Athens State College - Columns Yearbook (Athens, AL) - Class of 1972 Page 1 of 248
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TH€XE WCCE THE a- DAyj, v - ' .f :i ■■..■'  J:t,y; FRIEND ),V ■' .;■1972 COLUMNS WE TUCUeUT ■Mgun THEyC . . - v; .-T— - A - .-. J NEVER END i XI m THESE ARE THE FACES OF T . DOO DOLLIES k r4- jrsir « ' sb ' WX. ' - •  - ■ The Crow ' s-Nest ' A.C. WOMEN THEN AND NOW IflX Ho-V. W. P. Sanders, Athens President Rev. Geo. W. Read, D.D., Gadsden Vice President Mr. T. :M. Hobbs Athens. Rev. J. C. Persin ' CER Birmingham. Rev. H. C. Howart, D.D Talladega. Mk. H. B. Mai.one Athens. Rev. F. W. Brandon Bessemer. Ir. R. X. C.ARTWRIGHT, Athens Seeretary Mr. R. H. Richardson, Athens Treasurer Rev. I. B. Sargent Birmingham. Rev. J. B. Xorton Decatur. Mr. J. D. Lanier Birmingham. Mr. E. K. C-Ameell Birmingham. !Mr. Price Hendricks . thcns. Rev. E. M. Glenn, D.D Decatur. Presiding Elder, Decatur District. Rev. James A. Duncan, D.D., Pastor. .. .Athens. 1972 BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS R. C. Martin Chairman C. H. Winefordner Vice-Chairman T. S. Woodroof Secretary W. B. Young Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. C. Martin Chairman C. H. Winefordner Vice-Ciiairman R. S. Woodroof Secretary W. B. Young Treasurer and Chairman of the Committee on Business Affairs J. Homer Crim Chairman of the Committee on Academic Affairs J. E. Beasley . . . Chairman of the Committee on Development Barry Anderson. . .Chairman of the Committee on Campus Life Sidney E. Sandridge President of Athens College MEMBERS Term Expires 1972 0. S. Gamble AlbertviUe James E. Harris Athens Sim S. Wilbanks Alexander City T. S. Woodroof Athens Julian Harris Decatur Charles F. Betts Birmingham J. E. OToole Birmingham D. Paul Doyle Birmingham James A. Breland AlbertviUe Luther L. Gobbel Durham, N.C. Term To Expire 1973 Charles 0. Moore Anniston R. C. Martin Athens J. Homer Crim Huntsville J. E. Beasley, Jr Athens John Perkins Jasper T. M. Burgin Birmingham R. H. Miles, Jr Birmingham Barry Anderson Huntsville R. B. Nichols Athens Charles Frederick Florence Term To Expire 1974 P. W. Hendricks Athens John J. Sparkman Washington, D.C. E. L. McFee Birmingham William B. Young Athens E. Bert Goodwin Gallant Fred Sherrill Hartselle C. H. Winefordner Bessmer Albert Raines Gadsden L. D. Tyson Birmingham W. Van Gilbert Athens Monroe C. Lewis Decatur EX-OFFICIO MEMBER Bishop Kenneth Goodson Birmingham 12 The magnificent structure shown in the certificate is Found- ers Hall, from the drawing of the architect. Gen. H. H. Higgins, in 1842. The present third floor and other additions were added later, to provide living quarters for the president and boarding students as well as a library-functional additions that altered the purity of the original classic Greek design. Note the columns, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, which were, like the 15-foot thick walls, built by a master mason, a slave owned by Dr. Thomas Stith Malone. The names of the founders serve as a roster of ancestors of some of today ' s leading local families: Higgins, Malone, Maclin, Hobbs, Houston, Sowell, Coleman, to name a few. The college had opened in 1821 or 1822 (the records differ) about where the college union now stands, in a building which burned around 1860. The first president was a Baptist minister, the Rev. Daniel Bestor, a man of great scholarship and personal charm, as well as true Christian devotion. It was the first girls ' academy west of the Alleghenies, and, it is believed, the second in the world. Around 1840, some of Athens ' leading Methodists threw their wholehearted support into providing a building and campus worthy of a fine school, and within three weeks, among them- selves, they provided the present campus and the money to build Founders Hall. Classes met there in the fall of 1842. In 1843 the North Alabama Conference (present title) officially voted its support, a strong moral support that continues to the present day. Dr. Malone wrote the entire South is indebted to this school for many of its finest and most cultured ladies. N ' ' ATfeBKS, At. A L i oai rohom it mGij concern, fJrf ii.ivii: ■■Z: -X ' - ' -.n, tvJiJ. ' 4 , : f.i U j, J CZ:: ,. ' ' • ' v x- - ' x w . , .. ' w; . M e ' ■_ ' -J sij KAitl.y ; li- MA hi A ' iiK. ' .;, J,i. ,i ,i. fXu f.tiy. l,- ]i iir. ' HK ;• aw ' r:y,r. ir tfi ifi. vr, ' -;- u Aix a Vre t ii.y. rf -V: i 13 FIDDLER ' S TRANSFORMS DAYS NEW CONVENTION OLD TO AND . . PARENT ' S GETS IT 16 WEEKEND TOGETHER: AND . . . jtraticr.: i ; - J t — , . t c 5 : p.m. c 5:00 p.m. . d : . -. i: , BU 310 £H J ' l LH iOO J.H 4; ' ,? y JJJ r. •iO ? ' i - J ?- -r ; - -r ' F-314 A atixcy of thf: neec c; C. ' .-; i n Ls. vv ; , ' . V - ' ; r r. ' .5. r. ' li f t . A rr. : r i c r; Lit «: r tu f; i-j ' -- y 7 r ; t ; r, y ' A v r,t.jr,; ' ; ;; rr, ' ' ;. for h ' V ' , ., i;:r.o pro ' lucjr-g ?i p igf; , ' : l o=; ' r--.rr.h., i ' ivX ' ,r ' if. ' i j ' ■.. ' , ' . ' XT ' -.X ' : iiX irr ; ir.At. v«; , C ' -.J ' rOr-itiO, ' ; . i «: f , r f ' , 1 ' .1.;or. A ' r}ijr «. o Ih ' r .y. ' ,r,-: :r. ' ' to f.ih ijjo. ' ;, J h.r, ' : ouJtui-a) ' , : ' .;■■r ■■■■,(. . i r. r •; Ao.y ft- i0 1 ' ■. ' J J ? ' , ■:. h 3 f . 7 « : o K . i ; q u ' : ' -. i n A r •■; . f. : u r VAM ' i:rX-f. v jj] l : ' - rr. fur. ' i ' - r , :nt ' ' j If; of I r ' ;.ri ! ' -, ' ' •. Jtt. in p r f:0 ' ;j in; ' ' .-.r. ' J - ' 1. rrj ' i t • u r r o j o . 1:00 ,.u . - 4-00 jy.rn. r JJy ] 7.7J iihiri :Hfe f ath «:rf j;j.tJc ? Ijf-.Hiuj ' - ' - ' i to icqiiA-int tho htu ' Jrnt v. ' ith varirrty of f i n; n c ixi 1 c one ; pt h . V,-J ].;.-. 7 -JO ' . hr School Experiments With January Term Hard At Work Ro{4f;r U;jrv f-ll recently went lo IVIis.sissij)pi to stijfjy tlif; works of WiDiiirn I ' ' ;julkrifr, fScc Slory) Harwell Researched Faulkner y-dU: way, kiml U liou :r Harwf-lj I ' roparation for UmiiiU: treatment has led to the (Jis ' overy of ori(;Jrial riiijnuvripl.s of rioveli. ' .t Williarn Faulkner in f ' aulkner ' s anf e ' .tral home, Jt jv an ()h r.:., and ' lr l ' :iire of the find was made at the same time flarwell wa--, li ' iiiii!, re:- ;arf;fi on the aothr r in Oxf ' rd, Mi. , ' ,if ,ippi, where the hour .- is now part ( f ti ' M: Ole Mi.-,H ' arnpu- ' i ' I7ij. ' , war, Harwell •, projeet durin;; the ••nrif hrnenl t rrrn at Athens f jlle; ' ,e llarwelJ made the trip in ' rder t j vi ,)t pl f esi of intereftt fonrernins; Faulkner in ,Vli. ' . i.v ippi, iTj do inltrrviews with) : )f) f: who knew him tf.T )Uh y , and to meet Faulkner r holarx in thi ; area. ' ITie manu.v.Tipt find waA a pla . Altl-iout;h the rrianu.v.Tifjtji — ti-K- Ifz-.t orifiinals f f ' I- ' ylwi, ITie IJn vanquished. and An I l y t yin; ' ,, as well a. ' , a play ' utiiri ; and various ft K:iiHi are not read) for public iriif ,- tion, Hiirwell wa;-, abk tf,! examine a fe . ' .rf iPie more ttian 2.Wj pa}(eri tliat fia ' . U n f ' nind in a eardfx. ard I ' jx under a ilairway In addition, Harwell met with In. .lame:. Wchh, fhair rian of the l-,n( ' ,li;ih di ' p;ii tinent at ()le Miss, ! noti-d authority on the laiii ;U ' . ,iiiuii)i vnOb per. ' .onaily fondin b-rl Il.iiwell on a .ii[ii III the Mi.S!ii;,.M[)pi l!o()iii of tfic library, wh -ri- I- aulknci r, Nobel pn .e and many personal arlifiictf, are on ilr.play, iijfludirij ' . a portrait by hi ' , fiKjther Haiwell (in ' l, too, with Mai K ' ' • ' !, Ifi H ' .i yeai old phar inai l;,t at O ' .foirl who V. r a p fj e (1 I ' ;i ii I k n M ' i, iiianu:. ' dpi!, foi . ' thippinf, AiiiirdMif, u ■UiirwfU, Heed .aid Ifiat when Faulkner bioiJI ' .ht him his la. ' ,t liianu.vil|;t, il wa:. the only tim - fie rememhi-red heeini; Ifie writ T I airly known lo ;,mile actually laui ' .b Faiilknei ;,nick ic(| anil ;,aid, I mij.t (juit Ihr, fooli ;tiiM ' , ' i ' ., ' ■That final manuwript wan ' f7i - It -iver«. ilarwellK rt m-.hnUi-.h UuJ hirri Ui ' ,i-v. Albany, Faulkner ' H Ijif hplar e, and ti) I ' ipley , wlierc hiji j ' .randlatfier , Col Faulkn , fiad built a fjank. fjke many lA Faulkner ' ' ; relative:, and acquaintanr ef,, the (,ol. turned up in hi. ' -, wn . uv .. Mff.l ' jKi, Jlarv ell examined f ver 2,f|fiO phof , t;rapfi:; taken l. y f;ol. Colefield, Faulkner ' .s f erv.irial phol ' . i;raphK:r. In March, he will pre-r- ' ent hi;, finding,-, f oi e a meeting; of •Sit ma ' fa ' I :lta, IFk; national Kniilish fraternity, at Athen.-i By Bob Goodman A new and unitsual concept In curriculum liat, fieeii adopted by Alheii.s College with the change over to a4-l-4 academ- ic calendar, providing an oppor- tunity for the faculty and .stu- deiit.s to experiment with cur- riculum enrichment courses. The change was made In the form of a January term. This time perlo l will be used by students to study in areas of particular Interest which are not ollered here at Athens. The basic preriii.V! is that the un- usual, perhaps unstructured, r4ue. ' it for courses may be Initiated In a manner determin- ed by the need, desire or op- portunity presented without t e- Ing uniJuly fettered by the tra- ditional regulations governing a wen as siuueni imuaieu in- vestigations. Tlie student will be encouraged to propose in- vestigations pertinent to his major course of study but in an area or in a depth not now possible within our current cat- alog described curricula. En- richment is the key Ut evalua- tion. This year we are experi- menting — therefore a leberaJ view will be necessary in con- sidering subject inve.stigations. It is hoped that everyone will enter Into the spirit and appre- ciate the opportujiity possible so that this can Ix; truly a rich learning experience for all con- cerned. The program will be divided Into five steps; First, mem- bers of the faculty propose a course, or a student proposes a course; Second, faculty- stuiient ronsultatlon resulting ill proljlem statement, scope of investigation and means ol evaluation ol aicoinpllshmeiit are estaljlished; Third, Submit one page summary of step twi. results to the division head, Fourth, academic council con- sideration aiifl approval iiulud- liig credit hours and ii, n:,v number assigninent, and Filth the student registers for a|j- [Hoved course (iJecember 1 thru 20 . Course offerings and iiidlvl- duaJ course investigations when approved will l e compiled and published. Novemfjer i:.t is tlM! target date for tlie publication ol this compilation. Time will be taken in clas;;- rooms Monday, Tue.silay and Wednesday ol this week to ex- plain further ttie composition of the Lnrichment Term. The intention ol the program is to broaden the scope (;f learn- ing of ttie student, by allowing the stu(Jent to make individual study in the area ol his Inter- est. Although tfiere will be a lew classroom courses offer- ed, it Is hfjped that most of the student will be made on an indepernJent basis by the stu- dent at home. This program is not designed for allowing stu- dents to take independent stuiJ- ies of required coiJr.ses but rattier allow tfie student to re- place electlves and electlves in his rnajor with self de:.igned course to better suit his future needs; The cost for tlie January term will t e the same as the regular summer part-time cost. It has been tentatively arranged for those students desiring to re- main to take classroom cour- ses to stay In tlie dorrnatory at no co.st. This is nr.it official but is tenative. However, the cafeteria will be closed. Should this program be successful, possibly it will be offered again in tlie summer. • v i ;.v -:]« , ■' -V- - V n,Y : ATHENS «.■' y. ' - ' COLLEGE - ' ' FOUNDED 182? -s te • ' iC ' ■t-  -1 WE ' D ' k AA -, INC ! - M V vt jiilili ANC DANCE 23 S.G.A, President: Iran Buckler V.P.: Rick Hudick Treasurer: Henry Morrow Secretary: Kathy Seamen Senators at large: Angelo Azzarello Steven Campbell Roger Fouch Tom Hayes Mark Schupienis Bob Slaybaugh Off campus women ' s Rep: Kay Weathers Off campus men ' s Rep: Paul Clary Newspaper Editor: Bob Goodman Yearbook Editor: Allan Herman Students on Administrative Council: Rick Hudick Steve Campbell IFC Pres: Jim Parker Panhellenic Pres.: Kay Bentley SCA Pres.: Vicki Cover Sr. Class Pres: Lenny D ' Armiento Student Center Pres.: Steven Campbell 24 ATHENIAN Editor Advisor Bob Goodman MEMBER Dr. Vincent Colane Advisor: Dr. Vincent Colane, Circulation Manager: Kathy Grimm, Editorial Assistant: Den- ise Longtin, Tony Bogran, Business Manager: Kay Weathers, Jim Jackson, Brian Retka, and seated. Editor; Bob Goodman, and Jeff Field. ;-■' TO 9 % r r J THE COLUMNS Editor: Alan Herman Co-Editor: Steve Hewitt Photographers: Bill J.C. Forsyth Bob Goodsell Marty Gutmann Dave Noble Jim Ott Staff; Bob Goodman Bob Trouw Pam Goodkin Business Manager: Dyane Lesczynski Advisors: Mr. Loren Koslowsky Mrs. Penne Laubenthal  - i and the melody lingers on. 26 Liztrnm socienes Co-Editors: Roger Harwell, Alan Herman Art Editor: Pam Goodkin Staff: Susan Halverstadt, Debbie Pozinsky, Jan Richter, Susan Tharp, Michael Shepheard sages standing in God ' s holy fire As in the gold mosaic of a wall, Come from the holy fire, peme in a gyre. And he the singing • masters of my soul. - W. B. Yeats Miss N. drags Caroline to church. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION Advisor: Dr. Richard Couch Jim Preston 28 THE BIOLOGY CLUB Back Row, Left to Right: Mark McDaniel, David Edwards, George Williams, Charles Lockner, Walt Kunkel. Middle Row: Deborah Rodgers, Sherell Schniepp, Dwight Cooley, Gary Mack. Front Row: Larry Cottles, Paulette Blankenship, Randall Thornton, Frank Derham. 29 Father Timothy Hill Advisor, Newman Club THE NEWMAN CLUB Reverend Curtis Coleman Advisor, Ministerial Association 30 THE MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION 31 Left to Right: Kay Bentley, Myra Black-Vice President, Angelo Azzarelo, Stanley Amos Stafford, Wayne Brown, Jay Markanich, Bobby Knowlton, Mark Double O Dome. Not pictured but included in membership are all P.E. major and minors. Including Max Rairgy-President, Sharon Markham-Sec- retary, Randy Schaffer-Treasurer, Charles Carpenter-Membership Chairman, Danny Markham-Publicity Chairman. PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLUB 32 POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB Standing, left to right: Dr. Harry Joiner, Mark Chison.Cutbert Mustewegota, Jim Ott, Jay Markanich, Bill Dixon, Tony Bogran, Doug Piekarski, Charlie Augiaii. Seated: Bob Goodman, Bill Maloney, Dave Noble, Paul Grassman, Doug MickeU, Marty Gutman. 33 GROUP FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY President: Doug Mikell Treasurer: Kathy Grimm Advisor: Dr. Mary Jane Eaton Advisor: Dr. Joe Slate Rita Trimble William T. Adams, Jr. Wayne Radomski Row One: Caroline Page, Kay Bentley, Myra Black, Janet Smith, Dottie Pipkins, Jeannie Beasley, Rebbecca Burney, Gail Jenkins. Row Two: Curtis Coleman, Fr. Timothy Hill, William Maoloney, Doug Mikell, Lee Burdick, Charles West, Daniel Jones. STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Advisor: Chaplain Curtis Coleman Pres.: Doug Mikell V.P.: Vicki Cover Sec: Harold Gray Publicity: Bill Maloney Members: Caroline Page Kay Bentley Myra Black Janet Smith Dottie Pitkins Jeannie Beasly Rebecca Burney Gail Jenkins Rev. Daniel Jones Rev. Charles West Lee Burdick William D. Maloney Father Timothy J. Hill Rev. Curtis Coleman 35 METHODIST STUDENT MOVEMENT Advisors: Rev. Charles C. West, Rev. Curtis Coleman, Rev. Daniel Jones. Members: Lee Burdick. Vice President; Myra Black; Dottie Pipkins; Caroline Page, President; not pictured, Mary Jane Smith, secretary. 36 Dramatic Club Officers REBECCA CHANDLER .... President M. RY PERSIXGER . Secretary and Treasurer Members Rebecc. Cha.ndler Nelle Gotten Ethel M. e Hightower M. Ry Persixger Sarah Rives LiLLiAX Shelby 37 THE COLLEGE Presented by The Athens College Players HENRIK IBSEN i ' Cedda aSbr translated : Michael Meyer directed : Lawrence Saunders November 10 - 13 8:00 P.M. McCandless Auditorium Athens College 38 PLAYERS PRESENT m L.MjlsJt±:U I ' l ■I ' l ■I ' l I I ' l ■I ' l ■I ' l MTWTVlTV icLjEjni ilLJ Ljul h THE CAST Hedda Gabler e g y„derwood Judge Brack e i „ Miss Juliana Tesman aria Barclift Eilert Leevberg q Alsbrooks George Tesman j arry Lovelady Mrs. Elvsted Debbie Rogers Bertha Shenil Schniepp SYNOPSIS OF SCENES Act I - Morning of that day Act II - Afternoon of that day INTERMISSION Act III - Morning of the following day Act IV - The evening of that day ] The action takes place in Teaman ' s villa in the fashionable quarter of town. ' i 39 JACK AND THE GIANT by Ruth Newton PRESENTED BY THE ATHENS COLLEGE PLAYERS AND THE ATHENA LEAGUE • Mrs. Tom Ry berg. chairman DIRECTOR . . . Wayne Radomski ASST. DIRECTOR . . . Greg AUbrooks PRODUCER . . .Larry Saunders PRODUCTION ASST. . Deborah Rogers TECHNICAL DIRECTOR . . . William Forsyth Cast in order of Appearance HAPPY Steve Nelson SAD Larry Lovelady MOTHER Debbie Underwood DRUSILLA Scheryl Schniepp, Amy Moore UWITT Julia Martin, Sanders Woodroof GOLDEN HEN Marilyn Plosky JACK Roger Harwell OLD MAN Rickard Busch GIANT Alan Herman TOWN CRIER Chris McBee TOWNSPEOPLE John Laubenthal Patricia Martin John Hays Beth Crow Sandi Sandridge Chris Ryberg Michael Anderson Scotty Sams Sheila McLin Robin Rogers USHERS Pi Beta Sigma Sorority SCENE I JACK ' S COTTAGE THE VILLAGE THE GIANT ' S CASTLE SCENE II JACK ' S COTTAGE THE GARDEN THE PLAY TAKES PLACE ONE DAY A LONG TIME AGO. ffik i ' i —• Officers: President: Kay Bentley Vice President: Starr Plunk Secretary and Treasurer: Patti Presti Members: Kay Bentley Linda French Vicki Cover Nancy Keech Caroline Page Starr Plunk Diane Wiswell Officers: President: James Parker Vice President: Max Rairgh Secretary: Art Weed Treasurer: Bob Altman Advisor: Dr. William Bell Standing: Roger Fouch, Paul Joensen, Pete VVollmer, Joe Rusciano, Bob Meyer, Jerry Faulkner, Phil North. Seated: Chuck Bartlett, Max Rairgh, Bob Altman. SBT ' ' S f r.TS J ' aCSSC ' JDUB.1 Front Row: Debbie White, Bob Trouw. Middle Row: Kerry Hohl, Bob Goodman, Joe Rus- ciano, Paul Grassman. Top Row: Mike Babilya, Dr. Harry Joiner, Rich Winefeld, Vince Roig. PJi!|BI !M .i ?.l 44 mB Front Row: Mike Pozzuto, Wayne Radomski, Marty Gaspare, Jan Istok, Bob Peterson, Nancy Olsen. Back Row: Bob Tocci, Jim Beinkemper, Rick Burton, Bob Carroll, Kenny Thomas. • •• 45 Am Seated: Max Rairgh, Jerry Faulkner, Bob Meyer, Paul Joensen, and Mark Dome. Stand- ing: Chuck Bartlett, Tony Muklevicz, Hal Torello, Steve Schulman, Tom Minlionica, and Pete Wollmer. OUR LEADER i - 1 - 46 ' ' • •f PI KAPPA PHI Front: Guy Smith. Middle, left to right: Tom Ranky, Phil North, Bob Alton, Bob Slaybeaugh. Back: Chris McBee, Oscar Hill, Tom Dale, Linda Belcher, Steve Steff, Jean Mclendon, Jim Parker. • •• 3 -i ■La. tmu Standing; Roger Fouch, President; Brad Wines, Ed Pezzuti, Vice President. Seated: Paul Shashy, Steve Campbell, Treasurer; Barry Smith. Not pictured; Ralph Rasmussen, Secre- tary. 48 MEMORIES 49 A visit from the national office of Phi Mu. Carolyn Reeves, left, and president Linda French, right, show their scrapbook to national secretary Jocelyn McCall. Phi Mu DR. ELVA McLIN, ADVISOR 50 Back Row: Star Plunk, Carolyn Reeves, Leslie Manaugh, Dyane Lesczyncki, Secretary; Debbie Pritchett, Vice-President; Ginger Aspinwall, Patsy Cover, Janice Smith. Middle Row: Susan Krueger, Treasurer, Gail Bonanno, Cheryl Bonanno, Vickie Cover, Sheri Russell, Linda French, President; Joanne Brown (standing). Foreground: Patricia McKeown, Patricia Mins, Joanie Seibert, Nancy Olson. 51 %-l bigma Kappa Officers . .Officers of Athens College Epsilon Iota :hapter of Sigrria Kappa .Vjrority plarifjin founders Day activities are frorri left, Nancy Keech. oresident: Diane Wiswell first vice president: and Tannmy Reav; correspf nding sf relary. Barbara Tha ' recording secretary, is not pictured ' Sa Photo I Tau Alpha rT. Membership: Kay Bentley-Secretary, Miss Barbara Brooks-Financial Advisor, Dr. Mildred Caudle-Advisor, Nancy Devaney, Kay Guerin, Denise Longtin-Historian, Caroline Page-President, Janet P. Smith-Treasurer, Cathy Seaman-Vice President, Kay Weathers, Epsie Horn-Sponsor, Mrs. Peggy TomUn-Scholarship Advisor. Rush ' ■tfii|«r!vnT ' r ' Tiii t I h f Rush Student-Faculty Coffees 55 Pi Tau Chi Delta IVIu Delta Sigma Tau Delta I M r Alpha Psi Omega Delta Psi Kappa 57 Dr. William Echols, Founder of Pi Tau Chi Chiis McBee and Mrs. Francis Powers Wilson, Sigma Tau Delta William Moloney and Dr. John L. McDaniel, Chi Beta Phi Swt.-; Inter-Honorary Fraternity Banquet Dr. Sidney Sandridge and Larry Lovelady, Alpha Psi Omega Chris McBee and Mrs. Buford Thompson (Miss Christine), Sigma Tau Delta . - ' SSii . Dr. Richard Bryan and William Moloney, Delta Mu Delta Bishop Vath of Birmingham and Janet P. Smith, Pi Tau Chi Alpha Psi Omega Dramatic Fraternity President: Larry Lovelady Secretary-Treasurer: Alan Herman Director: Prof. Larry Saunders The Cast: Lynn Abraham, Bob DeCurtis, Bill Forsyth, Pam Goodkin, Susan Halverstadt, Martha Lynn Hicks, Kerry Hohl, Mr. Loren Koslowsky, Mrs. Penne Laubenthal, Larry Lovelady, Chiis McBee, Dr. Elva McLin, Steven Nelson, Doug Piekarski, Wayne Radomski, Max Rairigh, Mrs. Betty Rogers, Debbie Rogers, Joe Rusciano, Jeffrey Sandridge, Dr. Sidney Sand- ridge, Sherill Schniepp, Cynthia Smith, Barbara Thaip, Susan Thaip, Debbie Underwood, Mailene Waldorf. The Director and Hedda 59 (ght Ifta f hi SCIENTIFIC FRATERNITY Membership Dr. Richard Couch, Dr. Robert Daly, Dr. Aldo Forte, Mrs. Eunice Hutchinson, Kenneth Johnson -Treasurer, Annie Malone-Vice President, Dr. Ashley Martin III -Advisor, Mrs. Joe McDonald, Dr. Joe McDonald -Advisor, Mr. John McDaniels, Dr. Ronald McNutt, Thomas Miller, William D. Moloney-President, Brenda Parr-Secretary, Mr. John Russell, Dean Thomas A. Rodgers, Dr. William A. Short -National Secre- tary-Treasurer, Gregory Schniepp-Alumni Secretary, Mrs. William A. Short, Jerry Smith-Historian, Nancy Spencer, Dr. Carlton Whitt, Mr. George Wilhams. Alplja Kappa fflif apt r v . ' ! x. Delta Psi Kappa Delta Psi Kappa is the National Professional Physical Education Fraternity for Women. This is a recognized honorary group on our campus made up of women physical education majors. Some of the activities of this group include sponsoring of the various sports days, holding cUnics for high school teachers and students, and serving as hostesses at the various college functions on campus. This group of students serve as interns in physical education programs in the schools in the area as well as special interest consultants in programs and projects in the local high schools. Scholarship and service to the professional activities are prerequisites to membership. IS 61 ; ' s announcement apj S36, Allis-Chalmers $20 Senior Notes ( $16 Senior Subordinated The undersigned represented the ■' • ' placement of these Note I A I I V e Transactiori Tues Mon FrI Thur Wed I n 1,248 1,260 1,232 1,238 1,233 1| . . 431 563 589 454 571 J . 553 445 414 534 399 i . 2M 252 229 250 263 1 67 100 88 85 84 ' 3 4 2 4 7 MU developments E. R. Andrzejewski, Mrs. Brenda Ballow, Marvin H. BrownjAlbert Bush Jr., William Crawford, J. Tildon Dillard, Mike Drvimmond, Stewart D. Ebnter. Dr. pene Ermert-Moderator, Sam i l i - ■I p J. Summary and Forecast U t L I A 1 State Tax Lazard Freres QEn l Vice President, Susan Halverstadt, Dale- Howard -Program Chairman, Ken Johnson, larch 8. 1972 M. Rice, Ross E. Roberts, Col. T. A. Rodgers, Sidney E. Sandridge, Eugene P. Smith, Warren Steele, Stewart C. Strickland, R. H. Teuber, Curtis Tomlin, Mrs. Helen Traylor. Farrell G. Tuck- er, Charles Wm. Voigt, Kay Weathers-Secretary Treasurer, pasil Wheeler, John Wliite. o o o _ r CN w W OS u 41 C ■= o C C IC ' — it n- jz 3 tj LI  «T3 « c 0) a o Si V s a; 0) s I Ss 2: S - ft ■r • III ' - « 62 COOf— W CO to O CMp. o — o I +++ I I + g; rv wi ( - )■%o Oj ' - O V O CO -o r- ' I I I 2[+i++i I 1 1 1 r O M o to c-n f p ' 7 o .- fo NO .— '  o j r V) « CDOO V) I I I 1 n t — v o ,— n o o wi I J + : I + + I rt B::52s:Sgq T! T ■«? pi p-.; o ui V y I r-N. iO -o o 00 «o I 3 . 5 Of a: 5 ••« CmZ i(L.5 o O ooooo c I • o cs «o c vl t r -iOPWo- ' uiop K -J 0 Wl flO €0 •« - o c r o «o •o e 4 o« r-ir f- r . -or I o) rv -o o ' O 00 o I  o. rrep oc I X « «0 •O OB 00 to T-c •- •o m C! ' t; 1 tr uS csi in Q c i ' O T i Doio Jones Averages WALL STREET Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. ;er Markets 7, 1972 ltlo«aI Association of Securities Dealer quotes, as of 3:S0 p.m. Eastern tii r commission. Volume represents sha; : include only those transactions effecte ftne duplication where NASDAQ marke a weekly over-the-counter y on this page. mfral Airline iwlde Corp A lagh Comm Corp ■es Food System Offshore Gas cky Central I Life . . iPelroleum Corp ACTIVE STOCKS Volume 211,500 153,000 138,400 130,400 110,700 105,000 88,800 B5.200 3:N Bid Chg S ' t . . v + V.t - ' 26 9H r.4 39U 12 ' 4 + 1 V I.J Pi Tau Chi Membership: Maria Barclift, Judy Barker, Mrs. James Bathurst, Mrs. Deannie Brannum-Initiation Chairman, Dr. William Bell, Kay Bentley, Myra Black, Raymond Brown, Mrs. Mary Brown, Lee Burdick, Ernest Clem, Mrs. Lucille Clem, Joe Coggin, Dr. Vincent Co- lane, Rev. Curtis Coleman, Mrs. Jane Coleman, Mrs. Elizabeth Elliott, Dr. Azalia Francis, Vickie Cover, Mrs. Bertha Hargrove, Father Timothy Hill, Jimmy Howard, Jimmy Jackson, Dr. Daniel Jones-Chaplain, Mrs. Mary Jones, Karola Kover, Annie R. Malone, Steve Manzer, Mrs. Lola Martin, Dr. Joseph McDonald, Dr. Elva McLin, Douglas Mikell-Vice President, William D. Moloney-Treasurer, Jim Minor, Angelina Nazaretian, Dr. Loraine B. Pabst-Advisor, CaroUne Page-Secretary, Mrs. Ben Peck, Mrs. Mary Phillips, Dottie Pipkins, Mrs. Martha Porter, Anita Raby, Dean Thomas A. Rodgers, Mrs. Peggy Rodgers, Mrs. Gladys Sandridge, Dr. Sidney Sandridge, Dr. William Short, Dr. Joe Slate, Janet P. Smith-President, Jerry G. Smith, Nancy Spencer, Bonnie Tallent, Mrs. Dolores H. Thompson, Rev. Charles C. West, Mrs. Marion R. West, Miles Wright, Mrs. Gail Wunderlick, Rebel E. Grey. 63 A then-, ' ' .ol] ' : - ' : Abroad i.M«Trl fr , ' kri.vt j,i . ' r.  rr -,f sity, wt v ' ir ' : rrArr.r s ' ?, ' i t rrir. ' j«:f V jr, A-ti-. .t C ,;;. ' : f-kx ' M tfrui. ' K of fyi. ' :h«rgS-.; ftfj i ' ;? ' !; r fX J ' „ , . i - - Officers, 1971-72: Steve Hewitt, Vice-President; Maiy Jane Smith, Secretary; and Cltris McBee, President. The Pinter Readings: Roger Harwell, Alan Herman, Douglas Piekarski, Barbara Tharp, Jack Walczak 64 Officers, 1972-73: Rita Trimble, Secretary; Kevin Nkl allien, Vice-President; and Jan Richter, President. A.- Sigma Tau Delta Membership: Betty Beggs, Harriet Brooks, JoAnn Brooks, Kay Bumpus, Nancy Devaney, Donny Fleming, Robert Goodman, Roger Harwell, Alan Herman, Flora Holt, Kaiola Kover, Larry Lovelady, Chris McBee-President, Bob McCallion, Katherine McLaughlin, Dr. Elva McLin-Advisor, Steven Nelson, Bobby Norman, Caroline Page, Star Plunk, Jan Richter, Susan Roan, Mrs. Gladys Sandridge, Dr. Sidney Sandridge, Greg Schniepp, Mary Jane Smith-Secretary, Trea- surer, Lynn Stephenson, Barbara Tharp, Rita Trimble, Steve Yarborough, Steve Hewitt-Vice President. 65 -• !■Miss Mary Norman M ' President r€c 66 3j. . fijau ' .jialr Ol.iil III llii (.i iiltM EVEC ] . J I tie Or p h ii n A n o i c ,v eMivf LE CLAIRE G. DEWEY Drama Diploma, Mrs. Barnume School of Dramatic Art and Expression. AND ld)hLlid.wh J-L ' bd nnjourJ, d.S-.- -M A DAT. Circulo Espanol Dr. Sidney E. Sandridge President Dr. Sidney E. Sandridge became President of Athens College on July 1 , 1970. A Virginian by birth, Dr. Sandridge has earned degrees from the University of Virginia, Emory University, and Northwestern University. In addition to his civic affiliations. Dr. Sandridge holds membership in Pi Tau Chi and Phi Delta Kappa. He is an ordained minister and a member of the North Alabama Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. 68 69 COLONEL THOMAS A. RODGERS Dean of the College 70 CURTIS D. COLEMAN College Chaplain CHARLES C. WEST Assistant Dean and Registrar 71 DR. BERT HAYES Dean of Student Personnel STUDENT PERSONNEL ROBERT COLLINS Assistant Dean of Student Personnel 72 Jipx COLONEL S. C. HOLMES Business Manager ) GARY G. HARGROVES Director of Admissions - ■1 ' i 1 JEWETT E. FILLER Director of Financial Aid and Placement ROBERT L. FAULKNER Director of Physical Plant 73 CURTIS N. TOMLIN Director of Development JAMES D. BALLEW Librarian ROBERT B. GOODSELL Director of Public Relations 74 Miiir-::;:: ' t]:;2i LIBRARY Erected in 1946, the Athens College Library, a two-story brick building, adjoins Founders Hall. The book collection now totals about 20.000 volumes with annual additions averaging 2,000. Over -100 per- iodicals arc received through purchase and gift subscription. The li- brary contains the best source materials in each area of study of the liberal arts program. During 1955-56 definite steps were taken toward building a collection of local historical interest, including letters, ' manuscripts, and other material. 75 I DIVISION OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Education is big business-and getting bigger. Business ad- ministration curricula at Athens College reflects the growth and complexity of tliis program by including classes in accounting, bookkeeping, business mathematics, business law, data process- ing, and computer programming as answers to the explosion of market and industrial demands for experts to keep in stride with specific fields of concentration as well as business manage- ment. DR. GENE 0. ERMERT Division Chairman DR. JERRY F. BARTLETT Business Administration 76 PROF. BARBARA J. BROOKS Secretarial Science DR. RICHARD BRYAN Business Administration PROF. JAMES E. GARINO Business Administration PROF. MARTIN P. WEHLING Business Administration PROF. JEAN H. ROBERTS Business Administration 77 tiftff S if ifit W hai hfif ought fo be and ru help them io become uhat ht are capable of j 3vo DR. ROBERT H. MURPHREE Division Cliairman 78 DR. AZALIA S. FRANCIS Elementary Education DIVISION OF DR. C. ALBERT LONG Head of the Department of Physical Education D R. PEGGY WEBB Student Teaching EDUCATION iifeii ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' PROF. BETTY JO FULLER Physical Education COACH OBA E. BELCHER Physical Education COACH LYNN HOLLADAY Physical Education i W?! f ' isr ' PROF. ANGIE NAZARETIAN Physical Education 79 Education commences at the mother ' s knee, and every work spoken within the hearsay of little children tends towards the formation of character. -Hosea Ballou DR. MARY JAYNE EATON Head of the Department of Psychology Education makes people easy to lead, but difficult to drive; easy to govern, but impossible to enslave. -Lord Brougham 80 DR. JOE H. SLATE Psychology FRESHMEN 81 DIVISION OF HUMANITIES For He, who gave this vast machine to roll, Breathed LIFE in them, in us a REASONING SOUL: That kindred feelings might our state improve, And mutual wants conduct to mutual love. -Juvenal DR. DANIEL JONES Division Chairman DR. JAMES FURMAN MILLER Head of the Department of English PROF. DENNIS JOHNSON Head of the Department of Art 82 PROF. LOREN KOSLOWSKY Art PROF. DEANNIE BRANNUM English PROF. PENNE J. LAUBENTHAL English DR. ELVA McLIN English PROF. ELMA PEPPER English PROF. LARRY SAUNDERS Drama and English 83 And who in time knows whither we may vent The treasure of our tongue? To what strange shores This gain of our best glory shall be sent, T ' enrich unknowing nations with our stores? What words in th ' yet unformed Occident May come refin ' d with th ' accents that are ours? -Sam. Daniel (icr ViTl PROF. LOUIS K. AD AY Head of the Department of Modern Languages 84 PROF. VILMA ADAY Modern Languages PROF. BETTY ROGERS Modern Languages PROF. JOHN FOWLER Head of the Department of Music PROF. JEFFREY KING Music PROF. BEULAH FOWLER Music And sure there is music even in the beauty, and the silent note which Cupid strikes, far sweeter than the sound of an instru- ment; for there is music wherever there is harmony, order, or proportion; and thus far we may maintain the music of the spheres. ir Thomas Browne PROF. ROBERT HARVEY Music 85 DR. WILLIAM SHORT Division Chairman DR. RICHARD COUCH Biology Department DR. RICHARD DALY Biology DIVISION OF PROF. JOHN RUSSELL Biology 86 PROF. GEORGE WILLIAMS Biology DR. RONALD McNUTT Head of the Department of Chemistry NATURAL SCIENCES DR. ASHLEY MARTIN III Math and Physics DR. JOSEPH McDonald Math and Physics 87 DR. LORAINE B. PABST Division Chairman DR. MILDRED CAUDLE History DIVISION OF DR. WILLIAM BELL History PROF. MARGARET WALDRON History 88 SOCIAL SCIENCES DR. HARRY M. JOINER Head of the Department of Political Science For every social wrong there must be a remedy. But the remedy can be nothing less than the abohtion of the wrong. -Henry George DR. VINCENT R. COLANE Political Science and Sociology PROF. RAYMOND C. McCASLIN Head of the Department of Sociology Society became my gHttering bride. And airy hopes my children. -Wordsworth 89 MARTHA A. PORTER: Secretary to the President IRIS JOHNSON: Secretary to the Assistant Dean ELIZABETH ELLIOTT: Secretary to the Chaplain PATRICIA J. THOMAS: Secretary to the Dean DORIS D. ROMINE and CAROL MALONE: Student Personnel MARIA BARCLIFT: Secretary to the Business Manager E. GAYLE ROMINE Admissions Office SHIRLEY HARGROVE Admissions Office WILLIAM PERSONS: Admissions Office MYRA W. TATE, JEAN B. FAULKNER, ARLINE R. PUR- YEAR, BECKY KRAUS; Business Office CHRISTEL WALLACE, SUE MURRAH: Development s T A F F EPSIE HORN: Library MARY BROWN, GENE LEVENS; Bookstore BETTI MOLONEY: Bookstore lltBi; Standing: CAROLYN VANN, GLADYS WARD, PAM CROSS. Seated: LUCILLE CLEM, SARAH LEEPER: Library. JESS and BERTHA HARGROVE: Post Office BEVERLY BOYD: Faculty Secretary L. JANE LEACH : Director of Data Processing • ' , ■■■■' ' ■' ' UL.AI ... ' ■■■■' i W l ALMA PURYEAR, JANICE BULLINGTON: Registrar ' s Office V ' , ELIZABETH COOPER: Financial Aid Secretary LINDA LOVELL Switchboard Operator 92 MILDRED McLAIN Certification Clerk 1 §ii IBS m I fv . %. , m .■iif f WATERS SCIENCE BUILDING BROWN HALL 93 Ph.D. Mr. William Bell Mr. William Bell, B.S., M.A. Mississippi State University and member of the Athens College Department of History is presently at work on his dissertation for a Ph.D. from Louisiana State University on the subject of the Ku Klux Klan in Alabama during the Recon- struction Period following the Civil War. While at Louisiana State University he received a Graduate Fellowship to assist in his studies. Mrs. Mildred Caudle Those long hours in the books of the eighteenth century have paid off for our own Red , Mrs. Mildred Caudle, B.A. Athens College, M.A. George Peabody College. In January, 1972, she completed her dissertation for a Ph.D. entitled The Realignment of the European Balance of Power, 1713-1718. Past honors have included the Frank Owsley Memorial Award, an Honor Fellowship in teaching from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa and an article published in the JOURNAL OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES in June of 1970 entitled Thomas Moore ' s UTOPIA: Origins and Purposes. 94 CANDIDATES Dr. Harry Joiner Dr. Harry Joiner, B.A. DePauw University, M.A. Institute of International Studies, Geneva, a member of the Athens College faculty in the Department of Political Science, has just recently completed his dissertation for a Ph.D. from the University of Kentucky entitled, NATO and MLF. His past honors have included the Patterson Fellowship, a Dissertation Fellowship, a Graduate Assistantship at the University of Kentucky and his disertation is presently beign considered for publication at the University of Alabama Press in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Mrs. Penne Laubenthal Mrs. Penne Laubenthal, B.A. and M.A.T. from Athens College where she was a Graduate Honor student and has been a member of the faculty, has been silently working on her dissertation for a Ph.D. at George Peabody College in Nashville, Tennessee. The paper deals with the Spanish poet and playwright Garcia Lorca and is entitled: Premetheus, Prophet, and Priest: An Interpretation of Garcia Lorca ' s POET IN NEW YORK in Relationship to Walt Whitman ' s LEAVES OF GRASS. dt ' k Dr. Elva McLin Dr. Elva McLin, our own Mac , B.A., B.E.Ed. Kansas State Teachers College; M.A. University of Alabama, has completed her dis- sertation for a Ph.D. in English from George Peabody College in Nashville, Tennessee. Her paper is entitled Characterizations in Shake- speare ' s Second Tetralogy Through Syntactical and Morphological Choices. and used the following Shakespearen plays: Richard II, Henry IV pt. I, Henry IV pt. II, and Henry V. 95 is for Drawing, such aw- ful hard work That most of us try very often to shirk. is for Jolh- — a jolly class we, Who are striving for art in the old A. C. Literature is an avenue to glory, ever open for those ingenious men who are deprived of honours or of wealth. -Isaac D ' Israeli 96 How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. -Elizabeth Barrett Browning 97 WE ' D LIVE KDNA MARGUERITK HKKVKS MAY QVLl.S 98 I t . •JBTf- Kf THE Lire Kay DOOth WE CHC€ C 99 JOSE FELICIANO 100 IN ATHENS i V W: t FOUNDERS DANCE 102 AND QUEEN 103 HOMECOMING T. mJ i jM 104 ' T 105 GREGORY ANIUNAS VICKI COVER 106 WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN MYRA BLACK DOUGLAS MIKELL 1: CAROLINE PAGE WILLIAM D. MOLONEY COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES : III MAX RAIRIGH STAR PLUNK ' f ' - -N ' ife) JAN RICHTER JANET PAYNE SMITH : WARREN STEELE if NOT PICTURED: LYDIA KAY WEATHERS ] i ANNIE MALONE WILLIAM MANN JEFFERY WEBER 107 mmMm CHRISTMAS PARADE ChiTkiOe Shirley li t«lecud Vliit Srvajje Pijmp In th« conteM h«ld f ' r ' he fmhrrjr. prU in lh« New Donn. 109 WOMEN ' S CLUB CHRISTMAS 110 Ill 112 MR. AND MISS FRIENDSHIP MISS MERRY CHRISTMAS 113 MARDI % ¥ ) ft ii GRAS ATHENS B ' v lr B i w Lv ' V 1 1 - STYLE TWOUVUCacVU owl looritqttnro. - ' ( arc  rA,nJ The Committee for the Co-ordination of Black History Week Athens College and Limestone County BLACK HISTORY WEEK AT ATHENS OBSERVANCE OF BLACK HISTORY WEEK FEBRUARY 13-19, 1972 Theme: African Art, Music, Liturature — A Worthy Cultural Contribution February 10 and 17 McCandless Auditorium Athens College Athene Alabama February 15 Trinity Education Center Athens , Alabama 118 LIFT EVERY VOICE AND SING Lift every voice and sing, ' Till earth and heaven ring, Ring with the harmonies of Liberty Let our rejoicing rise, High as the list ' ning skies, Let it re-sound loud as the roll-ing sea- Sing a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us Sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us; Fac-ing the rising sun of our new day begun. Let us march on till victory is won. Stony the road we trod. Bitter the chast ' ng rod. Felt in the days when hope un — born — had died; Yet with a steady beat, • ave not our weary feet Come to the place for which our fathers sighed? We hove come over a way that with tears has been watered We have come, treading our path thro ' the blood of the slaui,htered Out from the gloomy past, till now we stand at last Where the white gleam of our bright star is cast God of our weary years, God of our silent tear s. Thou who has brought us thus far on our way; Thou who has by Thy might. Led us into the light. Keep us forever in the path, we pray- Lest our feet stray from the places, our God, where we met thee; Lest our hearts, drunk with the wine of the world, we forget Thee; Shadowed beneath Thy hand, may we forever stand True to our God, True to our native land. -JAMES WELDON JOHNSON 119 SCIENCE FAIR 120 121 ART DEPARTMENT 122 at :..i Orchestra 124 Orpheus with his lute made trees, And the mountain-tops that freeze, Bow themselves, when he did sing: To his music, plants and (lowers Ever sprung; as sun and showers, There had made a lasting spring. -Henry VIII Act III. Sc. 1. L. 3 MUSIC DEPARTMENT The music in my heart I bore, Long after it was heard no more. —Wordsworth 125 I -■-%, How many lives we live in one, And how much less than one, in all. -Alice Gary 126 When Nature has work to be done, she creates a genius to do it. —Emerson 127 McCandless Hall Physical Education Building 128 IPV I V!SH H %il E S IJK S iiHi ' f™ •i fc ' B ■jSEyu Jr J T H ' HA 1 s rrTTK IiflA V yft i 129 -i? -- . ' :: ' -. ' - • ' - ' aisit ' r iskc t Twll K ini WE ' D ri©nT ANC .- . ;.- . .-•.; v-W ' . NCVCC L€ m. c«i . 131 • C -. ■-. -i- •- ' •= _ , 1 -, ' h - ' JHIER YOUTH FOR iui-]ORRO J , ■x ■■■' ■' Ti ' — i r mTifHT- T ■■■■I ■■■■■ss m HH nil niQi ■■■■■132 GYMNASIUM-NATO RIUM THE BEAR Kj, ' ' Ufv THE POOL 133 SOCCER COACH, ALBERT C. LONG Charles Kramer e ' Dave Noble Jay Markanic Ken Griffin nf ' Tj ' -g- ' ■-■■r ' ■■i ri ' . ' 2 . ' ' ; ' ?r r Bruce Bellack Randy Shaffer Al Hauler Tony Bogran • • 1 4 134 Ron Prassas Don Marble Dan Evans Jim Landis Tonn Minlionica Chris IVIcBee Max Rairigh Jerry Faulkner Hal Torello Cuthbert Mottsewegota Charles Gillam Jim Hubbard 136 ATMLETIC Mll.lJ IJ.AI f-,f .S 137 COACHES: Oba Belcher Lynn Holladay Stanley Stafford Stewart Stephenson Bennie Newson Danny Petty Robert Bates Ralph Hayes 138 BASKETBALL Charles Martin Tony Julian Butch Looney 139 David Ogle Billy Coggins Ronald King Garland Franks Vernard Hendrix 140 141 142 TCNNIS Club lVe.j i(J«n( n (yt in ' f Officlrs V 143 144 Senior Ociinis (Tlub .!osi:r IP A nfKE RL BV s kgi-:nt ALMA Ll-IZTH RUBY SAKGEN 1 . Fiesideiu lUXK KHV lll-KKX MOW VKP Mi: MORN Al MRllH ' .K IRl-Nl srtn ' Ai I l-l.OlM PI 145 Susan Covington Patsy Cover Debbie Underwood Patty McKeown Vicki Cover Judy Barker 146 CHEERLEADERS a Marsha Woodfin Myra Black w - 4 «? - J- ii.-_ 147 148 THE GYMNASTS COACH: Dr. C. Albert Long Debbie White Susan Covington Terry Phillips ■J M W ■v ' - i r 1 • J t ' J ilillUJi pi iV 1 Gail Golman 150 ' i 151 PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLASSES li L Hi -JV I V. 1 ( J 1 ■1 153 ■'  ai«R ' Jt 154 ;i! r - ■' - 156 V 4. ■- 7 f hmWWtm iW A. ..- 4. •wwww, ' • i - ■. .j4 ' V f t ] fe«H =Ta«r- 158 Mi u i Irregular Students w A ' 4k m Mii Martha Ayres Lena Crawford Jewel Herlzkr Effie Kelley Evelyn .MeWilliams Maiiebeth Tatuni FOR WE WERE y€LNG 160 AND LCE TC HAVE CLE WAT. 161 v, 162 163 SENIORS Bob Altman Greg Anuinas Nancy Aron Helen Austin Cheryl Baird Robert Baird Brenda Ballew Charles Bartlett Joe Beasten Bruce Belack Tony Bogran Dale Bryan Iran Buckler Lee Burdick Betty Burroughs Joe Carlevaro Charles Carpenter Martin Caspare Carmen Catalfamo Terry Connor 164 Paul Clary Joe Coggin Judy Creekmore Ben Cybulski Terrell Daniels Lenny D ' Armiento Al Davis Linda Davis Dennis Deahl Frank Derham Bill Dixon Doris Dunkin Phillip Easter James English Jimmy Ennis Wayne Foster Roger Fouch Peggy Frederick Lenny Gerstner Pam Goodkin 165 Bob Gorum Vicky Cover Jack Grissom Kaye Guerin Donald Hall Margaret Harmond Annie Ruth Harris Joe Helm Jim Hill Michael Hodges Flora Holt Ric Hudick Jo Hudson Jay Hughes Alan Hyman Nancy Keech Gary Kennemer Pat Kent Don Kipfer Gail Kopec 166 Margarete Lange Richard Lawrence Mickey Locicard Mark Losben Mimi Love Larry Lovelady Gary Mack Bill Mann Steve Manzer Dorothy Marcinkowski Glen Mayfield Chris McBee Betty McFall Doris McGuire Steve Miller Henry Morrow Tony Mcklevicz Doug Munves Eleanor Nichols Bobby Norman 167 Philip North Malcolm Parr William Pate Beverly Patterson Chris Pederson Ed Pezzuti Star Plunk Marilyn Polsky Ron Prassas Maxine Priest Max Rairigh Bill Robinson Vincent Roig Gerry Rollins Kathy Seaman Kenneth Sherrell Mark Shupienis Robert Sliz Don Sims Gordon Smith 168 Mary Jane Smitli Orlando Sosa Warren Steele Lynn Stephenson Billie Stiles Bonnie Tallent Ken Thomas Delores Thompson Thomas Tidwell Sue Timmons Bob Tocci Sal Uliano Debbie Underwood Janice Watson Kay Weathers Jeff Weingartin Miles Wright 169 A ITR IHROVk FaS Ridr 170 ■W-WI ' SANDERS McCain n i n i i  • M  l II II 1 8 ' ■' ' i . 171 JUNIORS David Alexander Beth AUee Angelo Azzarello Chris Barends Linda Belcher Jo Ann Brooks Wilson Brotherton Dick Bush Steve Cam pell Dave Cerota Judy Creekmore Bob Delia Valle Bill Dobbs Jackie Findley Linda French Bob Goodman Paul Grassman Kathy Grimm Alan Hallier Kevin Halloran 172 Bonnie Hamric Jan Hardwick Mary Ann Harvey Roger Harwell Alan Herman Brian Hewitt Deborah Horn Andrea Jacobs Bob Johnston Kathleen Krueger Rick Linsenmeyer Sharon Markham Doug Mikell Bill Moloney Michael Mullen Caroline Page Bill Pettit Arthur Pevahouse John Quinn Jan Richter 173 Debbie Rogers Mike Seibert Nancy Spencer Yvonne Sprague Stanley Stafford Bill Thompson Leland Torodi Rita Trimble Buddy Vandiver Michael Wallace James Wendling Norma Whitt Harold Woodruff 174 £i n Til i v.. _ - ■' _r « ..  T . w-Vj j M IL n t. T 1 :.. ' , - Athens College Dorm Complex includes North, South, East, and West dorms. Each of these dorms has spacious living areas as well as air conditioning. Mis. Belva York, Head Resident Sanders Hall Mr. Steve Anuinas, Head Resident, South Dorm L. to R: Mrs. Erie Allen, Head Resident, North Dorm; Mrs. Lola Martin, Head Resident West Dorm; Mrs. Annie Ruth Prince, Head Resident, McCain Hall. 175 SOPHOMORES Craig Achenbach Laurence Allison Greg Alsbrooks Michael Babilya James Baldino Robert Bates Kay Bentley Cheryl Bonanno Brad Bradford Ken Brignola John Brunner Henri Butler Paul Carlevaro Eugene Carter Steve Catranis Richard Chittam Gary Cockburn Cindee Connors Kevin Cook Fred Cox 176 Anthony Cuoco Shelba Davis Edward Denton Ronald Dunnavant Paul Eckhardt Jerry Faulkner Cathy Fedick Dave Gillespie Bess Gray Harold Gray Ken Griffin Marty Gutmann James Hackett Thomas Hays Oscar Hill Leslie Horning Jim Hubbard Jim Hurley Jan Istok Jimmy Jackson 177 Tennie Jackson Paul Joensen Kevin Johnson Karola Kover Paula Lamon Diane Lyszinski Frank Mammano Patti Me Keown Olin Me Sherry Tim Miller Steven Nelson Nancy Olsen Richard Owens Michael Pozzuto Wayne Radomski Doug Repetti Bob Resh Doug Rice Geoff Robidoux Joan Seibert 178 Raymond Sienicki Bob Slaybaugh Adam Sobas George Soper Nancy Spencer Mark Springman Stewart Stevenson Art Weed Ken Whitmeyer Allan Wightman Peter WoUmer Bob Wright m 179 NAYLOR 180 FRESHMEN Ann Adams Patricia Anderson John Anuinas Charles Aquier Ginger Aspinwall Carolyn Beasley Jeanie Beasley Jim Beinkemper Paulette Blankenship Harriet Brooks Earl Brown Joanne Brown Janice BuUington Annie Cain Mark Chisom Alvin Cottles James Driskell Dave Edwards Vickie Gabriel Gail Golmon 181 Patsy Cover James Guyton Pam Hardman Bill Hays Leslie Manaugh Frank Marino Jon Markanich Patricia Mims Cuthbert Mutsiwegota James Ott Carmen Pacifico Alan Palm Debbie Pannell Robert Paterson Bill Plough Carolyn Reeves Sherri Russell John Saxelby Sherril Schniepp Carol Scovilk 182 Janine Smith Stan Sobas Sue Tharp Pat Thomas James Thornton Rich Viscione Regina Volpe Karen Ward Chris Weinert Debbie White Norma Whitt 183 COLLEGE UNION BUILDING COLLEGE UNION COMMISSION: Kay Bentley, Dean Robert Collins, Dennis Deahl, Debbie Horn, William D. Moloney, Caro- line Page, Jim Parker, Doug Piekarski, Steve Campbell, Mrs. Zodie Walker: Sponsor. COLLEGE UNION ASSISTANTS: Ken Hatch, Paul Joensen, Robert Johnston, Richard Weinfeld. 184 y LA LA LA LA LA LA 186 SrKNK Kkom ToMi Ov V ov nw Kiii iiiN. ruKSKMin i! riiK LAIA LA LA LA LA .-.t ' sU- . !! : ' 187 PARTY ni f ! 188 TIME 189 190 191 V- 5. x ' --. THE OTHER r . ' :■T ' J vy JAZZ 192 MARDl GRAS SARAH KING Recital: February 21, 1972 Martha Toney: Recital-May 16, 1972 ROBERT HARVEY Recital: November 16, 1971 James Field: Recital-April 7, 1972 1 w rfwfm V ' 1 ' ■• J ' 1 B m 1 194 DjldA.ca. i.d to Jika CLAksTLS Co 2sLa2. WoTTLiLTLs ' CJIajuJ A. TO co7Kfr{.£-?r .o ta.ytXo ' K. of HOLY NIGHT HELEM NAcS USHEV yviv . i - 60 P JEFFREY KINS JOpR l vo Alto TenoR Brtss tX thjiA-S. irS. X. k h . b g ' ij hp r 3 -r a.tin. La an i-Lna i. i MJiih. on. • A kl i. I itcLAQ poUi- ths. ' 7Lia,ht ' ■it thUAJi Jr uy f L i }fi. 4 i P MjLt,h (yK - xi. tk Zw 5 ,i t-f i ■, 3 ; i;2 t£ Ira. I hJ Hf P-f i, AAjith OT - £u thi E J -0 ta. Lx3 poil-L-n ' i -i -n it = ■MjitA on. - 2 ihn ata.A.c poU-l. ' rui tU -ni ' iAti Bar Li ' vts ARE pRISf vT oB THE CO(NVt sj|( vc.E ©► THE C(J ' BuiTO . TrtE WORK is To BE P£RFoRmEO E TiMtY f ° mETgicti- AZCSmT- At tfamU 195 Winter CONCERT University Symphonic Band EXCURSION JEFFREY KING Jeffrey Kins, an Indiana State University Alumnus who graduated in 1964 with a Bachelor of Science in Music Education, is Assistant Professor of Music at Athens College, Athens, Alabama. In 1966 he received a Master of Music degree in composition from Florida State University where he studied with Carlisle Floyd. Mr. King has been awarded first prize in the 1971 Brown University Choral Composition Contest for his work A Wind Has Blown the Rain Away. Four hundred eighty choral works by composers throughout the US were sub- mitted to this contest. This award is the second national recognition received by King. His Dialogue for Piano and Chorus placed second in the 1968 Young Composers Competition sponsored by the National Federation of Music Clubs, He has also written another band piece Manifesto which was fii ' st performed at the opening of the 1971 College Band Directors National Conference in Houston. Excursion was premiered at the Symposium of New ' Music at the University of Houston in 1969 and is recorded by the U of H Symphonic Band on Vol- ume II of the Houston Music Series. Tilson Music Hall TIREY MEMORIAL UNION THREE-THIRTY O ' CLOCK, SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 1972 INDIANA STATE UNIVERSITY TERRE HAUTE gihe 3Simtt6 Ulc Cimcs SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 1971 Athens Professor Wm Have Works Debuted in Week ATHENS - Two new com- positions by Jeffrey King, as- sistant professor of music at Athens College, will be pre- miered in two Southern states this week. Manifesto will be per- formed Jan. 27 by the Uni- versity of Houston Symphonic Wind Ensemble at the open- ing concert of the National Association of College Band Directors in Austin, Tex. ' ' Manifesto is the second of King ' s works to be premiered by the Houston ensemble. His Excursion was fea- tured during 1969 and was re- corded by the group. The Dunedin High School Chorale will present King ' s What if a Much of a Which of a Wind, a work for piano and chorus with a text by E. E. Cummings, at the An- nual Symposium of Contempo- rary Choral Music at the Uni- versity of South Florida, Tampa, on Jan. 30. King has had music performed at the symposium for three years in a row. The symposium this year will bring together 15 com- posers from six state and Florida High School Choral students to hear the most re- cent in American choral music. Composer of A Wind Has Blown The Rain Away, Jeffrey King directs the Qearwater, Florida Concert Choir in preparation for their performance at the University of South Florida. UNIMERSITY OF HOUSTON School of Music presents the SYMPHONIC BAND James Matthews, Conductor COLLEGE BAND DIRECTORS NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Sixteenth National Conference ■PROGRAM Concert Opener Bill Moffit Bill Moffltt, Conducting First Symphony (in one movement) Samuel Barber Transcribed for Concert Band by Guy Duker March for the Sultan Abdul Medjid Gaetano Donizetti Montage Donald O. Johnston I. Introduction II. Fugue Manifesto ' Jeffrey King Wednesday, January 27, 1971, 8:00 p.m. Hogg . uditorium University of Texas Austin, Texas • Premiere peifoimance 196 Thursday, February 27, 8:00 p.m. UNIVERSITY WIND ENSEMBLE James Matthews, Conductor PROGRAM Legend for Band Jeffrey Thomas King Tristia Richard Swift Quarter Note = 52 Eighth Note = 84 Quarter Note = 60 Music for Wind Octet and Percussion Robert Nelson Allegro moderate; alia marcia Andante Allegretto Allegro non troppo Penny Hyden, Flute Albert Closs, Oboe David Teasdale, Clarinet Charles White, Bassoon Howard Engstrom, Trumpet William Gottschaik, Conductor Mike Wall, Worn Wesley Zeagler, Trombone Richard Frazier, Tuba James Hyden, Percussion m I- 0411P EST 4 o5 7l Ji ' f k ' f. ' Sonatine for Percussion Ensemble Fisher Tull Michael Humphries Gerald Vandebruinhorst Nancy Cleveland James Hyden •1 335? CST APR 5 71 N3A175 SSH25 7 NS AAf le,4 (.AT 0. 5AA2291 4)PD IPilPDrB PVU 2CZC 145 TC PDF PROVIDENCE kI 5 336P EST JEFFREY KING - ■SG5 W WASHINGTON ATHENS ALA ET DEAR -in AiNG I Ai i PLEASED TO 5E AE-LE TO INFOR i YOU THAT YOUR ENTRY U KIND HAS BLOWN THE RAIN AWAY) HAS BEEN AWARDED FIRST PRI E IN THE 1v7l; 71 LROWN UNIVERSITY CHORAL CONTEST LETTER WITH DETAILS WILL FOLLOW LATER THIS WEEK SINCERELY RON NELSON CHAIRMAN DEPI OF VUSIC. NNNNC04 13P EST) • £ I PEACE PILGRIM 198 Set forth bcloiv ar the iiar ' .eK of tho F ' culty, Ctaff, ' ' .nri Arininistration of Athens College and ho-.v ne, four anonymous students, feel the; should show up at tho I ' ardi Gras on Friday evening, February l8, 1972 1 Although Tfc Imovr that a rreat r.nny of these people Yrill not oven attend this occasion, alt.o-.i.gh v;o hope th y tdll be there in spirit if not in body, ' ■e fuel that this list rives the b-st possibl-. cross section of these people and their fiction- .l, and SDinetiines non-fictional, coijnterparts, VJe also feel that, although this list is poinjv out quite late, the shock effect iTiay have sone spiritual effect on t- ose too apathetic to come and in the end somo ef those rret blankr.ts may dry up and shov: them- selves at this mcinorabl-.-. occasion — in costur.e. So vithovit further -ela , here the ' arc • , ) Dr. Sandridf:c Dean Rodgi rs. Dr. Hayes Dean Collins Carol (falono Col, Holmes Chaplin C3l ian Dean Jest Gixrtis Torilin A -. Rallevr Gary Karsroves J.Ir. FillJr Pat Thomas Janice Bulling ton V Pan Cross lirs. Porter } ' br, Faulkner Jane Loach Gene Levens iiary -roiTn Opal Zodie I ' lalkcr Iferia Barclift Dr. Ermert Barbara Sro- ks James Garino Dr. Bryan ' ' ' rs. xlobcrts Dr. farplircc Francis Slate Long 3athuar£.t ■■ebb Eaton N. 8. Ur. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Ms Coach Belcher I- ' r, Holladay ' ■■' r« ■' Te ' - ' ling- Dr , Jone s Dr. Miller Kr« A day Mr-, Fo -ler fJrs, 5 ' !rs. Brannun Laubenthal Dr. McLin I ' x, Saunders ' v.r, Harvey IJJrs, Pepper Mr, King liirs, Rofters Dr, Saort Dr. ' ' cNutt Dr. Couch Dr. Daly Dr McDonald —J o Little Jack Horner Col, Klink Sweet Pea Gomor Pyle Betty Bo op Nero Karl Jferx Michar-l J, Pollard Heinrich Him;7il«r Gabby Hayes Tne Mole Pruncface The Three Stooges Martha Mitchell Jughead Hal (2001 Space Odyssey) Josephine the Plumber V ' .histler ' s Mother Kadett Betty and Veronica Hcr .ian Goering Pollyana Topo Gigo Scrooge Lois Lane Hc ' ilock Bones Queen Elizabeth I Henry Higgins Joe Friday Dr. ' Doolittle lady Chatter ly Cheshire Cat Siena of tho Jungle Mayor Daly Paul Drake Captain K?.ngsroo J ' Jr, Peepers Dr, Zorba Bella Lugosi J, Edgar Hoover ¥3. Barker Cleopatra PeO ' ' .Tilf Jean-Paul Sartre i iMd Astaire Ginger Rogers Dracula Queen Isabella Pep in o John Proiumo Dr . Jeykle l , Hyde Napoleon 201 SIGMA TAU DELTA WRITING CONTEST WHITE DEATH — Robert Trouw TEARS — Sherril Schniepp THE WINNERS: Wanda Kay Adkins. Roger Harwell, Sherril Schniepp. Jeffrey Field, Jan Richter, Steve Hewitt, Rita Trimble, Robert Goodman, Amy Steele, Robert Trouw. RETURN TO NOSTALGIA — Roger Harwell LOBO — Amy Steele SNOW — Robert Goodman THE DONORS: Mr. Larry Saunders, Dr. Penne Laubenthal, Mrs. Deannic Brannum, Dr. Herbert L. Hughes, Dr. Elva McLin, Dr. Vincent Colane, Dr. Fumian Miller. 202 LESLIE FROST Nothing happens until you meet Miss LesHe Frost, daughter of late Poet Laureate Robert Frost, and then . . . like father like daughter . . . suddenly intellectualism coupled with dynamic personality and sparkling wit burst forth from a smile that grips all eyes in pearlized wonder and permits time to glide on in un- forgettable tableau. Miss Frost visited Athens CoUege and spoke to the Friends of the Athens College Library about her father, her trips around the world, and about her many volumes of children ' s literature. $ 203 THE CAST (IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE) IHE SHOCK OF RECOGNITION A producer ' s of ice Jack Barnstable Terry Connor Herb Miller Steven Nelson Dorothy Andrea Jacobs Richard Pawling Larry Lovelady THE FOOTSTEPS OF DOVES A basement showroom of a bedding store Salesman Alan Herman Harriet Cynthia Smith George Chris McBee Jill Debbie Underwood INTERMISSION I ' LL BE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS An apartment living room and kitchen Chuck Frank Derham Edith Susan Halverstadt Clarice Pam Goodkin I ' M HERBERT A side porch Herbert Larry Lovelady Muriel Susan Tharp YOU KNOW [ H ■n H Wfjk H 1 1 H | K m B mmm ; ' a; ' ' .-.T-. ' J B Bi9 H 1 H _ 22-] H| H s 1 206 CANT HEAR YOU WHEN THE WATER ' S RUNNING Me and my shadow. 208 STOP THE WORLD, I WANT THE CAST LITTLECHAP Larry Lovelady EVIE ANYA „ , „. ILSE SarahKing GINNIE SUSAN Elizabeth Allee JANE Ginger Carter THE ANNOUNCER Steven Nelson DEATH FIGURE Alan Herman THE BOY John Laubenthal THE OTHER CLOWNS Martin Gutmann David Noble Steve Schulman CHORUS Caroleigh Collins Vickie Gover Jeanenne Koslowsky Renata Lembeck Star Plunk Karyl Rauch TO GET OFF 210 I f ' 4 m ir wmmm f K W , n y r i r x i l mM r i Alpha Mu Gamma National Collegiate Foreign Language Honor Society Third Row, left to right: Dr. Bert Hayes, Mrs. Betty Rogers-Faculty Sponsor, Charles Carpen- ter, Cuthbert Mustiweguta. Second Row: Chuck Bartlett, Tony Bogran, David Wells, Dr. Louis K. Aday. First Row: Rita Tremble, Larry Lovelady. i 214 A ' jf ' Xy - LUAU IN ATHENS Maintenance Robert Faulkner, Head William Barnes Jerry Blair Charlie demons Jerry Ezell Lillian Green David Halt Catherine Jones James Murray Helen Nelson Eddie Nelson Monroe Thompson OUie Thompson James H. Vinson Harold Jones Sammy Barbee Annie Jarrett Lela Coleman John Davis Dock Allen C. Raymond Brown Edward Ball Donald McMahon Douglas Black Delmer Blankenship Vesa Holmes James Blankenship Security - Chester Lacy Gordon Frix Slater Food Service Employees Mike Adams, Manager Mamie Coats, Opal Gold, Laura Pack, Georgia Davis, Joe Davis, Robert Madden, Wilma Hicks, Lena Hunter, Ron Mills, Mary Smith, Mildred Moran. Dean Norman, Bertha Hub- bard, Ailene Thornton. 218 V H • MAY DAY MAY QUEEN VICKI COVER AND COURT. • ■■• ' - vW ?20 J ,1? i tjl 1 i m 1 ' % m ■PROGRAM ATHENS COLLEGE ANNUAL HONORS and AWARDS CONVOCATION May 11, 1972, 10:45 a. m. PHYSICAL EDUCATION CENTER 224 Pivjeeeii-nal CT jan Beulah Fouler Sferi 2l ! ui3ic The Cr uzi n . D. babrouita SolciBte ' ■- Jeci ' .ia Sullivan ' beaser ' er high Schcol) ■' enb. Carter yaune Fadcrreki Jf rocacu - e hart td Surdiak ; reeentat:-:.- c; Honcre Cean T. A. Fudgere line rivticrs. e.j.(y ' n hovcreti re peeente tne hianeet ' ' caaeTiic etonding in hie i-ff itctive clcisa. f ' eBhr ' ,v iu-Kcree ..,.£,. Cail Colnon Vi I Ham D. Cojgin 3 phor.cre Honcrpe Henri Butler A Um P. nightman i -xr.ior H ' ncree f i l a fi . Suiter Mark Mcfnniel Jenior Hjncree JameB Dvnnif Fleming DivxBX-.m hfrnoro : Eicn hcnoree vepreeenta the higheet academic standing in hie reepectije divieion and hae evidenced other echolaetia and citisenahip excellence. Divieiari cf Education Nancy Hodgee L ivieion of Social Science James Dcnnx Fleming CH. vision of Business Adninis tration Warren Steele (bryan (futstanding Auard) iHvision of Natural Sciences Math Jerry G. Smith Division of Hummities Flora Holt Outstanding Master of Business Adrninietraticn Hoyte Johnson Bestowal cf Cap Com President Sidney E. Sandridge Pr eeentation of Auarda : Person Presenting AiMrds Finley English Avard Dr. Elva McLin Sigma Tau Delta Pursuit of Excellence ADard Dr. Elva McLin Chi Beta Phi Honor Key Mike Mullen Delta Mu Delta Business Honorary Society Auard Dr. Gene Ejmert CRC Science Achievement Award Dr. Ronald McNutt Outstanding Biology Majors Awarde F rof. George yilliane y. B. Yeats Aijiord Susan Halverstadt Outstanding Senior in i rama Steve Nelson Middlebrooks Religion and Philceophy Award Pr. Daniel Jones 226 ■1 ill ' iiJVI M- 227 h m 1 THE ONE HUNDRED FIFTIETH May 20, Guest Speaker, The Honorable John J. Spaikman, U.S. Senator, State of Alabama. 228 ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT 1972 Honorary Degrees Conferred Bairy HoUis Anderson V.M. Burkett John Jackson Sparkman Mildred Taylor William Benton Young .l i -; ' i K l l fev I I Ijir ■• 231 y ATHENS NEWS COURIER Your Daily Morning Newspaper serving Athens Limestone County since 1880 232-2720 ATHENS PHARMACY Atlnens Leading Health-Store at the Hospital All students welcome to charge at the Pharmacy anytime. Phone 232-2242 5 n i ■ $[; ri(t«i jiji i !fc i compliments of ASHFORD JEWELRY 111 N. Jefferson St. Athens, Alabama Telephone 232-4333 BUCHANAN MOTOR CO. 103 W. Market— 104 W. Washington Phone 232-3410 NEW and USED CARS Where your Dollar Has More Cents 232 C M APOTHECARY 104 Sanders St. Athens, Alabama Phone 232-5298 Athens and Elkmont, Alabama Your Home Town Bank Tir$t national Bank fS Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. M§ M .ifn 7 te QenU Me ik. Bkop. ATHENS PLAZA ATHENS. ALABAMA 35611 PHONE 232-7663 nrnn l lagna 4 NORTH SIDE SQUARE ULome Onieriainmeni Genier ATHENS, ALABAMA 35611 TELEPHONE: (205) 232-10(3 233 ' T-00 Fun for ferijone ' ATHENS, ALA. highway 72 by pass $.50 charge for delivery PETE TOM ' S QUALITY CLEANERS THE HARPER HOUSE RESTAURANT ' Cleaning at its very best ' 116 N. Marion St, Athens, Ala, 232-3060 across from the Hospital Phone 232-9835 D. O. LOONEY Everything that ' s Good to Eat We Appreciate CoIJege Trade TELEPHONE 42 iiiriirminiii[iiirij|mirnnrii||[i|]r[|][riiriiirinnifTiTT mms N um us Lines, INCORPORATED Running from Huntsville to Sheffield via Athens, Rogersville and Florence Branch Line from Pulaski to Decatur via Ardmore and Athens Connections with Buses at Athens for Nashville and Birmingham; at Hunts- ville for Chattanooga, Gadsden and Fayetteville: at. Florence for Corinth. Russellville and Lawrenceburg. When a Minute Means a Lot to You — Take a Bus Operated by Number 7 Bus Lines, Inc. Phone No. 7 Athens, Alabama jjrmmjiimiii n i r iiiiiii rrTn i irrnn Lii irtn mimniiiiiiDr i iiiiii n r n irinnnimiiirnir 235 LaTerrace Top Brand name Merchandise Doiikeiiiiy Miss Pat CM. Coventry Extrovert Thermo Jac Rag Doll Bradley Young Men ' s Dept. Newest styles in Double Knit Slacks Also newest styles in Short sleeve shirts At the top of any class! STATE NATIONAL BANK OF ALABAMA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Gpif AL Q (5)VI1K.AIUL m !BE1 BE1 ' ®1§ BETTER THAN BUTTER beetOK It  made In a more healthful, brslenic manner, and under both srovemiDent and State Inspectioii. Do«« not r«t rmakeid. BETTER THAN ALL OTHER MAKES OF BUTTERINE because It la churned under a wholly original and Inimitable for- mula, producing an Ab ohitelr UBcqnalad QusUty. MADE IN COLUMBUS. OHIO 236 5S3 3 3 k3 k3 3 S S I J I 3? TRAVELWAY MOTEL Phone 232-3933 ATHENS, ALABAMA g g f g f g f g f g f S S$ ' S ODD — ■f TOURWAY RESTAURANT Highway 72 and 31 at TOURWAY INN Phone 232-7790 Athens, Alabama REAL HOSPITALITY AND FINE FOOD TH Electric City Engraving Co. B UFFALO. N.Y. W£ MADE THE ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK. £f =a 237 Elisalirlli ItUirrlnrk HrrHalilttH For such annlher nas llirr noon 7 s ie. TKe Hov(  a rT«o r writ Sj i i kaviA ' a writ. Moves on; r i Vu T?.t. vcr WlF NJ or 4 II 1 Kxj If vvas O ' lt . Wi ' 0 c ' i , f , 23« THE BEAR PAGE 239 240 I
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