Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) - Class of 1970 Page 1 of 248
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mm CIENCEi Sm mm wSfmm wimian WK sixties JB_ mm mm idJcZ-H « ■I If J© Scdu) 1 wester Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow Mary Elizabeth Callaway, editor Southwestern University Georgetown, Texas This album is symbolic of a concern which occurs to us on the threshold of a new decade, at this blinking moment in the spectrum of time. We are eminently aware of three di- mensions of our heritage and what it is to be for our coming times: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Much here is significant to us all: a sense of community and the possibility for advantaged education. Some here touches us only lightly for it is momentary and insignificant to us in the commotion of life. Each of us will glean through the memories stored here and write his own silent, private record and in time eventually understand what place it all has taken in the movement of time. It is hoped that a liberal arts education at Southwestern can draw us closer to the acceptance of both the dynamics of reality and the poetic mysteries of life. This album is dedicated to the hope and construction of peace. I960. While we heard the sound of a banging shoe in the halls of the U. N. General Assembly, scientists succeeded in making the laser beam operable. The Pill was approved for public use. And it was the year of the first of the original Playboy club. A tense situation arose when Francis Gary Powers was shot down over Russia in his U-2. Foreign prob- lems gave way to domestic concern with the beginning of sit-ins in the drive for equality. And Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy debated hot topics over the screens of national television. 1961. Science again brought its saving grace to the general public through the new oral polio vaccine and opened the doors to genetic research by breaking the DNA code. Dis- cotheques grooved on through the nights, and Freedom Riders pushed through_ the days with their new campaigns. Russia brought us closer to the universe, putting the first man in orbit, and separated man on earth as the bricks and wires of the Berlin Wall were put in place. The infamous Bay of Pigs invasion dropped presidential popularity to a new low. Roger Maris hit 6 home runs. 1962. Pope John XXIII began to update and liberalize the Roman Catholic Church through the Vatican II Council. Americans joined in the race for space as John Glenn orbited the earth, and science claimed success. Horror set in when the danger of thalidomide on the unborn was discovered. Held-breath and taut nerves characterized the stare-down between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cuban missile crisis in the fall of the year. And the new pop art drew general public acclaim. 1963. The Supreme Court dominated the news with its decision to outlaw compulsory prayer and Bible-readings in public schools. Abroad, the United States, Britain, and Russia signed an agreement to ban nuclear testing in the atmosphere. At home, the first of the giant civil rights marches took place. Pope Paul VI was elected. President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas; his assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, was murdered before millions of television viewers. Instant replay devices put a new slant into sports viewing. 1964. Voices were heard from university demonstra- tions beginning at Berkeley and underground presses began rolling. Television helped bring the Vietnam war into the consciences and into the living rooms of the country. Lyndon Johnson was elected to the presidency of the U. S. and Nikita Kruschev was deposed. The Supreme Court again was in the news with the Civil Rights Act. And mini-skirts set the fashion pace. 1965. The American mood darkened in the face of growing involvement in the Vietnam war. Teach-ins and draft-card burnings characterized the growing feelings of dissent. A long hot summer burned the country with race riots beginning in the Watts district of Los Angeles. Teacher professionalization and improved oppor- tunities for school children was provided for in the Elementary and Secondary Edu- cation Act. All areas of the military decided to get in on the act as thousands of troops moved in to quell the revolution in the Dominican Republic. Art turned op and religion became more and more secularistic. The Beatles were the top music makers and would be for another six years. HE MORE DEAD! kr w 1966. Culture, culture everywhere . . . Timothy Leary ' s followers tuned in, turned on, dropped out, while Mao Tse Tung ' s Cultural Revolution swept his country. People discussed far and wide aspects of the New Morality and the Head Start program began its work for the culturally deprived. While De Gaulle turned in France ' s membership in NATO, Stokely Carmichael called forth the Black Power Movement in America. Medicare and medicaid were the legislative issues of the year. 1967 . Massive anti-war marches expressed the discontent of a large portion of the American population. War reigned elsewhere. Arabs and Israelis fought the Six Day War, and Biafra seceded from Nigeria, thus beginning their civil war. Television networks went to total color and the world marveled over the first human heart transplant. Several large U. S. cities elected Negro mayors and the Supreme Court received its first black justice. _ 1968. The Tet offensive in Vietnam began a new phase of the war as peace talks struggled along in Paris. The country mourned two assassinations — Martin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy. Pope Paul ' s ban on artificial birth control produced controversy and split in the Roman church. The Broadway showing of Hair rocked the entertainment world. Hi-jacking planes to Cuba became an everyday occurrence. Czechoslovakia ' s move toward liberalism served as an excuse for invasion by Soviet and Eastern Bloc troops. President Johnson an- nounced his decision not to run for re-election and Richard Nixon was elected to the presidency in November. 1969. A changing of the guard everywhere: Charles De Gaulle announced his resignation and Prince Charles became Prince of Wales. Catholics and Protestants fought in northern Ireland. In the U. S., the Supreme Court began ordering desegregation and stiff drug laws were called into question. Spiro Agnew called networks for their news coverage. Music festivals, such as Wood- stock, brought thousands of young people together for days at a time. Inflation 10 MCCARTHY hit the highest markfin the decade. And the Mets rose from the cellar to win the World Series. Apollo 11 and man first set foot on the moon. Chicago conspiracy trials began resulting from riotous conditions during the Democratic convention. Germ and chemical-biological warfare aroused intermittent concern. 1970. Astronauts of the U. S. again caused the world to hold its breath as the first real trouble developed during space flight. The first general student strike in U. S. history shocked the rest of the nation. Earth Day teach-ins spanned the nation ' s schools as all eyes turned to air and water pollution as well as the popula- tion crisis. U. S. troops invaded Communist sanctuaries in Cambodia. As a result, anti-war demonstrations flared. The deepest hurt was felt at Kent State University where four students died in such demonstrations in con- frontation with national guard units. And as June be- gan turnover in cabinet posts caused much discussion and the Nixon administration came increasingly under questioning from all sides. II 12 ■srn 14 15 Yesterday speaks to us in sometimes silent, sometimes violent, always demanding voices. v ' % — ■-t A V. . . ' ■■ - -  Today sees sunsets, sees lights escaping m?r % ' % +■running, shivering through mists, through deserted buildings of the mind ' s eye, ? ' ft , ' iij = 1 1 P M ! ' : • ' • m; ' Jr u S «, ' Jg| ••• i ij 1 m m V- M V I j n L f 1 1 w r y [ ■' ■■■: ' .. ;:■.■■■. ' ' . ' A I n ' ' i 1 wy i ' ' M SwK5« 1 I  . ' ' ' ' ViWPIIIIHBB . ..., B JHJL m 9HP ; i jBl M jfc - t ' 1 m W x - HHr ' TBI BP ™ ' Ar i m PT5. i Sr - ' through land-markings statuary — the center of higher learning. So sees today the spinning circles of education focuses on the faces of tomorrow for tomorrow looks with sun-glared eyes into the fire, into the circles, s : - • % circling 1 waves of thought color frowns laughs at coffee cups and cries in the dawn and cries in the dawn f u Today paints new pictures of worship, new stains on the glass of an old-time religion M -t-t— r- 1 I SSPW a chiaroscuro of celebration and solitude. ■■■dancing-mad today laced • f I ' H ■,w A   VAV !« , £ ' j ™V? ■W? jpr, mix I to with the torn curtains of yesterday and tomorrow waits L HlliliHIMlllllllll — Wit npflnAMSMjraMMMMi: jr ggM T- £; npap t « : . •-- Y • - • egw 1 - h _j M 4 • ££V ; M, fcfc ; WW and laughs in the morning and laughs in the morning H « • Bfi f0fm ■■.. 33 Dr. Durwood Fleming, President 36 37 Dean Swift Dean Woodward Dean Appel Dean Clifford 38 Dean Richards The Administration Dr. Durwood Fleming President Miss Mary Louise Appel Associate Dean of Students Dr. F. Burr Clifford Dean, College of Arts and Sciences Mr. John D. Richards Dean, School of Fine Arts Mr. William D. Swift Dean of Students Mr. Barry K. Woodward Associate Dean of Students Mr. Paul Grady Anderson Director of Admissions and Registration Miss Marjorie Beech Assistant to the President Mrs. Barbara Seever Director of Information Mr. Harrison M. Crenshaw, II Admissions Counselor Dr. Judson S. Custer Vice-President for Educational Services Mrs. Barbara L. Denton Assistant Librarian Miss Mary Elizabeth Fox Assistant to Dean, School of Fine Arts Mrs. Mildred Q. Gervasi Librarian Mr. Tommie O. Keepers, III Assistant Director of Admissions Mrs. Gene S. Klein University Recorder Mrs. Jacquelyn N. Kreger University Nurse Dr. Jack Henry Longbotham Director of Testing and Counseling Miss Agnes E. Luecke Assistant Librarian Mr. William Lee Merritt Director of Athletics Mr. Charles A. Neal, Jr. University Chaplain Mr. Basil A. Phillips Vice-President for Fiscal Affairs Mr. Sanford C. Reed Associate Director of Development Mr. James A. Reid Director of Development Mr. E. C. True Assistant Business Manager Dr. Stay ton A. Wood Program Director, Bishops Memorial Union 39 English Marshall McLuhan has recently been hammering home Ezra Pound ' s dictum that artists are the antennae of the race. Teachers of literature have known this all along, for literature of necessity deals with the basic myths and sym- bols that probe man ' s experience. Creative writers are therefore explorers, exposing possible meanings tor lite. Literature thus offers the contemporary man complex ima- ges of himself and of his brothers, complex images from which the whole man can be drawn with freedom by each unique individual. We are shown man as an animal whose •bestiality sometimes threatens to destroy the accomplish- ments of his reason, as an animal who must therefore be exposed and recognized if there is to be any hope ot a lite better than that of the brutes - and as a sensitive spiritual being capable of heights of love, courage, and self-sacrifice. Literature thus furnishes tests and events to arouse the in- tellect and the imagination; it provides a means to over- come apathy and inertia, to stimulate the conscious exer- cise of personal freedom by holding up the possibilities ot man to achieve a goal of wholeness which, although sel- dom reached, is held up as a constant possibility. The an- tennae of the race have been receiving the signals for a long time - our job is to tune in on the right frequency in Psychology ■u Dr. Wendell Osborn Dr. Douglas Hooker One of the most satisfying experiences in the Psychology Department during the past few years has been the development of an academic intern- ship program at the Austin State Hospital. Seen pri- marily as the major concluding experience of the spring semester of the senior year, this program has provided psychology students with opportunities for learning at first hand about the real and very often challenging aspects of mental illness. The stu- dents not only attend case conferences and partici- pate in psychological testing, group therapy ses- sions, and educational and recreational programs with the patients, but they make as well a vital con - tribution to the welfare of the patients and the gen- eral psychotherapeutic atmosphere of the hospital. The effectiveness of the Southwestern students in relating to the patients has been received en- thusiastically by the hospital staff and the overall program has been referred to as being one of the most unique of its kind in the United States. Douglas Hooker Chairman. Department of Psychology 41 History Dr. Suk-Soon Suh Mrs. Martha M. Allen We would like our courses in history and government to be appropriate to the needs of the student, relevant to the prob- lems of society, useful for fu- ture professional practice, and interesting in the classroom. We would rather produce stu- dents who can think historical- ly than students whose store of knowledge consists of a myri- ad of memorized facts, stu- dents who understand the process of analyzing problems 42 and Government Dr. William B. Jones Mr. Charles E. Davis Dr. Hannelore Permenter Dr. George C. Hester Hi I J W. than those who think they have all the answers to them, students who think for them- selves rather than those who only parrot what others have said, students who understand the dynamics of social and per- sonal action rather than those who are simply trained to cope with given situations. To the degree that our teaching achieves these aims, it is suc- cessful. To the extent that it is not, it has failed. tax !V m Wm. B. Jones for the Dept. of History and Government Economics Mr. Jim Bridges 44 Business Mr. Lawrence Bates .... ■™ ! m The emphasis on social concern and political responsibility is not a prerogative of the Department of Economics and Business in the liberal arts college; but in the realm of economic realities the demands on the individual appear more burdensome if one does not understand the complicated structure of which he is a part. Before he will be able to judge it, a student has to acquire a considerable amount of knowledge. A multi-university may have specialists who confine themselves to one line only; professors in the liberal arts college must be highly and thoroughly educat- ed in and beyond their fields. They must have practical experience in related work. The economist or accountant must be a scholar and still continue his studies to remain abreast. As a professor he must take a stand, but he must nei- ther expect that everyone agrees nor must he try to indoctrinate his students. The success of a teacher cannot be measured immediately; but when ten or twenty years after graduation former students return to tell that their professors showed them how to become responsible citizens, it might be true. 47i % £ L- L. H. Merzbach Chairman, Economics and Business Administration 45 Foreign Dr. F. Burr Clifford Our task is communication. It is never easy. Two people are necessary to the communi- cation of the truth. One must accurately and clearly say the words which express the truth. Another must hear the words with the meanings intended by the speaker. Across the barriers separating person fro m person, over physical handicaps and mental limitations, throughout the complex structures of our communities, beyond our regional provincialisms, enriching our national loyalties, and among the nations we must learn to communicate until we discover the full dimensions of being human in one world. This kind of communication is what language is about and to this kind of communication our lives are dedicated. F. Burr Clifford Chairman, Dept. of Languages Mr. William Wingo Mr. Alberto de la Fuente 46 Languages Mrs. Regine Reynolds Mr. Francisco Betancourt Mrs. Elizabeth Beaver 47 Religion Southwestern University has had, across the years of its existence, a very high ambition and the difficulties in achieving it have been many. The ambition has been in line with the dream of the founder of the church of which Southwestern is one of the service centers. John Wesley recognized the need for a union of knowledge and vital piety. It has been the constant aim of the Uni- versity to develop within each member of the academic community a sense of personal integrity. This would be our way of encouraging on the part of the individual a vital piety. The other ambition is a very challenging one because the procurement and maintenance of a high quality faculty is always difficult. Men who not only have terminal degrees, but who have an unusual amount of common sense in seeking to apply their knowledge to every day affairs are not always easy to find. Academia is not merely a dreamland in which men achieve high honors scholastically, but it is also a very realistic world of academic achievement, where workable knowledge becomes productive. It is in this sense that across the years Southwestern has sought to bring to the campus the best qualified professors and make an environment possible within which these men might lead students into the rewarding achievements of their own disciplines. It continues to be the purpose of the Department of Religion and Philosophy to nave an active part in this overall enterprise of the University. Sincerely, E. H. Steelman Chairman, Department of Religion and Philosophy m and Philosophy IN MEMORIAM Dean John V. Berglund died June 5, 1970, after serving Southwestern since 1946. For eighteen years, he was Dean of Men and the remaining years were spent as assistant professor of religion and philosophy. Chaplain Charles Neal Dr. Edmund Steelman Dr. John Score 49 Dr. T. P. Jones Dr. Jack Longbotham We are proud of ourgraduates and of South- western ' s long record of preparing students for teaching. While Southwestern has always served the schools of Texas, our first profes- sional work was in 1904 when Superintendent Clark of the Georgetown Schools conducted a Summer Normal Institute. Five years later the Education Department was organized and in 1924, Dean O. A. Ullrich directed the first stu- dent teaching program in Georgetown. Our graduates through the years have conveyed to society the hopes, ideals, values, and wisdom of the Southwestern Community through schools and through their cultural concern and in turn, some of our most generous alumni and supporters have come from the teaching ranks. Service of this kind represents social action at its best and social concern where it truly makes a difference. s .UutAOir Judson S. Custer Department of Education m Education 4 Dr. Judson Custer Dr. William Anderson Mrs. Verna Peterson 51 Dr. Angus Drama The arts came into being when man discovered his need to express himself in ways which transcended his physical battle for survival. Fine Art became his human- izing leaven which, mixed with his struggle to acquire knowledge and skills in science and business and social development and the humanities, contributed greatly to his position as master of the animals. At no time in man ' s history are the arts more impor- tant than they are today in helping man to interpret his hopes and dreams, his aspirations and his desire for ful- fillment. Drama, the art which embraces all other arts, describes and explains character behavior and conflict; it presents and interprets social and psychological prob- lems; delves into man ' s strongest emotions and desires; creates beautiful and powerful language; it is always most concerned with man ' s inner nature. The Department of Drama will continue to provide opportunity for all students on the campus, through the Mask and Wig Players, to participate in the activities re- lated to the production of plays. We will continue to present plays, both classic and modern, which are thought-provoking, emotion-laden, controversial, in step with the times, and, desirably, entertaining. Chairman, Department of Drama 52 Mr. Robert Lancaster Art A balance between individual personal creativ- ity on the one hand and guided procedures with materials and techniques on the other is the ideal of instruction in art. Increasing awareness of a wide range of art activity over many periods as seen in art history affords personal perspective. The artist realizes his creative identity in a path which he must find for himself through personal encounters with the materials, through contacts with past and recent works of art, and in the daily revelations of personal experience. A distracting truth is that the individual is not always in full control during these confrontations and finds it a constant challenge to maintain personal integrity without losing sight of himself as an artist among artists past and present. Involvement in this kind of experience, both frightening and exciting, is therefore catalytic in the development of an art- ist, is it not? Chairman, Department of Art Mr. Claude Kennard Mr. Guss Farmer Mr. Robert Schmidt 53 Mr. Cochrane Penick Mr. Thomas Douglass The music department of the School of Fine Arts is dedicated to provide artistic expression, through teaching and performing, to the entire university community. Each faculty member excels in the area of their teaching and performing media. We provide an outlet for faculty and student ex- pression and creativity in music, the possibility of self- improvement in artistic endeavor. Through stimulating private instruction, classroom activi- ties and in group participation in choral and instru- mental organizations many students grow in their potential as patrons of music. The music department prides itself on the work of the students, the interest campus wide in musi- cal activities. The high standards set and main- tained in achievement and performance is in keep- ing with the total environment of our university. It is through the sponsoring of all phases of music and the complete commitment to music that the depart- ment has established a reputation for excellence throughout Texas and the nation. Sincerely, 54 John D. Richards, Dean School of Fine Arts Mr. Francis Woodward Music 55 Physics and Math Let me pose a question. I do not know the answer to the question (I do have a biased opinion). The question has no well-defined answer; howev- er, I believe the question is related to the current demand for more relev- ance in higher education. Set your imagination free - see what the question means to you. Suppose we return the world to some time in the past - prior to the origin of the human species. Assume the same en- vironmental conditions will exist as in the past, furthermore assume whatever origin of the species you like (make up one if it helps). Consid- er then the complete evolution of what we call culture - what part, if any, of this new culture would be exactly the same as our culture of today? Art? Science? Religion (would Christianity reappear?)? Mathemat- ics? . . . Ralph M. Whitmore Chairman, Department of Mathematics % Mrs. Ethel Sociology Dr. Frank Luksa The present technological age is atypical in man ' s cultural development. It is atypical because the automated society de- veloped within recent centuries of man ' s one million years of cultural evolution. The greatest religious systems, philosophi- cal ideas, political structures, and social organizations were developed when man was eking out his existence with the simplest and crudest of tools. The beautiful cathedrals, syn- agogue s, mosques, pyramids, statues, and various other forms of architecture were constructed without the hum and noise of heavy machines. Modern technology has delivered man from slave-like drudgery and has given him almost total control over his natu- ral environment. However the most frustrating and confusing problems facing man are yet to be solved. There are social frontiers in human relations, almost too numerous to mention, which need our awareness, energies, and all the mental facul- ties we possess for their correction and solution. There is the virulent issue of war. There are the problems of poverty, over-population, pollution, crime and juvenile deliquency. slums, and drug abuse. The problem of civil rights and justice demands critical attention. These are only a few of the chal- lenges facing us, but more specifically the challenge must be accepted by the present college generation with objectivity, maturity, and complete dedication, lest our society crumbles and disintegrates. The greatest resource our society has is its youth with its ideas, vision, sensitivity, and energy. C_ - - _ S. °C-c a- « Chairman, Department of Sociology 57 Biology and For those of you who have been through one or more of our courses in the Biological Sciences, we hope we have broadened your knowledge of living or- ganisms, their relationship in the world both past and present. We hope we have conveyed the idea that science is a con- tinuing process of constant re-evaluation. Above all we hope we have to some ex- tent aided you in understanding yourself as a live, functioning organism. Teachers have a grave responsibility to choose what students should learn ana an even greater burden in selecting what they do not need to know. In fact, it is easy to say no one should decide for an- other what he should not learn. We hope we have not failed you in too many ways. To those of you who plan to continue in this area, we hope we have supplied suffi- cient tools by wnich to build constructive careers. For you all, we hope the best. Sincerely, Dr. Sherman D. Lesesne ■x ' iUB Department of Biology Dr. Robert Soulen 58 Chemistry Dr. Eb Girvin Dr. Fred R. Hilgeman There are many factors that influence the quality of instruction in a modern university but at this time I should like to mention only one: The Teachers ' Attitude Toward the Undergraduate Student. Instead of consid- ering the undergraduate student as a number in a large class as many of the large universities, the chemistry faculty at Southwestern University tries to teach each student at his capacity. The efficient student is given special projects, conferences, and an opportunity to be- come involved in the teaching at Southwestern Univer- sity as laboratory assistants and tutors. The inefficient student is given interviews and, where needed, is urged to obtain a tutor from an approved list. The teacher is then in touch with both the tutor to direct his teaching, and witb the student to direct his study, attendance and progress. Dr. Edwin Lansford, Jr. 0) SJVyV dVi _£_iAJLXWUZ Sherman Lesesne Dr. Horace Jacob 59 Physical Education There is more to Physical Education than performance alone. Concern goes beyond the score. Physical Education is not only a means of conditioning young people for tasks imposed upon them by a demanding society but also an opportunity for custodial care to insure the brain a souncfbody to house it. Furthermore, the experience of movement is potentially educative, bringing about a personal effort of the total personality. Physical Education recognizes the totality of man and the fact that man lives in a social setting. The pursuit of life is not merely physical, but qualita- tive. What is important is the way that life is spent. Through Physical Educa- tion we have the opportunity to help to bring man into possession of himself, to provide him with the means for enjoying life, to give him friends and fun and the eminent satisfactions of doing something well. Learning resulting from Physical Education is both intellectual and physical, and the ultimate contribution is self-fulfillment and the educated life. We do not want a generation of spectators. We want everyone to be a par- ticipant in the vigorous life. Physical Education seeks to further the purposes of modern education when it stands for the finest kind of living. Our motto is All for Sports and Sports for All. ■' - - Dr. Tex L. Kassen, Chairman Health and Physical Education Department w ■X Miss Millie Usher Mr. Tibb Burnett 60 Mr. Bill Merritt Mr. R. M. Medley 61 ' ,:, encounter orient orientate frenzy frenzy freshman frenzy new people and new ways of living rush and more rush and the decision where am i i i ? we come now to a great crossroads . . . freshman frenzy sensitivity lab getting to know you see you touch you and listen to your voice listen to your mind. and we encounter orient are orientated to s.u. U 65 66 speakers speaking and voices voicing neiman marcus fashions putting on and vista building up lawyer shelden world affairs to the fore peru and bob honts the war and the sounds moratorium and bill holmes the university harrington and Jordan forever speaking — the voices 67 homecoming history the queen and her court the messrs. homecoming dr. gaupp and dr. merzbach parades and breakfasts and awards a dance coming home to the age of aquarius m MORATORIUM in memoriam MORATORIUM i remember MORATORIUM we remember MORATORIUM hypocrisy or truth MORATORIUM October 15 MORATORIUM open forum MORATORIUM peace march MORATORIUM policeman of the world ? MORATORIUM of freedom we know no end MORATORIUM of love we know no limit 11 football, field goal, football while life at s.u. abounds with other things . . . people, people, people — doing something, saying something donate blood get involved — vista round rock project aws — voices heard and keys are granted while sneed serenades for the great pumpkin 74 fall convocation and connally speaks committees and more committees — to listen or to bureaucratize ? for traffic safety ? psycho matinees new words and new media communication through a different voice 75 Ik 77 ■■. ' ■| , m •- ■aw ' . S V -.-■■' :• ' .-,■•■' 781 coffee house in candle-lit basement with circuit singers and coffee for conversation self-satires avant-garde plays chapel celebrations and some honky piano 79 music with us always wind quintet to prison balladeer from protest to soul Max Morath takes us back in time psychedelic moves us forward . it is in us always the music m ' ■: ' • ' . ■. : ■:■. ' - ' ■' ■' .. ■■■' .■; P ■■■' Jt ' ■- Jy 81 lion in winter in the fall unveiling history in the round the king and his sons in conflict and eleanor endures strength in dialogue finis. hi W 82 83 84 it was a year of politicking and of politicians, of moratorium and mobilization of armbands and flags and symbols of a state primary and a teach-in. vista came and petitions got longer to vote, to act, to speak to think, to reconcile the polarizations. 85 ucm retreats not to escape but to enter, to activate to be more humanly a part of the sometimes inhuman world cecil williams leads, offers thought right ideas for right action leading on for new roles leading on in new technology leading on . . . new life S35lllfflt ill 87 m speakers and concertizing the arts and the intellect willson lectures — stumpf flamenco politics — yarborough another triumph for huf fmaster people, journalism — jaro meeting of the minds at s. u. 89 it ' s that marvelouswonderful gorgeousfantastictremendous world round and round of the circus with color and song and love and round and round and the spectacular cirque de paris ! puppets, acrobats, clowns, a magician and love that makes the world go round the carnival came to town ! n faces turning inside out faces of who we are when we are not us playing silly grins curious dancing again in our whirl and we are the faces and the selves who we are more than the bodies that fill the spaces more than the voices crying above the crowd more too than minds for we are the faces playing 93 to break the ground, to help the crime of poverty to bring about a solution — community action community clean-up; round rock project; for the children — tutors and a party for the people — a chance at life to build, renew from the ground up a vote for tomorrow 94 95 living, teaching how to live to survive the emptiness to care, to love the tangled mind for those who care what others become an internship, austin state hospital learning the language of the inarticulate to help, to give to enter their silence 97 98 the evolution of a show think ights design and directors emotion the dance the songs make-up ugh and taking it off drop a line and you die work hard and you have 100 earth day, a call for environmental action to live in a clean and open place a call — through multi-media, earth concert and chapel in the dawn write your congressmen and hear a senator it ' s your world, consider more than one day of concern one day, only a beginning 101 if i could say how i feel right now . . . after these years, these midnight minute-years of burning the candle at both ends these times and troubles and thoughts that four years work, should all culminate in this: dignity, ceremony, directed toward my life in these years and out to those years how i feel the time gone by— the world spins by and i wait with both hands outstretched waiting to grab hold, the finish of one thing, the commencement. 102 103 Academic Affairs Council M$£m Student Life Council m ■■« H  H arc? ■Hal? Student Judiciary  i iSSi ■liBya 19 ' ■' ■' ■• ' Student Congress Cardinal Key Pi Gamma Mu K flES ' SWt ' KcfS HiKfl} BS3 ' ■' ■-: ' ■■■. -■' •■-. ' !■. I ..;:- ; ' y-- !: . ■■- ' ■' ■■■. ' ■-■' ' ■: Ppl ■■■■■' ■■' ■■' ■■■■■■• ' -■:.£ -. : ■■■' ■■' H . ' ■■' ■.-■.. ■■■' •IP ____iJ§___iKi_ lSB_i_d _S ■Bill Blue Key ■H _____ V. %3 f : ) UCM Kurth House Council L. K. House Council Women ' s Advisory HHHHBiH Pre-Law Society Southwestern Science Society IFC PANHELLENIC lei Alpha Chi OP nssHn Hi jam 1 A ii ' if ' ru ' ;wi ' ; ;Vf:ii i w i Awl- a Mask and Wig ■. .. ■«% H.B. - M.S. House Council Sneed House Council •■■:■.•■Pi Epsilon Delta ■' ..--. i Speech Club . ■. Southwestern Magazine %4 . I ■3 mf: f S it, AT 3 % i£ ▼v R; fa - ' . - j hV ' V WHn ' , ' .( 7il ' ' if PI DELTA EPSILON DELTA OMICRON mm ■■■MWV Southwestern Sinfonietta Southwestern Choir Southwestern Band ■P ' •■' ' -, ' ;,, §£ : . P m$ ■i. ■: ■:,. ' try Hit n HUHMH WRA Foreign Students UNION PROGRAM COUNCIL UNION GOVERNING BOARD Sou ' wester Staff mm- mlm STUDENT LIFE dr. jones stridde aycock appel anderson lundblad mccook dr. hooker dr. hilgeman neal kent fuller varnadore mcspadden underwood, r. ACADEMIC AFFAIRS dr. lansford richards anderson underwood, d. dr. spellman penick dr. girvin dr. Clifford dr. custer dr. luksa gervasi grayson winslow STUDENT JUDICIARY winslow griffin brunson karr riley peel klaveness haynes bellegie mings williams aycock STUDENT CONGRESS mckinney callaway cossaboom galloway, g. rives frizzell emmerton varnadore bell fuller, r. dillon stout reynolds key youker owens barrick CARDINAL KEY brunson schleier barrett daughtrey stokes woodman hennington mckinney todd dana dark schucany strain brown callaway stridde meek weaver aycock haygood zaumeyer wilkie kirkpatrick brannon hitz fikes peel stripling Campbell BLUE KEY winslow dillard fuller, r. witt underwod, r. curry mcspadden Johnson, k. underwood, d. varnadore karr grayson spring riley dean swift dr. score bell bigley swift, j. PI GAMMA MU giesecke tyler mcspadden varnadore rambo westervelt haygood fuller Johnson, k. bankston truitt dr. merzback dr. suh underwood, d. underwood, r. schucany bell kirkpatrick blackwood scleier dark manofsky parrish horn UCM bell dana ford karr strain adair todd mott KURTH HOUSE COUNCIL klaveness rawlings mckinney kuhns hennington waggoner haygood peavy smith, g. manofsky dark L. K. HOUSE COUNCIL liese mcknight mcdougal duran farmer bernard ford bohmfalk rose rollins rodgers dillon stauffer dana eaker westervelt doyle selden RUTER HOUSE COUNCIL haynes rupp hoi ley klaveness baulch horak shale gehrels AWS mckinney brannon stridde dana schleier meek dean appel hennington daughtrey snyder gibson blaine barr kaiser byard irvin PRELAW SOCIETY pickett truitt watkins klaveness zavislan hayslett smith, b. crozier harshman kessler true braden griffin harmon varnadore adler forbes hutton fuller, r. rodriquez SCIENCE SOCIETY dr. Jacobs dr. girvin dr. lansford dr. hilgeman cahill karr caldwell dean Clifford shaw tipton griffin key stout prather williams, g. ALPHA CHI hitz, s. mendietta wilkie underwood, r. westervelt griffin fikes gravson swift, j. gould standifer zaumeyer bankston thompson riley todd rambo caldwell Clifford stripling, m. bell hennington karr mcspadden, f. Campbell heard PANHELLENIC adler hansberry perry bellegie dobkins IFC williams, g. griffin holley parrish abel love Sheffield richardson dean woodward MASK AND WIG PLAYERS forbes mckinney roe rupp clyde hay cannon walker grisham rodriquez swift, t. bigley campbell stripling, m. bertschler doyle gean furstenwerth swift, j. sterk spellman, p. selden hebert harvey hilborn rundell peaslee shaw pollard norman porter haynes speas colby hitz, s. trevino gehrels sandord sneed stokes turner wheaton coody peterson thornton whitfield harbaugh conrad fridrich parr raper sadler rodgers dr. springer schmidt 130 H.B.— M.S. HOUSE COUNCIL deaton smith harris rodriquez, c. davis, j. sterling rodriquez, b. weaver, b. stolbun gleichmann madsen thompson, 1. SNEED HOUSE COUNCIL blackwood kearn cole prescott meek nichols todd wilkie stridde aycock PI EPSILON DELTA raper gehrels stokes conrad hitz, s. peaslee thornton hay SPEECH CLUB colby staton hitz, s. gehrels SOUTHWESTERN MAGAZINE brown bigley roe callaway hitz, s. THE MEGAPHONE norton henderson weaver schucany medford salinger rives Scarborough PI DELTA EPSILON hitz, s. roe Scarborough bigley callaway brown weaver kirkpatrick goodman rives DELTA OMICRON meek brannon heard harris, 1. ford pudlo webb engle barbee hahn mcgeehee white henderson, d. gregory frank carter Johnson s?.nderford SOUTHWESTERN BAND alien, k. bade bartels beard van dunham ellis engle ford goodman grissom haahn harrison hayslett heard hope Johnson, j. knoll krause luderus meza mott mckinley mckenzie peters prin le purvis rossman sanchez sanderford schulze shaw Sinclair stuchell webb A CAPPELLA CHOIR wells spellman, p. oxley knoll welch bartells fitzhugh dodge magee barbee trevino barrett matthews shullenberger stokes applin strotrrer warthen rodriquez corey Clifford roe russell ostlund matthews shaw porter lyman strain davis, n. bohmfalk gregory henderson, d. meek SINFONIETTA douglass mcgehee brown, b. penick brown, e. kopecky lincoln tanner applin gillespie karr forswall harris Johnson moffett guidry thune nelson schulze heard, s. dr. peterson dr. campbell bade engle krause haahn osborn mckinley bartels heard, t. aleman hayslett beard goodman nelson purvis ford ellis schroeder WRA carsey wood hale rodgers bradford FOREIGN STUDENTS lee yeo moffett soon yam dean swift dr. permenter lagarda lang dr. Jacobs ali YOUNG REPUBLICANS rodriquez barrick hudspeth weaver fuller dillon maedgen nobles zuckero mcmahon NEA adams, j. andes atlee bailey barbee barr bauer, b. blackwood blaine bohmfalk brannon brindley broughton byard caldwell callaway cervenka chadwick cole Cunningham curry daughtrey davis, j. davis, n. dobkins doehne farmer farr fikes granberry gunn gutowsky hall hardcastle hardy harper harrison, j. hawthorne hennington henry holmes hull hunter johansen kaiser kelly kern kirkpatrick klaerner klaveness kuhns kullin lunsford mckinley, k. mckinley, m. mckinney mcnulty manofsky maxey magee mendietta meyer miller norman ovitz paty peavy prescott roberts rowley rundell schleier scott smith, g. snider, 1. spellman, 1. spessard steffy strain tate tatum thomas, c. trevino, d. wagoner walker, r. walker walshe weeks westervelt whiting wilkie williams, j. womack rodgers, j. storter boatman SOU ' WESTER callaway kirkpatrick grayson guerrant greene rose stridde todd dillard goodman heck galloway, g. rumbaugh ROSEMARY MEEK MISS SOUTHWESTERN 134 Theresa Stridde 135 Bonnie Hennington HOMECOMING QUEEN MANDY WEAVER Patti Poling e fflb 136 Janet Rumbaugh Judy Phillips 37 Floyd McSpadden WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES •■■' ■■■- ■■■■? 140 ita H Sherry Haygood t n i • £ - t«3p %, Jim Swift Lynn Aycock 142 DeWayne Varnadore Fred Winslow John Curry 143 SOU ' WESTER SUPERLATIVES 144 COMMUNITY ACTION Ed Reynolds for Phi Delta Theta ■-■Itl EXECUTION OF THE ARTS Zakaria Ali Barbara Brown ATHLETIC EXCELLENCE Larry Haynes Bobby Young (Not Pictured) 145 Patty Poling — Alpha Delta Pi Debbie Stef fy— Zeta Tau Alpha 148 Beauties Shirolyn Moffett — Independent 149 ' ■-ft. 1 MM MHrP g| «- J — «r 1. Donna Barr 20. Ann Norton 2. Janie Rodgers 21. Jane Paty 3- Terri Hill 22. Marcene Perry 4. Becky Kelly 23- Sharon Daughtrey 5. Darlynne Morehead 24. Julie Harrison 6. Janice Liese 25. Suzette Rawlings 7. Janet Rumbaugh 26. Patti Poling 8. Susan Watford 27. Lou Wells 9. Vicki Granberry 28. Stacy Langston 10. Teresa Carsey 29. Judy Phillips 11. Sal lie Parr 30. Debbie Hardin 12. Kay Klaveness 31. Jill Fryer 13- Mary Ann Tate 32. Jane Williams 14. Susan Wood 33. Tina Dawe 15. Rosemary Meek 34. Nina Stephenson 16. Judy Jones 35. Melissa Hallman 17. Betty Bradford 36. Shalli Goodall 18. Susan Gresham 37. Kit Rowley 19- Flora Thomas 38. Pam Hale 152 Alpha Delta Pi 39. Sue Stauffer 40. Holly Sattler 41. Susan Hendrick 42. Mary Yates 43. Becky Lundblad 44. Sally Walker 45- Dianne Cannon 46. Ann Brannon 47. Sarah Hawthorne 48. Sandy Hale NOT PICTURED: Debbie Duggan Maxi Duren Judy Eaker Beverly Gustofson Mary Hooper Barbara Lawhon Melissa Kirkpatrick Janie Phillips 153 L. Mary Wieser 16. Jean Gibson 31. 2. Pam Broughton 17. Sarah Thomas 32. 3. Ann Tyrrell 18. Ann Staton 33. 4. Karen Thompson 19. Kathy Gregg 34. 5. Margie Stripling 20. Paula Bellegie 35. 6. Alice Schorre 21. Kay Heffler 36. 1. Martha Irvin 22. Nancy Woodman 37. 8. Tina Bentsen 23. Ca thy Hall 38. 9. Alice Oliver 24. Edna Rollins 39. ]() Shirley Henderson 25. Sherry Strain 40. 11. Sally Clark 26. Kathy Ford 41. 12. Sara Sehucany 27. Lera Tyler 42. n. Debbie Marshall 28. Maureen Ingram 43. 14. Rena Junod 29. Kathy Brumleau 44. 15. Betty Sue Storter 30. Katie Campbell 45. Mary Ann Medford Kathy Crofts Libbie Nutting Pam Maki Susan Tipton Jeanie Stripling Susan Peace Cheryl Bernard Frances McQueen Pam Oliver Cathy Cockrell Tanis Gutowsky Judi Kurth Debbie Henderson Barbara Brown 154 Delta Delta Delta 46. Tee Rose 47. Joan Blaine 48. Dianne McCook 49- Margaret Ann Magee 50. Annelle Fitzhugh 51. Sherry Farmer 52. Linda Chadwick 53- Mannette Dodge 54. Mandy Weaver NOT PICTURED: Gayle Galloway Becky McEntire Nita McKnight Emily Spessard 155 1. Cay Dickson 2. Dianne Weeks 3. Peggy Manofsky 4. Lora Nita Burgess 5. Jean Krueger 6. Ruth Klaerner 7. Nancy Wray 8. Cindy Wilde 9. Jonette Frank 10. Jan Stuchell 11. Annette Hastings 12. Pam Kline 13. Tica Davis 14. Madaline Roberts 15. Pam Rogers 16. Lauran Spellman 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. Sandy Cole Janie Weatherly Kristi Dillon Mary Rushing Mary Cook Shanon Roberts Janice Williams Janie Applin Becky Hardy Tere Nakfor Lynette Farr Shirley Oswald Dinah McCain Barbara Byard Beth Bohmfalk Cheryl Broady 156 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. Nancy Womack Martha Bailey Laurie Scott Nancy Nelson Jean Gillespie Betsy Hansberry Peggy Tatum Kay Holmes Gay Smith NOT PICTURED: Sharon Pudlo Cynthia Thomas Ernestine Trevinio Helen Thornton Marion Walshe Delta Zeta 157 . V 5s . •. ' •. ' , ' ,:; ' „• . fc : 1. Jan Adams 18. Shirley Ickes 2. Janie Lindner 19- Helen Andes 3. Kathy Whiting 20. Joanne Kullin 4. Meade Evans 21. Carol Sweeny 5. Cindy Appleman 22. Nancy Harbordt 6. Jean Keller 23. Robin Walker 7. Sharon Stevens 24. Lise Berger 8. Shirley Watkins 25. Judy Donaldson 9. Pam Denton 26. Toni Nelson 10. Martha McDougall 27. Becky Zuckero 11. Marilyn McAuliffe 28. Editha Hunter 12. Nancy Bode 29. Bonnie Brunson 13. Lydia Ovitz 30. Faye Doty 14. Mary Kern 21. Debby (PC) Brough 15. Cindy Truitt 32. Mary Standifer 16. Janice Johnson 33. Ellen Pitcock 17. Karen Wilke 34. Linda Harris 158 35. Molly Johnson 36. Lisa Carroll 37. Winnann Stone 38. Jeanie Stokes 39. Mary Horn 40. Marie Atlee 41. Jan Caldwell 42. Phyllis Hutchinson 43. Karen McKinley 44. Bronwen Webb 45. Nancy Dobkins 46. Loine Simons NOT PICTURED: Sandy Hitz Susan Prescott Gay Zaumeyer Phi Mu 159 atttSti;;;;, Bl f ffffTT ! ; nasn::t:t ssanraat sssae::: • sssssa SSSI:::;: . i V 1. Jan Westervelt 2. Joan Brindley 3. Jenny Thompson 4. Pam Gregory 5. Glenda Fikes 6. Dana Nicholson 7. Ann Dodds 8. Pam Thompson 9. Meg Huebner 10. Nancy Schleier 11. Tudy Boatman 12. Linda Doehne 13. Pam Bauer 14. A. Elkins 15. Leslie Quenichet 16. Bonnie Hennington 17. Elise Detweiler 18. Vicki Adler 19. Punkin Cockrell 20. Beth Snodgrass 21. Donna Lunsford 22. Judy Kuhns 23. Kay Allen 24. Lois Ulmer 25. Nancianna Crosthwaithe 26. Robin Burrell 27. Bettina Peters 28. Donna Dildine 29. Allison Morse 30. Debbie McKee 31. Lyn Reas 32. Lynn Aycock 33. Joan Raynor 34. Ann McKinney 35. Rosie Williams 36. Janet Miller 37. Sherry Haygood 38. Paula Forney 39. Cathy Hull 40. Frances Shephard 160 Zeta Tail Alpha 41. Kathy Brigman 42. Joan Westervelt 4.3. Carol Bondurant 44. LeeAnn Wagnor NOT PICTURED: Jeanie McSpadden Camilla Peel Jane Ann Caldwell Margaret Mings Margaret Peden Rona Robertson Debby Steffy Barbara Simms Ellen Swift Jere Weed 161 Independent Association i 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Grady Roe Dori Dana Bruce Emmerton Kathie Warthen Richard Prather Judy Campbell John Bigley Beth Riley Roseann Sanford David Shaw Bill Fling Cathy Lincon Donna Conrad Bill Scarborough Sue Rogers Winter Derus Linda Torno Becky Marshall David Baulsch (63 1. Dick Ellis 2. Rob Godsey 3. Randall Frizzel 4. Lucien Hughes 5. Jim Nolan 6. Bob Edmunson 7. Rock Houston 8. Bill Morrill ( ) Mrs. Williams 10. Jim Adamson 1 1. Lyle Roberts 12. Steve Hailey 13- Ty Davenport 14. David Lougee 15. Mark Ramsey 16. Jack Phelps 17. Walter Sheffield 18. Skip Southworth 19. Ray Petty 20. Gayle Williams 21. Ev Schrum 22. Vic Gleichman 23. Tim Ware 24. Bob Grayson 25. Jim Booth 26. Randy Boyer 27. Mark Lindell 28. David Heatley 29. Art Bussey 30. David Schade 31. Charlie Hart 32. Phil Bartlett 33. Dewayne Varnadore 34. Steve Huey 35. Charlie McGrath 36. Leonard Goffman 37. Archie Milam 38. Terry Richards 39. Jim Mason 40. Craig Jones 41. Roy Fuller 42. Bob Blakewell 43. Louie Bustamante 44. J. R. Keller and Bullet 45. Hank Milliard 46. Larry Lazicki 47. Alan Drake 48. Jeff Gilbreath 164 Kappa Alpha cr les L J6 t. ± J . . 49. Scott Miller 50. Rick Hayslett 51. Bill Powell 52. Chris Cahill 53. Matt Morian 54. Harry Blaylock NO T PICTURED: 55. Jerry Harmon 56. Marty Harris 57. Brian Gentle 58. Jay Mead 59. Mark McKenzie 60. Brian Heck 61. Bill Sommers 62. Buster McKay 63. Mark Stubblefield 64. Ken Musgrave 165 ( K n « . - . ' I t- 1 $ k s _   ■' T ■' - ..■■■, .-;-- :. r v ■t «■■■T.T,... J — if m . -;. J te«t ' fc  t ] iea 1 , 1. Tom Madsen 2. Chuck Adkins 3. Joe Abel 4. Chuck DeCuir 5. John Andrusek 6. Bill Rives 7. Mike Owens 8. Tom Forbes 9. Gary Joyce 10. Bruce Harrison 11. John Legg 12. Frank Baumann 13. J. L. Love 14. Richard Kline 15. Matt Seger 16. Terry Richard 17. Mike Hall 18. Bob Key 19. Jerome Davis 20. Will Cossaboom 21. Scott Harpst 22. Phil Peterson 23. Jesse Douglas 24. Cletus Dodd 25. Mike Galloway 26. Bill McCarver 166 ttzjF . Kappa Sigma 27. Erick Harpst 28. Ron Davis 29. Tom Beck 30. Mike Morford 31. Tom Birdsong 32. Tom Hambleton 33. Mark Blackbird 34. Irl Walker 35. Bruce Barrick NOT PICTURED: Spencer Marron Kent Hutton Jerry Richard 167 1. C. J. Whigham 7. Ray Ford 2. Blair Lohmeyer 8. Chris Phillips 3. Charles Mason 9. Bob Karr 4. Tom Miller 10. Tom Richardson 5. Gerry Lawler 11. Buffalo Britton 6. Dan Ryder 1. Steve Tipton 20. 2. Alan Lacy 21. 3. Bill Rambo 22. 4. Jim Beard 23. 5. David Clyde 24. 6. Wally Pou 25. 7. Kenny Holly 26. 8. Mike Rossman 27. 9- Rick Holland 28. 10. Chris Harrison 29. 11. Peter Berger 30. 12. Rob Frenzel 31. 13. Steve Kreger 32. 14. Ken Klaveness 33. 15. Ron Wellborn 34. 16. Gene Kraft 35. 17. Jack Harris 36. 18. Denny Pickett 37. 19- Charles Mayfield 38. Dennis Kost Joe Key Dick Donaldson Bill Hervey Paul Witt Lindsey Thompson Joe Davidson Rick Eason Craig Crosby Gene Kincaid Chris Rodriquez Howard Surber Bob Kessler Gary Spring Bruce Edwards Ronnie Underwood Larry Lindsey Bill Smith Fred Winslow 168 BASF.BAU. TEAM '  0 Pi Kappa Alpha 1. Ken Johnson 14. Dick Murchison 2. Frank Harshman 15. Kim Furstenwerth = Johnny Johnson 4. Bruce Sterk NOT PICTURED: 5. Bill Stubblefield Sam MacFerran 6. Jim Foster Bob Snider 7. Glen Hansen Ken Gorence 8. Floyd McSpadden Andy Welch 9. Joe Spezia Jan Schullenberger 10. Richard Crozier Paul Spellman 11. David Cory Doug Brown 12. Bruce Hay Jim Swift 13. John Curry Bob Mann 169 1. David True 18. Jack Nichols 35. Turner Caldwell 2. Tom Bullock 19. Louis Braden 36. Buddy Weaver 3. Hugh Pa rrish 20. Marty Palmer 37. Rod Cranberry 4. Jim Leslie 21. Boo Hauser 38. Ed Wagner 5. Randy Hood 22. Richard Trotter 39. Bill Ayers 6. Jim Sargent 23. Tommy Taylor 40. Bill Willis 7. Ronnie Reitz 24. Tom Jarmon 41. Eric Maedgen 8. Barry Rodriguez 25. Bill Rawlings 42. Forrester Smith 9- Mark Griffin 26. Bill Pratt 43. Marshall Hennington 10. Tom Snoddy 27. Larry Simpson 44. Charlie Walne i i. Joe Russel 28. Bayne Dorrell 45. Mike Martin 12. Dwight Childress 29. Ben Cunningham 46. Doug Vair 13. Matt Roberts 30. Richard Rice 47. Curtis Green 14. Charles Sanford 31. Mark Hoclgkins 48. Fred Griffin 15. Steve White 32. Mark McMahon 49. Mike Skidgel 16. Rob Youker 33. Howard Crow 50. Scott Douglas 17. Ed Reynolds 34. Mitchell Brown 51. Pat Wallace 170 Phi Delta Theta ' • NOT PICTURED: James Young Robert Young James Southern Charles Dwyer Bill Warren Baxter Clark Carl Hamilton Robert Matthews David Deaton Gayle Carpenter Mike McGee Ralph Tate Mac Stringfellow Gary Pat Manford Jan Douglass Jay Hodgkins Dan Stultze 171 174 Basketball Jacobs Elyse Holmes Wright Stultz Lacy Gool Young Hammonds Carpenter Deaton Warren Matthews McGee Coach Merritt Coach Miguel 1969-1970 SEASON s.u. Opponent 63 E.T.B.C. 71 54 St. Edwards 50 54 T.W.C. 56 54 T.L.C. 46 55 St. Marys 81 63 E.T.B.C. 61 69 T.W.C. 70 59 T.L.C. 56 59 St. Edwards 72 70 St. Marys 81 Most Valuable Players David Clyde Nate Wright Finished Third in Big State Conference 175 176 177 Baseball Cross Snoddy Holley Jacobs Simpson Sharp Hodgkins Bankston Maxey Lacy Matthews Sadler Haynes Austin Coach Miguel 1969-1970 SEASON s.u. Opponent 3 St. Edwards 2 8 T.L.C. 12 1 St. Marys 3 1 T.L.C. 3 2 St. Marys 4 6 T.W.C. 1 3 T.W.C. 6 6 St. Edwards 4 178 J 79 180 ' • ' -• ■. ' -,, •■. v.,. ,... X lv. iryY.-y ' T ' T T 7 ' f - ' f } Smith Harris Warren Oxley Brewer Season Record: Won 5 Lost 8 Southwestern Third in Conference 182 Coach Merritt Hodgkins Willis Torch Douglass Eddins GOLF 183 INTRAMURALS 1969-1970 Intramural Results MEN Intramural Trophy Swimming Golf Football Ping Pong (Singles) Ping Pong (Doubles) Pool (Singles) Pool (Singles) Volleyball Basketball Bowling Softball Track Tennis Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Independents Independents Kappa Sigma Independents Kappa Alpha Independents Phi Delta Thet a Kappa Alpha Independents Pi Kappa Alpha 185 izixiJZsZxisZJZ. 186 Intramural Trophy Archery Basketball 1969-1970 Intramural Results WOMEN tie Swimming Volleyball Softball Badminton (Doubles) Badminton (Singles) Tennis (Doubles) Tennis (Singles) Bowling Ping Pong (Doubles) Ping Pong (Singles) Outstanding Sports Captain Delta Zeta Phi Mu Delta Zeta Phi Mu Independents Delta Delta Delta Alpha Delta Pi Independents AJpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi Zeta Tau Alpha Alpha Delta Pi Delta Zeta Zeta Tau Alpha Phi Mu Zeta Tau Alpha Phi Mu Lauran Spellman Delta Zeta 187 188 f-SKKf SEN Thomas Anderson Helen Andes Marie Atlee Lynn Aycock Jim Bankston 192 John Curry Joe Davidson Tohn Dillard Nancy Dobkins Glenda Fikes Patricia Barbee Mary Helen Bengel John Bertschler Darleen Blackwood Ken Bland Bonnie Brunson Louie Bustamante Barbara Byard Mary Callaway Cathy Cockrell Sandra Cole IORS 193 Bill Fling Mike Florence Randall Frizzell Roy Fuller Kim Furstenwerth SENIO 194 Edward Godwin Judd Graves Bob Grayson Fred Griffin Tanis Gutowsky Sandra Hitz John Hudspeth Editha Hunter Kent Hutton Martha Irvin Tom Jarmon Ken Johnson Gary Joyce Gail Kaiser John Robert Keller Mary Kern Bob Kessler 195 ? SENIOR Rosemary Meek Kathryn Meyer Toni Nelson Robert Nielsen Marcene Perry Tommy Porter 196 Grady Roe Arnold Safarik, Jr. . Laurie Scott Everett Schrum Bill Shull U , Larry Simpson Gay Smith nt m ■f§k f jm- Judi Kurth Richard Luderus Floyd McSpadden Ann McKinney Marilyn McKinley Mark McKenzie Anita Holiman Maedgen Robert Mann Carol Pirrung Mann Rommie Maxey S Wally Pou Susan Prescott Bill Rawlings Suzette Rawlings Ed Reynolds, III Shannon Roberts 197 s 198 Larry Stanberry Mary Standifer Sharon Stevens Dennis Stout Theresa Stridde Ik. k ENIORS Florra Thomas Virginia Thompson Susan Tipton Gail Todd Robert Truitt, Jr. Don Underwood Ronnie Underwood Jan Westervelt Timothy Shaun Wicker Karen Wilkie Rosemarie Williams Fred Winslow Gay Zaumeyer 199 THOMAS MITCHELL ANDERSON Memphis, Tennessee History HELEN WYNNE ANDES Houston English WRA; Hospitality Com.; Speleological Society; Vice-Pres. Kurth; Vice-Pres. NEA; Phi Mu, Phi Mu Beauty, Standards Ch., Secretary, Asst. Treasurer MARIE IDELLE ATLEE Austin History Phi Mu, Corresponding Sec, Reporter, Registrar; WRA; NEA; Publicity Com. NITA LYNN AYCOCK Trinit Biology Zeta Tau Alpha, Scholarship Ch.; Cardinal Key, Who ' s Who; SU Science Society, Pres. of Student Judiciary; Kurth and Sneed House Council; Union Entertainment Com.; Student Life Council LOUIS JAMES BANKSTON Georgetown History PATRICIA SUMNER BARBEE Georgetown Music Education Delta Zeta; Delta Omicron Pres.; Choir; Band; Orienta- tion Leader DONNA LYNN BARR San Antonio Elementary Education Alpha Delta Pi; AWS President PAUL ALLEN BELL Dallas Sociology and Psychology Independent Assoc, Secretary and Treasurer; UCM MARY HELEN BENGEL Denison Psychology UCM Council; Ch. Forum Comm. Union; Union Directorate Member; Resident Asst.; LK House Council JOHN JOSEPH BERTSCHOER Galveston Humanities and Religion ACappella Choir; Scholars ' Program; Ruter House Coun. Pres.; All Men ' s Judiciary; Bible Reading Contest Winner; Distinction List DARLENE KAYE BLACKWOOD San Antonio Math and History NEA; Sneed House Council Treasurer; WRA; Pi Gamma Mu; LK House Council KENNETH GLEN BLAND Midland History Model United Nations; Alpha Chi; Pi Gamma Mu HARRY ISHAM BLAYLOCK, III Birmingham, Alabama Biology Kappa Alpha, Treasurer; No. 5 and 1; Sec of IFC JUDY BOURLAND Dallas English LOUIS REED BRADEN Houston History Tennis; Phi Delta Theta, Pledgetrainer MARGARET ANN BRANNON Shamrock Music Education Alpha Delta Pi, Pres.; Delta Omicron, 1st VP; Cardinal Key, Sec; Who ' s Who; SNEA; AWS Rep.; Young Republican; Beauty Nominee; Homecoming Queen Nom- inee JAMES ALLEN BRITTON Dallas Religion Scholars Program; Cheriox Conspiracy JEFFREY DONALD BRITTON Houston Chemistry Pi Kappa Alpha; Science Society ALAN MARION BROWN Georgetown English BONNIE GENE BRUNSON Houston Spanish Honor Council, Secretary; Cardinal Key; Phi Mu. JENNIE CARTER BUSBY Georgetown Elementary Education LUIS C. SANCHEZ DE BUSTAMANTE Franklin, North Carolina History and Spanish Kappa Alpha BARBARA GAIL BYARD Galveston Elementary Education Delta Zeta, Pres., Secretary, Social; NEA Treasurer CHRIS CAH1LL Houston Biology Kappa Alpha, Sergeant at Arms and Pledge Trainer MARY ELIZABETH CALLAWAY Beilaire English Editor Yearbook, 2; Who ' s Who; Cardinal Key; Pi Delta Epsilon; Newspaper Staff; Magazine, Poetry Editor; Steering Com. of Selt Study; Miss Southwestern Nominee; Orientation Leader; Distinction List; Congress Represen- tative; Welfare Com.; UCM LINDA ROSE CERVENKA Georgetown Physical Education DAVID BURR CLIFFORD Georgetown A ' Cappella Choir; German Club; Union Speakers Com.; UCM CATHY LYNN COCKRELL San Antonio English Delta Delta Delta, Fraternity Education; Student Congress SANDRA ANNE COLE McGregor Elementary Education Delta Zeta, Treasurer; NEA Pres. VERNON WILLIAM CROSS Georgetown Physical Education JOHN STEWART CURRY Pampa History Pi Kappa Alpha, Pres.; Blue Key Sec; Union, Vice- President JOE RILEY DAVIDSON Houston Government Pre Law Society, Pres.; Model United Nations; Pi Kappa Alpha, Rec Sec, Cor. Sec, Public Relations JEROME KELLY DAVIS Odessa Biology and Chemistry Kappa Sigma, Vice President, House Council JOHN WILLIAM DILLARD Richardson English UCM; Blue Key; House Council Herman Brown and Moody-Shern NANCY ETHEL DOBKINS Houston Elementary Education Phi Mu, Panhellenic; Hospitality Com.; Kurth House Council; NEA Publicity Ch. ALAN EZRA DRAKE Tia Juana, Edo. Zulia, Venezuela Business Kappa Alpha FRANCISCO ESTRADA, JR. San Marcos Religion Pi Kappa Alpha ROSEMARY KILLEN EVANS Georgetown Math GLENDA IRENE FIKES Portland English Zeta Tau Alpha; Cardinal Key; Alpha Chi; Pi Gamma Mu; Sec. of Union; NEA WILLIAM JACKSON FLING, III El Paso History Varsity Track; Independent Assoc; AMF MICHAEL FRANCIS FLORENCE La Marque History JOHN RANDALL FRIZZELL Houston Government Kappa Alpha; Student Congress ROY LANIER FULLER Baytown Economics Kappa Alpha, Vice Pres.; Pres. Student Assoc; Pi Gamma Mu; Blue Key KIM ROBERT FURSTENWERTH Dallas Art Set Designer; Regional Coordinator, Union; Pi Kappa Alpha, Soc. Ch., Recording Secretary JEFFREY DEAN GILBREATH Brunswick, Maine History Kappa Alpha EDWARD REDDIN GODWIN, JR. Houston Sociology BRADLEY HOWARD GOULD Houston Biology Alpha Chi CLIFFORD RODNEY GRANBERRY, JR. Georgetown Economics Phi Delta Theta; Pi Gamma Mu VICKI WEST GRANBERRY Georgetown Elementary Education Alpha Delta Pi JOHN JUDSON GRAVES Kermit Biology Leadership Board and Lab; Union Dance Committee ROBERT WYNN GRAYSON, JR. Calgary, Alberta, Canada Biology Kappa Alpha; Science Society; Blue Key; Sou ' wester Photographer FREDDIE LONG GRIFFIN Piano Biology Science Society, Pres.; Phi Delta Theta, Pres.; Alpha Chi, Vice Pres.; Student Judiciary TANIS GUTOWSKY McAUen Elementary Education Delta Delta Delta, Recording Sec; Kurth House Council; NEA SANDRA ELAINE HALE Dallas Art Alpha Delta Pi MARY ELIZZBETH HANSBERRY Houston Sociology Delta Zeta, Pledge Trainer and Panhellenic FRANKLIN ATKINSON HARSHMAN Houston History Pi Kappa Alpha TOM BRUCE HAY Texarkana Drama Student Senate; Ruter House Council; Mask and Wig- Pi Kappa Alpha 6 ' SHERRA LYNN HAYGOOD Houston American Studies. Zeia Tau Alpha; Union Vice-Pres.; Cardinal Key; Pi Gamma Mu DAVID CHRIS HEATLEY Beaumont Psychology Kappa Alpha BRYAN COLLIER HECK Houston History Kappa Alpha BONNIE JEAN HENNINGTON Beaumont French Zeta Tau Alpha, Pres.; Panhellenic Soc. Ch.; Alpha Chi- AWS Advisory Council; NEA; Cheerleader; Kurth House Council; Orientation Leader; WRA JOHN HITZ Georgetown History SANDRA ROLAND HITZ Georgetown Drama Alpha Chi; Cardinal Key; Mask Wig; Pi Delta Epsilon; Phi Epsilon Delta JOHN FREDERICK HUDSPETH Austin History Canterbury Club EDITHA ANN HUNTER Houston Elementary Education Phi Mu. Sec, Mantance, Registrar, Historian; Band; SNEA; Hospitality Comm. KENT BOYNTON HUTTON Dalhart General Business Student Congress, Pari.; Development Council MARTHA CAROLL IRVIN Freeport Math and Chemistry Delta Delta Delta, Pres., Treas., Orientation Leader; WRA; AWS Advisory Council, Treas.; Science Society; Sneed House Council; Cardinal Key; Scholars Program THOMAS MARION JARMON, III Dallas Business KENNETH WAYNE JOHNSON Houston Psychology Leadership Board; Student Congress; Band; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu; Blue Key; University Council MOLLY JEAN JOHNSON Houston English Phi Mu LOLA ANNETTE JOSEPH Round Rock Home Economics GARY ROBERT JOYCE Pasadena Biology and Psychology Kappa Sigma, Pledge Trainer; Guard and Treasurer GAIL KAISER Taylor English Phi Mu, Pres., Pledge Director; NEA; AWS Advisory Council; WRA; Hospitality Comm.; Student Life REV. ALFRED EDWARD KALLUS Georgetown Sociology JOHN ROBERT KELLER Sugar Land Chemistry and Biology Kappa Alpha, Sports Director MARY ELIZABETH KERN Buchanan Dam English Phi Mu, Song Leader, Fraternity Ed., Beauty; WRA; NEA; Student Congress; Publicity Committee ROBERT TELLER KESSLER Uvalde General Business Pi Kappa Alpha; LAGNAF KENNETH ALF KLAVENESS Houston English Pi Kappa Alpha, Pledge Trainer, Rush Ch.; IFC; Pre- Law Soc. JUDITH CAROLE KURTH Lufkin Elementary Education Delta Delta Delta, Social Ch. JEFF LINDEN LOVE Del Rio Government Kappa Sigma, President SAM RUSSELL LOVE Taylor Drama RICHARD OSWALD LUDERUS San Antonio Music Education Concert Band; Sinfonietta; Woodwind Quintet; Stage Band; Ruter House Council DONNA ERNESTINE LUNSFORD Fort Worth Elementary Education Zeta Tau Alpha; NEA MICHAEL McGEE Harrisburg, Arkansas Biology Phi Delta Theta MARK STUART McKENZIE Fort Stockton Economics Band; Orchestra; Stagehand; Pre-Law Society; Kappa Alpha MARILYN McKINLEY Pearsall- Mathematics Band; Young Democrats JULIA ANN McKINNEY Dallas Elementary Education Zeta Tau Alpha; Student Congress, Sec; Kurth House Council, Pres.; NEA, Hist. Zeta Beauty; UCM; AWS Advisory Coun. FLOYD FULLER McSPADDEN, JR. Houston Government Union, Pres. Ch. of International Affairs Comm.; Pi Gamma Mu, Pres.; Blue Key; Who ' s Who; Scholars Program Distinction List; Self Study Comm.; Young Republicans, Pres.; Pi Kappa Alpha, Pledge Trainer; IFC ANITA HOLIMAN MAEDGEN Salado Business GARY PAT MANFORD Smiley History Phi Delta Theta CAROL PIRRUNG MANN Georgetown Art Education ROBERT SMITH MANN Georgetown Accounting Pi Kappa Alpha, Sec. WILLIAM SPENCER MARROW, JR. Fort Worth Psychology Kappa Sigma, Vice President EDWARD MERRILL MASSEY George West Biology LYNDA MARIE MAXEY Georgetown Elementary Education ROSEMARY MEEK Beaumont Music Education Cardinal Key, Vice-Pres.; Sneed House, Pres.; Delta Omicron, Pres.; Alpha Delta Pi, Songleader; Who ' s Who; NEA; A ' Cappella Choir; AWS; Miss Southwestern SARA BERNADINE MENDIETA Austin Elementary Education Alpha Chi; SNEA JANICE SUZANN MEYER Houston Medical Technology KATHRYN ELIZABETH MEYER Houston Elementary T.ducatton Alpha Delta Pi ARCHIE ROBERT MILAM, II Sugar Land Chemistry Kappa Alpha; Union, Vice-Ch. Entertainment CHARLES SCOTT MILLER New Orleans, Louisiana Economics Kappa Alpha; Golf Team; Student Congress NANCY GENTRY MILLER Dallas Physical Education Zeta Tau Alpha; Saint of the Year Award ROBERT OVERTON MILLER Dallas Business Kappa Alpha TONI KATHRYN NELSON Dallas Business Phi Mu, Vice Pres.; Hospitality Comm. ROBERT COOKE NIELSEN New Orleans, Louisiana Chemistry Southwestern Speleological Society LYDIA OVITZ Bail Comeau, Quebec, Canada History Phi Mu DOUGLAS ARNOT PAISLEY, II Watertown, Connecticut History Kappa Alpha, Pari.; Pi Gamma Mu; House Council, Treas.; Student Congress PAMELA KAY PEAVY Dallas Elementary Education MARCENE ANN PERRY Atlanta, Georgia History Alpha l elta Pi, Treas.; Panhellenic Rep. CHARLES EDWARD PORTER San Antonio English THOMAS W. PORTER, III Georgetown Music Education Phi Delta Theta; A ' Cappella Choir; Pop Singers; German Club WALLACE GRAHAM POU, JR. Irving • ' Accounting Pi Kappa Alpha, Pres,, Treas.; Pre-Law Society MARILYN SUSAN PRESCOTT Temple Elementary Education Phi Mu, Scholarship; NEA; Kurth House Council; Sneed House Council; WRA SUZETTE RAWLINGS Tyler English Alpha Delta Pi; Hospitality Comm.; WRA; Kurth House Council Vice-Pres. WILLIAM DONALD RAWLINGS Dallas Chemistry Phi Delta Theta EDWARD DICKEN REYNOLDS, III Dallas Business Phi Delta Theta; Student Congress; Men ' s House Council TERRY LOUIS RICHARD Houston Sociology Kappa Sigma, Sec. and Rush Ch. SHANNON ELAINE ROBERTS Lamesa Math Delta Zeta; AWS WILLIAM GRADY ROE Divine English Independent Assn., Pres.; Ruter House Council; Mega- phone Rep.; Southwestern Mag. Non-Fiction Ed.; Pi Delta Epsilon; A ' Cappella Choir; Leadership Lab; Evalu- ation Board; Union Governing Board WILLIAM HENRY RUSSELL Georgetown Biology ARNOLD PAUL SAFARIK, JR. Thrall History EVERETT CROSBY SCHRUM Sugar Land Psychology Kappa Alpha, Pledge Trainer; UCM; A ' Cappella Choir; Student Congress; Student Judiciary; Union Governing Board; Self-Study Comm.; Residence Asst. WILLIAM HOLCOMB SHULL Houston Physics LARRY KEITH SIMPSON Grand Saline Physical Education Phi Delta, Sports Capt. GAY SMITH Angleton Art Delta Zeta; Young Republicans JAMES LEE SMITH Mart Biology GARY PORTER SPRING Austin English Pi Kappa Alpha LAWRENCE RAYMOND STANBERRY Dallas Chemistry MUN. Pari.; Cheriox Conspiracy; Student Congress MARY MANOR STANDIFER Austin French and History Phi Mu, Vice Pres., Sec; Alpha Chi; Student Congress; Pi Gamma Mu SHARON ANNE STEVENS Waco Religion Phi Mu, Pledge Trainer; WRA JUDITH SCHWERTNER STEWART Austin Elementary Education MARTIN ALAN STOLBUN Houston Biology DENNIS DALE STOUT Yucaipa, California Biology Student Congress, Treas.; Southwestern Science Society THERESA ANN STRIDDE Bay City Psychology Leadership Board; Resident Asst. Student Congress, Sec; Self-Study Board; Orientation Leader AWS Advisory Coun.; Cardinal Key; Student Life Coun.; Sneed House Coun.; Miss Southwestern Nominee; Yearbook Staff; Distinction List; Discipline Committee ALFRED STRINGFELLOW Alpine Business Phi Delta Theta MAJORIE LEE STRIPLING Abilene Speech and Government Delta Delta Delta, Scholarship Ch.; Resident Asst.; Young Republicans; Mask and Wig; Alpha Chi ELEANOR ANN SWIFT Bellaire Elementary Education Zeta Tau Alpha, Asst. Scholarship Ch., Ritual Ch. JAMES EMORY SWIFT Georgetown English and History Alpha Chi; Pi Gamma Mu; Who ' s Who JAY RALPH TATE Dallas Psychology Phi Delta Theta, Social Ch. MARY ANN TATE Justin Elementary Education Alpha Delta Pi; Young Republicans; NEA CYNTHIA ANN THOMAS Georgetown Elementary Education Delta Zeta FLORRA ANN THOMAS Bellaire Psychology Alpha Delta Pi, Activities Ch., 2nd Vice-President VIRGINIA MAE THOMPSON Corpus Christi Math Zeta Tau Alpha: Alpha Chi SUSAN ANN TIPTON Weslaco Chemistry Delta Delta Delta, Treas.; A ' Cappella; Band GAIL ANN TODD Irving Psychology Leadership Board; Alpha Chi; Dean ' s List; UCM Coun- cil; Outstanding Sophomore Woman; Resident Asst.; Orientation Leader; Self-Study Comm.; President ' s Scholar- ship; Yearbook Staff; M ; ss Southwestern Nominee DANIEL DAVID TREVINO Georgetown Elementary Education NEA ROBERT RALPH TRUITT, JR. Midland Economics and Accounting Pre-Law Society; Young Republicans; Pi Gamma Mu LERA PATRICK TYLER Overton History Delta Delta Delta, Service Projects Ch.; UCM DONALD WALLACE UNDERWOOD Wichita Falls History Blue Key; Who ' s Who; Congress V-P. RONALD LEE UNDERWOOD Wichita Falls Psychology Pi Kappa Alpha; Blue Key; Alpha Chi; Distinction List; Student Congress; Union Governing Board; IFC, Leadership Board; Who ' s Who; Student Life; Resident Asst.; Scholars Program; President ' s Liaison Comm. MORRIS DEWAYNE VARNADORE Houston History Student Congress, Pres.; Who ' s Who; Blue Key; Pi Gamma Mu; House Council Vice-Pres.; Kappa Alpha MARION WALSHE Houston History Delta Zeta; WRA; AWS LINDA ANN WALTON Austin German JOHN PHILIP WATKINS Georgetown Business SHIRLEY STEMBRIDGE WATKINS Georgetown English Phi Mu, Vice-Pres.; Senate Rep.; Union, Hospitality and Publicity Comm. AMANDA LOUISE WEAVER .Lafayette, Louisiana Sociology Delta Delta Delta, Rush Capt.; Homecoming Queen; Who ' s Who; Megaphone Editor; Pi Delta Epsilon, Pres.; WRA; Liaison Comm.; Cardinal Key; Cheerleader; Resident Asst.; Young Democrats; Leadership Board; Student Judiciary; Orientation Leader BRONWEN EVALYN WEBB Shreveport, Louisiana Latin Phi Mu, Social and Standards Ch.; Student Judiciary, Sec; NEA; WRA JANET LEE WESTERVELT Corpus Christi Government Zeta Tau Alpha, Treas. and Social Ch.; Kurth House Council; Alpha Chi; Pi Gamma Mu, Sec. SARA HAUSENFLUKE WHITE Georgetown Voice KAREN WILKIE Houston Mathematics Phi Mu, Social and Social Service Ch.; Sneed House Council; Alpha Chi; WRA; Cardinal Key; Science Soci.; Student Judiciary; SNEA GREGORY BRIAN WILLIAMS Houston Philosophy ROSEMARIE WILLIAMS Houston English Zeta Tau Alpha FRED AVON WINSLOW Waco History Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu; Blue Key; Student Judiciary; Who ' s Who; M-S House Council; UCM PAUL LOUIS WITT Ballinger Education Pi Kappa Alpha GAY ESTER ZAUMEYER San Antonio Physics and Math Science Society; Alpha Chi, Pres.; Cardinal Key; Speleo- logical Society; Phi Mu; Miss Southwestern Nominee Juniorjuniorjuniorjuniorjuniorjuniorjuniorjunior Junior Juniorjuniorjuniorjuni Bonnie Carter Dwight Childress Dori Dana Danny Darden Sharon Daughtrey David Deaton Chuck Decuir 203 Jayni McCarver 204 Choo-King Eng Royce Gehrels Jean Gibson Vic Gleichmann Gary Gool Stephen Kreger Judy Kuhns Joann Kullin Gerry Lawler Camilla Peel 205 Barbara Turner Bill Stubblefield Mark Stubblefield Linda Tatum Helen Thornton Janice Williams Dianne Woolard Nate Wright Yang Yang Yeo 207 Soph omoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomore SophomoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomore Donna Dildine Elise Detweiler Linda Doehne Bruce Edwards Bob Edmiston Bruce Emmerton Susan Engle Lydia Gardner Mary Faith Gean Jean Gillespie Shalli Goodall Martin Goodman Ken Gorence Marsha Griffin 209 Gene Kopecky Alan Lacy YDU iETNAM WAP Sam MacFerran Eric McKinney 210 Boo Hausser Larry Haynes Mary Horn Steve Huey Sarah Heard Lucien Hughes Gene Kincaid Richard Kline Tom Koenig Frances McQueen Jean McSpadden Randy Madsen Charles Mason Cliff Meier Margaret Mings Dick Murchison Dana Nicholson Chris Phillips Patty Rundell Jim Noland Ann Norton Libbie Nutting Robert Olde Ellen Pitcock Patti Poling Tom Richardson Gail Rivers Xh Kenny Sadler Stephen Salmon Carolyn Sanderford Eleanor Osborn Claire Peel Madaline Roberts Ronna Robertson G M It Jim Sargeant Bill Scarborough 213 Karen Thompson Ann Tyrrell Lois Ulmer Michael Vogler Robin Walker Charles Walne Tim Ware Kathleen Warthen Stephen Welch C. J. Whigham Pam Whitfield Gayle Williams Mike Yam 215 FreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmeF Kay Allen Cindy Appleman Neill Austin Phil Banks William Barbee Peter Berger Cheryl Bernard Teresa Carsey Ray Cates Linda Chadwick James Colby Molly Connolly William P. Coody Mary Cook Dick Donaldson Jesse Douglas iFreshmenFreshm Carol Bondurant Katie Campbell Dianne Cannon David Cory Kathy Crofts Ann Dodds Mannette Dodge fat Christine Hiser Mark Eddins Allison Elkins 217 Christine Hiser Cathy Hull Rick Hayslett Shirley Henderson Diane Henry Bill Hervey Hank Hilliard Ann Hinkelman Rip Hirsch M « M Judith Jones Marilyne Karr Ann Kirkendall Pam Kline Guy Knoll Mary Anne Knowles Dennis Kost 219 fWTta Becki Marshall Mike Martin Jim Mason Anne Matthews Charles Mayfield Mary Ann Medford Shirolyn Moffett rv j Nancy Nelson Larry Nobles Wynette Norman Terry Norton Alice Oliver John Onprusek Shirley Oswald Bettina Peters Claude Pollard Mark Pringle Leslie Quenichet Joan Raynor Mark Ramsey Lyn Reas 220 Frankie Lee Janice Liese Kathy Lincoln Janie Lindner Larry Lindsay Paul Louis Charles McGrath V fV- a . Debbie McKee Nita McKnight Karen McKinley Mark McMahon Eric Maedgen Margaret Ann Magee mkmsmd Susan Moncrief Susan Moore Allison Morse Richard Mott Tere Nakfoor Cindy Nelson wLt m Marcus Owen Michael Owens Paul Oxley Martin Palmer Joe Patton Susan Peace Margaret Peden Chris Rodriguez Pam Rogers Sue Rogers 221 Buddy Weaver Ron Wellborn Debby Satterfield Karen Sherwood Beth Snodgrass Bill Sommers Jimmy Southern Scott Spangler Emily Spessard Sue Stauffer Jack Stewart Jeanne Stripling Cindy Wilde Jane Williams Nancy Womack Mary Yates Bobby Young Joe Zavislan Becky Zuckero 223 TOMORROW. 224 «•:•:•:•:« ' . ' .•.•:•:•:•:•:. 225 I carry Time beneath the smooth sheetskin poppypetal thin, transparent covering a bag of stones and jagged glass — a manchild on my back. 227 228 We gaze through and beyond the blades and buds and cornices to a before while remembering an after in mute anger at the beauty and awesome adoration of the vulgar and decayed. 229 230 We are restless in the cherishing knowing that child replaces man, but being we the two and at once, both despising and drinking the here and the soon to be gone after. 231 There is a curious settlement of the thought ripping through glassy pasty pages and dark and fantasie-light faces to some strong blank line dotting itself signally across a parchment space awaiting and trembling for some answer of itself while we are held both accountable and nonconsequential for a breathless hundred thousand years. 233 234 235 So thus poised, just before the fact before the crossfire and enveloping inferno we turn to each other and muster some smile 236 237 some tight-lipped held back joy before the deed to say we once knew one another manchild Time and me on a small green minute of earth in a corner of the county of somewhere yes and held a thoughtless spaceless love and terror of the now and after of this fugitive Here, mary callaway editor 238 239 Record your own reflections here. They will be invaluable to you when Tomorrow is Today. .
”
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