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Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
©.
copyright 1974
David Ellis Btindcrman
The Tulane Jambalaya
http://www.archive.org/details/jambalayayearboo79edit
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DAVID ELLIS BLINDERMAN/Editor
STAGEY BERGER/Photography Editor
ALAN KRINZMAN/Associate Editor
RIGHARD PADDOR/Associate Editor
SUZANNE LICHTER/Business Manager
DEBORAH ARNOWITZ/Administrative Secretary
DALE MITGHELL/Administrative Secretary
ANDREA KISLAN/Secretary
GRANT BAGAN/Darkroom Manager
FRANGISGO ALEGHA/GRANT BAGAN/
STAGEY BERGER/DAVID BLINDERMAN/
STEVE BOROWITZ/ANDY BOYD/BILL GAMERON/
TOBY DARDEN/EDDIE HASLAM/LUD KIMBROUGH/
ROBERT PADDOR/HOWARD READ/LOUIS REMUS/
BILL TUGKER/MIKE SUSSMAN/DOUG VINGENT/
TOM PLANGHARD/Photographers
MATT ANDERSON/AVERY GROUNSE/WADE HANKS/
TOM LEE/MIKE SMITH/Gontributing
Photographers
DR. ANDY ANTIPPAS/Faculty Advisor
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It was Saturday night, after the St. Patrick's Day Parade .
It was Saturday night, after the St. Patrick's Day Parade, in Munsters Bar. The band was playing a request
number, "Every Man a King," which, if you don't remember, was one of Huey Long's more lasting endeavors
and a somewhat tuneful ditty. You could date the crowd by the number of people who knew the words and
could sing along. The average age was about 50.
The dance hall at Munsters has a concrete floor, hooks for coats, and a long, carved bar. The band — Tony
Fougerat's Kings of Poverty — plays a rough, raucous, and really traditional N(;w Orleans sound. Jazz, of course.
Very danceable. And everyone was dancing.
It seemed to me as I sat back at the table and took another swallow of Falstaff, that Munsters and the
band and the people were really part of what New Orleans is, what it's all about. Munsters, when you get down
to it, has a lot of things to offer: It's got good music, the beer's cheap (50 cents), they even have a juke box
with the latest hits for when the band takes a break.
You might say Munsters has already been discovered. The New Yorker wrote it up one time. Young
foreign jazz musicians almost always drop in once or twice while they're in town to sit in with the band. It's
chock full of local color. You can fairly easily get there by public transportation, and it's a lot of fun.
There wasn't one Tulane student in the place.
Now this ordinarily wouldn't worry me, Tulane alumna though I am. I see myself now as living in the
community of New Orleans, enjoying it for its own pleasures, and I don't often spend time wondering what the
New Orleans is a city that retains something other cities have lost
Tulane students are doing these days. And, if I really thought about it I could guess what they were doing.
They were probably going to the free fhck that Saturday night and either "streaking" through the aisles or out
on the quad or waiting for others of their kind to "streak" by. This is neither a good thing nor a bad thing.
But it struck me that the Tulane students were really missing something at Munsters bar.
And how many of you, Tulane students, are missing some of the good things of New Orleans?
Probably when you were getting ready to go to Tulane, one of the things that persuaded you and/or your
parents, friends, guidance counselor, etc., whoever helped you decide where you'd go to college, was the little
note in the brochures about New Orleans as an exciting place to be. Mardi Gras. The French Quarter. The
Mississippi River. The South. All those things that sound vaguely decadent, interesting, maybe different.
But once you get to Tulane, to school, how much of New Orleans are you actually seeing?
As universities go, Tulane is as capable cis any at satisfying whatever educational needs you might have.
And, also the other things that colleges provide: a waiting group of other young adults just like you, with
whom you can depend on enjoying whatever other young adults all over the rest of the United States are doing,
plus the university community which will hopefully give you a chance to bounce ideas off other minds, and, of
course, the ivory tower respite from the rest of the work-a-day world that comes, complete with tuition, in
your four years or so of college study.
But I hold that New Orleans itself has a great deal to offer that perhaps Tulane students are missing, and in
large numbers have been missing for many years.
New Orleans is a city that retains something that other cities have lost: a sense of roots, a sense of
beginnings, a sense that it really is a community. And the entrance into that community, the enjoyment of New
Orleans as a sensual environmental experience is something that no Tulane student should leave without.
New Orleans basically is still a place that can appeal to the senses. The sound of it - not only traditional
jazz, but the rattle of streetcars, boats on the river, mockingbirds in oak trees. These things no other place
could have in such profusion.
And the smell of it! Walk through New Orleans neighborhoods at suppertime, smell the aromas coming
out of kitchens. Garhc and onion, bayleaf and thyme, red beans and gumbo. The smell of the river that comes
wafting over French Quarter streets, hops from the breweries, roasting coffee reminiscent of burnt fudge.
The pleasures to the eye, yes, the French Quarter. Human in size, mellowed with age. The greenery, the
sort of thing you can see out of a streetcar window going up St. Charles. The softness of sky, the bruised colors
of sunset.
New Orleans might have its drawbacks. There are many poor people who live here. It is caught in the rising
swells of poUtics in all forms. The spectre of racism appears from time to time.
These are problems that you, as students, can help to solve. And should. Because even if only for four
years. New Orleans is your home, you are of voting age, you do have a stake in what happens to the city.
But just as a gift to yourself and for the sort of memories that you will treasure long after you have gone
away, give yourself the city of New Orleans.
Try the neighborhood bars. Talk to people. Take part in local festivals. Go to museums, ride the ferry,
take a date to the beach. Get out of the rut of the same people doing the same things.
The greater part of enjoying hfe with other people seems to me to be making an effort to enjoy life with
people who are not the same as you are: people who are older, younger, more conservative or more liberal.
People who are different, who don't dress or think or react the way you do.
The university community has a homogeneity not found in the community of the world at large. This is a
good thing. At its best the university community should be more a gathering place of ideas than the business
district or central city or the suburbs. But the community at large, with all its differences, has a great deal to
offer, apd, in New Orleans, because the city has always been a little out of the mainstream of American life,
you will find more interesting differences than you woidd in other cities.
New Orleans, to people who live other places, is a sort of Caribbean island, harassed at times by
hurricanes. Southern extremism, and politics. Yes, New Orleans may be all those things: but it's also a place
that many people CcJl home.
Cathryn Kolb
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Exigency, ExpediencL)- Education?
There are those, including this writer, who beheve
that the single most important event of the academic year,
1973—74, was Tulane's complete and overwhelming victory over
L.S.U. To be sure, this was a most auspicious and important
event and deserves its place as "something which will never
be forgotten." It was a great night.
Much less visible, but equally important, was the awaken-ing
to certain economic facts of life that the faculty, stu-dent
body and alumni experienced this past year. For the
first time ever, a faculty group began to talk in terms of
exigency. (A highly complex, meaningless word of financial
jargon that, in effect, means a state of financial "emergency.")
And, while their recommendations for a suspension of tenure
and other measures were not followed, the effect of the re-port
was to "wake up" this community to the unquestionable
fact that Tulane University is in serious financial trouble.
A fact that the faculty, students, and pathetically enough,
the administration, has been asleep to.
There are all sorts of reasons why Tulane is in the
financial shape it now finds itself. Inflation, the geomet-ric
rise in the cost of education (especially at the Medical
School), Nixonion cuts in federal aid to higher education,
poor administration for many years in particular areas, ris-ing
intercollegiate athletics deficit, etc., etc., etc. In
short, there are all kinds of reasons that explain the present
critical situation, some clearly beyond the control of the
present administration, others clearly within their control.
It is not my purpose here to say who is to blame, for what,
and why. The only question to ask at this point is how will
Tulane meet this crisis. What measures must be taken to sur-vive
financially and continue to excell academically?
In a sense, a crisis of these proportions offers an
equally large opportunity for change. If this administra-tion
is guilty of anything, it is guilty of responding to
these huge problems with small-minded, half-way measures.
The situation does not call for belt-tightening or window
dressing. We are in a state of affairs that cries out for
innovative reform, not the traditional means of merely cutting
budgets. Undergraduates will begin to feel the effects of
these measures next fall when many middle range courses in
certain disciplines will be cut out. Faculty will certainly
feel it as the administration asks (demands) that they increase
teaching loads. Recent alumni will painfully feel the effects
as the worth and stature of their diplomas decline. We are a
fortress under siege and our response, so far, has been to
throw pebbles at an army of well-armed problems.
In a large part, the future of this University hinges on
the completion and success of the new Medical Center. And it
is here again that we find numerous problems and complexities.
Early estimates on costs for the building were around $32 mil-
lion. But when it comes time for actual construction, the costs
could be as high as $75 milhon. Further, there is much doubt
as to whether this teaching hospital can make money as we have
been told it will. A great deal of skepticism exists among
the local medical community as to the need for yet another
hospital and said hospital's ability to simply "fill the beds,"
much less make money. It is a risky business, a risk and a
business whose success is inexorably tied to the future success
of the University.
Beyond this, the way is clear for necessary and sweeping
changes. First, the educational objective of Tulane, as a
private university, must be re-examined. Our purpose, from
both an educational and business viewpoint, must be clearly
defined. If we cannot define what we seek to achieve as an
institution, we will never discover how we are to achieve it.
In line with this re-examination, curriculum should come under
the closest of scrutiny. You know, college is the place where
you learn about how unchangeable and immutable other institu-tions
are. Yet the concept of college, its properties and pur-poses,
stand out as extremely closed to change. The "aristo-cracy
of competence" as represented by the faculty has proven
time and again to be an "aristocracy of indecision."
There is a figure who looms very large in the future of
Tulane University. He or she is, as yet, unnamed. The selec-tion
of a new president for the University is, unquestionably,
the single variable that will be most important for the future
of the institution. A fair, progressive system has been set
up to choose this individual. The Board of Administrators is
to be commended this account. They are also to be warned
on another account. The Board, in whose hands rests the final
decision, must choose someone who can be free — free to slaugh-ter
sacred cows, free to step on previously sacred toes. If
this new president, in consultation with faculty and students,
is not given the authority to change substantially the course
of the University, then we need not bother selecting one at
all. Incumbent upon all groups is the responsibility that
this president be the right man for an extremely difficult
job. We cannot afford a mistake.
Being self-indulgent and slightly pompous (as one is
allowed to be in such an article) I submit that Tulane's
future is good. It is good because a University is more than
a balanced budget. It is good because a University is more
than one football victory or an entire football season. It
is good because a University IS people. Students, faculty,
staff and even administration people. The potential for great-ness
exists among all these different people. The true test
is in finding the proper means for implementing the kinds of
changes that need to be made.
James A. Cobb, Jr.
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White socks — black socks — no socks — barefoot.
Cordovans — loafers — tennis shoes — combat boots.
Short skirts — long "granny" dresses — hot pants — bermudas.
Tee shirts — sweat shirts — flower shirts — no shirts.
Crew cuts — long hair — straight hair — curls — afros.
Horn rims — steel rims — no rims — perpetual sun glasses.
Street cars — sport cars — old cars — ten speed bicycles.
The pattern repeats itself — the old becomes new — the new becomes old —
plus c'a change, plus c'est la meme chose.
I came to Tulane in 1937 when Rufus Harris left the law school dean-ship
to become President of Tulane. My hair was longer than the students
and the cry was raised at the Barrister's Brawl:
"Give him a hank
Give him a bone
Give him a haircut
Stone, Stone, Stone."
I still had remnants of an Oxford accent despite a year in Wyoming and I
still used certain English mannerisms such as eating with my left hand.
These were noted and remarked. 1 was too stubborn to change all at once
though Tulane was as conformist then as now — the only difference being
the mores to which one conforms.
Tulane and Newcomb then belonged essentially to New Orleans and
a bit to Louisiana. Occasionally a Mississippian or a Texan came over.
It was a streetcar college and there were streetcars on St. Charles,
Freret, Broadway and Prytania. The only men who lived on campus were the
athletes who were housed in Alcee Fortier Hall. The girls were more fortu-nate
in their housing. The Law School was in the lower floors of Dinwiddle
Hall. The Library was all in Tilton Hall. The first two years of medical
studies were in Richardson Memorial. The Physics and Chemistry Buildings
were less unattractive than now because they were covered with ivy as
befitted the "Princeton of the South". Business Administration was an
undergraduate college and Norman Mayer Building had yet to be built.
Tennis Courts sat where now the University Center stands and Emmett Pare
developed nationally famous teams.
Tulane and Newcomb were smaller then. Foundations and government
projects had not yet discovered us. There were few grants, loans or scholar-ships.
Education was a luxury, but if you eould afford it, it was personal
and challenging. You were taught by the "old pros" — graduate assistants
were scarce. You knew the teacliers and gave them nick-names. They knew
you and chances were good that tliey had taught your parents or aunts or
uncles. The cafeteria was in the building which now houses political
science and one ate at tables under the great tree, and there was always
coffee at five cents a cup. Tliere were literary societies anil poetry clubs
at which teachers and students read papers. The Tulane Theatre presented
plays in Dixon Hall. Campus Nite was largely a series of fraternity skits.
The stadium had not yet become a bowl and football belonged to the students
and old grads and not to the football pools. Commencement was held in the
Municipal Auditorium and later when McAhster was built, there. Still
later it took place under the trees behind Gibson Hall rain permitting.
There seemed to be less grubbing for grades — less tension about
class ranking — personal rather than anonymous grading — essay exams rather
than true-false and multiple choice — no aptitude tests or vocational pro-files
— no computerized programming — fewer decisions by rule and more
individualization of cases — more attention to the whole person.
Paths across campus went in graceful curves rather than in today's
efficient straight lines and while the curves took longer, they were more
relaxing.
The war brought to Tulane, as to other universities, a sense of
urgency and many of the gracious forms of living gave way to practical,
efficient ways.
But now I detect ever so slightly a return to graciousness. Peo-ple
call out "Hi" or "Have a good day" to one another as they pass. And
what is more, the smile that often goes with the greeting seems a seal of
genuineness. People seem again to care and earing is important whether it
be for one's fellow, (privileged or under-privileged — both need caring) a
pet or the way a green lawn looks. It is also good to see the open green
places used for cricket, soccer, rugby and intramural sports and to see
the rivalry develop between houses, fraternities and colleges. Such wide-spread
participation leads to a great university.
Tulane is a fine institution. In its 140 years it has developed a
personality of its own — a reputation for excellence, a sense of balance
and good humor, a realization that a university worth its salt is measured
not simply by the brilliance of its men and women but by its heart and its
dedication to helping men and women to find themselves and to develop
their talents.
—Ferdinand Stone
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R. Buckminister Fuller
JimnriL) "The Greek" Snyder
U. S. Senator Sam Ervjn
U. S. Senator Daniel Inouye
Todd Rundgren
Dave Brubeck
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New Orleans Symphony
Tulane University Theatre
As You Like It
Tulane University Theatre
"Ernest In Love'
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The Tulanians
Look around you, especially you old-timers who can remember our little
streetcar university and its comfortable home town where a small stream of
visitors were personally entertained by local friends with river shrimp, jazz
and voodoo stories. Look and try to believe what you see coming, it's beyond
your wildest dreams. The splendid twenty-three stories of the Hibernia tower
of 1921, listed in almanacs as among the world's tallest and thought to be
the highest our pleistocene clay and noble pinetree pilings could support,
is now more than doubled, thanks to the new technology of concrete and the
innovative efforts of a talented son of our own back-bayou country. More
skyline rivals in the offing, some promised by new foreign capitalizers, at
least one envisioned by an enterprizing character out of the long local French
tradition, who sees things big, in ambitious rivalry of the latest manner.
But, there are more developments and more to come. A large inner harbor
project already activated. A symbolically conspicuous Trade Mart and Rivergate,
complete with a Convention-Exhibition Hall big enough to contain a Bob Hope
spectacular or a Nixon event. An active, pushing Centroport organization,
keeping apace with the latest containerized methods of cargo handling. A
dedicated municipal administration, staffed with youthful activists and
intellectuals, breathlessly scrounging to find new schemes for the old city.
I
"Gone are the river shrimp and the State's emblematic brown pelican; gone are the
chained-down silver sugar bowls, the agreeably countrified vegetable-oats-and-horses smells
and the pleasant coffee-and-beignet curb service at the French Market . .
."
to maintain and feed its character, image and vitality. Plans and studies
in progress for an extraordinary, controversial superport in the Gulf,
studies for region-wide movement of workers, visitors and goods, for an
activated and upgraded Central Business District, capitalizing its existing
advantages, for a large new-town development in New Orleans East, and for
rehabilitation of the neglected or backsliding elements of the population.
Above all, a vast, imitative but record-breaking arena rising to dominate the
city's profile, accompanied by a niounting rash of efficient overnight
entertainments and accommodations. Garibaldi once called Rome "the greatest
theatre in the world" but soon the superstadium, together with it Bourbon
Street supplement, may become its twentieth century replacement, in keeping
with an outstanding keynote of these times—the Image, the plastic reality,
the surrogated experience, the pseudo-event.
Some lovers of a New Orleans they have known and cherished question
plaintively today whether that once colorful, now slightly faded dream can
survive the engulfing volume and force of the latest expansions and
transformations. Gone are the river shrimp and the State's emblematic brown
pelican; gone are the chained-down silver sugar bowls, the agreeably countrified
vegetables-oats-and-horses smells and the pleasant coffee-and-beignet curb
service at the French Market (to make way for an undoubtedly far more
remunerative operation); gone are the exquisitely fanciful carved creatures
of Audubon Park's carousel (probably a handsome profit for some clever
antiques dealer); gone are the pride and amplitude of Esplanade's and St.
Charles Avenue's many fine specimens, victims of needless land speculation,
a toothless portrait of parking-lot or petrochemical economics; gone too,
the urban bustle of downtown's Cotton Exchange days with its white-starched,
white-haired gentlemen in white pananama hats.
But not entirely gone, while the Times-Picayune and Public Service hang
on, or the Boston and Pickwick Club hegemony, and our Administrators who
remember the thrill of being King for a day to the sweeping tunes of Dixieland
and military bands, supreme over all, even over the invading waves and
hoards of uninvited rockfest participants.
We do not need the Tourist and Convention Commission or the Association
of Commerce to remind us that this is a Unique City. Far more than their
ghostwriters realize, this is truly a special spot, comparable to Venice,
Istanbul or Kyoto, a piece of shifting earth at one of the planet's few
great estuaries, seized and maneuvered by some of the most resourceful
adventures, builders and scapegrace manipulators from all the pages of
"As throughout our past, there is a throb of conflicts and controversies that all
coalesce incoherently, like the trinkets and scrambles, the music and shouting,
the barbaric reversions and courtly provincialisms of Carnival day . .
."
recent history. In spite of numerous inventive devices to make this strategic
spot habitable and productive, New Orleans is unique chiefly through
imitation and assimilation rather than through innovation. Few if any of the
dominatit new features, either of the dying old civilization or of the
oncoming new era, have originated here. Indeed, New Orleans has been usually
a little slow in taking up with new trends. This has sometimes contributed
to the preservation of a characteristic local flavor, as when we had a law,
unique in the nation, prohibiting urban renewal, this during the period
when renevsfal usually meant the wholesale, often indiscriminate wiping out
of extensive areas of inner city blocks.
The excessive and unplanned thrust of highrise offices and hotels, the
Trade Mart Tower or Armstrong Tourist Park, are largely borrowed schemes,
infiltration by national corporations or plans by borrowed talents. Yet
the general outlook, the energy and splurge of the 1970's regime have a
promising freshness, an awareness of a heritage of rich potential with its
implicit destiny. As throughout our past, there is a throb of conflicts and
controversies that all coalesce incoherently, like the trinkets and
scrambles, the music and shouting, the barbaric reversions and courtly
provincialisms of Carnival day.
The native redmen must have been dismayed by the axes of Frenchmen that
carved out a village at their convenient river-to-lake portage, just as
later Frenchmen fought in the bilingual legislature to save their convenient
economy from the onslaught of interprizing yankees. For years they divided
New Orleans into isolated Municipalities, separated by Canal Street, only
to admit eventually their common interest.
New Orleans, like every city and even the least significant place in
history, is inherently conditioned by the genes of its locale and remote
origins, which remain as significant determinants amid the reshaping of
subsequent inputs. As a continental delta region and an international
seaport she has reached out and gathered unto herself an incredible grabbag
of peoples and practices. Long before this century of relativity, outer
space, atomic theory and cybernetics, she learned the great unifying and
vitalizing truth of contrasts, contradictions and irreconciliable impulses.
The world port must realize its unique qualities inevitably in relation
to the one-world sameness of our times. There is no escape from the
adolescence of this age, with its blemishes and growing pains. There is
hardly a corner of earth sheltered from the organized chains of commercial
paradises with conditioned air, heated pools and that little packaged soap
that secures the traveller reassuringly in his home away from home. When
you tire of the Athens or Istanbul Hilton, you can skip on to Shangri-la
in Singapore. Or drop in on "Heaven on Earth—they call it Bourbon Street."
So once again she shall assimilate the prevailing inputs of our times
and our culture: the shams and pretenses that dominate this century of
the Big Lie, the artificial image-making of diplomacy, government,
communications and marketing.
You ask, can our local intimate charm and flavor survive this engulfing
flood of organized fakery? A city that has known so many killing storms
and plagues will manage to absorb the waves of surburban sprawl as well
as the sclerosis of midtown bigtime of the Vegas-Miami syndrome. After all,
the very essence of New Orleans is pervaded by mummery and make-believe,
and its indigenous character is richly flavored with a long tradition of
colorful opportunism. Remember, also, that there is a point of no return
for highrise, tourism and exploitation. We have thrived on vivid dramas,
lived with the lethal threats of mosquitoes and exploiters. As long as the
dampness of earth rises and clouds burst down upon our gardens and oyster
beds, as long as rivers flow to the sea, some semblance of the New old
New Orleans will be renewed again. The odds are fairly good that the
planet will continue to thrive. While it does, this rich spot of shifting
topsoil, sister of the original. Biblical Eden, will continue to produce
a rich, beautiful courtbouillon.
—Bernard Lemann
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The 1974 Tulane Team
10 Steve Foley, QB
11 David Eckdahl, QB
12 Terry Looney QB
13 Martin Mitchell, DHB
14 Jaime Garza, FL
15 Buddy Gilbert, QB
16MikeKeeffe, SAF
17 David Falgoust, PK
18 David Bordes, DHB
19 Jeff Smith, SE
20 David Griener, M
21 Charles Cline, M
22 Mike Foley, SE
23 John Washington, DHB
24 Tom Fortner, FL
25 Wyatt Washington, DHB
26 Coleman Dupre, FL
27 Wally Harris, DHB
28 Randy Cothran, TB
29 David Lee, SAF
30 Bill Huber, FB
31 Virgil Vaughan, FB
32 Miles Clements, FB
33 Howard McNeill, LB
34 D. D. Thompson, SAF
35 Mike Loftin, M
36 Bill VanManen, FL
37 Kit Bonvillian, LB
38 Lyndon Lasiter, FB
40 Gary Rudick, FB
41 Mike Price, SAF
42 Don Lemon, TB
43 Ricky Hebert, TB
44 Steve Treuting, TB
15 Eddie Price, TB
46 Robert Brown, DHB
47 Nick Anderson, SE
48 Doug Bynum, TB
49 George Madland, M
50 Brent Baber, NG
51 Scott Mann, OT
52 Steve Wade, C
53 Rusty Chambers, LB
54 Hank Tatje, LB
55 Jim Gueno, LB
56 Bill Nix, C
57 Jay McGrew, DT
58 Cameron Gaston, C
59 Don Joyce, LB
60 yVlan Baker, OT
61 Mike Korf, OT
62 Brian Bourgeois, OT
63 John Ronquillo, OG
64 Mike Owens, OG
65 Mark Olivari, NG
66 Roland Szubinski, NG
67 Doug Lawrence, OG
68 Mark Jones, NG
69 Mike Arthur, OG
70 Nathan Bell, DT
71 Mahlon Harrell, OT
72 Dennis Delaney, OG
73 John John, DT
74 Rick Rutledge, OT
75 Gerry Chidester, DT
76 Ed Mikkelsen, OT
77 Paul Brock, DT
78 Wayne Lemelle, DT
79 Charles Hall, DT
80 Chuck Lapeyre, DE
81 Mike Trapani, DE
82 Frank Anderson, SE
83 Mike Truax, DE
84 Darwin Willie, TE
85 Rene Faucheux, TE
86 Bryan Alexander, DE
87 Dick Pryor, DE
88 Cliff Voltapetti, DE
89 Tom Thibodeaux, TE
Bennie Ellender, Head Coach
Don Jackson, Asst. Coach
Marvin Hagaman, Asst. Coach
Oscar Lofton, Frosh Coach
Joe Jones, Asst. Coach
Tony Misita, Asst. Coach
Billy Laird, Asst. Coach
Tulane 21, Boston College 16
Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La.
Sept. 22, Night (33,880)
Tulane 24, Pittsburgh 6
Pitt Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Oct. 6 (25,054)
Boston College 7 3 6 16 Tulane
Tulane 21 21 Pitt
10 14 25
6 6
BC—Esposito 5 run (Steinfort kick)
TU-S. Foley 35 run (Falgoust kick)
TU-S. Foley 35 run (Falgoust kick)
BC-Steinfort 39 field goal
BC—Zumbach 22 pass from Marangi (Run failed)
TU—F. Anderson 41 pass from S. Foley (Falgoust kick)
TU—Falgoust 39 field goal
PITT-Daniels 4 run (Run failed)
TU—M. Foley 55 pass from Looney (Falgoust kick)
TU—Hebert 5 run (Falgoust kick)
Tulane 42, V.M.LO
Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La.
Sept. 29, Night (25,037)
Tulane 24, Duke 17
Wallace Wade Stadium, Durham, N.C.
Oct. 13 (20,500)
V.M.L 9 9 9 9 9 Tulan
Tulane 14 7 7 14 42 Duke 10
10 24
17
TU-S. Foley 72 run (Falgoust kick)
TU—Garza 23 pass from S. Foley (Falgoust kick)
TU—Hebert 5 run (Falgoust kick)
TU—F. Anderson 50 pass from S. Foley (Falgoust kick)
TU—Price 11 run (Falgoust kick)
TU—Cothran 1 run (Falgoust kick)
TU-S. Foley 3 run (Falgoust kick)
TU—Garza 30 pass from Looney (Falgoust kick)
DUKE-Slade 85 punt return (Melechek kick)
DUKE-Martinez 2 run (Melechek kick)
TU-Falgoust 37 field goal
TU-M. Foley 3 pass from S. Foley (Falgoust kick)
Tulane 16, North Carolina O Tulane 24, Vanderbilt 3
Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La. Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La.
Oct. 20, Night (38,,'502) Nov. 17, Night (31,199)
North Carolina Vanderbilt 3 3
Tulane 10 6 16 Tulane 14 3 7 24
TU—Bynum 6 run (Falgoust kick)
TU-Falgoust 25 field goal
TU—Bynum 5 run (Pass failed)
Tulane 23, Georgia Tech 14
Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La.
TU-S. Foley 45 run (Falgoust kick)
VANDY-Golden 40 field goal
TU—S. Foley 1 run (Falgoust kick)
TU-Falgoust 37 field goal
TU—Garza 10 pass from Looney (Falgoust kick)
Maryland 42, Tulane 9
Oct. 27, Night (66,836) Byrd Stadium, College Park, Md.
Georgia Tech 7 7 14
Nov. 24(19,416)
Tulane 9 3 8 3 23 Tulane 3 6 9
Maryland 7 7 14 14 42
TU—Safety-Ball over punter's head through end zone
TU—Price 1 run (Falgoust kick)
G.T.—Stevens 1 run (Bonifay kick)
TU-Falgoust 25 field goal
G.T.—Home 1 run (Bonifay kick)
TU—Price 19 run (S. Foley run)
TU-Falgoust 42 field goal
Kentucky 34, Tulane 7
AID-Carter 1 run (Mike-Mayer kick)
MD-Russell 32 pass from Carter (Mike-Mayer kick)
TU-Falgoust 24 field goal
MD—Hoover 57 pass from Kinard (Mike-Mayer kick)
MD—Bungori 44 pass from Carter (Mike-Mayer kick)
MD-Carter 4 run (Mike-Mayer kick)
TU—M. Foley 4 pass from Looney (kick failed)
MD-Alkire 11 pass from Neville (Mike-Mayer kick)
Commonwealth Stadium, Lexington, Ky. luiane r, lou kj
Nov. 3 (49,360)
Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La.
Tulane «
Kentucky 10 10 7
7
7
7
34
'Oec. 1, Night (86,598)
LSU
KY-Steele 27 field goal Tulane 7 7 14
KY—Collins 1 run (Steele kick)
KY—Fanuzzi 1 run (Steele kick)
KY—Collins 1 run (Steele kick)
TU—Treuting 1 run (Falgoust kick)
KY—Collins 1 run (Steele kick)
Tulane 17, Navy 15
TU—Willie 36 pass from Looney (Falgoust kick)
TU—Lasiter 1 run (Falgoust kick)
Houston 47, Tulane 7
Astrodome, Houston, Texas
Dec. 29 (44,358)
Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl
Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, La. Tulane 7 7
Nov. 10, Night (40,135) Houston 7 14 14 12 47
Navy
Tulane 14
7
3
8 15
17
HOU-Johnson 75 run (Terrell kick)
Ti^TT i-» 1 o /rr iii.:_K\
TU—Garza 8 pass from S. Foley (Falgoust kick)
TU—M. Foley 35 pass from S. Foley (Falgoust kick)
TU-Falgoust 41 field goal
NAVY-Gilmore 3 pass (Dykes kick)
NAVY—Calland 9 pass from Glenny (Calland pass from Glenny)
HOU-Parker 3 run (Terrell kick)
HOU-Parker 3 run (Terrell kick)
TU-Fortner 32 pass from Gilbert (Falgoust kick)
HOU-Nobles 3 run (Terrell kick)
HOU-McGraw 1 run (Terrell kick)
HOU-McGraw 32 run (kick failed)
HOU-Husmann 7 run (kick failed)
^'\AA/
LH
13 I* i-"
The buzzer sounds. The ball players, worming their way through the
bustling crowd, walk speedily to the locker room. Tonight it's the loser's
locker room. Each player quickly finds a bench and squats. Heads drop like
flies. Silence reigns. Sweat trickles down the necks of a few players.
Frustration is evident in the frowns of others. Equipment boss Joe Charles
is present. He passes out looks of consolation. After a few long minutes
Coach Moir enters this den of dejection. No one moves. The Coach utters a
few words about hustle and determination. The players listen with respect
but their minds are thinking back to that buzzer and what it signifies.
After a few minutes there is movement towards the showers.
For those of us who played basketball for Tulane this year the above
scene was reenacted far too many times. Our record for the season was 12 wins
and 14 losses. Before the season began we set as our minimum goal a break
even year. To this end we failed. Yet, the season was by no means a disaster.
After losing, early in the season, seven straight games the team came back
to win six of the last eight games. Not only did the squad play as well as
I've ever seen a Tulane team play, but the fans came alive with bubbhng
excitement. It was during this part of the season, the winning part, that
one could sense the shining future of Tulane roundball. What I noted was
more than just the dominating talent of a leaping center, the accurate
shooting of quick guards, or the cool composed thinking of a good coach.
These things, of course, are important. But, I was struck with the attitude
of dedication exhibited by all the players toward making the sacrifices for
a winning team. Players who'd sit the bench for 40 minutes a game would be
at practice the next day hustling as hard as they possbily could. These
players never once gave up and neither did our team. We might have lost our
share of games but we always came back fighting. It is because of this trait
that I feel there is a bright future ahead for Tulane basketball. I'm only
sorry the Seniors won't be here to take part in it.
The buzzer sounds. The fans are chaotically cheering. The players walk
back to the dressing room with smiles of content plastered over their faces.
Hands reach to them in congratulations. A hundred "good game" expressions
are spouted from a hundred different directions. All enter the locker room.
There's much yeUing and screaming—no words, just yelHng and screaming.
No one is sitting as there's too much excitement to sit. Joe is there, as
always, but this time with a wide grin and a sparkle in his eye. The
coaches now burst into the room. They go to each player and congratulate him
on the game. No pep talk is needed so none is given. Everyone is happy. The
season is over and Tulane has won its last game of the year. Already,
thoughts are travehng to next season. Unlike so many before, next year
promises, at the very least, Hope.
—Jeffery Bruce Morris
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The 1974 Tulane Team
11 Bruce Bolyard, G
14 John Thompson, G
15 Marc Mirsky, G
22 Steve Stanley, F
24 John Bobzien, G-F
25 Luther Strange, C
30 Dave Renfroe, F-G
The Games
31 Toney BeauUeu, G
33 Phil Hicks, C-F
34 Paul Yungst, G
40 Jim Stanczak, F-C
43 Jeff Morris, F-G
45 Tim La Hann, C
54 Greg Spannuth, F-C
Charles Moir, Head Coach
Don Brown, Asst. Coach
Johnny Altobello, Asst. Coach
Joe Charles, Equipt. Man.
Date Opponent
11/30 U. of Alabama at Huntsville
12/3 U. of Illinois
12/6 U. of Southern Mississippi
12/8 Georgia State
12/19 Louisiana State Univ.
12/21 New Mexico State
12/22 Arizona State
12/27 Louisiana State Univ.
1/7 Valparaiso Univ.
1/8 U. of Arkansas
1/12 U. of Southern Mississippi
1/14 Stetson Univ.
1/19 Georgia Tech
1/21 U. of New Orleans
1/23 Dillard Univ.
1/26 U. of South Alabama
1/30 Xavier Univ.
2/2 Dillard Univ.
2/4 U. of Birmingham Southern
2/7- Samford Univ.
2/9 Utah State
2/13 Xavier Univ.
2/16 U. of South Alabama
2/18 U. of New Orleans
2/20 Georgia Tech
3/1 Ball State
Hi Scorer Hi Rebounder
81-65 H-W Renfroe-24 Renfroe-9
78-99 A-L Strange-19 Renfroe-12
95-78 A-W Renfroe-28 Strange-9
81-63 H-W Renfroe-18 Strange-10
60-67 H-L Hicks-19 Hicks-13
63-76 A-L Strange-16 Strange-14
70-119 N-L Renfroe-21 Hicks-10
44-76 A-L Hicks-12 Strange-12
63-68 A-L BeauUeu-15 Hicks-15
73-89 A-L Renfroe-27 Renfroe-8
83-88 H-L Morris-27 Strange-12
64-58 H-W Beaulieu-22 Renfroe-7
96-90 H-W Hicks-32 Hicks-14
79-81 H-L Renfroe-21 Morris-9
93-91 A-W Hicks-34 Hicks-25
71-104 A-L Morris-20 Hicks-14
53-61 A-L Hicks-19 Hicks-13
85-96 H-L Hicks-26 Hicks-19
80-63 H-W Hicks-22 Hicks-21
77-69 A-W Hicks41 Hicks-14
86-105 A-L Hicks-28 Hicks-15
97-76 H-W Hicks-28 Hicks-24
78-72 H-W Hicks-33 Hicks-20
74-78 A-L Renfroe-20 Hicks-11
71-70 A-W Hicks-14 Hicks.8
95-89 H-W Hicks-29 Hicks-15
*4^:^v-k^-?5^^.-!t^-
Baseball
The 1974 Tulane Team
R. J. Barios
Tony Beaulieu
Gary Bernard
Kenny Cronin
Vincent de Grouttola
John Foto
Jim Gaudet
Don Hartman
Jory Ketlin
John Kuhlman
John Leblanc
Ron Marcomb
Bryan Martiny
Brad Moore
Bill Morris
Steve Mura
Ralph Prats
Steve Pumila
Mariln Rogers
Gary Roney
Mike Rouen
John Ryan
Fred Schroeder
Dave Seay
Mark Spansel
Frank Steele
Don Tauzier
Bruce Thomas
Dave Zering
Milt Retif, Coach
The Games
Tulane 11 Spring Hill 1
Tulane 10 Spring Hill
Tulane 6 Arkansas State 2
Tulane 17 Arkansas State 2
Tulane 11 Arkansas State 3
Tulane 1 L.S.U. 2
Tulane 8 Notre Dame 7
Tulane 3 Notre Dame
Tulane 5 Notre Dame 1
Tulane 3 Western Illinois 5
Tulane 11 Western Illinois 5
Tulane 3 Drake 1
Tulane 3 Drake 4
Tulane 6 Western IlUnois 8
Tulane 2 Stanford 14
Tulane 2 U.C.L.A. 4
Tulane 7 Oregon 8
Tulane 2 Arizona State 9
Tulane 7 California Riverside 5
Tulane 4 Wisconsin 3
Tulane 4 Brigham Young 14
Tulane 20 North Park 2
Tulane 5 North Park 1
Tulane 18 St. Bernard 1
Tulane 4 St. Bernard 8
Tulane 2 D<-lta State 3
Tulane 5 Delta State 2
Tulane 1 U.N.O. 4
Tulane 16 U.N.O. 8
Tulane 3 L.S.U. 6
Tulane 13 Louisiana College 5
Tulane 3 Louisiana College 2
Tulane 6 Louisiana College 5
Sailing Team
The 1974 Tulane Sailing Team
Doug Brown
Doug Bull/Captain
Toby Darden/Co-Captain
Augie Diaz/Co-Captain
Lud Kimbrough
Jenifer Lehmanii
Dan Nash
Blu Putnam
Lee Schuman
Fred Stack
Bob Weber
Regattas
Regatta
PIRATE REGATTA
T.U.S.C. FALL INVITATIONAL
U.S.L. INVITATIONAL
SEISA C/B SLOOP CHAMPIONSHIP
UWF HALLOWEEN
BALDWIN WOOD
DOUGLAS CUP
TIMME ANGSTEN
SUGAR BOWL
WINDJAMMER
YACHT RACING INTERSECTIONAL
SEISA INTERMEDIATE SLOOP
SEISA MONOTYPE CHAMPIONSHIP
SEISA DINGHY CHAMPIONSHIP
ICYRA of NA TEAM RACING
ICYRA of NA MONOTYPE CHAMPIONSHIP
ICYRA of NA INTERMEDIATE SLOOP
ICYRA of NA DINGHY CHAMPIONSHIP
Place
Pensacola, Florida
New Orleans
Lafayette, La.
Tallahassee, Florida
Pensacola, Florida
New Orleans
Long Beach, Calif.
Chicago, Illinois
New Orleans
New Orleans
Kings Point, N. Y.
Pensacola, Florida
New Orleans
New Orleans
Boston, Mass.
Boston, Mass.
New London, Conn.
Boston, Mass.
Finish
1
2
1
2
1
1
6
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
3
Final Skipper Standing
Races Points Average
Augie Diaz 59 161 2.72
Doug Bull 67 220 3.28
Dan Nash 67 228 3.38
Toby Darden 67 228 3.38
Doug Brown 67 228 3.38
Chris Peragine 10 48 4.8
Ross Dierdorff 15 73 4.87
Tom Merie 26 134 5.15
Bob Weber 10 63 6.3
Lud Kimbrough 32 208 6.5
Jim Kinsey 23 150 6.52
Ed Nelson 20 131 6.55
Brian Zipp 10 86 8.6
Swimming
Don Barnes
Brian Beach
Bill Bower
Paul Buhrer
Brian Burke
Lon Cartwright
David Cowaniec
James Deluca
David Gange
Ben Goslin
Scott Handler
Niel Hanson
John HerHhy
Bob Hughes
Craig McPherson
David O'Leary
Mike Reynolds
Buzz Stagg
Richard Steele
Robert Streed
Betty Tieckelmann
Edward Tirpack
Constance Walker
Tracl^
Nick Anderson
Bruce Bowers
Steve Brooksher
Warren Chandler
Jason Collins
Dennis Gordon
Steve Hartberg
Daniel Heffron
Randy Johnson
David Legett
Steve Meyer
Frank Murphy
Melvin Paret
Thomas Pond
Robert Sahuque
Gary Weiss
Billy Wilcox
Johnny Oelkers/Coaeh
C. Richard Bower/Coach
Tennis
Steve Buerger
Mark Burnstein
Mark Harner
Davis Henley
Bruce Mertz
David Schumacher
Jeff Smith
Sean Terry
Mike Zygmunt
Roy Bartlett/Coach
Golf
Ted Biskind
Ron Bubes
Mike Butler
Jim Collins
Skip Eynon
Nolan Fine
John Hcyman
Jim Joseph
Burke Madigan
Scott Nicholas
Mike Rodrigue
Howard Waugh
Jim Hart/Coach
After four years at Tulane, what thoughts must
dominate the mind of a graduating senior? For
myself, it is the reaHzation that much of what I have
learned and experienced will quickly fade after I
leave. In future years I will undoubtedly
remember this period as pleasant, idyllic, and
unproductive. May education never succeed in
killing the irrational side of man — it almost got to
me. You have to fight it all the way. Spring is
here and the bear must sleep no longer.
Surely, in a book such as this, to expect these
papers to convey something beyond trivialities (after
all, what is nostalgia?) is a worthy aim. If one asks
himself why he reads or even casts a glance this way,
can the explanation be anything but to further the
illusions he is already embedded in? But alas, words
may amuse — particularly in the way they're abused,
and even if it's all for nought (Tulane, a southern
Camelot?) its priorities making one distraught (Oh!
you saintly Grcenies — heroes of the hordes — a
saviors of the mob.) It was the setting for a lonely
while. Some fools will dispute with you on anything —
it's all the rage you know? Let it finish on its own,
as you and I touch this way. I never did meet you.
But maybe we did — here, for just a moment. What else
is there . . .
Van Boyette / A & S Timothy Woods, Social Work
If all aspirins are not alike, why should all cities
and all universities be alike? Combine an artificial
historical and ethnic quarter, a super sports stadium,
a few skyscrapers, and New Orleans' reputation as a
fun city. This is a unique, interesting city? Who are
you going to fool for long? And then what happens to
said reputation? Combine a "party school" and a
"diploma mill" and get the most fun with the least
work; add Tulane's presently (adequately) good
reputation. A graduate from such an institution is
well-educated (a priori?)? And then what happens to
said reputation? And then one wonders why a college
diploma is no longer as good a key (alone) to a high
paying job — is a firm hiring a person or a
university? And one wonders why such a "well-planned"
city gets known as a tourist trap? Does one visit a
city or an image? It may not get as bad as I project,
but it is as bad as it is because of general apathy
and helplessness of the people and because a hasty
surefire solution to financial worries is sought.
Michael Ira Rose / A & S
/illiam Tell has stretched his bow til it won't
stretch no furthermore and/or it may require a
change that hasn't come before"
Bye
I suppose that I can see a great change in my
perspective and viewpoints over the period of my
duration at Tulane, this feeling as of late has
begun to mask the previous feeling that my education
at Tulane has not been learning facts, but, learning
to get by; which is perhaps as vaulable. At any
rate, I hope my new feeling isn't just Auld Lange
Syne.
Thomas R. Jones / Law Thomas Porter / Architecture
"Dear Ms. Helman:
I regret to inform you that your application for
admission has not been accepted.
Due to the sharp rise in the volume of applications
we have received to date, we expect from 3,000 to
3,500 applicants for our entering class of 125.
We are reluctantly required to reject many persons
of obvious ability and clear qualifications for
law study. We sincerely hope that our action will
not discourage you from pursuing your interests
in the field of law."
"Dear Miss Helman,
I am pleased to inform you that you have been
elected to membership in the Tulane Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa."
ONE FEMALE GRADUATE OF TULANE UNIVERSITY SEEKING
EMPLOYMENT. PLEASE CONTACT. ANY AND ALL POSITIONS
CONSIDERED. I AIN'T CHOOSEY!
Elinor Angel Helman / Newcomb
I
Stephen L. Spomer, Law School
Is seven years a millennium? Is Tulane worthy of
the title "academic" institution? Who cares!
Irregardless of your preference(s), Billy Pilgrim
had the right idea.
With my J.D. in hand — I'm off; please send mail
Stephen L. Spomer
c/o Mr. Bilbo Baggins,
HobbitviUe, under The Hill
Harvard of the South: circa 1970-1974
Year I: Orientation, Chemistry 107, the Panty Raid,
Girls.
Year II: Organic, Rex and Room 1032, Girls, Half
Way There.
Year III: Physics, the Dorm Power Failure, Girls,
the Medcats.
Year IV: Modern Art?, Off-Campus, Streaking, Getting
the Sheep Skin.
Stephen L. Spomer / Law Leonard L. Cohan / A & S
For the last four years I have been attending the
"Early Bird" program at the Engineering Department
(Mechanical) and have had an opportunity to further
my education to a level and extent that would be highly
improbable at some other school in the country. This
program has made higher education a possibility to
many of the working engineers in this area and I
would hope that more of the engineering students,
or all eligible students would be surprised of its
existence and that they would take advantage of this
opportunity to continue their education.
C. Curtis Mann / Engineering
Good bread,
Good Meat;
Good God,
let's eat.
I always thought that when this memorable occasion
presented itself I would expound on the vast amount
of elegant trivia that I have stored over the past
four "fun-filled" years. Now it hasn't been all
fun; who can forget the five semesters of fourth floor
Newcomb French, marathon genetic tests, the Newcomb
swimming test, without which one cannot get her B.S.
in Math (that's right), of course who can possibly
forget Dr. Arnold Levine (Prof, of Math at Tulane)
whose untiring efforts to deflate my ego almost
worked. But fortunately there have been more spirit-saving,
tension-breaking, heart-living things —
frisbees in McAlister (before they were outlawed alone
with blowing bubbles), mid-night serenades by
members of the Irby band, der Rat, good friends, math
comrades in misery, and best of all the Cuban Gypsy
(me corizon). My ulcer says it was worth it.
L. N. Shields / Architecture Deborah Mobberly / Newcomb
Four years here and I've been able to hang on to my
optimism and ambitions — not only am I leaving Tulane
with a little more knowledge about the world, others
and myself, but also many good friends and fond
memories which made it all worthwhile. It's been grins
. . . and I still love Barbara Streisand.
Rob Pisani / A & S
"Involvement with people is always a very delicate
thing — it requires real maturity to become involved
and not get all messed up."
Bernard Cooke
I came to this university in 1970 with the intention
of learning the foundations of a profession.
Fortunately, I am leaving with somewhat more. I did
learn the fundamentals, and I am capable of earning
a living. But at least as important is my exposure
to the many values, customs and ideas of people who
differ so greatly from tliose I've known. I suppose
that's the general idea; not to learn facts, but to
learn how to think and how others think.
At any rate, if I look back to my college time, I
want to remember that I'm satisfied with what I've
learned academically, greatful for the chance to
see different views of the world, and I still think
that Frost, a good guitar and friends are some of
the best things going.
Tim Freeh / Architecture Gary B. Grisham / Engineering
FATE OF THE EDUCATED MAN
"Know this: that Hfe is a tightrope dance: precarious two-step
and soft show shuffle."
Prattle on, pilgrim. You amuse us. Prattle on.
"Know this, too: that knowledge and truth and love are blown bits
of thistledown, elusive as inspiration."
Profound, pilgrim, most profound. Pray, tell us more!
"And finally, know this: as the world grinds out its sardonic
grinning tragedy, our only hope is to embrace
the beautiful and to laugh at the gloom."
Go, pilgrim. We grow weary of your rambhngs. Go.
Dee
I
Dan EUerman / A & S
Newcomb after four years has given me the following
insight:
However excellent intelligence,
Yet there is one endowment to outgo it:
And that is
to possess so little sense
You haven't even
sense enough to know it.
I wanted to know what this whole show (Tulane, New
Orleans) was all about before it was out, but somehow
I only got half way through the task.
Twenty years from now I'll be sitting in my typical
suburbia home witli my wife and two children. My oldest
will ask me, "Father, there were so many things
occurring in the world when you were young, political
corruption, crime in the streets, the energy crisis,
the agony in Great Britain, dramatic space achieve-ments,
war in the mideast, ecology, drug abuse,
racial injustice, sexual inequality, and the faltering
economy. Which fascinated you the most?"
My answer: "Exorcism, streaking, and a football
game that ended 14—0."
And they say there won't be a generation gap
between ourselves and our children.
Diana L. Winoker / Newcomb Robert P. Laclede / Engineering
My most rewarding educational experiences at Tulane
were directly related to my personal endeavors to
work on independent or student initiated study
programs. It is possible to receive an education by
the regimented courses; however, you aren't using the
system to its fullest potential. The faculty members
of the university are surprisingly interested and
helpful to students who initiate study programs out
of the ordinary.
TRY IT, YOU'LL LIKE IT.
Charles B. Montgomery / Architecture
With all the talk about the abilities of women, it
is amazing to me that the number of Newcomb students
tiiat are actively involved in their student
government can be counted on one hand. On the other
hand, I don't suppose this is peculiar to Newcomb.
Apathy seems to be tiie typical attitude at Tulane.
Student "leaders" can do essentially nothing
without the support of the student body.
Not to take anything away from Tulane's academic
program, which is still one of the finest in the South,
a great deal of my "education" came from outside
the classroom. Few other college communities offer
the educational (and recreational) outlets that
Tulane and New Orleans do. Registration, fraternity
life, football games, jazz concerts, T.G.I.F.'s,
ROTC Field Training Exercises, streakers, Bourbon
Street, free flicks. Direction '71—'74 — these are
just a few of the ways I've been educated. In my
four years here, there have been times when I thought
I couldn't stand the place any longer but somehow I
did. And now, on the verge of graduation, it all seems
somehow worthwhile: just seeing Tulane beating those
bastards from L.S.U. convinced me I'm glad I came to
Tulane for my "education"!
J. B. Cook / Newcomb Alfred Chiles / A & S
Tulane was a time for wasting time, for making
mistakes, for learning as one lives. Tulane was a
time for enjoying oneself, lots of free time, and
little responsibilities, lots of thrills, and little
restraint. One could get very lost, or one could
have had the luck of finding something truly exciting
and challenging to work at. And then, "in the end,
the love you take is equal to the love you make."
Paul Womble / A & S
In many ways, music has directed my academic and
emotional growth over the last three years. The
analytical perception needed for understanding music
theory, the historical perspective gained from
studying music Hterature, and the physical discipline
required for music performance to mc represent what
should be three important goals of any higher
education.
Of perhaps greater significance to me is the
special bond felt by those of us who love, really
love, music. Through music I have opened up to others
and have formed friendships which are sure to last a
lifetime.
The things that I would like to remember are: the
beautiful women, the good food, interesting courses,
and the prevailing intellectual atmosphere. The
things I never found: the beautiful women, the good
food, interesting courses, and the intellectual
atmosphere. Thank heavens for Sgt. Bilko and poker.
Leann Frances Logsdon / Newcomb Jack M. Dampf / A & S
The wandering thoughts of my middle-aged mind will
invariably arrive at my college years — perhaps
providing some humorous recollections in the midst
of a more serious lifestyle. Nights of endless booking
for test after test, the great drunks of four years,
the unpretentious loves, the everyday bullshit, and
the countless other exploits of the imseasoned
20-year old will undoubtedly occupy portions of those
future remembrances.
The success of my college experience can only be
gauged by how fast I am able to remove myself from
its grasp — For the remainder of my life cannot be
fashioned from the fantasies of university living.
Hopefully I will recall these good times, but also
be glad they were left behind.
Thomas W. Burke / A & S
DIRECTIOn
Direction '74, Tulane's sixth annual speaker's series, presented perhaps
the most diverse programs with some of the most controversial spokespersons
ever incorporated into a Direction series.
In labeling this year's series "A Crisis for Survival" the student coordinators
were asking the speakers to candidly discuss the crises in both
the Republican and Democratic National Parties, the Arts, the Energy Crisis, and
the Black American Movement, and hopefully translate the crises
into some workable solutions. While few, if any, solutions were offered,
speakers readily argued the nature of and labeling of America's problems.
With the exception of Rev. Jesse Jackson,
director of PUSH (People United to Save Humanity) and panehst on the Black
American Movement, few noted the urgency
of impending doom expressed by today's lost generation.
Rather they expressed their deeply felt convictions that the American political system is
not crumbUng; that the arts, or more precisely the theatre,
is only looking for a new means of expression; that the nuclear family, though
changing, will not die; and that the energy crisis, though real,
can be alleviated.
In almost total agreement, energy experts blasted the
idea that the energy crisis was merely contrived. Said
Rep. Mike McCormick (D-Wash.), this is a "natural
escape for simple minds who find a scapegoat and kick
hell out of it."
Speaking with McCormick, who has served on several
energy related committees and is one of two scientists
in Congress, were Jack St. Clair, an executive vice-president
of Shell Oil Company, Laurence Moss,
president of the Sierra Club, Dr. Alvin Weinberg,
former head of the Institute for Energy Analysis at
Oak Ridge, Tennessee and current director of the Energy
Research and Development office of the Federal Energy
Office, Turner Catledge, former executive editor for
the "New York Times", moderated.
They concurred that a national energy policy to
deal with the energy crisis must be set forth to
efficiently regulate gasoline and oil usage, to develop
alternative fuel sources and to ensure environmental
protection. McCormick pointed out that the policy
"must be a rational, in-depth consideration of the
facts, not a political consideration."
The crisis made the public aware that "the
energy supplies of this nation are not inexhaustible.
In the last 24 months we have passed from one period
to another - the era of cheap, abundant fuel is over,"
said McCormick. Echoing McCormick's feehngs, St.
Clair pointed out that "we will never return to the
free use of energy we have enjoyed in the past." He
added that "the Arab oil embargo was only a catalyst
which caused the country's awareness" of the energy
shortage.
In emphasizing the need for a policy. Moss said
it "should achieve a balance between supply and
demand, seek to reduce adverse social and environmental
effects of the current pohcy, and develop the
capability of self sufficient energy so as not to be
subject to political blackmail." He also indicated
that "users of energy should pay for the full process
of supplying it and pollutors should be assessed
charges comparable to the damages caused."
Saturday night, Jesse Jackson vehemently disagreed with energy panelists and called the
energy crisis nothing more than a "hoax."
Appearing with Jackson were Florynce Kennedy, founder of the National
Organization for Women and the Feminist Party, and moderator Hal Walker, CBS news
correspondent. Kennedy and Jackson asserted that the energy crisis
was an "example of the president's power."
"Nixon goes into his 'my fellow Americans' bag and says to turn down
your thermostat to 68 degrees," said Jackson. "He makes
a big show of turning down the lights on the national Christmas tree
and then flies to Key Biscayne while y'all freeze."
He noted that many poor Americans felt slighted by Nixon's suggestion to turn their
thermostat down since they had never had a thermostat to turn down.
Jackson, wearing an Afro and Adidas, made the only speech during the Direction series.
As he approached the podium, Jackson said that he came "as a minister of the
gospel to raise the possibilities of home. It's real bad to live in a slum, but
even worse when the slum gets in you."
Speaking to the audience with emphatic gestures, he noted that the fight for black
equality had been difficult. He reported that recently uncovered FBI files showed that
the bureau "has been working since 1967 to prevent the rise of a black messiah.
Hoover directed his men to discredit, disrupt, and otherwise neutralize our leaders.
"The FBI conspired to murder Malcolm X, Fred Hampton, and the Kennedy brothers.
This is at least as much of a scandal as Watergate," he continued.
While Jackson's speech was fiery, he continued to advocate non-violent means of
achieving black equahty. Flo Kennedy, at times portraying an air of defiance
and antagonism, suggested violence as the only means to achieve dignity
in an "uncouth, ruthless, militaristic society."
Jackson frowned as Kennedy said, "If we're going to move this nation one degree
off center, a few people must be ready to not only die, but to kill." She showed utter
disdain of pacifists who "sit there singing sweet songs and making
good cornbread. That's carrying nigger nobility too far."
Juxtaposed to the enigmatic presentations by Jackson
and Kennedy, members of tlie arts panel seemed almost
blase. Rather than concentrating on the arts, "New
York Times" drama critic Clive Barnes, Los Angeles
Center Theatre Group director Gordon Davidson, and
director and recent Academy Award nominee John Houseman
with Tulane chaplain Father V. Ambrose Mclnnes as
moderator discussed American theatre and how it is
changing.
According to Barnes, "Broadway is in very serious
trouble, but theatre in general is in great shape." He
noted the new subsidized theatre which is developing in
an attempt to reach a more contemporary audience. They
all agreed on the importance of technology and
specifically television in changing society's
conception of the arts.
"The way people who have been brought up on TV
absorb art is quite different from those who weren't.
This is the first society to be an agnostic society;
at least we are drifting in that direction, and that's
going to have a tremendous influence on the arts."
Both Davidson and Barnes said that it is now
necessary for theatre to supplant the emotional needs
formerly served by organized rehgion by "having
more immediacy, strength, and simplicity." Davidson
noted "a breakdown of the barriers between art forms
in theatre's continuing search for a new way of
expression."
Houseman denied any crisis in theatre referring to
it as "the most humanly characteristic of all art
forms, capable of masterpieces of the human spirit.
The terrible crisis for the Broadway theatre simply
marks the end of a certain kind of structure." All
panelists agreed that, in conjunction with the new
implementations, the classic theatre will survive.
Direction '74 panelists on the crisis in the
family each asserted their own ideas but agreed
with sociologist David GosUn who said that
• "there isn't any right thing to do or any wrong
thing to do." Speaking with Goslin were Dr.
Bruno Bettelheim, director emeritus of the
University of Chicago's Orthogenic School; Dr.
Rosabeth Kanter, Brandeis sociologist who is
visiting associate professor at the Harvard
University Graduate School of Education and
advocate of communal living; Elizabeth Janeway,
novelist and social historian; with moderator
Dr. Edward Knight, director of the LSU Out-patient
Clinic Mental Health Center.
Goslin, noting the trend away from the
nuclear family, said that "we're going to see
more variation in family structure." He noted
greater mobility, the entrance of women into the
work force, metropolitanization, and age
segregation as contributing factors in the decline
of the nuclear family.
Kanter, advocating communal h\'ing, said
that society should be "open to enlarging the
definition of family so that people in this
society can share more of their lives with one
another. Communal arrangements don't replace the
family; they enlarge it."
Bettelheim disagreed with Kanter saying
that in communal living, the "constrictions such
arrangements impose outweigh the advantages."
He concluded that "parents are the most important
people in the children's lives, whether you
accept them or reject them."
Former Attorney General Elliot Richardson
and Republican National Chairman George Bush
opened the Direction '74 program by agreeing
that President Nixon should not resign, but
tliat any action against him should go
through the Constitutional process by way
of the Judiciary Committee, which is now
investigating impeachment.
Bill Monroe, Washington editor of NBC's
"Today" show, moderated the program.
"It might be good for the country in the
short run for the President to resign because
it would clear the air; but in the long run
it would not be a wise move for him to
resign considering that he was overwhelmingly
elected by the people," said Richardson.
"The charges against him must be
substantiated before any action can be taken.
The President says he is not guilty so unless
he is found guilty, there are no grounds
for impeachment."
Richardson pointed out the danger of the President
resigning with an unclear record. "Why would he be
resigning even though he has not been proven guilty?
Would he be resigning because he has lost popularity
and because the people have lost confidence in him? By
resigning, he would betray a lack of confidence in the
system for deaUng with serious charges. It is better
if we show that the system works. I feel we can stick
it out a while longer and let the system do its job."
Bush added that the Judiciary Committee deserves
confidence. "This is so serious that Democrats and
Republicans cannot be partisan, but must rise to the
occasion. The Ervin Committee sounded its own end when
the vote became divided by parties."
Richardson attacked the President's actions in not
cooperating. "The President is persisting in strategic
mistakes by not demonstrating cooperation. He should
be saying that we need to find out who is to blame, not
raising technical questions of relevance. He should
say that he will help the House find out." Bush
added, "The more the White House can produce, the
better it is. Few people really care about executive
privilege or confidentiality."
Richardson also emphasized that the need to make
information public outweighs the President's
executive privilege. "This is merely a demonstration
of no cooperation with the Judiciary Committee or
any other committee."
Turning more to the future of the Republican Party,
Monroe noted the "reahstic" possibility of 1976
presidential aspirations by both Bush and Richardson.
Said Monroe, "The Republican Party has a lot to look
forward to with Bush and Richardson. However,
Richardson seems to be a more active non-candidate,
possibly because Bush has a job." Both rephed that
it was still early to comment.
Speaking on the Democratic National Party, House
Majority leader Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, Texas Senator
Lloyd Bentsen, and former McGovern campaign director
Frank Mankiewicz with moderator Carl Stern, NBC
news correspondent, echoed Bush's assertion that
Congress will not be partisan in evaluating impeachment
evidence. O'Neill emphasized the extreme importance
of the Judiciary Committee's decision as well as the
consequences it carries.
Mankiewicz and Bentsen agreed that the odds are
that Nixon "will be impeached." O'Neill declined to
predict because "if I said one way or the other, the
White House would immediately say 1 was partisan and
privy to secret information."
Bentsen pointed out that impeachment would not
spHt the country because "it was foreseen by our
founding fathers. It will depend on how clear cut the
evidence is. If it is as clear cut as the evidence
against Agnew, then there will be no problem. If it is
not clear cut, then there will be a problem."
None of the panelists saw resignation as a
viable alternative. Said Bentsen, "If he resigns
saying it is for the good of the country, but that he
is innocent, that is bad. It is also bad if he resigns
because he is guilty. It is better to go through
the Judiciary Committee. In any other country, Watergate
would be swept under the rug and forgotten. In this
country, if it comes to a vote, senators will be
non-partisan. Men will take themselves above politics
because of the seriousness of the situation."
Mankiewicz emphasized that "Watergate shows that
the American political system works well. It is a
system that has produced only one Richard Nixon in 200
years."
Laughing aloud, Mankievvacz said that in the
"cynical short run, it is better to keep Nixon in
office until November because it will only help
Democrats in the November elections. Therefore, in the
short run, it would be better for the Republicans to
get him out of office by November because it will
only help them."
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"An itinerant prophet, sandwiched between doomsday billboards
warns Jean that the river is rising, and the city will be a
new Sodom and Gomorah, flushed away by the river . .
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—Carol Flake
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NEW ORLEANS Hi
J^MRICA
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Student Senate
Debbie Rosenblum
Jody Cook
Rich Westfal
Pat Herrington
Loyd Whitely
Mike Lancaster
Alan Rubin
Steve Katz
Shepard Samuels
Peter Rubnitz
Terry Breen
Brian Zipp
Rick Fernholz
Steve Schiff
Bubba Stockwell
Hugh Rawn
Mark Rapoport
Scott Wagnian
David Willis
Ed Lalor
Erness Wright
Chris Tragakis
Jean Fennelo
Ed Quatrevauz
Brenda Tudor
Nancy Naryka
Serena Randolph
George Ann Hayne
Brett Patten
Margaret Kurlander
Bill Montgomery
Mary Elizabeth
Steven R. Criste
John W. Youngblood
Jerry Keel
Christopher Verldao
Kathy Carlin
Fred Heilman
Genaro J. Perez
Larry Romans
Marcia McMurray
Walter Barry
Betty Shiell
Lilian Buras
Pauline Morgan
Thomas K. Hotter
Carole Bitman
Rene Hamburger
Debbie Leon
Nancy Miller
Jerry Clark/President
Arthur Levine/V.P. Finance
Brian Bash/V.P.A.
Rina Cohan/V.P.U.A.
Streaking
The adolescent craze turned capitalistic money-making gimmick, cleverly labeled streaking, hit
Tulane with an impact greater than anything since the days of the aborted college revolution of the
TLF.
The mild spring weatl»er brought hundreds of supposedly highly educated genitilia into the sunlight
to be fanned by Louisiana's hot air.
A new generation's needed outlet for an excess of repressed energy burst forth in a blurred vision of
goose-pimpled flesh and greasy, UC-cafcteria inspired flab. The frustrations and social consciousness of
the Seventies did not inspire young idealists to go off and fight in a Spanish Civil War, to protest the
development of atomic weapons or demonstrate for peace.
The reaction was one consistent with the prevalent lack of direction and meaning. The exposure of
one's buttocks represents the epitome of egoistic self indulgence. The obvious desired result was sheer
shock value, but those the most infatuated with and startled by the spectacle seemed to be those
directly involved in it.
Wiiile bus loads of yats belching semi-digested red beans and rice deserted the strip joints and
watered down K&B gin of Bourbon Street for the inexperienced but much cheaper show uptown, the
great thighs forming the UC quad quivered with throngs of students, many of whom had not ventured
from their dorms since October.
The streakers shed their social skins and by doing so also discarded their social restrictions and their
identities. They became one massive peep show, pieces of flesh to be devoured by the onlookers until a
new, tastier morsel appeared.
Participants and spectators alike sought one of man's most basic kicks, sexual excitation through
voyeurism. Cheap thrills triumphed where revolution had failed. Idealism had succumbed to hedonism.
Even the Newcomb girls discarded their Scarlet O'Hara facades and infamous frigid coquettishness
to line the balconies of their dorms, and, like the lions in pursuit of the Christians, hungrily roamed
the arena in front of the UC.
Their insatiable cries for more echoed tin ough the swarming canyons between the dorms urging on
the male streakers cowering in the shadows before their mad fleeting dash into the spotlight to be the
center of attention and to be cheered on for probably the only time in their lives.
Sophie's disciples wasted little time in joining their male counterparts. Whether it was to tantalize
further numbers into exposing themselves or to satisfy their own fantasies, several girls darted here and
there through the crowd, their breasts bouncing crazily in all directions. The fame of the Newcomb
streakers spread around the world as a wire service picked up a photo of a "Tulane coed" and flashed
it as far as Israel. Even the hallowed and sanctified recesses of the Rat and the free flick were violated
causing more of a sensation than any movie.
A carnical atmosphere prevailed as streaking strengthened its hold on the campus. It became
distorted and perverted as Tulane added its own «|uirks. The completely nude streaker running as fast
as possible degenerated into mobs of walking or standing beer-gu/.zling exhibitionists outfitted in
grotes(]ue, revealing costumes. The New Orleans version was closer to Las Vegas showgirls and 42nd
Street winos with their severed trouser legs lied above their knees and covered only by their raincoats
than liberated nature lovers and free spirits.
The streakers and their admirers gathered like maggots on a rotting corpse-the corpse of great hope
and idealistic visions-and tore and rent it until its ghastly, unmoving limbs assumed an even more
horrible aspect.
Fifty unclothed jocks trotting down McAlister Drive in the middle of the afternoon is an ominous
sight, but not deferent enough to keep away New Orleans' amazingly diversified sexual deviant
population.
The lonely streaker, multiplied into an orgy of sweating bodies, totally lost the original defiant,
individualistic message of reljelliousness and fell into an abyss of tackiness and a safe, conforming
method of assuming a hipper than thou attitude.
In my youtli I had claimed that one could walk stark naked across the UC quad at any chosen time
and no one would pay any attention. My prediction became reality sooner than expected and sank just
as quickly into a miasma of further murky indifference, although with a very extensive suntan.
Rick Mason
• «•
p
c Alpha Tau Omega
Bruce Adams
Kieth Bowman
Kevin Bowman
Jeff Barter
Ken Bialek
Joe Bruno
John Buntin
Tom Burke
Chris Capo
Taylor Casey
Vic Crame
Mike DriscoU
Richard Ellis
Steve Frick
Dan Hermann
Bob Hughes
Steve Jones
Tom Kingsmill
Paul Lacroix
Kinny Lota
John Colaluca
Mark Lutenbacher
Tom Manson
Marty Mayer
Barry Meyer
Doug Miele
Burke Madigan
Bruce Newman
Greg PoweU
Mike Rouen
Tom Salyer
Bill Sloan
Carl Sturges
Bill Starr
Rob Sutter
Dinny Weber
Brian Buenda
Charlie Cladwell
Chet Chidcster
Randy Falk
Jeff Furbis
John Finzer
Constantine Georges
Scott Handler
Cecil Haskins
Bryce Le Blanc
Paul Porter
Dennis Reggie
Warren Doyle
J. C. Paciera
Bill Parsons
c Tau Sigma Delta
Alex Ward Alkire
Charles Crisp Benton
Creed Walker Brierre
Martin Jay Cybul
Sara Lynn Hill
Michael Robert Howard
Calvin Palmer Jones V
Charles Blair Montgomery
John Ralph Robb
Steven Alan Robbins
Lloyd Noble Shields
Leo Wiznitzer
c Beta Theta Pi
Herb Ashe
Tim Ashe
George Bryant
Clark Charbonnet
Jim Colomb
Jay Culotta
Scott Dash
Chris De La Vergne
Carlos De Salazar
Andy Ericson
David Floweree
Louis Gurvich
Parker Heffron
Guy Hickman
George Larsen
Steve Little
Chris Maher
Al Martin
Bob McKcnnon
Bill Molony
Mark Patterson
Nick Powell
Rick PoweU
Harry Quarls
Cliff Saik
Terry Schnuck
Mike Schornstein
Bob Sellers
David Sims
Larry Wald
Rick Wiggers
c Delta Kappa Epsilon J
Woody Banks
John Beatrous
Robert Bland
Edison Buchanan
Karl Clifford
George Durant
Bert Eichold
Gary Fretz
Ledoux Faust
John Koch
PhiHp Loria
Beau Loker
Barlow Mann
Peter McEnery
Charles McCrary
Frank McRoberts
Tommy Meric
Kevin O'Bryon
John O'Connor
Steve Parker
Hugh Penn
Chris Peragine
Steve Richardson
Blair Scanlon
Jay Schmitt
Mike Simpson
Drake Sloss
Benton Smallpage
Vance Smith
Marc Troy
Jeff Windes
Dave L'Hoste
John Crosby
Steve Bartlett
BiU Wynn
c Kappa Alpha
Jack Adams
Rufus Aldridge
Dan Anderson
Ken Bates
Bill BeU
Ralph Bernard
Jim Beskin
Mark Bielski
Jim Black
Jack Bolinger
Brian Boutte
John Braun
Ron Bubes
Laird Canby
Jerry Cave
Bob Chapman
Tom Crosby
Rick Cummings
Jack Dampf
Omer Davis
Gary Dent
Vincent Dobbs
Weslsey Dobbs
Gene Gibson
Jim Gorolon
Randy Gregson
Henry Hahn
John Halsey
Ray Hunting
Grady Hurley
Ronnie Kerr
Rusty Kerr
Rob Lebreton
Klive Logan
Rich Matzkin
Bob McClesky
Dixon Montague
John Moses
Davis Nolan
Rick Norton
Kris Pederson
Mark Peterson
John Pyburn
Mark Rosenberg
Ricky Schomborg
John Schroeder
Mark Simon
Mike Smith
Mark Talheim
Kyle Temple
Bill Tliornton
c 3 Alpha Omega Alpha
John J. Baehr HI
James Bean
Robert Card
Johnathan Ching
Emanual DeFraites Jr.
Carol A. Phillips
John J. Eick
Michael Ferrell
Elliot Haley
Stacey Johnson
Phillip KeUy
Michael McDonald
David McLann
Eugene Rosenberg
Larry Sander
Clay Skinner
Alvin Solomon
Arnold Spanjers
Carol Tipton
Thomas Watson
Paul Zelnick
c Pi Kappa Alpha )
Al Chiles
Steve Spence
Rick Rees
Martin Schiel
John Boudreaux
Mark Scharre
Mark Oswald
Rusty Hurst
Tom Stallings
Cory Scher
Rob Ritchie
Peter Delacos
Pat Bloomfield
Stan Wolfe
Skipper Scott
Paul Vander Heyden
Mike Heine
Tom Brown
Max Cannon
Rich Carman
Ray Tyree
Dave Indorf
Rick Brown
Curt Cowan
Curt Radford
Ricardo Pesquereo
Dave Hartzell
Greg Wyrick
Doug Peart
Mike Gordon
Dave Lewis
Bob Boese
Bruce Bower
c Kappa Sigma )
Steve Sallman
John Neuhoff Jr.
Bob Niemara
Steve Voss
Bob McBride
Robert Oliver
Richard Griffin
Pepi Saavedra
Eric Johnson
Chuck Stewart
Tom Breard
Bob Neblett
Chris Dunlap
Russ Dulaney
Ted Matheny
Toby Darden
Steve Corso
Jay McGrew
Joe Barnes
Hank Schwartz
Jimmy Fox
Ned Voelker
Rick Brown
"Pep" Pepoon
Dean Janeson
Dan Gerson
Jeff Ignatuk
Kurt Lang
Len Marino
Steve Hacker
Bill Meyer
Gene Taylor
Roscoe Thompson
Pete Mani
Chuck Talbert
Gene Gray
Dan Draper
Rob Sapp
Ronnie Stewart
c Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Durang Alderson
Lee Alig
Joe Amberson
Wilbu Buird
Leo Bertucci
Mike Bertucci
Kerry Bloom
Bill Bordeon
John Braiite
Bob Brown
Peter Bryden
Steve Buerger
John Chamberlain
Charles Cox
Duane Dahlgren
Richard Dardner
Vic Dart
Frank Davis
Dixon Dossett
Tim Douglass
Robert Duchen
Tom Duclien
William Edwards
Joe Fitzgibbons
Dan Forestiere
Marty Geller
Steve Golden
Greg Ham
Mark llarner
Richard Henry
Dick Hoffman
John Hopkins
Larry Jacobs
Gary Kirstein
Brian Kolowick
Steve Kopecky
Jimmy Lazar
Hunter Lott
Bob Lupo
Tom Majors
John McClung
Brian McGinny
Tim McKay
Jimmy Milan
Robert Miller
Brad Moore
Jay Pecues
Louis Provenza
Curtis Pelleris
Martin Risho
David Shaw
David Sibley
Art Smith
Marham Smith
Mike Stoltz
Luther Stranger
Hugh Taylor
Stan Terry
Cullen Thomas
Charles Vandenburg
Bill Walker
Prina Warnock
Baker Welch
Bill Wessler
Charlie White
Grig Wilson
Storm Wilson
Jim Dougherty
Alix Wooldridge
Dave Young
Bob Dresseir
Art Schwartz
c Tau Epsilon Phi )
Doug Wieder
Ross Jacobson
Sandy Grossman
Mike Koslin
Dale Newman
Eric Sawyer
Sandy Smiles
Rick Weiss
Hurst Hessey
Keith Hicks
George Payne
Steve Becker
Rich Stein
Ron Aspaas
Gale Clayton
Jerry Kane
Ron Katz
Paul Feinstein
Barry Garfield
Rick Monat
Frank Adelman
Bill Frankel
Myron Tanenbaum
Ed Weiss
c Kappa Kappa Gamma J
Melanie Aikman
Dotty Davis
Sue Mersman
Nan Heard
Anne Craighead
Jeanene Parker
Cynthia Heaberlin
Joni Anderson
Joan Simms
Marsha Ghormley
Robbie Meripol
Jenny Jones
Elizabeth Kilgore
Leigh Pratt
Marti Breen
Bunnie Habliston
Debbie Jaffe
Mecklin Stevens
Chris Horner
Judy Howard
Debby Heaberlin
Martha Sanders
Janet Waller
Kristen Jones
Bobby Provosty
Jenise Killebrew
Zonnie Provosty
Linda Sanders
Laura Whitney
Diane Andrews
Celeste Bertucci
Katherine Hendler
Madelaine Turegano
Isabel Waters
Carla Bloom
Dee Dee Mc Fayden
Priscilla Pumphrey
SaUy Grier
Lou Hobson
Anne Oldfather
Winnie Miller
Brenda Myers
Stella Curtis
Shari Cox
Grace Tabb
Caroline Robertson
Shawn Holahan
Clarissa Walker
Ann Collins
Karen Kiel
Katie Hovas
Lesa Hall
Debbie Broadwell
Kathy Shelton
Mary Preston Horn
Sue Lynch
Carol Sanders
Marta Rose
Mary Davidson
Janice Eittreim
Libby Mc Lean
Rebel Story
Nenetta Carter
DeDe Kenworthy
Cynthia Miller
Katie Shirkey
Collie Oschner
Nanette Stevens
c Sigma Nu )
Glen McEIroy
Frank Kinder
Larry Comiskey
Mitch Scher
Steve Jones
Sid Jacobson
Phil Fant
Dave Carey
Mike Richardson
Harry Macey
Charley Getchell
Bruce Bolyard
Charley Brown
Doug Bull
Mark Hanudel
Barrel HioD-Ogins
Rick Orfinger
Mark Perel
Tom Ploch
Mike Pugh
Jim Satron
Fred Sandefer
Dan Jesse
Reyn Archer
Doug Brown
Ed Baldwin
Charley Calderwood
Augie Diaz
Dave Dickert
John Duff
Steve Horton
Craig McGee
Mike Petrakin
Clyde Pilkington
John Raber
Rocky Scanlan
Pete Scrarpelli
Bob Warren
Mark Weisburg
Glen Vereen
John Yonngblood
Steve Reiss
Roger Bell
Bill Bohn
Ken Brown
Mike Carter
Dale Chambers
Skip Eynon
Fred Flandry
Dave Gauge
Nelson Gibson
Jack Higgins
Scott Katzman
Bob Ladd
Al Levin
Mike Lopresto
Charles McCain
Stan Mulvihill
Brad Rowberry
Bill Scholz
Chuck Trainor
Lenny Verges
Howard Waugh
Rich Williams
Joey Carvin
Monte McCullough
c Zeta Beta Tau 3
Lee Osiason
Neil Speer
Clay Epstein
Robert Tabeck
Steve Jackobs
Donald Linsky
Robert Bunnen
Max Friedman
Bruce Rickoff
Steve Benzuly
Randy Treadway
Randy Treadway
Neil Shact
Dick Sharf
Mark Mageids
Alan Rubin
Danny Danzinger
Jim Cummings
Gary Schwartz
Gary Shamus
Stanley Feldman
Larry Bassel
Rick Fernholz
Robert Levine
David Marcus
Marvey May
Art Fishman
Marty Dorian
NeU Wasser
Sandy Nadler
Bob Miller
Richard Benatur
Robert Green
Jack Jackobson
Alan Kaiser
Charlie Cohan
Doug Jackobs
Randy Reiner
Alan Greenberg
Jay Harbor
Terrible Ted
Ed Schapiro
Chuck TilHs
Error Lane
Youngster
Rob Goldstein
Jack Eisenkramer
Robert Grossman
Marty Diettleback
Paul Rubin
Bob Levine
Ron Friedman
Gerald Gussack
Jeff Knaver
Jerry Enslein
Mike Habbiff
Larry Schloss
Sam Denny
Richard Goldblatt
Robert Schwartz
Lance Borghoff
Jim Cohan
Alan Patterson
Lewis Gerwich
Lowell Davis
Mark Hecht
Peter Levy
Dan Hodin
Ed Shenis
Craig Perleman
c Alpha Delta Pi D
Debblo Bauman
Pat l)HV('ii|)ort
Melanio Kastnyr
Jifln MelnlQgh
Judy Mofl'Itt
lllfMin Pax I on
Mary iU'lli I'otloita
iitiy Reppo
Judy Vernan
Et\\v Ariail
Clai'o lti(ihardson
Margaret Bauor
Davlin Call
Niki lambur
Trovu Mill)urri
Kathluon Paxton
Liia Steinbgrf
c Phi Beta Kappa D
Neil Ann Armitr§ng
Mleliclc Asmuth
MlcliHfl \im'M[ llallotii
Dale Susan Barken
Ann Bennett
Katherine Anne Benton
MollsHB Dui'liani BernNlrom
Daniel lUdierl lllleknian
Robert Meiod Bono
Marian Thereie Boswell
Van Roy Boyette
Thomas Will la in Burke
Molly Rutli Olianeey
H(inla Teresa Chlal
Albert Murray Cohen
Virginia Claire Cooper
Alberto Jose de Armendl
Arthur Andrew Deniarest
Donald Rav Duplantiir
Deborah Ann Dutton
Matthew Joseph Parley HI
Robert Mark Pell
Joan Ingllsh Fisher (Mrs.)
John Stephen Pltggerald
Cynthia Benton Prondiera
William Thomas Garland
Sandra Louise Garrard
Robert Dean Grossman
John David GuUlory
James Thomas Ouyer
James Kennetli Harmon
Klmberley Elizabeth Harris
Elinor Angol Helman
Larry Edward Jaeobs
Howard Natliiui Kiiplun
Dorothy Nell Kecnan
Linda Kay Kelly
Charles Barrett Kennedy, Jr.
Luoie Monette King
Mary Lynn Landrum
Alyssa Anne Lappen
Milton Charles Lasoski
Elizabeth Jane Lindsay
Leann Pranees Logsdon
Joseph Kenneth Lota
Carol Ann Lundquiit
Carol Ann MeGeehan
Robert Edward MeMurray, Jr.
Mildred Ellen Methvln
Prlsellla Mlms
Jeffery Bruee Morris
Prank Joseph Murphy
Julianne Niee
Deborah Ann Olivera
Melissa Payne
Craig Stuart Pearlman
Joseph A. Pedone
Rlohard Seott Powell
William Harlow Pratt
Mary Prances tiadi'ord
Miehael Ira Rose
John Anthony Rouehell
Benlta Gail Rubinett
Stephen Lee Samuels
James David Satrom
Frederic Cliarles Sehleslnger
Julie Ann Sohwam
Carol Jo Seloniek
James Bfuijamin Shaw
Leopold ZangwiU Shor
Marilyn Callahan Snook (Mrs.)
Susan Marie Thcisen
Mary Margaret Traxler
Mienaei James Vargoti
Steve George Venturatos
Janet Maidtsby Waller
Wendy Lee Waliner
Kendrick Oliver Whittington
Riehard Seott Wyde
c Alpha Sigma Phi
Kyle Dennis
Robert P. Laclede
Gary Larson
James M. Baker
Craig Deyerle
Larson Fowler
Philip H. Hubbard
Robert C. Brandt
Michael E. Britt
Steven A. Fink
Gregory G. Garr
Thomas Gieseler
Mark Kimberly
Wilham Ladd
Nick Vaccaro
Thomas Waldron
Paul Jennings
James DevoU
Simon Mireles
Robert Monitz
Timothy Freeh
c ) Beta Alpha Psi
John Mclntyre Andrew
Richard Brownell Armstrong
James Sumter Carter
Stephen Kam Thye Choi
Rebecca Ann CranweU
Marilyn Faye Davis
Etta Jane Dovith Dimitry
Roberto Daniel Eager
Philip Lawrence Eiserloh
Raymond Joseph Gorski, Jr.
Richard Lewis Grider
Bruce Larry Hagins
James Christian Hendricks
Charles Allen Horstmann
Roderick Gerard Johnson
Lewis Albert Knight, Jr.
Taher Darwish Makkiyah
Charles Alfred Markel 3rd
James Granger Marquez
Thomas Murphy Martin
William Decker McClure, Jr.
William Conrad Miller
Samuel Arthur Milne
Mark Edward Munnell
Richard Harrison Nelson
David Allan O'Brien
John Whittemore Olson
David Howard Parrish
Robin Dower Peeples
Tariq Razzaqi
David Stewart Ringler
Michael Joseph Rosinski
Sallie Anne Scanlan
Lawrence Douglas Strain
William Murphy Templeton
Nazim Gulamhusein Thawerbhoy
Gurudutt Ganeshrao Trasy
Youssef Nashed Youssef
c Alpha Omicron Pi D
Lynn Mm
Agnes Burliae
Carol Gelenib
Maureen Crenan
Gerlnne Cressat
Georgia Dupre
Linda Eddln§
Louise Ferrand
Nancy Louise llolbrook
Betsy Marsal
Helena Naughton
Debby Olivera
Becky Olivera
Charmagne Padua
Schuyler Ruhlman
Doreen Sullivan
Jan Trimble
Susan Van Hart
Dawn Jackson
c Sigma Delta Tau J
Lynne Freeman
Elyse Reingold
Carl Carp
Jennette Brickman
I^aryann Berman
Carol Miranda
Debbie Rosenblum
Judy Weiss
Barb lAm
Betsy PreUnd
Barbara Krugman
Barbara Rachlin
Marti Benjamin
Carolyn Hirsch
Debbie Goldfarb
Maureen Wolf
Nancy Young
Linda Friedman
Randy Davidson
Debbie Stein
Yvonne Goldberg
Peggy Moss
Dede Dubinsky
Dee Dee Greenspun
lllen Patterson
Lee Bing
Jan Berky
Amy Adlestein
Carol Bitman
Susan Epstein
Jamie Jacker
Susan Hurt
Melinda Lewis
Linda Yefsky
Andi Servos
Anita Jarrett
c Pi Beta Phi )
Cathy Nelson
Bobi Maxwell
Lisa Fisher
Jan Shipman
Courtney Burge
Mary Helen Powell
Linda Rowley
Tricia Ramsey
Mary Plauche
Mary Helen Beecherl
Pati Fuller
Kim Harris
Beth Lewis
Aillen Livaudais
Anne Talbot
Liz Williams
Helen Loker
Lucinda Huffman
Gretchen Neff
Janie Law
Frannie McCoy
Kathryn Miller
Lou Ann Brown
Joanie Cleary
Vonee Reneau
Jaoe Crow
Camille Simpson
Kitty Hoselton
Daina Bennet
Libby Danielson
Julie Stratford
Bev Brown
Lynn Pollard
Debbie Frederick
Debbie Glasser
Lisa Barkley
Lisa Pressly
Debbie Darnell
Nancy Kistler
Cyndy Ittner
Jane de Butts
Polly Sartor
Susan Hemard
Becky Brock
Charlotte Waguespack
Grace Agresti
Catherine Chisolm
Diane Williams
Martha Talbot
Mina Eagan
Susie Brown
Marion Mitchel
Kathryn Miller
Diana Northington
Janise Shroder
Karen Bishoff
Owene Weber
Kate Lardner
Madeline Johnson
Helen de Butts
Kaki Ferris
Fontaine Harris
Holly Graves
Jodie Sartor
Carter Wells
Marsha Mayo
Debbie Lozier
Tricia Bowen
Caroline Loker
Dru Crabtree
c Phi Mu
Annetit! Anngtrong
Ll§t) nuudean
Mary \k.uk
Shdiey BeeUer
Paul Berton
Olgu Cliutiig
Diane Cox
Mittil Daniel
Linda Deel<bar
Kutlilecm Delery
Liz Dietriyli
Marcie Dillalia
Rosemary Dossier
Janice Garfield
Vangie Greeli
Adee ileebe
Ann Hodgson
Allison lluebner
Kelly Jackson
Heidi Junius
Ginny Kimzey
Wendy Kornegay
Liz Lipscombe
Debbie Martin
Karen McLafferty
Nathalie Mongeau
Bonnie Meulton
Curry Overby
Dana Popovich
Jennifer Premo
D
Lee Lee Prina
Rilclta PuUlam
Becl^y Rey
Shirley Richardson
Miriam Riehter
Sarah Riehter
Carolyn Rossi
Kyle Rovira
Sara Sandroek
Susan Savage
Patty Sealiet
Lynne Schwotzer
Jan Slianhouse
Janice Simmons
Betsy Skinner
Carol Sloss
Emily Stevens
Ginger Strate
Nancy Sullivan
Ann Troitino
Beryl Tullier
Winnie Waltzer
Cathy Wattley
Cindy Weeks
Ann Welch
lone Whitloek
SteUa Wright
Stephanie Yeonas
Laura Zink
c Delta Tau Delta )
William S. Howe
Michael P. Kiernan
James Stevenson
Macom V. Hornsby
Charles R. Swanson
Steven G. Banner
Donald R. Scotty
Robert Chase
John Lane
B. J. Chotiner
Thomas Schneiders
Peter Priola
Jay Bernstein
Henry Puente
Aaron Goerlich
Hubert Guirada
Donald J. Sharp
James F. Barnthouse
c 3 Beta Gamma Sigma
Kenneth Robert Burns
James Sumter Carter
Franklin Harold Cochran
Etta Jane Dovith Dimitry
Philip Lawrence Eiserloh
Wolfgang Helmut FeuchtmuUer
Bruce Larry Hagins
Larry Dean Heck
John Howard McCalla
Marilyn Isabel Montgomery
John Whittemore Olson
Sergio Antonio Oyanedel Galmez
Edward Lawrence Patneaud El
Tilden Robert Reid
David Stewart Ringler
Joseph Donald Thomas
Gurudutt Ganeshrao Trasy
William Benjamin Williams
Youssef Nashed Youssef
c Tau Beta Pi )
James T. Bennett
William Cameron
Antoine Chalhoub
Kent Davey
Charles Incaprera
Michael Larkin
Alexander Le Doux
John Orr
Samuel Stokes HI
David Vogt
Warren White, Jr.
Leslie Anticich
Mark Edgar
Abliaya Asthana
Paul Lind
Robert Le Blanc
William Rau
Morris Rau
Robert Swayne
VbI, tXXIV, N@, 1 NiW ORLEANi, LSUISIANA, AUQUIT 31, 1173
news norts
lleefieni ..,. Pap3
ielfBsfpnse ,,,,, Pii^i
Faeiisfviee ,,,,,,,:, . Jaii 11
TsufingNatehH Page li
Board opinion calls
gay club Illegal
THREE MUSKETEEilii R»ildeflti ef m\m mm tami In "tripli" due te 8
hsuilflgefftiehaiiMeunisd thst thislluotinn nhnuld It^nllevlHt^d <een,
efderRiipge9,Thg
Shortage of housing space creates
tight situation for men In Phelps
by Pete irynitemr
Twi may fci esfflpaBy, lut Ihi
midinti af Philpim findlni aut
thit Ihrsi m^n in a raem li
diflRlfilyaiFSwd,
AeesFdlng \e RIshtrd Harrli,
iiilitant iimim sf Heuilng,
Itilp li sn thi way fer itudvnti
fmmi ti "Iflpli" 1b Fiems
dtiigRid inly fer twi, Hi lald
that Iht studinli iheuld bi
asilinid tt niw rsomi In tws m
ihFii wiilti, If thi Ftasilgnminl
fakii sviF flvi wiiki, HaFFli
addid, an adjuitmint will ki
mail In thi pFlei tf fhi Ftemi,
IniurinM
Thg eauii ef thi heuiing
ihtFtaie may atim fFtm
yppiFilaiamin whs nmm a
Fssm as an
and Ihsn hunt fiF apaFtmints,
Thill itudintH fall te notify
Heusing af thilF eaneillatlena,
and thilF nam Is hild feFthsm
instiad ef bilng ilvin te anethiF
studint,
Undsritandlni
"Thi altuatlen Is iliaFing up
new," HaFFli iMplalnid, "Wijust
niid timi and un
BemlnltanCelliiideFmi.
"Part ef thi dial with
DemlniE^an was that thiBi glFls
weuld §tay a whttle BimestiF and
they undiFBtand that," aaid Suaan
iFili, assistant dlFivtoF ef
Heusini^ Ms, lrit^< did say
howiviF that thiFi an new tin
spans availahli feF
uppiFilasswemin In the
Neweemh deFms,
iy karry Areell
^ shewdgwB ever fheTulane
Oay itudiBts Unisn (§iU) Is in
the making with the release of a
legal epinlHH hy the Issfd of
AdminisfFatBFs whieh asserts that
FiengnitlHB of the group might
have serious legal ramitieatioBs
fertheUBlversity,
AeeerdlBi te the epmisB,
wfitteB hy Manly HoFten, legal
t'ounsel te the ieard,
"reeogBitian ef the Clay StudeBt
Union uBdertheeiFeufflstaneesas
presented would involve TulaBe,
Its offieers and agents in an illegal
aetivity whieh might suhjeet the
University or the individual
effiters and agents, to possihie
eharges of a eriminal nature."
Nlueh ef the eentreversy
revolves areund the statement of
purpese that the group was
reijuired te suhmit hefere
eonsideration as a reeegniifed
University orginiiiation, The first
ehjeetion was to the sentenee
that the CliU's purpose was "to
promote regular seeial outlets fer
gays en eampus without fear of
hBFassment"
Felsny
leth Herton and the ieard
f eu nd this statement
(luestionahle, Sinee homosexual
aet« are considered a felony under
i«ouisiana law, the Ieard fears
that the University eeuld he
aeeused ef aiding and ahettlBg a
feloBy hy reeegniiilng the QSU,
gut the UniveFsity ienate at
its ApFll 16,1973 meetlBg gave the
gFoup provisional approval,
ineluding, "the rights te whieh all
provisionally appFeved unlveFsity
organiii.atieBs ate entitled,
ineludlng the Fight te meet In the
UBlviFsity eentBF," thus setting
up the eonftentatieB at theflFSt
larod meetlBg Ib ieptemhet.
§ennity(len
Cemplieating the matter is the
gontFOversial pesitieB takeB hy
John Slihhs, Bean ef students,
supporting the pesitien ef the
ioard even though he is
mandated hy the eenstitutien ef
the Univeristy ienate te upheld
thereeognitionefSiU,
In a letter to the University
ienate explaining his pesitien,
Stihhs says "that it is simply net
possihle fer me te aet
affirmatively en the
reeommendatien ef the Ienate."
He adds that the SeBste aBd its
eemmittee ob studiBt affalFS
must "reeegBii'.e the authority ef
the Bean ef itudents te take an
apprepFiate stand when and
where neeessBFy,"
In aBethiF lettet, te Manly
Herten, Stihhs reafflFmi his
(See SiU, Page I)
tnm the students te lei us
thFeugh thli IneenvtBlinee'"
HaFFli laid that thi HeuilBg
ifflei will wiFk with the itudiBts
ti impFivi thilF diFmi, He
Invltei luggiitiins fFsm the
itudin ts and help in
Implemintlng thm suggistlaBs,
The pIcluFi, hewevir, is not so
hFlght fiF the 21 Niweomh
tFansfiF Ntudinti living In thi
La. politicians to speak on ethics
Tulane, Newcomb debate
future use for top of C.R.
by Killi MoOluir
Tulani and Niweemk
admlnlitFilari are pniintly
sngapd In i dthati linyiFnlng
the belt way te utlliisi thi mend
fliiF ef theCaFellni Rlihardien
hulldlng,
The 9,esg iquBFi feet ef ipaie
leeated over the Parleur In CR,
hai been empty fer mere than
twe yeaFi and both Tulane
Neweemb have plans fer uilng
the budding,
Tawn Itudini
Bean Jamei Bavldian ef
Neweemb College prepeiei to
uie the ipaee ai a ^offlblnatlen
tewn itudenti' lounge, general
Oevirning Counell (U.CQrC.) Is
lobbying to move thi plaeimint
offlei, nflwinthiU,f',,tor,R, so
that the iiudint iiniitt ean have
the ltri?f rooms now oeiupied by
plaeiment,
Lent Idli
"We all agree that the spuei In
C.R. hai been Idle long emnigh,"
eemmentid Davidson, "so now
the problem Is te deuldi how to
use It In the beit Intereitsef the
unlverilty,"
Davidson feeli that ilnee the
building was finuneed with
money made from Neweemb
itudeni meal eonlruels, II should
remilr baileally a eenter for
by Robert Buplentler
"Hew far ean yeu ge In using
siriptllleui miani, er ean yeu
uii them at ad? Afi publle
efflilals ihevi the law?" A
spiakiFi iiFlii en "lihiei In
Polities," speniOFid by thi
Tulani Cathelle CintiF, will
attimpt te answer these
quiitleni,
The pregFam, whieh will
Ineludi Leulilana efflelali from
the leeal, itate, and national level,
begini en leptembeF 13 with the
appiaFanee ef Louisiana
Lliutinant Oevernef Jimmy
PltemofFls, SpeakiFi te fellow
Include Mayer Meon LandFleu,
Judge Albert Tate, Jr, ef the
Leulilana SupFeme Court, U,8,
Cengreiswemun LIndy Beggi,
U.S. Senater Bennett Jehniten,
and. U.S. Cengreiiman P,
Bdward Hebert,
Quiitloni
Baeh speaker's presentation
en a partleular aipeet ef pelltleal
elhlei will be fellewed by a
queitlen and aniwer period, after
whieh perseni attending the
lerlei will have an eppertunlty tu
Father Val Melnnes, direeter
ef the Cathelie CiBter, views the
theme ef this year's program,
"Bthies In Pelitiei," as anether
Fisult ef the WatiFgat'e Fiasee and
the desires ef the general publle
to pFevent a simUaF Feeeeurrenee.
The Cathelie Center's series
will feeus en three baile needs;
the need for adherenee by publle
Sen. iennett Johneton
efflelali te a system ef ethlei In
government, the need fer
respensibUlty ef the publle itself.
Cemmenting en the need fer a
system ef ethles Melnnes said,
"Unless we have seme
well-defined let if ideals, nething
gets dene. We have te have
standards te live by and they have
te be, in seme way, ebjeetlve."
Melnnes was partieularly
eeneerned with the publle's right
te knew what Ihi government Is
deing. While eeneeding that the
government must limit the extent
te whieh It provides the publle
with Information, he asierted
nevertheless that the truth iheuld
netbeeeneealed,
Ixiipersting
The publle's respensibUlty, he
maintains, "Is to get te knew the
pelltleal system well enough that
they ean In faet use It. People will
get exasperated, but then they
won't fellow through... .to see
how they ean change the
system, "he said.
Father Melnnes made a ipedal
point ef mentioning that, while
invitations were extended to
prominent Republicans In an
effort to "balanee" polltleally the
lilt of guest speakers, theie
InHlulHiiala lianUmaA Fab ua*ln,ia
LONGENECKER RESIGNS AS PRESIDENT
by Katie McCluer
The new year began on an unexpected
note when Herbert Longenecker, president
of the University, announced his plans to
retire at the close of the 1 974-75 academic
year.
In a statement released last weekend,
Longenecker ascribed his sudden decision
to "personal reasons," noting that he will
be 63 years old on his requested retirement
date [July 1, 1975].
"I have made the request at this time in
order to provide ample time for an orderly
transition," he said.
Edmund Mcllhenny, chairman of the
Board of Administrators, announced that
the Board approved Longenecker's request
"with great regret."
"During the 1 5 years he will have served
as president, the University has
continuously developed its capacity for
educational leadership and its financial
position has been greatly strengthened,"
Mcllhenny said.
Looking toward the future, Mcllhenny
prophesied that a replacement would be
appointed by the end of 1974 or early in
1 975 to assure an overlap in terms.
Students, faculty, and administrators
met this week and quickly moved ahead
with the business of setting up a workable
system for choosing Longenecker's
successor.
"Joint action" was the key phrase at
Tuesday's meeting between
representatives of these three interest
groups. It was agreed that input from all
areas of the University community was a
prime consideration in the selection of a
new president.
"Longenecker's successor, whomever
he may be, will be in office for at least 10
to 15 years so it is vital that we choose
someone who can work with everybody,"
commented Jerry Clark (Grad.), president
of the Associated Student Body (ASB).
Tuesday's meeting ended with the
establishment of a preliminary committee
to serve as a sounding board for suggestionr
from the entire Umversity.
The committee, composed of three
faculty members, two students, and two
alumni, will be in charge of compiling a list
of presidential candidates.
DR. HERBERT LONGNECKER
Clark termed this set-up "very agreeable
from the student standpoint." He added
that although Tulane has a well-established
tradition for choosing a president, this year
marks the first time that students have had
any say in thematter.
Dr. Andy Antippas, professor of
English and a member of the American
Association of University Professors
(AAUP), voiced concern over the part that
the faculty will play in the selection
process.
The Board of administrators will decide
ona president, however, Antippas said that
the AAUP "has great interest in assuring
that all the candidates in the final running
are acceptable to the faculty."
Antippas has hopes that the list can be
narrowed down to a final six candidates by
October of 1974.
"This is not an easy job to fill," he
explained. "We need a man who can define
the goals of the University -someone who
is both a scholar and a fund-raiser."
Vol. LXXIV, No. 14 NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA, JANUARY 18, 1974 Tel. 865-6217
Scruton delays decision
on student use of stadium
Mardi Gras
questions
Out-of-state students may
—or may not- have trouble
finding a place to stay when they
come to New Orleans for Mardi
Gras this year.
Whether Tulane stadium will
be available hr these travelers is
still an unanswered question.
Peter Kohlmann (A&S75),
director of CACTUS, and
Deborah Pollack (N '74),
chairman of the Mardi Gras
Coalition, a committee of
CACTUS, met Wednesday with
Dr. Clarence Scheps, executive
vice president of the Umversity
Dr. John Stibbs, dean of students;
and Col. Robert Scruton, director
of Security to discuss the opening
of the stadium to Mardi Gras
visitors.
Dr. Herbert Longenecker,
president of the University, was
r.ot present at the meeting,
however, and Longenecker,
according to Kohlmann, is the
only one who can make the final
decision.
Housing in the stadium,
according to Kohlmann, is the
most practical solution to the
influx of visitors and guests who
have invaded the dormitories in
the past.
Entrance Fees
Last year, according to
Kohlmann, money obtained from
entrance fees charged at the
stadium - at 50 cents a h'^ad —
totaled $2,466. It cost Security
approximately $14, 000,
however, to keep the stadium
open during this six-day period.
"Tulane," according to
Kohlmann, "wants to get out of
this once and for all. I think they
take the side of the business
community," he said.
"But, "added Kohlmann, "a lot of
people are going to come away."
VPA ELECTION
An election to fill the post
of vice president of
administration of the student
senate will be held on
Thursday January 31st. The
void was created last semester
when Deirdre Boyd (N.'75)
resigned from the position.
Anyone wishing to run for
the office must present a letter
of intent, fifty signatures, and
a letter of academic standing
from his dean's office to the
Senate office by 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, January 22nd.
Language requirement
faces A&S showdown
by Richard McDermott
If you have seen those big
yellow buttons proclaiming
"Language: Yes, Requirement:
No" that have recently appeared
around the Tulane campus, you
may have guessed that something
big is brewing concerning that
ever controversial language
Energy crisis hits Tulane
ds students feel cut-back
by Rick Mason
The energy crisis, which has a
large part of the nation cringing
under layers of blankets and has
forced automobile gas tanks to go
thirsty for lack of fuel, has had a
definite, if not readily visible,
effect on the Tulane campus.
An Energy Conservation
Committee has been set up in
_ ir/._,.s>^, -onn Duff)
UNDECIDED: With Mardi Gras only a month away, the University still has not decided whether to use the
stadium to house student visitors.
order to study the crisis' effects
on the Tulane community and to
make recommendations to the
Administration on how to further
conserve energy. Dean John
McDowell, chairman of the
committee, said the University's
energy consumption level has
been decreased eleven percent
and added that the aim is for a
twenty-five percent reduction.
The committee has made
several recommendations so far
and is considering others, but
according to McDowell, if the
situation becomes worse, more
"drastic" measures will have to be
taken. He pointed out that if the
University depended on fuel oil,
it "would have already been cut."
Tulane uses more gas than
electricity but "the likelihood of
saving energy is greater in
electricity."
Thermostats
Adjustment of the
thermostats in the campus
buildings was the first
recommendation put into effect,
even before Nixon's suggestions
to the nation. A temperatureof
68 degrees will be maintained
when it is necessary to turn on the
heat. In addition, Tulane has an
(See CRISIS. Page 4)
requirement.
Something big is brewing, at
least for the College of Arts and
Sciences. This coming Tuesday
there will be a meeting of the
A&S Faculty at which time Dr.
Maurice Nugent, professor of
chemistry, plans to move for total
abolishment of the language
requirement.
Three times in the past three
years the language requirement
has been under fire at A&S
Faculty meetings. However, the
only time the issue was ever voted
on by the faculty was last year. In
the spring of 1972, a relatively
large percentage of A&S students
voted on the language
requirement with the results
showing an overwhelming 85
percent demanding some change
and 72 percent opposing an>
requirements. Last year, many
faculty members justified theii
votes to retain the requirement
by arguing that the students had
no substantial reasons foi
wanting it dropped.
WAGMAN TO WORK WITH REFORM VEEPS
by Dan Fjshbein
The special run-off election for next year's ASB
presidency held last Monday was won by Scott
Wagman, with b2.52% of the vote, over Jeff Barter,
running on the Reform ticket, who received 37.48%
of the votes cast. I 126 votes were cast in the special
election. Wagman joins the other newly elected ASB
officials, vice-president for administration Jack
Hildebrand, vice-president for finance Art Fishman.
and vice-president for University affairs Bob Aaron.
All three ran on the Reform Party ticket and were
elected last Thursday-
After the election, Wagman said he was "pleased
that for the first time in many years an independent
has cracked the ticket politics. 1 hope it will signify
the beginning ol a trend where people will vote for
the individual."
The question exists whether Wagman will be able
to work with three officers who ran on a ticket
which opposed him in the election. Aaron filed a
protest after the election concerning some
pamphlets that Wagman had distributed, but later
he withdrew the protest.
To this question Wagman replied that "the
difficulties are at an end. If I can provide the
leadership I think we all can do the job.
"Right now we have to break in the officers to
their respective boards." Wagman said. "That is, to
orient Jack to the Coordination Board, Art to the
Finance Board, and Bob to the Student Senate.
"My job is to talk to the senators and examine
the structure and history of the Senate. Our one
main goal is to somehow reorganize the Student
Senate to clean our own house. We have to do this
before we can gain the respect of the students, the
faculty and the Board of Administrators," he
continued,
Wagman said he planned to get together with the
Executive Committee and the class officers to
examine the procedures and shortcomings of the
Senate and to suggest changes.
Another major goal, according to Wagman, is to
"go back to the various schools and ask what they
expect out of the ASB. I expect this to be a
rebuilding year. We want to reorganize areas of mput
and make student government more responsive to
the students."
JACK HILDEBRAND, BOB AARON, ART FISHMAN,
AND SCOTT WAGMAN
®te ©ulane W Hullabaloo
Vol Lxxiv. No. :: NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA, MARCH 22, 1974 Tel. 865-6217
H
Bruno Bettelheim , Elizabeth Janeway . Edward Knight , Rosabeth Kanter , David GosUn
Elliot Richardson
The series opened this week with varied
programs exploring the Republican Party, the Arts
in America and the Family. Students, faculty, and
members of the community alike crowded into
McAlister Auditorium to listen to, and sometimes
pointedly question, the distinguished array of
speakers. (See stories, Pages 4 and 5)
(Photos bv Grant Bagan and John nuffl
Gordon Davidson
Beasley indicted
on fraud charges
by Richard McDermott
Dr. Joseph Beasley, dean of
Tulane's School of Public Health
and Tropical Medicine, was
indicted by a federal grand jury
this week in his capacity as
founder and chief of the Family
Health Foundation (FHF). This
marks the first time in the
history of the University that
the federal government has
leveled charges against a dean at
Tulane.
Beasley, together with three
other Family Health officials, is
charged with conspiring to
defraud the governnment
Election fills
28 positions
for Newcomb
by Laura Wlllimon
Newcomb students went to
the polls to vote for 28 different
positions, including class
representatives, dorm presidents,
Honor Board representatives,
and Newcomb Senate officers.
Chosen as president of
Resident Government was Ruth
Muscoivitz (N '75). President of
Butler is Jean Bettis, president
of Warren is Jennette Brickman
(N '75), president of Doris is
Susan Lapidus (N '76). president
of Johnston is Karen Blumenfeld
(N '76), president of Palerson is
Mindy Sloan (N "77). and
president of J.L. is Lyn Odom
(N -77).
The Newcomb Senate officers
are as follows: president, Debbie
Rosenblum ( N '75);
vice-president, Wendy Delery (N
'75), corresponding secretary.
Kathy Epstein (N '77); recording
secretary, Liz Guerin (N '76);
and treasurer, Cygne Hahn (N
76).
-specifically the Department of
Health, Education and Welfare
(HEW)- by making false claims
for federal money and by lying
to federal authorities to cover up
transactions.
The charges revolve around a
controversial set of mobile
health clinics. According to the
indictment. Family Health was
allocated some $659,000 m a
contract with the State of
Louisiana for the purchse of 15
mobile clinics.
Birth Control
Family Health's end of the
contract was to deliver birth
control services to Louisiana's
poor. HEW reimburses the state
for 90 percent of its
expenditures with FHF. So
when the mobile clinics were
built, the question arose as to
where the money went and more
essentially whether it was a
matter of misappropnation of
federal funds. The indictment
says the funds were "diverted to
other purposes."
A brief press conference was
called lated Tuesday afternoon,
soon after the indictments has
been handed down. Dave
Lelewer. director of
communications at Family
Health, made this statement at
that time:
Indictments
"We have just read the
indictment that has been
returned against Family Health
Foundation and its principal
officers. We want to say
emphatially and categorically
that every transaction involving
the mobile-modular clinics was
legal and proper and was
entirely open and above-board...
The claims of fraud, trickery,
deceit, etc. are absolutely and
totally false. The claim of fraud
IS transparent and could
SRC RECOMMENDS FINANCIAL EXIGENCY
6v Terry ireen
Tuline ii in "a sertoui finsnii&l
sifuatiin" wesfiiBi teBf, WaynsWggiy,
smiat^ iean @f Law and ehalFman §f the
Ij^eiel Reesmmendatisns e§mmitUe
(iRS) sf the Univiflily Senate,
If the Univeraity is ti keep ffgm
depleting all sf its reserve msney in the
next tw9 m three years, it will have te
reduee the eurrent pr@jeeted defieit @f
11,1 millien t@ S I millisn fer next year, By
the fellswini year (1I7§=76) there will
have t@ he a lers defieit, aeetrdinp t@ hith
the eurrentTulane adminlstratiiin pian and
the reesmmendatisn ef the SRC,
The means te aee@mpliih these gials,>
rather than the geals themselves, Is a
suhjeet «)ver whieh the Adminlstratlsn and
the SRe differ,
The Speelal Reeemmendatien
eemmlttee reeemmends that the
University restrueture sehssls and esUegei
gg as t@ eut dupUeatign sf eff@rt ind
maximiiie savings,
In srder fsr these divlsisns tg have the
flexihility in making these ehangei, the
IRC suggests that the University make a
"deelaraetien ef exigeney" whieh wguld
gllgw the various diviaisns tg fire unneeded
tenured faeulty, Wggdy said that this state
President €larenee ieheps dges ngt think
any tenured faeulty will have tg he fired,
He feels the University ean halanee its
hudget in twg years hy hglding the line gn
essts \n mm areas, eutttng the hudgets
gf exigeney shguld last fsr ahsut sne
year=gnly Igng engugh ti restrueture the
University,
Hgwever, University Exeeutive Viee
slightly in gther areas, and inereasing
inegm'e via tuitign inereases and gther
means, He is very mueh gppgsed tg
deilarlnganexlgeney.
Therggt gfTulane'sprghlemiithatfer
the past I d years she has spent an average
gf 11 milllgn a year more than sht farned^
In reeent years, she has spent reughly SSS
millisn a year, Thrgugh tuitign, grants,
gifts, and prgfits frgm tne endgwmenlthe
University has keen ahle tg raise rsu^ly
S48fflillignayear,
The defieit wy always met hy spending
funds In reserve, alsg kngwn as "funds
funetigning as endgwment" beeauie they
are invested like endgwment until they are
needed tgegver expenses.
It is predieted that hy the end gf the
fiseal year en June 16, \^1i the Unlveriity
wHI have S4,4 mUlign left in reserve, Of
this, II mUlign eanngt he spent in the
immediate future heeause It must stand ai
seeurlty fgr eertain investments the
University His nude.
This leaves il,4 mUlien as a minlfflum
fgr lune 19, 1 974 hewever,'thii figure dies
nst take intg egnslderatien earnings if
these funds, whieh, aeeirding ti Wieiy,
(lee FINANCIAL, Page 4)
"^ht "^nlnnt 9 UttUababo
Vg|, LXXIV, Ng, 14 NIW ORLIANS, LOUISIANA, APRIL 5, l«74 Tel, Sll^g|l7
Clash averted with ROTC move
by Kay Kahler
The Tri^Serviee Ceremgny,
griglnally seheduled tg he held gn
the UC Quad sn Tuesday, was
mgved tg the Stadium heeause sf
a misunderstanding gf student
sentiment due tg a laek gf
egmmunleatisn hetween the
Administratign and students,
Aeegrding ts Sr, Edward
Rggge, AAi dean gf admlssigns
and military egsrdinatgr, "The
unit egmmanders planned
earefully with the University
administratsrs as ts the Iseatign
gf the eeremsny, They were very
t^areful t,g gs thrsugh the prsper
ehanneli heeause it was a tguehy
issue, Hgwever, the eivUian
student memher |Art Levlne
(LAW75)| sf the eemmittee en
RQTC Pregrams did nst attend
the meetings last fall hen this was
diseussed and deelded upsn,"
Deelilen
The final declsisn was made
snNsvemherl*,
Rggie emphaiieed that
"ngthing wu Intended te he
hehind the haek sf the students.
They |the egmmanders] wgrked
well within the system, Had the
student memher heen there and
igfflmunieated that this was a
sensitive mgve, we eeuld have
avgiffed what happened,"
Jim eahh (A4S'74) agreed
that there was "ne attempt hy the
Administratign te subvert the
prggram, The fault lies in the laek
sf esmmunieatisH between the
egmmittee and Rina C'ehan |vlee
president fsr University affairs]
heeause she did net repert haek
te the Senate, She is respensihie
fer knewing what gees en In these
egmmlttees even if the student
members dg net repert te her,
Had we kngwn what happened,
we wsuld nst have reaeted In
erganiiing the demsnitratlsn,"
Csbh emphaslised that Dr,
Herbert Lsngeneeker, president
sf the University, had aeted in
gsgd faith hy meving the
eeremsny frsm the Quad te the
Stadium.
Regge added, "Ts have a
eenfrgnt alien ever a
mliunderitanding li the height ef
Idigey, Any lenfrgntatign gnihe
Quad Tuesday wguld have heen a
misunderstanding. The mgral gf
this Is tg try ts make the
eemmittee system werk msre
effeetively,"
Mere Pu^lle
Rsgge said that the deeislsn ts
mgve the eeremsny te the Quad
resulted frem a desire te make the
servlees mere publie, "We want te
strengthen the ROTC units gn
Financial future provides
Impetus for discussion
(See ROTC, Page 1)
by Ketle Meeiuer
"Msney" was a fretuintly
tpeken werd at the University
Senate meeting en Msnday as
members gathered te diseussthe
flnaneial future ef the University,
Impetus fsr the three=heur
dieusaien was a repert made by
Dr, Wayne Weedy, chairman ef
the Speelal Reeemmendatlsns
DomeaHc exchange program
initiated by McDowell
The prggram, said MeDgwell,
li net really anything new, but Is
merely a way ef gperatienaliiini
what Is already happening,
Aeeerding ts him, many sf the
students whs transfer frem
Tulane eften end up riiuming.
Other students plan ahead ef time
is spend a semester at anether
university and werk eui the
arrangements en an individual
basis.
by Dm Plihbtin
Tulane students will new be
able te spend a semester er a full
year at ether universities in the
Unhed States and have their
return te Tulane faeilltated by a
new prggram, anneuneed Dr,
Jshn MeDewell, assistant dean ef
A*8,
mr^'-m^rm^ ^lt^'/^^n,y:..
,»k
ROre.CEIlEMpNYJip^_P-MI"**»**M Awifd Cmmony, orlgiMUy ieMultd for the Quid, wa
New Pregrim
Under this new prsgram,
students that with te attend
anether aeheel for a semester
may plan a program fer appreval
er aeeeplanee ef transferable
«retlltN with the supperl ef
Tulane In applying te anether
seheel,
Aliheugh prier te return, a
readmisslen applleatisn must be
filed, If the student Is tllll In geed
standing after his term at the
ether university, his reudmliilsn
at Tulane Isalmesl assured,
In erder te qualify, a student
eannet be en prnbatlen, He
should eontaut the dean ef his
uiillege and present the program
he expeuts te take at the transfer
university, MeDewell suld that
the student's unilergraduate
eellege weuld be mere disposed
te lead asslslanee If the student's
riaa RyfUANflR Paaa 'i\
eemmittee (IRC), whieh
sugiisted that the "University
deilare that a state if flnaneial
exiieney exists,"
weedy's prspesil esneluded a
yiar=leni series if meetingi
between reprisentatlvei ef the
faeulty, Adminlstratlsn, and
student bedy whe served en the
SRCdeisteryabeve),
He emphasUid that the
Cemmittee's findings prived that
"It Is net true that the University
is faelng bankruptey," but added
that deelaring flnaneial exigeney
Is neeessary beeause "the
Cgmmlttee has eeneluded that aU
else has failed,"
The Cemmittee's geal li te
reaeh a defieit ef II mUllinby
If 71 and a lere deflilt by the
next year (lee figures, page 4),
AeesFdlng te Weedy, this geal ean
be reaehed Ihreugh a varleni ef
the "tub en Its ewn betiem" plan
(See SINATI, Page I)
A&S elections
postponed to
fall semester
The Cellege ef Arts and
Selenees eleetlens have been
pestpened until Sept, 19,
aeeerding te Shepard lamueli
(AAS ^74), A*S Ceunell
president and AAS Bleetleni
eemmittee ehalrman,
Samuels said that eleelleni
were pestpened beeause ef
eemplalnts from eandldales thai
they did net have time te
eampalgn and beeause there hid
been little publleily,
(See AA8, Page 3)
ThiifwUliMnoHULLAIA.'
LOO ntxl wMk due le Km
Itiltr hoUdiyii Out lat Imim
of the Mimiter wBI be die
faBAarfiuiua«ti- Anril 10-
The Tulane Hullabaloo W. T. U. L.
LARRY ARCELL/Editor-in-Chief
KATHRYN KAHLER/Associate Editor
RICHARD WEISS/Business Manager
LEE WILKERSON/Production Manager
LYNN LANDRUM/News Editor
KATIE McCLUER/Assistant News Editor
RICHARD McDERMOTT/Sports Editor
MARION LANASA/Ass't. Sports Editor
NATE KACEW/Features Editor
PETER BRUNSTETTER/Ass't. Features Editor
RICK MASON/Entertainment Editor
JOHN DUFF/Photography Editor
MICHAEL SUSSMAN/Darivrooni Manager
MAUREEN MURPHY/Administrative Ass't.
KEITH ABRAMSON/Columnist
TIM WELLER/Senior Reporter
SYDNEY WHITAKER/Editorial Ass't.
JEFF LEVINE/Cartoonist
DAVID SCHULMAN/Advertising Manager
CRAIG BACHNER/Circulation Manager
ERNEST M. BACK/General Manager
JOHN ABBOTT/Music Director
HUGH RAWN/Program Director
ALAN SMASON/Director of Development
THOMAS GIESELER/Teciinical Director
THOMAS PLANCHARD/Chief Engineer
RICHARD S. PADDOR/Sports Director
JOHN CLEMENS/News Director
ROBERT DUNN/Production Director
MICHAEL MCHUGII/Educational Programming
ALAN SMASON/General Manager
DOUGLAS VINCENT/Program Director
JAY HOLLINGSWORTH/Music Director
THOMAS GIESELER/Technical Director
THOMAS PLANCHARD/Chief Engineer
ROBERT DUNN/Production Director
LEN MARIN 0/Chief Announcer
JOHN CLEMENS/News Director
RICHARD WINER/Sports Director
LIZ WETZEL/Educational ProgTamming
KATHRYN KAHLER/Editor-in-Chief
RICHARD MASON/Associate Editor
CRAIG BACHNER/Business Manager
KATIE McCLUER/News Editor
SYDNEY WHITAKER/Ass't. News Editor
RICHARD MASON/Entertainment Editor
PETER BRUNSTETTER/Sports Editor
MARION LANASA/Features Editor
RICHARD BAUDOIN/Ass't. Features Editor
JOHN DUFF/Photography Editor
GRANT BAGAN/Darkroom Manager
DAN FISHBEIN/Editorial Assistant
JEFF LEVINE/Art Editor
ERIN FEENEY/Circulation Manager
JUDITH LEE/Administrative Assistant
KAREN BLUMENFELD/Secretary
Giant Sea Turtles
Francisco fliecha Y Erianz
Things are peculiar . .
.
. . . transcendental nostalgia . .
.
detached from space . .
.
. and time . .
.
Sensory information follows . .
.
necessary human intrinsic order . .
.
. . . Everything is a separate god . .
.
each thing is . .
.
... its own space time . .
.
^
%.
—the sun lights silentli) by . .
.
without love, substantiating . .
.
shadows lending existence to noticing
Robert F. Aaron, Jr.
Julie Abadie
John G. Abbott
Constance V. Abraham
Keith V. Abramson
Susan J. Acord
Jack H. Adams
Maxine D. Adilman
Henry Adkins
Martha R. Adkins
Cornelius M. Alig
Steven M. Allen
Kate Alley
Andrew J. Alpar
Mary L. Alphonse
^ '
'-IT
Julie A. Adler
Neal K. Adler 1
v^ ^%« i^^Kk
Algert S. Agricola 1L'T™ ^D
Aftab N. Ahmed 1 fc- 1^^^^
Mary C. Akers 4VT w^
Khan A. Akmal
Muhanunad Akram i^*
Carlos D. Alderson
Peter Alfaro 1 Hkr'^^lL^
Rafael Alfonzo mlh ^^^H
m. -^
lU(Akl.u>LUffMHH^i||H|
Jay P. Altmayer
John D. Alvarez
Jorge Alvarez
Thomas L. Amadio
Raymond A. Amador
Charles F. Amann
Yvette P. Amedee
Joan H. Anderson
Julia L. Anderson
Shawney E. Anderson
tf^^^M Tyrus R. Anderson
Diane L. Andrus
^Hl h^e^ Dennis M. Angelico
^|kJ!^ -T^^V' Cindy A. Arata
,^ Lloyd J. Arbo, Jr.
p-^v Edith Ariail -^^ Annette M. Armstrong
IT Neil A. Armstrong
' - John D. Arnold
\<-'^
W
Richard S. Arnstine
Elizabeth A. Asher
Heather Ashman
Michele Asmuth
Ronald H. Aspaas
Alvaro F, Asturias
Robert S. Aultman
Charles M. Babb
Beryl Bachus
Fred J. Baehr
Donald J. Bagert
Andrew R. Bagon
Henry L. Bahr
James M. Baker
Michael A. Balazs
Lloyd N. Baldwin
John C. Ballman
Michael E. Ballotti
Bridget E. Banz
Laura A. Barber
Norman K. Barbone
Maria C. Bargas
Lisa Barkley
Donald A. Barnes
John T. Barnes
Kerry A. Bamett
Jaime J. Barraza
John T. Barrett
T^'illiam T. Barry
Jeffrey D. Barter
Ben Bashinski
Beverly E. Baskin
Oscar R. Batson
David V. Batt
Deborah E. Bauman
Merrill Bauman
Steve Bauman
Karen R. Baumgarten
Dalan J. Bayham
Brian C. Beach
Claude A. Beaudreault
Chandler R. Becker
Jaime F. Beingolea
Melissa L. Belcher
Frederic L. Bell
MaiT A. Bell
Jeanette S. Bellina
Richard M. Benator
Paul C. Benesh
George A. Benner
Ann Bennett
Ariana H. Bennett
Michael A. Bennett
Stephen S. Bentivegna
Herbert C. Berding
Les M. Berenson
Andrew S. Berg
Holly A. Berkowitz
Eve R. Bemow
Jay G. Bernstein
Gloria M. Bertucci
Pauline Bettendorf
Mark D. Beuhler
Arthur A. Bianchi, III
Thomas J. Bienvenu
Karen Bishoff
Ted A. Biskind
Debbie A. Bislip
Bruce J. Bivona
Maud M. Bivona
Daniel J. Blackman
Claire D. Blaine
Michaele M. Blair
Michael H. Blakely
Sally H. Blanchard
Robert F. Bland
Cynthia Blank
George E. Blasini
Barbara F. Blatt
Solomon T. Blinke
Phillip B. Block
Lucia F. Bloodgood
Eric L. Bloomfield
Patrick M. Bloomfield
Lucy E. Blount
Gordon Blundell
Lucile Bodenheimer
WUIiam W. Bohn
Frank J. Boniewski
Richard H. Boodnick
Phillip J. Boogaerts, Jr.
Charlotte M. Bordenave
Bonnie A, Bordes
Bruce P. Bordlee
Lance M. Borochoff
John C. Boudreaux
Oscar W. Boultinghouse
Brian C. Bouttc
Patricia M. Bowen
Bruce Bowers
Keith W. Bowman
Kevin L. Bowman
Julius W. Boyar
Van R. Boyette
Karl Bozicevic
Bridget Z. Bradley
Robert C. Brandt
Frank R. Brannon
William A. Braun
Susan C. Braverman
Peter Breen
Thomas P. Breslin
BUIJ. Brichta
Frances R. Brock
Bruce T. Brodney
Steven H. Brooksher
Leslie A. Bropbacher
Beverly B. Brown
Qiris Brown
David M. Brown
Ellen B. Brown
Kennel P. Brown
Margaret F. Brown
Richard L. Brown
Robert G. Brown
Robert M. Brown
Daniel P. Bruce
Peter S. Brunstetter
Thomas C. Brutting
Peter D. Bryden
Barbara A. Buchstane
Robin S. Buckner
Ronald R. Buescher
Michele M. Bulliard
Steven R. Bumpus
Robert L, Bunnen
Courtney Burge
Denise Burka
Roger A. Burke
Harold C. Burkert, Jr.
Wilton M. Burt
Mark J. Bush
Neil M. Bush
Denise M. Butler
James C. Butler
James R. Butner
Kevin J. Byrne
Edward Calix
Kerry P. Camarata
William W. Cameron
Arthur C. Camp
Mlmi Campbell
Sharon F. Campbell
Lu A. Canan
Sharon M. Cantrell
Carolyn A. Capel
Kay E. Capella
Valerie E. Caproni
Vincent E. Caracci
David P. Carey
Bruce E. Carmedelle
Wynn B. Carner
Regan G. Carney
Carol A. Carp
Gayle L. Carp
Michelle J. Carroccio
Brad S. Carson
Virginia A. Carswell
Connie R. Carter
Michael C. Carter
Lon Cartivright
Peter V. Casano
Taylor J. Casey
John D. Cassanova
Linda S. Cauley
Michael A. Cenac
Cynthia A. Cerise
Antoine Chalhoub
Dale L. Chambers
Yulv S. Chan
Molly R. Chancey
Clark R. Charbonnet
John A. Chauvin
Nancy J. Chenette
Susan J. Chester
Alfred B. Chiles
Catherine C. Chisolm
Michael P. Christiansen
Gale W. Ciceric
Louis G. Clan
David F. Clapp
Jerry E. Clark
Richard B. Clark
Gale Clayton
Joanie Cleary
Ulmer Cleland
James M. Clement, Jr.
Miles P. Clements
Cindy L. Cloninger
Marilyn J. Coady
James A. Cobb
Phyllis C. Coci
Leonard L. Cohan
Douglas M. Cohen
Lisa E. Cohen
Maria J. Cohen
Robert L. Cohen
Paul L. Colby
Kenneth H. Cole
John S. Collier
Ann H. Collins
Frank Collins
Hector M. Colon
Gordon M. Combs
Jody B. Cook
Lauren D. Cooper
Margaret A. Corkem
Carol L. Corse
Raul J. Cotilla
Ian M. Cotton
Mary C. Cousins
Peter L. Couturie
Emanuel P. Couvillon
John H. Cowan
Shari A. Cox
Drucilla N. Crabtree
John H. Craft
James L. Craig, Jr.
Anne Craighead
Sabrina A. Crais
Victor C. Crane
m^'^kM Richard M. Cranford
^'•tII Cindy L. Crawley
-1 Louis R. Crayne w --/ Frederick L. Crevoiserat
William D. Crockett
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Maureen A. Cronan
James T. Cronvich
Debra L. Crown
Gregory C. Cummings
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