
In 1964, when the university was elevated from a branch of UNR to a fullfledged university, the campus hosted its first commencement ceremony. (Previous graduates had to travel to Reno for the honor of participating in commencement.) Education majors dominated that initial group of 29 graduates, which included Ray Rawson, who would go on to become a prominent dentist and state legislator. We picked four of his fellow graduates at random to see what they are doing now.
stories by Erin O'Donnell

Jon Cobain
Degree: BS Business Administration
Lives in: Monarch Beach, Calif.
Career: Cobain earned his MBA
at Northwestern University, spearheaded
nationwide marketing efforts
for truck giant International
Harvester, and headed up customer
development for Beatrice Foods.
Since 1979 he has run his own
mergers and acquisitions firm, Fomento
Ltd., in Irvine.
Today: "I help people convert
their hard work and their dreams
into a big payday," Cobain says,
by finding buyers for the businesses
he represents. His big client
of the moment is the largest
lighting company in all of Latin
America.
UNLV Memories: As president
of the first graduating class,
Cobain had the honor of receiving
the university's first degree. He's
now challenging fellow alumni
and others with connections to
UNLV from 1957 to 1974 to support
Division of Student Life programs.
He will match their donations to
the Early Pioneers Scholarship
Endowment Fund and the Early
Pioneers Student Union Fund up
to $200,000 during this 50th anniversary
year.
Notable: A pilot for 30 years,
Cobain has flown a Russian MiG-
29 fighter jet. He studied Russian
and aerobatics for months before
his three-week trek to the former
Soviet Union. "Getting an up close and personal
look at the Russian people turned out to be the
most positive aspect of the trip. They're just like
everybody else."
Quotable: "I thought I was going to be a senior
executive at a Fortune 500 company. As it turned
out, I didn't care for the big corporate environment.
All the wasted time drove me away. I spent
my career in small, boutique environments where
you have a direct relationship between what you're
doing and the results you achieve."

Fredric "Rick" Watson,
Joanne Favero Watson
Degrees: His, '64 BS Elementary Instruction
and Curricular Studies, '69 M.Ed; Hers, '64 BS
Business Administration
Lives In: Henderson
Marriage: The Watsons met in college but
didn't start dating until after graduation. They've
been married nearly 42 years and have four children
and eight grandchildren.
Careers: Rick taught in the Clark County School
District for six years, then worked at district headquarters
for eight more. In 1978, he became principal
of his first elementary school, then went on to lead
four more schools. He retired in 2000. Joanne worked
in insurance after their children were in school.
Today: Rick is archiving school district memorabilia
and has helped an author who is writing
a history of Clark County schools. Joanne is now
as devoted to her grandchildren as she was to her
children.
UNLV Memories: Rick credits UNLV with
guiding his hands-on approach to education. "I
learned the importance of making the school experience
inviting for children and appropriate for
what they are able to do — not developing a curriculum
that shoots at midline of all students, but one
that helps each individual at their own skill level.
That's a good part of the educational philosophy I
learned there; I didn't come by it naturally."
Notable: He also recalls studying with Holbert
Hendrix and James Dickinson, both of whom had
campus buildings named after them. Watson now
is similarly honored. Fredric W. Watson Elementary
School opened in North Las Vegas in 2001. He
said it was an honor for his entire family. "From
the time we start school until we leave our life, I
think that's what drives us: to make our families
proud and to be remembered."
Quotable: His advice for new principals?
"When you're down in the mouth and you need to
have your self-confidence restored, go down to the
kindergarten. They're just crazy about their teachers
and their principal, and it will improve your
mood in about two seconds."
Phyllis Darling
Degree: BA Political Science
Lives In: Port Angeles, Wash.
Career: Darling taught in Clark County schools
for 20 years, then spent 11 more as head of the district's
social studies program. She later moved to the
Olympic Peninsula of Washington. "My intention
was to retire up here, but it didn't quite take."
Today: She's in her sixth year as executive director of her local American Red Cross chapter.
"When I taught, I felt responsible for my kids. I
worried about their futures every day. Now I worry
about the future of the country, how we can prepare
for disaster and minimize the impact."
UNLV Memories: As a member of the university's
delegation to the regional Model U.N. conference,
Darling says the group was the first to use the name
"UNLV" because no one understood "Southern Regional
Division of the University of Nevada." Darling
also remembers meeting with her advisor, John S.
Wright — namesake of Wright Hall — under a tree
because their department didn't have office space.
And she was the first class secretary. "We all got to
be big fish in a small pond. We were all chairman of
this and president of that."
Notable: Darling won a $25,000 national educator
award from the Milken Family Foundation in 1991.
Quotable: "I have a lovely job. You just can't go
wrong when you get up in the morning you know
you're going to help someone."

Binnie Zink
Degrees: BA History, '73 M.Ed.
Lives In: Flagstaff, Ariz.
Career: Zink taught for 10 years in Las Vegas and Ohio, then went into guidance and counseling
for the Clark County School District. "It
turned out to be something I loved," she said. She
retired in 2002 from Western High School and
moved to Flagstaff with her husband, John.
Today: The Zinks have a 1957 Chevy — painted
Air Force blue in honor of her husband, a retired
colonel — and they're active in the Route 66 Car
Club. "But I'd really rather have a hot rod, like
Nash Bridges had on TV."
UNLV Memories: Zink, a Las Vegas native,
tried going away to the University of Southern
California. "I hit L.A. and it scared the crud out
of me." She came home and found her place at
budding Nevada Southern University. "It was absolutely
wonderful. It was so small. Everybody
knew everybody."
Notable: Zink was a woman of firsts on campus.
She was one of the first cheerleaders, when
Nevada Southern had only a basketball team,
and she was president of the first sorority, which
was named Nu Sigma Upsilon — initials "NSU,"
of course.
Quotable: "My diploma said 'Nevada Southern.'
Later they asked me if I wanted to turn it in
and get one that said UNLV. I said if I can't keep
this one, then no. I wouldn't give it back."
Got a new job? Expanded the family? Fulfilled a lifelong dream?
Submit your accomplishments to the Class Notes section of UNLV Magazine.
Fill out the online form at:
myupdate.unlv.edu
Or mail to: Diane Russell, UNLV Magazine, Box 451024, Las Vegas, NV 89154-1024