(UCLA 1935). Student and Alumna Memorabilia and Scrapbooks

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(UCLA 1935). Student and Alumna Memorabilia and Scrapbooks http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf9h4nb62s No online items Finding Aid for the Peel, Dorothy Mason (UCLA 1935). Student and alumna memorabilia and scrapbooks. 1929-1996. Finding aid prepared by Suzanne Shellaby, 1998 June; finding aid revised by Katharine A. Lawrie, 2013 May; machine-readable finding aid created by Katharine A. Lawrie, 2013 June. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] ©1998 June University Archives Record Series 644 1 Title: Peel, Dorothy Mason (UCLA 1935). Student and alumna memorabilia and scrapbooks. Identifier/Call Number: University Archives Record Series 644 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 15.6 linear ft.(39 boxes) Date: 1929-1996 Abstract: Record Series 644 contains the student and alumna memorabilia and scrapbooks of Dorothy Mason Peel (1935). Files regard UCLA sports (including football, basketball, volleyball, and tennis), Phi Omega Pi, and UCLA clubs & organizations. Materials include clippings, photographs, programs, tickets, posters, certificates, membership cards, Alumni Magazine copies, and other ephemera. Creator: Peel, Dorothy Mason (UCLA 1935) Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Open for research. Advance notice required for access. Contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Publication Rights Copyright has not been assigned to the UCLA University Archives. All requests for permission to publish or quote from the records must be submitted in writing to the University Archivist. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the UCLA University Archives as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Peel, Dorothy Mason (UCLA 1935). Student and alumna memorabilia and scrapbooks (University Archives Record Series 644). UCLA Library Special Collections, University Archives. Scope and Content Record Series 644 contains the student and alumna memorabilia and scrapbooks of Dorothy Mason Peel (1935). Files regard UCLA sports (including football, basketball, volleyball, and tennis), Phi Omega Pi, and UCLA clubs & organizations. Materials include clippings, photographs, programs, tickets, posters, certificates, membership cards, Alumni Magazine copies, and other ephemera. This is an inactive record series; no additional University records are expected to be added. UCLA Catalog Record ID UCLA Catalog Record ID: 3466885 Box 1, Folder 1 The Hoop. 1953-1970. Box 2, Folder 1 The Hoop. 1971-1975. Box 3, Folder 1 The Hoop. 1976-1979 Jan 06. Box 4, Folder 1 Basketball Programs. 1979-1980 Dec 06. Box 5, Folder 1 UCLA Basketball. 1982 Jan 16-1983 Nov 25. Box 6, Folder 1 UCLA Basketball. 1984 Jan 28-1986 Mar 03. Box 7, Folder 1 UCLA Basketball. 1987 Jan 02-1989 Feb 12. Box 8, Folder 1 UCLA Basketball. 1989 Feb 23-1992 Feb 06. Box 8, Folder 2 NCAA vs. Arizona. 1992 Nov 11. Box 9, Folder 1 UCLA Basketball. 1992 Feb 12-1994 Nov 26. Box 10, Folder 1 UCLA Basketball. 1995 Mar 11-1996 Mar 07. Box 10, Folder 2 NCAA Final Four, Seattle. 1995 Apr. Box 10, Folder 3 Clippings. 1994/1995. Box 11, Misc. UCLA Basketball. 1967-; n.d. Folders 1-2 Box 11, Folder 3 The Benchwarmer. 1970s. Box 11, Folder 4 The Kickoff (football). 1973-1974. Box 12, Folder 1 Women's Basketball Programs. 1979-1982. Box 12, Folder 2 Women's Volleyball. 1977-1981. Box 12, Folder 3 The Goal Post - includes Pigskin Reviews. 1935-ca. 1950. Box 13, Folder 1 The Goal Post - includes Pigskin Reviews for UCLA. 195?-1965. University Archives Record Series 644 2 Box 14, Folder 1 Rose Bowl. 1966 Jan 01. Box 14, Folder 2 The Goal Post. 1966 Oct 22-1970 Oct 30. Box 15, Folder 1 The Goal Post - includes Pigskin Reviews for UCLA. 1971 Sep 11-1972 Nov 04. Box 15, Folder 2 Touchdown. 1973-1974 Oct 12. Box 16, Folder 1 Touchdown. 1975 Nov 28-1977 Sep 17. Box 17, Folder 1 Touchdown. 1978 Oct 14-1980 Nov 08. Box 17, Folder 2 Rose Bowl. 1981 Dec 31. Box 18, Folder 1 Touchdown. 1981 Nov 14-1983 Oct 29. Box 18, Folder 2 Rose Bowl. 1984 Jan 02. Box 19, Folder 1 Touchdown. 1984 Nov 03-1987 Sep 26. Box 20, Folder 1 Touchdown. 1987 Nov 14-1990 Nov 17. Box 20, Folder 2 UCLA Football Yellow Pages. Box 20, Folder 3 Rose Bowl Pasadena. 1990. Box 21, Folder 1 UCLA Football Programs. 1991 Nov 16-1995 Oct 28. Box 21, Folder 2 UCLA Football Tickets. Box 21, Folder 3 UCLA Football Memorabilia. Box 21, Folder 4 Rose Bowl Tickets. Box 22, Folder 1 Ephemera. 1980. Box 22, Folder 2 Mirage Bowl Tour, Japan, etc. 1980 Nov-Dec. Box 23, Folder 1 Tip-off Classic XIII. 1991. Box 23, Folder 2 Great Alaska Shootout. 1990. Box 23, Folder 3 Pre Season National Invitation Tournament. 1992. Box 23, Folder 4 NCAA Volleyball Finals. 1977. Box 23, Folder 5 Los Angeles Basketball Classic - 1st & 2nd. 1959; 1960. Box 23, Folder 6 Bruin Classic. 1971; 1973; 1975. Box 23, Folder 7 AIAW 7th Annual Basketball Championship. 1978. Box 23, Folder 8 PAC 10 Tournament, Tempe. 1990. Box 23, Folder 9 NCAA programs. 1976; 1977; 1978; 1979; 1981. Box 24, Folder 1 NCAA Basketball Regionals, Tournaments, Etc. 1966; 1967; 1968; 1969; 1971; 1972; 1973; 1974. Box 24, Folder 2 Women's Athletic Association Handbooks. 1930/31-1935/36. Box 25, Folder 1 Pins - 2 Envelopes. Box 25, Folder 2 Small Pins & Parking Tokens. Box 25, Folder 3 UCLA Tennis Tickets. Box 25, Folder 4 NCAA Basketball Tickets. Box 25, Folder 5 Women's Basketball: 1 ticket AIAW 1978, 3 schedules 1980/1981, 1982/1983. Box 25, Folder 6 Women's Volleyball Schedule. 1980. Box 25, Folder 7 Parking Passes - includes Founder's Club. Box 25, Folder 8 Westside Bruin Club membership cards. Box 25, Folder 9 Westside Women's Bruin Club membership cards. Box 25, Folder 10 Bruin Bench membership cards. Box 25, Folder 11 Affiliates membership cards. Box 25, Folder 12 Founder's Club membership cards. Box 25, Folder 13 College of Letters and Sciences membership cards. Box 25, Folder 14 UCLA Medical Center Auxiliary membership cards. Box 25, Folder 15 UCLA Track & Field Season Ticket. 1974. Box 26, Folder 1 Bruin Boosters. 1970s-1980s. Box 26, Folder 2 Bruin Boosters for Women. 1970s-1980s. Box 26, Folder 3 Misc. UCLA Athletics Clippings - includes Ann Meyers, Jackie Joyner, Billie Moore, Denise Curry, etc.. 1978-1984. Box 26, Folder 4 Women's Award Banquet. 1986/1987. Box 26, Folder 5 Westwood Women's Bruin Club. 1973-1974. Box 27, Folder 1 Women's Intercollegiate Athletics. 1977/78-1985/86. Box 27, Folder 2 Old Rosters. Box 27, Folder 3 UCLA misc. - including snapshots. 1970s; 1980s. Box 27, Folder 4 Gold Shild 50th Anniversary. Box 27, Folder 5 Gold Shield files. University Archives Record Series 644 3 Box 27, Folder 6 Gold Shield Faculty Prize to Dorothy Mason Peel. 1986. Box 27, Folder 7 Westwood Women's Bruin Club. ca. 1961-1964. Box 27, Folder 8 UCLA pictorial guides - 2. c. 1980. Box 28, Folder 1 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1954 Mar. Box 28, Folder 2 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1959 Dec. Box 28, Folder 3 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1960 Sept/Oct, Nov. Box 28, Folder 4 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1961 Dec/1962 Jan. Box 28, Folder 5 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1962 Feb, Mar, Apr, May/Jun, Sept, Oct, Nov, Dec. Box 28, Folder 6 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1963 Feb/Mar, Presummer, Summer, Sept/Oct. Box 28, Folder 7 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1964 Jan/Feb, May/Jun, Jul/Aug, Sept/Oct, Nov/Dec. Box 28, Folder 8 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1965 Jan/Feb, Mar/Apr, May/Jun, Fall, Winter. Box 28, Folder 9 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1966 Spring, Fall; 1966-1967 Winter. Box 28, Folder 10 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1967 Spring, Summer, Fall. Box 28, Folder 11 UCLA Alumni Magazine. 1969 Summer, Fall; 1968 Summer, Fall; 1968-1969 Winter. Box 29, Folder 1 UCLA Student Handbook. 1934/1935. Box 29, Folder 2 UCLA Policy #1220 Support Groups. 1979 Sep 01-1983 Sep 01. Box 29, Folder 3 UCLA Alumni Association Occas. Papers - #1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 10. 1971 Apr-1976 Feb. Box 29, Folder 4 UCLA Monthly. 1972 Jan, Apr, Jul; 1973 Apr, Oct; 1974 Dec-Jan. Box 29, Folder 5 Misc. UCLA Performance Programs. 1944-1981. Box 29, Folder 6 Founders' Club correspondence. 1969-1971. Box 29, Folder 7 "UCLA Charter Day 1963, 1964." 1963; 1964. Box 29, Folder 8 Mortarboard Appt. Book, UCLA ed. 1993/1994. Box 30, Folder 1 A Walking Tour of part of the Campus - from Melnitz to West Center, Courtesy of UCLA Class of 1940 - includes negs. and proofsheets. Box 30, Folder 2 Student Union (Ackerman) brochure. 1961. Box 30, Folder 3 Misc. Alumni Materials. 1961-1965. Box 30, Folder 4 Phi Omega Pi misc. ca. 1939-1959. Box 30, Folder 5 Phi Omega Pi 17th Biennial Conclave, the Huntington Hotel, Pasadena, Program. 1939 Jul 09-13. Box 30, Folder 6 "POP Rosters, etc." Box 30, Folder 7 "POP 1984." 1984. Box 30, Folder 8 "POP Rosters 1988." 1988. Box 30, Folder 9 Helen Matthewson Laughlin issue. 1960. Box 30, Folder 10 Phi Omega Pi - Lawsonia, Wisconsin photo by Stanz(?) 1937 Jun 28. Box 30, Folder 11 Photo - Phi Omega Pi? Scope and Contents note Dorothy mason Peel is in back row, 3rd from left. Box 30, Folder 12 Dorothy Mason Peel Eulogy by Evan Mason, nephew; Photos of Dorothy Mason Peel. Box 31, Folder 1 12 videos of UCLA basketball & football.
Recommended publications
  • 2013-14 UCLA Women's Basketball Schedule
    Table of Contents 5 12 51 Noelle Quinn Atonye Nyingifa Cori Close The 2013-14 Bruins UCLA's Top Single-Season Team Performances .......35 Credits Freshman Single-Season Leaders .................................36 Table of Contents .............................................................. 1 The 2013-14 UCLA Women’s Basketball Record Book was compiled Class Single-Season Leaders ..........................................37 2013-14 Schedule .............................................................. 2 by Ryan Finney, Associate Athletic Communications Director, with Yearly Individual Leaders ................................................38 assistance from Liza David, Director of Athletic Communications, Radio/TV Roster ................................................................ 3 By the Numbers ..............................................................40 Special assistance also provided by James Ybiernas, Assistant Athletic Alphabetical & Numerical Rosters .................................4 UCLA’s Home Court Records .....................................41 Communications Director and Steve Rourke, Associate Athletic Head Coach Cori Close ...................................................5 Communications Director. Primary photography by ASUCLA Pauley Pavilion - Home of the Bruins ..........................42 Assistant Coach Shannon Perry ..................................... 6 Campus Studio (Don Liebig and Todd Cheney). Additional photos provided by Scott Chandler, Thomas Campbell, USA Basketball, Assistant Coach Tony Newnan.......................................
    [Show full text]
  • Planning Office. Project Files of George Vajna. 1946-1989
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8bc40tp No online items Planning Office. Project files of George Vajna. 1946-1989. Finding aid prepared by University Archives staff, 1990 April; finding aid revised by Katharine A. Lawrie, 2013 June; machine-readable finding aid created by Katharine A. Lawrie, 2013 June. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] ©1990 April Planning Office. Project files of University Archives Record Series 313 1 George Vajna. 1946-1989. Title: Planning Office. Project files of George Vajna. Identifier/Call Number: University Archives Record Series 313 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 24.8 linear ft.(62 boxes) Date (bulk): Bulk, 1957-1989 Date (inclusive): 1946-1989 Abstract: Record Series 313 contains the project files of George Vajna, of UCLA's Planning Office. Creator: Planning Office. Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Open for research. Advance notice required for access. Contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Publication Rights Copyright of portions of this collection has been assigned to The Regents of the University of California. The UCLA University Archives can grant permission to publish for materials to which it holds the copyright. All requests for permission to publish or quote must be submitted in writing to the UCLA University Archivist. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Planning Office. Project files of George Vajna (University Archives Record Series 313). UCLA Library Special Collections, University Archives. Scope and Content Record Series 313 contains the project files of George Vajna, of UCLA's Planning Office.
    [Show full text]
  • Alook at Ucla
    A LOOK AT UCLA As one of the nation’s premier universities, UCLA has come so Through academic out- far, so fast in its rise to the top tier of institutions of higher reach, UCLA works with education. From its celebrated faculty to its high-achieving K-12 schools through- students and distinguished alumni, UCLA’s College of Letters out Los Angeles to help and Science and 11 professional schools are committed to greater numbers of stu- advancing the common good through research, teaching dents prepare to com- and active participation in the communities they serve. Uniquely pete successfully for positioned at the crossroads of the world’s economies and college. UCLA also is cultures, UCLA combines outstanding intellectual achieve- partnering with com- ment with an innovative, entrepreneurial style and a deep munity colleges to in- sense of civic responsibility. Some of the university’s more crease the number of notable recent achievements include: underrepresented stu- Faculty, Students & Alumni dents transferring to the university. Additionally, UCLA faculty have been awarded two Nobel Prizes in recent UCLA faculty, research- years: biochemist Paul Boyer in chemistry (1997) and pharma- ers and students pro- cologist Louis Ignarro in medicine (1998). Among faculty there vide leadership and have been three other Nobelists, nine National Medals of public service in health Science recipients and hundreds of Guggenheim Fellow- care, law, economic de- Royce Hall ships, Fulbright Awards and other academic distinctions. velopment, social wel- UCLA educates more students than other university in Califor- fare, urban planning, public policy, arts and the environment. nia and was the most sought-after institution in the nation for Most academic departments have major research projects, this fall's freshman class.
    [Show full text]
  • UCLA University Archives. Subject Files (Reference Collection)
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8v1266j No online items University Archives. Subject Files (Reference Collection). 1881- Finding aid prepared by University Archives staff, 2012 September; finding aid revised by cbbrown, 2013 March; machine-readable finding aid created by Katharine Lawrie, 2013 June; additional EAD encoding revision by Caroline Cubé. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] Online findinga aid last updated 30 March 2017. University Archives. Subject Files 746 1 (Reference Collection). 1881- Title: UCLA University Archives. Subject files (Reference Collection). Collection number: 746 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 40.0 linear ft. Date: 1881- Abstract: Record Series 746 contains information on academic programs, buildings, events, and organizations affiliated with: the Los Angeles State Normal School (LASNS), 1881-1919; the University of California, Southern Branch, 1919-1926; and the University of California, Los Angeles, 1927- . The contents of the Subject Files (Reference Collection) include: reports, statistical data, histories of academic departments, organization charts, pamphlets, and other miscellaneous items. Creator: UCLA University Archives. Conditions Governing Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Open for research. All requests to access special collections materials must be made in advance through our electronic paging system using the "Request items" button. Publication Rights Copyright of portions of this collection has been assigned to The Regents of the University of California. The UCLA University Archives can grant permission to publish for materials to which it holds the copyright.
    [Show full text]
  • { UCLA Librarian }
    { UCLA Librarian } Preserving knowledge. providing access to the universe of ideas progress report 2011–12 Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important Letter than the outcome. from the — Arthur Ashe University Sprinkled throughout the renovated spaces of the Charles E. Young Research Library Librarian are a handful of thought-provoking quotations. Some are from famous individuals with a close connection to UCLA, others are anonymous or from people who never set foot in Southern California. Yet each offers a uniquely personal reflection on the themes of discovery, journey, and collaboration that guided the renovations. Of all of them, it’s the quotation above from Arthur Ashe that may best capture the ongoing mission of research universities and the academic libraries that support them. Expanding the idea of “journey” into a broader theme of transformation, this issue of the UCLA Library’s annual progress report focuses on parti- cularly significant changes in our collections and facilities during the 2011-12 fiscal year. For everyone from distinguished faculty to harried graduate students to overwhelmed freshmen, UCLA’s libraries serve as a kind of transport for their ongoing journeys in quest of knowledge. They don’t come to the virtual or physical libraries just to find answers; they come to learn how to ask questions, how to find answers, what other questions to ask, who else is asking similar questions. Books, journal articles, confer- ence papers, primary documents – they don’t represent the destination; they fuel the journey. In the following pages you’ll find vivid examples of the UCLA Library’s latest transformations of its collec- tions and facilities to support those journeys.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020-21 WBB Media Guide (Complete).Indd
    1,000-POINT CLUB (37 PLAYERS) Denise Curry — No. 12, Forward, Davis, CA (Davis HS) Years Record G-GS FG-A Pct. 3FG-A Pct. FT-A Pct. REB Avg. A S BS PTS Avg. 1977-78 27-3 30 280-451 .621 --- --- 50-65 .769 273 9.1 43 46 15 610 20.3 1978-79 24-10 34 355-586 .606 --- --- 93-115 .809 340 10.0 94 54 25 803 23.6 1979-80 18-12 30 361-599 .603 --- --- 133-149 .893 337 11.2 83 42 12 855 28.5 1980-81 29-7 36 390-647 .603 --- --- 150-192 .781 360 10.0 133 58 22 930 25.8 TOTALS 98-32 130 1386-2283 .607 --- --- 426-521 .818 1310 10.1 353 200 74 3198 24.6 Jordin Canada — No. 3, Guard, Los Angeles, CA (Windward School) Years Record G-GS FG-A Pct. 3FG-A Pct. FT-A Pct. REB Avg. A S BS PTS Avg. 2014-15 19-18 34-30 141-375 .376 3-23 .130 117-151 .775 116 3.4 148 69 3 402 11.8 2015-16 26-9 34-34 200-493 .406 16-61 .262 133-174 .764 134 3.9 193 79 2 549 16.1 2016-17 25-9 34-32 218-502 .434 29-82 .354 141-169 .834 176 5.2 242 85 2 606 17.8 2017-18 27-8 35-35 209-480 .435 51-132 .386 127-158 .804 131 3.7 248 114 1 596 17.0 TOTALS 97-44 137-131 768-1850 .415 99-298 .332 518-652 .794 557 4.1 831 347 8 2153 15.7 Maylana Martin — No.
    [Show full text]
  • NCAA Tournament Box Scores
    NCAA Tournament Box Scores 2005-06 1997-98 Mar. 19, 2006: Cleveland, OH Regional, 1st Rd. at West Mar. 13, 1998: Midwest Regional 1st Rd. at Tuscaloosa, AL Other Post-Season Results Lafayette, IN (Mackey Arena - Purdue University) (Coleman Coliseum-University of Alabama) UCLA 74 — Livingston 4, Pluimer 8, Quinn 21, Blue 7, Willis 23, UCLA 65 — Philman 3, Martin 16, Hubbard 12, Grimes 6, 1980-81 AIAW Playoffs Oren 2, Ibekwe 6, Pedersen 3, Henderson 0, Zaidi 0, Lezcano 0. Gomez 4, Pearson 15, Jackson 0, Flannigan 4, Veasley 5, Funi- West Regional at Pepperdine Bowling Green 61 — Honegger 15, Mann 16, Thorburn 0, Horne cello 0. UCLA 92, USF 68 7, Achter 11, McDowell 8, Flynn 2, McCall 0, Goldsberry 0, Lause Michigan 58 — Murray 13, Thomas 17, Johns 9, Thorius 4, USC 102, UCLA 85 2, Taylor 0, McKenzie 0. Lemire 5, Franklin 6, Walker 4, Willard 0. UCLA 61, San Diego St. 54 (3rd place) Halftime — UCLA 33, Michigan 23. Attn. — 3,025. Halftime — UCLA 42, Bowling Green 28. Attn. — 4,239. Sectional Playoffs Mar. 21, 2006: Cleveland, OH Regional 2nd Rd. game at Mar. 15, 1998: Midwest Regional 2nd Rd. game atTuscalo- UCLA 72, Oregon St. 65 (Pauley) West Lafayette, IN (Mackey Arena - Purdue University) osa, AL (Coleman Coliseum- University of Alabama) UCLA 73, Kansas 71 (at Kansas) UCLA 74 — Philman 16, Martin 13, Hubbard 19, Grimes 9, Gomez UCLA 54 —Livingston 0, Quinn 9, Pluimer 6, Blue 18, Willis Louisiana Tech 87, UCLA 54 (at Tech) 15, Ibekwe 6, Pitts 0, Oren 0, Henderson 0, Zaidi 0.
    [Show full text]
  • Women's Basketball Award Winners
    WOMEN’S BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS All-America Teams 2 National Award Winners 15 Coaching Awards 20 Other Honors 22 First Team All-Americans By School 25 First Team Academic All-Americans By School 34 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners By School 39 ALL-AMERICA TEAMS 1980 Denise Curry, UCLA; Tina Division II Carla Eades, Central Mo.; Gunn, BYU; Pam Kelly, Francine Perry, Quinnipiac; WBCA COACHES’ Louisiana Tech; Nancy Stacey Cunningham, First selected in 1975. Voted on by the Wom en’s Lieberman, Old Dominion; Shippensburg; Claudia Basket ball Coaches Association. Was sponsored Inge Nissen, Old Dominion; Schleyer, Abilene Christian; by Kodak through 2006-07 season and State Jill Rankin, Tennessee; Lorena Legarde, Portland; Farm through 2010-11. Susan Taylor, Valdosta St.; Janice Washington, Valdosta Rosie Walker, SFA; Holly St.; Donna Burks, Dayton; 1975 Carolyn Bush, Wayland Warlick, Tennessee; Lynette Beth Couture, Erskine; Baptist; Marianne Crawford, Woodard, Kansas. Candy Crosby, Northern Ill.; Immaculata; Nancy Dunkle, 1981 Denise Curry, UCLA; Anne Kelli Litsch, Southwestern Cal St. Fullerton; Lusia Donovan, Old Dominion; Okla. Harris, Delta St.; Jan Pam Kelly, Louisiana Tech; Division III Evelyn Oquendo, Salem St.; Irby, William Penn; Ann Kris Kirchner, Rutgers; Kaye Cross, Colby; Sallie Meyers, UCLA; Brenda Carol Menken, Oregon St.; Maxwell, Kean; Page Lutz, Moeller, Wayland Baptist; Cindy Noble, Tennessee; Elizabethtown; Deanna Debbie Oing, Indiana; Sue LaTaunya Pollard, Long Kyle, Wilkes; Laurie Sankey, Rojcewicz, Southern Conn. Beach St.; Bev Smith, Simpson; Eva Marie St.; Susan Yow, Elon. Oregon; Valerie Walker, Pittman, St. Andrews; Lois 1976 Carol Blazejowski, Montclair Cheyney; Lynette Woodard, Salto, New Rochelle; Sally St.; Cindy Brogdon, Mercer; Kansas.
    [Show full text]
  • Pages 77-80.Indd
    A LOOK AT UCLA FACULTY, STUDENTS & ALUMNI BRUIN BEAR UCLA faculty have been awarded two Nobel Prizes in recent years: biochemist Paul Boyer in chemistry (1997) and pharmacologist Louis Ignarro in medicine (1998). Among faculty there have been three other Nobelists, nine National Medals of Science recipients and hundreds of Guggenheim Fellowships, Fulbright Awards and other academic distinctions. UCLA educates more students than any other university in California and was the most sought-after institution in the nation for this fall’s freshman class. At UCLA, thousands of students extend their educations beyond the classroom by working directly with faculty on research projects. Many UCLA undergraduates participate in major research studies, working one-on-one with world-renowned scholars as they discover and create new knowledge. UCLA’s alumni are bright stars on the world stage. They include leaders of industry and commerce — Oscar, Grammy, Tony, and Emmy winners; philanthropists and public servants; Olympians and professional athletes; educators, engineers, bankers, and astronauts. BOOKS & TECHNOLOGY researchers and students provide leadership and public service in health care, law, economic development, social welfare, urban The UCLA Library is ranked among the top ten academic planning, public policy, arts and the environment. Most academic research libraries in North America with holdings of nearly 7.6 departments have research projects, fi eld studies or student internships million volumes. From the birth of the Internet at UCLA in 1969, that affect people’s lives in Los Angeles, the state and the nation. UCLA continues to be a leader in resources for learning. UCLA is nationally recognized for developing ground-breaking computer HEALTH CARE services for undergraduates and was the fi rst university to have a Each year more than 300,000 patients from Southern California, the website for every undergraduate student.
    [Show full text]
  • Study Abroad at UCLA Your Pathway to American Education Welcome from the Dean of UCLA Extension
    Study Abroad at UCLA Your Pathway to American Education Welcome from the Dean of UCLA Extension Greetings from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and UCLA Extension. We are pleased to welcome you to Study Abroad at UCLA. 1 Study Abroad at UCLA is designed for students who want to spend a quarter or more at a top-ranked American university, earn credit that they can transfer to their home university, and experience life in Southern California. Our program gives you the option of enrolling in daytime UCLA undergraduate courses with UCLA students, in evening UCLA Extension courses with students and working professionals, or a combination of UCLA and UCLA Extension courses. In addition to enjoying the park-like UCLA campus and our year-round sunny climate, you’ll be amazed at how much Los Angeles has to offer: L.A. is a hub for international business; it’s the home of the film and entertainment industry; it’s famous for museums, theaters, and concert venues; and, with its incredible beaches, mountains, and deserts, it’s a destination for sports and leisure activities. We are confident that your experience at Table of Contents UCLA will be both memorable and rewarding. Location 2 We look forward to welcoming you in person to UCLA & UCLA Extension 3 Study Abroad at UCLA! Program Overview 4 Sincerely, Curriculum 5 Sample Study Options 7 Campus Life 8 Wayne Smutz, Dean, UCLA Extension Support Services 9 Frequently Asked Questions 10 Academic Calendar 11 Location Southern California is a land of contrasts, with sunny beaches, wild-west deserts, lush gardens, and snow-capped mountains.
    [Show full text]
  • Championship Game Notes
    2013 NCAAÒ WOMEN’S FINAL FOURÒ National Championship - #1 Connecticut 93, #5 Louisville 60 New Orleans Arena · New Orleans, La. Tuesday, April 9 CHAMPIONSHIP GAME NOTES • The Big East won its ninth women’s basketball national championship tonight. The nine national titles surpass the SEC, who has eight, for the most all-time. • This marks just the fifth time that conference schools have met for the national title: 1989 (Tennessee over Auburn), 1996 (Tennessee over Georgia), 2006 (Maryland over Duke) and 2009 (Connecticut over Louisville). • With Louisville holding a 14-10 lead at the 13:51 mark of the first half, UConn exploded for 19 straight points to take a 29-14 lead with 8:48 left in the half. Louisville got as close as 11 (29-18) with 7:55 left but UConn outscored the Cardinals 19-11 the rest of the way to take a 48-29 lead into the locker room. UConn Notes: • With the win, UConn improves to 35-4 overall and wins its first national championship since claiming back-to-back titles in 2009 and 2010. • Tonight’s win gives UConn its eighth women’s basketball national championship. • Connecticut ties Tennessee for the most NCAA titles in history with its eighth (1995, 2000, ’02, ’03, ’04, ’09, ’10, and ’13). All eight titles have come under Geno Auriemma and he is now tied with Tennessee’s Pat Summit for the most all time for a head coach in women’s basketball history. • The Huskies have an 8-0 record in national championship games with wins over Tennessee (1995, 2000.
    [Show full text]
  • Pre-Ncaa Women's Basketball Records
    PRE-NCAA WOMEN’S BASKETBALL RECORDS Pre-NCAA Statistical Leaders 2 AIAW Results 5 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS The following women played all or most of their collegiate careers before the Player, Team Seasons G Pts. era of official NCAA women’s basketball statistics, which began in 1981-82. Queen Brumfield, Southeastern La. 1976-79 133 2,986 Before becoming members of the NCAA in 1981-82, most women’s programs Lusia Harris, Delta St. 1974-77 115 2,981 were under the auspices of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW). Pam Kelly, Louisiana Tech 1979-82 153 2,979 Wanda Hightower, UAB 1979-82 111 2,855 The NCAA would like to thank the University of Maryland libraries for their Jill Rankin, Wayland Baptist/Tennessee 1977-79, 80 146 2,851 assistance in sharing the AIAW Archive information: Betty Booker, Memphis 1977-80 137 2,835 “AIAW Archives, Special Collections, University of Maryland Libraries.” Valerie Still, Kentucky 1980-83 119 2,763 If you have information that can be utilized in expanding/completing any por- Tina Gunn, BYU 1977-80 101 2,759 tion of this section, please send supporting documents to ncaastats@ncaa. Kathy Miller, Weber St. 1976-79 100 2,746 org. Anne Donovan, Old Dominion 1980-83 136 2,719 Cindy Stumph, Weber St. 1980-83 122 2,690 Ann Meyers, Dayton 1977-80 126 2,672 Inge Nissen, Old Dominion 1977-80 135 2,647 Jerilyn Harper, Tennessee/Tennessee Tech 1979, 80-82 129 2,603 CAREER RECORDS Anne Gregory, Fordham 1977-80 127 2,548 Sharon Upshaw, Drake 1977-80 127 2,513 Scoring Average Julie Gross, LSU 1977-80 131 2,488 (Minimum 2,000 Points) Peggie Gillom, Mississippi 1977-80 144 2,486 Nancy Lieberman, Old Dominion 1977-80 134 2,430 Player, Team Seasons G FG FT Pts.
    [Show full text]