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The UNIVERSITY of CHATTANOOGA Yi I T MOCCASIN 1964 CONTENTS SENIORS 3 4 54 HONORS AND FEATURES ORGANIZATIONS 82 118 GREEKS MILITARY 143 150 SPORTS UNDERCLASSMEN 174 FOREWORD Let us say that the present is not and it is twenty years hence and the hands that hold this book are a little more weathered, the eyes a little more wrinkled, and the heart a little more grateful. In remembrance what will you find here — a cata- logue of facts, names, and faces, obscure and tarnished, and someone vague telling you that the best years of your life would be spent here? And you stare into nothingness and ponder the truth in that till it comes upon you that you hold one of those years in your hand . . . hold it gently dear reader. A compilation of faces and facts it is; this much we ' ve set down. But facts are nothing in the human heart without which this book will die. But it will live with a trying and a reaching back through the dimness, it will be fresh and alive, not stiff paper and ink shades, but a composite of memories . . . memories that you helped make. And if the memories are dear enough, then the hands, the eyes, the heart will be as young as those which behold it now. This is the year 1964; this much we ' ve set down. It is in your hands now . . . your book, your remembrance, your year . . . THIS WAS A YEAR . . . a year of weejuns and elephant jokes, knee-socks and burgundy, Bud- weiser and folk-music, snow and wrestling matches, welcome spring and closing books to run off to the lake. Sure all that was important and we savored every moment, but wait . . . there was more: what about formulas and test-tubes, conju- gations and chalk-dust, equations and worn erasers, treaties and maps, scrambled notes and overdue library books, foot-notes and carbon paper, blue books and red-pencil corrections, theories and re- alities, Aristotle and Faulkner? And what about self -discovery? Since 1886, students have walked these ways. The trappings may have changed, but the essence, the why of the walking has not changed. It is they who encompass both, who know most that this is not just a school. UC is ours and it ' s great. And of all her years this, in many ways, was one of her greatest. W m- tr M ; gar FRBMtlY Another academic year Begins, now that September ' s here. Youth, lovely, sanguine or unsure, Daring or timid, warped or pure, Veering between its hopes and fears, Success, frustration, joy and tears, Comes to be worked upon in schools And meets far fewer minds than rules; Learns much to be unlearned with pain As crushed Truth tries to rise again. ' Hail! We who are about to die Salute you, ' still is childhood ' s cry. Father James Harold Flye THE SNACK BAR— principle refuge from the weary world of scholarship. V t! r a i THE PARTY WEEKENDS . . . are ever too seldom, but gratefully greeted with something akin to relaxation, primordial jubilation, and the simple joy of being young and alive. AND WE STUDY TOO THE NOBLEST CAUSE... The pursuit of knowledge: early morning classes, the endless afternoons, the heavy evenings, tired and slow, lukewarm coffee and stale cigarettes, cramped legs, frustration, the joy of seeing a meaning where none existed before, sometimes reward, sometimes disappointment, more often ... a com- promise. They tell us again and again Don ' t be grade conscious! Don ' t be grade conscious! and you try. You try until one of your best friends fails to graduate or loses a scholarship by five-tenths of a quality point. What can you do? Oh well, back to the books. yr : v Time occasionally has a way to lift us out of her usual drift to encapture us in a moment of unforgettable beauty. It is in these moments that we live the most, for they, being timeless, touch eternity itself. And there are inward moments that are moods . . . of homesickness, depression, or just loneline ss. We all feel them. They are important to happiness: having been there, we cherish it more. If moments could talk there would be much to say. Among the mazes of moun- tains is Chattanooga cradled, and in the bends and crooks of her fertile river she settled summers past to thrive quietly. And the spirit of the land was on it all. With a free breeze rushing up out of cool twi- light hollows twittering russett patterns all around and the hard feel of a forearm on a kindly birch, we greet the ad- vent of a nocturne and the sealing of another span of light. And the earth drifts . . . on and on and many things will bereave you, but these mountains, guardians of the spirit of the land, once in your blood, will never leave you. The true kindred never part . . . never. And this is our legacy . . . our land. ww ?m s A misty morning, dodging the puddles on the steps, the glassy-bright doors, trying to open the wrong one, the couch to the right with its perpetual faces, glancing left into vastness of detail, entering the hall, the T.V. is on but you can ' t tell if anyone ' s watch- ing, into the din of the snack bar, friends, what a relief to put your books down, the line, the inevitable indecision as to what kind of donut to get, getting coffee, forgetting sugar or a spoon, borrowing a friend ' s spoon, small talk, We didn ' t have to write out that lesson did we? Think we ' ll have a test? the inadequate comfort that everyone ' s in the same boat, a stare lost across the room, a momentary gloom — a memory of a letter that didn ' t come, THE BELL — shattering all consciousness, noise increases quickly, all around people begin to move, finish your coffee, the tension builds, a slow resignation to real- ity, getting up, gathering books and courage, an inward stoic smile ... a launching into another day. We love it. In speaking of the poetry of Robert Frost, Robert Penn Warren remarked that all good poems . . . drop a stone into the pool of our being, and the ripples spread. Miss Isobel Griscom herself is like a fine poem. Those who know her and have been touched by her influence can personally testify to the experience of the spreading ripples. In the classroom she creates an atmosphere of enthusiasm and appreciative wonder, and in that spirit she breathes vitality and meaning- ful life into literature. She makes it glow. She questions everything. She shatters naive complacency, stirring into awareness even the most dormant minds and spurring into sen- sibility the most lethargic souls. With her knowledge she does more than instruct; she inspires. For more than forty years she has been a vital stimulation to the growth and intellectual life of this University. She is like a fine poem: enlightening, ele- vating, powerful and unforgettable. BOARD OF TRUSTEES W. E. BROCK, JR Chairman HARRY C. CARBAUGH Vice-Chairman J. POLK SMARTT Secretary ROBERT L. MACLELLAN Treasurer Members for Term Ending June 1964 EVERETT ALLEN Chattanooga SEBERT BREWER Chattanooga HARRY C. CARBAUGH Lookout Mountain T. O. DUFF, JR Lookout Mountain ALEX GUERRY, JR Lookout Mountain DeSALES HARRISON Lookout Mountain JOHN L. HUTCHESON, JR Rossville, Georgia W. S. KEESE, JR Chattanooga DONALD H. OVERMYER Chattanooga GORDON P. STREET Chattanooga J. E. WHITAKER Chattanooga RAYMOND B. WITT, JR Chattanooga Members for Term Ending June 1965 JAxMES L. FOWLE Chattanooga J. BURTON FRIERSON Lookout Mountain RUTH SULZBERGER (Mrs. Ben Hale) GOLDEN Lookout Mountain OTTO J. HUBBUCH Chattanooga H. CLAY EVANS JOHNSON Lookout Mountain SUMMERFIELD K. JOHNSTON Lookout Mountain ROBERT L. MACLELLAN Lookout Mountain SCOTT L. PROBASCO, JR Chattanooga R. P. PURSE, JR Lookout Mountain J. POLK SMARTT Chattanooga E. HORNSBY WASSON Newark, New Jersey EARL W. WINGER Lookout Mountain Members for Term Ending June 1966 CREED F. BATES Chattanooga W. E. BROCK, JR Lookout Mountain ROBERT H. CALDWELL Lookout Mountain W. MAX FINLEY Chattanooga JAMES B. IRVINE, JR Lookout Mountain JOHN T. LUPTON Lookout Mountain THOMAS A. LUPTON Lookout Mountain EDWIN O. MARTIN Lookout Mountain RICHARD L. MOORE, JR Lookout Mountain Z. CARTTER PATTEN Signal Mountain WILLIAM G. RAOUL Lookout Mountain CHARLES W. WHELAND Lookout Mountain LIFE TRUSTEES CHARLOTTE PATTEN (Mrs. Alexander) GUERRY Lookout Mountain P. J. KRUESI Lookout Mountain DAVID A. LOCKMILLER Washington, D.C. A. F. PORZELIUS Chattanooga JOHN ROSS SCOTT Chattanooga BISHOP ROY H. SHORT Nashville EDWIN C. WOOD WORTH Chattanooga ALUMNI TRUSTEES FORREST F. CATE, JR. ' 56 1961-64 HOWARD P. SOMPAYRAC, JR. ' 51 1962-65 DOUGLAS A. MEYER ' 54 1963-66 J 4 PRESIDENT MARTIN sident greets Joel Cunningham, President of the Student Body. H DR. LeROY A. MARTIN President, University of Chattanooga President ' s Message To you who are about to be graduated, greetings. I trust you enjoyed U.C., that you picked up some provocative ideas, that a professor or two provoked you into a deep look into yourself which produced better self-understanding, that you found a book which gave you a vision of the Beloved Com- munity, that you started a personal library which will grow and grow, that your mind will keep a growing edge all the way through this mysterious experience we call life, and above all that you became committed to reason as a method of understanding and facing the growing complexity of the world. LeRoy A. Martin 5 ADMINISTRATION COLLEGE OF APPLIED ARTS The College of Applied Arts is responsible for the education of many professional people in the Chattanooga area. The College awards two degrees, the Bachelor of Science and the Bachelor of Music. This division offers courses in the profes- sional fields of economics and business administration, educa- tion, engineering, health and physical education, home econom- ics, military science, music education, psychology, secretarial administration, special education, and professional education for social work. AUGUST W. EBERLE, Ph.D. Provost and Acting Dean, College of Applied Arts Director of the Graduate Division ROBERT W. FENIX, M.B.A., D.B.A. Comptroller COMPTROLLER ' S OFFICE The primary function of the Comptroller ' s Office is the maintenance of the financial condition of the University. It also pays the bills, keeps a strict account of all grants and departmental expenditures, and records and collects student accounts. This office is better known to the students of the University as the Business Office, and it does a great deal to keep the school running smoothly. 16 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES The College of Arts and Sciences offers programs in four divisions: Fine Arts, Humanities, Science-Mathematics, and Social Sciences, leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree. The primary purpose of this college is to acquaint students with broad and representative areas of knowledge and to increase their use of this information in living the mature life, in participating intelligently in society, and as the basis for a career. Selected courses in this college form the core curric- ulum which, with some modifications, is prerequisite for all undergraduate degrees. D i Wmdt IL JAMES. W. LIVINGOOD, Ph.D. Dean, College of Arts and Sciences Guerry Professor of History REUBEN W. HOLLAND, M.A. Dean of Students DEAN OF STUDENTS ' OFFICE The responsibilities of the Dean of Students ' Office are to coordinate the school calendar, maintain the placement service for students and graduates, and provide adequate housing for the dormitory students, both men and women. This office handles personal and vocational counseling, scholarships, and advises foreign students. This job is becoming increasingly difficult due to the growth of the number of students enrolled in the school. HAROLD CADEK Dean, Cadek Conservatory of Music Professor of Piano and Violoncello THE CHATTANOOGA EVENING COLLEGE The Chattanooga Evening College offers cultural, profes- sional, business, technical, and avocational interests classes. Its college-level courses are held in the late afternoon, evening, or Saturday morning and give the benefits of higher educa- tion to many adults in the greater Chattanooga area. The courses in this division are offered for credit or non-credit and may be applied toward any of the degrees or certificates awarded by the University. GARLAND M. MORTON Director, Development Office CADEK CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC The Cadek Conservatory of Music first became affiliated with the University in 1948. The conservatory has contributed a great deal to the music life of Chattanooga by encouraging the study and appreciation of music. It offers c ourses in music, art, speech, and dance instruction on non-college and pre- paratory level; it gives private lessons for credit to college students, and provides the instruction and development of artists, teachers, and non-professional music students. GLENN LeROY BUSHEY, Ed.D. Dean, Chattanooga Evening College Professor of Education THE DEVELOPMENT CENTER As it is the purpose of the Provost Office to stimulate the academic growth of the University, so it is the purpose of the Development Office to stimulate the physical growth. Working in conjunction with the Planning Committee, the Office is involved in various public relations and fund raising programs. Their present project is concerned with providing the much-needed gym-auditorium facilities for the University. 18 LIBRARY ALBERT H. BOWMAN Librarian The main library, named for a long-time faculty member, trustee, and devoted friend, John Storrs Fletcher, and the specialized libraries in Brock Hall and in the main library building, provide the essential foundation for the University ' s academic program. The approximately 85,000 volumes in the libraries, effectively arranged and adequately housed for study, reference, and research, are selected not only to support the undergraduate and graduate programs but also to provide a well-balanced resource for the pleasurable pursuit of learning in many fields. An efficient staff administers the collections, and they are always available and glad to assist in opening the treasures of knowledge in their care. Ila H. Shaw, Secretary, and Anita Stephens Patton, Cataloguer. 9 I Hilde Hugli Anacker, Assistant Pro- fessor of Modern Languages. Robert Hermann Anacker, Profes- sor of Modern Languages and History Terrell Louise Tatum, Guerry Pro- fessor of Modern Languages. DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY SCIENCE The purpose of the military science department is to produce commissioned officers for all branches of the United States Army. If a student successfully completes his ROTC program he will be commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army. The program is voluntary for male students. Joseph Sevier Callaway, Professor of Classics Maxwell Austin Smith, Guerry Pro- fessor of Modern Languages. DEPARTMENT OF LANGUAGE At the University one can major in the Romance languages — French, Spanish, or German — or Classical languages. Courses are offered in elementary languages, conversation and literature, both of current and past selections. These courses, therefore, attempt not only to give the student skills for conversation, but also to acquaint him with appropriate literature. Donald Caryl Graney, Capt., USA, Assistant Professor of Military Sci- ence and Tactics. Ellis Hamlett, Capt., USA, Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics. Lawrence Black Kelly, Lt. Col., USA, Professor of Military Science and Tactics. Paul A. Slater, Capt., USA, Assist- ant Professor of Military Science and Tactics. Paul L. Palmer, Guerry Professor of Education and Psychology. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION A student may receive either a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of Science by majoring in education at the University. The edu- cation department provides courses for both undergraduate and graduate degrees. All of the University ' s curricula for teacher preparation must fulfill certification requirements of the Tennes- see State Board of Education. Kenneth Robert Whittemore, Assist- ant Professor of Sociology. Stanley B. Williams, Assistant Pro- fessor of Sociology. Ulrey Kaulbach Wilson, Professor of Psychology. Mary Carlyle Winkler, Assistant Professor of Education and Psy- chology and Assistant Dean of St u- dents. Walter McClintock Ruby, Jr., Asso- ciate Professor of Education and Psychology; Director of Talented Youth Program and of Educational Services Center. Jewell Frick Rudicil, Assistant Pro- fessor of Education and Director of Reading Center. Ishmael Frederick Utley, Associate Professor of Education. DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY Under the psychology and sociology departments, a student may receive either a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of Science degree. Different fields offering a major in this department are psychology, sociology, and social work. Frank B. Hodgdon, Associate Pro- fessor of Mathematics and Engi- DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS To earn the Bachelor of Arts degree in mathematics, a student must have at least twenty-four hours of math plus the other re- quirements from the various departments. The Bachelor of Science degree requires at least six hours of math, usually consisting of algebra and trigonometry. F. Virginia Rohde, Professor of Mathematics. Thomas Edwin Geraghty, Assistant Professor of Economics and Busi- ness Administration. DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS The business administration department offers a four-year pro- gram in which the student may earn a Bachelor of Science degree. The curriculum is concentrated on general business, accounting, finance, marketing, personnel, and production. The student wishing to receive his Bachelor of Science degree in business administra- tion must have a minimum of 128 semester hours and 128 quality points. A shorter program with two 30-hour certificates, one in accounting and one in management, is offered. Tyler Deierhoi, Assistant Professor of History. Jane Worth Harbaugh, Associate Professor of History and Political Science; Chairman, Social Sciences Division. Ronald Oury Moore, Assistant Pro- fessor of History. Jame Getty Smart, Assistant Pro- fessor of History and Political Science. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE A student may receive a Bachelor of Arts degree by completing 128 hours and 128 quality points while majoring in either History or History and Political Science. History and Political Science is considered a combined major. Culver Hay good Smith, Guerry Pro- fessor of History. Theresa Waller, Assistant Professor of History. Rayford John McLaurin, Assistant Professor of Economics and Busi- ness Administration. Charles C. Thompson, Assistant Pro- fessor of Economics and Business Administration. Arthur G. Vieth, John Stagmaier Professor of Economics and Busi- ness Administration. o f I V George Warren Averltte, Professor of Health and Physical Education. Beatrice McNeill McRae, Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education. Andrew Cecil Moore, Associate Pro- fessor of Physical Education. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION All students at the University of Chattanooga are required to take four semesters of physical education. Students may major in and receive a teacher ' s certificate in Health and Physical Education. The Bachelor of Science may be acquired by completing 128 hours with 128 quality points. Moss Hackett Wright, Assistant Pro- fessor of Health and Physical Edu- cation. DEPARTMENT OF ART The art department allows one to major in either art or art education. Students majoring in art may earn a Bachelor of Arts degree while those majoring in art education may earn a Bachelor of Science. Both degrees require the completion of 128 hours and 128 quality points. George Cress, Professor of Art. Gail Shipman Hammond, Associate Professor of Art; Chairman, Fine Arts Division. Charles Richard Hanton, Assistant Professor of Art. • i Y - j - L k L ' 4 1 k k ■' y L r urn v ar W fi ji if I w Doris Doe, Professor of Voice. DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC The music department at the University of Chattanooga offers either a Bachelor of Music or a Bachelor of Arts to a student majoring in music. Courses are offered in applied music and the theory of music. Virginia Gross, Special Instructor in Harpsichord and Piano. fea Mcllwraith, Associate Professor of Music, University Organist and DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION The philosophy department offers a major in philosophy or a combined major in philosophy and religion. A student may earn a Bachelor of Arts degree in either of these two fields by taking the required courses and successfully completing 128 hours and 128 quality points. DEPARTMENT OF HOME ECONOMICS The department of home economics offers two programs to participating students: a four-year plan with a bachelor of science degree and a two-year plan awarding a certificate. The courses required include a general liberal background, detailed home eco- nomics instruction, and a concentration on science courses. Wiley Kim Rogers, Assistant Pro- fessor of Philosophy and Religion. William Kingsley Butts, Guerry Pro- fessor of Biology. Robert V. Curtis, Special Instructor in Engineering. Dorothy Elizabeth Dalby, Assistant Professor of Chem istry. Arvel Lawrence Fincher, Assistant Professor of Physics. Lewis A. Fletcher, Professor of Chemistry. John Richardson Freeman, Assistant Professor of Biology. Kenneth Alvin Biology. Fry, Professor of Irvine Walter Grote, Guerry Profes- sor of Chemistry. Karel Hujer, Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy. Norbert Koch, neering. Professor of Engi- Myron Stanley McCay, Professor of Physics. Horace Greeley McDowell, Jr., As- sistant Professor of Geography and Geology. DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE The science department offers a wide variety including biology, chemistry, astronomy, general science, geography, geology, and physics. The student wishing to obtain a Bachelor of Science degree in one of these fields must complete 128 hours and 128 quality points. Eleanor Ross McGilliard, Associate Professor of Biology. Henry Cleveland Ransom, Instruc- tor in Physics. Mary Page Rucker, Instructor in Biology. William Orr Swan, Professor of Chemistry. John Michael Temple, Instructor in Engineering. Robert Lake Wilson, Associate Pro- fessor of Geography and Geology; Chairman, Mathematics and Science Division. NOT PICTURED Blanche Mendel, Special Instructor in Medical Technology. Wade Miller Marsh, Special Instructor in Medical Technology. 7 Enid Parker Bryan, Associate Pro- fessor of English. Roland DeBuske Carter, Assistant Professor of English. George C. Connor, Assistant Profes- sor of English. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH A student may receive a Bachelor of Arts degree by majoring in either English literature or American literature and completing 128 hours with 128 quality points. Both composition and litera- ture courses are offered at the University. Mary Young Hale, Assistant Pro- fessor of English. Arlie Edwards Herron, Professor of English. Edwin Samuel Lindsey, Guerry Pro- fessor of English. Moore, Instructor Michael Reynard Richards, Assist- ant Professor of English. James Ernest Spears, Assistant Pro- fessor of English. Nickolas B. Spornick, Assistant Pro- fessor of English. Dorothy Hackett Ward, Associate Professor of Dramatics and Speech. Charles R. Woodard, Associate Pro- fessor of English; Chairman, Hu- manities Division. FOREIGN STUDENTS This past year the University of Chattanooga was fortunate in having three foreign student-teachers. They came from France, Germany and Costa Rica. Michelle Atoch, a vivacious blond, was a French college student when she was asked to spend a year in the United States. Upon arrival at the University of Chattanooga, she taught three French conversation classes, watched over the language lab for five hours a week, and registered for four courses as a student. Hans-Martin Muller hailed from Germany. Hans-Martin studied one semester at the University of Hamburg. While at the University of Chattanooga, he taught German con- versation courses and carried a full academic load. In addition, he kept the language lab for five hours a week. From Costa Rica came Roberto Rojas. When he first came to America, he headed for the West Coast to learn English and the American customs. From there he went to New Orleans where he worked and went to Tulane Evening Col- lege. He came to the University of Chattanooga on the rec- ommendation of a friend. While here, he taught Spanish conversation classes and studied Spanish literature. Michelle Atoch Roberto Rojas Hans -Martin Muller DR. JANE YV. HARBAUGH Program Director ASIAN STUDIES PROGRAM President LeRoy Martin, Dr. Jane Harbaugh, Dr. August Eberle, and Dr. James Livingood welcome the news of the Ford Founda- tion Grant. Dr. Harbaugh and Dr. Bowman look over new books on Asia provided for the University Library. The University of Chattanooga re- ceived a $181,000 grant from the Ford Foundation for a cooperative three-year Asian Studies Program. The program is primarily designed to increase the teach- ing competence in Asian affairs of mem- bers of the faculties of UC, Birmingham- Southern, Maryville and Knoxville Col- leges. UC has sought to give the people of Chattanooga an opportunity to reap the benefits of the appearance on the UC campus of some of America ' s foremost scholars and lecturers. Ten public ad- dresses have been given at Cadek Hall. Having the lectures here on our campus has provided the students with an excellent opportunity to be exposed to a culture other than our own and to hear interna- tionally famous specialists in such fields as Oriental art, anthropology, history, lit- erature, religion, sociology and govern- ment. Dr. William T. de Bary, Chairman, Department of Chinese and Japanese Studies, Columbia Uni- versity; Consultant for Asian Studies Program. Howard L. Boorman, Di- rector, Men and Politics Dr. Donald Keene, Professor of Dr. James Cahill, Curator of in Modern China, Colum- Japanese Language and Litera- Chinese Art, Freer Gallery of Dr. Kenneth Ch ' en, Professor of bia University. hire, Columbia University. Art, Smithsonian Institute. Religion, Princeton University. Richard K. Beardsley, As- sociate Professor of An- thropology, Associate in Research in the Museum of Anthropology, Univer- sity of Michigan. Dr. Charles O. Hucker, Professor of History, Chairman of the Commit- tee on Asian Studies, Oaklan d University. Not Pictured PROF. HERBERT PASSIN Columbia University DR. JAMES R. HIGHTOWER Harvard University IVAN I. MORRIS Columbia University FACULTY-STUDENT BASKETBALL GAME I have an announcement to make Ooo . . . don ' t fall! A little lower on the left side . . . ahhh! Come on, profs! True organization 1, 2, 3, Hike! Give me an F . . . ! B U s I N E S Margaret Buhrman, Assist- ant Comptroller. Louise Brimer, Secretary. Nettye Broyles, Manager of Jesse Eaves, Superintendent Mytle Lane, Assistant Man- Student Center Cafeteria. of Buildings and Grounds. ager, Student Center of Snack Bar. ' 7i W Edith Masse j , Bretske Din- ing Hall. Hulda Nite, Manager of Albert Rankin, B.S., Pur- Bretske Dining Hall. chasing Agent and Book- store Manager. Virginia Romska, Assistant Daryl Rose, Secretary. Bookstore Manager. OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS i A James G. Umbarger, Gertrude White, Bretske Charles G. Wright, Director Bursar. Dining Hall. of Maintenance. Jewell Snyder, B.S., Direc- Harmon Lee, Assistant to tor - the Director. EVENING COLLEGE DEVELOPMENT OFFICE Elizabeth Weatherford, Sec- retary. Louise C. Griffith, A.B., As- Margaret B. Jones, Secre- Eleanor Sweeney, Secre- Sara M. Walraven, Secre- sociate. tary. tary. tary. i?Sm i + A- ' OFFICE of the PRESIDENT READING CENTER OFFICE of the REGISTRAR Earl D. Hale, A.B., Director of Publicity. Louise S. Tone, Secretary. Natalie D. Schlack, M.A., Registrar. Marjorie Nelle Ward, As- sistant to the Registrar. ALUMNI OFFICE OFFICE of the PROVOST Betty Blocker, retary. Alumni Sec- o F F I C E o f t h e D E A N o f Lorena Heinemann, Secre- tary. Sarabelle Eldridge, Assist- ant to Director of Student Center. Linda Crawley Hawkins, Nancy Templeton, Secre- Secretary. tary. Gladys Conner, Sprague Ethel Crumbliss, Vine House. Street Dormitory. W k ' J dp Kit - J 1 - mL m v M Martha H. Hall, PfeifEer Ann Howard, Poplar House. Jamie Turnbull, Westcott Mary C. Winkler, Assistant Hall. Dean of Students. SENIORS Senior Class officers pictured left to right are: Margaret Wood, secretary; Pat Payne, vice- president; Franz Zeigler, president; Paul Greenberg, representative; and Janet Parks, treasurer. SENIOR CLASS As we began the year, we seniors at long last saw the end in sight of the long journey to obtain our Bachelor ' s Degree. We stood a little straighter as we realized that it was now our turn to serve as school leaders and met with determination the challenge of making our senior year the apex of our college days in the scholastic records we attained. Our professors wer no longer just classroom instructors — they were our friends. The thoughts of comps were pushed in the back of our minds in order to concentrate on term papers and that course necessary for graduation. We worked our last year on Homecoming, took a final class from that favorite professor, and began to plan for the next year. Graduation became a reality to us, and the time had come to leave our Alma Mater. As seniors we finally realize the true worth of our years at this University. We know we shall never forget. . . . 36 SENIOR CLASS First Row: HELEN RUTH AKERS: Mathematics; Chattanooga; Al- pha Lambda Delta; Alpha Theta Delta; Echo news editor; Honor Council; Kappa Chi Epsilon; Le Cercle Francais, secretary; Moccasin; Mortar Board, recording secretary; Panhellenic Council, senior delegate; Phi Mu, president; University Scholars. ELIZABETH JANE ALFORD: Psychology; Chattanooga; Baptist Student Union; Chi Omega, chapter correspondent. Second Row: HORACE THOMAS ARMSTRONG: English; Chatta- nooga; Phi Delta Theta; Golf Team. HUGH ANTHONY ARNOLD: Biology; Chattanooga. Third Row: MELVIN ALFRED ASHLEY: Health and Physical Edu- cation; Chattanooga. ANNE BAYLOR AUSTIN: Social Work; Lookout Moun- tain, Tennessee; Moccasin Favorite; Pi Beta Phi, social chairman; ROTC Sponsor; Sociology Club. Fourth Row: BEVERLY ANN BAILEY: Secondary Education; Fon- tainebleu, France; Cheerleader; Dorm Council; Newman Club; Pi Beta Phi, publicity chairman; ROTC Sponsor; SNEA; WAA. LARRY GENE BAKER: English; Albertville Alabama; Blue Key, alumni secretary; Honor Council; IFC, secre- tary and treasurer; Joe College ; Junior Class, president; Lambda Chi Alpha, rush chairman: President of the Stu- dent Body; Sophomore Class, vice-president. Fifth Row: STANLEY BARAN, JR.: Secondary Education; Ringgold, Georgia. WILLIAM MUECKE BARKER: Secondary Education; Chattanooga; AUSA; Circle K, board of directors; Dis- tinguished Military Student; IFC; Sigma Chi, pledge trainer and rush chairman. First Row: WILLIAM LESTER BECK, JR.: Engineering Physics; Rossville, Georgia; Engineers Club, president; Sigma Pi Sigma, vice-president; American Institute of Physics. LYDA COOPER BISHOP: Elementary Education; Chat- tanooga. Second Row: SYLVIA J. BOYD: English; Chattanooga; Young Republi- cans Club; Westminster Fellowship. MILA BARNES BRAMLETT: Elementary Education; Chattanooga; SNEA. Third Row: MARGARET ANN BRIDGE: Social Work; Chattanooga; Kappa Chi Epsilon; Sociology Club; Pi Beta Phi. DONNA LOUISE BROCK: Home Economics; Chatta- nooga; Home Economics Club, president, vice-president, treasurer; Mortar Board, corresponding secretary; SNEA; Steering Committee; Tassels; Tennessee Home Economics Association; College Club Section; Westminster Fellow- ship, treasurer. Fourth Row: LARRY R. BROOKS: Industrial Engineering; Bluefield, West Virginia; Football; C Club; Engineers Club. STEPHEN ERNST BROWN: General Management; Chattanooga; Society for Advancement of Management, Alpha Tau Omega. Fifth Row: BARBARA ELLEN BUEHLER: Social Work; Knoxville, Tennessee; Chi Omega; Sociology Club. PAUL EDWARD BURKE: Business Administration; Chattanooga; Alpha Phi Omega; Canterbury Club; Cheer- leader; Lambda Chi Alpha, social chairman, asst. treasurer, corresponding secretary, editor and reporter; University Players; ROTC. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: RACHELLA KAY BURROS: Medical Technology; Co- lumbia, South Carolina; Beta Beta Beta, president; Can- terbury Club; Chi Omega, asst. secretary herald; Dorm Council; Girls Chorus; Moccasin; Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. MARTHA KAREN CANNON: Health and Physical Ed- ucation; Lookout Mountain, Tennessee; C Club; Echo; Mocettes; Modern Dance Club; Phi Eta Tau officer; Uni- versity Choir; Varsity Tennis; Volleyball Team. Second Row: DONALD DOYLE CAREY: Pre-Dentistry; Kensington, Georgia; Independents; Physics Club. ROLAND DEBUSKE CARTER, JR.: Business Adminis- tration; Cattanooga; Methodist Student Union; SAM. Third Row: IRA BRUCE CARTWRIGHT: Industrial Engineering; Chattanooga; Engineers Club. ELIZABETH DOUGLAS CHASTAIN: Secondary Edu- cation; Signal Mountain, Tennessee. Fourth Row: HORACE DOYLE CHAUNCEY: Accounting; Chatta- nooga; SAM. JEFFE RSON C. CHESNUTT: Industrial Engineering; Hixson, Tennessee; Engineers Club. Fifth Row: ELI POLK CHURCHWELL, JR.: Industrial Engineer- ing; Chattanooga; Industrial Engineers Club; Engineering Club, treasurer. MARTHA ELLEN CLEMMER: Biology; Rossville, Geor- gia; Beta Beta Beta; Echo; Methodist Student Union, sec- retary; Mortar Board, president; Pi Beta Phi, vice-presi- dent, historian, program chairman; SNEA, president; Tassels, secretary-treasurer; University Scholars; Univer- sity Choir; Young Democrats Club. First Row: GEORGE MELVIN COOPER, JR.: Accounting; Chat- tanooga; SAM; Westminster Fellowship. DONNA RUTH COSTELLO: Health and Physical Edu- cation; Chattanooga; Methodist Student Union; Modern Dance Club; Orchesis, treasurer; Phi Eta Tau, secretary; Pi Beta Phi, social chairman; WAA. Second Row: JOHN FLOYD CREASY: Secondary Education; Ft. Ogle- thorpe, Georgia; Le Cercle Francais. JAMES ROGER CROOKS: Engineering; Daisy, Tennes- see; American Institute of Physics; Engineers Club. Third Row: GLENDA GAIL CUNNINGHAM: Elementary Educa- tion; Chattanooga; BSU; Modern Dance Club; Pi Beta Phi; SNEA. DON A. DAVIS: Business Administration; Chattanooga. Fourth Row: CONNIE JUNE DAY: Health and Physical Education; Cleveland, Tennessee; Dorm Council; Golf Team; Junior Representative; Kappa Chi Epsilon; Methodist Student Union; Mocettes; Pi Beta Phi, Phi Eta Tau, program chair- man; Student Council; WAA, secretary. WILLIAM EDWARD DICKERT: Engineering; Chatta- nooga; Engineers Club; Methodist Student Union. Fifth Row: JOSEPH PHILLIP DONNOVIN: English; Gainesville, Florida, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. GEORGE F. DORSEY: Chemistry; Chattanooga; C Club; Gamma Sigma Epsilon, president; Golf Team; New- man Club. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: BARBARA M. DOUGLAS: English; Hixson, Tennessee; Alpha Lambda Delta; Girls Chorus; Independents; SNEA; University Scholars. RAY G. DUNCAN: Mathematics: Chattanooga; Alpha Theta Delta. Second Row: RONALD MERLE EISAMAN: Secondary Education; Bethel Park, Pennsylvania; C Club; Intramurals — Bas- ketball, Softball, ROTC; SNEA; Track; TSSAA; Varsity Football. CHARLES JAMES EKVALL: Secondary Education; Chattanooga; AUSA; Pershing Rifles; Scabbard and Blade. Third Row: CATHERINE HOPE ELTON: English; Jacksonville, Florida; Alpha Lambda Delta; Canterbury Club; Chi Omega, president; German Club; Girls Chorus; Kappa Chi Epsilon; Le Cercle Francais; Moccasin, editor; Mor- tar Board; Tasstls; University Scholars; WAA. WILLIAM D. ESTES: Chemistry; Chattanooga; Gamma Sigma Epsilon. Fourth Row: LONNIE WAYNE FARMER: Health and Physical Edu- cation; Steubenville, Ohio; Football, captain 1962-63; Wrestling. WILLIAM EDWARD FARMER: Business Administra- tion; Chattanooga; IFC Representative; Methodist Stu- dent Union; SAM; Sigma Chi, social chairman. Fifth Row: L £WILLIAM ALFRED FIKE: Business Administration; Chattanooga; BSU; Circle K; Kappa Sigma, treasurer; SAM, president. WILLMENT CONRAD FOLK: Business Administration: Milford, New Jersey; Methodist Student Union; SAM. First Row: GEORGE LELAND FRANK; Psychology; Chattanooga; Echo, feature editor. FULTON LEWIS FRUMIN: Business Administration; Chattanooga; SAM, vice-president. Second Row: CHARLOTTE ADAIR GAITHER: Art; Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Art Club; Dorm Council; Echo; Elections Com- mittee; Moccasin, art editor. MARTHA GALBRAITH: Humanities; Chattanooga; Al- pha Lambda Delta; Chi Omega; Echo, editor; Honor Council; Mortar Board; Student Center Committee; Uni- versity Scholars, Tassels. Third Row: WILLIAM P. GARNER, JR.: Business Administration; Chattanooga; Lambda Chi Alpha, social chairman; Meth- odist Student Union; SAM. MARY DIANE GIBSON: Elementary Education; Chat- tanooga; Methodist Student Union; SNEA. Fourth Row: ANN H. GILLELAND: Mathematics; Signal Mountain, Tennessee; Alpha Delta Pi; Echo; Girls Chorus; Newman Club. GAIL MARIE GLADNEY: Medical Technology; Chat- tanooga; Beta Beta Beta; Gamma Sigma Epsilon; Kappa Chi Epsilon; Mortar Board, treasurer; Pi Beta Phi; Uni- versity Scholars. Fifth Row: DAVID JAMES GLOVER: Physics; Montrose, Alabama; AIP. DOUGLAS LEROY GORDON: Business Administration; Orlando, Florida; Sigma Chi. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: ROBERT RILEY GRAHAM, JR.: Business Administra- tion; Chattanooga; Lambda Chi Alpha; SAM. PAUL LYNN GREENBERG: Pre-Med; Chattanooga; Alpha Epsilon Pi, president and pledge trainer; Blue Key, treasurer; Circle K, board of directors; Echo, sports editor; Election Committee, chairman; Hillel, vice-president; Hon- ors Day Committee; IFC, president. Second Row: CHARLES T. GREGG: Business Administration; Chat- tanooga; Drill Team; Lambda Chi Alpha; Westminster Fellowship. MARY LOUISE GROVES: Home Economics; Lookout Mountain; Home Economics Club; Pi Beta Phi; WAA; Westminster Fellowship. Third Row: ROBIN GUY: Psychology; Valley Head, Alabama; Dorm Council, vice-president; March of Dimes Committee; Methodist Student Union; Phi Mu, treasurer and activ- ities chairman; Psychology Club; Sociology Club; Young Democrats. CANDACE AMELIA HACHAT: Elementary Education; Chamblee, Georgia; Alpha Lambda Delta; Canterbury Club; Dorm Council; Kappa Chi Epsilon; SNEA. Fourth Row: GARY ALBERT HACKWORTH: Business Administra- tion; Chattanooga; IFC; Intramural Regulations Com- mittee; SAM; Sigma Chi, athletic chairman; Wrestling Team. MARILYNN HALE: Secretarial Administration; Orchard Park, New York; Junior Class treasurer; Moccasin Beauty; Pi Beta Phi, scholarship chairman and recording secretary; Sigma Chi Sweetheart; Student Council. Fifth Row: ROBERT D. HALE: History; Chattanooga; Sigma Chi. DONALD ROY HAMILL: Business Administration; Chattanooga; BSU; Lambda Chi Alpha; SAM. First Row: BARBARA M. HARRIS: Spanish; Chattanooga; Alpha Delta Pi, chaplain; Mocettes; Sigma Delta Pi, treasurer; SNEA. JERRY JOHNSON HARRIS: Health and Physical Edu- cation; Demopolis, Alabama; C Club; Modern Dance Club. Second Row: BILLY JOE HARVISON: Health and Physical Educa- tion; Chattanooga; Football. JOHN THOMAS HEARD: Combined Sciences; Lookout Mountain, Tennessee; Male Chorus: Pershing Rifles; Uni- versity Band; University Orchestra. Third Row: WILLIAM RICHARD HEARN: Music Education; Chat- tanooga; University Band; University Orchestra. MARGARET R. HENDON: Elementary Education; Chattanooga; Koinonia Club; SNEA. Fourth Row: CORNELIA ELLIOT HINES: Mathematics; Lookout Mountain, Tennessee; Canterbury Club, secretary-treas- urer; March of Dimes Committee; Pi Beta Phi, corre- sponding secretary. RUSSELL HERBERT HOLDER: Business Administra- tion; Chattanooga; BSU; Lambda Chi Alpha; SAM. Fifth Row: JANE McCLENDON HOLMES: Elementary Education; Signal Mountain, Tennessee; Chi Omega; Modern Dance Club; SNEA; University Players. JAMES PITTMAN HOOD: Mathematics; Chattanooga. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: MARY ALICE HANDLEY: Elementary Education; Ringgold, Georgia; SNEA. THOMAS A. HOUSTON: Geology; South McLean, Vir- ginia; Canterbury Club; Circle K; Pi Kappa Alpha. Second Row: ELLEN JANE HYDER: Spanish; Florence, Alabama; Chi Omega; Sigma Delta Pi; Sociology Club. DAVID WOOD JAMES: Business Administration and Economics; Chattanooga; AUSA; Blue Key, president; Circle K International, Lt. Gov., Ky.-Tenn. District; Cir- cle K, president; Distinguished Military Student; Echo, business manager; IFC, president and secretary- treasurer; Junior Class, vice-president; Pi Gamma Mu; SAM; Sigma Chi, president, vice-president, rush chairman. Third Row: ALTON DOUGLAS JOHNSON: Physics; Hixson, Ten- nessee; Alpha Theta Delta; American Institute of Physics; Engineers Club, secretary; Sigma Pi Sigma, president. LILLIAN PEARL JOLLEY: English; Cartersville, Geor- gia; Alpha Lambda Delta, president; Chi Omega, vice- president; Dorm Council; Honor Council, secretary; Le Cercle Francais, secretary; Methodist Student Union, vice- president; Mortar Board, editor; Tassels. Fourth Row: THOMAS L. JONES: Health and Physical Education; Acworth, Georgia. MARY LOU COLLINS JORDON: Biology; Chatta- nooga; BSU; Girls Chorus; Modern Dance Club; Phi Mu, treasurer. Fifth Row: ROSS WILLIAM JORDON: Education; Rock Hill, South Carolina. ANTONIOS YOUSEF Physics; Bizzak, Syria. KARRAZ: Engineering and First Row: JANE KELLY: Business Administration; Chattanooga. WILLIAM F. KELSAY: Engineering and Physics; Chat- tanooga; American Institute of Industrial Engineers, presi- dent; American Institute of Physics; Engineers Club; Out- standing Industrial Engineering Student Award ' 63; Pi Kappa Alpha, pledge master, house manager, scholarship chairman, treasurer, project chairman, publicity chairman; Pi Kappa Alpha Scholarship Award ' 63. Second Row: BILL A. KERLEY: Industrial Engineering; Chattanooga; Engineers Club. MARTHA ANN KILGORE: Health and Physical Edu- cation; Chattanooga; Alpha Delta Pi, vice-president; BSU; Echo: Election Committee; Kappa Chi Epsilon, secretary; Military Sponsor; Mortar Board; Phi Eta Tau; WAA. Third Row: GARY K. KIMSEY: Business Administration; Cleveland, Tennessee; AUSA. STARR THATCHER KLEIN: Social Work; Signal Mountain , Tennessee; Canterbury Club; Chi Omega; So- ciology Club; Young Republicans. Fourth Row: SANFORD EUGENE LEAKE, JR.: Business Administra- tion; Rossville, Georgia; AUSA, president; University Band; Concert Ensemble; Lambda Chi Alpha; Pershing Rifles, secretary-treasurer; SAM; Sports Car Club; Scab- bard and Blade. CHARLINE MILLER LING: Secondary Education; Chattanooga. Fifth Row: ELIZABETH ANN LIST: Elementary Education; Chat- tanooga; Home Economics Club; SNEA; Westminster Fel- lowship. CARL ROWDEN LLEWELLYN: Economics and Busi- ness Administration; Chattanooga; Lambda Chi Alpha; SAM. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: EDWARD ALLEN LOVE: Chattanooga. Business Administration; SAMUEL HOLCOMB LOVE: Business Administration; Ringgold, Georgia; Engineers Club; SAM. Second Row: PAT McCRACKEN: Social Work; Cleveland, Tennessee; BSU; Creative Writing Club; Girls Chorus, Independents. MARSHA A. MANN: Psychology; Rome, Georgia; Alpha Delta Pi, president, social chairman; Alpha Kappa; Dorm Council; Dorm Council, treasurer; Methodist Student Union; Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl; Tassels; WAA. Third Row: SARAH ANN MAPLES: Elementary Education; Dalton, Georgia. SANDRA JOY MARTIN: English; Chattanooga; Phi Mu, membership chairman, pledge trainer, social chairman, Best Pledge Award; University Choir; Westminster Fellow- ship. Fourth Row: GLADYS DIANA MEACHAM: Home Economics; Chat- tanooga; Alpha Delta Pi, corresponding secretary; Home Economics Club; Methodist Student Union. EMILY MONTEZ MILLER: Art; Chattanooga; Art Club; Canterbury Club; French Choir; University Players; Creative Writing; Club. Fifth Row: MARVIN V. MILLER: Business Administration; Chatta- nooga; BSU; Kappa Sigma; SAM. NORMAN R. MILLER: Business Administration; Chat- tanooga; SAM; Westminster Fellowship. First Row: LINDA MARGARET MOORE: Junior High Education; Jasper, Tennessee; Dorm Council; Kappa Chi Epsilon; Methodist Student Union; Phi Mu; SNEA. OLEN DELANO MULLIS: Industrial Engineering; Chat- tanooga; Engineers Club. Second Row: JAMES M. NANCE: Chemistry; Chattanooga; AIP; En- gineers Club; Gamma Sigma Epsilon. DOUGLAS RICHARD NEWBERRY: Accounting; Cleve- land, Tennessee; Pershing Rifles. Third Row: JAMES AARON NEWTON: Mathematics; Chattanooga; Engineers Club, secretary; Sigma Chi; Veteran ' s Club. ELM A ELIZABETH O ' NEAL: Elementary Education; Chattanooga; Girls Chorus; Kappa Chi Epsilon, vice-presi- dent; Le Cercle Francais; Pi Beta Phi, corresponding secre- tary; SNEA; University Choir; University Scholars. Fourth Row: BOBBY MORRIS OVERTON: Health and Physical Education; Childersburg, Alabama; Methodist Student Union; Football. LINDA JANICE OWNBY: Classics; Cleveland, Tennes- see; Alpha Lambda Delta; Koinonia Club; SNEA. Fifth Row: EDITH MYRA PACE: Elementary Education; Rossville, Georgia. JANET BLISS PARKS: Health and Physical Education; Chattanooga; Dorothy H. Woodworth Award to Most Outstanding Junior; Echo; Freshman Class, secretary; Honor Council; Junior Class secretary; Mocettes; Pan- hellenic Council, president; Phi Eta Tau, vice-president; Pi Beta Phi, president, Best Pledge; Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl; Senior Class, treasurer; Sophomore Class, secretary; Student Center Committee; Student Council; Tassels; WAA, treasurer; Wittiest ; Most Athletic. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: :, JACK EDWARD PAULEY: Health and Physical Educa- tion; Titusville, Florida; Kappa Sigma. CALVIN PATTON PAYNE: Political Science; Chatta- nooga; AUSA; Blue Key; Circle K; Senior Class, vice- president. Second Row: DON THOMAS PERKINSON: Alpha Theta Delta; AIP, vice-president; Engineers Club; Moccasin; Pi Eta Sigma; Sigma Pi Sigma, treasurer; University Scholars. SANDRA W. PETERS: English; Chattanooga; Sigma Delta Pi; SNEA. Third Row: L. BERT PHILLIPS: Secondary Education; Chattanooga; SNEA. JOHN WESLEY PLATTEN: Art; Chattanooga; Art Club; Le Cercle Francais; Pi Kappa Alpha. Fourth Row: ROBERT OWEN RAULSTON: Combined Sciences; Trenton, Georgia; AIP; AUSA; Beta Beta Beta; Blue Key, vice-president; Distinguished Military Student; Elec- tion Committee, chairman; Gamma Sigma Epsilon; IFC; Lambda Chi Alpha, president; Methodist Student Union, council; Phi Eta Sigma, vice-president; ROTC Battalion Commander; Scabbard and Blade; Student Religious Council; University Players. J. CHESTER RESNICK: Psychology; Chattanooga. Fifth Row: ROBERT WILLIS RODRIC, JR.: Chemistry; Chatta- nooga; BSU; Gamma Sigma Epsilon; Sigma Chi. MARVIN IRA RUDOLPH: Accounting; Chattanooga; Alpha Epsilon Pi, secretary-treasurer; Hillel Council; NAA Accounting Manuscript Award; SAM, tour chairman. First Row: ALBERTA K. RUTLEDGE: Mathematics; Chattanooga; Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Theta Delta; Girls Chorus; Independents; Mocettes; WAA. BEATRICE MARIE RUTLEDGE: Elementary Educa- tion and Speech and Hearing; Chattanooga; Girls Chorus, president; Honors Day Committee; Kappa Chi Epsilon, president; WAA. Second Row: ROBIN EARLE RUTLEDGE: Home Economics; Chat- tanooga; Alpha Delta Pi; Girls Chorus; Home Economics Club; Kappa Chi Epsilon; SNEA. PRISCILLA ANN SAMPLE: Elementary Education; Chattanooga; SNEA. Third Row: EDNA JAY SATERFIELD: Elementary Education; Chattanooga; Alpha Delta Pi; SNEA. u JOHN WERNER SCHAERER: Biology; Chattanooga; Beta Beta Beta, president; Circle K; Honor Council; Kappa Sigma. Fourth Row: WILLIAM DAVID SCOTT: Spanish; Chattanooga; Sigma Delta Pi, president. GERALD LAWRENCE SEAR: Business Administration; Chattanooga; Alpha Epsilon Pi; Circle K; Hillel Council; SAM. Fifth Row: HOWARD WILLIAM SEITZ, JR.: Chemistry; Chatta- nooga. RAYMOND GORDON SHIPLEY: Engineering and Physics; Rossville, Georgia; AIP; Engineers Club; Sigma Pi Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: JULIA JOYCE SLAGLE: English; Chattanooga; Echo; Girls Chorus; Le Cercle Francais; Phi Mu; Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl Court; ROTC Sponsor; University Scholars. X JAMES WILLIAM SPENCER: Business Administration; 1 Chattanooga; Kappa Sigma. Second Row: EDWARD A. STEC: Health and Physical Education; Phoenixville, Pennsylvania; C Club; Modern Dance Club; Newman Club; Varsity Football; Varsity Wrestling. ANDREW DOUGLAS STYLES: Health and Physical Education; Hanceville, Alabama; Football. Third Row: MARTHA CLARISE SWINGLE: Elementary Education; Hixson, Tennessee; SNEA. MARY NELL POSTON TANNER: Home Economics; Chattanooga; Home Economics Club; SNEA; Tassels. Fourth Row: DAVID TEPPER: Combined Science; Chattanooga; Al- pha Epsilon Pi, president, treasurer; Election Committee; Gamma Sigma Epsilon; Hillel Council, president, pro- gram chairman; IFC; Student Religious Council, presi- dent; Creative Writing Club. MARGARET I. TRUE: History; Chattanooga; Echo; Methodist Student Union; Moccasin; Pi Beta Phi, exec- utive council, treasurer; Sigma Chi Sweetheart Court; SNEA; University Players; WAA; Young Republicans. Fifth Row: DONALD COTTER TURNER: Business Administration; Chattanooga; SAM. CHARLES R. UMBARGER: Business Administration; Chattanooga; Circle K, president; Honor Council; IFC; Kappa Sigma; SAM. First Row: JON RAYMOND VISSER: Engineering and Physics; Chattanooga; AIP; Engineering Club; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Pi Sigma. CARL CRESON WAGGONER: Physics; Chattanooga; AIP; DMS. Second Row: JOAN MARIE WALKER: Elementary Education; Har- rison, Tennessee; BSU; SNEA. PATRICIA SUE WARE: Home Economics; Chattanooga; Girls Chorus; Home Economics Club; Kappa Delta; Meth- odist Student Union. Third Row: JUDITH ANITA WEIDNER: Music Education; High Point, Georgia; Alpha Delta Pi; BSU; University Choir; Girls Chorus. MARILYN WOHLLEBER: Elementary Education; Sig- nal Mountain, Tennessee; Girls Chorus; Phi Mu, pledge trainer; Westminster Fellowship. Fourth Row: MARY PAULA WOMACK: Psychology; Chattanooga; Pi Beta Phi. CORNELIA MCAULAY WOOD: Art Education; Galax, Virginia; Art Club; Chi Omega; SNEA. Fifth Rov : MARGARET ELEANOR WOOD: English; Chattanooga; Alpha Delta Pi, recording secretary; BSU, president; Le Cercle Francais; Mortar Board, projects chairman; Senior Class, secretary; SNEA; Student Religious Council. . CHARLES GAMMONS WRIGHT: Psychology; Chatta- f nooga; AUSA; Kappa Sigma; Methodist Student Union, president; Student Religious Council; Wrestling Team. SENIOR CLASS SENIOR CLASS First Row: MILDRED M. YOUNGBLOOD: Music; Chickamauga, Georgia. HENRY FRANZ ZIEGLER, III: Industrial Engineering; Chattanooga; AUSA Engineers Club; Lambda Chi Alpha, pledge trainer; ROTC, captain; Scabbard and Blade; Senior Class, president; Student Center Committee; Stu- dent Council. £ I v IK I 1! ; . I v S JF tt « w L ifiv rf HONORS AND FEATURES Left to right, seated: Pat Payne, David James, Larry Baker, Jim Eldridge, Bob Raulston. Standing: Pat Bivens, Joel Cunningham, Charlie Umbarger, Franz Zeigler. r nvi T BLUE KEY One of the highest honors that can come to a male student is being tapped into Blue Key. Blue Key is a national honor fraternity with over one hundred chapters across the nation, and its purposes are to stimulate intellectual attainment, to study student problems so that student life will be enriched, and to see that our institution ' s progress and best interests are stimulated and promoted. The criteria for membership are character above reproach, excellence in scholarship, and leadership in college activities. Membership consists mainly of senior men, but particularly outstanding junior men may be tapped at the beginning of their junior year. Among its yearly projects, Blue Key this spring sponsored a forum inviting student discussion on all points of the newly ratified student council constitution; the annual Blue Key Follies, however, was not held. In addition to publishing and distributing the wrestling and basketball schedule, the fra- ternity has innovated a policy of co-ordinating with Mortar Board on solutions to problems affecting the university as a whole. Seated: Donna Brock Eberhart, Lillian Jolley, Margaret Wood, Helen Ruth Akers. Standing: Martha Kilgore, Cathy Elton, Gail Gladney, Martha Clemmer, President, Martha Galbraith. Mortar Board Section Meeting — Left to right: Martha Galbraith, Mrs. Ben Hale Golden, Mrs. Irvine Grote, Miss Lee Weigel, Vanderbilt. MORTAR BOARD To provide for cooperation between societies, to promote college loyalty, to advance the spirit of service and fellowship among university women, to maintain a high standard of scholarship, to recognize and encourage leadership, and to stimulate and develop a finer type of college woman. These are the purposes of Mortar Board as stated in the national constitution. The University of Chattanooga chapter of Mortar Board is the Quadrangle Chapter and is the highest honorary organization for which a woman student can be tapped. Mortar Board endeavors to interpret its purposes through service projects aimed at increasing college loyalty and encour- aging high scholarship. Fall projects included the annual calendar sale, a highly successful faculty-student basketball game, the Homecoming chrysanthemum corsage sale, and All- Sing, the annual campus group singing competition. After hosting chapters from four other colleges for a weekend Section Meeting, Mortar Board honored all women students named to the Dean ' s list for the preceding semester, and the annual Mortar Board scholarship was awarded to a deserving junior woman student in the spring. Helen Ruth Akers Jack Beck Catherine Elton Martha Galbraith Gail Gladney Richard Hearn 0% Marjorie Hubbard Lillian Jolley Alton Johnson Elma O ' Neal Jan Ownby Don Perkinson Bob Raulston Gordon Shipley Julia Slagle ALPHA SOCIETY The highest academic distinction granted for general excellence in scholarship is election to ALPHA, the scholastic honor society of the Uni- versity of Chattanooga. Members of the senior class who, at the close of the first semester of their senior year, have an average for their entire course of 2.25 or better are regarded as eligible for election. Election is by vote of the faculty mem- bers of Alpha and indicates that the student has shown the capacity to develop body, mind, and spirit. From the graduating class of 1964 twenty-two members were elected. Dr. John Freeman, Dr. Walter Ruby, and Mr. Stanley Williams were elected from the faculty. Miss Eleanor McGilliard serves as president of the society and Mrs. Mary Hale, as secretary-treasurer. NOT PICTURED Candace Hachat Benn Haynes Abe Levy Steve Russell Lillian Tapp Jon Visser Margaret Wood HELEN RUTH AKERS Phi Mu, President Panhellenic Council, 1962-63 President Mortar Board University Scholars LARRY BAKER Student Body President Blue Key Lambda Chi Alpha, vice-president MARTHA CLEMMER Mortar Board, President Pi Beta Phi, vice-president Beta Beta Beta University Scholars WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES MARGARET ANN CRAVEN Elections Committee, Secretary Chi Omega Beta Beta Beta CATHY ELTON The MOCCASIN, Editor Chi Omega, President Mortar Board University Scholars MARTHA GALBRAITH The ECHO, Editor Chi Omega Mortar Board University Scholars CONNIE DAY Women ' s Athletic Association Pi Beta Phi GAIL GLADNEY Mortar Board Pi Beta Phi Beta Beta Beta PAUL GREENBERG Elections Committee, Chairman Blue Key Alpha Epsilon Pi BENN HAYNES The ECHO, Feature Editor Lambda Chi Alpha Beta Beta Beta DAVID JAMES Blue Key, President Sigma Chi Circle K LILLIAN JOLLEY Honor Council, Secretary Chi Omega, Vice-president Mortar Board MARTHA KILGORE Alpha Delta Pi, Vice-president Mortar Board The ECHO ABE LEVY The ECHO, 1962-63 Editor Blue Key Beta Beta Beta MARSHA MANN Alpha Delta Pi, President Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl Women ' s Dormitory Council JANET PARKS Pi Beta Phi, President Panhellenic Council, President Senior Class Treasurer PAT PAYNE Senior Class Vice-president Blue Key Kappa Sigma DON PERKINSON Sigma Pi Sigma The MOCCASIN, Photographer Engineers Club University Scholars BOB RAULSTON Lambda Chi Alpha, President UC Battle Group, Cadet Commander Blue Key GORDON SHIPLEY UC Chapter of AIP, President Phi Eta Sigma Engineers Club JULIA SLAGLE Phi Mu Le Cercle Francais University Scholars MARGARET WOOD Baptist Student Union, President Alpha Delta Pi Mortar Board University Scholars DAVID TEPPER Alpha Epsilon Pi, President Student Religious Council, Chairman Inter-Fraternity Council CHARLES WRIGHT, JR. Methodist Student Movement, President Kappa Sigma Varsity Wrestling Team CHARLIE UMBARGER Circle K Kappa Sigma Honor Council FRANZ ZIEGLER Senior Class President Inter-Fraternity Council, President Lambda Chi Alpha ' oflp x 11 m m Seated: Judy Clyde, secretary; Genie Brown; Patricia Bonin; Lesta Lamb. Standing: Miss Natalie Schlack, advisor; Sue Mcintosh, vice-president; Sally Higdon, president: Eleanor DeLong, treas- urer; Martha Cartwright; Anne Wells; Helen Ruth Akers; Fontaine Moore. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA Alpha Lambda Delta is a national honorary scholastic fra- ternity for freshmen women which strives to promote a high standard of learning and to encourage superior scholastic at- tainment. A scholastic average of 2.5 is the minimum grade requirement for membership. Annual awards are given by Alpha Lambda Delta to outstanding senior women who have earned membership in their freshman year. These include the annual award which is presented to the graduating senior who has maintained the highest cumulative grade point average. PHI ETA SIGMA Phi Eta Sigma is a national honorary fraternity honoring freshman men who earn a 2.5 academic average or better at the end of their first semester at the University or an accumulative 2.5 average at the end of their first year. The purpose of the organization is to maintain and to improve the scholastic level on campus by challenging the freshmen to higher standards of scholarship. Bob Fanning serves as president of the group, and Dr. John Freeman is the faculty advisor. Seated: Bob Fanning, Jim Eldridge, Dr. John Freeman, faculty advisor; Hans Bingham. Standing: Joel Cunningham, Pat Bivens, Mike Smith, Ken Bowlin. R A V E N S Pat Payne, Franz Zeigler, David James, Larry Baker, Paul Green- berg, Charles Thornbury, Bob Raulston. m. ! ' ■' ; Jhe f v (occadin (7J eautieS 64 Auda p a j n ewman fe KC • tfffi 4 ?. • sS. ■■■■II 1 7 ■1 occaAin 1964 sTocin rruauelet (I5eautu Hanaro, J rewitt d5eautu Bonnie iVlcoLJcinlei mJ asLs. iU t 4 ' k ' R ; • . • , ' «J5i |g i 4| • • ' ■(J5eciutu (J5onnie AiiSlL (ISeauti 9 Uichl J eliL y MISS UC JANET PARKS Janet ' s smiling face and good sense of humor are well-known on our campus. An active participant in campus life, she has served as president of Pi Beta Phi, and of Panhellenic Council. She was elected a class officer for three years, and in her junior year was chosen outstanding junior woman. She typifies the UC co-ed in the well-rounded scope of her interests. DAVID JAMES BACHELOR OF UGLINESS David is a prominent figure in many campus activities. He has served as presi- dent of Sigma Chi Fraternity and Circle K and was vice-president of his junior class. He serves this year as president of Blue Key and is a Distinguished Military Student. His interest in student affairs and willingness to serve make him a well-liked and respected figure on the UC campus. SENIOR U P E R L A T V E S MOST AMBIGUOUS Martha Galbraith and Bob Raulston MOST AMBITIOUS Margaret Wood and David James MOST LACKADAISICAL Dec Dee Meacham and Carl Llewellyn MOST EFFERVESCENT Marsha Mann and Bill Fike MOST LOQUACIOUS Cathy Elton and Muecke Barker MOST GREGARIOUS Carolyn Davis and Pat Payne — ■— „. ,,, .„.J[ J f ■.■„••:■•..■::-.•■;•■,.■- f m $• s ■... ORGANIZATIONS  - STUDENT COUNCIL O S) tef?i LARRY BAKER Student Body President JOEL CUNNINGHAM Student Body President TRUDY BENDER Secretary-Treasurer The new precinct system, which went into effect last October, resulted in an overhauling of the Student Council. Members are elected from the sixteen precincts, each of which is com- posed of approximately eighty people. Besides one repre- sentative from each precinct, other members of the Student Council are the student body president, the secretary-treasurer, and the elections committee chairman. Perhaps the most important item of this year ' s accomplish- ments was the formation of three standing committees: the procedures committee, which controls parliamentary procedure and the appointments of various temporary committee mem- bers; the entertainment committee, which handles social events, concerts, lectures, etc.; and the finance committee, which set up the Student Council budget and reviews and investigates financial requests before presenting them in a Student Council meeting. Several other notable activities of the Student Council were the establishment of a walking blood bank, which enabled interested students to have their own blood typed and to donate fresh blood for open-heart surgery; the Four Freshmen concert held in the spring; sponsorship of the drama depart- ment ' s Romeo and Juliet; the traditional Old South Ball; and contributions toward the establishment of the UC march- ing band and the production of the Modern Dance Concert. Because of the December resignation of Larry Baker, stu- dent body president and thereby president of the Student Council, Council member Joel Cunningham was elected by fellow members to complete that term of office. The Council expresses its gratitude to its presidents Baker and Cunningham, secretary-treasurer Trudy Bender, and fac- ulty advisor Dr. Robert Fenix for contributing so greatly to the success of the 1963-64 Student Council. 84 Seated: Beth Gentry, Trudy Bender, Larry Baker, Paul Green- burg, Carol Sanders. Standing, First Row: Anne Wells, Bobbie Quinn, Sparky Sparks, Delphine Ainsworth, Betsy Clemmer, Trish Terry, Carolyn Mitchell. Second Row: David Koplan, Artie Jones, Louise Hampton, Joel Cunningham, Sandra Espy, Hans Bingham ' Sue Mcintosh. HONOR COUNCIL The Honor Council, whose members are nominated by the student body and elected by the faculty, holds as its responsibility the orientation of all new students in the regu- lations of the Honor System and the promotion of the effec- tiveness of the Honor System among students. Fostering a sense of academic honesty in all phases of campus activity, council procedure includes trying cases brought before it which concern violations of the honor code and designating penalties imposed on those found guilty. First Row: Eleanor DeLong, Janet Parks. Second Row: Lillian Jolley, Helen Ruth Akers, Louise Hampton. Third Row: Pat Bivens, Rick Weintraub. Fourth Row: George Elder, David Koplan, Joel Cunningham. Not Pictured: Chairman Jim Eldridge, Martha Galbraith, Trudy Bender, Larry Baker. 85 First Row: Judy Painter, Louise Hampton, Ann Burgncr, Myra Phillips. Second Row: David James, Charlie Chase, Terry Blunt, Paul Greenberg, Henry Green. ELECTIONS COMMITTEE PAUL GREENBERG Chairman The Elections Committee is composed of a representative of each fraternity and sorority and the Independent group on campus. The Committee governs campus elections by setting up rules, working the polls, and seeing that no infractions of campaign rules occur. The chairman of the committee is Paul Greenberg, and its secretary is Myra Phillips. ffiTlti i-ifif! ' ■■■■4 m m 2 £► • , j JBP J X DAVID GLENN Assistant Editor ORGANIZATIONS STAFF — First Row: Mary Lou Evans, Helen Ruth Akers, Pam Goodlet, Betsy Buice, Ann Woodard. Second Row: David Brammer, Sally Higdon. FEATURES STAFF— Karol Killian, Barbara Fenix, Rosemary Mindock. SPORTS STAFF — First Row: Terry Blunt, Lassie Colburn. Second Row: Mike Byington, Mary Fenix, Jerry Garner. Not Pictured: John Edmondson. 88 1964 MOCCASIN MOST HONORABLE AND WORTHY MOCCASIN ADVISOR— Rock ' Wilson. 1964 MOCCASIN STAFF Editor CATHY ELTON Assistant Editor DAVID GLENN Layout Editor BARBARA FENIX Class Editor KAY GRUBBS Greek Editor ANN LACKEY Art Editor CHARLOTTE GAITHER Sports Editor TERRY BLUNT Faculty Editor KAROL KILLIAN Military Editor RIVERS SHAW Organizations Editor MARY LOU EVANS Photographers JAMES BARCLAY, BILL DICKER!, JOHN HUGHES, KEN MURRAY, DON PERKINSON GREEK STAFF— Eleanor Gaither, Betsy Woo- ten, Ann Lackey, Susan Quinton. n ft $ .J l J CLASSES SECTION — First Row: Jan Milner, Nancy Griffin, Jackie Norton. Second Row: Tony Koeninger, Kay Grubbs, Priscilla, Maderis, Sandra Raines, Martha Cartwright, Jo Lynn Sims, Candy Bevan. PHOTOGRAPHERS Don Perkinson, Ken Murray PHOTOGRAPHERS John Hughes, James Barclay 89 5tye Bmtttrmtg lEctjn MARTHA GALBRAITH Editor PAT BIVENS MARILYN WOOD RICK WEINTRAUB Associate Editors MARY ALICE HANDELMAN Features JOY CARSCADDON Fine Arts Editor HELEN RUTH AKERS News Editor CHARLES CHASE Sports DIAN BARKOW DONN SHANDS Secretary Cartoonist MARTHA GALBRAITH Editor The University Echo of 1963-64 has sought to maintain the standards set in previous years and, at the same time, to broaden its coverage of campus life. Under the leadership of Editor Martha Galbraith, ably assisted by three associate editors, Pat Bivens, Rick Weintraub, and Marilyn Wood, the Echo has taken an active interest in all areas of student activity, with the goals of conscientiously reporting and interpreting events as they occurred and encouraging a progressive spirit within student affairs. The Echo has presented such features as interviews and commentaries from the faculty and administration, columns on community events, book reviews and election platforms. Holding membership in the Associated Collegiate Press and the Intercollegiate Press, the Echo has concerned itself with maintaining its standards in relation to collegiate newspapers of the nation. In all its coverage, the Echo, under the faculty guidance of Professor A. Lawrence Fincher, has striven to present news and evaluations of the University community, with accuracy and objectivity. Emphasis has been placed on the dual role of the student newspaper as a record of events and as a barometer of the general atmosphere on campus. TEACHER GALBRAITH POINTS OUT TRICKS OF THE TRADE — Seated: Martha Galbraith, Marcie Rodman, Carol Ann Schmitt, Ann Hetzler. Standing: Merrell Fort, Susie Sellers. OH, TO WORK WITH SUCH!— Diane Grob. reporter; Gail McClure, typist; Janice Rothe. reporter; Marge Breman. typist: Dona Gray, reporter; Gaile Rees, reporter. Carolyn Coop; Harriet Jones; Marilyn Wood, copy and proof editor, assistant editor; Martha Christison; Marcia Abernathy; Genie Brown: Nancy Odum. Ada Beard: Mary Alice Handelman. features editor: Pat Bivens assistant editor; Doug MacGaw. WHERE THERE ARE HEADS, THERE IS ADVICE (ALTHOUGH WE RARELY USE IT).— Ann Wood- ard; Barbara White; Dian Barkow, secretary; Helen Ruth Akers, news editor; Rick Weintraub, assistant editor; Martha Galbraith, editor: Sue Mcintosh. INTRAMURAL REGULATIONS COMMITTEE The Intramural Regulations Committee is composed of one representative from each fraternity. The purpose of the com- mittee is to regulate intramural sports. The committee is responsible also for supplying referees for all intramural sports events. Coach Andy Nardo sponsors the group. First Row: Martha Galbraith, Janet Parks, Franz Ziegler. Second Row: David James, Mrs. Mary Rucker, Charles Umbarger. Third Row: Dr. Robert Fenix, Mrs. Elizabeth Hampton, Dean Reuben Holland. Hi 1uAP jW RULES AND REGULATIONS COMMITTEE The Rules and Regulations Committee is appointed by the President of the University and includes as members five students and seven faculty and staff personnel. The work of the Committee in part is to determine innocence or guilt and levy punishment for infractions of University regulations and general rules of good conduct. The Committee also hears appeals from students who have been dismissed for failure to maintain prescribed academic standards. In matters relating to student government activities the Committee sometimes sits as a court to handle cases referred to it by student com- mittees which feel that more objectivity in decisions concern- ing infractions of student governing rules can be attained through such a referral. The Committee meets only as called; no regularly scheduled meetings are held. First Row: Ronnie Hash, Henry Rookis, Bubba Labbous. Second Row: Rob Landham, Gary Hackworth, Mark Jacobs. STUDENT CENTER COMMITTEE The Student-Faculty-Alumni Center, constructed and dedi- cated in 1958, provides facilities for students, faculty and alumni to come together informally for relaxation as well as for small group gatherings. It houses the University bookstore, Alumni offices, Publicity office, Dean of Students office, and offices for student publications and student government. Its snack bar and rec room are popular gathering places for both day and evening students. The spacious lounge, with its carefully selected decor and stained glass windows, attracts the eyes of visitors and evokes an attitude of dignified pride among the students who enjoy its captivating accommodations. Seated: Carolyn Wiley, Mrs. Washburn, Martha Cartwright. Standing: Joel Cunningham, Pat Bivens, Dean Holland, Dean Eberle, Dr. Fischer, Leon Ford, Hans Bingham. 9 HONORS DAY COMMITTEE In early May of each year the University observes Honors Day at which time honors and awards are presented to out- standing students by campus and local organizations, new members are tapped by honorary societies, and new student body officers are announced. The committee coordinates all activities concerning the program. Dr. Edwin S. Lindsey serves as chairman of the commit- tee; and students selected to assist him are Mike Byington, Barbara Fenix, Paul Greenberg, Artie Jones, Bea Rutledge, and Nancy Poole. PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE Members of the faculty and the administration and the editors of both school publications compose the Publications Committee which has as its general function overseeing each publication and as its standing purpose the encouragement of quality excellence for all contributions to the Moccasin and the Echo. Members this year include Dr. Enid Bryan, Cathy Elton, Martha Galbraith, Mr. George Connor, Mr. R. L. Wilson, Mr. Earl Hale, Mr. J. E. Spears, Mr. A. E. Herron, Mr. Michael Richards, and Mr. Lawrence Fincher. Dr. LeRoy Martin and Dean August Eberle are ex officio members. Mr. George Connor is chairman. Dr. Edwin Lindsey, Nancy Poole, Artie Jones. Seated: Martha Galbraith, Dr. Enid Bryan, Cathy El- ton. Standing: Mr. George Connor, Mr. J. E. Spears, Mr. A. E. Herron, Mr. Law- rence Fincher, Mr. R. L. Wilson, Mr. Earl Hale. STUDENT RELIGIOUS COUNCIL The Student Religious Council is composed of presidents and special representatives of all religious organizations on campus. It functions to co-ordinate religious activities, pro- mote joint projects such as All-Campus Retreats, and provide opportunities for inter-faith fellowship. Council members are Rev. James M. Bowling, Mr. George Connor, Bill Eiselstein, Artie Jones, Melinda L ' Heureux, Rev. Christopher Morley, Jr., Rev. J. M. Powell, Ed Streiter, Randy Weidman, Mr. Leslie Werner, Margaret Wood, Charles Wright, and Fer- man Young. Mr. Kim Rogers, chairman of the departments of philosophy and religion, serves as advisor for the group. First Row: Margaret Wood, Artie Jones, Randy Weidman. Second Row: Mr. Kim Rogers, faculty advisor; Mr. George Connor; Mr. Leslie Werner; Bill Yarborough; Rev. Bedford Transou. WESTMINSTER FELLOWSHIP The Presbyterian Church, through its Westminster Student Fellowship ,endeavors to help students to know Christ, to maintain Christian standards of conduct and to face attitudes which are hostile to the Christian faith. It strives to keep students in normal, vital contact with the church while they are away from home. It emphasizes worship, religious instruc- tion, leadership training, Christian service, and Christian fel- lowship. The student leaders for this year ' s Fellowship are Artie Jones, president; Pat Bivens and Mary Gregg, vice- presidents; Diana Campbell, secretary; and Donna Brock, treasurer. The advisor for the group is Ferman L. (Rocky) Young. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION The Baptist Student Union provides an opportunity for students to develop spiritually as well as an atmosphere of Christian fellowship. On campus the B.S.U. has a supper meeting once a month and two weekly meetings, including a service in Danforth Chapel. This year the B.S.U. had Home- coming decorations for the first time and participated in All-Sing. Off-campus activities included a Pre-School Retreat at Dogwood Lodge on Lake Chickamauga, a state conven- tion, an International Retreat at Gatlinburg, and a Spring Retreat. The most outstanding program of the B.S.U. is the Summer Missions program through which students serve during the summer. Pat McCracken will work in Hawaii and Jerry Jane Parker in Colorado this summer. Reverend Leslie D. Werner serves as Student Director, Mrs. Horace McRae as faculty advisor, and Reverend Billy Wallace as pastor advisor. Margaret Wood is president; Bill Johnson, vice-president; and Jane Alford, secretary. Seated: Mary Gregg, Artie Jones, Diana Campbell, Pat Bivens. Standing: Mr. Rocky Young, advisor; Jack Morris, Diana Druce. Temple Smartt, Diane Zelinsky, Eleanor Gaither, Nelda Dunnj George Thompson, Phil Glazner. Seated: Bonnie Walker, Martha Carter, Jerry Jane Parker, Lor- raine Holder, Myra Gravitt, Judy Sketoe, Gail McClure, Sharilyn Deerman, Linda Scoggins, Bobbie Jean Gilbreath. Second Row: Margaret Wood, Sally Higdon, Carolin Stripland, Martha Cart- wright, Pat McCracken, Jean Ray, Eleanor DeLong, Katherine Hatfield, Elaine Allison, Renee Fowler, Les Werner. Third Row: Bill Johnson, Malcolm Keown, Jerry Parker, Billy Wallace, David Martin, Bob Gooberlet. v - ' Seated: Mary Lou Evans, Pat Bender, Gaile Rees, Pam Martin, Jan Lynn Brown, Carole Rawls, Polly Ann Martin, Harriet Bandy. Standing: Ann Parks, Harriet Jones, Maxine Sims, Dee Dee Meacham, Bruce Wood, Charles Wright, Jack Quillen, Jay S enter, Jim Ketchersid, Pat Slatery, Bill Yarborough, Rev. Bedford Transou, Bonnie Justin, Marcie Rodman. METHODIST STUDENT MOVEMENT Through the Methodist Student Movement, students seek a more adequate understanding of life in terms of the categories of Christian faith. Any student may participate in the movement. Regular meetings are held at the Center, which is open all day each day. These meetings include weekly celebrations of Holy Communion, weekly luncheons and discussion groups, semi-weekly suppers, and special Sunday evening meetings. Several retreats are sponsored each year. Charles Wright serves as president, and the Rev. Bedford Transou is the center director. Henry Green, Diane Pressman, Edwin Streiter. HILLEL COUNCIL The Hillel Council is an organization for Jewish students. The group has as its purpose the nourish- ment of a strong personal concept of Judaism and the provision of opportunities for fellowship and discussion. Rabbi Abraham Feinstein sponsors the organiza- tion, and Edwin Streiter leads the group as president with Diane Pressman as secretary, and Henry Green as program chairman. CANTERBURY CLUB The Canterbury Club is the religious organization for Episcopal students at UC. The club meets every other week on Thursday night in Christ Episcopal Church. Every meeting is a service: evening prayer, beginning at 5:30, followed by supper and a program. Films on current topics, discussions, and interesting speakers top the bill at each program. The Rev. Christopher Morely, Jr., rector of Christ Church, is the sponsor, and Mr. George Connor is the faculty advisor. Officers for this year are: Bill Eisenstein, president; Ann Lackey, vice-president; Cornelia Hines, secretary-treasurer; and Calvin Hale, program chairman. First Row: Ann Lackey, Betsy Hill, Judy Fulton, Cornelia Hines, Sue Thompson, Amelia Lang. Second Row: Dian Barkow, Pat Parkin, Betty Reed. Third Row: Martin Bean, Bill Eiselstein, Bill Grieve, David Glenn, Father Morley, Mr. George Connor, Cathy Elton, Diana Smith, Calvin Hale, Merrell Fort. NEWMAN CLUB The Newman Club offers more than a house and a weekly meeting. Its underlying purpose is to deepen the spiritual and temporal lives of its members through a balanced program of religious, intellectual, and social activities. Every Catholic student on the UC campus is a potential member of Newman. Each active member has realized the values he can receive and the necessity of his individual participation in Newman Club life. Although Newman at UC is small, it has the seed of vitality, and with growth its impact will be tremendous. Father James Bowling sponsors the group, and John Collison is president; Donald Lynskey, vice-president; Dick Mansfield, internal affairs vice-chairman; Martha Christison, external affairs vice-chair- man; John Gibson, secretary; Richard Lynskey, treasurer; and Mary Davenport, historian. First Row: Anita Haller, Beverly Bailey, Melinda L ' heureux, Geraldine Dittmar, Maureen Hunter, Martha Christison, Alice Pospisil, Diann Donner, Barbara Lorenz. Second Row: Don Lynskey, John Gibson, Warren Schmidt, Raleigh Cooper, Marcus Diprima, Tom Gladney. Third Row: Tom Pikciunas, John Collison, Lon- nie Bork, Luis Paulete, Wallace Gould, Father James Bowling. Seated: David James, Steve Russell, Charlie Umbarger, Bill Fike, Bill Eisestein. Standing: Buddy Hickey, Richard Auten, Gerald Sear, Don Burgner, Terry Blunt, Tom Kline, Barry Nottage, Pat Payne, Bob Lanza. Not Pictured: Muecke Barker. CIRCLE K Circle K is unique among college organizations. It is not a social fraternity, but an international service organization for college men on the campus. Similar to Kiwanis and other service clubs, Circle K sponsors the annual Circle K Carnival, in which most campus organizations participate, and is responsible for the University float for the Armed Forces Day Parade. In conducting these and other services for the school, Circle K is led by its president, Charlie Umbarger; vice-president, Bill Fike, and secretary- treasurer, Steve Russell. KAPPA CHI EPSILON Kappa Chi Epsilon is a service sorority which in- cludes in its purpose the improvement of the relation- ship among students and understanding between stu- dents and the public. It also sponsors projects which help to interest prospective students in the University. Among these is Dorm Weekend for freshmen girls. Members are selected from the sor orities and the Independent Student Organization on the basis of leadership, loyalty, service, and scholarship. Bea Rutledge serves as president, with Elma O ' Neal as vice-president, Carolyn Wiley as secretary, Trudy Bender as treasurer, and Nancy Hanks and Stella Peck as projects chairmen. Mrs. Jewel Snyder and Mrs. Mary Y. Hale serve as advisors for the group. First Row: Elma O ' Neal, Bea Rutledge, Martha Kilgore, Bonnie Justin. Second Row: Dianne Armstrong, Sue Thompson, Martha Christison. Third Row: Charlotte Bridge. Teena Scogins, Linda Johnson. Fourth Row: Joyce Olson, Trudy Bender. Fifth Row: Kay Rankin, Deane Macormac, Judy Hogue, Cathy Elton. Sixth Row: Eleanor DeLong, Dian Barkow, Linda Moore. Sue Mcintosh. Seventh Row: Pat Richmond, Carolyn Stripland. Eighth Row: Judy Stanley, Carolyn Wiley, Helen Ruth Akers, Stella Peck. Not Pictured: Kathy Dalby. Seated: Don Perkinson; Helen Ruth Akers; Alton Johnson; Ray Duncan. Standing: Mr. John Gray; Mr. Winston Massey, faculty advisor; Dr. Virginia Rohde; Mr. Charles Brown; Mr. Herschel Sellers. . THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS ALPHA THETA DELTA Alpha Theta Delta was organized on the UC campus in 1952. The purpose of the organization is to recognize superior work in mathematics and to promote interest among students in this field. To be eligible for membership, a student must have com- pleted two semesters of calculus and must have been a regularly enrolled student for two semesters. The members are selected by a committee of the mathe- matics staff of the University. Only students with general excellence in scholarship are accepted. The faculty advisor is Professor Winston Massey. Don Perkinson is president, Ray Duncan, vice-president, and Helen Ruth Akers, secretary-treasurer. The American Institute of Physics is a national departmental club. The purpose of this section is the advancement and diffusion of the science of physics and its application to human welfare. This organization is only in its third year on cam- pus. There are approximately 35 members; most of these are upperclassmen but all UC students are eligible. Mr. Fincher, the faculty advisor, says that the only requirement for membership is an interest in physics. To join the national organization a student must join in the fall, but one can join the local group at any time. This year ' s officers are Gordon Shipley, president; Don Perkinson, vice-president; and Jim Crooks, secre- tary and treasurer. Seated: Mr. Lawrence Fincher, faculty advisor. Standing: Don Perkinson, Pat Hilliard, Jack Beck, Don Glenn, Mike Smith, Grady Huckaby, Jack Armstrong, Howard Elson, Joe Sandlin, Richard Wilson, Melvin Jacobs, Mr. Henry Ransom, Bill Kelsay, Jim Crooks, Gordon Shipley, Carl Waggoner, Richard Lane, Joe Clem. 99 MOCETTES Mocettes is an organization of junior and senior women who have earned not less than 500 W.A.A. points. The purpose of the Mocettes is to supervise the annual swim meet, regulate intramurals, and create interest in the physical education program. Bert Rutledge, Jean Landers, Linda Leatherwood, Catherine Neely, Janet Parks. PHI ETA TAU Phi Eta Tau is a society for women majors and minors in health and physical education. The program of this organi- zation includes monthly meetings dealing with current prob- lems in physical education and philosophies of physical edu- cation, selection of equipment, and participation in athletic tournaments sponsored by other Phi Eta Tau groups on Tennessee college campuses. Each spring the UC group spon- sors a tennis tournament at the University ' s Manker Patten Tennis Center for the college women of Tennessee. Seated: Mignonne Weber, Donna Costello, Janet Parks, Ann Clark, Ann Burgner. Standing: Jean Landers, Charlotte Bridge, Catherine Neely, Linda Leatherwood, Sparky Sparks. Karen Stec, Mignonne Weber, Eve Lyn Bailey, Louise Hampton, Ann Burgner. MODERN DANCE CLUB The purpose of the Modern Dance Club is attainment of the ideals of Orchesis, its honorary organization. There are approximately fifty-five dancers in the club who are being trained for participation in the annual Spring Concert and performances at community functions as well as for area high schools. The Dance Club ' s officers are the same as those for Orchesis. ORCHESIS Orchesis, the modern dance honorary organization, is newly founded to promote the highest standards of dance on campus, to sponsor the Modern Dance Club, and to present the annual Spring Modern Dance Concert at the Trivoli. Membership in this organization is the highest honor for a dancer on the University campus. Its officers are Eve Lyn Bailey, president; Mignonne Weber, vice-president; Louise Hampton, secretary; Donna Costello, treasurer; and Ann Burgner, membership chairman. First Row: Mignonne Weber, Eve Lyn Bailey, Donna Costello, Ann Burgner. Second Row: Helen Caine, Anne Miller, Betty Swanson, Judi Norris. Third Row: Trish Terry, Peggy Anderson, Cecil Teague, Betsy Farioletti, Sue Kennedy, Elizabeth Roberts, Joan Huguelet, Michele Tipton, Linda Hubbard, Mary Virginia Terry. First Row: Janet Parks, Donna Costello, Beth Gentry, Marsha Mann, Carole Rawls, Jennie Heywood, Ann Baker, Bert Rutledge. Second Row: Linda Ricketts, Connie Day, Ann Clark, Katie Dalby, Bobbie Quinn, Diane Zelinsky, Linda Leatherwood, Catherine Neely, Jean Landers. W. A. A. The Women ' s Athletic Association was founded to promote sports and fellowship among college women. One hundred points earned by the participation in women ' s intramural sports are required for membership. In the fall WAA sponsors a coke party for freshmen women. A cup is given by the group to the organization winning the most events in the intramural spring program. C CLUB The C Club is an organization for men who have earned a letter in a varsity sport. The purposes of C Club are to regulate the wearing of University letters on the campus and to promote athletics. First Row: Larry Brooks, Doug Styles, Wayne Farmer, Ed Stec, Ron Eisaman. Second Row: Bob Hillis, Bill Harvison, Jim Tanara, Glen Davis, Steve Trotter. Third Row: George Henley, Jack Proc- tor, Larry Elmore, Jerry Harris. Fourth Row: Bert Caldwell, Tom Schaffer, Steve Kovan. SPORTS CAR CLUB The Sports Car Club is one of the newest clubs on campus, but it is growing rapidly, under the guid- ance of the officers: president, Dick Hutson; vice- president, Jim Spencer; and secretary-treasurer, Kay Kerr. The active membership has a close association with the regional Sports Car Club of America under its president and our sponsor, Mr. Michael R. Rich- ards. There has been great co-operation in our events, such as the Hare and Hound Rally, which serve to promote safe driving. Good driving habits are pro- moted by proper knowledge of sports cars combined with an interest in driving skills. First Row: Rick Dynesius, Dick Hutson, Wilson Hunt, Kay Kerr, Dave Grant. Second Row: Bill Reed, Tom McHugh, Tim Spencer, Carl Halbert, Richard Turner. UNIVERSITY CHOIR Under the direction of Miss Isa Mcllwraith, students from any department in the University may come together to sing music sometimes sacred, sometimes secular. All students who truly enjoy singing are always welcomed in the choir. One of the oldest traditions of the school is the beautiful and inspiring Christmas candle-light carol service, presented by the choir. Worthy of special mention is the fact that the choir is a pioneer for this entire section of the South in using the old English custom of the Service of Nine Lessons and Carols for Christmas. The choir also provides music for the morning religious services in the chapel, presents concerts, both on the campus and in the surrounding communities, and sings at the June Baccalaureate Service. Members: Sandra Baker, Wanda Barham, Jerry Cannon, Martha Carter, Sally Cunningham, Lynda DeFoor, Glenda Dickson, Mary Giuliano, Bene Hammel, Beverly Hixon, Henry Holt, Leslie Hub- barb, Jane Kelly, Elsye I.andham, Rob Landham, Henry Lewis, Pat Long, Barbara Lorenz, Pat McCracken, Roy McKenzie, Martin Muller, Mary Jo Newman, Elma O ' Neal, Janet Reeves, Anne Roberson, Elizabeth Roberts, Roberto Rojas, Jo Lynn Sims, Bev- erly Smith, George Thompson, Carol Trotter, Claude Walker, Judy Weidner, Karen Whittle, Carole Wilson, Lynda Wood. o % , ' rfyawflCii Si is J%Mr i LJ A Tu t 1 T, ; ... ' il r- v f i t Members: Nelson Bean, Jerry Cannon, Ellen McDade, Loren Daniels, Lynda DeFoor, Bobby Dugan, Hal Easter, Larry Fain. Bill Folk, George Frank, Mary Giuliano, Dale Harding, Richard Hearn, Andy Lowry, Richard Lynskey, Norman Miller, Jimmy Ransom, Joel Rind, Linda Scoggins, Joyce Sommers, Larry Stewart, Bruce Wood, Fred Wood, Larry Wolfe, Bill Yarborough, Milton Welch. UNIVERSITY BAND This year the university band under the baton of Mr. E. D. Rushworth played for all the home football games and the annual UT game, thus lend- ing moral support not only to the players but to the spectators and cheerleaders as well. In addition, the band recorded a set of musical tapes for a local television station and presented its annual spring concert. With the help of Harvey Stowers and Earl Lan- caster, a Band Boosters Club was organized to help the band in purchasing the new uniforms so badly needed, so that UC will have a band that conforms to the standards of the other college bands in the area. M. E. N. C. The Music Educators National Conference is a national organization for the advancement of music education. The Student M.E.N.C., which has over 400 chapters, provides an opportunity for professional development of music education college students. Stu- dents may enhance their education through participa- tion in state, division, and national meetings of the M.E.N.C The UC chapter was host to the Tennessee Music Education Association in March, while several Chat- tanooga students attended the national meeting in Philadelphia. The local chapter was also responsible for the musical Anything Goes as well as for various civic club programs. The faculty advisor is Mr. E. D. Rushworth. First Row: Nancy Parks, Linda Wood, Mary Jo New- man. Second Row: Judy Glyde, secretary-treasurer; Mary Giuliano, Lynda DeFoor. Third Row: Larry Fain, Judy Weidner, Mr. E. D. Rushworth, faculty advisor. Fourth Row: Richard Hearn, vice-president; Dale Harding, Bob- by Dugan, president. First Row: Mary Giuliano, Polly Ann Martin, Barbara White. Second Row: Pat Long, Mimi Creasy, Ann Woodard. Third Row: CONCERT ENSEMBLE The Concert Ensemble, under the leadership of Mr. E. D. Rushworth, is composed of university students interested in vocal music. The most important activity of the ensemble this year was the presentation of Cole Porter ' s musical comedy Anything Goes, with leads portrayed by Pat Long, John Creasy, Elma O ' Neal, and Jimmy Ransom. Co-starring with them were Jerry Cannon, Nick Carter, Lynda DeFoor, Bar- bara Douglas, and Claude Walker. Mr. Rushworth directed Claude Walker, Jimmy Ransom. Fourth Row: Dale Harding, John Creasy, Bobby Dugan, Jerry Cannon. the music, and Betty Peruchi was in charge of dramatics. All choreography was done by Richard Kemmler. Its three suc- cessful performances were enjoyed not only by the audience but by those participating in the production as well. Later, accompanied by Dale Harding, the group performed selec- tions from the Broadway musicals Milk and Honey and Oliver and sets of many old favorites. MALE QUARTET The male quartet, organized this year, is composed of Jerry Cannon, Bobby Dugan, Jimmy Ransom, and Claude Walker. Under the direction of Mr. E. D. Rushworth, these boys, who are not only members of the quartet but are associated with all phases of the music department at the University, have enter- tained both on campus and for local civic organiza- tions. This is another example of how the music department endeavors to fit the vast field of music to the desires of its students. Claude Walker, Bobby Dugan, Jerry Cannon, Jimmy Ransom. I°5 Seated: Kay Rankin, Pat Lloyd, Eve Lyn Bailey, Judy Norris. Standing: Marcus Diprima, Ray Harris, Peggy Anderson, Pat Slatery. ART CLUB The Art Club, one of the oldest clubs on campus, urges both faculty and students into a stronger appreciation of the fine arts. Sponsoring the Spring Outdoor Student Show and holding continuous student work exhibitions in the Student Center are two of its primary functions while its weekly meet- ings offer such programs as guest speakers and slides of foreign art capitals. Its officers are Eve Lyn Bailey, president; Bob Strother, vice-president; Kay Rankin, secretary; and Stella Peck, treasurer. Seated: Nancy Stephenson, Miss Mary C. Winkler, advisor; Carolyn Wiley. Standing: Barbara Bostain, Betsy Hill, Judy Davis, Martha Cartwright, Sparky Sparks, Lillian Jolley, Dianne Armstrong. W. R. H. A. The Women ' s Residence Halls Association is made up of all students who reside in the University women ' s dormitories. This association ' s purpose is to elevate the scholastic standards and foster a high aca- demic atmosphere within the halls, to provide for the social development of the students, and to promote the general welfare of the students within the frame- work of the University. A Dormitory Council is elected by and from the members to enforce regula- tions, to assist new students in becoming acquainted with university life, and to represent the students of the residence halls to the entire campus. SOCIOLOGY CLUB The Sociology Club ' s main objective is to inform and to promote interest in the area of sociology of social work among the students at UC. At the begin- ning of the year, a get-acquainted party is given so that old members may meet new ones and so that plans made be made for the year 1963-64. During this year the club has had guest speakers from various areas of sociology and social work, informing as well as rewarding all those students who attended, giving each one a sense of the vastness of each area and the many opportunities that are available to graduates in sociology or social work. Left to Right: Jane Hyder; Barbara Buehler; Dick Messina, president; Kay Grubbs, treasurer; Elizabeth Roberts, vice-president; Jean Willingham; Mr. Stanley Williams, faculty advisor. Seated: Carolyn Hicks, Anne Chap- pell, Kay Rankin, Ann Barrios. Stand- ing: Carolyn Stripland, Miss Georgia Bell, faculty advisor; Robin Rutledge, Dee Dee Meacham, Temple Smartt, Barbara Kintzing, Sandra Espy, Glen- da Dickson, Jane White. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB The Home Economics Club participates in national organization activities of the American Home Economics Association. The club serves to bring the students interested in home economics closer together, gain news of the opportunities in their field, and give opportunities for service in the community. The current officers are: Kay Rankin, president; Glenda Dickson, vice-president; Carolyn Hicks, secretary; Tina Scoggins, treasurer. The group faculty sponsor is Miss Georgia Bell. Dr. M. S. McCay; Jon Visser, secretary; Mr. Henry Ransom, faculty ad- visor; William L. Beck, vice-president; Alton Johnson, president; Gordon Shipley: Don Perkinson, treasurer. S. A. M. S.A.M. proposes through research, discussion, publication, and other appropriate means to conduct and promote scientific study of the prin- ciples governing organized effort in industrial and economic life . . . for the general betterment of society. This year ' s officers are Bill Fike, president; Fulton Frumin, vice- president; Phyllis Easterly, secretary; Jim Fischer, treasurer. Seated: Fulton Frumin, Bill Fike, Phyllis Easterly, Jim Fischer, Fred M. Hall. Standing: Don Turner, Ed Love, John B. Carver, George M. Cooper, Jr., Jerry C. Johnson, Steve Brown, Norman R. Miller, Jesse Presley, Chip Adams, Ronald Hill, Gary Hackworth, Willment Folk, Larry Campbell, Samuel Love, Bill Hope, Bill Cain, Bill Bass, Ross Haire, Charlie Umbarger. SIGMA PI SIGMA Sigma Pi Sigma, the national physics honorary, was originally founded at Davidson College in 1921. Of the 108 chapters, the one at UC was the sixth to be chartered. Although the local chapter has had 202 members since its founding, there are only seven on campus at the present time. A student who wishes to join must keep a 2.5 average in three semesters of physics and a 1.5 over-all average. New members are initiated at the end of the semester. Each year the UC chapter presents an award to the top student in the general physics class. This May was the chapter ' s 35 th anniversary, and a special pro- gram was presented at that time. Mr. Ransom is the faculty advisor. |0 cs ' v First Row: Sandy Gray, Carol Trotter, Kay Williams, Gay Nolan, Barbara Harris, Jane Hyder, Elma O ' Neal, Lynn Edging, Deane Macormac. Second Row: Maxine Sims, Barbara Douglas, Jay Saterfield, Lynda Thompson, Jan Ownbey, Margaret True, Jan Brown, Donna Eberhart, Genie Brown. Third Row: Carolyn Zelinsky, Tommie Bishop, Margie Herndon, Marilyn Wohl- leber, Martha Clemmer, Martha Cartwright, Julia Slagle, Gail McClure. Fourth Row: Anne Wells, Mila Bramlett, Candy Hachat, Don Gray, Mackie Wood. SNEA The Student National Education Association is the professional association for college or university students preparing to teach. Student NEA provides members with oppor- tunities for developing personal growth and professional competence, for gaining an understanding of the history, ethics, and program of the organized teaching profession; for participating in co-operative work on the problems of the profession and the com- munity; for active professional membership on the local, state, national, and world levels. ENGINEERS ' CLUB The University of Chattanooga Engineers ' Club promotes interest in and discussions of new developments in the various engineering fields through films, club discussions, and lectures The Engineers ' Club also carries on an active job placement service which secures permanent positions for graduate students and part-time jobs for current students. Membership is open to students majoring in the fields of engineering, mathematics, physics, chemistry, and the related sciences. The Club ' s officers for this year are: president, William L. (Jack) Beck; vice-president, R. Gorden Shipley; treasurer, Eli P. Churchwell; secretary, Al- ton Johnson; program chairman, Bill Kerley; pub- licity chairman, Bill Kelsay. First Row: Robert Sexton, Alton Johnson, Gordon Ship- ley, Bill Kerley, Ron Hash, Ralph Miles, William L. Beck, Jr., A. G. Meuleman. Second Row: Michael Bailey, Joe Sandlin, Buddy Jacobs, Steve Hale, Lebron Benton, Bruce Cartwright. Third Row: Tom Kline, Lonnie Bork, Jack Armstrong, Sam Love. Fourth Row: Gene Edmond, Doug McDaniel, Butch Luther, Henry Jobe, Jerry Worm- sley, Richard Wilson, Howard Elson. Fifth Row: Eli Churchwell, Jr., Robert Hamby, Joe Hager, Bill Fritz. Left to Right, Seated: Dr. Freeman, Miss McGilliard, Dr. Fry, Dr. Butts, Mrs. Rucker. Standing: John Schaerer, Woody Oliphant, Larry Burt, John Charles, Myra Phillips, Ralph Nipp, Edwin Swart. BETA BETA BETA T he national biology honorary, Beta Beta Beta, founded a chapter at UC over 25 years ago. Miss McGilliard and Dr. Butts were charter members and have done a great deal to make it a success on campus. All of the faculty members in the biology department are members of Beta Beta Beta. The purpose of this organization is to promote sound scholarship, a desire to learn and an interest in biology. Students must have taken 11 hours of biology with a B average, have kept a C over-all average and be registered for another biology course. Initiation for these students was on Nov. 17 at Miss McGilliard ' s house. Students may become provisional members if they have had 8 hours of biology and are registered for more. These students are initiated in the spring. There are five members from last year: John Charles, presi- dent and chairman of the program committee; Myra Phillips, secretary; Martha Clemmer, historian; and John Monroe. Robert Burt, Ralph Wipp, Ed Swart, David Tepper and Woody Oliphant will soon be initiated. GAMMA SIGMA EPSILON Gamma Sigma Epsilon, originally founded at Davidson College in 1919, is the national chemistry honorary. The chapter here at UC is Iota Alpha. The president of the Iota Alpha chapter, George Dorsey, says that the organization wants to encourage the study of chemistry both on and off campus. A student must have a B average in at least three semesters of chemistry and a C aver- age in his other subjects to become a member. The chapter takes from two to four field trips a year. Every spring a banquet is held, usually followed by a trip to Dr. Grote ' s house. Initiation is also held in the spring. Dr. I. W. Grote is the faculty advisor. This year ' s officers are George Dorsey, president; Myra Phillips, secretary and treasurer; and Earl Cox, sergeant at arms. Left to Right, First Row: George Dorsey, Myra Phillips, Bob Fanning, Jerry Hobson, Bob Rodrick. Second Row: Mrs. Dorothy Dalby, Mr. William Swan, Bob Raulston, Dr. Irvine Grote, Ed Swart, Pat Bivens, Earl Cox. Ed Blevins. First Row: Fontaine Moore, Miss Terrell Tatum, faculty advisor; Dean Reuben Hol- land, David Scott. Second Row: Betsy Wooten, Diana Van Cleave, Sandy Gray, Car- leen Arnold, Barbara Harris, Deane Macormac. Third Row: Roberto Rojas, Thomas Van Cleave, Johanne Dixon, David Newton, Brenda Watkins, Neal Coulter. SIGMA DELTA PI The Rho chapter of Sigma Delta Pi, the first in Tennessee, was chartered in 1931. Professor Terrell Tatum is the faculty ad- visor of this national Spanish honorary fraternity. The purposes of Sigma Delta Pi are to foster a broader, more understanding view of todo lo be llo que haya salido de la venerable Espana and thus to bring about a continuing and more co-operative under- standing of Spanish-speaking lands. It also seeks to recognize special interests and at- tainments of the Spanish language and His- panic culture. Among the activities of the chapter are subscription to the magazine Mundo His- panico for the department of Spanish and sponsorship of the annual Pan-American Week chapel program and the Spanish night program of Fine Arts Week on the campus. The president is David Scott. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS Le Cercle Francais is the honorary French organi- zation. Its purpose is to stimulate interest and a greater knowledge of France, its history, culture, lan- guage, and people. Election to membership requires completion of two years of college French or the equivalent with superior scholastic performance. The group holds monthly meetings to which speakers are invited to discuss their experiences in France or other French-speaking areas. Dr. Maxwell A. Smith sponsors the group, and Jerry Hobson leads the group as president, Barbara Fenix is vice-president, Helen Ruth Akers as secre- tary, and John Creasy as treasurer. Seated: Michelle Atoch, Nancy Stephenson, Barbara Fenix. Standing, First Row: Lillian Jolley, Lynda Thompson, Genie Brown, Randy Weidman, Helen Ruth Akers, Elma O ' Neal, Jerry Hobson. Standing, Second Row: Dr. Hilde Anacker, John Creasy, Dr. Maxwell Smith, faculty advisor; James M. Adams, Ellis Forrester, Julia Slagle, Dr. Robert Anacker. UNIVERSITY WRITERS GUILD The Writers Guild is composed of students inter- ested in creative writing. This new group was organ- ized in 1963 to stimulate interest in writing creatively and to organize student material for the publication of an issue of the Southern Accent, a literary maga- zine formerly included in the University publications. Spo nsors for the group are Miss Isobel Griscom and Mr. Arlie Herron. Leading as president is David Glenn and as secretary Barbara Fenix. Ed Blevins, Delores Bachman, Ada Beard, Mary Lou Evans, Mr. Arlis Herron, David Glenn, Barbara Fenix, Jane Alford, Karol Killian. THE UNIVERSITY SCHOLARS Realizing that true scholarship involves more than the attainment of a certain grade average, the University Scholars was organized in 1960 to recognize those students who display outstanding ability, scholarly endeavor, and an unusual scholar- ly attitude. The Scholars, who must be recom- mended by the faculty for membership, meet monthly to discuss some work all have read and to report on the progress of independent projects. The object of these discussions is to provide an intellectually enthusiastic atmosphere and therefore stimulate creative thought. Dr. James W. Livin- good, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, is the faculty advisor for the 1963-64 Scholars. First Row Martha Clemmer, Delores Bachman, Pat Bonin, Cathy Elton. Second Row: Carolyn Mitchell, Elaine Allison, Ann Lackey, Joy Carscaddon. Sharon McMahan. Third Row: Dean James Livingood, faculty advisor; David Koplan, David Martin, Don Perkinson, Hans Bingham. Fourth Row: David Newton, Joel Cunningham, Bob Fanning. Seated: Linda Thompson, vice-president; David Koplan, president; Elaine Allison, secre tary; Miss Mary Winkler, faculty advisor. Standing: Pam Martin, publicity chairman Joyce Sommers, social chairman; Pat McCracken, treasurer; Loren Daniels, social chair INDEPENDENT STUDENT ORGANIZATION The Independents have a double purpose — to provide a full program of activities for the students and to aid and promote the aims and ideals of the University. The organization is open to all students who wish to have a large amount of individual freedom and also enjoy the advantages of group activity. Among this year ' s activities were a hayride and a dance given for all Independents in October. Later Sparky Sparks was sponsored for Miss Christmas Seal and Janis Beard and Joyce Sommers for the Moccasin Beauties. Sparky and David Koplan were elected to the Student Council, and the Inde- pendent girls placed second in intramural volleyball. .Jf_ Martha Lee Allen, Nelson Bean, Barbara Bostain. Myla Bramlett. Jerry Cannon, Nick Carter, Pauline Cook, John Creasy, Loren Daniels, Linda DeFoor, Barbara Douglas, Robert Dugan, Betsy Farioletti, Mary Giuliano, Bill Grieve, Richard Hearn, Brenda Heifner, Dixie Holland, Tom Jones, Earl Lancaster, Pat Long. Polly Ann Martin, Gary Mason, Ellen McDade, Jackie Norton, Elma O ' Neal, James Ransom, Patty Richmond, Elizabeth Roberts, Bea Rutledge, Bert Rutledge, George Thompson, Claude Walker, Fred Whitmire, Barbara White, Carole Wilson, Larry Wolfe, Ann Woodard, William Yarborough. Music: E. D. Rushworth. Dra- matics: Betty Peruchi. ANYTHING GOES By COLE PORTER CADEK HALL UNIVERSITY OF CHATTANOOGA DECEMBER 12, 13, and 14, 1963 8:00 P. M- Pat Long as Reno Sweeney and John Creasy as Sir Evelyn Oak- leigh. Pat Long, John Creasy, Nick Carter as Moonface Martin, and Linda DeFoor as Bonnie. Anything Suzie (Jackie Norton), a Sailor (Tom Jones), Hope (Carole Wil- son), Hope Harcourt (Elma O ' Neal), and Billy Crocker (James Ransom) on deck. Billy Crocker and Moonface Martin Stew in the brig. Goes Bishop Dobson (Jerry Cannon) and Ching (Dixie Holland) and Ling (Barbara White). Reno gives Sir Evelyn and Hope the once-over. Chastity (Bea Rutledge) admires her sailor. UNIVERSITY OF CHATTANOOGA PRESENTS IRumrn ani 3hilt?t As a gift to the city of Chattanooga on the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare ' s birth, the University Players produced a most excellent interpretation of the great bard ' s Romeo and Juliet, under the capable direction of Mrs. Dorothy Hackett Ward. As its two main goals, the newly organized Players, with Terry Blunt as chair- man, have proposed the presentation of outstanding dramatic produc- tions, usually Shakespearean, each year and a new theater of its own on the University campus. Membership in the Players, while not limited to majors in drama, is based on participation in scenery design and building, costuming, and acting and is extended by invitation only. Mrs. Dorothy Hackett Ward, faculty director; Beth Gentry, sec- retary; Terry Blunt, chairman. CAST Romeo Barry Nottage Juliet Beth Gentry Old Capulet Terry Blunt Lady Capulet Gloria Mills Old Montague Bob Raulston Lady Montague Chris Richards Benvolio, nephew to Montague Barry Jenkins Marcutio Schaak Van Duesen Tybalt Dan Paty Nurse to Juliet Betsy Farioletti Friar Lawrence Hugh Holt Escalus, Prince of Verona Leslie Hubbard Paris, a young Count, kinsman to the Prince Dennis Moses I ' ll lay fourteen of my teeth, — And yet, to my teen be it spoken, I have but four, — Call me but love, and I ' ll be new baptiz ' d; Henceforth I never will be Romeo. What ' s in a name? that which we call a rose By any other name would smell so sweet . . . I t What wouldst thou have with me? Good king of cats, nothing but one of your nine lives . . . . . . ask for me to-morrow and you shall find me a grave man. F ' l m GREEKS i a At the University of Chattanooga the Panhellenic Council, guided by Miss Winkler, the advisor, seeks to promote unity among the sororities, formulate rush rules, and co-ordinate inter-sorority activities. The presidential position rotates among the sororities. Membership is composed of the president, repre- sentatives of each sorority, and a delegate from each class within every sorority. PANHELLENIC COUNCIL Seated: Miss Mary Winkler, faculty ad- visor. Standing: Janet Parks, Pi Beta Phi, president of Panhellenic; Cathy Elton, Chi Omega; Gail Nevins, Pi Beta Phi; Pat Bender, Chi Omega; Harriet Bandy, Pi Beta Phi; Polly Ann Martin, Phi Mu. Seated: Carolyn Wiley, Phi Mu; Barbara Fenix, Chi Omega; Diane Armstrong, Pi Beta Phi; Diane Grob, Alpha Delta Pi. Not Pictured: Ma rsha Mann, Eleanor DeLong, Dee Dee Mea- cham, and Beth Gentry, Alpha Delta Pi; Judy Hogue, Chi Omega; Diane Barkow and Helen Ruth Akers, Phi Mu. The Inter-Fraternity Council at the University of Chatta- nooga, guided by Dean Holland, seeks to promote a friendly spirit among the fraternities, formulate rush rules and other resolutions pertaining to fraternities, regulate IFC activities both social and athletic, and promote the welfare and interests of the campus fraternities and the University. Delegates con- sist of two members of each fraternity and of the officers of every fraternity. INTER- FRATERNITY COUNCIL Seated: Dick Hutson, Kappa Sigma : Franz Ziegler, Lambda Chi Alpha; Buz Standefer, Pi Kappa Alpha; Larry Lowe, Sig- ma Chi. Standing: Bob Raul- ston, Lambda Chi Alpha; Barry Jenkins, Lambda Chi Alpha; Bill Reed, Pi Kappa Alpha; Gary Hackworth, Sigma Chi. Not Pictured: Dean Reuben Hol- land, faculty advisor; Charlie Umbarger, Charles Thornbury, Kappa Sigma; Bill Shelton, Lambda Chi Alpha; David Tep- per and Pierre Jaffe, Alpha Epsilon Pi; Earl Cox and Joel Cunningham, Sigma Chi; Joe Clem, Pi Kappa Alpha. !R©§II1 ClAipE PHILLIPS PRISCILLfi MAOARIS Alpha Delta Pi, the oldest Greek sorority, celebrates an- other extremely successful year in Beta Beta chapter at the University of Chattanooga. For new sisters we chose an outstanding group of girls who have already made themselves known on the campus: Chris Richard was chosen UC cheerleader, and Beverly Elliot, alternate cheerleader. Two actives, Nancy Jo Bales and Carole Rawls, are also cheerleaders. ADPi claims Margaret Wood, secretary of the senior class; Beth Gentry, secretary of the junior class; Bobbie Quinn, treasurer of the junior class; Bonnie Justin, secretary of the sophomore class; and Connie McDaniel, treasurer of the soph- omore class. On the Student Council are Beth Gentry and Bobbie Quinn. In other organizations on campus, especially religious groups, Alpha Delta Pi also has many leaders. Randy Weidman is president of Koinonia; Margaret Wood is presi- dent of the Baptist Student Union, and Eleanor DeLong and Jerry Jane Parker also serve with her as officers. The Newman Club elected Rose Ann Davis secretary, and Canterbury Club chose Ann Lackey as vice-president. JEANNE CHESTON FRANCES 80WDEN Ak BETA BETA CHAPTER FOUNDED MAY 15, 1851 WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE On the campus, Alpha Delta Pi ' s have gained much dis- tinction in honor organizations. Listed among those in Who ' s Who are Marsha Mann, Martha Kilgore, and Margaret Wood. Members of this year ' s Mortar Board include Mar- garet Wood and Martha Kilgore, who serves as vice-president. New initiates into Kappa Chi Epsilon are Bonnie Justin and Eleanor Delong, who is also in Alpha Lambda Delta. Chosen by the University Scholars in the spring were Joyce Olson, Connie McDaniel, and Ann Lackey. Working in school publications this year are Diane Grob, Eleanor DeLong, and Marilyn Wood, the latter being Asso- ciate Editor of the Echo. On the Moccasin staff, the Greek editor is Ann Lackey. Again for many years in a row, an ADPi was chosen Homecoming Queen, this year ' s queen being Carolyn Davis. Two of the five Moccasin Beauties are Bonnie Justin and Connie McDaniel. Officers of the R.O.T.C. asked Beth Gentry and Martha Kilgore to be their sponsors, while Bonnie Justin was chosen sponsor of the Pershing Rifles. With this many members in honorary positions in every phase of campus life, the success of Alpha Delta Pi is most apparent. ■a mm d JUUE ALEXANDER MARTHA GAlBRAiTH MACK IE WOOD JANE HYDER BARBARA BUEHLER NANCY STEPHENSON JANE ALFORD MARY ALICE HANDELMAN MARIA P1TNER FENTRESS WILSC JANNIE RUCKS NAN JOHNSON KATH1E LORENZ JOAN HUGUELET LILLIAN JOLLEY CATHERINE ELTON TRUDY BENDER ANNE WELLS GENIE BROWfS ir |P MARTHA BAGGENSTOSS JANE HOLMES VICKI KELLEY SUSAN ALFORD @h (f mega 19 64 Dtuoetfsifc) of (£hs Hanooga MARY GREGG OEANE MACORMAC NANCY JOHNSON BETSY WOOTEN _ COLBURN CAROL EWTON MARY WILL POPE LORENZ JULIA WOOD DIANA SMITH KAREN WHITTLE AMELIA LANG LINOA HAMlLL mm v h mmW GOODLET CAROLYN WELLS ELEANOR GAITHER TEMPLE SMARTT MARCIE ANN WOODARD ROSEMARY MIND Out of the weekend owl-hoots, the all-night slumber parties, the Chi Omega Spring Formal, and the autumn hay- ride have emerged the Delta Alpha chapter of Chi Omegas who have pulled together in sports, won together in elections, and worked together in civic projects. On the campus, Chi Omegas have gained much distinction. In the spring of 1963, Mortar Board tapped Martha Gal- braith, Cathy Elton, and Lillian Jolley, while four Chi Omegas became members of Alpha Society. Trudy Bender has served as Secretary-Treasurer of the Student Body, Martha Galbraith as editor of the Echo, and Cathy Elton as editor of the Moccasin. Vicki Kelley became a UC cheerleader, and secre- tary of the Honor Council is Lillian Jolley. To Kappa Chi Epsilon we added Judy Hogue and Deane Macormac. Twenty-nine pledges entered the Dutch-doors in September and joined in the fun and friendship so prevalent in the Chi Omega house. DELTA ALPHA CHAPTER FOUNDED APRIL 5, 1895 UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS HARRIET JONES CAROL ANN SCHMlTT EQttARQ VANT,NE Actives and pledges alike joined in promoting the candle sale held in the fall to raise money for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Ann Collison was elected treasurer of the fresh- man class, and Marcie Rodman became the secretary of the freshman class. In the Student Council precinct elections, Ann Wells, Louise Hampton, and Sandra Espy were chosen as representatives. ROTC officers asked Vicki Kelley, Judy Hogue, and Joan Huguelet to be their sponsors. Among the five Moccasin Beauties are Joan Huguelet and Vicki Kelley. Carleen Arnold is this year ' s Miss Christmas Seal. Listed among those in Who ' s Who are Margaret Ann Craven, Lillian Jolley, Cathy Elton, and Martha Galbraith. In second semester rush we pledged Sandra Prewitt. Sandra reigned as Military Queen and is a Moccasin Beauty. Homecoming decorations, banquets, All-Sing practices, Mon- day night suppers, new living room furniture, teas, candle- light ceremonies, and parties all helped to make a well-rounded and profitable year for Chi Omega at the University of Chattanooga. CHERYL CHAPMAN GKlCER MCALLISTER ELIZABETH BUICE KATHERINE BLACKSTONE LYNDA ORRELL POLLY ANN MARTIN Phi Mu sorority at the University of Chattanooga began the fall semester winning first place among Homecoming decorations with an attractive display of a giant coffee pot, cup and saucer, and creamer, with the caption Perk Up and Cream Them. Next on the list of Phi Mu activities was the Faculty Apple Polishing Party, at which each teacher was given a polished apple. One of the most outstanding events of the entire year was the Christmas party given by the sorority for teen-age girls at Bonny Oaks. The girls were entertained with supper and gifts. Another of Phi Mu ' s philanthropic projects was the Heart Fund dance given for the entire student body. All the pro- LINDA MOORE MARY LOU JORDON JOAN HUFFAKER SUSAN NAIL CONNIE PRICE ALPHA THETA CHAPTER FOUNDED MARCH 4, 1852 WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE SUSAN SPARGO PATRICIA PARKIN ceeds from this affair go directly to the Heart Fund Asso- ciation. In addition to this, all members of the UC chapter of the sorority joined the Heart Fund Drive on February 23. The Chattanooga chapter of Phi Mu also stays in close touch with all the Phi Mu chapters in the national organiza- tion. One of the activities which binds all of our chapters is the support of the work being done by the medical ship, Hope. Besides these interests, Phi Mu participates in all the campus activities such as All-Sing, and the Sigma Chi Derby. All of these many affiliations help make the Phi Mu ' s a well- rounded group of girls on the UC campus! fj f 3_E CA G CUNNINGHAM DONNA R COSTELLO ELMA E O ' NEAL CONNIE J DAY BEVERLY A.BAILEY PAULA WOMACK MARY L GROVES GAILMGLAONEY BARBARA K BARBER AliCE A THOMPSON C.WILSON HUNT D1ANNE ARMSTRONG MARILYNN HALE MARTHA E. CLEMMER JANET B.PARKS A.LWOA RICKETTS CORNELIA E.HINES $i ©eta IPVji 19 GAIL NEVINS ANDREA M DUKE JUDI NORRIS Q ANN C.BURGNER CHARLOTTE L.BRIDGE SUE S.THOMPSON 64 Bmuersikj of (gl aHanoocja MARY F GAMBLE JACKIE NORTON SUSAN E.POHL DIANA CAMPBELL PATSY A.ROBERTS ANN E. PARKS CAROL LSANDERS BETSY CLEMMER MARGARET REVANS PATRICIA LLOYD 9 9 F3 t?l €p SUSAN QUINTON JOLYNNSIMS BEA E CLEMMER V.GAILEREES DONA E.GRAY M.JOAN BOYD HARRIETT A.BANDY E.ANN SATTEHFIELD BARBARA E BOSTAIF The Pi Phi ' s started the fall of 1963 with a big bang by pledging 25 new members. The chapter had won recognition in the spring by placing second in Blue Key Follies and by receiving honorable mention for our chapter history nationally. A first place was gained in the Sigma Chi Derby and the Pi Phi ' s retained the cup for the year. Connie Day played on the golf team. The Pi Phi ' s added more honors to the list in the spring when Delphine Ainsworth was chosen Lambda Chi Alpha Crescent Girl; Marilynn Hale, Sweetheart of Sigma Chi; and Janet Parks as Pi Kappa Alpha Dream Girl. Loretta Ettien was in the Lambda Chi court, while Brenda Acton and Judi Norris gained recognition in the Sigma Chi court. Carol San- ders, last year ' s freshman cheerleader, served as head cheer- leader this year, and Harriet Bandy was the first alternate. With a great deal of fun and effort, Pi Phi ' s placed second in the Homecoming decorations, while Connie Day repre- sented us in the court. For the second consecutive year, the Pi Phi ' s gained acclaim for selling more symphony concert tickets, thereby winning the Schroeder Award. YRTLE A.HOBERSON NANCY L. GRIFFIN MAXINETSIMS IARGARET I. TRUE DEBBY KAYLOR KAY GRUBBS DELPHINE AINSWORTH ANN R.CLARKE LtNDA M ACKERMAN RIVERS SHAW SANDRA C.RAINES KAROL A KILLIAN JANICE L.ROTHE ANDREA K.ZAVA JANET E. REEVES ATRICIA PTERRY c TENNESSEE ALPHA CHAPTER FOUNDED APRIL 28, 1867 MONMOUTH COLLEGE The Pi Phi ' s had four seniors elected to Who ' s Who for their outstanding leadership: Connie Day, Martha Clem- mer, Gail Gladney, and Janet Parks. Martha is also serving as president of Mortar Board, and Gail Gladney is secretary. Janet Parks, who is serving her second term as president of the chapter, received the award last spring for the Outstand- ing Junior Girl. She is also president of the Panhellenic Council and treasurer of the senior class. Janet was elected Miss UC this year. The chapter has four members on the Student Council: Delphine Ainsworth, Carol Sanders, Trish Terry, and Betsy Clemmer. Delphine Ainsworth and Beverly Bailey are mili- tary sponsors. Eve Lyn Bailey is serving as president of the newly incorporated Orchesis, while Donna Costello is secre- tary and Ann Burgner, publicity chairman. Charlotte Bridge, Sue Thompson, and Gail Nevins are members of Kappa Chi Epsilon. The Pi Phi ' s won intramural volleyball. PAUL GREENBERG STANLEY VOGEL PIERRE JAFFE PAUL SOBEL DAVID TEPPER EDWIN STREITER A ha epsilon. i| 19 64 Umoersffaj df (Shattauooga MARVIN RUDOLPH JEFFREY MARGOLIS JEFFREY BRODNICK JEFF SCHWARTZ ARTHUR COLTAN DIANE PRESSMAN JOHN SHALETT STANLEY KOPKIN The ' 63- ' 64 school year has been a successful one indeed for Upsilon Chi chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi at the Univer- sity of Chattanooga. A fine new pledge class gave the fall semester a great beginning. With Homecoming, intramurals, and parties, the fall passed quickly. On campus Alpha Epsilon Pi ' s played prominent roles as leaders in school affairs. Paul Greenberg is chairman of the Elections Committee and vice-president of the Junior Class as well as a member of Blue Key. Rick Weintraub is one of the Associate Editors of the Echo. In Who ' s Who Among LLOYD OUARTIN NEIL KAPLOW1TZ D VANTINE Studios, Hamilton r -.- ■• ,- F UPSILOW CHI CHAPTER FOUNDED NOVEMBER 17, 1913 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Students in American Colleges and Universities, Paul Green- berg and David Tepper have been added to the list. Several AEPi ' s are active in the University Scholars and on the Stu- dent Council is Paul Greenberg. A fraternity means many things — strong bonds of friendship, common goals, interest in the welfare of others, and an active participation in the social, academic, and extracurricular life of the institution of which it is an integral part — and AEPi will continue to strive, reach, and then maintain all these lofty ideals. Words mean little until they are accompanied by actions. EASTER ROBERT ADAMS Kappa Sigma at the University of Chattanooga began the ' 63- ' 64 year with the largest pledge class of any fraternity on the campus, and shortly after pledging moved into a new fraternity house! This new house provided the setting for our first place winning Homecoming decoration. Many members of Kappa Sigma have gained distinction on the campus. Blue Key chose Pat Payne, Charles Umbarger, and Charles Thornbury. Bob Lanza and Bill Eiselstein were the newly elected members of Circle K at Honors Day last spring. Included among class officers are Pat Payne, senior class vice-president; Hans Bingham, junior class vice-president; Bill Eiselstein, sophomore class vice-president; Bob Lanza, 131 OMEGA PHI ALPHA CHAPTER FOUNDED JUNE 5, 1904 BOSTON COLLEGE J£f sophomore class vice-president. Among the military officers are Joe Galbraith, Captain; Pat Payne, Captain; Bill Fike, Lieu- tenant. Jack Quillen, Phil Hyman, Hans Bingham and Charles Chase, sports editor, are on the Echo staff and Tony Koeninger is on the Moccasin staff. In the athletic groups Kappa Sigma claims many prominent members. On varsity football are Ed Sussdorff, Jack Gregory, Henry Sorrell, Glynn Stowe, Larry Elmore, Burt Caldwell, and Jim Denton, while George Farr, Butch Harless, Glynn Stowe, Gene Hubbuch, and George Thrash were on the wrestling team. Incidentally Kappa Sig also won the intra- mural wrestling. The golf team also has two Kappa Sigs — Charles Chase and Bill Wooten. J 33 lambda (itu Alpha 19 ymocrsily of (fhaManooga CHIP ADAMS TERRY BLUNT DRU SCHENK ROBIN HOOD CHARLES COULTER Lt i l yStfiftltif OON NOBLER WILEY COPPINOER RICHARD HUNNICUTT JOHN WATTS GEORGE COOPER DAN ROBERT BRADSHAW DUTCH HOLLAND The year 1963-1964 has proved to be another highly suc- cessful year for Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. In all phases of school life, Lambda Chi ' s have served as prominent leaders. In the Military Bob Raulston was the Battalion Commander, Eugene Leake, a Major, and Franz Zeigler, a Captain. Terry Blunt also gained distinction as the highest ranking sophomore cadet. Among class officers, the fraternity claimed Franz Ziegler, president of the senior class and also president of the Inter-Fraternity Council; and Richard Hunnicutt, presi- dent of the freshman class. To the list of Who ' s Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities Lambda Chi added more members than any fraternity on campus; they were: Bob Raulston, Franz Ziegler, Larry Baker, and Benn Haynes. Tapped by 134 ERRY DEDMON GARY PHILLIPS CHARLES MURRAV ZETA PHI ZETA CHAPTER FOUNDED NOVEMBER 2, 1909 BOSTON UNIVERSITY Blue Key in the fall was Franz Ziegler. Terry Blunt served as Sports Editor of the Moccasin and a member of the Elections Committee. Among such organizations as the Uni- versity Scholars, Phi Eta Sigma, and Circle K, fraternity members took an active part. Lambda Chi also boasts two members of the Golf Team— Claude Walker and Colin Aldridge. During the year, the fraternity joins in such activities as Homecoming — in which we took second place — and All- Sing. Working together through the year the members of Zeta Phi Zeta chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha were drawn even more closely together in the bond of brotherhood. l 35 DAVID L KR1NG COJG C MCDANIEL GEORGE LUTHER RICHARD G MANSFIELD JR WILLIAM C.FRITZ DON E HENNEKER BONNER R. COHEN Pi Kappa Alpha, in its sixteenth year on the campus of the University of Chattanooga, began by obtaining a fine pledge class which added greatly to the long list of prominent local citizens already members. In the course of the school year several charitable projects were undertaken. One such project included assisting the March of Dimes. Another pro- vided for the restoration of a Confederate cemetery which, heretofore, had been relatively unknown to residents of the Chattanooga area. When the weather was pleasant, it was a common sight to see the Pike chapter traveling about in the fraternity ' s 1927 fire truck. This old vehicle has great sentimental value to all 3« DELTA EPSILOW CHAPTER FOUNDED MARCH 1, 1868 UNIVERSARY OF VIRGINIA SENDERT W.SMITH WILLIAM J. WOOLF the brothers and has added a great deal to all the social functions at which it has been used. And, it has long been a Pike tradition to take each new pledge class of each sorority for a ride around the campus and through the town on the day of pledging. Throughout the year, PiKA participates in such campus activities as All-Sing and intramural athletics. Among UC athletes, PiKA claims Dave Sicko of the basketball team. Thus, through these many and varied activities, Pi Kappa Alpha at the University of Chattanooga maintains itself as an active and efficient group on the campus. J 37 30B RICHARDSON JOHN EDMGNOSON TOM JENKINS JOHN BARNES TOM CRANWELL TOM PIKCIUNAS BILL YARBOROUGH JACK DAVIS This year was a very successful year for Sigma Chi on the University of Chattanooga campus. During the summer, the fraternity house was painted and redecorated by our alumni chapter in Chattanooga. The school year began with thirty-one excellent pledges, one of whom, Jack Davis, was elected vice- president of the freshman class. Among the class officers, Sigma Chi also claims Joel Cunningham who is president of the junior class and also president of the Student Council. Many Sigma Chi ' s have gained prominence in campus organizations. Artie Jones is president of the Westminster 138 DELTA THETA CHAPTER FOUNDED JANUARY 28, 1855 MIAMI UNIVERSITY JACK HEADRICK JOE SOLOMON PETE MCNALLY Fellowship and also on the UC tennis team. In ROTC, Muecke Barker is a Major, and David James is a Captain. Blue Key chose Joel Cunningham in the fall for member- ship, and the president of Blue Key is David James. On the Student Council, Sigma Chi boasts Artie Jones. First place in intramural football was captured by Sigma Chi, as was second place in wrestling. Thus, through these many activities and with these many honors, Sigma Chi at the University of Chattanooga feels that it is doing much to be a credit to the national organization. J 39 MILITARY r 43 CADRE First Row: Lt. Col. Kelly, Capt Hamlett, Capt. Graney, Capt. Slatery. Second Row: Sgt. O ' Rourke, Sgt. Allen, Sgt. Roddy, Sgt. Gentry. OFFICERS AND SPONSORS First Row: Martha Kilgore, Vicki Kelley, Beth Gentry, Judy Hogue, Beverly Bailey, Delphine Ainsworth. Second Row: Capt. Pat Payne, Lt. Col. Raulston, Capt. Franz Zeigler, Capt. David James, Capt. Joe Gal- braith, Capt. Carl Waggoner. 144 LT. COL. KELLY R.O.T.C. STAFF Right to Left: Cadet Lt. Col. Raulston, Cadet Capt. Connally, Cadet Major Barker, Cadet Sgt. Hill, Cadet Capt. Glenn, Cadet Capt. Newberry, Cadet Sgt. Major Eldridge, Cadet Major Leake. The mission of the Army Reserve Officers Training Corps is to train, as junior officers, college students who have the qualities and attributes essential to their progressive and con- tinued developments as officers in a component of the United States Army. The course of instruction is divided into two phases — The Basic Course and the Advanced Course. Each phase lasts two years. Attendance at a six-weeks summer camp is required of all advanced course students following the end of the junior year of college. Upon successful completion of academic requirements for a degree and the four-year mili- tary program the student is commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Army of the United States. The program is demanding both in time and effort but the rewards are worth the energies devoted. Development of leadership ability is a primary aim and skills learned are useful whether the graduate remains in the Armed Forces as a career officer or returns to a position in the civilian community. At the University of Chattanooga there are a number of student military activities which complement the ROTC training. On campus there is a chapter of Pershing Rifles, the National Society for basic students with attention directed to drill proficiency; a student chapter of the Association of the United States Army; a rifle team, which competes against rifle teams from other colleges and universities; a band; and a student chapter of the Reserve Officers Association. There has also recently been formed at the University of Chatta- nooga a Military Honor Society which, it is planned, will become a unit of Scabbard and Blade, a national honor organization for advanced course students of the ROTC program. A staff of four officers and five noncommissioned officers of the United States Army are on the University Campus to present instruction and administer the Department of Military Science. H5 COMPANY A Cadet Capt. Waggoner, Arm- strong, Byington, Elson, Hale, Chase, Coulter, Geyer, Gray, Hartman, Journey, Miller, Brown, Brownlee, Ballard, Croawell, Davidson, Davis, Dedman, Edmonson, Lon, Gill, Gilliam, Hunt, Kaplowitz, Kring, Lung, Margolis, Pen- nell, Ross, Schroff, Thornbury, Varnell, Wade, Garner, Adams, Baker, Bell, Bird. COMPANY B Cadet Capt. James, Jenkins, Kilpatrick, Lanza, Shirley, Or- cutt, Pledger, Stewart, Lay, Sullivan, Cubine, Hanna, Barnes, Evans, Hubbard, Hun- nicut, Hylen, Leithmann, Mc- Nally, Pikciunas, Schwartz, Viar, Varnell, Whitworth, Adamson, Brodnick, Flegal, Glazner, Jackson, Barnes, Dar- win, Fuller, Holt, Knobler, Boffo, Dynesius, Fuller, Hutson, Brown, Caldwell. .• HEADQUARTERS COMPANY Cadet Capt. Galbraith, Huddle- ston, Grant, Green, Whitwell, Goodberlet, Gladish, Criminger, Kimsey, Davis, Jackson, Pack, Welch, Yarborough, Durand, Greene, Morris, Flegal, Ded- mon, Schroff, Wilkes, Adams. 146 COMPANY C Cadet Capt. Payne, Spencer, Wright, Heard, Blunt, Ander- son, Dearing, Fuller, Price, Richardson, Smith, Waters, Adams, Coppinger, Friederich- sen, Kuka, Standefer, Ervin, Boyd, Duncan, Hampton, Pem- berton, Shirley, Vance, Willie, Crowley, Dye, Gibson, Nathan, Thomas, Kline, Darr, Falls, Payne, Reid, Stephens, Ward, Wright, Davies, Fleming, Har- ris, Reid, Davis. COMPANY D Cadet Capt. Zeigler, Fike, Creasy, Guinn, Shaver, Lon- don, Schaefer, Tollett, Wilson, Wright, Young, Cambron, Mc- Daniel, Navel, Schmidt, Walker, Campbell, Hilliard, Johnson, Quillen, Tate, Wilkes, Wise, Buppert, Fritz, Mitchell, Ran- dle, Smith, Webb, Hixson, Kas- chimer, Scarborough, Thomp- son, Wilson, Young, Butcher, Luther, Moses, Rogers, Vicky, Halbrunt. ?„ PERSHING RIFLES Cadet 2nd Lt. Ekvall, Adams, Dye, Gardner, Gilliam, Green, Halburnt, Jackson, Jacobs, Jones, Morris, Navel, Newber- ry, Pack, Rogers, Schwartz, Tollett, Walker, Wilkes, Wil- son, Whitwell, Goodberlet, Maggaw, Glazner, Barnes. 147 Raulston, Leake, Barker, Waggoner, James. A. U.S. A. D.M.S First Row: Leake, Payne, Galbraith, Jones, Barker, James, Zeigler. Second Row: Capt. Graney, Eldridge, Coventry, Raulston, Jacobs, Fanning, Hilke, Wright, Eckvall, Gregory, Thornbury. If nHHI p «■B ' - r fln ET-M ' f ' Vvi Hi Jb- Jjip ' t I 1 JJIK 8 ■i I M Sj i feX ' is Dm RIFLE TEAM Kneeling: Sgt. Roddy, Orcutt, Pinell, Miles. Standing: Capt. Graney, Fritz, Holt, Dorui, Varnell (Mgr). 148 MISS SANDRA PREWITT Sandra is a sophomore from Oak Ridge, Tennessee. A member of the cheerleading squad, Chi Omega Fraternity, and a MOCCASIN Beauty, this petite brunette with her charming smile is a familiar and attractive sight on the UC campus. MILITARY QUEEN The honor of being chosen Military Queen is given to one UC coed each February. Out of five candidates, nominated by the A.U.S.A., one girl is elected by the entire ROTC unit to reign as their queen. The presentation of the queen and her court takes place at the annual Military Ball, a formal dinner-dance held at the Fairyland Club. This year ' s queen is Miss Sandra Prewitt. She was elected from the following group of nominees: Vicki Kelley, Carol Sanders, Chris Rich- ards, and Joan Huguelet. Left to Right: Vicki Kelley, Carol Sanders, Chris Richards, Joan Huguelet, Sandra Prewitt. . a • ; r , wK Kk- HWP I i v 1 SPORTS Head Coach, A. C. Scrappy Moore The University of Chattanooga Moccasins ended the 1963 season with a 4-6 record against some of the top teams in the nation. Kelly Sargent set a new school record of twenty- seven pass receptions in a single season. Jack Proctor re- turned four kickoffs for 100 yards to set a new University record. Wayne Farmer, captain of this year ' s team, was voted Little Ail-American. The Mocs have a rebuilding job in store as they face the 1964 season with a loss of fourteen seniors. 1963 MOCCASINS Trainer, Sandy Sandlin What do you mean, hold that line? Yes, Larry says that she ' s a blonde in a red suit wearing a blue hat. ' Managers: Skipper Nardo, Gene Hubbuch, Tom Hubbuch, Bill Hope. Humph! Now you get out there and . . . I knew it would work! WB jB|l M rl M liwJi w£-£i ft t ' 31 h H ■fink! ' ' K l ■■■- ■v ihj l r B ' .. -! ■T B S - i2 b P i i Jimmy Denton Tom Schaefer Larry Elmore Ron Eisaman ' ROSTER W Wayne Fanner Larry Brooks Jack Proctor 87 Don Kilpatrick— E 86 Bob Waters— E 85 Tom McQuire — E 84 Kelly Sargent— E 83 Jack Gregory— E 82 Jim Tanara — E 81 Ed Sussdorff— E 80 Jack Watson— E 77 Ted Koulianous — T 76 Joe Matthews — T 74 Bill Hillis— T 73 Bill Harvison— T 71 Billy Fields— G 70 Sid Cahoon— T 67 Steve Kovan — G 66 Terry Davis — G 65 Henry Sorrell — G 64 Larry Brooks — G 63 Glenn Stowe — G 62 Pug Jordan — G 61 Truman Anderson — G 60 Wayne Farmer — G 53 Phil McLaughlin— C 52 Bob Shaddix— C 51 Doug Styles— C 50 Steve Coleman — C 31 Ed Stec— C 42 George Henley— FB 41 Tom Schaefer — FB 40 Bert Caldwell— FB 37 Ron Whaley— HB 36 Glenn Henley— HB 35 Delton Holmes— HB 33 Jerry Harris — HB 32 George Tomich — HB 30 Jack Proctor— HB 15 Ron Eisaman — QB 12 Jim Denton— QB 11 Larry Elmore— QB 10 Don Shaver— QB SEASON ' S Chattanooga 9 Northeastern Louisiana Chattanooga 5 Tennessee Tech 7 Chattanooga 22 East Tennessee State 27 Chattanooga Auburn 28 Chattanooga 7 Middle Tennessee State The Moccasins opened the 1963 season with a 9-0 victory over NORTHEASTERN LOUISIANA and went on to a season against such teams as TENNES- SEE, AUBURN and MEMPHIS STATE. The Eisaman shakes off Howard defense. Anderson and Elmore slow defenders as Proctor regains footing. Harris takes hand-off from Eisaman during E.T.S.U. game. I 5 6 RECORD Chattanooga 7 Tennessee 49 Chattanooga 14 Jacksonville State Chattanooga 25 Florence State 6 Chattanooga Memphis State 13 Chattanooga Mississippi Southern 24 MOCS held their own against these tough teams although they were overpowered. The scoring opened against N.E.La. with a field goal in the last seconds of the first half. Kelly Sargent Eisaman fades for a toss against T.P.I. Sargent runs into trouble after receiving Elmore pass. pulled in an Eisaman touchdown pass in the third quarter and an alert MOC defense late in the game preserved the victory. The following week TENNESSEE TECH upset the MOCS in a muddy, low-scoring contest. A MOC touchdown in the closing seconds was nullified by a penalty and the game ended with a 5-7 TECH victory. Next, a see-sawing scoring battle went to EAST TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY. STATE marched to four touchdowns to eek out their 27-22 victory. The MOCS traveled to AUBURN on Columbus Day and ended up on the short end of a 28-0 score. A 7-0 victory over MIDDLE TENNESSEE STATE broke a MOC three-game losing streak. Steve Coleman intercepted a STATE pass, and Larry Elmore directed the MOCS to a score. The second half was strictly defensive as Captain Wayne Farmer consistently aided in smashing the STATE offense. A fired-up MOCCASIN team traveled to Knox- ville to face the S.E.C. Vols; however the Scrappy MOCS went down to a 49-7 defeat. The MOCS rebounded to a 14-0 victory over JACKSONVILLE (Ala.) STATE. Elmore and Eisaman led the attack for two touchdowns in the first half. In a defensive second half Wayne Farmer and Larry Brooks held Jacksonville scoreless. On November 9, the MOCS honored Sandy Sandlin, the MOC trainer, on his night with a 25-6 trouncing of FLORENCE STATE. Elmore led a ground attack the first half of the game for two of the touchdowns and Eisaman led the aerial attack the last half to complete the scoring. Undefeated and once tied MEMPHIS STATE had their hands full on November 16, barely edging out the MOCS 13-0. This was the finest MOC effort in defeat. 157 Harris looks for an opening in the Jacksonville line. Off tackle slant nets short yardage. 158 Harris penetrates the Tenn. Tech defense for yardage. :? £ . ►• 1 9 6 4 Coach Leon Ford Gary Davis takes rebound from Sewanee eager. MOCCASIN BASKETBALL Under Coach Leon Ford the Moccasin cagers pulled a 13-13 season against an extremely tough schedule of teams. Gary Davis, guard, showed excellent ability on offense and defense. He was the leading scorer with an average of 13.6 points per game. Larry Davis, guard, also excelled in defense, hitting an amazing number of shots from the half court line. As is the custom of the Mocs, the captains were not chosen until the end of the season. Chet Rysedorph and Gary Davis were chosen co-captains for their outstanding work on the team. Huck Smith is the only man on the team who is gradu- ating; therefore the ' 64, ' 65 team should be well seasoned with many old pros. We ' ll be looking for an excellent season next year. Dave Sicko moves in for a layup in the game against Tennessee Wesleyan. ROBERT LUNG Forward LARRY BARNETT Center HUCK SMITH Forward Chet Rysedorf goes up for the rebound. SEASON ' S WON 13 Bryan College 72.54 Maryville 83-52 David Lipscomb 63-60 Bryan College 90-76 Tennessee Wesleyan 76-69 Middle Tennessee 86-71 David Lipscomb 83-71 Florence State 82-75 Athens College 79-73 Oglethorpe 94.75 Maryville 63-48 Howard College 89-62 Howard College 71-69 Huck Smith worms his way through to get a shot off. RECORD 13 LOST 69-81 Tennessee Tech 78-90 East Tennessee 60-75 Kentucky Wesleyan 88-109 Murray State 56-58 Transylvania 48-80 Carson Newman 64-96 Alabama 54-58 Oglethorpe 73-81 Middle Tennessee 80-81 Tennessee Wesleyan 84-93 Florence State 77-79 Athens College 58-72 Carson Newman Gary Davis jumps for a rebound. Wayne Steele gains control of the ball for UC. Robert Lung goes up for a shot. WRESTLING Coach Andy Nardo ponders the situation in a successful match against Georgia. Coach Andy Nardo ' s wrestling team finished the year with an excellent and impressive record. An almost perfect season of eight wins and one loss was the standing of one of the South ' s most outstanding teams. Although the Mocs did not capture the Southeastern Wrestling Tournament, they placed second, only two points behind the powerful Auburn team, the champions for the past eighteen years. Tom Hubbuch was the champion of the 177-pound class, and eight out of nine of the Moc entrants won trophies. Jim Eldridge (123), George Farr (137), and Chuck Steig (191) were in second place. Stieg pulls a reverse on Sewanee grappler. uc 29 uc 19 uc 24 uc 25 uc 26 UC 9 uc 30 uc 34 uc 25 SCHEDULE Maryville 6 Georgia 13 Maryville 13 Carson Newman 6 La Tourneau 8 Auburn 18 Georgia 3 Emory 3 Sewanee 6 MOC MATMEN — Foreground, Left to Right: Henry Sorrell. Frank Wright, George Farr, Schaak Van Deusen, George Thrash, Richard Haiek, Jim Eldridge, Kirk Salter, Charles Bingham, Tommy Hubbuch. Second Row: Glynn Stowe, Ted Brown, Chuck Steig. Third Row: Steve Kovan, Phil Glazner, Bob Cameron. Stieg going for a pin against Sewanee ' s Langley. Van Deusen trying for a take down in Maryville match. Standing, Left to Right: Morrow Chamberlain, Artie Jones, Vin- cent Lord. Kneeling: Ronald Johnson, Jack Davis, Jack Hixson. VARSITY TENNIS TEAM The UC varsity tennis team, under their able coach Leon Ford, has had an exciting year. As members of the Tennessee Interscholastic Athletic Association they have played against many good schools, but their toughest competitors were Ohio State and Sewanee. The mem- bers of this fine team were Morrow Chamberlain, Artie Jones, Jack Morris, Ron Johnson and George Von Cannon. GOLF TEAM The UC golf team plays matches against various southern schools during the months of March, April and May in addition to the Tennessee Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Tournament in late April and the Southern Intercollegiate Tournament in early May. The only loss is last year ' s captain, Darriel Broome. This year ' s team has 4 returning lettermen: Claude Walker, Rob Landham, John Hunley, and George Dorsey. Con- nie Day is a former Tennessee Women ' s Amateur runner-up. The 5 rookies trying out for spots on the team are Colin Aldridge, Don Tribble, Bobby Boehm, Hank Huskey, and Terry Houpt. Coach Geri is doing a terriffic job with the team. Missed again! It takes two to tango. But I ' m afraid of heights! ' By downing the Kappa Sigma team, the In- dependent basketball team secured the 1963-64 trophy. Although they had a 6-0 record, they had to beat the Kappa Sigma team with a 5-1 record. The members of the Independent team were Bobby Boehm, Bill McGuire, Butch Gross, and Morrow Chamberlain. The Kappa Sigma team gained runner-up position by winning over the third place Pi Kappa Alpha team. The Kappa Sigma fraternity took the intra- mural title for wrestling by having 4 winners. They were: Henry Sorrell (heavyweight) , John Pennell (123), Glynn Stowe (187), and Charles Bingham (177) . The Sigma Chi ' s secured second place, just seven points behind the Kappa Sigmas. John Barnes (130), Kirk Salter (157), and Ted O ' Neal (167) led the Sigma Chi ' s. Schaak Van Deusen (137) and Howard Huddleston (115) took other individual honors. The other Men ' s Intramural sports include swimming, Softball, tennis, and golf. In football, Sigma Chi placed first, Pi Kappa Alpha, second, and there was a tie for third place between Kappa Sigma and the Independents. After the ball Janie Rucks Take cover! INTRAMURALS In the fall of ' 63 Women ' s Intramurals started with Pi Beta Phi winning the volleyball tournament. The Independents came in second and Chi Omega third. The other sports included are basketball in February, badminton, tennis, golf, and swimming which all come in the spring. Points may be earned toward membership in WAA through participation in intra- mural activities. The Mocettes are responsible for procuring officials for these events. The spirit runs high, both among the participants and the spectators. Fun and frolic is to be had by all. Backhand ready, Betsy? HOMECOMING QUEEN C_ oro ww -JDarU Martha Johnson, Joan Huguelet, Emma Jean VandergrifT, Connie Day; Carolyn Davis, seated. MISS CHRISTMAS SEAL V ,arleen i Trnold 170 Kappa Sigma, first place. DECORATIONS Phi Mu, first place. !hi Omega Alpha Epsilon Pi Pi Kappa Alpha Pi Beta Phi 1 1 1 ■■V SKUCW1 H Sigma Chi Alpha Delta Pi Baptist Student Center Lambda Chi Alpha Carole Sanders, Head Nancy Jo Bales Vince Lord 171 Carole Rawls, Head Sandra Prewitt Vicki Kelley CHEERLEADERS Richard Hunnicutt Chris Richard 73 2 -v« K • ? % ■■' ' a ' v % n H. • v. ; feS . ' . , L t • ,... V JA l?x « MBS UNDERCLASSES JUNIOR CLASS All of a sudden the juniors realized that the days of survey courses were over and concentration in a major became a reality instead of just a word on registration cards. The juniors found smaller classes and more individual contact with their professors. They had learned how to have a good time long before; as juniors they learned to do it quietly. Junior Class officers pictured left to right are: Hans Bingham, vice-president; Bobbie Quinn, secretary; Joel Cunningham, president; Beth Gentry, treas- urer; and Bob Fanning, representative. JUNIORS First Row: BERTRAM E. ADAMS, JR Wilmington, Del. Business Administration ARTHUR GRAHAM ALLISON Hixson, Tenn. Chemistry ANGELA ANGIOLA Elizabeth, N.J. Pre-Med. ANNA LOUISE ARP Chattanooga Elementary Education Second Row: WILLIAM C. ASHBY Chattanooga Engineering DELORES BACHMAN Chattanooga English MARTHA LOUISE BAGGENSTOSS Chattanooga Physics MICHAEL LESTER BAILEY Rossville, Ga. Engineering Physics Third Row: NANCY JO BALES Chattanooga Elementary Education DUKE BALLARD Chattanooga Art BARBARA KEMP BARBER Chattanooga Art WANDA BARHAM Chattanooga Business Administration Fourth Row: MARY TRUDY BENDER Mineola, N.Y. Psychology MARION LEBRON BENTON Ringgold, Ga. Industrial Engineering Ki-HANS BINGHAM Chattanooga Engineering PAT BIVENS Chattanooga Biology JUNIORS First Row: PATRICIA LEE BONIN Chattanooga French STEPHEN A. BROOKS Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry K EDWARD C. BROWN Chattanooga Industrial Engineering GENIE BROWN Chattanooga Elementary Education Second Row: JAN LYNN BROWN Chattanooga Secondary Education ROBERT LARRY BURT Cleveland, Tenn. Combined Sciences LARRY L. CAMPBELL . . . Ooltewah, Tenn. Business Administration and Accounting WILLIAM L. CAMPBELL Annapolis, Md. Health, Physical Education, and Biology Third Row: HOWARD NEIL CANNON Chattanooga Voice GEORGE CARPENTER Rossville, Ga. Psychology MARTHA J. CARTWRIGHT Soddy, Tenn. Latin BEVERLY MARIE COOK Chattanooga Elementary Education Fourth Row: EUGENE C. COULTER Rock Springs, Ga. Pre-Med. ROBERT NEAL COULTER Chattanooga Spanish JOHN A. COVENTRY Chattanooga Mathematics JOEL CUNNINGHAM Oak Ridge, Tenn. Psychology Fifth Row: JUDITH A. DAVIS Fort Payne, Ala. Psychology PARMA CHARLTON DAVIS, JR Chattanooga Pre-Med. ROSE ANN DAVIS Chattanooga English KlSTEWART OWEN DAVIS Atlanta, Ga. Pre-Med. Sixth Row: CLAUDE E. DENTON Ringgold, Ga. Engineering Physics ] £JAMES RAYMOND DENTON, JR Chattanooga Business Administration RALPH DERIZZO Schenectady, NY. Health and Physical Education | £JOSEPH PATRICK DOLAN Chattanooga Chemistry Seventh Row: PATSY RUTH DOOLEY Cedartown, Ga. Medical Technology ROBERT LEBRON DUGAN Chattanooga Music Education PHYLLIS EASTERLY Cleveland, Tenn. Business Administration JAMES F. ELDRIDGE Chattanooga Business Administration Eighth Row: ROBERT P. EVATT Chattanooga English LARRY FAIN Chattanooga Piano ROBERT K. FANNING Chattanooga Pre-Med. K ' S.GEORGE FARR Chattanooga Business Administration First Row: BARBARA J. FENIX Chattanooga French HARRIET ELIZABETH GENTRY Nashville, Tenn. Social Work LARRY GRANT Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry DONALD RICHARD GRAY Chattanooga Education Second Row: SANDY GRAY Chattanooga Spanish £ JACK G. GREGORY Chattanooga Business Administration WILLIAM G. GRIEVE, JR Norris, Tenn. Biology NANCY GRIFFIN Chattanooga Elementary Education Third Row: RONALD GRIFFIN Dalton, Ga. Accounting KAY GRUBBS Berwyn, 111. Social Work JOE HAGER Chattanooga Engineering Physics KJ.ROSS MERRIELL HAIRE Chattanooga Business Administration Fourth Row: ROBERT E. HAMBY Daisy, Tenn. Engineering Physics MARY ALICE HANDELMAN New York City, NY. History and Political Science CAROLYN S. HANKINS Chattanooga Social and Political Science NANCY HANKS Chattanooga Elementary Education Fifth Row: DENNIS S. HANSON Chattanooga Accounting CONRAD JACKSON HARRIS Chattanooga Secondary Education TOM HARVEY Lindale, Ga. Business Administration WILLIAM LARRY HARVEY Chattanooga Business Administration Sixth Row: JOHN RONALD HASH Rossville, Ga. Geology PHILIP HAYS Chattanooga Physics BRENDA HEIFNER Chattanooga Secretarial Administration MEL W. HEMBREE Chattanooga Business Administration Seventh Row: ANNA MARGARET HETZLER Signal Mountain, Tenn. English JOY HETZLER Chattanooga Secretarial Administration KEMP CLEON HICKEY, JR Chattanooga Secondary Education MERVIN C. HILKE Chattanooga Finance Eighth Row: RONALD GENE HILL Rogersville, Tenn. Production JERRY HOBSON Chattanooga Pre-Med. t JIMMY HOLDER Chattanooga Chemistry CHARLIE HOOPER Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry JUNIORS JUNIORS First Row: WILLIAM T. HOPE Jonesboro, Ga. Marketing | .GENE HUBBUCH Signal Mountain, Tenn. Chemistry HOWARD HUDDLESTON Chattanooga Engineering JOAN HUFFAKER Cohutta, Ga. Elementary Education Second Row: JOHN B. HUGHES South Hadley, Mass. Business Administration WILSON HUNT Chattanooga English .DICK HUTSON . . .Cleveland, Ohio Business Administration BETTYE IRVINE Chattanooga Social Work Third Row: MARK JACOBS Chattanooga Biology JOHN W. JAMIESON Chattanooga Combined Sciences JERRY CHARLES JOHNSON Chattanooga Accounting MINA S. JOHNSON Chattanooga Elementary Education Fourth Row: NAN JOHNSON Chattanooga Elementary Education WILLIAM L. JOHNSON, JR Chattanooga English HUGH KENNETH JOHNSTON Chattanooga Business Administration ARTIE JONES, JR Lookout Mountain, Tenn. English Fifth Row: THOMAS K. JONES Rossville, Ga. History DEBORAH ELAINE KAYLOR Oak Ridge, Tenn. Art Education DEE ANN KEASLER Chattanooga Education MALCOLM KEOWN Chattanooga Physics Sixth Row: JOHN KILLEFFER Chattanooga Biology ■jj_ ANTHONY S. KOENINGER Soddy, Tenn. Business Administration HOWARD EARL LANCASTER Chattanooga Accounting LINDA LEE Rossville, Ga. Secretarial Administration Seventh Row: JOSEPH A. LENTZ Chattanooga Engineering NANCY LITTLE .. Chattanooga Medical Technology KATHIE LORENZ . . Chattanooga Elementary Education LARRY LOWE New Martinsville, W. Va. Chemistry Eighth Row: ( DONALD F. LYNSKEY, JR Chattanooga Chemistry , JIM McCOY Decatur, Ga. Business Administration V.1JOHN McDONALD Hixson, Tenn. Business Administration RUTH MACHACEK Chattanooga Psychology First Row: LYNN G. MARSHALL Chattanooga Psychology NORETTA MEDFORD Cleveland, Tenn. Elementary Education RALPH D. MILES Chattanooga Engineering Physics FRANCIS SAMUEL MILLARD, JR Chattanooga Industrial Management Second Row: SKIPPER NARDO Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry LARRY E. NELSON Chattanooga Combined Sciences SARAH ELIZABETH NEWMAN Ringgold, Ga. Elementary Education RALPH E. NIPP Chattanooga Pre-Med. Third Row: JACQUELYNN LEE NORTON Cleveland, Tenn. Elementary Education TED O ' NEAL Chattanooga Pre-Pharmacy JUDITH ANN PAINTER Rome, Ga. Political Science JANE PARDUE Chattanooga Secondary Education Fourth Row: JERRY HUDSON PARKER Chattanooga Political Science DAN S. PATY Chattanooga Accounting CHARLES W. PAYNE, JR Chattanooga Business Administration ui. GARY EUGENE PAYNE Chattanooga Business Administration Fifth Row: GARY PETERSON Rossville, Ga. Pre-Med. MYRA PHILLIPS Chattanooga Biology MARIA GRAY PITNER Chattanooga Latin JOY PITSINGER Rossville, Ga. Elementary Education Sixth Row: JESSE PRESLEY Chattanooga Accounting JACKIE W. PROCTOR Chattanooga Health and Physical Education BARBARA QUINN Chattanooga Art Education DAVID RAMSAY Chattanooga Business Administration Seventh Row: KAY FRANCIS RANKIN Signal Mountain, Tenn. Art Education ANITA CAROLE RAWLS Chattanooga Elementary Education TIDA RICHARD Chattanooga Business Education PATRICIA ANN RICHMOND Chattanooga Elementary Education Eighth Row: LINDA RICKETS Chattanooga History ELIZABETH ROBERTS Dalton, Ga. Social Work MIKE ROBERTSON Rossville, Ga. Business Administration K HENRY L. ROOKIS Birmingham, Ala. Health and Physical Education JUNIORS JUNIORS First Row: MARY JANE RUCKS Chattanooga Secretarial Education LEROY RYMER, JR Cleveland, Tenn. Business Administration TERRY SCARBROUGH Chattanooga English DWAYNE M. SCOTT Chattanooga Psychology Second Row: RICHARD J. SHAW Lansdowne, Pa. Biology MAXINE SIMS Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Elementary Education U4, W. P. SLATERY Chattanooga Art J. KAY SNEED Chattanooga Education Third Row: .,s JIM SPENCER Chattanooga ' Business Administration CHARLES A. STANDEFER Chattanooga Business Administration ROLLIN H. STAPP Chattanooga Health and Physical Education KAREN DUFFY STEC Chattanooga Biology Fourth Row: HOWARD STEFFEN Chattanooga Engineering JOSEPH DANIEL STOUT Gatlinburg, Tenn. Business Administration Id WILEY GLYNN STOWE Phenix City, Ala. Health and Physical Education EDWINDEEN STRAWN Chattanooga Elementary Education Fifth Row: PAT STULTZ Cleveland, Tenn. Secondary Education EDWIN G. SWART Chattanooga Pre-Med. WENDY TALIAFERRO Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Elementary Education RONALD TEEVAN Lindenhurst, N.Y. Combined Sciences Sixth Row: MARY VIRGINIA TERRY Chattanooga History ALICE THOMPSON Chattanooga Social Work LYNDA ANN THOMPSON Valencia, Venezuela French and Spanish i STEVE TROTTER Rossville, Ga. Pre-Med. Seventh Row: CHARLES VEAZEY Rossville, Ga. Chemistry PHILIP HOWARD VEAZEY Rossville, Ga. Chemistry LARY L. WALKER Dyersburg, Tenn. Engineering MIGNONNE WEBER Granite Falls, N.C. Health and Physical Education Eighth Row: RICHARD M. WEINTRAUB Chattanooga History ANNE WELLS Chattanooga Mathematics JOE WELSH Chattanooga Accounting STEVE WHITAKER Chattanooga Psychology JUNIORS First Row: CAROLYN ANN WILEY Cowan, Term. Secretarial Education CHARLIE N. WILLIAMS Dalton, Ga. Business Administration JEAN WILLINGHAM Chattanooga Social Work FENTRESS ELISABETH WILSON Annandale, Va. Elementary Education Second Row: BRUCE W. WOOD Rauses Point, N.Y. Accounting MARILYN WOOD Chattanooga English SOPHOMORE CLASS Sophomores — aware of the perils of life, prepared to meet the demands of the modern world, and eager to embark into a challenging year leading to gradu- ation — entered the second year of college with new found knowledge and a greater understanding of the purposes of education. Equipped with this new out- look on life, the sophomores were anxious to share their vast expanse of knowledge with the unex- perienced freshmen. In carrying out this project, the sophomores started by aiding in the freshman orien- tation program. Many members of the Sophomore Class were engaged in numerous functions of the school — leadership, athletics, scholarship — reflecting the variety of abilities and interests characterizing the Sophomore Class. Sophomore Class officers pictured left to right are: Bob Lanza, vice-president; Connie McDaniel, secretary; Louise Hampton, treasurer; Bill Eiselstein, president. SOPHOMORES First Row: LINDA MAE ACKERSON Chattanooga Secretarial Administration DELPHINE AINSWORTH Chattanooga Social Work SUSAN ALFORD Chattanooga Secondary Education MARTHA LEE ALLEN Cleveland, Tenn. Art Second Row: ELAINE ALLISON Chattanooga Social Work G. WAYNE ALVERSON Rossville, Ga. Business Administration PEGGY JOYCE ANDERSON Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. Art TRUMAN ANDERSON Lineville, Ala. Health and Physical Education Third Row: JACK A. ARMSTRONG Atlanta, Ga. Mathematics CARLEEN ARNOLD Chattanooga Philosophy, Religion MELVIN E. BAILEY Rossville, Ga. Business Administration SANDRA BAKER Chattanooga Music Education Fourth Row: BARBARA DIAN BARKOW Oak Ridge, Tenn. History CAROLYN BAUGHMAN Chattanooga Elementary Education NELSON RAY BEAN Chattanooga Pre-Med. BOB BELL Chattanooga Accounting SOPHOMORES First Row: R. LOWELL BENNINGTON Chattanooga Business Administration CANDACE BE VAN Chattanooga Biology TERRY BLUNT Signal Mountain, Tenn. Pre-Med. LONNIE BORK . . Chattanooga Engineering Second Row: DALE S. BOYD . Chattanooga Business Administration CHARLOTTE BRIDGE Chattanooga Health, Physical Education and Recreation FRANK BROMLEY, JR Cleveland, Tenn. Business Education DONALD B. BROOKS Chattanooga Chemistry Third Row: JAMES H. BUCKNER Chattanooga ANN BURGNER Chattanooga Health, Physical Education and Recreation RUBEN BURK Ringgold, Ga. Engineering MIKE BYINGTON Chattanooga Chemistry Fourth Row: SIDNEY LAMAR CAHOON Centre, Ala. Business Administration -BILLY CAIN Cartersville, Ga. Political Science DIANA CAMPBELL Chattanooga Psychology EMILY SUSAN CAMPBELL Chattanooga Elementary Education Fifth Row: CHERYL CHAPMAN Stevenson, Ala. Secretarial Administration «£, CHARLES CARROLL CHASE, JR Chattanooga English JOY CARSCADDON Chattanooga Elementary Education WILLIAM R. CHEAL Signal Mountain, Tenn. Psychology Sixth Row: ALBERT J. CHESLAK Newark, N.J. History MARTHA CHRISTISON Chattanooga Social Work ANN RUTHERFORD CLARKE Columbus, Ga. Health and Physical Education BETSY CLEMMER Chattanooga Business Education Seventh Row: CHARLES COULTER Chattanooga Enginering JEANNE CRAWFORD Chattanooga Elementary Education IRIS JOAN CROWNOVER Chattanooga Elementary Education MARY KATHERINE DALBY Chattanooga Pre-Med. Eighth Row: ( EDWARD L. DARR, JR Chattanooga Mathematics CHARLES E. DAVIS Chattanooga Pre-Med. MARY DEAN Chattanooga Secretarial Administration «.£BOB DEARING Chattanooga Business Administration First Row: ELEANOR DELONG Chattanooga Social Work Kg_ JERRY DILLARD Chattanooga Chemistry GERALDINE DITTMAR Chattanooga Chemistry RAYMOND DRIVER Chattanooga Geology Second Row: DIANA LYNNE DRUCE Chattanooga Medical Technology TOM DUFF Chattanooga History ANDREA M. DUKE Rossville, Ga. Secretarial Administration LESTER VANBUREN DUNCAN III Chattanooga Business Administration Third Row: SHARON A. EICKHOFF Chattanooga Secretarial Administration j £ BILL EISELSTEIN Chattanooga Mathematics DAVID ELDRIDGE Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry HOWARD R. ELSON Chattanooga Engineering Fourth Row: LEROY ERVIN Rock Springs, Ga. Business Administration SANDRA ESPY Chattanooga Home Economics BECKY EVANS Chattanooga Elementary Education MARY LOU EVANS Chattanooga English Fifth Row: LUCY FLYNT Chattanooga Secretarial Administration LUTHER A. FRAZIER Chattanooga Health and Physical Education CAROL FREY McMinnville, Tenn. Social Science RONALD FULLER Trenton, Ga. Medical Technology Sixth Row: | l-JOHN MICHAEL FUSSELL Chattanooga Business Administration MARY GAMBLE Atlanta, Ga. Medical Technology JIMMY GEYER Rossville, Ga. Geology MARY GIULIANO Chattanooga Music Education Seventh Row: VIRGINIA ANN GLISSON Cleveland, Tenn. English JUDITH GLYDE Auburn, Ala. Music PAT GODDARD Rossville, Ga. Business Education ROBERT GOODBERLET Avon, N.Y. Business Administration Eighth Row: WALLACE HARRY GOULD, JR Chattanooga Pre-Med. MYRA CAROL GRAVITT Whitwell, Tenn. Psychology HENRY GREEN Chattanooga Mathematics JUDITH ANNETTE GREENE Chattanooga Business Education SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORES First Row: WILLIAM ALVIN GREER, JR Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry MARY GREGG Chattanooga Elementary Education EARL JACKSON GREGORY, JR Chattanooga Health and Physical Education WILLIAM A. GUINN, JR Rossville, Ga. Biology Second Row: RICHARD HAICK Niagara Falls, NY. Geology W. MICHAEL HALBURNT .Chattanooga Political Science STEPHEN THOMAS HALE . . .Signal Mountain, Tenn. Civil Engineering LOUISE ELECTRA HAMPTON Chattanooga Health and Physical Education Third Row: GINNY HAMPTON Chattanooga Psychology JAMES FRANKLIN HARRIS Rossville Ga MARTIN W. HARRIS, JR. . Ooltewah, ferni! Electronics BEN HARTMAN Chattanooga Journalism Fourth Row: JUDY HUNT HEDGES . . . .Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Home Economics JENNIE LYNNE HEYWOOD Chattanooga Medical Technology CAROLYN CECILE HICKS Chattanooga Home Economics SARAH HELEN HIGDON Copperhill, Tenn. Biology Fifth Row: CLARENCE HILLIARD Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. Mathematics £ FRED D. HIXON, JR Chickamauga, Ga. Business Administration JUDITH ANN HOGUE Arlington, Va. Business Administration DIXIE HOLLAND Chattanooga Elementary Education Sixth Row: LINDA HUBBARD . Daisy, Tenn. Liberal Arts JOAN HUGUELET Signal Mountain, Tenn. Liberal Arts SANDRA KAY HULL Canton, Ohio Religion and Philosophy DOUG HULLANDER Chattanooga Pre-Med. Seventh Row: JERRY HUNT Rossville, Ga. Chemistry K£PHIL HYMAN Chattanooga English and Drama TOMMY JACKSON Chattanooga Business Administration JOHN BARRY JENKINS . . Chattanooga Pre-Law Eighth Row: BENNY JOHNSON Hixson, Tenn. Secondary Education LINDA JOHNSON Chattanooga History NANCY JOHNSON Chattanooga Elementary Education JAMES CRAIG JOURNEY Chattanooga Engineering Physics First Row: RONNIE JOHNSON Chickamauga, Ga. Chemistry BONNIE ANNE JUSTIN McMinnville, Term. Secretarial Administration VICKI KELLEY Chattanooga Biology KAROL ANN KILLIAN Signal Mountain, Tenn. English Second Row: DON KILPATRICK Adanta, Ga. Engineering GAY KIMBROUGH Richland, Ga. Elementary Education JOHN KINGTON Chattanooga Chemistry TOM KLINE Port Chester, N.Y. Business Administration Third Row: DAVID KOPLAN Chattanooga Politics SALEM LABBOUS Chattanooga Pre-Med. ANN POWELL LACKEY .Chattanooga History HENRY LEWIS Chattanooga Fourth Row: EVELYN LIVELY Chattanooga Business Education HAROLD DAVID LOCKHART . . .Chickamauga, Ga. History PAT LONG Cleveland, Tenn. Voice TOMMY McBRYAR Chattanooga Pre-Med. Fifth Row: ELLEN GRACE McDADE Skyland, N.C. Pre-Med. CONNIE McDANIEL Ooltewah, Tenn. Elementary Education TOMMY McDANIEL Chattanooga Business Administration LUTHER W. McGINTY, JR Chattanooga Engineering Sixth Row: TOM McGUIRE Knoxville, Tenn. Business Administration THOMAS JOSEPH McHUGH Port Chester, N.Y. Political Science PHILLIP McLAUGHLIN Oak Ridge, Tenn. Health and Physical Education SUE McINTOSH Chattanooga Pre-Med. Seventh Row: SHARON McMAHAN Chattanooga Spanish DEANNE MACORMAC Pittsburgh, Pa. Spanish CAROL MEACHAM Chattanooga Health and Physical Education TACIE ANN METTER Oak Ridge, Tenn. English Eighth Row: ANNE C. MILLER Chattanooga Secretarial Administration LINDA GRACE MILLER Chattanooga Art Education ROBERT JOHN MILLER Chattanooga Psychology CAROLYN MITCHELL Chattanooga Mathematics SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORES First Row: ALVIN O ' BRIEN MOORE, JR Chattanooga Business Administration SUSAN NAIL Chattanooga English MARY ELLEN NELIGAN Chattanooga Medical Technology GAIL LOUISE NEVINS Chattanooga Secondary Education Second Row: DAVID ELLIS NEWTON Chattanooga Spanish JUDY NISWONGER Chattanooga Sociology GABIE NOLAN Chattanooga Elementary Education MADELINE NOLAN Chattanooga Social Work Third Row: GRACE G. OLIVER Chattanooga Elementary Education JOYCE OLSON Oak Ridge, Tenn. Mathematics DONALD H. ORCUTT Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Physics DAN BERNARD PAGE Chattanooga Psychology Fourth Row: ROBERT PANERO . Chattanooga Industrial Engineering MARGARET PARK Chattanooga Social Work ANN ELIZABETH PARKS Chattanooga Elementary Education DOLORES ANN PARTON Chattanooga Humanities Fifth Row: tf£MICAJAH LEE PAYNE Chattanooga Physics JUDY PLATTEN Princeton, N.J. History SUSAN ELLEN POHL Atlanta. Ga. Secondary Education CAROLYN POTTER Chattanooga Art Education Sixth Row: SANDRA KAYE PREWITT Oak Ridge, Tenn. Secondary Education CONNIE L. PRICE Signal Mountain, Tenn. Biology MARTHA PRICE Chattanooga Secretarial Administration JACK QUILLEN Chattanooga Mathematics Seventh Row: SANDRA RAINES Chattanooga History CAROLYN JEAN RAY Chattanooga Chattanooga BOBBY L. RICH Chattanooga Medical Technology CHARLES RICHARDSON.. Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Philosophy Eighth Row: PATRICIA ANN ROBERTS Chattanooga Elementary Education ROBERTO ROJAS Guadalupe, Costa Rica Spanish WILLIAM G. RUFFNER Chattanooga Engineering Physics JOHN CARLISLE SADLER Harriman, Tenn. Business Administration First Row: REBECCA MARIE SAMPLE Chattanooga Medical Technology CAROL SANDERS Chattanooga French PHIL SCARBOROUGH Chattanooga Business Administration TEENA SCOGIN Chattanooga Home Economics Second Row: ROBERT LEROY SHADDIX, JR Chattanooga Health and Physical Education DON SHAVER Jackson, Tenn. Health and Physical Education RIVERS SHAW Alexandria, Va. Political Science ROBERT MONTGOMERY SHEWELL . .Chattanooga Business Administration Third Row: ANNA SLATTON Chattanooga Mathematics KEN SMITH Chattanooga Business Administration MICHAEL SMITH Chattanooga Mathematics and Chemistry ELIZABETH SOLOMON . . . Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Social Work Fourth Row: X£ HENRY THOMAS SORRELL Talladega, Ala. Physical Education JUDY RAE STANLEY Oak Ridge, Tenn. Secretarial Administration RICHARD D. STEVISON Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. Education DAVID THOMAS STEWART Chattanooga Engineering Fifth Row: HARVEY E. STEWART, JR Chickamauga, Ga. Engineering Physics CAROLIN JULIA STRIPLAND Marietta, Ga. Home Economics j £ ROBERT M. STROTHER Rossville, Ga. Art gED SUSSDORF Chattanooga Physical Education Sixth Row: BETTY SWANSON Chattanooga History VIRGINIA THACH Nashville, Tenn. Secondary Education SUE THOMPSON Chattanooga Geology f GEORGE THRASH Chattanooga Chemistry Seventh Row: NANCY TULEY Chattanooga Psychology BOBBY TURNER Chattanooga Engineering Physics EMMA JEAN VANDERGRIFF . Daisy, Tenn. Secondary Education BARBARA VIETH . .Soddy, Tenn. Home Economics Education Eighth Row: BRENDA GAIL WATKINS Hixson, Tenn. Spanish LINDA WHALEY ■.■;■■■: Chattanooga Business Administration RANDY WEIDMAN Charleston, W. Va. Pre-Law LYDIA WILSON Chattanooga Pre-Pharmacy SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORES First Row: RICHARD D. WILSON Chattanooga Pre-Engineering BETSY WOOTEN Chattanooga Spanish CAROLYN ZELINSKY Chattanooga Elementary Education FRESHMAN CLASS Often described as the most difficult time of one ; s college career, the freshman year is a year of adjust- ment for an entirely new way of academic and social life. At the end of a successful college career, you may look back on your freshman year as the most memorable of your lifetime. Freshman Class officers pictured left to right are: Richard Hunnicutt, presi- dent; Ann Collison, treasurer (not pictured); Marcie Rodman, secretary; Jack Davis, vice-president. FRESHMAN First Row: MARCIA ABERNATHY Chattanooga Pre-Nursing KENNETH G. ADAMS Chattanooga Business Administration ROBERT WAYNE ADAMS Elberton, Ga. Pre-Dentistry SCOTT ADAMSON Chattanooga Engineering Second Row: COLIN ALDRIDGE Chattanooga Business Administration PATTIE ANDERSON Oak Ridge, Tenn. Secretarial Administration CHARLES ANTHONY ATKINS Chattanooga Secondary Education TOMMY ATKINS Chattanooga Secondary Education Third Row: ££ CLAY AYTES Chattanooga Business Administration HARRIETT ANN BANDY Chattanooga Health and Physical Education RICK BARKER Savannah, Tenn. Health and Physical Education JOHN R. BARNES Chattanooga Business Administration Fourth Row: JANIS BEARD Chattanooga Elementary Education JESSICA BECKER Chattanooga Home Economics PAT BENDER Chattanooga Secondary Education MARY JANE BENNETT Tunnel Hill, Ga. Elementary Education FRESHMAN First Row: FRED BERSON Brooklyn, N.Y. KlCHARLES E. BINGHAM . . . Chattanooga Engineering ROBERT DAVID BIRD . Chattanooga Engineering JANICE BLACK Chattanooga Secretarial Administration Second Row: KATHERINE BLACKSTONE Chattanooga Pre-Med. TOM C. BLOUNT LeroVj Ala . Pre-Dentistry DANNY BLUE Jacksoil) Ga Health and Physical Education BARBARA ELLEN BOSTAIN Columbia, S.C. Secondary Education Third Row: NANCY BOSTON Chattanooga Secondary Education LINDA JOYCE BOWMAN Chattanooga Pre-Med. JOAN BOYD Chattanooga Psychology DAVID M. BRAMMER Chattanooga Humanities Fourth Row: MARGARET LOUISE BREMAN Chattanooga Psychology REBECCA BRIDGES Chattanooga English LARRY W. BROADRICK LaFayette, Ga. Secondary Education PATRICIA C. BROCK Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. History Fifth Row: JEFFREY M. BRODNICK Chattanooga Business Administration ROGER BROOKING Atlanta, Ga. Business Administration KATHI BROWN Chattanooga History LARRY BUHRMAN Chattanooga Engineering Sixth Row: ELIZABETH ANN BUICE Chattanooga STEVE BULLARD Chattanooga Humanities JERRY BURGESS . Crossville, Tenn. Business Administration HAROLD EDWIN BUTCHER Rossville, Ga. Engineering Seventh Row: BILL CAMBRON Chattanooga Physics HARVEY CAMP Chattanooga Chemistry CAROL ANN CAMPBELL Rossville, Ga. Secondary Education CAROL ANNE CAMPBELL LaFayette, Ga. Elementary Education Eighth Row: VIRGIL BRUCE CAMPBELL Oak Ridge, Tenn. Engineering JUDITH CARSON Chattanooga History MARTHA CAROLE CARTER Chattanooga Music Education TOMMY CARTER Chattanooga Business Administration First Row: JEAN FINLEY CHESTON Silver Spring, Md. Art BEA CLEMMER Rossville, Ga. Social Work JOYCE ANN CLONTS Chattanooga Secretarial Administration BONNER COHEN . . . . Atlanta, Ga. Political Science Second Row: ARIEL COLBURN Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Biology ANN COLLISON Chattanooga History ARTHUR COLTAN Chattanooga Business Administration EDNA JUANELL CONNER Chattanooga Secretarial Administration Third Row: CAROLYN COOP . Chattanooga Mathematics BARBARA FA YE COOPER Rossville, Ga. Mathematics GEORGE COOPER Chattanooga Business Administration RALEIGH COOPER Chattanooga Secondary Education Fourth Row: WILEY ALEXANDER COPPINGER Chattanooga History GEORGE THOMAS CRANWELL Pikeville, Tenn. Chemistry LINDA CRAWFORD Rossville, Ga. Medical Technology MIMI CREASY Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Secondary Education Fifth Row: WILLIAM R. CRIMINGER Signal Mountain, Tenn. Business Administration BETTY ANN CROUSE Chattanooga Home Economics JIMMY CROWE Chattanooga Chemistry SALLY CUNNINGHAM Fayetteville, Tenn. English Sixth Row: JOHN LOREN DANIELS Cleveland, Tenn. Mathematics and Physics RICHARD DARWIN Chattanooga MARY DAVENPORT Chattanooga Secretarial Administration GEORGE HAMILTON DAVIES Dalton, Ga. Engineering Seventh Row: JANET MARIE DAVIS Chatsworth, Ga. Art DEANA DEAKINS Hixson, Tenn. Secondary Education HELEN FRITTS DEAN Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Business Administration TERRY DEDMAN Rossville, Ga. Chemistry Eighth Row: SHARILYN DEERMAN Chattanooga Business Administration LYNDA DeFOOR Chattanooga Music Education fc£ ROGER DICKSON Chattanooga Business Administration MARCUS DIPRIMA Chattanooga Art FRESHMAN FRESHMAN First Row: DIANN DONNER Manila, Ark. Home Economics ANN F. DOWLING Chattanooga Secondary Education LAWRENCE DUKE Hixson, Tenn. Business Administration NELDA DUNN Chattanooga English Second Row: LINDSAY DURHAM Chattanooga Engineering MARY E. DYER Chattanooga Elementary Education RICK DYNESIUS Chattanooga Business Administration klHAL EASTER Chattanooga Chemistry Third Row: JANE EASTERLY Cleveland, Tenn. Secretarial Administration LYNN EDGING Chattanooga History GENE EDMOND Rossville, Ga. Chemistry JOHN EDMONDSON Maryville, Tenn. English Fourth Row: ELIZABETH REBECCA ELIOTT Dayton, Tenn. Mathematics BEVERLY ELLIOTT Chattanooga Elementary Education NEIL ELLMAN Chattanooga Biology CAROL EWTON Chattanooga Health and Physical Education Fifth Row: VICKI Y. FARRAR Chattanooga Art MARY FENIX Chattanooga EDWARD FINLAY Chattanooga Business Administration DANNY FLEGAL Rossville, Ga. Business Administration Sixth Row: RONALD FLEMING Rossville, Ga. Industrial Engineering LOUISE FORD Chattanooga MERRELL FORT El Paso, Texas English PATRICIA RENEE FOWLER Chattanooga Pre-Pharmacy Seventh Row: MIKE P. FRASSRAND Chattanooga Business Administration RICHARD FRICKS, JR Rising Fawn, Ga. Psychology JUDY FULTON .Cleveland, Tenn. Speech and Hearing JAMES GLENN FUSSELL Chattanooga Pre-Med. Eighth Row: ELEANOR GAITHER Chattanooga Elementary Education CAROLYN L. GANN Daisy, Tenn. Mathematics JERRY GARNER Rossville, Ga. Pre-Med. JOHN GIBSON South Pittsburg, Tenn. History First Row: BOBBIE JEAN GILBREATH Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. Mathematics and Secondary Education ROBERT L. GILLIAM Chattanooga Business Administration TOM GLADNEY Chattanooga Chemistry PHIL GLAZNER Chattanooga Pre-Med. Second Row: DON GLENN Chattanooga Physics PAM GOODLET Chattanooga Elementary Education DONA GRAY Chattanooga English VICKEY DIANE GROB Chattanooga Chemistry Third Row: CHARLES GROSS Chattanooga Pre-Law LINDA NELL HAMILL Chattanooga Secretarial Administration WILLIAM GERALD HARMON Chattanooga Business Administration JUNE HARRIS Chattanooga Medical Technology Fourth Row: RAY F. HARRIS Chattanooga Education DAVID CICERO HATMAKER Chattanooga Pre-Pharmacy KAREN HELMS Chattanooga Pre-Med. FRANCIS HENDERSON Chattanooga Pre-Nursing Fifth Row: DON HENNEKER Chattanooga Engineering Physics ELIZABETH V. HILL Copperhill, Tenn. Secretarial Administration JOE ALAN HILL Chattanooga Engineering BEVERLY SUE HIXSON Hixson, Tenn. Biology Sixth Row: JACK HIXSON Chattanooga Pre-Med. HUGH THOMAS HOLT Chattanooga Drama and Speech RONNIE HOYLE Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. Biology LESLIE H. HUBBARD Montevallo, Ala. Engineering Seventh Row: THOMAS F. HUBBUCH Chattanooga Business Administration JACK HUNNICUTT Dalton, Ga. Science MAUREEN HUNTER Charlotte, N.C. Science DEAN HUTSON Chattanooga Business Administration Eighth Row: EUGENE RANDOLPH JACKSON, JR. Chattanooga Business Administration JOHN M. JACKSON Cape May Court House, N.J. Industrial Engineering JUDY GAIL JACKSON Chattanooga Secretarial Administration PATTY JACKSON Chattanooga Home Economics FRESHMAN FRESHMAN First Row: SHERRI JAMES Oak Ridge, Tenn. Psychology ELIZABETH ANN JELLEY Chattanooga Secretarial Administration CHARLES JENKINS Sequatchie, Tenn. Political Science TOM JENKINS Manchester, Tenn. Pre-Med. Second Row: HENRY JOBE Chattanooga Civil Engineering MARTHA JOHNSON Chattanooga Secretarial Administration HARRIET JONES Chattanooga Medical Technology PAT JONES Chattanooga Secretarial Administration Third Row: BERNARD LEE JORDAN, JR Gadsden, Ala. Physical Education NEIL L. KAPLOWITZ Chattanooga Business Administration LEON KASET Chattanooga Pre-Law JEQUITA ANNE KEITH Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. Pre-Med. Fourth Row: BARBARA KINTZING Knoxville, Tenn. Home Economics VAL GEORGE KLEIN, JR Chattanooga Secondary Education DAVID KRING Harriman, Tenn. Business Administration HENRY KUNATH Chattanooga Pre-Med. Fifth Row: ENRICO LAGATTUTA Chattanooga Business Administration AMELIA LANG Cleveland, Tenn. Medical Technology LINDA LASITER Chattanooga Medical Technology GAIL LAWRENCE LaFayette, Ga. English Sixth Row: GILBERT LAY Signal Mountain, Tenn. Business Administration CAROLYN LEE Ooltewah, Tenn. Elementary Education BARBARA LEVI Soddy, Tenn. Elementary Education PATRICIA LLOYD Signal Mountain, Tenn. Art Seventh Row: JACK LONDON Chattanooga Business Administration WILLIS VINCENT LORD Chattanooga Pre-Med. BARBARA LORENZ Chattanooga Elementary Education GEORGE LUTHER Decatur, Ga. Pre-Dentistry Eighth Row: KlRICHARD LYNSKEY Chattanooga Engineering GINGER McALISTER Chattanooga Secretarial Administration GARY LAMAR McCLESKY Atlanta, Ga. Business Administraton DIXIE McCLINTOCK Chattanooga Secondary Education First Row: GAIL McCLURE Chattanooga Elementary Education JUDY McCLURE Zanesville, Ohio Elementary Education SAMUEL RUSSELL McGEE Lookout Moutain, Tenn. Business Administration ALAN McGILL Chickamauga, Ga. Pre-Pharmacy Second Row: MICK McLEMORE Madison, Tenn. Physical Education PETE McNALLY Oak Ridge, Tenn. Physics JEFFREY MACK Chattanooga Business Administration PRISCILLA MADARIS Chattanooga Secretarial Administration Third Row: LARRY MARTER Chattanooga Health and Physical Education PAMELA MARTIN Phoenix, Ariz. Social Work POLLY ANN MARTIN Chattanooga English GARETH MATTHEWS Rossville, Ga. Engineering Fourth Row: RAYMOND MILLER Chattanooga Law )(£RONNIE MILLIGAN Tuscaloosa, Ala. Health and Physical Education DAVID MILLS Pikev ille, Tenn. Mathematics JAN MILNER Chattanooga Elementary Education Fifth Row: ROSEMARY MINDOCK Chattanooga Elementary Education RONALD MITCHELL Chattanooga Engineering MIKE MORRIS Dalton, Ga. Industrial Engineering WAYNE DENNIS MOSES Chattanooga Pre-Law Sixth Row: BEAMAN MURPHY Rossville, Ga. Industrial Engineering FRANKLIN NATHAN Chattanooga Pre-Med. JAN NELSON _ Chattanooga Secretarial Administration MARY JO NEWMAN Chattanooga Music Education Seventh Row: JUDITH DIANE NORRIS Chattanooga Elementary Education NANCY ODUM Chattanooga Secondary Education LYNDA ORRELL Chattanooga Secondary Education YA HARVEY OUZTS Chattanooga Pre-Med. Eighth Row: JOHNNY PACK Chattanooga History LYNN PANERO Bay Shore, N.Y. Psychology LOUIS PASTORIK Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry SYLVIA PAYNE Knoxville, Tenn. Psychology FRESHMAN FRESHMAN First Row: U JOHN PENNELL Chattanooga Sociology ROBERT WAYNE PETERS Ringgold, Ga. Business Administration ROBERT PETERSON Chattanooga Physical Education CLAIRE PHILLIPS Chattanooga English and French Second Row: GARY PHILLIPS Chattanooga Business Administration RICHARD PIERCE Chattanooga Pre-Med. TOM PIKCIUNAS Chattanooga Business Administration JIMMIE LEE PITTS Dalton, Ga. Business Administration Third Row: CHARLOTTE POPE Chattanooga Elementary Education MARY WILL POPE Chattanooga French ALICE POSPISIL Chattanooga Elementary Education MARGARET PRESLEY Chattanooga Medical Technology Fourth Row: LLOYD QUARTIN Brooklyn, N.Y. Liberal Arts SUSAN QUINTON _ Chattanooga Physical Education ELIZABETH REED Chattanooga Biology GAILE REES : • • .Charleston, W. Va. Home Economics Fifth Row: JANET REEVES Chattanooga Philosophy and Religion DONALD B. REID Athens, Tenn. History WAYNE REID Chattanooga Business Administration MARION RENNICH Oak Ridge, Tenn. Psychology Sixth Row: CHRISTINE RICHARD Chattanooga English BOB RICHARDSON Lookou t Mountain, Tenn. Liberal Arts EDDIE G. RIGSBY Chattanooga Business Administration MARCIE RODMAN Chattanooga English Seventh Row: ARTHUR RONALD ROGERS Chattanooga Engineering JANICE ROTHE Chattanooga History ROBERT M. SANDERS Chattanooga Business Administration PETER S. SANFORD Atlanta, Ga. Physics Eighth Row: ANN SATTERFIELD Chattanooga Health, Physical Education and Recreation PAUL J. SCHALLER Buffalo, N.Y. Education W. WARREN SCHMIDT . . Chattanooga Chemistry CAROL ANN SCHMITT Chattanooga Medical Technology First Row: UDO SCHROFF Chattanooga Pre-Med. JEFFREY BRUCE SCHWARTZ Chattanooga Business Administration JERRY SCHWICHTENBERG Milwaukee, Wis. Education LINDA SCOGGINS Chattanooga Mathematics Second Row: SUZANNE SELLERS Chattanooga Philosophy JASPER WAYNE SENTER Fulton, Miss. Engineering JOHN SHALETT Chattanooga Sociology MARY C. SIMPSON Chattanooga Elementary Education Third Row: JO LYNN SIMS Rossville, Ga. Secretarial Administration JUDITH ANNE SKETOE Chattanooga History TERRY CHARLES SLAUGHTER Chattanooga Business Administration TEMPLE SMARTT Chattanooga Home Economics Fourth Row: BEVERLY E. SMITH Birchwood, Tenn. Health, Physical Education and Recreation CHARLES D. SMITH Chattanooga Mechanical Engineering DIANA C. SMITH Cleveland, Tenn. Pre-Dentistry K JIMMY BODKIN SMITH Chattanooga Business Administration Fifth Row: LARRY SMITH Chattanooga Commercial Art WESLEY SMITH Sequatchie, Tenn. Business Administration X RAY SOILEAU . . Trussville, Ala. Health, Physical Education and Recreation JOYCE SOMMERS Chattanooga Elementary Education Sixth Row: SUSAN SPARGO Copperhill, Tenn. Secretarial Administration SPARKY SPARKS Huntsville, Ala. Health, Physical Education and Recreation FRED DOUGLAS STANDEFER London, England Business Administration GANO STEVENS Fair Lawn, N.J. Elementary Education Seventh Row: CHUCK STIEG Chattanooga Health and Physical Education VICKI SUITER Rossville, Ga. Biology CARL SUNDSTROM Chattanooga Pre-Pharmacy TRISH TERRY Chattanooga Art Eighth Row: JERRY LARUE THOMAS Dalton, Ga. Industrial Engineering BOBBY J. THOMPSON Chattanooga Physics GEORGE LOWERY THOMPSON Chattanooga Chemistry NANCY THOMPSON Chattanooga Medical Technology FRESHMAN FRESHMAN First Row: TOMMY THOMPSON Gainesville, Ga. English RALPH THORNBURY Chattanooga Mathematics MICHELE C. TIPTON Chattanooga DANIEL D. TRIBBLE, JR. Chattanooga Engineering Second Row: DAVID M. TURNER Chattanooga Psychology DAVID VARNELL Chattanooga Biology WILLIAM VARNELL Whitwell, Tenn. Law CHARLES R. VIAR Halls, Tenn. Political Science Third Row: RICHARD ALEX WADE Chattanooga Psychology BONNIE WALKER Chattanooga Elementary Education ■MICHAEL JERRY WARD Chattanooga Pre-Dentistry JANICE GAIL WATKINS Chattanooga Medical Technology Fourth Row: ALVA WEBB Hixson, Tenn. Elementary Education JACK LARRY WEBB Chattanooga Industrial Engineering NANCY WEEKS Chattanooga Art MILTON WELCH Chattanooga History Fifth Row: CAROLYN WELLS Chattanooga Elementary Education NORMAN WEST Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Humanities ROBBIE WHARTON Ooltewah, Tenn. Language BARBARA WHITE Chattanooga Language Sixth Row: KAREN RUTH WHITTLE Chattanooga Piano BONNIE WILDER Chatsworth, Ga. Art DENNIS R. WILKES Chattanooga Engineering LEROY WILLIAMS Chattanooga Secondary Education Seventh Row: BARBARA JANE WILSON Chattanooga Medical Technology DELMONT WILSON, JR Hixson, Tenn. BILLY WISE Chattanooga Business Administration JULIA PAGE WOOD Galax, Va. Elementary Education Eighth Row: LINDA WOOD Ooltewah, Tenn. Piano ANN WOODARD Signal Mountain, Tenn. Special Education WILLIAM JOHN WOOLF, JR Chattanooga Art JERRY WORMSLEY Chattanooga Engineering FRESHMAN First Row: ,y FRANK WRIGHT Chattanooga r-Z Psychology JAMES WRIGHT . . Chattanooga Sociology, Pre-Law WILLIAM YARBOROUGH Tylertown, Miss. Chemical Engineering GEORGE YOUNG Montgomery, Ala. Industrial Engineering Second Row: ANDREA ZAVA Oak Ridge, Tenn. Psychology rsTER Y WORD IS! w j | NOW WHERE THE HECK DID I PUT THE KEY TO THAT MOTORCYCLE? -rrtfiaiy 1 - ilj ' lH. ■.„..•;.-_ - - - i I ■■' We would like to express appreciation to George Braziller, Inc., for permission to reprint from the book Letters of James Agee to Father Flye. We thank the following people for their cooperation in allowing us to use their homes as settings for the Beauty Section: Mr. and Mrs. J. Burton Frierson of Lookout Mountain Mr. and Mrs. Mertland M. Hedges of Lookout Mountain Mr. and Mrs. Z. Cartter Patten of Chattanooga Valley Mr. and Mrs. Eugene M. Thomasson of Riverview
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