Club is the second largest in the state of Florida. ABOVE: Determined concentra- tion is very important in the skill of karate. LEFT: USF Karate Club members practice various karate stances and approaches. 129 130 Student Accounting Organization The Student Accounting Organization is composed of individuals interested in accounting. During in weekly meetings its members are exposed to vari- ous speakers from he accounting profession and related fields. Members are frequently involved in sports activities and social gatherings with the faculty. Through 5.A.O.'s connection with the S.C.O.R.E. and lnfernship Programs, students are offered an alternative to Senior Seminar and valuable work experience. A primary event sponsored by S.A.O. is the annual spring ban- quet. Held at the end of third quarter, it draws practitioners from the field and its proceeds are used to provide scholarships for needy students. OPPOSITE: The members of the Student Accounting Organization are: Robert Jourdain; Karen Duis; Ger- ald Louell; Troy Hutchinson; Steve Hamlyn; Stanley McCallum; Paul Smith; Albert Mountain; Claude Hes- ter; Stephen Fogarty; Chester Brooks; Raymond Pineda; Dick Schwartz; Malcolm Hayes; Paula Heppe; Ira Girtman; Richard Collins; Bill Hirschkow- ifz; E. C. Bacon; John Gianakos; David Cobb; Celina Ponfe; Gerald White; David Westfall; Chester Frank; Antonio Molina,- Rebecca Waller; Charles Hayman; Harlan Schafir; Dave Collins; Vaughn Petford; John Fendenfz; Gerald Herrera; Joseph Cioppa; David Gauldin; Vic Motto; Michael Maiel; Anne Field; Chris- fine Cronin; Pamela Kane; Bill Odom; Edward Bacon; Mike Mord. ABOVE: S.A.O. members get togeiher in their spare time for a picnic and a ballgame. LEFT: The officers of the Student Accounting Organization are FRONT, Ieft to right: John Fendentz, President,- Chris Cronin, Secretary; Chester Brooks, Treasurer. BACK: C. Larry Frank, Vice-President. NOT PIC- TURED: is Pamela Kane, Corresponding Secreiary. 131 A new name: S E A C A new goal: Good continuous entertainment A new philosophy: Input and involvement with all students E and student groups The Student Entertainment and Activities Council has found all three. Seven para-professional students manage the varied areas of programming that have come to be A known as SEAC. They brought Seals and Crafts Quarter l, improved the quality of the weekend movies, and rear- ranged the UC calendar till we almost didn't recognize it. SEAC sponsored Song Fest, The Intercollegiate Music Festi- C val and all the recreational tournaments ltable tennis, billi- ards, chess, bridgeJ It takes time for any newly structured group to prove themselves. SEAC has. They encourage input and welcome any student who would like to participate in programming, whether it be in promotion, setting up sound systems or screening local talent and selecting movies. SEAC e YOU CAN BE PROUD OF IT YOU CAN BE PART OF IT ABOVE, LEFT: SEAC's Family Night turned out to be fun for all! ABOVE, RIGHT: USF students can be as creative as they like in the Craftshop. RIGHT: Seals and Crofts was iust one of the outstanding groups spon- sored by SEAC. I34 wx memgwm $ WWW: gag??? gm? 6: Published by me University Center I Univevsity of South Florida I Tampa, FIorida g; , STUDENT ENTERTAINMENT AND ACTIVITIES COUNCI f a M. ; A .c- 9., Llama? x ' $$$6 s 9 Q3 ma - a g 0C. ,5 I . jf:$ , z ' c,eri5 ' V ? 52 c5 ' ',., f, . .... x g: T a 1? ap . x. x . . ,1 x I ' o , - . ' ' U f;j , r- . x F! , I - Spizf .1 ! x ,' t I 0 - War Mum m am, 3 W - X The opinions expressed herein are not La , necEssarily those of the University m I W . 3: Center nor of the University of South - 3' r 'krA Florida. Any misrepresentation or implication is purely coincidental. ,3 x M ; Qg I W mm The Oracle This year produced a new look in' The Oracle as Robert Fiallo took over the editorship from Grant Donaldson, who graduated after first quarter. Some of these changes, such as new type style, a listing of current movies in the Tampa Bay area, a medical advice column, and more feature stories, helped enhance the status of The Oracle as one of the top 25 collegiate newspapers in the nation. A substantial portion of the revenue to produce the paper was generated by the students in the advertising department. The adver- tising staff solicits ads from campus agencies and off-campus com- mercial estqblishments. The Oracle, with a circulation of 15,000, is printed four times weekly, Tuesday through Friday, during Quarters I, II and III and twice weekly, Tuesday and Thursday, during Quarter IV. The news- paper has received an AII-American rating since it began publica- tion in 1966. .101 ?,?,gw,,.w: 1g, . TOP: Bob Font and Bill Kopf discuss their ad sales for the day. MIDDLE: The Editors' Cluster in the process of editing copy. RIGHT: Oracle members, left to right: Dave Moorman, Sports Editor; Ray Wolf, Sports Writer; Robert Fiallo, Editor-in-chief; and Vivian Mulley, Activities Editor, help produce The Oracle for its next deadline. 136 Delta Sigma Pi Delta Sigma Pi is a professional fraternity organ- ized to foster the study of business in universities; to encourage scholarship, social activity and the associ- ation of students for their mutual advancement by research and practice. The fraternity also aims at promoting closer affilia- tion between the commercial world and business stu- dents, and to further a higher standard of commer- cial ethics and culture and the civic and commercial welfare of the community. BELOW: The members of Delta Sigma Pi business fvaternity. FRONT, left to right: Mike Freed, Russ King, Rob Gatliff, Chuck Smith, Scott Welch, Mike Shearer, Jock Barrett, Jim Williamson, Al Wore, Bill Horslman, Dan Kelly, Torry Hill, Bob Royal. BACK, left to right: Wayne Ratston, Vic Motto, Ken Van Vorrhis, Randy Gabor, Craig Crowder, Ed Allen, Jim Komiofske, Rick Rivanbark, Chet McKay, Jack Phethean, John Marrocco, Ted Smith, Patrick Moss, Walter Lisiewski. 137 138 Pep Band Pep band is exactly what the name implies, a band solely for the purpose of creating more spirit or pep at intercollegiate sports events of the University. Founded in November, 1972, by a group of con- cerned students and staff members, it started as a dream and has grown into a solid sounding band with student officers and a future growth possibility far beyond earlier hopes. Thus far, the Pep band has played only at the home basketball games. However, plans are being studied to expand into away games and other sports areas. Funll is the top priority of the Pep band. Com- prised of volunteer musicians, desire, not quality of play, is important. The uniform for the Pep band presently is a funky hat, tennis shoes, ieans, and a T- shirt. As can be seen, the Pep band is off to a flying start. Thanks to the help of many, the Pep band is a permanent fixture of the University and will help realize many more victories in sports activities. RIGHT: Dr. Joe Howell conducts the Pep Band during the Home- coming basketball game against Louisiana State University. BELOW: The newly formed Pep Band show; its enthusiasm and support as the Brahman: score another point toward their victory. OPPOSITE: The members of Phi Chi Theta include from left to right: Mamie Smith, Christine Cronin, Edyth Hargis, Rebecca Wal- ler, Dorothy Harlow, Rony Kudler, Diana Johnston, Pam Kane, Cherri Potter, Barbara Buier, Barbara Shatz, Judy Michel, Kathleen Sherman, and Celina Ponte. Phi Chi Theta Phi Chi Theta is a national professional fraternity for women in Business and Business Education, which is active in USF student affairs. The fraternity is a member of the Greater Tampa Chamber of Commerce, and it gives its members an opportunity to visit businesses in the Tampa area. Phi Chi Theta also holds social functions with other organizations in the College of Business. Nit SMHKING 139 Pi Mu Epsilon The purpose of the Florida Epsiion Chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon fraternity is to pursue mathematic schol- arship. The monthly meetings feature talks by professors and outstanding students on various aspects of math- emutics. In addition to electing to membership the superior mathematics students of the University, Pi Mu Epsilon selects an Outstanding Senior in mathematics each year. Student Advisory Board The Student Advisory Board is an organization whose obiectives are to instill strong character and unity among the members of the College, to encourage scholastic and social prominence, and to help build and maintain the traditions of the College of Busi- ness Administration of the University of South Florida. The Board members represent their fellow Business students by conveying views to the Dean and Faculty. Among the activities of the Student Advisory Board are allocations of funds to the various Student Business Organizations, allocations of the Student Activity Fund, plan- ning and coordinating the Annual Business Picnic, representing, the College of Business at the Council of Presidents and Executive Board of Student Government meetings and submitting nominations for Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. The Student Advisory Board is the host for a reception at the end of each quarter for graduating seniors, at which the Senior Service Award and the Outstanding Faculty Award from the Student Advisory Board are presented. HO Senior Class This year's Senior class officers have tried to bring more recognition to the senior at USF. At the present time they are Fighting to get USF to hold two gradu- ations; one in June and another in December. The senior class officers have also attempted to establish better communication among the senior class. Open meetings are currently held and a Senior Class Banquet is in the planning stages. Among their future plans the officers expect to res- tructure the senior class elections. Senior Class is a term personifying integrity, maturity and seIf-accomplishment. OPPOSITE ABOVE: The members of Pi Mu Epsilon are: lEFT ROW, front to rear: Alice Meyer; Alan Boss; Gary Fleming; Alan Creveting; Bruce Fredrick. SECOND ROW: Richard Welch; Truett Lee Smith,- Bob Shumblin; Fraser Morse; Madelyn Reichman. THIRD ROW: Richard Borden; Rose Donovan; James Rizzo; Jim Davis; Arlin Wilsher. FOURTH ROW: Dr. Fredric Zerla, Faculty correspondent and Dr. Frank Cleaver, Adviser. OPPOSITE BELOW: Student Advisory Board members from left to right include: Rick Rivenbark; John Marrocco; Nancy Hoglund; Pam Kane; Jim Komlofske; Jack Phethean; Jim Williamson. Not pictured is Judy Michel. ABOVE: Betty Blizzard, Jan Shoemaker, and Robbie Cooney attend the Senior Class Open Buffet. BELOW: The 1972-73 Senior Class Officers from left to right: George Petros, Secretaty; Jim Larkin, President; Robbie Couney, Vice-President; and Barbara Twine, Treasurer. l41 H3 Photo Ctedifs: pg. 143 Bill Phillips pg. 2-3 Educational Resources pg. 134-135 John GaudeHe ALL OTHERS Bob Colmer Cover Design: Sherry Mason Many thanks go to Marion Myers and Bob Colmer for their enduring patience and hard work. A special thank you to Leo Stalnaker for salvaging what he could from the Aegean. This public document was promulgated by the Oflice of Student Publications of me University a! South Florida at a cost of $7,207.02, or $7.21 per volume, '0 provide students, staff and faculty with a record book of the 1972-73 academic year. Mpproxima'ely 49 per can! of he cost was paid through the sale of copies, space and photography commissionsJ 144


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