Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX)

 - Class of 1976

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1976 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1976 volume:

■SB ( j -AhS s ( SOU ' WESTER 1976 SOUTHWESTER UNIVERSITY GEORGETOWN, TEXAS v Contents Opening 2 Involvement 18 Features 20 Sports 74 Organizations 100 Individuals 138 Honors 140 Administration and Faculty 154 Classes 178 % £: . p V w_, In this 200th year in the life of the United States we are forced to evaluate our history. Forced, by a flood of reminders that THIS IS THE BICENTENNIAL YEAR, to view who we are and why we are. What is seen holding this patchwork of American History together is the thread of freedom. Bl Freedom? The realties of the present show that our outer garment is wearing thin; threads are beginning to break; holes need to be patched; seams need to be mended. What was and remains the goal of all people to be free — has yet to _ sewn completely. Freedom from want? Millions around the world starve. Our economy teeters while experts predict disaster. Unemployment reaches a dangerously high level while double-digit inflation appears, edom from fear? War id unrest raise the old .pectre of world war and holocaust. Ireland, the Middle East, and Angola linger on the brink of full scale hostilities Recent revelations of illicit activity in our own government call to mind the fears of totalitorian oppression. The Founding Fathers would be aghast. 1976 is closer to 1984 than i is to 1776. Freedom of expression? Many who speak out discover their name on enemy lists and have dossiers in FBI and CIA files. Freedom from ignorance? A recent public poll shows that 28% of the adult Americans do not know what import event occureed in 1776. - • - d . ■ T w . - m v ■ .. ■■ ., K Ep.r™ | s -1 H| 1 UNIVCRSITYI !J - ' jwjp|_ u f Jl GeORGCTOWN I J A fp s ' ' -. 1 t fewl ■ A M J I«hi j fe 11 : : = W ; - jj II% ! 4TJP. ■ jg AH m  .• fl f S s i I 9 w 1 i TT ' 2r 1 lii 1  i New freedoms discovered during college years become struggles to create one ' s identity and sense of individuality. In their own way, students react and involve themselves in a search for truth, value, and meaning. How can one apply and assimulate these concepts to gain significance? Each student must discover his own method of growing and initiating change. Some involve themselves in various phases of academic, social, and political lives. Others lock themselves away in rooms to study, striving for a self- imposed goal. Others blind themselves to harsh reality by maintaining an escapist life of partying. Still many remain confused and apathetic — existing more than living. f i ' I ' -Mi ' « I • I. I j . iir. . j . | • i • ' III • -. 1 if j - - 1||. . j , | [I I ' HM ' ll-lH -ill • |.|  •{ fH |- i-|H -,(( -j-l I-JH ' III- ' i- it J . |i|. - I - | «£ . ' _V.. Southwestern, founded in 1840, is also aware of its own history. GALILEO ■ NEWTON PRESNEL FARADAY CLAUSIUS MAXWELL HERTZ X X X X V, JL JL-j ROWLAND THOMSON EINSTEIN ! VfV r ' a J Hl 10 ■£-•■ • ' g g PSS SS: e fl ' iaW A j 0 I 1 f. I Hopefully, what is sewn into ; ! our lives by time spent at Southwestern will not only broaden us as individuals, but will also enable us to act in society. fc V ■ r .■-,.■-.,■■ ■ In the opening convocation, Barbara Jordon spoke of the truth America holds: the truth and standard of liberty over tyranny, order over revolution, meaning over emptiness The quality of your life will determine if that standard bespeaks the truth or if it also lies. 12 MKL u 5 1 4 1 — „__J J J ■ 1? v 6 «K«1 A k—sj- ' BBpt M ■ • ' ,- . , . J- ■JKr 0ftrl . WSm-. rjM ■ « :3 ,T w m A SMF ' .f ' -. ' w- % V.v v- • ' , £ £lg rtleSSsl • ' •■ ' ' $ ■ ' k n ' tfp WE msm ffilllii t=i =r - ■■ ■ • 3F idi- o rri ' :=T. Student Union Offers Varied Programs This year ' s campus activities have ranged from the absurdly funny to the painfully thoughtprovoking. They have been plentiful (too much so for an occasional weak-willed student) and mostly good — due to the Student Union. The diversity of Union programming is mainly because of the diversity of the Union. Any Southwestern Student may serve on any of the seven committees, and is eligible for a place on the Programming Council which serves as a steering committee for the Union. 20 The domain of the Coffeehouse Committee is the Sawdust Cafe. Heavily laden with local color this year ' s Cafe hosted a variety of musicians — several folk singers, rock ensembles (Pic. 4), and jazz blues duos — several of these included SU ' s home-grown talents. A visiting actor performed a one man show on Woody Guthrie (Pic. 1), and the committee hosted what may be described as an excruciating jalapeno eating and rootbeer chugging contest (Pic 3). In a more serious moment the committee sponsored its traditional poetry festivals (Pic. 2). This year in addition to student poetry a one act play, Seaweed and Leo was ' tested ' . 21 Committees Both Enlighten And . . The Entertainment Committee is perhaps a misnomer. It is neither more nor less entertaining than some of the other committees, but it is beyond a shadow of a doubt more cinematic. This year ' s offerings included: a documentary, Woodstock, a foreign treat, The Emigrants, a Kubrick classic, Clockwork Orange , a vintage classic, African Queen , a vintage Kubrick, Dr. Strangelove , and the proverbial much, much more. In addition to movies the Committee sponsored dances, a spades tournament, a bad artist, a better magician, a royal circus (Pic. 5), and an impressive multi-media show of Bernstien ' s Mass — Whew! Free University is almost another misnomer. There was occasionally a nominal fee for one of its potpourri of courses. Its non-credit and hassle free selection included: outdoor gardening, transcendental meditation, guitar, sitar, kicker-dancing (assumedly to the guitar) and yoga — just in the fall semester. Assertiveness training (for women), bicycle repair, a WELCOME 22 Entertains Campus nuclear fusion lecture, and a backpacking lecture rounded out the year for the F.U. The contraversiality of this year ' s Ideas and Issues Committee no doubt indicated that it did its job well. In a campaign to make its name more than just a name but a goal, the, committee brought to campus speakers from the lunatic and not so lunatic fringe — much argument followed as to which were which. Speakers such as the playwright Imamu Baraka (Pic. 4), a Cornell sinologist, the president of the American Jewish Congress, the vice-president of Standard Oil of Indiana, and activist Florynce Kennedy (Pic. 2) did indeed arouse many ideas and unveiled many issues. Another one man show was brought to campus, this time by the Minorities Committee, and this time about the eloquent Frederick Douglas. The committee sponsored yet another one man show of eloquence by the very much still-alive-and-present B.F. Maiz (Pic. 1), poet and advocate of prison reform (a subject on which he speaks from experience). They also brought the movie Sweet Sweet B adassss Song which had a badass meaning and co-sponsored the BOSS disco-jockey dance - The natural resources of the beautiful hill country were exploited to their fullest by the Outdoor Recreation Committee. This year ' s committee trained students in canoeing and backpacking. These skills were put to the test on committee sponsored treks near and far — near to the Booties and Enchanted Rock (see 52-53); far to Big Bend and Chihuahia Mexico. Spot Programs job is to (pardon the pun) spot where the calendar has a program gap and to fill it. This committee is the last stand against student boredom and apathy. This year they have alleviated their share of boredom via a disco-dance, a half-time mime show, and a turkey walk during regstration and a Homecoming Dance (pic. 2). They have fought apathy by way of a Flo Kennedy rally at dinner and the Man rally which put the administration on the spot — uh! The programing brought about directly by the Programming Council was actually quite scanty, consisting of the Ascent of Mjm series and the orientation dance. Indirectly their co- ordination was responsible for all of the Union programming this year. If the Union can be said to have had any short-coming this year it did not lie in the extent and quality of its programming; nor in the participation of its members, but in the non-participation of its non-members. The Student Union continues to dream the impossible dream of one hundred percent student participation, wanting to be every students ' union. 23 (1) Jack Ford campaigns for his father; (2) Young Republicans do likewise. In the Texas Republican Primary, Reagan won 100% of the delegates. Carter captured the Democratic presidential nomination; Ford won the Republican. (3) Senator Bensen speaks at Southwestern as a Favorite Son. 24 Patriotism And Politicking Mark Bicentennial iMI ' H of i spur ■ ' % la 1 4 4 y j1 1776 [776 f ' ,7 7 25 Texas Politics Added To Intership Program (1) Students meet with Rep. Albred during their first session. (2) Dr. Suh, Bill Meadows (Assistant to Albred), Jim Ewbanks, Peggy Overly, Divida Hopkins, Paula Kelly, Steve Cotton, Karla Krege, Rep. Albred, Winn Parker. 2b The Social and Academic Internship programs have been a vital and growing part of many students ' educational experience. Just this year in January, a new academic internship was added — the Texas Politics Internship at the State Capitol, coordinated by Dr. Suk-soon Suh (Chairman, Political Science Dept.) and State Representative Dave Albred (D.-Wichita Falls). The internship concept is one which seeks to unite the classroom learning with practical experience outside the University. Many types of internships are available in particular areas such as psychology, sociology, history, and political science. Students find that experiential gaps between theory and reality are often bridged through one of these internships. Past internships include riding with the Austin police, working with a welfare breakfast program, probational work in cities around the state, working for prison reform by offering various courses of study, working at the Austin State Hospital, and numerous other experiences. Each internship is constructed differently to suit the course. As the Texas Politics internship was structured, eight students drove to the Statehouse each Tuesday-Thursday and attended a lecture by a different speaker from 1:00-2:30. Their first session was spent with Gov. Dolph Briscoe. They also briefly met Attorney General John Hill. Many other notables met and talked with the group in free-wheeling question-and- answer sessions. At 2:30, each student went to his or her own internship, his or her place of temporary employment. Paula Kelley and Steve Cotton worked in Senator Lloyd Bentsen ' s central office and campaign office. Winn Parker worked for Common Cause and Davida Hopkins worked in Rep. Albred ' s office as a researcher, to offer a few examples. The internship experience is a vital one for those who seek to apply their academic and social skills acquired at Southwestern to the laboratory of life. r 28 Austin State School Welcomes Psychology Students To Reality Innumerable critics of education have said many times that college is all theory and no practice; that education likes to stay in an ivory tower of sorts, and let reality come crashing down two weeks after graduation. Without a doubt this is true in many cases, but it stops at the Austin State Hospital. Such that, the real world gets a few kicks in a year before graduation. The psychology intership at the hospital usually lasts all of the spring semester of a senior ' s year, but it only takes about a week before a senior is quite sure that the seemingly endless hours of books are not quite so bad after all. A day begins about 6:00 in the morning, which is not so bad except that bedtime was about 1:00. Then comes the thirty minute drive into Austin, and about the time that your body has decided that sleeping in a sitting position is not so bad, you are there. Where you go from this rude awakening is up to you. There are hyperactive children to follow, autistic children to hold, beaten children to comfort, adults defeated by a too complex world to be wakened, adults with illnesses that nobody really understands to give companionship to, and the ever present rumblings in the back of your mind that says that none of these people are really that different from you. The frustration, anger, sadness, hope, and exhaustion are all overshadowed by only two potential things. First, there is always that flicker of joy when someone moves and changes. Second, is the knowledge that everyone here is a person no different from yourself. Generally, it takes about a week at the hospital before books and papers begin to look appealing again, but it takes closer to twelve weeks for even the most sensitive person to begin to appreciate the little joys, the little surprise, and the joy of being able to go from place to place everyday, without having to be cleared or given a day. When the little things begin to matter and you finally believe that there is nothing wrong with crying, you have started. Welcome to reality. Jim Ferris 75-76 Artist Series Yielded Fine Performances The 75-76 Artist Series opened with the sixth Southwestern appearance ot the immensely popular Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Pic. 2). The band ' s authentic blues and hot Dixieland jazz was accompanied by much foot-stomping and hand-clapping, on the part of both the performers and the audience. In fact, when the musical orgy had come to an end, it was difficult to distinguish between these two groups as many of the latter — led by President Fleming-— had joined the band onstage to create a makeshift dance floor to the tune of When the Saints Go Marchin ' In. In November the New Shakespeare Company of San Francisco staged its interpretation of Billy S ' s popular comedy As You Like It. (Pic 1). The production, enhanced by the addition of modern if off- color vocabulary, references to current controversies, and even the singing of popular-though-Baptist tunes, not to mention a southern drawl which flowed from the mouth of one character, was performed with true Shakespearean spirit and gusto. The third event of the season arrived in the form of a two-piano concert of the husband-and-wife team Yarbrough and Cowan. Highlight of the evening was the artists ' spectacular performance of Aaron Copland ' s music for the ballet Billy the Kid. Re-opening the Series in January was the Alpha-Omega Players ' bicentennial revue Heroes and Hard Cases , which took a fond, if slightly irreverent, look at America during its good moments as well as during those which were perhaps not so good. From a lecherous Ben Franklin to an uncoordinated Neil Armstrong, the four members of the cast took on a variety of roles and moods, including one moving scene performed in Indian sign language. In February Alma Thomas Theater became the scene for yet another bicentennial production when Jimmy Driftwood and the Rackensack Folklore Society presented Music of the Ozarks (Pic. 3). Later in the month, Southwestern was host to the Texas Opera Theater, a troupe of young and exceptionally talented performers who travel across the state to reach those who do not have access to the Houston Grand Opera, the troupe ' s mother company. Southwesterners viewed an absolutely flawless production of Rossini ' s Barber of Seville. The presentation was sung in English, and can only be described as opera at its best. Continuing in a classical vein, the Artist Series closed with pianist Drusilla Huffmaster, SU Artist-in- Residence, and Werner Tripp (Pic. 4), solo flutist of the Vienna Philharmonic and Vienna State Opera Orchestras, also Miss Huffmaster ' s son-in-law. Performing with the perfection and professionalism expected of musical virtuosos, the duo charmed its audience with such works as Poulenc ' s Sonata for Flute and Piano, Debussy ' s Syrinx for Solo Flute , and Liszt ' s Etude Transcendental, No. 10, a solo played by Miss Huffmaster and dedicated to her friend Miss Ima Hogg, the recently deceased great patroness of the arts. ?JAZZ 30 u H .9 2- 31 Ride! Ride! Ml RIDE! RIDE! A story of John Wesley and Methodism CAST OF CHARACTERS Josiah Whitehead, Lancashire merchant . . Mark Mayfield Martha Thompson Whitehead, his wife Mary Macina Leah Sellers Martha, their granddaughter Tere Meyers Melanie Eaves Burgoyne Fish, an exprizefighter Rex Voland Roger Crane, a Methodist preacher Graden Vandament John Wesley Donn Miller 32 PHILEMON The Cast Andos, young convert to Christianity David Ainsworth Woman (The Wife), Wife of the underground leader . . . Stephanie Dory Servillus, Adjutant to the Commander Kelly Smith Marcus, Cammander of the Roman garrison Bill Gentner Marsyas, the young girl Cockian married long ago Edie Brown Kiki, the female half of the clown act Tere Myers Cockian, a clown Donn Miller n Look Homeward Angel FRONT LR: Eugne Gant (Kelly Smith), Laura James (Debbie Latimer), Mrs. Marie Fatty Pert (Bunny Fisher), Jake Clatt (Tedward Yearick). 2ND ROW: Madmame Elizabeth (Tere Myers), Will Pentland (David Ainsworth), Hugh Barton (Norm Allen), Ben Gant (Bill Gentner). 3RD ROW: Luke Gant (Bruce Allen), Mrs. Snowden (Mary Macina), Florrie Mangle (Dawn Cardwell), Mr. Farrel (Donn Miller), Eliza Gant (Marvi Arredondo) BACK: Tarkinton (Steve Truitt), W. 0. Gant (Marc Dudley), Dr. Maguire (Mark Mayfield) Not Pictured: Miss Brown (Roxy Moorhouse) 34 35 TRIO ONE Mannequins ' Demise by David Wolf Budbill Directed by Marc Dudley (Pic. 2) The Public Eye by Peter Shaffer Directed by Ted Yearick (Pic. 1) Red Peppers by Noel Coward Directed by Tricia Lomax 36 TRIO TWO Buss Riey ' s Back in Town by William Inge Directed by Debra Latimer (Pic. 1) This Property is Condemned and Talk to Me Like the Rain and Let Me Listen by Tennessee William Directed by Clayton Black (Pic. 3) I Never Saw Another Butterfly by Celeste Rapanti Directed by Donn Miller (Pic. 2) 37 Wli Changes Come With The Man Clad In Green It isn ' t often that the easy-going, serene atmosphere of the Southwestern student body is disrupted, but it happened several times this year. One of these disruptions developed when a strange man dressed in green with a four-leafed clover on his jacket began to frequent the Commons. Soon students began to note changes, such as having to present meal cards instead of just calling out the board card numbers to the Commons staff, and not being able to go into the kitchen to get fruits and cheese. Students soon learned that these changes were all the result of the little man clad in green with the clover signet on his coat. They found out that he was a representative from the Shamrock corporation, a professional food service firm based in Atlanta, Georgia. So putting two and two together (SU students may not be experts in the field of pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoniosis but never let it be said they cannot do simple addition), the students realized that the Shamrock firm was taking over for Ms. Edith Williams, retiring Commons dietitian and director, commonly referred to as Sarge. Initially, the students made an uproar about the food firm; nevertheless, Operation Shamrock proceeded as planned, making various changes in the food service system. The corporation installed machines for soda, chocolate, kool-aide, punch, orange juice, and whatever-other-kind-of-drink-you-can- think-of (often anything cheaper than milk, even watered-down milk). Occassional the firm set up a salad bar, in the dining area. (At one time, the firm played hide-and-seek with the salad bar, changing its location before every meal.) Another change was more sandwiches were served (everything from cornbeef and sauerkraut sandwiches to ham-and-a-sunny-side- up-on-a-hamburger-bun sandwich). Some students even noticed that a Sunday favorite of chocolate eclair was retired with Sarge. Student Congress appointed a Food Service Committee to communicate likes and dislikes to the Shamrock firm. Toward the end of the year, students were getting use to the new food service and the complaints returned to normal, more or less. An example: When are they going to start serving real food around here! nevertheless, the quiet, easy-going atmosphere of the campus also returned, thus ending another episode in the life of good ol ' Southwestern. Marlon Ross 18 It Was Too Soon To Tell If you ' ve ever looked at Southwestern University as you enter Georgetown from Austin, then you know how appropriate the name Camelot is to the structures that constitue the school. The tall spires and the rounded roof give a castle effect. Recently the eye has been forced to fall upon the sight of an olive grey roof, incongruent to the surroundings, set off from the school by more than just location. This is the New Gym. It is a great sign of Southwestern ' s intended growth and its progress. And progress at the school is a synonym for controversy. If Mood Hall was a conflict of old and new, then the New Gym was a conflict of financial priorities. Perhaps the best expression given by those who couldn ' t understand why Southwestern needs a New Gym was tagging the gym as a symbol of Academic Excellance. It was not uncommon to see students with book- shelves and the like in their rooms built with pieces of Academic Excellance. The sarcastic label embodied the main reservation of those who objected to the New Gym, that the money used for its construction and maintenance could have been better used. Most likely, these objections will fade when the Gym becomes used and popular in its purpose. Then people will have forgotten the maybe uses of the money forgone. It is really too soon to tell if the New Gym is worth the money, but this may be a better time than later. The Gym is nice, there is no doubt. It may prove a valuable asset in the attraction of new students, but it is another example of a school, a Camelot, that is changing its complexion before our eyes. George Young aK - -m ■ , ' A ♦-, : :v :. ' , . v •■■ 40 NY Exchange: Final Quotanbiw |W Life Offers Both Work And Play Many picture life in a female dorm as a life where women roam the halls with little on but rollers and gowns and where loud, constant noise is a fact of life. Many might be surprised. There is a large amount of noise in the dorm, more so in Laura Kuykendall than in Kurth. The lobby, with its ringing phone, blaring television, banging door, and entering guests is the loudest. People talk loud, discussing either the latest national news or the newest campus gossip. However, when Mrs. Adams, the renowned LK housekeeper, arrives at 11:00 p.m., the noise settles and guests leave, the television goes off and the phone slows down its ringing. Upstairs, the dorm, too settles down. Women get ready for bed or head to the arcade or to the study carrels to study. The showers are busy as the residents clean up. Occasionally, one room, where a party of women is gathered, is loud with its voices, laughter and music echoing down the hall. Often one may spot an angry person stomping to the room to utter the infamous words, It ' s quiet hours! But seldom does that lower the noise level, if anything, it increases. Dead Week is yet another matter. Silence is the password in the halls. Quiet hours are strictly enforced. Resident assistants become angry quicker. Do not disturb signs are common, gatherings are few and noise is down. No semester is different. Until Finals week and dead days, noise, popcorn orders, parties and guests are commonplace; but, when the dreaded dead days arrive, noise odors of popcorn, parties and guest are rare. 41 .«.. ... • =$ Male Dorm Life Was Never A Dull Moment! Splash! Kaboom! Pow! These are familiar sounds around the men ' s .dorms as the year rolls by. Spontaneous activities from water baloon fights to firecracker throwing to sword fights have reigned in the men ' s housing complex. Some of the child ' s play was aimed at letting off steam during tense moments such as during finals when students walked out onto the balconies at 12:01 am during dead week and screamed. Another occasion for planned release of frustration was competition by floors in intramural sports. Although male dorm life may have been centered in the tiny cubicles, inappropriately dubbed bedrooms and study areas, it also took place at Gattis when a group went out for a drink or two or three or four or five or . . . One very important aspect of male dorm life is females who frequented the dorms for a friendly chat or other entertainment. There was definitely a contructive side to dorm life in the HB-Moody Shearn-Ruter complex. For instance the residence hall program produced some RA ' s and SA ' s who were willing to help students who were confronting problems of dorm life. Also, some relationships were built between students which will last a lifetime. Then, there was the ice machine that seldom worked, a TV stolen and never returned from MS lounge, off-campus mixers, midnight cramming sessions, throwing frisbees across the lawn, splashing through the flooded sidewalks after a thunderstorm, shaving cream under a neighbor ' s door, floor meetings, flics on MS lawn — never a dull moment. Mostly reflecting insecurity and immaturity, these were but a small segment of male dorm life. Hopefully a group of men grow toward mature adulthood and academic intelligence. 42 4 L.K. Celebrates Halloween . „_. r . 1-11 44 Christmas Activities Fill The Calender 45 A Giant Step Is Made Because more housing space was desperately needed, and because the International House had successfully worked in terms of men and women living together in one house, the third floor of Herman Brown became open to women. How did the women of HB feel about being the second great co-ed dorm experiment 7 They, like others on campus, hoped that the establishment of co-ed living was a progressive step for Southwestern and not just the fulfillment of a need for more housing. RA Mernlynn Miller enjoyed her job. Many times, she said, freshman men would go to her if they had a problem. Having a female RA was like having a big sister to go to. Skylight rooms, ample storage space, plenty of electrical outlets, privacy, and quietness were among positive factors of HB living. Doors leading outside rather than into a hallway also created an apartment-like atmosphere. Then, as always, everything was not positive. Sorority activities at night presented a small problem fo sorority members because they had to dress and go over to LK, while the women of LK and Kurth simply walked down a hall. Because there is no real lobby to speak of at HB, receiving flowers was another small problem. Some women felt HB was even noisier than LK or Kurth. Others only said the noise was just more organized (i.e. Midnight Scream). Other persons believed HB was too cold-looking and found Sneed more inviting and homelike. It was only a question of personal preference. All in all, it was a successful first year. Many women will continue to live in HB next year as it remains coed next. 4b it T 47 Students Find Entertainment In Small Towns GEORGETOWN • CITY LIMIT POP 8395 48 HISTORICAL MARKERS IN CITY U.S. Torpedo |4 Submarine W Battleship Q o Destroyer - Kejicano Avocado Tore a Bean « M Burrito Bean iDeef Bumf o Bean or Beef laco Bear. ' Beef lac o Ram - Special 75 39 $1.25 H+9 isi-.il .55 bS .40 45? The Duter- i JkaMOtfg Cooked Hani Jfamam Chop. Ham or iur ljWSrt0 u5 BerTiner OH. Salami Press. Ham Hot Link Srckd . Link Ti : rcr.Saus. . -Salami f] al , 50i 55,tO t fc5 ' lOtl5 55-W-W-W ' Sl 45-S 554D ' l5 ' 40 50 ' U 10-  . i. ' _ w00HKtt Unique Lives Come From Off -Campus Living There is a young — maybe fifteen year old — pecan tree that grows outside the window by my bed. Sometimes in the morning I push aside the curtain and pretend I ' m in a tree house, or maybe a bird perches on one of the branches and whistles or sings for a while. I was coming out to the SUB when someone asked me to write this and I said, Sure! What do you want? At first it seemed simple, but then I began to think of my lifestyle. You know, my view of off-campus life is pretty stilted. What do you mean? We ' re pretty free at the Greenhouse. Well write what you can and try not to be too stilted. Maybe you could write about the relaxed qualities. Except there are a lot of tense times. Times when the utility bills are due and you don ' t have quite enough money to cover them. Or maybe you spent a good deal of the rent on a new rug or a big date. Or it might just be the end of the month with no food left but oatmeal and peanut butter and jelly, no bread. When I think of hassles like those, I wonder why I didn ' t stay in the dorm. The most constant answer has always been My Room, the one place I can go and pursue the paths of my mind without interference. And just as important, it ' s been a place where I discovered many good people. There have been many spectacular times. Such as when the 40 or 50 of us played mingle in the hall of D.B. ' s and my duplex, followed by a session of head-standing in the living room. There were many fine nights spent with T.H. in the candlelit living room and open porch of the farm watching thunderstorms roll in from the west. Then one night, when out of sheer boredom and craziness, we began to believe we could conjure them up ourselves and got the best show of all. I can ' t forget the rather rotund lady with bad teeth who kept trying to seduce me. T.D. and I cooked up some pretty good meals for some fine women when we first moved into the Greenhouse. P.P. and I raised a dog with half a tail here. Remember the many Texan ' s shares of beer and Bar-B-Q in the backyard. And there are a few times, like last Sunday night, when a friend brought over his dulcimer and a handful of us sat on the front porch and stomped, patted, and hummed while he played hill-country tunes. I ' ve never been very good at essentializing. These are few of the things that stick vividly in my mind from my three years off campus. The good and the bad — as always — are all mixed up together. The best I can do is that it ' s something like the tree outside my window that dies in the fall and grows in the spring. Paul Whitley 51 -v • Jf . 4 52 Texas Country Offers Unique Opportunities The beautiful Texas country is an extra reason for the Outdoor Recreation Committee to exist. Pendenalas Falls, Big Bend, the Guadalupe River — all these and more were visited by the members of the committee this year. On the first Saturday in April, approximately fifteen students headed for the beautiful and appropriately called Enchanted Rock, between Llano and Fredricksburg. They were going to learn and experience the thrilling sport of repelling. Outdoor Recreation Chairperson John Wolf, with the help of Nancy Chadwick, had located and hired an instructor from Houston who was willing to teach as much as persons were willing to learn. After learning about the equipment, to tie the right knots, and the rules and lingo of repelling, the group climbed to the top of Turkey Peak to practice. Having had little exercise during the winter, almost everyone was huffing and puffing by the time they reached the top; but, maybe it was the view from such a height that had taken their breath away. Nervous excitement filled the air as persons waited for the ropes to be secured and tested. Scott Pollard was the first to decend (Lt). A round of applause greeted him as he touched ground. Laynie Moses followed with ease. (Far Lt). By the end of the day, everyone had gone down one or both of the cliffs and had experienced an unforgetful sensation. 54 When One Remembers The Booties — One Has His Own Memories 55 Course Combines Biblical And Texas History What course was like a big Easter egg hunt for grownups? Students interested in digging would answer, Archeology in Palestine. What does Palestine have to do with it? Speaking in terms of textbooks, the course dealt with Jericho and other Biblical settings. Reports, notes, and tests also added up to three hours in religion. Field-wise, there was exploration of an Indian mound just west of the San Gabriel River. The class was one of the unique offerings at Southwestern. During the course, students discovered such artifacts arrowheads, knives and rubbing stones. Dr. Steelman believed that the treasures came from Tonkawa Indians and date from 500 BC to 1600 AD. After the required digging hours, students continued to explore — just for the excitement. Saturday mornings, all year, students and the Steelmans would journey out to areas which will some day be flooded by the North Fork Dam. What better way to learn about The Bible and Texas history at the same time? « tti V ' 56 j% % f , J ■ 5 Student Teaching Proves Rewarding Small towns . . . small elementary schools ... an equation that doesn ' t always hold true. One large, open area — overcrowded — make do as best you can — noise — tension — learning? Courses Observation Student teaching pattern normal the fit always don ' t Children Discipline — where and how does that fit in? Pressure Mounts to Do Well . . . Reccomendations are Vital to jobs How does one write on paper the beautiful plan on envisions? 8:25 a storm outside All those hours of painstaking planmaking melt into the rain Philosophy New ideas Creativity Hope Faith Love New ideas are too much trouble and we don ' t have time to ' Status quo . Ditto machines . Establishing within eight to sixteen weeks the beginnings of one ' s methods of teaching Do I want to teach? Is it worth the battle? So much needs to be done. The Children are Beautiful . . . S8 (1) Lualeen Danheim teaches music at the Round Rock Middle School. (2) Debbie Hoy works with her special educa- tion class at Round Rock Middle School. (3) Mary Alice Camacho leads her elementary class at Georgetown Elemen- tary. 59 CLOSED Mood Hall Symbolizes Year No place, no event, no person, proved an indication of the past year more than did Mood Hall. In years past, probably the Administration Building, or a school ' s athletic facility, would have proven centers of student interest. But this old building destined for a renovation which would leave it forever changed proved a center of controversy itself, and it was no coincidence that Mood Hall was the home of the finder of controversy, Mood Man. It is perhaps strange that an old and somewhat plain building should become a symbol for a student body, pictured in the minds of its elders as a non-conservative youth, a student body seen as tempermentally fascinated by change; fascinated with changing the world around them and in changing their lifestyles during their college years. However, the symbol is a good indication of this generation ' s real intentions. Mood Hall became a value, and values were something that the generation which will become known as the Watergate generation cries out for. The value that is Mood Hall is a simple structure, honest in both its building materials and in its solid, longstanding architecture. This generation needs something simple, uncomplicated, and honest; a very different ideal than the complication of issues involved for the Viet-Nam generation. Mostly, this ideal was very different than the lies they have learned to hate during the time of their coming in to social awareness — during what will always be known as the Watergate years. Their approach to the problems intrinsic in the Mood Hall controversy were deeply rooted in the greatest desire to know all the truth in any matter — a combination of having grown up during both Viet-Nam and Watergate. A real twist arises in the fight by this generation to preserve something (in this instance Mood Hall), instead of trying to change something. The desire to preserve is an instinctive attempt to hold a value unchanged long enough to know that value, to let that value become proven simply by withstanding time. Sure, it was the chance to confront an Administration — something which has become almost a prerequisite for students before they can graduate. The sage was right who said students believe Administrators exist mainly to give students something to get upset about. Every generation rebels in some manner against the persons responsible for running the school. But, this hassle was the best yet — a constructive effort to preserve a building with a long heritage and an essential beauty that once lost can never be regained. This is what Mood Hall became. That it should be the symbol of the year should indeed hearten those who are dismayed that the students don ' t just stick to their books. The students sense that next year ' s Mood Hall will have none of the flavor of this year ' s. George Young 61 Congresswoman Barbara Jordon Honored Nothing new under the sun. Nothing. These opening words of Barbara Jordon ' s convocation address, September 15th, could not have embodied more truth. According to Jordon, the basic conflicts of liberty, order, tyranny, and personal rights on which this country was born are still prevalent today. This is especially true of such issues as busing, economic crisis, ecology, conservation, liberation of women and Third World persons, CIA assassinations, and euthannasia. In referring to America ' s history, Jordon pointed out that it does no good to relate the injusties suffered by some citizens of the country or point out the incongruity between American rhetoric and her actions. Our job is to make the match. Americans must remember that the preamble to the constitution states: We the people ... We are the persons who hold the responsibilities of citizenship. We are the persons to act. 62 Mood Man Has Momentous Year Mood Man flung back the beautiful doors of Mood Hall and let his gaze wander over the peaceful acres of Camelot, also known as Southwestern University — The Peaceable Kingdom. At Mood Man ' s side were his valiant companions, Frank the Wonder Cat, Albert, the Ail- American Student, and Cronkite Creature. The trio listened eagerly as Mood Man began to speak. My friends , said Mood Man, it has been a momentous year indeed. We have come face to face with Admissions Man and Money Man, questioned the Benevolent King, appealed to the Trust Men, gone rat- hunting in the Gastrodome, crusaded to save Mood Hall, and even prevented the destruction of Camelot by a crazed science student. As you know, comrades, the heretofore-unseen Mood Man even appeared before the students of Camelot to dramatize the urgency of matters before us which need changing. The Scholarly Knight was struck down, and we mourned; Basil the Scrooge built a tribute to power in the form of Leviathan, the new gymcrazium, and we protested; the Trust Men were uninformed and unseeing, and we spoke out. There is no doubt, friends, that we have worked for Camelot, and that we are needed here; for even in a peaceable kingdom, all does not run smoothly and well. W v i Cronkite Creature, Frank the Wonder Cat and Albert the All-American Student looked about them. They saw the Administration Building being remodeled painstakingly while the inhabitants of Mood Hall lived with temporary butchery-cum-restoration. They saw the swarms of confused students who had been wooed to Camelot by Admissions Man. They saw the now-almost-completed Leviathan rising from the hillside even while the Fine Arts Building threatened to sink into the subterranean springs beneath it. Somehow, though, they still managed to see hope coloring their view of Camelot, and they, with Mood Man, vowed to to continue working to bring life at Camelot from the depths of confusion and misunderstanding to its greatest attainable peak, as the Southwestern University School of Academic (and Humanitarian) Excellence. 63 Book Buying Becomes Buck Breaking Just as every semester ends with the trauma ot finals, the beginning ot each session is heralded by the shrieks and groans ot agonized book- buyers. The hour or two spent shuttling through the bookstore like cattle in a herding pen involves a series ot mounting shocks which leave some students in tears, others in outrage. Six books tor your English course at three bucks a piece. Introduction to Biology: one book at twenty dollars. Introduction to the Old Testament: five books (including an OAB) totals about twenty-five dollars. A ten dollar book for your Math course. And just about the time you think its over — Art History: one book: thirty bongo bills. After the long agonizing wait to pay your bill, one might expect the trauma to be over, but in fact it has just begun. All too often professors change their texts at the last moment. If the student has bought a previous text and made any mark in it whatsoever, then we all know which creek he or she is up without a paddle. And there are the times you find a paperback copy that costs half as much as the hardback test you have a ready bought. And let us not forget the courses requiring several texts, only parts of which are used and the rest are ignored. Part of the problem of book prices if directly related to Southwestern ' s size. As a small school, S.U. does not offer the market to make book selling profitable to the publisher. The result is a limited selection of books. One solution might be to join our buying power with that of other small schools with similar curriculum and thus make books worthwhile to the publisher as well as less expensive for the student. Nearly all complaints about book prices are answered with the same echoing reply to resell your books to the publisher at the end of the semester. A great idea, except too many times the text in question has been replaced by a new edition or discontinued, driving the resale value of the book in question as low as ten per cent of the original purchase price. And even if the book is still in demand it is impossible to get much more than thirty per cent of the original price — an amount usually so insulting that the student will keep the book out of spite. The only other alternative is to hold on to your books hoping that you can sell them next year, though this course is often as fruitless as the former one. You return the next semester only to find that the course has been dropped, or the professor has changed texts, or that there is a new edition out. Answers to problems like these are hard to come by. Many of them are surely in the hands of the administration and faculty. The best most students can do is to convince themselves that the price they have paid for books is worth every cent. Besides, what price wisdom? Paul Whitley .■■:..•■:■■ ' , „ , , H ■ ,„ - , u ; „ ■ ■■ i wwp _- BSE 64 For Only Four Books? 65 . A 66 Traditional Greek Organizations Occupy A Major Social Position At Southwestern ■ ni 68 69 Nameless Terror Manifests Itself It is alwyas at midnight and it is always a Sunday, usually the second one in December or the first one in May, when the Nameless Terror manifests itself. I am usually on my way from the library to the dorm. Maybe it ' s a cold night, with light drizzle, and the campus lights shine only enough to illuminate the steam rising from the ground and vivify the imagination. Or it might be a still, sticky night when the scents of jasmine and honeysuckle replace oxygen in the air. In the darkness I hear the slow flapping of wings and a large raven circles me, then perches on my shoulder or head and greets me: — Finals! I swat and bat but cannot hit the bird. I try to chase him away, but he only circles me, out of reach, screaming: — Finals! Frustrated and terror-stricken I flee to the dorm. Leaping four steps at a time, I mount the stairs to my room and rush inside, slamming the door behind me. My three suitemates are each sitting in their study carrels making sounds like Whirr Buzz Klick as they absorb knowledge. And — Oh No! — in each carrel is perched a large black bird. A shreik of horror breaks from my lips. My bird looks up from his place over my empty desk and begins to squawk: — Finals! Finals! Finals! Experience has taught me that nothing will silence him except study, so I sit down and open a book. The siege is on. Wednesday night Thursday morning Lord I ' m so tired If I could just lay my head on this nice soft Math book and close my eyes for just a little while — Finals! — What!? — Finals! I throw a book at my bird and miss. Shouts of anger come from my roommate ' s carrel and the book flies back over the partition. I sink back in my chair and close my eyes. — Finals! Maybe another cup of coffee will help. Where ' s my cup? It ' s got to be here somewhere. Ah. Under the quadratic equations. Quadratic equations! Oh Help! Where ' s the coffee? Time. What time is it? The Mickey Mouse clock says three. Three! — Finals! Mickey has a silly grin on his face. I put my cigarette out on his nose . . — Finals! Just two more! Just two more shed with finals. It ' s finally Friday. Finished with finals. Rollo may put Skinny in a box with English literature from Beowulf to Dunsinane with an exponent of one over ten to the twelfth. Hooroy! No more Finals. Finally finished. Finalised. Finally finalised my final. Finalised. Finalised, Final, Finally, Finished. Kaput. Paul Whitley 11 Graduates Celebrate An End And A Beginning The Litany of Celebration from the Commencement Convocation, May 9, 1976 We who today commence, with a sense of continuity, and we who continue, with a sense of newness different segments of our lives, celebrate what we have meant and given to one another in these times together at this University. We celebrate the experience of learning, enhanced by mutual respect, commitment to truth, seriousness and humor: in private and in companionship, in doing and persisting, in discovering and performing, in hearing and being heard, in searching for what is of value, in our own deep desire to be of value. We celebrate the deliverance from solutions which restrain the truth, or restrict the evidence, or exclude the wider experience of humanity and nature. We celebrate the summons of the years to come and the larger world, the growing awareness of our limits, the need to face and solve the problems that lie before us individually and severally, the possibilities of a kind of search and service that is continued learning. We celebrate what we have brought with us thus far, the changes it has been wise to make, and the future of our education in the living of our days. 73 (1) Michael Minks leaps toward a needed win in the decisive game against St. Mary ' s in San Antonio. (2) Charles Olson bounds for two points in a pre-conference game against Dallas Baptist. (3) Russell Stone — manager, Steve Doering, Michael Minks, Jimmy Duffield, Joe Buchanan, Dick Pool, Phillip Sewell, Mike Edwards, Leo Bompart, Kenny Dennis, Tommy Johnson, Dennis Minks, Coach John Edwards, Student Helper John Fish. 1975-1976 BUC BASKETBALL BIG STATE CONFERENCE RECORD Huston Tillotson College (Austin) . . . . 92 - - 73 ! St. Edward ' s University (Austin) . . . . 61 - - 59 Texas Lutheran College (Georgetown) .... 94 - - 90 St. Mary ' s University (Georgetown) .... 49 - - 30 LeTourneau College (Longview) . . . . 81 - - 59 East Texas Baptist College (Marshall) . . . . . . . 65 - -63 Huston-Tillotson College (Georgetown) 79 - -56 St. Edward ' s University (Georgetown) . . . ... 100 — - 58 LeTourneau College (Georgetown) 80 - - 57 East Texas Baptist College (Georgetown . . . . 60 - - 65 Texas Lutheran College (Seguin) .... 61 - - 78 St. Mary ' s University (San Antonio) 67 - - 77 5 76 Bucs Ignite Spirit After a shaky start, the Pirates caught fire and rolled off nine straight wins on to a 15-15 season, including an impressive 9-3 conference mark. Fighting an awesome schedule, seventeen road games and three tough games in five days against the likes of Oral Roberts, Baylor and Texas A l, The Bucs, through trademarks of team work and hustle, pulled off upsets against foes both in conference and non-conference. Highlights of back-to-back stunning conquests over St. Mary ' s and Texas Lutheran were only anticlimatic to victories over National Tournament Representative Howard Payne and Lone Star Champs, Angelo State. The roller coaster season ignited by the Get the Basketball Spirit of 75-76 attitude attracted standing room only crowds to all the games and created a new image of basketball at S.U. John Edwards, in his first year at the helm, was voted Big State Coach of the Year while Joe Buchanan was selected to the all-district and all-conference first team. Teammates Kenny Dennis and Mike Minks were chosen for the all-conference second team. (1) Kenny Dennis maneuvers for two points against St. Ed ' s. (2) Joe Buchanan battles for the rebound against Huston-Tillotson. (3) The Pirates and fans pictured after the first game against St. Mary ' s which gave SU the lead in the Big State Conference. J a 1975-1976 SU Vollyeball Team: (STANDING) Coach Munt, Debbie Fiser, Rose Gonsoulin, Jan Faulkner, Carol Sheffield, Diane Byars (KNEELING) Shannon Taylor, Elaine Carleton, Laura Chandler, Lee Ann Everett — Co- Captian, Lynda McGee — Co-captain, Eva Mendiola, Janice Doughty A young Southwestern volleyball team confronted and overcame many obstacles including an inexperienced team, a new coach and a dismantled gym. Lee Ann Everett, who was instrumental in the establishment of a women ' s athletic program, and Lynda McGee led the team to a season record of eleven wins, twenty-one losses. The team displayed great potential at the Huntsville Tournament where they upset Howard Payne 15-4, 15-12 in the opening round and then lost a close match to Baylor in the quarter finals. The team had two members receive individual honors. Senior Eva Mendiola was chosen as most valuable player. Sophomore Janice Doughty was named to the all-tournament team at the St. Edwards tournament. 9 ll 51 V 80 (1), (2) Lee Ann Everett (3) Lynda McGee (4) The team in action (5) Eva Mendiola 81 H Mar ■«♦ m I Pirates Place Second In The Big State Conference 1976 compiled a 32 win — 12 loss season record, one of the best in Southwestern ' s history. Pitcher Rick Tabolba also earned the honor of Baseball All American honorable mention. Nineteen lettermen returned from the 1975 team to be the most experienced team fielded by Coach Mallon during his tenure. With outstanding speed, strong pitching, hustling defense, and power, the Pirates captured second place in the Big State Conference — behind St. Mary ' s University. Southwestern earned a conference record of 9-2. (1) Jim Miller strikes a powerful hit. (2) Stuart Whitlow dodges an attempted tag on his way home. (3) Frank Rodrigues rounds the base. 83 ,..-, ■■■ ' : ;■■•- 4- N_ (1) (2) Pitcher Ricky Tobolka winds up and throws. (3) Pirates speak with fans. (4) Lane Holmstrom and Charles Chapman watch the game (5) A Bulldog races the Pirate ball to the base. (6) Team members pictured: 1ST ROW: Lane Holmstrom, Tim Rieg, Gene Lawhon, Bob Leonard, Merril Baily, Bruce Partam, David Stiba, Rick Gravens, Mike Skinner, Kenny Weir 2ND ROW: Stuart Whitlow, Jim Miller, John Hasskarl, Frank Rodngues, Mark Ott, Bruce Fell, Ronney Maynard, Joe Farr, Steve Wendtland, Ricky Prewitt 3RD ROW: Coach Jim Mallon, Kenny Wenzel, Noel Seal, Garry Ivy, Rick Tobolka, Brian Remhardt, David Puryear, Steve Cornell, Steve Cornell, Steve Klopp, Charles Chapman, Bobby Fuller 84 h ■ w ■ 8? W r 86 Rigorous Conditioning Pays Off 1976 was an outstanding year for the SU women ' s tennis team. The women followed a rigorous conditioning program — including flexibility exercises, wind sprints, weight training, mile run, and jumping rope. Such conditioning payed off as they defeated Baylor University in one of their opening meets. With the performance of the top four — Julie Crain, Mary Ellen Clifford, Marsha Miori, and Janice Doughty — the team compiled an impressive win-lose record of 10-4. The team won victories over Abilene Christian College, St. Mary ' s, Texas Southern College, Baylor, Concordia, and St. Edwards. Concluding its season with competion in the TAIAW Zone meet, the team was defeated by Mary-Hardin Baylor, and Texas A M. The Most Valuable Player for the team was Julie Crain. Serving as captain was Mary Ellen Clifford. Lynda McGhee was the team manager, and Nancy Pearce served as student assistant. With a full squad returning, Coach Glada Munt is looking forward to another strong season. (1) Julie Crain follows through on a rapid return. (2) Team members pictured: Carol Sheffield, Elaine Carlton, Mary Ellen Clifford, Julie White, Jan Doughty, Julie Crain, Kathy Jones, Marsha Miori, and Coach Glada Munt (3) Jan Doughty enjoys playing net. (4) Mary Ellen Clifford bends to return a low backhand. Men ' s Tennis Captures BSC Sportsmanship Award Under the direction of Coach Tex Kassen, and with hard work and dedication, the 1976 men ' s tennis team placed third in the Big State Conference. Leading the conference was St. Edwards, followed by St. Mary ' s. For the second year in a row, the Buc netters won the BSC Sportsmanship Award. Special recognition is given to David McNisky and Jay Elder, winners of second place medals in the BSC doubles tournament. 88 (1) David McNitzky shows good form as he volleys a mid-court shot. (2) Raymond Khouw stands ready as partner Cliff Leonard (4) returns a quick backhand. (3) Team members pictured: Cliff Leonard, Dr. Tex Kassen, Bill Nelson, 2ND ROW: Mike Moffett, Jay Elder, Raymond Khouw, David McNitzky 84 y ■ Buc Clubbers Capture Second In BCS Although Southwestern ' s golf team lost the conference title won in 1975, it wasn ' t by much. The Buc Clubbers placed second in the Big State Conference behind first place Texas Luthern College. In District 4 NAIA, the team placed fourth. Mark Coward earned a District 4 NAIA medal and participated in the nationals at Elms College in North Carolina. Under Coach Bill Merritt, the team hopes to regain the conference championship in 1977. (1) Dr. Deed (2) Steve Doering (3) Rick AMts (4) Team members pictured: 1ST ROW: Les Russel, Steve Wilkens, Mark Coward, Coach Merritt 2ND ROW: Wallace Livesay, Johnny Jones, Steve Doering 3RD ROW: Rick Ailts, Smitty Tonahill, Jerry Berkalback, Paul Parker 92 ■ r 1 }- ' ' ' ' Groups Battle For Victory Ba -o to, ! 6 . lit ■ O Sou:-. If 93 Preparation For Game Brings Excitement Walking in the gym where the game is to be held, one can feel the excitement and tension in the air amid the players as well as among the observers. There is a definite split between the teams and their supporters. One can even see who supports whom and who plays for whom. The players, in their loose fitting shorts, tennis shoes, and team jerseys, speed their drills as game time approaches. When a ball runs loose, they hurry to retrieve it. Clapping begins among the players to rouse spirit and tense laughter fills the floor. On the sidelines, the individual team coaches prepare their lineups, upset when the star player does not come. They search anxiously for a replacement, many times finding a substitute in the stands who does not really want to play. One minute to practice. Spirit boosters for each team increase their chants and songs, clapping and singing louder to make their voices heard over the din of the workout. The coaches turn in their rosters. The buzzer rings. The gym floor clears as the respective teams hurry for their good luck huddle. The coach announces the first players — some are happy; others, mad that they don ' t get to play. The spirit groups shout encouragement to their teams. Players line up in their positions. Umpires get their whistles, position themselves and wait for the buzzer to go off to signal the beginning of the first game. The buzzer buzzes. The game begins. 94 Game After Game Depending on what sport it may be, either men ' s and women ' s basketball, tennis, pool, ping-pong, swimming, golt, volleyball, softball, badminton, bowling, archery or track, the anticipation for each game in each sport is much the same, increasing more when a game decides the championship or when the teams are bitter rivals. Each game has its sets of injuries, those incurred by either legal or illegal punches, shoves or kicks, some severe, others very minor. Each game has its share of excitement as well; whether it be game points, time running out or controversial umpire decisions, or simply good play, all of which are interrupted by clapping or yelling. All the players, coaches and observers take the game with seriousness, some more seriously than others. The players try vainly to keep the game in their favor with the ball on their side; the coaches revamp their strategy when the star player suddenly arrives or when their trick play doesn ' t work. The observers watch the events steadily, rarely taking their eyes off the action below them, adding applause or comments now and then. The game is over. The players huddle and congratulate the opposing team, winner or not. As the sweaty, tired players leave, the gym calms down until another set of teams walk on to practice for their game. ' ? lirn Hill lilll Hill Hill HI ■ ' ' J % The Cycle Continues . -. t i - -$r iX ' r :- Continuously the cycle turns — two games a night until each team has played all the others and a winner emerges. The cycle ends, not with a single sport, but with the end of intramurals after all twelve sports have been played. But, it ends only for a short time. The cycle will begin again with the next intramural season. The next game is over. The gym is silent once more. And so the cycle continues. 9 Rebecca Jones — Union President Winn Parker — President of Student Judiciary Pam Slaughter — President of Student Association 100 Student Congress Debbie Hoy — President of Student Congress Student Congress members: 1ST ROW: Joel Richardson, Robert Keegan, Steve Cragg, Debbie Hoy, Sallie Gibson, Curtis Haynes, Marvi Arredondo 2ND ROW: Monica Minor, Susan Cloud, Jane Ann Pool, Pam Slaughter, Kelly Kay, Catherine Barbo, Yoland Saldana, Mariann White. 3RD ROW: Andy Campbell, Steve Chaloupka, Mike Stanley, George Young, Gayle Johnson, Mark Sessions, Steve Millard, Jim Ewbank, Russell Dees, Danny Deaver, Roger Neely 101 Alpha Chi Alpha Chi, a national undergraduate scholarship society, formerly known as the Southwestern University Scholarship Society, was founded at Southwestern in 1915. Its objectives are the stimulation, development, and recognition of scholarship. Members of the Texas Alpha chapter are elected from among the top tenth of the junior and senior classes. Members of Alpha Chi pictured: 1ST ROW: Jane Robins, Melanie Francis, Sheryl Chilson, Elizabeth Turner, Mildred Allen, Ricque Brister, Becky Warlick. 2ND ROW: Kathenne Clement, Lynn Lidell, Russell Dees, Barbara Prats, Janice Kelly, Judy Strange, Donn Miller, Keith Hall; Bill House, Steve Millard 3RD ROW: John Quinius, Tom Chandler, Albert Ainsworth, Robert Moore, Brad Beard, David Neakhusan, Jim Jarvis, Kelly Kay, Davida Hopkins, Rebecca Rucker, Thad Harkins. 102 Blue Key Blue Key is a national leadership honor fraternity recognizing those men who have had a distinguished campus performance in the areas of scholarship, leadership, and service. Members of Blue Key pictured: 1ST ROW: Winn Parker. Russell Dees, Steve Cotton, Ronny Sherwood 2ND ROW: Owen McCall, Richard Devere, Donny Sherwood, Steve Millard, Ken- ny Wenzel, Mark Phillips, Donn Miller Cardinal Key Members of Cardinal Key pictured: 1ST ROW: Pam Smith, Roxy Moorhouse, Susan Cloud, Missy DeLotto, Beverly Brewer, Pam Slaughter 2ND ROW: Jane Robins, Rebecca Rucker, Marilynn Miller, Marty Shelton, Gretchen Curry, Luann Fancher, Ricque Brister Cardinal Key, national leadership honorary for women, selects each spring the most outstanding women from the junior class to serve as members during their senior year. Membership is based on scholarship, participation, and leadership in campus activities. Each year Cardinal Key gives special recognition to outstanding freshman and sophomore women. 103 Student Union Committees The Spot Program Committee is an avenue of expression which may take any direction. This committee promotes free thinking and creativity on Union programming. Members pictured (Rt.): Tina Martin, Ricque Brister — Chairperson, Shirley Tatum, Lawrence Musgrove, Scott Polard The Outdoor Recreation Committee provides students with the opportunity to plan and participate in numerous activities including camping, spelunking, biking, canoeing, and tubing. Members pictured (Rt.): Lauren Traylor, Tina Martin, Lavonne Heacock, Conrad Lamon, John Wolf — Chairperson The Ideas and Issues Committee of the Untion is a group of people who try to keep the campus informed about what is going on in the world, in the nation, in the state, and on campus. Members pictured (Below): Carol Bennett, Tina Martin, Marlon Ross, Melanie Francis, Alice Nyberg — Chairperson, Danny Deaver, Joe Cross, Ray Bunnage, Barbara Prats, Russell Dilts, Linda Phillips, Dustin James 104 The Entertainment Committee provides the campus with outstanding movies, dances, entertainers, and a variety of special events. Members pictured (Lt): Steve Chalupka, Russell Dees — Chairperson, Debbie Barnes, Paul Irwin, Conrad Lamon The Minorities Committee reflects the need for Minorities to have a voice in Unionprogramming. Members pictured (Below): Shirley Tatum, Shiela Sells The Coffeehouse Committee provides an avenue for creative entertainment mediums. Seeking to create new and unique experiences, the committee offers, among other things, music acts, plays, and poetry readings. Members pictured (Above): Bill Gentner, Janet Sharpe, Lavonne Heacock, Jeff Cherrington, Conrad Lamon, Karen DeCotis — Chairperson, Diane Braody Program Council Members (Below): Karen DeCotis, Conrad Lamon, Russell Dees, Alice Nyberg, Rebeca Jones, President, Ricque Brister, Jamie Grey — Union Director 105 L.K. House Council Members of LK House Council pictured. (LR UP- WARD): Barb Simmons, Tricia Mernl, Tom Morris, Becky Withrow, Juli White, Adele Spencer, Roxy Moorhouse, Evelyn Trujillo, Ranel Stevenson, Yolanda Soldara, Kathie Sherrod H.B. — M.S. House Council Members of Herman Brown — Moody Shern Houses Council (LR UPWARD): Andy Cmpbell, Kenny Dennis, Mark Mayfield, Donn Miller, John Schulze, Raymond Gray, Paul Schrotf, Mike Moss 106 ' f % ' International House Members quickly enjoy an Italian dinner at the Booties before a downpour. International House: 1ST ROW: Paul Lowry, Maureen Hoffert, Shoshana Hoffert, Bob Hoffert, Gail Owen 2ND ROW: Karen DeCotis, Debbie Willems, Brian Reed, Sue Raagas, Yoke Thue- Gan, Dorothy Caldwell 3RD ROW: Bane Smith, David Ray, Joel Richardson, Sally Brigman, Carlos Lowry Sneed House: 1ST ROW: Diane Broady, Jams Davis, Lavonne Heacock, Christie Cook, Beth Hensley, Pam McKay. 2ND ROW: Mrs. Nickols, Kathy Boehning, Liz Burkhalter, Stairs: Suzie Perkins, Mary Alcie Camacho, Alice Nyberg, Melanie Francis, Kathenne Clement. Mortised: Thad Harkins — Sneed Sweet- heart s n e e d 107 Opera Theatre Maryanna Reed, Debbie Raby, Debbie Reed, Richard Brelsford, Dennis G ilmore. Donn Miller, Stephanie Dory Extraordinaries 1ST ROW: Edie Brown, Carla Hawkins 2ND ROW: Karla Babcock, Andy Smith, Jeannie Williams, Debbie Reed, Tanya Gode, Julie White, Roxy Moorhouse, Carig Zook, Donn Miller 3RD ROW: Mike Stanley, Dennis Gilmore, J. P. Reed 108 Kenny Sheppard directing. 1ST ROW: Gary Bryson, Joe Graves, Wesley Robertson, Jeff Johnson, Dennis Gilmore, Jeff Williams 2ND ROW: Jamie Farr, Carol Pemonter, Lela Gardner, Barb Mandry, Judy Finn, Rebeca Vardmont, Julie White, Carla Babcock, Debbie Moon 3RD ROW: Veta Berry, Margert Wilcox, Vicky Varteressian, Pat Fulkes, Cindy Vega, Charlotte Hardi, Sue Raagas, Deb Mann Chapel Choir 1ST ROW: Vickie Sheppard, Adele Spencer, Carla Hawkins, Edie Brown, Stephanie Dory, Sonja Brown 2ND ROW: Debbie Raby, Marcia Stuart, Cindy Karr, Tanya Gode, Jeanie Williams, Alberta Hubbard, Bunny Fisher, Sharyn Calcote 3RD ROW: Donn Miller, Richard Brelsford, David Lawson, Garry Cude, Nathan Johnson, Dennis Gilmore, Andy Smith, P. J. Reed CONDUCTING: Kenny Sheppard University Chorale 109 Southwestern Band I % 110 Southwestern Orchestra IV 111 Mu Psi Chi Mu Psi Chi is a fraterity founded during the Spring this year at Southwestern. It is a social and service organization for men in the field of music. Mu Psi Chi Members pictured: (SEATED IN FRONT) Jim Farris, Jim Jarvis, John Schulze (STAIRS UPWARD): Brian Todd, Michael Meyer, Albert Ainsworth, Kelly Kay, Jerry Harlow, Oen- nis Gilmore, Garry Cude, Nathort Johnson, Bob Brockett, David Lawson, Donn Miller Michael Meyer directs Georgetown school bands at a bicentennial concert. 112 ■■BH H MM Delta Omicron Delta Omicron is an international music fraternity, with collegiate chapters established abroad — a professional fraternity for women in the field of music. (LT.) Albert Ainsworth and Sonja Alvarado munch on chicken at a joint Mu Psi Chi and Delta Omicron picnic. Delta Omicron Members pictured: 1ST ROW: Mary Lou Tittle, Marsha Miori, Lou Ann Spellman, Lualleen Danheim, Sonja Brown, Eddie Brown, Sharyn Calcote, Kathy Peterson 2ND ROW: Charlotte Hardi, Debbie Mann, Jane Robins, Joan DeLucchi, Cindy Rogers, Mary Gan, Carla Hawkins, Missy DeLotto 3RD ROW: Rabecca Vardiman, Mananna Reed, Pamela Smith, Margaret Wilcox, Roxy Moorhouse, Stephanie Dory, Debbie Holbrooks, Debora Raby 113 Mask And Wig Players Mask and Wig Players is the Southwestern University dramatic society. It was founded in 1921. Mask and Wig Players pictured: 1ST ROW: Karen DeCotis, David Amsworth. Edie Brown, Rex Voland, Steve Truit, Donn Miller, Roxy Moorhouse 2ND ROW: Patricia McDowell, Dawn Cardwell, Charlotte Gates, Bill Genter, Mary Macma, Bobbie Fisher 3RD ROW: Bruce Allen, Beth Reid, Phil Holcombe, Mark Mayfield, Debbie Latimer, Stephanie Dory 4TH ROW: Tricia Lomax, Joyce Slade, Beth Ann Huffman, Fred Goodson Pi Epsilon Delta Pi Epsilon Delta is an honorary dramatic fraternity. Its purpose is to raise standards and achievements in dramatics. Membership is restricted to juniors and seniors. It was established at Southwestern in 1927. Pi Epsilon Delta members pictured: 1ST ROW: Rex Voland, Bill Gentner, Donn Miller 2ND ROW: David Amsworth, Debbie Latimer, Roxy Moorhouse, Mark Mayfield, Tricia Lamax, Joyce Slade 114 Political Science Luncheons t ■-k-f. fcSS? fT- l i i i ! n ' ' i Li C«j III L rA I — . %je: Science Society The Southwestern Science Society is an organization of advanced students who meet scholarship qualifications. Requirements for membership are 30 hours of science courses (biology, chemistry, mathematics, and physics) as well as a 3.0 grade point cumulative and in the division of the sciences. Members pictured: 1ST ROW: Creed Pettigrew, Bane Smith, Melame Francis, Kathenne Clement, Barbara Mandry, Jeanett Hartm, Mary Kluttz, Eric Smith, Donnie Sherwood, Craig Naeurt 2ND ROW: Dr. Girvin, Elbert David, Bobby Stern, Lynn Udell, Theodore Barnett, Keith Hall, Ernesto Adame, Pablo Vicharelli, Tom Talbert, Cathy Boehnmg 3RD ROW: Fred Hilgeman, Tom Chandler, Brad Beard, John Wagner, Robert Moore, Dr. Deeds, Tom Ellis, Richard Devere, Mark Strong, Robert Schaen, Mark Dawson, David Paul i r C T 7 r hV, I - j J i r.ur •- .-„-■« ' ■ • , -f f ?f wSSu S •• ■ ' • ' ■ , .--% J JLV 1 Is ROWLAND THOjMSON EINSTEIN m tm If Xk ? ± ' ±. z!A. wt f ' w f Psi Chi Psi Chi, the national honor society in psychology, was founded in 1929 to encourage and recognize professional excellence in psychology students. The Southwestern chapter of Psi Chi was chartered in the spring of 1975. Psi Chi members pictured: BACK ROW: Donna Reaves, Jim Farris, Dr. Justin Custer, Dorothy Caldwell, Beth Raines, Dr. Wendell Osborn, Teresa Coble, Susan Armstrong, Sheryl Byrd, Christie Cook, Marianne Ball FRONT ROW: Mike Moss, Karyl Kinsey, John Schulze, Rebecca Rucker, Jett Williams, Barbara Simmons, Cindy Hill, Dr. Raleigh Pegram, Cheryl Lewis Not pictured: Dr. Billie Fuftingim, Dr. Douglas Hooker, David Lester, Sandy Jensen, Debbie Eidson, Worth Green, Sherri Zink, Janie Longan, Ricque Brister 116 Scenes From Psychology Club Luncheons 117 Sigma Delta Pi Sigma Delta Pi is the national Spanish honor society. It is an organization ot students engaged in promoting a wider knowledge, better understanding, and appreciation of the Hispanic contributions to the development ot the modern world. The Southwestern chapter was chartered in 1973. Members pictured: Web Tilton, Mimi Duvall, Mark Mayfield, Maria Betancourt, Dr. Betancourt 118 La Catatriee chauve Personnages M. Smith Kelly Kay Mme Smith Janis Davis M. Martin Mark Kishego Mme Martin Sue Lynn Cole Mary, la bonne Martha Young Le Capitaine des Pompiers Regine Reynolds La Pendule Peggy Overly Pic. 2 3 scenes from play Phi Delta Phi Pi Delta Phi, the National French Honor Society, is open to all persons who meet the academic requirements set down by the Society. Students are nominated in recognition of their academic achievements in French above four semesters with at least a B average. They must also be in the upper 35% of their class in general studies as well as in French. Pi Delta Phi members pictured: (Pic. 1) SEATED: Peggy Grosse, Susan Fitch, Judy Strange. Janis Davis, Kay Webb, Debbie Barnes, Martha Young, Cynthia Burrus, Kelly Kay STANDING: Ronnie Munro-Fergison, Sue Lynn Cole, Davida Hopkins, Peggy Overly, Kelly Kay, Dr. Regine Reynolds 119 Sou ' wester Staff 1. Dorothy Caldwell, Editor and Photographer 2. Caroline Snell, Features 3. Marlon Ross, Administration and Faculty 4. Lawrence Musgrove, Photographer 5. Linda Phillips, Artwork and Cover 6. John Schulze, Photographer 7. Linda Moore, Artwork; Kathy Leckie, Who ' s Who and Photographer 8. Alice Nyberg, Sports Not pictured: Bill Pitts, Photographer Evelynn Trujillo, Organizations Susi Roberts, Classes Contributors: Melanie Miller Beth Ann Huffman Jim Ferris Paul Whitley George Young Tom Buckner Dustin James Joe Cross Sherry Zink Steve Cotton Mary Ghan Nancy Pries Melanie Francis Paula Kelly x , ' , , fc '  3 i. .  C . ' - - iXV VXX V XXX . ■ X XX? , ' . ' ±hr: jS 121 (1) Staff members pictured: Kelly Kay, Editor; Marlon Ross, featured writer; Kay Webb, editorial assistant; Dustin James, lay-out and photographer; Steve Cotton, featured writer; George Young, featured writer; Michial Meyer, fine arts; Larry Franks, photographer; Jerry Harlow, reporter; Yolanda Saldana, campus news, Paula Kelly, reporter; (seated) Mood Man (2) Staff members relax after completion of the last edition of the year. (3) Editor Kelly Kay at work. The Megaphone Staff tk. .J M2 i a The Southwestern Magazine Staff Not Pictured Paul Whitley — Editor 123 AWS All women students are members of the Association of Women Students. This organization sponsors projects and programs geared toward the interests and concerns of women. Officers pictured: Debbie Holbooks, Sarah Key, Barbara Prats, Cheryl Lewis WRA Women ' s Recreation Association is an organization of women students who sponsor intramural competion among the various organizations. Team captains and officers pictured: 1ST ROW: Carol Knolle, Jole Roberts, Missy DeLotto, Sterling McCullough 2ND ROW: Julie Crain, Nancy Pearce, Janice Doughty, Marty Shelton, Glada Munt 124 ■M iH Southwestern Cheerleaders 1ST ROW: Connie Casad, Minnie Johnson, Lezlie Moore. 2ND ROW: Jackie Langelier, Jody Darkas, Lela Gardner, Sharon Tittle, Debbie Willems 125 Black Organization For Social Survival BOSS members pictured: 1ST ROW: Fred Washington, Rhonda Peoples, Mike Edwards, Jimmy Dutfield 2ND ROW Carmen Alexander, Ann Edwards, Sheila Sells, Shirley Tatum 3RD ROW: Rose Kemp, Alberta Hubbard, Joe Buckannon, Bobby Williaams • 4 126 Participating in the BOSS Black History Week program were: Rose Kemp, Wade Cox, Alberta Hubbard, Bobby McWilliams. Nathan Johnson, April Fennel, Sheila Sells, Helen Thomas, Carmen Alexander, Shirley Tatum. Bobby McWilliams, Fred Washington, Jerome Carter, Jimmy Dutfield 127 Alpha Delta Pi 1ST ROW: Catherine Neely, Rose Gonsulin, Pam Slaughter, Virginia Henderson, Loura Chandler, Becky Withrow, Cindy Cunningham, Tricia Merrill, Carol Lawrence, Lezlie Kirby, Terry Thorpe, Patricia McClatchey 2ND ROW: Jackie Langelier, Ricki Fletcher, Carrie Kirby, Sally Gibson 3RD ROW: Becky Watkins, Katy Sherod, Davida Hopkins, Sonja Brown, Sue Lynn Cole, Susan Davis, Kerry Cole, Caroline Shell STAIRS: Ellen Feltner, Monika Minor, Charlotte Hardy, Karen Thompson, Tina Bade, Luann Fancher, Judy Strange, Debbie Jones, Rebecca Rucker, Missy DeLotto, Marilyn McPhail, Susan Cloud, Mary Stump, Kim Mitchell, Suzanne Blake, Beverly Brewer, Paula Hammond, Cindy Youker, Janie Callahan, Sarah Hutfman, Julie Crain, Lasses Lowry, Mary Ellen Clitford, Carol Knolle, Nancy Martin, Nancy Pearce 128 Delta Delta Delta 1ST ROW: Donna Carter, Lela Gardner, Katheleen Hindman, Danice Phillippi, Janice Lane, Melanie Miller, Barrie Browder, Colleen Ward, Jennifer Field 2ND ROW: Becky Estep, Kris Baird, Gingee Hessel, Mona McNeill, Leesa Holbrook, Lisa Dueker, Lisa Maxwell, Martha Peck, Vicky Vander Naillen, Janet Flanaghan, Jamie Farr 3RD ROW: Patti McDuffie, Jole Roberts, Emy Parker, Connie Casad, Phyllis Meagher, Gale Gregory, Liz Dubuis, Mad Miller, Candice Hinson, Maureen Murtaugh, Karla Babcock, Karin Soulen, Lucy Vick, Becky Young, Cindy Hill, Jenny Gore 4TH ROW: Gayle Johnson, Mary Lou Davis, Cathy Luck, Nan cy Newton, Sterling McCullough, Tracy Chambers, Lizabeth Pool, Beverly Houghton, Debbie Reed, Nancy Chadwick 5TH ROW: Catherine Barbo, Tissie Ann Elliot, Jane Robins, Jane Ann Pool, Marty Shelton, Cheryl Lewis, Gretchen Curry, Karen Bennight, Merrilynn Miller, Farra Thomas 129 Zeta Tau Alpha TOP ROW: Ranel Stephenson, Barbara Duke, Sarah Allen, Mimi Duvall, Patty Amsworth, Laura Lancaster, Debbie Willems Spooky, Anne Taylor, Beth Johnson, Elaine Carleton Wagley, Martha Burdell, Nancy Avery, Carol Hartwig STANDING: Carol Storter, Cilia Pitts, Kathleen Koemng, Debbie Eidson, Laura Dannenbrink, Kathy Steer, Joette Breeding, Marcia Stuart, Jeanette Hartin, Sheri Belnap, Jenny Lyde ON MR. ED: Karla Kreger, Barbara Cilly STANDING: Liz Drake KNEELING: Ann Skinner, Sandra Watson, Rhonda Viney, Karen Hanson, Patti Fidler, Dode Devore, Dixie Leonard, Helen Cross, Laurie Mason FRONT ROW: Peggy Overly, Robin Poerschke, Paddington, Sandy Jensen, Lezlie Moore, Susie Robertson, Nancy Pries, Susan Armstrong Not pictured: Susan Anthony, Debbie Barnes, Cynthia Burrus, Sheri Byrd, Lee Ann Everett, Valerie Leon, Ollie Ann Myers, Virginia Pate, Jan Stewart, Shannor Taylor, Janet Taylor, Janet Thorn, Gwyn Tuttle, Carol Watkins. , 1 ,-- Delta Zeta 1ST ROW: Nancy Lou Lacky, Pam Smith, Gail Murphy, Leah Sellers, Elise Green, Judy Thomas, Shelia Greene, Lynn Sanberg 2ND ROW: Dianne Holley, Roxie Moorehouse, Beth Reid, Stephanie Harris, Mary Alice Camacho, Liza Daily, Kara Wilson, Jane Tompkins, Lisa McCord, Margaret Wilcox, Debbie Mann, Ellen Schlemmer, 3RD ROW: Betze Hudson, Marsha Miori, Susan Briles, Terri Flagg, Jenny Aaron, Marsha Russell, 4TH ROW: Kim Tipton, Janet Sharpe, Michele Mattke, Christi Cook, Maryanna Reed 131 Panhellenic Women ' s Panhellenic Council is composed of a delegate from each chapter of national social sororities represented on the campus. It has for its purpose: to maintain good inter- soronty relations, to cooperate with the admistration of the University in maintenance of high social and scholastic standards, and to compile rules governing rushing, pledging and initiation by sororities on this campus; to work together for the good of the college and all its women students. Council members pictured: Barb Mandry, Debbie Willems, Sori|a Brown, Karm Soulen Sorority Beauties 132 in mB ia Rose Karin Sbulenl Fraternity Honors tea Watsqn ZTA 133 Pi Kappa Alpha 1ST ROW: Ronnie Sherwood, Carleton Wilkes, Dave Davis, Steve Cregg, John Qumius, Mike Stanley, Tom Vandivier, Bobby Carson, Marty Shelton, Mark Strong, Carol Lawrence, Bill Baird, Bill Sheldon 2ND ROW: Lynn Lidell, Henry Guevana, David Neahusan, Bland Cromwell, Jeff Williams, Jim McNutt, Craig Nauert, Cal Renfro, Gary Querbach, Ted Caryl, Wallis Livesay, Rickey Pierce, Lisa Dueker, Richard DeVere, Andy Smith, Paul Parker, Charlie Olson, Sue Lynn Cole, Les Romo 3RD ROW: Chip Brooks, Bob Brockett, Woody Willhite, Jimmy Jones, Bill Pitts, Jack Seals, Debbie Hoy, Bob Thomas, Sonja Brown, Johnny Jones, Freddy Neuman, Eric Smith, George McDaniel, Charlie Qualia, Geoff Monsour, Steve Millard, Jane Robins, Robert Schoen 4TH ROW: Diane Henry, Paul Schoel, Ronnie Munroe-Furgeson, Milton Dare, Teresa Coble, Debbie Reed, Gretchen Curry, John Schulze, Dan Darby, Rob Peters, Bill Williams 1)4 Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Rose Nominees. Cindy Edge, Lisa Maxwell, Karin Soulen, Becky Young Donna Carter, Tina Bade TOP ROW: Mike Underhill, Bill Enguall, George Jones, Ottis Clarkson, Paul Irvin, Bennett Morgan, Matt Worley, Bill Ashley, Jay Lindley, Robert Edmonson, David Jones, Richard Brelsford, Greg Gordon, Bruno Yasoni, Mike Schroeder. MIDDLE ROW: Mike Moffitt, Charles Cotten, Jay Elder, Skip Liedtke, Steve Erck, Eric Hanson, James Burkholder, Cliff Leonard, Mike Wilkerson STEPS: Newton Dougherty, Jerry Pate, Neil Harris, Steve Tinsley, Kevin Kneisley, Gordon Winfrey FRONT: Rod Meagher, Damal Hanmis 135 Kappa Sigma 1ST ROW: Jim Ivers, Mark Middlebrooks, Mitch Brownlee, Tanner Garth, Winn Parker 2ND ROW: Monte McGowan, Richard Kalmbach, Bart Koontz, Price Blalock, David Lester, George Shackeztord 3RD ROW: Owen McCall, John Sonnenberg, Thomas Hambleton, Ray Worsham III, Craig Grayum, Ben Orgain Not Pictured: Erick Harpst, Bill Anderson, Bryan Everett, Danny Middlebrooks, Court Greer 136 Phi Delta Theta 1ST ROW: Jack Neely, Mike Covert, Mike Ellis, Dennis King, Bobbie Beattie, Dale Hunt, Keith Boone, Gary Clayton, Al McCullin, John Brock, Mark Phillips, Jim Eubanks, Steve Hooper, Pete Buzzini, Craig Jones, David Hodges. 2ND ROW: Gary Cooper, Ellis Mills, Rickie Williams, Tim Boone, Bill Mattison Not Pictured: Brent Baker, John Edgecomb, Mark Ellis, Cliff Roberts, Les Russell, Dannie Deaver, Tod Sattler, Brian Hill 137 £ t t HONORS (1) John Wolf, Jane Robins — Fine Arts (2) Melanie Francis — Fine Arts (3) Larry Franks — Student Publictions (4) David Ainsworth, Donna Miller — Fine Arts (5) Alice Nyberg — Student Union (6) Debbie Hoy, Steve Cotton - Student Government (7) Courtney Ward - - Fine Arts (8) David Pau l, Rose Kemp — Student Life 140 Sou ' wester Superlatives Who ' s Who John Quinius Rebecca Rucker 142 Kelly Kay Mary Lou Tittle 143 Albert Ainsworth 144 Thad Harkins Creed Pettigrew 145 K X 9 i Craig Nauert Pam Slaughter 146 Steve Millard Judy Strange 147 Beth Raines Worth Green 148 Pablo Vicharelli 149 Mark Phillips Rebeca Jones 150 Newton Dougherty Dan O ' Laughlin 151 Honors Ms Southwestern Nominees (1) Rebecca Rucker (2) Sherri Zink (3) Mary Alice Camacho (4) April Fennell Ms Southwestern (5) Pam Slaughter Panhellenic Scholarship Award: Delta Delta Delta Mary Katherine Holloway Outstanding Sorority Woman: Pam Slaughter Outstanding Freshman Woman: Kay Webb Outstanding Sophomore Women: Melanie Francis, Barbara Simmons Mary Lynn Webb Starnes Music Award: Albert Ainsworth Dames Club Award: Melanie Francis David Knox Porter Pre-Theology Award: Bernard Richea Delta Omicron Senior Honor Pin: Mary Alice Camacho Star of Delta Omicron Award: Mary Lou Tittle American Chemical Society Award: David Paul Freshman Chemistry Award: Dustin James The Wall Street Journal Student Achievement Award: Tom Vandivier The Accounting Excellence Award: Kevin Kneisley Frank Luksa Award in Sociology: Bernard Richea The Bob Lancaster Award: Carl Lowry, Courtney Ward Pi Delta Phi Outstanding Student: Judy Strange Student National Education Association Awards: Mary Martin, Annette Brown, Janice Lane, Stefani Harris Outstanding Teacher Citation: Paul Blanton (l)Pam Slaughter awards Kay Webb the Outstanding Freshman Woman Award. (2) Judy Strange receives from Dr. Reynolds a book from the French government for her outstanding accomplishments in the study of French. (3) Paul Blanton speaks after receiving the Outstanding Teacher Citation. • New Position Created President Fleming explained the new administrative position to Student Congress members, who gave the proposal their full support: As Administrative Vice President, Dr. Jones and I will divide the supervisory responsibilities of administering the institution between us as occasion and experience shall dictate. He will assume direct responsibility when I am away, referring to me such issues as he feels should be decided by the President. In the legislative process of the University he will serve as an ex-officio member in all committees, councils and divisions with right to voice but not of vote. He will review all legislation and call for delay in the implementation of any act or action which he feels I should review. As Provost, Dr. Jones will assume responsibility for the coordination of re gular University planning, communication, and implementation procedures. In this role he will work with other administrative officers, faculty, students and staff to promote the harmonious and efficient functioning of the institution. He will not interfere with or displace anyone in a currently established position, but he will work with everyone to promote a greater institutional unity and efficiency. 155 Southwestern University Deans (1) Dr. Nelson F. Adams — Dean of the School of Fine Arts (2) Dr. Frederick Burr Clifford — Dean of the Brown College of Arts and Sciences (3) Ms. Suzanne E. Gordon — Dean of Student Development and Services 156 Office Of Admissions And Registration (3) Admissions Secretaries — Francine Phelan, Jeanne Peschel, Deshone Sikes, Jutta Sharpe (2) Ms. Joy Sloan, Ms. Kathy Tourteliotte — Admissions Counselors; Mr. Michael Rossman — Asst. Director of Admissions; Ms. Kathy CHIiland, Mr. Sam Mathis (not pic.) — Admisions Counselors (1) Mr. Paul Grady Anderson — Director of Admissions and Registration 157 (1) Mr. Marcus Raney, Jr. — Director of Alumni Relations, Coordinator of University Relations (2) Mr. Ken Johnson — Director of Annual Fund (3) Mr. Thomas Buckner - Director of the University News Service (4) Mr. Michael Riddle — Director of Planned Giving (5) Ms. Barbara Seever ■=- Director of Publications and Special Events (6) Ms. Maureen Hoffert — Director of International House (7) Mr. David Connelly — Director of Men ' s Housing (8) Ms. Sarah Key — Director of Women ' s Residence Halls (9) Ms. Charlotte G. Taylor — Director of Student Financial Aid (10) Ms. Jaime Gray — Director of Student Activities (11) Ms. Vivian Maurine Nichols — Director of Sneed House l ' .H (1) Miss Elizabeth Fox — Assistant to the Dean ot the School of Fine Arts (2) Dr. Jackson — Director of Library (3) Library staff members pictured: 1ST ROW: John Hasting, Kathreen Stone, Charlene Eicher, Mary Pat McLoughnlin, Francis DeSalme, Bernice Archer, Laurie Mason 2ND ROW: Mark Dudley, Jency James, Mary Louise Graspy, Dr. Jackson, Garce Jones, Brenda Boufford, Elizabeth Sanders, Wanda Lancaster, Imogene Gillett Not pictured: Lorena Widmer, Thelma Poole (4) Robert Schwartz — Auditor and Chef Accountant (5) Business Office: Joyce Anderson, Nancy Smithwick, Sandra Davidson, Jeanie Hyman, Leona Morris, Doris Wittera, Donne Mertinek, Robert Swartz, Shirley Caluette Not pictured: Betty Knauth, Dorothy Williams, Leverme Johnson 159 Sarge Retires, Shamrock Takes Over Commons Director Edith Williams retired after of many years of service to the University. The Shamrock Corporation, a food service firm, was initiated to direct the Commons. I 160 (1) Fay Hubard, Beverly Turner, Patsy Raby, Rosemary Hutchinson, Edith Benton, Linda Gibbs, Joyce Rosenbush — Annex Office (2) Shiley Ingram, Kenneth Chambers, Virginia Wiggins — University Store (3) Wanda Vogler, Myrtle Hartman — Postal Service (4) Opal Birch, Charlsie Moore — University Operators (5) Floyd B. Lackey — Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds (6) Mamtence Staff (7) William Shell — General Services (8) Mamtence, Janitorial, and Grounds Staff 161 School Of Fine Arts The School of Fine Arts consists of the Departments of music, drama, and art. The School represents the importance of the creative and performing arts in a liberal arts education. (1) Dr. Nelson F. Adams — Dean — Prof, of music, choral ensembles 1b2 ' -KS l H-, Dept. Of Music (1) Ms. Drusilla Huffmaster — Assoc. Prof, of paino, Artist-in-Residence (2) Mr. Thomas C. Douglass — Prof, of string msturments (3) Ms. Exa Jane Lansford — Asst. Prof, of piano (4) Dr. George E. Nelson — Assoc. Prof, and Coordinator of instrumental music education, brass and percussion instruments, Director of band (5) Dr. F. Ellsworth Peterson — Dept. of Music Chariman, Magarett Root Brown Prof, of Fine Arts 163 Dept. Of Music (1) Mr. R. Cochrane Penick — Prof, of organ and sacred music (2) Mr. Raymond L. Schroeder — Asst. Prof, of music, Director of orchestra, woodwind msturments (3) Mr. Kenny Mac Sheppard — Instructor of music education and choral music, choral ensembles Not pictured: Ms. Barbara A. Thomas — Instructor of voice, choral ensembles 164 Dept. Of Theatre And Speech The Department of Theatre and Speech adds vitality and dramatic creativity to the University. The Department produced three major plays: Ride! Ride!, Look Homeward, Angel, and Philemon. There were also two sets of plays directed by senior drama students. BELOW LR: Mr. Fred R. Goodson — Assit. Prof, of Drama and Speech, Dr. Angus Springer — Prof, and Chairman of the Dept. of Theatre 165 Dept. Of Art (1) Mr. Guss D. Farmer — Chairman, Asst. Prof, of Art (2) Mr. Claude L. Kennard — Assoc. Prof, of Art, Director of Alma Thomas Fine Arts Gallery (3) Ms. Audrey A. McClinchie — Instructor of Art, Art Ed. (4) Mr. David Eugene Everett — Instructor of Art, Sculpture 166 Brown College Of Arts And Sciences The Brown College of Arts and Sciences is composed of three divisions: Humanities, Social Sciences, and Natural and Applied Sciences. Humanities Division (1) Dr. F. Burr Clifford — Dean, Prof, of English and Classics (2) Dr. Jack Harris — Asst. Prof, of English (3) Ms. Jane McCook — Asst. Prof, of English (4) Dr. Thomas W. Herbert — Assoc. Prof, of English (5) Dr. Lois W. Parker — Asst. prof, of English (6) Dr. Virginia A. Carweli — Assoc. Prof, of English 167 168 Humanities Division (1) Dr. Paul Blanton — Asst. Prof, of Religion and Philosophy, Director of Social Internship Program (2) Dr. Farley Snell — Asst. Prof, of Religion and Philosophy, University Chaplain (3) Dr. Karen Fiser — Asst. Prof, of Philosophy (4) Dr. John Score — Chairman of Dept. of Religion and Philosophy, Prof, of Religion and Philisophy 169 w 170 Humanities Division v 171 Social Science Division (1) Dr. Joe Colwell — Chairman of Dept. of Economics and Bus. Ad., Lillie and Roy Cullen Prof, of Economics (2) Mr. Jim Bridges — Assoc. Prof, of Economics and Bus. Ad. (3) Dr. Leonard Giesecke — Asst. Prof, of Economics and Bus. Ad. (4) Dr. Norton E. Marks — Brown Visiting Prof. of Economics and Bus. Ad. (5) Dr. Robert E. Munday — Assoc. Prof, of Economics and Bus. Ad. (6) Ms. Elizabeth Lundblad — Instructor of Economics and Bus. Ad. 172 (1) Dr. Connie Lee Venable — Asst. Prof of Education, Director of Career Counseling and Placement (2) Dr. William Sikes — Asst. Prof, of Education (3) Dr. Biffie Fullingim — Asst. Prof of Education (4) Dr. Raleigh Pegram — Asst. Prof, of Education (5) Dr. Bruce Mossman — Asst. Prof, of Education (6) Dr. Judson S. Custer — Prof, of Education, Chairman of Education Dept. (7) Dr. Shirley Ahlers — Asst Prof of Education 173 Social Science Division (1) Dr. Wendell Osborn (Chairman of Social Sciences Division, Assoc. Prof of Psychology) (2) Dr. Suk-Soon Suh (Prof, of Political Science) (3) Dr. Robert Hoffert (Asst Prof of Political Science, Director of Humanities Program) (4) Dr. Francis O ' Brien (John Tower Prof, of Political Science) (5) Dr. Edmund McCurtain (Elizabeth Root Paden Prof, of Sociology, Chairman of Sociology Dept.) (6) Mr. Dan Craig Hilliard (Instructor of Sociology) 174 (1) Ms. Glada Munt (Instructor of Physical Education) (2) Mr. Tibb Burnett (Instructor of Physical Education and Dance) (3) Dr. Tex Kassen (Assoc. Prof, of Physical Ed., Chairman of Dept. of Physical Education and Athletic Director) (4) Mr. James Mallon (Asst. Prof. Of Physical Education) Not pictured: Mr. John Edwards (Asst. Prof, of Physical Education) Mr. William Merritt (Asst. Prof, of Physical Education) 175 Natural And Applied Sciences (1) Dr. Donald Deeds — Asst. Prof, of Biology (2) Dr. Eb C. Girvin — Prof, of Biology, Chairman of Biology Dept. (3) Dr. Horace Jacob — Asst. Prof, of Biology (4) Dr. Edwin Lansford, Jr. — Prof, of Biochemistry (5) Dr. Fred Hilgeman — Assoc. Prof, of Chemistry (6) Dr. Robert L. Soulen — Lillian Nelson Pratt Prof, of Chemistry, Chairman of Chemistry Dept. Not pictured: Dr. Edward Golla — Instructor of Chemistry ■j 176 PHYSICS IS FUN (1) Mr. John Chapman — Asst. Prof, of Math (2) Mr. Harold Eidson, Jr. — Instructor of Math, Coordinator of Data Processing (3) Dr. Bob Brown — Chairman of Physics Dept., Prof, of Physics (4) Dr. Edwin M. Lansford, Jr. — Asst. Prof, of Math (5) Dr. Ralph Whitmore — Chairman of the Natural and Applied Sciences Division, Chairman of Dept. of Math, Prof, of Math Not pictured: Mr. James Copeland — Instructor of Physics 177 •wrj CLASSES (1) Gail Boyer, Georgetown (2) Bill Ashley, Tyler (3) Tina Bade, Victoria (4) Sarah Allen, Burnet (5) Annette Brown, Dallas (6) Debbie Lattimer, Austin (1) Scott Buchaan, Austin (2) Bonnie Berry, Houston (3) Donald Benton, Georgetown (4) Bill Anderson, Matagonda; Erik Harpst, Houston (5) Bernard AHts, Abilene (6) Britt Brawley, Georgetown (7) Steve Wenzel, Georgetown (8) Clayton Black, Abilene (9) Barrie Browder, Waco (10) Albert Ainsworth, Georgetown (1) Sonja Brown, Dayton (2) Sandra Caldwell, Angleton (3) Mary Alice Camacho, Georgetown (4) Ted Caryl, Midland (5) Elba Castaneda, Piedras Negras, Mexico (6) Yolanda Cazares, Houston (7) Nancy Chadwick, Cambridge, OH (8) James Cohagen, Corsmana (9) Sue Lynn Cole, Anchorage. AK (10) Karen Milam Coleman, Porter (1) Jeff Brown, Bryan (2) Sharon Camp, Killeen (3) Kenneth Cmerek, Taylor (4) Steve Cornell, Coupland (5) Hugh Collins, Royal Center, IN (6) Dana Conner, Georgetown (7) Ralph Comer, Wharton; James Burkholder, Harlingen (8) Lualeen Danheim, Tyler (9) Laura Dannenbrink, Houston (10) Milton Dare, Fredericksburg (11) David Davis, Austin ( 1 ) Susan Feller, Athens: Janie Cragg, Houston: Midge Milli- on, Piano (2) Janis Davis, Crockett (3) Newton Dougherty, Houston (4) Jay Elder, La Marque (5) Inez Del Pozo, Houston (6) Mark Dudley, Merkel (7) Sherian Edwards, Tomball (8) Russell Dees, San Antonio (1) Debbie Eidson, Dallas (2) Lee Ann Everett, San Antonio (3) Richard Crozier, Austin (4) Norine Douglass, Leander (5) Jim Farris, Houston (6) Elizabeth Drake, Midland (7) Cathie Eldge, Austin (8) Mimi Duvall, Houston: Spooky; Bryan Morgan, Houston (9) Linda Faulk, Midland (10) Carmen Garay, San Antonio (11) Janet Flanagan, Corpus Christi: Collen Ward, Houston: Karen Bennight, Corpus Christi ' ■ (1) Larry Franks, Austin (?) Mike Giblin, Albuquerque. NM (3) John Fish, Boerne (4) Bridget Graham, Taylor (5) Terri Giese, Austin (6) Rebeca Guzman, San Antonio (7) Lee Ann Harris, Dallas (8) Mary Hildebrandt, Houston (9) Tom Hambelton, Granger (10) Fred Holland, Carthage (1) Sheila Gregg, Austin (2) Robin Grote, Lampasas (3) April Fennell, Houston (4) Thad Harkins, San Antonio (5) Tom Heard, Belton (6) Stefani Harris, Wills Point (7) Curtis Haynes, Houston: Marvi Arrendondo, Weslaco: Austin (8) Phil Glasby, San Antonio: Jerry Krueger, San Antonio: Whitt Trimble, Hockley: Scott Wisch, West Columbia: Bob Baen, Mathis (1) Debbie Hoy, Houston (2) Richard Jackson, San Antonio (3) Elizabeth Johnson, San Antonio (4) John Johnson, Houston (5) Jimmy Jones, Conroe (6) Kelly Kay, Houston (7) Rose Kemp, Houston (8) Karyl Kinsley, Sweetwater (9) Kent Leipold, Austin (10) Karla Kreger, Georgetown (1) Bryan Everett, Houston (2) Janice Lane, Fort Worth (3) Lynn Vineyard, Houston: Kathy Leckie, Dallas (4) Rebeca Jones, Georgetown (5) Robert Keegan, Houston: Paula Kelly, Houston (6) Mary Kluttz, Vidor (1) Mary Martin, Villanova. PA (2) Diane McMeans, Irving (3) Jean Mason. Dallas (4) Cliff Leonard, Anmston. AL (5) Stirling McCullough, Burnet (6) Judy Lawson, Houston (7) Carl Lowry, Richardson (1) Kevin Kneisley, Conroe (2) Richard Laster, Bloommgton Grove (3) Janie Longan, Dallas (4) Phyllis Meagher, Killeen (5) Steve Millard, Houston (6) Owen McCall, Wichita Falls (7) Mike Miller, La Porte (8) Eva Mendiola, Kerrville (9) Jack Lyons, Mercedes fcdf-.JIi 1 Jm { ' a«giM : ■ ' ,.i ? (1) Nina Nelms, Houston (2) Winn Parker, Midland: Sandra Watson, Spring (3) Jon Nelson, Georgetown (4) Gary Morris, Austin: Dode Devore, San Antonio (5) Robert Olde, Houston (6) Peggy Overly, New Orleans, LA: Susan Ray, Lockhart BOZ SC EEIW mm MUNicis (1) Madeline Miller, Dallas (2) Lawrence Musgrove, Houston (3) Robert Moore, Corsicana (4) David Paul, San Antonio (5) Trisha Lomax, New Boston (6) Donn Miller, Richmond (7) Pam Parr, Irving; Paul Lowry, Richardson (8) Alice Nyberg, Irving (1) Dan O ' Loughlin, Abilene (2) Mark Phillips, George town (3) Cilia Pitts, Conroe (4) Les Romo, San Antonio (5) Scott Pdard, Odessa; Ricque Brister, Arcadia (6) Suzanne Perkins, Newton Square. PA: Gretchen Galloway, San Antonio (7) Creed Pettigrew, Fort Worth (8) John Quinius, Waco: Craig Nevert, Waco (1) Beth Raines, Houston (2) Doug Ratchford, Silsbee (3) Brian Reed, San Antonio (4) Rebecca Rucker, Monahans (5) Bucky Ritchea, Sinton (6) John Pate, Houston (7) Ed Ruby, Georgetown (8) Joel Richardson, Houston (9) Barbara Titt, Midland j2« (1) Chris Ryaman, Richmond. Lu Ann Wagener, San Antonio (2) Marianne Stiles, Del Rio (3) Mary Vavra, Marble Falls (4) Bane Smith, Houston (5) Mark Strong, Tyler. Bill Shel- don, San Antonio (6) Pablo Vicharelli, Nuevo Laredo. Mexico (7) Lucy Vick, Yazoo City. MS (8) Mary Lou Tittle, Granger (9) Jan Steward, Midland (10) Pam Slaughter, Dallas MZLi ' r- ;X ■; % H i ' ' r ■ f EL ■ ■% Er t!. • N ' X w Nv 4   ;c (1) Kim Tipton, Brownsvill (2) Joey Tonahill, Jasper (3) Ann Tonahill, Jasper (4) Judy Strange, Fort Worth (5) Ronald Sherwood, Bay City (6) Marty Shelton, Houston (7) Wayne Smith, Houston (8) Donald Sherwood, Bay City £ • ' jt sfcw (1) Paul Whitley, Garden Grove. CA (2) Rebecca Warlick, Terrell (3) Courtney Ward, Fort Worth (4) Tom Vandivier, Houston (5) Rhonda Viney, Midland: Karen Hanson, Midland (6) Sherri Zink, Houston: Worth Green, Ingleside (7) Ted- ward Yearick, San Antonio (8) John Whittemore, Lockhart: Blanche Nicholson, Hamilton ■■■■- . .4 ■■ -. (1) Linda Wiegman, San Antonio (2) Rex Voland, Lake Forest, IL (3) Jeff Williams, Groves (4) Bob Wheatley, Picadilly Mans. Hong Hong (5) Gay Wadzeck, Houston (6) Mike Wallace, Temple (7) Carleton Wilkes. Salado Dana Allison, Ingleside Betsy Attwell, Houston Marianne Ball, Fort Worth Gary Buse, San Antonio Janie Callahan, Houston Bobby Carson, Cedar Lane Jeanette Centeno, San Antonio Thomas Chandler, Austin Charles Chapman, Temple Harriet Chapman, Midland Janice Childress, Killeen Sheryl Chison, Georgetown James Chovanec, Fayetteville Katherine Clement, Granger Mary Clifford, Harlingen Susan Cloud, Belton Teresa Coble, Mansfield Gary Cooper, Channelview Rudy Cortez, Corpus Christi Steve Cotton, Dallas Scott Coulter, Houston Kris Cox, Georgetown Bland Cromwell, Waco Jimmy Duffield, Houston Mke Edwards, Columbus. GA Rebecca Estep, Richardson Jim Ewbank, Tyler Luarm Fancher, Bryan Jan Faulkner, Georgetown Andrew Fitzpatrick, San Antonio Melanie Francis, Midland Yoke Thue Gan, Jasin. Malaysia Bill Gentner, San Antonio William Gordon, Houston Craig Grayum, Austin Noble GreenW, San Ant Peggy Grosse, Austin Court Greer Yoakum Charlotte Hardi, Coupland Jeannette Hartin, Tyler Diane Henry, Porter Beth Hensley, Kenedy Martha Hicks, Austin Debbie Holbrooks, Stamford Lane Holstrom, Austin Stephen Hooper, La Port Davida Hopkins, Alvarado owed, Houston Betze Hudson, Marshall Garry Ivy, Fairfield Jim Jarvis, Houston Sandy Jensen, Dallas i, Galveston Tommy Johnson, Georgetown Craig Jones, Houston David Jones, Houston Carrie Kirby, Houston John Kirkpatrick, Leander Carol Knolle, Rosenberg James Krause, Houston David Lawson, San Antonio Barbara Ledbetter, Sumner George Lenox, Houston John Lesesne, Georgetown David Lester, Harhngen Cheryl Lewis, Arlington Lynn LideB, Georgetown John Liedtke, Houston Jay Lindley, Abilene i, ueuigetown Bid Mattison, Houston James McCord, Beeville Christine McKevitt, Round Rock Deborah McMahan, Oklahoma City. OK Michial Meyer, Baird ark Middlebrooks, Dallas Miller, Waco Ann Skinner, i Mike Skinner, Houston Joyce Slade, Pharr Bretna Smith, Houston Gregory Smith, Houston Pamela Smith, Houston Lou Aim Spellman, Georgetown Charlene Sprayberry, Georgetown Robert Stern, Hutto Carol Storter, Brownsville Judy Thomas, Taft Jane Tompkins, Waco Smith Tonahill, Jasper William Turner, Galveston John Wagner, Odessa Steve Wendtland, Rosenberg Kenneth Wenzel, Austin Steve Wenzel, Austin Elizabeth Weyel, Seguin John WMams, Abilene Mary Williams, Victoria James Willis, Georgetown Madeline Willis, Georgetown John Wolf, San Ant Daniel Worley, Rob Patricia Ainsworth, Galveston Mildred Allen, Georgetown Norm Allen, Austin Sarah Anderson, Taylor Susan Armstrong, Houston Nancy Avery, Beeville Bill Baird, Dallas Kristine Baird, Waco Brent Baker, Galveston Catherine Barbo, Georgetown 208 Debbie Barnes, Houston Paul Basham, Arlington Thea Benedict, Grapeland Jerry Birkelback, Georgetown Kathy Boehning, Dallas Tim Boone, Dallas Diane Broady, Houston Bob Brockett, Austin Liz Burkhalter, Houston Cynthia Burrus, Beaumont Dorothy Caldwell, Alvin Dawn Cardwell, Pleasanton Connie Casad, Dallas Randall Cavness, Austin Chris Childress, West Columbia Rodolfo Cortez, Corpus Christ! Stephen Cragg, Houston Julie Crain, Victoria Joycelyne Darkis, Kingsville Debbie Davis, Fort Worth Mary Lou Davis, Houston Mark Dawson, Midland Karen DeCotis, San Antonio Joan DeLucchi, Houston James Dilts, Piano Janice Doughty, Corpus Christi Karen Douglass, Georgetown Barbara Duke, Austin Jim Edgar, Edinburg Tissie Elliott, Balmorhea 209 Thomas Ellis, Houston Steve Erock, Fort Worth Dorothy Escamilla, Nashville, TN Karis Fagan, Houston Rex Falconer, Temple Joe Farr, Houston Bruce Fell, Austin Patti Fidler, Houston Jennifer Field, Plamview Deborah Fisher, San Antonio Susan Fitch, Denton Becky Fleming, Conroe Patricia Fulkes, Austin Robert Fuller, Waco Barbara Galloway, San Antonio Absalon Gamez, Georgetown Garth Tanner, Midland Charlotte Gates, Georgetown Sallie Gibson, Houston Tanya Gode, Georgetown Elise Greene, Midland Sheila Greene, Midland Laura Grisham, Seguin Keith Hall, Eden 210 Eric Hanson, Midland Byron Harris, Dallas John Hasskarl, Brenham Lavonne Heacock, Corpus Christi Bryan Hill, Houston Cynthia Hill, Frederick, MD David Hodges, Dallas Leesa Holbrook, Huntsville Beverly Houghton, Houston Bill House, Austin £M£ s i 3lfr ?r ' Elizabeth Huffman, Austin Sarah Huffman, Waco Jim Hull, Midland Darrell Hurmis, Dallas James Ivers, Beaumont George Jackson, Port Arthur Minnie Johnson, Cameron Cathy Jones, Midland Janice Kelly, Bay City Raymond Khouw, Dallas 211 Judy Kirtley, Round Rock Steve Klopp, Austin Bart Koontz, Placedo Larry Koslovsky, Temple Craig Katz, Luling, LA Thomas Lain, Houston Conrad Lamon, San Antonio Laura Lancaster, Georgetown Jackie Langelier, San Antonio Vance Langley, Huntsville Carol Lawrence, Beaumont Laurie Lentz, Georgetown Marcia Lesene, Georgetown Lasses Lowery, San Antonio Peggy Lowry, Richardson Mary Macina, Midland Barbara Mandry, Odessa Lee Marcus, Austin Michele Mattke, Seguin Mark Mayfield, Temple Lisa Maxwell, Dallas 212 Marc McCauley, Dallas Monte McGowan, Houston David McNitzky, Corpus Christi Jim McNutt, Athens Marilyn McPhail, Houston Tricia Merrill, Houston Mark Meyer, Hebbronville Brian Milling ton, Nixon Marsha Miori, Wharton Lezlie Moore, San Antonio Linda Moore, Houston Ron Morris, Arlington Toni Morris, Fort Worth Laynie Mosess, Denton Michael Moss, Dallas Ron Munro-Ferguson, Evanton, Scotland Oliie Ann Myers, Georgetown Roger Neely, Fort Worth Bill Nelson, Corpus Christi Charles Olson, Waco Bruce Owen, San Antonio 213 Riva Padgett, Killeen Linda Pate, Tyler Charles Paty, Georgetown Robert Phillips, Georgetown Jane Ann Pool, Nacogdoches Barbara Prats, Houston David Puryear, Austin Debora Raby, San Antonio Debra Reed, Stafford Liz Roberts, Fort Worth Cynthia Rogers, San Antonio Janet Rose, Dallas Marsha Russell, Weslaco Robert Schoen, Houston Karl Scholl, Midland 214 John Schulze, San Antonio Barbara Simmons, Grindstone, PA Robert Skinner, Houston Dana Smart, Houston Eric Smith, Irving Karin Soulen, Georgetown Mike Stanely, Amanllo Tim Stanton, Dallas Robert Steele, Dallas Kathy Steer, Houston Russell Stone, Albuquerque, r Marcia Stuart, San Antonio Mary Stump, Midland Tom Talbert, Houston Debbie Tanksly, Georgetown 215 Helen Tanksley, Georgetown Anne Taylor, Dallas Faye Terry, Sonora Farra Thomas, Houston Cullum Thompson, Dallas Renato Troconis, Caracas, Venezuela Elizabeth Turner, Bowie Valerie Turner, San Benito Cliff Valley, San Antonio Vicky Van Der Naillen, Houston Dick Vaughn, Galveston Cynthia Vega, San Antonio 216 Debbie Voyles, Round Rock Michael Wilkerson, Donna Debbie Willems, Houston Jeanie Williams, Abilene Rickey Williams, Cameron Kara Wilson, Seabrook Becky Withrow, Midland Cindy Youker, Harlingen Martha Young, East Lansing. Rebecca Young, Dallas Joel Youngblood, San Antonio Craig Zook. Houston 21 If fllJia-. iV l ' Glenn Adams, Lake Forest Peter Aguilar, San Antonio Carmen Alexander, Austin Bruce Allen, Palmer Sonia Alvarado, Edmburg Susan Anthony, Columbus Karla Babcock, Lubbock Susan Baker, Navasota Sheri Belknap, Waco Carol Bennett, Conroe Kathy Black, Conroe BHIy Bledsoe, Midland loette Breeding, De Soto Richard Brelstord, Shreveport, LA Yvette Bricker, San Antonio Susan Briles, Temple Chip Brooks, Fort Stockton Gene Brown, Del Rio Mtch Brownlee, Oklahoma City. OK Ray Bunnage, Odessa Martha Burdell, Abilene Randy Burt, San Antonio Peggy Byars, Austin Sharyn Calcote, Houston Andy Campbell, Corpus Chnsti Cathy Canion, Austin Elaine Carleton, Midland Donna Carter, Galena Park Tracy Chambers, Lubbock Laura Chandler, Midland Gary Clayton, Ft. Worth Kirk Clendinning, Austin Kerry Cole, Anchorage, AK Michael Covert, Odessa Karlene Cox, Georgetown Marsha Craig, Pearsall Paul Crissey, Dallas Joe Cross, Haltom City Cindy Cunningham, Galveston Barbara Daeschner, San Antonio Dan Darby, Fairfax, VA WalBs Davis, Kingsville Danny Deaver. Fort Worth John Deeds, Austin Carol DeMontei, Hondo Stephanie Dory, Houston Peggy Downing, Houston Kim Doyle, Houston Melanie Eaves, Houston Sidney Eddy, Bellaire Robert Edmonson, Dallas Michael Ehrlich, McAllen Therma Efckson, El Paso hike Ellis, Crockett Wilam Engvall, Dallas Mary Estill, Round Rock Jamie Farr, Austin Ellen Feltner, Houston Bobbie Fisher, Georgetown Terri Flagg, Lubbock Ricki Fletcher, Camzo Springs Lela Gardner, Dallas Dennis Gilmore, Killeen Ricky Gravens, Abilene Joseph Graves, Houston Paula Hammond, San Antonio Mitch Hankins, Winnie Jerry Harlow, Round Rock Carol Hartwig, Houston John Hasskarl, Brenham 222 Carta Hawkins, Edinburg Virginia Henderson, Ozona Candace Hmson, Graham Phip Holcombe, Victoria Graham Hokway, Dallas Andre a Holt, Midland Sharon Horn, Houston Alberta Hubbard, Galveston Cindy Hudgins, San Antonio Dale Hunt, Weatherford Chester Hurst, Beeville Paul Irwin, Houston Jana Johnson, Waco Jeffery Johnson, Georgetown Nancy Johnson, Georgetown Debora Jones, Georgetown Johnny Jones, Conroe Cindy Karr, Sinton Peggy Karrick, Austin Leslie Ktrby, Houston Ron Knapp, Houston Kathleen Koerrig, Houston Wng-Keong Kwan, Penage, Malaysia Nancy Lackey, Georgetown Kent Leediker, Mineola Rose Leon, Galveston Robert Leonard, Athens Theresa Lewis, South Houston Virginia Loveless, Seabrook Jennifer Lyde, Corpus Christ! 224 I HM Richard Mang, McAllen Debbie Mann, Edna Nancy Martin, Dallas Tina Martin, Delhi, LA Patricia McClatchy, Brownwood Julie McDonald, Dallas Patricia McDowell, Kerrvllle Patti McDuffie, Nacogdoches loeAnn McKenzie, Corpus Chnsti Mona McNeill, Beeville Rodney Meagher, Killeen Randall Metcalf, Houston Dan Middlebrooks, Dallas Stephen Milam, Porter Melanie Miller, Pampa Monica Minor, Irving Kim Mitchell, Carnzp Springs Mike Moffitt, Lake Jackson Deborah Moon, Lake Jackson Bennett Morgan, Dallas Yuki Morris, Austin Kristi Moses, Corsicana Maureen Murtagh, Corpus Chnsti Merrily Musgrove, Dallas Catherine Neely, Bell ville Jean Nees, Austin John Nelson, Austin Frederick Neuman, Brackettville Nancy Newton, Dallas Thomas O ' Dell, Texas City Jim Oliver, Houston Mark Oliver, Houston Mark Ott, Galveston Patty Palmer, San Antonio tWi wiiMS « ui m ' wUr sWJk fcJi i- 2- - ; ■ - mrm pw nwv • u S 226 Eric Perkins, Ft Worth Katherine Peterson, Hallettsville Danice Phillippi, Wharton Jim Pippin, Haskell Bill Pitts, Con roe Mark Piewetz, Houston Pam Pollock, Fort Worth Nancy Preis, San Antonio Allan Price, Gonzales Charles Qualia, Midland Gary Querbach, Conroe John Paul Reed, Lake Jackson John Rentfro, Wichita Falls Tim Rieg, Austin Susan Robertson, Houston Marlon Ross, Cuero Mary Ross, Wichita Falls Mark Rossman, Tyler George Rutherford, Albuquerque, NM Johnny Rutherford, Mike Salter, Smton Lynne Sandberg, Austin Jennifer Scates, Humble Michael Schroeder, Georgetown Rick Schroff, Richardson John Schulze, Corpus Christi Sheila Sells, Houston Mark Sessions, San Antonio Susi Sharp, Dallas Caroline Shell, Houston Katie Sherrod, Fort Worth Andy Smith, Austin Mark Smith, Georgetown Paige Smith, Austin John Sonnenberg, Waco Adele Spencer, League City Jeff Stoltenberg, Huntsville Shirley Tatum, Houston Laura Taylor, Georgetown Helen Thomas, Georgetown Robert Thomas, Boerne Karen Thompson, Metarie, LA Sharon Tittle, Houston Brian Todd, Georgetown Tom Tourtellotte, Richmond Lauren Traylor, San Antonio Steve Truitt, Fort Worth Evelyn Trujillo, San Antonio Graydon Vandament, Richardson Rebecca Vardiman, West William Walton, Houston Frederick Washington, Houston Becky Watkins, Houston Kay Webb, Austin Juli White, Houston Marian White, Odessa Margaret Wilcox, Eagle Lake Denise Williams, Houston William Williams, Houston Tom Williamson, Mineral Wells John Wong Matt Worley, Houston Ray Worsham, Irving Bruno Yasoni, Houston Candice Yeary, Beaumont Jeff Wiener, Austin li 1 K : v r 230 J II 1 ■! « HT I vlTlh gw ■ 1 L! I | ,! , Bicentennial Quilt y ?ft Fragmented years Woven with ambiguities and fears Black people, brown people, yellow, white, red ;?• . ' .6 -■ -site s ' . ' ■ ■. Patchwork people Bound by the aspirations to be free A new nation evolves gradually Yearning souls Cut by the past; piecing for tomorrow Individual I and plural we r-si - 231 MBBMM SENIOR INDEX Ailts, Rick BA. in Biology; Pi Kappa Alpha; Golf Team; Extraordmaries; S.U. Singers 91,17? Ainsworth, Albert B A. in Music; Symphonic Band; Sintometta; Stage Band; Mu Psi Chi; Alpha Chi; Who ' s Who; President ' s Honor Scholarship 102, 112, 113, 144, 179 Allen, Sarah 130, 183 Anderson, Paul 136 Anderson, Bill 179 Arredondo, Maria 34, 101, 185 Ashley, Bill BS in Math; Kappa Alpha Order (VIII Sar.-at-Arms and Scholarship Chairman) Bus Boy of Commons 4 years, Dean ' s List 135, 178 B Bade, Tina 133, 178 Baen, Robert 185 Bennight, Karen B of Music in Education; Delta Delta Delta. Delta Omicron; S.U. Singers, Chapel Choir; Herman Brown Moody Shearn House Council, AWS, WRA. Cardinal Key 183 Benton, Donald 179 Berry, Bonnie B S in Education; Alpha Delta Pi (Recording Secretary; Social Chairman; Pledge Board), WRA, AWS, Psychology Club, LK House Council 179 Black, Clayton 179 Bompart, Leo 74 Boyd, Barbara Boyer, Gail 178 Brawley, Britt 183 Brister, Ricque Lynn B.A. in Psychology; Union Spot Program Chairperson; Entertainment; Coffeehouse and l l Committee member 74-75, Mask Wig Players; Program Council; Psi Chi (Secretary); Alpha Chi (Secretary). Cardinal Key; RA, Secretary of Union 102, 103, 104, 105, 192 Browder, Barrie 117, 129, 179 Brown, Annette BS in Education (Biology Major ), WRA; Science Society; SNEA; Cardinal Key, Nominee for Mary K Holloway Award; Phi Mu Beauty; Phi Mu Eraternity (Member ship Director), Panhellemc Vice President; LK House Council 178 Brown, Sonja 10, 113, 128, 132, 133, 180 Brown, Jeff B.A in Social Studies and History; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pre-Law Society; Baseball team 72-73; Sophomore Advisor 73 74; Resident Assident 181 Buchanan, Scott B.B.A. General Business 179 Burkholder, James 135, 181 Caldwell, Sandra 180 Camacho, Mary Alice B of Music; Cardinal Key (Secretary); Delta Zeta (Delta Zeta Beauty), Dean ' s List; Delta Omicron; Community Life Council, President ' s Advisory Committee; Sneed House Council; S U Singers; S.U. Band; S.U. Smfon ietta; S.U. Woodwind Quintet. Nominee for Ms Southwestern; Sou ' wester Superlative in Fine Arts; Orientation Leader 59, 107. 131, 152, 180 Camp, Sharon 181 Caryl, Theodore 134, 180 Casteneda, Elba 180 Cazares, Yolanda 180 Chadwick, Nancy B S. in Education; Delta Delta Delta; Alpha Chi; Psychology Society; Presidential Honor Scholarship; Distinction List 129, 180 Chandler, Judy Cluff, Spencer Cmerek, Kenneth 181 Cohagen, James 180 Cole, Sue Lynn B.A. in English, Pi Delta Phi, Cardinal Key, Student Rep to Humanities Division; Coordination and Planning Council; Dean ' s Advisory Committee, Alpha Delta Pi; S.N.E.A.; Freshman Orientation Leader 119, 128, 180 Coleman, Karen Dianne Milam B.A Spanish; Student Rep. to Humanities Division 180 Collins, Hugh 181 Conner, Dana Farley BS. in Education; SUPER. Club; Rep to Social Science Division; Methodist Scholarship Recipient 181 Conner, Ralph B.B.A.; Kappa Alpha Order 181 Cook, Lisa Cornell, Steve 84, 181 Cotton, Charles Coward, Mark 91 C ragg, Janie 182 Corozier, Richard BS- in Education; Pi Kappa Alpha; Outstanding Education Student of Year; Resident Assistant 183 D Danheim, Lualeen 59, 113, 181 Dannenbrink, Laura 130, 181 Dare, Milton BBA; Pi Kappa Alpha; Extraordmaries; S.U. Singers; Business Club; Intramural Sports; All-Intramural (Football) 134, 181 David, Elbert Robert BS. in Biology, Southwestern Science Society 115 Davis, David 134, 181 Davis, Janis 107, 119. 182 Dees, Russell B.A. in Humanities; Entertainment Committee Chairperson; Rep to Humanities Division; Student Congress; Program Council; Alpha Chi; Blue Key; Freshman Honor Scholarship Megaphon e Staff; Chairperson Free University; Ideas and Issues; Coffee House Committee; Freshman Orientation Leader 101, 102, 103, 182 Del Pozo, Inez 182 Devore, Dorothy 130, 190 Dougherty, Newton B.A. in Religion; Kappa Alpha; Rep. to Humanities Division; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities 135, 151, 182 Douglass, Norine 183 Drake, Elizabeth 130, 183 Dudley, Marc B FA. in Theatre; Mask and Wig Players; Pi Epsilon Delta; Goosetree-Morgan Award for Acting 34, 182 Duvall, Mimi B.A.; Zeta Tau Alpha (President 1974-75); Sigma Delta Pi (Sec. Treasure 74- 75; Pres. 75-76); Cheerleader 72-73 119, 130, 183 E Edwards, Sherrian 182 Edwards, Ann 126 Edison, Debbie BS. in Education; Zeta Tau Alha; Psi Chi 117, 183 Elder, Jay B.B.A.; Kappa Alpha; Tennis Team; Big State Conference Doubles Finalist 74-75, 75-76; Resident Assident Kappa Alpha House 75-76 135, 182 Eldge, Cathie 183 Everett, Lee Anne BS. in Education; S.U. Volleybll Team; (Co-captain 75 and 76); Zeta Tau Alpha (Sports Captain; Education Chairman; Secretary); WRA; AWS; SUPER. S.A.SS. (Vice-president 74 75); Cardinal Key; Sou ' wester Superlative in Athletics (1975); Sou ' weste r Sports Editor (1975), Megaphone Women ' s Snnrts Editor (74 75) 79, 81, 183 Everett, Bryan 136, 187 F Farris, Jim B.A, in Humanistic Psychology; Sou ' wester Staff; Chaphan ' s Advisory Committee; President ' s Advisory Committee; Housing Committee; S.U, Band; Student Congress; S.U. Orchestra; Psi Chi; Mu Psi Chi; Dean ' s List; President HB-MS House Council 112, 116, 183 Faulk, Linda BS. in Education; Delta Delta Delta; Pi Kappa Alpha Little Sister; Texas State Teachers Association, WRA; Panhellemc Delegate; Dean ' s Distinction List; Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl Nominee 2 yrs.; House Council 183 Feller, Susan B.A.; Alpha Delta Pi; Editor of Megaphone; Who ' s Who in American Colloges and Universities 182 Fennell, April 127, 152, 185 Fish, John 74, 184 Flanagan, Janet 129, 183 Franks, Larry 122, 141, 184 G Galloway, Gretchen B.A in American Studies; Delta Zeta; WRA; S.U. Singers; Student Congress; LK House Council; Kurth House Council (President 75): Sou ' wester Staff (72- 73, 73-74); Bicentennial Committee 192 Giblin, Mike 184 Giese, Terri 184 Glaspy, Phillip 185 Gossard, Molly Graham, Bridget B A. 184 Green, Worth 117, 148, 196 Gregg, Janet B.A. in History; Delta Zeta; Rep. to Humanities Division; International Club; Student Welfare Commission Gregg, Sheila 185 Grote, Robin Rene ' B.S.; S.U. Band 185 Guzman, Rebecca 184 H Hambleton, Thomas Lee B.A.; Pi Kappa Sigma (President; Treasurer); Union Dance Committee 136, 184 Hanna, Mary Hanson, Karen 130, 196 Harkins, Thad B.A.; Alpha Chi; Blue Key; Pi Gamma Mu; President ' s Advisory Council, Student Advisory Council; Union Governing Board; Ideas and Issues (Co-chairman); Student Publications Board; Student Congress; Educational Affairs Commission; Discipline Committee; Student Welfare Commission; Congress (Parlimentanan); Vice President — Texas Students Association; Senator Bensen ' s Office Intern; R.A.; Sophomore Advisor; Rep to Social Science Division; Liason Committee; Megaphrjne Staff; Outstanding Union Member; Who ' s Who; Delegate to Student Congress on National Affairs; Sneed Sweetheart 81, 102, 145, 185 Harpst, Erik Bruce B.F.A. in Art; Kappa Sigma 136, 179 Harris, Lee Ann 184 Harris, Stefani Delta Zeta (President and Vice-Pres); Delta Zeta Dream Girl; Cardinal Key; Science Society; SNEA.; WRA; All-Star Basketball; Outstanding Secondary Teacher 113, 131, 185 Haynes, Curtis B.A. Humanities; Student Union; Coffeehouse Chairperson; Blue Key; University Honors Scholarship; Lay-out Editor of Megaphone 101, 185 Heard, Tom B.A. in Economics, B.M. in Music Literature; Smfonietta; Independent Intramural Sports; Library Committee; Music Library Staff; Dean ' s List 185 2)4 Hildebrandt, Mary Kathy B.A. in Social Science; Varsity Women ' s Tennis Team; S.U.P.E.R. 184 Holland, Fred 184 Hoy, Debra 59, 134, 141, 186 Humphreys, Darlene Jackson, Richard B.A. in Sociology; Mask and Wig Players; Student Congress; Social Science Division Student Concerns Committee; Union Entertainment Committee; Sou ' wester Staft (Photographer); Union Recreation Room Manager; School Bus Driver 186 Johnson, Beth B.S. in Education; Zeta Tau Alpha, Kappa Alpha Little Sister 130, 186 Johnson, John 186 Jones, Jimmy B.A. and B.S. in Education, B.A. in History; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu National Social Science Honor Society (Pres.); Search and Interview Committee; Pre-Law Society; IFC Representative; History Club President 134, 186 Jones, Rebeca B.A. in Psychology; Ideas and Issues Comm. (Chairperson); Student Congress; Student-Faculty-Administration Conversations Comm.; Building and Planning Comm.; President ' s Comm. on Priorities; Kellogg Foundation Grant Committee; Bi- centennial Comm.; Rep. to Humanities Division; Community Life Council; Cardinal Key; Sou ' wester Superlative; Who ' s Who; President of Student Union; Chairperson of Union Governing Board; Rush Evaluation Committee 100, 105, 150, 187 K Kay, Kelly B.A. in Humanities; Pi Delta Phi (President); Alpha Chi; Symphonic Band; Smfonietta; S.U. Singers; Mu Psi Chi; Student Congress; Megaphon e Editor-in-chief; Board of Student Publications; Mask Wig Players; Who ' s Who; President ' s Honor Scholarship; Summa Cum Laude 101, 102, 112, 119, 122, 143, 186 Kautz, Gilbert Kelley, Paula B.A. in Political Science; Megaphone Staff; Political Science Intership 26, 122, 187 Kelly, Paula B.A. in History; Student Congress; Hospitality Committee; Rep. to Humanities Division; Delta Zeta; LK House Council Keegan, Robert B.A. in Biology 101, 187 Kemp, Rose 126, 127, 141, 186 Kilpatrick, Gary Kinsey, Karyl B.S. in Social Science; Ideas and Issues; Cardinal Key; Alpha Chi; Psi Chi; S.U. Psychology Society; Sou ' wester Superlative; Dames Club Scholarship; S.A.; Vice-Pres. of Union 116, 186 Kluttz, Mary B.A. in Mathematics; Science Society; Business and Economics Club; Library Comm.; Kurth House Council; Student Assistant in Library 115, 187 Kneisley, Kevin 135, 189 Kreger, Karla B.A. in Social Sciences; Zeta Tau Alpha; AWS; WRA; ZTA Ritual; Panhellenic 26, 130, 186 Krueger, Jerry William B.A. in Social Science and History; Education Education Affairs Comm.; Pi Kappa Alpha; B.F.R.A.; SA 185 L Lane, Janice 129, 187 Laster, Richard 189 Lattimer, Debbie B.F.A. in Theatre; Mask Wig Players (Technical Award) 34, 114, 178 LaughJin, Joe B.S. in Education; SU Singers; Extraordinaires Lawson, Julie 188 Leckie, Kathy Homecoming Nominee (73); Delta Zeta Beauty (73); Delta Zeta; Outstanding Soph. Woman; Cardinal Key; S ou ' wester Staff; Sou ' wester Editor (75); Sneed President; Student Congress; Union Governing Board; President ' s Advisory Comm.; Board of Publications; Entertainment Comm.; Outdoor Rec. Comm.; WRA; 120,. 187 Liepold, Kent B.S. in Economics; Pre-Law Society; Business Club; Sou ' wester Staff 186 Leonard, CUff 84, 135, 188 Lomax, Jacqueline 114, 191 Long an, Janie 117, 189 Lowry, Carl 107, 188 Lowry, Paul 107, 191 Lyons, Jack 189 M McCall, Owen B.S. in Biology; Kappa Sigma (President); President of Men ' s Interfraternity Council, President of Blue Key; University Christian Movement; Student Judiciary; Chairman Educational Affairs Commission; Megaphone Photographer; Liaison Committee; Freshman Orientation Group Leader; Resident Assistant; President ' s Advisory Council; Community Life Council; Student Congress 103, 136, 189 McCuMough, Stirling B.S. in Education; Alpha Chi; Cardinal Key; President ' s Advisory Committee; Summer School Task Force; President WRA; Delta Delta Delta; AWS; Freshman Scholarship; Homecoming Queen Nominee; Swimming Capt. WRA 124, 129, 188 McMeans, Diane B.A. English and Sociology; Delta Zeta (Scholarship Chairman; Vice- president; Pledge Trainer); Extraordinaires; A-Capella Choir; S.U. Singers; AWS; WRA; Dean ' s List 188 Makins, Michael Mason, Jean 188 Martin, Mary B.S. in Education; Phi Mu (Asst. Pledge Director; President) S.U. Singers; S.N.E.A.; AWS; WRA 188 Meagher, Phyllis 129, 189 MendioJa, Eva 79, 81, 189 Miard, Steve B.A. in German; Pi Kappa Alpha; Student Congress (Vice-president); Liaison Committee; Pre-Law Society, Educational Affairs Commission, IFC; Rep to Humanities Division; Sigma Delta Pi, Blue Key, Alpha Chi, University Honors Scholarship, Dean ' s List; Sophomore Advisor; Resident Assident 101. 102, 103. 134, 147, 189 Miller, Donn B.F.A. in Theatre; Blue Key (Sec. -Treas.); Mu Psi Chi (Social Chairman), Mask and Wig Players (Treas.) Student Judiciary; Admissions Board, Pi Epsilon Delta, HB-MS House Council; Chorale, Extraordinaires; S.U. Singers; Opera Theatre, Marshall-Hay Latimer Technical Award; All Star Cast; Dean ' s List 34, 103, 112, 114, 144. 191, 102 Miller, Mike 189 Miller, Madeline 191 Milligan, Midge B.S. in Education; Alpha Delta Pi; SN.EA.; WRA; AWS; Dean ' s List. Cum Laude 182 Moore, Robert B.S. in Biology; S.U. Science Society; Alpha Chi 102, 115, 191 Morgan, Bryan 183 Morris, Gary 190 Musgrove, Laurence 104, 120, 191 N Naeurt, Craig 115, 134, 146, 192 Neely, Jack B.A. in Biology; S.U. Band; Student Congress; Science Society; Phi Delta Theta, 137 Nelms, Nina B.S. in Education; AWS; WRA; Alpha Delta Pi 190 Nelson, Jon 190 Neaves, Roy Nicholson, Blanche 196 Nyberg, Alice 104, 105, 107, 120, 141, 191 O ' Loughlin, Dan B.A. in Humanistic Psy.; Kappa Alpha (President) Who ' s Who; Psi Chi; Blue Key 151, 192 OJde, Robert 190 Overly, Peggy B.A. in English; Megaphone Staff Writer; WRA (Golf Chmn.) LK House Council; Zeta Tau Alpha (Sec; Corres. Sec; Judicial Chmn); Pi Delta Phi; Cardinal Key; Rep. to Humanities Division 26, 119, 130. 190 Pate, John B.A. in English; Phi Delta Theta (President and Treas.); President of Coordination and Planning Council; Men ' s IFC Student Intramural Director 193 Parker, Winn 26, 103, 109, 136, 190 Parr, Pam 191 Paul, David 115, 141, 191 Pearce, Nancy 124, 128 Perkins, Suzanne 103, 192 Pettigrew, Creed B.A. in Biology; Science Society; Alpha Chi; Student Congress (Vice- President); Science Society (Vice-Pres.); C.P.C.; Freshman Orientation Leader; Who ' s Who; Student Union 115, 145, 192 Phillips, Mark B.S. in Science; Phi Delta Theta (President 74, 75); Community Life Council; Science Society; IFC; Who ' s Who; Blue Key; Deans List 103, 137. 150. 192 Pierce, Richard 134 Pitts, Cilia B.S. in Education; Zeta Tau Alpha (Vice-President); Panhellenic; WRA (Treasurer); N.S.E.A.; AWS 130. 192 Pollard, Scott 104, 192 Quinkis, John B.A. in Economics; Admissions Committee; President ' s Building Committee; Student Recruitment Committee; Megaphone Staff; Pi Kappa Alpha (Scholarship Chairman); Freshman Orientation Leader; SCONA; Alpha Chi; Pi Gamma Mu; Who ' s Who; Freshman and Band Scholarship; Band; Stage Band; Student Congress; Liason Committee; Chairman of Educational Affairs Comm.; Coordination and Planning Council; President ' s Honor Scholarship; Pres. Distinction List; Sou ' wester Superlative in Government 102, 134, 142, 192 R Raines, Beth B.A. in Psychology; Psi Chi; Delta Delta Delta; Psychology Society; Cardinal Key; Who ' s Who; Community Life Council; Student Congress; Freshman Orientation Leader; Student Judiciary; R.A. 116, 148, 193 Ratchlord, Doug B.A. Sou ' wester Staff (Photographer); Megaphone Staff; Outdoor Recreation Committee 193 Ray, Karen 190 Reed, Brian 107, 193 Reinhardt, Brian B.B.A. in Accounting; Baseball Team (73-76), All-Conference Baseball Team; Basketball Team (72-73) 84 Richards, Shirley B of Music; Alpha Chi Richardson, Joel Student Congress (75-76), Bicentennial Committee (75-76) 101, 107. 193 Ritchea, Bucky B.A. in Sociology; Pi Kappa Alpha; Student Congress; Martin Ruter House Council (President and Vice-President); Alpha Chi; Pi Gamma Mu; David Knox Parter Theology Award; Frank Luksa Sociology Award; President ' s Honor Scholarship 193 Romo, Les B.A. Pre-Law Society; History Club; Political Service Club; Pi Kappa Alpha 134, 192 Ruby, Ed 193 Rucker, Rebecca B.S. in Education and Humanitic Psychology; S N.E A (President 75-76; Vice-Pres. 74-75); Freshman Orientation Leader; Kurth House Council (Vice-Pres. 74-75); Sinfometta; Concert Band; Alpha Delta Pi (Treasurer 73-74, Chaplain 74-75); AWS; WRA; Cardinal Key; Who ' s Who; Dean ' s List Liason Committee; Social Science Committee; Alpha Chi; Psi Chi 102, 103, 116, 128, 142, 154, 193 235 Ryman, Chris B A in Economics; Resident Assistant; Sophomore Advisor; Student Union (Vice-President); Student Judiciary; Pi Gamma Mu; Blue Key; Who ' s Who; President ' s Advisory Council; University Events Committee 194 Scully, Noel Seals, Jack 134 Sellers, Leah Sheldon, Bill B A. in English and Art; Pi Kappa Alpha; Student Congress; Student Welfare; Educational Affairs; Sophomore Advisor 134, 194 Shelton, Marty B.S. in Biology; WRA (President; Vice-President) Cardinal Key (Treasurer); Delta Delta Delta; Pi Kappa Alpha Little Sister; SU Tennis Team; Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl; Freshman Orientation Leader; Sophomore Advisor; Kurth House Council 103, 124, 129, 134, 195 Sherwood, Donnie B.B.A.; Student Congress (Vice-President; Treasurer); Pi Kappa Alpha (Vice President); Blue Key; United States Marine Corps Officer Candidate School; Business Economics Club; Dean ' s List; Resident Assistant 103, 115, 134, 195 Sherwood, Ronnie B.S. in Biology; Pi Kappa Alpha, Blue Key; Community Life Council; SU Science Society; Student Congress; Intramural Football; HB-MS House Council; Resident Assident 103, 134, 195 Slaughter, Pamela B.A. in English; Student Association President; Cardinal Key (President); Alpha Delta Pi (Pledge Training Vice President); Feature Editor of Megaphone 1974; Who ' s Who; Community Lite Council; Coordination and Planning Council; Ms. Southwestern 100, 101, 103, 128, 152, 153, 194 Smith, Bane 107, 115, 194 Smith, Wayne B B.A. in Accounting 195 Spearman, Karen B.B.A. in Accounting; Zeta Tau Alpha; SU Band; Business Club Stewart, Colita 194 Strange, Judy B.A. in German; Rep. to Humanities Division; Alpha Delta Pi; Student Congress; Alpha Chi; Cardinal Key; Who ' s Who. Pi Delta Phi; Megaphone Staff; University Honors Scholarship 102, 119, 128, 147, 153, 197 Strong, Mark B S in Biology; Pi Kappa Alpha (President); Science Society; Student Congress; IFC; Liason Committee; Student Welfare Commission; Distinction List; RA; SA; Ruter House Council (President) Lab Assistantships; Computer Operator 115, 134, 194 Stiles, Marianne 194 Thompson, Laura B.A. Phi Mu Fraternity; Kappa Alpha Little Sister; Cheerleader Thorp, Terry 128 Tift, Barbara B.A. in Elementary Ed.; Phi Mu 193 Tinsley, Stephen B.A. in History; Kappa Alpha (Freshman Scholarship Citation Award); Behrens-Scott Award (74 76) 135 Tippit, Barbara Tipton, Kim 131, 195 Tittle, Mary Lou B. of Music; Delta Omicron (President, Madrigal Director); Fine Arts Student Representative; Who ' s Who; Cardinal Key; SU Singers 113, 143, 194 Tonaril, Ann 195 TonahBI, Joe 195 Trimble, Whitt 185 Vandivier, Tom B.B.A. in Business and Economics; Pi Kappa Alpha (President; Rush Chairman; Pledge Advisory Board; Executive Council; Sargent-at-arms; Scholarship Chairman); Student Judiciary; Pre-Law Society (President; Publicity Chairman); Business- Economics Club; IFC; Intramural Sports; Dean ' s List; Magna Cum Laude; Pi Gamma Mu (Vice-President) 134, 196 Vicharelli, Pablo B.S. in Physics and Chemistry; SU Science Society; Commumtee Life Council; Texas Academy of Sciences; Acoustical Society of America; Associate Member of the American Chemical Society; Distinction List; Who ' s Who 115, 149, 194 Vick, Lucy B.B.A. in Economics; Delta Delta Delta (Chaplain); Coordination and Planning Council; Kappa Alpha Little Sister; Kappa Alpha Rose; Homecoming Candidate 129, 194 Viney, Rhonda 130, 196 Vineyard, Lynn 187 Vivra, Mary 194 Voland, Rex 114, 197 W Wadzek, Gay 197 Wagener, LuAnn B.S. in Education; Sophomore Advisor; Governing Board; Entertainment Committee; Student Judiciary; Orientation Leader 194 Wallace, Mike B.A. in Philosophy 197 Ward, Colleen B.S. in Elementary; Delta Delta Delta; KA Little Sister, Orientation Leader, Dean ' s List 129, 183 Ward, Courtney B A in Art; Lancaster Award 141, 196 Warlick, Becky B.A. in Biology; Alpha Chi; Megaphone; University Honor Scholarship; President ' s Honor Scholarship 102, 196 Watson, Sandra B.A. in Economics; Zeta Tau Alpha (Music Chairman; Ritual Chairman; Executive Committee); AWS (Publicity Chairman); Kurth House Council (Treasurer); LK House Council; Kappa Sigma Starduster; Zeta Tau Alpha Most Beautiful 130, 133, 190 Wenzel, Steve 179 Wheatley, Bob 197 Whitley, Paul 196 Whittemore, John 196 Wiegman, Linda B.S. in Elementary Ed.; Phi Mu; S.N.E.A.; International House; Dean ' s List 197 Wilkes, Carleton 91, 134, 197 Williams, Jeff B.S. in Social Science (Psychology); Pi Kappa Alpha; Science Society; Psi Chi (treasurer); Chapel Choir; SU Singers; PiKA Secretary 109, 116, 134, 197 Wisch, Scott B.S. in Biology; Pi Kappa Alpha; SU Concert Band; SU Stage Band; Educational Affairs Comm.; Alpha Chi; SU Science Society; SA 185 Yearlick, Theodore 34, 196 Zink, Sherri 117, 152, 196 FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION INDEX Adams, Nelson 136, 162 Ahlers, Shirley 173 Allen, Martha 171 Anderson, Grady 157 Beaver, Elizabeth 168 Betancourt, Francisco 118, 168 Blanton, Paul 153, 169 Bridges, Jim 172 Brown, Bob 177 Buckner, Thomas 120, 158 Burnett, Tibb 175 Carwell, Virginia 167 Chapman, John 177 Clifford, Burr 136, 167 Colwell, Joe 172 Connelly, Dave 158 Copeland, James Custer, Judson 116, 155, 173, 230 Deeds, Donald 91, 115, 176 Dodson, Dan Douglass, Thomas 163 Farmer, Gus 166 Edwards, John Eidson, Harold 177 Fleming, Derwood 104 Everett, David 166 Fiser, Karen 169 Fox, Mary Elizabeth 159 Fullingim, Billie 173 Giesecke, Leonard 172 Girvin, Eb 115, 176 Golla, Edward Goodson, Fred 114, 165 Gordon, Suzanne 136 Gray, Jamie 105, 158 Harris, Jack 167 Herbert, Thomas 167 Hess, Rick Hilgeman, Fred 115, 176 Hilhard, Dan 174 Hoffert, Maureen 158 Hoffert, Robert 174 Hooker, William 170 Huffmaster, Drusilla 163 Jackson B.F. 159 Jacob, Horace 176 Johnson, Ken 158 Jones, W. B 155, 171 Kassen, Tex 89, 175 Kennard, Claude 166 Kent, Ren 171 Key, Sarah 124, 158 Lankford, Dallas 177 Lansford, Edwin 176 Lansford, Jane 162 Lundblad, Elizabeth 172 McClmchie, Audrey 166 McCook, Jane 167 McCurtam, Edmund 174 Mallon, James 84, 175 Marks, Norton 172 Merrit, William 91 Morris, Warren 171 Mossman, Bruce 173 Munday, Robert 172 Munt, Glada 87, 124, 175 Nelson, Geroge 163 Nichols, Vivian 158 Norris, Robert 168 O ' Brien, Francis 174 Osborn, Wendell 116, 174 Parker, Lois 167 Patterson, Jane Pegram, Raleigh 116, 173 Pemck, Cochrane 164 Peterson, F. E. 163 Phillips, Basil 105 Raney, Marcus 158 Reynolds, Regine 119, 168 Riddle, Mike 158 Rogers, Gerhild 168 236 Rogers, Paul Schroeder, Raymond 164 Schwartz, Larry 159 Score, John 169 Seever, Barbara 158 Sheppard, Kenny Mac 109, 164 Sikes, William 173 Snell, Farley 169 Soulen, Robert 176 Spellman 170 Springer, Angus 165 Steelman, Edmund 170 Swift, William 155 Suh, Suk-soon 26, 174 Taylor, Charlotte 158 Thomas, Barbara 164 Venable, Connie Lee 173 Watts, Harvey 170 Whitmore, Ralph 177 Williams, Edith 160 UNDERGRADUATE INDEX Aaron, Jennifer L. 131 Adame, Ignacio E. 115, 198 Adams, Glenn 219 Aguilar, Peter M. 219 Amsworth, David R. 34, 114, 141, 198 Ainsworth, Patricia A. 130, 208 Alexander, Carmen 126, 127, 219 Allen, Bruce T. 34, 114, 219 Allen, Mildred A. 102, 208 Allen, Norm 34, 208 Allison, Dana R. 198 Alyarado, Soma 113, 219 Anderson, Sarah D. 208 Anthony, Susan 219 Armstrong, Susan D. 116, 208 Attwell, Betsy E. 198 Austin 185 Avery, Nancy 130, 208 B Babcock, Karla L. 109, 129, 219 Bade, Mary L. 135 Baily, Merril 84 Baird, Bill 134, 208 Baird, Kristine 129, 208 Baker, Brent D. 208 Baker, Susan E. 219 Ball, Marianne 11, 198 Barbo, Catherine 101, 129, 208 Barnett, Theodore 115 Barnes, Debbie J. 105, 107, 119, 209 Basham, Paul A. 209 Beard, Bradley A. 102, 115 Beattie, Robert E. 137 Belknap, Shen D. 130, 219 Benedict, Thea 209 Bennett, Carol A. 104, 219 Betancourt, Maria J. 119, 199 Berry, Veta 109 Birkelback, Jerry 91, 209 Black, Kathy A. 219 Blake, Suzanne 128, 199 Blalock, Jesse Price 136 Bledsoe, Billy 219 Boehmng, Kathy A. 107, 115, 209 Boone, Keith P. 137 Boone, Tim B, 137, 209 Breeding, Joette 130, 219 Brelsford, Richard 128, 135, 219 Brewer, Beverly D. 103, 128, 199 Bncker, Yuette 219 Brigman, Sally 107 Briles, Susan I. 131, 219 Broady, Diane O. 105, 107, 209 Brock, John B. 137, 199 Brockett, Bob 112, 134, 209 Brooks, Chip 134, 219 Brown, Edith M. 108, 109, 113, 114, 199 Brown, Gene 219 Brownlee, Mitch 136, 219 Bryson, Gary B, 109 Buchanan, Joe E. 74, 77, 126 Bunnage, Ray 104, 219 Burdell, Martha 130, 219 Burkhalter, Liz 209 Burrus, Cynthia F. 119, 209 Burt, Randy E. 219 Buse, Gary A. 199 Buzzim, Robert P. 137 Byars, Peggy D. 79, 219 Byrd, Sheryle 116 Calcote, Sharyn 109, 219 Caldwell, Dorothy 107, 116, 120, 209 Callahan, Margaret J. 128, 199 Campbell, Andy 101, 106, 219 Canion, Cathy 220 Cardwell, Dawn 34, 114, 209 Carleton, Elaine 79, 87, 130, 220 Carson, Bobby 134, 199 Carter, Donna 135, 220 Carter, Jerome 127 Casad, Connie 125, 129, 209 Cavness, Randall 209 Centeno, Jeanette 199 Chaloupka, Steve S. 101, 105 Chambers, Tracy 129, 220 Chandler, Laura B. 79, 128, 220 Chandler, Thomas Y. 102, 115, 199 Chapman, Charles R. 84, 199 Chapman, Harriet A. 199 Cherrington, Jeffery 105 Childress, Chris 209 Childress, Janice 199 Chilson, Sheril S. 102, 199 Chovanec, James E. 199 Cilley, Barbara L. 130 Clayton, Gary D. 137, 220 Clement, Katherine S. 102, 107, 115, 199 Clendinmng, Kirk W. 220 Clifford, Mary 87, 128, 199 Cloud, Susan J. 101, 103, 119, 128 Coble, Teresa F. 116, 134, 199 Cole, Kerry A. 128, 220 Cook, Christie E. 116 Cooper, Gary W. 137, 199 :ortez, Rodolfo 209 Cortez, Rudy 199 Cotton, Steven 26, 103, 122, 199 Coulter, Scott 199 Covert, Mike A. 137, 220 Cox, Helen K. Cox, Kris 199 Cox, Karlene F. 220 Cox, Wade 127 Cragg, Stephen P. 101, 134, 209 Craig, Marsha J. 220 Crain, Julie K. 81, 87, 124, 128, 209 Crissey, Paul W. 106, 209 Cromwell, Bland 134, 199 Cross, Helen 130 Cross, Joe W. 104, 120, 220 Cude, Garry T. 109, 112 Cunningham, Cindy 128, 220 Curry, Gretchen 103, 129, 134, 200 Daeschner, Barbara 220 Daily, Liza B. 131 Darby, Dan 134, 221 Darkis, Joycelyn A. 125, 209 Dasilva, Diane 200 Davis, Debbie 209 Davis, Mary Lou 129, 209 Davis, Susan E. 128, 200 Davis, Wallis 221 Dawson, Mark C. 115, 209 Deaver, Danny D. 101, 104, 221 DeCotis, Karen M. 105, 107, 114, 209 Deeds, John 221 DeLotto, Mary M. 103, 113, 124, 128, 200 DeLucchi, Joan B. 113, 209 DeMontel, Carol 221 Dennis, Kenneth W. 74, 77, 106, 200 Devere, Richard E. 103, 115, 134, 200 Dilts, James R. 104, 209 Doermg, Richard 74, 91 Dory, Stephanie E. 108, 109, 113, 114, 121 Doughty, Janice 87, 124, 209 Douglass, Karen E. 209 Downing, Peggy A. 221 Doyle, Kim 221 Dubuis, Elizabeth M. 129 Dueker, Lisa S. 134, 129, 200 Duffield, Jimmy 77, 126, 127, 201 Duke, Barbara H. 130, 209 E Eaves, Melanie F. 221 Eddy, Sidney G. 221 Edgar, Jim 209 Edge, Cindy 135 Edmonson, Robert J. 135, 221 Edwards, Mike 126, 201 Ehrlich, Michael 221 Elder, Jay 89 Eidson, Debbie 130 Elkins, Randall King Ellickson, Thelma L. 221 Elliott, Tissie A. 129, 209 Ellis, Mike 137, 221 Ellis, Thomas 115, 210 Engvall, William R. 135, 221 Erick, Charles S. 135, 210 Escamilla, Dorothy M. 210 Estep, Rebecca J. 129, 201 Estill, Mary 222 Ewbank, Jim 26, 101, 137, 201 F Fagan, Karis 210 Falconer, Rex S. 210 Fancher, LuAnn 103, 128, 201 Farr, Jamie 109, 129, 222 Farr, Joe 84, 210 Faulkner, Jan L. 79, 201 Fell, Bruce W. 84, 210 Feltner, Ellen M. 128, 222 Fidler, Patti 130, 210 Field, Jennifer 129, 210 Fisher, Bobbie A. 34, 109, 114, 222 Fisher, Debbie 210 Fitch, Susan R. 119, 210 Fitzpatrick, Andrew M. 201 Flagg, Tern G. 131, 222 Fleming, Becky L. 210 Fletcher, Ricki A. 128, 222 Flinn, Judy K. 109 Francis, Melanie J. 102, 104, 107, 115, 141, 201 Fulkes, Patricia 109, 210 Fuller, Robert M. 84, 210 Galloway, Barbara 131, 210 Gamez, Absalon 210 237 Gan, Yoke Thue 113, 201 Garay, Carmen 183 Gardner, Lela 109, 129, 222 Garth, Stephen 210 Gates, Charlotte 114, 210 Gentner, Bill 34, 105, 114, 201 Gibson, Sallie 101, 128, 201 Gilmore, Dennis 108, 109, 210 Gode, Tanya 108, 109. 210 Golden, Carole Gonsoulm, Rose 79, 128 Gordon, Gregory 135 Gordon, Wiliam 201 Gore, Jenny 129 Gravens, Ricky D. 84, 222 Graves, Joe 108, 222 Gray, Raymond R. 106 Grayum, Craig 136, 201 Greene, Elise B. 131, 210, 131 Greene, Sheila A 131, 210, 131 Greenhill, Noble 201 Greer, Court 136, 201 Gregory, Gale T. 129 Grisham, Laura W 210 Grosse, Peggy 119, 201 Guevara, Henry 134 Gunkel, Bill 202 H Hall, Keith N. 102, 115, 210 Hammond, Paula J. 128, 222 Hankins, Mitch 222 Hanson, Erick K. 135, 211 Hardi. Charlotte R. 109, 113, 128. 202 Harlow, Jerry 112, 122, 222 Harris, Byron Neil 135, 211 Hartin, Jeanette 115, 130, 202 Hartwig, Carol S 130, 202, 222 Hasskarl. John F. 211, 222 Hawkins, Carla D. 108. 109, 113, 223 Heacock, Lavonne 104, 105, 107. 211 Henderson, Virginia L. 128, 223 Henry, Diane B. 134, 202 Hensley, Beth 107, 202 Hessel, Virginia 129 Hicks, Marth M. 202 Hill, Bryan 211 Hill, Cynthia C. 116, 129, 211 Hindman, Kathleen 129 Hmson, Candace S 129, 223 Hodges, David S 137, 211 Holbrooks, Debbie 113, 124, 202 lolbrooks, Leesa 129, 211 Holcombe, Philip 114, 223 Holley, Lois D. 131 Holloway, Graham 223 Holt, Andrea L. 223 Holstrom, Lane 84, 202 Hooper, Steve 137, 202 Hopkins, Davida 26, 102, 119, 128, 202 Horn, Sharon D. 223 Houghton, Beverly L. 129, 211 House, Bill 102, 211 Howell, Mark 202 Hubbard, Alberta 109, 126, 127, 223 Hudgins, Cindy 223 Hudson, Betze 202 Huffman, E lizabeth A. 114, 120, 211 Huffman, Sarah E. 128, 211 Hull, Jim 211 Hunt, Clem Dale 131, 223 Hurmis, Darrell D. 211 Hurst, Chester L. 223 Irwin, Paul 105, 135, 223 Ivers, Jim B. 136, 211 Ivy, Garry 84, 202 Jackson, George L 211 lames, Dustin K. 104, 120, 122 Jarvis, Jim 102, 112, 202 Jenson, Sandy 113, 130, 202 Johnson, Gayle 101, 129 Johnson, Jana J. 223 Johnson, Jeffery 23, 109 Johnson, Minnie 125, 211 Johnson, Nancy E. 223 Johnson, Nathan 109, 112, 126, 127, 203 Johnson, Tommy C 74, 203 Jones, Cathy 87, 211 Jones, David 135, 203 Jones, Debbie 128, 223 Jones, Craig D 137, 203 Jones, George C 135 Jones, Johnny M 91, 134, 223 K Kalmbach, Richard W. 136 Karr, Cindy L. 109, 223 Karrick, Peggy 223 Kelly, Janice 102, 107, 211 Khouw, Raymond S. 89, 202, 21 King, Dennis E 137 Kirby, Carrie L. 128, 223 Kirby, Leslie A. 128, 223 Kirkpatrick, John A. 203 Kirtley, Judy Lee L. 212 Kishego, Mark E. Klopp, Stee 84, 212 Knapp, Ron 223 Knolle, Carole A. 124, 128, 203 Koenig, Kathleen 130, 223 Koontz, Bart 212 Koslovsky, Larry W. 212 Kotz, Craig A. 212 Kraus, James W. 203 Kwan, Wmg-Keong 223 L Lackey, Nancy L. 131, 223 Lain, Thomas S 212 Lamon, Conrad E. 104, 105, 212 Lancaster, Laura 130, 212 Langeher, Jackie 125, 128, 212 Langley, Vance D. 212 Lawhon, Gene L. 84 Lawrence, Carol S 128, 134, 212 Lawson, David C. 109, 112, 203 Ledbetter, Barbara J. 203 Leediker, Kent M. 223 Leggett, Cherne Lenox, George 203 Lentz, Laurie D. 212 Leon, Rose V. 224 Leon, Vanessa O. Leonard, Dixie 130 Leonard, Robert D. 89, 224 Lesesne, John S. 203 Lesesne, Marcia 212 Lester, David 203 Lewis, Cheryl 116, 124, 129, 203 Lewis, Theresa E. 224 Lidell, Lynn R. 102, 115, 134, 203 Liedtke, John H. 135, 204 Lindley, Jay 135, 204 Livesay, Wallace B. 134, 91 Lothrmger, Robert A. Loveless, Virginia A. 224 Lowery, Lasses L. 128, 212 Lowery, Peggy 212 Luck, Cathy S. 129 Lyde, Jennifer R. 130, 224 M Macina, Mary E. 34, 114, 131, 212 Mandry, Barbara Ann 109, 115, 132, 212 Mang, Richard R. 225 Mann, Debbie S. 109, 113, 131, 225 Marcus, Lee 212 Martin, Nancy A. 128, 225 Martin, Tina 104, 225 Martinez, Alex 204 Mason, Laura M. 130 Matthews, Kevin Blane Mattison, William E. 137, 204 Mattke, Michele R. 131, 212 Maxwell, Lisa 129, 135, 212 Mayfield, Mark 34, 106, 114, 119, 212 Maynard, Ronny D. 84 McCauley, Marc 213 McClatchy, Patricia A. 225 McCord, James 204 McCord, Lisa 131 McCullen, Al 137 McDaniel, George R. 134 McDonald, Julie A. 225 McDowell, Patricia A. 114, 135, 225 McDuffie, Pattie G. 129, 225 McGee, Lynda Joel 79, 81 McGowan, Monte 136, 213 McKay, Pamela K. 107 McKenzie, JoeAnn 225 McKevitt, Christine 204 McMahan, Deborah L. 204 McNeil, Mona A. 129, 225 McNitzky, David J. 89, 213 McNutt, Jim 134, 213 McPhail, Marilyn 106, 213 McWilhams, Bobby E 126, 127 Meagher, Rodney E. 135, 225 Merrill, Patricia J. 106, 128, 213 Metcalf, Randall D 225 Meyer, Michael 112, 204 Meyer, Mark 112, 213 Middlebrooks, Dan 136, 225 Middlebrooks, Mark 136, 204 Milam, Stephen R 225 Miller, James 83, 84, 204 Miller, Melanie D. 120, 129, 225 Miller, Mernlynn 0. 103, 129, 205 Milhngton, Brian P. 213 Mills, Ellis 137 Minks, Dennis W. 74, 205 Minks, Michael G. 74, 205 Minor, Monica L. 101, 128, 226 Miori, Marsha L. 81, 113, 131, 213 Mitchell, Kim L. 128, 226 Moffitt, Mike 89, 135, 226 Monseur, Jeff 134, 205 Moon, Deborah K. 109, 226 Moore, Lezlie S. 125, 130, 213 Moore, Linda Marie 107, 120, 213 Moorhouse, Roxy L. 103, 106, 108, 113, 114, 131, 132, 205 Morgan, Bennett 135, 226 Morris, Ron 213 Morris, Toni G. 106, 213 Morris, Yuki A. 226 Moses, Kristi L. 226 Moses, Layne 213 Moss, Michael 106, 116, 213 Munroe-Furguson, Ron 119, 134, 213 Murphy, Gale 131, 151, 205 Murtagh, Maureen E. 129, 226 Musgrove, Merrily A. 226 Myers , Olive Ann 213 Myers, Tere 34 N Neahusan, David L. 102, 134, 205 Neely, Catherine 128, 226 Neely, Roger 101, 213 Nees, Jean A. 226 Nelson, Bill 89, 213 Nelson, John 226 Neuman, Frederick J 134, 226 Newton, Nancy 129, 226 O ' Dell, Thomas W. 226 Oliver, Jim 226 Oliver, Mark A. 226 Olson, Charlie 213 Orgain, Benjamin D. 136 Ott, Mark 84, 226 Owen, Gail 102, 205 238 Owens, Bruce W. 213 Oya, Takao 205 Paddington 130 Padgett, Riva 214 Palmer, Patty 226 Parker, Emy 129, 205 Parker, Paul 91, 205 Parnsh, Mark 205 Partain, Bruce 84, 205 Pate, Linda 214 Paty, Charles 214 Peck, Martha 129 Peoples, Rhonda 126, 227 Pemonter, Carol 109 Perkins, Eric 227 Peter, Robert 134, 205 Peterson, Kathenne 113, 227 Phillippi, Kanice 129, 227 Phillips, Linda 194, 120 Phillips, Robert 214 Pippin, Jim 227 Pitts, Bill 120, 134, 227 Piwetz, Mark 227 Poerschke, Shawn 130, 205 Polansky, Clinton Pollock, Pam 227 Pool, Jane Ann 101, 129, 214 Pool, Elisabeth 129 Prats, Barbara 102, 104, 107, 124, 214 Pratt, Jeff 205 Preis, Nancy 130. 227 Prewitt, Richard 84 Price, Allan 227 Puryear, David 84, 214 Q Qualia, Charles 134, 227 Querbach, Gary 134, 227 R Raagas, Sue 107, 109, 205 Raby, Debora 108, 109, 113, 214 Railsback, Carolyn 205 Reaves, Donna 116, 205 Reed, Debra 108, 129, 134, 214 Reed, John Paul 108, 109, 227 Reed, Mananna 108, 113, 206 Reid, Sherry Beth 114, 131 Rentfro, John C. 134, 227 Ricahrd, Elizabeth 206 Rieg, Tim 84, 227 Roberts, Jole 124, 129, 132, 206 Roberts, Liz 214 Robertson, Susan B. 130, 227 Robertson, Wesley 109, 206 Robins, Jane 102, 103, 113, 129, 134, 206 Rodngues, Frank 83, 84 Rodriguez, Belinda A. Rogers, Cynthia 113, 214 Rose, Janet 214 Ross, Marlon B. 104, 120, 122, 227 Ross, Mary M. 227 Rossman, Mark A. 228 Russell, George L. 91 Russell, Marsha K. 131, 214 Rutherford, George S. 228 Rutherford, Johnny 228 Rylander, Linda J. 206 S Saldana, Yolanda 101, 106, 122, 206 Salter, Mike G. 228 Sandberg, Lynne M. 131, 228 Scates, Jennifer A. 228 Schlemmer, Mary E. 131 Schoen, Robert W. 115, 134, 214 Scholl, Karl 134, 214 Schroeder, Michael A. 135, 228 Schroff, Rick C. 106, 228 Schulze, John E. 106, 134, 228 Schulze, John Wesley 112, 116, 120, 215. Seal, Noel 84 Sellers, Leah 131, 206 Sells, Sheila B. 105, 127, 228 Sessions, Mark G. 101, 228 Sessions, Pete 206 Sewell, Phillip C. 74 Shacleford, George H. 206 Sharp, Janet 105, 131, 206 Sharp, Sue 228 Sheffield, Carol Ann 81, 87 Shell, Caroline P. 120, 128, 228 Sheppard, Vicki 109, 206 Sherrod, Catherine J. 106, 228 Sherod, Katie 128, 228 Simmons, Barbara 106, 116, 215 Sinclair, Susan E. Skinner, Ann 130, 207 Skinner, Michael 84, 207 Skinner, Robert S. 215 Slade, Joyce 114, 207 Smart, Dana B. 215 Smith, Andy W. 108, 109, 134, 228 Smith, Bretna M. 207 Smith, Eric R. 115, 134, 215 Smith, Gregory 207 Smith, Kelly W. 34 Smith, Mark B. 228 Smith, Paige 228 Smith, Pamela 103, 113, 131, 207 Sonnenberg, John 136, 228 Soulen, Karin 129, 132, 133, 135, 215 Spellman, Lou Ann 113. 207 Spencer, Adele M. 106, 109, 228 Spooky 130, 183 Sprayberry, Charlene 207 Stanley, Mike C. 101, 108, 134, 215 Stanton, Tim 215 Steele, Robert R. 215 Steer, Kathy Jean 130, 215 Stern, Robert C. 115, 207 Stephenson, Renel 130 Stiba, David S. 84 Stoltenberg, Jeff 228 Stone, Russell 74, 215 Storter, Carol J. 130, 207 Stuart, Marcia 109, 130, 215 Stump, Mary 128, 215 Suttles, Joe D. Talbert, Tom 115, 215 Tanksley, Debbie 215 Tanksley, Helen 216 Tatum, Shirley 228 Taylor, Anne 216 Taylor, Laura 104, 228 Taylor, Phyllis E. Taylor, Shannon A. 79 Terry, Faye 216 Thomas, Farra A. 129, 216 Thomas, Helen A. 126, 127, 228 Thomas, Judith A. 131, 207 Thomas, Robert E. 134, 228 Thompson, Collum 216 Thompson, Karen 128, 228 Tilton, John W. 119 Tittle, Sharon E. 125, 229 Tobolka, Richard J. 84 Todd, Brian T. 112, 229 Tompkins, Jane 131, 207 ronahill, Smitty 91, 207 Tourtellotte, Tom 229 Traylor, Lauren J. 229 Troconis, Renato 216 Truitt, Steve P. 34, 114, 22y Trujillo. Evelyn J. 106, 120, 229 Turner, Elizabeth K. 102, 216 Turner, Valerie 216 lurner, William B. 207 Valley, Clifton 112, 216 Vandament, John G 229 Vander-Waillen, Vicky 129, 216 Vardiman, Rebeca 109, 113 Varteressian, Vicki M 109 Vaughn, Dick 216 Vega, Cindy 109, 216 Voyles, Debbie 217 W u Underhill, Charles M. 135 Wagley 130 Wagner, John M. 115, 207 Walcher, Michael P. Walton, William H. 229 Washington, Frederik 126, 127, 229 Watkms, Becky 128, 229 Webb, Kay 119, 122, 153, 229 Weir, Kenny 84 Wendtland, Steve 84, 297 Wenzel, Steve 207 Weyel, Elizabeth 207 White, Julie 87, 106, 108, 109, 229 White, Marian 101, 229 Whitlow, Stuart 83 Wilcox, Margaret 109, 113, 131, 229 Wilkerson, Mike 135, 217 Willems, Debbie 107, 125, 130, 132, 217 Willhite, Forrest 134 Williams, Demse 229 Williams, Jeannie 108, 109, 217 Williams, John 207 Williams, Mary 207 Williams, Ricky 217 Williams, William 229 Williamson, Tom 229 Wilson, Kara 131, 217 Winfrey, Gordon 135 Withrow, Becky 106, 128, 217 Wolf, John 104, 141, 207 Worley, Matt 229 Worsham, Ray 136, 229 Yasoni, Bruno 135, 229 Yeary, Candice 229 Youker, Cindy 128, 217 Young, George 101, 120, 122 Young, Martha 119, 217 Youngblood, Joel 217 Zook, Craig 217 Zwiener, Jeff 229 STUDENTS NOT PICTURED: Charles Aiken; Felix Angel; Jeff Archer; Jamis Bickham; Samuel Blanco; Joe Bobb; Mike Boyd; Frank Brisco; Kathi Brown; Rebecca Buck; Dora Buie; Robert Burkhart; Steve Caskey; Jorge Cisnerus: Solon Coleman; Donna Cowan; Betty Croppon. Deborah Culp; Vivian David; Glenda Deeds; Stanley Denman; Mark Ellis; Candace Fendley; Bill Foster; Earl Gaertner; Chester Gentry; John Glass; Barbara Goodwin; Elliot Goodwin; Warner Hancock; Helen Holden; Dorothy Hooker; Henrietta Huiskmg; Tom Jackson; Nirmala Jacob; Anna Jeffus; Lael Johnson; Linda Kirton; Kathi Kuehl: Melvin Kurth; Robert Lam; George Law; Warren Law; Pam Long; Neil Mann; Melra Martinka; Mary McDuffle; Eunice McGarrahan; Jane McGregor; Ed McGuyer; Joe Mims; Peggy Mims; Peggy Palmer; Richard Pate; Robin Perry; Hill Pool. Opal Powell; Chen Mouser; Jane Neal; Robert Randall; Alyce Ray; Dennis Reynolds; James Reynolds; Clifford Roberts; Willie Rocknell; Jonathan Roquemore; Kim Ross; Susanne Ryan; Craig Ryman; Todd Sattler; Clemmie Schroeder; Andrew Shea, Karen Simcik; Candy Sisk; Walter Stockard; Gay Tangred; Emilie Teague; Gayland Thorn; Doug Townsend; Cindy Trott; Gwyn Tuttle; Ruben Vasquez; Billie Veach; Ann Vogler; Pam Walker; William White, Thomas Whitehead; James Willis; Madeline Willis; Susan Woytek; Moises Yanez 239 In Memory Of Dean Nelson Adams If any single facet of Dean Adams ' personality dominates my memories of him, it is his role as a learner, a person determined to grow through the situations and people that make a life. In the college Sunday School class at the First United Methodist Church, Dean Adams participated in discussions as a fellow seeker, sharing thoughts and feelings developed through his experiences. I remember his expressing his opinion regarding a preacher ' s use of surnames in baptism during a study of United Methodist ritual. Possessing a doctorate of divinity, he offered a view alien to the rest of us. Designated moderator for the class, the dean listened and responded to students not as a remote figure of authority spouting pat answers. He shared with us members of the class himself; he probed with us what makes life most meaningful. Dean Adams ' decision to appoint students to formulate policies regarding the Fine Arts Center and to define the Honor Code in the context of the School of Fine Arts communicates this same readiness to learn from his fellow men. Aware that persons who practice for juries and paint sets know best what makes facilities most functional, he enlisted their energies in devising a workable system. Perhaps even the occasions the dean initiated for allowing faculty and students from the whole school to encounter the particular mode of one department echo his conviction that sharing is learning. Ben Shahn ' s art may be as foreign to pianists as electronic music from a synthesizer can be to painters, but a person ' s exposure to either one enhances his awareness of human creativity. Man teaches man, and man learns from man. For all that Dean Adams imparted to us and gleaned from us, I am thankful. To Dean Adams, Summer, 1974 You became the Dean of Fine Arts All through the summer, you worked hard Preparing for the coming school year Fall, 1974 A new school year had begun You worked long hours, even during weekends Rap Sessions were held for students to voice their grievances and opinions Spring, 1975 Changes and improvements were evident — You tried to bring the students and faculty of the departments to a better understanding The Chapel Choir was revived . . . Summer, 1975 The long vacation I ' d been dreading came Fortunately, I got to work in your office As usual you were pleasant to work with Besides, our trip together is unforgettable My summer vacation wasn ' t bad after all Fall, 1975 Another school year began You continued to strive for improvements The semester ended with a happy climax — the beautiful and unique candlelight service Then came the tragic news You were killed in an automobile accident on Dec. 27 I cried . . . Spring, 1976 The School of Fine Arts had to go on without you I miss you ... You ' ll be in my mind even when I leave this foreign this foreign country YOKE THUE GAN MAY 10, 1976 MELANIE FRANCIS 240 ■■i— i ii m ini i hi in i m 1 1 mini w i i ■in r nmnn rrnrrr v tf V f bfr k -. ' .. J- « 3 ' Wtg r s „.   •« • ■  m % I 4 9 I I  § « 4 3 ' M %HH f:1 fM mC «A r. • . W%m %mimi ' ) % W yf® 111 wkeWZA m m %? «4 : •« ' 1 ii V • H ; F| KL 1 J fc ' i j®««- ji| — i - ! SP -S WXimmmm V w f % % W % ' ■ Hjav eW i pig , . 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Suggestions in the Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) collection:

Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

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Southwestern University - Souwester Yearbook (Georgetown, TX) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

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