Guilford College - Quaker Yearbook (Greensboro, NC)
- Class of 1973
Page 1 of 264
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 264 of the 1973 volume:
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139199 ....■. : m ;i- ' i i HJ ] lll 4 I ID 1 . -.- n V X .. r •fV as?! ■«♦ • 1 m h - i J w contents . 128 baseball 214 basketball 76 faculty 50 football 32 freshmen 192 golf 226 homecoming 40 union 204 crosse 222 organizations 174 seniors 144 soccer 24 sophomores 200 tennis 220 track 218 u hrt ' c u hn 170 I iMMaMMMafaihi nfaB Midiila l « ? ?yitSa ( Tjif ' -f ,1 , • „ . ■, % m n V%v - ' tpi «i£s. wis.. s - . ••, v ,- Tv , :. ' !Aiin: si rf . . . r ' v k . L V l ■: sr tl-.a Mk m§ -f-1? coca cola leadership award— John lord best tackier— John lord best hustler-john bryant best blocker— mike twichell most valuable player-james Stanley 12th man award— jeff budda dickens The Vansant Veer Armfield Stadium . . . For the past two and one half seasons, Guiltord Col- lege football has not once achieved the primary goal known in any com- petitive sport . . . victory. In 1970, mid-way though the season, the Quakers waxed Gardner-Webb, 35-7. Since the game on the tenth of October, Guilford has lost and lost and lost. Ohhhhhhhhhh and 25. After a 0-9 year in 1971, 1972 turned into a back-to-back wintess year at 0- 10. The scores tell most of the story, those who saw the games know more. The ultimate story is statistics. In 1972, the Quakers scored seven touch- downs, hit three PATs and Donnie Cupit banged two field goals, one of which was marked at 52 yards, a Carolinas Conference record. The season total was: opponents— 336, Guilford- 51. Total offense: opponents- 3,872, Guilford— 1,822. It all adds up to the longest collegiate losing streak now in existence lead- ing into 1973. Dr. Henry Vansant doesn ' t give a damn. Reporting for good on luly 10th, Vansant begins his tenure as the number one Quaker. He doesn ' t want to look at the game films from last year, he doesn ' t want to get preconceived ideas. With buggy eyes, a work day that often stretches into the wee hours, Van- sant brings a fresh and entire new working theory to Guilford College. If you ' re going to win, you have to work at it, he explains. It means you have to study, plan and get yourself mentallv and physically prepared for each game. I want to be so well planned and prepared for each game that I can manipulate the complexity of the game, week-by-week. While downing a can ot V-8 juice, Vansant gives you a thumbnail philoso- phy of what it takes to win games. I ' ve gotten into situations before where no one believed they could win, says Vansant. Shucks, if you ' re dedicated enough and work at something long enough, you ' ll win. You have to be agressively patient with yourself and your teammates. Guilford ' s historical problem seems to be too much patience. 25 games too much. What Vansant has already turned about is the attitude at Guilford. With a few beefy recruits and obvious dedication, a rejuvenated spirit exists in the offices above the alumni gym floor. You have to have dedicated coaches willing to lose sleep for a one point win. You have got to have players who believe In the coaches and each other. Top notch physical shape is required and we shall have that. We ' re going to be ready for that first game, physically and mentally. We can and will win at Guilford College. And so Vansant comes on strong. A man with a white hat who cares about his players, a character in all respects with a need to accept the biggest challenge in recent sports history and the right degree of cockiness to get the job done. The highly touted Vansant veer rolls on the first day of September with one primary destination. Goal line, 1973. 00 30 pr. PmOE dlonq Fmndly jf- Fliiirs Chap l i L-VGI IUI C ID INV I i ' immvjr ' ,p lewis aiken psychology maritza almeida Spanish j. r. boyd mathematics Wl : William burns political science William carroll polilical science claude chauvig ne Joyce dark physical education thomas clarke geology ann dt-JK humanitie donald deagon drama carter delafield enghsh buzz dunning physical educatio mary feagins foreign language Carroll feagin philosophy Uiuis tikf politual science im gitlord hislor Iliam fulcher biology lames gutsell english dennis haglan physical education henry hood history hiram hilty foreign languag Cyrus Johnson education Wilbur Johnson physical education uberl Johnson sociology jack Jensen physical education kenneth kaufman psychology met keiser nan in Ihe twentieth century dons lauten sociology daryl kent philosophy John lambeth physical education Ju. . m j mildred marlerte english elinor massoglla education stuarl maynard physical education lima manduldv mathematics richard morton english Josephine moore history lloyd n rehgK fred parkhurst economics rosalie payne foreign language i« «i ■• |ohn pipkrr reliRion maurke raiford physics f arnt ' ss purcJn physics wen reddeck fduialion 1 ' i ■alfd,) nckt ' llon biologv lorlon robbir economics kitty Steele physical education v-l , kdlhv srbo pohlical science eugene thompson foreign language ak xander sloesen history kenneth walker mathematics bruce wilstjn english ' ' - S t 41 paul zopi sociology :m ' ,0? ■J ' H m ' :••: TEAM I FOULS I PERIOD 2 .... . r :r : 4 .1 11 .♦ Smt In riext rnfttjbe-. Charlie Harville: Coach, you ' ve just won the N.A.I. A. National Championship. How do you feel? Jack Jensen: Tired, Charlie. Frozen in near shock. That ' s really the only way to describe the look on )ack Jensen ' s tace as the scoreboard read the final victory of the 1973 season. This is the biggest thing in my life except for my marriage, said the third year Quaker Coach. Now Marsha knows where she stands. For lack Jensen, it was more than a national championship. It was a dream come true. FHis dedication to this impossible dream began his rookie year when a return trip to Kansas City was snuffed out in the finals of N.A.l.A. District 26 by the A T Aggies, 71-63. After that disaster night of 1971 came 1972 when injuries spelled defeats. For the first time in three years, the Quakers had to win the Carolinas Conference Championship to advance into the playoffs. Again, disappointment. Elon— 83 Guilford— 69. But, for Jensen, the brightest lights were to come. On February 24th, 1973, in the final game of the regular season before the conference tournament, the Quakers sealed the right to play in N.A.l.A. District 26 by defeating Gardner-Webb, 101-98 in the Charlotte Coliseum. The rubber game of the match. Maybe Jensen knew it all along. Maybe he said things on the court that no other human was able to access. About the strength and desire of M.L. Carr. About the scrappy play of a determined Teddy East and the unknown potential of an old marine who just might have that special spark as a transfer. Maybe he knew Greg Jackson could lead the Quakers in the West as well as the East. And maybe because he knew that Lloyd Free was certainly the diamond in the rough. He prunned the orchard of odd talent through the season. A season that began on shakey ground causing many to feel, well, not this season. Maybe he knew all along. Jack Jensen ' s year of preparation is one of such storybook nature, it ' s incredible. He tuned the team for the District 26 Playoffs. Over and over, the tournament for the trip west was the topic of discussion. Calmly, with great determination, the games for district wins were calculated. They weren ' t just another win or another game. To Jack Jensen and his team, they were one step closer to getting in that second and all important tournament. It ' s great to win the Carolinas Conference Tournament, said Jensen one afternoon. But the only place you can go on that alone is home. There was a difference between this and previous Quaker teams who landed in Kansas City and took that long ride into the metropolitan area that never sleeps. Jensen never flashed. He just worked. He studied stats. In half sleep, he would sit alone to watch the opponent for the next day. He was relaxed and took the trip as strictly business. Jensen set liberal hours for the players. Once he asked Teddy East, Teddy, about tonight. Do you think 11;30 is a gocjd curfew? Teddy: Why not make it 1 1;00 coach. And that was the story of the week. An inspired self-discipline by the players who knew how much and how badly Jack Jensen wanted this tournament. While the Kentucky State players, three time N.A.l.A champions made themselves known whereever they trod through the streets of Kansas City with their gaudy jackets, the Quakers walked silently and quietly. Calm but cocky. A knowing wink was all. No threats to other teams, just business. In five games, they took care of their business. 99-96 came. The season was over and for the first time since district playoffs were formed, the Quakers ended as victors in their finale. There ' s more to coa hing than just figuring patterns. There ' s psychology. There ' s sociology. There ' s politics. More than all this, it takes a human being. A human being whose tears prove his faith, his true emotion. This is the ultimate coach ... a friend, a father, a confidant. Cjod bless Jack Jensen. He ' s one hell of a coach. i- « This section was written and developed by Bill Buckley, the Quaker ' s Sports Information Director in 1973 who provided this service so that he and others could remember and never forget. LEXINGTON (NC) ... It just didn ' t seem possible. The championship jinx for the Quakers in the Carolinas Conference Tournament was as real in 1973 as it had been in 1972 . . . 1971. The Quakers ended the regular season with a tremendous win over the N.A.I.A District 26 Champions of 1972, Gardner- Webb, 101-98. Lloyd Free put the Cougar Prelim in Charlotte in rocking shape with iayups, 25-footers and near dunks for his season and career high in college ball ... 35 points. Teddy East, the player the league coaches doubted could handle a forward spot at 6-2 played with pure emotion to 18 rebounds. Now it was time for the Carolinas Conference Tournament. The real victory had already been won. Regardless oi how the Conference tournament came out for the Quakers, they would still have at least one more game . . . the understatement of the season. The opening round with Atlantic Christian was too easy to be true. Although the Quakers had finished the regular season tied with Lenoir Rhyne, 11-3 in the league, a draw for the top seed saw Guilford relegated Part One: The End Came First to second pod. A.C.C. fell in the Thursday opener, 94-63. A complete blow out. Friday night ' s semis found a match up that had occured a night later in the previous two years of tournaments for the CC crown . . . Guilford vs. Elon. Always emotional. Elon had slapped the Quakers with a one point loss during the regular season while Guilford retaliated later with a 12 point win. Emotion charged? You bet. The Quakers knew what the game meant. Not really as far as the tournament was concerned because there was that district playoff. But, as a matter of principle. |ust because the two previous years had seen Elon win. It wasn ' t easy for the Quakers. Emotions ran the garnet. At the end of regulation, an exchange of baskets forced overtime. Not what either team needed to advance to the finals only a day away. M.L. Carr, the leading rebounder with 12, fouled out in regulation, but Teddy East and Ray Massengill, along with the steady sophomore, Steve Hankins, maintained balance into the second overtime as Bill Miller, coach of the Christians, had to search his bench for cold subs at guard. Lloyd Free and Greg Jackson took advantage of the situation and with Free banging away 25 points, the Quakers survived, 79-76 . . . in 50 minutes instead of 40. Saturday night ' s championship game was strange. It was as if God wanted Catawba to win. The Sam Moir Indians had experienced a terrible month in February, losing just about every conference game they played in a rough road schedule. It was a Donnybrook return from the dead. Shooting was off for the Quakers from outside; and inside, Bill Bailey, a senior and Charlie Lynn played with inspiration and when it was over, Guilford had lost its third consecutive championship game of the Carolinas Conference Tournament and it hurt. It hurt inside. For the players and for jack Jensen, who, along with M. L. Carr, Teddy East, Robert Fulton and Greg Jackson watched the third death. But, unlike, 1972, the end in Lexington, was not the end completely. The Quakers were still going to the district playoffs. Only without the conference tournament crown. As M. L. Carr walked out to receive his second place trophy, the face was as open as a book. It hurt. To lose. Oddly enough. Jack Jensen was coach of the year, Carr player of the year and suddenly, the Quakers had lost their final game of 1973. It was the end of pain. As Catawba ' s Bill Bailey and Sam Moir were lifted to cut the nets from the YMCA rims, only destiny knew that other nets were to be cut. Nets so great and so beautiful that this sudden and painful end would soon be viewed as only a beginning 1472-1 47 i Store-. 82 Mars Hill 77 85 Pie liter 74 m L Barber-Scotia 95 81 Pteifter 78 41 At- Christian 64 % Albion 75 83 Pembroke St. 72 ( 7 L Catawba 74 Wi Mars Hill bl 85 Lenoir Rhyne 84 ' « Pembroke St. 84 11 ) Greensboro 87 bi L Elon 64 85 High Point 75 47 Pteitler 69 82 Elon 70 82 Livingstone 75 M, Catawba 84 78 L Lenoir Rhyne 84 85 Mars Hill 80 8! Newberry 70 75 High Point 60 101 Gardner-Webb 48 Greg Jackson and the leaping layup Ray MassengiU ' i ' Vijfi ' Klouch It Just Wasn ' t To Be Carolinas Conlerence TuurnamenI 94 At. Christian 79 Elon (2 OT) 69 L Catawba PART TWO: A Year ' s Work ' 5 i Winston-Salem ' s Bighouse Gaines didn ' t like what he saw HIGH POINT COLLEGE (NC) . . . For the second time in three years, The Quakers of Guilford College were in the championship game for the right to represent N.A.I. A District 26 in the national playoffs March 12-17 at Municipal Audito- rium, Kansas City, Missouri. All that stood in the Quakers way was 40 minutes and the pow- erful Rams of Winston-Salem State University. The Quakers, behind Lloyd Free ' s 30 points and M. L. Carr ' s 13 rebounds, had extended a 33-32 halftime lead over Barber-Scotia into a 90-80 win for the right to meet Winston-Salem, the Rams killing the Indians of Catawba. This was what the Quakers had keyed for. This was what lack |en- sen had preached all season. It was the top of the line . . . this game was second to none. Through lensen ' s sermons, the Quakers learned to want it. And so, it began. FIRST HALF With 16:52 to play in the first half, Ray Massengill scored a two- footer and the Guilford College Quakers led 2-0 over the Rams. Lloyd Free followed 25 seconds later with a longshot and Guilford led 4-0. It was shakey in the beginning. Neither team put up good shots. Both knew how much each at- tempt meant and the tension was overpowering. The Rams came back to take a 6 point lead, 16-10 with 11:51 to play and it looked as if they were mov- ing away. Consecutive field goals by Steve Hankins, individual buckets by Free and M. L. Carr tied the game with 8:56 for the fifth time of the game. 18-18. Then the Quaker ' s game began to experience severe technical dif- ficulty. Scoring at intervals of only once every two minutes is un- healthy in a championship game. The Rams outside shooting and su- perior work in the pivot turned the stiles into a 32-25 lead with 1:32 to play in the first 20 minutes. At the seven point lead, the Rams finished their scoring for the half. The Quakers, behind Greg Jackson with a field goal from the top of the circle, a Ray Massengill rebound shot and a corner bank shot by M. L. Carr put the Quakers back in it but still one down at 32-31, Rams favor, as locker room doors opened for Coaches lensen and Gaines to work their magic . . . their fifteen minute timeout. Second Half Both Guilford and Winston-Sa- lem opened the second half in zone defenses, the Quakers in their typical 1-3-1. The Ram ' s worked. Guilford ' s didn ' t. In a matter of only 2:54, Win- ston-Salem tore through the Quak- ers for another seven point lead, 44-37. In fact, the Quakers had only scored six points in the opening 4 minutes, 24 seconds. Only six. The offense was hurting. Winston-Salem began to beg in a wee bit of foul trouble, but their bench personnel didn ' t let up. Guilford held the Rams without points for a lull three minutes and got back to within 2 points, 44-42 with 13:56 remaining as Lloyd Free went to the line twice and hit 3-4 and Greg Jackson drove for a layup. But again, the Rams relentless shooting inside and out denied the Quakers of the lead, or even a tie. The Rams led by 8, 50-42, with 12:18 to play and again by 8, 56-48, with 9:46 remaining. It looked almost over. With 8:15 to play in the trip game, the biggest rubber match in the world, Winston-Salem still had a 6 point lead, 58-52. It seemed that whatever the Quakers could do, the Rams retaliated. Time after for 40 Minutes time. Then things began to work. With 6:44 to play, M. L. Carr hooked in a five footer in front of the basket to cut the Rams lead to only three, 59-56. It was the closest the game had been in twelve minutes. Then it was Greg Jackson who banked in a right side hook that took it to only a 1 point lead, 59-58. The amazing Rams still were not impressed. They took a five point lead, 63-58, with only 4:54 in the game. What had worked for the Quakers seemed to be falling apart. And then, here came Super Jocko . . . Greg Jackson. A three point play put the Quakers back to within a bucket at 63-61 with 4:33 to play. Then Teddy East, who hit from outside so well in the tournaments, stepped to the line and tied the game with a 2-2 trick. The Quakers had a tie game at 63-63 . . . 4:1 1 to play. It was only the sixth time of the game there was a tie situation, the last was 18- 18 in the first half. A technical foul on the Rams put East back on the line. With 4:M to play, Guilford was leading, 64-63. A large, but overly quiet group of Guilford ardents rose, in mass, in a deafening roar. But excitement was only momentary. Smith hit for Winston-Salem . . . 65-64 with 3:40. Free hit for Guilford . . . 66-65 . . . with 3:14. Smith hit for Winston-Salem . . . 67-66 with 3:01. Free hit for Guilford . . . 68-67 with 2:35 Garner hit for Winston-Salem . . . 69-68 with 1:57 Jackson hit from the top of the circle for Guilford . . . 70-69 with 1 :09. Hearts racing fast enough to burn the batteries out of the best of electro cardiographs brought tears of tension. Guilford had the one point lead, 70-69. The Rams had the ball. The last three minutes and two seconds of exchanges assured players, coaches and fans of the prospec- tive shootout ... but not over- time. Someone would win in regulation. Bighouse Gaines strategy was obvious. Get the good shot . . . win the game. But then an odd thing happened. For the first time in the last four trips down the floor, the Rams hit the rim, not the net. A Flying Lloyd Free grabbed the rebound and called it: TIMEOUT-GUILFORD. 41 seconds. Jensen wanted to get the good shot, but better yet, hang on to the end. 70-69 was good enough. In desperation, too late though, the Rams fouled Lloyd Free with :19 on the clock. The first rimmed in . . . the second . . . Swish . . . nineteen seconds and the Quakers led by three, 72-69. Then the icing on the cake. A flipping pass to a breaking Steve Hankins on the steal who back- handed it with :02. Guilford had it, 74-69. It was only a matter of time . . . :01 . . . :00. KANSAS CITY . . . HERE WE COME!!!!!!! The nets ripped, the fans spilled onto the court to ready for the trip back to the Guilford campus. Guil- ford had hit 12 of their last 12 free throws. Steve Hankins, a 28-year old e - marine transfer from Pembroke has scored the last two points in North Carolina. Little did he know that 436 points were yet to come. District 26 Playoffs ' W Barber-Scotia 74 Winslon-Salem St. Quaker Square: A Night to Remember QUAKER SQUARE (NC) ... As the cars that had tripped the Quakers to High Point for the finals made their way over that last hill of Campus Road . . . the sight was out of sight. The visual shot from the hill that overlooked the corner was unreal. Tissue paper carelessly but with artistic inclinations of freedom covered the two block area at the entrance of the college. It looked like a concentrated snow fall. Neither man, beast nor Quaker was to make it through the corner square area without being hugged, kissed, ravaged, molested or assaulted. Traffic was completely shut off on Friendly Road. 500 students had gathered to share in the 45 minute session of how to act like a maniac. The player ' s cars were swamped. Those who could not get to their heart-throbs simply stood back and screamed. Bob Dayton, WCOG ' s Disc Jockey after the Tom Wall road show was off the air, hit the single that was Number One for the next two weeks: Kansas City. Amid the screams, blaring radios and back slapping, one girl stood alone, just crying. Perhaps she knew more than any other . . . that full impact. Pity the poor rookie sheriff ' s deputy. With a badge as big as a number on a stat sheet, this young trooper decided to be the hero. Threatening and with fear in his eyes, he commanded that the students clear the street or arrests would be made. As someone tied a string of the ever present tissue paper to the squad car, some- one else yelled, Back to Mayberry, Barnie. The ultimate putdown. Another rookie, but one with much more class and definitely more importance at the time, Lloyd Free, had stepped, unnoticed, out of the mob. He walked calmly over to the window of Hardee ' s and ordered a large Coke. Then he grinned, I was thirsty. Soon, Lloyd, all the Quakers and the coaches. Buzz Dunning and lack |ensen, had been hoisted on shoulders for individual cheers from the crown. When lensen appeared, a voice in the crowd called, Speech!! Jensen replied in horse tones: On behalf of the team, I want to thank you for the support you have given us this season and tonight. You just don ' t know how much it means. We are going to work real hard now for the national tournament. We are going out there to win it all . . . With 500 raised fists, more tears and a thousand different smiles, no one believed otherwise. JENSEN: THEY WANTED IT BADLY On March 8th, the N.A.I. A. District 26 tournament win over Winston-Salem was history. So was the night at Quaker Square. Already, maintenence crews began to clear the entrance of the college of the white stuff that was now minced into a million different particles. It ' s what I ' ve been praying for all these years, said Jensen in retrospect. I prayed the past two nights that we ' d get them ... I wanted this victory more than anything. It means so much to me personally, said Teddy East, one of two Quakers who had been to Kansas City in 1970. Nothing beats going out as a winner. I always wanted to return to the national tournament. Not too many players get the chance to play in a tournament like the N.A.I.A. I know what it ' s like to be going, said the other returnee, M. L. Carr. Teddy and I have been there before and we ' re going to spend the rest of the week teaching Greg and Lloyd how to relax in the games we ' ll have to play. Jensen felt the tournament itself is a great coaching clinic. You learn so much from the games and the people there, he said. I ' ve learned a lot the four previous times I ' ve been with Guilford as an assistant. With a few breaks and a couple of good bounces our way, I feel we can make a good showing. Jensen summed up. guilford (74) We ' ve been lucky to have a bunch of guys r J?a -, ■, i ' c V. , I I 1 Ti 1 I ° ' ' 1- 1 11 5 14 who love each Other. They make a pretty good Free 8-21 8-10 8 3 24 bunch lackson 7-12 1-2 4 4 15 And so Jack Jensen and his Quakers were Hankins s-io 0-05 10 on their way. A big win over Winston-Salem, a Massengiii 3- 6 0- 4 6 send off from fans at a corner and memories of past tournaments. totals 29-71, 16-22 44 17 74 And most of all . . . the desire to do it ail. w-s state (69) FG FT Reb Ast. TP Wells 4- 9 0-01 8 Garner 7-14 4-4 11 18 Williams 3- 8 0-07 6 Smith 4- 7 4-43 I 12 Chavious 4-11 0-012 8 Cuyler 1- 10-07 2 Gregg 2- 3 0-03 4 Hooker 2- 2 2-30 6 Kitt 2- 6 1-32 5 TOTALS 29-61 11-13 39 3 69 GUILFORD 31 43-74 W-S State 32 37-69 Magazine calls us IC4NS4S CITY ' S FINEST ST IK HOUSE ' Hue 1600 Genessee In The Stockyards 842-2866 PART THR EE: KANSAS CITY (MO.) ... Af- ter a wealthy breakfast of whole eggs cooked by mas- ter chef Charlie Hendricks, a Saturday exchange of flights from Greensboro to Atlanta and on to Kansas City put the Quakers in this Missouri city in mid afternoon. A short trip from the air- port took the Quakers to their residence for the tour- nament . . . the Phillips Ho- tel, only two blocks from the Municipal Auditorium. A few fans went out with the team, but most waited until Sunday and a flight through Chicago on to K.C. Through either route, the final resting place for most fans was in a three block area square with all roads leading to municipal auditorium. Kansas City is a wide open town. As if day never ends. A lighting system makes 2 am seem like early evening. It is not a town for sleeping. The Pioneer Grill quickly became headquarters for fans and players alike, its lo- cation directly cross cornered the Phillips. After practice at a local college in the afternoon, Sun- day found the Quakers relax- ing. M. L. Carr and Teddy East reviewed the city for teammates as to what had and had not changed. Actually Sunday was a bor- ing day. Press books were available Monday and lack Jensen was to quickly con- From Saturday to Saturday fiscate one ot his SID ' s copies as the only scouting reference he had. Included in the book were scores, aver- ages and vitals on the play- ers, positions, sizes and scor- ing averages, percentages. As more and more fans ar- rived on Sunday, the Quaker faces seemed to brighten. Handshakes and grins turned a day of confusion and that far away from home feel- ing from cold to warm. As was true from day to day, there was fear. Fear that this might be the last game the Quakers were to play. Over cups of coffee and packs of cigarettes, fans remembered the day when the Quakers were top seeded in this tournament . . . 1968 with 6-8 Bob Kauff- man. And they remembered losing the first day to Osh- kosh State on a last second shot, 80-78. And so it was cautious optimism. Players from the higher seeded teams, Kentucky State, Sam Houston State, Augustana and Wisconsin Green Bay enjoyed their big night of talk. Doing their vari- ous upity struts, all they had to do tonight was walk. To- morrow, they would have to play. On Monday, they would become no better than anyone else, at least un- til they proved something. 32 teams came to play 32 games. Only one could do the Sunday Strut on Saturday. - x ' .jmi sf ' sa lna ■H I I WJ B EASY MONDAY: A WOLF MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM ... At the ab- surd hour of 9:30 am, basketball began in the 36th annual NAIA National Basketball Tournament. It is the basketball fan ' s cutting block. Where love is proven. Eight games a day for the first two games of the tournament. Many, including a wheat farmer Quaker fan, saw all 32 contests. Pausing only for a lunch break and a supper break, balls bounced all day and all night. The opening game, that 9:30 duel saw De- fiance of Ohio slap George Fox of Oregon, 82- 62 in a sleepy lackluster that put George Fox back on a plane just after noon of the first day. Truly mass-produced basketball at its best. The most grueling tournament anywhere. While one team observes halftime, the follow- ing game ' s two teams warm up. Game 2 saw Westmont hit South Dakota Tech, 85-66 and the third game of the tourna- ment was Oklahoma Baptist in the first ex- citing game, 79-76 over sixth-seeded Alcorn A M. The first upset. GAME 4 Now it was the Quaker ' s turn. Guilford met Keene State of New Hampshire at 2:45, Kansas City time, in game four. This was to be Ray Massengill ' s day in court. The 19-year old sophomore had come to meet the finest big men in the nation. With 19:10 to play in the first half, Ray Mas- sengill scored the first two points for the Quakers in Kansas City to tie the game with the Owls, 2-2. The game was tied five times in the first six minutes of play and this 19-7 team from Dis- trict 32 North was giving the Guilford team all they could handle. N SHEEP ' S CLOTHING But then, the fireworks started. With 13:16 to play in the first half, M.L. Carr hit a layup to put Guilford out front, 15-14. The first time they had led. With Ray Massengill slapping away with his softees from 5-10-15 feet, the Quakers woke up. By halftime, they had outscored Keene State 41-16 in 14:35 and had the intermission lead by 26 points. 56-30. lack Jensen, knowing what might come in the days ahead, substituted freely in the last six minutes of the first half and by the halfway point, the entire bench had emptied onto the floor. It was just too easy. Frightfully simple. With 15:15 to play in the game, the Quakers had an outstanding 34 point lead, 68-34. The outcome obvious, Guilford ' s play began to slide even though they averaged a 28 point lead for 80 ,, of the second half. Only against the subs were the Owls able to manage points. And so it was over for the Monday. Ray Massengill had starred with amazing shooting and five Quakers were placed in double figures. Now, at least until Wednesday while second round activity went Tuesday, they could relax, rest and ready themselves for whatever was to come. As the Quakers walked off the court, on came the Kentucky State Thoroughbreds, the three time defending champion for game 5 against Valdosta State of Georgia. Ka sas City Boxes 1. Guilford 92 Name FC East 5-11 Free 7 14 Carr 7 12 lackson 5 8 Massengill 9 12 Hankins 3 7 fullon i 3 Ralls 2 Krnl S|)eas I dials 39 69 TUESDAY: A DAY OF REST MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The shocking news had come the day before. In Monday ' s follow to Guilford ' s win as a first round upset of the team the Quakers were picked to meet. Vaidosta State of Georgia, an unseeded team with a 16-7 record had held on to upset third ranked and three time N.A.I. A. Champion Kentucky State (25-4), 90-81. Shucks, said M.L. Carr on Tuesday. I really wanted to get at Kentucky. They beat us in 1970, and I wanted a crack at them this year. As it was, the Quakers were to meet the Bla- zers of Vaidosta on Wednesday, 11:15 am. But that was a day away. Today was to be spent relaxing. For if the Quakers were to stay for the full tournament, they would need the rest, physically and men- tally, that today was to provide. Honorary coaches who sat in Quaker warm- ups during games, Mr. Luke Gill and Mr. Bi I Nicks, of TWA saw to it that the Quakers got relaxation. Tours, gifts of flight bags, a total of over $25 of gifts per man. A trip to the home of the Kansas City Chiefs was planned. Then, the Quakers dined at the top home of K.C. steaks, the Golden Ox. But while the players larked in trips, sight- seeing and general walking and looking around, the Quaker fans enjoyed the blurr of basketball that made Tuesday seem just like Monday. Monday had seen the upset of Kentucky State, fifth seeded Marymount (KS) was killed by Slippery Rock (PA), 74-73, Missouri South- ern waxing sixth-seeded Fairmont State (WVA), 70-63. Second-seeded Augustana, with their beserk fans and beserk coach, nar- rowly escaped defeat at the hands of Hanover (IN) but won, 66-65. Tuesday was a regular. Eight-Seeded Maryland-Eastern Shore rap- ped Eastern Montana, 114-107 in the high scoring game of the tournament. Fourth- seeded Wisconsin-Green Bay maintained their standing by knocking of Dallas Baptist in a rout, 77-66. At times, W-GB had led by 30 points. Then, of course, top-seeded and 27-0 Sam Houston eased a win over Wartburg (lA), 88- 62. Many Quaker fans moved on to shopping sprees in the brisk wind. Others slept after a vigorous night life. Some even watched TV. All were in anticipation. They knew Wednesday was coming. Many felt that they had played and, as if they were uniformed Quakers, they rested for whatever was to come. Rest to ei- ther have the energy to last the days or the courage to accept defeat and pack for home. Ever watth 8(eight) straight basketball games? KANSAS CITY (MO) Augustana had their thou- sands, Oklahoma Baptist had their neurotics and the Quak- ers had their faithfuls. Kansas City was as much a story of people, the little people, as much as it was the players. )ust one week of a big, happy family. Their modes of travel were mixed. Some took the $146 round trip wings, others the 1,200 mile road trip. Some were going, even if they had to walk all way. GLENN THORE and TIM CRAWFORD did just that to see the games. JACK )ENSEN became known as Peter Falk, the Columbo star, BUZZ DUNNING was the trophy bearer, MARSHA JENSEN, BARBARA DUNNING AND JEAN HUEY tore a room apart in the Phillips. TOM WALL, the voice of the national champions, said, Free hits from downtown Kansas City a thousand times if he said it once, CHIP CUMMINGS, pictured at left, bit his lip and survived the flu for the Westmont game. )IMMY SCOOP SHIELDS, the Quakers assistant SID, Quaker Fans In a Big Box became a wildman while the SID cracked his hand on the press table. It was a week of those type of memories. Of DENNIS HAGLAN, caught standing on a street corner at 2 am one morning saying, Got to stay up . . . don ' t want to miss anything. Then the faculty. President GRIMSLEY HOBBS flew in for the Valdosta game, former chemistry prof CHARLIE CARROW crawling into his seat with his baggage in hand. EARL REDDING cutting a vacation to see the Westmont game from Iowa. CHARLIE HENDRICKS get- ting a piece of that final net. GROOME FULTON and lORDAN WASHBURN sit- ting at press row as if they were media reps with stolen passes(pictured at left). And then the students and the former students. Student WILLIAM MILLIS washing out the same shirt everyday to wear for the games. Tight end CHRIS CULPEPPER, in a stupor, challenging the entire squad from Augustana on the fifth floor of the Muelbach Hotel. A couple of married ex- student ardents, GLORIA AND JACK PROBECK, bor- rowing the folks Cadillac to drive out, DICK AND LOU WHITT, arriving by air on Friday, without their luggage. And more students. CHEERLEADERS JUDY TER- RILL, BENGIE HESTER AND DONNA MUSE along with their male counterparts, STEVE BECK and MIKE KENNEDY. BOB VINSON, wearing out tires to drive the route with Kennedy and MILTON CO- LINDRES, who snapped over 1,000 pictures. CRAIG FUL- TON, who, along with Millis and Culpepper, became the K.C. terrors for the week, proud Quakers. BOBBY OWENS, who bummed a room a night for the week. Indians are like that. TERRI MILLER, who rode out with Owens along with Greg )ackson ' s wife TINA and daughter KIM. And pretty P AM WALKER, the Calamity Kid, who caught the flu and had to fly home in mid-week. Three arrivals on Friday. Teddy East ' s mother and Steve Hankins ' wife and mother. BOB HELLER, re- porter from the Greensboro Daily News, who became as much a fan as writer saying, My God, they really did it. It was just that kind of week. Wherever you turned, there was DR. )IM BREWER, bag in hand, or LEFTY RALLS walking the streets. And DR. and MRS. HERB APPENZEL- LER who had to come late due to his illness. People. Small in size but big in heart. Loving it all, eat- ing up each defeat of the Goliaths. )ust a bunch of Davids in Kansas City . . . with a bigger bunch of stones to cast. MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM As a grey sky lightened over Kansas City the field of 32 teams from districts across the United States had systematically been sliced in half. Guilford College remained as one of the 16. Only four of the eight seeded teams were still here. No 1-Sam Houston, now 28-0, No. 2 Augustana, now 26-1, No. 4 Wisconsin-Green Bay, now 27-3 and No. 8-University of Mary- land Eastern Shore, now 23-2. Wednesday was a full 8 game day, just as Monday and Tuesday had been. Opening was Slippery Rock State over Quinnipiac, 104-75. Then, in game 18, it was the Quakers turn again. Valdosta State had defeated Kentucky State in a rocking upset on Monday, 90-81 . This was their fourth trip to K.C., the last coming in 1969 when they lost in the first round to Elizabeth City, 86-78. Their hot points were their guards. 6-2 Willie Oxford averaging 18.6 and 6-2 Tim Dominey averaging 18.1. Oxford had 2 5 against KS while Dominey had 22. They could shoot the eyes out of it. Up front they were balanced in scor- ing at 6-8, 6-6 and 6-5. WONDERFUL WEDNESDAY: LIGHTS WENT OUT IN The first half of the Valdosta State game was scary. It looked at times as if the Quakers might be playing the season ' s finale. The Quakers broke from an 8-8 deadlock with 16:14 remaining to blow out nine points unanswered by the Blazers. Moments later, Valdosta began going inside and came back to within 5, 17-12 with 13: 55 remaining. The Quakers went back to Massengill, East and Carr and expanded back out to a 10 point margin, 24-14 with 12:22 to play. Play then began to slop for the Guilford end of the board as Valdosta went back outside to Oxford and Dominey to get back to within 3, 32-29, with 6:31 to play and then tie the game, 41-41, with 2:42 in the first half. The Quakers were outscored 18-7 in the fi- nal 5:34 and went to intermission down two, 48-46. The second half began with the same slop. Tied at 48,50 and 52, it was only then that Carr, Free and Greg Jackson began to get down to business. Valdosta could do nothing inside and Ox- ford and Dominey cooled off from the outer limits. Free had 15 in the second half and Greg Jackson got 12 of his total of 16 in the final 20 minutes. That added up to 27 from the guards who drove as well as they shot. The Quakers were running and in fine fash- ion. Valdosta looked tired as Guilford rolled out to a commanding 17 point lead, 82-65 be- fore Teddy East hit all 6 of the final points to ice the game at the widest margin of 17, 98-81. Valdosta ' s coach, James Dominey, said in disappointed terms, I think we played a much better team in Guilford than Kentucky State. There ' s no question about it. So what turned the Quakers around the sec- ond half? We played more patient defense after the break, said Jack Jensen. We didn ' t get quite as many steals but we didn ' t pick up many fouls either. Our other adjustment in the sec- ond half was getting back on defense. The most disappointing part of our play, rHE NIGHT THE GEORGIA said the losing Dominey, was our front line. I know they ' re young, but I ' m certain we got annihilated on the boards, Dominey ' s verb choice was super 48-35 in rebounding. In all, it was another game of balance with five men in doubles: Free-29, Carr-19, |ack- son-16, Massengill-14 and East-12. Hankins was close with 8 to making it six. As the day progressed, another upset came about. No. 1 Sam Houston, undefeated throughout the season, was knocked out 67-60 by an inspired Xavier club. Following the Xavier win, Westmont beat Missouri Southern easily and the stage was set for the Quaker ' s next bout. We ' ll try to run against Westmont, said Jensen after the affair was set. I ' d guess they ' ll try to hold us down but I don ' t expect a stall. We ' ll try to press a little bit, but we can ' t af- ford to get our people in foul trouble. Probably the most hearlded occurence Wednesday in the Valdosta game was M.L. Carr ' s ejection with 8:54 to play. Official scorers had credited one of Ray Massengi personals to the 6-6 senior and he walked to disqualification with only four fouls. Later, offi- cials admitted their mistake at the scorer ' s table. Bush. GUILFORD (98) EAST, TEDDY FREE, LLOYD CARR, M L. JACKSON, GREG MASSENGILL, RAY RALLS, )OHN FULTON, ROBERT SPEAS GREG KENT, ROBERT HANKINS, STEVE TOTALS VALDOSTA STATE (81) OXFORD, WILLIE DOMINEY, TOM ALSTON, KEN HODGE, TINY REASON, DON TIERNEY, BOB BURGAMY, MARVIN CLYDE, MIKE SPRINGFIELD, jIM DONOHOE,BOB TOTALS Made And Made And And Made And Reb. Assl, Pe THURSDAY: MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM . . . And then, there were only eight. Billed as East meets West by the innovative and slightly neurotic Kansas City newspapermen, the Quakers were to meet a group of beach boys from Santa Barbara, California in the bounding match of the tournament. A win for Guil- ford here would assure them two more games. In the prelude to the Quaker ' s meeting with Westmont, Slippery Rock destroyed fourth seeded Wisconsin-Green Bay almost as well as their fans tore apart the Phillips Hotel. The Rockets won in destruction, 60-58 while their fans conquered two of the three eleva- tors at the Phillips for over $2,000 damage. At the Downtowner, home of the Quaker broadcast team, the Rock fans covered the entire fourth floor with a chemical fire extinguisher. 8:45 arrived and the Quakers hit the court. Offensive execution was miser- able and, in the end, it was free throws that kept the Quakers alive in the N.A.I. A. play. After being down to Westmont lor 10 of the first 20 minutes of the game, the Quaker finally broke the ice and gained their first lead, 23- 21, as M.L. Carr hit an 8-footer with 8:50 to play in the first half. Run- ning wasn ' t working and neither was shooting. Guilford held on for the tirst half running a big lead of h, M-27, with 2:4 i to play as Mas- sengill hit 2-2. Guilford couldn ' t hit anything for the rest of the way and went to the locker room, 33-31 over the California kids. A hot second half on both sides caused the first real fear in a tight game since the Winston-Salem State game. The Quakers couldn ' t get that comfortable lead of 15 or 17 points. Eight was it and it came :alifornia basketball with 13:22 to play as Massengill hit from 15 feet. Behind 6-3 Charlie Mehl and 6-5 Bill Boyd, the War- riors came back to take over the lead, 55-54 with 9:53 to play. The Quakers were scoring a bucket at no better than once every 2 ' 2 minutes. That wasn ' t good enough to win. Guilford went down by as many as 5, 59-54, with 8:54 to play as 6-9 Fred De Vaughn hit a bucket, De Vaughn was to hit 8 of Westmont ' s last 10 points. With 1:02 to play, Guilford was in trouble. They trailed 65-62 and until Greg Jackson hit a jumper from the circle, the Quakers couldn ' t get close. Now trailing by one, Jensen called timeout with :46 on the clock. The Quakers gained possession and looked for the good shot. With :30 to play, Greg Jackson hit 2-2 and put the Quakers back in the lead for the first time since they had led 54-53. With Guilford ahead, 66-65, Westmont called the clock with :28 left. Bringing it in, Lloyd Free swiped the ball and was fouled. He hit the 2-2 pressure shots and Guilford was swinging 68-65 with :14 left. Westmont ' s Devaughn walked through the Quaker defense to pull back to within I, 68-67 with :06, but the Quakers controlled their way back down the floor to Steve Han- kins who banked away gold at the buzzer, 70-67. Breathing heavily, a bushed Jack Jensen managed a post game comment. Our defense held us in the game, he said. Our offense wasn ' t doing things it normally does but I credit Westmont ' s de- fense for that. This was the worst game of the series, the Quakers appearing le- thargic .... as if care just wasn ' t around. As if they wanted to go home. One problem was an injury to super frosh Lloyd Free. For a while, I thought it was a twisted ankle, said Jensen. But now I find he had a broken toenail. Free had shooting problems in the first half but came back after intermission to get 15 of his 19 points. Again, for the third straight game, the Quakers had balance. Even though it was unimpressive at times offensively, again five men were in doubles. And just as the lights went out in Georgia, other titles began to ap- pear relevant. Tonight, it was rain- ing in southern California. GUILFORD (70) Field G lals Free Throws Made And Made And CARR, M, L. 30 5 n 1 EAST, TEDDY 15 3 4 4 MASSENGILL, RAY 40 fa 12 2 FREE, LLOYD 20 7 17 5 lACKSON, GREG 33 5 9 2 HANKINS, STEVE 55 2 3 RALLS, lOHN 10 D N P FULTON, ROBERT 13 D N P SPEAS, GREG 24 D N P KENT, ROBERT 34 D N P TOTALS 28 51. 14 14 WESTMONT (67) Field GoaK Fret Throus Made And Made And BOYD, BILL 45 8 14 1 1 kRAUSHARR, KURT 55 ! ' 1 DEVAUGHN, FRED 53 11 2(1 MEHL, CHARLIE 23 2 10 2 2 CAMPBELL, WALT 21 4 l SMITH, GREG 35 4 10 1 lOHNSON, RANDV 11 n STEPHENSON, ART 33 BRECANTE, DON 15 D N p RICE, JOHN 43 D N P TOTALS 32 h ' l i 4 AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! % V w_J J t I  l  . AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! AUGUSTANA! MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM Auggie fans were everywhere. Maybe that ' s why the Quaker fans wanted this more than any game. Just to shut them up. They had thousands there, filling the upper deck with their deafening roars. They had a wild man for a coach, )im Bor- cherding. A real mental case. Their cheerleading section was a beautiful mob of flying blonds that appeared to all have the same birthplace: A Swedish massage parlor. More than this, they were a good team. Now 28-1, their only defeat to Sam Houston in the regular season, 64-63. Their front line looked like this: 7-0 )ohn Laing, 6-11 Bruce Hamming and 6-6 Chuck Menzer. Laing was the workhorse with a 20.6 average and returning after a 1972 trip to Kansas City when he was named All-American and the Vi- kings had lost only in the quarters to Eau Claire, 77-70. The Quakers jumped on Augustana early and often. The Vikings couldn ' t contain the Quaker backcourt of )ackson and Free . . . especially the shooting of Free with 25 points. Hankins and Massengill Gang Bang 6-11 Bruce Han k Although Augustana was to outrebound the Quakers with their height, Guilford ' s defense stuck. Ray Masseng- ill hit 10 points off the Ail- American Laing and held the 7-footer to only 14 points. Augustana had slipped through their first two games, 66-65 over Hanover and 64- 61 over Defiance before ex- ploding over Oklahoma Bap- tist, 63-46. Augustana led only once against the Quakers . . .13- 12. Guilford played over their heads and the Vikings to 12 point lead in the first half, 31- 19 with 2:32 before leading that margin at the half, 35-23. The second half was sim- ply a coast. Augustana threat- ened at times coming to within 6 near the end, 75-69, but only before Greg Jackson hit a couple of free throws with :10 remaining for the victory. Finally, thank heavens, they were quiet. And above all, the Quakers had a shot at a national championship. They had gone farther than any team of Guilford ' s, any team in North Carolina. AUGUSTANA (69) HAMMING, BRUCE MENZER, CHUCK LAING, lOHN BROOKS, MARK BOSTER, DREW KOLZE, MIKE MILLER, TOM VAN DECASTEELE,|IM BRUNDIGE, lOHN MICHALSKI, MIKE TOTALS Field Coals Made Altd Free Throws Made Atld Reb. Asst Per. GUILFORD (77) CARR, M. L. EAST, TEDDY MASSENGILL, RAY FREE, LLOYD lACKSON, GREG Free Throws Reb. Asst Per Made And Made Atld HANKINS, STEVE RALLS, lOHN FULTON, ROBERT SPEAS, GREG KENT, ROBERT TOTALS D N D N Flying Free hit 30 point ' s in the ME. AC. for MVP ... a first for a freshman 32 Teams Came .... And 31 KANSAS CITY (MO) 8:45 pm. over a week after the Quakers ar- rived in this city, they were still in uniform. It seemed im- possible that they had made it this far. Considering the powers of Kentucky State, Xavier, Sam Houston, the cream of the crops from across the land. One goal had already been reached. The Quakers had gone farther than the 1970 team. They would be no worse than second ... in- stead of 1970 ' s fourth. Oddly enough, it was the ugly duckling Quakers, to- tally unseeded, unhearlded throughout the tournament meeting the last of the seeded teams. Maryland Eastern Shore for the Championship. Augustana had disposed of Slippery Rock easily in the consolation round and now the ball game of ball games was to begin. It was odd to see the Quakers, attired in their red road uniforms enter the con- test, a team that had not been able to get out of their own conference tournament back in far away North Carolina. The bets were going on U.M.E.S. The members of the press thought the Quakers had been lucky indeed to gel where they were, but the counted them out of the real race for the top honors. Here Couldn ' t Hack It. U.M.E.S. was making their seventh appearance to the nationals. They had taken the same team to K.C. in 1972 but bombed out with the youngsters to Xavier, 102-80. Now, they were ready. They were solid outside in shoot- ing and had 6-10 )oe Pace, a freshman, who could really stick it through the hole. They came to Kansas City ex- ploding with a 96.4 scoring average, third best in the na- tion and produced six players in double figures. The team stood now 26-4, they had been in the championship game in 1969 only to lose to Eastern New Mexico in a blow out, 99-76. Oddly enough, their opponent was to beat them by scoring the same magic number, 99 . . . but this time U.M.E.S. was to do better than 76 points. They had power, strength. 6-3 Rubin Collins averaging 18.0; 6-4 Talvin Skinner aver- aging 17.0; Granville Cannon getting 14.9; William Gordon averaging 13.4; Tyrone John- son hitting for 12.2 and Pace at 11.2. They had duel power in re- bounding. Skinner and Pace both averaged an awesome 16.9 as they had beaten A T State, Shaw, Barber-Scotia and Morgan State. With the play-by-play printed within the confines of this section, there is no need to give the blow-by-blow de- scription in print. You can read and enjoy for yourself. But what is truly notable is the play of the players. A team that wasn ' t supposed to have it this year. A team when at it tallest in starting stood 6-10, 6-6 and 6-2 across the front and 6-0, 6-1 in the back court. Tribute must be paid to both M. L. Carr and Teddy East consecutively. They both did a hell of a job. In inspiration as well as professoring less acquainted players in the tournament, Carr and East had come to win and they didn ' t want to end their careers at Guilford College without the national crown. To a big horse of a marine who took the raps in the press and got the Quakers national press lines for being a 28-year old sophomore and a veteran of Vietnam with a ta-too on the left arm. To a backcourt duo, the best in the nation. To Greg lackson, the leaper who could hit from inside as well as out but more, was the leader of the team, the spark plug to a big en- gine. To Lloyd Free, boy wonder, who, as a ripe old freshman, flew through the air as a poetic mad dog for the 25-footers that ne- gated the big strengths inside. Free, who be- came the first rookie to ever receive the MVP award of the 32 team National tournament. God, he was great. 120 points to lead the tournament. And then, the kid with the sunburned legs, Ray Massengill. Possibly the least counted on threat for the Quakers who suddenly turned into the best big man in the nation. Averaging nearly 15 points in the tournament after not cracking into doubles in the regular season. Surprise. Surprise. Suprise. They were super. And as Teddy East was to later say, Man, it was the team, dig? That ' s what did it for us. We were a real team. 36th ANNUAL NAIA BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT at Kansas City, MO. Came 32-9:OOPM-5at-3 17 73 •••• ' CHAMPIONSHIP ' MARYLAND EASTERN SHORE VS. GUILFORD ATTENDANCE: 9,268 TOURNEY TOTAL: 71,300 TIME: M-G Maryland play by play Guilford piay by play OPENING TIP TO: Guilford 19:44 0-2 Carr, tip 19:29 2-2 Pace, lay up 19:18 2-4 Massengill, short jumper side 19:07 Free, pusfiing off P1T1 19:01 4-4 Pace, lay up 18:45 6-4 Gordon, lay up 18:33 6-6 Carr, lay up (goaltending called on Pace) 18:19 8-6 Skinner, 15-foot baseline 18:01 10-6 Nelson, lane drive 17:30 Carr, holding PI T2 17:20 12-6 lohnson, lay up 17:04 12-8 lackson, underhand lay up 16:56 14-8 lohnson, driving lane 16:38 14-10 East, f by Skinner P1T1 (XX) 16:24 16-10 Gordon, 20-footer 16:08 Collins, holding PI T2 16:00 16-12 Free, f by Pace PI T3 (XV) 15:38 18-12 Collins, tip 15:27 18-14 Free, short jump front 18-16 East, lay up 20 20-16 Collins, corner jumper 20-18 Carr, short jump front 13:52 22-18 Skinner, 25-looter 13:35 22-20 Carr, 12-foot bank 12:28 Massengill, pushing off P1T3 12:22 24-20 Pace, short bank 12:04 24-22 East, lay up 07 26-22 Pace, lay up 10:56 26-23 Free, f by Pace P2T4 (ox) TIME OUT MARYLAND 10:39 28-23 lohnson, corner 1-hander 10:22 East, pushing off P1T4 54 !0-23 Collins, ft line jumper 42 Carr, offensive P2T5 32 32-23 lohnson, 15-footer 09 32-25 Massengill, baseline jumper 03 East, hooking P2T6 54 34-25 Collins, 20-footer 48 TIME OUT GUILFORD 28 36-25 Nelson, driving underhand lay up 17 36-27 Carr, lay up 02 38-27 lohnson, follow lohnson, pushing PIT5 lackson, 20-footer Nelson, f by Hankins P1 (o) Carr, driving lane lay up Free, lay up 47 Nelson, pushing PI Tb 36 38-34 Free, f by lohnson P2 (ox) 19 40-.i4 Nelson, f by Free P2 (XX) (1-1) 46 40-36 Hankins, lay up 32 40-i8 Hankins, f by Pate P! (XX) (1-1) 04 42-i8 Collins, lay up (fulkourt pass) 17 42-40 East, f by Cordon PI (XX) (1-1) 54 44-4 l Nelson, lay up 25 46-40 Skinner, f by East P) (XX) (l-l) 46-42 Carr, f by Casey PI (XX) (1-1) 44 4f)-44 Carr, tip 34 48-44 lohnson, soft lay up front 09 4«-46 Hankins, lay up 39 4«-4« Massengill, lay up 02 4«-50 Free. 25-footer i8-29 38- !1 38- H HALFTIME: GUILFORD 50, MARYLAND 48 TIME: M-G Maryland pfay by play 48-50 Guilford play by play TIP TO MARYLAND 19:08 48-52 Free, lay up 18:39 48-54 Free, baseline drive 18:32 Skinner, on his back P2T1 18:15 Carr, charging P3T1 17:56 50-54 Skinner, short bank follow 17:26 50-56 Free, baseline jumper 17:26 50-57 Free, f by Cannon, P1T2 (x) 17:12 TIME OUT MARYLAND 16:53 50-59 lackson, lay up 16:31 52-59 Collins, lay up 16:09 54-59 Gordon, 12-foot jump front 15:41 54-61 East, follow 15:34 Skinner, offensive foul P3T2 15:07 55-61 Collins, f by Free P3T2 (xo) 14:55 55-63 East, f by lohnson P3T4 (xx) 14:28 55-56 Free, twisting lay up 14:00 55-67 Carr, lay up 13:51 57-67 Pace, follow lay up 13:25 59-67 lohnson, short baseline jump 12:57 59-69 Free, lay up 12:50 61-69 lohnson, ft line 12:37 61-71 Massengill, 10-foot baseline 12:03 TIME OUT MARYLAND 11:41 62-71 Skinner, f by Carr P4T3(xo) 11:32 62-72 Hankins, f by Pace P4T5 (ox) 11:08 64-72 Skinner, lay up front 1 1 :00 lohnson, holding P4T6 10:52 64-74 Free, f by Nelson F2 (xx) (1-1 ) 10:44 66-74 Skinner, 20-footer 10:06 66-76 lackson, lay up 9:57 68-76 Nelson, f by Massengill P2T4 (XX) 9:04 70-76 Collins, Lane 8:56 72-76 Collins, stolenball 8:51 TIME OUT GUILFORD 8:25 72-78 Free, lay up 8:25 72-79 Free, f by Skinner P4 (x) 8:14 74-79 lohnson, tip 7:48 74-81 Free, corner 7:40 76-81 Casey, baseline jumper Casey, f by Free P4T5 (o) Carr, baseline drive Free, lay up Skinner, f by Hankins P2T6 Offensive Goaltending On Pace Carr, drive Carr, f by Pace P5 (x) 5:51 78-88 lohnson, follow 5:39 78-90 lackson, f by lohnson (xx) ( 1-1 ) 5:33 80-90 Gordon, 15-footer 4:59 82-90 Nelson, follow 90 Nelson, follow TIME OUT GUILFORD East, f by Collins P2 (xo) (l-I) East, f by Casey, P2 (xo) (l-I) 92 Skinner, stolen ball lay up TIME OUT MARYLAND Free, f by Gordon P2 (xx) (1-1) ■94 Collins, baseline fallaway Free, f by Nelson PS (o) -% lackson, lay up :52 90-% Collins, land jumper :50 90-97 Nelson, f by Skinner P5 (xo) ( 1-1) :50 92-97 Collins, short front :21 94-97 Graham, follow :15 TIME OUT GUILFORD :06 94-99 East, f by Nelson P4 (xx) :01 %-99 Nelson, lay up FINAL SC ORE: GUILFORD ' N, MARYLAND % 7:40 7:00 76-83 6:36 76-85 6:21 6:17 6:07 76-87 6:07 76-88 4:32 4:29 B4- 4:05 84- 3:57 84- 3:03 86- 2:41 2:28 86- 2:18 88- 2:06 1:01 88- ' ■' ' Kf 9IS9!SU9rtPi  mm GUILFORD (yy) Field Goals Free ■Th rows Reb, Asst. Per. Total Made And Made And Foul Points CARR, M. L. 30 10 22 3 3 16 4 23 EAST, TEDDY 15 4 7 10 12 10 4 3 18 MASSENCILL, RAY 40 4 11 6 2 8 FREE, LLOYD 20 10 21 10 13 10 4 4 30 lACKSON, GREG 33 5 11 3 4 4 4 13 HANKINS, STEVE 55 2 6 3 4 4 7 RALLS, lOHN 10 D N P FULTON, ROBERT 13 D N P SPEAS, GREG 24 D N P KENT, ROBERT 34 D N P TOTALS 35 78 29 36 50 14 15 99 MARYLAND EASTERN Field Goals Free Thi rows Reb, Asst. Per, Total SHORE (%) Made And Made And Fouls Points SKINNER, TALVIN 41 6 10 3 4 13 3 5 15 lOHNSON, TYRONE 35 10 21 9 2 5 20 PACE, lOE 44 5 6 9 5 10 OLLINS, RUBIN 24 11 24 1 2 2 1 ! (.ORDON, WILLIAM 23 4 12 4 2 8 ( ANNON, GRANVILLE 31 1 NELSON, TOMMY 33 6 15 4 5 3 4 16 CASEY, MICHAEL 32 1 3 1 4 1 STANTON, LESLIE 34 1 GRAHAM, ARNOLD 25 I 2 1 2 TOTALS 44 93 8 12 46 7 26 96 1973 Cu Iford Qi akers National Championship 29-5 10 lohn Ralls 0.8 13 Robert Fulton 2.9 15 Teddy East 11.7 20 Lloyd Free 20.6 24 Greg Speas 1.3 30 ML. Carr 18.6 33 Greg lackson 14.6 34 Robert Kent 1.2 40 Ray Massengill 8.3 55 Steve Hankins 9.2 Manager-Niel Welbo rn • ?- 36TH ANNUAL NAIA BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT At Kansas City, Missouri March 12-17, 1973 THE ALL TOURNAMENT TEAM FIRST TEAM PLAYER SCHOOL HT BRUCE SEALS Xavier U. 6- 8 RUBIN COLLINS Maryland Eastern Shore 6 ' y LLOYD FREE Guilford 6 ' 1 M. L. CARR Guilford 6 ' 6 TALVIN SKINNER Maryland Eastern Shore SECOND TEAM 6 ' 5 WARDELLIEFFRIES Oklahoma Baptist 6 ' 4 JOHN LAINC Augustana 7 ' 0 MARK BALBACH Slippery Rock State 6 ' 3 BRUCE HAMMING Augustana 6 ' 11 DENNIS lOHNSON Ferris State 6 ' 6 OUTSTANDING PLAYER OF THE TOURNAMENT LLOYD FREE Guilford Eastern: The Official Airlines of the National Champs GREENSBORO (NC) Eastern Airlines flight 203 hit the far runway at Green- sboro ' s Triad Airport and, suddenly, with the skip of the tires and a puff of smoke, the Quakers had come home. Really home. At first, the view from the plane showed no one. It looked as if there would be disappointment in the num- ber of fans available to wel- come home the 1973 Na- tional Champs whose title was not yet 24 hours old. But then, as the bird tooled its way into the proper space, a sign was visible on the side of an Eastern service truck. Guilford World Champions. Then all became apparent. Due to the security checks and the danger, no one was allowed past the lobby. Faces jammed the front glass and prayers were answered. Only an official welcoming party of Quaker Club execu- tives were allowed at the base of the plane. After a quick message by Dr. Grimsley Hobbs, the president, in a private board- ing room, the Quakers walked the long hall to re- ceive the full house of lovers, back slapping, handshakes and tears. Jack lensen had the ban- ner. Buzz Dunning, who had been the escort for the huge Naismith trophy from the time it was presented on the floor in Kansas City. Buzz turned to Jack and said, Don ' t you want to carry this? Jensen, whose arms were wrapped around the banner, rejected it saying, No you ' ve carried it back . . . now carry it home. The yell of the day, We ' re Number One brought goose pimples to the arms of the players. It was so loud. So true. The players, the coaches and the fans in K.C. came off the plane bushed. They had been flying most of the day and little rest was found for them in K.C. as parties per- sisted into the night mostly just to be sure it was indeed true. Many simply didn ' t sleep. As one fan put it, was afraid that if I went to sleep, I would wake up and find it was only a dream. A dream it was. An impos- sible dream. But better yet, as Quaker flight 203 was to con- firm, it was the best kind of dream. The kind that came true. The Grand Finale: .... But No The Friars Couldn ' t Make It One Cared. JEFFERSON STANDARD COUNTRY CLUB We Went To Kansas City, We Didn ' t Go For Fun. And Ended Up With Plenty, Cause We Came Back Number One The slogan was set by Buzz Dunning and it appeared on the front of the program pro- duced for the banquet, April 13th, a Friday(be!ieve it or not) here in Greensboro at 7:00 p.m. Hundreds were expected and hundreds came. lean Huey, owner and manager of Gilliams Florist, donated place settings and flowers that turned great into magnificence. The 1973 Quaker Club President, Marion Lefty Ralls presided while colorful Charlie Hendricks was the MC of the event. Excitement was running rampant. Anyone who was anyone in Greensboro or Guilford College was in the throng that expanded from one large dining room and over- flowed into yet another sup- plied by the public address system. Captains Teddy East and M.L. Carr presented the Naismith trophy to Dr. Grimsley Hobbs for college exhibit. Buzz Dunning distributed the certificates of letter. A let- ter that looked just like the previous years but one that would mean so much more. Various awards were presented. Players were to receive beautiful plaques list- ing the district and N.A.I. A. playoff scores, jackets listing the N.A.I.A. championship and finally, the supreme gift, a watch, being specially pre- pared by the awards division of Bulova Accutron. A gold watch, with NAIA printed in blue at the top, Guilford Col- lege in the middle in red and, also in red, the big words at the base: National Basket- ball Champions . .1973 Each player ' s name was engraved on the back. The coaches also received the boons of the night. Both got furniture compliments of Broome Fulton and Jordan Washburn and then the grand finale. Lefty Ralls, his voice broken and stammered through obvious excitement. presenting a check of $500 to Buzz Dunning and his wife Barbara and then a $1,000 check to jack and Marsha Jensen. So the night was complete. And as many charged off to watch one of three local tele- vision station ' s recap of the night, others lingered, to shake a hand, to slap one more deserving player and to say their thank yous. In a way, however, it was terribly empty. The night just didn ' t seem complete. But only because, as one fan put it in passing, Damn, it was great. But I ' d have passed up the whole night just to see them play one more time together. Some dreams just won ' t come true. It ' s a part of his- tory. To be relived only in the minds, hearts and souls of those who were there, that night and the many nights before of Guilford College basketball. Seed March 12 Monday Tue 13 sday 1 Sam Houston St. (TX) 7 00 p m Tuesday Wartburg (lA) 1973 NAIA BASKETBALL TOURI Marcti 14 Wednesday Marist(NY) 5 15 pm Tuesday Xavier (LA) Game 1 ; Ferris St. (MICH) 10 45 p m , Monday Pembroke St. (NC) Eastern Montana 1 GO p m Tuesday 8 Maryland-Eastern Sh. Game 1 1 5 Marymount (KS) 9 00 p m Monday Slippery Rock St. (PA) Quinnipiac (CT) 9 30 a m Tuesday Ouachita Baptist (AR) Game 9 Hastings (NB) 11 15am, Tuesday South Carolina St. Dallas Baptist (TX) 2 45 p m Tuesday 4 Wis-Green Bay 3 Kentucky St. 5 1 5 p mi Monday Valdosta St. (GA) Keene St.(NH) 2 45 D m Mono ay GUILFORD Westmont (CA) 11 15am Monday South Dakota Tech Missouri Southern 3 45 p mi Tuesday 6 Fairmont St. (WVA) 7 Alcorn A M (MS) 1 00 p.m Monday Oklahoma Baptist Grand Canyon (AZ) 10 30 p m , Tuesday Winona St. (MN) Defiance (OH) 9 30 a m Monday George Fox (OR) Hanover (IN) 7 00 p m Monday 2 Augustana (IL) Game 10 Game 12 Game 5 Game 2 Game 16 Game i 56 107 114 73 Sam Houston St. (TXy 60 7 00pm Game 22 Xavier (LA) 67 Ferris St. (MICH) 90 1 00 p m Game 19 Maryland-Eastern Sh. 95 Slippery Rock St. (PA)104 9 30 a m Game 17 Quinnipiac (CT) 75 South Carolina St. 55 2 45pm Game 20 WIs-Green Bay 72 Valdosta St. (GA) 81 11 15 a m Game 18 - GUILFORD Westmont (CA) 86 8 45 p m Game 23 - Missouri Southern 70 Oklahoma Baptist 82 10 30 p m Game 24 Winona St. (MN) 72 Defiance (OH) 61 5 15 pm Game 21 |— Augustana (IL) 64 MENT SEEDING AND PAIRINGS March 15 Thursday ier(LA) 80 00 p m Game 26 land-Eastern Sh. 87 March 16 Friday ery Rock St. (PA) 60 15 pm Game 25 Green Bay 58 Maryland-Eastern Sh.1 13 7 00pm Game 29 Slippery Rock St. (PA)82 March 17 Saturday Maryland-Eastern Sh. Game 32 Championship 8 45 p m LFORD 70 15 p m Game 27 tmont(CA) 67 GUILFORD 99-96 CHAMPION loma Baptist 46 10 pm Game 28 istana(IL) 53 GUILFORD 9 00pm Game 30 Augustana (IL) GUILFORD 3rd Place 7 00 p m Slippery Rock St. (PA) Game 31 Augustana (IL) AUGUSTANA 96-93 3rd Place .row ' (S -v ! SI ■IkL ' ) i 1 N r TP . ;• ' fl ;fj R,-: ' . ' 1 Ww ej 1 ■K • 1 jRl f: s B J Mi a d m n I s t r a t I o n I. . Ill II I III rrx godard Kutive dean david parsons business manager karen reehljng assistant director of alumni affairs henry semmler director of alumni affairs bruce Stewart director of nchardson fellows program Charlie hendricks associate director of admissions ann whitley admissions counselor don woodside director of financial aid andy gottschall dean of students vickl curby associate dean of students george roycroft director of information services and publications dave Owens news bureau Jesse and l nn lorum residence coordinators ron cruitkshank residence coordinator jim newlin assistant business manager Cyril harvey academic dean gail wikl diKi LlfbhK- wnght residence coordinators A, linda swofford news bureau dave morrah development coordinate ray moody residence coordinator dick woodward director of counseling and placement dill U.wt-ry director of student activities ■' ■■• ' ititu ft;a: ■•i '  ii ! lU :7 eTi ' kI ' Il,! ! 260 ■IP m seniors becky new -i . jim and jan pickering Carolyn Simmons henry hackett paul meech m f . alien berger bob lingerfelt gordon thomas somchart khantaveth joftre lewis judy harvey f « ' : l r5= I Wf dick paschal llnda epsti ' in glenn thore patty wall i__ m gray pruin randv moorr uurlh vvilson riiikL. kdeh dun vlII. If ii chris Culpepper craig fulton lynn mcdaniel nie gelman Steve wubbenhorst John worthington jim brldger robert rutley .indy smith ed Simpson cathy schlosser gilbert ochieng mbeo ariha hall debbie collins brenda Ireland cralg colben bobby owens chuck gillis quincy edgerton Stanley chuck shakar djn u,ul)rn lioh unson stevt ' vagas j«Tr (rcKkc wanda mayo jeannie campbell hdh lowHcrmilk ed hickey John white lim trawtord nancy poole a small bill edelblut william milli like twichell don scan (laro and miku slillwell rf y. Connie teras |im harper george nelson k.irrn m.irsh.i came taylo laura naimark jolene howell like and laura walsh who ' s who among students in american universities and colleges helen murphy alien William stuart buckley jr. michael leon carr willa minette coleman ronald m. d. cruickshank kelly dempster Jeffrey coleman dickens Joseph aubrey faircloth jr. William m. b. fleming jr. edward englehardt giberson jo ellen cox grubbs James wesley hilliard Samuel arthur lantor robert albert lowdermilk iii mark albert o ' connell charles doughtie sewell Charles alvin smith glenn william thore jr. kV- t ? . , . . •• ■in VL _ V  iv . . • o r n I z a t I o n s basib r L ikMii educators club ' wra c ' v ,f « j jt: J t J g. andrew p. ball I. bassett s. bower s. braun t. bray r. broadbent c. brooke k. brown a. bryant ). burns c. buxton k. chandler d. chilton d. conklin K Crockett d. davis t. delaney b. diboise k. dukes j. englrsh b. foley k. hood r- Hudson h. humber c, hunsucker BV ;V . i HHMM ■MMMH ■HHHHHHMMHmhhmh V ■■■■■■■■■? B J ii ' 4. HB- ' ' ■ ♦ ...i fK ' M 1 5ii. l 1 1 1 ;, V jJl Bil ! zv XC i h ' ' ' ' K ' Y Ih 1 ■■■■HI HHHh 1 1 V : ■- ■Hi ' f:. ni matleson p mayor b. mulendon m- mclendon g. novak f ' k b. wetzel m. Wilson I. Winchester m. Wolff j. wood b. wnght 1 i)W ' ' • ' r-v ■- sVjfs- ' - ■■-■' . ' ■:« ' so es e. Johnson X H j. Johnson j. king j. allnut s. al-sabah c, anderson m. baranskt m. barone b bashor k, borreson b. bussey c. butler T ( B ■r ' 1 H Hiy l t ' - BH SSjn jL ' K iJ H KSCI Hi - ;-«f ' Lw: ' J rr ' v ' J ■r ?;r:tfe .?4  . ' -. ' - ' r -. •. : 4 •- . :. ,;  -«.S :J yi2iM. .■f i i!Ult.,r- :iaasiait - baseball Catawba atlantic-chrislian salem guilford guilford Rullford guilford guilford pfeiffer t ' lon guilford i-lon ' atawba guilford high point pleiffer cillantic-thristian davidson guilford high poinl guilford guilford guilford salem Johns hopkins Johns hopkins franklin and marshall winston-salem stafe guilford guilford winston-salem stale guilford guilford davidson guilford guilford guilford guilford old dominion guilford track after losing lo madison, high point, catawba and elon, guilford ' s track team finally gained a victory from at- lantic-christian college. The 1973 season saw one con- ference record set by tony swainey in the javelin throw and a school record set by gary chanfry in the triple jump. ---;;V ; ., u.n.c.-g. guiUord elon high point guilford guilford guiltord guilford guilford elon Campbell atlantic christian high point most valuable player-aubrey torlint ' s guilford catawba guiltord guilford greensboro pfeiffer greensboro catawba pfeiffer guilford guiltord guilford guiltord 1 k nrvf-rof.   xir duke raleigh guilford v.p.i. e. Carolina guilford 6 12 9 9 12 b guilford guilford appalachian guilford guilford n.c. slate outstanding player cone award— dick -dan waet)en singleton •iVv r t. l directory ABBOTT, lay D. Ill W. Market St. Georgetown, De. 19947 ADAMS, Bradford Ross 2117 Valley Rd. Wilmington, De. 19810 ACNIEL, Elizabeth P.O. Box 8791 Greensboro. N. C. 27410 ALBRIGHT, Frederick S. P.O. Box 108 Buckingham, Va. 2.W21 ALLEN, Karen Denise Rt. 1 Asheboro, N. C. 27203 ALLNUTT, )ohn Choate 227 Great Falls Rd. Rockville, Md. 20805 ALLSOPP, Charles S. 3 Westwick Rd. Richmond, Va. 23222 AL-SABAH, Salem A. 2940 Tilden St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20008 AMAKER, Lawrence P. 729 Fairview Si. High Point, N. C. 27260 AMOS, Karen Crowder 801 West Ave. Eden, N. C. 27288 ANDERSON, Catherine E. 15 Chestnut Dr. Woodstown, N.|. 0809H ANDERSON, Craig K. 875 Parkview St. Asheboro, N. C. 2720 S ANDERSON, lanet E. 4116 Beverly Rd. Rockville, Md. 2085 1 ANDERSON, Wilbert R. 211 Hermitage Rd. Greensboro, N.C. 27401 ANDREW, Cayla Dawn Route 1, Box 157 Snow Camp, N.C. 27349 ANLYAN, William G. 55-G Tomahawk Dr. Greensboro, N. C. 27410 ARMSTRONG, Daniel G. 3245 Rio Dr. Apt 915 Falls Church, Va. 22041 ARTLEY, Christine 2417 Wrightwood Ave. Durham, N. C. 27705 AVERY, W. Moulton 820 Country Club Greensboro N. C. 27408 AZCUY, Ana Maria 4100 Foxford Rd. Charlotte, N. C. 28205 BACHELLI, Waldo A. |r. 901 Lockland Ave. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 BALL, Phillip Wayne 1280 Opportunity Winston-Salem, N.C. 27105 BARANSKI, Michael 178 Pershing Ave. Carteret, N. |. 07008 BARKSDALE, Mary B, 309 Sunset Dr. Greensboro, N.C. 27408 BARNES, Cecil T. Rt. 4, Westlake Vly Sanlord, N.C. 27334 BARNES, Paula L. Route 2, Box 198 Conway, N.C. 27820 BARONE, Mai ann R. 9 Moriah Lane Suflern, N. Y. 10901 BARR, Leslie Anne 506 Lloyds Lane Alexandria, Va. 22302 BARTEAUX, Leslie S. 10226 Vale Rd. Vienna, Va, 22180 BASKETT, Cynthia K. 5233 Fairfield, Va. Beach Va. Beach, Va. 2S462 BASHOR, Robert Daniel Box 114 Rd. 2 Cheswick, Pa. 15024 BASSETT, Linda Bea 581 1 Cannon Lane Alexandria, Va. 22)0! BAUGUSS, Christa Ann Frazier Apt. 27 Greensborcj, N. C. 27410 7002 Highview Terr W. Hyattsville, Md. 20782 BAYNHAM, Meredith A. 222 Forest Dr. Falls Church, Va, 22046 BEALS, STEPHEN A. Greensboro, N. C. 27410 BECK, leffrey Steven 700 Overbrook Dr. High Point, N, C. 27262 BEEDE, lohn Maxwell 718 College Ave. Richmond, In. 47374 BEERMAN, Stephen S. 608 Myers Lane Greensboro, N. C. 27408 BELL, Pamela Elaine Box 267 Hamplonville, N. C 27020 BENDALL, Charles S, 803 Russell Ave, Reidsville, N, C, 27320 BENBOW, Mary E, Box 206 East Bend, N, C 27018 BERGER, Allen, Richard 31 Wensley Rd, Plainview, NY, 11803 BERNARD, Lucian I, 32 Newbrook Rd, Newark, De, 19711 BERNSTEIN, Szphen T, Rt. 2 lustamere Frm, Greensboro, N. C, 27405 BHATTI, Mohammad Z 2424 Queen St, Winston-Salem, N, C, 27 UH Blanton, Lucian R, 1108 E, 18th SI Lumberton, N. C. 28358 BLANEY, Martha 3400 Dogwood Dr. Greensboro, N, C. 2740) BOARDMAN, Peler Calef 10 River iew PI, Hastings On Hud, NY 10705 BOLGER, Laura leanne 6)1 Rosemarv Ln, Media, Pa, I ' KXii BOOZER, Margaret Ann 9 Kaywood Ln, Cherry Hill, N, |, 080)4 BORRESON, Karen Alice 11200 Lockwood Dr. Silver Spring, Md. 20901 BOUTWELL, Stephen P, 2807 Friendship Cr, Durham, N. C, 27705 BOWERMAN, K. on M, 500 6th Ave, S,W, Calbary, Albert A BOWER, Sarah D, 15 Willard St, Cambndge, Ma, 02138 BOYD, Deborah Ann 205 Robin Rd, Mt, Airy, N, C, 27030 BOYD, Robin L, 13316 Compton Rd. Clifton, Va. 22024 BOYLES, Grace E, 4009 W, Friendly Ave, Greensboro, N, C 27410 BOYLES, lanel Sue Rt. 3, Box 91 King, N. C. 27021 BRADFORD, Carl Edward Rt- 6 Box 254 Salisbury-, Md. 21801 BRAUN, Steven Robert 8203 Scotts Level Baltimore, Md. 21208 BRAY, Teresa Naomi 4940 Leinbach Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 BRENNER, Kyd Douglas 3427 Executive Ave. Falls Church, Va, 22042 BRIDGER, lames Earle Rt, 1. Box 622 Clinton, Md. 20735 BRIGMAN, William Alan 1074 Spotswood Ave. Norfolk. Va. 23507 BRINGLE. Mary Louise 513 W. Cornwallis C ' boro, N. C, 27406 BRISTON, Valentine S, 1013 Oak Hill Ave. Hagerstown, Md. 21740 BROADBENT, Richard 407 Lincoln Ave. Takoma Park, Md 21X112 BRODERICK, Lorraine I 212 Pineburr Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 BROOKE, Mildred R. 3422 Manor Rd. Chevy Chase, Md 20015 BROWN, Clinton B, P. !903 Livingston St. Washington, D.C. 20015 BROWN, David A. P. 3903 Livingston St. Washington, D. C. 20015 BROWN, Elena Maura 6223 N. 22nd St. Arlington, Va. 22205 BROWN, Elizabeth Kaye George, N. C. 27H33 BROWN, Glenn Kendall Box 13 Hays, N. C. 28635 BROWN, Louise Hyde 177 Ross Dr. Birmingham, Ala. 35213 BROWN, Sarah Frances 2329 No. Spruce St. Little Rock, Ar. 72207 BROWN, William David Box 416 Rt. 4 Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 BROWNLOW, loseph S. 2751 Palm Aire Dr. Pompano Beach, Fla. 33060 BRUNDRED, Laura E. 10805 Fox Hunt Ln. Potomac, Md. 20854 BRYANT, Ann Hunter 1009 Pebblebrook Raleigh, N. C. 27609 BRYANT, lohn Walter 315 Cherry St. Scotland Neck, N. C. 27874 BRYANT, Paul Edward 1021 Bennington Massillon, Oh 27262 BRYDEN, Robert L. 807 Lexington Ave. High Point, N. C. 27262 BUCKLAND, Kathy Gail 4710 Showalter Rd. Roanoke, Va. 24017 BUCKLEY, Mark H. 10006 Ewards Ave. Bethesda, Md. 20014 BUCKLEY, William S. 4130 Dogwood Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 BULLUCK, lohn Werner 3102 E. 1st St. Duluth, Mn. 55812 BUNKER, Kenneth Dale P. O. Box 386 Ronda, N. C. 28670 BURNS, Eloise Diane 2100 So. Fletcher Fernandina Bch., Fa. 52034 BURNS, letfrey Edward 5005 Allan Rd. Washington, D. C. 20016 BURROWS, loseph M. Rt. 2, Box 324 Chesterfield, Va. 23882 BUSSEY, Robert Owen Amer Embassy CG-5 APO SN Francisco %243 BUTLER, Cheryl A. Moq 133 Quantcco, Va. 22134 BUTLER, Michael P. 911 Meode Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 BUXTON, Lucinda D. 221 Monlebello Cir. Charlottesville, Va. 2290! BYERS, Donna Scarboro 129 Gloria Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27107 BYRNES, lohn loseph 456 N. Niagara Ave. Lindenhurst, N. Y. 11757 CAMERON, Donald lay 195 Knollwood Dr. Wilmington, N.C 28401 CAMPBELL, Bruce David 68 Forest Ave. Glen Ridge, N. |. 07028 CAMPBELL, Cynthia S. 6005 Copely Ln. McLean, Va. 22101 CAMPBELL, Helen |. Rt. 2 Box 174 E. Clarksville, Va. 23927 CAMPBELL, Mary lean Rt. 2 Box 174 E. Clarksville, Va. 23927 CAMPBELL, Paul Byron 2102 F. West Cone C ' boro, N. C. 27408 CANNADY, Andrew Fagan 2401 A. Merritt Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27401 CANIN, lonathan 1402 Avenue K. Brooklyn, N. Y. 11230 CARLSON, Robert E. 200 Grenbriar Apt. E. G ' boro, N. C. 27405 CARR, lohn Henry |r. Rt. 5 Mt. Olive, N. C. 28365 CARR, Michael Leon Rt. 1, Box 39 Wallace, N. C.28466 CARRATELLO, Michael E. 2615 Azalea Dr. Greensboro, N. C 27407 CARRIER, lames Arthur 112 West Green Ct. G ' boro, N. C. 27407 CARROLL, Robert D. 5439 Taussig Rd. Bladensburg, Md. 20710 CARTER, Giles, M. Box 293 Halifax, Va. 24558 CASEY, lohn A. Crestview Dr. Spnngfield, Pa. 19064 CASSEL, Sue Ellen 47 Amsden Rd. Ormond, Beach, Fla. 32074 CATOE, loseph Randy 36 Frazier Apts. G ' boro, I. C. 27410 CAUSEY, Steven G. Rt. 1 Liberty, N. C. 27298 CELI, Linda Marsan Wake Erst. U. Trir 8 Winston-Salem, N. C. 27298 CHANDLER, Kenneth W. 516 West 5th St. Chester, Pa. 19013 CHANTRY, Gary L. 4112 Santa Mariadr. Chesapeake, Va. 23321 CHATMAN, Douglas R. 1118 Gunka Rd. lacksonville, Fla. 32216 CHEEK, Elizabeth R. 1025 Sycamore St. Durham, N. C. 27707 CHENEY, lane Knox 301 Tyron St. Greensboro, N. C. 27403 CHESTER, Dana Beth 1035 Holmes St. Salisbury, N. C. 28144 CHESHIRE, Sprague S. 2522 Wake Dr. Raleigh, N. C. 27608 CHEW, Sara lane 383 Riverside Dr. Ormond Beach, Fla. 32074 CHILTON, Danny Ray Rt. 3 Box 127A Mt. Airy, N. C. 27030 CHILTON, Delmer L. Rt. 3 Box 127A Mt. Airy, N. C. 27030 CLARK, Andrew Willard Route 4, Box in Winchester, Va. 22fiOI CLARKE, Anthony S. 2530 Overbrook Dr. Greensboro, N. C. 27408 CLARK, Connie C. 702 Kintyre Dr. Monroe, N. C. 28110 CLARK, Gerald Dean 10013 Lomond Dr. Manassas, Va. 22110 CLARK, Mary Kathryn Box 455 Gary, WV 24836 CLARK, Robert Edward 5101 Inglewood Rd. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 CLARK, Word C. |r. 3608 St. Marks Rd. Durham, N. C. 27707 CLIFFORD, Mitchell 169 Harmon Ave. Pelham, N. Y. 10803 CLINE, Andrew Haley P. O. Box 180 Fairhope, Ala. 36532 CLOEN, Melissa Ann 566 Rhine Ave. Tampa, Fla. 33606 COATES, Lydia Apt. 121 Hunt Clb Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 COBB, lames letfrey 207 Buttercup Dr. lamestown, N. C. 27282 COBB, Kathryn LaVerne P. O. Box 175 Tarboro, N. C. 27886 COBERT, Craig Hawthorne House Boston, Va. 22714 COCHRAN, lames Howard P. O. Box 523 Reidsvllle, N. C. 27320 COFFIELD, loseph B, P. O. Box 495 High Point, N. C. 27261 COLEMAN, Marvin I. 847 Colony Dr. Charleston, S. C. 29407 COLEMAN, W. Minnette 2683 Collier Dr Atlanta, Ca. 303t8 COLINDRES, Milton |. t545 Farrell Dr. Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 COLLIER, Dan Hamilton 633 Scott Ave. Greensboro, N. C. 2740! COLLINS, Deborah E. Rl. 2, Box 271 Hamptonville, N. C. 27020 COLLINS, Timothy W. Rt. 3, Box 114 Blacksburg, Va. 24a 0 COMPTON, Thomas A. 103 Kimberly Ter. C ' boro, N. C. 27408 CONANT, Holly Luise 58 Shore Dr. Short Bch., Ct. 06405 CONKLIN, Diane P. 46 Fairchild PI. Whippany, N. |. 07981 CONKLIN, Muhael I 268 Burr Rd. Commatk, N. Y. 11725 COOKE, David Allen Rl. 2, Box 52« Rural Hall, N. C. 27(M5 COOKE, Raymond D Rt. 2, Box 152 Brown Summit, N. C. 27214 COOPER, Thomas D. Ill 3018 S. Fairway Dr. Budington, N. C. 27215 (ORNWELL, Carolyn W. 1112 Piper St. Wilmington, De. 19803 COX, ludy K. 301 Armfield Ave. Asheboro, N. C. 27203 COX, Keith Hunter Frazier Apt 9 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 CRAWFORD, Christoph A. 2209 Lombard St. Philadelphia, Pa. 19146 CRAWFORD, lohn K 6418 Perthshire Ct. Bethesda, Md. 20034 CRAWFORD, Timothy M. Cermanlown, N. Y. 12526 CRESCENZO, loseph P. 6707 McCahill Dr. Laurel, Md. 20810 CROCKETT, Gary L. Quantico Rd. Salisbury, Md. 21801 CROCKER, lerry 15 Silverpine Amitysville, N. Y. 11701 CROSS, Robert S. 805 Memphis St. Greensboro, N. C. 27406 CROWLE, Bruce Allan 19 Frazier Apis. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 CROYLE, Lydia 3200 7th St. Lower Burrell, Pa. 18068 CULPEPPER, Christophe 2563 Tabor Ct. Morrow, Ca. 30260 CUMMINCS, loe lason 5500 Gardner PI Springfield, Va. 22151 CUMMINCS, Susan E. 1211 N. Hamilton SI. High Point, N. C. 27262 CUNNINGHAM, lames C. Rt. 1 Sherwood Dr. Sewanee, Tn. 37375 ruPIT, William Donald 4IX)5 Weyanoke Dr. Porslmoulh, Va. 2!70i CURTIS, Edward Allan M«9 Hunters Ln. Durham, N. C 27707 (. URTIS, Mary Lynn 2240 Sevierville Maryville, Tn 37801 DACEY, Lisbeth Hall 108 East 10th SI. Washington, N. C. 27889 DAVES, Lois Ellen Route 1, Box 170 Connelly Spgs, N. C 28612 DAVIDSON, Mary Carol 2200 Spruni Ave. Durham, N. C. 27705 DAVIS, Augustus L. Ill 415 Glen Ave. Moorestown, N. |. 08057 DAVIS, Deborah May 1236 Pinckney Ave. Florence, S. C. 29501 DAVIS, Gary Thomas 8202 Buckeye Dr. Richmond, Va. 23228 DAVIS, Harold Leigh 1108 N. Main Si. High Poinl,ON. C. 27261 DAVIS, lames Thompson 3935 Flowedand Dr. Atlanta, Ga. .i0319 DAVIS, lames Royle |r. 3345 Paddington Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C 27106 DAVIS, Jeanne Louise 1803 Whiteley PI. G ' boro, N. C. 27405 DAVIS, Martha Holly 404 Estes Dr. Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 DAVIS, Mary Shuford 9 Kimberly Dr. Dirham, N. C. 27707 DAVIS, Sally Anne 1259 Cambndge SI. Gaslonia, N. C. 28052 DAVISON, Barry T. 833 W. Bessemer Ave. C ' boro, N. C. 27408 DEATON, William R. 101 Elgin PI. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 DECKER, Carl Barton 308 SI. Davids Ln. Richmond, Va. 23221 DEES, George Ralph Rt i, Box 1003 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 DEHAVEN, Carol Lee 11204 Dewey Rd. Kensington, Md. 20795 DELANEY, Henry Bowler Rt. 11, Box 487 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 DELANEY, lohn T. 4429 S. Alston Ave. Durham, N. C. 27707 DELLINGER, Lydia M. 2640-1 B Grnbr. Apts. Burlington, N. C. 27215 DEMPSTER, Kelly 2017 Nottingham Ln. Burlington, N. C. 27215 DEVRIES, Michael D. 3 Bahama Dr. Wrightsville Bch., N. C 28480 DEZARN, Marilyn |o 128 Butler Si. Pilot Ml., N. C. 27041 DIAZ, Eduardo Ignacio 624 loyner St. Apt. 1 C ' boro, N. C 27403 DIBOISE, Barbara Ann 50 Clover, Lane Highslown, N. I. 08520 DICKERT, Bridget Anne 624 Garden Lane Bristol, Va. 24201 DICKENS, letfrey C. 1727 North Church Scotland Neck, N. C. 27874 DICKINSON, David F. RR 2, Box 209 Sparta, N, C. 28674 DICKINSON, L. Suzanne 1514 Mill Pond Rd. Charlotte, N. C. 28211 DIETRICH, Guy Allen Brk All Apt, D-Il Magnolia, N. |. 08049 DILLARD, Charles R. Route 5, Box 685 Kernersville, N. C. 27284 DILLARD, Edwin R. 613 Kimberly Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 DILLARD, Mary Stamps 613 Kimbedy Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27408 DILLARD, Susan Weir 695 Hartford St. Wrothinglon, Oh. 43085 DIMOFF, Michael G. 3054 Prior CIr. Cuyahoga Falls, Oh. 44221 DITZEL, lohn E. jr. 1060 Ashburton Dr. Dayton, Oh. 45459 DOBIE, Ray A. 3907 N. Central Kansas City, Mo. 64116 DOELLER, Marshall D. P. O. Box 886 Warrenton, Va. 22186 DOCCETT, Aubrey C. 2813 Galsworthy Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 DONALDSON, Marybelh 395 Dalton Ave. Pittsfield, Ma. 01201 DOUB, William M 4931 Stoninglon Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27103 DRINKARD, Sara Ellen 39 Lexington Rd. Richmond, Va. 2!22h DUKES, Karen Sue 324 Latimer Rd. Raleigh, N. C. 27609 DUNNING, Barbara H. 4900 Hilltop Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27407 DUPRE, Georgia Field 317 Onondaga Dr. Forest Heights, Md. 20021 DUVAL, Crystal Rae 8623 Irvmgton Ave. Bethesda, Md. 20034 EASTER, Catha Lee Rt. 5, Box 52 Mt. Airy, N. C. 27030 EAST, Teddy Lee 205 30lh N. E. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27105 EBEL, leanette Lois Box 401 lamestown, N. C. 27282 EDER, lohn Slephan 4104 Mitscher Ct. Kensington, Md. 20795 EDELBLUT, William B. 8718 Burning Tree Bethesda, Md. 20034 EDGERTON, Edward Lane 323 Hillcrest Dr. Wilkesboro, N. C 28697 EDGERTON, Mary Pate P. O. Box 602 Clinton, N. C 28328 ELLINGTON, Margaret H. 709 Longbow Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 ELLISON, lohn Barker 669 Pine Tree Rd. lenkintown. Pa. 19046 ELLMAN, lames David 5619 Fair Oaks St. Pittsburgh, Pa. 15217 ELMORE, Richard A. 2912 Keeler St. Greensboro, N. C. 27407 ENGLISH, lohn Richard 511 Lyons Rd. Liberty Corner, N. |. 07938 EPSTEIN, Linda Ellen 6634-24th Ave. W Hyatlsville, Md. 20782 EUSEBIO, Thomas C. RED Box 4104 Upper Marlboro, Md. 20871 EVANS, Charles M. 1102 Ashford Ln Westtown, Pa. 19!95 FAIRCHILD, Elizabeth 505 Ashe St. High Point, N. C. 27260 FAISON, George Toel 11904 Seven Locks Potomac, Md. 20854 FANKHAUSER, Anne Ft. 1 , Box 168 Durham, N. C. 27705 FANSLER, lames M. 35IOB Parkwood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 FARLEY, Pamela Wilson 1544 Tudor Ln. Bon Air, Va. 23235 FAV, Donald Byrne 402 Stewart St. Greenville, S. C 2%05 FAY, Eleanor 5608 Friendly Ave. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 FENIMORE, Cynthia M. R D 4 Waynesboro, Pa. 17268 FENSKE, Carl Emil 2319 Walnut Ln. Wilmington, De. 19810 FERGUSON, Harry 7 Frazier Apts. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 FERGUSON, John A. 1212 Arnette Ave. Durham, N. C. 27707 FILMANSKI, Kenneth P. 597 N. Kings Ave. Lindenhurst, N. Y. 11757 FISHMAN, Frederick G. 204 East Kemp Rd. Greensboro, N. C. 27410 FLEETWOOD, William M. 833 W. Bessemer Greensboro, N. C. 27408 FLEMING, William M. |r. 435 Vernon Rd. jenkinton. Pa. 19046 FLETCHER, Samuel P. Port Republic, Va. 24471 FLOYD, Margaret E. 103 W. Greenway N. Greensboro, N. C. 27403 FLYNT, lames Edwin 1302 Clover Lane Greensboro, N. C. 27410 FLYNT, William F. 3579 Kernersville Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27107 FOISTER, Robert T. 808 W. Ray Ave. High Point, N, C. 27262 FOLEY, lohn Weldon 825 Ray Place Va. Bch, Va. 23454 FOOR, leffrey Alan 826 Stenlon PI Ocean City, N. |. 08226 FORLINES, Aubrey Lee 1317 Shepherd St. South Boston, Va. 24592 FORMAN, Robert F. 2214 Rutgers Dr. Broomall, Pa. 19008 FORSYTH, Kate V. 908 Longwocxi Ave. Bedford, Va. 24523 FOX, lohn Harper 1138 Princeton Dr. Wilmington, N. C. 28401 FREGOSI, Robert P. 190- 16A 71 Crescent Flushing, N. C 11365 FREGOSI, Albert H. |r. 2336 Burnt Creek Decatur, Ca. 30033 FREE, Lloyd B. 360 Stone Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. 11212 FREEMAN, Cathy Lynne 5682 Huntley Ave. Garden Grove, Ca. 92645 FRIEDMAN, Hilary Ann 1241 Placetas Ave. Coral Gables, Fla. 33146 FROST, Michael loseph 1229 E. 7th St. Plainfield, N. |. 07062 FREUND, loseph Walter 26 Conellan Rd. Scarsdale, N. Y. 10583 FUDGE, Robert B. Route 3, Box 143 Hillsboro, N. C. 27278 FULLER, William E. 20 Frazier Apts. Greensboro, N. C. 27410 FULTON, Craig Lynn 802 Ferndale High Point, N. C. 27260 FULTON, Robert Daneil Route 2, Box 4 Lewisville, N. C. 27023 GAILACER, Stephe I. 1165 Pinetown Rd. Fort Washington, Pa. 19034 GALLAGHER, Thomas 3 Williams Blvd. lake Grove, N. Y. 11755 CALLOWAY, Wallace D. 118 Neely Rd. Brevard, N. C. 28712 GAMBILL, Allen L. 3310 Stockton St. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27107 GAMBLE, Patricia lean 2206 Hope St. Raleigh, N. C. 271)07 GAMBLE, William A. 1825 Hermilage Dr. Kingsport, Tn 37664 CARBETT, William A. 170 Madison Ave. Haworth, N. |. 07641 GARFIELD, Robert Alan 37 Ferndale Rd. Easlon, Cl. 06612 GARNER, lennifer Lee Farmer Station Asheboro, N. C 27203 GARRETT, Amanda Lee 4318 Custis Rd. Richmond, Va. 23225 CATHRICHT, lohn T. 6531 Monroe Apt 2 Charlotte, N. C. 28212 GATES, Margaret D. Rt. 1 Box 124 Ramseur, N. C 27316 GATTIS, Merrill Lee 1304 Biltimore Dr. Charlotte, N. C. 28207 GEBICKE, Paul F. 7831 Powder Mill AdelphI, Md. 20783 CELMAN, Ronnie %1 Victory Blvd. Staten Island, N. Y, 10)01 GEORGE, lean P. 217 South Park Ave. Mt. Airy, N. C 27030 CEORCIADE. Nancy j. 2523 Wrightwood Ave. Durham, N. C 27702 GERATY, Peter Henzi 21 1 Tipperary Ln. Winston-Salem, N. C, 27104 GIANARI5, Francesca I. 3317 Watauga Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 CILLIS, Charles A. Frazier Apt 21 G ' boro, N. C. 274111 CRLIS, Martha loan S57 Boulevard Pompton Plains, N, |, 1)7444 GILLIS, William I 357 Boulevard Pompton Plains, N I 07444 GILLIS, lennifer B. Frazier Apl 21 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 CILMAN, Carolyn 221 Valleyview Salisbury, N. C. 28144 GILMORE, Emily Dora 203 FHomewood Ave. G ' boro, N. C 27403 GITTER, Ronald Harris 18 E33rd St. Brooklyn, N. Y. 11234 GIVENTER, Susan Holly 1250 Post Rd. Starsdale, N. Y, 10583 GLEITER, Thomas Glen 1112B Willow Bk Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 CLORE, Clare Margaret 601 Larchmont Dr. Wilmington, N. C. 28401 GOAD, William Burkes Rl. 2 Stuart, Va. 24171 GODARD, Gregory Trent 120 Williams St. Williamslon, N. C. 27892 CODDARD, Kathryn Ann 6127 Colchester PI Chadotte, N. C 28210 GODWIN, Harold P. 1813 Lakeshore Dr. Fayetteville, N. C. 28305 GOLDMAN, Elise K. 6015 Meriwether Ln Springfield, Va. 22150 GOLDMAN, Richard lay 1711 Tryon Rd. New Bern, N. C. 28560 GORDON, Kennon A. 1106 Pamlico Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 GORDON, Richard C 4009 Henderson Rd. G ' boro, N. C 27410 GOTSCH, Ellen Louise 4914 Tremont Dr. Raleigh, N. C. 27609 GRAFF, Thomas D. B. lOtl Longwood Ave. Cumberland, Md. 21502 (,RAY, Eloise il4 ( hamberlin Ave, Hampton, Va. 23 363 GRAY, Mav Edwin 7() )i Granite Hall Rii hmond, Va. 2)225 GREEN, David Adiai 6506 Kenhowe Dr. Bethesda, Md. 20034 GREEN, Sophia Cindy 10 Indian Red Rd. Levittown, Pa. 19057 GREEN, Stephanie W. 1202 Cypress Rd. Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 GREENBERG, Ellen T. R R 1 Box 121 Kerhonkson, N. Y. 12446 GREENE, Jonathan M. 44 Brunswick Park Melrose, Ma. 02176 GREGORY, John Russell 123 Roszel Rd. Winchester, Va. 221)01 GROSSMAN, George M. jr. 5 Wallasy Way Riverside Ct. 0()878 GRYDER, David Wayne 28 Frazier Apts G ' boro, N. C. 27410 GRYDER, K. |oy H. Frazier Apt 28 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 GURLEY, A. Eugene Frazier Apt 2 G ' boro, N. C 27410 GLJRLEY, Rebecca Smith Frazier Apt 2 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 HACKETT, Henry P. 407B Dolly Madison G ' boro, N. C. 27410 HADDAD, Edward A, 295 Wayland Ave. Providence, R.I. 02906 HAESELER, lillian S 300 Fordham Rd. Vestal, N. Y. I )850 HAHN, Robert Randall 9810 Inglemere Dr. Bethesda, Md, 2LX134 HAINES, Stanley Kay 7W. Oakland Dr. Elkin, N. C. 28621 HAISLIP, Lisa Douglas 1514 Guest St. G ' boro, N. C. 27405 HALL, Amanda K. P. O. Box 404 Scottsville, Va. 24590 HALL, Eric Livingston 126 Fern Lane Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 HALL, Esther Susan 1439 Valley St. Harnsonburg, Va. 22801 HALL, Jeffrey Winston 2505 Indian HI Rd. Va. Bch., Va. 23455 HALL, Martha Ellen 1546 Reynolds Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 HALL, Sandra Marie 7120 Armat Dr. Bethesda, Md. 20034 HALLBERG, Russell K. P. O. Box 317 Jamestown, N. C 27282 HAL5EY, lohn Selden 117 Matoaka Rd. Richmond, Va. 23226 Hamadeh, Viviane 3108 Lawndale Dr. G ' boro, N. C 27408 HAMMOND, Velina C. Lake Dr. King, N. C. 27021 HANES, Williams M. 339 Lynn Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 HANKINS, lames S. 30 Frazier Apts G ' boro, N. C 27410 HANNAH, William Allen 92 Franklin Ave. Ocean Grove, N. |. 07756 HARDEE, Susan P. 1708 Hobbs Rd. G ' boro, N. C 27410 HARING, David M. 2508 Woodwardia Rd. Atlanta, Ga. 30345 HARMAN, Thomas Knight Rt. 9 Box 253 Mt. Airy, N. C. 27020 HARPER, lames T 6166 Leesburg Pike Falls Church, Va, 22044 HARPER, Nellis S. 3322 Ocolea St. Raleigh, N. C. 27607 HARRINGTON, Edward A. 17 Selborne Dr. Wilmington, De. 19807 HARRIS, lames F. 3525 Turnbridge Dr. Raleigh, N. C. 27609 HARRIS, Sylvia Ann 1421 Verbeke St. Harrisburg, Pa. 17103 HART, Diane Sue 15 Cross Rd. Morris Plains, N. |. 07950 HART, Susan Elaine 3606 Panorama Dr. Huntsville, Ala. 35801 HARTZELl, Margaret |. 44 East Lincoln Gettysburg, Pa. 17325 HARVEY, ludith Ann 3316 Torquay Rd. Muncie, In. 47304 HARVEY, Richard M. Box 339 Ridgeland, S. C. 29936 HARVEY, Sarah Scott 645 Clendale PI Utica, N. Y. 13502 HATCHER, Weaver R. 5000A Brompton Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 HAUER, loel Lynn 3307 Windnft Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 HAWKINS, Mary E. Box 59 Traphill, N. C. 28685 HAWKINS, Stanley H. Rt. 6, Box 439 Salisbury, N. C. 28144 HAWKINS, William 5. Box 235 Colfax, N. C. 27235 HAWORTH, Byron Allen 902 Fairway Dr. High Point, N. C. 27262 HAYES, loan R. Rt. 5 Box 1% C ' boro, N. C. 27405 HAYWORTH, loseph A. |r. 910 Croyden St. High Point, N. C. 27260 HAZELIP, Debra Lynn 400 Tanglewood Dr. lameslown, N. C. 27282 HEDRICK, lane Orene Rt. 1 Tryon, N. C. 28782 HELLARD, Richard W. Rt. 5, Box 764 Kernersville, N. C. 27284 HENDERSON, Gayle E. 3932 Nottaway Rd. Durham, N. C. 27707 HENRY, Pamela Rae 4320 Ogburn Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27105 HERMANN, Karl Alan 8 Calgary Rd. Newark, De. 19711 HESTER, Betty S. 2100 Montrose Ave. Kingsport, Tenn. 37664 HESTER, Mary Benjamin Route 1, Box 38 B Oxford, N. C. 27565 HIBBARD, Linda lean 106 Twiddy Ave. Edenton, N. C. 27932 HICKEY, Edwin Weyman 11111 SW 61 Ct. Miami, Fla. 33156 HICKMAN, R. Harrison 121 E. Cedar Ave. Wake Forest, N. C. 27587 HICKS, Isaac L. Ill Rt. 2, Box 181 Tnnity, N. C. 27370 HIGCINS, David C. 921 Woodbrook Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 HILES, Clyde Robert 1 !17 Long Creek High Point, N. C. 27260 HILL, lohn Arrington 3520 Valley Dr. Alexandria, Va. 22302 HILL, Robert B. 336 West End Blvd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27101 HILLELSON, Caryn B. 17 Ridge Rd. Englewd Cliffs, N.|. 07632 HILLIARD, lill 352 Allen Ave. Salem, N.j. 08079 HILTUNEN, Vesa K. 5406 Foxwood Dr. C ' boro, N. C 27401 HINNANT, Mary Carol 1923 Wyoming Ave. Ft. Pierce, Fla. 33450 HINSON, Nora lane 4872 Fairlawn Rd. Lyndhurst, Oh. 44124 HINN, Patricia Louise 6104 Edgewood Terr. Alexandria, Va. 22307 HIRSH, jason O. Sunrise Park Waynesburg, Pa. 15370 HIRATSUKA, |on S. 406 S. Barton St. Arlington, Va. 22204 HOBGOOD, Eleanor Anne 207 W. Murray Ave. Durham, N. C. 27704 HOGAN, Lee H. 2481 S.W. 82nd Ave, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33314 HOGAN, Marjorie P. 235 Fenton PI. Charlotte, N. C. 28207 HOISINCTON, Elizabeth 10017 Frederick Ave. Kensington, Md. 20795 HOLCOMB, Bennett S. Route 3 Yadkinville, N. C. 27055 HOLE, Sonja Mae Rt. 1, Box 68 Danbury, N, C, 27016 HOLLAR, Duncan Arthur Route 1 jonesville, N. C, 28642 HOLLINGWORTH, Amanda 607 Morgan Crk. Chapel Hill, N. C 27514 HOLMAN, Patricia Anne 520 Nylon Blve. Seaford, De. 19973 HONDA, Sachiko 2312 Walker Ave. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 HONEYCUTT, Thomas W. 709 Muirs Chapel C ' boro, N. C 27410 HOOD, Kathryn Elaine 338 Falcon Ave. Miami Spnngs, Fla. 331Wi HOOKS, Laura Beachum 712 Cannon Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 HOOPES, Ann Christine 516 North Church West Chester, Pa. 19380 HOOVER, Harold I. 1199 6th Ave. Freedom, Pa 15042 HOPKINS, Randolph B. 121 Breckwood Cir, Spnngfield, Ma. 01119 HORNEY, Caro l Rt. 1, Box 195 M Laurinburg, N. C. 28352 HORNBECK, Douglas A. 4539 Nebr. Ave. N.W. Washington, D.C. 20016 HORNOR, ludy Ann 1500 N. Mt. Bella Richmond, Va. 23235 HOUCK, Marcia Lynn 2543 Villanova Ct. Vienna, Va. 22180 HOWELL, Nancy jolene 800 Forest Hill Dr. Goldsboro, N. C. 27530 HOWLAND, Diann 12 Coolidge Dr. Acton, Ma. 01720 HUDDLESTON, Peter C 3121 S. Greenway Dr. Covington, Va. 24426 HUDSON, Rickey Suther 532 5th St. S. W. Hickory, N. C. 28601 HUGHES, Charles Bruce 874 Kenwick Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 HUGHES, Robert W. 607 Sunset Dr. High Point, N. C. 27262 HUMBER, Heidi E. A. 1914 Crescent Dr. Rockingham, N. C. 28379 HUNSUCKER, Paul C i19 Craven Dr. Asheboro, N. C 27203 HUNTINGTON, Karen I. 21 Maple St. Seneca Falls, NY, 13148 HURLEY, Benjamin A. Rt. !, Box 170- A High Point, N. C. 27463 HYPES. William Loomis One Carter Si, New Canaan, CI, OfifMO lEONG, Leontlu Sao Ki Roma W8 San Isidr Lima. Peru INGLIS. Carol |o e 103 S. W. C. SI. Richmond, Ind. 47374 INTERMACCIO. Ale« H. 3000 N. Tuckahoe 51. .Arlington. Va. 22213 INTERMACCIO, Marc L. 3000 N. Tuckahoe St. Arlington, Va. 22213 IOSCO, Robert Charles 55 Whitewood Rd. Newington, Ct. 06111 IRBY, Samuel Scott Route 2, Box 275 Kenbridge, Va. 23444 IRELAND. Brenda Kay Box 155A Rl. 1 Hamptonville, N C. 27020 IRELAND, Caynelle F 2050 Craig St. 17 Winston-Salem. N. C 2710 IZLAR, Ann Chamblin 1509 Sycamore St. Durham. N. C. 27707 JACKSON. Gregory h Frazier Apts. C ' boro. N. C. 27410 JACOBS, jerry Alfred Rt I, Box h ' l Bolton, N. C. 2H42i lACOBSON, Michael Ira 3607 Henderson Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 lAMES, Dennis Raymer 3915 Poindexter Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 jARRARD, janeece R. %29 Weathered Oak Bethesda, Md, 20034 lENNETTE, Ivnn 890 Riverside Tr. Atlanta, Ga. 30328 JENSEN, Vinccntino Nakahodo Apts 402 MalsushiIa-( ho 2, ( home lOERG, lanet Margaret 2424 Wrightwood Ave. Durham, N. C. 27705 lOHNSON, Barbara Lee 240 Arbutus Rd. Southern Pines, N. C. 28387 lOHNSON, Elizabeth L. 519 Muirs Chapel G ' boro, N. C. 27410 lOHNSON, lames Finch 830 SW 5th Richmond, Ind. 47374 lOHNSON. lean E. 712 Ashview Dr. Winslon-Salem, N. C. 2710! lOHNSON, Ralph |. 220 S. Elam Ave. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 lOHNSON, Shirley Ann 4305 Belvoir Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27406 lOHNSON, Steven W. 221 Hedgecock Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 lOHNSTON, leffrey O. Route 2, Box 8 Dinwiddle, Va. 23841 lOLLIFF, Irma lean 3408 Carter Lane Chester, Pa. 19013 lONES, Anita C. 3319 Sweetb riar Rd. Albany, Ca. 31701 lONES, Anne V. 4727 Champion Cl. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 lONES, David Bryan 803 Westridge Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 lONES, Nancy E. 7 Locke Dr. Enlield, Ct. 06082 lONES, Richard B. 15i4 Thomas Ave. Charlotte, N. C. 28205 lONES, Ronald Ragan 1 im Valley View D. G ' boro, N. C. 27405 lONES, Denni Muhele 18 ( olonial Dr ( helmslord. Ma 01H24 lONES, Cji ' orge Martin 4 , Oak Grove Rd. Norfolk, Va. 23505 lOYNER, Debra Hart 9410 Rhonda Dr. Richmond, Va. 23229 lOYCE, Harry Richard 3322 Nottingham Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 lUSTICE, Hilda |oy Rl- 6, Box 291 Hendersonville, N. C. 28739 KASSING, Kim Leslie 6549 Hi ft Ave. McLean, Va. 22101 KAUFFMANN, C. I. 1 302 Avondale Ave. Richmond, Va. 23227 KAUFMAN, Susan 2609 Vansfory St. G ' boro, N. C. 27407 KEATING, loseph R. 212 Count ry Park G ' boro, N. C. 27408 KEIGER, Elizabeth Ann Rt. I Tabaccoville, N. C. 27050 KELLER, Marybeth 2906 Cortland, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20008 KELLER, Stephen R. 1007 Westridge Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 KENNEDY, Barbara Ann 7201 Brynhurst Dr. Charlotte, N. C. 28210 KENNEDY, Muhael | Rl. 1, Nibliik Dr Platltown, N ( . 27040 KENT, Peter Osgood 1201 Nathan Hunt C ' boro, N. C. 27410 KENT, Robert Hoskins 1201 Nathan Hunt G ' boro, N. C. 27410 KHANTAVETH, Somchart Rt. 4, Box 94 Kernersville, N. C . 27284 KIMMEL, Harry O. Ill 918 Woodbrook Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 KIMMEI, lames S. Frazier Apt. 4 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 KING, Annette Marie P.O. Box 8 Seagrove, N. C. 27341 KING, Bradley lohnson 324 Ridgewood Ave. Glen Ridge, N.|. 07028 KING, Debra Sue Box 2801 St. Thomas, VI 00801 KING, leannetle H. 613 E. Leonard St. Southport, N. C. 28461 KING, loyce Dana 831 Smith Neck Rd. So. Dartmouth, Ma. 02748 KIRBY, Dale Melvin 122 Louisiana Ave. Ashville, N. C. 28806 KIRBY, loseph Earl 2309 Kersey St. G ' boro, N. C. 27406 KIRBY, Eric Steward 106 Pineburr Rd. Lenoir, N. C. 28645 KIRK, Winifred N. Rt. 3, River Ridge Brevard, N. C. 28712 KIRKLAND, Isabella C. 3404 Hawthorne Ave. Richmond, Va. 23222 KNOX, Bonnie Louise 114 Marcel la Rd. Wilmington, De. 19810 KOHL, Pamela Lynn 929 Winterlochen C ' boro, N. C. 27410 KOOB. loanna Elaine 956 Elsinore Dr. Palo Alto. Ca. 94303 KOTHE. lane 950 Alameda Way Sarasota, Fla. 33580 KRASON, Deborah Ann 5800 Marbur Rd. Bethesda. Md. 20034 KREUZBURG. lanire E. Box 225 Rl. 7 Baltimore. Md. 21208 LACKEY. Robert L. 1044 4th Ave. NW Hickory. N. C. 28( 1 LAD1KOS. George A. 2414 Mimosa Rd. Norfolk, Va. 23518 LADD, lohn Duncan 200 Greenbriar Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27405 LAMIMAN, lohn Dana 9609 Falls Rd. Potomac, Md. 20854 LANE, Van McKibben 2b11 Yanceyville G ' boro, N. C. 27405 LANTOR, Samuel Arthur 1100 Main St. So Boston, Va. 24592 LARSON, Peter Gregory 216 East B. St. Iron Mt., Mi 49801 LATHROP, Carolyn D. 6424 Bannockburn Bethesda, Md. 20034 LAUGHON, Susan lane 1945 Arbor Dr. Burlington, N. C 27215 LAVENHAR, Paul Bruce 1122 St. Marks PI Plainfield, N.L 07062 LAWRENCE, Elizabeth C. 1142 Ridgecrest Dr. Roanoke, Va. 24019 LAYTON, Mary Kathleen 1106 Elwell Ave. G ' boro, N, C. 27405 LEACH, Michael Joseph 1 123 Mississippi St. Cloud, Fla. 32769 LEACH, Nancy Louise 9742 Hedin Dr. Silver Spring, Md. 20903 LEATH, Melissa Anne 5420 Tory Hill Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 LEE, Charles L. |r. 413 E. Church St. Williamston, N. C. 27892 LECHLEIDER, Joseph R. 1955 Angela St. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 LEHMANN, Robert Henry 5329 Massdale St. Durham, N. C, 27707 LEICHT, Emily Elaine 2025 Greenbriar Rd Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 LELAND, Barbara B, 12 Westwood Dr. Montpelier, Vt. 05602 LELAND, Marjone W. 12 Westwood Dr. Montpelier, Vt. 05602 LENNEY, David Porter 2001 N. Adams St. Arlington, Va. 22201 LENNON, Gary M. 4726 N. 24th Rd. Arlington, Va. 22207 LEONARD, Robert C. 1H6-176 N. Tryon, N. C. 28782 LESTER, Anne Bahnson Rt. 1 Pine Hall, N. C. 27042 LEWIS, Arthur Weldon 108 N. Howard St. Chadburn, N. C 28431 LEWIS, Brenda 709 W Sixth St. Chester, Pa. 19013 LEWIS, loffre Peter 18 Silver Spring Short Hills, N.|. 07078 LEWIS, Paul M. 165 Twin Pine Glen Mills, Pa. 19342 LEWIS, Richard H. Navy Reg Med Ct Portsmouth, Va. 23708 LIGHTBOURNE, Leslie H. 2903 Amherst Ave, Burlington, N. C 27215 LINDENTHAL, David W. 510 Lindsey St. Reidsville, N. C. 27320 LINDLEY, loseph |. 1218 W. Davis St. Burlington, N. C. 27215 LINDLEY, lulia lone 1218 West Davis St. Burlington, N. C. 27215 LINDSEY, lames Lea 911 Sedgefield St. Durham, N. C. 27701 LINCERFELT, Robert P. 2421 Williams Ave. High Point, N. C. 27262 LITTLE, Patricia Anne 342 Sixth St. N.W. Hickory, N. C. 28601 LIVINGSTON, Russell E. 4201 Tallwood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 LLOYD, lohn Arthur 2728 N. Howard St. Baltimore, Md. 21218 LOCKHART, Patricia |. 2663 Monlicello Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 LOGAN, Lionel Eric 1910 Finley St. G ' boro, N. C. 27406 LONG, Yolande Alice 55 Mountain Ave. Hillburn, N. Y. 10931 LOONEY, Chesley H. 3406 Notre Dame SI. Myattsville, Md. 20783 LORD, lohn S hirley Rt. 2 Commerce, Ga. 30529 LOVE, Wendel Tucker Route 1 Pinnacle, N. C. 27043 LOVELL, Lydia L. P.O. Box 695 Pilot Mt., N. C. 27041 LOW, Cameron Lewis 3501 Donovan PI Charlotte, N. C. 28215 LOWDERMILK, Robert E. 1 X)7 Rosecrest Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 LOWE, Richard Grant 620 Scott Ave. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 LUEDY, Patrice Ann 410 Northside Dr. Lexington, N. C. 27292 LUPIN, Richard Scott 7514 Old Chester Bethesda, Md. 20034 LYNN, Peter C. Rt. 1 Box 2960 Hillsborough, N. C 27707 MACAULAY, ludith T 25 Old Railwayline Freetown, Sierra Leone MACDERMUT, Thomas S. 5104 Ellenwood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 MACDERMUT, Betty Ann 5104 Ellenwood Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 MACE, William Derring 108 Bickfield Dr. Hampton, Va. 23366 MACKENZIE, George C. 1723 N. Veitch Apt. 5 Adington, Va. 22201 MACKENZIE, Nancy M. 333 Weslmont Dr. Collingdale, Pa. 19023 MACLAMROC, Alan 1910 Pembroke Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 MACLELLAN, Scott W. 66 Gard Ave. Bronxville, NY. 10708 MACON, Randall Seth 3803 Madison Ave. C ' boro, N. C. 27403 MAHARAIH, leanette 38 Roy Ave. Marabell, Tnn. Wl MAHARAjH, Pateah M. 38 Roy Ave. Marabell, Trin. Wl MALLONEE, Paul C. jr Box 5712 Fayetteville, N. C. 28303 MALLONEE, Virginia B. 3402 Scotty Hill Fayetteville, N. C. 28303 MANGUM, Walter Curtis Box 236 Eaison, N. C. 28341 MANNING, Elizabeth A. 5313 Wayne Rd. G ' boro, N. C 27407 MARCENOT, John Robert 11 Schem Rd. Greenwich, Ct. 06830 MARGULIES, Phillip P. 650 Washington Ave. Plainview, N. Y. 11803 MARLETTE, David F. Rt. 1, Box 309 Graham, N. C. 27253 MARSH, Edd Carson Route 1, Box 222 C Siler City, N. C. 27344 MARSHALL, Karen Earle 24 Hawthorn Rd. Salem, Va. 24153 MARTIN, Adrianu Hale 1514 N. Halifax Dr Davtona Bch., Fla. U018 MARTIN, leffrev D 181 Lake Oti ' , Rd. Winter Haven, Fla. 33880 MARTIN, MIchele Anne 5004 Tally Ho Ave. lacksonvllle. Fla. 32208 MARTIN. Nancy K. 321 Townes St. Ext. Greenville, S.C. 2%0 ' ) MARTORELLI, Ann Mane 120 Yawpo Ave. Oakland, N.|. 07436 MARZO, Marilyn C. 115 Pheasant Rd. Spartanburg, S. C, 2 )302 .MASON, Edward .M 1 KM Bedford St. Cumberland, Md. 21502 MASON, Nicholas P. 740 Castlewood Rd. Glenside, Pa. 19038 .VtASSENGILL, Raymond A. Rl I Four Oaks, N. C 27524 MATTHEWS, Debra Dawn ' 112 Fairidge Drive Jamestown, N. C. 27282 MATHIS, Steve L 911 Waynewood Blvd. Alexandria, Va. 22308 MATHIS, William B. «X¥, r Lawndale Dr. Greensboro, N. C. 27408 MATTESON, lane F. 1 i23 lamacia tt. Jacksonville, Fla. i221h MATTESON, Marjorie A. 1 12! lamacia tt. lacksonvllle, Fla !22U MATTOCKS, George S Box 220 Rose Hill, N. C 2H45H MATIOf kS, Thomas B. P O Box 4 ,2 High Point, N ( . 272h1 MAURY, Marcia AIk e 1H South Parkwav Newark, De. 19711 MAXW! 1 I , lohn Joseph 4 l Hayes Road Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 .MAQOR, Pamela Ann 7205 Helmsdale Rd. Belhesda, Md. 200 !4 MAYNARD, Russell 209 S- Chapman G ' boro, N. C 27403 MAYO, Wanda Lee 2612 Occidental Dr. Vienna, Va. 22180 MBEO, Ochieng G. Box 1254 kisumu, Kenya, E. Africa MCCOY, David L. 4300 42nd St. NW Washington, DC. 20016 MCCOY, Marion L. 2014 Walker Ave. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 MCCOY, Peter 2014 Walker Ave. G ' boro, N. C 27403 MCCRAW, Gary Michael 3439 Blithewood Dr. Richmond, Va, 23225 MCCRAW, Steven W. 3439 Blilhewood Dr. Richmond, Va. 23225 MCDANIEL, Lynn C. 107 S herwood PI. Bel Air, Md. 21014 MCDONALD, Nancy Inez 2119 Pebble Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 MCGARITY, Alexander D. 3318 Watauga Dr. G ' boro, N, C. 27410 MCGILVARY, Susan Kay 318 Lucille St. Nashville, N C. 27856 MCINTYRE, Debra Lee 6635 Brookmeade Dr. Charlotte, N. C. 28211 MCIVER, Julia Lynne 3815 Seminary Ave. Richmond, Va. 23227 MCIVER, Kathlynn 10825 Ridge Spring Dallas, Tex. 75218 MCKEOWN, Sharon L. 570( Ashfield Rd, Alexandria, Va. 22310 MCKINNEY, aria 4904 Old Well Rd. Annandale, Va. 22003 MCKINNEY, Charles D. 400 Hilltop Lexington, N. C. 27292 MCKINNEY, Kenneth A. 1712 Clarendon Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 MCLARTY, Bruce B. 550 W. Lafayette Dr, West Chester, Pa. 19380 MCLENDON, Brantley A, 201 Kimberly Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 MCLENDON, Martha E 409 Biggs Ave. Thomasville. N. C. 27360 MCMANUS, Mark C. 1 50tj Edgedale Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 MCMULLIN, Albert Guy 2404 Washington Ave. Wilmington, De 19805 MCNAIR, Molhe 1563 Fama Drive Atlanta, Ga. 30329 MCSWEEN, Janet 921-A Walker Ave. Greensboro, N. C 27403 MCVAUGH, Mary S. 15 Laurel Rd. Riverlon, N.J. 08077 MCWHITE, John Evans Box 8 Clarksville, Va. 2.3927 MEECH, Paul Collins 4 56 West End Av. Stalesville, N. C. 28677 MEEKER, Susan Lee 10225 Kensington Pky Kensington, Md. 20795 MENGEBIER, Nancy E. 211 Dixie Ave. Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 MERCADANTE, Alphonse 5612 Friendly Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 MERCADANTE, Margaret 5612 Friendly Rd G ' boro, N. C. 27410 MERELO, Patricia Ann 1504 Pebble Dr. G ' boro, N. C, 27410 MESHENUK, Christina L. 909 Worthy St. Windsor, Ct. 06095 MESSNER, Deborah Shaw 640 Philadelphia Chambersburg, Pa. 17201 MEYLER, lohn Peter 15 Hillside Ave, Kearny, N. J. 07032 MEYER, Melissa Rose 51 Fern Place Berkeley Hts., N. |. 07922 MEYER, Ruth Marie 3530 Rosewood Dr. Lumberton, N. C. 28358 MICHAEL, Arshavir Ian Po Stuntzabad Mian Chunnu, Pakstan MILES, Hall B. Ill Box 5 Harfville, Oh. 04463 MILLER, Debra Lynn 539 Old Liberty Rd. Asheboro, N. C. 27203 MILLER, Mary Anna 223 Fairview Ave. Mt. Airy, N. C. 27030 MILLER, Nancie E. Windsong Metacomet Farmmgton, Ct. 06032 MILLER, Teresa Ann Route 1 No. Wllkesboro, N. C. 28659 MILLINS, Robert S 1316 National Ave. New Bern, N. C. 28560 MILLIS, WILLIAM DAVID 1107 Rocklord Rd. High Point, N. C. 27262 MIN1CK, Penelope Sue 21 N. River Dr. Sluarf, Fla. )3494 MINICK, Douglas lames 21 N. River Dr. Stuart, Fla. 3.3494 MINICK, leffrey M. 28 Wake Forest TrI Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 MINGES, Paula Setzer Rl. 1, Box 878 Lumberton, N. C. 28358 MINGES, Virginia M. 308 W. 25th St. Lumberton, N. C. 28358 MINOR, Richard loseph Frazier Apt 34 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 MITCHELL, Robert B, jr. S02 Elm PI. Princeton, III. 61356 MOODY, Steven M. 115 Dunedin Ct. Gary, N. C. 27511 MOONEY, Maureen Lee 202 Milford His Rd. Salisbury, N. C. 28144 MOORE, Randolph T 1507 Nathan Hunt C ' boro, N. C. 27410 MORRISON, Susan E. 1600 Belfield PI. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 MORTON, Kristin S. 1307 Pump Rd. Richmond, Va. 23233 MOULDEN, Michael M. 1501 Riv. Rd. 1015 Washington, D. C. 20016 MURPHY, Richard D, 5613 lordan Rd. Bethesda, Md. 20014 MURPHY, William L. 809 S. Church St. Scotland Neck, N. C. 27874 MURR, David W. 3522 Tanyard Rd. High Point, N. C. 27260 MUSE, Sarah L, 20qF E. Montcaslle C ' boro, N. C. 27406 MUTH, Donna Marie 7 McGregor Way Bel Air, Md. 21014 MUZZEY, lohn L. 1903 G. Cedar Fork C ' boro, N. C. 27407 MYERS, Elizabeth M. 604 Sugarberry Rd. Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 MYERS, Linda Carol 1000 National Hwy Thomasville, N. C. 27360 NAIMARK, Laura lane 7501 Democracy Bvd. Bethesda, Md. 20034 N ' Dow Sulayman Alieu 8 Kent SI. Balhurst, Gambia NEEDHAM, Thomas C. 1609 Fordham Rd. Wilmington, N. C. 28401 NEILL, Douglas D. 10 West Way Chappaqua, N. Y 10514 NELSON, George B, III Rl. 3, Box 275 Asheboro, N. C. 27303 NELSON, Mary Ellen 7i4 Liberty Bell Libertyville, III. 60048 NERBOSO, Mary P.O. Box 179 Cullo« hee, N.C. 28723 NEW, Rebecca Allyson RFD I King, N. C. 27021 NEWCOMER, Richard F. 1 12 Ado Court Spartanburg, S. C. 29301 NEWMAN, Robert Loyd 225 Redcoat Dr. Charlotte, N. C. 28211 NEWTON, Jeffrey W. 254 Tanner Marsh Guilford, Ct. 06437 NOONAN, Richard C, 23 SO Overbrook Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 NORMAN, Cynthia Ann 18 Stevenson St. Piermoni, N. Y. 10968 NORRIS, William Bruce 4008 Avera Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C. 2710 5 NORTON, Robert Dewitt 1 104 Montpelier C ' boro, N, C. 27410 NOVACK, Gregory E. 332 E. Church St. Elberton, Ga. 30635 OAKES, Randy Wayne 1515 Summit Ave. C ' boro, N, C. 27405 OATES, Kerry Michael 128 Carteret St, Glenn Ridge, N. |. 07028 O ' BRIEN, Raymond F 24 D. Hunt Club Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 O ' CONNELL, Mark A. 7409 Venice St. Falls Church, Va. 22043 O ' NEAL, Grover M. Route 1, Box 525 Wilhamston, N. C. 27892 O ' NEILL, lames F. 1425 Woodland Rd. Rydal, Pa. 19046 OSBORNE, Albert M. 1011 Center Church Eden, N. C. 27288 OSBORNE, Rebecca L. P.O. Box 1344 Lumberton, N. C. 28358 OWENS, M. Kathenne B, Rt. 5, Box 479 Reidsville, N, C, 27320 OWENS, Robert D. Box 8355 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 02ZELL0, Lynn |oy 14 Horsechester Rd. Briarcliff, N. Y, 10510 PAGE, Carl Roy |r. P.O. Box 387 Slokesdale, N, C. 27357 PAMPLIN, Peter Wesley 2517 Shadylawn Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27407 PAQUETTE, Michael A. 1509 Talley St. C ' boro. N. C. 27407 PARKER, Elizabeth L. P.O. Box 5 George, N. C. 27833 PARKER, Victor A. Route 1, Box 219 Aulander, N. C. 27805 PARSONS, Penelope 1502 Nathan Hunt C ' boro, N. C. 27410 PASCHAL, Richard A 108 Shannon Rd. Asheboro, N. C. 27203 PATTERSON, Stafford A. 536 Country Clb. Rd. Mt. Airy, N. C. 270.iO PEARSE, Robert N. Rt. 1, Box 356 Bahama, N. C. 27503 PENCE, Susan Gary 708 Hemlock Rd. Newsport News, Va. 23601 PENNISI, Cordon A. 332 C. Burlmgate G ' boro, N. C. 27407 PENNINGTON, Nancy C. 1821 Woodburn Dr. Hagerstown, Md. 21740 PENNINGTON, William E, 4820 Brompton Dr. C ' boro, N. C, 27407 PENSLER, Alan Mark 17265 Sherfield Southfield, Mi. 48075 PEREZ-REYES, Arthur 808 Christopher Rd Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 PERKINS, llvarez H. Box 479 Reidsville, N. C, 27320 PERRIN, William D 1013 Latham Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 PERRY, Daniel Emerson 1782 Beacon Hill Atlanta, Ca. 30329 PERRY, David Leighton 1312 Lakewood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 PERSAK, Kenneth lohn 1033 Gralyn Rd. Wilmington, De. 19803 PETERSEN, Stephen W. 2713 Bedford Ave. Raleigh. N. C. 27607 PETERSON, Bruce R. 3018 Sunshine Blvd. Miramac, Fla 33023 PEITTIT, Cordon M. 608 Chancery PL G ' boro, N. C. 27408 PFEFFER. Thomas A, RD 2 Woodslown, N. I. 08098 PHILLIPS. Diane Lynn 413 S. Lindell Rd G ' boro, N. C. 27403 PICKERING, lames W. Frazier Apt 16 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 PICKERING, lann C. Frazier Apt 16 C ' boro. N. C. 27410 PIERCE. Cynthia M. Rt. 3 Asheboro, N. C. 27203 PIKAARD, Bruce Neil 805 Gen. Cornwallts West Chester, Pa. t9380 PITTMAN, lames S. 4313 Quail Hollow Raleigh, N. C. 27609 PITTMAN, William III 414 Pinar Dr. Orlando. Fla 32807 PLEASANTS, Cheryann R Rt, 4, .Mangnolia Gr Slier City. N, C. 27344 POE. Floyd Clark 230 Pmevieyv Rd, Durham. N, C. 27707 POOL. Nancy lane Rd 1 Harrisonville Woodslown, N. I, 08098 PORTER, Margaret Mary 207 Lanier St. Tryon, N. C. 28782 PORTWOOD. loan White 54 Beverly Dr. Durham, N. C. 27707 POTTS, Victona A. 6601 Friendly Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 PRANGE, Martha Louise 1804 Rolling Rd. Chapel Hill, N. C 27514 PRATT, jeltrey C. 28 Mohawk Ave. Sparta, N. |. 07871 PRICE. ( ynthia |. Rt. 11, Box 302 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 PROCTOR, William S. 1417 Seminole Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 PRUITT, Frederick G. Rt. 2, Box 105 A. Richmond, Va. 23233 PUGH, Caria Haydock 1)123 S.W. M Ct. Miami, Fla 13156 PUIDAK, Susan Id 7 Simpson Dr. Old Bethpage, N. Y, IIH04 PUTNAM, Marcus Bryan 2229 Pinecrolt Rd G ' boro, N. ( . 27407 QUARANTA, Philip T. 604 Dartmouth St. Westburg, N. Y. 11590 RAGLAND, Kim Ann 2411 Hoyt St. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27103 RALLS, lohn Thomas 5309 Guida Dr. G ' boro. N. C 27410 RALSTON. Madeline B. 2531 Wrightwood Durham. N. C. 27705 RASCHI, Elizabeth H. 803 Woodbrook Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 RASCHKE, Gwenne Mane 4410 Montbello Dr. Charlotte, N. C 28211 RAWLINGS, lane W, 3937 Bristol Rd, Durham. N. C. 27707 REAGAN, lane Todd 2-22-10 Sekimae Musashino Shi, Tokyo lapan REAMS, Stephen W O. 771 Bon Air Cir Lynchburg, Va. 24503 REAVIS, Thurman Lynn Frazier Apt 5 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 REDDICK, Cathryn A. 104 Edgelea Ave. Wilhamston, N. C. 27892 REDNER, Debra L. F. Frazier Apt 31 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 RED, lohn West 2214 Granville Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27420 REDNER, Richard Alan Frazier Apt 31 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 REED, Chas Wm Craig 3405 Rolling Hill Durham, N. C. 27705 REES. Floyd Eugene 821 Country Club ,Mt Airy, N. C. 27030 REGENOS, Constance R 4 Dana House Greensboro, N, C. 27410 RHEES. David lerome 1701 Parkview Dr. Elizabeth City. N. C 27909 RHOTON. Nell Rose 828 N. Elm Apt. 4B G ' boro, N. C. 27410 RICE. Carol Kristine 568 Mt. Vernon Rd. Atlanta, Ca. 30327 RICH, Charles Boyce 212 Colville Rd. Charlotte, N. C. 28207 RICH. Cheryl Cathy 1200 Bancroft Dr. Raleigh, N. C. 27609 RICHBOURG. David L. 3810 Dogwood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 RIESS, Peter Ernst 42 Woodbine Ave. Larchmont, N. Y, 10538 RIGGS, Nancy 7 Park Rd. Scarsdale. N. Y. 10583 ROBBINS, David M, 206 College Rd. Richmond, Va. 2)229 ROBBINS, Don L, 4300 Rosebriar La, Winston-Salem, N, C. 27106 ROBERTS, Suzanne S 3370 Will Scarlet Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 ROBINS, Timothy G 280 Upper Mtn. Upper Montclair, N. |, 0704! RODDY, Cynthia Leigh 95 Oxford St. Glen Ridge. N. |. 07028 ROGERS, Daniel Thomas 2701 Fairfax Rd, G ' boro, N. C. 27407 ROGERS, Kennette C. 218 Elmwood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 ROGERS, Linda 1503 Allendale Rd. G ' boro. N. C. 27408 ROGERS, Victoria M 785 Roslyn Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C 27104 ROSE. Deborah loan 9 Pipers Hill Rd, Wilton, Ct, 0( 897 ROSEN, Andrew L. 92 Club Dr. Roslyn Hgts., N. Y. 11577 ROSSER, Rhonda L 215 Markham Dr. Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 ROUZIE, Don 804 Kenwick Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C 27106 ROUTH, Fred Eugene |r. 4107 Rose Lake Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27407 ROYCROFT, William Rd. 300 W. Murray Ave. Durham. N. C. 27704 RUBLE, lames M. 16555 E. letferson Grosse Pt., Ml 48230 RUMFELT, Daniel S. Rt. 1. Box 348 B Leesburg, Va. 22075 RUST, W. Montgomery Magbie Hill Warrenton. Va. 22186 RUTHERFOORD. Bruce B. 630 Briarwood Ave. Pittsburg, Pa. 15228 RUTLEDGE, Philip L. 4002 Colorado Ave. Durham, N. C. 27707 RUTLEY. Robert F. Box 8892 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SAFRAN, Lucia Blount 3421 Florida Dr. Fayetteville, N. C. 28301 SAGER, Ann Elizabeth 116 Hawthorne Rd. Raleigh, N. C. 27605 SALAME, Antinio Box 1227 Valencia, Venezuela SALSBERC, Dennis |. 154 N. Green Ave. Lindenhurst, N. Y. 11257 SANDLIN, Sherry Ann 1729 Maxwell Ct. McLean, Va. 22101 SANNER, Denise Vern 100) Rosemont Ave. Frederick. Md. 21707 SAPP. Ellen Currie Box 411 Stanley, N. C. 281M SAPP, Riilh Ivey Lucia Rd. Stanley, N. C. 28164 SAUVE, Lynn Scarboro 313 So Main St. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27107 SCALES, Donald |. Box 1(X) Cavlier Est, Langdon, ND 58249 SCARR, Donald L. 205 Revere Dr, A 27 G ' boro, N. C, 27407 SCHEDIN, Elizabeth RED Podunk Rd. E. Brookfield, Ma. 01506 SCHEDIN, Shelley East Sturbridge Rd. Brookfield, Ma. 01506 SCHEIDER, Susan E. RED 2 E. Arlington, Vt. 05252 SCHERR, Leslie Lecron 642 Locust St. Ap B. Ml. Vernon, N. Y. 10552 SCHICK, Kenneth B. 1690 Robin Hood Ln. Clearwater, Fla. 33516 5CHIAPPA, Salvartore 1144 East 7th St. Plainfield, N. j. 070fi2 SCHIER, William A. 2530 Overbrook Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 SCHMIDT, Ronald G. 17-16 Noble PI. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 SCHOFIELD, Andrew B. 14 Pirce Rd. Wilmington, De. 19803 SCHOMMER, Pamela 9 Schaefer Maplewood, N. I 07040 SCHOMMER, Kenneth B. 9 Schaeter Rd. Maplewood, N. |. 07040 SCHWORM, Leslie Dale 125 Sunline PI. Spartanburg, S. C. 29302 SCOTT, Cecil D. 505 W. Sprague St. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27107 SCOTT, Daniel K. Rl. 1 Box 45 Hillsborough, N. C. 27278 SCOTT, Douglas A. Box 8385 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SCOTT, George W. 216 Martin Ave. Stuart, Ela. 33494 SCOTT, Thomas Wm 1417 Lebanon St. Bluefield, WV 24710 SESSOMS, Ricky Daron Route 1 Robbins, N. C. 27325 SEWELL, Chades D. 211 61sl St. Va. Bch., Va. 23451 SHAFFER, Robert D. 5614 A Maple St. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SHAKAR, Charles E. 4629 Arcie St. Odando, Fla 32806 SHANAHAN, ludith L. 2 Harry Rd. Somerville, N. |. 08876 SHAMI, Nabil |. P.O. Box 313 Amman, lordan SHARP, David Wells ()07 Elmwood Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 SHARP, Edward M. 920 Washington Ave Haddontield, N. I OHOii SHARPE, Pamela S. 3508 Pinetop Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SHAVER, Peggy Smith 505 Rotary Dr. High Point, N. C. 27260 SHELTON, Reuben W. 4978 Sloneington Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27103 SHEPARD, Thomas H. 2318 N. Elm St. G ' boro, N. C. 2740H SHEPPE, George B. 3241 Hastings Rd. Roanoke, Va. 24108 SHERRILL, Sarah V. 115 Chamberlain St. Raleigh, N. C 27607 SHIELDS, lames Taylor 1 10 Eriendway Cir G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SHIMAKA, R. Mumia Wa Rt. i. Box 584 Coldsboro, N. C 27530 SHUMATE, Cathy R. 1301 Morrison St. Tampa, Fla. 33606 SIDES, lohn Houston 108 Lakeside Dr. High Point, N. C. 27263 SILLIMAN, David Allen 724 Greenwood Rd. Wilmington, De. 19807 SILVERS, Everen W. 117 Highland Ave. Greenville, Tn. 37743 SIMMERMON, Gern A. Rt. 5 Lebanon, Pa. 17042 SIMMONS, Carolyn j. 5016 Whitewood Ln. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 SIMPSON, Edward K. Route 2 Lewisville, N. C. 27023 SINGER, Randie Susan 119 Kemp Rd. Easl. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SINGLETON, Richard B. 8 Oak Lane Glen Burnie. Md. 210( 0 SIN. Yuen Ming 8B 275 Glocester Hong Kong SIPPEN. Kathi Hope 33 Lucas Ave Kingston, N. V. 12401 SLOAN, Kathleen Helen 110 Oak Ridge York, Pa. 17402 SMALL, Allan Weston Frazier Apt 26 Greensboro, N. C. 27410 SMITH, Andrew 191 1 Swananoa Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 SMITH, Emory Paul 501 Webb Rd. Newark, De 19711 Rt. 1, Box 147 Halifax, N. C. 27839 SMITH, Gwendolyn S. Route 6, Box 384-A Martinsville, Va. 24112 SMITH, Kyle Patrick 381 Hearthside Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27014 SMITH, Lunsford R. 345 Hawthorne Rd. Elkin, N. C. 28621 SMITH, Pamela Rae 313 Yorklown Rd. Lexington Park, Md. 20653 SMITH, Patricia Ann 10123 Parkwood Dr. Bethesda, Md. 20014 S.MITH. Paula Oliva 114 Mlllord Dr Salisbury, N. C. 28144 SMITH, Stanley R 360 Hasting Hill R. Kernersville, N. C. 27284 SMITH, Thomas lames Mouth of Wilson, Va. 24363 SMITH, Virginia Lee 224 Westland Ave. S. Massillon, Ohio 44646 SMITHDEAL, Bonnie L. 2201 Elizabeth Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27103 SNIDER, Florence Lide 1405 Briarclilf Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 SOCOL, Alan T 1172 Reeder Cir. Atlanta, Ga, 30306 SOCOL, Scott Kevin 1172 Reeder Cir, Atlanta, Ga, .i0i06 SORRELLS, Kenneth R, 4320 Rosebriar La, Winston-Salem, N. C 27106 SOUTHERN, David Scott P.O. Box 202 Walnut Cove, N. C 27052 SPARGER, Celia Carter 67 Irving St. Winston-Salem. N. C. 27103 SPEAS, lohn Gregory 222 E. Avondale G ' boro, N. C. 27403 SPEAKS. Terry Wayne Rt. 2 Clemmons, N. C. 27012 SPRUILL, Donna Ruth Pine Drive Aulander, N. C. 27805 SPROUL, William E. 23 Slelson Ave. Duxbury, Ma. 02332 STACKHOUSE, Robert C. )r, 413 Sinclair St. Norfolk, Va. 2i50S STANICK, Martha 725 Westminster C ' boro, N. C. 27410 STANLEY, David Wayne 301f) Hunt Rd. Oakton, Va 22129 STANLEY, lames Lee Rt. 4 Martmville, Va, 24112 STARR, David R, Rt. h. Box IW C ' boro, N. C. 27105 STEDMAN, Robert Burke 3535 Lawndale Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27408 STEELE, Beverly E. Box 9026 C ' boro, N. C. 27408 STEELE, George H. |r. Box 9026 C ' boro, N. C. 27408 STEER, Barbara Ellen 37 King St. Norwalk, Ct. 06851 STEPHENS, Robert H. )r. 408 Stafford Rd. Wilmington, De I ' lHOi STEPHENS, Paul F 4702 Trent River New Bern, N. C 285( ) STEVENS, Cheryl Ann 288 Fithian Ave Merthantville, N | (IHKI ' i STIIWELL, Michael (, I r 0 Blair St. Thomasville, N. ( 27ii,() STOSUY, Dan Lei- 712 Hilltop Rd Cmnammson, N.|. 08077 STOVER, Robert M. Route 2 Plafllown. N 27IM(I STRADER, Harlan Lynn 154 Wellington Rd. Garden City, N.Y. 11530 STRATTON, Vickie Sue 506 leanette Ave. High Point, N. C. 27260 SUMMER, David Elliott 300 Elliott Rd. Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 SWAINEY, Carl Anthony 108 Avondale Dr. lamestown, N. C 27282 SWAHN, Charles Robert 20 Bernard PI. Centereach, N. Y. 11720 SWAIN, Michael Ray 240 Crandview Dr. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 SWAIN, Robert W. Frazier Apt 35 C ' boro, N. C 27410 SWAN, Lucy Gushing 5705 Kirkwood Dr. Washington, D. C. 20016 SYKES, Frank A. 3656 Caye Lane S.W. Roanoke, Va. 24018 TABRON, Tanya Danita 718 W. nth St. Chester, Pa. 19013 TANGER, lane Ellen 114 Falkener Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 TANNEN, Lisa Castle 7835 S.W. 66 St. Miami, Fla. 33143 TAYLOR, Carolyn P. 525 N. Middletown Media, Pa. 19063 TAYLOR, Claude Brent 5901) Arcadia Lane C ' boro, N C. 27410 TAYLOR, lohn Guest i04 Kimberly Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27408 TAYLOR, Shahane R III 2207 Carlisle C ' boro, N. C 274f)8 TAYLOR, Steven Arthur P.O. Box i07 Pilot Mtn., N. C. 27041 TETTER, Cynthia Beth RD 2 Gettysburg, Pa. 17325 TEMPLE, Rhonda Lynn Route 3, Box 42 Lexington, N. C. 27292 TERAS, Constance, L. 1208 Airfield Midland, Mi. 58640 TERRELL, ludy Stewart 5906 Arcadia Lane C ' boro, N. C. 27410 TESH, Wayne Charles Rt. 11, Box 829 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 TEUTSCH, Monica Susan 115-25 Metropolitan Richmond Hill, N. Y. 11418 THIBAUT, Charles H. 1004 Hgid Woods Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514 THICPEN, lohn Boxon Hill Scottsville, Va. 24590 THOMAS, Charles C. Box 589 Woodbury, N.|. 08906 THOMAS, Cordon Martin Frazier Apts 32 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 THOMAS, lackie L. 2121 Churchill Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 THOMAS, Phoebe Anne 1055 Oaklawn Dr Culpepper, Va. w2701 THOMPSON, Cadene M. 12051 2 Sprg Garden C ' boro, N. C. 27403 THOMPSON, Herbert B. 1301 Oakwood Dr. Rocky Mount, N. C. 278(11 THOMPSON, Lori L. Rt. 2, Box 110 Graham, N. C. 27253 THOMPSON, Ronald B. 12506 Davan Dr. Silver Spring, Md. 20904 THOMPSON, Susan Marie 74 i1 Folger Dr. ( harloffe. N C 28211 rtHO tl SON, Timiithv L 117 S ffdiden Rd C ' boro, N. C. 274fl7 THORE, Glenn William 2818 Edwards St. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27107 TILLEY, Karen Lee 214 Orchard St. Mt. Airy, N. C 27030 TIPPENS, lames R. Rt. 2 Chapel Hill, N. C 27514 TIPTON, M. Emily 7644 Comanche Dr. Richmond Va. 23225 TISE, Harold B. |r. 4870 Thales Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C. 27104 TOBUREN, William B. Wedge Dr. Rt. 1 Pfafftown, N. C. 27040 TODD, Michael Alan 10109 Lloyd Rd. Potomac, Md. 20854 TORNQUIST, loel Brand P.O. Box 516 East Setaukef, N. Y. 11733 TORCASO, lohn Vincent 206 Kenneth Blvd. Havelock, N. C. 28532 TOVE, Michael Henry 2133 Buckingham Rd. Raleigh, N. C. 27607 TOWE, Patricia |o 1430 Fancy Cap Rd. Ml. Airy, N. C. 27030 TRAYNHAM, Chades L. Box 79 Wingale, N. C 28174 TREBER, lenny Ruth Box 204 Creenlown, In. 26936 TRIGG, Louisa Hagner 100 Watlington Dr. Reidsville, N. C. 27320 TROLLINCER, Henry R. Wl Cliff Rd. Asheboro, N. C. 27203 TROUTMAN, lohnny Rt. .i Box 346 Lake Placid, Fla. 33852 TRUSLOW, Gail Marie 2100 Mecklenburg Charlotte, N.C. 28205 TRUSLOW, Robert Gray 1706 Pennrose Dr. Reidsville, N. C. 27)20 TUCKER, David Basil Box 175 Eden, N. C. 27288 TURMAN, Krislina Anne 1113 Capitol View McLean, Va. 22101 TURNER, David E. 307 S. Liberty St. Centerville, Md. 21607 TURNER, Nancy L. 12 Oneluska Dr. Durham, N. C. 27705 TUTHILL, Bartley F, 929 Townsend Dr. Va. Bch., Va. 23452 TWICHELL, Michael E. 165 Sylvan Ter. Leominisler, Ma. 01453 TYLER, Ethel C. P.O. Box 36 Roxobel, N. C. 27872 TYREE, Bertha Maxine 4207 Queen Beth Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27405 UNDERWOOD, Cynthia C, 1915 Granville Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27408 UNDERWOOD, Stephen A. 2512 Lakeshore Dr C ' boro, N. C. 27407 VAN DEUSEN, Edwin R Box 101 Rl. 5 Princeton, WV 24740 VATZ, Morris Freid 1817 Tryon Rd. New Bern, N. C. 28560 VERNON, Darlene Jones Frazier Apt 17 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 VICKERS, Clare F. 1800 Providence Rd. Charlotte, N. C. 2821 1 VINDLER, lames D 24 Springbrook Tr. Sparta, N.|. 07871 VINSON, Robert S. 1807 10th St. NE Rochester, MN 55901 WAETjEN, Daniel Gregg 2221 Briggs Chaney Silver Spring, Md. 20904 WAGNER, Michael Paul 113 Virginia St. Olean, N. Y. 14760 WAGNER, Richard F. Rt 2, Box 261 Lewisville, N. C. 27023 WAILES, Theodore R, 510 Piccadilly Rd. Baltimore, Md. 21204 WALFORD, Lyie 681 Ctlandt 103 New York, N.Y. 10451 WALKER, Charles F. 3619 Medlord Rd. Durham, N. C. 27705 WALKER, Eutimus S. Hector ' s River PO Portland, iamaica, W.I. WALKER, Glona L. 1387 College Hill Cheyney, Pa. 19319 WALKER, Heather C. 935 Ardmore Ave. Lie, Pa. 16505 WALKER, Michael T. 3 537 Paddington Ln Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106 WALKER, Pamela Ann  7 Sunset Dr. N. Asheboro, N. C. 27203 WALKER, Stephen E. ii!7 Paddington Ln Wmston-Salem, N. C. 27106 WALL, lohn Allen 5407 Tory Hill Rd. C ' boro, N. C 27410 WALL, Joseph Garrett 7 Prindle Rd. West Haven, Ct. 06516 WALL, Patricia H. P.O. Box 268 Siler City, N. C. 27344 WALL, Richard Eli 24 )9 Queen Palm Rd. Boca Raton, Fla !S432 WALL, Ricky Vance P.O. Box 385 King, N. C. 27021 WALSH, Laura E. Frazier Apt 3 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 WALSH, Michael C. Frazier Apt 3 G ' boro, N. C. 27410 WARD, Claudia Mae 304 Shadowbrook Dr Budington, N. C. 27215 WARD, Ellen Patricia 26 Central PI. Caldwell, N. |. 07006 WASHINGTON, lohn G. Box 432 Jamestown, N. C. 27282 WASSERMAN, Amy Rulh 27 Irene Lane East Plainview, N. Y. 11803 WATKINS, Christopher 22-D Hunt Club Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 WATKINS, Nancy E. 125 Boston Rd. Calhoun, Ga. 30701 WATT, William Price 610 Main St. Reidsville, N. C 27320 WEATHERS, Ingrid K. 2838 Anandale Rd. Falls Church, Va. 22042 WEBSTER, Susan E. 1305 Kensington Ct. High Point, N. C. 27260 WEBSTER, Thomas W 716 Lipscomb Rd. C ' boro, N. C 27410 WEEDEN, Anna Nicki East Lake Rd. Cazenovia, N.Y. 13035 WEEKS, Charles Eric 127 Sea Cliff Ave. Sea Cliff, N. Y. 11579 WEHRMANN, Diane L. Rt. 3, Box 457 Wilkesboro, N. C 28697 WEISNER, Celia I 1101 Westridge Rd. G ' boro, N. C. 27410 WEINER, Marc Vincent 2915 Marshall St. Falls Church, Va. 22042 WEIR, Andrew Scott 7110 Beechwood Dr. Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 WEIR, David Alan 7110 Beechwood Dr. Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 WELBORN, Andrew Scott 214 Mistletoe Dr. G ' boro, N. C. 27403 WELBORN, Max O Niel P.O. Box 248 Yadkinville, N. C 27005 WELLS, Sara R. 19 Oak St. Reading, Ma. 01867 WELLS, William D. Highway 117 North Wallace, N. C. 28466 WELTI, Susan Eliz 131 Edwards Fry- Rd. Leesbury, Va. 22075 WENCE, Martha Eliz 8 luniper St. Orono, Me. 04473 WESCOTT, lohn Guy Manteo, N. C. 27954 WESTNEAT, Barbara I. 49 Goodrich St. Hamden, CI. 06517 WETZEL, Elizabeth B. 48 Orchard Lane Glastonbury, Ct. 06033 WEYLL, Curtis Alan 23 St. Andrews Ln. Glen Cove, N. C. 11542 WHEELER, Deborah Anne 274 Haverhill St. North Redding, Ma. 0186- WHICKER, Ronald E. Rt. 2 Kernersville, N. C. 27284 WHITE, lohn David 203 Westridge Dr. High Point, N. C. 27260 WHITE, Michelle A. 610 Chester Rd. Winston-Salem, N. C 27104 WHITE, Paula Lynn 1608 Penny Dr. Elizabeth City, N. C. 27907 WHITE, Steven Young 2405 Running Brook G ' boro, N. C 27408 WHITEHURST, Marie A. 1020 Hill St. G ' boro, N. C. 27408 WHITEHORNE, Robert T. 1107 McCuinn Dr. High Point, N. C. 27262 WHITLEY, Mark C. 127 Old Mill Rd. Dover, De. 19901 WHITTINCTON, Sandra A. Box 6 Sedalia, N. C. 27342 WILD, Call Ethel 36 Hillis Terr. Poughkeepsie, N. C. 12603 WILES, Donny Douglas 10 Frazier Apts, C ' boro, N. C. 27410 WILES, Isaac C. Friendship College Rock Hill, S.C 29730 WILHITE, Patricia 303-D N. Hannihon Richmond, Va. 23221 WILLIAMS, Carolyn 606 Rollingwood Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 WILLIAMS, Donald Lee 305 lackson Rd. Mt. Airy, N. C. 27030 WILLIAMS, Fred H. 126 E. Vandalia Rd. C ' boro, N. C. 27402 WILLIAMS, lennifer |. 3901 Monlreat Ct. Raleigh, N. C. 27609 WILLIAMS, lohn Philip 606 Rollingwood Dr. C ' boro, N. C. 27410 WILLIAMSON, Gale R. 267 Glen Ave. Sea Cliff, N. Y. 11579 WILLIS, Sara Lynn 1130 Aycock Ave. Burlington, N. C. 27215 WILSON, Benjamin E. |r Box 1924 C ' boro, N. C. 27402 WILSON, Edward C. jr. 820 Quaker Lane High Point, N. C. 27262 WILSON, Frederick M. Box 213 Little Switzind, N. C. 28749 WILSON, lames Worth 208 Canal Dr. Mt. Olive, N. C. 28365 WILSON, lohn Kenneth 58 Lantern Ridge New Canaan, Ct. 06840 WILSON, Marsha Lynn 820 Quaker Ln. High Point, N. C. 27262 WILSON, Stanley D. Rt. 3, Box 79 Eden, N. C. 27262 WIMBiSH, Laura G. Rt. 3, Box 198 C ' boro, N, C. 27410 WINCHESTER, Elizabeth 3115 Teesdale St. Philadelphia, Pa. 19152 WINFREE, Alison F. 415 Horace Mann Ave. Winston-Salem, N. C, 27104 WOHLFORD, Anne C. Box 8859 C ' boro, N. C. 27410 WOLFF, Diane 101 Kimberly Ter. C ' boro, Nk C. 27408 WOLFF, Martha Faye Rt. 1, Box 456 Raleigh, N. C. 27609 WOLINSKY, Nancy L. 118A Yesler Oaks E. G ' boro, N. C 27408 WOOD, Deborah lane 405 Palsy Ave. Collinsville, Va. 24078 WOOD, lohnny C. 322 Rockford St. Mt. Airy, N. C. 27030 WOOD, Manton Hall 22 Woodcrest Ave. Atlanta, Ca. 30309 WOOTEN, Shellie Cay 2233 Marble St. Wmslon-Salem, N, C. 27107 WORRELL, Frank B. Rt. 12, Box 491 G ' boro, N. C. 27406 WORTHINGTON, |ohn D. RD 1, Box 251 WRIGHT, Barbara E. P.O. Box 337 Scottsville, Va. 24590 WRIGHT, Carl Rober 708 Brookside Dr. High Point, N. C. 27262 WRIGHT, Deborah Kaye 1400 Chatham Rd. Waynesboro, Va. 22980 WUBBENHORST, Stephen 29 Dogwood Trail Kinnelon, N.j. 07405 WURDEMAN, Richard D. 11501 Orebaugh Ave. Wheaton, Md. 20902 WYMAN, Andria Kaye 4 Crestline Cl. Owings Mills, Md. 2111 WYNN, Holly 20 Woodbury Way Syosset, N. Y. 11791 WYSZYNSKI, Theresa 115 Strandview Ave. Ft. Myers Bch., Fla. 33931 XACAS, Jonathan Mark 505 Prairie St. St. Charles, III. 60174 XAGAS, Steven George 505 Prairie St. St. Charles, III. 60174 YELTON, Donald Moss 4316 Aspen Hill Rd. Rockville, Md. 20853 YELTON, Patricia E. Box 589 Tryon Rd. Rutherfordlon, N, C. 2 ZANKY, Pamela Mane 301 Barberry Dr. G ' boro, N. C 27406 ZIMPRITCH, Georgiana 2100 House Ave. Durham, N. C. 27707 ZITVER, Annette E. 6502 E. Halbert Rd, Bethesda, Md. 20034 ZULICK, Elizabeth S. 222 Fallsbrook Rd, Timonium, Md. 21093 ■-■1 4 ' W NEBI 4 w 9 ' vSSBI mm M Vvv , n •;•-. ' ; ' ' i )gli«— aBai BJg i- SBi!BI editor-in-chief: glenn thore; business manager, managing editor: patty wall; basketball layout and design: bill buckley; contributors: missy cloen, marcia cupit; photographers: milton co- lindres, randy catoe, joe lechleider, John wilkerson; george roycroft, guilford college; dave marshburn, burlington; jack lambeth, Chesapeake, Virginia; joe walker, greensboro; cover pho- tograph: Charlie sewell. special thanks to george roycroft, bill buckley, dave marshburn, floyd reynolds
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