Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA)

 - Class of 1972

Page 1 of 264

 

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collectionPage 7, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collectionPage 11, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collectionPage 15, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collectionPage 9, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collectionPage 13, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collectionPage 17, 1972 Edition, Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 264 of the 1972 volume:

To see the earth as it truly is, small and blue and beautiful in that eternal silence where it floats, is to see ourselves as riders on the earth together, brothers on that bright loveliness in the eternal cold — brothers who know now they are truly brothers. Archibald MacLeish For everything created In the bounds of earth and sky Has such longing to be mated It must couple or must die. George Melville I amM £Pee. C. ff r Lt 3 4 t . A 3 os CSf n This, my body and spirit, is the end of the quest. I wished to know the mean- ing of things. I am the meaning. It is my eyes which see, and the sight of my eyes grants beauty to the earth. It is my ears which hear, and the hearing of my ears gives its song to the world. It is my mind which thinks, and the judgement of my mind is the only searchlight that can find the truth. It is my will which chooses, and the choice of my will is the only edict I must respect. I know not if this earth on which I stand is the core of the universe or if it is but a speck of dust lost in eternity. I know not, and I care not. For I know what happiness is possible to me on earth. And my happiness needs no higher aim to vindicate it. My happiness is not the means to any end. It is the end. It is its own goal. It is its own purpose. I am a man. This miracle of me is mine to own and keep, and mine to guard, and mine to use, and mine to kneel before! And now I see the face of Cod, and I raise this god over earth, this god whom men have sought since men came into being, this god who will grant them joy and peace and pride. This god, this one word: I. Ayn Rand We must believe in a Being, a divine will, or in an intelli- gent purpose be- hind the world. And we must live as if the world had sense, not as if the world were mean- ingless. Cold, cyni- cal people are not only unhappy, but are dead to the spiritual values that make life. Only the positive attitude in acts of kindness and peace will give the joyous life. Charles Brown Travelling through the dark I found a deer dead on the edge of the Wilson River road. It is usually best to roll them into the canyon: that road is narrow; to swerve might make more dead. By glow of the tail-light I stumbled back of the car and stood by the heap, a doe, a recent killing; she had stiffened already, almost cold. I dragged her off; she was large in the belly. My fingers touching her side brought me the reason — her side was warm; her fawn lay there waiting, alive, still, never to be born. Beside that mountain road I hesitated. The car aimed ahead its lowered parking lights; under the hood purred the steady engine. I stood in the glare of the warm exhaust turning red; around our group I could hear the wilderness listen. I thought hard for us all — my only swerving — then pushed her over the edge into the river. William Stafford J Three monkeys sat in a coconut tree Discussing things as they're said to be. Said one to the others, “Now listen, you two, There's a certain rumor that can't be true. That Man descended from our noble race. That very idea is a disgrace. No monkey ever deserted his wife, Starved her babies or ruined her life. And you've never known a mother monk To leave her babies with others to bunk. Or pass them on from one to another 'Til they scarcely know who is their mother; And another thing you'll never see — A monk build a fence around a coconut tree And let the coconuts go to waste. Forbidding all other monks to taste. If I'd put a fence around a coconut tree Starvation would force you to steal from me. Here's another thing a monk won't do, Co out at night and get on a stew, And use a gun or club or knife To take some other monkey's life. Yes, Man descended, the ornery cuss — But, brother, he didn't descend from us. This world of man, race against race, this world of men and women, of strife and greed, of hate and lust, of unjustice and sordidness, this materialism of the Great War and its horrible aftermath, this rush and fever and ferocity of the modern day with its jazz and license and drink and blindness — with its paganism, these were not here in the grand shadow of Naza. No sharp wolfish faces of men limned against the silence! No beautiful painted faces of women! No picture of the Indian tribes, driven from the green pastures and running water of their fore- fathers, herded into the waste places of the earth! The white man had not yet made Naza an object of his destructiveness. Nothing of the diseased in mind and body, the distorted images of mankind, the incomprehensible stupidity, the stony indiffer- ence to nature and beauty and ideals and good— nothing of these were there in the moon-blanched canyon. 12 Zane Grey COUNTERPOINT I WANT YOU IOW THIS’N HERE IS THE BALD EAGLE, OUR NATIONAL BIRD AND SYMBOL TO KILL EVERY ONE OF THE VARMINT5 YOU SEE! The World and Mercer . . . Francis Abboit Rod artd Diirme Hrlton 74 Rick MdW'v 7J Collcr 75L !' « fritchird 74 We Have Made A World For Each Of Us But We Need A World For All Of Us! o rrr Ad? Robert Alday, It jnrfe Allen SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY SCHOOL OF MERCER UNIVERSITY! Beverly Taylor 74 Richard Men 741 lames Richardson 72 Susan Tcaslcy 71 Ruth Nelson 74 John Harris 7J Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each one of you be alone. Give your hearts, but not into each other's keepings- For only the hand of life can contain your hearts. And stand together yet nor too near together For the pillars of the temple stand apart. And the oak tree and the cypress grow not in each other's shadow, Ci bran Donald Amend Mjrlin Amici Marcy Hobbi 72 Rufus Harris Arim Sharon Smith 75 This one was put in a jacket. This one was sent home, This one was given bread and meal Bui wouldn't eat none. And this one cried No No No No All day long. Donald Justice Rostwick Anderson My soul is oftentimes a battlefield upon which my reason and my judgement wage war against my passion and my appetite. Reawn, ruling alone, is a force confining; and passion unattended is a flame lhat burns to its own destruction. Gibran William Annette Brenda Smith HpO Second Vear Class Officers Netia Asuncion 74P fere Couch 73P Stephen Fnodberg 731 Mary LaPenna 75 George Appfebee Cathy Freeman 72 Doug (ones 73P IMalhanifrl Abrami 74P Kathy Walker 75 Susie Smiihers 71 Hugh Armstrong Who's Who irr American Colleges and Universities Willie Sands 751 This above ail: to thine own self be true. And it must follow, as the night the day. Thou cansl mol then be false to any man, Shakespeare Peggy Bennett 73 Ihomas Ctennon Psy Morris Arnold It is the part of a wise man to feed himself with moderate pleasant food and drink, and to lake pleasure with perfumes, with the beauty of growing plants, dress, music, sports, and theatres, and other places of this kinti which man may use without any hurt to his fellows. Benedict Spinoza Bill Aip CjHjndra Asuwitt Peggy Dubose Pol tarty Clements 75 When you're down and troubled And you need some loving care And nothing, nothing is going right Close your eyes and think of me And soon I will be there To brighten up even your darkest night. Csrolc King Sandy (wafer There are so many voices in the world St. Paul Golden Braid . music is the universal language of mankind Cauldron . Mercer's brew of academics and social activities Soccer . . Greece, Thailand, [ngland, Columbia, Pakistan Greeks friends in the name of the Alpha and Omega LaveyAwl Gwendolyn Rotwriwtn 74 Therman McKcncie 7IP David Beam 74P Margaret Cngiby 7JP WaM er Saccus Cardinal Key Sunion Friedman No one would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century that this world was being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than man's and yel as mortal as his own; thal as men busied them- selves about their various concerns they were scrutinised and studied, per- haps almost as narrowly as a man with a microscope might scrutinise the transient creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of water. With infi- nite complacency men went lo and fro over this globe about their little affairs, serene in their assurance of their empire over matter. It is possible that the infusoria under the microscope do the same, No one gave a thought to the older worlds of space as sources of human danger, or thought of them only to dismiss the idea of life upon them as impossible or improbable. It is curious to recall some of the mental habits of those departed days. At most, terrestrial men fancied there might be other men upon Mars, perhaps inferior to themselves and ready to welcome a mis- sionary enterprise. Yet across the gulf of space, minds thal are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us. And early in the twentieth century came the great disillusionment, H C Wells Slower Thorrus 721 Irene Colette 7JP Jeffrey Wilcher Si idrt Biker .VI. i Baneit Is ii $o small a thing To have enjoyed the sun To have lived light in the spring. To have loved, to have thought, to have done; To have advanced true friends, and beat down baffling foes? 'Matthew Arnold v) Tango by Slawomir Mrozek Tango is lively enough and willy enough to command attention in any circumstances, but apart from ils intrin- sic attractiveness il must also be seen as a parable of modern history, with the Bohemian family reflecting the disorder of life between the wars and Arthur ex- pressing the nostalgia of reaction . Tango belongs to Mrozek's continuing war against power's savage parody of logic. Henry Popkitt Eugenia Eddie Eugene Arthur Eleanor Storm I Ala Peggy Blow lavier Bernal Steve Keith Alan Young Priscilla Corley David Thompson Carol Ison Marcy Hobbs ftatlalion sponsor, Walter Bel! The Negro has a callus growing on his soul and it's getting harder and harder to hurt him there, That's a simple law of nature. Like a callus on a foot in a shoe that's too tight. The foot is nature's, and that shoe was put on by man, That tight shoe will pinch your foot and make you holler and scream, But sooner or later, if you don't take the shoe off, a callus will form on the foot and begm to wear out the shoe. It's the same with the Negro in America today. That shoe — the while man's system — has pinched and rubbed and squeezed his soul until it almost destroyed him. But it didn't. And now a callus has formed on his soul, and unless that system is adjusted to fit him, too, that callus is going to wear out that system. Dick Gregory SjuI Bequier Centennial Banquet Ball and Concert Tomorrow's leaders are today's students . Cod grant that every student of Mercer remember his American heritage Ronnie Thompson Character in institutions, like character in peo- ple, is the product of high principle, dedi- cated and continuous effort, and commitment to a sense of mission. This century is not so long that il forbids the desire of our heart for another such period with even more mutual dependence Dr, Harris George Bergquisi Beth Bel tel Chief Crazy Horse and the British Blues Master John Mayall frjnk ft tbee Crazy Horse, a California-based band Move out to the Country Side was exactly what they seemed to be: I Doubt It a down-home, mess-around One Sided Love entertaining quintet. One Thing I Love The never-existent group is explained by John MayaII — I put bands together for the enjoyment of playing something new which is not necessarily different. It is a situation in which no one is forced to stay and become stagnant in their development of musical modes. In this type of situation any member can leas'e without any questions asked, and there is plenty of room for inventiveness in this Rocking. Foot-Stomping Blues. til Sofomon 74 t David Minccy 731 Eugenia Smith 72 Ronnie felts 74P Donald Thomas 75 tick Bilt Rob Mixon 75 Rosemary Blow Sally Fulther 72 Warm, eager, living life — to be rooted in life — to learn, to desire, to know, to feel, to think, to act. That is what I want. K. Mansfield Sondra BkKhwiti IV V. — . 1 (V e . y Cmger Byrd 7 J Mike Sanders 75' Blue Key V F Bond. Ir i ► The Experimental Freshman Program has now matured from an innovative creation to an established institution — incorpo- rated into the curriculum as a welcome re- lief from more structured disciplines. The subject matter vanes as greatly as the indi- vidual's response to it, With the emphasis upon a more personalized approach to a liberal arts education, the program is often- times a challenge to the entering student whose creativity and desire to experiment have been stifled by twelve years of classroom education. One strong exam- ple of the program's success has been a general broadening of its mam features into a Sophomore Special Studies program and most recently into a program open to all students simply designated Special Stud- ies. ZtegfiM Bondar Peter Nero Deems Riddle 74 P lldridge Turner 75 Pat Kohan 75 Wayne Gullati 72 Deni« Lanier 75 |udy William; ?4P Willram Doll 74L Young heads are giddy, and young hearts are warm, And make mistakes for manhood to reform. Cowper Belly Bollle I Chartes Brewer Bill Gardner Ps p Charles Whileman 75 Betty Stanley 72 Tom Reiman “at flanr firm son Oh, Thai men should pul an enemy in their mouths, to steal away their brains! that we should, with joy, pleasance, revel, and applause, transform ourselves into beasts! Shakespeare Frederick link 751 Rcba Smith 73 Lamar Leddis 75 Carol Whitaker 74 John Randall 75 Cynthia Hall 74 Shirley Trsvillian 74P Karen Murphey 75 Robert O'Brien 7JL Harold Broken Sco t Goins. 74P Glenda Hawkins 75 Mike leaks 7J.P Kenneth McDaniel 75 Thomas Clay 75 Forrest Barren 72 Dcnnii Rainer 72 Adrian Rond Fne lee 8 uton 5-4-2 Plav r Coa s Assists Points David Ponsonby 10 7 17 lohn Ziglar h 3 9 loel Bickersiaff 2 1 3 Brian Carrey 1 2 3 Cedo King 1 0 3 Preecha Meelaphsoo m 2 1 3 Leo Assimacopoulos 1 0 1 Scott Cordy 1 □ 1 Roddy Hardee 1 0 1 Pervaiz Peter 1 0 1 Randy Sims 0 1 1 Brian Carney 12 goals 4 games 30 average Bob Munford 12 goals 8 games 1.5 average Mercer — 28 goals - - 2.6 average Opponents — 24 goals — 2 2 average Sylvia Sawyer ?4 Cinget Byrd How sweet the Summer! And the Autumn shone Like warmth within our hearts as in the sky, Ripening rich harvest that our love had sown. How good that ere the Winter comes, I die! Then, ageless in your heart, I'll come lo rest Serene and proud, as when you loved me best. lfHPtt.1 Gw Hans Zinsser -1 There is one day that is ours. There is one day when all wo Americans who are not self-made go back to the old home to eat salerat us biscuits and marvel how much nearer to the port h the old pump looks than it used to Ibanksgivmg Day. is the one day that is purely American. O Henry tfteftkith Campbell 5am Hcatofl 73 [meat Campbell for (here are moment1; in life, when the heart is so full of emoli on. That if by chance it be shaken, or into its depths like a pebble Drops some careless word, il overflows, and its secret, Spilt on the ground like water, tan never be gathered together. Longfellow Ma garel Ciiiock S. F carter Gilbert Murphy 74L Linda Sippet 75 Kernelh Bryant 74 Wifliam McLeer 73P Fred Bordevcn 72 Margaret McDann?t 71 Alpha Bond Sot How lonelv we are in ihe world! how self’ ish and secret of everybody! . . .Ah, sir, a distinct universe walks about under your ha! and under mine, — all things trt nature are different lo each, — the woman we look at has not the same features, the dish we eat from has not the same taste to one and the other, — you and I are but a pair of infinite isolations, with some fellow-is- lands a little more or less near to us. Thackeray cun Cruwjy t Rain. Together, intent upon their talking, go raindrop and umbrella. Lamar lecturer Louis Rubin The Writer in the South . Tell About the South You Would Have to Be Born There1 Why Do You Hate the South? Alt red Catcmo jamce Chehy Ralph Glati 74 Cli'e furse Chm Cunt Case Bill Keithfift 7S Chrii Baker 7J Trina Andm 75 toe Morn 73 Iml Clttrwwn Allison forfcne 7) Bui such is the irresistible nature of truth, that all it asks, and all it wants, is the liberty of appearing. Thomas Paine Thomjt Ctuthorn lames Scandtyn 7JP I. Eartv73P Connie Collins 74 tin Stowed 74 Jennifer Wrenn 74P Ron and Oro! Middleton U Kappa Epsilon officers. Eric Kmart! 75 . (he mind is restless, turbulent, strong and unyielding . as difficult to subdue as the wind. Bhsgdvsd-Gita lames Harpe 72 Diane Swihart 74 Charles Gafnea 75 Ralph Nailer P I CJej mjn It linvmy lirvn 72 Abdel ClitHwood Hollis Hooks 71 k RjncfdH Sorenson 73L Clrlos Flrck Hu Piu Ctower ancy Cole Frank Connally Sandra Walker 74 Thom Worley 73P Diane Davis 72 James Brown 7SL David Bailey 73 Thomas Cain 73L Denise Gerrow 7JP Eugene Sequin 72 Eliot Youman CH fames Wright Mfl To Hugh, my 10-year old son, in the faith that his will be a better nation, and in the hope that his color will never be a curse or a blessing, For if the Negro revolt succeeds, he will have to take his stand as a man Whatever else the Negro is, he is American. Whatever he is to be- come — integrated, unintegrated, or disintegrated — he will become it in America. Only a minority of Neg- roes have ever succumbed to the temptation to seek greener ideol- ogy. Our lot is irrevocably cast, and whatever future awaits America awaits the Negro, whatever future awaits the Negro, awaits America. Louts Lomax Fuiiy Copper Gail Plurry 75 Michael Johnson 74 |inx Thomas 72 William A(ey 73 Larry Fannin 74P Tony Brown 72 Charles Cormack 75 loscphinc Wills 75 Slevtn Sells 74P frank Costello Bedford Cot pan Qgiyenljerry Phy Cathy Ziglar 75 Edwin O'Quinn 73 Robert Stanton 72 DeJwe Sjdfe 72 Comnc Kitchens ?4P Ansvy Ramsey 75L .the wise man looks into space, and does not regard the small as too little, nor the great as too big, lor he knows that there is no limit to dimensions, Lao-tse WiMim Co wen When all (he world is young, lad. And all (he trees are green; And every goose a swan. lad. And every lass a queen; Then hey for bool and horse, lad. And round the world away; Young blood must have its course, lad, And every dog his day When all the world is old, lad. And all the trees are brown; And all the sport is stale, Jad, And all the wheels run down, God grant you find one face there You loved when all was young! Charles Kingsley fjnsey Dindihon On Saturday, December 11, Mary Weslervelt and her partner, Chocolate Pudding, set out to break the Mercer Dessert Test Record Their goal was lo endure for 31 minutes, the mark set by the team ol Mac Bond and Strawberry Tart only two days before. But, after 16 minutes — 31 seconds, Mary's partner succumbed to the overpower ing force of gravity. H. C Djnfonb Linda Toliver Pbarrrwcy Wives' Club Daniel Dapper Joyce Hancock 73P Cdestc towards 73P Mida Burch 74P UMitia Jefferson 74P Harold McManus Chr Howard Giddens Chr Roben Taylor Chm “Down-home” loudermilk From Tobacco Road lo the medley of songs others made a fortune off of, it was a unique ex- perience. No big string section backup, no back- ground voices, no elaborate set; just |ohr D. Loudermilk The plight of the hoi polloi was expressed in , fa Baker and Indian Reservation. A renovated oldy-goldy medley contained Norman, Waterloo, and SacJ Movies. Singing, playing, speaking of the importance of discerning and preserving the classical aspects of everyday life. Walter Davis Tom Moose 75 Peter Welch 741 Henry Will urns 74P Lindi Ddnlorlh 75 Mike Tolley 7TP Wayne Gillelarnl 74L Lynda Walker ?s Bennie Flanagan 7Jp Bartjara Balspf 7JP limes Gravel I.• 72L Helen Banks 75 Marion Ashley 71 Flynn Clybum 73P frank Iordan 72L Shobhna Sedan: 7JP Christmas shopping takes the place ot' Christ's Mass; the Chamber of Commerce will soon have pre-empted the Cradle of the Child, David Steele W. B Dt'jn A I it I le work, a liltle play, to keep us going, and so, good day! George Palmella Robert H Demere Clarencp Curry 74P Suwn Red 72 Cffi'lij Sipc 72 Gwald Griffin 75 Mite Grngler 75 f D. Witcoa, ni ■ uthur Dciten For unto you is born this day a Savior, Christ the Lord lames C DeWcesc, tr 0L SnuMeit of- Cfod i emtuw w iun in I f Oul ThomJi C Dickinson Harvey Woorfromt 75L Chuck Bailey 7HP Kenneth Hammond fng Brenda Roundtree 75 Tom Sebastian 72 fohn t Diem Icrrt Mcadon 72 fXimvy Mc nJors 74 Philip Donald BjiptiM Siu k‘fil Union Yamin Fjrhat 75 Kaihv 5ilva 75 Allen Wallace 74L D Trent Walter 73P You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown is happily presented by anne johnson Director and Designer mary sue Vickers julie de guehery Assistant Director Stage Manager debby allgood Technical Director john gordon dark gcsner Script Music and Lyrics and . . . david iennings as Linos michael day as Charlie Brown wesicy smith as Patty tom knight as Schroeder karen hayes as Snoopy sue ann guess as Lucy with . . . alan skipper as Piano Accompanist bob hawley playing bass Anf tOrty Durham Bsfberl Domifly 74F Utrv Walkei 74 P Rifturri Robinson 74P Gary Woods 72 Brenda McKinstry 75 Aline fllington It's wiser being good than bad; It's safer being meek lhan fierce, It's filler bemg sane lhan mad. Robert Browning Merrer Indcpendem Men's Association Pjm Mian Gordy 72 Mjre f ngvl Steven lites I She saw every personal relationship as a pair of iniersecting circles . Probably perfection is reached when the area of the two outer crescents, added togelher, is exactly equal to that of the leaf-shaped piece in the middle. On paper there must be some neat mathematical formula for arriving at this; in life, none, fan Struther I ll It i I wish I were a little rock, ashling on a hill, A-doing nothing all day long. But just a-sitting still, I wouldn't eat, I wouldn't sleep, I wouldn't even wash — I'd sit and sit a thousand years, and rest myself, b' gosh! lamei Watson 7JP Hnokl Stillwell 7$ Jerry Thompson 7JP Qjvid Bryson 7S David Uendpr 7if Carl Brown 73 Kav Armstrong 7S Richard Antlrae 72 ■Uron Felton Frederick f atimer Of Charles field led Mordenluug Phi Vou do not need to leave your room Remain silling a your (able and listen Do noi even lislen, simply wait, be quite still and solitary. Ihe world will freely offer itself to you to he unmasked, it has no choice, it will roll in ecstasy ai your leef. Fran Kafka Paul frmstrip Marguerite Woodruff Sot Vidor hrnlurj I edn lotmvon 75 Sammy fitdav The human features and countenance, although composed of but some ten parts or a little more, are so fashioned that among so many thousands of men there are no two in existence who cannot be distinguished from one another Pliny the Elder Rjt mofid Filch Ooo« fncM Circle Club Minor Itniiii'i Allon Bjldft-t 7i William Cram 7JL Debh.e iUr ef 75 laddie Gherman 71P Sieve Kifkley 75 Dale Mallhewi 75 Cbad« Wall 73L Icxn frimble Adm A S fog lack Sheppard Chr Paris Wallers 72 Barba Bibhee 7S |ohn Manning 21 Arthur Christie 72 Dave Casto 73 Carol ConnaJly 74 lames Murray 72 Raymond Foil Gerald Hudson 72P tarry Garrett 72P I- W. fohnton 7JP Alyte Mosby Phrn SfttflfV fOJSeri Miubell foster Carolyn Ashley 75 Wheeler Carver 73P lim Gawriluk 75 Michael Johnson 74 Shane WircsO 75 Phyllis SkiUern 75 Warren Mersereau 73 Stanley Pollock 731 Scott Kilgore 75 A brave endeavor to do thy duty, what e'er it's worth. It s better (Han life with love forever. And love is- the sweetest thing on earth. Aimes Roche University Judicral David Thpmpwn 72 A‘rrf v funi C f Cjfnj Betty Carter Pes i Gem (3V Nitliifof f. C Cpofgs Womens Judicial Cftufttil Paul CibbJfd 729 Gerald Dolia 72P There is a sumptuous variety about the weather that compels the stranger's admiration — and regret. The weather is always do- ing something there; always at- tending strictly to business; al- ways getting up new designs and trying them on people to see how they will go, Mark Twain Nancy loveday 73 VV 6 Gibbs Allen Mollen 75 Angela Golct ?i Roberto Vega 74 Phillip LOU 75 fully Wdrburton 74 Eddie Carswell 75 I raev Robin 75 Margie Could 75 Edwin McDonald 75 Hubert Gilbert Malcolm Boyd 'disturbor of the peace Mademoiselle , . . the communications priest Newsweek spokesman lor the alienated generation Washington Post an ex-television producer who became an Episcopal priest a civil rights, peace and ecologist activist . . author Of a number of successful books (Are You Running With Mo, Jesus? has sold over a million copies) who lectures na- tionwide on college campuses. Ann Griifeyr John Lowery 72 Rho Chi Officers. Under the direction of Michael Gielen, the 110 musicians of the National Orchestra of Belgium demonstrated the reason for their highly acclaimed international reputa- tion. As the Orchestra made its first American tour ever, the Macon audience was treated to an outstanding con- cert. yjmes Griffin Sjfly MMn Garrick Ghlsson. a performer in (he concert series, was the first American winner of the Chopin International Competition in Warsaw. A renowned virtuoso, he will play with many of the nations' principal orchestras in North Amertca and Europe. A superb performance was well received by an appreciative Mercer audience. Kobt'fi Groover 75 Christine Happy The greatest thing a human soul ever does in this world is to see something, and tell what it saw in a plain wav Hundreds of people can talk for one who can think, but thousands can think for one who can see. To see clearly is poetry, prophecy, and religion all in one lohn Ruskin Dorothy Hardee Raymond Hjrciv Providing outstanding entertainment in an addition to Homecoming '72 Warm Up Week, Jonathan Edwards brought J'5unshinr to an enthusiastic Mercer crowd, A folk artist of the first calibre, he combined a pleasing rapport with a variety ot songs for a delighttul performance Mary Befh Haskins Marcia Oliver 72 Tom Lindsey 74P Ronnie Daniel 74P Sheryl Cannmgfan 74P Daniel Teat 74P Norma Cathopoulis 74P Stephen Orion ?}P John Turpi no 7JP Chott Hayes ANTIGONE Antigone Peggy Blow Creon Terrance Poland kmene Anne Johnson Haemon Leonard Boswell Nurse Jody Wilts Euridice Priscilla Corley First Guard Javier Bernal Second Guard Barney Strickland Third Guard Joel Howard Director film Technician Gloria Harrison Herb Kossover Messenger Tarry Chisholm Page Orewcv Head Cissie Corley Chorus Members Joy Johnson Denise Stephens Rhonda Pryor Millie Monday Chorus Leader Wesley Smith -IT Andrew Hwl Alpha Gamma Delia Winner Celeste McCarthy 74 Dr Sj nue Hejion HOMECOMING '72 provided the campus with quantity, quality, and diversity. Combined with Warm-Up week, activities included movies, entertainers, athletics, and displays. Warm-Up week was introduced by David Schoenbaun, an Insight speaker, and included a Holiday on Ice performance at the Macon Coliseum Jonathan Edwards closed out the week's events. Homecoming proper began with The lams singing ■Re Young ” Ihursday night was filled with a bon-fire in an effort to incite our Rears to victory. Ike and Tina Turner fired up a Friday night crowd at the Coliseum and the Bears iced the festivities Saturday night by defeating Missouri Western. Alpha Gamma Delta received top honors in a held of highly contested displays. ftnrf Hcmingwjv Henry Hemphill Pdui Benton lohnny Barter ?4P CS r Pavard 74P What's the use of worrying' ll never was worthwhile. So, pack up your troubles in your old kil-bag And. . . Smile, smite, smile, George Asaf Mercer Rille Team f. F Herrington I N, Hibberi r George Saintsbury Criticism is the endeavor to find, lo know, to love, to recommend, not only the best, but all the good, that has been known and thought and written in the world. Side tfv Hinson Mercer Teddy Bears 21-1 Sybil Blalock Myrel Huskey Linda Callahan Marilyn AMgood Merita favors Laine Williams Elaine Iordan Candy Head Pat Redmond Beth Seeord 17.2 lb,6 6.7 4.0 6.4 6.1 .6 6 .5 3.3 A lbi-rl HlJvaty ftjute Hobbt Dr, Michael Novak has been active in the Resistance lo the draft and the war in Vie! Nam, visited American deserters in Paris and Stockholm, and has written extensively about the coming revolution in America. Author of Belief and Unbelief ami Ascent ol the Mountain, Dr. Novak combines the long view of the philosopher with the inten- sive insights of the poet. The topics of his two-day lectures were the End of Radical Politics, the Experience of Nothingness, Political Realism and Instructors, and the Role of the Educator ' Scolt Qui liman 75 Dwane M wri4ori Barrie Williams 75 . i Car Horan Many are our joys in youth, but oh’ whal happi- ness to live when every hour brings palpable ac- cess of knowledge, when ail knowledge is de‘ light. And sorrow is not there! Willuim Wordsworth f ted H Horiser Arnold Howell The Trial of the Catonsville Nine Supersonic time that noses the ether like hell hound on mercy and bombing missions bore me here dropped me like a dud. I sit in the town slocks for ten thousand years a judge's or butcher's scrawl GUIITY around my neck. The Trial On a park bench in |apan a man's shadow sits after the bomb's wink ten thousand years until God wink again like a lucky fisherman and the man's mouth snap shut on the hook they say Cod says stands for hope. The man screams or yawns unheard from as a fish or a man at rope's end by Goya or Daumier. Harold Htibbotl Daniel Berrigan SfdnfOn Humble lift A Hunter Mercer Bears 19-7 Billy Smith 16,4 Jack Scott 15.8 Leonard Hardin 13.5 Bruce Gordy 11.1 Eddie Creech 7.1 Mike Green 6.0 Monty Brabham 5.8 David Jones 4.9 John Kinman 3.5 Charlie Dixon 2.4 Larry Falls 1.9 Marvin Bailey 1.8 Kenny Nixon 1.0 Wilted Hus m futius H. Issjt I am (ho people — the mob — the crowd — the mass. Do you know that all the great work of the world is done through me? Willie fackton MUm I. lohmon Asvoojicd Women StutJenis Agrip IV lories 1 asst Grady IV Jena 1 Howard C. kaatord Mercer's tribule to a dying art, the Ms Freshman Pageant, in- troduced three score of beauties to feast upon, A slim crowd cheered as Dusty Sutton was crowned 1972 Ms Freshman by the reigning co-erf, fane Turner. Ms Sutton is a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. The Pageant was sponsored by the sophomore class. William f. Kautirmn ■ tVrJson Iypcwrrier A Adding Machine Co Jacquelyn Hopkins 7 Bill Wally 75 William Line 74 Belh Turton 7i Janke Hunter 7S Weldon Johnson 75 Mile hell Burns 7J Doris lark son ? liSJ 1 044 75 Out of the dusk a shadow, Then a spark; Out of the c loud a silence, Then a lark. Out o! the heart a rapture. Then a pain; Out ol the dead, cold ashes, life again. fohn fabb Mary D. taftirhara JW C linier MO fipffy ijPcnnj IV O D t ong, U lili' a child I fiisl sat in the sunlight and played with thp minutes as they wmi running by like a child who had never known sorrow I didn't hurry tomorrow I |iist looked at Ihe sky While ihe clouds went on endlessly passing. All (he clouds on their voyage home seemed to say (hat youth is everlasting but a rose cannot grow alone Like a child I would listen in sllmcc to the soft sound of evening as it caught up ihe day, til you were (here in the gathering darkness and we found Thai our green years had all gone away. Now the clouds are going forever here awhile then gone evermore and a child on Ihe far side ol never has Iq run when time closes the door. Then tale my hand and as children well go now all alone through the thundering crowds Take mv hand and logelher we'll look now1 like a child for the little los! clouds { O Lowery Kerr McDuffie 72 Marion fJv Tt Cecil H Lunsford V; I l nda Kay 72 Panhol Ionic Car let O Mojg uicalm (f Baibarj B Manor Cecil H ,Mason Dean A McCtoin 5. C. McOnihk If M lewis ?2P ir e Gresham 72P Linda Striblinji 72P Sherry Farmer 7AP l isj frrh T McDufhe William Howard 74P DougFai Taunton 72P I- O Mctathem Dorothy A McKcown Tommy Knight 75 H, It XicKmftry, fr tane Lovflrt 72 W I. .Mr! amp lofifl H iMeek Alfred I. Mercer I r Col Wtliijm fl Miifer, it. iVfiIhRjn Jesus Christ, Jesus Christ Who are you? what have you sacrificed? Jesus Christ Superstar Do you think you’re svhat they say you are? Everytime I look at you I don’t understand Why you let the things you did gel so out of hand You'd have managed belter if you'd had it planned Why'd you choose such a backward time and such a strange land? If you'd come today you would have reached a whole nation Israel in 4 BC had no mass communication Don't you get me wrong — I only want to know Tell me what you think about your friends al the top Who'd you think besides yourself's the pick of the crop? Buddah was he where it's al? Is he where you are? Could Mahomet move a mountain or was that just PR? Did you mean to die like that? Was that a mistake or Did you knowr your messy death would be a record-breaker? Don't you get me wrong — I only want to know Tim fiicc iime Vlurph Vim Nash Our creator has put in us hungers that this earth cannot satisfy. We cannot be completely self-con- tained on earth. Physical sense cannot give us a full life, nor can knowledge alone, No life is lull unless it is linked to something that goes on after we are dead If we have nothing more to live for than just to get ahead in a competitive system, then de- mocracy wilt go down before other philosophies. Ralph Sockman Samira Howell 73 |anp Stanford 73 landa Sims 71 Tod I’hnllips 72 Scott Cordy 74t Ronald Gun! ttpr ?4L 13'Ann Fuquiiy Mai Domni Wool) 74P Rickey {Ilis ?4L |ohn Adams 741 Tom Tolben 74P Nancy ftalftc 72 Frank Abbot! 7J Nancy K'dkow 74 Ctoru Nt isbom Donald Francis 7JP Susan Shivers 74 Karen Griffin 7S lim tong 7fP Doug Kemp 73P George Smilh 7S J Ed Corson Eng Durtf isotfii Honor Council Skeet Ewing 73P Alan Preiss 73P Adair At S‘ynnatly Boot si e George 73 IcivpJi McDaniel 74P Marva Malone 74P Rodney Hayties 74P Sam Miller 74P Gad Padgett If you can't gel enthusiastic about your work, it's time lo gel alarmed — something is wrong, Compete with yourself; set your teeth and dive into the |ob of breaking your own record, No one keeps up his enthusiasm automatically. Enthusiasm must be nourished with new actions, new aspirations, new efforts, new vision. P pyru s O. I ft'irorf I Rpfra j j tohn and Dune Stogt; tng Ed Gaither 74 Agualung Ml Duncan Hitchcock 75 Sian Fog 'i Alary Ann Pivuv Gaity that sweetens existence and makes n wholesome — a sense of humor, a acst of enjoyment — this is the accompaniment of courage which gives it a supreme value. Something of the high laughter of a Cyrano de Bergerac — The world needs it. Herbert Hichen lorry Boykins 7JL Gary Conger 72L William Adams 721 Soodrj Blothwiu 75 Mercer Porter Hugh K Prdll Softball Intramural Championship Unaffiliales 16 Panlherettest The Unaffiliales went undefeated while the Panlherettes were served only one loss. The joy of feeling fit physically is reflected in a clearer and more useful mind. You may read and study forever, bul you come to no more important truthful conclusion than these two: Take care of your body, and your mind will improve. Work hard, be polite and fair, and your condition in the world will improve No pills, tablets, lotions, philosophies, will do as much for you as this simple formula, not of my invention. Every intelligent man of experience since lime began has taught it as a natural fact £d Howe Hairy O Prine Bill Sfotl Eco VV H hitchard Now I've been cryin lately thinking about the world as it is why must we go on hating why can't we li re in bliss cause out on the edge of darkness there rides a peace train now I've been happy lately thinking about the good things to come and I believe it could lx; something good has begun oh, I've been smiling lately dreaming about the world as one and I believe it could be some day it's going to come cause out on the edge of darkness there rides a peace train oh peace train — lake this country get your bags together go bring your friends, too cause it's getting nearer it soon will bo with you come and join the living it's not so far from you and it's getting nearer oh peace train sounding louder Cal 5fevem Mary pr0f se 74 B 1f lillis 72 Paul Do« ?4P Kenneth fanes 74P Siotl Thurman 74p Carole Ray 74P Cwgf t%pv tng lanny Hudson 74P By ft Qui« Varsity Baseball Season record 19.3 Herb Dean sported a 6-0 won-loss mark. Chuck Brewer swung a .333 batting record, Sid Swartz held a .416, Richard Jordan was not far behind with a 371 Michael Minsk 7-IP Henry Chilton 74P Charles Rohrei 74P Steve Davis 74P Sherry Samples 74P Steven HonJ 74 P Ptyihp Rest on r Henry Heard 7-jp John Darnel 741' Bill Respess 74P Thomas Brooks 7JP Charles Lee 74P RoRer Williams 74P Curtis Creen 74P Alison Vph 74P Pail I Bjlkrisrrna 74P Wayne Harris 74P t ti Roberts. It Bobbi Hennecv Enjj An appealing personality is not something grafted on from without It is not like a coal of paint applied to a building or cosmetics used on the face. It is expressed through the body, the mind, the heart, and the spirit. Edith lohnson Sam Hutto Art f bonus f Rotten Duug Mitchell 721 Njt FinMntein 72L Reginald Wiienbakcf 721 Biydni Culpepper 721 Oun$ton72i Alpha Tau Omega r r ftuueti friwst Saloom Forced to go among (horn, and to allow them to believe t hat I, too, have tumbled from their mold, I ventured into their realm to seek what they could offer or to find what I had that they hungered to devour The ash people engulfed me in a blanket of gray warmth That soft womb of dim comfort, well oiled to repel the crisp edge of priceless water from penetralion. And how surprised were they as I welcomed the cleaning dampness, shedding the gray shelld I was to have embraced. As I departed, the light, newly exposed, blinded them, Their heads turned again to the dim safely of grayness. DeHo Phillips Tap lohn Horton 74P Brenda Bolden 74 Aaron Grant 74P Free Samplei Leone hates Edu Emory Teel 72L Cary Gfover 721 William Flatam 721 Pi Kappa Phi Y'ffgrnrd 'I StfftFirt ivuc Singer Why should the Golden Rule be so difficult in business and foreign rel at ions? The happily married treat each other as they wish to be treated. They treat their children better than they wish to Ik- treated themselves. Unless we do unto a friend os we do unto ourselves, we lose a friend. In an emergency we rush fo the aid of our neighbor. Is it so great a Step to realize that all people everywhere are neighbors? Art her Dunn Paige (.arson 74 I Af Si ipfW' Michael Hawkins 721 George Newborn 721 Charles leseretl 721 Laurie Davis 72L George Haas 721 Charles f Smith H W, Smith, AtO. Mm Thomas 72 lames Anderson 73L U ilium Covington741 Deborah Good m 7 a Ihomai Barron 741 Stjn Peck 74t Mercer Tennis Team Teddy Bears' Varsity Tennis Season record 10-1 Cynthia Hall Barbara Ranisier and Chris Henson were undefeated. Bears' Varsity Tennis Season record 5-6 Bill Means netted a 6-S season Utmelf fl f n ih A man 15 the part he plays among his fellows He is not isolated; he cannot be, His life is made up of the relations he bears to others — is made or marred by those relations, guided by them, judged by them, expressed in them There is nothing else upon which he can spend his spirit — nothing else that we can see. It is by these he gels his spiritual growth; it 15 by these we see his character revealed, his pur' pose, his gifts. Woodrow Wilson Morris Adiir M«l toe Cook 71 Claria J Sprout Robed Mifjfson 721 Gaftor d Taylor Adm r ggy 'ihun Phi Eta Sigma Roy I loyd “2L Waher line 721 Charto Clarit 711 'Vjrfcn Slowen 72L Fted Godwin 721 Burton Shard' 721 ludton Green 721 Miwv Swan Amt IjrUwi The Roar of the Greasepaint The Smell of the Crowd A musical embodiment of the Laurel and Hardy characters. Two irarrsps play the Came of Life as they struggle to exist — with or without meaning. .......................................Alan Young Cocky ............... Mack Porter rtf Kay Watkins egro and Flute Player Dwight Hamilton g0Uy .......... Mortimer Crunch Qjff ................................Christie Aenchbacher ..... and all the urchins Paul Tempo Wiilrer Dow ling Pol Id Bdcon Adm . C Thompson If we work in marble, il will perish; if we work upon brass, rime will efface it; if we rear temples, they will crumble into dust, bui if we work upon immortal minds and instill into them just print ipk-s, we are then engraving upon tablets which no time will effate, but will brighten and brighten to all eternity Daniel Webster Way McMillon triR Robert IV Tobmt Tom Tumble lohn Mitchell Adm Fear less, hope more, eat less, chew more; whine less, breathe more; talk less, say more, hate less, love more; and all good things are yours Swedish Proverb times Buie 72P Fred Hunter 72P Rilev Dickerson “2P Charies Marsh 72P Robert Prolfm 72p Herbie Ellis 72P Qlui) toiipe fuditui rV Tuita r Phi Mu Paul Howell 72 Tikia Grablc 75 loKn Camello 75 T Vafc w-Sirt dlx ii Arl is a human activity consisting in this, that one man consciously, by means of certain external signs, hands to others feelings he has lived through, and that other peo- ple are infected by these feelings, and also experience them. rolatoi Doug Davis 72L t D Beo «in 72L Henry Hammock 72L I fl Dalle Wlcltslmm 72 fteisy Iones 72 Sjrn Vulto. Ir — MSwCfl fmcit P. Wjgonrr Jim Carem 21 Sylvia Gray-wood 72L DfORK Sirders 72L Phi Delta Theta Tom Ha r 75 Wtllkwn D Wally fane G. lVjf! i rJon hefyn It IVevfhprs CJjrk l,irnirum 7JL Tom Merritt ■ J Jofirt Phi!l i 72L Cherie Parker 75 |ohn Comes ? 2l Rost Smilh 75 FmdtfKk F Weber 5-H % i r- Spyros lagans Chm Gary Wood 72P ffobe t C tVeilmt He who binds to himself d joy Does the winged life destroy; But he who kisses (he joy as it flies Lives in eternity's sun rise. fl ako I Url I omen 721 B □. Murphv 721 VVjync Whiff ENGELBERT H MPER0 NU MM 20 fc S. 9 PM MERCER UNW SOUTHERN SCHOOL of PHARMACT DEDICATION 3™ l' I am alone with the beating of my heart lui Chi 5am Sibley 721 Larry Lynch 77L Billy tones 721 Barrie Wilkie What is an individual? lusi a bit of life shot off from the one Life in the universe — just a bit of love and truth dropped on (his globe, just as the globe itself was once a bit of light and heat dropped from Iho sun, C VV. Barron Kenneth ( Wiffrjrm Hamer f Wiisan U rr 1( 5 W,hon Peggy Hunter 75 Mm Brawn 74 Ml Hire 74L LIn-da Callahan 7 K Uinfurn ir Inter-Fraternity Council jfjf 5 Woadi Bela Bela Bela 00 V'jm rt M Rot hji I Piper 71 Alpha Delia Pi Alden Snead 7) Lydia Dumas 73 Berry Yougtri When you are old and grey and full of sleep, And nodding by the fire, take down this book. And slowly read, and dream of the soil look four eyes had once, and of their shadows deep; dow many loved your moments of glad grace. And loved your beauty with love false or true. Jut one man loved the pilgrim soul in you, And loved the sorrows of your changing face; And bending down beside the glowing bars, viurmur, a little sadly, how Love fled And paced upon the mountains overhead And hid his face amid a crowd of stars. W. H. years Mercer's Class of 1922 (ames Murphy 5oc Gamma Beta Phi I jrry Pfine 73 Elizabeth Ijpp Sob Olio Chr Larry Pearce Hi lerila Rollins 72 You may know for a certainty that if your work is becoming uninteresting, so are you; tor work is an inanimate thing and can be made lively and interesting only by injecting yourself into it! George Hubbs Arnold Ziffle 151 Larrttxla tjhi Alpha Sigma Tau Gamma Let us do our duty in our shop or our kitchen, in the market, the street, the office, the school, the home, just as faithfully as if we stood in the front rank of some great battle, and knew that victory for mankind depended on our bravery, strength, and skill, When we do that, the humblest of us will be serving in that great army which achieves the wel- fare of the world. Theodore Parker Sarah Harrison 7J Bill Closer His Student Education Association Vuk JimmMim A college education is not a quantitative body of memorized knowledge salted away in a card file, It is a taste for knowledge, a taste for philosophy, if you will; a capacity to explore, to question, to perceive relationships, be- tween fields of knowledge and experience. Whitney Griswold Bobby lonps Adm The spotted iawk swoops by and accuses me, He complains of gab and my loitering. t too arri ijqt a bit lam J, I too am untranslatable, , I sound my barbaric yawp over th® roofs of the world. , « . 2 ft I depart as air, f shake my wmite locks at the runaway sm, I effuse my flesh in eddies, and drift it ir laqy jags. 1 bequeath myself Mo the dirt to grow from the grass loye, If you warn me again-look for mq under your booi-soler failing to fet h me at first keep encouraged, pissing me one plate sear elf another I stop somewhere wading for Vou. 4 ,' • ; Whitman • lefferson, Letitia tUvi loan is, Brenda mccfo lohnson, Dean fird lohnson, E, W, Me lohnson. Holly issa lohnson, (oy font lohnson, Michael cost lohnson, Michael foil lohnson, Richard brrd lohnson, Weldon laba lolly, Elizabeth issa lones, Betsy yu l Iones, Billy wilk lones, Bobby ........ wilk [ones, Doug . . . .. arms lones, Edward hunt Jones, Henry trim lones, John find lones, Karen wits lones. Kenneth atquai lones, Sandy Zigf lones, Suzanne ....... meek Jordan, Frank dean Iordan, Howard V'PP Iordan, McGregor pers Kay, Lmda ... moag Keithcari, Bill cars Kelley, Raymond mcd Kelly, Roy hard Kemp, Doug norr Kem. Brenda cake Kilgore, Scott font Kinard, Eric cell King, Charles hemp King, Spencer cor Ktrklev. Steve fogs Kirkpatrick, Lee hard Kitchens, Corrine cowe Kling. Rick gem Kmght, Tommy mcki Kohan. Pat . . . bond Krakow. Nancy newb Kfopskr. Edgar cake LaMarca, Felice foie LaPenna, Mary appl Lamb, Larry mcd Landrum, Clark we be Lane. Walter summ Lane, William laba lamer, Denise boll Larson, Paige skip Lawler, Ray wbrf Lawrence, Stephen pers Lazans, Spyros weil Leake, Mike brut Leddis, Lamar brok Lee, Charles . .. robe Leonard, Greg mill Leverett, Charles smit Lewis, |oe me do Lewis, Paul Link, Frederick foga brok Lincoln, Sylvia Mitchell, John ... troy Mitchell, Mike brief Morrison, Dwane bora Mollen, Allen . ... gilb Moore, Francis best Moore, Joey Moore, Kirby gem Moore, Newton yopl Moose, Toni . dean Mosby, Alyce foie Moser, Debbie fogg Move, W A best Murphey, Gilbert ..... can Murphey, Karen brok Murphy. D. B whil Murphy, James you! Nadler, Richard pril Neiman, Scott pres Nelson, Ruth allg Newborn, George smit Nichols, Gary smit Nidiffer, Jay gear Nixon. Rob blow Nordenhaug, Ted fims O'Brien, Robert brok O'Quinn, Edwin cowe Ogle, Linda herr Oliver, Marcia haye Ollerman, Laddie fogg Orton, Stephen ...... bens Otto, Carol ........ dow Parker, Cherio we be Partridge, Margaret cats Pauard. Cheri herr Payton, Don fief Payton, Gwendolyn wake Peasant, G. A. . tone Peck, Stan smit Pederson, Lorrie brew Peek, Pat wood Pender, David . felt Perko, Carol cals Persons, Kimberly blow Petralia, Cynthia iohn Phelps, Rosa howe Philips, Beix best Phillips, Dekle samp Phillips, John webe Phillips, Ted -. nasb Pinson, William trim Piper, Robert yoga Platt. Wilfred asle Polleite, Unda smu Pollock, Stanley................... fast Post, Lisa..........................lit Powers, William ... . CflM Pratt, Kathy........................ wo Preiss, Alan..................... norm Preslon, Priscilla prat Price, Robert ..................... wag Prince, Carl....................... wood Prine, Larry tapp Pritchard, Alice ................... dp Pritchard. Cathy . kaut Proffitt, Robert................... froy Proviso, Mary quai Pruitt, Ann........................ hard Quillman, Scolt.................... hora Quisen berry, Dan................. cenve Rainer, Dennis..................... b ur Raines, Nancy...................... npwb Rainwater, Mike .cell Ramsey, Ansvv...................... rowe Randall, |ohn...................... brok Rausch, Jeffrey................... happ Rawdon, Larry..................... brrd Ray, Carole..... qua Ray, Frank.......................... col Ray, lames .. aro Ray, Robert............... . .elli Red, Susan ........................ desl Reeves, Lera cars Reid, Helen....................... padg Reiman, Tom.........................brew Respress, Bill . robe Reynolds, C....................... find Reynolds, lohn...................... aro Rhodes, Thomas hard Ribas, Salvador . .whit Rich, Arhlur........................yoga Richardson, James ..................allg Riddle, Deems.......................bond Rlifcer, Juanita pone Roach, Hal..........................loti Robb, Sharon........................prat Robertson, Gwendolyn................bacc Robin, Tracy........................gilb Robinson, Ernie .................... mad Robinson, Richard etli Robinson, Susan.....................iohn Rogers, Andy happ Rogers, Stockton mc a Rohrer, Charles rand Roper, Tom mcd Roskos, John....................... jonc Roundtree, Brenda . diefft Russell, Susan......................tobi Sandler, Delores ................. cowt Saloom, Lindell ........... file Samples, Sherry. rand T Sanders, Dennis warb Sanders, Kay bond Sanders, Mike bloc Sands, Willie arno Sawyer, Sylvia . byrd Scandlyn, lames . . caul Scott, Thurman quai Sealy, Phillip , issa Sebastian, Tom , diem Seda, lohn adz Sedani, Shobhna dean Sells, Steven ,. cost Sequin, Eugene conn Seredick, Guy wake Sharaff, Burton swan Sharpe, Wynona mefa Shaw, Michael jone Sheddan, Mack ... ham Sheppard, Jack fogg Sherman, Nadine . . aro Shivers, Susan . . norr Shockley, Mildred . wagg Sibley, Sam . wilk Sites, Ronald . dick Siiva, Kathy durh Silver, Randy lobt Sims, fanda nash Sipe. Cecelia . dest Sippel, Linda cart Sipple. David whir Skillern, Phylfis . . lost Slowen, Warren . . swan Smart, Jerry peac Smith, Brenda appl Smith, Cindy . . , , maso Smith, Danna tape Smith, Eugenia bill Smith, George non Smith, Georgie casa Smith, James strut SmMh, Phyll adz Smith, Rpba brok Smith, Rose webe Smith, Sharon ande Smith, Wilson mano Smithers, Susie arms 5o!oman, Lil bill Sorenson, Randall clow Soupart, Evelyn anne Southard, Bob fret Sparks, Joe yawn Spencer. Tim husk Sponger, Fift toga Stanford, lane nash Stanley. Betty brew Stanton. Robert co we Stead lev. Eddie Me Siege. John and Diane pier Stembridge, Bill cake Stephens, Denise . . . kick Stillwell. Harold felt Stone, lerry yipp Slone, Pete Stowell. Jim salo Stransky, loseph . ., fixe Streetman, Mike hard Striblmg, Linda medu Stuart, Ann foie Suddccth, Peggy !oga Swift, Mat whit Swihart, Diane chea Tallent, Jayne dapp Taunton, Douglas meed Taylor, Beverly allg Taylor, Garland stua Taylor, Robert davi Teague, Sammy wagg Teal, Linda ..... dapp Teal, Steve padg Teasley, Susan allg Teat, Daniel haye Teel, Emory sere Terry, Edward kaut Thomas, Camille . . maso Thomas, Donald bill Thomas, Owen bake Thomas. Jinx cost Thomas, Mae smit Thomas, Patricia fiel Thompson, David funk Thompson, Gwen mail Thompson, lerry fell Thompson, Rosemary dick Thompson. Stephen dapp Till is. Biff quai Todd, Terry wago Tolbert, Tom newb Toliver, Leroy . . lape Tolley, Mike ... dean Travillian, Shirley brok Trimble, Tom fogg Tucker, Gary . hard Turner, Eldndgo bond Turpm, John hayc Turton, Beth laba Tyner, Terry cowe Van Cott. lohn issa Valdes, Albert meek Varner, Robert kauf Vega, lorge husk Vega, Roberto gilb Vernon, lames lape Vickers, Mary Sue kick Walker. Kathy arms Walker. Ken pull Walker, Larry elli Walter, Lynda....................... dean Walter, Sandra ..................... conn Wallace. Allen durh Wally, Bill..........................laba Wallers. Doris.......................foil Walters, Treni . durh Walton, Elayne ..................... amen Warbwton, ludy gilb Ward, Patricia Ware, Foss mcke Watson, Billy............. . bane Watson, James....................... fell Watt, Charles........................fogg Weatherly, lane......................happ Wedel, Eileen........................ din Weese, Shane........................ fosl Weghorst, Barbara gem Weinelt, Teri.........................fan Welch, Peter.........................dean Wellons. Diane.......................kauf Wei Ions, johnny......... . .Aauf Weslerwelt. Mary....... . gafn Whaley, Bonnie.......................foss Whighim, William. . . . ;............grum White, Floyd....................... forte Whiteman, Charles................... brew Whitaker, Carol .....................brok Wh itlaker, Lawrence.................btin Wickstrum, Dale .....................vult Wilcher. lelfrey bake Wilcox, T. I.........................dest Wilder, Bob..........................yipp Williams, Barrie.....................bora Williams, Beth...................... mill Williams, Gwendolyn...................din Williams, Henry dean Williams, Jeffery . cell Williams, Juoy.......................bolt Williams, Roger ... robe Willingham, Bongos . wagg Willis, Loretta , wagg Wills, losephine. cosf Winfield, lerry..................... atwa Wisenbaker, Reginald russ Wood, Gary..................... . w if Wood fin, William . kick Woodrome, Harvey . diem Woodruff, Marguerite....... .. fims Woods. Gary.................... . elli Woolf. Donna newb Worley, Thom conn Wren, Jennifer.......................eauf Wrighi, fames....................... conn Yeh, Alison robe Yelton, Charles . . . . hunt You man, Eliot . . conn Youmans, Bryant tril Ziglar, Kathy . rowe


Suggestions in the Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) collection:

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Mercer University - Cauldron Yearbook (Macon, GA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975


Searching for more yearbooks in Georgia?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Georgia yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.