Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA)

 - Class of 1971

Page 1 of 176

 

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1971 Edition, Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collectionPage 7, 1971 Edition, Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1971 volume:

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Ji - - 4.n..a.' ha Tartan 1971 Covenant College Lookout Mountain, Tennessee Gary Lindley, Editor fl ...- I - 2-Q, I n V' I f I . it 'W ll w1'4' 41 hfyiltmd R- Y HSI Dcnfm K 3 , L ' Ro.:-io 51.4906 , , lx 1 of fvnfblm L if? 54 F If A.. '44 - futile. That its guiding light is illumination Credo That the Bible is the Worcl of God written, And without its guiding light our efforts are i on the way of rightness, not an adage on the wall. A And that when we read it We can see Truthg A 1 we see the way and we walk in it. I Q the Word speaks and we listen. 'l Q . . O s U' .'. g. '+A . 'Wv ', . , if I 4 1 3 .' ' . ,- '. a'. .' ,..----- if -'sv ,-nf4, ' V Y V X., 'WI J - , .' iv V. aan: . Q50 '4-' '1 . . .UA V rl 'Q I . if , ' ' ' i s ,.' ' ' ' 4' :I ' Y F. V. V YY, ,- wi 'Ile ',, A' V ' -af - - 6 5 . , . 4. , f 1 rf if ' .V ' '. ' ' fd A I L ' Y ' x7 ' w I D . . ,-, :I 6' ' .. ' - ,. 'f - -' q , Q- 4' - r a yt' , 4 ' . 1 'P ' vi ',.4 V' E 'im fy' fl 301 I4 1 '.. F C A 35 gm. ' 'fl ivy. ,'-- I 9 . ,nk if fp. nw- ., . .19 ffl f' ,In I Io. -' I ' f A' ', A fi, ' . 4 ' -o . ff . ' I l -ini I III' flfdmz . ' , -'wp 1 I , f , I l , 4 '.'.-1341 I That all of life is governed by religious presuppositions, And that everything we do reflects our religious commitment. That the Word is also written on our hearts - the very basis of our every actiong And as our religious presupposition develops about the Word, its light governs our life. the Word speaks and we act. QV! 6 ft A, 1'4- ll That we must always maintain a Christian frame of reference, - And when we confront the world,s problems, we do so on the basis of Christ's mandate to make disciples of all men. That we must cast ourselves at his feet, renouncing all other gods that would distract us from his commandsg And that we must actively make disciples of all men to his kingdom, the Word speaks and we follow. f vs,-'i' , V ' .f-if-'avf - - -.kwa ,f.,w ,Q .5352 4121 , , - Mmfiyifg , '-.-ff ' - HQ A 'fwff ff2,f. 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L57 X, -,rf J !- S 'Ax 4 I 'YdS X Asn x F- A .L Q ,K i ffgy, -u I ' mx U ,is qi' N I, ,' ll, ina Nl if I I 1 .. x 'xr ' 1 if' 'V Q . xv- 'LA ,fax 14, .- ' f' ., - A. z ff: 3, 5 ,-: ,, -' Aff' gvjgv- CL 'Nik '-1 - .Sf N 'gnit fx. Q V, w fx . . , T Q- ! 415 245- gu i- - .gt - -I . 's 'KLM i 1 fi ' ,I 1. a n I . .. ., xx- . 9 ix 5 X 'Q , - 4 f. J- - . 4 ' V I x YA' . , '. Ip , 1 1 . ,. 5.1! 5 . . ' ' NX' ' ' 'f b '1Q'3' s ' 'Q ' U , N - ,n ' Z., ,uf f Q3 'P' Rl xr JI jr 1 1 1 .. ,tg ' ' 4. ,Y 4 ' I I -Q 4' ' 9 . ,vw -nu... --.......,..-...ap , ,gn 9 1 . A I WEE 4 . 4 'W 2 wa. 2 Cm H'HnlE A45 .X ff 43ffilxQli:Q'..1'QfT'Qii' I0 I T1-04 That we acknowledge the pre-eminence ofthe Lord, jesus Christ, ' And that he is even now king over all powers That Christian discipleship demands a total commitment to our presuppositiong And that this commitment requires constant intelligent evaluation of our world. the Word speaks and We respond. W, 4 4- 3: 4849122 That we, through tangible faith, can understand that the worlds were framed by the Word, that we have denied the natural creation order, And that our works must be redeemed, reshaped and through the obedient Christ, our lives may be redeemed, confirmed. That we are called as the body of Lord Christ to redeem the creation and make it fit for God's kingdom. And that we must learn how to be disciples, to redeem God's workmanship. the Word will speak and we hear. We learn. V X fw..f - 4, ef-P.. N'r4 A,-f 5' -. ,W H ,...-. ,,.,, , i- ,.- .--, ,,.-1 ,..-- .,-- rv , I X u i i , flx w , P W x 11 Y Y ,'W . S f ' Q V , E, g Q. , ' 'Q L 1 ' 3 w if W k N ' :n::. MA? Q , , N., ' E , X 'ii Qf 1 I Q' H E Q 23 ,I H , F: J, M ! i S ,,..l ,11- ' E , l 1 I ! 1 I ,WI . ' a f , X ' , 1 w ',' I '4 Q SU f' T Mg V! I ff ? N 3 if X f f f? . . 11 M qi sd K ' if I WX , ,'t + . , X'. ef -: , X1 ,MAL 5 ' ,H N ' KH 4, ml nk D Ml !! Lg v u I ul---'n -111' :gf----:F - ,-- ' ff 7:5 5:H a'. 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I N 'K ,-1 V 5 'v- Q .- - -f-'-- .ig As' W All School Outing Then at the first of the year the Dorm Council, consisting of those upstanding defenders of campus order, sponsors an all-school outing. I don't know what it was like on Captain jack's horses, but we really whooped it up in the pond. A raft, warm water, and eight guys in a canoe. Or you can start a softball game starring Mr, Graf and turn it into major competition. I sometimes wonder why we get all refreshed and in- vigorated by visiting a farm with long grassy slopes and beautiful scenery and twangy drawls. Did God make the country toescape to? Well, that may be why we have a dorm council to begin with - because there's more to living than riding horses and lying in the grass. There's living responsibly before God to redeem all the world. And that takes work. uw- Y F w .a:,:,,-.W J, V M 'U ' in i A K' 1- , L., '. fi-I'3W?' ' ' . HALL 4 . AL qize? , g V Xtwmwn 5.-- x1g.4 . 'n' Dorm Council l I N 1. P. i R 6 O 18 Student and Faculty Recitals You eould never tell XK'll.lI would hippen next in the musie department this yegir, All the way from lboos visions of lvetter housincg to Gordon liohson's tello. Those suppertime retit.ds seemed Ll hit Mrletthed .it first, hut then it really l7L'L'LlINL' .i help tor the music majors who pruetiee .ill semester gind nex er perform. It kind of lets the student hody know wh.it's going on down at the musit house. Xwhy do we have reeitgils? lNIin'lue it's just prestige, or nmybe it's 11 reuetion. But I douht it. l'd sgiy it's :ln nrt to recite, and not only to do what you've learned but to surround it with the psytliologiegil tension of an audience. Music is for people and God's people should under- stand it the best. Excellence takes real saeritiee, though, and we are so seldom willing to give it. Maybe thnt's what reeitnls are tor. Sneriliee for excel- lenee. ,-'v,,..- -' ,.f- ' B -,,. -in sr-., . '- A -i wifi, r ,. QF' 1 Is V ?- f 5. 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' 15 'S 44 and ,M ,V ,.... 1 5, . myiiu 5,,,, ', 1 'L N 1- Q v vi . wwf e- S w - ,... 1-H A E, Xi' .9 W v I--I x nz D 40,2 .: x ' -may -wilstf f .:5X'2.ff '-5 fiueix 5 M ..- xv A, X., -, 5 ff M. -4 .mf fu. av:-f ,Y N' ., ,U ,fl if: A w 5, y Fa' 3 . v'--Q l I' . . 4' ,' Je , , , . nw. , ox . . .r, iq X, , . Y A li . ,'. Q + 5- A n. 4 5 ww' y ' . ,, 'Www I ef Ns- 12,3-I vu sy 'SN ,. I ,ff .vzfiffffiflwv -as lV i 214si'+mf-ef f 'e i' wwf- U if L ', -wqnwflwfwf gf l ' it N5 JW Frye, 7-:nf X. . QQ an , M75 F Eff 1--his-Jef-f 'wi Y. 4 I 'I ' 4 Q 1 'I -, Q ' I , . - 1. ',, .A r w, .. . 'L we U . 41, MW , t s . 1 si at '. . ix! vs95'f5 dx u . ' ,gg any-A' rr . , - Y, .nova sn' fxil, 'V 1' ,b--gy. f L ,. , . ws- I A P- 5 r ' .' -Q -,FT ' '- N'-Q psig, -V' , A swim in X V, 1' 4 ,A-,mr-1-A ,. 'A I 7 Soccer l 1454 Won 14 Nashville Internationals Dayton Internationals St. Bernard College Berry College Tennessee Temple College Toccoa Falls Institute Georgia College Oxford College of Emory U. DeKalb College St. Bernard College Bryan College George Peabody College University ofthe South University of Tennessee Middle Tennessee State Univ. Phil Alston Max Armes Phil Baer Steve Barnett Chris Collins Dick Crane Dave Crawford Dan Cross Spencer Davis Steve George Dick Hagedorn Dan Herron Craig I-Iopson George Hopson Steve Longacre Greg Maffet ,Iohn MacGregor Tom MacGregor Peter Mollenkof Steve Mollenkof Lott I Coffman! 2 8 3 4 O 1 5 17 4 2 1 4 3 6 5 Dan Morton Kirk Phillips Rob Rayburn Bob Schmidt Andrew Shaw Dave Stanton Capfanz Eric Stanton jeff Talley John Taylor Rick Tyson Captam Mark Vigil Pat Winning Warren Vreeland Steve Young Walter Bowman Coach Craig Burdett Slalulzczan Lewis Ruff Manager w X- 1.4 I QT'.I 3 -.4-'gh i kg ,rr M v' - .V S Pi: If-'Ilia x i I. 4 'I , I Q - A i- Qq 1l'.' , 1 'Eli' . ' ms, , I t - bs , ' . wsgx- .. 9 . ' v ' 4 Q. Ll: if Q.. ,. N-v ,ff - ' V I s , .' -.1, ., 'S 1, ',f L,,'f+'9w!1 4 '4 5 A' N VM A, , ,, .A - , - WA. A 114'-,Ac 94.4 22 uni, , MMJQ 5 af, 5, Mi, ., f. .1 . f qu.. ad.. , Q a 'fa 5, 1 xv ,Q , - . 5. , r ' x v -. N- My! V. MWA g I-F, gps' 7, V t SIX-, 3:5 K il iigyqgg ..j,,5,,x3 ,V A' g.ffi.SNgn+-.. E53 wh' 4 - 1'.4gf-3,3-f:,,f . Q .ffli f,-ji -4. ,T .51 .'. ,,3...f ,. .f',:i,-Q8:g'1qf'lu..1 I 7 1 t7 ffff 535: f4'd'. f9gf'C, 1-ff. g2?'11'W'271 , 'L E 'lm 9 WNW Wm: i i' ,M 5' , . x, -Wh. ng Will' ' w' 1-T' ,v fi' - fd? as Hg '29 -' A.'e,v,,f1-swsfv- W-' A ' 1 CY.. if -. It rn, ,,,. 4 a N gy,-no-ef .. 1 .i,.nf, .nl-:W -all-1' Soccer ,Q in Not everyone can play soccer. It takes a lot of work, and more time. I mean, the game must be disci- plined with a certain number of players who have worked together for a long time. To learn the game. Games like Bernard made playing soccer worth it. But you can either make the game a beautiful thing or fight it out to win. I think the spectators sometimes wonder if they can always get both. After all we have to win. But then why win? What's it all for anyway? Of course there's something about people who watch a soccer game. They play the whole game. They wince the ball past defense, they stomp the ball right through the net, and they punch the ref at the top of their lungs. I'll bet some of us would do well to do ten pushups, but when it comes to soccer, our irritated voices are in top shape. I think playing soccer should be really fun. Like saying, Oh, Coach got together a bunch ofguys to play sports this year. They went around to a few schools who had the same idea. Had a blast. We learned a few things, too. I think that's what a game is for. To play. f , ,2z,.a,yf Q ' 2 gv Nfl: V' . . jffigfe2K.,.,,:jCi? 4, ' V 1 , ' f f fr, ,As '. -, 1 I N.,-1 45410 4 nh' .H I , 4-ft 4 Ko... 4 ' ' M bw ' 1- Jw, A. 3 , f' A- A gs . 53' W. ,. .L A V' A' ,, 3 w f M 455' :V--' .?,,5Qv,. 'ff , , AL N ,,'.H ' 4 f- , BL. ' X f ' , ' - ' . A , . 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' 0 ' 1 Q . t ,. , Q - .. -.I .- -1 . ,., , - X Q ,. A . ' .A 1 K . -, u p x ' V' - 1 X tk- 1 P sv . Ji' M' . , , . . , J 5 - dl ' K1 A-1 ' ' ' gs! , ' ' A n 'V . Q 1?'m' 5 . 4 . L A H.. xg Hayride A haytide could be described as recreation although sometimes planned recreation gets tight, especially when the trucks are too small. A nice time for close fellowship, And to further dampen spirits there was rain. But that's just sort of what a hayride is. The barn was nice, too. I think a hayride is a chance for a bunch of city peo- ple to put on the guise of country folk, and jump on the truck to ride on out like they were just in from baling hay. That's probably why we don't like the raing we're not used to living outdoors but we want to act like it. E 'H Y' Q nfs. Y ii A Cross Country -'L 'X' ati! av' ni W1 Cross country is prolmihly the most grueling sport But at least you get there, .ind running i5 something you'll do all your life. It seems like cross country is juxt fighting yourself, Every bone and muscle in your hody says you're crazy but your head says run .myw.1y, So you run. You're on your own in this gnmeg almost in if the other team weren't there. Only they .Ire So it really takes drive - sort of like the kind Elijah had to beat Ahalfs chariot hgulc to the nity. Af. 4. in M ,fm Jrv Mi? '46 .. ,fl-w 5 HE. V'-W' -vt dawg, , fb I h X X .. x ,..,.,. . A ' 'f.S:' 1' x 4 x W K7 Q . x S at X . , , X K A S . X VN . 0 an 5.-1 Y Cross Country Bryan Berry Temple David Lipscomb Sewanee Temple Bryan Rod Alexander Lonnie Barnes Dave DuMom Kevin Ivery Tony Johnston Barry McWilliams Won Los! 4 3 Colman! Oppomfnl 24 51 44 15 20 56 38 17 25 50 21 55 29 26 .jim Peale Paul Talley .jim Wildeman Charles Anderson Coarh Carole Starzer Manager In a community such as ours you have to struggle. It's not easy to live Christian in this place especially when everybody is in the way all the time, It's not easy to redeem our world, either, especially when our own failures are part of it. The Black and Blues Band was a struggle, a really big one. The group was to encourage. The group was to min- ister. It was to praise the Lord at Rossville, at Riv- erside, at Third Street. So few of us remembered that. After all, it cost money, as dear as it is, and it cost time, and for many it cost hypocrisy. X l . li , ,Gif E23 ,, M4 .w---V-., , 'Nr .,! .,,4W5Z?,m 1 . Us 1' I W '. Lf f . in , 3 , 1 Q Black and Blues Band Y .fl f i .- . 1 ' 'ifi-'LA 4 -X ' ---' 1-slit s 3 T -N 'V iT ' . 2'77 f - ' , Am fl : eee, 1 ' -si 33 Q : . vi -5. 135' , 'F At Rossville we wanted glory, at Riverside we want- ed a big crowd, and at Third Street we wanted those college people to go back up the mountain so we could sing for the people on the back porches. Now we have to redeem our failures, our vain glory, and our voices. Sing a new song. For jesus. L Freshman Talent Show It isn't every talent show you go to where they serve hors-d'oeuvres during the intermission and Sprite on the rocks. But I guess the talent show slowly loses the mean- ing it once might have had. It sort of introduced the freshmen, laying their sundry abilities before the upper classes as a peace offering for initiation. Now the talent show is more a demonstration of organiza- tional ability and committee competence. The school watches the incoming freshmen and by the time the talent show comes around it's almost a di- g1'CSS1OI'l. And then again, class distinctions quickly dissolve when you come here. I don't know, maybe we should call it the community spirit. gg r ,rv 1 A s f' ' , V l K. il. W .7-Yo-v--an I wr' mi' nd 1 :1 1 1 1 I1 i1 1 11 1 ' M f ! ' X l1l111l11ll11lllW 1 MMM ,5l' X l ll1llllll11il1llllll1 l ll . 1 : 1: .h 1, . 1, 1, . 1 .- li , ll -.1 L l lt's kid Flea W S79 en Mr. Street came we really felt classy. I don't w what place that has in the Christian Mind, but ' f 'Al Ih .wx 3 , i 3 5 A 5 2 5 11 'Wi- , l ,N.,...,,,,....-vw ,uw 3 2 11194 an ,rf Qf' Y: 5 YZ... ,,,A Y ff bs, ,i I. sl iff.-122 . i , W' DN. I ALBA. HThe Importance of Being Earnestw I suppose when some people think of drama cluh they think of musicals, big stages with ZOO lights and air conditioning. Then they come to Covenant College and tind out that Drama Cluh is a small group of people with a lot of drive and more late pers. Witli nothing hut a dining hall. a roll-away stage and popping radiator pipes. And then again it's hard enough to get the Great Hall for anythingg it seems to be at a premium. When I went to the Play I was just waiting for all those people to come out whom I thought would just tit the part perfectly and I'd he antici- pating their various entrances. And then when it was all over I remembered the play and not the characters. Is that what play characters strive to do, to become so much a part of the story that the cast is forgotten and the play is the center of attention? I wonder why anyone would sign up for makeup, or stage hand. All they see is a paint brush and light switches. I guess that's another part of for- getting yourself and doing it all for the sake of the play. I wonder why they call it Play. '55 Christian Thought Conference This is the week when all the pseudo-philosophers group together and perhaps don coats and ties even to think out the complexities of a lecturer. Tape re- corders all across the front of the podium and pen- cils in every hand. Pretty good faculty representation too, usually. I wonder if any of us have ever really participated in a Christian thought conference. I mean, have we really thought Christianly about what the lecturer said? Or ever really drawn any thinking conclusions? I guess we just sort of soak it up, like the speaker is the only Christian thinker, and he had already thought up these lectures a year ago. Christian thinking is confronting and putting things in their created place. You don't have to be a philo- sopher to do that. is i H-9 :-:LV : 9 325533 1 1'5Q'?3'.1, '-lf -1 ' -N -i-i Mt ,au- f APY, E .ax .w1:.if'Z'- Wy- iygfi-.-,. .-,-i-at, .':1Q,:s li, 4, , .gig 5 +11 fe '5 v1n- Bagpzjye if But sometimes we were just too confused to put out a paper. Once somethings in print everybody can read it, and we didn't want to have a joke page. We wanted the Truth in print for students and all the people. It's not very easy to publish the Truth and not your own messed-up words. The devil tried every possible way to stop it. And we were still wondering how to put the Truth in print - as it presented itself in our real lives. Sometimes the light was obscured and we started writing our own words. And that's when we really got confused, Bagpipe hasn't always had the freedom we had. Maybe that's why a little truth came out. Truth is funny sometimes, laughing funny. Now and then it's sad, quietly sad. To students it's usually unhappy in some way. Partly because a lot of the time we're confused with all the falsehood. Maybe Bagpzgpe was some Truth. Timothy Belz, Edztor Chorale and Chamber Grchestra Covenant Festival Choir UN: A choir has got to be one of the most frustrating ex- periences in the worltl, You get ll nice song anti then you can't sing more than two measures antl the con- cluctor stops you. Ancl talks for live minutes about why it was wrong. That is essentially the story of .1 Choir. Then you run over a song until you're sick of it yourself antl then you have to get up and sing it for other people anti make them like it. That must be one of the biggest iohs of .1 conductor. Making the Chorale like it and the people like it too. Anti that feeling of class comes hack when there's .1 real orchestra up there while Festival Chorus helts out the illciiizizli on the tratlition.1l Suntlay in Decem- ber. In a way our school is really 111111111111 mln. XYZ- clon't know what to do with ourselves when some- thing big like an orchestra happens. And we finally end up enjoying it, if for no other reason than the principle of the thing. To say nothing ofthe music. Winter Banquet I don't think everyone in the school would want the job of planning events for everybody to enjoy. I mean, there's just so many games 500 people can play. But anyway, when the candlelight dinners come around we find one social activity most every- one can participate in. The banquet has the strange distinction of being a banquet for the sake of it. Then of course if it need- ed purpose it would be just to see all the fantastic dresses and hairdos. And people like the idea of an event. A tux can be tight. Social events are always a conglomeration of person- al feelings. Most everyone wants to impress every- body else in his own way, some have great feelings of chivalry, and some have great feelings of adult re- sponsibility. Of course many have first dates on big social events, they have a way of making a date casu- al. With feelings like that flying around, the ones who go just to have fun are usually the most suc- cessful. rf' if i, m. , ' Q FX .gigan- -. wi Q MQ! in , r 4-,, I Nw. it 5 S mx K' ' 0 'gy ff, --fiyw 'HZ .'. - f.mv:.',ff-- , u 'Q bv 'U' 5' tf' - 4 s.. 0 lr. 1- N ' 0 H 1 Social Committee Menu: 4 'I 3 5 ,nn Cheerleaders Maybe l've retained too much of a high school pic- ture - and at this school we have a decidedly differ' ent image. They've whipped the cheerleaders into highly synchronized artists. Less random shouting and more calculated, Concise wordingg less spontane- ous energy but more practiced grace. A kind of hush falls over the audience as the cheer- leaders trot carefully into the center circle. ln some- what mature tones, the girls present their work ar- ticulately down to the last pirouette. A cheer goes up as they come back to the stands, and the crowd resumes its usual incoherent chatter. Cheerleading must be a very difficult job. Being able to maintain your composure when everyone else has lost theirs is no easy task. Then again you have to be able to yell your head oft' when nobody else will. Barb Alston Ctgfmzin Sharon Barr Doreen Degel Linda Miller Linda Schwab Laura Schenk Esther Armes janet Cruise Judi Unruh Ccwlzlfll W page Wan 15 Lee College Toccoa Falls Institute Emmanuel College Atlanta Christian College Baptist Christian College Tennessee Temple College Grand Rapids Bible College Pillsbury College Tennessee Temple College johnson Bible College Bryan College University ofthe South Dalton .junior College Trevecca Nazarene College johnson Bible College Trevecca Nazarene College Spring Arbor College Toccoa Falls Institute Piedmont Bible College Tennessee Temple College Atlanta Christian College Emmanuel College Bryan College Lee College Calvary College North Georgia College Basketball SCAC Tournament Toccoa Falls Institute Lee College Tennessee Temple College Rod Alexander Don Beebe George Hopson Greg Maffet Alex Rowan Andy Shaw Loft 14 Cozfenam Oppomfnl 54 90 82 47 69 46 87 45 64 99 54 68 91 82 58 5 5 50 76 77 65 7 5 104 54 57 79 92 5 5 65 101 66 86 99 89 97 95 67 127 47 70 66 1 1 5 69 80 71 84 106 78 100 100 87 94 56 76 49 32 44 81 92 jeff Talley Bruce Tilton Captain Steve Young Walter Bowman Coach Lewis Ruff Manager M! Wx D Basketball This is a game we used to play in PE. when the teacher couldn't think of anything else to do. I was never too good at itg it takes a certain practiced grace to jump up just right and put the ball through the basket. But obviously it's more than a game now. lt's a discipline. an art. and in some cases a protes- SIOH. Some people go to the game to relaxg it takes their mind off the pressures ot' lite and turns to the pres- sures ofthe game. Others go tp the game out of zeal for the sport, dedication to one team, and a sort of secret wish to play themselves. And we all end up fighting ourselves off the floor. l think basketball is a good diversion for spectators and a true skill for the players. Basketball. however. should never be a diversion from real lite, It should always point us back to our true responsibilities and be a teacher to us on human needs. All too often it is in the most painful way. And the value of the game must be the way it drives all of us to acknowl- edge our own inadequacies and cast ourselves on Jesus Christ. P' iw2+.m,,, 4 LEE BE qua Lo , qi ,5, a,,,,,, , ' X- , ,, ..,. -N v . . vw 05 T .E-. 3 , xirfir VAV,-,aw -.S ,. .. :-x:g A 1 , ig as-Q Basketball 1 M ff Ni i, k . sf Qfygf ' s' JL 1-, ., ,., ,4:. ., -,J . api 6- ff! 5 'fix f. .A -4-.. Qi, A Madrigal Dinner Concert ...ni The Madrigal Dinner Concert is coming close to being a regular tradition. For several years now the Music Club has labored to produce a huge feast in a bigger hall. Come to think of it, we live in a pretty good place to have a Madrigal dinner. The madrigal group is often taken to be the most so- phisticated ot- all musical groups at the college just because of the tuxes and that 15th century music. Actually, much of' what they do is what travelling troupes and troubadours used to do. I wonder how long it will be before madrigal groups start doing Burl Ives. At things like Madrigal dinner it's easy to feel im- portant. I mean with all the responsibilities and committees everybody feels like if they got sick the whole thing would fold. Somehow it all comes off. It could be kind of bad to go to a big dinner. I won- der how much longer we will be able to have big dinners. Or I wonder if we have a right to have big dinners. It makes me feel like taking my baked pota- to down the mountain sometime. V3lCHt1HC7S Social M.. . A 1 A Yfwff? IW Mx' 1 - f 1. , - .. ff..-Xia,-ft 14 We , ry, if. 5 ,. fi ' 'V I ' a ' f f eff - 5 my! . , . ' ' In my elementary school we hung up grocery bags with red and white paper all over the outside, and you dropped your valentines in the proper bag. At the end of the day we counted out the spoils. The guys always thought it was corny, and if you wrote anything on the back, like I luv you or It's really true you got nabbed. The girls were somewhat the same, but always a lit- tle more aggressive about the whole thing. I mean, who's Valentine's Day for, anyway? They'd come with arms full of Valentines for everybody in the class to say nothing ofthe red bows and dresses. It used to be really hard for me to carefully judge which Valentine should go to which person. We usually got them at the store, and they were never really accurate. But then I was always reluctant to throw my Valentines away. Ferenc Nagy digg-332 r 5 e if -e T . 1 e S. e :If 2?ef 5 9 if c I fi' ifiata Q' r -Y ---S ??la g 2: :Q more .: .gf:f fE 'f-e fk 4.1 Exiif-L 5 g A 'sais a f . - 1 H i e 'L e :HE if-if Z -' H . S - i 5 5, ' i -' -fi Egg es- g. . L+ Q e ?Es. J. ag be I aries? L a ee i e' ri e i Either you don't pay any attention at all and let your mind wander, or else you have to hang on every word to understand a European. And it was worth it for me. Mr. Nagy turned out to be a very well-in- formed man. This time Cultural Affairs brought a regular history of modern European revolution right to us. Communism has always been the ultimate threat to the American mid-twentieth century mind. At least within the scope of my experience, until Mr. Nagy presented an accurate picture of its real significance in the light ofthe real issues. lt sort of shows you how your mind can be completely controlled fand dupedl by public opinion or media. It takes a lot to go to a lecture on Friday night. How many times do you have to go somewhere that you don't really want to go but it turns out really good? And then we wonder how God can work out the lit' tle things in your life. JV. Basketball Won Loft 5 lO john Arentsen Frank Snyder Max Armes Eric Stanton Craig Hopson jim Wildeman Bob Luth Pat Winning Paul Maynard G. Craig Burdett Coafli Mike Powers Don Allen Manager I've often wondered what would make a person go out for JV. basketball. It seemed like the game would lose a lot to be junior varsity. But then I de- cided it couldn't be glory, but just a love for the sport, even though you weren't varsity. and enjoying the game anyway. But at least in 'j.V. there's a tangible goal beyond winning games and making the tournament. lm- prove your skill at the game and you can advance to Varsity. Then again we would hope that the principle is to allow as many to play as possible for the sake ot' the peoples need. Not just for the sake of the game. CON 558 arb Anderson ebbic Barres Linda Landgren illa Brock Ginny Pettit etta Hudson Linda Miller Coach JV. Cheerlee ders I never had a crush on a cheerleader, They were al- ways either too popular to know who I was or too boisterous for a scared kid like me. My brother went with a cheerleader when I was a scared kid but he was a basketball player. I always had a secret crush on her though and I was always trying to be real cute and witty when she was at our house. Cheer- leaders are prettyi 5 at H ' if tw L JI' 4 IE his bi.. .lug A is Evangelism Conference W 'f .g.. WY iff! . fy-' v TTB if fu? F' There was a time when Christian Service Council got up once a semester and made us all feel uncom- fortable in chapel, because nobody was getting any- thing done for Christian service. For some reason that doesn't happen too much any- more. maybe because we have a new idea of evangel- ism, or the Council just doesn't have it to make those speeches anymore. lt's hard to End a speaker for an evangelism confer- ence - one who will say something very old and fa- miliar in a very new and vibrant way. And sometimes l'm wondering ifvve should have to have an evangelism conference, After all, it's only through sharing the Good News that any Christian can call himself that - a follower of Christ. And of course we don't have an evangelism conference just because we've had it before. I think we need to repeat evangelism conferences sometimes just because they never take hold in our real life. XY'e have our minds so segregated that we don't know hov: to think Truth completely, all the time. That's what Evangelism could do. ,.. -..-4.-1 7 , 1 FF 1 'x sh-gg i . if K., K! -Wil' ' 'T 2 ' l': ,X '4 si K s 'X' ' sx ,'X u f J' l IX 1 i , ai? ' f I gl sg , .1 1 Christian Service Council Dr. Gordon Clark Well, Ilve known about Scottish Presbyterianism from both sides of my familyg I guess you call it her- itage. So many of us are blindly proud of our heri- tage without really knowing what it is. But in my experience I think heritage is like a bedtime story of grandpa's reminiscence. It's really a kind of naive thing like the jewls remembering the wilderness and the walls of Jericho. It's to give you a respect for courage as well as a feeling of worth as a descendant of Abraham. 'V Til ,L lx f 1 i fiilffli Jul H1 4 k -,.. . 1' 5 A Freshman Carnival I said, oh no, what a childish thing. Then we turned around and the frosh were leading the student body in raising funds for everything from scholarships to doctor bills. Maybe we expected the freshmen to do things like that - childish things - but never pected motives like that. - I used to think adult life would be very dull. Theres nothing fun left to do except enjoy the children and try to recapture some of that abandon ourselves. f N-0 Q They even set up two Closed-circuit televisions in the lobby for the overflow crowd. And then the peo- ple came from every possible extreme and plenty from the middle, all to hear about a new, more com- plete way of life. And after they got here they found that way in the very fact that they were all together and concerned about it. It has to be tremendous drive to make people sit through six or eight hours of lectures a day, but I think the lecturers were saying what the people real- ly wanted to hear. We pray God that this may not be another cult, or sub-culture with its own passwords, but that it may spark the work of Christ toward its real goal of re- demption. And from what they said they're ready to go. L7Abri Conference tm les.. lim , 1: 61 See, college is sort of a miniature world, or town, with a big group of people living close together, and assignments are deadlines, decisions, and even crises, to set up tense situations just like real life. In college you learn how to better cope with these tensions, all on a socioacademic level. Part of this learning expe- rience is leadership, recognition, or responsibility. And these positions attempt in a somewhat indivi- dualistic way to have relevance and influence on the way that the community is set up. Itls hard to know what Student Council should do or how it should function. It isn't really powerful enough to administer justice for all, and yet it must maintain the respect of all. Thus it sometimes turns to other functions of government wherein it can rind identity, and it also becomes a more personal thing. So being on Student Council is like being part of a problem you're trying to solve. And it depends on you how big a problem it really is, .C VY' ' 5. 4? a-...., Kiiilblri' A' fwfr , U LHR 1 . '4 if fig' af ,, il sf' Q 9 gl HV l' Wm TW U ff fl Student Council w. N if is ..-5':,mJ xg., g V I L . 1, , Xu Vu X 'X K if Q ., v Ag 4:54 A A Beginnings - The Rock Opera There's a pleasant air of acceptance around here at student art presentations. That is, if someone takes initiative and writes some poetry or a couple of tunes, puts' up a sign advertising, and goes to all the trouble of getting official recognition, we're ready to bend over backwards. Sometimes the biggest problem is just gaining access to the Great Hall. You really want people to work. It's really good to find some one putting in time to do something more than is expected of him. And something tells me that if we had our sights on God's Work more than on other men's approval, we would be working much harder. M., . ,wa , . ff' N, - iuzfpnw pgs?-as 5 .sk ,X ,f ...WM .. . , HQJ... ii ' 1 5. 0 Literary Society We tried a new idea this year. We let different members of the society serve as program chairman each month. Thus we achieved greater variety of programs and more personal interest from those in- volved in planning. Lit society wanted to retain a certain dignity but without the stuffiness of a private, exclusive group of academics. And I think some of us found out how much literature is often best understood when you make it. n1a- W 1-Q 2 1 . i X ' van!- 1-. ,A ' . in W J Very rightfully named a play. And with the abandon of Huck Finn, the cast flees from care and furrowed brow. In a sense, that's sort ofthe way a play isg to simulate an artificial situation which only reflects on a real-life situation. Comedy is just making it funny. But I tell you, a play-writer has to really work to make it funnier than real life. 'KQ-f 'cYou Can' .-f . . .X X ai x l . U:-.lxiynf y . ,fy 315.595 X A U si '., 1 A W--, 'fr-' X 5 5 1 'WW f' pu. H-'Q - :wr Q '1 5 -. ,., r - ,qt 4. .gs-dll . . . ' V I A .no . ,. of , , , -, ii, .n , U. of Tenn. at Chatt. Cleveland State Cleveland State Dordt Dordt Albion Messiah Sewanee Sewanee Spring Arbor Spring Arbor Bryan Bryan Tennessee Temple Tennessee Temple Atlanta Baptist Atlanta Baptist Bill Evans Dick Hagedorn Chuck Holliday Bill McCall Steve Mollenkof Pete Rodgerson Steve Sluis Frank Synder Won Loft 5 1 2 Baseball Covenant Oppgnmf 4 8 5 5 1 2 2 5 6 O O 8 O 5 5 11 6 5 2 IO 8 11 11 1 6 5 10 5 5 8 5 8 l 17 Dave Stanton Rodney Stortz Jeff Talley Bruce Tilton, Caplain Steve Young Lewis Ruff, Manager Walter Bowman, Coach .:A'l- ' -1 , '-i5'r'9 f 3? .bv2VQ'gi ui: fag.- i UU., 5. I rn! vit-Vi ' . - 5. I-fr V ' 'mf 1 Sa K. , . 1-- It J. 'wr get f Y . .41 .P Baseball is a good thing to do when the winter's fi- nally over. And when the team is not necessarily shooting for all-state, it can be a very relaxing and enjoyable pastime. Baseball is no new game either. People have been winding up, hurling with all their might, watching the ball sail over, and running their heads off ever since the world began. And Covenant is not the first in our heritage. David whipped the Giant in one strike. 19' 1 -'H ' ,. f' -' . , .- .1-4 F' 4 I . - p 3n......f. ..- .4 'nf-fifg-' 'H -.Q .,- - - , W'-'f -. g- 'f'W-- . N H-.f - A ., - - 11.1 be-I? -'5'l.'::.1A. ' ' ' Y-' gb' .I 'Is A H 1 . Q ,ds'g.,..4qo', ..1,.- -1 -1,.- . 'vga M , 11... :A 'ww.., -4 .1 .- 1 4-.. ., - . . il - '-4' W o I-2+-I -2 A T1-P iff adr- , -51-.alumna , 'L' 'fwamyflhwvx y V f flaqlfy Rub Mus . .. Ja... 1. ' ' f -' - ' , . -x - .' , Q. . uf . -,fu . , - , ' -.,-1 .. , , Q., , - . . 4 . , V H- x., .. ,,.f.. .4 fl.-' .. 7 -3 ' '-41 . -WM, ,. 34 . V. ,.-vi . . .V , . N i l 1.311 . fi , Ar' u ' . .w la, . G . ,..,,, ., + :Fx Q Cv I.. ' 1 '1 4 , 'N ., - ' - Y 1, ' f ,Q , J- ,- 4 .- VHP .ff A A 1u '. fr 3 1Zi'5'i.?fs A 'A' 4 , Q kwin- . Q, l N .Q,'.f21 ,oy .fi - Ag' . LO 0 . -. I ,. A, . , ', , .uf N Q, f it 1 - '-' -- - I 1... ..p..,n,- .rL.,'l. ZKQ' U x 1 .. ww M ,M ' 4-Ll-.- ., - ' ' 421, y:if'16,L ' ,.,s fr.. . x :Z-.iTiH f 'J,y 11? A f1f:l1ff4?7' W1 0 'Y 5 ZQJHQYIWA4 .N ' AJ v xt- -- I wwf W' ., Q.. be -' - -on .Q-...,,-U Baseball 4 , . u-M. .,-- .....o.. 1 f V -,, - Q-v-5,1 ,..,.. 4 KES!!! iff, K ,, Ill lil ll lxl l4l IIC 'A fit mw - ' 5 F 1 1-L 2 l !!!!! L ,-- ' W U XX kill ,-all -1 5 ,X What Didnit Happen Since a yearbook so often becomes a diary of eight months we thought we would include some blank space. For all the things that did not happen this year at Covenant College. For all the times we chose to sleep in, walk out, lay off, give up. or sit down. And to remind us of the things we just left undone until next year or never. And to call to our attention the many chances we had when we asked for another chance. Maybe this blank space could be a time for silent prayer. For forgiveness. For neglecting everything that really needed to be done now. And never was. zu pgaug--r-9 Wwe!! gf. 'nf-1 . A l1i---1-....,.. 2 3 1 A I r HES F .K4 'Ui 'rf I, f' M !f:?w1 '37 V 4 ,gfi 4 8 .vn- 1 f ML, x ' on 411. Spring Banquet So you asked a girl to go to the banquet with you. That morning she cut three classes to go downtown all dayg stayed up until Wednesday morning, 3 A.M. fussing with satin and flowersg and cut three more classes on Friday to sit under a hair piece. And you pressed your suit. That three-day wait when you never see her is kind of nice. Then when she comes downstairs Friday night starving and happy, you realize just how much she can fix herself up. And your suit looks nice. 4... ,, A L R xv, Lx s S i 1..-I Commencement 'ua 'Q-M. 1, tk F .K J, fs P. fx , 1 f 1 I I've often wondered why they call it commence- ment. I mean, from the students' point of view, it must be the grande finale. But I guess it's just that I don't use the word right. It would take a new kind of motivation to be a teacher in a college. Some of the students become your good friends, and then they leave your commu- nity for good. It would seem so futile sometimesg al- most as if they were rejecting your counsel. And there's so much at stake in the graduates life that you would be responsible for. It would be hard to adapt to their new status, too. As a fellow human being and not a student. When commencement comes all the students are gone. Only the graduates and the parents are left. Sort of like the parents are receiving the young can- didates into the order of adulthood. Maybe com- mencement means they're just beginning to learn. X f fLf '7' s-ff' I ' f M ' ff f 1 X'-X H, ff-3.1-?T4JMf?Z ' f K N '12 . 4 4,,f ff fx uh f if! 3 sxyll 'aku bv is 'b-.X N c f'CK7 iq Fc- ,,.,..-9 f ,-: :Fax Q 4,1 lf! 1, 4 x 'I' xx N s C l'f ffl , 2 A1 AVWW f- f 1 M 'Q H'm'W7 f ,wff ,J 1 f fl! ff!! fi? f f , 41 , 1 m , I 1 X NNW, ,J K J W KZ, If W f X ,I I mr! Administration, Faculty, and Staff Miss Agnes Barr Sefretmy to the President Mr. Charles W. Anderson Associate Projkssor of Bible Q . Dr. William S. Barker Mr. Walter L. Bowman Dean J Faculty Assistant Prqfessor of Pbysiral Education Assoriate Prwssor M History Dr. Nicholas P, Barker flssociate Prokyxor of Englzkb I' ' R I YM Dr. Marion D. Barnes Preyident YY Profmor of Cbemimy Mr. joel Belz Imtructor in Communicatiom Miss Patricia Cochran Mr. G. Craig Burdett College Nurse Manager W' Accounting ana' Tuck Shoppe Mr. james Cox Dean of Men Yu-All' Miss Phyllis Crooks Administrative Asszktant Dr. john C. Canfield Afmciate Proknor afMz15ir Dr. john P. Cummer Dean of Studemfs Asyociate PTWJ507 M Education : - MY: Q' . 'Q 'S' F fr L , Y 1. F vmimw ' V.: ,V Y F. rl f 5 j ? 3' ' ff' Q 1 3 qS?m9yl,,,Z 0505?-65 6 of UG' 3,5 G i423 3 6, 5 v G'4,Egw69'Grn ,9f4 70cbCfQ'92t6j ft Gsromyo -if v an Q G4 ,V . , 9 9qqafs7'434Vo.f9: 59 'fua. 'fbvfk1T+ W ' ' If Q51 ..'-CV? 'Li1'T'n Q , Q ' , -. Si . ,A - Q , - ' :wr 2 Q3 Mr. Raymond H. Dameron Afwfant Prokuor of Pby5if5 , 17 3 'C Mr. E. Allen Duble Vine-Preyiderzt for Development Dr. Charles W. Donaldson Afmtanl Prokuor of Cbemislry Mr. Robert J. Frerrs Sluderzi Work Coordinator Qf ' Mr. William Graf, .Ir , r Av 5'- a f yl Director of Engineering Dr. Paul R. Gilchrist Assistant Professor of Bible Mr. Raymond R. Dotts Supervisor of Buildings and Grounds Mr. T. Richard Hagwood Instructor in English Dr. john E. Lothers Asforiale Projhyor of Biology Dr. Karl H. Heller Afyoriate Profarsor Q' Hisfory 31- ggi hr-H 3917 'ww f ii ll 5 i 5 ? Q , 5 l g 1 1 Q ' 3 Mr. Gary B. I-Iuisman Librarian wm.. lla M we 5232: ,..,...............a,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,aq- .,..,... ..,..,-- '-f-v'!9 ,nnr..f.......,,,.,.,,.g vu-..... Dr. Jamieson C. Kiester Awklanl Profassor of Pbyxics V' Dr. Robert M. Nuermberger Amfiafe PfQt6'J.f07' qf Pfycbology V O Q . .z,,,. yu, . ,, 1 -ww 10145.33 ,fy N .,.Qi1Y.':-f ' ' Miss Anita M. Jubin Imfruflor in M wif Mrs. Shifky MCfffft Rev, Jghn M3CGfQg0f Adminiytmtizfe Afyimznt Chaplain 2 c 3 J 1 4 ,ff LQ ,WEXQT -X, ' Ap 6 - Yg 5 ' . ,,,,f,1M' Ja, , 'J 0 ,ri qu ,, Mr. john Moore Supervifor of Maintenance and Opemliom Mr. john F. Pokrywka Imlrucfor in Philomplqy Mrs. Fern Moore Adminzkfmlizfe Afmlanl 'Gtr--A Mr. Leonard S. Pitcher Axmlmzf Projkuor gf Pryrlwfogg ax.--X' Dr. H. Omar Olney Projhsor of Biology .rr ' Q, Y ' A 4 A 1f ,,. ? j - L mf ' 2. Mrs. Marie Sims . Manager of Office Senfires 'G 2 Q. G S L. 3 g , . 2 4 Mrs. Collyn F. Schmidt Mr. Willard Sims Dean of Women Superuzkor of Grounds and Equgbment 1 Lark 'T' ' Y K' X- 'xi I3 3,1 ' , f f A.. ,,T: A , Mrs. Marilyn K. Slenker Arszlrtanl Librarian .4591 rv x 'Q Dr. john W. Sanderson Proksyor of Pbiloropby Scholar in Reridmce Mr. Rudolph F. Schmidt Regzktrar and Director of Admiuiom rr in fwfr' if I Miss Ncllc A. Vander Ark Assiftant Projhsor 0fEngl13h Miss Emlee Taylor Imtrzzrlor in Frenfla QW urqwf If Y Mr. Richard Steensma Administrative AdUl:f0f Dr. john M. L. Young Pf0jQ'550f of Bible and Mimom Mrs. Geraldine Stcensma Afyofiate Prokssor of Edumfion 2 I 1 1 I F1 UQ 1 5 4 . at .if ' Miss Arlinc Wetzcl Amktant to the Deam i fa 252 When we go to dedicate a book, I guess we assume that there's something in it worth giving. We take it for granted that, because this year's book is specifi- cally presented to one person, he will count it valu- able. So many gifts are just giving back. Like when we give ourselves to Christ as our Lord and Maker. It's just sort of recognizing our own position as really not deserving anything ourselves but instead giving back all we have. We have a friend. He wants to share with us his own deep motivation, earnestness, and diligence. And smiling quietly, he goes about his various diffi- cult tasks, never forgetting us and always prodding us to continue in faith. With zeal he speaks and with artistic care he lec- tures. He is a friend to needy children, too, but he maintains the standard of competence among profes- sors. It is with humility that we give back to DR. WILLIAM BARKER some of what he has given us. Dedication gg -L' '1f 'A if fJ kfiwfm 1'-xv I '- -fx, fx xx H- ':-U.-9nV4'J 'fF Y ,-fri'-iZ'fLf.4f- ',,,f ,X 5 S - ZW' -'CL 'NL1,3f7 ,S7,1,N Aff' 1,411 ,J 11 lf 4 lk ' lfv 4, v 4 f ! tj .ft ffffffg f 7 ! X A, il IZ xtixfl xg' 'bag A'i'qH-ff! gl f Vvffwgigff ' K fzfl Y fwqgf' 'W N4f,Z 'fzf.,s.Zf5 ff-f- X p H117 , 5-Llfvf- fl rl. f f f W ff Q vm, - +4 -,T, gf, WK 1 , . wx, W W my W A W 1,7 I K In i Y K .f WWW , ' V? f 41 KW Q W ff S1 ,f X X X V gk X WW Cl 9 K f 9 William Henry Bragdon Biology Janet Elizabeth Brown English Susan Ellen Abbot English was David Holmes Bryson Bible x f 0 .1 fi C - Affial Rex Lieffers Prefident Bill Bragdon Vine-President Laurie Byers Secretary-Tremurer Linda Warsing Sofia! Chairman Elizabeth Ann Campbell Engliyb Class of '71 if ..-v f ' fif A Laurie jean Byers Social Science Alma Ruth Clark Psychology 'O . gg if? if 'L vm s I 3 i 1 Q A 3.2 ' , Q t. 3, . - - 5 S Nancy .Jeanne Cooke Englixh Judith Eileen Cochran Englifb , P f '- ' i ng, rf , ,,,, A U A hl.. V V. ,V V 2- 1' Y . if dw Q? ,, Sandra Lee Cox Nzming 11.4 Doreen Alyce Degel Englzkla ,amp l xxx, Dorothy jean Donehoo Claemimy Samuel David Creech Psychology Spencer Kent Davis Psyfhology nf' 'ww - W .,-- LA L, .., X x., 'X -cz' f ..-........ 1 1 - . Q. H rigid a' 'H L-. N. Q His? , 1 , 1 .wk i Q4 , ,U Six., if 4 ?wu g?w fig 2211 Q ,K A It 5a '1Wmg X ' , '14 Wfu., .1121 W in ' - , W , , f,+.fgf52w3f Margaret Ann Garrison Pfycbology FJ -r f. ff n 9' J fir vi iii? 1 . 5 A - ' lf . my '?,t4,.j,.,j -f , V Q 31 , V, G 'Hula . : if ' 'iff A.-1 5 Charles .Morris Frick Social Srience 1'Q ,B 48515 N 1 1 finiffz 1 s j A '.. Carl Mason Haas Pbilofopby 1-Af fl' 4 james Alden Hedstrom Hiylofy Theresa Louise Social Sfieme 6 Pamela Edelmayer Lawyer Social Srience V 'Lx . dm Sandra Louise Leonard Hzktofy noun, X, 5 196221615 L I iwlt' 9 wx ' K Rex Clarke Lieffers Social Sfience Kathleen Marie Lynch Music .4 by if Frederick and Celeste McFarland Social Science, Social Science WF: I Q J ' s A . I 1 ? Linda Ewing Miller Cynthia Anne Miller Psychology Social Science 7 ,gym sts. '47 li Carolyn joy Olin Naming .,,., 'vw-1' jerry and Linda Moore Math, Social Science -VM fun, '57 .Ioan MbRae Nabors Hislwgf I'-5' 'X Ig' P Douglas L. Parkes Hiftory ffl 4 J IIIAA ll 4-ii' A A SL LL K l ' 4 Lewis Albert Ruffkjr. X . e if Biology ,f e . - ,f l e M, , f a 3 E ll alfa 'l I 3 1 l X , Pamela Joyce Queathem English Thomas Paul Shorb Bible w ' LXNX .,-,sg 9-vs . N ,h ef , ,- I 7 , ,H L I 2 I .F-l ,'.',.55'f-frg 9 0 Dale Lansing Smith Paul CM. Sternlcr Bible Hislofy Susan Ruth Stc-inert Sofia! Science Ylzzr Gail Ruth Umbrcit Pfychology czk' udith Ann Unruh Social Science Richard Wayne Tyson Pfycbology Sarah Martha Van Dorcn Social Science David Darroll Wendorf Social Science ing Linda jean Warsing Social Science Milton Forrest Wicst Social Science David Carl Willey Bible li 'R Xef.A.,n':: ln' . ,ow -44 , , ' Q 'FZ -' 'W .- , , janet Kay Williams Bible in V3 l john Claude Wilson Social Sfienre Graduating Nurring Sludwzlr .Jessie Henderson Clara jefferis Rosalie Shelley Doris Walker 4 Steve Miller Preyidenl Bill Schultz Vice-Preridenf Sue Sharpe Secretary-Treasurer Sharon Barr Social Chairman Rod Alexander Barbara Alston Nancy Anderson Linda Appleby fer M' Laura Annes Pat Arriens CQT7 -urs' QE? -9 Phillip Baer Lois Barnes Sharon Barr Allen Bauer .at-Q, N-f of 72 Tim Belz Naomi Black Cal Boroughs Nancy Brandle -Joyce Bricker Dave Browne Tim Browning jim Coad Sharon Collins Lois Cordes Triv Courtney Richard Crane 6 David Crawford Daniel Cross Peter Cross Sheryl Cross N--...Av pl.--mil j,- K .4 Q in .P 511 ,M YB , .vw ,, fl'-R , , l r i mf' ME' 'lr ,C Srl? X XX lr 1 'L i w ff' ' Nancy Edwards Willard Ettinger Bill Evans Tommy Farr Chris Fazakerly Bill Floyd William Foster Martha Freel 5. NMR 'UU .--....f-- 'I QAM'-01 ,. z A1 ,l?lw:'y24 - 'A .ff - A x. 3,. 'J' 4 , A ' s .wc ,-1 e- AN! ' ' rv, ,., 4--wg , '2- I bf H, A v 1 Beth Henry Daniel Herron W -1,-if JW' . ij, 1 1 X X 1 A ',, 131 Ly 1 . R .- v .', 3 ' U1 '21 Q v K b s , , qi.. 1, . 'za' J ., Li1,, '-Pl' XQ.'f -4 X . . - N . , , , , 1 . 'I P , glam, ,t gf f , I.-1 ,, ,., ngWi. ,QW-x , . ,L M. v -vugqe - - 1. : , ., . . .aww 2' -' fi V -, ,Or e .5 . 1 ,P ,x.L'r, ,Vu ttf 9 ft 'A 'r .325 1' A- ,,5x Q,Gvs .Q Qin ' 3' - - , 1: I, Q' X' Z 'D '. f',.'.,vN1-'ZIQ ,H ., ,, . 1 li,!:n'f .fq 2'j,-l'.! .1 as n Q - -M.,...q' '.a, 3,nN L .. ' '-f vw:-5-'v ir' fb! Y ,Mya-I-'xx'-. ' ' ru'--A ' '.' .' ' 4 4 . v E' '- A 5 , 'U gsm K ' ., 1 I I , 11- ' ri' l. V. .lt x V ,' 5b,,1s4 K K'xy . ., .V'.fT--'-3., ,, L'5g1..1 I, eff 1. --, -I fix 5 ww 'qf'?'-nv. Xu 27'-' xfu L '55 . '1'2.?,'. 5' yi s -.f ', . 1 I il, F., , . h xr wx lv 4 , A 'PJ .. 1 '-'agzi 'Vx ' ' 'ity 'af' 1 rsf hf 0. . -5' ' M 1 'qw . . .- r' '- .. ,gli -nf, K ' U il-I 51 gh-,.fd... .1 1.1,--. . -, - '- .. ' , 1 -13-xfsl fi NAU.. :lx .. ' . xv- 4 fvkh, 1,51-U' , I., H Q. ' .a .3 duff' ESQ .. 'm - 'H N X 'SLS' -FV . ', , -nl, -A 1:5 iris? .L A l lafv P 'c' ' 1 'Q Mix '? . 'fi' T X 1' L X f. ,' ' - ig. 1-111 , 1 -' I- in ' rv' 18 i .1 q, 1 -v J. J SHN- -. Ch2r1CS H01lid2y George I-Iopson Karen Horner Nancy Hull Gene Hutchinson 7 Barbara Ingelse Kevin Ivery George johnson Philip Lancaster Dale Lee Gary Lindley Norma MacGregor Gregory Maffer Q f. ., ,v .1 .1 'Wad' 5 , . W v .a : K A M fi? ,4 W, .ivy if . I ,H fww A -Q , m , wi. M132 gg vs, V er We f ifwiwafff . i WW ' 3 i 1 'L' 32 . . ' 22 f-if , .,.1 , W ' LIE-si ,I A ' xx v , 3 R v ga 02,7 . Sally Mare Barry McWilliams Paul Meiners Steve Miller Barb Moginot Peter Mollenkof David Moon Beth Moore George Moore Randy Nabors Cathy Nielson Pat Nyenhuis Donna Overbeek James Peale Stan Peters Linda Prichard Dan Pruitt Robert Rayburn Pat Reilly William Schultz Mary Sehum Sue Sharpe Eleanor Soltau Linda Spooner Q! David Stanton Rod Stortz Ginny Strom Pris Strom John Taylor Bfucff Tilton a gk E N 'N l g i YE' C117 uw.: Pi! is a Oliver Trimiew james Ward Bruce Young Stephen Young David DuMont Preiidenf effrey Talley Vife-President Betsey Bragdon Sefremrv Trewurer Debbie Wentling Social Chazrman Dianne Adams Claudia Allender Donald Anderson Edith B. Anderson Judy Anderson Max Armes Judith Arnold Leigh Baggett it M- - Uv nf? IZ 111, -.1 . ,,p.': '1:'9iL 9-lv' 1.-v gi' C157 4f -...Z 521 4X 9 Roger W. Banes Stephen Barnett Ginny Bender Mary -Io Bonner Betsey Bragdon Sylvia Breit Cilla Brock Patty Brown janet Carper Class of '73 4 Denny Collins janet Cruise Patty Davenport Dyan Dejong David Doll Karen Dortzbach David DUMOUI john DuMont Cathy Elmer Dan Fearnow SfCPh6I'l Fikkert Q7 'FQ M'R'w'-SX 'Vw 'l'Y ...J ,JN Sandi Fletcher Molly M, Gannon jesse Helms Paul Heubach IQ -vi' N- .7 it Leilani I-light 5 '., Kathleen johnson 7 Tony Johnston P t'2'fT+? ftfff Rufus Lacy -Ln Beth Lambert George Lauderdale Stephen Lawton Elizabeth Livingston 6 Maiy jane Lockard Beckie Malone Tom MacGregor Anthony j. Marcano Miriam MacNair Nancy Mare ,, 9 R ,C Q at 'el L fykfl, X A . ii '. ,K Q' AU' ,iQ , t- 4 Q rg' ii ,fx n --., 3: .,Y- - ,'4 A In A if Scott Martin Yusuf Masih Paul Maynard Bill McCall r r LF , Q Xt s nh, ,N . m.. M F 1. YW' 1'3- N419-: 'iiizv wwetfii A v. 'Q 'Fm :f'f?f5,, gyfffflz we-9 X . Q-ri 'Y A 1 kv: F -' if -,: . 9, ff'-R ' - x. .'2a3ff . -.A , . r . ' ,',4'g1-- . j.. ' A, -P mzzfif ga f:f?fQ.15'1:fT ' S , g..ff?s , .,r2-1. f g'4a, ,E It- 3 ,x.- Q. nu ff Z:-.,..-. V W ' 'I 3' or 1 X I .A vv . '-, if Q. ggi . Lgfgffg, fly?-bfi uyqfsv Y-,mir V .-,. 1, -N U' 5 if JT' L' ,f k f'7 :PVT , 3 ' 5 if if-fvf?3'i3f3iH V . V dure s: A ,f 'M -L.-f' 'I b Q ' JJ ,U it '-If ,Nb 5 X . I-,,.. gs! :Y-wi 5--1' ff Bob McLaughlin Janie Miller Stephen Mollenkof Phil Moran Dan Morton Sharon Neff Ron Neugard Margaret Noe 7 lYJ'Z 5 L? . K ',:,,.wy If X rl' N fl-e ---va Marty Olney john Paulsen Robert Petito Suzanne Queathem Pat Ralston Ruth Rhoda Susan Rowland Laura Ann Schenk Linda Schwab Susan Shaw Judy Shelley Sharon Shepard Henry Sholar Lea Simmons .John Simpson Dan Smith 1' Is, ,..,, N15 ff' ' '17 H4 fs V .K I , 1 ,Q 43 - , if-IN. ,Q -:jx V 'ff ' , X ki U ' 1 Y ' N 'o 'Og' i ' V . . o F K I ' Ajay. I : f Qt 'iii ' .A .'.'u.'. r ' ' ' T ' 1 L...- mvf 4,5 S.. 'T .11 lk Sue Soltau Carole Starzer Susan Steele Charlotte Stevens .ix n -xt! xv, 9 z., ' s Q ov: W 4 wi ,W M 'f'i'.Z',3' Patr1c1a Sussman Ann Swc-:mam Jeffrey Talley Fred Taylor .lackxe Tebbcn L01 Tran 3,4 .'. S' .- 45 , , I l : X, I 1 f' - , , Q PA 01. xii , ' '-X-iw 49' . X Q l' - if fy ' HQ I ' 8' fe. sf x .M ,, X if ,Sw .A ,.,. L S x qw' 'I , , 'W' 4X Mya? in 'S' ,ji A 4 Ig , 5 O' 11 ' an fx aww,- Y.f.':-azllx 'fb F N ' L5 -H Ns 'L Q, if' Qi' 'K uw I Q Z v 3' 33' if fam, i 4 f-.1 W4 fm.. f ' qs: x ,Xxx in f james Wildeman Doug Withington 'UK Q f 'I - A ' x. ,,,ii I x lf K.. -' Cs- k -gy I ' Q rf . Sue Wilkins Bill Wing Sally E. Yeaple Gail Zorn I ' B 'K A dv 5 Y H .K fi . sf ff Y, -k ,Q ' .E 1 qi? ' 5 . iw '- '- ' ' Q - w i . ,, A 'O Y- 4 i ..- E-. i gl 5 - MQ! V X M, 1-4.2,-' .,-1-31, ' . ' -di' . ' ,- Q Fill ' if-f -R 5 ' Q . A ,- 1 In 2 William Rowan Prafidm! Andy Shaw V ive-Presiderzl Cathy Manning Secretafy Elizabeth Mahlow TVFILYHVFF Barbara Bierce Sofia! Cbfzirmafz 1 'Aan - f. 4. V -ev , 'W' 'tx 13?-MY ff fag, We f ea fx 'if 2 Don Allen Esther Armes Phil Alston Barbara Anderson Marsha Anderson john Arentson ' B k Lonnie Barnes Eileen Auel john Avis Gayle a er X e 1 WX -q,..--ur C'-' QT! , 55---, x, an ffm-f f mu ' - 2 f . hs, 'Q if, 'N x - lv , gh I .z .. MJ . li W 4 -A - i a '2 4 f I of 74 Debbie Barres Don Beebe Nat Belz Don Benkendorf Barbara Bierce Steve Bissell Beth Blomquisr janet Boesl 0 4 4 -Ioyce Boughamer Sheila Bouma Emily Boyd Susan Brady Helen Braunius Larry Brown Tony Bufflngton Bob Byrne fT 'J' gmt' ,,,. '15 Qllvw., J fffs I ., M ff- 2 ff' f -1, ,IV 1. 2 rx A' 2 , 5 ei 1 'U 0 M., X , 'Q 'Y 4 'FW , qi, E N. M ' 'VN v1T'7' 9, 'wry .,-ff ',p0 . . -I -ar- ' tl 'iii' '71 'sd Carry Combs Kathrine Copp Philip Daane Fay Dick Dale Doane Kathleen Dobson Donna Dull Lawrence Edison Ginger Ellis Sharon Canfield Randy Carroll Bob Coleman Chris Collins Kathy Everett Nancy Evers Betty Friesen Margaret Friesen David Futch Meg Gannon Ken Garner Pam Gamer Jwvv 10 -ag N fill. 1,5 Hair' - --.....M.-f p A Q. t 'Y , X ff? if J. , g pf., .rw-.1 5 ,gglfif G! iff, , ' ,,. Q . x 'Q V A, ', , . gy f ' .rx N 4' . an k K X li ' ' ii ii ' s , ,-V I . .. ' 'r 'se - f i 'Y,,1'1' L X 'X Q G M5-ix A W A K I 1 4,5 . ik 1. ' ' -rgy . :Aff A W- - Y h l rf?'f Q 1 ' 5 vf- 9. 15+ 1 ' ' 'j QPSK :f'7I:', sr . 'Q-rf I Q' xv, ,x ., 1-1 al Jeanne Goldie Richard Hagedorn Drucie Hawley Harold Hendrix Craig Hopson Ken Howell ',.4w vin X 1 .av -G fi lv' X f. , M47 Marianne Gaston Tom Gillespie Phyllis Hagerty Steve Harrison lg 7 William Knighton Linda Langren Steve Lon gacre Phil Lully ,nur h , mr 'REL---. 'rr' MV 405 -19' 136 ' X iii? E' ,A L ,,, - I fvulw, , fd 41' - Gu ' A K ,, M ' 'V --' f i sry -sr Q- ' L 'R .f.,q gifs A 'win ' 149, asm.-49 Ketta Hudson .Ioan Keller Lois Lauderdale Bob Luth Lorraine jackson Deborah King Lynne Lenker john MacGregor -api' mga' vw-'Q If if Elizabeth Mahlow Cathy Manning Noreen McRae -'M 'CT7 cf' ,Io Mciners Linda Mustoc Shirley Nelson l In i 1 TW . 'ffl S if. tb 1 1:,4 , X 1 i .:!, -, I? gs! ' x VA ' fm' 9 4 Y P :rr 1 ' V it W ,S+-f. 4'-X-J A f Af x x rf 1 LJ W-K ..AA f 5 V W-hx ' xg Lx cf I.0X I -,L-I-If K K . 1 , V ,,,vf,. wr -rf Karin Neugard Ginger Newton Julianna Otteson Cynthia Peeler Linda Person Donald Petcher :Tb u 1 iw, IDX Carolyn Parkes Ginny Pettit n 7 . ,-N CW 16 7' 1 1 I :ll L ai 45 f'v Q' I r 'F 'N fe: .. --' 1 Q 'v V1 ri ' Q ' Kirk Phillips -IULIDDLI Quinn Lynette RCA Norma Rhcn Gordon Rolwxun PCIL' Rmltsltrxoll 1 4754 William A. Rowan Autumn Schauer Andy Shaw Carolyn Sinclair Q. '96 Bob Schmidt Steve Sluis ..., .3 it ' 'X' Q . ,,,, A Ii . T' 2144 I ,gi , rg? 1 ' 'Jia jean Schulcrt Michael Smith ,xw nw! MANS ,fl X51 gf' .. 4 a x, 1' 1' 6' Q5-f Eric Stanton Becky Stigers Dave Thcune Rebecca Van Wechcl 4 Mark Vigil Warren Vreeland Sharon Waldecker Raymond Watson Gayle Watts Bill Wigton if a 4, N. ,.1 ' f -5 i ' 'C' ' 'V -Q., ,,.....f , W w. ng wr - j '. . . 7 , Z-E' 1 fx .. ax x 5' ff, 4552 r caf i-1 ' F' f '. '3 fri ',- ,: 1: Y I -,:,' lf' t 2 a.. A 5 , . Q' W' ,A M11 'X-ff HW , f ' ,vw na . . -2 .2 - Q af. - 'rf A 1 ff' g X ' far' 3 'W' j V is . , JK i La iff l Linda Wildeboer Patrick Winning Gary Worley Carol York ..,,, -. Y' S N , ,,, ,eu -ew. pl.. 1'-C' J' Ep..-,Q ..- . 'I , rf -- . '5 ,1 s ' Riff, A av' A ,, h 7 l .uf A' ' LL' W. ., V . . .' at - ' '.f 1,7 , ff' ,ytm- W aa, ,V .i ,S 'lf ,Q A U ,J , ,g ,4- A - N U 3, f, 4 . V, U - . x X X Ps, 'ww Second Semester Students -uv -w 1' . 1 I va,-nJQ Q, . 2-A sl A Q-'al Q. 4 Q ' x tag ef! -3 ,f 1' ..t,r is 'M Q 1 9, 'v ' '. A 1 -' S- 'W' 42- . sd! 1 '. r,, Q 'V f 'Q ilu- R- , ,Wal -f ,-,, ' 'WF 31 ,,fz. ' 1 v +'f'f.v' . 1-'fggri gfgg' VI ..,, ,M 'Yi 7 - . Ao' Y'-311' -. ' - .2 '54 M I N , Q ., .fa Mr S ., 'fa A K1.w..?,.- -fl-. t anyt- 4. 'fQi5 '--. Wa-i -'-ew: 4 4- 1 ' 3 A 'K V ' ,f .faG'4!7 ?'. M- 'B Saw' Neill Campbell Cathy' Houck Roger Spomuglc Ken Dull Nancy Elliott Becky Fann Steve Grimm Kathy Hein si I r , r P ,lf 'L'-I V . W E 1 . .2 4 2 F I ! Q' f I ' -3 K x ' I Q ' -5 r ' , -gf 1- - i P ? ' ' 4 E he I l U! I gn I Q N 51 , N N I Q I - I Y' . I 1, X 1 e f, Y - l 4 MEI N f ' 1' . , I 3 H if X I , , fn ,. la 1 f ' f b Z - X , IQ U' ' : X fW'7'4 K N XX . ,ff H ff ,fa I I WN' . ,ldglkigi ' : MSRufi??g51Z5'WWZQ i . ix-X A v s.,...4-N-g, ' ' ff Kuff XLX 'U-X. rr ,:.:'-9 l'Jf,, F' I ff if B NUR' '45 , ...Tl - ffzvfv hi: 0 Aff' I ffdy I If 'l I NNI EN 'lvx as vb 4 4 ' lf!!-. if ,W ww ' 2 -11 W X :ffm MWM ' ,5 f I ' K 'C ' 4-, 1-:7VT4 ' f A' f ff ff 'ff ' '- '-4 1 af X f if .ff IW HN!!! 'T' '77 f J V 1 f W if VKZK ff: 1 1' Wfllf x ! f Q 1 f f f . Q I W ,f L X QQ QWW Z g Advertisements W.. - . H v-.,,,,.,,,,,.,,, .,,-V -, - , .n- X X I47 OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR YOUR YEAR BOOK U va THE NATION S STUDIO SCHOOL PORTRAIT DIVISION IIOI CARTER STREET CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE 37402 T six .NA . A. 1 . .h Q' . K , li Happy Valley Delivered Fresh To Your Door . or at Your Favorite Stow! X V MII' K fi 3. ALWAYS DOES A BODY G-O-O-D! 4 U gag? I 'I ' I Q' I IIXE Happy Valley Farms ALWAYS FRESH! Covenanf S+uden+s Are Ins ur I n g Always Mosi' welcome Better A+ Tomorrows Today . . . MITCHELL ROAD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH XQTEERSQ! Q G,eZ2Zi.r:?s:siLR5::i,.i,,a 5 The Ta pe ' Minisfry 554 McCallie Ave. Cha++anooga, Tenn. cn ie Sngfllle Quali+y for Fiffy-six Years 809 Marlzef S+. 8l0 Broad Sf. CHATTANOOGA Hickey-Freeman Kuppenheimer Varsi+y-Town Clofhes Gani' Florsheim Shoes Excello London Fog 149 0 PARTICULAR BRIDES HAVE BEEN CHOOSING KOCH'S WEDDING CAKES FOR OVER 20 YEARS CompIeI'e Wedding and Recepfion Par+y Needs 3307 S. Broad S+. CI1a+'ranooga, Tenn. 265-333I Sleep above the clouds tonight ON TOP OF LO0KOUT MOUNTAIN I BRICK COTTAGES I ELECTRIC HEAT FOR RESERVATIONS Teleph 4 831-6651, Chatt enne I TILE BATHS I AIR CDNDITIUNED lx one I I40 I Q T Lookout Mountain Union 76 800 Scenic Highway Lookouf Moun'rain D Good thing take .ff ,n o little longer --1 - -- --J Vg 1. ' E is 7 X 6 .h X Y ,ax X M X' ., I 'E- ef - E 2555. . c, -- X 2 -- :HIC 1 I , . is 'se' . Q-.W 5 4 -- Q X A . 1 . ' J e 'fa'- , - -. ...M . ,t.. ,. .. X A -A ' - . f - . 2-S'Sj'. - -'nad ' ' The eight-hour loo . ,ww ig:.,?,M ,7,, fej wif, ,I H x - P oft f Bbl :aim Cont Dorary 0 tune m0 llnoh 4 'Z N.,,,,,,,, ' THEOLOGICAL Seminary REFORMED PRESBVTERIAN DR ROBERT G RAYBURN, PRESIDENT DR R. LAIRD HARRIS. DEAN ST. LOUIS. NISSOURI 83141 -F' Congratulations to the Class of l97l 'v 44 . 5 .az JOHNSON'S SCENIC COURT 300 Yards Pasl ,cm fl' ., -v ' wi, Convenanr College QIDUBNZIIU qH1'B5hQf21'iZI11 uf St. ZEUII 5 New Uni'rs Wiflw Panoramic View of 7 Sfafes Phone l404l 83 I -l020 lun-1 .. r' If f P C 'mi X, I 1 V ., -Cnr -' - ll-M 1 l Q. . 2I43 Nor+l1 Ballas Road, S+. Louis, Missouri 63l3I is happy +o claim Hue 'Following s+uden+s: Nancy Mare Sally Mare Pamela Queafhem Suzanne Queaibem Rebecca S+igers Deborah Wallis Max Armes Larry Brown Chrisiopber Collins Cary Combs Gary Lindley Miriam MacNair Pafriclx Winning REV. WILLARD O. ARMES, Pas+or r Complimenis Q lx .4 V4 .-.bw 'rw W. X Q, swlrr '- Utah 81 CO. 5 fe.-1 V ,,--.N ge, Wx -QD Fkifgagf 'Vs'-fy, t x,f x ,f' 'x A , -wggfg.. .X ... iv, 'C REFO RMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Loolcoul Min., Tenn. THE QUARRYVILLE PRESBYTERIAN HOME Quarryville, Pennsylyanie 1 7'- Sk A,,q, fi x Cl'1ris+ian Concern in Adrien New Building Program sched- uled for complelion January l972. Facililies for 200 Reiire- men+ gues1's and I50 Convales- cen'r palienls. Also, a Medical Cen+er cons1'an'rly sfaffed by dociors. For informalion wrifez Rev. F. S. Dyrness, D.D. Adminisiralor R.D. 2, Box I2-A Quarryville, Pa. I7566 Telephone: 7l7-786-732I FAIRYLAND DRUGS SEE - RIDE Lvekwflwvwrfcuix alll N 'Rdlfwag WORlD'S STEEPEST 34 SAFEST America's Mos? Amazing Mile IRemember: Y prescripfions ai' F yl cl D g I air an Complimenfs of PROFESSIONAL FGODS SERVICE MANAGEMENT l ' ,ii - ,.....1n-r-1' --::g '-T.':-T- ,-.,....-1- 1.1.1- -,i-1-sr-v i,...1a- ,-.,,,.... ... ...-i , : ,,,..--1 1 --,... .T-Tl T--if? ,.,.......-f L--f- -:---:...1-' , -i- ,,.J'-3'-A - .,,-v-1 ..-. Il T 'I i , Eg 4 UKUEIIQUP II 'I I -ELE 4 f J I Dvwwvi .sf ' In-T-I I355ecLcI Ia 'P' I s rengfders TEXT BUUKS I-- 'l- - '--- ffaldfb IIILLPIL-I ----- igwgqr annzrs , . 5uppIif.A, 5'r',4x:vu-as I --- ' .'.A lI5!ZJ.L 54 .2g f Jag 7 V :.c1 If 'ml .l- i -.. -. Y w -, Tucsc SHOPPE 70-14 ,I .-I . ...I .1 1.- 11 -- I Ii ---'..- ZS ,, ...- .g.....---f I - ,:..- ..f'I ..-.-:.- '.-...AI lil ..1.-1 il.. ------,I ,,111i.- 1 I -ha .i....--- 11-1' , .-.li-q..1 8, 4 , A NEW DIMENSION IN QUALITY DRY CLEANING 'XV' Samtone ff'U'4V 9.Yf LOOKOUI' MOUNTAIN CQMPLETE CLEANERS LAUNDRY SERVICE 808 Scenic Highway 3333 Ringgold Road LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN, TENN. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. DII-6544 - 5 624-2687 - 3 CongraI'uIa+ions From 'rhe Queen CiI'y of 'rhe Sou+I1 FAITH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH I805 Easf Sevenfh Sfreef CI1arIoI'+e, NOFTI1 Carolina Rev. Richard D. Tevebaugh Pasfor If It' the real thi .C ke. N9 QR -in 7 Chattanooga Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Inc. Complimen'fs of A FRIEND V ft JA - 4 wa I -I . . N 6 ' W' W.. is 'S . 53 il P . ,n, inf 5 af-3 L' , i, il , F. 'M ,,,,sssfes...i . s 5 ' Y. , y .P - - ,.nuh5., , - H, X1 . ,vga , . gk... . A . in A!'ew.L6fvfs - 1' fm. ' -1. i i, ' ' A Silky.: S V ' ' 4 'A A Y O MILLS AND LUPTON SUPPLY COMPANY Chattanooga, Tennessee Cleveland, Tennessee Your Complefe Supplier COMPLIMENTS OF AAAAAABBBBBBCCCCCC DDDDDDEEEEEEFFFFFFGG HHHHHHIIIIIIJJJJJJKKKKKI -LLLLLMMMMMMNNNNNL DUOOCPOPPPPPPQQQQQQ- RRRRRF-ISSSSSSTTTTTTVV JUUUUUVVVVVVWVVVVVV XXXXXXYYYYYYZZZZZZ GGGCHATTANOOCAGGG AAAAAATODAYBBBBBBB CCCCCCDDDDDDEEEEEEE FFF ENTERTAINMENTSK FFF H HHIDININCRCUIDEHHHH IIIIIIJJJJKKKLLLLL LLMMM MMMNNNNNNOOOOOGPP RRRRRRSSSSSSTTTTTTVV UUUUUUVVVVVVVVVVVYYY AAAAAABBBCCCCCCDDD EEEEEEFFFFGGGGGGHHHI ned 6 Publishers of Ch tnooga's official entertainment and dining guide Have you iorgollen somelhing imporlanl? There were len lepers wilh no place To go. No fulure. Jusl The bur- den ol gelling Through The day. Complimenls Jesus came. And lheir pleas 'fouched Him. The len were cleansed. Bul only one said Thanks And he was a Samarilan. of Why is if so hard lo remember? Giils have been received. Mercy has been graleiully accepled. Bul who says Thanlcs? Missionaries are frying. Maybe you would like 'ro 'fry loo. WORLD PRESBYTERIAN MISSIONS, INC. SEARS 90I N. Broom Slreel Wilminglon, Delaware I9806 The Foreign Missions Board of 'rhe Reformed Presbylerian Church, Evangelical Synod 5 The DEAF A largely overlooked mission field - at home and abroad. Why not include Them in your Prayer, Church-meeting, Sunday School and Missionary oufreaches? Q wweww 55555539 QQWWQWQ3 FOOD DISTRIBUTORS., INC. 336 Easl l0l'h Slreel' Cha++anooga, Tenn. is-2 y 34 ,,x ,. AMERICAN ALPHABET USED BY THE DEAF Compliments of the 6AriAfian Widdion for lea! .fdfricana an 1 pg P.o. Box 1452 l i W 5' Detroit, Michigan 48231 ' ' A f'-- .....,A ,,,,A,,w, V Complimenls of A FRIEND i , xxs 'ax ' 1 li i A . 1 - l XA 'Y ' 1 1 F . i 1 5-li W . ij , -i ' 7 I ms ' H at A 4 E' 5 L ' mx Y E x ,. .5 'Kg A sullfw-J ifq l v'. lg:'l-in if 14 .-x qhix.. ' I I I I I I I ' ms. T '- 'mf '2 was sms f CompIimen+s of STARKEY PRINTING COMPANY Congra'ruIa+ions ASSOCIATED GENERAL Fm' AGENCY, INC. 7I3 HamiII'on NaI'ionaI Bank Building P.O. Box I I248 Chaffanooga, Tennessee 374OI Telephone 266-4I83 CHRISTIAN TRAINING, INC. The Educa+ionaI Board of The Reformed PresbyI'erian Church Evangelical Synod ' S+uden+ Summer Service ' Covenfry House ' Presbyferian YouI'h Workshop July I0-I6 a'I' Covenan+ College 6 I SHIPP'S CLEANERS Serving fhe Tuclc Shoppe 2? IA., 'sz ,, ,L v-f '. 'm:..,,4-si ill' The CHRISTIAN COUNSELING SER- VICE INC. is a non-profif organizafion charfered fo provide counseling for menfal disfress, family and domesfic problems, and ofher needs from a Chrisfian viewpoinf. If has engaged fhe services of Roberf M. Nuermber- ger Ph.D., and hopes fo affracf ofher Chrisfians who are qualified in psychol- ogy, psychiafry, social work, fesfing, research, and educafion. Evenfually, fhe service hopes fo provide educafion in counseling procedures fo ofher pro- fessionals, clergymen, and Iaymen who desire advanced or specialized frain- mg. For God l'lafh nof given us The spirif of fear: buf of power, and of love, and of a sound mind. I2 Timofhy I:7I me CHRISTIAN COUNSELING SERVICE Inc. YMCA BUILDING, 301 W. 6TH ST., CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE 37402 615 2658834 P E ' C. WOODY PRATT CO , A ZOI3 S. Highland Parlx Avenue A, Chaffanooga, Tennessee ' 'A I 1 , Phone 624-2877 I I i 1 e We Disfribufors f, I yi Tomos Dv rg I I A f' Candies ai S ' ' :nn Toasfed Peanufs . 'I Peanuf Buffer A , F xp 'flipf , Sandwiches I 0 A P I NATIONAL PRESBYTERIAN MISSIONS. INC. The Church Exrension Board of 1'he Reformed Presbyferian Church, Evangelical Synod YOUR FUTURE FLORIDA CHURCH HOME ' I . 'wiv' if T. ' xc' T, L., Q Y I is 1 ,f..n2gw fu., rw- 'W , QT. . ...qi f ,, ...W ak ,. D' 'Aff' . '- . L, , - V ' Mg. ra Y .. V MKYNQN - ,Luv-. . lf i il lg Y 4 Ji K ,.. E In ,ex ll X L I ,D 3 EE I N I gg A if I I ' In 1 111' ' ' .P 'I ' +1 I ,O ' ' iZf,gv,:-:wg , ':. ',:15 -,'- -' COVENANT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Lakeland, Florida Kenneih A. Horner, Jr. Paslor REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH lEvangelicaI Synodl 3I00 Universiry Drive Hunfsville, Alabama Pasiorz REV. PAUL ALEXANDER 539-8542 Church Phone: 539-II34 Asst fo 'Ihe Pasforz MR. JAMES CONRAD 859-296l .R -V Y K, ,VJ .,.. QQ' WBC V. 4- . - .- ,K .- Y - .rya- .fy-. 5 L -ar'-st -Q- -. 161 'hw U CHANTICLEER T' LODGE ' Individual roclz coH'ages ' Swimming pool ' Television ' Telephone ' One-half block from l ' Roclx Cify ' Member AAA ' 83l-I47I 9 fav? 1, , ,B .oio l Congratulations to the Graduates L ,T to g A 3 J is and Best Wishes to All of You , Y qf . ' u ,m Qf', IAv- . . for a Wonderful Future f -Q A - -. Y Interstate Life 6 SINCE 7909 INTERSTATE LIFE A ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY HOME OFFICE CHATTANOOGA TENNESSEE 37402 WE RECOMMEND COVENANT COLLEGE TO OUR YOUNG PEOPLE FAITH REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH R.D. 2 Quarryville, Pennsylvania I7566 PATRONS AND SPONSORS Mr. Charles W. Anderson Rev. and Mrs. Willard O. Armes Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bagge++ Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Bender Mrs. Margarel Boesl Mr. and Mrs. Jesse J. Boyd, Jr. Mr. George Bierce Mr. John H. Brady, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Lamberlus Braunlus Mrs. Alice V. Brock Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Browne Mr. David Byers Mr. and Mrs. W. Eugene Carroll Challanooga Paper and Woodenware Co. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Coleman Mr. Norman S. Collins Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Collins Mr. George B. Copp Mr. John P. Daane Rev. and Mrs. Herber+ DuMon+ Rev. and Mrs. Edwards E. Ellio++ Mr. and Mrs. Alberl W. Elmer Mr. and Mrs. John E. Evers Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Fann Rev. and Mrs. Glenn Fearnow Mr. and Mrs. Lee-Allen Ford Forsylhe Vending, lnc. Rev. and Mrs. Alberl C. Grimm Mr. and Mrs. Garrel J. Hagedorn Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herron Rev. and Mrs. Kennelh A. Horner, Jr. Mr. Harold L. Hull Mr. and Mrs. Cliff M. lvery Mr. George R. Johnson, Sr. Col. and Mrs. J. T. Johnson, Jr. Mr. Kenl D. Kehr Dr. and Mrs. Billy W. King Mr. and Mrs. Truman O. Lancasler Lea's Flowers Mr. and Mrs. James H. Leiffers Mr. and Mrs. Winslon A. Lindley Rev. and Mrs. David P. Livingslon Mr. and Mrs. William J. Loclcard Loolroul Sporling Goods Co. Mr. and Mrs. Felipe Lucero Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie A. Lynch Rev. and Mrs. William A. Mahlow M and J Supermarlcel Rev. Fred E. Manning, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Roberl Marlin Marlin-Thompson Co. Rev. and Mrs. Harry H. Meiners, Rev. and Mrs. Gilberi Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Franlc G. Musloe Mr. and Mrs. D. Harold McRae Mr. and Mrs. Gilberl' A. Neugard Mrs. Jean Newlon Mr. Swen Olin Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Person Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Pelcher Mr. and Mrs. Herberl J. Ralslon Dr. and Mrs. Roberl G. Rayburn Mr. and Mrs. W. Curlis Rohm Mr. William T. Schauer Mr. and Mrs. John C. Simpson Mr. and Mrs. George D. Sinclair Mr. Derwin B. Smilh Mrs. Lansing T. Smilh, lll Mr. and Mrs. Franlc D. Snyder Spaco-Soulhern Aluminum Builders Supply lnc Rev. and Mrs. Donald Slanlon Mr. and Mrs. Edward S+or+z Mr. and Mrs. Francis G. Sfraub T. H. Payne Company Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Tyson Verney Unruh Norman VanDoren Arlhur E. Williams Holland Z. Yeaple J Jr OUALITY PRODUCE CO 720 Easl I llh Sfreel Chalfanooga, Tennessee 266-4I 39 or 266-4I 30 3 .3 li 64 ADMINISTRATION ical Seminary, B.A., Shelton College Kim Hlght - Comm- Ch' 2, 3, 4, Drama Sanderson, john W. - A.M., University of Club 2, 3, 42 Music Club 1 Barker, William S. - Ph.D., M.A., B.D. Pennsylvania, A.B., Wheaton College, Carol Jackson ,- Comm- Ch' 1, 22 Dorm' Barnes, Marion D. - Ph.D., A.M., B.S., S.T.M. and B.D., Faith Theological Semi- Coun. 3, 43 pep Club ll SOC. Comm. 3 LL.D. Cummer, john P. - Ed.D., M.S., A.B. Duble, E. Allen Schmidt, Rudolph F. - M.A.T., A.B. Steensma, Richard - M.S. FACULTY, FULL TIME Anderson, Charles W. - B.D., Faith Theo- logical Seminary, A.B., Wheaton College Barker, Nicholas P. - Ph.D., and M.A., Uni- versity of Minnesota, A.B., Princeton Uni- versity Barker, William S. - Ph.D., Vanderbilt Uni- versity, M.A., Cornell University, A.B., Princeton University, B.D., Covenant Theological Seminary Barnes, Marion D. - Ph.D., and MA., Co- lumbia University, B.S., University of Ar- kansas, LL.D., Wheaton College Bowman, Walter L. - M.S., Michigan State University, B.S., Gordon College Canfield,john C. - Ed.D., Florida State Uni- versity, M.Ed., Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, B.S., Miami University Cummer, john P. - Ed.D., Florida State Um versity, M.S., Indiana University, A.B., Wheaton College Dameron, Raymond H. - M.S., University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, B.S., Penn- sylvania Military College, B.D., Covenant Theological Seminary Donaldson, Charles W. - Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, B.S., Wheaton College Gilchrist, Paul R. - Ph.D., Dropsie College, B.D,, Faith Theological Seminary, B.A., Columbia Bible College Hagwood, T. Richard - MA., University of Virginia, A.B., Wheaton College Heller, Karl H. - A.M., University of Penn- sylvania, A.B., Mount Allison University, Th.M. and B.D., Pine Hill Divinity Hall, K.G.B., Institut Fur Handel und Wirt- schaft Huisman, Gary B. - M.S. in Library Science, Western Michigan State University, A.B., Calvin College jubin, M. Anita - M.F.A., University of Georgia, B. Mus. and B.A., University of South Carolina Kiester, jamieson C. - Ph.D. and M.S., Georgetown University, B,E.P., Cornell University Lothers, john E. - Ph.D., University of Kan- sas, M.S., Kansas State University, B.S., Oklahoma State University Nuermberger, Robert M. - Ph.D., Michigan State University, A.B., Houghton College, B.D., Westminster Theological Seminary Olney, H. Omar - Ph.D. and M.S., Univer- sity of Delaware, B.S., john Brown Uni- versity, Th.M., Dallas Theological Semi- nary Pitcher, Leonard S. - A.M., New York Uni- versity, A.B., Colgate University, Th.B., Westminster Theological Seminary Pokrywka, john F. - MA,, University of Pennsylvania, B.D., Westminster Theolog- nary, D.D., Geneva College Schmidt, Collyn F. - M.S., Washington Uni- versity, B.S. and R.N., University of Iowa, M.R.E., Faith Theological Seminary Schmidt, Rudolph F. - M.A.T., University of Chattanooga, A.B., Highland College Slenker, Marilyn K. - M.S. in Library Science, University of Iowa, B.A., Shelton College Steensma, Geraldine - M.A., Columbia University Teacher's College, B.S. in Edu- cation, Slippery Rock State College Vander Ark, Nelle A. - A.M., University of Michigan, A.B., Calvin College Young, john M. L. - Th.M., Calvin Theolog- ical Seminary, B.D., Faith Theological Seminary, A.M. and A.B., Acadia Universi- ty, D.D., Covenant Theological Seminary FACULTY, PART TIME Belz, joel - A.B., Covenant College Taylor, Emlee - A.B., Wheaton College SENIOR ACTIVITIES Susan Abbot - Bagpipe 1, 2, 3, Drama Club 2, 3, Literary Magazine 3, Literary Society 1, 2, 3, 4, Tarfan 4, St. jud. Board 4 William Bragdon - Bagpijfu' 2, Asst. Ed. 3, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 3, Drama Club 3, 4, Liter- ary Society 2, 3, 4, Pep Club 2, 3, S.M.F. 1, Student Coun. 4, Cultural Affairs 3, C.S.C. 3, 4, Soc. Comm. 3, 4, V.P. Senior Class janet Brown - Comm. Ch. 2, Drama Club 3, Literary Society 1, 2, 3, 4, Pep Club 2 David Bryson - Bagpqw 3, Basketball 1, Manager, 2, Comm. Ch. 2, St. jud. Board 2, Pre-Min. Club 4 Laurie Byers - Comm. Ch. 1, Senior Class Sec.-Treas. Elizabeth Campbell - Basketball 1, Dorm. Council 2, 3, 4, Pep Club 1, 2, S.M.F. 2, 3, Tartan 3, 4, St. jud. Board 3, Cultural Af- fairs 4, C.S.C. 2, 3, 4, junior Class Sec,- Treas. Alma Clark - Tartan 4 judith Cochran - Chorale 2, 3, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 3, Music Club 4 Nancy Cooke - Bagpyne 2, 3, Drama Club 2, 3, Lit. Mag. 4, Editor, Literary Society 1, 2, 3, 4, Tartan 3, 4, C.S.C. 2 David Creech - Drama Club 3, Pres. 4, Tar- tan 3, Soc. Comm. 3, Psych. Club 3 Spencer Davis - Bagpme 1, 2, 3, Baseball 2, 3, Drama Club 3, 4, Soccer 3, 4 Doreen Degel - Cheerleading 3, 4, Drama Club 2, Pep Club 1, 2, Tartan 3, 4, St. jud. Board 3, Soc. Comm. 2 Dorothy Donehoo - Comm. Ch. 3, 4 Charles Frick - Bagpjie 3, Drama Club 3, 4, S.M.F. 3 Carl Haas - Basketball 1, 2, 3, Dorm. Coun. 2, 3, Stu. Council 2, C.S.C. 1, 2, Pre-Min. Club 1, 2 jean Harrison - Bagpipe 4, Lit. Mag, Asst. Ed. 3, Pep Club 1, Tartan 1, Asst. Ed. 2, Co-ed. 3, Stu. Council Sec.-Treas. 3, C.S.C. 1, Public. Board 4 Theresa Landry - Bagpyie 3, Drama Club 3, Literary Society 2, 3, 4, Sec.-Treas., Psych. Club 3 Pamela Edelmayer Lawyer - Chorale 1, 2, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, Dorm. Coun. 3, Tartan 2, 3, Soc. Comm. 3 Sandra Leonard - Comm. Ch. 4, Tartan 2, 3, Soc. Comm. 1, 2 Rex Lieffers - Bagpyw 1, Dorm. Coun. 4, Pep Club 1, Soccer 2, Student Coun. 4, St. jud. Board 3, Psych. Club 3, President Sen- ior Class Kathleen Lynch - Comm. Ch. 4, Music Club, Sec.-Treas. 3 and 4, Pep Club 1 Celeste McFarland - Bagpgie 1, 2, 3, Chorale 1, 2, 3, 4, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 3, 4, Lit. Mag. 4, Madrigals 3, Music Club 1, 2, 3, Tarlan 2, Cultural Affairs 3, 4, Soc. Comm. 3 Frederick McFarland - Dorm. Coun. 3, Soc- cer 2, Student Council 3, Pre-Min. Club 3, 4, junior Class President Anne Miller - C.S.C. 2 Linda Miller - Cheerleading 3, 4, Tartan 2 jerry Moore - Chorale 2, Comm. Ch. 2, Dorm, Coun. 4, S.M.F. 2, 3, President 4, Tartan 2, 3, Student Council 2, 3, Vice- Pres. junior Class, Vice-Pres. Soph. Class Linda Moore - Dorm. Coun. 4, Soc. Comm. 4, Secretary Senior Class joan McRae Nabors - Bagpipe 3, Black and Blues Band 3, 4, Chorale 1, 2, 3, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 3, Madrigals 3, 4, Music Club 2, Tartan 3 Carolyn Olin - S.M.F. 1, C.S.C. 1 Doug Parkes - Dorm Council 3 Pamela Queathem - Drama Club 3, Lit. Mag. 4, Asst. Ed., Literary Society 3, 4, Soc. Comm. 3 Lewis Ruff, jr. - Bagpyle' 3, 4, Baseball Man- ager 3, 4, Basketball Manager 3, 4, Lit. Mag. 3, 4, Pep Club 3, Soccer Manager 4, Tartan 4, Student Coun. 4 Thomas Shorb - S.M.F. 3, Vice-Pres. 4 Dale Smith - Dorm. Coun. 4, S.M.F. 4, Tar- lan 4, C.S.C. 3, Pre-Min. Club 3, 4 Paul Stemler - Literary Society 3, Pres. 4, Pre-Min. Club 3, 4 Susan Steinert - C.S.C. 1, 2, S.M.F. 1, 2 Richard Tyson - Chorale 1, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 4, Pep Club 1, 2, Soccer 1, 2, 3, Captain 4, Vice-Pres. Freshman Class Gail Umbreit - Comm. Ch. 1, 2, Lit. Mag. 4, Pep Club 2, Tarmn 4, Soc. Comm. 4, Soc. Chairman Soph. Class judith Unruh - Cheerleading 1, Captain 2, 3, 4, Chorale 1, 2, Madrigals 1, 2, 3, 4, Cul- tural Affairs, Chairman 2 and 3, 4 Sarah Van Doren - Comm. Ch. 2, 3, Dorm. Coun. 4, Pep Club 1, Tarlan 3, 4, Soc. Comm. 1 Linda Warsing - Comm. Ch. 2, Dorm. Coun. 4, Pep Club 1, Tartan 2, Student Coun. 3, St. jud. Board 2, Soc. Comm. Chairman 3, Soc. Chairman Senior Class David Wendorf- Basketball 1, Chorale 1, 2, Comm. Ch. 1, Pep Club 1, Student Coun. 3 Milton Wiest - Student Coun. 1, 2, Vice- Pres. 3, Pres. 4, St. Jud. Board 2, Chairman 3, President Sophomore Class, President Freshman Class David Willey - Chorale 1, 2, 3, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 3, Madrigals 2, 5 Janet Williams - Chorale 1, 2, 3, Comm. Ch. 1, 2, 3, Dorm. Coun. 3, 4, Tartan 1, 2 John Wilson - Bagpye 1, 2, 3, 4, Baseball 3, Basketball 1, Cross Country 33 Dorm. Coun. 3, Lit. Mag. 3 STUDENTS Susan Abbot - Kingston, Pa., p. 100 Dianne Davis Adams - Stratford, N. p. 122 Don Allen - Beaver Falls, Pa., p. 132 Claudia Allender - Hopewell, Va., p. 122 Rod Alexander - Newark, N. J., p. 114 Barbara Alston - Memphis, Tenn., p. 114 Phil Alston - Memphis, Tenn., p. 132 Barbara Anderson -- Fairfax, Va., p. 132 Donald Anderson - Chester, N. J., p. 122 Edith B. Anderson - Bristol, Tenn., p. 122 Judy Anderson - Fairfax, Va., p. 122 Marsha Anderson - Underwood, N. Dak., p. 132 Nancy Anderson - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 114 Linda Appleby - North Glen, Col., p. 114 John Arentsen - Cedar Grove, Wis., p. 132 Esther Armes - Kenya, East Africa, p. 132 Max Armes - St. Louis, Mo., p. 122 Laura Jean Armes - Muruu, Kenya, p. 114 Judith Arnold - Pittsburgh, Pa., p. 122 Pat Arriens - Oostburg, Wis., p. 114 Eileen Auel - Pompano, Fla., p. 132 John Avis - Memphis, Tenn., p. 132 Phillip Baer - Las Casas, Mexico, p. 114 Debbie Baggett - Nashville, Tenn., p. 122 Gayle Baker - Pearl River, N. Y., p. 132 Rodney Ballenden - South Africa Roger W. Banes - Mechanicsburg, Pa., p. 123 Lois Barnes - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 114 Lonnie Barnes - Burlington, N. C., p. 132 Stephen Barnett - Charleston, W. Va., p. 123 Sharon Barr - Atlanta, Ga., p. 114 Debbie Barres - Margate, Fla., p. 133 Allen Bauer - Lehighton, Pa., p. 114 Don Beebe - Media, Pa., p. 133 Diane Belz - Lookout Mt., Tenn. Nat Belz - Walker, Iowa, p. 133 Tim Belz - Walker, Iowa, p. 115 Ginny Bender - Oxford, Iowa, p. 123 Don Benkendorf - Quarryville, Pa., p. 133 Barbara Bierce - Stratford, N. J., p. 133 Steve Bissell - Granada Hills, Calif., p. 133 Lucy Black - Las Cruces, N. Mex. Naomi Black - Moscow, Pa., p. 115 Beth Blomquist - New Castle, Del., p. 133 Janet Boesl - Baltimore, Md., p. 133 Mary Jo Bonner - Camden, Ark., p. 123 Cal Boroughs - Greenville, S. C., p. 115 Joyce Boughamer - Verona, Pa., p. 134 Sheila Bouma - Washington, D. C., p. 134 Emily Boyd - Annapolis, Md., p. 134 Susan Brady - Kobe, Japan, p. 134 Martha Bradshaw - Falls Church, Va. Betsey Bragdon - Wilmington, Del., p. 123 Bill Bragdon - Wilmington, Del., p. 100 Nancy Brandle - Holland, Pa., p. 115 Helen Braunius - Hawthorne, N. J., p. 134 Sylvia Breit - Salem, Ohio, p. 123 Joyce Bricker - Huntsville, Ala., p. 115 Cilla Brock - Sacramento, Calif., p. 123 Janet Brown - Oakfield, Maine, p. 100 Larry Brown - St. Louis, Mo., p. 134 Patty Brown - Coulterville, Ill., p. 123 Dave Browne - Trenton, N. J., p. 115 Tim Browning - Tampa, Fla., p. 115 David Bryson - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 100 Tony Buffington - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 134 Guyn Burnett - Bedford, Tex. Lauri Byers - Blowing Rock, N. C., p. 101 Bob Byrne - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 134 Betty Campbell - Kenya, East Africa, p. 101 Neill Campbell - San Diego, Calif., p. 145 Sharon Canfield - Lookout Mt, Tenn., p. 135 Janet Carper - Congo, Africa, p. 123 Randy Carroll - Colorado Springs, Colo., p. 135 Alma Clark - Houlton, Maine, p. 101 Jim Coad - Due West, S. C., p. 115 Judy Cochran - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 102 Bob Coleman - Flanders, N. J., p. 135 Chris Collins - St. Louis, Mo., p. 135 Denny McKinley Collins - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 124 Sharon Collins - Delanson, N. Y., p. 115 Cary Combs - St. Louis, Mo., p. 135 Nancy Cooke - Silver Springs, Md., p. 102 Kathrine Copp - Del Rio, Tex., p. 135 Lois Cordes - Ventnor, N. J., p. 115 Triv Courtney - Philadelphia, Pa., p. 115 Phil Cox - Lookout Mt., Tenn. Sandra Cox - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 102 Richard Crane - Newburg, N. Y., p. 115 David Crawford - Pittsburgh, Pa., p. 116 David Creech - Greenville, S. C., p. 103 Daniel Cross - Wheaton, Ill., p. 116 Peter Cross - Greenville, S. C., p. 116 Sheryl Cross - Wilmington, Del., p. 116 Janet Cruise - Prospectville, Pa., p. 124 Philip Daane - Oostburg, Wis., p. 135 Patty Davenport - Los Gatos, Calif., p. 124 Spencer Davis - Indianapolis, Ind., p. 103 Craig Davoulas - Newtown Square, Pa. Doreen Degel - Lakeland, Fla., p. 103 Dyan DeJong - Wycoff, N. p. 124 John Dengler - Lookout Mt., Tenn. Fay Dick - Tulsa, Okla., p. 135 Dale Doane - Norfolk, Va., p. 135 Kathleen Dobson - Rochester, Minn., p. 135 David Doll - Olathe, Kansas, p. 124 Dorothy Donehoo - Norcross, Ga., p. 103 Karen Dortzbach - Atlanta, Ga., p. 124 Donna Dull - Quarryville, Pa., p. 135 Ken Dull - Quarryville, Pa., p. 145 David DuMont - Chicago, Ill., p. 124 John DuMont - Chicago, Ill., p. 124 Lawrence Edison - St. Louis, Mo., p. 135 Nancy Edwards - Hopewell, Va., p. 116 Nancy Elliott - Garden Grove, Calif., p. 145 Ginger Ellis - Beltsville, Md., p. 135 Cathy Elmer - Coral Springs, Fla., p. 124 Willard Homer Ettinger - Emmaus, Pa., p. 116 Bill Evans - Sarasota, Fla., p. 116 Kathy Everett - Bonita, Calif., p. 136 Nancy Evers - Plantation, Fla., p. 136 Warren Falcon - Greenville, S. C. Becky Fann -Johnson City, Tenn., p. 145 Tommy Farr - Birmingham, Ala., p. 116 Chris Fazackerly - Memphis, Tenn., p. 116 Dan Fearnow -- Trucial States, Arabian Gulf, p. 124 Stephen Fikkert - Cedar Grove, Wis., p. 124 Sandi Fletcher - Lansdale, Pa., p. 125 Bill Floyd - Dallas, Tex., p, 116 William Foster - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 116 Martha Freel - Pensacola, Fla., p. 116 Chuck Frick - Springfield, Pa., p. 104 Betty Friesen - Calgary, Canada, p. 136 Margaret Friesen - Calgary, Canada, p. 136 David Futch - Naples, Fla., p. 136 Meg Gannon - Huntsville, Ala., p. 136 Molly M. Gannon - Huntsville, Ala., p. 125 Ken Garner - Chattanooga, Tenn., p. 136 Pam Garner - Naples, Fla., p. 136 Margaret Garrison - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 104 Marianne Gaston - Everett, Wash., p. 137 Steve George - Grass Lake, Michigan Tom Gillespie - Glen Mills, Pa., p. 137 Jeanne Goldie - Middletown, N. J., p. 157 Steve Grimm - Lynchburg, Va., p. 145 Carl Haas - Mechanicsburg, Pa., p. 104 Richard Hagedorn - Midland Park, N. p. 137 Phyllis Hagerty - Wilmington, Del., p. 137 Jean Harrison - East Point, Ga., p. 105 Steve Harrison - Augusta, Ga., p. 137 Drucie Hawley - Ladoga, Ind., p. 137 Jim Hedstrom - Wheaton, Ill., p. 105 Kathy Hein - Gypsum, Col., p. 145 Jesse Helms - Greenville, S. C., p. 125 Harold Hendrix - San Diego, Calif., p. 137 Beth Henry - Tulsa, Okla., p. 117 Daniel Herron - Harriman, Tenn., p. 117 Paul Heubach - Philadelphia, Pa., p. 125 Kim Hight - Coulterville, Ill. Leilani Hight - Coulterville, Ill., p. 125 Charles B. Holliday, III - Pittsburgh, Pa., p. 117 Craig Hopson - Newtown Square, Pa., p. 137 George Hopson - Newtown Square, Pa., p. 117 Karen Horner - Lakeland, Fla., p. 117 Cathy Houck - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 145 Ken Howell - Tampa, Fla., p. 137 Ketta Hudson - Millington, Tenn., p. 138 Nancy Hull - North Augusta, S. C., p. 117 Gene Hutchinson - Starr, S. C., p. 117 Barbara Ingelse - Oostburg, Wis., p. 118 Kevin Ivery - New Castle, Del., p. 118 Carol Jackson - Moscow, Pa., p, 105 Lorraine Jackson - Moscow, Pa., p. 138 George Johnson -Joppa, Md., p. 118 Kathleen Johnson - Montgomery, Ala., p. 125 Tony Johnston - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 125 Joan Keller - Tampa, Fla., p. 138 Bruce Kinch - San Jose, Costa Rica, p. 145 Deborah King - Millington, Tenn., p. 138 Judy Kissell - Atlanta, Ga. Bill Knight - Deerfield Beach, Fla. William Kenneth Knighton - King of Prussia, Pa., p. 138 Rufus Lacy - Ashville, N. C., p. 125 Beth Lambert - Chattanooga, Tenn., p. 125 Philip Lancaster - Baltimore, Md., p. 118 Linda Landgren - Underwood, N. Dak., p. 165 6 138 Theresa Landry - Houlton, Maine, p. 105 George Lauderdale - Atlanta, Ga., p. 125 Lois Lauderdale - Atlanta, Ga., p. 138 Stephen Lawton - Santa Barbara, Calif., p. 125 Pam Edelmayer Lawyer - Camden, N. J., p. 106 Dale Lee - Royal Oak, Mich., p. 118 Lynne Lenker - Ideal, S. Dak., p. 138 Sandra Leonard - Colorado Springs, Colo., p. 106 Rex Lieffers - Atlanta, Ga., p. 106 Gary Lindley - Kirkwood, Mo., p. 118 Elizabeth Livingston - Willow Grove, Pa., p. 125 Mary Jane Lockard - Cheltenham, Pa., p. I 126 Steve Longacre - Santa Anna, Calif., p. 138 Phil Lully - Wilmington, Del., p. 138 Bob Luth - Glen Rock, N. p. 138 Kathy Lynch - Guntersville, Ala., p. 106 John MacGregor - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 138 Norma MacGregor - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 118 Tom MacGregor - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 126 Miriam MacNair - Ballwin, Mo., p. 126 Gregory Maffet - Newtown Square, Pa., p. 118 Elizabeth Mahlow - Annapolis, Md., p. 139 Beckie Malone - Walker, Iowa, p. 126 Cathy Manning -Jackson, Tenn., p. 139 Anthony John Marcano - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 126 Nancy Mare - St. Louis, Mo., p. 126 Sally Mare - St. Louis, Mo., p. 119 Scott Martin - Newark, Del., p. 126 Yusuf Masih - Bhogpur, India, p. 126 Paul Maynard - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 126 Bill McCall -- Greenville, S. C., p. 126 Celeste and Fred McFarland - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 107 Colleen McKoy - Pensacola, Fla., p. 145 Bob McLaughlin - Moorestown, N. p. 127 Noreen McRae - Hatboro, Pa., p. 139 Barry McWilliams - Holyoke, Colo., p. 119 Pam Meck - Hialeah, Fla. Jo Meiners - Las Cruces, N. Mex., p. 139 Paul Meiners - Las Cruces, N. Nex., p. 119 Anne Miller - Pensacola, Fla., p. 107 Janie Miller - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 127 Linda Miller - Pensacola, Fla., p. 107 Steve Miller - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 119 Barb Moginot - Alton, Ill., p. 119 Peter Mollenkof - Maple Glen, Pa., p. 119 Stephen Mollenkof - Maple Glen, Pa., p. 127 David Moon - Las Cruces, N. Mex., p. 119 Beth Moore - Hopewell, Va.,,p. 119 George Moore - Arlington, Va., p. 119 Jerry and Linda Moore - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 108 Phil Moran - Beverly, Mass., p. 127 Dan Morton - Philadelphia, Pa., p. 127 Linda Mustoe - King of Prussia, Pa., p. 139 Joan McRae Nabors - Newark, N.J., p. 108 Randy Nabors - Newark, N. J., p. 119 Sharon Neff- San Jose, Calif, p. 127 Shirley Nelson - Annapolis, Md., p. 139 Karin Neugard - Fairless Hills, Pa., p. 140 Ron Neugard - Fairless Hills, Pa., p. 127 Ginger Newton - Atlanta, Ga., p. 140 Cathy Ann Nielson - Lynbrook, N. Y., p. 119 Margaret Noe - Walker, Iowa, p. 127 Pat Nyenhuis - Oostbutg, Wis., p. 119 Candy Olin - Evanston, Ill., p. 108 Marty Olney - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 128 Julianna Otteson - St. Petersburg, Fla., p. 140 Donna Overbeek - Huntsville, Ala., p. 120 John Parker - Decatur, Ala. Carolyn Wendorf Parkes - Merrill, Wis., p. 140 Doug Parkes - McMurray, Pa., p. 109 John Paulsen - Apex, N. C., p. 128 Jim Peale - Tylersport, Pa., p. 120 Cynthia Peeler - Harleysville, Pa., p. 140 Linda Person - Phillipsburg, N. p. 140 Donald Petcher - Huntsville, Ala., p. 140 Stan Peters - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 120 Robert Petito - Princeton, N. J., p. 128 Ginny Pettit - Henrietta, N. Y., p. 140 Kirk Phillips - Wilmington, Del., p. 141 Mike Powers - Chesapeake, Va. Linda Prichard - Greenville, S. C., p. 120 Dan Pruitt - Starr, S. C., p. 120 Pam Queathem - Columbia, Mo., p. 109 Suzanne Queathem - Columbia, Mo., p. 128 Joanna Quincy - Schenectady, N. Y., p. 141 Pat Ralston - Readlyn, Iowa, p. 128 Robert Rayburn - Creve Coeur, Mo., p. 120 Lynette Rea - BocaRaton, Fla., p. 141 Ike Reeder - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 145 Pat Reilly - Newark, N. J., p. 120 Norma Rhea - Plainfield, Ind., p. 141 Ruth Rhoda - Pomona, N. Y., p. 128 Gordon Robson - Pompano Beach, Fla., p. 141 Pete Rodgerson - Houlton, Maine, p. 141 Doug Rohm - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. William A. Rowan - Harriman, Tenn., p. 142 Susan Rowland - Miami, Fla., p. 128 Jeanne Rowe - Beaver, Pa., p. 145 Lewis Ruff- Philadelphia, Pa., p. 109 Robert Sanderson - Lookout Mt., Tenn. Autumn Schauer - Englishtown, N. p. 142 Laura Ann Schenk - Issaquah, Wash., p. 128 Bob Schmidt - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 142 Jean Schulert - Nashville, Tenn., p. 142 William D. Schultz - Rock Hill, S. C., p. 120 Mary Schum - Chattanooga, Tenn., p. 120 Linda Schwab - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 129 Sue Sharpe - Memphis, Tenn., p. 120 Andy Shaw - Elgin, Ill., p. 142 Susan Shaw - Raleigh, N. C., p. 129 Judy Shelley - Greenville, S. C., p. 129 Sharon Shepard - Hamden, Conn., p. 129 Henry Sholar - Greensboro, N. C., p. 129 Tom Shorb - Hanover, Pa., p. 109 Lea Simmons - Waterloo, Ill., p. 129 John Simpson - Miami, Fla., p, 129 Carolyn Sinclair - Drexel Hill, Pa., p. 142 Steve Sluis - Wyckoff, N. J., p. 142 Dale Smith - Pensacola, Fla., 'p. 110 Dan Smith - Darlington, Pa., p. 129 Michael Smith - Woodland Hill, Calif., p. 142 Frank Snyder - Underwood, N. Dak., p. 143 Eleanor Soltau - Richardson, Tex., p. 120 Sue Soltau - St, Louis, Mo., p. 129 Valerie Souchek - NorthHeld, Ill., p. 145 Roger Sponaugle - San Francisco, Calif, p. 145 Linda Spooner - Miami, Fla., p. 120 David Stanton - Oostbutg, Wis., p. 121 Eric Stanton - Oostbutg, Wis., p. 143 Carole Starzer - Homdel, N. J., p. 129 Susan Steele - Philadelphia, Pa., p. 129 Susan Steinert - Durham, N. C., p. 110 Paul Stemler - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 110 Charlotte Stevens - Florissant, Mo., p. 129 Darrell Stewait - Trenton, N. J., p. 143 Becky Stigers - St. Louis, Mo., p. 143 Rodney Stortz - Collegeville, Pa., p. 121 Karin Stout - Seminole, Fla., p. 143 Ginny Strom - Roorkee, India, p. 121 Priscilla Strom - Roorkee, India, p. 121 Patricia Sussman - Huntingdon Valley, Pa., p. 130 Ann Swetnam - Belvedere, N. J., p. 130 Jeffrey Talley - Glenside, Pa., p. 130 Paul Talley - Lookout Mt., Tenn. Fred Taylor - Herminie, Pa., p. 130 John Taylor - Herminie, Pa., p. 121 Jackie Tebben - Schenectady, N. Y., p. 130 Dave Theune - Oostbutg, Wis., p. 143 Bruce Tilton - Maple Glen, Pa., p. 121 Loi Tran - Saigon, South Vietnam, p. 130 Oliver Trimiew - Newark, N. J., p. 121 Rick Tyson - Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., p. 111 Gail Umbreit - Savannah, Ga., p. 111 Judith Unruh - Newton, Kansas, p. 111 Sarah Van Doren - Trenton, N. J., p. 111 Mary Sue Van Gorkam - San Jose, Calif., p. 130 Ruth Van Gorkam - San Jose, Calif., p. 143 Rebecca Van Wechel - Seattle, Wash., p. 143 Mark Vigil - Denver, Colo., p. 144 Warren Vreeland - Baldwin, N. Y., p. 144 Sharon Waldecker - Seminole, Fla., p. 144 Debbie Wallis - St. Louis, Mo., p. 130 James Ward - Irwin, Pa., p. 121 Linda Warsing - King of Prussia, Pa., p. 112 Raymond Watson - Huntsville, Ala., p. 144 Gayle Watts - Newark, Del., p. 144 David Wendorf- Merrill, Wis., p. 112 Debbie Wentling - Wilmington, Del., p. 130 Milton Wiest - Cherry Hill, N. J., p. 112 Bill Wigton - Butler, Pa., p. 144 Linda Wildeboer - Burlington, Ontario, p. 144 James Wildeman - Lemmon, S. Dak., p. 131 Sue Wilkins - Annapolis, Md., p. 131 David Willey - Lemmon, S. Dak., p. 113 Janet Williams - Aldan, Pa., p. 113 John Wilson - Laurens, S. C., p. 113 Bill Wing - Savannah, Ga., p. 131 Patrick Winning - St. Louis, Mo., p. 144 Doug Withington - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 131 Gary Worley - Bolivar, Tenn., p. 144 Sally Elizabeth Yeaple - Wilmington, Del., p. 131 Carol York - Villa Park, Calif., p. 144 Bruce Young - San Francisco, Calif., p. 121 Stephen Young - Lookout Mt., Tenn., p. 121 Gail Zorn - Perkasie, Pa., p. 131 Editor: Gary Lindley Layout: Nancy Cooke Becky Van Wechel Litemffyx -James Ward Buiineyf Stajf' Doreen Degel Miriam MacNair, Dave Crawford Pboiographys Tim Belz Bob Petito Don Petcher, Dan Pruitt Patty Reilly, Dale Smith Eventff Sharon Collins Orgarzizafiomx Betty Campbell Facully: janet Cruise Sporlys Bruce Tilton Clarfieff Barb Moginot Typzkts Ginny Strom Affliflf Mary Schum 6 4 h We wanted to try to produce a Christian yearbook this year, a Tar- tan that would exemplify our brazen claims on life. But we weren't just sure what that means - and we still aren't. That's certainly be- cause we don't even imagine what it is like to take every step in the light of God's Word. The darkness of the age is too often stiflingi Nevertheless, we hope that this book is a step taken in the Way of Truth, that it will be an impetus for a more rigorous, enlightened walk. And even more than that, we hope that this book is reflective of a total effort here at Covenant to heed the Rule of Lord jesus in all that we do. We have a long way to go. That's why we weren't sure what constituted a Christian yearbook. Pictures seem to be somewhat neutral, although we tried for por- traits of people doing things, not just standing against a brick wall. Layout is like putting together the pieces of a puzzle. That leaves the copy, which despite ambiguities, can be a penetrating medium. I like the copy a lot, maybe because james Ward wrote exactly what I wanted without my ever really telling him what I wanted. Beyond all that, though, we tried to produce a book that was as good as we could make it, that our walk as Christ-followers be not shoddy and half-hearted. That kind of stewardship is heavy. Some people put many hours into the production of this book, and for their assistance I am thankful. But there are a few who war- rant special thanks. Ginny Strom was an ever-faithful, wonderfully- efficient typist. Ward scribbled out the year in homey, reflective -prose, all the time suggesting direction, if you're careful to sa. I Aida I ,Q 5 ,iff T ,- 'mv -' , ,j 53955. qw ,,.. Q11 P 1 . .. ',,,, ,. 3 , x Mary Schum amazed and pleased me with her excellent work on divisionals. Doreen Degel and Miriam MacNair supervised aifi cial picture that was delightfully black, instead of bright red, for first time in years. Crawffordl sold a pile of ads. But that wou. have been sufficient had not the parents responded overwhelmi to our patrons letter.'Thanks, folks. And then Barb Moginot car ly organized the myriad of data for the Classes section, and I Campbell really pitched in at the last. But highest on the list are the photographers. They probably posed over 25,00 frames of film during the year, plus developing printing every picture in the book. Those glanced-at photos ri sent hundreds of hours spent in coverage, composition, and c room work. Busy Dale Smith carried the ball most of the year, 4 cially after technical expert Bob Petito did not return second se ter. The senior pictures are theirs. Don Petcher, assisted by R Carroll, did the bulk of the darkroom work spring semester though tied up with the Bagpipe, Tim Belz snapped and pr many quality photographs. And Dan Pruitt contributed a bol in capturing many candids. l C Finally, thanks to Taylor representative Ike Boyette for making define our objectives, and to Dr. Charles Donaldson for han around to answer questions and call Ike. , . , l L l v . . L I r v r V X 4 V V ,i gikf3:H,' , , ,v,:, , L..-1 ,- b, ! Q A ' '41 S I 4 , V, , , : A. 1 1 M A , , 4 'wh .w1'w75H:'ixYrv::faa?1-711.wz1zA'e!nuilamLm1wafn5ml:lW ' C ,K 4 ,S ,- , Y J , 1 Nc. u w 1 Q' 1:7 A.. , 51 'Y H. -Z


Suggestions in the Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) collection:

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Covenant College - Tartan Yearbook (Lookout Mountain, GA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974


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