"W"
M* iMrtlMWfc lilt
'—. 1
-
1 .1111..
..I ,rfy «.
^
<
.:';"'^---: iV
^ X
*-\;- - "?».
^^ifeW"^
i
Tulane
New Orleans, Louisiana
1983,. Volume 88
1983 Jambalaya
Edward M. Esposito
Editor-in-Chief
Susan Corgiat
Media Advisor
Susan Poovey
Publishing Representative
Suzanne Saussy
Business Editor
AAAAAAA
AAAAYA!
^- isw.
KHAtOSLB
Byron Lohman
Photography Editor
Victor Rodriguez
Photography Editor
Amy Pepper
Layout Editor
Mary Brett
Copy Editor
Opening
Academics
L
' I.
Graduate Schoo 46
Organizations
Sports
Student Life
72
92
126
Greeks 174
Seniors 226
Honoraries 240
C asses 256
Tulane
A University with Tradition
Tulane University comprises 11
academic divisions with over 6,500
undergraduates and 3,800 graduate
students. The College of Arts and
Sciences and Newcomb College are
liberal arts colleges for men and
women, respectively. Schools of
Architecture, Business and Engineering
offer both undergraduate and graduate
programs. Other divisions include the
Graduate School and Schools of Law,
IVledicine, Public Health and Tropical
Medicine, Social Work and University
College. All divisions except the
medical complex, which includes a
teaching hospital and clinics, are
located on Tulane's 110-acre campus
in uptown New Orleans.
Tulane has a long tradition of
leadership in higher education, both
regionally and nationally. It was
founded in 1834 as the Medical
College of Louisiana, the Deep South's
first medical school. In 1847, when the
Medical College merged with the
public University of Louisiana in New
Orleans, it added law studies,
establishing the twelfth oldest law
school in the nation, and an academic
department for men that today is the
College of Arts and Sciences.
The Civil War caused the University
to close temporarily in the early 1860's,
and the war's aftermath brought about
a series of financial problems. In 1882,
a permanent solution was found.
Paul Tulane, a New Orleans
merchant, set up the Tulane
Educational Fund to be administered
by a self-perpetuating board. In 1884
the state legislature turned over the
property and control of the University of
Louisiana to the board and the
University, now a private institution,
was named The Tulane University of
Louisiana in honor of its benefactor.
In 1886 Newcomb College was
established as a degree-granting
women's college within Tulane
University — the first women's college
of its l<ind in the nation. In 1894 the
University moved to its new campus on
St. Charles Avenue, five miles from its
former site in downtown New Orleans.
In the following decades Tulane
established several professional
schools, including the Deep South's
first schools of architecture (1907) and
social work (1927). The Middle
V -rvki-
American Research Institute, founded at
Tulane in 1924, became a pioneer in
Central American archaeology and
anthropology, excavating and restoring
the Mayan village of Dzibilchaltun in
the Yucatan. In 1942 Tulane founded
University College to provide
continuing education for adults in New/
Orleans.
Since World War II Tulane has
emphasized the development of
graduate studies and research in the
Graduate School and in several of the
professional schools. The emphasis
has both strengthened the
undergraduate divisions, which share
faculty with the Graduate School, and
produced important new knowledge. In
1977, for example. Dr. Andrew Schally
of the School of Medicine received the
Nobel Prize for Medicine for his
research on the endocrine system.
The University's nine librahes, which
hold over 1 .3 million volumes and
12,000 penodicals, include the mam
Howard-Tilton Memorial Library with
branch collections in architecture and
natural history, and separately
administered libraries of law, medicine,
business, mathematics and primate
research. Special collections include
the William Ransom Hogan Jazz
Archive, the Maxwell Music Library, the
Southeastern Architectural Archive, the
Latin American Library and the
Louisiana Collection of historical
materials.
The juxtapostion of so many
disciplines on one campus creates a
lively academic atmosphere. Tulane's
speaker program's, film sehes, stage
productions, art shows and music
programs make the University a major
cultural center. At the same time, the
relatively small size of the individual
schools and colleges preserves an
identity and intimacy for their students
that is more typical of a small college
than a large university.
New Orleans
New Orleans is a truly unique city
with blend of mint julep and magnolia,
French and Spanish colonial, Old South
and bustling contemporary America, It
is a sensual city — where aromas of
spicy Creole food waft in the air. It is a
historical city, founded as a small
French colony by Jean Baptiste
Lemoyne, Sieur de Bienville and
named in honor of the regent Louis XV,
due d'Orleans,
The onginal colony comprised the
area known as the Vieux Carre, the
French Quarter, New Orleans' most
famous and popular tourist attraction.
The Quarter today still boasts narrow,
cobblestoned streets; building of brick
and plaster with balconies of ornate
filigreed wrought iron; lovely, lush
tropical patios hidden away behind
shuttered porticos; numerous antique
shops and art galleries; and some of
the world's finest restaurants.
Throughout the 18th century the
A Vintage City
French Quarter was the domain of the
Creoles, the descendants of the early
French and Spanish settlers. In 1803,
New Orleans was ceded to the United
States as a part of the Louisiana
Purchase, and Americans began
pouring into the city. So different were
the Americans in manner and customs
from the Creoles that a great animosity
and competitive spirit developed
between the two. The Americans
settled on the up-river side of Canal
Street ("Uptown") and the wealthiest of
those built their spacious homes in the
Garden District, about 20 blocks from
Canal Street. Here you will find a great
variety of architectural styles — Creole,
Neo-Classical, West Indiana, Italianate,
Greek Revival, Victorian and several
indigenous styles such as the
"shotgun" and "camelback."
Farther up St. Charles Avenue is the
University section with two private
universities and a small women's
college, stately homes, shops,
restaurants and Audubon Park. Within
Audubon Park's 280 acres are a zoo,
golf course, bicycle and bridle trails,
and large open spaces ideal for
throwing footballs and frisbees. From
the levee at the southern end of the
park, there is a first-rate view of the
Mississippi River where one can sit and
watch the ships pass. And northwest of
the Quarter is the Lakefront area with
its seafood restaurants and view of
Lake Pontchartrain.
While each area of the city has its
own distinctive qualities, anywhere in
New Orleans you are still in — New
Orleans. Whether you're visiting for the
summer or live here year long,
remember that many of New Orleans'
most vivid features cannot be
appreciated by sight alone. You must
hear, feel, smell and taste the
character of the city.
10
11
12
.*:
'''/''' i'.- ^—^- . ^
• -•!-43si2x^
In/'" "V'Cil^i
tS . SS^t" l^S '
JH •
sv" j^^^H -9^
<^' ^_:^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l
^ BH^'mmJ^ >-jr^ ^l~ "W^i^^^ i^^AltT
gV-^"/.^^'J!^B
14
^«i*(**«WM<**"- •- Faculty
15
Eamon Michael Kelly
President of Tulane University
16
Tulane A Growing Community
Board of Administrators
Chairman: John G. Phillips
Vice Chairmen: John W. Doming
W. Boatner Roily III
Front LR; Lanier Simmons, John W Deming,
John G. Phillips. W, Boatner Reily III. Sybil M
Favrot Back LR; A, J. Waechter Jr., Harry B.
Kelleher. W. Kennon IVlcWilliams Jr , Harry J.
Blumenthal, Erik F Johnson, Henry E Braden III,
John G, Weinmann, Peter A Aron, G Shelby
Friedrichs.
17
18
19
>'^v
DEANS
Joseph E. Gordon
Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences
Raymond A. Esthus
Acting Dean of Newcomb College
Louis E. Barrilleaux
Dean of University College & Director of
thte Summer Scfnool
Anthropology — Back L to R; Dr J.L Fischer. Dr DM Healan,
E,W, Andrews, M.S. Edmonson Front L to R;
W,M. Norman, A.R. King, D,D Davis, B,M
Masquelier, H.M. Bricker.
•-^rr.'^lt^a?
Biology — L to R; Charles F, Ide, Milton Fiugerman
chairman, Leonard B. Thien, Michael M. Kane,
Gerald E. Gunning, Erik G, Ellgaard, Robert
Tompkins. John T. Barber, Merle Mizell. A, Ross
Kiester,
22
Art Department — Back Left to R; Hal Carney, Donald Robertson,
James Steg, John Clemmer (chairman). Gene
Koss, Richard Tuttle, Arthur Kern. Front Left to R;
Jessie Poesck, Pat Tsisrgno, Caecilia Davis, Dennis
Costanza,
Chemistry — Back Left to R; P. Gebert, M. Herman, H. Ensley,
J. Jacobes. W. Schriner, J. Homer. M. Sulkes
Front Left to R; J. Mague, W Alworth, M, Levy,
Missing; R Averbach, L. Byers, 0. Fritchie, G,
McPherson, R Sohmehl, H. Jonascen.
23 I
Classics — Back Left to R; Dr. Stanford G. Etheridge, Dr. Dennis P
Kehoe, Dr Alan J Avery-Peck, Dr R M. Frazer, Dr. Kenneth
W Hare, Front Left to R; Dr James J Buctiannan, Jim
Docker, Dr. Cetin M Smithi, Dr. Joe Park Poe (chairman).
Economics — Front Left to R; Jonathon Hamilton, Carroll Smith, Alice
Slutsky (dog), Ann Kocher, 2nd Row; Janet Furman, Patricia
Warren, Bob Brlto, 3rd Row; Harold Fried, Betty Daniel,
George French, 4th Row; Adele Wick, Mary Thomas, John
Newman, Yves Balcer, Radu Filimon, Steven Slutsky. Ernest
Tanner. Back Left to R; John Boschen, Herman
Freudenberger, Clark Nardinelli, William Oakland, Missing;
Rodney Ralvey. Rodney Gretlein, Yutaka Horiba, Frank Keller,
Sanford Morton. Eytan Sheshinski, Dana Campbell.
24
Education — Right Row; Dr. Robert Wimpelberg, Dr
Marguerite Bougere, Ms, Carol Catardi, Dr John
King Left Row; Dr Nancy Nystrom, Dr Rita
Zerr, Dr Diane Manning (chairperson), Dr.
Samuel Stnngfield.
English — From Bottom Left to R; M Stewart, M Young,
J. Cohen, J. Catano, M. Boardman, B. Ahearn, P
Boyette, T. Toulouse, J.L. Simmons. M. Kreyling,
G. Mulderig.
25
Geology — Left to R; R, Horodyski, R. Parsley, G. Flowers,
L. Metelman, S. Nelson, E Vokes, M. Seale. J.
McDowell Missing; H. Skinner
History — Left to R; W, Burlie Brown, Nels M Bailkey,
Charles H, Carter, Gertrude M Yeager, Raymond
A, Esttius, Ralph Lee Woodward, George L,
Berstein, Sylvia R. Frey, Kenneth W, Harl. Colin
M. MacLachlan, Samuel C, Ramer, Patrick J.
Maney, Bill C. Malone, James N, Hood, Charles
T. Davis, F. Robert Hunter, Clarence L, Mohr,
Lawrence N. Powell, Dino Cinel, D. Blake
Louthstone.
26
French —
Seated Left to R; Catharine S Brosman
Elizabeth W Poe, Linda L Carroll, Candance D
Lang Standing Lett to R; Harry Redman.
George Rosa. Hope Glidden. Weber D.
Donaldson (chairman).
^'Sfc-yPJ
I^HM^^^^BP^^^Vt^^^^^^l
sn*^-^.-
'
f:
,' >W! 'im
::V 1 y- "—' — -m^^ --«•
German and Russian —
Left to R; Bode Gotzkowsky. Jessica Diaz. Ann
R. Arthur. Birgit E. Berger. William C. Brumfield.
Karlheinz Hasselbach.
Spanish and Portuguese —
Front Left to R; Margaret Stock. Dulce Maria
Garcia. Lydia Meledreras. Steven Boldy. Patricia
Bany. Back Left to R; Paloma Tejero. Thomas
Montgomery. Daniel L. Heiple. James F, Brown.
Norman C. Miller. Otto Olivera. Almir Brunet.
Gilbert Paolini.
27
Math — Seated Left to R; Jackie Boling, Susan Lan,
Meredith Mickel, Jerry Goldstein, Hester
Paternostro Standing Left to R; Bob Gardner,
Tapas Mazumdar, Terry Lawson, Thomas Love,
Steve Rosencrans, Michael Mislove. Edward
Conway, Jim Rogers, John Liujjonen, Laszio Fuchs,
Ross Urwin, Al Vitter, Ronald Knill, Bill Nico, Bob
Miller, Frank Tipler, Gary Sod, Frank Quigley,
Chong Han, Hossein Mansouri, John Dauns
Behind the Glass Far Back; Ronald A. Fintushel,
Philosophy — Front Left to R; Graeme Forbes, Louise Roberts.
Ronna Burger, R.C. Whittemore, Bacl« Left to R;
Donald Lea, John D. Glenn, Michael Zimmerman,
Andrew Reck, Radu Bregdov.
28
Physical Education —
Physics —
Front Left to R; Durham, Fran Delfeld, Jules
Mollere, Morris, Rosenteel, Perdew Back Left to
R; Deck, Riess, M Norman, Kyame. Top;
Purrington (chairman).
Political Science —
Left to R; Henry L. Mason, Jean Danielson,
Robert Strong, Douglas Rose, William B. Gwyn,
Paul Stekler, Robert Robins, James Davidson.
29
^m
Psychology — Back Lett to R; Peter Clark, William Dunlop, Jefferson
Sulzer, Terry Cfiristenson, Lawrence Dacfiawski,
Ctirisman Wilson, J, Hanscfie, Edgar O'Neal, Halsey
Matteson Front Left to R; Barbara Moely, Cfiizucko
Izawa, Krista Stewart, Pat Scfiindler, Davis Cfiambliss,
Jams Dunlop, Jeffrey Lockman. Seated Left to R; Lee
Hoffman, Ina Bilodeau, Tina l\/larshall.
Public Policy — Left to R; Mark Ivlcbride, Don England, Stepfien
Under, Guy Peters.
30
Sociology — Front Left to R; Paul Roman, Richard Tardanico,
Shelley Coverman, Paul Benson Back Left to R;
Frederick Koenig, Edward Morse, Joel Devine, Terry
Blum, Dwayne Smith.
Theater — Kneeling Left to R; Gregory Etter, Linda Conway.
Front Left to R; Gary Bailard, Theresa O'Shea,
George Hendwickson, Ellen Ryba, Ron Gural. Buzz
Podewell Back Left to R; John Rouse.
31
Architecture
Ronald C. Filson
Dean of the School of Architecture
32
Architecture —
Seated Left to R; Susan Ubbelohde, Georgia
Bizios, James Lamantia, Karen Kingsley. Back Left
to R; Franklin Adams, William Turner, John Rock,
Robert Helmer, Ron Filson, Robert Schenker,
Gareth Jones, Mark Denton, Malcolm Heard, Bruce
Goodwin, Leo Oppentieimer, H T,C Davis, Bernard
Lemann
33
Engineering
Hugh A. Thompson
Dean of the School of Engineering
34
Biomedical Engineering — Left to R; van Buskirk, J B Paik, Cednc Walker,
DA Rice, SC Cowin, RR Ashman,
Civil Engineering — Lett to R; Dr S C Das, Dr John L Niklaus, Dr
Robert N Bruce, Dr T J McGhee, Dr Frank J,
Dalia, Walter C, Sherman
35
Chemical Engineering — Left to R; Kyriakos Papadopoulos,- Raymond V
Bailey, Samuel L Sullivan, Richard W Freedman,
Danny McCarthy, Henry Luttrell.
Computer Science — Left to R; M. Bernard, F Retry, L. Reeker. L,
Becker, J Hassell, A, DeChampeaux, B. Dailo, T,
Revesz, V, Law.
36
Electrical Engineering — Left to R; Faik Eken, C J. Sperry, Paul Duvoisin,
S T Hsieh, Robert L Drake. Daniel H Vliet
(Department Head), Edward Williamson, Charles
Beck, George Drouant
Mechanical Engineering Left to R; Harold Sogin, Paul M Lynch. Robert G
Watts, Morteza M Mehrabadi, Anna M Sullivan,
Chester A Peyronnin, DeWitt C. Hamilton, Louis
Orth.
37
Alumni Fund —
Front Left to R; Charlotte Colomb, Aida Sanford,
Betty Milliard, Dolly Chisholm, Back Left to R; Terry
Jones, Lydianne Barousse, Stan Retif, Melinda
Sanchez. Missing; Jody Fretwell, David Calacci.
Counseling and Testing —
Left to R; Ann Rehage, Jerry Phillippi, Dorothy
Perkowski, Janet Limouze, Janet Hansche, Jeffrey
Powell, Janie Beers.
Housing Department —
Left to R; Mela Dutka, Linda Franke, Debbie Henry,
Elizabeth Eichner, Jackie Treadway, Brian Hughes,
Tim Meaut, Harold Schott, Jefferson Sturkey, Alan
B. Davis, Richard Melancon. Missing; Euane
Charles.
38
Legal Aid — Left to R; Jeff Bock, Fred King, Suzanne Prevot.
Library Executives — Left to R; Wilbur Menercy, Dorothy Hagedorn, Pfiilip
Leinbacfi, Liselotte Anderson, Norma Sievert, Jane
Stevens, Curt Jerde, Agnes Metzler, William Cullison,
Thomas Niehaus, Marie Morgan, Robert Bledsoe,
39
Newcomb Admissions — Front Left to R; Lydia McCray, Joan Ferro, Carolyn
Meyer. Susan Chapin (counselor). Back Left to R;
Laurie Lagonegro, Myra Hudgens. Beth Stanley
I\/lissingi Lois Conrad (Director of Admissions),
Monica Boguski (counselor). Vivian Caruthers
PFM — Front Left to R; Ptiiilimene Collins. Kathy Courtney,
Carol Ankney Back Left to R; Dennis lessen. Jim
Stajdal. Kelly Ennis. Greg McRae, Gary Ankney.
Bobby Sherrod.
40
Security — Front Left to R; Officer Powell, Sargent IVIutter,
Officer Riley, Detective Ivlagee, Sargent Van Buren,
Back Left to R; Officer Lloyd, Officer IVIcKenzie,
Corporal IVIcWilliam
Security — Front Left to R; Officer Jessemy, Officer Gosper,
Officer Lawson, Carol Dafilem (crime prevention
officer), Officer Calegan, Officer Miller, Officer
Terrell Back Left to R; Officer Derry, Corporal
Roberts, Officer Roberts.
41
Department Of Physical Plant — Front Left to R; Lavern Hughes, Walter Schleh,
Richard Phillips, Cynthia Swan, Nga Nguyen,
Alanson Arnold, Mike White, Mary Walker, Ken
Symonette Back Left to R; Mike Artus, Archie
Berger, Tom Armitage, Mike Crago, Mike Jester,
John Bendler, Lynne Alexander, Karen Kersting,
Geneva Peck, George Wright, Lorraine Palmer,
Edna Love, Henry Fry
42
Student Activities Right to L.; Gordon Wood, Leiand Bennet, Mike
Thompson, Roy Lee, Melode Mitchell, Lew Ross,
Regina Adams, Jane Rushing, Susan Corgiat,
Gerald Rhodes, Charles Patin.
University Relations — Back Left to R; Clair Kuswa, Lee Odom, Christine
Kreyling, Armand Berlin. Diana Pincl<ley, Nancy
Courtney, Barbara Williams, Kattiy Cain Front Left
to R; Josepti Chaillot, Dawn Podolnick, Kera
Tarbell.
Women's Center — Left to R; Beth Willmger, Linda Weil, Mimi Miller.
Missing; Priscilla Morton, Barbara Hayne.
43
Junior Year Abroa(
%
/
Marcelle Saussy
Director of JYA
Junior Year Abroad is an lionors
program wliicli offers qualified third
year Tulane students ttie opportunity
to spend a full academic year in
France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy
or Spain.
45
V ¥*?! *^-
,1
f
I
^^m^ i'
rit
6801
^'M%i
46
M.B.A. & Law
47
Meyer Feldberg
Dean of the School of Business
Meyer Feldberg, the new dean of
Tulane's School of Business, received
his MBA Dean's Honors at Columbia
University and his Ph.D at the
University of Cape Town. A native of
South Africa, Dr. Feldberg has been a
visiting professor at the Cranfield
School of Management in England and
at the Sloan School of Management,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He was dean of the University of Cape
Town Graduate School of Business for
seven years, and since 1979, has been
an associate dean and director of
executive education at the J.L. Kellogg
Graduate School of Management at
Northwestern University.
The author of many articles and
books. Dr. Feldberg is an instructor of
international repute, regularly lecturing
at universities and for corporations and
associations in many countries. His
main areas of interest include
corporate strategy, international and
multinational business.
48
Business School Faculty
49
School of Business
Founded 1914
220 undergraduate students
408 graduate students
Faculty: 27 full-time/12 other
Degrees: Bachelor of Science in
Management/Master of Business
Administration
In the School of Business,
undergraduates combine a liberal arts
and business education. Students
initially enroll in a liberal arts division of
Tulane, then apply to transfer in the
junior year to the School of Business
for two years of concentrated study in
business/management courses. A
five-year program leading to an
undergraduate degree from other
Tulane colleges and a MBA from the
School of Business is available. And
graduate students pursue MBA's in the
fields of accounting, administration,
finance, international business,
management science, marketing and
organizational behavior.
50
52
Executive M.B.A. Program set for success,
With Tulane's BSM and MBA
programs already in place, Dean
Meyer Feldberg named as a top
priority for the School of Business the
creation of a master's degree program
in business administration geared
specifically for business executives.
And by early April, just six months
after Feldberg arrived at Tulane, the
School's new Executive MBA (EMBA)
Program had been designed and
announced to the public.
The Executive MBA Program will
begin in January 1983, enabling middle
and upper-level managers to receive
an MBA in 17 months without
interrupting their careers, Feldberg
explained to the press at a recent
luncheon held at the Plimsoll Club. The
program is for businessmen and
women who may be managers,
professionals, engineers or
entrepreneurs with eight to ten years of
management experience.
Reaction from the business
community has been excellent,
according to Paul Forbes, assistant
director of the program. Calls have
already been pouring in as a result of
newspaper articles and other media
coverage of the luncheon. Some of
New Orleans' larger corporations have
expressed an interest and chances are
that others from the region will follow,
says Forbes, who is not surphsed at
the program's early success
He points out that the program is
potentially valuable to business people
from many different backgrounds. In
fact, he adds, the more variety the
better. Accordingly, guidelines have
been established to ensure that 'no
company sponsors more than three
candidates in a single class.
Participants will attend weekly
seminars on alternate Fridays and
Saturdays for two years in order to earn
a master's degree in business
administration. And ideally, their pursuit
of higher education will be sponsored
by their companies.
"The commitment would be on both
sides," Feldberg explained. "The
company would give up two days a
month of its employee's time and the
employee would give up two days of
his own time."
Marketing Professor and Program
Director William Mindak spent last
summer completing a feasibility study
for the program. "The market made it
clear that a curriculum as rigorous and
challenging as that offered full-time
MBA students was needed, yet it has
to be fine-tuned to the issues and
problems encountered by modern
business organizations in a dynamic
environment," Mindak pointed out. "It
wanted a curriculum and faculty with a
practical dimension that would reflect
the more mature and experienced
students' backgrounds."
He also emphasizes that the EMBA
Program is not a shortcut to a master's
degree, but a program especially
designed for experienced executives.
(Update 1982-83)
53
The School of Business,
Firmly committed to a rigorous program
The Tulane School of Business is
firmly committed to a rigorous
inter-disciplinary program for
management education. With a long
tradition of excellence and leadership
in this endeavor, it is one of eleven
charter members of the American
Assembly of Collegiate Schools of
Business. Both the Bachelor of Science
in Management (BSM) and the Master
of Business Administration (MBA)
programs are professionally accredited
by the AACSB.
Originally the College of Commerce,
the school was founded in 1914 under
Dean Morton A. Aldrich, a pioneer in
college-level business education. A
Master of Business Administration
program was begun in 1940, and until
1962 both the Bachelor of Business
Administration and the MBA were
offered. Because of the increased
demand for graduate education, the
BBA was discontinued in 1964, but an
undergraduate program leading to the
Bachelor of Science in Management
was reinstated in 1976. This very
successful BSM program allows
undergraduates the opportunity to
combine a liberal arts and sciences
education with education in business
administration and management.
The school's goal is to educate
graduates who possess a strong
theoretical, practical and experiential
foundation in the basic business
disciplines and who appreciate their
interrelationships within the business
world. The curriculum is designed to
provide the necessary entry-level job
skills needed for advancement to
upper-level management. Graduates
are expected to use their knowledge to
analyze business problems, to propose
workable solutions to these problems
and to calculate in advance the risks
involved in their proposed solutions.
To ensure that Tulane provides the
best possible business education, the
school carefully maintains its small
size; this Allows for extensive
interaction between students and
faculty. A low student-to-professor ratio
and a well-planned distribution of the
faculty's teaching and research
activities guarantee that students with
different educational backgrounds,
goals, and interests receive individual
attention. In addition to the classroom
situation, students work and play hard
together in a vahety of academic and
social activities. The school phdes itself
on having a cohesive community of
dedicated faculty and students and on
providing rigorous challenges within a
relaxed, informal environment.
The Tulane International Business
Entrepreneurs is devoted to
developing the sl<ills of Tulane students
interested in international business. The
group had a busy year participating in
the Commtex International Exposition at
the Superdome as well as attending a
career contact program, which allowed
members to make contacts in the world
of international business. The club also
had an executive briefing and tour of
the Port of New Orleans. The highlight
of the year was the Tulane International
Business Week. Held in March, this
week long event featured a forum on
Japanese Trading Companies.
55
M.B.A
Jose R. Armstrong
Theodore R. Barkerding, Jr.
Bunny A. Bernhard
James Joseph Bertrand
Reynaldo Bruzual
Laureen Kristie Carlson
Joseph L. Carrere
Alberto Cevallos
Jade S. Chow
Jaquetta Bliss demons
William B. Collier
Danica Ann Cordell-Reeh
Robert H. Cox
Colette Allison de la Burde
Patricia M. de los Heros
Daniel Antonio Del Rio
56
Nanci M. Easterling
Andrew Feinman
Eugenio R. Garza
William Anderson Glenn
Eugene IMIchaei Golizio
Sophie Anne Goy
Richard David l-iachenburg
Thomas D. Ham
Clare I. Hickham
John OIlie Humphreys, III
Ricardo Hutt
Melissa Anne Hyatt
Grant McLatchey Irvin
Karl E. Keller
Sheryl D. Larson
Louis V. Lauricella
Pamela A. IMahler
Victoria IVI. Martin
Robert P. MatteuccI
Alan Oean Mayer
57
Anne R. Owens
Susan M. Pankey
Mary Perez
Pablo Ramiro Perez
Shelley Thomas Picon
William Charles Potts
William B. Provosty
Eric L. Reiner
58
Timothy P. Rice
Terry Brown Richardson
Felix L. Rivera
Neston A. Rivera
Robert G. Riviere
Beejay Rosman
Donald J. Shope
J. Elton Smith, Jr.
Linda Ann Southerland
James Marie Spiro
Peter N. Strelt
Sergio J. Tamez
VIpIn K. Thukral
Daniel Hendrlcl<s Vilet, IV
Bobble Edward Ward
Susan B. Weinberg
TonI IVIonlque White
Robert Lewis Wolf
Nordin Yahaya
59
Paul R. Verkuil
Dean of Tulane Law School
60
Law School Faculty
1st Row: Proffessors William Lovett,
Cynthia Samuel, Robert Peroni, Suman
Naresh, Joseph M. Sweeney, Dean
Paul Verkuil
2nd Row: Professors Paul Barron,
Thomas Andre, Hoffman Fuller, Richard
Pierce, David Combe, Billups Percy,
Vernon Palmer, Luther McDougal
Tulane Law School: the name bnngs
to mind hours of study in the Joseph
Merrick Jones Library, pohng over
volumes of national, state and local
statutes, as well as writing interminable
briefs and giving nerve-wracking oral
examinations. All these tasks do,
however, culminate in ultimately
satisfying and rewarding things, such
as respected careers and, in Tulane's
case, the honors received in the
National Moot Court Competition,
61
The Law School
Founded 1847, the twelfth oldest law
school in the nation. Tulane Law School
is the only United States school of law
to offer complete training in both civil
law, which is practiced in Louisiana,
and common law, which governs all
other states.
ti Dreadflies" lead to national law title
A "dreadfly" infestation, witin tine feared
insects crossing the border separating
two small countries and bringing along a
swarm of legal problems, is a compli-cated
piece of make-believe tfiat has led
six Tulane law students to a coveted na-tional
championship.
In April, Cathy Anderson, Marjory
Appel, Patrick Baynham, Jon Brooks,
James Jones, and student coach
Stephen Ott combined talents to win the
National Division of the Philip C, Jessup
International Law Moot Court Competi-tion
held in Washington, D.C.
They are the first national champions
ever produced by Tulane in that competi-tion,
although past teams have come
close — finishing third as recently as
1980.
This year's was destined for greatness
early on, smashing competition in the re-gional
level by scores of 9-0, 9-0 and 7-2
in preparation for humiliating the Univer-sity
of Texas 9-0 in the final regional play-off
in March. En route to the national title,
Tulane displaced teams from Vanderbilt,
Georgia, Northwestern and Loyola of Los
Angeles.
In Moot Court competition, a possible
score of nine points is based on oral and
written arguments. The Tulane team re-ceived
the award for the best written legal
brief in both the regional and national
competitions, giving it a two- or three-point
lead at the outset. Oral arguments
count for the either six points awarded,
and team members Brooks, Appel and
Baynham were cited for outstanding oral-ist
awards after the competition ended.
Perhaps the real story of their victory
has more to do with what happened be-fore
head-to-head competition even be-gan.
Four of the five team members were
chosen last spring. One slot was left open
—just in case an incoming freshman was
good enough to be added. As it turned
out, first year student Patrick Baynham
did join the others last fall. But by then
second year, students Appel, Anderson
and Brooks had already been notified of
the hypothetical court case chosen for
the competition. And third year student
James Jones— selected the team's brief
writer — was busy collecting relevant
materials involving the same issues of in-ternational
law that the make-believe
case contained.
Summed up briefly, the case involved
two countries that bordered on each
other, much like Louisiana and Arkansas
64
do. One country was on the coast and the
other landlocked. The landlocked coun-try
paid millions of dollars to the coastal
country for the use of a major highway to
the coast so goods could be exported
and imported.
But when the news of a "dreadfly" in-festation
in a neighboring country broke,
the coastal state suspended the use of
the highway to the landlocked country,
fearing fruit transported through their
land might spread the insect. This led to
all sorts of reprisals by the landlocked
country and counter-reprisals until finally
the two governments decided to seek
justice in an international court.
This was the challenge to the 125 law
school teams entered in the competition:
conventions and treaties, customs and
past cases to some extent. But there are
no legally binding precedents in interna-tional
law per se," she lamented.
Jon Brooks commented on the long
hours spent poring over cases even
when everyone else had gone home for
the holidays.
"On Christmas Eve it was me, the law
librarian and Santa Claus in the library,"
said the native of Manhasset, New York.
The oral part of the preparation started
in late January.
"We practiced on almost a daily basis,
said Appel. "What we'd do is line up pro-fessors
and attorneys to sit as judges
while we rehearsed our arguments. Then
we'd respond to their questions. We con-how
might you most effectively argue all
the points of international law that apply
to the best advantage of each country?
The teams had to be ready to argue on
either side. Their position was deter-mined
by a coin toss just prior to the
actual competition, giving team mem-bers
only 90 minutes to prepare a list of
arguments after looking over the oppos-ing
law school's brief.
"It was sort of a combination of the
California medfly and the freezing of Ira-nian
assets with the Cuban boycott
thrown in," explained Baynham.
So, all last fall, the team members re-searched
the issues in international law. It
was no easy matter, as team member
Marjory Appel pointed out.
"There is no code of international law to
go by. Many different sources are con-sidered
when cases are heard, including
stantly practiced this process of making
our presentation and then answering
questions thrown at us."
The job of the cooperating attorneys as
to pick apart the students' reasoning in
much the same way future opponents
were likely to do. The team revised weak
arguments and bolstered strong ones
further. Gradually they sharpened their
argumentative skills. And then, all of a
sudden, their faculty advisor and their
coach were yanked away, having been
called upon to help organize the regional
competitions. That's when a Tulane Law
School alum stepped in to help prepare
the group.
"We got an extraordinary amount of
help and cooperation from Judge Morey
Sear," noted Jon Brooks. Sear is a Feder-al
District Judge and team members said
they regarded him as their professional
coach and guardian angel.
Patrick Baynham echoed the feeling,
describing a fortuitous coincidence:
"Judge Sear's involvement really helped
us in more ways than one because at the
regional finals we had two federal judges
scoring the round; we won that round
unanimously against the University of
Texas. Their coach remarked to me after
it was all over that we seemed unusually
calm before those federal judges, like
we'd argued before federal judges be-fore.
Well we had! There's no doubt that
kind of practice helped immensely in the
final round."
But the student's quickly learned that
any particular judge's reaction to them
was a hard thing to predict.
"I got a few comments from some of the
chauvinist judges about my voice," re-membered
Appel, who always followed
the more deeply pitched male voices.
Teammate Jon Brooks thinks he knows
why she drew such kidding.
"When those judges saw somebody as
lovely as Marjory get up, they expected to
hear this very dainty little petite voice, and
Marjory is an excellent advocate with a
strong voice. They didn't expect that at
all, so they were taken aback."
But Brooks was also served up a con-trary
judge. "In Washington one of my
judges took up five minutes of my alloted
time asking me a question. He )ust rolled
for five minutes. And I couldn't interrupt
him! This individual just seemed to enjoy
the sound of his own voice,"
Another judge broke into Brooks' open-ing
presentation with only four of the
scheduled twenty minutes elapsed. He
had a technical question on international
law. He asked if Brooks was prepared to
discuss the point right then. Brooks
politely answered yes, he was (though in
fact he was unsure). Later Brooks found
out the judge had marked down a high
score for Brooks because of the manner
in which the interruption was handled.
"They try to ask you a question you
can't answer. Even if you have a re-sponse
at first, which we all did pretty
much, they come back at you again,
wanting a different answer, grilling you
over and over," said Appel.
Baynham quickly added "Just be-cause
a judge is giving you a hard time,
however, doesn't mean he's giving you a
bad score. Often it's just the opposite.
He's judging your ability to handle that
hard time." In fact the team members
vividly recall one round when they were
losing because they were sure being
picked apart and peppered mercilessly
by the judges, while the other team didn't
get the same treatment at all. "We won
the round," noted Baynham.
The psychology of handling the judges
may have played a major role in one par-ticular
contest at the national finals. The
team had received brief biographies of
the judges prior to the arguments. They
noticed that one of the judges was a Unit-ed
Nations Legal Counsel. Marjory Appel
knew immediately what to do.
"We researched a lot of U.N. stuff that
we threw at our opponents because there
was that one particular kind of judge we
knew we could sway with those kinds of
arguments. We showed a thorough
understanding of the effects of U.N. res-olutions.
Our opponents kept getting
their U.N. facts messed up."
All else being equal, it was obvious to
the students that their cohesiveness may
have been the deciding factor In their
success. On their trip to Washington they
indulged each other with many small acts
of caring such as leaving notes and mak-ing
check-up calls to be sure all members
of the team were feeling ok, getting to bed
on time, and not drinking too much. Each
morning they clamored back and forth
through their adjoining rooms, sharing
coffee and shouting their speeches at
each other to get their voices going.
Jon Brooks summed up the situation.
"A team member from another school
pulled me aside after one round and
asked me if we were all still talking to one
another. Many teams, after being thrown
together over an extended period of time
where they see each other on a daily
basis, develop internal conflicts. The
competition puts you in an anxiety-ridden
situation under incredible pressure. I
suppose it's an unusual occurrence for
team members to develop raw nerves. I
think it really spoke well for us as a team
that we had the ability to get along. We
managed to stay one big happy family.
Joseph Chaliot
Inside Tulane
June 1983
Standing Left-R,; Pat Baynham,
Cathy Anderson Front L.-R.;
Marjory Appel, James Jones, Jon
Brooks.
65
David Abraham
Karen Adams
Alkhallea Ahmad
Salfh Al-oufi
Lori April
Maria Arosemena
Chris Aubert
Jessica Bagg
Franic Baiiey
Katherlne Bailey
Richard Bari<er
Brian Becitwith
Stephen Belser
Ashley Belieau
Roland Belsome
Cheryle Bernard
66
David Bernberg
Peter Bolvlg
Jose Bonau
Allen Borne
Alan Bracken
William Bryson
Thomas BrzezenskI
Deborah Carman
Darrell Cartwrlght
John Cesario
Loretta Cleutat
Richard Cllne
Michelle Comlskey
John Coogan
Thomas Crane
Marlene Cyhel
Patricia Davis
Stevan Dittman
Anthony Dunbar
Elton Duncan
67
Charlie Farley
Christina Fay
Juan Flol
Joseph Flaglello
Timothy Francis
Anne Galennle
Patrick Gallavgher
Gilbert Ganucheau
Melanee Gaudin
Ronald Gee
Samuel Gee
William Gee
John Gessner
Robert Gist
Stephan Godchaux
Anthony Goldsmith
Deana Greengus
Audrey Hamer
Susan Hamlll
Alfred Hansen
68
Jonathan Harbuck
Ben Henschel
Jeanne Hepher
Peter Hess
Stephan Howe
Christopher leyoub
Hashem Jaber
Rolf Johnsen
Noel Johnson
Sharl Kaufman
David Kettel
Alan Kohler
Robert Kopacz
Edward Landry
Louis Laurlcella
Wayne Levlne
Lance Lisle
Said Mahmoud
James Mansoul
Michael Mark
69
Benjamin Marshall
DIanne Marshall
Mohamed Mattar
Eric Mayer
Patrick Mclntlre
Scott Mexic
MIyukI MIyazakI
Janice Oakes
Peter O'Reilly
Norlando Pelyhe
Mark PIvach
Gregg Porter
Christopher Price
Janelle Rachal
Musa Rahman
Alicia Reggie
Joseph Rome
John Ruskin
Kallste Saloom
Massimo Sangulnetl
70
Hank Savage
Michelle Schmidt
Glenn Schrelber
Barry Scott
T. Gregory Serwich
Edward Shapack
Raymond SIman
Cathy Smith
Susan Snyder
Joseph Splllman
Jack Tobias
Mike Torian
Joseph Treuting
Gregory Upton
Betty Washington
Deborah Welsler
Deborah Wendel
Stephen Wheells
Maria Wyatt
Wolfgang Wyreli
71
M
J£ b^
72
Organizations
73
Afro-American Congress of Tulane: Kneeling: Antoinette Conley, Paul Burns. Second Row:
Tina Balthazar, Maria Newton, Maureen Joseph, Letitia Cagnoletti, Jackie Smiley. Bacl< Row:
Gerald Legarde, Andre Jones, Cindy August, Charles Bacot, Wendell Chambliss, Karl Doss.
A&S Senate: Front Row Left to R: Richard Langan, Paul Peyronnin, Bill Donohue, Martin
Kerckhoff. Bacic Row Left to R: Mark Sallinger, Mike Irish, David Mignatti, Dr. David Heins
(faculty Advisor).
74
Circle K: Back Row: Adam Friedman, Dan Roussel, David Frank, Keith Landry, Nick IVIuniz,
Carlos Lima, Kelly IVIihm, Elisa Granados, Reinol Gonzalez, Terry Hine, Aline Bettancourt,
Eddie Gomez, Jackie Gallart, Denise Gray, Rosa Corzantes, Madeleine Lopez, Tony Muniz,
Larry Pivornik, Gary McNamara, Randi Glorsky. Front Row: Neil Beals, Nettie Conley, IVlike
Rodriguez, George Rodriguez, Joe Skeens.
Club Sports Council: Riglit to L: Kevin Wimbley (Vice-Pres. — Skydiving Club) Brian Alworth
(Orienteering) Diane Bloomberg (Pres. — Barracuda Club) Dan Mahoney (Ice Hockey) John
Christensen (Skeet & Trap Club) Michael Landy (Scuba Club) Harold Etherington (Scuba &
Soccer) Christopher Connelly (Pres. — Soccer Club) Christopher Festa (Pres. — Rugby) Jon
Ablemann (Pres. Scuba, Skeet, Trap Clubs, New Pres. — Club Sports Council
75
Concerned Students Association: Left to Right: Pat Blackwell, Alan Goodman, Susan Stileo,
Wendy Ring, Lynn Sargent, Bill Rose, Bicky Gorman, Emily Sailers, Tom Frank, John Stanton,
Ben Colbert, Debbie Shaw, Jenny Salpeter, David Lawson, Michael Zimmerman, Bruce
Solomon, Eric Martin, Brad Peterson, Max Mailman.
Direction '83: Front Row Left to R: Mona Friedman, Lynda Bohannon, Lori Little, Lauren
Gotlieb, Kathryn Zuckerman, Garrie Haydel, Ken Degot. Bacit Row Left to R: Jeff Siegel,
Bruce Hamilton, Dave Horrigan, Malcolm Davidow. Missing; Andy Grieff, Kenny Weil, Jimmy
Horowitz, Dave Reynolds.
76
Engineering Student Council: Kevin Callermae, Kathy Walsh, Judy Bernstein, Xavier Viteri,
Pam Blowen, Franl< Rosinia, David Gereighity, Laura Weber.
Finance Board: Left to Right: Pete Simoneaux, Regina Adams, Mil<e Thompson, C.W.
McGowan, Eric Weinstein, Melodye Mitchell, Louis Ross, Leiand Bennett, Karen Kravtin,
Margaret Williams, Lisa Shoham, Charles Patin, Brad Schur.
77
Hullabaloo: Front Row: Deanna Harris, Howard Legator, Julie Hartig, Richard Parisi, Andy
Pellar. Back Row: Peter Ward, Mark Harris, Amiee Allen, Patricl< Sweeney, George Schleh,
Arthur Triche, Pete Rodgers, Susan Corgiat, Casey Davidson, Jodi Glick, Larry Stern.
1 I
L.A.S.A.: Front Row: Maria Isabel Casas, Michele Reid, Christian Merendez, Patricia de los
Heros, Etienne Mejia, Luis Ferrer. Back Row: Pablo Mateu, Jose Francisco Nater, Osvaldo
Fajardo, Beatriz Blanco, Pablo Ontareda, Ana Morandeira
78
Media Board: Left to Right: Bart Merkle, Carl Lindberry, Russell Shaddox, Ozgur
Karaosmanoglu, Edward Esposito, Jerry Richy, Billy Witz, Margaret Williams, Maurice
Rosenbaum, Susan Corgiat (Media Advisor), Glenn Schulmann.
'M:
0?^f5 r)^m
;
i^l\h /
!
a^
A Company: Kneeling: P. Polydores, J. Waecheter, G. Schank, K. Keese, R. Greighton, P.
Huff, C. Lowe, R. Hanneman. Standing: M. Fitzgerald, L. Bertolino, L. Stark, A. Hietala, J.
Navarette, S. Sloan, E. Wacchessoni, H. Thornhill, D. Ellis, E. Diamond, M. Jackson, M. Hallal,
Gonti, R. Perry, S. Schultz, S. McPherson, S. Fee, G. Harris, J. Scott, U. Tokach, P. Stanely,
Dwyer, K. Nelson, B. Howell, R. Berkowitz.
79
B Company: Kneeling: C. Abbot, P. Patrick, M. Salle, M. Silvestrl, T. Mannix, K. Wood, B.
Martin. Standing: B. Donovan, R. Donn, T. Anderson, M. Cain, H. Rivera, R. Fahy, C. Kinney,
B. Bie, S. Mitchell, T. Durst, M. Hamilton, S. Meade, K. Rothermel, M. Korndorffer, R. Amend,
A. Broussard, D. Whiddon, T. Eriandson, G. Cole, T. Hanna, M. McRee, K. Johnson.
/fifeijfi^ ^.---j
__
80
H.Q. Company: Kneeling: M. DeQuay, T. Paco, T. Kotouch, S. Lawrence, J. Ranee, A.
Reybick, M. Jones, S. Klearman, C. Holton, B. Johnson, B. Fitzgerald, Z. Herig. Second Row:
P. Hoskins, P. Ryder, J. Hatch, K. Mahne, S. Moeller, V. Malone, M. Malarky, T. Dorsey, W.
York, B. Beeson, R. Hymes, P. Deckert, L. Dumas, S. Whalen, C. May, B. Yarrington, A.
Mosely, J. Bremer. Third Row: K. Lewis, J. Coscia, J. Fahsbender, B. Dickinson, M. Gibson, S.
Borey, P. Silton, A. Slaughter, B. Morgan, J. Rich, J. Modisette, C. Swallow, M. McGowan, C.
Doskey, P. Fennell, D. Wilton.
Army R.O.T.C: Front Row: Chris Jayne, Anne Schiele, Jim Goff, Lee Smithson, Rob Harding,
Pat Klotz, Dave Lawson, Mike Barrett, Andy McCray, Greg Smith, Anthony Haywood, Fran
Chancey, Back Row: Cliff Smart, John Larvie, Alan Schomaker, Martin Kerckoff, John Fagan,
Jon Jones, Dave Scott, Dave Davis, John Seed, Andy Mueller, Dave Skinner, Ken Hurwitz,
Victor Torano, Iris Ruiz, Geri Bruckner, Chris Homebrink, April McConnell.
Drum and Bugle Corps: Kneeling left to r: K. Lewis, B. Dickenson, M. Malaky, T. Dorsey, T.
Kotourch. Second Row: J. Hatch, K. Mahne, T. Paco, S. Moeller, S. Lawrence, M. DeQuay, E.
Herig, J. Fahsbender, J. Coscia, B. Yarrington, J. Bremer. Third Row: M. McGowan, C.
Swallow, C. May, B. Johnson, V. Malone, A. Mosely, C. Doskey.
81
staff: First Row: T. Nolan, M. Hochswender, R. Snyder, G. Worthon. Second Row: L. Cross,
B. Marston, B. Paris, S. SImerlein.
Tate House: Front Row: Brad Burlingham, Jean-Francois Poupeau, Dave Lawson, Suzi
Thomas. Second Row: Jim Clark, Brian Alworth, John Decell. Back Row: Paul, Aida Rivera,
Damon DiMauro, Dave, Vincent Andrews, Ted, Lauren, Sonia.
82
Tulane International Student Organization: Back Row: Muhamed Ifdehkar, George Nesbitt,
Bari Ibrahim. Front Row: Michele Reid, Nihal Amer.
Tulane Student Foundation: Left To Right: Martha Tester, Chris Borah, Lea Mary Smith,
Jeanne Faulla, Maridel Roth, Cheryl Cunningham, Eva Kistler, Susie Sullivan, Ann McCallum,
Ashley Stone, Missy Cohen, Amy Pepper, Dolly Chisholm, Julie Brackenridge, Heidi Pohl.
83
T.U.V.A.C: Left to r: Gary Hurwitz, Dave Price, Edward Hall, Julie Sipos, Rick Cheadle, Paul
Strauss, Mark Rogers, Pete Flagg.
84
W.T.U.L. Staff: Peter Lewman, Davie Margulies, Wendy Edelstein, Nina Camacho, Chief,
Bethyonge, Kevin Plottner, Jay Main, Kate Oschlager, Katy Caraway, Clay Markham, Nancy
Anfanger, Joe Provno, Ian Karr, Bart laia, John Howell, Maggie Towne, Christoensing, Rich
Searle, Stu Svenson, Neil Kwatinez, Lisa Brown, Chris Abbot, Kathleen Zuckerman, Joseph
Schlaferman, Andrew Lambert, Steve Walsh, Carolyn Blaine, Leslie Plaskom, Loren Solomon,
Mike Lasky, Mark Andrews, Errol Demense, Jeanne, Michelle Magill, Ivan Bodley, Rob Pastein,
Rick Cheadle, John Pollock, Lisa George, David Simon, The Duchess, Mr. Bill, Ken Reyes, The
Jock of New Orleans, Doug Grills, Jim Thorpe, Stuart Lob, Bruce Murray.
A.S.B. Officers: President: Andrew Werth, V.P. Administration: Pete Edwards, V.P. University
Affairs; Amy Pinsker, V.P. Finance — C.W. McGowan, V.P. Academic Affairs: Michelle Burkett,
A.S.B. Trustee: Scott Radnick.
C.A.C.T.U.S.: Chairperson: Lisa Shoham, Vice Chair Campus: Tracy Mizell, Vice Chair
Community: Wendy Schneier, Vice Chair Children and Schools: Jennie Heller.
85
Air Force R.O.T.C.
Commodores: Officers; Amanda Wood, Ellen Lyons, Eileen Brown, Cheri Osgood.
86
T.U.C.P.: Officers: Brad Schur, Herb Scher, Derek Schwenke, Lisa Tawil, Peter Silton, Garrick
Prejean, Bill Gould, Ann Starer, t\/lark Rubenstein, Howard Wolofsky, Steve Simerlein, Tom
Zilahi, Billy Rippner, Philip Lozman, Andy Pine, Louis Ross.
TULANE CHOIR
87
Society of Petroleum Engineers: Officers: Josepfi E. Vidal III, Palmer Stevens, Susan Kron.
Society of Blacit Engineers: Officers: Lisa Perez, Eli Brown, Theron Foley.
88
Tulane Engineering Society: Officers: Laurie Zabelny, David Gereighty, Tommy Meehan,
Jamshid Manoucfiehrie-Naini.
Pre-Med Society: Officers: Anna Lou, Paul
LeCat, Jay D'Lugin, Rob Talbot, Maurice
Rosenbaum.
89
Newcomb-Tulane Art Association: Officers: Wendy Krivitzky, Marge Ward, Steve Cristo.
Newcomb Senate: Officers: Fonda Magids, Robin Reagler, Mary Spilker, Kathy Flech.
90
91
•*..*»•.'
J'^f^^'tw-i^-:
'M...m\i>W:"
'•*^'--^-'^' ^;--,i»«K.*>,^-x.>..iie-ry^:.„-.. '.yw.- . —^..-r^^-^-'^jna
92
HHi
Sports
93
MONK SIMONS JF
RTHLETIC BUILDING
lA>«-<J>v.
94
NO. PLAYER 25 Eddie Dowell 53 Randy Saffy
1 Wade Elmore 26 Randy Hubbell 54 Harvey Cox
2 Tony Wood 27 Curt Baham 55 John Angelo
3 Wayne Smith 29 Jeff Wenhold 56 Bob Hirschfeld
4 Mark Massey 30 Ricky Goff 58 Frank Roberts
5 Ronald Parker 31 Ronald Davis 59 Kirk Robb
6 Reggie Butts 32 Toddy Francis 60 Terrence MacCracken
7 Bubba Brister 33 Reggie Reginelli 61 Mark Benzio
8 Lionel Washington 34 Earl Jenkins 62 Max Mitchell
9 Joey Gagliardi 35 Kelvin Robinson 63 Tommy Rose
10 Larry Copeland 36 Melvin Cormier 64 Bob Clendenning
11 Tyrone Smith 38 Elton Veals 66 John Hein
12 Mike McKay 39 Gene Harris 67 Shawn Lee
13 Gerald Broussard 40 Benny Burst 68 Ken Mackey
14 Treg Songy 41 David Jackson 69 Vic Perez
15 Vince Manalla 42 Mike Jones 70 Lindsey Cooper
16 Jim Barkey 43 Burnell Dent 72 Mike Burnett
17 Cassey Howard 44 Laraun Ambrose 73 Raoul Rodriguez
18 Jason Whitten 45 Timmy McCray 74 Bill Lichtenstein
19 Reggie LeBray 47 Tim McConnell 75 Jeff Wenzel
20 Carl Ambrose 48 Harold McGrew 76 Don Maggs
21 Rodney Cooke 49 Mike Landry 77 Jim Boyle
22 Donald Ray Thomas 50 Deno Jeter 78 Kevin Young
23 Greg Liggett 51 Charlie Dunn 79 Jerry Baker
24 James Alexis 52 David Paliscak 80 Clint Wenzel
Tulane
Football
'i ^f'V J
81 Craig Harrison 91 Artie De Laneuville
82 Jay Rhodes 92 Zack Dixon
83 Robert Griffin 93 James Still
84 Larry Roufe 94 Lester Lavalais
85 Greg Stopher 95 Mike Popko
86 Mike Feduccia 96 James Sanders
87 Jeff Davis 97 Chris Cannon
88 Kevin Tate 98 Darryl Tipton
89 Mark Savini 99 Eddie Neal
90 Ricfiard Williams
1982 Season Results
Miss, St. 30, Tulane 21
S.M.U. 51, Tulane 7
Tulane 30, Rice 6
Vanderbilt 24, Tulane 21
Ga. Tech 19, Tulane 13
Southern Miss. 22, Tulane 10
Tulane 17, Memphis St. 10
Tulane 30, Baylor 15
Ole Miss 45, Tulane 14
Florida 21, Tulane 7
Tulane 31, L.S.U. 28
Tulane alumni show support for their alma mater.
95
Gibson Resigns in
Wake of Tulane
Victory
An underdog Tulane team traveled to
Baton Rouge to defeat the L.S.U.
Tigers on Saturday, Nov. 27, a victory
that briefly squelched the rumors that
Gibson's job was in jeopardy after an
unimpressive 4-7 season. But the
following Tuesday, Athletic Director
Hindman Wall announced that Gibson
was resigning.
Ironically, UPI had just named
Gibson coach of the week for his
victory over L.S.U., which Gibson
called "the finest win I have ever been
associated with anywhere."
The former coach, whose three-year
stay at Tulane garnered an overall
record of 17-17, noted in his
resignation letter that he had requested
an extension of his contract, which had
only one year remaining, in order to
have "an opportunity for a successful
recruiting year." That request was
denied.
"Taking both the type of year and
disapproval of the extension of my
contract into consideration, I feel it is in
the best interest of the University and
football program if I resign," he wrote.
Gibson fires last minute instructions to ttie team.
Viewing from the sidelines, Coacti Gibson
surveys the action on the field.
96
Jenkins jumps in an attempt to block the
competition
Bubba Brister successfully evades the
opposition's attack to prevent a touchdown.
Tigers Drown in
Second Green Wave
Flood
The end of the Green Wave football
season this fall was anything but dull,
with the Green Wave's resounding
victory over Orange Bowl bound L.S.U.
It was red tide for the Tigers on their
home turf Saturday, November 27,
when the Tulane Wave rolled past them
to a 31-28 victory, the Greenies'
second win in a row over rival L.S.U.
Safety Tyrone Smith's eleventh-hour
interception — only Tulane's fourth of
the season — insured the miracle
during the game's final crush. Fullback
Reggie Reginelli caught a 31 -yard pass
to tally up a winning score.
^^
m^ ,.
t
v'i^^:
An excited Coach Gibson rides atop Tulane
players as they share the excitement of Tulane's
second straight victory over LSU.
Tulane gives the victory sign as the Wave
clenches the win over LSU
'/ Elton Veals breaks through the LSU line to run
the ball for a touchdown.
99
Above — Standing: Cheryl Nickerson
(co-capt.), Lil Little (co-capt.), Sharon
Israel, Erika Poleschner, Kim Holak,
Jessica Waters, Janet Morgan, Kneeling:
Jeffery Poritsky, Barry Munkasy
Right — The Tulane spirit is examplified by a young
fan.
Opposite — Lee Bressler and Kim Hoiak revei in the
excitement of Tulane's second consecutive win over
LSU.
100
%,
^H'--
*.
/
%
V^^.fV
Who is this man who gets up before
the chickens and who pays
painstaking attention to the most
minute detail of everything around
him? Or perhaps more importantly for
a team that has seen Jim Pittmans and
Larry Smiths find success and then
move on, how dedicated is he to
staying at Tulane?
He's the guy who put the fine edge
on the passing games of all those
quarterbacks represented on his wall.
He's the guy who gave up $52,000 in
playoff money and a possible Super
Bowl ring to leave the Miami
Dolphins to come to Tulane. He's
Wally English and he's Tulane's 31st
head football coach.
"I've got commitments from the
athletic director and the president of
Tulane University," English says.
"And I've made commitments to
building a very successful program
here. That's it. Now, if I came in here
and said 'I'm going to do this and I'm
going to do that', well that wouldn't
be too intelligent. I simply haven't
been here long enough to know about
all the personnel. And, even if I had
been nobody can predict what's going
to happen in the future. But I can say
that we're going to play exciting
football simply because that's the type
of football I coach. I also know I'm as
ready as I'll ever be. I've coached the
line, the offense, quarterbacks. But
now it's everything. I'm responsible
for the whole thing and I just feel like
I'm ready for this challenge."
The challenge, English says, is one
he eagerly accepts, but it is not likely
to be all-consuming and burn him out
the way it did the Philadalphia
Eagles' head coach Dick Vermeil
whose 16-hour-a-day,
seven-day-a-week, 52-weeks-a-year
pace reduced him to a teary-eyed man
who bowed out while at the peak of
his game.
Wally English can shut football out
of his life when he has to. But then
again, when he's talking football, he's
talking about his life.
The Englishes have five sons. The
four not in diapers are all in football.
Even the neighborhood the
Englishes live in was determined by
football. Son Thomas wanted to play
football at Jesuit High School. But the
uptown home the Englishes were
eyeing was not in the Jesuit district.
So Wally packed up the family and
moved them several miles farther
from campus to meet eligibility
requirements for Thomas at Jesuit.
Peggy English? With a football
coach for a husband, four sons who
play the game and a toddler who
insists he "wants to be an athletic
director," probably no other woman
in America has had as many passes
thrown to her or at her, near her or by
her. She's taken all of that and those
twenty uprootings in stride.
"It's been a great life," she says.
"We've been to Japan and Hawaii and
all because of football. There isn't a
job in the world where we could have
done all the things we've done. It
certainly wouldn't be any fun having
a 9-to-5 job.
"Sure, there are times, especially
during the season, when we all wish
we could see more of Wally. That's
kind of why I wished we could have
found a home near to the campus . . .
so he could come by and see us now
and then. He even went down
Audubon Boulevard one day going
from door to door looking for a house.
"It would have been nice too
because when some of the recruits
would come in to visit the campus we
could have them into our home. They
could go back and say, 'Hey, we were
in a real old New Orleans home.'
That's what we want to do, take them
out and show them the town . .
.
show them we care. Show their
parents we care. I know when one of
my sons is away in another city at
school I'd want him treated that way.
"You'd think that as much football
as is played around this house and as
close as I've been to the game I'd
really be an expert," she says. "I
really know very little about the game.
I listen to what others say at games
and later when Wally asks me what I
thought of this play or that one, I
repeat what I heard."
Says wife Peggy, "I love it here in
New Orleans. I want to spend the rest
of my life here. Wally says all we
have to do is win and keep on
winning and we'll stay here. He says
that should be no problem."
103
Left: Elton Webster attempts a basket during ttie
Nictiolls State game-
10 Daryl Moreau
1 1 Kevin Saulny
12 Ralph Davis
14 Danny Gauttiier
20 Shai Sharf
22 Gary Delph
24 Bobby Thompson
30 Tony Wallace
32 Howard Jenkins
34 Paul Thompson
40 Elton Webster
44 Clyde Eads
50 Curtis Wallace
52 Farley Gates
54 John Williams
Tulane
Basketball
105
Top: Elton Webster going for a layup stiot in the /^
Wave's game against San Antonio. pS.
Bottom: Tulane fans and team watch the action I
from the sidelines, r
Opposite: John Williams watches a precarious
rim shot in the San Antonio game.
'^^
*:
/
irs V\%1»>^
V'A
'>*^<
M
*V
y^ 107
Tulanes' All
Time
Top Scorer
Drafted
by Cleveland
Paul Thompson, a four year Tulane letterman who
holds the all time Tulane scoring record with 1851
points, made an immediate and lasting impact on Tulane
basketball history. Thompson's Tulane career which
began with the 1979-80 season saw him lead the team in
both scoring and rebounding. He was also named Metro
Conference Freshmen Player of the Year. In addition, he
was named to Basketball Weekly's Second Team
Freshmen All America.
As a sophomore, Thompson again lead the Green Wave
in scoring and rebounding. He was voted First Team All
Metro and the Sporting News named him as Honorable
Mention All America.
During his Junior year, Thompson again led the team
in rebounding and combined with teammate John
Wilkins to lead the Green Wave to a 19-09 season and the
N.I.T. — the first post season bid for Tulane in the
school's history. He was also named to the second team
All Metro.
The 1982-83 season, Thompson's last for the Wave,
saw him lead the team in both scoring and rebounding.
He also led the team to a 19-12 season and another spot
in the N.I.T. He was named First Team All Metro and
was selected to U.S.B.W.A. All District 6 Team.
The N.B.A. Draft saw Tulane's dynamo selected as a
third round pick by Cleveland, a tad bittersweet for
Thompson who many thought would be a late first round
or early second round choice. "I think I might have to
prove something to some people. The only reason I'm
saying this because I went in the third round. If I had
gone in the first round, I don't think there would have
been any doubt about my ability or talent. I'm not going
to do anything unusual or different than what I've been
doing. I'm just going to try harder," said Thompson.
Thompson fends off a San Antonio competitor as he
strives for a basket.
108
m^
110
TULANE BASEBALL
T"^lc^}^T.uL*)n^i!
No. Name
1 J.B. Mahoney
2 Glen Fourmaux
3 David Turner
5 John Zelenka
6 Chris Rivette
7 Mike Borgatti
8 Scott Barbier
Gregg Barrios
Brian Migliore
Scott Murphy
Lenny Edelman
Danny Wagner
Joe Scheuermann
Tim Cox
Reggie Reginelli
Kevin Burdine
John Reich
Kevin Mmahat
Eric Lane
Tommy Mathews
Steve Riley
Brian Shearman
Jack Catanese
Tommy Little
Marc Desjardins
Head Coach: Joe Brockhoff
Assistant Coaches; Mickey Retif
Kenny Francingues
Manager: Joey Brockhoff
Manager: Jim Sexton
Trainer: Mike Hall
Tommy Matthews keeps a watchful eye on the
ball.
111
% , ^V ) i V
%
Mi
Intense concentration is displayed by Brian
Migliore in preparation for tliis
pitch.
Tulane players listen intently to pregame
instructions.
113
mmt
Women's Basketball:
striving for a Winning Season
H
No. Name
10 Missy Paulman
12 Sue Owens
13 Sharons Duclos
14 Sharon Towry
20 DayrI Kimche
22 Sara Schlagman
25 Paula Brown
30 Ellen Tupper
31 Sarah Heider
32 Bernardette Williams
34 Teresa Heike
35 Beth Lebsack
11 IJP^
'^
Ist J&
Wlu\\
Men's Swim Team
Back Row; L. to R. Kevin Switzer
(capt.), Reed Dunne, Robert Killeen,
Jody Moore, Jimmy Flowers (capt.).
3rd. Row; Scooter Aselton, Wayne
Viola, Bill Bond, Morty Berger, Keitti
Mason, 2nd Row; Scott Hammond
(coach), Jon Schwartz, Chris Snyder,
Perry Keating, Mark Fleming, Tom
Paulin (asst. coach). Front Row; Tom
Gordon (trainer), Danny Callen, Jerry
Watson.
115
116
TENNIS
Mark Wales swings diligently to return thie ball
during a grueling match
Sandy Sacks practices her backhand for an
upcoming match
Dickey IVIcDonald prepares to slam the ball for a
point.
117
Tulane
Track
118
119
WOMEN'S
VOLLEYBALL
Manda Kapp stretches to return the ball at the
women's competition.
Members of the volleyball team display their
enthusiasm as the ball is slammed from team to
team.
Roster: Back Row: Todd DeMezza, Manager.
Kathy Trosclair, Tia Newsom, Melina Gerfers,
Elizabeth Kinsley, Terri Harvey, Charlotte Cunliffe,
Patti Boerner, Ann Bruder, Patricia Toulouse.
Front Row: Kathy Birdwell, Patricia Plumb, Veda
Ferdinand, Marda Kapp, Karia Seals, Darlene
Cooke.
120
lA-'i^' '«;««
LACROSSE: Southwest Champs
Again
With a quick start and a quick end, the
Tulane Lacrosse Team finished its 1983
season with a record of 9-0 in the
collegiate division and 1-3 in the club
division. For the third year in a row, the
Green Wave captured the Southwest
collegiate crown.
Highlights of the season were early
victones over Texas A&M (16-4) and
Sam Houston State (15-8). The Wave's
defense and midfield play pulled out
important wins late in the season to
capture the Southwest championship
outright.
Left: Members of the Lacrosse team
ham it up in front of the camera after a
grueling match.
nr
122
Left-right: Mickey Graff, Claude
Madere, Joseph McCarthiy, Coachi
Abadie, Gary Mehrtens, Earl Adorno,
Adrienne A, Theriot, Secretary.
Right: A member of Tulane's skydiving
performs an exhiibition jump for
interested spectators.
123
Skeet and Trap Club
The Skeet & Trap Club is
comprised of 22 members who enjoy
practicing shooting sl<ills and
participating in championship and
inter-collegiate matches. Throughout
the year the members planned
matches with such schools as Yale,
University of Illinois and Oklahoma
State. The group is coached by Jon
Abelman and Jon Christensen, Officers
include
Jon Abelman, president; Jon
Christensen, vice-president; and Lenny
Sorges, secretary.
Kneeling Left to R; Scott Brown, Jon
Abelmann, Stefan Schirler, Chris Jayne.
Standing Left to R; Bret Pahs, John
Christensen. Gabriel Saavedra.
124
Tulane Scuba
Seated Left to R; Harold Etherington,
Bruce Gasarch; Middle Row Left to R;
Jon Abelman (president), Michael
Landy, Dan Muskat; Back Row Left to
R; John Eynon, Michael McRee, Mike
Hilton, John Broman, Jeff Sturkey, Kris
Salzer, Dirk Angeuine.
125
-s? i^^
"^ •- K
481
126
student Life
127
A
128
129
The Quad
-> •:.:i*.A<.
'imd^.
r#^»
jT
FcocoKn^7i^>^:s?
Missy Cohen enjoyed a cold beer and good con-versation
during a TGIF
Volleyball l<ept many students entertained on Resi-dence
Hall Day.
Capacity crowds stretched ttie quad for WTUL's
Marattion weekend.
TULANE UNIVERSITY
THEATRE
IMP L/yj
William Gregory Etter and David Miller in Coming
Attractions. Directed by Michael Price.
!H
.^.
.^r I,.
«^^;'
»
\ -. V^ A/f^*... f ><^;v i .«« . ^ .
_•* ^.
,
"l:
:^'', K r"'*' ^' j^aA.
(*-' '"' y
t
'A ^'
.' 1 iv'^\. ^V- 4-' V-J-H >
( ^ t
'
. « '• '
'S
<' • i-*Y''
,'
•tf £ f ,H
.'.i^j;/wt,..: U 'l:
V-v^O.
-0kSm^:
Steven Sutherland and Elizabetti Hewlett in Crucifer of Blood, directed by Ron Gun
134
Above: Two actors in a scene from American Buffalo, a
University Players production.
Below: Freda Norman and Rico Peterson appear in ttie
Tony Award winning play Children of a Lesser God.
135
MAMBO'S WORD E.M. Esposito
Dear Mambo,
I am a college student about to move
into an apartment with two other guys. It is
a mid-size three bedroom, one bath
apartment several blocks from campus.
They are real close friends, however, I am
just an acquaintance of the two. Is thiis a
good home, and what about a maid''
Apartment Alarmed
in New Orleans
Dear A. A.,
An apartment is a student's dream! Oh
to get out of his parent's house and one of
those 10X10 square cell blocks you are
squeezed into freshman year with a weirdo
roommate you never met before. But life
isn't a bowl of cherries, so to speak; you
tend to hit a pit now and then.
Well, here are some suggestion to
survive apartment life ....
Above all, don't take a basement
apartment! If you haven't signed the lease
yet, get out of it. It isn't the best way to
spend the school year going to bed with
an umbrella and galoshes half the time
while your furniture spends its time on
cement blocks.
Arrive at the apartment first. You want to
get first choice of bedrooms. The one
furthest from the bathroom is the best, so
you don't have to hear a roommate all night
after he drank too much.
Don't shop at uptown garage sales. The
array of items scattered about those old
mansions are just over-priced remnants of
furniture, etc., left after an uptown child
smashed it during a temper tantrum — it is
sure to fall apart.
Promise all your friends some
apartment-cooked meals of real food (not
that institutional food they serve on
campus) and they are sure to help you
move in. This is very important if moving to
the third floor.
Install a work schedule. Otherwise you'll
136
be scrubbing that nasty soap-scum around
the tub while your loving roomies are
pushing the button on the dishwasher.
Buy many plants. Although it is very
difficult to keep them alive (I think you
need to water them or something . .?) they
will detract from the surrounding disaster
that exists in most college apartments.
Need a house device? If ever you are at
a loss as to where to get an item for your
apartment, )ust go to the real world; yes,
the shopping malls of Metarie.
Never have the parents over with a full
refrigerator. Only let them visit when the
place is semi-messy and the fridge is
empty. By sundown the fndge is sure to be
full and they won't hesitate to send money
the next time you need it.
Always shop at Schwegmann's. For real
good prices on food for the budget
minded, it is the place to hit, especially to
stock for those late-night binges. Besides,
think of all the friends you could make.
Meet your neighborhood bartenders. It
helps towards the end of the month and
during finals when you really need to suck
down a few G.T.'s and your cash flow was
sucked down the first half of the month.
Don't ever give a key to a friend! Your
keys are the pathway to freedom; once
they get that your phvacy walks out the
door.
Never-ever walk into a room without
knocking first. Always knock before
entering another person's room or one with
the door closed. You never really want to
know what goes on behind closed doors, it
may not be all talk and no action!
Don't complain to your parents or any
friends too much. Complaining turns
everyone off and will have your parents
pushing you back into the dorm cell
blocks. When in need, go into a closet,
scream, then proceed to lie down in bed
sucking your thumb for a few hours — it
does wonders!
Don't let anyone borrow your car. One
night they may come back without it and
not tell you for days what happened.
Hungry for a po-boy'r' Eat at Domilisie's
or make your own and save your stomach
from mayo that sat out all day or is flavored
by Anna-May's and Rose-Mary's fingers.
Be prepared for roaches. New Orleans is
the birthplace of billions of those oversized
insects. They enjoy everything from down
home soul food to the best French
delicacies. Just name them, call them your
kids and be happy; DEAL WITH IT!
Tell your dad Mom wants and needs a
new microwave. Be ready to catch the old
one when it gets thrown out the door
because you can't afford such luxuries yet.
Then teach all your guests to use it while
you watch T.V.
Never look a puppy in the eye.
Otherwise, you'll fall in love and want to
take it to your first home of your own.
Puppies and New Orleans apartments just
don't go very well together. Adopt a roach
and train it to bark at strangers.
Girls, now it is time to learn to make
something for Sunday dinner besides
reservations! Make an adventure out of it
and discover pots.
Be thankful every day that you don't
have hall meetings, a community bathroom
of forty persons, that you have your own
kitchen (be it ever so messy) and that your
meals (though not always recognizable)
are not institutionally prepared. You can
reclaim some privacy and you can enjoy
the wonders of independency . . . and
bills!
137
CO
00
o
Tulane's Direction Program aims at
bringing together leaders in tlie
national and international political,
scientific, and media-based disciplines.
Ttiis year Direction was proud to
present sucti prominent figures as
ex-Soviet Ambassador and advisor to
Andrei Gromyko, Arkady Stievctienko
(top). Also present were ttie Wasfiington
Editor of ttie "National Review" Jofin
McLaugtilin (bottom) and Zbigniew
Brzezinski, President Carter's Assistant
for National Security Affairs (qpposite).
138
140
Opposite page: Top: John
McLaughlin Bottom Left:
Dick Clark, former Senator
Bottom right: Pentagon
papers author Daniel
Ellsberg
This page: Top: Kurt
Waldheim Bottom: Adm.
Eugene Carroll and William
Rusher, publisher of the
National Review
141
4-
The Louis Faico Dance Company dazzled stu-dents
with their unique brand of modern dance.
TUCP Dazzles Tulane
with Fine Arts
Last year, culture came to Tulane in the
form of TUCP's Fine Arts Series. Students
had the chance to experience panto-mime,
dancing, classical piano and dra-ma
performed by some of the world's
best.
In this, the second year of the series,
TUCP has established the series as a
lasting, welcome addition to their annual
programming.
Kicking off this year's season was Miss
Margarida's Way, an experiment in audi-ence
participation. Estelle Parsons' fine
acting ability made this one-woman show
much more than a spectator event.
In the second show of the series,
legendary jazz great Dizzy Gillespie
wowed the audience with his music.
No Maps on My Taps combined film
and actual performances to present an
interesting documentation of the evolu-tion
of tap dancing.
Second Semester provided patrons
with modern dance from the Louis Faico
Dance Company. Rel<nowned for his
choreography in Fame, Louis FaIco gave
the Tulane audience a memorable and
dynamic performance.
The last show and series highlight was
the Tony award-winning play Children of
a Lesser God. It was an intense perfor-mance
dealing with the problems deaf
people face in a hearing world, and one
woman's struggle for independence.
Children of a Lesser God brought us deaf people
learning to cope in a hearing world.
143
Dizzy Gillespie entertained the audience witti tiis
legendary jazz stylings.
144
!^V
Estelle Parsons skillfully took the audience back to
grade school in Miss Margarida's Way.
Tap dancing highlighted the show No Maps on My
Taps,
145
<
cc <
BEAUX
147
ing Homecoming Homecoming Horn
148
149
150
The Jazz Fest is among the array of
festivals celebrated each year
throughout Louisiana. The musical mix
of Gospel singers to Pop Rock to
Broadway tunes entertains hoardes of
visitors as they browse by the booths
of home crafts and Cajun cuisine.
^^m-^, ^'^'
/
/
j:.!:
/ ^*'Y
S<^f *',l4.
-.**!^'%
5^-
M*
Le 15 Avril 1834 (Honore Daumier lithograph)
TULANE STUDENTS GET CULTURED!
As Tulane University is a Member of
the New Orleans Museum of Art, all
Tulane students are admitted to NOMA
free of charge. During the past year,
Tulane students were offered many
exciting exhibitions and special events.
In November, the Museum presented
three special exhibitions, Honore
Daumier 1808-1879, from the Armand
Hammer Collection, Contemporary
American Political and Social
Cartoonists and Photographs by
Mother St. Croix. The latter was of
particular interest since Mother St,
Croix (1845-1940), a Roman Catholic
nun, belonged to the Ursuline order in
New Orleans. Mother St. Croix
bequeathed to the community a picture
nt.
no longer in existence, preserving an
ira that would otherwise have been
lost forever.
In February, The Modern Masters
came to NOMA in a special exhibition
entitled 20th Century Paintings from
the Collection of The Museum of =
Modern Art, New York. This exhibition
included 50 paintings by such Modern
Masters as Picasso, Matisse, Chagall,
Braque and Klee, and concentrated on
three major art movements from
1907-1959 — Cubism, Expressionism
and Surrealism 20th Century
Paintings offered a rare opportunity to
see the growth of modern art since the
early 1900s through masterpieces from
that period and an opportunity to
understand an era that created such
important movements as Cubism,
Expressionism and Surrealism.
In the Spring, the Museum presented
"the exhibition you love to hate," the
1983 New Orleans Triennial, the
nation's oldest continuing survey of
regional contemporary art. As always,
this exhibition stimulated a bit of
controversary, as well as presented
some important new works.
Also, during the Triennial exhibition,
the Museum presented Etchings by
Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Piranesi
(1720-1778) was the most inventive
and powerful designer among 18th
century printmakers. This exhibition
presented 50 prints by the Italian artist.
During these special exhibitions, the
Museum presented several film series
and lectures to complement the
exhibitions, all free to Tulane students
as a benefit of University Membership
at NOMA.
In addition to special exhibitions and
events, the New Orleans Museum of
Art acquired some very important
works of art and opened two new
galleries. Last year NOMA received
100 contemporary Haitian paintings
and sculptures from the Perry EH.
Smith Collection. Formed during a
four-year residence in Haiti, this
collection includes important works by
Haitian artists from the founding
generation of young artists.
Additionally. NOMA was among a
group of 13 American museums
selected by the bequest of Edward
Steichen, one of America's foremost
20th century photographers. The
museums were selected on the basis
of their commitment to photography
On March 11. the Museum opened
the Rosemonde E. and Emile Kuntz
Rooms. These two period rooms exhibit
choice examples of Americas fine and
NE¥ ORLEANSHMUSELMCFAKT
decorative arts heritage and add
another dimension to the Museum's
already highly regarded Arts of the
Americas Collection,
Finally, on May 15, the New Orleans
Museum of Art proudly opened a
special gallery of the imperial
Treasures by Peter Carl Faberge from
the Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation
Collection. With three Imperial Easter
Eggs and eighteen magnificent floral
creations, including Feberge's floral
masterpiece, the Imperial Basket of
Lillies of the Valley, the Gray
Foundation Collection is one of the
three most important Faberge
collections in America (the Forbes
Magazine Collection and the Pratt
Collection at the Virginia Museum of
Fine Arts being the other two). These
incredibly beautiful creations were
made by Faberge for the last Czars of
Russia,
In addition to being an important
cultural institution, the New Orleans
Museum of Art is a vital educational
resource, including NOMA'S Felix J,
Dreyfous Library, This resource library
is opened to all Tulane University
Students during general public hours,
and many Tulane students took
advantage of the library during the past
^B[ jB8 ' m'
:^:ii)#.t:
cf¥^- 1*
Uwi fc- ^
SHOOT
YOURSELF
154
155
156
159
itch, bitch, bitch
by Anne Morton
Sure, everyone knows about the college
years being the best years of ones life,
insists Uncle Fred, Aunt Sue, et al. Your
older friends present you with a vision of
Tulane nothing short of Paradise:
continuous partying, little work, road trips
on weekends, the Quarter. But who was it
who neglected to mention the other things,
the nagging irritations that taken by
themselves are nothing, but when piled up
threaten to drive the sanest student to the
counseling center? No one, to my
knowledge, has ever sung the praises of
such wonders as quarter-gulping washing
machines, cold dryers, walking up eight or
twelve flights of stairs when the elevators
have died or wasting slowly away on
cafeteria food. The time has come to
recognize these vital ingredients of college
life, without which our education would be
sorely incomplete.
Take cars, for example. How many of
you out there who are vehicleless have
drooled over the black MG parked in front
of Irby? Or even over the 1971 Dodge
hidden away in the farthest corner of the
Willow Street lot? Take heart, friends, for
the climate of New Orleans and the
drainage system of McAlister Drive give
those fortunate enough to posess a car no
end of hassles. After the periodic floods,
imagine waking up and discovering that
your car is no longer in front of Sharp, but
is in fact rapidly floating towards Favrot
Field House. Or, even worse, finding out
that it is your Camero which is blocking
McAlister and causing high blood pressure
in all those infuriated motorists behind it.
To continue on with the rain for a bit
longer, since it is such an integral part of
New Orleans. You've heard of the scifi
movie "The Incredible Shrinking Man"?
What about Tulane's version: "The
Incredible Sinking Ouad"? Those students
brave enough to tackle the boggy mud
flats after three days of rain are legends
in their own times if they manage to appear
on the other side alive. If someone's
roomate has disappeared after a rainstorm,
well, it can't be helped, they've tried to
walk through swampland . . . Those who
do reappear are greeted with furious
outbursts as they track gallons of mud all
over their roomie's pale yellow carpet.
To move on, quarters. No, not the
drinking game, but those valuable pieces
of currency so quickly used up in
vending machines, Pac-Man, and last but
not least, washer and dryers. A word of
advice to those attempting to do laundry:
ASK a knowledgeable person which
machines work. Otherwise you may be
faced with Levis soaking in dirty water,
soggy clothes that have been in the
dryer for an hour, and that most
frustrating occurence: machines which
greedily gulp your money and then
refuse to even fill with water or spin
around. Some of you may be persuaded
to violence, but beware: a sheetmetal
washing machine is more durable than
your foot.
Next comes the food. Sure, we knew
that when we signed up for the meal plan
that it would not be mom and her Joy of
Cooking preparing our cuisine. But who
would have expected such delicacies as
mystery meat or powdered eggs?
Everyone says that you put on a few
extra pounds at college but after this we
wonder how that is, until we discover the
chocolate bars and ice cream which are
vital to our existence and well-being.
Finally, the miracle of that time and
wind-saving invention; the elevator.
Though only a minority of the school
suffers with these so-called
"conveniences", the frustration endured
by these students certainly deserves
recognition. For those residents fortunate
to live on the first floors of these halls, the
inconvenience is minimal. However, how
many of you penthouse dwellers have
been faced with the prospect of climbing
eight or twelve flights of stairs after a
hard day because the elevators were
taking the day off? Less annoying, but no
less unattractive, is the unique
experience you may face in the morning;
that of keeping company with the
garbage on the way down. Unappealing
at any time, this hde is certain to kill your
appetite for breakfast.
Don't let all these things fool you,
people; college life does have its fun
times. Remember, you must pay some
price for no parents, no curfew, and the
Quarter. Besides, if there weren't for any
of these occurences, what would you
discuss with your friends during
Economics?
161
^^
4' - '-''"
^fL!}i^l.Ml
^
« ^ 1*
(0
(0
5
(C
164
165
1.^
it!
168
George Thurogood
169
THE TULANIANS
Trombone player Ric Coons
Tulanians Cast: Adrienne Petite, Lee Waldman, Eddie Levine,
Carrie Robinson, Cliristine Slianl<, Jay D'Lugin, Cassie Stecl<,
Brian Batt, Julie Emig, Doug Schiffer, Wendy Levy, Ric Coons,
Mil<e Kelly, Bob Czachara, Scott Greene, Ricky Howe, Mike McGo-wan,
Rich Rhodes, Joel Livingston, Timothy Beach, Steve Brown,
Kenny Weil, Brad Beeson, Jim McDernnott, Stan Terry, Lisa Josvai,
B.J. Perez. Director: Jane Rushing. Instrumental Director: B.J.
Perez.
170
171
172
173
*t^.
/./-*
,L
\S r \
1
.IS:
,r.
v\
W 0'
1/
V
\ f
IX
'
i IB • .o
174
Greeks
175
"Because everyone who is anyone is . . .
"
"I don't l^now. I did not realize until I woke up that I
had joined."
"I'm into goats."
"It seenned like a good way to meet people, and
get involved in campus life."
"For the food."
"To expand my horizons."
"I liked the guys."
"I knew I would make fhends for life."
"Connections."
"For the cable TV."
"I have no idea."
Members of the Tulane Greek System
What is the mystique of the Greek system?
What drives a freshman to endure hell week'!'
What drives actives to participate in the long
hours involved? What drives alumnae to spend
long hours supporting — long after their college
years? It is the rare opportunity to join a group of
people united by certain convictions. It is the fel-lowship.
Just as a family may be divided into smaller
groups, each with their own characteristics, so
too may a Greek system be divided. Once classi-fied
into the structure of fraternities and sororities,
personalities develop, and each group hence be-comes
a unique entity. A member may then expe-nence
both the system and the individual group,
doubling the opportunity to develop mentally,
physically and socially. It is this diversity yet uni-fication
that makes a Greek system appealing,
and it IS these qualities that make the Tulane Uni-versity
Greek System strong.
176
The Greeks of TU are a unique mix of people
with a myriad of social values and attitudes. They
come from all over the country with varying goals,
dreams and expectations. They each join the sys-tem
and each contribute something to their
group. Such diversity could be crippling, but the
existence of compromise and cooperation based
upon mutual respect has salvaged and streng-thened
it.
While the students deal with the added advan-tages
and disadvantages of New Orleans, they
bond together to form a cohesive unit, indi-vidualistic
yet unified. The attitudes and actions of
the system have proven to have a profound and
positive impact on the involvement of Tulane's
student life. It is the traditions coupled with the
uninhibited creativity that attracts students. It is
the chance to belong to a nationwide family and
the unique Tulane system that holds them for life.
Fraternity rush provides a sharp contrast to
the formality of sorority rush. Gone are the sun-dresses
and iced tea; instead, madras blazers
and beer form the mainstay of fret rush. Through
rush week, the rushees are invited to numerous
parties ranging from casual beer/band bashes
to more formal alumni cocktail parties. In be-tween,
the brothers use every form of persua-sion
they can, to encourage rushees to pledge.
Little sisters, campus activities, "brotherly"
talks with the rushees and sometimes strippers
urge the rushees to pledge XYZ fraternity.
At the end of the week, the fraternities issue
bids to the rushees they wish to pledge. While
many (unsuspecting) rushees see pledging as
the end of rush, upperclassmen know better.
The fun has just begun!!!
179
9^:\>^;
.^^.
<^O^O:^^
September 1
Dear Mom,
Rush starts tomorrow, and I'm scared to
death! I only know one sorority girl, my orien-tation
coordinator, and I can't remember
which sorority she's in! And I just know my
dress won't get back from the cleaners in time
for me to wear it. Please check with Mrs.
VanNorman and make sure she sent in my
recommendations!
Love,
Suzy
September 2
Dear Mom,
I made it through the first series parties, but
I am sure I'm going to be cut. I had absolutely
nothing to say so I just giggled like an idiot at
anything the actives had to say. I spilled an
entire pitcher of water at one of the houses.
Now the whole world will think I'm a klutz!
What am I going to do?
Miserably,
Suzy
mi
12.
'JBHv }
' :• .- -^ ' . ..».-.t!J«M; - .- __ mi"
VkW^'- Mr
.-"_^iiB*'- . Y'-" ^ir*-^
i
^Tl^i^A
^^* }
%
"^-•L, - liil
i
^^R 1
Ik ^ i 1
1^
: vV
180
September 3
Dear Mom,
Well, at least I got asked back to some of the
houses, although not the one where I tnpped
down the front steps. My roommate says I should
get my hair cut before tomorrow, but I can't find
any place open that early. I guess I'll just have to
go through second series looking like a sheep-dog!
Please send my brown sandals before Fn-day
so I can have something to wear with that new
sundress.
Desperately,
Suzy
September 4
MOTHER,
I told you I had to have those shoes before
tomorrow. Now I have nothing to wear so I'll just
have to go shopping. Don't complain to me about
the VISA bill that you get, it's your fault anyway.
Third series parties are tomorrow. I think I'll slit my
wrists.
Unhappily,
Suzy
181
September 5
Dear Mom,
Well, I've signed my preference card, but we
won't know if we got the bids until tomorrow. I
don't think I'll live until then so I have eaten four
pepperoni pizzas to pass the time. My roommate
dropped quiche on the carpet at one of the
houses, and it had just been redecorated. She
hasn't stopped crying since she got back. I'm
glad I didn't do anything that dumb.
Anxiously,
Suzy
September 6
Dearest Mother,
I GOT I N ! ! ! It was the one I wanted and every-thing.
My roommate got in too (apparently they
got the quiche out of the carpet). I've never been
so happy in all my life! Now, I've got to go shop-ping
so I'll have something to wear on Screech
Night.
All my love,
Suzy
182
183
K^^^
184
This year, Sigma Chi fraternity resumed their
tradition of hosting an inter-sorority pledge com-petition.
Known as Derby Weel<, the competition
resembles a small scale Greek Week. The soror-ities
compete to earn money for philanthropies, to
entertain the Sigma Chi's and to find the most
derbies in a scavenger hunt and to show the most
spirit.
The week gives pledges a chance to work
closely with their respective pledge classes on a
project of their own — their chance to show the
actives that pledges are an important part of the
sorority. The actives, in turn, offer support and lots
of spirit during the week.
The week ends with a day of games on New-comb
quad. Each pledge class along with its
Sigma Chi coaches, competes in such activities
as beer chugs and balloon pops. When the
games end, the Sigma Chi officials tally the total
points for the week and announce the winner of
Derby Week. The 1 983 winner was Kappa Kappa
Gamma, for their spirit and enthusiasm in all
events.
185
ie^.
^^^
186
1..^
187
9^^ i^\0
Newcomb Panhellenic had a very successful
and productive year. Eight sororities pledged
389 women.
Several new faces appeared on the scene
this year. First, Nancy Olinde became the new
advisor. Also, the colonization of Delta Phi Epsi-lon
began in August. They proved to be a strong
chapter and received their charter in March.
Many programs were offered during the year.
These included receptions, speakers, study
breaks and the annual progressive dinner,
which is always a good excuse for adding a few
extra pounds. Also, Greek Week and Derby
Week events enjoyed by soronty members.
Games, dances and other social events
rounded out the year.
One program that Panhellenic is proud of is
Operation I.D. Sororities worked with the Tulane
security department to allow students to have
valuable items engraved for identification.
Finally, a new branch of Panhellenic was cre-ated.
Junior Panhellenic, made up of pledge
representatives, encourages inter-sorority
events for pledge classes.
188
This year for the Tulane Interfraternity Council
was marl<ed by an evaluation of both the univer-sity
and the fraternity system by the National
Interfraternity Committee. The evaluation was
directed at improving the relationship between
the university and its fraternities as well as
focusing on objective approaches to enhance the
fraternity system at Tulane. The final report will aid
the fraternities in their ongoing efforts to become a
fully integrated entity at Tulane and in the surround-ing
neighborhoods.
^
189
190
Greek sports in the '82-'83 season were very
competitive. Tine race for tine Inter-Fraternity
Council trophy was as close as possible. Sever-al
fraternities were in the race all the way. Kappa
Sig's late month probation took them out of con-tention
forthe trophy, SigmaNu, looking fortheir
fifth stright IFC crown, won two of the three
major sports, Sigma Chi won softball in exciting
fashion to finish up inter-fraternity competition
with a bang.
Alpha Epsilon Pi had led the best of five
series, two games to none, and Sigma Chi
came back to win the next three games to take
the Softball title, AEPi had great hitting from Joel
Cohen and Scott Lazarus, but it was not enough
to stop the power of 'Greg Barr & Co,' of Sigma
Chi.
In football, SigmaNu, underthe leadership of
quarterback Marty Bolton, beat AEPi to take the
the title. The football season was a great one for
AEPi — they were undefeated going into the
finals, thanks to their receiver Paul Weissman.
In the finals, however, it was Sigma Nu's de-fense
led by the rushing of Steve Kenney and
the coverage of Ken Davidov, Bernie Hoppen-feld
and Kent Strubble which proved to be the
difference in the 7-0 Sigma Nu win.
Sigma Nu also won the basketball title by
beating Kappa Sigma in overtime. For Sigma
Nu, Ken Davidov and Jeff Jonas led the way
with accurate shooting and great defense. Kap-pa
Sig's E.J. and Dave Miller led their offensive
surge at the end of the game to put the game
into overtime. Sigma Nu scored eight points in
the overtime while holding Kappa Sig to a mere
one basket. The "little sports" (pool, bowling,
ping pong) were dominated by Kappa Sigma,
Track and Field was won by Sigma Nu, Sigma
Chi won wrestling. At year's end with all points
except grade point average, Sigma Nu was in
first place and Sigma Chi needed first or sec-ond
place in that category to beat the apparent
five time champions — Sigma Nu,
?z^'__.
^Kv^^
192
1 ^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^Hmb^bbBBHBBBWI^^^B^9 ^^^^mli''!-^
>^^H|^^^|V^p^^^Hpv'-'VvmPr-r ..-,-7--' -^gj ^^^B
V^
aJ ' "^'' ''**^"'^^^l
^k^
i
193
Alpha Epsilon Phi
Robin Adier
Amy Arno
Laurie Baim
Linda Baylinson
Lynne Bernstein
Rebecca Bernstein
Nancy Byck
Dianne Colnen
Maria Colien
Maura Cohen
Susie Collat
Maxine Coppersmitii
Clieryl Davis
Laurie Dollin
Sherne Edelman
Mindy Elser
Debbie Fanburg
Melissa Feldman
Leslie Finkelstein
Susan Frank
Monica Fried
Mona Friedman
Andrea Golden
Ellen Goldfarb
Jill Goldman
Fonda Goldstein
Lauren Goldware
Lauren Gotlieb
Nancy Graboyes
Jill Greenberg
Beth Harris
Lori Hecht
Melanie Heintz
Amy Herta
Barbara Hodin
Judith Isdaner
Jill Jacoves
Nancy Kaplan
Andrea Katz
Merrie Keller
Donna Kelly
Elaine Koby
Joan Kohn
Robyn Kohn
Wendy Kosberg
Amy Kovler
Karen Kravtin
Maria Krupman
Jan Laupheimer
Beth Levine
Jill Leving
Wendy Levy
Shari Lipschutz
Jody Lischkoff
Patricia Loeb
Caroline Lux
Laura Magaziner
Fonda Magids
Susie Mannis
Sherri Marblestone
Debbie Mesirow
Sheryl Mesirow
Toni Miller
Nancy Mills
Sally Mintz
Lisa Mittler
Carl Nathanson
Toby Pallet
Shari Penner
Lynette Perlman
Lisa Peyton
Amy Pinsker
Brenda Rayel
Karen Ronnel
Debbie Roos
Edith Rosen
Gail Rosenbaum
Nancy Rosenberg
Peggy Rubens
Michelle Sainer
Patti Sandberg
Deena Schencker
Tammy Schiff
Lynda Schwalb
Amy Seigal
Tami Seltman
Joy Shapiro
Ellen Shayman
Bonnie Sheitelman
Shari Sheitelman
Lisa Sherins
Linda Siegal
Suzanne Smith
Loren Soloman
Patty Soloman
Susan Soloman
Lynn Spector
Lon Spielberger
Clanssa Star
Laurie Stein
Dana Stern
Debbie Stern
Merryl Thaler
Pam Tizer
Randi Tompkins
Amy Trubowitz
Lee Waldman
Susan Wiener
Pam Zahler
Shara Zakarin
Roberta Zarkowski
Lisa Zier
Sheril Zimmerman
Randi Zinberg
194
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Louie Abramson
David Albert
Bennet Alpert
Edward Bases
Howard Bendell
Stephen Bilkis
Robert Belchman
Eric Blumenfel
Douglas Bowling
Mark Bradley
David Brenner
Howard Brenner
Scott Brightman
Ross Brown
Alan Bulbin
Jonathan Cohan
Joel Cohen
William Crooks
Lawrence Dear
Richard Dinnerstein
Jeffrey Epstein
Richard Feibus
Paul Feinberg
Stephen Felton
Leonard Fischer
Bruce Forrest
Richard Galkin
Mitchell Gervis
Jonathan Ginsberg
Lawrence Gladstone
Jeffrey Gold
Richard Golden
Bruce Goldfarb
Kyle Green
Ira Guttentag
William Scott Harris
Noah Heftier
Mark Heller
Michael Heller
Edward Henkin
Bruce Herman
Daren Howard
Stuart Israel
George Johnson
Eric Kono
Russell Krakow
Jonathan Kramer
Gary Kranz
Steven Kranz
Andrew Kurland
Richard Lambert
Eric Lazarus
Scott Lazarus
Albert LeBoyer
Richard Mandel
Lanny Marks
Marc Mauser
David McDowell
Stephen Meltzer
Adam Menkes
Leif Metsch
Philip Michelson
Jeffrey Miller
Andrew Mills
Laurence Moser
Andrew Mueller
Mark Olensky
Robert Orlin
Adam Persky
Scott Pestcoe
Michael Polo
Steve Press
Barry Resnik
Ron Richmond
Braig Roberts
Mathew Rosengart
Andrew Rosenzweig
Neil Ross
David Rothenberg
Robert Rubinstein
Jonathan Sawyer
Matthew Schilowitz
David Schwartz
David F, Schwartz
Russell Schwartz
Lee Sherman
Steven Shore
Jonathan Siegler
Howard Singer
Robert Slatoff
Jack Soloff
David Speizman
Mark Spirer
Steven Steiner
Lawrence Stempel
Warren Struhl
Jeffrey Tamis
Jeffrey Tannenbaum
Kenneth Turkel
Mark Tusk
David Weil
Sanford Weinberg
Herschel Weisfeld
Paul Weisman
Barry Weiss
Richard Weiss
Scott Weiss
Jeffrey Wolf
Howard Wolofsky
Thomas Zilahi
195
Alpha Sigma Phi
Michael Caruso Stephen Jones
Mike Bissau! Ian Kerr
Andrew Donnelly Steven Koreman
Marc Greenberg Christopher Kuruvella
Gary Helfman Keith Luber
James Henderson Sean McDonald
Howard Herman Kenneth Price
Jason Johnston Jeff Williams
196
Alpha Tau Omega
Michael Armltage
John Bolton
Brent Bourque
Volney Campbell
Anton Cangelosi
Charles Carr
James Day
Burgin Dossett
Kent Dussom
Robert Frost
John Gallagher
Keith Goodfellow
John Hatch
Howard Henriques
Kirk Heumann
Thomas Hughes
Michael Kelly
Leonard Killeen
Patricl< Kingsmill
James Korndorffer
Walter Lebreton
Bret Levy
Michael Litvack
Cyril Lowe
Peter Lund
Gary McNamara
Edward Moise
Robert Morton
Kent Nicaud
Rene Paysse
Shepard Perrin
Mark Pilie
David Quinn
Hugh Randolph
Paul Reggie
Raymond Reggie
Russell Rhea
Rex Roberts
John Rodney
Kent Ryan
Mark Sigler
Eugene Simon
John Truett
Robert Truett
James Ulrey
Daniel Wagner
Wesley Walk
James Wilson
Gregory Woolverton
Robert Yates
197
Beta Theta Pi
Norman Beck
Jack Biggs
Mitchell Blumenthal
Robert Bocock
Tim Bouchard
Marco Brunicelli
John Eynon
Laurence Fox
Christopher French
Robert Garvey
Chris Greanias
Kevin Hooper
Andrew Hurwitz
Howard Jacobs
Michael Judd
Peter Kettler
Raymond Koloski
Chris Lazarou
Jeromw McCarthy
Terence Nolan
Michael Park
John Papandon
Stephen Propper
Frederick Schuler
Chris Scroger
Steven Sloan
Philip Stevenson
Marco St. John
Edgar Ulloa
Kurt Weinstock
Adam Williams
Stephen Wolf
James Wrathall
Lawrence Yarborough
Yvan Zorrealba
198
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Bryan Batt
Jonathan Bean
John Bendernagel
Thomas Beron
Charles Bethell
Joseph Brewer
Christian Brown
Brodie Cobb
Craig Colombes
Gary Culbertson
Ana De La Fuente
Herce
Williann Dossett
George Francisco
Louis Freeman
Robert Gallagher
Charles Gamburg
John Georges
Paul Glass
Alex Goodson
Jesse Henley
Crawford Hindermann
Chris Johnson
William Kearney
Thomas Kilby
Daniel Killeen
John Kostmayer
Wesley Lambert
Marc Lauricella
Bruce Levy
Edwin McMullen
Charles Morse
Jonathan Mulkin
William Naff
Nal Neitzschman
Michael Owens
Kevin Pomet
Raoul Rodnguez
Ricardo Rodnguez
Gerard Ruth
Parks Shackelford
Billy Shepard
William Slatten
Gerard Sonnier
Douglas Sprunt
Jeffrey Streich
Michael Tubbs
Randall Turney
Norris Williamson
llOfil
199
Delta Phi Epsilon
Eve Alman
Judy Bressler
Lisa Chaiklin
Lisa Cinapin
Lauri Clare
Susan Cohn
Rebecca Cotler
Ellen Eisen
Cheryl Gildenhorn
Sherri Hecktman
Debbie Schechter
Beth Schick
Tracy Swedlow
Lisa Weil
Jill Weinstein
Lauren Wunsh
Ellen Zaglin
200
Delta Tau Delta
Barry Adams
John Argenti
Steven Ballinger
Bradley Barnhiil
David Bell
Michael Berry
Jeffrey Bey
John Bonerba
Scott Brook
Laird Burnett
Frederick Burns
Gregory Calejo
Clay Christianson
Clair Davis
Kenneth Degot
Thomas Diaz
Mont Echols
William Eckert
Steven Eisner
Mark Felger
William Fitzpatnck
Russell Forbis
Andrew Gardner
Revi^ Goodenow
David Gordon
Jeffrey Gum
Jack Gutman
Bruce Hamilton
Tod Hanna
Kent Heck
Jeffrey Hood
Stephen Julien
George Koclanes
Francis Larvie
William Leffler
Michael Low/enthal
John McKenzie
Paul Melblom
John Nicosia
Michael Nictakis
David Paarz
Michael Paton
Peter Riccobene
Timothy Rood
Michael Rosenberg
Arturo Salow
Vincent Santomassimo
Steven Shaffer
Raymond Silverstein
Stephen Simion
Mark Smallwood
James Smith
Barry Soicher
Brion Stanford
Daniel Sullivan
Allen Tafel
Chnstopher Tobe
John Tompkins
Peter Urbanowicz
Rhett Weiss
David Weissman
Andrew Wetstone
Derek Winebrenner
ELTA TAU
rrj ^~ ^ r! ATA
201
Kappa Alpha
Brad Adams
David Adelman
William Akers
James Baus
John Bellan
Emest Bie
Tom Bolen
John Carwie
Lincoln Case
Salvador Casente
James Churchill
William Colomb
Thomas Colvi/in
John Cox
Guy Curry
John Daly
Douglas Dillon
Brent Finley
Brian Fitzpatrick
Vincent Gauthier
Charles Hamilton
Andrew Hillary
Francis Holland
Christopher Holton
Bay Ingram
Jeffrey Irle
Barry Kern
Steve Kline
Robert Killeen
Omer Kuebel
Honore Lartigue
Robert Lil)eberg
Charles Livaudis
J.B. Mahoney
Richard McGinity
Paul McKee
Ian Miller
Michael Miller
Michael Moorehead
Christopher
Muckerman
Donald Nalty
Frederic Newburger
Jeffrey Oustalet
Stephen Pelleriti
David Pixberg
Jonathan Pollock
Kevin Pomet
Marc Quiroz
Felix Rabito
Neil Rapmund
Jeffrey Small
Lawrence Smithson
Lee Smithson
Miguel Solen
Edward Stauss
David Sussman
Victor Teumer
Peter Thompson
Michael Toso
David Turner
John Turner
Steven Van Zandt
Thomas Wallace
Hugh White
John Young
202
203
Kappa Alpha Theta
Carolyn Agresti
Sara Agresti
Teresa Barnes
Anne Barrett
Denise Bartizal
Tricia Benoit
Portia Berrey
Lisette Betancourt
Patricia Bowers
Suzy Brundage
Caroline Burton
Katherine Coleman
Elizbeth Cravens
Judy Dalton
Heidi Davis
Bndgett Everitt
Sharon Fenno
Caryn Fine
Amy Giordano
Mary Page Gready
Katherine Heatherw^ick
Christine Hoffman
Elizabeth Huddleston
Lizzie Hudson
Polly Johnson
Sharon Jones
V. Jannette Jones
Danielle Kane
Rylla Karst
Teri Katz
Caren Knochenhauer
Alma Kombari
Laura Leitch
Suzanne Lemay
Theresa Lippert
Anna-Marie Litwin
Elizabeth Malman
Margaret McCullough
Suzanne McGlone
Joanne McHugh
Marcia Miller
Laura Miskovsky
Chnstine Mitchell
Anne Morris
Maria Morris
Lisa Myers
Nancy Newmark
Tia Newsom
Robin O'Bannon
Lea Percy
Marta Perez
Adrienne Petite
Regina Reed
Mah-Ofe Rodriguez
Yvette Rusca
Lynne Sargent
Jamie Saucer
Amy Saulnier
Amy Shafer
Jean Simion
Peggy Stafford
Lesley Stanford
Ruth Stecher
Nancy Sternberg
Susan Strachan
Margie Strauss
Elizabeth Sullivan
Andrea Vilmos
Robin Walton
Lizzie Weintraub
Alora White
Anne-Marie Wolfe
Callaway Woods
204
Kappa Sigma
Peter Albert
Jonathan Anastos
Richard Baker
Robert Ball
Christopher Belaire
Christopher Bellone
Richard Cameron
Done Capsis
Bradley Chase
Andrew Citrin
James Cohen
Michael Conley
David Connelly
Mark Connolly
Abner Cornwell
Joseph Corteguera
John Cottingham
Walter Davis
Rhett Debuys
Richard Delrio
George Dimitri
Robley Dupleix
Mark Duvoisin
Daniel Eckstein
Joseph Fischer
James Fitzmaurice
Arthur Fullerton
Harry Geismar
Joseph Gilliland
Robert Grainger
James Hillhouse
Alec Hirsch
Gregory Holcombe
John Jacobson
Warner Janof
Daniel Johnson
Wayne Johnson
Gregory Jung
Richard Jurisich
Chris Kelly
Walter Kenrich
Carter Kolba
Edward Krampe
Steven Kushnick
Thomas Lachman
James Ladd
Roger Landry
Craig Lax
Michael Levitz
Douglas Lister
Roland Livney
James Marks
Charles McGowan
Christopher Miller
David Miller
Michael Mollow
David Monahan
Ben Mortman
Michael Munck
Guy Neilson
David O'Flynn
Eric Phifer
Ed Pilot
Daniel Pohl
Mark Potter
Thomas Rebman
Robert Regent
Kenneth Reidbord
John Renda
Ray Rhymes
John Rogan
Karl Rothermel
Jim Runsdorf
David Sanker
Scott Schiller
Frank Scroggins
Todd Seltzer
Jay Selznik
Theodore Shafer
Steven Sheinkopf
David Shepard
Clayton Smith
Rodrick Soars
Ross Spector
Gregory Stadtlander
Lawrence Stern
John Strasburger
Charles Thompson
Francis Trombetta
Wade Turnbull
Steven Vaughan
Burton Vincent
Robert White
Robert Williams
205
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Jane Alexander
Shawn Allkis
Karen Andrus
Alike Antonatos
Leiand Baldwin
Karen Barlow
Genie Barnard
Alice Barnes
J. Barr
Suzy Bettinger
Allison Bolen
Ruthie Bolvig
Martha Boone
Alyson Boothe
Gina Brasher
Tracey Brice
Jordan Bruns
Ruthie Calhoun
Tenley Carp
Gilley Chamberlain
Holley Chant
Catherine Clark
Maggie Cleary
Colleen Costello
Elizabeth Dana
Dawn Davis
Lauren Dessommes
Lynne Eagan
Dana Galler
Stephanie Gambino
Berb Gibbons
Lisa Gillis
Diana Gonzalez
Mimi Goodyear
Betsy Gordon
Jeannie Grelier
Lorie Groton
Mary Gruenebaum
Laura Harriss
Rene Hedges
Brooke Howell
Joanne Jacobs
Lori Johnson
Nancy King
Michelle Kingsley
Libby Kermentz
Alice Landry
Kris Langdon
Cindy Langston
Lisa Lasseigne
Jill Levy
Carrie Lewis
Elise Livaudis
Sarah Lowman
Dede Lyman
Kathy Martin
Liz Masters
Teffie McLaughlin
Leslie McNair
Shelley McNaIr
Diana Merkel
Callie Metzinger
Bridget Meyer
Rennie Miles
Mimi Miller
Barbara Milnamow
Carolyn Moore
Kyle O'Connor
Betsy Padwee
Dana Paul
Marilyn Pelias
Carolyn Peterson
Beth Pinkerton
Melissa Rainey
Varin Rushton
Susan Saper
Suzanne Saussy
Sarah Sawin
Jody Schunng
Sara Schwedland
Scottie Settle
Julie Sherman
Carline Shook
Brenda Sibille
Elizabeth Sigety
Sharon Spence
Mary Spilker
Shirley Stahman
Caroline Stevens
Stacey Sutton
Shirley Tokheim
Ann Tomkins
Mariette VanderMeer
Sarah Waters
Katie Wenzler
Susan Wise
Edie Yarborough
Annie Young
Melissa Zuber
206
207
Phi Kappa Sigma
Charles Allard
William Bermingt-iam
George Biancardi
Stephen Blum
William Caldwell
Peter Callais
Michael Clanton
Geoffrey Daniels
Daniel Fisher
Joseph Friedman
Rodd Garfinkel
Adam Greene
Paul Gregoli
Michael Heffernan
John Hodges
Benjamin Hopkins
Timothy Hunt
Geoffrey Isles
Warren Jones
Lewis Ledyard
Peter Leuhusen
Philip Maniatty
Robert Mason
Edward McShane
Craig Menker
John Mobley
Charles Moore
B. Paul Morrison
Robert Morns
Dean Morrow
Stephen O'Neil
Stanley Perelman
Thomas Rand
Gerry Scheirman
John Schenken
James Shearman
Andrew Shenken
Richard Shepard
Jonathan Small
John Stewart
Murray Stewart
Rolf Theineman
Jeffrey Thornton
Forrest Turkish
Robert Wartelle
Jeffrey Youngman
208
Phi Gamma Delta
Daniel Babineau
Pedro Biccheri
William Bowers
Daniel Bucholitz
Kevin Carroll
Patrick Colpoys
Todd Durand
Timothy Durst
Todd Eriandson
Richard Feller
Marshall Ford
Ned Gohl
Seth Grant
Steven Grizzanti
Adam Gutman
Barry Hammond
Scott Hayward
James H. Hyland
James M. Hyland
Mark Jasen
Kraig Kessel
Raj Krishnan
"Kevin Limp
Richard Lustig
Daniel Mahoney
Alex Martin
Scott Mashkin
Clarence McGowan
Rick Mejia
David Miller
Charles Oakman
James Odza
Mark Perry
Mark Sallinger
Steven Sandler
Paul Schulman
Keith Schw/aner
Howard Tee
George Toland
David Vining
Andrew Werth
209
Phi Mu
Jody Baldwin
Tahnya Ballard
Angela Bartholomew
Becky Belford
Shari Berke
Stacey Bialkin
Elizabeth Black
Pat Boulet
Margaret Brown
Joyce Budowsky
Michelle Burkett
Lynn Carley
Eleanor Comer
Susan Cone
Melissa Corcoran
Jennifer Cowin
Elizabeth Cox
Wendy Crandall
Rachel Dacey
Lisette Darmstadter
Patricia Dayton
Ann Druffner
Dolly Duplantier
Sarah Eddy
Laurie Elliot
Mary Eriings
Mary Fischer
Grace Fowler
Jane Foy
Mary Freret
Dawn George
Teri Gioia
Missy Glaser
Melissa Gordon
Hale Gork
Denise Gray
Jill Griffin
Karen Gruesen
Jan Hawley
Bonnie Hogue
Michelle Hornack
Anne Hughes
Karen Ibach
Sandra Jansa
Kathryn Johnson
Laura Kittok
Nancy Klevan
Lisa Landis
Patncia Lanier
Hedda Lauten Schlager
Lisa Leach
Michael Lederman
Mary Lindquist
Mindy Loff
Diane Machell
Bea Maldonado
Heather McArn
Debbie McManus
Leslie Mine
Stacey Mitchell
Katherine Moore
Cynthia Neder
Valerie Nelson
Tammy Newell
Jeanne Pappas
Melissa Patterson
April Peppe
Virginia Phillips
Stephanie Pipkin
Vicki Pollock
Donna Prados
Ann Prevatt
Laura Punghorst
Ellen Riccobene
Michelle Rooney
Pat Ryder
Sandy Sachs
Holly Schymik
Jane Seymour
Lisa Solzman
Barbara Steen
Cheri Tobin
Elaine Trimble
Lisa Twill
Valerie Vanderlick
Shannon Wall
Pauline Warriner
Catherine Weil
Melinda Wettels
Debbie White
Elizabeth Whitemore
Paige Wiegel
Kathy Wilkinson
Mandy Wood
210
Pi Beta Phi
Berit Amiie
Chris Arthur
Deborah Atkins
Micheline Avegno
Stepharnie Bachhuber
Karen Baker
Susan Banks
Lynn Barham
Gina Barron
Leigh Ann Blackwell
Carolyn Blaine
Elizabeth Boh
Geri Bosworth
Eveline Brine
Krista Camden
Ann Carey
Shannon Casey
Suzanne Church
Celia Cironne
Marilyn Clements
Brooke Cruger
Priestley Cummings
Lilynn Cutrer
Wendy Dehan
Joyce Delery
Lea Dobbs
Janet Drago
Kris Dreisker
Gretchen Edell
Valerie Edwards
Cathy Emmanuelson
Elizabeth Erdreich
Adrienne Fetkowitz
Heidi Flynn
Christy Fugate
Paige Garner
Reecee Garner
Renee George
Gina Gibson
Kerry Gibson
Page Giddings
Katharine Gilly
Sarah Grider
Halfleigh Hall
Pam Hensen
Edie Harrell
Suzanne Harris
Nancy Harrison
Connie Hartson
Beth Haynes
Monique Hocking
Lizzie Horchow
Loren Hurst
Kathleen Jordan
Catherine Kehoe
Lori Lane
Leslie Lanier
Lynne Levy
Julie Litvak
Karen Markham
Claudia Marozas
Elizabeth McCarron
Flora McConnell
Rachel McHale
Laura Morris
Page Morris
Kelly Morsman
Sherry Mussafer
Margaret O'Keefe
Peggy O'Malley
Gwen Osborne
Barbara Pearlman
Jenny Pharr
Joby Ranier
Marianne Rapier
Liz Reidy
Christy Riggs
Renee Sanditz
Kristen Schattagen
Dina Schefler
Becky Schoel
Gail Schultz
Leslie Schwarz
Ashley Scott
Madeleine Sheahan
Megan Shamwell
Susan Shiver
Catherine Shoup
Shelley Skiles
Lea Mary Smith
Susie Sommer
Elena Soto
Mollie Talley
Emily Timberlake
Camille Van Sant
Margaret White
Margaret Winston
Louisa Wittmann
Marguerite Young
211
Pi Kappa Alpha
James Albrecht
Lee Altschuler
Scott Bibo
Lee Brauer
Kenneth Bubes
Christopher Cahill
Christopher Campbell
Anthony Demolina
Anthony Dunaif
Len Edelman
Joe Eggleston
Steven Emerson
Steven Fradkin
Alan Gahagan
Victor Galliano
Marc Golden
Jay Goldstein
Robert Gotfried
Philip Greenfeld
Scott Groene
Douglas Hart
Paul Hegener
Michael Herman
David Hertz
Stephen Johnson
Daniel Katzner
Jonathan Kaufman
Troy Kenyon
Thomas Kern
Mark Kombert
Leon Lants
Joseph Leavitt
Charles Lederman
Marcel Leveque
Gregory Lieberman
Elliot Liss
Alan Loehr
Louis Lustenberger
Napoleon Maminta
Mark Manuel
Enc McWhirter
Steven Muir
Andrew Murphy
Alan Nachman
David Nachman
John Nolan
William O'Mara
William Pappas
Gary Podell
Hillard Quint
Stephen Ravosa
Bradford Ray
Geoffrey Regg
David Reynolds
Barry Rogers
Steve Ross
Lang Ryder
Richard Schreiber
Alan Schwerer
Robert Silverberg
Richard Smith
Patrick Staves
Barry Howard
Edward Strobel
Charles Thomas
Theodore Tsatsas
David Viens
Dana Waldman
Douglas Walker
Ivan Waters
John Withers
William Wolf
Andrew Worth
Kurt Yap
212
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Stephen Armstrong
John Baay
John Bailey
John Batt
William Beasley
George Blackwell
Robert Bland
Edel Blanks
Greg Blatz
William Boyer
George Burnett
John Chilton
Timothy Cruger
Moss Davis
Michael Dawahare
Richard Diehl
James Dillard
Dennis Dorsey
James Dyer
Eugene Ely
Robert Feidelson
Monty Glorioso
James Gold
Arthur Gorling
David Gray
Thomas Hardy
Bruce Harrison
Cecil Herrington
Thomas Jackson
Leslie Jacobs
Harris Jones
Kyle Keese
George Kelly
Todd Kelly
Garland Knight
John Lancaster
Kenan Loomis
Richard Mackie
Thomas Mackie
Matthew Maloney
Fred Martin
John McHale
Stuart McLaughlin
Peter Michaelis
James Morgan
Alexander Navarro
Jeffrey Parkinson
Thomas Potter
Alfred Rufty
David Russell
James Ryan
Patrick Senne
Wesley Shafto
Andrev\/ Shoup
Clifton Smart
Douglass Smith
Theodore Snider
Andrew Sperling
Robert Sprain
James Swanson
Geoffrey Tolsdorf
Mark Unverzagt
John Waddell
Andrew Wehby
Thomas Wharton
Kenneth Wimberly
213
Sigma Delta Tau
Jennie Altman
Laura Applebaum
Marci Arnheim
Robin Altas
Toby Baldinger
Adrienne Balsam
Jodi Bell
Betsy Bimbaum
Lisa Brazel
Stephanie Brown
Lilias Butterman
Brenda Chocs
Bonnie Cohn
Judi Darrow
Mindy Dimenstien
Kim Feigin
Debbie Fine
Pamela Fink
Con Foreman
Pam Forrest
Kyle Foster
Jayne Fnedland
Allison Friedman
Barri Friedman
Lisa Frydman
Melanie Fuss
Sherri Gabaeff
Jodi Geduld
Dana Gerbie
Dana Gerbis
Cindy Gilman
Nancy Ginsberg
Pamela Ginsberg
Cindy Glaser
Valerie Goldman
Lisa Gottlieb
Cindy Greenberg
Karen Greenberg
Nancy Guller
Jennifer Haas
Karen Haft
Jill Henkin
Bonnie Hershkowitz
Julie Hoffman
Cheryl Hollander
Jean-Ann Horowitz
Sheila Katz
Kathy Kernoff
Michelle Klapman
Stephanie Klein
Cheryl Kraus
Suellen Krieger
Karen Landsberg
Wendy Lehrer
Sally Levin
Lonna Levy
Robin Loff
Terri Lustig
Michelle Mann
Lise Matanky
Gariann Morguelan
Denise Nathanson
Karen Novick
Arlene Nussdorf
Caren Osten
Lanie Padzensky
Sharon Poritsky
Beth Portnoy
Susan Pusar
Shari Ravner
Jodie Recht
Jan Rineberg
Julie Rochman
Alison Rosenberg
Jeannie Rosner
Debbie Ross
Kim Ross
Randi Ross
Micheline Roth
Michele Saloman
Elise Sand
Shari Schimnan
Lisa Schlesinger
Carol Schwab
Mindy Schwartz
Tina Segall
Karen Segar
Tina Sharkey
Holly Shore
Beth Silver
Elina Silverstein
Leslie Singer
Jill Smiley
Jan Sokol
Randy Sokol
Lisa Soloway
Carol Spiro
Stacie Steppa
Julie Stiefel
Rickie Streisand
Debbie Tannenbaum
Beth Teplitz
Sue Touff
Rachael Turnoff
Heidi Wagman
Michele Wahlde
Linda Weil
Lori Weiner
Ellen Weinstein
Randi Weisman
Emily Weissman
Caren Wigdor
Julie Yarvin
Susan Yurman
Dana Zaie
Robin Zeilberger
214
Sigma Nu
Scott Andres
Darryn Band
Jeffrey Befir
Nathan Bennett
Edwin Blair
William Blair
Albert Bolton
Jerald Bowman
George Clifford
Thiomas Clifford
Harold Cohien
Christopfier Creedon
Andrew Crowder
Kenneth Davidov
William Davies
Frederick Day
John Delery
Gregory Fleming
Julius Gasparre
Frank Gavel
John Gonzalez
Campebell Griffin
Samuel Grissom
Van James
Grundmann
Peter Hamilton
Morton Hanlon
Christopher Harbuck
Reid Harrell
Stephen Heese
Michael Hillman
Jay Hirsch
Frederick Hoffman
Joseph Holcomb
Bernard Hoppenfeld
Keith Home
James Hurson
Glenn Hurwitz
Saul Hyatt
Michael Insh
William Jasionowski
Thomas Johns
Jeffrey Jonas
Gregory Jordan
Allan Kamensky
Roy Kenney
Martin Kerckhoff
William Kirkikis
Michael Kirkpatrick
Steven Kline
Todd Klumok
Chns Kostanecki
David Kovacik
Kenneth Krawcheck
Richard Lane
Richard Langan
James Ledbetter
Frederic Lexow
David Liebowitz
Joel Livingston
Timothy Lux
Colvin Matheson
Dudley McCalla
Matthew McCormick
Robert McMurrey
Tracy McNamara
Gary Meyers
David Mignatti
William Morris
David Mulmat
Peter Mulmat
David Mussafer
Joseph Nolan
Kyle Morris
George Parks
Steve Porter
Dean Rainey
Michael Ray
Steven Riccardelli
Henry Ritchie
John Roberts
Bradley Rossway
Kenneth Sadowsky
Ronald Salvitti
Craig Scott
Noel Segal
Alexis Smislova
Randolph Speight
Joe Steen
Stephen Straughan
Kent Stuble
Charles Sullivan
Philip Tingle
Scott Linger
Gregory Valladao
Anthony Van Vliet
Enc West
Michael Wilensky
Gregory Wisdom
Jonathan Yellin
Will York
215
Sigma Chi
Michael Aloe
Michael Baricev
Gregory Barr
Matthew Bartlett
Martin Berger
Aleck Berlin
Harry Bernstein
William Black
Kenneth Botwin
Scott Brown
Jeffrey Bryer
Jeffrey Bush
Thomas Buescher
Rodney Crevoiserat
David Davis
Don Deford
Kirk DeLeon
James Dwyer
Peter Flagg
Craig Freedman
David Friedman Ignacio Iribarren Joseph Saenz
John Fuchs Andrew James David Sharpe
Carlos Gavilondo Charles Joffe Bruce Smith
Gregory Gelderman John Johnston Robert Starbird
Samuel Giberga Konrad Kennedy Christopher Straka
Thomas Glaser Robert Lachapelle Michael Tierney
David Goettler Andrew Lazarus John Tillotson
Keith Goldman Robert Lazarus Matthew Voelkel
William Goldstein Adam Lewis Thomas Wald
Winston Griffin Jeffrey Lewis Scott Ward
Randolph Gumenick
Gerald Haggerty
Robert Harris
Edward Heffernan
Thomas Heffernan
Timothy Heffernan
Eric Helman
Stephen Heun
Daniel Hunt
Rubert Hymes
Thomas Mason
Steven Master
Paul Mastragna
Richard Mitchell
Mark Morel
David Ostrau
James Rankin
Nelson Reed
Daniel Rees
William Rippner
Paul Watson
Thomas Weil
Gregory Weiss
Jonathan Wesley
Stephen Whalen
Nathaniel Wheelwright
Thomas Winn
David Wood
Arthur Woolverton
216
Tau Epsilon Phi
Douglas Armstrong
Nevin Ashe
Steven Ashe
Stuart Chirls
Robert Cooper
Michael Criscito
Robert Deal
Richard Eisenberg
Steve Ferrando
Michael Fine
Keith Finger
Daniel Forman
Peter Franl<
Andrew Fredman
Marc Frenl<el
Jeffrey Godsick
Bruce Hartman
Michael Hayt
Robert Heller
Mark Hellman
Michael Hellman
Brian Krakower
Louis Kraselsky
Jeffrey Kroft
Damian Kulas
Kenneth Lane
Jon Leader
Paul Lemcke
Geoffrey Less
Barry Levine
David Lynch
James McDermott
John Miller
Samuel Nemroff
Steve Patrinick
Stephen Pearl
Kenneth Pierce
Steven Poverman
Daniel Ravner
Spencer Rose
Maurice Rosenbaum
Herbert Schumann
Bradley Sensibar
David Shaw
Mark Smith
Nicholas Smith
Anthony Stark
Robert Talbot
Stanford Terry
Michael Todoro
Albert Wagner
Lawrence Weiss
Dave Dadukian
Denove Gorsheim
217
Chi Omega
Margaret Adams
Laura Adelman
Libby Amdur
Karen Andressen
Liz Argus
Mary Martha Armstrong
Dora Atwater
Beth Baptist
Sanda Beach
Beth Benhoff
Susanne Berry
Lynda Bohannon
Debra Brown
Michelle Brown
Ellyn Buran
Andrea Cabell
Donna Cahill
Alane Carlson
Gale Conklin
Aline Cortese
Shannon Crystal
Cheryl Cunningham
Debbie Curry
Corre Curtice
Ragnhild Daasvand
Marline Davis
Helen Deas
Holly Edgerton
Elizabeth Engman
Gretchen Everett
Sarah Fasterling
Jennifer Field
Leslie Fine
Jerianne Fitzgerald
Kathy Fleck
Lisa Fleck
Pam Giesler
Irene Gonzales
Irene Gracia
Lisa Gutman
Lori Hahn
Robin Hall
Leslie Hilliard
Kerri Holdsworth
Susan Hughes
Tara Kattine
Michel! Lausen
Tracey Lazarus
Lori Little
Susan Littlefield
Mary Livaudis
Kelley Lozes
Nancy Marra
Nancy Mayer
Muffet McCauley
Nancy McCornack
Janie McKinney
Christie Metcalf
Melissa Mock
Julie Moise
Julie Montgomery
Mary Mouton
Maureen Murphy
Catherine Negrotto
Ketti Neil
Shari Norman
Pam Park
Mary Patterson
Anne Perron
Jennifer Price
Beth Rodgers
Rosemary Roosa
Kelly Ryan
Lynda Ryan
Linda Saul
Wendy Schubert
Karen Sconiers
Leslie Seabright
Karen Simmons
Kathleen Simon
Julie Sloan
Mary Jane Smart
Karen Smith
Jeanne Smits
Marion Speigel
Cassie Steck
Ashley Stone
Lil Story
Susie Sullivan
Jenny Timmeney
Tracy Tobin
Laura Troy
Nancy Turkel
Julie Tyson
Marie Vickers
Tanya de la Vargne
Trudy Waguespack
Leigh Ann Wall
Valerie Wall
Jessica Waters
Marion Welborn
Anita Wieland
Betsy Williams
Shannon Williams
Laura Wimberly
Laura Winstead
Kit Woolverton
Maria Yiannopoulos
Anne Young
Ann Zemanak
218
Zeta Beta Tau
Michael Abt
Douglas Adair
Scott Agran
Michael Angerman
Frederick Axelrod
David Balm
Morton Berger
Tom Berger
Michael Berkowitz
Bradley Berman
Daniel Bernstein
Brett Bressler
David Briller
Mort Brous
Gregory Burke
Marc Carney
Mark Cherlin
Arthur Cholodofsky
Lee Cohen
Stewart Cohn
Randal Colen
William Croft
Malcolm Davidow
Richard DeLuca
Lloyd Desatnick
Steven Diamond
William Donohoe
Michael Dubow
David Eder
Robert Egerman
Michael Eisenberg
Steven Epstein
Armand Estroff
Robert Fefferman
Samuel Feldman
Jeffrey Fine
Robert Fink
John Fisher
Andrew/ Fox
Marc Friedfertig
Stephen Friedman
Sean Gelb
Mark Getelman
Henry Gillman
Lawrence Gladstone
Ross Gladstone
Daniel Flick
Michael Gold
John Goldberg
Michael Goldberg
Todd Goldberg
Peter Goldstein
Robert Goldstein
Clifford Greenbaum
Michael Greenfield
Andrew Greiff
Eric Gruman
James Haber
David Hellman
Scott Henkle
Gary Herskowitz
Stewart Homier
James Horowitz
Mark Israel
Thomas Jacobs
Richard Jacobson
Philip Jaffa
Robert Johnson
Jonathon Kadis
Hugh Kaplan
Stuart Kaplan
Marc Karetsky
William Karp
Jonathan Katz
Scott Kazdan
Michael Keyes
David Kleiman
Andrew Kligerman
Rex Knofsky
Louis Korman
Paul Korones
Jerome Lamensdorf
Bryan Levey
Richard Levy
Jon Lewin
Steven Lieberman
Gary Lifton
David Lonner
Philip Lozman
Jeffrey Mankoff
Robert Mann
Scott Meltzer
Bruce Miller
Evan Miller
Steven Morris
Suart Morns
Brian Moyer
Todd Nathan
Steven Neuman
Bradley Nirenblatt
Louis Novick
Leon Nowalsky
Scott Offerman
Steven Pearl
Stuart Peskin
Mark Pindsky
Samuel Pinsky
Lawrence Preiser
Mark Purcel
James Quicksilver
Douglas Raboy
Jonathan Rachlin
Scott Ratchick
David Rawitscher
Matthew Reich
Bruce Reiter
Ronald Resnick
Marc Rich
Gary Robinson
David Robinson
Alan Rous
Richard Rosenberg
Jeffrey Rosenthal
Mark Rothenberg
Mark Rubenstein
Peter Russin
Ronald Sachs
Gregory Samuels
Andrew Saslawsky
Jay Scharf
Edward Scheldt
Mark Schild
Marc Schweitzer
Steven Shakno
Robert Shankerman
Jeffrey Shear
Howard Shifke
David Shumeli
Allan Schwartzstein
Jeffrey Siegel
Anthony Sigel
James Sigman
Gregg Silverman
Richard Sloane
Zachary Solomon
Michael Sosnow
Stuart Speer
Andrew Starr
Marlon Starr
Paul Stein
David Stone
Jeffrey Strauss
Arnie Tannenbaum
Sanford Tassel
Stephen Temes
Gregory Tendrich
Brian Thum
Seth Toporek
David Tucker
Robert Udolf
David Urbach
Michael Wadler
Bruce Weil
Kenneth Weil
James Weinberg
William Wellons
George Wells
219
Zeta Psi
John Bauer
Robert Borah
Mark Bryan
Andrew Chary
Richard Cheney
Kevin Donahoe
Brian Doyle
Paul Fleck
Brian Geiger
Stephen Halperin
John Hess
Dave Horrigan
James Hughes
Mark Jackson
Stephen Joost
Ozgur Karaosmanoglu
Ronald Levy
Daniel Mallin
Anthony McCormick
Terry McCormick
Mark McCullough
Dana Mcllw/ain
Daniel Muskat
Bret Paris
Edward Parrot
Gavin Ray
Tom Rosenberg
Ramon Roux
Francisco Sanmiguel
Michael Schement
James Shaffer
Michael Sheehan
Paul Speyerer
Louis St. Calbre
Randall Wheeler
220
N
FAMILY
It is generally supposed that upon enter-ing
college, you leave your fannily behind
and start a new life on your own. Well, that's
only partly true. You certainly leave behind
the family you grew up with, but you enter a
new sort of family at school, the Greek
family.
It's really quite simple. You pledge a
fraternity/sorority. You get a big sister or
big brother who is one of the actives. As a
fraternity little sister, you get a big brother
from among the actives and a little brother
or two from among the pledges. In your
sorority/fraternity, you get a little brother or
sister from among the new pledge class,
although you still keep your big brother or
sister. Now, your little sister/brother has
you as a big sister/brother as well as your
big sister/brother. But in your fraternity affil-iation,
you also get big and little sisters.
Now that you have enough brothers and
sisters to fill your own cast of Eight is
Enough, perhaps you understand why it's
not quite accurate to say you leave your
family and strike it out on your own. You
don't lose your parents, you gam brothers
and sisters who are there for you when your
parents can't be.
221
222
224
225
* n P'*^^
mmiq
V
s^f^m,
W%v
**s^-
f!^
^
'<
t I
226
Wm
•A '^f^ w ]
;-^V. Seniors
.^S-4^*?^
f
-
227
mmmm.
h
Karlem Riess
A decade of leading the
commencement parade
'>1
/
i*^^
When Law School commencement
ceremonies were over this year,
University Marshal Karlem Riess had
walked about 1,600 students down the
aisle in the course of three days to
receive graduate and undergraduate
degrees.
Most of them he knew. He called one
"freshman" or another "tubby", he had
a tug on the ear or a poke in the
stomach or a hand on the shoulder for
others. But no one minded, in fact they
would have felt left out, if they weren't
subject to joking, pokes and
nicknames. It's what they expected . .
.
and love.
Although he's loathe to do it. Dr.
John Karlem Riess celebrates a lot of
anniversaries this year. It is his own
fiftieth anniversary of graduation from
the College of Arts and Sciences, his
fortieth year as professor of physics
and going on his thirty-fifth year as
advisor to Tulane fraternities.
To a man who hates anniversaries, or
sentimentalities, or limelight or trying to
guess the number of people he's
walked down the aisles in McAlister,
perhaps it's the worst year in a while.
It's business as usual nonetheless.
There's little usual about a man with
Karlem Riess's attributes. He is not just
Dr. Riess the physics professor. He is
Dr. Riess, member of several honorary
societies and the winner of countless
awards for distinguished service.
Leading people down the
processionary aisles is how Riess has
spent one long weekend in May every
year for the last ten years. He attends
each of nine commencements. He
makes sure all the degree candidates
and platform party members are in the
right place. He does a once over on
academic attire for top university
administration, seeing that hoods hang
just so and mortar boards are at the
proper angle.
And the university marshal worries.
It's his job to keep commencement
ceremonies from straying off schedule.
He looks at his watch and worries
whether university president Eamon
Kelly will make it from the last
commencement on time. He worries
that some speaker may talk too long.
And he worries that the hundreds of
faculty and degree candidates may
take too much time getting lined up
properly.
But the job as university marshal
doesn't mean putting on regalia and
marching around. There are also the
tremendous, sometimes tedious amounts of
logistics involved in planning, coordinating and
contracting.
University marshal since 1972, Riess came
as no stranger to those requirements. He has
served on the Committee on Academic
Ceremonies since he returned to Tulane in
1943. He has supervised the conferring of
hundreds of degrees, special ceremonies like
inaugurations (Riess has three under his belt
now — Herbert Longenecker in 1960, F.
Sheldon Hackney in 1975 and Eamon Kelly in
1981).
Already Riess's years of service have
surpassed the combined tenures of his
predecessors, but he thinks that it's chance
that he stayed so long. "When you take a job
you don't know how long you'll stay. I didn't
think back then I'd stay so long."
Riess is not a sentimentalist. He dislikes
having to assume the role as the retrospective
university historian. When he acquiesces to the
inevitable "overview" question that one is
always subjected to on an golden anniversary
of any kind, Riess has this to say, "Well, of
course the university has grown in size and the
scholastic standards have been raised. But
you know something — there really isn't much
difference in the student body of today and
that of thirty years ago. If there is a problem
that I could see it would be that faculty and
students don't have the same kind of close
contact that they did thirty years ago.
231
m
232
233
236
237
238
HONORARIES
Arts and Science
Bachelor of Arts
Johnathan S. Agri
Brian T. Alworth
Vincent M. Andrews
Dirk L. Angeuine
Ivan D. Assael
Steven R. Ballinger
Michael J. Benson
Edwin W. Berry III
Lawrence G. Bertolino
Richard D. Bertram
Williams O. Bilden
Keith J. Billedeaux
Martin T. Boles
Jonathan M. Botter
Mark A. Bradley
J. Robert Bratman
Christopher J. Brown
Josheph A. Buda
Frederick W. Burns
Peter J. A. Campfield
Roger E. Cassidy
Dilip C. Chitani
Donald R. Chaney III
John A. Christensen III
Andrew T. Citrin
James L. Clark
George E. Clifford 111
Alan J. Cohen
James D. Cohen
James Elliot Cooper
Edward P. Coming 111
Dimetry B. Cossich
Christopher E. Croly
Guy C. Curry
Michael W. Davila
Douglas B. Davis
Michael M. Dawahare
Lloyd B. Desatnick
Stephen D'Esposito 111
Wiliam W. R. Donohoe
Isaac D. Minski
Karl A, Doss
Wiilaim K. Dossett
Christopher G. Dover
Richard C, Drennan
Kenneth R. Dunlap
Kennedy R. Eckerd
Wiilaim H. Eckert
Peter E. Edwards
Richard A. Eisenberg
Robert L. FarrUl, Jr.
Patrick T. Fennell
David E. Finch
Michael J. Fine
Donald L. Fleischer
Peter R, Frank
Seth M, Friedman
Ariel E. Furst
Alan 1. Gainsburgh
Robert E. Garvey, 111
Gregory A. Gelderman,
Frederick E. Gerson
David L. Glancy. Jr
Charles T. Glaws
Jeflery R. Godsick
Frederick B. Goldsmith
Robert P. Goldstein, Jr.
David M. Goldstone
Gregorio G. Forestal
Seth E. Grant
Phillip R. Greenberg
Andrew S. Greilf
Eric Gruman
Jack N. Gutman
John F. Hardie, Jr,
Craig A. Harley
Stanley M. Harris
Timothy E. Heffernan
Jonathan M. Heller
Edwadr R. Henkin
Jay F. Hirsch
Keith J. Home
Sanford 1. Horowitz
Samuel H. Howell
T.J. Semmes Hughs
Scot' G. Intagliatia
Geoffrey J. Isles
Spencer D. Jackson
Daniel K. Johnson
Jelfery W. Johnson
William A. Jordan
Allan E. Kamensky
Marc I. Karetsky
Joshua M. Katz
Jonathan H. Kaufman
George W. Kelly
Richard L. Keyser
Victor E. Killory
Clennon L. King
David M. Kleiman
Jonathan S. Klorfein
Keith J.Lanhold
Brett D. Lafving
Michael P. Landy
Kenneth G. Lane
David R. Lawson
Jon M. Leader
Brian F. Lee
Kenan G. Loomis
James A. Louzan
Michael I. Lowenthal
Peter J. Malcolmson
Jeffery W. Mankoff
Robert P. Marston
Edward B. Mauri
John F. Mazza
Jerome E. McCarthy
Matthew B. McCormick
David B. McDowell
Jonathan McHugh
Paul K. McNeely
Spence J. Mehl
Daniel C. Meyer
Peter W. Michaelis
Howard N. Milgram
David A. Miller
Frank G. Miller
Jeffery A. Miller
Jonathan P. Mulkin
Peter A. Mulmat
Michael P. Nictakis
Terence E. Nolan
Leon L. Nowalsky
Didier S. D. Opotoswky
Marshall J. Osofsky
David G. Paliscak
Bret Van G. Paris
Jay L. Parker
William L.W.C.Parker
Thomas W. Parks
Rene S. Paysse, Jr.
Michael H. Pelias
Stephen J. Pelleriti
Paul L. Peyronnin
Paul B. Pizzeck
Jonathan A. Rachlin
Robert E. Ratelle.Jr.
Daniel H. Ravner
Rob