University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN)
- Class of 1973
Page 1 of 356
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 356 of the 1973 volume:
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awareness is striving to stretch the range of eye and ear. . . it is taking time to 100k and to listen and t0 nd. comprehe -w. a. peterson :mm ' - e $3,. - ' .' 1 '. xW '4 .' a1 . '-. . the most important thing in the lives of all of us is to be aware . . . Xx but of the everlasting present. -anne maybury 11 kmm m features 15 homecoming 72 - these are the good ole days 18 A Musical Extravaganza launched Home- coming festivities with performances by the Newfound Gap, the UT Singers, and others. ttRally Daytt followed with the judging 0f Fraternity, Sorority, and Residence Hall decorations, a bike race, and the Super Rally ending With an outdoor concert on the Uni- versity Center Roof Plaza. uField Day con- sisted of a carnival at the intramural fields with booths featuring exhibitions, conces- sions, and games,f0110wed by a mini-concert and a student-alumni dance. Game Day included the traditional pre-game freshman foot race and the highlight of Homecoming, the UT v. Ole Miss game. A victory and 3 Homecoming concert featuring Chuck Berry and the Ace Trucking Company put the finishing touches on 3 Homecoming memory. 19 festivities make new memories 3,1,1 free time UTK students found things to do other than study on week- ends. From Friday's ttHappy Hourtt to Saturday night's con- certs, students relaxed and had fun. The university provided a variety of recreation facilities for student use. The Student Aquatics Center, tennis courts, gym facilities, p001 room and bowling lanes were a few of the places students could spend free time. The activities pro- gram brought films and enter- tainers t0 the campus for stu- dent enjoyment. 21 dance theatre The main performance of the UT Dance Theatre was held during winter quarter on Febru- ary 24-25 at Clarence Brown Theater. The guest performer was Barry Shelton, male soloist with Lamar University Ballet Company. Also performed as part Of the Friends of Dance series of University Concerts and co-sponsored by the UT. Dance Theatre, were the First Chamber Dance Company, No- vember 4, Contemporary Danc- ers February 7, and the Daniel Nagrin Workshop Apri14-7. 24 25 opera theatre UT Opera Theatre, whose director is Edward Zambara, was in its 6th year on the UT campus. Every production was geared to student participation and to provide a learning ex- perience in all aspects of the operatic theatre. This year the theatre produced 3 operas. uElixir of Love , by Donizetti was presented NOV. 9-12 in the Music Hall Auditorium. ttDie Fledermouse was presented on Feb. 1, 2 and 3 in the UT Opera Hall. The last production was ttMacbeth , by Verdi, done completely in Italian, on May 24 and May 26. Faculty mem- bers also participated in the performances, as well as the University Chorus and the Opera Chorus. 3x. m3 ttartuffei and 1776, tt1776 was Clarence Brown Theatre's first production of the season. It ran from Sept. 26-30 and Oct. 2-7. Benjamin Franklin tRobin Kemppainenl, John Hancock IEugene Dan- ielst, John Adams tBarry Brind- leyJ and Thomas Jefferson tChris Smithl portrayed the major Characters in this com- edy-spoof 0f the signing of the Declaration of Independence. hiTartuffe'i brought to the UT stage the services of Richard Galuppi, who made his debut at UT in HWaiting for Godot. He is a professional actor from Pittsburgh, Pa. The play was performed in the Clarence Brown Theater Nov. 8-18. Other major Characters were Elmire tWandalie Henshawl, Damis IRonald Venablel, Mariane tMaria Wozniakt, Dorine tHar- riet Nicholsl and Tartuffe Hon Lutzt. 32 stars and concerts Tony Bennet and Buddy Rich and His Orchestra performed February 17 at the Civic C01- iseum. The music of the ttBig Band't was well received. Ben- net put on a show, toasting the fans, the band, and the con- ductor. Also appearing in concert at the Stodely Athletic center, Rare Earth and Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Air- men made a hit. Cody's music, a combination of country, rock and roll, and 19405 swing blended together to form a unique means of entertain- ment. Wwwawmqu tthe serpentt Van Italliets HThe Serpenttt opened March 3, to the con- fusion of the audience during some parts of the performance. It explored the book of Genesis, relating it to modern life ex- periences. Making the most of its unusual setting, ttThe Ser- pent was at least a different experience for most theatre buffs. xnmxwxmmxvzw. 36 fifth dimension The Fifth Dimension, along with Merry Clayton, appeared in concert at Stokely Athletic Center on March 8. They per- Y formed their standard hits and 'some exciting new material, which was thoroughly enjoyed by the capacity audience. 38 twaiting for godott Samual Beckett's first play, ttWaiting For Godot, was pre- sented by Carousel Theater on October 11-15, and October 20-21. As a part of the infamous Theatre of the Absurd, the audi- ence resigned itself to the ap- parent nonsense 0f the play, whose purpose was not to push around Big Ideas, but to simply express the texture of exist- ence. The cast included Estra- gon tRichard Galuppi1, Vladi- mir Uon Lutzl, P0220 tRobert Shawt, and Lucky tBen Har- Ville1. Wandalie Henshaw made her debut as director of this much misunderstooTWork of dramatic art. iignxai canadian dancers The Canadian Dance Troupe presented an unusual program of modern dance at the UTK music building auditorium. Beginning with an amusing country dance medley, the troupe continued with both lighthearted and serious rout- ines. The audience was very appreciative and enjoyed the interpretations that the dancers presented. The troupe also instructed several dance class- es during the time that they were on campus. dionne and elvis The distinctive and versatile voice of Dionne Warwick has demolished the barriers that used to separate pop, rhythm and blues, jazz, and gospel singing. She appeared at Stok- ley Athletics Center on Friday, October 20, and pleased the audience, beginning with a three-song medley of her best- known hits. They were ttWalk on By, HI Say A Little Prayer, and HDO You Know the Way to San Jose. Dionne wooed the a audience with her superb voice control, and the concert was the perfect example of profession- alism in singing. She spoke the words to John Lennonts uImag- inef' and her appeal for world peace in song was her most emotional effort as she received a standing ovation. People change, fashions change, music Changes, times Change, but the enigma of Elvis- superman 0f the rock tn, r011 era w- lived on during his sell- out performance April 8, 1972, at Stokley Athletics Center. 42 john hartford and loggins and messina Iohn Hartford was reviewed as HThe only lyricist in current popular music who's fit to be called a poet. He picked a whole bunch of banjo and played a hypnotic fiddle. His performance in the Alumni Gym on November 17, gen- erated excitement and got the crowd together, stamping their feet and Clapping t0 the magical sounds of Hartford's banjo and fiddle. His style was a com- bination of bluegrass and rock and his music had an appeal to a variety of listeners. Loggins and Messina ap- peared at the Alumni Gym on November 3 to a sellout crowd. Their music was youthfully vibrant, personally warm and amazingly tight. The audience responded well and heard mu- sic from their new album HSit- tin' In. The musicians have worked together on each other's material and have gathered a group of remarkable musicians. 44 45 holbrook as twain uMark Twain Tonight, starring Hal Holbrook played the Civic Auditorium on February 2. The rapport which Holbrook achieved with the audience was extraor- dinary. For two hours Hal H01- brook was Mark Twain and the audience enjoyed every moment. rod mckuen On October 29, Rod McKuen appeared at Stokely Athletic Center dressed in a work shirt and sneakers. When heard in concert, the raspy, strained voice so predominant in his records was non-existent. Only a small amount of poetry was presented because the main concentration was on his mus- ical arrangements. 47 K 49 tas you like itt The National Players, the most highly respected touring theatre repertory company in the United States, presented the Shakespearian comedy As You Like It on February 6 at the Civic Auditorium. ttAs You Like It was a narrative of family feuds, starcrossed lovers and disguised heroines. In its 373rd year, As You Like It charmed the audience with its delightful dilemmas of people in love. Brought to Knox- ville by the University Concerts Celebrity Series, the players were on a coast to coast tour of the United States. They were in their 25th year of existence and have played an invitational performance at the White House and nine overseas tours. W the square revolution The Square Revolution pre- sented several short produc- tions in Theatre 11 of Clarence Brown Theatre. Molierefs The Doctor in Spite of Himself commented on the medical profession. nRide Across Lake Constance, a play by Richard Handke, opened in January. Gunter Crassfs HNOCh Zehn Minuten Bis Buffalf On1y Ten Minutes until Buffalm was performed in German. UTK s lab theatre offered a smaller and more intimate ap- proach to dramatics. 50 52 53 the buskers aaDracula, Baby! opened November 20, and again in January by popular demand. The musical farce 0n Bram Stokeras novel with Steve Fos- ter as Dracula, Patti Bryant as a Mae West-type nurse, and Scott Conley as Renfield, was a smash success. In the March production of afThe Secret Life of Walter Mittyf Patti Bryant played Agnes Mitty with a Ncharacter- ization of originality and ad- mirable intensity? Steve Fos- ter portrayed Walter Mitty, who extended reality to please himself. u.t. singers The UT Singers came into being on the Knoxville campus in 1949, created initially as a choral group devoted primar- ily to serious works. However, the exceptional talents of the Singers soon led to a colorful reputation for versatility in performance - from Monte- verdi to Country Music to Rock. A top-notch touring group of approximately 44 students is chosen each year on the ba- sis of talent, leadership abil- ity, scholarship, and devotion toethe rigid schedule required to attain the traditionally high quality of performance. In ad- dition t0 the vocal members there is an instrumental back- up group that provides accom- paniment in keeping with the various types of music the Sing- ers perform. Suprisingly, only a small percentage of the Sing- ers are music majors, and al- most every area of study is re- presented. Under the direction of Dr. Guy Alan Bookman, the Sing- ers have been designated ttTen- nesseets Musical Ambassa- dors by Act of the General Assembly of the State of Ten- nessee. Each spring, the Sing- ers use their vacation break for a good-will trip to tour the home state and usually parts of surrounding states as well, Visiting high schools, conven- tions, Clubs, government offi- cials, and student and alumni groups. Military installations both at home and abroad are a favorite audience. The Sing- ers have traveled on concert tour outside the United States eight times and planned anoth- er trip for Summer, 1973. 54 circle drill feature of ut band The UT Pride of the South- land Band attracted over 300 members this year. The band appeared at all of the home football games and three out-of- town games. This year the band was selected to march behind the presidential car,' as the Honor Band Of the Presidential Inaugural Parade. This was the fourth inaugural parade the Pride of the Southland Band has participated in, but its first as ttHonor Band. 56 57 M, 58 de of the pr: hland asked sout lOIl t to Inaugura 59 pibeta phi. . . all sing 73 With the theme itWe Belieye in Musicf' 1973 All-Sing was presented with great success. Master of ceremonies was Pro- gram Director of WKGN radio, Mr. Bob Baron. He was aided by appearances by such cam- pus celebrities as Bill Battle, Archie Dykes, and Smokey. Reese and Humes Halls walked away with top awards February 23, with first place in the Mixed Group category. In second place was Massey- Greve Halls, followed by Phi Delta Theta and Delta Delta Delta in third. In other categories Phi Gam- ma Delta won first place in the Large Merfs Group performing tiThe Sounds of Silenceii and ttWindy. They were followed by the Pi Kappa Alpha Frater- nity. 60 m 16 d a m m a 9 .1m p A $03. ., ,gthamv aw 4 f. lambda chi alpha reese-humes 1973 aH-sing The Large Woments Group was won by Pi Beta Phi soror- ity, performing ttThe Boy From Ipanema and ttSometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Childft The second place in this cat- egory went to Zeta Tau Alpha, third to Phi Mu. Lambda Chi Alpha won first place and audience admiration in the Small Group category, using barber shop quartet mat- eria1.A1pha Xi Delta and Clem- ent Hall finished second and third. halloween for 5.11 kids Halloween offered a good time for children from neigh- boring areas and also for the students. UTK's students got into the spirit by getting togeth- er for a residential pumpkin- carving. Charlie Brown's Great Pumpkin play was the high-light 0f Massey Halrs Halloween Party for a local Boys Club. The Children trick- 0r-treated at decorated dorm doors. Clement Hall entertain- ed children from Wesley House, while Strong hosted Girl's Clubs. 64 b1 ack history week In February, Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority sponsored Black History Week. The week was organized to give exposure to the various aspects of black culture and history. Events such as art exhibits, and films went on during the week. The Aaron Staples Community Choir presented a program at the U. T. Center Auditorium and an hEvening of Souls, was put on by a group of Memphis State University students. There was a Sickle Cell Ane- mia Drive as well as a speaker and film on the disease held during the week. Other speak- ers were Sonia Sanchez, po- etess, and Representative Iule ian Bond of Georgia who dis- cussed the problems confront- ing black students. 67 evening of soul ' sickle cell anemia - part of black heritage r'w W.M.....wui-. ,vV 71 international house focus for foreign students UTKts five hundred foreign students, representing sixty- five countries, faced a variety of problems in university life. As they learned to cope with everyday life, they also found places of their own at UTK. The International House was the focus for most of the events and a second home to inter- national students. When the 'Munich soccer team visited UTK, a reception was given at the House. Students went to the House for other events, such as meetings, but the House was also a center for social gatherings every weekend. The establishment of Scandinavian Club, an international dinner, celebration of the Chinese New Year, and the gala World on Parade in the spring offered a wide range of activities in which to participate. WNW j - L , vymew.wav-wmw:mxw ?xxxunxmmmymtmwwvd rwwmwmmm a mmv ' 74 65 countries represented at ut 75 issues Differing in format than in the previous four years, the Issues Program for fall quarter was centered around many in- dividual topics which had no relation to each other. The speaker's topics ranged from Government secrecy and prison reform to the fascinating and little understood world of ESP. The Fall Program included such speakers as the former press secretary to President Kennedy, Pierre Salinger, col- umnist Ioe Speare, criminolo- gist and former warden 0f the Arkansas penal system Tom Murton, and ESP advocate Russ Burgess. ttThe FBI spies on political leaders, blacks, actors, ath- letes, and anyone who speaks his mind. -10e Speare 76 HThe only information that the US government has a right to hold fromtthe American people is when publication of that in- formation will harm the na- tional security. tPierre Salinger gm ta 77 HWe d better revolutionize the prison system or otherwise we are liable to have a slave riot. -Tom Murton 78 ESP is a form of creativity and we all possess it to a different degree. -Russ Burgess 79 ttMore than 40 per cent of American males have engaged in some kind of homosexual activity at some point in their lives. However, many of these people feel that their homo- sexual experiences have made them less than entirely hetero- sexual and they have enacted defenses against their possible homosexuality. e Dr.A1an Bell 80 issues Human sexuality and the present role of the black man in America highlighted speak- erts topics for the Winter Is- sues Program. Albert Ellis and Alan Bell spoke to overflowing audiences about the various aspects of human sexuality. Sonia Sanchez, appearing as a part of Black History week, and Dr. Charles Hurst, former president of Malcolm X Col- lege, commented on the rela- tionship of black people in a white society. hThe male believes that he must have sex now. He he- comes utterly miserable and depressed if he doesnht. The female, on the other hand, is more interested in love than in H sex. e Dr.A1bertEllis I703 81 In the 70's there is a respon- sibility to being black. IFS not talk, it's not wearing a natural, ifs changing your perspective. - Sonia Sanchez 82 We are not moving toward a nation of two societies, we are a nation of two societies. Dr. Charles Hurst 83 rape panic hits campus For a few weeks last fall, one subject dominated all discus- sions in dorms, classes, cafe- terias, and off-campus areas rape. The rape panic began in the summer and reached its peak in October when a girl was raped at mid-day in the Human- ities building on campus. 84 This panic eventually reached state-Wide proportions as state and local officials called for extra protection and patrolling of campus areas, and also offered rewards for infor- mation leading to the capture of the attackers. Two dorms and a fraternity offered round the clock escort service, and girls all over campus carried knives, hair-spray, mace, and other protective weapons. Project Feedback had a program to in- form students about the prob- lem and told women what pro- tective measures to take. Even- tually, the police made one arrest and the panic died down. Many women still worried about the remaining uncaught assailants, but after a few weeks, the campus returned to normal. 85 womenk lib active on utk campus An upsurge in interest in women reached the UTK cam- pus as several different organi- zations became active in proj- ects to inform women on cam- pus of their situation. Project Feedback discussed Dr. Nancy Van de Vate s suit against the University for discrimination because of sex. 86 87 Women Involved Today spon- sored a discussion group for all U.T. women called The Tues- day Thing for Women, in which women brought their lunches and took part in dis- cussions ranging from the Task Force Report on Women to dis- crimination 0n the campus. The U.T. Evening College and Of- fice of Special Services spon- sored a fair at West Town Mall with exhibits demonstrating career opportunities for wo- men, and the Feminist Coalition held a series of lectures on The Forgotten Halff Mn, ' 72 1011 elect 88 national state, and local elec- tions as prominent candidates appeared in Knoxville. The Student Senate put on voter registration drives and students turned out at the polls in fairly large numbers as students were successful in finally getting all regulations lifted against stu- dent registration. A heated battle Which aroused a great deal of interest in the UT. area was the fight for the State legis- lative seat from the UT. dis- trict. John Mann and Bill Owen conducted a vigorous campaign throughout the district as John Mann won in one of the closest races in the city. 89 students propose liquor resolution With the lowering of the legal age to 18, representatives of five of the university campuses drafted a resolution for posses- sion of liquor on campus, which the Board of Trustees put under committee study for further consideration. Since Knoxville legalized liquor by the drink, liquor was easily available to the students in 0ft-campus areas. The University also per- mitted consumption of liquor in fraternity buildings. Students hoped that the Board would allow students to have liquor on university property in the near future. 92 93 r, 11911.1?!sg :. L gvirciuszusgii : X L L, ?...? N 1. Students seeking off-campus housing faced deteriorated conditions in the Fort Sanders area. Officials investigating cited numerous housing code violations throughout the area. Residents formed an Ad H00 committee and sought improve- ments in many areas as Mayor Kyle Testerman promised full cooperation in alleviating the problem. Where were you in Decem- ber of 1961? If your name was Kennedy, you were in the White House, worrying about a beard- ed Cuban revolutionary and a hideous brick wall in Berlin, unaware of a fateful rendevous with an assassin's bullet that awaited you two years hence. If your name was Nixon, you were in California preparing for an unsuccessful run at the Governor's Mansion and would soon tell the press that you were throwing in the political towel. But if your name was James Thomas Davis of Living- ston, Tennessee, your future was even bleaker because you were on patrol in a place called Vietnam and you were about to die a cut down by a hail of Viet Cong bullets as you stum- bled from a mass of tangled steel that used to be your truck before it ran over an electron- ically controlled land mine. Sp. 4 Davis was the first Amer- ican killed in that strange little country of rice paddies and Buddhist Monks. He would not be the last. It has been 11 years since Davisi life line was so abruptly severed. Severed from the Cumberland Plateau where he grew up; severed from his wife Geraldine and his two year old daughter Cindy; sever- ed savagely, not by disease nor by accident, but by the pre- meditated act of a Vietnamese boy. What did the Vietnamese boy have against a good ol' fellow from Tennessee? Was not Jim Davis well-liked by al- most everyone he met? Did not his family love him dearly? Good Lord, did Mrs. - Davis make her son put on his heavi- est coat in the cold only for him to gunned down in Vietnam? That is the question Mrs. Davis must have asked and the ques- tion that has tormented more than 45,000 other American mothers from 1961 when their sons risked land mines and am- bushes as military advisors, until 1973 when their sons were being picked out of the air over Hanoi like targets in some Cheap penny arcade shooting gallery. In 1961 the American people knew much more about penny arcades than they did about Vietnam. Perhaps todayls freshman, who was but then seven years old, had learned of Vietnam in geography class, but 96 no dancing in the that is not likely. Vietnam was pretty insignificant as countries go. When Jim Davis was grad- uated from Tennessee Tech in 1959, he had never even heard of Vietnam, we are told. The 1973 graduate is better inform- ed. He knows about Vietnam be- cause he has grown up with it, much as a child afflicted with a crippling disease grows up with loneliness. The 1973 grad- uate knows about Green Berets, HGooks, and protective re- action. He has received a crash course in herbicides, napalm, and defoliation; he knows about body counts and smart bombs and can point out the Gulf of Tonkin on a map. He knows of all these things and he knows more. He knows about hundreds of thousands of young people growing long hair, smoking pot and marching against their gov- ernment. And he knows about the firing squad of National Guardsmen at Kent State, about Universities being shut down and about students pitted against each other in verbal and physical battle. He knows about these things and he knows more. He knows about young men with hate in their eyes who spell America with a HK and blow up banks, ROTC build- ings, and sometimes themsel- ves. He knows about construct- ion workers who march down the streets of New York and beat up long-haired protesters because their sons and brothers are dying in remote rice pad- dies for some reason they can- not understand. And they asked why e why are college students free to protest and attack the t l StreetS -' rob Christenson government while their sons are free only to be drafted and get a bullet in the head. The 1973 graduate knows all these things, and because he knows them he shares with Adam the God-forbidden bur- den of a terrible knowledge a the knowledge of a tarnished idealism and the knowledge that America, that great and noble democratic experiment, helped perpetuate a crime against humanity. And as Adam was banished from Eden for tasting the apple, many in the Class of '73 no longer seek par- adise for having experienced the bitter fruits of Vietnam. John F. Kennedyls grand phras- es which inspired the young just a year before James Davis death now ring as hollow as Lyndon Iohnsonls Great Soc- iety; no longer are many of us convinced that we shall, in fact, overcome. Innocence died in those rice paddies as sure as James Thomas Davis died there. But the agony and torment of Vietnam was not confined to the Asian continent. Vietnam dripped, dripped, dripped like a leaky faucet against the Amer- ican psyche, until no longer able to control herself, she lashed out in a violent fit! A fit that so shook America that no one was able to escape it - pervading every aspect of our lives. 'The University of Tenness- ee was no longer just an insti- tution of higher learning, but a safe harbor from the slaughter. Because of the draft, the grad- uate ranks swelled and the grading system became A, B, C, D, and 1-A. A counter-cul- ture developed around the war, and many of us began wearing outlandish clothes and shoulder length hair. No longer were the expensive clothes we could afford fashionable. So we don- ned the tie-dyed shirts, buttons with anti-establishment mes- sages, old jeans, and anything else we thought would anger the war-makers. Even the lang- uage Changed and was replaced- by repetitive, inarticulate rhet- oric. Our music called for peace and revolution and we decorat- ed our rooms with posters that carried ttrelevantll messages. We rapped about out indiffer- ence to material things while our expensive stero hook-ups blared in the background. Yes, we were a generation that would change the world. We were the final culmination of man's long march out of darkness, so it was our duty to mold the world in our image. And so, equipped with our self: righteous rhetoric, we set out to restructure the order of things. We held moratoriums attended by thousands in Circle Park and marched on the Post Office, the Market Street Mall, and held all night vigils for peace. When Cambodia was in- vaded in the spring of 1970, we struck the University for three days. In Knoxville, with a few exceptions, we were largely peaceful. But on many campus- es the rage burned deeper. The Vietnam veterans returned, not with parades and flags waving, but quietly. They had done their job and no longer wished to talk about it. There wasnlt much glory to spread around. As the Depression endowed its students with a strong mater- ial drive and as the patriotism and near worship of the mili- 97 tary rubbed off on the World War II generation, the Vietnam war will haunt the class of 73 until the last of us are in our graves. We are undoubtedly de- stined to become a famous and muCh-examined generation of collegians. UT existed 175 years before it saw the likes of us, and we rocked the boat with a fevor not likely to be match- ed for some time to come. Were we right? That is a heady question on Which we ourselves could not agree. It is a question for historians, armed with a perspective only time can grant, to mull over. But whether the judgement be yea or nay, one thing was cer- tain: to paraphrase the late Harry S. Truman, uWe done our damnedestfl As I watched President Nixon announce the long-waited cease fire, I listened for the tradi- tional firecrackers and pans being beat together in noisy celebration as in other wars. But I heard none. And I looked out my door, expecting to see joyous dancing in the streets, but I saw none. For there was no dancing in the streets, no dancing in the streets. alumni Clayton Arnold, retired mail carrier and postmaster 0f Wil- liamson County, passed the $1 million mark in contributions to UT. Dividends from these secu- rities provided 140 undergradu- ate scholarships in the College of Education. The alumni supported the university in numerous ways e- through donations, attend- ance at performances and sports events, and participation in alumni booster clubs. The Century Club was composed of persons who contributed at least $100 a year to the Uni- versity of Tennessee. Scholar- ship funds were the primary means of support, allowing stu- dents to obtain a college degree who might not otherwise have had this opportunity. 98 100 101 orientation Registration and orientation brought excitement and frus- tration to many UTK students. Innovations in the registration progress included computeriz- ed scheduling and drop and add, which aided some stm- dents and thwarted others. Dr. Charles Cleland was ap- pointed ombudsman, an acade- mic trouble-shooter for the students. The UTK book store brought in a Penthouse Pet to highlight sales. However, many students found prices to be excessively high in all stores and initiated the Free Book Store in the base- ment of Melrose Hall. Moving into a new dorm or back into the old one, greet- ing friends and getting settled, UTK students got involved in studies and extracurricular activities. presidential complex The Presidential Complex was composed of Reese, Humes, North Garrick, and South Car- rick. Humes, sponsored ttTuesday Night Talks, with speakers on topics ranging from abortion to job placement. North and South Garrick combined residents associations to provide more opportunities and resources for residents. Jointly they offered ice cream spre- es, a ski trip, bridge tournaments and free lessons for hobbies from music to sewing. Reese Hall housed 528 men, more than any other dorm on campus. A fall barbeque was provided for residents through the joint efforts of the Presidental Complex and Morrill Hall. 103 residence halls Clement and Hess joined Dunford and Greve 0n the ice last winter at the Ice Chalet. Melrose Hall offered darkroom facilities for black and white development and planned color facilities for East Area resi- dents. Melrose Offered coed upperdivision and graduate housing with academic empha- sis. Strong Hall held its first annual formal Winter Quarter at the Civic Auditorium Ball- room and sponsored a ttSpring Flingtt complete with barbe- que. Clement sponsored a night in the Student Center with pool, bowling, and movies for its re- sidents. i ap artments Owned and operated by the University of Tennessee, Andy Holt Apartments was an exper- ience in campus housing. Single students had an Opportunity to live conveniently in an apartment building on campus. The furnished apartments were equiped with kitchen and study facilities. Along with standard service areas, the Apartments contained a bookstore and gro- cery within the building. Controversy over the quality of married students, housing was an important topic of con- versation in the seven housing apartment complexes. The apartments offered one and two bedroom apartments furnished and unfirnished. Complaints were centered around inadequ- ate plumbing and garbage dis- posals. University housing for married students offered re- creation facilities from swim- ming pools to childrents play- grounds. mxmwlnu 109 r-A wwwa H M. F we .w. . UTK offered a varied intra- murals program which includ- ed sports for every interested student. Intramurals had a large campus participation as groups from every part of the university fielded teams or en- tered individual competition. During the fall, flag football twas the big event, followed by volleyball. Winter qUarter brought basketball, swimming, and bowling. Handball, tennis, track and field, softball, golf, and paddleball were some of the main sports of interest in the spring. 111 112 113 u.t. workers Many people worked behind the scenes to keep everyday life at UTK running smoothly. From the maintenance workers to the seldom seen telephone operators, each was a necces- sary part of campus life. Controversy over the neces- sity or even the legality of 8 Workers Union concerned many people across the state. UTKts workers attempted to form a union, but they were un- successful. 114 115 116 117 W N wheat: The University of Tennessee is a statewide educational or- ganization which seeks to de- velop human and material re- sources through instruction, research, and public service programs. Twenty-five thous- and students cram into the uni- versity each year and still establish rapport and intima- cies, for the university is at- tempting to personalize educa- tion without resorting to social security numbers as complete student identification. High quality instruction, laboratory and research facilities, and administration aid the univer- sity in maintaining up-to-date relevant courses. The Univer- sity of Tennessee is continually rel-defining and re-evaluating, in order to hold its reputation among leading schools nation- wide. after graduation . . . The challenge of graduation from the University of Tennessee becomes a reality to thousands of students each year. The culmination of undergraduate and grad- uate learning, training and experience is the beginning of new experiences and the application of the knowledge acquired Within the past years Of study. Although library and paper work, final exams, proj- ects, and late night study are over, the graduate realizes that a hard-earned edu- cation does not immediately place him in a job situation. While some individuals find employment easily after graduation, others are often turned down again and again. The UT placement office, in cooper- ation with employers, conducts interviews and finds employment for many students each year. Finding employment is a diffi- cult task when job offers are scarce and some major fields have few job openings. Despite attempts to find as many jobs for individuals as possible, for some grad- uates there are no jobs. 120 waned , 5 cm ms at cm m! am 121 V. 15, 1an 0 . governor Winfield dunn 122 the university-of tennessee board of trustees 123 edward j. boling president 124 Born February 19, 1922, in Sevier County, Tennessee, Ed- ward I. Boling has been in- volved and has seen many advancements in the University of Tennesseeis development. His association with the Uni- versity began when he earned both the bachelor's and mas- ter's degree in business ad- ministration from the school. During his undergraduate study at UT, he won the Phi Kappa Phi scholarship award and he was charter president in the founding of the Beta Gamma Sigma a professional fraternity at UT. After specializing in higher educational administra- tion at Peabody College in Nashville, Dr. Boling went on to become an instructor in UTis College of Business Admini- stration. Before his appoint- ment as President, on Septem- ber 1, 1970, Dr. Boling was the Universityts Vice President for Development and Administra- tion. As the 17th President of the University of Tennessee, Dr. Edward I. Boling heads a state- wide educational system that includes 5 primary campuses, agricultural research and ex- tention programs, and other academic centers. Archie Reece Dykes, born in Rogersville, Tennessee, Ian- uary 20, 1931, received the bachelorts and mastefs de- grees from East Tennessee State University and the doc- torts degree in education from the University of Tennessee. Dr. Dykes has been awarded numerous honors throughout his university years and in 1969 he was the recipient of the Volunteer Symbol, highest award, given by students to members of the faculty and administration of the Univer- sity of Tennessee. Before his apointment as chancellor of the Knoxville Campus, Dr. Dykes was Chanc- ellor of UT Martin. He began his career at Church Hill High School, Church Hill, Tennessee where he was a teacher and principal and then became the Superintendent of Greenville City Schools, Greenville, Tenn- essee. In 1962 he became di- rector and professor, University of Tennessee 9 Memphis State University Center for Ad- vanced Graduate Study in Edu- cation. Affliated with the Pres- idenfs office, Dr. Dyke's was on the American Council on Education Fellowship at the University of Illinois. archie r. dykes chancellor 125 Vernon W. Darter Dean of AgricUlture Extention Service John A. Ewing Dean of Agriculture Experiment Station Hilton A. Smith Vice Chancellor of Graduate Studies and Research 126 Howard F. Aldmon Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs A Iohn C. Baugh Walter R. Herndon Charles A. Burchett General Counsel and Vice Chancellor of Dean of Student Conduct Secretary Board of Trustees Academic Affairs and Orientation 2, Philip A. Scheurer Director of Student Activities Brodie Baynes 5? Treasurer A James A. Patrick Dean College of Architecture Fred N.Peeb1es Dean College of Engineering James D. McComas Kenneth L. Penegar Sylvia Hart Dean College of Education Dean College of Law Director School of Nursing John B. Ross Dean College of Business Administration Donald G. Hileman Dean College of Communications Alvin H. Nielsen Dean College of Liberal Arts 0. Glen Hall Dean College of Agriculture Lura M.Od1and Dean College of Home Economics Jezmmnm mMuMWH,um, college of agriculture Historically, agriculture has been defined as the sciences and art of cultivating the soil, harvesting crops, and raising livestock. While these are im- portant aspects of the field of agriculture, this definition does not adequately describe the kind or nature of the educa- tional programs offered in the College of Agriculture. Pro- grams now being Offered in- volve disciplines and sub dis- ciplines which relate to the production, distribution, pro- cessing and wise use of soil, plants, and animals Which con- tribute significantly to the well being of people. The role of people involved in agriculture as well as the impact of manipu- lating soil, plants, and animals on the environment are im- portant aspects of programs currently being offered. Non- farm use of natural resources and environmental quality are emphasized in courses and programs. 130 131 college of . architecture The primary objective of the School of Architecture is to train competent architects for their Chosen professions, one which encompasses aspects of technology and the humanities Emphasis is placed on the study Of architecture as the organi- zation of space for manis needs. The program is designed to help the student envision an en- vironment for the contempo- rary world and to prepare him to exert his influence as an architect to realize that en- vironment. Every attempt is made to inform the student of recent developments in science, technology, and human be- havior that relate to the prac- tice of architecture and to equip him with an attitude of inquiry that will allow him to adapt to Changing needs and conditions following graduation and his continuance into prac- tice. 132 a m M. m 11 W 133 134 college of business administration This is a century of unpre- cendented technological ad- vancement, and the process of change provides the chance to improve the well-being of all the people. The professionally educated business person can expect to find himself literally at the ttthrottle 0f the engine of change. The College of Busi- ness Administration prepares students to cope with Changing society. Formal programs of profes- sional education in business administration give the student both technical and analytical competence and an understand- ing of the environment in which business operates. The College of Business Administration 'of- fers such programs, and it is fully accredited by professional accrediting associations. The faculty is an outstanding one and has national as well as in- ternational academic and pro- fessional reputation, and the full resources of the College are at the disposal of students of business administration. 135 AWARDS pROG-RAM 4 :89 DEC. '72 EDITBEML wamus Mxxxww $63,558 Schsigrshins AXD GRANTS mmmmum mama n Imu mmmmtwm thwwoun mm... - 136 TM; Mmumt mely t , , ; i I M; , ,, W. . , Mr , - L I a t wmpwn um mm fur I T p xtrumm bu n far Mime. H! v t Q0? imiivtmi ma wants vhargv. imnw 137 bums : college of communications In four short years, the C01- 1ege of Communications has be- come recognized as one of the leading programs in the nation. Its students and teachers mingle with outstanding practitioners both on and off the campus and the faculty has engaged in a variety of public service ac- tivities throughout the state. This year saw the beginning of a research program which will be tied closely to the teaching and service aspects of the Col- lege. A new sequence in Public Relations was offered for the first time in the School. The College is dedicated to a newer, broader concept of total communications which gives a student an understand- ing of advertising, broadcasting, and journalism as well as an opportunity to develop skills in one of these specialized areas. The challenge before the College continues to be the preparation of competent com- municators in a world that is constantly changing and grow- ing in complexity. CIRCLES 138 PAPERS ma ,- Mum, college of education Since 1903, when the first courses for teachers were of- fered, the College of Education has increasingly fulfilled its responsibility to provide schools with high caliberteach- ers and service personnel. One of the basic strengths of the college is its dedication to the environment of the individual student. The philosophy of the college demands that the under- graduate receive early expo- sure to actual Classroom ex- periences. As early as his fresh- man year a student may elect to participate as a teacher's aide in one of the local public schools and earn college credit for the experience. . The combination of academic and direct experiences allows the prospective teacher to ac- quire a depth and breath of knowledge and understanding Which will contribute to life- long professional accomplish- ments. 139 MR comma 140 141 , . r ,4 Itttzttr'u: college of engineering The College of Engineering includes among its purposes: instruction of students, the transmission of existing knowl- edge to students at all levels; research, the acquisition of new information relating to engineering; and service, work for the benefit of humanity. World problems which in- clude the energy crisis, pollu- tion, loss of natural resources and inefficient transportation systems require a high level of technological accomplishment. The College of Engineering equips an individual with the skills and social understanding necessary to cope with these problems. The engineering graduate may apply his skills in many fields including in- dustry, government, business management, technical sales or private practice. college of home economics Programs of the College of Home Economics relate to the multilevel problems of today's complex society. The basis of the College professional educa- tion programs is to prepare young men and women to serve the needs of people - individ- uals, families and consumers - in their many varied environ- ments and different stages of life. The College is concerned with the physical, social, emo- tional, and esthetic well-being of people - with their housing and nutritional needs, With human development and re- lationships, and with the man- agement of human and material resources. Home Economics seeks to relate knowledge from the natural and social sciences, the humanities and the arts to solves the concerns of contem- porary society. The College is ranked among leading accredit- ed programs in the nation. 142 143 144 145 college of law The College of Law com- menced operation in 1890 and has continuously sought to pro- vide high quality legal educa- tion in a university community. While the principal objective of the College is to prepare students for the private prac- tice of law, its total mission is more broadly conceived. The College of Law exposes stu- dents to the legal issues of our society enabling them to de- velop analytical skills in re- spect to decisional law and their knowledge of the law, an awareness of the historical growth of the law, a knowledg- able appreciationof the inter- relationship of law and society, and the ability to use law as an implement of societal con- trol and development. Students are thus equipped to serve their community not only as advocates and counselors, but as policy-makers and active, responsible citizens as well. 147 college of liberal arts The College of Liberal Arts is the largest College at UTK. It encompasses the course of- ferings in the humanities, the social sciences, the natural sciences, and the fine arts. There are 26 different depart- ments from Anthropology t0 Zoology. In addition to the academic services offered there are sev- eral important ancillary units operated by the College: The McClung Museum, the Hearing and Speech Center, the Bureau Of Public Administration, the Psychology Clinic, and the Uni- versity Theaters. Interdisciplin- ary programs are Offered as well: Asian Studies, Black Studies, European Studies, Lat- in Studies, and American Stud- ies. The work of Liberal Arts is thus far ranging across and central to the life of the univer- sity, providing a core of aca- demic courses used to serve all of the colleges on campus. liberal arts encompasses fine arts to social sciences 148 149 50 1 school of nursing The baccalaureate program offered by the School of Nurs- ing was established in July, 1971. It is committed to the re- sponsibility of preparing nurses who are concerned with the total health needs of all people, who recognize the importance of health maintenance and pro- motion, and who are able to provide' high quality nursing care to the sick. The unique resources of the University as well as those of many com- munity-based health agencies and hospitals are utilized for the implementation of the pro- gram. A wide variety of Clinical and health agency experiences are provided for all nursing students to acquaint them with the total health care of delivery system. final exams abolished new methods advised Many students breathed a sign of relief when the Faculty Senate passed the measure abolishing final exam week beginning fall 1973. Although independent study, outside pa- pers, group discussions and oral reports were suggested to supplement if not replace the final exams, many pro- .fessors still relied on compre- hensive finals to evaluate 3 students proficiency in a course. Many students found that the abolishment of final exam week resulted in four or five finals the last two days Of classes. The purpose of the new system was to make exams more of a learning system a situation in which the student could learn from his mistakes. Whether the end result of the abolishment of final exam week will be favorable is still un- known for the Change is still in the infancy of a two year trial period. Unfortunately for some, the outcome has not been favorable so far. Chances are, finals are here to say. 152 facUIty senate-new name, new activities Changing from a University Senate to a Faculty Senate was a reorganization plan approved by the UT Board of Trustees for 1973. With fewer administrative members and more faculty, the senate was authorized to con- sider a wider variety of subjects than ever before, The senate approved changes in the resi- dency requirements for 0b- taining a Bachelors Degree, which allowed work taken for credit through UT continuing education programs in off cam- pus centers to count as part of the resident requirements. By using resources more effective- ly, the senate planned ahead to develop high quality programs. The senate took off time from deliberations for a Hawaiian Luau party. 154 155 ss centered around student problems The student senate programs 0f1972-73 endorsed the ultimate goal of the University of Tenn- esee, that of understanding. The problem of off-campus housing in the Ft. Sanders area was one of the senate's major projects. The improvement of legal and medical aid to students on cam- pus, the allowance of alcoholic beverages in dorm rooms and the appointment of a student to the Board of Trustees were other areas of interest. Stu- ; dent's rights, minority affairs, off-campus housing, consumer rights, residence halls, and married students were several of the concerns facing the stu- dent committees. To inform freshmen 0f the various ac- tivities on campus, the senate formed a Freshmen Leadership Conference. It also helped stu- dents with schedules, drop and add, and many other com- mon problems. Year-round ser- vice was the prominent charac- teristic of the student senate as it provided draft counseling, academic counseling, tenantts union and referal service, fem- inist coalition, and free trans- portation t0 the Election Com- mission for voter registration. By attempting to change and to improve policies, the student senate reduced many of the problems encountered by uni- versity students. The officers of the senate included Karl Schledwitz, president, and Bill Nolan, vice-president. 156 157 Dr. George T. Spiva is a teacher of economics at the University of Tenn- essee who has shown an interest in the academic program through several articles in the Daily Beacon. I am an academic first and foremost. All other activites that go on at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville are peri- pheral to the educational and research function of the Uni- versity, and anything that in- terferes with or threatens to interfere with that function is to be deplored if not de- nounced. Make no mistake: a student protest that disrupts the functioning of the University is as much to be deplored as any- thing that might be done by intercollegiate athletics at UT. Nonetheless we are concerned here with athletics, particularly football, and my general posi- tion is that presently on the University of Tennessee, Knox- ville campus intercollegiate athletics tends to be competi- tive to rather than comple- academics and athletics: complementary or competitive? mentary to the academic func- tioning of the University. We have, if you like, too much of what might otherwise be a good thing. In a program of intercol- legiate athletics such as pres- ently exists at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, the em- phasis Ifrom the Athletics De- partment point of viewi has to be on winning. The success of the team ensures the position of the coach and his staff and funds the on-going program. The penalties for losing are obvious and repeated year after year as coaches are fired and replaced regardless of what- ever else they accomplished with the boys they coached. The pressures to win are immense and the response of the staff is the only one consistent with this pressure, namely, get the players Who can win and help them as long as they can help you. The education of a player is secondary to the overriding goal of fielding a winner. No one familiar with big-time col- lege football or basketball pre- tends any different. Thus the athlete takes courses he can pass in order to stay eligible. His grade point aver- age is important not as a reflec- tion of his academic abilities or ambitions but of his eligibility to play. His academic program may or may not point him to- ward a degree because a degree is secondary to keeping him 158 eligible to play. Vast tutorial resources are available to the athlete who needs help; term papers have been written for him, other students have taken exams for him, subtle and not so subtle pressures have been put on staff members to give the athlete a Hbreak, etc. The list of violations of the aca- demic spirit in behalf of big- time football and basketball is endless. The athlete is segregated and isolated from the mainsteam of campus life. He lives in a dorm- itory especially for Hjocksf he eats in his own cafeteria and he is subject to a host of special rules and regulations formu- lated by coaches and staff toV maximize his efficiency as an athlete. There are always exceptional student-athletes and the Ath- letics Department never fails to capitalize on the occasional and exceptional student-athlete who carries a full and regular course load and does well academically but this hoopla should not blind us to the more general rule of Woodruff-Bat- tle-Mears and Co.: ttwin first, educate if possible. The terrible hypocrisy of re- cruiting tend the penalties on the coach who really tries to abide by the rulest are too well known to repeat here. The hy- pocrisy of education for ath- letes is no less real. Other aspects of the Ath- mvmgi i letics Department at the Uni- versity of Tennessee, Knoxville serve to antagonize and irritate those of us in academics. ttSour grapesll the coaches cry, and they are partly correct. Jealousy is continually fanned by the actions of the Athletics Depart- ment, and it has to take its toll amongst faculty members. We are constrained by the UT or- ganization in a way that seems not the case with Athletics. Our Deans are responsible to an Academic Vice Chancellor and ultimately to the Chancellor of this campus. To whom is Mr. Woodruff answerable? I donlt know but it doesn't seem to me that he is very much answer- able to anyone, especially as long as he consistently produces winners. I teach a course on the Knox- ville campus over closed Cir- cuit television, as do several other professors. We have 16,000 to 20,000 students in our courses during a years time. Only a herculean effort by a dedicated staff in the broad- casting department enables us to function at all as our equip- ment is old and tired and some- times fails to work. The frus- trations of camera breakdowns or audio malfunctions are part of our daily fare, and it cannot help but gall us to have to try to teach under such conditions while we watch the Athletics Department spend money like it was going out of style. When we hear Icorrectly or incorrect- lyl that they spent $100,000 for a plexiglass walled handball court or that the stadium lights Ihardly an absolute essentiall cost $300,000 or that the De- partment made a llprofit last year of $313,519.03 tor some such figuret it gives us pause to wonder if we are all working for the same organization. One year soon the football team is going to Honolulu to play. This obvious recruiting device is not likely to improve the image of the football or- ganization in the eyes of the faculty. I cannot imagine that the team will leave Friday after Classes, play Saturday and re- turn on Sunday. All kinds of special arrangements will be made for the team including II will betl a number of re- quests to professors to postpone exams or arrange for make-ups so that while we labor here we can see pictures of the team and staff Iand wives, probablyl oavorting on the beaches at Waikiki with leis around their necks. Do I hear the llsour grapes refrain again? Perhaps. But there is also a genuine feel- ing of bewilderment that this can be said to be an essential part of the University as an educational institution. When our legislators hear, see and read of the lavish physical facilities of the Athletics De- partment and its junkets to Hawaii, can they really believe 159 that we are hard up for funds at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville? Can they really be persuaded that salaries of the academic staff are pitifully low and that for many of us the salary increases of the past few years have not even enabled us to keep us with increases in the cost of living? I think not. We pay a terrible price for the suc- cesses and excesses of the Ath- letics Department, but few out- siders know it. If the University of Tennes- see, Knoxville were recognized everywhere as an educational institution of preeminent rank, I do not believe that the inter- collegiate Athletics program could be overemphasized. But, we are known as one of the big ttjocklI schools, purveyors to the post season Bowl games and suppliers to the ranks of the pros. How sad, but how true. As an academician, I can only lament the competition be- tween what I and my colleagues are doing and what goes on in the Athletics Department. The further tragedy is that there are fine people at all levels in the Athletics Department. I wish they were more allies than opponents. Regardless, I will press on doing my ttthingf, teaching, and I will hope for a time when we have a better balance between academics and athletics than we have now. 160 161 seeking to increase effectiveness Of Offense the V013 began their 9-2 sea- son which eventually lead to an AstrO-Bluehonnet Bowl in- vitation with a 34-3 defeat of the uRambling Wreck of Georgia Tech. Following this nationally televised performance, the Orangemen dealt successive defeats to Penn State, 28-21, and Wake Forest 45-6 and began preparation for their next game with Auburn, a team which V01 seniors had never defeated. In a game characterized by many Tennessee penalties which ended crucial drives, the War Eagles won their 3rd straight game against Volunteer seniors, 10-6. Much of Tennessee's 0f- fensive troubles in this game centered around the Offensive line's failure to give the quar- terback time to set up. This trouble was satisfactorily taken care of before Tennessee went against Memphis State the next week, adding a 38-7 victory to their season's record. The Vols took advantage of an open date to re-group forces before tack- ling Alabama. Tennessee played good ball against 'Bama but the Tide was able to capitalize on some V01 mistakes late in the 4th quarter to end the game 17-10. With half the season over and a 3-2 re- cord, Coach Battle said, HWe learned some things about dis- appointment but we're going to bounce back and play good foot- hall the rest of the year. 162 The next week, the Vols did bounce back with a 34-2 Victory over Hawaii. Follow- ing this with 14-0 defeat of the Georgia Bulldogs, the Orange- men became mentally pre- pared for homecoming the next week. In the home- coming game Ole Miss pro- vided little more than light exercise for the Volunteers as they coasted to an easy 17-0 victory. Ending -the season with defeats of 17-7 over Ken- tucky and 30-10 over Vander- bilt, Coach Battle began the difficult but all-important re- cruiting of players for the nextseason hters - bill battle we Ve got to find some fig in Ianuary of 1970, Bill Battle became the youngest grid coach in the nation, and the youngest to ever hold the reigns of a South- eastern Conference team. In his third year as V01 coach, Battle posted a 8-2 season to boost his overall record to 29-5-1. 166 WWr y : , 2 W 4x 11,0, m0 ,1;;'!! II, M w. , ' W , WW WWW 104,04 X W r', ,,r WI WW Wm suummmmw ' H E 3W: QNNWX XWMmummm , N3 xxmxxmumummxxx mnmxxmga 'xy XXXVI R :W xx xx 168 Xx X x- K L V: x xx X : XX :Yx :Txx . x : : : : V- MA ; w1 X X X is! X X 1 NM x - ,X Liit: XXX h : $1 X M Q xxagxxvx V QR : X XX : W NW 2sz : : x 42x M ll'ln M 9? 1,; f '13? l. : :25! r'h'fr'!2iv'!;1g',lr' : M 'ng Z; 1! '99:; m 1 797 Wm! I' f4 4'! 4 , 3.1 I '1? ,, M, 1:! XX w MW a 169 1 '1 XLV 111111 111111151;mm L 1111 11111531111413 15 1111111111111 W T ' 1 mdbhlx 511 ,111111111 1 17 1. . ,1 H??Mk 3 Le 1111111513111 14 D111 1111118., xA ?11kn3361111 1i N11xx1x1111111 Tennessee 1717i? ' 1171711111183311111 311 Vanderhh orangemen suffer crucial defeats t0 alabama and auburn mm 172 the one that got hm wasn t planned . . . 173 ' . KY Kw. orangemen lose V01 classic 176 177 sec title decided in voI-kentucky clash 178 As the halfway mark of the 1972- 73 season rolled around, the Vols found themselves intthe lead of the S.E.C. race, followed by Alabama, Vanderbuilt, and Kentucky. Specu- lators predicted Tennessee would take the Conference Championship but the absence of center Len Kosmalski, who suffered a foot injury for much of the first half of the season, slowed down the Vols offensive attack. After a loss to Ole Miss. in Starksville, the Vols re- bounded with a one point victory over Kentucky in a nationally tele- vised game, but were outmarked by Alabama, also played on. national TV. After their defeat by Alabama, who was rated among the top teams in the nation, the Vols fell to second in the Conference race but recap- tured the S.E.C.1ead with a crushing 93-76 rout over Mississippi State as Alabama fell to LSU, 70-72. , The Volunteers, who had been playing their traditionally slow- pace offensive game, began to de- velop a fast break offense centered around point man Rodney Woods. Utilizing this newly organized attack, the Vols increased their scoring per game, reaching their peak as they scored 93 points against Miss. State. o The Vols dealt successive defeats to Alabama and Ole Miss, but re- ceived a disappointing loss to L.S.U. and to Vanderbuilt. Rebounding with a 80-72 victory over Auburn, the Vols threw the S.E.C. race into a deadlock. In the decisive game against Kentucky, the V013 grabbed a. 4 point lead late in the last half which quickly faded to a 6 point defecit as Kentucky's Greevey hit 6 straight baskets. As both Snow and Robinson received their fifth foul, Kentucky edged out Ten- nessee, 65-61, placing the Vols in a second-place tie in the SEC. 179 orange - a big influence on tennessee life The enthusiasm for the Big Orange dates back ten years to the advent of Tennessee bash kelball coach Ray Mears. Ilis effects have been far reaching i from UT sports to the school itself. Everytime you see it, you think of pride in your school, commented Coach Mears. The color itself is Ton- nessee's own brand of orange and is abundant in clothes, buildings, and of course, jer- seys. The student comment ranged from scorn t0 avid in- terest, but on game days orange and white pennants can be seen waving from every corner of the center. The color orange dominates all facets of campus life, from elevator buttons to carpeting. Some students feel the orange is over-whelming, but whether they agree or dis- agree it is certainly a big part of UTlife. 180 181 swim team history is filled with success Since Tennessee1s five-year 01d aquatics program began in 1968 under the leader- ship of Coach Ray Bussard, it has become recognizable alongside its veteran com- petitors and in fact, one of the finest in the nation. Moving from national ranking of 9th in 1970 to 6th in 1971, the V01 team, strengthened by the record breaking speed of Dave Edgar, compiled a 12-0 1972 rec- ord bringing their overall record to 57-2. Edgar, senior captain in 1971-72, and John Trembley rivaled one another as the swiftest 50-yard freestylers in the nation. Edgar cracked the world record with a NCAA championship time of 20.2 in 1971 and Trembley finished the race third with a 20.8. Edgar then bettered the 100-yard freestyle America mark with a 44.5 in the lead-off leg of Tennessee1s 400 freestyle relay team. . During the Summer Olympics in Mu- nich, Germany, Edgar, swimming along- side some of Americas best amateur ath- 1etes,broughttremend0us prestige to Ten- nesseets swim program by taking the gold metal for America in the 400 meter relay. V01 swimmers take second championship V01 swimmers continued to increase their consecutive dual meet winning streak which began in 1969. As they recorded their 4lst consecutive triumph, Tennessee smashed six Florida p001 records while coasting to a 70-42 victory. Highlighting this meet, Tom Lutz swam a record shattering 200-individual medley victory over Olympic silver-medalist Tim Mckee while freshman Graham Windeatt, Olympic silver-medalist from Australia, knocked 25.9 seconds off the pool record for the 1000 freestyle. In a double dual meet against Alabama and Kentucky at the UT. Aquatic Center, Tennesseeis Lee Engstrand recorded 4144.7 in the 500-yard freestyle, knocking 0.9 seconds off the p001.record.Iuni0r Chris N011 recorded excellent times in both the 200 and 500 free- style, including two p001 records against Florida, and Iohn Trem- bley continued to improve his time in the 50 freestyle. Grabbing 676 points, the Vols ended the season by taking theit; second straight S.E.C. championship, in which 14 S.E.C. records fell to the Vols and Gaters collectively. Chris N011 led the Vols with three individual victories, the 500 freestyle, 200 freestyle, 200 butterfly, and the 100 freestyle relay to total 56 individual peints. Windeatt knocked down the S.E.Cfs 1650 freestyle with a 16:05.12 while Kenny Know and Keith Gilliam, captain, gave the Vols 3 one-two finish in the 1'00 freestyle. Ieff White recorded a 2:08.26 to seize the SEC 200 breastroke. 188 u. t. swimmers exhibit varied aquatic interests 189 Winning breeds Winning - r. bussard 191 V01 swimmers joined by Olympic silver medalist - graham windeatte '192 indoor track team takes 9th sec title in ten years In nine years, Tennesseets indoor track team captured eight Southeastern Conference championships,1osing only to Alabama in 1972. Iust as in '72, the 73 conference race was considered to be primarily between Tennessee and Alabama. Stan Huntsman, not concerned with Alabama's abrupt end to the Volts eight consecutive S.E.C. titles, sought to prepare the V01 trackmen for the NCAA. meet in Detroit on March 9th and 10th. Huntsman predicted a need for 18 men to qualify for the National Championship in order to have a good chance for the title. Among those Who qualified for the NCAA. meet are Willie Thomas, defending outdoor 880 champ, and Doug Brown, who highlighted the cross country teams 72 na- tional title with a second place finish in the N.C.A.A. cross country championship meet in Houston, Texas. 194 P; h 195 196 n.c.a.a. meet or national title L held in detroit 198 199 five vols invited to Olympic trials The 1972 Outdoor trackmen captured their 9th consecutive S.E.C. championship, compiling 64 points to edge out Alabama who received 61. Earlier in the season, the Vols, defending S.E.C. champs, went up against Indiana, the Big Ten Outdoor champions. In this meet, Volls Willie Thomas and Wilbur Hawkins battled each other in the 880, With Thomas Winning. Wayne Whigham scored a vic- tory in the'100 but was upset by teammate Bob Hauk inlthe 220. In the SEC. meet, Danny Martin took the individual title in the javelin while Pete Mat- tina captured the 120 high hur- dles and Charlie Geter won the long jump. The Vols scored in every event except the pole vault and 440. Tennessee also took 10th in the N.C.A.A. meet with a total of 16 points. Willie Thomas, Wilbur Hawkins, Bill High, Pete Mattina, Doug Brown, and Charlie Geter were all invited to the Olympic trials. capture 9th straight sec title 201 cross country team upsets e.t.s.u. for n.c.a.a. title Emerging from an uninterrupted string of SEC. Championships which began in 1965, the University of Tennessee's cross country team impressed the nation with an incredible performance in Houston to upset East Tennessee State University and capture the NCAA. cross country title. The Vols, not even mentioned as a pre-race favorite, edged out E.T.S.U., 134-148. Doug Brown highlighted the Vols victory with an amazing second place finish, being defeated only by Cusack from E.T.S.U. Roberto Lemmarduzzi finished 17th overall with Dan Zoeller, Ron Addison, Phil Bonfiglio, and freshman Bob Bentz taking 25th, 55th, 138th, and 142nd, in the overall standings. The win gave Tennessee its first national Champion- ship in any sport since the schoolts founding in 1879, and helped secure Stan Huntsman's present honor as national cross country coach of the year. 202 $55 . hollandts paul van minn takes conference singles title h, t; E: Under Coach Louis Royal, the V013 became a major contender for the 1972 tennis championship. In the first day of the SEC. tournament, held at UTK, Dan Huber, unseeded in N0. 4 singles, defeated first seed Ray Hudima of Florida after defeating Mississippits Iohn Haver. The V013, scoring 21 points, were forced to settle for a second place tie with Mississippi State in the t conference, despite Paul Van Min's brilliant upset victory over Georgia's Birchmore and Robert Van Malderts win over Boyce ofMiss. State.Pau1Van Minn, defeating Birchmore, took the SEC. singles Champion- ship. In the NCAA. meet, all four Tennessee players were eliminated in singles competition. Belle and Van Malder defeated Columbia in doubles but were beaten in second round action by U.C.L.A. 204 205 vols finish with 7-6 conference record 206 42' Q $53: .tlilll'tt 'iia 'n .D... Hawk 207 In 33 season games, the 1972 V01 baseball team, coached by Bill Wright, broke even by re- cording 19 wins and 14 losses. The Vols won 7 Southeastern Conference games while losing 6 t0 aquire a 0538 conference percentage. Out of 18 letter- men, right fielder Bobby Tucker led the Vols with a 0.395 batting average and totaled 6 home runs and 37 RBYs. Second-baseman James Elliot and left fielder Roger Mc- Kinney followed with averages of 0.327 and 0.325, respectively. Ioe Obrien, who pitched in eleven games, had 76 strike- outs While pitching 46 hits for 20 runs. wrestling Since 1969, wrestling has shown signs of development into a fine at- traction for Vol spectators. Under Coach Bob Davis and his assistant,10e Boone, the V01 team is gradually con- verting its inexperience, a primary handicap in the teamis first three years of intercollegiate wrestling, into the experience necessary to ac- tively participate in such a physically oriented sport. Having devoted much of their first seasons to recruitment and development of young athletes, there are several indications that Tennessee may become a contender for the SEC. championship within the next few years. 208 209 Dr. Earl Ramer is a professor of con- tinuing and higher education at the University of Tennessee and is the current president of the National C01- Iegiate Athletics Association. intercollegiate athletics: an asset to the university As one of the nation's major Universityis, U.T. seeks pro- gram excellence. Excellence in intercollegiate athletics at U.T. can be documented by evidence from regional and national com- petition, growth in facilities and programs, financial soundness and educational growth of par- ticipants. In the ten-year period ending with the 1971-72 school year, UTKis overall athletic record totaled 1018 victories, 449 de- feats and 13 ties, a remarkable record. During this period the sports programs were expanded to include swimming and wrest- ling. Numbers of athletic scholarships were greatly in- creased in the spring sports thus involving greater student par- ticipation. At any given time, athletic scholarships finance, partly or wholly, the education of approximately 250 students. Tennesseeis traditional achievement in football and basketball was maintained during the ten-year period, and these sports were joined by track and field, cross country, swimming, and tennis, in setting Conference and NCAA records. Advancements in base- ball and wrestling have been significant. This well-rounded achieve- ment in athletics is evidenced by U.T.K.'s receiving the 210 Southeastern Conference All- 'Sports trophy for the last four years. Program excellence is heavily dependent upon leader- ship, and Mr. George R. tBobi Woodruff is to be commended for his skill and vision in mov- ing U.T.K. athletics into the forefront among American Universities. His activities and those of his colleagues in sports administration during the ten- year period earned U.T. repre- sentation 0n the SEC Executive Committee, and other standing Committees; the NCAA Council and Executive Committee; the U.S. Olympic Committee; and Presidencies 0f the SEC and NCAA. Excellence in sports achieve- ment is paralleled by excel- lence in facilities and financial accounting. Gate receipts, largely from football and basketball, permit the pro- gram to be self-supporting and to make significant contri- butions to other campus pro- grams, i.e., $1,000.00 annually to the Rifle Team; $10,000.00 annually for band scholar- ships; and more than $40,000.00 for band trips in 1972. The Ney- land Academic Scholarships totaled $5,000.00 or more for each of the last three years and involved more than a dozen students. Through the years, athletic funds have been used to pur- chase properties later providing for U.T. parking lots, tennis courts, and buildings. Athletic funds have supported dormi- tories, offices and workshops under Neyland Stadium. Debt service arrangements through athletic funds assist with the purchase of Gibbs Hall, Stokely Athletic Center and Tom Black Track. In this way athletic funds have been used to pur- chase and maintain many buildings and facilities having broad campus uses. A11 athletic facilities have been improved dramatically through the decade and have attracted national attention. High-quality facilities have made possible not only a broader sports involvement of students on campus, but stu- dents and school representa- tives from the state, region, and nation through such outstanding events as the U. S. Junior Olympics in 1968, the NCAA Track and Field Meet in 1969, the SEC Track Meet in 1970, the NCAA Cross-Country meet in 1971, and the NCAA Swimming meetin 1973. Sports achievement is not fully assessed on the playing fields, at the box office, or by excellence of facilities. Aca- demic success of athletes, and the total impact of sports pro- grams upon athletes and stu- dents, faculty, administration, and the public must be con- sidered. Through the years, academic achievement of athletes has been comparable to that for all male students on the campus. For the Fall Quarter this year, the GPA. for all U.T. male athletes was 2.34; for all male students, 2.46. The freshman football squad for the same quarter achieved a G.P.A. of 2.35 as compared with 2.17 for all freshman male students. U.T. athletes have won aca- demic honors worthy of note. During the last ten years, 14 players were selected for the Academic All-SEC, two re- ceived National Football Foun- dation Scholastic Awards and two NCAA graduate fellowship awards. Present and former students, faculty, administration and the public can be proud of the tradition of athletic excellence at U.T., an excellence marked by all-round development of students who, after leaving the campus, have contributed significantly to state and nation in diverse leadership roles. Our State University is large and comprehensive in its activites. The program of inter- collegiate athletics 0n the UTK campus reflects the size and 211 scope of the state-wide Uni- versity and commands active interest and support from peo- ple throughout our state. Sup- port among thousands of our citizens is heavily dependent upon the existence of successful sports programs. Tennesseeans take pride in their State University and en- dorse its programs of inter- collegiate athletics, not merely because of their desire for excellent teams, but from their conviction that sports partici- pation makes positive contri- bution to educational growth. Faculty and students in the great majority join the public in the feeling that athletic pro- grams are consistent with the institutions educational aims. U.T. membership in the SEC and the NCAA commits the in- stitution to maintain inter- collegiate athletics as an inte- gral part of the educational program. Few University ac- tivities can command campus- wide loyalty and support com- parable to athletics. This loyalty and support permeate the feel- ings of alumni and other Citi- zens throughout the state and provide an important basis for the welfare of the University. 212 3x, 1 9 1V ' 5b 213 panhellenic councH One representative from each sorority and an executive board of officers compose the Panhellenic Council which is the governing body of the Asso- ciation. Council regulates events and activities which involve all sororities. Panhellenic sponsors pro- grams which include officer- training workshops, annual philanthropic projects, scholar- ship awards, and joint projects with the Interfraternity.C0un- oil. A highlight is the annual IFC-Panhellenic Christmas Party for underprivileged children from the area. 214 Hit :3sz 216 alpha chi omega Row 1: Terry Cooper, Kathy Evers, Marilyn Brown, Sherry Williams, Karen Eilliamson, Melynda Moore, Janice White, Kay Riddle, Debbie McQuire, Cris Plunket. Row 2: Debbie Hayes, Liz McGowan, Janice Carey, Sylvia Pettey, Iody Morris, Kathy Koteski, Becky Garland, Frances Lehr, Sharon Williams, Kathy Stephens, Bedonna Clayton, Ellen Thompson, Lauren Wyatt. Row 3: Peggy Dixon, Karen Reagan, Cathy Munson, Tootie Doerries. 217 Row 1: Nancy Maples, Mari- beth Ryman, Karan Henry, Kay Coleman, Tweedie Sibold, Laura Hicks, Becky Venable, Rhonda Butler, Ann Coff, Jennifer Rich, Kathy Looett. Row 2: Joy White, Susan Blevinsh Susan Coleman, Dionne Kennedy. Row 3: Debbie Cunningham, Chris Keefe. Top Row: Mary Jean Nanny, Debbie McDonough. At Bookcase, Mona Lason, Scarlett Bennett, Martha Sue Sulvahouse, Dorothy Courtney. 218 alpha delta pi 219 . Me x : www- - '11:: g??? alpha gamma delta Row 1: Barbara Bechtold, Mar- tha Dalton, Pattie Ruddle, Leigh Alexander, Fran Harvey, Betty Herrington, Anne Wood, Iennelle Yord, Carol Brumbley, Alice Wood, Betty Lewis, Mari- anne Jones, Margaret Mack. Row 2: Sarah Simpkins, Janice Mincy, Janet Boyette, Susan Bearden, Pam Seaboch, Jane Mauney, Mary Buchanan, Susan Bankston. Row 3: M. I. Wyatt, Nancy Baird, Mary Por- ter Kolb, Linda Doyle, Nancy Lamb, Mary Jane Finchum. 221 alpha amicron pi Row 1: LeAnn Foutch, Ste- phanle Baynes, Sherry Young. Row 2: Carolyn Post, Ada Smith, Baiten Stout, Diane Chamberlin. Row 3: Joyce Har- rison, Cindy Smith, Missi Sut- ton, Christy Wright, Becky Bla- lock, Marcia Lee Baynes, Lou Ann Blanton, Mary Ann Curry, SallyRidenour, Susan Pierce. Row 4: Patty Clemmer,1an Hall, Lynda Richey,Me10dy Hannah, Linda Berry, Cathy Weylit, Mildred Kennon, Ellen Curry, Missi Coulter, Liz Jacobs, Anne Clark, Anne Rader, Ianet Dig- naigo, Celeste Walton, Terry Davison, Edith Jones. Row 5: Rhea Jennings, Anne Smith, Joyce Jennings, Annette Bad- dour, Ginny Smith, Missi Camp- bell, Judy Elliott, Debbie'Par- rish, Lisa Burrus, Donna Stultz, Carol Engelbret, Jenny Fair, on Alley, Nancy Manbry, Mar- cia Overton, Katie Jones, Lee OYDonnell, Patti Goode, Margie White, Susan Bible, Becky Kin- nard, Patti McBride, Sally. Payne, Julie Hoffman, IackieW Hammer, lane Colvin, Carrol Kennon, Patti Szabo, Martha Galyon, Becky Homer, Becky MCReynolds, Barbara Hammer. 222 223' alpha xi delta Row 1: Tami Cheatham, Carol Markant, Betsy Endicott, Mar- garet Lane, Cindy Morgan, Marcia Mashbern, Becky Campbell, Marilyn Montoye, Denise Woodall, Debbie Lance, Lu Hayes, Melanie Wade, Ian- ice Sailors. Row 2: Margaret McQuilken, Melanie Maloney, Pam Lyle, Bev Troxler, Karen Murphy, Elisa Massey, Karen Nave, Marianne Csotello, Sandy Lattimer,1ackie Lovvorn, Debbie Morren, Brenda Smith. Row 3: Pat Bennett, Mary Lane, Suzanne Cox, Beth Lewelling, Janet Sherman, Babs Barton, Betsy Keeling, Diane Obitz, Nancy Hilgert, Lynne Freshour, Becky Petrey, Kitty Stephenson, Linda Caughron, Janie Sturgill, Sally Luther, Linda Loucks, Susan Creswell, Diane McCar- ter, Nancy Allen, Debbie Mooney, Sheryl Iackson, Cherie Binger, Ann Coker, Cindy DeBord, Janice Kidd, Barbara McCurry, Terri Lowe, Kary Shinpaugh, Cindy Skogman, Helen Beaty, lane Dunlap. Not pictured: Char Taylor, Marcia Tramel, loan Diana, Cagol Yard, Jennifer Weir, Jeanne Cox, Thomi Sue Sutton, Lynn Ables, Peggy Arnold. 224 227 chi omega Row 1: Beth Seabrook, Karen Wheeler, Beth McClure, Jenny Gattett, Susan McConnaughey. Row 2: Susan Jackson, lean Anne Gardner, Patti Neuensch- wander, Jane Manning, Eleanor Couffon, Lee Stewart, Amy Skinner. Row 3: Cindy Win- chester, Bette Gordon, Sena Seward, Paula Brown, Joyce Alderson, Ann Guile, Carol Regas. Row 4: Ellen OCallagan, Zaidee L. Ozment, Iudy New- berry, Mimi Browning, Lucy Hunds, Rosie Royal, Ian Spit- zer, Nancy Brannon, Molly Gillespie, Merrill Dunford. Row 5: Connie Dugan, Olive Young, Ian Montgomery, Marty Marley, Robynx Reich, Susie Keith. Row 6: Mary Beth Law- ler, Rita Freeman, Pam Benk- ley, Pam Chusm, Tina Gillespie, Kenne McWhorter, Dee-Dee Anderson, Cindy Hamlet, Martha Ann Duncan, Dianna Deweese, Ellen Lesher, Ellyn Clapp, Michele Orr, Lyn Frierson. delta delta delta Row 1: Quin Lovingood, Mary Ann Harwood, Cathy Curtis, Terrye Broome, Brenda Whit- aker, Missy Grant, Mary Rob- erts, Carol Dance, Patti Ander- son, Lynn Naumoff, Beverly Bundy, Elaine Jackson. Row 2: Laura Watson, Shelly Leffers, Marilyn Mabrey, Bobbie Berry, Laura Smith, Mary Guion, Sloan Dulaney, Lyn Burleson, Ann Vandewoord, Sue Barnes, Ian Lehtinen, Mary Haynes. Standing: Joey Brickels, Mary Herd, Holly Dstlimd, Cindy Still, Linda Clift, Pattie Tori- nash, Cindy Trean, Terrie Vance, Claudia Landis, Janet Wright, Mary Kay Williams, Ellie Conners, Cindy Whitson, Pattie Burns, Becky McManus, B. I. Callison. 228 229 230 Row 1: Carole Francke, Betsy Spencer, Ellen Glover, Sherrie Lowe, Roxie Hood, lame Nuc- holls, Susan Rochat, Betsy Hodges, Wrene Wooley, Mary Lacy, Linda Woods, Marty Stewart, Sandra Morgan. V211- erie Oster, Tish Kinglon. Row 2: Cathy Hammock, Abbey Hess, Carolyn Tale, Carla Buntley, Kathlen Byars, Carol Stmwbridgo. June Part- rich. Terri Cundmnn. Linda Jennings, Katruna Clahnugh, Carol Ann Clark, Barbara Carlyon. Lucy Frazinr. Marti Combs, Linda Fant. Row 3: Harriet Harworth, Paula Dannevik, Becky Rochat, Mardi Conway. Beth Ann -Genlry. 231 delta gamma Row 1: Janet Hoskens, Donna McCorkle, Nancy Thomas, Bonny Henley, Vicki Vaoght, Alice Lawson, Georgianna Mit- chell, Lou Cockrill. Row 2: Kate Geeen, Patty Wheeler, Ian Dudney, Pam Grimes, Kathy Keykendall, Kathy Jones, Gail Settle, Sherry Carroll, Vickie Spears, Carol Ann Weddengtor, Susie Anderson. Row 3: Betty 232 delta zeta Cockrill, Deane Hankins, Vickie Severs, Sarah Spencer, Linda Schrolder, Edith Martin, Marguerite Pridgen, Alice Ann Reed. Not pictured: Carol Freeland, Debbie Funel, Ginia Holliday, Debbie Moore, Carroll Potts, Patty Sonka, Sharon Webb, Debbie Wells, Candy Wood, Vickie Robins. . mg $3 '3? ' ' 233 234 gamma phi beta Row 1: Susan N0rre11,Char10tte Anderson, Cathy Lowe, Helen Swindler, Mary Ann Graham, Cindy Yambert. Row 2: Vicki Marcus, Penny Graham, Mari- lyn Owens, Melanie. Watley, Denise Duvall, Diane Parker, Angie Byrde, Marilyn Sharp. Row 3: Ann Overton, Gail Pierson, Kathy Price, Mary Demarest, Beth Scott, Lorie Hamlet, Susan Cooler. Row 4: Trina Lomax, DeAnn Under- wood, Debbie Stansberry, Vicki Ross,1ame Campbell, Liz Batte, Lori Voris, Donna Boland, Fran V Owen. 235 236 Row 1: Sue Nicholson, Missy Moore, Barbara Coe, Katie Hines, Lisa Woods, Patty Schaffler, loan Tonning. Row 2: Kippie Leland, Sheryll White, Diane lertinet, Jackie Gilbreath, Ginger Slaon, Susan Beasley, Susan Oglesby, Candy Rhyme, Lynn Cate, Kathy Orders. Row 3: Patsy Cloud, Kathy Mitchell, Jeanne Broussurd, Debbie McCoin, Barbara Button, Cathy But-- ton, Mary Huey, Susan Goza. 237 238 239 kappa delta Row 1: Mec Berry, Diane Faulk, June Barefoot, Beth Ryan, Char- lene Russell, Dana Jennings, Virginia Harrison, Eda Allen, Katie Ayers, Marcie Dennard. Row 2: Susan Travis, Dan Kicks, Nancy Trice, Benet Bradley, Kathy Arnold, Margaret Doug- las, Amy McClain, Deane Beard, Terri Simmons, Ginger Headden, Shellye Beasley, lane Barefoot, Debbie Kamman. Row 3: Carol Turrentine, Peggy Seaman, Janet Napier. Row 4: Carolyn Crowder, Susie Wrin- kle, Louanna Hardison, Debbie Story. Row 5: Trish Peagler, Marian Gulliford, Barbara Bad- gett, Susan Hackney, Lou Dick- enson,Car01Wohlf0rd. 240 241 kappa kappa gamma Row 1: Kathy Reedy, Susie Gustafson, Fran Kaniels, Janie Holcomb, Beth Bryson, Pat Wilkinson. Row 2: Jeannie Hale, Deane Stanley, Debbie Hardison, Mary McHenry, Shem Port, Carla Martin, Linda Graves, Peggy Hannah. Row 3: . Gretchen Bruce, Margaret Bon- ner, Betty Grandis, Kathy Moon, Jane Hill, Susan George, Bonn Nunn. Row 4: Betty Eng- 1ish,L0uise Rudy, Debbie Page, Lisa Koella, Nancy King, Susie Montfomery, Libby McClure, Judy Stroud. Row 5: Susan Warren, Paula Corn, Amy Sut- tle, Judy Hopkins, Tish Welsh, Leslie Eaves. Front: Pam York, Anne Todd King, Marilyn Denney. 242 phi mu Row 1: Nancy Post, Hennie Brumberg, Debbie Tucker, Deb- bie Rice, Betty Mathis, Karie Doster, Carol Norton, Carol Katner, Ann Ieffries, Iulie Jack- 7 son, Ioan Hawkins, Kim Kogen. Row 2: Susan Strain, Libba Nankivel, Brenda Hankins, Lucy Schantz, Mary Grace Phillips, Marcia Fitts, Melissa Pitts, Susie Ditzel, Becky Bing- ham, Suzanne Rice, Paula Sue Braden, Beth Shelton, Marilyn Bolks, Margaret Ann Braden. Row 3: Stephanie Seaman, Nancy Cook, Kathy Gideon, Ioanne Perry, Lynn Prevost, Frances Brown, Beverly Knight, Iam Iackson, Ianie Pitts, Rachel Schultz, Randi Waters, Karen Fuson,lRuth Glover, Linda Pitts, Linda Hankins, Katherine Greenwood. Row 4: Teresa Steiner, Cathy Petty, Cathy Cox, Kathy Oxford, Christie Dor- ner, Susie Goff, Linda Springer, Muncie Cooper, Bonnie Kelley, Pat Allen, Penny Little, Nancy Poe, Renda Johnson, Penny Crook, Iune Dengler, Dianne Dennison, Carolyn Baldwin, Liz Schantz, ' 243 pi beta phi Row 1: Susan Osterlon, Mary Beth Maddux, Jayne Rose, Bar- bara Prall, Suzanne Boze, lane Martin. Row 2: Terry Hill, Elizabeth Stucket, Regina Rice. Row 3: Patti Clift, Amy Weage- ner, Sandra Born, Jeannette Higgins, Beth Mull, Sue Frost, Carol Love, Marsha Bloyer, Nancy Lee, Martha Henard. Row 4: Chris Meussig, Barbara Blanks, Martha Vaughn, Diane Coleman, Sharon McCullough, Denise DuBois, Carolyn, Ivy Hudson, Anne Kelly, Karen Pierce, Ianet Levan, Cathey Butler. 244 sigma kappa Row 1: Kathy Falls, Peggy Melton, Laura Tieke, Connie Keeling, Char- lotte Miller, Cathy Ford, Vickie Hancock. Row 2: Laura Booth, Ienny Frye, Lila Salisbury, Mary Lou Hovis, Karen Rowe. Right couch: . Emmy Clark, Fran Hatchet, Monte Ellis, lane Minton. Left couch: Karen Coopwood, Mary Ellen Brit- ton. Row 3: Janet Smith, Iulia Hounshell, Karen Piltz, Cathy Ogle, Mary Bean. Row 4: Martha Gillis, Pam Murray, Martha Ross, Brenda Diegel, Ieanne Barnes. Row 5: loan Morton, Ianet Pullen, Ianie Knight, Angie Gettelfinger, Gail Shaw, Iean Briggs, Becca Ottinger, Trudy Moore, Eleanor Iones, Betsy Stick- ley, Becky Atchison, Becky Quillin, Linda Lauderbock, Kandy Mun- drell, Pam Bevins, Kathy Moore. 246 247 248 249 zeta tau alpha Row 1: Michelle Johnson, Mary Beth Bone, Denise Valentine, Nancy Anderson, Eleanor Larkin, Ann Davis. Row 2: Mary McAl- lester, Mimi Rogers, Marty Car- roll, Marianne Overholser, Katy .Estabrooks, Amelia Reid. Row 3: Tricia Iorgenson, Karen McKin- ney, Mintha Evans, Joan Banks, Diane MCGaha. Row 4: Peggy Hannon, Barbara Conlee, Mary Ann Sheridan, Teresa Harrill, Jill Banks. Row 5: Susan Parsons, Debbie Bettis, Debbie Dabbs, Tina Sutherland, Connia Carter, Iudy Witt, Susan Mclunkin, Libba Bond, Lucy Eubanks, Margaret Dickson, Debbie Butler. Row 6: Ann Eastland, Mary Wynn, Cathy Workman, Deborah Paschall, Mary McVeigh, Susie Owen, Cindy Oakes, Ann Dudney, Gina Bell, Diane Hester, Mary Brown, Joan Whittaker. Not Pictured: Ann Almond, Nancy Arnold, Ann Bell, Charlotte Bush, Diane Car- ter, Carole Chriss, Nancy Cole- man, Pat Connelley, Debbie Cot- trell, Debbie Dolen, Sloan Easton, Sandra Guice, Karen Harrell, Ginger Hunt, Pam Jackson, Pam Kious, Danon Lampley, Cecilia Lowder, Nancy Masters, Lucy McMorry, Susan Miller, Kathy Neumann, Elaine Patrick, Mimi Pollock, Janice Ray, Lynne Roe, Jo Anne Scott, Dianne Taylor, Renee Tribble, Melanie Weaver, Lucy West, Diana Woodward, Laura Young. alpha gamma rho Row 1: Kathy Koteski, Pat Haun, Ricky Winters, Van Kemp, Jerry Estes, Bobby Hooper, Mike Hensley, Iohn Cornwell, Mark Wilson, Rick Brandon, Iudy Witt, Iim Farley, Bill Craig, Mark Swanson, Mike Nicoles, Bo Wilson. Row 2: Fred Funte, Dewayne Ingram, Allen Howard, Ray Damron, Ioe Mad- ron, Ioe Kemp, David Bacon, William Elliott, Richard Calla- han, Leonard Schlofman, Char- lie Willis. Row 3: Randal Wil- son, Ray Wakefield, Iohn Swaim, Don Miller, Payton Hewitt, James Morris. Back: Bink Hutsell, Victor Wakefield. 252 254 255 alpha tau omega Row 1: Joe Yarow, Henry Ham- ilton, Kenny Dickson, Tommy McAdams. Row 2: Chip Wilson, Iim Goese, Russ Porter, Ray Alford, Ian Hall, Patti Pearson, Craig Snider, Kay Andrews, Debbie Gatof, Cathy Huster, Norman Allet, Jean Davis, Gayle Collier, Pam Drenning, Marshall Kaufmann, Debbie Armstrong, Ann Leader, Ieoff Alston, Ienny Smith, John T. Boyd, Pay Mahoney, Anne Clark, Les McGowan, Bob Hennigan, Satch Sanders, Dicky Reasons, Demetria Bufford, Mark Yates, Harris Haston. Row 3: Zaidee Ozment, Beth Soloff, Tony Lannigan, Paul Wrothless, John Hoffman, Ienell Budermann, Connie Mil- ler, Steve Shoaf, Monty Ross, Bill SheJton, Jennie Larkin, Tommy Swarm, Bobby Graves, Ricie Wilkes, Kent Caldwell, John Holmes, Duncan Potter, Tommy Humberd, Jim Parks, Chuck Hall, Louis Rosenberg. Row 4: Ronnie Robertson, George Lee, Bert Rigsby, Thad Rigsby, Steve Fergus, Lawrence Heckell, Bud Halle, John Smucker,R0bby Gibson, Jenny Larkin, Paul Smith, Dan Davis, x Robert Breeding, Brad Chris- tenson. Top row: Debbie Tuck- er, Jenny Garrett, Sandy Lati- mer, Susan Cooper. 9 o $ in ,1 I I h; r: u. R c ., z: .. 4 a. beta theta pi Row 1: Mark McDaniel, jenni- fer Moore, Jessica Pflaiger, Skip Brannan, Mark Whitler, Lucy Schantz, Steve Stagnetti, Nancy Post, lune Partrick, Web- ber Powers, David Beasley, Richard Kannis, Gail Miller, John Haley, Torn Mitchell, Mick Cockran. Row 2: Bunky Hamp- ton, Bill Pflager, Ned Stephen- son, David Smith, Danny Coop- er, Chris Mazzitti, Tom Perry, Ralph Steltzman, Donny Iones, Debbie Rucker, Terry Mont- gomery, Rick Parker, Thomas Rolf, John McCoy, Bill Meyers, Jim Odom, Jeff'Dorr. Not Pictured: Mike Arrants, Bob Carlock, Leonard Liridsey, Bill Prendergast, David Iaun, Carolyn Lindsey, Pat Boruff, Bill Nix, Liz Schantz, Tricia Sorgensen, Larry Sullivan, Roger Fookes, Suzie Fookes, Mike Doggett, Brad Mitchell. 257 f5 Ax w L : a, Kx. 534?. 258 259 delta tau delta Row 1: Dave Hamm, Ieff Flet- cher, Iim Tuttle, Susie Evans, Ieff Collart, Iill Farr, Larry Wayman. Row 2: Mike Brown, Iay Rice, Bill Fisher, Karen Berger, Iohn Dangler, Linda Benson, Iim Myers, Kathy Mitchell, Iaci Ellison, Terry May, Debbie Whitman, Bill Browder, Frank Thomas, Todd Lumley. Row 3: Ginny Thorpe, Dude O Neil, Ray Puc'ci, Ieff Guild, Iohn Vahore, Rex Ogle, Bozo, Rick Smith, Eric Holbert, Eddie Hughes, Debby Browder, Steve Alsobrook, Bill Ziegler. Row 4: Jeanne Brummette, Lin- da Sleigh, Mary Guild, Fred Brooks, Lewis Conner, Bobby Whisenant, Allan Abernathy, Mark Cummings, Mike Carney, Clay McConnell, Mark Rassas, Burt Larsen, Ken Jackson, Gary Larsen, Dennis Pompillio. Row 5: T. R. May, Ed Pickett, Mayes Hume, Bram Neil, Bar- . bara Coe, Ieff Hoover, Phil Martin. Row 6: Jim Ricker, David Hull, Floyd Ditmore. delta Upsilon Row 1: David Myers, Harry Weatherford, Iudy Welch, Elaine Moss, Cathy Lowe, Charlie Bellamy, Elisabeth Whitney, Tom Greenwood, Jim Trame. Row 2: Jerry Gardner, Frank Knies, Don Cowe, loan Carter, Brad Drake. Row 3: Bob Koch, Hayes Graf, Jerry Hamby. Kneeling: Tom Emma Day. 260 farmhouse Row 1: Steve Drevett, Ralph Lovely, Phil Booher, Lewis Fletcher. Row 2: Terry Demott, Carol Marthens, Mary Elizabeth Smith, Susie Hozaphel, Fredie I-Iolbert, Ioe Hall, Terry Thompson, Jerry Bundren, Mike Willis, Jesse Driver. Row 3: Bill Hall, Shelby Sullivan, Terry Rowland, Phil Elsea,Pau1Pemberton, Ronnie Bryan, Larry Cunningham, Steve Elsea, Bill Ligon. Tommy Coley. Holding Flag: Steve Street, Jim Ligon. ' 263 kappa alpha Row 1: Susan Platt, Roger Hil- dreth, Marilyn Sutton, Hoppy Horne, Morton Thomas, Ron Embry, Cathy Mitchell, Wes Blalock, Iack Brooks, Karen Rowe. Row 2: Leah Smith, Ienny Vinsant, Iim Iohn'ston, Tim Masters, Patti Anderson, Ienny Frye, Ed Slade, Celia Hicks, Sharon Carson, Bob Mullins, Winnie Tart. Row 3: Neal Crowell, Larry Hord, Wayne Pitts, Steve Pickard, Buddy Smith, Kathy Shupe, Corky Yost, Kevin Rush, Phyllis Coburn, Iim Turner. Row 4: Mark Larsen, Larry Hiller, Sunni Eden, lay Summit, Bob Lyon, David Tweel, Rick Bowers, Gray McLeod, Bill Clark, Bill Baxter, Steve Lamb, George Edlund, Carter Shipe, Will Mills, Robert Henry. 264 265 267 lambda chi alpha Row 1: Dan Woosley, Honor Pledge, Little Gober, Bubba, Wallet-Fag Letts, E. B. Scope, Pay Phone. Row 2: King-Pong 'Winn, Little Baddour, Jeff, L. T. Peterson, C. P. A. Rose, First Deck Mullins. Row 3: Carry, 018 Miss Morgan, Sarah Cameron, Billy Roy, Wee Wil- lie, Auburn iil; Row 4: Jean Claude Gober, E. Baylor, Diane Cochran, 440 Les1ie. Row 5: Clark Kent, H ndball Hodge, Moon Pie, Diane Faulk, Tri- Delt Dance, Bankester, Spacey lane, 0. Henry, Natalie, Wil- liam Twerpy, Laura, One-Arm Andes, Auburn iiZ, Obno Bear- den. Row 6: Max s Roommate, Ayres Hall, House Mouse Homer, B. B., Nathan Baddour, Dale Did, Mescaline Man, Three-Putt Plemmons, B. 0. Stevens, Helmet Head, Harvey Shelton, W. Moster, Pretty Boy, M. Kelly, Mec Clark, Happy Harold, Miss Humboldt, T. B., Dolly Madison, Brad, Punky Tasman, Thunder Thornton, The Godson , Carl LaFond, ATO Troll. Not Pictured: Duke, White Moses , Pearman, Semi-McCord, Worthless For- um, Video Smoke, Deacon, Big Baddour, Ramon Burnette, Phantom Bit, Surfer, Moving- Vann Martin, R. A. Campbell, Worm, David R.A.T. Scott, Pete , Sweetser, Capt. Ron Henry, Bef0re, Bledsoe, Carlos Piltz, Gary s Roommate, Bill Morgan, Whitney Baylor, Cat Stevens Connors, N. N. Clary, Siler Schultz, Whiff's Sister, B. Crane, Mary G., C. B., C. P., Granc' LaChi. am, . : .H r a xm 5, EV ' 3.. ...$ L 135$; .11 a n . I w; Qi . phi delta theta 269 Back Row: Anne Todd King, Chris King, Jim Hudson, John Hardin, Bruce Downing, Suz- anne Boze, Tom Symmes, Iune Barefoot, Doug Beville, Ronnie Marsh, Carter Medley, Terry Armstrong, Skip Viall, David Breeding, Ed Tuttle. Row 2: Wlater Trent, Bill Hahnne- mann, Chip Deacon, Bob Cur- tis, Wear Culvahouse, Soright- Soright, Rick Prall, Bill Hale, Charlie White, Marty Conway, Henry Green, Mac Reed, Richie Gray, Rebecca Parker, Bruce Barham, Babs Richardson, Lauren Bowden, Brad Tisdale, Gaston Williamson, Ray Boaz, Diane Samples, Iim Richard- son, Tom Hale, Jack Hayter. Row 3: Dennis Kenna, Steve Koenig, Richard Hoehn, Kim Gordon, Kai Kaiser, Rick Meadows, Iohn Kinser, Mike Hale, Bonnie Bernius, Mark Abraham, Greg Slusher, Susie Montgomery, Claude, Brenda Fancher, Ed McHugh, Lee Greathouse, Bob Woods, War- ren McLain. Not Pictured: Rick Krause,B1are McCarty, Kendall Price, Don Kent, Rick Win- chester, Randy Whiting, Mike Birdsong, Jimmy Bennett,F10yd Thrasher, Mickey Kelly, Gary Madden, Stewart Johnston, Mark Shea, Chuck Marsh, lack Pendergrast. 271 phi gamma delta Row 1: Sandy Mattie, Larry Gurdner, Bill Norris, Susan Berry, Scotty Tanner, Tom H01- loway, Bryan Thompson, Steve Crabtree, Nundy Cleaves, Ralph Jennings, Bob Edgerton, Ron Shuffiels and Gamma , Gary Kromer, Andy West, Ioey Fielden, Les Carlos, Bob Bundy, Lee Moss, Carlton Sedberry, Harry Miller, Ken Harvey. Row 2: B03 Wilder, Bill Hackett, Gary Bean, Bradford Hann, Gengo, David Britton, Julie ODOnnell, Iovey Gill, Steve Carr, Larry Johnson, Dennis Fetel, Becky Wisecarver, Sonny Hooper. Row 3: A1 Enochs, Cathy Wyatt, Randy Lawry, Bobby Beard, Champ Ed Clark, Wymer, Mike Shain, Iimmy Moody, Patty Anker, Linda Graves, Sharon Law, David Reese, Marilyn Mabry. Row 4: David Morse, Jim Goddard, Mike Kelly, Sugar Ray Cowles, Mike Whitlock, Richard lame- son, Jim Lomenick, Bill Parker, Mark Turner, Tim Busby, Rufus Ross, Dee Hodge, Jim Simpson, Ron Halle, Mason Barrick, Mike Stewart, Bill Smith, Vince Carver, Bryon Faust, David Wilkerson, David Frazier. Not Pictured: Karl Willard, Bill Robertson, Doug Hines, Duffey, Tom Summers, George Cole, John Chandler, Steve Chesney, John Brewer, Tom Dailey, Bob Cowles, Ronnie Walker, Worm, Bruce Owen, Phil Lowe, Tommy Davis. pi kappa alpha- Row 1: John Foster, Robin Lyle, Marc Severance, George Camp- bell, lay Desuaus, Ray Azbell, Bob Tarver. Row 2: David Anderson, Jim Reasons, Rick Kuhlman, Iohn Litton, George Hill, Melissa Pitts, Carol Katt- ner. Row 3: David Blair, Iohn Stinnette, 109 Johnson, Charlie Pfitzer, Bruce Stillwagon, Bill Hickerson, Lytle Brown, Doc Perkins, Larry Lunsford, Butch Moore. Row 4: Bill Murphee, Al Painter, Bill Tallent, David McCarty, Fred Preston, David Hill, Brown Bevill, Boyd Smith. Row 5: Ed Coleman, Gary Williams, Mark Greek, Tommy Morris, Randy Litton, Frank Puryear, Bill Perkins, Ty Hooper, Donna Cook, Mark Haeberle, Steve Richards, Joe Pearson, Susan Yablou, B0 Boaz. Row 5: Tom McCalla, Bill Casey, Terry Wolfe, Joe Schaniter, Rick Zerfing, Steve Terry, Mom Ross, Fred Farley, Larry Jackson, Alka Edwards, Terry Jenkins, Teresa Williams. 272 ifc Christmas party 274 275 276 . pi kappa phi Row 1: Marty Scobey, Ioe Wyrick, Iim Ogden, Howard Haun, Paul Iernigan', Robin Ford, Steve Swangin, Cindy Saylor, Marshall Peterson. Row 2: Ice Fields, Iim Hutchi- son, Mike Gray, Wayne Shuford. Row 3: Wayne Houser, Bob McKinney, Pat Boruff, Bruce Wilson, Bob Sledd, Jim Moore, Andy Donohue, Iim Hotchkiss, Kathy Krumpnick, Iim Camp- bell. Row 4: Mark Medhus, Bob ' Newman, Marlin Sanders, Kim Pierson, David Hamilton, Mickey Phelps, Tom Reynolds, Clayton Root, Buffet, Katrena Clabough, Iim Brent. Row 5: Linda Jennings, Drew Stewart, William Turner. 277 Row 1: Libby Price, Michele Orr, Nancy Baublits, Reb Ivey, Roy Emery, Graham Lattimer, Graham Swarfford, Kay Cole- man, Adelaide Fowler, Pro- fessor Warren, Bill Pearman, Eli Shouse. Row 2: Berry Good- man, Jim Jones, Allen Town- send, Cindy Jackson, Barry Thomas, Madam Jean Louise, K. O. Primm, Janet Boehm, Reed Gibson, Linda Berry, sigma alpha epsilon Linda Ritchey, Dick Cowan, Julie Owen, Barbara Badgett, Mike Updegraff, Ronnie Emery, Doug Singer, Houston Moran, Earl the Pearl. Row 3: Jim Wallace, lean Liebhart, Allen Brooks, William Brown, L. A. Green, Lee Maxie, Carol Wauford, Sally Pace, Stokley Doster, Iim Bentley, Keith Simpkins, Duncan Forte, Alma Phillips, Iim Culpetter, Mark 278 Russell. Row 4: Joe Pryce, George Cullan, Fran Gilian, David Poss, Gerard McDonnell, Phil Wygil, B0 Carey, Richard Chamberlain, George Hutson EDAL Bill Varley, Bryan Foreman, Brick Faucette, Johnny Phipps, Jeff Howers, Gary Clement, Barton Stout, Katie Vandernaillen, Kay Stevenson, Patti McBride, Hard Roller Chew, Iim Uet Mam. 280 sigma chi Row 1: Mike Baten, Sally Del- bridge, Betty Washburn, Tom Downs, Hank Brink, Kirk Davis, Bob Batson, Dan Oxbarn, Steve Potest, Iett Andrick. Row 2: Andy Beckman, Iimmy Tro- baugh, Ed Crenshaw, Randy Tipps, Fletch Zelloer, Rick Ienkins, George Iammons, Iim Cavalas, Steve Inklebarger, Doug Tyler, George Turner, Ken Jackson. Row 3: Warren Goock, R. B. Summit, Iim Woodford, Bill Walker, Charlie Trotter, Sam, Iohn Spellings, Gary Adams, Iohn Staley, Scott Trager, Iohn Harbor, Bob Cor- ker, Ken Culshaw. Row 4: Bobby Shriver, Bill Woodcock, Beth Soloff, Bob Straight, Iohn Beard, Bob Duling, Mike Williams, Chuck Honaker, Don Fehn, Charlie White, Phil Cockran, Paul Gibson, Iim Daniels, Chick Hill, Allen Frierson. Back Row: Richard Incad, Don Oakes, Iim Petty, Wes Burleson, Rick Hardaway, Mike Edwards, John DePersio, Lee Murray, Dean Kleto, Randy Funderburk, Allen Robertson, Charlie Reynolds, Ed Simms, Dave Robertson, Palm Pitts, Bobby Reagan, Bill Tate, Bill Massey, Bob Elliot, Steve Davis, Bill Marsh, Phil Bad- dour, Steve Waggoner, Bob Gardner, Randy Waddell, Mark McClure, Mike Croyle, Iim Haslem, Iohn Tykins, George Baddour. 281 sigma nu Row 1: Mairs Baxter, Charlie Parrish, Debbie Staley, Kathy Guy, Dan Shveda, Gary Ross, Tyler Smith, Chip Wolf, Iohn Thomason, Ann Wegner, Terry Sharp. Row 2: Patti Forinash, Iim Maden, Iackie Phipps, Margia Calotti, Tom Mariner, Iim Hanvey, Bill Wilder, Tom Brown, Kent Phillips, Ben H01- comb, Iohn Stokley. Row 3: Mike Rasher, Sarah Faulks, Bill Shade, Marshall Osterloh. Row 4: David Mecklin, Jeannie Matthews, Iim Nenson, Mike Craig, Debbie Hayes, Ioe Simp- son, Ann Ogden, Lex McGhee, Ray Morgan, Nelson Hurst, Caroll Freeman, Iim Parker, Herbie Lewis, Roger Weigel. 282 284 sigma phi epsilon 4 ; 285 Row 1: Steve 'Wiles, Danny Crawford, Bob Outland, Tom Harris, Viper, Andy Jones, Ken Prabal. Row 2: Bill Mararity, Brian Spickard, Don Johnson, Allan Stout, Mac Hutton, Kent Roller, Iim Elliot, Charlie Wil- ' son. Row 3: Jim Handler, Dave Foster, Bill Williams, Lop Hamblers, Bill Standefer, Matt Deal, Bob Lobse, Rae Cran- miller. Row 4: Herschel Ruther- ford, Mike Peacock, Micky Cook, Randy Goodman, Iohn Kirgs. Row 5: Art Zucker, Jim Bowers, Bob Demicio, Ted Bland, Craig Diller, Ioe Scattergood. Not pictured: Torn Tidwell, Steve Taylor, Lenny Sitar, Rick Henderson, John Reed, Buddy Barnes, Dave Richardson, Bill Neuman, Ali Rotellsa, T. N. King, Frank Harmon, Lenny Marlow, Steve Alexander, David Foster, Ray Greer, Fred Human. 286 afrotc The AFROTC mission is to commission through a college campus program, second lieu- tenants in response to Air Force active duty requirements. The AFROTC program at the University of Tennessee is open to male and female students. In addition to the training and commission, a number of other benefits, including scholarships and monthly allowances, are available to students who enroll in AFROTC. 1. Cadet Lt. Col. Rainey, Cadet C01. Alexander, C01. Kuchta, Cadet C01. Duyke. 2. TSgt. Starling, TSgt. Dou- cette, Mr. Merritt, TSgt. Tweed, Mrs.Gay10r,SSgt. Stanford. 3. Capt. Pendergrass, Capt. Howell, C01. Kuchta, Lt. Col. Gray, Capt. Shearer, Maj. Lilly. 287 arnold air society The Arnold Air Society is an honorary organization of Air Force ROTC cadets. It is com- posed of outstanding Air Force ROTC cadets. The society en- gages in activities including supporting the ROTC program on campus, conducting brief- ings for local high school stu- dents, participating in Civic projects, assisting in selective motivational efforts, and con- ducting local, regional, and national extracurricular fun- ctions. 288 289 angel flight Angel Flight is an honorary service organization whose pur- pose is to support the Air Force ROTC cadets, Arnold Air Society, and the US. Air Force. Angels also promote campus and civic service projects. Var- ious activities include attending National and area conclaves. The U.T. Angels sponsor parties for cadets and have performed their nGrand Orange Opry skit art area conclaves. afrotc and angel flight party 290 equestrian club w . N s e , ; v 4 ; a v ; , 4 . ; 4,- w w , u, 291 V01 corps V01 Corps is a voluntary ser- vice organization of students who act as the official hosts and representatives of the Uni- versity of Tennessee. Members are chosen on the basis of leadership, scholarship and service to the University. Activ- ities consist of: high school Visitations, conducting regular- ly scheduled tours, ushering at special occasions, assisting in student orientation programs, alumni banquets during home- coming, and setting up infor- mation booths during regis- tration and whenever there are large groups on campus. The membership consists of about 100 individuals from all phases of college life. campus entertainment board ylMichael Blachly, Ron Kolod- ziej, Bruce Whittaker, Evan Meade, Karen Piltz, Robert Lasher, Hal May, Steve Carr, DickyBrown. 293 omicron delta kappa Howard Allenberg, President Alvin Best 111, Sec.-Treas. Lindsay Boring Michael Brookshire Steve Carr, Vice-President Frederick Ergen Jerry Estes Calvin Fitzhugh Ioe Mitchell Goodman Harry Laughlin H William McConnell Law L. Gaut Ragsdale Edward Lee Reynolds Lloyd Richardson Mike Richardson 294 , ,i: 295 296 womens swim team Hard-working women com- prise the UT Women's Swim- ming and Diving Club. Self- Coached and enthusiastic, these women built this organi- zation into a recognized sports Club. During their season, the team swam against Bearden High School, Chattanooga Girls Preparatory School, Emory, Appalachian State, Columbia College, and Vanderbilt. It was a great year for the team and they are looking forward to an even better season next year. S P r 0 C b g u b d n a m u r d 300 The Army ROTC Sponsor Corps is composed of 60 Uni- versity of Tennessee coeds who are active in campus and com- munity service projects as well as support of ROTC and US. servicemen stationed abroad and in the states. A few of campus activities other than boosting Cadet morale include sending the Vols off to away games to wish them luck, welcoming visiting teams with smiles and Big Oranges, and acting as campus hostesses for UT teas, tours, sports programs, and other events. The Sponsors make an annual trip to Washington, DC. to entertain patients at Walter Reed Army Hospital. army r.o.t.c. sponsors y; . university center governing board 304 The purpose of the University Center Governing Board is to expand the social, cultural, recreational, and educational opportunities of The University of Tennessee for the members of the University community. The board advises the Univer- sity Center Director with respect to building operations, program budgets and general policies. gamma sigma sigma Gamma Kappa Chapter of Gamma Sigma Sigma National Service Sorority stresses friendship, service and equal- ity. They are involved in such projects as working with patients as Eastern State Psychiatric Hospital, tutoring at the Knoxville Boy's Club, Sunshine Center and the fourth avenue neighbor- hood Center. u.t. daily beacon 1. Wendell Potter, Second Term Editor, Fiwrst Term News Editor 2. Lynn Wildrick, First Term Advertising Manager 3. Frank Monger, Second Term Managing Editor 4. Bob Raissman, Second Term Sports Editor 5. Thea Bryant, Second Term Advertising Manager Bill Harbin sNot Picturedl, Second Term Business Manager 308 u.t. daily beacon 1. Pat Campbell, First Term 2. Editor Polly Peterson, First Term Managing Editor Mike Conley, Second Term News Editor Steve Kelley, First Term Sports Editor Jerry Erhlich, First Term Business Manager 310 311 The 1973 Volunteer was printed by Delmar Printing C0., Charlotte, N.C., with offset lithography. Photog- raphy was by Michael O'Brien, David Stansbury, Harlan Hambright, Gary Mauldin, Harry Diament, and Bob Stockdale. Several sports action pictures were compliments of the Knox- ville News-Sentinel. The cover artwork was by Dave Mills. 1973 volunteer 312 313 Libby Barnes, Editor Ieanne Barnes, Managing Editor Carrie Hastings, Classes Editor Ann Davis, Features Editor Katrena Clabough, Greek and Organizations Editor Steve Carr, Business Manager Ricky Woods, Sports Editor LeAnn Foutch, Greek and Organizations Assistant Ian Henley, Business Staff Cathy Waltz and Joel Haber, Features Assistants phoenix Bill Sims, Editor of the Phoenix Mrs. Edith Hall, Receptionist Mr. Steve Slagle, Director of Student Publications 315 publications board The Publications Board was the governing board of student publica- tions. It decided on major policy and was composed of Dr. James D. McComas,Mr.Phi1ip Scheurer, Mr. Harold Whitehead, Dr. Dozier, Cade, Dr. Anna lean Treece, Miss Quinta Martin, Mr. Gary Moore, Mr. David Bragg, Mr. Vernon MC- Kinney, Dr. Carter F. Miller, and Dr. Pietro F. Pasqua, Chairman. 316 317 freshman, sophomore junior, senior 319 Adams. Edward William Anderson, Deborah Sue Anderson, Phil Armstrong, Terry Arnold, V. Alyson Atwood, Beth Ayers, Katie Azbell, Raymond A. Baird, Robert A. Bass, Carla Battle, Bucky Baxter, Jane E. Beard, Robert W. Beeler,Michae1I. Bell, Belinda Bennett, Wm. M. Berry, Samuel C. Bishop, Johnny Blankman. Dave Bornblum, Irvin H. 320 freshmen 321 Bradley, Carl Brooks,A1fred A. IV Brown, James Needham Brown, Lytle IV Brown, Michael R. Brown, Thomas Walker Bruce, Betty Bruner, Robert H. Bundy, Robert W. Burchett, Susan Burrows, Debbie Butler, William T. Butts, James Edward Callahan, Carole Campbell, Lisa Carson, Corky Childs, Richard C01eman,Ed Connell, Mark Edward Cooke, Jeff Cooper, Lee D. Copp, Gary Lee Cothnon, James Danny Cottrell, Frances I. Cowan, Luanne Crabtree, Stephen E. Craig, Mike Craze, Ricky Culvahouse, S. Wear Dale, Terry Lynn Davis, Luanne Carol Dawson,Mari1yn DePriest, Diane Dixon, Scott A Duffey, William Errice Dwornik, Pam Dzikowski, Sally Ann Edmundson, Alan Wayne E11i0tt,William B. E11i0tt,William M. Enochs, Alfred M. Erwin, Ian Esposito, IoAnn Evans, Joe L. Evans, Randy Ezell, David Ashley Farr, Iill Faulk, Diane Ferguson, Mike Ford, Sharon Foster, David L. Francis, Guy Martin Frazier, Steven C. French, Sandra Lee Gaines, Shelley I. Gantt, Susie Garrett,lenr1y Gatewood, Lucy George, Sherrie Rae Gleason, Donald R. Gordon, Gary Gray, Nancy Greene, Wallace H. Greer, Ray E. Greer,Wi11iam W. Grigsby, Lee Haeberle, Mark Turner Hale, Tom M. Hallum, Mike Hammond, Joseph M. 322 323 Hardiman, Lynn Harris, Kathryn L. Harris, Jean C. Harrison. Ginger Harter, Robert Kent Harvey, Kenneth Nunn Haynes, Karen Denise Haynes, Mary Ford Heagen, Jeff Heck, Jeanie Heckman, Amy Heinz, Douglas B. Hewitt, Ierry Payton Hi11,David E. Hill, George A. Hinson, David William Hinton, Kem Hogan, John R. H01bert,Eric Holloway, Thomas I. Horton, Karen Lyn Horton, Rex Rice Hoskins, Ianet Hudson, lim Kyle III Hull, David Mack Human, Fred H. Hutton, Malcolm G. Hylton, Clyde D. Ir. Igou, Mark Edward Jackson, Kenneth Johnson, Roger L. Iohnston, Leslie A. Jones, Andrew M. Jones, Richard Alan Iones, Stephen Glenn Iorgensen, Dory Kelly, Mickey Kennedy, Kelly Anthony Kinnard, Rebecca 10 Kinser, Iohn H. Ir. Knox, Vincent E. Ir. Krieger, Lester Martin Kuhlman, Russell B. Larsen, Gary Lee. Nancy Lerner, Marshall Lewis, Herbert L. Lewis, Virginia Lee 'Lillard, Anneliese Lillie, Iohn I. 325 Lingar, Donna Lockett, William S. Lohse, R. M. Ir. Lomenick, James Robert Love, Mary Lynne Lumley, Todd Lyle, Iames R. Sr. MacConnell. Clay M. Mailman, Robyn Marsh, Ronnie L. Martin, Graham Martin, Phil Mattice, Sandy May, Fred R. Ir. May, Sharon Maye, Ben Mayfield, Pamela Lynn 'MCCallister, Glenn S. McConnaughey, Susie McDonough, Steven R. McGaha, Debbie Diane McGuire, Debbie McKinney, Cynthia L. Medley. Carter West Miller, Harry H.112 Miller, Max Miller, Steve Miracle, Steve Mitchell, Kathryn K. Mofield, MelindaGay Moore, William L, Jr. Morarity,Bi11' ' Morgan, Raymind Morris, James R. Morrow, Ronnie Murphy, Michael K. Nelson, Greg Nelson, Nancy Lynne Nichols, Mike Norris, William B. Norton, James F. Norton, Sam Norrell, Chris Ogilvie, Andrew P. Ogle, Rex Overstreet, James P. Overton, Ken Oxford, Linda Parella, John Michael Parker, Karie L. Parker, William A. Patterson, Bob Patterson, Sam P. Ir. Pearson, Sherry Pfitzer,Char1ie Pitner, Pamela Kay Platt, Martha Susan Pope, Kathy Ann Prewitt, Mary Louise Price, Kathy Price, Jimmy Proffitt,Frank1in E. Puryear, Frank G. Regain, James C. Ir. Ramey, Dorcas Anne Reagan, Ieffrey Alan Redlin, Sheryl Dawn Reed, Joseph Whitmel Register, Bob Reis,Michae1Leslie 326 327 Reynolds, David G. Rich,lu1ia Anne Ricker, Iim Riddle, Dee Rodgers, Joseph Lee Rogers, DeNe' Rogers, Martin E. Ross, Robert W. Sanders, Betty Ann Sanders, Guy Robert Schulz, Bradford Sedberry, Carlton N. Sheridan, Margaret Shomaker, Bob Shreda, Daniel M. Jr. Simpson, Jim Smith, Gary Wayne Smith, Harold F.1r. Smith, Kenny Smith, Roger D. Smith, Tyler Spink, Jeffrey Arnold Standefer, W. B. 111 Steuart, George Stillwagon, W. Bruce Stutts, William Barry Swaim,10hn Richard IV Tabb, Steven R. Tackett, Lester Tanner, H. Bryan Thomas, Frank Wayne Thomas, Robert W. ThompsOn, Bryan B. Thompson, I. Rick Thrasher, Iim Tidwell, Chris Trentham, Danny E. Turner, Mark Dudley Viall, Paul 1. 111 Vines, S. Kathrine Wakefield, Alfred Ray Wall, Bill Walsh, James L. Watterson, Chuck Welch, Matt Whitlock,Michae1R. Whitt, Peggy Suzanne Whittaker, Richard E. Widener, Jim Wilder,Wi11iam W. Ir. Wilkerson. William D. Williams, Danial G. Williams, Mary Key Williams, Mike Williamson, Gaston Williamson, Tom Wilson, David B. Wilson, Deborah Sue Wilson, Robert Winter, Steven Martin Wolf, Chip Woods, Linda Carol Wooten, John Herbert Wuest, Janice Marie Wyrick, Ioseph Truemun 328 sophomores 329 Abraham, Mark Steven Abrams, Martin E. Acker, John Howard Alexander, Steven T. Bacon, David Barrick, Mason Bean, Gary Duane Bennett, Iames III Berge, Augie BeVille, Doug III Bible, Mary Kaydean Bland, Theodore Scott Boaz, Raymond M. Ir. Boaz, Thomas B. Bodlien, John Milton Bonham, Iay Braden, Paula Sue Bradley, Jane Ann Busby, George Timothy Cagle, Denise Calkins, Kenneth L. Carloss,Wi11iam Les Carr011,MarthaIean Casey. William L. Chesney, Steven R. Chew, Jennifer C. Clarke, Mike Claxton, Henry Reeves C1eve1and,Alan Cohen, Mike Cole, Janice Kaye Collins,10 Cowles, Raymond R. Crawford, Daniel C. Cummings, Mark Damron, Ray Dangler,10hn H. Deacon, Robert B. Ir. Denny, Merilyn M. Diller, Craig Iohn Doster, Karie Duncan, lack Owen Edgerton, Robert N. E11i0tt,1ames Keith English, Betty H. Federer, Zoe LAnn Fielden, Ioseph A. Finley, Gary Eldon Fisher, Franklin A. Foust, Byron Herbert Fowler, Lee Sory Freeman, Carroll N. 111 Funte, Fred Gardner, Larry Gibson, Sue 330 331 Gi11,Ierry L. Cleaves, Randall W. Goodman, I. Randall Greenberg, Bruce B. Halle, Myron Ashner Hamlett, Deborah Hamslen, Lap Handler, James Edward Heins,A1bertG0rd0n Hensler, Grady S. 11 Hickerson,Wi11iam L. Hodge, Doyal H. Ir. Hoehn, Richard Hoover, Jeffery Neal Huges, Edward Hume, Mayes III Hurst, Nelson I. Huttenhoff, Bradley I. Isler, Edward R. Johnson. Joe B. Jr. Kelly,10hn Michael Kent, Donald B. King, John Joseph King, Lee Ann King, Nancy Campbell K01b,Mary Porter Koontz, Kathy Jane Krause, Richard N. Kromer, Gary Charles Lemler, Richard S. Litton, Randall A. Lis, Edith Ann Locke, Greg Lowry, Steven R. Lynn, David B. Madron, Ioe Keel Mann, Bradford Dayton Marlow, Leonard Lee Marthens,Car01Anne Martin, Michael W. Mason, Ruth Anne May, Frederic May, Terence M. Mead, Iamie Melancon, Delean Ir. Meyers, Jean Marie McAmis, Iohn C. III McCarty, William B. McDow, Ronald A. McGee, H. Alexander MCLain, Warren W. Montoya, Marilyn K. Mullis, Yasmin Lynn Myers, Cathy Neil,A1bertB. Olson, Iohn W. Owen, Euin M. Owen, R. Bruce Parker, Jerry L. Parks,10hn W. Peacock, Michael V. Pearson, Robert P. Perkins, William Ir. Perkins, William T. Pierce, Dennis Holt Poindexter, Marian E. Potts, Betsy Preston, Fred Prigg, Kendall T. 111 Pryor,Wi11iam A. III 332 Rasher, Michael W. Reddin, Kathy Reed, Mac D. Renfro, Clem Ir. Richkus, Sally Richardson, James Ir. Robertson, Thomas L. Sargent, C. Craig Scattergood, Joseph E. Scruggs,10y Searle, Margaret Delia 333 Sharp, Terry L. Shea, Marc Shults, Martha Smith, Kathryn Smith. Rick Smith, William Boyd Snodgrass, Charles W. Sparkman, James T. Stark,10hn Kunkel Stark, Kenneth Stepbach, Marc Stewart, Sarah Summers, Robert F. Swanson, Mark H. Tallent, W. C. Ir. Terry, Stephen Allan Tipton, Martha L. Trent, Walter F. Vanore, Iohn Wayman, Larry Webster, Tom Whisenant, Bobby I. White,10y Anita Williams, Deborah N. Williamson, Susan D. Willis, Charles F. Willis, Iohn Herbert Wilson, Beauford I. Wilson,Char1es D. Wilson, Mark D. Wofford, Camille Wooten, Chuck York, Pamela Sue Young, Thomas M. Zucker, Arthur L. 334 juniors 335 Adams, Ierry A11en,Ben Anderson Anderson, David C. Anthony,E1izabeth Arendt,10hn S. Baker, James Michael Barger, James Alan Barger, Raymond H.1r. Barnes, Buddy Bateman, Tricia Baxley, Patricia Jean Bevill, George Brown Bible, Libby Blach, Ralph Carl Blair, David W. Blevins, Robert Lee B01t0n,Eddie L. Boruff, Patricia Nell Bowers, James S. Ir. Breeding, David N. Bright, Iudith Sharon Brobeck, Ianet K. Brooks, C. Eddie Bunch, Thomas Porter Butler, Ionnie Ir. Cannell, Stewart P. Carter,Pau1A. Caste, William Ronald Chandler,10hn W. Ir. Christy, Craig Cook, Mickey E. Cornwell,10hn R. Ir. Coulter, Missy Craven,10hn Ronald Crook, Susan Curbo, Bruce Dawson, Jackie D. Demcid,R0bertPau1 Denny, Tina Ann Desvaux. Iay Sherwood Dewey, Don M. Doerries, Karen Drysdale, Ion W. Ir. Edwards, Allen Ergen, Charles William Estes, Mike Etkind. Debra Tamara Evans, Donna Lynn Farley, Frederick A. Fetzer, Ioe Finley, Jerry F. Fisher, Marie Frazier, Winston Garrison, Rhonda C. Glenn, Clay Goddard. James S. G01dstein.David G0rd0n,Kimba1Cross Greek. Mark C. Hagewood. Mack Cliff Hahnemann. William H. Hale, Michael Hamilton, Becky Hamm, L. Dave Hanvey,1ames L. 336 337 Harbinson, Terry Harman, Francis Edward Harris, Ion T. Helton, Everett N. Henley, Peggy Ian Hensley, Mike Hodges, Robert S. Holloway, Robert Lee Horst, A. Gail Hull, Edward Earl Hutsell, H. A. Ingram, Dewayne Inouye, Alice M. Jackson, Larry S. Iacobs, Liz Ienkins, Terry L. Iennings,Ra1phIr. Johnson, Don Johnson, Nathan Tyrone Johnson, Rusty Johnston, Stewart R. Jones, M. Susan Iorgensen, Tricia Kaiser, Kermit B. Jr. Kammerud, Barry Alan Karp, Richard Keller, Janice W. Kemp,10e Killingsworth, Myrth King, C. Larmor King, Thomas N. III Kingery, Bill Kite, Karen Sue Kosten, Ierry Kovach, Steve Laster,Gi1William Lawson. Ron Lee, Charlene Marie Little, Penny Paulette Lowe, Charles P. Ir. Lowry.Rand01ph M. Lunsford, Larry W. Mabry, Lee A. Mandrell, Kandy Marcum, Terry Wayne Martin, lane Ellen Martin, Patrick Lansing Mason, Eric Parker McAlexander. Thomas M. McCalla, Thomas L. McCarty, David Grant McElhaney, Max' Lyle McHugh, Ed Mecklin, David Miller. Donald Norman Morris, Robert A. Morse, David Mosley, Bruce Moss, Steve Myers, Iim W. 339 Nelson,C1iff Neuman, William Parker, James W. Parker, Marcia Dianne Parks, Hugh P. Ir. Pettey, Sylvia Porter, Carl Edwin Porter, Mary Martha Prahl, Ken Prall, Richard W. Price, Karen Purtee, Ronald W. Putnam, Nancy Graham Reasons, James Arthur Reece, David Alan Reel, Susannah D. Reid, Alice Ann Richardson, Dave Roller, Larry Kent Ross, Gary Lee R0tello,A1bertR. Rutherford, Leo H. Ir. Schlofman, Arthur L. Schlossberg, Stuart Scruggs, Billy Severance, Marc S. Smith,Car01yn Grayson Smith, Doug Dewitt Sneed, Michael L. Soloman, Deborah Stier, Kenneth Stout, AllenK. Stucker, Mark Lee Taylor, Dan Tingle, Rita Maria Tisdale, Bradford W. Troxler, Vesta Ann Turner, Ieff Tuttle, Ed Vickerstaff,Ar1n Wakefield, Victor Walker, Ronald Elijah Warren. Harry Richard Waters, Mike Weaver, Janet Noleen Whiting, Randall D. Wilder, Robert Coke Wiles, Stephen H. Wilkerson, G. C. III Wilkinson, Pat Willard.Kar1Philip Williams, Alan E. Williams, Bill Wilson, Betsy Wilson, John D. Winchester, Richard T. Winters, Richard F. Woodmere. Toby S. Woodruff. Doak E. Woods, Robert H. Young, Sherry Zook, Sharon Adair 340 seniors Abernathy, Allen Agee, Christopher, G. Allenberg, Howard B. Alsobrook, Stephen Ammons, Ralph H. Sr. Andrews, Fae Parsons Bales, Ginger C. Barham, Bruce Barker, Rebecca W. Bartel, M. Kathleen Barzizza, George T. Baxter, E. Mairs III Beck,R0na1d Keith Beets, Robert E. Sr. Birdwell, Judy Bishop, Bob Blakely, Terry Van Boyd, William T. Ir. Braden, Margaret Arm Bradley, Charles T. Brandon, Rick Brewer,10hn G. Britton, Noah D. 111 Browder, William Brown, William G. Brumley,Car01 Brust, Sabine Buis, Ioanna Butler, Mickey Button, Barbara lean Calfee, Terry H. Calhoun, Sara Callahan, Richard S. Campbell, George W. ' Carney, Michael Carr, E. Steven Carringer, Frances M. Carver, Mike V. Cate, Stephen L. Cayce, James Patrick Christian, Rhonnie P. Clark, H. Richard C01e,George E. Ir. Collart,10ffrey A. C011ins,Andy Comella, James Gary Conlee, Barbara Dee Conner, Lewis Coopwood, Karen Cortese, Jack L. Cowles. Robert S. Crabtree, Thomas R. Cravens, Royal Gene Curtis, Robert Iames Dailey, Sharon L. Davis,Ionr1erss Deaton, C. Dudley III Ditmore,F10yd A. Donaldson, Barbara A. Downing, Bruce Edwards, James H. Ellison, Jackie Emerson, Robert S. Ervin, Christie Estes, Jerry 342 343 Evans, Philip I. Fain,Wa1ter W. Farley, James M. Farmer, Ioe Ferre11,George T. Ferrell, Richard W. Fiege, Christopher M. Finley,Char1es Fisher, Gary A. Fishe, Martha Vidd Fisher,Wi11 G. Fletcher, Jeffry T. Foster,10hn Shaw Foxworthy, James C. Fuller, Walter L. 111 Fuqua, Billy Ray Fyfe, Bruce McKenzie Fyke, Iohn Edward Gantt, Douglas C. Gibson, Janice Ann Gibson, Vicki Doyle Gillespie, Tina Gray, Richard Greathouse, Lee Joyner Green, Henry D. Guild, I. W. Hackett, Bill Hackett, Danial I. Hale,Wi11iam Tuttle Hardin,10hn Rucker Harris, Gerald A. Harris, Lynn H. Hatmaker, Carolyn L. Haubenreich, Mary C. Hayes, Lula Turner Hayes,Wi11ist0n S. Hayter, Ralph I. Headlee, Albert Edward Headlee, Nancy Surrett Hedgcoth, William I. Helfenberger, David Henderson, E. Richard Hill, James R. Hinsley, Neil H. Hinson, James S. Hockett,C01eman Ir. H01t,David Ramsey Hooper, Cyrus Tyrone Hooper, Robert W. Ir. Homer, David Howard Horton, William M. Jenkins, Pam Jenkins, Pamela Sue Jones, Eleanor S. Jones, Russell A. Ir. Iohnson, Chris Keller Johnson, GregJ Johnson, Larry H. Iurand, Lydia Ursula Kemp, Van Kenna, Dennis Terrell Kinser, Terry R. Kohn, Martin Alan Kook, Io Ellen Kuhlman, Frederick Ir. Lane, Carolyn Ruth Larsen, Burt A. Law, William M. Ir. Lawler, Mary Beth Lewis, Gregory E. 344 345 Lippard, Hal Monroe Litton,10hn Terry Livesay, Bill Lord, Rodney A. Lutes, Kathy Lyle, Pamela Gail Lyman, R. Edward Ir. Lynch, Dan Milton Madden, Gary Wayne Maden, James F. Mariner, George T. Ir. Mars, Samuel Alexander Mason, Daniel R. Mathews, Jeanne E. McDougal, Robert Ir. McNabb, Mitchell Meadows, Rick Miller, Marita Millhorn, M. Joan Minkin, Bruce 1. Mitchell, Carolyn Jane Morris, Dan Shaw Morris, Ioseph Thomas Moss, Lee M. Moss, William H. Myers, Keith Wilson Myers,Lir1da Faye Nave, Karen Newbern, Wyatt Kimsey Nich01,H. D. ONeil, lack B. Osterloh, Robert M. Outland, Robert W. Overbay, David E. Overholt,Car1Edward Pafford, Don Painter, A1 Parrish, Charles E. Pasqua, Randall Clyde Patterson,1rene Ogg Paul, Don D. Pendergrast, lack Sr. Phelps, John Arthur Phillips, Billy Kent Pickett, Edward 111 Piltz, Karen H. Podlaskowich, R. A. Poe, Ierry Lewis Porter, Suzanne Price,Frar1k N. Rassas, Mark A. Ratcliff, Mona Rector, Daniel S. Redding, Faye Jordan Reed, David Ernest Reed, John S. Reynolds, Cynthia A. Rice, M. lay Richards, Steve Richardson, Iackie Richardson, Philip M. Robinowich, Ierrel R. Rose, Mike Ross, Jacquelyn S. Roth, Larry Royster, Thelma Ann Ruhe,RobertMiChae1 Sanford, Walter C. III Saver, Cynthia Suzane Scherer, Mary Ann 346 347 Schuster, Bob Self, Betty Lynn Sellen, once Settle,Me1anie Arm Shain, Michael David Sharp, Leo Alvin Ir. Sheridan, Mary Anne Shuffield, Ronald A. Shumilas, Diana Irene Simpson, Joe D. Sitar, Leonard Iohn Slusher, Gregory L. Smallwood, James E. Smith, Elizabeth Wade Smith, Murral Randal Smith, Sheila Ann Smith, William I. Sorrells, Dudley Spencer, Sarah Ellen Stinson, Stephen R. Strickland, Susan D. Sturgis, Linda Lois Sukloff, Sidney K. Summers, Edward T. Sutton, Stephen R. Symmes, Thomas H.111 Tanner, Alvin Hunter Tarrer, Robert S. Taylor, Landon R. Taylor, Steve Thomas, Iimmy Tidwell, Thomas T. Ir. Tonning, Ioan E. Towbin, Norman 8. Trentham, Dennis G. Trotman, Richard P. Truran, William R. Tsao, Tomson Kung Tucker, Sherry Tuttle, James M. Vigdorth, Don Eugene Vogt, Carolyn M. Wallace, Jeffrey Warren, Harry P. Weathersby, E. Woods Weigel, Roger Welch, Deborah Gail Wells, Brenda once West, Andrew R. West, Curtis Westbrook, Chris R. Whetsel, Richard Mac White, Charles 0. Wiggins, Mary Carolyn Williams, Gary Lee Willis, M. F. Jr. Willis, Mike Willson,Pau1G. Wilson, David L. Wilson, I. C. Wilson, Randall B. Wooden, Linda Sue Wright, Bobby Lynn Wright, Lu Ann Yandell,10hn Hartman Young, Marlene Louise Zamberlan, Garry Reno Ziegler, William R. Ir. 348 graduate students Burney, Robert Wesley Cassidy, Patrick T. H0well,Wi11iam D. Ienkins, Steve R. Kwashoshoski, Douglas Liner,Rand01ph M. Meadows, Mark Austin Pucci, Ray Russell, Clifford III Small, Betsy 4 4 .a a c 4 c 349 ..... how the ears of my ears own 9 . . . 351
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