Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA)
- Class of 1963
Page 1 of 192
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1963 volume:
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LIBRARY OF MARY BALDWIN COLLEGt 54B95 1963 BLUESTOCKING LIBRARY OF MARY BALDWIN COLLEGL Jean Vaughan Wells Editor Activities Faculty Features m Classes Organizations Contents Opening Section 1-19 Dedication 18 Administration, Faculty and Staff 20-41 Memorial 22 Administration 23 Faculty 26 Administrative Staff Activities 38 42-61 Student Government 44 Honorary Organizations 48 Publications 54 Features 62-77 Personalities and Events 64 Academic Year in Madrid 68 May Court 70 SGA Coffee House 76 Classes 78-133 Seniors 80 Juniors 104 Sophomores 112 Freshmen 122 Organizations 134-153 Clubs and Committees 136 Choir and Glee Club 140 CA and Church Groups 142 Athletics and Sport Clubs 146 Eta Betas and Fours 152 Advertisers, Patrons and Index 154-184 Ads and Index 156 Patrons 173 Closing Section 178 Last Word 184 The Year began in late September— A new Freshman class, innocents aborad, began a bright new life called College— And upperclassmen fell back into the same old rut just like summer hadn ' t happened. Autumn strung everydays together, like so many wooden beads— We fought to keep our mailboxes open, and made survival kits in case of fall-out and ran to eight-thirties and ran back- David Boroff warned us to beware the intellectual rope-dance of the Ivies and waterfights at Wisconsin— And David Reisman said If one is afraid to be fooHsh, it is very hard to get an education. We all went to class and we worked hard, and some of us thought and learned. We went to parties, and we gave some— We learned to do the slow twist and the bird— We were the noise and the make believe and sham- But the times we liked best were the quiet times. 10 Winter came, not with the snows we expected but with a bleak depressing cliill— a flu epidemic Student Government meetings Christmas exams and tea time. 13 Through a kaleidoscope of bricks and steel and mud we watched the campus grow— The pieces shifted, but our life didn ' t change much- Freshmen signed the Honor Pledge and passed a petition— We learned how Student Government worked and decided to change it a little, constitutionally— We began to learn who we were And we grew. 14 March blew us Spring sprinkling diamonds and pins, generously, over all four classes— The leaves came out, and tennis rackets- Seniors studied for comps. Juniors took office, And we all looked forward to Summer, to lots of sleep and beach time and parties and weddings— We looked back and wondered where the year had gone— what we had accomplished— And some of us knew. 17 For the years he has devoted to us, for the friend he has been to us, for the time, interest, guidance and affection he has given each one of us, we, his class, dedicate this book to Outside class. Marshall Moore Brice Intuition When the joy is in your laughter And a song is in your heart, When the gladness shows its rippling And the gayness won ' t depart, When your eyes are bright with smiling— Just as bright as morning dew- Does your intuition tell you That another ' s happy too? And when sadness breaks the laughter And the sunshine rolls away, When the darkened clouds of dolor Come to blot you from the day. When your dark brown eyes are troubled And your joyous smiles are few, Does your intuition tell you That another ' s saddened too? You have said that intuition Often told you many things. That it sometimes brought you tidings Of some love on eagle ' s wings. But this messenger of tidings- How I often tvish I knew That this intuition told you That another loves you too. M.M.B., 1919 Junior-Senior Banquet, 1962 . 18 In class. 19 Administration, Faculty, Staff 22 Memorial 23-25 Administration 26-37 Faculty 38-41 Administrative Staff In Memoriam Barbara Kares Page Administrative Assistant to the President November 20, 1962 Richard Randall Potter Chairman of the Board of Trustees December 6, 1962 22 Administration Joseph W. Timberlake, Jr. Vice President Samuel R. Spencer, Jr. President of the College 23 Martha Stackhouse Grafton Dean of the College Anne Elizabeth Parker Dean of Students 24 James T. Spillman, Bursar Marguerite Hillhouse Registrar and Director of Admissions John B. Daffin, Treasurer and Comptroller The new 100,000- olume library, to be constructed in the area now cleared and graded on Frederick Street between Academic and Bailey Hall, will be the center of campus academic life. With the completion of the dormitory housing 171 students at the east end of campus, accommodations for a maximum enrollment of 600 will have been realized. Wilson Terrace, located on die site of the old Chapel and surrounded by a garden of seasonal plants, has been built for informal gatherings. Furtlier plans for construction include a science building and a fine arts center. Faculty Emeriti Herbert S. Turner, Professor Emeritus of Religion and Philosophy, was cited by the Laurel Society as an inte- gral part of a student ' s conception of MBC. He was for a number of years vice-chairman of the Board of Trustees and led the College during critical formative years. His latest book, concerning his native Scotch-Irish community, Mebane, N. C, was pubhshed last fall by the University of North Carolina Press. As college chaplain, Dr. Turner continues to be in charge of the chapel serv- ice and is available for counseling with students, a function he has always fulfilled with deep understanding and insight. Fannie Barth Strauss, Associate Professor Emeritus of German and Comparative Literature, was a member of the first organized class of Mary Baldwin College, 1912. For 30 of her 44 years at MBC, she was supervisor for the Bluestocking, and she was given an award by the National Scholastic Press Association for her work. She is listed in Who ' s Who in the South and Southwest and in Who ' s Who Among American Women. Since her re- tirement last year. Miss Fannie has been engaged in bringing up to date the history of tlie College and in visiting nearby alumnae chapters. 26 William J. Kimball, Ph.D. (Pennsylvania State University), Associate Professor of English, has received grants-in-aid for research on the Civil War and for post-doctoral study. He has pub- lished a source history, Richmond in Time of War, and has contributed to several professional historical magazines. English Department .A.. Ben H. Smith, Jr., Ph.D. (University of North Carolina), Assistant Professor of English, has continued to study the traditional aspects of the Middle Ages and the seventeenth-century meta- physical poets. His interest in music of the eighteenth century and before has been complemented by his study of several keyboard instruments. Andrew J. Mahler, Ph.D. (University of North Carolina), head of the English Department, is immediate past president of the North Carohna-V ' irginia College English Association. Dr. Mahler is recognized for his comprehensive understanding of language and literature and for his ability to communicate to his students an individualized appreciation of English. His time is devoted to intensive reading and to his students. Dr. Mahler is a scholar ' s scholar, and his service to Mary Baldwin College has been in- valuable. Marshall M. Brice, Ed.D. (University of Virginia, University of Wisconsin, Clemson College, Columbia University), Professor of English, is the co-author, with Dr. Ullin Leavell, of How To Study with Success and Satisfaction, and the author of numerous published poems and essays. Dr. Brice has represented Mary Baldwin College at annual meetings of the National College English Association for many years. He sponsors the Class of 1963. 27 Julian E. White, Jr., Ph.D. (University of North CaroHna; The Sorbonne, University of Paris), Assistant Professor of French, was a Fulbright scholar and is a member of the Medieval Acad- emy of America. He recently translated a Regnard play for performance by the Mary Baldwin College drama department, . t present he is compiling an anthology of medieval French literature and writing a comparative study of Voltaire, Swift and Cyrano de Bergerac. Language Department: French and German Vega M. Lytton, M.A. (Drake University; Uni- versity of Chicago; Middlebury College; Al- liance Francaise; The Sorbonne, University of Paris), studied at the Sorbonne under a grant from the Christian Education Board of the Pres- byterian Church, U.S. She has traveled exten- sively in Europe and conducts European tours for college students. Gerda L. Dippman, M.A. (New York University, Friedrich Alex- ander Universitaet, Erlangen, Universidad de Madrid, Univer- sidad de Barcelona), Assistant Professor of German, is at pres- ent working on her doctoral dis- sertation, which deals witli Schiller ' s aesthetics. 28 Spanish Barbara Peabody Clarke, M.A. (Middlebur - Col- lege), Instructor in Spanish, has joined the fac- ulty of Mar ' Baldwin College after a year of graduate study in Spain. Miss Clarke worked for two summers in the Spanish department of Time magazine. While in Madrid she ser ' ed as translator and interpreter for an Anglo-Chinese firm in addition to tutoring. Dorothy M. Mulberr., Ph.D. (University of Madrid), Assistant Professor of Spanish, is director of the Man,- Baldwin Academic Year in Madrid. Her extensive European travel and study, as well as her firsthand knowledge of Spain, was a stimulus for the entire program. She has arranged e erything from classes to housing to invitations for a Balenciaga fashion show for the girls. Her jobs include help and counseling in their orientation to Spanish life, in addition to her official duties as director of the program. Barbara F. Ely, Ph.D. (Tulane University), Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, was the recipient of Carnegie and Southern Regional fellowships. She studied at the University of Madrid on an Institute of International Education scholarship. Dr. El -. an accomplished violinist, studied under Hugo Kortschak of Yale University Music School. 29 Fletcher Collins, Jr., Ph.D. (Yale University), Professor of Dra- matic Arts, is tlie founder and producer-director of the Oak Grove Theater. He is coordinator of the Virginia Alliance for Encouragement of New Playwrights. This alliance of fourteen theater groups encourages new Virginia playwrights by reading, criticism, and production of their scripts. In addition to trans- lating French plays, Dr. Collins composes songs, acts as folksong consultant, and plays the violin, fiddle, and guitar. Fine Arts: Art and Drama Departments Ulysse Desportes, (Doctorat de I ' Universite de Paris), Associate Professor of Art, studied in France on a Fulbright grant and received his doctorate in art history with a designation of very honorable. He has exhibited his works in museums in Charles- ton, Richmond, and Baltimore. Dr. Desportes is completing a biography and catalogue of Giuseppe Ceracchi, an eighteenth century Roman sculptor. Horace T. Day, Professor of Art, was a student of Kimon Nicolaides, Kenneth Hayes Miller, and Boardman Robinson at the Art Students ' League in New York. Mr. Day has exhibited widely in national exhibitions and is represented in permanent collections of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; Addison Gal- lery, Andover, Massachusetts; Nelson Gallery, Kansas City, Missouri; and other public and private collections. During the past year an exhibition of his paintings of Jamaica was held at The Institute of Jamaica in Kingston. 30 Ruth McNeil, S.M.D. (Union Theological Sem- inary), Associate Professor of Music, was a pupil of Marcel Dupre and Isador Philipp. She is president of the Advisory Board of the N ' alley Mental Health Chnic. Dr. McNeil is compiling a collection of folk songs from the Shenandoah Valley. Fine Arts: Music Department Carl W. Broman, M.A. (Columbia Uiii irMty), Mus. D. (Hon.) (Hampden-Sydney College), studied under Josef Lhevinne and Rubin Gold- mark of the JuUiard School of Music. He is a former conductor of the Lutheran Bach Society in Xew York Cit ' and is an honorary member of the Pierian Sodality of 1808 of Harvard Uni- versity, the oldest active music organization in the United States. Gordon Page, M.A. (University of Virginia), Professor of Music, was a pupil of Shari de Lys, Boston, Massachu- setts. He has studied in the Sacred Music Department of Union Theological Seminary. Mr. Page is founder and director of the Mary Baldwin College Choir and Glee Club and has directed the choral groups in sacred con- certs along the eastern seaboard. He is current president of the Board of Directors of the King Series, and he is sponsor for the Class of 1966. 31 John B. Daffin, M.S. (Universih ' of Chicago; Johns Hopkins University; Indiana University), Professor of Chemistry, is a fellow in the Ameri- can Association for the Advancement of Science and in the American Institute of Chemists. He has done research in the use of silica gel in organic preparations, on the organic chemistry of bi alent sulfur, and on crotonic acids. Mr. DafBn is listed in American Men of Science. Mathematics and Chemistry Departments W. Jackson Galbraith, M.A.T. (Duke University), Assistant Professor of Mathematics, retired after a distinguished naval career, which included six years on the staff of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis and the Naval War Col- lege at Newport, Rhode Island. Mr. Galbraith has received the Silver Star, tlie Bronze Star, the Purple Heart and the Order of Orange Nassau. Mildred E. Taylor, Ph.D. (University of Illinois), Professor of Mathematics, is a fellow in the American Association for the . ' d ancement of Science. She is a past president of the Virginia di !sion of die American Association of University Women. As College Marshal Dr. Taylor is responsible for the organization of faculty processions. Very active in many phases of church work. Dr. Taylor is at present chairman of the faculty section of the Presbyterian Education Association of the South. 32 Lillian C. Thomsen, Ph.D. (Cornell University), Professor of Biology, supplements her classroom teaching in zoology with firsthand knowledge of animal life. In addition to her menagerie, assembled through her travels, she specializes in ornithology. For many years Dr. T fed and kept records of birds which frequented college grounds. Biology Department Mary E. Humphreys, Ph.D. (Duke University), Associate Professor of Biology, is a past associ- ate-editor of the Virginia Journal of Science. In the dedication of the 1961 Bluestocking to Dr. Himiphreys, she was recognized for a vast knowledge of nature and its worth. Her con- tributions to the college range from basketball to bryophytic flora identification. 33 i ' atricia Holbert Menk, Ph.D. (University of Virginia), Associate Professor of History, is the first woman member of the Staunton City Council. She is hsted on the University Center Roster of Visiting Lecturers. When the 1960 Bluestocking was dedicated to her, Mrs. Menk was cited especially as an outstanding lec- turer. Her fast-moving lectures on historical and current events result from extensive and continual study. Departments of Mary Swan Carroll, Ph.D. (Duke University), Professor of History, has studied under the Carnegie Endowment Summer Session in Inter- national Law at McGill University. She is a former international historian of the Sigma Kappa Sorority and a member of the American- Historical Association. History, Political Science, and Economics Alan Geyer, Ph.D. (Boston University), Assistant Profes- sor of Political Science, is a member of the American Political Science Association and a fellow of the Society for Religion in Higher Education. An ability to correlate politics and religion has made him a popular guest speaker. His first book, Piety and Politics, will be pub- lished in autumn 1963. Lillian Rudeseal, Litt. M. (Uni- versity of Pittsburgh, University of North Carolina, Emory Uni- versity), Associate Professor of Economics, has studied exten- sively in the field of industrial relations. Her research has in- cluded work on the economic and social reforms of the late eighteenth century. 34 ■,- ' --, K James L. McAllister, Jr., Ph.D. (Duke University), Associate Professor of Religion and Phi- losophy, has written an essay on John Witherspoon: Aca- demic Advocate of American Freedom, which will be pub- lished during 1963 in a volume of essays dealing with aspects of American religious thought. Dr. McAlhster is chairman of tlie Lexington Presbytery ' s Com- mittee of Ministerial E.xamina- tions. Frank Wilson Price, Ph.D. (Yale University), Professor of Inter- national Studies, has spent much of his life in Asia. He continues to study the Chinese language and to translate Chinese litera- ture into English. This summer he and his wife will leave for the Orient on a fifteen-month leave of absence. Dr. Price vnll tour, lecture, and study under the auspices of the World Coun- cil of Churches, tlie World Agricultural Mission, and the Nanking Theological Seminary. Departments of Religion and Philosophy and Sociology m v Jf {■ Thomas Hancock Grafton, Ph.D. (Northwestern University), Pro- fessor of Sociology, is the author of se eral articles and papers in the field of his special interest, the sociology of rehgion. He has contributed material to Intro- duction to Sociology by J. H. Bossard. t k Marjorie Bacheler Chambers, Ph.D. (Yale University), Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy, has studied at the Uni- versity of Goettingen, West Germany. Her thesis was done on contemporary German theology. She is interested in linguistic analysis in philosophy, and she is a member of Phi Sigma Tau, the national honor society for philosophy. 35 Herbert Lee Bridges, Jr., Ph.D. (University of Virginia), Profes- sor of Psycliology and Education, has been the director of the Mary Baldwin College summer school program for many years. For si.xteen years he has served as e.xecutive secretary of the King Series (Fine Arts). He has traveled to other Presbyterian colleges for the e.xchange of educational ideas and techniques, in which he is especially interested. O. Ashton Trice, Jr., Ph.D. (University of Vir- ginia), Associate Professor of Psychology, serves as psychologist for Staunton and Waynesboro, Virginia, city schools. He is helping area pubhc school systems in establishing special education classes. Dr. Trice is listed in Aniericaj Men of Science, Who ' s Who in the South and South- west, and Roster of American Scientific Person- nel. Psychology Department Julia F. Weill, M.A. (Columbia University), directs the MBC nursery school, where students gain practical experience with small children. In her travels, she has studied and observed the educational theory and prac- tice of a number of countries. Lillian A. Pennell, M.S. (Pennsylvania State University), instructs psychology majors in men- tal measurements, directs Lexington Presby- tery ' s Guidance Center, and acts as vocational and guidance counselor for the student body. Class of 1964, as well as the Dolphins Club. 36 Mary Jane Metcalf Donnalley, M.Ed. (University of Virginia), is a nationally known tennis pro and the author of Net Results, a book on tennis. A winner of many city, state, and regional titles, .Mrs. Donnalley is a former national ranking player. She often leads tennis clinics at nearby colleges. She was selected in 1962 for Who ' s Who in American Education and has contrib- uted articles on education to several publications. Gwendolyn Elroy Walsh (Tufts College), Instructor in Physical Education, is a candidate for the Masters degree in Education at the University of Virginia. Mrs. Walsh is interested in folk dancing in addition to her au- thoritative knowledge of mod- em dance performance. Department of Physical Education Betty Myers Kegley, M.Ed. (Madison College), Instructor of Physical Education, is a rated offi- cial of the United States Field Hockey Associa- tion and has expanded the intercollegiate hockey program at Mar ' Baldwin. She sponsors the Class of 1964, as well as the Dolphins Club. 37 Mrs. Gertrude C. Davis Librarian Mrs. E. Virginia Bennett Admissions Counselor and Director of Financial Aid Mrs. Dolores P. Lescure Director of Information Services Mrs. Sarah Matthews Clements and Miss Martha Ann Pool Alumnae Secretary and Alumnae Association President 38 Miss Betty R. Can- Food Senicc Director Miss Harry Ann Dunlap and Mrs. Georgia Hill Resident Nurses Administrative Staff Mrs. Catherine C. Ratcliffe and Mrs. Elizabeth Hume Carr Dormitory Residents 39 Administrative Staff Mrs. Marian H. Smith and M. Scott Nininger, Jr. Assistants to the Bursar Mrs. Julia Littell Patch Assistant to the Dean of Students Miss Ellen O. Holtz and Miss Karen A. Schultz Assistant to the Director of Admissions Assistant Director of Information Services Mrs. J. E. Ferrell, Mrs. J. Alvin Ro.sen, and Mrs. Alice G. Simpkins Professional Library Staff Mrs. A. S. Morgan Hostess at Main Desk Mrs. Steve Timberlake Hostess at Main Desk Mrs. A. B. Valz and Mrs. G. K. Doome Secretaries in Business Office and Alumnae Office Mrs. H. S. MacDiarmid and Mrs. Hugh Schmid Secretaries to the President and the Vice President 41 44-47 48-53 54-61 Activities Student Government Honorary Organizations Publications Student Government Association Self-government by students is an ingrained and valued concept in tlie college community. As mediator and coordinator of campus life, the Student Government Association strives to impart to each student a greater awareness of individual responsibility. A Coffee House was sponsored by the SGA in December for intellectual discussion of contemporary arts. In order to integrate campus activities, to evaluate the college program, and to achieve its goals, the SGA at present comprises three branches: The Student Board, central coordinating and legis- lative body; the Judiciary Board, guardian of personal and com- munity honor; the House Presidents ' Council, the molder of dormi- tory life. As the college grows to its maximum enrollment, the SGA is evolv- ing a more effective system of regulation and administration within which the Mary Baldwin ideal of personal honor will not be lost. Katharine Scott Jones President of the Student Government Association. The Executive Committee: Bunny Wishart, vice president of SGA Katherine Scott Jones, president Martha Singletary, chairman of the judiciary board; and Keene Roadman, chairman of the house presidents ' council. Student Board: Front row, Liii Roberts, Katharine Scott Jones, Jeanc Murdoch, Charlotte Folk, Jackie Riddle, Bunny Wishart; Back row, Martha Singletary, Emily Dethloff, Anne Jackson. Student Board: Sharon Cook, Peggy Engle, Sally Livingston, Honey Bessire, Keene Roadman, Jean Wells. Day Students ' Organization: Irene Malhias, vice presi- dent; Vicky Cacciapaglia, secretary-treasurer; Sharon Cook, president. 1 .1 i if k 0i ' sJ f eH mM ■ ( V t i K. ivK I . m Board of Coordination: Sarah Alley, Betty Ray Matthews, Leslie Wilson, chairman Peggy Engle, Gene Anne Allred. 45 House Presidents ' Council Planning with her dormitory council for parties, open houses, and interdormitory competition, each House President works to maintain a congenial atmosphere in her dormitory. The nine-member House Presidents ' Council meets bi-weekly to discuss relevant problems and to coordinate activities and policies to aid each dormitory member in her adjustment to a new and different way of life. Keene Roadman Chairman of the House Presidents ' Council. From left. Margie Woodson, Lyn Warner, Keene Roadman, Jenny Stott, Carpie Gould, Emily Tyler, Ann Dial, Judy Thompson and Shearer Troxell. 46 Judiciary Board Martha Singletary Chairman of the Judiciary Board To interpret, uphold, and preserve the Honor Code is the duty of the Judiciary Board. Composed of one representative to each dormitory, the Board strives in all situations to make adherence to the Honor System a matter of spirit and personal integrity rather than application of rules. From left, Judy Shannon, Hope Baldwin, Betty Austin, Liddy Kirkpatrick, Judy Payne, Ingrid Carlson, Bev Tumlinson, Anne Hogshead, Julia Carrington and Martha Singletary. Honors 1962 Honor Society The members of the Mary Baldwin Honor Society are chosen on the basis of scholarship by the faculty and are in- vested at an alumnae meeting during commencement week. Five seniors were elected from the class of 1962: Betty Cacciapaglia, Linda Dolly, Jane Gilmer, Susan Jennings, and Carolyn Stover. Dr. Spencer presenting the Sullivan Award to Mr. Wilson. Birdie Salinas receiving her plaque from Miss Parker. Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award Each year at commencement Mary Baldwin College and the New York Southern Society award, in honor of Algernon Sydney Sullivan, two medal- lions to those whose lives signify unsel- fish service. Recipients for 1962 were Bertha Alicia Salinas, an English major from Mexico, who was recognized for her enthusiasm and devotion to the col- lege; and Eldon D. Wilson, Executive Secretary to the Presbyterian Synod of Virginia, valued trustee and good friend to Mary Baldwin. Laurel Society Juniors and seniors recognized as out- standing student leaders are elected and tapped by the Laurel Society early in the second semester. Eligibility for Laurel membership is based on character, serv- ice, and scholarship, as well as outstand- ing leadership. Making an active contri- bution to the college each year, the Laurel Society sponsors the Campus Guide program and helps with scholar- ship and high school weekends and with the recognition of honor students. Seated, from left, Peggy Engle, Waverly Rogerson, Keene Roadman, Jeane Murdoch, Bunny Wishart; standing, from left, Katharine Scott Jones, Liddy Kirkpatrick, Karen Schultz, Lin Roberts, Martha Singletary, Shearer Troxell, Ingrid Carlson, Karen Appleby, Sally Hagy. 49 Who ' s Who Among Students In American Universities and Colleges These students were recognized for their scholarship, their participation and leadership in academic and extracurricular activities, and their citizenship and service to the school. Seated are Shearer Troxell, Waverly Rogerson, Keene Roadman, Martha Singletary, and Sally Livingston; standing are Liddy Kirkpatrick, Peggy Engle, Lin Roberts, Bunny Wishart, Jeane Murdoch, and Katharine Scott Jones. 50 Russell Scholar Martha receiving the award as Russell Scholar from Mrs. Grafton. In memory of Margarett Kable Russell, the first female member of the Mary Baldwin Board of Trustees, a faculty committee each year designates an outstanding junior or senior as tlie Russell Scholar. She develops a research project in her major field, a description of which is permanently filed in the library. Chosen for academic achievement, character, and service, Martha Damaris Singletary took as her project The Theme of Death in Fifteenth Century Lit- erature under the supervision of Dr. Ben Smith. Among Martha ' s outstanding qualifications were membership in the Laurel Society, four-year membership in the Choir, her position as chairman of the Judiciary Board, and consistent recognition on the Dean ' s List. Martha Damans Singletary 1962 Russell Scholar. 51 Each marshal, elected as a class officer on the basis of beauty, grace, and poise, represents her class at social functions. The head marshal, a senior elected by the entire student body, leads the senior class procession for Charter Night, Founders ' Day, and Graduation and coordinates the duties of ushers and marshals. College Marshals j From left are Judy Bastian, Carolyn Epperson, head marshal; Hope Rothert, Susan Thompson, Nanrv Nelson. Nancy Nelson. 52 College Ushers The ushers, two from each class, are selected by the marshals to assist at the King Series and other social functions. Prom left are Heidi Brandt, June Price McLaughlin, Helen Downie, Anne Nimmo, Emy Martin, Reese Edmondson, Helen Hutcheson, and Jane Ellen Vaughan. 53 Miscellany Miscellany staff: from left, Carol Stewart; Dave Verstandig, freshman winner; Jeanie XJmberger, art editor; Gene Ann Allred, associate editor; Scotia Kenney; Peggy Malone. The Miscellany, in its 64th year of publication, offered an opportunity to MBC students for com- petitive literary expression. Material submitted for the Miscellany, published biennially, was critically reviewed by the editor, staff, and spon- sor, before publication. Again this fall the Miscellany conducted a con- test to stimulate interest among new and return- ing students. The freshman winner was offered a position on the Miscellany staff. Dr. Marshall M. Brice, adviser, and Carol Stewart, second semester editor, check proofs. Business manager Lin Roberts and editor Karen Appleby consult on cover designs. Ad istr Dr. Ben Smith and editorial assistant Kathy Green relax with a game of pool. Aiming to produce a yearbook at once traditional and contemporary, the 1963 Bluestocking staff made a few innovations: the book, even to the cover, was completely designed and laid out by its staff; it was published by an offset process instead of engraving and printing as in the past. For the first time, the ed- itor of the yearbook was a member of Student Board. One of the greatest improvements has been in the photography. The purchase of a Bluestocking camera caused a few headaches, but as a long-range invest- ment, it was a step forward in the efficiency and economy of the publication. Jean Wells, editor, pauses among editorial clutter. Bluestocking Heads of staff: from left, Ellen Pagenstecher, classes; Alice Farrior, faculty; Molly Holt, index; Marsha Nye, organizations; Darlena Sizemore, student government; Ellis Bullion, publications; Glen Ellen Downie, lionorariis; Roxic Tobin, organizations. Mimi von Clahn, business manager, balances Bluestocking books in her study in Rose Terrace. Lines and angles in a page layout are matched by Emily Wirsing, art editor, and Libby Thompson, literary editor. Photographei. , Lyn MacCorkle, Helena Richard and Susan Oast capture a candid shot. Jo Ellen Jennette, managing editor, and Jane Doughtie, pho- tography editor, await further instructions about procedure. 56 Literary staff: from left, Sally Marks, Leslie Wilson, , , - - ' Karen Cowserf, Anne Frascr, Paula White. Layout staff: standing, Claire Jackson, Cenia Hedden; seated, Julie Gevedon, Bunsy Craig, Eleanor Eckle, Ludniila Bratina, Susan Brugh. Mary Lewis, Penny Huff; kneeling, Lou Ann Hartgraves, Lavinia Mikell. Bluestocking Staff Photograpliy staff: standing, Nancy Yates, Mary Lewis, Marian Gordin, Betty Jane Maloney, Liz Moore; seated, Debbie Bulkley, Susan Richards, Gail Apperson, Vicki Lindgren, Diane Cooper. Business staff: back row. Penny Abbitt, Dee Dee Huntsberry, Charlotte McCaa; first row, Vicky Ellis, Sammy Ann Primm, Lynn Schwarzenburg, Penny Huff, Julie Price. Editor Jeane Murdoch looks up a back issue in one of Campus Comments ' bound files. T ' ping ad copy is notliing new for Business Manager Eleanor Poole. Campus Comments Feature Editor Gary Flake and News Editor Susan Scheel follow up a lead by phone. Sue Hook, assistant news editor, is not pictured. Many news media are checked daily In Campus Comments ' Associate Editors Ann Dial, Bunny Wishart, Ann Delk, and Martha Singletary as tliey write up-to-thc minute editorials about national events and campus happeniniis. Increased circulation, a foreign correspondent, and a special six-page edition before Christmas indicate that Campus Comments is expanding with the College. Published twenty times a year, the newspaper is a primary source for campus news, student features, book reviews, and edi- torial comment. In addition to exchange columns and a calendar of events. Campus Comments covers all outside lectures. King Series programs, and other college activities. Both editorials and letters to the editor serve as channels for student opinions and are often influential in initiating and encouraging student legislation. Campus Comments is a member of the Virginia Intercollegiate Press Association; Intercollegiate Press Association; and the Associated Collegiate Press, which awarded Campus Comments First Class Honor Ratings for both semesters of 1961- 1962. Files aid Circulation Manager Martha Murchison and Advertising Manager Susan Goodman, botli of whom have broken records this year. Copy Editors Ann Gordon Abbott and Charlotte Folk retype a stor - while Make-up Editors Sarah Alley and Betty McGlamery go o er page layouts. Fran Sanders, photography editor, crops a picture as Cartoonist Nancy Rowe ponders her latest creation. 59 Advisors Mrs. Dolores Lescure, Miss Karen Schultz, and Miss Mary E. Humphreys compare past Campus Comments coverage with the current standard. Campus Comments Long hours of hard work made possible the special news and feature coverage in Campus Comments which began with news about the Academic Year in Madrid, David Reisman, Parents ' Day, the Cuban Crisis, Basil Rathbone, the Coffee House, Dolphins pageant, election changes, Nemerov ' s visit and May Day. A training program with Alf Goodykoontz of the Richmond Times-Dispatch and weekly staff lunch meetings were other innovations. Front row, from left, Margaret Gunter, Suzanne Ackerman, Judie Moore. Second row, Fairfax Hardesty, Page Jones, Phyllis Short, Julie Willman. Third row, Carolyn Smith, Jane Heywood, Charlotte Tyson, Blair Lambert. Fourth row, Betsy Dismer, Jane Miller, Harlan Light, Nancy Nelson. Fifth row, Juliane Jorgenson. Composed of the present and past editors and business managers of the Miscellany, the Bluestocking, and Campus Comments, the Board of Pubhcations coordinates activities of the three student pubUcations. This year the editor of the Handbook was added to the Board ' s membership. From left are Lin Roberts, Jeane Murdoch, Mimi von Glahn, Becky Cannaday, Jean Wells (foreground), Peggy Engle, Eleanor Poole, and Karen Appleby. Board of Publications 61 Features 64-67 Personalities and Events 68-69 Academic Year in Madrid 70-75 May Court 76-77 SGA CofiFee House David Riesman, professor of social sciences at Harvard and Chicago universities, spoke October 24 on Student Life and Political Commitment in the United States and Japan. Gen- uinely interested in campus life. Dr. Riesman and his wife actively participated in a Student Board meeting and joined students for meals in Hunt Hall. They also visited sociology and political science classes during the day, discussing psycho- logical, political, and economic problems in contemporary society. Uavid BorofI spoke on The Question of Campus Morality to open the Current Issues Series October 5. Chatting informally with students during his brief visit here. Dr. Boroff stated that he had found pseudo-intellectuality prevalent in American col- leges. An associate professor of English at New York Univer- sity, he wrote Campus USA, a study of manners and morals on college campuses. 64 Personalities and Events The Grand Gesture, a two-act comedy by Richmond play- wright Mihon Bernard, had its premiere November 16-17 in King Auditorium. Directed by Dr. Fletcher Colhns, Jr., the play satirized the standardization and mechanization of modem man. Included in the cast were two MBC professors. Dr. Alan Geyer and Dr. Ulysse Desportcs, as well as Oak Grove players and eleven MBC students. 1 1 Ir2- l i h mmmb J 3 H H m [ ' m ■ H The 1962-1963 King Series opened October 29 with a concert by The Little Orchestra Society of New York, conducted by Thomas Scherman. The program included works from the old masters and was concluded with the modem Le Tombeau de Couperin by Maurice Ravel. Featured at the piano was guest soloist Frank Glazer. Basil Rathbone presented both Shake- speare and modem poetry November 26 when he appeared in the second King Series program. The following day he charmed drama classes during informal sessions about the art of oral reading. Personalities and Events TliL- Structure of Imagery in Modem Poetry was the topic of Canadian scholar Northrop Frye when he visited MBC November 29. An authority on WiUiam Blake, Dr. Frye showed through works of T. S. Eliot, William Butler Yeats, and Wallace Stevens that the symbolism in modern poetry is based on Dante ' s Divine Comedy. He is principal of Victoria College of the University of Toronto. The Paganini Quartet, whose repertoire includes chamber music from Beethoven to Britten, per- formed with Stradavari instruments for the Feb- ruary 18 King Series. When a violin string popped, the audience was treated to an im- promptu comment on concert history. I 66 Adele Marcus, outstanding American pianist, featured in her program February 25 a 12-tone work written for her by Meyer Kupferman. That morning Miss Marcus ad- dressed an assembly, relating the roles of The Perform- ing Teacher and the Teaching Performer ; she then explained the structure of the 12-tone music scale and demonstrated with passages from the Kupferman work. Howard Nemerov, contemporary poet and current visiting professor at Hol- lins College, was the speaker in May for MBC ' s first Literary Awards Day. Named this year as Poetry Consul- tant for the Library of Congress, Ne- merov chose the winner from student entries previously judged by the Eng- lish Department. A Garland of Arts, directed by Fletcher Collins, Jr., offered three firsts to MBC and the community March 15-16: a Middle Ages liturgical drama compiled by Susie Clark from photo- stats of original manuscripts; The Constant Wife, a one-act Marivaux comedy translated by Dr. Collins; and a full-length play by Margaret CoUins, Three Filosophers in a Fire Tower. ♦ ' r N . r .. r MBC students toured much of Spain in a private bus. Visits to Spanish landmarks provided firsthand knowledge of Spanish culture. A medieval walled town, a camera, and an MBC student were the formula for recording memorable events of a year in Spain. Academic Year in Madrid classes, all taught in Spanish, were arranged to meet the specific needs of the Mary Baldwin students in Madrid. In August 1962, Spanish majors from five colleges sailed from New York for Mary Baldwin ' s first Academic Year in Madrid, under the direction of Miss Dorothy M. Mulberry. For a month of orientation the girls studied Spanish civilization and culture and received intensive language training in Salamanca. In addition to study at the University of Madrid, the MBC students as a group have courses and seminars at the Inter- national Institute for Girls in Spain. Liv- ing in Spanish homes, they have toured Spain and other European countries. On saihng day, Admiral John M. Will gave a reception for the MBC group aboard the S.S. Independence. Miss Mulberry worked with the Spanish professors to coordinate curricular and extra-curricular activities of MBC students in Madrid. :r?-V Spain ' s varied art and architecture revealed the history of her civilization. Margie Woodson May Queen 70 Liddy Kirkpatrick .:h - Senior Attendants Becky Shelor 71 Iris Harding Jean Umberger Junior Attendants Anne Nimmo 72 Bunsy Craig Sophomore Attendants Susan Thompson Marjorie Loving 1 Mary Whittle 73 Anne Hunter Larus Peggy Bistline Freshmen Attendants Lou Ann Hartgraves Jane Humphrey 74 rr I ■ T£ P«S5 May Day May Day 1963 featured for the entertainment of the entire school a folk concert by Joe and Penny Aron- son. Later, at the dance in King Auditorium, Margie Woodson was crowned, and the Queen and her court were presented. The art, drama, music, and dance departments joined in last year ' s May Day festivities to honor Queen Mary Prior Meade and her court. Kurt Weill ' s folk opera, Down in the Valley, was sung by the Choir and Glee Club of MBC and the Washington and Lee Men ' s Chorus. 11 -., i } .♦.. V ' -. Kfl r mmm MaiM ia Bfl Mi a ,yr Entcrtainnniit for tlie Qiicfii aiul licr (.ourt, Mav Da - 1962. The square dance from Kurt Weill ' s Dotcn in the V ; ( i , in McClung ' s courtyard. fAfMM 75 Dramatic lighting added to the effect of presentations. Here, a reading from WilHani Golding ' s Lord of the Flies asks, is man hopelessly degenerate? SGA Coffee House An espresso atmosphere in a well- disguised Mirror Room characterized the SGA Coffee House December 5-6. Stu- dents presented six questions concerning the contemporary arts; each was dis- cussed for an hour by students and fac- ulty, who drifted from table to table listening and offering opinions and ques- tions. Attendance was by reservation and interest ran high; the Coffee House stim- ulated thought for the entire campus. Coffee, candles, and candid questions: what is abstract painting? 76 In planning, coordinating, and directing the Coffee House, Waverly Rogerson set a precedent that will be hard to match. Presentations of drama and the dance, poetry and sparked absorbing discussions. Faculty and students exclianged opinions and ideas during the informal sessions. ' f ' -p y Standing room only encouraged mobile conversation. 77 ' ::«« ■ s S : ' m9- I [{■■ N ■:. _„i - ' r ■ r - •■ ' -■-- ' ' CI asses 80-103 Seniors 104-111 Juniors 112-121 Sophomores 122-133 Freshmen 80 enior CI ass Waverley Rogerson, social cliairman; Lane Wright, treasurer; Libby Linn, representative to the social committee; Judy Bastian, marshal. For Seniors the year was one for offi- cially completing things. October 3 Dr. Brice honored his class with a formal banquet. After the Sophomore Show, the Seniors feted their sister class with a champagne party. The Class of 1963 survived comps and graduate records, looking forward to graduation on June 2 and their new role as alumnae of Mary Baldwin College. Gene Anne Ailred, secretary; Jane Ellen Vaughan, vice president; Emily Dethloff, president. 81 Terry Lee Alexander Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Gene Ann AUred Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Enghsh Helen Kathryne Arrowood Candidate for Bachelor of Arts D egree Enghsh Judith Collins Bastian Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Dorothea Louise Bessire Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Class of 1963 82 Janet Lee Bish Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Biology Nancy Joyce Blood Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Enghsh Melissa paints. Both sides of the desk. 83 Ann Harrison Booker Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Spanish Lucy Bebecca Cannaday Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Worship. 84 Elizabeth Ingrid Carlson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Religion and Philosophy Rebecca Duke Chambers Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Biology Susanna Holland Clark Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama Class of 1963 Jane Higgins Coulboum Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Frances Elizabeth Davis Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Ann Stevens Delk Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Chemistry Emily DethloE Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Ann Louise Dial Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Sally Hull Dorsey Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) Class of 1963 Eleanor Reese Edmondson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree French Victoria Freeman Ellis Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) Nancy Ely Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology 1962 Junior-Senior: glamour Hawaiian style. Margaret Darke Engle Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Music Carolyn Marie Epperson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Biology Alice Grace Farrior Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Mathematics (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) Class of 1963 Patricia Fisher Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Medical Technology Sharon Lynn Foye Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama Ann Terry Ceggie Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Roberta Bruce Gill Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Long afternoon labs. Mary Carpenter Could Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology M artha Schuyler Grant Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama Carolyn Louise Haldeman Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Political Science Ella Margaret Hombarger Hancock Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama Holly Keith Hanson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Class of 1963 Elizabeth Ban- Hawkins Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree EngUsh Virginia Hesdorfler Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Anne Harfield Hogshead Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History County Fair, 1962 Freshman- Junior Party. Joan Jackson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Art Katharine Scott Jones Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Music Melissa Frances Kimes Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Art Class of 1963 Elizabeth Duncan Kirkpatrick Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Elizabeth Louise Laird Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Apple music. Elizabeth Daugherty Linn Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Judy Ann Lipes Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Sarah Lewis Livingston Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Religion and Philosophy Elizabeth Simmons McClmig Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) Eleanor Glasgow McCown Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Martha Ahce McDevitt Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) 93 Minta Cameron McDiannid Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Mathematics Bette Brock McGlamery Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Art Margaret Anne Mapp Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree French Irene Feraba Mathias Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Class of 1963 Mary Rutherford Mercer Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History 94 Liddy studies. Katherine Lynn Miller Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Susan Gail Moore Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Art Lucy Anna Morris Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Enghsh Joann Brown Morton Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Julia Davidson Morton Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology ' JKr f Jj Virginia Leslie Morton Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Spanish (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) And tlien he said , 96 Bette Eugenia Murdoch Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Harriet Josephine Murphy Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree French Robbie Jena Nelson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Art You never outgrow your need. Class of 1963 Gretchen Gale Palmer Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English 97 Dorothy Page Putnam Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree History Rebecca Clement Qm ' nn Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Economics (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) Anna Kate Reid Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Keene Roadman Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Spanish Rosalinda Brooke Roberts Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Class of 1963 Don ' t shoot until you see the whites of their eyes. 98 Nell Boone Rogers Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Waverly Virginia Rogerson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama Rebecca Dudley Shelor Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Psychology Fancy free. 99 Class of 1963 Martha Damaris Singletary Candidate for Baclielor of Arts Degree English Mary Ellen Smith Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Katharine Lapsley Sproul Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Mathemat ics Virginia Louise Stott Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Judith Ann Thompson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English Anne Shearer Troxell Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Biology 1 Emily Thomason Tyler Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Biology 101 Jane Ellen Vaughan Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Martha Carol Vogel Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Drama (Accelerated; to be awarded 1964) Spring comes to the bookstore. Class of 1963 Lynette Hightower Warner Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree French 102 Jean Vaughan Wells Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree English E mily Coxa Wirsing Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Art Barbara Russell Wishart Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Sociology Margaret Kathryn Woodson Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Enghsh Julia Lane Wright Candidate for Bachelor of Arts Degree Mathematics Junior Class Organization was the motif of the Junior Class. In September they arranged a mixer for the Freshmen, their sister class. Class rings arrived the night before Thanksgiving holiday, and Juniors went away wearing a visible link to the Col- lege. With spring came the planning and preparation, in deepest secrecy, for the Junior-Senior banquet. Studies were or- ganized around a major subject, how- ever many times it was changed; in many cases social life was organized around a tiny pin. Nancy Nelson, marshal; Bev Estes, vice president; Jackie Riddle, president. Bess Alexander, treasurer; Jean Umberger, secretary; Sarah Brennan, social chairman; Wortley Davis, representative to the social committee. 105 3 r m 9 Penny Abbitt Suzanne Ackerman Sarah Alley Karen Appleby Mary Ann Appleby Betsy Ayres Hope Baldwin Betty Lou Barnes Sarah Brennan Senah Buchanan Ellis Bullion Julia Carrington 9 y C, BL ' s l f ' Carolyn Cleminer Margaret Cole Sharon Cook Glenn Ellen Downie Helen Downie Cindy Durham Louise Erdman Beverly Estes Susanne Eve Katherine Farrar Anne Fisher Cyntliia Freeman 106 Class of 1964 Buckingham Palace. 107 Susan Goodman Ann Higgins Kathryn Green Laurie Holbrook Fairfax Hardesty Eliana Huidobro Iris Harding Barbara Isicson Aleen Harper Jane Heywood Mary Claiborne Jarratt Jo Ellen Jennette Ellis and Gus. 108 .?-t;-! V Juliane Jorgensen Happy Juer Fran Lovelace Helen McHenry Nancy Kapp Patricia Kidd Blair Lambert Linda Leeds Constance McKenzie Mary Carleton McRae Chris Miles Martha Murchison Class of 1964 Smile. 109 1 f iitdtf Nancy Nelson Anne Nimmo Susan Oast Susan Palmer Eleanor Poole Betty Puckette Helena Richard Jackie Riddle Nancy Rowe Virginia Royster Anita Saffels Frances Sanders Judy Shannon Phylhs Short Darlena Sizemore Anne-Marie Taillefer Libby Thompson Margaret Thompson Jean Umberger Mimi vonGlahn Sarah Warren ifer. no Intellectual center of the campus. Mary Anne Weiglein Byrd Williams Liebgard Winkler Pam Wright Class of 1964 111 Ann Gordon Abbott, vice president; Anne Jackson, prcsiiltul, .Siia.tii llionipson, class marshal. The accent was on activity for the Class of 1965. During the summer. Sophomores helped form Little Sisters ' first impressions of MBC, offering them advice and welcome by mail. In the early fall, tliey set the date for Apple Day, October 15, and began to plan for the annual trek to the orchard. Sophomores dec- orated the Christmas tree on Lower Back Callery. The Class of 1965 entertained the college with the Sophomore Show to climax Sophomore Week, Feb- ruary 25-March 2. Throughout die year, members of the class served as Campus Guides for college visitors, and in spite of it all. Sophomores completed their Independent Reading. Peggy Malone, representative U tlie social couniiittee; Frankie White scarver, treasurer; Mary Newell, secretary; Betty Jane Brown, class social chairman. Sophomore Class 112 ■ m a imn mm mmmmm , Class of 1965 Ann Gordon Abbott Betty Austin Jo Avery Bonnie Beiderwieden Aino Berris Martha Bertrand Valerie Cammack Meredith Carter Anita Chandler Grace Cooke Diane Cooper Jane Craddock Betsy Dismer Jane Doughtie Polly Dove Betty Sue Bailey Dianne Baldwin Sara Jane Beabout Betty Jane Brown Deborah Bulkley Vicky Cacciapaglia Stuart Chapman Eleanor Chew Betsy Cluxton Mary Pickett Craddock Bunsy Craig Nan Davis June Early Katherine Early Eleanore Eckel Peter, Paul and Mary. lis Carol Anne Emory Gary Flake Dale Gatchell Juliet Gevedon Anne Gillespie Mary Gillespie Fran Gilliam Margaret Gunter i Janet Haddrell Delia Haigler Jo Linda Hill Catherine Hofgren Margaret Hogenauer Sue Hook Class of 1965 fi i x vrv 116 Suzanne Hunter Edith Huntsberry Ship them to Yale-C.O.D. UXT Anne Jackson Margaret Jackson Nancy Jackson Adele Jeffords Kather Ti Johnson Janice Jones Scotia Kenney Bonnie Lamb Virginia Liebhch Harlan Light Vicki Lindgren Julie Lohsen 117 Marjorie Loving Jean Lynn Gail McAlpin Charlotte McCaa Jean McCauley Kathleen McConahay Peggy Malone Betty Jane Maloney Katie Marks Katherine Scott Marshall Emy Martin Betty Ray Matthews Ann Mebane Jean Melvin Fran Mesick Dale Midgette Jane Miller Betty Moore Hup, two, three, four. 118 Class of 1965 This is the lounge. Color me lounge chairman. Jane Morris Faith Neuschel Mary Newell Betsy Nottingham Marsha Nye Sandra Pace Ellen Pagenstecher Judy Payne Dee Peach Julia Price Cl% F l jfL Randi Nyman Julene Reese That ' s Lfe. Class of 1965 Academic 1. 6..|| 120 Susan Richards Meredith Robertson Sara Rouse Judy Roy Carla Russell Susan Scheel Constance Shipe Fran Simmons Hillie Smith Carolyn Smith Hazel Southall Susan Spickard r Paula Stephens Carol Stewart Gloria Stoveken Dandridge Terrell f %r V r h:4 f Nancy Terwilliger Susan Thompson Sallie Thornton Roxie Tobin Beverly Tumlinson Charlotte Tyson Betsy Walker Helen Whitehead Marshall Wilkerson Julie Willman Carolyn Wilson Sara Lou Zachry wwd 121 Anne Hunter Larus, social chairman; Cissy Gossni.ni. n i n scjilaliNc to ihf social committee; Jeanne Crusemann, treasurer; Barbara Lee Edwards, secretary. Orientation for the Class of 1966 began in September when its first members walked up the steps between Ham and Jam, but the Freshmen came through with a class song and Mr. Page as spon- sor. After their first bout with college exams, Freshmen successfully petitioned for unlimited overnights at their discre- tion second semester. As the year ended they prepared to change from Little Sisters to Big Sisters for the Class of 1967. Freshman Class Ellen Gordon, vice president; Jane Humphrey, president; Hope Rothert, class marshal. 122 Ann Alexander Lynn Angevine Gail Apperson Louise Armstrong Jan Bailey Judy Barbee Julia Bethea Patricia Bilbo Peggy Bistline Mary Ann Bj ' orklund Julie Blanchard Ellen Bowers Bette Boyd Heidi Brandt Ludmila Bratina Sims Brockenbrough Susan Brugh Lynne Bunch Mary Chenault Mary Coggins Marygena Collier Pat Collins Rogie Coulboum Pret Coward Karen Cowsert Ernestine Craig Cary Cravens Celia Crittenden Margaret Crowgey Jeanne Crusemann % Q iK ¥ % 124 Evelyn Cuelliir Betsy Cunningham Ann Dalil Fran Davis Joan Davis Carol Delbridge Janet Devonald Betty Drury Susan Dunn Barbara Lee Edwards Gay Edwards Charlotte Eidschun Class of 1966 Caught in the act. 125 Ginny Evans Leila Gibbes Sally Fisher Marijane Gish Janne Foster Judith Gisriel Svire, I ' ll get you a blind date. r 4 ¥ Gigi Freeman Betsey Gallagher Virginia Gender Carey Goodwin Joan Goolsby Marian Gordin Ellen Gordon Cissy Gossmann Jane Hanbury Jeannie Harlan Rosemary Harris Lou Ann Hartgraves 126 % Genia Hedden Joan Hegner Patricia Hintze Penny Huff Jane Humphrey Anne Hutton Claire Jackson Beryl-Ann Johnson Esther Johnson Louhe Johnston Page Jones Carolyn Kamey Dianne Kearney Lucy Lanier Anne Hunter Larus Avril Laughlin Bonnie Leonard Mary Lewis Class of 1966 It ' s a letter from him. 127 It ' s all in the way you hold your mouth. Class of 1966 Over my dead body. 128 1 co Scottie Liipfert Missy McKeithen Lucy Mathews Cathy Moore Suzanne Norfleet Robbie Penn Nancy Lindsay Alice Lippitt June Price McLaughlin Jane McMurdo Nancye Marshall Laurie Mauldin Elizabeth Moore Judie Moore Glenda Norris Jean Owen Penney Phifer Patricia Phillips Roberta Long Susan Lyles Ouida McClendon Gwynn McNaught Gay McWilliams Sally Marks Tikker Merritt Lavinia Mikell Peggy Mitchell Ann Morgan Nancy Morris Susan Mulford Elaine Page Anne Patrick Glenda Pearson Jean Poland Sammy Ann Primm Kay Puckette 129 V Class of 1966 Just wear a smile and a Mar Baldwin blazer. Mary Walker Rainer Susan Ramsey Martha Ratchford Susanne Raybum Carol Rednour Jo Anne Rice Rosemary Richmond Barbara-Allen Robinson Mimi Robinson Arlene Romweber Hope Rothert Kathleen Sapp Harriett Schultz Lynn Schwarzenberg Sandra Shaw Kitsy Sinclaire Lee Slawter Lynn Smith 130 Look, it says so right here. Anne Spilman Susan Swartz Claudia Turner Candy Stanley Ashlin Swetnam JoEllen Turner Claire Stem Betty Swope Suzanne Vance Sandy Storm Lamira Sullivan Ginger Timbes Annette Ti der Linda Lee Vander May Ginny Vaughan 131 Lynn Suojanen Alice ToUey Joan Velten Davyne Verstandig Cinda Waits Patti Wasmansdorff Carolyn Weekley Susan West Jane Ellen Via Carol Walters Janet Weaver Katherine West Carol Whetham Ann Wade Latane Ware Meg Webster Nina West Donna White HK ? !•. Class of 1966 132 Janet White Paula White Thou wast bom of dreams . . . Marty Wiese Janet Wiethoff Leslie Wilson Penny Wilson Robin Wilson Nancy Wood Nancy Yates Ann YingUng Sandra Zeese Jane Zinn $ f . f 0 Where ' d they all go? 133 Organizations 136-139 Clubs and Committees 140-141 Choir and Glee Club 142-145 CA and Church Groups 146-151 Athletics and Sport Clubs 152-153 Eta Betas and Fours 402 Workshop stimulates the literary creativity of its fourteen members. Small and non-academic, 402 operates effectively and freely as a workshop offering criticism for each individual ' s effort. Innovations this year: a play presented by a member to the Thursday night 402 ' ers, and a folk ballad set to guitar music. The Workshop was invited to dessert with Dr. Bedford Moore, a University of Virginia poet. Members of 402, including Dr. Marshall M. Brice, were host to critic and poet Howard Nemerov when he spoke and judged the selections for the college ' s first Literary Awards Day, May 6. Row one, Lucy Morris; Hope Baldwin; Scotia Kenney; row two, Pat Fisher; Carol Stewart; Dr. Marshall M. Brice; Cindy Durham; row three, Susan Oast; Karen Appleby, secretary- treasurer; Jean Wells, president; Julie Lohsen. 402 Workshop Hear ye! Hear ye! The Fine Arts Club presents the Prince Series! To stimulate interest in art, music, drama, and dance, the Fine Arts Club, with a record- breaking membership of 230 students, introduced a diminuitive King Series. Dr. Marshall M. Brice opened the series with a reading of his own poetry. During the year there were presentations of art forms from the Latin American, European, and Asian countries repre- sented at MBC this year. From Left, Terry Lee Alexander, secretary; Waverly Rogerson, president; Ann Delk, vice president; Happy Juer, treasurer. Fine Arts Club Young Democrats The Young Democrats, sponsored by Dr. Mary Swan Carroll, organized this year to promote an interest in and under- standing of the Democratic Party and to stimulate political acti ity and participa- tion on and off the campus. Several speakers addressed the group, and an informal debate was conducted with campus Republicans. The club main- tained files on the senators and repre- sentatives of the Staunton district. From left, Jane Craddock; Aino Berris; Martha Bertrand, chairman; Carolyn T. Smith; Polly Dove. Public Affairs Forum The November 1962 election, the crisis in India, and the stock market were among topics considered by the Public Affairs Forum this year to broaden stu- dents ' knowledge of the current political scene. Through speeches and discussions members of the Forum were afforded an opportunity to inform themselves about local, national, and international affairs. From left, Meredith Carter, publicity chairman; Becky Cannaday, president; Shearer Troxell, secretary-treasurer; Lane Wright, vice president. 137 Visitors to Mary Baldwin College receive their first impression of the girls as well as the college from Campus Guides. These sophomores, selected by the Laurel Society, show visitors and prospective students around MBC, supplying information and historical notes about the college. Campus Guides Campus guides point out the choice rooms in New New Dormitory. Vicky Catciapaulia, piiMdcnt; Jill Morton, vice president; Anne Hogshead, secretary. Not pictured, Julie Gevedon, treasurer. A piiiata party, a typically Latin American Christmas c elebration, began the year for the Spanish Club. Organized this winter by Miss Barbara Clark, the club has given members an outside-the-classroom knowledge of Spanish hfe. In the spring, the group made a Spanish-oriented trip to New York City to visit museums, restaurants, and other Spanish points of interest. Chilean Eliana Huidobro talked to the club on her native country; Miss Clark presented slides of Spain. Only Espanol is spoken at the monthly meetings, and at lunch each day there are Spanish-speaking tables. For a non-speaker it might be hard to get the butter passed! 138 Kidin li ft.Woiiley Davis; Sarah Brciinan; Waverly Roger- son; Lin Roberts, chainnan; Julie Willman; Mary Ruther- foord Mercer; Peggy Malone; Betty Jane Brown. The formal Christmas Dance, December 8, was the biggest success on the 1962-63 social calendar. Planning and executing events for the whole student body, the Social Committee sponsored a Halloween Party, the Christmas Dinner, a snow-sculpture contest, the Birthday Dinner, a semi-formal May Day Dance, and man ' informal parties, coffee-hours and get-togethers. Social Committee Nancy Morris, Mary Ann Appleby. Christmas Dance, 1962. Qub Committee To keep the Club an enjoyable and pleasant place for relaxing, the Club Com- mittee conducted a year-long cleanup campaign. New machines, with selections of fruits and salads as well as hot and cold sandwiches, were added in the summer; new ash trays and trash cans were supplied to complete the face-lift. Rules for weekend use of the Club were reviewed first semester, and hours were extended for dates to use the Club. 139 The Choir A concert with the Glee Club from the University of Virginia highlighted the year for the Mary Baldwin College Choir. The Choir sang for the Parents ' Day Program, at Christmas, at the kick- off dinner for the library drive, and at graduation. Throughout the year they provided anthems for chapel services. Choir members in a Chapel service. Cathy Hofgren, sophomore representative; Judy Lipes, president; Carpie Gould, chairman of board of review; Glenda Norris, freshman representative; Susie Clark, secretary-treasurer. The Glee Club Margot Michael, vice president; Julene Reese, president; Judy Bryant, treasurer. ■y m ' fy, u- ' ii a M The Glee Club perfoniiing. Laughter at first attempts and satisfied smiles at a finished work characterized the rehearsals of the Glee Club during its second year. The combined Choir and Glee Club presented selections from Broadway shows for the Parents ' Day Program in October and a group of English carols at tiie Christmas assembly. The Glee Club pro ided religious music for the Easter Chapel Service and made its final appearance at a spring assembly. Dee Dee Huntsberry, secretary; Beverly Estes, icc prcsuknt; Betty Jane Brown, treasurer; Sally Livingston, president. Christian Association Richard Niebuhr ' s Christ and Culture was the topic for six student-led discussions sponsored by the Chris- tian Association. Later in the year a series of discus- sions was held on marriage. Religious Emphasis Week brought Dr. Paul Holmer to the campus for convoca- tions and conferences with students. Other CA projects included dorm devotions, vespers, the Frosh-Faculty Picnic, and Peanut Week. Service to the community involved Operation Playmate and work at the Effie Ann Johnson Day Nursery and at Western State Hos- pital. These activities emphasized the purpose of the CA— to relate Christianity to the life of students and the college. CA. Council: standing, from left, Fran Lovelace, Jane Coulboume, Bonnie Beiderwieden, Martha Murchison, Patti Martin, Charlotte Folk; seated Betty McGlamery, Julie Gevedon, Julene Reese, Charlotte Tyson, Susan Scheel. Betty Jane, Margie and Suzanne enjoy an infonnal discussion with Dr. Holmer during Religious Emphasis Week. Ernestine and Anne have as much fun as the children taking part in the CA ' s Operation Playmate. 143 An organization for Episcopal students, the Canter- bury Club held informal monthly meetings and such special activities as a fall picnic for freshmen, Christ- mas caroling at V.S.D.B., and a Corporate Communion and breakfast at Trinity Church. Throughout the year members assisted as teachers in the kindergarten de- partment at Trinity. Susan Scheel, secretary-treasurer; Anita Chandler, vice presi- dent; Judy Bryant, president. Wesley Fellowship seeks to be the Methodist stu- dent ' s link with her home church. As an active re- ligious organization, this group met with fellowships from nearby schools, sent representatives to state Methodist conferences, and performed service projects within the Staunton churches. Sue Hook, vice president; Senah Buchanan, president; Jane Coulboum, secretary-treasurer. Dee Dee Huntsberry, vice president; Scotia Kenney, secretary; Kay Miller, president; Vicky Cacciapaglia, treasurer. The Newman Club, an organization for Roman Catholic students, stresses study of their faith as well as group projects. Members directed a Catholic Youth Organization drama in the spring and supervised playground activities of St. Francis School during the year. Offering an atmosphere in which the student can affirm her Christian faith, Westminster Fellowship sponsored study groups on Presbyterian beliefs and held a campus communion service at Easter. The Fellowship participated in Assem- bly ' s Youth Sunday and acted as host to the Synod ' s Wes-Fel Council. Sally Hagy, president; Margaret Jackson, secre- tary-treasurer; Diane Baldwin, vice president. Denominational Fellowships Emphasizing Christian service in everyday life, the Baptist Student Union held Sunday School classes for the Virginia School for the Blind. Fellowships with the Washington and Lee B.S.U.; representation at the state convention at Eagle Eyrie, Virginia, and at the spring Officers ' Retreat; and collections and offerings for the support of the Southern Baptist missionaries were other projects. Penny Abbitt, president of the Baptist Student Union, was a Virginia delegate to serve as a 1962 student summer missionary in California. Dee Dee Harper, secretary; Nancy Jackson, Y. W. A. leader; Robbie Nelson, social chairman; Penny Abbitt, president; Sammy Ann Primm, treasurer; Debbie Bulkley, vice president; Iris Harding (standing), publicity. R. A. executive committee: Frankie Whitescarver, treasurer; Carol Gibson, secretary; Honey Bessire, president; Laurie Holbrook, vice president. To make sportsmanship synonymous with sports at MBC is the aim of the Recreation Association in all its activities, from the Spring Style Show to the Middle Atlantic Tennis Championships to the Rec of the Week. At the Freshman picnic in September, reorgan- ization and expansion of the clan system were ex- plained, and new bids were given to the entire school. The bridge tournament and MBC ' s College Bowl pro- vided a change of pace from the clans ' sport tourna- ments. Relaxation through recreation, rather than ac- complishment, is the purpose of the organization, and skill is recognized in the clan competitions. 146 Recreation Association Tennis Team, standing, from left. Cissy Gossman, Loulie Johnston, Lyn MacCorkle, Sandy Zeese, Charlotte Folk; kneeling, Judy Payne, Cynthia Goeltz. R. A. dormitory representatives: back row, from left, Julie Blanchard, Candy Stanley, Ann Alex- ander, Barbie Robinson; front row, Pam Wright, Anne Hunter Larus, Janet Wiethoff, Latane Ware, Lyn MacCorkle. Hockey team: standing, from left, Lucy Matthews, Betty Swope, Sara Rouse, Bunny Wishart, Peppy Armstrong, Linda Lea VanderMay, Carolyn Wilson; kneeling, Jean Poland, Betty Matthews, Margie Hogenauer, Frankie Whitescarver, Honey Bessire. 147 Tlie hockey team in action. Catch me if you can. Cover those shins. 148 Clans Intramural competition in seasonal sports pitted clan against clan through- out the year with double purpose: the development of an active interest in sports and the promotion of good sports- manship. For more participation from the student body, the clan system ex- panded to include Welsh and English clans in addition to the original Scotch and Irish clans. Under the new four- clan system, all students, faculty, and staff received new bids, and competition has been spirited. The Welsh clan quickly proved itself by capturing the basketball championship. The Welsh and Scotch tied in the tennis tournament. Joint faculty-student participation in many activities is a unique feature of MBC ' s clans. From left, Juliane Jorgensen, Irisli; Betsy Walker, Welsh; Wortley Davis, Scotch; Billie Litton, Enghsh. From left, Patricia Hintze, Gary Cravens, Julene Reese, Dianne Kearney, Sims Brockenbrough, Adele Jeffords, Liz Moore, Ann Dahl. 149 i t , 1 4 m From left, Emy Martin, Fran Gilliam, Dale Midgette, Tricia Hintze, Sarah Brennan, Margaret Thompson. Not pictured, Bibi McClung, president. Modem Dance Group MBC ' s Modem Dance Group was formed during the third quarter. Feb- ruary 15 and 16 the girls attended the College Dance Festival in Richmond to see a performance by the dance group of Jose Limon, to participate in a master dance class taught by him, and to pre- sent a short dance for discussion and criticism. The rest of the second se- mester was devoted to study, practice, and demonstrations of their skill for stu- dent audiences. Dolphin Club Mary Ellen Smith, president; Randi Nyman, secretary; Liza Lou Laird, vice president; Anita Chandler, treasurer. r Vigour: ' The Dolphin Club stressed creativity of synchronized swimming. Members selected in the fall after individual try- outs exchanged knowledge of aquatic arts and learned new figures and float- ing patterns during the year. Far East Fantasy was the midwinter show planned, produced, and executed by the Dolphins. You Are Beautiful, an oriental swim. Bit n Spur To promote horsemanship at Mary Baldwin College, the newly formed Bit ' n Spur provided an opportunity for girls skilled in riding to become better eques- triennes. Members rode and hunted with the Staunton Glenmore Hunt Club. Bit ' n Spur has concentrated this year on organizing the club, writing the charter and constitution, and stiny ilating inter- est among students and meinbers. Standing, Betsy Walker, secretary; Bunsy Craig, vice president; Mrs. Theodosia Spitzer, sponsor; seated, Julie Blanchard, treasurer; Cindy Durham, president. . . From left, Cindy Freeman, Julie Blanchard, Cindy Durham, Marian Gordin, Libby Thompson, Betsy Walker, Nancy Rowe, Bunsy Craig, Genia Hedden, Tudie Davenport, Charlotte Eidschun. 151 ii. ' C - Eta Beta Pi Juggling trays and dodging each other, the Eta Betas serve meals in Hunt Hall with a cheerful smile and an occasional extra dessert. At Halloween yellow pina- fores were discarded for the appearance of the scholarly witch and her school of goblins; at Christmas, Daddy Cool Claus and the little wife (hostess Ann Delk and her assistant Julia Carrington) were joined by Rudolph the Red-nosed Eta Beta and her fellow reindeer. However the Greek letters translate, MBC couldn ' t do without the Eta Betas ' three-times-a- day teamwork. The last cup of coffee makes the meal. With a concentrated effort she always hits the cup. Ttrry Lee leads the reindeer serenade. Even Eta Betas have to eat Four or More In Edniondson there ' s always a fourth for bridge. Two of Bailey ' s foursome peruse educational matter. Uke duo practices in Riddle ' s apartment. Advertisers, Patrons and Index K 156-177 Advertisers and Index 173 Patrons 178-183 Closing Section 184 Last Word Faculty and Staff Mrs. Wessell C. Bennett RFD I, Churehville, Virginia Mr. Marshall M. Brice 9, 18, 19, 27, 54, 99, Woodward Apartments, Staunton, Virginia Miss Jewel Brandt 301 North Market Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. H. L. Bridges, Jr. 1220 Windsor Lane, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Seth Burnley, Jr. 130 Sproul Lane, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Carl W. Broman 14 Madison Place, Staunton, Virginia Miss Betty Carr 113 Rose Hill Circle, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Elizabeth Hume Carr 426 Stonewall Avenue, Winchester, Virginia Miss Mary Swan Carroll 402 Osage Place, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Marjorie B. Chambers 319 North New Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Barbara P. Clarke 316 East Beverley Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. W. C. Clements 10 Moreland Avenue, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Mr. Fletcher Collins, Jr. RFD 5, Staunton, Virginia Mr. John B. Daffin 14 Tams Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. W. L. Davis 224 Hendren, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Horace T. Day 306 Sherwood Avenue, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Ulysse Desportes 322 North New Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Ulysse Desportes 322 North New Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Gerda L. Dippmann Parkwood Apartments, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Kenneth G. Donnalley 308 College Circle, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. George K. Doome 306 North New Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Ann Dunlap RT. 2, Lexington, Virginia Miss Barbara F. Ely 228 East Frederick Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. J. E. Ferrell 1001 Selma Boulevard, Staunton, Virginia Miss Elva Filer 106 Williams Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. J. W. Galbraith 12 Oakenwold Terrace, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Richard Garber 225 Wayt Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. S. H. Garst 1205 Windsor Lane, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Alan Geyer 938 Donaghe, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Thomas H. Grafton 708 Selma Boulevard, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Thomas H. Grafton 708 Selma Boulevard, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. W. P. J. Harman RFD 6, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Georgia Hill 2702 North Pecksniff Road, Wilmington, Delaware Miss Marguerite Hillhouse 122 North Jefferson Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Ellen Holtz 814 Parkview, Staunton, Virginia Miss Mary Humphreys 112 Prospect Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Fulton Kegley 119 Prospect Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. W. J . Kimball 836 Mt. Elliott Avenue, Staunton Virginia Mrs. J. B. Leonard 307 College Circle, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Waller C. Lescure 122 Overlook Road, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Vega M. Lytton 113 Rose Hill Circle, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. H. S. MacDiarmid 114 Williams Street, Staunton, Virginia 38 136, 178 31 39 39 34 35 29 38 30 25,32 38 30 30,77 28 37, 148 41 39 13,29 41 32 34 24 ,51 35 39 25 40 33 ,60 37 27, 182 38 ,60 18,28 41 Mr. Andrew J. Mahler 108 Easterwood, Staunton, Virginia Mr. J. L. McAllister, Jr. Ridgemont Road, RFD 4, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. A. S. Morgan 309 Sherwood Avenue, Staunton, Virginia Miss Ruth McNeil 2016 North Augusta Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Donnie D, Meeks 510 Hull Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Karl Menk 212 Hendren, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Warren Moore Raphine, Virginia Mrs. Henry B. Morrow 2711 Park Avenue, Wilmington, North Carolina Miss Dorothy Mulberry Zurbano, 56-5D-, Madrid 10, Spain Mrs. Virginia W. Munce 611 East Beverley Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. M. S. Nininger Bo.x 1035, Waynesboro, Virginia Mr. Gordon C. Page Deerfield, Virginia Mrs. William A. Pallavicini, Jr. 725 Gypsy Avenue, Staunton, Virginia Miss Elizabeth Parker 201 North Market Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Alexander M. Patch 325 Vine Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Lillian Pennell 135 North Coalter Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Robert Plaster 1 13 Eraser Lane, Staunton, Virginia Miss Martha A. Pool 307 Virginia Avenue, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Frank W. Price Hillcrest Lane, Morningside Heights, Lexington, Mrs. J. C. Ratcliffe Woodstock, Virginia Mrs. J. Alvin Rosen 811 Monroe Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Lillian Rudeseal 220 North Market Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Hugh P. Schmid 1611 North Augusta Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Karen Schultz Woodward Apartments, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Alice G. Simpkins Fishersville, Virginia Mr. Ben H. Smith, Jr. 1028 Warwick Drive, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Mason F. Smith Star Route B, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Samuel R. Spencer, Jr. 46 Ridgeview Road, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Sarah V. Spetz 15 Academy Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. James T. Spillman 310 Pleasant Terrace, Staunton, Virginia Miss Fannie B. Strauss 315 Nortli New Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Mildred E. Taylor 220 North Market Street, Staunton, Virginia Miss Lillian C. Thomsen 15 Academy Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. J. W. Timberlake 615 East Beverley Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Steve Timberlake 172 North Coalter Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. O. Ashton Trice 212 Rose Hill Circle, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Herbert S. Turner 315 North Coalter Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. A. J. Ultee 1661 Mulberry, Waynesboro, Virginia Mrs. A. B. Valz 11 Taylor Street, Staunton, Virginia Mrs. Gwendolyn Walsh 359 Sherwood Avenue, Staunton, Virginia Miss Juha Weill 231 East Frederick Street, Staunton, Virginia Mr. Juhan E. White 1611 Belmore, Staunton, Virginia 27 35,77 31 Virginia 34 29,69 40 2,31 24, 48, 77 40 36 38 35 39 41 34 41 40, 49, 60 41 8, 18, 21, 55 40 19, 23, 48 25 26 2, 21, 32 8,33 23, 115 41 36 19,26 41 37 36 28 156 Browsing in the MBC Bookstore (operated by the Beverly Book Co.) passes an afternoon for Blair. Two Anns and one Kay choose a decorator ' s scheme from samples at Staunton Faint and Wallpaper Company. 157 Class of 1963 Terry Lee Alexander 82, 136, 169 1008 Duncan Street, Ashland, Virginia. (1) (2) Fine Arts Club, Hockey Team; (3) Vice Pres. Fine Arts Club, Hockey Team, Morning Meditations Com., The Life I Gave You, That Light Forever ; (4) Sec. Fine Arts Club, 402 Workshop, Coffee House, The Grand Gesture. Gene Anne AUred 9, 45, 54, 81, 82, 85, 153 3922 South P. Street Fort Smith Arkansas. (1) Honor Scholar, Honors List; (2) R. A. College Bowl, Big Sister, Vice Pres. Dorm Council, 402 Workshop; (3) R.A. College Bowl, Chapel Com., Parliamentarian for Student Board, Vice Pres. Dorm Council, MISCELLANY, 402 Workshop, Honors List; (4) SGA Com. Chairman for membership in Inter-College Organizations, Sec. Sr. Class, Asst. Ed. MISCELLANY, 402 Workshop, Public Affairs Forum, Honors List. Helen Kathryne Arrowood 9, 82 135 Brookhill Road, Shelby, North Carohna. (1) IRC; (2) Big Sister, Dorm Council, Current Issues Series; (3) Dance Club; (4) Fine Arts Club, Dance Club. Judith Collins Bastian (Judy) 51, 82 620 Vallamont Drive, Williamsport, Pennsylvania. (2) Transfer Sophomore, May Day; (3) Dorm Council, WSC, Dance Club, Honors List; (4) Dorm Council, Senior Class Marshal. Dorothea Louise Bessire (Honey) 9, 45, 47, 82, 96, 146 2563 Woodbourne Avenue, Louisville 5, Kentucky. (1) WSC, Canterbury Club, Hockey Team, Fine Arts Club; (2) Dorm Council, Canterbury Club, Treas. R.A., Hockey Team (3) Pres. R.A., Canterbury Club, Glee Club, Hockey Team, Pubhc Affairs Forum; (4) Pres. R.A., Choir, Canterbury Club, Fine Arts Club, Hockey Team, Public Affairs Forum. Janet Lee Bish 83 322 Miller Street, Winchester, Virginia. (1) (2) (3) Tri-Beta; (4) Tri-Beta. Nancy Joyce Blood 83 1445 Nicholson Road, Jacksonville 7, Florida. (1) Honor Scholar, Literary Club, CotiUion Club, WSC, Cheer- leader, VSDB, Honors List; (2) Honors List; (3) Business Man- ager MISCELLANY, Sec. Treas. Board Publications, Honors List, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1962. Ann Harrison Booker 84 1803 Hanover Avenue, Richmond 20, Virginia (1) Cotillion Club, Arts and Crafts, May Day; (2) Fine Arts Club; (3) (4) Fine Arts Club, Spanish Club. Lucy Rebecca Cannaday (Becky) 61, 84, 137 2734 Sharon Road, Charlotte, North Carolina. (1) IRC, Canterbury Club; (2) Big Sister, BLUESTOCKING, WSC; (3) Public Affairs Forum, Glee Club, Business Manager BLUESTOCKING, Honors List; (4) Pres. PubHc Affairs Forum, Glee Club, Dorm Council, World Day of Prayer Chairman. Elizabeth Ingrid Carlson 47, 49, 85 303 Goodwood Gardens, Baltimore 10, Maryland. (1) Hockey Team; (2) Hockey Team, Dorm Council, Big Sister, R.A., BLUESTOCKING; (3) Hockey Team, Irish Clan Leader, Honors List; (4) Hockey Team, Judiciary Board, Laurel Society. Rebecca Duke Chambers 77, 85 Bo.x 268, Rogersville, Termessee. (1) BLUEST9CKING, Cheerleader; (2) Tri-Beta; (3) Tri-Beta, BLUESTOCKING, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1963. Susanna Holland Clark (Susie) 84, 140, 153 Bo.x 269, Ice Glen Cottage, Stockbridge, Massachusetts (1) Fine Arts Club, Six Characters in Search of an Author, Electra ; (2) Fine Arts Club, Choir, Murder in The Cathedral ; (3) Pres. Fine Arts Club, Choir, The Two Sisters, Macbeth ; (4) Fine Arts Club, Young Democrats Club, Readers Theatre, Sec. Treas. Choir, The Constant Wife, Three Filosophers in a Firetower. Jane Higgins Coulboum 9, 84, 142, 144, 178 406 Katherine Street, Suffolk, Virginia. (1) Cotillion Club, Literary Club; (2) Big Sister, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Wesley Fel; (3) Pres. Wesley Fel, Dance Club, Christian Council; (4) Christian Council, IRC, Vice-Pres. Wesley Fel, Fine Arts Club. Frances Gibson Davis (Bitty) 84 720 Cassell Lane, S. W., Roanoke 14, Virginia. (1) VSDB, Canterbury Club, Fine Arts Club; (2) Glee Club, Eta Beta, Dorm Council, Big Sister; (3) Eta Beta, Christian Council, Vice Pres. Jr. Class, Honors List; (4) Fine Arts Club, Dorm Council. Anne Stevens Delk 10, 59, 84, 85, 136 Lovingston, Virginia (1) Eta Beta, Mathematics Achievement Award, BSU; (2) Eta Beta, BSU; (3) CAMPUS COMMENTS, Fine Arts Club, Eta Beta; (4) Eta Beta, Associate Ed. CAMPUS COMMENTS, Vice Pres. Fine Arts Club, Public Affairs Forum, Young Democrats Club. Emily Dethloff 45, 81, 86 1347 Roosevelt Avenue, Pelham, New York. (1) Canterbury Club, Fine Arts Club; (2) Canterbury Club, Tennis Team; (3) Canterbury Club, Tennis Team; (4) Canter- bury Club, Fine Arts Club, Pres. Sr. Class. Anne Louise Dial 13, 18, 46, 59, 86 3250 E. Briarcliff Circle, Birmingham 13, Alabama. (1) Dorm Council, BSU, BLUESTOCKING; (2) May Court, Big Sister, Dorm Council, BSU, Christian Council, BLUESTOCK- ING, Morning Meditations Com.; (3) House Pres., Managing Ed. BLUESTOCKING, BSU, Public Affairs Forum; (4) House Pres., Associate Ed. CAMPUS COMMENTS, Glee Club, Public Affairs Forum, Fine Arts Club, BSU. Sally Hull Dorsey 77, 86 5500 Albemarle Street, Washington 16, D.C. (1) Fine Arts Club; (2) Big Sister, Production for Medea and for That Light Forever ; (3) Requirements for graduation com- pleted in summer of 1963. Eleanor Reese Edmondson 53, 86, 90 3 Cohawney Road, Scarsdale, New York. (1) (2) Dolphins, Big Sisiter; (3) Dolphins, CAMPUS COM- MENTS, Dorm Council; (4) College Usher, Public Affairs Forum. Victoria Freeman Ellis (Vicky) 57, 86 1406 Brookland Parkway, Richmond 27, Virginia. (1) CAMPUS COMMENTS, Cotillion Club; (2) (3) Fine Arts Club, BLUESTOCKING, Requirements for graduation com- pleted in summer of 1963. Nancy Ely 86 7 Riverside Drive, Roswell, New Mexico. (1) BLUESTOCKING, Canterbury Club; (2) BLUESTOCKING, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Big Sister, Canterbury Club; (3) Glee Club, Canterbury Club; (4) CAMPUS COMMENTS, Public Affairs Forum, Canterbury Club. Margaret Darke Engle (Peggy) 7, 16, 49, 50, 61, 84, 87 115 Dupont Circle, Norfolk 9, Virginia. (1) Choir, CotiUion Club, IRC, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Wes Fel; (2) Big Sister, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Choir, Campus Guide, IRC, Dorm Council, May Day, NSA Com.; (3) Ed. CAMPUS COMMENTS, Laurel Society, Choir, Rules Com., May Day, Board of Pubhcations, Dance Club; (4) Chairman Board of Co-ordination, Chairman of Board of Pubhcations, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, Laurel Society, Sec.-Treas. Laurel Society, Dolphins, Choir, REW Com., Fine Arts Club. Carolyn Marie Epperson 32, 52, 80, 87, 89 3102 Evergreen Lane, S.W., Roanoke Virginia. (1) CotiUion Club, May Day; (2) Big Sister, WSC; (3) Dorm Council, Tri-Beta; (4) Chief Marshall, Tri-Beta, Fine Arts Club. Alice Grace Farrior 55, 88 365 S. Ridge Street, Southern Pines, North Carolina. (1) Wes Fel, Trustee Scholar; (2) Wes Fel Council, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Big Sister; (3) BLUESTOCKING, Wes Fel, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1963. Elizabeth Senhen Fisher 69, 101 3671 Richmond Street, Jacksonville 5, Florida. (1) RA, CAMPUS COMMENTS, WSC Com., Cheerleader; (2) (3) (4) Sr. Year in Madrid, Spain. 158 Fran and Holly look for the perfect gift at H. S. Lang Company. The picture of organization; she uses the First Merchants ' National Bank. From every angle, Schwarzschild ' s can outfit the Mary Baldwin girl. Class of 1963 Patricia Fisher 88, 90, 136 5503 Boxhill Lane, Baltimore 10, Maryland. (1) Canterbury Club, Choir, 402 Workshop, Electra ; (2) Choir, MISCELLANY, Sec. Treas. 402 Workshop; (3) Choir, Pres. 402 Workshop, Ed. MISCELLANY, That Light Forever, Require- ments for graduation completed in summer of 1962. Sharon Lynn Foye (Cherie) 88 124 Irvin Avenue, Pittsburgh 2, Pennsylvania (1) Canterbury Club, Arts and Crafts; (2) Canterbury Club, Cheerleader; (3) Canterbury Club, Cheerleader, Glee Club, Pro- duction for Nledea and The Life I Gave You ; (4) Fine Arts Club, Canterbury Club. Anne Terry Geggie 88 72 Hollywood Avenue, Hampton, Virginia. (1) Arts and Crafts, Cotillion Club, Wes Fel; (2) Big Sister, Cotillion Club, Young Democrats; (3) Christian Council, Public Affairs Forum; (4) Sec. Treas. Public Affairs Forum, Fine Arts Club, REW Com. Roberta Bruce Gill 88 350 Middle Street, Portsmouth, Virginia. (1) Canterbury Club, Fine Arts Club, CotiUion Club; (2) Can- terbury Club, Fine Arts Club, Pubheity Com. C.A.; (3) Can- terbury Club, Public Affairs Forum, Dance Club, Publicity Com. C.A.; (4) Domi Council, Canterbury Club, Pubhc Affairs Forum, Fine Arts Club. Mary Carpenter Gould (Carpie) 46, 80, 89, 140 309 Worthington Road, Towson 4, Maryland. (1) Christian Council, Wes Fel, Choir, CotiUion Club; (2) Treas. Soph. Class, Big Sister, Choir, Chaimian Fellovvship Com.; (3) House Pres., Choir; (4) House Pres., Choir, Choir Board Chair- man. Martha Schuyler Grant 76, 77, 89, 92, 97 128 Wythe Crescent Drive, Hampton, Virginia. (1) Production for Six Characters in Search of an Author, Fine Arts Club; (2) Big Sister, Com. on Campus Activities, Treas. Newman Club, Young Repubhcans; (3) Choir, Dorm Council, Vice Pres. Newman Club, Production for The Life I Gave You, Social Com; (4) Choir, Fine Arts Club. Carolyn Louise Haldeman 89 165 La Salle Avenue, Hampton, Virginia. (1) Cotillion Club, BSU, IRC; (2) CotiUion Club, BSU, IRC, Dorm Council; (3) Public Affairs Forum, BSU; (4) Pubhc Affairs Forum, BSU, Glee Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS. Ella Margaret Hornbarger Hancock (Margie) 89 Davidson Park Apts., Lexington, Virginia. (1) Hobbies And Crafts, WSC, Choir; (2) (3) (4) Holly Keith Hanson 80, 90, 159 953 WeUington Road, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (1) Wes Fel, CoHllion Club; (2) Big Sister, May Day, WSC; (3) Honors List; (4) Fine Arts Club. Elizabeth Ban- Hawkins (Betty Barr) 90, 97 2435 Stanley Avenue, Roanoke Virginia (I) Cotillion Club; (2) Cotillion Club; (3 Dorm Council; (4) Fine Arts Club. Virginia Hesdorffer 90, 115 6 Whittle Road, Martinsville, Virginia. (1) Cheerleader, Canterbury Club; (2) Cheerleader, Big Sister, Pubhc Affairs Forum; (3) Cheerleader, Pres. Glee Club, Pubhc Affairs Forum; (4) Public Affairs Forum. Anne Harfield Hogshead 13, 47, 91, 90, 99, 138 Box 1181, Las Vegas, New Mexico. (1) R.A.; (2) Scotch Clan Leader, Hockey Sports Leader, Hockey Team, Rep. to West Fel; (3) Judiciary Board, Public Affairs Forum, Hockey Team; (4) Vice Pres. Judiciary Board, Pubhc Affairs Forum, Hockey Team. Joan Jackson 17 gj 3358 Peakwood Drive, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia. (1) Choir, WSC, Fine Arts Club, IRC, REW Com., Canterbury Club, Trinity Church Choir; (2) WSC, Fine Arts Club, Canter- bury Club; (3) Glee Club, Canterbury Club, Fine Arts Club May Court Attendant, WSC; (4) Fine Arts Club. Katharine Scott Jones 44, 45_ 49, 50, 91 1623 Westover Avenue, Petersburg, Virginia. (1) Honor Scholar, Choir, Treas. Fr. Class; (2) Choir, Fine Arts Club Sec,, Judiciary Board, REW Com., Honors List; (3) Choir Accompanist, Fine Arts Club, Marshal, Judiciary Board Dol- phin Club, REW Com.; (4) Pres. SGA., Choir Accompanist Fme Arts Club, Dolphin Club, Laurel Society. Melissa Frances Kimes 11,83,91 11434 Memorial Drive, Houston 24, Texas. (1) CotiUion Club, Fine Arts Club, Arts and Crafts Club, Six Characters in Search of an Author ; (2) Cotillion Club, Fine Arts Club, Vice Pres. Arts and Crafts Club, Y ' oung Republicans; (3) Public Affairs Formn, Fine Arts Club, Young Repubhcans; (4) Public Affairs Forum, Fine Arts Club, Young Republicans. Ehzabeth Duncan Kirkpatrick (Liddy) 47, 49, 50, 64, 71, 92, 95 RT. 4, Culpeper, Virginia. (1) Dorm Council, IRC; (2) Current Issues Series, IRC, Sec. Soph. Class, Big Sister; (3) Judiciary Board, Public Affairs Forum, Current Issues Series; (4) Sec. Judiciary Board, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, May Court. Elizabeth Louise Laird (Liza Lou) 92, 150 Meade Street, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania. (1) Dolphins; (2) Treas. Dolphins, West Fel, Big Sister; (3) Sec. Dolphins, Sec. -Treas. West Fel, Chairman E£Re Ann John- son, Glee Club; (4) Vice Pres. Dolphins, Glee Club, Young Republicans. Elizabeth Daugherty Linn (Libby) 81, 93 469 W. 63 Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. (1) R.A., WSC; (2) (3) Social Com.; (4) Fine Arts Club, Social Com., Dorm Council. Judy Ann Lipes 81, 93, 96, 99, 140 875 Cherrywood Road, Salem, Virginia. (1) Choir, BSU, VSDB, WSC, Fine Arts Club, CotiUion Club, May Day, Amahl and the Night Visitors ; (2) Choir, BSU, May Day, Lion ' s Club Minstrel, Teacher of THE DANCE; (3) Choir, That Light Forever, Modern Dance Club, Teacher of THE DANCE, Lion ' s Club Minstrel, May Day; (4) Choir Board Pres., Modern Dance Club, Fine Arts Club, Christmas Dance Com., Coffee House. Sarah Lewis Livingston (Sally) 45, 50, 93, 142 54 Linden Avenue, Hampton, Virginia. (1) WSC, West Fel, Fine Arts Club, Choir, CotiUion Club; (2) Social chairman Soph. Class, Pres. West Fel, Christian Council, Social Com., Choir, Big Sister; (3) Sec. C.A., Choir, Chairman Operation Playmate; (4) Pres. C.A., Student Board, Fine Arts Club, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, REW Com., Choir. Ehzabeth Simmons McClung (Bibi) 93, 150 215 Chestnut Street, Salem, Virginia. (1) Honor Scholar, Choir; (2) Choir, Honors List, Big Sister, (3) Choir, Fine Arts Club, Modern Dance Club, Honors List, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1963. Eleanor Glasgow McCown (Mickey) 87, 93 Box 981, Staunton, Virginia. (1) R.A., May Day; (2) R.A., Big Sister, May Day; (3) Pres. Day Student ' s Organization, R.A., Student Board, Honors List; (4) R.A., Requirements for graduation completed first semester. Martha Alice McDevitt 93 5500 Seventh Street S., Arlington, Virginia. (1) Cheerleader, Newman Club Sec.-Treas., Fine Arts Club; (2) Cheerleader, Newman Club; (3) Newman Club, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1963. Minta Cameron McDiarmid 94 3133 Trafalgar Drive, Augusta, Georgia. (3) Transfer Jr.; (4) Dorm Council, Fine Arts Club, Pubhc Affairs Forum. Betty Brock McGlamery 59, 94, 142 2310 York Road, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia. (1) Arts and Crafts Club, West Fel; (2) Sec.-Treas. West Fel, May Day; (3) Publicity Chairman C.A., West Fel, Big Sister; (4) Publicity Chairman C.A., CAMPUS COMMENTS, Public Affairs Forum, Fine Arts Club, Glee Club, Young Republicans, West Fel. Margaret Anne Mapp (Peggy) 94 34 Willway Avenue, Richmond 26, Virginia. (1) Dorm Council; (2) (3) Junior Class President; (4) Fine Arts Club, Dorm Council. Irene Feraba Mathias 19, 45, 94 Route 3, Staunton, Virginia. (1) May Day, R.A.; (2) May Day, R.A.; (3) Fine Arts Club, West Fel, R.A.; (4) Vice Pres. Day Student ' s Organization, Fine Arts Club, R.A. 160 Take me away in a Quick-Livick bus. Leslie and June find hats and hose and anything else at Leggetts Department Store. Where else but Willson Brothers Drugs can you get this much ice cream for five cents? i; t •• 5 m - m 1 4 ' t. i P - 1 1 Z1 B ' I ' ll tell him to look at Crown Jewelers. Class of 1963 Mary Rutherfoord Mercer 94, 139 4107 Exeter Road, Richmond 21, Virginia. (1) Arts and Crafts Club, May Day; (2) Christian Council, May Day; (3) Chairman of Worship Com., Glee Club, Dance Club, Sec. Jr. Class; (4) Choir, Social Com. Katharine Lynn Miller (Kay) 95, 144, 153 23 Cleveland Street, Bergenfield, New Jersey. (1) Six Characters in Search of An Author, Arts and Crafts Club; (2) Big Sister, Newman Club; (3) Newman Club; (4) Pres. Newman Club, Christian Council. Susan Gail Moore 83, 95 Box 285, Davidson, North Carolina. (1) Fine Arts Club, Cotillion Club; (2) Presbyterian Church Choir, Fine Arts Club, Cotillion Club; (3) Sec. Fine Arts Club, Publicity Chainnan Wes Fel, Presbyterian Church Choir; (4) Fine Arts Club, Church Choir. Lucy Anna Morris 9, 19, 76, 95, 96, 136 1140 Rugby Road, Lynchburg, Virginia. (1) (2) (3) (4) Chairman Curriculum Com., 402 Workshop, Fine Arts Club. Joann Brown Morton 96 2324 Piedmont Rd., Charleston 1, West Virginia. (1) Dolphins, Dorm Devotions Chairman, Chapel Devotions Com.; (2) (3) Publicity Chairman Public Affairs Forum, Pres. Dolphins; (4) Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1962. Julia Davidson Morton 96, 153 1604 Louden Heights Road, Charleston, West Virginia. (1) Fine Arts Club, Canterbury Club, Arts and Crafts, Cotillion Club; (2) Fine Arts Club, Canterbury Club, WSC Com.; (3) Canterbury Club; (4) Canterbury Club, Young Democrats Club, WSC Com. Virginia Leslie Morton (Jill) 96, 138 4249 Southcrest, Dallas 29, Texas. (1) Fine Arts Club, Young Republicans, Public Affairs Forum, IRC, CAMPUS COMMENTS; (2) BLUESTOCKING; (3) Modern Dance Club, Vice Pres. Spanish Club, Carnegie Foun- dation Scholarship for Study in Mexico in Summer of 1961, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1963. Bette Eugenia Murdoch (Jeane) 23, 45, 49, 50, 58, 61, 96,153, 181 Box 29, Barium Springs, North CaroBna. (1) CAMPUS COMMENTS, IRC, Wes Fel, Current Issues Series, Trustee Scholar; (2) News Ed. CAMPUS COMMENTS, Wes Fel, Big Sister, Current Issues Series, IRC, Student Rep. to Library Advisory Board; (3) Editor CAMPUS COMMENTS, Public Affairs Forum, Student Board, Board of PuWications, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, Laurel Society, Requirements for graduation completed in three years. Harriet Josephine Murphy 97 Route 2, Fincastle, Virginia. (1) CAMPUS COMMENTS, West Fel, Arts and Crafts Club, Honor Scholar, Honors List; (2) CAMPUS COMMENTS, West Fel; (3) Business Manager CAMPUS COMMENTS, Board of Publications; (4) Fine Arts Club. Robbie Jean Nelson 3, 97, 145 62 Turlington Road, Newport News, Virginia. (1) Honor Scholar, BSU, Fine Arts Club; (2) Vice Pres. BSU; Pres. BSU, Glee Club, Christian Council; (4) Fine Arts Club, Social Chairman BSU, Dorm Council. Gretchen Gale Palmer 9, 97, 98 R.F.D. 4, Box 385, Roanoke, Virginia. (1) WSC, Canterbury Club; (2) Big Sister, Canterbury Club; (3) Glee Club, Canterbury Club; (4) Fine Arts Club, Canterbury Club, Public Affairs Forum. Dorothy Page Putnam 98 1331 Woodlawn Avenue, Columbia, South Carolina. (1) Honors List. Honor Scholar, IRC Publicity Chairman, Cotil- lion Club, West Fel, Choir; (2) Honors List, Choir, Public Affairs Series, Pres. IRC, Vice Pres. Wes Fel; (3) Choir, Laurel Award, Pres. Wes Fel, Christian Council, Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1962. Rebecca Clement Quinn (Becka) 8, 98 2626 Richelieu Avenue, Roanoke, Virginia. (1) Newman Club; (2) Dorm Council, Newman Club, Social Com., Campus Guide, Big Sister; (3) Dorm Council, Social Com., Requirements for graduation completed in summer of 1963. Anna Kate Reid 64, 98 610 Hickory, Arkadelphia, Arkansas. (1) IRC, YWCA; (2) Big Sister, Dorm Council, Social Com., (3) Big Sister, Dorm Council, Social Com.; (4) Requirements for graduation completed first semester. Keene Roadman 45,46,49,50,98 4312 37th Street, Arhngton 7, Virginia. (1) CAMPUS COMMENTS, WSC, Current Issues Series, IRC; (2) CAMPUS COMMENTS, Pres. Soph. Class, Current Issues Series, Campus Guide, IRC; (3) CAMPUS COMMENTS, House Pres., Dolphins, That Light Forever, Honors List, Laurel Society, Glee Club; (4) Chairman House Pres. Council, Execu- tive Com., Pres. Laurel Society, Fine Arts Club, Spanish Club, Who ' s who in American Colleges and Universities. Rosalinda Broode Roberts (Lin) 45, 49, 50, 54, 61, 98, 102, 139, 181, 182 862 Longmeadow Street, Longmeadow, Massachusetts. (3) Transfer Jr., Social Com., CAMPUS COMMENTS, Tennis ■Team, Choir, May Day Program Com., Ed. Student Handbook; (4) Social Com. Chairman, Choir, Business Manager MISCEL- LANY, REW Com., Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Uni- versities, Laurel Society. Nell Boone Rogers 64, 98, 99 6101 Park Avenue, Fort Smith, Arkansas. (1) Hobbies and Crafts, Fine Arts Club, IRC, BLUESTOCKING, Cotillion Club; (2) Big Sister, IRC, Fine Arts Club; (3) Dorm Council, Choir Librarian, Fine Arts Club, Big Sister; (4) Dorm Council, Social Com., Choir Librarian, Fine Arts Club. Waveriy Virginia Rogerson 18, 49, 50, 67, 77, 81, 92, 99, 136 (1) (2) Arms and The Man ; (3) Sec. Social Com., Medea, The Two Sisters, Choir; (4) Choir, The Grand Gesture, Social Chairman Sr. Class, Chairman SGA Project, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, Pres. Fine Arts Club. Rebecca Dudley Shelor 71, 99 Box 101, Floyd, Virginia. (1) (2) Cheerleader, WSC; (3) Cheerleader Captain; (4) May Court. Martha Damans Singletary 9, 44, 45, 47, 49, 50, 51, 59, 84, 100 71 Rock Creek Drive, Greenville, South Carolina. (1) CAMPUS COMMENTS, Choir, Rep. to Judiciary Board, Honors List, Honor Scholar, Choir Board; (2) CAMPUS COM- MENTS, Choir Board, Honors List, Rep. to Judiciary Board, REW Com., Campus Guide; (3) Associate Ed. CAMPUS COM- MENTS, Sec. Judiciary Board, Chairman REW Com., Choir, Chairman Choir Board, Honors List, Laurel Society; (4) Chair- man Judiciary Board, Choir, E.xecutive Com., Associative Ed. CAMPUS COMMENTS, Russell Scholar, Fine Arts Club, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, Laurel Society. Mary Ellen Smith 100, 150 2645 North Druid Hills Road, Atlanta 6, Georgia. (1) West Fel, Dolphin Club, Fine Arts Club; (2) West Fel, Campus Guide, Dolphins Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Fine Arts Club, Honors List; (3) Wes Fel, Dolphin Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Glee Club, Honors List, Chairman World Day of Prayer; (4) West Fel, Pres. Dolphin Club, Glee Club, Fine Arts Club, Public Affairs Forum, Young Republicans. Katherine Lapsley Sproul (Kathy) 62, 87, 100 Middlebrook, Virginia. (1) West Fel, Fine Arts Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Eta Beta; (2) Treas, Fine Arts Club, Murder in The Cathedral, Cotillion Club, Dorm Council, Eta Beta; (3) Treas. Fipe Arts Club, Production Medea and That Light Forever, Dorm Council; (4) Fine Arts Club. 162 Dinner at the Stonewall Jackson Hotel is a successful student therapy. Lainidry from Staunton Steam Laundry even smells good! ' it S With Palais Royal and Mr. Sak how can you miss? 163 Class of 1963 Nancy Virginia Stickley Box 3385, Charlotte 3, North Carohna. (1) Canterbury Club; (2) Christian Council, Big Sister, Canter- bury Club, Fine Arts Club; (3) Sec. SGA, May Court, Require- ments for graduation completed in summer of 1962. Virginia Louise Stott (Jenny) 9, 46, 100 308 Seneca Road, Richmond 26, Virginia. (1) Wes Fel Pubhcity Chairman, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Cotilhon Club, May Day; (2) Vice Pres. Wes Fel, Big Sister, Christian Council, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Cotillion Club; (3) Dorm Council, Christian Council, Chairman Club Com.; (4) Wes Fel, House Pres., Fine Arts Club. Judith Ann Thompson (Judy) 3, 46, 100 5701 W. Franklin Street, Richmond 26, Virginia. (1) Cotillion Club, BSU, RA; (2) Big Sister, Cotillion Club, BSU, Eta Beta RA; (3) House Pres., Glee Club, Eta Beta, RA, BSU; (4) Choir, House Pres. Anne Shearer Troxell 46, 49, 50, 100, 137 104 Macmurdo Street, Ashland, Virginia. (1) Dorm Council, Honor Scholar, Canterbury Club, IRC, Sky- scrapers; (2) Dorm Council, IRC, Canterbury Club, Skyscrapers; (3) House Pres., Skyscrapers, Tri-Beta, Canterbury Club, Public Affairs Forum; (4) House Pres., Sec. House Pres. Council, Sec. Treas. Public Affairs Forum, Fine Arts Club, Canterbury Club, Tri-Beta, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, Laurel Society. Emily Thomason Tyler 46, 101 Sherwood Forest, Charles City, Virginia. (1) Cotillion Club, Arts and Crafts, Board of Review, RA, Can- terbury Club, Hockey Team; (2) Sec. RA, Big Sister, Cotillion Club, Dorm Council, Arts and Crafts, Board of Review, Hockey Team, Canterbury Club, Campus Activities Com; (3) House Pres., Hockey Team, Fine Arts Club, Vice-Pres. Canterbury Club, Tri-Beta; (4) House Pres., Fine Arts Club, Tri-Beta, Can- terbury Club. Jane Ellen Vaughan 9, 53, 64, 81, 102 64 Algonquin Road, Hampton Virginia. (1) West Fel, Arts and Crafts Club, Cotillion Club; (2) Big Sister, CAMPUS COMMENTS, West Fel, Fine Arts Club, Eta Beta, Cotillion Club, May Day; (3) Dorm Council, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Club Com., REW Com., Modern Dance Club, Honors List, Fine Arts Club; (4) Vice-Pres. Sr. Class, CA Stewardship Com. Chairman, College Usher, CAMPUS COM- MENTS, Fine Arts Club, Glee Club, Public Affairs Forum. Martha Carol Vogel 9, 102 314 Lexington Road, Richmond 26, Virginia. (1) (2) (3) Requirements for graduation completed in the sum- mer of 1963. Lynette Hightower Warner (Lyn) 19, 46, 102 809 Clark Drive, Rome, Georgia. (1) Sec. Fr. Class, Canterbury Club. Cotillion Club, Dolphins; (2) Treas. Dolphins, Dorm Council, Glee Club, Canterbury Club, Big Sister, Chairman CA Service Com., Campus Guide, Social Chairman Soph. Class; (3) House Pres., Dolphins, Requirements for graduation completed in three years. Jean Vaughan Wells 9, 18, 45, 55, 61, 102, 136 612 Locust Avenue, Waynesboro, Virginia. (1) Wes Fel, IRC, Cotilhon Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Current Issues Series; Honor Scholar; (2) CAMPUS COM- MENTS Feature Ed., BLUESTOCKING, First Prize Fall Issue MISCELLANY, 402 Workshop, Big Sister; (3) Ed. BLUE- STOCKING, Fine Arts Club, Board of Pubhcations, Pres. 402 Workshop, Coffee House Com., Requirements for graduation completed in three years. Mrs. Elizabeth Hockaday White 1611 Belmore Street, Staunton, Virginia. (1) Honors List; (2) Honors List; (3) Honors List. Emily Coxe Wirsing 17, 56, 83, 102 2624 Stanley Avenue, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia. (1) Cotillion Club, Canterbury Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS, WES Com.; (2) Cotillion Club, Canterbury Club, CAMPUS COMMENTS, Christmas Address Book; (3) Treas. Jr. Class, Pres. Canterbury Club, Board of Review, CAMPUS COMMENTS: (4) Art Ed. BLUESTOCKING, Canterbury Club, Chairman Library Com., Fine Arts Club, Public Affairs Forum, Coffee House Com. Barbara Russell Wishart (Bunny) 10, 44, 45, 49, 50, 59, 102, 147 510 Park Avenue, Towson 4, Maryland. (1) Pres. Fr. Class, Hockey Team; (2) Treas. SGA Hockey Team; (3) House Pres., REW Com., BLUESTOCKING, Hockey Team, Laurel Society; (4) Vice Pres. SGA, Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, Associate Ed. CAMPUS COM- MENTS, Hockey Team, Fine Arts Club, Laurel Society. Margaret Kathryn Woodson (Margie) 46, 70, 102 486 Willow Drive, Pittsburgh 16, Pennsylvania. (1) May Court, Class Usher; (2) May Court, Glass Usher, Dorm Council, Christian Council, Big Sister; (3) May Court, Class Marshal, Glee Club, Stewardship Drive; (4) House Pres., Choir, May Queen. Julia Lane Wright 2,20,81,102,137 159 Lewis Avenue, Salem, Virginia. (1) Honor Scholar, West Fel, IRC, Cotillion Club; (2) Dorm Council, Campus Guide; (3) Dorm Council, Public Affairs Forum, Current Issues Series, Honors List; (4) Treas. Sr. Class, Vice Pres. Public Affairs Forum. 164 4 ■-(JpSHW Class of 1964 Frances Pennington Abbitt (Penny) 3, 57, 106, 145 Appomattox, Virginia Suzanne Marie Ackerman 60, 106, 143 4309 Stuart Avenue, Richmond 21, Virginia Bess Louise Alexander 78, 105 426 Park Club Lane, Willianisville 21, New York Sarah Louise Alley 45, 59, 106 Box 525, Tazewell, Virginia Karen Appleby 7, 9, 11, 54, 61, 106, 136 2180 Fourth Avenue, Bay City Michigan Mary Ann Appleby 11, 49, 106, 139 1218 Rennie Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Betsy Belle Ayres 106 516 Mortimer Street, Sturgis, Michigan Virginia Hope Baldwin 13, 47, 106, 111, 136 Indian Brook Road, Garrison, New York Betty Lou Barnes 106 Ridgewood Road, Bassett, Virginia Anne Alexander Baylor 69 321 College Circle, Staunton, Virginia Janine Bowling 68, 69 51 N. Arlington Avenue, London, Ohio Sarah Catherine Brennan 105, 106, 139, 150 3020 Stratford Road, Richmond 25, Virginia Senah Anne Buchanan 106, 144 204 Parkway Road, Bristol, Tennessee Mary Ellis Bullion 55, 106, 108 5411 Edgewood, Little Rock, Arkansas Juha Ruth Carrington 12, 47, 106 319 Main Street, Oxford, Nordi Carolina Kay Cartmell 68, 69 183 Maple Street, Clarksdale, Mississippi Susan Carolyn Clemmer 106 4728 Long Leaf Hills Drive, Wilmington, North Carolina Margaret Kerneen Cole 106 506 Chandler Circle, Richmond, Virginia Ann Corbin Conway 26c Hillside Terrace, Lexington, Virginia Sharon HoUis Cook 45, 106 11 Thompson Street, Staunton, Virginia Wortley Crowe Davis 105, 139, 149 25 N. Princeton Circle, Lynchburg, Virginia Glenn Ellen Downie 16, 55, 106, 182 45 Hanley Downs, Saint Louis 17, Missouri Helen Kelsey Downie 16, 53, 106, 182 Rt. 5, Box 330, Little Rock, Arkansas Cynthia Anna Durham (Cindy) 9, 67, 107, 136, 151 3420 Meredith Lane, Columbia, South Carolina Louise Kinard Erdman 106 8518 Academy Road, Richmond, Virginia Beverly J ane Estes 77, 105, 106, 142 1925 Hanover Avenue, Richmond 29, Virginia Susanne Pearman Eve (Sue) 106 1 1 Raleigh Court, University Circle, Charlottesville, Virginia Norma Katherine Farrar 106 601 N. Payne Street, Fairfax, Virginia Anne Fisher 106, 109, 183 Box 367, Elizabethtown, North Carolina Nichols Compton Fox (Niki) 3, 7, 76, 134, 167, 182 U.S. Army Garrison, Camp Pickett, Blackstone, Virginia Cynthia Rowe Freeman 106, 111, 151 Argyle Heights, 102 Sussex Street, Fredericksburg, Virginia Susan Sargent Goodman 59, 108 1519 Westwood Avenue, Richmond 27, Virginia Margaret Bcllmont Gray 68, 69, 101 1606 Watchill Road, Austin, Texas Kathryn Ellen Green (Kathy) 55, 108 1736 Woodland Drive, Charoltte 5, North Carolina Sarah Margaret Hagy (Sally) 3, 49, 145, 165, 179 211 Third Street, W., Radford, Virginia Nancy Fairfax Hardesty 42, 60, 108 .3705 Carolina Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Iris Ehzabeth Harding 72, 108, 145 160 Maple Avenue, Halifax, Virginia Aleen Marie Harper (Deedee) 108, 145 4809 S. Sunset Boulevard, Tampa, Florida Jano Gregory Heywood 60, 108, 153 1116 13th Street Huntington, West Virginia Ann Blythe Higgins 108 558 Walnut Avenue, Waynesboro, Virginia Eveline Williams Holt (Molly) 13, 55, 153 Alanton, London Bridge, Virginia Laurie Kathryn Holbrook 146 1445 Pueblo Drive, Pittsburgh 28, Pennsylvania Eliane Huidobro (Exchange student) 108 4313, El Dante, Santiago, Chile Barbara Rose Isicson 108 609 Kenbrook Drive, Silver Spring, Maryland Mary Claiborne Jarratt 108 P.O. Box 233, Floyd, Virginia Jo Ellen Jennette 56, 108 1313 Rhem Avenue, New Bern, North Carolina Juliane Elizabeth Jorgensen 60, 109, 149 2413 Medina Way, West Palm Beach, Florida Mary Boisseau Juer (Happy) 109, 136 1112 Oakridge Road, Petersburg, Virginia Nancy Rowland Kapp 109 3971 Brunswick Avenue, S., Minneapolis 16, Minnesota Mary Wallace Kerr 3, 9, 15 111 Calumet, San Antonio, Texas Patricia Ann Hensley Kidd 109 1507 Monroe Street, Waynesboro, Virginia Gratia Ann Kiracofe 68, 69 Route 4, Staunton, Virginia Blair Lloyd Lambert 60, 109, 157 1339 Monterey Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia Beverly C. Leetch 68, 69 Garden Apartment 5-f. 201 Tuscahy Road, Baltimore 10, Maryland Linda Gilcrist Leeds 109, 111 161 Ellison Avenue, Bron. ville, New York Billie Carol Litton 149, 183 104 Riverside Drive, Greenwood, Mississippi Mary Frances Lovelace 109, 142, 159 Dogwood Drive, Bedford, Virginia Helen Boyd McHenry 109 Box 498, Lexington, Virginia Constance Satterlee Rhinelander McKenzie 109 1820 Corielyou Road, Brooklyn 26, New York Mary Carleton McRae 109 120 Shadyside Drive, El Dorado, Arkansas Patricia Diane Martin (Patty) 142 1 Winding Brook Drive, Larchmont, New York Ann Morrell 68, 69 43 Kings Highway West, Haddonfield, New Jersey Christine Wehrle Miles 109 12 Twin Circle Drive, Westport, Connecticut Martha Dillon Murchison 59, 109, 142 150 N. Union Street, Concord, North Carolina Nancy Jane Nelson 52, 60, 72, 105, 110, 153 529 Bishop Avenue, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania Anne Langhorne Nimmo 53,72, 110 249 Taylor Avenue, Salem, Virginia Susan Clarke Oast 56, 110, 136, 153 709 Graydon Avenue, Norfolk 7, Virginia Ellen Elizabeth Page 107 Vermont Avenue, Lynchburg, Virginia Susan Maxfield Palmer HO 14 Kenneth Road, Upper Montclair, New Jersey Eleanor Young Poole 58,61, 110 315 E. Fillmore Street, Petersburg, Virginia Betty Evans Puckette 110 3246 Downing Drive, Lynchburg, Virginia Helena Elmina Richard 13, 56, 110, 134, 153 1752 Talbott Place, Waynesboro, Virginia Jacqueline Virginia Riddle (Jackie) 105, 110, 43 1513 Brookland Parkway, Richmond, Virginia Nancy Lewis Rowe 3, 59, 104, 110, 151 442 Hawthorne Drive, Danville, Virginia Virginia Lee Royster (Ginny) HO 2233 Buford Road, Bon Air 35, Virginia Anita Carol Saffels HO 913 Concord Road, Tallahassee, Florida Frances Anne Sanders (Fran) 59, 110 3811 Seminary Avenue, Richmond 27, Virginia Pickett Shannon (Judy) ■ 2,43,47,110,181 136 E. Renovah Circle, Wilmington, North Carolina Phyllis Larrie Short 60, 110 92.3 Monument Avenue, Fredericksburg, Virginia Darlena Sizemore 55, 110 Box 472, Pineville, West Virginia 166 If I could get him into Rick ' s, I know I could tie him up. ' Niki checks over becoming clothes coming from Woodward ' s Cleaners. The spring fashions are accessorized by HoIIiday ' s shoes and handbags. Penn and Barbara try music by Morgan ' s. Class of 1964 Anne Carolyn Smith 26, 60 2 11 Riverside Drive, Newport News, Virginia Anne-Marie Taillefer (Exchange student) 110 1 Blvd. Prince de Galles, Nice (A.M.), France Ehzabeth Hart Thompson (Libby) 13, 56, 110, 140, 151, 153 306 Williams Street, Lake City, South Carolina Margaret Lee Thompson 110, 150 195 Stonewall Heights, Abingdon, Virginia Eleanor Jean Umberger (Jean) 54, 72, 105, 110, 152 3128 Woodlawn Avenue, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia Edith Merian von Glahn (Mimi) 56, 61, 110, 182 1808 Shadowlawn Street, Jacksonville 5, Florida Anne Miller Warren 6 3443 Landon Street, Lynchburg, Virginia Sarah Cornelia Warren 110 18 Elm Avenue, Newport News, Virginia Diane Warthen 9, 154 1509 Clayton Avenue, Lynchburg, Virginia Mary Anne Weiglein HI 706 Beacon Street, St. Albans, West Virginia Penelope Ann Wev (Penny) 69 7537 Parkdale Avenue, Clayton 5, Missouri Sandra Whately 1019 Perrvmont Avenue, Lynchburg, Virginia Elizabeth lUrd Williams HI Meadowbrook Hrijjhts, Charlottesville, Virginia Liebgard Winkler (Exchange student) HI Bahnweb 16, Voitsberg Stmk., Austria Pamela Lee Patteson Wright 111, 146 5820 York Road, Richmond, Virginia Class of 1965 Ann Gordon Abbott 58, 112, 114 4005 Monitor Drive, Hampton, Virginia Ehzabeth Davis Austin (Betty) 47, 113, 163 509 West French Place, San Antonio 12, Texas Jo Ann Avery 114 1 Webb Avenue, Old Greenwich, Connecticut Betty Sue Bailey 91,114,120 1306 Vanceright Circle, Winchester, Virginia Linda Dianne Baldwin 114, 145, 179 136 Queen Street, McCoole, Maryland Sara Jane Beabout 114, 142, 179 Box 543, Rt. 2, Maitland, Florida Susan Louise Beene (Susy) 15 6305 Westchester, Dallas, Texas Bonnie Lee Beiderwieden 114, 142 511 Claremont Avenue, Teaneck, New Jersey Aino Evehn Berris 114, 120, 137 Allen Hill Road, Danielson, Connecticut Martha Ann Bertrand 114, 137 640 Cambridge Drive, Augusta, Georgia (Mrs.) Mary Ann Milne Brewer 22A Hillside Terrace, Lexington, Virginia Ehzabeth Jane Brown (Betty Jane) 112, 114, 139, 142, 143 .3218 GriflBn Avenue, Richmond 22, Virginia Susan Leigh Browne 4 303 Park Place, Newport News, Virginia Judy Marie Bryant 141, 144 5010 Dunvegan Road, Louisville 7, Kentucky Deborah Church Bulkley (Debbie) 57, 114, 138, 145 432 Long Hill Street, Springfield, Massachusetts Victoria Elaine Cacciapagha (Vicky) 45, 114, 138, 144 933 Donaghe Street, Staunton, Virginia Valerie Anne Cammack 7, 114 145 Bingham Avenue, Runison, New Jersey Meredith Clare Carter 114, 137 Box 293, Hahfax, Virginia Anita Olive Chandler 114, 120, 144, 150 Box 172, West Point, Mississippi Virginia Stuart Chapman ' 114 1113 North Franklin Street, Wilmington 6, Delaware Eleanor Lee Chew 114 3806 Noble Avenue, Richmond 22, Virginia Ehzabeth King Cluxton (Betsy) 114 955 North Lake Road, Lake Forest, Illinois Grace Redwood Cooke 114 c o Rear Admiral W. A. Sutherland, Jr., National War College, Quarters 6, Fort McNair, Washington 25, D. C. Diane Tilson Cooper 57, 114 21 Queen Street, Charleston, South Carolina Jane Anthony Craddock 114, 137 2205 Beverly Heights, Altavista, Virginia Mary Pickett Craddock 114 Cluster Springs, Virginia Eleanor Bennette Craig (Bunsy) 57, 73, 114, 151 1525 Adger Road, Columbia, South Carohna Joan Elizabeth Critchley 152 2808 Northesast 23rd Street, Fort Lauderdale, Florida Nan Parrish Davis 114 1505 Delaware Avenue, Apt. 2-A, Wilmington 6, Delaware Ehzabeth Maude Dismer (Betsy) 60, 114 6220 30th Street, Northwest, Washington 15, D. C. Jane Mitchell Doughtie 11,56,114 24 South Rose Road, Memphis 17, Tennessee Pauhne Robinson Dove (Polly) 114, 137, 179 403 Victoria Avenue, Monroe, North Carolina June Major Early 114 22 Glen Hollow, West Hartford, Connecticut Katherine Saunders Early (Kay) 5, 114 22 Glen Hollow, West Hartford, Connecticut Eleanore Jean Eckel 57,114 701 South Boundary Avenue, Southeast, Aiken, South Carolina Carol Anne Emory 6, 116, 119 3815 Hawthorne Avenue, Richmond 22, Virginia Gary Louise Flake 58, 116, 120 4608 Hanover Avenue, Richmond 26, Virginia Charlotte Hoff Folk 45, 58, 142, 147 2809 22nd Avenue, South, Nashville 12, Tennessee Hannah Dale Gatchell 116 30 Normandy Circle, Memphis 11, Tennessee Juliet Meriwether Gevedon (Julie) 57, 116, 142 P.O. Box 637, Beaumont, California Carol Hutchinson Gibson 115, 117, 146 164 Noe Avenue, Chatham, New Jersey Anne Fuller Gillespie 116, 120 College Drive, Bluefield, Virginia Mary McGavock Gillespie 116, 179 910 Calhoun Street, Anderson, South Carolina Frances Campbell GiUiani 116, 120, 138, 150 Rt. 1, Box 417, Hopewell, Virginia Catherine Ruth Griffin 426 Oak Avenue, Carrolton, Georgia Margaret Anne Gunter 60, 116 3724 Trenholm Road, Columbia, South Carolina Janet Ellen Haddrell 8,116 223 Essex Street, Beverly, Massachusetts Bessye Adelia Haigler (Delia) 116 4451 Atlanta Highway, Montgomery 9, Alabama Josephine Linda Hill (JoLinda) 116, 117 P.O. Box 604, DeLand, Florida Mary Suzan Hodges 1814 Stadium Road, Charlottesville, Virginia Catherine Annette Hofgren 116, 140 21 Royal Avenue, Jamestown, New York Margaret Elizabeth Hogenauer (Margie) 116, 143, 147 Westtown School, Westtown, Pennsylvania Sue Massey Hook 116, 144, 153 223 N. Grant Avenue, Manassas, Virginia Suzanne Hunter 117 306 Ridgeway Drive, Alexander City, Alabama Edith Ann Huntsberry (Deedee) 57, 117, 142, 144 508 Courtfield Avenue, Winchester, Virginia Helen Young Hutcheson 12, 53 Boydton, Virginia Corneha Anne Jackson 45,112,117 25 Maplehurst Avenue, Harrisonburg, Virginia Margaret Ann Jackson 117, 145 105 N. Goforth Street, Kings Mountain, North Carolina Nancy Cornelia Jackson 117 1310 Monterey Avenue, Norfolk 8, Virginia Adele Jeffords 117, 149 3401 Valley Road, Columbia, Soutli Carohna Kathryn Leigh Johnson (Kak) 117 1915 Virginia Road, Winston-Salem, North Carolina Janice Lee Jones 117 Qtrs. 13, Ft. Holabird, Baltimore 19, Maryland Elizabeth Farnsworth Kenna (Ibbie) 3742 Popular Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee Scotia Anne Kenney 54, 117, 136, 144, 163 4 Harriet Court, Sea Cliff, New York Harriet Anna Kohl 16, 153, 181 11 Osborne Avenue, Catonsville 28, Maryland Bonnie Elizabeth Lamb 117 150 Elk Mt. Scenic Highway, Asheville, North Carolina Virginia Campbell Lieblich (Gidge) 117 2102 Gaddy Court, Holmes Run Acres, Falls Church, Virginia 168 Caskie Paptr makes great after-dinner stationery. Spring comes to New York Dress Shop in madras surrev. Magazines to medicine, Hogshead ' s has tlicm all 169 Class of 1965 Elizabetli Harlan Light 60, 117 4 University Place, Lexington, Virginia Victoria Lindgren (Vicky) 57, 117 609 Meade Terrace, Shillington, Reading, Pennsylvania Julie Ann Lohsen 8,117,136 4941 West Hills Road, Baltimore 29, Maryland Marjorie Ellen Loving 73,118,120 Bacova, Virginia Jean Elizabeth Lynn 118 701 Sunset Avenue, Petersburg, Virginia Gail Rae McAlpin 118 8314 W. Weyburn Road, Richmond, Virginia Charlotte Ann McCaa 9, 57, 118 Box 336, St. Paul, Virginia Jean Marion McCauley 118 198 Maple Street, Kearney, New Jersey Kathleen Ann McConahay 65, 118 76 Elm Street, Fort Devens, Massachusetts Gail McMichael 521 Murphy Street Madison, North Carolina Mary Katharine McMillan 1333 Webster Street, New Orleans 18, Louisiana Margaret Malone (Peggy) 54, 112, 118, 139 165 S. Rose Road, Memphis Tennessee Elizabeth Jane Maloney (Betty Jane) 57, 118 2325 Pennsylvania Avenue, Wilmington 5, Delaware Katherine Woods Marks (Katie) 118 407-B Mason Farm Road, Chapel Hill, North Carohna Katherine Scott Marshall 118 505 Redd Street, Reidsville, North Carolina Emma Healy Martin (Emy) 53, 118, 150 1420 Park Avenue, Baltimore 17, Maryland Lucy Lee Massie 908 McCormick Avenue, Clifton Forge, Virginia Ehzabeth Ray Matthews (Betty Ray) 45, 115, 147, 169 1224 Windsor Lane, Staunton, Virginia Ann Fonvielle Mebane 118 216 S. Church Street, Rocky Mount, North Carolina Jean Elizabeth Melvin 10, 118, 152 3811 Abingdon Road, Charlotte 7, North Carolina Frances Louise Mesick (Skippy) 118 1122 Michigan Avenue, Evanston, Illinois Margaret Webster Michael (Margot) 16, 141, 153, 181 2 Murray Hill Circle, Baltimore 12, Maryland Dale Louise Midgette 118, 150, 153 1017 N. W. 11 Avenue, Gainesville, Florida Jane Katherine Miller (Janie) 60, 118 435 Mammoth Oaks Drive, Charlotte 7, North Carohna Grace Elizabeth Moore (Betty) 118 601 Baldwin Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia Mary Jane Morris 119,180 Rt. 1, Box 114, Wilmington, North Carolina Faith Susan Neuschel 119 37 Willow Lawn, Buffalo 14, New York Mary Gathright Newell 112, 119 1209 Confederate Avenue, Richmond 27, Virginia Betsy Taylor Nottingham 119 9501 Sherwood Place, Norfolk, Virginia Marsha Lee Nye 55,119,152 822 Temple Street, Hinton, West Virginia Randi Christine Nyman 119, 150, 153 2365 Park Place, Fort Worth 10, Texas Sandra Jean Pace 119 3610 Edgewood Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Ellen Alexandria Pagenstecher 55, 119 620 McColl Circle, McAllen, Texas Juditli Commander Payne (Judy) 47, 119, 147, 182 1331 Brandon Avenue, Norfolk 7, Virginia Mary Dee Peach 119 1302 Park Lane, Gastonia, North Carolina Julia Kathleen Price 57, 119 531 Ott Street, Harrisonburg, Virginia Julene Reese 16, 119, 141, 149, 181 3001 Pawnee Avenue, Birmingham 5, Alabama Susan Richards 57, 121 406 W. Clairborne, Greenwood, Mississippi Meredith Robertson 120, 121 Rt 1, Chester, Virginia Sara Dedman Rouse 121, 147, 153 217 Woolridge Lane, Versailles, Kentucky Judy Ann Roy 121 426 Mississippi Street, Forrest City, Arkansas Carla Winfrey Russell 120, 121 1221 Wood-Lynne Boulevard, Linwood, New Jersey Mary Susan Scheel 58, 121, 142, 144 7480 Supply Group, Air Force Europe Exchange, APO 633, New York, New York Drusilla Schuster 2448 Lincolnwood Drive, Evanston, Illinois Constance Anne Shipe (Connie) 10, 121 1220 Mecklenberg Road, Ithaca, New York Frances Caffey Simmons (Fran) 121 P.O. Box 658, Clarksdale, Mississippi Anne Hilliard Smith (Hilhe) 121 615 Mansion Drive Hopewell. Virginia Carolyn Tieche Smith 121, 137 2105 Harper Road, Beckley, West Virginia Jane Annette Smith 179 2212 Rivermont Avenue, Lynchburg, Virginia Hazel Sa.xby SouUihall 121, 179 205 Boston Avenue, Lynchburg, Virginia Susan Lewis Spickard 121, 179 1830 W. Main Street, Salem, Virginia Paula Wynne Stephens 121 2113 Spanish Trail, Fort Worth 7, Texas Carol Sutton Stewart 54, 121, 136 136 Dickson Avenue, Pittsburgh 2, Pennsylvania Gloria Joan Stoveken 121, 163 29 Eaton Mews North, London S.W.I, England Margaret Dandridge Terrell (Dee) 121 5082 Lowell Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. Nancy Ellen Terwilhger 6,118,121 20 S. Pleasant Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey Minerva Dudley Thompson (Missy) 116 136 W. Main Street, Mount Sterling, Kentucky Susan Custis Thompson 8, 52, 73, 112, 121 23 Willway Avenue, Richmond 26, Virginia Sallie Lucretia Thornton 121 427 Mclver Street, Greenville, South Carolina Roxanne Louise Tobin (Roxie) 16, 55, 120, 121, 181 14 West Fourth Street, New Castle, Delaware Beverly Marie Tumlinson 47, 121 Barton Ferry Road, West Point, Mississippi Charlotte Louise Tyson 60, 121, 142 406 Kershaw Place, S.E., Aiken, South Carolina Mary Peyton Waesche 153, 161 3221 45th Street, N.W., Washington 16, D.C. Ehzabeth Myers Walker (Betsy) 121, 138, 149, 151 4900 Hillside Road, Columbia, South Carolina Helen Whitcomb Whitehead 121 Route 1, Box 74, Bayside, Virginia Frances Conway Whitescarver (Frankie) 112, 138, 146, 147 302 Tunbridge Road, Baltimore 12, Maryland Mary Harrison Whittle 73 933 Langley Road, Norfolk, Virginia Anna Marshall Wilkerson 121 528 Elm Street, Troy, Alabama Nancy Floyd Williams 8903 Sierra Road, Richmond 29, Virginia Julie Malone Willman 60, 121, 139 Quarters NB 3, U.S. Naval Station, Newport, Rhode Island Carolyn Rhodes Wilson 118, 120, 121, 147, 169 2701 Abercorn Street, Savannah, Georgia Sara Lou Zachry 121 609 Avenue E, West Point Georgia 170 Colonna Studios, Inc., 1963 class portraits 171 Class of 1966 Virginia Ann Alexander 77, 78, 124, 138, 147, 157 426 Park Club Lane, Williamsville 21, New York Evelyn Bishop Angevine (Lynn) 124 98 Bank ' s Place Southport, Connecticut Gail Marie Apperson 57, 124, 179 4216 Wayside Avenue, Fort Worth, Texas Louise Peple Armstrong (Peppy) 17, 124, 128, 147, 173 1415 Park Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Jean Reid Bailey (Jan) 124 1306 Vanceright Circle, Winchester, Virginia Dorothy Ann Banker (Dannie) 533 Randolph Road, Plainfield, New Jersey Julia Saunders Barbee (Judy) 124 1432 Lorraine Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Julia Emily Bediea 124 Box 68, Lancaster, South Carolina Patricia Wreath Bilbo 124 813 Camp Avenue, Gulfport, Mississippi Marjorie Foster Bistline (Peggy) 74, 124 4301 Converse Drive, Columbia, Soutli Carolina Mary Ann Bjorklund 124 1846 Westover Avenue, Petersburg, Virginia Juhe Harper Blanchard 124, 146, 151 3017 Fox Spring Road, Augusta, Georgia Ellen McDonald Burke Bowers 124 6 Wiley Court, Salem, Virginia Elizabeth Lawrence Boyd (Bette) 124 302 Morrison Road, McMinnville, Tennesse Heidi Brandt 53, 124, 125, 131 38 Fairway, Youngstown, Ohio Ludmila Bratina 57, 124 Route 1, Box 28, Kearneysville, West Virginia Nancy Simmons Brockenbrough (Sims) 124, 149, 159, 161 3412 Noble Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Martha Susan Brugh 57, 124 5706 W. Franklin Street, Richmond, Virginia Virginia Lynne Bunch 124 5 Aldrich Way, Wilmington 6, Delaware Mary Frances Chenault 124 822 Starhng Avenue, Martinsville, Virginia Mary Campbell Coggins 124 Route 2, Inman, South Carolina Marygena Collier 124 Quarters 615-B, Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama Patricia Ruth Collins 124 2306 Greenlee Drive, Austin 3, Texas Martha Rogers Coulbourn (Rogie) 124 406 Katherine Street, Suffolk, Virginia Louise Pretlow Coward 123, 124, 127 304 Pine Forest Drive, Greenville, South Carolina Karen Ann Cowsert 57, 124 16 N. Washington Street, Winchester. Virginia Ernestine Craig 124, 143 1620 Statesville Road, Salisbury, North Carolina Gary Cravens 124, 149 20 Ashcom Drive, Houston, Texas Mary Francelia Crittenden 124 865 22nd Street, Beaumont, Texas Margaret Anne Crowgev 124 P.O. Box 568, Taylorsville, North Carolina Jeanne Margaret Crusemann 122, 124 2704 Moonlight Bend, Austin, Texas Evelyn Cuellar 125 3565 Colgate, Dallas 25, Texas Elisabeth Cunningham (Betsy) 125 2544 Hampton Avenue, Charlotte 7, North Carolina Ann Louise Dahl 125, 149 1340 Granville Street, Burlington, North Carolina Ehzabeth Hay Davenport (Tudie) 151 Mount Carmel Road, Parkton, Maryland Frances Elizabeth Davis 125 1412 Oak Hill Avenue, Hagerstown, Maryland Joan Seaton Davis 763 Aumond Road, Augusta, Georgia Carol Delbridge 696 University Place, Grosse Pointe 30, Michigan Janet Noel Devonal d 2430 Ridge Road Drive, Alexandria, Virginia Betty Ann Drury 4308 Esteswood Drive, Nashville 12, Tennessee Marguerite Clara Duane Bram ' s Point, Milton Head, South Carolina Susan Armstrong Dunn 1030 Elm Street, Saint Albans, West Virginia Ameha Louise Earl Cobham Park, Cobham, Virginia Barbara Lee Edwards 909 Greenleigh Road, Baltimore 12, Maryland Paula Gay Edwards 2318 Briarwood, San Antonio, Texas Charlotte Ann Eidschun Pott Spring Farm, Timonium, Maryland Virginia Evans (Ginny) Walnut Lane, Elkton, Maryland Sarah Barker Fisher (Sally) Chattolanee Hill, Owings Mills, Maryland Martha Moore Flowers 1637 O.xford Road, Charlottesville, Virginia Janne Adair Foster 101 Rebel Ridge Drive, Lexington, Virginia Anne Dove Eraser 306 Hickory Street, Clinton, South Carolina Virginia Fitzhugh Freeman (Gigi) 1913 Datura Street, Sarasota, Florida Betsey Ellen Gallagher 321 Pine Street, Clifton Forge, Virginia Leila Boylston Gibbes 1501 Deans Lane, Columbia, South Carolina Marijane Gish 608 Patterson Avenue, San Antonio 9, Texas Judith Michael Gisriel 1809 Hamilton Drive, Fairfax, Virginia Cynthia Louise Goeltz 4506 Harling Lane, Bethesda 14, Maryland Virginia Worth Gonder (Gin) 1220 Brandon Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia Carey Louise Goodwin 405 Faquier Street, Fredericksburg, Virginia loan Kav Goolsby 1018 Boylan Drive, Raleigh, North Carolina Marian Kennington Gordin 1040 Carlisle Street, Jackson, Mississippi Ellen Stuart Gordon 1008 Forest Avenue, Richmond 29, Virginia Marie Davis Gossman (Cissy) 607 Sunnyside Drive, Louisville 6, Kentucky Lila Jane Hanbury 312 Third Avenue, Farmville, Virginia Florence Jean Harlan (Jeannie) 4007 Betsy Lane, Houston, Texas Rosemary Montgomery Harris Circle H Ranch, Winona, Mississippi Lou Ann Hartgraves P.O. Box 957, Clarksdale, Mississippi Eugenia Hedden Partridge Road, Spartanburg, South Carohna Joan Marie Hegner 909 S.W. 27th Terrace, Boynton Beach, Florida Patricia Carol Hintze 190 Branch Avenue, Red Bank, New Jersey Martha Davis Holland 1105 Marshall Street, South Boston, Virginia Margaret Penelope Huff (Penny) 301 Clark Drive, Rome, Georgia 122, 5, 125, 125 125, 130 125 125 125, 179 125, 161 133, 173 125, 151 126 126, 131 126 57, 126 126 126 126 126 126 147, 163 126 126, 130 126 57, 126 126, 151 126, 147 126, 128 57, 74, 126, 183 57,127, 151 127 149, 150 126, 122, 127,; 57, 127 172 Friday is White Way Laundry day at McClung. Patrons AST HARDWARE BRICK HOUSE TRIANGLE RESTAURANT HOMESTEAD RESTAURANT MAX MIX BE AUTY SHOP REIDS STORES ROCKET ROOM SNYDER ' S JEWEL BOX STANLEY-WARNER ' S DIXIE THEATRE STAUNTON INSURANCE AGENCY WILLIAM P. SWARTZ, JR and CO.. INC. WORTHINGTON HARDWARE CO., INC. 173 Class of 1966 14, 74, 122, 127 Dorothea Jane Humphrey 2201 Windsor Place, Fort Worth 10, Texas Anne Doreen Hutton 16 Woodberry Avenue, New Hartford, New York- Marie Claire Jackson Old Kennett Road, Kennett Square, Pennsylvania Beryl-Ann Dorothy Johnson Route 2, Oakland, Maine Esther Badger Johnson 104 Longmeadovv Road, Greenville, North Carolina Loulie Marcia Johnston 2025 Carter Road, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia Elizabeth Page Jones 1124 Woodland Road, Petersburg, Virginia Gene Carolyn Karney (Genca) Box 473, Hearne, Texas Beryl Dianne Kearney Pleasantview Plantation, Money Mississippi Sandra June Krapf Box 109, Fort Amador, Canal Zone Mary Susan Kummer 2721 Carolina Avenue S.W., Roanoke, Virginia Lucy Lanier 3302 Wilmington Road, Montgomery, Alabama Anne Hunter Larus 74, 122, 123, 127, 146 8914 Brieryle Road, Richmond 29, Virginia Avril Elizabeth Laughlin 115 Tanglewood Drive, Frankfort, Kentucky Bonnie Sue Leonard 2115 Berkeley Avenue, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia Mary Joyce Lewis 3717 A Westridge Avenue, Fort Worth, Texas Analeak Scott Liipfert (Scottie) 380 Buckingham Road, Winston-Salem, North Carolina Nancy Moses Lindsey 5206 Sherwood Road, Little Rock, Arkansas Alice Walker Lippitt 519 E. 45th Street, Savannah, Georgia Roberta Ann Long Walnut Drive, Route 2, Chester, Virginia Susan Morris Lyles Garden Street, Winnsboro, South Carolina Gwendolyn Byllesby MacCorkle (Lyn) 755 Spring Road, Charleston, West Virginia Ouida Frances McCIendon 807 Geneva Street, Opelika, Alabama Millicent Jean McKeithen (Missy) 614 West Bend Boulevard, Winston-Salem. North Carolina June Price McLaughlin 53, 126, 129, 159, 161 305 North Jefferson Street, Lewisburg, West Virginia Jane Vaughan McMurdo 129 1901 Brook Drive , Camden, South Carolina Gwynn Ann McNaught 129 4703 Park Avenue, Richmond, Virginia Gay McWilliams 129 309 High Street, Tuscumbia, Alabama Sally Harrison Marks 57, 129 1516 Westwood Avenue, Richmond 27, Virginia Lucy Dixwell Mathews 129, 147, 173 15 Roaring Brook Road, Easton, Connecticut Nancye Dale Marshall 129 118 Arrowhead Road, Louisville, Kentucky Laura O ' Neal Mauldin (Laurie) 129 606 Oak-wood Lane, Rock Hill, South Carolina Florence Danforth Merritt (Tikker) 129 3490 Poinciana Avenue, Coconut Grove, Miami, Florida Lavinia Griffin Mikell 57, 129 24 Azalea Road, Charleston, South Carolina Margaret Gaye Mitchell (Peggy) 129 5100 Monument Avenue, Apt. 508, Richmond, Virginia Catherine Anne Moore (Cathy) 5, 129 Steeles Tavern, Virginia 43, 127, 157 57, 127, 145 127 127 127, 147 60, 127 127 2, 43, 127, 149 127 127 127 57, 127 5,129 129 129, 133 129, 179 129 56, 147 129 129 Elizabeth Dustin Moore (Liz) 57, 129, 149, 161, 167 5.500 Norwood Road, Shawnee Mission, Kansas Judith Walden Moore (Judie) 60, 129 1409 Confederate Avenue, Richmond 27, Virginia Ann Marie Morgan 129 4130 Blossom Street, Columbia, South Carolina Barbara Anne Morgan 167 303 36th Street, Virginia Beach, Virginia Nancy Jo Morris 129, 139 219 East Dixon Avenue, Davton, Ohio Susan Parry Mulford ' 129 347 East Main Street, Moorestown, New Jersey Suzanne Norfleet 129 3160 Spottswood Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee Glenda Lee Norris 129, 140 76 Addison Drive, Short Hills, New Jersey Jean Erb Owen 129 1740 Harbert Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee Elaine Kirkpatrick Page 129 112 Winter Street, Rus.sellville, Kentucky Anne Meredith Patrick 129 2215 Chesapeake Avenue, Hampton, Virginia Glenda Ellen Pearson 129 618 Horsepen Road, Richmond 29, Virginia Roberta Winton Penn (Robbie) 129 1202 Crescent Drive, Reidsville, North Carolina Anne Penney Phifer 129, 165, 167, 173, 179 595 Garden Drive, Louisville 6, Kentucky Patricia Ann Phillips 129 3134 Wilmington Road, Montgomery, Alabama ' Jean Ray Poland 129, 132, 133, 147, 179 8107 Shelbyville Road, Louisville 7, Kentucky Sammy Ann Primm 57, 129, 145 17 Robinhood, Little Rock, Arkansas Kay Holmes Puckette 129, 157 3246 Downing Drive, Lynchburg, Virginia Mary Walker Rainer 130 125 Silverwood, Mobile, Alabama Susan Carol Ramsey 130 133 Tahoma Road, Lexington, Kentucky Martha Jane Ratchford 130 1438 Lilac Road, Ciiarlotte 9, North Carolina Susanne Goodwyn Rayburn 130, 179 Route 9, Box 160, Charlotte, North Carolina Carol Anice Rednour 130 20 Spook Rock Road, Suffern, New York Jo Anne Rice 126, 130 3 Academy Hill, Northport, Alabama Rosemary Richmond 130 Pinecrest Road, Riverside, Connecticut Barbara-Allen Robinson (Barbie) 17, 130, 147, 161 1011 Malvern Avenue, Baltimore 4, Maryland Myriam Sue Robinson (Mimi) 127, 130 550 East Parkway S., Memphis 4, Tennessee Helen Arlene Romweber 130 46 North Main Street, Cranburv, New Jersey Janet Hope Rothert 52, 127, 130 656 Graham Street, Camden, Arkansas Kathleen Pearl Sapp 130 125 North Popular Street, Winston-Salem, North CaroHna Harriet Franklin Schultz 130 Rt. 1, Box 64, Crozet, Virginia Kathryn Lynn Schwarzenberg 57, 130 7007 Sherwood Drive, Kno.xville, Tennesse Sandra Margaret Shaw 130 223 East 2nd, Tyler, Texas Katharine Murray Sinclaire (Kitsy) 11, 130 47 Great Oak Drive, Short Hills, New Jersey Elizabeth Lee Slawter 130 621 Yorkshire Road, Winston-Salem, North Carolina Lynn Taylor Smith 130, 167 3517 Heathwood Road, Columbia, South Carolina 174 Congratulations and Best Wishes To The MARY BALDWIN Class of 1963 Staunton Creamery Distributors of Monticello Products 175 Class of 1966 Anne Ridgely Spilman 131 Garrison Forest Road, Ovvings Mills, Maryland Priscilla Rees Stanley (Candy) 131, 146 1921 Daniel Drive, Corinth, Mississippi Claire Blum Stern 131 2401 Jefferson Avenue, New Orleans 15, Louisianna Carol Ann Storm (Sandy) 131 4404 Lincoln Road, Louisville 20, Kentucky Lamira Parker Sullivan 131 317 East Paris Road, Greenville, South Carolina Lynn ' alerie Suojanen 128, 131 10 Hunt Terrace, Greenwich, Connecticut Susan Carol Swartz 131 4 Sherwood Road, Wardour, Annapolis, Maryland Margaret Ashlin Swetnam 131 Rt. 1, Box 99. Herndon, Virginia Mary Elizabeth Swope (Betty) 131, 138, 147 Rt. 2, Bo.x 78, Herndon, Virginia Virginia Cassels Timbes (Ginger) 131 236 Cedar Street, St. Simons Island, Georgia Annette Louise Tixier 131 2319 Bolsover Road, Houston 4, Texas Mary AHce ToUey (Alice) 126, 131 220 James Ri er Drive, Newport News, Virginia Victoria Littleton Tucker (Vicky) 496 Hawthorne Drive, Danville, Virginia Claudia Jane Turner 131 2435 Del Monte Drive, Houston 19, Te.xas JoEUen Turner 131 4401 Holly Hill Road, University Park, Hayattsville, Maryland Suzanne Vance 131 4669 Crossover Lane, Memphis, Tennessee Linda Lea Vander May 131, 147 County Road, Eastham, Massachusetts Virginia Ann Vaughan (Ginny) 131 8016 Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Virginia Joan Leslie Velten 131 1504 Seaboard, Midland, Texas Davyne Elaine Verstandig (Dave) 54, 132 19 Filbert Street, Hamden 17, Connecticut Jane Ellen Via 132, 173 811 Sylvania Avenue, Fredericksburg, Virginia Ann Hamilton Wade 132 Rosedale, Virginia Lucy Linda Waits (Cinda) 132 131 South Battery, Charleston, South Carohna Carol Lee Walters 132 5033 Upton Street, N.W., Washington 16, D.C. Ann Latane Ware (Latane) 132, 147 1494 Harbert Avenue, Memphis 4, Tennessee Patricia Delma Wasmansdorff (Patti) 132 6821 Stone Mill Road, Kno.xville, Tennessee Janet Lynn Weaver 132 510 Jackson Avenue, Lexington, Virginia Margaret Thompson Webster (Meg) 132 Rt. 4, Ridgemont Drive, Staunton, Virginia Carolyn Jeanette Weekley (Stuffy) 132 Bena, Virginia Nina Moir West 132 Whittle Road. Martinsville, Virginia Katherine Bradley West 132 106 Eakin Street, Blacksburg, Virginia Emma Susan West (Susan) 132 Cranburv Neck Road, Cranbury, New Jersey Carol Jean Whethan 132 64 Lexington Avenue, Needham 94, Massachusetts Donna White 132 730 E. Main Street, West Point, Mississippi Janet Anne White 133 c o Col. Jack C. White, USAF Mission c o U.S. Embassy, San Salvador, El Salvador, C.A. Paula Lou White 57, 133 902 N. Swinton Avenue, Delray Beach, Florida Martha Louise Wiese (Marty) 133 710 Roslyn Road, Winston-Salem, North Carolina Janet Sue Wiethoff 128, 133, 147 615 W. Sunset Drive, Sevmour, Indiana Leslie Hastings Wilson ' 45, 57, 65, 67, 133, 159, 161 The Dell. Port Republic, Virginia Penolope Anne Wilson (Penny) 10, 128, 133, 165 4814 Bromley Lane, Richmond. Virginia Roberta Evelyn Wilson (Robin) 133 4316 Lorraine, Dallas 5. Texas Nancy Harrison Wood 133 7617 Gleneagles Road, Norfolk, Virginia Nancy Browning Yates 57, 133 221 23rd Street, Dunbar, West Virginia Ann Ramsey Yingling 133, 143 2524 Gunston Hall Drive. Bridgeville, Pennsylvania Sandra Gillette Zeese ' 128, 133, 147 27 Summit Street, Huntington, New York Jane Marshall Zinn 116, 133 504 S. Deer Creek Drive, Leland, Mississippi Index Academic Year in Madrid Baptist Student Union Bluestocking Board of Coordination Board of Publications Campus Comments Canterbury Club Chez Nous Christian Association Choir Clans Club Committee Coffee House Day Student Officers Dolphins Eta Betas Executive Committee Fine Arts Club Four or More 402 Workshop Freshman Class Officers Glee Club Honor Society House Presidents Judiciary Board Junior Class Officers Laurel Society 68-69 Marshals 145 May Court 55-57 May Queen 45 Miscellany 61 Modern Dance Group 58-60 Newman Club 144 Operation Playmate 13, 55, 153, 184 Personalities and Events 142-143 Public Affairs Forum 140 Recreation Association 149 Religious Emphasis Week 139 Riding Club 76-77 Russel Scholar 45 Senior Class Officers 150 Social Committee 152 Sophomore Class Officers 44 Spanish Club 136 Student Board 153 Student Government Association 136 Student Guides 122 Sullivan Award 141 Ushers 48 Wesley Fellowship 46 Westminster Fellowship 47 Who ' s Who 105 Young Democrats 49 52 70-75 70 54 150 144 143 64-67 137 146-148 143 151 51 81 139 112 138 45 44-47 138 48 53 144 145 50 137 176 The year has passed we have saved little of it- We have picked clean the bones of night and throivn away our notes— The rest is in the mirror. 179 We are a 7nosalc of yesterdays and tomorrows of kid gloves and bright drea? is at dusk ajid books and blue denim overalls— We are the sleeping nightingales the silken girls ivith sherbert celestial cinders and lateen shooting stars— We are the top of the ferris wheel, and where do we get off, 7 iister? 180 181 We are the search for knom-ledge ive quest for the Holy Grail and ive are onr own educators— We are the teeth behind the toothpaste the hand playing the cards the vjind controlling the words— We are Mary Baldwin. 183 The Last Word Amazing, isn ' t it? The 1963 Bluestocking is finished and nobody flunked out. And in the process the staff learned about organizing, meeting deadlines, focusing cameras on large and small groups of people, and rationalizing low grades. It has been an education. These 184 pages show the composite effort of many people; it would be impossible to recognize them all, so we single out a few: Mrs. Dolores Lescure, who pulled us through many depressioiiL- and flunkings-out; Jeane Murdoch, Helena Richard and Kathy Green, who did anything that needed to be done, at any time; Libby Thompson and her staff, who researched and wrote the faculty section; Emily Wirsing, who de- signed each page of class pictures and made innumer- able cover sketches, until the editor was satisfied; Molly Holt, who typed the index singlehandedly; Dr. Ben Smith, who fixed our comma errors and defended us against all comers; Mrs. Alexander Patch, who com- forted and encouraged us when everyone else was in a bad mood; Ted Riddle and Hubert Gentry, who came to take pictures whenever we called; all the last- minute helpers, who helped; and Alexander Graham Bell, who invented the telephone. At the same time, we could have done without: the very few faculty members who upset our picture sched- ule; those ladies who objected to having their double- chins show and who also objected to retaking pictures; staff members who were afraid to do any work, and who messed up what they did; people who held up things like picture schedules and elections; and dead- lines, English courses, and the United States Post Office. It is my editorial hope that future Bluestocking staffs will be able to operate with the freedom and coopera- tion we have had, to maintain a like association with Campus Comments, and to receive as much satisfac- tion and downright fun as we in 1963 have had. Jean Vaughan Wells Editor 184 This book printed by VELVATONE, a special process of lith graphic priming. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffalo, N. No other printing firm is authorized to use the Velvatone methO ' LSBHABY OF MARY BALDWIN COLLEGl col ' ! Oi Oi J)| -4 = 001
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