Two double portraits of Rosita Dee Cornell, landscape architect Ralph D. Cornell's 4-year-old daughter, sitting on a stool next to Gloria Weil. There is also a baby doll in one of the portraits.
Two portraits of 4-year-old Rosita Dee Cornell, daughter of landscape architect Ralph D. Cornell. One portrait shows her curtsying with a teddy bear; the other has her standing next to a baby doll sitting on a stool.
Double portrait of 4-year-old Rosita Dee Cornell, daughter of landscape architect Ralph D. Cornell. One portrait shows Rosita Dee standing with a teddy bear; the other has her sitting on a stool with a baby doll near her feet.
Double portrait of Rosita Dee Cornell, landscape architect Ralph D. Cornell's 4-year-old daughter holding a teddy bear with Gloria Weil. Portrait of Rosita curtsying for the camera.
[identify sport? jerseys may be clue; integrated team; which campus? No leads from Yearbooks...Same man appears in Vermont campus ceremony photos (search Vermont YBs for him)-KM]
Exterior photograph of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), official photographer for several UCLA publications and unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events. Holding a camera, he stands in front of North Hall on UCLA's Vermont Avenue campus.
Exterior photograph of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), photographer and lifelong chronicler of UCLA events. Hoover was an active member of the UCLA Alumni Association and taught photography through the UCLA Extension Division for twenty years.
Exterior portrait of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), official photographer for several UCLA publications and unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events.
Exterior photograph of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), official photographer for several UCLA publications and unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events.
North Shore Tavern (Main Lodge) were common even before the university received the facility as a donation in 1957. Known today as the UCLA Conference Center, the Lake Arrowhead facility is located about 90 miles east of Los Angeles.
Studio portrait of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), professional photographer in Los Angeles, Califronia. While at UCLA, Hoover was the official photographer for several UCLA publications and an unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events. He became the manager of the Westwood Village Studio--a photography studio--in 1938.
Studio portrait of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), professional photographer in Los Angeles, Califronia. While at UCLA, Hoover was the official photographer for several UCLA publications and an unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events. He became the manager of the Westwood Village Studio--a photography studio--in 1938.
Studio portrait of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), professional photographer in Los Angeles, Califronia. While at UCLA, Hoover was the official photographer for several UCLA publications and an unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events. He became the manager of the Westwood Village Studio--a photography studio--in 1938.
Exterior photograph of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), official photographer for several UCLA publications and unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events. He stands with his photography equipment next to a 1928 Ford Model A Business Coupe.
Studio portrait of Thelner B. Hoover (UCLA 1930), official photographer for several UCLA publications and unofficial chronicler of numerous campus events.
Fathers and sons pose with UCLA coaches in this photo during the annual alumni picnic at UCLA's Spaulding Field, which opened Homecoming week festivities with food, fun, games, and contests. Included: William C. Ackerman (ASUCLA Executive Director and former men's tennis coach; front row, third from left), Red Sanders (football coach; front row, seventh from left), J.D. Morgan (men's tennis coach; fourth row, fifth from left), John B. Jackson (UCLA Alumni Association Executive Secretary; fifth row, second from left), and John Wooden (men's basketball coach; fifth row, fourth from left).
Image appears with article "Buys Noted Painting. 'Blue Boy' Goes to Huntington; Famous Gainsborough Work Purchased by Los Angeles Millionaire; Picture Was Acquired Short Time Ago by Duveens for £170,000," Los Angeles Times, 14 Nov. 1931: I1.