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COACHES & STAFF 2008 BRUINS OPPONENTS 2007 IN REVIEW UCLA RECORDS TRADITION/HISTORY GENERAL INFO BRUINS IN THE NFL UCLA FOOTBALL - THEN ... NOW ... FOREVER 153 GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL INFORMATION NEWS MEDIA INFORMATION NEWS MEDIA INFORMATION Legend: BW-Beat Writer, SE-Sports Editor, ESE-Exec. Sports Editor, SD-Sports Director, B-Broadcaster. NEWSPAPERS Los Angeles Times, 202 West First St., Los Angeles, CA 90012 — 213/237-7145. Randy Harvey (SE), Chris Foster (BW). Orange County Register, 625 No. Grand Ave., Santa Ana, CA 92711 — 714/796-7817. David Bean (ASE), Robert Kuwada (BW). Los Angeles Daily News, P.O. Box 4200, Woodland Hills, CA 91365-4200 — 818/713-3600. Kevin Modesti (ESE), Gene Warnick (SE), Brian Dohn (BW). South Bay Daily Breeze, 5215 Torrance Blvd.,Torrance, CA 90509 — 310/540-4201. Todd Bailey (SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories. Riverside Press-Enterprise, 3450 14th St., Riverside, CA 92501 — 951/368-9533. Patricia Mays (SE), Kevin Pearson (BW). Long Beach Press-Telegram, 604 Pine Ave., Long Beach,CA 90844 — 562/499-1338. Joe Haakenson (SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories. Pasadena Star-News/San Gabriel Valley Tribune, 1210 N. Azusa Canyon Rd., West Covina, CA 91790 — 626/962-8811. Art Wilson (Asst. SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories. San Bernardino Sun, 2239 Gannett Parkway, San Bernardino,CA 92407 — 909/386-3865.Louis Brewster (SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories. Ventura Star, 550 Camarillo Center Drive, Camarillo, CA 93010 — 805/437-0275. Jon Catalini (SE), Joe Curley (BW). UCLA ON RADIO/TELEVISION This season, UCLA’s football games will be broadcast on AM 570 (KLAC).This is the 12th year of UCLA’s association with Clear Channel Radio and its fourth on AM 570. For the first time, the games will be produced by International Sports Properties (ISP), UCLA's corporate and media rights holder. ISP is also building a network on the West Coast and KLAC is the flagship station of the UCLA/ISP Sports Network. The game broadcasts are also available on the Bruin web site at www.uclabruins.com. Chris Roberts will be in his 17th year as the play- by-play voice of the Bruins. A four-time Golden Mike winner, he also handles the play-by-play duties for men’s basketball. He has twice been nominated for the Southern California Sports Broadcasters Assn. “Play-by-Play Broadcaster of the Year” award. Prior to joining the Bruin crew in 1992, he served as the voice of the Long Beach State 49ers for 10 years. During that time, he was the sports director at KFI/KOST 103 FM. Over the last 26 years, no one has done more Division I radio play-by-play in Southern California. Former Bruin quarterback Matt Stevens ('83-86) will be in his 12th season as a member of the broadcast team and his eighth as the analyst following four years as the sideline reporter. He will also serve as co-host of the pre-game show. Left to Right: Matt Stevens, Chris Roberts and Wayne Cook Bill Macdonald Wayne Cook ('91-94), another former Bruin quarterback, will be in his seventh year as a sideline reporter and pre-game show host. UCLA’s complete television plans were not definite at press time. ABC will televise the USC game to a national audience while airing the Fresno State game on a regional basis. ESPN will televise the opener against Tennessee while ESPN 2 will carry the game at Arizona State, both on a national basis. ABC/ESPN is expected to select other games 12 days prior to kickoff in accordance with its contract with the Pac-10 Conference (20 total Pac-10 home games with at least 12 on ABC and the others on ESPN or ESPN2).In addition, the game at BYU will be televised nationally by Versus through its agreement with the Mountain West Conference. Fox Sports Net will televise 18 Pac-10 football contests throughout the nation on its cable network for the 12th consecutive year. FSN has already selected UCLA's game versus Arizona for a national telecast. In conjunction with Fox Sports Net, Versus will produce and televise five Pac-10 home games nationally. Both entities are expected to select other Bruin games during the season. Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket, a Los Angeles-based regional sports cable company, also available nation-wide on DIRECTV (694), will televise some games on a local basis. Bill Macdonald will again handle the play-by-play duties (16th year). On Monday nights, Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket will also air the “Lexus Gauntlet" show, which will feature highlights and interviews. UCLA MEDIA OUTLETS Antelope Valley Press, 37404 Sierra Hwy., P.O. Box 880, Palmdale, CA 93590 — 661/273-8465. Robert Johnson (SE). The Sentinel, 3800 Crenshaw Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90008 — 323/299-3800. Ken Miller (SE). UCLA Daily Bruin, 308 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90024 — 310/825-9851. Sara Salam (SE). WIRE SERVICES AND NATIONAL PUBLICATIONS Associated Press, 221 So. Figueroa, Suite 300, Los Angeles, CA 90012 — 213/626-1200. Ken Peters (SE). Sports Ticker, 11152 Lexington Dr., Los Alamitos, CA 90720 — 562/431-4374. Ron Griffin. USA Today, 10866 Wilshire, #890, Los Angeles, CA 90024 — 310/882-2400. David Leon Moore (L.A. BW). TELEVISION STATIONS CBS2, 4200 Radford Ave., Studio City, CA 91604 — 818/655-2400. B: Jim Hill, Steve Hartman. NBC4, 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, CA 91523 — 818/840-4237. B: Fred Roggin, Mario Solis. ABC7, 500 Circle Seven Drive, Glendale, CA 91201 — 818/863-7677. B: Rob Fukuzaki, Curt Sandoval, Jon Hartung. KTLA, 5800 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, CA 90028 — 323/460-5907. B: Damon Andrews. KCAL, 4200 Radford Ave., Studio City, CA 91604 — 818/655-2400. B: John Ireland, Gary Miller. KTTV/KCOP, 1999 S.Bundy Dr.,Los Angeles,CA 90025- 5235 — 310/584-2030. B: Rick Garcia. FSN Prime Ticket, 1100 South Flower, Suite 2200, Los Angeles, CA 90015 — 213/743-7800. Bill Macdonald (UCLA Play-By-Play), James Washington, Michael Eaves, Jim Watson, Don MacLean, Sean Farnham. GM: Steve Simpson; Exec. Producer:Tom Feuer; PR Contact: Jennifer Johnson. ESPN, ESPN Plaza, Bristol, CT 06010 — 860/766-2000. Local — B: Shelley Smith. RADIO STATIONS AM 570 KLAC (UCLA/ISP Sports Network Flagship Station), 3400 W. Olive Ave. #550, Burbank, CA 91505 — 818/559-2252. UCLA broadcasters: Chris Roberts (play-by-play), Matt Stevens (analyst), Wayne Cook (sideline).Hosts:Steve Hartman,Mychal Thompson,Vic Jacobs, Petros Papadakis, Matt Smith, Joe McDonnell, Tim Cates, Joe Grande. GM: Don Martin; Asst. Program Director: Brian Blackmore. KNX, 5670 Wilshire Blvd. #200, Los Angeles, CA 90036 — 323/964-8307. KFWB, 5670 Wilshire Blvd. #394, Los Angeles, CA 90036-5679 — 323/900-2098. KSPN, 3321 S. LaCienega, Los Angeles, CA 90016 — 310/840-2492. Mighty XX, 3655 Nobel Drive, Ste. 470, San Diego, CA 92122 — 858/535-2500. uclaradio.com, 308 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90024 (UCLA Student Station) — 310/825-9104.

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Page 1: GGENERAL INFORMATIONENERAL INFORMATION NNEWS … · (ESE), Gene Warnick (SE), Brian Dohn (BW). South Bay Daily Breeze, 5215 Torrance BlvdT .,orrance , CA 90509 — 310/540-4201. Todd

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GENERAL INFORMATIONGENERAL INFORMATIONNEWS MEDIA INFORMATIONNEWS MEDIA INFORMATION

Legend: BW-Beat Writer, SE-Sports Editor, ESE-Exec. Sports Editor, SD-Sports Director, B-Broadcaster.

NEWSPAPERSLos Angeles Times, 202 West First St., Los Angeles, CA 90012 — 213/237-7145. Randy Harvey (SE), Chris Foster (BW).

Orange County Register, 625 No. Grand Ave., Santa Ana, CA 92711 — 714/796-7817. David Bean (ASE), Robert Kuwada (BW).

Los Angeles Daily News, P.O. Box 4200, Woodland Hills, CA 91365-4200 — 818/713-3600. Kevin Modesti (ESE), Gene Warnick (SE), Brian Dohn (BW).

South Bay Daily Breeze, 5215 Torrance Blvd., Torrance, CA 90509 — 310/540-4201. Todd Bailey (SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories.

Riverside Press-Enterprise, 3450 14th St., Riverside, CA 92501 — 951/368-9533. Patricia Mays (SE), Kevin Pearson (BW).

Long Beach Press-Telegram, 604 Pine Ave., Long Beach, CA 90844 — 562/499-1338. Joe Haakenson (SE).Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories.

Pasadena Star-News/San Gabriel Valley Tribune,1210 N. Azusa Canyon Rd., West Covina, CA 91790 — 626/962-8811. Art Wilson (Asst. SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories.

San Bernardino Sun, 2239 Gannett Parkway, San Bernardino, CA 92407 — 909/386-3865. Louis Brewster (SE). Paper carries L.A. Daily News UCLA beat stories.

Ventura Star, 550 Camarillo Center Drive, Camarillo, CA 93010 — 805/437-0275. Jon Catalini (SE), Joe Curley (BW).

UCLA ON RADIO/TELEVISIONThis season, UCLA’s football games will be broadcast on AM 570 (KLAC). This is the 12th year of UCLA’s association with Clear Channel Radio and its fourth on AM 570.

For the fi rst time, the games will be produced by International Sports Properties (ISP), UCLA's corporate and media rights holder. ISP is also building a network on the West Coast and KLAC is the fl agship station of the UCLA/ISP Sports Network.

The game broadcasts are also available on the Bruin web site at www.uclabruins.com.

Chris Roberts will be in his 17th year as the play-by-play voice of the Bruins. A four-time Golden Mike winner, he also handles the play-by-play duties for men’s basketball. He has twice been nominated for the Southern California Sports Broadcasters Assn. “Play-by-Play Broadcaster of the Year” award. Prior to joining the Bruin crew in 1992, he served as the voice of the Long Beach State 49ers for 10 years. During that time, he was the sports director at KFI/KOST 103 FM. Over the last 26 years, no one has done more Division I radio play-by-play in Southern California.

Former Bruin quarterback Matt Stevens ('83-86) will be in his 12th season as a member of the broadcast team and his eighth as the analyst following four years as the sideline reporter. He will also serve as co-host of the pre-game show.

Left to Right: Matt Stevens, Chris Roberts and Wayne Cook

Bill Macdonald

Wayne Cook ('91-94), another former Bruin quarterback, will be in his seventh year as a sideline reporter and pre-game show host.

UCLA’s complete television plans were not defi nite at press time.

ABC will televise the USC game to a national audience while airing the Fresno State game on a regional basis. ESPN will televise the opener against Tennessee while ESPN 2 will carry the game at Arizona State, both on a national basis. ABC/ESPN is expected to select other games 12 days prior to kickoff in accordance with its contract with the Pac-10 Conference (20 total Pac-10 home games with at least 12 on ABC and the others on ESPN or ESPN2). In addition, the

game at BYU will be televised nationally by Versus

through its agreement with the Mountain West Conference.

Fox Sports Net will televise 18 Pac-10 football contests throughout the nation on its cable network for the 12th consecutive year. FSN has already selected UCLA's game versus Arizona for a national telecast. In conjunction with Fox Sports Net, Versus will produce and televise fi ve Pac-10 home games nationally. Both entities are expected to select other Bruin games during the season.

Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket, a Los Angeles-based regional sports cable company, also available nation-wide on DIRECTV (694), will televise some games on a local basis. Bill Macdonald will again handle the play-by-play duties (16th year).

On Monday nights, Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket will also air the “Lexus Gauntlet" show, which will feature highlights and interviews.

UCLA MEDIA OUTLETSAntelope Valley Press, 37404 Sierra Hwy., P.O. Box 880, Palmdale, CA 93590 — 661/273-8465. Robert Johnson (SE).

The Sentinel, 3800 Crenshaw Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90008 — 323/299-3800. Ken Miller (SE).

UCLA Daily Bruin, 308 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90024 — 310/825-9851. Sara Salam (SE).

WIRE SERVICES AND NATIONAL PUBLICATIONSAssociated Press, 221 So. Figueroa, Suite 300, Los Angeles, CA 90012 — 213/626-1200. Ken Peters (SE).

Sports Ticker, 11152 Lexington Dr., Los Alamitos, CA 90720 — 562/431-4374. Ron Griffi n.

USA Today, 10866 Wilshire, #890, Los Angeles, CA 90024 — 310/882-2400. David Leon Moore (L.A. BW).

TELEVISION STATIONSCBS2, 4200 Radford Ave., Studio City, CA 91604 — 818/655-2400. B: Jim Hill, Steve Hartman.

NBC4, 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, CA 91523 — 818/840-4237. B: Fred Roggin, Mario Solis.

ABC7, 500 Circle Seven Drive, Glendale, CA 91201 — 818/863-7677. B: Rob Fukuzaki, Curt Sandoval, Jon Hartung.

KTLA, 5800 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, CA 90028 — 323/460-5907. B: Damon Andrews.

KCAL, 4200 Radford Ave., Studio City, CA 91604 — 818/655-2400. B: John Ireland, Gary Miller.

KTTV/KCOP, 1999 S. Bundy Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90025-

5235 — 310/584-2030. B: Rick Garcia.

FSN Prime Ticket, 1100 South Flower, Suite 2200, Los Angeles, CA 90015 — 213/743-7800. Bill Macdonald (UCLA Play-By-Play), James Washington, Michael Eaves, Jim Watson, Don MacLean, Sean Farnham. GM: Steve Simpson; Exec. Producer: Tom Feuer; PR Contact: Jennifer Johnson.

ESPN, ESPN Plaza, Bristol, CT 06010 — 860/766-2000. Local — B: Shelley Smith.

RADIO STATIONSAM 570 KLAC (UCLA/ISP Sports Network Flagship Station), 3400 W. Olive Ave. #550, Burbank, CA 91505 — 818/559-2252. UCLA broadcasters: Chris Roberts (play-by-play), Matt Stevens (analyst), Wayne Cook (sideline). Hosts: Steve Hartman, Mychal Thompson, Vic Jacobs, Petros Papadakis, Matt Smith, Joe McDonnell, Tim Cates, Joe Grande. GM: Don Martin; Asst. Program Director: Brian Blackmore.

KNX, 5670 Wilshire Blvd. #200, Los Angeles, CA 90036 — 323/964-8307.

KFWB, 5670 Wilshire Blvd. #394, Los Angeles, CA 90036-5679 — 323/900-2098.

KSPN, 3321 S. LaCienega, Los Angeles, CA 90016 — 310/840-2492.

Mighty XX, 3655 Nobel Drive, Ste. 470, San Diego, CA 92122 — 858/535-2500.

uclaradio.com, 308 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90024 (UCLA Student Station) — 310/825-9104.

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MEDIA CREDENTIALS Admission to the Rose Bowl press box, sidelines and dressing area is by credential only. Due to space limitations, credentials will be limited to media members who cover UCLA on a regular basis, media members who cover the visiting team or national media. Local weekly publications will be credentialed only if space is available after fi lling requests from daily publications. Freelancers will not be accommodated. Requests should be submitted in writing by the media agency’s Sports Editor or Sports Director at least two weeks prior to the game and addressed to Marc Dellins, Sports Information Director, UCLA Athletic Department, P.O. Box 24044, Los Angeles, CA 90024-0044 ([email protected]). Writers covering the UCLA beat may request credentials for road games through Dellins.

CREDENTIAL PICKUPCredentials are available during the week at the Sports Information Offi ce. Credentials not claimed by Friday afternoon will be available on Saturday at the “Press Will Call’’ window, which is located outside of Gate B at the southeast side of the Rose Bowl. Photo credentials are not available for advance pick-up and are issued on the day of the game. “Press Will Call’’ opens two hours prior to kickoff.

MEDIA PARKINGA limited number of parking permits are available from the Sports Information Offi ce. The media area is located on the west side of the Rose Bowl. A map showing lot locations is printed on the back of the pass.

MEDIA ENTRANCE/SEATINGThe press gate is located adjacent to Gate F on the west side of the Rose Bowl. Three press box elevators are located in the lobby area opposite Gate F. Media seating is located on the south side of Level Two of the press box. Television and radio booths are located on Level Three of the press box. Press box credentials are not good on the sidelines until the fi nal fi ve minutes of the game. Please be aware that all people and bags are subject to search.

MEDIA SERVICESA play-by-play of each quarter, plus halftime and fi nal statistics and post-game quotes from both coaches, are supplied to media. Programs, pre-game notes and fl ip cards will be distributed prior to the game. Food is available in the press box for the media and in the fi eld level work area for photographers.

TELEPHONE/INTERNET/FAX SERVICEMedia wishing to order telephones should place their order through AT&T — (800/339-3204).Telephone instruments are not provided. Radio stations wishing to order broadcast lines should contact AT&T Program Services (800/400-6990 from anywhere in the country). Four charge-call telephones are located in the press box for use by the media.

Internet access is available in the press box by both network/ethernet connection at each seat and by wireless connection.

Media members wishing to have stories or statistics transmitted from the press box should contact Amfax (Rick Laubert — 562/494-8757) for fax service. The UCLA Sports Information Offi ce will also have a fax machine.

PHOTOGRAPHYTelevision and Photo credentials entitle video and still photographers to shoot from the sidelines. In accordance with NCAA rules, members of the media (still photographers, television cameramen and reporters) are not allowed in the team area (between the 25-yard lines). Only photographers wearing proper credentials and working are allowed on the sideline. Photo credentials will not be mailed and may only be picked up on game day at the Photo Will Call booth at Gate A. Please have picture identifi cation available and be aware that all people and bags are subject to search. Credential holders not working will be asked to leave the sidelines. In addition, a limited amount of space is available on the Photo Mezzanine, which is located in front of Press Box Level One.

A new photo transmission room has been established on the fi eld level on the east side of Tunnel 23A (the west tunnel). Photographers may order telephone lines installed in this area for digital transmission. Electrical power, game programs and rosters will be available in this area. In addition, food and drinks will also be available in this area.

POST-GAME PROCEDURE Following a cooling-off period, head coach Rick Neuheisel and selected Bruin players will be available in the Interview Room, located on the east side of Tunnel 23 A (west tunnel). Soon after Coach Neuheisel addresses the media, the UCLA locker room will be open to credentialed members of the media. The UCLA locker room is located down the hallway from the interview room. The visiting coach will meet the media in an interview room just north of the visiting locker room. In the case of a night game, questions and answers from the Interview Room (UCLA interviews only) will be shown on the press box television monitors.

WEEKLY INTERVIEW OPPORTUNITIESHead Coach: Rick Neuheisel hosts a media conference every Monday at 1:00 p.m. in the Press Room of the J.D. Morgan Center. Coach Neuheisel will also be available following practice sessions on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. In addition, an audio tape of his Monday news conference will be available for play-back throughout the week, beginning late Monday afternoon.

Coach Neuheisel will also be available weekly on the Pac-10 Coaches conference call. Contact the Pac-10 offi ce for the telephone number and schedule of coaches.

Coach Neuheisel will not be available to the media on Sundays.

Players: All interviews must be arranged by the Sports Information Offi ce. Players have been instructed not to grant any interview, in person or by telephone, not arranged by the SID staff. Player telephone numbers are private and will not be released.

Players will not be available on Sundays. Interviews may be arranged for Mondays (a non-practice day), prior to coach Neuheisel’s regular media session, by making a request to SID Marc Dellins or Associate SID - Football Steve Rourke on Sunday. Please do not expect players to be available if you have not made prior arrangements.

On Monday through Wednesday of game week, interviews may also be scheduled around the lunch hour, if the request is made the previous day and the player is available. Players will usually be available for brief interviews after practice on Tuesdays and Wednesdays once they have completed their

football obligations. Players will not be available on Thursday, Friday or before a game. Post-practice interviews will be conducted on Spaulding Field or in Pauley Pavilion. The locker room, training room and weight room are off-limits to everyone with the exception of team members and Athletic Department personnel.

Radio stations may schedule telephone interviews following the guidelines listed above. All interviews must be completed before the players leave the locker room area after practice. Night interviews will not be scheduled.

WEEKLY RELEASESThe weekly UCLA football release is available on the offi cial school internet site — uclabruins.com. Audio and video interviews will also be available on the site during the season.

PRACTICEThe UCLA football team practices on Spaulding Field, located just south of Pauley Pavilion. This season, practice sessions on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays will be open to the media outlets that cover UCLA on a regular basis, national media and other media outlets at the discretion of the Sports Information Offi ce. Media expecting to attend practice should contact the SID offi ce (310-206-6831) to have their name placed on a list.

No live/real-time transmissions are allowed during practice, including radio reports or blogging. Video and still photographers may shoot isolation footage of players to be interviewed but not wide-angle formations. Video and still photographic shooting is only allowed during the fi rst 30-40 minutes of practice. Media must call in advance to make sure that their name is on a list to be admitted to the practice session.

The team will have a light workout on Sundays this season. The Sunday workout is closed to all media and no interviews will be conducted that day.

DIRECTIONS TO UCLAFrom Los Angeles International Airport, take Century Blvd. east to the San Diego Freeway (405). Take the San Diego Freeway north to Wilshire Blvd. (approx. 15 miles). Go east on Wilshire and continue to Westwood. Turn left on Westwood and stop at the parking kiosk. Media parking is available in Lot 6 and Lot 8, located near Pauley Pavilion.

DIRECTIONS TO THE ROSE BOWLFrom Los Angeles International Airport, take Century Blvd. east to the San Diego Freeway (405). Take the San Diego Freeway north to the Ventura Fwy (101) — approx. 20 miles. Take the Ventura Freeway east to the junction of the Hollywood (101) and Ventura (134) Freeways — approx. fi ve miles. Take the Ventura Freeway east past the Golden State Freeway (5) into Pasadena — approx. 15 miles. Exit at Linda Vista and follow the signs to the Rose Bowl.

VIDEO SERVICESTelevision stations desiring highlights and/or interviews with Bruin players should contact Dennis Kirkpatrick at Bayview Productions (310/543-1835).

NEWS MEDIA INFORMATIONNEWS MEDIA INFORMATION

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GENERAL INFORMATIONGENERAL INFORMATIONATHLETIC DIRECTOR ATHLETIC DIRECTOR

On April 25, 2002, Daniel G. Guerrero was named UCLA’s eighth Director of Athletics, succeeding the retiring Peter Dalis. A former Bruin baseball player, Guerrero, who assumed his duties on July 1, 2002, exudes the pride of a student-athlete who is now calling the shots at his alma mater.

Guerrero, one of the most respected and talented administrators in inter-collegiate athletics, has placed his mark on the program as the director of athletics at UCLA. He is currently serving as the chair of the NCAA’s Division I Men’s Basketball Academic Enhancement Group. He is also a member of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee. In addition, he is the third vice-president of NACDA, serves on the NACDA Executive Committee and is also on the executive board of the Division I Athletic Directors Association. In June of 2007, he was named NACDA Division I West Region Athletic Director of the Year.

In his fi rst six years, Guerrero has clearly established a pattern of “image and substance” that few in his profession can match. UCLA stands as the No. 1 University in the nation for NCAA team championships (103) won, a number that continues to grow under his direction. In those six years, UCLA teams have won 17 NCAA team titles (the highest total in the nation in that span) in 11 different sports, fi nished second 13 times and have had an additional 22 Top Five fi nishes. A staggering 113 teams (of 138 possible) have qualifi ed for NCAA post-season competition and the football team has appeared in six bowl games. The program has also won 37 conference championships in 15 different sports, produced 338 All-Americans and featured four Honda Award winners, including the 2003-04 Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year.

Furthermore, during the 2004 Summer Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, 57 Bruins participated as athletes or coaches, representing the United States and 13 other nations. They won 19 medals, including eight gold.

In the last six years, UCLA has fi nished second three (2007-08, 2006-07 and 2005-06), third twice (2004-05 and 2003-04) and sixth (2002-03) in the race for the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) Director’s Cup. Only two schools (UCLA and Stanford) have made the top six each of the past six years, representative of UCLA’s place among the nation’s elite.

This past year, UCLA won its fourth consecutive NCAA women’s water polo championship, its fi rst NCAA title in women’s tennis and its second in men’s golf. The Bruins fi nished second in women’s golf, tied for third in men’s basketball (third straight Final Four), women’s soccer (fi fth straight College Cup) and men’s tennis, placed fi fth (tied) in women’s volleyball and softball, seventh in women’s gymnastics, 14th in men’s indoor track and fi eld and 17th (tied) in baseball and men’s soccer. UCLA also played in its sixth consecutive bowl game and won fi ve conference champion-ships and two league tournaments.

In 2006-07, UCLA won an NCAA championship in women’s water polo, the school’s 100th NCAA team title, and placed second in men’s soccer and women’s tennis, third in women’s golf, tied for third in men’s basketball, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball, fourth in women’s gymnastics, fi fth in women’s outdoor track and fi eld, tied for fi fth in men’s tennis, seventh in men’s golf and women’s indoor track and fi eld, ninth in men’s outdoor track and fi eld and tied for ninth in baseball. UCLA played in its fi fth straight bowl game in football and won four league titles.

In 2005-06, UCLA won two NCAA titles (men’s volleyball and women’s water polo) and placed second in men’s basketball and women’s soccer, tied for third in softball, tied for fi fth in men’s tennis, tied for seventh in men’s golf and tied for ninth in women’s volleyball and women’s tennis. UCLA also won the Vitalis Sun Bowl in football and captured seven con-ference championships and two post-season tournaments.

In 2004-05, UCLA won three NCAA titles (men’s water polo, men’s tennis and women’s water polo) and placed second in women’s soccer, men’s volleyball, women’s golf and softball, tied for second in women’s outdoor track and fi eld, fourth in women’s gymnastics, tied for fi fth in women’s volleyball and tied for ninth in men’s soccer. UCLA also earned its fi rst NCAA post-season appearance in women’s rowing (varsity eight) and won eight conference championships.

In 2003-04, the Bruins won four NCAA titles (women’s outdoor track and fi eld, softball, women’s golf and women‘s gymnastics). They also placed second in men’s tennis, women’s tennis and men’s golf, tied for third in women’s soccer, tied for fi fth in men’s soccer and women’s vol-leyball, fi fth in women’s indoor track and fi eld and seventh in women’s swimming and women’s cross country. In addition, the Bruins captured seven league titles.

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICSDIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS SEVENTH YEAR :: UCLA '74 SEVENTH YEAR :: UCLA '74

GUERREROGUERREROdandan

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In Guerrero’s fi rst year at UCLA (2002-03), UCLA won four NCAA titles (men‘s soccer, women‘s gymnastics, women‘s water polo and women’s softball). The Bruins placed third in men’s golf, tied for third in men’s tennis, tied for fi fth in women’s golf and women’s tennis, eighth in women‘s outdoor track and fi eld, tied for eighth in women‘s indoor track and fi eld and tied for ninth in women’s soccer. UCLA also earned six conference titles.

Over the past six years, Guerrero has earned numerous honors. In June of 2007, he was named the NACDA Division I West Region Athletic Director of the Year. His other honors include 2002 UCLA Latino Alumnus of the Year (October 2002); Cal State Dominguez Hills’ Alumnus of the Year (March 2003); and 2003 “Father of the Year” by the Father’s Day Council of the American Diabetes Association (June). On September 10, 2002, the Los Angeles City Council honored him with Dan Guerrero Day. He also became the fi rst athlete in any sport at Banning (Wilmington, CA) High School to have his jersey (#8 in baseball) retired (2003).

Guerrero was named one of the nation’s Top 100 Most Infl uential Hispanics by Hispanic Business Magazine (October 2004) and the May 5, 2003 issue of Sports Illustrated listed him #28 among the 101 Most Infl uential Minorities in Sports. He was one of 28 people whose photo was featured on that issue’s cover.

In addition to unparalleled success in the playing arena, his fi rst six years have also demonstrated the overall excellence Guerrero has made a priority for the program. Belief in conducting a program of integrity has been a cornerstone of Guerrero’s leadership throughout his career. Named as a 1999 Sports Ethics Fellow by the Institute for International Sport, Guerrero has fostered a strong sense of commitment and dedication among his coaches and staff to the development of the total student-athlete experience. He has also served as an Executive Board member of the National Consortium for Academics and Sport for over a decade and is resolute in his desire to support academic achievement and life skills development for UCLA student-athletes. As a result, he has spearheaded unprecedented growth in the Academic Support and Life Skills program at UCLA. In Guerrero’s fi rst fi ve and two-thirds years (17 quarters), student-athletes earned 4,003 spots on the Director’s Honor Roll (3.0 or higher grade-point average for a quarter) and community service activities for the program are at an all-time high.

Resource development has always been a strength for Guerrero and his tenure at UCLA has demonstrated continued evidence of this skill. In 2004-05, he successfully negotiated two blockbuster deals: a new multi-million dollar agreement with ISP Sports, a premier national collegiate sports marketing organization, and a six-year, multi-million dollar extension with adidas, equipment provider for all of UCLA’s 24 sports.

Guerrero also led the negotiations that solidifi ed the relationship be-tween UCLA and the Rose Bowl, inking a 20-year agreement, which included over $13 million in facility enhancements to benefi t the UCLA

football program. He has also reorganized the External Relations area, integrating Corporate Sponsorships, Marketing and Development under one umbrella, in anticipation of a major revenue generating initiative designed to address capital project needs, operational support and program endowments.

Under Guerrero’s guidance, UCLA continues to aggressively enhance its athletic facilities, including the completion of the Bud Knapp Football wing of the Acosta Center, and the sports medicine and athletic per-formance centers in the same complex. A new golf practice facility and the Easton Softball Stadium renovation, benefi tting the Bruins’ golf and softball powers, respectively, were completed for the 2004-05 season. The installation of synthetic turf at Spaulding Field was completed in 2006 and the fi nal phase of the Acosta Center project (Olympic sport locker rooms) is now complete. The Spieker Aquatic Center and the renovation of Pauley Pavilion are the next projects slated for completion.

Guerrero has extensive experience in committee work at both the NCAA and conference level. He is serving his fourth year as a member of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee and also served on the “College Basketball Partnership,” a group formed by NCAA president Myles Brand, that included many of the most infl uential people in the sport. He has served as Chair of both the Pac-10 Athletic Directors Com-mittee and the Budget and Finance Committee, has served on several Pac-10 committees and is currently a member of the Pac-10 Television and Football Bowl committes. He has also served on other NCAA com-mittees, including the NCAA Division I Baseball Committee and at the time of his hire by UCLA was serving as the second vice president of the Division I-AAA Athletic Director’s Association.

Guerrero came to UCLA from UC Irvine, where he had served as UCI’s fi fth permanent Director of Athletics for 10 years (1992-2002). The broad competitive success of its athletic teams, the academic excellence of its student-athletes, the development of new and improved facilities and enhanced relations with the UCI community, refl ect the progress UC Irvine Athletics experienced under Guerrero’s direction. During his ten-ure, the program continued to accumulate conference championships, garner national rankings, feature graduation rates among the nation’s best, and win numerous post-season honors for its student-athletes. In June of 2002 while still at UC Irvine, he was named the 2001-02 Division I-AA/I-AAA West Region NACDA Athletic Director of the Year.

Resulting from Guerrero’s resourcefulness and creativity, UCI experienced unprecedented activity in the area of athletic facilities development. In his fi nal fi ve years, Guerrero was the driving force behind $38 million of newly constructed or renovated facilities. These projects included a newly renovated track and soccer complex, a new 64-meter competitive swim-ming pool, a new baseball stadium and the Anteater Recreation Center, one of the premier recreation centers in the country.

Prior to arriving at UC Irvine, Dan came from Cal State Dominguez Hills, where he led that program to national prominence while serving as Athletic Director for fi ve years (1988-92).

Guerrero received his Bachelor’s degree from UCLA in 1974 and played second base in the Bruin baseball program for four years. His batting average in Pacifi c-8 Conference games over three seasons as a varsity performer was .343. Guerrero, known as “Warrior” during his playing career, was inducted into the UCLA Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996. The Bruin Athletic Director earned a Master’s degree in Public Administration in 1982 from Cal State Dominguez Hills and was named to the Pi Alpha Alpha Honor Society for Public Affairs and Public Policy that same year.

Guerrero, born on November 10, 1951 in Tucson, AZ, was raised in Wilm-ington, CA. He is married to the former Anne Marie Aniello and they have two grown daughters: Jenna and Katie.

ATHLETIC DIRECTOR ATHLETIC DIRECTOR

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When it comes to athletic success, UCLA ranks second to none, as evi-denced by its 103 NCAA team championships. Over the past three-plus decades, no school can match UCLA’s combination of NCAA team and individual championships, football bowl games, men’s basketball NCAA Tournament appearances and Olympic participation. In April of 2005, Sports Illustrated On Campus stated that “UCLA has the most complete athletic program in the country.”

In 2007-08, UCLA placed second nationally in competition for the annual NACDA Directors‘ Cup for the third consecutive year. The cup recognizes the school with the best overall sports performance each year and awards points based on fi nishes in NCAA competition. UCLA has fi nished in the Top Six in all 15 years of the Directors‘ Cup, placing second in 2007-08, 2006-07, 2005-06, 2000-2001, 1999-2000 and 1995-96, third in 2004-05, 2003-04, 1996-97, 1994-95 and 1993-94, fourth in 1997-98, fi fth in 1998-99 and 2001-2002 and sixth in 2002-2003.

This past year, UCLA won its fourth consecutive NCAA women’s water polo championship, its fi rst NCAA title in women’s tennis and its second in men’s golf. The Bruins fi nished second in women’s golf, tied for third in men’s basketball (third straight Final Four), women’s soccer (fi fth straight College Cup) and men’s tennis, placed fi fth (tied) in women’s volleyball and softball, seventh in women’s gymnastics, 14th in men’s indoor track and fi eld and 17th (tied) in baseball and men’s soccer. UCLA also played in its sixth consecutive bowl game and won fi ve conference champion-ships and two league tournaments.

In 2006-07, UCLA won an NCAA championship in women’s water polo, the school’s 100th NCAA team title, and placed second in men’s soccer and women’s tennis, third in women’s golf, tied for third in men’s basketball, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball, fourth in women’s gymnastics, fi fth in women’s outdoor track and fi eld, tied for fi fth in men’s tennis, seventh in men’s golf and women’s indoor track and fi eld, ninth in men’s outdoor track and fi eld and tied for ninth in baseball.

In 2005-06, UCLA won two NCAA titles (men’s volleyball and women’s water polo) and placed second in men’s basketball and women’s soccer, tied for third in softball, tied for fi fth in men’s tennis, tied for seventh in men’s golf and tied for ninth in women’s volleyball and women’s tennis.

COMBINED PROGRAM

UCLA has won more NCAA team championships than any school in the nation — 103 (71 men’s and 32 women’s), including 17 in the last six years, more than any other school in the country (Stanford is second with 12). Those 103 titles have been won in 17 different programs. In the 27 years that the NCAA has awarded both men’s and women’s championships, UCLA has won 63 NCAA team titles (31 men’s and 32 women’s). Overall, UCLA has won a nation-leading total of 124 collegiate championships — 103 NCAA crowns and 21 other titles.

UCLA has won at least one NCAA team title (men’s or women’s) in 26 of the last 28 years. In addition, the school has won at least one collegiate title (NCAA or AIAW) in 42 of the last 45 years, missing only in 1979-80, 1993-94 and 2001-02. Over the last 37 years, UCLA has won at least two collegiate titles 29 times.

UCLA has placed amongst the top six schools in each of the 15 years of the Directors‘ Cup. In 1992-93, UCLA earned the award as the nation’s top combined program, according to the annual USA Today All-Sports Survey. Prior to 1993-94, USA Today conducted separate surveys for men’s and women’s programs. In the 23-year history of the All-Sports Survey for men’s programs (formerly conducted by the Knoxville Journal), UCLA fi nished fi rst 11 times (no other school had more than six titles), second seven times, third once and fourth once and was in the top 10 each year. The Bruins won fi ve of the last eight men’s surveys and placed fi fth in 1993. In the women’s survey (formerly sponsored by the Santa Monica Evening Outlook), UCLA won 10 titles in 18 years, including four straight (1988-1991), and fi nished second in 1992 and 1993.

In the last 39 years, the Bruin men have won 57 NCAA championships, 10 more than second-place Stanford and 31 more than third-place USC. Eight times they have won at least three titles in a single year. UCLA is the only school to win four men’s titles in a single year more than once, accomplishing the feat in 1969-70 (basketball, tennis, volleyball, and water polo), 1970-71 (basketball, tennis, volleyball, and outdoor track) and 1971-72 (basketball, volleyball, outdoor track, and water polo).

In 1981-82, the fi rst year in which the NCAA hosted women’s champion-ships, UCLA became the fi rst school in history to win fi ve NCAA titles (men’s swimming, men’s tennis, men’s volleyball, softball, and women’s track) in a single year.

2007-2008 UCLA SPORTS RECAP(Conference & NCAA Finish)

Sport Conf. NationalBaseball 3rd T-17th in NCAABasketball (M) 1st T-3rd in NCAABasketball (W) T-4th n/aCross Country (M) 4th 7th in NCAA Reg.Cross Country (W) 10th 23rd in NCAA Reg.Football T-4th Las Vegas BowlGolf (M) 4th NCAA ChampionGolf (W) 2nd 2nd in NCAAGymnastics (W) 3rd 7th in NCAARowing (W) 7th n/aSoccer (M) T-2nd T-17th in NCAASoccer (W) 1st T-3rd in NCAASoftball 2nd T-5th in NCAASwimming (W) 4th 31st in NCAATennis (M) 1st T-3rd in NCAA Tennis (W) T-1st NCAA Champion Indoor Track (M)* 10th 14th in NCAAIndoor Track (W)* 6th T-62nd in NCAAOutdoor Track (M) 3rd T-34th in NCAA Outdoor Track (W) 5th T-29th in NCAAVolleyball (M)* T-4th n/aVolleyball (W) 5th T-5th in NCAAWater Polo (M)* T-3rd n/aWater Polo (W)* 1st** NCAA Champion *Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation**Won conference post-season tournament***Varisty 8 boat only

UCLA ATHLETICS - CHAMPIONS MADE HEREUCLA ATHLETICS - CHAMPIONS MADE HERE

UCLA ATHLETICS SIX-YEAR RECAP

Sport 02-03 03-04 04-05 05-06 06-07 07-08Baseball n/a T-17th n/a T-33rd T-9th T-17thBasketball (M) n/a n/a T-33rd 2nd T-3rd T-3rdBasketball (W) n/a T-33rd n/a T-17th n/a n/aCross Country (M) 8th/R 7th/R 4th/R 12th/R 23rd 7th/RCross Country (W) 25th 7th 27th 6th/R 5th/R 23rd/RFootball bowl bowl bowl bowl bowl bowlGolf (M) 3rd 2nd 30th T-7th 7th 1stGolf (W) T-5th 1st 2nd 11th 3rd 2ndGymnastics (W) 1st 1st 4th T-13th 4th 7thRowing (W) n/a n/a 15th** 12th** 14th** n/aSoccer (M) 1st T-5th T-9th T-17th 2nd T-17thSoccer (W) T-9th T-3rd 2nd 2nd T-3rd T-3rdSoftball 1st 1st 2nd T-3rd T-33rd T-5thSwimming (W) 11th 7th 18th 20th 15th 31stTennis (M) T-3rd 2nd 1st T-5th T-5th T-3rdTennis (W) T-5th 2nd T-9th T-9th 2nd 1stIndoor Track (M) 29th 12th 25th T-52nd n/a 14thIndoor Track (W) T-8th 5th 20th T-15th 7th T-62ndOutdoor Track (M) 19th T-17th T-33rd T-22nd 9th T-34thOutdoor Track (W) 8th 1st 2nd T-14th 5th T-29thVolleyball (M) n/a n/a 2nd 1st n/a n/aVolleyball (W) T-17th T-5th T-5th T-9th T-3rd T-5thWater Polo (M) n/a n/a 1st n/a n/a n/aWater Polo (W) 1st n/a 1st 1st 1st 1stn/a - indicates did not compete in NCAA championshipR - indicates fi nish in NCAA regional competition** - indicates Varsity 8 boat only

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OLYMPIC GOLD MEDAL STANDINGS

No. 1 in NCAA Titles (103)

Women (32)Track & Field (8)1956 19731966 19781971 19871972 1988

Volleyball (19)1970 19841971 19871972 19891974 19931975 19951976 19961979 19981981 20001982 20061983

Water Polo (8)1969 19961971 19991972 20001995 2004

Basketball (11)1964 19711965 19721967 19731968 19751969 19951970

Golf (2)1988 2008

Gymnastics (2)1984 1987

Soccer (4)1985 19971990 2002

Swimming (1)1982

Tennis (16)1950 19701952 19711953 19751954 19761956 19791960 19821961 19841965 2005

Softball (10)1982 19901984 19921985 19991988 20031989 2004

Volleyball (3)1984 19911990

Gymnastics (5)1997 20032000 20042001

Water Polo (6)2001 20062003 20072005 2008

Track & Field (3)1982 19832004

Golf (2)1991 2004

Tennis (1)2008

Indoor Track & Field (2)2000 2001

2004 at Athens1. United States 352. China 323. Russia 274. Australia 17T9.UCLA Athletes 8

2000 at Sydney1. United States 392. Russia 323. China 284. Australia 1612. UCLA Athletes 8

1996 at Atlanta1. United States 442. Russia 263. Germany 204. China 167. UCLA Athletes 12

1992 at Barcelona1. Unifi ed Team 452. United States 373. Germany 334. China 169. UCLA Athletes 8

1988 at Seoul1. Soviet Union 552. East Germany 373. United States 364. UCLA Athletes 175. South Korea 12

1984 at Los Angeles1. United States 832. Romania 203. UCLA Athletes 194. West Germany 17

UCLA LOGO STYLE SHEET

PANTONE 285 (BLUE) PANTONE 123 (GOLD)

BLACK

Additional NationalChampionships (21)

Women (13)Water Polo (4)1996 19981997 2000

AIAW TitlesBadminton (1)1977Basketball (1)1978Softball (1)1978Tennis (1)1981Track & Field (2)1975 1977Volleyball (3)1971 19751974

Men (8)Football (1)*1954

Volleyball (5)†1953 19651954 19671956

Crew (2)‡1972 1973

*UPI†USVBA‡IRA

Men (71)

UCLA - NO. 1 IN NATIONAL TITLES (124)

UCLA ATHLETICS - CHAMPIONS MADE HEREUCLA ATHLETICS - CHAMPIONS MADE HERE

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Women’s TennisNCAA Finish: 1st; Record: 24-5; Pac-10 Finish: T-1st

The UCLA women's tennis program captured its fi rst-ever NCAA Championship in 2008, defeating Pac-10 rival Cal, 4-0 in the fi nal at Tulsa's Michael D. Case Tennis Center. After winning the doubles point, the Bruins picked up singles wins from Alex McGoodwin, Andrea Remynse and Riza Zalameda. Zalameda, who was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, clinched the victory for UCLA with a 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 victory over Susie Babos at court No. 1. In addition to Zalameda, Remynse (No. 4 singles), McGoodwin and Yasmin Schnack (No. 3 doubles) also received all-tournament honors. Zalameda and partner Tracy Lin were named all-tournament at No. 1 doubles. The seventh-seeded Bruins, who had lost to Georgia Tech in the NCAA Final the year before, breezed through the 2008 tournament, dropping just two points in six matches. UCLA's six wins in the tournament were as follows: def. Buffalo, 4-0 (1st Rd.), def. Denver, 4-0 (2nd Rd.), def. USC, 4-0 (Rd. of 16), def. Arkansas, 4-0 (Quarterfi nals), def. Florida, 4-2 (Semifi nals), def. Cal, 4-0 (Final). The Bruins were led in 2008 by its four seniors Zalameda, Lin, McGoodwin and Elizabeth Lumpkin.

Women’s Water PoloNCAA Finish: 1st; Record: 33-0; MPSF Finish: 1st

The 2008 UCLA women's water polo team captured its fourth consecutive NCAA title, defeating crosstown rival USC, 6-3, in the championship match at Stanford's Avery Aquatic Center on Sunday, May 11. The Bruins' win capped a remarkable 33-0 season, a year in which UCLA was ranked as the No. 1 team in the national poll from start to fi nish. UCLA fi nished with an undefeated record and NCAA championship for the second time in four years - the Bruins' 2005 squad went 33-0 en route to defeating Stanford for the national title. In the 2008 championship match, junior Tanya Gandy paced the Bruins with two goals, as seniors Courtney Mathewson and Gabrielle Domanic, junior Anne Belden and freshman Priscilla Orozco each scored one goal. The Bruins raced to a 3-1 fi rst-quarter lead and registered a 5-1 halftime advantage. USC closed the gap to 5-2 by the end of the third quarter, and each team traded a goal in the fi nal quarter. Gandy earned NCAA Tournament Most Valuable Player honors, having scored three goals in UCLA's 11-4 win over UC Davis in the semifi nal contest before netting two goals in the championship match. The 6-3 victory over USC marked the fi nal game in a Bruins' uniform for UCLA's fi ve seniors - Kamaile Crowell, Gabrielle Domanic, Jillian Kraus, Courtney Mathewson and Brittany Rowe - all of whom helped lead the women's water polo program to NCAA titles in each of their four seasons at UCLA.

Men’s GolfNCAA Finish: 1st; Pac-10 Finish: 4th

On May 31, 2008, senior Kevin Chappell made a par on the 72nd hole to preserve UCLA's second NCAA title in men's golf. Chappell also won the individual title, becoming the fi rst UCLA golfer to capture NCAA medalist honors. On the 71st hole, Chappell chipped in from off the green to maintain UCLA's one-shot lead over second place Stanford, which had made a late charge in the fi nal round. Birdies at the 16th and 18th holes in the fi nal round by senior Craig Leslie proved crucial to the Bruins' title hopes, as well as key par saves on the fi nal holes by junior Erik Flores and freshman Philip Francis. The national championship was UCLA's third in May and its 103rd overall.

UCLA’S 2007-08 NCAA TEAM CHAMPIONSUCLA’S 2007-08 NCAA TEAM CHAMPIONS

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Donald G. Morrison is in his 15th year as UCLA’s Faculty Athletic Repre-sentative. Last year, he served as President of the Pacifi c-10 Conference, a role he also fi lled in 1997-98.

Morrison, a specialist in management science and marketing, is the William E. Leonhard Professor in the Anderson Graduate School of Management.

A 1961 graduate of M.I.T. with a B.S. in mechanical engineering, Morrison earned a Ph.D. in operations research at Stanford University in 1965. He joined the Columbia Business School faculty the following year as assis-tant professor, served as associate professor from 1968 and was named professor of business in 1973. He has also served as visiting professor at Stanford and at the University of California, Berkeley. He joined the UCLA faculty in 1987.

Over the past 40 years, Morrison has supervised the doctoral disserta-tions of a number of students who are now faculty members of other leading institutions. Many are now on key editorial boards and six have endowed chairs. Morrison was the founding editor of the professional journal, Marketing Science and was editor-in-chief of Management Science

Dr. Gene Block became chancellor of UCLA in summer 2007, taking the helm of a world-class institution comprising 37,500 students and 29,000 faculty and staff, with an annual budget of $3.8 billion. As chief executive offi cer, he oversees all aspects of the university’s three-part mission of education, research and service.

During his fi rst year at UCLA, Chancellor Block has called for the univer-sity to engage in campus-wide strategic planning, strengthen its civic engagement and increase diversity of the campus community.

A biologist, he holds faculty appointments in psychiatry and bio-behav-ioral sciences in the David Geffen School of Medicine and in physiological science in the College of Letters and Science. He also leads a research lab funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Dr. Block previously served as vice president and provost of the University of Virginia, where he held the Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Profes-sorship in Biology and headed an NIH graduate training program aimed

for eight years. He has served as departmental editor or editorial board member of several other professional journals.

In 2002, Morrison was awarded the highest honor in the American Marketing Association, when he was named the McGraw-Hill/ Irwin Distinguished Educator of the Year.

He is the author or co-author of over 90 articles, with a special emphasis on marketing research and applied statistics. He has been an expert witness as a statistician in a number of legal cases and a consultant to industrial fi rms and government agencies.

Morrison, who will be 69 on February 26, served as captain of the M.I.T. track team. In 1961, he was the Eastern Conference long jump champion and placed third in the long jump at the New England Championships.

Morrison’s wife Sherie is a professor in UCLA’s Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics department. Their daughters Heather Felix and Michelle Oliva earned their MBA degrees from the Anderson Graduate School of Management at UCLA. The Morrisons also have three grandsons, Parker Graham Felix, Spencer Andrew Felix and Jake Carmine Oliva.

at increasing the number of scientists from underrepresented groups. In 1998, he received the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Outstanding Public Service Award for his work with Virginia’s business community.

He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and has invented a number of devices. He holds a patent for a non-contact respiratory monitor for the prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.

A native of Monticello, N.Y., Chancellor Block holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Stanford University and a master’s and Ph.D. in psychol-ogy from the University of Oregon.

Dr. Block and his wife, Carol, have two adult children.

FACULTY ATHLETICS REPRESENTATIVEFACULTY ATHLETICS REPRESENTATIVE15TH YEAR :: MIT '6115TH YEAR :: MIT '61

BLOCKBLOCKCHANCELLORCHANCELLOR

SECOND YEAR :: STANFORD '70SECOND YEAR :: STANFORD '70

UCLA ADMINISTRATIONUCLA ADMINISTRATION

genegene

MORRISONMORRISONdondon

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UCLA is among the world's leading research universities, known for the breadth and quality of its academic, research, health care, cultural, continuing education and athletic programs. A shared public asset, UCLA enriches our neighborhoods, our nation and our world on a daily basis by creating knowledge, educating students, powering the economy and serving the community. Many of its 11 professional schools and academic departments and programs are ranked among the best in the nation. UCLA is a university with the size and scope to allow for unimagined diversity, unmatched breadth and depth of scholarship, and limitless possibility for its 26,000 undergraduates and 11,500 graduate students.

FACULTY, STUDENTS & ALUMNIFive UCLA faculty have been awarded Nobel Prizes — the two most recent are Louis Ignarro in medicine (1998) and biochemist Paul Boyer in chemistry (1997). Among faculty there have been nine National Medals of Science recipients, and hundreds of Guggenheim Fellowships, Fulbright Awards and other academic distinctions. UCLA educates more students than 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. Founded in 1934, the UCLA Alumni Association serves 87,000 members with a comprehensive array of services, programs and activities.

BOOKS & TECHNOLOGY The UCLA Library is ranked among the top ten academic research libraries in North America with holdings of more than eight million volumes as well as digital resources and services. From the birth of the Internet at UCLA in 1969, UCLA con-tinues to be a leader in resources for learning. UCLA is nationally recognized for developing ground-breaking computer services for undergraduates and was the fi rst university to have a Web site for every undergraduate student. The university provides an innovative, on-line tool called “My.ucla.edu,” which provides a Web page tailored to each student’s academic needs.

OUTREACH & COMMUNITY SERVICEFrom its founding, UCLA has been an integral and contributing part of the greater Los Angeles community. Outreach programs and volunteerism are as much a part of UCLA as academics and research, with hundreds of UCLA-sponsored programs providing a wide range of opportunities. Many of UCLA's undergraduates volunteer for these programs, including tutoring youths, adults and incarcerated youths; ad-dressing health and educational needs of underserved communities; combating poverty and homelessness; aiding the elderly and disabled; and providing legal, social, medical and educational assistance to community residents.

Through outreach and academic preparation programs, UCLA works with K-12 schools throughout Los Angeles to help greater numbers of students prepare to compete successfully for college. UCLA also is partnering with community colleges to increase the number of underrepresented students transferring to the university. Additionally, UCLA faculty, researchers and students provide leadership and public service in health care, law, economic development, social welfare, urban planning,

public policy, arts and the environment. Most academic departments have major research projects, fi eld studies or student internships that directly affect people’s lives in Los Angeles, the state and the nation.

HEALTH CARE UCLA Health System has been a leader in patient care, medical research and teaching for more than 50 years. Today, our physicians provide an array of cutting-edge and research-based primary and specialty services in four hospitals on two campuses, and in more than 75 clinic locations. Physicians provide specialty services in of-fi ces located on the Westwood campus and throughout Santa Monica Primary care physicians provide healthcare for children and adults in community offi ces from Manhattan Beach to Malibu. Patients from Southern California, the U.S. and around the globe enter our clinics more than one million times annually, and our hospitals, more than 80,000 times a year to be treated at the world-renowned Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and Orthopaedic Hospital, primary care offi ces and community outreach health programs. The four schools in the medical enterprise are medicine, dentistry, nurs-ing and public health. UCLA Medical Center has been ranked as one of the top hospitals in the country by U.S. News & World Report, including “Best in the West” for 18 consecutive years. A new state-of-the-art medical center, which includes UCLA Medical Center, Stewart and Lynda Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital and Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA, is under construction and is scheduled to open

in the summer of 2008. Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and Orthopaedic Hospital renovations are scheduled for comple-tion in phases beginning this year. Groundbreaking research is constantly taking place in the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, the Gonda (Goldschmied) Neuroscience and Genetics Research Center and in many other centers and laboratories on campus.

ARTSA diverse array of public arts programming makes UCLA the lead-ing arts and cultural center of the West. More than 500,000 people annually attend arts events including theater, music, opera and dance performances, lectures, poetry readings, exhibitions, fi lm screenings, and media arts that are presented by UCLA’s two professional arts schools. Check the web sites at www.arts.ucla.edu and www.tft.ucla.edu for more information.

LIFELONG LEARNING Another prime example of UCLA’s connecting with the com-munity is through UCLA Extension, one of the nation’s largest divisions of continuing higher education, offering more than 4,500 courses each year in diverse fi elds of study.

In addition, the university conducts guided walking tours and dis-tributes self-guided tour maps. For further information, call (310) 825-8764 or check out UCLA on the Web at www.ucla.edu.

Royce Hall

DeNeve Plaza

A LOOK AT UCLAA LOOK AT UCLA

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• The fi rst African-American to play major league baseball (April 15, 1947). Born Jan. 31, 1919 in Cairo, GA.• His widow Rachel, a UCLA alumna, founded the Jackie Robinson Foundation, which has funded college scholarships for deserving African-American students.• The fi rst four-sport letterman in UCLA history — football (1939 and 1940), basketball (1940 and 1941), track and fi eld (1940) and baseball (1940).

UCLA FOOTBALL• Led the nation in punt return average in both 1939 (16.5 yards) and 1940 (21.0 yards). His career average of 18.8 yards ranks fourth in NCAA history.• As a senior in 1940, he led UCLA in rushing (383 yards), passing (444 yards), total offense (827 yards), scoring (36 points) and punt returns (21.0 average). In his two-year career, he rushed for 954 yards (5.9 average) and passed for 449 yards.

UCLA BASKETBALL• Led the Southern Division of the Pacifi c Coast Conference in scoring in both 1940 (12.4 average in 12 league games) and 1941 (11.1 average in 12 league games).

UCLA TRACK & FIELD• Missed most of the 1940 season while playing with the Bruin baseball team but won the NCAA title in the broad jump (24-10 1/4) after winning the Pacifi c Coast Conference meet with a leap of 25-0.

UCLA BASEBALL• In 1940, batted just .097 during the California Intercollegiate Baseball Association season. In his fi rst game (March 10, 1940), he had four hits and stole four bases, including home once.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL• Played for the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1947 to 1957. • Selected National League Rookie of the Year in 1947 (the award is now named in his honor). • Selected National League Most Valuable Player in 1949.

POST-BASEBALL CAREER• Became Vice-President at Chock Full O’Nuts in 1957.• Served as a member of the national board of the National As-sociation for the Advancement of Colored People.• Selected UCLA “Alumnus of the Year” in 1962.• Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1962.• Was instrumental in the founding of the Freedom National Bank in Harlem, NY.• Became the fi rst African-American baseball commentator when hired by ABC-TV in 1965.• Passed away on Oct. 24, 1972 in Stamford, CT.• Selected as a charter member of UCLA’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1984.• Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Reagan in 1984.• His No. 42 was retired by Major League Baseball in 1997.• Awarded the Congressional Gold Medal by President Bush on March, 2 2005.

THE LEGEND OF UCLA'S JACKIE ROBINSONTHE LEGEND OF UCLA'S JACKIE ROBINSON

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Name Signifi cant Accomplishment(s)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar NCAA and NBA champion; College Player of the Year; Three-time Final Four Most Outstanding Player; NBA career scoring leader; Six-time NBA MVP; Member, Basketball Hall of Fame; AuthorVal Ackerman Vice-President, USA BasketballTroy Aikman Quarterback of three-time Super Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys; Television analyst (Fox); Inducted into Pro Football Hall of Fame in August of 2006 and into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008Linda Alvarez TV journalist and anchorwomanArmy Archerd Veteran entertainment columnist and broadcasterArthur R. Ashe, Jr. First African-American to win Wimbledon tennis title; Human rights activistSean Astin Actor, “Rudy” and “Lord of the Rings”Donald Barksdale First African-American Olympic basketball gold medalist Gary Beban 1967 Heisman Trophy winner; Senior Executive Managing Director of CB Richard EllisCatherine Bell Actress, Movies and Television show “Jag”; "Army Wives"Harve Bennett Writer/Producer/Director, notably of “Star Trek” fi lmsCorbin Bernsen Actor, most notably “L.A. Law”, “Major League” and “Major League Part II”Jack Black Actor, most notably ”School of Rock”Tom Bradley Former Mayor, City of Los AngelesRalph J. Bunche 1950 Nobel Peace Prize laureate; Former Under-Secretary General to the UNYvonne B. Burke L.A. County Board of SupervisorsCarol Burnett Actress, Emmy Award WinnerMark Canton Former Chair, Columbia and TriStar Pictures; President of Canton Company; Atmosphere EntertainmentCormac Carney UCLA football player; U. S. District Court Judge/Member; Academic All-America Hall of FameSylvia Chase Emmy Award-winning TV journalistFrancis Ford Coppola Six-time Academy Award-winning movie producer (The Godfather I, II, III)Walter Cunningham NASA Astronaut; Apollo VII crew memberMarilyn McCoo Davis Seven-time Grammy Award winner (Fifth Dimension), "Up, Up and Away"Donna de Varona Two-time Olympic Gold Medalist (swimming); Sports BroadcasterTerry Donahue Winningest football coach in Pac-10 and UCLA history; Sports Broadcaster; 2008 UCLA Alumnus of YearThomas Everhart President of CaltechLisa Fernandez Three-time Olympic Gold Medal winner in softball; UCLA assistant coach; Sports BroadcasterAnna Lee Fisher NASA astronaut-Discovery shuttleTroy Glaus 2002 World Series Most Valuable Player, now playing for St. Louis CardinalsMark Harmon Television/movie actor (NCIS, St. Elsewhere, numerous movies); UCLA football quarterbackRafer L. Johnson 1960 Olympic decathlon gold medalist; President, California Special Olympics; 1984 Olympic torchbearerJackie Joyner-Kersee Three-time Olympic track & fi eld gold medalist; BusinesswomanGary E. Knell President and CEO, Sesame WorkshopLester Korn Former U.S. Ambassador to the United NationsHeather Locklear Television/movie actress (Dynasty, Melrose Place, Spin City)James E. Lu Valle Inventor; chemist; 1936 Olympic medalistWaldo K. Lyon Director of the fi rst sub-Arctic North Pole voyage of the Polaris submarineFrank Marshall Academy Award-nominated movie producer (Sixth Sense, Back to the Future, Snow Falling on Cedars)R. Bruce Merrifi eld 1984 Nobel Laureate in ChemistryAnn Meyers Drysdale Member of Basketball Hall of Fame; Sports broadcaster; General Manager of WNBA's Phoenix franchiseRev. Donn Moomaw Football All-American; Former pastor, Bel-Air Presbyterian ChurchSteven Muller President emeritus, The Johns Hopkins University; Rhodes ScholarHisham Nazer Saudi Arabia’s former Minister of Petroleum and Mineral ResourcesDorothy Wright Nelson Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, 9th CircuitRandy Newman Academy Award-winning Composer/Singer, “I Love L.A.”Rob Reiner Actor/Director/Producer, actor in “All in the Family,” producer of “American President,” director of “A Few Good Men”, "Bucket List"Gene Reynolds Six-time Emmy-winning Producer/Director ”M*A*S*H”Tim Robbins Academy Award-winning Actor/Producer/Director, produced “Dead Man Walking,” acted in “Mystic River“Jackie Robinson UCLA’s only four-sport letterman; First African-American to play Major League Baseball; Former Los Angeles Dodgers great; Hall of FamerNobutada Saji President, Suntory, Ltd.Henry Samueli Co-Founder and Chairman of the Board, Broadcom; Owner of the NHL's Anaheim DucksWilliam Sharpe Co-recipient of 1990 Nobel Prize in EconomicsDarren Star Producer of television shows “Sex And The City” , “Melrose Place”, "Beverly Hills 90210"Ted Stevens U.S. Senator from Alaska; 2004 UCLA Alumnus of the YearRobert R. Takasugi Judge, U.S. District Court; First Japanese-American Federal Court JudgeGeorge Takei Actor, most notably as Mr. Sulu in “Star Trek”Kiana Tom ESPN fi tness show expert/Actress/ModelTritia Toyota Television newscaster, KCBS 2 Los AngelesGabrielle Union Actress, appeared in “Bad Boys II,“ “Love & Basketball,“ “Bring It On“, "Ugly Betty"Antonio Villaraigosa Mayor of Los AngelesBill Walton NCAA and NBA champion; College Player of the Year; Television analyst; Member, Basketball Hall of FameMalcolm-Jamal Warner Emmy Award nominated actor/director, most notably “Cosby Show,“ and “Listen Up“Michael Warren Actor, notably “Hill Street Blues” and “City of Angels;” Basketball All-AmericanKenny Washington Football All-American; First African-American to play in NFLCasey Wasserman Owner, Los Angeles Avengers of Arena Football League and Wasserman Marketing GroupDiane Watson U.S. CongresswomanFred L. Whipple Astronomer; Director, NASA Optical Satellite Tracking ProjectJaleel White Actor (Urkel in “Family Matters“)Natalie Williams Pac-10 Female Athlete of the Decade in basketball and volleyball; Olympic gold medalistJohn Williams 27-time Emmy, Grammy, Academy Award-winning composer (“Star Wars”, "Indiana Jones")Jane Yamamoto Television newscaster, Fox 11 Los AngelesZev Yaroslavsky Los Angeles County Supervisor, District 3

Rob Reiner, Movie Producer/Actor

Rafer Johnson, President ,California Special Olympics

Mark Harmon, Actor and former football player

Catherine Bell, Actress

Casey Wasserman, Owner, Los Angeles Avengers

Heather Locklear, Actress

UCLA'S FABULOUS ALUMNIUCLA'S FABULOUS ALUMNI

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UCLA athletes have appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated 114 times, the highest total of any school in the country, and at least once in 45 of the last 47 years. Here is the complete list:

1. Rafer Johnson (Jan. 5, 1959)

2. Gary Cunningham (Mar. 19, 1962)

3. C.K. Yang (Dec. 23, 1963)

4. Walt Hazzard (Mar. 30, 1964)

5. Gail Goodrich (Mar. 29, 1965)

6. Doug McIntosh (Dec. 6, 1965)

7. Arthur Ashe (Aug. 29, 1966)

8. Gary Beban (Sept. 19, 1966)

9. Lew Alcindor (Dec. 5, 1966)

10. Lew Alcindor (Apr. 3, 1967)

11. Gary Beban (Nov. 19, 1967)

12. Lew Alcindor (Jan. 29, 1968)

13. Lew Alcindor (Apr. 1, 1968)

14. Lew Alcindor (Mar. 31, 1969)

15. Lew Alcindor (Oct. 27, 1969)

16. Lew Alcindor (Mar. 9, 1970)

17. John Vallely (Mar. 16, 1970)

18. Sidney Wicks (Mar. 30, 1970)

19. Lew Alcindor (Apr. 27, 1970)

20. Sidney Wicks (Nov. 30, 1970)

21. Lew Alcindor (Feb. 8, 1971)

22. Steve Patterson (Apr. 5, 1971)

23. Lew Alcindor (Apr. 19, 1971)

24. James McAlister (May 17, 1971)

25. Gail Goodrich (Dec. 13, 1971)

26. Bill Walton (Mar. 7, 1972)

27. Bill Walton (Apr. 3, 1972)

28. Lew Alcindor (Apr. 24, 1972)

29. Tommy Prothro (July 24, 1972)

30. John Wooden (Dec. 25, 1972)

31. Bill Walton (Feb. 5, 1973)

32. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Feb. 19, 1973)

33. Bill Walton (Mar. 26, 1973)

34. Bill Walton (Dec. 10, 1973)

35. Bill Walton (Feb. 25, 1974)

36. Jimmy Connors (Mar. 4, 1974)

37. Bill Walton (Mar. 25, 1974)

38. Bill Walton (Apr. 1, 1974)

39. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (May 20, 1974)

40. Jimmy Connors (July 15, 1974)

41. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and

Bill Walton (Oct. 14, 1974)

42. David Meyers (Feb. 17, 1975)

43. Jimmy Connors (May 5, 1975)

44. Arthur Ashe (July 14, 1975)

45. Dwight Stones (June 14, 1976)

46. Shirley Babashoff (July 19, 1976)

47. Jimmy Connors (Sept. 20, 1976)

48. Bill Walton (Dec. 23, 1976)

49. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Feb. 14, 1977)

50. Sidney Wicks (Apr. 25, 1977)

51. Bill Walton and

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (May 27, 1977)

52. Bill Walton (June 13, 1977)

53. Bill Walton (Aug. 21, 1978)

54. Jimmy Connors (Sept. 18, 1978)

55. Bill Walton (Oct. 15, 1979)

56. Darren Daye (Mar. 31, 1980)

57. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (May 5, 1980)

58. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Dec. 15, 1980)

59. Wendell Tyler (Aug. 24, 1981)

60. Jimmy Connors (July 12, 1982)

61. Jimmy Connors (Sept. 20, 1982)

62. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (May 9, 1983)

63. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Feb. 1984)

64. Dwight Stones (July 2, 1984)

65. Rafer Johnson (Aug. 6, 1984)

66. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (June 10, 1985)

67. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (June 17, 1985)

68. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Dec. 23, 1985)

69. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (May 26, 1986)

70. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (June 22, 1987)

71. Jackie Joyner-Kersee (Sept. 14, 1987)

72. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Apr. 18, 1988)

73. Florence Griffi th Joyner (July 25, 1988)

74. Jackie Joyner-Kersee and

Florence Griffi th Joyner (Oct. 10, 1988)

75. Florence Griffi th Joyner (Dec. 26, 1988)

76. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Jan. 23, 1989)

77. Troy Aikman (Aug. 29, 1989)

78. Troy Aikman (Aug. 27, 1990)

79. Mike Powell (Sept. 9, 1991)

80. Jimmy Connors (Sept. 16, 1991)

81. Jay Schroeder (Dec. 16, 1991)

82. Jackie Joyner-Kersee (July 22, 1992)

83. Gail Devers (Aug. 10, 1992)

84. Arthur Ashe (Dec. 21, 1992)

85. Troy Aikman (Feb. 8, 1993)

86. Arthur Ashe (Feb. 15, 1993)

87. Troy Aikman (1993 Year in Pictures)

88. Troy Aikman (Aug. 1, 1994)

89. Troy Aikman (Jan. 16, 1995)

90. Ed O’Bannon (Apr. 10, 1995)

91. Tyus Edney (April 1995)

(UCLA Commemorative Issue)

92. Steve Bono (Sept. 2, 1996)

93. Cameron Dollar (Basketball Issue)

94. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Nov. 11, 1996)

95. Jackie Robinson (May 5, 1997)

96. Joy Fawcett (Dec. 20, 1999)

97. Baron Davis (May 21, 2001)

98. Troy Glaus (November 2002)

(Angels Commemorative Issue)

99. Dan Guerrero (May 5, 2003)

100. John Wooden (March 22, 2004)

101. U.S. Olympic Softball Team (Aug. 30, 2004)

102. 50th Anniversary Edition (Sept. 27, 2004)

103. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Dec. 27, 2004)

104. NCAA Basketball Preview (Mar. 21, 2005)

105. NCAA Basketball Preview (Mar. 20, 2006)

106. Troy Aikman (Pro Football Hall of Fame

Commemorative Issue) (August 2006)

107. Chase Utley (Aug. 14, 2006)

108. Jonathan Ogden (Sept. 25, 2006)

109. Faces in The Crowd (Dec. 15, 2006)

110. NCAA Basketball Preview (Mar. 19, 2007)

111. Kevin Love (Nov. 19, 2007)

112. Kevin Love (Mar. 24, 2008)

113. Kevin Love (Mar. 31, 2008)

114. Kevin Love (Apr. 7, 2008)

UCLA'S SPORTS ILLUSTRATED COVERSUCLA'S SPORTS ILLUSTRATED COVERS

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GENERAL INFORMATIONGENERAL INFORMATION

The UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame enters its 25th year of its existence and its eighth in a new location facing Westwood Plaza. The new Hall of Fame, double the size of its predecessor, opened in July of 2001.

The fi rst fl oor in the east wing of the J.D. Morgan Athletics Center features the 8,000-square foot Athletics Hall of Fame and serves as the main entrance to the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.

The Hall of Fame features state-of-the-art interactive displays; a mini-theater where Bruin video clips and highlights re-create past championship moments; a timeline of important U.S., California and UCLA dates showing how sports weave into the great moments in history; a collection of Bruin memorabilia and much more.

UCLA athletic teams have won 103 NCAA team championships and each of those fi rst-place trophies grace the Hall of Champions. Other exhibits include photos of UCLA’s fi rst-team All-Americans in football and basketball, Gary Beban’s Heisman Trophy, Wooden Awards won by Marques Johnson and Ed O’Bannon and a special display highlighting all of UCLA’s Honda and Broderick Cup winners. Displays on UCLA’s football bowl victories, the Bruins’ NCAA basketball tradition and UCLA’s Olympic Games medal winners are featured in the new Hall of Fame.

Each of UCLA’s sports has its own individual display area within the Hall of Fame. In addition, there are displays honoring Jackie Robinson, UCLA’s Academic All-Americans and women in sports. There are also sample lockers of former Bruin greats in various sports.

In connection with the building, which originally opened in November of 1983, UCLA established a Hall of Fame with 25 charter members representing a cross-section of the school’s athletic history. Each year, a minimum of one and a maximum of eight former UCLA athletes, coaches or administrators are added to the Hall of Fame. Following is a list of the members, including the eight members who will be inducted during the 2008 football season:

1984 (25 charter members): Bill Ackerman, athletic di-rector; Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), basketball; Arthur Ashe, tennis; Gary Beban, football; Mike Burton, swimming; Paul Cameron, football; Chris Chambliss, baseball; Elvin ‘Ducky’ Drake, track coach and trainer; Gail Goodrich, basketball; Walt Hazzard (Mahdi Abdul-Rahman), basketball; Cecil Hol-lingsworth, football scout and gymnastics and wrestling coach; Rafer Johnson, track; Kirk Kilgour, volleyball; Billy Kilmer, football; Donn Moomaw, football; J.D. Morgan, athletic director and tennis coach; Jackie Robinson, football, baseball, basketball and track; Henry ‘Red’ Sanders, football coach; Al Sparlis, football; Bill Spaulding, football coach; Bill Walton, basketball; Kenny Washington, football; Bob Waterfi eld, football; Keith (Jamaal) Wilkes, basketball; and John Wooden, basketball coach.

1985 (6): Bob Davenport, football; Craig Dixon, track; Wilbur Johns, athletic director/basketball coach; Tommy Prothro, football coach; George Stanich, basketball/track; and Sidney Wicks, basketball.

1986 (8): Kermit Alexander, football; Burr Baldwin, football; Keith Erickson, basketball; Mike Frankovich, football; Jimmy LuValle, track; Willie Naulls, basketball; Jerry Norman, basketball player and assistant coach; and Don Paul, football.

1987 (8): Don Barksdale, basketball; George Dickerson, football; Jack Ellena, football; Bert LaBrucherie, football; Dick Linthicum, basketball; Jim Salsbury, football; John Smith, track; Jack Tidball, tennis.

1988 (6): Sam Balter, basketball; Mel Farr Sr., football; Robert Fischer, athletic direc-tor; Marques Johnson, basketball; Ann Meyers (fi rst woman inductee), basketball; and C.K. Yang, track.

1989 (7): Pete Dailey, football; Tom Fears, football; Vic Kelley, sports information director, Carl McBain, track; Karen Moe-Thornton, swimming; Ernie Suwara, vol-leyball; and Pat Turner, track.

1990 (7): Evelyn Ashford, track; Dr. Bobby Brown, baseball; Stan Cole, water polo; Denny Crum, basketball; Norm Duncan, football/administration; Mike Marienthal, football/special service; Mike Warren, basketball.

1991 (7): Willie Banks, track; Kenny Easley, football; Brian Goodell, swimming; Briggs Hunt, wrestling; Tim Leary, baseball; Jerry Robinson, football; Sinjin Smith, volleyball.

1992 (9): Wayne Collett, track; Terry Condon, volleyball; Jim Johnson, football; Robin Leamy, swimming; Freeman McNeil, football; Dave Meyers, basketball; Jack Myers, baseball; Corey Pavin, golf; Woody Strode, football.

1993 (8): Sue Enquist, softball; Greg Foster, track; Maurice (Mac) Goodstein, football;

Karch Kiraly, volleyball; Jose Lopez, soccer; Don Manning, football; Bill Putnam, basketball; Curtis Rowe, basketball.

1994 (7): Donald Bragg, basketball; Denise Curry, basketball; John Richardson, football; Larry Rundle, volleyball; John Sciarra, football; Kiki Vandeweghe, basketball; Peter Vidmar, gymnastics.

1995 (8): Jimmy Connors, tennis; Debbie Doom, softball; Mitch Gaylord, gymnastics; Ricci Luyties, volleyball; Stephen Pate, golf; John Peterson, football/track; Jerry Shipkey, football; Mike Tully, track.

1996 (7): Bill Barrett, swimming; Jackie Joyner-Kersee, track/basketball; Liz Ma-sakayan, volleyball; Eddie Merrins, golf coach; Dot Richardson, softball; Skip Rowland, football; Dick Wallen, football.

1997 (8): Jim Bush, track coach; Paul Caligiuri, soccer; Tim Daggett, gymnastics; David Greenwood, basketball; Frank Lubin, basketball; Doug Partie, volleyball; Cal Rossi, football/baseball; Charles Young, chancellor.

1998 (12): Glenn Bassett, tennis coach; Sheila Cornell, softball; Randy Cross, football; Gaston Green, football; Florence Griffi th-Joyner, track; Tom Jager, swimming; Eric Karros, baseball; Reggie Miller, basketball; Ken Norton Jr., football; Tom Ramsey, football; Art Reichle, baseball coach; Cy Young, track.

1999 (12): Troy Aikman, football; Sam Boghosian, football; Kay Cockerill, golf; Tracy Compton, softball; Denise Corlett, volleyball/basketball; Dave Dalby, football; Gail Devers, track; Bob Horn, water polo; Ernie Johnson, football; Torey Lovullo, baseball; Sharon Shapiro, gymnastics; Kevin Young, track.

2000 (10): Lucius Allen, basketball; Jeanne Beauprey-Reeves, volleyball; John Brenner, track and fi eld; George Farmer, football; Kim Hamilton, gymnastics; Carnell Lake, football; Billie Moore, basketball; Steve Salmons, volleyball; Eddie Sheldrake, basketball; Dick Vermeil, football.

2001 (11): Jill Andrews, gymnastics; Sharron Backus, softball; Jim Brown, football; Charles Cheshire, football; Gary Cunningham, basketball; Terry Donahue, football; Warren Edmonson, track and fi eld; John Green, basketball; John Lee, football; Lisa Longaker, softball; Asbjorn Volstad, volleyball.

2002 (9): Denny Cline, volleyball; Bob Day, track and fi eld; Cobi Jones, soccer; Don MacLean, basketball; Shane Mack, baseball; Ted Narleski, football; Anita Ortega, basketball; Duffy Waldorf, golf; Russell Webb, water polo/swimming.

2003 (8): Danny Everett, track and fi eld; Lisa Fernandez, softball; Brad Friedel, soc-cer; Ryan McGuire, baseball; Jerome “Pooh” Richardson, basketball; Don Rogers, football; Al Scates, volleyball; Tim Wrightman, football.

2004 (8): Henry Bibby, basketball; Dennis Dummit, football; Carlton Gray, football; Steve Lewis, track and fi eld; James Owens, football/track and fi eld; Sigi Schmid, soccer; Fred Slaughter, basketball; Natalie Williams, basketball/volleyball.

2005 (8): Hardiman Cureton, football; Dawn Dumble, track and fi eld; Allen Fox, tennis; John Godina, track and fi eld; Ed O'Bannon, basketball; Mike O'Hara, volleyball; Art Shurlock, gymnastics; Kenny Washington, basketball.

2006 (8): Carol Bower, rowing; Herb Flam, tennis; Monte Nitzkowski, swimming/water polo; Jonathan Ogden, football/track and fi eld; Annette Salmeen, swimming; Dennis Storer, soccer/rugby; John Vallely, basketball; Elaine Youngs, volleyball.

2007 (8): Amy Acuff, track and fi eld; George Brown, track and fi eld; Jennifer Brund-age, softball; Jim Ferguson, water polo; Troy Glaus, baseball; John Moore, basketball; Jeff Nygaard, volleyball; Keri Phebus, tennis.

Kenny Easley

John Wooden

Karch Kiraly

The 2008 INDUCTEES

Traci Arkenberg, soccer

Peter Dalis, athletic director

Leah Homma, gymnastics

Kurt Krumpholz, water polo/swimming

Robert Seaman, track and fi eld

Jackie Tobian-Steinmann, golf

Eric Turner, football

Todd Zeile, baseball

Jonathan Ogden

UCLA ATHLETICS HALL OF FAMEUCLA ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME

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UCLA FOOTBALL - THEN ... NOW ... FOREVER

The nation’s most famous college football stadium — The Rose Bowl — is now in its 27th season as the home of the UCLA Bruin football team. One of the fi nest football stadiums in America, the Rose Bowl was built specifi cally for football, but was used for portions of the 1932 Olympic Games and was also the soccer site for the 1984 Olympics. The Rose Bowl has also been the site of four Super Bowls, most recently Super Bowl XXVII on January 31, 1993, and was a venue for the 1994 World Cup and 1999 Women’s World Cup soccer tournaments, including the championship games.

On January 4, 2006, the Rose Bowl hosted the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) National Championship football game for the second time with Texas beating USC to win the title. On January 3, 2002, Miami won the BCS National Championship by defeating Nebraska at the Rose Bowl.

Last season, UCLA and its opponents dressed in new state-of-the-art locker rooms. Located underneath the south concourse of the stadium, the locker area features all of the latest amenities to benefi t the players, coaches, sports medicine staff and equipment staff. There is also a new media interview room and working area. These items were the fi rst step in a $16.3 million capital improvement program launched by the Rose Bowl and the City of Pasadena last summer that will benefi t both UCLA and the Tournament of Roses.

In 1998, new individual chairs were installed in the seating areas between the end zones as part of a plan to bring the Rose Bowl into the 21st Century as America’s

premier college football stadium. Also, improved seating areas for the physically challenged have been installed, as has a new sound system. In 1997, a state-of-the-art video board, as well as new matrix-style scoreboards, were added to the the Rose Bowl. In the last few years, new concession stands and restrooms have been built and the team dressing rooms have been renovated.

Prior to the 1992 season, the Rose Bowl built a new three-level press box. In addi-tion to modern facilities for the print and electronic media, the new press box has two levels of executive and club suites, some of which are still available for lease. Three elevators service this state-of-the-art facility. In addition, the Rose Bowl also received a new state-of-the art lighting system prior to the 1992 season, including new lights, fi xtures and towers.

Completed in 1922, the Rose Bowl was fi rst used for the USC-California game that year. The stadium was horseshoe shaped and seated 57,000 persons when it hosted the 1923 Rose Bowl Game. The south end was enclosed prior to the 1929 game and enlarged to seat 76,000 spectators. Demands for more and more seats led to further enlargements; to 83,677 in 1932 and to 100,807 in 1949.

With the new seating confi guration, the current seating capacity is 91,136, though a record 106,869 witnessed the 1973 USC-Ohio State Rose Bowl contest.

In conjunction with UCLA’s move in 1982 and the Olympics, a Rose Bowl improve-ment program resulted in the refurbishing of the press box, adding permanent concession stands and backs for more than 50,000 seats. In recent years, all of those areas have enjoyed additional enhancements.

The Rose Bowl has many fi rsts to its record. On Jan. 1, 1927, radio stations across the nation were linked together for the fi rst time in a coast-to-coast broadcast. On Jan. 1, 1954, the UCLA-Michigan State Rose Bowl Game was the fi rst west-to-east color telecast on a nationwide hookup.

The Rose Bowl has 77 rows of seats. It measures 880 feet from the north to south rims and 695 from east to west. Its circumference around the rim is 2,430 feet, compared to 1,350 feet at fi eld level. It took 28 miles of lumber to provide the original seats. There are 79,156 square feet of natural grass on the fl oor of the stadium.

UCLA’s Rose Bowl Record Rose Bowl Road Year Record Record1982 *6-0-1 4-1-01983 *3-1-1 4-3-01984 4-3-0 5-0-01985 *5-0-0 4-2-11986 4-2-0 4-1-11987 6-0-0 4-2-01988 5-2-0 5-0-01989 2-4-0 1-3-11990 3-3-0 2-3-01991 4-1-0 5-2-01992 4-2-0 2-3-01993 *3-4-0 5-0-01994 4-2-0 1-4-01995 4-2-0 3-3-0

Rose Bowl RoadYear Record Record 1996 3-2-0 2-4-01997 5-1-0 5-1-01998 *5-1-0 5-1-01999 4-2-0 0-5-02000 5-2-0 1-4-02001 4-1-0 3-3-02002 2-4-0 6-1-02003 5-1-0 1-6-02004 3-3-0 3-3-02005 6-0-0 4-2-02006 6-1-0 1-5-02007 4-2-0 2-5-0Totals 109-46-2 82-67-3* Includes Rose Bowl contest

At Home with the Bruins: UCLA played its home games at Moore Field from 1919-1928 with the following exceptions: 1919, Los Angeles JC at Los Angeles High; 1926, Occidental and Iowa State at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum; 1927, Occidental, Pomona and Drake at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum; 1928, Pomona and Oregon at the Los Angeles Coliseum. UCLA played all of its home games from the 1929 through 1981 seasons at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum with the following exceptions: 1929, Fresno State at Westwood; 1933, Los Angeles JC and San Diego State at Westwood; 1934, Pomona and San Diego State at Westwood. The Bruins moved to the Rose Bowl prior to the 1982 season.

ROSE BOWL: HOME OF THE BRUINSROSE BOWL: HOME OF THE BRUINS

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The UCLA Athletics Campaign has endowed 204 of the 282 NCAA allowable athletic grants-in-aid. UCLA Athletics expresses its sincere gratitude to the individuals listed for their support in the continuing effort to distinguish UCLA as the nation’s premier academic and athletics institution.

An endowment generates income to the University in perpetuity. By investing the gift principal and using just the interest earned to help meet the cost of a grant-in-aid assures the Athletic Department of on-going funds to maintain the quality and diversity of its program.

Currently, UCLA provides fi nancial assistance to over 400 student-athletes participating in 24 intercollegiate sports. However, expenses such as the cost of tuition for student-athletes have increased dramatically in the last several years while department revenues have remained relatively stable.

Tax-deductible gifts to the Wooden Athletic Fund play a pivotal role in meeting the escalat-ing costs of team travel, recruiting, equipment replacement and, most importantly, in provid-ing athletic scholarships. Now more than ever, private support is necessary if UCLA is to main-tain its position as the best athletic program in the country. Your help is truly needed and greatly appreciated.

To encourage private support of our program, the best football and basketball tickets are al-located to our most generous donors. Members

of the Wooden Athletic Fund receive priority in the assignment of tickets for home contests in the Rose Bowl and in Pauley Pavilion in accordance with the UCLA Priority Seating Policy. Please refer to the donor benefi ts chart to determine season ticket opportuni-ties. In many cases, special reserved parking is also available for our donors.

If you have any questions regarding the Wooden Athletic Fund or the benefits members receive, please contact the Athletic Development Offi ce at 310/206-3302.

GRANT-IN-AID DONORSGRANT-IN-AID DONORSFOOTBALLEdgardo & Francesca

AcostaTroy & Rhonda AikmanJohn & Catherine AllenBill & Kathleen BittingBill & Peggy Bloomfi eldTerry & Dora BrighamTom & Arabelle BrownIn memory of Bob

CampbellEstate of John CanadayJim & Carol CollinsRonald Conway FamilyAllan & Carey CooperJim DevereBernie & Virginia DienerWarren & Pat DodsonBen & Pat DolsonTerry & Andrea DonahueDick & Lita DulgarianRudy & Joanne FeldmanFinestone & RichterRobert GeddesRose GilbertJohn & Carlin GlucksmanKristene Griffi nPaul & Gloria Griffi nJohn & Linda GunnJudd & Jeannette HenkesEd & Merle HollywoodJohn D. & Betty Howard

FamilyChris and Leslie JohnsonKen KaplanPeter & Patti KranskeJoe Lange & Marina

RussmanBob LeonardRandall & Janell LewisRobert F. Lewis & FamilyArt & Lindsey LombardiJerry & Dorothy LongTony & Geri LongoMichael B. and Lana

Luftman

Darrel & Geri MayesAngelo MazzoneCarl & Bette McBainJohn MorrisViolet Mugler (In memory

of Charles Mugler)Matsue MuranakaJohn & James PagliusoHoyt PardeeJames & Beverly PetersCarl PetersonJohn & Marolyn PetersonIn memory of Brett PurdyGregory G. Turk for the Purdy & Turk FamiliesStephen & Janet RogersLen & Joanne RothJ. Patrick RothsteinSanbo & Kay SakaguchiLeonard & Cornelia SaubleJim & Susan StanleyGreg TaylorTommy & Erile ThompsonRuss & Char TorreyIn memory of Joe Val-

entineDick & Carol VermeilBob & Marion WilsonChuck & Annie WinnerMEN'S BASKETBALLJohn & Catherine AllenJohn Branca FamilyBuddy & Linda EpsteinLarry EricksonRose Gilbert (In memory

of Sam Gilbert)Jim & Sally HarrickKen & Di KaplanNahum & Alice LainerJohn MorrisWillie & Anne NaullsPooh RichardsonArt & Shelly RosenblumRalph & Shirley Shapiro (In

honor of Sidney Wicks)James & Sylvia Thayer

Tony & Sharon ThompsonGeorge & Liz VulichIn memory of Nell

WoodenTeam Endowment

Carroll W. AdamsSteven AntebiTom & Arabelle BrownMark CantonAllan B. Cooper (In

memory of Harold Cooper)

Bernie & Virginia Diener

Eric Flamholtz & Yvonne Randle

Dick & Tricia GreyJudd & Jeannette

HenkesBruin HoopstersRob KahaneJack & Phyllis KingDavid A. NeumanJames M. PetersFrank PrittJay & Maria RappaportIrv & Phyllis RyderJim ShirleyBill and Mary Lou

SteinmetzTeam Managers FundChuck & Annie WinnerBilly WooJackie Wright

WOMEN'S BASKETBALLEvelyn and Eleanor Lloyd

DeesParker & Spencer FelixRose GilbertStephen & Ann GoldbergBette McBainKirk Pasich & Pamela

WoodsChristopher, Kelly &

Connor Pasich

MEN'S TENNISGlenn BassettBob Garrow FamilyLarry Greiner FamilyJoel Hein MemorialJay JacksonSteven & Ellen JacksonWilliam Martin MemorialMEN'S TRACK & FIELDJim & Carol CollinsEstate of Ducky DrakeCarl & Bette McBainOliva FamilyWOMEN'S TRACK &

FIELDVictoria Cook ChapusBASEBALLGene and Jackie AutryJames E. Brakebill

MemorialJim DevereRick & Karen GanulinHarrold & Roslyn Ganulin

MemorialJack GiffordDennis GilbertMary Jo Greenberg (In

memory of Hank Greenberg)

Wayne & Dixie HardingTracy Gifford Jones &

Cameron JonesEric KarrosTim LearyShane MackJeffrey S. MooradArn & Nancy TellemDavid WeinerTeam Endowment

Parents’ Fund10th Player Fund

SOFTBALLMichele Aguilar Carlin

MEN'S SOCCERFrank and Kathleen

MarshallDan TanaMEN'S WATER POLOArpad & Katherine

DomyanIrving & Betty WebbMEN'S GOLFRobert Bergman Memo-

rialFriends of College Golf

honoring:Eddie MerrinsByron NelsonGreg NormanArnold PalmerLee Trevino

Jack KellerWOMEN'S WATER POLOTed and Jennifer

WeggelandWOMEN'S GYMNASTICSEvelyn DeesCarl & Bette McBainDonald R. ShepherdWOMEN'S VOLLEYBALLTerence LimMEN'S VOLLEYBALLCharles Jackson FamilyJames MontgomeryAl Scates

Marty ShapiroTupac & MoyThe Von Hagen FamilyWOMEN'S SOCCERArthur Levine & Lauren

LeichtmanShirley & Ralph ShapiroWOMEN'S TENNISGayle Godwin & Bill ZaimaRonald MarksIn Memory of David MayJohn MorrisMurray & Lenore NeidorfPete SamprasThe Sutton SistersWOMEN'S GOLFBette McBainJackie SteinmannWOMEN'S ROWINGLouise & Tom Jones

FamilyIn Honor of Amy FullerOTHER ENDOWMENTSBruin Boosters for

Women’s Sports/Dr. Judith R. Holland

James DevereEstate of Lucille MossHenry & Dee Stickney

*Through May 9, 2008

WOODEN ATHLETIC FUND/ATHLETIC ENDOWMENTWOODEN ATHLETIC FUND/ATHLETIC ENDOWMENT

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PAC-10 NCAA WOMEN'S TEAM TITLES BY SCHOOLStanford (1) 37UCLA (2) 32USC 13Arizona 12Arizona State 10Washington 4Oregon 3California 3Note: Number in parentheses is national rank.

PAC-10 NCAA MEN'S TEAM TITLES BY SCHOOLUSC (1) 73UCLA (2) 71Stanford (3) 58California 24Arizona State 11Oregon 11Arizona 6Oregon State 3Washington State 2

PAC-10 NCAA MEN'S TEAM TITLES BY SPORTBaseball 26Basketball 15Boxing 1Cross Country 10Golf 14Gymnastics 11Soccer 4Swimming 21Tennis 49Indoor Track 4Outdoor Track 45Volleyball 24Water Polo 34Wrestling 1

PAC-10 NCAA WOMEN'S TEAM TITLES BY SPORTBasketball 4Cross Country 7Golf 12Gymnastics 5Indoor Track 3Rowing 5Soccer 1Softball 20Swimming 10Tennis 18Indoor Track 1Outdoor Track 6Volleyball 13Water Polo 8

NCAA TEAM TITLES BY SCHOOL (COMBINED)UCLA 103Stanford 95USC 86Oklahoma State 48Arkansas 43LSU 42Texas 39 Penn State 34North Carolina 33Michigan 32

Entering the 2008-09 season, the Pacifi c-10 Conference continues to uphold its tradition as the "Conference of Champions."® Pac-10 members have claimed an incredible 159 NCAA team titles over the past 18 seasons, for an average of almost nine championships per academic year.

Even more impressive is the breadth of the Pac-10’s success, as those 159 team titles have come in 26 different men’s and women’s sports. The Pac-10 has led the nation in NCAA Championships 42 of the last 48 years and fi nished second fi ve times.

Spanning nearly a century of outstanding athletics achievement, the Pac-10 has captured 371 NCAA titles (259 men’s, 112 women’s), far outdistancing the runner-up Big Ten Conference's 217 titles.

The Conference’s reputation is further proven in the annual United States Sports Academy Directors’ Cup competi-tion, the prestigious award that honors the best overall collegiate athletics programs in the country. STANFORD won the Directors’ Cup and UCLA placed second. Other Pac-10 schools in the Top 10 included ARIZONA STATE and CALIFORNIA.

The Pac-10 captured 13 NCAA titles in 2007-08 to fi nish fi rst nationally, one shy of the all-time record for a single conference (Pac-10 in 1996-97). NCAA team champions from the Pac-10 came from UCLA (women’s water polo, women’s tennis and men’s golf ), ARIZONA STATE (men’s indoor track and fi eld, women’s indoor track and fi eld and softball), ARIZONA (men’s swimming and diving and women’s swimming and diving), USC (women’s soccer and women’s golf ), CALIFORNIA (men’s water polo), OREGON (men’s cross country) and STANFORD (women’s cross country).

The Pac-10 experienced continued success in football as the league sent six teams to bowl games -- UCLA, USC, CALIFORNIA, ARIZONA STATE, CALIFORNIA, OREGON and OREGON STATE.

The Pac-10 was the premier basketball conference this season, as it sent six teams to the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship. UCLA advanced to the Final Four for the third straight year. The Bruins captured the Pac-10 regular season championship and the Pacifi c Life Pac-10 Tournament crown. On the women's side, three teams competed in the NCAA Tournament with STANFORD reaching the championship game.

The Conference swept NCAA men’s and women’s water polo honors. CALIFORNIA captured the men’s title (second straight), while UCLA garnered the women’s hardware (fourth straight). ARIZONA STATE claimed both the men’s and women’s indoor track & fi eld NCAA titles and the softball crown. USC claimed the Pac-10’s fi rst women’s soccer title and also won in women’s golf while ARIZONA clained both the men’s and women’s swimming and diving crowns. The league also swept cross country honors with OREGON winning the men’s title and STANFORD winning its third consecutive women’s crown.

On the men's side, Pac-10 members have won 259 NCAA team championships, far ahead of the the 198 claimed by the runner-up Big Ten. Men's NCAA crowns have come at a phenomenal rate for the Pac-10 - 15 basketball titles by fi ve schools (more than any other conference), 49 tennis titles, 45 outdoor track and fi eld crowns and 26 baseball titles. Pac-10 members have won 25 of the 39 NCAA titles in volleyball, 34 of the 39 in water polo, and 21 total swimming and diving national championships.

On the women's side, the story is much the same. Since the NCAA began conducting women's championships 27 years ago, Pac-10 members have claimed at least four national titles in a single season on 19 occasions. Overall, the Pac-10 has captured 112 NCAA women's crowns, easily outdistancing the SEC, which is second with 73. Pac-10 members have dominated a number of sports, winning 20 softball titles, 18 tennis crowns, 11 of the last 18 volleyball titles and 12 of the last 19 trophies in golf.

THE PAC-10 STAFFCommissioner: Thomas C. Hansen Associate Commissioner, Administration and Women’s Basketball Administration: Christine Hoyles Associate Commissioner, Communications and Football Administration: Jim Muldoon Associate Commissioner, Electronic Communications: Duane Lindberg Associate Commissioner, Compliance: Mike Matthews Associate Commissioner, Business and Finance: Scott Sabatino Associate Commissioner, Governance and Enforcement: Ron Barker Associate Commissioner, Olympic Sports and Student-Athlete Programs: Chris Dawson Assistant Commissioner, Communications and Men’s Basketball Administration: Dave Hirsch Assistant Commissioner, Communications: Bri Niemi Assistant Commissioner, Governance and Enforcement: Tammy Newman Assistant Commissioner, Compliance: Erik Price Assistant Commissioner, Championships: Heather Perry Assistant Commissioner, Offi ce Management: Patricia CesnikDirector of Video & Internet Operations: Kristina CaseDirector of Business and Finance: Kathy LynchAssistant Director of Business and Finance: Lina Diaz Coordinator of Football Offi ciating: Dave CutaiaDirector of Instant Replay: Verle Sorgen Public Relations Interns: Maggie Emmons and Gina VerlengiereAdministrative Fellow: Nicole Goyette Championships Programs Manager: Kris Berndt Historian: Wiles Hallock Administrative Assistants: Pat Ricks, Felicia McDaniel, Wendy Heredia (Public Relations), Yvonne Halvorson (Compliance and Enforcement), Michelle Zumalt (Elec-tronic Communications) Receptionist: Erin Heiney

IMPORTANT PHONE NUMBERSPac-10 Offi ce: 925/932-4411 Fax: 925/932-4601 http //www.pac-10.org

THE PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCETHE PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE

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ROSE BOWL SELECTION PROCEDURESThe Pacifi c-10 Conference has agreements with seven bowls. The Pac-10 champion shall play in the Rose Bowl, unless it is ranked No. 1 or No. 2 in the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) ranking system. It that case, the Pac-10 champion would participate in the FedEx BCS National Championship Game. This year, that game will be played in Miami on January 8.

If that is not the case, the following procedures will determine the Pacifi c-10 representative in the Rose Bowl. The Pac-10’s Rose Bowl representative shall be that member’s team with the best record in Conference games. If, however, the records in Conference games of two or more members are identical, determination of the Rose Bowl representative shall be as follows:

Two-Team Tie: If two teams are tied for the conference championship, the team that won the head-to-head meeting shall be the Pac-10’s representative in the Rose Bowl.

Multiple Ties: (1) When three or more teams are tied in Conference play, if one has defeated all others, it shall be the Rose Bowl representative. If that is not the case, a comparison of the tied teams' records against the other tied teams shall be made and the team having the best record against the other tied teams shall be the Rose Bowl representative. If two or more teams are still tied after this comparison, the appropriate two-team or multiple-team tie-breaking procedures shall be repeated

among those teams still under consideration.

(2) If more than two teams are still tied after the process above is completed, each remaining tied team's record against the team occupying the highest position in the fi nal regular season standings shall be compared, with the procedure continuing down through the standings until one team gains an advantage. When arriving at another group of tied teams while comparing records, each team's collective record against the tied teams as a group shall be used.

If at any point in the process the multiple-team tie is reduced to two teams, the two-team tie-breaking procedure shall be applied.

If more than two teams are still tied after comparing their records all the way through the Conference standings, the team among the tied teams with the highest ranking in the fi nal BCS standings shall be the Rose Bowl representative.

If a tie remains, the team most recently earning Rose Bowl or Bowl Championship Series automatic selection shall be eliminated.

Ineligible Team: Teams ineligible to participate in the Rose Bowl shall not be included in the tie-breaking formulae, except their games against other institutions shall count and may be utilized to break ties between other eligible teams.

PAC-10 BOWL ARRANGEMENTS - 2008-2009Bowl (TV) Pac-10 Team Opponent Date / Time (PST)

Rose presented by Citi (ABC) Pac-10 #1 Big Ten #1 Thur., Jan. 1/ 2:00 p.m.

Pacifi c Life Holiday (ESPN) Pac-10 #2 Big 12 #3 Tue., Dec. 30/ 5:00 p.m.

Brut Sun (CBS) Pac-10 #3 Big East, Big 12 Wed., Dec. 31/ 11:00 a.m.

Pioneer Las Vegas (ESPN) Pac-10 #4-5 Mountain West #1 Sat., Dec. 20/ 5:00 p.m.

Emerald (ESPN) Pac-10 #4-5 ACC #4 - #7 Sat., Dec. 27/ 5:00 p.m.

Sheraton Hawai’i (ESPN) Pac-10 #6 WAC #1 - #3 Wed., Dec. 24/5:00 p.m.

San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia (ESPN) Pac-10 #7 Mountain West #2 Tue., Dec. 23/5:00 p.m.

2008-09 BOWL GAME SCHEDULE2008-09 BOWL GAME SCHEDULEBowl (Conference Affi liations) Stadium, City Date/TV Time (PST)R & L Carriers New Orleans Bowl (Sun Belt/Conference USA) Superdome, New Orleans, LA Dec. 19/ESPN2 5:00 p.m.Congressional Bowl (ACC/Navy) RFK or National Stadium, Washington DC Dec. 20/ESPN 12:30 p.m.New Mexico Bowl (Mtn. West/WAC) University Stadium, Albuquerque, NM Dec. 20/ESPN 1:30 p.m.St. Petersburg Bowl (Big East/Conf. USA) Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL Dec. 20/ESPN2 3:30 p.m. Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl (Mtn. West/Pac-10) Sam Boyd Stadium, Las Vegas, NV Dec. 20/ESPN 5:00 p.m.San Diego Co. Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl (Pac-10/Mtn. West) Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, CA Dec. 23/ESPN 5:00 p.m.Sheraton Hawai'i Bowl (Pac-10/WAC) Aloha Stadium, Honolulu, HI Dec. 24/ESPN 5:00 p.m.Motor City Bowl (Mid-American/Big Ten) Ford Field, Detroit, MI Dec. 26/ESPN 4:30 p.m.Champs Sports Bowl (ACC/Big Ten) Citrus Bowl, Orlando, FL Dec. 27/ESPN 1:30 p.m.Emerald Bowl (Pac-10/ACC) AT&T Park, San Francisco, CA Dec. 27/ESPN 5:00 p.m.Meineke Car Care Bowl (Big East/ACC) Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, NC Dec. 27/ESPN 10:00 a.m.Petro Sun Independence Bowl (Big 12/SEC) Independence Stadium, Shreveport, LA Dec. 28/ESPN 5:00 p.m.PapaJohns.com Bowl (SEC/Big East) Legion Field, Birmingham, AL Dec. 29/ESPN 11:00 a.m.Valero Alamo Bowl (Big Ten/Big 12) Alamodome, San Antonio, TX Dec. 29/ESPN 5:00 p.m.Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl (ACC/SEC) LP Field, Nashville, TN Dec. 30/ESPN 12:30 p.m.Roady's Humanitarian Bowl (WAC/ACC) Bronco Stadium, Boise, ID Dec. 30/ESPN 1:30 p.m.Pacifi c Life Holiday Bowl (Pac-10/Big 12) Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, CA Dec. 30/ESPN 5:00 p.m.Texas Bowl (Big 12/Conf. USA) Reliant Stadium, Houston, TX Dec. 30/NFL Network 5:00 p.m.Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl (Conf. USA/Mtn. West) Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, TX Dec. 31/ESPN 8:00 a.m. Brut Sun Bowl (Pac-10/Big East, Big 12) Sun Bowl Stadium, El Paso, TX Dec. 31/CBS 11:00 a.m.Chick-fi l-A Bowl (ACC/SEC) Georgia Dome, Atlanta, GA Dec. 31/ESPN 4:30 p.m.Insight Bowl (Big 12/Big Ten) Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, AZ Dec. 31/NFL Network 2:30 p.m.Outback Bowl (Big Ten/SEC) Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, FL Jan. 1/ESPN 8:00 a.m.Konica Minolta Gator Bowl (ACC/Big 12, Big East) Jacksonville Municipal, Jacksonville, FL Jan. 1/CBS 10:00 a.m.Capital One Bowl (Big Ten/SEC) Citrus Bowl, Orlando, FL Jan. 1/ABC 10:00 a.m.Rose Bowl Presented by Citi (BCS - Pac-10 vs. Big Ten) Rose Bowl, Pasadena, CA Jan. 1/ABC 2:00 p.m.FedEx Orange Bowl (BCS - ACC vs. At-Large) Dolphins Stadium, Miami, FL Jan. 1/FOX 5:00 p.m.AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic (Big 12/SEC) Cotton Bowl, Dallas, TX Jan. 2/FOX 11:00 a.m.AutoZone Liberty Bowl (Conf. USA/SEC) Liberty Bowl Stadium, Memphis, TN Jan. 2/ESPN 2:00 p.m.Allstate Sugar Bowl (BCS - SEC vs. At-Large) Superdome, New Orleans, LA Jan. 2/FOX 5:00 p.m.International Bowl (Big East vs. Mid-American) Rogers Centre, Toronto, Canada Jan. 3/ESPN2 9:00 a.m.Tostitos Fiesta Bowl (BCS - Big 12 vs. At-Large) Univ. of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, AZ Jan. 5/FOX 5:00 p.m. GMAC Bowl (Conf. USA /Mid-American) Ladd-Peebles Stadium, Mobile, AL Jan. 6/ESPN 5:00 p.m.FedEx BCS National Championship Game Dolphins Stadium, Miami, FL Jan. 8/FOX 6:00 p.m.

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UCLA FOOTBALL - THEN ... NOW ... FOREVER

THE FOOTBALL STAFF (310/825-8699)Head Coach ................................................................................................................ Rick Neuheisel, UCLA ’84Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks .......................................................................Norm Chow, Utah ’68Defensive Coordinator/Secondary ...........................................DeWayne Walker, Regents College ’92Assistant Coach/Linebackers ..........................................................Chuck Bullough, Michigan State ’92Assistant Coach/Special Teams ............................................................... Frank Gansz, Jr., The Citadel ’85Assistant Coach/Safeties ......................................................................................... Tim Hauck, Montana ’90Assistant Coach/Defensive Line .................................................................. Todd Howard, Texas A&M ’91Assistant Coach/Wide Receivers .......................................................................... Reggie Moore, UCLA ’91Assistant Coach/Running Backs ............................................................... Wayne Moses, Washington ’77Assistant Coach/Offensive Line .................................................................................Bob Palcic, Dayton ’71Graduate Assistant Coach - Offense .....................................................................Phil Rauscher, UCLA ’07Graduate Assistant Coach - Defense ........................................................... Mike Rutenberg, Cornell ’03Head Athletic Performance Coach ............................................................................... Mike Linn, UCLA ‘93 Director of On-Campus Recruiting ...........................................Angus McClure, Sacramento State ’95Director of Football Operations .............................................................Darren Witcher, Washington ’84Assistant Director of Football Operations .....................................................Steven Radicevic, UCLA ’07Head Coach’s Administrative Assistant/Offi ce Manager ....................................Jolie Oliver, UCLA ’79Football Administrative Assistant .................................................................................. Lea Bean, UCLA ’88

THE ATHLETIC STAFF (310/825-8699)Director of Athletics..........................................................................................Daniel G. Guerrero, UCLA ’74Faculty Athletic Representative .......................................................................Donald Morrison, M.I.T. ’61Sr. Associate Ath. Director/Senior Women’s Administrator .................... Petrina Long, California ’77Sr. Associate Ath. Director — External Relations ................................... Ross Bjork, Emporia State ’95Sr. Associate Ath. Director — Business and Finance ..........................................David Secor, UCLA ’85Sr. Associate Ath. Director — Sports and Administration ..................................Glenn Toth, UCLA ’76Sr. Associate Ath. Director — Business Operations ............................................. Ken Weiner, UCLA ’78Associate Ath. Director — Sports Information ....................................................Marc Dellins, UCLA ’76Associate Ath. Director — Sports and Administration ....................................Bob Field, Arkansas ’71Associate Ath. Director — Academic Admissions Services ................. Mike Sondheimer, UCLA ’77Bruin Sports Properties General Manager.......................................... Tom Davis, Southern Illinois ’88Director of Compliance ............................................................................................. Rich Herczog, UCLA ’75Assistant Ath. Director — Operations .................................................................Mike Dowling, UCLA ’83Assistant Ath. Director — Wooden Fund ......................................................... Sharon Takeda, UCLA ’89Assistant Ath. Director — Marketing and New Revenues ............................ Scott Mitchell, Utah ’81Assistant Ath. Director — Academic and Student Services .......Dr. Christina Rivera, UC Irvine ’96Director of Student-Athlete Counseling .............................................................. Mike Casillas, UCLA ’89Director of Student-Athlete Development ........................................Ashley Armstrong, UC Davis ’95Head Athletic Performance Coach ............................................................................... Mike Linn, UCLA ‘93Central Ticket Offi ce Director .........................................................................David Lowenstein, UCLA ’64Head Team Physician .....................................................................................Dr. Gerald Finerman, Penn ’58Associate Team Physician ........................................................... Dr. John Difi ori, Franklin & Marshall ’85Assistant Team Physicians ..........................Dr. Sharon Hame, UCLA ’85; Dr. Aurelia Nattiv, UCLA ’81; Dr. David McAllister, UC San Diego ’88; Dr. Ali Motamedi, California ’89Team Dentist ................................................................................................................. Dr. Ray Padilla, USIU ’73Director of Sports Medicine ............................................................ Dale Rudd, Cal State Northridge ‘76Athletic Training Staff ..................................Steve Agee, Fresno State ’03; Grace Golden, Oregon ’89; Lorita Granger, CS Fullerton ’82; Tandice Hawkey, Illinois ’02; Kristin Lage, TCU ’89; Laef Morris, Missouri State ’04; Carrie Rubertino, Ohio State ’98; Tony Spino, UCLA ’74; Anthony Venute, UCLA ’02 Director of Equipment Operations ..............................................................................Tony Perri, UCLA ’84Equipment Staff .................................................... Sean Markus, Colorado State ’02; Phil Hollenbaugh; Ryan Lynch, Ithaca ’06; Pete Maglieri, LSU ’96; Scott Whittum, Washington ’02Video Coordinator .................................................................................................................................Ken NorrisVideo Assistants ....................................................Eric Kowal, UCLA ’91; Tony Gentile, East Carolina ’04

THE SPORTS INFORMATION STAFF (310/206-6831)Associate Athletic Director/Sports Information Director ................................Marc Dellins, UCLA ’76Associate SID - Football ......................................................................................... Steve Rourke, Virginia ’79Associate SID .................................................................................................. Rich Bertolucci, Santa Clara ’81Associate SID ..................................................................................................... Ryan Finney, Kansas State ’90Assistant SID ........................................................................................................................ Liza David, UCLA ’95Assistant SID ....................................................................................Danny Harrington, San Diego State ’97Assistant SID .............................................................................Stephanie Sampson, Long Beach State ’03Assistant SID ............................................................................... James Ybiernas, Cal State Northridge ’01SID Assistant ...............................................................................................Alex Timiraos, Boston College ’06 Student Assistants .....................................................................Seema Choksy, Collin Henry, Jack Hogan, Michael Leary, Devna Shukla

IMPORTANT TELEPHONE NUMBERS & ADDRESSES

UCLA Sports Information:

U.S. Mail: P.O. Box 24044, Los Angeles, CA 90024-0044

Federal Express or UPS: J.D. Morgan Center, 325 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1639

Telephone: 310/206-6831

SID Fax: 310/825-8664

Rose Bowl Press Box: 626/397-4210

Rose Bowl Offi ce: 626/577-3100

Rose Bowl Telephone Installation: 800/339-3204

UCLA Central Ticket Offi ce: 310/UCLA-WIN

UCLA Results Hotline: 310/825-8575

UCLA Athletics Web Site Address: uclabruins.com

Radio Broadcast Web Site Address: uclabruins.com

TRZ Radio Broadcast Listen Line: 1-800-846-4700 x5929 (credit card charge)

ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT STAFFATHLETIC DEPARTMENT STAFF

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Page 20: GGENERAL INFORMATIONENERAL INFORMATION NNEWS … · (ESE), Gene Warnick (SE), Brian Dohn (BW). South Bay Daily Breeze, 5215 Torrance BlvdT .,orrance , CA 90509 — 310/540-4201. Todd