Lipscomb University - Backlog Yearbook (Nashville, TN) - Class of 1971 Page 1 of 240
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Soni ot pha 4 rad | bh a 4 ye Kis Coin OH) a tere at to a 5 ay pede a NU OND) Se Ga Ts ae ‘ee A i z my we id a ; 4 t cae AS SR a Phe Duy Med | “ Dee se 4 ty A rhe) v 1S is i a 1s NALS Lave kg ANN ‘ ‘ fag | ; qe) el , ny hee “™ : 4 ° i ; 40,19 AP Vaan Phy ; ph We Le i 2% oh, c ¥ | Pay ho ee ee i ay bel a ara A PU ' be eat Yeas 4 iy fay , a ‘ i . Ah Nae a ‘ i . ee is f a) ie of } 5 a) } W y %, ih’ Vy thsi + ; 4 ez i , | SOM 4 “a ‘A f ; j ey 1 ; Ti i ‘ i aT i t a aL 2 1 a Y iy ‘ ' 4 ) Ue 7 +P “el . rE! Camm nae) i HY , @ RY a uy ioe n { ‘ Da A. vt ( A i Vn ' | ‘ Vous : Ae ie Van OP 4 0 wera lye hia i Ur mi nGr, y bi 7 AGUAS ig . Lae Ly SER PR Na iy) cas F y ’ , 5 ‘ hte Nr bis a AI el ‘ he gt j iy A 4 Z a eat, msi he TABLE OF CONTENTS Prospectus | I People | 17 Perspective | 149 Postscript | 220 prospectus (pro-spek -tus),n. A ees prelude or overview ee envisioning the anticipated goals of a forthcoming venture. backlog 1971 | david lipscomb college | nashville, tennessee cet sia a ame 1s SH fe AS ‘ N . = be f .. : ‘One ae is a minute, but vital ake in the procession of the Family of To touch life—to touch understanding, compassion, to watch each day’s ebb and flow, to embrace thorns and stones, petals and warm earth—to know this is... =f f qu oh a) ee: Rarer nates te To touch people—to watch their growth, share their lives and realize their humanity, to love them in spite of it, to be molded by the force of their spirit—io know this is... . To touch time—to know its infinity, to feel its immediacy, to use it, to serve ) et it, to live with its power, and to realize its futility—to know this is .. . ‘ sete, fe heat a ey Wd Bees nae EN ae enatattgs gerne Shi hb Seeman TP ee Rr Se ictal 3 ath To touch the strange—to find new worlds thousands of miles away or within the closeness of one’s own mind, to notice the small things over-shadowed by the enormous, to be shocked, ex- hilarated, and awed—to know this is .. . SE See aS he “ i rage ae re 7 ® SOR ete ; 4 pate = ¥ abe BSAA SETAE MAS MET Ee REEL Tay E BE PT fp SAA TRANG POMES Wim oe rere tiate: tas oe a GaN Mie of hapa deste sh RET be? ete ee elo bbe lE PF IPM TE CSLLEY, aH anty pane, shila a pene es mr ee yeh See verte Ree AR Ae seas eNO te ih ¢ SIRES EF ARN S STNG BR LTE PGA EF RRO, EEN STOTT e oard of Directors James R. Byers Chairman Nashville, Tennessee William Dalton Vice-Chairman Hartsville, Tennessee M. N: Young Secretary and Treasurer Nashville, Tennessee James E. Adams Nashville, Tennessee Claude Bennett Birmingham, Alabama Word B. Bennett, Jr. Nashville, Tennessee David L. Boyd Chattanooga, Tennessee Bryan A, Crisman Memphis, Tennessee Joe L. Evins Washington, D.C. and Smithville, Tennessee Dr. William R. Gray Louisville, Kentucky John W. High McMinnville, Tennessee Thomas J. McMeen Nashville, Tennessee Charlie G. Morris Tuscumbia, Alabama Thomas A. Noah, Jr. Shelbyville, Tennessee Athens Clay Pullias Nashville, Tennessee Mrs. Emmett H. Roberson Nashville, Tennessee Edgar E. Smith Huntsville, Alabama Donald G. Thoroman Pound Ridge, New York Newton York Walker, Jr. Franklin, Tennessee 20 Hol- Athens Margaret 0 i 1S. 1 T. Long, Edsel F 1€. Mack Wayne Cra Willard Collins, Seated y Pullias, itanding: Nathan pper, Jacky Ray Dav ‘jan, Ya: To, 21 Inistration Adm | President Athens Clay Pullias ie pe nace aie Willard Collins | Vice-President 23 Mack Wayne Craig | Dean 24 25 — EES Manager ness Holman | Bus Edsel F Ralph R. Bryant | Registrar GEBRA ANG PoonomETRY Carl McKelvey, Jr. | Dean of Men 26 ident istants to the Pres ive Ass istrat In Adm Nova Lee Simmons Mary Sherrill Mrs. Altie H. Smith 7h James E. Ward | Director of Library Services Thomas C. Whitfield | Director of Teacher Education Eunice B. Bradley | Director of the News Bureau James R. Armstrong | Admissions Counselor 29 Library Staff Left to right: Myrna Perry, Associate Li- brarian; Jane Webb, Associate Librarian: Anne B. Johnson, Assistant Librarian; Frances Rutherford, Assistant Librarian. 30 Ruth Gleaves | Fanning George L. Mann High Rise Mrs. Vio May Bonner | Johnson Dormitory Supervisors Bill Carpenter | Sewell : C. Patricia Walters | Elam 31 Heating Plant: Standing: James Estes, Doyle Edney, Larry Branscomb, Bill Pope. Seated: Claude Hayes. Nursing Staff: Jewel Floyd and Elizabeth Harrell. Campus Policemen: Paul Hughey, Mitchell Jones, and James Estes. Food Services: Fred Vincent, William Shannon, and George Vlahakis. ‘Maintenance: Seated: Jerry Helm, Arnold Underwood, Frances Loeb, Jerry Bullard. Standing: Jimmy Langley, J. Y. Wilhoite, Henry Edwards, W. S. Ivey, David Collins, Dave Abbey. STAFF Supervisors: Front: Marie Smith, Mary Carrigan, Anne Marie Robertson, Gertrude Ryan, Athalie Thurmon, D. M. Hassey. Back: Doris Irwin, Mary Ray Ryan, Rufie McQueen, Cleo Whitfield, Dorothy Empson, and Allene Dillingham. Secretaries—First row: Jo Ann Harwell, Anita Pahman, Linda Pettit, Sara Jones, Jackie Howard. Second row: Dora Mangrum, Barbara Jenkins, Mary Ruth Buchli, Mary Proctor, Ruth O’Brien, Jane Hardy. Third row: Eva Baker, Ann Zentz, Vivian Anderson, Jo Newsom, Diane Olive, Eula Jones. Fourth row: Brenda Pierson, Joyce Thorn- ton, Phyllis Frump, Sharon Hall, and Martha Hick- erson. 33 35 -. Left to right: Harvey L. Floyd, Assistant Professor tor; Marlin Connelly, Associate Professor; Dean Dail Freetly, Associate Professor; J. E. Choate, dr.; ter, Chairman, Professor; Harold S. Baker, Associate Professor; Joe E. Sanders, Associate Professor; Carroll B. Ellis, Professor; Mack Wayne Craig, Professor. 36 f — | Bible Reaching out to touch the hand of God, wise men of great learning and courage teach and ask that others reach out to find the will of God. Here, daily, a man and a woman may share the gift of finding the way to walk with God. Men of great compassion live and show what it is to find the heart of God. This is all there is here —a world of God, His Word, laid open to all. ; Fred B. Walker, Assistant Professor; Carl McKelvey, Associate Professor; Thomas I. Cook, Instruc- Professor; Clyde M. Miller, Instructor; Batsell Bax- Professor; J. Cliett Goodpasture, Assistant Professor; John R. McRay, Dean; Rodney E. Cloud, Instructor; John T. Willis, Professor; J. Leo Snow, Assistant Religious Education If a child should ask me, “Where is God?” How shall I find Him?” pr enadencresesnniras And if his father should want to know, “Who is God? “Where can I meet Him?” Everyday, in every way, aman or child must learn. And how to teach and where to teach and what to teach I must know. Because to teach of God is Love. Left to right: Joe E. Sanders, Chairman, Professor; Carl McKelvey, Associate Profes- sor; Paul Brown, Instructor. 37 Education. The very soul of life is learning and learning how to teach others to learn. Not so very long ago a humble, sinewy carpenter from Galilee stepped into the lives of men and taught them the Truth and now it makes them Free: Today we learn how to do the same, only with reading, and writing, and algebra. So there you are— in front of a classroom full of minds with an impressive title trying to impress and the only thing you can think of is how He would do it. Left to right: D. H. Wilkinson, Professor; Thomas C. Whitfield, Chairman, Professor; Franklin B. Jones, Associate Professor; John H. Brown, Professor; Margaret Hop- per, Associate Professor; Willis G. Wells, Associate Professor; and James W. Cos- tello, Assistant Professor. 38 Left to right: Jack Norwood, Assistant Instructor; Peggy Roberts, Assistant Instructor; Gary Davis, Assistant Instructor; Betty Webster, Instructor; S. Eugene Boyce, Professor; James Ward, Associate Professor, Duane R. Slaughter, Chairman, Professor; Michael T. Clark, Instructor; Kenneth L. Dugan, Assistant Pro- fessor; Thomas E. Hanvey, Associate Professor; Russ Combs, Assistant Instructor. Absent: Stephen Barron, Assistant Instructor. Physical Education Listen, brother —some people are dying and are hungry, and you’re just running around in circles, running, jumping, bouncing. Is that what P.E. is all about? Why? But, there’s more. There’s development. You learn something about yourself. You lose and learn. You win and learn. You strain—ache—sprain—read the sports page and visit Merry-Go-Boy’s grave. You grow socially, mentally, physically. Listen, brother, It takes a grown person to serve the hungry —and the dying. 39 Home Economics Boil, bake, baste, pin —the intangibles, the evidence of an enormous task —the molding of a quiet greatness. To build a home in a house, to shape a personality from an infant and promise, to be a companion (and helper) ; thus to grow. Skills also become vocation as well as avocation. Careers in the home sciences begin in future bride’s classes. The house (managing or being managed by it?) —luncheons and white blouses and dark skirts —experimentation, discovery —all lead to confidence—in one’s ability to build. Seated: Margaret Carter, Chairman, Professor; Alice King, In- a etOn Standing: Marilyne Burgess, Instructor; June Gingles, nstructor. MOE COUNT AT Ce pens Ua ee Speech And he opened his mouth. . . and he knew how to say a thing, and men got the message and today what the people hear or decide to hear or to believe depends mostly on how a thing is said —on expression. Transferring an idea from one mind to another (whether the idea be God or English lit or political reform or entertainment) involves speech. Left to Right: Fred B. Walker, Assistant Professor; Batsell B. Baxter, Professor; Carroll B. Ellis, Chairman, Professor; Jerry Henderson, Professor; Marlin Connelly, Associate Professor, Har- old S. Baker, Associate Professor; Perry Cotham, Assistant Pro- fessor; Forrest Rhoads, Assistant Professor. Music Practice rooms are crowded with men and women getting acquainted with curious creations called instruments, turning them from meaningless, lifeless wood and metal and strings into animate, ordered voices of beauty. Chopin Mazurkas, A Cappella tours With Brahms, Bach, and Barber Riding along in buses With us as they Have ridden immemorially with The hearts of others. Ensembles disassemble; Chorales disintegrate with Time, but hearts who’ve known here the magic ship Music Go sailing on Still singing. Seated: Frances H. Hill, Associate Professor. Standing, left to right: Jerry J. Jennings, Instructor; Travis A. Cox, Assistant Pro- fessor; Mamie E. McCommas, Acting Chairman, Instructor; Gerald L. Moore, Assistant Professor; Benford H. Masterson, As- sistant Professor. Pa 0 Macha Praterthy rt fe To create the beautiful. . . to imitate the power of God in molding, painting, sculpting, capturing the image. . . this is art. Mastering a skill but also cultivating a talent and using one’s talents in a concrete fashion is art. To those students caught up in this effort getting ready for their first art show, stretching their imaginations, developing their silk screening lab, with india ink on their sleeves, acrylics on their faces, glue on their fingers, and the beautiful on their minds. the world is their clay: struggling, searching, lifting, hoping to find. . . art. Left to right: Rudy Sanders, Instructor; John C. Hutcheson, Chairman, Assistant Professor; Dawn Whitelaw, Assistant In- structor. 43 To speak to a man with his own mind is a great thing, but to speak with a man in the language of his youth is to know him and to share. A voice to guide the reteaching of a man’s tongue requires energy and patience and many years. A new department with increased offerings, but still the voices teach how to speak. To teach one to speak so that a friend might understand —this is a lasting thing. Modern Languages Left to right: David Howard, Instructor; Donald R. Taylor, Assistant Instructor; Ruth H. Campbell, Instructor; B. Don Finto, Chairman, Assistant Professor; Gladys E. Gooch, Assistant Professor. English Left to right: Nancy Raskopf, Instructor; Mary H. Collins, Instructor; Eunice Brad- ley, Instructor; Thomas Cook, Instructor; Morris P. Landiss, Chairman, Professor; James W. Thomas, Instructor; A. Dennis Loyd, Associate Professor; Sue Berry, Asso- ciate Professor; Cynthia Dilgard, Instructor; Connie Fulmer, Assistant Professor; Jean Thompson, Instructor. Feandlited by CRAY LERTS: 4% 2 ‘DBOOK OF GREEK MYTHOLOGY _ HODGES’ LOD © Literature Children Dhases the relevance of relevance, tHe Literature the reality of aestheticism, and the stark necessity of civilized communication. GEORGION McClella na Gunmaaanee waaay” ENGLISH LITERATU Hodges and Whitten HARBRACE COLLEGE HANDBOOK THIRD DETIIN Remember, long ago, on 2 when the freshman forgot to ask how one writes 600 words on the similes in a 50-word poem, or when the sophomore forgot to explore the logic behind, “Read it because it’s ‘Great’ ”? Remember, not so long ago, how the freshest freshman and the most sophomoric sophomore cried for relevance? Those men and women who study words, beautiful and ugly, know that not too long from now the future will show Sauwwwwwr ys Cwuria wee 45 OPC ema ss, 2te29. Left to right: Dorothy Eubanks, Instructor; Patty Dugger, Assistant Harris, Instructor; Axel W. Swang, Chairman, Professor; Fred J. Kittrell, O. Wilson, Associate Professor; Walter B. Rogers, Justin Potter Distinguished Professor; R. Clouse, Instructor. Absent: Robert E. Kendrick, Visiting Professor. Business Administration Working to improve an economic world built on the complexities of finance. Clicking typewriters, the audible sound of progress, the tension of the CPA exam, in preparation for a fast world, a dollars and cents world, a combination world of human minds, of human interrelation, of human necessities and commodities. Motivation applied to a numbers psyche spurs the decisions, the intelligence, that lead to Success. 46 Professor; W. Douglass Associate Professor; Harold Wilburn If you asked me years from now how to solve a problem by the quadratic formula or by simultaneous equations, you might have me in a mathematical bind. If you asked me when, in the long ago of my fresh college years, my math class met in spring, I'd remember in a flash that I forced myself to class at 4:00, body without mind. Somehow, even now though, I have to believe that in studying math I am honing a part of me that sees analytically and that will see, with gratitude, something around the corner from The Answer— the beauty of exactitude. Mathematics Left to right: Raymond E. Dodd, Assistant Professor; Marvin A. Nikolaus, Assistant Professor; J. Austin French, Assistant Profes- sor; Robert H. Kerce, Chairman, Professor; Ralph R. Bryant, As- sociate Professor; John C. Holland, Assistant Professor; C. Earl Dennis, Assistant Professor. Physics Pieces of chalk hurled through the air spinning madly to demonstrate centrifugal force, keeping Fletcher’s renowned trolley on its track; amplifiers, expensive e m tubes, exact 3-D drawings —all are efforts of the body. And mixed with them are the efforts of the mind. The mental —whether it is hours of deep thought (Newtonian in origin) or an extension of that thought in machinery (computers, mass spectometers ) —one finds it necessary to delve into the secrets of the universe to make a journey to the researcher’s Mecca (Berkeley). All to discover the physical secrets of Nature’s order. Left to right: C. Franklin Kyle, Assistant Professor; Ralph W. Nance, Assistant Professor; W. Everette Hunt, Chairman, Profes- sor; W. Ralph Butler, Assistant Professor. Absent: James G. Barrett, Special Instructor, Left to right: James L. Wood, Associate Professor; John W. Dawson, Associate Profes- sor; Paul B. Langford, Professor; John T. Netterville, Chairman, Professor; George E. prakes Associate Professor; David O. Johnston, Professor; John C. Craig, Assistant rofessor. Chemistry NMR, Organic, P-Chem., ACS., Bio., Qual. . . abbr’ed names for phases of chemistry that S-T-R-E-T-C-H the mind (as well as the student). Stretching can be painful. It begins with incomprehensible macromolecules, the odor of pyridine, Wilbert being out to lunch—and you’ve spilled your sample, shooting solutions into a gas chromotograph until 11:00 —p.m. staring at a test, problem, confused, frustrated —but without stretching one cannot REACH. And without reaching, man cannot reach more and without reaching more, man stops. This year’s periodic charts, lubricating powders, small reaches contributing to chemistry and that ultimate understanding of new opportunities to serve man ... and God. 49 Biology Discovering life in a room of living monkeys, rats, mice, guinea pigs. Examining life in an angel fish gliding through clear, shimmering water. Observing life in cold, slithering snake movements and in rows of plants in rooftop greenhouses —some beautiful, some functional: this is life. The squeamishness that rises while discovering a frog’s brain, the awe and wonder of a pumping heart, creatures suspended in a sea of formaldehyde, a grinning human skeleton —all to be herpetologists, botanists, ichthyolo- gists, geneticists, doctors. All to discover values based on nature and God. The end: —to curb the destruction of Life. 50 Sy Ae BIOLOGY CHARTS By Hilary S. Jurica, Ph.D. “EY CONTENTS JE “IBS 1. Green Algae 528-1. Amonba and Euglena i JBS 2, Brown Algae IZS 2, Parameceum © IBS. 3, Bacteria, Molds, and Parnsit IZS 3. Hydra and Obelia WIZ 4. td eworen alee Hinder? ZS. §. Earthworm SZS 6. Clete and Starfieh UBS 4, Yeast, ed Skene an IBS 5. Fungi . : ZS 7. Crayfish SBS. B ay SES 8. Grasthopper — IBS 9. Boel : ra ie JZS 9. Howsefly and Honeybee 4 JBS10. Seis La e q 4ZS10. Frog= Reproduction | JBSTY. Root ad Pl ant Functions -SES11. Fess Skeleton JIBS 42. The Laat ee ee - IZS12. Frog Circutatory System JZS14, Yellow Perch and Snake JZS14. Birds and Their Tools S SZS1S. Animal Cell Tepes ‘ JZS16. Meiosis snd Mitosis JBS 14. Monocotyledanous Stem JBS 14. Dicotyledenous Stem JS18, Flowers Apple Blog UBS 16. Mendel’skaws of Ir Published 6° INYSTIIEM CO. Chicago Side anon ck Left to right: Oliver H. Yates, Professor; Willis C. Owens, Chairman, Professor: Johnnie E. Breeden, Associate Professor; Russell C. Artist, Professor. Psychology Of all subjects I have invented, I find myself most fascinating; for I love unrequitedly, I hate illogically, I hope blindly, I dream unceasingly, and I still die ungracefully. While I’m here I find myself trying to discover why my brother stumbles off the road into a still, dim, unbounded meadow. Today I light that meadow and lead my brother through the darkness back toward the road with my extended hand. Maybe tomorrow with God’s help, Pll keep him even from stumbling. Left to right: David H. Martin, Associate Professor; William H. Vermillion, Chair- man, Professor; Dean Dail Freetly, Asso- ciate Professor; Ralph E. Samples, Assistant Professor; Robert §S. Sturgeon, Associate Professor. Sociology Building students, rebuilding a department, the emphasis falls on human relationships in a human world, enlightened social service in a troubled world, respect for the truth . . . individual expres- sion in a growing year. Committees of the Sociological Society, a survey executed and published, AGAPE, and the search for elusive answers— Probing into the depths of society, love, prejudice,’ community, individual, urbanization, reaction, “various and sundry phenomena,” Because man lives with man. Left to right: Hollis E. Todd, Associate Professor; James E. Mar- tin, Instructor; Thomas J. Ingram, Instructor; Nathaniel T. Long, Chairman, Professor. f } ; ‘| i 52 Left to right: M. Timothy Tucker, Assista1it Professor; Patrick H. Deese, Assistant Professor; Lewis S. Maiden, Professor; Robert E. Hooper, Chairman, Professor; James L. McDonough, Associate Professor; Paul D. Phillips, Associate Professor; Norman E. Trevathan, Assistant Professor. Social Science ” 7 Lest we torget. -o. . . . man has a usable past to build a workable future. The world turns on and on and on Yet lives of great men remind us: hopefully, Henry Clay would still rather be right than President. Or William Jennings Bryan —‘T shall not be crucified on a Cross of Gold.” osersspothi=a Of perhaps... Alert to the past living vibrantly in the present and dedicated to the future: uLest we forvet.tc ” Janet Adams Nashville Sharon K. Albright Nashville Louis Allen Miami, Fla. Aimee Alsup Sparta Cathee Alsup Sparta Allen Anderson Nelson, Wis. Forrest Anderson Decatur, Ala. Alvin Araki Hilo, Hawaii Lynn Armstrong Castalian Springs Betty Aston Alliance, Ohio Twyla Avery Nashville Paula Bach Tavares, Fla. Dewey Bain Corpus Christi, Texas Sue Bainbridge Farmington, W. Va. Steve Bair Wrightsville, Pa. Bill Baize Nashville Wayne Batey Colonial Heights, Va. Charles B. Beasley Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Dianne Beauchamp Nashville Michael L. Belisle Pueblo, Col. Cliff Bennett Donelson Sally Bennett Nashville 56 Linda Bilbra Nashville Hulen Bivins Nashville Dan Black Maury City Linda Bloomingburg Arlington, Va. Betty Katherine Bogle Morrison Diane Bohannon Knoxville Paula Bonbrisco Roseville, Mich. Nathan Boring Monroeville, Pa. Mike Bouldin Gruelti Donald Bowen Nashville 57 PRESIDENT: Morgan Davis VICE-PRESIDENT: Babbi Hinson Ed Boyce Nashville Elizabeth Ann Boyd Jasper Bonnie Boyer Mineral Point, Pa. Rosemary Bramlette Chamblee, Ga. John N. Brasel Madison Brenda Britton Chattanooga Sherry Brown Old Hickory John Brumley Hamilton, Ala. Bill Bryan Nashville Richard Bryan Nashville 58 December Officers SECRETARY: Suzanne McCullough TREASURER: Fala Christian Jerry Bumbalough Dayton, Ohio Linda Bumgardner Pensacola, Fla. Patti Burleson Nashville J. Randal Burton Whites Creek Lynn Burton Whites Creek Betty Busbin Summerville, Ga. Johnny E. Cagle Trinity, Ala. Larry Calliouet Huntsville, Ala. Charles Caldwell Nashville Ken Caldwell Ashland City Glenda Campbell Falls Church, Va. Stephen Caraway Nashville Marie Cassels Greenville, Ky. Cyndee Catlett Darlington, Pa. Charles Cauthen Tyler, Texas Byron Chambers McMinnville Teresa Chessor Nashville Neil Christy Nashville Charles R. Chumley Nashville Diane Clark Urbana, Ill. Phil Cobb Po-Grab Martha Cochran Summerville, Ga. Becky Cole Smyrna, Ga. Ron Coles Nashville Debbie Coleman Nashville Ellen Conway Ft. Deposit, Ala. Betty Cook Indianapolis, Ind. Ronnie Cook Nashville Susan Cook Hopkinsville, Ky. Ronnie Cope Cottontown 59 Billy Copeland Decatur, Ga. Gary Cowan Cookeville Karl Craun Nashville Kay Crawford Memphis Judy Laura Crosby Bradenton, Fla. Bill Crump Madison Paul Cullum Nashville Paula Cyr Chattanooga Roger Dale Nashville Carl Daniel Augusta, Ga. Debbie Daniel Waverly, Ky. Anna Daniels Paintsville, Ky. Dianne Dart Hubbardsville, N. Y. Ron Davenport Smithville Jimmy Davis Lawrenceburg Morgan Davis Nashville Sandra Davis Nashville Donna Day Dayton, Ohio 4 ; j ; | Steve Deasy Portland od Po oso ee onsen vaynnataaaeredtny SueAnn Deese Nashville Susan Delancey Yazoo City, Miss. 60 UATES June Officers PRESIDENT: Ronnie Jones SECRETARY: Kay Crawford TREASURER: Bill Wagner re ic asia OE eee, ” Dianne Derryberry Lewisburg Larry Deweese Madison Linda Dillon Ashville, Ohio Sam Doan Nashville Walker N. Dobbs | Haleyville, Ala. Beverly J. Dodd Brentwood Rosalind Dodd Michie Paulette Donati Pittsburgh, Pa. Katherine Dooley Ridgely Gail Doty Selma, Ala. 61 Russell Dudrey Reno, Nevada Bobby Edwards Nashville Carolyn Elliott Detroit, Mich. Nancy Elliott Gallatin Rita Evans Livingston Vicki Evans Ft. Payne, Ala. John Ewing McMinnville James C. Fassino Indianapolis, Ind. Sharon Finley Naples, Fla. David Fisher Bethlehem, Pa. Charles Floyd Battle Ground, Ind. Gayle Franklin Winchester Marilyn French Hamilton, Oho Gary Fulford Nashville Nancy Gafford Rome, Ga. Peggy Galligan Metairie, La. Donald R. Garner Marion, Ohio Stephen B. Garner Old Hickory Gary Gatten Bentleyville, Pa. Paul George Nashville Mark Gibbons Greenbrier Karen Gibbs Louisville, Ky. Donna Gilbert Oak Ridge David Goolsby Clayton, Ohio Tom Haddock Oak Ridge Mary Jane Haines 2 Franklin Randall Hall Nashville Thomas Lee Hamilton : Nashville | Dean Hankinson : Carlisle, Pa. | George Hanlin Sheffield, Ala. 62 Jim Harper Nashville Neil Harper Florence, S. C. Ronnie Harris Nashville Fred Hauser Greenville, Miss. Marlene Haynes Murfreesboro Myra Herren Marietta, Ga. Martha Hickerson Dickson George M. Hicks Colonial Heights, Va. Brenda Hilderbrand Memphis Mickey Hiter Antioch 63 Diana Hixon Rome, Ga. Brenda Hobbs Nashville Arthur Horton Tuscumbia, Ala. Ron Howard Nashville Susan Howell Columbia Donna Huckaby Nashville Cindy Huffines Madison Dick Hughes Warren, Pa. Barbara Hunter Nashville Ronnie Hunter Nashville Bill Hurt Franklin Kathy Hutchison Henderson Bill Ingram St. Marys, W. Va. Donna Irwin Nashville Earl Johnson Athens, Ala. Steve Johnson Dresden Angela Jones Petersburg, Va. Diane Jones Jackson, Miss. Gwen Jones Nashville Mural Jones Petersburg, Va. Ronald C. Jones Nashville Ronald E. Jones Nashville Sharon Jones Millersburg, Ohio Lynda Karnes Nashville Linda Kaufman Ft. Myers, Fla. Lucinda Kaufman New England, W. Va. Steven Kaufman Parkersburg, W. Va. Paul Keckley Chattanooga Jeff Kelley Decatur, Ill. Jerry Kennedy High Point, N. C. Joy Kent Nashville Nancee Kerr Rosiclare, Ill. Susan Key Lehore, W. Pakistan Tom Kirkpatrick Hermitage Gerald King Waverly Janice King Linden ‘Gina Kay Kirby Montgomery, Ala. Melinda Knott Nashville ‘Russell Lambert Muscle Shoals, Ala. 'fim Lavender Columbus, Ohio Jennis Laws Nashville uarry Little Moulton, Ala. 65 Lynette Logan Fayetteville Stephen B. Long Nashville Jerry Love Nashville Jacqueline Lutes Nashville Peggy Lynn Oak Ridge Linda McCalister Panama City, Fla. Suzanne McCullough St. Marys, W. Va. Scarlett McDaniel Danville, Va. Delbert L. McKenzie Zanesville, Ohio Richard McLeod Atmore, Ala. 66 William Lee Maddux Nashville Dwight Marable Nashville Jim Marlowe Rockwood Zachry F. Martin Chattanooga Richard Mayer Tampa, Fla. Sue Mayfield Charlestown, Ind. Richard Means Gainesville, Fla. Kay Meiser Nashville Pam Merryman Gallatin Reid Meyers Bellevue, Ohio Jack Milam Nashville Ken Miller Lorain, Ohio Alice Milton Jacksonville, Fla. Jim Mincey Garden City, Mich. Wanda Mistyurick Dayton, Ohio Janet Mitchell Loveland, Ohio Eddie Montgomery Nashville Jan Moran Winter Garden, Fla. Richard J. Morris Franklin Louis Morrow Nashville Marsha Morrow Alexandria, Va. Ron Mosley Milan Pamela H. Mundy Whites Creek Beverly Murray Nashville Shirley Myers Brownsburg, Ind. Jerry Nash Nunnelly 67 Andra Neeley Paducah, Ky. Edward Neelley Columbia Allen Neese Moro, Iil. Jane Nevins Tompkinsville, Ky. Carl Newby McMinnville Larry Nixon Mt. Juliet Alton Norman Nashville Nancy Norman Charlotte, N. C. Mike O’Neal Smyrna Larry J. Pahman Nashville Charles Parker Lavergne Regina Parker Mansfield Ronnie Parker Lavergne George Parks Nashville Pam Parks Nashville Teresa Parlon Nashville Linda F. Pate Nashville Jeannie Patton Nashville Dianne Payne Letohatchie, Ala. Marinell Payton Nashville Beverly Pardue Pearman Nashville Lowell Peden Colonial Heights, Va. Susan Phelps Milan Margaret Phillips Johnson City Stephen Pierce Manchester Diana Piercy Royal Center, Ind. Jan Pippin Lincoln Park, Mich. Garth Pleasant Flint, Mich. Janet Plemmons Paoli, Ind. Connie Porter Nashville Terry Porter Marietta, Ohio Melvin Potts Nashville Connie Powell Dayton, Oho Darla Powell Huntsville, Ala. Nancy N. Powell Nashville Ralph E. Powell, Jr . Nashville Sondra Powell Cincinnati, Ohio Jim Prince Huntland Presley Ramsey Nashville Brownie Reaves Nashville Nancy Clendening Reaves Nashville Tom Reed Nashville 69 Winston Reed Huntsville, Ala. Wayne Register Nashville Lana Rich Huntingdon Frank Rittenberry Nashville Connie Roath Springfield Dan Robinson Plymouth, Mich. Robert Robinson Augusta, Ga. Carolyn Rochelle Nunnelly Jillene Rose Eustis, Fla. Jeri Ruby Sanford, Fla. Dennis Russell Pulaski Tom Rutherford Nashville Ruth Ryan Nashville David Santi Madison Annette Sargent Decatur, II. Jerry Savage Cotton Valley, La. Donna Sawyer Old Hickory Gerry Sciortino Nashville Teresa Brewer Scott Memphis William E. Scott Memphis Patricia Seal Sevierville Hal Sensing Kingston Springs Margaret Sessions Forest Home, Ala. Linda Sherwood Madison, Ind. 70 Lindy Short Nashville Susan Sinclair Nashville Michael Ray Smith Smyrna, Ga. Donna Snyder Williamstown, W. Va. Beverly Socha Middlesfield, Ohio Kathy Sparks Nashville Robert Sprague Salem, Ky. Diane Turner Staggs Nashville Dennis R. Stephen Toronto, Ontario Gerald Stephens Indianapolis, Ind. Ernest Stewart Oregon, Ohio Wavell Stewart Nashville Mary Stiles Ithaca, N. Y. Jane Stowell Schenectady, N. Y. Reid Street Nashville George Strickland Palatka, Fla. Pam Strosnider Hopewell, Va. Evelyn Stuart Dudley, Mo. D’Lo Sturdivant Mobile, Ala. Rita Sullivan Bon Aqua Linda Summey Brentwood Donna Sutherland Goodlettsville Marilyn Swaim Lebanon David Switzer Paducah, Ky. 71 Carol Tarpley Dickson Mickey Tarpley Dickson Linda Tate Birmingham, Ala. Janie Taylor White Bluff Carol Temple Detroit, Mich. Karen Themmen Teaneck, N. Y. Brooksie Thompson Nashville Wayne Tomlinson Paducah, Ky. John Tracy Westerville, Ohio Harold O. Truth Baxter Les Tubb Sparta Patricia Ann Turney Lakewood, Ohio 72 Margaret Uvick Danville, Ill. Carol Varnado Charleston, S. C. David H. Vaughan Scottsville, Ky. Gary Vaughan Amory, Miss. Joan Vernon Henderson Roy Wagers Walled Lake, Mich. Bill Wagner Tallahassee, Fla. Cathy Walker Hernando, Miss. Richard Wallace De Soto, Texas Robert L. Weaver Lenoir City Bobby Webb Nashville Jerry Webb Nashville John Weills Cleveland, Ohio Connie White Lester, Ala. Andrea Whitson Charleston, S. C. E. J. Wilkerson Valdosta, Ga. Alice Williams Nashville Dan Williams Nashville Doug Williams Columbia Tommy Williams Quitman, Ga. Jim Wilson Nashville Mary Wilson La Grange, Ind. Cherry Wiser E. Peoria, Ill. Carol Womack McMinnville Nancy Wooten Memphis Carl Wright Nashville Wayne York Nashville 73 Marsha Adams Roanoke, Va. Paul Agee Carthage Marjorie Anders Annadale, Va. Jim Anders Cookeville Mary Anthony Oak Ridge Jane Arnold Bowie, Md, Joy Arnold Eagleville James Atwood Nashville Theresa Atwood Nashville Russ Baker Pensacola, Fla, Pat Ballen Mt. Dora, Fla. Irvin Bass Lebanon Frank Batson Nashville Jan Bellar Hermitage Nancy Bennett Nashville Larry Bickel Nashville Gail Biddle McMinnville Betty Billingsley Nashville Joan Blevins Rising Fawn, Ga. Rhonda Blevins Chattanooga Phil Bowers Forest Park, Ga. Andrea Boyce Nashville Harrell Boyd Chattanooga Robert Bradford Terre Haute, Ind. Grady Braziel Sarasota, Fla. John Bridges Deatsville, Ala. Ginger Brown Lewisburg Margaret Brown Pulaski Sharon Brumit Bowling Green, Ky. Ann Bryan Ardmore Gerald Bucy Mt. Zion, Ill. Anita Burford Brownsville Steve Burnett Old Hickory Wilson Burton Nashville Joann Basey Montgomery, Ala. Steve Callen Evansville, Ind. Danny Cannon Nashville Lynette Carnahan Donelson David Chadwick Talladega, Ala. Susan Christy Nashville Brenda Clements Nashville Beth Clevenger Nashville Tommy Clevenger Nashville Charles Cliburn Franklin, Ky. Charleen Cline Montgomery, Ala. Belvia Coats- Trenton, Ga. 74 CLASS Annette Cody Nashville Flora Collins Nashville Libby Colson Birmingham, Ala. John Conger Smithville Sherry Cooper Nunnelly Bill Cope Nashville Chuck Correll Donelson Larry Covington Greenbrier Dixie Craig Tarentum, Pa. Rusty Crider Memphis David Crosier Nashville Buddy Davis Chattanooga Catherine Dixon Nashville Beth Donati Pittsburgh, Pa. Mack Dugger Albany, Ga. Theresa Eason Birmingham, Ala. Daniel Easter Nashville Paula Ellis Columbia Paulette Fewell Alamo Summer-Fall Officers PRESIDENT: Dewey Bain VICE-PRESIDENT: Jim Slater SECRETARY: Harriet Jackson TREASURER: Liz Joslin 75 JUNIOR Judy Fowler Birmingham, Ala. Sam Frame Nashville Gary French Hamilton, Ohio Terry Frisby Columbus, Ohio Gerald Frump Indianapolis, Ind. Hazel Fulford Cortez, Fla. Doug Gates Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Jack Gaw Gainesboro Sharon Glisson Chattanooga Randy Glover Peoria, Ill. Joel Greene McMinnville Jim Grimenstein Oakmont, Pa. Rex Grisham Ashland, Miss. Bill Grundy Nashville Elizabeth Hairston Rockville, Md. Nancy Hammer Scottsboro, Ala. Jenny Hammond Decatur, Ga. Wayne Hampton Dayton, Ohio Randy Hawkins Ft. Payne, Ala. Thomas Hayes Nashville Connie Heindselman Olnay, Ill. Jane Heinselman Nevarra, Ohio Mary Lynn Helm Hartsville Wanda Hendrix Florence, Ala. Kay Henry Nashville Mark Henry Nashville 76 Winter-Spring Officers SECRETARY: Jane Arnold PRESIDENT: Mike Seamon TREASURER: Janice Neese VICE-PRESIDENT: Ron Jackson Deborah Holder Adairville, Ky. Bill Hollins Brentwood Rebecca Holmes Tannar, Ala. Dennis Hood Nashville Howard Horn Knoxville Dorris Hubbell Columbia Phyllis Huddleston Sarasota, Fla. Debbie Huey Grove City, Ohio Henry Huffard Sheffield, Ala. Judy Hughes ship y ppl Ala. Stephen Ingram Crossville Harriet Jackson Old Hickory Ron Jackson Atlanta, Ga. Kent Johnson Winchester 77 Keith Kull Canton, Ohio Hubert Langley Ripley C. T. Lawrence Franklin Richard Long Rainsville, Ala. Phil Lovell Columbia Marty Luffman Durham, N. C. Kenny Lutterman Glasgow, Ky. Mary Lou Lynch Trenton, Ga. Chris Lynn Union City Richard McBrayer Nashville Pam McCann Sylva, N. C. Ann McCay Nashville Jerry McCormick Nashville Stephen McDonald Paragould, Ark. Mickey McElhaney Nashville Joy McMeen Nashville 78 Fran Jones Tunnel Hill, Ga. Gwen Jones Oceana, W. Va. Michael Jones Petersburg, Va. Rachel Jones Jasper, Ala. Liz Joslin Gallatin Douglas McVey Chattanooga Marvin Mann Dellrose Debbie Matthews Huntsville, Ala. John Paul Matthews Shelbyville Tom Maust Berlin, Pa. Beckie Mayer Tampa, Fla. Lois Mead Melrose, Mass. Janice Miller Granite City, IIl. Patricia Minton Benton, Ky. Susan Mitchell Louisville, Ky. Vicki Moreland Oklahoma City, Okla. Mary Ann Morrison Lakewood, Ohio Mike Moss Danville, Ill. Brenda Murley Scottsville, Ky. Elizabeth Murphree Bruxelles, Belgium Betty Murphy Columbia Janet Nakao Hilo, Hawaii Janice Neese Moro, Ill. Phil North Madison Marianna Norton Winston, Ga. Greg Oliver Newark, Ohio Charles Ottinger Nashville Ken Parker Trion, Ga. Lynn Parker Jackson Roy Pate Nashville Don Patton Tuscumbia, Ala. 79 Deryl Perkins Pennsboro, W. Va. Linda Perry Beamsville, Ontario Al Pilkinton Decatur, Ga. Sylvia Price Winder, Ga. Walter Pruitt Huntsville, Ala. David Ramsey Miami, Fla. Linda Ramsey Memphis “IpPINESS IS Dectino Bee HAYGING, ALAC Steve Raney Brentwood Doyle Richmond Memphis Joseph Rigol Nashville Kathi Risher Peoria, Ill. Tony Roberts Nashville Jane Rummell New Philadelphia, Ohio Effie Sanford Courtland, Miss. 80 Paula Wickers Indianapolis, Ind. Doug Wilburn Memphis Dave Williams Chattanooga Mary Alice Wilson Nashville Ruth Wilson La Grange, Ind. Jeannie Wolf Jacksonville, Fla. Jane Woodring Rineyville, Ky. Jean Woodring Rineyville, Ky. Beverly Wright Nashville Donna Wright Nashville Marie Yavarone Neptune, N. J. Billie York Falls Church, Va. Arlene Seals Mt. Carmel, Il. Charlotte Seals Mt. Carmel, Ill. Michael Seaman Mocksville, N. C. Judy Sells Sevierville Janet Shannon Madison Linda Shipp Old Hickory Connie Simpkins Ashland Jim Slater Dearborn Heights, Mich. Donna Smith Nashville Wayland Smith Barton, Fla. Jerrilyn Snell Florence, Ala. Henry Staggs Nashville Myrtle Stanley Nashville Turney Stevens Nashville Sue Summers Flat Rock, Mich. Ron Swang Nashville Jim Taylor Nashville Janet Tedrick Canton, Ohio Stephanie Terry Nashville Ralph Thompson Tompkinsville, Ky. Sheila Thompson Henderson, Ky. Roscoe Thornthwaite Huntsville, Ala. Tommy Tignor Nashville Paulette Tucker Fulton, Miss. Doris Varnell Greenfield Donnie Webb Nashville Karen West Nashville Deborah Whitaker Gainesboro Jerry Adams Melber, Ky. Joanne Adams Murfreesboro Virginia Alexander Lincoln Park, Mich. Ginger Allen Nashville Phil Allen Memphis Marvin Ancell Cortez, Col. Tom Anderson Gainesboro Linda Appleton Nashville Melanie Arguitt Marietta, Ga. Greg Atkinson Shoals, Ind. Jimmy Atkinson Nashville Gary Atnip Nashville Rebecca Barnes Vicksburg, Miss. Wywanna Barnes Paducah, Ky. Roger Baskette Nashville Laverne Baxter Covington John Bean Richmond, Va. Charlotte Bell Luverne, Ala. Frank Bennett Nashville Ronald Benvegna Brentwood Diane Biggerstaff Indianapolis, Ind. Nancy Boyce Nashville Bill Boyd Mt. Dora, Fla. Michael Bradley Centerville Kay Branch Alamo 82 Randle Branch Alamo Mary Jane Bratton Duck River Durward Brantley Shelbyville Cindy Brennemon Lexington, Ohio Della Brock Louisville, Ky. Gaylan Brown Dickson Jim Buckner Nashville John Buford : Owens Cross Road, Ala. Jerry Bullard Hartsville Bonnie Burch Killen, Ala. Larry Burgess Dayton, Ohio Patricia Burks Cowan Bob Burton Goodlettsville Elizabeth Burton Nashville Corine Byerly Stone Mountain, Ga. Joyce Cagle Hixson Ethel Carr Nashville Charlotte Cary Louisville, Ky. Jim Chaney Columbia Gary Christian Jacksonville, Fla. Nancy Clark Searcy, Ark. Betty Claxton Brentwood Karen Clay Lima, Ohio Chris Cline Brevard, N. C. Gerald Coggin Lewisburg Clark Collins Nashville David Collins Gallatin Paul Compton Nashville Anita Conchin Toney, Ala. Kathy Cook Nashville Phyllis Cook Taft Donna Corley Nashville Marcia Corley Nashville 83 Judy Cortner Wartrace David Craig Nashville Callie Crosby N. Ft. Myers, Fla. Susan Dahlstrom W. Hartford, Conn. Beverly Daniel Burns Jennifer Daniel Shelbyville Steve Davey Novi, Mich. Elaine Davidson Shelbyville Nancy Ruth Davidson Nashville Diane Davis Brevard, N. C. Marilyn Davis Manchester Robert Davis Lawrenceburg Robin Davis Uniontown, Pa. Gary Dennis Louisville, Ohio Tommy Dillingham Nashville Gary Dobbins Nashville Tommy Doty Ottumwa, Iowa John Downs Levittown, Pa. Debbie Duke Stone Mountain, Ga. Melinda Earheart Nashville Carolyn Ellmore Covington, Ind. Summer-Fall Officers PRESIDENT: Steve Majors SECRETARY: Sally Montgomery TREASURER: Karen Siska 84 STUDENTS IN EVERY WAY | PosSIBLE—IF WE O NOT HAV 1T, WE CAN GET IT FOR YOU V you caN BUY FOR LESS AT COLLEGE STORE ee fe rm RE CLASS Chug Elrod Centerville Cheryl Empson Nashville Fred Enters Nashville Carol Evans Nashville James Faust Nashville David Fields Memphis Dot Fowler Birmingham, Ala. Melvin Fox Goodsprings Cherie Fuchs Augusta, Ga. Wayne Fugate Huntington, W. Va. Millie Fulkerson Nashville Pam Fulford Nashville William Furlong Oakland, Ky. Teresa Gammon Old Hickory Gaylord Gardner Dublin, Ohio Ted Gaw Gainesboro Nella Golden Nashville Larry Green Hickory, Ky. Mike Gross Piqua, Ohio Janet Hall Nashville Lynn Hardaway Nashville Glenn Hardison Lewisburg Frank Harrell Nashville Greg Harris Holtland Jill Harris Edison, Ohio Elaine Head Springfield Edna Heflin Ft, Smith, Ark. Phil Henry Nashville Grady Hensley Florence, Ala. Tommy High Tompkinsville, Ky. Linda Hobbs Norfolk, Va. 85 Paula Hogan Greenville, S. C. Cliff Holladay Monroe, Mich. Charlotte Holt Shelbyville Darrell Holt Pegram Michael Hood Decherd Vicki Hoover Miami, Fla. Anne Hopkins Fayetteville 1) . =a 5 888 ws gta ret? A-werss@ sat sis memes ass3apm: sees y coiimnatill died bas sess sree PP eeeee. Sd PRESIDENT: Ernie Hyne SECRETARY: Elaine Davidson © “‘Naghvitle VICE-PRESIDENT: Jim Taylor TREASURER: Ricki Hodges 86 « +igett! siti - { SOPHOMO Peggy Hubbell Columbia Jim Hudson Hershey, Pa. Dave Huffman Muncie, Ind. Lois Hutchinson Shady Valley Ernest Hyne I f ; Nashville Donna Ingram Avondale Estates, Ga. i te hy ee Winter-Spring Officers a Martha Jayne Memphis Chrystal Johnston Nashville Jan Johnston Paducah, Ky. Kinny Jones Nashville LaNette Jones Nashville Kathy Kennedy High Point, N. C. Mary Beth Kerce Nashville Susan Kerr Allensville, Ky. Janice Kuhn Vermilion, Ohio Gil Lamb Nashville Frances Lampley Fairview Vickie Lampley Fairview Marcia Lashley Alliance, Ohio Kathy Lawrence McMinnville Jim Laws Readyville Sharon Lemp Elmont, L. I., N. Y. Billy Lloyd Winston-Salem, N. C. Denis Lockler Mobile, Ala. Lawre Lovelace Memphis Becky Loveless Centerville Nancy Lovell Birmingham Dona Lowry Manchester Gary Lynn Decatur, Ala. Charles Lyons Hendersonville Warren McCaslin Old Hickory Dan McEachern Nashville Diane McGill Shelbyville Lynn McKinney Memphis Dennis McNeely Worthington Judy Mahaffey Nashville Kathy Mancell Theodore, Ala. David Manning Nashville David Martin Portland Eric Mason Selma, Ala. Janet Mead Melrose, Mass. Michael Mertz Allentown, Pa. Bob Milam Huntsville, Ala. Dale Mitchell McMinnville Dianne Mitchell Loveland, Ohio Gary Mitchell Paducah, Ky. Sally Montgomery Lewisburg 87 Janet Moon Atlanta, Ga, Karen Moore Sharon, Penn. Pam Moore Sarasota, Fla. Richard Moore Nashville Wendell Moss Danville, Ill. Lynn Mullins Nashville Camilla Murray Fairview Lindley Murray Nashville Larry Nash Vicksburg, Miss. Irene Nesbit Nashville Brenda Newberry Parkersburg, W. Va. Nan Nicks Nashville Barbara Nolan Parkersburg, W. Va. Linda Norwood Orlando, Fla, i | ae ie ahi | AM f ’ met gepeeete Ge Nias VAS REESE Wendell Oakley Tullahoma Ronald O’Guin Nashville Phyllis O’Neal Columbia, S. C. Sharlet Oatts Hopkinsville, Ky. Nina Ottinger Nashville Cynthia Owens Franklin Frank Padovich Toms River, N. J. 88 Nancy Pullias Coral Gables, Fla. Ann Raulston Bridgeport, Ala. David Read Jackson Eva Redmon Nashville Mary Riggs Tulsa, Okla. Neal Robbins Indianapolis, Ind. Donna Roberts Hamilton, Ohio Cathy Robinson Dickson Debbie Roder Centerville Kathy Roland Jackson Kathy Runions New Johnsonville Donna Ryan Centerville, Ohio Ben Parker Brentwood Jeffrey Paul Brownville, N. Y. Billie Payne Decherd Janet Pendergrass Des Plaines, II. Sandra Perry Bethpage Karen Perryman Des Moines, Iowa Rick Persinger Hanover, Ind. Becky Phillips Williamstown, W. Va. Candy Plumlee Kingston Springs Donald Poole Nashville Monty Powell Asheville, N. C. Bill Price Hartsville Marti Pritchard Memphis Les Pruitt Memphis SOPHOMO Marsha Sampson Hot Springs, Ark. John Sanders Nashville Darryl Sanderson Pascagoula, Miss. Horace Saunders Carlisle, Pa. Marsha Scarboro Nashville David Scott Memphis Roger Sharp South Point, Ohio Jerry Shearer Monticello, Ky. Jerry Shepard Centerville Margie Shepard Adams David Shepherd Germantown Paula Shirley Knoxville Bob Sircy Madison Candy Slaughter Tampa, Fla. Connie Smith Nashville Cathy Smoak Columbia, S. C. David Spann Nashville Vicki Spann Oak Ridge Kathy Spivey Whitleyville Karen Stewart Oregon, Ohio Glena Stillinger Euclid, Ohio Butch Stinson Nashville Peggy Stout Carneys Point, N. J. Gerry Sturgeon Mooreville, Ind. Ann Summers McMinnville Duke Sutherland Goodlettsville Craig Taylor Bloomington, Ind. James Taylor Nashville Steve Temple Nashville Keith Thomas Louisville, Ky. Stephen Thomas Nashville Sallie Ann Thompson Hagerstown, Md, Joyce Tonkery Fairmont, W. Va. Ron Tosh Nashville Jeannette Tramontano Huntington Station, N. John Troup Grant, Ala. 90 RE CLASS Linda Tucker Pulaski Rod Turnham Lakewood, Ohio David Vester Brentwood Devona Vitatoe Akron, Ohio Denny Wade Martinsville, Va. Pat Waggoner Nashville Fred Walker Nashville ia! ; = ‘ Sandy Walker a : : pg ae Hamilton, Ontario Kathy Wallace Florence, Ala. Geneva Ware Nashville Debbie Watkins Miami, Fla. Barbara Welch Huntsville, Ala. Mary Edith Wentler Livingston Jim Wesson North Olmsted, Ohio James West Fayetteville Judy West Gainesboro Sandy Wheeler Wood River, Ill. Tom Whitfield Nashville Joy Wilkison Ramsey, N. J. Greg Wiliams Pensacola, Fla. Tommy Williams Nashville Barbara Willis Columbus, Ohio Joy Willis Arab, Ala. Stephen Wilson West Newton, Ind. ' Robert Wingo Joelton Andrew Winstead Nashville Mary Witt Westland, Mich. Rose Eva Wofford Nashville Paul Wolfert Terre Haute, Ind. Debra Womack Jasper Ouida Woodroof Antioch Homa Yamin Tehran, Iran | Peggy Yates Nashville Pat Yearwood Nashville ‘Harmon Youngblood Mayfield, Ky. Jim Zimmerly a Bloomington, Ind. an a 91 FRESHMAN Bill Abbott Bedford, Ind. Karen Abraham College Park, Ga. Graham Acree Longmont, Col. Jim Adams Nashville Larry Adams Nashville Sheila Adcox Nashville Al Albany Glasgow, Ky. Diana Alexander Middletown, Ind. Marsha Alexander Nashville Martha Allen Atlanta, Ga. Pat Allen Memphis Scott Anders Powder Springs, Ga. Joyce Anderson Concord Sharon Ashberry Little Rock, Ark. John Austin Nashville Mike Austin Memphis Susan Baker Chattanooga Gerald Barker Antioch Debbie Barnes McMinnville Tom Bates Nashville Tom Bauer Cincinnati, Ohio Bill Beasley Milan Sara Beatty Ross, Ohio Beverly Beaty Clarkrange Dana Beaver Covington Lynne Berry Huntsville, Ala. James Beverett Montgomery, Ala. Doug Biggs Nashville Jerry Billingsley Gainesboro Tommy Billington Nashville Ricky Binkley Nashville Jan Blackburn Chattanooga Jeffrey Blackwood New Johnsonville Harold Bodiford Memphis Louis Bogle Bruceton 92 Missie Bolt Rockwood Janet Bolyard Cambridge, Ohio Donna Bracey Jacksonville, Fla. Larry Branscum Nashville Janie Brasel Madison Charles Brewer Memphis Robbie Brewer Gallatin Brenda Bridges Belvidere, Ill. Audrey Brooks Memphis Debi Brown Jasper Dennis Brown Hendersonville Fred Brown Morrison Janet Brown Lewisburg Valarie Buckley Sewell, N. J. John Bufford Nashville Brenda Buntley Nashville Beth Burnett Chamblee, Ga. Andrew Burton Memphis Jane Lee Burton Nashville Donneita Byrd Uniontown, Ky. Steven Cagle Mercerville, N. J. Summer-Fall Officers PRESIDENT: Don Loftis SECRETARY: Sharon Hampton VICE-PRESIDENT: Ike Bradley TREASURER: Kathy Carroll 93 FRESHMAN Pat Callicoat Proctorville, Ohio Barbara Campbell Trumann, Ark, Pat Campbell Memphis Jimmy Carman Nashville David Carnahan Madison Teresa Carnahan Madison Mark Carpenter West Palm Beach, Fla. Frances Carr Nashville Kathy Carroll Atlanta, Ga, Bruce Carter Hendersonville Nora Chambers College Grove Susan Chambers Sarasota, Fla. Glenda Chambliss Memphis Keller Chapman Nashville Ken Chastain Miami, Fla. Judy Cherry Memphis James Childress Waynesboro, Va. John Claibourne Nashville Cathy Clark Byrdstown James Clark Louisville, Ky. Jerry Clark Nashville Nita Cline Nashville Connie Cobb Petersburg Larry Cochran Nashville Sandy Colglazier Salem, Ind. Edith Combs Tompkinsville, Ky. Randy Cooper Amherst, Ohio Gail Cowden Madison Terry Crain Colorado Springs, Col. Jane Crawford Maryville Dianne Daniel Waverly Paul Daniel Columbia, S. C. Nick Daugherty Nashville Susan Davidson Longwood, Fla. Yvonne Davidson Midwest City, Okla. Karen Davis Dillsboro, Ind. j i mae ce ee 94 Paula Davis McMinnville Wayne Davis Hopkinsville, Ky. Paul DeHoff Murfreesboro Mike Dennis Nashville Dianne Dickerson Tullahoma Steve Diggs Oak Ridge Brent Dolan Memphis Kathy Dorris Monticello, Ky. Pat Douglas DeFuniak Springs, Fla. Dan Dozier Nashville Ann Drake Atwood Kathy Dreaden Nashville Valle Dreher Clare, Mich. Linda Driggers Nashville Diane Duggin Nashville Johnny Duke Nashville Debby Duncan Nashville Peggy Dunning Paducah, Ky. John Durham Centerville Eddie Eakes Hermitage Anne Ernest Atlanta, Ga. Dave Edlund Strongsville, Ohio Cheryl Eller Hermitage Brenda Ellis Columbia Greg Embry Atlanta, Ga. Wanda Enochs Lexington Blythe Epperly Nashville Donna Fassino Indianapolis, Ind. Marsha Finch Proctorville, Ohio Nancy Fincher East Point, Ga. Bruce Finney Nashville Brent Flanakin Houston, Texas Dana Fleming Hicksville, N. Y. David Floyd Nashville Carolyn Foote Paducah, Ky. Kim Forrister Nashville Doug Foster Tuscumbia, Ala. Elaine Fox Madison Mark Fox Indianapolis, Ind. Pam Franklin Winter-Spring Officers PRESIDENT: Gary Glover VICE-PRESIDENT: Madison Walt Leaver Wayne Free Penrod, Ky. See SE eee A estes: rir Mike Jackson Marcy Galligan Metairie, La. Charlie Gamble TREASURER: Jasper Alva Jo Gann Rose Carroll Columbus, Ohio Gail Gaw McMinnville Jerry Gaw Donelson Ellen Gentry Richmond, Ky. Eleanor Gibbons Greenbrier Gail Gillis Charleston, S. C. 95 Nancy Gist Batesville, Ariz. Carol Glenn McMinnville Jim Glisson Chattanooga Gary Glover Peoria, Ill. Dixie Goff Nashville Kathy Goodpasture Mt. Sterling, Ky. Glenna Goolsby Clayton, Ohio Mary Gore Pegram Roger Gore Goodlettsville Duane Gossett Gainesboro Martha Graves Birmingham, Ala. Jim Gray Louisville, Ky. Patricia Gray Louisville, Ky. Ted Greene Manchester, Mo. Karla Greer Louisville, Ky. Jeannie Gregory Nashville Steve Groce Fayetteville Ken Grubb Terre Haute, Ind. Sarah Grubbs Chattanooga Stan Gunselman Nashville Dan Guthrie Nashville Gail Guttery Rockledge, Fla. Christopher Hadley E. Liverpool, Ohio Bruce Hall Lawrenceburg, Ky. Tommy Harbin Mobile, Ala. Peggy Hardcastle McMinnville Greg Hardeman Mayfield, Ky. Clara Hargrove Nashville 96 . FRESHMAN Walton Harless Nashville Winston Harless Nashville Shelia Harmon Dothan, Ala. Debbie Harris Nashville Buddy Harston Nashville Kathy Hartman Hermitage Julia Harwell Nashville Ellen Hatch Nashville Carol Hawthorne Decatur, III. Jerry Helm Nashville Lisa Hembry Macon, Ga. Cindy Hemingway Gretna, La. Becky Henderson Verona, Pa. Becky Hendrick Owensboro, Ky. Jeff Henry Lockbourne, Ohio Janet Henshaw Dickson Shelia Herman Owensboro, Ky. Ginger Hicks Dickson Janice Higdon Lewisburg Jeff Hinkle Nashville Jana Hoffman Whiteland, Ind. Greg Hogan Louisville, Ky. Wanda Holland Pleasant Shade Pam Holliman Avondale Estates, Ga. Elvis Hollins Hendersonville 97 FRESHMAN Ford Holman Nashville Chris Holmes Buchanan, Mich. Millicent Holmes Tanner, Ala, Mark Hood Nashville Beth Horn Knoxville Connie Houston Crossvlille John Hudson Nashville Joe Hunt Nashville Joan Hunter East Point, Ga, John Hutcheson, III Nashville Douglas Jackson Louisville, Ky. Mike Jackson Marietta, Ga. Donna Jenkins Tullahoma Jessica Jenkins Nashville Mary Lou Jinkins Richmond, Va. Kathy Johnston Nashville Don Jones Goodlettsville Joy Jones Nashville Melody Jones Nashville Nancy Jones Sardis, Ohio Reda Jones Fairview Steve Kail Alamo Gary Keckley Chattanooga Alan Kelley Decatur, Ill. Janice Kelley Addison, Ill. Don Kerr Miami, Fla. Ken Kerr Xenia, Ohio Georgia Kester Lebanon Nelson Kidder St. Clairsville, Ohio Johnny Kimbrough Morrow, Ga. Karen Kimbrough Nashville Phillip Kirk Nashville Gena Kodatt East Point, Ga. Donna Koho Xenia, Ohio Kay Krumme Cincinnati, Ohio Beth Kuhn Huntsville, Ala. Ron Kuhn Vermilion, Ohio Phyllis Kwapick N. Tonawanda, N. Y . Chris Lacey Nashville Jeanne Lamb Powell Debbie Lancaster Centerville Barb Landefeld Woodsfield, Ohio Deborah Landefeld Woodsfield, Ohio Michelan Landes Brazil, Ind. 98 Debbie Lang Ft. Branch, Ind. Patricia Lankford Dickson Ed Larkins Chicago, IIl. Kathy LaRue Nashville Steven Lasater Huntsville, Ala. Gordon Lawrence Memphis Cheryl Layton Connellsville, Pa. Walt Leaver Nashville Morris Legg Hollywood, Fla. Ellen Lemon Wheelersburg, Ohio Darlene Leonard Galax, Va. Jim Lokey Nashville Prudence Long Bolivar, Pa. Beverly Loring McMinnville Janet Love Palmyra, Ind. Vivian Loveless Centerville Laura Ann Lowrey Nashville Marilyn Lutterman Glasgow, Ky. Marlene Lyon Tompkinsville, Ky. Barry McCarver Memphis Doug McClure Florence, Ala. Betty McDonald Lebanon cathy McIntyre Nashville Michae] McKee Castalian Springs Sandy McLaughlin Portsmouth, Ohio Keith Mack E. Liverpool, Ohio Kevin Mack E. Liverpool, Ohio Pam Mangus West Point, Ind. Charles Manning Nashville Rachael Marr San Jose, Cal. Sandy Martin Pekin, Ind. Deborah Mason Lexington, Ky. Debbie Mathis Huntsville, Ala. Martha Mays Florence, Ala. Gary Meadows Indianapolis, Ind. Patricia Mickholtzick Warren, Ohio Beve Miller Colorado Springs, Col. Connie Miller Nashville Dwight Miller Woodbury Lee Miller Columbia, Mo. Ronald Miller Tucker, Ga. David Mitchell Athens, Ala. Nancy Mitchell Arab, Ala. John Moon Springfield Karen Moore McMinnville Pat Moore Hialeah, Fla. Ivy Morbach Miami, Fla. 99 FRESHMAN Janice Morris Gracey, Ky. DiAnn Mosley White Bluff Elizabeth Moss Arlington Kathy Motley Tucson, Ariz. Tony Muncher Leeds, Ala. Bill Neese Moro, IIl. Bill Neil Nashville Dave Nelson Galion, Ohio John Netterville, Jr. Brentwood Nancy Newberry Parkersburg, W.Va. Debbie Newell South Haven, Mich. Kay Nichols Stone Mtn., Ga. Pat O’Brien Nashville Peggy O’Neal Smyrna Donna Owens Nashville Henry Palmer Ligonier, Pa. Debbie Parham Tichland, Mich. Allene Parker Tuskegee, Ala. Nancy Parker Tupelo, Miss. Wilton Parker Brunswick, Ohio Charlotte Patillo Eagleville Geoffrey Paul Reading, Ohio Stephen Paul Madison David Peugh Streetsboro, Ohio Victoria Phillips Sutten, Pa, Susan Pickerill Louisville, Ky. Suzanne Pilkington Decatur, Ga. Rodney Plunket Killen, Ala. William Porter Nashville Richard Posey Florence, Ala. Don Potter Tulsa, Okla. Alan Powell Southgate, Mich. Danny Proctor Joelton Gail Pruitt Harlan, Ky. Nancy Ramsay Nashville Nick Rapheal Hendersonville Keith Ray Louisville, Ky. Gene Reed Huntsville, Ala. Joe Reed Lebanon Marcia Regenauer Louisville, Ky. Debby Rhoads Nashville Don Riley Nashville Gloria Ringer Akron, Ohio Wanda Robertson Vanleer 100 Pam Robinson Cloverdale, Ind. Debi Rodgers Panama City, Fla. Tom Roll Cambridge, Ohio Betsy Ross Mount Bayou, Miss. Mike Ross Hammond, La. Sherry Rowden Nashville Joyce Rupp Indiana, Pa. Sheila Sams Nashville Janet Samuels Cherry Hill, N. J. Joy Sanders Lebanon Mike Santi Madison Carmen Santiago Blanchester, Ohio Susie Sargent Decatur, Ill. Janine Sarver Marietta, Ohio Joel Sawyer Ft. Worth, Texas Kerry Schumaker Nashville Rob Scobey Nashville Edith Scott Nashville Rhonda Selvage Grant, Ala. Jay Shappley Memphis Doty Shaub Nashville Carol Shaw Atlanta, Ga. Gale Sheppard Scottsboro, Ala. Terri Shirley Buchanan, Mich. Pam Shockley ‘Immokalee, Fla. Wanda Simmons Franklin Debby Slaughter Tampa, Fla. John Slayden Nashville David Smith Springfield, Va. Larry Smith Waverly Sarah Smith Springfield Tim Smith Nashville Suzanne Snider Nashville Karin Snyder Ft. Wayne, Ind. Mary Spann Waverly Peggy Stahl Riversville, W. Va. Eddie Stanfield Whites Creek Joe Stevenson Dellrose Mary Stewart McMinnville Randy Stewart Nashville FRESHMAN Debbie Stinson Bowling Green, Ky. Debra Stone Athens, Ga. Valerie Stone Oxon Hill, Md. Mark Street Nashville John Stroop Russellville, Ky. Brenda Stubbs Montgomery, Ala. Charleen Stutzman Indiana, Pa. Randy Stutzman Penn Run, Pa. Bill Sullivan Hermitage Linita Sutton McMinnville Donna Swann Atlanta, Ga. Ken Switzer Paducah, Ky. Siri Tanner Pelahatchie, Miss. Alice Teel Christiansburg, Va. Karen Teel Christiansburg, Va. Becky Temple Nashville Lee Terry Nashville Mary Thomas Jacksonville, Fla. Joan Thomason Owensboro, Ky. Donald Thompson Nashville Rilla Thompson Nashville Wendol Thorpe Tiptonville Paige Thurston Dayton, Ohio Maury Tidwell Nashville Carol Tinkle Louisville, Ky. Darlene Totty Plainfield, Ind. Nancy Trusler Toronto, Ontario Pam Turbyfill Creve Coeur, Md. Sharon Turnbow Tullahoma Karen Turner Muncie, Ind. Peggy Turner Cincinnati, Ohio Ronda Turner Columbia, Mo. Debbie Turney Gainesville, Fla. Doug VanHooser Bowling Green, Ky. Susan Veal Sarasota, Fla. Carolyn Velasquez Jeffersonville, Ind. Wayne Victory Nashville Van Villines Springfield Debbie Waddey Nashville Agnes Wadlington Cadiz, Ky. Ramona Walden Antioch 102 Charles Wallace Nashville Donna Ward Centerville Gregg Ward Atlanta, Ga. David Wayman Nashville Judy Weaver Nashville Carol Weir Chattanooga Bonnie Wells Bedford, Ind. Richard Wells Birmingham, Ala. Mike Wentz Marietta, Ohio Ronnie Westbrook Stone Mountain, Ga. Nancy White Manchester Elizabeth Wilcher Vandalia, Ohio Paul Wilcoxson Lawrenceburg Donna Williams Columbia Jan Williams Pennsville, Ohio Nancy Williams Floydada, Texas Steve Williams Nashville Debbie Williamson Bethalto, Ill. Deana Wilson Dayton, Ohio Joe Wilson Nashville Pamela Wilson Panama City, Fla. Rex Wilson Killen, Ala. Philip Wingard Huntsville, Ala. Gene Witherspoon Nunnelly David Wolfe Erin Linda Womack McMinnville Cooper Wood Nashville Selma Wood Red Boiling Springs Sharon Woodlee South Bend, Ind. Laura Wooten Gainesboro Kathy Work Dickson Celeste Wyatt Nashville Linda Wyatt Nashville Sam Wylie Mayfield, Ky. Nancy Yelton Nashville Nina Yelton Nashville Sal al Pat 5, Go Sane Sal 104 w =) — Bachelor of Ugliness Service to others and quiet understandment of one’s accom- plishments seem to accurately characterize Tom Rutherford. A senior from Madison, Tennessee, Rutherford never makes one ov- erly-conscious of his achievements. Yet, he is constantly on the go and usually, when the polls close, he winds up on the top of the heap among his fellow students. Serving as president of Circle K, Rutherford led a club rich in leadership ability. Out of a group which has furnished the 14,000-man Circle K International organization with three Inter- national Trustees and one International President in the past three years, Rutherford was elected by his peers to lead them during 1970-71. A history major, Rutherford plans to pursue a career in juris- prudence and will begin the study of law in the autumn of 1971 at one of several schools which have expressed an interest in his abili- ties. Rutherford was a member of Phi Alpha Theta history fra- ternity and was listed among ““Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities.” His selection as Bachelor of Ugliness is, of course, a natural in- dication of the esteem in which his colleagues View him. Intended as the top honor for a male Lipscomb graduate, the Bachelor of Ugliness is that one person who best incorporates the ideals of Christian manhood. 106 8 a9% SDNY eee Miss Lipscomb FL my I eee The attainment of high honors is certainly no stranger to SueAnn Deese. She has consistently, throughout her long and varied career as a Lipscomb student, been not only a top scholar, but also highly honored by her fellow students as well. he me During her four years at Lipscomb High School, Miss Deese achieved the position of valedictorian of her class, edited the school’s yearbook, and was selected as Miss Lipscomb. Not one to be satisfied with having once achieved the top, she proceeded, after moving to the other side of the campus, to be- come secretary of the student body. In addition, Miss Deese served as world secretary of International Collegiate Civitan during the 1970-71 school year. == Listed in “Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities,” she is consistently a member of either the Honor Roll or Dean’s List. Miss Deese was Associate Editor of the 1970 BACKLOG and was a consultant to the 1971 edition. se pope mae nae a a a a ae hd Miss Deese topped an outstanding collegiate career when she was named Miss Lipscomb of 1971 by her fellow students. The honor is bestowed each year upon the woman graduate who most nearly personifies to her colleagues the ideals of scholarly achieve- ment, Christian character, and congeniality. 107 Student Body Ofticers Paul Keckley Summer-Fall SueAnn Deese 108 sajyy OF MADAME BE ae ‘ sean easel 2 ver posy LET Uni eer) Winter-Spring Mike O’Neal Annette Sargent 109 Honor Graduates ope dhe Hal | ‘ ae oa z ae so} os ot Ot) . Teal ol] al ee ay (ee Le a = I ‘ oy ot ot oF, 08 |” meee alo 1 oF i ‘ Paul Cullum | December Valedictorian Lynda Karnes | December Salutatorian 110 Jim Harper | June Valedictorian Nancy Wooten | June Salutatorian Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities Each year, a committee of faculty mem- bers and students selects the thirty most outstanding members of the junior class and accords them the honor of being named as Lipscomb’s representatives in the national publication, “Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities.” They are chosen on the basis of their academic excellence, contributions to the school, and outstanding character traits. Carolyn Sue Bainbridge (above) combined a study of home economics with a major in educa- tion to prepare herself as both a homemaker and a wage-earner. From Farmington, West Vir- ginia, Miss Bainbridge served as president of Omega Chi social club, secretary of PAL, and consistently achieved membership on either the Honor Roll or Dean’s List. Steve Botts (above right) earned distinction both before and during his collegiate days with his speaking ability. During his first year here, he became the first freshman to win the Founder’s Day Oratorical Contest. From Nashville, Botts also held membership in Pi Kappa Delta, national debate fraternity, and served as Vice-President of the Tennessee College Young Democrats. Elizabeth Boyd (right), a native of Jasper, Ten- nessee, prepared herself for a career as an ele- mentary school teacher while at Lipscomb. In addition, she was a member of SNEA, hospital singers, and the President’s Student Council. An active member of Mission Emphasis, Miss Boyd was that organization’s secretary-treasurer. 112 Linda Bumgardner (right) majored in psychology but probably should have studied journalism. She was a reporter for the Babbler during all four of her years here, the last two of which she served as Managing Editor. In addition, Miss Bumgard- ner was the president of Pi Delta Epsilon, na- tional journalism fraternity, and secretary of the Press Club. From Pensacola, Florida, Miss Bumgardner will graduate in the top one per cent of her class. Larry Caillouet (above) held membership in Tau Phi social club, Pi Kappa Delta, Circle K, and the President’s Student Council. A speech major from Huntsville, Alabama, Caillouet was a fre- quent participant in intercollegiate forensics. Neil Christy (above right), a native of Marion, Ohio, carried a double major in Biblical lan- guages and speech. He held membership on the Board of Directors of Circle K and consistently placed himself on either the Honor Roll or Dean’s List. Janice Hoover Coone (right) combined a major in home economics with membership in the Home Economics Club. From Stantonville, Tennessee, she was also a member of K-Ettes. Another fre- quent honor student, Miss Coone was a member of the President’s Student Council. 113 HTH TEES FRAKES ES eee 114 Anna Daniels (right) is best known for her exten- sive dramatic ability. Having appeared in nu- merous productions on the Lipscomb stage, Miss Daniels also held membership in Pi Kappa Delta and served as president of Gamma Lambda social club for two years. She is a speech major from Paintsville, Kentucky. Jimmy Davis (above left) is from Lawrenceburg, Tennessee and served as president of Beta Tau social club. He majored in mathematics and par- ticipated frequently in intramural athletics. Davis also held membership in the President’s Student Council. Steve Deasy (above) was a member of SNEA, Music Educators National Conference, the DLC Concert Band, and served as vice-president of Beta Tau social club. He was a music education major and is a native of Portland, Tennessee. Sue Ann Deese (left) proved to be one of those rare people who excelled in everything. A fre- quent member of the Dean’s List while carrying a chemistry major, Miss Deese polled the double honor of being selected not only as student body secretary, but she was also elected Miss Lips- comb during her final year here. She is from Nashville. og iene at MIE a eS a Be hs Paulette Donati (above right) was an elementary education major from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She was a Bisonette, member of Civinettes, served as President of Sigma Phi social club and was elected secretary of the Interclub Council during her senior year. In addition, she was a member of the President’s Student Council. George Hicks (right) was, during different years, selected the outstanding chemistry and physics student in those departments. He is from Colo- nial Heights, Virginia and held membership in the Environment Club and Collegiate Civitan. Hicks was selected to membership in the Presi- dent’s Student Council. Burton Elrod (left), from Centerville, Tennessee, majored in chemistry while holding membership in the American Chemical Society and serving on the Board of Directors of Delta Nu social club. Elrod was selected as the Most Valuable Back in the intramural football program for three consec- utive years. 115 Ronnie Hunter (left) plans a career in dentistry with the aid of a biology major. A Nashville na- tive, he served as President of Delta Nu and was a member of Circle K and the American Chemical Society. Hunter was also active in intramural athletics. Lynda Karnes (below), a December graduate, fin- ished as salutatorian of her class. She was a member of the DLC band as well as the Presi- dent’s Student Council. Lynda was also active in various other campus organizations. Gerald Jerkins (left) was a member of Delta Nu, Circle K, and Pi Delta Epsilon. From: Nashville, Jerkins served as editor of the Babbler and was a member of the President’s Student Council. He plans to pursue his study of chemistry by working toward a medical degree. 116 Paul Keckley (above), from Chattanooga, served as student body president while continuing to de- bate on the intercollegiate team and sing with the A Capella Chorus. A speech major, Keckley also was elected to serve as an International Trustee of Circle K. Susie Key (above), an elementary education major, hails from Battle Creek, Michigan. A member of K-Ettes, she also held membership in Sigma Phi and the President’s Student Council. Tim Lavender (left), a transfer student from Ohio Valley Christian College, is at home speak- ing on any stage. A speech-education major, he held membership in Mission Emphasis as well as other campus organizations. 117 Mike McDonald (right), now in the graduate school of speech at the University of Illinois, is a native of Madison, Tennessee. He was a member of Chi Alpha Rho and the President’s Student Council and served as president of Circle K. Wesley Paine (below) was no stranger to the Lipscomb stage, regardless of the outfit. A speech major and a December graduate, this na- tive of Atlanta was a member of the Footlighters and appeared in numerous dramatic productions. In addition, she was frequently on the Honor Roll and Dean’s List. Neil Rhoads (right) was comfortable with either art or music, as both were his majors. A Nash- villian, he was a member of Alpha Rho Tau art fraternity, Alpha Tau, and A Capella Chorus. 118 Tom Rutherford (above), achieved the honor of | being selected by his fellow students as Lips- comb’s Bachelor of Ugliness. A member of Beta Tau, he is a native of Nashville. Rutherford was president of the junior class and Circle K. Ruth Ryan (right), a biology major, was a mem- ber of K-Ettes and served on the Babbler Staff. She was a member of the President’s Student Council and graduated with a major in pre-medi- cine. 119 Vicki Porter Shaub (left), a December graduate, was the 1970 Miss Lipscomb. A native of Nashville, she was a biology major and a member of Kappa Chi. She regularly appeared on the Dean’s List and Honor Roll. Linda Sherwood (below), a psychology major from Madison, Indiana, could always be found around the BACKLOG office. A member of K-ettes and Bisonettes, she was also Associate Editor of the BACKLOG for two years. David Switzer (left), a native of Paducah, Ken- tucky, was a member of Collegiate Civitian, Beta Tau, and was active in intramural sports. A math major, Switzer also held membership on the Presi- dent’s Student Council. 120 Wayne Tomlinson (left), a math major from Pa- ducah, Kentucky, was a member of the Collegiate Civitan, Beta Tau, and before his marriage, was an assistant dormitory supervisor in High Rise. Patricia Turney (lower left), from Nashville, was an elementary education major. She was a mem- ber of K-Ettes and Delta Sigma, as well as the Student National Education Association. Karen Williams Gibbs (below), a native of Louis- ville, Kentucky, was also a member of SNEA. An elementary education major, this 1970 gradu- ate was consistently on the honor roll. 122 PTR Lad fem — cS Lad | amd Lome) | CIVINETTES CIVINETTE OFFICERS President Annette Sargent Vice-President Paulette Donati Secretary Paula Cyr Treasurer Susan Phelps CIVITAN OFFICERS President Randal Burton Vice-President Bob Bradford Secretary-Treasurer Bill Wagner 124 Reaching out to both the school and the com- munity, the Civinettes have taken the lead in a va- riety of service projects. In serving the college, the women’s affiliate of Civitan International has co-sponsored blood drives, contributed to the es- tablishment of a scholarship fund, ushered at vari- ous school functions, and rewarded the service of others by declaring them Citizen-of-the-Month. By actively serving, Civinettes have demon- strated their firm belief in their International theme for the present year which states that one must :“Build Tomorrow Today.” CIVITAN At Lipscomb, Civitan is not something one joins, it is something one does. This belief guides the local chapter of Civitan International in serv- ing the community around the school and in try- ing to build the world into a better place. Civitan projects for the year included visits to the Junior League for Crippled Children, collec- tions for March of Dimes and Heart Fund, spon- sorship of two campus blood drives, and responsi- bility for collecting area donations to the Cerebral Palsy Telethon. Randal Burton, local chapter president, was elected to serve as the International President of Civitan International at its annual convention in Atlanta during the summer of 1970. Burton (right) directed the activities of several hundred Civitain chapters scattered around the world. His travels during the year took him coast-to-coast on behalf of Civitan. eoteemine TO Svbisetiemninonomcnsicapas oo ee aie 126 In only their second year of existence, the K- Ettes worked with their brother club, Circle K, in sponsoring a variety of projects designed to fur- ther the good of the community. Established a year ago as the first women’s auxiliary to Circle K International, the K-Ettes produced puppet shows for small children and shut-ins, sponsored an Easter egg hunt for under- priviliged children, collected for numerous organi- zations, and contributed a number of other ser- vices to the school community. K-ETTES OFFICERS President Nancy Gafford Vice-President Linda Ramsey Secretary Ruth Ryan Treasurer Joy Kent Dedicated to serving their fellowmen, the men of Circle K united during 1970-71 to attack press- ing issues of society ranging from drug abuse and juvenile delinquency to ecology and the genera- tion gap. Led by president Tom Rutherford and Inter- national Trustees Steve Raney and Paul Keckley, cach member dedicated a minimum of twenty hours per quarter to such activities as recording textbooks for the blind, delivering food to shut- ins, and nearly fifteen other projects. As the year prepared to close, the club hosted some 500 other Circle K men for the annual Ten- nessee-Kentucky District convention. CIRCLE K OFFICERS President Tom Rutherford Vice-President Doug Wilburn Secretary Bill Hollins Treasurer John Cagle 127 PHI BETA LAMBDA OFFICERS President Annette Sargent Vice-President Linda Perry Secretary Linda Tate Treasurer Cathee Alsup 128 H0008080068 = 00000000000 200000000000, 5 00000000005, ¥ ida Brightening a Christmas for orphans, enlight- ening the student body with a directory, collecting for the March of Dimes, knocking on doors for the Heart Fund, inducting pledges . . . all this can be totaled on the credit side of the Delta Theta chapter of Phi Beta Lambda, a national women’s business sorority. Phi Beta_Lambda provides its membership with the opportunity for growth and _ service through leadership development on the collegiate and community level. Active participation in Phi Beta Lambda is a positive step toward a more useful citizenship and an aggressive, but effective, leadership in business. ALPHA KAPPA PSI The Delta Kappa chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi has been rated the top local collegiate affiliate in OFFICERS the nation for twelve consecutive years and the club’s projects for the year show why. President John Cagle Alpha Kappa Psi, a national business fratern- Executive Vice-President Walker Dobbs ity, participated in activities ranging from Christ- . : . : mas gifts for orphans, a regional convention, in- First Vice-President ih George Hanlin duction pledges, to the annual Sweetheart Ban- Second Vice-President Les Tubb ree Led by President Johnny Cagle, the club hosted the regional Alpha Kappa Psi convention during the winter and was accorded the honor of being named the top local affiliate in the region. 130 Under the direction of Lawrence E. McCom- mas, the Lipscomb A Cappella Chorus launched out both into new areas of music and also into new areas of geography this year. The group performed pieces usually reserved for professional groups and added to their repetoire a number of highly moving dramatic monologues and ensemble pieces. Undertaking two separate chorus tours for the first time ever in one year, the A Cappella singers went first to the south and midwestern portions of the country, performing in Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, and Ohio during spring break. Later, the group moved farther to the north and per- formed in several northern states. 131 INTERCLUB COUNCIL Members of the Interclub Council are: Doug Gates, Alpha Tau; Nancy Hammer, Delta Sigma; Mike Bradley, Omega Chi; Buddy Davis, Sigma Chi Delta; Janie Yates, Kappa Chi; Dixie Craig, Zeta Nu; Anita Conchin, Pi Delta; Mike O’Neal, Winter-Spring Student Body President; Jim Grimenstein, Kappa Theta; Tom Maust, Tau Phi; Paulette Donati, Sigma Phi; John Rigney, Sigma Iota Delta; Turney Stevens, Delta Nu; Linda Peek, Psi Alpha; Annette Sargent, Winter-Spring Student Body Secretary; Patty Minton, Lambda Psi; SueAnn Deese, Summer-Fall Student Body Secretary; Jenny Alexander, Phi Omega; Paul Keckley, Summer-Fall Student Body President; Susan Phelps, Gamma Lambda; and Doyle Richmond, Tau Phi. The role of the Interclub Council in campus affairs is to coordinate all the activities of the various men’s and women’s social clubs. Tom Maust and Paulette Donati served as President and Secretary, respectively, of the Council during the 1970-71 school year. At least five new clubs were added to the total number of social clubs on campus, bringing more than 50% of the student body into one or another of the groups. 132 PRESIDENTS STUDENT COUNCIL Serving as a liaison between the student body and the administration, the President’s Student Council meets once each quarter with the Presi- dent of the college, Athens Clay Pullias, to discuss policies and developments of the school. Each time the Council convenes, Mrs. Pullias gives a reception to honor the members of the group, all of whom have attained distinction in some phase of campus life. 134 BABBLER Lee Maddux, Editor-in-Chief of the 1970 Babbler, led the weekly paper to its sixth consecu- tive All-American rating by the Association of Collegiate Presses. He was aided by Linda Bum- gardner, Associate Editor, and Deby Samuels, Managing Editor. A veteran of four years on the Babbler staff and three on the Lipscomb High award-winning paper, the Pony Express, Maddux directed his staff toward new efforts at objective, professional news reporting and analysis. The area of na- tional politics was given special emphasis with weekly columns devoted to probing interpretative features of current events. BACKLOG A yearbook is not the easiest thing in the world to produce as Turney Stevens, a converted newspaperman, learned. Stevens, Editor of the 1971 BACKLOG, and Linda Sherwood, Asso- ciate Editor, led a staff composed of promising young journalists. In producing the 1971 BACKLOG, Stevens strived to introduce new concepts into the field of yearbooks. He did away with the traditional sec- tions and instead divided the book into two major sections, one devoted to people and the other to a chronological order of the year’s events. 135 CHEERLEADERS An integral part of any basketball team is the cheering squad, which does so much to give the hosts that fabled “home court” advantage. Spurring the crowd when the team sags, encourag- ing the ball players on the floor during a cold streak, planning and executing pep rallies to create pre-game excitement; all of these and more are a part of the job of the Bison Cheerleaders. Front row: Jan Blackburn, Melinda Cockerham, Elizabeth Cockerham. Second row: Terry Frisby, Janet Mead, Nancy Hammer, Lois Mead, Jan Johnston, Sharlett Oates, and David Craig. RGR ENTRAR DS RISER Sixty-four strong, the Bisonettes march to drill cadence before each home basketball contest and lend their vocal support to the Bison hoopsters on the court. Selection to the Bisonettes is an hon- orary position bestowed on those girls from each of the four academic classes who are judged by their classmates as being the most enthusiastic, at- tractive, and capable supporters of the school’s athletic teams. 137 PSYCHOLOGY sam CLUB The Psychology club, under the direction of president Connie White, undertook during the course of the year to provide meaningful pro- grams of wide interest at regular intervals. Striving to serve and educate the public as well as its own members, the club provided career guid- ance for those majors who chose to join. Becoming a member of the club aids immeasura- bly in gaining further insight into the field if one plans to go into professional psychology. Tm ] T i) ay | eek: I Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary fratern- ity of the dramatic arts, further evidenced its members’ abilities during 1971 by undertaking a U.S.O.-sponsored tour of Greenland and Iceland and by producing superb performances of Ar- thur Miller’s Death of a Salesman. Membership in Alpha Psi Omega is selective and limited pri- marily to those who plan to work with the per- forming arts again after graduation. ALPHA PSI OMEGA 138 Pi Kappa Delta, national speech fraternity, draws its membership from speech majors and collegiate debaters. Two of its members, John Tracy and Dewey Bain traveled to the national debate tournament in Houston after completing a successful season. While there, they captured fourth place in the national team competition out of more than 500 participating schools. P| KAPPA DELTA PI DELTA EPSILON Pi Delta Epsilon, led by Deby K. Samuels, is the national hon- orary fraternity for collegiate journalists. Composed of staff members of the two campus pub- lications, the Babbler and BACK- LOG, the fraternity undertook a trip to Washington to attend the national convention and spon- sored the annual Publications Workshop for high school jour- nalists which was attended by more than 300 students from throughout the area. sap AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Composed primarily of chemistry majors, the American Chemical Society strives to better ac- quaint those who plan to make chemistry a pro- fession the possibilities and pitfalls of both career work and graduate study. More than twenty-five strong, the ACS conducts programs, lectures, and workshops throughout the course of the year to further the club’s objectives. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Formed at the beginning of the present school year, the Lipscomb chapter of the American Insti- tute of Biological Sciences attempts to guide those students who plan to go on to further study in the biological sciences. Career possibilities are dis- cussed at each meeting where also a local or na- tionally prominent biologist is invited to address the group on matters of scholarly interest. At 140 | ! =i TT Ty a az | SORGGSRS5 TEES eaea PHI ALPHA THETA Phi Alpha Theta is the national honorary fra- ternity of history scholars. The majority of the club’s members are majoring in either history or political science. Seminars and meetings are held on a regular basis at which papers are presented by various members of the group. Dr. Robert Hooper, chairman of the Department of History, sponsors the organization. Xanadu, deriving its name from the Coleridge poem, is the honorary English fraternity at Lips- comb. Formed at the beginning of fall quarter, 1970, the club supercedes the defunct English Club. Programs of literary interest are presented several times a quarter at which members perform or read papers of scholarly interest. 141 HOME ECONOMICS CLUB P| EPSILON The Home Economics club is a career organi- zation designed primarily for majors in the area. Activities of the club center around projects and programs which will increase the girls’ awareness of new developments in the field and help them, eventually, to become better homemakers than classroom instruction alone would allow. Pi Epsilon, national honorary fraternity for those majoring in physical education, is composed primarily of prospective coaches and instructors. Many of Pi Epsilon’s members will later go on to careers on either the secondary or collegiate level. Composed mainly of those planning to teach in elementary or secondary schools, the Student National Education Association plans and con- ducts workshops, programs, and other extracur- ricular activities designed to give the student greater insight into the profession he is planning to enter. STUDENT NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION 143 Fiemes Bte emciepnr: Sine scavenge Smeets Under the baton of newly-appointed maestro, Dr. Gerald Moore, the Lipscomb Band changed its name to the “Concert Orchestra” and launched out into an aggressive series of public appearance and performances this year. Although the total number of bandsmen was purposely limited to a smaller number than in the past, Dr. Moore at- tempted a more varied program. Ranging from classical pieces to swinging popular, the Orchestra made several appearances on campus and also furnished a pep band for all home basketball con- tests. CHRISTIAN 146 Love and Christ are inseparable entities and, to the member organizations of the Christian Ser- vices Council, this belief is the pathway to service. Formed as a means of co-ordinating the work of Lipscomb’s various spiritually-oriented clubs, the Council explores means and methods of increas- ing the spiritual emphasis on the campus and in the community. PAL, a euphemism for “Play-and-Learn,” is a group of seventy-five students who give up their Saturday afternoons to tutor, teach, and, in gen- eral, communicate with ghetto children from the Edgehill Urban Renewal Area. The Tennessee Orphan Home group goes, each Saturday morning, to the Home in Spring Hill, Tennessee, to play with children who would otherwise have little or no contact with anyone outside the school. SERVICES COUNCIL Mission Emphasis meets regularly to discuss materials and methods of current and prospective mission work throughout the world. The group is composed primarily of those interested in entering the mission field. The Hospital Singers, one hundred strong, go each Friday evening to sing to, and visit with, in- digent patients at Central State Hospital in Nash- ville. Chi Alpha Rho, an honorary fraternity for ministers, and the DAC club, a group composed of those interested in ministering to the spiritual needs of the deaf and dumb, are also members of the Council. eo TENNESSEE ORPHAN HOME vr — UR RII np soeeyscs eR HOSPITAL SINGERS MISSION EMPHASIS % cs MS 3 Ba) a mS Bee ot cele te Vy Saha sereeran EARLE DENG swipe wy fled R's ; ; Pa} : a4 Chee “= ett fe, CO el PN Se a Pape fehl ts The Brave New World Of the Rookie Collegian Going away to college is a traumatic experience, particularly if you’re an eighteen year old freshman leaving home for the first time. There are a lifetime’s worth of possessions to transport, closed classes to fight for, and endless forms and lines to pa- tiently endure. 152 For college students, wherever they may be, September is a time of mixed emotions, The end of summer, the beginning of the regimentation of school, the loss of freedom, the start of new friendships and renewing of old ones—all these are wrapped up in what is affectionately known as . college. Freshmen find the first week in a strange town and among a completely new set of people a har- rowing, often scary, always lonesome experience to be endured. It is a time of endless lines, infinite forms, and continual surprise. There are new pro- fessors to meet, more freedom to cope with, a dif- ferent home to become acquainted with, and most important of all, seven hundred other miserable, but brave, people to try to get to know. The second and third and fourth, and for some fifth and sixth, times you go through that first week of school, it seems somehow old stuff. The monotony of the situation begins to get the best of even the most hardy soul. The lines don’t seem to get any shorter, nor are there fewer forms to fill out. It’s just that when you know what’s coming, you learn to suffer in silence and make the best of the situation. In all though, whether veteran or rookie, the opening of school signals the start of a new period in one’s life, the challenge of new classes, and the stimulation of . . . A New Year. One of the most popular games at the Freshman Mixer was “Red Rover” (above.) While many upperclassmen observed the adven- tures of the freshmen with condescending glee, others were con- tent (below) to simply sit idly by and enjoy the beauty of Indian summer afternoons. 154 The Joy and Agony For seven hundred green freshmen, the first week of school represented a fascinating, some- what confusing new world. Coming from practi- cally every state and several foreign countries, the rookies were greeted upon their arrival on the Lipscomb campus by an avalanche of activities designed to orient them into the life of a college student. After a frenzied and rushed first day of meet- ings and counseling sessions, the frosh greeted the veterans of the student body for the first time at a Mixer designed to give all who attended the op- portunity to meet and get to know the literally hundreds of new faces around the campus. “Man, I felt like a nut doing all those silly things; but you know, it was really fun,” remem- bered one newcomer. . Wheelbarrow races, Red Rover, Drop the of Being a ‘Worm’ Handkerchief, and, of course, the grand finale— the shoe pile—were all part of being a Worm. Student body officers, Paul Keckley and SueAnn Deese, planned the event to help as many freshmen as possible meet each other and their older colleagues. “We especially wanted the freshmen to know each other by face and name because it’s so im- portant during the first week of school to know to whom to go to share your problems and loneli- ness,” said Miss Deese. Keckley, president of the student body, added, “Of course, we did want to help to acquaint the freshmen and upperclassmen. The games we planned, although silly, were great for just the very thing we were trying to accomplish—helping people to meet each other.” “There’s got to be an easier way of getting from one place to an- other,’”’ agonized the two frosh girls above as they raced other rookies in a game of ‘‘Wheelbarrow.”’ Paul Keckley and SueAnn Deese (below) planned and coordinated the Mixer for the seven hundred new freshmen. 155 More than fifty freshmen turned out to par- ticipate in the Freshmen Personalities Show which drew an enthusiastic response from the audience. 156 The first week in the new environment of col- lege life meant different things to each freshman. Few knew exactly what they were doing, but then all were really too busy to notice. Wednesday morning soon came and all the ex- citement of the previous evening’s Mixer was lost in the confusion of the very first day of College classes. When the after noon was over and there were no remaining teachers to make you stand and tell your hometown, the most impressive memory of the day had to be that there really wasn’t so much difference between college and high school after all. The week wore on and preparation for Fri- day’s Freshmen Personalities Show was tempo- rarily halted by Thursday’s Faculty Firesides, at which each freshman was given the opportunity to go into a professor’s home and spend the evening talking and getting acquainted. When the curtain finally rose on the Personalities Show, a large crowd of curious upperclassmen was on hand to scout the musical, thespian, and singing talents of the rookie class. For the veterans the week was not really that different from many of the other weeks. It meant the beginning of another school year, perhaps one’s last; it meant old friends and at least several hundred prospective new ones; but most of all it meant books, lectures, and getting up in time for that eight o’clock class you really didn’t want to take in the first place. The Frosh ‘Do Their Thing’ ie For many of the freshmen, the first week of classes signaled the beginning of long hours in the classroom and lab (above), but for those who had been around a little longer (upper center), there were better places to spend those last, beautiful Indian Summer afternoons. Amanzo Jones, outstanding freshman dram- atist, thrills the audience at the Personalities Show. 157 158 Founder's Day, Nature's Hues Mark Autumn Founder’s Day ceremonies, honoring David Lipscomb and James A. Harding, co-founders of the school, were held early in October on a crisp, clear Friday morning in McQuiddy Gymnasium. More than 2,700 students and faculty members attended the activities of the morning, during which President Pullias announced that fall quar- ter enrollment in the college was at all-time rec- ord levels. October also provided less weighty matters to attend to, as well. The warm, late summer tem- peratures and brilliant blue skies continued to prevail over a campus rapidly shedding its heavy growth of green foliage and donning the sparkling gold, red, and yellow of. . . autumn. al j O'S Beer le. eee ee 6a ee “= s 9 eer ‘ . : bar eae state ’ di Op yew 5 : . tent SE : mee SS , ’ wad vee - MeL, J mgd : eo ae eu: Pd ty “y President Athens Clay Pullias officially pro- claimed the 1970-71 school year a reality at Founder’s Day ceremonies in early October (above). Much of the remainder of Octo- ber was devoted to wistful autumn after- noons studying under one of the colorful maple trees on campus (left) or long walks in one of the city’s many parks (opposite, above). Steve Hawkins and Perry Stites led a young, but mature, cross country team to an outstanding season against tough compe- tition. 160 Harriers Hurry Toward Records Left to Right: David Craig, Brixie Shelton, Randy Cooper, Don- ald Kerr, Ronnie Cope, and Steve Groom. Absent: Coach Steve Barron, Steve Hawkins. Ronnie Cope proved to be the most out- standing individual performer on the squad as he set several individual records and was rewarded by taking first honors in nu- merous meets. Returning nearly every letterman from the previous season, the Bison cross country squad, led by Ronnie Cope and Steve Hawkins, compiled an enviable record of 10-3 during the fall’s com- petitions. Composed of sophomores, who a year ago were considered to be the most outstanding group of freshman runners ever recruited by the school, the squad went to the national meet in Kansas City to climax the season. Cope broke several individual records, and the team joined to help tear down at least two team standards. October Open House It was the day when everyone spruced up for visits from friends and relatives. Dorms were cleaned, exhibits were put up, and all were on their best behavior. In short, the campus was put on display. It was Open House. The main pastime for the visitors was the guided tours of the school’s plant. The secret was to keep moving and avoid the lengthy tours of the physics department. Also, there was the highlight of the day, as guests listened to the A Cappella Singers on the steps of Alumni, while quietly munching their cookies and popping their punch cups. The day was not complete until the dorms opened for inspection. Boys could visit the girls from 2-3 p.m., and girls in vice versa from 3-4 p.m.; but no one really kept track of the time. It was a day of smiles and laughs, of fond re- membrances and visions of the future, and of praise and criticism. Fortunately, there was much of the former, but very little of the latter. The new Campus Store was officially opened on Open House Sunday (right). Exhibits by the various academic depart- ments (above) gave visitors a comprehen- sive view of the scholastic programs of study at Lipscomb. 162 The Lipscomb Concert Band _ premiering under the baton of Dr. Gerald Moore, was featured on the mall of the campus, along with the A Cappella Singers. Refreshments, courtesy of the Patron’s As- sociation, were served througho ut the after- noon at various locations on the campus. 163 The Frantic Rush of Pledge Week Pledging—that renowned and notorious initia- tion into college “life” had its beginning at the fall Rush Fair, October 3. Seven hundred curious freshmen crowded into McQuiddy to browse through social club exhibits, mingle with the up- perclassmen, and meet the club members. Each of the nineteen clubs had carefully planned its rush exhibit in hopes of capturing the scanning eyes and considerate signatures of many freshmen. Cordial introductions, conversations, and activi- ties at the fair led to more rush parties, more in- troductions, and finally the glorious invitation to join “the club” of the freshman’s dream. But this was only the beginning of social life for many students. Pledging followed with all its excitement, its duties, and its humbling status. Throughout the 164 year pledges were a welcome source of ready labor for Bison Day, Homecoming projects, and Singarama. Pledges always furnished excellent maid and laundry service, personal valet, car-care, and waiter services, not to mention various and sundry ego-booster antics for their superiors. Many freshmen minds and mouths were kept in high gear trying to remember and rattle off every active’s name, major, hometown, and _ favorite food within 60 seconds. Pledging and social clubs mean many things to many people. Each club gave someone a friend- ship; it brought someone laughs and companion- ship; it provided a few freshmen with newfound humility; less importantly, it gave some actives a new importance; then, hopefully, it gave all a little more compassion for each other. The Clubs Gave Friendship, Laughs, A Hard Time, and Compassion for Others’ The whole process of joining a social club begins with a rush fair (left) early in the fall quarter and eventually culminates (right) in one type or another of initiation. Although pledge duties are far from being confined strictly to shoe polishing, that chore (left) still remains one of the most popular, Tau Phi pledge Eddie Urrutia obliges active Les Pruitt. 165 Seniors Sweep Grid Competition The senior squad, led by quarterback Jim Prince (above) compiled an undefeated rec- ord and again won the intramural football championship. 166 Although the caliber of play may not be as good as it would be if the school had an intercollegiate team, it is the spirit of com- petition which makes the game worthwhile. As it must be, the intramural tackle football program came to a close with its victors, its not so lucky, and those who said “Wait until next year.” The program was small and the recognition was almost null. Practices were long and tiring, and the men who tried knew what it was to sweat and grit their teeth in pain. Through all of the agony, one might ask himself, “Is it really worth it all?” “Yeah, I think it’s worth it,” said a tired, but victorious, Jim Prince who piloted the seniors to their third straight championship. “I know it’s nothing like big college football, but that’s not what matters. When you’re out there knocking heads you forget where you are; you just want to win, and isn’t that what’s most important!” Competition, the unquenchable desire to come out on top—that is what causes a man to endure the pain necessary to achieve his goal. Obviously, the seniors had a goal and were the victorious, the sophomores and freshmen were the not so lucky, and the juniors were the ones who realized the heartache of being second. First row: Jack Milam, Doug Williams, Jim Prince, George Hanlin and Jerry Kennedy. Second ees Don Garner, Mike O’Neal, Carl Daniel, Garth Pleasant, Dick Morris, Les Tubb, Gary atten. 168 ootball. Sweetheart SG, trp eS “Life is worth living when it lives beyond itself. “Life is fruitful when its good- ness is contagious and adven- turous. “Life is worthwhile when it serves, and lifts, and over- comes.” —Anonymous Brenda Hilderbrand Football Attendants, left to right: Kathy Lawrence, Kathy Motley, Celeste Wyatt, Gail Doty, Gwen Jones, Joy McMeen, Marcia Corley, Brenda Clements, Cherry Wiser, Barbara Hunter, Absent: Janice King. 169 There’s No Business Like Show Business Although no major dramatic production was scheduled by the Drama Department during the fall quarter, stage presentations were nevertheless plentiful. Ray Walker, a member of the Jordanaires quartet, presented a solo concert on the Alumni stage late in October. Walker’s smooth blend of contemporary pop, rock, and soulful ballads pro- vided the audience with the ticket to a highly en- tertaining two hours. A campus screening of the Lipscomb stage show which toured Greenland and Iceland in No- vember followed Walker by several weeks onto the stage. The first half of the U.S.O.-sponsored production was composed ef a musical revue enti- tled “Music City, U.S.A.” The last hour was a shortened production of the popular Broadway musical, “Pajama Game.” The fourteen Lips- comb students who made the trip to the frozen north left the week after the show closed at Lips- comb and played to capacity audiences at army bases throughout the arctic. A Talent Show provided the campus with a look at some home-grown ability late in the quar- ter. Amanzo Jones, a freshman, copped top hon- Gary Jerkins, 4 la Chet Atkins, performed ° . . . . t - Ww in ovember ors with a dramatic cutting. A variety of musical oO placed third with his picking and sing- and singing acts took the remaining honors at me: the two-hour show. The Insiders made their campus debut at the Talent Show and were so warmly received that they have followed that appearance with numerous other city engagements. 170 ae | I ‘ i ® Ray Walker, popular singing star and member of the Jordanaires quartet, was presented in concert by the student body officers over Parents Weekend in October. Danny Joiner assures Linda Smith of his undying love in a scene from ‘Pajama Game,” one of the productions the Lips- comb Drama Department presented while on tour for the U.S.O during November. 172 Bison hero for the day, Gary Keckley (above), charms a young lassie (Doug Gates), during a skit prepared for Bison Day as a club of “real dolls’? (right) sit rae), to welcome the team on the playing oor. Bison Day Signals 1970 Hoop Premier “WHEREAS, the first home game of the 1970- 71 season will be played with Harding College in McQuiddy Gymnasium on November 19, 1970, and “WHEREAS, it is the privilege of every mem- ber of the student body and faculty of Lipscomb to lend support and encouragement to the Bisons, “NOW, THEREFORE, I, Athens Clay Pul- lias, President of David Lipscomb College . . . proclaim this day . . . as Bison Day, and hearken to all... to take due note thereof . . . that the proper greeting to all and sundry on this Bison Day shall be: ‘SUPPORT THE BISONS,’ ” easeincees th cincaptionntacees Betty Bisonette is saved again as Gary Keckley, hero of the Alpha Tau pep skit, arrives to save the day (above). Alpha Tau’s villain, alias Al Jackson, proved to be among the most popular of all the pep ‘characters’ despite his ‘‘evil’’ rep- utation. 173 The Proper Greeting to All Shall Be: ‘Support the Halftime of the Lipscomb-Harding clash was highlighted (above) by presentation of awards to the winners of the Spirit Stick com- petition among the social clubs. A capacity crowd (right) watched the Bisons lose a heartbreaking opening game by a thin margin in the final minutes. 174 “This Bison Day is really a great thing. Excitement builds throughout the day, and by game time, the roof is about ready to come off. The spirit really helps us,” said Rick Clark, Bison captain. And Bison spirit was vividly displayed on November 19 as activities throughout the day anticipated the season’s opening tip-off against the Harding College Bisons of Searcy, Ark. Clowns, squaws, Bison “builders,” human eggs, raggedy-anns, and various other costumed Bison supporters confronted a rather amazed and amused audience throughout the day’s events basketball campaign on Bison Day. which included pep rallies of large and small di- mensions. “IT am expecting to see a lot of friends and fa- miliar faces on the other side of the gym. I really want to beat that bunch from Harding. I don’t know who is more worked up, the boys or me,” said premiering Head Coach Mike Clark. However, a beautiful Bison day, a highly spir- ited crowd, and the opening game to a promising season were climaxed with a letdown as the Bison vs. Bison battle resulted in defeat for Lipscomb, who later returned the loss in a Thanksgiving Day victory at Searcy. Pi Delta ‘‘Squaws” (left) join the Bison cheerleaders (below) to kickoff the 1970-71 175 176 Christmases At College Are Very Special Times The best present of all, (above), is the gift of being able to go home during the Christ- mas break. December 1970 arrived with all the usual, and for some, quite unusual accompaniments: “Ho, Ho, Ho,” Christmas joy, No-Doze for final exam week, and “Pomp and Circumstance” for those lucky few who had come to the end of the grind. Brightly lighted and lovingly decorated Christ- mas trees appeared everywhere to give the entire campus a North Pole appearance. Most Lips- comb students were as busy as Santa’s proverbial helpers as they scurried to collect gifts for or- phans, attend the endless list of Yule festivities, and between shopping and caroling, find at least some time to take those poorly timed Fall finals. Governor Buford Ellington combined his final speech in office with the commencement address at the December Graduation ceremonies to give departing seniors a final, memorable evening on the Lipscomb campus. ee ee ANAS ENSEMBLE ES IN FUDAN Sey tise ea es AP aa Bib Lipscomb’s quarter system offers students the chance to graduate at the end of any of the four divisions of the school year. Left, December graduation annually attracts increasingly large numbers of graduates wishing to commence the next phase of their lives with the beginning of the new year. Christmas, when you’re away at college, is a very special time. New friends and even some old ones (left and above) brighten the season and add yuletide joy to everyone’s heart. 177 The Wrench of Ice and Snow and Rain As inevitably they must, the north winds begin to blow in earnest along about the first of J anuary and the miserable, penetrating Tennessee winter rains commence, seeming to lapse the whole world into chilled despair. Ugly, black snow clouds hang low on the hori- zon bringing their foreboding message of impend- ing doom, only to dissolve into a brilliantly blue, and quite snowless, tomorrow. Occasionally, though, just to prove to her hud- dling Earth-child that she does still remember, Mother Nature reveals her frosty beauty in all of its icy awe. The creation, once again, awakens to the purified innocence of its snowy elegance and all the hemisphere knows it is . . . Winter. Although class dismissals almost never accompany the arrival of newly fallen snow, there is still an air of quiet exhilaration in even the most ardent ice hater when a coat of white sweeps in during the night to blanket the earth and transform an otherwise dismal winterscape into a glistening new world. 178 What else is there to do with newly-minted snow (left) but to throw it? The winter of 1971 provided few opportunities, however, to test one’s pitching accuracy as the Nash- ville Weather Bureau recorded only six total inches of snowfall. While snow is always the most visible evi- dence of winter, rain and grey, dismal days are just as much a part of the season. Butch Stinson, a sophomore standout, executes a twisting layup (above) during the Homecoming tilt against Sewanee, while Bob Burton (right) appears to be stuffing the ball through the hoop in reverse. All-American Rippetoe Fails to Offset Bison New head coach Mike Clark leaned against the stark wall of now-folded bleachers and sighed, ‘It’s height, that was the whole problem. We just didn’t have the horses to clear those boards.” Perhaps no other statement could have summed up the season better. A better-than-av- erage shooting team from the floor, the Bison hoopsters time and again saw their inability to re- bound cost them an otherwise well-played ball- game. Finishing a disappointing season with an unenviable record of 8-14, Clark’s charges did provide, however, more than their share of hair- raising finishes and outstanding individual per- formances to give their fans something, at least, to cheer about. Ron Rippetoe, the highest scoring and proba- bly the flashiest Bison ever, compiled a stupen- dous 30.4 scoring average and broke his own indi- vidual record for total points in a season by buck- eting a Lipscomb high of 522. In addition he es- tablished the single game mark with a career high of 43 points against Southwestern. All-American honors and a high finish in both the NBA and ABA drafts rewarded Rippetoe for his toils on the court as the season closed. The Bisons as a team were not, however, without their moments of glory. Recording one of their all-time outstanding victories, the team pulled off a stunning upset of tenth-ranked Tran- sylvania in late January. We just didn't have the horses to clear those boards” V Bisons Ves 4 Bison varsity team members for 1970-71 were: David Martin, John Buford, Rick Clark, Paul Compton, Bob Burton, Roy Pate, Ron Rippetoe, Bruce Bowers, Farrell Gean, and Butch Stinson. nconsistency Bruce Bowers was again the leading Bison rebounder. On a team desperately lacking in height, Bowers time and time again proved that he could jump with anybody. 181 182 New coach Mike Clark joined returning assistant mentor Jack Norwood in tutori ng the Bisons this winter. Ecstasy reigned su- preme at times during what eventually proved to be a long sea- son, but at other times, the difficulty of the task was all too read- ily apparent. Reigning as Lipscomb’s 24th Homecoming Queen, Peggy Lynn, an Oak Ridge math major, was crowned in ceremonies preced- ing the basketball tilt with the University of the South on February 6. 184 Homecoming escorts and the attendants they accompanied were (left to right): Neil Christy, Marlene Haynes; Clark Collins, Marcia Corley; Randy Hawkins, Liz Jackson; Gary Glover, Melody Jones; Doug Wilburn, Paula Ellis; Queen Peggy Lynn; Linda McCalister, Ronnie Jones; Gwen Jones, Ernie Stewart; Gerry Sciortino, Jerry Kennedy; Teresa Brewer Scott, Ronnie Hunter; SueAnn Deese, Paul Keckley. Snowy Enchantment Greets Alumni Women aren’t the only creatures who have difficulty getting to all the hooks and but- tons as Ronnie Jones, with the help of Gary Glover, learned. Wi aa, 2 igi vse 248 be ntti. oxunsnee er eR SSL RS at EM TEE AS ot A wintry Enchanted Forest, complete with flocked trees and a resplendent throne room, wel- comed students and alumni to the February Homecoming festivities. As a capacity crowd surveyed the captivating scene, ten pink-clad prin- cesses, accompanied by their handsome escorts, prepared the way for the Queen, blonde and radiantly beautiful Miss Peggy Lynn. Magic and fantasy reigned supreme as the ele- gant, regal tones of the Concert Orchestra, under the capable baton of Dr. Gerald Moore, an- nounced the arrival of the Queen’s retinue. Tokens of appreciation were presented to Miss Lynn by Rick Clark, captain of the Bison basket- ball squad, and Mike O’Neal, student body presi- dent. A WHIRLWIND OF EVENTS Junior attendant Paula Ellis and escort Doug Wilburn (left) acknowledge the applause of the capacity crowd before continuing their progress down the court during the processional. Bison cheerleaders (above) never have a hard time spiriting a Homecoming audience. LEFT MANY BREATHLESS, BUT ENTERTAINED lag puemeta ALUMN Sf 8 SS Homecoming, that magical day of superb beauty and fond remembrances, dawned on an early February Saturday aglow with brightly painted blue skies and warm, spring-like tempera- tures. A mad whirlwind of exciting ev ents swiftly followed throughout the morning and afternoon, leaving many breathless, but entertained, by day’s end. For social club members, the proceedings began in the wee hours of the morning as the vari- ous projects were rushed to completion before the mid-morning judging. For alumni, however, the day began somewhat later and on a note of less hurried anticipation. Coffees, breakfasts, re- unions, and luncheons served to kick off the activities of renewing old friendships and com- mencing new ones. For a certain petite blonde native of Oak Ridge, the morning dawned as rather an unusual, often frantic, always exciting rush of last-minute preparation before the magic crowning hour of 2:30 arrived. Peggy Lynn, smiling fondly, re- members the day as one of unsurpassed thrills: “I think there were times when I wondered if I would make it through all the activities and ex- citement,” she said. “But, just like a wedding, it For the first time in more than twenty years as President, Dr. Athens Clay Pullias was unable to crown the Queen and, in his ab- sence, Vice-President Willard Collins (left) officiated. was a once-in-a-lifetime experience and I obvi- ously wouldn’t trade it for anything.” The activities of the afternoon were, to all eyes, a full-blown spectacle of pageantry and ex- citement. First, the crowning of the Queen and the presentation of her attendants and _ their respective escorts. After a hurried evacuation of the Enchanted Forest set, a special Homecoming exhibition by the Bisonettes, the Lipscomb women’s drill team, brought the crowd to fever pitch just before the tip-off of the Bison-Univer- sity of the South conflict. A disappointing, but rugged, first half of play was followed by an exhibition of gymnastics skill by Coach Tom Hanvey’s nationally recognized team. The second half of the basketball game proved to be more fiercely fought, but equally as disappointing as the first half. When the final buzzer sounded, the Bisons had dropped a heart- breaking loss to Sewanee. An enjoyable, memorable day by all involved was the general consensus of the capacity crowd as they slowly exited stately old McQuiddy Gym- nasium for more reunions and the events of the evening. Soon-to-be-Queen Peggy Lynn confers with one of her royal attendants at a picture ses- sion on Homecoming morning. 187 Sigma Phi, Psi Alpha, and Delta Nu cap- tured first place in the Homecoming Project competition by constructing a full-scale rep- lica of the Apollo Lunar Module and “land- ing” it on a University of the South Tiger. “Extinction Delta Sigma, Beta Tau, Alpha Chi Delta, For alumni, Homecoming is a time of relaxa- and Sigma Tota Delta “Shut Out the Ti; - : : es: gers” from their twenty-five foot ark an tion, fondly remembered companionships, and de won third place. lightful reunions with long-separated friends. But for members of Lipscomb’s twenty-one social clubs, the approach of the Big Game signals the time for the start of construction of increasingly sophisticated projects to spur the spirits of the team. Desiring to equalize the competition, the In- terclub Council limited the cost of the 1970 proj- ects to $100. But first place winners, Sigma Phi, Psi Alpha, and Delta Nu dug a little deeper into their imagination and constructed a take-off on the Apollo Lunar Excursion Module. Standing more than fourteen feet off the ground, the “Lips- comb Extinction Machine” was a full size model of the original and weighed more than two tons. 188 Second place in the contest was claimed by a Bison who continually butted a Tiger up a goal post and into the basket. 189 ‘Welcome to the Festival of Hearts Summer is the traditional time for the circus to come to town, but for Lipscomb the date was early February and the occasion was Homecom- ing Night. Before the Big Top had folded its tents at the annual Festival of Hearts Pageant that evening, spectators had had not only their share of thrills and chills, but also a parade of lovely heart-stoppers had competed for six coveted posi- tions as Campus Beauties. From twelve beautiful finalists came the even- tual winners: Andrea Boyce, Melinda Cocker- ham, Sharlett Oates, Kathy Roland, Teresa Brewer Scott, and Janie Yates. All were judged not only on natural beauty, but also on their poise, appearance, and carriage. Donna Huckaby, D. J. Smith, and Linda Ramsey, a popular campus trio, displayed their vocal wares during the Pageant. Andrea Boyce proved herself to be among the fairest of the fair as she claimed one of the six coveted Campus Beauty positions. Dean Mack Wayne Craig, perennial quiz- master for the question-and-answer por- tion of the competition, poses a hypothetical problem for one of his prettier ‘‘students,”’ Teresa Brewer Scott. iran, Ringmaster Gary Cowan announces the arrival of the B ig Top with the immortal, “La-a-dies and Gentlemen, We-e-e-lcome to the Circus.” Estella Walton, 1970 Lipscomb graduate, holds forth from the Festival stage during the long wait for the judges’ decision to be announced. 191 CAMPUS BEAUTIES ect sae scat eine sere yt a -n pa e z or es a. ne ear ee CA CES. Sa te ee i ee Oe ee reroronenn aca ee ee ene | 192 Andrea Boyce da Cockerham in Mel 93 1 s _ Ss es) w Y Le) Res Ss ia) Kathy Roland 195 Teresa Brewer Scott Hill : 196 pe = = - + = na 3 Janie Yates Fee tee sc, ee RN SS A Ty Be thes 1 5 BR AT AY bs ‘oe en 5 wh ¥ u = A wey “ s ee ee ee . toot in ed | wy - ‘ on VR, “ OSE ag Be es ew Conteh wetht ce - ra NN Kiko Sc Carre Buh bea SERN wares tT ee 7s ee ye “ey Big! eee Marsha Adams Debbie Duke WY) a wall D S = Ss x sy S S = 98 1 Campus Beauty Final Jan Johnston Pam Hollimon Elizabeth Hairston 199 Up, Up, and Over Despite the fact that the gymnastics team had only four regular members, the squad again proved to be among the most outstanding in the South. Tutored by nationally-recognized coach, Tom Hanvey, the Gymnasts were led by All- American Steve Bohringer, who once again this winter, travelled to the NAIA Nationals and man- aged a ninth place finish in the competition. The size of the team prevented any dual home matches, but in foreign competition, the squad re- corded an undefeated slate. In commenting on the season, Coach Hanvey speculated, “Outstanding high school gymnasts who measure up to Lipscomb’s admissions code are increasingly difficult to find, but with the up- surge in gymnastics on the secondary level, we’re confident we can maintain our level of accom- plishment in the coming seasons.” Steve Bohringer displays the form that made him an All-American on the Parallel Bars. Left to Right: Coach Tom Hanvey, Jerry Guifree, Joseph Rigol, Scotty Howard, and Steve Bohringer. Absent: Chuck Tomlin. Jerry Guifree, freshman standout, performs on the High Bar (above). Coach Tom Han- vey (below) led his team to another win- ning season despite having only four team members. Playing or the Love f it Jerry Cover slices off the pivot in an intra- mural basketball contest that held all the excitement and thrills of a Bison intercolle- giate game. The Cavaliers, led by the scoring punch of Frank Bennett (above), successfully de- fended their intramural hoop championship. Cooper Wood (right) was only one of a record number of participants in the spring softball competition. 202 The powderpuff football competition, won by Kappa Chi social club, drew the largest spectator crowds of the season as the male population of the campus turned out in droves to watch the women block, tackle, and throw a few passes. Under the capable direction of Fessor Boyce, the intramural sports program again this year drew record numbers of participants. Every ma- jor sport was included in the list of possibili- ties from which any student could participate. Basketball, powderpuff football for the distaff set, tennis, golf, and even ping pong encompassed the sports calendar. More than 40% of the student body signed up to be divided into permanent teams. 203 204 In the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love, golf, girls, baseball, lovewee ae When the winter winds finally cease to howl along about the last week in March and the sun begins to make regular appearances in the newly painted azure sky, the world seems to come alive with the beauty of birth and the wonder of the Creation. As the thermometer inches its way to- ward heights not seen since autumn’s reluctant exit six months before, the campus joins in con- cert with the earth to revive the joy of living and the world knows that itis. . . spring. i ee 205 Dugan and Co. Make Good On the Sandlot Circuit Spring appeared to present a rosy picture for Lipscomb’s “diamondmen” as they began their ambitious 56 game schedule with a _ swing through Florida during spring vacation. “We ought to win at least 30 games and per- haps 35 if we can get 4 break in the weather,” said Bison mentor Ken Dugan. One thing was for certain: the potential and the material was there, as the team lost only two seniors, only one of which was a regular starter, from a 1970 squad that had a 29-13 record and Coach Ken Dugan, beginning his twelfth year at the helm of the é : : Bisons, established two goals for his 1971 team: to win 35 games made a trip to the NAIA District 24 tournament. and 4o et tothe NALA Retincie e Returning were six lettermen who boasted over .300 averages: Dave Lindsey, Mark Massey, Jim Minnick, Ted Jamison, Steve Garner, and Farrell Gean; and a host of others who were in the .290 range. Pitching prospects were also good with Gar- ner, 8-0; Ronnie Albright, 4-2; and Butch Stin- son, 6-3 all returning for a second year. Also, the Bison freshmen, who marked a milestone in recruiting, were expected to fill some holes. Hopes were high for All-American honors going to Lindsey, a catcher, and Stinson, if they could maintain their previous years’ performances. The Bisons made a regular practice of crossing homeplate. As the season closed, the team was nearing a school record for most runs scored. 206 Standing: Tony Muncher, Jimmy Hibbitt, Dave Lindsey, Steve Garner, Mark Massey, Maxie Garrett, Jamie Pride, Glen Hardison, Farrell Gean, Jim Minnick, and Butch Stin- son. Kneeling: Jim Glisson, Steve Williams, Mike Santi, John Paul Matthews, Buddy Harston, Ted Jamison, Ernie Smith, Ronnie Albright, Mike Dennis, and Clark Williams. 207 Baseball “Now, if I can just crawl on down to third without this Buffalo or whoever he is seeing me . . .”” (below). “Let’s see, that gives these guys eighteen runs, no I believe it’s seventeen. Boy, I wish they’d stop scoring ’cause I can’t count much higher . . .” (left). ‘ ' Left to right: Nancy Boyce, Paula Hembree, Lois Mead, Joy McMeen, Marcia Corley, Donna Owens, Carolyn Elliott, Ellen Gentry, Coach ’Fessor Boyce. Absent: Coach Peggy Roberts. Tennis Led by a new coach, Peggy Roberts, and a host of returning veterans, the women’s tennis team set out to take up where they left off last spring when they finished as the runner-up squad in the Tennessee Intercollegiate Tournament. Joy McMeen (left) and Paula Hembree returned to hold down the numbers one and two positions, while Nancy Boyce, Marcia Corley, Pat Byers and Lois Mead rounded out the top six. The men, coached by Dr. Robert Hooper, ex- pected to devote 1971 to the rebuilding process as they lost their number one man from last year’s team. Paced by Tom Haddock, a returning let- terman, the team showed unexpected early season strength, but prospects for the remainder of the spring were dimmed when Gary Jerkins, the num- ber two singles ace, injured his knee and was lost for the season. Left to right: Dr. Robert Hooper, Rick Clark, Tom Haddock, Frank Bennett, George Whittle, Gary Jerkins, and Steve Burnett. Absent: Bob Cannon. Bob Cannon (below) smashes a hard forehand back to an opponent who Bie became a victim. Dr. Robert Hooper (left) checks results with several of his aces. 211 Paced by Dick Morris (below) and Ole Olsen (above), the Bison links squad was aiming for a third consecutive invitation to the NAIA na- tional tournament as the season closed. eT aD BO A ies Left to right: Coach Ralph Samples, Assistant Coach Walt Rogers, Reid Myers, Sam Wylie, Dick Morris, John Brewer, Ole Olsen, Bill Cosby, John Angelopoulos, Larry Lowe, Jack Milam. Linksmen Roar to Fast Start Although hit by the loss through graduation of All-American competitor Bill Castle and several other linksmen, the Bison Golf squad again posted an enviable record. Led by Dick Morris, a com- petitor Coach Ralph Samples hoped would suc- ceed Castle on the All-American squad, the team had hopes as the spring matured that they would be able to make a third consecutive trip to the NAIA national tournament in June. Early sea- son competition seemed to prove the hopes feasi- ble as the Bisons roared away to an undefeated slate through the first three weeks of play. Coach Ralph Samples tutored the team along with the able assistance of Dr. Walt Rogers. 7283 A well-balanced track team, featuring both veteran and rookie performers, held forth a bright promise for the 1971 spring season. By mid-sea- son, the Bisons had already re-written the school record book in a number of events and only narrowly missed others. Tutored by Russ Combs, a stand-in for regular coach Steve Barron who was serving six months of active duty with the Marines, the harriers compiled a respectable rec- ord of having lost only one dual meet against such tough competition as Tennessee State, West- ern Kentucky, Tennessee Tech, and Middle Ten- nessee. Outstanding individual performances by Louis Allen, Ron Cope, Fred Walker, and others highlighted the team’s early season efforts. As May approached, the Bisons had their sights set on sending as many men as possible to the NAIA Nationals in June. 214 James Mitchell and Sandy Saunders (above) and David Craig (below) com- posed three legs of the Bison’s mile relay team. Speed and Inches are the Name of the Game Front row: Louis Allen, Donald Kerr, Perry Stites, Steve Groom, Ron Cope, James Mitchell. Second row: Russ Baker, Sandy Saunders, Fred Walker, David Craig, Jim Hudson, Phil Cobb, Coach Russ Combs. a Sheer, brute strength (above) is always im- ortant to a trackman, but some events put Just as much emphasis on finesse (right). ‘Death of a Salesman’ Tops Drama Season 216 The Loman family, one of the most tortured in the American theater, played to capacity audiences in Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman” in mid-April. The Drama Department, to close out a highly successful season, presented Arthur Miller’s highly acclaimed tour de force, “Death of a Sales- man,” in mid-April. The production, under the tutelage of Dr. Jerry Henderson, starred Sandra Hughes and Eddie Lenoir as the embattled Loman couple. Playing to capacity audiences during its week-run, the production accurately in- terpreted the highly successful Broadway drama and is a strong candidate as Best Play in this year’s Totty Awards. Chip Arnold lent strength to the cast of “Death of a Salesman” as he gave a stir- ring portrayal of Biff Loman, the misunder- stood son. Sandra Hughes and Eddie Lenoir (right) held starring roles in the spring production of ‘“‘Death of a Salesman.” 217 218 And so June finally comes. For the majority, it is the signal to go home, to seek out the warm rays of the summer sun, to learn by doing rather than by listening. But for half a thousand, the first week in June signals something completely different. It marks the end, for most, of endless classroom lectures, long nights spent wrestling with procrastination, the joy and freedom of being half way between the child and the man. It marks the beginning of a new phase; it is the dawning of the age of re- sponsibility for each individual. Whether one finds he must wrestle with the problems of a new but also of beginnings, for closes, another opens. job or the conflicts of a new marriage or both, June is the time of beginnings. On a hot Saturday evening early in the month, rarely used black robes appear. Professors take on all the cherished dignity of their time-honored positions. Students find a non-congruency be- tween their own academic garments and the brightly-striped shirts and dresses underneath just waiting to be liberated from childhood. The names are called, the speeches given, the tears shed, the farewells exchanged and for the world’s newest Hope for the Future it is Graduation. Graduation is a time not just of endings one finds throughout life that for every door which postscript... To have loved and touched and felt... To have lived and therefore to know the joy of living . . . To have wept because when the heart is young it is tender. . . To have smiled and to know the wonder of making another smile . . To have played, sometimes a winner, sometimes a loser .. . To have learned, never losing sight of further worlds to conquer .. . To have disputed, for to be young is to misunderstand . . . To have worshipped and prayed and thought . . . But most of all To have shared... . Te 221 “T don’t know Who—or what—put the question, I don’t know when it was put. I don’t even remem- ber answering. But at some moment I did answer Yes to Someone—or something—and from that hour I was certain that existence is meaningful and that, therefore, my life, in self-surrender, had a SOY x ee —Dag Hammarskjold 223 224 i lt CO BRR RB iy “Now there are some things that we all know, but we don’t take’m out and look at’m very often. We all know that something is eternal. And it ain't houses, and it ain't names, and it ain’t earth, and it ain’t even the stars . . . everybody knows in their bones that something is eternal, and that something ” has to do with human beings . . . —Thornton Wilder 25 No man is an island, entire of itself...” 227 228 A Abbott, Bill, 92 Abraham, Karen, 92 Acree, Graham, 92 Adams, Janet, 56 Adams, Jerry, 82 Adams, Jim, 92 Adams, Joanne, 82 Adams, Larry, 92 Adams, Marsha, 74 Adcox, Sheila, 92 Agee, Paul, 74 Albany, Al, 92 Albright, Sharon K., 56 Alexander, Diana, 92 Alexander, Marsha, 92 Alexander, Virginia, 82 Allen, Ginger, 82 Allen, Louis, 56 Allen, Martha, 92 Allen, Pat, 92 Allen, Phil, 82 Alsup, Aimee, 56 Alsup, Cathee, 56 Ancell, Marvin, 82 Anders, Marjorie, 74 Anders, Scott, 92 Anderson, Allen, 56 Anderson, Forrest, 56 Anderson, Jim, 74 Anderson, Joyce, 92 Anderson, Tom, 82 Anthony, Mary, 74 Appleton, Linda, 82 Araki, Alvin, 56 Arguitt, Melanie, 82 Armstrong, Lynn, 56 Arnold, Jane, 74 Arnold, Joy, 74 Ashberry, Sharon, 92 Aston, Betty, 56 Atkinson, Greg, 82 Atkinson, Jimmy, 82 Atnip, Gary, 74 Atwood, James, 74 Atwood, Theresa, 74 Austin, John, 92 Austin, Mike, 92 Avery,Twyla, 56 B Bach, Paula, 56 Bain, Dewey, 56 Bainbridge, Sue, 56 Bair, Steve, 56 Baize, Bill, 56 Baker, Russ, 74 Baker, Susan, 92 Ballen, Pat, 74 Barker, Gerald, 92 Barnes, Debbie, 92 Barnes, Rebecca, 82 Barnes, Wyanna, 82 Baskette, Roger, 82 Bass, Irvin, 74 Bates, Tom, 92 Batey, Wayne, 56 Batson, Frank, 74 Bauer, Tom, 92 Baxter, Laverne, 82 Bean, John, 82 Beasley, Bill, 92 Beasley, Charles B., 56 Beaty, Sara, 92 Beauchamp, Diane, 56 Beaver, Dana, 92 Belisle, Michael L., 56 Bell, Charlotte, 82 Bellar, Jan, 74 Bennett, Cliff, 56 Bennett, Frank, 82 Bennett, Nancy, 74 Bennett, Sally, 56 Benvegna, Ronald, 82 Berry, Lynne, 92 Beverett, James, 92 Bickel, Larry, 74 Biddle, Gail, 74 Biggerstaff, Diane, 82 Biggs, Doug, 92 Bilbra, Linda, 57 Billingsley, Betty, 82 Billingsley, Jerry, 92 Billington, Tommy, 92 Binkley, Ricky, 92 Bivins, Hulen, 57 Black, Dan, 57 Blackburn, Jan, 92 Blackwood, Jeffrey, 92 Blevins, Joan, 74 Blevins, Rhonda, 74 Bllomingburg, Linda, 57 Bodiford, Harold, 92 Bogle, Betty Katherine, 57 Bogle, Louis, 92 Bohannon, Diane, 57 Bolt, Missie, 93 Bolyard, Janet, 93 Bonbrisco, Paula, 57 Boring, Nathan, 57 Bouldin, Mike, 57 Bowen, Donald, 57 DIRECTORY Bowers, Phil, 74 Boyce, Andrea, 74 Boyce, Ed, 58 Boyce, Nancy, 82 Boyd, Bill, 82 Boyd, Elizabeth Ann, 58 Boyd, Harell, 58 Boyer, Bonnie, 58 Bracey, Donna, 93 Bradford, Robert, 74 Bradley, Michael, 82 Bramlette, Rosemary, 58 Branch, Kay, 83 Branch, Randall, 83 Branscum, Larry, 93 Brantley, Durward, 82 Brasel, Janie, 93 Brasel, John N., 58 Bratton, Mary Jane, 83 Braziel, Grady, 74 Brennemon, Cindy, 83 Brewer, Charles, 93 Brewer, Robbie, 93 Bridges, Brenda, 93 Bridges, John, 74 Britton, Brenda, 58 Brock, Della, 83 Brooks, Audrey, 93 Brown, Debi, 93 Brown, Dennis, 93 Brown, Fred, 93 Brown, Graylan, 83 Brown, Ginger, 74 Brown, Janet, 93 ; Brown, Margaret, 74 Brown, Sherry, 58 Brumley, John, 58 Brumit, Sharon, 74 Bryan, Ann, 83 Bryan, Bill, 58 Bryan, Richard, 58 Buckley, Valerie, 93 Buckner, Jim, 83 Bucy, Gerald, 74 Bufford, John, 93 Buford, John, 83 Bullard, Jerry, 83 Bumbalough, Jerry W., 59 Bumgardner, Linda, 59 Buntley, Brenda, 93 Burch, Bonnie, 83 Burford, Anita, 74 Burgess, Larry, 83 Burks, Patricia, 83 Burleson, Patti, 59 Burnett, Beth, 93 Burnett, Steve, 74 Burton, Andrew, 93 Burton, Bob, 83 Burton, Elizabeth, 83 Burton, J. Randal, 59 Burton, Jane Lee, 93 Burton, Lynn, 59 Burton, Wilson, 74 Busbin, Betty, 59 Busey, Joann, 74 Byerley, Corine, 83 Byrd, Donneita, 93 Cc Cagle, Johnny E., 59 Cagle, Joyce, 83 Cagle, Steven, 94 Caillouet, Larry, 59 Caldwell, Charles E., 59 Caldwell, Ken, 93 Callen, Steve, 74 Callicoat, Pat, 94 Campbell, Barbara, 94 Campbell, Glenda, 59 Campbell, Pat, 94 Cannon, Danny, 59 Caraway, Stephen, 59 Carman, Jimmy, 94 Carnahan, David, 94 Carnahan, Lynette, 74 Carnahan, Teresa, 94 Caroll, Kathy, 94 Carpenter, Mark, 94 Carr, Frances, 94 Carter, Bruce, 94 Cary, Charlotte, 83 Cassels, Marie, 59 Catlett, Cyndee, 59 Cauthen, Charles, 59 Chadwick, David, 83 Chambers, Byron, 59 Chambers, Nora, 94 Chambers, Susan, 94 Chambliss, Glenda, 94 Chapman, Keller, 94 Chaney, Jim, 83 Chastain, Ken, 94 Cherry, Judy, 94 Chessor, Teresa, 59 Childress, James, 94 Christian, Gary, 83 Christy, Neil, 59 Christy, Susan, 74 Chumley, Charles R., 59 Claiborne, John, 94 Clark, Cathy, 94 Clark, Diane, 59 Clark, James, 94 Clark, Jerry, 94 Clark, Nancy, 83 Claxton, Betty, 83 Clay, Karen, 83 Clements, Brenda, 74 Clevenger, Beth, 74 Clevenger, Tommy, 74 Cliburn, Charles, 83 Cline, Charleen, 74 Cline, Chris, 83 Cline, Nita, 94 Coats, Belvia, 74 Cobb, Connie, 94 Cobb, Phil, 59 Cochran, Larry, 94 Cochran, Matha, 59 Cody, Annette, 75 Coggin, Gerald, 83 Cole, Becky, 59 Coles, Ron, 59 Coleman, Debbie, 59 Colglazier, Sandy, 94 Collins, Clark, 83 Collins, David, 83 Collins, Flora, 75 Colson, Libby , 75 Combs, Edith, 94 Compton, Paul, 83 Conchin, Anita, 83 Conger, John, 75 Conway, Ellen, 59 Cook, Betty, 59 Cook, Kathy, 83 Cook, Phyllis, 83 Cook, Ronnie, 59 Cook, Susan, 59 Cooper, Randy, 94 Cooper, Sherry, 75 Cope, Bill, 75 Cope, Ronnie, 59 Copeland, Billy, 60 Corley, Donna, 83 Corley, Marcia, 83 Correll, Chuck, 75 Cortner, Judy, 83 Covington, Larry, 75 Cowden, Gail, 94 Cowan, Gary, 60 Craig, David, 84 Craig, Dixie, 75 Crain, Terry, 94 Craun, Karl, 60 Crawford, Jane, 94 Crawford, Kay, 60 Crider, Rusty, 75 Crosby, Callie, 84 Crosby, Judy Laura, 60 Crossier, David, Crump, Bill, 60 Cullum, Paul, 60 Cyr, Paula, 60 D Dahlstrom, Susan, 84 Dale, Roger, 60 Daniel, Beverly, 84 Daniel, Carl, 60 Daniel, Debbie, 60 Daniel, Dianne, 94 Daniel, Jenifer, 84 Daniel, Paul, 94 Daniels, Anna, 60 Dart, Dianne, 60 Daugherty, Nick, 94 Davenport, Ron, 60 Davey, Steve, 84 Davidson, Elaine, 84 Davidson, Nancy Ruth, 84 Davidson, Susan, 94 Davidson, Yvonne, 94 Davis, Buddy, 75 Davis, Diane, 84 Davis, Jimmy, 60 Davis, Karen, 95 Davis, Marilyn, 84 Davis, Morgan, 60 Davis, Paula, 95 Davis, Robert, 84 Davis, Robin, 84 Davis, Sandra, 60 Davis, Wayne, 95 Day, Donna, 60 Deasy, Steve, 60 Deese, SueAnn, 60 DeHoff, Paul, 95 Delancey, Susan, 60 Dennis, Gary, 84 Dennis, Mike, 95 Derryberry, Dianne, 61 Deweese, Larry, 61 Dickerson, Dianne, 95 Diggs, Steve, 95 Dillingham, Tommy, 84 Dillon, Linda, 61 Dixon, Catherine, 75 Doan, Sam, 61 Hiv on me . . | os fH Dobbins, Gary, 84 Dobbs, Walker N., 61 Dodd, Beverly J., 61 Dodd, Rosalind, 61 Dolan, Brent, 95 Donati, Beth, 75 Donati, Paulette, 61 Dooley, Katherine, 61 Dorris, Kathy, 95 Doty, Gail, 61 Doty, Tommy, 84 Douglas, Pat, 95 Downs, John, 84 Dozier, Dan, 95 Drake, Ann, 95 Dreaden, Kathy, 95 Dreker, Valle, 95 Driggers, Linda, 95 Dudrey, Russell, 62 Dugger, Mack, 75 Duggin, Diane, 95 Duke, Debbie, 84 Duke, Johnny, 95 Duncan, Debby, 95 Dunning, Peggy, 95 Durham, John, 95 iE Eakes, Eddie, 95 Earhart, Melinda, 84 Eason, Theresa, 62 Easter, Daniel, 75 Edlund, Dave, 95 Eller, Cheryl, 95 Edwards, Bobby, 62 Elliott, Carolyn, 62 Elliott, Nancy, 62 Ellis, Brenda, 95 Ellis, Paula, 75 Ellmore, Carolyn, 84 Elrod, Chug, 84 Embry, Greg, 95 Empson, Cheryl, 85 Enochs, Wanda, 95 Enters, Fred, 85 Epperly, Blythe, 95 Ernest, Ann, 95 Evans, Carol, 85 Evans, Rita, 62 Evans, Vicki, 62 Ewing, John, 62 F Fassino, Donna, 95 Fassino, James C., 62 Faust, James, 85 Fewell, Paulette, 75 Fields, David, 85 Finch, Marsha, 95 Fincher, David, 75 Fincher, Nancy, 75 Finley, Sharon, 62 Finney, Bruce, 95 Fish, Gale, 75 Fisher, David, 62 Flanakin, Brent, 95 Fleming, Dana,°95 Floyd, Charles, 62 Floyd, David, 95 Foote, Carolyn, 95 Forrister, Kim, 95 Foster, Doug, 95 Fowler, Dot, 85 Fowler, Judy, 76 Fox, Elaine, 95 Fox, Melvin, 95 Frame, Sam, 76 Franklin, Gayle, 62 Franklin, Pam, 95 Free, Wayne, 95 French, Gary, 76 French, Marilyn, 62 Frisby, Terry, 76 Frump, Gerald, 76 Fuchs, Cherie, 85 Fugate, Wayne, 85 Fulford, Gary, 62 Fulford, Hazel, 76 Fulford, Pam, 85 Fulkerson, Millie, 85 Furlong, Gail, 95 Furlong, William, 85 G Gafford, Nancy, 62 Galligan, Marcy, 95 Galligan, Peggy, 62 Gamble, Charlie, 95 Gammon, Teresa, 85 Gann, Alva Jo, 95 Gardner, Gaylord, 85 Garner, Donald R., 62 Garner, Stephen B., 62 Garr, Ethel, 85 Gates, Doug, 62 Gatten, Gary, 62 Gaw, Gail, 95 Gaw, Jack, 76 Gaw, Jerry, 95 Gaw, Ted, 85 Gentry, Ellen, 95 George, Paul, 62 Gibbons, Eleanor, 95 Gibbons, Mark, 62 Gibbs, Karen, 62 Gilbert, Donna, 62 Gillis, Gail, 95 Gist, Nancy, 96 Glenn, Carol, 96 Glisson, Jim, 96 Glisson, Sharon, 76 Glover, Gary, 96 Glover, Randy, 76 Goff, Dixie, 96 Golden, Nella, 85 Goodpasture, Kathy, 96 Goolsby, David, 62 Goolsby, Glenna, 96 Gore, Mary, 96 Gore, Roger, 96 Gossett, Duane, 96 Graves, Martha, 96 Gray, Jim, 96 Gray, Patricia, 96 Green, Larry, 85 Greene, Joel, 76 Greene, Ted, 96 Greer, Karla, 96 Gregory, Jeannie, 96 Grimenstein, Jim, 76 Grisham, Rex, 76 Groce, Steve, 96 Gross, Mike, 85 Grubb, Ken, 96 Grubbs, Sarah, 96 Grundy, Bill, 76 Gunselman, Stan, 96 Guthrie, Dan, 96 Guttery, Gail, 96 H Haddock, Tom, 62 Hadley, Christopher, 96 Haines, Mary Jane, 62 Hairston, Elizabeth, 76 Hall, Bruce, 96 Hall, Janet, 85 Hall, Randall, 62 Hamilton, Thomas Lee, 62 Hammer, Nancy, 76 Hammond, Jenny, 76 Hampton, Wayne, 76 Hankinson, Dean, 62 Hanlin, George, 62 Harbin, Tommy, 96 Hardaway, Lynn, 85 Hardcastle, Peggy, 96 Hardeman, Greg, 96 Hardison, Glenn, 85 Hargrove, Clara, 96 Harless, Walton, 96 Harless, Winston, 96 Harmon, Sheila, 96 Harper, Jim, 63 Harper, Neil, 63 Harrell, Frank, 85 Harris, Debbie, 96 Harris, Greg, 85 Harris, Jill, 85 Harris, Ronnie, 63 Harston, Buddy, 97 Hartman, Kathy, 97 Harwell, Julia, 97 Hatch, Ellen, 97 Hauser, Fred, 63 Hawkins, Randy, 76 Hawthorne, Carol, 97 Hayes, Thomas, 76 Haynes, Marlene, 63 Head, Elaine, 85 Heflin, Edna, 85 Heindselman, Connie, 97 Heinselman, Jane, 76 Helm, Jerry, 97 Helm, Mary Lynn, 76 Hemby, Lisa, 97 Hemingway, Cindy, 97 Henderson, Becky, 97 Hendrick, Becky, 97 Hendrix, Wanda, 76 Henry, Jeff, 97 Henry, Kay, 76 Henry, Mark, 76 Henry, Phil, 85 Henshaw, Janet, 97 Hensley, Grady, 85 Herman, Sheila, 97 Herren, Myra, 63 Hickerson, Martha, 63 Hicks, George M., 63 Hicks, Ginger, 97 Higdon, Janice, 97 High, Tommy, 85 Hilderbrand, Brenda, 63 Hinkle, Jeff, 97 Hiter, Mickey, 63 Hixon, Diana, 64 Hobbs, Brenda, 64 Hobbs, Linda, 85 Hoffman, Jana, 97 Hogan, Greg, 97 Hogan, Paula, 86 Holder, Deborah, 77 Holladay, Cliff, 86 Holland, Wanda, 97 Holliman, Pam, 97 Hollins, Bill, 77 Hollins, Elvis, 97 Holman, Ford, 98 Holmes, Chris, 98 Holmes, Millicent, 98 Holmes, Rebecca, 77 Holt, Charlotte, 86 Holt, Darrell, 86 Hood, Dennis, 77 Hood, Mark, 98 Hood, Michael, 86 Hoover, Vicki, 86 Hopkins, Anne, 86 Horn, Beth, 98 Horn, Howard, 77 Horton, Arthur, 64 Houston, Connie, 98 Howard, Ron, 64 Howell, Susan, 64 Hubbell, Dennis, 77 Hubbell, Peggy, 86 Huckaby, Donna, 64 Huddleston, Phyllis, 77 Hudson, Jim, 86 Hudson, John, 98 Huey, Debbie, 86 Huffard, Henry, 77 Huffines, Cindy, 64 Huffman, Dave, 86 Hughes, Dick, 64 Hughes, Judy, 86 Hunt, Joe, 98 Hunter, Barbara, 64 Hunter, Joan, 98 Hunter, Ronnie, 64 Hurt, Bill, 64 Hutcheson, John, III, 98 Hutchison, Kathy, 64 Hutchison, Lois, 86 Hyne, Ernest, 86 I Ingram, Bill, 64 Ingram, Donna, 86 Ingram, Stephen, 98 Irvin, Sherrye, 86 Irwin, Donna, 64 J Jackson, Douglas, 98 Jackson, Harriet, 77 Jackson, Mike, 98 Jackson, Ron, 77 Jayne, Martha, 87 Jenkins, Donna, 98 Jenkins, Jessica, 98 Jinkins, Mary Lou, 98 Johnson, Earl, 64 Johnson, Kent, 77 Johnson, Steve, 64 Johnston, Chrystal, 87 Johnston, Kathy, 98 Johnston, Jan, 87 Jones, Angela, 64 Jones, Diane, 64 Jones, Don, 98 Jones, Fran, 78 Jones, Gwen, 64 Jones, Gwen, 78 Jones, Joy, 98 Jones, Kinny, 87 Jones, LaNette, 87 Jones, Melody, 98 Jones, Michael, 78 Jones, Mural, 64 Jones, Nancy, 98 Jones, Reda, 98 Jones, Ronald C., 64 Jones, Ronald E., 65 Jones, Sharon, 65 Joslin, Liz, 78 K Kail, Steve, 98 Karnes, Lynda, 65 Kaufman, Linda, 65 Kaufman, Lucinda, 65 Kaufman, Steven, 65 Keckley, Gary, 98 Keckley, Paul, 65 Kelley, Alan, 98 Kelley, Janice, 98 Kelley, Jeff, 65 Kennedy, Jerry, 65 Kennedy, Kathy, 87 Kent, Joy, 65 Kerce, Mary Beth, 87 Kerr, Don, 98 Kerr, Ken, 98 Kerr, Nancee, 65 Kerr, Susan, 87 Kester, Georgia, 98 Key, Susan, 65 Kidder, Nelson, 98 Kimbrough, Johnny, 98 Kimbrough, Karen, 98 229 230 Kirk, Philip, 98 Kirkpatrick, Tom, 65 King, Gerald, 65 King, Janice, 65 Kirby, Gina Kay, 65 Knott, Melinda, 65 Kodatt, Gena, 98 Koho, Donna, 98 Krumme, Kay, 98 Kuhn, Beth, 98 Kuhn, Janice, 87 Kuhn, Ron, 98 Kull, Keith, 78 Kwalpick, Phyllis, 98 L Lacey, Chris, 98 Lamb, Gil, 87 Lamb, Jeanne, 98 Lambert, Russell, 65 Lampley, Frances, 87 Lampley, Vickie, 87 Lancaster, Debbie, 98 Landefeld, Barb, 98 Landefeld, Deborah, 98 Landes, Michelan, 98 Lang, Debbie, 99 Langley, Hubert, 78 Lankford, Patricia, 99 Larkins, Ed, 99 LaRue, Kathy, 99 Lasater, Steven, 99 Lashley, Marcia, 87 Lavender, Tim, 65 Lawrence, C. T., 87 Lawrence, Gordon, 99 Lawrence, Kathy, 87 Laws, Dennis, 65 Laws, Jim, 87 Layton, Cheryl, 99 Leaver, Walt, 99 Legg, Morris, 99 Lemon, Ellen, 99 Lemp, Sharon, 87 Leonard, Darlene, 99 Little, Larry, 95 Lloyd, Billy, 87 Lockler, Denis, 87 Logan, Lynette, 66 Lokey, Jim, 99 Long, Prudence, 99 Long, Richard, 78 Long, Stephen B., 66 Loring, Beverly, 99 Love, Janet, 99 Love, Jerry, 66 Lovelace, Lawre, 87 Loveless, Becky, 87 Loveless, Vivian, 99 Lovell, Nancy, 87 Lowry, Dona, 87 Lowrey, Laura Ann, 99 Luffman, Marty, 78 Lutterman, Kenny, 78 Lutterman, Marilyn, 99 Lutes, Jacqueline, 66 Lynch, Mary Lou, 78 Lynn, Chris, 78 Lynn, Gary, 87 Lynn, Peggy, 66 Lyon, Marlene, 99 Lyons, Charles, 87 Mc McBrayer, Richard, 99 McCalister, Linda, 66 McCann, Pam, 78 McCarver, Barry, 99 McCaslin, Warren, 87 McClure, Doug, 99 McCay, Ann, 87 McCormack, Jerry, 99 McCullough, Suzanne, 99 McDaniels, Scarlett, 66 McDonald, Betty, 99 McDonald, Stephen, 78 McEachern, Dan, 87 McElhaney, Mickey, 99 McGill, Diane, 87 McIntyre, Cathy, 99 McKee, Michael, 99 McKenzie, Delbert L., 66 McKinney, Lynn, 87 McLaughlin, Sandy, 99 McLeod, Richard, 66 McMeen, Joy, 78 McNeely, Dennis, 87 McVey, Douglas, 79 M Mack, Keith, 99 Mack, Kevin, 99 Maddux, William Lee, 67 Mahaffey, Judy, 87 Mancill, Kathy, 87 Mangus, Pam, 99 Mann, Marvin, 79 Manning, Charles, 99 Manning, David, 87 Marable, Dwight, 67 Marlowe, Jim, 67 Marr, Rachael, 99 Martin, David, 87 Martin, Sandy, 99 Martin, Zachry, F., 67 Mason, Deborah, 99 Mason, Eric, 87 Mathis, Debbie, 99 Mathews, Debbie, 79 Matthews, John Paul, 79 Maust, Tom, 79 Mayer, Beckie, 79 Mayer, Richard, 67 Mayfield, Sue, 67 Mays, Matha, 99 Mead, Janet, 87 Mead, Lois, 79 Meadows, Gary, 99 Means, Richard, 67 Meiser, Kay, 67 Merryman, Pam, 67 Mertz, Michael, 87 Meyers, Reid, 67 Mickholtzick, Patricia, 99 Milam, Bob, 87 Milam, Jack, 67 Miller, Beve, 99 Miller, Connie, 99 Miller, Dwight, 99 Miller, Janice, 79 Miller, Ken, 67 Miller, Lee, 99 Miller, Ronald, 99 Milton, Alice, 67 Mincey, Jim, 67 Minton, Patricia, 79 Mistyurick, Wanda, 67 Mitchell, Dale, 87 Mitchell, David, 99 Mitchell, Diane, 87 Mitchell, Gary, 87 Mitchell, Janet, 67 Mitchell, Susan, 79 Montgomery, Eddie, 67 Montgomery, Sally, 87 Moon, Janet, 88 Moon, John, 99 Moore, Karen, 88 Moore, Karen, 99 Moore, Pam, 88 Moore, Pat, 99 Moore, Richard, 88 Moran, Jan, 67 Morback, Ivy, 99 Moreland, Vicki, 79 Morris, Janice, 100 Morris, Richard J., 67 Morrison, Mary Ann, 79 Morrow, Louis, 67 Morrow, Marsha, 67 Mosley, DiAnn, 100 Mosley, Ron, 67 Moss, Elizabeth, 100 Moss, Mike, 79 Moss, Wendell, 88 Motley, Kathy, 100 Mullins, Lynn, 88 Muncher, Tony, 100 Mundy, Pamela H., 67 Murley, Brenda, 79 Murphree, Elizabeth, 79 Murphy, Betty, 79 Murray, Beverly, 67 Murray, Camilla, 88 Murray, Lindley, 88 Myers, Shirley, 67 N Nakao, Janet, 79 Nash, Jerry, 67 Nash, Larry, 88 Neeley, Andra, 68 Neelley, Edward, 68 Neese, Allen, 68 Neese, Bill, 100 Neese, Janice, 79 Neil, Bill, 100 Nelson, Dave, 100 Nesbit, Irene, 88 Netterville, John, Jr., 100 Nevins, Jane, 68 Newberry, Brenda, 88 Newberry, Nancy, 100 Newby, Carl, 68 Newell, Debbie, 100 Nichols, Kay, 100 Nicks, Nan, 88 Nixon, Larry, 68 Nolan, Barbara, 88 Norman, Alton, 68 Norman, Nancy, 68 North, Phil, 79 Norton, Marianna, 79 Norwood, Linda, 88 O-P Oakley, Wendell, 88 Oatts, Sharlett, 88 O’Brien, Pat, 100 O’Guin, Ronald, 88 Oliver, Greg, 79 O’Neal, Mike, 68 O’Neal, Peggy, 100 O’Neal, Phyllis, 88 Ottinger, Charles, 79 Ottinger, Nina, 88 Owens, Cynthia, 88 Owens, Donna, 100 Padovich, Frank, 88 Pahman, Larry J,, 68 Palmer, Henry, 100 Parham, Debbie, 100 Parker, Allene, 100 Parker, Ben, 89 Parker, Charles, 68 Parker, Ken, 79 Parker, Lynn, 79 Parker, Nancy, 100 Parker, Regina, 68 Parker, Ronnie, 68 Parker, Wilton, 100 Parks, George, 68 Parks, Pam, 68 Parlon, Teresa, 68 Pate, Linda F., 68 Pate, Roy, 79 Patillo, Charlotte, 100 Patton, Don, 79 Patton, Jeannie, 68 Paul, Jeffrey, 89 Paul, Geoffrey, 100 Paul, Stephen, 100 Payne, Billie, 89 Payne, Dianne, 68 Payton, Marinell, 68 Pearman, Beverly, 68 Peden, Lowell, 69 Pendergrass, Janet, 89 Perkins, Deryl, 80 Perry, Linda, 80 Perry, Sandra, 89 Perryman, Karen, 89 Persinger, Rick, 89 Peugh, David, 100 Phelps, Susan, 69 Phillips, Becky, 89 Phillips, Margaret, 69 Phillips, Victoria, 100 Pickerill, Susan, 100 Pierce, Stephen, 69 Piercy, Diana, 69 Pilkington, Suzanne, 100 Pilkinton, Al, 80 Pippin, Jan, 69 Pleasant, Garth, 69 Plemmons, Janet, 69 Plumlee, Candy, 89 Plunket, Rodney, 100 Poole, Donald, 89 Porter, Connie, 69 Porter, Terry, 69 Porter, William, 100 Posey, Richard, 100 Potter, Don, 100 Potts, Melvin, 69 Powell, Alan, 100 Powell, Connie, 69 Powell, Darla, 69 Powell, Monty, 89 Powell, Nancy, 69 Powell, Ralph, 69 Powell, Sondra, 69 Price, Bill, 89 Price, Sylvia, 80 Prince, Jim, 69 Pritchard, Marti, 89 Proctor, Danny, 100 Pruit, Les, 89 Pruitt, Walter, 80 Pruitt, Gail, 100 Pullias, Nancy, 89 R Ramsey, David, 80 Ramsey, Linda, 80 Ramsey, Nancy, 100 Ramsey, Presley, 60 Raney, Steve, 80 Raphael, Nick, 100 Raulston, Ann, 89 Ray, Keith, 100 Read, David, 89 Reaves, Brownie, 69 Reaves, Nancy, 69 Redmon, Eva, 89 Reed, Gene, 100 Reed, Joe, 100 Reed, Tom, 69 Reed, Winston, 70 Regenauer, Marcia, 100 Register, Wayne, 70 Rhoads, Deby, 100 Rich, Lana, 70 Richmond, Doyle, 80 Riggs, Mary, 8 Rigol, Joseph, 80 Riley, Don, 100 Ringer, Gloria, 100 Risher, Kathi, 80 Rittenberry, Frank, 70 Roath, Connie, 70 Robbins, Neal, 89 Roberts, Donna, 89 Roberts, Tony, 80 Robertson, Wanda, 100 Robinson, Cathy, 89 Robinson, Dan, 70 Robinson, Pam, 101 Robinson, Robert, 70 Rochelle, Carolyn, 70 Roder, Debbie, 89 Rodgers, Debi, 101 Roland, Kathy, 89 Roll, Tom, 101 Rose, Jillene, 70 Ross, Betsy, 101 Ross, Mike, 101 Rowden, Sherry, 101 Ruby, Jeri, 70 Rummell, Jane, 80 Runions, Kathy, 89 Rupp, Joyce, 101 Russell, Dennis, 70 Rutherford, Tom, 70 Ryan, Donna, 89 Ryan, Ruth, 70 Ss Sampson, Marsha, 90 Sams, Sheila, 101 Samuels, Janet, 101 Sanders, John, 90 Sanders, Joy, 101 Sanderson, Darryl, 90 Stanford, Effie, 80 Santi, David, 70 Santi, Mike, 101 Santiago, Carmen, 101 Sargent, Annette, 70 Sargent, Susie, 101 Sarver, Janine, 101 Saunders, Horace, 90 Savage, Jerry, 70 Sawyer, Donna, 70 Sawyer, Joel, 101 Scarboro, Marsha, 90 Schumaker, Kerry, 101 Sciortino, Gerry, 70 Scobey, Rob, 101 Scott, David, 90 Scott, Edith, 101 Scott, Teresa, 70 Scott, William, 70 Seals, Arlene, 81 Seals, Charlotte, 81 Seals, Patricia, 70 Seamon, Michael, 81 Sells, Judy, 81 Selvage, Rhonda, 101 Sensing, Hal, 70 Sessions, Margaret, 70 Shannon, Janet, 81 Shappley, Jay, 101 Sharp, Roger, 90 Shaub, Doty, 101 Shaw, Carol, 101 Shearer, Jerry, 90 Shepard, Jerry, 90 Shepard, Margie, 90 Shepard, David, 90 Sheppard, Gale, 101 Sherwood, Linda, 70 Shipp, Linda, 81 Shirley, Paula, 90 Shirley, Terri, 101 Shockley, Pam, 101 Short, Lindy, 71 Simmons, Wanda, 101 Simpkins, Connie, 81 Sinclair, Susan, 71 Sircy, Bob, 90 Slater, Jim, 81 Slaughter, Candy, 90 Slaughter, Debby, 101 Slayden, John, 101 Smith, Connie, 90 Smith, David, 101 Smith, Donna, 81 Smith, Larry, 101 Smith, Michael Ray, 71 Smith, Sarah, 101 Smith, Tim, 101 Smith, Wayland, 81 Smoak, Cathy, 90 Snell, Jerrilyn, 81 Snider, Suzanne, 101 Snyder, Donna, 71 Snyder, Karin, 101 Soche, Beverly, 71 Spann, David, 90 Spann, Mary, 101 Spann, Vicki, 90 Sparks, Kathy, 71 Spivey, Kathy, 90 Sprague, Robert, 71 Staggs, Diane, 71 Staggs, Henry, 81 Stahl, Peggy, 101 Stanfield, Eddie, 101 Stanley, Myrtle, 81 Stephen, Dennis, 71 Stephens, Gerald, 71 Stevens, Turney, 81 Stevenson, Joe, 101 Stewart, Ernest, 71 Stewart, Karen, 90 Stewart, Mary, 101 Stewart, Randy, 101 Stewart, Wavell, 71 Stiles, Mary, 71 Stillinger, Glena, 90 Stinson, Butch, 90 Stinson, Debbie, 102 Stone, Debra, 102 Stone, Valerie, 102 Stout, Peggy, 90 Stowell, Jane, 71 Street, Mark, 102 Street, Reid, 71 Strickland, George, 71 Stroop, John, 102 Strosnider, Pam, 71 Stuart, Evelyn, 71 Stubbs, Brenda, 102 Sturdivant, D’Lo, 71 Sturgeon, Gerry, 90 Stutzman, Charleen, 102 Sullivan, Bill, 102 Sullivan, Rita, 71 Summers, Ann, 90 Summers, Sue, 81 Summey, Linda, 71 Sutherland, Donna, 71 Sutherland, Duke, 90 Sutton, Linita, 102 Swaim, Marilyn, 71 Swang, Ron, 81 Swann, Donna, 102 Switzer, David, 71 Switzer, Ken, 102 T Tanner, Siri, 102 Tarpley, Carol, 72 Tarpley, Mickey, 72 Tate, Linda, 72 Taylor, Craig, 90 Taylor, James, 90 Taylor, Janie, 72 Taylor, Jim, 81 Tedrick, Janet, 81 Teel, Alice, 102 Teel, Karen, 102 Temple, Becky, 102 Temple, Carol, 72 Temple, Steve, 90 Terry, Lee, 102 Terry, Stephen, 81 Themmen, Karen, 72 Thomas, Keith, 90 Thomas, Mary, 102 Thomas, Stephen, 90 Thomason, Joan, 102 Thompson, Brooksie, 72 Thompson, Donna, 102 Thompson, Ralph, 81 Thompson, Rilla, 102 Thompson, Sallie Ann, 90 Thompson, Sheila, 81 Thornthwaite, Roscoe, 81 Thorpe, Wendol, 102 Thurston, Paige, 102 Tidwell, Maury, 102 Tignor, Tommy, 81 Tinkle, Carol, 102 Tomlinson, Wayne, 72 Tonkery, Joyce, 99 Tosh, Ron, 90 Totty, Darlene, 102 Tracy, John, 72 Tramontano, Jeannette, 90 Troup, John, 90 Trusler, Nancy, 102 Tubb, Les, 72 Tucker, Linda, 91 Tucker, Paulette, 81 Turbyfill, Pam, 102 Turnbow, Sharon, 102 Turner, Karen, 102 Turner, Peggy, 102 Turner, Ronda, 102 Turney, Debbie, 102 Turney, Patricia, 72 Turnham, Rod, 91 U-V Uvick, Margaret, 73 Van Hooser, Doug, 102 Varnado, Carol, 73 Varnell, Dorris, 81 Vaughan, David, 73 Veal, Susan, 102 Velasquez, Carolyn, 102 Vernon, Joan, 73 Vester, David, 91 Victory, Wayne, 102 Villines, Van, 102 Vitatoe, David, 91 WwW Waddley, Debbie, 102 Waddlington, Agnes, 102 Wade, Denny, 91 Wagers, Roy, 73 Wagner, Bill, 73 Waggoner, Pat, 91 Walden, Ramona, 102 Walker, Cathy, 73 Walker, Fred, 91 Walker, Sandy, 91 Wallace, Charles, 103 Wallace, Kathy, 91 Wallace, Richard, 73 Ward, Donna, 103 Ward, Gregg, 103 Ward, Geneva, 91 Watkins, Debbie, 91 Waymon, David, 103 Weaver, Judy, 103 Weaver, Robert, 73 Webb, Bobby, 73 Webb, Donnie, 81 Webb, Jerry, 73 Weills, John, 73 Weir, Carol, 103 Welch, Barbara, 91 Wells, Bonnie, 103 Wells, Richard, 103 Wentler, Mary Edith, 91 Wentz, Mike, 103 Wesson, Jim, 91 Wests James, 91 est, Judy, 91 West, Karen, 81 Westbrook, Ronnie, 103 Wheeler, Sandy, 91 Whitaker, Deborah, 81 White, Connie, 73 White, Nancy, 103 Whitfield, Tom, 91 Whitson, Andrea, 73 Wickers, Paula, 81 Wilburn, Doug, 81 Wilcher, Elizabeth, 103 Wilcoxson, Paul, 103 Wilkerson, E. J., 73 Wilkison, Joy, 91 Williams, Alice, 73 Williams, Dan, 73 Williams, Dave, 81 Williams, Donna, 103 Williams, Doug, 73 Williams, Greg, 91 Williams, Jan, 103 Williams, Nancy, 103 Williams, Steve, 103 Williams, Tommy, 91 Williams, Tommy, 73 Williamson, Debbie, 103 Willis, Barbara, 91 Willis, Joy, 91 Wilson, Deana, 103 Wilson, Jim, 73 Wilson, Joe, 103 Wilson, Mary, 73 Wilson, Mary Alice, 81 Wilson, Pamela, 103 Wilson, Rex, 103 Wilson, Ruth, 81 Wilson, Stephen, 91 Wingard, Philip, 103 Wingo, Robert, 91 Winstead, Andrew, 91 Wiser, Cherry, 73 Witherspoon, Gene, 103 Witt, Mary, 91 Wofford, Rose Eva, 91 Wolf, Jeannie, 81 Wolfe, David, 103 Wolfert, Paul, 91 Womack, Carol, 73 Womack, Debra, 91 Womack, Linda, 103 Wood, Cooper, 103 Wood, Selma, 103 Woodlee, Sharon, 103 Woodring, Jane, 81 Woodring, Jean, 103 Woodruf, Ouida, 91 Wooten, Laura, 103 Wooten, Nancy, 73 Work, Kathy, 103 Wright, Beverly, 81 Wright, Carl, 73 Wright, Donna, 81 Wyatt, Celeste, 103 Wyatt, Linda, 103 Wylie, Sam, 103 Y-Z Yamin, Hama, 91 Yavorone, Marie, 81 Yates, Peggy, 91 Yearwood, Pat, 91 Yelton, Nancy, 103 Yelton, Nina, 103 York, Billie, 81 York, Wayne, 73 Youngblood, Harmon, 91 Zimmerly, Jim, 91 232 ADDENDUM So it must end. The Golden Anniversary Edition of the David Lipscomb College BACKLOG. What do you say when something you love and hate and fear and adore very much draws to a close? That it was a nice try? That it had a good message? That you and the school and the world are better for having made it all the way to the last page of The Book ? You say thanks because without Linda and Ernie, Jim, Ken, and Paula, Lee and Dawn, Deby, Hutch, Denny, and ad_ infinitum, there would be no book to end. You say that it was a horrible experience, because it was. But you also say that it was a won- derful experience, because it was that too. You say that you loved every minute of it, because now you do. And you say that you wouldn’t trade those twelve months for anything in the world, because now you wouldn't. You say that what is written on these pages is not written on paper but, rather, on your heart and maybe, someday, on your life. You know that everyone won’t understand because they never do. But you hope that maybe somewhere, sometime, one person will thumb through the book and realize that there’s more to it than just words and ink and cardboard. You want to say all those things you didn’t know how to say before. You'd like to take the world by the lapels and say, Look, you’re in a mess and the only way you’re ever going to get straight is for us to learn to touch and to feel and to love again. You want to make somebody realize that this year at this school in this city on this planet in this Universe wasn’t too important after all. You try to say, Hey, you who just hit that home run, or you who just starred in that play, or you who just edited that yearbook: you’re not so big. You're just one equal part of three billion and just because you don’t like the color of that man’s skin or the length of his hair or the way he talks doesn’t mean you’re any better than he is. But, in the end, all you say is that this year and what we said here and what we thought here and what we learned here are only a prospectus. They are a prelude to tomorrow. And maybe, just maybe, if we have learned that we’re all brothers, this year will become a prelude to a New World. ear ee Se SSS See Seuen Se
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