Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX)

 - Class of 1969

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1969 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1969 volume:

SHfrC M I BHHL ■ B  3 H am • ' fritf. ■ m_ an Hkhsk I BK££!i i WSk mm item tmmsM I mm JHk. HUH SKif? K H ft: «,( ■■ ..-■■■ ■■■• . ' ■ ' ;.. ' ■:. ■.■■•.. ' :. 8fw«isSs ! HnKHnraig OTTOHE - COURTESY OF NASA Elements they are, or starry clusters in congregate nebula. A constituted Universe resides in your Being. r ' r V v L ; l rf v ■ ,jp % : 4.v ' .% ; . ♦ Welcome to the sun-spangled microverse of Williamson county. Fal Winter Spring winter grumbles in and suppressing the rah-rah metamorphosizes indelicate passion into diligence — of an inner sort. under the long-baking sun of Indian summer, nature rusts and in the changeling atmosphere, the autumnal eguinox awaits our celebration. striking thoughts are thrust forth ' in tempered color and drop as quickly. basketed from neat raked piles, burn unnoticed. such is the ceasing sap severing days and the yawn of another season of knowledge is ahead. and spring — the high celebration of the feast of seasons. V- In the midst of cybernetic, pyrotechnic, psychedelic, supersonic, vitamin-enriched revolution: rf lEf DERATION i;:,:; the calm of Georgetown, an eye in the storm of the computer steel conflagration. - ! - .. M Zr « ■: : 5 l ' iT - THE CHALLENGE create recreate creation recreation c o 4— ' 05 CD i_ U CD C o 4— ' O OJ u n — rD n o OJ 4—  03 OJ u CD CD 4—  (D u . v-i ' V 1 1 yd create recreate creation recreation n - ro rt o ' rD n rD 5 10 II II No man can reveal to you aught but that which already lies half asleep in the dawning of your knowledge. Gibran 12 14 Measure the mystery of Man by my face, child the self will leap through my lips, and the soul, dance from my eyes. 15 Pleasure is a freedom-song. Gibran 17 Faces facing fa on the face a doc or a situation Exchanging faces with a mirror or too afraid to face it Facing expressions as if faces faced inwards After filtering a thousand faces through the same mood, you begin to notice a uniformity. — Spradlin M A r Retrospection: ' 68- ' 69 September I I October 12 16 20 24 25 26 27 I 2 3 4 5 6 8-9 II 13 15 16 17 18 19 22 24 25 27 29 31 November 2 5 7-9 12 13 20 22-23 December 2 5 9 13 14 14-20 21 22 25 31 3 9 January Freshman registration Soviet tanks occupy Czechoslavakia Classes and rush start Greek bids out Niqeria captures Biafran cities Willie Morris, editor of Harper ' s magazine and author of North Toward Home speaks Larry Caroline, controversial UT professor speaks Joe ' s closed, reasons unknown Charles Field, artist, gives gallery talk Possible UAR-lsraeli settlement rejected Columbia University students strike Challenge Grant Campaign of 3.75 million begins Generation Gap panel Biafran and Czechoslavakian crises panel Peru under military coup Candidate Wallace adds LeMay to V.P. post Annual Derby Day UCM has communion at Booties Cybernetic seminar with Henry Malcolm of Columbia University Spoon River Anthology with Alpha-Omega players Military coup in Panama Don Wink, artist, gives gallery talk Student tutoring of underprivileged refused school board approval Lisa Hobbs speaks: Inside Red China 70° o of campus votes Nixon in mock election Homecoming dance Homecoming parade, Phis beat Pikes in annual football game Tenth District Congressional Candidates present platform Apollo 7 lands safely Humphrey campaigns in Texas Melvin Munn of Lifeline characterizes the campaign Breatholyzer for testing intoxication installed by local patrol officers Viola da Gamba and Harsicord Concert McCarthy finally endorses Humphrey LBJ speaks to nation of bombing halt One million children in NYC out of school: teachers strike Nixon campaigns in Texas Nixon-Agnew defeat Humphrey-Muskie Royal Hunt of the Sun presented by Mask and Wig Players Dr. Beavers speaks on drugs Dr. Jacobs performs with sitar Richard Schickel, movie critic of Life Magazines, speaks UCM has marriage seminar San Antonio Symphony S.U. has first student activist meeting Amigas de las Americas program Tree Trim party with University Band and Choraliers Santa Claus visits L M Three petitions circulated by activists Candlelighting Service Registration for spring semester Austin Ballet presents Nutcracker Suite Finals North and South Vietnam disagree on peace table shape Apollo 8 carrying 3 men launches 82-man spy ship Pueblo crew released from North Korean captivity of eleven months Manned Apollo 8 circles moon ten times Number of Jets hijacked to Cuba reaches 28 Lebanon escapes involvement in Middle East crisis Francis Hall delivers film and speech on the Four faces of Southeast Asia 24 January February 24 29 30 31 3-4 7 10 I I 14 16 20 21 March 3 7 8 12 14 15 19 20 21 24 27 28 3 I -April 2 April May 2 15-18 15 16 17 7-19 19 23 23 26 28 29 30 2 4 5 6 13 14 25 Nixon inaugurated Royal Shakespeare Company presents Othello Reginald Smythe — Ayn Rand Philosopher Nixon creates Urban Affairs Council Alumni Awards ■ Jews Hung in Iraq Danforth Lecturer Charles Siepmann The Physicists African Leader assassinated Required Assembly abolished by SLC Women ' s Dress Rules abolished in AWS election New Election Code Frank Wardlaw, UT Press Peru seizes US boats San Francisco soldiers accused of mutiny Model United Nations Basketball team finished 6-4 in conference Independent hayride Delta Orriicron State Day on campus Rabbi Kahn — What is a Jew Sirhan admits to RFK assassination Beauty review Apollo 9 AWS seminar Richard Dyer Bennet James Earl Ray gets 99 years Miss Southwestern crowning Pop singers Diary of Anne Frank Georgetown school board controversy Blood bank director Meet the President Congress votes to determine SLC selection Willson Lecture — Dr. Joseph C. Hough, Jr. Nixon will continue 10% surcharge Liquor by the drink passes Texas Senate Independent Blood Bank a success Eisenhower buried Film Festival Faculty votes down Congress proposal for SLC selection Congress rescinded closed organization decision North Koreans shot down US scout aircraft 100 mi. out in sea — Nixon will continue sending reconnaisance flights Photography exhibit — Union Stop the World, I Want to Get Off! Sing-Song Houston Ballet The Music of the Beatles Dr. Joseph Kruppa Dr. Gaupp— Invitation to Learning Tower received Distinguished Alumnus Award DeGaulle steps down Richard Linde — Middle East Tinderbox Ideas and Issues — Mr. John Hummel Panicked driver injures 35 at Austin block party DelMar String Quartet Dorm Barbeque 2 S. U. Students Busted Arab-Israeli Conflict — Mr. Babaa Honors Assembly — Frustration Day Attempted Panty Raid 10:00 p.m. Open House in Women ' s Dorms Graduation Ceremonies Orientation and Registration 27 ; ♦ f V r f V |T %u3 I Kappa Alpha Derby Day . Edgar Lee Masters ' H Spoon River |j Anthology I Alpha-Omega Players I 30 Othello: The Nationa Shakespeare Company 31 Intramural Footbal Homecoming Weekend 1968 ttwww MrM® M 34 ' fHltafe 3 XL. J IV SO UTHWESTERN ' ■■ - - [-■„„■!! ■■ ■ T nrnnw— ■nrwri- — itimm i UN 35 Pumpkin Carving Contest ► 36 WKfm : s- i : ; A ;:: t r iu 37 SmhH HP The Royal Hunt of the Sun lis HHHM9 4ft Sitar Folk Jazz Sou 41 FRAN WILLIAM HALL ' Four Faces of Southeast Asia ' RICHARD SCHICKEL ' Understanding and Misunderstanding Mass Media WILLIE MORRIS ' North Toward Home ' MELVIN MUNN ' Political Character of the Election ' 68 ' LAWRENCE WHARTON Alcoholism 42 Speakers: Sophistication, Substance, and Soap LARRY CAROLINE Socialism LISAHOBBS ' Inside Re d China ' DR. ROBERT BEAVERS Drugs: Use and Abuse CHARLES FIELD Gallery Talk 43 MR. HENRY MALCOLM Cybernetics Seminar 44 li MR. GREG OLDS ' Journalism and The Texas Observer 45 MR. CHARLES SIEPMANN Danforth Lecturer DR. LEDBETTER UCM Marriage Seminar Lecturer MR. REGINALD SMYTHE Ayn Rand Lecturer DR. JOSEPH HOUGH Willson Lecturer 4h 1 I ' fcM RICHARD LINDE ' Middle East Tinderbox ' DR. JOSEPH KRUPPA The Beatles MR. BABAA League of Arab States The Arabs 47 Christmas 48 49 AWS Seminar: The Role ,, « -afi. r- JP J I of Woman in the 20th Century 5 52 r THE BIS R. HAY 8 EDW HIRAM A BOAZ ' OWN FOr own M Activists s 54 55 56 57 Above: Fountainhead of the Cosmos Bill Stubblefield, First Place: General Black and White Prints Left: Fetus ' s Heart Jim Blakewell, Second Place: Gen- eral Black and White Prints Expression III: Photography Entrants and Winners Above, Left: So Many Years Bill Stubblef ield, General Black and White Prints Above, Right: untitled Bob Grayson, Honorable Mention Right: Stockham the Water Faucet Bill Stubblef ield, Third Place. General Black and White Prints : : - St ' , .1.- 9r.tt ,A ' . ' - Left: Robinson Crusoe Jim Blakewell, General Black and White Prints Below, Left: Faces Jim Blakewell, General Black and White Prints Below, Right: Fence Bob Grayson, General Black and White Prints Opposite, Near Right: The old John Jim Blake- well, General Black and White Prints Opposite, Far Right: Ber- ries and Leaves Jim Blakewell, General Black and White Prints Opposite, Bottom: Un- titled Bob Grayson, Gen- eral Black and White Prints The San Antonio Symphony, The Houston Ballet, and Gallery Shows 62 63 Model Unite 64 (Nations 65 Student Teaching 66 68 .... ■ : ... ■ 69 Dr. Frederick Ernest Gaupp The Professors ' Professor 73 74 Two-by- Two 75 , V fct tii, ifttt , A ' £Wi . •BW jfl $ J KM r 76 The Grads 1 21 78 % ! ' ♦• ■f •• a. - 1k. ' .V ' ♦ • ft jC ,«  ' . ? flp • « ■ 79 HISTORY: THE DEEPEST REFLECTION Cornerstone laying in li While Texans were throwing off the yoke of Mexican rule and forced allegiance to the Catholic church, one patriotic Texan appealed to his countrymen in the East to Remember Texas. William B. Travis, one of the earliest supporters of Methodism in Texas, wrote a letter on August 17, 1835 which was published in the NEW YORK CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE a few months before he was killed in the Battle of the Alamo. The letter read: My Dear Sir: ... We are destitute of religious attention in this exten- sive land ... I regret that the Methodist church, with its fine itinerant system, has so long neglected this interesting country ... About five educated and talented young preachers would find employment in Texas and, no doubt produce much good in this benighted land. Texas is composed of the shrewdest and most intelligent population of any new country on earth; therefore, a preacher, to do good, must be respectable and talented. In sending your heralds into the four corners of the earth, remember Texas. William B. Travis Because of this letter and others like it, eastern missionaries came to have a deep interest in this new land. In 1836, when the cause of Texas independence still hung in the balance and when reports from Texas continued to tell of a dire need for religion and education, Martin Ruter, then 52 years old and president of Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvania, asked to be sent to Texas. His request, and its subsequent approval, produced an unusual scene on a July day in 1837: a large body of students from Allegheny College and citizens from Meadville assembled at the port of Mead to say good-bye to a man who, with his family, was about to start on a dangerous expedition. He was going to Texas. Martin Ruter traveled by water to Texas. He often remarked: The way to Heaven is as short from Texas as from any other spot! In seven short months that one man laid the foundation for higher education in Texas, for it was through his efforts that Rutersville College, which eventually became Southwestern Univer- sity, was established. At the end of his first 60 days in Texas, he had traveled 1200 miles by horseback. He made one trip to Bastrop with an armed escort of three men to protect him from bands of marauding Indians. Martin Ruter gained the support of Governor Mirabeau B. Lamar and General Sam Houston for his plans for a university. On June 25, 1838, only 40 days after the death of Martin Ruter, a group of laymen pledged themselves to establish a university despite the difficulties which loomed ahead. It was decided that the university should be placed in a town away from the temptations of drinking and gambling; since no Texas town could qualify, however, they decided to form a corporation, purchase a league of land and develop a new town- site. They named the town Rutersville, which was also the name of the college. ' Rutersville was granted a charter by the Fourth Congress of the Republic of Texas, Feb. 5, 1840. Granted also were four leagues of land, 17,712 acres, to be used as payment for any expenses incurred in establishing the school. There were some restrictions, however. The charter was limited to 10 years, the endowment was limited to $25,000, and the institution had to be non-sectarian. The college became a dominant influence in shaping the lives of young men and women throughout Texas. To guarantee the maintenance of moral conduct in this town, Congress granted the school trustees full jurisdiction over all conduct and events within a mile of the school buildings. Fines from $10 to $200 could be assessed by the college officials. Each term of the school year in 1840 lasted 21 weeks; tuition fees amounted to $20 per term for higher studies, $25 per term for higher studies and languages, and $12.50 per month for room and board in a private home. The university catalogue of 1845 made this observation about examinations: The annual examinations of this institution were witnessed by a large assembly of spectators, including several gentle- men of intelligence and distinction. There was a time when university chapel was held at four o ' clock in the morning. Atop a post on the campus hung a large bell that called students to classes, and each morning, in the dead of winter or at other times out came the students, filing into the old chapel. The penalty for missing chapel was missing breakfast, which was served by candlelight immediately after chapel. Chapel came again, at 8 o ' clock in the morning, and again at sunset. 80 Approximately 3300 students from Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Indian Territory and Missouri attended the college from 1840 to 1869. The Civil War dealt a harsh blow to the college (as it did to most Southern institutions), for there was a time when the president and all the students went off to war; classes were suspended for the duration. The period of Reconstruction in the South was also a time of reconstruction for Texas Methodism in the field of education. By action of the five Texas conferences, a central university was planned in Georgetown. This institution was to take the place of the numerous smaller colleges which had all but died away during the preceding decade. Thus, on October 6, 1873, under the name of Texas University, the present Southwestern University opened its doors for the first time. It encompassed not only the former Rutersville College, but also Wesleyan College, established at San Augustine in 1844; McKenzie College, established at Clarksville in 1848; and Soule University, establ ' s hed at Chappel Hill in 1856. The Rev. Francis Asbury Mood, D.D., president of Soule Uni- versity, was chosen the first president of Southwestern in its new location. He was given the title of Regent. In 1874, a young minister was appointed by the Bishop to aid Dr. Mood in developing Southwestern University. Dr. James Campbell, later to become a giant in Texas Methodism, came to Georgetown in that year and spent most of the next decade here. In 1906, at a convention of Texas Methodist educators, he gave the following account of his early days at Southwestern: When the junior preacher arrived at Georgetown in 1874, he found a small village with a moderately re- spectable courthouse, a few stores and shops and perhaps four or five hundred inhabitants. All the marks of a frontier village had not been entirely effaced, and some of them did not seem to be so very ancient. It was during the very early days of Southwestern that its true character for at least fifty years was determined. Official publications of the Texas conferences describe the location of the s-hool as ' away from the evils of large cities. ' The simple, isolated area of Williamson County was believed highly advantage- ous for the stated purposes of Christian education and perpetuation of simple provincialism. Wise and experienced men of Texas Methodism praised the newly-established school with comments such as this This is the ideal spot for a great institution of learning. The great city may have some advantages . . . but it also has its disadvantages. Page after page of the conference reports from this period laud the school and its leaders, not to mention the praise by which the church leaders congratulated themselves for their foresight in founding the institution when and where they did. From a small beginning of 33 students and four administrator- professors in 1874, the school rapidly expanded. In 1884, at the time of Dr. Mood ' s death, the enrollment stood near 325, there were fifteen professors and teachers, and the enrollment was continuing to grow. The school had become co-educational about 1878, when a separate building was built for women. An 1883 graduate of Southwestern, describing the school ' s rapid ascendency to prominence, wrote in 1906: In preparing Texans for the duties which await the men and women of the period I know of no more potential agency than this University ... So I declare ... that the Southwestern University is today the happiest, dearest, and staunchest existing creator and finisher of great Texans. Despite the desires of early leaders, Southwestern failed to prove as isolated from evils as might have been hoped. vmp nsposToma Baseball Nine about li Legends, many verified by reliable sources, tell of the last public hanging in Williamson County. The spectacle drew several hundred persons from the area around Georgetown, and among those who witnessed the execution, the story goes, were several dozen young ladies from Southwestern, dressed in their party frocks for the festive activities which accompanied such cele- brated events. The 1 920 ' s were a decade of growth for Southwestern and transportation was no exception. A Megaphone of the era advertises a scheme by some fortunate student with a car: round trips from the Women ' s Annex to the downtown area for fifty cents per person, with cars leaving every thirty minutes on Saturdays. The M-K-T railroad came to Georgetown early in this century, and during the Twenties, each day saw six passenger trains northbound and six southbound whistling into the new Katy station on the northwest edge of the campus. An old Megaphone of the period even told students how to hop a freight for Temple, where better connections could be made with passenger trains. Athletics became important at Southwestern, as they did at other Texas schools, just after World War I. During the 1915- 1925 period, many special trains carried students, faculty and friends of the University to football and baseball games away from Georgetown. Many games were played in Temple, and one 1922 trip saw 325 students ride the rails north to Temple where they were met by some 300 students from Howard Payne College at Brown- wood; SU won the playoff. The cost of that trip was a total of 2.25, which included train ticket, football ticket, a box lunch and free transportation to and from the football field. In 1925, the Women ' s Annex burned on a cold January night. Although no one was killed or injured, the school had suffered a severe financial loss. Not to be overcome by fate, however, the administration quickly took stock of the situation, then moved all men out of Mood Hall and into homes in Georgetown, turning Mood Hall into a women ' s dorm for a year and a half. The depression hit Texas a severe blow in the Thirties. South- western reeled under extremely large drops in enrollment and limited funds. By the late Thirties, however, the rising prosperity of an economy being geared for possible war had restored some of the old strength to SU. 1940 was the centennial year for Southwestern, and a vast celebration was held. Messages from across the nation poured in to the school from men of high station. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Sen. Tom Connally, Lyndon B. Johnson and many other dignitaries of the state and nation lauded the accomplish- ments of the one hundred years of higher education claimed by SU. The war years of the Forties were once again days of glory for SU football. The V- 1 2 units being trained for the War De- partment at Southwestern provided the school with many top athletes from across the nation at a time when most colleges were barely able to field a team. During this era, Southwestern won the Sun Bowl game at El Paso, and achieved unofficial recogni- tion as the number one team in the nation. So, from about 50 students and an endowment of $25,000 in 1840, Southwestern University has grown to over 800 students and an endowment of over $7,000,000. The grounds of the university comprise altogether more than 500 acres within and adjoining the corporate limits of Georgetown. Throughout America there are to be found eminent jurists, bishops, ministers, doctors, writers, educators, professional and business men ... all promi- nent ex-students of Southwestern University, Texas ' oldest college. SUB in the Forties 81 Mrs. Diane Greer Sandberg, Miss Southwestern 84 Miss Judy Franze, 1968-69 Homecoming Queen 85 1969 Miss Soutf Miss Susan Bowyer iL Miss Judy Franze Miss Johnarw 86 western Nominees Mrs. Judy Chadwick Bulay Th ames Miss Olwen Broderlck 87 Beauties All-School Beauty Alpha Delta-Pi Stacy Langston Delta Delta Delta Ann Staton t -t «baei Delta Zeta Gay Smith «I £f Hffl ■■ 1 mm ' . ' 4$. - % s. 1 ' v lf 1 - ; ■-. ■ V .ft-- i c i ? ■ ! ■ • iff M Who ' s Who Bob Dupuy Diane Greer Sandberg Judy Chadwick Bulay Bill Hardt Susan Youens Ronnie Sandberg Judy Franze Carl Clarke 90 Susan Bowyer Marc Raney Olwen Broderick Laura Youens Larry Thomas Jan Miller Fleming Crim Amelia Alie need we say more! - 91 Senior Superlatives 92 Jerry Prothro David Pena Rick Bilbie Terry Furguiele Lon Curtis John David Fields Barbara Kelly Janell Hutchison Jan Whigham Genie Hackenjos Janet Beinke Johnanna Thames 93 MW. ifl 3 ■V c ■ i 1 1 1 1 p i J 8a fc Si S2U I Mi M • ' ■ 1 ,1 H M .. ' ;. •«. I A 1 Student Congress Sam Bertron Don Underwood Theresa Stridde Bob Grayson Brenda Butler Kent Hutton Donna Dildine Ken Johnson Genie Hackenjos Mary Kern Trisha Nahas Skipper Paisley Jim Swift Lera Tyler Gayle Williams Nancy Woodman Rob Youker Dr. Ren Kent Holly Satler Paul Bell Bruce Barrick Jim McConnell Edna Rollins Ed Reynolds Dwight Adair Judy Campbell Mary Callaway David True Bob Gomez Kerry Hope DeWayne Varnadore Hugh Parrish Ann McKinney Dennis Stout Dean William Swift Everett Schrum Diane Sandberg 96 ■ :.4$ y V V Controversy on three fronts: joint state- ment determining of S.L.C. election, Governing Board amendments — success along with failures, impeachments? and fiscal examinations — the students move and speak. I don ' t make jokes; I just watch the government and report the facts. Will Rogers [T Union Governing Board A deliberating body Once under fire Coming out alive To work at it again. By union the smallest states thrive, by dis- cord the greatest are destroyed. Sallust Everett Schrum Camella Peel Ronnie Underwood Glenda Fikes Terry Furguiele Olwen Broderick Andy McMullen Jerry Prothro Stayton Wood John Stone Dean William Swift Dr. E. H. Steelman 98 Union Program Counci f Andy McMullen Billy Tom Williamson Floyd McSpadden Linda LaBelle Susan Inscore Sherra Haygood Terry Furguiele Sally Clark Olwen Broderick John Curry Slenda Fikes Genie Stokes Getting the show on the road — on the calendar out to the students they plan ideas, issues, films pajamas and apples, frisbees and frustration — Welcome to the unison union. Ideas must work through the brains and the arms of good and brave men, or they are no better than dreams. Emerson 99 Student Judiciary Now for the evidence, said the Kin g, and then the sentence. ' No! sa d ti- e Queen, first the sentence, and then the evidence. Nonsense! cried Alice , so lou dly that everybody jumped, the idea of having the sen tence first! Lewis Carroll Roy Fuller Bronwen Webb Lynn Aycock Rick Bilbie Harry Crenshaw Doty Davis Rob Godsey Don Guerrant Virginia Dupuy Camilla Peel Mandy Weaver Karen Wilkie Fred Winslow 100 Student Life Counci Dean Swift Dean Harmon Dean Clifford Dean Richards Dr. Osborne Dr. Anderson Dr. Lansford Dr. Kent Mrs. Parker Miss Chase Mr. Chapman Coach Merritt Mr. Kennard Chaplain Neal Marc Raney Ron Sandberg Roy Fuller Sam Bertron Andy McMullen Susan Bowyer Freedom — an experimen t in new ideas I Ten- pered with wisdom o f experience. No freedom from care or responsibility — But freedom to care, to be responsible — j Life— student life our ives 101 Southwestern Science Society Fleming Crim Terry Furgiuele Clair Goodwyn Lynn Aycock I urner Caldweli Amp Miller Susan McCanne Becky Lindsay Fred Griffin Gay Zaumeyer Camilla Peel Bob Grayson Karen Wilke Martha Irvin Bob Karr John Clifford Dennis Stout A project for the society — each ' s personal contribution, a society of honors — in science chembiophys — energy eguals minds come to terms with matter. Every great advance in science has issued from a new audacity of im- agination. John Dewey Pi Gamma Mu Man — a social animal, they say. Rational and irrational Rich, poor, normal, and neurotic. Sees the world as it is, yet looks to what it ought to be. The proper study of mankind is man. Pope Janet Beinke Pam Pratt Kenneth Bland Nancy Carlton Judy C. Bulay John Clifford Carolyn Cochran Janell Hutchison Kenneth Johnson Rankin Koch Patty Jo LaCoke Jan Miller Walter Norris Emily P. Clarke Beth Reeves Dareen Reid Ronald Sandberg Diane G. Sandberg Johana Thames Fred Winslwo Joe Cavitt Jerry Prothro Diane Steinert 103 Y.D. ' s In politics, there has to be a loser A conservative is a statesman who is enamored by existing evils, as distinguished from the liberal who wishes to replace them with others. Y.R. ' s fefHBr ' (PiPP r ' rrffl -;■ « ■ ! i h slinL. ■ - W ,. u im V ' mm hi • H - flr ' ' . -Jy 6 p ■ WL .■  . The elephant lumbers in — with Ray Gabler, pamphlets and more buttons, triumphs in the mock election, and gain- ing momentum, lumbers out: with a President. 104 Vicki Adler Douglas Brown Joe Cavitt Robert Conn John Curry Joe Davidson John Fields Rand Fuller Roy Fuller, Pres. Frank Harshman Leonard Hoffman Kirk Huffman Don Iverson Johnny Johnson ill Kessler Bob Kessler Ken Claveness Jack Ladd Steve Kreger John Lawrence Pre-Law Society Steve McClain Mark McKenzie Andy McMullen Jane Munden Denny Pickett Wally Pou Floyd McSpadden Lon Curtis Ron Sandberg Michael Smith BobTruitt Tom Taylor Dewayne Varnadore Phil Watkins Jerry Prothro Kent Hutton Carol Baldwin Bob Dupuy Cornell Walker Kerry Madsen coats and ties for Dean Keaton, Law School, UT and Texas Tech and SMU: deans experts from the legal profession expose ambitious minds to the future Ren Kent and George Hester sponsor Lawyers are the only per- sons in whom ignorance of the law is not punished. Bentham 105 Mask Wig Pi Epsilon Delta A Royal Hunt — for talent The Physicists — relativity to life And Stop the World, let the show go on. Harry Crenshaw John Murrell Cindy Murrell Lee Ellen Arnold Gina Geldmeier Sandy Roland Jeanie Allen Cathy Boswell Doug Brown Donna Conrad Gina Doyle Susie Doyle Tom Forbes Francine Furlow Thrasher Kim Furstenwerth Deborah Galbreath Mary Faith Gean Don Guerrant Will Harbaugh Bruce Hay Dayle Hilborn Editha Hunter Patty Jo LaCoke Sam Love John Murchison Ellen Pitcock Janine Pitts Patty Rundell Jeanie Stokes Helen Thornton Joyce Wileman Sharon Williams Dr. Springer, Advisor ! John Murrell John Mansfield Cindy Galbreath Murrell Joyce Wileman Francine Furlow Thrasher Gina Geldmeier Bruce Hay Sandra Roland Lee Ellen Arnold 106 One of my chief regrets during my years in the theatre is that I couldn ' t sit in the audience and watch me. Barrymore EM University Concert Band Richard Luderus Lydia Ovitz Eugenia Stokes Lera Tyler Susan Engle Marsha Krause Fred Langham Sally Nolte Carolyn Sanderford Patricia Webb Editha Hunter Ann Brannon Sarah Heard Ann Haahn Don Nobles Reynaldo Meza Ernest Clark Richard Ellis Teresa Colvin Ken Johnson Dennis Lee Stewart Neblett Kerry Hope Marilynn McKinley Delia Mays Mary Sel ' e Stanley Beard David Clifford Marin Goodman Jud Graves Mark McKenzie John Reynolds Roy Bartles Bill Stubblefield Jack Phelps Richard Prather Kenneth Dunham James Robertson Rickie Sinclair Walker Jan Williams And-a-one, two, three Jazz, shows (basketball games) All-purpose musicians, enjoying their music Concerts in fall and spring Lively music — come and hear. Jazz will endure just as long as people hear it through their feet in- stead of their brains. Sousa 107 d «w University A Cappella Choir Lee Ellen Arnold Beth Bohmfalk Mary Davis Natica Davis Annelle Fitzhugh Patricia Rundell Dori Dana Rosemary Meek Sherry Strain Robin Walker Nancy Woodman Wayne Walton Kathleen Barrett Martha Ann Chappel Judy Franze Eugenia Stokes Doty Davis Nancy Gentry Ann Haahn Melinda Warner Kathleen Warthen David Clifford Charles Mason, Jr. Bruce Matthews Jim McConnell Bob McLeroy Everett Schrum Jan Shullenberger John Bertschler John Clifford William Johnson Joshua Morriss Grady Roe Paul Spellman The music-makers and choir tour takers and chapel singers And altos, tenors — all it takes to make good music. Wha t ' s that you hear? An a ' capella loo-loo — -do justice to good direction. Of all noises, 1 think music is the least disagreeable. Johnson 108 - .u:Y ' Give ' em some Culture — At least twice a year. Concerts of serious music, Beethoven, Mozart — No, not a record, the real thing. And so make life, death and that vast forever one grand, sweet song. Kinsgley Thomas Douglass Barbara Brown Mrs. Cochrane Penick Janie Applin Mrs. Bob Brown Jeanette Gillespie Edwin Heenan Linda Harris Ernest Clark Richard Luderus Ann Nelson Sarah Heard Dr. Jeff Campbell Susan Engle Marsha Krause Carolyn Sanderford Ann Haahn Donald Nobles William Hooper Marilynn McKinley Mary Margaret Seele Rodney Howell Stanley Beard Mark McKenzie Martin Goodman Jan Williams Kenneth Van Dunham Reynaldo Meza Other Area Residents 109 The Extraordinaires . Dwight Adair Cathie Boswell Ernest Clark Dorothy Davis Annelle Fitzhugh Jody Franze Bonnie Hennington Bill Hooper Cynthia House Virainia Dupy William Johnson Bob McLeroy Rosemary Meek John Murrell Tomas Porter Sherry Strain Robin Walker Andy Dean Tina Dawe Jan Schullenberger Dan Stultz John Clifford Jim Robertson 110 a new exuber- ance in con- cert — who could forget the saints marching round the union. Everything we do is music. Cage Delta Omicron perfection reflections madrigal recital wrong notes and right, its all in black and white professional musicians — music of the future sing a song music for all times. Song song song sing sing sing sing song. Rado-Hair Laura Youens Susan Youens Patricia Williams Jan Williams Carol Ford Rickie Sinclair Walker Ann Brannon Rosemary Meek Elaine Wagner Cynthia House Annelle Fitzhugh Susan Engel Rebecca Kelly Ann Haahn Patricia Webb Glynda Hartmann Sharon Pudlo Linda Harris Sarah Heard III Associated Women Students Women of the future, of now — Roles in the 20th century. Government and learning. Decisions, decisions — hours and dress rules. Women for now. What government is best? That which teaches us to govern ourselves. Goethe Judy Franze Donna Barr Beth Reeves Jan Miller Cecille Haynie Janet Beinke Diane Steinert Katherine Prehn Julie Spring Janell Hutchison Diane Greer Sandberg Judy Chadwick Bulay Leslie Lepar Bonnie Brunson Olwen Broderick Judy Campbell Dori Dana Susan Bowyer Linda Abbett Martha Irvin Jean Gibson 112 II ' N.E.A. Jeanie Allen Helen Ancles Lee Ellen Arnold Marie Atlee Janet Beinke Darlene Blackwood Joan Blaine Gayle Blake Evelyn Boone Barbara Bowles Ann Brannon Bonnie Brunson Barbara Byard Linda Cervenka Cathy Cockrell Sandi Cole Nancy Dobkins Glenda Fikes Clair Goodwyn Tanis Gutowsky Nancy Bacchus Julie Harrison Judy Hartzog Kay Holmes Cynthia House Judy House Joyce Wileman Patsy Williams Linda Zerr Jane Woodman Editha Hunter Janell Hutchison Susan Inscore Lana Johnson Mary Kern Kay Kirby Kay Klaveness Judy Kuhns Patty Jo LaCoke Leslie Lepar Donna Lunsford Deborah Marshall Delia Mays Susan McCanne Karen McCart Paula McClain Ann McKinney Frances McQueen Bernadine Mendieta Janet Miller Susan Nabors Emily Perry Clarke Susan Prescott Patty Proctor Kay Purdy Bill Rambo Beth Reeves Laurie Scott Julie Spring Shirley Stembridge Diane Steinert Jeanie Stokes Susan Stone Mary Ann Tate Johnanna Thames Virginia Thompson Susan Tipton Jan Warllck Bronwen Webb Jan Westervelt Jan Whigham Cathy Whiting educators one and all picnicing today, foreseeing the future Big conferences, little seminars — Education for others and self. Reeling and Writhing of course to begin with, and the different branches of arithmetic — Ambition, Distraction, Uglification and Deri- sion. Lewis Carroll The Megaphone Soap box for the masses — Integrity and guts, Coverage and uncoverage. Presenting new ideas, New Hope. Keep the discussion moving, And hopefully the readers alive. A newspaper is a circulating library with high blood pressure. Baer Mandy Weaver Genie Hackenjos Mary Callaway John Fields Lon Curtis Joe Cavitt Mike Jones Bruce Emmerton Bill Scarborough Francine Furlow Linda LaBella 114 Pi Delta Epsilon Genie Hackenjos Lon Curtis Mandy Weaver John Bigley Mike Jones Mary Callaway Judy Franze Sandi Roland Kathy Buescher John David Fields Glen Smith Joe Cavitt John Hummel Ad-selling a trip or two — Expression III expressing creativity, expressing the hours and toil of collegiate journalism An incurable itch for scribbling takes posses- sion of many, and grows inveterate in their insane breasts. Juvenal aiii vi SOUTHWESTERN MAGAZINE Editor J jdy Lynn Franze Fiction Beth Reeves Non-Fiction John Bigley Poetry Sandra Roland Art Director Barbara Brown Advisors John Cardwe II i Mrs. Lois Parker Graphics with words ideas and the art sketches of talent snatches of artistry— a literary cream. ' The ink of the sc holar is nore sacred than the blood of the mart Moh ammed 116 tw Alpha Chi MMMfttf « K P  f W - ( Honors Assembly — honored students Top ten percent — Scholastically well-done Learning ' s the thing: what are grades to the scholar? Accumulation of knowledge but wisdom the goal. The true strong and sound mind is the mind that can embrace egually things great and small. Johnson Jan Miller Diane Steinert Janet Beinke Gay Zaumeyer Rick Bilbie Carl Clarke Judy Franze Bradley Gould Diane Sandberg John Murrell Glenn Smith Larry Thomas Laura Youens Susan Youens Karen Wilke Emily Perry Clarke Amilia Alie Ken Bland Fred Griffin Andy McMullen Bernadine Mendietta Sandra Roland Ronnie Underwood Jan Westervelt 17 pr mm Sneed House Counci Janell Hutchison Kay Kirby Nancy Cariton Leslie Lepar Rosemary Meek Doty Davis Jeanie Allen Barbara Kelly Olwen Broderick Susan McCanne Clair Soodwyn Susan Stone Sneedies initiated: mystic b.s. and keys a year began a closeness, a fire; a seranade, goodbye to Joe ' s The Senior Women — Who ' s That a closeness in ending. Laura Kuykendall House Counci HBHHlHHHi Joan Halbert Mary Wieser Judy Donaldson Toni Nelson Laurie Scott Shannon Roberts Margie Stripling Barbara Turner Sharon Daughtrey Marilyn McKinley Kandace Kennedy Kay Klaveness Linda Doehne Elise Detweiler Martha McDougall Jean Keller Mary Faith Gean Karen Thompson Ann Tyrell Holly Sattler Margaret Funk Maureen Ingram Madaline Roberts Rosalind Porter Suzanne McKay Matilda Rose Tina Riley Katherine Prehn Joan Blaine Darlene Blackwood Trudy Carter Make a rule, break a rule Demerits and fools — Change for change ' s sake? For progress, for the times we live in. Open dorm — new ideas New people. All things must change To something new, to something strange. Longfellow 19 Herman Brown-Moody Shearn House Council Bill Shull Phil Watkins Kirky Kuykendall Bill Morrill Harry Blalock Mac Stringfellow Vic Gleichmann Ben Cunningham Dewayne Varnadore Tom Taylor John Dillard Jim Lawrence Denny Pickett Joe Cavitt Matt Roberts John Canafax Seek and find, they say Profs and coffee Dialogue and talk Seek and find — Lawrence Wharton on alcoholism Talk and find Open dorms once a month Open mind Seek and find. Then as grownups they seek and hope. Sandburg 120 Kurth House Counci Unison of voices trials and attributions — a council of government subduing rules for cobperaticn. Julie Spring Helen Andes Ann McKinney Tanis Gutowsky Janet Miller Nancy Dobkins Susan Inscore Gina Geldmeier Jan Westervelt Pam Bauer Susan Prescott Carol Baldwin 121 Ruter House Council John Bertschler Michael Yam Grady Roe David Deaton Tom Birdsong Bill Scarborough Project: dorm athletic eguipment and study-break parties. Floods: accidental and planned — Deadweek frenzy. A good crew to run the show. 122 II T I Women ' s Recreationa Association Margaret Seymour Louden Leslie Lepar Mandy Weaver Tanis Gutowsky Tudy Boatman Lana Johnson Linda Zerr Sandy Hale Carolyn Cochran Dawn Lewis Judy Donaldson Jeri Hargrove Susan Inscore Kathy Buescher Kaila Keisling Margaret Vance Mary Davis Basketballs and black e -yes- -a lesson in sportsmanship and skill Intramurals — Playtime at s. U. All work and no pic ly makes Jill a dull girl. — Anon. 123 Cardinal Key Miss Charlotte Taylor Theressa Stridde Mary Callaway Bonnie Brunson Lynn Aycock Karen Wilke Ann Brannon Gay Zaumeyer Sandra Roland Rosemary Meeks Mandy Weaver Martha Irvin Sherri Haygood Glenda Fikes Olwen Broedrick Leslie Lepar Judy Franze Doty Davis Barbara Kelly Mrs. Nichols Beth Reeves Jan Whigham Janell Hutchison Kay Purdy Campus tours anyone ? Honors and red ribbons — Challenge Grant solicitations And rewards — A challenge to succeed. Honor is the reward of virtue. Cicero 124 Blue Key Don Underwood Bob Grayson Roy Fuller Bill Hardt Ron Sandberg Dr. Lansford Lon Curtis Mr. Hummel Ron Underwood John Curry Dr. Peterson Floyd McSpadden Rick Bilbie Bob Dupuy Larry Thomas Carl Clarke Dr. Wm. B. Jones Bob Dupuy, President Drawn from the community, marked Parking attendants and guides : Working and living to serve. So are they all, all honorable men. ' by service: Shakespeare 125 ?? Sou ' wester Mary Callaway, editor Kathy Buescher, associate John David Fields, photographer Howard Martin, greeks Ken Johnson, athletics Melissa Kirkpatridc, copy Tee Rose, classes Cindy McDaniel, beauties and honors Alice Schorre Lon Curtis Fred Winslow John W. Cardwell, Advisor special thanks to photographers Bob Grayson Bill Bostelman Billy Stubblefield Breck Breckenridge Cletus Dodd Let us unite, let us hold each other tightly, let us merge our hearts, let us create — let us create for Earth a brain and a heart, let us give a human meaning to the superhuman struggle. Kazantazakis Panhellenic Barbara Kelly Nancy Dobkins Gail Todd Tica Davis Bonnie Hennington Jane Woodman Schrum Coordination — an interplay of ideas, Goodwill, the trying times — rush the rewarding times — victory, rules and rights in coordination. 130 Earl Walker Wally Pou Leonard Hoffman Sonny Blalock Louie Bustamante Jim Clarke Fred Griffin Amp Miller I.F.C Bill McCarver John Hartig Turner Caldwell Ken Johnson Floyd McSpadden John Mastin Tom Madsen Ronnie Underwood collectivism for strength: hashing out — a striving toward cooperation, constitutional amend- ments for drastic change: a body in harmony. 131 Alpha Delta Pi ■ ' X ■ ' ■■ :2v. M 35 5 2S- 26 ' |ri 32... t| 53 J a 4 j 7 Ira] ' lr m% to 132 -■ Janell Hutchison Judy Franze Melissa Kirkpatriclc Jan Miller Sandy Harvey Sharon Sweeny Sarah Hawthorne Melissa Hallman Terry Hill Kay Klaveness Sally Parr Ann Norton Barbara Bowles Becky Kelly Salli Goodall Nina Stephenson . Jr --A .: V . ;; . V ?j -v. X V„ A m f J 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. Ann Brannon Beverly Gustafson Mary Hooper Holly Sattler Suzette Rawlings Stacy Langston Debbie Hardin Julie Harrison Sharon Doughtrey Patty Poling Kit Rowley Susan Hendrick Jeri Hargrove Flora Thomas Marcene Perry Tina Dawe 33. Dawn Lewis 34. Vicki Granberry 35. Janie Phillips 36. Susan Wood 37. Rosemary Meek 38. Mary Ann Tate 39. Donna Barr NOT PICTURED: Valerie Wolfe Debbie Sonnen Deborah Dualline Cynthia House Paula McClain Barbara Brauer Diane Sandberg Barbara Kelly 133 Delta Delta Delta ¥%{M ¥ 1 If: f ! I -%,AY- 3 ■$ I 7 £• | f ' VV I ' M ' I 12 13- ' f S? ' at • -- ?o if 2 2 25 M 2S m -S 1 - ■ vV- -.; 134 m I QM y $-0 ' 27 28 f s 1 . Pam Broughton 2. Barbara Brown 3. Betty Mills 4. Theresa Stridde 5. Gail Todd 6. Peggy Phillips 7. Susie Nabors 8. Joan Blaine 9. Diane McCook 10. Karen Thompson I I . Alice Schorre 12. Pam Maki I 3. Ann Staton 14. Paula Bellegie I 5. Sherry Farmer 16. Annelle Fitzhugh 17. Kay Heffler 18. Frances McQueen 19. Libby Nutting 20. Maureen Ingram 21. Cathy Hall 22. Debbie Marshall 23. Jean Gibson 24. Betty Sue Storter 25. Carene Smith 26. Edna Rollins 27. Mandy Weaver 28. Joyce Wileman 29. Nancy Woodman 30. Jeannie Allen 31. Kay Kirby 32. Janet Beinke 33. Beth Reeves 34. Sally Clark 35. Virginia Dupuy 36. Susan Stone 37. Karen Curry 38. Martha Irvin 39. Lera Tyler 40. Sherry Strain 4 I . Susan McCanne 42. Margie Stripling 43. Katherine Prehn 44. Trudy Carter 45. Susan Tipton 46. Cathy Cockrell 47. Brenda Butler 48. Julie Spring 49. Tanis Gutowsky 50. Judi Kurth NOT PICTURED: Becky Lindsay Kandace Kennedy Jan Long Hanna Tucker Emily Clarke Judy Bulay Jan Whigham Jane Schrum Sara Schucany Mary Wieser Gayla Todd Tee Rose Rena Junod Ann Terril 135 ' -. •, - ' : r rm Tk ' r- BBBPHBPPR ? ' ;v --. ' Delta Zeta X?Uz ' M-J -;. r , : 4; Y- .V;. •■ ..■ ' A- ■■ ■fi$,S- 32-33 ;rffe l |l :•: f ' - |K ; : K --f : ; 3 fVI 78 ,il i H , ::?-4 i f :. f; ; Jl_ : 5 1 . 1 : id i . ' . • JasaJ ' 7 i ' 1 if . v ' £  . 136 m %(ZS 2 gt i 1 -ix -«.-, K ' t7 1. Mary Ann Richardson ' ft K 2. Loranita Burgess ■- V. ' . 3. Carolyn Cochran 4. Jean Gillespie 5. Marion Walshe 6. Gay Smith f-% 7. Shannon Roberts 8. Helen Thornton 9. Cay Dickson 10. 1 1. Betsy Hansberry Leslie Lepar 12 Susan Inscore r a- i 13. Lauran Spellman 1 ■tf- 14. 15. Lynnette Farr Betsy Hall €fed — ui 5 ' - , — - - •-- - - v ■ I 6. Lana Johnson 17. Ruth Klaerner 18. Laurie Scott 19. Tica Davis 20. Janie Weatherly 21. Madaline Roberts 22. Cheryl Broady 23. Barbara Byard 24. Martha Bailey 25. Janine Pitts 26. Dianne Weeks 27. Kathy Barrett 28. Sandi Cole 29. Kay Holmes 30. Janie Applin 3 I . Peggy Manofsky 32. Jean Krueger 33. Janice Williams 34. Beth Bohmfalk 35. Sharon Pudlo 36. Nancy Wray 37. Mary Selle 38. Suzanne McKay NOT PICTURED: Jane Lawson Cindy Thomas Alice Withrow Nancy Harris Bacchus Carol Ford - 37 Phi Mu j Vj i A3 3S- jw fvM iv! ,30 3 33 n- ?i if, ' , j: ' ! ' : - g . ' ' a - . vr L ®,1 1 ,fe 1. Ellen Pitcock 2. Marie Atlee 3. Jan Caldwell 4. Jan Adams 5. Editha Hunter 6. Jean Keller 7. Kaila Kiesling 8. Lydia Ovitz 9. Lise Berger 10. Carol Sweeny I I . Mancy Dobkins I 2. Gay Zaumeyer I 3. Mary Standifer I 4. Connie Gates I 5. Helen Andes 16. Nancy Bode 1 7. Mary Kern 18. Loine Simons 19. Lisa Carroll 20. Bronwen Webb 2 I . Winnann Stone 22. Judi Gregory 23. Cindy Truitt 24. Gail Kaiser 25. Shirely Stembridge 26. Sandy Roland 27. Carolyn Plagens 28. Mary Horn 29. Robin Walker 30. Mandy Hutchison 3 I . Joann Kullin 32. Bonnie Brunson 33. Linda Harris 34. Judy Donaldson 35. Susan Prescott 36. Karen Wilke 37. Kathy Whiting 38. Jeanie Stokes 39. Sharon Stevens 40. Margaret Lowden 41. Martha McDougall 42. Toni Nelson 43. Gail Blake 44. Marilyn McAuliffe NOT PICTURED: Shirley Ickes Patty LaCoke k 138 _ 139 Zeta Tau Alpha • - 3 £ 37 - :, 3 42 44 Wj 53. S ' ' ? 2e ' W J % ft c ; n ? ?■ •£ Y f I - -;4 S4 - 140 h ■i i-i;- : •08 0 ' ) So ,-f( ' % Vt If 1 y I . Olwen Broderick 2. Lynn Aycock 3. Janet Miller 4. Patti Procter 5. Carol Clearman 6. Carol Harvey 7. Joan Westervelt 8. Margaret Mings 9. Paula Forney 10. Claire Peel I I . Punkin CockreN I 2. Donna Lunsford I 3. Janice Miller I 4. Mary Osborne I 5. Sherri Haygood 16. Kay Purdy I 7. Cecille Haynie I 8. Laura Rodgers 19. Jan Westervelt 20. Pam Bauer 2 I . Francine Furlough 22. Linda Doehne 23. Bonnie Hennington 24. Vicki Adler 25. Ann McKinney 26. Karen McCart 27. Glenda Fikes 28. Ellen Swift 29. Camilla Peel 30. Lee Ann Waggoner 3 I . Donna Dildine 32. Valerie Hanna 33. Judy Kuhns 34. Dana Nicholson 35. Judy Hartzog 36. Suzanne Widdecke 37. Marsha Krause 38. Rosemarie Williams 39. Nancy Schleier 40. Meckie Crump 41 . Tudy Boatman 42. Joan Brindley 43. Margaret Vance 44. Meg Huebner 45. Carol Moody Hall 46. Susan Youens 47. Peggy Lowe 48. Mary Bull 49. Ann Hunter 50. Jean McSpadden 5 I . Jere Weed NOT PICTURED: Debbie Steffy Robin Burrell Elise Detweiler Pam Pratt Nancy Gentry Laura Youens Robin Burret Kappa Alpha %M :L$ lliiliiiiifi li i- if 3 ' 8 ;ij)|V; 4 i, BT ►WJ$L U iil ' j ' i -A ' j P J V-v; ■■.■ t.- Li ' ti :..-;i5.E.--y . 1. Jay Mead 23. Jack Phelps 45. Matt Morian 2. Lon Curtis 24. Steve Huey 46. Mick Ware 3. Rob Godsey 25. Bill Morrill 47. Jim Noland 4. Mark McKenzie 26. Larry Thomas 48. David Schade 5. Bill Hardt 27. Kirk Kuykendall 49. Steve McLeroy 6. Owen Stokes 28. Everett Schrum 50. Dick Ellis 7. Bill Olbrich 29. Walter Sheffield 5 1 . Bob Edmunson 8. Craig Jones 30. Chris Cahill 52. Tim Ware 9. Louie Bustamante 31. Rob Drake 53. Jeff Gilbreath 10. J. R. Keller 32. Steve Hailey 54. David Heatley 1 1. David Lone 33. Charlie Hart 55. Dewayne Varna dore 12. Jim Blakewell 34. Leonard Hoffman 56. Skipper Paisley 13. Lucian Hughes 35. Ben Hock 57. Scott Miller 14. Archie Milam 36. Ty Davenport 58. Bob Grayson 15. R. D. Andrews 37. Lyle Roberts 59. Ken Musgrave 16. Mike Freeman 38. Vic Gleickman 60. Gail Williams 17 Mark Lindell 39 Jim Adamson NOT PICTURED: 18 Richard Freeman 40. Bob Blakewell John Mansfield 19 Mark Stubblefield 41 Roy Fuller Bryan Heck 20 Randy Blair 42. John Denman Jerry Harmon 21 Randy Boyer 43 Harry Blaylock Art Bussey 22 Alan Drake 44 Wade Stansell 142 IBM 143 Kappa Sigma A ' . V ' K. ' rv, 3 g| S® 5° V ' 1 . Phantom 2. Bob Key 3. Ken Huddleston 4. Les Girvin 5. John Wright 6. Larry Cole 7. Scott Harpst 8. Mike Sefeldt 9. Cletus Dodd 10. Irl Walker I I . Harvel Loveless I 2. Jim Robertson I 3. Buzz Barton mu225 j j 144 fUI;i S M SWL ! I ... V v s-g Ai 14. Steve Crabb 15. Phil Peterson 16. Terry Richard I 7. Chuck Atkins I 8. Chuck Hains I 9. Jerome Davis 20. John Mastin 21 . Gary Sanson 22. Bruce Barrick 23. J. L. Love 24. Tom Madsen 25. John Legg 26. Robert Creech 27. Bill McCarver 28. Carlie Hargett 29. Art Olsen 30. Will Reagan 31. Joe Abel 32. Tom Birdsong 33. Gary Joyce 34. Ron Bell 35. Terry Key 36. Mark Blackbird 37. Bill Reeves 38. Tom Finley 39. Harry Crenshavi 40. Tommy Forbes 4 I . Frank Bauman 42. Roy Vadas 43. Mike Galloway NOT PICTURED: Spencer Marrow 145 Phi Delta Theta . ' I . tff W W MSi wy ■ . ... ! ■ . 2. i2 -ft ! 12 : m Zq ■t-3s m 27 || i. 3 ,. ■ - y J i-l.ri-- - ' -- ■ ■ - ' ' . ' ii i ;: 4;--i ,, jA ' -- ' ' . •. 146 £ t m Wm i 2 m 1 . Carl Hamilton 2. Ed Harris 3. Amp Miller 4. Larry Simpson 5. Gary Manford 6. Buddy Zeagler 7. Robbie Mathews 8. Zach Ballard 9. Tom Jarmon 10. Mike McGee I I. Ed Reynolds I 2. Mark Hodgkins I 3. Boo Hausser 14. Howard Martin 15. David True 16. Gayle Carpenter 17. Pat Wallace 18. Bill Ayres 19. Tim Caldwell 20. Derrill Elmore 2 I . David Deaton 22. Louis Braden 23. Tom Treadway 24. Matt Roberts 25. Jon Wood 26. Hugh Parrish 27. Bill Rawlings 28. Mac Stringfellow 29. Scott Douglas 30. Dwight Childress 31. Jay Hodgkins 32. Jay Ralph Tate 33. Bill Bradford 34. Randy Hood 35. Andy Lowry 36. Charlie Walne 37. Rob Youker 38. Jack Nichols 39. Mark Griffin 40. Tommy Taylor 41. Jim Leslie 42. Ben Cunningham 43. John Hartig 44. Jimmy Clark 45. Tom McDougall NOT PICTURED: Jim Waggoner Baxter Clark Bob Douglass John Johnson Bill Pratt Jim Sargent Richard Trotter Tom Bullock - z£g % 2 - 147 Pi Kappa Alpha . _■ ' ••; - faajgz Bill Rambo Dan Ryder Dick Murchison Howard Serber Bruce Sterk Andy McMullen John Curry Bob Kessler Joe Davidson Ken Klaveness Bob Snider Mr. E. C. True (Alumnus Counselor) Mrs. B. B. Boyette (House Mother) Jerry Prothro Fred Winslow Ken Johnson Bruce Hay Sam Macferran 148 19. Kearby Swofford 20. Terry Furgiuele 21. Wally Pou 22. Bill Kessler 23. C. J. Whigham 24. Bruce Edwards 25. Jim Foster 26. Ken Gorence 27. Jeff Brittor, 28. Joe Key 29. Lindsey Thompsor 30. Andy Welch 31. Mite Smith 32. David Bost 33. Blair Lohmeyer 34. Jay Stovall 35. Randy Madser, 36. Denny Pickett 52. Doug Brown 37. Wayne Price 53. Mike Leet 38. Burney Gibson 54. John Meeks 39. Jan Schullerbenger 55. Gary Fowler 40. Ray Ford 56. Joe Spezia 41. Tom Mi.ier 57. Jim Beard 42. Josh Jorriss 58. Charies Lockett 43. Chris Phillips NOT PICTURED: 44. Kim Furstenworth John David Fields 45. Charles Mason Henry Derwin 46. Tom Richardson Rod Howell 47. Gene Kinkaid Billy Stubblefield 48. Steve Salmon Jim Swift 49. Rick Holland Billy Lockett 50. Frank Harshman Glen Lich 51. Paul Spellman Ron Sandberg 149 ndependent Association Governing Board . _ 9 1 f l 1 , 1. Grady Roe 2. John Bigley. Pres. 3. Judy Campbell 4. Donna Conrad 5. Barbara Linney 6. Melmda Warner 7. Bill Scarborough 8. Jim McConnell 9. Clyde Watson 10. John Riley 1 I . Ernie Clark 12. Bill Fling 13. Dori Dana 14. Jan Williams 15. Will Harbaugh 16. Paul Bell NOT PICTURED: Kathie Warthen Rick Prather Ann Caldwell Martha Ann Chappel John Clifford Teresa Colvin Paul DeHaven 1 kc Bruce Emmerton Diana Fitsimmons Jan Gatlin Lydia Gardner Linda Grubb Nancy Ogilvie John Reeves Christina Riley Gail Rivers Patty Rundell Bill Sterling Margaret Tift Steve Welch Patsy Williams Tom Winzeler David Baulch Jolene Curry John Dillard Ed Massey Kerry Hope Glynn Langston Kenneth Shilkun Shaun Wicker Sponsor: MR. DON WINK HI 53 KA ROSE— Denise Choate 154 H1 m ' X IT w INDEPENDENT SWEETHEART— Judy Campbel PIKE DREAM GIRL— Jan Swallow 155 Pirate Cheeryleaders Tina Dawe Bill Ayres Maureen Ingram Ben Cunningham Lydia Gardner Boo Hauser 158 ■I 1 69 Pirate Basketbal Southwestern ' s Basketball Pirates finished the season in second place in the Big State Conference with a 6-4 win-loss record and a 14-11 record for the season. The Pirates began the season with a young and inexperienced team with only one returning starter. But they soon proved themselves to be a very fine team. One of the highlights of the season was the final game in which Southwestern came away with an exciting 78-74 overtime victory over the Conference leading St. Mary ' s Rattlers. It was an especially pleasing victory for Coach Bill Merritf whose Pirates had not beaten the Rattlers since he came to SU in 1965. Mike McGee, a junior transfer student, was named to the first team all-conference team and Ken Hoch and Gayle Carpenter were second team and honorable mention respectively. David Deaton, sophomore, a nd Robbie Matthews, freshman, rounded- out the starting line-up this year. Vernon Cross and Dan Stultz were the other lettermen. Coach Bill Merritt loses only one starter and returns six lettermen and three squadmen for next year. SU Opponent 54 Houston Baptist College 84 1 13 Northwood Institute 67 72 East Baptist College 71 63 Wayland College 58 103 Northwood Institute 53 74 Austin College 68 62 St. Edv ard ' s 65 60 Houston Baptist College 66 72 Baptist Christian 63 53 Southwest Texas State 80 70 St. Edward ' s 85 72 Texas Wesleyan College 64 63 East Texas Baptist 58 49 St. Mary ' s 59 47 Texas Lutheran College 49 45 Southwest Texas State 82 59 Trinity University 71 79 San Angelo State 76 67 East Texas Baptist 64 64 St. Edward ' s 60 72 Texas Wesleyan College 74 86 LeTourneau 65 65 Texas Lutheran College 61 76 LeTourneau 78 78 St. Mary ' s 74 ' Denotes Conference Game ttm 159 f - -wr Mike McGee All-Conference Team Vernon Cross Gayle Carpenter All-Conference Honorable Mention 160 in Ken Holley David Deaton Ken Hoch All-Conference Second Team Alan Lacy Mark Hodgkins Robbie Matthews 162 Track V ' - - Tom Richardson Tom Stewart Romie Maxey Wayne Price Karl Johnson Kenny Sadler Varsity Golf ' 69 W9 M mm £  Lf w LP R 1 H l v mhr [1 mk?mm : r% d I i E i ! J| ■ i ■■ L 1 W ; ii 1 9f i Ek R. M. Madley, Coach 165 Amp Miller s Wally Pou Jan D Tom Madsen 166 W I Ken Gorence lass Phil Watkins Lindsey Thompson 167 I J ! Karl Johnson Larry Simpson Varsity Baseball ' 69 168 Alan Lacy Ron Smith Top season hitter for the Pirates was shortstop Ken S adler with a .328 mark for the year. The Pirates finished the season with a 5-1 I worksheet with a freshman and sophomore-dominated squad. Second high for the year was pitcher Larry Simpson with a .317 mark, while third went to Ken Holley, a pitcher-first baseman, who averaged .3 14 for the year. Other top Pirate batsmen included centerfielder Larry Haynes with a .283 mark and outfielder Harry Crenshaw — the only senior on the team — with a .272 average. Top pitcher for the Bucs was Simpson with a 3-6 won-lost record but a 2.19 earned run average. Other pitching marks included Holley, a l-l record and a 4.33 ERA, and Robbie Matthews, a 1-3 record and a 4. 1 3 ERA. Top fielder for the Bucs was Simpson with a .962 fielding mark, while Matthews playing a variety of positions in addi- tion to pitching — had a .955 average. The Pirates had been slated to play a 23 game season, but bad weather reduced the total to the 16 games played. Head Coach Bill Merritt said that the year was a build- ing season. We had a lot of young players, and our youngsters have come along real well, he said. SU Opponent 2 Trinity 6 1 Baylor 2 7 St. Edwards 2 6 LeTourneau 8 LeTourneau 5 5 St. Edward ' s 7 2 East Texas Baptist 10 1 East Texas Baptist 7 St. Mary ' s 4 2 Philips 3 3 Nebraska 4 2 Texas Lutheran 6 2 Baylor 9 3 Texas Lutheran 10 2 Trinity 3 2 St. Mary ' s 6 denotes Conference games 169 f Harry Crenshaw Romie Maxey Jim Foster 170 m Larry Haynes Kenny Sadler Vernon Cross Robbie Matthews 171 9 Rand Fuller Bruce Edwards Big State Conference Doubles Champions Varsity Tennis ' 69 172 - H Wayne Price Louis Braden Men ' s Intramurals Football Phi Delta Theta Basketball Phi Delta Theta Softball Pi Kappa Alpha Golf Kappa Alpha MS i Swimming Kappa Alpha MJWW WUUi d $ mm 0 Um ' f 9 : wm m Track Pi Kappa Alpha 177 Women ' s Intramural Champs - m Alpha Delta Pi — Singles, Doubles Badminton . It ' 10 iM H-i-ttf MOM io f, I ! i! U UO. ' Zeta Tau Alpha — ,y Independents — Bowling Softball r 1 Phi Mu — Tennis Delta Zeta — Doubles, Phi Mu — Singles, Ping Pong T President Durwood Fleming i Dr. Roy Shilling, Executive Vice President Dr. Basil A. Phillips, Vice President for Fiscal Affairs 185 Francis Marlene Harmon, M.A. Dean of Women Deans Frederick Burr Clifford, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences 186 John David Richards, M.M.Ed. Dean of the School of Fine Arts William D. Swift, B.D. Dean of Students ■Hi Paul Grady Anderson Director of Admissions and Registration Sanford C. Reed Admissions Counselor James Anderson Reid Director, Annual Fund John W. Cardwell Director of Public Relations E. C. True Assistant Business Manager 187 Sarge Williams Dietitian and Supervisor of Commons Jacquelyn N. Kreger, R.N. University Nurse W. Jeremy Stringer, M.A. Director of Men ' s Housing Barry Browne Director, Martin Ruter Hal 188 Gene S. Klein Recorder Stayton A. Wood Program Director, Union ) Floyd B. Lackey Campus Engineer John N. Stone Director, Union 189 Mrs. Nichols Mrs. Cupit Mrs. Kinne y Housemothers Mrs. Goodnough Jeff Campbell, Ph.D. Herman Brown Professor of English Chairman of the Department June Chase, M.A. lostructor Department of English Virginia A. Carwell, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Charles T. DeShong, M.A. Assistant Professor Jane Brown McCoolc, A.M. Assistant Professor Lois W. Parker, M.A. Assistant Professor - ,,J Department of History and Government Sulc-Soon Sufi, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Government r J Frederick E. Gaupp, Ph.D. Professor of History and Government George C. Hester, LLD. Professor of History and Government H. Ren Kent, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History ., i+ idb%A5k ,. £- - f Martha M. Allen, M.A. Assistant Professor of History Charles E. Davis, B.A. Instructor in History and Government William B. Jones, Ph.D. Lucy King Brown Professor of History Chairman of the Department of History and Government 193 Department of Psychology William Douglas Hooker, Ph.D. Associate Professor Chairman of the Department Wendell L. Osborn, Ph.D. Associate Professor Department of Sociology |7 ■ • ■ ! k ft 0 ty jA jA Frank E. Luksa, Ph.D. Professor Chairman of the Department James R. Meurer, M.A. Instructor John N. R. Score, Ph. D. Professor John V. Berglund A.M. Associate Professor Department of Religion and Philosophy Norman W. Spellman, Ph. D. Chairman of the Division of Humanities Edmund H. Steelman, S.T.D. Chairman of the Department Chaplain Charles A. Neal, S.T.M. Assistant Professor Harvey D. Watts, A.M. Associate Professor Elizabeth P. Beaver, A.M. Assistant Professor of Foreign Languages William T. Wingo, Jr., B.A. Assistant Professor of German Department of Foreign Languages 196 John H. Hummel, A.B. Assistant Professor of French J. Manuel Sanchez de Bus+aman+e, D.L Assistant Professor of Spanish Francisco Betancourt, M.A. Assistant Professor of Foreign Languages A Department of Education Judson S. Custer, Ph.D. Professor of Education and Psychology Chairman of the Department Gordon E. Burks, M.Ed. Instructor William J. Anderson, M.S. Assistant Professor T. P. Jones, Ph.D. Professor 197 Eb Carl Girvin, Ph.D. Professor and Chairman of the Department of Biology Fred R. Hilgeman, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Departments of Biology and Chemistry Edwin M. Lansfcrd, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Biochemistry Sherman D. Lesesne, Ph.D. Professor and Chairman of the Department of Chemistry 198 Robert L Soulen, Ph.D. Lillian Nelson Pratt Professor of Chemistry Horace Samuel Jacob, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology ==— T- v-1 j if Mary Elizabeth Wilcox, A.M. Associate Professor of Mathematics Ralph Martin Whitmore, Ph.D. Chairman of Department Mathematics Robert Marion Brown, Ph.D. Chairman of the Department of Physics John Barnes Chapman, M.S. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Departments of Physics and Math Corre W. Berry, M.A. Assistant Professor of Physics 199 Ludwig H. Merzbach, Ph.D. Chairman of the Department of Economics and Business Leonard F. Giesecke, M.A. Assistant Professor Irene Deupree. A.M. Chairman of the Department of Home Economics i ■■■■■ ' : ' ■ ' i3WW ■ii rwt w% Jim L Bridges, M.A. Assistant Professor Elizabeth Lundblad, A.M. Associate Professor Departments of Business, Economics, and Home Economics , Lawrence W. Bates, M.S. Instructor (part time) Department of Physical Education R. M. Medley, A.M. Director of Athletics William L Merritt, M.S. Assistant Professor of Physical Education Tibb Burnett, B. Mus. Ed. Instructor (part time) Myron H. Dees, Ed.D. Associate Professor of Physical Education Mildred M. Usher Assistant Professor of Physical Education 201 R. Angus Springer, Ph.D. Professor Chairman, Dept. Drama and Speech Robert L. Lancaster, M.A. Associate Professor Chairman, Dept. of Art (Sculptor) Jon D. Wink, M.F.A. Assistant Professor of Art Drusilla Huffmaster International Piano Artist in Residence 202 Chairman, Dept. of Piano F. Ellsworth Peterson, Ph.D. Margaret Root Brown Professor of Fine Arts Robert W. Schmidt, M.S.Ed. Assistant Professor of Speech and Drama Raymond Lee Schroeder, M.M. Assistant Professor of Music, Director of Orchestra Claude L Kennard, M.A. Assistant Professor of Art Louise Toth, B.F.A. Juilliard Artist Diploma Instructor in Voice R. Cochrane Penick, Sac. Mus. M. Associate Professor and Chairman of the Dept. of Organ and Sacred Music Thomas C. Douglass, M.M. Professor and Chairman, Dept. of String Instruments F. Lewis Woodward, M.M.Ed. Assistant Professor and Chairman of the Dept. of Voice D. Edwin Heenan, M.M. Assistant Professor of Piano and Low Strings 203 SENIORSENIORSENIORSENIORSENIORSENIORIORSENIC AMELIA ALIE Malaysia; Chemistry; Southwestern Science Society, Secretary JEAN C. ALLEN Waco; English; Union Dance Com- mittee; L. K. Kurth House Coun- cil; Secretary of Kurth; Vice Pres- ident of SNEA; Mask and Wig; Delta Delta Delta, Rush; W.R.A.; A.W.S.; Sneed Fire Marshall NANCY HARRIS BACCHUS Austin; English; Delta Zeta ; SNEA CAROL BALDWIN Kerrville; Economics JANET BEINKE Richardson; History; Delta Delta Delta, Scholarship, Chaplain; Pro- gram Chrm, AWS; Secretary of Alpha Chi; Secretary of Pi Gam- ma Mu; SNEA; WRA; Treasurer, Kurth House Council; Dance Com- mittee WILLIAM J. BENNETT Georgetown; Psychology; New Activist Steering Committee; Cul- tural Affairs Committee RICKBILBIE San Benito; History; Pre-Law So- ciety; Dean ' s List; Scholar ' s Pro- gram; Pi Gamma Mu; Vice Pres- ident; Alpha Chi; Counselor; Senior Representative to Judiciary; Teach- ing Assistant GAYLE BLAKE Mercedes; Elementary Education; Phi Mu Pledge Director, Song Leader; NEA; WRA; Distinction List JIM BLAKEWELL Fort Worth; Chemistry; Kappa Al- pha; President, Photography Club; President, Speleological Society EVELYN BOONE Houston; Elementary Education; NEA; LK House Council, Senate Representative; WRA; Independent SUSAN BOWYER Houston; Psychology; Student Life Council; Women ' s Ad visory; Disci- pline and Assembly Committee, Miss Southwestern Nominee; Who ' s Who BILL BRADFORD Annadale, Virginia; Chemistry; Phi Delta Theta 204 OLWEN BRODERICK Luf kin ; English; President, Secretary of Zeta Tau Alpha; Vice President Union Program Council and Govern- ing Board; Chairman and Vice Chairman Leadership Board; Un- ion Directorate ' s Representative to Governing Board; Spanish Club; SNEA; WRA; AWS; MSM; Kurth and Sneed House Council; Who ' s Who; Cardinal Key; Miss South- western Nominee; Executive Com- mittee JOYCE S. BRONAUGH Burnet; Math JUDITH CHADWICK BULAY Dallas; Psychology; Alpha Chi; Cardinal Key; President Delta Delta Delta; Honor Council; Miss Southwestern Nominee; Who ' s Who. BRENDA BUTLER Houston; Math; Delta Delta Delta Publicity Chairman; Student Con- gress; Student Welfare Commis- sion; UCM; Union Film Co. CAMILLA B. BUTLER Burnet; Elementary Education JOHN F. CANAFAX Cleburne; Business NANCY SUE CARLTON San Angelo; French; UCM; Total Living Seminar Co.; Ideals and Issues JOSEPH V. CAVITT Rockport; Economics; Independent Assn.; Pre-Law Society; Publicity Chairman; Pi Gamma Mu; Pi Delta Epsilon; Megaphone; Moody- Shearn and Herman-Brown House Council: Younq Republicans ERNEST L CLARK Round Rock; Piano; Extraordinares; Band; Independent Assn. 205 CARL T.CLARKE Georgetown; Humanities; Blue Key; Alpha Chi; UCM, President; Who ' s Who EMILY PERRY CLARKE Georgetown; English; Delta Delta Delta, Service Projects Chairman- UCM; Senate JAMES H. CLARKE, JR. Dallas; Chemistry; Phi Delta Theta, President; Honor Council; Vice President of IFC JOHN CLIFFORD Georgetown, History; Varsity Ten- nis; A ' Capella Choir; UCM; In- dependent Assn.; Pi Gamma Mu; Extraordinares CONNIE COMINGORE Houston; Spanish; UCM, Treas- urer; Scholar ' s Program ROBERT F. CONN Kirbyville; Government; Pre-Law Society HARRY CRENSHAW Georgetown; Chemistry; Kappa Sigma, President; Letterman ' s Assoc; Blue Key; Mask and Wig, President; Junior Class, Vice Pres- ident; IFC, President; Rep. Student Judiciary F. FLEMING CRIM, JR. Waco; Chemistry, Physics; Pi Kap- pa Alpha; Alpha Chi; Blue Key; Science Society, President; Who ' s Who; Bishops Memorial Union, President KAREN CURRY Houston; Sociology; Delta Delta Delta, Corresponding Secretary; Kurth House Council, Secretary DOROTHY DAVIS Tyler; Christian Education; Car- dinal Key, President; A ' Capella Choir; Extraordinares; Student Ju- diciary H. PARKER DAVIS Baytown; Business; Kappa Alpha, Treasurer STEPHEN E. DAVIS Dallas; Chemistry; Kappa Alpha, President; Science Society; Scho- lars Program; Welch Foundation grant for chemical research C. DAVID DETWEILER Houston; Math; Ruter House Coun- cil, President ROBERT B. DOUGLASS Dallas; Psychology; Phi Delta Theta SUZETTE DOYLE Houston; Sociology; Mask and Wig; AWS; WRA; Kurth House Coun- cil; Independents Assoc. 206 JOHN D. FIELDS Sonora; Economics; Pi Kappa Al- pha, President, Vice President, Pledge Trainer; Pre-Law Vice Pres- ident; Blue Key; Pi Gamma Mu; Pi Delta Epsilon; Megaphone; An- JUDY FRANZE Bryan; English; Alpha Delta Pi, Rush Chairman; AWS, Vice Pres- ident; Jr. Class Secretary; Cardinal Key; Who ' s Who; Alpha Chi; Pi Delta Epsilon; Magazine Editor; All- School Beauty ' 66- ' 67; Homecoming Queen ' 68- ' 69; Nominee for Miss Southwestern; Choir; Union Pro- gram; UCM; WRA; Dean ' s List; Editorial Board; Academic and Cultural Events Committee, Schol- ar ' s Program RANDALL FRIZZELL Houston; Government; Kappa Al- pha; Pre-Law TERRY FURGIUELE Houston; Biology; Pi Kappa Alpha, Vice President; Science Society, Vice President; Blue Key; Union Program, Vice President, Commit- tees; Orientation Leader; Dean ' s List; Union Governing Board; Men ' s Intramural Council ROBERT GOMEZ Corpus Christi; Humanities; Union Committees; UCM; Congressman CLAIR GOODWYN Cuero; Biology; Independent Wo- men; Mask and Wig; Union Com- mittees; Alpha Chi; Science So- ciety, Secretary, Treasurer; Sneed House Council GENIE HACKENJOS Houston; German; Megaphone Edi- tor; Pi Delta Epsilon, President BETSY HALL Dallas; History; Delta Zeta, Sec- retary, Rush BILL HARDT Beaumont; History; Kappa Alpha, Secretary; All Men ' s Judiciary; Shearn-Brown House Council; Who ' s Who; Blue Key; Pi Gamma Mu; Editorial Board; Orientation Leader 207 EDWARD J. HARRIS Georgetown; History; Phi Delta Theta JOHN HARRIS Waco; Psychology; Kappa Alpha; Megaphone, Editorial Board; All Intramural Football JOHN L. HARTIG, II APO New York; Chemistry; Phi Delta Theta an si - f arte . ie ! . 1 . ▼ 4 i P - sUk x 1 r JUDY HARTZOG Bay City; Elementary Education; Zeta Tau Alpha, Social Chairman Mask and Wig; Kurth House Coun- cil; NEA; WRA EMILY BAKER HESTER Georgetown; Math KENNETH R. HOCH Oley, Penn.; Physical Education; Basketball Team BENJAMIN A. HOCK Temple; History; Kappa Alpha, No. VIII CYNTHIA OUALLINE HOUSE Conroe; Music Education; A ' Ca- pella Choir; -Alpha Delta Pi, Chap- lain; Beauty Review; Delta Omi- cron; NTA; Extraordinares JUDY HOUSE Conroe; Elementary Education 208 Mi KIRK D.HUFFMAN Garland; Economic;: Pre-Law So- ciety; Student Welfare Commis- sion Chairman; MSM; Hospitality Committee JANELL HUTCHISON Bryan; Elementary Education; Car- dinal Key; Pi Gamrna Mu; Sneed House Council, President; SNEA, President BARBARA J. KELLY Houston; Religion; Alpha Delta Pi; Cardinal Key, Vice President; Pan- hellenic, President; Leadership Board, Chairman BILL KESSLER Uvalde; Accounting; Pi Kappa Al- pha, Treasurer; Pre-Law Society KAY KIRBY Wichita Falls; Elementary Education; Delta Delta Delta, Treasurer; Kurth House Council, President; Sneed House Council, Vice President HAROLD D. KUYKENDALL, JR. Sugarland; Psychology; Bishops Memorial Union; Kappa Alpha; Governing Board JIM LAWRENCE Taylor; Business LESLIE J. LEPAR Waco; Elementary Education and P.E.; President, Treasurer, Delta Zeta; President, Vice President, WRA; AWS Advisory Council; Un- ion Committees, NEA Treasurer REBECCA A. LINDSAY Austin; Biology; Scholarship Chair- man, Delta Delta Delta; Science So- ciety; UCM; Scholars ' Program JEFF L LOVE Del Rio; Government; Kappa Sig- ma, Vice President Young Repub- licans LUKE L LUCAS Houton; Math; Phi Delta Theta; Basketball and Baseball Teams SUSAN McCANNE Beaumont; Biology; Delta Delta Delta; LK and Kurth House Coun- cils; Sneed Secretary; Distinction List, SNEA, Union Committee, Sci- ence Society KAREN McCART Denton; Elementary Education; Zeta Tau Alpha; AWS; NEA PAULA McCLAIN Georgetown; Elementary Education; Alpha Delta PI; Panhellenic JIM McCONNELL Bellaire; General Business; A ' Ca- pella Choir; Independents Assn.; Student Congress 209 111 TOM McDOUGALL San Antonio; Business; Varsity Bas- ketball; Letter-man ' s Club; Treas- urer, Phi Delta Theta LAGNAF DELIA MAYS Freeport; Elementary Education; Delta Delta Delta; NEA, AWS; Congress Secretary; Band; Or- chestra; UCM; Union Committee JAY MEAD San Antonio; History; Kappa Al- pha ROSEMARY MEEK Beaumont; Music Education; Al- pha Delta Pi; A Capella Choir; Choraliers; UCM AMP MILLER, III Dallas; Chemistry; Senate; Pledge- master, Phi Delta Theta; Herman Brown House Council; Megaphone; Science Society; I FC Council; Golf Team JAN MILLER Stephenville; Sociology; Who ' s Who; Cardinal Key; Pi Gamma Mu; Alpha Chi, President; Vice President, Treasurer, Alpha Delta Pi; Senate Treasurer; Directory Editor; Treasurer, AWS; Dean ' s List; Assemblies, Orientation Committee BILLOLBRICH, JR. Pasadena; History; Kappa Alpha, Vice President, Secretary; Pre-Law Society; German Club; Dean ' s List MARY OSBORNE Houston; Math; Zeta Tau Alpha, Secretary, Treasurer; WRA DAVID PENA Denison; Rel ' gion; Pi Kappa Al- pha; Ruter House Council Pres- ident; UCM PAM PRATT Bronx, New York; Sociology; Zeta Tau Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu WAYNE PRICE Mineola; Biology; Science Society; Pi Kappa Alpha PATTI PROCTER Beaumont; Elementary Education; Zeta Tau Alpha, Corresponding Secretary; Secretary International Affairs; NEA; WRA; MUN; Dream Girl Nominee KAY PURDY Houston; Elementary Education; Zeta Tau Alpha, Pledge Trainer, Vice President; Vice-Chairman Union Committee; Cardinal Key; NEA, Vice President; Cheerleader HAROLD RAMM Florence; Physical Education MARC RANEY Lake Jackson; Psychology; Senate, Vice President; Liaison Committee; Student Life Council; Dorm Coun- selor; UCM; Phi Delta Theta; Who ' s Who 210 BETH REEVES Wichita Falls; English; AWS Re- cording Secretary, Delta Delta Del- ta Recording Secretary, Pi Gam- ma Mu, Cardinal Key LAURA ROGERS Menard; Government; Zeta Tau Alpha, Kurth House Council RALPH RUSSELL, JR. Georgetown; Chemistry; Independ- ent Assn. DIANE GREER SANDBERG Georgetown; English; Dean ' s List, Scholars Program, MSM, Most Out- standing Sophomore Woman, Poetry Expression I, Union Com- mittee Vice Chairman and Evalua- tion Board, UCM Council, Secre- tary, Senate, Pi Gamma Mu, Sec- retary, Alpha Chi, Homecoming Queen, Alpha Delta Pi, President Pledge Trainer, Women ' s Advisory, Congress, Cardinal Key, Who ' s Who, Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl, Miss Southwestern JOHN RONALD SANDBERG Georgetown; Government; Fresh- man and Sophomore Class Presi- dent, Chairman and Vice Chairman Union Committee, Science Society; Senate; HonoF Council Blue Key, Secretary; Students ' Assn. Pres- ident; Pi Gamma Mu; Pi Kappa Alpha; I FC Rep.; Residence Hall Counselor; Who ' s Who; UCM; Scholar ' s Program BRIAN S. SCHROEDER Richardson; Math; Basketball; Ruter House Council JANE WOODMAN SCHRUM Dallas; Music Education; Delta Del- ta Delta; WRA; AWS; A Cappella Choir; Panhellenic CHARLES R. SETTLES, JR. San Antonio; Chemistry KENNETH F. SHILKUN Sugarland; Biology; Independents Assn., Social Chairman; Ruter House Council 21 JULIE SPRING Austin; History; Delta Delta Delta; L. K. Rep. and Fire Marshall; Kurth House Council Fire Marshall and President; Union Committee; Leadership Board and Lab; WRA; AWS. DIANE STEINERT Fort Worth; History; L. K. Pres- ident; AWS Corresponding Secre- tary; Union Vice-Chairman; Pi Gamma Mu; Cardinal Key SUSAN STONE Dallas; Elementary Education; Del- ta Delta Delta Senate Rep., Cor- responding Secretary, Recommenda- tion Chairman; Union Committee; Kurth and Sneed House Council; WRA; SNEA Historian; Dean ' s Distinction List THOMAS J. STOVALL, III Houston; Business; Pi Kappa Alpha House Manager MARVIN K. SWOFFORD, JR. Houston; History; Pi Kappa Al- pha; Varsity Track; UCM JOHNANA THAMES Kenedy; English; Union Director- ate; Union Vice-Chairman; Leader- ship Board; MSM; UCM Treas- urer; Worship Committee Chair- man; WRA Council; Governing Board; Orientation Leader; Pi Gamma Mu FRANCINEFURLOW THRASLER Houston; Speech and Drama; L. K. House Council; Leadership Lab; Union Committee; Mask and Wig Players; Pi Epsilon Delta; Zeta Tau Alpha Chaplain and Ritual Chair- man; Megaphone LARRY W. THOMAS Dallas; English; Kappa Alpha Vice- President; Blue Key Vice-President; Alpha Chi; UCM HANNA HANNAN TUCKER Georgetown; Biology; Delta Delta Delta Trident Corr.; Young Demo- crats, Secretary JAMES P. WAGNER Overijse, Belgium; Chemistry; Phi Delta Theta Warden and Social Chairman CORNEL W. WALKER Georgetown; Hislory; Phi Delta Theta Librarian; Letterman ' s Club EDWARD M. WARE, JR. Wa,co; Biology; Kappa Alpha JAN WHIGHAM Pecos; Elementary Education; Delta Delta Delta Sports Capt., Trident Corr., Publicity Chairman, Mar- shall; Senate; A ' Capella Choir; Cardinal Key; NEA Publicity Chair- man; L. K. House Council; WRA; Assembly Committee; Student Counselor SUZANNE WIDDECKE Fort Worth; Sociology; Zeta Tau Alpha Social Chairman JOYCE WILEMAN Winnie; Elementary Education; Del- ta Delta Delta Fraternity Educa- tion Chairman; TSEA; Cardinal Key Historian; Pi Epsilon Delta; Mask and Wig Players; Goosetree-Mor- gan Award; L. K. and Kurth House Council; WRA Reporter; Union Committee ; Senate; Pi Kappa Al- pha Dream Girl Nominee 212 II y I KAREN WILKE Houston; Math; Phi Mu. Social Chairman; Student Judiciar ; Arts Committee JAN WILLIAMS Sawyer AFB, Michigan, Music Edu- cation; Delta Omicron, Treasurer; Independent Assn.; Concert Band, Sinfonietta PATSY WILLIAMS Dallas; Music Education; Delta Omi- cron; UCM; Independent Assn., Program Chairman JIM WILSON Georgetown; Business MILLARD ZEAGLER, JR. Lufkin; Business; Phi Delta Theta, Pledgetrainer; Brown-Shearn House Council, Treasurer LINDA ZERR San Antonio; Elementary Education; UCM; WRA; Sports Team Captain; Vice President, NEA SANDRA PRETTY ABSTON Georgetown; Elementary Education JOYCE M. ANDERSON Round Rock; Elementary Education; NEA RONALD M. BELL Houston; Business; Kappa Sigma DON EARL BERRY Belton; History FLOYD G. BETTS, III Tyler; Biology; Kappa Alpha DAVIS R. BLANTON Texas City; Accounting; Phi Delta Theta; Varsity Basketball W. BEN CLENDENIN Dallas; English; Senator; Cheerleader; Megaphone; Counselor; UCM CAROLYN J. COCHRAN Pasadena; Business; Delta Zeta-Rush Chairman; WRA; Young Republicans; Panhellenic STEPHEN C. CRABB Waco; Business; Kappa Sigma T. LON CURTIS Belton; _ History; Kappa Alpha Cor- responding Secretary; Megaphone Assoc. Editor; Pi Delta Epsilon President; Pr e - Law Society; Brown-Shearn House Coun- cil; Senate J. WILLIAM DEFOREST San Antonio; Biology; Phi Delta Theta Scholarship, Chaplain; UCM ROBERT W. DUPUY Marshall; Pi Kappa Alpha; Blue Key President: UCM Council; Who ' s Who SUSAN J. ELLIOTT Houston; English; Union Committee; Housing Committee; Senate MARY EAST FIELDER Austin; Bology SINA LEE GELDMEIER Roresville; Drama; WRA; Mask and Wig; Kurth House Council CHET GUTOWSKY McAllen; History and Economics; Kappa Sigma Vice-President and Secretary RONALD E. HALE San Antonio; Business; Pi Kappa Alpha LAMOINE M. HALL, III Fort Worth; History RAY P. HODGES, JR. Georgetown; Business WILLIAM E. HUFFHINES, III Beaumont; Biology; Kappa Alpha LANA RAE JOHNSON Houston; English; Delta Zeta Social Chairman, Panhellenic; AWS Program Chairman; WRA MICHAEL J. JONES San Antonio; Business; Basketball Man- ager; Baseball Manager LEIGHTON PinS KELLY Austin; Business; Pi Kappa Alpha RANKIN H. KOCH Georgetown; Sociology; Lettermen ' s Assn. Secretary-Treasurer PATTY JO LACOKE San Antonio; Math; Phi Mu Chaplain, Treasurer; Union Committee; WRA; NEA; Mask and Wig; Pi Gamma Mu; Science Society Distinction List WILLIAM R. LOCKETT, JR. San Antonio; Business; Pi Kappa Alpha; Golf HARVEL LOVELESS, JR. Houston; Chemistry; Kappa Sigma Pres- ident and Secretary; IFC Treasurer JAMES R. LUND Houston; Economics and History JOHN S. MANSFIELD Houston; Drama; Kappa Alpha Record- ing Secretary; Pi Epsilon Delta; Mask and Wig; Goosetree-Morgan Award WILLIAM M. McCALL Yellowstone, Wyoming; Chemistry; Phi Delta Theta JANICE MILLER Houston; English; Zeta Tau Alpha JEAN M. MITCHELL Austin; Piano DAVID H. MOORE Galena Park; Math CINDY GALBREATH MURRELL Sonora; Drama; Mask and Wig Secre- tary DONALD W. NOBLES Belton; Piano; Band; Orchestra WALTER B. NORRIS Georgetown; Psychology; Phi Delta Theta JERRY R. PROTHRO Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Government; Student ' s Association DEE WEISSINGER REID Georgetown; Psychology; Delta Zeta; Pi Gamma Mu; WRA Young Republicans WILLIAM H. SHULL Houston; Math; Brown-Shearn House Council R. GLEN SMITH Georgetown; Art; Pi Delta Epsilon Vice- President THOMAS W. STEWART Salado; Philosophy; Mood Hall Council; SCA; Brown Council President JANELL PINKSTON STEWART Salado; English MARTHA LOFTIN SULLIVAN Houston; Elementary Education; Delta Zeta GENE S. TERRY Georgetown; History; Kappa Alpha MARGARET R. VANCE Taylor; English; Zeta Tau Alpha; Kappa Alpha Rose CORNEL W. WALKER Randolph AFB; History; Phi Delta Theta; Letterman ' s Club PHIL O. WARLICK Dallas; Biology; Kappa Alpha Treasurer EDWARD A. WILLIFORD, III Georgetown; Business JOHN W. WRIGHT, JR. Georgetown; Business; Kappa Sigma SUSAN YOUENS Bellaire; Piano; Zeta Tau Alpha; Delta Omicron LAURA YOUENS Bellaire; Piano; Detla Omicron Pres- ident; Zeta Tau Alpha; Alpha Chi; Scholars Program 213 JUNIORJUNIORJUNIORJUNIORJUNIORJUNIORSJUNIOF HELEN ANDERSON Houston HELEN ANDES Houston MARIE ATLEE 1 mm m ' Austin W LYNN AYCOCK Trinity DONNA BARR San Antonio MARY HELEN BENGEL Denison SAM BERTRON, II! Houston JOHN BERTSCHLER Galveston KEN BLAND Midland JIM BANKSTON Malakoff HARRY BLAYLOCK, III Birminaham, Ala. ANN BRANNON She :l« BRECK BRECKENRIDGE Midland JIM BRITTON Dallas BONNIE BRUNSON Houston BARBARA BYARD Galveston 214 MARY CALLAWAY Bellaire LINDA CERVENKA Georgetown CATHY COCKRELL San Antonio SANDRA COLE McGregor JOHN CURRY Pampa JOE DAVIDSON Houston JOHN DILLARD Richardson NANCY DOBKINS Houston BILL FLING El Paso ROY FULLER Baytown KIM FURSTENWERTH Dallas NANCY GENTRY Abilene PAUL GILBERT Houston JUD GRAVES Kermit BOB GRAYSON Calgary, Alberta FRED GRIFFIN Piano TANIS GUTOWSKY McAllen FRANK HARSHMAN Houston SHERRI HAYGOOD Houston DAVID HEATLEY Beaumont 215 snow BONNIE HENNINGTON Beaumont JOHN HITZ Dallas KAY HOLMES Dallas JOHN HUDSPETH Austin EDITHA HUNTER Silsbee KENT HUTTON Dalhart MARTHA IRVIN Freeoort MOLLY JOHNSON Houston 216 MIKE JONES San Antonio GAIL KAISER Taylor MARY KERN Burnet BOB KESSLER Uvalde STEVE KREGER Georgetown JUDI KURTH Luf kin MARGARET SEYMOUR LOUDEN San Antonio SAM LOVE Taylor PEGGY LOWE Belton RICHARD LUDERUS San Antonio DONNA LUNSFORD Fort Worth MARK McKENZIE Fort Stockton ANDY McMULLEN Weslaco BOB MANN Richardson CAROL PIRRUNG MANN Mesquite BERNADINE MENDIETA Austin 217 ARCHIE MILAM Sugarland TONI NELSON Dallas BOB NIELSON Houston PAM PEAVY Waco MARCENE PERRY Atlanta, Georgia TOMMY PORTER Georgetown WALLY POU Irving SUSAN PRESCOTT Temple SUZETTE RAWLINGS Tyler ED REYNOLDS, III E Dallas L w GRADY ROE HP%i i Devine ARNOLD SAFARIK Thrall EVERETT SCHRUM Sugarland BILLSHULL Houston LARRY SIMPSON Grand Saline GAY SMITH Angleton RICK SPRADLIN Houston LARRY STANBERRY Dallas SHIRLEY STEMBRIDGE Dallas SHARON STEVENS Temple 218 DENNIS STOUT Houston THERESA STRIDDE Bay City ELLEN SWIFT ellaire JIM SWIFT Georgetown MARY ANN TATE Justin FLORRA THOMAS Bellaire SUSAN TIPTON Weslasco BOB TRUITT Midland DON UNDERWOOD Wichita Falls RON UNDERWOOD Wichita Falls PHILWATKINS Midland MANDY WEAVER Corpus Christ! GREG WILLIAMS Houston ROSEMARIE WILLIAMS Houston FRED WINSLOW Austin CLARENCE WUTHRICH Georgetown GAYZAUMEYER San Antonio 219 OPHOMORESOPHOMORESOPHOMORESOPHOMORES LINDA ABBETT Austin JIM ADAMSON Houston VICKI ADLER Boerne ZAKARIA ALI Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia LEE ELLEN ARNOLD Atlanta MARTHA BAILEY Corpus Christi KATHLEEN BARRETT Bay City BRUCE BARRICK Lubbock PAM BAUER Houston TOM BECK Midland DANNY BELL Cedar Park PAUL BELL Dallas HOWARD BIELSS Jarrell JOHN BIGLEY Muldoon MARK BLACKBIRD Houston DARLENE BLACKWOOD San Antonio 220 JOAN BLAINE Fort Worth BOB BLAKEWELL Fort Worth TUDY BOATMAN Houston NANCY BODE Austin BARBARA BOWLES San Marcos BARBARA BRAUER Lampasas JOAN BRINDLEY Temple PAM BROUGHTON Waco BARBARA BROWN Houston DOUG BROWN, III Beaumont DAVID BUERSTETTA Houston KATHY BUESCHER Houston TURNER CALDWELL, III Clarendon JUDY CAMPBELL Dickinson KATHY CARSON Houston TRUDY CARTER Del Rio SALLY CLARK Fort Worth CAROLE CLEARMAN Hereford DAVID CLIFFORD Georgetown ELVA COCKRELL Houston . ' . EMT 221 DONNA CONRAD San Angelo DORI DANA Carlinville, III. SHARON DAUGHTREY San Benito TICA DAVIS Pasadena DAVID DEATON San Antonio JOHN DENMAN Nevada, Missouri JUDY DONALDSON Euless DIANA FITSIMMONS Pierre, S. Dakota ALICIA FREELAND Bellaire MARGARET FUNK Dallas JEAN GIBSON Temple VIC GLEICHMANN Uvalde JUDI GREGORY Bryan JUDYGUNN Baytown CLAY, HALL, III Overton WILL HARBAUGH Houston TERRY HARES Dallas JERI HARGROVE Mart JERRY HARMON Crowley, La. JULIE HARRISON Bellville 222 CHARLES HART Midland AL HEBERT Houston TERRI HILL San Antonio LEONARD HOFFMAN Dallas KENNY HOLLEY Waco RANDOLPH HOOD Wichita Falls ROD HOWELL Houston MEG HUEBNER College Station 223 II ANN HUNTER San Angelo SUSAN INSCORE Leakey DON IVERSON Moraga, California SCOTT JENKINS Orange BOB KARR Pampa KAILA KEISLING El Indio LIZ KELLEY Houston TERRY KEY Lubbock MELISSA KIRKPATRICK San Antonio RUTH KLAERNER Fort Worth KAY KLAVENESS Houston JUDY KUHNS Denver, Colorado JOANN KULLIN Harlingen LINDA LA BELLA Arlington FRANK LANG North Point, Hong Kong JOHN LAWRENCE Bryan 224 MARK LINDELL Taylor CHARLES LOCKETT San Antonio CYNTHIA McDANIEL Monahans MARILYNN McKINLEY Pearsall BOB McLEROY Gainesville STEVE McLEROY Houston PEGGY MANOFSKY Beaumont HOWARD MARTIN Houston REYNALDO MEZA, Jr. San Antonio JANET MILLER Houston BILL MORRILL Beeville JANEMUNDEN McLean, Virginia STEWART NEBLETT Houston ART OLSON Houston HUGH PARRISH Oranqe CAMILLA PEEL Houston JANE LAWSON Houston MIKE LEET Austin GLEN LICH Comfort 225 WINSTON PHELPS r iouston PEGGY PHILLIPS Tulsa, Oklahoma DENNY PICKETT, JR. Midland CAROLYN PLAGENS RICHARD PRATHER Pago Paqo, Samoa KATHERINE PREHN Houston BILL RAMBO San Antonio JOHN RILEY Houston PAULSPELLMAN Stamford, Conn. JOE SPEZIA Houston BRUCE STERK Houston JEANIE STOKES Galveston 226 MARTIN STOLBUN Houston SHERRY STRAIN El Paso DAVID STREET Baytown MARGIE STRIPLING Abilene BILL STUBBLEFIELD Georgetown GAIL TODD Irving DAVID TRUE Houston BARBARA TURNER Houston LERA TYLER Overton RICKIE WALKER Georgetown PATRICK WALLACE Houston WAYNE WALTON Lufkin MELINDA WARNER Dallas DIANNE WEEKS Houston CATHY WHITING Dallas JANICE WILLIAMS Houston SHARON WILLIAMS Buchanan Dam TOM WINZELER Houston VALERIE WOLFE Houston NANCY WOODMAN Houston 227 FRESHMENFRESHMENFRESHMENFRESHMENFRESHMENFI JOE ABEL Midland DWIGHT ADAIR Hempstead RANDY ALLEN Smi+hville NONI ANDERSON Mategorda R. D. ANDREWS Baton Rouge, La. JANIEAPPUN Austin ROY BARTELS Snyder DAVID BAULCH Blytheville AFB, Ark. FRANK BAUMANN Corpus Christi STAN BEARD Brenham PAULA BELLEGIE Waco WILLIAM BENTLEY Houston LISE BERGER Houston TOM BIRDSONG Fort Worth BETH BOHMFALK Lampasas CATHY BOSWELL Houston CHERYL BROADY Houston MARY BULL Grand Prairie LORA NITA BURGESS Abilene ARTHUR BUSSEY Houston ANN CALDWELL San Angelo JAN CALDWELL Angleton SUSAN CARTWRIGHT College Station MARTHA ANN CHAPPELL Texarkana BARRY CHILDERS San Antonio 228 DWIGHT CHILDRESS Ozona TERESA COLVIN Shamrock ROBERT CREECH Midland BEN CUNNINGHAM Wichita Falls JOLENE CURRY Hamilton MARY DAVIS Nashville, Tenn. CHRISTINA DA WE Wrightsboro ANDY DEAN College Station PAUL DE HAVEN Mexico City, Mexico CAY DICKSON Houston DONNA DILDINE Houston GENA DOYLE Houston KEN DUNHAM Houston BRUCE EDWARDS Abilene TONY EMERY Galveston SUSAN ENGLE Houston GARY ENGLISH Leander SHERRY FARMER Duncanville ANNELLE FITZHUGH Big Spring RAY FORD Austin 4-. i ' m il PAULA FORNEY Houston JAMES FOSTER Houston JIM FOSTER Lampasas CHUCK GAINES San Antonio DEBORAH GALBREATH Sonora LYDIA GARDNER Houston JAN GATLIN Houston MARY FAITH GEAN Keller JEAN GILLESPIE Temple SHALLI GOODALL San Antonio MART GOODMAN Houston KEN GORENCE Midland MARK GRIFFIN Odessa LINDA GRUBB Mesquite BEVERLY GUSTAFSON Lyford ANN HAAHN Houston CATHY HALL Overton MELISSA HALLMAN Wills Point THOMAS LEE HAMBLETON Midland VALERIE HANNA Newgulf DEBBY HARDIN Grapevine LINDA HARRIS Houston CAROL HARVEY Archer City JANIS ADAMS Johnson City SANDY HARVEY Tyler ALBERT HAUSSER San Antonio RICHARD HAWORTH Houston SARAH HAWTHORNE Houston LARRY HAYNES Waco SARAH HEARD Belton KAY HEFFLER Houston SUSAN HENDRICK Houston RICK HOLLAND Richardson M ' KE HOLT Dallas 230 BILL HOOPER Buna MARY HOOPER College Station KERRY HOPE Bryan MARY HORN Houston STEVE HUEY Dallas LUCIEN HUGHES Houston MANDI HUTCHINSON Beaumont SHIRLEY ICKES Georgetown ROGER JACOBS Brazoria JENA JAMES Houston BOB JAMESON Houston BEVERLY JOHNSON Georgetown, Texas KARL JOHNSON Corpus Christi RENAJUNOD Beaumont BECKY KELLY Houston BOB KEY Albany JOE KEY Albany GENEKINCAID Pampa RICHARD KLINE Elkhart, Ind. ROSEMARY KNAPP Pinner, Midds., England H TOM KOENIG Houston GENE KOPECKY San Anqelo MARSHA KRAUSE Suqar Land JEAN KRUEGER San Antonio STACY LANGSTON DENNIS LEE Hong Kong PATSY LEE Dallas JOHN LEGG Midland HOK TAI LIE Penang, Penana Malaysia BARBARA LINNEY George West FRANCELIA LOFTUS Austin MARILYN McAUUFFE ayamon, Puerto Rico MARTHA McDOUGALL San Antonio SUZANNE McKAY Houston ERIC McKINNEY Johnson City WILLIAM McKINNEY Fort Worth FRANCES McQUEEN Dallas JEAN McSPADDEN Houston SAM MacFERRAN Hartford, Conn. PAM MAKI Houston DEBBIE MARSHALL Victoria CHARLES MASON Beaumont JOHN MEEKS Houston CLIFTON MEIER San Antonio TOM MILLER Tyler MARGARET MINGS Houston MIKEMORFORD Abilene EDDIE MORLAN Houston JOSH MORRISS Texarkana DICK MURCHISON Grapeland KEN MUSGRAVE Odessa PATRICIA NAHAS Beaumont DANA NICHOLSON Beaumont JIM NOLAND Midland ANN NORTON Houston 232 LIBBIE NUTTING Dallas NANCY OGILVIE West Columbia ROBERT OLDE Houston SALLIE PARR Houston CLAIRE PEEL Houston BRUCE PENNY Houston RAY PETTY Dallas CHRIS PHILLIPS Houston ELLEN PITCOCK Graham PATTI POLING Houston GREG PRATAS Lubbock BILL PRATT Bronx, N. Y. SHARON PUDLO Midland RANDY REED San A ntonio JOHN REEVES Kerrville JOHN REYNOLDS Georgetown MARY ANN RICHARDSON San Antonio TOM RICHARDSON Dallas CHRISTINA RILEY Fredericksburg GAIL RIVERS Houston J. M. ROBERTS Houston MADALINE ROBERTS Odessa JANE RODGERS Houston EDNA ROLLINS Houston MATILDA ROSE Albany Wm WmmmW Z-llm ml P r 3mjJ mm jfe ,. - f «■ - K L , MjSi0 i I. :::::-: : :0;,:?V-- ' -■.■ :--:.■. .-■::■ .-■.■:■,:.,::,:.. j — -jM 233 PATTY RUNDELL Houston BILL RUSSELL Georgetown DAN RYDER Beaumont KEN SADLER Waco STEPHEN SALMON San Angelo CAROLYN SANDERFORD Kempner JIM SARGENT Lampasas HOLLY SATTLER Houston BILL SCARBOROUGH Austin DAVID SCHADE Houston ALICE SCHORRE Houston MATT SEGER Victoria MARY SELLE New Berlin, Wis. JAN SHULLENBERGER Houston LOINE SIMONS Houston CARENE SMITH Houston CARLA SMYTHE Houston EDDIE CHENG KUNG SOON Penang, Malaysia LAURAN SPELLMAN Stamford, Conn. WADE STANSELL Grapevine ANN STATON Waco 234 DEBBIE STEFFY Beaumont NINA STEPHENSON Austin BILL STERLING Friendswood WINNANN STONE Georgetown BETTY SUE STORTER Brownsville DAN STULTZ Dallas WILLIAM SURBER Corpus Christi LOGAN SWANSON Wichita Falls CAROL SWEENEY Dallas CATHEY THOMAS San Antonio KAREN THOMPSON Midland LINDSEY THOMPSON Bay City REBECCA THOMPSON Rosenberg MARGARET TIFT San Antonio RICHARD TROTTER Houston CHARLES WALNE Midland TIM WARE Waco KATHLEEN WARTHEN Dallas CLYDE WATSON Uvalde PATRICIA WEBB Elgin JEREWEED Beaumont STEVE WELCH Alexandria, Virginia STEPHEN WHITE Dallas PAM WHITFIELD San Antonio GAYLE WILLIAMS Houston 235 MM Epilogue: These Years There are years years inbetween yesterday and the nebulous now when life means biting the wind and and spitting out imaginary islands bearing thick evergreeness and sounds rich as harpsicords floating over a still winter bay. And in these years we speculate sighing war is hell and breaking glass for the colors just behind only to find them disappearing vapor. These years are steel threads infinite in complexity infallible in strength holding life about our armreach threads that in touching render us intimate threads that cut us and while we bleed we laugh. II These years begin by declaring us children babes so newborn our eyes perceive only distant shapes some alien, some mother-love. But in the implosion of an instant we realize that our skin is not new and wipe cobwebs from around blemished eyes. Ill And these years ripen us into day by day prisons some we accept some we flee but comes one yellow day and a lion lunges in our blood and we strain to hear the jungle that is so faraway from the walls we are bound Mi8!iti 8ft -:. tgSSfgliSlSSsgg - ' ' 1  ' i y Z IVl ■ w ■ y _ 1 ' J I v I •! V l , 1 n j ■ w ' t A 14 ii f JJr ' I J- •■ -■- ' I ! r w It J 7 7(1 V ■ Vj-, ( • . _4 « J - v. r v. t s tV : if . T« jl : r r 5  ; r w L-Jhl M f ' i JCjj ?J X= V: ?! ' ■ - • ' . t W 1 i - M m m | Ij m _ .sj ! • «: «. w IV These years have faceless clocks silent ticking phantom crippling no burden of the forbidden vision and as they smile covered smiles knowledge slices through that impenetrable impossibility. These years are storms and deep air passion in fingertips fires and cities and delusions and they bring to their mistress the last train to run the obsolete beauty of an era antique shops of a hundred thousand childhoods treading, sweating away fading into darker mornings. VI And these years jerk back the curtain on nakedness leave hunger to the soul scorch tears away in desert sunsets and give breath to snowbound tiny flowers. And these years open back love into many kinds and shapes and owners and we learn to hate and close our minds and carry our weapons and anticipate the bearing of children. VII These years become one windowview past. We sleep no more because we have tasted a cup that allows no complacency and after, the starving truth slips quietly in and spawns a horizon of consciousness. 239 • •:-• ' . ' ■- N i S Four years: One pinpoint piece of time gives us the salt the wonder the granite just beneath a breath They come, rest a minute and are gone. Mary Callaway editor 240 tiKBfPJA XaD IN 1HBB r ■B ■ I ■ ■ HP ■ TfilMl«7tt8Q S5h iV.r,ft,v ■ nil ihWIHI ii : BKhNH , ' .-.•■- ' •■■■ ' .. I— ■ ■■ ' ■ V ' Wt ' ■r ' ' -■ , SHffll is Bra.. Warn IIP ■ ■■■,■. ■ ' ' ■ ' • ' ■ ' • ' rani «iS ' WWPWWMg— — — — — Ml ■ . t Hum slBH iiH ■ :■■•:■■.. ' H ' ' ... ' • ' ■■ IH1S3 :.,. ' • ST mm mm, iSgTjW l MfHBf •■■ ' ■ ' !■ ' ; HH v vt«j irci « «v«j !


Suggestions in the Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) collection:

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972


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