Webb Schools - El Espejo Yearbook (Claremont, CA) - Class of 1973 Page 1 of 216
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eler (Ackilles [Anion S eler Joseph. a YYlicliael (Soleman cKoward Seoffrey (A. Q arlk Qa. ct Qn. QllacH ffavies Q} ' lc(Sall C jprl nger g amie Oo J)avid k Xrehchn ffejjrey toward Qrayhill imolUy £7C. tParicka lichard L onner QJwallo CD. Q)ongll ongtliongsn raig L ' llan clxosenslein k i,ia I ' norlazavi QDouglas nelson UJoesel knslopLr 0i. ei gers ffames Qiennedy Q o . (Walls cJ nomas ray cJ nor ff ol SdurL (Skarles Q recLenriige Q7lc0{inley 9tarry Q. 9CigL _iae iij ' iaduattng Utass of Jlineteen tJiundiea and Oevenly-iniee WeDD ibchool of Ualifoinia ( Hnnounces Corrmencement Oxetcfses C unday afleinoon, (June tniid at two o clock. lamo Uouit ula ' iemont, Caiifoinia CO 0 o H m o u CJ H 1 i « 1 ■« W? thank thee our heavenly father for thy many blessings. Help us to do thy will on earth. Am en. El Esp ejo 1973 FREDERICK HOOPER and GRACE HOOPER (hf ' i liff ' W ' ifk. I A.fti ' ItnrntA, tiroun uilh tht ' Wt ikiHt) i ti thr m ' IMi; )( it x if your hff rirf rHiirti oh It.  M fiist ihiHO yoii kntiW, yoti ' ll hitvf nutrir ft lifr out of  ,)0 ' f hft . too Vhtttxii titlfyurn Thou shalt be served . ' ' . - ' ' I - - -- rjf $eTxice ti, huh th ju - r ' .;-- ' . ; %• -- . ' m,- Sometimes I think we ' re alone, and sometimes I think we ' re not. In either case, the idea is quite staggering. British Astronomer 10 ; J , : r- • }- ■ T T rt.JSS!«B5gB5 -U ' - • -: Sr ,¥% That uhich is past and gone is trrt ' zocable. fVise men have enough to do with the present and things to come. Francis Bacon 12 13 15 HAHAHAHAHAHAHA VER YF UNNYJOKE R. Brautigan 16 17 {H0 18 19 S-rnW ' J. 20 21 22 All touched by a common genius United in the strife that divided them. T. S. Elliot 23 If I did not work these worlds would perish. Bhagavad-Gita 24 25 ...sKSSSS ' 4 26 27 28 TI — I -fj 3 30 31 I saw the ' potamus take wing. r.s. Elliot 33 34 35 A m ry - ■i . ; V - -JK« : L ' .. , C 6y ' y aw a o«( ' li ' zV ; zc beating of my heart. Lui Chi 37 38 39 40  -iU..i 41 i 43 RAYMOND M. ALF LAUDATEDEUM! 44 . G Oi - G- , i - - ■cr ' 4 3 y -V-T-Ti, OTTO BUERGER good mind possesses a kingdom. Seneca 45 ,( Kahlil Gibran You may give them your love but not your thoughts, For they have their own thoughts. You may house their bodies but not their souls, For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams. You may strive to be like them, but seek not to . C - . make them like you. joJ •, y For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday. J ROYBERGESON f oA ' V Yet I cannot tarry longer. . . For to stay, though the hours burn in the night, is to freeze and crystalize and he bound in a mould. . . Kahlil Gibran HECTOR DIAZ JiLr . 47 ART AND SUE HOUSE . . . for the great majority of mankind are satisfied ti ' ith appearances as though they nere realities and are often more influenced hy things that seem than by those that are. Machiaielli 48 The strongest principle of gro-uth Bes in human choice. George E ot «s Baby, love is the most work in the world .... Linda Cusumano, tn her early twenties the operator of a day-care center in Manhattan ' s East Village during the late 1 960s. lUMlO HM dr-UAtL KdLt) -MU-cXt auM 50 MARGUERITE McMillan LES PERRY 52 The Orif in of Baseball Someone had been walking in and out Of the zvorld ivithout coming To much decision about anything. The sun seemed too hot most of the time. There weren t enough birds around And the hills had a silly look When we got on top of one. The girls in heaven, however, thought Nothing of asking to see his watch Like you would want someone to tell A joke — Time they ' s say, what ' s That mean — timef, laughing with the edges Of their zvhite mouths, like aflutter of paper In a madhouse. And he ' s stumble over General Sherman or Elizabeth B. Browning, muttering Can ' t you keep Your big wings out of the aisle f But doivn Again, there ' d be millions of people without Enough to eat and men with guns just Standing there shooting each other So he wanted to throiv something And picked up a basketball. Kenneth Patchen RICKWHYTE LES PERRY Je ne vois que des infinites de toutes parts, qui m ' enferment comme une ombre qui ne dure qu ' un instant sans retour. Tout ce que je connais est que je dois mourir; mais ce que j ' ignore le plus est cette mort m me que je ne saurais enviter. Pascal GERALD JOHNSON 54 1 RAMSEY AND MARY HARRIS The stream of know ledge is heading towards a non-material reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than like a great machine. Sir James Jeans THE MYSTERIOUS UNIVERSE fi hat are they doing noivf I heard One bird ask another bird. Talking aivay, the other said, Ofzi ' hat they hope and ivhat they dread And how to manage their meat and drink, And what a thinking man should think. Some of them kneel in church and pray. Some of them sit at their books and dream. Or button their clothes, or learn to play. And none of them knows how odd they seem. Clarence Day 55 ALBERT AND LIBBY KORBER 56 speech stammers to tell of touch of stone, of love, of ache inside, or startle of surprise. Whatever at last is said is spoken from uhat is unsayablc. John Baughan 57 JOELARDNER 58 - =1 Go go (JO, said the bird: human kind Cannot bear very mueh reality. T. S. Eliot TOM EDWARDS 59 I 3 V ;y a man does not keep pace ivith his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music ivhich he hears, however measured .or far away. I ' Th oreau L ■.- 7 J -J C «? 60 C y f , I V d EVAN AND WENDY JAQUA c 61 To sum up the whole, we should say that the aim of the Platonic philosophy was to exalt man into a god. The aim of the Baconian philosophy was to provide man ivith what he requires while he continues as a man. The aim of the Platonic philosophy ivas to raise us above vulgar luants. The former aim was noble; but the latter was attainable. Plato drew a good bow; but, like Acestes in I ' irgil, he aimed at the stars; and therefore, though there was no want of strength or skill, the shot was thrown arvay. His arroiu ivas indeed followed by a track of dazzling radiance, but it struck nothing. . . . Thomas MacCauley HALL WARREN For every man the rvorld is as fresh as it was at the first day, and as fu II of unto Id novelties for him who has the eyes to see them. Thomas Huxley GARY PICK BILL RIPLEY Happy are those who dream dreams and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. L. J. Cardinal Suenens jt j . a v fu x, . -c9( VxL W ' ' :lff ' ' r- R.WALTER . . . and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions. Joel2:28 King James Version of the Bible 65 9 ' V -.i jf ' y ' ' ' l si OJOHN ' HEYES 2 waited for you to fall in love with someone else to get tired of my difficult zvays to tell me finally, i ' m leaving you, you ' re hopeless but you didn ' t isf now i ' m faced with the biggest terror of my life, knoiuing i am enough even at my worst for you to love me all your life Joseph Pintauro ly 66 I F. W. CARTER ; iuA . I oJa- ( aCr J Cast a cold eye on life; on death. Horseman pass by. Yeats ' Epitaph •Jl ««i lt l; ' yiv! ' 67 r PHILCURRIER 68 i TONYKORODY 69 MR. GARRETT spsw 70 - JACKSCHNURR fti!W ww gira TIM PERRY 71 .1. MRS. CARTER MRS. HAYLER 72 MR. HUISKING MRS, BALLOU 73 MR. TRUSSELL MR. BECK MR. WESTBROOK ■fiff- r atiKi t t -wt, 74 75 SANDY BALLOU 76 THE GROUNDS CREW 77 I GENESCROGGINS ENRIQUE FLORES 78 Anyone that don ' t have a sense of humor, don ' t have no sense. General Lee GENERAL LEE KNEELAND SAM VAUGHN 79 MISSPEESO KITCHEN CREW 80 MRS. GENERAL MRS. ZANDERS MRS. POTTS ii 81 r 1 MRS. BARLOW MRS. ZAKEM MMES. HOWARD AND KAMPF 33 ( 84 85 87 Js he came back to the hearth, limping slightly but with a brisk step, Stephen saw the silent soul of a Jesuit looking out at him from pale loveless eyes. Like Ignatius he was lame but in his eyes burned no spark of Ignatius ' s enthusiasm. Even the legendary craft of the company, a craft subtler and more secret than its fabled books of secret subtle wisdom, had not fired his soul with the energy of apostleship. It seemed as if the shifts and lore and cunning of the world, as bidden to do, for the greater glory of God, without job in their handling or hatred of that in them which was evil but turning them, with a firm gesture of obedience, back upon their lives: and for all this silent service it seemed as if he loved not all the master and little, if at all. the ends he served. James Joyce 88 89 90 CW Wlj i jVjULXLa.!i 91 J 1 J y m 1. ' r . . 1 Uh :: WWJMI M t J ' ■■■■1 P 1 ■• - -■■- ' MMi v - a ,« 92 93 ;f-— %v. ' ' . ' WiS N ' - f ' .1 .Ttc, ■94 iwi I II ■«(! ' • The Chair she sat in, like a burnished throne Glowed upon the marble, where the glass Held up by standards wrought with fruited vines From which a golden Cupidon peeped out (Another hid his eyes behing his wing) Doubled the flames of seven-branched candelabra Reflecting light upon the table as The glitter of her jewels rose to meet it. From satin cases poured in rich profusion. 96 97 98 99 ( 100 101 SIMS, WILLIAMS, GILLETTE, DANEMAN. MIRKIN, MOORE. JOHNSTON In vials of ivory and coloured glass Unstoppered, lurked her strange synthetic perfumes. Unguent, powered, or liquid — troubled, confused And drowned the sense in odours, sitrred by the air That freshened from the window, these ascended In fattening the prolonged candle-flames, Flung their smoke into the laquearia. Stirring the pattern on the coffered ceiling. Huge sea-wood fed with copper Burned green and orange, framed by the coloured stone. In which sad light a carved dolphin swam. Above the antique mantel was displayed As though a window gave upon the sylvan scene The change of Philomel, by the barbarous king So rudely forced; yet there the nightingale Filled all the desert with inviolable voice And still she cried, and still the world pursues. ' Jug jug ' to dirty ears. 102 103 TORRES. RAND, GIFFORD, GREEN BRINER, DE SHAZO, REAGON, ISSARA, D. MC COWAN 104 TtTd C tOS? ' T tlH ' ' IUD«T Di- iOJ, vxXjm ■l LoaVl HA fete A DO X luut-Jl vlU ) i: ZtA Xzl [K}f K 1 (V, - l iMd i ' ' ' JO rc- ' v pH P( Lh- l Avvuu)! sv Cl- A U U ' a i iS qXA- ■W S iAUti 7L A€■' +A v tx: ! if Ca i TCLO tM W A XP - c su i aUA zt ' VA■l M) i5? ' lt J:: ' - Ai?t)V)i l lll , ' Al £ o 6j- -? (i IVX l. tj -fefebstM-lD ' S iCi)!. T-v uva VVA ' VTL CvUV Li?-} Cl v AOe EtAULi . Mg A CSv Xyx C ' OCj x. , ,, - 1K A o1 T DV V ' ■OS ( v 2. ej O PLUMB . AVANTC ' ii o n.q ' x o-in o. a i ' -p .-se i a. 5 2 DOT fw ± Loot - L- AyO ' K cDo st, :i To • _ VvO V P 4bo B-JT vv l .-• ' OMNl ' M« r -l ' l -lPil i h, TV.E? ■Q[)Gl(l Ov l C-]2 T M ' I - b A - t kjr ) UM QOD ' (- f lLivT n (?- ' . K-- 105 And other withered stumps of time Were told upon the walls; staring forms Leaned out, leaning, hushing the room enclosed. Footsteps shuffled on the stair. Under the firelight, under the brush, her hair Spread out in fiery points Glowed into words, then would be savagely still. 106 • iri hj % GARCIA GRANADOS VON KAESBORG WORDEN PONTY 107 I « %mxm run 4 KILEEN. FIOCK BARD CHURCHMAN ' MC COWAN, J. YOUNG ? MARTIN. J. HART. HUFFMAN MERRITT WOOD, ROSENBERG, CRUMMEY, HEINTZ mm spo-( jb65r(rm I the om: ' 06Kup-( Dr , f V ' . ' ( . -- T ' ( jO i- ' f I A. 2, s o - ) i- 86 a -friend JjJ; rc . IMA i X X © ni oi (ju o c fv S gAil . 2A wv (7o ZISCHKE ZEALEAR HEWSON BAYLY 111 H ,,-- ' ■. ' -. af ' -C: •■■..;v LAHAR. ANTON, M., MILLER, BAER KIRBY. DAY, MC KINSTER, MONTENEGRO 112 ' i: ,r yj BISHOP. D. WILT WILSON. BOATMAN 113 A ' J -y SI ff o- ,f ,, 2 : Of .0- ,J) J - , v .f y n . ' ' v - .-- 0 O rv, ' - C- 3 - . xN o- o ' 2 ... , P - j V .7 .. - ■' , f ' ' My nerves are bad tonight. Yes, bad. Stay with me. ' Speak to me. Why do you never speak. Speak. ' What are you thinking off What thinkingf What? 7 never know what you are thinking. Think. ' HUBBARD FLETCHER BRADY 114 HELLER. PERKINS , •%« 115 BASHNER BAO WONG JERMAIN, PITTS. ATTYAH, KHAN 1r l il6 DAVIS SMITH PINESS, MAGIER. STECHER. WRIGHT, MARCUS 117 jrmm HINRICHS. ARMSTRONG, AVANT, C. MOULTON, MARTIN, A., ALLER. T., ZAKEM 118 PEARCE MADRID, DAN MILLION OGIER THOMPSON ROWE 119 BOVETT, KROGH, CONTRERAS, WARDE, DAVID MADRID CHEVERTON, ZEE, WETRICH 120 ' {-••• riri w: ' f m; - ' 1 Dl MAIO ATTERBURY HILDEBRAND think we are in rats ' alley Where the dead men lost their bones. DENNIS. YEN. JOB, STEVENS. SP.. RICHARDS 121 lyA ifer, K-e. Vo£,l5 «? s . ' - -  i S i  ' ■NOVELO, L NOVELO. M. kI ■- ' i% ' ■- ' , - . ' ■«, . - tH ' - -r- || jy jgci| • H WHP STILL, LYNCH, SCHUMAN, BOYCE 122 DIX. TSENG, GOVEA, LIBAW. KRO ON. DONIN ier T ?W c t3 U ch. v T a ' ' fVhat is that noise f The tvind under the door. ' What IS that notse nowf What ts the ivtnd dointff ' Sothing again nothing. ' L ' You knozv nothing f Do you see no thing f Do you r member -J. 0-9 A K ' Noth ing i ' --€ • I remember V) 1 r J Those are pearls that xiere his eyes. J C-J S ' - ' ■' c Qj(t r- CL ' Are you alive, or not f Is there nothing in your head? ' ' ' ux h uu l ty T JL, 0000 that Shakespeherian Rag— fccCe C e L-c -i OyrJL It ' s so elegant f- 0 ' - = Qf - j 00 intelligent 1 if) —T ' What shalll do mnvf What shallldof jfTl 2i - • . ' I shall rush out as I am. and ualk the street ' V Q_ ' ' UTuJ UjC 7 (■T ' - - ' - tzl ' li ith m hair dozvn, so. fi ' hat shall rve do tomorrow? Jj fy Jp - - Q.ajC_ feSTUt (uu n Sr- r s-j,) MASCARIN, CARNAHAN f lll 124 SHINNICK, PARIS, ROBERTS The hot water at ten. And if it rains, a closed car at four. And we shall play a game of chess. Pressing lidless eyes and waiting for a knock upon the door. Well, that Sunday Albert ivas home, they had a hot gammon, And they asked me in to dinner, to get the beauty of it hot — MAUTNER 125 126 Hurry up please it ' s time Hurry up please it ' s time Goodnight Bill, Goodnight Lou. (loodnight May- Good- night. Ta ta. Goodnight, Goodnight. Good night, ladies, good night, siveet ladies, goodnight, good night. C LA t o .- r ry Ci AAlMr-fl !jM .J i «o -T -i 127 128 r: t.i ?« r: ?:. ' f ■■' m ' mm ' w 1 c . ■««. rf M •- wv M  132 SAGE EDITORS 134 FOURTH ESTATE STAFF BLUE AND GOLD STAFF 135 THfi ou EON . 1 i I EL ESPEJO EDITORS .iii ' - . ♦ . Wj ' W ' .x ' , ' ' ' - ' J l b ' - j :. ' ■•?« -rv - - M - 1 -3 EL ESPEJO STAFF 137 i ' ■•?? • : if0§0 W¥f- ' : :. ' :MM V, 138 ' t % 141 142 i - - 144 145 146 147 I MWWlBWWfUWt.w RICHARD BRIDGE Poi s ' ascose nelfoco che gli affina Quando fiam uti Chelidon — O swallow swallow Le Prince d ' Aquitaine a la tour abolie These fragments I have shored against my ruins IVhy then lie fit you. Heironymo ' s mad againe. Datta. Dayadhvam. Damyata. Elliot 148 Stuart Stevens ' ; , . M9 Wherever I am, there ' s always Pooh, There ' s always Pooh and Me. Whatever I do, he wants to do, Where are you going today f, says Pooh: Well, that ' s very odd ' cos I was too. Let ' s go together, says Pooh, says he. Let ' s go together, says Pooh. So wherever I am, there ' s always Pooh, There ' s always Pooh and Me. What would I do f, I said to Pooh, If it wasn ' t for you, and Pooh said: True, it isn ' t much fun for One, but Two can stick together, says Pooh, says he. That ' s how it is, says Pooh. A. A. Milne 150 M PETER ACHILLES ANTON i .x ' C ' ' lO ' Whenever you feel PETER RAUEN ■n-. like criticizing anyone, just remember that all the people in this zvorld haven ' t had the advantages that you ' ve had. F. Scott Fitzgerald you don ' t really know how great you can be how much you can love what you can accomplish what your potential is. Those whole hope is strong SEE and CHERISH all signs of life and are aready every moment to help that which is ready to be born. Erich Fromm There ain ' t no man can avoid being born average, but there ain t no man got to be common. • ' y ' M ' -- •■% i. ' w- ■' ■■, - Satchel Paiqe • , jL 4 What a long strange trip it ' s been. Greatful Dead 151 B cy ci MCU J ' y€ ' i J ' lfi } u. v J u j Me . (-f ze . r JuoX 2 c -i -uo (pu ,-tfuCt jiA ' i . ' Ho t O-v i ji ' -t ymu jaj Au yur fzlc i i a i j2m 1j Oea j. c ku }vk, Mi M ' a u i VeMj- JvA-i A iJlj j r-txs-h M ' A KroiT c-i ju ' itaoiuu . ecc J ' uic ' :f t , d ' « -vz Uuy i i tW We must he able to dish it out and to take it too. JEFFGRAYBILL P ' - ykulai ■iX aJui t yi cUuie AA Ai- 0-vouj ! ■(3m M t H - .AiM.U-i,C -i Uj Ai a-t ' J, ' i h o ' Jkfn U y. 152 ■l , - 2 y,y CHRISTOPHER MORRISON dJLO If you don ' t have anything intelligent to say. then don ' t say anything. (That ' s not a very intelligent thing to say.) But mother, you know that I do not do good in English Wellf H ' hat do zve do f Don ' t let ' s do anything. It ' s safer. Samuel Beckett 153 w ftr f RICHARD SCOTT BARTON Power to do good is the true and lawful end of aspiring. Francis Bacon You do not get a man ' s most effective criticism until you provoke him. Severe truth is expressed with some bitterness. Thoreau Never say die. Charles Dickens 154 shall pass through this world but once. Any good thing, therefore, that I can do, or any kindness that I can shoiv to any human being, let me do it now. Let me not defer it or neglect it, fori shall not pass this way again. The Greatest Thing in the li ' orld We cannot all be great, but we can always attach ourselves to something that is great. -H. E. Fosdick When you get something for nothing you just haven ' t been billed for it yet. -F. P. Jones PHIL LISLE 155 BILLMcCOWAN The greatest sin: fear. The best day: today. The greatest deceiver: one who deceives himself. The greatest mistake: giving up. The most expensive indulgence: hate. The cheapest stupidity and the easiest thing to do: find fault. The worst trouble maker: talking too much. The worst bankruptcy: the soul that has lost its enthusiasm. The cleverest man: one who always does what he thinks is right. The best teacher: one who wants to make you learn. The best part of one ' s religion: gentleness and cheerfulness. Alice laughed: There is no use trying, she said: One can ' t believe impossible things. daresay you haven ' t had much practice, ' said the Queen. When I was your age, I always did it for an hour a day. H ' hy, sometimes I ' ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast. Leivis Carroll Four long years. It ' ll be good to get back to the country and see some of those friends again. I ' ve been gone far too long. J im- Your future lies before you Like a shining path of snow Be careful how you tread For every step ivill show Mike Hemsley fdjui JCKa. .y tUL TLuJ Jl GEORGE PLATZ Are you all by yourself? asked the man and his wife as suddenly I crunched through the spring snow past their cabin. Are you all by yourself? asked the Are you all by yourself? asked the stars. On The Loose It takes both rain and sunshine to make a rainbow. _X ei o-e- ..A-fiJLACK, ytt ucy -H. JUj --Cd- . - lXXJJ- J JxJLM. JLb iLX yUJLfX Ahj .jijj:xJUJr Q. Ok .xo-aA ,X ' -u_ . isuU cs X X ' S.1i M5 TOS-— , 5 : Vjuue.4A iA-otA4 158 JOHN NEWMAN A bon chat, ton not. proverbe francaise Everything has its beauty but not everyone sees it. Anonymous Ilfaut cultiver notre jardin, Voltaire 159 A ■S V ,ft ' ««• jf Jr J- y K - - v - .-- - O X } y v ' i - ' JERRY ROSENTHAL Ir . ' tf jh p nethertheless you know you ' re It ' j, ' tT J Ji ' ® ' i 9 ' ' seconds tick the time )r,y.j fl ' . 3 ■' .■i left to knov.-, and I ' m on the road to f ind out f -fr ' - y ansuer lies within .. .jf yj But sometimes you have to moan when nothing seems to but nethertheless you know you ' re locked towards the fu V on and on you go, the seconds tick the time out. There ' s i hen nothing seems to suit yer, ture. So so much yes the ■• ' d- y ,y y ' y y y sevens 1 - y J y y y yyy ' yy. ' ' y y 4 A K ' : ., ■y y ) ' r ' - y - .V v y MICHAEL HOWARD Good Day my friend. it ' s early, about 6:45 on a drizzly Tuesday morning. lie been spending some quiet moments in front on my uindoti-open- feeling the cool air brushing my body . . . thought Td share it tiith you. This has been a long pleasant day-or rather night ... hazen ' t been to sleep. A little Elton John, Laura yro. and Joni Mitchell are playing-so our moment is complete. My room is tilled tiith the sounds of morning-little birds chirping, cars rushing, music and leaking. I ' m sitting in the corner, noti- beside my tapestry, under my net and beside my table zihich keeps playing color games . . . there s a red candle buming-on it and in this comer its some nhat dark. The candle flickers-casting-spells on my trails and paintings, and illuminates a (deoupagel of Christ. It ' s all very comforting, and beautiful. Today is something tionderful-tiouldn ' t you sayf Pearl u Thank you Pearl .... for so zery much. M.H. 161 THOMAS MATTHEW COOPER The more you help others, the more you help yourself. 162 PETER BISHOP Qui ex errore imperitae multudinis pendet, hie in magnis viri non est habindus. Cicero Illigitimati non carborundum Anon The light dove, cleaving the air in her free flight, and feeling its resistance, might imagine that its flight would be still easier in empty space. Kant 163 . The Lives sat on the grass and spoke together in soft voices; they seemed to take no further notice of the hobbits. Frodo and his companions zvrapped themselves in cloaks and blankets, and drowsiness stole over them. The night greiv on, and the lights in the valley went out. Pippin fell asleep, pilloived on a green hillock. juay high in the East swung Remmirath, the etted Stars, and slowly above the mists red Borgil rose, glowing like a jetvel of fire. Then by some shift of airs all the mist was drawn away like a veil, and there leaned up, as he climbed over the rim of the world, the Swordsman of the Sky, Menelvagor ivith his shing belt. The Elves all burst into song. Suddenly under the trees afire sprang up nith a red light. ' Come! ' the Elves called to the hobbits. ' Come! Xow is y4 the time for speech and merriment! ' j Vl J. R.R. Tolkien Beaumarchais s y j } Iy galosh is lost. y£y Zoshchenko Helas! pourquoi ces chases et non pas d ' autresf r M 3 V d ' - ( z eat ' or so to live that whe n we come to die ' ■V Cfi y y— ,, . even the undertaker will be sorry. Mark Twain TOM THORON 164 JAMIE cox 6 Help me now please my friend I never felt so bad before Never never before Deep Purple J have a friend I ' ve never seen. He hides his head inside a dream. Someone should call him and see If he can come out Try to lose the down that he ' s found. Neil Young It ' s very far away, It takes about half a day. To get there, if we travel by my a dragonfly Just ask the Axis, he knows everything. And so castles made of sand slips into the sea, Eventually Jimi Hendriz 16f; WARREN PERSON I ve always thought people aren ' t considerate enough of their feet . . . and that their noses get chopped down too much. Af, rieni My father ' s hair has turned to grey now I never stopped to ask him why And all the things that he once treasured I see them slowly drifting by. Seals and Crofts 166 • PAUL HOWARD EGGINGTON So you ride yourselves over the fields and You make all your animals deals and Your ivise men don ' t know how hoiv it feels to he thick as a brick. Gerald Bostock and I. Anderson Eh, Santa, pass us that bottle zvill ya ' I. Anderson Music and ivamen I cannot but give way to, tvhatever my business is. Samuel Pepys 167 KIETH A. JACKSON You spend a good piece of your life gripping a baseball; and in the end it turns out that it was the other way around all the time. Jim Boutom 168 CRAIG BERNE So it goes. Kurt Vonnegut Jr. 16S First Thought Since you and me are God, thus respect . Respect has to be paid by each of us. Second Thought If heaven is the imaginary home for God; therefore earth is an imaginary heaven for mankind. Third Thought I said common sense is the key for our prospective generation. J. asked me how do you justify common sense? Then, I told him to go to the place where it stands at the opposite direction of heaven. Fourth Thought J said I always feel so awkward when I want to say ' love ' . I replied, Another way to say love is . . ■i DANAICHATRA VONGTHONGSRI 170 NOKKAO ISSARA C 50 v «i2.. •( £ - l-c . 2i2 ASi _ t-._ -.l- :;4 x am (2 man but i can cry for the fading scent , of flowers t am strong but i can weep my brother ' s plight i am an ego but I have a soul in search for my creation i am a man and i will strive, but i can also cry You never really leave a place you love. Part of it you take with you, leaving a part of you behind. 171 r-x 1 1 § ; { ' y ' WILLIAM MICHAEL MONSOUR i 7 : V X ' 1 fV SV Plus fait douceur que violencel s :) $ ' . fl I i i 1 . iif TofrikdsMpyk burden ' s- fs g kl -H 1. 4 1 -j is 4 ;,fc, Pi ■i- l ' % ' }. y ' i:: o my friends: ' •t i f , iflz Ugly, when am I ever going to see you i i ( C 9uys again? ,, , , N X Ugly, ansivered Hauk, that ' s a painful subject. I Av J. U V 3 o )f it ' s soon, but I don ' t know. If you come to Maine, . • . ou ' ll see me. If we attend the same medical meetings C v.-r- ?W i ne ' ll meet. From here it sounds great to say zve ' ll all get x ' i_ ' ' 1 her soon, but all I know is this: you can call me or ' • i the Duke fifty days or fifty years from now and we ' ll be vj % ' P gold to see you. S togethi 3 1«o •«. f C c • -s • -a 5: f MASH ' %. S - Aflff Spread my dreams out under your feet. Tread softly V 1 ■.Y for you trecRjon my dreams. fVell, w ih you think? Y iiv|||. Roy Me: You ivant to knozv ivhat I ' m planning? ' , Me: I don t knoiv, I ' m not a planner. 9 Somebody: Yeah, I ' m a liver, too. Me: I ' m a pancreas. GEOFF BARTH 173 +c special -te vv e . AH i ' c ji r ims can a (0£ Jo fy tr.. f f en ;l Vie. -fe e rdea h. ' oijVe o e, -Fy .e d oni T a)A - Neir el? ca ViV, Ab Tl loot ( yoiAr . 174 Only one word on my mind. Sha na na RICHARD CONNER SWALLOW ■P y 1 ii J XA t J f , lA v i T It ' s strange. We gulls who scorn perfection for the sake of travel go nowhere, slowly. Those who put aside travel for the sake of perfection go anyiv here instantly. Remember, Jonathan, heaven isn ' t a place or a time, because place and time are so very meaningless. Heaven is If our friendship depends on things like space and time, then ivhen we finally overcome space and time, we ' ve destroyed our own brotherhood! But overcome time, and all we have left is Now. And in the middle of Here and Now, Don ' t you think that we might see each other once or twice f Jonathan 175 fJK m ' r I II off b (fiik - X ly (joi 0i jm ; = h aouKati of ki] uiMJ oJ-JiJ . no gj unrni. u. ' H , fhat. Jt U ulio innd •«« mj auj a d 7.J. avU Sk. ' cLilt , ' ' ' ' ' W r i IaJaII oil ■1 ' i ! ' } ' , His face was banded TL ' ii and f ■' y l i ' Only his hands were loo J, , f -K M J Jin,p .0 ' Then suddenly he leane. J- «on1 IhiuJ S f Bandages fell away. ' ' ' ' fJJ, 3 ' ' « ' - tyH ' 4 t ifa: kAipryjA4£3fr H aii its t iat ' ifaiyi v ' fiBJ '  i AM sy« i£(a4 £6s Vi nr JAMES WATTS His face was banded with cold bands, his legs were bandaged together. se . . . d up and the great world reeled. D. H. Lawrence So let the boat carry me. Tomorrow is another day. D. H. Lawrence Nothing can stop me now, ' cuz Tm the Duke of Earl. Gene Chandler tfc olo 176 DAVID MACK Say ' Knock. Knock ' Knock, Knock Who ' s there? (general laughter) 1 |{)Uud tt ffic bai sfdVb iiu fM «« (foju oJ- U at . Xi 177 HARRY HIGBIE Senior Quote Let him who is taught the word share all good things with him who teaches. Do not be deceived; God is not mocked, for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. For he who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption; but he who sows to the Spirit will from the spirit reap eternal life. And let us now grow weary in well-doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we do not lose heart. — Galatians 6: 3 thru 6 178 stand amid the roar Of a surf-tormented shore. And I hold wit him my hand Grains of the golden sand- How feiv! yet how they creep Through my fingers to the deep While I weep-ivhile I weep! O God! can I not grasp Them with a tighter clasp f O God! can I not save One from the pitiless wave? Is all that we see or seem But a dream ivithin a dream f Edgar Allen Poe If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. Voltaire CHRIS ODGERS rv w FRANK GREY .4 180 CRAIG ALAN ROSENSTEIN could not briny these thoughts to any conclusion. A stone had been dropped into the well, the well was my youthful soul. And for a very lon(i time this matter of Cain, the fratricide, and the mark formed the point oj departure for all my attempts at comprehension, my doubts and my criticism. Hesse All these manifestations, from the unscrupulously invented rumor to the injlammitory article, from the boycotting of enemy art to the defamation of iv hole nations, have in their source a failure to think, a mental laziness that is perfectly pardonable in a soldier at the Jront but ill becomes a thoughtful writer or artist. H, esse  y«?. -ySi Q -o ■- ' ■■y- jjf, f 6t . . % Uu.i t. v - 4 :! ' ' ' ' i.eyo- Bernie was there in Miami that day. You couldn ' t keep Bernie axvay from a Dolphins game ivith a gun, a zvhip and a chair. He went zi ' ith his hair stylist, an Englishman named Bernard, who is related to Bernie only through insanity. They sat in the teeth of the wind and the rain among roughly 5,000 people in a stadium designed to hold half the population of Bolivia. Bernard (the sensible one) finally suggested that if they had to drown, it would be a lot nicer to go down for the third time at midfield instead of the 20-yard line where they normally sat. Stumbling through the elements and thousands of empty seats, they staggered to the 50-yard line, draped a raincoat over their heads and settled down to watch the game. Midway in the first ' ' quarter, Bernard felt a hand on his shoulder. I ' m sorry, ' mumbled an apparition, dripping water furiously amid the sea of empty seats as he waved a soggy ticket stub, but you are sitting in my seat. ' ' - ' y ' y i y c a ' -j -. .y U . U ' n . P: - (y cA -r ' ' - :C , c f ) c. y ■r CO ' i i. ' ' ' ' ' tA Crljy Qyf V • ■— J i - P. ZU,. yU (Zip cCy eP JIM ALLER He who sits in dust will soon be covered by dust. myself The difference between you and me is the difference between two universes. Instead of us putting down each other, let us destroy our defenses in hope of understanding each other as we really are. myself 182 By letting it go it all gets done The ivorld is icon by those ivho let it go. But when you try and try The ivorld is then beyond the ivinning. Too Te Ching JOHN CARPENTER - V - ' -ma ■.:fr . ' i- ' 183 Play for more than you can afford to lose, and you will learn the game. Churchill So you went to Louvre: Hhat did you see? On The Loose After the first Artist Only the copyist. On The Loose yWV _X2JU?V . KIA MORTAZAVI -a 0 , GCv1«. go - To begin ivith, he said heavily, you ' ve got to understand that a seagull is an unlimited idea of freedom, an image of the Great Gull, and your whole body, from wingtip to wingtop, is nothing more than your thought itself. The young gulls looked at him quizzically. Hey, man, they thought, this doesn ' t sound like a rule for a loop. Fletcher signed and started over, Hm, Ah . . . Very well, he said, and eyes them critically, Let ' s begin with Level Flight, And saying that, he understood all at once that his friend had quite honestly been no more divine than Fletcher himself. No limits, Jonathan? he thought, JVell, then, the time ' s not distant when Tm going to appear out of thin air on your beach, and show you a thing or two about flying! And though he tried to look properly severe for his students, Fletcher Seagull suddenly saw them all as they really were, just for a moment, and he more than liked, he loved what he saw, No limits, Jonathan? he thought, and he smiled. His race to learn had begun. Richard Bach : 184 BOB BURKE -WA .. .,.2::: 185 DONALD G. ARMSTRONG We ' re not talking about the same thing, he said. For you the world is weird because if you ' re not bored with it you ' re at odds with it. For me the world is weird because it is awesome, mysterous, unfathomable. Much interest has been to convince you that you must assume responsibility for being here, in this marvelous world, in this marvelous desert, in this marvelous time. I wanted to convince you that you must learn to make every act count, since you are going to be here for only a short while, in fact, too short for witnessing all the marvels of it. Don Juan .... said, hey babe, take a walk on the wild side . . . Lou Reed 186 DAVID KRETSCHMER See there! A man is born and we pronounce him fit for peace. There ' s a load lifted from his shoulders with the discovery of his disease. JVe ' ll take the child from him put it to the test teach it to be a wise man how to fool the rest. Gerald Little Milton Bostock 187 ««JI « f S ..ji,.Jii. Deep calls to deep at the sound of Thy water alls; J II Thy breakers and Thy waves have rolled over me. The Lord will command His loving kindness in the daytime; And His song will be with me in the night, A prayer to the God of my life. Psalm 42:7-8 DALE MARTIN 188 ()W iRii M iUo ' bie + 6 (Xc - - i c ■I la iMul2Z Pert N(6fc DAY two b t CHARLES BRECKENRIDGE IWcKINLEY cdJL -A Don ' t ivalk in front of me, I may not follow. sV h M ] y y ' . Don ' t walk behind me, I may not lead. u mL. i ' vi li Walk besideme. and just be my friend. ■i1- T a LXjv ji2A ' (i yitf ljL rj ' . , 189 --• Holu patient you are. Earth And how merciful. We rip you and tear you and bite you and stab you and drown you in, Asphalt. We embed Deep into your subconscious The unrational and anomalous Fermentation of, Atomic warfare We murder your natural childret Unite! With the flowers birds bees And starve us — Earth. Alone The last time I saw her face Her eyes were the Sparkle of the Stars and she walked alone. MICHAEL NORTON •• ? i I ' i , J, ' AiitV CuaI cU v Ji % - . .L io 190 ■, ,i • i- I When someone is seeking, said Sidhartha, it happens quite easily that he only sees the thing that he is seeking; that he is unable to find anything, unable to absorb anything, because he is obsessed with his goal. Seeking means: to have a goal; but finding means: to be free, to be receptive, to have no goal. You, O worthy one, are perhaps indeed a seeker, for in striving towards your goal, you do not see many things that are under your nose. Hermann Hesse TimsheW  -j: ft? A t.% ss ALLAN 0. HUNTER - SI 4 xtx ;sK j - v S x o °LO-0- R. SANFORD STRAGNELL fF jflf is this place that would make me want to stay here Sir Francis Bacon fVithin you there is a stillness and sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself. Hesse OH, he ' s a genuine backpacker all right. IVe ' s got a filed down toothbrush. Overheard by Colin Fletcher 192 Sometimes I willj then again, I think I won ' t. Forgotten Friction is an inherent part of living together, regardless 0 the relationship. Living together is easier if you accept it and do not overreact to it. It ' s you. It is a lot easier to get your zvay if you have more than one way. DOUG BOESEL SANDY MAXSON tried to remember what I thought and what I used to say. Cat Stevens 194  if ' k ' i ' jt y ,--.tj ., V. !|t ,■, , 4 ; ' i H ' ' •• TIM PARICHAN ■M : A . ( f be it sight, sound, a smell, or a touch the something inside that remains so much the sight of a touch or the scent of a sound or the strength of an oak with roots deep in the ground the wonder of fires to be covered again and then to burst up through Tarmak to the sun again or to fly to the sun without burning a wing to lie in a meadow and hear the grass sing to have all these things in our memory ' s orb and to use them to find HA HA HA H A G. Edge Rou Roue Roueeeee KLVK 195 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Alfred B. Hastings, Jr Chairman H. Earl Hoover II President William G. Henshaw III Vice President George H. Whiteney Treasurer-Vice President Gordon A. Wilson Secretary Peter Adams Frederick R. Hooper John F. Bishop Jack A. Korber John J. Burke Nathaniel Paschall Thomas A. Chandler Mrs. George Ponty Robert H. Carpenter Paul Reitler J. Randolph Elliott Charles E. Scripps Howard H. Earle Mrs. Ludlow Shonnard Carlton M. Higbie Robert Stragnell Earl Hightower Lek Von Kaesborg Martin B. Holt Thompson Webb HONORARY MEMBERS Alphonso E. Bell, Jr. Leon W. Scales Donald C. McKenna Millard Sheets Richard W. Millar Mrs. Elbert W. Shirk Mrs. Thomas M. Price 196 WOMEN ' S ASSOCIATES OFFICERS Mrs. Albert J. Rosenstein President Mrs. Roy Person Vice President Mrs. Frank G. Springer Recording Secretary Mrs. Martin T. Cooper Corresponding Secretary Mrs. William G. Cheverton Treasurer DIRECTORS Mrs. Daniel R. Young Mrs. William Wordon Mrs. Robert Stragnell Mrs. Achilles P. Anton Mrs. Jack Libaw Mrs. Arthur M. Gray Mrs. Hans Kretschmer Mrs. Roy Bergeson HONORARYMEMBERS Mrs. Norman MacLeod Mrs. Thomas Price Mrs. Harold Ruddick Mrs. John A. Sutro Mrs. Reese Hale Taylor ADVISORS Mr. Everett Burton Clary Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hooper Mr. Douglas C. Gregg Mrs. Richard Millar Dr. Thompson Webb Mrs. Ludlow Shonnard, Jr. 197 BASEBALL VARSITY JUNIOR VARSITY Pitts Zakem Avant, C. Contreras Baer Jackson Carnahan Hart Bayly Person Job Mascarin Crummey Platz McKinster Wetrich Lahar Anton, M. Montenegro Young Wood Mack Richards Wilson Wright Attyah NNIS VARSITY JUNIOR VARSITY TRACK VARSITY JUNIOR VARSITY Elliott (Co-Captain) Khan Anton, P. (Co-Captain) McKinley Issara, S. (Co-Captain) Wong Howard (Co-Captain) Mortazavi Barton Dennis Avant, M. Rowe Cox Hinrichs Berne Bridge Newman Issara, 0. Bishop Daneman Boatman Novelo, L. Cooper Davis Libaw Novelo, M. Gillette Williams Marcus Rand Graybill Bovett Miller Smith, W. Kirby Briner Million Torres Merritt Day Mirkin Heller Morrison Hildebrand CROSSCOUNTRY Odgers Krogh Bridge (Captain) Mirkin Plumb Lynch Howard Zee Rosenthal Moore Rosenthal Job Thoron Shinnick Magier Cooper Tseng Smith, K. Marcus Cheverton Watts Yen Thoron Yen Zischke Zee Atterbury Davis Pearce Reagan Gray (Manager) Armstrong, P DeShazo (Manager). FOOTBALL VARSITY B Jackson Watts Attyah Wilt Burke Heintz Bashner Young McCowan, B. Rauen Gillette Armstrong, P McKinley Person Hart Avant, C. Avant Hunter Jermain Day Norton Tseng Khan Hinrichs Springer Swallow Mascarin McCowan, D. Baer Mack Moore McKinster Zischke Zakem Paris Reagan McCowan, J. Eggington Schuman Richards Newman Bishop, P. Sims Skinnick Berne Elliott Still Smith, W. Crummey Van Fleet Wetrich Stevens, Sp. Barth Armstrong, D. Stevens, St. Boesel 198 WRESTLING! VARSITY JUNIOR V Jackson (Captain) Jermain Avant Green Moore Hart GOLF VARSITY JUNIOR VARSITY Burke (Captain) Aller.J. Aller, T. Magier Barton Warde Rosenberg Roberts Vongthongsri BASKETBALL Burke Person Wright Baer Anton, M. Pitts VARSITY Lahar Wood Rosenstein Tseng Bayly JUNIOR VARSITY Daneman Paris Dennis Reagan Huffman Snnith. W. Johnston Wilson Mascarin Wilt McCowan, J. Young McKinster Carnahan Montenegro Kirby SOCCER VARSITY Platz Anton, P. Merritt Pearce Rowe Thonnpson Worden Aller, J. Bridge Elliott McKinley Newman Stragneil Thoron Richards Miller Zealear (Co-Captain) McCowan, B. (Co-Captain) Stevens, Sp. Bashner Cheverton Khan Shuman Williams Brady Dix Heintz SWIMMING Hewson Martin, A. Piness Stecher Armstrong, D. Barth Carpenter Howard Kretschmer Martin, D. Monsour JUNIOR VARSITY Von Kaesborg (Captain) Kron Ponty Ogier Briner Aller, T. Gifford Contreras Moulton Hildebrand Martin, J. Bovett Job Garcia-Granados McCowan, D. Bishop, D. Million Richards Springer Stevens, St. Swallow Martin, J. McCowan, J. McKinley Thompson Avant, C. McCowan, D. Still Norton 199 SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs. John Attyah Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Avant Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Boesel John J. Burke Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Grey Dimond Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Fletcher Dr. and Mrs. James Green Patricia Maxson Dr. and Mrs. Wm.D. McCowan Mr. and Mrs. John Norton III Mr. and Mrs. George Ponty Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Parichan Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Rosenstein Dr. and Mrs. Robert Stragnell Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Young Dr. and Mrs. H.L. Mirkin DONORS Dr. and Mrs. Achilles P. Anton Bill Boatman Conrad Briner Mr. and Mrs. A.M. Gray Mrs. Irene D. Griffan Mr. and Mrs. Jack Libaw Lorance W. Lisle Mrs. J. Christina McKinley Dr. A. Mortazavi Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Rosenthal PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Bao Dr. and Mrs. Berle Barth Dr. and Mrs. R. Dudley Boyce Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bridge Mr. and Mrs. Martin Cooper Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Donin Mr. and Mrs. Charn Issara Drs. John and Nancy Sue Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Kron Mr. and Mrs. Samiel Magier Dr. Nathan E. Martin Mrs. Marilyn F. Monsour Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Paris Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Person Dorathy E. Platz Mr. and Mrs. John B. Rauen Jr. Mrs. Verna Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Walker Smith Jr. Capt. and Mrs. Frank Springer Mr. and Mrs. H. Sanford Williams Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Worden Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice W. Wright Jr. 200 James Stanton Aller 6440 N Van Ness Fresno, California 93705 (209)439-0438 Geoff Barth 1821 Lakecrest Circle Santa Ana, California 92705 (714) 639-9638 Marty Brmer 1221 Cambridge Claremont, California 91711 (714) 624-6800 Tom Alexander Aller 6440 N, Van Ness Fresno, California 93705 (209)439-0438 Richard Scott Barton 1 2538 Titus Avenue Saratoga, California 95070 (408)252-3961 Bob Burke 1 6860 Sunset Boulevard Pacific Palisades, California 90272 (213)454-0064 Mark Achilles Anton 761 1 Buena Vista Cucamonga, California 91 730 (714) 982-9737 Brian Bashner 691 3 Texhoma Avenue Northridge, California 91324 (213)349-8084 John Carpenter 51 50 Gloria Avenue Encmo, California 91316 (213) 789-9166 Peter Anton 761 1 Buena Vista Cucamonga, California 91 730 (714) 982-9737 Don Bayly Bayly Ranch Paicines, California 95043 (408)389 4505 Paul Madden Cheverton 2612 San Andre Way Claremont, California 91711 (714) 626-8893 Don Armstrong PO Box 345 Walnut Grove, California 95690 (916) 776-1636 Craig Berne 659 Valparaiso Claremont, California 91711 (714) 624-9751 James Thomas Churchman 4349 Faulkner Drive Fremont, California 94536 (415) 792-5737 Paul H Armstrong 2809 E Hillside Avenue Orange, California (714)998-2349 Doug M Bishop 600 Rodeo Road Fullerton. California 92632 (714) 525-9770 Ernesto Contreras 197 W. Franklin Avenue Pomona, California 91 766 (714) 622-1683 Clark Atterbury 1 236 Valley View Drive Glendale, California 91202 (213)247-6749 Peter Bishop 346 South Reno Avenue Los Angeles, California 90057 (213)380-8826 Tom Cooper 724 Clark Avenue Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 622-1862 Bob Attyah 1714 Lynoak Drive Claremont, California 91711 (714) 624-5964 Jim Boatman 4123 N. Garey La Verne, California 91 750 (714) 593-1 1 14 Jamie Cox 4884 Skyline Road Carlsbad, California 92008 (714) 729-5053 Chris Avant 270 Sequoia Drive Pasadena, California 91 105 (213) 793-3824 Doug Boesel 67 Westshore Road Belevedere, California 94920 (415)435-981 1 Jack Crummey 1455 N Echo Avenue Fresno, California 93728 (209)237-8820 Mich Avant 270 Sequoia Drive Pasadena, California 91 105 (213) 793-3824 David Bovett 535 Bishop Place Claremont, California 91711 (714) 626-6193 Steve Daneman 4698 Park Mirasol Calabasas. California (213) 888-1228 John Alan Baer 1 564 Hacienda Place Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 629-1026 Jim Boyce 16872 Phelps Lane Huntington Beach, California 92649 (714) 846-3520 John Davis 1941 Radford Drive Claremont, California 9171 1 (714) 626-7965 Irving K H Bao 2050 Jackson Street San Francisco, California (415) 522-8685 Dave Brady 52 Charles Hill Road Orinda, California 94563 (415)254 1488 Ben Day 61 5 San Marino Avenue San Marino, California 91 108 (213) 681-9128 Brian Bard 527 Cumberland Road Glendale, California 91202 (213)245-3577 Richard Bridge 871 5 Banyan Street Alta Loma, California 9 1 70 1 (714)987-2797 Dean Dennis 2514 N Mountain Avenue Claremont. California 91711 (714)624-8804 201 William DeShazo 1721 Carlyle Avenue Santa Monica, California 90402 (213)393-3976 James Vince DiMaio 2142 Doheny Place Capistrano Beach, California 92624 (714)496-5531 Lloyd Dix 3918 Bon Homme Road Woodland Hills, California 91364 (213)347-3021 Robert Donin 4065 La Junta Claremont, California 91711 (714) 593-2166 Paul Eggmgton 1623 Lafayette Road Claremont, California 91711 (714) 624-0705 Dave Elliott 174 North View Road Los Angeles, California 90049 (213)476-5966 Ed Fiock 1 833 N Mountain Avenue Claremont, California 91711 (714)624-6895 Michael P Fletcher Mission Hills Country Club Cathedral City, California (714)328-3970 Keith Gifford 2084 Yorba Drive Pomona, California 91 768 (714) 593-6247 Bob Gillette 509 E Alameda Street Altadena, California 91001 (213) 791-1848 Jose Samuel Gallegos Govea III 472 S. Woods Avenue Los Angeles, California 90027 (213)263-5314 Julio Rafael Garcia Granados 30 Del Mar Chula Vista, California (714)427-9519 Frank Gray 1700 Mermaid Drive San Pedro, California 90732 (213) 832-6021 Jeffrey Howard Graybill 1 9 Dapplegray Lane Rolling Hills Estates, Califonria 90274 (213)326-0486 James R Green 2220 Yucca Fullerton, California 92632 (714)871-6566 Jim Hart 2929 Claremont Heights Drive Claremont, California 91711 (714) 626-1135 Bob Heintz 409 S Lucerne Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90020 (213)933-4991 Michael P Heller 1666 North Beverly Drive Beverly Hills, California 90210 (213)275-4477 Gordon Hewson P Box 935 Zephyr Cove Zephyr Cove, Nevada 89448 (702) 588-6531 Harry Q. Higbie 93 Kenwood Road Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan 48236 (313)886-6825 Thomas Hildrebrand 1760 Midwick Drive Altadena, California 91001 (213) 797-4202 Mark Hmrichs 2007 Galatea Terrace Corona del Mar, California (714) 673-6114 Michael C Howard 2182 Tierra Rejada Road Moorpark, California 93021 (805) 529-0666 Peter Hubbard 6762 Hawarden Drive Riverside, California 92506 (714) 682-6620 Steve Huffman ' 547 Rider Street Claremont, California 91711 624-8177 Allan Hunter, Jr. 31435 E Nine Dr Laguna Niguel, Ca (714)493-2518 Olarn Issara 1 1 MakSawat Tungmahamek Bangkok, Thailand 860416 Songkran Issara 1 1 MakSawat Tungahamek Bangkok, Thailand 860416 Keith Jackson 505 E Whitcombe Glendora, California 91 740 (213)963-3454 Paul Jermain 623 N First Avenue Upland, California 91786 (714)982-4917 Richard Charles Job 1047 Moab Drive Claremont, California 91711 (714) 626-4976 Jeffrey Ian Johnston c o Aramco P Box 1 732 Dhahran, Saudi, Arabia 5930 Karim Khan 431 Glendora Mountain Road Glendora, California 91 740 (213)335-0015 D J Killeen 1730 Russell Place Pomona, California 91767 (714) 626-3817 David Kretschmer 14180 Sunset Boulevard Pacific Palisades, California 90272 (213)454-9701 Jeff D. Krogh 288 Freda Avenue Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 622-4605 Charles Edmund Kron P.O. Box 21 7 Flagstaff, Arizona 86001 (602) 774-6017 David Allen Lahar 1476 Lincoln Avenue Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 622-0079 Evan Justin Libaw 1 1 20 Summit Drive 202 Beverly Hills. California 90210 (213) 276-3543 Phil Lisle 305 E Orange Grove Avenue Sierra Madre, California 91024 (213) 355-1027 Gregory G Lynch 31 7 S Burlingame Los Angeles, California 90049 (213)451-4239 David Mack 1958 Valleio Street San Francisco, California 94123 (415)451-4239 Daniel J Madrid 1415 Meeker Avenue La Puente, California 91 746 (213)338 3348 David M Madrid 1415 Meeker Street La Puente, California 91 746 (213)338-3348 William I Magier 1928 E Merced Avenue West Covina. California 91 791 (213)331-8535 Charles Marcus 4816 Santa Ana Canyon Road Anaheim, California 92806 (714) 637-7349 Alan Martin 382 Lincoln Avenue Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 622-0712 Dale Martin 382 Lincoln Avenue Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 622-0712 James A Martin 382 Lincoln Avenue Pomona, California 91 767 (714) 622-0712 Peter Mascarin 2740 Clark Hill Drive West Covina, California 91 791 (213)339-1567 Sandy Maxson 1261 Sandalwood El Centro, California 92243 (714)352-3647 Bill McCowan 2640 N Prospero Drive Covina, California 91 722 (213)332 7239 Doug McCowan 2640 N Prospero Drive Covina, California 91 722 (213) 332-7239 John McCowan 2640 N Prospero Drive Covina, California 91 722 (213) 332 7239 Charles McKinley 1 3 1 Topaz Balboa Island. California 92662 (714) 675 8679 Jim McKinster 2319 Mesquite San Bernadino 92404 (714) 862-21 15 Mark Jackson Gordon Merritt 1826 Antioch Road Claremont, California 91711 (714)624-3409 Carey Million 4567 Martson Drive Encino. California 91316 (213)345-7632 Kevin Miller 7 1 6 Via Montevideo Claremont, California 9171 1 (714) 621-1804 Jon Mirkin 13069 East End Chino, California 91710 (714)627-1091 William Xerxes Monsour 508 West Eleventh Street Claremont, California 91711 (714) 621-2654 Alexander Montenegro 4519 N Park Avenue Baldwin Park, California 91 706 (213)962-5716 Willis Moore 821 E 41st. Place Los Angeles, California 9001 1 (213)231-0223 Christopher Richard Morrison 19185 Chloe Road Apple Valley, California 92307 (214) 242-2720 Kia Mortazavi 1 6 2 1 St Street Nader Shah Avenue Tehran Iran 827057 James Moulton 390 Lakeshore Road Beaconsfield, Quebec, Canada (514) 695-5615 John Donald Newman 3663 Washington Street San Francisco, California 94 1 1 8 (415) 563-0234 Michael Norton 681 6 N Joshua Tree Lane Scottsdale, Arizona 85253 (602)959 8806 Luis Novelo Osuna Estero Beach Hotel Resort Box 86 Ensenada B C Mexico 399-18 57 Mark Novelo Osuna Estero Beach Hotel Resort Box 86 Ensenada, B C Mexico 399-18 57 Chris R Odgers 2 580 N Mountain Avenue Claremont, California 91711 (714) 626-8626 Walter Charles Ogier 71 7 West Eighth Street Claremont, California 9171 1 (714) 624-6258 Tim Parichan 3410W Alluvial Fresno, California 93705 (209)431-0687 Tony Pans 1480 San Remo Drive Pacific Palisades, California 90272 (213)459-2703 Phil Pearce 4045 East Desert Crest Drive Scottsdale, Arizona 85253 (602)959-8354 Phil Perkins 2 140 Catowba Lane Newport Beach, California 645 8715 Warren Person 1 835 North Wilson Avenue Upland, California 91786 (714)982-7224 203 Tom Piness 645 W 9th St Claremont, California 91711 (714) 624-2179 Wallace James Pitts 742 West Hawthorne Ontario, California 91 762 (714)986-8455 George Platz 823 Mason Street San Francisco. California 94108 (415)474-2251 John Plumb 23882 La Hermosa Avenue Laquna Niguel, California (7{4) 495-5287 SG Pontv 14050 Sunset Boulevard Pacific Palisades 90272 (213)454-9563 Cham Rand = 7 Biltomre Estates Phoenix Arizona 8501 6 (602)956-7003 Peter Rauen 432 S McCadden Place Los Angeles, California 90020 (213)934-7377 Ron Reagan 1 669 San Onofre Drive Pacific Palisades. California 90272 Paul Richards 3409 Duke Claremont. California 91711 (714)626-4571 Larry Roberts 4003 Via Padua Claremont. California 91711 (714)626-3204 Ian Benny Rosenberg 4225 La Junta Drive Claremont. California 91711 (714) 593-3129 Craig Alan Rosenstein 4429 Trancas Place Tarzana. California 91356 (213)987-1219 Jerry Rosenthal 1915 Fifteenth Avenue San Francisco. California 941 1 6 (415) 566-1491 John Blackford Rowe 2151 Gainsbourough Drive Riverside California 92506 (714)686-4667 Jon Kris Schuman 1681 1 Sea Witch Lane Huntington Beach. California 92649 (714)826-1808 Deitrich Henry Sims 600 W Arbutus Compton. California 90220 (213) 636-5505 Mark Shinnick 461 N. Faring Road Los Angeles, California (213) 2 5- 1755 Kevin Smith 691 1 Rio Vista Drive Huntington Beach, California 92649 (714) 847-3080 Walker Smith III 901 Zurich Circle Newport Beach. California 92660 (714)673-1805 James McCall Springer 2 1 6 Roycroft Avenue Long Beach. California 90803 (213)433-5288 Bob Stecher 491 5 Queen Victoria Road Woodland Hills, California 91364 (213)436-9591 Spence Stevens 1569 N Euclid Avenue Upland. California 91786 (714)985-9132 Stuart Stevens 1569 N Euclid Avenue Upland. California 91786 (714)985-9132 Chuck Still 10399 Elk River Street Fountain Valley. California 92708 963-1343 Sandy Stragnell 262 W Lemon Avenue Arcadia, California 91006 (213)446-8654 Richard C Swallow 1 1585 Bellagio Road West Los Angeles. California 90049 (213)472-2480 Shawn Thompson 17 Ginger Tree Lane Coronado Cays Coronado California (714)429-3966 Thomas Gray Thoron 624 Highland Road Ithica. New York 14850 (607)273-5023 Mike Torres 909 Hartford Beverly Hills, California 90210 (213)274-9187 Roland Tseng 19130 Clymer Street Northridqe. California 91324 (213)363-7100 John Van Fleet 14606 Tigertail Road Apple Valley. California 92307 (714)242-3736 Danaichatra Vongthongsri 1 57 2 Soi Mahardlex Luang 2 Rajadumn Road Bangkok, Thailand 55036 Roger Van Kaesborg 121 E Sunset Drive Redlands California 9171 1 (714) 793-4955 Douglas Dunlap Warde 10060 Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90024 (213)274-7029 James Kennedy Moffit Watts 270 Sea Cliff Avenue San Francisco. California 94121 (415)386-5637 James Gleason Wetnch 1630 Barnard Road Claremont, California 91711 (714)626-7175 Lindsey Williams 4830 Bandera Montclair, California (714) 624-4381 Sandy Sanford Williams 1 500 Ramillo Avenue Long Beach. California 9081 5 (213) 597-1698 Mark Wilson 2156 Yorba Drive Pomona. California 91 768 (714) 593-2883 Bob Wilt 284 Lamar Claremont. California 91711 (713)626-7565 204 ■«• sr-r CS£. —one CjTic ' ' -• 11- 27 552 1 37 r-L ooc ■152 Vsr -- - - Csr- ar- : -. 31711 r7i4-.524-li2. ' . ' E ' - ' i ' i. 3. ' — rfS 5sace-£ la urTia SI 107 2 3i( 7s3r-7o23 ' abe- ■' ;— : ' — 7 ' i 5S -755G 3€7 War. — 0!_--t. Z .f-j—. s. = ' 71 1 _= ' i(er-e la.r i — ia5 730 S TiC. — £.rfnr .i£ r . Q 2.13; g2S-D4.73 - ' c 22i-2 i2 21S= CirL lei irijli.llc 51711 — - « s —  : = : W-s ' =-,ac v gi -:z.- 2ar ' - - __ ' _3ErH52 ' ■■:- - - : C-ol 5ac « 2 ' 3 22S- 2 ' = — Ji Z J -. T-_ . 5 advisor: bill ripley les enfants: sandy maxson sandy stragnell dick bridge doug boesel Charlie mckinley peter rauen matt zealear kurt zischke jack crummey bob heintz allan hunter david kretschmer mike norton george ponty tim parichan ken worden roger von kaesborg in appreciation; ens odgers craig rosenstein 206 207 don ' t be sad for the reflections will hurry and replace it for glad but i must hurry or i will go insane - so replace in your heart, soul and body a lightness . . me m PISCHEi PISCHEL YEARBOOKS INC 208 .it ' ' h ' Ctl-., J - h kui ii. Mxh i, . -V-i- 1 o Jf ' C c r ' 7 Lyi ' fC ■4 ' A - ' i - Ji-C J-dx - Vcr ! .6 c o ' ■iiM y ,(1. u --u - r- ' j7f ' 2 ' ' ' ' 2?r 3: -t- ' C i-v.-u-- (Tlllan ©. 9eunler, gr Q niQ. QMJ) W JCi t ) J CxA qmJL a jimiLi, (ywT) , [j jyffxsdoumjiA a jbcy oJvxiMJ) JiOJAJi UU cJLPj jyehll. 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1973, pg 130
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