North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 334
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 334 of the 1967 volume:
“
.5- a i Er Ni? m fm wa. -'iw Q 5 A 3? i X 1 1' 'Q fu 'is .HQ 'X 3 1 5' J Y' X 4 s: r-wfx - ...mc 4 1 N 1 1 Aff' H S R is in fi . 2 : ,Q a f,, .mf--4 f L wiv - f,w,,,vfwWt' , -9 ff 1 W L - v L. A 'rw 'w w f?,eg','5'M, 5 as L7 uf' S -t I -.J F' ll pq. hu- '52- Z Ka N' A 3 I 5 .f ,Q- 'W N L: X' if - ff vii TAM, 1 1 1 1 f, ,1 - 1 L ,111L,,1isi1.,1wL NWQMQ-Mwwjwwwwwwwwafswg hm-W :Wx -, .v,,.wm.M5M4...u,wMm.,vMN.. ... LV V M-is-ww. .....L.. ww-QL vw-I-. f, .lllll L-nl viii SEE !' ij ff 1 I 1 ggsuvf .,....-- ...uni I lx . n . I K 1 Q 1 11 1- i I Y E I T i n X R 1 E : 3 Nvalb-Fw-1-5 ff? ! ,fx Quik F7 ws. , .1 fix'-s '.WJ . A x m - wf' s Q? ,A fs? ,K Af, -f k,.-. X F sw 'fad 'Q da-A .A ' A Vfavls xi 1 8 W 4 if 1 s ' 5 V - 5 5 y I I I 'W Z g 2,4 2 2 rw if A ,s . 1, .- I wk Z V, A ,i I f K 1 if ,. 1 E Q , is f 68 ff - ,I ga: ' ' X Y ':1,,1 . , H 4, 'W' 5 V, 1 e Y I, ff, 'V 4'-. if 1 Q Tfgl' 'V . 4 .f Q5 Q I, 94 f f' 3 .. s ',g Q- wr , s +1-Q KQQ w A X A- .. L?,kk fgr,i 3 ' - H 441' YL, X1 I A y -,I - , lr Aix il . . 1 g . Q. ,f 'aL x E . 1 .. .L - , K . X .gfx X. f - 1 as f 'f '4'v- ix I-v ..' M , A Q3Eb p X X N11 S - , N., , ' ,x ,-1 K f K Q x m i x T at-x - v'm. 1 3 Li Hx, 'Q -'vw A ww? ,fs r 5 X x . L K .... x... .NN I inw- M,,,,.,-.-----' fn, ' i ld? if Ehrman-ll! av .,WM..ff+-M 445' Q Al Wm-ww J, arf-vw av A' vw .1 M -A QQ av N 'nw an L ilu , 5146 L H , , .0 ik N 0 -1, dai! ' A x 'Qi xx sp' -2. I ' . jvfif ' W4 ,I A 1 7,0 :f ,::. 1 va ' 1 n ,QI 5, -M xvi Ffa' ,4- JAS 'Q VK Q 4' F H i Viv wr ' K4 ,-ey, fs! s , -at syn af H n ,L - +V vi'y,V ,fi ,Lai gg.. I f 'M' 1 , L X . 1 N. ,M ., fun ., .4-. ui' xi' , -so K N M ff' , 1 AGROMECK NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY BOX 5727 STATE COLLEGE STATION RALEIGH, N. C. 27607 PREFACE ENVIRONMENT Housing Campus Schools Events PEOPLE People as People Student Organizations Athletics Group Organizations Fraternities Honoraries Beauty Student Government Military INITIATES Administration Seniors Biography 81 Club Memberships if ' pf - . i' - L 'L Q9 . - -. ,, + N. L . -Q .r L - ,Q N in.. n A .Q Q Q 2 S , . .5 ' F32 Y if QQ Lf ' , , ' K. .1 t jug ,,3. M, it N- 4, - :L L I ,Q 'PZ I L 1 . S . Q L -- V L-1 . ,, .5 L -'H .L - .- Q '- . fini -s .f-- .. . , 'L L ' y . .Wm 8-.mjilm S M- ff .H H Q - Q Q -A fx' ,T , i f E il f ws -Q5 ,QL aw Q QM.. Q Q W. L ,N f 1. L, LL'1:f,, Q 3,5 L . QM L Q M 5 I 47- gy.. . . H 3 1 1 ,f,f.,, i . gf-. .S H, ,XV . . . - - - . ., -he if Q . in A :dk . Q .Q Y? X :S Q Q ,p il ik Zig Q' , M fx . W 4. .. A Q X HN , ,QQ A. .... -- fm. ng- . Q QR Q, ,. ap E ,gp - Q E QQ L is, will , -lg 5 Q, -. Q Q L- . .-, Q.Q5,-gf.-QQ, ' -Q ,Q is Q' Q- . w al-- W , .. or ,J . . . . x X p , .,. 1 ,B . .W ,. 4, it . is , . hr . .. QQ,-'f L . JA ,. . QS! -1Q'L'fw .,.,m.,' Q . fy ' ,Www 'L'--lfliflfggg. 5, . ' . 5 . . L LL L 'Q f E . , '.L Q. A L 5 - Lx . L - L wi '- + L 'L i. . . Lf S 1.-5955-S M qw Ly f iffy. 42,-f I 4 L- Quia , , LL i----Qing , in 4 J - LL 5. '- 4 ':.+ - - . - L Lf? V . A - Li'-. . LL fiii' -f. .. ,F L L ' fi' - - 9 Lw sg -L L'-A - fy L.. Qi f R L L ' f - L . . . --. M .- sv:-w p . . f. 5. .QQQNQM . b Q. K. b 3 Q' Q' XL gas Qi Wg if Q is is WgQ,QQ.wzM:Q Ju . if .fb . . . ik ,. Q7 ...Q-W . I 1 A L SSA ' ,g ,,. . jj Q fini hx 1: Q X ., .f Q 5- T. if Rf xi: 3 ,li Q Qff' k-gS1.,,Qgr.4.4.,g3m fini ,ig Q P K 1 b Q ,x V . JK Is : 9 K. ' , X ,M Q Q Q.. .f ...LQ ,LL Q f QQ..- L' ff, Q. L L +1 - Q .M ff N: 1,5 '-5, -L,..Q1 Q Q 'L L 1 W , K Q : Q Q 1 w w. .LL - - .LHB I 5 sent- -,g. Q Q 1-at ugh X K Q Q 6 Qi? L. ASN, Q Q A Q . -b Q xr -3 s QQ , N tgxve -kr ij. A .Q f Q 3-a s 1 X 1 J Q :S Q - Q. - ,X .Q -, M QQ . Q Sei ff- . '33fL5:i.,m'31-QLXL -X a' - . - --- 9 - - fp - , 2. fem L - -L . L . - -Q f . . w X . . - 2 L ' .1L,Q5g. .,jiF3g5'i52 'Pi 1 -3 Q LL' -'H' gf - Q is Q -we... .Q fr- L SQ' Q LL f' 'fl L ff- - '. nz L - . F Q ,Q 5' . P ,g.3Q,,: L f.fL fl : ' 'MQLLLQQ-fi5Er':rm ' f ,E if L -I X L .L - LL L3 -X W - - L -L 3? L - . +L S L -L 1 ,- ff - Aff - . . - L - Lf-LL fy f -W - L . , L L . ENS- Q f-Mm,-Q-Qgw. i i . . . Aw 6 . 5 - 5 . 1. -. I W . - - Al X - X L- N -f an Q 1, tr., 11 , F. 1 'Lifmi'gig5g...5..- - . . . L. A L -- - i L L A J Q 1 - 9 , sk f - wx 9 . S- 1 5 Q 1 'JF X . f. . E. -gf if H .Q X. . .. V QQ Q Q L Q . Q Lf QQ v. QQ . Q :L img, SW SKQ fx Q Q Q, Q. Q QQQQ . .N QQ, Q. If ,Q i gy Q Q Q ,L x.,,.QQQQ Q . A , Q5 rv? Q Q. . QQQQ A , J . Q., X. ig 4 . Qi , .Mg . N . N. . . if xg .. fx. Q FQN . , Ei? , Q P .. is-. Q .g. ,f gigs Q? MEA HQ. QM P Q Q is . it QA , V .1 D ,E J, .Q Q 1 1 QQ ,R M A 'WLL . - f - . . . - Fi L LL M - Q 2 - , L L- f AQ Q QQQ rf 5 Q , . L , Lv-1.QANuii1i3.QQl -A . ii Q Q Q X i E ---. fi.- Q . t -Xu.-Q t Q .N in X pg Zyhsfislgp ya I 3,4 QL 9 Lf Q 5 if , Q Q ,QQ Q, .t A- '--. A.,Q4Qk:n-x.,.Q mn . Q. ,L - . L L5 ' L L . , L ...QQ I . Q yi, L - . X L Q if S- Q .Q . Q giff . .gf ff' I , , 14uim?x.T.,,,,L'S,x-gQ,. . WJ., ,.,. ff -f . Q, .gi 1 ? L L .1 2i?n,f . LW ' gig YA fi- ' Q -flafgff' if tim Q! L1 LL LL 'L1L f'iLf L'ffQ1sL1,..Q,LL Q! 3' 'Lf .. ,T L ,L 45-Mi :Ls I 'LLLL .SL - f i g LLL MEL -. 5 N -if L L 'L was if - ,SL ' f' Iv Q - L- ., L L L'L 'L L L LLLLLLL1 QF-i::.ff ' 4 L . .Lf -L L , 1 ' 1 . Q Q .L . if . , .' 'L Ziyjsfzv L is -5, .. 1 Lf L Q Q S, 'I ,.i P . Q ,Q Q QQ Q . Q Sl. .NMQQ Q1 MWA H . QQ: .Q ...Q Y gf . Q- . .. .ji 6 .Q -LL L? L LL - LQ -L fy QU sp ,rf LL 'L 'LLL 'YL---Q. ,L L L 'L' L. rwwo LL 'LW--ii? MK. 'f L 'T ' L L L LL L : . 'L FL LL - if .Li .L u Q Q f . . 1 ' A L ff f- . N + , -I -.M , - L X . .. L-Lf 4. -',- -.. S- L - .. .- 'WF' S it ,ff . Qi' . fgff Q J LSLQLLL-,QQ ,, QQ 'lf--L-vw. Q , Ni 5 ......,,.,, QQ ' L. L- ..., . . L 31 LL 5 Q 2 T5 -'L' ri .f L lf'-L QR . -.NYL .L PVF5' k'L'L5iL2i2-'fng-w..XLL YLL L L L , W LTrJ ,-H S..-. - L' 5 'LY? f - .- .L - -L 5 . L r . 5. L Q f . 2 . wif-'L if . N 1, if 5 L-'L L L L P35 Lf:-Lf S4 -'Q- - - -,-1 s . - L L ' L' JL 5 -L fig L Q' I ?L.,::Q1LfM'FJ:vX.-QQQF i I-mv .f '5 3 4-Q s mug, , L- 9. . L b fy vig- . . ig ,Q L-'??5?33gg I . L A L K My QQ Q L - . Q ,,wf.AL:tQaLgwFLf3f-rig jfggf' ..ig:mmgmQQQQL-if-.L.LLrf iff N 5-,vp QQ ' 8' E - ,Q WN 53 - I-fi Q -, - ' LQ -MQ-Q.Qf,5'i,Q , , 5 Q QL L - . LLL-fling Q L Q. .,. 'I' i if ' .Q gf' Q5 1211 Q, Q, Q Q, URN-F QQ -Lf fxwrfg- 1 K ig? in Qi ? ,Q L' L ' W- Tk Ks: ,ix is Q QQQQQ Q . 5 Q 7 LL V L ix . L- WL M- f -J + yy' Q N .,, 7 - eff Q ,L L A -33.3--L1LL-f 1, . r - 5. 5 L . , ,f .Wig-X., 9- L L L 5- ,SL-. f ,,., if-.Q ff- -ff' , Q , . . L pf . - .6239 ... A Ls. f. 41v . Lg N: Q W ' L -. Q Q ig ...I 1 A V V b ig QQ -. Y, QQ if vs? Wag-N...s4::fs::sfiNW,gi . Y Q M Q. I nh Q S :MA , ..- LX 1, 'Q Q WM XESTKQQ 'Q ., S 5 K' F , L I L Q.-Qygi wkw Lmwmw- Q if QQQQQ, W, my X L 2. , Qi ,QQ Aj. L Q QL, in Q, is f,fi:,1,:i Y , Q- . . 5 YQ b. .Q - .. L L I L A Q 4-. Qs .Qrfvwf N . .5 - f-Qf 'LW .mugs ' -- L QQ L N L LQ- QQ .1 L . Q L- .QQQ L .-Q Lj Q , L L U Q' , ., .Q Qi V fgfSLQP unmylQ: 'L -M.'Q-, ff: sf-LQ,-Ji . 5 gif ,. NLLRLL -2-was . Q W- Q - ,L-L? ,,QgQQ Q LQ- , , Q 3? L . QQ. X fy - Z-,gQ ,3 Lx- '. iff 5 5 -. ,. Q gl.. L . ,fivgi f f.gSr.. 1 ff ,wg Lf - .elf-fist -ff-.f m f . ww L 'W , . A L -. -M.. - H li -,f,-.- f N.. - iz Qs LL . f-L:-if ,, -J L 'X L - 3 - u L . f S LL --LW is -M L L22 1 -L ff L Sf L- ' Q 'W' L Q 4 i- v we f L ,wi Lise: X . 5-A+ M A 1 - 1 . 2 . 1 -- - - - . - in - 3- -7 .le 'S - Q 1 in L L 5 Nj -n.. lf 1 Q f if --fs? , 4' - 'L . f .L LL - 1 Lf Q -3, L rw ik, im L S. 5' L - Luk I - A J K x1l,i.5jQL Q5 Q' 'S-v:3..,lfgQ 5 . Qi QM- - Qf fL.?Qy-Lf QQ, L Fix, ST QQ Q L gf',jL' . if :Hx if Q 4,714 . .., J F Ns L I . T , A Q M . f x Q api . - it - - vim . ,.m - B Q . Q gg QL 1 ,fs - fb Q , . 5 if -lf 'L sf . 1 wi-L 4 - if ii sffr. L 'L My-f--, L . 'M - Li-fi - 1 Q 'L -X 1 L'LL-hw-QWL L . - : . . L- L Lis! -iff' L L QQQSQQLV' J it .L f , L' SSLILWL L-wtf-L.. . . L L a f - -V ' f, f A ... 'LLL LL LL 'L-JL.-L li le Lf Q 'L Ll f L -nil A L LLH11-f!n2,xu9QL L Q N XLR V -L ..f .Q u LLL v g . gr it 'Q I 'Nl W 1 L Fx M V. 'ij I .E Qi 'QQLQ -5 K : . 1 . 5 1 rf'-l Jj. ',v. L--Q ,Q ,Q Q, X 1 L L .. L if -- LL ,. Y- '33-3 3 L Q Q 3, L, 0, 'ENN . ' '. fig' ,A Q, ig ,iff-, L -kg , x, ' . 0 ' 'Y L -L L . if in-:.L tg sf- . ' L 1,-. L LJ L-4.3 , L -' L f -V' f'-Tix ,WV ' L L 'Yi L UL, 'L Y 1 K g L Q ' Q ' J N -- 1-Q ' ,' .Q x -ur Q i L' Suki! uipg- -- WY . 1 1 sfyf 1 3 Q S? L QW Qffizggng-,M Q -Q .Q -3.9 Q e- Q -. . -L g ,x - J' I - - Y sf ff' L. ,X f 'L'-:LL L 3' LAL L Q L. ff' ' L L - f win. LL S LLL: fi .. LL L L LTD. A L 5 . L L -if 1 -' k . A Q Q 5. 5, QQ: Q 24. . QQQQQ.lWS.- f Q .Q Lg. it E ,.Q Q M, , , Q eg, ag-,. Ks 3 Qi! Q, at .Q il? LL 41 5 Q. LL Sir LL ,M -:LQ-- ff: A ' L 3 ' 3'i:-'!.L':iiLLLL'3L LL'-my L - L LL LLLL is L fi L! L .. - Q 'X LL W . . -if LL A V L L LL J L L 3- L L L L 1 , LL L LLwL f 3 X' L L if-L L1 L 1 L ' .r . 2 1' Rf' Q . gr SG.-'L Q5 Law 3- N -f' Q X Y Q f- . -M, Q X Q,w-,M -. LL ' L3 +3 f - Li. Q. '. QQQ5, 75 : Q .Q --L - .ff . . . .1 . . . . f X ' - Lffmmwwmg- - -:S 1 . 5 . H 5.935 H . , X Q .S .. Q. . I, g 55. . 6. .R-rg M Q 2 b V5f.,4't.m-Hg Nagin- f Q ,IQ JA N 'Q Q S2 LA .31 X A Q X, QQ. Q S,.fQ,f .K K . 7 N - rj Qi - 2. 'f' NL 3 L- L' K :L - L- Sails, Q , M E - - Qf Q Q - ,,,. Q K HQ, .Q w k fx ' 'Q 3 S - fix Q?-E 3 52- f - ' - -Q A .0 4: . - Q:-.F 2-'LQ 1-f, - Nas - - - f . -,Lf , -WL F. .Q Q . Q -L si! ssxw- .W w ,4 3 L- L, . Lwshvig L ,Qi Q . K 5 - ,Q 35 gif.. 'X ga S N ' L L f L ' L ga L H .. ,sn ' 'LLL 5' Ll22L-msg?-QQ, L52 LLL L L U 1 -Q' -. L M., X Q IL LN Q Lf - L LLL ., --f uf - . . , Q L 3- 52 .QQQQ U r A ,Q M NJ .Q. +5,szz., v .Q - Q 3 ,ax Q .QS - gkgk . , 552451. . Q W 1 ' if Q .: if L . 1 4? ig SLLLLWNL .. li iw. -. L , , Q5 Q L , m .f :Lid PLE ff 3, 3 Q5 L L -. -if . Q L W' L-LLL-rum J.. L L 8 'f Xl L 'LL' LL QQLRLLT 'avi L1 Ax Ll, gg, I 4,5 -ff a . -ff K . Q gg . Q - LL .m v . X - - M -L, Q -M. 35 -f 5, X -.-. Q V. Q. gig YQ , -,W .. S .g n fl. ig gf A 5 ,,,k . I 3 L QQ K W......,...fmf. .QM i gy, A . L. - . 6. Q X f -L F Q., Q! K Qj- g - . .L g W A. 2' QQ ,Mix V K ,Q My ' . . ' - Ts, -,E -Aix -L - L- ' S L Ly. .. b Q.. LL L. . L . - V? LLP--V ... if - P - 'xl'Qgg3w .. . 1' - '- ff LS .L L A-ff . Qfsgfii L L 1 -x L L ,g .' ' 1'-3i fLfYL... qw -Lg' ' A V LiL fi-Q C' tLL -.XE L- L LIL- g LL 'L 15 L4 ,gli L , L gf .. L' , L - gg L --, Q -LL wm..mQQiiQfLQ Q f- L.. Lug- f - L - O K Q L-.4 3,8 -L be -f-L if -- ff A if - HL LL -- P. -ar - - Q Q L 4. Q .,,L Q 5 g,,.N': L. -L , ' I 955 L, K Q , . K .3 'xl f , Q F .5 K -- L L 5 L . 1 'LL Lg- . L L S99 . L, -.55 - . ,- 1 A S QQ . L QQQQ LL AL SL, mg. ,Q if L D rf -5 .. L W L mt LQ L 1 D K. Qgaf -Qs gff -girly? Ng. 15 Q f S, Q L -L RQ- 'xx j L L L Q, LLLLLWLLXLLa1 gt,f 'L' vi i L L . if-, . , -emi-LLLQL I r L w L 9' L L L LLL L5 - 'Q 3 L LL ..z.g.,, iffy 5 --L L3 v JP - L L Q W-.siif-iw-2 +, .Mf iL M- . L cf - - is . . -. - . 1- - LL . . 'LL . L r ..-F f L55-,gba -mf kgs? ff' - . . 5 , : .X . . . e .5 3' 1-9:51-Q wa., .,,,, L . ,f . -L . . , in LL , + gy 1 QQ 3 will-Fi W! Q YE 0 8 . Q x A S - ig an KK Q Q. 5 gtg K-wg ??,5fQ,FQVkwQMk'mqQ wk f K ,Qu Q . . W K X .Qs is . gi. S S yy Q LL 4- L - I 1,--my Af . Q iw' , L A Q. 'E fi- W L L, fL gf L QQL -wh R. , - w L, Qi! Q Q SX' . J , L . 4--3 se ff' L -.LL L. L- ff f- J V , . Nix LL 'Lf' L L' LLfL LL gf L -an LLL Q , . L-9.3. f. ff 1- - if Y L ,Lg .Q . -x LL-L-Y-fix-ffL:i..L:L L ,ff L - -,Q .. L-L g Q .5gQQ?,., if J . Q' - . . - 53, 5 A -N 5 It - -- Q - - - M Q Q-S. ,ggi L S- ' fi - L L Q15 2 L V L -- Y Q - L - -L . - . - L Q - sv --1 L ,Q ' Q L LL LLLL 'L ' + Q X48 . K KL LL - L - .Q L S ' L . 3. t X 'L .-Q, L, X- ' ' Q - : - L- fy- .L L 'L' Q1 N' 1 Q, Qi L QQ ' . Q me , 2 Rxw ' .f .. 2 N! . M K :l ib V1 Q, ,Qi M5 ,if . QQ. Q - ww, ew.. . L L L L LL LLL x L' ff' L . .. . .Q ., fi Q Q . .Q Q. R 1 ' . - L L' .. gig is LT 1 LLL 'L L' Lf- .5 2 lnlnl it lm! t 'iff T ' Xf!l.lnA ii. :Ill ,l T h . 'vzzrfm fb s ' '4 :I ,ZX W , ,n. .17 ,4,, iff W . ill r' l ll'f2Tx'3-'ix t lil, ,. 7 f X lll ' I 9 K ' u , lx plc N T X tb 3 l Y xl A T' x t lit f t TQQ HF M , Q, mum l l l , li 'T n Mull xAf lf nrt H , Qt Vi! Q'Qu-,l tv mlm .- a t .nr xllllvt 1 1 l ' K tfttl , Jig ltil A 1 , .J -, ... lull lll xf l,i Y fllfx lvlgupl Q t Q Q V 'llll X MLA iflxfl' t lfllfnllhug 'Wi f tl Vflllifibl ill X I H' , :B 'I' Y V N 'U lmlwfl- ., ff1I'MlQl ra. -5 A wi -H I' A a L 'V f ll , flilll lm iq it l..-fu A v ' :I .X tvl.mnl 1l',Q 1 Ajdllfillll xllll a, xthtl V l XX lll .ll ' 'lk' It Q Rx ra 'r 4: l Sx 'I ,tri ,iw xv' :iw i 'U 6 if N 'NI if A 1 'my xv 1 4 H 'Xl f .l 5 f M ' I l Q a - is i gk I 'J n unify' 5. li: fl tl' QL' ,tl m y ill lil:- Q mf? rl lv l A ARI llllll 3 ,FI Married students, says the handbook, may choose to rent one of 300 university-owned apartments in McKimmon Village. This rather innocuous phrase does little to suggest the complex, self-sufficient community that exists at McKimmon Village. The Village has its own mayor and council, and its own playground for the children. Recreation is still organized, but with a flavor more suburban than campus: movies, dances, and bridge parties in place of beer blasts. Of course the main difference between McKimmon Village and the rest of the campus is the sex of your roommate. This means added responsibilities, added work, and a little less flippancy about what one plans to do with ones' life. The student who live here finds himself living the life of a commuter: off to work in the morning, back to home at night. The work is usually a lecture with a grade report at the end in- stead of a paycheck, but otherwise the comparison remains valid. 3 Q ua A , v sg f. , Lb? .ku .fiyg T i3'.'+ ' A I if v... 'ln' A . wp- vf Q Kwai' W W as ...gqf ' .iff 5 rssszfsssffiiiff y wf N A565 E12 pn I ll F252- g'5EE?Iif1 , f f V if 4 'K ,, V waawgis-'W f Q , x. ,k gl Qu 4 . H ,4l.1j' fl' ,. .Q te.-, MQ -k i ,, , . . ,. L F5551 Il--., We W A . X. g.,,,fe'S-S' . ,X ,K 1.53 V.:-Q: . 4 0' s., ' '2m.i!'. -W. ,, , an W ., 5 563 W . M 8 ',!, 5, M fn 'z , N lm W fgiflm 4 ,fq 'ma 'H 1 Ax 1, -9542, LC, Y I :gfpy ' w XQWQT' ZJQUWS . . , V . , F - I Q 4 . lX7, , - V , f X V 4 I , I I V g r 3x 1A 1 , , A I 4 1 HI HNQQX Bm 1211! w - s I6 ill 'WWW z 1 Lx, ' -I !DWM?'lff , 4 f 11 rx, Q! ,n c Sr W I 1 9 wa' no fu m my in Um' .v ' 1 r I S1 Ml u I I 4 IP 277 'I 11 -Yfi Wv--f-------- - 1 W Y 1 I I -.W w x X w 1 1 1 1 w 12 The room of the average American Dormdweller ta lineal descendant of the cave manl is a cultural phenomenon unique to this continent. Although no two are alike, all possess certain traits by which an observant visitor may easily identify them: A window sill which contains last week's half-eaten can of baked beans, last month's only slightly moldy orange, and three empty beer bottles ltwo domestic, one importedl. Tattered paperback copies of Fanny Hill and Candy with all aesthetically stimulating passages clearly marked. A wastebasket fcardboard box, bucket, washtub, etc.l which contains a slight odor and three times as much refuse as it was designed for. Two unmade beds. A two-inch layer of slightly soiled underwear on the floor. A half-inch layer of dust on all woodwork. Assorted bugs, dead or dying from asphyxiation, in the closet and in corners. Rooms inhabited by the female of the species are generally not quite as neat. 1 KN f 'SIN U3 s ,, . 1 - A FR A ilsimffm K- g eff S , g m Qiijwi A 2 ilk Y if yi.: I . ' Q- m f Q., fw M . va I B .Y w ' rs x . an V 51-Qt. rs' 1 x Mt JFS Q 1 Qu ' Q .i Q' f -Q 1 I+. its I-ww 5 fr 16 Fraternity life offers the most highly organized en- vironment on campus for those willing and able to channel their every energy into some sort of group effort. This, in fact, is what fraternity life is all about: brotherhood, doing things together. That energy may be directed toward a bridge game or an all-night drunk or a charity or a Pearl Harbor party, but it is always done in unison with one's fraternity brothers. 'lik-tvqiir' 'W-V mf, 1 Wy:-, 1 f , f In . .4 W , ,jlzww x 6, 125' f Q5 i,W'f'!'5, 1,2 , 1' ,ff 'ffQf1'f 1T5Tf -5 ,: '9 1 11613 ,un 5224? if if u 5325 5 www. ,wx A mv, f va Confused by the labyrinth of a large university cam- pus, many students turn to off-campus housing in an effort to obtain tighter personal control over at least one phase of their environment. The student can obtain a small quantum of seclusion without sacri- ficing those campus activities in which he desires to participate. The student must prepare his own meals, clear his own dishes out of the sink, take out his own garbage, and get by with only two glasses this room- mates have broken the restl. Above all, he must main- tain friendly relations with his little old landlady rather than some impersonal agency of the university. t f A .ymn X fifhll N1 3 : f N.f Ma I K rn 'U - ,5 i 5: 111' 1 fll - 1 A 'BU . - L. 9 4 I P! f l 'mf x Q? VII f 'E f uw S Qlxx I T. 'L: '2SfS'?af 4 mx, 3 Q fg2llQ??QviEl n A Wm' f-,lv 'SHE '3 umm 3 + A V wr: . AL'H I eu '- iw' ' .H fmt! Hn.: X101 -JY me Uv 'tl N 1c,nX W X UR- nu .. ISA Y? l K A ll C 4 4 .Lp F,y,li,, 'ug .Q ,g IX 10 1 f' - Aiwllnm! QQMNY 3 I WSH g,f W, 4: z . ew ff ff W mmf 5 -3-und' V ..- ,,-,. ,YYY , ,, N f N 24 4 1 1 4 ll f . Q o 4 I .lx Mlfl, QL gg yy f b fwx-:mx ., N M .. ' 3 ---fss'snusw,v,-L ...N .-g f ff - f . -' .' K '-.' Sf fm QQQM - V iv I -ww? . ' mf 8. 9 W .. gil , f , , L .. f my-A m Q H ' .5 V , '. 2HF , f - A. I xt ,,,iM,gg,Q.3ff .1 r 'H K, .R N 1, jf ,g 'H 2 QW vfwffriwf . ff 'f -gg .., K , fm Q ,- 1, 4 .. -.' '- - -1 '- ' 1 ifwf 4, , ,A 'N ef-1' wane-1'-11:-R '-'27 -, ' 1 1 -4fxx.,,gT,1:' - wld' , lg 1-+'1 S . '-15, -is f' f1gy?-- - , .1 , ' - . ' . ,,,. fqu, ,V x. K . , ,gs Y kyr n. Q: v-4' A fm '- s .QA ,,, nk, ,.. -4 Shui., , so ,a.:x.,.':'-Xf -. , . .,..-- .. - :ls-' .-sq '. . - -if 41.5.-fn W 1- N M gk ' gsiwx -' -ff: 1, , f- .i .1 as 1 , 4 5 , 15-M:sfs- , .si .. ' 4 . . -- N f- - - '- 1 J -'N . Q . f ' , Jw- , g, QQ,-f, fr' an x,- 2, ' , . Q.: 'ff J! ,. 1 fx , , A , W 3, :gi KK XX , Q ' -'M X, - ' ,, -f N Q N' RX, xv, L ' L9 N X N w R X, 5:1 X 4 'I , xv x4 ' X I X kk . ' 5 's , , X y. X - , Ax k I 5 Q X .V X X , ff 'X , A A X , . v, as r N X ' A. X, K ,, x .,-4 -. ,.. . , lg 'fx y .xv M yr M , .ty Ng X ,LK ,ff W M'HWw '-fMx'x.., - xv 'x A , ' , Qu '. , W 'i I ,S -' ,' ' ' W' ' NN fg. .i'X 3 C, . fb: f sf 'N ,Nb ix X s QQT: ,, 27 I 1 'Q 'Ng uw ix QWNH, ' . , KNHNI 5 N fx. I x .ai ltfwlt, l x if xllwsx Rl X5 ,Max 1 it ix . .aux ' s unix 'ai yu. u Q s Q E . I ll U slazlgxxskx 5-kimguxf .. A h 1 xl I K I Sn: ' M alwllllilm 'Q 4 ma 3 ! Ea I 1 1 I ' ' ' 2 s .. ., r H 32 Fi A' , 2, ---f V 5-WV-M-M M W' ,,, M .4-nr ' ' M 3 iliiinia X 5 M 'N-W, M Nm.. .,, , ,...-- 1 1, 1? 17 -K.,-ka -JJ H5 sf' av , 3 ,Ad , , ,Q gi? if If , s I '47 ,WW f' . 1 ,f fy 1 ,gqwffg 3 Q I-, , 1 , '1 ' x 5 nmwfi .Y 2' X- 2 W, I I +j,.:,ff'f I gf M W, Q. , . I MJ , 1 . ',. Amwnmw , 29 X f ,f f Q M ff ff !.f,!ff!!, ,I If I My X Mwxw gi ,, W ww, .X,X,? X wfM . 5: i krk. X .sz S sg! ,. ,. 33.1 5 'U A 2+ Q 7, A W f f, - My r W , K , if 2 lf 4, ff- f Q7 Wagga 1 ff . 1 Y jfs My gfrli 1,24 ,, V 45.'5 fI'af FV' wi 2 g' 51 wfitw . 1, '13 f aw' L ' wa M Qqfffwf? ' mmf ff 'ffnsxhmx W,., EW, f fl ff I ,M ,A ,W ,ff , , Lim' MLW , : Lf M5 Maw ww ,,.,f M' fwff ,JW ,W ,Qi W aMf ff W- f,,f M U g ,M , ,Maw-'Q-'-' -- g,..,,,.i urfq T X , , ' ,,,, iz s 'SQ W Q' , X L, , if Q A, ' - . . - , . 1 ., '1-Y, SP W '.jF'SKfg-,?' vm , -. 1 ,, . , . ., 11 s ' .?14b 4: Q54 , 'fly V' -k- x l xbv. Q-, ,- ,N ,gl- , 'K ' 4 X fl. 4 -. -. 1 , Q, F VW, f YK A , RQQL.: f, Q1-ts. - W .L ,- ' ' - w- , 5- A ' QW .L - .-f' Mx-.Q M .1 Q' ' ,4',1'Q..,,T Qgc, , 'f 1 .A 481-'w' .J - ,J ' 5-'. 3 . ifygw ,.- ,gf .f .-M -g ' W J w. 2 J 'Mg ' ' , ' ' ' ' M -., . 5' 32 3:23 ' g' 7 .. 15 4 ' f . xA , s g , R 7 1 :.y f ' if Q ifiif f J, ,' 'Man , 1 W JM 5 w I a 9 W I up e f my , N Z, U' E 4' ga -Qlifplj ' f Q 553' ,V M M I V M 'A7 ,, :'i .Ky , P M- ,Q , , . - L .A W 1,52 . A -A H ,:Qq .f5,5 is , V , J o ,, fc - - ,Q W? L fl' A - ' few' .L W 3' QW ,gwggyze W.. , - M, Q V vw 5 35 ,j g Q' whwll rr I Mi ff 'W W ' m i? W 4' ' ' f ' gif A' M I T' n, 4. ,IW ' , 1 jf 'N J w,,jg1 fm ,Lf ,V , g f' W , - 'W' 'Q-I 'Q 1 ,av -I Av 1' A ' . vm, 1 ,, V, igggla 5 .k ,fm a i, ,gm 75 I ,, ' L 'Ii' 1 Q Qty ', I Y , I ' , ' ' ,-x Q o,i,.2 . :V waxy 'a A . . I , .Q I q g- M , X f i KVQNLLLR Y f ' 'Y ' ? , L, ,, y 'f f I 4 'wYuMf'4, g . 'Z v Jak - M . rf. W, 0 R M: mfs ,M kv-1 5 a f , 34 g'ri-out ture 9.5 ar- QQ ,wlli Y Cows are milked with foam rubber and steel, pigs inhabit sterilized pig pens, and farmers use slide rules to fill out their income tax forms. Modern ag- riculture is modern. The farmer is no longer just a farmer, but a technician and a businessman as well. Thus a School of Agriculture and Life Sciences is no longer a luxury-it is a necessity. At State students are taught more than how to plant corn or slop the hogs.They learn aboutchromosomes, genetics, grafting, and the nervous systems of chick- ens. They learn how to operate and service machines that would dwarf a plow horse. They learn about modern marketing techniques and the new econom- ics. They read Joseph Conrad and write term pa- pers and work quadratic equations. In short, the farmer is no longer a hick. Agriculture has more than changed, it has under- gone a revolution of titantic proportions. State's Ag School not only teaches its students how to cope with revolution-it teaches them how to help im- plement it. Within five years chickens may be lay- ing square eggs leasier packagingl. m..sNum 35 1 1 36 I 37 ww ' , vw X. llIlIH. !Q E : ' g 4 mTW f The working environment of a design student is unique. Denied regular working hours by the nature of his work, he compensates by slaving far into the night over a tangled jumble of lines in an effort to meet his project deadline. Denied any fixed stand- ards of excellence, he compensates by creating his e-sign I own standards, his own blend of form and function. The result is, hopefully, more original concepts of what the externals of our world should look like. For the modern ranch house and the modern inkwell are both designs These concepts will thus apply not only to concrete and steel skyscrapers but to toothpaste tubes, front lawns, automobiles, and whis- key bottles. What the appearance of our world evolves into is the responsibility of the design major. ua-u-nik IN, MRA SYS is X in if f-,SQ in u ,As ima. PROFESSOR DUNCAN R. STUART .3 Nik She used to be an old woman with grey hair, thick glasses, and white chalk dust on the seat of her dress. Now she may just as well be a he lin the case of educational television, an it l. Her job used to be the teaching of the three R's with a liberal dose of old-fashioned discipline. Now she lectures on the quantum theory, Sartre's exis- tentialism, and something called the new math. The preparation of a teacher, no matter what shape, size, or color a modern society may impose ed u-ca'tion on her, is the primary purpose behind State's School of Education. lt not only offers degrees in such diverse areas as Agriculture, Industrial Arts, and Mathematics, but provides professional education courses for potential teachers in English and Social Studies. lt is only a matter of time before knowl- edge is injected into people with a hypodermic at birth, but until then such institutions as the School of Education will continue to be needed. ...... NSN 'swims' - by S 5 5 3 5 Q'-'Q Affll, .Q .i 'vqd me ' .0 mfwr ,Www wwmmiwgt yew' -.xx 46 DOCTOR NORMAN D. ANDERSON ,- :if -ef I Q 1 K Q w, Q 1 s xx S Eg Pr iii i A fi 1 1 2. kg va - 15 V1 fJx+?W?T. E w V QA 'fh- iv 5 if wma en gi-neer'ing The engineering freshman enters into a world of almost terrifying complexity, a world of test tubes and wires and atomic reactors. He discovers that he is expected to be a virtuoso in a dozen different fields of study, mastering equa- tions, theories, charts, and metals. Two plus two may no longer equal fourg water is no longer only water but a precise blend of hydrogen and oxygen. Once he leaves his freshman year behind him, he must choose between nine different departments, some of which didn't exist five years ago. The work load never lets up, if anything it becomes more demanding, more exacting. ln the next three years he is expected to absorb generations of knowledgeg knowl- edge that may be made obsolete by next week's technical journal. The result, the end product, is the Engineer. The School of Engineering at State is one of the country's major source for high quality engineers, the men who, for better or worse, are responsible for lifting the world out of the dark ages. The engineer has put the horse to pasture, the airplane in the sky, and the television in the living room. He has created the atomic bomb and the electric toothbrush, the hydrofoil and the tin can. 49 , -- N N , 3 1 1 1 1 w W 7? 5 V? 5 1-wfiwv 50 ff-QQNW A x,-, :,,4..Qy, Z E 2 DOCTOR JAMES C. WILLIAMS, III 53 ior'est-ry Forestry has been a subject of major concern in recent years, for our timber resources are dwindling at a rate inversely proportional to our growing need for them. The job of controlling this highly un- favorable ratio is near the top of the list for grad- uating forestry majors. Yet the management of all those leafy-green trees demands more than an overgrown Boy Scout with a Bachelor of Science degree. Forestry, like so many other formerly simple things, is now a science. Once the trees leave the forest the emphasis shifts to pulp and paper technology, an important portion of the forestry program at State. But the job is not ended here. Forestry majors soon find that they must also study insects, soils, eco- nomics, physics ,chemistry, mathematics, and maybe a few basic English courses. fi 1 Xiffg 'W Quia Fi' e., 5112 xiii S ,Q ff E 'Hmm 1 ff fy W 1, sf, nw .. Q f Ti? fffwi v hi V was 'Masai Q , 2 L i ,M r VMC.. . A .5 1' j , pf' To 35' 'tid 'Q jf at M' rf .f J' z' my -:za fw 11, ' ' ' ' .V ' l Li ' ' 'Y A . - ' ' ,Q lib ral arts i Behind a facade of tired old jokes and instant put- downs, the School of Liberal Arts has been rapidly growing in both quality and quantity. Already the third largest school on campus, courses are con- stantly being added which offer both variety and challenge. Its professors certainly equal in quality, if not reputation, those at more venerable institutions feven this qualification is only a fast disappearing generalizationj. The Liberal Arts Council has proven itself to be a vital fand controversialj segment of stu- dent government. Graduate programs are being in- stituted in some areas and expanded where they already exist. Yet the Liberal Arts School is not just an entity unto itself but an integral part of the improving cultural atmosphere of the university as a whole. A math major with a strong interest in English history can find courses which strike his fancy, while a physics major may want to learn more about Shakespeare. The Liberal Arts School is no longer an enigma or an unknown quantity. It is making its presence felt. M ,gf ffl!! Z' Elm ,fa 'iw 4 .,v, . ,mms if-iffy? gk , ff gf f: , ,.:,:32F: H if ks, .J ,.,.f,--- n , ,Lu , m .gixyi up E W. PQ . , gflilgkwnx' V54 Mfr llllln' xx XX X -fi--. 1 .--2-:SSA 3 as X f5'ASi'i'1i M - ge! .sf.sf7.w,..f , :. - ga . .g1TSsf?s-.sew Afwwm: -we - . .. 94 .M U. , f' .ff -- W .- .- f-mi..-S5-ysxz .Digi K N Yi --w--1f4z1.SSf2f-fff5- aw-fs-. fm X X -.me-2 .5 N. .. fs saw. 4-: :I:S:- ical , ESEa?iL55i .53-I is 3 .125-g 1 N mm , ,xxx . K si! K W 1 W S L . 1 - fs'.:-im-1:1 . Q . , K ...wjX.m. . .... .. -my .. Qs. 5 - - - W . lg-1.-V.. X-l.w.......,5.,N?2.m, ww+w.1 - - - - -few?S'I.ei5:3:fZE?z-1 -f I mLmmW,X.X. ,, m,.. . 12.5 . . S my .,.K.. .. .. .. :X .,.. ,5,.k., .W 1452.2 :Sv :Q S 1' ESgS'ls?L--J .Q T251-ii. sriiiw wee T. ,, . -f . S ,, M ,..43.., fm-.:.1115--.5-...vm f -..2TE,ef 1 f if 1512511 --.md F5 ..fE.5555 ?5Tl JT 71+ - .V .wi-.Fi4z:a 9 K ' Q ..,:iEff'.s11.s.sfrg- 'X -Q .gzzxsikg XSg:QS'371 - Xucif- V :-.kzimw-rawj sijgfigl :- V. .. .,..f:gf1-.gmggx-..s'g felifii-f ff'.1'ff25S?f-- :fifilz 2:f'..3QSiggaS?.fgf:i4 1-11:2SSYqN5g55--ill. 1- 1ff5f.5iil5i.51:. - .. 1. -. .mfS11Sf.-afegiffg 5 A . .,.. .. Q. , ,. ..L..M..,. 18.-rf? ..- .,... .s..,... Wi? . 55253- 'W xii 51 I , fe. ,X .1 -fn. -,iss h ' 61 Once upon a time, when the world was still flat and at the center of the universe, science and mathematics were toys that poor philosophers played with. Now, when the world is no longer quite as flat or as self-important, science and math are no longer toys and the men who play with them are no longer poor. State turns out a high number of this new breed of scientists and mathematicians. The best of them can expect challenging jobs and high pay. Yet, strangely enough, no one enters these fields for a fast buck, for they demand a high de- gree of interest and abilityg physics, chemistry, and calculus don't fit in with anyone's idea of what a crip course sr ould be. Thus the caliber of those who choose to enter this area is highg the caliber of those who survive it is even higher. phys'1cs and math Q25 W QS' VJ? V vg vw , , NW if xy uw ' Ik VV I ,ff 4 if W W llllllll iv 41 .,., , ' PROFESSOR HOWARD A. PETREA 1 4 In FM J ,,VA, 5, 5,,.,,,. ' l t x'tile With the possible exception of a few cannibals in the jungles of New Guinea and a few headhunters along the upper reaches of the Amazon, textiles are one of the most needed products in the world today. The more sophisticated cannibals and head hunters who inhabit the United States are no exception to this rule. North Carolina is one of the nation's leading states in this field: cotton, wool, and about fifty miracle syn- thetic fabrics are all produced here. The demand for technicians is understandably high. It is a demand the School of Textiles constantly strives to meet. Yet the actual study of textiles is not confined to the operation of a jet-age version of the spinning jenny: like all the other students at State, the textiles major must learn to cope with the sciences and humani- ties. He must also, inevitably, channel his work into one of three areas: fiber and yarn technology, knit- ting technology, and textile chemistry. Granny, with a wooden spinning wheel, has been replaced by a technician with a stainless steel whatchamacallit. Granny has been put out of date, but as long as she has her mini-skirt and bikini she doesn't seem to mind. . i 1 1 68 Q M14 ji 6 PROFESSOR ERNEST B. BERRY 71 Ballet, whether interpreted by Degas or Nureyev or the American Ballet Theatre, is ballet. Images of poise and elegance well up within the mind, for a ballet has traditionally been a blend of the fluid mo- tion of the dance and the grace and serenity of clas- sical music. Above all, ballet is a sense of beauty, both piognant and timeless, that has come to life. The Ballet presented this October may have jarred many who hold such traditional preconceptions. The dancers in one presentation were garbed in strictly unconventional Victorian dress and their movements struck some as being more devoted to Samuel Beckett than Swan Lake. Yet enough of the classical remained in the other presentations to satisfy the most conservative, while others were undoubtedly impressed by the attempts to innovate, to break new ground. Certainly none who attended felt that the ballet was ready to be replaced by the watusi. - , x . 4 1 II 1 .r 4 A s 1 I lr XY' - ,?l lt 9 t . 4 ixfi' l ttyag l S 5 wtf l if T 3 la ft it, rs H, .MC akfl .fklf l T-Nl l.X? p5W 4 5 ,HIA T idx, 5.3 'A fl l NS F bflif ,Nil lg W sfiflifid fix? li W am ' I' iikilclnx T W l 5.11, , ylx S .r- 5 -l i 'Q x l sliligl 'QWT 4 3 ir, f' - l NY' If 73 it ? it 'Q 5 af 75 Symposium: Communications came to mean some- thing more than a telegram or a telephone call in the minds of those who attended. 76 RALPH NADER SENATOR WAYNE MORSE SANDER VANOCUR is wan-. 7' 77 T f- W-- DA-DA-DA-DUM-M-M-M-M 78 CHAMBER SYMPHONY OF PHILADELPHIA gf. M 5 DO-RE-MI-FA-SO-LA-TI-DO 5 5 3 5 S Eg Q SEQ ANNA MOFFO RICHARD TUCKER Mercury Vapor Lights and a Steel Guitar Loud Castinets and Vibrant Costumes Color and Sound Spanish Ballet JOSE GRECO if Ah, take the cash, and let the credit go! -The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyan STUDENT ART AUCTION A man cannot tell whether Appelles or Albert Durer were the more triflerg whereof the one would make a personage by geometrical proportionsg the other by taking the best parts out of divers faces, to make one excellent. Such personages, l think, would please nobody but the painter that made them. Not but I think a painter may make a better face than ever was, but he must do it by a kind of felicity. -FRANCIS BACON ,fig- I have never seen a newt, but I am convinced that creatures who have no music ARTHUR FIEDLER U' have no soul. KAREL CAPEK There was a time when folksingers were poor and oppressed and hungry and slightly off-key. Now folksinging is big-time show-biz with all the attachments: Cadillacs and re- cording contracts and television appearances and smooth voices. The songs themselves have become attuned to the times. Specialized. Their sub- jects are concentration camps and Joe McCarthy and civil rights and the draft. Now no one can really dislike Peter, Paul, and Mary. They're nice people with even nicer voices. Yet somehow one wishes they were a little less rich and maybe slightly off-key. J PETER YARROW PAUL STOOKEY MARY TRAVERS Van Cliburn, an aura of success still lingering from his 1958 victory at Moscow, made his second ap- pearance at State in February. Anyone who attended under the delusion that long hair meant the Beatles found himself confronted with the likes of Debussy, Schumann, Prokafieff, and Beethoven - a con- tinental combo that never made it big in the states. r.?, ,Y l 4 88 was MN Culture has become the God of the latter part of the Twentieth Century, a fool's golden calf into whose flaming maw we pour the manuscripts of centuries and then proclaim ourselves learned men. The ashes are left for our prophets to sift and decipher and tell us what we've gained, if anything. Four prophets came to State this year under the auspices of the Erdahl-Cloyd Union - Maynard Mack, Thomas Wolfe, John Dos Passos, and Alfred Kazin. The collective name for this annual literary entrails reading is Contemporary Scene. l l The Engineers' Fair gives everyone a chance to see exactly what those engineers have been doing all year. Displays include the usual quota of sincere- looking robots, radio-active mice, talking garbage cans, and radios made out of two matches, a bottle cap, and the eye of a newt. Accompanying these electronic marvels, booths with games were added to allow those with a non-techni- cal bent to participate. There were basketball free- throws, go-go girls, dart games, and one stand which gave all patriotic 2-S's a chance to sink the Viet Cong Navy with the aid of a water pistol. 90 f i .4 A an NMX f, ' f maxima! fr 'ffm 5 .1 ff! V 5 , Q Q 4 Q , 4' aw A 'f Na f' f' . , YV, I l 34 may if 7 1 ,: V' V ffwf' ii 'W' 41 f Q V du, f 31 fig , 1 1 'i 1 A h.'t41if f ffm 5 '-M 1 ' ff if V- I' xx f X, X X n. WK, X :L 1 fi Hn- lf 1 G W af , , w W +Z l V 41 : 6? 1. ,v For those who had, at least until now, survived the whole ordeal so flippantly referred to as education, the university provided a reward in the form of an all-campus week-end to accompany the Engineers' Fair. Although the campus cynics were quick to deride it as an ersatz version of Carolina's Jubilee Week, everyone could find something to suit their musical palates, from country music to rock and roll to jazz. 1 95 L WW if' Pi., + Y --'-+ 1 Q .- NS . lf? . gk we AQ if V - sf' i X-, il A K K xl . . 3 F -xl xxx X, ,K K 1 X Xf f X i A ix .S 2 S R x 5 100 N 1 , ,Q . A 5 44.14. Wa? 'Wh x x 'Www VT 7555! Q. S X2 w -ms. ' ,g ' Q jfs , i J.. N.-aww. ' if 'mum 109 F- --W -- - ,qv '1. 'T'BFX'f ' Wm x. fi 1 A X 2+ - L fun- f . JT ,frvrfeiff 'lifff' Dhabi? '.'.J..4K W N E53 T 0mL: 'f1'W .JFK 1, Q' 'N X' ' E 'IF CDA .QQINI 'IHIEA ' , 110 N L . Drama has always been a highly uncertain amalgam of word, thought and action-an amalgam never more uncertain than when witnessed in the three yearly productions of the Frank Thompson Theatre. Where else is lbsen played for laughs? Yet despite limitations of budget and interest, the productions are always carried off with a highly professional touch and an obvious love for drama as an art that the devoted followers of Peyton Place would never understand. 111 V7 w IRA ALLEN, JEAN VINSON, BARBARA OKA, DAVID LAPSON, BARRY CORBIN GEORGE SCHWIMMER Qmwluand-Q, 112 JL A-gag f..,,Rgs1,. A 'j gg awww ...- 'QQ ff rf ff wg, X .s. l in 113 Qllll S t WIN! 1 Qllllh vlllli fi ' Qfl 'Nj 'Illlffb . I Any art form that can unite Leonard Bernstein and the Rolling Stones and still have room for bands and glee clubs is, to say the least, unique. Its success can be measured by the fact that Pithecanthropus Erectus was probably hitting two rocks together to make music before he learned to speak. Music at State has come a long way from the primi- tive sounds of the cave man. iAnd has not yet reach- ed the primitive sounds of such groups as Harper and the Bizarresi Yet it still manages to soothe even the most insensitive elements on campus. :W . ,.- - .N ' I QQ. . as testi Q X S 1 X -1 ' Q . . . 1 Qlziiiiv-5:2 H - ' t V - . . g ,...Q:s:9xs.iAi- -fiifbifm k ' 'V f -fe 11'-.gggsg g-S ' - t 1 -f-- 'F is EEE . , 1 , EQ -1 it W . Nw. is ' .St 7 -sl bmah .Qf,A: I . - wav ' KY ., ,, N M Q W s g A 1 5.3 , P t G m . Q b D ., . .V-L.-,:.- K LL ,.fg'A , MM, ,P m . sv . QW ! i Qi I I N ' j -3 A ,Qu X if 5 9, 1 , -. g D ' . rv'-' iw , R R X 1 sl' For tastes which run to Basie and the Beatles rather than Beethoven and Brahms, New Arts, sponsored by the Inter-fraternity Council and the Erdahl-Cloyd Union, provides a series of six concerts. Although rock and roll is probably dead and jazz is certainly decadent, tickets, strangely enough, always seem to be sold out at the start of the year. 118 JIM DALTON IH S ' CHARLES FRAZELLE Nr- . ROBERT BOYETTE :X K Q ' i C' xxy Y . JY' 5 li Stl' Q4 gtll Q V, NPLXN N W Xl XR X NIH iii N 'ig -1 la' I-'Q ' x 'iw V wx, 5 5 , , ART Nm I S Nlxjb i gi' ll ur- MM. Ni iv is Y lib In a city where The Sound of Music can play to capacity crowds for over a year at one theatre, an organization such as Sight and Sound provides a welcome respite from the saccharine floods which originate in Hollywood and inundate the land. Al- though the definition of art film is too often stretched to in c I u de everything from Bogart to Kurosawa, the student who eschews the ordinary can be counted upon to attend regularly. spit mn ysrurfrrvfyi legit pm. new if in -Qi :ll,ll4QlI its fflflxll W 5 I I.: lvl I 'SMI ll AN III JOHN G. KARPICK JANEEN SMITH JOHN CARROLL MARY OLIVE JOHNSON BARRY ALLEN E I -8' lffflmk lnm S'I' IIlII5A'lI' I-fa Queen , ',x'a' mWQ2 UCIGQ :I Iflmifflf 5,'4'I'I.I If EIf491.f15RiI3I22 R I- M222 I-TIILY I' figiiii' N LS: f?.Z V I ' mi Ii ILL. v .Tr'i? ?E'S 120 JIM KEAR GEORGE BUTLER DR. R. N. ELLIOTT W. H. SIMPSON OLIVER NOBLE FRANK HOUGH DON GRIGG T. M. SNOW C. O. EYCKE BETTY WILLIAMS TINA WARTHEN TOM ANTONE RICK WHEELESS CY KING ABS. WELLS HOOD Aguuulm T 51 Wu PHOTO EDITOR - z T- ' 'Q T, 1, EARL MURSENHIMER MORGAN, In 'f 5n I,k 'ff' 1 5 , mlm Illf Ulf A 'AA 'LI-I If xx I .Li ,Q-:QI U MXt'f. .A1:QKU1 l'olHu'fc, , X ,I ,, , . 'A-QUQIA' i- A. ,KfT!?51'x.'W2:1fl,-cf! Q I uf .Q 1 7 1 Y .MNH mil -'lil W K EDITOR P' - A -f FRANK M. HOUGH, JR. 'X Af I'-51 RMT: Xr2I'fl1i'f'kX 121 MANAGING EDITOR MIKE SNOW N fl-ig -IIII i '-I. , , ASST. MNG. EDITOR BOB POWELL STAFF NORA BLACK COPY EDITOR JULIAN PARKER SPORTS COPY HARRY EAGAR INITIATES COPY JOHN TEANEY SPORTS PHOTOGRAPHY JIM HOLCOMBE ORGANIZATION PHOTOGRAPHY ROBERT STEELE ORGANIZATION 81 FRATERNITY PHOTOGRAPHY THOMAS JEFERSON LAND, JR. 123 W! 'll I I Nlil l ' ' ,EDQERE r-ui:-la-lf5le3vf .sl!t!5 J' llgggqrhgng vi -6fpiw',luN L fl 1 l ,. N ' I A ix' lit!!-ll r't'l'I ' r..l .l'!2'Jl- ll'-mu ' -'l 1lQIlvl - Q'-v'fi!llillig,l ,ulv.,35 s' Wai lillf ll WIA' R?gl?'n5Al-TXENEITEEQ 124 It prints the news every Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. It surrounds the news with stories covering the many faces of the University. But, the thing that keeps it alive is freedom - freedom to voice an opinion, a viewpoint. This viewpoint, usually expressed in the editorial pages, sometimes creeps into the rest of the paper. This is as it should be. lt gives the paper a personality, that of people who make it up. In this way a moldy piece of pie becomes an opinion and a source of action. The response of the students who can recognize this personality is a form of reward to those who serve the needs of the students and the demands of a publication schedule. When all the glue is gone, when all the gripes are forgotten, and when all the lost sleep is replaced, there remains a solid feeling of accomplishment. They can't take that away from you. MANAGING EDITOR CARTOONIST BOB HARRIS BOB CHARTIER Us at as , ., gi g, .Hz if ' f is V V A' 'Q W ' 'li' slr lf YH STATION MANAGER if N DON GRIGG 'fx ' fill! 4 Q'-1 IX xi' JJ l 1:31, . tv :W 'l s N ' n.,?Qg,N' I 5 it at l I 'Hg' -.-'lx ox' z f xl ,A 1 'V 1' V- 5 I A tsif if, - Of' alixl f I-1- . ,s-'-' ry -if ,'--' A vfittl ii 1 WKNC-FM is radio - collegiate radiog but what, one might ask, does this quasi ivy-league sounding marque mean? WKNC-FM is organization - an organization that behaves and functions like prisoners who have to do it and corporation junior executives whose pay checks make them want to do it but without either. lt's an organization impervious to the jibes and barbs of carrier current ridicule and one that must scratch for everything from that last penny from the Board to that five minute interview with someone who would rather be interviewed by WPTF. It is an organization that had a lack-luster beginning but one that has begun and is going in the up direction. WKNC-FM is the small but faithful 19'M-, who said no to W . . .and braved the rol- ling stones of irate suite mates, who said no to stereo mediocrity and sterile intel- lectualism and listen to what entertained and pushed back the dingy crannies of their brain. KNC-FM is special and its listeners are special and growing. All the electronically sophisticated meat and potatoes that make our magnetic wig- gle, all the fanatical wonders who man her switches and typewriters -- all these are special and make what we feel is a special way of feeling -- WKNC-FM. L. OLIVER NOBLE, PROGRAM DIRECTOR PAUL BROCHON DON GRIGG, STATION MANAGER STEVE WETHERSPOON DON THOMPSON BRUCE CARL DOERLE GARY CONRAD DAVID BROWN JEFF SIKES CALVIN BARNHARDT JAMES BALDWIN BILL POINDEXTER, CHIEF ENGINEER DAVID PORTER STAN BAILEY JOHN BEARD JIM BRANDEN 127 I .,.,...F, fi 3- - Mlxglii bvligiaaiklq 'TJ' wnn.N.bIq1 IQIIIII VQJAIIN ' 'III' . -'Nflimhp - I -R ' ' xprlj up 'li MN a . IIHMHII 1 SI I Q 4 I lk' Lyx,-ll Q 'Y In 1 I ' 'II 'x1p vllI',KU X .nw A , .. -.. XI III I .12 ii-I 1f',.'-9'-:HD '1'- Ni's .'. ?5 '-I5 I. fi 'al 'QI ' TV I A... Abt ART EDITOR JOE COVINGTON FICTION EDITOR TOM ANTONE EDITOR TINA WARTHEN Q POETRY EDITOR HUGH NAYLOR STAFF BOB TALLAKSEN MIKE ERNEST LAURA PERRY One of the few visible manifestations of the burgeon- ing literary atmosphere at State is the Windhover, the School's Literary magazine. lt tries to provide some sort of cultural outlet for all members of the university, an outlet that is only gradually being taken advantage of by both campus and community. De- spite an annual inundation of short stories and poems about disillusioned youth, suicides, and pet cats, the finished product is an impressive array of literary talent. 1 .. .sm-mln NON-FICTION EDITOR ROSE COOPER ui a,a w HIIIIID-INK I:-rffxvm Iiihsn HI IIIHIH Inna.-fin IUIIJ UIEIIFWIHXCIIH' XIII IDII is ll.IlID'IID'l IIN NUI IPIIA. li IIIDIIDII I2-I M IZ-II +- ll IUINIHXIIIWXWI NIM- ul.m:-II:-I Nlfslirv I:-II T: umwmmnwjnmm, uamammwwmwg . uIlID'IID'IIMIlf2l NIl IDIIIQQA uII:slI:4I:4IqIIaIl!I:-was IFIIKIS .E II II 2 W II 353535 uI:IlI:4I:nIafJIlII:-IM I:-me If I . ,FTF- I 1' ' - . 5' , ' A I I 'Z' 5 u.Ilz:-II:4IxinI:lTmfI a-Mrk I ' rf , sis ,l ,XII '-' -VD' A ' 01 A , 'J t S II :I - .e. I I I R, q 1 N1 Nik IS I 'If T ' ' S ul O 1 D X Ivizrusxamvsmnswmw ISIIKIS HPIIIDIIIJIIR I I ix IIE INIKPB BETSY ROSS CHUCK HUGHES CHRIS COLTRANE VICKI YAKUTIS SCOTTY WAGONER LLOYD RAWLS ROY COLQUITT DIANE RAMSEY JIM STRAWBRIDGE CHARLES LINDSEY DIANE DAVIS JIM MOLOFSKY 'W' . li.2-Haiii S A ni lf A FN-2 ' A l'ilMl-Milli Sv- in..- .......- A, A Y Q A aifnwiualw-A -- 4 T Z-wg xi' V Q4.!'5,'5E4--+w-A - . . f-- 1. Lg m 'i - ' :CZ . A 2325 , fukillliiliitilili A- , ' A 1. I c' 4 Aifbhgwegmg iw 4 us 2 iFi:.' 'NPI '1A3A,... 7--- .sm fl ' f Sjfi '- ,--1...:'. -1 CARTER STADIUM RALEIGH N C. I I Qhfwtmsa. , Ska.-A 22553912 522 i5 ?l'Ff , .... I ' -5-n..----Q-.5625 . 1- .-sl-- ..i , . . 1 ,. ,, 1 . i are at nw as 0 -3' H-fy-13 .1 ., ' f . 4. r ft ' Img . if 5 M K ' A . l if J K 'af 1. -W 'i:.Q1'., S, - A ,A .. ,. . A. . s. fi . . . 1: ' I W' L A .5--nel 4 ,, ,-gig , ,K . gm. 1' . UH- wx, ' l a - . I F a 4 ,H r 3-539,-' F, ' I., in - .j 0 wt- . . -fl -'--0' A, :gm 1 . . .Q ' .-. - A chilly rain and a one-point loss to Southern Mississippi in the Oyster Bowl can be countered by a bright autumn sun and a win over Clemson, but weather isn't all in the mood of defeat - or victory. The saddest thing at the Oyster Bowl, sadder even than losing, was a young camel that toured the field at half-time with Halloween dressed men and a wretch- ed oriental band slopping over the wet grass. The one cloud smothering the city, the black sky, the cold wetness, the dirty stadium, a relic of Depression welfare, the defeat, could not equal the melancholy of a desert animal in raincoat weather. 132 A roll of drums, a bleat of trumpets, and just like the movies, life changes in a reminiscence. The gloom of a WPA arena is incomparable to the aseptic gleam of Carter Stadium under a,made-to-order football sun. Nothing is alive at first but the green-enough grass and the color in the girls' outfits. The brightness of the crowd has nearly covered the coldness of the concrete when that other life, those small figures in numbered suits, trots over the grass and takes up its care- fully ordered positions that only the fan can be privy to. The droning of the ad- vertising plane and the liquor laws can be ignored, but now no one can ignore the brightly colored giants posing as gnomes on the green-enough grass. The pain of the checks and tackles cannot be felt in the stands, the agony over a missed assignment cannot disturb the happiness of a crowd that knows that its hour has arrived, its glory that its team is the one that controls the green- enough grass. The game only has meaning that it is given, and this one has even less mean- ing than the ones before it: the loser will still be the champion when the gun sounds - Clemson cannot lose even though it is not the victor. For the win- ners it is still a lossy for many they will not play again on green-enough grass be- fore an agreeable crowd, they will not challenge seven other teams to a test of strength again. A victory will ease the memory of an average season only a few moments, but it is a good way to go, a good last effort. State continued its role of arbiter of Atlantic Coast conference football with a team that performed well, though less well than its potential. A second place finish broke the string of three straight champion- ships, but the Pack's kicking game win over cham- pion Clemson in the final game pushed the decision into the last week of the season. Elsewhere, particularly at Michigan State, the team kept up the conference tradition of losing all the non-family tilts. Michigan State came out for blood and a national title and sent four Pack starters to the doctor. Their absence led to the most important loss of the year at Chapel Hill the next week, but State beat Duke, and Duke got its licks at Carolina, so everyone had at least one chance to brag and imbibe a victory punch. Otherwise it was dominate your friends and don't antagonize visitors all season. State provided the people at Columbia something to smile about by giving South Carolina its only win, but mopped up the rest of the conference as in the gloried past. Florida and Southern Mississippi proved again that the ACC in general and State in particular ought not to get out of its own neighborhood. ,A,C' ALL AMERICAN DEFENSIVE TACKLE DENNIS BYRD .NE Y S x ,, In gf X - s . ' if . ' , ' Qi hsriygiifkiiiihifxli' ' xidflif, W. A 41 5 'W f N K ,, - V , Q Q... er ,W W, , ' M T A -'L . .hav ' Acqy N fi-'ff-P W- . N. ,JZ--Kg? Qi in .1-, M - 5?-fl V Sr-PEE? - 5, .,,.5151,i ' 3335 - L'X:f1Piif.,.7' - 4 V- - iabgfmfdg- 'iff A if-1,1 f, A' fafgm qiw X' i.--Qzfvk-1' ms 1, -ilft----fm,ggfme- A - ' ' ,g-'1V:3?Q TH! k Mfiiikiiiq- Xififfwl neil! -f H951 Si . S1 . f Q K . ' . X ' . S, 'iii I i I ,ay , ,K A i L, ,. K. . ' 5 rim if -3' ' 1 :x Y' Q -33 Hi- A g Q X, g L , I x as-, X W - mf w - I - S j . , 1 5 :.A 6 Eg V. A, ,.,h gi 7 K . ,,, X Z - ' -H 45 .. , f' -2 I 5. , In n z . man ,I . N ' ' N 'T' 3 Q' ' I 'Sw F EVIL: ivy., LM bb If dj fu, :WTI W H LK ,gr Ml J Kita Vx V I ,L L FC- 'Im QQ fgf,':f 3 I if-' I I PM '5 g '21 52 4 ' W . is .ff I-e-.,-- 2111. , ,IJ-,J L: f 7'1f 11 rm, Q 0 cu f1 ff' Z .ph LL -qv , I -5A nvvtgd., A .Af Q, I U3 J ua i , -1 AIR, I. I Q4 'Yin I C '- BILL WYLAND, WENDELL COLEMAN, CHARLIE NOGGLE, BILL JAMES, GARY ROWE, GARY WHITMAN, TERRY JENKINS, DAVE EVERETT HAROLD DETERS, DON DeARMENT, CHARLIE TAYLOE, BILL GENTRY, JOHN MONAGO, JOHN STEC, RON JACKSON, PETE SOKALSKY, STEVE WARREN ART MCMAHON, JIM DONNAN, JOE WHITE, DON DONALDSON, BILL MORROW, TONY BARCHUK, HARRY MARTELL, LLOYD SPANGLER, DENNIS BYRD JIMMY LISK, CHARLES MOORE, FLAKE CAMPBELL, JOHN MCDUFFIE, NORMAN CATES, GREG WILLIAMS, CHARLES AMATO, TRENT HOLLAND, TERRY BROOKSHIRE CAREY METTS, MIKE RICHARDS, BENNY EMMONS, ROCKY RUSSELL, LEON MASON, RON WATKINS, MARK CAPUANO, FRED COMBS, BILL CRAIG, FRED BIVINS TOMMY GILL, RICHARD CHAPMAN, WALTER COOKE, FRED WINTERSTEEN, MARVIN THARP, BOB FOLLWEILER, GARY YOUNT, ART WALESKI, JACK KLEBE, DICK SCHIRIPPA CURTIS WALKER, BRIAN SOUTH, DAVE KELLY, KELLY JONES, ART HUDSON, CHARLES TOPE, PAUL REID, STEVE DIACONT, BOBBY HALL, PETE BAILEY WAYNE LEWIS, DICK IDOL, MIKE ALFORD, SETTLE DOCKERY, A. G. HAYES, BILL EWASKIEWICZ, LEE ROY HAMILTON, MIKE HILKA, LOU BIEGA, ROBBY EVANS, MARK WILCOX CHANCELLOR JOHN T. CALDWELL, TRAINER AL PROCTOR, MANAGER RAYMOND ROHLFF, ASST. ERNIE DISCOLL, ASST. AL MICHAELS, ASST. TIM TAPP, ASST. BILL SMALTZ, EUGENE TAYLOR, ASST. CAREY BREWBAKER, HEAD COACH EARLE EDWARDS, PRESIDENT WILLIAM C. FRIDAY, ATHLETICS DIRECTOR ROY B. CLOGSTON at eff The 1966-67 State basketball team had class. It didn't win many games, but it arranged to win most of those it did win at home so that the supporters could share the glory. lt didn't win many games, but it won the Triangle Tournament, and beat a highly regarded team to do it. It didn't have experience, but it had class and poise. It played close games with two of the country's best, Carolina and Duke, and it lost, but not because it got flustered and lost a lead. It had the only coach in the country whose wife sang the National Anthem before home games. It had class. Q 7 433995 N 139 Q X ,, . S li 1 Q m E, www' State partisans are used to having their basketball teams do well year after year and any deviation causes more grief than failures in other sports do. This year was not vintage for State, but the evidence indicated that it was, indeed, a fluke. Almost everyone who played the year before was gone, and so was the coach. The new coach, Norm Sloan, and the new players had a long way to go. They went a long way before the season ended. lt wasn't a brilliant, record-breaking team fexcept that it lost more conference games than any other Wolf- pack squad and tied a mark for consecutive lossesl, but it was a heart-breaking team. The team couldn't have been as bad as its record said. While it set a record for ACC losses it took time out in a non-conference game with ACC team South Carolina to beat the Gamecocks and win the Triangle Tournament. lt lost to number two ranked North Carolina by one point, and led Duke until nearly the end before losing to that nationally ranked team. lt was not a good year, but it was a better year than the score said. x ' f Bs - LA 7- . ' phi' 1 ly- w l ,f' I ini ,L1 , - 'K - f:3,.f. - g x A ..,' 1 , '-',. V, K 142 X The swimmers do not end their competitive season when State completes its schedule. During the sum- mer they fan out over the country and the world, exchanging the enervating hothouse atmosphere of a heated indoor pool for the breezes and sunshine of outdoor meets in Russia or California or less ex- otic North Carolina. State swimmers have swum on special international teams, with Philadelphia's famous Vesper Swim Club, and the North Carolina Athletic Club fmade mostly of athletes from North Carolina universities and colleges.l Indoors or out, theirs is the only sport at State that never has an off season. K., is .xx ax g . 91' . M,.4-S' S' ' -.., 'bbw ., , , -. ' .. . W 1- N we A. , ' W- A ' 1- ,L A . 'N -- A 55 EL lj M mf. 5:- .N K ' x -- WAY '- X--JK Q -W , .. aw? .QWM 1 K K Qu? gy . K' V 'f-wi ,Nb wk ft: .K-6 K- Taxes may go up and the student deferments may be revoked, but one thing is both sure and steady -the swimming team. The swimmers lost a dual meet at Yale this year, but that doesn't happen often. The six all-Americas on the team and their helpers regularly demolish their opponents, both in and out of the ACC. After smashing Maryland the team began looking for a repeat of last year's conference championship, and trips on to the AAU and NCAA championships. With many of last year's champions and new strength in diving and backstroke, the swimmers of Coach Willis Casey were anticipating new honors in the water. With four of the six All-Americas fFton Wirth, John White,John Calvert, Jeff Herman, John Lawrence, and Steve Rerychl scheduled to come back next year the success of this year and last looks like a con- tinuing habit. 146 , ,ssl 'N a f - 1' .sw . N392 wwwr' fan s--- ,Sims - ,,-Cx, F si. ., n my V . was ix ass, 'NYM wif-??s 6 H YS we E2 , H Q ' 3 f -rsaglili kk 9131 A 5 1 Haggis 'Una L Q VX 255553 f sglggfga. .. ngghngf IHEQNRS 'Hynix 'K r ' ' A Y - S' K ' A Qs. ef' - 3 1 ' as rf ,,,.. R . 5. . ., L .. . k,..ySf, gif W i,,.....,.5A,,,, -if g. W MQW? wif' fr i t it su get X T Hx if 'Tj' . 'F' s. gm S f fi Q. f 'J -1 ,ga M. W- C is ,S ,, W... +Qa,qy M N Q N., R A Y SB Q ugh .wr 'S .am s .Q tr af X X. 6 5 , Q ' . , 5 Q' 'Krfs' C K . -4 . -J' :Ki ffl.-'T'-.f ' . '- ' ' p iii? K- KL .. QR. T KK Eff? 1 ffs 'CK i 5 -- 4 1' a ,., f- rf -. K -f--2' f 'kk- Q ,L nt. -,. . .. J- , msg-:,.:g5r,-.-N... . Q ,. sf- 3 K., an K ,,:19 fF,r-raves... -, , ' . .vs 4-4 :ff KK M-,ufys am A..-ml - V.. K., X . , 1 t ' .f ..YvwKK'i S- - Q .Ili ' 1.515 , X wif. ,Q--if ,:. - K 1. ,. sm- Q -. . - F1 .- wx- v.. , ,QQ ogfsli I ., , ' fQT'f Q 2 1-. - ww . - ' fggfxsfgif YN 5 QT .t ' ' - Tykes gg 'f K new-.., ming.-is Emir: affine: Uhqglig 3553222 'Killah Q RQ lt 'f-32. SWL... A 4-ww. WM.-,,,,,,h, W A N I ? ll w,I,g.,W.,,.h ,,,, I II I JOHN LAWRANCE, LARRY HANNIBAL, PAT GAVAGHAN, JOHN RISTIANS, DON HECKLER, BOB HOUNSELL, F ?y'O' I I , w V ,, W WARD HILL, PETER MCGRAIN, GEORGE CAIVIERON, JOHN WHITE, JOHN CALVERT, LARRY LYKINS, LEE . I ,W JONES, RON WIRTH, STEVE RERYCH, SAM FALZONE, JEFF HERIVIAN, JACK WRIGHT, ART WIENCKEN 147 554' E K 5 fA::39'f gig: x wr S1'f?g55?2:g4ffif.2f yan at M D., . As adulation follows a record breaker so shin splints follow a track man. The road to the Olympics is paved with the panting remains of runners who jarred their legs to quivering jelly. The faint of limb and weak of heart do not last in track. It takes more than an ordinary athlete to make four trips around a quarter mile track for fun: ahah, ahah, huff, Damn stone, ahah, ahah, huff, l'll have a blister before I finish, ahah, ahah ahhh, done at last, Charlie do you have a spike? This one's out of line. Every afternoon, just for fun. l 149 , lJ QA, . f i - ' - ff . K 'Q .. AEA BOB SVABODA, RON ENGLAND, ED PLOWMAN, ED CARSON, JIM LEE, BILL BANKS, STEVE MIDDLETON, COACH SHEA BERRY CLAUSE, PETER MacMANUS, MEL SMITH, ED HAWKFIELD, LEE PROCTOR, GARY MCCURRY, LARRY JORDAN, MARSHALL ADAMS, GEORGE PARRIS, COACH WESCOTT, COACH DERR DWIGHT GREENE, BILL COOKE, JEFF PRATHER, DOUG CURTIS, TOM FERGUSON, BILLY CREEL, KEITT DARBY, ANDY CURTIS 151 MAC ALLEN, DAVE BOYER, TOM BRADFORD, ALEX CHEEK, FRED COMBS, DAN DeROECK, STEVE DIANIS, TOM HAAS, CLEMENT HUFFMAN, JULIAN KING, JOHN LANCASTER, DON MANLY, STEVE MARTIN, MIKE PRONE, JOHN ROWLAND, MAX WILSON, GARY YOUNT, BILL CARR, BOB GRIFFIN, J. BROCK, TOM PAISLEY, ROBERT JONES Gone are the days of baseball glory with 150 State men tried out for the team, and it took three days just to give each one a chance to bat. Gone is Vic Sorrell, the gentleman who led the team from the gone days to the recent days and stepped down this year. The team got a new coach, Sam Esposito, who also handles basketball. Nothing else changed. Baseball won't go back to the gone days when 150 men tried out for the team. Like the fights and the Indianapolis 500 it has chang- ed during the twenty years Vic Sorrell coached it. Not many people come out for the team, almost no one follows the players' averages. Not one stu- dent in 100 can name last year's ACC baseball champion. But still, on a hot spring day the old guard comes down to the field and lies under the trees and eats popcorn and watches the teams play, always hoping to see a homer put over the creek. 4.1 PETER MaCMANUS, COACH JIM WESTCOTT, ED CARSON, GARY MCCURRY, JIM LEE, LEE PROCTOR, STEVE MIDDLETON, GEORGE PARRIS, LARRY JORDAN, ED PLOWMAN, TOM FERGUSON, MARSHALL ADAMS, COACH MIKE SHEA 155 Not many people anywhere fence since the invention of the machine gun, and until recently almost no one in North Carolina did. Still, this did not stop the fencing team from winning six medals in the 1967 North Carolina open championships. Since Coach Ron Weaver brought fencing to State the sport has also come to Carolina and Duke, and even to the University of North Carolina at Greens- boro. The sport continues to gain speed and support, and promises to become one of the most popular minor competitions. Bill Hube represents State as a North Carolina champion, and Bob Mituniewicz, Karen Costerisan, Dianne Ramsey, Rick Hosey, and Ray Lamont own medals as top swordsmen and women in North Carolina. CAMERON SEELEY CO-CAPT. WOODY GREENE RICHARD LEE CHARLES DEBNAM KENT WILLIAMS DAVID WILLIAMS, ABS: SAM GEALY, CO-CAPT. The hundreds of foreign students at State do not have to abandon their national sport when they come to Raleigh as long as soccer is played. This fast sport, which looks like football played in basketball uniforms on a hockey field, is the athletic mania of nearly all the non-Anglo-Saxon countries of the world. Here is a little known sport that offers to its relatively small number of followers as much action and excitement as any other sport in the program. As usual in the ACC, Maryland won the champion- ship and everyone else, State included, was allowed to fight for second place. But this year Maryland, which has never lost a con- ference game, was forced into an overtime, and everyone else, State included, cried, Wait 'til next year. 160 DOUG DIANIS, TIMOTHY DOFFIN, WARNER LUCAS, JOHN DURHAM, MIKE MCBRIDE, HENRY GRIFFIN, EMANUEL MAY, WALLACE STURTEVANT, GEORGE KAKKOS, EDDIE LINK, DAVID HOSSINGER, THO- MAS REUDA, BOB CARMANY, ROBERT STEINMETZ, CARLOS LEMOS, DONALD JOHNSON, COACH MAX RHODES, FRITS VANDE BOVENKAMP Tennis at State entered a new stage this year with new coach Norman Chambers. Otherwise things are much as they have always been. State tennis teams have never finished last in the conference, but then again they have never finished first, either. The scholarship tennis players of Caro- lina and Maryland dominate the tournaments, but the success of the sport here is proved when the players play club meets in the summer months and hold their own. After fourteen years of tennis with John Kenfield, State tennis promises to keep its former position under new management. it 35 Q it , , COACH NORMAN CHAMBERS, MANAGER BILL WALKER, BOB WICKHAM, JIM WALKER, JAY GINSBURG, KEN TROUTMAN, STEVE SMITH, MICKEY CORN, PORKY BYRD, BUNNY COWARD, DENNIS CUDDY, RAY STEIN, HARLEN GREEN, LEO FULLER I 164 Wrestling is a good way to hold down a tendency to overweight. Straining your muscles every after- noon against a man of equal strength is practically a guarantee of keeping fit. lt is not, unfortunately, a guarantee of winning all one's matches. Unless you are from Maryland. This year, as in all the past fourteen years, the Terrapins won the ACC champion- ship. ln the conference championships only State's Greg Hicks kept Maryland from winning every weight class. IN. Z if BOB LEWIS, STEVE DICKSON, ALLAN BRAWLEY, RAY ST. CLAIR, JIM HAVARD, PAUL CRAVEN, MAC PAGE, BOB HARRY, P. J. SMITH, PHIL KANOY, TOM GERRITY, PAUL KINZIE, DICKIE BOLIN, MIKE COUCH. ABS: ROGER VAN NOTE, GREG HICKS, RALPH HAMILTON 165 :rr A jg? ,Q . .Ax jf'g' ifjif. T X L 3. 6 , A I , E24 Q 1? If ' '25 f'-f ,ewf. ' 'za ik F4:.' ' '..A. . ' if . v fn N VI ':' 'wg JYVQL1-. A ' V' il l .W,, 'X -W L -1552-19' 5RL'.T5 E24 fin - ' - l X 1? '9ff'Tf skis' riff. . Q im 41g,r5gQ',2-,,11iffngFE, A KWSN - 75-LN1-11. fu -'V' MTAUQ1.-zfzf aw :Win ' r ff 'RMI uhkmn JJ: sk -..n..J A H LL,,,,,.,. p Yvww KL X 'A Rx.uf4A, 3 ,x ' , f'- I- , -I, V, ',,- .-au .-- mm .1 Abi.. ,n.4.4,ng1 Lguanwl .Zim .3 LL Six'-M':. 166 Extramural intramurals are probably unique to the Big Four. The intercollegiate intramurals have been found for about twenty years, with students from Duke, State, Wake Forest, and North Carolina meeting every May for competition in a dozen or so spring sports plus riflery and skeet. State has been winning the championship about half of those twenty years, and annually sends a couple hundred men to the competition at Big Four Day. vw, .:,W. 'Emi' 4,000 men and a few girls take part in intramurals at State. On some days there are as many as 40 bas- ketball games. Some weeks see 100 football games. Before a man graduates from State he is almost certainly going to compete in intramurals at one time or another. Carmichael Gymnasium keeps track of these and of participants in other intramural sports. lt features basketball courts, wrestling, boxing, weight, fencing, and gymnastics rooms, volleyball, handball, and , 0 itil? t gz,w wafw uf it gf squash courts, classrooms, a practice putting green, olympic swimming pool and auditorium, soccer, foot- , ,.+1f+a. W W. .V W M., ball fields, golf practice area, track, archery range, and skating rink. Other than that there is not much there, except athletic offices and dressing rooms, and not enough parking spaces. wwmwmwg 170 ' 171 ' 1934 - .. ,- SS-5+-4 Q. . ,via 4,f,'.l- K' Q-fl? x x 'Mis axis wif u ,rm- 'J y?..a.A 33 3:5 uf.- Q.g.x.-7 1 n l -A 4' 1' . A 3. j.g', 0 I 4' QYMXQE Q. -. 'ln 7 5 3. . ze. Q- ' gt . if f Q4 1 :SL-,CT '2' A F I . ,f .. t 4, 'Qi :gay f- um 'IFJ :Z For the lonely Briton at State far from the banks are braes of bonnie Doon or the plains of New South Wales a little bit of home in State athletics offers him solace. Not for him the intricacies of two platoon football or the set piece action of baseball, no, better than a touchdown pass or a hotdog at the old ball game is rugby, a sort of sanctioned mayhem played by ama- teurs. For the past two years this unique sport has called expatriate Britons and curious Americans at State to some of the bloodiest combat seen in North Carolina since King's Mountain. The team, which is a wholely student endeavor, plays mostly club teams since few other school have teams. Only hated Duke and Carolina of other area schools have faced State in rugby. So far none of the three has managed to dominate the others. Rugby at State is completely unlike any other sport, lt is the only one that has no non-student coaches, and though it is not disapproved by the athletic de- partment, neither has it any direct connection with it. TRAVIS TOMLINSON, JR., PRES. RANDALL DAVIS, SGT. AT ARMS STEVE GIMMERMAN, SONG LEADER DAVID HARVEY, SEC. FOR ALUMNI FRANKLIN HACKNEY, TREAS. jf-fgxl,a'Ila me Il?ia!IQu,:'- ANI4I 'IiI 1 H1 'Q' :II Q QTNIBIFH HA 2-D I fwWQmNmI'lII YM I Q1 IH! ,W fl-wal-H: -. 'PII I I In,-7 2 II' mf- ff' I uw A ws . -xvxm HU I HI my Lv?-'E . V4 N f is 135 w B5 5 If Y.. . ............. 4 X n U!! lx' l I ls Y I L H fuilmia .Q li if i ,l ' lil f 52101, 1 W NW I I mmm .T , W HR In I' ' n 3: f- Pm' QZPP1 .VI All w mlm Ll lk RIM? I X CHARLES HOLDER, PRES. ROY POWERS, V. PRES. JOHN SINNETT, SEC. RONNIE NORMAN, TREAS. SIGNS T+- DONALD WEAVER, TREAS JIM ALLISON, VICE-PRES BARBARA BROWN, SEC HERMAN LENINS, PRES frmmwwp QmnnW,0 IQ WR aww REMIX! llama, I wma L Wm i U55 09 A 'H isham 1 renew' !I,Nfll1l.W P WN Mill! Fl dll gm Dill' Sv rx Alle 1 fmaffw L'ff9.' UPA ,Qi QN lik iw ll'-l'1X. ?lmSx?f,1f HQ-I I 1 Q IM., N Ll FM K X . 5l' , fl! EIL!! RAW M IX Tis 'W VLGA M 'e ilk ll qw' 1T TCiZ fFfI'fVQ'iYId' ff2,fq,vgfNpgrr 'P , IRI UNIV I V- f'f'- w' gf? . I' '35 'H' v YP' mi' imfwivvwv -47-+-+ MT-L M-QL -'L-+--A-v Lf--2 I I'-.fr-q.2132'If - JK, If I 211 -H.,-'-.1 wif 1 ,ye I?-,Yi VCE-f 'QI' I IFJ ' IWILU IV. ,I A I T'Qfu.'If I-fi :xii I' I ,'- H . g-I u I' nn - . -H .vwwymm I rn I I I' fp -v+- l ' I I- . IIINILIQIN. II g.u.:If1III:w:1w:Ii as 2:.FULJ4-w..f.I.a' ROBERT BOYETTE, V. PRES GENE PRIDGEN, SEC. MIKE COVINGTON, PRES. JIM SIMPSON, TREAS. 1 V A ' mwlihxwf MWMGRVLGH4 VYHMIA . A1 .. : ' '- A 'E fe . 1 Q If l:f.VMN um un 1 W we dxlikw 'Inu hh 'wwf by I J' LU' - V K'-V Q ,V 5-I W lg 1 31:2 GW as 1 HW- QWNJ 1 WH 1 1 I 'G' Tvfqn ' ' ,?'. W' 651 0 Q ,Ai ' W W wg! K M K1 ll 1: K 1 f, 3 N1 rf 3.1. , K 178 SAM GEALY, PRES. RON WIRTH MEL SMITH STEVE MIDDLETON f1Q bi4gfg,slpg,lX we x'l.t,ljlzfifiZ4i3'ilEBl fv flHiI1' A 'l +fl4.U,lE,:?3 erwqngyrgsm, ix,W-le,u1l!101s: Mg f -i zsoluljli. fgilslhxl 4 llilfjlgfff'-. ,:Wi1Slas'iflvl, R -l MM 4: 1:5 53 1 xw MA M 1 LU H2- 179 MARY ANN KELLY, HISTORIANg LINDA BELL, VICE-PRES., IRA JEAN HARLEY, PRES., JUNE LUNCEFORD, SE .' C . DIANE YEARGEN, TREAS.g BRENDA MOORE, CORRES. SEC., BARBARA HOLLAND, AUDITOR 180 S i' I -X NDIS WI'-N N55 If-X my 1' , I 5 2 -X 5 saw fx II S' Igzlghilag filwfwusafs Wwflw if I wif IIQQIQH S! 'U Sf' I If 5 sys HM M1255 ga I-x I A ' I LS gn A is fp I 1 Ili? ,II I:NQUIQ.f fi AU Pt? If 'II4'NIFf'Pf se NI I3-+9 '17 IIT? I K Ax E 1 U: Q W Q 1 'D T x . U ' .- up A X: v I . sg Ns xg ' A QC X! l. I 0, A 1 gasuazqkmg. .Q 3 I N Q . Z' A ' . '11 '9 A N, 9 M .- g . Is X. .ya-:sun is A mfs IIIAI:-u1uur4sgi.N1IQ. 'i I'lID1IIIDII ' Q'nI4Iul:wkmIgI Is lIHI'I3IX1 Ni 5 'II-'lIlI5FIIQ'NQ. 'naz-saw xl W. ' IHIIIHIN N NN 1Ia1IAiwiwNI ' 'I :qw Nm ' IIHIlI9'IIx iv ' I Ix NX 9 :WA WIP M ,XIII ,Ix WX 9 3 I5 I I , IQ SIWIA X- II ,V 'ww mzlfxi I' In fl f, .fxqf 'I' W? :.g'1I rI ' ll ' X Y v:I.fIf:.r'wuI I ?TII'.I'IfII,' QNQYIN I IV IE I I I H fX I A Ixqe Ii I If .l 5. IX I x LAWRENCE O. STAHL, SEC. JOHN M. WHITE, V. PRES. BERNARD W. PATTON, PRES. DARRYL R. MOYERS, CORRES SEC WILLIAM W. LAWS, JR., TREAS XSSUCIIATIIUN U3 SNS N101 :HI :N 9 M1 Ng 3.5 '-6 y,,'3 ' A s wfwgdsunx k aQ er14V5 :gi Nm Q ,f-x5QwQl:5 , lk-X I IIIHN 3-gigs :pm S A mf '4 ix 1 iuliwfisi ihllplfk 5 fx mwzluz -x e mfitrfa - '1l,DiX'lf. 5 f?X5bllN'I1XI'I1ll f X-X mmf? w s AS W ! Ns' WOMENS ASSCDCIIATHQE JUDY ADAMS ANN AUSTIN JOANN MORGAN PATTY GREEN BARNEY CARROLL, JR., V. PRES. ROBERT LOWERY, PRES. DANIEL SPOON, TREAS. PAMELA LIAS, SEC. Q x 'HK fs. 4 fa'pL4Lar'J A fl if lxl Idlljl M M ,gdeiiih Mrwlsljlll 1 .fur nh Mlm ix ' QM xi. lxl iJaj5..i1. yn v 51 2:4 K' 'f s 1 O' I5 Vi Ei!! All-X .ik All: A Yl.1'ff' 'T VZ. 'QW 51 3 mm in IYI l3vlAlkisiIilImllmS - dig-f fillfw 'J.. ir. .ANN W -. d Lv uuiwrw Ql .Ll,l l --X. frffgf ' 'ia ., 'g525eJfmMN,nm1wmwm1 :if ? 'li 1: LQ. . iKI.1Ql5I A-gsgzf Qi Ag 4 4 M x miss asm - 1 ,fd fYflJif'Wx, IY , :.i314?A1i,?i'ciefY mn . . ,,. -3 .f flwlfNQ. ' . f - ' 1' A-- 'ff' ' . gi A 1' ' 'dl-33,-5:5-9 ai g f ' rl, 4 'lk lla, , r. Q, Anil- I , 'Za-3 ' . 'XI , l i-.IH'l.i:'ii,4 23315211 gizsl N ' -n S QI :M , ,M ffa xr A ' f i'l2! 2':5'- -1 N 10 gl' .- ,r 5 ',-,S-S9 ' '41 LH E2 -Q1 r igg-jf, HH- fl-' ..-ESQ -if -...J ,ff ,'-- -I 'L 1. .f -..-, '?, .- .7438 1 M 184 41,2- ze' .M ,vw MQW is 31' 'wuuii' M ta.. wg 1 J, ..- ,Q,LW if-95 wismaiixi wmWi4'ia P lik . Hain? 'F .V-'K N1 -.-' ..,,...w-W If kiwi' an amp. , mx ., RQ. N' E .W .Mg ff- 185 1 9. V Q 4 i we 0 if f ,, 5 1 . K.,. ,,,,.,.. ...maxi-M '- R. B. GOINS, J. V. HENDERSON, F. R. VAN NOTE, MRS. WEST, R. E. FRY, W. R. HAMILTON J. W. COXE, W. L. CURREN, K. A. RICHARDSON, J. C. DEVANE, G. H. PARHAM, A. D. PENDASULO F. L. HARDISON, G. G. PEMBLE, J. B. GRAHAM, W. D. MCGILL, J. M. ROGERSON ALPHA GAMMA RHO was A- Alpha Gamma Ftho, a social-professional fraternity, prides itself in having a brotherhood made up of students whose main interests are either Agriculture or Forestry. Here at State, Nu Chapter has main- tained a high scholastic ranking among fraternities, the result of earnest effort and hard work. Our house, though small, is ideally located only a few steps from the University. The brothers here at State feel the relative smallness does much to increase the fraternal ties formed during active membership. This year our brotherhood is striving to increase our membership while keeping the spirit of fraternalism as strong as ever. With a combination of effort, fraternalism, and par- ticipation, the brothers of Alpha Gamma Rho feel able to rank among the top of the fraternities here at N. C. State. HELEN EVERETT JEWELL HILL Rho Chapter of Delta Sigma Phi was founded at N. C. State in 1915, making it one of the oldest fra- ternities on campus. Situated among 7Vz acres of tall Carolina pines and surrounded by the Raleigh Golf Association, this picturesque setting is unique to fraternities in this area. Throughout the year Delta Sigs are engaged in var- ious social events. One of the highlights of the fall DELTA SIGMA PHI was Homecoming, when many of the alumni came back to participate in the activities of the week-end. A Christmas party honoring the parents of Delta Sigs was held this winter. Many of the schooI's faculty and administrators, along with some state legislators, help to welcome the parents to Raleigh. The brothers are looking forward to the Lawn Party, Sweethearts' Ball, and especially the Sailor's Ball, a convenient opportunity for many to grow beards. W. D. LANGENDORFER, A. J. MARK, T. W. CASEY, F. D. KING, R. N. MANAIRE, W. H. WILKERSON, L. E. SHAW T. D. BUCKLEY, N. M. EMANUAL, P. D. ROUSE, A. E. HILTON, D. K. COVINGTON, R. B. HULL, D. D. DU MONTIER, G. A. MCGEE, R. G. GREER, D. H. CREATER, G. G. JENKINS, L. S. HERMAN, L. D. GARDNER, J. A. FARRELL, D. D. PLAKE, T. W. BLEDSOE, L. B. BLACKBURN, B. S. THOMPSON R. K. PEOPLES, R. R. DANELLA, J. A. MCNEIL, R. M. KASHUBE, C. B. KENLEY, C. D. DARWIN, J. H. SCHNIDER, F. T. MITCHELL 189 . BETTY CARRAWAY Three men in a Y. M. C. A. Bible Class at the Uni- versity of Missouri became friends in the fall of 1904. By the following spring, there were eleven members. FarmHouse Fraternity was founded in 1905 by seven of these young men, dedicated to their chosen vocations, to their university, to their country and to their God. The fraternity has chapters mainly on agricultural campuses. One unique aspect of FarmHouse is that no drinking is allowed at any FarmHouse function or on fra- ternity property. Our men strive to fulfill the motto, Builders of Men! FarmHouse men are justifiably proud of their Fra- ternity, its national records, and the noble profes- sion which they serve. 190 FARMHOUSE R. A. SETZER, C. S. JACKSON, C. O. BRADLEY, W. R. BELL, E. R. HARDY, JR., P. L. HATCHER, JR., D. J. SINK, E. A. MAY, J. S. SUGG, M. L. NICHOLS, E. R. WRIGHT, W. B. HALL G. B. BUTLER I. E. PETTERSON H. L. WILLIAMS W. D. WHITE L. R. SYMRE HOUSEMOTHER MRS wALsH, c. H.'lsLEY, J. w. DOUGLAS, JR., D. w. 'sTARNEs, H. o'. BLACKWELDER, G. L. NEWTON, R. ef ALLEN, G. W. JONES, R. O. TRIPLETT, C. D. LEE BARBARA WHITLEY Kappa Alpha was founded in 1865 in the spirit of Robert E. Lee and in the traditions of the Old South. We at North Carolina State have thrived on this basis since 1903. To each individual our traditions are special and cherished and to each these traditions are in some way motivating. Through the heri- tage of gentlemanly honor Kappa Alpha strives to impart to its members the virtues of consideration, integrity, and respect in and of all things worthy. As stated in our pledge manual, Kappa Alpha seeks to make a permanent contribution to strong, clear, useful man hood by innoculating in young men those gifts and graces and virtues that shone brighter in the life of Robert E. Lee. KAPPA ALPHA !'91?U?7P997?9'?U7 '9P5' PFUWPFUTPF-HEFJZOEQU MYERS HAMELTON JOHNSTON LEONARD LEE RIGSBEE HUGHES GRUBBS ANTHONY MOIRE MOORE FULGHUM HUNTLEY KNIGHT SULLIVAN PATON GREEN BAGGET TEAR HUGHES LAWSON HELDS ANDREWS HUX FERRELL PATTERSON COX MCLEAN SHERRELL DOCKERY 7- fv - --- KAPPA SIGMA . E. HAMILTON, T. W. BORLAND, G. W. MCGARITY, R. M. STUCKEY, N. L. CATES, JR., P. J. BAILEY, . J. MONTELEON, JR., P. T. HEILIG, J. H. BRASWELL, JR., J. W. GOLDSMITH . C. HODGIN, III, J. J. RUSSELL, II, S. M. ANNAS, P. O. AUSTIN, R. G. SHERRILL, E. W. WAGONER, . M. EDSON, JR., J. C. LISK, R. W. TEASLEY C. W. ALLISON, F. B. DUNN, JR., R. M. SIGMON, III, M. J. DONOVAN, G. D. LAYNO, P. T. MONTE, S. H. DUNCAN, F. L. WILLIS, III, W. T. RHODES, JR., E. W. LARGEN, J. J. MCCALL, M. B. CHADWICK, C. E. LINDSAY D C E C 192 SHERRILL GRIFFIN Kappa Sigma is one of the oldest existing fraterni- ties, for it was founded in 1400 at the University of Bologna in Italy. On December 10, 1869, at the University of Virginia, Kappa Sigma was established in America. Since then it has grown to over 117 ac- tive chapters in both the United States and Canada, with some 90,000 active alumni. Some distinguished Kappa Sigs include coach Norm Van Brooklin, auto racer Phil Hill, and such late and great Americans as Lowell Thomas, Edward R. Murrow, and Estes Kefauver. The National Fraternity also has one of the largest Scholarship Endowment Funds in the United States. The three-story fraternity house, the highest on the row, is the only house to provide all two-man rooms on two floors completely separate from the social area. The fraternity has just instigated a rigorous scholastic program, along with our ever-active social program for which the Kappa Sigs are widely known. MARY CLEM K. E. STROUD, W. I. INGRAM, JR., T. L. WINDSTEAD, T. L. WINSTEAD, W. C. BROOKS, D. W. SHANNONHOUSE, D. J. EDWARDS, R. E. MCCORMICK, R. E. CAHOON, H. A. WALKER, JR., J. M. SIMS, JR., J. M. KALEY, J. M. TURK, J. J. COLLIER, C. J. PURVIS J. D. WALLER, JR., J. P. FUNDERBURKE, W. E. SYKES, R. I. TILLEY, III, L. N. POWERS, R., H. B. GIBSON, JR., R. D. WHITAKER, JR., Z. R. WINDLEY, JR., M. L. NICHOLS, C. O. ROBINSON, R. C. MADRIN, J. W. OWENS, L. W. MILLER, J. R. SALEM, T. A. KYLE, V. W. DAVIS, L. M. COGGINS, J. B. POLLOCK, H. K. BEWERGIN Take a deep breath, close your eyes, whisper a prayer, and move on. College-here we come, back again or for the first time. It really doesn't matter, for we were born here and here we'll be buried fit's been forever alreadyl. Which seems rather strange, for we were freshmen only yesterday and tomorrow begins our senior year. Founded at Boston University in 1909, Lambda Chi Alpha has since grown into a fraternity of national prominence. More than 160 chapters are maintained at colleges and universities both in the United States and Canada, making Lambda Chi the second largest in the fraternity world. Lambda Chi naturally has a tremendous influence upon its members. To us, this is home. Four years are here today and gone tomorrow, but through it all we are tied together. Maybe we'll meet again in another race some other time, but until then Lambda Chi has made the whole rat race worthwhile, more exciting, more meaningful. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA 193 l r' ' i1'IwrI..dsz,w g , 2, I if A - W.. I I I' C' E ' - I L L,,, T 'VII ' 'H INII'--:alle - 'U fu' ff' QI JI' -Us-I' QT .ARI Y 'fg1'?'fi3j,I9- Y If Q l ! 1, ,J , I -is ' ' ., ' ' I ai W, ,, H, .iff 'V 'Vbf - N' ' If ' 5, . f- ,Sb ,,,- 'f'- . WI A IIA IIIqII'I.iiI I . . uI:I.f' was ?I ',x,II'gIg 4 'II -I? Qxx . '?.Ql7fII' ' '- H W TT . S L 'HIKIV' S :W ,iff Epi? .? EX 'S 7 -' . IIAI , : , , , 'ff 5 , , 5 I .NA. ,Ig ,I if- Q IyI1I Ll li - 5 j,, 'I N - 5 I 'III , Xrlm j if I H ,img - , 7- FI ?--:QI xl ek? ' ' .7 Q , ,. ,,,, . -2- V I A X , M .2 1 2 X 194 J. E. FISHER, W. D. REEVES, R. B. SUDDERTH, J. H. ROBERTS, JULIE BROWN, E. J. PIASKI, JR., J. V. FOURMY, D. M. WARD, D. W. COULTER, W. W. WHITE, JR., C. S. JOHNSON, JR., M. J. LaCORTE R. R. LONG, T. J. YOUNGBLOOD, III, J. F. WALKER, D. W. TURNER, L. J. WERTZ, V. E. WILLIAMSON, JR., E. A. HUGHES, III, R. A. WICKHAM, R. L. BOWLING, L. C. HUFFMAN, L. A. TWISDALE, JR., J. W. SCHOUT, JR., T. H. JOHNSON, G. P. WOOD, D. L. MOORE, JR., S. M. SIMMONS, K. W. DUNSTAN, R. C. SHEARIN, C. W. BOARDMAN, R. J. GIRARD, JR. JULIE BROWN PHI KAPPA TAU PI KAPPA ALPHA Pi Kappa Alpha-the friendly fraternity-ceased to be a local fraternity a year after its founding. Our precepts have spread to the entire nation: one can travel from coast to coast and stop everyday at a different chapter house. ' This year the District Six Convention was held in Raleigh. All the Pi Kappa Alpha Chapters in North Carolina met to hear such famous alumni as Chan- celor Caldwell, Ruffin Bailey, and our National Presi- dent Don Dickson. Alpha Epsilon Chapter at N. C. S. U. is having an- other successful year. The Pike founding spirit- Congeniality based upon character -leads us to serve our community by heading up a cerebral pal- sey campaign and giving parties for the orphans. ELEANOR FISHER R. C. LANGFORD, D. F. FERMAN, M. G. CLINE, JR. E. W. LOVE, JR., H. L. JONES, A. W. ROZIER, JR. P. K. TEMPLETON, J. L. BULLOCK, J. G. SNUGGS E. T. SHEPHARD P. F. MILLER, A. J. GILLESPIE, W. A. BURNS, J. K DENNY, J. R. HITCHINGS, P. S. WALSH, JR., R. P MIESKY, T. C. PAISLEY, D. F. MOWERY, R. A. GRAY E. U. HARRIS, E. W. JONES, JR., C. W. WITHLEY JR., R. U. RAYNOR, C. U. BAIRD, JR., A. Q. BROWN L. D. CHILDRESS, D. J. DAVENPORT, J. C. TEETER D. D. WILLIAMS, J. C. QUEEN, JR. 1 IPI Ii1L1?FHA.I?III From our beginning in Charleston, S. C., on Decem- ber 10, 1904, we have grown into a fraternity of over one hundred undergraduate and alumni chap- ters. Although characteristically Southern, Pi Kappa Phi is national in scope. Pre-school clean-up and Rush Week initiated Pi Kappa's fall semester activities. Two combo parties, combined with some serious moments, made for a full measure of fraternity life. An important event was the district meeting held here at Tau Chapter by all the Pi Kappa Phi chap- ters in North Carolina. An alumni banquet, with one of the more prominent Pi Kapps in North Carolina, Governor Dan Moore, instigated the formation of an alumni chapter here in Raleigh. 196 ITI rswrwrwssaope F-! Sf'9TUF7Pf'99P7?ZF'1TII3U D. M J. O. FERRELL C. STANLEY J. WIKE B. BARKER G. SMITH L. DAVIS PRICKETT J. ALEXANDER TOTLE L. PRUETTE CAPOONE H. FAUST G. WILSON ALVEREZ L. GAMBLE C. LANCASTER E. UNDERWOOD G. SLACK L. ALLEN S. MURPHY B. CARLSON C. EDWARDS M. MYERS GLEASOM A. LONGHINI C. WHITAKER E. MCGUIRE E. TUCKER J. ENGLE W. SMALL D. OVERMAN BAGGEST BRANDON BROWN C. C. CHRISTY W. R. SAWYER R. H. TURNER M. L. SAULS CHRIS FISHER T. L. MCNETT MARSHA SEAPARKS SALLY HOUGH SANDRA HOFFMEYER CANDY HORTON MARY ANN WEATHERS A. F. CLABO JAN GREENE ELEANOR MANNING J. F. DANIELSON, III R. C. MATLOCK J. C. SKIDMORE A. A. WATTS K. R. LARSON N. B. MURPHY J. J. WATERS C. A. EDWARDS A. H. SMITH T. M. SNOW T. B. HILTON J. L. PRIVETTE B. V. SHIVE L. L. KINLAW H. H. ROBINSON W. B. BANDY J. E. CORT R. K. PENTZ L. D. LOVVORN R. C. WEST I. A. FRASER W. F. KING P. H. DUCKWALL F. H. ROSS W. R. TUCKER R. E. MATTAR J. M. RAMSEY J. D. REGAN W. G. GRANGER E. J. BAYSDEN J. R. LOWE W. R. JEFFREY S. H. ROBERTSON D. J. THOMPSON D. G. STUART D. J. STOCKLEY BETTY HUTSON Sigma Alpha Epsilon is the oldest national fraternity to be founded in the South and the only one to maintain continuing existence during the Civil War. It has built for its members a heritage and tradition which are ever demand- ing but fulfilling. SAE's entrance into the fraternity sphere on the N. C. State campus came late-in 1947. However SAE, welded together and inspired by national her- itage, met the challenges of the school and fraternity ideals and quickly built itself into one of the most active chapters on campus. SAE pledgeship has been rebuilt in order to adapt the student to the pres- surized environment of an expanding university. Both mental and physical tor- ments have gone to their gravesg now the wedlock of propriety and responsi- bility are being stressed. Something new within the fraternity system has been introduced by the SAE's in the form of a Little Sisters Club. This group of girls, chosen from surround- ing schools for their loyalty and love for the house, has served us as workers and Sisters, SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 197 i V- '7 TWYW JOANNIE SCHWARTZ 198 N. L. SCHLOSS, N. J. SIMONOFF, R. R. BRODSKY, H. R. MANN, N. L. NASH I. L. FEINBERG, J. P. CROSSON, D. W. DOVE, D. K. COOPER, J. N. GROSSMAN, P. SAPERSTEIN, H. D. BRANDENBERG, R. C. NAUMANN, M. H. WEISSELBERG R. A. SEITZ, F. A. WEINBERG, R. STONE, J. N. MOLDOW, R. J. TRICHTER, F. M. FEIBELMAN, P. N. DEL MASTRO, M. SILVERS, R. A. COOPER, M. A. FIELDS, M. L. POPPE, H. S. LICHTIN, J. E. ROSENSTEIN, S. A. THAL, B. JULIAS, R. J. THAL, P. C. STEIN, E. A. REBACK, L. S. SAMET, R. P. HOLTSHAUSER, V. W. FEIT Fast and Firm is Our Union . . . Strong its Ties That Bind Held by Links of Friendship Together, Now and for All Time . . . The Sammy Steamrollers, after a record third place finish in the IFC Athletic standings last year, are in the midst of a rebuilding program. However, with our usual strong spring sports, we expect to make a good showing in IFC competition. Homecoming stands out as the fall's most memorable weekend. The Sammy float was undoubtedly the best in the parade. The New Year started off in grand style with our Alumni Dinner in New York City during semester break, and our Annual Parents' Weekend in February. Ever Lasting, Ever Faithful, Ever Staunch and True, St d h B th h d f d' S' Al h Mgn, s t e ro er oo we orme in lgma p a gg A. HORNADAY, R. H. RANKIN, H. L. FORD, W. F. GALOGALY, R. W. DHUE, K. G. WORMAN, J. D. ILLAM J. A. GARDNER, B. CHURCH, L. W. WOOD, C. D. REIDLING, W. R. SNELLINGS, R. E. WILLIAMS, J. A. WATEON, J. W. WATSON, J. R. SIMPSON, W. A. WATERMER, R. E. DELLINGER, W. J. SPROULL, T. W. LAN FORD ' J. F. SCHNEIDER, M. B. COVINGTON, T. D. CALLOWAY, L. R. SIMPSON SIGMA CHI ln 1854 six members of the Deke Fraternity at Miami University at Oxford, Ohio, left that fraternity. A seventh man was picked up and thus Sigma Chi was founded. The reasons for the separation and the characters of these seven men carries over into the ideals and purposes of all Sigma Chis today. Such varied individuals as Barry Goldwater, Sena- tor J. William Fulbright, and commercial magnates T. G. Balfour and Charles Mitchell still enjoy close relationships with Sigma Chi. Sigma Chis here at State retain such prominent po- sitions on campus as IFC President and Treasurer. Three members on the HBC, members and the chair- man of the CCB, chairman of the SP, Junior Class President, Technician Business Manager, Freshman Class Vice-President, and various positions of the State Student Legislature. NANCY CLARK 199 E. CARTER, JR. J. E. TEFFT, III L. F. BOST R. A. BOYETTE P. W. COTTON R. C. BUDAY, JR. J E STRAWBRIDGE D. L. YELTON R. O. LINKER, JR. C. A. HUSTRULID, JR. M. A. PEELER R. L. WARD L. J. STARNES, JR. W. S. WILLIAMS J. W. TAYLOR T. E. ROBINSON C. G. WALL, JR. D. C. MUNHALL S. R. LONG E. W. RILEY N. A. ADKINS, JR. A. G. RAYMOND W. H. LUMSDEN, JR. J. J. FEHRENBACHER, JR. H. W. PERRY W. E. WHITE D. E. LOFTIS J. E. LAIRD, III I D. R. EVANS, JR. ANN COPENHANER ' H. B. EDGERTON, Jn. Founded at the Virginia Military Institute in 1869, Sigma Nu has since grown nationwide into one of the leading fraternities in both prominence and num- bers. By instructing its members in the ideals of our founders, ideals known to us as the way of honor, Sigma Nu continues to seek those who be- lieve that each individual has within him the power and drive for self-improvement. Beta Tau Chapter of .Sigma Nu was founded at State in April, 1895, thus making it the oldest fraternity on campus. Highlighting our social program is the annual White Rose beach weekend held in the spring. Culturally, Beta Tau conducts a contem- porary issues speaker series during each fall se- mester, named after a prominent alumnus, former Governor O. Max Gardner. ln the words of a former chapter commander: We are unique because our ideals are unique, growth seeks us because our programs provide a foundation to support growth. Think broadly and you fit our size. SIGMA NU ELEANOR SOUIRES Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded at the University of Richmond on November 1, 1901, and since its in- ception has grown to be one of the largest national fraternities. The North Carolina Beta Chapter was founded at N. C. State on March 4, 1905, and from that time over six hundred men have shared the ideals upon which the fraternity is founded. Since moving into our new house in 1964, Sigma Phi Epsilon has strived to advance with the chang- ing framework of a college fraternity. New emphasis is being placed on the development of leadership potential for the betterment of the fraternity, the university, and the individual. To this end Sigma Phi Epsilon strives to prepare a man for the respon- sibility of his position as a member of society. The members of a good fraternity must be men of diversified talents, and the worth of a fraternity is measured by its ability to develop these talents. We believe that a man will have been made better for having been a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon. SIGMA PHI EPSILON W. M. BLAIR, R. L. GRAY, S. D. MCKINNEY, C. M. PAGE, C. W. STALLINGS, C. C. THOMSON, B. W. DAVIS R. I. PARNELL, R. G. STEELE, D. L. HAMILTON, G. D. POE, R. L. MARTIN, B. D. WALDROP, M. R. SIGMON, M. E. GAILLARD, J. C. LOGUE A. R. JARVIS, W. H. WEISNER, E. E. HUNTER, J. P. CRAWFORD, R. N. HARDING, W. H. THIGPEN, H. L. JONES, D. W. GALBRAITH, T. C. PHILLIPS A. V. DONNAN, J. E. MCCOMAS, G. E. LEWIS, W. A. YOUNG, M. H. BERNARD, G. M. TRUELOVE, D. W. GURTIS, H. F. LABOSSE, C. P. HARRIS, W. A. S. WRIGHT, M. H. WILLETT, D. R. WILEY, H. J. FOLEY, P. H. WARREN, R. W. SMITH, G. B. GAINEY, J. B. BARNS, R. F. FILER ..-MQ 1 'Y I ' w .,, .9 rx 201 On January 26, 1897, Miss Charlotte N. Malotte, the Professor of Latin and French at Vincennes Univer- sity, spoke to the student group at the chapel hour. She took for her subject, College Fraternities. A month passed. Then, on the afternoon of February 26, one might have seen four students making their way to the English room on the second floor of the old college building. Sigma Pi was about to have its first meeting. When, after a long session, the meeting adjourned, Sigma Pi had been born. Sigma Pi National at Vincennes University, Vin- cennes, Indiana, granted a charter to Rho Chapter at N. C. State University in May, 1921. Since then, Sigma Pi has remained in the historical house on Clark Avenue. The annual Peter Pops Day is a Thanksgiving meal and entertainment for the underprivileged children of Wake County, has has been observed since 1943. An Easter Egg Hunt for orphans is another of Sigma Pi's many civic activities. 202 SIGMA PI FAYE WARREN W. J. SHEARIN, S. M. DOLLYHIGH, T. V. WILLARD, J. C. HARLEY, W. F. KELLY, L. W. REDMAN, L. A. THORNBURY, J. R. MCALPINE E. C. LILES, A. M. WIENCKEN, R. G. FORD, J. DUDEK J. E. SAIN, J. E. SAUNDERS, K. A. BUTLER, B. . GODEHN, J. F. SHORTRIDGE, W. S. MOORE, D. . JOHNSON, D. A. GREENE, C. E. GOODWIN, P. . MITCHELL, L. A. HANNIBAL P GJZZ SANDIE GAMBILL TAU KAPPA EP SILON W. K. HALE J. B. HERMAN C. KOSZEWSKI N. L. ROSE W. C. JONES J. S. LAWRENCE J. M. MOLOFSKY J. B. COX S. K. COLLIER R. M. BRUNK S. B. BLEDSOE R. P. MOORE D. F. HEYWOOD J. E. MILLER D. R. BRAUN R. A. SMITH V. A. FOUSHEE L. S. GALVIN D. B. ANDREW R. HOLLAND I. E. BENKERT A. THURMAN D. W. CADY 203 I EJ W. C. SWART H. HARDINGE, IV R. C. PIKE C. W. STUTTS J. R. ERDODY J. R. KIRKMAN D. G. HOWARD E. R. LEWIS D. W. TARLTON J. M. HINKLE R. E. MCCOY R. A. JONES R. L. CROUCH J. H. GOING E. B. IVICKEITHAN 204 'JO ANN PICKETT Just a few more minutes, folks, and the girls will be back for your enjoyment. But while you're wait- ing step up and win! win! win! This was the at- mosphere of the 'Theta Chi A Go Go' Campus Chest Carnival booth last spring as we walked off with more than our share of awards. Theta Chi has been go-going since. Having also won the Vietnam Blood Drive, the fifteen graduating seniors at the annual Senior Banquet in May could look back on a re- warding career as Theta Chis. Theta Chi, realizing that the fraternity's place in the university has changed drastically, has taken the initiative to be of service in making the student into a responsible citizen, placing emphasis on individ- ual participation. Our athletes brought us into the playoffs in football, and second place in volleyball. Being a social fraternity, we of Theta Chi usually find time to occasionally enter a frog jumping con- test, fsecond place in North Carolina's annual con- testj, or play host to the other nine regional Theta Chi Chapters for our annual Mason-Dixon Jubilee. THETA CHI SIGMA KAPPA Sigma Kappa has been a part of the North Carolina State University campus since 1960. From the first group of ten initial members, the Gamma Phi Chap- ter has grown to a membership of 37 girls, all active in various phases of campus life. The Chapter at State closely identifies itself with the original chapter founded at Colby College, Maine, in 1894. Both chapters originated on a pre- dominantly male campus and were the first sororities at the colleges. Sigma Kappa has the distinction of being the only sorority at State. Added to this, its members include the 1967 Homecoming Queen and two members of her court, the president of WCCB, the secretary of Student Government, three cheerleaders, several Stu- dent Government senators, and many members in honoraries from Phi Kappa Phi and leadership ones on down. SUSAN JAMES LINDA RAND LINDA WARREN SHARON SHOWALTER THANTA ISENHOUR ANN HONEYCUTT BARBARA PRYER CONNIE HOGANCAMP JUNE CLARK JUDY O'NEAL LINDA HOWELL NANCY JEFFERSON JANE GIBSON SHELIA MOBERLY JUDY BROWN JENNIFER LOWRANCE GAIL LASSITER CAROLYN CAUDLE JOAN WISE KIT CAVE GAIL SHELLEY MARSHA FRALICK BETSY ROSS MARTHA NEAL PAM GABLE LINDA MITCHELL CHRIS COLTRANE BARBARA MILLER VICKI YAKUTIS JANEEN SMITH JOAN STEWART 205 I I . I :II Iii! I ,I In III Ig .IIIDSI :IIIII I .way FQ if I I I ,ISI FIIIIIIII QRIIIRIIQII If .3I,I I' I7 I Iwi-Tfn9lI'f I,IImlI IQSI IN IIII, ISI Ifgwgfjsggw. II IIIIII, I I . 4 . . I I A.. ' N - . 1' I ' ,nw 1 I 'I ,I lj ' :XI N Typ I S IXI .N F! x In ,rI'gI ,,IrIa' II I I,I.' ' i . I xi fIllIV:II!! . I Q , I .IIIIII I: tsew .I II Is:I BERNARD SMITH MIKE CAUBLE DON GRIGG PETE COKER RICKY CONE RON ENGLAND GEORGE BUTLER GENE M. MCGARITY ROY COLQUITT MINUTE PARKING ONLY MIKE BOWMAN MAC MCGARITY GEORGE BUTLER GAIL SHELLEY RONNIE ENGLAND TOM BRIDGERS RICKY CONE BERNARD SMITH : JI A Ill !,! A '32I'IX: fIfI I HCI!!! III X x I , N W IEE :X 5 was Aw In-I , 5 'aff ihfvmfhe MQ I 4.111 ,tm :IN I PI x 2- me fa' rw 35101. ,IIIDIIQVI HA IR Mm ISI I-gil! IW? MIIJGII2 Diff ff A I N W W ISIQIINI-E fox' Ifjghillb im Il I IlzAX x fm! 153' fn II I I III jim if IR, I NJIY1'I',III C I Ii'-If R' 1.4 I vcr STI-I MU: ,iixfriw I '!QIX7'II.I I MCI ISN I4 Y I Iixl I xi I4I I . I H QX, - Iwi 41-giQfpQ'. many, 1 l.n'u5:spIg?I:4f:6I.f:II-:II I ,I,'I'IIii'I X 'T'-JI? In ' u mm: IICIQAIIIRII Q 'I IfIlI,f3I I-+CIl'CIQiIlIQI 5 II,IumI:m:4-Ir:IennI'I I I 'NI JN IIICIN 'Mm Wgzfge RON THOMPSON BARBARA MILLER LARRY BLACKWOOD LOUIE CARTER MARY WEATHERS, CORRES. SEC.g JUDY ADAMS, SEC-TRES.g WALTER WILKINSON V. PRES. WES MCCLURE, PRES.g ABSENT: JIM BAILEY GENE PRIDGEN My I I S EM I X114 PIII ylQH0Is wgwov Q I1-Iwi? WIWIw Mina : IN? fIx YIM I I YV -VH I YIQ' ' ' 5 'S 'X' h IK YI I I , . 4 . , W I QI I x?:In-es' N .lI,IH :I QIFC IQIQIH' I Mei MY: L -LIE azrz I X IQNFCE Hlg YANG? II Ilhf 'IH X':IlC? :ith A' 1 XFIFCI mrs: YIIFCI ilII Kimi IF Il 'flee IIEI 1 IIIgLIg5III.III:t+:Ii I IlIg.I.?fUI2I QI I, 5 ISI .wI:mm I w u . LU'I3UlI I sg-.M vwwu I I A mwwvm WALLACE BAITY DONALD WHITE JERRY HICKS DALE NEWTON RENTAL El i. ,tn .th iii i 5.1 f LQ F! I Sriv 1 fm' ' gi, Eiffi It fu an hi 1 air YA xii X 5 i I3I :N IIT :ran rx Izsaeirgx maxi? IISIIJN 53 IQ r asv. +I I3IlSll'B'I Iiilf, EGIUIW Izsnww wi IWIAQYIIN ISSIIHSIIII N la: f , M ' I5,lX 0-I A al . f', szaim Ill Y ISIIQRQYIQ N : avgmw 'ww Jrzairikkeflw Izdirwfgiw 1 sam mmp I:4lI:W:X IW I-fI':KIIu' j2iqe5I,x1IlfyIp Izgpfwmy wxf' Izzlbm I ' Ii J: I MISS CONSOLIDATED UNIVERSITY LYNN BURKHOLDEFI 211 MISS CARTER STADIUM DIANE DAVIS ww Sm W nvW ' HOMECOMING QUEEN LINDA HOWELL wwf wif' if w , l 5 an W. ffm .N The democratic process, like Mom's apple pie, is an aspect of Americana which seems to permeate all areas of American life, including the management of affairs on a university campus. State's own politi- cal world possesses the somewhat dubious distinc- tion of paralleling lor perhaps parodyingl national power politics-including a two-party system and deadlocked meetings. The distinctly American apathy toward elections is also shared by State-only one out ofi every five students bothers to vote. The results are, understandably, less than inspira- tional, generally consisting of a number of resolu- tions denounced by The Technician and ignored by the students. Yet Student Government did have one shining moment this year: a boycott against Slater iyechli Foods l?J Service which pricked the interest of almost everyone on campus. I M . V ggi, i',f . ' fy ,W+'6'ffi ' rfviqf . WW ,.,,g,. , . ., fn? QW? if f , rf -fm:i.gQ1,f , . mhz,wx:w:, f ' . 5 .1 --ms, I I I 5333325333595SQZEIEISHBSQHEE MARY ANN WEATHERS, DAVID MOORE, RONNY LINKER, BILL TAYLOR, JACK GARDNER, JEFF COLE, JIM WATERS BILL WATERMEIR, BUSTER JOHNSON, MAC MCGARITY I-'IICIIID3 SITA-IIIMVID SSNBIM MIIEECS CAMPUS CCDDE IIIIIENIS CAMPUS CUIDIEI-IICIUUI SEMMVIII SQNQIM BRUCE CHADWICK, CLAY EVERETT, ROBERT PLASKY, DAVID PARKER, DON YELTON, RONNIE MATLOCK, CHARLES EDWARDS, ROBERT WRIGHT SICGICDJDI SHQIINVJ SQNEMUIMWUNIEIIWS CAPIIIPIUS COIDIE WQMIEWS CAMPUS CUDIESICCIICJS SHCIIIHVZD SGNHINCIM JUDY ADAMS, JULIA SHEPHARD, CHRIS COLTRANE, MARTHA NEAL, LINDA RAND, GAIL SHELLEY BIENIIURS SMOIINEIB BIENIIORS SHORES SENKORS SYTTUIWS SMIUZRQS SMUDJNEIS SIENMIRS SMGIHB ORS SIE-INI SHORES SENIIUIRS JUNIDN SHIOIINIM' JIUNIIORS SHUNIU' JUNHURS SHICDINIM' JUNIIORS SMOIINIM' swomm JUMOW SOIPIHIUMIOIRJE SIEIIUNOIIWJIUS SUIPIHIU GRE SINIUMOIE-lIdIOB SOIPIHICEDMIURIE 39533335 QHBHHHSEE HHIUNQH-HAIUS SUIPIHIOMIORE 30535333335 IFRESHMLAN NVIWJISHIUJ IPRESIHINIAN NVIIUHSHN4-II IFIRCESIHIIVIIAN NVM1HiS1:N.:1I FRESIHIMIAN NVWSSIHLJI FRIESHPJIAN SEMd FRIESHFIIAN NVMHSEINJI IFRIESIHIMIAN . .J 5 K Y fl , 5 n ' 4 ' 4' V 1 wr CADET CADET CADET CADET CADET CADET LT. COL. BRYAN CLUTZ COL. COL COL COL COL. DANIEL WOODAU RUFFIN B. HOLDER JERRY MICHAELS JOHN DICKEY MILTON HAAS CADET COL. RUFFIN B. HOLDER EE ML 221 CADET EXEC. OFF. DAN TRACY CADET ASST. S-3 OWEN PHARR CADET S-1 RANDY SNYDER CADET S-4 BILL WADE CADET. COL. DOUG UNWIN CADET S-2 CHRIS KOSZEWSKI CADET SGT. MAJOR CHARLES PIERCE CADET S-9 JOHN DOERN CADET COL. DOUG UNWIN LT. JAMES L. WISE f Qu ll 57' fngifii-ale CI-nIsh'i'-Zip! tj. t. KL. initiatus, past D: 1n1t1ate. ,, ' 2. I13 the 1n1.t1g1l. stageg bpgqngi commezlcc One who IS, or IS to be, lmtlated. -- ln-1't1-a't01' C-a' t PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA WILLIAM C. FRIDAY 'JW ws IB' KW CHANCELLOR OF NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY JOHN T. CALDWELL W 227 g'ri-cut ture DEAN H. BROOKS JAMES 228 , 1 ,, rf A s as-suiL4.n.1 r-HB4 . I A iz. 1 fi lax' ,kt 'Q-'ig .ig Z 1 . . M' cm-was frffwwt rr TIT?-15A , , YLa...'l?N-E.lF.t,l.aJ1li':. R 'K . .s g,:...,..f.....n. ...... . LIU!!! I 1I'l!'W1 i The earth is not a mere fragment of dead history, stratum upon stratum like leaves of a book, to be studied by geologists and antiquaries chiefly, but living poetry like the leaves of a tree, which precedes flowers and fruit, -not a fossil earth, but a living earthg compared with whose great central life all animal and vegetable life is merely parasitic. During the Neolithic era of Man, there appeared one who had discovered the magical adjunct of soil and seed. There also came another who had learned the ways of animals and had made them tame. From those distant ancestors, we have inherited a continuing need for sus- tenance from the earth and its creatures. And, in part, we retain some of their awe: there remains a somewhat spiritual affinity between us and our food- we are not too distant from them in that aspect. Our sophistication may have outdistanced their belief in sympathetic magic, but a simple truth still holds: Man yet lives close to the soil. No degree of sophistication can obliterate that fact. No more than it can obscure the shrinkage of our earth, the steady disappear- ance of tillage and pasturage-terms for a problem never considered by our Neolithic ancestors. It is and will remain a problem of considerable import to us. The union of Life Sciences and Agriculture was not an altogether fortui- tous one. TOM BRIDGERS OLIVER NOBLE, ED. ROBERT WINSTON .-'F ibn-...... . f, 2' , if . ,ggi If , 5' I 3 ,if xm 'L' . ., 'sh 7 5 '-.I I I I ' - 1' Y-. -1+ M. wa. 1 . x K V,,',k. z 1 - Q1 7 if. ' i V, ,f . f JK '13-. as as Q, '14 if We Q .N jg, - X A 'xg ,Q 1 SIDNEY M. ADAMS CLARENCE R. ALCON PAUL S. ALEXANDER DAVID M. AMAN ,ff 'I I I ...H V- HERBERT G. ASHBURN JIMMY H. ASHLEY JIMMY G. ASKEW, JR. WILLIAM E. BAILEY I.,-v JAMES F. BARWICK ROY B. BAUCOM DAVID A. BOYD, JR. CHIVONS O. BRADLEY R52 'Tiny' DAVID W. BRADSHAW DAN R. BRAUN THOMAS F. BRIDGERS, JR. WILBUR T. BRITT, JR. STEPHEN W. BROOME CHARLES E. BROWN GEORGE B. BUTLER JOHN R. BYRD VICTOR A. COLLINS RICKY D. CONE BENJAMIN G. DANIEL LARRY T. DANIEL 230 mx 5 H. ELNATHAN BROWN DON M. BRYANT LINDA L. CELENTANO LARRY L. COATS WALTER F. CONGLETON FREDHICK E. cuMBo JERRY G. DAVIS LARRY W. DAVIS LEWIS E. DAVIS JAMES F. DAWSON JOHN W. DOUGLAS, JR. THOMAS F. DRAKE JOHN W. DUNHAM MALCOLM L. DUNKLEY BERNIE R. EDWARDS I I V , mga ROBERT D. EDWARDS RICHARD H. FAULK WALTER N. FLEMING HERBERT M. FLOYD MYRON E. FURBEE WALTER R. GAMMON JANE K. GIBSON ROBERT B. GOINS JAMES B. GRAHAM , LEONARD W. EDWARDS DENNIS K. FETHERSTONE JOHN E. FRANCIS JOHN F. GREESON 231 ROBERT W. GUDGER, JR. RALPH W. HARTGROVE, JR. TYREE B. HOLLAND, JR. DENIS S. JACKSON 232 WILLIAM W. POINTER ZENNIE J. QUINN, JR. WILLIAM L. ROGERS HENRY C. RIDDICK DANIEL W. RUDY, JR. JOSEPH R. SALEM, JR MARY E. SCOTT GAIL E. SHELLEY SAM L- SIMMONS, JR- I ROBERT E. SMALE BERNARD L. SMITH RITCHIE F. SMITH GLENN S. SPENCER WILLIAM G. SPREYER EDGAR G. STALLINGS THOMAS G. STIDMAN KENNETH E. STROUD ROBERT J. SWANSON 234 JOHN W. TATE HUBERT L. TALLEY ROBERT B. THOMPSON WALTER B. TURNER, JR. JANICE B. VARON DAVID H. VAUGHAN KENNETH C. WALKER THOMAS H. WETMORE RONALD E. WHEELER .I M 8 I WILLIAM W. WACHTEL RICHARD S. WHITE fi RICHARD A. WHITFIELD TOMMY R. WILLARD WILLIAM T. WINSLOW ROBERT W, WINSTON, JR, CHARLES H. WOMBLE A. C. YARBOROUGH ,ef RANDOLPH CROXTON, ED. LEE BUTLER, ED. FRANK CHAFFIN, ED. D-'ESHQH .5F'f Qgl 'iii .i :Q Jmzra..-fd.: 'fb' A..- - . .ff , , Trlfl. f 1' 'F' ifffif 'f V--1' - FJ. A. ,vt ,e-I , , lp lf., fgf5',Q.,-.Iwi '....'-....w..f.t....4. - .,11t.f-Qlsfisi-ss. , . , . 'I ,, 9-fi fi if .-rv my I--Q., DEAN HENRY L. KAMPHOEFNER e s1gn 236 I What ol architectural beauty I now see, I know has gradually grown from within outward, out of the necessities and character of the indweller, who is the only builder,-out of some un- conscious truthlulness, and nobleness, without ever a thought for the appearancef . . . On the eighth of June, 1966, at Spring Green, Wisconsin, the United States issued the two cents postage stamp in its Prominent Americans series. Featured on the stamp was Frank Lloyd Wright and a portion of the Guggenheim Museum. We can not cavil over the honoring of the late archi- tect, but we may lament its implication --that some- one on the Potomac considered Wright a popular enough name for inclusion in the series. The use of the museum as background strengthens this as- sumption. Who has not heard of the Guggenheim? As an honor, though, the selection of Wright is vaguely suggestive of a citation from the Sunset Hills Wednesday Afternoon Bridge Club and Art Society. lt appears even more so if we note other popular aspects of our society commemorated dur- ing the same year: the Humane Treatment of Ani- mals, the Circus, Women's Clubs, Johnny Apple- seed, and Lady Bird's Beautification Program. What does it matter that we fail to grasp the essence of a man's work, as long as we can roll his name like a jawbreaker in our mouths? lt matters not. Other than it is our loss. The true artist, whatever his medium, will remain apart from us, challenging us with his aloofness. Something which he sees now, we may see even- tually, but by them he already will be looking else- where. Ours always will be hindsight to his insight. MICHAEL R. ANDRES GEORGE D. BLEVINS LAURENCE W. BUNCH JOE R. COVINGTON, JR. RICHARD V. KRAMER BETTY B. CUSHING JOHN K. ANDERSON LEWIS F. BOST COLEMAN H. BYNUM, JR. MICHAEL E. FOWLER JUNIUS M. ANDREWS, JR. SAMUEL L. BROCKWELL ROBERT L. CHARTIER CRAIG B. GIVENS, III DONALD E. BASILE ROBERT T. BUCK JOSEPH A. COURTER, JR. RICHARD J. GREEN 237 MAURICE D. GULLEDGE GEORGE W. HAGANS CHARLES M. HAGER PATRICIA R. HALE CHARLES D. HARRIS JOHN HARVEY TROY HERRING, III RANDOLPH T. HESTER, JR. STEPHEN P. HINES DAVID F. JONES DAVIS W. JONES ROBERT M. JORDAN STEPHEN P. KING T ' ' T T. J. LAND, JR. WENDELL H. LEONARD, JR. JANE G. MCNEARY FELIX D. MARKHAM, JR. THOMAS M. MAYO KENNETH M. MOFFETT JOHN E. MOYER 238 Tom Hyde, the tinker, standing on the gallows, was asked If he had anything to say. 'Tell the tailors,' said he, 'to remember to make a knot in their thread before they take the first stitch.' His companion's prayer is forgotten. Very few of us today are Miss Doves, nor would we care to be. That goodly lady- remember Jane Wyman in the role?- belonged to another era, one which afforded her the time for all the little niceties which made her the paragon of a dedicated and self-sacrificing schoolmarm. lDoes anyone recall her grading student papers in those gloriously techni- colored scenes?i It is equally unlikely that many of us will be faced with disciplinary problems of the type which Glenn Ford knuckled through, or the glamorous diversions which kept Jim Franciscus too preoccupied to worry about certification. No, not hardly. What, then, can we expect? Aside, that is, from the numerous hankies required by Miss Dove, or the bruised knuckles acquired by Ford, or the starlets which desired Franciscus? Possibly nothing more than how to remember whether Mrs. Brown's little Willie is :,l:i:437296, with the freckles, or 44:437300, with the braces on his teeth. 240 ed u-ca'tion DEAN J. BRYANT KIRKLAND . ,V ga , V rf ten: t Mu V. ,V g P W Lf ..... A , . .. WWMM RICHARD F. BARKER GEORGE C. BAXTER EDWARD J. BIEDENBACH JAMES O. BILLINGS PLEASANT A. BROWN THOMAS L. BROWN JESSE L. CAPPS EDWARD G. CARDONICK MS-'S DEWEY F. ALLEN GARY F. ANDREW GUS L. ANDREWS, JR. SUSAN M. APPLE JOHN C. BOLT, III DAVID VON BROWN JAMES C. CATON CAROL J. CHACTO ALVIN F. CLABO JESSE S. CLEMMONS BRUCE B. COOPER RAY R. CURTIS DORSEY W. DANIEL ALAN W. DATTELBAUM THOMAS E. DAUGHTRY HOYT R. DAVENPORT, JR. HAROLD K. DAVIS JOHN M. DELAINI LAWRENCE T. DICKENS JAMES M. DONNAN III DAVID L, DURHAM ERIC G. FAREL CHARLES B. FERREE mgw 141' L' ... M .akh .W N' VANCE E. FISHER, JR. FRED A. FOGLE WILLIAM W. FOREMAN 242 5 Z 1 I ERNAL W. FOSTER PAMELA H. GABLE JOSEPH P- GAVAGHAN SAMUEL R. GEALY WILLIAM T. GENTRY ROBERT S. GINGHER X JOHN W. GOOCH ELMER P. GRIFFIN ROBERT C. GRIFFIN EDWIN M- GUEST III F 'ifkglflf W LARRY J. HALL WILLIAM L. HAMRICK CLINTON D. HARLEY ABNER M. HARRINGTON xi' .4 A. P. HEGGIE H. MICHAEL HILL ERNEST T. JEFFERSON GEORGE E. JONES LYNNE D. JONES JOSEPH M. KELLY 7 . . K lm H-,,,,,......w QQ z A . RR. K ff :iv x' E' V 'L-, i , - V 5 K. Q K. s 5. Q O RUSSELL A. LEWIS JOHN D. Llcxo sp A - JOHN D. LINKO W- -' . NWWE' I I .LL f., .g ' - MARGARET G. LONG PETER McGRAIN JOHN D, MORGAN f- 1.- uk.,- Q . IRVIN H. MURRELL, JR. SIDNEY O. NEWMAN HONOR S. NORTON DAVID A. PETERSON SAMUEL W. PUGLIA JIMMY E. QUAST j I DIANE W. RAMSEY MARTHA E. ROSS DAVID W. SHOEMAKER JERRY E. SIMPSON LLOYD C. SPANGLER JOHN A. STANCIL 244 Alf? A. JAMES M. STEELE ROBERT F. SYKES, JR. BARRY S. TINDALL DWIGHT L. TURNER, JR. LEIGHTON H. TURNER, JR- F if 5? I 9- Q GERALD R. VERNON DON E. WEATHERLY DONNIE S. WEAVER RALPH R. WHITE CHARLES R. WHITFORD GARY D. WHITMAN RONALD L. WIRTH CHESLEY G. WISE, JR. WILLIAM N. WYLAN A-K 'GNP' VALERIA P. VAN VOORHIS ROBERT G. WHISNANT, JR. LARRY S. WILLIAMS 245 DEAN RALPH E. FADUM 246 A - 9 My Bantam at 1 T ' ft ,' :'-4 :'A il i 'za '. if , 5.5 ' 1 lf!! .f-5' , . 12-aw wit. i ll aftllfs fit jelfiafj .Q :lx 't gall' I-. 'VL South We have constructed a tate, an Atropos, that never turns aside. lLet that be the name of your enginej Men are advertised that at a certain hour and minute these bolts will be shot toward particular points ot the compassg yet it interferes with no man's business, . . Once it was a big occasion to go down to the station and watch the trains go through. Today, they pass among us and we sedlom take note. Great- grandpaw can tell you about when So-and-so's horseless carriage backfired, frightening all the chickens out of laying for a month. Today, the chickens we see are Kentucky Fried. And when was the last time your Detroit Dobbin backfired? Not many years back, we held our breaths while What's-his-name? was in orbit. Now, we get a capsule report on the news round-up, or we glance at headlines in passing. The diesel replaced the chugging woodburner. So-and-so's horseless carriage long ago rusted in the south pasture. That first space vehicle was obsolete before blast-off. And we have since probed the dust on the Moon. While, with incredible swiftness and precision, we continue to evolve toward our ultimate goal. That the dedication and singlemindedness, the skill and knowledge of the modern breed of engineers makes possible this progress is unarguable. Our debt is inexpressible. en gi-neer'ing WILLIAM TYNDALL, JR. JAMES SCHMIDT JAMES ROOKER TOM WEST, ED. EARNEST ALEXANDER ALFRED L. AVANT LATMER S. BAILEY, JR. EVERETTE A. BAREFOOT, JR. EMIA C. BATTS, JR. 248 STANLEY G. AVENT ,, I , 3 . I CARL R. BANKS www-v' KENNETH M. BARNES JOHN W. BARTELME DENNIS W. BARTLETT GEORGE W. BARNETT ROBERT E. BAURLE DOUGLAS H. BEALE JOSEPH V. BELLAMAH RICHARD A. BENDER CHARLES F. BAHNSON, JR. JOSEPH E. BANNER OCTAVIUS B. BATTLE JOHN W. BENNETT CHARLES K. BENSON, JR. ROBERT J. BODEN MARSHALL N. BORDEAUX JOHN H. BREWER lv. Winn., M,- MICHAEL H. BERNARD DONALD P. BERNHEISEL WILLIAM D. BILGER RICHARD E. BLAKE STEPHEN E. BLEVINS III I ' - I T I 1 STEPHEN G. BOGGS JOHN F. BOHLAND JACK N. BOONE ' rf ., . 5 JAMES W. BOWLING CHARLES E. BOYD JAMES H. BREEDEN 3 , - Ai DONALD G. BRIGHT DAVID E. BRINDLE JOHN T. BRITTAIN ROBERT R. BRODSKY SAMUEL F. BROOKS G. E. CONNAUGHTON, JR. DENNIS D. COOK DANIEL W. COULTER GEORGE C. CREECH, JR. ANDREW T. CREEKMORE ROGER G. DANIELS VIRGIL W. DAVIS EUGENE W. DOUB, JR. FLETCHER R.CRAWFORD,JR. JOHN N. CRUTCHFIELD V AA S y n v I -Qi ., V, ,V ,J I f I A A X.: 'NLL , k'VA' J N02 if!! 'Ag 2gfg.:f?r'a.zf.2:22:e1r..m-fr QIQZFR AAAA Egg !f I K' '.m.S Wim? ,.m ..-- AA I .Emi :favs ws,-Mvffwv.. Z 2: 'mi EAW ' I . A , , f I .f E ' T I Q 7 ' GORDEN F. DUCKETT JACK DUDEK JOHN T. CRUTCHFIELD RONALD T. CURTIS DONALD K. DAVIS JAY P. DAVIS WADE A. DAVIS ERIC L. DAWSON, III ORRIS F. DUMAS GIANCARLO B. DURI CHARLES CUNNINGHAM, JR. ROBERT H. DAVIS JESUS R. DIAZ ALLIE G. EDWARDS. III 253 WALTER F. GREENING KENNETH W. HAIGLER WILLIAM L. HAMLETT ROY W. HARRIS 256 DON A. GRIGG GEORGE M. GRIGGS HARRIS B. GUPTON GARY A. HALL WAYNE E. HALL THOMAS R. HAMILTON CHARLES E. HARDEN WARREN S. HARMON MOHAMMAD F. HAQ JAMES L. HARRISON ROBERT H. HARTGROVE JERRY G. HAYES JOHN A. HAWKINS WILLIAM C. HICKS ,,..-gr, E GRAY M. HENDERSON JAMES C. HENDERSON DON R. HERMAN JOEL G. HICKS, JR. SAMUEL T. HICKS. III ,flaw Wm JAMES E. HIGGINS RALPH J. HILL, JR. ROBERT F. HILL MANLY J. HILTON BOBBY G. HINES gg A-...N LARRY W. HINES RUFFIN B. HOLDER, II DONALD E. HOLLOMAN PHIL T. HOWARD WILLIAM C. HOWARD, JR. THOMAS C. HOWELL JAMES F. HOYLE KANANG S. HUANG JON E. HULBURT ROBERT L. HUMPHREY ALVIN N. HUMPHREYS JOHN R. ICARD ALAN N. JACKSON 6 f,,,,M,..W FRED D. JOHNSON HERMAN N. JOHNSON, JR. JOHN H. JOHNSON, JR. JOSEPH A. JOHNSON LARRY M, JOHNSON 258 STEPHEN E. HUNT CHANDRA P. IMMANUEL DWAIN L. JENKINS MARION P. JOHNSTON WILLIAM T. JOHNSON LEONARD F. JONES, JR. GEORGE D. KAKKOS JACK C. KETNER MAX D. KIMMONS PHILLIP G. KINKEN JAMES R. KIRKMAN WILLIAM G. KLUTTZ ROBERT W. KRAYER STEPHEN P. LAMONDE JOHN H. LASLEY LARRY L. LANG WAYNE D. LANNING ROBERT A. LAWHON JAMES J. KELLY KENNETH D. KIRBY WILLIAM M. KORMAN RICHARD H. LEDBETTER 259 RICHARD M. LERNER ALBERT V. LEWIS, JR. JAMES W. LEWIS, JR. WAYNE L. MICHAEL JAMES G. LINVILLE ALDO L. LIVERA, JR. REX C. LOMINAC DAVID R. LONG GARY S. MCCACHREN GEORGE F. MCEVER 260 5 D L 0 kr ks X. 9 RICHARD K. LOWDERMILK JACK I. LUNSFORD WAYNE D. MCCALL DAVID A. MCCALLUM ROBERT F. MCGHEE JAMES A. McKEE MICHAEL B. LINVILLE GLENN R. LYERLY LORANCE R. MCDONALD JAMES R, MCKEITHEN FRANKLIN D. MCLAWHORN JESSE B. MARR RICHARD L. MATTHIS, JR. ROBERT S. METZ TONY B. MCNEILL DAVID H. MCREE ypfwr, . , . We' ge I . an .. - I A J I SCHAPPI MARSH CESAR A. MASO, JR. ,. A575 LIZ: -.ww M in ROBERT L, MAYNARD MOHAMMAD MAZHAR RICHARD E. MEADOR wAvMoN A. MELVIN, Jn. pr 1. lit K3 wk 4 Ti A M CLEMON T. MILLER, JR. LARRY W. MILLER JAMES M. MITCHELL JERRY W. MITCHER WILLIAM R. MANTIPLY, JR. SOMAN MATHAI ROBERT A. MERRICKS .L EUGENE A. MOORE 261 ' 1 . JOE G. MOORE, JR. MARION D. MOORE ROBERT S. MOORE WILLIAM R. MOORE MICHAEL J. MORAN BENNY G. MORGAN ff, ' f,ZS?g3V 4iZ ' - 'Iwi' KENNETH W. MORGE EDWARD J. MORRIS THOMAS W. MYERS HUBERT M. NANCE DAVID S. NELSON ROBERT W. NORRIS JABES A. ONDER ERNEST W. O'NEIL, JR. THURMAN L. OVERCASH R. LOUIS OWENS DONALD B. OWENSBY FRANK M. PAGE, JR. 262 A, RONALD M. PAGE VICTOR P. PALOMINO EDWARD S. PARRISH HENRY H, PARRISH JAME F. PARSONS HENRY W. PATRICK BERNARD W. PATTON DAVID H. PATTON RICHARD A. PATTON SAMUEL N. PAYNE 'E W... Wu' . ':'rg.,j WW 1 WILLIAM F- PEACOCK JIMMY R. PEDDYCORD THOMAS D. PENDER JEOFFREY R. PERRY . W, 9 . THOMAS A. PETERSON JOHN N. PHILBROOK WARREN B. PINNEY, JR. ROBERT L. POTTER RANDALL S. PRESSON RALPH S. PRESTWOOD Nz.--Q IM TONY A. PROPST DONALD M. REYNERSON CHARLES L. ROBERTS ASA D. RUARK 264 ARTHUR S. RABINOWITZ THOMAS P. RANKIN ALBERT T. RAY WILLIAM T. RIDDICK, JR. GENE D. ROHRER SAMUEL W. RUSS HUBERT G. REAVIS, JR. GEORGE A. RIEDEL JAMES R. ROOKER PHIL R. RYMER LAWRENCE J. RETTINGER, JR EARL W. RILEY LOUIS P. ROSSI BENJAMIN R. SAGE plum BENJAMIN L. SILL NELSON W. SIMONS LEO R. SIMPSON WALLACE P. SIZEMORE STEVEN C. SLOOP KENNETH L. SMITH LARRY E. SMITH MALCOLM L. SMITH ROBERT E. SMITH, JR. STEPHEN C. SMITH THOMAS R. SMITH, JR. THOMAS S. SMITH HINTON T. SNEAD EMORY R. SNYDER THOMAS J. SOCKOLOSKY W. BOYD SOCKWELL WYNDHAM M. SOUTHWELL LAWRENCE O. STAHL 266 THOMAS A. TOMLIN ELTON G. TUCKER JAMES K. TURNER FREDERICK C. TYNER HORACE H. VANCE, III RICHARD A. VANDERVEER LARRY S. WADDELL LLOYD R. WALKER JOHN D. WALKER WALLACE R. WASHBURN, JR. STEPHEN L. WASHINGTON ROBERT A. WEBBER 268 WILLIAM O. TYNDALL, JR. WILLIAM J. VAUGHAN DAVID B. WASHBURN JAMES R. WELCH ROBERT J. WENDLAND RALPH B. WESTON, JR NATHANIEL K. WHITFIELD JOHN D. WILLIANS, III RONALD J. WITHROW LEONARD W. YEARGAN WILLARD H. WHITLEY CHARLES R. WICKER KENT B. WILLIAMS LARRY K. WILLIAMSON CHARLES S. WOLFF JIMMY D. WOODIE ROBERT R. YONTS BONNER N. YORK LAWRENCE E. WICKS CHARLES C. WILSON III JOHN L. WOOLARD ARTHUR W. YOUNG RONNIE L. WILLARD JAMES G. WILSON CHARLES J. WYSONG HARRISON C. YOUNG THOMAS V. WILLARD WILLIAM R. WILSON, JR. JERRY K. YARBOROUGH HENRY H. YOUNG III 269 '54 21 4-A -' TK ' , 2 72 3!7'1!, - Vfjl 1? '15 v 'S ff v Nl In '44 I 4 F43 1' :J , yt. .,vtz1vy1'f'g in -A ,. U C2711-5' -:1-v-,v --'G - - ..: - ri ,' f li-'u -Af I ' I DEAN RICHARD J. PRESTON 270 ws:Q2IEe. 'si-'J z A4 J M al' ,Ei .,'V9? f'5 TLV' 41 f-.wff'w4F-sir Tswgfgl .zz fig - eff? ,h-4.1. .ima u 259-it rm ,XJUT-2.14 ii! rf, IRL LA! 1...,n ...l..1'.1n..L iorfest-ry LARRY JOHNSTON, ED DAN MCNEAL LARRY JONES ROGER VAN NOTE lt is remarkable what a value is still upon wood even in this age and in this new country, a value more permanent and universal than that of gold. After all our discoveries and inventions no man will go by a pile of wood. ERNEST G. ALEXANDER STANLEY W. BREWER DOUGLAS M. CHAPPELL RALPH M. CULLOM JEFFREY K. AMIDON WILLIAM H. BROUGHMAN DAVID COLEMAN FRANK C. DORMAN, III PHILIP A. ARAMAN RUSSELL H. BUTLER HERBERT W. CRASE RALPH L. DUNCAN, JR, GIBBONS O. ASH +66 1 WILLIAM S. CALLAHAN CHARLES A. CREIGHTON JOHN S. DURHAM 271 THOMAS P. FETTERS GEORGE G. GLASS, JR. GALE H. GOODMAN DOUGLAS L. HAMILTON HOWARD W. HARRELL, JR. L RANSOM V. HINTON WILLIAM W. HOOD, JR. JOSEPH H. HUGHES JAMES T. JENNINGS LARRY R. JOHNSTON JAMES F. KEAR LARRY M. KENNEDY GAIL L. KITTLESON I GEORGE E. LENNON GEORGE V. LLOYD WILLIAM D- IVICGII-I-, ll 272 LARRY H. HARRIS SHERWOOD L. JONES, JR. WILLIAM D. LA ROGUE RONALD B. MCMILLAN RALPH H. MULLIS KHAJA NAIMUDDIN CHRIS E. NIELSON GEORGE G. PEMBLE I 'Dx E ,mm -.w..w.,,,,,, WILLIAM F. PFOHL WALTER N. REED JOHN F. SCHNEIDER -wwf X. Q W... WILLIAM D. SMITH WILLIAM J. WADE, JR. E. GORDON WARREN WY' ROBERT C. SCHOWALTER RICHARD D. WEIGEL DENNIS A. NECKER KURT J. PETERSON PAUL A. SCHWAB RUDOLPH T. SHEARIN LARRY L. WILLIAMS WILLIAM A. S. WRIGHT,JR 273 1 for lib ral arts DEAN FRED V. CAHILL, JR. Why should we be in such desperate haste to succeed and in such desperate enterprises? lf a man does not keep pace with his companions, per- haps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. It is not important that he should mature as soon as an apple tree or an oak. Shall he turn his spring into summer? If the con- dition of things which we were made for is not yet, what were any reality which we can substitute? We will not be shipwrecked on a vain reality. Shall we with pains erect a heaven of blue glass over our- selves, though when it is done we shall be sure to gaze still at the true ethereal heaven far above, as if the former were not? -Henry David Thoreau PHILIP V. ALBANO GEORGE W. ALLEN, JR. JOHN C. ALLEN, JR. JOSEPH G. ASBELL CHARLES E. AUTRY HENRY P. AVERETTE, JR. WILLIAM B. AYCOCK WILLIAM B. BAILEY JERRY B. BAKER RICHARD B. BELL WILLIAM A. BENSON ROBERT A. BOONE 4G'i'f4Y'! BRYAN L. BOULIER MICHAEL L. BOWMAN FRANKLIN L. BRADHAM RODERICK W. BRADLEY FRANK D. BRASWELL DONALD A. BURSON RONALD V. CARVER WILLIAM R. COLQUITT, JR. 276 BARBARA A. BROWN RONALD L. CANADY fig? KATHERINE M. CHAMBERS HOWARD W. DANIEL SHIRLEY M. DANIEL DONALD A. DAVIS JUDITH C. BROWN ROBERT M. CARMANY HARRY H. CLENDENIN, III PETER R, DAVIS RAYMOND C. BUDAY BARNEY A. CARROLL, JR ROBERT C. CLODFELTER GURNEY L. DIXON, SR. ,h,,w'f riff fy' W Www M15 wffff A SIDNEY R. GRIFFIN CHARLES E. GRUEHN GEORGE F. HACKNEY LYNN R. HALLOCK KATHRYN W. HAMILTON JOHN G. HASSELL fm, Q 'd '9V WILLIAM M. HASWELL ELDON L. HOFFMAN ANTHONY O. HONEYCUTT VANCE E. HONEYCUTT ELIZABETH E. HOWARD HARRY S. HUGHES MARY S. JAMES ARTHUR R. JARVIS RANDALL G. JOHNSON 278 WILLIAM H. JOHNSON, JR LEAR ' . I ' HQ 1 CHARLES c. JONES B. T. KELLER I . TICE N. LEONARD, JR. ROBERT C. LOWERY EDWARD A. MARTIN JOSEPH R. MARTIN, JR. PATRICIA L. MILNER LINDA M. MITCHELL MARY R. MOORE CHARLES W. MORTON CHARLES W. MOTLEY DENNIS F. MURPHY LEWIS G. MURRY, II RACHEL B. NASH AWG. W WILLIAM B. KLUTTZ, JR MARIANNE R. MCGILL CAROL G. MORGAN MARTHA JO NEAL CLIFFORD L. OAKES WILLIAM H. PARIS DENNIS A. PARKER CELIA R. PARSONS EDWARD L. PAULEY WILMA C. PEEBLES . Il'I IL h e I .fig ..,,f II'III I I I E H ko , ...V I Q ,l,, O N ,340 4 u 'BWV I: 4? A O - Y' I V DAIE 1 I ,Q -4,4 CAROLYN M. PICKETT HOBERT c. PIKE RICHARD G. POINDEXTER E :1P.xiiu.D 7 of ILII I I ' I I I ' I Y V ,, ,, 4 Q. A K S ...I IIlI I I ' I Y 57 A V II .. Q. A .I , Ii.. Ak .WA Gsm S F RANCE . + . - I ,VI A ...E..I ' L ,311 I 'ff . ...Inn ROGER D. POWELL JAMES M. ROSENSTOCK RUSSELL G. SHERRILL NORMAN S. SMITH TERRELL E. STEVENS MAX H. STRADER, JR. JAMES E. STRAWBRIDGE BETTY A. TALTON CURTIS C. TILLOTSON, JR 280 f -L rl M ROBERT C. K. TSANG HOWARD A. TYSON JOHN R. VANN BRENDA J. VERNON JIM WATERS HELYN L. WATSON JODY C. WEBB ,f :iff X 1 W 'I I 9? is JANET L. WEBSTER JOHN M. WHITE WILLIAM E. WHITE STEPHEN A. WILDER THOMAS E. WILLIAMSON, JR. DON L. YELTON JILL E. YONTS Our notions of law and harmony are commonly confined to those instances which we detectf but the harmony which results from a far greater number ol seemingly conflicting, but really concurring, laws, which we have not detected, is still more wonderlul. A philosopher of sorts, one of the New England Transcendentalists, once said that all words ex- pressing moral or intellectual facts, if traced to their roots, would be found symbolic of natural facts. Those natural facts, in turn, were symbolic of spirit- ual facts. His final conclusion implied that words were also symbolic of spiritual truths. With that in mind, let us imagine him on a guided tour of the School of Physical Sciences and Applied Mathematics. No, no, Mr. E-, there is more. We still have to show you the plasma physics laboratory. And there is the radio-chemistry laboratory. As well as our one million volt Van de Graaff accelerator, and the two analog computors-the GEDA and Donner. Nor must we miss the IBM 1620 digital computor, or the IBM System 360 Model 30-that's connected by telecommunication lines to the Model 75 at the Tri- angle Universities Computation Center. Then we'll show you the Varian Associates HA-100 high resolu- tion nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer. And the upper atmospheric physics laboratory. And the biomathematics and biophysics laboratory. The ultraviolet-infrared-visible spectroscopic laboratory. The heterogeneous nuclear reactor. The X-ray lab- oratories with diffraction and radiographic equipment. The Beckman Model E analytical ultracentri -what did you say? The what? . . . Oh. Let me think-I know we must have one . . . Oh, yes-around the corner. The door with MEN on it. MEN. M-E-N- like in Homo sapiens. 282 alexis? DEAN ARTHUR c. MENIUS, JR. 2 phys'ics and math ff L SAMUEL R. AVERETTE JOHN W. BASS JOHN E. BERCAW CARL W. BLEICKEN GARY M. BRADY JOHN W. BRANER D ROBERT F. BURCH MYRON L. CAUBLE THOMAS L. CAUDILL, JR. EDGAR R. CHAVEZ ALBERT H. DOBYNS RICHARD W. EAKER Q. JAMES M. EPHLAND WILLIAM R. FAIRCHILD DUNCAN J. FLOYD JOSEPH W. FREELAND ROBERT T. GIBBS fmi-f's2 bmi' DANIEL GRINNAN, JR. PAUL T. HEILIG LORENZO O. HILLARD WATSON D. JUSTICE CHARLES A. KEEN WILLIAM F. KING GENE W. MCGARITY DENNIS K. MACKLIN MARGARET E. MANN WILLIAM S. MIDDLETON WILBERT L. MURPHY 284 .,.,...,,,.,,.,, WALTER G. GIBSON HARVEY M. IWEEKS THOMAS W. LANGFORD WALKER L. OLDHAM JOHN C. PEGRAM, JR. OWEN F. PHARR, JR. ROBERT E. PHILIPS EDMUND J. PIASKI JAMES K. QSHEEK, III JOHN W. SIMPSON THOMAS L. SMITH ROBERT W. SPAIN LYNN B. SPEES EDGAR W. TANNER, JR. ffm ,. , I fi, IVEY M. WARREN BRUCE A. WHITAKER SARAH K. WHITE OKIN S. WHITENER, JR. FREDERICK L. WILLIS HERMAN C. LENINS Perhaps we should never procure a new suit, however ragged or dirty the old, until we have so conducted, so enterprised or sailed in some way, that we feel like new men in the old, and that to retain it would be like keeping new wine in old bottles. And at the other extreme, there is the familiar tale about the Emperor and his new clothes. Remember that one? Remember also the clear-eyed child's ex- clamation when the Emperor, deluded and denuded, paraded his new finery through the streets? But he's naked! Or words to that effect. Not many of us share a predilection for old bottles, nor would most of us care to join the Emperorls parade-despite the dictates of current fashions, or the availability of new materials of sheernesses comparable almost to that of the Emperior's new suit. Our tastes generally are more conventional. Even so, we live our lives swatched in a multitude of textiles, and have done so since Man first gave the pelt back to Bruin-or to his wife for Christmas. Whether the fabrics are woven or knitted, whether the fibers are cotton, wool rayon, or one of the many new synthetics, whatever our places along the con- tinuum between Emperor and Man of Concord, textiles and textile products sat- isfy a fundamental human need, as well innumerable fancies. 37 his ' 1 QFRQVFQVEW WI 'BL :lx n.Qx.L,.1' ..i qFEPYgWFWU E? . I- il' li. 5, is-1..4Q., A. 4.4-f 73.4. TEE-i.lt'IIII.f3 , 'fry-xvffaffr' --1 , up L '1 fs! A il itil.: L3 ,,...J,,?-4 A--2.3 4 gIL4I..i'if I1 I, nf' a-' .TJ .A ,TS 286 t x'ti1e 1351 rr TTI 1: f if rr 1 FURWI ' I i3lli?'li FSQUW robust DEAN MALCOLM E CAMPBELL BILL SHAW CHARLES TYSON RALPH ELLIOT, ED. ROSE COOPER STEVE ELLIS GARRY MORRISON ROSEMARY FORTE E JAMES M. ALLISON -WWI f af ---'W' MICHAEL A. BLAIR mv' JACK W. BRINKLEY WILTON E. CARTER, JR. ARMON W. BALDWIN, JR. JOHN D. BOAZ I FRANK BuccA RICHARD C. CLINE 4 M, K2 JOHN C. BAUCOM, JR. MITCHEL W. BAUCOM P A CHARLES H. BOHRER ZELBERT E. BOYD JOHN E. BUTTS JERRY D. CALDWELL I 3 JOHN E. COLLIER JOHN H. CORBETT 5 HENRY T. CRIGLER EMMETT J. DAVIS, JR. MUMTAZ DURMAZ RALPH D. ELLIOTT 288 LENWOOD E. DANIELS, JR. ROBERT E. DELLINGER CHARLES A. EDWARDS STEPHEN L. ELLIS ROBERT P. DANIELS ROBERT T. DAVIAN CHARLES L. DONALDSON TERRY L. DOWNES EBEN R. EDWARDS, JR. FOREST M. EDWARDS, JR HASAN E. ESEN RODNEY T. FARLOW I .AWN -fp ww M-W .1 I JEFF I. FITCH JACK K. FONG ROSEMARY J. FORTE CHARLES D. FRICK YVON GAGNON LYLE D. GARDNER Ei Q f W, i I .I f'i'W'fHw . 1 lxizfif 7' ,Vw ' my 7 5 V : ,,, .g ,gww A . V W, ' mmw r . . ,. .,,. W ' - , Hifvmvzw fk ' ...ima f N I V V 'D Nf' ' .Iggy V V I . G. ,I :V I f,,f4'ff!LV.' in , V ' V J ',f, V, , .Vf 5, ai, 1 ' M... ,, . 4. 1, .cg IH .4yi..'f'f' ,, .. Id' QV 7-411.-mg V . , V ' wifi-1 LW ' fm 'ff V ,., . ...W V. S iiIi.lIQI!!! I V X i V M ,FAX SR li ff V:-. 'L gg r .. GEORGE R. GEMAYEL I A 5 A rssemsmmisqggggg I k .V .-V-N. W5 ,, G , Q PHILLIP 0. GRIFFIN A A f W My ,Aw EMERY H. HARRIS KENNETH W. HARRISON JOHN J. HARTLEY, ll WADE L. HIGGINS CHANCLE L. R. HILL, JR. DAVID W. HIRSCH 289 DAVIE R. HOLMAN KENNETH E. HOWELL HEATH B. HOWIE, JR. JERRY D. JAMES ROBERT L. JAMES MARLENE M. JEFFREYS BENJAMIN P. JENKINS TIMOTHY H. JOHNSON CHARLES A. JONES JAN M. KALEY BILL G. KENYON JULIAN W. KING BILL A. KNIGHT E. M. KOEBBERLING JON C. LEDUE LARRY G. LISK 290 fy' 4, ALFRED W. LOFTIN CHESTER R. LONG, JR. JOHNNY F. LOWE DAVID L, LUNCEFORD DANIEL L. MCLAURIN, III HOWARD C. MALPASS JR JAMES L. MAUNEY JOEL T. MERRITT , ,f mmf wwf 51i W5 ik 5? CHARLES B. MOORE JOHN G. MORGAN ROBERT D. MORGAN GARRY W. MORRISON S. l JAMES H. MORTON M. MOSTASHARI HERBERT S. MURPHY MURRY P. MURPHY JOHN F. MURRAY WILBUR L. OWNLEY fm, ,' 'www wwf ROBERT F. PALMER, III ROBERT L. PAQUETTE ALLEN B. PARKER ALAIN PELOQUIN RALPH A. PETRONE HAROLD G. PETTY A - 'Q , M II X . BLL I 2 JIMMY L. PRIVETTE RAJA A. RASHID JERRY H. REITZEL V www W ,fwppv . Wx-I V M , r ' REJEAN ST. DENIS DAVID T. ROUSE YVES SANCHE PIERRE L. SEVENO JOHN M. SCOTT BRADLEY W. SMITH MELVIN L. SMITH WILLIAM G. SMITH, JR. DANNY S. SWAIN 292 , Q CHARLES L. TAYLOE KENNETH A. TROUTMAN HIGH L. WALDER, JR. MICHAEL J. WHISENANT l BOBBY W. TAYLOR JAMES M. TEAGUE JESSE G. THOMAS CHARLES L. TYSON BARRY D. WALDROP GARLAND L. WALKER JERRY L. WALL WILLIAM T. WARDEN WILIAM D. WHICKER D JOE D. WHISNANT ERNEST S. WHITE RONALD C. WILSON in 'in lv B4 F3 E51 UD .A 5? lg- 55 Q5 ea '1 -1 QQ 5' an eg E24 E23 GF an r Eg fia If 93 Q52 ..-S gm AQ m 5 3 X z Z E m Ez C 22 f Q img 552 Q-. J 88 E ON Zw 2 WOIW 39 5 O' N 1 zjwmw Bro w 2 Wim 452 md 22m wp m 'N m DWPE O 42 Z wr, G O '-E24 J gp Q D Z Z - 7 O U44 wo O ' ZJ Wzm IPIW N Zw-OtyOJODo 10 Q g Prmzo 41 II O m m-, E IJ Z P I mmit M3 ?IO'E4?g U 4J5om5EWw525mS5 23 QIWQZUOOESEZS 520 2 3wwEd fwvggg 4PaB ZIO- I M 50 y m xi E xo 0 -w m m P m r '1-- wk O J4 O II LPPPG Oo so 3 EJo-3OJm4 IJ 1 X424 1 m4 0P5?3E4m24o1 11 4 - o Jlzmz ik mwi Dv EDN, , Emo Ermo m,O 4 B D m im. ,K O mo DJ4mcmI WJJ54E!m- z5m5J 3 Pww04mO 1 I 4 mmm .riwommrk Q2 P!wmm'Dm3o Olmwl 444mm P m omDDq4JEJQ ID- -1533!-U Z'-U I- Lllffzl-Luz Imm LU, Lu'-1-I 4g:f'4iw mImmJoOO gg 3605-IILuluEli'QgZ4zEO :.1 1454.12 220 ,502 Q Jzzw Q ,zo Ezm EQ Jwffwiwf J4Z'.7mmO'ZZ z3P42wSmzJ2a47 W P45 SEQEEESHQEI S 2fsS3:aE5z25aSE E2 533255fE225g9OE322F5EE5E22S3:2520552145362 oowrwvmmmmi Q m3mmmoPwwomo1m4 mm Zm4P1w5mEmo1EaEm543woE4mwmomom1mE4mmE5wmmw E - m ' P' f t 3 E Z 3 5 3 Qwi 2 5? 55552 w'EP 5 ' O 4 Om 1 N7 O WI I-www O Ed: m J Q F' ,Z lu QE , Z Zo 1?-to xjmuji I .I Z SPE m2 0 Ja 8352 8-ENEO EI42gW5wE mowtiiggz 5 5 20? E20 W 9 255 EEE S E2243faa052E2EEfS2fs5g2a fggiiagsg 2 Qzem 5 EEESSSQ sg 522544 E 4 4 9 2 m m -- W-.d- .www Q N m W wP ZI Z m O4 I4 Dwm Jm4mP-E m m op- -3omII-2x14 4-lim m -3Q- -'m 3 ZQEZZOIQB JI Qz-4 OPmZmwymr . o - 4 , - - DJ - 4 - - I m 05901 oz BD w Effgiag w finiE421352mzEmi555242WwHEfm25fg2N 3 ZsiggmgagwggffwsQ522SEl2S3fw -. .I ., - wmzizwz Q ZZQGWQEEEM49WEEZEE22g1E2wmEEO2zmEt 2 wJmQmQm!PQ 2tgZ44EbO5QE-mZ5Z 5212532 8 EEOESMODEEUQEJmZwr4OQZ4ZZmJmDEIOOO Q wmzmppmozbjymgIgzzmjwpzrdzrz GJOEKEQ l moEE mrm O4 444P42IqWIW4O-q'WOWIO m OQ4mm4O4m4-4IrO-O-4-144.4000 w ILPWOIWJIIJDwIwh1IODDIgJ?I1OPw 4 E5Dm4OI1!DgEmw1ED12mlDImlO1m E i . T 7 I Z gg - Z 'J O Z m co Z m - m r O 3 m O I W W 849 W 4 - mg m II W P Q Q J z W M 24 mmI m V 9 D rm zw-1 WQwPw z Z1 Q 1 m - O . 2455 ESE 222553 Q 5mw2iiQEsgQggZg22:SpSgaggEgi23Q M gF,5m 2 sm 2 525 Q P oo 0 F-43 O44 Im m -mo-P45 - 55m Q PI W . oJwm Zzm4- 3g2galg2555f?gg Eg Esanedfg5J2:E2!EE5mgs4425535532 5 5gs5gwzEsmsQsaiges:g4 2 E- 22.42-.11 m Us moof-ME -XI-OQP --E2'44d wb? :F 5 4.I245?4Gwzf00:w?3EDfm? fE:i.EUEmEEDm4E ZS 4J6Q4z.5DQiof2w?mmw.oww jxrfmmw W gPOm5g8fggOw?EEZgOm?wmm ssSwSf2f2SH2fmf 35 fEffiiSd?525i4Ew52wI3EEiwQQam25 2 zSEswfw50f55PEzSfssPEmG EQSEEJEJEESSEEO as 525555QESEESEEEQSEEEs:sf5EEa?aE E 59:s2E522Q5E55a2E:sEfi5 mJm1J3I3P4omow4 QW P4Smwwwoom4EwEoP0o5Qwoo3iaomdoo 4 miiogjoqmagogmoifiwfomi X, ggz. if . E E om mf'2m 11 E 14 7 O'D PEQETEJM 7 d 4 m 1 2 A m gig 5ImJw-ww3Z O 1 E E JZ E 75 O J EZP g w14 fwgOEfEjJE zow 6 2 QHIIIEQ lgmggg gmlogw 44 jgjgg2EOmo402m9 Ogm m05D?pDHH!O9gm5mfwIQz9w4P E3 fgmw-smP04Qawwii2g6m55!EH:Eff251w2oii5ga2Ei2g 54 3 0 -lo Z im- 4- 0,i . 0p,.O'E,-.4 1wI.I 3. 4: PrZ4EJm-m53?E,3mIPm1g 225 JgmEw.mDo E . 3 E 0 DQ E40 4mqI4 3 I , mm GEM 4 P 21231 202 Q2 MIZQZEEHESEZE Emgwmvg2gg3E:ogSgZEgHS4SZ5gSZs5 TO m0m5O2OwOZ4I4f22 52, 2mmwmESJ4J1zmJ4UJI 444m vm mI:o4mPmPmow?2:510553mm5ommom3mQmx5333QQ5313g z rmJ OO EHESQEWZ 7 dQOm3JEm r Hwg D Exom I0 ggjzzw O Ol-U mlmow - 2 -4S3wx4 m mmo S 355-4g1JgSI6g4Ezwg Q m-Ogm EO 3-03 52 X 0 igofmmgogmoi.DSo42jIIgoO' 4 4.2253 m XJQJW. grin- 453 2 'mg dJlOW'2fQm 'INILW' O 05 4gEmQmE04Q Pkdmggxzwox 2 ' -Om 4 OEmm r 50 Q rim O: . m w 4 -o r O - 0 lZmPQJmO2mmIm44m-Qmm Q EJ -2 2x4 J 4 mm EI I w EJ6ZImO44m4E4EOOoE40:45am 1 Simooaooigiifmmmiroimisfo 1 Q5 C5 va F21 Qu Q? Q5 EN 1: .a 4' 1. .Ei E3 C5 2:1 gym Q55 Q Y fl El. fe ' F . r U - ' . U W w 4 5 E 5 E gm I 5 5 E 5 as .E E 4 cg, si - . - W .. Z7' T 0 Z 3'J E - 5' P m r , m P Q y Z 32243 mE 4 4 Q35 G5 S . 0 O 83 E 4 E 3 0 W 4 m E E m2oQw MO m Q CUE . 43 O 1 4 Z mg 5 0 . .I O 4 Lu , O F X31 , 2 O gnu, Q: Wu.- -, .5 J O UOQ5, .5- 3 -I I ,1 - O U- m 3 U-I -J P' ' ' Q m'E .Q . . Ogm 'J '-9-no O O ' ,Q-O , Q I ..D 0 l Q X W - I D 0 3 m muztfmm Jm 204 wow - -oE:o W T J Z W W EBUCZ h mom E z 4.0 1 Q m w r O . ? W-2mv24 Oo W o E mug E --05W . m Q m 4 QEBDO P J WzJ C64 EDT 5 Sli E-f 3 J 3 iT 2 3 Ezmqgmi if iii woamg 3 gZSm5 E w 5 E 3 5044625 303 O 4 W W ,' 4.' E O? r 4 ,-0 .m m'5'2m 4- -4 760 3 0 W- - Z.w 02m '.m 'gg 725 Wgf 30012 5.4 P. 5 boar ECI o2g3323glf 4333 22325 lw BQNEO f E01 ETT Ezaguwl Ez: iwh 2,hw SCO 1'90J O24 'OQP 5230 Q-4 -'MU-I -oo i204 44: CDW9 Efiiwmw 410 wZ4 m'2o3'4 -4 9.1 054m Om 42 sm: n: -Or 0 .34 O umm Z0 Z45'D0m..'0u.nu Wo 1:Q:.D2D5 o.-mug: I ul, - O gg -C go i2Qm Eva 'Hao 3'2 2.62-PO We 2253 ff, 0 2:1 acweesmkh 3-0+ .droaaomo N5 'iam wk sew frm,-aw u1E 'O - z ,. .' wo. - -z - Um N .- C.' :H ,. ' . . .- '. 3 - . . Egg Eiga gag ggigg 3555 gagg 25552 M35 5224595555 5255 giggzgig EEESEQE QEES EEE Egfgaia SEEE ft.- - O T: -mo -an .. n.-- coo 0 -.c aw .:.- or I Z CDO ' C5 -'Oz 3 CJ - L-LD ...UO ILL4 xu.4m 1:34 :ccn:x:4:: :cm4m 14:54 IIILL'-iw 2:04 5,zfn.mE4344 9:34111 3c52c7 z5:nL'i1,4w 3323354 xg4m X54 A853224 244:11 -J -'DS as 6: 5' :- ,. 42 ,ua 4 at - ... C 5 D: 3:4 an -- In U1 II co 5 534 if 'DL' o 0 on , 4 N 3 0 3 m P 3 P P 0-m o E2mo N E - 1 N W my ' - - ' P 0 . E - E E -Bw Dom: m E 0 Z v-3 C II v- Q 0 I-E 4 ,-.- an 1 ,Ny- QUZ 1 C 'J Z -I O O O ' O U3 4 EUJBOEID 'S-Lg U, , E gg -I o4 Raw 5 3 w z g 0 z 0 z if 7 42 6 Swgw -ow J - W -53 - :P f -42 - Q . - 2 o w o o 0 ' 0 4-6 . . Hmwumo 4: w . 44. 3 P ww K ig 3 E553 K 3 5 3 3 5 5 H 6 5 E 5 19 E 9 m 054 W 5 553395 d66Ei3 F 2 32 P E 4 423 W Q- z.m-0 w m ' o 26 N6 Ho ' o sn z - fix' 1- -C N0 z z-OZ I ' vm Lu 'vw IQbNC0 4 C 4 20111 -, -4 ug 10 4 m 4 I-O IO 0 z ,-529 O m -5 OE 0 I-21.5.8 4 I 4 LU .gg .1 -Q90 E623 gzsagfw gdi lg E25 gel gzgil 223l ET EigT 50ggT gal 2332332 Eaggfg :Z Q QL 307 2 54? -.1 cu.: -SE . bw I- 1 -I .ECI -OI -1' an . .I Qifhmm C : O dm: mf n. . F ' - - -IDL CDS-2 I ME Q1 'Q .Zo 'Q O -C O F4 LU 29,4 ZW: EZ -,4.-j9Oo-42 O--E ,0v4- . .- -4 CD -J i230 030022932 I-Cm mm itz 7- -Lu 22?-Lu oo Igwo U5 hc-68 H -8 A Wwu-IQ mgmgswkoy. Z -Ocu-gm , ,O EUSXOM -p.!D 4:3163 .QC 4 LIJQ E QE ... -5- 10 0 ..4 O QZUJ IIC? -Q-L. Oc . .J,oLT-:U30 mam Pg 'fo 44 m.E.'!o u::Q ' ZW dam-sm ocglgl- Hal- Egan:-40 gigomgzmww U, Po mr-'W l.UZ3mwO 09230 CWI 342 X 4.. I 4 X04 41257124 4Z C4 -4 E4 Zo 4Qf 4435 0:3 '-'O L rn '5 '4g. M6342 CD24 E ,o '4Z E285 aigigsa :Sagas sis sis 25355 E535 is 62-5 552532 E352 2S62E26 335355332 32553 sis 555553 .- .. '-Um - 4 L- - .c.-o.,,... - ,, .c mo oxz4 owufE44u.u Q34o4m Q34 ou:4 mu.o44 m344 E4 E354 LLI434LL1 254m oiobcaom 0:3451-c?zc34a. L'J3,34u: 004 :x:o:cc34w LU 'c W CD D o w P o m I J 0 dz 2 : our .-o E 9 'D W 4 Z - 1025 D 64:62 E at-ggi? 1 293 2 S 2 Q is Z 68235 S 552'-535 'li' . .2 P- EE'3:S8Li' ' 3160--0 '- 5 3 QM g 53522 ,E M gigiziw 2 A 4 5 E PEEEXSS 5 wsg?i 6 5 C J 35 '-uw - Omwwv- Q 4 4 6000: P EW v- 4 2 4 y.. rlcgcndi :P f... QDEC4 D Dx 3 - .-ov:...Q -I C'-0-53 i- Z -,J . 44 -IZ 4 -02 - 3-J U-I Q f Z 4 I bo 02. '- O mcg: Z -Um I- 7' . mm ' 2 Q QLIJ Z .:,wm'5-- 5 03 0.51:-96435 - 4 Z ff O E+-2 gj -.:52 -.3-U8 2 f-35953 4 E -CJ 'I C5 OCD 3 -E lu m 4.wCEgf 2622 gozgg :um m m 4 E P oo' Zgv 5:-4 mgggg E 524 Q62 ,634 ,o4 dig UJO iq,-E .- x. -'cn - - 0 -lm I b- hl,,'5-- Dm -.Z '- - ul VJ Q.-Q m, :gcbmm Z III O -O .n'D Q Z :uhm Z Z lr, fr II- - -II fig24:l Qzal o2ae-8?2D Id: 3-LE P-5,1 Sgaofiumi 005 mmf lo mgig 421 I2-L8 123 3213 ,FEQSEO -,oom .5QEi6u35m 0.5m 4250 QZQESM Efiiowgmo mi5E:,5N5F mfag J-:W g,gDE 553 5-85 zzwgggw Iic,,,w0 fr: ogg E330 12 Do I-5:04 2604:-O Nevq,5...,3uJ -, NNEQE Ewv -5 mo -fgmo gsmo op- 91-3 33 01504 422242 5.51-E93--Q2 d -Q2 5.949 ISI---JZ U-fmmxgogg.: C53 m'U 5156 SAE E942 E0 42 vig 342 V534 4Q OcE35.E rrbt! P5Eg5wEgIE IEEE 4210 JcEDmE Zgrvwgggm zxcggggmmo 2510 z m! Sxgmo Smm Soma 3338833 52533 3282233633 E533 3233 332328 383338352 3332283332 E338 E533 S5333 E33 E523 O z A D E G wug - r : E ' S22 53 4 QE 5 E 2 5 E S H 2 win 6 3 5 S -- ca O - P- 5- ,, wr -eu 0 r Q, who - JO .'w m Z U P 5 ' Q 0 - 0 - C13 J m - - 0 ..c Lu 0 O2 WO P, CU- - Lu --csv? Z to Z 3 an om 9- I Lf 0 . Z , uuo 5 Q .n O0 P . P 5 . - 5:50 4 ' , 2: m 110 W 1 w w 2 ESEDJ W 5: 423 5 .42 I-4 -0 Q . 4 W P 3 w36O H 2 5 N42 Q Omg w.E 4 4 , . 2 O Q O .O 3 Om LUQ I O Z 4-Ox..-I i 0 l- r - 5, .,. mzo ... U7 -- --2 09.0 -U O -0- m I -.:'- 0 .5 E V3 SP-D. gn '.c C5 :Q-'00 5 :CL-O E II D- L 5- u.l 0 E Eovof E,ZT 5904? 2.T4 Q22 rZm4 r 4 5 E Lung Om T 4 2 T 4 9035 265 o 2 E 2 m E T Z'1Wd 3 mzm- hOo-' DZ-4 mn Egmi 5'w j.q ,-fDN 725 259 O NE'3 Em I. 3-M 4 - e3g5E2I idlg 55555 S655 1523 EEE? 235 :DIE 30EQ3I 2-5 f 26331 562351 Eel Pvig 303 I5 291 A :-: ,- 4: ' - 1 '- -4- - - 4 QD - ,..'- 4 0.4 ' . - .. '.. 4 Q mzomoggob- O-gum Dfrgmmm o'SuJ'J 29:5 .Scsi 'Zim gZOl- xz-9 Y..Q 5515 8 5:5491 4bm-03'op- D 0 2235 gzo of ,Zm . 4 , , . - , , - fcfhkgmg ZQWP EEBQPO -SP3 Sumo mmwa 3:30 rew8 2fm'Sw O50 P :ssh afwaaww zsw wbmo 2- ww zxh E-9 H --4 OU-'44 bn'-JZ 2404- H1342 'V - -Z LU A '52 4 I-1 4 'QE 4 : - 40 '4 0:42 'J.Q'm 45 0-J 422-25.01-' 051:11 fjg'5dau:E 431111 I-gggg 5315211 IQEUZE :1'glI,5 2.232221 gwgnm Qicugg: Qfomcm-I 231 Qgmo l:m?.oqgLf, Egfr nmwoS2oQ Jmow Joosoo :gow wwoo mgeo wowo 4:om qzmswo 43220 omrao mS.2SwQ moo mzoo ma22om mow 4n:ocol-04m 45:44 4ZcLb4w 4-144 4m4u.u 4u.44 404:11 1110411 mc9xEo4 mu.-1:04 1113544 mu.ZQJO4m mn.4 CDEQLU mccu.o441 1:1124 295 WALTER B., JR. N. C E . EE 32 I-CD .I 3. 4g ZZ 5 - CDE ,O Il 'Z E igh S H AM W. POINTER, WILLI Semora, N. C. ER, NANCY F. N. C. EE DSE' 52 Gi EDS 296 Ei N0 CD . I-N lt! QU, .am CS GJ IL., .-.c GJD. 361 O.: I. EE-S 4 CD E N.- U-V 05 :- EE .: 'U l': U... Q60 .cz II cu E SZ Ke Gam Blue lpha A T RI. TECH.-AGRONOMY hree, CD CD U3 I 5-:meg Sw EI 4.2 4-4 Baptist CD gEuJ vo-D Og Tu- 6 ute Astro 2: z .JE Oo ua it retary r cs Sec Unio r: :I O O 71 9.4 r.: - .. C215 O O .I E U, cm IU fo SZ I- al.. :sq-c cu-a: :mv QQ 4 :GCD - Lu 'Q L3 '29 si' 'L' ULTRY SCI .-PO Co 3 Cl -G3 N P15 -024: Z5-1: .. KU C .25 1: D 'U 2: cu: .,. mi o - -E O as 'EEE 0, - E '3..-fo I:c'- - OQJOO QIOUEDZ 0.9.-.EoLD UPGJCDU4 GD A. D. C x. CD 5 .Q 2 r U ' z ai -.w d L II Z' 5-2 :no Zen RI. BUS.-AG ONOMICS Z o Lu-EW N3-.Q 2 E QUIN Seven BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AG a Phi Kopp LE n. AG EC D LIFE AN ICULTURE CES O C O O LLI ni 3 :fd 2 . oz -'qi No-v I- Z 2 z Ir! C50 erm 2 E .: U3 . 1 ROGERS, W -L'AM '-- SMITH RITCHIE F. WACHTEL WILLIAM w. ZIIIEEESLLS, EIILLIAM o., JR. Mebane, N.C. F,,q,,ay-varIna, N.C. spnng Hope, N.C. ' ' ' Alpha Zelal A9l'0fl0mY Club Intramurals 1, 2.3.42 AQYI Golf 1, Intramural Basketball Qg'gk,OB,h',2gAGR'- AGRI. TECI-I.-AGRoNoIvIY Engr. Technology Club 3.4: AGRI. SCL- Offlcer 4 AGRI. ECONOMICS RIDDICK, HENRY C, AGRI. TECH.-BIOL. 81 AGRI. MORRISON, NEILL A., Ill Elizabeth City, N.C. ENGR- WALKER, KENNETH C- Gefnen N- C- AGRI. TECH.-AGRoNoMY H'llSb0f0U9ltf N-C- Varslty Menls Glee Club 1'3' gpEN?ER'NGEENN S' l4llg'r?cl?IIlluEl'lalFE?13?I!elilng Club 4,5' M,45Mgg cranon,.. PSI Sfffecsiiffeglondangu seecfe- ,'f,'Q,',',,ff,f,'h,DQl'fL W 'R' AGRICULTURAL GCIENGE AGRI. TECH.-BIOL. eAGnI. 'aft' 4? ATE C 'b 2'3'4' AGRI. SCI.-ANIMAL SCIENCE ENGR' AGRI. TECH.-aIoL. s. AGRI. 2P31l3f5nR,RWlILLIAM G. WHEELER, RONALD E. ENGR' SA'-EMI JOSEPH R-I JR- Farm House, 'Horticulture Club A 9,'e N'C' NSW BGITI, N.C. HORTICULTURAL Agri: TSCR. Engf. CIUD 2,3,4, NEWLIN, wILBuR A. Pre-Med, Pre-oem. cIub, AGRI. TEcI-I.- Pfef'de'l' fl -fl lnlfgllufalsr Mebane, N. C. Cheerleading Squad 2,3, HORTICULTURAL SCI. Y0'eY BEA Barge oesf 4-H CIub, Animal science Freenrnen Claes Senator: Ag',Q,'S-TESH jB,OL 5 AGR, Club, Agricultural Engineering Pfesldenl Of PVe'lVleCl1 Pfe' STALLINGS, EDGAR G, ENGI5, ' ' ' Technology Club Dem- Club 3 LaGrIan!gg,I N.C. ' AGRI. TEC,-,...BIOL. 3, AGRI, AGRI. SCI.--ZOOLOGY AGR. .- ENGH. ANIMAL SCIENCE w1g'E'N'3g 'ARD S' SCOTT' MARY E' STIDMAN THOMAS G AGR' SCE' I ' h N. . , . ' ' NOBLE. LESLIE 0. Ra e'g ' C GIWIOIIG NG. N 'A' SC'ENCE Deep Run, N' C' Pre-Vet Club, Treasurer AGRICUUURE AND WHITFIELD RICHARD A AIpIIa zera 4, Pm Kappa Phi AGR' SC'-'ZOO'-OGY LIFE SCIENCES ,weigh N 'C ' 4, WKNC-FM Program Director SHELLEY GNL E AGRI .I1EdH' 3,4, Chief Announcer 2, Editor . I - 31-RQUD, KENNETH E, - '- of Agri-Life 4, Freshman Camp Flalelghf N-C- Deep Run, N,C, 'ORT'CULTURA SC'ENCE Counselor 2, 3.4, Secretary Sigma Kappa, President, Rush L bd Ch' A, h H p 'd t Y. M. C. A. 2, Chairman of Chairman, Phi Sigma, Thirty 8 4?nN.C? 3- Czllggiargsz-an IKIILLLARDJ EOMMY R. Planning Committees Apollo Three, Sec.-Treas., Copywriter Cguby Vice president 4, ABETYEECH' BIOL Sl AGRI Club 3, Climate of Learning 3, for Annual, Cheerleader 2, Social Chairman 3 ENGR AGR'f'TECH ' Agricultural Economics Club Women's Campus Code Board- AGRI, SCI.- ANIMAL SCIENCE '- 2, 3, 4- wefk 21 3ICCl'lalflT'lal'l 4? RURAL SOCIOLOGY AGM B S--AGRI. omen's horus-Vice Pres., Orientation Group Leader, Susquehanha pa ' H 'tF' 'It ' bl b Orientation Commission AGRI SCI-EIGL 5 AGRI 0' 'CUTUEEH U Ol-SON, JOHN C- IsIoLoGICAL sCIENCEs ' ' ' AGR E '- Forest City, N. C- ENGR. HoRTIcuLTuRAL SCI. ga - 2 35 Ora EM' 2 CD GJ LU 252 Q E' 9:5'3 5 . F0 Eofinovo- E o '---59Io .2220-IL: l.Ll4'tDQu-CJR aENeOwL mL . 2 22252 Oieowsoi Ezezotueza QF :fi of :bei P1 53' :- . 205 8 3 8425 -I -was 9 EOa5::l'm OZQEOGLII -9 -0'CJEU7'i' 232335: I--.Il.I...JO.4g P- . 'gp n: -gm -' 632 - S CE K5 5.33 ER UJOQ.I 03.6 -'u.4 02 m2 O lr: z - '- - oagg H5 56?-I 42 E-oO ..m-- ET-I UJIICLIII CDLL E 2 LLI ECE . mo.I O I vane 20 SL' 4 - msg:-l 32 o6QlD :lg eoaw EE O , Baez 5, -Q2-l.l.I C .-lI- 5. 3:00 4:2 102403 run 0 E DZ' 0 lg 4 E ea E G' 2,5 i9 I 225 eew 0.92 . '41 E210 4EOZ P-ClJ4l-I-I ni I- E, Q '11 5 O. IIQLUL' -zero z -DZ Qcl-lu UJO.-l-- Q-'CDO 239m OEIUJ 1365 I'.J4.l UD .E E .E 5, -- :- O 0 if o .J mv Q l-ID IuN5I.I..I c5,:uJlg -I E-in E352 eu-43 .ci 2 0 U3 .2 E E 5 S2 U U Im E639 5-I. gem? 3342 .camo UISIOO il-4LLI I BS -cf 7 Q5 C223 J'-1 QE' -4 Q53 C273 r-:Il ll 5. 1 of K.. C3 F21 ll A ,wt ei aa Ca tr-1 '5-if El.. cf l -J D r LI. z I .Lu z u.I OOg E TZI- -agi- ng ,O -ZO QGJUJ I- ,I-I-I Lllzt PCC 22212 'QSI O O ergo: Ein: D204 CD24 . u.I gg E n: 32 E lj 20 0 I O0 E E 5 I-JE E 5- 8 3523 :rg ?rdm .. : FZ m2-34532 CD6 - ---C43 z'5z 594233 E-042 I-Om? cl mmm cniSn1Ez I.LIgLLI LLIOCUQQQ :coco Io::cI-E.I C25 If 2015 . 'i .863 -I gf BEH- ',,. :mum II I 0-82.3 uJ ll- .EN-:E mdiu g'fmoggEIu O II OZU-C II Di 'D Joao: WI- -' 'C7J0 'QI- u5'o '9 -E2 o LLIKDLLI mifoncm ...EP U-lu,0UJa,.Ql- Pb- I' 71 1'5- mgzr: mx-og :I 4,90 32'-',l..-EEO Il-CC OmO,,qgpI 004: Omoo-om-i Safer Y- .. 4,361 . 2261 II 20 'G Fl ..Ei3f.5 273002 OZ.5:hwg3 1 ,KD 251255 325,05 lI.'gm:':Z.I 2511938 CU L 4225024 STEC, JOHN C. Charleston, W. Va. Footbal 4 P. STEPHEN N. C. . 'Z 359 2w Emu IUZQ Q '1 'fo COVINGTON, JOE Winston-Salem, N. PRODUCT DESIGN NK. OH ON, J N. C. O c .EI ID an D Z6 cn cu E CD ,LE 11a LI.I.9't5 QQ: Zm 9 414 n3 E' :S -Q -I I . P6 D Q m Q 552 3 Q2 5. 0 Z ' G O nu M25 mg-E5 O.u1 U: X0 ffzm Q21 D JDE 3 S --D 5 26 fffdf was 'Lg 9,55 'IIEIS 52,13 - 0-3:3 5--533 Lu - S S22 EENE iw? 4 Pan.:-OJL 314 1 'J 1 F 5 .I l -, x , I 1. lg S 2 IE Zom Z Pm Wim 5 m mzm m nm 411 1 I 3 3.N: E-: Ed: 565 f9E5 226 P5 M - - agm g-mm him tim wt 4251 651 mgt 'CI 2:31 mI 1 1 Q30 0530 Zio 380 -L1 MNL1 m1 om 204 JQS4 E14 EI4 m 1 2 - 8 Q 3 2 . E r 3 W E 5 m Eggs 5.2 sow E SE CD03 I-U03 423 E Lu QI- GJ- I I- Pda- ' O ,Zo O-do 4 4 Gaim gp Lu Cm ,Lido Er: 251 1st w I'5,I 4.911 LI-IEI uiiQ C0490 C520 CD50 .wuz 3:1 4:51 4-CC 4954 004 114 104 I4A 1 'U S ci VJ' Lu . ff 33... 2 5 m P'- 5 3-1 0,1 1QQ 15 -ICD l-UmuD LLIZD C -?I- wmv- nu ID CD20 , O O65- UJ .CUJ u7'LLI gg: Z gui- an -O - ww.. 251 gb: gg gas Sas me m L Sm ZE1 H01 D21 mo 4w4 mQ4 mom 1 1 5 Z 0,9 CD. 53 Om Q 44,- O EE LQ Evo LES D. AR CH 6 .2 co E2 1.9 4E ILLI 2 Lu O Z. U-IU 1 3: 4: -ICD IE Om Z1 DJ CDE D RA Vet PR ARCHITECTURE TURE ARCHITEC 'Ill 0 lv IL. F5 Elia E92 -A EQ ir EW :Jia al' A 5 fl na -1 4 U3 'ff-I 4 sig ,,,.'. -. LV! r a U3 E? sffzi ffm JR. E r-053' u-'YZ 55525 Sowgiz E-Jn'u-ICD - 'LL . . !OG10w RT, NEA T DEN STU H IB N AND AINS ADLEY R ON Edd wb-D-my? Lu11LuQ:1 2112111 44 4 imriiim CARL REEVES CHARLES STRICKLAND JESSE CLEMMONS DORSEY W. DANIE JERRY DAVIS JOHN GOOC JAMES E. GR JOE HAMPTO TED B. HOLL CURTIS R. R CHIVOUS BR RICKY SETZE I. E. PETERS H RDT RLAND .I BLE S - 520 CC 1 05512 ND-45 24214 A Z U3 -E-IILLI ZIE' jmkg R Q Wwiw- H2 APPLE BRAY CATO K. DAVI DAVEN DURHA HALL L. HAM MURRE W. O'C QUAST LNICK STANCI WARRE G. WHISNANT 5 X Z 9.12 ZWEE 140 42 -5-5 LLID SUSAN JAMES JAMES HAROLD HOYT R. DAVID LARRY WILLIAM IRVIN H. RONALD JIMMY JANE R JOHN A. JANE C. ROBERT ZZ 5 E UDP' E52 Wimw0 HA O PHI ALP RH TRY SON CH N 1IEQz,,1Z ffhf Z - 2 RICHARD F. BA DON BROADWE DAVID V. BROW JAMES DONNAN JACK DOUGLAS ELAINE DUNSHE CHARLOTTE E. GEORGE E. JON LYNNE D. JONE W. PHILLIP KAN WILLIAM E. E RONALD C. F RALPH H. HA KENNETH D. JERRY T. HO PAUL JOYCE HOWARD D. RE JAMES A. RON SIDNEY E. SAU JAMES R. SMIT GLEN M. SUTH DAVID L. TYRE ROY VESTAL JESSEE L. BUNC RAEFORD DAUG JOHN W. DUNHA JOSEPH EDMON RUEBEN R. FRE ALTON P. GRAD WALDEN M. HEA BILLY J. HENSE EARL HUFFMAN ANTHONY E. MCLAMB DON L. MCLAMB JAMES H. NORRIS ZENNIE QUINN Z :- SZQE 0011 m Z 1 O zW4w D Eiwyml ME m142:7IOm'5Q3 O Q U x J ZOZWI 41-A 4cn4mBu:2OE-,E4..1OLI.luJwD:!gg5O4 go 24413 y-OOU-ILu:31IOI-Km lu.l4-IOD D2 ...gig ,gui .gwirgfggbgsgag I-O ui w Q0 I - - - . . N . .2 mi . o. , EI'-4 Qg25 Zfg5I,.gI.urE'-L'E,,,0f21xg -0 zffznfzb'-I-'I-,z0gfCg43m,.:a.n,rzm,. ID ZgI4IJgJwI1O EQW-11m124 UQ u.lQ010UJuJ4+-OWLUE .-OIS-qu-,O.,:uJ qw DmwO12QDW1PO10g1gOO1wwD 15 Q I:-el F31 E3 n:-:a 4: gf L1 Q53 523 UW A 1 lv -P! Q. F5 fl EL. Ps -- ua .Q ID J., 0 . Gr 63? 0 020.0728 Q 2925? O 4'- rr , Q39 wg 4 Z '1 qmwagwg . E I . 'Uwcm ,QCD DO Q 40M5m:ot MPP uJ - I- O ' 33.212227-'L' -I .2 4 52651535 2 E54 X , O O62 -not-E O 545.1 QQND :Or-: 0-5 O -'w4 2040 55 wg?-5o E4 5 'UUE m -- - - Ogg, I'g5O2'g,LIL.I o.f2',7, D I Om rucfouag 93.53 0 X O .- OO 1 I- 4 E 49 '4 1:005,'SfU-QLEL-E5 590 oooz olimwwmoom QSZ C S E .-.C wtf 2 , Z E2 . Q 4 Q 2 40? O Z - P 2 9 . 564 m 1 : E 1 J Q O EQEE I-Ll nal- Z' tn .nal-' Qqfm 2 w o o w m 0 W H4 4'z2 ' E- 2 w'3 w mm? 100- 202 425- woo 2 :EUJ -:pg gzo 116,25 Lgzu' ird44E'f W - - Lu b-- E 2554 Tr? 2554 mfg ziiisg -LII! I-.90 EIDE! LLEILU 03:00:23 jgO1 -193 0501 12- I-,-:SDSU -ELLI4 Ono 121114 44:0 4:U'gmz mr-1n. m1uJ mo1cL 01m 00:5-0- E 65 - , o , 235 1 sw LIDO Z Q Ev' Z - D90 o . 1 : o u, E - .- - - mn-L 5- O 4 :cu I.. 7 Q ..': 0 4 3 0-R 4 12582 1 W Q EE 1 4-MSE QP S- W Qi QP ggmng Q or ,dwg 2 --rw 22 - 1 22 QSEEE 0- 322 Ulgnqo' -E - ,--E 9431 I-Q 69 4-C99 v-Q I:-Po 44 1:P mm43:4q moi Umm m34 E5 Owm :cg E,,,1:c I-HO Dnge-gmac 1c0-:go1 x-3 mgwmwom 4o.cowq,u.l4 4EQ -:.--mu.l4 mm1Omw11 m4m mmwmmmm O f: .5..- 0.- O GE Ei 3 Q. .. mug' 2:8 O .--C: 'Q-'EO . - SOS w 1.8212 - B2 U' 52175 'E ,.Q'ffEgQ EWDQ P' mi 4 mz maui- ZD ol- Q 953 J 4-SESS 5255 wdfrgt- 45 ogimgn 3 ua: Q-- QQE- -Q 2 Q mcwa -Z.'!I5-,.IE EO gf-'fm ,2o5n.u E55SEgQo 13E6gI HEC: -'CDI-E3:QD DoQ'U:I- Q-L-FI JQEQEOZD Zcmfuf m:w4 4:c-n...w-l.u 4w:LmLuE 4:1122 297 UQ 2: If If E - - ' 1 W.. m QE z E - 4 awz '-I 8 O , J: E Z apic - . ' - ' ' . ,,-eu ul 'Z U3 S.. 2 'I ,, Z EJ! O If I-IJ pmt: U5 I-Q0 P- 5'-7' 0: Eff ,Q 'D 4 I: O 'glib Z 3-is--C02 'z mzi I -img 5 am I E 5 4 J 5- o 0 N o E90 Egg E-2322 g E4 964 Q.S E .5 D SESEF EZF gag 123.95 Q--3: Hz: 595 Selig ggagif'-25 get? hgm Jr-QZQ -0 E ,JE OZ h.-- mw0NE2D 33 Jcg 4 E-: Ir ,I Z I 30 wo - D W Om -P -P O Z m Mlgwa- m LLJ-QI E00-mm! gm hw gitup b-gm O -'25 I LLI cam LUELU Q 4- ' .. 53'-E 25513355 gisa nc-,gg 256' E533 '23-3555 3:33 cnn:E FI:u:oo:IL I-252 EEZ 452 I-UZ'- U-'ID'5:m 4 I-U04 - - bmw :EEE BEEEx4E 322 Z 365 of .nO 2-,7,o 3- IU!-3 -Q 5'-T: me 'ESE 3 . 5 - Elia, 7 -EMA? 6 S mv S - .- F - 4 - - - 442 fn D -,QS I O-I-5 Z .6 '-'J Z 3. - -54? I- -' -Q --I' o Q 7' 2 'D a: Z 9.609 O CD 3 SN 4 EZI. DOI! ids.: Z Vggv- Q Q E O Q puff El' . I- wh CE mfg 224 OZEE E:Om55 5.4 0 -w 4 Z :Q E34 34:15 E u'g'5'f7J C003 I --' 'D -3 -217, -O 501: -, Oaio U3 ECN 4 -Qgmzf D: Q05 r -QP , D-mm',-,3 .46-,Q 1,3 - .IZ 4gl'-.I -Oaqp - ESE 1641: Z-935.1 jug 2258 iZ-,,,- - ,O 2250 wo--if D2I1'CQE -cn -nI- 42:3 L,-,:2c5o2'u.I 4 -.GEEK zcu, 0-gnc,-, -EH-Ir - N31-Q CD Qmm gg qy 0 .::LqgI- Q UJ I.. .- D- -X 4 .. I 04: O O... w 44 I- 1: 4 gy C3 Q- 05- UJUJOI E07-I-'UCD CC-U3 -.IDC I-IJ-C U-I 5:12 53,3 gg-:gg gambecf- g'a'3'.zD EEE wgpg 615,22 13.913012 0 - m gsww 4 'uwn : P-Q N5 w -Om 4.12 .NJE E244 20252-92 mm . O24 Lu- Q D.- In -5,- .. 2n:En.Z 242 qgzm 1532 4 I-- J-U4 - - mmwmmm E : E cu o I Z Z - S-9 59 -CD - O o 5 1 gg 5 5525 5 EZ 2 5 Q 5 r I C- - 0-E.-IU: .. - '- O - U' 3 LL N34 I2 ni E41-1.-90 I- I- gf, ,: W g - E 3 3 v Q E .-.Ago 4 E me 4 I- Q 0 P Q .I 2- cc -' cr ,,o QI, - .- 4. O 'ivy QI- E .avggc 4- 5 ,-rzg E Luo 3 Lu E as W Z0 'Nc-fic Q :JfQ'Ef'Im'5'5UP .10 -ff-'5rn cn. .I Lu fl .I Ir.Z ID zz 5 gow E22 J-'J 2 - Oz 2 4 mgvq mz Z 'wE O- - 110025 - -Za--ZZ CE I Ir o 'az O qu- OID -E 42.- 150,02 3 g O 'Z Q D O X09 - -- -UI-:Iv I-rn w-: '-afE9- 5.-Q4-2 -EO ' II '.- -3 mmF I C L m 0 PQ , F TOP Z NP m-m -44 , m- gm 0 u Q 10- ,J F L UJQ4 c5CEEn..-Lu P-cu B-:ul 44 r-,,,:.-c4q mn, - Z ,D--.I Fmt., 4 ,DEX -,Om Oqg u D:U7t5w-gl-ll IGD4 IZ3 -E ED gg.-3 ,UE4-Q: Q. -C..-:rang I-:D4D- C O A0 ,L G, O -' KU- :CLI 439--Q U, -Ou: Z:-- mix CD00 - me--D- EER 52525834 Smwig mw4 NSSRESE 203 855 Eiagm n. zxooiimrn. cJmLL.Ion:cL 55.1.1 - ...www C5604 c5c5xm4 2 3- Z no .5 no Z ut. 3- L DO No . -I- Q 21- :- - ...-- fr O4 5 2 52 -I- - -. --E -J - O4 'U-QE.. - 2 52 Q FE S 58 -gg Z iiwga Z Q CD Em :3 4 IDE 3-.D 4 113755 I.-Q 4 . UJ o uJ Nev CE gl-U ,, IULLI .I ,wooogfbzcll 2 gn S w -'UZ 2 Si S 52645 10345 E- 45320-ESE 2 E O E E22 - - - L - 5633-CNIZZ :img II Lug: Ezmgggl-Q4 I-6 4 EEZ Zifl- D 6 Q5 gg EE 8653 3qi.cog-gap?-'Z ,Q .F-I I- -.4 Q00 O 3-I of ,S-.,,I'CI 5-5-J .dj gggn- 5 S0 mzgg IIZ4 -:D-3 zggg Inger-.954 vi,-21: Jzgg, A24 -EOEEIIIZ I- -sm Q-Ir 4.00 5-50- o.,D-Cnarrx ,gmac Lu -no LLI .EmOw':cI5-f Iggl- ZEI- Zau-I ma-:ur O.Iww.zO,I 10.95 -co- I-- 'm'5J3m o ofusw mgw -0 -130,6 Oomm..-Lu EI. ZCCQ: ,.G5EE-.-O,,,:,D3 D-:mg W3 4:1 Ow44 Ozltggllg 3526 43445 49.9m3.Q9.'Uf3m 4520 ZCDO im'-E 4 QQ44 oc:Jwo4u.n..EEm DDEg Q55 Q35 298 ni E' 'I 2 Z 'I 5 5 55 EOE O 3 - i m F 588 Lu2 ' I: - 53' an D 4 5 -5 'DCE Bm Q: m y .-O m -oa:4 4 V' P- D cu OC: LJ 'm I' 1 Q Q-Em ... up I IO 0540 Di D . Q 1550-D nh. 0.4 40. .- 4-LU 2'un..-.- FELLES -102 -24 415555Z -IQJ ZEQTP 236 Ego 0,55 -Iv..-E -z4 o-.- Z-FZ -E--w -: 1-m Za P0 w E ma-N-Q Z 'OSU M54 CWI- 41:44 Euh. ,LuD-- fI- ww-:HZ .90 U-mm 5 'U'-' 4.50: I mfr ..U,o.I2u.I I:q,D I: 3 I-xgrrx 3-Q3 ,-cg O 55255 SEQ 555 28835 fem 123533 rn cam z.. .Iu.n:n. 30:2 Ezxm- - I-ou.: Qi.- .N ,g on 09- - .C -ogg, N I-ajgmm . Z T: -Q5-'Doi 3 0 Z 2 XF I--C - - : Q 3:-C . O - Q 7' O IU - Q . -I--U10-H0 - 4 .D I- Q 5. MB-wiff--5 -5ZSuI29g 54.2 5 E . J.z-3O f4 I- D .D f 4 9 'L -127, 29 ffl Tw Pomrcfg- 4 -:m2-4.-s- -Iz N-w 2 u:ZgE.gc1,: f g 5-21 50.1 -bg gE O ,Z EONZZ 4 0 N xi- -24 'I - I-2 -'O 2 -O- E-Qgwwg-NS 46I-,jZHEggPDJ5Q-1,'Fg -E '5QfcuL , 25 FCI' Q50 044 --0 uJ'-:44 mmm.. .. I mourn om mum!-I-I Ow4-,www cn-CEO-C -Umm CD w-3 ZEQIUIIX zCo Onmx L Uno UNF Q: 45 L m Q mga OUI,.m .auf O a-1040-O0f4DLu Q u:3E7aOEz5DJ t'3I:E 5:12 3-2 0--901 I-U4 I-QD I-g.8I-UE -1- UD- O- f0D'I!QflIE1. www mmmggl -- an ,, .. ' U E OC . - . cngaog I- Z : 46 G 5 S :Meg P Q : co E .Z Z w Z Oz 4092 UJ I- E 42 m -I - mm IU cn - 4 -'E 3 ,Q O I- 4 'IO LLI .ENf3:p- 2 I. Q cc 20 Jan- I- ,ff ,NZ 400,:-- CE u: gg I- - 4 - 4 I Q 222 225 E0 2G54 525 T04 W-4 5- Q E65 gig Q22 S243 g,fEf5j g9gg 5952 hm O F 5- F Q C.- - Z- Z- -35 Qfw Q25 QEEN fE5PS4E gfsi 1-22 ULE3 ffmI -123 IIQCI H may 2503 Luo-,034 CD'S7LU Sm E212 ISD fr.:'S'- 31153223 5528 5.-sg'5E wsz IQE E22 5223 fifxiag 2223 QEEE 'E .6 CD E :s 'UW KB '- ---- L .-O . mC U, C I- : IDC o ma: - -0 Z -oo Z . Lu - 'lv-'55 o DC O . DC O ' U Z 22 - m 1 'U O an bf-frm cr iam 0 fr Lu 2 LLI 'I '- LU A -QCD oaf- Q QU - . - ,. -I O 2.2 502505 2 S.gc Q 6269 m F 3 .3 -Z--m- Q Q, 5 -, - IOQ .Z 4-U-4 -E Z.-...'f'D 11002 G .D 4 -Z rn 0 if Q.- I-Q ' rfu..o mint z -Zo -m 0-g c E, D , D - Z.: qt.:-'fm 44 D-ECU-I Q44 u.I --I- Lum on-o --- UJ 4E ID 'gm Lui mg -I Z- mv mm U J W 4 bran, Z2 O ua DI! I Q-4.-I Lu gg! 'ICI Lumo QE-f 0224453325 Eggs? 55231 fri: gf: CD12 oomv-oomn. 13054252 gferg E82 ESS I LA F35 EEE If E3 EF4 QQ L. 53 ms '13 Sf uf ,211 H3 II. ,.,,.. E2- Iii: sf- 13 F3 11 In 921 C 3 in If-fi n n M. M E 1' 7' 2 Z Z -3 F- P o O 2 P ZZ j 4 o O , o Q m 2 O wr Jzgwr Z O W Q2 w 2 wo Zy O 2 z 2 O 24 mzz D P E P2 mg GEOEPW Z o W E8 3 42W I 5 z mg 12 Ow m 5 Eg wOjS z of xzzo O IZ mprggmzm w 2:2210 O w2Z Qmwo 204m ew ,mo Iwo Em P4 w E w I, wiwz 4 420 02512 0 0134200424222 5sa022'225zD2fHw1a2I riff.-aiffws 212221592 E2 25-Da' we 525122 2zsw:'s2mj2 15 .J - .I cn - I U . Z U3 U1 D 5595896355 sg 2-f3N5555505533000352255gg5580153035522E3IibE558w,5'gw5S.LE'-21-3253 SESQEQSQQLSIEEEEPESQEE g15252'gErf E E,5.2::af9E22gaOm8gg53gwgd5LL315551Egg25,2mm2225Ej12a,w528rE,E2Qfdg2m 55293-mOgm5mE222f2Em9E22 P- D-0.4 .1 LU 0 Ir- l-U D- P- cn Z-1.ll- 4 40902 Lum LU .1 cn XI .1 .1u1q-I4 Z 213543235 S Jzgmzggf gomgzffmzmama2mlmmgm:Ezzzmm2E3z5omwrEE5 Ez! E521 M E EQ.zw3imEmz3432Qw4:2J 05114550013 2 :HiELS'5oQ4'EQQEQEQQSEEE525525835-15525555E'E'3Ed54E53'iEE,'i'wEmE,'EE:2':'EE Lu !EEZ2EE'3m0iE?EE:'5:'2?f3E'25E vJ3mm?omx m ?m4m1omi4Im.mummmmi.Pm1.1023www11woom.?43x5mo.w3Pxxwwm?.o E mm.ommm5Eo.ox3o3vomom4o . I - i . ' I P E 4 E m -E . E 8 I Q 5 1 1 - 1 m -.Im- E Z m I , E O II 1 -1 2 - - CJ 1 GEEDZ 6 Q mi WZ - Q? img Jmf.j 35132-E To E mO EE EE-I i Z m 2522wi0 2 Q wi mg 5 IIm2Z2 dfgjwigz 545-ozm mzmj Q J- Q EWZGJP wti-552 mo I 2. O 2 5 Q - W I O Z 40.44 I Im 42 Q s1.- 04 mm wmxw E I 2 21 44-m Z5 OP w - iimfmgo 452,35 giwszgmgimdgiggg Emgzogofg15oEE4gm2g2mMgEQ52Og D 280 955,258505?.,,22fIe5sa22f.s1Q,2rE5EJ2S:,,52g25gE222gm255022111552 25825522awisiaaawsgaiifssmigig MEMEE ' l - - - .- ' - s . .gn .. , A - '.TLf'Lujuj.2-i?neg5'fnd1'.EEJfEf5-i .2,2,,f-'jujfv-'-13.12-5212 .,252-525,523-',j',':'5L,jd1L,j5?fm11-5:,f,wW1do . T 1Soyf ',E'Tdd1-,2fg?3o,..1 3 ggaimoo -4 DQEIWEUW QI-129 XPE 32. WCW-jd E40 jgmmgmq 2104 Q wm0wiw.mJ IZEJ Id.w 1, .fswgw 3 mmzjhg m mJ4 E- 4mI4.4Z3mEZI Em IIW w4Z Pgmyf mm P4 P4mIIPm Pq.Z mo img hiv I-DP www mmm W 4mm-ww mwogi Uirzm 4 -4 qwgg w adwd qmE44w5y44DwImwEmwwm.mm zw,w. Q,4m4IrmqmJ 44mm O wQ.4. 1 Ibm Zbr 4222 mZ Ziw W mJJOwzmIwIf M I E I-- mmmI3-w4mw2 I mmr.mPJ mom-z4ZIOmmz4zm-m m. m ZZ zmg ' ' - 4 --- -- m - -m - 5ESESJEEJEZ35555423335-'-'EEE-'3'35E?E55335U5: ff3 0ZEEEZDSEESEE305552533'f2?f58E35'ZSI'E5E32OE'5'f2ZE5E5 E IIEEUCO ww.:P3xuB1?wmxavrmmmr33m111o5ooE2mEEw3Qiiooiimfoarmoimfm525065202bmwmixzgirmifriioomo 0 QQZOE5 i . o 2 m JE . - E , S O m m J I 1 4 P Z - Z4 W' 525 G www 0 2 W P OW Q I ' 'Im BP . fm .3 1 mwo Z H 3mm gwdg wj 4 m 1 EE mfnmx 252 GE 22825 14 Wwgmm .E I-um O .1 mo 3 .ru-IZQ 5 mg: gg D -12 rI3 .14 ..1 Nm Q Iwo -I 4 m Z m M JI w m- 2 OmIIOwJD -3103 Z m- - 3 mm om J. mt w xozzz IOZI oN O m,2mom mwzz m mm m X9 4Q5.O!4m0Zom 4Q4I4oMo mmggi m 5 25 UJEEZEEm5E'j35E,mm22g2-s0wgL 'LQQJDQEQEQZSSEE'-585 v'3'gLiJ?5'4E2EfQ2'-19w1 i2?E9 ,,5:1'.f5E'f m2E1'Smmggf,.m0og5'u1 Oomfidddrl 12 E21 b45wmmmm mmm44 P5mfwmE04m 225 m E zfmyfm w4wSwP44- 4 EJMQ , if PD.D O5 4 Q- Qm 444o4m mm mwi owfw m w.0w:4OD rhvi P 1 4ImW2 w m IPPBEG w.w3 mzmz -prmgmpfw . wIpQiI7 42 222g22Q22.L2'a255Q5z .2-51:2222.2211152252525292fL3w2g.g'f'222gIQ2s'21 2 5I2afg52f22gmj2m424Q,2 -g,'gg'1f.13ZIb-E9 gg E2555EZgEEEgi4ZjEIEJg:OEEE!EIjgjEEEgg4Zg4ZEEug8JIg5IEmtZEj5 2 06gjm:Ojg012IIw5I5m48E?gOgZgEmO N - . - - - - - - LIJ - - - - .. - 10 .114woowmw.1oBQ44uw?mo5.o.2IQmPmmmrmmiorEofw5:w3fP0Qo52oo5m 2 aIIDEgBg4gQiEQgIQEEdO Eqfbgmofd X 2 F s E - m 0 2 E 5 0 4 o W w 2 Q 4 m m I mm w W X Z 0 ZWZ4m5Z'I I mm W I 2 Dm 2 JO oI 2 0 OO O W Z Z J 2 - E EgQgQgItggWm 2 3 Z 12 1 5 Em I 2 w 0 5 S E Z jo CEE? m Sm w OCNO 34momm 0 OP Z! mZ? 2m O W0 :JY Zrzw - 4 E NWI EPQGZ 01 w:4 m E Elmgvggzwfir 2 5225 Hmm 3502401 .,,EEg5 Zdz :H95w028522 d 2 S 3 553 521:22 5 W SEEN 5523 M 9 Q .4 I- Im-- cn I- 24 do - 0: El-U 45 gg mf ZII 40209: I4 - I 1- 5400! gg O I- wq mol-Um 2 1w..1a4 .m. w,w4 Owiomomm 3402222-22:24 8QmJI1WPlmOSwEmZ 2 2I0aJOlzzuzIIf fmwowzmm Urogm-m 4 DQJW om Om 04- Ozqw m33SfDlmIw:: mwJn.W50Ew bPw1J 253 4 PQ 4424 zomof 14 QZIO4wp 4 Q42 Q mJmwzZPm I Z IEmOIImI O42 4 I 4 mgm W E Zipoq-Ewwp OO O 3- w Pmby Oswmymmm Q Jw Emz I S -Om rqw mmmq O - W O21 Iylwg ,J y I az' mDpy 25454 Z! X 4 EmmOwmm4Z4 -mio I 40mm5mN41mmQ W mm -40 oz0m0Q1zwIWo PI 4 Ozmokm Zwwfmw E Om45WFI ,mmm 54? mmmw-mpglg W 3DE2I4mImwEb I 4 24112 ZPD3 Hm0.b45gIoJmImdS mSPmZ2 54m EJ m ' I P lzzzzimm WZQIOE 140421 m 2 0044145-UOQ4O44 9 -1EO:'9Oo2O5JzoZ2..1o4EI444111115952 .4Io44o54IOQdoE0-' 2 I2OO 'UII'fIQ4 '2'D42QoQE4:Z2-'mfr550 4 Io11EZmm4wwQ 4 Owoimwhwmm4Qw4GmIwom.20mEm.oQQmQEm4xQHmxmEPm 4 Q3EE5g5QQEQZOgqED4IUPSDODEUEOFG N9 6 I-TTI N 5 'E -I D CDU? II I- ovzk Q2 Z mr 0 H EQIQEIIOS 581.0 E gg 5 -I 3 Egg.: mg! Ir 8 E 255155: 2555 Ee 55 eww? 552 M2252 memes E 2391 5 moww- 0 -rn I 0512 E: z-I Or n:- II I-ng -NE 4 I- w..J-- 5 4zP4w42 IDE 4mmxmE0 Od4o0OmbOEE'DmmE4go0D ' w.E4Z3O Q X44mzm32O 4mDmJOW O9I:2o52P4OlD?5I4-3,1 z53 5555255 Z5E99EI55E29eiiEi3LZEE'3Ee5Sff'2'f2E5H?F5i'55'S'i'Z5fE2 - - 4 0 L - - I ' 351291 E 35522EZGESWSEHEEEIEZESEESQTSEEESEZEWEEEEEEEE DI '-LULLI'- I .. LU . --- I- II . - I- .I - igmgmzg E LUIIIXUSWIEEEIEQICDOCJLLILLIDECDUJDIIEDlDD:BZlDlD'1514I-QEEIEIIJI-CE E 5 E O of , IJJ - - .- fr I- E I- U: tr gf E ' - '1 : - Z.: 'D - O 0 O - -ff II Z Z 1 w : moaf Q 2, 15g gm 1 mx zu mgrfgw Jw o J O W PZ oe? 0020 I Oz mm' Z rj Wmgomgf tOd5'dPJmmg7 J E5 ?,E55mEEg954gE2 m,r':.9'22E8g8,I2sgsz,ggE5I ggfggzggifiwg SI-55 Lu .I I- 40 2 :av--503 lzwwz 4?-D I-S .iff 41010-0 'I 25,2110EE59805955Qrg'iffQI29rv:14255538 foEzg:',g'2i'g500E?g233gr'I 45-5m ISuI9?g'fEE0zZg59'U,,,?:fF5'i5'i5'5f1l2Gz'555'723'-R-siargfffizfn40515 :0'Z-30? 0O530Q',Q 'mJ4'0'wJwP4m'mUz4EQ - Dwurdw w Ruiz LLIIII. DI II4 I.LI .m:I:u-ILu z ci.IEIL I-1 I- . ,I .I - Lu.I-I - .J .I CEU-Il-IJ Zlll 4-I U-'II C5 Lu 4 C5 E4zg:,gmm9ZfQmn24lg?ff'zmfmofzlrfEIuDgzmIuEEIQZZZEZZMEIIIIZQEDIIQ .I2:I:u.IQ2zbzolr1:42s-mnfrr-1292P-or40bmEE:I:EfD3-I-211.11200002250200 -OQkq4q4O-IOIOq1mI3Qq-qO-QI-434-OQDQWQOQO-O O-W4w4IOW- Bcz-,un-,-1-Iocrn:ou.o0-,ILI-0.1-1-,E-,frm-aoiorcn-,-I-JD:.ncznc-I-vi-a3o:Irc5-,xop--JLD: Z I O I iz E,.I . E E0 -,O OIIICD IJ: CD u. gg EZ II - ,Q 3-'14 -, CJ E erm Q: h- cn Q OUJI zncli' Id-gg U5 g IU, I-Iuermgm r-Z mjw..I4,lf,0 O Zzjmofrm ommm 5 ua 2 E Z Z 4 U-lo: U3 92 u.: BE 2522-lg -101 gm-:'O!4WOl'QE-'LQEGNEEOZP 4 -JLUCDI-I-Izlg .I 41 5,...1!?4g:OUJI.l.l er - -!V3IO..IZII 'ooOmq m,1.ILL:O D irnaagffrucogm -14, m0o0ILu4zz E 415-j,.0:r:OmgI Oqomww .QQ-5 E 4 ef-egwieese .,, gfeezegeeee-feeeegefgeez .. e 'v .I Q U. Q -- --- . .tn 'DI-u 1 Lu - If EEHSEEEOE 2 IE Q11 Ziff Sew D EDU424 'L24 mwm' 'ff2GIEiH'.7,E Lu E QI-2,03 I.uIuDLu eg I.I.Imb4ajmD0 :o4Z4I: 4 -g22:I:22!2Dffn:::QQzn:zm!mm 'D - -lqlrzmmim n: C05 Iw2ff355ZlICE I- :ILu:r:zl-5:I:Q0'SIOEQ,.4oI4oz: :I :I 2-fi-400040 U-I 04290440040 .:: L -mQm4.f0414QIu4.I:IrwOI4m:I: 4 - -Iicniomrronz rc Ir-,-wu:1-.I2Q:I:0n:0o n. 3I.I.-.ImE-,-,-aI-omcDwu..I0CJ-,O-nuI- I- 3 m 'Q IE cs LE 5 I.: w :rg Z Z - O LU Q LU Z P. mfr LU 0 4 31 0 zfrm u:-,DZQ A 25- wi- Z . 2 mu: 03 mb-m U, OOI- mmm U, 0 Zo q:..IDILIJZ D20 uI,m,.O CD p-2.1 n: - :I II I- -14 U1 I-Iuw I P- ff u.I EI-QQQI-o:Z0f.IHiEU-I Qggimgz 3w5z0m2,,,EdEEEwsz OZ3 gDl-Ugj l-U gig m In 2 efLI.I.-I Z..ILu I.I.I -ZIE Z2 u.I Du: GE .Q552S5'6'5IO4gff240zofmmDEE-E40QQEEEEEELIEBDEEI-wE'fwIEDEUJEH3 IrCJ!IOOI:cmo..IXa-3242ggiQEg8zC5IL4Oc5SED.,:vJQmI0IIIIIE-.-E3 E2-,6'Z0O2W,jn.,,:q - O -- 2Df:Er:IEo:u.IOff7'-32055:-,Zdml-ULUEEIL-'EDIlUOfDz3l-I-'UI-I-I-olUZIuI-EDI,IIEU-lEZ:I:IrEEI-I-L 52'252'5: '2fg'I'2'r' IU-'fwzz Diogmwoagrmmmigimmkizm 249' 3 1575 -,Zo-,Z-,IEZ 535222--bggol-I-I,I..IzQ-,Zo -E qi-I-IZI-U-J E ,LI-Ip--I IJYOIDQ-Iimmm -, -, ,,I- Om :I::r:Z-JQDC5 EIUJ-I4 EQ 205002112 Oa:I-CD4-2 O On:0iI- -00-0-1:01n:lUOQO4HJ-1:14401-:cI.uonfr-w.I0I.u04Lum O.II4Z':-W-44024403 30Ir3a:34o0I-ILE0-,1022InLu?0qu.3omni-u.IEI-w4n:xn:?cD:I:-3n:on.w?zcDn:.IuJ4cD?n:2 300 I 1 Q5 C-3 PEI F121 I Q59 I2-'23 -I'-:I . .13 I-- P-1 Q3 ea '5 LJ U' 3 K. Q! Il., C3 ri: fl G., S KD ADDINGTON, ALBERT W. BATTS, LEMIA C., JR. BROOME, WILLIAM M. CLAYTON, JOHN H., JR. West Jefferson, N. C. Rose Hill, N. C. Hickory, N.C. Fayetteville, N. C. MHVCIWIIIQ Cadefsl AIME Intramural Bowling 2, 3, 43 CIVIL ENGINEERING Theta Chip ASCE, Engineers' Collegiate Nlene Glee Club esug AICHE 2, 3, 4, Tutorial Fair, President ef PIedge Clee GEO'-0GlCAL ENGlNEERlNG 2,3 BRCTT, DAVID L. CIvIL ENGINEERING- ALMADZAI, MCHAMMAD s. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Aehevllley, N-C- CONSTRUCUON OPTION Gerdiz, Kabul, Afghanistan P' Tau Slgmai AIAA APPLIED MATHEMATICS AEHOSPACE ENGlNEERlNG CLCCKER, EVERETT J. AIKEN LYNN E IlIvl:IldI'3egIE5nRIII3ERT E' A'eXa d'ia' Va' ' ' ' BROWN, DAVID E. ' ' - Durham, N.C- ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING C,a,k,0,, N C ye Iechn'c5aQ,1g3f.ASM'i' ASCE: Imramurals 1' 23 Intramurals A' ricultural ea- reas' -' ' ngmeers Engineerys Fair I I I 9bI ATEI A CounCIl 2,3, CoIIIeg Union CML ENGINEERWG DEALE, DouGLAs H. Ensmeeflfls Glu I I I 9- Aenvmee Commmee Chairmen Asheville, N. C. COI-'USC' RePl'9S9ntaf'Ve 8' College Union Board of Dir. 3 AILOR, WILLIAM H., Ill 1 Ag. Counsel: ATE Club Treas., MECHANICAL ENGINEEHING . I B sketb Il 2 . R Intramura a a , , Ichmond, Va. Football 1 2 Swimming 1 2 Program 8t Social Committee Phi Eta Sigmag Tau Beta Pig S nba!! 1'2,' ASCE. A306 ' AGRICULTURAL ENGINEER- COM-S RONNIE M PI Tau sigma, Marching Bend: 0 ' ' ' ING TECH. . - ' Symphonic BandI Clarinet ENGINEERING OPERATIONS AUQIIGYI IEC- 2 Choir BROWNI OLNEY JII JRI Stu ent overnment AERosPACE ENGINEERING BELLAMAH, JOSEPH v. Cary, N. C. CHEM'CAL ENG'NEER'NG ALLENI CLAUDE DI BeaUf0I'I, N.C. CIVIL ENGINEERING- COBB GERAD M giII3n'I?g:rI1O,4Iq'Ecngineering EIZXITIJGRCEIIIZ: ESESILIHUISC-LZ'lTOI:IT'oN I-EaEnI2DIgrII.mIIi:5nIc Band Operations Society Capt. 43 Intramura o , , ,I - - I - ENGINEERING OPERATIONS 43 Basketball 2 HUDIGVSVIIIS, N-C- I Mafchlllg Band Ellgllleeflllg 0P9l'aflQllS ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ALLEN, KARL K., lll Society, Representatlv to Rane' I1 N,C, BENNETT, JOHN W. . , - Q I Engineers Council COGGINS HA Q . . , . Salisbury, N. C. ALI-RED PAUL W JR Chl Epsllon, ASCE Vice-Pres., I I LIIIIngIer3, N.C. ' IDC, vaee Pree. Eeegen Derm BRUCE CLARKE M, American Seeletv ef Metals ASCE: Enqineerfs pai, 3, Engineer's Council 4 Richmond, Va, METALLURGICAL CIVIL ENGINEERING CIVIL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING OPERATIONS ENGINEERING 1. vi 2 CL ' 0 aazwf gg .9.?-065: 5 bOa3E E 20-is w E E-Zgm CD Z '54'3'l 5SE 5 . Ufzgigggsig 2 'ZS'-eg E535-EQ-SLE 2955555 'f . as .I-5D.9-n.5Q5 I ,952 Z n: a - G O- - z YZOCW Q'-1 z 0 E'D1f4i-www ol-U 56 0 Qmoc - 'ISEcnofi Dmcw '44 ff 3'-Q3 'I V H5555 Egggfai ,iw 5 5152 hi ., ff CD5 go .Q'EZ -Idg Q Cbgmcg iii? 0552? mis 'I -HZ 522 S625 w 2583 Egg ni ?E1qQf'2,SI-U Ci giglg z E tp.. O25 :DC-, upgjcnn O E Oqpw Z m'U 3 - 4 Z -5 ,: :ga 0552 2631593635 gigfiffiz Q 42 QD H1 O2fi'm9s 2 LU fE3 5ZId - P E 'UE -'I Om qjgyw 2 m LUQ O --mba Q--JU 04 CJ--C .rn . 4 'U V' u. I1-'U CCI W '.1 'Z L: D gl QEO E ,.C0q, ,bay-C O - -cv mo DQ'-O !2,1'BCSd- OO U-fd I1-I 'LlJ.i559'S 'Enz wcgm O6 32125 25 O20 Zdwmgaau, 0E U3 EONHE I-U-54-C E- 6 -, z r- ,ggzgw Eu, z 02:22 .fm Lu: Z LUQSE 425 0'--EE LU Q q '-031-UE Lu -- gag 3.5-Jsogew-ez Q 9 511128532 H25 P FLD. ' LUCOLU - - - - ' 225 552-Eshagg 5 Q Q-.5 0222 2,5 CD32 ,.::cg.c2C.gg -I Q, O E 2:4925 OQCD W 0:3 O'En 52sS'4: 8 57- 45 m32Z OE mc-5::q,:Eg,l-:O ,I cs 5126 ,-30:-n: 0 ,E-2'-'J-rm. wi dz - 2 Ll-I 5. E111 z . P-2 .Jw 2 m3,:LU'- wemm Eff o Lab-C - ay I- ws- Z 1 - OOQJBO O25 -:-' Uldmwg' D LU r:'L' 'asf UJ ,Z Omg n: H2 0 I '-U cum . 5. 'Um E55 3,5 E2-6-gi 4 mg D: '22 I UJQEJ- mhz 555- Lu -5.5,-L-I I .CZ D wa -I g,,8f3: cn ww 358 Eg,-4 9 gm Iqigliga 2:1 C,'.f,.:g,O z mg-I go QFQQ UC. J I-b .2 ::.'-5, : 0 m Bm JDO: ,NE lr -:,,5.'E I o ,U - . 5-L.-mm Z, 41 4 -5- cu :C f. O rn C 0 -0 - Q- 11 mow .5 o 15gq,.1 .. ,Dmluwc 4 , zccumo O, - -3 omg: EEQCQEQ fr 5 a-S 0 MSU 01:85 EQHEQQ oomawo W 4 a E Q Wd E221 ff E 11501 Quang-59C 25 Z 0:05 lr M QBEQ 5'gt:'Eg:'mE 4:.g'Sgg g O 8 :EERE Zig mgmbzgg EWSQWQ.: z C7356 0 gm:-90-II-u mE.s,,,,'g33E mf gggwz Q E 13 2,335,453 Q25-giglzr-fm Q-Sgmgiq 52 uj E 'g 'f'8gg 0 Ez I-I-Ii ... ' E' 'U - ua OEEUHE- I 201043 -N45 DBZ lu Lu -C 0 p- 4 OF o : :oz 2.4 .D-QUE Em 1-w 2 G, 0 Om Irhx..-:E 2-2 4 2 uJ O Z EHSQSEL-nf :Zn ESM E if 0 E g wgggggglg EIS? H9225 -5 Em nr, E 'mm:'fE.. --59 whim '- .32 0 Wd? 95 H -5 w M332 EEE vfgigi E362 Z ZSQYE ME -55 OJs8iamwOLLwE5'w it-jg m 5 C5 mg.: Lug,-,lgzf 1553.1 4103552 6 LU Z U-I .xx -?. ,o'-ft Lujau. 0 5. .Lu , . a .-u.I oz fi E - 5 mifoz' E359 5 S5-5 D: ri G 3 Lu O62 DCUJEE lg ,529 U12 5 m 2 6 O S305 gfagiii gag 'gs A E 2 25 0 G25 g2.,,j'2g -ISI - 4 4: I-U 'K 5 5220!- -JGDO 'Sag I lr : E mxgg-Q qhuj 20:01 04'-U 3 II ' CC ei wt: 0 .0 wo qi O N 3 '-U E 4 Cf- D U16 LU LU --5 2320 P: ff -I . 5 Zdl-U U : mm -U .I-O :ff U 0 0-0 sm -cw 511 4 Z -.s , WZ D -...U 55 2:49612 43'-'J w'9'w ' 'img'-U mimw Z ' -655.5 42 032 -I f 'O if X4 - 0 :ID-: . mo- -OS -' '-'- -W LI .QUJQE If 4 an v-I1 4 -'ww L- r- -, II 2 Ulm 4U,m'f'-LU Lu :J -C0 40 gr -3.9 -C..NELU .I D -'iooo ' . :- . um - 285 4 'Ega,5 Q7,Zgff:L'-555 8 EBM? EQOE-M2552 n:E2',?'5,:.l ggi-cgligsm 4 Q62 w.MeO2ff, 2 as O 553'-539559 2 u.: 'f5w,'f,2u' 9, 'fgu.u5,:.' Z Oni? :c 0 5 2 0 Z .. E E g 'S E o '-'-'-, 5 - 2-9 n:,,,, 0 E ou D-ogg -S.-Z . w -LU., z 4 49 ... w-dam Qdzu. lilimqg r: 5520: IEE II -OTULU 'g nf r-8335 Siam 232585 E -.w gosdifgg 'E-ECE I E uf TU 2.2: 222: 485:25 G H U12 f S zoo Zo :EO- wotvkgg n: E Off-g Q l.lJ2 E,,,ZE Lu E E g rf If 0- 3'-lJ J E -2 M .. Q C, 'L355SiE1ss'E?235wE E ES Z? .5 .- -4 Lu' -Id w hz O52PigIi,2,cEQo.Zl 5 Zm .1 Z g E O O31 ...WE ZE hZ-,,.5 0 2 DI n: 0 U-I oj2331mLuD'f-zrf-4 U-' m - Q E fr.vi.f'J ,fr I w Z If? z : 0 5928565 Eiinrm SOLUU E. ff - I6 E cn -l-mrE5ZQ,S.-'o2U-'- 0 'UF 'Fw 4.26 gg z 022416 qi Z5 zo '-'-' 05 - '5 20m U-I E DLuu:g.'5.'2Q1'5C5'ft.5 111.16 EZ og 2 UJ U-I - Luqf 0 Oman-EQ'-ZI. 4 CDI d,,5'Uv5 - .amzi Lu-,E 0 X-CoUJuJoLUf5Z'JZjZO ,:cu90 ' ffffigw 2 Q: Z P-grmi E 50 mW,-5 L5 5-aim 5535055022555 U' o5E55EE'rS:9Jz 550,222 5-255 -rZmS,Zw5?,5g.,5 U, O3swo2aQwdSw.EE252 Qitou-1,64 6 -5.1 Z - Q: Z Du-lHa:C IILLL- cow LL,-L 4 O55 5-55 :JE EE E111 E S E 2 - Q 0 'HJ QQLU5 525 'rfilimfiofs sv-10 ww Ewa: ww wo P Z2 wtH5'52z af,-e'faHL 1335 2 4:-,- ID la 4 .. - cv- ...as QUJOE z.f ',,,,,'- 55- -2-1o-Q- I 11:0 . '-Ulffvczlil'-hw nc cv 0 cc o QL O: 4: ,, , gli gr -I Ll.l Lu II . 0 Z L UJ 012315 S4555 ,Q zo f 5 w ff 2 as Q, 'DE use-Eigg i CD -LU 41123 JSZQ E16 . Eg .- 0 D83-EEIGLI.. J E O22 ESE Safes Eg 211125 6 E353-f 5:2222 .I 3 - '-USO Qjgm i - -.iw Q :SOGVE 0 43:2-:Di 4 P ONLU4 2441.103 bf. Lu 2 PE 4:3 5 2 2 '02 526 EEE M S36 if L nc L.. E E 25 4:2 ,313 Q Z .I gdg-.. mths Q E .52 3 H .E 553 5855 3264 Efiiwiigz E 0 ,L-,ff'im z U S I-UEEO w3E,':f.O,,,S'3oEc5 H z ,Z-LSEELLI U as Omg 'rnz Luo--12:03 'EZ - E C5 :J 2 0 - fr 'D C1 ff'-- -r'-o wsu 3 Z . 4 .Omg Z Lu 0 Lu .ogg u.: IL gzn-UO. :J -Q -Q-Em Z Luz mm 4 Lu C U4 E2 0500: 050-0.19 95 UI-U E an '16 cn 'U - - IZ-, 0--wg .. 322:22 g-55,22 , .1 w 5 E f Ogg: w 122305635 bdom 4-- 5 Os:-Z Oi 4 E164 cs E Lu - Oggncvigos- fr O-I 93.12 Z CDCZ4 Z :O 4 Z gngjwow tu 4 CDE.-,'-II 02-4 xc: nj -- wggncz -,Eg-2 IT: m ua 4:05 O. NETOCEI- go aw oo HE semi 0 NJ 52310 E6 OQES 5-ggi 55.1 225 05 O2....I QNUJ4 WSLQZ f 2:6 0.1 OE, P 405 5 m'- 'DO d:LEO :D-J-U CD - I-U I-uio 0 at qi-I BC,-Em ,gg E igmo-I 2 2 Q5 U' CD Ogmw Q-dp 'fjzft E ormijp. Lu-5.904 I E D '52 Z 'L'-I 322 5559 a. '32-5 0 053752 9,6 U-I .1. Sv-ff Lu Emo :rang 'fi E25 'disuei 2 5 50234 ,E 2 Z2 520 L LU lIN2m ff ' 2? n-:az ui -' ' - Omu-I S' 5 2 miwxii mf S 8 2:56 0: 5 gm -, I- Rf O 4221.11 .gb Lu 65502 Q .EO Lu ' os SE ,: 65 'if E234 HEC-Pm W5 -4 z-f .05 G zwisao uf gg Qff 'Divas 2:-J'38'f,'f:i' 31115 2 0 I- EU' Emi Q 55W2 ,I w 46 EQ 2'1 o 65121 EE za Lu -Q 2 ag LLIO mdnh Gd miluagg- uiygwo O I m .. Lu .- W DEl'3 5 O - ff C5EU '5 'JOZD -'O-' 0 53+-Z uf E Z 5,5260 .-20 n5C55':o 4532 SEMI 225 mdzmgfi -, H ff Q a:moZ3 4 Z -122922 u.i Z r G Wo ECJZE - D Q, Zm Z I- 3Ew 'm '49-n: 'E IQ 4 Z msizr-5-Z9 gU5 'J 'D 52 4 0 'J' ,QI 4-21,1 I qu- Lu - ac- I-L4 Xiao: 5 O I 0355? 5-J.Ql.LI Ogmgm E Zo. t: gr og E21 wgzomgi' 465 I3 E 260 -'gli' 2 .mZ 03 EO Lu H m-Q8 gs 0,89 CDD I 0 0 536 35,529 9,9 mg 5 z 2 ,gf-12 If 5633105 .5624 522, GZ z.:Q,,,,, 2 z- , cs :Or-6 ,I 2 if-91550 :reg Zz N :,f,s..,gJ 56 as M 5 mzw, w E wfsw gsm mi Wfigg 55 5,2 564 5526 2 3 52,25 . 'DU5 1552 EEE 0 I-U 9- 4 wk, CD C2 --Xu-E 156 ml-I-I OIZ 43 .1 0 C cn maa0-I0 iQ ! '.:m Z Z -Cm Lu C...m 4 if .15 2235 hi 2 .AEN M 5 was 2 S5222 'nfs O sfyg 5 Qdigsg 3 -I mmm - F . +I ,- '.. 'uw frame ,gg trzgagw 5 WKETSES 'DSEEEQQ 52f.g2gUJ LU dpi-Q0'5gm U, GSH EE '5Z5r' wciafffiwfg Z Lu 5532031 5253-EEQFE ff S 43522 5 'Ti' 2 5 . af - - -6 P5 22 m,E.2j'a5C932EEE 5.1 P5-'9E'f9:.'H 0559 5506242 L53 E of-sO G -' Su: 052 Riagg Lu 4054- mo. 0 m- 'LE 301 cn 0 Q Z E Q o , m m p w m m m 4 Q- 5 - EI 2 If IE If 5 D - 4 Ii' LU 4 .Z tu I-9 Ir O c Go z Z o - Ir . . -UI r . III .JUG Oo ZZ.: 40 ..l .22 u.I- m-4 32 4 Q E oz EEIQ . Q alifuj -5 OBE je E 285 E3 49 4m ou- - O O L PU Ohm Ofmm CO0 WS EEE EEEH 325 EE' - 0 ca nl 5, E Z -- n: u: E .SCE Iii H O 16.122 E ' .I Z Z 'ZSEOEQJ Z CD 4 3-:il-Ez Z A E z 24025-1 QZQQZ 3 .-t J'Un,:..,::q r.n:- D24 wEE'5gEQ 2235 05.59 DJEEU, II O-E-ILIJ Zgg,-DZ Zn hgh? wo,-Iz -OI- 4EMLo2O XM4- x20 Euwwzwm OEPU zwm - -- 7 '7 EEIUELIIIEE 'TEES Iufam' s. 'E 0 ' E-23 2 E get if E E 'Dwi -, H . C- Lu Z O E 353 E 5 LU .-: z cs EOEIEZ 5 Q Ii E H2425 Eg E 2' II-I EQEWDXISE O CD ..- Q.- u-I .' f 28IEs'3:II1I 'Sz 5 Ii' Dg.ew6.:4E r- -OI Lu OC-52 'OI-CD 4520 I-I-I SEE-'I--EZ 25852 E I-ov-oo U-I U' CD :CD z oz 0 0 O QE 2 E E :gtg D3 E -cc 'DZ sa E EI :Gig . E6 - - z EOE R IE -O E EE 422 I1 uago :I 'E-I Z -LLI ,O mwz 0 .--42 gg.: 4:21 gig, 5559 E4 TI.-50 TTIIII -gmgr 9.525 25.915 15:3 2621 293 EEE 232 ZEE3 CU QILIZ olro DELL! C1222 302 Kappa Phi: TRICAL ENGINEERING Phi E. .. N 0 In o :Iutu WSJ I--Lu ci JOHNsON, FRED High Peinl, N.C. ENGINEERING GINEERING II. E: Monogram ross Country HA CAL EN .ac o 'E I- .5 3 ON 4.5 i 2 Morganto ASM 1: C MEC C. INEERING .Eg 4 -LU Eu E4 BIIIQ n: aggl- ..-50 5-EIL' Dim LU CI 4 as if ua CD : 2 6 .l: I df KD. mga: E E 1.92 L UPG msg me 24 3: ai O R Z cc LU u.l Z E29 tu-I.u I 2 ci Z 4 Winston-Salem ELECTRICAL DONALD A. N. C. Z O VJ Z I O -.I OSI GRIG Ralei DAWSON, ERIC L., Ill Rocky Mount, N.C. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Blue Key: Scabbard 8t Blade: PSI: IIIUOTIIUTHIS DIAZ, JESUS R. American Institute nt JOHNSON, JOHN H., JR. METALLUEGICAL Caracas, Venezuela Aeronautics 5 Astronautics: East Bend, N.C. ENGINEERING INDusTRIAL ENGINEERING Ag,o,,,eck, WKNC Station Man- ENGINEERING DQAB, EUGENE W., JE, ager 4: N.C. State Bands: MCKEITHAN, JAMES R- Caty, N.C. Climate of Learning Confer- '6?1:lI:Sg3I:n,gIOsEgH A' GreerISb0r0, N-C- I ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Eheenpealgs List: Qpollo Club. CML ENG,tjEEn,t1,G 2:21151 gigiizisgg gigfsggons xecu Ive omm.: ummer -, DUCKETT, GORDON F. Judicial Board: Cafete 'a Ad- Society: Big Four Sports Day: Asheville, N.C. visory Board: Cross-COIlntry 1: ISZISZISSSNNLQITRY NI' Intramural Sports ENGINEERING OPERATIONS Intramural Tennis . ' ' ' ENGINEERING OPERATIONS AEROSPACE ENGINEERING- CII' EIISOIOII 32352 TACK ECONOMICS CIVII' ENGINEERING MeLAwHORN, FRANKLIN D. INDUSTRIAE ENGINEERING GRIGGS, GEORGE M. ',I,tgIf,II:i2NtLt IIQILLIAM T' IEIEEIIJIITRIIGAEIEINGINEERING DuMAs, ORRls F. ZSIBIEIEOIISI N-G MECHANICALIENGINEERING ILL TONY B IIIAIIII2 CIVII- ENGINEERING JOHNSTON, MARION P. VvZIQIIEJefiereen, N.C. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING GURTGNI HARRIS E- ZIIIIIeiIIfIIfItIIlIhseItIIIeIy ef ELEEEHRICAL ENGINEERING DURII GIANCAIRI-O B- I'0IIISbIIT9' N'C' Mechanical Engineers Latin Club: The Technician, HAIGLER KENNETH W Greensboto N C ' Sfaff WIIIGI I - JONES, LEONARD F., JR. M B t p'- ,E ' -t Ct b- ENGINEERING OPERATIONS gnfnlpha Rush Reeky Meuhl, N.C. Bgnd e1E2,SIj,,,,If,IIII,II,fZ ptgsil EDWARDS, ALLIE G., ll Chairman. AME Sgmeta, . CIVIL ENGINEERING- dent 3: Dorm Ceuneeler 3,45 veee, N.C. Engineem: Counci, Y' CONSTRUCTION OPTION IDC sg lniremurele 1,2 EDWARDS' LARRY T' KEIOIIISEI Gfeece I MELVIN WAYMON A JR Fayeuevlne, N.C. E. Soccer 2' Hellenic E - N C -1 - INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING flgumbust N30 Assoctatton Aglgniof-United States Army n ramura s . EDWARDS- TIMOTHY I- MECHANICAL ENGINEERING CIIIEMICAI' ENGINEERING Institute of Electrical 81 RRIGIQIII N-C- KETNER JACK C Electronics Engineers ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING HAMLETT, wILLIAM L. Hickor 'N C ' ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING EFIRI1 KII-LIAN D- Dufham' N-G' Alpha II5hi Iolnega- Alpha PI Raleigh, N.C. ENGINEERING Mu. AME ' MERRICKS, ROBERT A. Sigma Phi Epsilon I RIN Reidsvil e, N. C. METALLUFIGICAL HARDEN, CHARLES E. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEE G Secretary-treasurer Gold Dorm. ENGINEERING Raleigh, N.C. KIMMGNS, MAX 0, CHEMICAL ENGINEERING MN C ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ntnnt0n.riatgn:ggtt,C, METZ, ROBERT S' ENG,NEEn,NG'nnEnAnnNS HARMON, WARREN s. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Elkin, N5hC.E I E Bessemer City, N.C. igma i psi Ort! TIQIIICSIINQ ENGLAND, RONALD W. Varsity Men's Glee Club, Vice- KIRBY, KENNETH D. Operations Society: Activities IVIOTQHTIIOHI N-C- President, Business Manager: Morganton, N.C. Chairman, Housing Chairman, Order Of Thirty 8- Three: Blue American Institute of Chemical Tau Beta Pi: Engineering Fraternity Activities: YDC: gays IVAOHOFHSI Slug: Futrrlliure Engineers, Representative to Echo? Pizogrgm: Vg:eFT'resi- Fre:ZsI'5mJanBTennis 1:Dlntrgmurals U 2 P0 0 U I ores Engineers' Council, Non-Voting ent uc er orm , oor , , , : ig our ay PrOdUCIS RSSSHYCIT SOCIOIYJ Member to Engineers' Council: Counselor 2, 3, 4: lnterdorm. ENGINEERING OPERATIONS ROPTCOOIIUIOIIVS. YO3rbOOIf SIUCIY Engineer's Council, Vice-Pres. Council 3 ggmmlsslcxthf: Fellglflshlp of CHEMICAL ENGINEERING NUCLEAR ENGINEERING MILLER, CLEMON T., JR. ristian t etes: ass , Erwin, Ntgt 523522 S?n'3mI?l'?l?mEiI35'miiSi.e HAQ' MOGANMAD F- 5EQ.IfnII'HZSiI?t'iI,'III IGI' ERIIISEEIINZISIEBRIZOJLIW I K h', P K' I ' ' G R P Coming Committee: Class EZEIINEERIIINEIEII Varsity Men's Glee Club President 3,43 Varsity Football CIVIL ENGINEERING II VEISIIY Tfack I' 2' 3'4I HARRIS ROY w IIIIIIIRSIIIIIIII-IsIIeiIf:fnIIMEISOM' IIIIIRIIIIIIRI BOWIIIIG 2 HelIieieF N C I LAMONDE' STEPHEN P' Engineering Obereiiene society FURNITURE MFG. 8m MGT. AIAA I ' I Ports, N.H. ENGWEERING OPERATIONS American Nuclear Society ENSLEY, FMIGHAEL R. ENGINEERING NUCLEAR ENGWEERING GIITIOUIY - - MILLER, LARRY W. D Charlotte, N.C. G 1 ' , NC, VITO I OCIO YC I is.i.2iI:: IRI' I teeni tm tgtty gtngn Th t CI'I', S I -H IIIGII G I I MaIffCt,iIEpSffQ?,,aIInt,aonIffa,S CERAMIC ENGINEERING hANgnNG, vniyngcn, ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 1,2,3,4: Junior Class Ring EI1 OrS0rIVI OI - - Committee: American Society HARTGROVE, ROBERT H. Tau Kappa Epsilon: AIAA: MITCHEM, JERRY W. of Civil Engineers, President 4 King, N.C. Intramurals 1.2.3.4 BGSSEIIICI CITY, N.C- CIVIL ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AEROSPACE ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING L w 5 w Z Cy. Q -Er 0 2 :ww E . D: - uv- Lu . , . I E E 55: S D w E z.o f Eve 51 Z6 E J E 0 4, N O 4 - LLIO -P Zo - - l.l.I O 9.0 m N- gm-G 120 md-0 J :ZZ O-:bd og 4,E o.og d W-1 w8wcgg4Im 251 1211 2 ,EIU , 40 OQBLU ,h3LLI , ,3uJ u.lmLu u,ld,,E:.5Q-lu.: LU uJ Lu:-'Lu LU U:-Z u:..,LuEW Z ai--Z mm Z ug O95 0515228556 O35 02755 O 222 O:QooQIu.lZ O52 OGJLUZ O Ou-I E44:Eu.IO2l.L1 Eu.uJ 232m E 0 50 Q 0 - Z cb- E ..-- - ..-. Q ug fr ming QD - . 0: C: u.: . 130- Z - nc LU eu L C - 4 I-U mg Q i mg- E E E 1 Z . H - : Q - 0 I cu' CD n: 2'2 U-' gg fl P -ggwz W,2Eg E 4 O P E zogm M moogv 0 r 0 md IUSOERI-I 0.5.38 z 9,52 uJ,2I Q, QUE mZIO, N mbg B20 -'- '- ' ' 'Q O - - 4 -- 5-Qimfim ggggmwi 0:25 -20 mm H P m eww M z w-O asmu.uI I E - 0 5.4 USEIEOB s5f'f5'E,'2E ESG EEO 4452-wu-l..l qcTs5E:DLu moz mgm .I.l44ELLl .1O:c4:u.lEO .1c:u.l .u.LLD o- -CU - No 0 M 5g-m 5610? E E C, 63621 5 - 352335 2 53-'W S m 0 Qwohwn' - Ewmgg M w wi 9 O m l . vu- .- Lu -f 26.505 E E g'0 ifSO5f5Q.E 111 Z ct,5CUOZ fi -0 42fU,.2!LUoc E I - hC,,,Lu C502 .5 U1--3mIn.m C5 .,,Na:q, ,Lu -mftu Own. OOcu -C0-.I -2 'QE I-3- E Z -2 ,E,-.434 Z LU Zzoggmfiio-r-LU ,Zm :EQ OEO OP O--who J In -.-:a, - woq: w:.-g in 5 .ac ww C2 - or-:L4 H04 2.9 Em rr em frm E -- 'C 39: 4 LLIQUJ whmqmmowvbo XOQCDEEI Q-EO Ogcug,g'g25b:'i'VS ?EPi:i0 ZEm Zcr w'7E lm 4Z45...m0.:li-I UJEUJ u.laa.9-EEE,-f '15 -I Iwmcnwo I fi II444il.lJEQtr:1'6CJ Ps CD .gm . Z oz 5 5 E i Q 39 'J - I- E Z G 5 f E 5 gg UJ -- - 4 - - ... , I Z 'JO QD ., '-U C: - -U . 0 m E DZ Z m m Z p E8 o,l E.m y W 5.1 O -.Q 05 ow o.: -, OQ 2 E0 0 O , U9 .Z -lm 4 O .4 u.I cg .OZ OZ'-U 'Z' LLQ m2 LIJZU3- Q CE LU G Q Q .I -' g CII 63 P-JZ 'u. F '-C L4 cm - - Q: Z gdb qy ,CD , P, - O WI5 MIM wg 4 OIOS- Esgm 222 m J zmwr mgmms mga? ffwff Wx? 03950 0C.::'6 U-I -'m'Enf5 bm: bc- frfnwl-U qmgwr O.: -- -- L .. CZ u.lZLL mac u.n.4:E Ll.4l-If-U u.ou.n.u HQQ A 0 E w E-Qfzr z ,E o 0 Z 0 a3aWQg E mg Z Z Q Z EWCTJNP3 Lu SKU ff I I- +- D: LCQ44J . W . E5 W g H . 4 . 2 W 030 EJ 5 E 0 - m 1 I 3 E m 'O EM4 4 0 E' Z I Z W m Z . 5 QEQP m 2 P cg G P 0 2 8 E m 0 4 mgfs W qdm 2.03 z m Z 4 U z .- U-I LIJ U9 . 6858525 624 592' U 5 J 202 36355 as Cb- - MZMN A E- -wgagmi E'Q ,havmg Q44 m2E mimci 4- ZCwC Wm -Ez Zoohmm :Q , m - DQ 15 fS1wswP2 Zm4 45i9EP M-1 QEW Qigwm fo S: HEZWO 4mI On 35W GSP mmZ mmmCP mg 2Eg550gE Ska 52waE2 593 SEG 56538 DE - o-oZ w :LQ 'Z 'Lg Z ?4o4wmZo 222 EQQPQZ E23 Zim Egfmd O3 U5 C : 0 I v w m U Z 0- ,CJ Q3 9- E gg - E E205 5 2 2059 2 X H Q ?2NE F E 5505 5 E . mmJw E 4 m ESE 4 O E J -gmz 1 E 2 wg 5 E I 4 w Q 2-QMEE f 1 5 5 9022 5 Q X w-w IOOGSZ A O z 1 ASCE z m o- EQJ oziwem o- 0 idw 0.6.26 N 2. SQO 124 5-2292 37,2 mid 30Eg O J JO ZZ -o-I -- .Ui .. . ' ,- -iQ -S:gEQ 4295 ',Q 425026 S 52? Q21 moz woman 'JW Om- D - '- E 1 I-m Juq JtpE:m Qgaw 451 hcmJ0Qgm mgh Ogm dvr dw -QP mm z z,P 2-aw UP Daw waz 550 ,f22cO mima img OUMMEMEO EW wi- ZSW 252935 bw2z 055 SSEEQWQH ESS Eng 442 Jihmom 320m Jim 4oammEim Jzm Jim Pr U3 UJ .QCD O E U 5 5 E ss S g 2 5,5 F F - I O E ' I E 4 4 : W 9 w O W W I 1-I - . S - l W 0 W SE . E WQE g. on - U M E E E 5 Im ' I O :Zo O O CD 0, - 0 . KB QD G 0 J- E. Z wo- Z l,I z rUmO 6 Z ' m2 42 m 4 cm 4.n , .Q EQ 3,9 - 5.0 m PQLQ 206 . OU 4 Z ,ax Z mz 0.5 m2Z EEE jg Q 2 3 J 52234 4, Z m -Zi O51 491 'm O ,EE S m,w:5 E931 O6 Z LU 'J,Lu CDOLIJ 3.1: - w0....r:n: Omg-C- Q':Lu may QQILIJ ,Cl-IJ ,LLLLI ,UI I Z'ED.W,... 2.9.91-U C 255 WSE ww! wE P -wmiw UWRP Qgwz M2 mlm imc Yao xxwo 09:-3 Jim 0 wwf' ww M22 QEZ Qmz Qgmf Ooago Jiwmw Jmmw Z IIN Iim rim Im!m EEEOZ Em!fE E555 E5 U 0 U U m ' - ' 1 ' w W rm m E E 8 ' W D2 W Z m 4 m 2 Z .2- Q ,z J 0 . 5 2 0 hzo O09 4 ra Z I 7 N- . E LU Mo I 2 .0 I- .- :CJ 4 Q 5:2 .ZQJLU IO Z IOm U, F Q2 O 1 GSW 4 2 O-:W 0-W w N--m W mP -EOJ 604 Ezm -zw 400 x04 z-mz iOwO4 gzug -li 3,5 2-E 122: MSEW 223129 M252 22119 92? 125 S '09 3-15 m-Pwr Zwhq qnwm Wim Oiw mgmm Wimm J5,mP : I 5wwP Nw -32 movh -35 ohmio -C20 M050 m-4 mq- Qing XwlL m UW Xmm wumw MO' r ' Zm m Nami IJJ D . E L OSWCJ Ohcm mm:4 10- 1- 3:m4 gomw m4-mw aww? mimw m2O uim moJm mIa4 EERING SEP: JR. c .Q : NE W., Kappa Nu GIN E .GZ Ol-Ll 34 44 pg SP 50 4-LLI cu.: PLLI NEST ER 1' un Z 2 , m O P- G . O fr .I O Z LYERLY, GLENN Salsibury, N.C. Delta Kappa Phi TEXTILE TECH RING EE CE ENGIN PA OS INES, LARRY W. ott N. C. H Charl GINEERING EN ma AL IAA ER m. Q LUTHER E., N. C. -EQ WZ io QED4 P-gui! IFPS 0252 ai d 0 U 0 W 2 , z Q U z U 20 55 J E - Z 1 E z Z '-u.u u.: Di - DI .2 LU E . - Hr aw E W H m W E O m m 3 gm cuz Z '-U - Z ' .Lu .U-I CD- E Z D Z -3 '6 0 , I - LLOZ Q CD2 H5mo0w 54 5 r Zz fvw--1 6- 552252052 if 2 EQ E 55292 P9 .52 I- 2 ard' m .1 Z :ful '-'-' 09:2 ,522-',.n0d.:z.8z4Z,gg3:'5,g-,E,g2.u z3QI5Q:f?ff-442W GZOE 11-afm-mf cnz 2'-z .09 11:29 E,2cEz gzlu :EQE w::E -2419 6 ,4 O04 rn-gl! wdfr -:gcum F u.: Q24 Zgu- Z ,acc 211-lI1rmI5gE5o5 uJ0':2.,Jmr5En:-193 32225 E33 EEE-'3 395 2155 525255 S2422 EES E580 53,55 042 ooz owm 02m muffmo n.n:u.u 102 QBE ummm .15 35, E Q 5 S - Hg Sh Si 0 -3 E 0 ru E EE: E2 'UOCEE Z E - w - Q W Z 3 W : Qgww . 5582: O Sm uJ - G, uJ -I ,502 .l gan.- - ,Lu 5 z 5 1 z D OQEE ,-dg'ag,g3cLE 2.92 ' - -CU O CD X- E 2 .'5 E 9 1 SAGE Ez8wEwHZO E20 4 m w95 E,a m E SEX? 3 wg,Q5Eg 4,5 - Z O.- -we-vt: -w my I .- 3 E 5-E E22 1 205555 IEEQSSOEC Egg foQ mf W 9 O '4wv 'wmmc 260 5-O -' -2 4255 .-dw 2 Q?i6w 7'Q E'4JC,,E'aR5-z,2 Q22 524 'QW fizmf ICO592 4CC jzowh 4 4 PVI I J I-m-I HSEEQ4 Z9EhS - w IWI bs E L- c .-' an -2 -J 2,0 ICO I-mb-CO I-mfoqggr p-Emu,-UC-2 NSU fww 4:3 4:-ww fewoem 4-5230320 43m 202 El-Z Eom-E Exxcnro 2?cLmow4oo E115 UI cm mg . EG CD G z Saw . Z E Sz w E Z , gg? M IO , PE E J m 2 m o fr - ' I Lulu LLI . iam 3 GE O 0 QQ w E EE z Q Z '19 4 ZO 5 Z . u:- . W LU CD45 - - M O Z Z - .. - G Z b KD .55 Oo mz Edu K-iz 0 5 3 45 J Q E3 E55 Q2mHQ 125 SQQM 5 5 1054 T W Zia 554 52255 ?g5 EFFS T04 5226 E65 535 E25 giiis 256 ?SSE E26 ESQ? sig iam CD32 .nsffmff 'f .. ZJDEP 'L' -S 11221 ms DEE an O U3 Q UZLLI .I-O-Z gc- 5. U, r- 520,43 Ex lr: L U m J-W Q m U 23: omzio oe? o:2J :mr :raw 334 452 w-O IIPOO IIO IILW IOO Iwai I4w Qmw .1 I E io 0 EJ A Q G ,rw mz 2 - ba 5 E Z . wow SE m 2 6: - W ' LUIS LLI N no l- L E 0: : 'U'-U Lu . m 4 0 LLI waged XLU Z In hw lr .Q Lu 2 Q 3- - -Z 4 ' N3 w J E Z 4 LE' O iw vw 3 ma 1 Q 6 2 m P29 2 5 E E5 2 QS O E E 2 O. 'o H' ' f m LU fzg 1z0Em T250 Q,8Q d,-fgmg Tzfmg W-m 5,9-E 76 E ,550 m2iC:HJ z-H21 Zcz -.C33- mggr- Za, Q 446 KDNZ-1 '-.C '?:gJ OB- 09:52 Pomo Zuma O-mE:-4 ?9xE0 frww crggsn: 22,-Lu mwio D.:,1:w9on- omogm 452 4:11:53 I-I-Io.:.J -JE-U-I O.c2-Qozl-U OESOLLI Gow Orru.-u. CDDiD.LU L'Jn.4:O CJO4:n.Ou.lE 00:5-O4 303 KU 1- 'El 2 gg U, G Su- 't -L 1 r 0 2555 Z Z Q52 . 9 4 Q 0 W 0 gg 0 w w G Z 'HQ 3 - HOUU5 Z Z -U Z Z .- , Z Z Z Z W - W E-w 0 . I - -wmv - - O - O Z 'HmE - Q : - HE -- P-L5 .. - M E cr . O - II z E Q EUE H 1 m C 1E Cm J m 0 I m - mC0 - - I-U LLI i who mpg: Lu -.a 4-'amz Lu Lu - c l- A ul . I- , Lu : of 000 LU 5- hc y- , u.l IQ 2 W 4 0208221 0 P z T EUQCEE 2 w I 2 E m m W 4,5 z m - -iw 9 5 4 , 45 0 Q F J Z 0 ' Ow - E' ' m -vw-w 4 2 Q m 2 m 0 Z Q 'n'3w -' E 1 E- - - Um .J .0 7 U' 7605 0. II Z 'ab' 6 -gig--Sw I 5 gr Z5 1 'LG ' 0 l.l.l 2 ' :US-.9 Gm E Q: ml- W CD C5 ZO 595 E gEgw25O w 5 oz E E 9s,jwZ 5 z 5 2 O E 9 5 220 2 9 5 SSEEE 55 o 5 333 555 w EZ 2 Sim! SQEG m- M Id J J-USE Wg zdm 5 E 0 4. M m 0 SEG O. w o65I5CC w.0 --gow E' M HQ -,J ,c-Q5 BZ 20 z -,, 405 fn- J , Q I ,o,oam -J! O 2.4 E. asf, 12-6352-.mf 42 6 gg 22 12-MSW 624 Sw 2 ff was P9 2 5 Q2 S 40 - - - ' - -- ' . - ' - : f m z-m C - Do- m.j Q2wum - 2 Q Z Z wgwcmm 4,Q ,Zu M ,2'Q Jim Dwm DZmQ w-mmm : -m2 w 3 ho- hz 3 mas m2ug,E:mw If w 55 4 Qgmuaizm 591 m aim 15:1 -Om miw milm Eg5E-ggvEE-H E-554 255 Z- Em 550 SEWESQSEZ 22mm 3225 59532924 :BB 5226? Qggg Q62 522 jgmg EEEESOOQISEZ Sgmgi 851 QENJE 495 mggggiggg m23S momm mgimgwgg 555 f-mE0 026m 090 42w 425m mESmUwwBOj20 jErwP JE0 JE0-2 - - - .- .. aJooZ -cv .1 - Z ---Z - E' - +-'32.9'D?1lU- -- 2- I-I-I ---I-U - CD20 Som 3m4wP0m0m 3x40 ?m4E 3mmwZoOZ Bmm Bwwwm Exim Sim Sim 3205 ?5Emw:2EE3SE 35452 332 33400 m E . Z U . , M C 0 .t '07 C C cn ' T-mc W m 35 5 0 w 0 w M5 w 0 - C Gram Z H r 20 c Z - 0 Z O 2 2 5- C Z Q 8 0 ww'z O C -90 -m m - E z Q wz m5H0 - w - z CUE-U .. cp C' CD 0: -1 .. -,. . O O . mW cr -E Z , gn .. '- E 'DI-L . Lu gg ' 1 '- Q: .Em --rn an q: 5,304 F' . Ugmmwu Q - L T .y- qu: 5. y. Q..-NC Lu on O 2 L Cwou 4 I Bro 25km 0 - 1 W 0 W I 4 W 4 4 1 Q-C o M C I- m W .-m 0 m w BU 2 1 z m :m w . CPG z - w P 0 w o9nHEm w 1 ,3wSP,wW w E - P 2 2 E - sz W E 9 - E J-M E30 E 1 0 M O1 0 4 w 2 2m500 1 m hC-45f54 0 P 0 0 m ' 4 a I n- E m 4 Z 4 m 203962 U P Z W Z0 --Z J 2 5 E.83I2o9 g.gE2L2SEE4 E E EEE go? 3 0 R 65 i O D05 3.0 glgsfoi 5 g E - 3 Ez 195 3 P z EEEONEPU OUEWEBZ W Q0 E50 m'-m giw i'w if.iW - 0 m-m ,qw Odmo m- . m 4 4 mQ yzm O 5'm MQOWHEEZ '2OzEgEESm0Z 322 0Q?44 I 4 392 QwO9J D z mzz Jzz vEgW8BE 2 EO z Idm zw 5-z Q Zim P3-mS0 I - -SZQESUIEI 42m 12040 -if -ZE w2zm4 ZUE L56 9-E -E WS38wo P2 5 E-C 60 :EG -INN4 65555935 595503025935 4,5 EJOQE 525 355 52 gE 525 102 igw EgE'mmwwE 9 z 522422 O22 54ga9 go :Eq,5Z Q96 E5 cnE4.4Z -foz mcggfr -,CD Z Imfgl- x DEN Oil-U ,D -.,,o5,,,?E4 -g Lu -g:u.1,,, 'iowm 4 huge: Iigfogm- Z:gmig2w:M4- IS- E9w5I 252 mg? QJELQ Q55 O34 125 33422 ZEI 2mmJ mSmgJw 354 zmxxg :Casa--S E -15:-Hfswflmg 456 62:3 450 few wcmso M0 ms H0 A -5:05220 vos f-2 :sz 405 22 m '- 'U-- -5- 'DV'- 1 -CLE I- Z P-lv.-an l-: v- Z b--EE 5-:Z l-0- r-OZ D -..m x.-olll 5-Em- 4wEo..O mo- LLlOmE.J w340014m w040m44E0mEm wim wmwwi 035 03m wmmmE mom 020 mzm wE4wJo30E 0040 P20000 Pao Pmmmm 2 T6 M m E - U 4 C 36 ' 5 . N Nw 5 N E 5 9 EEEQ 3 m 9 5 2 3 55 3 5 9 S 655 E9 9 - - Nv- z J - , - M - - - - - c - 0 . 2 0 5 E aifsiaffsi Q SS E r E 2 2.535 2 CD 'I ff. 8522 E 1 'nw .2 -w m . mr I , ln- 650 Lu Lu . ,E . - ...-U-I-.a 4 3 '-U . 9305 at m 2- 4 m Q z Q g,mgEo E og 0m-Z E Z 4 0 m E 4 men, 5 6 ENE 3 Q plwo 5 0 00 5 . ' r4b4m Z z-eg- - z Q -Sew J ,x- - . 0 4 2' 0 ESE' gg ffigagi 2.555 562 E 5 EEL, Z-gd 2 5 iwsg 2 md I-I Z 4522 6 ES 3 3:22 5 2.5 m- - ME 4 : ,. , ,-who --M .- . - - , 8-6 A g9S5gE3S gzgi 29:04 524 icy Sig 52 2 39321353 Ez QQ 39252 Qvuf 828932 E 2535 g Ezg 12m 4 ,ZH m-m- If'U -8204 h4 ? mm- ,M W -Z wm 9- 1-m0- 1295 ZK4 J6Ufm4 -2m- - P-- cu II LD .- fm cn n: O Z .- om -'-2 O p- -311 .fu I-'D D O cn..-O XO 20 zum 13:23 3 ,--IICCND: UE fi Z - O 'L .EC -I UJfD:-- Di gy!!! 22 E QSSQSEBH -EEE ZOSQE Ewa JQE NIH wfgQ ,QWAEOBE M2235 wemsi 6655 g36gmggg 53:9 5 sg LLlO p- -c mmm--Z wb qw .:,. -,Q,. .J g,'S EC 2 1-5:,..q,,c gr? -, rnseumm mm ,,, .. 0- njn. P-WO O Eoq-1g.:m4- D:.QJC0 mfg 'HO LUN-I IME n:.-m4 DZQQCCOFZ 4.5 42 tU 'mO Zoml- C0555 '-QEE E 031,32 Q2 zxzuuj If-'Q---'f-CQJLU gil-..Z me-S4 PLO L- 420 lun: Oh,-Q..-l-..9- x ,-- JLUJ OL O Og- ZSEEEE 5238 235255 EEE EEE 5525 55524 55522 53.15555 5,555 55,5552 252 3 z 5 C C0 an z- ua Lu Z -6 .L ,, G .6 0 CJ Z O 0 D-VJ ' L Z LZ : Z O 7' P- 0950, ' QNZ 'G Z - ' 'U Z Z OO . b -' O ' 'f5 C0-E cc N - II V3 9- '- ' - gg -- o P - 4 22 m w -m 0 - Dm M Q m m OE Oh: 4 4: U- . If E 0- - coqw ,JY-LLI Wm CD Em Lu CE as LI.I LI.I 0 -3 . Z qu--.,' 7 -LU . 3 g Lu . Lu -4 , , wwm of - 0 5 0 Q 4 2.35 omwg m -EZ A C, J -w z 1 mm - I 920 D,m Z z z P Q z :L-w - WL 4 RE . ' I E Z Dm 0 ,- mzl J E S - 2 m 6 22.5 I w2g5J 27290 P 22 4 0 4 0 P Bmw w 9 mm Q.EEg 2,0 m.m j E 2 E m 2,36 O Egghq 52522 E Eg? Q 22 ,Q E E waz 4 Z g MO Ed 2 POEW- DEG 30W Ed U O'O L-5 P552 R-490290 mazgm m.Ew0o 4.5m Z- ,.6-M E-m P.Eo W- Oo 52855 EEZ E22 . Z fqg SUM hggm g0gEjhm2 qmgma OO4W6z 1044 Q2 2 EOEJJ QQJ moiz Q2 Ez Haag iss was gi Q gas G25 55:5 823957555 55345 DQZEQSE ffgg R23 225-'its +165 2.2225 12355 ESMF Cm mfm or W mmm 'at wwgm mf E:8jw z05:1 EEPSJW Oawh PS Ofmsm 221 Jflw wSPJw Sb-E-JCIJ Z2-J Oouj-I E02 I5 ---I UJ-:EMP EQQUQZ CDO VJ gb- 3 Zmwml- QOH- 40,52 SC 212 P2052 P20 rkg 450' znw mxm Pgwv 152 9 P5 ZHMSS PEHEPE SEED Qtwo EEN O 250 4655 QXSFE 4wE-0 4-2 41- www? M02 N23 mmED IE!-Ecwz Z35Em ORN-Wz momo mogw 4 3m Xm 4-92 muwwz 14400 aim moo 1i4O mim arm m04z mm32a3Em mwEwm 1mf22m 1255 1549 12535 E35 mfwm mgfim 304 A O .I 4 5. Oo F25 2-E 225 O II- :QS Som 0 Z I E ' z E G E E 36 J ::' . 4 EZ Q yi E E258 LU--uJ.I l-I-LIJ 0 E E 4 5 I E I- Z LLI LU 503 Q29 1 '.C Iwi' CES Ecu.: UJDELIJ E 7 r O 1 Z w m O LIJ Z I LU E935 B229 4 2 -,,.uJ .lgq--I If-054 WSNO UI ,E ZS'P PM P228 LU KU.I mimm S. LES WOLFF, CHAR Raleigh, N. C. ENGINEERING ' 0 I Z .m z 095 Pzg 60 THOMPSON, CLAY North Wilkesbor AEROSPACE EN NGmEEmNG m aqui Z Biff' -IQJQ ,gg 3 Q8 :J I P: E CDELU E 1 F 0 2 Z gcc .1 'UJ 295 Z- 3452 K.. owm E25 Q62 IIIDO 0 I c E CD o N? 2 , E Q 0 . 455 5 Z .- D: 0 U-- + 'Pg E 53 5 2 2552 2 IS Q 2 .QLD cn Snz a: Mg' u.: nc -91:55 if '5 . 00- Z 0 : 022 5 E36 3 gm E 4 Egan dd 2.50 Q Z I A - .. 2 P f,5 1 E02 .ds,e- 0 3520 1.4 1952 9.5 f.4 Em 4 uoul I 'mc . .- mZ W O 1 I O U4 . .4q, u.: 0 as E ZuJ Ou.: O gg Em I cu .-hZ O X gn Z II , Z .- cz o0m'cJ.1 CDZ...oU,m -J 'D 2 , ,ZI- Z 02 R-:E 1 E5 3-500 -19535 222 5262 5225 EZIE HQ, ' - - E Wim Z .- lu I :Z - -3 EWS 2-S-m mmm- 4 4'5--m -52 m5mm 525 6245 Q- OEESP Omumgg 050522 QQ? gm 5 Zg 2012 Ogi wggig 232220 553226 zgm mifz ogg :SPE ENE SEEEE 525225 335825 9:2 9258 926 9555 .I - r QD . CD 3 0 4 V7 CD E - O g 0 z C z Q mgv 5 5 0 1 Z E Q 22 o -U I-S-7 Z , I , : Lu II CBP 5: I 202 -9 5 .'.: E LIJ Q - LU 4 58. 4 I Q ' 'm Lu Z' . Z I QU, 1 ' Lu -03,5 4 I. . O -ULL LH Z X O IO - O . UJ - 2 05. w.EF E cz' 5 5 5 o'z . 0 -Hoa E y F d Z 2:0 4031 Z QC- S .Z EOE LIJZ Z m 'UIi- O 1 Q W 1Em .00 m 'www JO m'm O- W -ZE3 m r' Z !6,:2 gmt? m 25252 5-M Qzw 45 J E-5E 0 4,9 Q00 I.m -zwlm ITZO 2 Jgaiw 224 was 52 4 News E 402 Azz O02 Z rn I-cm' u mc.:.l ,, 'qi I-'-CUIQJ N O PCE: gr - 'J ,E -3 O --01 3 4950- M Luoq: A90 u,.C Im - mmm- Lu .IZ ,tv ,Z igmuhw mm 0 .ISE ,T-E ,E Z u,lu'5::.-q,Lu -I -E 1:5 DI ,ld-IJ 1053-TI: -QEEO q.D'- mg- Luo 4 Q lub ,Z U-I.C2 LLICZ EEEEZ JQ9wgm xgrmi QEQ m J OEWI rugm- SQ- rw- 19- OESEI1: 20105 C.: 0-0-5111 z2u.s z-ug 2:20 zcmoogw 420 21:0 -'20 IGHOD Ow-ow3 sw-LI rmJ rw- 4-ww 40:o,Z mz Iz 4mz PmEom Pcxwml P0410 www Pmo S342 bz4w-m Bmw Sim Bmw 5.2 J w w - we U U E 0 Z Z A Q- 0 E Em 0 z Z S , z Q Q E Z Z gp Z - T E -E: ' ' - C - W :D m 5 nm- E 2 55 . m 322 5 E 2 E 2 E ES w D :S 5 His m : EE 4 z Q 135 E 5 Q E r 5 E o Og 2 6 01 O 532 z W O' ' wgw - . 1 w m I O- ' 'EO Z H m ' - CD E C5 Z U O 5. ,L ,.. 0 CDO 7- .mO. C5 l,,Q.-Z ,J Z Lu ..-A .Q Z CDO CD O mdu- O fm.- Z i .IZ Z m.:m Q W Qbwc 4- 4 -.-v U zm ,w - m wzl 0. I. 5: W 520 2 0 O73 G rwm- 3 mg ,257 mhmm JmJ gziww J 0,2 O52 E-z Z xigm J ,gzv J OH5 4 ooco 4,4 P-ECP 4 :QE 1-E U91 E w -D 4 4560 Ja 8: 4 -L14 5 -O an '55 - ,.:. ,.Z -o O -CDQUJQ -In 3 UJ.---- O IIO- C- CD-.- Nm ,LU Lu mam-LU -,gc mwzm go.f:O0 - hnqll hon: ,5n.CN p- ,mm ,.-:LLI ,,,Q.Eu.1 O-LuO:u: gem all -err ua CD ... Ll-IE L LL! Q. ,Q Qu I' I fn , I 0 I I- I mm I Z Iq,Z CD gZ 5 I- cu U, ua Q, I- PS4O Peo F52 af: H26 PEG enema SSIQDO 5342 s22:5mo .. Q: - - -H - A w ' - F - - V- aiiw 525 5225559 ses asa 52.55 825555 asia SEEEEQE I . : 3 I '55 E N Z as CD an E C3 2 L5 on 2 CD CD 3 C5 D Z 0 Nz Gm- Z Z 'U Z - Z 0 Q- C202 - - no - -- II O J U, 3-E Em::l.u U: CC Lug U3 5 u.: I- Errm l-U I-U my U-I ' - uJ , p- - ac 'D . 'fm Q 4 sa W'S2 - .5 f ice? 9 5 - 5 I Hwsz L 2 2 ...- o - - .- ' - w - JQE- D m0 m-02Ez-y- 0 3 0 . 2 N950 1 3 z I UZ II Wm D. II . . - Up.: Z 4 O 0 UJZ 4ZQu-I LLI UE LLIU -QLLI .Lu -I I E Dio E .mmgu-I G Q LIJ g.mQ Iigm EdE 2253gJQZw . Wo 4.0 qggim so.oJ mozw oo-z Q14 4 Et 43-Z 42W 3- m -zz 1 Qgga O EQQ wig? ,564-Q C235 'iggvwggig 29.2 E? 2 Egg 5553.5 525.2 -- E P6:m mega 1' aS2-1m -61 we m -Sm mam QE w-022 -1525 5324 E325 522.5524 E28 .65 8 Esz ursmimg 52.5555 3952 msag IS-m OEFaa0wog 451 waim 250 wgggaw 42230 -m,O Ogo- Owl:-J O--,-Q-guJON- DOI-LI DL-LU P'-Z 4--- GJ.1 4GJCDL. u mmoo mmmo mJmm mimmpimoo mm4 IW44 m4m w44EIm w:412 I. Q.. QE ...1 E553 Es Q2 UW 221 'L 53 na -w 4 QD E9 .Q B3 ,.. ,,,,. . Eh. EQ my km r an F3 A :la FEI .99 n RONALD KILLIA CHARLES CREIGHTON N JEFFREY AMIDON WIL AM EDWARDS LI DENNIS AMMONS THOMAS SCOTT DUCTS SOCIETY 2 '15 '55 mm 333 mm En: ou: 2 CDEXI4 U1 owt 5511.144 -JCJZUQCD C0032-g P' -Om mzzm- mrsmi jgooo LONNIE MILLER BORDEAU MARCUS KING EDWARD PARKS DOUGLAS WHITE RICHARD PETERS JERRY COUSINS N MILK LA R McMIL NALD RO MARSHALL 326 ... :Fw n: 44W o .JO-ICJ I-Q2 Qjtozf 5:4230 Q. . 5z4ro -4.o. IIOIIEE z G8 I-UD 'L' IIEE m mm 532205 EQZZLU- 405401 IIE 0.17- 445055 4Jodmm .:'O .40 ammrim 33 Q9 FF F51 -r.' 7 E5 C2 Jn. a .if EJ .-4 C7 Qu' ?E .... fi? H? -:a G.. mn 05 . gb 4 94 fn Q- '... 5 mgggg II ev O, 4 hum-'O I Op, 15.1 0 '6:-'20 d 6E'9Z - .D LOI gb.254u-O -o - m EE 532+- oZ'..o: QE mwfreo UJLQQNQO LWDL 5532222 -m 195 .U ' - E W 55 5 w 5 ,fo E 5 I SINE 2 J - - Edofi:-1 O -bgciigf Od EQQQCE Ei oh, - E-g'Ln.'-,JJ 15 .I-C.- 'Dm D. 40 wcm 4U QCLQOEO Ig Ojrniiu. OO M r 5- O 2 2 E 2 3 L I as O . P' 'E LU O B 'CQI' CD Z-ECI Z. 47.933141 oO Zim Sf mi? ,NBQ 9-5 isisg Gsm I-UD CD ,EILIJ 305,41 525 II:'5-505' 43m mE5Zm 6 O - 6' C5 .rw P REF? 22 T0 MZEO Q LU Ev-mm 72 E Sash H:- I-11.1.5 E ILS ..-- cn U, g4xgEl mi m,UmC4 7- org gl A ZEPE w ZW m lb: Om Eo2525 Qu 45235: 20 4mPmmm 4? FORESTRY GY LO CHNO WOOD TE M, RALPH M. apids, C. N. CULLO Roanoke R A. Q6 P 4 o 2 E Z 4 E 5 CD Lu- -'U CO Hur R, RUSSELL H. Id N. J. LLLQ -J... I-75 D0 m3 4 2-. dr I. 1? 55 EE IIID 4Z 305 FORESTRY PULP 81 PAPER TECHNOLOGY FORESTRY FORESTRY U1 C 0 U --'ca .CCDA UI env: .EC FT - mmdg h 50WmP P P 5 59,00 z Z 5'E,:-gz . 2 1 2 F 58:4 LU O g-'Jw-LU D UJ -I .LU 4 -SSW E E'5W2oE 0 E rqi -Em 2 0 09-3:26 1.0 120 EQEQEH 5 Uzwiggi 5'E 565 '- O - ' : d?fd23Pg m33Qggg 223 fag Eg ogg-Og -:Um an 5 wg -ID ' -QEFEPUE Esfrgmm dwg 225 mm WH 1 H sm m -w c www aww m 0 m um OUHUHQOQ Imwmicm -gm jam h N .-Q.-oo 45S5N5Co 4:LC':o Woo -wo ?IwmFE,m ?Imm4ym Emu SIE r 5 r .': I..- U .-:,: CD 4 ww O 'Q O ' U2 E444 as 5 O EO Q 60 P P E Z P P cm . v0 'Z 2 0: u. ggi-NI Z Z ow J: Z E 4 E46 W o-o 4 W . W 58 0 E W MO w -U0 m 6E'E F E W E 2 -E H O E 4 - N 4 Q I 3 ' Xw m 50 2 380 m 149m gd 2 Egg m.-D m - 2 ..- C .,' .1 G! - mz ZOEmZ O-Wmow X' Z 'Zz Whmh M Wm Z CI m. ,211 LU?-E Om Z-0 -I I-4E n. Lum-D m0 ozouo o. CW4 2-24 264 J me 4 P524 ww H6342 525551 0205 355 2550 m Q O5 m- - m- -- , 3 0 ' EQ WETEQ 430356 2555 435 -mfgrw 3555 30 2:2-Q0 gugziq, magma? Ig? Qmmuogm 2335 50 82280 wEe95S E250 S90 mEEgES 0350 Lg ZO4wg a34mLa ummm mmm mamwom mwmm 'Fw C :- UV' -E ' .9 ' :EE Q fME ww - 5 3 E , 2 P 1 :mm an S -avg om- -g N , D- Wy -- -mm - - m2 - Bad-EJ ,595mE as 22:50 'JESS m - . -E - M - , Qigggm 655.05 G WSEBQEOE QdgWwE Son: O :6iE'O O -mg b ml- N-05:0 'I --nu-OWO -D3 Zan -I .-Cs uw-O -1 N- o-I E Ewgwgg imiw-w Omg B:20mg gnmgao JO-Eadzgd--WEE5 5ggE.g55g2o555:a5 -:mam-4 IGWW' 2 0 -2 -. 2 0 E,2oEEE5zW2f5go Efggiifgigzggogmg PSESSUP-ffsamcz 'EOWSO woe 9549 UJ 3: :UJUJ an ---. -c ,,, 10 O :xm...q-QOQ 29EwEmmmEmE225wwDmmmHEU-E Srow 5 Iaqgalmxggzua Q5 Egwmoqc-'-'BOc'E,Q-1D:mwgQJC'UO :SEE O OE3Eg:N5mO WEEQSOED-4EEO5W9O QOQEENEwmilmmimmgxmFm4mom4!bEmEm3 E . Q, y E -QL G SE mia ,C 2 '3 i'6 9 . O o waz-S O 2.-cn O I P . Cflmmm P UE F . H 2 g.wE-35W 2 vwra 2 D- P, Z I 'UL .ZOCD I Z . 'N-N F I P W '- 0505: P o IUP mEDf o E U, CD CD E IOC Q .mOLtDUJM I E L-.- Lu W O .Wmzm o -E mr 2 Q-Bm 2 3.4m aw2P4..cQf2w P go fwmf P L 0.90 C5 4 459: ggfxfgaxg-Eg If E 4 CD 'cn -LTI-Quin: Q 122 u: .Z gow o.- -fvq,q,-.- LU .Z 20,959 .Q-u1 O P I O04 -mg IQFEQQEE 2 E04 qzgmdmmi Sf -QB 322261 hmfgpgogl -12211 'IU' -:ra wmtnop 42 Jmgooom : F -6mm'ma I-19 655224533560 EwwwfPZsCs:eEw E3E4OrmmuO am0EggwfS6lE93OPErgwDl wg: O4abpfO27,-Iggccu UEUJO-JgjaJfrI'-CUIQ..-X--1 EOIIEO -1EoO0:u4mbo3CoO33 4EoZ35'U'5'rQED :EE43cMm.o?aImEoo3oi4aImu.rzm2wmQm ...- ogg P-3' .-EO B Em, P , P gtbh Z - 5, Z 0,5032 E I 6 E . -22 4 m 5 89m D 298m J.o o.w20 2 12-0 3:4 DO 34 4 . 344 C2 3-H52 -UNL-Z im Z O .I E064 Q-i-4 DC ELL4 JE un , h E 'Vic E EQSECNE . C , 22h E5zmP hgwmfh --CD DZ-g.:otD I 00,07 Sim l.u9g':uJ ,,.Eg'gT-Lu 523 55525 522585 wxm w?m4m wm44wm P' 8 -I 0 5 - 5 T W G5 W o - 5 Q 83 Lu LU D -:dang m0m 9 4. Zzw? . - Q -H OZLU C: . -IO cc ,ow 5 -25 OO 112 E39 nga. 52g 3 EE ZEQIE Z-Q05 n,j-. -C .901 PS Oc Dcnw -1 ..I,,-.--.- Zeng- p..-Lu -PLL! - usa: Q, -4 .- 2'U-I OE.-'II 95.107 EQQQ BSE :SE 352 3288 -- P- : u'HW O 8 cQ,:g'5g.E 3 of :ac-f52Eg6LE 2 T-I ,, c'ggEc2lgC, I . 1 I:fED.QE.Q3o O I 3 2f0...o88.:::.L,L-I I ,,, o.- --gn'-' E QE 'a'5:.E 320: ft S-wgEfsS255g w- j92OO46050 4 Q9 - km QLLP P' gznm - m -mm -2 - -my ID .- DI .iqq ,PIEXLCD5 U3 -P NC ., vcmll-lo': U-'ICD Cl.Q'WI:E g,'o,,'5'og, I.gLIJ SQQEEEQSQQSJ geg ru.-.c'cox...- --O3 fU IICDOLUL'JLLUJEDu.D. IUZLL. P- C5 ' .-O .--C 5,15 O 42 Em -1 - owbi - --E O : I- Ir o fr - EEE 5' 8355 0 ggm E J.5fE8C6 sc 0530:-ou-I O'-oo!- ' zw- 01.2 0 Z cn Cds: n.Z':cqC,u: Z 40.-V-2,2-I-53-111115 E .uJ'gc1. q guS: gD- Q2 cm--50,2 Q02-I4 H h:QO,,76 ,ou.m D. -C ZWo.,,uJ-,- ZI.--Q05 EQ, 4'-wk 2.04 u.v3o 4m 26rmwEmogIE5EIE 4- Q- +-.- Sf29df5Ef399SSB Q5'fpfu?.EEu. ClClJ45D0. Q4 306 P25 EM as E5 F3534 QQ 2 55 Kd '1 -4 QQ QQ Q3 ,,.' 2' a. R Q24 EQ G? an - r md F' d 1. Em E2 Q0 I MJ. If-fi n f'l HRIE UTH, JR. NEY, JR. AN m L if 202522053 .0205-40 .04 -IQU.-I wgzq oo - m -z2-- 322525140 -nmcxn.-Igcirf 2 -I CIO -I P- If WWgmm1 Pm g'ILI.-H'I'u ZEZ wOgzrf3 D FRANK BRA RODNEY PO STEVE BRA DWIGHT BU WILLIAM W ROBERT LO DON DAVIS CARLTON H GENE M. CA HARRIS KER GEORGE ALLEN STEVE HUGHES DON ROUTH JOE HANCAMMON DENNIS CUDDY JOHN A. DOERR WOLFGANG CHRISTIAN RANDELL KABAI NICK LEONARD JOHNNY MOORE L 4 Q ': -I -,cn Q LU CL f-'C IE QQ rrrrg 1:5 24 fCgLm2g To Qigzgwq oz wwzwgif 'SW Egg-52018 Q5 4m4dOOm Im mmxmmzo. 33 Q3 na nm uf 1 Q5 EN F? C9 UW IN IJ ,- . Q-.1 C3 FQ I: 6. 2 Q my cffdf d 2 E23 E i was . 'DZ g. XUEEE mo gzgmmw . o Jzg Ediaag Ago zE8:5o Wa-1 LIJPFEEZ 350 wgwgmg O-CU-I Ou:-:'-'50 n.cncD UIQ!-EELU . O 3 2 E- J o WE z E El O 2 if Q 3, 4 w 0 Wo HOP 'SBE --3 P'm Ewa- 525 azi S224 EEO 254 -E511 u..?Z I-lJ.9'Ui ENQLIJ LLEEQ Zmu.l 4:.cE OQO OEQ I4OJ :mm Imq as QE 3 5 gg D. Cm EO Edwq Bi E232 26 3 EdlEE JEOE E23 E252 E35-Q Z3n:O 25.-DO 4'-I-I-O 4m.:2O QCDQLIJ axiom CD E 2 'J .9 r 8 - 5 5 0 2 W-S E 46 go: W r -I .- w 223552 Q62 --- Ei r .-I gggfgyggjzg Eg5Bg5n9S5S .JSO-Im.'23'2c0E.cn 4Em42IoI4Pa J so . SENH G -5 2 as-Q4 .1 Eno - I-I-I uao2v5c-6 2 0 -I O- ' '00 Lu 4-0 C0 .1 lswl-3: gg 52 Z 8 fl oC2q1 - ' : .- 2 ig E w g QI35w' 5923 may gdeeagii jzgmy gag 51082035 - ' - 5- cn '-l7JlL0 'f'S1111 'I - II z -ieuoiiir cc.- OO I .:- W.: c n.-- 3-O n.a1 CDWDUJ Lum wp- l-O ,CDN tbl. - gasiw 5335 wigwggmig magma: mini 22235335215 C G, .o L. .,3 D OI'- W o . . gg m W 2 is . 1 I I 7' 32 O r EO ef, 2.3 -I I Q2 ,OL go -I 2 4 P-DEW . CD 4 . Nui D: .P-'15 m 6 O So EU, mz' L '- Z .J . ws g.N3 E565 E, 52 65 132m 42325-0 9 ..w5,w'Sfsff 1 022 fo 4 -mm3:I !94O IQOW 3 IW wi c -w o go6QjEE:ol.lJ.?f5QJOwB'-U7 - OEz:O9352QEE6Z:J22t IQMISEX-449001501-J P-mIwmwgwQoEQg2 GJ UMD CE 11:1 'gg :DE Eg .58 . ...- U3 ' 4 go ap Q 3 O an nf -.35 4 2 4 U If .162 Egg! E- :I :- ZOEDQ LUZE.-2 Z .4 :1 8703 02.910 I- -4193 IO.- E .51- Q CDUJ LLIC VJ- O -.C CJ.,..1 fm-E mein? '20, yz84 29550 wgnao ffgm w,w4 52.-:P 55262 1.990 za-,.u: 521:22 55,58 S255 55211 m- m 5 USSR r L 'UL 1 4 J 23533 E mg -' 3m2f?c'i'J ' . LU - 5 fo Q E 5 235.0 Io EEE? Q0 Q 125558 LII2 wrjoifzgii 5d',ggfif'5 !: -W-'OEQGSS ,. 2-.C-13040 waSrGoI:O52E420wlS: ni...-, r: -o ' , -'ON l.u2..lE0g-':ZmgOEC5'uCOE ba-10 4' OZsu ?1U'o-'D H 4mmE58B68SI2OiB8EQE OIID-1L'JmuJ4o T I'1 C 0 -95' . ff . M EE. 5224 Q Q. W w 51 8 -'53 2558 - -2' T572 nf hd E mtgagugm: EE-U: . COE: -3 Ji. 4: :BO 52.456 . Q.-:ug gg --E , .42 .xo -0 Q Q, zu mom Lu Z -3 aff:-mm EE 4 xmmc 'oz ' ogi- .5 '-0 :QS M 20630930 ,z E gs 3 Og 4 E E m w 3 - -24- '00 . 3 O0 - P Q Oo' J 4 4 , w- - . , E I . : . H . D , 2303 goI fN1'3'5E11'i'.f:111 E559 U mgzgk- Sf, E .1135 95,111 2 'U 2 E E 'f'4J.95 'IZ:'D2.-m9--E9 11132 ZOEBHQU mc going Oo ff w 5 o 2 2- W. 1 . 31:50 CD -222-4500132 nm O20 wg: 028 Ojom., ZZ 261- Lu . . 400, Ig-gm 1. ,J -Wo 6 4522 EZSWAEEEEOQSO 30311 ,Q -oigqgf m -E Iqidgv Ig SOP' E610 id Z S5 U-iz '- -- hp ' . . E558 52552255225 555 92525636 ggg zg825vww 151 g?E Q28 Q22 554250432 Sofgg jd, '-U WDEQCS4-g.mlO 4-III ..1 -0:l- 'gf' - Og'-U 2:6 -11 ' -C .E-' . - 4--I -EJ U: 25cu- -:CD - LD-Lu PE-J -7439301 will 430 ww gpm -E 2.93: znozo mo,Q Lu-CO 'lliq DZ-U 2 .O ' 292 1- O POPPEJQE WOO rmavvw 0 Zww PEP m-- P92 mwm Wai 41- Z- m 'PJ I-:cm P24504 ,Gtr 43413 4-gg 20 -wo I-it 91:02 -cnp- O:-Q O mg 4: - IU- U-' I- mu-' mm -l'-- 1--53 Z 1- Q 0, 0 v1.1 EIIII ggg gage 1:9 1'-EQ 112-1 -16,580 250 Ll..I go 3 WO Lu UI O .9 5, . 'I 2.1 311 O-cO E gm an .U Om Pl-CD . ., . E -f T1 52 sa . S . L? 1 8 4 E2 Df m : 75 E 8 ,B 2 540 'o 'cg O U aj CD gf- '7 ,Q 412:03 - -2 20,10 J: EE.-8 .U ,D ,, 6 LU co... : 3 2.99 3 E : q,g.:w2- E -g 3- oo Q- . O LU 15 E .D Z Q .,0 U- Q 013: 5 UJ:404E 0 Hn-0E,7,2m co 0 Oz. .1 -5 Sim Z 0: mc I . -55 2 Q 'ff : HE --,hghfon 5 '5..51q.-g'Q . LLP: 563 jog, 5 4 859 n. 8 I gg, .1 -S--gn 'U 5EEb5g2cg gf gg17,2:E,i5'.gE . 2 2 , . ..- 5 --'- kg...-5 H -.. : .-...1 -I I-- Sszw fEO,E5E2 56: 5.339 55405 Q E82:2:E2 4 am:JSOE-53: 2 5 P? OZ -' . f5E2Q5Lu.OU Jo.0 40,5 - I ..- 3 B S jwgsgiga 3 - C2-V ..'5'1 -:mo D P- O 05.9- U5f'i,,grJb 3 Q . o -233 gfzl zioff'-250217182 H1622 320022 m921513g9Q7jSr1.Oi'E EE 5' E 'IES M92-Zhlg OJi4gfm2 2-wr, go 1-156 J-o2NwPH0N2rOZ9.:3:E00,33 gd m m -5-3 ZQOQOPEDD-f29PQm, O-Effwfiswgzgwwlfyzwsciggcivw--reofwrbm-on Q- 4oPi9352 QE:-ESQ352:18Qg8QE2.5.oE-EE-E59g.EPg25OEg'6Sm5g4Z,15E2g ,532 lggggkgnwglic-52053100 mzguzfwzosib- VJUJ Xqjmawgm m-.2 4fm 'cn CD --I muh- ICD LU N 'CJ '95 C 105392 Cy. F -O , -LLG U32 -O ...'2-0- 5.0 3 wwf- '-'D ,- -19 'U LOOUI c 0: O..--Q 9 1. X -4.0 mfoqmzmrr2255232535225SSaE'395Eg5gsza2Jg,E25Sg565555:333.59 OEI2mwJoBEfG2S845E5ESSEQDQ3iQ525Iggzgigig lllIJl-L'JDZ'UOtL.1 6-C 'C-4.r:0QEm--o.Q':O -EOIQ,Qwm -ONOOCQ 1.1 ILLJUJUJLJUJ . 7 if: Z' U, cr uf nf ... 'Wg - '-,. . .- 4 1 1 . 5 1 I ESQ E S5 . of E 0 5 : :. P r . 7 ,E ...hm .-E lu :N 5- C -9 F 2.1 3 5,0 5 3 I it 3 L. 51115 L, Es 2 24.5.5 Qgdegffgs., . ' ' - v- an -- .. - Frm Ez O. W2 2 Q E9 Pd 4 .wh , E M , ag 4 5 42232 H 5-45wEP+ P-O E - - LL W 9' 2 .901 QE' o C -3 .Lrwf-1' ' 'O -'f-aa- 'Lqg a-. wqww 40 11.Z2,.4-EO Gpcwff 111111, U-' :U 1- O :I cn-We I W I'5m.f,E-:n -x 42 QqPQZ.P'O-g-3 ..1Z -U5 1-,.u.l.p.m1: 2.10, Q: I QEOQ -Q CD -q, E32-3 z W 0- cz c I II IO . 1-111 Qmq -w 3-.- CL E f gr QL- Q 420 l-05 gOE 620 'Sal M64 hzwC5E EQQ w , -ami :SS .VWSUPOE W, Q OEgBEm O ow? i5P0 wwO mga -mw0 maJ - 22: 2E24n0 W. vw Q w m2325500 Zo w w moS50w Z-Dj Z'-OZ .132 01:10 ,T-,.E.Ew uJ'D4 EEEQU-I 6 -lrtmio JQSBQ mint! 02 -mama, Q -yy 0QjEU1C.-E'u .Q :go 3258 mio :EG 1552 SEI wmoimz x2,1f0J Jenwf -235 25254555 wzo --OESm'82Ew Q1-11 12114.11 Egg Egg 25555 2-23 E535-5m 5259503 23,525-,Q 3650 1-g'lg5q,fr.Q8 ills-E Ezztgwda 41,29 U- 111. u-X3 lm-Umm :P Q-6 -U 0 U3 Z Z N .Jlob-1 -EO 2 'CL 553062 qggg - 021111110 .-::O D .:--c DI- LL E W .5 , 'KJ WPEQE3 551268 3523 52521-2562 25,5 52s2.EE8f,Eu'f9 - m PW UZGQQBSQO WMO 455xW2Q- 50 mr-Q 0- CDZUJ Ioergaoagr 'Q 650.2 Q C 4-lu '-' Pu 53582 J 5 S 5 1 . 01.1j'f'i z X . '5 3 E EE am? 5 5- 45- . 45 C U, . ,...- SQESE- E Q 4 3 2 4 W . 2 . EEE 6 m EQQEEE 5 559 S SE ES., Uggmjgm Z ng E 1. L5 .9 dv -I P 4 U, 0,55 Z HS'-fgPc:: , 532.515 5-9 ...go-9 EE mm 4 LU D- 0 0.4-6 D ,. :ECL 5 5 E 33-oDE n: q,0Qa,'1'q,5m 5.15111 WQQUQE lrgjfllo 5 -- I gg 2- .J E LIJ ULQTG u.l 0'-EC58E Xgwvmhm 3. -0 5og5mw,l.E2. I-QE E,n E-N 4 m z 22:2 3 I Fug- 8 E w502:54EE-gg? SCCECDEG -24 04040655-Dom O25 Z 0 u: 50,9111 I-,..I2jC2 ,, 33-mg-Cwuoeq.- L 2- ..Om- 3 np- r- Q. lr 4 1: O 0 4 49 -- 02- .1 - Ou JQQE., .Q 3.93-EQQQ4.,-,mzg 2,08-12110058 mcg o ,.m gg Ig z. 54 ,ggugqslz A m.-gN2m-5:1112-53: u. .1: 5 , f, , rv . 1-an -- -'-:fi - QQ- O0 hz-N 01.-,Mg -' ..m -mm mom wijodggggi3gg5g5555f!Qg5U2gx2zE6N8g8gn6s5 12 g.ggCwsm wg gJ8'wJD5mE62f .--5... - 4 u.l ... --o - mm C'-- Q-Q4 -1 3 5. . C -ocqag O fd um.-m'U C: '-1.h02q,O -m4-00111--rv '- -Vim--EO GU -L O -'C -'-- Q: ILUO-C-f'---p ---l'- -C: Cgb- . O -::.'2 40420mwfrm-n:cuou:EO'50O2EQm'UQ P4LZ2jg-QQLIQKEOO--om.,-lrul-Emm-:u',7,V1 .- b-Ep: -Q-N'-Nioqy.-2q1.9. lD--- fDu..1mEu1 mmgggg1v.9fo:pSggQE90IT,8o1rCa,:g'ffe' .0b.Qj5'v11'0 25 3EO3Z .5--I E--02?lE,15222',9I 'rC0f0CDIu.0IO30'fDoO4:5oG150: 1:0049 QERQJJD-a1Z0'5E,,8Co4f1 25u1:u.1--U, 'rmOWUJCDOES-90909-U24E2IE0EEcCE O.1g'o-cO:f5x-CE'o E0.-m- -oaoln-IOmuJo3-COOm0cu?1,,O05.-gf:-Q5LNE,'0g.Q Omooooqggi 307 FG Eh we QL' .M .fx i: HN Q2 'E 53 EE hd '1 -1 U2 2:51 L23 ,,,.' . Ea EQ my kd r fin 93 E793 ,Z-fi . n HENRY ROBINSON RICHARD SHACKLEFORD RICHARD SHEARIN HOFER I cn .. 1:07 LLID Lui ,Z LUZ 'XEIIEZWLO mo? owg .mm unfin- Q.- 222 Z E55 LIJE.I z I4 35 Zhw HOm ln- E AMS, JR. N 4 323 :34X IGMA CD II LU P .-1' co SIGMA . Pl . S P' Z Z 4 D N JR. ANAKIS R on O - mm Im EPO-W oo D 4 was Q-522 mEw2gff2Ht EmQOEtwEEEE,f.i33E35 qJmg48JQwgwQ!3zr:.54 .PdEZwP3w,mogOQPEOo 402 III Zn- CC E II UJ..JLLI LLIP-IO uJZ 4 u.lbLuQQ wmmgm5m1wz555DEmO5m: -04 P- 3 4 HI 4O D O Emwfimmgaogfgmigmwfafg -m E EEZ X ow , mm - Em ES 54 5430 103 C2 mg 'I-I-I Z -wZm E2 Xzohi 3Emw3mwwPww2 RHOFER nf 3 3 Oni?- n':..J-,Viz -QUJE -- z m - mzim Em WQWOJJ .1uJOl13m 'foligitiql-Ug- DJ-U ac :IQ O .DOlQ52IEO44mg4ZEEEQg45g0 Qqgp- QQQOLI. .gg 405 IEEE 1013 CDUJZLIJ .E 4QwmmQ 1.W 'I M- .,-lm'QI.P JAMES H. GERASSIM ANAGNO WORTH B. JORGE A. JAMES L. STYLIANOS DANIELO ROBERT G RAYMOND ROBERT T RICHARD A JAMES C. PENELOPE MALACHI THOMAS R MARTIN A. WILLIAM F LUTHER D EDWARD S JAN W. L. JOHN R. P ROBERT L FRED T. R DAVID A. S WILLIAM H JOHN G. S ROBERT H. RALPH B. W RICHARD H WILLIAM A. SCIENCE. COUNCIL GS ULOS EAKER VANS IX CH OLEY FRALEY FULP BBS SON ALL LSEY BERTSON HASMNS INS HLUARD LTON ORTON JOHNSTON LFAOGLU R.KOPF WDER EE U1 uJ w 43 Q 5.1n:v- 3 jm I co zu-2 4zmZmWmzO34 Q-wu.lwZD 4PEm2Q'3EOE U, - Q:g4I'2gg2L II4 ,. P-.1 .Im 2wdZEE3JW33 4 Z o5o1Eoomioo mizvmhoxoom Z ZZ4 QU: 422 urn: E4ILI.IDII..U gzowor Q 10350 o do 4 'QI m-0 OI 41 Jz ' r imEO,- l'wmEm wG.g4w0dI.'!w! 4Jmg4-E -O4 ?.u.-xi. - 4:n.z- lu. WO I m b P E ,u.lOOmmO-I J:-, lu.: Zn- -0. E104 wlgoml-W, mm 5Pm.mmzgQPIOPEmP5Eod05N WEQO 34r1ldmJ rr DLI.I..I4Z4lIn- cr-,rccmqw -, 2u:4Ig5I--1 -2403 .mp- 9Wz,P134INm9wzlwm3mJmzmWElm2E0mz0mzmm Z35w4ECD03333EE3mfE3E3332285554152155 Qm423ow mm1Jmwwmm?5zm1JmPwroow5QEigon CHEMICAL AMERICAN SOCIETY Znf u.: O' Sw 3 5 I' - Z 2 un 'D-'mo rr U-I gr H3122-IZIELUEUJP-I mm Wm Iimz X WQE 4xPEQb2OZQmE4E45EE U32 mf2QImW42Q QD-JZ-3 w,wm.f2:JJ:m1w2sfw OD:u.l-p-Z..1OZZq3OIOtJ:q! CL UluJUJOILU44-4OIQ-O-4I- Z L5wccmu.ooEQDl-mc:-,Eos-E 'I E 3 7 4 gp BC Z - pl gn O l.l.l 2 as E22 2 40700 :L 4 O mm .I U91-II.. I 4Q44 wwmhi. gg -I D13 .Luu-lu. ' CDE! 4LLID IP4 EZP Q32 wr:-'m'x4Dgj 4 Lul-uC'J.. E--.123 5tD3Z:Jlu:bZ3:1:-I efOO4...LLI444O- -Jccoomrooo.-wi z gm 4 m GE m U-S D EE E 1 1 Q5 G3 va bd Q4 4? Q as 4: gf 4. Q53 C9 PW fi 5 :R -3.1 K- C3 U2 fl G4 E QF OEM -- ESE 34 w w m F m m w w w m o ,EQEEN-Q 1 Q 4 359 Q 1 - L... ' r C- 7 ' Z - - 5wg5E':2 g.2 m 252 E w 3 5 4 3 .-5:44:42 OE Gaz - 2 Z6 m w Fd mglgsidggm Sim gdwmm X m Z I-CE 4 1- wir nNSEE wwf E-HSE 1.5 5. 020 Ed NZ ZPE Us cI4 D54 ZEE4 404 o 'T-:qi O P- U3 P- Z - 'AC-?C:U5 LUOE - cn.-2 I: .E 4 -CME Ijcc Ofc: P-2m-93000 -'6 IIEELL 'iz '12 SHED P45 425 JESE?u3l5O can Q2 no who Sum wE,! fa- fa- w2wSfwgaaE mf! 45965 wa! wa9 D- -I ,--E ,,,-UE Lu X OE -q,.1 20.1 I-U,uJg..1 I---.1 I---03 SEED, -Qu.: .tcm mg,-5Li,EwQm ZED. EL.-:EL 520. E25- -5-2 525 525 aaiigaaisi Sai 33582 322 322 w m .-gf E.: cj C1- Qfgcfi '52 .nm --465 E -9... . 6:Eaf m0 aio I 'E,,0,g+5'Q, EE - 1- , - Q- - 3 E'3 263 3: 3 935 gvi mio M893 2 QE -J S5-- -1 -m aww , BME-iam: -w8- 4 . OXI- -CLI--I I' I'-1 59994 -C0 1.-C go- 4wl-LI' 1030224 4221 Ed 2 QC- wo aagcgd' .4 2 . I ' '- --'-- Q I ' W-- fZ5EEw5o53g5 gz gm E23 EZ33533w1!d80Eg 3s:4sE9zmEPJoP:-P2-ss, 5s28mSE2o2.E42P 'qp6,,,..'I4'-551642-4OO4u'I0:CI5 Omo 1D,hOwZ2Z 'I 4 ggeggiggfmiM22'Z5g2E3gEmg,E52fg4g6wgwE Ees58Df?s?025D2fDffml25weiEwExW8,EYNDD Jem- Erym-E4-E4oEmEEX.-mo EDESF-!w2MmQ C14-'OOUJ-ID-1Hm':-JIV7,-Imy-lIm.Ci,WE-Wlvwn-an UJI.U.'C-Dc.,-:.I Gmc--Wqnfm QQ,Q2c,Qj2n,4-:'E'0w'UUJ:I2-C:EUJl-L-tb-uloml-.-LL -.Eo591Diana,.uoa.u.1EnL:::E4D9I:z:--E-om0,,9:l:1000-11 232-1-o4EILE24 O04 u-.I4nLr:an.?n-ocL34cJo3vcnn.m2cnuco4 ui 3 3 3 3 3 32 3 - - - - - . w - hm - P P ' - D P P x N WE P 4 4 E 4 ,O 0 5 Z 4 4 4 w 3 L do 4 E Lu E 1 rr ,., O E .E - Z LI.I gg E 5 2 w E P2 W wo W 2 mos 2 mf I - 2 O - fr I- ,- 5 . P. . Z - 4 -.- o.P ,OP mr J.: mz 4-P JZP m.0P 6.2: P ZQQ F24 mg 4Qg- 4 FP- 304 II -4 QOKD4 4 325 Q 2 og gin Ibm 25 E25 -245 423m 5 D -cn Z'-ISO 'IEW ' -QCD ui -Q OED Z -40 E hLLIg'- cm arm EEN wf9 ESMQ Q-- OBE -ew 4292 42 ww! ,Pj m-I vm Exw wwf E64 ZHJ !9m4 293224 L m.: U7 'D O - 7 E o2cL wma. mvb- m2.-P- I.:-:SEIU msn. UJ,,D- 421-n. Q22 .-on. .INCL D251 -DI -tU,:I 301 3150. LLIQD. MID. tU.-.C.ClL u.n:4 u.O4 CDn:n. LDn:n.a. ...u.O -104 XLL4 2n:u.4 En::LcLO4 5m C- E cu: ' w Q3 w 3 wg w w w If Q gg, Q E '5 Q :OQ Q Q -H - 4.P P 'P ' -' I4 r'f71?'2.4 ILE5: 24054143 I-I-I Ohm ua CD 3 95 E - L-C54-'Eg 69 D- 2 E gf .E E I E D 2 fa E2 34952 UQ m 2 35935 EE E1 4.ZP +-r. ugh: 5: W W POoPtD+-m.P4 Wo34zo4mogEw4Qdmm mdg 4Ig4CfLIJN45Q r M245 125 25215-s5 z 5'a 2 '- 2 E35 H122 'OE E2 If K-4m Q.o ,-mw3mffhEmw -ZS-Q jim N-Q Mio ,A 5 ,-u.:Qu.1 ,Em p.c'5.015Lumm,..Q 152132 - E LLIEILJ 223 mu, - u:.9'rn3 rnfU'J D2m,f 42.52309 O:uE,Q.J Dc.: Pg.: Vg.: Lug E mga-:L mia 43 Cg14:m:b- ZPS.,:a. Dtn. 4,.a. UD.-.11 zcowlu barn. 4:n. mmrm-n-meow: 32'-on. 4on. Ian. Ora 4.01: 4n:n.4 mo4 mzEu.c54mz:nEn. mcnEcn4 OZ4 O04 044 Luo4O tyv on-Q. .53 U53 -A az Ei? 'E 53 na '3 QD 'Q QQ Es E53 G? an r 23 Iii Eh Ui Q4 d O 0 'O II- WUI Z Z y mZ E 1215 Q U30 .IEEE 2 DE'-US,gCD ng KD I-I-I 2 ml- 1410 EIU: !.I z 3 LU :I JP W 4m4Jw J Pmp-I-11205-uJUu.I mag'-...JD Q5 U9 ,.Z I- 4 4I:J7'ClJI:41mPZ!Ll.lJl-I--EDO N I-UZ l-Om X IZ I 0432250225--I.Z' M SSWOTZ E to d2Em,dmzJ.,54?E33a 3 025308 M 30 DZLU-1 -mi-n.mO.Ig,-U .W ,, orzwz- 2-I ua I'-,3- LUIO , ,gm 60:4 Og, I N5 Zu.: E IP7zm W wmm4 4 rw I0 X -J LIJ4 I-D LUZI-U:uJ frIIIIQE E gg QQ-I-U-I 12 51 S5a8EE3522fms0E82g2 Q ESNQEE ES as moPmmo113m5J42xoHP B Emfmoi So z z 3 I O W m P Z W X In, 9 OJ! W m Z 4 O w w O0 m7wJO Z J 4 G 1 1 ED mwm'OwIZmD Po Z 2 gfmmm PZ E433 J I zoo oro o 1 1- - IEES-x'wE2ZQJg4E5WDg2J0dOm:ImwP444 P'.i2u.IfLg5 POI LUDID-,DI Z 5 8 2 Z mz mm 53292 Ommog Om wfk S 3 4 :E N D 1552309 mWm3dPmbD03 n- Emp-1?-II-u.J QlILUO,JO,, Z J 51 Il,II mh4-gm :0mEwmmmJw4ommJ Uzm O04 I-i.uO44I-:c:OO42II,.u, Q za: Ir.: mzozro wwoljx 4yfmgmI-241245 jIZg4OZojjP2:D? EOwIIu:,wI-mOIrcnOImn:3:,S.i-, E - nf 5 2 T 3 m X 45mi m D ZW z X 1 2 m EImmW09 wmojo Z .J 3 O EDg255EEEg5Egwg0E5S XI w!WEQm..4 D ' O J4E3OQ334wWmmm-w'60 u.I z Z Zo 5 I-b- 4 - O - : fl EEE6'mLy,LudgEITJ!5mgE?.g20O2IIn:979Jg?JEEEgggggggfnrgmp-Zi-m'lLImgj,-Ei.cn.i l IZ4 JWXXZ J4P44E2rll7D - mwqqrfy zmig Dwomfow Irmq Z I I 471 w I Zmzwg mm O:J44!4 m4-J4zmr3 5 222 JYII I 0021:QIE025510:oo2mE1o4oEEEwQQQE5E I-.ImOOI:cOI-mm-,mo-,On:I-,Z.JOI-Diuw-,mEa:n:o:.Im-, I :E Db w -mr m29 SEw25E5s!a5:fSEIaO: ::4coI-oEoz3m2o55:I:4'r7:u:IJ-fn z z m 0 z Oo m Z I 1 W Q Em m O W 5 ww o m Z w I D 0 ZZ X z w w wg W wg w 2 I Wo m W aiizgsgawanfiaa 2.5 235525525522 EE SQEESEQQEQ 265 0OzPEwOrdPE-EUOxmPI qwggnosqogfo 4JN32b504!3-4 :DE 4-I:,Ew1E4m'f E a:Il-UP-I-40-aDao4DO-IJ LUI ,g4OqII Ogzojl-L! CD10 1,4 O 1aIQ O M4317 l m4 m DA L Om14D qom Qywo El-U In USOZZI m 0I-I- E mI Q I' 4 in Q ZI- I'- zw z r I . m z m m o z 4- r EZ9QEEEEIf4Eiz8o5zzmEETz3zWEm4mm 2 50 X m49E yIwE90mD 1I7W4mIwQjgJZIJ7WIEmmm2I2IOIEg2g L :EEfSzIwmEESOmZ p0 4O4mIO4mm-QsOQw4A04mOO2Q4Q2q4Q4m I mmQmqwQIO4m4ZQmZpO .I-.-oI.Lomc5.I..Imu.I cc-,zmCJ14NIrn:-J-.I-,14.I4u.I1-1 CL m4-.Iu.n.cDn:orru.Ii-n:p-,m-,OB z 0 0 3 Z .Eg -2 5 w J 1 M Q W 1 I J W w z m w ZDOP JZ w 1 0? - P wg do mow0QmDEO13:wd wwf 5 l4Omgg W 5 moxm o 201 Nmwwo-Zommhifwzmi ao- zm fzwm Lwzz 4492 Io ?JWjwPzP 34m:4P4Io Z OEEZ Im lO7PqmW0 2Ew3mI4 Orm EO454mwm4EOlo43Eo24EZE212w95oE 1QP15o2'9OE50El0j2 J -D3j3mE4mwIPwI 3 mg m W rxJm4 Qmmf 54wzQ mm woq-DE E n: O E I-U-' LLI I--' 0 4 mrr1yy4?wBIEww4mImyQym4gW5g XE mmmmm -Kworfjpwmmsmwwwmo E0 4mm-mmmm:44 ma mm 54 m J QJQDJ Ww4Immoo4rwZo:fLoE4JEo:w5mfQ1f EI-mo-Q-,cnmQoJ::mm3UJn:2..I0.Ju:1zEmmIuom AATCC DELTA u.Iu.IOE Luu,i.II- 7- IZ JJm4w,JxJmE5W52I OI IrIr..ju.imI:r 4I.u mzfr 222,11 44345144 m7IQ4IIP7X IIo-4mIfZoDoo19Q44- oo4?1womwmwmmom1mm2 G? P1 PM if Q5 na Ad if QS C3 UW A Q V Al C. C3 W5 I: GA m Q Qw ARLES L. SON, CH e, N. C5 x 5 E Q -ii Us m D eu NALD viIl ID GD OSA: Owx 7 o - 9 W o COLLIER, JOHN Whitevilie, N.C. TEXTILE TECHN LES H. Y I 5 ERE I 025 igm waz: ESP 025 mWP o Q 6 I- fn 0: E E 193 ?g 25- Q- Q8 .JC -IO 40 1 E 0 Q Pmwoo gg 00 QI 'Q xx mm EWU 355 ao. id gThom ocie Thom ouncilg Drum 1,2 Gm M FM m D. L O ::0 0-ll-I Phi T T Bug CORBETT, JOHN H. Garner, N. C. TEXTILES BOYD, ZELBERT Rose Hill, N. C. TEXTILE TECHNOLOGY M ui cu QQ Q- Preside U 'GGY xo: mv .LZ .L KU 0 I S. Y ce ounseio elo De Bet 5 r .r S ID 1022 IJ Boa L20 41 GJ'-L m CSI 2 3! wQc.: 2985 OLOGY .i P- Z . I m0 II O m u.I I- I- - co TEXTILE HENRY T. N. C. 2 3 hw E-l..:I.u I: .Jo:' CRIG Belm TEXT GY CK W. NOLO JA H LEY, N. C. LE TEC gg '- 555 IEW IDE!- 7-Ps ...Q-.u C.-.- ID U e: Umvers Z. C 2 W: O M O 'a CD S Nr: E th L Ps ommitte EE o 5 oiw E22 age L o 'E LFP O SLIJ -:' EP cm- e, N. Kappa Tau Beta: au Sig CHEM RY P CU EQ Ewhw mag 4 .C N- 9162 IUZEEILU DO M P S T JR. si NWOOD E., ag P pkins swf wo me .I ,O AZ.- UJ c LEE o.o I- 0:25 TAZ 2 ni JR. MUM , C. Soccer Team S RD BEN R., W E535 4 mL5 E P X 0 DEEM Q ombw m P- CJ O .I O Z I O :M ROP -I -LI-ULU QE u::' Nm: msn P Z- QQX 4 4:52-ev om4x3E 15 o'3m WQQP :Nm 6224 C - Egg :Siam DJDP Z. I2 I-... P as Iv 2 ..- . 0 5,5 EU 9? o z If -.I GY E. C. hi NOLO TON ui 2 z r 8 gd Zz: Z. w Oo. O Erm- 42 ch E Em 4-2 m4 OX OW 'd Z: w EWEJ EI fa? SI- l.I. -8 Ill- -XD :m4 n.I-cn .I. EO w -2 n: 1' P- E925 LIJZCLQ ID .22 or gg mm..- U50 DANIELS, Elizabeth Lambda TEXTILE GY LO no d mi E T 4 50 I --I- Q I Zw 1 mimi' ui ESEQ 5 40.E7u.I ..I OEWP O C. NOLOGY N. CH do Z. I2 M, poiis, TE 542 EN 403 S502 XP M D4 ui O64 7: ci Raleigh, N. C. N. C. State Veterans Ass TEXTILE TECHNOLOGY DAVIS, EMMETT J., J Rutherfordton, N. C. TEXTILE TECHNOLOGY HNOLOGY TEC If o 2 Q E EEZ GSM XQP si LE ...Q 02 E 7 E 29 -EE CDL E Om W: 'o 4 c cu o M E o EO ..OLIJ 'B 1' Lg? lE5u.I n.I-I- 309 3 L E -.ig 5 5 .0 Dv Q.- fin SE S6222 QMS E 1 -o- .z Em -- wq5.Kg,: gg 0 r fzvr r r rm r mN-f w-:ow r . r ' :C r o J :gSo cw 0 gm w , Savmiggggeiw-:ggi gag 0 ,O 25PO?.gO - O -h- O4 w ,QQ COPWOD O -Ego O ' ,-J U7 'JS ,,-I Or:-I E -I C5 U-Q -I XEQ'-EWQGJO NJ Z ..1 -i ...I W nO w :Pio po o -3 ofD.-:m3o2 w L14 o SEQ o y -Z J :HmZ rj Z W Z W EE ZLWI'Sm PP'Q2mwZ ,Zjr QE 2 Ol II -'L ED .- LU ug ..1 --C c , -CQ.-- -I -5 z ,I .Of:mI m :I -I lm I gg n.'-I-Qu-..-hn. -an I 101 0 X I 2 fa E062-g.Dssa Eva Womb 0 42m1:Hsvm25m5v-12O::-23:20 4'mF O' 5-P ms: wi 7-QE u'I5QE 9u:Q-P32mf5LuIQ0, Em DOT, 2-9-:DW Owi- i- -ZQ D- CJx.D.xS0'5OQ-Cmm,- F J- ,ZCDCQ4-1'- 7-m 56:-gmiiwm m5uW,NE m PNw:QwSwmCw1um2mm -o-gm 5 21.1 O.-w0- ,.1 O .-.1 3.-.1 4.::!m .1 Z-OK?-N -O! -- ---1 ug---I LU ---'o-Y,,,-I .. -E- .xi ,N- Aff- Q- 201 nm- '0 --CL cuxcuv- XP- !P :1D-q,- q:mP Jmom P-Jx-P UCP Oammih Ogm5DmMOmaQa,P442k-J2l5E-P 32-'gi 2262555 2886 ME 111521116 2115-.r,.'-:sf1g2iS'.?,S.f5:5 -EE 422 2355 wm-P P4m-nPwmmv-wmv -momm-w3omoE-znxwrm-3iP3mm2PmP U7 .. ' E w - 9 m 0 mv C Q- C O . L ' Wm - 0 0 112-0 ax Ur 2'-do 'U an mxcu . : O ' LQ- 3 r : r r mr xwap --:N - wEN 5 . 0 Q 0 0 -o , PO. X204 m Emgi -E 4 0 . m O . O Q03 gw04E BQEX U, 45-F-LC : D- D: .I gn P- .1 I . .J m.1 c,..4'- . M-on.. W J aw N w 3 0 S 0 4 P O -- O:--:EC w-J 0652 E conizog SUD z E C z E 1 Eowzm0mQg55Z,,O1: 4LSn'E'6LlJ I-CU' u.1 1' - 5 .lgjl 5 5, lr 995 ZZEE EZQEELUJ S03 -8 Xo OON O ..l Lu ' D I 0 'mu-C. Iigwwgv m 5 2. E .ia M 4 -42 42m Odwuf6aHw2Im24s1w Q -Stas SEC? :SZ - -S P H2203 .ffm of 'WDP g5 Ji65gO Escmifg mC!o-m :mmm mfmw mg! m o-m am ,mm ,gsm nag--mm ,.m-n 0 w.: 4 Em.: -C,,,.1 Lu- .1 -11.1 ll-l,,..I u.1r:.1 p..q,,,,.1 ,,,ma:.-w,,l 504111110 m- -i 1E:m' 49m' x: E' I Nt' WN' PC IC mo In:'En cu 1- 1- 1- as 1- 161- 1- -1- CL1- 0- ...1- E 02.-.-OOXUIOUJQ za! X1 .-3 U3 l-Q, 3 O02 7-113 C 7-0249 wp 05636111 2.52115 552111 4-:Bai 425 E96 QCESE QQEE 59353355 555223 E.1Q4:O1- EOLLE1- Oc:n.1- n.Ec1u.1- cram- u:.11- n:.11- wc5a.1- mc5n.1-0E1- mmqolo E Q .Q 5 9- -Q - 1 QI 55 mam P - m M E5 Q Q , 535 Q gg . 2 55 5 5 J 5 E gg J : E ,QRQE 4 J m4 4 N E028 9 - 2 Q B m me O m w ozlii O F ,O 3 5 Eiga o W. o 25- Z :4 Z I,' -c 442 1 :Z A - 2 6' m L:tZ y0EZ Q.E 2 sz I 1-05 'Elm 'OI I-I-1-0-I DC 2 -4 0 1- 4:21 z -11 2:1 m mm O .m m QEEO O O ' N ' mE mmO ZZ 0 h X-P3 m E21 m2mn:,m g.Nm 40 Zi- E2 wggk m I mm D'm E0 C P E0 wwamg P za- I2 4-L - Iw-wmv aa- KEQ JZWE m Iww Wwgxlfm E gm U m Waow Sow Owbwc Q:g ogg C ,- - -- ,-m m - ---- - 5-2532 was Wgxfmgd wax. wr. iss. -G5 .sawaf ,525 bg! CQ ww 'cw W5m2:wH mmm- m9P wan. -EE 0-am-E Wwmi o-m 3EE':x gmx Egswicx Ezsx 22x JQEX xox Z2 :Ex Bt-x zi- O-oQom Ocm 4-vmwmw Qmww Oww 4:mw 92m o-Emum 006m :oi IMPMOP IOP 13QEP2P -Bow -mp xm.p .QP Jimpqp .Emp .mg I T . -X m m m 3:2 a S -5 Q--3 D. .- - 'DE G WE 1 - NEC- f X r r r r - r wz y y 2 .CUJLQB G . 0 0 5 0 G I - - e,Qe P 2 m C . 0 - E- 0 m 0 QOQQEQ 2 , 6 9 5 9 E2 9 D 2 5 2 4 ,522 .. 2 m -NSE O m-o o X o qw o w o M m o 5530 -0 o 123, - Z 20- 2 - - vz EE z m EZ zmm O 2 z -rwz M2 Z --H I o'w I 40 !U'I 2 I J' Uv I vw- O,1 z . m w O11 O m-I QI 4 I m:m: O o,2 0 LZ XSXO wgeo 1. o b2E ooo o QSQO Q. 0 -BQOEI N moi W m, Orgm 032m 423W 'NO 'W Z'0 U Z: U Wgawmv P -5 P mam 4 QP m oh I,QP hO-w JZP -OCmgP 43 P OONWES w Env w 'Bw 169m -dim Obmm Z-fm mum E2,2:m IE m 'r :!mCo,,,i O'0.E -1 -cn-I -09.1 Lu3q,.l -5!.I Ov .1 P-111.1 -1 '57-:C.I 0 ',7,.1 ggmgwvc- -55 F EEF 022i -Sai Samn Zgwc 42a P61E2F -zur -sebmox Ew--x Fix Ziox Izxx -::x Uwgx Ewx mg,E:x jumx 0:1111 0-:QUJ 42-cD.:u.I -DLL! OO.cu.l Oa2mu.1 ICUCDLLI 4Z:1-Lu mam qqycgou-I ,Q-Cm 1.umQOCDz..w1- LI-CDIILILI-' u.m1- ILXCLI- L.m1-1- u.uJC11- 0041- UUJI- IZCLOOI- :1:n:n.1- 310 :E Eg y Elm, 0 T255 5 9 4UEEE9m 2 ,f9HoEO I ww W 'do Di - F Lu E9gQNO52h 12P0.m4.m J2mFFf SEE -'KDE .U -4- 4'l'.91'fS5 Iain: Bwwqmhizh L E :ET ..- m-1:49 3 . BSN 3 2 28-5 6 E5'?s29 - I- C553-O N U3 053 .. - E .::gEZ FQ-E SLJWKUMI hm Q. -O 501 jju-'EEN 9N0EfE3iP 1- -Lu 'Dan'-m .'f fim03f Olwpzersw .ggx -mmumx CLLIJ 2.C.-CCL1J -PP wowmmh E - : 1 Er - r ' wg J 8 U , S- m A 2 E E2 2 2 402 EI 4-I 2.2 oo Q00 Izua Z U55 SE -25 15 lm mim mam .1 :Cf ff-.511 S: 55: Emu Em Oom 45m LL.l- 2021- 2-11- ID S 2 g P A E .Stag 25551 Sz gzggi E- .aw -2 f2Q2w E83 O2 E11 End g01.m:l ' -ICI- ml5S.',,PC CX ...cazoug Omm room- :xp Y.: UE -A EQ ... EL v-- E. 4 221 'a 53 nm -1 1 QD uf .3 E23 QQ ww 153 E2 E. 21 QE U3 if EPS D XWEZ Eg NSE 82123 35 J mah EEOQZE ZzOoo4m 4411-44554302214 -III-,--I-I LuE,,eE .,.3w4.-44.1 4mD Emwzwozgy-3 2000- y2444wmmm d .JI -m.324m3:msmZ4o4E 315-252223 55552. dfoipmivrmiowmmmo oxmhizmzzp- zI44oE544 5 1 P Fmg mga mfmmmz EEQ.s EQE-3500553 2Q240z4m4g5ogE444 mmgGOEIEI-qjwwffi dUJiiI6IMWiDiF34J asededpgpmaiediaa Z Z E wz Lu LU 'Str ZEwo4ww D 'WJ O w mgxzzmlz-I sfgzsmfogeggxww j24fmE1OOoowIwg 44-m-mmmm-.ESD .-m.m.4mm2o. ld wqdmEoISdwDwJ6D Sggsgmmggiawmez EEO34EwZZS552Z5 mDEmHgQDDUIbgO4 AUSA 3 o m Z 2 2 o 1 G z m m m C omwf Bl - 4,m 4421 m- I J .mbmmJ40wP0 W omm G mmwijz 23 - bmwrmmzzm- m m D4 4-I 4- Bzmfm Jmgjm PJEM 34 4 x 4 X 292m 0qoW2m .. - .J E wE0EEZE!iEE:m?E 1 HPmmxooE1m4EQoo N MIKE THOMAS LARRY HARRISON J. A. MOTLEY WILLIAM R. RUEHWREIN JOSEPH BURBAGE GROVER C. HILL L. NOLAND DAVID W. SHUFORD CHARLES G. PIERCE EMMETT F. HUGHES, JR. C. OAKLEY DENNIS F. SNIPES ALAN COCKMAN JAMES R. JORDAN J. T. OWENS ROBERT L. WALKER JOSEPH WILLIFORD J. W. LACKEY C. PARRISH JAMES A. WASHBURN W. A. MELVIN E. L. PETERSON JOHN G. WATKINS JAMES W. OESTRICH F. S. PULLEY JOHN F. WATSON ARNOLD ATR SOOIETY WILLIAM O. O'KELLEY J. M. RAY DAVID L. WILLIAMS WILLIAM L. POWELL E. ROBINSON JERRY S. WILLIAMS RETER AEENE ROGER L. ROSS B. W. SHUKLIS HUBERT M. WINSTON BRUCE R. BONNER JAMES K. SHEEK, III C. W. SMITH JOSEPH A. WOOTEN RICHARD BROWN HAROLD R. STEWART E. ZMITHRS ' THOMAS L, BROWN DOUGLAS A. UNWIN . P. OME JAMES OALOWELL JOHNNY G. WATKINS H. R. STEWART SCABBARD 5 BLADE ROBERT DALTON CLAUDE A. WHITEHURST K. B. STEPHENS DOUG A, UNWTN JOHN W, DICKEY TOMMY R. WILLARD C. M. TUCKER MILTON F. HAAS BILL FAIRFAX MITCHELL WILLIAMS A- T- WEAFI WILLIAM B. KLUTTz DONALD A. GARDNER FICE-ERT E- WOOTEN R- WYATT JAMES G. LINVILLE E. D. GOOCH JOHN W. DICKEY BILL GRISWOLD FARRIS A. DUNCAN MILTON F. HAAS BRIGADE STAFF FLIGHT TRAINING PROGRAM DON A. GRIGG WALDEN HEARN RUFFIN B. HOLDER JAMES HENDERSON DOUGLAS A. UNWIN MARSHALL N. BORDEAUX HERMAN O, LENINS RUFFIN B. HOLDER LAWRENCE D. TRACY DONALD A. BURSON DENNIS A, NECKER PHIL T. HOWARD RANDY SYNDER VANCE E. FISHER, JR. JOHN O, OLSON CHARLES E. HUGHES CHRIS KOSzEWSKI JAMES W. PFEFFERKOR ALAN N. JACKSON JOHN A. DOERR WALTER B. TURNER JOSEPH KELLY BILL WADE PERSHING RIFLES WILLARD H. WHITLEY MARK KONTOS CHIP PHARR JAMES O. WOODALL BEN A. LASSITER CHUCK PIERCE DAVID L. ARNOLD TICE N. LEONARD ROBERT LEAGUE JAMES C. BRABBLE GARY F. ANDREW HERMAN C. LENINS DAVID V. BROOKS JOHN W. BRAUER JAMES G. LINVILLE OOUNTERGUERRILLA UNIT THOMAS D. BREOHTLEIN JOHN A. DOERR THOMAS E. MAY ROBERT E. CARLSON LARRY FERGUSON LARRY W. MILLER JAMES K. SHEEK, III GEORGE M. CLENDENIN GENE FUzY DENNIS A. NECKER EMMETT F. HUGHES JAMES C. COCHRANE EMMETT F. HUGHES STEPHEN E. NICHOLS SAMUEL E. COPE ROY H. Cox ALBERT V. LEWIS JIM PFEFFERKORN KENNETH M. PHELPS DOUGLAS W. DAHL ROBERT E. NANCE RON ROBERTS T. AOREE THOMAS M. EILERMAN ERNEST W. O'NEIL JOHN ROSS S. J. BARBERIO WILLIAM K. ETHERIDGE JAMES K. SHEEK ED SETzER D. D. BROWN LARRY H. FERGUSON LAWRENCE D. TRACY THAD W. SHORE R. S. BRUCE KENT H. FULTON DON E. WEATHERLY BILL A. STEPHENSON A. R. BURTON EUGENE A. FUzY LARRY HARRISON WILLARD WHITLEY R. C. CHAPMAN ALFRED G. GASH JOHN W. BRAUER JAMES D. WOODALL Y. CROUSEN ROBERT R. GILBERT HAROLD C. THREATT JOHN YODER B. L. DAVIS JOHNNY P. GREEN ROBERT L. TUCKER
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.