Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL)
- Class of 1964
Page 1 of 252
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
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Text from Pages 1 - 252 of the 1964 volume:
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LIBRARY BIRMINGHAM -SOtfT ££ N COLLEGE BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COILE 5 0553 01001663 9 H51 5k 1964 southern accent birmingham - southern college birmingham alabama volume 23 ! i When Southern University moved to Birmingham in 1918, the city was young and small. The people who moved the college put it on a stony hump on Enon Ridge, the northern rim of Jones Valley. Town was, the brochure said, only an eight to ten minute bicycle ride away, and the campus only 1 Va miles from the city limit. In the valley, down where Third Avenue runs now, was a little creek and a sizable swamp, and Five Points West was still a dahlia nursery, but over to the west of the college, the steel mills were already industriously spewing smoke and fumes into a graying sky. Since then the city has expanded, taken in new land and changed the land. The creek no longer has its swamp, al- though it now stinks in continuous, sullen rebellion to urbaniza- tion. Dahlias, too, seem to grow just as well on less profitable ground, but the steel mills have endured and grown and been joined by other mills, making atmospheric purity a dim, myth- ical image in the municipal memory. Steel has for so long been theme and center of Birmingham ' s story and of Birmingham-Southern ' s. Steel brought money to Birmingham and because the people in Birmingham who wanted a college had some of that money and Southern Uni- versity of Greensboro had none, the college came. And all the while, as the city grew and rechanneled its creeks and dried up swamps, absorbed farms and spilled over out of its valley Birmingham influenced this college far beyond the tacts of name and location. Never, until the last few years, had anyone realized how completely this city and the region from which it draws its life have permeated the life and attitudes ot the college and the minds and spirits of the college s people Never have we been forced so persistently to the harsh task of analyzing and evaluating the true meaning of these few acres of rocky, poor — farm dirt; to the deep realization that the forces which stoke the furnaces have seldom fed the fires of the intellect. What we ' re really trying to do in this book, and may- be it isn ' t even our |ob, is to impress you with the single historical fact of having lived in Birmingham during the past year. Our purpose is to help, or even make, you recall how things in this town and nation looked to you in that year. Without making a value |udgment for you, we want you to remember exactly how it was in this city in May, 1963. We would have you remember watching the rioters and riot-watchers gather in the afternoon, the great hairy cops with carbines and shotguns, the smell of old pine shacks burning in the night down in the black ghetto. Remember, long after you ' ve forgotten your spring quarter point average or S.G.A. elections or who you dated that spring, that ten blocks from you, America changed. There was,really, little noise and little pain for such a great battle, the meeting of hundred year old ad- versaries in Kelly Ingram ' s park. Remember, too, how deeply you were touched and untouched by it all; how strongly you pulled for whichever side was yours and how happy or sad you were at the end of each day, and remember how, during Birmingham ' s slow crucifixion, you went to class and took tests and sat in the cafeteria drinking your iced tea. i« ■■-. In speaking of the past year and how it affected students on this campus, there is no way to omit November 22, 1963, and, really, little use to remind you that on that day two bullets struck and blew away most of John Kennedy ' s head. Surely, you must remember exactly where you were and what you were doing when you heard of the shooting and, later, of the death. It was during finals,and most of us spent the whole weekend watch- ing the reports and funeral on television, knowing of the necessity for study, but yielding to the greater demand of seeing in the formalized grief of John Kennedy ' s funeral the true meaning of being an American, and seeing this more clearly than Americans have since World War II. These two events, the Negro Revolution and the assassination, formed the backdrop up- on which we played our individual lives. There is no need here to recount the specific facts. There will be books and magazines — thousands of words — to set them down. We ' re in no danger of losing from our national history exactly what happened and when, but this is the only book intended to help you recall the way it was with you in that time. This is all very fine, you may say, but what of my specific life; what does this ac- tually mean to me? It is really amazing, and frustrating,too, the mundane things which occupy us even in the midst of great and portentous times. After everyone, as we all did, took a few solitary moments to evaluate the enduring relevance in our individual lives of these events, after the secret interior cataloging and filing was over, the surface flow of our lives went on as before. No one may say in what exact direction or degree another ' s life was moved, but there is no doubt that each life was shaded in some way by the er- ratic mood and tempo of the past year. If our recent history was the canvas upon which each inscribed his own tiny and personal motif, we must all wonder what marks we left on that canvas, on ourselves, and on each other. The image of the self-conscious college student, crusading, meditating, subjectifying his whole environment, has become as much a part of the American popular culture as the con- cept of the frenetic teenager. The fact that parents and teachers look back on their youthful struggles with patronizing amusement doesn ' t really alter the immediacy of our own struggles. And whether for good or ill, this college has a way of rendering these problems immediate and imperative and of creating a deep seated disturbance that one may avoid in the anonymity and passivity of a larger, more undemanding school. The decision of choosing a niche in the pocked and shelved wall of society; the hope of maybe doing something a little beyond forty hours, two weeks paid, nice house and kids,- the gnawing recurrence of an insane idea, of really having enough guts to put those fine discussion group ideas into your actual life— all these demand resolution; all of them lie with you at night and go with you in your waking like an old man ' s wet-weather ache. There is a way to survive, though. When the big questions — those of future, ambition, and sanity — become too great, you can always submit to the mesmerism of campus life. There is no novocain so complete, no numbness so sublime as the complex, non-crucial routine of subsisting on this campus. Among labs and library carrels, with erudite, unthinking re- search in beige-walled dorm rooms you can actually accom- plish the difficult task of losing yourself — from yourself. Surely, there must be some here who are either so well ad- justed or so unconscious to begin with that such a spiritual vacation at some time during four years is not necessary. But most of us, soon or late, become so suffocated that nerveless absorption with the task of learning is a welcome respite. It is like living by an outline, form without content, in which the spin! is an ob|ective and unconcerned spectator to the postur- ings of its body. It is very easy to fall into the habit of labeling that which we are too lazy to analyze or unable to define as intangible, and you have probably heard it said that Southern has such a quality, some pervading essence which draws and holds peo- ple to it. Southern does have an intangible, or at least an elusive, quality which sets it apart; but this feeling produces estrangement and affection, loyalty and distaste in relatively equal amounts. It is this quality which produces our need for occasional self isolation and which spawns the perennial talk of transfer to a more attractive, sophisticated campus. Paradoxically, the same aspect of life at Southern brings us back each year in spite of our protestations and creates in us a grudging, but tenacious, affection. If we cannot pinpoint what it is about this school that be- longs uniquely to it, at least it is not difficult to say when it operates most strongly; when this hill becomes a complete world for you, detached from outside ties of location and af- fection; when you feel like a tiny, sterilized bearing in a great, slow grinding gear, and there is a persistent heat behind your eyes that means you are torn between an absolute hate and repulsion for every person here and a staggering need to have |ust one person care if you now or ever walk down that cold hill in the early morning. The time when it really gets you is winter quarter. December, January, and February as they are in Birming- ham are months which s houldn ' t happen to any yeatjany place. It ' s cold-a damp, garment penetrating cold that defies the fee- ble old paint-caked radiators, the kind you can lean against and get a streak of warmth up the back of each thigh and buttock while the rest of your body remains as chill as the rest of the room. Just the cold wouldn ' t really be so bad, but for the ram coming slow and steady for weeks on end until the quadrangle becomes spongy underfoot and crisscrossed with little dams of dead grass. Everyday in class you sit and feel the moisture slip through your shoes, quietly assured that some- one has walked off with the umbrella you left dripping in the hall. The final thing about winter here, thoughts the utter and total grayness that makes the buildings uglier even than they are and the people seem ashen and wilted. Too, over all is the industrial stench of Birmingham, which carries on the wet air and strikes you on the day ' s first door opening. For many, that smell of Birmingham on a cold, gray, 7 o ' clock morning before the sun burns the vapors away must be the enduring mental abbreviation for that pernicious depression that stalks us all in the winter. It is this internal burden, engendered and nurtured in soli- tude, which inevitably sends a few home before the work is done. But each of us, too, labors under an external burden that is very much a part of this college and constitutes its big- gest problem: Administrationism. Administrationism means that total fascination with antiseptic account books and impersonal grade point averages which characterizes second floor Munger. It ' s what gives you the feeling that they would gladly sacrifice your present or future happiness, career — even burn your body — just to keep the books in balance. Administrationism is what causes your throat to constrict and your hands to get sweaty when you stand there trying to schedule a class or find out how many hours and quality points you need. You know that its not a question of if anything is wrong; just how wrong. It is really amazing that such a tremendous body of regula- tions and procedures can accrue around the task of directing one thousand lives. After awhile, you actually begin to think of yourself as a being composed of polarities of obedience and non-obedience caught amid the subtle manifestations of the gap between the leaders and the masses: the sidewalks that don ' t go where anyone wants to walk, but serve only to awkwardly circumnavigate chain-guarded areas where grass seed have been spread on the rocks; the convocations called simply because every week has a Wednesday; the fact that the college employs someone who zealously tickets unstickered cars on a campus where parking has never been a problem. There is a deeper schism, too. One occasioned not by lack of communication but by absence of common purpose. One that fosters evasiveness, furtiveness, and a get by attitude among us, and is evidenced by the fact that so many officials work so tirelessly at holding us to a system of behavior which has little relevance to our education and which many have found personally unfeasible. And so the college contributes its part to our seasonal with- drawal and introspection. And Southern can really expect little loyalty toward the institution itself as long as it adheres to a policy of rules made to fit the occasion and after the fact. Little loyalty will come as long as navigating among the ex- isting rules, policies, and practices continues to remind us of daily going to the same stone wall, backing off ten equal paces and daily running headlong into that wall. 10 Occasionally, even here, a person may realize that there is a remedy for that lump of loneliness, frustration, and impa- tience which lies day and night in your stomach; that makes you want to scream obscenities at noon in the cafeteria or drive far away for a few days, just get a motel room a ' nd wonder if you ' ve been missed. But every now and then an- other person comes swimming out of their kin, and the hazy dream of two lives merge into a new definition. The meeting needn ' t be beautiful, the dialogue cool, nor anyone particular- ly dashing; the only requirement is another person real enough at that particular moment to snap you back out of yourself. The story isn ' t new, and we have no special claim to it. Prob- ably the script is pretty much the same everywhere at any time, but the special joy of giving a mutual damn, of a warm and opposite body makes the routine bearable. Just having another human point to aim at can give you a new courage and flair for life. Life here, though, is set within boundaries of time: September and May, Christmas and Spring, and when the threads of continuity and rapport are broken by absence, short or long, you may never find that same person again. Neither is this the place for permanence nor the time in your life for lasting, and the sadness lies in knowing that the difference from the way it was before is really within yourself. It isn ' t very hard to figure out what to do then; follow the old routine. Everything has waited, conspiring, knowing that you would come full circle back to yourself alone again. Then draw yourself up into the smallest space onto the most easily defended ground. There, still, are the books and the long, long walk across the quad, past the concrete circle where the sun dial used to be, between two ugly build- ings made bearable by the night. I. ' Editor Hubert Grissom Assistant Editor Mary Ann Griffin Copy Editor Howell Raines Business Manager Mac Moncus Circulation Manager Diane Copeland Pageant Director Marianne Hitchcock contents DEDICATION 14 IN MEMORIAM i 6 ADMINISTRATION 18 ACTIVITIES 38 BEAUTIES 70 GREEKS 98 SPORTS 126 ORGANIZATIONS 152 CLASSES 190 ADVERTISEMENTS 226 1 4 . r u dedication Who is he, this man of many faces? A fifty-vear-old boy wonder who . . . plays tennis two hours every day looks at home in a heavy fog with damp cigar and his hands in his pockets fears nothing except bats in a dark room can step onstage and into any character can make a girl smoke a cigar and pretend to like it continually receives top halves for his glasses plays first trash can, last chair in the symphony of the absurd can give a 98-pound girl courage to climb a 60-foot ladder and hang curtains on non-existent rods collects more disciples daily — and deserves them dares to present the new and often misunderstood stops what he ' s doing to chase moths demands the impossible — and gets it manages to be the forboding professor and still keep his classes laughing understands both tragic and comic, the reasonable and the absurd Who is this man? His many faces demand many names: Arnie . . . The Great White God . . . Dr. A mold Powell. 14 arnold francis powell in memoriam Dwight Isbell died in an automobile accident, during the summer of 1963. He would have been a senior this year. In life, he would likely have disdained such tributes as annuals usually give. We offer this page, then, only to recall to you Dwight as you may have known him. Here we shall say only true things of him. They will suffice. Dwight was the dominating intellectual force among the students, and he respected the responsibilities of this often unenviable position. Above all, Dwight Isbell possessed the high seriousness of the true scholar. 16 17 administration 18 For many years Birmingham-Southern has operated, and correctly so, under the theory rhnt maintaining an able faculty should take precedence over tf a construction of an imposing physical plant. More than half of the sixty-nine faculty mem- bers hold doctorate degrees, and they average approximately fifteen years of teaching experience. Unlike many institutions, Southern places classroom performance and interest in the pupil ahead of research and publication. The college ' s major problem is not recruiting, but holding, able faculty members, since Southern has become a ' hunting ground for schools from other parrs of the country. Editor Susan McCartney 19 Howard m. phillips, sr. president :o President and Mrs. Phillips entertain with a faculty tea Dr. Howard Mitchell Phillips, Sr., is serving his first year as the sixth president of Birmingham-Southern College. He has filled the positions of professor of biology and dean of the graduate school, Emory University, and president of Alabama College, Montevallo. Dr. Phillips received his B.S. and M.A. degrees from Wake Forest College, and his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and Pi Kappa Alpha. In his public statements, Dr. Phillips has avoided lip-service to highly idealistic goals in favor of the more realistic goals of money, expansion, and recruitment. In referring to his Master Plan , Dr. Phillips made the fol- lowing statement, June, 1963, immediately after he assumed his office. Our assignment will not be easy; it will require excep- tionally hard work, dedication, cooperation and a tre- mendous amount of money. It will demand an under- standing attitude and a zealous commitment on the part of all of us. We shall begin immediately to pro|ect out new goals. Southern for many years has had sufficent goals, aims, and mottoes; now it is hoped that under the leadership of Dr. Phillips she will receive the physical means to make the ideal a reality. President ' s Home. 21 the board of trustees Hi cers executive committee CHAIRMAN: Mr. Robert F. Henry VICE CHAIRMAN: Dr. J. H. Chitwood SECRETARY: Dr. R. E. Branscomb CHAIRMAN: James B. Hill (deceased November 30, VICE CHAIRMAN: J. H. Chitwood SECRETARY: Lonnie P. Munger 1963) From left to right; First row: Mr. Frank Spain, Dr. Paul Clem, Dr. Phillips, Mr. Robert Henry, Mr. N. M. Yielding, Dr. R. E. Branscomb, Dr. J. Carlisle Miller, Mr. Edward Q. Norton, Mr. Mervyn H. Sterne, Mr. William Hulsey, Mr. S. M. Baker, Mr. Marvin H. Vickers; Second row: Dr. Otis E. Kirby, Dr. Calvin Pinkard, Dr. Beuford Word, Mr. Elton Stephens, Dr. Cylde Miller, Dr. J. H. Chitwood, Dr. Thad Ellisor,Mr. Taylor Kirby, Mr. E. L. Boatner, Sr. 22 Chancellor Guy E. Snavely held the position of President of Birmingham-Southern College from 1921-1937, and again from 1955-1957. Upon his retirement in 1957, he was elected Chancellor of Birmingham-Southern College. He resides in Washington, D.C. guy e. snavely 23 dean of the college Dr. Cecil Abernathy Dr. Abernathy has been dean of Birmingham- Southern College since 1958. He received his B.A. degree from Birmingham-Southern College in 1930, and his M.A. degree from the University of North Carolina in 1935. In 1940 he received his Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University. dean of women Mrs. Robert Cothran Mrs. Cothran has been dean of women at Birming- ham-Southern College since 1956. She serves as sponsor for the Women ' s House Council and Pan- hellenic Council, and coordinates all women activities. Mrs. Cothran received her B.S. degree from Hunting- don College in 1924, and her M.S. degree from Columbia University in 1926. 24 dean of students Dr. Ralph Jolly Dr. Jolly has been dean of students since 1956. He serves as sponsor for Men ' s Dorm Council and Inter- fraternity Council, and all activities for men. Dr. Jolly received his B.S. degree from Birmingham-South- ern College in 1942, and his B.D. degree at Duke University in 1945. In 1954 he received his Ph.D. degree from Vanderbilt University. He is also profes- sor of religion. assistant dean of students B. P. Burch Mr. Burch was chosen to fill the newly-created position of Assistant to the Dean of Students. His chief responsibility is to coordinate fraternity affairs. Mr. Burch received his B.S. degree from Middle Tennessee State in 1946, and his M.A. degree from Peabody College in 1947. In 1947 he received his P.G. degree from Indiana. Mr. Burch is also an asso- ciate professor of Physical Education. 25 DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS Ralph M. Tanner Assistant Professor of History B.A., Birmingham-Southern Col- lege, 1954; M.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1957. OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS: From left to right: Anne H. Powell; Ethel George; Robert Dwain Dortch, Assistant to Director of Admissions. administration REGISTRAR Robert W. Hites Associate Professor of Psychology B.A., Mercer University, 1947; M.A., Ohio State University, 1948; Ph.D., Ohio State Uni- versity, 1950. OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR: from left to right: Ruth H. Perkins; Alice M. Nix :.■• OFFICE OF THE BURSAR: from left to right: Ruth G. Word; Robert H. Walston, Bursar- Thura B Godwin. DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC RELATIONS: Virginia Hamilton. CAFETERIA STAFF: from left to right: S. King Atkinson; Don Amason. administration From left to right: Helen D. Moss, Secretary to the Dean of Students; J. Mitchell Prude, Assistant to the Treasurer; Ellaree D. Spear, Manager of the Bookstore. 27 OFFICE OF THE TREASURER: Newman Manley Yeilding, Treasurer; Ruth Truss. ALUMNI OFFICE: Virginia McMahon, Hiram Benjamin Englebert. administration MARGARET H. HUGHES ROCHELLE CROW A.B., Oberlin College, 1927; B.S., in L.S., Carnegie A.B., Birmingham-Southern College, 1959; M.A.L.S., Institute of Technology, 1932; M.S., Columbia Uni- Denver University, 1962. versify, 1949. FRANCES D. MCLAUGHLIN A. B., Birmingham-Southern, 1956 BARBARA ANN MOSELEY A.B., Birmingham-Southern College, 1959; M.A., Uni- versity of Alabama, 1 963 library BERNICE B. PHELPS A.B., University of Kentucky, 1945; 1945-47 Mather College, Western Reserve University. Columbia Uni- ' , versify, School of Library Service, 1 947-48, admitted j to candidacy for M.S. program. VIRGINIA Pins REMBERT Assistant Professor of Art B.A., Alabama College, 1942; M.A., Columbia Univer- sity, 1944; M.A., University of Wisconsin, 1959. PAUL C. BAILEY Professor of Biology B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1942; M.A., Vander- bilt University, 1946; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University, 1949. RAYMOND JOHN MacMAHON Professor of Art B.F.A., University of Georgia, 1939; M.F.A., of Georgia, 1947. University the faculty art biology c assies JAMES ARTHUR DOUBLES Professor of Biology B.A., University of North Carolina, 1935; M.A Uni- versity of North Carolina, 1938; Ph.D., University of North Carolina, 1940. DAN CLARK HOLUMAN Assistant Professor of Biology B.S., University of Alabama, 1957; M.S., University of Alabama, 1959; Ph.D., University of Alabama, 1962. JAMES H. LANGDON, JR. Circulation Librarian B.A., University of Southwestern Louisiana MARIAN CRAWFORD Assistant Professor of Latin 1951. A.B., Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College, 1927; A.M., Southern Methodist University, 1931. HERMAN ROBERT BUTTS Professor of Classics B.A., University of Missouri, 1932; M.A., State Univer- sity of Iowa, 1933; Ph.D., State University of Iowa, 1942. KENNETH MILTON GORDON Professor of Chemistry B.A., University of Illinois, 1938; Ph.D., Northwestern University, 1942 WILLIAM RANDOLPH MOUNTCASTLE, JR. Associate Professor of Chemistry B.S., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1943; M.S., Uni- versity of Alabama, 1958; Ph.D., University of Ala- bama, 1958. WYNELLE D. THOMPSON Associate Professor of Chemistry B.S., Birmingham-Southern College, 1943; M.S., Uni- versity of Alabama, 1935; 1956; Ph.D., University of Alabama, 1960. the faculty WILLIAM S. WILCOX Professor of Chemistry A.B., Washington and Lee, 1943; Ph.D., Emory, 1952. RUTHERFORD RAY BLACK Professor of Education B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1930; M.A. Uni- versity of Chicago, 1939; Ed.D., University of Ala- bama, 1 956. KATHRYN M. BOEHMER Instructor in Chemistry B.A., University of Wisconsin, 1921. MARJORIE W. McWHORTER Associate Professor of Education B.A., Wellesley, 1921; M.Ed., Harvard, 1953. chemistry education geology B. D. WHETSTONE Assistant Professor of Education B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1955; M.Ed.,: Birmingham-Southern College, 1959; Ph.D., University ' of Alabama, 1963. THOMAS C. COMMITTEE Associate Professor of Accounting-Business Administra- tion B.A., Bethany College, 1943; M.A., Texas Christian University, 1963; LL.B., West Virginia University 1949- C.P.A., 1950. economics ELLEN F. WALKER Assistant Professor of Business Administration B.S., University of Alabama, 1929; M.A., Columbia University, 1940. RICHARD W. MASSEY, JR. Associate Professor of Economics and Business Admin- istration B.S., University of Virginia, 1939; M.A., Birmingham- Southern College, 1954; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University 1959. the faculty business administration psychology JOHN S. COCHRAN Assistant Professor of Economics B.A., Southwestern at Memphis, 1952; M.A., Harvard 1953; Ph.D., Harvard, 1961. ALBERT RAYBURN JONES Associate Professor of Psychology B.A, Millsaps College, 1952; Ph.D., Vanderbilt Univer- sity, 1959. lOMAS JACK CARRINGTON isistant Professor of Geology S., University of Kentucky, 1958; M.S., University of mtucky, 1960. win ■IWm r f m .j Pi 1 i fe WILLIAM A. THOMAS Associate Professor of Geology B.S., University of Kentucky, 1956; M.S., University of Kentucky, 1957; Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute 1960 THOMAS B. LEONARD, III Assistant Professor of Psychology B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1960. CAMILLA HOY Associate Professor of French B.S., University of South Carolina, 1943; M.A., Uni- versity of South Carolina, Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College, 1954. the faculty french Spanish german ROBERTA ELIZABETH WAWRO Instructor of French B.A., Sweet Briar College, 1961. MARY HELEN BRASWELL Instructor of French B.S., Birmi ngham-Southern College, 1961. de Langue, University of Toulouse. Certificat JOHN T. SIEGWART Professor of Spanish B.S., Memphis State, 1952; M.A., University of Mis- sissippi, 1952; Ph.D., Tulane University, 1959. WARREN H. MORY Assistant Professor of Spanish M.A., University of Alabama, 1961. DOROTHY COX WARD Assistant Professor of German B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1935; B.M., Birmingham Conservatory of Music, 1950; M.A., Columbia University, 1954. CHARLOTTE D. HARDAGE Assistant Professor of German B.A., Huntingdon College, 1958; M.A., University of Alabama, 1960. GERALDINE G. DILLARD Instructor of German B.A., Birmingham Southern College, 1961. EGBERT SYDNOR OWNBEY Professor of English B.S., Vanderbilt University, 1 927; M.A., Vanderbilt Uni- versity, 1 928; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University, 1 932. HOWARD HALL CREED RICHEBOURG GAILLARD McWILLIAMS Professor of English Mary Collett Munger, Professor of English B.A., Central College, 1930; M.A., Vanderbilt Univer- B.S., University of Alabama, 1 922; M. A., University of sity, 1 932; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University, 1 942. Alabama, 1 925; M.S., Harvard University, 1 933. the faculty english speech KATHLEEN MOORE PEACOCK Instructor in English B.S., Randolph Macon Women ' s College, 1926; M.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1958. FAIRLIE ARANT Instructor in English B.A., Wellesley College, 1957; M.A., Columbia Un versify, 1 961 . LESLIE C. LONGSHORE, JR. Instructor in English B.S., Tulane, 1948; M.A., University of Alabama. 1954. ARNOLD F. POWELL Professor of English and Drama B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1937; M.A., Van- derbilt University, 1 938; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University 1947. CAL M LOGUE Instructor of Speech M.S., Florida State University. EVELYN VIRGINIA WILEY Professor of History B A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1938; M.A., Van- derbilt University, 1939; Ph.D., University of Pennsyl- vania, 1959. the faculty O. LAWRENCE BURNETTE, JR. Associate Professor of History B.A., University of Richmond, 1945; M.A., University of Virginia, 1948; Ph D., University of Virginia, 1952. WINTHROP ROBINS WRIGHT Assistant Professor of History B.A., Swarthmore, 1958; M.A., vania, 1 960. University of Pennsyl- history engineering physi cs TIMOTHY R. HORNSBY Assistant Professor of History B.A., Oxford University, 1961; Harkness Research Fel- low, Columbia and Harvard, 1 961 -63. ROBERT B. deJANES Assistant Professor of Political Science B. A., George Washington University, 1 957; M.A., Uni- versity of Tennessee, 1959. M. VON STEPHENS Associate Professor of Engineering B.S., Auburn University, 1948; M.S., Auburn University, 1951; B.M.E., Auburn University, 1953 JAMES HARRIS PURKS Professor of Physics B.S., Emory University, 1923; M.A., Columbia Univer- sity, 1925; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1928. HOYT M KAYLOR Professor of Physics B.S., Birmingham-Southern College, 1943; M.S., Uni- versity of Tennessee, 1949; Ph.D., University of Tennes- see, 1953 WILLIAM ELLIS GLENN Professor of Mathematics B.S., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1925; M.A., Emory University, 1927; LL.D., Athens, 1956. WILLIAM RAINES BATTLE, JR. Robert Sylvester Munger, Professor of Physical Educa- tion and Director of Intramural Program B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1930; M.A., George Peabody College for Teachers, 1 935. LOUISE HALL ECHOLS LO LA FRANCES KISER Ass.stant Professor of Mathematics Associate Professor of Mathematics !i ' u U ™ ,e S° l Alabama, 1931; M.A., University of B.S., Memphis State College, 1952; M.A., University of Georgia, 1 954. Alabama, 1935. the faculty mathematics physical education philosophy ■Wf ? ' v JOHN FRANKLIN LOCKE Professor of Mathematics B.S., Memphis State College, 1927; M.A., Vanderbilt University, 1 929; Ph.D., University of Illinois, 1 933. HAROLD WALTER PICKEL Instructor of Physical Education and Basketball Coach A.B., Birmingham-Southern College, 1959. ELIZABETH DAVIS Assistant Professor of Physical Education Diploma, New Haven Normal School of Gymnastics, 1924; A.B., Birmingham-Southern College, 1946 OLIVER C. WEAVER, JR. Professor of Religion and Philosophy B.A , Birmingham-Southern College, 1935; B.D., Garrett Theological Seminary, 1939; Ph.D., Northwestern Uni- versity, 1952. t - J i ii 1 1 1 t -rrr - the faculty religion music HENRY JACKSON GOLSON Instructor in Religion and College Chaplain A.B., Birmingham-Southern College, 1960; B.D., derbilt University, 1963. Van- THOMAS W. OGLETREE Assistant Professor of Religion B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1 955; B.D., Garrett Theological Seminary, 1959. JOSEPH HUGH THOMAS Professor of Music B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1933; B.M., Birm- ingham Conservatory of Music, 1935; MM., Birming- ham Conservatory of Music, 1 937. SAM BATT OWENS Assistant Professor of Music and College Organist B.M., Birmingham Conservatory of Music, 1 950; M.M., Birmingham-Southern College, 1956. RAYMOND FLOYD ANDERSON Professor of Music, Director of College Choir B.A., Maryville College, 1926; M.A., Columbia Uni- versity, 1939 MARTHA DICK McCLUNG Assistant Professor of Music B.M., MacPhill School, 1924; M.M., Birmingham Con- servatory of Music, 1944 WILLIAM HUBBARD BAXTER, JR. Associate Professor of Music B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1942; B.M., Birm- ingham Conservatory of Music, 1947; S.M.M., Union Theological Seminary, 1949; Ph.D., University of Rochester, 1957. ELMER EVERETT PITTMAN Assistant Professor of Music B.M., Birmingham Conservatory of Music, 1 950; M.M., University of Texas, 1955. ANDREW GAINEY Assistant Professor of Music B.A., University of Denver, 1940. ALLEN O. GIBBS Lecturer In Music B.M., Birmingham Conservatory of Music, 1935. BETTY JO HARMON Instructor of Music B.M.E., Birmingham-Southern College, 1949 LOUISE MASSENGILL lecturer in Music B.M., Birmingham Conservatory of Music, 1 934. LUIS BENEJAM Instructor of Music and Director of the College Orches- tra Diploma, Barcelona Conservatory of Music, 1 936. AMY ELEANOR FOWLER Instructor of Music B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 1961; B.M., Bir- mingham-Southern College, 1962; M.M., University of Michigan, 1963. minnie McNeill carr Lecturer in Music B.A., Converse College, 1 908; B.M., Birmingham C servatory of Music, 1 942. JANE SIRLES PINION Instructor of Music B.M., Birmingham-Southern College, 1947. the faculty conservatory of music •■' ■Iw i mmf a 1 • . • activities 38 covpr h V I ' 5 ' S V ° 9Ue ° nd com P reh ens!ve enough to cover the diverse functions included herein. It should be noted and t°hntT functions ™ within the realm of the gung-ho and fhat th averag e student still depends on the more spon- taneous and personal amusements. Editors: Jo Gober and Beth McConnel 39 may day, 1963 Spring is a trying time for scholars. After diligently develop- ing fine minds all winter, some actually discover that they do have bodies and give themselves over to such glandular pur- suits as houseparties and creek-banking. Southern ' s official means of safely channeling the vernal en- ergy is May Day. The 1963 May Day entailed a concert by the prodigal folk duet of Richard Jim, field events and allowing girls to wear bermuda shorts in class. As if this wasn ' t enough blatant indecency, there was dancing in the street during the evening. Despite so much careful planning, however, May Day 1963 managed to be quite a lot of fun. ' Munchin ' Melon at the Zeta ' s May Day booth Unofficial. The Tau s booth capitalized on our destructive tendencies. 40 The 1 963 May Queen title went to Miss Dean Mil- ler. She was crowned by a former Southern May Queen, Mrs. Cynthia Ford Hearn. Dean is a Senior, majoring in French and hails from Pensacola, Florida. She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. the may court and queen Cynthia Ford Hearn crowns Queen Dean Diane Ethridge, Pam Teogue, Carolyn hearn, Judy Thomason, Rusty Glass, Bonnie Cofield, Alo Reynolds, Beverlye Brown, Cathie Glosser, Betty Striplin, Karla Tatum. Anne Paulk, Janneke Hollimon, Nancy Dee Meeks, Jeonnie Patterson, Judy Short, Margie Allen, Trina Nannie, Jeannie Mabry, Rose Coleman Catspaw is a formalized version of the favorite campus pastime of inter- Greek cutting. Gathering material is no problem since everyone has an abundance of idiosyncrasies,and there is no such thing as a real secret at Southern. 1963 was a cleanup year for Cats- paw since the 1962 show had been justifiably declared dirty. Virtue, in the form of expurgated skits, triumpned in the end, as students discovered that being wholesome was almost as much fun as being trashy. SAE-AOPi Monks take first place catspaw, 1963 LXA-lndies win second place with their version of Alice in Wonderland Of course I deserve the trophy, I did all the work KA ' s and KD ' s say, Some fairy tale, but third place? 42 You must not laugh at me, darling, but it has always been a girlish dream of mine to love someone whose name was Ernest There is something in that name that seems to inspire absolute confidence. Ernest in Love, the gay musical presented last Spring, was adapted by Anne Croswell and Lee Pockriss from Oscar Wild ' s The Importance of Being Earnest. It was College Theatre ' s first musical to De presented in Munger Auditorium. ' Alice, what do you think is the first thing that a man notices about a ' woman? In a moment of mental abstraction for which I can never forgive my- self, I deposited my manuscript in the bassinette -and placed the baby in the handbag! ' ' 43 ■fc . m Sermon on the mount ta po-boy supper 1963 Goin Bar-foot Hell no, that ain ' t no roach- One day a year the Zeta ' s scream legally and somewhat in tune. Going barefoot makes them more careful about where they throw their gum, too. rt ■i if alumni day Yes! Welcome alumni. graduation, 1963 After four years the aver- age student witnesses his first graduation exercise. 4 5 7 Y T MX Orientation means education by repetition and endoctrination through boredom. orientation You ' re on social pro. 46 rush, 1963 Rush means talking to people you don ' t know, about things you don ' t care about. Rush takes a week, starting with heat and thunder, and ending in apathy. What rush really does is determine the course of Greek competition for the coming year, and there is no lack of hard nose competitiveness as each group strives to lure young and unwary individuals into the warmth of its collective bosom. Rush may be hard sell or soft sell, but it always boils down to the basic,and not always pleasant, fact of acceptance or re- action. Party invitations are processed. Please, Fairy Godmother Happiness . . . Relief. 47 Seasoned vets keep a safe distance while surveying the new recruits. rush... You pledged WHAT? Of course you can have friends in other groups, dear. We have just got to scream louder than they do. rush Don ' t get jealous, Jerry, you ' ve been pinned! Nice meeting you, Charlie. 49 Director, Marianne Hitchcock, instructs finalists on Just one more thing— m iss southern accent Judges cheerfully look over the contestants. r 0 ♦ I f , ' « k ytf tk After the student vote, twenty-five semi-finalists faced the judges . . . charmingly. When thinking of things distinctly Southern, one must not omit the Southern Accent Pageant. The pageant is conducted in a fashion similar to the Miss Alabama Contest and engenders the same spirit of good old American cut-throat competition. While the male population looks on in bemused detachment, the contestants, cheered on by the various sisterhoods, really turn on the snow as the veneer of gentility wears thinner and thinner and the distance be- tween smile and snear progressively lessens. The Pageant itself is usually well attended,and with reason. For if the air of suspense is a little contrived, the entertainment is usually worth the admission price. The Journeymen gave a com- petent, even if somewhat dispirited perform- ance while the judges deliberated and a sudden thunderstorm reminded everyone that their car windows were down. And then there were fifteen. I don ' t know, Mary Ann. Why do elephants climb trees? 51 But Lily Mae promised me. ...miss southern accent pageant ' Oh, hell! Another beauty contest. Backstage means a chance to stop smiling. 52 Tommy Charles gives the pageant continuity by using the same jokes every year. The Journeyman. They sing folk songs. Shirley Herrin crowns her successor, Rose Coleman, Miss Southern Accent. 53 the pops concert The choirs struck out in a new direc- tion this year with a Pops Concert. This repertoire gave the program broader appeal among students, but the per- formance was not of the consistent high quality of which the choir is cap- able. They sing folk songs, too. Judy Short, Miss Alabama, joins the Men ' s Chorus. 54 - n • - Student-Faculty Volleyball Game, another well attended function. An enthusiastic crowd looks on Okay girls, let ' s get out there and beat hell out of ' em. the faculty vollyball game Naw Cal, I haven ' t heard that one. Why do elephants climb trees? 55 The fall play, N. F. Simpson ' s One Way Pendulum, con- cerned an ingenious plot to increase the death rate in England by shifting the earth ' s axis and bringing the polar cap nearer. Kirby Groomkirby, the master planner, had grown up with an obsessive fondness for mourning black, and found murder too distasteful a method of making such apparel appropriate. The set designer insists upon manufacturing his wallpaper manually, flower by flower, with stencil and spray gun. ' But my arms are too short. ' You really shouldn ' t have put so much catsup in the asparagus. ' 56 ' What do you mean, you taught the parking meter to sing? Say! If I give the whole damn family food poisoning, I won ' t have to cook tomorrow! The cast takes its curtain ca Standing in the judge ' s bench is Grady Clarkson. The two counse and the judge stand before him: Harry Mueller, Kerry Pennington, and Howard Cruse. Downstage, left to right, the play- ers are: Bill Reich, Ann Rivenbark, Charles Shults, Sam Ratcliffe, Pam Walbert (seated) Dianne Higgin- botham, Michael Carlisle, Ruth Trowbridge, Jerry Anderegg, and Jimmy Slater. wafer ballet Some thought the Love theme was carried too far. Breathless Love 58 ' fcL A • i Indian Love Actual Love Every year they have the Water Ballet. Every year . . . This year the theme was Love is a Many Splendored Thing. The pool people are to be congratulated on han- dling this explosive topic so tastefully that Water Ballet remained a real family outing. Divine Love 59 Sober up, Queen Harry homecoming As the pictures reveal, this function defies comment. Joan of . . . who? Student leaders do the darndest things. ' Alabama needs a two party system. Birmingham-Southern was host to a debate by local attor- neys sponsored by the Pre-Law Society and the Independent College Association. Resolved: Alabama needs a two party system. The student body proved themselves to be apathetic, by not bothering to attend. The fifth annual Birmingham-Invitational Forensics Tourna- ment,sponsored by Birmingham-Southern and Howard, was held at Southern. Twenty teams from colleges in eight Southern and Eastern states entered the tournament, and Liberty Na- tional Insurance Company provided the Trophies. There were 132 debaters entering 33 events. Forensics Tournament debates Forensics Tournament 61 christmas Freed from the prospect of finals immediately before the holidays, the Hilltop generated an unusual amount of Yule spirit. The faculty responded to such pre-season levity by as- signing a generous amount of holiday study, but, as always, S.G.A. had a party, and, as always, the student body survived this bit of planned jubilation and went on to have a very merry and commercial Xmas. The Ministerial Association voted unanimously to put Christ back next year, then we all went home. Ho, Ho, Hell The tolent of Helen Braswell demands serious interest. 62 r. -V V + . psi 83 ■■' , K Ir 3WH rp f KTl . .« yg • M i 1 I 1 ' «..! to The McCoy Carol Service. casino party The Alpha Chi Omega Casino Party was quite a surprise. That is, it was a surprise in that it was a rather widely acclaimed suc- cess. The party established a campus first, being the first time a group of students had a good time in our beautiful, antiseptic stu- dent center. The Hi Zrop News pointed out that the party proved that a Greek group could give a successful all-campus function. The S.G.A. Social Committee pouted. Supervised sin!! 64 And by and by, the elephant came unto the tree . Say that again, Smart . . .! religious emphasis week Reverend James Glass of Vanderbilt Divinity School was the Religious Emphasis Week speaker. He was an entertaining speaker of the type we ' ve come to expect: witty, ingratiating at times almost risque, and with an I understand the problems of the searching, complex-ridden modern student approach. The believers were happy and said, Look, see how liberal are we modern Christians. The agnostics were reluctantly in- terested and said, Watch it, he ' ll con you. Finally, with everyone duly witnessed to, the week passed, the speaker left, and religion faded comfortably into the hinterlands. Most of us liberals smoke cigars. 5. 65 The Tradition mr. hill topper A.T.O. and friends entertain. Lest we forget the poor children, AOPi presents its annual Mr. Hill- topper Show, which serves the sec- ondary purpose of reaffirming our faith in the good old American bloc vote. The talent was better this year than usual. And the chorus line tried valiantly; but, embarrassingly, they were their own worst act. But it ' s the tradition that counts. 66 Mr. Hilltopper, .Cary DeLoach; Best AOPi, Roseanne Harpe; and Show Director Carolyn Atchison pose at the end of another all-campus function. The harmonious Theta Chis entertair The Screaming Zetas, Scream, 67 The Powell-ized Shakespeare is immortalized on celluloid. On-location filming took place everywhere from Fra- ternity Row to Elmwood Cemetery. The College Theatre ' s winter production, Shakespeare ' s Much Ado About Nothing, was presented in the style of the silent films of the twenties. Keystone Cops pursued gangsters reli- giously dedicated to villainy, while two sets of lovers were tossed about by the winds of romantic melodrama before finally achieving Happiness. The comedy ran for four sell-out nights. In this, though I cannot be said to be a flattering honest man, it cannot be denied but that I am a plain-dealing villain! 6 8 Thou naughty villain, thou art full of piety as shall be proved. Though it be not written down, yet forget not that I am an ass, as well as a wise fellow, an officer, a householder, and as pretty a piece of flesh as any in Messina! The cast Charlstons in for curtain calls. TOP ROW: Sam Ratcliffe, Balthazar; Ruth Trowbridge, Ursulo; Kerry Pennington Claudia- Ann Arrmstead, Hero; Grady Clarkson, Benedick; Peggy Walton, Beatrice; Charles Shults, Leonato; Eloise George Margaret- Paul Grow meyer; Don Pedro. BOTTOM ROW: Wayne Wheeler, the Notary; George Warren, 1st Watch and Western Union Boy Howard Cruse 2nd Watch; Jim Pass Verges; Britt Leach, Dogberry; Harry Mueller, Don John; Bill Barclift, Borachio; Fred Mauldin Conrad- and Andy Motes, Father Francis beauties 70 Editor: Camille Herring 71 m iss southern accent Miss Kose Coleman sponsored by the student ' s art league 74 Miss Southern Accent ,s selected every year on a basis of beauty charm, and poise. Miss Southern Accent for 1964 is Kose Coleman, a Junior from Russell vi Me, Alabama. Rose, a Fine Arts ma|or, was sponsored by the Student ' s Art League. She is a member of Alpha Omicron P, sorority and has been in the Birmingham-Southern May Court, the Miss Ala- bama Contest, and chosen as the Franklin County Maid of Cotton. As Miss Southern Accent, Rose will serve as the official host- ess at campus affairs and represent the school at cultural and civic events. 75 ...first alternate Miss Zrixie Mill sponsored by pi kappa alpha 76 ... ...beauty Miss Meverly Mrown sponsored by mortar board ...beauty Miss Diane Copeland sponsored by kappa delta 81 ...beauty Miss Mdinda Kerr sponsored by theta sigma lambda 33 ...beauty ,-£  ? W 55 Mawy T)ee Mccks sponsored by theta chi 84 ...beauty Miss Cois Seals sponsored by kappa alpha order f aS!( i. i .-,-?«■! ' ■■:■■. ,: ' - ' : ' : 4 V: ' :: . 87 favorite Miss flackie Adams sponsored by methodist student movement SH favorite Miss Margie Allen sponsored by caduceus 89 favorite Miss Cibby Aronld sponsored by andrews dormitory 90 favorite Miss Barbara Chapman sponsored by women ' s intramural council 91 favorite Miss Mally T)yas sponsored by circle K 92 c m%M favorite 1 iki Miss Mary Ann Qriffin % A m W ' - 1 : ' 4t sponsored by amazons fe. d 4 H 1  • m § % iftr A J 4 | f 1 .:: ■■■— ■. ■■' : ' S 93 favorite Miss Kay Covett sponsored by alpha tau omega v. I favorite Miss Mae Cynn Smith sponsored by phi eta sigma 95 ivIldA Af j kort Or. labi miAS atabctma 97 : ' Jfc w greeks 98 Editor: Jeannie Meadows One sure way to start an argument is to bring up the sub- ject of fraternities and sororities. With a membership of over fifty percent of the student body, the Greeks are the domi- nating force in the student power structure, that is in the very little power that students have. At any rate, membership is virtually a pre-requisite in the honoraries race. In any debate, the Greeks are at a disadvantage in that they accept as a basic premise the rather te nuous proposition that fifty or so people can actually be best friends when, in reality, the ties of brotherhood often have a chapping effect. Too, the anti-Greeks always yell conformity. Well, if the mem- bers of each fraternity or sorority do move as a group, at least each group has a distinctive, if not always savory, flavor, and amusingly enough, each and every order cherishes the deep seated belief that they are the only real people. Southern ' s Greeks must be given credit as one of the major forces in drawing students here and one of the stronger fac- tors in holding them. Greek groups also provide a consistent social life for their members beyond that offered by the inade- quate, cut and dried school program. 99 alpha chi omega Alpha Chi Omega was founded at De Pauw on October 15, 1885. Alpha Omega Chapter was chartered in 1926. OFFICERS Peggy Harrison President Jane Anderson 1 st Vice President Dianne Higginbotham 2nd Vice President Karen Sewell Recording Secretary Alice Ann Clifton Corresponding Secretary SEATED: Karen Sewell, recording secretary; Peggy Harrison, president; STAND ING: Dianne Higginbotham, 2nd vice president; Jane Anderson, 1 st vice presi dent; Alice Ann Clifton, corresponding secretary 100 Jane Anderson Mary Glen Bohannon Susan Bohorfoush Pat Bolle Diane Capps Carole Charlton Margaret Ann Childers Doris Dressier Eloise George Andree Godfrey alpha omega chapter Pf3W . Carol Grady Susan Greene Peggy Harrison Diane Higginbotham Betty Hight Mary Holt Judy Johnson Linda Keith Pat Keith Jan Kinnard Gayle Leak Mary Lucas Anne Middleton Marcia Morrow Trina Nannie Suellen Reid Sue Lee Sander s Betty Ann Scroggin Bobbie Serio Karen Sewell Judy Short Judy Simenson Mary Sue Spruce Katie Thomason Gayle Trotter Ruth Trowbridge Janice Wlison Ann Worthy Becky Wright Linda Wright 101 alpha omicron pi Alpha Omicron Pi was established at Barnard College of Columbia University on January 2, 1897. 1925 was Tau Delta Chapter ' s first year. OFFICERS Rosanne Harpe President Betty Farrington 1 st Vice President Patsy Compton 2nd Vice President Penny Roberts Recording Secretary Diane Etheredge Corresponding Secretary Barbara Chapman Treasurer Kay Chandler Rush Chairman SEATED: Rosanne Harpe, president; Patsy Compton, 2nd vice president. STAND- ING: Kay Chandler, rush chairman; Penny Roberts, recording secretary; Barbara Chapman, treasurer; Diane Etheredge, corresponding secretary; Betty Farrington, 1 st vice president 102 Carolyn Atchison Dianne Bundy Lee Anne Cagle Kay Chandler Barbara Chapman Billie Anne Clearman Rose Coleman Patsy Compton Betsy Cowart Linda Cowart Marti Cuthill Diane Etheredge tau delta chapter Betty Farrington Sigrid Fichtner Linda Folsom Billie Claire Fuller Maylene Gabbert George Ann Gibson Carol Gillespie Maizie Griffith Rosanne Harpe Vicki Hassler Linda Hawkins Shirley Herrin Nancy Horsley Joan Hunt Jessica Jones Brenda Knight Kay Knowlton Joanne Luther Micki McClure Virginia McGee Pat Mahone Lynn Martin Nancy Moore Susan Nealeans Martha Jane Paul Pat Ohnich Nancy Post Penny Roberts Retho Rozelle Sylvia Sanders Mary Wallace Shav Linda Shores Jean Sivert Joan Sivert Mae Lynn Smith Judy Turner Kathy Turcotte Peggy Walton 103 delta zeta Delta Zeta had its origin at Miami University in 1902. Theta Beta Chapter was activated in 1963. OFFICERS Mimi Fearn President Pat Nicholson 1 st Vice President Gaye Duncan 2nd Pice President Janet Spahn Secretary Marie Baldone Treasurer SEATED: Marie Baldone, treasurer; Jane Spahn, secretary. STANDING: Gaye Duncan, 2nd vice president; Mimi Fearn, president; Pat Nicholson, 1st vice president 104 Marie Baldone Eulalio Benejam Sandra Bourgault Shirely Crowson Gayle Duncan Noel Engel theta beta chapter Mi mi Fearn Sharon Hobbs Pam Leverett Sharon McMahen Anne Martin Anita Minear Pat Nicholson Sandra Rogers Carol Slaughter Jan Spahn Rita Watkins Carol Winning 105 kappa delta Kappa Delta was established at Longwood College on Oc- tober 23, 1897. Alpha Upsilon was founded in 1930. OFFICERS Beverlye Brown President Val Morrow Vice President Diane Copeland Secretary Ellen Worthy Treasurer Betty Bryan Assistant Treasurer Rene Armstrong Edltor Beth McConnell Membership SEATED: Rene Armstrong, editor; Ellen Worthy, treasurer. STANDING: Beverl; Brown, president; Betty Bryan, assistant treasurer; Beth McConnell, membershi Val Morrow, vice president, Diane Copeland, secretary. jST - 106 Margie Allen Sally Argo Mary Anne Armistead Rene Armstrong Sally Armstrong Libby Arnold Adelaide Ashley Marcia Barklow Muriel Bentley Beverlye Brown Betty Bryan Louise Chesnutt alpha upsilon chapter f 3 A i A — Ellen Worthy Janet Wuehrmann Diane Copeland Anne Cotton Linda Dollar Mally Dyas Carole Evans Linda Ferrell Diane Freeze Sally Furse Jo Gober Sophie Hemphill Molly Ann Hicks Martha Hightower Marianne Hitchcock Sharon Johnson Becky Kirczow Beth McConnell Marilyn Merchant Val Morrow Loretta Morton Melissa Moss Carol Nix Libby Owens Linda Parsons Karen Phillips Dru Propst Lois Seals Elinor Shaw Eugenia Singleton Ann Turner Jean Wager 107 pi beta phi Pi Beta Phi was founded on April 28, 1867 at Monmouth College. Alabama Alpha was chartered in 1927. OFFICERS Kimi Stinson President Carol Smith Vice President Judie Fields Recording Secretary Karla Tatum Corresponding Secretary Carole Murphree Treasurer fW? Madeline Albert Linda Burgreen Anne Cheney Nancy Cleverdon Jackie Curry Linda Farely Holly Farmer Anne Howard Fenn Ginger Ferrell Judie Fields Anne Ford Michael Gainey Carolyn Gomillion Nancy Graessle alabama alpha chapter 4 m A. Im. A K AS Barbara Weed Cynthia Wells Barbara Wright Pat Graybill Nanaline Holt Lynda Hancock Pam Horton Jean Ingels Katrina Johnson Melinda Kerr Donna Ligon Katy McDorman Melinda McEachern Ann McKnight Christine McPhaul Nancy Dee Meeks Celia Ann Mills Janet Morrow Nancy Murphree Nancy Odom Aleeta Paulk Anne Paulk Peggy Perkins Jean Pigman Mary Pulliam Sylvia Shumake Carol Smith Mary Beth Sorenson Anne Stimson Kimi Stinson Ruth Sullivan Charlotte Tate Karla Tatum Helen Thompson Mary Kate Tucker Rosemary Walker Lyn Ward Anne Warren 109 zeta tau alpha Zeta Tau Alpha came into being on October 15, 1898 at Longwood College. Alpha Nu was chartered in 1922. OFFICERS Mary Ann Griffin President Nancy Gray 1st Vice President Janet Jennings 2nd Vice President Jeannie Meadows Corresponding Sec. Margaret Stewart Recording Secretary Suzy Bailey ' ■Treasurer Nancy Carr Historian KNEELING: Suzy Bailey, treasurer; Jeannie Meadows, corresponding secretary. SEATED: Janet Jennings, 2nd vice president; Nancy Gray, 1st vice president. STANDING: Margaret Stewart, recording secretary; Mary Ann Griffin, president, Nancy Carr, historian 110 Jackie Adams Suzy Bailey Shary Baird Bonnie Byrd Nancy Carr Katy Cassen Trula Cather Sharon Cook Jane Dudley Lynn Faucett Marcia Flood Harriet Gaither alpha nu chapter Julianne Givens Nancy Gray Dianne Greenwood Mary Ann Griffin Johnnie Kay Grimsley Dee Dee Guerrant Jane Gain Gayle Haney Camille Herring Janet Jennings Connie Jones Sally Linebarger Kay Lovett Janice Kay Lyda Dianne Manasco Carol May Susan McCartney Jeannie Meadows Rachel Redwine Ginger Russell Kathy Savage Anne Sisson Camille Smith Susan Smith Margaret Stewart Cornelia Stuckenschneider Mary Sullins Becky Wilson Wendy Wismer Linda Wood 111 SEATED. Kay Chandler, Pan, Norton, Peggy Harrison, Gayle Duncan. STANDING, Susan Greene, Linda Hancock, Anne S.imson, Rasanne Harpe, Nancy Post, Jo Gober, Beth McConnell (NOT PICTURED; Penny Roberts, president; Kim. Stinson, secretary). panhellenic council The Panhellenic Council is composed of three representa- tives; the president, rush chairman, and representative; from each ' of the sororities on campus. They serve to promote friendly relations, among the sororities. They supervise policy matters relating to sorority life. Their chief function is to formulate plans for organized rush, and to govern rush activities. Rush is opened in the fall with a Panhellenic tea for all new girls. The Council under the guid- ance of the Dean of Women, Mrs. Robert Cothran prepares information to be given to all girls going through rush. OFFICERS Penny Roberts President Peggy Harrison Vice President Kim,St,nsom Secretary Mrs. Robert Cothran Advlsor 112 III FIRST ROW: Bill Harmon, Charles Sims, Lonnie Manning, Charles Clark, Ian Sturrock. SECOND ROW: Robert Smith, Pete Real, Scott Johnson, Don Lusk, Lonnie Maske, Jimmy Pace. THIRD ROW: Tom Brugh, Skip Hardenburg, Andy Robinson, George Warren, Barry Wertz, Woody Smith, Ed Lonergan. interfraternity council The Interfraternity Council functions, ostensibly, to promote friendly relations among the fraternities and to set up rush reg- ulations. This organization is composed of the president and two members from each of the six fraternities on campus. I.F.C. meets each week, and Dr. Ralph Jolly is their advisor. OFFICERS Scott Johnson President Ian Sturrock Vice-President Skip Hardenburg Secretary Robert Smith Treasurer alpha tau omega Alpha Tau Omega was founded at Richmond Virginia on September 11, 1865. Beta Beta Chapter was formed in 1885. OFFICERS Charles Clark President Charles Booth Vice President Jeff Ramsdell Secretary Mai Street Treasurer Dan Hixon Historian John Rutland Sentel Lowery Stanford Sergeant-At-Arms Miss Sharry Baird, Alpha Tau Omega Sweetheart. Standing left to right: Charles Clark, president; Charles Booth, vice president; Jeff Ramsdell, secretary; Mai Street, treasurer; Dan Hixon, Historian; John Rutland, Sentel; Lowery Stanford, sergeant- at-arms. 114 Jerry Albright Charles Alexander Sam Allen Pierce Bailey Charles Booth Doug Braswell Tom Brugh Charles Chabot Charles Clark Jim Clark Bob Clem Ray Cooper Wayne Coxwell Larry Culver A 4 1 v : 5 j £ ft I m,;feA beta beta chapter A S 4ik 4. d w Ttottt 4 Ik 4l fell , . 4 . ' , - ' J 4t%4«fc 4 4 4: 4 Richard Cunningham Sam Dabbs Fred Darbey Richard Deemer Richard DeShazo Walter Donaldson Bill Ernest Charles Feigner Davis Glasgow Don Hall Cliff Hardy Lamar Henderson Dan Hixon Hardy Jackson John Lemmon Richard Lindblom Dale Lovett John Mackin Lawrence Maples Felix Miles William Nelson Johnny Newbill John Oliver Robin Orme Arthur Paulk Jeff Ramsdell Richard Real John Rutland Bob Sheehan John Stms Louis Smith Terrell Spencer Lowry Stanford Mai Street Bruce Tully Bobby Vaughn Jim Varnell Bill Wagoner Vernon Wessel Glen Wilcoxson Allen Willey 115 kappa alpha Kappa Alpha Order was founded at Washington and Lee University in December, 1865. Phi Chapter was established in 1882. OFFICERS Barry Wertz President Buddy Ramsey Vice President Bill Gray Secretary Ian Sturrock . . Treasurer Miss Lois Seals, Kappa Alpha Rose. SEATED: Barry Wertz, president. STANDING: Ian Sturrock, treasurer; Buddy Ramsey, vice president; Bill Gray, Secretary. 116 Richard Arthur Charles Bernhard Jim Bradford Michael Carlisle Tony Cherry Murray Clarke Craig Cooper Jim Cooper Bill Dawson Roy Gandy phi chapter 1 inn Khftfc J| r sP thtt ihrfiJafol Bill Gray Bill Heim Arthur Howington Richard Hughes Pete Kennedy Charles Latady Leon Morgan Jimmy Pace Paul Pisani Bob Posey James Pugh Buddy Ramsey Carlton Rhodes Woodie Smith Richard Storm Tom Stoves Ian Sturrock George Sutton David Thompson Jim Tripp Ben Wall Jimmy Ward Kendall Weaver Don Wells Stuart Wells Barry Wertz Wayne Wheeler John Williamson James Wilson Brad Wood 117 lambda chi alpha Lambda Chi Alpha had its beginning at Boston University on November 2, 1909 Theta Mu Zeta Chapter came to Southern in 1924 OFFICERS Frank Troncale President Bill Harmon Vice President Bill Wright Secretary Steve Lavoy Treasurer Miss Kathie Thomason, The Crescent Girl of Lambda Chi. STANDING: Frank Troncale, president; Bill Harmon, vice president, Bill Wright, secretary; Steve Lovoy, treasu rer. 118 Bob Bohorfoush Louis Bohorfoush John Bolt William Cleere James Cowart Mike Crenshaw Stan Downey Gerald Ganus Paul Grawemeyer John Drenning MM x theta mu zeta chapter Hugh Griffin William Harmon Jimmy Johnson Ned Kilhan Steve Lovoy •r liiiiii Don Lusk Lonnie Maske Harry Mueller Randall Pitts Cal Purswell Anthony Reed Frank Troncale Bill Thomas Donald Wilson Bill Wright 119 pi kappa alpha Pi Kappa Alpha traces its origin to the University of Virginia where it was founded on March 1, 1868. Delta Chapter was chartered in 1871 . OFFICERS Robert Hoglund President Skip Hardenburg Vice President Jack Lloyd Secretary Walter Bryant Treasurer Carolyn Wilson, Pi Kappa Alpl sam Girl. STANDING: Robert Hoglund, President; Skip Hardenberg, Vice President; Jack Lloyd, secretary; Walter Bryant, treasurer. 120 Walter Bryant Andy Cooley Larry Culver Charles Hardenburg Ben Haynes Robert Hoglund Michael Knight Carl Lecroy delta chapter m m Robert Lerer Patrick Lyle Victor Thompson Randy Troup James Trucks Charles Williams Jim Wilson Mike Zealy 121 sigma alpha epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded on March 9, 1856 at the University of Alabama. Alabama lota came into being in 1878. OFFICERS Eddie Crouch President Hubert Gnssom Vice President Howell Raines Secretary John Ferrell Treasurer Miss Diane Copeland , Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sweetheart. STANDING: Eddie Crouch, president; Hubert Grissom, vice pre sident; John Ferrell, treasurer; Howell Raines, secretary. 122 Chips Bailey Lee Baldwin Jack Bamberger Joe Basenberg George Blanton Bobby Boone Martin Briscoe Carl Buck Pete Bunting David Calhoun Lewis Chapman Howard Cleveland Miles Copeland Andy Cromer iiki 4:k alabama iota chapter A : fe Vfc ifc A J .w 4 4ii tit t fcfc Ned Taylor Hank Watson Jim Bob Williamson Bryant Wilson Hugh Wilson Arthur Cross Eddie Crouch Cary DeLoach Kyle DeLoach Jimmy Dorroh Wade Drinkard John Dudley George Ellis Walter Ellis Rickt Evans John Ferrell Masey Gentry Tom Gibbs James Goodgame Hubert Grissom Pat Haley Lorry Hemphill Mike Hemphill Bill Hogan Mike Hoke Hod Hunt George Jenkins Scott Johnson Howard Jones Johnny Lockett Ronnie Luckey Lynn Luther Bill Mathews Fred Mauldin Mac Moncus Jim Mullins Harry Nelson Richard Lytle John Parris William Patterson Cren Prichett Joe Proctor George Quiggle Howell Raines Jimmy Randle William Robinson Bill Russell Charlie Sims Glen Smith Larry Smith Robert Smith Ernest Stewart Ronnie Sutterer Jack Taggart 123 MeA ows - thea chi Theta Chi was organized on April 10, 1856 at Norwich University. Beta Xi Chapter was chartered in 1942. OFFICERS Bill Adams President George Watren Vice President Jim Cushen Secretary Danny Lynn Treasurer iiss Ginger Ferrell, Theta Chi. Sweetheart. STANDING: Bill Adams, president; George Warren, vice president; Jim Cushen, secretary; Danny Lynn, treasurer. 124 Bill Adams Clifton Briggs Jimmy Calton Joe Chambers iibiifc iifclifc Jimmy Cushen Edward Haggard Albert Hughes Bruce Jordan lifctk beta xi chapter Lonnie Manning Andy Motes Ronnie Nelson James Pass David Petty Andy Robinson Bill Rossman Don Short Daniel Summers George Warren fcttfc 125 sports 126 On Thanksgiving Day, 1940, the Birmingham-Southern foot- ball team, composed of twenty-two men, defeated Howard College 9 to 6,and intercollegiate football at Southern was finished forever. Intramurals were set up that year, and plans were made for such pursuits as horsemanship, fencing, and soccer. Since then he P. E. department has settled for less aristocratic activities, but the more ordinary sports continue to occupy a surprisingly large amount of leisure time and in- terest. Fraternity sports are followed with great enthusiasm and usually amount to little more than legalized mayhem and or- ganized hostility as everyone gives their all for The Broth- ers. Sorority basketball and softball games combine to help destroy any vestigial traces of the myth of Southern woman- hood. When Southern discontinued football, it settled on the more inexpensive and sophisticated games of tennis and basketball. This year a golf team has been started, perhaps in anticipa- tion of the back forty being converted into a much promised eighteen hole course. Editor: Chips Bailey Women ' s Intramurals: Diane Manasco 127 Wagoner, Henderson, Glover, Luther, Calhoun, Wells, Jackson, Grey, Newby, Leeman, Wessel, Donaldson. NOT PICTURED: Posey. BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE 1963-64 Basketball Results Date South ern Opponent Dec. 3 71 LaGrange 89 Dec. 5 79 Lambuth 77 Dec. 6 80 Millsaps 67 Dec. 1 1 57 Huntington 69 Dec. 17 76 Georgia State 66 Dec. 18 74 Sewanee 66 Jan. 3 60 Charlotte 70 Jan. 4 100 Charleston 70 Jan. 8 68 Sewanee 80 Jan. 11 92 Georgia State 75 Jan. 17 84 Southwestern 82 Jan. 18 88 Lambuth 78 Jan. 25 67 LaGrange 90 Jan. 31 84 Miss. College 102 Feb. 1 68 Millsaps 83 Feb. 5 63 Huntington 72 Feb. 7 78 Southwestern 82 Feb. 14 87 Miss. College 78 COACH HAROLD PICKEL 128 STUART WELLS (15) Junior Center BOBBY GLOVER (II) Freshman Forward BOB POSEY (12) Sophomore Forward LAMAR HENDERSON (10) Sophomore Guard 129 BILL GREY (44) Junior Forward BUTCH WESSEL (53) Freshman Guard BILL WAGONER (33) Freshman Guard DOYLE NEWBY (35) Sophomore Guard 131 Panthers fought to a third quarter tie only to lose to arch-rival Huntington 79-66. Southern split the series with Sewanee while opposing Coach Varnell entertained the fans. 133 basketball 134 Before a crowd of over 200, in the last game of the sea- son Southern was victorious over Mississippi College 87-78 in a hard-fought, fast-break battle. The Spirit which is truly Southern ' s is to lie dormant until next season. 135 golf 1964 1964 GOLF SCHEDULE Southern for the first time in its history has a golf team. High- land will serve as their home course. Mr. Raymond MacMahon will serve as coach. It is hoped that in the spring the students will roam the fairways in support of the golf team. March 23 Sewanee Birmingham April 4 Huntington Montgomery April 9 Huntington Birmingham April 22 Ala. College Montevallo April 30 Ala. College Birmingham May 4 Sewanee Sewanee, Tenn MirowTir-r- ' - ' - 1964 GOLF TEAM: Jimmy Trucks, Don Meyer, Jimmy Wilson, Charles Green, Butch Blanton, Coach MacMahon. 136 Tennant McWilliarm, Dan Hixon, Larry Hemphill, David Hutto, Charles Booth. tennis BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE 1964 Tennis Schedule The tennis team has the advantage of appealing to those who really enjoy their sport and the disadvantage of a lack of experienced players. The Southern team suffers from the lack of scholarships. Most players participate out of their love for the game and are to be commended for this. Mr. Leslie Longshore, in his first year as tennis coach, brings a great deal of playing and coaching experience to his posi- tion and will certainly inject a new vitality into the program. March 20 March 26 April 1 April 3 April 10 April 1 1 April 13 April 22 April 23 May 1 May 2 May 8 May 13 May 1 6 David Lipscomb Alabama College Middle Tenn. Emory Middle Tenn. David Lipscomb Sewanee Alabama College Sewanee Emory Georgia State Georgia State Huntingdon Huntingdon Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Murfreesboro Nashville Sewanee Montevallo Birmingham Atlanta Atlanta Birmingham Birmingham Montgomery 137 HEAD CHEERLEADER Jackie Adams The cheerleaders attacked the task of exciting a lethargic student body with admirable courage and energy. Through sheer tenacity, they actually managed to get a sizable number of students to conspicuously cheer. FIRST ROW: Camile Smith, Becky Kirzow, Jackie Adams, Sharry Baird, Diane Etheredge. SECOND ROW: Karla Tatum, Pat Graybill, Rachel Redwine, Lee Anne Cagle. 138 1 y cheerleaders 1963-64 hands up jj FIRST ROW: Carlton Rhodes, Barry Wertz, Louis Bohorfoush, Don Short. SECOND ROW: Joe Proctor, Coach Battle, John Mackin, Jimmy Wilson, Jim Otto. men ' s intramural council The Men ' s Intramural Council is responsible for setting up the schedule and regulations for the men ' s intramural sports. The Intramural Council is made up of a representative from each fraternity and the Independents. The intramural program consists of such team sports as touch football, basketball, volleyball, and softball. The individual sports include table tennis, horseshoes, swimming, badminton, tennis, and paddle- ball. Coach Battle serves as Director of the program, with Barry Wertz as Student Manager. Barry Wertz, Student Manager and Coach Battle, Intramural Director. 14 football ALL STAR FOOTBALL TEAM-FIRST ROW: Jim Otto, R. End; Johnny Dudley, R- Guard; Ronnie Lucky, Center; Hardy Jackson, L, Guard; Jimmy Wilson, L. End. SECOND ROW: David Thompson, Wingback; Lowry Stanford, Block ing Back; John Parris, Tailback; Howard Jones, Wingback. Ml .. %- ■, : ■JP V ■--:■■■. ' ;l intramural football Final Standings 1. Sigma Alpha Epsilon (5-0-1) 2. Independents (4-2) tie Kappa Alpha (3-1-2) tie Alpha Tau Omega (3-1-2) tie 3. Pi Kappa Alpha (2-3-1) 4. Theta Chi (0-5-1) tie Lambda Chi Alpha (0-5-1) tie i. intramural volleyball Final Standings 1. Alpha Tau Omega 2. Sigma Alpha Epsilon 3. Faculty 4. Kappa Alpha intramural basketball MEN ' S INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL Final Standings 1 . Independents 2. Alpha Tau Omega A 3. Sigma Alpha Epsilon B 4. Sigma Alpha Epsilon A 5. Faculty 6. Kappa Alpha A MEN ' S BASKETBALL ALL-STARS Jim Otto — Independent Kendall Weaver — Independent Mike Atchison— SAE B Lowry Stanford — ATO A Dr. W. Wright— Faculty WSSBSB Ba 144 FRONT ROW: Linda Parsons, Sally Linebarger, Jeanne Rice, Holly Farmer, Ginger Russell, Janet Spahn. BACK ROW: Barbara Wright, Kay Caufield, Judy Johnson, Barbara Chapman, Aleeta Paulk, Sally Furse, Nataline Hull. intramural council The Women ' s Intramural Council is composed of sports man- agers and one representative from each participating group. It acts as a governing body over all intramural sports, which include volleyball, basketball, Softball, badminton singles and doubles, tennis singles and doubles, ping-pong singles and doubles, and swimming. Among the duties of the council are to organize and super- vise all sports tournaments, train and select officials, and rule over, decisions involved in the intramural sports program. A banquet is held each spring, at which time team and individ- ual trophies are awarded. Senior Manager, Jeanne Rice 146 Badminton Finalist: Holly Farmer, and Barbara Wright Badminton Finalist: Jane Anderson, and Peggy Harrison individual sports Tennis Winners: Peggy Harrison, and Jane Anderson 147 volleyball WOMEN ' S INTRAMURAL VOLLEYBALL Final Standings 1 . Alpha Chi Omega 5 1 1. Pi Beta Phi 5 1 2. Zeta Tau Alpha 4 2 3. Independents 3 3 4. Alpha Omicron Pi 2 4 4. Kappa Delta 2 4 5. Delta Zeta 6 148 149 Alpha Chi with their supporters 150 WOMEN ' S INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL Final Standings 1 . Alpha Chi Omega 5 2. Pi Beta Phi ....... 4 1 3. Zeta Tau Alpha 3 2 4. Alpha Omicron Pi 1 4 5. Independents 1 4 6. Kappa Delta 1 4 151 organizations 152 Southern is pregnant with organizations. It is the great haunt and true home of the organization man, but organization with a little o for at Southern one collects rather than works for organizations. Organizations grow and fade at Southern like mushrooms in a dank cellar. We had only to rid ourselves of P. E. and LH.S. (In His Service) before Psychology and Alpha Phi Omega burst forth in regimented and newly mimeographed splendor. Most organizations vaguely classify themselves as being serv- ice groups. There are service organizations for all ages and sexes(such as Sophomore Women ' s, Senior Men ' s, ad infinitum), as well as for most known or admitted problems, needs and denominations. The campus is saved from total servility ' only by the fact that none of them do anything beyond meeting and planning, and that most members consider the elections of officers to be their ma|or purpose for existence anyway Never have the vineyards of the Lord been so amply staffed with so many listless toilers. Editor: Nancy Murphree 153 Anne Paulk, Rene Armstrong, Kimi Stinson, Charles Booth, Libby Arnold, Bill Hogon, Don Short, Diane Higginbotham, Ray Cooper, Albert Hughes, Carolyn Gomillion, Arthur Howington, Nelia Stuckenschnider, Jeff Ramsdell. student government association The Student Government Association has received several unfortunate breaks in the past few years. One of these is the fact that its initials fit perfectly into the mock-religious theme song of a Walt Disney production dating from our early teens: Mic-Key-MoSGA. The second, and most unfortunate, of these breaks is that the group fits the song ' s connotations as well as its initials fit the meter. Actually, the reason for S.G.A. ' s perennial impotence is so obvious that we usually overlook it entirely. The word gov- ernment implies that the ass ociation has the power to pass rules and the sanctions to enforce them. Our S.G.A., like that on most campuses, possesses neither the power nor the sanc- tions. So, it isn ' t that they don ' t want to do anything; they move and second and pass, propose and resolve with enthusi- asm and high seriousness. They just can ' t. S.G.A. does serve one ma|or function, that of bookkeeper for the $14,000 paid by students for the remarkabl y evasive purpose of Student Activities. Sometimes they allocate this money correctly, usually indifferently, but all too often they screw even this function up. In full view of the financial record of the 1963 annual, which operated on a very tight budget, and for the first time in several years, finished in the black by less than $100, the S.G.A. cut the budget of the 1964 Accent by $400. The result of this astute financing is that each student must now pay $.50 for an annual whose cost is supposed to be covered in his quarterly Student Activities payments. Mai Street, President. 154 s. g, a, officers £55 SEATED: Mai Street, President; Robert B. deJanes, Faculty Advisor; Bill Bernard, Treasurer; Randall Pitts, Vice-Presi- dent; Karla Tatum, Secretary. PUMPKIN T - is com w president ' s cabinet The President ' s Cabinet is the dead- horse-whipping branch of S.G.A. It consists of, among others, the Activ- ities Chairman who hires the bands that play with shrieking guitars and driving beat in the splendid solitude of Snavely ballroom; the Parking Chairman, who handles the mammoth problem of arranging 300 cars on as many acres,- and the Spirit Chairman, who rides herd with pounding drum, clanging rattlers,and slightly embar- rassed cheerleaders over our some- times spirit. Indeed, school spirit ' is our deadest and most fervently whipped, horse. The students, much to S.G.A. ' s dismay and their own credit,, have never greeted their basketball team with the brainless fervor of the Auburn fan. The Spirit Committee may someday realize (but not this year) that the best a de-emphasized athletic program can expect is a rather muted cheer. The Cabinet, SEATED: Alo Renolds, Jim Cobb, Cary DeLoach, Billie Gearman, Kay Chandler, Betty Farrington, Peggy Harrison, Jimmy Calton, Mary Ann Griffin, Jeannie Meadows, STANDING: John Drenning, Barry Wertz, George Warren. 155 SEATED: Judie Fields; Beverly Brown; Becky Forrester; Pat Dubose, President; Elizabeth Cothron, Faculty Member. STANDING. Melinda Kerr, Billie Clair Ful- ler; Michael Jean Gainey; Rosanne Harpe. mortar board Mortar Board is the highest honor that a senior woman may receive. The qualifications for membership are an over-all 3.0 average and a history of service on the campus. The members are selected by faculty nomination and unanimous vote of the old members. The purpose of this organization is to teach leadership by ex- ample, encourage scholarship through participation, and render service where needed. To contribute to this year ' s scholarship fund, Mortar Board sponsored a book exchange. OFFICERS Pat DuBose President Charlotte Manning Vice-President Becky Forrester Secretary Beverlye Brown Treasurer Mortar Board ' s Silver Display 156 omicron delta kuppa Omicron Delta Kappa is the outstanding service and honorary organization for upper division men. In its selection for member- ship it recognizes and encourages achievement in scholarship, athletics, student government, social and religious affairs, pub- lications, speech, music, drama, and the other arts. Through this representative selection, an organization is created of men in all phases of collegiate life. Each year a member of the faculty is also tapped with the purpose of bringing faculty and stu- dent body together on a basis of mutual interest and under- standing. Two of the annual projects of Omicron Delta Kappa are the student directory and the alumni banquet. MFIir: OFFICERS John Ferrell President Albert Hughes Vice-President Sam Batt Owens Secretary Everett Pittman Advisor - ' ' -: SEATED: Dr. Dan Clark Holliman, Sam Batt Owens, John Ferrell, Albert Hughes, David Glascowjom Gibbs. STANDING: Bill Wright, Danny Hixon, Bill Mathews, Mai Street, Eddie Crouch, Hubert Grissom, Bill Bernard, Howell Raines, Ian Sturrock. NOT PICTURED: Everett Pittman, Wayne Coxwell, Don Dicie, Lynn Luther. 157 alpha lambda delta Alpha Lambda Delta is a national scholastic honorary composed of freshmen and sophomore women. Its aim is to foster scholastic achieve- ment among freshmen women by introducing the aims of the fraternity early in the fall quarter and setting the re- quirements for membership as a goal for scholarship. Prospective members are en- couraged by scholastic assist- ance and an annual reception held jointly with Phi Eta Sig ma. OFFICERS Mary Pulliam President Mary Dudley . . Vice-President Barbara Wright. . . Secretary Mimi Fearn Treasurer Mimi Fearn; Barbara Wright; Mary Pulliam, President; Mary Dudley. STANDING: Eulolia Benejam; Miss Kiser, Advisor; Mary Kate Tucker; Elizabeth Willis. phi eta sigma Phi Eta Sigma is a national scholastic honorary for freshmen men who maintain an average of 3.5 for their first two, or first three quarters. Each year Phi Eta Sigma awards a plaque to the fra- ternity pledge class with the highest average; an award is given to the graduating member of Phi Eta Sigma with the highest average; and a joint reception is held with Alpha Lambda Delta to en- courage freshman scholastic achievement. OFFICERS Harry Mueller President Robert Lehrer Vice-President Tommy Miller Secretary-Treasurer Malcom Street Senior Advisor Tommy Miller; Robert lerer; Harry Mueller, President. NOT PICTURED: Arthur Howington; H. R. Butts, Faculty Advisor. 158 Mai Street President, Student Government Association Karla Tatum Secretary, Student Government Association Bill Barnard Treasurer, Student Government Association who ' s who The students listed in Who ' s Who Among Sfudents in Amer- ican Colleges and Universities were chosen by a committee of five students and five faculty members with the Dean of Stu- dents serving as chairman. Students were chosen for leader- ship, campus activities, and service to the college. Editor Hubert Grissorr Southern Accen t John Ferrell Chairman, Honor Council Diane Etheredge Secretary, Student Government Association, 1962- 1963 who ' s who Pat Dubose President, Mortar Board College Theater Diane Higginbotham Melinda Kerr President, Eta Sigma Phi Eddie Crouch President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Mike Crensha President, Lambda Chi Alpha who ' s who Charles Clark President, Alpha Tau Omega 161 Dean Cothran; John Ferrell, Chairman; Charlotte Manning, Secretary; Dean Jolly. STANDING: Kimi Stinson, Wayne Coxwell, Eddie Crouch, Betty Farring- ton, Tom Gibbs. NOT PICTURED: Bill Bernard, Dean Abernathy. honor council m ■The Honor Council is composed of eight upper division stu- dents elected by the Student Government, the dean of the col- lege, the dean of students, and the dean of women. The Honor Council ' s responsibility is to inform the students as to the nature of the honor system in effect at Birmingham-Southern College, to promote the observance of the honor code, and to try of- fenders. Most ' Southern students come from high schools in which cheating is, by the many, overtly condoned and practiced, and, by the ethical or fearful few, consciously ignored. Working with this raw material, the school has utilized the code and council to make classroom integrity a present, working, even if still unaccustomed, reality. Its hardest task has been, and is,to convince the student that ignoring another ' s offense is as harm ful as committing the same offense oneself. Its great challenge is the clearer delineation and enforcement of the ethics of pa- per writing outside the classroom. 162 student advisory committee to the president The Student Advisory Committee defines no over-riding goal or purpose for itself. Dr. Phillips organized it at the beginning of the fall quarter in hopes that such a committee might be able to breech the durable wall of mutual misunderstanding that exists between student and administration. Toward this end, the committee simply discusses campus problems without attempting to provide immediate remedies. The creation of such a committee is a hopeful sign to those who would like to see Southern achieve the unity implied in that much used term ' academic community. ' From this promis- ing start, it remains to be seen if the Student Advisory Commit- tee will come to share the same limbo occupied by the similarity conceived and now defunct Student Life Committee. MEMBERS Dr. Howard M. Phillips President Mai Street President S.G.A. Randall Pitts Vice-president S.G.A. Karla Tatum Secretary S.G.A. B ill Bernard Treasurer S.G.A. Bill Mathews Editor, Hilltop News Hubert Grissom Editor, SoutheVn Accent Charles Entrekin Editor, Quad Don Lusk President, I.F.C. Penny Roberts President, Panhellenic Bill Bernard President, Independents SEATED: Penny Roberts, Dr. Phillips, Karla Tatum. STANDING: Mai Street, Don Lusk, Hubert Grissom, Randall Pitts, Bill Mathews. NOT PICTURED: Bill Bernard, Charles Entrekin. 163 S lW !♦ it ■m - 4 f yi J CENTER: Robert Smith, Vice-President; Jim Cobb, President; Susan Tucker, Secretary. FRONT: Katy Cassen, Mary Pulliam, Carol Gillespie, Libby Arnold, Anne Paulk, Carolyn Gomillion. BACK: Ray Cooper, Chips Bailey, Don Short, Jimmy Pace, Dick Lindblom, Bruce Tully. triangle club The Triangle Club is an honorary organization composed of outstanding members of the Sophomore Class. Each spring new members are elected from the Freshman Class on the basis of leadership and service. The Triangle Club helps the college host visitors, helps during orientation, and aids in May Day festivities. Primarily, though, the Triangle Club helps its members. It is the first step in the non-academic honorary race, and from Triangle Club to ODK or Mortar Board is a mere hop, skip, and a climb. Also, it serves as a testing ground in which the candidate learns to dynamically do-nothing in the best other- directed fashion. OFFICERS Jim Cobb President Robert Smith Vice-President Susan Tucker Secretary 164 publications board The Publications Board is the supervisory body for the three campus publications, Hilltop News, Quad, and Southern Ac- cent. The board consists of the editors and business managers of the publications with the president and secretary of S.G.A. and three faculty members. The Board is to be commended in that it has never served as a means of administration censor- ship, always choosing to leave the actual running of the pub- lications in student hands. The ma|or criticism of the Board however, must be that it has never served to stimulate any controversy which merited censorship. The publications themselves are of varying quality, their ma|or weakness being the narrowness of student participation. The Hilltop News, in the past, has taken stances ranging from the gossipy passivity of the high school paper to the other extreme of conscious and opinionated aggressiveness. The 1963-64 ' News has been, in general, conservative, well run, and in diligent search of a safe controversy. Quad, in 1963-64, made an appeal for broader student con- tribution, but tenaciously clung to its carefully cultivated image as the haven of the iconoclast and the tortured intellectual. The Southern Accent has ranged in format from artificial cynicism (1961) to last minute sloppiness (1962) and finally to an admixture of both of these, with a glaze of ivy-covered sentimentality in 1963. The quality of this year ' s product has yet to be determined. Mrs. Virginia Hamilton; Chairman of Publications Board. — «fpg SEATED: Mrs. Virginia Hamilton, Egbert Sydnor Ownbey, Howard Creed. STANDING: Jim Goodgame, Bill Mathews, Hubert Grissom, Mac Moncus, Charles Entrekin,Mal Street. NOT PICTURED: Karla Tatum, and Becky For rester. ,- ■the hilltop news Believing that a college newspaper should adjust its policies each year to meet the requirements of evolving attitudes among students, the Hilltop News attempted to use its weekly four pages to reflect the progress of the campus toward its proclaimed goal — excellence. Facts of news were printed, along with feature stories com- plementing and humanizing the facts, but, more important, we tried to clarify those areas where there was misunderstand- ing between administration and students. We refused to take sides, thereby allowing us the flexibility of criticizing where we felt there was an abuse of campus harmony. Our purpose was to contribute honesty to news, interest to features, dignity to arguments, fairness to controversy, and active loyalty to ideals. Perhaps we were successful. If not, we hope you accept our efforts with the same respect that we hold for yours. Bill Mathews, Editor Bill Mathews, Editor Features Staff Writers Cheryl Holmes Margaret Childers Susan McCartney Pat Bolle, Editor Anne Cheney Brenda Knight Leon Morgan staff Bill Mathews Editor Nancy Gray Associate Editor Jim Goodgame Business Manager Kathy Savage News Editor Pat Bolle . . Feature Editor John Mackin Sports Editor Louis deTurro Photographer Jim Goodgame, Business Manager; and Juli Givens, Assistant Business Manager. News Staff Writers: SEATED: Nelia Stuckenschnider; Kathy Savage, Editor; Bill Nelson. STANDING: Louie deTurro, Photographer; Elizabeth Willis; Mary Charles Lucas. Typists: Marcia Flood, Linda Wood, Camille Herring. Charles Entrekin, Editor. quad, 1964 Quad, the literary magazine for this campus, draws its ma- terial from those students who wish to give expression to crea- tivity which goes beyond their academic studies. This year Quad is presenting two separate issues which, it is hoped, will give everyone interested a chance for creative expression in literature as well as other areas of productive thought. Quad for this year, as in years past, offers to the interested student an opportunity to have his work published if only in a student magazine. Of the works submitted, the student edi- torial staff chooses those works which they consider best, to be published in either the winter or spring publication. Quad makes only one request of its readers — give each se- lection a careful reading before passing judgment. Charles Entrekin, Editor Holly Farmer, Editorial Staff; Chris Waddle, Managing Editor. Sena Jeter, Associate Editor 168 Editorial Staff— Janice Entrekin, Nancy Dee Meeks. Becky Forrester, Business Manager. Charles Entrekin Editor Sena Jeter Associate Editor Chris Waddle Managing Editor Becky Forrester Business Manager Editorial Staff- Holly Farmer, Janice Entrekin, Nancy Dee Meeks. A Creative Break. Real writers don ' t conform. 169 Hubert Grissom, Editor. i the 1964 Each year it becomes the unvoiced duty of the Southern Ac- cent staff to present Birmingham-Southern College in a fresh and novel manner. The Accent, in past years, has pictured ' Southern as a harmonious campus with rolling green hilltops, or has portrayed ' Southern through a series of hilarious cutlines, endowing the college with an over-abundance of school spirit. Contrary to previous opinions, we feel that a college an- nual by definition should be an honest pictorial resume of a specific college during a specific year. This year we have tried to utilize a larger staff enabling us to give the attitudes and opinions of more than a few people. We have also broken new ground in that we have added more copy to each section, cap- tioned pictures with names, and tried to cover each event of the college with a critical shutter and pen. Perhaps we have been too harsh in our interpretation, or are the requirements of our definition too stringent? We make no apologies. At the same time we have not gone beyond our definition to appease a particular person, policy, or group. Only through an honest evaluation of Birmingham-Southern College in 1963-1964 can this Southern Accent be of any value to you. Hubert Grissom, Editor Copy staff-Howell Raines, Editor; Lynn Faucett. SEATEDr Ann McKnight. Mary Ann Griffin, Assistant Editor. 170 southern accent staff Hubert Grissom Editor Mary Ann Griffin Assistant Editor Howell Raines Gopy Editor Mac Moncus Business Manager Diane Copeland Circulation Manager Marianne Hitchcock Pageant Director Howard Cruse Art Jan Langford Photographer Susan McCartney Faculty Jo Gober and Beth McConnell Activities Camille Herring Beauty Jeannie Meadows Greeks Chips Bailey Sports Nancy Murphree Organizations Nancy Post Classes Business Staff: Don Emory, Ad Salesman; Diane Copeland, Circulation Manager; and Mike Hemph Ad Salesman. Howard Cruse, Art. 171 rW Faculty Division — Kathy Savage; Susan McCartney, Editor. Beauty Division— Sharry Baird; Camille Herring, Editor; Not Pictured, Camille Smith. Jane Blackburn, Ac- tivities; Andree God- frey, Layout. Activities Division— Dee Dee Guerrant; Beth McConnell, Co-Editor; Jo Gober, Co-Editor. Sports Division— Chips Bailey, Editor; Tip Wilson, Men ' s Sports; Dianne Manasco, Women ' s Sports. Greek Division— Linda Wood; Jeannie Meadows, Editor. southern accent staff Nancy Murphree, Organization Division Editor. Organization Division- John Drenning Pat Graybill Nancy Moore Rosanne Harpe Nancy Post, Editor. Organization Division Staff— Mary Beth Sorenson, Barbara Weed. U3 president ' s scholars 0M9 GROUP I. SEATED: Anne Paulk, Mary Dudley, Mary Kinnear, Mary Pulliam, Nancy Horn. STANDING: Pam Walbert, Howard Cruse, Mimi Fearn, Harry Miller, Robert Lerer, Noel Koestline, Tommy Mueller, Eulalia Benejam. President ' s Scholars is a pro gram intended to extend the educational experience of prom- ising and superior students. The members participate in a series of weekly seminars. In addition to the seminars, arrangements are made for the Scholars to attend concerts, the theater, art galleries and other offerings of cultural interest. GROUP II SEATED: Nancy Murphree, Linda Gribbon, Nancy Dee Meeks, Holly Farmer, Melinda McEachern. STANDING: Bil Harmon, Omer Lee Burnett, Lonnie Maske, James McPherson, Bill Mathews, Bill Thomas, Jerry LeBlanc. 174 american chemical society The American Chemical Society is an organization composed of about 25 chem- istry majors. Its purpose is to provide chemistry students with the opportunity of keep- ing up with current events in the field of chemistry. The society provides out- standing guest speakers and gives each member the op- portunity to explain his own individual research. Pres: Charlotte Manning Vice Pres: Mark Habercom Sec.-Treas: Mary Pulliam. FIRST ROW: Dr. Mountcastle, Charlotte Manning, Mark Habercom; Jerry LeBlanc. Mary Pulliam, Mrs. Thompson SECOND ROW- Mary Kinnear,- Homer Lee Burnett; Tommy Miller; Mimi Fearn; John Roden; Ann Sisson; Mary Kate Tucker THIRD ROW- Mac L oe WU; R ° ber L - FOURTH ROW : Tommy Well,, Charles eta sigma phi . Eta Sigma Phi is an honorary fraternity recognizing high scholarship in the study of classical languages. Its purpose is to promote respect for and interest in clas- sical thought and learning among college students. Its activities include the regular busi- ness meetings, and a program once a month with guest speakers from the col- lege faculty and the Birmingham area. Dr. Butts and Miss Crawford are the sponsors of Eta Sigma Phi. Pres: Barbara Peyton-Wright; Vice Pres: Damon Nolin; Sec: Melinda Kerr; Treas: Marianne Hitch- cock. FIRST ROW: Nancy Murphree; Dr. Butts; Barbara Wright, President; Marianne Hitchcock; Marian Crawford- Woody Payne. SECOND ROW: Barbara Serio; Gordon Melton; James Pace; Mar|orie Watson; Pat Haley- Jim Mu ' llins- Bill Wright. THIRD ROW: Wayne Coxwell; Charles Green; John Oliver; Bill Altham; Judy Johnson; Cliff Hardy- Jimmy Johnson; Jack Bamberger; Cary DeLaoch. NOT PICTURED: Lynn Faucett, Camille Herring. 175 kappa delta epsilon Kappa Delta Epsilon is a women ' s national honorary association for educa- tion ma|ors. A 3.0 average is required in e ducation courses and a 2.5 over-all average must be maintained in order to qualify for membership. The purpose of Kappa Delta Epsilon is to bring education majors together to discuss items of inter- est in the educational field, and to profit from association with those of similar vocational interests. KDE works closely with the education department in carrying out departmental duties and sponsors an annual tea for women who are interested in majoring in education. SEATED: Mrs. Maude Newton; Peggy Harrison; Vol Morrow, President; Nancy Odom; Anne Ford. STAND- ING: Rene Armstrong, Diane Bundy, Melinda Kerr, Charlotte Tate, Michael Gainey, Diane Etheridge, Sandra Brooks, Pat Bolle, Nanaline Holt, Beverly Brown. phi cfif theta Phi Chi Theta is a professional busi- ness fraternity for women whose members must maintain the all student average. It sponsors supper meetings with professional speakers. OFFICERS President Betty Tamburello Vice President Anne Stimson Secretary Margaret Dale Stewart Treasurer Charlotte Tate SEATED: Mrs. Walker, Betty Tamburello, Ann Stimson. STANDING: Charlotte Tate, Rosemary Walker, Susan Green, Margaret Dale Stewart, Ginger Broadaway 176 W $fjk 1 - ♦ 8 v 1 Wt : H 4 ■■k - 1 FIRST ROW: Ruth Trowbridge, Kerry Pennington, Peggy Walton, Sam Rat- cliff, Kathy McDorman, Jim Pass, Mary Charles Lucas. SECOND ROW: Marti Kitchens, Gardy Clarkson, Harry Mueller, Becky Forester, Andy Moats, Nancy Dee Meeks. college theatre alpha psi omega College Theatre presented Ernest in Love, an Edwardian love comedy, in spring 1963 One Way Pendulum, a comedy in the absurd mode, followed in the fall quarter. The winter production was a highl y original adaptation of Shakespeare ' s Much Ado about Nothing, presented in the style and dress of the American 20 ' s. For College Theatre, this is a typically diverse group of plays, and like all their productions, each 177 theta sigma lambda Theta Sigma Lambda, honor- ary mathematics fraternity, is designed to honor students who have excelled in the field of mathematics. Each year the fraternity spon- sors several mathematics lectures on the campus. FRONT ROW: Ginny Lillard, Carol McDonald, Linda Gribbon. SECOND ROW: Marvin Keener, Pierce Bailey, Frank Van Landing- ham. NOT PICTURED: Jim Goodgame. alpha kappa psi Alpha Kappa Psi is a national honorary organization for busi- ness ma|Ors. The purpose of the organization is to foster better business standards for the fu- ture. Industrial field trips, prom- inent speakers from the field of business, forums on car eer plan- ning and panel discussions of current political and economic problems are some of the group ' s activities. FIRST ROW: Larry Culver, Doyle Brown, Royce Thrngill, George Adams, Bob Sartain, Dr. Massey, Earnest Cocoris. SECOND ROW: Mr. Committe, Dr. Cochran, Edward Haggard, Ernie Stewart, Robert Brewer, George Ellis. 178 amazons Amazons is an organization composed of three outstanding women from each of the six sororities on campus. They wel- comed new sorority pledges with an all campus tea, winter quarter. OFFICERS President Nancy Gray Sec.-Treas Susan Greene SEATED: Marianne Hitchcock, Susan Greene, Nancy Gray, Gaye Duncan. STANDING: Beverlye Brown, Pat Bolle, Peggy Harri- son, Betty Farrington, Charlotte Tate, Melinda Kerr, Val Morrow, Karla Tatum. alpha phi omega . 111 Hi I Alpha Phi Omega is a na- tional service fraternity com- posed of former scouts. The fraternity ' s purpose is to assem- ble college men in the fellow- ship of the scout oath and law, to develop friendship and to serve the school, community, and nation. Some of the many activities of Alpha Phi Omega include spon- soring the annual Bloodmobile, and actively participating in the Jones Valley Fund Raising Campaign. This year ' s president is Bruce Tully. FIRST ROW: Jimmy Calton, Louis Bohorfoush, Bruce Tully, Damon Nolin, Tommy Miller, Bill Altham, Leon Morgan . SECOND ROW: Mac Porter, Don Lusk, David Glasgow, Chips Bailey, Bill Patterson, Charles Latady, James Wilson, John Sims, Murph Archi- bald. THIRD ROW: Richard deShazo, Joe Proctor, Wayne Wheeler, John Lemmon, Richard Deermer, Gerald Albright, Mike Beasley. 179 FIRST ROW: Robin Orme, Bill Heim, Charles Clark, Richard Leech, Ray Cooper; President; Mally Dyas; Sweetheart; Han Watson, Brant Smithson. SECOND ROW: Mike Hoke, Hardy Jackson, Bill Ernst, Jerald Albright, Richard Deemer, Bill Nelson, Walter Donaldson, Arthur Howington, Fred Darby. THIRD ROW: Ross Williams, Sam Allen, Buddy Briscoe, Butch Wessel; Woody Smith, Bill Wagoner, Jim Bob Williamson, Jim Pace, George Blanton, Robert Smith. FOURTH ROW: Dan Summers, Kyle Deloach, John Rutland, Bob Clem, Charles Feigner, Ben Dorman, Jim Pugh, Don Hall, Don Short, Joe Basenberg. arc fe k The Circle K Club is a service or- ganization sponsored by the Down- town Birmingham Kiwanis Club. Mem- bership is by invitation to those who wish to be of service to the school and community. This year, Circle K co-sponsored the blood drive, sold tickets and con- cessions at the college basketball games, helped in the debate tourna- ments, and provided man power for various other campus activities. — debate squad, The debate team holds as its purpose the development of critical thinking and effective communication. This year the debate team co-sponsored, with Howard College, the Birming- ham Invitational Forensics Tour- nament attended by 1 80 delegates from eight surrounding states. Among the seven tournaments attended by the team this sea- son were those held at Emory University, Mercer University, and the University of South Carolina. FIRST ROW: Bruce Jordan, Becky Forrester, Peggy Harrison, Rita Watkins. SECOND ROW: Arthur Howington, Gerald Ganus, Mr. Logue, Coach; Don Short, Bill Barclitt. 180 art students league The Art Students ' League is a society for those interested in the study of the arts. Its purpose is to acquaint the members with a well rounded understanding of art and to promote the better use of art on the campus. Its activities include bi-monthly meetings, and art displays throughout the city as well as on the campus. SEATED: Martha Kitchens, treasurer, Rose Coleman, V-pres., Dominique Lathrop, president, Mrs. Virginia Rembert, advisor. STAND- ING: Jim Rivenbaark, Judie Pattie, Anthony Antonio, Joan Willett, Don Hall, Nancy Post, Barbara Doyle, Dianne Glover. pre-lavt society The Birmingham Southern Pre- Law Society was formed through the cooperation of interested students and faculty. Member- ship is open to all students of Birmingham Southern College who are interested in law as a profession. The purpose of the Pre-Law Society is to promote and en- courage pre-legal study at Bir- mingham-Southern College, and to increase the students ' under- standing of law and of the legal profession. OFFICERS Jerry Winfield President Mac Moncus Vice-President John Oliver Secretary SEATED: Louis Smith, Mac Moncus, Jerry Winfield, John Oliver, George Likis. STANDING: Hank Watson, Mai Street, Scott John- son, Hubert Grissom, Gerald Ganus, Cliff Hardy, Barry Wertz, Robert Smith, Ronnie Nelson, Chips Bailey. 181 FIRST ROW: Sandra Rogers, Pat Nicholson, Nancy Murphree, Don Dicie, Harry Mueller, Mae Lyn Smith, Andy Motes , Kay Lovett, Susan Nealeans, Tom Gibbs. SECOND ROW: Linda Folsom, Damon Nolin, Bobby McCullough, Mary Jane EveriH, Johnny Jacobs, Joe Bullington, Jan Amberson, Jerald Al- bright, Suzy Bailey, Pam Horton. THIRD ROW: Roy Gandy, Gerry Gibson, Rosemary Walker, Bill Altham, Bobby Boone, Dianne Higginbotham, Jim Bradford, Noel Koestline, Albert Hughes, Brenda Knight, Felix Miles. FOURTH ROW: Janet Jennings, Rex Brown, John Ferrell, Sylvia Hutchinson, Delbert Bailey, Charles Alexander, Pat Powell, Ray Cooper, Peggy Walton, Michael Gainey. touring choir Under the direction of Mr. Raymond Anderson and Mr. Sam Batt Owens, Southern ' s choir is a necessary part of campus life. Each year the annual Christmas Carol Service draws overflow crowds. Another highlight of the year is the Spring Tour. In the past few years the choir has traveled to such places as Memphis, Dallas, Miami, and New Orleans, as well as towns all over Alabama. This year the choir has organized a Women ' s Glee Club under the direction of Mr. Anderson and Men ' s Glee Club under the direction of Mr. Owens. The Women ' s Glee Club has performed for convocation. The Men ' s Glee Club will embark upon a three-state tour later this year. Tom Gibbs is president of the choir. 18 2 women s chorus FIRST ROW: Joan Hunt, Nelia Stuckenschneider, Pat Graybill, Mally Dyas, Linda Farley, Sylvia Sanders. SECOND ROW: Helen Vance, Letitia Vaughan, Molly Hicks, Diane Waite, Jane Cook, Diane Bundy. THIRD ROW: Nancy Moore, Ann Grace, Linda Wood, Doris Dressier, Gerry Gibson, Jean Jones, Susan Green. FOURTH ROW: Connie Jones, Ginger Ferrell, Maize Griffith, Ann Ford! Alice Carter, Linda Folsom. FIFTH ROW: Cynthia Wells, Jan Kinnaird, Ja Holt, Kathie Thomason, Virginia McGee, George Ann Gibson, Noel Engel. men s chorus FIRST ROW: Don Dicie, Seals Burbage, Jim Cobb, John Denson, Larry Smith, Joe Bullington, Don Lyle, Mike Zealy. SECOND ROW; Roy Gandy, Tom Gibbs, Harry Mueller, John Ferrell, Bob Hogland, John Oliver, Albert Hughes, Bobby Boone, Andy Motes. THIRD ROW; Jimmy Slater, Sam Ratcliffe, Mike Hemphill, Andy Cooley, John Drawhorn, Jerry Albright, Jim Tripp, Bill Altham, Damon Nolan, Mark Habercom. FOURTH ROW: Fred Mauldin, Mac Porter, Cary DeLoach, Ray Cooper, Rex Brown, Norris Broome, Ernest Burdette, Jim Crouch, Howard Precise, Delbert Bailey, Charles Chabot. 183 women ' s dorm council The Women ' s House Council is composed of elected and ap- pointed members from Hanson, Andrews, and Women ' s West dorms. It is a representative and regulatory body, supervising the activities of these dormi- tories, initiating rules, and striv- ing for full cooperation between the women residents and the administration. SEATED: Marianne Hitchcock, Louise Chestnut, Diane Greenwood, Betty Bryant, Anne Cheney, Gay Dunkan, Nancy Carr, Lou Smith, Hariett Gaither, Kathlee Elberts, Juli Givens, Wendy Wismer, Karen Sewell. STANDING: Rita Watkins, Sue Ella McCrim- mon, Camille Smith, Nancy Post, Molly Friedel, Nancy Horsley, Micki McClure, Martha Jane Paul, Sue Lee Sanders, Sharon Poole, Becky Kirzow, Susan Grenne men ' s dorm council oQ € ? ' i ? v i The men ' s house council is composed of appointed members from Men ' s West and North res- idence halls. It is a regulatory body designed to supervise the activities of the men residents. The council strives to improve the dormitory life by providing the men with a means of re- course in matters concerning dormitory life. FIRST ROW: Mr. Cook, Coach Pickle, Coach Burch, Dr. Jolly. SECOND ROW: Jeff Ramsdell; Carlton Rhodes, President; William Rossman, Tennant McWilliams; Ray Warren; Bill Wright. THIRD ROW: Charles Alexander; Cliff Hardy; John Ferrell; Barry Wertz. 184 Ms organ ons price fellowship SEATED: Betty Farrington, Glenda Reader, Noel Koestline, Jane Cisco, Linda Quinn, Connie Jones, Ann-Howard Fenn, Harriet Gaither, Sharry Baird, Suzy Bailey. SECOND ROW; John McMahon, Bruce Tully, Joan Fields, George Ann Gibson, Bill Ernest, Marcia Flood, Maizie Griffith, Hardy Jackson, Fred Darby. THIRD ROW: Bill Altham, Paul Ward, Dr. Golson (advisor), Wade Drinkard, Ricky Arthur, Massy Gentry, George Quiggle, (president). ministerial association Price Fellowship is an in- terdenominational service organization. Their activities include a campus-wide Pan- cake Supper toward the end of each quarter, and their interest in the State Training School for Girls. Each third Sunday the members prepare a worship service for the girls at the Training School, and a party is planned for every quarter. The regular meetings are held at 10:00 on Monday Mornings in the chapel. The Ministerial Association is an interdenominational ecclesiastical assembly of men pursuing an education that prepares them for some full time religious profession. The programs of the Associa- tion acquaint the members with topics of professional in- terest. The purpose of the Association tends to combine religious fellowship and in- spiration for the ministerial student, and to serve the Christian community, both on and off campus. This year ' s officers are: Pres: Bill Wright, Vice-pres: John A. Stodenmire, Sec: Damon Nolin, Treas: Charles Alexander. SEATED: Charles Alexander, Damon Nolin, Bill Wright, Mike Beasley, Bill Altham. SECOND ROW: George Melton, Joe Bullington, Leon Ellis, Thomas Olgetree, Jack Atkinson, Andy Moats, Rick deShazo. THIRD ROW: Felix Miles, Wade Drinkard, Massy Gentry, Bob Clem, Dr. Golson (advisor), John McMahon, Dale Lovett. 186 FIRST ROW: Noel Koestline, Janice Anton, Ann-Howard Fenn, Kay Chandler, Billie Clearman, Kay Knowlton, Nancy Carol Murphree. SECOND ROW: Linda Cowart, Judy Barnes, Betty Farrington, John Ferrell, Diane Etheredge, Damon Nolin, Glenda Reader. THIRD ROW: Alice Carter, Jane Cisco, Linda Ferrell, Linda Folsom, Judy Capps, Connie Jones, Linda Barber, Nancy Graessle, Mike Beasley. FOURTH ROW: Charles Alexander, Linda Quinn, Masey Gentry, Bill Altham, Leon Ellis, Buddy Brisco. methodist student movement Each second and fourth Tuesday evening the Methodist stu- dents gather for a fellowship supper, followed by recreation and a program given by students, visiting speakers, or faculty members. The purpose of the Methodist Student Movement is to provide a crossroads for intellectual development and spir- itual growth. This year ' s president is John McMahon, the vice- president is John Ferrell, and the secretary is Betty Farrington. 187 _ newman club The Newman Club is composed of Roman Catholic students on campus. The club strives to pro- vide a balanced program of reli- gious, intellectual, and spiritual activities. The club holds discus- sions, presents outside speakers, and sponsors service activities. OFFICERS Jane Dudley President Charles Booth Vice-President Jerry LeBlanc Treasurer Linda Gribbon Recording Sec. Carole Charleton Corr. Sec. Jack Hargrove. . . Re!. Council Rep. SEATED: Father John Robinson, Jerry LeBlanc, Jane Dudley, Linda Gribbon, Jack Hargrove. SECOND ROW: Betty Tamburello, Eulalia Benejam, Joe Hagrty, Danny Lynn, Susan Bohorfouhs, Johnny Dudley, Lucille Christy, Robert Lerer. THIRD ROW: Pat Hagrty, Lee Mills, Pete Weinheimer, John Higginbotham, John Roden, Hugh Griffin. FIRST ROW: Ned Taylor, Ron Duncan, Sam Allen, Sigried Fitchner, Margaret Dale Stewart, Linda Myers, Anne Middleton, Suellen Reid, Sharon Johnson, Ellen Worthy, Danny Hixon, Asa Couch. SECOND ROW: Pat Dubois, Micki McClure, Libby Arnold, Ginger Russell, Sharon Cook, Carol McDonald, Charlotte Manning. THIRD ROW: Lamar Henderson, Martha Jane Paul, George Ann Gibson, Judy Johnson, Mary Glen Bohan- non, Bill Adams, Mrs. Barnes. baptist student union The Baptist Student Union is a religious organization with mem- bership open to any Baptist student. Its purpose is to provide Baptist students with the opportunity for Christian fellowship, encourage participation in a local church, and witness to non-Christians on cam- pus. In addition to its regular weekly meeting, B.S.U. sends dele- gates to the state convention held in the fall and spring, holds a fall retreat, and sponsors an annual banquet. OFFICERS Danny Hixon President Hank Watson. . . Religious Council Westminister fe owsfi p Westminster Fellowship is the Presbyterian religious group. The or- ganization visits the Ketona county farm and contributes Christmas and Easter gifts to under-privileged chil- dren. OFFICERS Sally Armstrong President Rene Armstrong Secretary Richard Leach Treasurer FIRST ROW: Blache Gainer; Murphy Archibald; Sally Armstrong, Pres; Richard Leach; Marcia Morrow. SECOND ROW: Judy Edwards; Dan Davis; Elizabeth Willis; Katy Cassen. THIRD ROW: Marcia Flood; Dee Dee Guerrant; Ian Sturrock; Barbara Chapman; Bill Heim. FOURTH ROW: Jeannie Mabry; Rosemary Walker. canterbury club The Canterbury Association is composed of Episcopal students. The purposes of the group are to enrich student life spiritually and socially and to foster fellowship among Episcopal students. It meets every Tuesday, conducts holy com- munion services on campus and holds quarterly banquet meetings. OFFICERS Bill Wright President Jeannie Meadows. . .Vice-President Barbara Wright Secretary Kathleen Elberts Treasurer FIRST ROW: Bill Wright, Pres; Kathleen Elbert; Dick Lindblom; Jeannie Meadows; Barbara Wright; Father Wurtz SECOND ROW: Lyn Ward; Pat Keith; Harriett Gaither; Richard Deemer; Bill Nelson. THIRD ROW: ' Dink Glosser; Charles Latady; Barbara Potts; Nina Nelson; Jean Pigman. FOURTH ROW: Mr. Hornsby; Ben Hanes; George Blan- ton; Diane Copeland, Jerald Albright. ■m classes 190 Editor: Nancy Post This section is alphabetized. You should have no difficulty in locating your picture. 191 seniors GEORGE RAYMOND ADAMS Birmingham; Business; Alpha Kappa Psi — President, Vice-President JANE CAROL ANDERSON Alpha Chi Omega Birmingham; English; M.S.M.; Alpha Chi Omega — 1st Vice-President; Kappa Delta Epsilon — Treasurer,- Intramural Council. NATHALIE CAROLYN ADAMS Jasper; Elementary Education; Women ' s House Council; Independents; Span- ish Club; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship. WILLIAM CLAYBROOKE ADAMS Theta Chi Albertville; Biology ; Alpha Phi Omega— Vice-President, Secretary; Theta Chi —President, Pledge Marshall, Librarian,- B.S.U.; Caduceus Club; Intramurals; I.F.C. ADAMS LETITIA CHRISTIAN ARANT Birmingham; Psychology; Psychology Club. BAILEY BALDONE BARNARD BARNES BARNES DELBERT EUGENE BAILEY Huntsville; Music; Men ' s Glee Club; Touring Choir; Film Director S.G.A.; Ex- ecutive Council Independents; College Theater. ALINE LOIS BARNES Birmingham; Elementary Education; B.S.U.; Psychology Club. MARIE ANTOINETTE BALDONE Delta Zeta Birmingham; Elementary Education; Newman Club; Intramurals; College Choir. WILLIAM DEAN BARNARD Birmingham; History Political Science; S.G.A. Treasurer; Independents- President; Phi Eta Sigma — President; Honor Council; Delta Phi Alpha, Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; President ' s Scholars, Student Advisory Committee to the President. JUDITH CAROL BARNES Albertville; Elementary Education; M.S.M.; Religious Council; Independents —Treasurer; Women ' s House Council; Freshman advisor; Intramurals. 192 BOHORFOUSH BOLLE BRADFORD BRAZEMAN BREWER LOUIS CHARLES BOHORFOUSH, JR Lambda Chi Alpha Birmingham,- Business; American Chemical Society; Lambda Chi Alpha — House Manager, Ritual Chairman; Intramurals; Alpha Phi Omega. PATRICIA SUSAN BOLLE Alpha Chi Omega Birmingham; History; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Panhellenic Council; Women ' s House Council; Feature Editor— Hilltop News; College Theater; Alpha Chi Omega — Rush Chairman; Amazons. JAMES SCOTT BRADFORD Kappa Alpha Order Birmingham; Music; S.G.A. Lower Division Representative; Triangle Club; Soloist; Touring Choir. SANDRA BROOKS Birmingham; English; Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Choir; Independ- ents. BEVERLYE JEAN BROWN Kappa Delta Huntsville; History; Mortar Board— Treasurer; Panhellenic Council— Treas- urer; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship; May Court — 2 years; Triangle Club; Alpha Lambda Delta; Amazons; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Southern Accent Beauty, Favorite; S.G.A. Women ' s Upper Division Rep.; Kappa Delta— Membership Chairman, President; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities. WALTER SNOW BRYANT Pi Kappa Alpha Birmingham; Psychology; Pi Kappa Alpha— Treasurer; Interfraternity Coun- cil; Ministerial Association; College Choir; Alpha Phi Omega; Intramurals. AIMEE WOLF BRAZEMAN Birmingham; English; Transfer — University of Minnesota. CLARA DIANNE BUNDY Alpha Delta Pi Birmingham; Elementary Education; Transfer— Texas Christian University; Director— Student Activities; President ' s Cabinet; Southern Accent Beauty,- Kappa Delta Epsilon; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship; Psychology Club. ROBERT H. BREWER Enterprise; Economics; Alpha Kappa Psi MONTAE CAIN Jasper; English. BROOKS BROWN BRYANT BUNDY CAIN 193 seniors DAVID HUDGINS CALHOUN Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham,- Biology; Transfer; Varsity Basketball; Caduceus Club; Psychol- ogy Club HERBERT SCOTT CHAFFIN, JR. Birmingham; Geology; Intramurals; Geology Club; Alpha Phi Omega. JOE B. CHAMBERS, JR Theta Chi Birmingham, Chemistry; Caduceus Club; American Chemical Society; West- minster Fellowship; Intramurals. ROBERT HENRY CARLSON, III Birmingham; Chemistry-French; Caduceus Club; American Chemical Soci- ety; Transfer — Washington Lee University. LEWIS PEYTON CHAPMAN, JR . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Eutaw; Math, M.S.M. — State Secretary; Alpha Phi Omega; Triangle Club. CALHOUN CARLSON CHAFFIN CHAMBERS CHAPMAN CHERRY CIRILLO CLARK ANTHONY LOUIS CHERRY Kappa Alpha Order Birmingham; Economics; Varsity Basketball; Basketball Team Captain; Kap- pa Alpha — President; Intramural All-Star; Top Ten Athlete, 1961. PATRICIA RUTH COMPTON Alpha Omicron Pi Selma; Biology; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship; Intramurals; Student Forums Com- mittee Secretary; Alpha Omicron Pi— Social Chairman, Treasurer, 2nd Vice- President. AUGUST M. CIRILLO Birmingham; History. CHARLES EUGENE CLARK Alpha Tau Omega Huntsville; Chemistry; M.S.M.; Caduceus Club; Alpha Tau Omega — Presi- dent, Secretary; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; In tramural All-Stars; I.F.C.; Circle K Club — President, Secretary-Treasurer; S.G.A.; Triangle Club; Varsity Tennis. JAMES CHRISTIE CONWAY Birmingham,- Psychology; Psychology Club — President; College Theater Alpha Psi Omega. 194 COXWELL CRENSHAW CROMER CROUCH CULVER WAYNE LEIGH COXWELL Alpha Tau Omega Jackson,- Biology; Triangle Club; Honor Council; Omicron Delta Kappa; Eta Sigma Phi. MILTON LAWRENCE CULVER Alpha Tau Omega Gadsden; History Political Science; Intramural All-Star; Intramural Coun- CHARLES MICHAEL CRENSHAW . . Lambda Chi Alpha Birmingham; History Political Science; Westminster Fellowship; President ' s Cabinet; Board of Elections Chairman; Pre-Law Society; Intramural All-Star; Interfraternity Council, Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universi- ties; Lambda Chi Alpha — President. ANDREW McCORKLE CROMER, JR Sigma Alpha Epsilon UnTontown; History Political Science; Intramural Council; Pre-Law Soci- ety; Westminster Fellowship. EDWARD EUGENE CROUCH Sigma Alpha Epsilon Oxford, Mississippi; Biology; Eta Sigma Phi; I.F.C.— Secretary; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — President; Omicron Delta Kappa; Caduceus Club; Triangle Club; Honor Council; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; Intra- mural All-Star. LARRY RICHARDSON CULVER Pi Kappa Alpha Birmingham; Business; Alpha Kappa Psi — Secretary, Pi Kappa Alpha— Sec- retary, Scholarship Chairman. WILLIAM CARY DeLOACH, JR. . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Mobile; Biology; Touring Choir; Men ' s Glee Club; Eta Sigma Phi; President ' s Cabinet; Forums Committee; Circle K; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — Corresponding Secretary; Mr. Hilltopper — 1964. LOUIS V. de TURRO Birmingham; Spanish; Photographer — Public Relations, Hilltop News; New- man Club; Spanish Club. DON MICHAEL DICE Birmingham; Organ; College Choir; Men ' s Chorus; Birmingham Music Club Winner; Omicron Delta Kappa; Newman Club, Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities. BARBARA ANNE DOYLE Birmingham, Elementary Education; Newman Club. CULVER DeLOACH de TURRO DICIE DOYLE 195 seniors PATRICIA R. DuBOSE Jackson; Elementary Education; Mortar Board— President; President ' s Schol- ars; Alpha Lambda Delta— President; B.S.U.; Who ' s Who In American Col- leges And Universities. GEORGE M. ELLIS, JR. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Jasper; Business; Alpha Kappa Psi; Intramurals. JANICE K. ENTREKIN Birmingham; French; Quad Staff; College Theater; Phi Sigma lota— Pres dent. DuBOSE JANICE DIANE ETHEREDGE Alpha Omicron Pi Birmingham; English; Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sweetheart; Cheerleader; Wom- en ' s Lower Division Rep.; Triangle Club; S.G.A. Secretary; Alpha Omicron Pi — Corresponding Secretary; Amazons; Intramural Council; Women ' s House Council; Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Delta Epsilon, M.S.M.; Price Fellow- ship; Publications Board; May Court; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities. JOHN MELTON FERRELL Sigma Alpha Epsilon Cullman; History-Psychology; Triangle Club— Vice-President; Men ' s Lower Division and Upper Division Rep.; M.S.M.— President, Vice-President; Sigma Alpha Epsilon— Treasurer; Men ' s Residence Council; Honor Council Chair- man; Phi Eta Sigma; Eta Sigma Phi; Omicron Delta Kappa— President; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; Senior Class — Presi- dent. ENTREKIN FIELDS JUDITH ANN FIELDS Pi Beta Phi Panama City, Florida; English; Women ' s House Council; Alpha Lambda Delta; Triangle Club; President ' s Scholars; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Mortar ' Board; M.S.M MARY KATHLEEN FRIEDEL Birmingham; English; Alpha Psi Omega; College Theater; Independents; Women ' s House Council. HELEN ANNE FORD Pi Beta Phi Gadsden; Elementary Education; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Intramurals; Spanish Club; M.S.M. REBECCA A. FORRESTER Jacksonville; German-English; Debate Team; Delta Phi Alpha; Alpha Psi Omega; Mortar Board, Quad, Hilltop News Staffs; College Theater BILLIE CLAIRE FULLER Alpha Delta Pi New Brockton; Biology; Mortar Board; Southern Accent Beauty; Theta Chi Delta; Caduceus Club — Secretary; May Court Pageant Director; Forums Committee Chairman; American Chemical Society; Who ' s Who In Ameri- can Colleges And Universities, Women ' s House Council. 196 GAINEY GANUS GIBBS GLASGOW GLOVER MICHAEL JEAN GAINEY Pi Beta Phi Birmingham; Geology; Touring Choir; Alpha Lambda Delta — President; Mortar Board; Geology Club; President ' s Scholars; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Westminster Fellowship. LILLIAN GRAHAM Sylacauga; History; Alpha Lambda Delta; President ' s Scholars; Washington Semester. GERALD ALAN GANUS Lambda Chi Alpha Gardendale; History Political Science; Lambda Chi Alpha — Secretary, Rush Chairman, Vice-President; Interfraternity Council — President, Secretary. NANCY REBECCA GRAY Zeta Tau Alpha Langdale, English; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship; Southern Accent Staff; Hill- top News Staff— Reporter, Associate Editor; Water Ballet; College Choir; College Theater — Assistant Business Manager; Intramurals; Zeta Tau Alpha — Vice-President; Amazons — President. THOMAS J. GIBBS, JR Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham; Philosophy-Religion; Touring Choir — President; Men ' s Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega — Recording Secretary; Phi Eta Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; Honor Council; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — Chaplain. RICHARD DAVID GLASGOW Alpha Tau Omega Birmingham; Biology; Omicron Delta Kappa — Treasurer; Alpha Phi Omega — President; M.S.M.; Caduceus Club; Theta Chi Delta— Vice-President; Phi Eta Sigma — Vice-President; Senior Class — Vice-President. CHARLOTTE H. GLOVER Birmingham; Music. CHARLES L. GREEN Birmingham; Economics; Westminster Fellowship; Intramurals; Circle K; Al- pha Phi Omega; Price Fellowship; Golf Team. VIRGINIA PATRICIA GRIEB Birmingham; History; College Choir,- Independents — Secretary; Canterbury Club — Secretary; College Theater; Alpha Psi Omega. MARY ANN GRIFFIN Zeta Tau Alpha Tuscaloosa; Political Science; Amazons; Panhellenic Council; Westminster Fellowship; Triangle Club; Mortar Board; President ' s Cabinet; Zeta Tau Alpha — President, Rush Chairman, Pledge Trainer, Corresponding Secre- tary, Assistant Social Chairman; S.G.A. — Freshman Representative; Eta Sig- ma Phi; College Theater; Intramurals; Southern Accent Favorite; Southern Accent Staff — Activities Editor, Assistant Editor,- Psychology Club; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities. GRAHAM GRAY GREEN GRIEB GRIFFIN 197 seniors HUBERT AUBREY GRISSOM, JR Sigma Alpha Epsilon Cullman; History Political Science; Triangle Club; 1964 Southern Accent Editor; 1962 Southern Accent Business Manager; Pre-Law Society— Presi- dent; Sigma Alpha Epsilon— Vice-President; Omicron Delta Kappa; Publi- cations Board; Student Advisory Committee to the President; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities. JOHN PATRICK HALEY, III Sigma Alpha Epsilon Seima; Biology; Triangle Club; B.S.U.; Caduceus Club — President; Circle K — Secretary; Phi Eta Sigma — Secretary; E. W. Patton Award; Eta Sigma Phi. CLIFF HARDY Alpha Tau Omega Birmingham; History Political Science; Debate Team; President ' s Council; Intramurals; Pre-Law Society; Eta Sigma Phi. TONY J. GUNTER Geraldine; English; Ministerial Association; M.S.M. RAYMOND F. HARGRAVE Birmingham; Piano; Phi Eta Sigma; Birmingham Music Club Winner. GRISSOM GUNTER HARDY HARGRAVE HARPE HARRISON HERLONG HERRIN HERRING ROSANNE ELIZABETH HARPE Alpha Omicron Pi Huntsville; Music History; Alpha Lambda Delta; May Court; Triangle Club- Secretary, ' Hilltop News Staff; Alpha Omicron Pi— Secretary, 1st Vice-Pres- ident, President; Southern Accent Staff; Mortar Board. WILLIAM BYRON HERLONG Birmingham; Chemistry; Phi Eta Sigma; Triangle Club; American Chemical Society; Caduceus Club; Theta Sigma Lambda; Theta Chi Delta. SHIRLEY HERRIN Alpha Omicron Pi Selma; History; Miss Southern Accent— 1963; Intramurals. PEGGY CARTER HARRISON Alpha Chi Omega Birmingham; Speech; Debate Team — 3 years; Intramural All-Star; Kappa Delta Epsilon — Secretary; Panhellenic Council— Vice-President; Alpha Chi Omega — President; President ' s Cabinet; S.G.A. REBECCA CAMILLE HERRING Zeta Tau AI P ha Jackson, Mississippi; Psychology; Eta Sigma Phi; Zeta Tau Alpha— Member- ship Chairman; Psychology Club; Panhellenic Council. 108 HIGGINBOTHAM HITCHCOCK HUES HOGLUND HOLT LINDA DIANE HIGGINBOTHAM Alpha Chi Omega Anniston; Music; Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Psi Omega; Alpha Chi Omega —Activities Chairman, 2nd Vice-President; College Theater; Touring Choir — Secretary; Mortar Board — Editor; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; S.G. A. — Women ' s Upper Division Rep.; Walter Ballet; B.S.U.; President ' s Scholars; Fine Arts Week— 1964 Chairman; Birmingham Civic Opera. MARIANNE HITCHCOCK Kappa Delta Pine Apple; English; Women ' s House Council; Eta Sigma Phi — Secretary, Treasurer; Amazons; Kappa Delta — Treasurer; 1963 Miss Southern Accent Pageant Director. MARGARET ANN HITES Birmingham; History Political Science. C. ROBERT HOGLUND, JR Pi Kappa Alpha Fairfield; Psychology; College Choir; Men ' s Ensemble; Pi Kappa Alpha — President. NANALINE HOLT Pi Beta Phi Gadsden; French; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Intramural Council; Intramural All- Star; M.S M. ALBERT CLEMON HUGHES, JR Theta Chi Fairfield; Music History English; Omicron Delta Kappa —Vice-President; Touring Choir— Librarian and Soloist; Hilltop News Staff; S.G. A.— Men ' s Upper Division Rep.; Quad Staff; Canterbury Club; President ' s Scholars; M S.M.; Independents; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; Birmingham Civic Opera; B.S.C Chamber Opera, SUSGA Delegate. MELVIN RICHARD HUGHES Birmingham; Economics. Kappa Alpha Order JEAN INGELS Birmingham; Biology; Pi Beta Phi — Membership Chairman; Panhellenic Council; Women ' s House Council; Westminster Fellowship; Southern Accent Staff; Intramurals. Pi Beta Phi -Membership Chairman; Panhe MARY ELIZABETH HOLT Alpha Chi Omega Leeds; English; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship; Alpha Chi Omega— Historian. MARGIE ANN JACKSON Birmingham; Geology; Geology Club. HOLT HUGHES HUGHES INGELS JACKSON 199 seniors JOHNNY DeESTER JACOBS Warrior; Music; College Orchestra; College Theater; Touring Choir. MARTHA PENRY JOHNSON Denver, Colorado; Elementary Education, M.S.M., Hilltop News Staff, Beta Omicron; College Theater; Spanish Club. SENA KATHRYN JETER Birmingham; English; President ' s Scholars; Quad Staff —Associate Editor; College Orchestra. LINDA KEITH Alpha Chi Omega Birmingham; Elementary Education, Alpha Chi Omega — Rush Chairman; Intramural Council; Panhellenic Council; Intramural All-Star. KATRINA JOHNSON Pi Beta Phi Gadsden, Greek; M.S.M.; Touring Choir. JACOBS JETER KERR KITCHENS LEWIS LINDBLOM LOCKETT MELINDA KERR Pi Beta Phi Wedowee; English; Eta Sigma Phi — Secretary; Mortar Board; Southern Ac- cent—Favorite, Beauty; M.S.M.; Price Fellowship; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Pi Beta Phi — Pledge Supervisor; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; Hilltop News Staff. MARTHA JEAN KITCHENS Hinsdale, Illinois; Psychology; Transfer — University of Iowa; Psychology Club; College Theater,- Art Students ' League. JUANITA LEWIS Birmingham; Math. JOHN HOWARD LINDBLOM Jacksonville; Biology; Basic P.E. — 3 times; l.l.T.Y.W.I.I.W.Y.B.M.A.B. Club. JOHN A. LOCKETT Sigma Alpha Epsilon Selma; History; Circle K; B.S.U.; Pre-Law Society; Intramural Council. 200 LONG LUTHER LUTHER MACKIN MANNING ETHEL NORA LONG Birmingham; Religion. ABNER LYNN LUTHER Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham; Biology; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Hilltop News Business Manager; Theta Chi Delta; M.S.M.; President ' s Scholars. JOANNE THOMAS LUTHER Alpha Omicron Pi Birmingham; Elementary Education; Kappa Delta Epsilon; M.S.M. — Vice- President; Women ' s House Council; Southern Accent Staff— Greek Editor. JOHN H. MACKIN Alpha Tau Omega Selma; History; Varsity Basketball; Pre-Law Society; S.G.A. — President ' s Cabinet; Hilltop News Sports Editor. CHARLOTTE MANNING Sumiton; Chemistry; Dupont Summer Scholarship Winner; Independents; American Chemical Society— President; Mortar Board— Vice-President; Honor Council — Secretary; B.S.U.; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; Theta Chi Delta; Senior Class Secretary. JOSEPH WILLIAM MATHEWS, JR. . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham, English; Transfer— The Marion Institute; Omicron Delta Kappa; Delta Phi Alpha; Alpha Psi Omega; Hilltop News Editor; Presidents Scholars; College Theater; Psychology Club; Publications Board; Student Advisory Committee to the President. BETTY ANN MAY Sawyerville; French; Intramurals. SUELLA McCRIMMON Bessemer; Social Science; Women ' s House Council; M.S.M. CHARLES ROWLAND McMANIS Old Greenwich, Connecticut; Philosophy; Canterbury Club; College Theater; Transfer. CLARENCE ALLEN McMURTRY Goodlettsville, Tennessee; Psychology; Transfer — Peabody College; Psychol- ogy Club. MATHEWS MAY McCRIMMON McMANIS McMURTRY 201 seniors LEAMON PAUL McWHORTER Blountsville; Greek; Eta Sigma Phi; Ministerial Association. NANCY CAROLINE MELTON Brewton; Elementary Education; M.S.M.; Water Ballet; College Theater; Women ' s House Council. NANCY DEE MEEKS Pi Beta Phi Dickson, Tennessee; English; College Theater; President ' s Scholars; Choir; Intramurals; M.S.M.; Southern Accent Beauty. JOHN GORDON MELTON Birmingham; Geology; Geology Club; Eta Sigma Phi; M.S.M.; Ministerial Association; Independents. McWHORTER ANNE MARIE MIDDLETON Alpha Chi Omega Birmingham; Social Science; Alpha Chi Omega — Treasurer, Scholarship Chairman; President ' s Scholars; Alpha Lambda Delta— Treasurer; Hilltop News Staff; Spanish Club; Panhellenic Council; Intramurals. MONCUS MOON MORROW MYERS NANNIE CLAUDE M. MONCUS Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham; History Political Science; President ' s Cabinet, Southern Ac- cent Business Manager; Publications Board; Pre-Law Society — Vice-Presi- dent; Price Fellowship; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — House Manager. LINDA HELEN MYERS Birmingham; Biology; Price Fellowship; Choir; B.S.U.; Caduceus Club. BARBARA SIDES MOON Birmingham; Elementary Education. VALERIE JEAN MORROW Ka PP a Del,a Selma; Elementary Education; Kappa Delta-Editor, Secretary, Vice- President; Kappa Delta Epsilon— President; Amazons. TRINA CLAIR NANNIE Alpha Chi Omega Nashville, Tennessee; Elementary Education; Transfer — Martin Junior College; Alpha Chi Omega— Treasurer; College Theater; Kappa Delta Epsilon; M S.M. 202 NEALEANS NELSON NEWTON NOUN ODOM SUSAN ELIZABETH NEALEANS Alpha Omicron Pi Sylacauga; Organ; Touring Choir; Dean ' s List — 3 Years; Miss Alabama Scholarship Winner, AARON WILLIAM NELSON Theta Chi Birmingham; History Political Science; Choir; M.S.M.; Pre-Law Society. MAUDE B. NEWTON Birmingham; Elementary Education; Kappa Delta Epsilon. GEORGE DAMON NOLIN Montgomery; Greek Religion-Philosophy; Alpha Phi Omega; M.S.M.; Ministerial Association; Eta Sigma Phi; Touring Choir; M.S.M. NANCY ELLEN ODOM Pi Beta Phi Atmore; History Political Science; Pi Beta Phi — Treasurer; Kappa Delta Epsilon — Vice-President; Top Ten Sportswoman; Intramural All-Star; M.S.M.; Intramural Council; Kappa Alpha Rose; Eta Sigma Phi. PATRICIA OHNICH Alpha Omicron Pi Birmingham; Math; Choir; Water Ballet; Hilltop News Staff; Intramurals; Spanish Club. JOHN P. OLIVER Alpha Tau Omega Dadeville; History Political Science; Hilltop News Staff; College Choir; B.S.U. — Secretary, Treasurer; Pre-Law Society; Eta Sigma Phi. ARTHUR HOWELL PAULK Alpha Tau Omega Hartselle; Chemistry; S.G.A. — Upper Division Rep.; Interfraternity Council; Caduceus Club — President. NANCY CROWELL POST Alpha Omicron Pi Birmingham; Elementary Education; Alpha Omicron Pi — Social Chairman, Standards Committee; Panhellenic Council; Southern Accent Staff — Class Editor; M.S.M.; Women ' s House Council. BARBER P. POns Birmingham; English; Canterbury Club. OHNICH OLIVER PAULK POST POTTS 203 seniors CLARENCE CRENSHAW PRITCHETT, III Sigma Alpha Epsilon Thomaston; Psychology; Sigma Alpha Epsilon— House Manager; Psychology Club; Circle K; Intramurals. GEORGE WIUARD QUIGGLE Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham; Religion-Philosophy; Religious Council; M.S.M.; Price Fellow- ship; Spanish Club; Intramurals. DRUCILLA FULTON PROPST Birmingham; History Political Science. DALE CALLAHAN QUIGGLE Birmingham; English. Kappa Delta HOWELL RAINES Sigma Alpha Epsilon Birmingham; English; Southern Accent Staff — Business Manager, Copy Edi- tor; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — Secretary. PRICHETT PROPST QUIGGLE QUIGGLE RAINES RAMSDELL RAMSEY REAL REECE JEFFREY KENNETH RAMSDELL Alpha Tau Omega Sidney, New York; History Political Science; Pre-Law Society; Alpha Phi Omega; Men ' s Residence Council; Intramurals; S.G.A.; Swim Team; Alpha Tau Omega — Secretary. RICHARD H. REAL, JR Alpha Tau Omega Birmingham; Biology; Interfraternity Council— Vice-President, Treasurer; Alpha Tau Omega — Social Chairman; S.G.A. — Traffic Committee. H ANDREW REECE Birmingham; Religion-Philosophy. AUBREY ALLEN RAMSEY Kappa Alpha Order Birmingham; Business; Intramurals; Interfraternity Council. GLENDA FAYE REEDER Childersburg; Music; M.S.M.; Independents; Choir; Price Fellowship. 204 RENFRO RHODES RICE RICHARDS ROBERTS CAROLINE ANNE RENFRO Opelika; History Political Science. HOWARD A. SARASOHN Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Math WILEY CARLTON RHODES Kappa Alpha Order Atmore; Business; President ' s Cabinet; Men ' s Residence Council— President; Kappa Alpha — Historian; Top Ten Athlete. BEVERLYE JEAN RICE Birmingham; Physical Education; Intramural Council— Senior Manager; Price Fellowship; M.S.M.; Independents; P.E. Club. ROBERT M. SARTAIN Birmingham; Business; Alpha Kappa Psi— Treasurer. CHARLES RAYMOND SCHULTZ Birmingham; Physics; Physics Lab Assistant; Intramurals. JULIE ANDERSON RICHARDS Russellville; Elementary Education. FRANCES PENELOPE ROBERTS Alpha Omicron Pi Birmingham, Biology; Panhellenic Council— President; Southern Accent Fav- orite; Religious Council; Alpha Omicron Pi— Rush Chairman, Recording Secretary; Price Fellowship; Choir; M.S.M.; Who ' s Who In American Col- leges And Universities; President ' s Advisory Committee. ELINOR MOTLEY SHAW Birmingham; Elementary Education; Eta Sigma Phi. JUDY FAYE SIMMONS Birmingham; Elementary Education. Kappa Delta SARASOHN SARTAIN SCHULTZ SHAW SIMMONS seniors CHARLES HARTWELL SIMS, III Sigma Alpha Epsilon Selma; Psychology; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — President, Pledge Trainer, Rush Chairman; Intramurals; Triangle Club; Dean ' s List; B.S.U. — Vice-President; Circle K; Caduceus Club; Psychology Club; lnterfraternity Council. STELLA RUTH SLAUGHTER Citronelle,- History Political Science; M.S.M.; Intramurals; College Theater DOROTHY CAROL SMITH Pi Beta Ph Oneonta; English; Pi Beta Phi — Scholarship Chairman, Vice-President; B.S.U — Vice-President; College Theater; Southern Accent Staff. LAWRENCE A. SMITH Birmingham; Business. Sigma Alpha Epsilon MAE LYNN SMITH Alpha Omicron Pi Jasper; Piano; M.S.M.; Alpha Omicron Pi — Scholarship Chairman; Touring Choir — Secretary, Treasurer; Miss Alabama Scholarship Winner; So Accent Favorite. SPENCER STANFORD STEWART STOUDENMIRE STREET JOSEPH TERRELL SPENCER Alpha Tau Omega Birmingham; Biology; Caduceus Club; B.S.U.; Intramurals; Student Activities Committee. JOHN ALEXANDER STOUDENMIRE, JR. Alpha Phi Omega Prattville; Religion-Philosophy-Psychology; Alpha Phi Omega— Vice-Presi- dent, Ministerial Association — Vice-President, Publicity Chairman, Historian; Eta Sigma Phi; M.S.M. — Publications Chairman,- Psychology Club; Intra- murals. LOWRY CLAIBURNE STANFORD Miami, Florida; Accounting; Intramural All-Star. Alpha Tau Omega ERNEST RUPERT STEWART, JR. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Anniston, Business-Economics; Alpha Kappa Psi; Senior Class Treasurer MALCOLM BARTELL STREET, JR Alpha Tau Omega Anniston; History Political Science; Alpha Tau Omega — Secretary, Treas- urer, Vice-President; Triangle Club — President; Religious Council — Vice- President; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pre-Law Society — Vice-President; Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Phi Omega; Circle K ; S.G.A. — President, Representative; Pres- ident ' s Scholars; Dean ' s List; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Uni- versities, B.S.U. 206 TATE TATUM THOMAS THOMASON THOMPSON CHARLOTTE ANN TATE Pi Beta Phi Birmingham; Business; Pi Beta Phi — Rush Chairman; Panhellenic Council; Phi Chi Theta, Treasurer; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Eta Sigma Phi; M.S.M. KARLA TATUM Pi Beta Phi Mobile; Elementary Education; S.G.A. — Secretary; Women ' s Lower and Upper Division Rep.; Pi Beta Phi — Corresponding Secretary; Triangle Club; Hilltop News Staff; M.S.M.; Women ' s House Council, May Court — 2 years; Cheerleader; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities; Ama- zons. WILLIAM ROTHER THOMAS, JR Lambda Chi Alpha Opelika; Math; Circle K; President ' s Scholars; Phi Eta Sigma; Lambda Chi Alpha — Secretary. KATHIE JANE THOMASON Alpha Chi Omega Memphis, Tennessee; Elementary Education; Choir; Intramurals; Lambda Chi Alpha Crescent Girl; Alpha Chi Omega— Chaplain, Secretary. VICTOR L. THOMPSON Pi Kappa Alpha Bessemer; Organ; Pi Kappa Alpha— President, Social Chairman, Rush Chair- man, Secretary; Touring Choir— President, Librarian; Omicron Delta Kappa —Vice-President, Interfraternity Council; College Theater; Alpha Psi Ome- ga JAMES ROYCE THREADGILL Birmingham; History Political Science; Alpha Kappa Psi— Vice-Preisdent. JAMES FRANK TRUCKS, JR Pi Kappa Alpha Birmingham; English; Phi Eta Sigma; Pre-Law Society; Poetry Group; Presi- dent ' s Scholars; Intramurals. WINIFRED ANN TURNER Kappa Delta Birmingham; Psychology; Newman Club; Psychology Club— Secretary, Treasurer. DAVID CARL VEST Huntsville; English. EDNA MARIE WAKEFIELD Birmingham; Music; B.S.C. Chamber Opera; Birmingham Civic Opera; Choir. THREADGILL TRUCKS TURNER VEST WAKEFIELD 207 seniors WILLIAMSON WINFIELD WRIGHT WU ANNE WALKER Spnngville; Art; Transfer— Sullms College; M.5.M.; Art Students League. BENJAMIN REYNOLDS WALL, JR Kappa Alpha Order Gorgas; Biology; Kappa Alpha — Secretary, Vice-President; Intramurals. RAY NOBLE WARREN Larensburg, Kentucky; Geology; Geology Club; Men ' s Residence Council; Intramurals. MARJORIE WATSON Birmingham; Math; Eta Sigma Phi. BARRY LEE WERTZ Kappa Alpha Order Manchester, Pennsylvania; History Political Science; Kappa Alpha — Vice- President, Treasurer, President; Men ' s Residence Council — President; Intra- murals; Interfraternity Council; Pre-Law Society; President ' s Cabinet; Intramural Council; Hilltop News Staff; Who ' s Who In American Colleges And Universities. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: David Glasgow, Vice- President; Charlotte Manning, Secretary; Ernie Stewart, Treasurer; John Ferrell, President. JOHN P. WILLIAMSON Kappa Alpha Order Mobile; Spanish; Kappa Alpha — Social Chairman, Treasurer, Corresponding Secretary; Southern Accent Organizations Editor; Phi Sigma lota— Vice- President; Canterbury Club; Religious Council. JERRY PHILLIPS WINFIELD Birmingham; Spanish-History Political Science; Pre-Law Society — Presi- dent, Treasurer, Secretary; Hilltop News Staff; Intramurals; Spanish Club; Spanish Lab Instructor. WILLIAM BASKIN WRIGHT Lambda Chi Alpha Jacksonville; History; Alpha Phi Omega; Eta Sigma Phi; Ministerial Asso- ciation; Price Fellowship; Canterbury Club; College Theater; College Or- chestra, Omicron Delta Kappa. ANTHONY WU Hong Kong; Chemistry; Theta Chi Delta; Newman Club. Jackie Adams ZTA Birmingham Ronald Akers Birmingham Madeleine Albert PiBP Decatur Jerald Albright ATO Birmingham Charles Alexander ATO Hueytown Margie Allen KD Selma Sam Allen ATO Tupelo, Mississippi Bill Altham Birmingham underclassmen Sharry Baird ZTA Lebanon, Tennessee Lee Baldwin SAE Mobile Paula Ballard Birmingham Jack Bambarger Eutaw Linda Barber Birmingham Marcia Barkalow Centreville Joe Basenberg SAE Cullman Mike Beasley Montgomery Aifc4ifci Eulalia Benejam DZ Birmingham Muriel Bentley KD Birmingham Charles Bernhard KA Birmingham Jane Blackburn Birmingham George Blanton SAE Selma Mary Glenn Bohannon AXO Gadsden Bob Bohorfoush LXA Birmingham Susan Bohorfoush AXO Birmingham John Bolt LXA Birmingham Bobby Boone SAE Alexander City Charles Booth ATO Anniston Sandra Bourgault DZ Springfield, Mass. Douglas Braswell ATO Montgomery Robert Breckenridge Birmingham Millicent Breedlove Opp Clifton Briggs TX Brewton Martin Briscoe SAE LaFayefte Tom Brugh ATO Prattville Betty Bryan KD Memphis, Tenn. Carl Buck SAE Bessemer Joe Bullington Autaugaville Pete Bunting SAE Birmingham Ernest Burdette Birmingham Linda Burgreen PiBP Madison Omer Lee Burnett Goodwater Bonnie Byrd ZTA Montevallo Lee Anne Cagle AOPi Birmingham Pat Callahan Birmingham Jimmy Calton TX Eufaula Diane Capps AXO Morristown, Tenn. Juay Capps Gadsden Bill Carlisle Birmingham lifcM titfcfc Michael Carlisle KA Birmingham Nancy Carr ZTA Anniston Linda Carroll Birmingham Alice Jean Carter Mobile Kary Cassen ZTA Memphis, Tenn. Trula Cather ZTA Birmingham Kay Caufield Gadsden Charles Chabot ATO Birmingham Kay Chandler AOPi Decatur Barbara Chapman AOPi Birmingham Carole Charlton AXO Birmingham Anne Cheney PiBP Oneonta underclassmen life Alt llik Louise Chesnutt KD Selma Margaret Ann Childers AXO Meridian, Miss. Lucille Christy Birmingham Jane Cisco Birmingham Jim Clark ATO Birmingham Key Clarke KA Russellville Billie Anne Clearman AOPi Dothan William Cleere LXA Fairfield Bob Clem ATO Hunts ville Howard Cleveland SAE Centreville Nancy Cleverdon PiBP Summerdale Jim Cobb Birmingham Rose Coleman AOPi Russellville Jane Cook Birmingham Sharon Cook ZTA Haines City, Fla. Andy Cooley PiKA Bessemer Craig Cooper KA New Rochelle, New York Jim Cooper KA New Rochelle, New York Ray Cooper ATO Nashville, Tenn. Diane Copeland KD Kansas City, Missouri Miles Copeland SAE Beirut, Lebanon Anne Cotton KD Panama City, Fla. Betsy Cowart AOPi Reform James Cowart LXA Birmingham George D ' Andrea Brewton Fred Darby ATO Huntsvilte Dan Davis Birmingham Ann Dawson Guin Bill Dawson KA Birmingham Julia Dean Birmingham Richard Deemer ATO Birmingham Kyle DeLoach SAE Mobile Richard deShazo ATO Birmingham Linda Dollar KD Birmingham Walter Donaldson ATO Nashville, Tenn. Ben Dorman Anniston Jimmy Dorroh SAE Birmingham Stan Downey LXA Birmingham John Drenning LXA Monroeville, Penn. Dorris Dressier AXO Atlanta, Georgia Wade Drinkard SAE Linden Jane Dudley ZTA Birmingham John Dudley SAE Birmingham Mary Dudley Birmingham Gaye Duncan DZ Louisville, Ky. Ronald Duncan Merced, California Mally Dyas KD Auburn Terry East Alexander City Judy Edwards Birmingham Stanley Eggert AOPi Birmingham Kathleen Elberts DZ Huntsville Wayne Eller Birmingham a 4n 4 M underclassmen Leon Ellis Birmingham Walter Ellis SAE Birmingham Noel Engel DZ Montrose William Ernest ATO Greenville Carole Evans KD Birmingham Ricky Evans SAE Decatur Linda Farley Memphis, Tenn. Holly Farmer PiBP Troy Betty Farrington AOPi Montgomery Lynn Faucett ZTA Bradford Mimi Fearn DZ Mobile Charles Feigner ATO Birmingham Mahlon Felkins Birmingham Ann Howard Fenn PiBP Decatur Ginger Ferrell PiBP Nashville, Tenn. Linda Ferrell KD Mobile Sigrid Fichtner AOPi Huntsville Susan Fletcher Huntsville Marcta Flood ZTA Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Linda Folsom AOPi New Brockton m AtWltt Goyla Fowler Cullman Andrew Fox Birmingham Robert Frederick Birmingham Diane Freeze KD Huntsville Elizabeth Fromm Birmingham Jeanette Frost Birmingham Rosemary Fuller Birmingham Sally Furse KD Gadsden Maylene Gabbert AOPi Birmingham Harriet Gaither ZTA Memphis, Tenn. Roy Gandy KA Atmore Bryon Gentry SAE Birmingham Eloise George AXO Birmingham George Ann Gibson AOPi Decatur Gerry Gibson ADPi Selma Carol Gillespie AOPi Birmingham Julianne Givens ZTA Atlanta, Georgia Jo Gober KD Panama City, Fla. Andree Godfrey AXO Birmingham Carolyn Gomillion PiBP Montgomery Jim Goodgame SAE Russellville Ann Grace Fairfield Carol Grady AXO Birmingham Nancy Graessle PiBP Jacksonville, Fla. Paul Grawemeyer LXA Memphis, Tenn. Bill Gray KA Birmingham Pat Graybill PiBP Warrington, Fla. Susan Greene AXO Birmingham Dianne Greenwood Mobile Linda Gribbon Birmingham Hugh Griffin LXA Rye, New York Maizie Griffith AOPi Birmingham ZTA Johnnie Kaye Grimsley ZTA Enterprise Dee Dee Guerrant ZTA Danville, Ky. Jane Gwin ZTA Jasper Joe Hagerty Birmingham Edward Haggard Attalla Don Hall ATO Trussville Lynda Hancock PiBP Huntsville Gayle Haney ZTA Melvin underclassmen tifeidfc L 4iki Afk Vicki Hassler AOPi Birmingham Linda Hawkins AOPi Dothan Richard Hawley Moylan, Penn. Ray Hayes Birmingham Ben Haynes PiKA Birmingham William Heim KA Panama City, Fla. Larry Hemphill SAE Birmingham Mike Hemphill SAE Birmingham Sophie Hemphill KD Anniston Lamar Henderson ATO Columbus, Georgia Fay Nell Hendricks Birmingham Linda Henson Guin Peggy Herring Birmingham Richard Earl Hester Birmingham Molly Ann Hicks KD Athens John Higginbotham Birmingham Betty Hight AXO Birmingham Martha Hightower KD Sylacauga Danny Hixon ATO Birmingham Sharon Sue Hobbs DZ Birmingham liiik Bill Hogan SAE Birmingham Mike Hoke SAE Selma Larry Holland Dutton Cheryl Holmes Huntsville Juanita Holmes Birmingham Hilda Horn Tarrant Nancy Horsley AOPi Boaz Pam Horton PiBP Birmingham Tom Hose Birmingham Arthur Howington KA Monroeville Hod Hunt SAE Jackson, Michigan Joan Hunt AOPi Heflin Harvey Jackson Grove Hill SAE George Jenkins Decatur Janet Jennings ZTA Piedmont Chester George Johnson Flomaton Jimmy Johnson LXA Birmingham Judy Johnson AXO Pulaski, Tenn. Scott Johnson SAE Gadsden Sharon Johnson KD Birmingham Connie Jones ZTA Gadsden Howard Jones SAE Tallassee Jean Jones Muscle Shoals Jessica Jones AOPi Springville Margaret Jones Cordova Sarah Jones Huntsville Bruce Jordan TX Alexander City Gerry Katz Birmingham Marvin Keener Birmingham Pat Keith AXO Birmingham Connie Keller Cullman Carol Kendrick Fairfield iiklifc Pete Kennedy KA Brentwood, Tenn. John Kent Birmingham Margaret Kidd Tulsa, Oklahoma Ned Killian LXA Anniston John Kimbrough Birmingham Bill King Birmingham Jan Kinnaird AXO Bay Minette Mary Gordon Kinnear Sheffield underclassmen Carl LeCroy PiKA Birmingham Gary Leeman Birmingham John Lemmon ATO Birmingham Bea Leonard Odenville Robert Lerer PiKA Atlanta, Georgia Pam Levereft DZ Winfield Freddie Lewis Decatur Donna Ligon PiPB Mount Pleasant, Tenn. Elaine Likis Birmingham George Likis Birmingham Virginia Li Hard Fort Lee, N.J. Richard Lindblom ATO Jacksonv 4 v lik Aifc Sally Linebarger ZTA Gadsden Errol Locker Anchorge, Alaska Carolyn Lovell Birmingham Dale Lovett ATO Birmingham Kay Lovett ZTA Birmingham Steve Lovoy LXA Birmingham Bill Lowe Trumball, Conn. Mary Lucas AXO Cullman Ronnie Luckey SAE Birmingham Don Lusk LXA Fairfield Mike Luther Birmingham Janice Kay Lyda ZTA Gadsden Patrick Lyle PiKA Birmingham Danny Lynn TX Birmingham Richard Lytle SAE Birmingham Carol Maddox Jasper Carolyn Magnusan Birmingham Pat Mahone AOPi Atlanta, Georgia Dianne Manasco ZTA Birmingham Lonnie Manning TX Monroeville Lawrence Maples ATO Huntsville Cary March Mobile Jack Marino Birmingham Anne Martin DZ Birmingham Evelyn Martin Sawyerville Lynn Martin AOPi Birmingham Lonnie Maske LXA Siluria Fred Maulden SAE Mobile Carol May ZTA Birmingham Barbara Jo McBride Cleveland Susan McCartney ZTA Huntsville Micki McClure AOPi Birmingham Beth McConnell KD Panama City, Fla. Carol McDonald Birmingham Kathy McDorman PiBP Birmingham Melinda McEachern PiBP Tampa, Fla. Virginia McGee AOPi Tuscumbia Ann McKnight PiBP Nashville, Tenn. Sharon McMahen DZ Huntsville Robert McMurrain Birmingham Christine McPhaul Ozark Jeannie Meadows Birmingham Margie Meller Athens Marilyn Merchant Pensacola, Fla PiBP ZTA KD underclassmen iKtKfc 7 rsr f 7 « ik Aft ill I fct l: l fc Don Meyer Birmingham Felix Miles ATO Cordova Howard Miles Tarrant Tommy Miller Dothan Celia Ann Mills PiBP Birmingham Lee Mills Birmingham Anita Minear DZ Decatur Nancy Moore AOPi Oxford Leon Morgan KA Selma Janet Morrow PiBP Birmingham Marcia Morrow AXO Birmingham Loretta Morton KD Birmingham Melissa Moss Memphis, Tenn. Andy Motes TX Birmingham Harry Mueller LXA Birmingham Jim Mullins SAE Clanton Mary Jo Mummert Birmingham Nancy Murphree PiBP Oneonta Jimmy Nabors Bessemer Donald Neal Gadsden Harry Nelson SAE Birmingham Nina Nelson Birmingham William Nelson ATO Birmingham John Newbill ATO Huntsvi Randall Pitts LXA Hueytown Sharan Poole Birmingham Mac Porter Abbeville Bobby Posey KA Dawson Libby Posey Tallassee Margaret Powel Birmingham Pat Powe Birmingham Joe Proctor SAE Andalusia James Pugh KA Birmingham Mary Pulliam PiBP Berry Cal Purswell LXA Birmingham Linda Quinn Birmingham Jimmy Randle SAE Bessemer Sam Ratcliffe Birmingham Rachel Redwine ZTA Mobile Anthony Reed Birmingham Suellen Reid AXO Huntsville Alo Reynolds Demopolis Gayle Richards Birmingham Atfeiifctk iifcttfe Edmund Rose Birmingham William Rossman Birmingham Ernest Rowell Birmingham underclassmen TX Retha Rozelle AOPi Birmingham Bill Russell SAE Jasper Ginger Russell Clayton John Rutland Decatur ZTA ATO Carolyn Salay Birmingham Sue Lee Sanders AXO Harlingen, Texas Sylvia Sanders AOPi Birmingham Elizabeth Sansbury Bessemer Kathy Savage ZTA Theodore Jim Scarborough Florence Charles Schuelly Tarrant Sherry Scott Jonesville, S.C. p -fZj. JB I Betty Ann Scroggin AXO Centre Lois Seals KD Birmingham LeNeta Segars Hueytown Bobbie Serio AXO Birmingham Karen Sewell AXO Atlanta, Georgia Mary Wallace Shaw AOPi Eutaw Bob Sheehan ATO Birmingham Linda Shores AOPi Birmingham Don Short TX Sylacauga Judy Short AXO Birmingham Charles Shults Cullman Jean Sivert AOPi Birmingham Joan Sivert AOPi Birmingham Jimmy Slater Birmingham Carol Slaughter DZ Birmingham Camille Smith ZTA Jacksonville, Fla. Glen Smith SAE Mobile Larry Smith Florence Louis Smith ATO Livingston ItfcAitfcfc Lulc Smith Fayette SAE ZTA Robert Smith Mobile Susan Smith Quincy, Fla. Woodie Smith KA Panama City, Fla Brant Smithson Bessemer Morris Solomon Cairo, Illinois Mary Beth Sorenson PiBP Jacksonville, Fla. ' anet Spahn DZ Tuscumbia Gayle Spellman Birmingham Elizabeth Spraggins Birmingham Mary Sue Spruce AXO Montgomery David Squires Birmingham Margaret Dale Stewart ZTA Haleyville Anne Stimson PiBP Decatur Kimi Stinson PiBP Milton, Fla. ■v -v s - . ■■: Richard Storm KA Fairfield Bill Story Birmingham Tom Stoves KA Birmingham Francis Strong Lexington, Ky. Cornelia Stuckenschneider ZTA Chattanooga, Tenn. tlviii Wkkm t ttifc t 1 RS , ff ( underclassmen Jim Sturgis Birmingham Ian Sturrock KA Birmingham MarySullins ZTA Athens, Tenn. Ruth Sullivan PiBP Aliceville Daniel Summers TX Jasper Ronnie Sutterer SAE Birmingham George Sutton KA Birmingham Jack Taggart SAE Jasper Betty Tamburello Birmingham Lynn Taylor Birmingham Ned Taylor SAE Selma Shera Thackery Anniston Edward Thomas Birmingham David Thompson KA Birmingham Helen Thompson PiBP Birmingham Jim Tripp KA Pensacola, Fla. Frank Troncale LXA Birmingham Gayle Trotter AXO Mobile Randy Troup PiKA Birmingham Ruth Trowbridge AXO Birmingham Mary Kate Tucker PiBP Clanton Thomas Lee Tucker Hueytown Bruce Tully ATO Wilmer Cathy Turcotte AOPi Centreville Judy Turner AOPi Mobile Frank Vanlandingham Atlanta, Georgia Jacquelyn Vann Birmingham Jim Varnell ATO Birmingham Bobby Vaughan ATO Decatur Letitia Vaughan Jasper Jean Wagner KD Panama City, Fla. William Wagoner Borden, Indiana Centre Rosemary Walker PiBP Birmingham Charles Walton Birmingham Peggy Walton AOPi Chickasaw Jimmy Ward KA Birmingham Lyn Ward PiBP Prattville Paul Ward Selma Anne Warren PiBP Decatur George Warren TX Alexander City Rita Watkins DZ Dublin, Georgia Hank Watson SAE Anniston Peggy Watts Bessemer Kendal Weaver KA Birmingham Barbara Weed PiBP Anniston Cynthia Wells PiBP Wyckoff, N.J. Don Wells KA Birmingham John Wells Birmingham Stuart Wells KA Madison Thomas Wells Mobile Vernon Wessel Borden, Indiana P ppil P Wayne Wheeler KA Birmingham David Whiteis Birmingham Terry Widener Birmingha m Marci Wietchy Gadsden Glen Wilcoxson ATO Florence Joan Willett Montgomery Allen Willey ATO Birmingham Charles Williams PiKA Gadsden Jim Bob Williamson SAE Mobile Elizabeth Willis Birmingham Becky Willson ZTA Athens, Tenn. Bryant Wilson SAE Mobile underclassmen A 4vfc 4 fc mm Donald Wilson LXA Birmingham James Arthur Wilson Montgomery Janice Wilson AXO Birmingham Jim Wilson PiKA Birmingham Tip Wilson SAE Nicholsville Fred Wimpee Oneonta Carol Winning DZ Birmingham Jada Winton Decatur Wendy Wismer ZTA Chevy Chase, Maryland Brad Wood KA Fairfield Linda Wood ZTA Auburn Ann Worthy AXO Mobile Ellen Worthy KD Alexander City Barbara Wright PiBP Mobile Becky Wright AXO Birmingham Linda Wright AXO Boaz Janet Wuehrmann Birmingham Mike Zealy PiKA Birmingham Ina Gayle Zeigler Sylacauga KD advertisements 226 CI 1 E = ACIPCO ADDS STEEL PIPE PRODUCING FACILITY You ' re looking inside the new American Steel Pipe Division plant recently completed at ACIPCO and now in production. This new facility means additional employment, additional production, and additional growth for ACIPCO and for Birmingham. As has been said before, the success of one contributes to the other. We ' re proud of our mutual progress. And as the nation knows the name of AMERICAN as a leading source of quality cast iron pipe and steel tubing, you can be sure our steel pipe will take its important position. The men and women of ACIPCO are proud of the part our company and our people have played in contributing to the civic and cultural growth of the community. Yes ... it is nice to live in Birmingham. AMERICAN CAST IRON PIPE COMPANY • BIRMINGHAM, ALA. A things go better,! Coke BOTTLED UNDEI AUTKOWTY Of THE COCA-COtA COMPANY tY BIRMINGHAM COCA-COLA BOTTUNGCOMPANY FOR GOODNESS SAKE, EAT GOLDEN FLAKE GOLDEN FLAKE POTATO CHIPS ' YOU CAN GET THEM IN THE SNAK BAR ' for readers of all ages DARK, MIDDLE and MODERN ph. 322-1311 on the circle in five points south SOUTHERN RUBBER, INC. Gillette Tires Recapping Wheel Alignment Front End and Brake Service PHONE 322-4615 917 6th Ave. North WOOD-FRUITTICHER GROCERY COMPANY JOY YOUNG CAFE CHINESE AND AMERICAN COOKING The Best in Food and Service 412 N. 20th Street 251-0371 g fejia l A R e alSer vice in ffeal Val ues Monf omeru p$ J|EAfc ESTATE ahd I NSURAMCE CO. jm REALTORS OU SS 528 NORTH TWENTIETH STREET P. O. Box 1951 Birmingham Ula. 322-3325 Traditionally Fine Clothing For The Inner And Outer. Man ALABAMA BY-PRODUCTS CORPORATION South ' s Leading Commercial Producer of Coke-Coal Chemicals-Coal FIRST NATIONAL BUILDING PHONE 252-5171 BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 231 Smart Girls Your Year-Round Key To Fashion dbtes J to MOUNTAIN BROOK CRESTWOOD 871-9075 592-0861 reineheid C Ljreen, rnc. Zror Une if fewest Jrn jraskic 2402 Wontevalto PoaJ ill fountain VDrooh, -Mlabama ions Phone 879-4062 COLLEGE HILLS CORNER COLLEGE HILLS COLLEGE CLEANERS REXALL DRUG STORE BEAUTY SHOP 785-4108 786-3245 737 8th Avenue West 729 8th Avenue West W. E. White -M.T. Jones Robert C. McKee Owner COLLEGE BARBER SHOP 645 8th Avenue West C. S . Houston, Owner 232 The Statue of Liberty is an important symbol to all Americans because it represents the free- dom which is the foundation of our way of life. Our Company is proud to use it as its trade- mark. Men to remain free must provide security for themselves and their families and most Ameri- can families have found life insurance to be the best way to provide this security Liberty National Life Insurance Company is providing a large measure of security for many families. Over a third of a billion dollars is held by the Company for the protection of policyowners. Perhaps this financial strength is one of the reasons why more and more people each year buy their life insurance from Liberty National. LIBERTY NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO HOME OFFICE: Birmingham, Alabama Frank P. Samford, Jr., President Compliments of GRADY HEMPHILL ASSOCIATES 534 Volley Rood XX1E Telephone l Q 871-9201 2738 Cahoba Road on the circle at MOUNTAIN BROOK VILLAGE Birmingham (Mt. Brook), Ala. £$3$ Sst ve? Sfotzd ffltxtn eMw ■reoA ' , Ma zma- 4 - iSV .s , _ l r ' bbT - '  PS 111 rW?l c ! ' j; gss g ! rnr-r: n™r rrar | | I W ! tsttk; nT u r f n:n: |te .±£ m ' ' ■' $ £ ' •  ,■P§ .r 1 llil ' jilPi ' llirjIIfif;  ■P I1I.IPI Fl SV £M£w s !r s - jajL .J j fc t i . fc. - -r _2 - - ■McCOY METHODIST CHURCH Adjacent To The Campus Meeting Your Spiritual Needs At College The Ministers, Staff Facilities Are Available To You At Any Time TRY OUR FAMOUS MEXICAN DINNER PHONE 785-9337 Private Dining Rooms 1118 3rd Ave. West R. B. BROYLES COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS Allen Clark, ' 24 Jess Bates, ' 41 Allen Clark, Jr. ' 51 2021 North 2nd Avenue 251-7171 LOVETT ' S FLOWERS Bedding Plants Wedding Decorations Funeral Designs 2150 Highland Avenue S. 251-6126 Greenhouse: 630 6th Ave., S.W. 252-5117 Your Invitation to a Delicious Lunch WAITE ' S 2101 7th Ave., South 251-9224 FINE FOODS SINCE 1923 the ENGEL companies For Your Real Estate, Insurance and Mortgage Loan Needs 333 Bank for Savings Building Ph: 323-8081 Your dreams come true with PLAID STAMPS Desiring to Serve You With . QUALITY— The Finest in High Quality Merchandise! SERVICE — Friendly, Satisfying Service To Everyone! PLUS — Cash Savings and Valuable Plaid Stamps magic cleaners o two blocks east of the campus ph: 785-4181 ... m m m with a Southern Accent Operating from its Birmingham headquarters, Vulcan Materials Company supplies the nation with concrete and concrete products, surfacing materials, metals and chemicals... all contributing to burgeoning, building America • Construction is America ' s biggest industry. And Vulcan Materials Company is one of the nation ' s leading suppliers of basic materials for construction. 236 COMPLIMENTS colonial restaurant steer room Mr. and Mrs. Bob Stanford WATERS FLOWERS ACROSS FROM WEST END HOSPITAL 705 Tuscaloosa Ave. 787-4665 COFFEE CUP HICKORY HUT SERVING CONSTANTLY The Best Food in Town 5 Points West Shopping City Gray 250 West 54th Street New York, N.Y., 10019 Photographers of your class section Honeycutt Street —imam m Barberb olxu iu Jpjwdjuucfo Barber SEE . . . IF you DON ' T LIKE BARBER ' S BEST! ' IT ' S FINGER LICKIN ' GOOD! Colonel Sanders ' K«ntitfkij fried hkken VARNER BROS. RESTAURANTS, INC J I 1720 Third Avenue West Birmingham, Alabama 787-5233 Pianos Music lA . Band Instruments Forbes has served the Music- Loving Public for Over 73 Years. Parking Lot Next Door and Across Street 1914 North 4th Ave. Ph. 251-4154 Stores in Anniston, Decatur, Gadsden, Montgomery, Florence STEINWAY PIANOS HUNTER STREET BAPTIST CHURCH WELCOMES YOU TO EVERY SERVICE Sunday Schedule Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship Service 1 1 :00 a.m. Student Snack Supper 5:45 p.m. Training Union 6:15 p.m. Evening Worship Service 7:30 p.m. A PROGRAM PLANNED FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS! 238 For 52 years HILL Stores have served the housewives of Alabama with the finest quality foods that the markets afford. Our stores are so arranged and so stocked with the finest quality nationally known foods that the most discriminating housewives find it a pleasure to shop in their neighborhood . . . HILL ' S ALSO GIVES YOU THOSE WONDERFUL S H GREEN STAMPS- WITH EACH PURCHASE. KLEIN ' S FLOWERS Flowers for All Occasions TWO LOCATIONS South Side Vestavia 2009 Highland Ave. Shopping Center 323-8761 879-1656 Herbert J. Baum GENERAL AGENT Suite 802— Protective Life Bldg. PROTECTIVE LIFE WilKom I. XimMm, ftuMMl twvfnf • Swth Shm 1907 Phones 252-5114 and 251-3171 9cmfuutf MOtlCttVI IWI  Ull IN JIMMY WILSON STUDIOS 1914 28th Avenue South Homewood 879-3201 Miss Southern Accent, Rose Coleman PHOTOGRAPHERS OF THE BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN BEAUTIES This is the name that has meant Quality for over 60 years in COFFEE TEA SPICES THE ENSLEY GRILL Good Food 414 19th St. ENSLEY EviabUhtd leSS THERE S NO PLACE UKf HOME TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU South ' s Leading Home furniture EASTLAKE 7740 1st Ave., N. DOWNTOWN 111 North 19th St. 240 EBSCO ETfce Compfete Qmpkc Jkte Ce ta fa Graphic Arts fa Business Aids fa Sales Aids fa Advertising fa Art Design fa Commercial Printing ■fa Custom-made Binders fa Advertising Specialties fa Magazine Subscriptions ■fa Recreational Equipment Supplies One-Stop Service for all your Graphic Arts Needs No matter what your needs, EBSCO guarantees prompt service and top quality that will please the most discriminating customer. Many years of experience in the Graphic Arts — coupled with the most up-to- date machinery and equipment — enable EBSCO to give you complete satisfaction. UNLIMITED SALES OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE FOR QUALIFIED COLLEGE GRADUATES. 323-6351 EBSCO industries, inc. 1230 1st Avenue North BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 35201 Phone 323-6943 • PRIME AND CHOICE Aged Steaks ® Charcoal Broil $1.19 up CIRCLE ES STEAK HOUSE THE CONSTANTINES THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONTINUED PATRONAGE FOR THAT LATE SNACK PHONE IT IN AND TAKE IT HOME. DRIVE IN 2800 LOAAB AVE. 786-2351 Compliments of SOUTHEASTERN BOLT SCREW 1009 2nd Ave., No. Phone: 252-3191 SPECIALIZING IN WEDDINGS PROMS 251-5972 o maiSTUp ! 2032 4th AVE., N. ALABAMA PRODUCE COMPANY COLLEGE CAFETERIA Good Food At Reasonable Prices COLLEGE BOOK STORE Complete Line of School Supplies, Text Books and Paper Backs HUNTOON-COPELAND-HEDIN, INC. Hunter A. Copeland, President 30 East 42nd Street New York 17, N. Y. STERNE, AGEE, 142 LEACH, INC index advertisement Page Alabama By-Products Corporation 231 Alabama Produce Company 242 Apeda Studios • 237 Atlantic Pacific Tea Co., Inc 235 American Cast Iron Pipe Company 228 Barber Pure Milk Company 238 Baum, Herbert J., Insurance 239 Boutique Bootery 233 Broyles, R. B., Furniture Co., Inc. 234 Burch Tant 242 Canterbury Shop 231 Casual Aire 232 Coca Cola 229 Coffee Cup Hickory Hut 237 College Cafeteria Bookstore 242 College Hills Barber Shop 232 College Hills Cleaners Beauty Shop 232 College Hills Rexall Drug Store 232 Colonial Restaurant Steer Room 237 Constantines 241 Crutcher, Gene, Book Store 230 Dale ' s Hideaway Cellar 230 E. S. Steak House 241 E.B.S.C.O. Industries Inc 241 El Charro 234 Engel Companies 235 Ensley Grill 240 Fain Ltd 233 Feinefield Green 232 Forbes Sons Piano Co., Inc. 238 Golden Flake Inc 229 Haverty Furniture Company 240 Hemphill and Associates 233 Hills Grocery Company 239 Hunter Street Baptist Church 238 Huntoon-Copeland-Hedin, Inc. 242 Joy Young Cafe 23 1 Kentucky Fried Chicken 238 Klein ' s Flowers 239 Liberty National Life Ins. Co 233 Lovetfs Flowers 234 Magic Cleaners Inc 235 McCoy Methodist Church 234 Montgomery Real Estate Insurance Co. . 23 1 Royal Cup Inc 240 Southeastern Bolt Screw Company 242 Southern Rubber Company 2-30 Sterne, Agee Leach, Inc 242 Vulcan Materials Company 236 Waite ' s Inc 235 Waters Flowers 237 Wilson, Jimmy, Studios 240 Wood-Fruitticher Grocery Company 230 The business staff asks that each student do two things in regard to the advertisements appearing in this section: after looking at the pictures go back and read the copy, and if you have the opportunity patronize our advertisers. Without the support and generosity of our advertisers, this issue of the Southern Accent would not have been possible. LIBRARY OF BIRMINGHAM -SOUTHERN COLLEGE
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