Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN)
- Class of 1974
Page 1 of 460
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 460 of the 1974 volume:
“
Q? 'fu 'lx nm . . 'U xi- 5 -L . . - 1 X Vqfx' if' ,xi-Wrf ' I' 'f-' N 'P 2 ' - N f , x'Q':' 1 AX . , . , ,if f. c- 'Q - ' ' ff if gh Qin? 'l .. 5 ff +7 'wg' ' ' QM 'K ' f'1' 5ff5i-f X ff f' V ' I , ,Q . f - ,fyfd Lf el W? , C AW q,-,,-fs?-. gy 5 pg? Q s Ma: if gi f' 'Q' 5 ly fiyihbi' ,b I A X i , an I f ,Af Q. ff fy' . f' -A f f, Ml. I ,t 45 A 16 25N .u,i:LArgih v f , f ' V 2 ' , '14-sn'f'?i1'::+ia 7 'Y mvwi' . f- eff 'vvl 'ff fl fl X 1 V 4 f f f ' ' y X, Q fl 'I ij Z1 X , j 7 .7 f -,f 471 , DC if' f' , W , .A T32-31 an Q: 1 rf iii..-4,41 . 'if Wai 142:45 12 .gsfai i I ff' I 1 'fi 97312 i is y I LJ? :E Q f 4 N gf W 314, x MZ ,qw WAV? If 'i A' f ,,,v ggv ff t f ., f , 1 'A ,f- 'fb' .,:' fm ' 4, I 171 3 : 1 , ' ,- 1 JE g 7,'Qj3lf a A XX ff 5 .2f..,.g,!5? 1 H.. - KH?- D ' - ,f af y w if ffl fi ,w g C . f ,. ISL .Z?f4bf5 3'7f' 6-lf lf' 'zo f. EZ 7 fm g fggyg ' f' ,QM ' J ? f JI? Q! , I mf :5:,h?!fy'sjI4X f l 1, I N , f 2, Q ,ff f W f ,f - f '- ,- 1 ,N , 14 f X 'Ns A X 5 X. ffm , .week ' x.,. ww X 3,7 ps, , w W .M wg M W Q' V X THE SECOND CENTURY VANDERBILT COMMODORE 1974 EDITION COMET VOLUME 88!COMMODORE VOLUME 66 , Y ' ., J' , 1 ..- '.s '- '1 . , 1 , t x,' N, vf , Ps Q,' 5...,,,,,--qu-nur - J , ',r1 W?. X . FI l.., V gf. ,'.Q..f5::3.r-. iv 'fJ':Zi. 1, , :ll Za . J, Qt um -W ' ' ff!-'M If X -an T if wwf, 'I X, ,. 1, 7 A' ae., I , i '- v ., -F' N E .sf 4- Isl A ,YI ' 1 '-' r g' : j : 'V+ J -' 5 . Q ' f I ' 31? r Q' L: k 1 -ff-..,,,,m MQ- - Jim-- A A' L.. .-Q lr mix!! v .WW V nl. ' r A 254-351 4 k , ,. n e mb' 'f ws-.gg . QM. 'TY'-. L .f. gafzw , I 1' .nl , 1 ...I-5,-qgyg:y.,a 4-f 1. - L., -'Mfr-3-gzafwa . .. .1A.,w...'f - - .1 f ,Z'F.1f4 S'S?4l?':?Q1 r 1-4 'E ' x .-.,,,i..31qk L5 1 A - I 'QC X '41 X 2 U 3 V 'YQ' W f K .S-F, Qu, HE' 9' we v- ..- A s , - ,WN 1 Today Vanderbilt consists of a college of arts and science, offering a broad liberal arts curriculum, and seven graduate and professional schools, with programs in Engineering, Nursing, Law, Divinity, Medicine, and Management. The University en- rollment stands at 6,859 The size of these schools ranges from 3,280 in the College of Arts and Science to 93 in the very new Graduate School of Manage- ment. In addition, there are approximately 500 students in a variety of training programs. Vanderbilt is recognized as a center of excellence in quality of education. In 1949, it was elected to the very select Association of American Universi- ties. Its academic and research programs in the physical and natural sciences have drawn national attention. With support from the National Science Foundation it has undertaken a Science Develop- ment Program, a part of which involved the con- struction for 312,000,000 of the Stevenson Center for the Natural Sciences. Interdisciplinary research programs have been established in such fields as environmental pollution control and treatment of respiratory disease. In as different fields as physiol- ogy and the study of 19th century French literary criticism, Vanderbilt has achieved special world renown. The strength of the institution and its programs has economic ramifications for the city of Nashville and the surrounding region. The University is one of the city's largest employers with a combined faculty and staff of approximately 4800. Its annual budget exceeds 870,000,000 Of this, approximately 3096 is spent in support of the Vanderbilt Hospital, which provides about 100,000 out-patient visits and about 16,000 admissions annually, serving the sev- eral counties in Middle Tennessee. Almost 50'Zn of the patients come from outside Davidson County. Vanderbilt medical personnel also staff the Nash- ville General Hospital As a corollary to Vanderbilt's institutional strength, derived in significant part from its re- gional support, Vanderbilt has responsibilities to- ward the city and the region: In having developed a health delivery service, the University has assumed the responsibility of continuing to provide it. Other health care delivery programs, such as the Veterans' Ad- ministration Hospital, have developed their services in interdependence to Vanderbilt. The University's tax status is premised upon its public service role. The general public looks with appropriate expectations toward a uni- versity to contribute to the quality of life in such areas as technological developments to reduce pollution, research developments to combat disease, etc. The University Center is one of the largest generators and attractors of transportation within the' city. It must do its share to handle the volume of traffic and parking that its pro- grams create. It must either provide indepen- dently or recognize its shared responsibility for the housing of its 7000 students and their fami- lies. It must recognize the impacts of its dense development and demand for service from both the public and private utilities which it shares as a resource with the community. Finally, the University's people, programs, and possessions represent a cultural resource to the community and region. The direct and indirect support that the community gives the Uni- versity is recognition of this resource. the GBIS A STLDY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY WITHIN METROPOLITAN DAVIDSON COUNT! TENNESSEE 55615951 gon DEVELOPMENT ' A THE SECOND CENTURY J ..-1 W, , . 1:51 I W' f In summation, features of the Development Plan - deal directly with the following four areas: Land Use Vehicular and Pedestrian Circulation Parking Public Utilities In dealing with these, the objectives to be attained through the execution of the plan are: To facilitate orderly campus development. The existence of complementary circulation, park- ing and utility systems permits development on new sites and a new perspective on the use of existing sites and facilities. With this plat- form for development providing a matrix of circulation and utilities, the Development Plan illuminates opportunities and limitations, thereby becoming a tool for decision-making concerning the physical growth and change in the University. To improve the University's ability to respond to changing needs. In the context of a designed infra-structure to support land development and supporting data concerning utilities capa- cities, the implications of a decision facing the institution will become visible. To maximize the benefits to both the Uni- versity and the city of improvement projects to be funded under provisions of the University Center Urban Renewal Project Area-One. Fe- derally funded street and utility improvements accomplished under the Urban Renewal Proj- ect can serve to help develop the University's circulation system as well as the best interests of the neighborhood. -adapted from the Platform for Development for the Second Hundred Years. gig., I 17: Ag, T 'lf THE SECOND CENTURY f 5 V X :A . A . . , A' lg: ,- Q , wp, 4? 4 X , X -.-T S C : ,u:'.,:,, -4, Q- .', ,', 6 I THB SECOND CENTURY Af f. 1, UA HS X ,I N 6 Rx un US If 'Q 10, NI If I, x I u com 1 x Q QQ 'W xx mI .I 'L L. in ufc I -' IC I -I OFFICE OF CAMPUS PLAINING X 5 X , ' W '- I -+ ' Q X 4,55 .-x i ' d X ' 4 1 4 ' .V Q 4445 .zvxv I . . .+I 3' 'S ' '1 I I n ' ' v ,Q r .tw ,sgv O . ., . ,ew : M I IV' I' '. Q' I' Q' ,,.w I x I jeux 0 ig .xi K. X .43 I I I-A - I , I Q I X llliullillul u X X I , 4. , .1 .Q ,Q .p E I I, I' f' S v xx ' H f y s ' Ke, s E : I , tl X+ I 'I I I - I We .x 1 4 ' I' .HQ ' : '45 ,px X' I E l- . , I N - ,R : - W I 'N -I I ': I I -Q X 'A X' i E: nn Quran: '15f,,,,,- 1 : :I L x :ll0Ol0O0ll:0S00OOLl, :zu-sawing, ! I N-Q f all I I H l' I, Vox x q V: IV p. :Z I .. . t I if il: I J I I I I , :l II' U r 'i :Q ii - :E I ,ff I I ll 'A4,, 1 ,QQ I , : UE? I I L' I. .. u intl' X fgx ' 5 .. : n : . N ly 'XXX Q N, ,, - f: B 'll X E, ..,. f, ,s : I ., e o V 3 E I ' F, A-R 4,- I ' :' :Q T laura I I ' I' ' ' U S : - n 11 L .I KA A XB 6 : :I A : , xlux N 4 X J ,Qs o : U S2400 : X, , X -. unucvu Q' ,H Q- !l.!!rg4nu: lL:!!!gu:-f' rf'-'urn -.iii I - .X E+ X X A 4.11-I.l l.vl f' . -1 Q f fx - TM xi V fy XX u ,. X ,E .L an 1 , Y. ,X I QA XY -1 V , Tunica: Av: I I L1 IL I I t 'Nb' PLATFORM FOR DEVELOPMENT ,HE v,,,,DE,.,,.L, ,,,,,,E,,S,,, LAND USE PLAN NASHVILLE TEMESSEE f'7 X Comments for the 1974 Commodore by Alexander Heard, Chancellor, Vanderbilt University: As Vanderbilt begins its second century, I cannot help reflecting on the feelings of the first Chancellor when the University opened 100 years ago. All Vanderbilt's chancellors have been filled with gratitude, determi- nation, and hope. All have faced a future weighted with difficulties, some known in advance, some not. Chancellor Landon C. Garland worked in a world that moved more slowly, however, and it is fair to say that he was plagued less than his successors by conscious uncertainty about the future conditions under which his university would function, and especially less than a Vanderbilt chancellor today. As it turned out, whatever stability in the social environment Chancellor Garland assumed would continue in the years ahead was radically altered. In turn, Vanderbilt's own nature was radically altered during its first century, suggesting the difficulty of seeking now to look ahead to the university's future in a different second century when changes will probably be even more rapid and fundamental. Chancellor Garland was a profesor of physics and astronomy, and also a mathematician, and was well equipped to appreciate the dynamic force of scientific discovery and invention. Yet I find no prediction from him of the avalanche of technical innovations that would follow the founding of Vanderbilt and have profound impact on the societal institutions, cultural values, intellectual insights, occupational pat- tems, and educational expectations that largely mold a university's life. When the comerstone of the building that is now Kirkland Hall was laid April 28, 1874, there was no telephone, phonograph, automo- bile, airplane, radio, television, photocopier, computer, antibiotic drug, nuclear fission, subcellular research, nor any of a multitude of other creations and highly sophisticated systems of knowledge that have made ours a new world. The rate of change has so accelerated that when Vanderbilt opened its newest school, the Graduate School of Management, in 1969, the 8 I THE SECOND CENTURY School's proclaimed purpose was to train managers of change, leaders for whom change was not a condition of transition from one previously normal state to a new one, but rather was the continuing state of the social environment, the norm itself. ln retrospect, it would have been futile to expect Chancellor Garland to look very far ahead into Vanderbilt's future, the task is just as ambitious today. li If one looks back, in fact, instead of ahead, it is easy to despair of the whole enterprise of education, past or future. Mr. Garland, speaking in 1870 in Memphis at the General Conference of the Method- ist Episcopal Church, South, three years before he was to become Chancellor, observed as follows on the relationship between education and human welfare: Never was there a greater mistake than that which is becom- ing so prevalent at the present day, thatmere intellectual culture is of itself adequate to exalt the virtue and secure the happiness of a people. It was never so at any period of the world. The contrary is susceptible of the clearest proof from the history of our race. In all nations, the periods of greatest literary distinc- tion have been the periods of greatest moral corruption, as witness the Periclesian age in Greece, the Augustan age in Rome, the Elizabethan in England, the Republican in France, and the present in America. Education was never more widely diffused throughout the United States than now. Never was there more ado about it. Never were institutions so multiplied. Learning was never more highly valued and sought after, as a means of reducing the laws of nature, and the properties of matter, to human controL and contributing to national and individual wealth and power. . . . Has the virtue of the people increased with their knowledge? Are our public men more patriotic, more self-denying, more honorable, more true to compacts, and more trustworthy than they were fifty years ago? Are the morals of the people improved? Is there less of crime and lawlessness in proportion to population? Alas! to all such inquiries there comes up a negative response which is well-nigh universal.And yet education is, with a vast number of persons, the agency which is to bring us to the perfectibility, so called, of our nature. Mr. Garland was arguing for education under the sponsorship of a Methodist Church that he dearly trusted. He would count heavily on the religious character of the contemplated institution to ensure its pursuit of a higher education conducive to positive social values, where students might receive the largest intellectual culture without detriment to their moral habits and religious sympathies. While the University and Church would part company after four decades, there is little evidence at Vanderbilt or elsewhere that the formal seculariza- tion of some of our colleges and universities can be held accountable for the present intensified form of the difficulties Mr. Garland observed a century ago. The relationship of intellectual culture to moral values and socially useful purposes remains today, nonetheless, a crucial iwue in Vanderbilt's and Americas future. Intellectual capacity distinguishes the human from other forms of life. The first concern of a university is the enhancement of that power. The university is also concerned with the ultimate results. I have never thought that rationality and morality impeded each other, that ra- tionality somehow eschews values. Much the contrary. In the human conduct they commend, highest morality and ultimate realism are one. We have been concerned on the campus during the Centennial period to examine the uses of knowledge, the consequences of knowing. Van- derbilt's task ahead, as it has always been, will be to make itself an ever more useful social institution, useful in the broadest reach of that concept. Vanderbilt pursues this goal chiefly by working to en- hance the quality of thought of all who are azsociated with it. To accomplish this task requires certain conditions. The University must be intellectually free. It must encourage the distinction between ul- timate social values and short-range personal prejudices. It must be blind to differences in color and deeply knowledgeable of differences in culture. It must aid and inspire its students to develop skills, knowl- edge, understanding, toward the goal of full awareness of the ultimate realities of our world and of the lives we live. It must be supported morally and financially by the society it serves. Even under' favorable conditions, Vanderbilt will encounter critical issues in the years immediately ahead. These issues will challenge the validity of many conventional university assumptions. They will test our educational creativity and ingenuity. And they will require effective interpretation of university values to the wide range of public and private constituencies on whose understanding and convictions the life of all universities in the long run rests. I point to four issues of special importance to Vanderbilt's future. lk We in the universities have acclaimed the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake, have held that discovery and new knowledge are their own sufiicient rewards. The premise has been that in the long run the results would be good. Without denying the deep philosophical roots from which con- cepts of intellectual freedom spring, in our culture and in our time the justification for freedoms of expression and for freedom to inves- tigate the unknown-and our rationale for public and private sup- port-has been the ultimate value to the society that has guaranteed, tolerated, and supported these freedoms. The celebrated, tangible result of these processes has been pm- gress, especially material progress, the undergirding postulate has been that progress would result and progress would be good. The current challenge comes from the apparent consequence of assuming the open-ended goodness of knowledge and its discovery. We face the startling apparition that our technology demands for energy may exceed within a short, predictable time the supplies of energy that can and will be made available. The proper response to this condition is not anti-intellectual despair, but rather to direct research and thought in purposeful ways to make man and his environment compatible with each other. A national effort is called for comparable to waging a total war, a war for survival with our planet at to live on. Institutions of higher education will make their contributions to this national effort. The task calls for a sustained attack on a national and world condition and will inescapably change the social, economic, and politi- cal environment in which Vanderbilt will live in the future. ll' Now, a second issue. The severe impact of knowledge-based tech- nology on the culture of societies and the psychology of individuals has been profound, and has been largely unanticipated in the range of its consequences. The elasticity of human capacities is being tested daily: ability to adjust to unfamiliar pressures, to operate effectively in unstructured and changing environments, to meet new expectations, to sustain unanticipated living experiences. Within a remarkably short time, traditional conditions of continuity and stability in societies, within which individuals have functioned in t.he past, have altered at their roots. The strain on individual personalities and social institutions is ex- traordinary. The challenge to education is to help individuals develop internal, stabilizing gyroscopes. In stable cultural settings where values are clear and consistent, rules of conduct known and continuing, changes in expectations and contexts moderate, an individual has guidance and support from his heritage and environment. Within the limits of his cultural setting, a person knows what is right and what is wrong He is not bound to the status quo, but he knows what the status quo is. A multitude of technological changes have fundamentally altered the conditions of human life, even in remote tribal societies. One consequence has been a decline in the traditional socializing and stabilizing influences of education-and also of religion, of the family, of the tales of elders, of national legends, of creeds and command- ments-as these influences have been diluted by the incessant bom- bardment of new ideas, new skepticism, newly generated appetities. The cumulative result is a severe test of the individual's psychological stamina and strength of personality, as can be read in many indicators of personal and societal maladjustment. if Those are two issues that bear on Vanderbilt's future. They lead to a third: the scope and purposes of a university education. Every influential exposure an individual experiences is part of the educating forces that shape him. At one time higher education affected a relatively small segment of the population and constituted a relatively isolable segment of a person's total educating experiences. Other institutions that contrib- uted to the total education of a person, e.g., the church, the family, community opinion, appear to have declined in setting standards of conduct, defining moral values, creating allegiances and goals, and otherwise guiding the lives of people. Colleges and universities have been drawn into the partial vacuum created, with mounting hope by some that the institution will accept responsibility for developing the whole person, and with resistance to that expectation by others. At Vanderbilt, I have said, our first concern is the human intellect, but our ultimate concern is the human being. Certainly its primary contact with students is an intellectual one, but in the long run Vanderbilt must be concerned with the total human being who emerges as an educated person. The concept is clearly ambitious, to some doubtless presumptuous, in any event more a definition of concern than a description of duties. It will not be possible, however, to avoid the issue. It is a more complex question than deciding what kinds of vocational, professional, or continuing instruction to offer what kinds of students-issues that are themselves demanding enough. The concern for personal develop- ment stems from the need to cope with those conditions of a tech- nological society that have led to the decline in the authority of other institutions. The institution that can help its student become a better integrated person, with a sense of command over his own destiny and a sense of how he fits into his complicated and mercurial social environ- ment, will have achieved the most demanding and significant educa- tional objective of our time. lk Finally, a fourth issue. the kind of independence and autonomy enjoyed by colleges and universities when Vanderbilt was founded is gone. There is now functional interconnectedness among all elements of higher education and between higher education and the rest of the society. The enormous volume of material resources, for one thing, now involved in higher education ensures that the rest of society will assert its stake in what we do. Beyond that, however, the inherent importance of all a true university does makes certain that the func- tions it undertakes will be scrutinized, evaluated, and supported or' not supported, by others. Vanderbilt is now more integrally a part of its larger communities than ever before. Participants in higher education will inevitably need to become more effective participants in the councils of society where public policy and public opinion are formed-if they wish to influence the policies and opinions that ultimately determine their welfare. There will be no proper alternative to taking as effective a part as posible in shaping the nation's strategies of higher education and its policies as they bear on Vanderbilt. To identify issues that must be met is not to predict the shape of the future. The form of what we do will change continuously, but our largest goal will always be to create and stimulate the kind of learning that breeds strength and honor and hope within a person, and that helps build a society outside him that stirs his pride and commands his affection. THE SECOND CENTURY I 9 A frequently quoted statement on the purposes of a university is that it is an institution for the acquisition, transmission for disseminationj, preservation, and appli- cation of knowledge. That knowledge is the primary commodity with which universities are supposed to deal is undeniably true, but the statement, nevertheless, is deficient in a number of respects. In the first place, the statement fails completely to embrace the notion that universities exist to serve the ends of mankind. While knowledge pursued for its own sake has long provided a powerful impetus to learning, attempts to interpret the meaning of such a motivation do not have to probe very deeply before it is discovered that knowledge for its own sake really means knowl- edge for the sake of humanity. Obviously, the endless search to achieve a comprehension of the natural, social and human worlds refers to a desire to achieve human comprehension. This search for comprehension has es- tablished principles possessed of great power, simplicity and beauty, has expanded the consciousness of man, and has given new meaning to human existence. Surely, knowledge for its own sake means knowledge for pur- poses such as these. Moreover, an emphasis on knowledge as a product or commodity, without due attention to the processes Glen F. Clanton, Vice Chancellor for Academic Planning by which the stated activities of acquisition, transmis- sion, etc., occur, lends a certain sterility and aridity to university activities which are not on the mark. The spirit and zest of an active adventure are altogether missing. In addition, the focus on the product knowl- edge and the body of content, thereof, leads to many organizational and pedagogical problems related to the vast increase of this product, and the specialization, fragmentation and obsolescence flowing therefrom. 'The emphasis on product rather than process is also serious in the sense that the prime actor in the process, namely, the human intellect, is overlooked. Conse- quently, nothing is said about the development of those intellectual qualities which the act of knowing requires. Learning to analyze, to weigh and judge evidence, to suspend judgment, to doubt, to draw conclusions, and to think with clarity, precision, and independence, yet with an understanding of .the limitations, the value, and the consequences of what is known-the importance of all these attributes is missing in the phrases acquisi- tion and transmission of knowledge. The specific words themselves have some interesting connotations. For instance, the phrase transmission of knowledge, to describe the teaching-learning process places the learner in the role of a passive spectator, 'Tian-Q nb 10 I ACADEMIC PLANNING rather than an active participant, in the process. Yet it is known that learning is not a spectator sport, effec- tive learning takes place through diligent labors as a doer of the word, not a hearer only. Finally, the four nouns acquisition',, transmission , preservation and application of knowledge suggest four separate, unrelated, compartmentalized activitiesg namely, that faculty members through research acquire new knowledge, which is then transmitted to students, preserved in libraries, and perhaps applied to the solu- tion of problems in an entirely separate enterprise. While there is a certain element of truth in these claims, it is possible to question the validity of such compartmen- talization and to seek to establish a purpose more coher- ent and unitary in its conceptualization. To move toward remediation of these deficiencies, an alternative statement of purpose is proposed, namely, that universities exist to foster inquiry into the natural, social, and human orders of existence to help ensure and enhance the future of mankind. Here, the emphasis is on process, the process of inquiry. To foster this neces- sarily entails attention to those capacities of the human intellect needed for this activity. It means learning how to learn, and, once this is learned, a foundation for a life-time of learning exists. There is no implication of a dichotomy that faculty members acquire new knowledge through research and that students are the passive recipients of this body of truth, forever and irrevocably valid. Rather, all members of the university are participants in the activity. Profes- sors and students sometimes inquire together into issues of common concern, sometimes they inquire separately, but in any event they are all actors, though presumably with differing responsibilities in the enterprise. The in- quiry may be at the frontier of a field, or may be directed toward analysis of a body of knowledge in the light of new insights, or may seek to understand the application of a body of knowledge to a set of social, technical or human issues. The inquiry may take place in the library, the laboratory, the classroom, the dormitory lounge, a factory, a kibbutz, a prison, or foreign country. It is a dynamic enterprise, with as much satisfaction coming from the chase as from the capture. fkflfflf Yet, if one takes note of the fact of the rapid obsoles- cence of knowledge and of the tendency of society to require expertise and sophistication in areas that do not fit into the traditional disciplines, it is clear that an education based upon the assumptions of the advocates of the body of knowledge theory are not integrally re- lated to the demands placed upon individuals in the forty or fifty years of life following the conferral of the baccalaureate degree. While it is clearly essential that students receiving an education learn the principles of mathematics, understand the dynamics of physics and chemistry, and appreciate the aesthetic products of man's genius, it is at least as important that young people acquire the skills, the attitudes, the habits, the techniques, and the modes of behavior that will help them to continue to learn throughout life despite the absence of a formal setting. They must be equipped to inquire into new areas of knowledge and to adapt and grow even though the substantive knowledge they ac- quired as undergraduates may, by their own middle age, be largely obsolete. In sum, the undergraduate curriculum cannot provide a reservoir of information upon which the individual can draw for the rest of his life. It can be an initial reservoir to serve the more immediate needs of the indi- vidual, but independence of mind and spirit, curiosity and the drive to satisfy it, disciplined modes of thinking, a capacity to discriminate between the important and the unimportant, and the broad perspective derived from an understanding of basic principles, cannot be fueled solely from a mastery of subject matter. SHINE It is clear that a majority of our students, perhaps as many as three quarters, come to Vanderbilt with the rather explicit purpose of preparing themselves for some sort of post baccalaureate study. These students pursue their entire undergraduate program at Vanderbilt with their attention focussed on the way in which their un- dergraduate records are going to be reviewed by admis- sions committees in schools of medicine, law schools, graduate schools of business, and so on. These students as a consequence tend to be relatively unadventurous and to have an overriding concern with their grade point average. A minority of students, perhaps a quarter, on the other hand, see their undergraduate education as an experience in itself rather than as a means to prepare for further study. They expect their undergraduate studies simultaneously to provide personal fulfillment and sufficient knowledge and to prepare themselves for entry into a career. These students are far more heter- genous in their aspirations than the preprofessional students and consequently place many more demands on our curriculum, both in terms of subject matter and methods of instruction. 'From the Assumptions of the College ACADEMIC PLANNING I 11 liz' 3 ll Q' ,W 1 SOME OBSERVATIONS ON STUDENT LIFE AND THE NORMALCY OF CHANGE by Sidney F. Boutwell Dean for Student Life The sixties were exciting years on most campuses and convulsive ones on some but all campuses experienced not only new levels of activity but new styles of action, as well. At Vanderbilt, student government gained new respect fto the sur- prise of somel as it emerged as the most effective means of student influence and action. Student government proposals, based on careful committee work, resulted in numerous modifications of traditional policies concerning, for example, alcoholic beverages and visitation and closing hours for residence halls. On some other campuses, similar changes were brought about not through the orderly processes of student government but through mass violation of existing campus regulations. Because students adopted new styles of action in the sixties, adminis- trative offices found it necessary to change their manner of dealing with students and visitors to the campus. This new style was based more on rational persuasion than on the simple exercise of authority. It was essential for most students to learn by doing, even if it meant making mistakes. Better to make a mistake, in fact, than to do some- thing simply because you were told to do it in a particular way. It was important for students of the sixties and is important for the I2 I STUDENT LIFE students of the seventies to do things their way. There are, however, some important differences about which one can make some general comments. While some students still employ the styles of the sixties, many have developed other styles. For example, I mentioned earlier that students want to do things their way. To many students of the sixties, this meant doing it differently from the way it had been done traditionally. Today's students often prefer a more traditional way of doing things. Students of the sixties tended to seek advice on that aspect of a matter which most interested them and then they would develop their own game plan , sometimes with a little attention to related factors. Happily, group discussion could and did sometimes lead to the adoption of a more comprehensive game plan which usually led to success. However, those students who pursued a game plan based on a narrow view of a subject often experienced disappointment and frustration. On the other hand, students of the seventies increasingly ask what your game plan would be. They may then reject it, modify it or take it as their own, they are, in short, just as determined to do things in a manner which is palatable to them but they are less anxious to risk making mistakes and therefore seek to profit from the experiences of others. Although I make no attempt to be encyclopedic in my treatment of this subject, there are some other observations I would like to share, space permitting. For example, the American withdrawal from the war in Viet Nam has had a significant impact on the lives of college-age men and women, particularly of the men. Required military service ended at a time unfortunately when the job market became tight and graduate fellowship money began to dry up. Deprived of the period of military service in which to make up their minds about a career, many students found themselves facing graduation without a job. Some subsequently took jobs as waiters or as laborers. Having witnessed the plights of some of their older friends, many students today are voicing concem about jobs and for graduatefprofessional school. They say they don't have time to participate in campus and community activities because they must study more to improve their records. In addition, they increasingly ask about job placement procedures and ask why the University doesn't do more to help them know how to handle themselves in interviews. When students do participate in campus programs, increasingly it is those with a quick pay-off. Many students simply don't want to make what they consider to be long-term commitments to campus organizations and programs. At the same time, one is struck by the fact that business in the Good Woman is at an all time high, as are social registrations in Betty King's office. All of these developments simply mean that once again we are being called upon to adapt to changing priorities. In an effort to add intel- lectual foci to the student's new emphasis on grades, departments, such as philosophy, are being asked to have an association with a particular residence hall. By establishing a regular pattern of seminars, discussion groups, sherry hours, etc., it is hoped that members of that department will make significant contributions to the development of a distinctive character for that particular residence hall. Initial interest is high and if this program catches on next year as we believe it will, then student life will take on a new vibrancy and vitality. This development and others like it lead me to suggest that the campus will not be paralyzed by apathy, as some persons now fear. Rather programs with new appeal must be provided and will be pro- vided because Vanderbilt will endure. UNIVERSITY FOOD SERVICES Richard Deckbar, Director It's 5:15 a.m. when the key is first turned and 12:30 a.m. before the doors are finally locked and we can call it a day at university food services. It requires the skills and efforts of approximately 160 Vanderbilt employees to perform the services and prepare the food for the students, faculty and staff. The three cafeterias and the Commodore Room serve their patronage over 7000 meals each day. The ordering, preparation, serving and sanita- tion programs present new challenges daily in today's unstable food and labor market. Three times a day, seven days a week these people show their dedication and display their skills to our university community. Our only purpose is to supply this community of students, faculty and staff with nutritious, economical and appetizing foods in pleasant, sanitary surroundings. We will endeavor: to purchase only quality items on a bid base, to maintain an interesting varied menu, to absorb as much as 5-1076 of the current spiraling raw food cost of some popular items, delete those items which are considered premium and unreasonable, to increase the selling price only when the purchase price dictates it and to decrease the selling prices as purchase prices decrease. We are hopeful of countering our own high food costs with good operational management since we anticipate greater participation in the university dining halls with no additional staiiing and due to our constant concern for good purchasing and fair pricing methods. We encourage students to get into the habit of eating a daily breakfast. Considered nutritionally to be the most important meal, breakfast is by far the most eco- nomical. Items are intentionally priced lower by com- parison to other meals in order to induce participation. Luncheon items include a selection of entrees and cooked vegetables, however, check menu boards for stu- dent-budget-specials-the cafeterias will have one fast foods line, e.g. hamburgers, low priced homemade soups, other sandwiches, etc. Fresh fruits are also available at all meals, although not cheap, they are a much wiser buy than potato chips, candy bars etc. for snacking between meals. The evening meal, in addition to roast beef, steaks, chops, ham, chicken Qwhole meat itemsj has a selection of prepared garden vegetables, a wide choice of fruit and vegetable salads, many homemade pastries and breads, ice cream and beverages to choose from, will feature A-Meal-On-A-Bun w!Fries , one-dish entrees, e.g., Ita- lian spaghetti, stews, pan-pies, chili etc. These items along with a salad selection, homemade breads and beverage will not only adequately satisfy the normal appetite but are nutritionally sound. V.U. cafeteria patrons come from all walks of life and from all over the world. We intend to satisfy everyone with a varied, interesting, nutritious and economical offering of food services. However, we have built our operation on employee and customer ideas, constructive criticism and student opinions. The meal book was designed and priced approximately six months ago offering a student the opportunity to assure himself of approximately 75'Zn coverage of the meals served on campus during the semester. I-OOD SLIIVILILS 13 is' THE FUTURE OF RELIGION Beverly A. Asbury Everybody has a scenario for religion's future in the next generation. Theodore Roszak has given one in Where the Wasteland Ends. Another has been given by William Irwin Thompson in The Edge of History. There are countless others, from the one of G. Ted Armstrong to those of the numerous other Jesus groups of the day. Well, I have one of my owng actually, several of my own, and I'll lay them out for your consideration. But, first you'll have to consider what leads me to forth-tell such a future for religion in America. In 1968, C. P. Snow gave a remarkable address entitled The State of Siege . He stated that only extreme measures, taken at once, could forestall famine and starvation. Snow emphasized that such measures required a radical decrease in military expenditures and a drop in the living standards of the West. He added that concerted action would have to be taken by the United States, the Soviet Union, and Western Europe. Six years later . . . well, you know . . . plus self-sudiciency in energy by 198O . Snow was not to be surprised. In 1968, he said: Does anyone believe that that will happen? We are all selfish . . . to stint ourselves to avoid a disaster in twenty years-what body of people would ever do it? Right, When sensible persons ask me any of those questions-does anyone believe that that will happen-the answer is, of course not. Now, asks Snow, what will happen to life, with money continuing to go for arms instead of bread? He gives three models. The Hrst is the gloomiest and the most likely. It reads: The relations between the super-powers will not alter much. They will still co-exist, in the sense of avoiding major war. They will spend increasing sums on armaments, anti-ballistic missiles and so on: There will be no greater security for either, and probably not much less. lntemally, they will change less than many who live in other countries would expect. This will disappoint both their friends and their enemies. The U.S.S.R. is a very stable society. So,despite all surface appearances, is the U.S.A. 14 I CAMPUS MINISTRY Both the American and Soviet societies will get richer. In many ways, the U.S.A. will get richer faster than the U.S.S.R.: in places the U.S.S.R. will concentrate its priorities effectively, and will keep up. The rest of the advanced world will polarise, as now, towards one or the other of the super-powers. The increase of population all over the rich world may get a little less. In the poor world it wou't, except in one or two pockets. Despite local successes, as in India, the food-population collision will duly occur. The attempts to prevent it, or meliorate it, will be too feeble. Famine will take charge in many countries. It may become, by the end of the period, endemic famine. There will be suffering and desperation on a scale as yet unknown. This suffering will be witnessed- since our communications will be even better-by the advanced countries, where populations will be living better than they are today. It is hard to imagine the psychological and political conditions which will be created by such a gap. Some of us are lucky who won't have to live in them. Without question, the rich populations will feel they are in a state of siege, sometimes in a literal sense: and it may be that our present unease is a shadow thrown backwards from the future. Snow's second model is a more optimistic revision of the first one. It amumes the production of more food via improved technology. Snow's last model is the most unlikely. It called for breaking out of the state of siege, or at least, attempting to. And despite detente, we see little evidence that this model will be enacted. And so, in this light, consider what our world may be like within 20 or 30 years. Millions will be starving. There will be a state of siege. Hungry millions of people, fellow human beings, will want our food, in exchange for their oil, minerals, etc. We shall want and need justifications for being among those with enough to eat. We shall need rationalizations for our life within a fortress America . In this setting, fundamentalist, literalistic religion will in all likeli- hood enjoy astonishing success. Revivals will pack 'em in . People will find comfort and reassurance in church. As either Marx or Freud would have known, a state of siege can only be bom behind the walls of religion. As Sinclair Lewis allegedly said, The only two places where you find stained glass windows are bars and churchesg both are escapes from realityf' The revival of revivalism and personaljstic pietism is already with us, and it is only the beginning. In my view, such religion is parody, sham, and hypocrisy, and it will be exposed as a house of demonic cards and as an opium den. Such religion may produce the psychotic illusion that we are safe, that we are God's people while other human beings die. Such religion may work with society and its media to abstract and obscure the realities. However, it cannot in any sense be pronounced as anything other than heresy and perversion in the light of the historic Jewish and Christian traditions and commitments. Ah, well, I won't argue that. You either know that or you don't. Let me give you anotherrscenario. Scenario-endebted both to Will D. Campbell and Jacques Ellul The year is 1985. The scene is the state of siege . America itself now knows shortages that were first hinted at in 1973 as belonging to our future. The planet's endemic famine has deeply affected our own land. Many of our own poorest citizens are now suffering severe protein and vitamin deficiencies and significant numbers are dying- starving, really, although the weekly body count in the media doesn't list causes. White Town and Black Town have now become reality. Passage between the two has been restricted and passes for blacks to enter White Town are issued for work only. fWhites simply do not enter Black Town.l In Black Town, there is great hunger, surpassing that of isolated enclaves of poor whites. There simply is not enough food, and the government is concemed about freeloaders . A roundup of welfare recipients is held to determine eligibility for being on the government's food rolls. It becomes clear that some will be fed, but only some, in what Washington describes as a humane policy. Riots break out in Black Town, exceeding in kind and degree those oftwenty years earlier. A contingency plan is effected and Black Towns are fenced off. Black para-military groups send out commando groups to kidnap white suburban children and hold them hostage in Black Towns. Then, by plan, and simultaneously, Black Towns are set afire-from New York to Oakland, from Atlanta to Chicago. Firemen won't go in, can't get in anyway. Black Towns are destroyed. Many die. More are hurt. Millions cry, Feed us. House us. Military camps are opened to receive and process them .... On the political scene, the focus is on General Westmoreland . He had been elected Governor of South Carolina in 1974 and Senator in 1978. The General was now known as the Architect of our Victory in Vietnam , and he was the candidate of all major parties in 1984's last year's Presidential election. As President he has appealed to the good people , a first made legitimate in Nixon's Omnibus Crime Bill fifteen years earlier. President Westmoreland no longer advocates search and destroy . Now, in a more sophisticated vein, he appeals for our nation to isolate and contain bad people , chief among whom are destroyers of property. Under President Westmoreland , the police state described by Jacques Ellul in the mid-fifties, now comes into being. Consider an inquistorial and brutal police force that operates as it pleases and carries out arrests arbitrarily. No citizen has any peace of mind. Yet the only remedy so far devised for the disease is the establishment of the hypermodern system of dossiers. Every citizen is kept track of throughout his life, geographically, biologically, and eco- nomically, the police know precisely what he is up to at every moment. This police system no longer needs to be brutal, openly inquisitorial, or omnipresent to the public consciousness. But it permeates all of life, in a way the average citizen finds it impossible to understand. Just what has been gained? Admittedly, man need no longer be apprehensive at work, or live perpetually under suspicion, or be afraid of being subjected to the third degree . The terror which until now has been an integral part of the police methods of totalitarian states is, or soon will be, a thing of the past. A diffuse terror usually follows open police raids and public executions. At this stage, the police may be invisible, but they lurk in the shadows. One hears tales of secret executions in the soundproof cellars of vast, mysterious buildings. At a still more advanced stage of police technique, even this diffuse terror gradually dissipates. The police exist only to protect good citizens . They no longer carry out raids and there is nothing mysterious about themg therefore they are not felt to be oppressive. Police work has become scientific Their files contain dossiers of every citizen. The police are in a position to lay hands on anyone wanted at any moment, and this obviates to a great degree the necessity of doing so. No one can evade the police or disappear. But then, no one wants to. An electronic dossier is not particularly fearsome. And the good people have nothing to fear. The Technological Society Vintage edition, 1964 What will religion be then? The associations of the good people , naturally, what else? And what will religion do then? Condemn the bad people , of course, and justify the government's course of action as necessary . Property rights will rise to the status of religious belief, and the old, old nemesis of religion, the good prosper and the evil suffer will be elevated to functional dogma. Such religion will flourish in the future. Again, I repeat, this is historically and theologically, heresy, perver- sion, andidolatry. I find it abominable but entirely likely. Before I quit, there is one other bit of forth-telling to do about religion's future in America. It's also an old, old scenario. In the Jewish Scriptures fsome of us call them the Old Testamentnj, this scenario is called the remnant -a surviving remnant , a saving remnant . It is from this concept that we should take a clue about religion's future. Robert Jay Lifton, the Yale psychiatrist, has helped me, via his award-winnirrg book, Death in Life to put this idea of a remnant in contemporary perspective. In writing about Hiroshima and the sur- vivors lthe remnant? of the atomic blast, Lifton introduces us to the Japanese term hibakusha . It means, literally, an explosion affected personf' Hibakusha are those who are touched by death, bodily or psychically and who yet remain alive. In a sense, Paul saw Jesus as an hibakusha, as one who died, was marked by his immersion into it, and was made alive again. He was plunged into death and returned as a survivor. And Paul claims that anyone baptized into Christ must be baptized into his death. A disciple is an hibakusha, one touched by death and yet remaining alive. To be a part of a surviving remnant is not a light thing, it is to have survived. Before any contemporary person yeams for remnant status, let Elie Wiesel and other survivors of the holocaust be heard: Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has tumed my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw tumed into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky. Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever. Never shall I forget that nocturnal silence which deprived me, for all etemity, of the desire to live. Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall I forget these things, even if I am condemned to live as long as God Himself. Never. Night fAvon, 19581 If the role of a Christian in our world is to be an hibakusha, then let that Christian know that becoming hibakusha means being marked by death. The role of a survivor is not an easy one. There is the shock of having survived, the resentment, the guilt. There is also that counter peril of self-righteousness, ever present for one who survives. However, what is really also true is, as Lifton says in another essay, fAmerican Poetry Review, Jan.!Feb. 19731, that . . . we are not only survivors of holocausts which have already occurred but those we can imagine or anticipate as well. fitalics minel Perhaps, in that sense, we here are already survivors. But there is a question. The question is, can we really take my two scenarios before this one seriously and survive? Can we imagine holocaust and survive? Can we anticipate the usofter death of the human spirit so often induced in a consumer society? Can we survive the world of spectacle and non-event, the world of instantly new where there is no history ? Can we survive the deformations, dislocations, and imaginative impediments of funda- mentalist revivalism, which joins the rest of culture in psychically numbing us and assuring us of staying on the sunny side of life. ? Lifton seems to believe that we can: In struggling to reorder his experience fthe survivorl can contribute to the general reordering so widely craved . . . the psychological emana- tions-from past holocausts and their survivors, from anticipated holo- causts and their imagined survivors, the painful wisdom of the survivor, can, at least potentially, become universal wisdom. titalics minel Perhaps, then, the future of religion in its best historical sense lies with those called to be hibakusha, marked by death and by the painful wisdom of having survived, of being a part of a redeeming remnant still alive for a purpose. Lifton states it well: What I am suggesting is that 'to touch death' and then rejoin the living can be a source of insight and power, and that this is true not only for those exposed to holocaust, or to the death of a parent or a lover or friend, but also to those who permitted themselves to experience fully the end of an era, personal or historical. fitalics minel CAMPUS MINISTRY I I5 VANDERBILT AND THE ARTS By Dan Bischoff It took Vanderbilt ninety years to come up with a Fine Arts Department. Eleven years ago, in 1963, the field of the visual arts here was as bare as a Michelangesque land- scape. There were few-very few-art history courses being taught by the resident painter and sculptor, Puryear Mims, but he was entirely alone on campus. Perhaps 300 students were being reached by those courses, and only four were art majors. That was the year Hamilton Hazelhurst was brought to Vanderbilt to found and chair a Fine Arts Department. Now there are eight faculty members feight and a half, according to Hazlehurst, counting the arrangement with Peabody that maintains one of their staff here on campus with Vanderbilt fundsl, teaching an estimated 1700 stu- dents in art history. There are 70 students who are majoring in art history with the option of going on to a four-year-old masters program. I cannot tell you how much I enjoy every aspect of this, Hazelhurst said, smiling. The enthusiasm of the students has been marvelous, as has been the support of the administration. There isn't any place I would rather be. Not to suggest that that satisfaction isn't tem- pered with the challenge of a need for improvement. Vanderbilt has yet to establish a doctoral pro- gram-though Hazelhurst hopes to have one soon-and the present facilities fail to provide an adequate art reference library and study center. Although the theater arts are rather solidly repre- sented by the Vanderbilt University Theater, the idea of a music curriculum on campus seems to have gone a bit flat. Expansion in these and other areas-notably art studio courses-must be cautious, however, for Ha- zelhurst hopes to develop a greater co-ordination between the art departments and facilities of the Nashville University Center schools to provide a diverse and comprehensive curriculum. If we hope to bring these departments, say at Fisk and Peabody, into closer work with us, we must be careful to avoid duplication . . . music has never been important because of a lack of money. B THE PLONI NILKX Now it would be a duplication of the services Pea- body offers. Steps have already been taken that forecast the proposed interchange, such as the presence of six Peabody faculty members who teach at least one course here on Vanderbilt salaries, and Hazelhurst continues to press for a final unification. But that time seems to be somewhere in the distant future, and Vanderbilt has its own problems right now. We need a constant and readily availa- ble library reference system, especially in the picto- rial category to which We must constantly refer fthe Joint University Library Art Room is pre- sently stocked with general circulation booksl, and I would like to see this new library equipped with a modern study hall, perhaps in a building adjoining this one fthe Fine Arts Building, housed in the Old Gyml. We would want a computerized slide system so that the students could come here and view the material as they can now only do in class . . . and we would also like to have an adequate facility for the housing of our permanent collection. The permanent collection, which is now only five years old, is basically a study collection with ar- tifacts from all ages. Over 890,000 has been obtained for the collection fund through gifts and through the Art Association Lecture Series, to which faculty members have contributed their time. But for a really significant endowment to grow alumni con- tributions are necessary, and they come few and far between. Vanderbilt has been slow to support the arts because it came in contact with them relatively late. The alumni are mostly ignorant of the fine arts, when they were here they received little training in them. The connection between this uni- versity and the arts is not made in the minds of most people. But when this group of students, your group, graduates, I expect they will give most gen- erouslyf' Hazelhurst hopes that the unification of the NUC will help in this area too. Not only would it establish a stronger curriculum for the student body, but it would also establish a truly impressive department, one which would attract more con- tributions. And the amalgamation of the various permanent collections would create an excellent study and dissemination center for the arts. Beyond the strong history department curricu- lum and Vanderbilt's ability to raise money, the University would have the Contini-Volterra ar- chives as an asset to the developing NUC co-or- dination. The archives is a unique collection of over 55,000 photographs of Italian Renaissance materi- als that would go a long way toward making grad- uate work here valuable and attractive. Hazelhurstis confident of the advancement of the arts at Vanderbilt in the future, and he points to the rapid growth of the history curriculum as an indication of the possibilities. If anyone had come here 10 years before I did they wouldn't have been able to accomplish anything . . . now our classes are overflowing. The beginning that we have had in this field has inspired students to take an interest in the studio courses at the Art House, where Don Evans has stirred up a great deal of enthusiasm himself. I'm glad I came, I wouldn't want to be anywhere else. We have succeeded in getting a most congenial group together famong the facultyj, he continued. We have a great time. I've known many depart- ments that have omnipresent undercurrents of pol- itics and intrigue, but there is nothing like that here. I think that we have been very lucky. Perhaps the greatest recent change in the situa- tion of the arts at Vanderbilt came with the acqui- sition of the Old Science building to house studios two years ago. Hazelhurst pointed out that this move alleviated the serious space problem that had confronted the department in the past while pro- viding the campus with a creative focal point of artistic expression. Don Evans, the well-known and rather flamboyant head of the Art House fwhich has gone under assorted aliases since its creation, most recently that of Media Experimentation and Co-ordination Center for the Arts, or MECCAJ is as pleased with the facility as Hazelhurst, though he has some strong misgivings about how long he will be able to maintain it. This building, if given a few minor renovations, is perfect for our purposes. It has space, volume, high ceilings, and windows-all of which are great for a studio. Though it wouldn't do for a normal classroom activities anymore, I believe that it would serve us better than anything we might find THE ARTS 17 Him Y ' ' as-:I af- '2 . i Y, ix g A . 5 ,Sn f ad Q V E I Xe here ever would-but they still intend to tear it down, sometime in the near future. Evans feels that the success and activity of the MECCA program over the past year has gone a long way toward reinforcing the possibilities of making it a permanent or near-permanent facility, but University planning is still toying with ideas to eliminate it and use the grounds for some new construction. The Art House was originally designed to provide students with ready access to the tools and materi- als necessary to create art, but it has flowered into something more than that recently. Evans feels that art should call attention to itself and to its activities and he has done so with his students at MECCA-in dozens of ways. This year he has de- veloped the music studio to be a blaring center of electronic amplification at all hours, he has also seen to it that the plaster constructions-some re- sembling tarantulas and some resembling people and some resembling both-made in art classes have been set out on campus grounds. He has, in short, lived up to his own injunction to become visible. 8 THE SECOND CENTURY But there are fruitflies in the oatmeal. Evans has some dissatisfaction with the general type of student Vanderbilt attracts-the academic nature of the students. The creative individual isn't drawn to the Uni- versity, he complains. When they do come, they find that Vanderbilt lacks a core of creative stu- dents, and they either leave or bide their time till they graduate . . . You cannot attract creative individuals without promising them a core of other creative individuals to interact with. And until Vanderbilt does provide that core, it won't draw creative students . . . Yes, it's caught in a Catch- 22. Evans sees three possible routes that the Art House might take in the future. One possibility is that the destruction of the building will force it to disintergrate into the other departments and no longer exist as a separate entity. More optimis- tically, it could become an arts and science com- munications center, supplying an interested stu- dent body With all the resources it might need in whatever media it is interested. Or, as Evans him- self prefers, it would become a media experi- mentation center, an expanded version of its present self, and live up to its new oiiicial title. I would like to drag Vanderbilt, Evans says, chuckling, into the 21st century Qkicking and screaming if I have tok and not just catch up with the 18th or 19th. 1 .gf- X VUT AND NE ELY Since 1947 the future of the University Theater program has been dominated by one factor: the absence of a permanent home. In that year the present wooden frame structure was built of government surplus materials on grounds designated for medical expansion. It was considered a temporary makeshift at the time and a tacit promise of a new and permanent theater was made. Now, 27 years later, the VUT is still in that ramshackle building across the street from the hospital. But the pinch ofVanderbilt's growth has increased tremendously, and the theater's site has been chosen for a new rehabilitation facility which will be part of a link between the Medical Center and the Veteran's Administration Hospital. That means a move is in the making, and the quicker the better. For more than a year Cecil Jones, the director of the theater, has been casting a roving eye about the campus for a substitute, and it seems that he has found one in Neely Auditorium. Neely, which was built. as a chapel in 1925 and witnessed compulsory morning services for the entire student body before classes six days a week, is now used'irregularly for any number of campus events. Much of the time it stands unoccupied, and the completion of the Sarratt Commons will severely limit its remaining uses. That makes it ideal for renovation and reassignment to the VUT. I think we can say that Neely is a minimally used facility in a location that is of potentially high use, Jones said, and that is one of the factors involved in our request to convert it for our needs. Jones' proposal to the University planners makes elaborate plans for a commission to study the feasibility of Neely's conversion, using as a basic design a project funded by the Ford Foundation and pub- lished in The Ideal Theatre: Eight Concepts. One of the criteria for this project, which makes it particularly malleable to Vanderbiltfs needs, was that it should provide maximum flexibility in production mode and not be dependent on complex machinery. The new plans would not entail the construction of a proscenium stage, like that at the VUT' now, due to poor sight lines in Neely fthe floor is completely f'latJ, but would promote a more unconventional and flexible approach to theater design. Exact configuration of the stage and seating arrangement fwhich would preferably have a mini- mum of 300 seats! and the requirements for exterior construction have yet to be determined. The proposal predicts a preliminary budget, for planning purposes, of S500,000 to S700,000. We hope to begin our interior construction by this summer, Jones said. Hopefully that means that we will be in the new theater a year from then, or the fall of 1975. But that may be a bit optimisticfl The move would mean a lot in terms of the future of the VUT. For one thing, it would move the Theater back to the heart of the campus, which couldn't hurt its attendance. And the modern, flexible facility would allow for more experimentation and for a freer theatrical mode for Vanderbilt and for the community, which is of no small importance in a city like Nashville where quality drama is rare. Beyond a technical improvement of in the facilities of the Theater, Jones would like to see an increase in the faculty- . . . in the classroom, the production aspects, and in such things as costume design, play writing, and so on -that would develop the VUT's capacity for the needs of its majors. With the present faculty only so many major productions can be mounted at one time, and that of coulse limits the number of people allowed to perform. It discourages new people in the group, Jones said, to try out only against the very good people-and often the same people-in play after play. The situation where all the best can be in every play fwould be alleviated! if one more director were added to the faculty. t'We must add to the faculty then. We are doing as much as we can with the resources we now have. When the additions we want are made, then an expansion of our program will be possible. THEATRE l 19 .4 -v- if -. 3' . .mf ,113 SEASONS I 21 31:- f is r .,1 X x' ' N 'lf kc., Fr' 'a ,JJ -'.a,-- X' , -1. 45' ' ,QCE M P' W .g. 4 K Nia! J HI Y r . .- -- - w vi. -15 '--gg. .. lk, .Eff-SM' F ' --. J. .. .:-N , . 4. ,j ' T ' ,. MF! , '?I'.'1Q:'k5t '!:f'Q. :hr 'V H12-4 'eiE3fi'fi'1E?'b-+?i5m ' ff' ...,i,'L,,.p Lag ., V H5 c. Jrflgrf- flggx '-fx:-Q' 7d'fi'fffr 47' 7'1'5'1-- -:ffF'1-,ff 'H A 1 ' zutz- fw .R-in 'g ,- ,. , .f 1- . 4 -113 L wif.. I' , f, '59 Nt' C Tit' V f' 7... .- fm' ' -:!: 3 .I-Ifqr N. , , , 41,054-., L I., SUP' -vm.. f ,T ' 5 'ix 1-, --'Qi ,ar ,,-Lk,-L ... ,E -- . . - .ns- 22 l OUP E AROUND ,gg gn- 1 . nz ' L-1' V--: 1-,.,,-,. 7.. - diy? .a 5rF'S A ,IL 1h.'I'- ' is 'y- A 14? 4-3-ig.. :J ff ,Na - OUT H AROUND I 23 7 . W , 55 v , ' , are '8- , -.'1'5n , ' ' 1 1 ff . W I, 1 .., a 4 1 1 I f 51- , .T . . . is J it .J t -A-' V :WI , - sy . 4,1 G L' V- ll 1' fr 1 B P 1 5 5 i V A ,11 M.,-, ' , ,, ig A - 5 T531 '-A , ' .5 if was- --- o. . ..q, -, L. 'tv :W r Y 11 4 ? 4 i 1 4 A 1 1, A 1 . W X J 1 A V Ag if , ':. I ,fl V, r V , Y R E I fbi, 'L ,Y 1 u W E L.-fi 35 in ' ' f.. X - 'sr 0'Nga Jv- Dryx .f b I a 3 26 I OUT 8: AROUND I . 4 716-LN ., fsgix 1,: .gr- OUT 81 AROUND I 27 fr. 1 1. ,ru . ff il ...um I HE' , . 'ggi iff? -M . ,G-I, ' .4 ,. I--Y V. --Lv A 1.11, ' l 1.,,', 'I 28 l OUT L AROUND . Q l-5555 I ' I 5- ' 1 1 1-. -K g- F. M.-, - .fl .' .gm ..z 4110 ,ln ,u A -raw av 0UT 5 AROUND I Z9 df'-' N52 lien, . 'S 1- 1 V 3, 30 I OUT 8: AROUND J-'s . 5. .5 .N , -, , ,v...x,- G-L- . - f - HAEL RS 1 in Q I 1 4 ,-1 ,af fi' ! t ..- 4. 0 '. ruv v 4 p., X. I v4 Qu. 447.5 4.4 4 Lg, Y win- Y , 4,1- .., ,Q - W ., H 5-45-123 I ' 11:31- ,..v- . . -,Lx.. .- ,. . -- sl' b. --x'Y.f:-5. S., -.L-fg. .- f- ' I'-L' ,-- OUTR AROUND I 31 TT.l3: fJ. ' V -.V. 'fgfw g'I'e:.g,1I-fr' Q ' ww VIV' IH. ' ' . I ,- T ' . E . , Vj . ,. 3 f .-'YW .17 .fx ,x A F-A ,. Y 1' ' -N1-v V N'-I ,A ,.- ip? -V.. ,I P . -V '- 'I f 4 - ',. . I V. ima ,. Fir' F Q f ,' 1 - .V f' xy 4 l' 'J' ' 5 -Q ...-u .-Vw 1 V VV V V V I K Lf , 'L 'V ak! f' 'H 'J ' f C ff ,IQIII 2IIg?f 6 II IIN, II III I I . I V V V I+ . 'r Ir, I , -.V ,'. I ., I . I . . ,I . If flvvjflif'-5'l'f K X css, Vg ' .. -4I1,.II.-rfld I T I! , if Q .Mi W h I ' in A Q For Is .-I -III' 'Q V-32, . 1 . V I JVi'f.4:XF1,-. f 'HH -I QI ' '75, I:.L,,, '-.Q - ,iq Ji, III ggi,-1 'x'.- 1 I I I -' I QI .Ji ' I ' E' 'I ' . -,4-,QILI 1 XI j .,,1' I I ., I II, - k1I.1- 1,4 ,QQIQ I V I V I, ,V . - ,fxfw-, ' V' , 4, VV V A2 34 ff V, . 4,-,w Q, ' f - V - Q., ,V I ., ,II .. , I ,V . V ,. .- Q s .x, ., V , J' x - I in.. ' . o 1 '. 2, -V . V . - , Q - --I I . I If I sl fx I' ' I I I I I, x ' Wi IIo..'v::I I I j::!F Q - fx? x v Xlhi. 4 . . .., 'NL -, . .V , - , 5' QI- gf- 14 ' Vx ,- . 4.41 X I I ff I . I. I--,QI ',I 5 I . I '..I.!5 I X 1,04 I I :If . ' L V , .V-Va -Aw '75 3' f TV va? ,W 'i ' fn ,fs :O V , Y.: - ' c-1.4-X -, . f dx. fi? - ' f ' -f -2 ' 2 2 2 V 33294 'Y 1 ' 'iff ' pg-,I . V , I H' , X . s -gf '.zfVf-.1 V- .auf-1 L- 2,4 , . ,IIIV I 1 5, ' IILTII .f ix J' . 1'-,ryV I .V if: I 1 fx V I,I I' X '49 rf' - I ' 4 ' , fn'. f,,g . 1 AI I II , I - X V-1, XT- v- -1 ' 5 'Wf y -. ZH 1 V, .,, ,fx 1 v Q N' Dali aww V ' ,4 ' 'V ' V... .ff 'Q 1' - L '13 J fc' -' g ' . , . QE - , , -.NA -,. P' ' WH.. ' ' ,T X- XX 1 - I X V x, 'X N. , '41 ' .r 4. , , I ...,, , .1 - VM4.-...QLQ ' - ' I I, I . V .,, ,. f, V. V VV I . IIII YI ., ...... ---4---' 'X I . .,,,........- I ---- ' . f - -' --sg 1 .... .. 1 , I ,..,-,,.V- 4. - f,- I V II I I I I p- -LI-' av ' -VV-...,.,..--l-n--..4.- X Ig ......-a----'ev-'-'F I A, II,II ,, , I...V-.,,.,, I I . ,I I II . - L J' I ' . ' 1 ..11usn-l-- ,,,..--Q-as-f I II II I IP I I ...... .,.1,.-uno.,-films? rv' ,J Ii, . I' g..-.-....--'.--H V ' I III,III I II -.........- ...a..- ..- I I I I I I I --IV I- I I Il I -.-.- no-I an--uv-. I V I I , 4-Q--v 1 I I I . Q--..... T I .II ,YV ,- ...--- ......- I ..-Q , I r 7 u V 7, ,ff , ' '-uvgfil V'--- ' A -44+ .F ., --vw M v- . .rv ...- . -V-. hgh ,. ' I .IU ,, L ' 'i H ' 3 w A w N 1.3-, w i2I52 ' 5 ,. T, a H, 57.557-. N W' .7 W' 3 Q Va ' fe-six ' r' if-s 111'- ,,f' JV x .- .34 J,W.n.' xx V' ,:-it fm. .IE I . . - W , . . A, Q, ini?-XXL .l':l' Y' fn +8.39 1 4 4 1 1 .132 K J X1 .4 'Q 1 4 L. 1 1'. d. .N Qisffif' .aft if fm, -. Q SQQ 3 Mk f ,X K f1'f THE TERRACE THE TERRA 1' .ah 36 X THE TERRACE R. N 5 W. ,.,Y..,.. .W 'A 2 1, ', r,'4q-J' n 1 151 n Bl 4 . . 1 , T ,,,:.:.v4m .14 .I if ,X 1 C 1 . , N , 'N - ' ' '- . . W , 1 lf' ML I 1' '- :vas-. .vi Y :. .., wx Ai. , ,. , Y-.Q . -1, V . J. ',-.. .4-:A ',- -V A , .-, -. -- el fs Y, -. 1 -ff.,'.f . tg , . , ,...f,u '59-Y.. 1 .-11.2 . ,- '-4, -,wg '.-':,. . . , ,P '1' fgm 5 -'S-'f a 1 .1 -' W -,,-. s. THE TERRACE I 37 38 l THE 'IERRACE X tv '..' ins- 'Q f . , X, XXI! I T f J XS7 I N-H, ,. y., W g i, 'x , , -., 5. ,w,. .Ng I .. fsL, 5 ,-5. .' ,Q,,.M- 3 y - 1 l '-Q. 1139, 13 ,gig -'-H,-,Q -,,. JM. . - ' x ' ' 132.p,J..- IL, ' . ,.f ' n N . , 7 Q. nr-. ' ff -- 1 :E'l'5...E?':.f:' -Q, N we ' ' A ' ' V, , -1, I: AW -YU K, -. 4 wwf: r '1Lfl3J' me 1 i T2 L , .QQ3 In , 1: A AL, If , , A!-1 gflisfliff? H 1 ' .7 533' '- l 'M -V 5,v-ufzv-rr t- -4'-1.7 'J Oi' no-.-:uhh ,-,. ,- x ' -, I 3' 1' -. 'IL x .f 27 2 A -4 .1 .SX if 'Qld .1-Y-j-'4f u THE TERRACE I 39 40 I THE TERRACE if T' ,i-'W rf. Y-' f LW 'U . an -uivwdi YM, Q-q4.4.,- 1 -. f. -ff... --is t 4m.qfnf.!q, -u,,1 Y I 1 .O gg., Q-.4 1 4-fiiis . X 5 :- ug 0 I .,,.u,,..,. A-x f-f-'af-,wiv ' H J 2 1 , ii-1 r,-- v: D I , f ,.., -... .:, 4- ,..-.-.u,o-f-- A .- .. ,,.-.,... an-:zulu-hx-Agana: J , 1 , , 1. ,, ,.,.-a. X I ., ,,..,, ..-,-,ui-.--M45 Nz' , ' 1 R 1 5 , N J, .L ,fun-.,,,.4 mem Q was ' L, .I A J r.,.., 'W-' if 'WH x mu ' L L.-.-+96 'ff X f 4 . , . 15 0- L R . .Ani w .. H , - - ,. My ' - W - 4' '-.., , .,..,,.-5 ........ -1 ' V A P ff -. ,v 1y9S!Qi1, :uf .vEsi'1:-,- -4 rn fa 'ESQ-gms: 4 if ',,...., .Aveda-I 'fff' :mg gg 1 153 '1'5'v':s L ,-fn .- A-NU. ' ,w P . A 7 P? , r ,J ,,,,!.: ,.,.g.aaA.1 I v . W ..- in -x. Q 1'pf, . .Q W Y I 5 T'T',:'i-+..p 1 h -N if 1 Write WOmen baCIl lhfn .., ,fr 4, fix' jx i . ff-1 fi THE TERRACE I 43 -,- J..f Sv,,, ,.-f - ' Y Y 4 .444 -,af X , g - A. JZ if X L-ll f IQA, If. -v -. 1. 44 I WILDLIFE T 5. WILDLIFE I -15 hi I Wll.Ill.II-'E 'N 'if 5 si 1 aqui , p 4'-' ' A N f. iw,-' Az- , 1 ' I N1 'Q A -1. 4 JN ' K 'H Y' -V ' ' ' -0 1. .,, W -Q .1 V-5 rs '5- -1, -1- f -0 M in A . . :- ' Wv fl Nt p 5 Q f I-.-,. FV A 'Q fu -G va-vq . 'QL UH ., ,, .4 .. .1,.. . v A-- J N mx , A cg. N! -,.- -' 4. ,, gg. -4 K 7-i, 'ua-,':. M , 041 MY . .n x w' K 'pa-3. ,- .s. V .i A. wif- ff xi., ' 'R' ','t4,- rj E .'-' v ' : -- ,.n. -, 5.-V . ..V iff, ,- '.- -1 ' . . ' ' ' ' .. ,yrf u- , '.:,4- A :,, 1 4,3 -.-1 1 N. :'. : v. - .'.r.: f .- .,' 2--f'.'1.'f.1n-'U , Q.- - - WL 13:1 .-. ' .. C'-. - -'W . .. . ,-, A. -, - 5 -,1 ., -wx.:-lu , '- '. ,hz-Jf 'f'. 'F -- f - : 1 7 ' ivrv', v, ,.'. ' A' Q K Y K., 4 H f X , A Q Jlavxx., -, r. .A . '-'-xg j'-'. 'vixlll 1. ,.,,,.V, , .X ni'-'-. ,v ,., v.- . - . .',. An ':-' f- -'?L' Iwm.gn.-.4-..x.. wg... Rv . .-.Wen .9 64. ,-'-131 if - r. . '-. :---3.3-T. , Ai'-1,1 .s-.Q I .-.xx-gg .1-,. ' - .. N - Q .- -,- P .,' Wll.IlLlFl'I I 47 , 'Al ,'.lH,, ,v . ' V Hn- v ..4 ,ia tak! lin.: N,,,. A ' ,1 . ' r1'!'uti.s '- I in as . . 1 'jx' . 'ull' - F, P 't-F 4 Nw E - , 1g..JEf1...'-1132515 1B I WlI,lJlJl E s T ZF' -'j,':- 'mai '1 .. 114h, J -L f 1 ,gf 4.4-4-L U ' 1. ,, OJl'a -Q-. WILDLIFE I 49 ii, I' if I -35 1 xi i!!! fx . ,W U m 5751 ,, . w F' 1 4-ve J! Q2 Vs GW: F' -W . ' .1l'a'W ' il S ii: I A A . 1 ,., 1 fe in ' I ' --u'qmnn-A-use-ms'-f 4' 12 . as 1- ' - ' Z, I' I Qgasvf - 65' ' lu +L :S N is-:, 1-?lbT4 Wa 'if ad' rf WWE 4? Qjlfs-0 w if ww'-.r ww if ff? v. Q, 91 n- I RAND? 52 1 FOOD nqivwguggfrqqpkrugx -ri1l'vh-Gvfv .V .. , . 4 ' , 114 ,J L -.rgf 9 Q11- e u VA, 1 F' 1 FOOD l 53 ' 4 'Sf Ah nhfvfl . PI fv, .Ii s I ' .ffwe ,5 ' f ' ,9 .3114-I - + V a AA 11. i d fr' 3 'H ' 1 if 'A E ,fn , 1 nu 5' il-bl ,if sf - ,It ' I ll 1 lf. . A , R. 1 .3 17.-L 1.57- , pf .' - --1.5, M W -Sfgzmf T' , -- ' 5 'TRI-'I-171.1 v H-Z-'FA 'f -3.' F-Ears I-Tp 4: ,,q:f:JL , ..,...f. ' '. 'V:f 'J-,Y 1 - N111 1. .-'4 ,fy 1 ?'4'v + J5' , if 'Mug' , V4 f U , .l ,X A. 9 'l' ' 1 1f,l A. - I W' A ,f' if 4 ' 4 3' .,Q Auf 44 ,fr ' ,, 1 ,fs ' 1 ' t I 1 1 f W J , : ,EAI I FOOD 1 as 58 I FOOD E-f.f:-f.---4,.L.4-f A- 'ff r W 0 ' A, - --sew -L ..-If V , -A4 . U' . Q, Q L, 5 L ' -4 ,,,., .. AQ, ,NLvv:' 4-1 r ::.. - 'U ,,,,.., -' A 4-, ' 4 1 I' FOOD I 57 ll .adv ,ff f , . .xl Iggy- , W r , , .T in ,L . as .7 ' - J . N A L' wr is , 1 J I ., . I. - 1.1 - I Vi .- ', ' ,1 .sV.f r-. ALM A, A-Q wx ...D gf i 9 l ., wks 5--- f',f. i mf X W, -f .4,,,,! P fm '-K ,J 1 .211-:tiff 1 my 4 1-1513 ii 2 K , S y . in t .- Y ,ff9QJp-vswxvih, ' '-' , i' 3 - -1-5 :JA -:f1.. gg.,-1 J ' 'AHTCQVT5 . ' -.1 ,Nh . Ai, f 'n ' - 1-Q., 1 f1 f , 1, 1 ,445-1g+'a, , I -:' -4 f 1-- V N 'A-J, I- 7,L5 ,5' .-fl? A-..2 :ffl X x . f. 5+ ' ' X x -'riff 'wv . 15 f 7 'fd 'f7'l1fl .,fl.5n .v uK' A-we 60 I C-ROOM fy. v- ' v . .1 .4 ' .lv , --- . -,' --.F ',f.,' ,,-Q L. ., - - , k, ' 'f A- S.. fjfe zg1'.s5'jn.:J-'JI L - G gy. .N '99 c.-1 -,mf-fs.,0:1-f .1 W' - 'iff' N - Z, .. - . - , f- ve,-A -.-, - rf v , ,, f , . y-.:, L , Q - Q. ,Mfr W . 55: .--I -.. -'..,,v:v'-.- z .vu -1- - fic, '-sl.-'!'Lf.. '- - '.. Uffi 1.1 L in J-.5 'Zmfg E 'ffgk 'ffl' ,1 U E '-e'.?F'm,m'-'f -'. ' af' H: :Q ..-::ggv35f.-ff - rx, s - 11' !...fv yy. - ' -3- ,-rf? V - L :,-2 2-as ,q.2- gi,-,fx -' 1: :J f- .nw 2. ', , , . Ng-.- if .1 1- . :If J -. ., - . ' L:-v ' f' f --.P-7 ' ' Lv x- , Nz.:.i::' '- - '-1'- ' :Q :-af.-12: Z,-Q -' A 3 W - A -n ff?'H 11+ f 3 '.'. -' D, A- -an . '-A 'Q1',Q-1.' A- '13, ' lr ,: - ' '- - n ' -'-U' ,.'- .,',.- ,,31,,f,4, -g '--J, -iitcwh .11 A ' WBQQGVIB H k attv eq, an Emil. W . ,',..s-, , .,..Aft-ffl ..-Q V - 'T' fl- ' A ,fwal - A 44,1 .nl t - '25 ,. X1 . fl-.wx Arif- ,arf . . EH' .af 9- it--.J4 ., li un 3 3-,4-gif g,.1. '. 'z,t EJ. Q f. 7L.,',- ' 1 - LS' ' ' 'I ' J- 'J-,i 1- J'lAr:A - 5-ws.-if' sf? 1:33, I 1 iq- J f hgfhny If 1-715-R ,Y 'vf 2 ' f 47 , h fw, wl '14-. as Aw. - ': Aw ' ' -. A.. , , A V! '- fffgi Wi C311 51 1' 'if-'-W-'X '. If ja fw ' 54' ii' 9 W, .-...,. X , 5. :qu wr A LII -Q49 ffq i J, D za.: nv, , x ul ii Q lf: 'jw v. 'Q- Lf Y ' n ,.. fw 215. ,x-.,: ' AH 3' ' s ni 1 . h Y Y I Avxd .1 I - by I . M -5A-rwng. ' bb MV, LV .J g 'V I -1. ...,, . X,-E' rm. ,if2f1gTf' . - Ft , - , ', fits.-tg: .L-:Fw-, 1, ff ss, ga Q . vu 7. . ' .rm , Q Hal' gf? 'i Mir' , .F , . . :,, Kb!! , . P . ,UE .., 'f4r,.,',H , 4 ':,,, '. ,- .,. nw f ' .r-, -!.- : - no .' .' -x -, J ,. -,V Q.,- .v -.glib 'fu T ,sk Q . ,Q 'Ain 'ali' -K, -W-1,-,,., f'-. , K -gt -NAA: ..,, .s. , as N ring '-4' - B',11- 4 ' . ' -,-.Q ,ft -fu' N' if 'lat 4742 ' - . .lr 9s3f .,+i . . . .J - 1-pl N us., 'L- ' .. .5 , jar' . J -Iffl ' i J v -.r vi-s ff:-1-D ' . '-. fl'-FZ 3- .. .Vx-+,4.- '- ' A C-ROOM I Gl 621 C-RDOM iv ffx' , 4 4,4 M xjl ..L.1,. 'N Why-, 5 ,0- 1 .v rf ' L I 47 ' . ., . nfl' ' 11 , 'Q C-ROOM f 63 m Wu WMM WW! W W gl 1wm mwmw umwvnnrmwu Www! WWWWWMWMW WWMW WWW HW WWWJWDHWWWW WWKPHIMWWW JH: VN Wiiu 'N WWWWMWWW WWWWWWJWWEMWWWWHWMW J EW fiynnwrmm ww' , Z Wwwwwmw -MWMMM mmmwmm WwwW'Wu ww umwwwvmr wwwwwww WMWMWWM MWWMMWM , h 7 9 4 ue -.. .-.51 ,,.-.-4 .--uf D' W- mwE I WMWWMMW WMWMMMWMMWWNM MWMWWW WWWMWWM WWWWMW WWWWWwW WWHWWM Mw WW AMWWVWWWWWWWWW WWWWWW HMMWH WWWMMWWM . 1 W3 'P lm.-3' .-K x x 66 I C-ROOM 43 + -rx -I .,, .vi J . . 5 J , ' f:S'5'F. , f . V ' QM ,,,,:,3 I 3 lY1 qu-QM: 1 mm me-gi , rm Ar' 'U ,fr 1 Q'-Q93 win-n.w .' .Hira- w m'4i!Iieu. 'is P1 U81 , Q, Photograph by David Tuma C-ROOM I 67 88 l BOOKQ W 5?5Fmif , 1 ,IIA ' 'u fx J- 'E .fx A 'Q Nl ,,,....-as g '., , ' N,- AH... F,:,'..l, Q X I 4 . ' - ' -- - v ' V + x-Q - V V- . ,, ,H - , ,.f ',--,i - '+- H'vSf '.'r'i' L-'i T f f9R. N Elem MW' -, '-3225 f'5LY 'v,':1,12i'f! lffgf-Y-I'-73 - 5'L,5Lg:.,X,j,lg?w. ,- X- f. 119-: Y ,,Rcm.,3g5u.,L -,w.4J,-fL.U.5- L' Mm- .. ww my , 1 Q 4,:,4-.mg-wvgi nw..- uk.r'1' i ,. ,I ,, 0959 wr-V ' ,,-1' i kat, BOOKS I 71 72 X BOOKS ' 1 Z Q 171 Q-v J i 'E V' Q 'Tv-' vt 1- Q, 'F , 0 '- ' ,Qin .2 11. '-an -..-r '- and Photograph by J. Clark Thomas BOOKS I T3 i 74 I THE MAILS vi, . . ,,,. .1 ,'V1,. 9-'41 1 ' a jl!' , IE! 'inn' flbw 'IJVY ,A iga...-1-,af Lv-gf., Y. U , T' ,. L... X ' P' iii ?-+ THE MAILS I 75 78 I THE MAILS ,M A ,l THE MAILS I 77 78 I THE LIFE 1- J' .is 'tara PHOTIXIRAPHH BY ROBBIIC SLOCUM 'I'Hl-1 LIFE I 79 B0 l TH E LIFE C L A S S R 0 0 M l 2 3 1 4-4:30 M-F Sociology 303 -- Studies in the American Family An in-depth analysis of a typical American family, the Cleavers, with emphasis on the effects individual outside conflicts have on the family proper. Extensive viewing required. Mr. Laney and staff. Grades for let Test Attermann A- Cooney D- Cromer B+ Miodonski B Cobean G Sherry C+ Comments: to Mr. Atterman -- Your 2nd essay,'Judaism and Wa11y,' was quite provocative. I would like a copy. to Mr. Cooney -- 1 found your argument that June is a lesbian rather unconvlncing. x fKQy ihsi la annul --I ! -A 1 JA. 4 if.. 1.-I .41 THE LIFE I 81 82 I THE LIFE A.- E ., Av -A... f' I gp-6-M 1 THE LIFE I 83 I XX ' ' ,- '-nw-,Y f :K :If 5 n i THE LIFE I B5 ,-,,,,,-s-- ' ..f ,A -:. ' IS .nn V . f I if, Q 'N ' , '., .', '50 ,Ju -r---9 , W 9 1- -, I x , J M-A V W 21 : Bwsronffw 1' 5 --f f ' ' Y Y l V f-A - . X '!: - N - A-f'LHI3!E25f'.L4 N ff- 3 6 ' 1- ! 'L '- M'w f1 'f'f W'WNWWW Y W M g S 'X' .ig-vv f Y W Q , ,.. . ,. X-MX H ! - B6 I THE LIFE i -RV-YH V Lug-, ' ' -Y -. 7..,, A mp A , 1- M X q I'H0'l'OG1lAl'I-1 nv S'I'E1'Hl'IN lJAUGHl'lll'l'Y -uf f If 'f 74' 1 I ' A .,,- . f 'I' A-' 4 -,gf ,h - - I + ' 'f if 'f7'- ,VQ 5 E 52 'iff?i fM ??-1 gfyg- if 7. 'iZ,-ijii J' P11 v- I ,rf - A. . 'fig xc . -f 1- .-V, 4. . - 4 I THE LIFE I B7 f Jig La. If Q5 'X N x.x.N .X N , X BB I THE LIFE x . K XX X'--.xx-, ,274 v? Ad' -ki -I-if ,- l ll 4' I . ,Ln f if vi 3' 1.-ff'4:1' F' , . f. 'N .,?T'TdT'T. ...ifwl .'f'-'f,1L--7:25, 'g'frf,,.f-wIff,-,',Q,s.2j--ft - 7,,:'-LE5EL, ,'-'I'71 i m:T,lY-'-,f-,wifi . ' ,Req--F tj, 'N-SQ? 'I X-'Fi-'73 'fft..S4-33-1-.J '.. Jax vj:1,:',1'-,-. ,-M12 553.55 5-7'f3:'1'J M -4 1 f Alf-'if 1 . ., .u .. N , - F A' H-, -- - - A - -. -,..h.,,. .. M' , - i , I I 5 Jax' vb' , 'N . 4625? .,vf1..,. 1 ? 1' ifaih- 4- Y . .. .f. , g'Tf --mfs me +. ,. 6:5112 m api 'V '-Ty' yi A ,f.- W: 'i f-.-h V -1,.--.w 0 k v. - Wm-we A , -1 ,1.5'.,f, 4 137 av, , H0f'IHl HH' ..a-f Q sv STUDENT HEALTH in 1 if W 1 fs hi. ffjgr ' ' Q94 15? L- ,,.,::j ? . , v, ... -K'1'f. ug: .-,, .Tr ,.. Ht' . f . L-'..,u .4-. I Q., mg X 1 -fq qw R N FW' . 4 f ' 51 1 Nix IFQT X YF :T . ,, 'X Ti N f , . ,Q 234 I Qi . 1 1 1 f ' , I ,, 1 N. Ig J ,J ..f , J .4 , , ,' X ,M A l I ff' ' x J A A .5 1 ,. ' igzg, 1 I' X I IHRI LIE ' qv-v.. -..Q--Q ,,.,. .Jr-I pw dui H .lam Gregg I . -S v I W Y' . 11' I:-.ZLI ' F i I 'Q jiri if 31 ' ,gilt ,,,k, ,rf '.:'f? . - T ,. 1 .:r.- ' 4 l H L 1 11 1 1 df, fllt 'A I H., r 'T 1 S . 'fly-V.. .mt ,ll-L-. . Y img- W ,, -4593-12 OGKB TO .4,. r N -V if '.i , '-'--'-mf-M ----- T 'ELL CE.,-vs' Uh Ill 1 E sub I' 'rl 'M ,1 f I 1 'H U , ' v ' - ,. 'H 5 'lIm., ' V 'Ivil- ef A ,n', .W ll al' 1.4 'IE ,- I' : '31,-i'F I-VCLA ' V, 1-. I -. , 'igzlh init, ' r-'-l ,A P-3: .- ' ' ITN, 'C' . - .,:. J. 1 W .., W 1 I UI. rf its U: ffm 1 md' W . M A X ' 'Y' '5ff f5f:.:r,.1.LAHj, ,iq , ff' l f A ,N ' Q If, Y I . J 1' If ' X I 3 2 , - .A W r, ' 1 Y fm? 1 1 43:71 f Qvrf 'liz ' 3,1 - n , ,- Xa:-, ,Lx - L .. . , EX usms :ss A TV, L1-, 1-,,,y,,,:.,fL1 -.-ww'-uw - Y Y , i Q .N .HAT 'H , A 1+-wr . ' 'f 55': ' Af' . G-, 915 I EX LIIERIS .l .Vx-4' EX LIBRIS I 97 -1 .i....,- Q 1 -Q-.Q K NWN' K R. J Gm , 3. --,L 3.1-- . ... r..- 7- 1 N fllEfu7..' 'X - I 1 102 I IN CLASS PW' '43 5' ' -iff .- D 3757 0 U b . ' n 3 l A -A ,, .-A'f' --LI.-1 I --img .Mr V ' 'X 23,1 ' 4 g , Q , ,wb . f- , W I 'S Lp. 433th D5 3 X fl 1 , 1 4, E MAE, ' - . n !,' ix 5 4 H 1,7 xx .V .xX X-4, -. ' 5. I ,-4' ,,, U. . il 'Mi' ' s A ,gf .4 -,1-. v --2.4 Q. ,ll- IN CLASS I 103 m xq-fy.. 1. W. I., 4 j . 'iZ j??Lf., ,,,. ,, f WWE? -Yds-' X , . HPC' 'Y X hnfamhvmdq f-.......'E.'.'f:.. :f '-34122 32?-E 1 f.: ,pw 'jr .- ,L ,F it - , cu. -qf Y :K 'T' new-m-'iv-Mnuuiewi V. ,ev 5 - ':., ,': f.-LA P , 3 WI 3:4-:fiffff --A' iv, g ' +5 N 4 tx H X. X KA A' lib . l I , f if 31 -wg, W A f i .ff l'+:ln,.,1j ,. Q 1 X. X hum ' IN CLASS I 105 f' 1,,J'hf '44 106 I IN CLASS 'Q J , I . 2 A y. A I 2 AQ ' .I -L' S K ,4 -rf- Q. .vo . - ,,:v,:,- J-L N '- V . L. ':' .V-f1'5si::.,g. v ,ww - .: , ',.-4-f V ' H Aunmvlw. I ,fi ' 5 f J 52'a ' K xx. TY- q tr W .fl 'T. ' g .Lil I , N, F A Y fe Aw IIE? N- k Qf l f vi. , if fi? l I! N37 IN CLASS I 107 fx, Y . egg, ' ' , ,q Q , E mei. ' i if, 94153516 Jw, - zz: ,S--V , , L E we --fQ,55fwH Zyl. iw ,H lu ,H H, ww -- ww , mf--.Viv ,H w -A ,H H U w . ,ij - ' 2 srl lm isifwerfy MM ,..v, gg N Mia EVME M H M NM.. ,H w w 1 ,, Aw mf W U, ' 'NM 33 w m a V - fs. , 'Z . , , ,mWQ,., ' f 2 1 wqgww wifisfafmz 5? ies1:5E?iesv z- Q, G m Wu ,L ' W i - E 55 w ,mf my mf Sm, nw mf My 7 sairagmif 15,2 M, lg igqggfg, if 2 :L ft time 1' - , igglfiz f :nf gl ww as agwxsiwgl-yfmygpz u.,m,w ,ww 494594243 QL1., ,Q Y I ,Q , V, nm- , AM. uhifizss ' W H ,ew avg, , Wm gs - -, ,, My v , f W M 5,21 X V- , mifn 5 '-1132212125512 U , Q1 Z., Lqmffw' K' W mi , 'gm , gza, 'gfwsvfg'-p J3':fPa1 'fr - Aix -fm - wg me M., W .,A.vL W ,.,.igme , Jgii, ,df ,fee- ,J1 - Y 'Sw 25352, m' u m m m uv mu-u m w m ,H ww , wg-.. B 3,2 , Wm W ' 395' 35, n, :Q S TW ' 555 M . Q verzamigwi , may g,,mA.v,,, 'i'HfTf'i lfpffi M iam AW V 5955? 72 ' R ' ' uf-qm,1 ?f?'fiqf2fL , ,. , W 10,7 gmzfg 11 Wifi swf? vii w.,2L,?, w ' w m . Wg E55 5 ' 25? Q12 . 1605. , A .rjl wg ' 1 ,nv ,H .1 uw Y 1 .,- .Am ,vl ' .mf 'ff - - 'vu .'. nfl... -, k '1 W . -ff, F-if - ,,m- 1373-Btf 110 I BUILDINGS IA-rf ...- D 'Q -.L H2 I BUILDINGS , ':, .'I' .4-, vs' ,' ff , 1-IQ: '- . :.i.n?QJs.+, f-- ,,--.- '- is N' I, , ,ff . W, , f ' ' ' ' I. lt -. 4,5 'fn ' T X f -' A. ,I A '.. - - , rp.. fr- ,I rf. -ff . '. .., ' 1'A- rj! 1 'nu' . ' V , . a -. .K . ' 'ws .2 - -., 'f 'I Q X I ,I- , ,-Q-rxugw ' 1 .. fn --I ,- r---5' 4 x. .-av.,-M f-,f A I. I, 'f,i+?L..'. '. ' .,-PU J -'wf, Y. 1.- r 1 . -, fI I . V I. I -4 f 'f ff--v x.-5 'AI -f-' f-.gif FV- 7:- ,, ,..-- -- . -L.-ws A 4 -3. -r:',,4-yi -. .Y gf: .2-,Of Q f I v' ,. .' I ' .. 'Fil ', I--af' Y 'x ..5'T.. I JI- 1 I ' .--gr..-,J-.1-' Q..-.. ' ' -,, .. -- I ,. I . ' IQ ' 'XZ-7I ' Aqff ' ' 1-:Z .-.. ,fi 'ff' '--.- ,I, --,I , rw' I . - - 4? A ' 'an' - ' 3 L-J'- . , L.-'fl' J'-K '. I 'W' I 7- . - I 1 , ..I.I .L,,.. III I If.- , 5 ,,,. . I . I ., , .. I I ,Y 1 I lux. . Y A I . I I , ,I I. H, ,fi Iii. n J -an -4 1 - I 'K C I I 5 my . -'hr' -- ff I L. - ' - . f' f , -A - f . -I, III f I 2 , 4 gs : . , - , . ' A!-sr ' --...r I . . I . fr, X . , - -I In I ' I 3 I 4' , A, L.-,Q II If II- 4 I , a - . , 1 'f ' - .J ,uf L, . ' - , '1 '.' ,I fit th Ev- QM :I -, LAJHI' rt .-J' F-- f - -.1 - ' 1 -1 , I.: w- 1 -I I I 7 .- -- - -II , ' 1 '- , T I., --- --1 Mn ' O',I - 1 A r::11 'g '4I'-I -2. 'f f f Jl - u 1- rs? n --:..I1F I- If-, f flgff I, vi- , - - ,,' 'u'- UG 1- 1ww1 N, '. IN 1. J -.-. , - - Q- ' 1 ' - Y- 7 , ,1L' 1-'Q-23'-P2'. :'s N ' U--' 1. I - I 1 1 ' ...Qs gsur-m.duJ ., - ' V- .. ,, . .. rw v5'Q u-' 'Qi 1 .. r , 1 . - , 1 I..-F: ,---I Q- :rfjn ' I. I 'gf -I .... ' ' 'rr ft ml ' . v - vI- .4 -99155 -' 4. 'J' I II I f--,ft1'FJr5I,--- IQ Qr.L'g-- E ' f 41' A rx- I 1 - 1-v ' , -' .5-.a-if!-,..-?-E., - ' . ' -, f. I ' A-A-N f ,1 I ga' 'A M --f -- - ,,f.Imr'-13--gy .,- -n-an ' , A--vf- . - . ,w .g I. gs, . . , W. ,- .l ' .. 7. -. -, -- ' --.-:-v.-- N - f -I , ' II III I. If, I, -Jw -' in--g.r,.' L. X , :f45f': I-,. ' PA- 4 - -' ' ' - f . '- .1 . 4 -- , 'f m' h Tm - 2 '-- 'fg-----'w --f 1- - w - r -I ' , 4 ,. .' 'ff' ' ' 'fa-A -S. 3-Q'-. l-.zfi-T f' ff, Y :J J Q-44'-,'r1fY'CL+.E?44 N - .- ,f .I ' . .p,,g- .,. ,f I 5 -- . .:-m,1v+1'-' ffl ' ,, ' fx ' I ff - If I I -- i,,-af-'im Q- -1 ?-zfmff-Q K - 'YI' . If.,-' , -:I7 I-I,f.-- Ivf' 4- -?I'w.Y,,:QA I H Q -,,f,..1 I . . ,I II N 4 v..II.. .I , --I..,II I-I ,II r,, -' ' - III, 'Y f II., ,J '-' l IQ I I I ,.f+-Qs--Ig. .! ' I , V' - . :I-Q-I ,. .J.'I ' ' . , I , ,-,.f- - f I .u 3 ' I I - -f'17i'F ' IM,,p,Lv--a,-'- -MJ' , - Jr.: 1 I yn, ,f 'W --p I nh Y v'k J I 1 ',f -.I , 1 f , . .. , 'I ' '15 : I .fe . I I A :,4' .. -E1 I-2-yi ,,-Q5 'f-saw' M .. bu ,J ,. -' .-.W -. - .g f . ,.w,'ft ' -,ilhikrg-j1,q:-v A DI, --' 'J 'I ,I., -. 'Af '. f. f. ---,- , 1 , f,-..5:,z,-- - Jar' ,-.qgg-wg5E+ --'F L-1-:Q '. ' ' -ff' -.-ff? . . :'v- ,I ,. w.r, Iv' - ' IV-I ,, ,I V ii, 14.5. . .Hg -I If 4' - i 'Lv --Ig.-of '- I, ',',A, -'Qi lfg, ' 7 '. .NIL - 'I,', ,3'f..: njzagfi H' V V -. . - , I - -'wr -'I---LI,',' I- I, 11-- 4 . I. W ' L- ' w59: :f-gmt I .. Il.-.f-'IQ W: ,Ir LI , ' .-,:g'-,l . -1' , ':,,5.- wud. Lf -V - N591 ,, , ., I ., l III-I I -' ' ':'f'gQii...,:f 'Vi' , .1 L.: 5 ' .:,, ' If ' -'J - . -, '7 ,5,,- -V- - AW., ., v . , 1 A 6 '1 4 I ' 1' A ', w. ., v. 1 -'-1 -...4'..-, .- ,- . . 04 .' ' ' C1 E. , ,Q , .- 24 99 ' r, , . J ir, . A 1 'N .4-If 'f Y-, .. 4 . L' : s . -t,' 4 'Q .1 S X V . , r ,',-'- .f - . rvw X x fm. 'Y' xr-5 Q-.wg , 1, 5-, 1 .vw Q., Q1 N x., P 5 X IL N 1 - sf,- s 4: 'N-v-5..,., 'U Qin GJ' XXV N Tv 'V 41 ' ,,,3' 'x 'm SQUIRREIS l 115 116 I FREAKY FRIDAY 67 ' 'mi , . V, ., . ' nt- -I ' 1 ' . , Lf b w. 'Ti .- ix , 3, Q' . 1,14 NP , -I n'Q HQ In - X -XL. P ul I lr A rf 1 gf? x J r ' A.-f ' 1.- ?L'.-.s Wifi 1 33 .x-I I. ' , Y 4 wi , . ron' Q f Q 5 I I fp! iii. 5 ' Z 44? ' 5' mfr gr-s 'J ,'V ', L 4 avfjtf . 5 21 ' 1?fv 'Q-.55 . :w 1- Qmwi'-w. L, 118 I SAHf FY 4 is ,. r,,.a - f .VM ::':v ,PA .14 .if . ' x I1 V -.r 1- N'-SIL?-,Em ay I PHOTOGRAPH BY EDYVIN SCHMIDT 2-iAl E'I'Y I H9 RAPH BY KAREN CARRINGTON PHOTOG X G -4 P F' F' I fi V r F 9 tlfia 1 -- '. K J' T-iw -- V IA f'iif4 X'1 ' -' X Y 1 K .- - x7 . X x V xf -, K '- , ..x Aff '-Hffj J' Ti-J . 'FW rxzfx f - - ' , M 'K ,,-g,-1- - 't-.,.-1-xi. - -x..- A--xi:-,-3?-1'5f:X-:A-'f 'C -3 ,L X-A'-A. -Q-A-Wa S'--1 -J--Y - -- X.-- fn N a - , . A- II ...X I Sf- kfj '. 5311 ,F-...Af-I'q,i'Y.,,5Ij-,B-2-Ij,,,l 1:---TX-.K--4I'Q .XIII -, I. I T .I XTX, . Mfg -,--' '. I 'Y x X L-11. iAx.L1.i-X -4 'P'AY' ,W -1--. 'v'.,I.54 1 .Tir-5fx'QX7-f-X, 'K -af 'Xi -' ' 77 f R-f'i QN- . . -' . - -X ,-A ,-.-,-----,,... f ' ,--. 'fi-. P ,. - -.W .. - JJ- gg .U 1' - A .4 - - -ff. A gi .W wi, 1--x :---M g' ' .- - 31,1--y' -X-f TX:-V-, ff'-X LST ' -'5:- Q, '- ... b-T' HX -fx .. -1 rf-f --. 4' u--A X,-5 x--4' -3-A ,, Q..x' . --Hx -XT-'1 .--- v ' -J - Q - '. 5 b' '. b ' ' - x ', Hr 'X 5 fill X 21 X' ' -I-5 L'-.'-I 'Fix x'.f 'd,t TZ? ' 'Yiul'-fjj.L,-4--3 iL-X'Qf'TXl! -3' Tzflf-3'gi ' . 7- 1 7' A 33x . ' T-'Q' - - 5-- fi-I ' W.. fx. F 'fu . 'z'i 7'i 'LX T T7'A' 51 X 'ii' XMI ,II 'Y ,X I .L II,Y-.,I .I.IX I xIII -I-ik If I -IIITP W.. fi,--1IIwI,1X.T.f ig'-1 TQL-1 '1 V X --' L 7. .1 ' 'X .fi 'I ',' -. X ', ' 'X 1 , A . i ,'.-S' Xf 5 -if? N '- f,-N-'B ll '- C' , f' . V 1 .-. .L X X - x -4- - , .X -pl- A '- -- K f ,-S'-Mf'.. x '. ik A ,xx fx - K . ,.., ' I - 'A R . , ' I ..,, . ' 1 1 -' ' ,A ' --. ' -,-.1 ,, f -I ,-.f 1,27 x TX. x 1 A . '-A39 : .f-4-Wi.. jx 'X -3-' TX Vw XLIL - ' 'ff . -ax , , - '..-.,- N .xfx . '-L ,-L x, 1, ,ff 1 '- -L ,. -X---X g'Kfgxj f ,ww--. ,A- ,I -'I--,,, LII' N ,.- ' , I-7 A ,,, X'- X 'I nv- IX, I xI' qua '?,.,fX I N- SI I, 1, 17, 3 ,,..- I Y..--T ..--XI 4,...I 3QD,1 . Is , .-.T I,-Y '3,.T ,,-, IM.. ix., . ...Q 'l .1-- ' '.' r ' 1 - -'X X '..fx- ' X ' - H' 71 QS' 75 '15 'Ll-f 7x 'L 7 -' ' I I W I I-V. 1' X A II III,gx.- X-,li-,L I I U I I RMI-4 1,,,f , II I',-,..xI:l'v,,-XII I 1, T IIYX,..1f':f H ' ' Q . fx.-. '- Q. 1 . -A-ff . A'HfTnfi ffO.u--.f'f.1fx:..1 -P -I I Iwi A I . If QI iv I NI,Ia'I' II ,. I QI x III I V .151 41 I-, I-xliAI'?III1,IIi3-:Az .vit :XI III ,MI-:XIII I If f,T, - ' '- N' h Af I. X- kffl--f' L if' QQ 'A .1 M- ' 1 ., 'f j , - 1 ',' 1' ,Q--,3Q.X'5 -1 Q. - gm, ., Y ,wLf5ET'1X-. ' aj ,-'i '- J T A- ' .-I --T '- - ,L--1-- T ' -ff-' - .D 1 ',Q.L ' - A' 5 Y X t -' T114---fTxL X Z nf' -- ' p 'V. -f 7Xl---4' FI -v3 . ' . 4- - ' .. k ,- x 1 .. -- f -.-xr LA ff -A --P x ,,x-r '-- X ' 1 N ' 4- '17--4 ' ' X ' '-' ' T -f - -. X'-'. f L- ' 'MX-ff '3.--- 'g .-1-- Q,-qif ,I I I I .LI TI, fy' I .4 xx ,,-'Z I, ZA T-1 L,,I. A J .,,. :IA II I .,fLIf-IIT,-:ji .X-X IIT'L-. S II, .IIIIW I . .I I .III ,Iff-X YL- A 4, , 51255, , 1- IQIQIQQ 412 .-- ' ' ., '4 - ' ' - X ' 'Z . ' A I Q-:x'1'? - .f-f-'E F L. 'A-'- 'A4 -f ,19,'1r '- 'I ' , .I-'iv . -, ,- ' ,,- - 'T. X ' N-1-' - 'TL' an ...W ,, fr' f 'Y - X---r' ,LN ' -- fo . A A . -' , N -- , ---. , . 1 1'-15' ,A-W 'iiiq-.X . -1 +f f-x -A - U1 Ie-LQ,,,-L-jf f' Lffk If . ' 'pf ' 'Q . - ,rww -t. QI '1Q'I-15--:A1'1 f'.TA ' 5 ' , - X - .. J ..-A ff , J - 1. - 3.-I Z.,-,'1f,' , g 1 3 QA fy .I I X 1, II -,X .I . I --1, IIA ,ef I I , I I rg .. . I Ira , ' 1 Lf: , - ' L,- Q.-. 'X ' 'K' -,n,1,f', ,. . ' ' 1 ' ' , f I ..-- I-4 . - , - fl, - ' ', ,,---'W 'A,,L-'- M..3- 1 ' 1 - ' J ,.-.'-'?- -' ,' 'JfTY., M' ,, ' 3 . , ig f :a- f-. V -- -- A -. L- Q - V. g,,x---..:,-'- 1 fu - RTX- ,rf-ffm if--,' -- 1 - ' X psi. X- -fffff - k ,,:-iglfriif-b-1.--M-f..-. + , - ' Mic-E - . W' ' . , ' -.. ' M .- + 'T. . - ,pf ' 'X--'Q -A A: ,---7' ,-611--4 2 . x - Vg, .- f -v ,A-My - -,P ,.-.. ,.- .- .-. - x D5 A ' r' L,-X, 4 B -I M.. . ff ,,-f'4 fl- ' L 1- - --3- 1 :X-U X.-,fx L5 Y '-W 3 - TVX f ., if-H Q- E . X-.. .- .X - .X . --1 ,. --f ii- LA 4,-f 1..-.MNC . --.- X .- 1 --- ' -, -A X. v 1 - x -- ..--.-f A , ,- 1 I - J, - A X ,, I I,.,.,I A,-.Sz ,Y 1 ,,-f- x liz'-I -Y ,,f,- -if c. .. ' ,if .,,-' - - -f , -.-- 3 ' ,- 'M - -'x ,,--fx ,Q-ff-1' -r ,.-ff' .,A - ,fd -x. .1 V x S XL - L 41 'UPQIH CYCLES I 121 ORGANIZATIONS STUDENT GOVERNMENT: COMMON SENSE OR WHAT IS TO BE DONE? By Stuart McCloy The most commonly heard complaints at Vanderbilt are that it is intellectually deaden- ing in its educational process and that the stu- dent government does nothing. Somehow, the two complaints are often articulated as if one is a direct cause of the other. During the latter part of January, 1974, and the first part of February, the Hustler con- tained several letters to the editor contending that Vanderbilt indeed was a total academic failure or that it was not a total failure-one merely had to choose one's professors with care and take advantage of some of the extracur- ricular activities to drive those aca- demic-failure-blues away. The letters usually mentioned some phase of student govern- ment-usually the Gaventa years -as indica- tive of some sort of intellectual vitality the campus had at one time. Then came a story in which this past year's Student Association president, John Civils, commented on the achievements of the Under- graduate Student Affairs Board CUSABJ under him. High on his list was raising the Activity Fee Committee out of the obscurity from where U it has always rested, a redistribution of au- thority necessitated by the creation of the Sar- ratt Committee, a group which will run the new Sarratt Commons, in which the 'USAB will actually find itself better off, in relation to the other campus governmental bodies and finally, the creation on a new internal commit- tee system for the USAB. One of the biggest problems he noted was that many people become disappointed when they find out they don't really have a whole lot to do in the actual business of the Uni- versity, that they're really more in a position of persuasion than one of authority. . . . I too was misled by the title 'SA president' . . . It says a lot more than it is. The actual authority involved is very small. Civils is not the only person who is misled. The vast majority of students who bother to think about university governance do not real- ize that the USAB was not designed to have anything to do with University business , especially any sort of authority to influence the quality of the educational process. The USAB is based upon the 'autonomousu J student community model as Assistant Dean for Student Life, Shirley Maxwell has phrased it. That is, students only should govern those things which directly affect the extracurricular life of the students. This includes such things as conduct regulations, housing policy, social regulations and policies regarding under- graduate campus associations. At best, under this line of reasoning, the USAB could only be consultative in academic or administrative matters-precisely as the Constitution of the Student Association spells it out. By such criteria, the USAB Kas well as In- terhall, Interfraternity Council and the Pan- hellenic Councilj is a success. But its time has come and gone-which is not to say that it should be abolished. Students should realize its limitations and turn to matters which are more pressing now that We are more or less in control of our private affairs. The fascination with the USAB is due mainly to that legend-in-his-own-time, John Gaventa, SA president 1970-71. Of course, the story that culminated in the reforms of his time had a prior genesis. The Proposal for Restructuring Student Governmentn prepared by the Gaven- ta-appointed committee, chose the student elections in the spring of 1964 as a watershed. The report states the first task of the new Board of Presidents was to foster a student I U community identity, stimulating ideas and passing them to other bodies for consideration. Most of the proposals centered on student life . The Board changed. Students wanted a bigger role in the substantive legislative process governing non-academic student affairs. This changed context was the one in which John Gaventa ran as a reformist with plenty of experience from his work in the Educational Affairs Committee, famous for the abolition of the P.E. requirement and making only six of the seven distribution areas mandatory for graduation. Involved was not only greater student con- trol of student affairs, but a return to a more democratic method of selecting leaders than that provided by the Board. The rationale for all these changes was that the interest, aware- ness, and intellectual capacity as well as the development of students' political maturity lhadj progressed to the point at which students are capable of assuming broader responsibilities in the Vanderbilt Communityf' However, the students were not deluding themselves into thinking that they would have real authority regarding University legislation. The influence of the new student government would come only through a lobbying role and somehow becoming the legitimate articulator of the student interest in University affairs-or University businessv, if you will. The line of thought emphasizing student au- tonomy was very much in the mainstream of other student movements in the mid-sixties. Another line of reasoning emphasized the com- munal nature of the university with its three broad groupings of faculty, students and ad- ministrators-all in pursuit of a common goal. The idea of a collegial body of university gover- nors with broad powers seeking the good of all was uppermost in the minds of students ad- si -g,se ' vocating this approach to governance. It was an idea that would replace the prior emphasis on autonomy for all groups. Naturally, there were arguments-student versus student, faculty versus student and ad- ministrator versus student-over the relative merits of each idea and the precise powers which would be entailed in the competing pro- posals. At last, in February 1971, the new structure replacing the old Board of Presidents was implemented. If offered compromise between the autonomous and community models of go- vernance. Today, the USAB, Community Af- fairs Board QCABJ, the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Council and Interhall comprise the five student powers, but only the CAB has representatives of all three groups of the uni- versity. And the overwhelming interest and prestige is still centered on the titles and Pres- tige of the USAB. This recitation of recent Vanderbilt history demonstrates several things: IJ that the fasci- nation with tlie USAB as the be all and end all of students in University governance is mis- placed-certainly misleading g 25 that the community model obviously has the potential for meaningful student input in actual Uni- versity business -especially academic matters, 35 that as times change, students do become more capable of handling responsibilities in which they previously had no voice and 45 that the discontent with the educational process should not be confused with the USAB's rela- tive powerlessness to deal with it. There are several very important ramifi- cations for the future shape of Vanderbilt poli- tics in these conclusions. One is that the struc- ture of the present system does not need drastic overhauling. The students must maintain and consolidate those gains made in the last ten years in which we have more or less gained control of our personal affairs. And the present Hstructure does this. But, We must expand in new directions where we will eventually take our place as equal members of the intellectual community alongside the faculty and adminis- trators. As in the past, the students must become aware of the larger responsibilities. Until there is a large body of students who have some grasp of what it is like to be a partner in the academic process, the four undergraduates on the CAB will never be able to have any effect. The uni- versity level, now, is too much too far divorced from the locus of that very educational process we find so dissatisfying and too easily con- trolled by the faculty and administrators. The place for students to gain the necessary experi- ence as well as the only place they can begin almost immediately and most directly to affect the process is in the various departments of the University. Trickle down does not work. Definitely, the 1972-73 controversy of the year centered on tenure. Irate but ineffectively organized students in the English and political 28 X IIURLY IIURI Y www 'PH 0' pmmni 4M4 v- abil rf- '- lol WP saf1fof-:vw 1' IH HM' ' I HHH 154.4 i iz' ' WH13?5f!? f ,WI MII! Ol mu science departments raised the issue when good teachers in both departments were denied ten- ure. Meetings between students and faculty were held to demystify the shrouded process, iden- tify the issues and criteria involved in the deci- sions. A Student Task Force on Tenure ap- pointed by the USAB got down to study the issue in October of 1972 and came up with its final report in April, 1973. In that report, the task force denied that students could have any substantive role in the process since it defined tenure per se to be a faculty problem. It did recommend that the student evaluation forms be implemented but never questioned the desirability of the tenure system or advocated a larger student role. Naturally, it had no means to implement its suggestions. As in the past it was up to students outside the formal governance structure to do some- thing.A group ofstudentsbegan workingout of the Office of University Ministry that spring under guidance of John Hatcher, a University chaplain. They set out to document the educa- tional shortcomings of the University-as well as provide a stimulus to various departments on campus to organize the students. The pre- vious fall's tenure battles had gone a long way to gel the English and political science stu- dents, but preliminary efforts were made in the psychology, philosophy and German depart- ments as well. The group worked without pub- licity while writing hundreds of letters to former faculty to document the reasons that they left. Other schools were written for infor- mation on their respective tenure systems. The organized undergraduate associations were asked to submit chapters to a report which was presented to the Board of Trust during its spring meeting on May 5, 1973. This act did get the attention of the last Hustler editorial of the school year which appeared May 8, 1973. Be it known that change is germinating in the University . . . . . . fWlhat about the practices that cannot be accepted-the invidious camaraderie that pervades departments, the sidestepping of written rules, the tokenism that students merit on University Com- mittees . . . . . . The method they used is evidence of a changing philosophy which can only be fruitful in compari- son to the traditional, groveling sort of student group which asks for favors and pouts when they are not granted . . . For once some students are on the offensive in the game of university governance . . . The group did not fade away during the next school year. In fact, another study is planned for the summer of 1974. The undergraduate associations became stronger and more were organized with the same philosophy. This ad hoc committee on governance, as well as the cooperating undergraduate depart- mental associations is concerned with the edu- cation students get at Vanderbilt. They are also attuned to the political problems which can affect that process. Unfortunately, those students who wrote those letters to the Hustler voicing discontent in the educational process did not know about various students who feel exactly as they do and who are organized and working if not within the system of irrelevant University committees and cabinet positions in the SA structure, certainly for constructive change. Students must become politically involved with the faculty on the departmental level in order to modify the present educational process which deprives them of an intellectually stimu- lating education at Vanderbilt University. The fact is that Vanderbilt is failing at its ultimate purpose of providing an inspiring edu- cation for its students. Too many find -it intel- lectually stagnant. It kills students' motivation to learn. How many people have come to Van- UR U derbilt, eyes wide open looking for students under the trees with faculty members, a con- templative atmosphere and time to mull over the ideas encountered during the day or the week. If rainy weather kept people out from under the trees, the thoughtful discussion and widening intellectual vistas was not to be found inside the classrooms either. People really do expect something special when they arrive on campus. But then all they hear from the Vuceptors is how much freshman year sucks at Vanderbilt, how crummy the social life is, how strong the fraternities are, how hard the grades are and how much better next year will be. So this is college, you thought at the ice cream supper and picnic. So this is college, you thought as you played thumper in your Vuceptor's suite, wish- ing classes would start. So this is college, you thought as you nod- ded off in your first lecture. But what is the essence of a good education? What might satisfy those frustrated students? I, personally, have spent many sleepless nights with other students as we tried to answer these very questions. Admittedly, we never were able to put the answers into precise words. We talked anecdotally, and heads would bob up and down in agreement as recognition of similar experiences came to rnind. We also talked met- aphorically. Often we talked in almost sensual terms. Whatever intellectual stimulation or educa- tion is, it involves at least two people and leaves them both feeling satisfied. It would make peo- ple come to class on Friday. It is not something that can be found inside the notebooks or read- ing assignments but must be in the way that students have been led through an intangible process of thought. Right now, students at Vanderbilt are not interested in intellectual pursuit. If they are when they get here, most of the interest is killed by the time they are far enough along to be in positions to do anything about it. The fac- ulty, for the most part, is bored with uninter- ested students and therefore they are boring. The faculty has too often been disappointed by students with big ideas that were waylaid by home football games or more fun things to do -which is just about anything. Young faculty are told not to expect much from the students, as well as the kinds of beha- viour or teaching techniques that are accept- able in the departments. The students' attitude toward school work and the low esteem and expectations of faculty HURLY- l B members for students form a vicious circle of attitudes. This condition prevents the Uni- versity from performing its essential function of educating students-providing that indefin- able stimulation. In order to break the circle, two things must occur: lj Attitudes of both students and faculty toward school must be changed, and 29 the University governance structure must be brought in line to serve its educational purpose better. This must mean a substantive role for students, based on equality with faculty in the educational process and the political processes affecting it. Much energy at Vanderbilt is frittered away on inconsequential activities. This does not include the many educational and worthwhile volunteer activities which people, until re- cently, had to seek-practically unaided by the University. But what about the near-frantic obsession with weekend parties, trips, getting away from school in any form? There is a definite need for students to reaffirm the real reason they came to school-to get a good edu- cation. In turn, the faculty would take renewed in- terest in teaching students, taking part with them in a mutual process of personal growth. But, granting new attitudes on the parts of students and faculty members, how can the University governance structure be made bet- ter to serve the students and education? Once again, the responsibility rests with the students to make the first move. Students must take charge of what faculty and administrators now consider their own affairs . But they must not take on such responsibilities to fulfill their role as defined by others, but as equal partners in the University. Students must ob- viously participate as equal members of the direct educational process in the classroom, HUR -BURLY though inferior in knowledge of the subject matter. Similarly, they must be willing to pull their own weight in the running of the Uni- versity, both academically and administrati- vely. Students would help set the University's goals and priorities in this process. This would call for a reaffirmation of that interest, awareness and intellectual capacity as well as political maturity which we have demon- strated in the past. It is students who must provide the initial impetus for attitude and governance changes. It is they who must mobilize and organize to demonstrate that they are, indeed, ready to take on the added responsibilities. Students must wake up and realize where the real struggle lies. Only at the departmental level can the battle be fought successfully be- cause it is only at this level that enough stu- dents can be involved in determining the sort of educational process they want. Only at this level can a powerful mobilization of the stu- dents occur, which will give impetus to later attempts at the University-wide level. This is where the main problem is located. And it must be met where it touches the students, where the students can feel it. It must be remembered that as this process takes place, the conditions from which it sprung will change. The very act of making students and faculty get down to analyze their common experience and to plan that experience will go far in providing the needed intellectual stimu- lation. Then the purposes of the undergraduate associations must change, too. Otherwise they will become just as anachronistic as the student association. They will cease to be crucial to the process which they had a large share in starting. The general strategy of student involvement fa 11' '-s at the departmental level automatically makes student-controlled teaching evaluations a prime tactical tool. The teaching evaluations have never been used effectively because with- out strong undergraduate associations, there is no good mechanism for their implementation. In this manner students could begin to change immediately the unfortunate self-image of the majority of the Vanderbilt faculty that they are good teachers. Furthermore, the vali- dity of teaching evaluations would rise since students would come to see that the kind of an evaluation they give a teacher does really matter. The evaluations would carry weight with faculty members who would hate to read that they are poor teachers and that their courses should be avoided. Indeed, some stu- dents really might start making the course request form a bal1ot', for voting for good teachers by swelling their class roles and against bad ones by driving their courses from the schedule of recitations. This process would automatically raise the priority of teaching in the three criteria sup- posed to be used in determining tenure fcur- rently the measure of successl merely by draw- ing a great deal of attention to it. Over time, a backlog of evaluation forms could be used to determine a person's teaching qualifications for promotions, contract rene- wals, tenure or merely periodic evaluations of a department's faculty. The general strategy and tactics outlined in this article have as their goal a revitalized edu- cational process in which faculty and students share equal responsibility for its success. In the past, Vanderbilt students have demonstrated that they can handle new responsibilities, but only time will tell whether students Will ad- vance beyond the steps taken in the last two years. The faculty are not going to just give up their preeminent position, it will take more than a round of reasoned arguments to bring about the changes in the political relations. Part of the argument will have to be demon- strated by a refusal to accept less and tenacity to insist on an equal responsibility for our own education in the new University. UR LY- BUH 134 l R.O.T.C. R.O.T.C ,X If 1 Zi al- 1. -in .4 - 1 q?I-lhravn-47 ','K !:' Aff ' , 'gf' -U.-7175.41-'-'N' V f,. '. Aww -V -.M m- L., .. ,, 4 .. ,M H M .Jah R.0.T.C. I 135 K HONOR COUNCIL ESEZISEIEJSUQ 138 I HONOR COUNCIL Shep Tate VICE-PRESIDENT Marie Hall CORRES PON DING S ECRETARY Jo Anderson RECORDING SECRETARY Brannan, Tony Brooks, Rebecca Buck, Tom Chester, Caroline Dunham, Chuck Dupree, John Early, Patti Eliand, Susan Elster, Allen Heidbrier, Don Higgins, Dave Johnson, Frank Kain, Bob Kearney, Jim Linn, Don Longshone, Billy McBride, Rob Miles, Mary Mills, Cindy Millsap, Brad Minks, Marilyn Neff, Cindy Phillips, Craig Porter, Jim Sadler, Sue Thomas, Carolyn Spacapan, Ed Vale, Steve Wakefield, Adair Walton, Ben Wright, Jeff The Vanderbilt Honor Council is the judicial organ of the Honor System, an institution of mu- tual trust among students and their professors The thirty-six member student judiciary hears academic breaches in the three undergraduate schools and decides on penalties when a violation exists. Vested with direct authority by the Board of Trust, the Council's decisions a1'e irrevocable excepting review by a body of appellate jurisdiction which can re- mand cases for second hearings if an abuse of au- thority has occurred. Revision of any penalties, however, lies with the Council. The Council's work extends beyond the hearing room and into the administrative realm as well. The past year has witnessed an energetic attempt to reach different student and faculty groups with the dual task to inform and to learn of criticisms. Addresses were made to the assembled faculties of the College, the Nursing School, and the Engi- neering School as well as the new faculty at its annual reception. Individual members conversed with professors during their departmental meetings and in private. In August, the Council released a new publication on the Honor System. Appearing in the student handbook, this publication, the re- sult of two years' work, contains an all-encompass- ing written code, sections on the preparation of papers and other class work, and hearing proce- dures. To maintain faculty members' awareness, each departmental office was given an excerpt of this publication and the Council's Constitution for reference. Additionally, each new faculty member went through the annual orientation and was given a copy of the revised faculty handbook. Periodic meetings and semester retreats mark other Council activities. During these times, criti- cisms from the university community are discussed and new policies instituted. Discussion of better methods for orienting new students and instituting other penalty structures compose integral parts of our retreats. After a request by the Community Affairs Board, the Council met and drafted a mem- orandum representing its stance on the controver- sial introduction of legal advisors in its proceedings. Realizing it is the representative of student con- cerns yet equally dependent upon faculty partici- pation, the Council has attempted to remain keenly attuned to demands for change to institute prudent revisions within its time-tested investigatory framework. Hoping to find evermore eflicient ways to safeguard the student community's integrity, the Council must remember that academic honor is not something to be temporized by a changing campus to meet contemporary attitudes. The Council is confident its new publications and numerous meetings with students and faculty have removed much apprehension, causing issues of mu- tual concern to surface. Greater cooperation by all has emerged from the Council's desires attempt to meet with the college community. Our success in these activities is measured by increased requests for ofiicial warnings and hearings and the multi- tude of enthusiastic remarks continually made to the Council's advisors and members. Gerald Kline President HONOR COUNCIL 139 Robert Boak Slocum EDITOR THE COMMODORE J. Clark Thomas ASSOCIATE EDITOR ff E5 ER ,.,..--R Karen Carrington Michael Ryan King Cheryl Whitworth MANAGING EDITOR CONSULTING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER N0 XTHE COMMODORE Larry Zuckerman EDITORIAL ASSISTANT ' - ... 12 Bill Buzzell Laurie Durbrow GREEK co-EDITORS Contributors: Cindy Greener Martha Wallace Gerald Kline Skip Bayless Stuart McCloy Bo Carter Pate Skene Rosalynne Harry Bob Gillespy Fred Farris Bob Carr Jim Graham Monroe Frank Rich Deason Jo Lynn Baker Logan Shillinglaw Ken Moore John Wade Sara Raup 'Tori Olin Mike Biscoe Mauriee Poitras Dan Bischoff Edwin Schmidt Thom Eggers Pam Showalter Bih' Eweis Michael Johnson Carlton Cass Marie Hall Walt Potter David Toma John Cloud Steve Daugherty PIIOTOGRAPHER PHOTOGRAPIIER PIIOTOGRAPI-IER .- gg, THE COMMODORE I 141 1 Marie Ragghianti John Bloom Keith Riggs EN .ggzf JM . 35. , fm! SD , 142 I THE HUQTLER UIQ, ,X I' nl HUSTLER My earliest memory of The Hustler is not a very memorable one. It served as a twice-weekly distraction my freshman year from the long and winding dinner lines at Branscomb cafeteria. After giving it a perfunc- tory perusal, I usually sent it on an ignominious journey to the kitchen, creaking along on my tray underneath a crumpled napkin and the vestiges of an ice cream sandwich. My next memories are being dragged up the 47 steps to glory fas they were once pretentiously dubbedl to the Hustler offices in besmattered, inglorious Alumni. My incentive was a close friend, who, to my admitted indifference at the time, also happened to be a Hustler staffer and devotee. She swore that I should give it a try. So I did, reluctantly. Upon admittance I was some- what overwhelmed by the impressive bustle of a very determined and rather smug collection of Hustlerites, so I settled into a corner merely wishing to survey the scene. But a News Editor soon capitalized on my unoc- cupied state and thrust a news release into my hands to be rewritten. Clutched by the conviction that I had been handed a task of grave importance, I slowly and painstakingly rewrote the lines, after first consulting with my friend whowas on the arts staff. Her carefully delivered, and now incomprehensible advice to write it in a featury style fsomething one never does to the average news releasel aided in rendering me a very abashed goat, as I watched my rewrite shortly thereafter being rewritten unrecognizably and buried somewhere in the two-days hence Hustler. If itlhadn't been for the genuine compassion of one staffer in particular, I might well have left, defeated and sore at the whole idea of journalism fa field into which I had never ventured or much cared about beforel. But something intrigued me about it all and I returned before long to become the almost permanent fixture in those offices which I remain today as editor of The Hustler. My memories only serve to point out an unavoidable fact: The Hustler probably is not read carefully for even at alll by a great many students at Vanderbilt. But that seemingly devastating revelation ruffles not at all the energies of those who write for it. Although no one who works diligently on The Hustler believes anything contrary to the above, everyone works as if every line, logo and letter of each issue were scrutinized by the whole of Vanderbilt University and the Nashville news media. And ultimately that underlying seriousness and determination admidst the usually raucous and insou- ciant atmosphere makes laying down one's academic, social or recreational life for once in a while genuinely worthwhile. But just as nobody who works for The Hustler is fooled into thinking that it is as big a deal for everyone else as it is for them, nobody is fooled into thinking that reckless reporting or sloppy editing will not be R noticed and condemned. To whatever degree, they know it does pack an influence and that a typo or misquote can ignite tempers just as fast as a pleasing turn of phrase can bring the praise and recognition which every- one secretly or openly craves. The inevitable critics who rail for the sake of railing are regarded with only a wry tolerance, but when those who categorically demand respect turn critic, the person who incited the attack does some soul-searching and finds that he does care. It would be foolish to claim that the people who devote so many hours to The Hustler-admidst looks of incre- dulity by their friends-do it out of a sense of duty to Vanderbilt or to the cause of social change. They do for themselves, mostly, but the rest does seem to follow naturally. They do it because they enjoy being caught up in the intensity and wit of the people around them and the challenge of getting out a tangible product twice a week which is anticipated with the regularity of the chimes on Kirkland Tower. Perhaps more than anything they do it for the opportunity to write creatively, to express opinions in print and among themselves and to find out something about the way Vanderbilt works- and with that to rub elbows with the administration and faculty and to exude that ineffable air of importance that a notebook and pencil can create. Quite simply, they do it because it makes life at Vanderbilt a little more interesting. So when someone suggests-as they frequently do- that The Hustler's chief asset is its suitability for decking the fioors of bird cages for some other such dubious functionl, a staffer within earshot will more than likely grin and pass smugly by, unperturbed and still devoted to a simultaneoulsy selfish and selfless endeavor. MARY ELSON f EDITOR 1 HE HUSTLER f 143 4'For People With Little To Sayg anderbilt is an Expensive Place to Sa lt. VERSUSn1agazi1ie, a division of Vanderbilt Student Communications Inc is published i t' , ., s x lmes a semester at Nashville, Tcnneswc. Circulation 3500 per issue. Address all inquiries to: Versus, Box 1734, Station B, Vanderbilt University, Nashville 37235. Editor: Miachal Rozek. Assistant Editor: Bob Darham. Business Manager: Warren R. Donaldson. Art Editor: Michael Johnson. Literary Editor: John Surface. Contributing Editor: David R. Miller. Photography Editor: Mary Sue Price. Asso t P - ' ' ' ' ua 0, tggy Caldwell, John Duboise Barbaia Techman Michael O'Connell Facult Advisor R' h d S , , , y . 1 ic ar tracke. Consultant: Jim Leeson. VERSUS I 145 HRW! FW L 5 3 - fi 1 ' X Ar-N? w .- . in HAn1u, W'u I A- f swf, JN A W -.x W: ,V-.1. , , ,'L WRVU 1 JOHN LOGAN Station Manager Despite the chaos of moving our studios first semester, the 91 audience heard remotes from Rand Terrace, in- depth investigations, such as the Radnor Lake acquisi- tion study, cooperative programs with the Psychological and Counseling center, discussions on Greeks, sports and other topics, and a wide spectrum of entertainment features: Oldies shows, bluegrass specials and all sorts of contests. Spring semester, WRVU will jump to 428 watts, cul- minating efforts we began last spring to make another step toward full development of our potentials. After March, a stronger clearer signal will take WRVU pro- gramming to an even larger portion of the Nashville University Center. MIIVU The Vanderbilt Poetry Review is a quarterly journal founded by un- dergraduates in 1972. Although it now has a small but nationwide cir- culation in college libraries and bookstores, the VPR originally sought to fill the need for a poetry journal of high quality in the Middle Tennessee area: one which could attract well-known poets while also establishing an outlet for local, un- established poets. The summer issue, presenting work from around the nation, followed this guideline. While in the past the review has published primarily American, Brit- ish, and Canadian poets, the 1974 winter issue is devoted entirely to works in translation. It is a collec- tion of contemporary Italian poetry brought together by foreign editor Frank Judge. STAFF Christopher Morgan SENIOR HlJI'I'0ll Patricia Bolton 1-:IJl'l'oI: Alice Boggs Jamie Jennings Anne Hathaway Deb Kasbeer Jeff Levenson Michael O'Connell John Roberts Claud Robison Brice Thomas 148 I P01-'I RY VANDERBILT POETRY REVIEW FOR THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 1973 x ' t, i !: c.J V A '.1 l 142:2 1 QI In 'se -u n, 1, -'zaixfif-' , A , 1- . fir ic 414:35-5,l,r --, -.I . H L,-B 1' -Luger' r.- ' rw , i ., -gf , ,,., cw' A - 4 I . ' 'fZ?if.'- rt . , ' - ' . w..- ,': f ' -' av:-I: . . ' '+- : - is ,ivN4 - ',l' ' t 33513 4 .-2 ie- :'- .' ', ' ,451 Q Tx .5- 3 . '?'1 irblif. -1 ,' ,, , .,5u3ffi'f- , I gf -2 f.fi'x1- WW f f Ewfirfial .f L1 Ia :,,. -. ,gl I ,- y - . ..- ,,.,49-...P , , 3 .- 1 A - 4M'i:j,Qg -- w r ,. 'Rig I. -Q ., ,:'+'g ie- -Q, 'Q' f ' .-fur ., ,f - , , fa 'gf 3fihI!.MQ..ff - ,ex -4 . differ -JW' ,Y N.. xafwfffi' l YlJ-?xrM!3K - 'fig ' .3 v' - - 'L91' rf tr .m...c,.. BY JOSHUA SHARP lBehold fond man! See here thy pictur'd life-pass some few years, Thy flowering SPRING, thy SUMMER'S ardent strength, Thy sober Autumn, fading into age, And pale concluding WINTER comes at last, And shuts the scene! -- A GREAT VARIETY OF PIECES INSTRUCTIVE AND AMUSING IN PROSE AND VERSE SUMMER, 1973 51.00 On was created to provide the Vanderbilt community with a creative means of liter- ary expression. By presenting a selection of contributions from Vanderbilt students and an unusual insight into the literary profes- sion, On hopes to raise the appreciation of, as well as generate the creation of, the lit- erary arts here on campus. CS. Cobean, Eaftor RAP MAGAZINE A literary magazine published once a year by Blacks in the Vanderbilt community. Sponsored by the Afro-American Association and funded by the Creative Arts Fund. Proceeds to Black Arts Festival. An effort at communication with the Blacks and Whites at Vanderbilt A display of generally untapped Black resources on this campus. ,JW X Brenda F. Hopson H 7 EDITOR Edward Whaley Aurxsr Teresa Snorton Dale Newton Jerry Washington C ART HUUSE 1 i -as 5 3 Qu n -A? Q A 41,1 ogtffwup inf' 1 I 'aL 1: r. .,,1 'i' 1 s 4 s ww . X . u-01 Q ' -1 gba!! 9: G AJ f ART HOUSE I 151 . ,. .xy muh Q , R' ' X, T. F3 -I-',-.iji f5'E5': 5- if A gli' Q gf X ' 11,39 .. ,' - :l'.'L7 ,1 ,. 313-1':fv', , ,R.Fff,Q.4 ' ' -SP...f',w i , .wwf 7 1-+1 QT.-. ,H , n nw ' ',- ...u ,yi-'ff-:T f' ' :b:f1s5:-H- 1 w--r Gr:-'47 :ff fini Tv: v I, . 5 x . L. 1,4 . 54- , ..-y -in ' a JF. 9, .-4 , s U I 1 n' ,,-- 3. .5..., .fe . , -Q G1 I H. v x XA! 2 I il A N 5 in V 3: L 'lv . 4 i .rf-i , V 5-+.4xm-lf? V J . , , 1' 'N' wi-,ngsrqf 4 7.1 r' 'Qu w F ,,,,, 1 wg., ,VH ww 'I 1 W. JN 3. 117- ,. ...f YJ 4 un nf 'C Fifi' NI: ., H'-K. y . -IL, ,- . Eg.1'mxx..u- NY-'3 .1-2: la- ' '- 4' . - S+ '.' xi:-?5 g'5f 2 U ,-m11 - gggaierff ,Q 'iq fffC+eij.' Q , sf.-gg C - m x . , M' ' 'o 'J' .., V J 4-J ff 5' Q , 7: ul F5 39' . , Q. 1 - .k-. RA A ' 1 . 5 . ' X x,' A, Q Af ' . .J V ,X . . - . J f 'A , if 11 , 1 v Y. 1. K 'o , I . mx 1 sv:-mx:-:us v . TOM HAYDEN AND JANE FONDA IBO I Sl'HAKl'IRS PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID TOMA 4 GAQRIEL K ll e V . f QE' L '51- lu fi PFAKER. RSITY UNIVE DERBILT N VA The Vanderbilt University Theatre began its 1973-1974 season with, perhaps, its most enthusiastic and close-knit membership in years. The events of the school year that fol- lowed tested this espirit de corps, for developments brought setbacks and success, predicaments and promise. Disappointment and apprehension, though, were somewhat alleviated by the administration's announce- ment of the finalization of plans to erect a new theatre complex. After almost a quarter of a century in sup- posedly non-permanent residence on Garland Avenue, plans for an ar- chitecturally innovative theatrical design were acquired and nationally famous experts were brought in. The practicality of the renovation of Neely Auditorium was examined and primary reports were hopeful. -Forrest Hinton M 19' 1- 11 -P if wg!-Q Limp U 1 -- I. C I 0 I A., n H 1 X iii-Ae .Jai w r I 5 r ,J l w R x kl ' o D z 3 X . 5' f,.,,fl-fsfgf ,- A ' , -IEP-1 -- V x, 7 ' r J Q -4, 9 A 4-if iid., en ' ' Qtkz, A I .23 iii? ' I 2 s ,x N'-v C 0 N C E S PHOTOGRAPH BY FRED FARRIS .'-J'd 1 2 'L .ab 121314. L mug Nl ' W1 UMW m 1 .WZ CONCERTS I 167 1 1' K if -.1 .H , f hi ,- F1 3-, U 4 . I -A 1,2 P-.k I 1.r,.., ja 35: A ' 4-wi' M 3 ,Lzf mf' xii: 'O 'r'. 'f P ' :X ' l-Q ' in i Al. - . . , ' . f' - 3 ' , A 1 1, , 112W , . 2 :Lf , .,r. .. ,.f 1. -... np-, -' ' ---'. A , nk i D 'si 1,15 , ,A . :An - ..3' '-fa 1Sm'b,. - - J-w+ff2:fffff-f K I 7 ...f 4 44 .4 I X' , i rw., ,1 F,- u Q1 ?? Q ,-P 1'-N lr. . . 4'-v' - iglm? . 'I -'- -.av ..'-- - X Q,- , x ip, 'bw T, ,fn , A . . ' .ff ,N - 1 ' wif , 1' ffl x' v- ,' I J , vi ' ' . , v n ? 'Jin 'f wf xm, , if d V N . , X' Q AL .- is X . N l ASL? . .1. 1 - J . ' I mf, 4' 1, I ,x 1' g.' 1 1.5. -mu.. Ir xfq, -,. V. . .ix a 1- , , -' ' .1- . r 'xv-'JJ ax' ' 1135 .- ' N ' 1, :-f Q.. ' ' ' 'L X1 A-3 .--Z A V - ' ' 'am ,- -x . 'X 'Z C-.. k A Ir..-.A. 1 n an 9 ..x if 1.5! - ---- 4-1-cz, R gvv- -:H ' s if 3 .1 1 .9 B C? N1 ,.-1 , fvw -fr ' gl - ,A IA -Q ax V s. '44 V m7 1Lfff' an fo . vmi - X JU 2-NN A ' w YM 6' -'qw il ,,-5.4.-ff 37 Mfr ,D l V QL., xx'-4 .rx . A9 4 T ., K 4, 1 EX H X K1 ' I ik. --K- R .. gm E-as I A P W 1:1 1 'Nall X xg, ' ' ,Q ,T -9, 4 - 2 . 15.4. 1 A' - V , , H 5 lx ' E b I i . ' F I 5 I , . , fi' U3 ,, -XE! N - ,, ' V, 'wg .,,Q rx: ,. , Kg, , -A...-5. .. ,--..,.-Q.. , , ' - 1. If . A I I 5, -.fx Q . - I ' 'fgxk I . mrs . If i 1 wr -' '.,, ,I in Q Q -4.5 CUNl'HR'I'S F 173 I 1 BAND 2 3 -ff 'W Q A . 5 . BAND CHOIR VUCEPT In presenting Vanderbilt to your Vuceptee, however, give him the opportunity to learn for himself. That is not to mean that you should move him into the dorm and forget him fperish the thoughtl, but rather that you should present the University with as little of your own bias as possible-he'll develop enough of his own opinions with time. Give the kid a chanceg don't bombast him with everything that has made you P.O'ed at Vanderbilt-Vucept is neither the time nor the place to vent your spleen and everything else that has built up inside you over the last few years. Be honest and fair, but don't be vindictive. Let your advisee know what he is up against, what he has gotten himself into, but, for God's sake, donit give him a foul taste of the place before he has gotten a good bite on his own. By the same note, don't slosh rose colored paint from West End to 21st, either. -from the 1973 Vucept staff handbook ALJ 4 'NIJ VUCEPI' I 1 77 J, N Y? ,ii , I ' ..'. ' ' 1 I ,.-V. 19 H' 2 . 5 if P, it-' 4 'fun , 'Q , 1' -,,-, , iff 1,1.', . , 1 Q gl -. , '- I Q 'N ' l , s. I, Sf- -v..A- 111- Axe. , .. iwfcf- '-.1 6,1 -..- ,1.-61-r f A - Wharf . .1 . ,, V.- 4 A -. -f ' . ,,.,.,... .,..- mg, AE 1. Qxfu Af. ! v I ' 'Ni'-fu! 1 'A y .J 15' Gr? 'awlgg--. fs: -9 I ' 'r,5'f Q 'f J ' 4' fl ,As . , w3'f1w':.',, , yu Mfr. ,. 4 - lf,- fk ,i37: ,:wii- ., g1..:'w.f.-wa. -4 i12Q'ILfFQ'f'f '--sq. ff -u VOLUNTEERS IN SERVICE STUDE HE LTH CUALITIO ...U muff --W 1 I nf I W f 'S 'iv ' .. J-v,..,f f -. 1 , -r . s2,,,,iA-giifzgki , njqgiq .YN A ' N ix ' ,T ...A 14.5 Z:,.Lw?T1-.1 A-.iq q ,fa -' i .za-hz V 55 ' -A 5.. ff- .. . P-' rs. 'fliiggblfqifif r Vx it ......- IBO I STUDENT HEALTH COALITION ' 'Ji'-'I xl v-Q n 11, , V '11 1' Ffll' 1, i -1 3 X Y --W1 ' 1- J' - qu ' 3-fi.. . E14 -4 1 Q 'ins , I f-', I, .L STUDENT HEALTH COALlTl0N I 181 QLPJ-IAt4PHI OMEGA -4' ...ai -f- . N-.-. , un.. ... H ,,,..4 7,407-u-I In . '.. . ' , 1 up . -, .57 F -Q ' K g , ' ' J- 4 .'-.-xr 0 ' . ., ,li -- ' 1 Y 1 .-.. -4'-'I ' . v', , ...U ' - ' .. ' ,pay-.441 QQ . -- K '1- ... M? I' ' - .Q . bn. V . Q 1.40 40 J 'FQNQQ ., A V 1 dk 0, V 4 .f- t , . a n - -, . xv -- ., 1 ,........- ' -f-- J - Y n G -N.. ,,,, .......,............- - :ff-9 , , I- N 'L ' 4 -451- .-D. I V 4- A , .. ...,, I Quay.. Q K Q, ,Qt in .vi-E ir , w.. f:'ri,gd,' ,. V e EIU' V' ' V 'FZ rfff I Yr! ,un --1 -S-.1 iv- I J. -. ,Z sp-ANDERBILT ENVIRONMENTAL GRO 1 Y.:.LM,r 'l ., 1 . Q - , ' I 'T X. Q L NNN , 'SJ L xjs. V A 1 u l' y ,:W.,w5,. ffvhsal J 'f'T.1-. ' f u-f N 1 . 1 ,. .. ,z yi 7:m.L::,I -HGV. ' Lfmi,a,?:L?,4 4+ . M , g Sql! -,Ln-, A ws, ..n 5 N-' Q, 5 1. . ,',gVl1:. ' 1 , v' .- .V ga ., 5qxx,- 5 1 ' v . ,I -V41 44 4Q'Qi, g. S f f if ll ff f-Me - A '1,.- f,-:-T ,..,..k. ,.-, it , 'Xb f- rfff z .. -. fi' rf I ,f eitvi , r 4- 'fr' 45.1, - lag' I-4:-i' ' V . .,f.Mrfl . time f . ' X ff 1 r ' ' f.,-it! ' ' i , !f.'!1'i. 1 g' J fkxvx igi N 1 N, ,, .1 , p it by ,a at W . gift. L 1, 1 ffm it qi ,, F t or I ' - wr l' l ' HE-Q ilk' A , -: ll, ' l l.-nfl' . 1 ii' li l f Y 754-Arlfi-rl? 'Rt .klrili .rf'?fi' ' aid! 3 , ml, .ll lfifkisiiyr Wi.--1. Mi v H424 , .v fini' . it auf W ar 42' .1 H N ll . 4 ' ' fi? .f mi., 'ru- ei 'riff-'Q 'H P 'Nw .1-M , -- ' f A Ni' . f, sq l in - Vw I i'Zr E I , 1 7 'reg s N 14,1 is dag' 06, f lk H t U I I nxt? X I A . gg .V X-J F , QM. .g ff , ,..,a, 5, yn in YOUNG REPUBLICANS The College Republicans this year', like so many other political organizations were hurt by the many scandals that plagued Washington in 1973. According to Lewis Thomas, president of the organization: We felt the impact of Watergate in a drop in membership and an increased amount of apathy. We have tried to stress to our members that the actions of one group within the party is not and should not be a reflection on us. Looking at the past the College Republicans are somewhat dismayed at what has happened in the last year and a half. Thompson goes on to say: We cannot condone the actions of some of our high level administrators. One of the principles this country is founded on is that each person, whether he is president or John Doe is subject to the same laws. At the same time, however, he is entitled to the same rights-a trial by jury after legal investigations, not trial by the liberal press. With regard to the future the CR's are optimistic. They feel that many individuals will be hurt by Watergate but the political system as a whole can only profit by it. The country will not be destroyed by the scandals and Americans will regain faith in their government. -Lewis Thompson, President 184 I POLITICS af f'f ,.,g1 i .. YOUNG DEMOCRATS The Vanderbilt Young Democrats during the 1973-1974 school year have finally reestablished themselves as the most successful and active partisan political organization,on the Vanderbilt campus. Using the very active campus McGovern campaign of last year as a base, the YD's have expanded both in numbers and in activity. Meetings have been held twice monthly, often with featured guest speakers such as Tennessee State Representatives Doy Daniels and Mike Murphy and State Attorney-General David Pack. Aside from the individual political activities of its various members, the Vanderbilt YD's have worked in close conjunction with the Davidson County and Tennessee Young Democrats as well as the local and state senior party. Plans for the spring semester include a speakers' series of Democratic gubernatorial hopefuls in Tennessee as well as a trip to the National College Young Democrats Convention in Chicago February 15-16. The Young Democrats are also engaged in issue-oriented activities. The National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws QNORMLJ and the Vandy YD's combined to raffle two tickets to the Bob Dylan concert in Memphis for the benefit of NORML. Plans are now being laid for a major NORML-YD sponsored concert on campus, probably sometime in March. A showing of the movie Reefer Madness is also planned as a NORML benefit. -John Summers, President Y.A.F. Young Americans for Freedom is a nationwide conservative youth organization, centered mainly on college campuses. Its basic philosophy is set down in the Sharon Statement, issued at its founding in 1960. YAF carries on both educational and activist programs for conservative principles. Our main activity this fall has been calling for a balanced Speakers Program at Vanderbilt. We feel that the Speakers Committee has an obligation to bring a wide range of speakers as long as they are funded through student and university funds. We sponsored a showing of the movie The Three Stooges in Orbit in response to the appearanceof The Tlu'ee Stooges of Hanoi -Jane Fonda, Tom Hayden, and Jean-Pierre Debris. Our movie was on November 7. -David Boaz I 'F I . u 'UA lv? ll:-f' ff, ' eb' Tflltgv' og U 5, IMPOSt.1r , -'ll U V5 DUT NOW., Pi stu It ' 'YV :N U5 11555 . Y.S.A. The Vanderbilt YSA is a campus organization whose members are undergraduate, graduate, and professional students as well as employ- ees and staff of the University. It is a campus affiliate of the Young Socialist Alliance, the largest radical youth group in the U.S. The nationwide YSA is a revolutionary socialist youth organization, uniting young workers and students around the banner of socialism and dedi- cated to the building of a revolutionary movement which can lead the working people to socialism. The YSA bases itself on the principles of Marxism as developed by Lenin and Trotsky, and on the traditions of the American people represented by such leaders as Sam Adams, Frederick Douglass, Wendell Phillips, Eugene Debs, and Malcolm X. -Ben Harris N.P.C. The New Peoples Coalition was formed in order to provide an umbrella for student activities on campus, This function is served by fulfilling the obligation of students to have a charter for campus activities open to all the students. The New Peoples Coalition has provided these services this year forg The Indochina Peace Campaign, the United Farm Workers and in collaboration with the Young Socialist Alliance on at least one occasion. POLITICS I 185 Transcendental Meditation Now that the topic has entered my own interest it seems that questions of the scope of man, both his possibilities and apparent limitations, reoccur quite commonly in the classroom environment in such courses as philosophy, religion, psychology, and even English as well as in allusions to the topic in many private conversations. Discussions here most often seem to come to a bind when it is attempted to decide if the gap can be filled between what is commonly per- ceived as reality and what is put forth as truth or ideal. Those who think not sometimes label the gap as man's absur- dity while others claim faith or tran- scendental experiences can bridge the two. The ground is thusly set for a revi- val in Jesus movements and the present iniiux of Eastern practices of yoga f union',J and meditation. With all this available I chose Transcendental Medi- tation which in its simplicity appeared to have the most to offer. In the mental technique the interest of the mind is used to let the whole nervous system settle down to a deep state of rest. A state is developed where the mind is fully alert though engaged in an inwardly directed thought process that is not a form of contemplation and qualitatively very different from the unconsciousness of sleep. For fear of claiming a faddish uniqueness I reserve myself to just say I have found in the practice what I was seeking-that the freedom granted by the balance of activity. In theory if one looks at the polarity of rest and activity, both find enhancement as a new dimension is added. Having rested one can act and feeling fresh one wants to act. The next time you are doing something whether it is praying, playing tennis or taking a test ask yourself if you don't view your- self higher than you feel. Tim Stryker 14 I 9 v 1 fx . ., rg 4 TAE KWUN DO ,Tae Kwon Do, the Korean art of self-defense, practiced for nearly three millenia, was introduced to Nashvillians only four years ago by Tae Whae Haw, sixth Dan black belt, a Vanderbilt student from Korea. Since then, the Vanderbilt Tae Kwon Do team has won more than forty trophies in national tournaments in form and free sparring, establishing itself as one of the most powerful and respected schools of marital arts in the Southeast. The key to our success has been long intensive training involving both mental and physical self-discipline. We are taught to concentrate our energies into precise and powerful movements, a side-kick to the head area being the fundamental technique. Along with kicking we do basic movements and forms Ctheoretical attack and defense movements! but free sparring is emphasised with controlled contact being the measure of proficiency. The idea behind kicking is that the legs are longer and more powerful than the arms, and Tae Kwon Do stresses not so much speed and multiple movements as it does power and efficiency. The ethic of Tae Kwon Do is respect for humanity entailing protection of the weak. The Vanderbilt Tae Kwon Do team is more than an athletic team-it is an individual experience of mental and physical therapeutic value. Irv Rubenstein TAE KWON DO I 187 - 1 A . , . , v., , -.L .5 , f' ' -'F' is . ' FT Qi' 'f 'T - f ,W 44 iff ' fi' an nb 'Q L -f PM A 'NL' x - , , - rg , -. 5 5, wr. -.:3.g-1 , , ' , ' ' -61 J.. A v- X, -, , , H . -JJ' -,3'f.,, .N 5,6 '. vga. l J : ',. ': -'I ff' -3-2-3 Q. .,k fs l ,-,nv fi 4 -- 1-1.x .XM .1 fn 1: -4-f -14 .- -. f 4 'L . ,f,- - ,...,Y.v.,.y 4--nfl' YN. yvg Vji, ml -. -1 r- - ,X 1 wk- gw Q1-f f'1w4 -5+.,Lsp-fm iw, v' :x-V Mvp 1-Q A v AV V' RM fr W if . I -hm 4 'ff A -G nf ah r'f AW, 5 Q k' 'rr ' ,X 1 Y 'vr,'z'v.',, N. it-I. -Vi, vi! J x. .V-,x,!.,,h,-.,.: , H. ,P 1 U w 'NN f-17 fd' W' ws Jin wo 4 n'1-MJ, ,ip VH 59? -vb K U, vu b-'wl A 1.4555 'FFT ' A 4. i4rQf5,,Q1fT9'A W :1 .1 ji sf, ,QQ ai.L,qv' . if Qlgl w! fl SPORTS FOOTB LL 4' ww r ll J' 1,3 'I 4 ., Af! 1 X E. N. I I A ' N 52:5 -aft E I ' 4 ff . ' 3' . rf ' AL' 1 ,., 35' -' 190 FOOTBAI l Y-rw ,MQ g.,, ffl . ' ' FOOTBALL I 191 By Skip Bayless Collision '73, No matter from which direction Vander- bilt students entered Nashville in August, all they could see, hear and wonder about seemed to be Collision '73, The Vanderbilt football team-supposedly the same team the students had sighed, snickered and shaken their heads at for lo, those many embarrassing, humiliating Saturdays past-had this young, new coach. And as classes began the Nashville community was flooded with Sloan, Sloan, Sloan. Steve Sloan, Bear Bryant's Cub. Collision ,73! the billboards, posters and bumper stickers screamed throughout Nashville. Collision '73! Football, drawled Steve Sloan, is a contact sport, and that's the way we're going to play it. Sloan, people began to wink and whisper, was an All-American at Alabama, where he quarterbacked the Crimson Tide to a national title. He was an Atlanta Falcon bonus-baby, he had offensive-coached three different universities to bowl games. He was a Christian, and he was quick to let everyone know about it eye to eye. He was, in a word, a winner, whether the game be football-or life. Everything, Sloan vowed, must change. Everything. He won the annual National Football Coaches' Golf Tournament during the summer by eyebrow-raising margin of 11 strokes-and in so doing, convinced the Commodores that someone from Vanderbilt could beat the best, and earned his players' respect and faith. 192 FOOFBALL Sloan immediately bought new uniforms, he moved the the Vanderbilt bench to the side of the field opposite the student section iso opponent's, hopefully, might suffer some near-future Saturday under its potential tormenting and harassmentjg he changed the practice routine, he and his assistants stressed the value of pride, morale and team unity through the breakdown drill ldifferent players or coaches led fiery cheers and chants in the midst ofa team huddlejg he stressed senior leader: shipg he instituted and enforced a team curfew and more rigid discipline ino more beer or girlie postersl. Yes, everything would change-and so would, hopefully, that all-too-important Record. Sloan called a special meeting of the squad and asked them to decide individually on the Collision '73 goals. The concensus was to win seven, lose four and go to a bowl game-reasonable goals, just as long as the Com- modores also had made up their minds to believe in themselves. Sloan prayed they did. Then just before the season began, slippery, speedy wide receiver Walter Overton, the Stud in Sloans's Get it to the Stud offense, wound up in Vanderbilt Hospital with a broken collarbone. It's like you're get- ting ready to tee off, said Sloan, and you find that somebody stole your driver. And so began Vanderbilt's season-long struggle against adversity. That first night-opening night at Dudley Field-a curious, yet unconvinced crowd took their seats to watch and judge as the Commodores walked on water. Have- not UT-Chattanooga was the foe, but alas, Vanderbilt played just like the Vanderbilt the crowd was trying so unreasonably to forget, and the Commodores were forced to stop a Moc two-point conversion attempt to hang desperately onto a 14-12 win. Vanderbilt was a 25ipoint favorite, and many who came to Dudley ex- pecting touchdown bombs and double reverses walked through the exits grumbling about how nothing had changed. But the Commodores, it seems, were merely testing strange water. And Sloan, who had an opening-night POOTBAI L 193 194 I F0 OTBALI. jitter or two, didn't seem too surprised or upset by his team's showing. 'Tm really impressed, he said, that our boys won in spite of me. Gosh, they overcame my coaching to win. That's all that really matters. They would grow together, Sloan and his boys. Then the Commodores traveled to Starkville, Miss., where they collided helmet-on in a duel for survival of two lowly, yet budding Southeastern Conference foot- ball programs. But cover your eyes, for when Mississippi State quarterback Rocky Felker wasn't throwing toward the endzone, he was running, and at the end of a long, hot, disbelieving afternoon, the Bulldogs had buried a surprisingly mobile Vanderbilt offense, 52-21. 'SI guess they were just a little more mentally ready than we were,', said Sloan. His Commodores, it seems, still did not believe. The 180-degree point of Collision '73-indeed, the turn-it-all-around point of the Vanderbilt football pro- gram-came the night of September 29. With Alabama Wishboning over, under, around and through Vanderbilt 44-0 late in the fourth quarter, the entire squad suddenly vowed they would forever forget how to quit. The com- modore defense stopped the Crimson Tide cold on fourth and one to save what appeared to be a meaningless touchdown. Sloan cried in front of the players after the game, and they finally realized just how badly he wanted to win. They believed. At Virginia the following Saturday, they had their chance to demonstrate their new-found faith. Staring up at an 8-0 deficit, Vanderbilt suddenly couldn't seem to do anything wrong, and the haughty Cavaliers paid on the scoreboard, 89-22. Back at Dudley a week later, rain fell in slick sheets on Dudley's Tartan Turf, but the Commodores wasted no time in drowning William and Mary's upset dreams, 20-7. And significantly, a surprisingly large, vocal, begin- ning-to-believe crowd-mostly students-watched the mistake-free water-walk from under their umbrellas, Sloan kept warning everyone that as long as his boys continued to believe, one of these weeks they would beat a team they weren't supposed to. And what better week than Homecoming-tradition, recruits, alumni. Georgia, which had its mind on nothing but SEC championships and major bowls, came strutting through to perform the necessary evils. And down 14-3 at half, the Com- modores did indeed appear to be just so many necessary evils. But Barry Burton's left foot exploded into a 79-yard punt. Seventy-nine momentum-switching yards. And as the momentum swung, so did the combustible Vander- bilt crowd. The defense played like 11 Great Walls of China, Hawkins Golden soccer-drilled three had-to field goals and a bunch of stunned Bulldogs, tails between legs, watched the clock tick painfully down on an 18-14 scoreboard. You've got to believe. The Commodores cried. Sloan cried. Ecstatic, satisfied tears. I think we earned some respectability today, and that's what this team's trying to do. It just shows you ifyou don't give up and don't lose your guts, good things will happen to you sooner or later. It sure feels good . . .but I'm just stunned. I think I'll go home and laugh at the late movie tonight, whatever it is. I want to make this day last as long as I can. Now 4-2, Sloan's boys headed for Ole Miss actually expecting to win for the first time since Jess Neely's father laid a football in his crib. The Rebels had spent more time wallowing in the valleys than skipping across the peaks, but Johnny Vaught had returned to coach land leadj, and yes, Norris Weese had returned to quar- terback Qand leadl. r FOOTBALL I 195 gli 3 . s. ix -N .s,a. , .- 1 y ? wh nn mn- 'f.,-..,- , 'Rig A-Q 4. xi. ' N .fx x, .V X 4- wir.. FOOTBALL l 197 . I So very unfortunately for Vanderbilt, Ole Miss finally was ready to scale that peak for their blood-bout with LSU the following week, and a deadly combination of gusty field position and a defenseless third quarter sent the Commodores into quarter four facing a 24-0 moun- tain ofa deficit. But once again, a Vanderbilt team which most certainly had forgotten how to quit airmailed a pair of seven-pointers into the endzone to make it, as Sloan had promised, a respectable 24-14. After a timely week off, Vanderbilt caught Fran Curci's high-rolling Kentucky Wildcat's on the rise. With visions of Peach and Fiesta Bowls dancing in their heads, the Commodores nursed a 7-3 deficit into the locker room at half, but after the defensive dyke sprang another sudden leak in the third quarter, a 27-3 Wildcat flood gave Vanderbilt yet another chance to call it a day a little early as the fourth quarter began. But, believe it or not, another pair of fourth-quarter touch- downs fand a near TD pass at the gunj left the final at yes, a very respectable 27-17. A week later in New Orleans, a fine Tulane team was yards and yards past due for a solid display. Couple the Green Wave famine with the Commodores' so-close frustration and quarterback Fred Fisher's first poor night at the controls, and Vanderbilt dragged itself out of the Sugar Bowl a painfully whipped 24-3. So with the students leaving for the Thanksgiving 198 I FOOTBALL holidays and the Nashville crowd more interested in a Saturday college football doubleheader on national tele- vision, only some 14,000 dotted Dudley for the Tampa game-the first real Commodore gut-check. With the Spartans leading 16-15, the defense dug in and held inside the five, and Golden's toe provided the critical 18-16 win. Fisher had his finest all-around day, and Commodore fans began to realize that as Fisher threw, so went the Commodores. Which left one last Game-in Big Orange country. Tennessee was seething for eight wins, while Vanderbilt lnow 5-51 was mighty serious about a winning season and winning the state recruiting war. Sixty-seven thou- sand-many of whom were wearing black and gold- watched the Big Orange roll up a 14-0 halftime lead. But with 11:35 left in the third quarter, Vol inspiration Condredge Holloway limped to the sidelines. Suddenly, to the ecstasy and and amazement of Vanderbilt fans across the state, the Commodores passed and scrambled their way back to a 17-14 lead. A beautiful, short-lived 17-14 lead. Re-enter Holloway to slip through the Commodores' clutches and guide the Vols to their 17th point. Then, with a fourth and six from his own 24, Commodore punter Burton made a valiant choice to run instead of kick. He was smothered by a horde of couldn't-be- stopped Oranges three yards short of the first down, and seconds later, Ricky Townsend hooked through the 20-17 three-pointer. Respectable wasn't the word for Vanderbilt's closing Collision '73 showing. Throughout the year, Sloan continued to emphasize to all who were reasonable and realistic enough to listen that, All I said before the Season started was that we were going to be respectable. I didn't promise anything else for this year. His Commodores had learned what believing really meant, they had tasted and nibbled at big-time victory, they had learned the value of pride, unity and senior leadership, they had learned to over- come adversity, they had forgotten how to quit. Five wins, six losses-three of which realistically could have ended up on the left side of the Ledger. Everything was changing. Everything. Foundations had been laid. Steve Sloan's boys-Steve S1oan's men- were ready to play some real football. With anybody. FOOTBALL I 199 r w 11144- MV W-.SR M, T. Y , r I, l r . , X I , 1 lg J qi. 1. fi' ,-QD' E . ' lrl' v wr' 4 Q wha LH Ayr 'i Lf' u 3: r y f , ' ,ir 4- .X :,V ,V 42 p w '-' ' 'f : 1. 'F-1-I 'l-f - ' 77,24 ff 1, . yp.. 4-+, Ds V 'WM t . 'W i 'W E -- 1- Tr wwf , W C, 1 . .- J L H517 V' nl X Y v. '. ,L--W 'Hi N- 151 1 L ,, .u:...,5L 5. .Q V 4... Wg, I R 6 5 . 'ff xr uf l v 'F Yr MX, I ' 13-ull . ,A - .13 IJ, L. 'r I . N- nn.. CHEERLEADERS 1 -5 1 CHICEI-il.!'1ADl-IIIS 1201 I 1... ! 2 .H I ,lf I llASliE'l'IlAI.I. .. 4- . Xiu. l 0 , , ,V ... 1 :.-A . r.m2:: k 1 '- ,vga k -,- - l . -vi-AQ Outside, the wind whips viciously through the bitter-cold night-across Dudley's empty Tartan Turf, up through the dark seats, and down through the exits. The wind knifes under McGugin's empty bleachers, moans low over the infield, over the frozen yellow grass, and sweeps across the outfield slopes, toying irreverently with a long- forgotten hot-dog wrapper-with thou- sands of never-to-be forgotten memories. And then, gaining momentum all the while, the biting January gale summons all its chilling fury and begins to rush in a frenzy around and around the con- tours of Memorial Gymnasium, search- ing for a cracked window or an open door. Inside, it is game night for the Van- derbilt basketball team. Hundreds upon hundreds of winter coats have been hung over the sides of the upper decks or piled high on the floor in front of the student section. The warm, musty air smells of fresh popcorn. Fifteen thousand five hundred eighty-one pairs of eyes dance from side to side without blinking as their five Commodores weave and spring through more villainous opposition. Back and forth the five Commodores dart and cut. and break and leap and twist and dive and pass and shoot to the rhythm of a basketball thumping on hollow wood. Back and forth, back and forth, across the raised, spotlighted stage. With each shot those in the student section leap and scream, leap and scream, into near-delirium. On the other side of the stage, the Nashville aristoc- racy-dressed so very formally, thank ya kindly, in coat and tie or long dress and long gloves-lean farther and farther forward in their theater seats and ap- plaude the action louder and louder. And in the heights of Clyde Lee's balconies, those open-collars who bought the few remaining tickets that afternoon, protect the five Commodores with their lungs just as if those five were their own sons. Down on the floor, just beyond one end line seated in t.he middle of the Van- derbilt bench, sits a slender slumped fig- ure of average height. Now he leans back in his folding chair and scowls. Soon he is standing, staring up into the rafters in disbelief. Then he sits again and stud- ies those five Commodores-his Commo- dores-with the wariest of eyes. And now he leans quickly from side to side to confer with an assistant or yet another substitute who will enter the game to inspire the four Commodores left on the stage. His name is Roy Skinner. He came in out of the cold, out of the raging winter wind, 14 seasons ago. Ever since he has been the only one inside Memorialis walls who night after night has been able to rise calmly, knowingly above the frenzy, the tension, the chaos, the delirium. Roy Skinner: At the time of this writ- ing, his Commodores had come out on the long end of 13 basketball scores. And on the short end of just one, bless his soul. Ranked sixth-SIXTH, mind ya-in the entire U.S. of A. Oh, sure, up in Lexington and over in Knoxville and down around Tuscaloosa they had been a grinnin' and a whisperin' about how ol' Skinner still didnit have him no big man-which was like tryin, to whip up some dandy country music without no git-ar. But ol' Roy, bless his soul, all the time it seems he was doing his grinnin' on the inside. All along he knew darned good and well he was about to play him- self a whole season of five-card draw- 74 x 1? 'RT HE 15 up-dv S 9: 'N ir ' P. A! fi. . ,-A I f 'Q' 135 I , Q . as if gl- only his deck would be stacked with eight complementary studs. Yessuh, on defense ol' Roy winked to himself and knew that Jan van Breda Kolff could leap with the tallest of trees. The ones Jan couldn't out-leap, he could just plain out-smart. And the ones he couldn'tout-muscle. . .well,shoot,Bob Chess could. And the stray shots those two missed shouldn't be much problem since Jeff Fosnes, Butch Feher, Lee Fowler and Bill Ligon were always hanging around up there near the top of the backboard. And when Jeff gets heated up, he can jump-shoot with the best of lem. When Butch smells that hoop, better watch your step. No matter whether the opponent is Samford or Alabama, Lee will just flat hustle the ballthrough the hoop.And Bill. . .well. Bill can light the quickest bonfire under those Commodores you ever did see. Then Joe Ford can run the offense-and the defense-and score when the score- board says it's time to score. And just who,s gonna two-point the hoop the rest of the forty minutes? My, my, just put a basketball in Terry Compton,s hands, and no matter where he is-lying on his back, tiptoeing through a crowd on one foot, flying through the air with the greatest of uneasiness or sipping a Coke near the refreshment stand-he'll find some way to send it through the nets. Yeah, that's right. Suddenly Texas Tech, Memphis State and Tennessee had been bushwhacked, in, of all places, their very own gymnasiums, and come right on in, world-beating Alabama had found Memorial none too hospitable. Boy Skinner: He came in from no- where-out of the cold, out of the wind-when Bob Pelk suffered a heart attack to head-coach 159 victories inside Memorial against only 33 losses. HI never felt Ild be here this long, says Skinner. '6When I first took over I was young- real young-and I thought that maybe Ild rather be at a large state university in order to get the chance others had recruiting-wise. But instead ol' Roy leaned back in his chair and played mental five-card draw with the talent the Great Recruiter Up Yonder had provided him with. I don't have any special team I like to coach. I use what I get from recruiting and shape the team from there. The players get to be my pride and joy. I try to keep in contact and watch them even after they graduate. For the most part. 210 I BASKETBALL 4- 4.. . ,....,,-.Yak ,. , . .,,. N.:-,v559!'9' .-4-..... ....... .. Q. rv' . 1 J, x .1 v1,.:,.,.' '- 1, 1 Y r - 2 W ' A -' - -' ' ' 32 eff: Ti' -Q-Hi . . 'H - ' ' - v .fl , IL' 'JZ-1 - ' ' ' -ij, -. P, :mv -f If . 'Fm 53,1 , Y ,. wg- L , 3 ,4'.' L fi. they've all been successful. I like to feel I've had a little part in making them what they are. But I never planned on staying here. Then came the success and meeting the people associated with the school, and Vanderbilt started to be something spe- cial to me. Even after we had three straight down seasons, the crowds still came out. It wouldn't have happened any place but Vanderbilt. I can't explain it. I never did want to get old coaching basketball. I always thought that if I had the opportunity to do something else, I'd leave. But that opportunity never came along, and I don't want to go any place else in basketball, so I guess I don't have any choice but to get oldf' And as Skinner's success bounced higher and higher, so did his responsi- bility to the public. The last couple of years assistant coaches and recruiters Ron Bargatze and Wayne Dobbs have undertaken more and more of the chores Skinner might have handled himself his tirst few winters. 6'Coach Skinner, says Bargatze, has some qualities very few head coaches have-patience and complete honesty. He's a great disciplinarian because he treats our players like men-he gives them their freedom. He's not an initiator in relationships with the players, but he loves to have them come by and talk to him. And he's very interested in their success in their vocations. Following the home-court cliff-hang- ing of Alabama, van Breda Kolff was quoted in Sports Illustrated as saying, We realize now that Skinner is a better coach than we thought he was. The first couple of years here, I wondered at times. We used to blame a loss on the coaching staff. Now if we lose, we're going to blame it on ourselves. Many of the other successful coaches, says Bargatze, would have marched Jan into their office for saying something like that and really chewed him out. But not coach Skinner. He re- ally appreciates something like that, be- cause he wants his players to learn to appreciate him by the time they're seniors or after they've graduated. And in the last five years, we've changed our recruiting in this respect: we still go after the best-known players-those with speed and shooting ability-but we also want a player with goals and intelligence. This is a disad- vantage to our program in that we'll go after a smaller number of players and it makes our margin of error slimmer. I think our success will open some doors this year. We need some numbers. f'But the thing I really want to point out is the value of our four seniors. We had those bad years a few years back and everything looked like it was on the way down. People even booed coach Skinner some. Everyone was disen- chanted with the selfishness and individ- uality we had on the squad. But then people saw these four play on the freshman team, and they were exciting. They started talking about J an's passing, Terry's unorthodox shots, Bill's moves and Lee's long jump- shots. It was like a ray of hope. They began to establish a relationship with the community, and the season-ticket hold- ers started coming back. These seniors showed an unselfishness and a willing- ness to work. Gosh, they've all come so far. Lee came in as an unclassified student, now heis coasting in with just nine hours this semester. And before Terry came here, he thought a shrimp cocktail was some kind of drink. But these four deserve all the credit in the world. Coach Skinner thrives on their kind. I think they've played a big part in the overall improved attitude around McGugin.', It's getting warmer inside Memorial Gymnasium now. That popcorn aroma is smelling sweeter and sweeter. Those piles of coats are getting higher and higher. And that noise . . . oh, that noise is getting louder and louder. Jan van Breda Kolff, Terry Compton, Bill Ligon and Lee Fowler are gone now, but in their places they have left new aromas, new leaps, new screams, new ecstacy. New warmth. Hey, hurry up, y'all get on in here out of that cold and wind and shut that door. Take off your coat and stay awhile. Roy's been waiting for you. -Skip Bayless Ha 'L , A:-Mffw' ' N ,An x,, ,-rms...-X. , . .l 147' V .. +--3' 'ff , .Q-' , ., .. 4 W -.--V-,1,,,-w - , ,. V 11, vial., I . gdirfig- ,.,.4gq:':' Y, X ,-w 'tb .- , Vx ,rw-.A-1 1-1 - - , ' ,,4 7 ' ,fn- 5.1 Aw -H:-IFF? ,nw A' ., 5 7 ff' A-.-,..,-'j .. .....- , -- -., F... ISASKE'l'llAl,l. I 2lIl BASEBALL ALI. 216 I BASl IBAl.l. By Skip Bayless He came to Vanderbilt, this Harvard of the South, back in 1968, did this Larry Schmittou. He came from Goodlettsville High School, mainly beacuse athletic director Jess Neely couldn't find anyone else crazy enough to coach the only baseball team in the Southeastern Conference which didn't have scholarships to offer. Well, after all, Neely probably reasoned, he's just some two-bit Nashville high school coach, and anyway, who even cares whether the Vanderbilt baseball team loses one or one hundred games a year. Schmittou's squad finished 8-19 that first spring. But Schmittou, you see, had never coached a loser, and he wasn't about to get used to it. Then, very quietly, he began to bluff and shrrfiie, manipulate and cormive. I've got a Connie Mack team thigh school ageJ, he thought, that nearly won the Connie Mack World Series this summer. So, hey, why don't I talk my best kids into coming over here and playing college ball for me. Then I'll show these Vanderbilt people how baseball is supposed to be played. The Hustler called him Smokie, after Los Angeles Dodger coach Walter Smokie Alston, and he had his image. Then the student body found out how much fun it was to sit out in the sun on McGugin Field's hillsides, down a few ttoo manyj brew, and unmercifully harass the opposition tjust a beer-can throw awayl into pitiful miscues. And soon the Nashville people began to End out how much fun it was to watch another Vanderbilt team win more than it made excuses. Since Schmittou first shook his head at the dirt and rocks and slopes they called McGugin, his Vanderbilt teams have won 158 games-and lostbut 105. And oh yes, they won one, two, three straight SEC Eastern Division championships-and last year their first SEC crown. And all along Smokie continued to bluff and shuffle, manipulate and connive. A halfscholarship here, another full one thereg a promise here, a little white lie thereg a prestigious game or invitational tour- nament here, a top-ten ranking there. And he continues to coach-and exploit-his summer Connie Mack t.eam. Last spring, Smokie's Commodores won 36 games-another SEC record-while losing 16. Oh yeah, many of them had played under Schmittou as long as they could remember, and nobody will hide the fact that plenty of squabbles-healthy squabbles-resulted. Some players even swore they were playing against Schmittou to prove to him they could win the SEC. You see, he manipulates. He wins. Down deep they respect him. Somehow Schmittou bluffed himself into the prestigious California Riverside Toumament in March, and when the Smoke had cleared, Vanderbilt incredibly had bushwhacked the number one and two college baseball programs in the nation, Southern Cal and Arizona State, and finished third in the field. These wins, Schmittou t.old the world, have to be the greatest in the history of Vanderbilt athlet- rcs. After a never-expected, never-quit 9-8 comeback win over Tennessee on the way to the Eastern Divison title, the Commdoores actually toyed with Alabama, 5-1 and 13-7. for the SEC championship-and an opportunity to represent the conference in the NCAA District 3 playoffs in Starkville, Miss. Schmittou just keptwinking that 1-told- you-so wink. Nossir, he wasn't about to quit until he showed them Vanderbilt high-rollers what a national championship looked like. Then, behind the indomitable pitching of Jeff Peeples H2-2, 1.64 ERA? the Commodores had big-inninged Georgia Southern tranked sixth nationallyj, 62, and another late-inning miracle of a blast by centerflelder Tommy Powell tnonscholarshipl had sent North Carolina State t.o the losers's bracket, 4-2. But all of a sudden, the overworked arms of Peeples and John McLean t8-4l the two arms the '73 squad lived or lost by, began to tighten and tire. Beginning to panic, Schmittou bluffed and shuffled. but Georgia Southern t5 to 23 and Miami t6 to 55 wouldn't fall for it. Their deeper pitching staffs caught the Commodores on the ricochet and double-eliminated their first shot at all the NCAA marbles. You have every reason to leave with your heads up, he told them. You have won your division, you have won your conference and with a break you might have gone to the tcollegel World Series. It was a fantastic year. But right then and there Smokie realized he was still one small step away. One step. My goal here, says Schmittou without blinking an eye tunless of course, it's to winkl, is to win it all-the whole NCAA. Now we've got to get one or two more proven pitchers. That's the only thing that kept us from going to Omaha tsite of the college World Series! last year. If we just would have had one more Peeples or McLean, we would have been there. And then at the rate we were going, nobody would have stopped us. Our program is to the point right now that we have a good chance of getting any good player we want in Tennewee. And now we're even beginning to branch out to the other states in this area. We have so many players in the pro baseball that's it's really beginning to help recruiting. But I just want to whip Southern Cal treigning'NCAA champj. And now Larry Schrnittou, Smokie Schmittou, some high school coach from Goodlettsville, suddenly finds the Harvard of the South at his knees. He has had several offers to coach minor league baseball the last two years. Of course, says Schmittou without hesitation, my family's been the main reason I've stayed here. But if I could coach in the 'bigsf I'd leave right now. But I'd rather coach a good college team than a low minor league team. And l'll guarantee you that within four years we'll have an accept- able playing site and seating. People will be able to watch us play without getting grass stains. We'll have more and more people coming out, more paying customers and more money spent. We're always going to have good teams. Baseball is important t.o our athletic department. At this point he winks faintly again. Yes, we're going to have another good team this spring. But as usual, it's going to be another different type team. We'll be similar to last year in that we won't have any power hitters. But our biggest asset will be speed. We'll have a world of speed. And we'll have an excellent defensive infield. Well definitely be a contender for the crown, but everything will depend on if anyone can take Peeples' place as the ace. And two other big question marks will be how good we are behind the plate and in the outfield. I'll tell you what: We've got more raw talent than any team l've had here. But we only have t.hree seniors, and the rest of the kids ,ff-s x rx' JI' 'Kip-. Qian-pw 45 , l a . i really haven't played together. Playing so well last fall really helped us a lot. Now, lo and behold, Vanderbilt liasvhull-tlie program t.hat just six springs ago perfumed on some cow pasture ofa h-team football practice field and celebrated il' it scored a run-is serving the Harvard of the South as an inspiration for its football and basketball teams. Each season, Smokie has lighted up a little bigger cee-gar, leaned quietly back in his chair and decided-oh so slyly-exactly how to get the most runs-for and least runs-against out ofwhat The Man has provided, Three division titles-and one great big ol' SEC crown. And this season, Smokie winks and swears to anyone in the count ry who will listen that he has his most raw talent ever. A pair ofAll-SEC juniors, Rick Duncan 1.3433 and Ted Shipley t.335l are back at Mc- Gugin to take Smokie's program one step further on their way to the 'bigsf And somehow, just when Smokie needed that new ace so desperately, deadly lefty Ricky Rhodes thillside to hillside heati re- turned to school after a year's absence. Wasn't that another wink, Smokie? Maybe the Nashville Nucleus is gone, but now Smokie can puff a little easier on his cee-gar knowing they left behind a lasting founda- tion-a lasting tradition that he can sit back, grinning inside all the while, and watch snowball toward each new spring. llASl'1llAl.l. I 21 2201 RUGBY Wwvgwgjvqgpvfp 5--nxvf -,1 . g,Ag,..,- . --- g. , 9 - .ein- A q,,n:, f. - '. IAQ. 3 -. X. - 1 ' x-Mm-v '- ,D iw. :ggiffji?'4',i..:i:-.g,?--X, in wr- ' RUGBY I 221 222 I RUGBY Somewhere in this land of ours. Dr. Geoffrey Berry and Pat Apel are smiling broadly. The founders of the Vanderbilt Rugby Football club saw the group evolve from a handful of frustrated jocks who were happy to have a break-even season to a power-to-be-reckoned-with which whipped the Uni- versity of Massachusetts and Michigan rugby clubs in the 1973 Gator Invitational meet before falling to top- ranked Notre Dame. The rugby team's size has more than doubled in those years and boasts 45 participants for the 1974 season. I was told to try rubgy because it was kind of like football, said co-captain Gary Watkins who played as a non-scholarship gridder at Vanderbilt in 1971. I loved football, but rugby was definitely better. You see, rugby is a football player's dream, Watkins continued. If you're a lineman in football, you never get a chance to score. In rugby all you have to do is pick up the ball anywhere on the field and take it across the goal no matter what position you're playing. It's that kind of personal enthusiasm that has pro- pelled the VU rugbymen to their present level of achievement. Innovation continues to be the key to Vanderbilt success as the club introduced the first Southeastern Conference Rugby Tournament to Nashville in April. The tourney included Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Ken- tucky, Louisiana State, and Vanderbilt. Most of these teams were disappointed they hadn't come up with an idea like this earlier, said VU rugby president Scott Ross. This should be a great step forward for both Southern rugby and the spirit of fellowship which will come out of such a large gathering of players from diverse areas. Of course, it must be remembered that rugby stat- isticians are as concerned with 9-2 season's records and 18-game home winning streaks by the Commodores as they are with number of kegs of Pabst beer consumed in winning the partyi' after the action has ended. The camaraderie is great, the winning is great, the fans are great, Watkins observed. Our biggest problem is that only 15 players can start and no substitutions are allowed. That causes a big loss of players unless we switch our starting line-up around each game. RUC BY I 213 224 I SCCCER 1 sa- mf ,-.fggd-, 1fy:,1 Vanderbilt's soccer team has a way of making up for the football losses when it meets the same opponents. Take the Ole Miss Rebels and the Tennessee Vols, for example. Vandy's soccermen were thrashing Rebels 7-1 on the same day that the footballers were losing to Mississippi. The VU booters also defeated the Vols three times during the fall with two of the wins coming in Knoxville. Leading scorer Devinder Sandhu Q11 goals in regular seasonl was just one of the vital cogs in the 9-2-3 fall performance, but he left quite an impression on Com- modore foes with his reckless drives toward the net. It's just every now and then that you feel like you have to avenge those Vanderbilt losses in other sports, Sandhu states. Since UT is our biggest rival, it doesn't take much urging to get fired up for them. Last spring Sandhu and 55 other Vandy soccer per- formers embarked on a sort of 'spring training' for the fall outing by participating on three teams in the Dixie Amateur Soccer League. The league featured countless players with international experience, and it gave Vandy hopefuls a chance to get into peak physical for such powerhouses as the University of Alabama-Huntsville. . -' .VII ,Q 'f P?l6K -.125 .. v - Ulf Qilzh.-f'.'-if 1' 1- f4.!gil -1L1gv'Qy,l:,g 4 . --4-,QQ-.. 's. 1 1'f--7,'i'1'i4'iY4'5-.qi Sv 1-S- 2 L- ff. .'. 'maui-. Oddly enough, UAH has one of the top soccer pro- grams in the South and the Commodore booters gave the Alabamans a severe test before falling 4-3 in the Southeast Soccer Invitational in Knoxville. You 'd never believe their facilities in Huntsville, said Vanderbilt goalie George Gilbert. They've got a dressing room as big as McGugin Center and give full scholarships for soccer. Right now, all the Vanderbilt kickers can do is sit back and dream about such developments. Let's face it, Sandhu notes, we're still a club sport, and we're usually disappointed to be playing before small crowds. Sandhu and his mates received a break, however, when the soccer unit was supplied with an on-campus playing field next to McGugin Center for the 1973 season. And players such as the sophomore Sandhu are con- fident of the future. We know we can go all the way unbeaten next year, he says. We lose our starting goalie John Lanier and a real leader in Nat Robison, but we also have a lot of young guys who can take their places. SOCCER l 225 ... ,Q , A, .fx -gif: V x ' W. ,'Q5'-Tn. 1 1 -- , g'9irI'!f513T .ur 1'-3 .,..-.-',5.-lg ' 1 f -'11 4.. ,. :f:Q:A1,'.j,,-' -ui x 'TR'f',3ge',: , 4 S. .yr , fi' - 81' 226 I SOCCER 33,431 ., 1 A 734. 1 . .f T M . . bg? gg- , . .- , '-i ,A-1'-H '. -r .V 1-1 g 1 Sq. I t'f'ff,L-Ain jig., 5-'THA - H 1' L.1-:t 'i51-5:13- g. iw , 'liff a ,N 13 iw .A .' X., . 'mix 5 4 .il 'ul 'i V .pr ,..x I 1-' 5. If .'i:ff'.-F' ..,.,.. -. 1?-i v w. .,'L1l7,L1!jif5 2. 1? 4 , il. U?'w, 'ti . E -' , , '- Deniz. 95- , ',s:f,e': - x F.. L. , Iv! - m .QUE '54 aim .pw X19 r - ,- ., :, ,4--gl Nfl 1225- cs IU:-c k?f .'5?-ff Y , r. nlg- ' ,r.--v,-'.f,.'q..- r-1 .- -- . . 'li -1- 14. - if 'gm' jk R, ffpg,-V' rf Y ggi'- xl 'f-5' K , T -..1.ff:r'qfy-if 'M' fm '-'- 3 'L .3 .....-I? X' -1 '- '1 - 5- is . .. 7 I' . ' , f' , 1' 1 . V I. 'vu 1-47.- MV .w.Eu.-,.- r .,,. -U 1 Vt- 7' '- v- -.c :-- , - V. Y, w . K, - fr - 4, QQ 5'-5 , . ' A ' , ., .1 W-52 , -12,5 N SOCCER I 227 I By Bo Carter Rebuilding is a word that crops up in the vocabulary of several Vanderbilt coaches, but Commodore swim coach John Smith has rarely evoked the term. The 1973-74 swim outfit faced this task, however, with a horde of young talent and several battle-hardened veterans. Freshman dist anccmen Boh Matush and Scott Shephard joined record-setting sophomore Bob McNult.y to make the Commodores a formidable opponent in middle distance t500 yd.l and long distance 11,000 and 1,500 yd.l events during dual meets. Versatile Brad Vear and Rick Vinton supplied plenty of punch in butterfly and breaststroke races as well as being members of the medley relay group. Ve1.eran three-year lctterman George Welborn tsprint freestyle! and the team's only proven lmckstroker, senior Chuck Van Fossan, Earned clutch points all season in their specialities and gave the club a nucleus ot' leadership. But what about seniors Bob Cutanuch and Jell' Perout, the tankels who had almost singlehandcdly provided the winning points in the 1972 and 1973 Vanderbilt Invitational victories? Their cases were similar to 1972-73 captain John Stein who missed most of his final year in the pool, Perout succumbed to early injuries and illness which can bog clown any accomplished 1'reestyIer's training timetable while Catanach, a consistent l.M. performer, sat out the early part of the season with other unforseen difliculties. You know, this year's mnior class appeared to have great potential when it arrived, Smith said. Alter watching their progress for four years, though, I think that it is the young and hungry ones who turn out to be your best swimmers. Smith's observation tells a lot about the psychological aspect of collegiate swimming. The rigorous self-training sessions followed by frustrating losses can clishearten a potentially-potent tanker. But there is also the dilemma of over- preparedness. '1That's one reason why we cancelled the Vanderbilt Invitational this season, Smith stated. Our swimmeis reached such an emotional peak in preparing for that meet, that we had little stamina left for the Southeastem Conference meet six weeks later. We went into this season with a lot of young swimmers, but we have some fine potential for the future, added the Vandy aquatic coach. What we need now is some community interest and student support. That would go a long way toward improving team morale. The Commodores' record in dual meets during the winter indicates that Vandy will not have to maintain a 'rebuilding' image much longer. SWIMMING I 231 P p s 1 r w TENN S By Bo Carter What a schedule! Vanderbilt senior tennis player Jim Mixon exclaimed after noting that the Vandy netters had to play all nine of the other Southeastern Conference tennis units in 1974. Mixson's astonishment is characteristic of reactions by other members of the team who have never played against more than three or four SEC schools in dual matches in one season. The Florida native was not a member of Vanderbilt's 8-9 crew in 1973, but he recalls the glory years when the Commodores were winning 13 or 14 matches per outing while he was manning the No. 3 singlw post as a freshman and sophomore. Coach lKenJ Thompson has lined up some very good opponents, Mixson noted. We've got some experience and some promising fresh- man players, but we just don't know how the season will go. Thompson, who replaced eight-year veteran Jack Vredevelt as tennis mentor, is making some positive strides. We had a party in the fall to try to bring the team members closer together, Mixson said, and I think it helped. Team unity is going to be important this spring. Concerning the zero-scholarship problem which plagued Vredevelt each year, the senior netter sees a big difference in philosophy between the past and present coaches. Coach Vredevelt used to tell us that as soon as the football team had a couple of winning seasons in a row, we would be able to build a sound, scholarship-based team, Mixson observed. I think that with Thompson it's a question of motivation, he continued. Most of us haven't really developed as much as we should have, and studies have always come first when there wasa school-tennis conflict. He's shown a real interest in individual development. Summer tournament play may also have its effect on the 1974 spring showing by Vanderbilt. Last season's top two seeds, Rip Trammell and Marschall lSmokeyJ Runge, participated in several Nashville open toumaments and bene- fined from them. You learn a lot more in toumament play than you can get by practicing every day, Mixson said. Most of the guys on the Vanderbilt team are club players, and these toumeys help you to see how good you really are in respect to the competition. Losing in them helps you to put your game into perspective. Joined by seniors Scott Shaw, Bill Durfee, and Tom Langenderfer, along with several untested freshmen, Mixson looks upon the 1974 slate with mixed emotions. The question for '74 is whether Thompson can mold six singles players and three doubles teams into a team-oriented group which hopes to climb out of the eighth place slot that it held in the 1973 SEC tennis finale. TENNIS I 233 Hd!CROSS CROSS- COU TRY By Bo Carter Three winters ago, they were asked to go into 'voluntary redshirt status' by athletic director Bill Pace. Now Vanderbilt's cross-country and track teams are emerging from the cocoon and establishing a program, although it is admittedly in the formative states. A former harrier named Hendricks Brown revitalized the sport in the fall of 1972, and its return after a one-year layoff has been slow but sure. Ten men answered the call to cross-country by Brown and the team's coach, Dr. William Cocke. Their initial problem was how to rejuvenate a cross-country program that had flourished under the late E. H. iHerci Alley for 31 years. That dilemma has been partially solved by encouraging signs such as a third-place linish in the 20-team Old Hickory Run during the fall and, oddly-enough, a ninth-place standing in the 1973 Southeastern Conference dist.ance race. We finished ahead of Ole Miss in the SEC meet, said sophomore distanceman George Busse, but lost to them in a dual meet 21-27. It's a lot easier to lose to Ole Miss than to get clohbered by Tennessee and Kentucky like we did earlier, adds Busse. We have trouble competing against teams that give scholarships to their top seven runners. Busse omitted the fact that one of the Tennessee harriers was Olympic silver medalist Doug Brown, a steeplechase and 1,500 meter run specialist. He doesn't omit the dedication of individual Vandy cross-countrymen, however. t'Lee Davis ran more than four hours a day to train during the season, states Busse. That makes it kind of tight for homework and other activities. It takes that kind of dedication to excel in this sport. Winter training helps Busse and his mates remember the spring season which sees Vanderbilt entering its first dual track meet competi- tion since 1970. We were encouraged by an allotment that was given to us during the fall-by the Athletic Department, Busse says, and we're anxious to get out on the Hillsboro High and MBA tracks to run in our own events in the spring. COUNTRY CROSSE By Bo Carter Youth movements seem to have imbued the Vanderbilt sports scene lately, and the Commodore lacrosse team is no exception. Player-coach Wat Bryant relies on a host of lacrossemen who prepped in the heartland of the sport-New England and the East Coast region-to lead Vandy out of oblivion. Last spring's 8-2 record, the best in VU history for the stickmen, was keyed by do-it-all attackman Dan Maoulton who returns for his fourth outing with even more impressive credentials. The abundance of young talent can't be overlooked, however. Our strength is definitely defense, says Bryant. We have a fresh- man goalie, Leighton Aiken, who was recruited for a scholarship by Cornell, and three defensemen-junior Dave Vern and sophomores Kent Roberts and Buck Montague, who could play for anybody. Bryant also cites an attack group, paced by yearling Pete Kern who scored two goals against Tulane in his initial varsity contest, as a strong asset. We've always been weak in the midfield positions, but we've got three people who are capable there this year, he adds. Who knows what kind of team we might have with this kind of talent? Early tests in the fall gave the player-coach some idea of team prowess when the Commodore lacrosse entry fell to Tulane 6-4 and to Pensacola Naval Base 12-3. We weren't dissatisfied with either of these performances, Bryant notes. Pensacola is, in effect, an alumni academy for the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and the NCAA lacrosse championships always have Navy and Johns Hopkins going for the title. Are the Vandy stickmen ready to challenge such perennial champs? No, Bryant says emphatically, we can't find a full-time coach, and our regional schedule is a lot tougher as it is. Even Georgia Tech, usually a breather for us, has improved greatly. We've got to get better with the opposition. 4 .I 1 gr 3-If it lllfllllrl- r Wlllfllllaigi -l i r vfllfl llg , ,sh k 'i ci- ..-sg it CROSS COUNTRY I 235 SKI OUTI CLUB .. . V .w-'avg : f, z.: U-. .fvi ' I , ...-nl' -.,,-,,,'-, 1 fy , :,,.1-- ,--...znz - - r. K, Q Q, ,vu .tg Lu.:-,. ' ., S. ,gig-' , will 4:- .kfr is y., '11 ra, '-.- . ff-fx Hi A H -TE, A ,'. , I, J , -V . M, . .r., F' . 'Jia-I 1532 :I ..- -. '-2, . ..:. '-.-H? iff J 1 ,Q ,,,.,'.,,,.-,,. .Lg-'fr5.,,. , ' 'Q- uay -:Q ing'- - 'ut -M --q:fxR1XL, -.11 -. 14.4 '- Z ?' f. ' 1.17 1 : PQ- ef ' 11554: .- .ij -f::2f'n',N,,-5,,A . , -'?.- 515- 127.9 L. ,. -- -- L.:-.5 . .V ,, -,,,, . 1-.w'.,. JW '. -M-. .,. L, Q ---nw . :-. -'E---iff.. ' 1 A .. .- .,. A , , --.'--.- . '- ' '. ., ' J 1' ' g,. K w' .- Q ,. -. . 4 xr .' ' f .-u: x, , i ' T -',- SKI Xe 0l I'lNG CLUB I 2517 .x . , '-s-1..g.4z-' Q Mp. L'-- --1-Avff 'v A. 1,01- 1, nba R, . : gs. ZHR ISPORTS fi973Q L 'l LQ.-' ws:- HM. , ,L .Ji I M vl ' - - ' 9425 xx f ,If 1, xx X X n X - X X 1 a Ye i m s f x HOMECOMING I 239 GREEK aw gum-:ans GREEKS 1241 ALPHA EPSILON PI 242 I ALPHA EPSILON PI iii., 69 Steve Karr fAutoJ Sol Miller fKrankyJ Mike Friedland fFact01'J Chris Gibson KT. CJ John Pogue lChipJ John Dennis QJ. DJ Barry Weiss fThe Barrister! Durward Harrison lWoodJ Mark Barron Joe Rudolph Gil Bubis Aavon Wolfson Porter Richmond CP. YJ Hal Freeman CH. BJ Morning The morning dawns with a thunderous pounding on the door. Let me the Hell ini , the booming voice booms, but to no avail. The Pi house is locked tighter than a vault. Soon, one of the slumbering brothers, awakened by the plaintive knock, unlocks the portal, and the Pi morning scene commences. First on this AM's agenda are a few games of pinball in the Warehouse. The considerate brothers are careful not to awaken the mystery guest, who will go nameless at this time. Then comes a sound from the back stairs-a dainty tip-tap. Who else could it be but neech? The occasion for heading over to the C-room for morning coffee and conversation has arrived. ,. Afternoon The Pi afternoon is ushered in by a familiar soprano call to the lunch table. The brothers are well aware that a beautiful lunch and an undera- bundance of Weaverade awaits. This ordeal is gen- erally followed by a pilgrimage downstairs for a few games of pong for ping depending upon which end of the table one getsl. Highlighting this area of Pi-life is the famous crouching serve which is illegal according to international rules. Then for some, it's off to the PM classes. But for the pride of the Pi house, those award-winning brigands of the bridge table, it's hit the decks. But we Won't deal with those jokers now. Night With the setting of the sun comes the Pi night scene, and more especially the Pi weekend night scene with its scandals, shuffles and surprises. Cer- tain features make the atmosphere distinctively Pi, even to the most casual observer. The pungent aroma of day-old beer, the remains of burgers, tacos, and the other assorted foodstuffs, those per- sons out of line being personally removed. The Great Basketball Offense Controversy, the Green Slime, As the Pi House Turns, T. W., sitting around the temporary tube, and heading over and back to the old B-ball games. Not to be forgotten how- ever is the Brothers Three's contribution of pl and d. This and much more. LP? You decide. ALPHA EPSILON Pl 2 '4 . tavern Seated: Cleft to rightl Helen Jonesi Rosalind Jackson, Judy-Fenton Tillion Cleveland, Mrs. Ida Martin fGraduat1e advisorl, Gail What: ley, Phyllis Bankston, Rosetta Davis, Amy Brown. Founded in 1903, Howard University- standing: fleft to xightJRwaynellJordan, Debra Bright, Sylvia Taylor Its establishment inspires scholarship, leadership Sharon Kelley, Donyss Cotton, Nancy Richardson, Patricia Rogers and service to all mankind. Myron Oglesby QPres1dentJ, Eunice Rogers. Eta Beta Chapter of Alpha Kappa is an existency of Vanderbilt-Peabody women and was chartered on the campus Nov. 10, 1972. 244 I ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA S., iTQl. ,Ig X gif ..., N , JI1 w 1 ,JV 'fig 1-1 N GREEKS I 245 ALPHA OMICRON PI a K Q at 4 liigfgigfw f- 246 I ALPHA OMICRON PI 'QCA fig ferrari? Karen Rauch Libby Owen Chris Benz Sally Baum Danna Kelley Anne Harrison Rose Susan Davidson Candy Shens Martha Lee Wyatt Carol Jones Paula Dean Sally Self Barbie Babes Joy Bradley Lolli Robinson Anne Dunlop Ann Holloway Ruth Ellen Smith Stacy Economou Barbara Craighead Angie Berry Weefus Dickenson Annette Mazeau Mary Lee Susan Findley Jane Britt Suzie Hoffman Barb Chandler Nancy Glenn Roberta Green Gail Moreau Ann Riebel Cheryl Hibbett Lisa Head Vicki Lancaster Sharon Bach Sarah Ford Patrice Pritchard Barb Miller Nancy Britt Mildred Brooke Joan Robertson Debbie Ewing Marcey McCarrell Margie Roberts Cindy Neff Nancy Hart Kath O'Conor Robbie Roper Sister Loflin Julie Fassett Beth Kern Carroll McCullough Ava Ellwood Martha Yount Lynn Higginbotham Becky Boston Sue Sue Derryberry Jane Wilcox Linda Raker Sally Tucker Mary Ann Dale Toby Stilz Susan McRae Margaret Yates Order in Variety we seeg though all things differ, all agree. -Pope ALPHA OMICRON Pl 247 ALPHA TAU OMEGA 248 I ALPHA TAU OMEGA Leapin Gene 'Young Arms Alyward Bozo Simons Stooge 2 Hartly Hall Ralph McGibouy Dub Manin Bird Man Page Butch Thoma Hart lD.C.M.H.J Hart J. D. CSpacemanJ Strichland T. lGoldenfingersl McCowan Donnuts Noel Miles Wipeout Walsh Richard Gillerman Vinney Starr Stooge 3 X. Neal Crenshaw Frank Buck Biller Stoo C. C. Cody Esq. Matt Yonge Toe Mivanda Fetch Campbell Amph Welborn n gel P BETA THETA PI 'KMMP9 f 250 I BETA THETA Pl if Vi vel if ii' Tiger Moore Steve Rhodes Scott Barksdale Steve Geech Dr. Dave King Tim Tubout Tom Gill Dick Cummings Pappy Tom Grimes Larry Eckenfelder William Moseley Dave Stratton Gordon Alessio Deb Hehn Gene Hammond Bubba Maring Steve Kain Bob Kane Jeff Ottom Bryant McKee Kenny Tate Doc Gillespy Gerry Gehring Gris Bowden Andrew Tootall Q, ,- V 1 I i TH GAMMA PHI BETA 9 aw llllil pw 252 I GAMMA PHI BETA is 59-i4Wi'45'5'iEj,'i'7 YQ n4a2Q?.?, Susan Lucas Anne Phillips Cathy Thompson Joy Kendall Paula Allphin Susan Kelso Eileen Effinger Chris Devanny Sue Keller Eva Furner Susan Riggs Luann Daugherty Linda Daniel Annette Swank Sherrie Rackley Elaine Duke Tricia Huff Connie Brandon Sandy Green Sherry Peglow Mary Fern Tate Carol Schola Carol Koysf Jan Strother Joan Scheele Anne Rountree Suzanne Wood Pam Masters Disa Krestensen Debbie Brice Donna Tanner Karen Weaver Jane Krabill Connie Pelster Sherry Kritzer Karen Cain Holly Harper Vickie Millsyi Ginny Place Rosalie Torres Julie Madsen Anne Wright Jac Stroud Becky Olive Cathy Csaky Suzanne Drexel Barb Goss Margie Letner Barb Tate Lisa Geibel Don't walk in front of me I may not follow. Don't walk behind me- I may not lead. Walk beside me- And just be my friend. CAMUS C AMMA I HI Bl-.TA 253 R tv Qiiteiem rl it 5522533 at DELTA DELTA DELTA Wage in Eagan Wiiimi Susan Shands Betsy Branscomb Julie Truss Susan Gore Jane Berry Genie Cato Kathy Follin Mary Collins Elizabeth Rankin Ann Simpson Sue Hunt Amy Morse Louise Martin Nancy Draper Janie McCauley Jeanne Ann Freeman 254 I DELTA DELTA DELTA QDAYULTAH DAYULTAH DAYULTAIPU Nancy Holzmer Sally Pettit Kathy Davis Sara Hamric Ruth Johnson June Borg Anne Maxwell Didi Garza Elise Dunklin Debbe Demaray Mary Helen Bond Marilyn Minks Bobbi Bracewell Jane Kennedy Dinah Holman Debbie Fry Nan Hawkes Pam Barrow Amy Neilson Becky Morris Ali Gregg Linda Peacock Mrs. Werdna Phillips Kathy Kraft Brenda Brown Jessie Gallagher Stephanie Beavers Ruth McCorkle Betsy Kaufman Jo Ann Longshore Dorothy Dana Peggy Flinn Carol Woods Dede Beasley Mindy Millar Susan Hartzoge Jane Montgomery Linda Arnold Jane Williamson Donna Mayo Pam Cooper Liza Reynolds Barbara Williams Kim Weller Nancy Wells Ruthie Brown Charlice Geiber Adair Wakefield Carolyn Thomas Mary Lu Jordon Susan Efland Anne Pohli Mary Keeney Sally Pruett Georgia Ann Fry Graeme Kelley Sissy Williams Terry Northcutt Beth Knight Sarah Graham Celeste Finucane Nancy Ford Helen Burrus Val Hunt Betsy Vidal Tish Callender Phyllis Burbridge Beth Cooper Betsy Cooper Susan Floyd Beth Colvin YW he -41.8 h.....,, 4- ' -0 -Aaqu 1 '4 DELTA DELTA DELTA KDAYULTAH DAYULTAH DAYULTAHJ l 255 DELTA KAPPA EPSILON 256 I Dl'Il.'I'A KAPPA EPSILON 'K Tom Evans Tex Hippie Mystery Biff Abdul-ben-Tool Pugsley J EB Kaye WRD Coon Turpin Crash Dr. Cardey Holsum Sheik Hilts Rags Pitz Henry Balam Tomlin 111 Man Omar the Tentmaker Filipino house boy, Alex Torrance Lardo Boy Wonder YD S.D. Bye bye, Burger Olongopo S.E.G. 111 Munchkin Mr. Crowel Crazy Man Big F'n Lew Fuzzy 5X-5 - Y AJ. The merry band of brothers dressed out in full for their daily formal-a session of Jeopardy, with Art Fleming. See if you can outguess the Paducah Pounder, the Bettendorf Bulldog, the Houston Rocket, and the other Wizards of the Gamma Hutch. Derclicls for Ten Romance for Twenty Pinball for Thirty The Navy threw this He got trapped by a Give these guys a Lunchmeat to the dogs. Huntsville Hurricane. shoebox with a pair of flippers and they'll play it. Lust for Peg Gamma Gossip for Fifty Deke Throat was How about them 'Dnresl filmed Behind That Green Door . And the Final Jeopardy Answer is: Seventeen of these just mounted the Woolly Goat! Thank you, Don Pardo 'lisa G DELTA KAPPA EPSILON I 257 ZETA BETA TAU ai!-We 'fi 258 I ZETA BETA TAU 52, i f94?'fi 3f?i3?i ef' emi K Steve Sainati David Pine Mike Solomon Henry Levi Jack Rich Rick Simovitz Linda Zhffrin Larry Zuckerman Valerie Gallin Dave Braman Richard Harris Mark Spiegel Bob Henning Tom McCarthy Tom Davis Rick Kisber Elyn Saks Susan Adzick Steve Katten George Masterson Felix Caldwell Larry Saripkin Elaine Silverman Susie Baer Bob Pozen John Bernstein Jay Miller Richard Bond Eric Schaeffer Steve Lidd Audry Farkas Lynn Gerwin Carey Beard Karen Scott Ken Grier Steve Fayne Rick Eiseman K. C. Weiner Greig Stein Doug Lapidus Gerald Kline David Greif John Dana Carol Scherr Rich Lober Sherrill Perkins Bill Nordlund Rusty Saunders Jo Lyn Baker Chuck Myer ZETA BETA TAU I 259 KAPPA ALPHA 260 ! KAPPA ALPHA Wiz fl' 5553 Mgilidihb .L -B 5 W illem Dale Huddleston Don Heidbrier Tony Brannon John Heflin Harley Thomas Billy Culp Tom Kitsmiller John Wharton Randy Hooper Frank Johnson Don Linn Steve Lee Jim Spiatt Ben Walton Glen Hoskins Herron Weems Keith Graham Richard Greer Ted Baker Tom Scott Al Huddleston Billy Longshore Rick Timmons Rob Baker Brad Cowgill Tom Colven L. T. Southall Bill Leader John Cashier Tom Crews Dave Higgins Frank Mergele Walter Weems Les Davis Harvey Ford Raleigh Kent Lee Johnson Mike Yankee Paul Hyman Tom Moller Bill Kahlmus Ben Harrison Buck Montague Steve Morimoto Mike Flanagan x J , '51, 1 v .1 N I 1 5. 0 ff 1- . 414 VXA . . - 4 ,di if x W N KAPPA ALPHA l 261 KAPPA ALPHA THETA ' W W5 Ao ,aaa Pi ra ml 4 'rl .ilwaggfgfwgiiii 262 I KAPPA ALPHA THETA 5 Awe Mama Lee Allen Stephanie Paparozzi Jamie Jennings Teddi Waxelbaum Francis Olsen Florence Gifford Betty Biggs Lisa White Maurus Henty Eugenia Wattles Jean Popp Dot Carmichael Ruthie Rand Bitsy Stonebumer Happy Stratton Margaret McCullough Pogo Davis Cindy Venn Sis Hickerson Binny Dallas Nancy Armstrong Ann Lehr Emily Nuaham Fade Kalanzis Emmy Collins Cheryl Black Jeanne Stewart Millie Farmer Mary Suttles Alice Boggs Chaille Cooper Linda Watts Betsy Ford Ellen O'Connell Cynthia Crook Dee Showalter Mims Maynard Jeannie Whittenberg Patsy Corn Floy Oliver Marie Hall Nanct Beach Sherri Pace Leslie Johnson Nancy Crea Pilkinton Deb Kasheer Gray Oliver Belle Schroeder Ellen Blackford Tiffa Strief Peggy Jewett Laurie Durbrow Melinda Baskin Karen Grimaldi Francis Dannals Joan Douglas Linda Paradise Cindy Bailey Mary Miles Wendy Doolittle Barrie McCann Debbie Beck Connie Fabern Cindy Wigton Martha Wallace Irwin Edwards Beth Bourland Sally Johnson Saura Trickett Sarah Powell X ,-'fm 1 tif- L ,I , xx Qi N ' .ff 91' 411. 10 4 aa P M5 4 x I4 -4' ,.- .n YN- fx. !! P KAPPA ALPHA THETFA I 263 .1 Q.:-1 -up ,-faq.-,fa . Y is ' 53 iii' , ,J 1 ,. ' x, 5. ' ,j ' ii li .. I Y u 'I li J.. l h .vh I -Wil iii l 1 y '13- KAPPA DELTA qi QA ei'i3?ii 2 alalimli 26-1 I KAPPA DELTA Alicia Thomas Scarlett Stewart Emmy Miller Barb Carroll Mary McKeen Carol Gilmore Debbie Allen Murfy Alexander Carolyn Walker Martha Maggart Tara Winklar Carol Caine Sherrill Perkins Lynn Simpson Marcia Ludwig Harriet Solmas Amy Baxter Cathy Lawler Linda Anderson Melanie Mclnturfl' Cathy Verkander J 0 Anderson Eleanor Barnard Jane Raynolds Kay Wischmeyer Lynda Mersereau Betty Walthall Sharon Morrill Julie Lyon Karis Hamblin Pam Orcutt Diane Laurer Jamie Baker Ruth Arm Miller Susan Bigham Pam Gaylor Sody McCampbell Sharon Ruben Gil Anderson Meta Conder Mary Lynn Morrill Donna Lucas Melissa White Suzy Huhtala Lissa Logan Penelope Malone Gayle Smith Sally Beale Linda Gibson Carol Ann Koster You've got to have friends The feeling's oh so strong! You've got to have friends to make the day last long! I've got some friends but they're gone . . . Someone's come and taken them away . . . And from the dusk till the I'1l stay! Standing at the road, boys, dawn, here is where waiting for my new friends to come, I don't care if I'm hungry or cold, I'm gonna get some of them, cause you've got to have friends! Friends Bette Midler Friends from the Divine Miss M Atlantic Recording Corp., 1972 KAPIA DPI IA 28 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA , ll 1- Diane Goldey Diane Love Mary Wilson Patty Early Cathy Wilson Ann Marie Deer Ramsay Bohner Janet Bowen l I 4, fra Edie Nichols Sue Rogacz Elise Shaw Sheryl Kroeger Dede Brown Becky Jo Dilcher Debby Dukes Nancy Wells 11- 1-1g ' innu- ww'-v vau-v ' -'11 -nu---W -Spare' , 4. ,Ai sm ,D KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA I 267 KAPPA SIGMA 268 I KAPPA SIGMA A Bobby Anderson Joe Roller Steele Jones Richard Strang T-bone Pritchett Jeff Hoffman George Fleming Scott Collins Linc Fuge Greg Spyridon Keith Zimmerman Charlie Williams Ted McCarley Stan Cotton Bob Funke Charles Matson Tripp Stegall Logan Sharpe Mark Houck Sammy Duke Doug Gamer Dean Bucalos Marty Strauss Ed Crockett Dennis Jones Phil Fleming Ron Bauman Steve Ramee John Reed Bowen Caldwell Tom Weisman Q.-, . .,,,- .gn ASQ! n , . 5. - , 3 'TI' 'EW ,JUYCN - 42' ' dv, ,,-W 5 --' ' :.., t. . 4 ' gg. NK--...s , 4 2---- , ' G39-, X --. 1 QA'-,nl km, v A r i . ' wx , ' g 4 S. I - ' . -N.. , M A 1 '- '-' ' -4. : 'ff . Ng, A R... 4 ' :af ri-15' .. .': -wil' ' fa-fi'-N D:'.1,f'T - , ..5- 333 .yr ,A :Q-, .g, --'A xx -. Ln Q5 idx-, 3 ' .Zigi-M 1.5: , rl, -L Q. 41 , -- , 4,4-,, -.aa-1-,faif 31-121' -.1 KAPPA SIGMA I 269 270 1 PI BETA PHI PI BETA PHI t ime f i f de eo' l 4 Gayley Atkinson Judy Kepler Jan Cobbledick Lynn Yocum Anne Julian Sally Cline Kathy Sanders Holly Dennison Ginger Yarborough Wendy Wolf Louise DiNatale Kathy Hunt Claudia Owen Mimi Nimmo Donna O'Bryan Betsy Gayle Linda Owens Barbie Penick Linda Protiva Sarah Bellows Kari 'Peterson Martha Kling Mercy Prieto Linda S. Rogers Camille Dean Kingsley McLeod Betsy Taylor Christi Couch Susan Williams Emily Martin Alison DeWalt Holly Hurst Debbie Patton Sue Sadler Marilyn Marstiller Nancy Green Linda M. Rogers Chris Hudson Beth Belasco Polly Rossiter Jane Hanes Gregg Custer Mary Allen Jan Jordan Mary Perry Karen Voss Cathy Hoffman Ann Hale Sally Hale Betsy Rubel Kathy Wilkinson Robin Magee Vicki Smith Becky Denham Katy Herrington Gay Nienhuis Margaret Jeffries Susan Weyrauch Susan Nerlson Wendy Rumsey Becky Bruning Nancy Morgan Pl BETA PHI I 271 5 . v PI KAPPA ALPHA il l G' fis lkiiii 272 I PI KAPPA AI PHA Dave Collins Hugh Futrell Gloria Swansig Jack Armstrong Kathy Dearson Lisette Carriere Kaky Hardy Leisa Marshall Ed Thornton Richard Garland John Lannom Tom Robertson Mis. Gentry Bob Catanach Marty Harrell Fred Farris Gregor Gephart 'Q R. K. Pruitt Steve McNish John Fowler Mendy Miller Nancy Turner W. Rand Hodges David Dodson Marc Macclougall George Darfus Kari Seve1'son Cissy Phelan Paul Aas Hiram Goza Bill Murray Paula Ewing Janet Martin Jason Poulos Rosemarie Finder Chip Woltz Val Vogelstein Basil Rene Lanneau Robert Ebtide Heidi Henjun Jack Hammond Steve Winkler Bob McNulty Debbie Patton Linda Rogers George Bednarz David Armstrong Charles Peay John Boone John Fritz Will Perry William Bradford my r .f, .xii ,r 1 0 '-' We Q '5 . . 1 4r' xl JV A! V X -,, X.. H1 A-Y fgtlaq ' ' XX: 3- f :f'Ai'ffI, Qgi' L u ,nf-L 'ls , 5 R X , :IN-Q. , w Ma' 1 74 z I ' L' X Q 3 ' ' -0 ' is ,ll ,, I I 4, X rfa- :LN ' , I 14,1 ,.f.,,, 1' , Vial- ZW ' ' -ly.. N ,J Pl KAPPA ALPHA I 273 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 95 459 iii img- tniffr 59 we li? ' J I 4 l r 1 s 274 I SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Jim Tate Milum Testerman Bob Gillander Tyler Spratlin Catlin Cade Jim Cato Jack Howser Randy Short Steve Vale Rick Hoson Andy Currie Nelson Crowe Wrong-way Corrigan Robert Ramsey Jamie Wilson Sam Nicholson Waldo Floyd Rick White Bruce Trimble Bob Cooper Jim Dowden Bo Johnson Louis Battey Heyward Hosch Whit I-Ball Whitson Bill Norton Big Rich Bill Oliver Dr. Brant Lipscombe Jim O'Neill Mike Barraza John Pitts Ware Bush Tramell Hudson Rick Patton Tom Curtain Brooks Patterson Forde Kay Crawford Binion Ed White 17 -Q l . 1 r 4 , 1 4 i ,L Bob McLaughlin Jack Capers Bill Buzzell Chuck Grice Joe Sheehan Tom Steele Mr. Joe Marula Summers Pinhead Ramsey l-lotty Young Dave Dodson Nicks Williams Andy Isakson Ms. Mary .4 li. I ,J Iii' Ji SIGMA NU The Sigma Chapter of Sigma Nu Fraternity was estab- lished at Vanderbilt in 1886, seventeen years after the found- ing of the Fratemity in Lexington, at the Virginia Military Institute. The ideals of the Fraternity are embodied in our Short Creed: To believe in the Life of Love, To walk in the Way of Honor, To serve in the Light of Truth- This is the Life, the Way, and the Light of Sigma Nu- This is the Creed of our Fratemity. And we strive not to be hypocrites. A 'Q i t 1 , flliimil J L fri fl . z in will v A 276 I SIGMA NU Drew Goddard Sammy Dinicola Steve Il-:ard Art Noonan Mike Clinton Craig Kuykendall George Hilgendorf John Reese Murray Wags Bonnie Brill Ralph Roland Phil Johnson Rob Goff Tom Green Pat Mulloy George Buse Robby Montgomery Steve Parey Bill Freed Steve Klein Bill Chenault Ed Coyne Bruce Harrington Cary Troll Pulliam Richard McKinley Hank Gatlin Russ Blain Roger Jewell Don Begley Scott Loemer Bob Warren John Wolford Carl Blatt Bob Engel Chuck Fitzgerald Jon Peach Haag David Hyman Townes Duncan Buck Paden Bo l-leflar Exie Harvey . Jeff Winslow Rod Riggins Mike Geitz Biff Baker Naomi Rucker LeRoy Claude The Spirit of JP -AXA SIGMA CHI 1 A Giiifiiiiiif 5 Wai Mali aim idtii-ifftvif-MN kii'?a?EiWg Tim Schoettle Charly Bisig Bill Speed Jim Little John Mike Regen Jim Harrison Scott Mortimer Bob Murphy Chuck Dunham Jim Mercer Greg Berry Webb Spradley Peter Freeman Hunter Handley . John Brock Dan Corrigan Bob Mallette Bob Hamess Paul Jacobson Hawkins Golden 21. Greg Williams 22. Rusty Ross 23. Sam Patterson 24. Jess Selby . Phil Davis . Bob Walkenhurst . Leo Schmidt . Scott Shaw . Bob Whitelaw . Rob Barrick . Ernie Greer . Craig Phillips . Rusty Ross . Tom Wilson . Bob Welsch .Jack Wood . Cayce Fuqua . Eric Bernstein . Jim Pittman Peter Groetzinger . John McHenry Skip Evans Bobby Johnson Ronnie Pearson . Jim Fuqua Rick Corbett Don Clark Brock Stevenson Rob Fr'icke Lee Robinson Mike Smith Bob Cadden Dave Norman Jerry Kasting Ben Rainwater Rick Engle .John McSwain . Jim Onstott . John Hampsher Logan Shillinglaw Steve Bohner Ken Quillen Brad Veer Steve Carson Mitch Grissim . Chip Zimmer . Charlie Boone Hunter Moore Richard Rathe . Tim Miller George McCollunr Jeff Colton Scott Corlew . Tom Harvey George Garrett av' A.. 9 1. .- frkv gl xi -Tr AJ.-A F . '1- ,us 'K . -4. WT. N .R-vel. Q - :- :Q 'L Xxx' SIGMA CHI I 279 I 4 280 I PHI DELTA TH ETA ,Kg :Av . Q.- f , t . , , f. Y J., ..- . nm x Peter Calanclruccio-Rocco Joe Fleming-Joe Tim Sullivan-Soph Frank Sanders-Frank Stewart Bronaugh-Bun Billy Webb-B Tom Curtis-Wally Bill Freeman-Mindy Jim Calandruccio-Doo-Doo Lynn Bernard-Linus Tim Sullivan-SR Wearen Hughes-Warren Rick Boyer-Buckeye 131 Parker Ransom-Parks Bill Loveless-Doggy Johnson Hightower-Johnst Harvey Miles-H Bill Fuqua-Frenchy Scott Stern-Scott Bill Carpenter-B.C. John Eason-E-Man Andy Peeler-Mont Bob Kjellman-Chelly . Joe Walker-G.I. Joe . Tom McQuiston-Tom John Tatum-Tatum Randy Wielsma-Wiexs . Chuck Knight-Chuck Lex Jolley-Flex Ken Friedman-Friedman Art Simon-Art . John Aberna thy -Ab Frank Blair-Frank-O Walker Sturdivant-Sturd Calvin Lewis-Cal . Orman Kimbrough-Hormone . John Stone-Stoney Rick Mann-The Man . Shep Tate-Shep Blake Williamson-Stride Bill Floyd-W.O. 42. Buzz Grant-Dive . . . And those who slept that Saturday Qu' fl rv . Y ! , J gif PHI DELTA THETA Closer Closer Closer than cold on ice than white on rice than a collar on a dog Closer than a country ham on 1, 2,3 it's a great to be a Phi a hog 'if-W9 l l HI Dl-Il.'l'A TH I-ITA ! 281 5 M1871 klffiql 282 I I Ill KAPPA SIGMA 1. Peanut Piacenti Chris Klebex' Rob Rosen Bart Binning Rick Wellinghoff Quadro Thompson Mike Upfield Molly White 9, Russell Gallagher Cathy Madigan Bob Oliver Donald J. Henley Rusty Miller Ware . Jim Valentine W. Daryl Sandexs G. Edmund Clark 18 19 20 21 22 . Steve Jacobs Kenton Voorhees Polly Rossitei' . Jack Barmess . Norm Mclnnis 23. Skip Bayles 24. Bill Fay 25, Al Atkinson 26, Jim Alpha Hibbett' 27 Linda Peacock 28 Fred Lloyd 29 Betty Hathcock 30 Bill Herald 31 Dave Kyger 32 Will Earl Godwin 33 Murph 34. W. Alexander Holl is J- .11 A , , -aw ll ble 1 , ll ll v.. ll I , H: l lu IQ iwexm- is ..- ,- hi Q., 1 1 1 iw, hs. my 7 1 'n , 1 Y' 1 uX H741 cf, i AT 3' fv- vu- 'K 5 pg 'A di 5 K A K N 'X .VMS eff? f s J ' W .,x-7 z -'Nb V' '.. nf. 4 3, mv. J , - .x -r -r PHI KAI'I'A SIGMA I 283 PHI KAPPA PSI L84 I PHI KAPPA PSI . Bob James . Eric Smith . Mark Browning .Joe Gordon John Murray , Charlie Payne Bill Shippen 8, Sir Cesil Creep Norman Frost Larry Hargett Tommy Smith Joe Hrasna Dewey Teske Larry Grover David Lewis Mike Crowe Jeff Wright Steve Heighman Steve Upham Mark Brenzel Don Davis Cecil Ross Kirk Von Rosenberg J im Can non Richard Eckert 26, Tom Derr Bob Sullivan Randy Harris Mark Hoover David Mullins Bob Homm Jim Bonnet Pat Marlette Lans Levitt Joe Baker David Bonnet Scott McCoy Heath Clift, David Malone Chas Morrison Ray Herod Olie Abel Jimmy Stewart Charlie Miller Bob Schumacher David Weiss Stuart Crisler Frank Pallotta Mark Staples , Jim Allison Dave Doering Rick Barnes Henry Jarrett Frank Benham Tony Sprigman Brent Bertke Eddie Martin I do feel first of all that friendship cannot exist except among good men. For friendship is nothing else than an accord in all things, human and divine, conjoined with mutual goodwill and affection, and I am inclined to think that, with the exception of wisdom, no better thing has been given to man by the immortal gods. Friendship offers advantages almost be- yond my power to describe. What's sweeter than to have someone with whom you may dare discuss anything as if you were com- muning with yourself? How would your en- joyment in times of prosperity be so great if you did not have someone whose joy in them would be equal to your own? Friendship was given to us as the hand- maid of virtue, not the comrade of vice. But inasmuch as things are frail and fleeting, we must ever be on the watch for some persons with whom we can be a friend, and who will be a friend in return. For without friendship, life is no life at all. It creeps imperceptively into every life, and suffers no mode of exis- tence to be devoid of its presence. This is all that I have to say about the subject-so esteem it that you will think nothing more excellent than friendship it- self. Cicero's, De Amicitia In memory of James W. Stewart, Jr. PHI KAPPA PSI I 285 . CHI OMEGA A real friend is forever a friend. flwiliaiiiibi iwtlw lta BAA 8 Louise Timberlake . Janie Coe Beth Marston . Flo Barnard . Rebecca Dickinson . Marilyn Vuksich . Cherrie Felder 8. Edie McElwain 9. Micki Muse 10. Stephie Strohm 11. Cathy Pearson 12. Susan Trigg 13. Alayne Crowell Leah Dickie Lisette Cariiere . Ann Winters Jennie Ward Polly McLeod Melinda Dunn .Tes Brown .Claudia Manson Mis. Ban' Rebecca Kirkland . Jana Banahan Patty Pitts .Judy Yoder . Sharon Musselman Anne Crandon Angela Pardee Elaine Green Gail Nichols Mary Ann McCready Jan Heller Connie Judson 35. Tori Ellington 36- Sue McSwiney Rose Marie Pinder Vikki Streuli Cindi McCreless - Julie Dewherry Holly Sutherland Laurel Smith .lane Flachmann Ann Polk Martha Ann Peters Pat Garvin Dianne Gannaway Carol Honey Betsy Thrasher Becky Miller Sally Frerking Carolyn Dawson Ellen Brittain Nancy Evans Maiy Ellen White Jan Hommel 57- Cile Many 58. Martha Lee Slater 59- Jane Arendale 4+ .ff N J LH! OMEGA I 287 'F? ' wk- -If-F , L , 5, vi 1 Q OMEGA PSI PHI 288 I OMFCA PSI PHI ' . -eil' 1 , L . fit '- 15451 nd ' ' I 5 l - . - 4 , an----1-1. Alvin Simpson Larry Wooden Larry Drayton Jesse Edwards Dale Newton . David Smith 7, Johnny Legget lla Q1 Qj xi .Y--Q A GREEKS I 289 ADMIN1sTRAT10Nf FACULTY - 1 if ,.a ZH D5f:.f, f 59 'fr ,- - V+ 'Y-I -.. ,J .v . 1 ,,- 1,1 , .1 w . ' ' ' , A . , wr . ,,.hgh?1 A . 1 I ,u10L1,gf, - -1 . ..,a-nilw' .-j, ,. wj' 5 .- qfi--f -,,g.,- , V, . 5, JH. V, Y -' .:.-j., .u.'., ' - '.1u,,,1j' 34,4 --gm'-.7 ' 1 - 731' may . AL Y x,:',5-:QI .. HW: Ri, 4 .!+'u.., wer' V FA , Ira,-g -,iw ' ' ff 11551 ,,. F' - ,,-41 4-', : , yi jr, .'14' 1.5-'L N Exif. ' V+ 1, , V ' ,- --nu fJ':Qf.'-f . - . up .Y-.Aw ' f ,'J.2w . X' ,mv ffeji' lwimk' '- VYW1-f-17. '- . ' f J:,' 4 I . ' A' L ' I -A .,,.b -v .. A- - . 3 A - Q.. w v H- ' Sl, . 1 1 - w . , .,,,y,-,uf ,f. g,-'ffl ff 315' .JJ SLM ..1 I' 4 :ntfvgi , rg,-' WW,-V , z..+ U.-uf. img .. 4 'N' J'- .lm-., .' f A-peg gg 'g.-'M If v V kvw U..-...ll ul, V .QE ,.,4-.. ,. , f..,, ,- ' x .,'f '.1-,. ,. .. ' ' L7 , 1.4 J' N zz-. '-Vu.'Y.: , ' . ' . ,Ln n:.,', '. .'l .5 .,,'.. ' ' wg .,..,Q.1, ,,,,.,.-,. 'N-I L' .,f,,- A .Q xi' T' ,f2r-r-- 13, 4 -rv. ff wg, ,.'2-f-Ib,-11'--pw ' N..A'-lf'. I ,. -':v', 'rw -,. .,,gx.',1-,. .,, S9412 . -.1--f rw-.-'J wr 'Q 4 - .J ,. w J, -' I ftgi.. 'ff ' , f . R- vkeng 2, f A 1- . , W. V -,, ,tc FI A ' ' 'ful- :A A In 1, .I . 4' 'V ., ,. WL .5 ff, wg. ' ,f. L. I - ,,' .4 Qij5Cc'j,11L-1' .', V -flux? '. ff '-P5 i.V-?f,. -, r ' ' 11? Gi' v ,umm ,FTE ' . V' . -' me if.-45 .I A U , I . 3 '4'- ' ' ' 1:,,l, ,,-S' ,pda My x su. H, ,.,,, ,.,, 5. lv . .13 f A ff f CHANCELLUR ALEXANDER HEARD X x A XAXX 4 ll N 284 I ADMINISTRATION f a. , o infar- s 1' A 'Q ., , X VICE CHANCELLORS left to right John W. Poindexter Rob Roy Purdy James R. Surface George Kaludis John E. Chapman ADMINISTRATION I 295 Nicholas Hobbs PROVOST 'nwrlg Imllllll r i l WWII 1 I , gif' Robert McGaW SECRETARY OF THE UNIVERSITY ADMI'NlSTR XTIOIN I 297 gli. RlGH1'f Howard Hartman sr'H00l. OF I-ZNGINEI-:RING 11E1.owf Wendell G. Holladay C. Elton Hinshaw Forrestt A. Miller Ruth G. Zibart John L. Bingham l'0l.l.I43GI-I 011' ARTS xl SCIENCE X Y ' :BJ-..:V l ACADEMIC DEANS 'DEAN OF , THE COLLEGE ' 'i 293 1 A DM INISTRATION DEANS OF STUDE T LIFE ABOVPU Robin L. Fuller K. C. Potter, II Anne Elizabeth King Sideny F. Boutwell James H. Sandlin Shirley Maxwell Stephen Caldwell Margaret Cunniggim Dorothy Minnich 300 I ADMINISTRATION W a X 'i' . - . N. 'V7' 1- ulirmin u 17di 'P-'C WG ' 9-9 4 Af 'O Q N 'Ni' ' Ns 1 4 In F I 11 I e K , p 5 3 ,ig I i Photograph by Knren Carrington , Mad1SOH Sarratt VICE-CHANCELLOR EMERITUS -1 I . ,. ADMINISTRATION I 301 302 I FACULTY AFRO-AMERICAN STUDIES Akbar Muhammad Director of Program ANTHROPOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY Row li Ronald Spores Mary Voigt Sheldon Goldenberg Ronald Parris Michael Miller How 2: Emilio Willems Mayer Zald Norma Shosid ,Io Anna Kaplan now :sz Omer R. Galle Anthony Oberschall Earnest Campbell Walter Gove Richard Peterson George Lewis Bradley Hertel ASTRONOMY AND PHYSICS 304 X l ACUL'I'Y ROW l: Horace W. Crater Arnold Heiser John Paul Barach Akunuri Ramayya ROW 2: Jerome Wagner Stephen Reucroft Medford S. Webster Sheldon Stone Ingram Bloch Robert S. Panvini ROW 3: Paul Galen Lenhert W. T, Pinkston Charles E. Roos Ernest A. Jones Robert T. Lagemann Joseph H. Hamilton Royal G. Albridge ARMY ROTC FRONT: Julian H. Turner Ralph H. Jackson Horace A. Maclntire BACK: Joel M. McElhannon George M. Massey John E. Miller James E. Coby Allen E. Brock Walter W. Griswold CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEATED: William Wright John Williamson John Roth Franklin Farrar STANDING. Paul Harrawood Robert Lott Norman Schnurr Knowles A. Over Dil-lard Jacobs R. D. Tanner ll 7? fx V X. F.. di vt.. 'Fi' X holser CHEMISTRY LEFT TO RIGHT: William B. Peatman David L. Tuleen John R. VanWazer Mark M. Jones Thomas M. Harris James P. Fehlner Melvin D. Joesten Charles M. Lukehart Robert E. Rummel FACULTY I 305 306 l FACULTY CHINESE John H. Cheek, Jr. Sheldon Shih-Tsun Ma CLASSICAL STUDIES H. Lloyd Stowe Robert Dale Sweeney Bruce MacBain Susan Wiltshire Carter Phillips Ned Nabers I 308 X FACULTY i DRAMA AND SPEECH Randall M. Fisher Emil F. Schulte Kassian A. Kovalcheck Cecil D. Jones Joseph E. Wright EAST ASIAN STUDIES Anthony M. Tang, Director of Program 5 if . ,J 1, Zyl, Q Z lur- ---'If'- ' W V V 1 ' it 5- 5 Z E 3 v an 41 ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SEATED: Malcolm Getz James S. Worley Carlos M. Pelaez Fred M. Westfield Clifford Ching-Ju Huang William O. Thweatt C. Elton Hinshaw Ben W. Bloch STANDING: William H. Nicholls John J. Siegfried Nicholas Gerogescu-Roegen Rendigs T. Fels Rudolph C. Blintz Gian S. Sahota Robert C. Brooks, Jr. T. Aldrich Finegan David W. Dunlop Ewing P. Shahan ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEATED: Charles Stephenson Richard Shiavi Harry Sanders Robert Wagner Frances Wells STANDING: William Rowan Ensign Johnson George Cook John Bourne Larry Wilson FACULTY l 309 ENGLISH Herschell Gower J. Scott Colley W. Paul Elledge John Plummer Samuel Longmire Chris Hassel Rupert E. Palmer Harold L. Weatherby John Aden 310 I FACULTY FINE ARTS AND MUSIC SEATED: Hamilton Hazelhurst Christine McCorkle James R. Ramsey STANDING: Milan Mihal Thomas B. Brumbaugh Ljubica Popovich Herb Peck l-.,,..'.-' Student-faculty relations are always in crisis. The Freshman Year Committee requests that each freshman advisor report to the Dean of his school his assessment of the experience of his freshmen in the past semester. One advisor expresses a sense of uneasiness because not one of her advisees has any major complaint to offer. There are always students who can't find their advisor and advisors who can't find their advisees. There are always students who express their dissat- isfaction with student-faculty relations and with the advisory system. There are always young instructors with great energy, backed by Chipsian elders with visions of devoted disciples in every prep school, who prem for new mechanisms which will bring about the new Theleme. These concerns, with different emphasis and different intensity, have always been here. When I was a student writing my war poems, I yearned back to the golden mornings when the first generation Fugitives, over coffee in some red brick mansion, rebuked the poor rhymes of their juniors. We came as a wave of veterans tfour years between my freshman and sophomore yearsl, chronologically mature and even more so psychologically, hungry to learn tand often hungryl. Our relations with the faculty were excellent, since they, too, had in many instances fought the war and understood our frayed nerve ends, our bitterness and our appreciation of the miracle of being spared to go back to the feast of leaming, My Hrst French teacher at Vander- bilt had been in the Resistance movement. Our formal advising con- sisted of sitting down across a table from some professor who helped make out a schedule and put us in the courses right there in the Old Gym. I don't remember knowing or caring who was Dean ofthe College and I think my subsequent relations with Kirkland Hall was minimal and polite. I assume that we were the joy of the various departments, just as they were-for the most part-ours, because we were insatiable, disciplined, but not docile. tWhen they built a fence to keep us from walking between the buildings of West Side Row, some ex-G.I.'s with experience as sappers, blew up the concrete posts with dynamite charges in the middle of the night, a prank which brought only a L , mild lecture from Mr. Sarratt but would probably bring out the National Guard today.J Vanderbilt, which has supposedly become a residential institution in recent years, had limited dormitory space, but those of us who lived in Old Kissam or the fraternity houses were likely to have our professors living only a block or two away. Dr. Rochedieu's place, where the AEPi house now stands, offered a friendly cup of tea or a glass of wine if you could stand his asthmatic old dog. Dr. Swint lived where the Beta House is, Mr. Manchester on Kinsington, Dr. Mayfield across the present Quad, the Lancasters, J ewells and Ingersolls on Garland. Dr. Zeek, Chairman of Romance Languages, seemed positively aloof at Woodmont and Hillsboro Road. This faculty presence in the area was one of the plus factors which we should endeavor to restore. When I returned to Vanderbilt from Berkeley in 1954, The Frantic Fifties had arrived before me. A volunteer corps of professors known as the Board of Underclass Advisors was established about that time. Vanderbilt students, after Berkeley, were such a joy that I fell hopelessly in love with them. I marvelled at their insourciance, their lack of sophistication, their lack of cynicism. Their loud rock and roll and their fraternity parties filled me with wonder that people could have so much fun in a doomed civilization! My apartment was always full of them. I played tennis with them, tutored them in a variety of subjects, listened to their' troubles. These children of the Fifties are my hidden legionsg they send me word of their successes and failures, they send me their children. They help me to believe that students and faculty can communicate. The children of the Sixties demanded better student-faculty rela- tions, just as they demanded everything else. The University, which tried to give them everything they wanted, was not always able to please them. The most vocal and articulate, the leaders who dominated the sullen mass Ca mass riddled by guilt for not caring enough tb protest! became, not unlike my generation of veterans, the favorites of those professors most likely to take interest in their students. These leaders offered challenges, forced us to face issues, and we became their friends Cand occasionally enemiesj. But these same students took all our time and energies and we neglected the needs of the less articulate, the plodding, even the quiet and serious. Relations between faculty and students were characterized by distrust, apathy and antipathy. For the most part we learned as little as posible from each other. Relaxed requirements, a general policy of laissez faire as demanded by students, a growing reluctance on the part of students to engage in non- relevantl' intellectual activity twhich includes most of a liberal educa- tionl, all widened the gap between what they want and what we want and our concerns often clashed instead of coinciding. The present advisory system based on the residential unit, is both a recognition of the stand-off of the Sixties fthe emphasis on the group, not the individuall and a serious attempt to get faculty to go to the students who have stopped coming to them. Some contend that we have special problems here at Vanderbilt, problems of being ourselves, difiiculty of communication, social hand-ups. My best friends, the people on whom I have had the most influence tfor good or bad! have not necessarily been my advisees. They may be friends of my advisees, students in my classes, students I meet by accident on the steps or Rand Terrace. Something chemical draws us to begin to communicate, in spite of the eternal taboos. But the system shows we care, it helps us try. Our ideal in the future should be to use every effort, outside and within the system, to remove the constraints which prevent us from reaching out to our students' minds las the missionaries say, wherever they are J and them from reaching out to us. No era, no upbringing, no teacher preparation, no system can pair us and bind us without the constant individual effort to love, to understand, to hold out our minds to each other. -CARL R. PHILLIPS CHANCELLOR'S CUP RECIPIENT FACULTY l 3ll FRENCH AND ITALIAN SEATEDI C. Maxwell Lancaster Dean R. Zibart Jean Leblon Dan Church Jacqueline Wachs STANDING: Raymond Poggenburg Carl Phillips Morris Wachs James S. Patty GENERAL BIOLOGY SEATED: Frederick T. Wolf Robert B. Channell William M. Clement Dean P. Whittier Lee H. Pratt Elsie Quarterman James J. Friaut Charles E. Farrell STANDING: Burton J. Bogitsh Clint E. Carter David Nunnally GEOLOGY Richard G. Stearns Arthur L. Reesman Nichohas C. Crawford Anthony W. Walton Leonard P. Alberstadt SEATED Heinrich Meyer Josef Rysan Antonino F. Gove Nina Gove Margareta Hiett Igor Chinnov STANDING: Hans Joachim Schulz Phillip H. Rhein Richard N. Porter James E. Engel Marcus F. Motsch 1 'GX GERMAN IC AND SLAVIC LANGUAGES Sergey Alexandrovich Zenkovshy FACULTY I 313 314 I FACULTY 'T rrrrvrvr rra-vrrrVr,Pr,rprrv-vvfr ... .5 . fmy, li i f , t v l l HISTORY FRONT: George D. Summnn Douglas Leach Hubert Is-zhemwmd Jacque Voegeli Leon Helguera Howard Boorman Paul H. Hardacre Donald L. WIIIIUIS Peter Marzahl BACK: Forrestt A. Miller Charles F. Delzell Dewey Grantham Frederick Schneider Alexander Marrlmnt Henrv Luc Swint Kermit Hall Uta-Tenate Blnmenth Stuart Grover Holger Herwig Sannxel MeSevency James E. Haney Melvyn Leffler Herbert Weaver al MATERIALS, MECHANICS, AND STRUCTURES ROW 1: James J. Wert B. N. Ranganathan Paul F. Paukman Rnhert -I. Bell ROW 2: T. S. Tarpy, Jr, Robert J. Bayuzick Hugh F. Keedy Donald L. Kinser Elmer B. Carnes Robert M. Havketl Roger M. Webb Fred W. Beanfait William F. Flanagan FN- fn , FACULTY I 315 MATHEMATICS ROW 1: Neil A. Eklund Rielizlrd Arenslnrl' Robert Miura Philip S. Cmnke Huy! D. Warner Robert I.. Hemminger ROW 2: Charles S. Kuhane Eugene Hamilton Michael D. Plummer Stephen D. Comer Horace E. Williams Richard Heisey ROW 3: .lzmws R. Wesson Morris L. Marx William L. Grams George W, Redflien, Jr. B. F, Bryant Ricluwcl -I, Larsen Lawrence T. Ratner MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 316 I FACULTY SEATHD: Gisela Mosig Oscar 'Vouster Thomas Bilning Daniel L. Friedman -lon D. Weil STANDING: Leonard S. Lorman John H. Venzlhlu. -lr. Robert -I. Nell' Giovanni Ui Saxlmtn Xi L NAVY ROTC Sl-ZATED: M. D. Tweed James C. Brown STANDING: Henry S. Beukema David J. McMahon Alan P. Shizle Anhrey W. Bugle Kurt O, E, Tschaepc Donald R. Gardner Robert E. Houser Curtis E, Brooks NURSING Sara K. Archer Amy Frances Bmwn Julia Jane Hereford Helen F. Bigler Judy Jean Chapman Mary Louise Donaldson Nel Getchel Virginia M, George- Barhara Fox Grimes Mary Evelyn Kemp Joyce K, Lahen Lucille H. Anlsehrook Margaret S. Buchanan Frances E. Carson Patricia Chamings Catherine H. Dennis Mildred M. Fcnsku Justina B. Franklin l-Irline H. Gore Barbara H. Harris Darcl G. Ht-ss Dorothy Kent Michael H. Miller Hildcgard M. Salvnius Kcnnuth A. Wallston Glenda li. Woodard Gingur Ross Alessi lithvl Battli- Michael Irving Burger Carolyn Bess Gloria Calhoun lithvr Center Barbara Gail Bos Christman Virginia I.. Davis lilizaheth C. Dayani Dorothy' H. Gaskin Patricia Ann Gauntlt-tt I'1-arline Gilpin Annt- Harnory Ann Baile Hamric Varol l-I. Higgins -lack A. -lacnli Larry li, Lancaster Sandra Allen Long Lydia Luttrull Fr.-licia I.aw11:ncu Luslie Borg Moore Susan A. Morgan Virginia Mary Oldfield Gail C. Osturfiuld Fruida Hopkins Outlaw Marjorie C. Poole lilizahut h Iioln-rsun Suzanne M. Boihackvr Sally Ann Sample Carol Ann Solnmon Virginia T. Slt3gl'l2llI0l' Patna-la Watson Bnrhara Lee Wemer Ramona Bryant Young Annette Kirchner Sast 13' Barham Wallston FACUIJVY I 317 PHILOSOPHY Charles Scott Michael P. Hodges Donald W. Sherburne John J. Compton Henry A. Telon Robert R. Ehman Jeffery Tlumak John Lachs Clement J. Dore POLITICAL SCIENCE 318 I FACULTY sHA'l'1ilx Alex Dragnich Robert H. Birkby Derek J. Waller J. Leiper Freeman STANDING1 Richald Pride James Thompson John G. Corbett Harry Howe Ransom Gene Larimoie Benjamin Walter John Dorsey .. ,155 I 5: EE EE PSYCHOLOGY ROW 1: Carol Izard William Smith John Harvey Jon H. Kaas Richard Blanton Bruce Bloxom ROW 21 Arthur Robins John D. Bransford Nancy McCarrell Richard D. Odom Macalyne Fristoe Leland Thune J. C. Nunnally STANDING: Robert J. Barrett William F. Caul Jeffery Franks Martin Katahn Joseph S. Lappin Keith Clayton William H. Conner RELIGIOUS STUDIES SEATED: Charles H. Hambrick Richard L. Brubaker STANDING: Lou H. Silberman Ewing P. Shahon Doulgas. Knight Daniel M. Patte FACULTY I 319 -SOCIO-TECHNOLOGICAL SYSTEMS How 1: Robert T. Nash Karl B. Schnelle William Y. Smith Ernest G. Freudenthal George W. Malaney Paul H. King Row 2: Edward L. Thackston Merritt A. Williamson Barry A. Benedict Robert A. Goodrich SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE SEATED1 John Crispin Enrique Pupo-Walker STANDING: J. Richard Andrews Earl W. Thomas Mario Bacigalupo Charles M. Vance fl -Illllllllllll ff' Y W I v eiwiwr-T2f'1'1-'tv 1.- mg - . -- A- -91 -.W bfi vj:5i5'?f'L V -in ' 1',J,g.kv' . any 1 FQYFN, . .. 31,5-J' .,... axwff qufq- l .- .af-lr WJ:-' ,,. , x' Y' . A ..-fi.. 1-,-2 :EA X . :1-..... Q - -LIT -'-K' .,:.:' '- -..L:L-y--...,, gf, .4 FACULTY I 321 CLASSES Mair Aatrishus, a, Teiae, France Basil Zaki Abu-eid, e, Washington, DC Elizabeth Marie Adams, e, Sedalia, Mo. Susan Eve Adzick, e, Prairie Village, Kan. Maureen Elaine Ahern, a, Washington, DC Leighton Aiken, a, Pikesville, Md. Susan Louise Albert, n, Maplewood, NJ JeH'rey Brooks Aldrich, a, Boca Raton, Fla. Frances Huger Alexander, a, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Patrick Lynch Alexander, a, Franklin, Tenn. Theodore Crandall Alford, e, Emmitsburg, Md. Betty Blair Allen, a, Indiana, Miss. Donald Iee Allen, a, Huntsville, Ala. Trip Allen, a, Memphis, Tenn. Wesley Walker Allen, e, Madison, Tenn. Linwood Robert Allsbrook, a, Louisville, Ky. Franklin Scott Anderson, a, Lourenco Marques Mozambique Robert Michael Anderson, a, Alexandria, Va. Judith Ann Andrews, a, Nashville, Tenn. Jack B. Anon, a, Dayton, Ohio Tommy Arant, a, Paducah, Ky. DeVan Dumas Ard, a, Birmingham, Ala. Molly Lane Arey, n, Berea, Ohio Dale Allison Armstrong, a, Coral Gables, Fla. David Rufus Armstrong, a, Bolivar, Tenn. Thomas Brantley Arnau, a, Charleston, SC J aney Cay Arrowood, a, Cherry Hill, NJ Pamela Mary Auble, a, Sandusky, Ohio Daniel Quinlivan Aucremanne, e, Clarksburg, W.Va. Andrew James Auerbach, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Ellen Margaret Babbitt, a, Bethesda, Md. Susan Lynn Baer, a, Memphis, Tenn. Michael Hardie Bagot, Jr., a, New Orleans, La. Martha Elizabeth Baitner, a, Toledo, Ohio Wendy Lyn Baker, a, Ann Arbor, Mich. Patty Joyce Balch, a, Tupelo, Miss. Susan Jane Ball, a, Northbrook, Ill. Thomas William Ballman, a, Reading, Ohio Elizabeth Pointer Bankston, n, Metairie, La. Sara Helene Barli, a, Miami, Fla. Charles Tinseley Barnard, e, Huntsville, Ala. David Waddell Barnes, a, Macon, Ga. Mark Randall Barron, a, Paris, Tenn. Pamela Jean Bashore, a, Camp Hill, Pa. Noel Marie Bassi, n, Bay Village, Ohio Kitty Bayte, a, Humboldt, Tenn. Adrienne Beall, e, Bradenton, Fla. Roger David Bear, a, Key Biscayne, Fla. 324 I FRESHMEN 1 'xlv I . gi- ,1 , x N 0 5 . Nh' lx V : 'S 1? . I -X - ' P . . V up J ,, fi, ' we Y ' ' lg rj-v 'I - yi , ' N' ' 4 wavy ny- Q-v . , ' 3:1 v: B ax - . Q :L View 1. 1 .3 9,573 i 'T f N fri N Q, 5' . l ' , .Q . ef 'R -L 19 ' L ,1' N' P A ' ik X 4+ 'X , ' - 'V EF f in 4, Y 7 V' I gwuu F ' 'fi I ., L ' .X 'Q 1 X V S- . J. t - ws l . f ' .1 4 x 1 ' 5' 'I M ' ' , w-. 1- - ' n..1-'1 E- F' grae . H ,. ' 4. , ,lf C ' is r 0 , Ll , .T L' if ,.. mi .1 it 'fi A 9- A L . I ff, -'.'.4'-'J iam ,u W Liz., ! . o 31.-2112. ,td-J!:::: .aj fe LLQI' Ha f if ww q V 'JT if-P+?-' sf' - fbi - Q' if 7.51, L1 QS 3 Q, , y ' 4 Y f xx g N, K ' K , 51, l i f A A .f h 'ar , 'fl -. A ' x .' 'l, Q J 3 'K' i 1 .. . 1 4 S 4 ' F 1 ' 2 A A J, - f ,gg 5 ' -' Ju . . f ' I Ag ca ' Q - A- ' . 9 lo- ah i .1 .-f. i ' ' ll. ' 3:2 ' ' ' .JL ' T? xg 1 K N It Y A Z . L 1- X- l ' Y' , fr ,7 E .J ,,, 1? N, fa- . 'ze x . , - -. X tirvir, -QTL J K ESQ T bljjfug 'V 1 :Yp- M X, R ,If Y. 'W ' i 1 .11 4 ' N .I F - :- Q o V V '- si ks , , ,g g Q. 4: ,- jjl-it .Q t 4. ini. LA JU 11 X . Z , V V 'KS' ,- l ' ' ' 2? .ASQFQLY - 5. gf i?.'.f'afA X ri my Xia- K 'PM I A VN seq in f N 5 1.7 - .ri N ,Q 4 aim . L ,fix .ff ff , Ha we V ' if s fa.. d- A --4, :Q x A N . vi, .xt 'I' A I W V . ri: A 'v , ' g .ff A - .v ln. F- lr' Q.. viii 4-:,.. 6 :Q rs l V, 1' i If I V iii J-MI' .- b L W P V j ll: QI .. -' - ' '2 ,,. v f' ,' 1, ii' gf- 4. if L lu D , Q - , fir X if ij 1. vu ck Q A -L ,iw .r , I, u -gr ntl K1 V rg.-S jk .NIL ' l f- ,A 'B Af- - 'nfl Tr , W 1 Ili' X Al I Q X ,Iliff in A Vie -4 Q g ' 1 -f LJ 1 W V '- FF: VN 0 ',' X 4 -+L 1- ' . 11 H n- 7' . . . 1 .fi x .' H 1 sa ' ' M' 6: F A , ll! . . ' gb ' 'L 'F -o X Ya G . 5. Y Carey Burnice Beard, a, Waco, Tex. Leon Williams Bell III, a, Memphis, Tenn. Michael Gordon Bell, a, Columbia, Tenn. Peri Margaret Bell, a, Jackson, Miss. Terry Lynn Bellenfant, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. Mike Neuhous Bellmont, a, Houston, Tex. Thomas Ferris Bellows, e, Houston, Tex. Arthur Franklin Benkey, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Thomas Charles Bennett, a, Arlington Heights, Ill Bruce William Berger, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Carol Lynn Berry, a, Milwaukee, Wis. Elizabeth Slater Best, a, Dallas, Tex. Patricia Lou Bevill, a, Jasper, Ala. Peter Stuart Bevington, e, Atlanta, G.a. Bruce Robert Beyer, a, Passaic, N.J. Holly Rea Bigelow, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Carolyn Byrde Bigger, a, Dallas, Tex. Ina Ruth Bigham, a, Nashville, Tenn. Sue Carol Birdwell, a, Carthage, Tenn. Barbara Ann Bischoff, a, Wilmette, Ill. Leslie Louise Black, a, Dallas, Tex. David Edward Blum, a, Willmette, Ill. Robert Alan Bonies, a, New Orleans, La. Pattie Pittman Booker, a, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. William Scott Bowen, a, Little Rock, Ark. Chalky Bowman, a, Wheeling, W. Va. Patterson Augustus Boyce, a, Lexington, Ky. Laura Lucille Boyd, a, Athens, Tenn. Kean Daniel Boyer, e, Havre de Grace, Maryland John Gerard Boyle, a, St. Louis, Mo. John Miller Bradley, a, Birmingham, Ala. Susan Jean Bragg, a, Old Greenwich, Conn. James Edwin Brakefield, a, Nashville, Tenn. Bennett Hill Branscomb, e, Corpus Christi, Texas Bill Leyden Branyon, a, Anniston, Ala. Laurie Tackwell Bregman, a, Chester, N.Y. James R. Brevard, a, Houston, Texas Elizabeth lone Brewer, a, Jackson, Miss. Anne Andrews Brockman, a, Birmingham, Ala. Ann Louise Brockmann, a, Frontenac, Mo. Sean Anthony Brong, a, Upper Saddle River, N.J. Arthur Scott Brooks, a, Kingston Springs, Tenn. Beverly Jean Brown, a, Asheville, N.C. Devan Earl Brown, e, Chattanooga, Tenn. Gary Michael Brown, a, Columbia, Tenn. Mary Ruth Brown, e, Conrad, Montana Reginald Brown, a, Orlando, Fla. Sanford Samuel Brown, e, Athens, Ga. FRESHMEN I 325 Shevawn Dentrise Broxton, a, Tampa, Fla. Clay Hamilton Bryan, a, Atlanta, Ga. Gilbert Howard Bubis, a, Nashville, Tenn. Alan Ray Buescher, a, Atlanta, Ga. Benjamin Parrott Bullington, a, Roanoke, Va. Richard David Burbank, a, Long Meadow, Mass. Nancie Jane Burrows, a, Houston, Tex. James Lamkin Burton, e, Clearwater, Fla. Gerald Allen Bushman, a, Little Rock, Ark. Susan Dell Calderwood, n, Dunwoody, Ga, Julie Anne Caldwell, n, Houston, Tex. Thomas Conrad Caldwell, Jr., a, Birmingham, Ala. William Edward Caldwell, a, Monteagle, Tenn. Betsy Mercer Callicott, a, Memphis, Tenn. Matt Merik Callihan, a, Pensacola, Fla. Mark Robert Cambisios, a, Massapequa Park, N.Y. Ray Worthy Campbell, a, Johnson City, Tenn. Silas Wright Campbell, a, Lexington, Ky. Christine Ann Canda, n, Chesterfield, Mo. Larkin Lee Canington, a, Waycross, Ga. Edward Louis Carney, e, Brentwood, Tenn. Edward Johnston Carpenter, e, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Karen Susan Carr, e, Columbus, GA. Mary Abigail Carson, a, Athens, Ga. Stephen Poindexter Carson, a, Bowling Green, Ky. Beth Ann Carter, a, Birmingham, Ala. Catherine Anne Carter, a, Moline, Ill. Thomas Anderson Cassedy, a, Tallahassee, Fla. Robert Horne Cassell, a, Atlanta, Ga. Brad Avants Cazort, a, Little Rock, Ark. Patricia Lynn Chailin, n, Franklin, Tenn. Melanie Jean Chambers, n, Decatur, Ga. Stephen Preston Chandler, a, Lexington, Ky. John Ford Chappell, e, Nashville, Tenn. Robert Louis Charron, a, Chicago, Ill. Cathleen Marie Christian, a, Gretna, La. Ellen Douglas Clark, a, Memphis, Tenn. Frederick Morris Clarke, e, Shaker Heights, Ohio Thomas W. Clarke, a, Nashville, Tenn. Anne Marie Cleary, n, Nashville, Tenn. Emiley Louise Cleveland, a, Houston, Tex. Melinda Ann Clinard, a, Metairie, La. Catherine Lee Cohagan, a, Lebanon, Tenn. Jamie Lee Cohen, a, Blytheville, Ark. Catherine Elizabeth Cohill, n, San Diego, Calif. Michele Denise Collins, a, Murraysville, Pa. Jeffery Craig Colton, a, Brentwood, Tenn. 326 l FRESHMEN ,fwiu A n 'lb Q. rf u - M.: fam? . ji, . -4. - , :Lf 1 vi, ' -' Ax I hi . X 'f v 'f nfl if ff 5 K .4 -. H I w ., - , ff. ' xl N is ',- if 'll for i K J L . ,-2? S Q Y '. . p E! X' ' .t FX ,A H N r V' ,. u I. 5 ' , rj ox 3 1- - A-:Q .fi D. w -.- , Q .g . ' F . I ' 7' 1 Y-2 , , f V Q. N. w K .L E I 4: I .', Q x N ' I . 'H ll ui . 3454 ll lr V vv rg is -v- f ., , .L ,- -5 Q. 'T' T7 1 ' J s... X Q J ' n ' . f A' . ,. ' I X fb N V ' fr -.-.. ff' J f . . Eau l J. Lfhff. 1 ra' v,,, ,l A ev fum ff? Ll . - 79 5' I 3! '71 n l ' ,W N K ,U .M L' .- . ' ' W K .wig Hnaifv- . 'Il-3 , ' If 'Z' , g A '11 . X C X 'I it A T - -'zz ' l 4 A g -ff r A mf , bw-J in qw ' if N ' U - ff Q .4 A Q , - g is ,L ' r A, . ' -1' 'f' ' l ji 'A - V? K ff 1 X. - E F 2 !gx5.:31.1n , a I f v I . --I. ' - 'il ,, . ff . 1 ill Fl' 2 . L -Liv 5,31 . 1 L J .. . X , slip. :I .I It N 3 AX, 1, -, J n -N s .1 5 1 N.. Y 1 if ' 1, 'S :H f rf M 1, 5 , li Q, 1 .. J. , VV , r I C I A K C-- .triage .4 S ' S VC . - 'I-4 -ve -f 'na N 1. lcv. 1. tp E - ,, R I .-, A A :fu ,l , 'V V X x . .gf 3 , ..- , Ia, ' , 4 ' ' . 4 i F A a . g ,. , . .1 MJ- 4- .C -:nk 7, Q 1 fi ,S- Arsf N iff N35 'h Q . s f ' Y -v- ' A ' l . , J :Q l Q ff, ji . if I Ib ,.,- ---, 4 Q ' pm ' . . f 2 A. . 5, -.., , 4 ax as 2 s:. , -.Q 'il ,A Y 1 H , ' A nm If, - . J Y 'Z Q 1 , Ti ST- -' 7 3, fv-il 1 '4' -1 - ,' 1-' '.: i wf ,N ,l-- - YZ 1 , ,I 1 ' - I , - X. , ,Q . 'c ' ' , 4 s. rf 's--. , Fifi it 532: -I 4 ' , , , ,Q ., f A t T 'Q In r 7 , i ' 1 ii 9' 'I :ei - v- 'I . 4 ' 7 fm ii ' ' ,I 1 Y Jax H 1 . ai x , I2 i 1 X ,IQ i Rt 1-V -'fr --I 5. fb y 1 V-' In ei' W ' 1 ' A R 3? A ' , , Q i - vs ,nl .f A 'W ' A 'mi v '-T an -2: ' ' .O 'E I 1 v. x, ' N K ..,. . , , '-Q.. 'i '7 'ini l v 'L ', W H ' A, ay - I . Ay B' 'I i I I my . Q 5 . was 1513! X 4 fvxgf- l -v. or X - :Q A ' - ' .A K 31- ' ,ff Q i S j 'N , f 1 ' L if f 1 , - i 1 , Jimi! f' x f Teresa Lynn Conant, n, Houston, Texas Timothy K. Conrad, a, Lexington, Ky. Stephen Webster Converse, a, Baltimore, Md. Jay Parker Cook, e, Memphis, Tenn. Gina D. Cooper, a, Charleston, W.Va. Jonathan Wyatt Cooper, a, Newport News, Va. Nancy Christine Cooper, n, Ballwin, Mo. Penelope Cooper, a, Winter Park, Fla. Vicki R. Corazza, n, Nashville, Tenn. Samuel Clark Corbett, a, Louisville, Tenn. Daniel Scott Corlew, a, Murfreesboro, Tenn. Robert William Courtney, a, Tampa, Fla. Harold Douglass Crall, a, Jonesboro, Ark. Stephen Maher Crawford, a, Tampa, Fla. Wendy Kathryn Cresswell, a, Stone Mountain, Cathy Lee Critchfield, n, Euclid, Ohio Dennis Wayne Cross, a, Bristol, Tenn. Mary Elizabeth Corss, e, Miami, Fla. William Caldwell Crosswy, e, Paris, Tenn. Michael Curtis Croyle, e, Streetsboro, Ohio Carol Cantrell Culp, a, Birmingham, Ala. Beverly McKenzie Cumming, a, Atlanta, Ga. Stephen David Cummings, a, Houston, Texas Thomas Leon Cummings, e, Nashville, Tenn. Kevin Eugene Cuneo, a, Erie, Pa. Martha Lavona Currie, e, Atlanta, Ga. Timothy G. Cutler, a, Morristown, N.J. William Cleland Dade, e, Hopkinsville, Ky. Martha Natalie Dalstrom, n, Decatur, Ala. Leigh Harris Damon, a, Alton, Ill. Sheldon Henry Dan, a, Memphis, Tenn. Mary Katherine Dare, a, Fairview Park, Ohio. Lynn Renee Darsey, a, Albuq., N.M. Richard J. Daswick, a, Glencoe, Ill. Elizabeth Ann David, a, Creve Coeur, Mo. John Robert Davis, a, Birmingham, Ala. Norris Danglison Davis, a, Arden, Delaware Stephanie Nita Davis, a, Columbus, Ga. Susan Carter Davis, n, Nashville, Tenn. Richard Nils Dean, a, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Joyce Marie DeBrosse, n, Cincinnati, Ohio Marcia Lee Delk, a, Savannah, Ga. William Redding DeLoache, a, Greenville, S.C. Pauline Ethel Delzell, a, Nashville, Tenn. G Joseph Timothy DeMonbreun, a, Nashville, Tenn Thomas Craig Derian, a, Jackson, Miss. Albert Nathen Diatikar, a, Nashville, Tenn. Sara Alice Dickie, n, Wrigley, Tenn. FRESHMEN I 327 Richard John Dickie, a, Wilmington, N.C. Joan Peyton Diehl, a, Huntsville, Ala. Robert McDowell Diehl, , Nashville, Tenn. Ann Garland Dillard, a, Lynchburg, Va. Evelyn Harrison Dinkins, a, Atlanta, Ga. Stephen Ashton Disney, a, Louisville, Ky. Steven Arthur Dohme, e, Cincinnati, Ohio Laurie Ann Dollhofer, a, Northport, Ala. Mary Frances Dominick, a, Birmingham, Ala. Melanie Graham Dorsey, a, Chevy Chase, Md. Robert Blain Downing, a, Nashville, Tenn. Patricia Ann Drake, a, Atlanta, Ga. Scott Edward Drake, e, Memphis, Tenn. Kim Denise Draper, a, Huntsville, Ala. Rena Lynn Dreskin, a, Greenville, S.C. Dawn Louise Dudgeon, n, Rockford, Ohio Marianne Ruth Dunstan, a, Webster Groves, Mo. Denise Mary Durbeck, a, Lexington, Ky. Jill McRoy Dutton, a, Dunedin, Fla. Debbi Lynn Dykema, a, Grand Rapids, Mich. Ann Tinsley Eastham, e, Luray, Va. Carole Camille Ehninger, a, Simsbury, Conn. Lisa Ann Ehrichs, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Grant Walter Eisner, e, Oklahoma City, Okla. Daniel Pope Ellard, a, Gainesville, Ga. Mary Ball Saunders Ellett, a, Slidell, La. David Winfield Elliot, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Gregory Taylor Ellison, a, Auguata, Ga. Georgia Jean Elmore, n, Jonesboro, Ark. Robin Ann Elms, a, Beachwood, N.J. Donald Mark Engelman, a, Middlebury, Conn. Richard Alan Engle, a, Providence, R.I. Susan Hall Englund, a, Birmingham, Ala. Jerry Wayne Esmond, e, Nashville, Tenn. Stephen Forrest Eson, a, Glendale, Mo. Neal Dow Evans, Ill, e, Jacksonville, Fla. Dirk R. Ewing, a, Findlay, Ohio Patricia Ann Ewing, a, Miami, Fla. Paula Reed Ewing, a, Memphis, Tenn. Elizabeth Jane Faig, e, Houston, Tex. Jonathan L. Fales, a, New Canaan, Conn. Allan Bennett Fallow, a, Potomac, Md. Aubrey Sharon Farkas, a, LaPorte, Tex. Robin Lynn Farnsley, a, Louisville, Ky. Mary Jill Farringer, e, Nashville, Tenn. Patricia Ann Fedor, a, LaGrange Park, Ill. Berrylin J. Ferguson, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Jeannie Farrar Fields,.a, Nashville, Tenn. 328 I FRESHMEN . -, Q N 1 r' . r W an if-Mg -1 NT s F . . .I -- , ' I J! E lr I' J, ' Q' i 4 Wh- f Wi b 'QQ , 1 te 'KP' Y , f F Ni' V it 'x ' ri Q -1521 9- . RN U .f. .n pf. F- 'R 5- 5.- -5 ' , 4-1 153 Nw g .. .A M- . ' X- ya. ,VA'L' 1 G , ,, , J, . 1' Ax , ,fh W .-Z7 -,X U. fl' , N i N K -. I x A hid, 1' g ' I NA l , s L . .!'f -a i P A V . . . '- , .Ill 51 -S-'Fl' ' 7'h'x 4. J l -. r T' . V .f ff , ,W ,s . I, ,Es A A li lla or r' A L 9 'TWH '. :ff 7, M' -gg K A ff g V' 7 Q SL gr Q9 .n-. 4 Q L 4 K I' .X 'A Q 1 -. ps y U 7 -iv vit 2 I '2 -V W iv -EM . A .1 .zz J., Q, v. ' I7 f - i 1 x., A ' K 8' f-I X 1 , Ib , T t Y - nj, ,A E4 , V.-it N. As. A L if .J ., 1 f ic- f - if we W, f ' -a : J- ,zz -. 2 iq? If 4 A gi' Lx 1 ' 'T f-1. , Li, ij'-4, K l ' y A ' .. - .L , J' x ' 5 K' , wx-1 - 5 - ll 5- II F: A 'A - 1 I A B , Ka- I ,E I X ' '. .. 5 Y . , 1 A A u l and ,ar , 5' , V-ef-aiu' x i' .I 3 -I l - C: ' .r . 'FJ 1 4 N, W , fpwyfi P Hx f , Y ' ' , ,, W A Q U, at , A X .fi A -1, ' . ,fe . ,A an . if G f F e ...al -llfrk Q fr- ALAN: F-'fr H V Q CY S 2 'fl V e J iwnvlv. Lx 1,1 I I ps I N! 0 a ' N rn K 5 'ii . 33- lie' , . , w- -- 1, X V. bf' lx y I ey... . ' ' V f-. A 1 ,lf 'y ,. ' ' h f ' . ,H Q' A -T , Y Y Y Q51 x ,ffflf lx Y J l 7-. -A 1- TF gf, , ,MEM Q -5. , I l lv 'A ,lr ,. .Lai R 'rj XS, , ,EL I ,Dj W ' I ' , -- I .- fa-4. .W V MTF fi - . , . ' l 1 .14 . I X If 5 I 6 , .i . . - , ' ' J,,9v,,L , ZW , f .,l,. ,- ' fm lf- F V 4' ' Q l M, Q. 1 ji f 4 . fix' I Y, .-.-,I - X Q4 A. I 1 in-All H. Lee Finlaw, e, Cincinnati, Ohio Daniel Robertson Finley, a, Houston, Tex. Rose:-mn Rinucane, n, Ballwin, Mo. Cynthia Lee Fisher, a, Rocky River, Ohio Jeffrey Reynolds Fisher, a, Columbia, Tenn. John Clark Fisher, a, Memphis, Tenn. Susanne Brook Fisher, n, Charleston, W. Va. Susan Whittier Fleming, a, Memphis, Tenn. Walter Lawrence Floyd, a, Durham, NC J anaruth Harlington Ford, a, Bessemer, Ala. Julia Elizabeth Ford, a, Nashville, Tenn. Mazo La-De Ford, Garfield Heights, Ohio Theodore Conor Mason Forrest, a, Murray, Ky. Janet Claire Forsythe, n, New Canaan, Ct. George Robert Foster, a, Clarksdale, Miss. Robert Marshall Foster, a, Summit, NJ G. Doss Fowler, a, Hattiesburg, Miss. Barbara Constance Frackiewicz, n, Huntington, Lesa DeAnne Fraker, a, Clinton, Tenn. Bruce L. Frankenberg, a, Barrington, Ill. Kenneth William Frasure, a, Brentwood, Tenn. J aniece Yvonne Frazer, a, New Orleans, La. Margaret Elaine Freeman, n, Altus, Okla. Lynne Doranne Freer, a, Atlanta, Ga. John Paul Frick, a, Nashville, Tenn. Rebecca N. Fricke, e, Houston, Tex. Joanne Bette Fried, n, New Orleans, La. Clinton Mills Froscher, a, Homestead, Fla. Nancy Jane Furey, n, Pepper Pike, Ohio Katherine Heyward Furman, a, Charleston, S.C. Laurel Fuson, a, Williamsburg, Kan. Mary Katherine Gaedeke, n, Nunda, NY John Michael Gaffney, a, Tampa, Fla. Valerie Lynn Gallin, a, Bethesda, Md. Nicholas Thomas Gallucci, a, Louisville, Ky. Wayne Gandy, e, Orlando, Fla. Betty Ann Gardner, n, Lovingston, Va. Laurie Anne Gardner, a, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Marilyn Ruth Gardner, a, Decatur, Ga. George Montague Garrett, a, Bardstown, Ky. Linda Sue Garver, n, Akron, Ohio Carlton S. Gass, a, Miami, Fla. Jay David Gassman, a, Woodbury, NY Jan Clayton Gates, n, Wilmington, Del. Georganne Claire Gayou, n, St. Louis, Mo. Lee Anne George, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ivy R. Gers, n, St. Louis, Mo. Lynn Marie Gerwin, a, Terrace Park, Ohio. PRESHMICN I 329 NY Janet Sue Getty, a, Little Rock, Ark. Charles McClelland Gill, Jr., a, Nashville, Tn. Aaron Alan Gilman, a, Lorain, Ohio John Joseph Giordano, Jr., e, Morrisville, Pa. Laurie Jo Glime, a, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Gary Alan Goforth, a, Enterprise, Ala. Stuart Harrison Gold, a, Savannah, Ga. Mike Goldberg, a, Houston, Tx. Robert Davidson Goldsmith, a, Albany, Ga. Jamie Lynn Gooch, n, Indianapolis, Ind. Mary Ellen Gooch, a, Dumas, Ark. Elizabeth Ann Goodman, a, Columbus, Ga. M. Williams Goodwyn, Jr., a, Selma, Ala. William Bradshaw Gordon, III, e, Columbia, Tn. Jean Barnett Gould, a, Mt. Prospect, Ill. J eifrey Richard Gould, a, Murfreesboro, Tn. Thomas Arthur Grabeman, a, Dayton, Ohio Karen Ann Graham, n, Louisville, Ky. Phillip Rush Graham, e, Evansville, Ind. Eugene William Grant, Jr., a, Lawrenceburg, Tn. James Crawford Gray, e, Shaker Heights, Ohio Ray H. Gray, III, e, Hixson, Tn. Bernard Riney Green, a, Nashville, Tn. Nancy Stowe Greenberg, e, Stillwater, Okl. Susan Brune Randall Greenlee, a, Columbia, S.C. William Julian Gregory, a, Patton, Ga. George Rian Grisemer, e, Cincinnati, Ohio John Mitchell Grissim, Jr., a, Nashville, Tn. Peter Vanatta Groetzinger, e, Birmingham, Ala. James Moore Guill, a, Union City, Tn. David Chester Guth, a, Tampa. Fla. William Walker Gwinn, Jr., a, Memphis, Tn. Christine Marie Haeussner, n, Jacksonville, Fla. Rebecca Ann Halbower, a, Fort Worth, Tx. Barbara Lukens Hall, n, Birmingham, Ala. Kimberly Hall, a, Potomac, Md. Lynn Hall, a, Hinsdale, Ill. Mark A. Hall, a, Brentwood, Tn. Forrest Cleave Ham, a, Lexington, Ky. James Richard Hamilton, Jr., e, Nashville, Tenn. Jeffrey Richard Hamilton, a, Bratenahl, Ohio Elevyn Elizabeth Hankey, n, Atlanta, Ga. Douglas E. Hanlin, a, Kettering, Ohio Nettie Clare Harding, a, Newport News, Va. Katherine Paynor Hardy, a, Jackson, Ms. Waller Cecil Hardy, III, a, Vienna, West Va. Carol Jean Harley, n, Western Springs, Ill. Jeffrey Owen Harrell, a, Memphis, Tenn. 330 I FRESHMEN A 4' If E 7' ig 'f is Q' 'T 1 . . 1: A Q' . V u, U ,gig 'Q a ll. .1 . ' .. ll . f K . .1- 2 '55 -' 'W' 't ' ' A, kv l- 'A X' I 4 n I . ' . A 6 4 1 'p,.'u.g ' . , X 1 ' we 4' A .J f-1 Hx, ' -T , 2. M .a it n e get .m vp I J, X- ' A -X ' ' ' il V3 1 ' ' . 4 an -L '61, n - -P 4-.N z. ,-1. vi- -. , -e 1 il I- O .- N' - r I- .Q xg' ll Q I -Q ,'., f- u - ' ' . 4 T ' fin A Q was Y ' ' ' .a . 141 K 17. 51 'J J N, ,gb 7-5? 4 gg -A 3 L, E Q, ' V ' 'X - . - I WJ ...J T f , f' 'I f rf ' fifv 'tn n' 9'3 ' ' Ln ff' i v . , - . ,pg J Q 4 'i 1 Q T. ff, is ff- -f- 9 'wi - 1 . ,A A ' If X ' ' is nl Nfl Q5 V25 x x -f an 'i . I 1 , v . l v K A 'fb' .sig i . ' M 'x f-- 8? A fa. l P- . H f- ., ,. A :Q , xi ' In J i -5 T ', r ' . 4 rj 9 '.'.A ,El N A' ,' t ' if 14 ,Q XA ' V W , 5 sfo M if . ,,1-,4. lx' 1 : 14. 1 Q ,M ' .R 4, -M-Fi U 2- :ar J :ah ee J aesa - fi , .5 f fi ,. yi ,,. V I 1 I li X A if , 1 ll, ' ', I , n X w , A L f . ' ii ff . Pi' ,'.. .xl A w V' , 1 t . ' ' MA g V h - ,ac U ' , I ,. ,, ,AV , xp Q-Q . . J N r ZI4 , U I A JW 4 I 'V' . -- ,- .' I ' 4 75 T: 'T rib 21 .. , X l . 4' In at n I ' 11 ill Li , :M fd X 1 X A 1 . Y 5 ., ' IQ 'c Q, I - Q! -' 1 Q C. - ,. ,M Q J, , V, .. - - Q M., -, ,., we :fic 3. A 31 . I 5 ,-fj gi , V 4 ' A X . :v ll. 1. - fi A 'X A' A 7 J Vwlf. A b f ll Qt fi A v . - lf M th Q 'if' 'i 3 A FY A F X x I lux ' 'fag 'N Y ,.'Q.'L+. . 1 3-ki 'W ..-.,, A , , W Q is X l .4 C . nv- -G5 H J ' -1- .3 ii i -J . ii- f .4 ,1 -1, I '11 , '13 , J J ' T . f K , . . A' 'il I im F, ' B if In K All-x ,ln , pf-fm - ' Y - H 1 ,- FF 1 . Il .ii 'T A I :F I A 'f ' - P ' 1 ' , I . 'l' sf.: .W J 'T x tr 'th Y A-'U ie . N 3- M -0.18 Q . 'ff' A 7 J, ' -1 Ja- 4 ! -A a, , ' T ' ' 4 t- V' 'gl U V lx 1 rv? xi ' ' p ,, I l .. ' ini 'ff A 'X 4 t' -- . Lucy Dale Harrell, a, Pensacola, Fla. Nancy Ann Harris, n, Birmingham, Ala. Terri Diane Harris, n, Atlanta, Ga. Richard John Hartmann, e, Nashville, Tenn. Robert P. Hartung, e, Tamaqua, Penn. Thomas E. Harvey, e, Nashville, Tenn. Teri L. Hasenour, a, Louisville, Ky. Stephen Ford Hauenstein, a, Kettering, Ohio Charles Everette Hawkins, a Stamford, Conn. William Thomas Haywood, a, Macon, Ga. Deborah Lee Hehn, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Mark Weslie Hekther, a, Coral Gables, Fla. James Thomas Helton, III, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Janet Marlene Hendershot, a, Bowling Green, Ky. Bruce Balfour Henderson, a, Wellesley, Mass. Gordon Eugene Hendrich, a, Bend, Oregan Douglas Marion Hendrix, a, Toney, Ala. Lisa Herbert, a, Dayton, Ohio Mark Phillip Herman, a, Jefferson City, Mo. Brian D. Herr, a, Barrington, R.I. John Robert Herrmann, a, Cleveland, Ohio Melissa Ann Herrmann, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Mike Scott Hertzog, a, Redstone Arsenal, Ala. John Henry Hewetson, e, Naaleho, Hawaii David Archer Hibbitts, a, Nashville, Tenn. Harold Winford Hicks, e, Jefferson City, Tenn. Michael Alan Hiemstra, a, Atlanta, Ga. Barbara Lynn Hill, a, Jackson, Mich. Caroline Hazel Hill, a, Vina del Mar, Chile Hortensia Christina Hill, a, Scottsdale, Ariz. Pamela Kay Hill, a, Carthage, Tenn. Phillip Keith Hill, a, Huntsville, Ala. Patrick Samuel Hillegas, e, Jacksonville Beach, Fla Jane Elizabeth Hirsch, a, Charleston, S.C. Douglas Robinson Hitchcock, e, Cleveland, Ohio Marion Elizabeth Hobbs, e, Nashville, Tenn. Laura Cleveland Hobson, a, Memphis, Tenn. Thomas J. Hogan, a, Glen Rock, N.J. Barbara Jean Hogenson, a, Denver, Colo. William David Holland, e, Dallas, Tex. Frances Hunt Holliman, n, Atlanta, Ga. David Edward Hollinberger, e, Belleville, Ill. Nancy Lynn Honey, a, Ft. Thomas, Ky. John Robert Hoos, a, Brentwood, Tenn. James Milburn Hopper, a, Baton Rouge, La. Paul Nicholson Horne, e, Martin, Tenn. Milton Vernon Homer, a, Ft. Thomas, Ky. William Carl Horton, a, Atlanta, Ga. FRESHMEN I 331 Robert Edward Hosse, a, Atlanta, Ga. Ann Noreen Hotter, n, Elm Grove, Wisc. Gregory Howard Hoveland, a, Madison, Wisc. Mary Catherine Howard, a, McLean, Va. Donna Marie Howe, n, Nashville, Tenn. Delphine Victoria Hulfman, n, Birmingham, Ala. Katherine Marie Huffmaster, n, Atlanta, Ga. Teresa Gail Huggins, a, Nashville, Tenn. Elizabeth Leavell Hughes, a, Memphis, Tenn. David Whitaker Hughes, a, Indianapolis, Ind. David William Hull, a, Louisville, Ky. Jane Lynn Humphreys, n, Chevy Chase Md. Stanley Frank Humpton, e, Bethlehem, Pa. Ira Augustus Hunt, III, e, Ft. Monroe, Va. Linda Fontaine Hunt, a, Charlottesville, Va. Warren H. Hunt, Jr., e, N. Canton, Ohio Thomas Andrew Hunter, a, Hendersonville, Tenn. Molly Huntington, a, Columbus, Ohio Edwin Gray Hurley, a, El Dorado, Ark. Joseph Barber Hurst, a, Little Rock, Ark. Vernon Hutton, e, Nashville, Tenn. William Robert Hysell, a, Allendale, N.J. Sandra Kaye Iden, e, Nashville, Tenn. Charles Walker Ingraham, e, Atlanta, Ga. Nancy Elaine Inman, e, Columbia, S.C. Thomas Keyser Isenhour, a, Nashville, Tenn. Bonnie Ann Jackson, n, Palmyra, N.J. Joyce Jackson, a, Hendersonville, Tenn. Mary Susan Jackson, n, Atlanta, Ga. Ronald Keith Jackson, e, Ashland City, Tenn. Craig Lowell Jacobson, a, Park Ridge, Ill. Maureen Therese Jakocko, n, La Grange, Ill. Linda Susan Janecek, n, Morris Plains, N.J. James Quintus Jardine, e, Mobile, Ala. Walter Allen Jarrett, a, Tifron, Ga. Judith Lent Jay, a, West Memphis, Ark. Emlyn Christopher Jeffrey, e, Rumson, N.J. Nancy Davis Jenkins, a, Toledo, Ohio Clay Straus Jenkinson, a, Dickinson, N.D. Danny Gene Johnson, e, Hopkinsville, Ky. Harold Bowtell Johnson, Il, a, Waterton, NY James Ed Johnson, a, Enterprise, Ala. Ronald C. Johnson, a, Tulsa, Okla. Samuel David Johnson, e, Moundsville, W.Va. Christi Diane Jones, a, Nashville, Tenn. Robert Knapp Jones, e, Memphis, Tenn. Henry Todd Kaestner, e, Louisville, Ky. Sarah Ann Kanaga, a, Greenwich, Conn. 332 I FRESHMEN 4- il - 1 ,X iff I, n Q H X ,1 .W fame:- xj' I I f X3 - , . 'X 'S I A Q W ,f Y 7 X . I ' .Q . g ar I. as ,:. Q 7: 1 J f gg gl cj, 1 -3 :L 1 57 param :QW an ., . f .ff J i fy A fi' . ' , Q E A F Int. - T! 5 ' .k X 1 ir -2- . 5 . K I , 'W ,, ,Ji- 2-fs . K f CE A, . -'A J . Vs 1 .3 I. -1 4:5 L . -dusk -,ge 'Y -f 1.1, I 'K 11.3 ay 1 ,lf I X I A pl: x' ' ,sam ,.,. . ' x - 7 . g JA . , -Y - ' Q ' V f..xYhiWry,,11IhiiMiV Q ktfgn 4 c W N 0 'Jn gr ,,, 'N 2 5 V I LL 1 -:L ,I fi -5- 0 r. but A .Nw .i . WE - : , ' ' fn 1 A ,an ', lb , I fl- 7 .nu- - . J , 7--.X Q. . t. L Q il 'ws ' . .f E . f. g, 4 ' K ,, is ' iii , r M' f' vid , 'DAQ ..!Lf. li - 1 -.. ,M I' lf Y ' -ra. .ra 'X 1, wil lr' 6 N ,sis ,Ag I fl. , , i. z.. ' 1x3:,-:.-' 1 f. I ' S:-ff -:fm - ul ff A' ' A? - 'W . ,J ,U 'Q .J . ' ' - -g .f - 1 A. . I I . ff W I 1!rL?iff'.L, ' ' 0 en .H- 4 v BI' w F , a 4 1.5 , A Jia. jg - J , f I-J .1 a, , ' X t V, x J R v LJ I v ta.. ian,-P. I5 'T ' fi' ':.- Q 41 . ,. 'M J, gg p nf. ,V .F xx sh r ., , . ,K iihi A y as 'rx' N., 1, r ,-., X Q Er, , -A4' L A . 'T' A ,AX 4if 'fV 1 'A ' . L, , 42 . .tl c g , A M f 'P r f All . ' .L-? N ,J 'g iss. Q i 477: .Y vin., sf 1 ,, M fa , 'I fy I A 1' I '- : ' Sl 2, .W 1+ ,fl fa? 31 G. S'-W yvff 7 uv . ' PFA, X 'A ' . :L ' xg .7 Q un E 4 Ayer, ,r-L -'Z L Q, Q K, 5' A 11'-.laik 3, .,, Y , 1 -'H '-.-A , ..,' .af ' g x Lf- IK al ' . 1 ,M 'wi ga F- ' ge .. .fi- .N, :L . ,, xi- - w V ,w - I 1 M - ' .L V 'I : ' W . . 4' V ' ' L , 'a- 1 mg? sr ' U r? I S I T FX Q ? ' P illegal ' fill? . , , '59, . -. 4 .:, ,N if all A V , . sa ' v ff gi el.. ,g. Y . fi - illxgff K - f F., . 55. ff-Q f ...J . ., , 'wffif f . 5 Barbara Sue Kane, a, St. Louis, Mo. Martha Evelyn Keay, a, Dallas, Texas Michael Garth Kemp, e, Nashville, Tenn. Doug Kemper, e, Atlanta, Ga. Elizabeth Eric Kennedy, a, Lookout Mtn., Tenn. Helen Marie Kennedy, a, Pensacola, Fla. Liz A. Kennedy, n, Clearwater, Fla. Betsy Camille Kenyon, a, Gainesville, Ga. Elizabeth Kerner, a, Dallas, Texas Jeff Thomas Kiley, e, Wynnewood, Pa. Judith S.'Kilgore, n, Chattanooga, Tenn. Thomas Shelley Kimbrough, e, Montgomery, Ala Celia Lou King, a, Augusta, Ga. Deen Gray King, a, Lakeland, Fla. Patsy Irene King, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Paul Lee Kirby, e, Carthage, Tenn. Robert Kahn Kisber, a, Memphis, Tenn. Richard Marshall Klausner, a, Nashville, Tenn. Richard B. Klein, e, Barrington, Ill. J eff Perry Knight, a, Plantation, Fla. Michael Lawrence Knotts, a, Cocoa Beach, Fla. Tom Michael Koch, e, Memphis, Tenn. Richard Wilker Korsmeyer, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Susan Kaye Kraft, a, Tulsa, Okla. Charles Taylor Kreischer, a, Dalton Ga. Cynthia Kulman, a, Atlanta, Ga. Barbara Catherine Kunikoff, a, Milwaukee, Wis. Davis W. Kuykendall, e, Little Rock, Ark. Wendy Jean LaBarr, n, Kettering, Ohio Ronald Dee Lacey, a, Caracus, Venezuela Glenn Minga LaGrone, a, Atlanta, Ga. Frank Harrison Lamons, e, Greeneville, Tenn. George David Landolt, a, Murray, Ky. Marian Bibb Landrum, a, Lexington, Ky. John Jeffrey Lane, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Cynthia Kulman, a, Atlanta, Ga. Nona Elizabeth LaRose, a, Greensboro, N.C. Robert Charles Larsen, e, Leesburg, Fla. Todd Pendleton Lary, e, Miami, Fla. Thomas Richard Laskey, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Elizabeth Auxier LaViers, a, Irvine, Ky. James Parrish Lawrence, e, Cincinnati, Ohio Laurie M. Lawrence, n, Encinitas, California Janet Denise Lawson, a, New Orleans, La. Charles Harwick Lee, a, Tyler, Texas Robert Erich Lee, a, Nashville, Tenn. Michelle Elizabeth LeMieux, a, Houston, Texas Sandra Mindell Leonard, a, Decatur, Ga. FRESHMEN f 333 Pamela L. Lesemann, a, Fairport, New York Tim Rolfe Lester, e, Atlantic Beach, Fla. Catherine Marie Lett, a, Jackson, Tenn. Geoifrey Roger Lewellen, a, Atlanta, Ga. Dale Alan Lewis, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. William Berkley lewis, a, Louisville, Kentucky Helen Wen-Feng Li, a, Hattiesburg, Miss. Donna Sue Lilly, n, Oklahoma City, Okla. Mark H. Lincoln, a, Little Rock, Ark. Lawrence Axel Lindquist, Jr., e, Nashville, Tenn. Michael Barry Lipschutz, a, Anchorage, Kentucky Samuel David Lipshie, a, Jackson, Tenn. William Norris Little, a, Dalton, Ga. Laurie DeWalt Littlejohn, a, Dallas, Texas Dale Roger Long, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Susan Elizabeth Long, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Betty Anne Looney, a, Big Spring, Texas Carol Gene Loud, n, Springville, N.Y. Cindy Love, e, Atlanta, Ga. James Michael Low, e, Dallas, Texas William Ray Lucas, a, Huntsville, Ala. William Joshua Lukius, a, Louisville, Ky. Bridgett Leigh Luther, a, Brookfield, Mo. Elizabeth Anne Lyle, n, McMinnville, Tenn. Margaret Frances Lynch, a, Nashville, Tenn. Margaret Alice Lyon, a, Orlando, Fla. Harold Dwight Lyons, Jr., a, Spartanburg, S.C. Douglas Allaby MacKenzie, a, Anchorage, Ky. Catherine Marie Madigan, a, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Mary Frances Mahaifey, n, Princeton Junction, N.J. Joan Claypoole Mahery, a, Athens, Tenn. Pauline Ann Maloney, n, Pelham Manor, N.Y. Marsha Ann Manahan, a, Toledo, Ohio Lucy Ann Mancini, a, Mexico D.F.5 Barbara Jean Mangum, a, Huntsville, Ala. Richard Shannon Manley, Jr., a, Demopolis, Ala. Vi 2 ' n'. I . m sl, -P -A . .., W ,Q -...,. '.-as ,.., , rw rf' ay 'xg hh K 'x fri -7' , ni 5 in :dl . ' ' Uh N Q'- 4 . u T -x . . . l X X t p Q' 5 -in Q I r , , ,. 'sg ff YK K , , T gg .A , ffl -- A -3 ,jf Af., , 5: 4- - ,,. J ' A ' -x ' . 2 I Q tml I , J fat . . ' ' ' , .s 'Qi' 1 435 lie f A Q l il. Y Q ' Q , , av v -1 1-51, . .v ,. -0- a 1 Tl ev ... ,,... 2 ,-1? -fa .L .S f . '7 2 Y Cl it , Q Q. 'ea Eleanor Lucile Mann, a, Forrest City, Ark. 1 , ' Dianne Mari?Mannarelli, e, Kirksville, Mo. -A 4 K ,. A 2 ..w xg' '., Jennifer Lynn Manson-Hing, a, Birmingham, Ala. - .2 , . Amy Caroline Markarian, a, Englewood, N.J. ' 'J' Anne Elizabeth Marsden, a, Jackson, Tenn. ' H, f Vg K ' Julia Harrison Marshall, a, Haverford, Pa. V, X V , U . I 1 :' .A 1. l I ' K A iz' A ,- ' 7 - J 1 Kathryn Dix Marshall, n, Jeifersonville, Ind. ' Debra Sue Martin, a, Indianapolis, Ind. A , .3 A U ,, SB Earle Plain Martin III, a, Houston, Texas I. ,N - J -1-4 L ,- Greg Allan Martin, a, Little Rock, Ark. '-' 7' --- ' F ' 'r ' ' Jerome Alan Martin, a, Pittsfield, Mass. ' X- -, - . ng 1 Robert Calhoun Martin, Jr., a, Columbus, Ga. . N In-K ,. W 4 If l ' X 331 I l Rl'ISllMl'IN N., V A J V P ti 'WI ,vii . 3 1 4 2? ,,, ,0- . ...adn V ,ll J 1 5 ji ll f X, -he N . V , All A M, I , qftl ,I 1 72252 , 1 Av!! A X . ' U ' If-i 'gf 1 I f 'F-' -4- 0' .' ' a g 1 ,Q , rf.. .. 1, 4 ,Q I , gg:-f 'L XF X f' ., B I n A A i .W Y liir 1 A . ' ' J V J ' . A R. ,Y ., S 1 H52 rl g W ' ff, ' - .J , - - 5. -v , -3 I ,. .gf J 155 , 43 W .-9 ,ill '--v. nv' 3, . f' ' , ' X, K Y a ' ' fi 1475 g , '- ' F -- -9 Q . QQ, J 1- ,. ' ' .1 -M, I F l ' P5 I mil :QB 3- X , x 'J' 1 1' if' ,R F 'N' .. fan . ' Ti LZ! fr ' , 'J 4' ,- .A 0 as I Y' rg Q mf' w- M N- lx' 7 N5 I 'D f -.. rl ' 'Y' VW Y-TWH 2- A+. X I at rg --- ii ' 1 N I - ,e mf A V ii V , . . it ' ' hz, J I 'F -if .vklllh 'li PP7 Q V- - 1 K -Y ' K ,G I Q I 4-r 5 ' -. Q V . A as ,, I 55, fam ' 4 g I f k 1 ,Lf 2-L, :. -, X g -I K ' X E-Uwe, L :I ,. -' ,, I I 'L . .I ' N 1 Q X .4 S5 . 'W' .Y ' - A M , , ' J -TIL J if it - ' li, . I , v X ,Q wr! X - Nh - Fa .rl I Jesse Lee Mathers, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. John Allen Matush, Jr., a, Woodland Hills, California Alice Jane Maxwell, n, Chattanooga, Tenn. Charles Alan May, a, Orlando, Fla. Ronald Lewis Mayers, a, Manhasset, N.Y. Mark Davis Mayo, e, Dresden, Tenn. William M. McCleery, a, Quinicy, Ill. Christopher Columbus McClure, a, Nashville, Tenn. Michael G. McCord, a, Anderson, Ind. Sue Ellen McCown, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Gregory Buel McCoy, a, Clarendon Hills, Ill. Vernelle McCoy, n, Columbus, Ga. Bruce H. McCrea, a, Richmond, Ind. Pamela Ann McCreary, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. William Garrison McCuen, Jr., e, Landrum, S.C. Ann Logan McDaniel, a, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Mark McDonald, a, Atlanta, Ga. Gail Susan McEwan, a, Granville, Ohio William Thomas McFatter, a, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Mark McGann, a, Austin, Texas George Peters McGuinn, a, Nashville, Tenn. James William Mclnturff, a, Nashville, Tenn. Meredith Lynn McKay, a, Davenport, Iowa Wade Hampton McMullen, a, Ft. North, Texas Margaret Ann McNichols, a, Wilmette, Ill. Leslie Jo McQuarrie, e, Seneca, S.C. John Simmons McSwain, a, San Antonio, Texas Larry Edward Mead, e, Fairfax, Virginia Sylvan McGrath Mendelsohn, a, Scarsdale, N.Y. Kenneth Gary Menendez, a, Memphis, Tenn. George Jonathan Meng, e, Norristown, Pa. James Edwin Mercer, a, Akron, Ohio William Wagner Merten, a, E. Lansing, Mich. David Louis Metzig, e, Neenah, Wise. Roger John Meyer, a, Quincy, Ill. F. Bradford Meyers, a, East Alton, Ill. Samuel Pratt Midkiff, a, Versailles, Ky. Ann Elisabeth Faulkner Miller, a, Birmingham, Ala. Richard Douglas Miller, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Robert Paul Miller, e, Casper, Wyoming Robert Rush Miller, a, Casper, Wyoming William Joseph Miller, a, Bonner Springs, Kansas Mark S. Mills, a, Mechanicsburg, Pa. Charles Edward Milster, e, Madison, Alabama Helen Mitchell, a, Jacksonville, Fla. James Aitkens Mitchell, e, Kingsport, Tenn. Roger Keith Mitchell, e, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Pamela Ann Momenthy, n, Oak Park, lll. FRESHMEN I 33 James Joseph Montague, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. Nancy Lee Montgomery, a, Carbondale, Pa. Charles Kirkman Moore, a, Metairie, La. Ellen Sheldon Moore, n, Dunwoody, Ga. Kenneth Gerald Moore, a, Altamonte Springs, Fla. Kenneth Scoggins Moore, a, Westport, Conn. Loran Paschal Moore, a, Owensboro, Ky. Mary Elizabeth Moore, a, Richmond, Va. Steven Morris Moore, a, Little Rock, Ark. Clive Newlands Morgan, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Mack Jay Morgan, a, Lexington, Ky. James Hosmer Morse, a, Winnetka, Ill. David Lee Mueller, e, Waunatosa, Wisc. Robert Buchanan Muir, a, West Hartford, Conn. Bryan Mark Mulloy, a, Louisville, Ky. Charlotte Kittrell Munn, a, Ft. Worth, Texas Marilyn Ruth Muns, a, Richmond, Ky. Sara Helen Murphy, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Robert Sands Murray, Jr., e, Mobile, Ala. Julia Jean Mushro, a, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Mary Lynn Mustoe, a, Winnetka, Ill. John Edward Musumeci, a, Bridgeport, N.J. Karen Sue Myers, a, Akron, Ohio Kathryn Bryson Nash, a, Charlotte, N.C. O. H. Naturelle, a, Arid, Arizona Walter Nelms, a, West Memphis, Ark. Eric Marinus Nelson, a, Louisville, Ky. Stephen James Nelson, a, St. Louis, Mo. Mary Lindsay Nesbitt, n, Nashville, Tenn. l, - fr ' A l ' I L- -Z-In ff-, .!-ff f 'l X X, to ll PJ J :if ii W' ', 1 If ml f' -. fa?.3il'5ll QL-ff . l ' 4 15' ' gh 5 GJ-'A fl? A in - wr l - -r .7 tv , -1. ll.. Xl I f-'T .iz 5 e 1 A x ' ' r r. ' A ' 4- x hi' ' :Fl ta' . J? W -- 2 in Q ' ffl: .R . .4 . ,, J ff , V l: ' C ll YQ. li l V lil 'ill 7: Y V' Ai 5 ' i r Q l ,. Q A ' I 'Isa l, :im f eg- 'I A A fr.-if ffl' wx i l ll .1 l l f 4 N- -vi so n 2 ' 'P' 2 iz, , ' I ' -rf '--4 1 ' ' N l -X x - g f' ,J , N . Gerald Ernest Neuburg, a, Lorton, Va. ' X ' 'Q g. ,Q I, I ' VL I .53 -- f A. if f K -7 Erik Franklin Neva, a, Potomac, Md. Q A Diane Newman, a, Atlanta, Ga. ga: , 'J ing at 'A -5, ,N Dale Christopher Newton, a, Orange Park, Fla. .A H M 'J l Q , . ' Marianne Catherine Nicastro, a, Huntsville, Ala. N - 'LVL . ' ., Gordon Earle Nichols, a, Madisonville, Ky. 'Q -' ' 'if' f A ' ' af ' ,pg aj John Rolland Nichols, a, Walworth, Wisc. x ' ' ' ' Il ,Lf N Y , , ' , ,, - ' ' . 4 :K 117 tm' ix'-1'-Y, . ., X E. l William Frederic Nicholson, a, Belton, Texas 'i 'f1 Jane Elizabeth Nickerson, a, Montpelier, Vt. H 'G' Y I, ,gi ,,, Cathy Jean Nikoden, a, Palatine, Ill. -. 5 A L. Wg f - ,K T Philip L. Nones, a, Minneapolis, Minn. ' ' f l ' 7, 'lg' ' I Peter Andrew Norowaki, a, Memphis, Tenn. , Y f . ' ,Q ,. Dina Marie Norris, n, Atlanta, Ga. 1 wif, ,Y 'X 34, sf. 3.1, . .fa A PY I 7 1' i Elaine Noton, n, Austin, Texas l Gavin Peter Nowlan, a, Brentwood, Tenn. ' fx ,,, 4 .: Y 4, 1 fl Elizabeth Noyes, a, Cincinnati, Ohio ' ,L . J, A A' ' 2, X Harrell Odom II, a, Forrest City, Ark. ' 'A ' f '. ,.'- 'J 3? , , Ebi Daniel Okara, a, Port Harcourt, Nigeria ' V.,-1 1 V ,, ' , ' ' I Elizabeth Lynn Oldfield, n, Nashville, Tenn. . l lf X ' Ig fs 4. .rm , un. 336 I FRESHMEN 2-:fr - , X E P1 . it ., V 9 5' K F: J' X ' - f- '5-3' 'fi' 1 ii li- ini -ff '55 . E M if X rf' A f f i f' .rs .x .am f. da J:-his 'Fri 'ze .R 'zu g,-5, lf fa .4195 ' dw ' A 3, W 54 as nu J 7? ' If' ..., L T 12 35 5, .V , A - 1 , . , 1 Wg- I , ' Pl Q ' X X3 1 . or V .f fy' ,f 4 ,ts ' 9 . , i-1 Q-at 4 rg .. rig. ft if 4. K, '- 3 L. 3 Ll, I X, V .51 g U I ..,V L A A X u Dx 4 X i v x if are '1 v - nv' .lg r I J- -J 2.3 1 L , V. , ' 7 K, Z1 , 1 5 1 I . , J' ,, ' ' iivgiw 1-sk 1 ...lik l ? an g 'T' J r QV' 1 P -, --'L .1 'N I K wx! V A x. .er g x, ,gf , A' 1 ,A I U Y V V ' no fx. -.1 , K. , 'f 1 V. lg --1 3' l V - il., I N, S -, ' , Q ' 1 ia. i ., ..... R.. 1 A rxgsh V Q X . uf ' T5 C .- s. 2, ' Q 'li ' A' x- 1 , W -F 1,-N? W K' .. . . - . K fi A in 1 'img . . Q: O ' -. V 1 :f FM A ' lf Paul Engholm Olin, a, Joliet, Ill. James Flemister O'Nei1l, Jr., a, St. Petersburg, Fla Howard Ross Orenstein, a, St. Louis, Mo. Susan Ann Osburg, a, St. Louis, Mo. Steven Frank O'Sheal, a, Columbia, S.C. Martin Petersen Ostergard, a, Chagrin Falls, Ohio Joseph Harris Oswalt, e, Mobile, Ala. Randal Wilson Owen, a, Texarkana, Ark. William Dale Pacetti, a, St. Augustine, Fla. Benjamine Gerardo Padilla, a, Toledo, Ohio George Pallas, e, Lebanon, Tenn. Paul Louis Palumbo, u, Lyndhurst, Ohio James Littleton Pardue, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Nancy Leslie Parham, a, Talbotton, Ga. Theodore Chesley Parker, Jr., a, Forrest City, Ark Howard Ives Parks, e, Highland Park, Ill. Paul Franklin Parks, a, Auburn, Ala. Jennifer Ann Patchell, a, Columbus, Ind. Catherine Patterson, a, London, England Sam Harwell Patterson II, a, Hudson, N.Y. Joe Paul, e, Geneva, Ala. Ben Elliott Payne, Jr., e, Nashville, Tenn. Ellen White Payne, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Nanette Lynn Peacock, a, Hinsdale, Ill. Nannette Pearce, a, Shelbyville, Ky. William S. Pease, e, Wyoming, Ohio Fred Vinson Peay, Jr., e, Nashville, Tenn. Elizabeth Ann Perry, n, Pittsburgh, Pa. William Merritt Perry, e, Ridgewood, N.J. Kay Ellen Peterson, n, Ashtabula, Ohio LeeAnn Peterson, n, Wauconda, Ill. Alan Charles Pierce, a, Key West, Fla. Constance M. Pierce, n, Clarendon Hills, Ill. Ned Barry Pillersdorf, e, Nahuet, N .Y. Leslie Ann Pillsbury, a, Northbrook, Ill. Mildred Armstrong Plant, a, Selma, Ala. John Miller Pogue, a, Roselle, Ill. Norma Rachele Poindexter, a, Memphis, Tenn. David Lindsay Pontius, a, Mt. Kisco, N.Y. Andrew Robert Porter, a, Kansas City, Mo. Heather Eve Potts, a, Greencastle, Pa. Holly Ann Potts, n, Greencastle, Pa. Jane Amanda Powell, a, Dallas, Texas Amy Margaret Praskac, a, Rumson, N.J. Phyllis Novella Prather, n, Selmer, Tenn. Charmaine Allene Price, a, Dallas, Texas Johnny Marvin Price, e, Opelika, Ala. Mary Agnes Price, n, New Orleans, La. FRESHMEN I 337 Rosie Price, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Wheaton Price, a, Lake Placid, Fla. Valere Kay Procter, a, Brentwood, Tenn. Heidi J. Pudliner, a, Okemos, Mich. Richard Carl Pulsinelli, a, Indiana, Penn. Douglas Michael Quartner, a, Baltimore, Md. Ellen Quertermous, a, Murray, Ky. Berney Ragan, a, Rockville, Md. Jean Marian Rainey, a, St. Louis, Mo. Thomas Mark Ramee, a, Savannah, Ga. Linda Anne Ramsey, e, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Gamiel Ramson, a, New York, NY Judy Lynn Rary, a, Atlanta, Ga. Patricia Jane Rasbury, a, Columbia, Tenn. Margaret Alice Ratteree, a, Irving, Tex. Sarah Raup, a, Springfield, Ohio Newell Harris Ray, e, Wilson Casper, Wyo. Robert Creswell Rea, a, Sylacauga, Ala. Roger Russell Ream, a, Brookfield, Wis. S. Mark Redelsheimer, e, St. Louis, Mo. Susan Hoyt Reed, a, Tupelo, Miss. Karen Frances Reese, a, Memphis, Tenn. Shelley Jane Regan, a, Tyler, Tex. Susan Lynn Regan, a, Tyler, Tex. Phillip Allan Regen, e, Nashville, Tenn. Hugh Edgar Reichley, e, Marion, Ala. Richard John Reiland, Jr., e, Aurora, Ohio Ed Joseph Reilly, u, Cleveland Heights, Ohio Philip Walton Rich, e, Miami, Fla. Carol Frances Richardson, a, Memphis, Tenn. Sterling Houston Richardson, Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. Clinton Q. Richmond, a, Chappaqua, NY Porter Yeary Richmond, a, Richmond, Ky. Lorie Ann Ricker, a, cincinnati, Ohio Gail Woodward Riley, a, Meridian, Miss. Mark Barry Riley, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Lori Ann Rioux, n, Punta Gorda, Fla. Nancy Ellen Rittenhouse, n, Fort Washington, Penn. John Harling Ritzen, a, Deerfield Ill. Virginia Lucillle Rizor, e, Goodlettsville, Tenn. Regina Jourdan Roane, a, Memphis, Tenn. John Louis Roberts, a, Lexington, Ky. Stephen Crawford Roberts a Nashville Tenn William Duke Roberts, a Russellville Ark Robert Nathaniel Robertson e Jacksonville Fla Jessica Dee Robins a Pensacola Fla Jeanne Denise Roe a Oak Ridge Tenn K' 1, N , ,, qs ,.., . '-fi , 'Pi 1, -v,. T- 1 ,Y -vw . ---.sw .ii . L 1,1 fl- Y Nur' ,gs - Rfk, Ye 1752 'Wi A fu Y ,- I .. gm -4 fn if I Ns - Y I A sl tif' 'll ixl . 4, 3 F w . , rss-or 1 'J KN , ' N if-f - J 1, .5,5, I f ' .r ,, w f 13' Q ,' X..p I . . 3'5,j,,4 'U x. L:5.f. Q44 H ', x Q' X T X 1. ,J xi A ju. . 3 'V' -sg - --. '9 .., , X O ' I A W 4 ,, -v. -f v- l., 'rev vu 5 J Nqr f 1 'I is. Y' N 0 x x- h +1 Q '1 'N Y N ,fp all, ,fw .- .w,, K, , - ' '7 x F 7 'TL' K x 'Nl' F Q ri.: - :vga ' 8 s R A 'D' ,J r X A A .fri ' ff R g ff F cv iz ,-f - J P! S,- J l fl v Sf Q K' so fa I .is - A Ifilastffh an .- ni 11 pus' WV I I -1 , 4. GJ , Y-Q X V, . ' 3 , 7 L I' Q 1 FB' if x . . ' ' . ' ' 5 ' L Q . 'E , , . Q I Y , 1 1 1 ' 4 : ,dl ' ' A F' . . v 1 - 'Q' - ld., k -'il Margaret Anne Rockwood, a, Columbus, Ohio .. 1 A ' Y ' X A .ff 1 'X 11' 1 338 I FRESHMEN .v. We .4 K .1 L. A, I' i v, V 1 X In ,M A.: , qt' 4 ' 'ul 1 A 'P S' I, -. ',i -f ' ' -I , .- ' ' f ' N, wi? .-. ' ' 't- .Ld 4 ' ' 2 'N I' I ' ,f x . M , . C' .f ia t ' aa x J un , :A 15 , Y' 1 . rw , 1, -, . ,J-5 , T , ' -X la' 3. ,ze .1 .im V l . 'L 4 'Lg' 9 , 2 1 r ' ' ng K P I-,xi A .X 'X - V nw, , 7 ,dx I L A Lf? 've ,M Fw -.:, ,.. 7 , 1 'a . ' 'QM V Nf l-'35 A A xx 1 ' -' K j V H i i Y. g pr f nv , ax hh 5 IA F V -1 r , ' I K ji 1 . ' -A if . Qi, A 'xv vu ' , ' I -v ' ' .- ' 5 , V, N !:,.vx: ,A .HI .1 'v ' - fn - ' 7312 A -.- - J-1 Q-' x , I F jr , x 1 ' ,A fx, li if Q- L, 4 A . 'x , , Q 4.51 S, Q- w- ,qs T - f f Ibr.. Q H ,J 59 ' M 1 i s .. ' if . X- n 1 r p f I Patricia Ann Rogacz, a, Andrews, N.C. Melanie Anne Rolander, a, Marietta, Ga. Alberto Elias Ron, a, Columbia, South America Laura Gibbs Roosevelt, a, Birmingham, Ala. Joanne Gayle Rosen, e, Miami, Fla. Kenneth M. Rosenzweig, a, Hot Springs, Ark. James Cary Ross, Jr., a, Temple Terrace, Fla. Ashley Kennedy Rowe, a, Richmond, Va. Joseph Willcox Rudolph, e, Radnor, Penn. Robert Frank Rumble, a, Decatur, Ga. Anne Everett Russell, e, Ashland, Ky. Steven Lynn Russell, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Susan Lane Rutledge, a, Birmingham, Ala. cEdward Norman Ryan, a, Houston, Tex. Robert Mark Saitz, a, St. Louis, Mo. Elyn Ronna Saks, a, Miami, Fla. Sharon Elaine Sanders, n, East Point, Ga. . Tonya Yvonne Sanders, e, Chattanooga, Tenn. , Charles Sprigg Sands, a, Gambrills, Md. David Jay Saphier, a, Sarasota, Fla. Van Chapman Sayler, e, St. Petersburg, Fla. Elizabeth Laugmon Schaaf, n, Richmond, Va. Ben Michael Schaffer, a, Hartsdale, NY Debra Susan Schatfstall, n, Chamblee, Ga. Carol Anne Scherr, a, Charleston, W.Va. Robert Cleveland Schiff, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Richard W. Schiffman, a, Atlanta, Ga. Robert Alan Schlussler, a, Lincroft, NJ Jeffrey Lewis Schmitter, a, Hamilton, Ohio Steve Palmer Schoettle, a, West Memphis, Ark. Thomas Richard Schoonover, a, Lima, Ohio Mary Kathryn Schrock, n, Iowa City, Iowa Deborah A. Schulte, a, Corona, Cal. Mary Martha Schumacher, n, Canton, Ohio Joseph Melvyn Schwartz, a, Reisterstown, Md. Evan Bennett Schwulst, a, Alexandria, Va. Karen Nancy Scott, n, Cincinnati, Ohio Francie Estes Seibels, n, Birmingham, Ala. Jill Ann Seltzer, a, Huntsville, Ala. Steven Howard Selznick, e, Lantane, Fla. Rosilane Faye Senior, n, Columbus, Ga. Virginia Jo Severinghaus, a, Roswell, Ga. Kari Ellen Severson, a, Chesterfield, Mo. Anne Mebane Sewell, a, Houston, Tex. Claire R. Shcakelford, a, Atlanta, Ga. John Michael Shahan, e, Tullahoma, Tenn. Jeifrey Raymond Shaheen, a, Northbrook, Ill. Juanita Faith Sharpe, a, Atlanta, Ga. FRESHMEN I 339 John Sherman Shaw III, a, Birmingham, Ala. Sara Jane Shaw, n, Birmingham, Ala. Sheila Diane Shay, a, Pulaski, Tenn. William Alfred Shell, a, Nashville, Tenn. Scott Darrell Shepard, a, Riverside, Conn. Cogan Shillinglaw III, a, Lake Bluff, Ill. Philip David Shipley, e, Nashville, Tenn. Jeffrey Thomas Shocklin, a, Creve Coeur, Mo. Mark David Siegel, a, Sarasota, Fla. Mary Nell Simpkins, A, Alexandria, Va. Carl Albert Sims, Jr., e, Madison, Fla. Nancy Bailey Singleton, n, Atlanta, Ga. Anthony A. Sion, e, Warwick, R. I. Leigh Anne Sisk, a, Memphis, Tenn. Claud Knight Slater, Jr., a, Jacksonville, Fla. Jerry H. Slifka, a, Woodmere, N.Y. George Prescott Slover, a, Dallas, Texas Elizabeth Leigh Small, n, Scarsdale, N.Y. Lawrence Richard Small, e, Houston, Texas Carl V. Smith, a, Charlottesville, Va. Daniel Paul Smith, a, Jackson, Tenn. Elton Shouse Smith, a, LaPaz, Bolivia Felicia Scott Smith, a, Asheville, N.C. Kimberly G. Smith, n, St. Petersburg, Fla. Lindsay Crawford Smith, Jr., a, Birmingham, Ala. Mark Winfield Smith, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Neida Kaye Smith, n, Frankfort, Ind. Paul Heermans Smith, Jr., a, San Antonio, Texas Sally Lee Smith, n, Whitesburg, Ky. Sarah Lynn Smith, n, Akron, Ohio William Herbert Smith, a, Clover, S.C. James Horton Smolenski, a, Shreveport, La. Catherine Julia Snider, a, Charleston, W.V. William E. Snodgrass, III, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Teresa Elaine Snorton, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Charles Goodrich Snow, a, Charlotte, N.C. Mary Elizabeth Snyder, n, Massillon, Ohio Elizabeth Ann Sourek, n, Independence, Ohio Sherry Louise Spain, a, Nashville, Tenn. John Eugene Spitler, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Christopher Spyridon, a, Pascagoula, Miss. Kirk Davis Staff, e, Evansville, Ind. Elizabeth Diana Stalcup, e, Nashville, Tenn. Elizabeth Anne Stark, a, Bethesda, Md. Patricia Ann Stark, a, South Miami, Fla. Jane Marion Starnes, n, Ashville, N.C. Jane York Staub, N, Houston, Texas David Russell Steckler, a, Smithtown, N.Y. 340 I FRESHMEN .n ,. L gf ' . 3, if . , 'V . , is h ' -2 -4 ,.,, f j V- Q V4 W' cl uf '49 Y' f-I .wt K X' gf , 4 jf- 35 'gn ' J- t 7 ,N L19 an , y if a l , I A6 K K .1 15.1 ' X ' 4' 5 cr .4 1: LP 'xl' gf? .SS Q .Q I ,. -4 1 .. 125 J 'Q' Q' 'A N 5 x 'K 47 f.'l 'Z'Z'k- ' I . A 'I . - 1 :ma r ' 'vw .1 . ' s c J r We F 'vi .5 A ssjzcyl , ,Xin X - .- X - -f 27, W- , -- fr ff ' f r I u . '-if - 1 I tl Li rf .Qgtfif.a.-f4f. i1i lx X A V F ' Ik I fe I if E I f: ,... .ax-, -. - 1: . I , . . h. al fs.- .v 5 L 1 J .P ' ,gg fax, qfv .-, x fa . 4' r ' . S e N C s- . - Y . W r 1 in ae ., y F ' 2 ' 3 ' F5 4 -I fl J 1? :ffl l L V 4 ' Q, VY' I - ,bfi nw ' ' H7 . V ' N ' I ' ' fl 5 9,--,V I y . l , ' I' 3 ' 4. A Mary Kate Thorpe, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Q f a N 'T l ' ' 'R+ ' 1 W 'LM rw v-ac' Q 'VX 'Q J sw A ,V , .X . iz .ttf , af A I 1 s F 3 . 4' on A 1 ' 'Q I -3 ,ev-'fi . r S' , . .A ' n. ' ,. . hx . ., , , . .' ., - , ,-,Q A , '. - Lg. Q :v-. f i- . - l, 0,1 ., .. ,. N vs... - 4 7 . ll, 4 I AW' ., if ,k I ff' 2 - 0 n. A - rf. ' N ,X Q s. . -fs ' -- Q 1 rl V, -r ff 171' . 4 P lu '31 'Tr A 'L LV... 'ff 'S-5, 17 'S- 41 Y idllgxifgl r 4 I A Qmszw 'Lat H- ..-- W , I :s 4 l, I ' Nr J' X N rf . I ...Z V I t J if. . ' Y . ff 7 O'-10, Strefftrfw! Edward G. Stephany III, a, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. James M. Stephenson, e, Franklin, Tenn. Susanne Elizabeth Stephenson, a, Greenville, S.C. Julie Grace Stevens, a, Louisville, Ky. Edana Ranae Steward, a, Anderson, S.C. Jean-Ann Stewart, e, Frankfort, Ky. Kate Clark Stockham, e, Birmingham, Ala. R. J. Stockham, a, Birmingham, Ala. Lynette Maria Stone, a, Waynesboro, Ga. Frederick Markley Stow, a, Haddonfield, N.J. Stephen Charles Stratton, e, Atlanta, Ga. Nell Miles Stringfellow, n, Nashville, Tenn. Patricia Strohmeier, n, Great Falls, Va. Cynthia Marie Stucker, a, New Albany, Ohio James P. Sukow, a, Louisville, Ky. Thomas J. Sullivan, a, Hempstead, N.Y. Michael John Suty, e, East Chicago, Ind. John Walter Sweat, a, Jackson, Miss. George Gary Swint, a, Murfreesboro, Tenn. Charles Jordan Tabb, a, Dallas, Texas Anne Elizabeth Tally, a, Gadsden, Ala. Janet Reid Tate, a, Memphis, Tenn. Genora Taylor, a, Nashville, Tenn. Lucile Carter Temple, a, Memphis, Tenn. Richard Billing Thoman, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Brice Wesley Thomas, a, Nashville, Tenn. James Louis Thomas, e, Memphis, Tenn. Janet Thomas, a, Hawkinsville, Ga. Joan Darby Thomas, a, Memphis, Tenn. Cynthia Carolyn Thomas, e, Winter Haven, Fla. Delta Lynn Thompson, e, Houston, Texas Elizabeth Hunter Thompson, n, Essex Fells, N.J. Frank Corace Thompson, a, Freedom, Pa. William Carothers Thompson, a, Dallas, Texas William Newton Thompson, a, Nokomis, Fla. Terry A. Thon, a, Louisville, Ky. John Meade Thrower, a, Norton, Va. Joseph Edward Tienstra, a, Lighthouse Pt., Fla. Barry Forrest Tillman, a, Natchez, Miss. Samuel Howard Tinsley, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ann Blanche Tipton, a, Nashville, Tenn. Rebecca Lynn Tittle, n, Oak Ridge, Tenn. John Warren Titus, a, Nashville, Tenn. Gerald Graham Todd, a, Granite City, Ill. Rebecca Newman Todd, a, Richmond, Ky. David Lee Towles, e, Atlanta, Ga. John Wallace Townsend, a, Little Rock, Ark. FRESHMEN I 3-ll , Fr' dl? N J Deidre Lee Truitt, n, Snow Hill, Md. Susan Victoria Truss, a, Chevy Chase, Md. Richard Alan Turner, a, J oppa, Ala. Richard Hill Turner, a, Pensacola, Fla. John Lee Turnley, e, Nashville, Tenn. Nancy Elizabeth Tusa, a, Houston, Texas George Andrew Tyring, e, Evansville, Ind. Robert Earl Ustruck, e, Olean, N.Y. Larry Glenn Utley, a, Milan, Tenn. Lee S. VanDeest, a, Nashville, Tenn. Joseph Vas, a, Perth Amboy, N.J. Robert Paul Vicevich, a, Saugerties, N.Y. Richard Jay Victor, a, N. Miami Beach, Fla. Richard Harry Vinton, e, Pittsburgh, Pa. Virginia Ann Virginia, n, Houston, Texas Charles Joseph Vogl, a, Glenview, Ill. Mary Susan Vogt, n, Carrollton, Ill. Jane Gordon Voll, a, Louisville, Ky. Richard Pagels Voss, a, Wyoming, Ohio Herbert Peyton Walker, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. Phil Neal Walker, a, Miami, Fla. Robert Lane Walker, a, Pittsford, N.Y. Janet Carol Walkow, n, Houston, Texas Donald James Wallace, a, Barrington, Ill. William Charles Wambaugh, a, Midland, Texas John M. Wampler, a, Nashville, Tenn. Michael Gregory Warner, a, Nashville, Tenn. Brett Van Cortlandt Warrington, a, Cary, Ill. Gerald Thomas Washington, a, Rolling Fork, Miss. Raymond Willis Washington, a, Sarasota, Fla. William Earl Watson, a, Worthington, Ohio Dorian Vanessa Weaver, a, Little Rock, Ark. Nancy Ann Webber, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Steven Weinstein, a, Baton Rouge, La. Barry Jay Weiss, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Karen Ladner Wenzel, a, Delray Beach, Fla. Deborah J olyn West, a, Marietta, Ga. Stewart Dyke West, a, Columbus, Miss. Edward Lee Whaley, Jr., e, Chattanooga, Tenn. Thurston McAdams Whitaker, a, Vicksburg, Miss. Mary Nelson White, n, Bethesda, Md. Stephen Noss White, e, Charlottesville, Va. Susan Jenifer White, a, Coral Gables, Fla. Janet S. Whitesides, a, Nashville, Tenn. Benjamine Joseph Whitten, e, Memphis, Tenn. Walter Dillingham Wick, a, Greenwich, Conn. John Robert Wiener, a, Woodmere, N.Y. Sherrie Lorraine Wier, a, Bronxville, N.Y. 342 l FRESHMEN 6 . iss, .' 1 r .J V. We -uf :Psi X-,g X ' .sein 75 A ' ' fa - j ' fe- -is r, X- - 5 - 'J T . , I jr . I., I ' ,Q . f V ' ' I ' me ,O Y -fi' L J '39 7 L -5 . , - . a- A . ar it + lf!h V H 5 ff t Ae' A.,. 2 .-. -- ,A '-SQ I Q, .,,,. '45 J' 4 R '. Q I -, 'N I , .A Xa: 4 - - ' ,T',' fa rj 12.67 I 'J 7 I 1 i . V f -,Fx ' N sw is 1 ?f,5Qv4w' i 1 - V' I' '5 ' f i'fffP?f'. gg . 1 1 -. ' f I V .xx . 3' .- 5. cz. , , ., . ' ' -5' ' -2, ' N ' .AL-,TK 4 4 .J X 'P Q.. F-Q A I L , 3 W ., .5 If'1, ' Q . b 'x . Xfin' f E I !N' ,f T H I 3 X1 .L -r H V 1 I A15 ka E -'i pf U Lx' L -rf, .- if if 4 We -ev - 1+-,f f? .- ,. ii 1 xg Q' , - P . . 4 r K' 5 .I 1 i Y ft- Jwfv an I ' .531 A - 1 ' - ,Q , ' 'laglf Y ly . V 1 'VT I ,., A ' IA F3 ' 2 '. ' gi, -. , B .SS S A Us ,-Q24 A 71 ft 'N s f V' X -, 1 ' ' ' . lr! 9' i iq ww Lf' - I .lfxl - . 43-FCP , 'ns A 1' 'A ,, Q- ' 2 . -,'x'. , -,Lx W , , '- ,ji . , ,. J , I Y- . N A' I j -J X ti t f '19 ' 'T , - -F ' . -J . 4 Y H3 ig' ' ' fi '11 . -N' I fr, 1 x If . I W . f ,J - - ' ff wk V. .. 3 1 I 'wir a' N if ' T - ,, ,Q 1 X. . s 1 X , DTV' I -' ' .r . 'F . ,, I 7 A-1 -..J ..... f,. V X x 1 -.w -ff' ::'.-'- P . 4 5 -f - X. K,.','a'a.fr - . f - l -5 Q'-Q ,J xt. '-:-- N3 1 N J 'I . N X .J Al ' sv fn 5- 3. -1 I 4 B 4 . C, 1 1- , .H ' ,E 5, I.. 2 V fVy ' Q6 1 Qi 1, le A , ,.' I f 4 do . u ri. N' li . fav n, , I . rf My V , I- ' -' , M3 K ',: .,, n- V Q fl U '35 I H. V M, ' 1 ' ' fr' , ffl? .. Q' S K t X ' - w ., ' I X ig 21' .dihilnii .afffnei l , A li. Lynne Diane Wieting, n, Cincinnati, Ohio Bradley David Wigor, e, Cincinnati, Ohio Susan Carrington Williams, a, Richmond, Va. Penny Rae Williamson, a, Birmingham, Ala. Mary Judith Willms, n, Milwaukee, Wisc. Brenard Kenric Wilson, e, Daytona Beach, Fla. Charles Douglas Wilson, a, Fern Creek, Ky. Mary Jo Wilson, a, Weston, Mass. Robin T. Wilson, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Don Wilson, e, Lebanon, Tenn. William Edwin Wilson, a, Louisville, Ky. Clure Lancaster Winfree, e, Nashville, Tenn. Mary Stacy Winter, a, Athens, Ga. Aaron Howard Wolfson, a, Tampa, Fla. Steven Lynn Woodruff, e, Decatur, Ala. John Dows Woods, a, Kettering, Ohio Marshall Sands Woodward, a, Charlotte, NC Brenda Marilyn Woolley, a, North Palm Beach, Fla Linda Dianne Wrede, a, Lexington, Ky. Lo Wrent, e, Nashville, Tenn. Frederick Cooper Wright, e, Rome, Ga. George Dewey Wright, a, Dalton, Ga. John Kelly Wright, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. Lucinda Jane Wright, a, Rome, Ga. Peggy Lynn Wright, a, Houston, Tex. James Paul Yalem, a, St. Louis, Mo. Mary Idyle Yarbrough, e, Toone, Tenn. Nancy Clare Yarnell, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. David U. Yaspan, a, Woodmere, N.Y. Craig Maurice Yeager, a, Winter Park, Fla. Allyn Cline Young, e, Houston, Tex. Joyce Ann Young, n, Atlanta, Ga. Margaret Fawn Yount, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. William Lum Zabriskie, e, Shelbyville, Ind. Yvonne Jane Zakkay, a, Plantation, Fla. Linda Jean Ziffrin, a, Rock Island, Ill. Chip Zimmen, a, Hamilton, Ohio Gary Bryant Zimmerman, e, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Susan Elizabeth Zimmerman, n, Houston, Tex. Richard F. Ziska, a, Columbus, Ohio Martin Michael Zorn, a, Hillsdale, N.J. FRESHMEN I 34 Il -1121 rural Ill! Ill I 'Fnx Oliver Abel, a, St. Louis, Mo. Mark C. Adams, e, Pensacola, Fla. Susan Lee Adams, n, Alexandria, Va. Jeffrey Kimberlin Adkisson, a, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas Richard Ahlersmeyer, a, Muncie, Ind. Joseph Francis Alessi, a, Jamaica Plain, Mass. James David Allison, e, Jacksonville, Ark. Jennifer Lynn Anderson, a, Hayesville, NC Nelson Carter Andrews, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Louis Andry, Jr., e, New Orleans, La. William Leonard Arendall, a, Jackson, Tenn. Louise Amy Arkin, n, River Forest, Ill. Steven Buckner Armistead, a, Nashville, Tenn. Nancy Gail Armstrong, n, Maitland, Fla. Linda G. Arnold, a, Texarkana, Ark. Richard Lee Arnstein, a, Dallas, Tex. Alfred Vaughan Atkinson, a, Hyattsville, Md. Anne Atkinson, n, Decatur, Ala. Bettina Harman Ault, a, Knoxville, Tenn. Rusby Gordon Ault, a, Basking Ridge, NJ Lynne Marie Ayers, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Jo Lynn Baker, a, Owensboro, Ky. Ted King Baker, a, Wilmington, Del. William Frank Baker, Jr., a, Versailles, Ky. Wilmouth Henry Baker, III, a, Tallahassee, Fla. Marcia Ballard, n, Thousand Oaks, Calif. Cynthia Rae Banks, n, Cincinnati, Ohio Phyllis Marie Bankston, a, Houston, Tex. William Christopher Barker, e, Millington, NJ John Michael Barraza, a, Monroe, La. Melinda W. Baskin, a, Greenville, Miss. Evelyn Evan Batey, a, Memphis, Tenn. Chester Paul Beach, a, Memphis, Tenn. Nancy Hieronymus Beach, a, Frankfort, Ky. Gordon Winslow Beale, a, Webster Groves, Mo. Stepahnie Diane Beavers, n, Tucker, Ga. Donald Edward Begley, II, a, Toledo, Ohio Frank Leslie Benham, III, a, Columbus, Ohio Stephen Bennett, e, Evansville, Ind. Steve Benson, a, Nashville, Tenn. Walter John Bentley, a, Los Angeles, Calif. Christine Elizabeth Benz, n, Signal Mt. Tenn. Lynn Allan Bernard, a, Houston, Tex. John Robert Berquist, a, Nashville, Tenn. Eric Michael Bernstein, a, West Orange, NJ Angelo Jo Berry, n, Arlington Heights, Ill. Jane Elizabeth Berry, a, Nashville, Tenn. Brent Edward Bertke, a, Louisville, Ky. 346 ISOPHOMORES wwf'-B' I fra L . V W' 1 , : i 3 Q, x' 7' 'Z' 'E V 1'F'- gg. h 1 Q- 5 ,- 5, y Li. I 'Lai' . J .wif ' , S--1 1 , 'iw ' f-mf lx gi ' ' I ' 'E Qi , if i-A . 'P if .ge . . 'I ,J I-X 2 x -- ., .r .--1 -C ... N V rx, 'TX' 'A A if x ffl X. LMQ fix o Y--7 N Q Q V E 4 ' L ' ., Y' 'fkj . -3' I J: f. , 4- 5 '2' D - -A , Q a V. fi ' QR, - W '- ' A ' -54 fr V' iw: A -I It ' -1 V- N V It d . 5' . W 7' A -4: J' L A 'I Q 3 if - 'As' - '.A 4,. H - K 4 s Q ?l'.'f?'vj.-1, I f 1 31, I V ,, , ai' F3 'X L-,157 f-H I ' . , If m X ,., A, . ' 2 QT ,fp 1, nr - - V Y ' ,fx I, , I F? . , . Q-.1 . ,I 1, V . -.1 , 1 'Z .1 ,,--,, Qiczfila., ge' ia, J, , C I . I 1 '9 I I 3 - 'T , v Q .av- ii H, 1 X if ri ' J. ' 5- ' vw!-' :ga I -I x ' 1 A I iff Fl, , V , ml 1 A ' , Q, 475+ iff' ,A 45 ll I - - '. - 'E kv, 1 5. ff! . I j 'im' . . 1' 4: 'ri' -by ,z , Q , ' 5 ' , . if ' are f so We 1 . at - I- . J -. I M S l V 1 .Ur-v , I we - fi! Dnxfiu. C 1 Eff . ' X fy x l sf Q B' . ,r if ,K yr. I , i pr pp - h u ? , I J. MPH W- I 1 -f- ii g Ea .1 I A V 'yi ,-,. lwgafwx ' 1 A Q- -I X'T gi Y p If . I ir Q JA Hari :N li f' I-aj I I J I 73- 'N .g A X - 1 '-J .-if .J hx -3-,i W-J. .4:v, -:gi i X lr y J A f' A I A as wr as .. '-fi? , I ' SQ I -fl- . A4 Vx A. -I ' A ' I qrul I ' X Y: 3 , 'I ,W ,za . H , I p - -, I el as , slit ' . xiii V ll, ,f F, k ,J g A Q , Y' I '1 ' -if I ,gi L A A . Susan Lee Bigham, a, Lewisburg, Tenn. Eric Mishel Birch, e, Mobile, Ala. Wendell Raleigh Bird, a, Atlanta, Ga. Cheryl Lynn Black, a, Maggie Valley, NC Carl Frederick Blatt, Jr., a, St. Louis, Mo. Linda Louise Blow, a, Swansea, Mass. Cathryn Elizabeth Blue, a, Bessemer, Ala. Richard Craig Bond, a, Johnson City, Tenn. James Vicnent Bonnett, a, Temple, Tex. John Leigh Boone, a, Davenport, Iowa Mary Kathryn Booth, n, Pulaski, Tenn. Junie Elizabeth Borg, a, Atlanta, Ga. Deborah Cobb Borum, n, Nashville, Tenn. Rebecca Susan Boston, a, Lawrenceburg, Tenn. Alan Forbes Brackett, a, Palm Beach, Fla. Joy Tresselt Bradley, a, Evansville, Ind. David Braman, a, Silver Spring, Md. Robert Keith Brandenburg, a, Versailles, Ky. Anthony Netterville Brannan, a, Tampa, Fla. Rachel Ann Brannan, n, Nashville, Tenn. Richard M. Breen, a, Louisville, Ky. Mark Thomas Brenzel, a, Louisville, Ky. Debbie M. Brice, a, Rome Ga. Robett John Brill, a, Gainesville, Fla. Nancy Lee Britt, n, Evansville, Ind. Ellen Gertrude Brittain, n, Nashville, Tenn. J. Stewart Bronaught, a, Nashville, Tenn. Millie Marie Brown, n, Nashville, Tenn. John Geer Brownlow, e, Knoxville, Tenn. David Louis Bufkin, a, Jackson, Miss. Janet Louise Bullard, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. David Wingate Buntin, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ladonna Jean Burke, n, Metairie, La. Christopher Scott Burns, a, Danbury, Conn. Bob Bush, a, Augusta, Ga. George Karstens Busse, a, Mt. Prospect, Ill. James Wahl Butler, Jr., a, Fairfax, Va. Joseph Lecount Butler, n, Nashville, Tenn. Melvene Noetta Butler, n, Nashville, Tenn. Dan Buttrey, a, Nashville, Tenn. Andrew Wayne Byrd, a, Nashville, Tenn. Robert Gordon Byron, a, Owingsville, Ky. Carol Evelyn Caine, n, Jackson, Miss. James Howard Calandruccio, a, Memphis, Tenn. Felix Lehman Caldwell, a, Memphis, Tenn. Luther Bowen Caldwell, III, e, Lexington, Ky. Margaret Suzanne Call, a, Denver, Tenn. Beth Virginia Callaway, a, Huntsville, Ala. S0 PHOMORES I 347 John Richard Canney, III, a, Mendon, Vt. James Ross Cannon, a, Nashville, Tenn. William F. Carpenter, III, a, Nashville, Tenn. Robert Howard Carson, Jr., e, Athens, Ga. Christie Parker Carter, a, Danville, Ky. Eugenia Cato, n, Macon, Ga. John W. Cecil, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Mark Garland Chandler, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ralph Christopher Chandler, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. William Iley Chenault, Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. Lori Chisick, n, Goshen, Ind. Benjamin Franklin Christian, a, Atlanta, Ga. George Edmond Clark, e, Brentwood, Tenn. Sally A. Cline, a, Dallas, Tex. Michael Steven Clinton, e, Huntsville, Ala. Janie Coe, n, Tulsa, Okla. Edward Hiller Cole, Jr., a, Cincinnati, Ohio David Frank Collins, a, Moraga, Calif. Frank Robert Collins, a, Manhasset, NY Harold Scott Collins, a, Peoria, Ill. Mary Elizabeth Collins, n, Hinsdale, Ill. Thomas Joseph Colven, III, a, Kinston, NC Robert Wells Connell, a, Orchard Park, NY Michael William Conway, a, Fort Wayne, Ind. James Richard Cooney, e, Murray Hill, NJ Betsy Cooper, e, Birmingham, Ala. Judy Ann Cooper, n, Decatur, Ga. Mary Ann Cooper, a, Lexington, Ky. Pamela Dawn Cooper, a, Ticker, Ga. Loll Ann Cox, e, Louisville, Ky. Joseph Henry Crabb, a, Wyckoif, NJ Suellen Craig, a, Franklin, Tenn. Barbara Evans Craighead, a, Hilton Head, SC Anne Turner Crandon, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Tom Matthew Crews, a, Laurel, Miss. Stewart Crile Crisler, a, Memphis, Tenn. Michael Eugene Crowe, a, Bristol, Va. G. Thomas Curtis, a, Nashville, Tenn. Virginia Patricia Dallas, n, Scarsdale, NY John Richard Dana, a, Richmond Hill, NY F. Keith Danield, a, Hollywood, Fla. Mark Vernon Danielson, a, Chicago, Ill. John Jacob Dauer, e, Beaver, Penn. Ellen D'Augustino, a, Tampa, Fla. John Alger Davidson, a, Memphis, Tenn. Susan Lee Davidson, n, Evansville, Ind. Donald James Davis, Jr., a, Orlando, Fla. Les Boone Davis, a, Covington, La. 348 I SOPHOMORES I. v g pr- 2 rf f , , -sa -'Q ,v -at y -.Alix XA Ld ' 4 . f +3 B V' 1. U'- -Q '24 nv yy ' ' I . ' t 'N .. , v F v AE 1 I .J . . x 1 'fi 1 . bl x y M ' 1 I ' g,, . Q . 1' N-Ni FLT. ,QL V ' ' A 'wk 12:. 'If:1' - ' -'mtl - A 5- A T: It-I I :...: Q , . ,117 , mx V 5 V Ig, -N Ca X , M fi - 'f VI -.' .1 Ii R 'I fx f' i' oi 1 , Hg... - I ' Al 1,55 - - -.., 55 -' ws- ,. - 4: -- .,,, 1 as ., , .. sl!! 5 dig 1 -. ' ' A A ll' L , . ' tx V ,gr - 1477 Q- 5 55-Q 47' X 'li-?- I :Iv ' 1 vji '- .N 'iff f. -7 X .NA 1 N t . I yr' Lfll ' 'J .. uid A .Ig , E N 2 5'5 'J-XKQY' '7 , 1' X 4 am r: V1 ,I , ' :', y it i 8. ,A V .1 , , . , Z ,sif'w.fR5 g g W ' W In -A l V x l N .. TT , Q? 3 5 .ft V i -' . ' I X L I v- A I i'-Er. v.f'il,1 W -l .Q ., 1 W., PT , W1-my , . .fiWf ' H' 3 r 551 QQ! 5' 'ff' 53-' :Y A 59 1. -I . A, - xv, in ! i I V, x, lf' A ,XXVI . 7 .z J ' fl A . .a 1 .. .:, ,F 4, 53, V, f 2' -C .ig -3 , T X ' . 1' , 'A - -T F 1 'T' 'il I' ' I r l -' ' Y , , . I t D ,xiii f: 6-D l ' , -ag F-wh J 3, V A ' -- . 'Zi' 53, I 4- -' yi sr- -A 4 -SQ, 1 K' 1, in ' V l' X - '- in 'Wit 'i'hQ'1 g 'lk ,.,, , ,Af ill'-'wiv' 'ffm i -l Q F- rf . J , . -2 i. '.' .L lt al 1 lg, A Y-'fl , , , . -' f l T 4 ,K -id. I vi--I ,L V X, up ' K X X ,, V V is X 'f , '-Y,,. ' CL., AV C J' - '5fil7 5 . 16 J .5 fy A 4, ' 1h Carolyn Susan Dawson, a, Barrington, Ill. Paula Dianne Dean, a, Huntington, W.Va. Ann Marie Deer, a, Delary Beach, Fla. Ronny Glenn Deere, e, Nashville, Tenn. Diane Deitz, a, West Helena, Ark. John Michael Dennis, e, Nashville, Tenn. Laura Holly Dennison, a, Atlanta, Ga. Thomas McKean Derr, e, Birmingham, Ala. Susan Elizabeth Derryberry, a, Shelbyville, Tenn Richard W. DeVenzio, a, Rendondo Beach, Calif. Andrea Joan DeWahl, n, Bismarck, ND Alison May DeWalt, n, Ormond Beach, Fla. Richard Edward Dietzen, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Patricia Ann Dodge, n, New Orleans, La. David Loyd Doering, a, Huntsville, Ala. Patrick Joseph Donlon, a, Nashville, Tenn. Wendy Gayl Doolittle, a, Huntsville, Ala. Joan Parsons Douglas, a, Memphis, Tenn. David Eugene Driver, a, Gardendale, Ala. Leigh Elaine Duke, a, Amarillo, Tex. John Erin DuBois, a, Nashville, Tenn. Sammy Christopher Duke, a, Nashville, Tenn. Teresa Dunkel, n, Huntsville, Ala. Elise W. Dunklin, e, Pine Bluff, Ark. William Richard Dunstan, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. John Carroll Dupree, a, Jackson, Miss. Irma Jean Durham, a, Memphis, Tenn. Robert Loile Durham, a, Gallatin, Tenn. Patricia Mclntire Early, a, Amarillo, Tex. William E. Easley, a, Millington, Tenn. Bruce Alan Eastes, e, Spartanburg, SC Robert Crutcher Eaton, a, Virginia Beach, Va. Michael Wiltz Edwards, a, Jackson Tenn. Steven Wade Edwards, a, Linden, Tenn. Richard Joseph Eiseman, a, Memphis, Tenn. Tori Suzanne Ellington, n, Atlanta, Ga. Allen DeVaney Elster, e, Houston, Tex. Mary Sue England, n, Glasgow, Ky. Thomas Garnett Eubank, a, Louisville, Ky. Arthur R. Evans, a, College Park, Ga. Nancy Ann Evans, n, Joplin, Mo. Kent G. Farish, a, Tulsa, Okla. Millie Elizabeth Farmer, a, Atlanta, Ga. William Thomas Fay, a, Wilmington, Del. Susan Ann Fennelly, a, Charlotte, NC Susan Blaine Findley, a, Clyde, Ohio Johm Miller Finley, a, Overland, Mo. Bret Kortney Fisher, a, Nashville, Tenn. SOPHOMORHS I 3-19 Glenn Mansfield Fisher, a, Kingsport, Tenn. Virginia Lee Fitts, a, Owensboro, Ky. Charles P. Fitzgerald, a, Frankfort, Ky. Jane Randall Flachmann, a, St. Louis, Mo. Joseph Randle Fleming, a, West Hartford, Conn. Harold Lee Fletcher, a, Gurley, Ala. Mark A. Fletcher, a, Western Springs, Ill. Waldo Emerson Floyd, III, a, Macon, Ga. Elizabeth Barger Ford, a, Newport, Tenn. Harvey Albert Ford, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. Nancy Carolyn Ford, a, Wichita Falls, Tex. Sarah Ann Ford, a, Humboldt, Tenn. Sara Jane Fortune, a, W.Layfayette, Ind. Dorothy Anne Fox, a, Memphis, Tenn. Monroe Cartwright Frank, III, a, Little Rock, Ark. William Allan Freed, a, Scarsdale, NY Mark Pearce Freeman, a, Memphis, Tenn. William Criswell Freeman, a, Nashville, Tenn. Walter Edward Freitag, Jr., a, Louisville, Ky. Charles Manis Friedman, a, Knoxville, Tenn. John Fritz, a, Orlando, Fla. Norman Frost, a, Birmingham, Ala. Deborah Linda Fry, a, Spanish Wells, Bahamas James Franklin Fuqua, a, Tullahoma, Tenn. William Mitchell Fuqua, a, Columbia, Tenn. Roberta Eileen Gallagher, a, Huntington, W. Va. Russell Charles Gallagher, a, Nashville, Tenn. Dianne Gannaway, a, Lancaster, SC Kurt Douglas Garbow, a, McLean, Va. Richard Dusenbury Garland, e, Paintsville, Ky. Henry Grady Gatlin, a, Bethesda, Md. Dawn Marie Gavigan, a, Nashville, Tenn. Pamela Jean Gaylor, n, Oak Ridge, Tenn. James Richard Gewin, a, Mobile, Ala. James Bailey Gilbert, a, St. Louis, Mo. Edward Clarence Giles, Jr., e, Charlotte, NC Tony Blair Giles, a, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas J. Gill, a, Wyoming, Ohio Richard Gordon Gillerman, a, Lawrence, Kan. Teresa P. Godchaux, a, Abbeville, La. Cynthia Perkins Godshalk, a, Glenview, Ill. Joseph Pannell Goddard, a, Maryville, Tenn. Diane Harriet Goldey, a, Daytona, Beach, Fla. Wallace Camp Goodloe, e, Ormond Beach, Gla. Susan Louise Gore, a, New Orleans, La. Oliver Russell Grace, Jr., a, New York, NY Sara Gwendolyn Graham, a, Spartanburg, SC Louis Wesley Grant, e, Tulsa, Okla. 350 XSOPHOMORES i rf -' 'm airs, :im gli ' . A g X!!! Y in ' Q . ,SJ ..- . if E5 Q -Q -4 - I fn:-. Ig .r ,r N.!5 ' if , 'fn K in-A J I 1 , . k la Aa I 57 'if ., 1 -M 1 ngi . l+'-- ' f: . , pk 'Iss f - 1-fra . '- 75, V QL.-- - 'K 1 fr' .... 1 A ' CZ.. x- '7 ' rf' A53 Jn ' 4 'f jf , L? 9 1' w 1 ' W' .C I i ' Rx . ' , 'L L I f V m I J. . . A W ff . P A, LT' ,Q 5 , I Fit ,V vT',!7 'iii' , 'Wi ,f ' K ,. X V'V A 1- . 1' ' g X' z Hgilif f if ,3 , i 9 ' , f A H ' Ji -me V c . I '- ' A f V - V .1 g g g 6 , 5 A Cl r ' . ' f P. . V 'li I I Q Q' A ,-'N :lm -,ag . , f W Q5 L '. i ' f' . -- -Q -If . g g A .af JLKB - Q I 2- 4' L ' - , 54 Ffa i ' -if i f 6 . a an A ,e ig F? ' - iff, r I A L L l W ' ' A ef-1 -3 ' ' J -4 1:11, T' 4 '2 V7 -Y I 1--15: ' . '1 - ,f fri' V k i . , Ml ' - .. L . l, gg gr gg 4.. Qi -'Q g -1 Si..-.f , g . as X u if H - V ' L Ly I My , fl , r . -. , A , ,fi 10 ' V: 3 is W -g, fa' X -' h .1 X nl ef li! Q g V X' F a Y' Kg! X , , '3 ' A VJ .1 'TF ,VZI - K .N ' Y , f f 9 1 Ji' ' 35' 1 3 'Q- , 'P if Dinah Lou Grashot, a, Memphis, Tenn. Daniel Lee Graves, e, Nashville, Tenn. Diane Elaine Green, a, Dyersburg, Tenn. Sandra Ann Green, a, Winchester, Ky. Timothy Garland Green, a, Memphis, Tenn. Richard Lawrence Greenberg, a, Palm Beach, Fla Irl D. Greenwell, e, Taylorsville, Ky. Scott Gregory, a, Pensacola, Fla. Wm. David Grief, e, Memphis, Tenn. William Curtis Griiiin, e, Jackson, Miss. Karen Rose Grimaldi, a, Tampa, Fla. Randolph Harris Gustafson, a, Glenview, Ill. Ann Bachman Hale, a, Rogersville, Tenn. Sally Jo Hale, n, Ridgway, Ill. Joseph Lee Haley, a, Enterprise, Ala. Lee Hartley Hall, a, Bradenton, Fla. Maurice Hall, e, Cookeville, Tenn. Karis Jan Hamblin, a, Tupelo, Miss. David Robert Hampton, a, Deerfield, Ill. Sara Louise Hamric, e, Dallas, Tex. Steven R. Hanor, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Charles David Hardison, Jr., a, Lewisburg, Tenn. James Roland Harper, a, Atlanta, Ga. Susan Mae Harrell, n, Ocala, Fla. Brewster Harrington, a, Memphis, Tenn. Charles Randy Harris, e, Clarksville, Tenn. Dane Carl Harris, a, Decatur, Ala. James E. Miller Harrison, e, Nashville, Tenn. Margaret Ann Hart, n, Ashtabula, Ohio Gail Ann Hartman, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Alexander Harvey, IV, a, Baltimore, Md. Kenneth Dwayne Hastings, a, Orlando, Fla. Paul Hatfield, a, Evansville, Ind. Ellen Elizabeth Haydon, n, Cincinnati, Ohio Walker Bennett Hayes, Jr., a, Clayton, Mo. Deborah Jane Hays, n, Washington, Conn. Don Alan Heidbrier, e. Ft. Worth, Tex. Martin R. Heilstedt, e, Peru, Ill. Donald Mason Hein, a, Severna Park, Md. Dorothy Jan Heller, a, Mattoon, Ill. Sharon Elaine Hemming, n, Shelbyville, Tenn. Stephen Keith Henderson, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Jerone Anthony Herbert, a, Nashville, Tenn. William.Raymond Herod, a, Longwood, Fla. David W. Higgs, a, Nashville, Tenn. George Miller Hilgendorf, a, Winnetka, Ill. David Wayne Hilsdon, e, Memphis, Tenn. Jeffrey Joseph Hoffman, e, Spartanburg, SC S0lHON10Rl'N I 351 John Robert Hogan, a, Lincolnton, Ga. George Samuel Holder, a, Hartsville, Tenn. Mary Catherine Hoifman, n, St. Louis, Mo. Mark Andrew Holloran, a, Nashville, Tenn. Nancy Anne Holzmer, n, Nashville, Tenn. Robert Joseph Homm, a, Louisville, Ky. Janet Elizabeth Hommel, a, Toledo, Ohio Charles Edwin Hornaday, Jr., a, Owensboro, Ky. Heyward C. Hosch, a, Gainesville, Ga. Glenn Allen Hoskins, a, Lexington, Ky. Mark Houck, a, Dallas, Te'x. Charles Stephen Houston, a, Knoxville, Tenn. Michael Nolan Howard, a, Lexington, Ky. Joseph John Hrasna, III, a, West Orange, NJ Amy Louise Hudgins, a, Falls Curch, Va. Kathleen Elaine Hunt, n, Scotch Plains, NY Susan Merrill Hunt, e, Houston, Tex. Richard Stonestreet Hutchison, a, Atlanta, Ga. Catherine Ives, n, Birmingham, Mich. Andrew Alan Jacobs, a, Mission, Kan. Stephen Scott Jacobs, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Robert D. James, e, Indianapolis, lnd. George William Jenkins, III, a, Memphis, Tenn. Ann Margaret Jarvis, n, Cleveland, Tenn. David Neal Jewell, a, Lexington, Ky. Roger Michael Jewell, a, Nashville, Tenn. Frank Doyle Johnson, e, Dallas, Tes. Leslee Kay Johnson, a, Indianola, Miss. Mark Warren Johnson, a, Ann Arbor, Mich. Robert Lee Johnson, a, Langdale, Ala. Stephen Jay Johnston, e, Atlanta, Ga. Rickie Lee Jones, a, Nashville, Tenn. Rodney, E. Jones, a, Naples, Fla. Lee Workman Jordan, a, Franklin, Tenn. Rubynell Jordan, n, Columbia, Ga. Alexis Jones Joyce, a, Nashville, Tenn. Robert C. Kain, Jr., e, Lighthouse Pt., Fla. Frederick William Kahlmus, Jr., e, Meridian, Miss. Lou Franklin Kalil, a, College Park, Md. Susan Elizabeth Kane, a, Greenville, Del. Gregg Robert Kantak, a, New Albany, Ind. Charles Stanley Karow, e, Sarasota, Fla. Stephen David Karr, a, Nashville, Tenn. Kimberly Marie Keck, a, Boca Raton, Fla. Susan Gayle Keedy, a, Nashville, Tenn. Mary Sue Keller, a, Peoria, Ill. Thomas Carl Kellogg, e, Binghamton, NY Susan Elaine Kelso, n, Paducah, KY. 35 XSOI HOMORFS F 5 A ,. 1 A lk H' 1' L3 2 fe, :an -X X' 1 H- ., M 'C . .ll V1 y g dfyjlg I Q' If H H it at T' is 13'-'WJ-KV ,H ik-:.,gm 'Ji' iv P I .I .b X A, si' 5, QL gg g cy A lm ,I Al. -t i l , .-TL 'N I: 3 N up : nd I iq, l T A ' 'JI' ixaf. A .1 xx V Xa- if AY il -l x A ef new . 4 so r Q. V .6-,fn lx Q FN 'L . In :T lil ii' ' .V in ' X M 1 ' L4 AL W K , ' T -a A is v u in Y I 5 is 9 ml .gs If , L. X i, tl A ! Y -45 Av: mf ' f fir' ITV X . 5 M nj ,ji 'Q a.., 1 4 1 A. A5363 FT 1, of-I ai F s jx A .gg ,ns 'Q QL, 31. 1, gg. , ,h '-li if T Q f'.' I ..'..- .y A 4 -.x'4.:l'. V Y 'iv-m - QW- fab .nur A R dim! I Q xx . 'XA . an ,Q-.Q . is M X- all -J . I 'K An 7 . f i, Q , Q - , ,, . JL, gt J -1' N ' Qi , - 's W J' fr flf.. -.f 01 ,V . s ' 'X if Kr 2 ..N, .5 f 16 11, A' fi V79 f '14 1. so -s . -,gf F W FF I4 rx 'nga -. a X v, iff Walter Wallace Kennedy, III, a, Birmingham, Ala. Jon Campbell Kinnard, a, Franklin, Tenn. Dabney Ann Kirkland, n, Memphis, Tenn. Robert Harold Kjellman, a, Needham, Mass. Brian S. Klein, a, Huntsville, Ala. Stephen Robert Klein, a, Gainesville, Fla. Kathryn Ann Klinke, a, Memphis, Tenn. Beth Ann Knight, a, Delray Beach, Fla. Harry Weatherly Knight, a, Anniston, Ala. Richard Alan Koch, a, St. Louis, Mo. Laura Susan Kossoy, a, East Patchogue, NY Carol Ann Koster, a, Paducah, KY. Jane Elizabeth Krabill, n, Wadsworth, Ohio Irwon Jacobs Kuhn, a, Nashville, Tenn. Robert Craig Kuykendall, e, Hot Springs, Ark. David Linger Kyger, a, Huntignton, W.Va. William Blanchard Lacy, a, Cookeville, Tenn. Vickie Renee Lancaster, a, Nashville, Tenn. Arthur Williams Landry, a, New Orleans, La. Bob Latimer, a, Nashville, Tenn. Dennis Richard LaVette, a, New Britain, Conn. David Claude LeDoux, e, Paducah, Ky. Steve Paul Lee, e, Norman, Okla. Deborah E. Leek, e, Dumas, Ark. Lissa Madison, LeGrand, a, Birmingham, Ala. Lilliam Ann Lehr, e, San Antonio, Tex. Calvin Pearson Lewis, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. Joan Frances Lisle, a, Nashville, Tenn. James H. Littlejohn, e, LaGrange, Ill. Richard Wayne Lober, e, Falls Church, Va. Danny E. Lodter, a, Johnson City, Tenn. Elizabeth Ann Lofiin, n, Natchez, Miss. Melissa Yvonne Logan, a, Atlanta, Ga. William Allen Long, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Joann Ford Longshore, a, Birmingham, Ala. Barbara Jeanne Love, n, Delray Beach, Fla. Diane Love, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. William Edward Loveless, a, Memphis, Tenn. Susan Vanessa Lucas, a, Tulsa, Okla. ,John Francis Lucey, a, Loudonville, NY Marcia Sue Ludwig, a, Louisiana, Mo. Bonnie Lee MacPherson, a, Miami, Fla. Margaret Frances Madden, n, W. Palm Beach, Fla Robin Gayle Magee, a, Winnetka, Ill. David Dean Malone, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. Edwin Bush Manning, a, Franklin, Tenn. Roy Manning, e, Nashville, Tenn. Cecile Leguir Many, A, New Orleans, La. SOPHOMORES I 353 Harry B. Maring, a, Selma, Ala. Kathryn Marie Marion, e, Nashville, Tenn. - - Elizabeth Rodman Marshall, n, Haverford, Penn. . Elizabeth Witherby Marston, a, Memphis, Tenn. ' ' ' ' ' Qs K. Douglas Vass Martin, a, St. Louis, Mo. Edward Alan Martin, a, Nashville, Tenn. .Q -we , . i Mitzi Loraine Martinez, a, Tullahoma, Tenn. ,N A M John B. Mast, e, Zanesville, Ohio ,sg if Ben Ross Matthew, a, Kelinworth, Ill. , . 1' '-. Miriam Metcalf May, a, Houston, Tex. Mims Maynard, a, Birmingham, Ala. , Annette Lampe Mazeau, a, Bethesda, Md. pl I i . H' ' .4 ,... .. .- 1 , .V T V I , . 1 ,. ul .. -' ., X 1 . , , .ss t Barbara Lee McCall, a, Brentwood, Tenn. 1 L Louise Gerner McCampbell, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. . - ' - -. , A .0 Barrie Susan McCann, a, Lexington, Ky. f f ' - Marcey Ann McCarrell, n, Washington, DC 5 'J ' 1 ' J' Thomas Philip McCarthy, a, Phillipsburgh, NJ H x' Q Eliza Jane McClenaghan, a, Nashville, Tenn. ., ,A , A ' ' J M A I' - -'1 ,, 1 as-ff' - ? I George Edwin McCollon, II, e, Henderson, Ky. 5' ' ' Cynthia S. McCreless, e, Bethesda, Md. ,V 7 l - Margaret Myers McCullough, a, San Antonio, Tex. 7 f F' 5' 'F' Robert Henry McCurdy, a, Stone Mountain, Ga. 1 f '21, 1 -1 Beth Jean McElvy, n, Seabrook, Md. ' Y Pl' f, Robert Steven McGee, e, Nashville, Tenn. A 1- A , - ' '-X , . I , 1 If ' 3,1 3 'aj H ' Q' FFT'-W ' ' -1 John Lucius McGehee, a, Memphis, Tenn. Charles Merritt McGibony, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Daniel Browning McGregor, e, Clarksville, Tenn. Norman Kenneth Mclnnis, e, Santa Ana, Calif. Melanie Mclnturff, n, Pegram, Tenn. ,ff ' -' ' ' Joel Blene McLemore, a, Nashville, Tenn. -V X Y wt ,F 5. A . -- ' .4 ve. , . ,, ,-,, , Q , I-if - -.w I- r Kingsley McLeod, a, Ormond Beach, Fla. Robert Roland McNulty, a, Panama City, Fla. ,N - Thomas Jeter McQuiston, a, Memphis, Tenn. P, 2' Q Ellen Fontaine Mears, a, Birmingham, Ala. ' ' ' Darlene Mendenhall, n, River Beach, Fla. ' ' ' Frank Warren Mergele, a, Abilene, Tex. :E xl V +1 I s ' at 47 , -n. -vi K 'I ri 1 f I , Judith Stone Meriweather, n, Nashville, Tenn. ' i - Lynda Ann Mersereau, a, Chevy Chase, Md. as A r Carolyn Ogden Meyer, a, Cincinnati, Ohio ' -v D 1-' t Mary Capell Miles, a, Memphis, Tenn. f-y N -if -- a 1 . jf., Charles Davis Miller, a, Jackson, Miss. T ' ' , QL Nj 111 as Dale Anthony Miller, a, Tampa, Fla. Q ' ' ' ' x A ' xt A A K ,I ,. Russell Edwin Miller, e, Rocky River, Ohio ' ' 7 A 3 Solomon Ira Miller, a, Huntsville, Ala. Timothy Dirk Miller, a, Cincinnati, Ohio A .Q -4 3' in A . Anthony Guy Miranda, e, Vienna, Ohio ' ,gi Q ,, George E.N. Montague, II, a, Charlotte, NC ' - X, ' ' Richard Abner Montague, a, Hattiesburg, Miss. , 6 3 w 'A ,Z , I 4. A 354 I SORHOMORES fu All '11 , raw, 'X-'SI sl, ' I if.. X ali 'rx -3, .4 . J-- 7 eil. Aff .5 L ,V A -47 -A sm . 1 'XZ' 1. 4 .GE-1. Y: Six. IU? .. X ' ' - . Ji'- : f i A ' lip? xx 4 4. P is 3 ' .T ,'? . 4 , g - My S B ' . .fy , .. n ' . 'Gi ,, ,pf -.. ,LH .., , ,4 V J' A - 1 in I .0 'uw p V 3,1 ' n if' 1 9' Q ff? i if 9 . , r Q 1 a WQ -.fri WW. gigs . d - I , f' ' , ,.:, ' r 'l' ' 'U W1 I x an ff f. f ' , . f.H vg sf Mw4?l.t 59 2 ,Q 'JN -v ,--. 1 Ju M .7 -., X- w A1 I ' x. 'ex I X 'I 1 X . 5 'V F J 1 .f 'T' I' li 53 Lf. L.. w , ' , T- . 1 n . A Q I f 'Q N A . pri A if 2 Wi is ii ,- X 'i4. , . - i 4 14? 4 ::'Qi?,f,11i5? a f '. , F5yg1MmalM f tk Y. 2 in T 3 , ' w L SY VA Y ax A : 'Q' A 4: .I : Jai. MVA . ---' ' Y G ' 'J X jaw. . . ' ' My J ' - 1 35, Q I'-Q' -e . ' . ' X . Q L A as Q lx li-. l Jane Anne Montgomery, a, Tampa, Fla. Joseph Hunter Moore, a, Sikeston, Mo. Mark Lee Moore, a, Metairie, La. Patrick John Moore, a, Nashville, Tenn. R. Michael Moore, a, Decatur, Ill. Royanne Atkinson Moore, n, Richmond, Va. Thomas Wilbur Moore, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. Dan Thomas Moriarty, e, Freeman, NJ Jeffrey Scott Morgan, a, Lake Forest, Ill. Sharon Elizabeth Morrill, a, Erwin, Tenn. Amy Morse, a, Dallas, Tex. Valerie Leigh Muehlhausen, a, Smyrna, Ga. Brian John Murphy, a, Huntsville, Ala. William Carroll Murphy, Jr., a, Johnson City, Tenn Sharon Joy Musselman, a, Upper St. Clair, Penn. Ann Keel Myers, a, Ft. Mitchell, Ky. Cynthia Lee Neff, n, Ft. Thomas, Ky. Susan Neif, a, Nashville, Tenn. Laura Marie Nelson, a, Memphis, Tenn. Edith Caroline Nichols, n, Savannah, Ga. Gail Grace Nichols, a, Pine Blum Ark. Janie Blakemore Nichols, a, Jackson, Miss. John Henry Nichols, a, Short Hills, NJ. William Ronald Nichols, e, Oak Ridge, Tenn. David Lee Nicholson, e, Memphis, Tenn. Mimi Renee Nimmo, a, Springfield, Ill. Samuel Augustus Nolen, a, Wilmington, De. Arthur L. Noonan, a, Louisville, Ky. Kenneth Leonard Norcross, a, Louisville, Ky. William Chalmers Norldund, a, Decatur, Ill. David Ewing Norman, a, Hinsdale, Ill. Luci Kirtland Norman, a, Nashville, Tenn. Lucille Terry Northcutt, r, Louisville, Ky. Daniel Mack Oates, e, Memphis, Tenn. Marion Madonna O'Bryan, n, Louisville, Ky. Wendy Leigh O'Callaghan, a, Naples, Fla. Ellen Jane O'Connell, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Kathleen Mary O'Conor, a, Ottawa, Ill. Victoria Henderson Olin, a, Ft. Worth, Tex. Becky Gay Olive, e, Houston, Tex. Floy Anne Oliver, a, Nashville, Tenn. Gray Adelaide Oliver, a, Nashville, Tenn. Robert William Oliver, a, Dallas, Tex. William Langdon Oliver, a, Savannah, Ga. James J. O'Neill, a, Rome Ga. Lloyd Janes Onstott, Jr., e, Wichita Falla, Tex. Claudia Owen, a, Houston, Tex. Elizabeth Owen, n, Houston, Tex. SOPHOMORES I 355 Sheri Lynn Pace, a, Atlanta, Ga. Chris W. Page, a, Eufaula, Ala. Frank B. Pallotta, a, Atlanta, Ga. Angela Cannon Pardee, e, Gaithersburg, Md. John David Pardue, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Stephen Edwin Parey, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Gary Allen Passons, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. James Fraser Patrick, a, Lexington. Ky. Deborah Grace Patton, a, Nashville, Tenn. Richard Morris Patton, a, Atlanta, Ga. Linda Jane Peacock, n, Atlanta, Ga. Ronald Gary Pearson, a, Tucker, Ga. Sheree Lynn Peglow, a, Munster, Ind. Malcom Andrew Peeler, a, Jonesboro, Ark. Katherine Sherrill Perkins, a, Huntsville, Ala. Mary Perry, a, Houston, Tex. Mary Carolun Peterson, a, Clarendon Hills, Ill. Debra Mullen Petty, n, Nashville, Tenn. Sam G. Petty, e, Carthage, Tenn. Edward E. Peyronnin, a, Evansville, Ind. Anne Sturgis Phillips, a, Birmingham, Ala. Craig Scott Phillips, a, Orlando, Fla. Kathy Ann Phillips, n, Harrison, NY Emily Crea Pilkinton, n, Columbia, Tenn. John S. Pitts, a, Shelybville, Tenn. Patricia deG. Pitts, a, San Antonio, Tex. Anne Pohli, a, Dallas, Tex. Jean Ann Popp, e, West Hartford, Conn. William Marshall Potter, a, Birmingham, Mich. Jason G. Poulos, a, Miami, Fla. Robert Lee Powell, Jr., e, Chattanooga, Tenn. Jennie Lynn Powell, a, Birmingham, Ala. Philip W. Powers, Jr., a, Houston, Tex. Gail Sarah Preston, a, Broussard, La. Clair Patrice Prichard, a, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas Leonard Pritchett, III, a, Sheflield, Ala. Sally Fuqua Pruett, a, San Diego, Calif. Bruce Randolph Punch, e, Nashville, Tenn. Susan Ann Pyle, a, Mamaroneck, NY Tim D. Quarles, e, Hopkinsville, Ky. Kenneth Dale Quillen, a, Nashville, Tenn. Nial K. Raaen, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. John Paul Ramsay, a, Sarasota, Fla. Robert Chaflin Ramsey, a, Nashville, Tenn. Richard G. Rathe, e, Covington, La. Karen Annette Rauch, n, Steilacoom, Washington Kirk Smith Reeves, a, Thomson, Ga. Andrew Willcox Reiland, a, Columbus, Ohio 'IBB I SOPHOMORFS -w I '- , Q ' ' -W A 'ii l r 'Q---.YQ . . Q xv, 1 '-L' A H 3 if 1 ' . , ' '. 2 .V '- f -I , --4 N H - .. f g g N. I, - -.9 .I L A .4 at 1 F' In 1 :tl QI. x 1. . I ' 7 I -'- 'Zi .wma or I I' ,J lf 7 --'rv . ' lla ' A kin' T' 1 A .5 I . - 1 - W ,. .,. , , gg lg, Y it If W . D ,. l 1,6 V -H H I M' K v. , , -.Q 'I P x y J A V! 1: , If .sv Y! F 5 if is . , x e- J 'T' '44 '52 Fil -- . F I . , .V , A J N ex ' ' ' .EXW g ,al FA H .J X W 1. eq 1--, 1 A, . .: .. .. ,., ' p J ' fs. it .E .ff ' . ' ,gf:,:fg.lh . - g , ii .1 1 at ,an .-M 'Y P I if L ...L .af i, Y A ,' V . ' f -- -' .vv Ta , ,I ' - ' . 'f f LY' B Y 5 1 'A--i VY in-'L M wa.- 'A ' ' li -A is f W as E 4-5 z , 5 'h 1 ,Ji ' X 'L ' l . . f I I ..,. 5 . fa, 1 ' .1 ,ff l V X: f- MSFT . HUP ,k lg J s V far' 1: - an Q 15 f E is , .Y H' , 42' f .APL by 11.5 A fa N ' A U37 ' T- ' ' 'X Us wi A 1.3 ,I V IT, ,Q-n ji ' nfl i Q s.- '. ' V.' -Xin? A fi-'V A E -Q gi 1 -2. Sm ,: hs ,f Qi-5 , I A, ' ix. 9 , 1 army' J: at M1 Ji. f . N ' g ff . fe' ' ' ' ' W-Q' ' . ,. '-'Ax W 'KAW 2 rv s-.. L R 5 ' ' KSN , 1 'Li ' X if .6 14 r g , - J J l 1 f 1. ' .il fy ' o ' fa :I .fr ,six ' I: '- 3, :L l Q. 'lb . -5 .l ,, N I X Y ,T . ,, ,NH ,PA y ' jf, -fill , M i ' 5141.113 X iv. ' afa- Sgr' ' T N . il st f 1 f- . ., R-Uv, A I S . . . QM ' -'Ji -I BT'-..'1x! '-N In A r w ,Na+ lx 'a I' I M , 4 .- :f ' 1- V V --:vi .,'. o V A , . .4 lm .,- . X p -jilffig H if-, ', li' L, I IG YY1 - . 'fill 1 1 rife . f 1- 2il?ffi. 'L V X Ar Q Mlldl ' R K K l S Q ., . were f-f A I - 'J' 'SEQ Q ' Vg' WM, ' wp- H- 1. , T Mx t 1 .JH l -as ' rf J., 9 ,h fi K 'T ,.,,-, A 76. . U X W-.-1 Q - ! , gg y ff- ., ,, 138' F3 A .', f'..,a M X , - .. 3 A . it lil-Lv! I 1 X 1 22 .:.:f 2 Kathryn Anne Reiney, n, Indianapolis, Ind. Margaret Carol Reitz, n, St. Louis, Mo. Margaret Ann Reynolds, a, Cadiz, Ky. Steven Michael Rhodes, e, Naperville, Ill. Thomas E. Rice, a, Cookeville, Tenn. Daniel Brewer Richardson, Jr., a, Worcester, Mass Gilley Graham Richardson, a, Lake Charles, La. Ann Ellen Riebel, n, Haddonfield, NJ Edward Lee Ries, e, Louisville, Ky. Susan Stuart Riggs, a, Little Rock, Ark. Suzy Preida Rigsby, n, Chattanooga, Tenn. Carol Lynn Ritter, a, Memphis, Tenn. C. Kent Roberts, a, Winston-Salem, NC Suzanne Rogacz, a, Andrews, NC Joseph William Rogers, a, Perrysburg, Ohio Linda Scott Rogers, a, Coral Gables, Fla. Patricia Ann Rogers, a, Memphis, Tenn. Robert Venable Roper, II, a, Atlanta, Ga. Anne Harrison Rose, a, Richmond, Va. Robert Terrell Rosen, a, Shaker Heights, Ohio Kathy Ruark, n, Greencastle, Ind. Betsy Lee Rubel, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Deborah Anne Rubin, n, Lexington, Ky. Randal Hale Rudderman, a, Gainesville, Fla. Teri Rummans, a, Fayetteville, NC Marschall Stevens Runge, a, Austin, Tex. Jeanne Ree Russell, a, Memphis, Tenn. Wendy Ellen Sager, a, Miami, Fla. Sally Lynne Samoriga, n, Hamilton, Ohio Devinder Singh Sardhu, a, Lexington, Ky. Russell Harper Saunders, a, Lexington, Ky. Eric Schaeifer, a, New York, NY Mary Joan Scheele, n, St. Louis, Mo. Robert William Schindler, e, Louisville, Ky. Edwin Jay Schklar, a, McMinnville, Tenn. Vincent Schmidt, e, Louisville, Ky. J. Daniel Schmidt, a, Columbus, Ohio Jane Ellen Schneider, a, Olivette, Mo. Sophia J oellyn Schneiter, a, Jackson, Miss. Robert James Scholes, e, Nashville, Tenn. Carol Ann Scholla, a, Louisville, Ky. Belle Spalding Schroder, a, Atlanta, Ga. Robert James Schumacher, a, Louisville, Ky. Michael George Schuster, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Alvin Robert Schwab, Jr., a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Donald David Schwartz, a, Evanston, Ill. B. Kathryn Scofield, a, DeFuniak Springs, Fla. John E. Selby, a, Columbus, Ohio SOPHOMORES I 357 Susan Emily Senturia, a, Lake Jackson, Tex. Joe Settles, a, Louisville, Ky. Jane Bingham Seward, a, Johnson City, Tenn. Robert F. Sharpe, Jr., a, Memphis, Tenn. Ann M. Sharry, n, Charleston, SC Elise Levereault Shaw, a, Dallas, Tex. Mark Andrew Shetley, a, Kennett, Mo. John Frederich Shireman, e, Girard, Kan. Randy Short, e, Nashville, Tenn. Pamela Sanda Showalter, a, Winter Park, Fla. Scott Foster Siman, a, Springfield, Mo. Arthur Joseph Simon, a, LaGrange, Ill. Shelley Singer, a, Huntsville, Ala. Robert Kenneth Sirgiovanni, a, East Brunswick, NJ Martha Lee Slater, n, Jacksonville, Fla. Robert H. Slater, a, Birmingham, Mich. Herbert Milton Slatton, Jr., a, East Ridge, Tenn. James Kirk Smith, a, Sellersburg, Ind. Kirby Marvin Smith, a, Tucker, Ga. Laurel Lynn Smith, a, Grand Rapids, Mich. Philip Copeland Smith, a, Atlanta, Ga. Ruth Ellen Smith, n, Chattanooga, Tenn. Thomas Garthwaite Smlth, a, Birmingham, Ala. Vicki Ann Smith, a, Dallas, Tex. Michael Soloman, a, Harrisburg, Penn. Edward Spacapan, Jr., e, Arlington Heights, Ill. Elliotte Speake, a, Birmingham, Ala. Charles Ted Spellings, a, Nashville, Tenn. Sandra Kay Spellings, n, Nashville, Tenn. James Dean Spratt, a, Atlanta, Ga. Stuart Laird Sproull, a, St. Louis, Mo. Mary Esther Stamp, a, Nashville, Tenn. Shirley L. Stanley, n, Highland Park, Ill. Miriam Elizabeth Staples, a, Orlando, Fla. Meredith Ann Statham, n, Atlanta, Ga. Tom Rye Steele, e, Nashville, Tenn. Phillip Andrew Steidl, a, Timonium, Md. Nancy Susan Stein, n, Miami, Fla. Scott Allen Stern, a, Atlanta, Ga. Mary Faye Stetson, n, Springfield, Ky. James Randall Stevens, a, Hillsdale, NJ Joyce Ann Stewart, a, Tulsa, Okla. Kent Taylor Stewart, a, Nashville, Tenn. Scarlett Inga Stewart, a, Lithonia, Ga. John William Stone, III, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. Dale Christian Strasser, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Jill Roberts Strathman, n, St. Louis, Mo. Stephanie A. Strohn, a, Barrington, Ill. 358 I SOPHOMORES ffl. .4 .wr- K - - .4 ...7 A - -w , ff F ri Ci ' 1 . il . 'O VT Q? - , .'A H I ff w . H -X K' , X I o 5 fi. gr K 3 A -55 :ig Rx . I' 1 'fp .2 1 'A 'v ' - -.. 5'7 X' 1 1 . 1 Mc?-2-.'Rc:5f fl. ' 'N .J -. - -' .,- ' I .Q N J, - 1 ' X' ,1- . 11 C I Xi B l J ,Sn 3 f-fi, -,N v.- -1- - .N , -Q- , -3 - n A A '5- .xl , N, . r A ug ji fr I , ' l , 1731 -1. l 5 - .eg 'WM' Y Q- .1 , 5 5? .v .fn 4 H x :., X I 1 :fy x ,j '- . , . , sf -x ,f ' v, rf V '-- I W -, ' L -- Q? ff ' l ,- Y'-' ,f 1 'l I H v .-. .. , v , ,, 7' A .,f L A , v fi ' X,-:AJ ak In ' .A ,f.f:?.,gYI- E, -W.. 'U Q5 I I. X ., lui' . Q I, D H , fi. 1 - . ah , f W, ,-.N V. . 'C' f i' in ' V Z ,: .J PL Y T K I X A 1 ' X i H - N- i ,ju wi- '-,. 3 -A fm 5' 'K M - ox Q FH I -x 4 , V aa N ,., . J x., ,, 'T an L f I . N-5 if- .. Q. bt? 'if' 0 ix -er we .Ve L r ,. , 4- Na Q - -'I - , .F . 1 f I 1.1! .1 p ' Y - 1 f' E . '. w ,- F J., I W, Ethan Beden Stroud, e, Nashville, Tenn. Jaclynn Denise Stroud, n, Birmingham, Ala. Jan Strother, e, Birmingham, Ala. Joan Stumpf, a, Rye, NY Jane Gordon Sullivan, a, Rome, Ga. Timon Vincent Sullivan, a, Nashville, Tenn. Harold Wayne Sutton, Jr., e, Mt. Juliet, Tenn. Lori Catherine Szczukowski, n, Chattanooga, Tenn Constance Marie Tabern, a, Lake BluH', Ill. Robert Glenn Tallent, e, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Anthony M. Tang, II, a, Nashville, Tenn. Barbara Lynn Tate, a, Cincinnati, Ohio James Solomon Tate, Jr., a, Louisville, Ky. Rich Tate, a, Nashville, Tenn. Harley Walter Thomas, a, Still Water, Okla. Peter Russell Thompson, Jr., a, Piqua, Ohio Edward Ross Thornton, e, Tulsa, Okla. Rodney Carl Threadgill, a, Birmingham, Ala. Rollin Louis Thrift, e, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Michael Edward Torrey, e, Nashville, Tenn. Louise Timberlake, n, Princeton, Ill. Andre Marcel ToH'el, a, Birmingham, Ala. Brenda Corine Tompkins, n, Hialeah, Fla. Rosalie Tourne Torres, a, New Orleans, La. Micahel Edward Torrey, e, Nashville, Tenn. Rip Trammel, a, Nashville, Tenn. Joel Upchurch, a, Nashville, Tenn. Michael Alan Upfield, e, Louisville, Ky. l Rawson James Valentine, a, Washington, DC Paul Douglas VanLandingham, a, Jackson, Miss. Deborah Ann VanMeter, n, Elizabethtown, Ky. Cathy Alice Verlander, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Martha Virginia Vogel, n, Phoenix, Ariz. Kenton lttner Voorhees, a, St. Louis, Mo. Karen P. Voss, a, Webster Groves, Mo. Mary Adair Wakefield, a, El Paso, Tex. David Joseph Walker, a, Charlotte, NC Kenneth E. Walker, a, Rye, NY Margaret Jean Walker, n, Bay Village, Ohio Sharon Gwyn Walker, a, Memphis, Tenn. John Stuart Wallace, a, Athens, Ala. Otis Bennet Walton, III, a, Jackson, Miss. Stephen Recker Warren, a, Winter Haven, Fla. Karen Weaver, a, Dickson, Tenn. William Lee Webb, a, Albany, Ga. Kane Christopher Weiner, a, Houston, Tex. Frederick Anthony Weis, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Perry Welch, Jr., e, Smyrna, Tenn. SOPHOMORES I 359 Richard Brookbank Wellinghoff, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Nancy Lynn Wells, a, Erwin, Tenn. Thomas Calvin Wells, a, Jackson, Miss. Kathy Anne Wetherbee, n, Galena, Ohio William Anthony Whalen, a, Windham Center, Conn. John VanMeter Wharton, a, Lexington, Ky. Gale Denise Whatley, a, Birmingham, Ala. Joseph Michael Whelan, a, Cinnaminson, NJ Melissa Ruth White, a, Lake Charles, La. Richard Winfield White, a, Macon, Ga. Stephen Harper Whitmore, a, Mt. Pleasant, Mich. Elizabeth DeBardeleben Wideman, a, Birmingham, Ala. Randall Frederick Wiersma, a, Western Springs, Ill. Thomas Daniel Wiesman, a, Evansville, Ind. Cary Cochran Wilkins, a, Greenville, SC Kathy Lyn Wilkinson, e, Newton Penn. Mark Bennett Williams, a, Minnetonka, Minn. Mary Jeanne Williams, a, Meadowbrook, Penn. Jane Elise Williamson, a, Dallas, Tex. Robert Bermel Willis, a, Nashville, Tenn. Walter D. Willis, a, Oneco, Fla. Barbara Ruth Wilson, a, Dalton, Ga. James Wilson, a, Ashburn, Ga. Robin B. Wilson, a, Chapel Hill, NC Dawn Michelle Winkler, a, Birmingham, Ala. Steven Robert Winkler, a, Dalton, Ga. W. Jeff Winslow, a, Shawnee Mission, Kansas Margaret Kay Wischmeyer, a, Fair Haven, NJ Sally Wolff, a, Dumas, Ark. John Leland-Joseph Wolford, a, Louisville, Ky. Leslie Hankins Wood, a, Louisville, Ky. Jane O. Woodbridge, a, Topsiield, Mass. Michael Eric Wooten, u, Hinsdale, Ill. Janet Susan Wray, a, Belleville, Ill. James Dewey Wright, a, Birmingham, Ala. Robert U. Wright, a, Atlanta, Ga. Martha Lee Wyatt, a, Nashville, Tenn. Steven Robert Yafrate, e, Franklin, Tenn. Kathy Ann Yancey, n, Louisville, Ky. Sarah Kendall Yancey, a, Nashville, Tenn. Margaret Polk Yates, a, Atlanta, Ga. R. Lynn Yocum, n, El Dorado, Ark. John William Young, a, Smithville, Tex. William Lyons Zelenik, a, Waukegan, Ill. Keith Allen Zimmerman, a, Highalnd Park, Ill. Michael Floyd Zoccola, e, Nashville, Tenn. 360 I SOPHOMORES Y 'tw f .-.- I e: --5... ,iv - ff- L J' rf if V X, y , h A I 4 pa E 'Q le I x '9 'R ' v I, ',, 4 fl 'W 5 'LH ' . 1 A? ij N Q ' ' - W fx. ,I 'T Q, if dk' Q I 5 ' ' -3 'J u fi? V H L .FT-v I 'Af l , K . .L fi. il X ,th 1 1.3 l all ' u A---U V -11 . ,,., f-. -' ' 1 ' - ' 1 1. 7' Y V A x , - , Aw-, .f 1 I . F ,I X ia X f. R 'if ' o t at t N9 a as ,V ., .- fr. 4- A F 7 f L x . if a 111 Y . U ff' : , . Z A Mk ,,.x,., I eo , ' , .0 W X., 5 'ff ir- ' N R , r 1 1 A . i k, , L Y' . 2. .A l of-ya . 11 -- Hr B V F' .1 1 ' if ' . 0.65, -e. :iii-f lin- - . -j- A l 5-uiiiegpk-. g-' A' n - ,ii B' Q' L .. . Y i All k .aoe W' f ' Q J . . 3 -1 ,jp y . x xy ' jg r 3 Qi w K U . Ay I 1 '.x', s Y fi. , n K Nwx-,siir , -4 Ae. .,! ' x I , wxq' ,'. . . .X X L ', '.- .'. 1 '14, ,x, -. x f K. f - a, 4-,. u Ki... 1-. 5,4- Lg'-f .,' 1X , 1 nk- 4 A .Q F ,Q A.. Mg Q. Y 'K ' K x R Loralee Veronica Abbazia, a, Murray Hill, N.J. Lee Eifron Abelson, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. James William Adams, a, Jackson, Tenn. Vicki Ann Aderman, n, Houston, Texas Willian Boyd Adkins III, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Mary Frances Alexander, a, Bell Buckle, Tenn. Thomas Harrison Alexander, a, Potomac, Md. 'Q John Raymond Allen, e, Madison, Tenn. W S Mary Frances Allen, a, Lookout Mtn., Tenn. Ann Kelby Allison, a, Memphis, Tenn. Paula Rae Allphin, n, Mexico City, Mexico James Edward Anderholm, e, Columbus, Ohio , . '1 an-Mihai Jeffrey Scott Anderson, a, Kennett Square, Pa. ,.. Jo Anne Anderson, n, Nashville, Tenn. Linda Jean Anderson, a, Madison, Tenn. Walter H. Anderson, e, Nashville, Tenn. Robert F. Andrews, a, Memphis, Tenn. Robert Hunter Frierson Armistead, a, Nashville, Tenn. I S7 f 29 David Warren Armstrong, a, Marion, Iowa 19 Cynthia Juliet Ashley, n, Evansville, Indiana Joel Michael Atkinson, e, Jacksonville, Fla. A Richard David Austin, a, Petersburg, Ill. Robert Randolph Aylward, a, Pace, Miss. Barbara Mae Babes, n, Huntsville, Ala. M Clark, R. G. Baker, a, Nashville, Tenn. Jamie Elizabeth Baker, a, Ann Arbor Mich. Susan Tilghman Baker, a, Richmond, Va. , Eleanor Strode Barnard, a, Huntsville, Ala. ,- Pamela Ann Barrow, a, Bedford, Ohio Joseph Townsend Barss, a, Port Huron, Mich. ,V -wg ,- . Sharon Ann Bach, a, Arcadia, Calif. 5, -dz P? John E. Bartness, a, Sheffield, Ala. .,- Laura Kathryn Bateman, n, Atlanta, Ga. Louis Joaquin Batista, e, Nashville, Tenn. 1 William Robert Bauer, e, Nashville, Tenn. l Ronald T. Bauman, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. Deborah Anne Beck, a, Lexington, Ky. 1 George F. Bednarz, a, Glastonbury, Conn. Tom A. Bell, a, Greenbrier, Tenn. Sarah Elizabeth Bellows, a, Houston, Texas Carl Avery Benton, a, Pensacola, Fla. Michael Zachary Bergen, a, Greencastle, Indiana fe Richard O. Bessent, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Frank Joseph Biller, a, Davenport, Iowa Mariem Jane Bingham, a, Harrodsburg, KY- G. Barton Binning, a, Oklahoma City, Okla- Thomas Irving Blair III, a, Dallas, Texas use 1 .wmons .rp .'1 rl x-. ' cll . .- . L1 -... fr 4 -f p N 'Vr- I 1f,.P'511, - la., 1 A A 1,111 . l 'F ei if 1 sN.1l'ii A I fi' ,I A .0 .,. .YI y . 1. Pj, ff' Robert Y. Alvis, e, wheaam, 111. A 4 N1 at Vw. X 1 f -A I ' , vw ,, ' P 'BQ +- , 0' , 6 1-uv .f : .. I 4 U- .P , . ' K.. A 1- A F? -1 Tj '7 p F g s 'uf k 'ik 1 f: i . , - l J ' 'w 'Es I ' . . nixfq g g M, g All . n ,A , ly, J Ich .-vu 'V ff 1 X.-' x. , .-.2 . 1 J., 1:-. 5? lf , - H, lk Q -f ' -.aa , ,Wm fs -1-' Ixus 1 KXSLN. KI,- - -4 .il ri ls' Clk N Fifi I .. i . If 'av 7-. r 1 .f . , .44 A 4 . l A IT W Mx -1' N . A Y F 1 W f .1 ps X . ffil li f ' ' 3 7 Fi ' rv A . N- 6. Y . p ,-1. ,, - ,j .. ,- I :Q- ' 4 iii? 'il , V, 71 E V . gp .xv -Q . 9 , -6 '--A -:il 'QT 1. .' Y. d ' , 1, , ,v 2- ' f' 4 i f X 6 I ? ? , -if X-:' 1 N' ' ,. . . I+ fa' 'ff A R l rv . A2 if. . -5.-. , ,. . suv 1 1' .W 1 iv 1 , ...Y .....-. . ,-..n V: .-. lm, ' w .R N Qi r .3 hifi' J' . -K ,, 4 1 Q.. I ,N l V - A if f .S I..-. - . it A J A A A I 'bf 5. - if ik '-1' . ' 42,- . - ,.. --3 .fy v--jj' X A ii., 1,1 .ls T so if at g - L -J li :L q ' , is ffi- 12 p 1 M ,M X ' p I 2 . Aslan.. - 1 N 2 A ' ,A f f Paul Marcum Bland, a, Bardstown, Ky. Madeleine Gibbons Blakenship, n, Nashville, Tenn. Matthew Steven Blakenship, e, Oklahoma City, Okla. David Douglas Boaz, a, Mayfield, Ky. Stephen Edward Bohner, a, Jensen Beach, Fla. Steven R. Bond, a, Lewisburg, Tenn. Betty Jeanine Bonds, n, Atlanta, Ga. Robert Bruce Bonner, a, Nashville, Tenn. Lisa E. Bourdeauz, a, Meridian, Miss. John Edward Bowley, a, Rahway, N.J. Franklin D. Boyce, Jr., a, Colonial Heights, Va. Barbara Ann Bracewell, a, Brentwood, Tenn. William Butler Bradford, e, Elizabethtown, Ky. Harry Murray Brammer III, a, Menomonee Falls, Wisc. Connie Lynne Brandon, e, Nashville, Tenn. Cherrie Marie Bresenham, n, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia Robert P. Breum, e, Maitland, Fla. William Chester Brewer, a, Jackson, Miss. Deborah Lynn Bright, a, Nashville, Tenn. Jane Anne Britt, n, Evansville, Ind. Debra Leigh Brockmeyer, n, Nashville, Tenn. Kenneth L. Brooke, a, Livingston, N.J. Stephen A. Brown, a, Nashville, Tenn. Tom Dewey Brown, a, Tampa, Fla. Tom Tartt Brown, Jr., a, Birmingham, Ala. P. Gwyn Bruhl, e, Dallas, Texas Rebecca Louise Bruning, n, Louisville, Ky. Julia Elizabeth Buckthal, a, Amarillo, Texas Mary Kay Burbach, n, Whitefish Bay, Wisc. Deregal Fay Burbank, n, New Orleans, La. Thomas Gregory Burch, a, East Windsor, N.J. Byron Glenn Burchett, a, Lebanon, Tenn. Kathleen Ann Burkett, a, Dallas, Texas Mary Elise Burnett, a, Kankakee, Ill. William Ware Bush, a, Augusta, Ga. Rose Maria Bustamante, n, San Salvador, El Salvador Robert Joseph Cadden, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Adolphe Catlin Cade IV, a, Tuscaloosa, Ala. John Bright Cage, a, Portland, Tenn. Margaret Moorman Caldwell, a, Louisville, Ky. Laurie Hunt Campbell, n, Nashville, Tenn. John Davison Capers, Jr., a, Augusta, Ga. John Melville Caraway, Jr., a, Cordova, Ala. John Edward Carr, a, Huntsville, -Ala. Lisette Anne Carriere, a, New Orleans, La. Phyllis Kay Cathey, a, Dearborn, Mich. James Robert Cato, a, Macon, Ga. Janet Bushmiaer Cattelino, a, Nashville, Tenn. JUNIORS I 383 Anne Chambers, a, New Castle, Ind. Deborah Ann Chambers, a, Hamilton, Ohio Barbara Jean Chandler, n, Atlanta, Ga. Caroline Hudson Chester, a, Signal Mountain, Tenn. Harrell G. Chotas, a, Gainesville, Fla. Andre Lemont Churchwell, e, Nashville, Tenn. David Draper Clark, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Doris Helen Clark, n, Betterton, Md. William Thomas Clifford, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. John Cloud, a, Sarasota, Fla. William Martin Clough, Jr., a, Memphis, Tenn. Jason P. Cohen, a, Poughkeepsie, NY Barbour Hayes Cynthia Cole, a, Barbourville, Ky. Mary Patricia Colemen, a, Ft. Myers, Fla. Chaille Linn Cooper, a, Houston, Tex. Emmett Anderson Cooper, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. John Robert Cooper, a, Taylorville, Ill. John Douglas Copeland, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ronald David Copeland, a, Nashville, Tenn. Carolyn Lee Corbett, a, Louisville, Ky. Richard T. Corbett, e, Memphis, Tenn. Patsy Corn, n, Franklin, Tenn. Sarah Elizabeth Cornett, n, Maryville, Tenn. Daniel Francis Corrigan, a, Sikeston, Mo. Susan Costen, a, Memphis, Tenn. Donnyss Thelvana Cotton, a, Nashville, Tenn. Christian Couch, a, Hot Springs, Ark. Whitley Howard Courtenay, a, Louisville, Ky. Eugene Carpenter Covington, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Pamela Gallup Cox, n, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Edward James Coyne, e, Wahroonga NSW Australia Norma Elizabeth Craft, a, Memphis, Tenn. Joseph Neal Crenshaw, e, Huntsville, Ala. Edward Crocker, a, Milan, Tenn. Cynthia Pendelton Crook, n, Jackson, Tenn. DeWittle Talmadge Cross, III, a, Birmingham, Ala. Orin White Crouch, a, Winchester, Tenn. Nelson Crowe, a, Brentwood, Tenn. William N. Culp, III, a, Birmingham, Ala. Elizabeth Joy Cunningham, a, Houston, Tex. Overton Anderson Currie, Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. William Jackson Currie, a, Wilmot, Ark. Thomas Neil Curtin, a, Melverne, NY William Routledge Cushing, Jr., e, Endwell, NY Diane Marie Cushman, n, Jristol, Vermont Lucy Terry Dade, a, Hopkinsville, KY. Denise Marie Daley, n, Hamburg, NY Dorothy Virginia Dana, n, Ft. Worth, Tex. 364 I JUNIORS ' 1. ' 'f . 7 w I ' FT! i V ,. f 421: if '. 'A .. -17' lg, ' 9 , .T 1, . -24 px if im it W .1 M' 2' fill in pu 1 AA . ii f l 1 if ' ' A 'Tj X tif-ff ' ' -3' 5' K YV E, sl X r 'Q : .r . 3 , X 'tw It A H n '- I ,A '4 -,nf , .,,4 .b ' I . , -' ' S .ar at .e Q., 4 - ,ul 8 An 5 M 7 ix. Q I V Iii' :g', ! .'. .ali Vl V H JY. J. 1..,.1 1QLg 'f:f.j . Ny , 'if' I, ' swf A A QQ , A 1 H - f f , ' ' 'Q S A , ' W: .. W. ' fi 5 V V' ll 4 -Qi in . - . f i N . '94 'W' 0 ff 0' ' f i' i, .if 1 fi :X--Y-5 L ii. 6 .I M. nl V sf. all .h W it it if 'I an 1:3 , fn V. :fir X A 4 X dig I ll, fi 'L mile- ' I if f 1 . ' -3- , .zip g ,ri 3 gif A Mg ' if c ji' - JT- x X V ' r' 'f FV , 1 .5 t - IQ 5 '92 13 A n fn -v J Q - -- li ,rg '27 i -Q 1 i x... x. ,L 4 ' . Q M 'V ,fg ,-Q1 i lg I' ' !l, rr. - , ft ir if.: .. ...g' P . - ' f. ,Q . , L . J' W ,V 22' an 5 5 2 .4 - 'ES P. ll :P , . , 'W fc . - lF'S:'T.t- X I i F - . as I .7 r .J 6-Q x It 'T ,' Ji: ' -if 'Nair I i ' Q! Q ki ,R , gf.. J It . V- -:ef . 11 , . 23 5 ,L 'ff f I . t1X.,'!. , , , 1 .i-'tx 'll I 3' , Q -g . , J y . ,.. em X ll xi ,X -nr. ' A Ag 1 4 V ff' , -1- Q . N . 4 K fa '4- .Ki ,f . i 1 . . Y k iq: , ..' ,, A ' - -T .v I7 M, f '1- X X... , , . . . 4 , - . I ' A f ff A Y Y 1 . ' .V i . V . ' 'F . fvff -f 1 A '- 1 1 1 jx- f 1 'X . A V ,. or . -up ,, l I ,Dlx TT 1 Y. -f Q- YY i. :N H Nr' V . '.f.L,:qii N ., A, '1' A- :-Av. .fatty 1.-an -as ..a. th i .hy 1? MW E E fs Victoria Leota Danforth, n, Oklahoma City, Okla Linda Ann Daniel, a, Columbus, Ind. Don Daugherty, a, Springfield, Mo. Luann Catherine Daugherty, e, Nashville, Tenn. Stephen Franklin Daugherty, a, Canyon, Tex. Helen Davis, a, Hillsboro, Ark. James Phillip Davis, a, Nashville, Tenn. Katherine Margaret Davis, n, Birmingham, Ala. Jan L. Deaton, a, Jackson, Tenn. Karen L. Degerberg, n, Weston, Mass. Frances Bond DeLoache, a, Greenville, SC Becky Kay Denham, n, Shelbyville, Ky. Roger Deromedi, a, Alamo, Calif. Benjamin Lee DeVane, a, Ft. Pierce, Fla. Christine Laura Devanny, n, Columbia, SC Mary Julienne Dewberry, a, Dallas, Tex. Lise Diamond, a, Elmont, NY Leah Reynolds Dickie, a, Atlanta, Ga. Rebecca L. Dickinson, n, Bloomington, Ill. Anne Lee Fitzhugh Dierdorff, n, Crownsville, Md. Rebecca Joan Dilcher, n, Atlanta, Ga. David Bond Dodson, a, Pensacola, Fla. Warren R. Donaldson, a, Wayne, NJ Richard Paul Drake, a, Ft. Collins, Colo. Laura Nelle Drury, a, Nashville, Tenn. Kathy Graham Duffey, n, Nashville, Tenn. Paul Duke, a, Darlington, Md. Buell G. Duncan, III, Orlando, Fla. Edward Townes Duncan, a, Washington Grove, Md Jones Charles Dunham, a, Birmingham, Ala. Ann Elizabeth Dunlop, a, Chapel Hill, NC Melinda Ann Dunn, n, Seminole, Fla. Janet Durfee, a, Toledo, Ohio Richard Barton Eckert, e, Knoxville, Tenn. Tasia Stephanie Economou, a, Wilmette, Ill. Eileen Mary Eflinger, a, Langhorne, Penn. Thomas Stark Eggers, a, Racine, Wise. Thomas Joseph English, a, Tifton, Ga. Debbie A. Ewing, a, Memphis, Tenn. Jill Louise Fachilla, a, Emory, Va. Michael Falk, a, Paramus, NJ Frederic Brian Farris, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Robert E. Farris, e, Nashville, Tenn. Steven David Fayne, a, Smithtown, NY Cheryl Denise Felder, a, Summit, Miss. Gail A. Fergerson, n, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Kathy A. Fergerson, n, Nashville, Tenn. Harry Harper Ferran, a, Orlando, Fla. IUVIORS '485 Donald Eugene Fisher, e, Nashville, Tenn. In i 1 - ' .. ' . 4 G Susan Flavila Floyd, n, Hamilton, Ohio P4 N 'T' Ben P. Folk, a, Jackson, Miss. ,. ,. - -1' fy V Q 'F , ig, 55. Katharine Forsythe, a, Paris, Ky. . : QV V I I 1 ,,. ' Sterling Forsythe, e, Ripley, Tenn. Y- 'x 1 1 V TT-F' l Howard M. Fosdick, a, Glen Ellyn, Ill. 5' b K I X ,A W A ,. 1 , Q X f . H ,Q H 4, Baron J. Frankel, a, Atlanta, Ga. ' ff t 15 t V' - , , Hal B. Freeman, Russellville, Ky. 'G ' , ' - Peter Richardson Freeman, a, Southwest Harbor, Ja ' -I ,. Q I My Maine Y, . ,, g -.g A A f-3 Marcia Kay Froula, a, Cleveland, Tenn. ' X 3 J'-xf' .U 7 H ' 'Ji ' J. Robert Fricke, e, Houston, Tex. . , X , , I gyvgggltl Michael A. Friedland, a, Nashville, Tenn. Q , ,... ., ll 'l i ' 3.11-Z, A X - T.- f' . - ,-.J5Iil'i!,- , ' W -- Myra Ann Friedi, a, Nashville, Tenn. A g , ' Greg Fritz, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Q , -,Q ' 2 .vu A - -. Georgia Ann Fry, a, Spanish Wells, Bahamas E i , 5 it ', Robert Harold Funke, a, Pewee Valley, Ky. '45 1 7 T: I' . William Keith Funkhouser, Jr., a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. X I . ' A Cayce Preston Fuqua, a, Nashville, Tenn. ' 5 f f. f- -1 ' , sm, V , C g YM l C g Douglas Gilbert Garner, a, Dallas, Tex. 4 M ' I Stephanie Diane Garrich, n, Carlisle, Ark. 8 :- .-Q S , ,A .A P, Carol Jo Garvey, n, Ft. Worth, Tex. ,, - ,. , James Marion Gary, a, Greenville, Ky. ' sis' ' Betsy Ann Gayle, a, Houston, Tex. ' , ' M I Gerard F. Gehring, a, Bowie, Md. 3 , . 5, . , , - , -, ., g. ' f g ,V ri g T 'V Charlice Evelyn Geiger, n, Atlanta, Ga. Ki ' Keith Gelman, a, Wichita, Kan. A b ,M Charles Gregory Gephart, a, Wagoner, Okla. 5 Q ' ' 0 4' , A . Sally Lynn Geraldson, a, Waukesha, Wisc. iff 1 v Fl f ig, T. Christian Gibson, e, Wilmington, Del. . A xt . .J , If ,H Robert Carlisle Gillander, Jr., a, Jacksonville, Fla. ' Q , N ' ' ' A A 'l F' . H. .5 m ' l 7 F A f. James Barry Gillespie, a, Jackson, Miss. I A ,' Julia Ann Gillespie, a, Jackson, Miss. . -N 5 5 Ig. .S Robert H. Gillespy, III, Chagrin Falls, Ohio - S A sa , 'N A-:L , 1 . Francis Davidson Gilman, a, Matthew, NC 7, , W? x ,-A 'f'I. 1 ' ' ? Carol Ann Gilmore, a, Dallas, Tex. .x ' D ,iq ' A it 1 ' Calvin Ervin Glidewell, a, Leesburg, Fla. ' X X ' - -1 f . l A. Michael Glover, a, Knoxville, Tenn. , , D John Andrew Goddard, e, Maryville, Tenn. 'F 7' , ' George William Godwin, a, Jackson, Miss. , -4 J, ' Robb B. Goff, a, Houston, Tex. ., , 33 all i , Leslie Ann Gorday, a, Catskill, NY '- ' A ' U Leigh Ellen Gossett, n, Portland, Tenn. ,' f 5' V -' wa- ! 4 3 'fl A 254: Hiram Jennings Goza, a, Memphis, Tenn. Edwin G. Grafton, Jr., a, Dallas, Tex. Bonnie Lee Graham, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. Thomas B. Green, Jr., e, Nashville, Tenn. Ernest Parker Greer, Jr., a, Paris, Tenn. Richard Doty Greer, a, Birmingham, Ala. 3661-IUNIORS F' A . ' r1V '- f A f: . ' .. , ., 2 It .-.- ' t ' , E '- 11' J. ,LWQQ A .',i F ff' 1: .: .. V. - ... -4 l 07.1 C-5 'Li ,' ,, I 83, X - Q uf , - If ' , lf. -:E f !-AX V? A A . V if G f a F W , i' ' 1 '. K2 'C-'A' 'f . Wg! 'fav ak. f Q: , A Q., ,I in v I .' N Iwi. I ' Y K -I W . li 'li gg F '.x.xlNWx'.h,fll' I . ,I f SIM me E 515' - 2 3 V X Y W ., It , - , . asia V I ' 1 v I 'WI VW' 1 V- :H . Q Algfff ' V I 4 he Q . A-. X , ,it 1' I ' ' .. ., -.-a -- ' 'EEN '-' -'J' ' N , 1 V 'I fl ' -L -A . A ,L iimsk- 1 I V E ' 1 I 1-A z 3 - -'RW f.-v f-use at g :I ,ss '- 'f . f, 4... at Al ,ffl 4 , 'rg l . f i ff. I r l --v fo - W - . vi X . I S' .!f - ,,l ,ev 'w - I .-. -f-lgrj, .0 s MIS.: I ,V 41 M -ff'-Jil, .- kr -M-:V W g M ' r ' 1 Q' TM W I , .- N 0 - Y Q, K ag- e. I A . g -, , -i V , h at I , .KJIEJ .Vs a A . .. ,',.,E1,, -. gy Lfifl' 51. 5 Q' 1 fish VF l 'W A ' .f ir, . ' - 73. n- ,g 76 I A 2 S. ' . . . ' tal ., Alice Marguerite Gregg, a, Nashville, Tenn. Julia Lorene Gregory, n, Nashville, Tenn. Marcella Jean Gregory, n, Glasgow, Ky. Kenneth Scott Grier, a, Tampa, Fla. Thomas Loftin Grimes, e, Jacksonville, Fla. Stephen Edward Grimm, III, a, Lake Forest, Johanna Cecilia Guehl, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Fred Habeeb, a, Birmingham, Ala. Len F. Hale, e, Cerulean, Ky. Wayne Lashlee Hall, III, a, Nashville, Tenn. Gary Nestor Hamburg, e, Maple Glen, Penn. Jean Lucile Hamilton, a, Rumson, NJ Frances Jean Hammond, a, New Albany, Ind. Jack Lansford Hammond, a, Jackson, Miss. John Fremont Hamsher, a, Memphis, Tenn. Bonnie Helen Hancock, a, Waldorf, Md. L. Hunter Handley, Jr., a, Orlando, Fla. Robert Rutledge Harness, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Sam Turner Harper, a, Tullahoma, Tenn. Martha Lynn Harrell, a, Ocala, Fla. John Burke Harris, a, Macon, Ga. Linda Gwyn Harris, a, Dickson, Tenn. Durward Harrison, a, Louisville, Ky. Nancy Rhea Hart, a, Murray, Ky. Susan Lee Hartzoge, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Rick Hasselback, a, Richmond, Va. Cindy Lea Haynes, a, Kenner, La. Michael Glenn Head, e, Nashville, Tenn. Charles Austin Heffernan, a, Bethesda, Md. Stephen Jay Heishman, a, Louisville, Ky. Ill. Stephen Brown Henderson, e, Guntersville, Ala. Donald James Henley, a, Memphis, Tenn. William Charles Herald, a, Miami, Fla. John James Herlin, III, a, Memphis, Tenn. Katey Herrington, n, Bad Axe, Mich. Edith Morrow Hickerson, a, Manchester, Tenn. Valanca Lee Hicks, a, St. Louis, Mo. Melissa Sue Higdon, a, Leitchfield, Ky. G. Johnson Hightower, a, Oklahoma, Okla. William Thomas Hill, a, N. Little Rock, Ark. W. Rand Hodges, e, Baltimore, Md. Susan B. Hoffman, a, Dayton, Ohio Norman Alexander Hofheimer, e, Jacksonville, Richard Lee Holcomb, a, Aberdeen, Md. William A. Hollis, a, Anchora, Turkey Anne Marie Holloway, a, Atlanta, Ga. Richard See Holson, III, a, Lake Forest, Ill. Carol Anne Honey, a, Ft. Thomas, Ky. JUNIORS I Fla 367 Priscilla Ann Hooper, n, Gallatin, Tenn. Donald C. House, a, Rockville, Md. Susan Jane Hubbard, n, Winchester, Ky. Robert D. Huber, a, Arlington, Heights, Ill. G. Trammell Hudson, a, Montgomery, Ala. Madeline Christian Hudson, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Paul A. Hughes, e, Nashville, Tenn. r Valerie Jean Humphrey, n, Evansville, Ind. Michael Allyson Hunter, a, Franklin, Tenn. Holly Kay Hurst, n, New Castle, Del. Bren Hutchinson, a, Stone Mountain, Ga. Stephen Thomas Ikard, a, Winchester, Tenn. Elizabeth King Ingle, n, Sevierville, Tenn. Socrates Andreou Ioannides, e, Nicosia, Cyprus Nita Louise Irby, a, Memphis, Tenn. Virginia Dent Irwin, a, Atlanta, Ga. David Stoutt Isenhour, e, Nashville, Tenn. Marilee Jacobs, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ralph Charles James, a, Birmingham, Ala. Henry Kinzer Jarrett, III, a, Nashville, Tenn. Margaret Allison Jeffries, a, Anapolis, Md. Paul X.M. Jensen, a, Louisville, Ky. Arthur Carson Jessen, e, Winnetka, Ill. John William Jewell, II, e, Nashville, Tenn. Rebecca Elizabeth Joffrion, n, Huntsville, Ala. George Lee Johnson, a, Decatur, Ala. Nancy Jeanne Johnson, n, Nashville, Tenn. Nancy L. Johnson, a, Memphis, Tenn. Phillip Carl Johnson, a, Houston, Tex. Ruth Ann Johnson, n, Lafayette, La. Richard Cyrus Jones, a, Oak Park, Ill. Russel Steel Jones, a, Owensboro, Ky. Thomas Daniel Jones, e, Nashville, Tenn. Mary Lucile Jordan, a, Houston, Tex. Richard James Jordon, a, Tampa, Fla. James Francis Kane, II, a, Louisville, Ky. Michael D. Kantor, a, Metairie, La. Gerald B. Kasting, a, Louisville, Ky. Steven Elliott Katten, a, Waco, Tex. Forde Sullivan Kay, a, Augusta, Ga. William Samuel Kaye, a, Columbus, Miss. Lynne Marie Kazanowski, a, Yardley, Penn. Allen Tison Keel, Jr., a, Birmingham, Ala. Donna Susan Kelley, n, Short Hills, NJ Graeme Rutledge Kelley, a, Nashville, Tenn. Gwynn Kelly, a, Gallatin, Tenn. Jane Gregory Kennedy, a, Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Judith Anne Kepler, a, Medford Lakes, NJ mu 1 .mmons -Q ' jf . I .T 'vs nr as ,J 'N .. ,A N y Q- x 0. , xv. ' X A 5 A J FW , I -- 0 -.,, J ,Q' 5 Nw 1 .:- 33, . Iii ., :L ii us. in ,,, ' A. I I v :f-riff. I 'ea 6 vm lg T. F' 'I . 1 'W e I'-5. if 'Ng A 51 ? ' 5' , f 7 R N . -V f AX Vi x X v A i I Lx 5- i f !..,1,q is .,.. 1 a s s I x .-9. .1 ,x . .r 'N' - 5 9 -6 nu , - 14 ' i Q ,351 Q rf' , I 1 7 6 -.f - -J ,I X VI . I ' I at J .sa Lf 12 I fre., , 3 Arn , , A., .... -li' ig. ,,, ka. ,Q K, e A . Lili 2: 0'-L ' 3 9 .gh ' 4.-. I el-1-f 1 2 - 'fn ' 1:3 1 v-5 . . 44 Xi' K - 'X V' E 1 . cv R 9, A 'h '-?, Vg.. '11 'N , x ' oA ' I x Y A-A 7 0 4 A R T 3 A. M nl. A 4. tt,. - N ' -. 4 ',f ' T9 ff' U .5 .ii X L1 . is K ,J , .Al if Z ' ' f' 1 I ' - . 5.1.-I . I T' H I i' X K . Mi ai A I J i, -C .A ,f, Las 5, , -L - 55. N . W ' . A ' , 'WW H I -.-' in L I ., U -. e vii -v va -3 -.L A -:' '- 'F' '1 ' f ' ' P 4 f ., f ,,,,,ng,, 1 ills! to ,ml al r ' I I J i I -.4 I' K , ' ' Q -I V V ' Y I 5 .wx 1 K . 1 7 Vg 1 . i I i 1 af I We' A e ' . - ll I ' . P ' P 2.12 . I 4 1715 , gl-5 ' , ' 7 I-'fi A , ft . 5 I . - vi an , ' .es I A' . ul l f - V i- 1 ., V' U ' QU e . f-.M I i 'W '21 1? V rk k Y A F7 W s a :Q gs -. vi I ', -rr- ' , vi X X Y 'ln 1 'W R '3' ' ' ima X Jw, x -f A - i, , of A fi - I .. , .4 - - , ,. Elizabeth Ellen Kern, a, Bethlehem, Penn. Mark Kessler, a, Jacksonville, Fla. John Judson Keyes, III, a, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Orman L. Kimbrough, a, Greenwood, Miss. Sallie Elizabeth King, a, Murfreesboro, Tenn. Carol Ann Kingsbury, e, Louisville, Ky. Lance Grayden Kinsey, a, Shaker Heights, Ohio Jane Elizabeth Kirby, a, Memphis, Tenn. Rebecca Jane Kirkland, n, Birmingham, Ala. Richard Kisber, a, Memphis, Tenn. Thomas Edward Kitsmiller, a, Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Christopher Hampton Kleber, a, St. Charles, Ill. Kevin Jon Klein, a, Louisville, Ky. Charles Daniel Knight, a, Shreveport, La. Lynn Rochel Kocen, Silver Spring, Md. Carol Anne Koepf, a, Baltimore, Md. Eveline K. Kraft, a, Tulsa, Okla. Disa Carol Krestensen, n, Natchez, Miss. Joel Frederioc Kuadaraucius, a, Freeport, Ill. Paul Thomas Lafrenz, a, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia Betty Jo Lancaster, a, Columbia, Tenn. Evan Price Landrum, III, a, Ocala, Fla. John M. Lannon, a, Diersburg, Tenn. Nancy Jane Larrison, a, Wilmot, Ark. Diane Ruth Lauver, n, Chatham, NJ Catherine Annemarie Lawler, n, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Jeffrey Parker Lawson, e, I-lamden Conn. Charles Robert Layton, a, Nashville, Tenn. Bryan Michael Lazare, a, New Orleans, La. Bill David Lee, a, Pensacola, Fla. Cathy Patricia Lee, a, Houston, Tex. Marjory Ann Letner, n, Lyndhurst, Ohio Henry Baldauf Levi, a, Evansville, Ind. Janet Ellen Lewis, a, Washington, DC Stephen Joel Lidd, a, Bethesda, Md. Kenneth Robert Linden, a, Chicago, Ill. Donald L. Linn, a, Greenville, SC Albert Brant Lipscomb, Jr., a, Nashville, Tenn. Hal Kemp Litchford, a, Nashville, Tenn. Scott H. Loeflier, e, Oklahoma City, Okla. Keith Logan, a, Union City, Tenn. Carol Louise Longbotham, a, Cabot, Ark. William Levi Longshore, a, Birmingham, Ala. Mary Jo Love, n, Delray Beach, Fla. Charles Nelson Ludwig, a, Louisiana, Mo. Julia Scott Lyon, n, Pittsburgh, Penn. Benjamin Robison Mabry, a, Nashville, Tenn. Marcus MacDougall, a, Parsippany, NJ JUNIORS I 369 Robert T. MacLachlan, a, Nashville, Tenn. Julie Madsen, a, Birmingham, Mich. Martha Lee Maggart, a, Lebanon, Tenn. Robert A. Mallette, a, Jackson, Miss. Penelope Jane Malone, a, Nashville, Tenn. Walter David Marianelli, e, Nashville, Tenn. Byron Wayne Marks, a, Owensboro, Ky. Henry Charles Marks, a, Ocala, Fla. Maurice J. Marks, a, Lake Wales, Fla. George Patrick Marlette, a, Alexandria, Va. Jon Peach Marhall, a, Nohasonak, Nova Scotia Marilyn Jane Marstiller, n, Kirkwood, Mo. Emily Graden Martin, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Louise Armistead Martin, a, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas Rhodes Martin, a, Memphis, Tenn. Patricia Ann Masters, n, Shawnee Mission, Kansas George Harman Mastwerson, a, Shetlield, Ala. Margaret Jody Mateer, a, Orlando, Fla. Charles B. Matson, e, Little Rock, Ark. Mary Phil Matthews, n, Nashville, Tenn. Rebecca Elizabeth McBride, e, Birmingham, Ala. Theodore Trimmer McCarley, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ruth Elinor McCorkle, a, Memphis, Tenn. Bryan Scott McCoy, a, Prospect, Ky. Richard R. McDonald, a, Pleasant Hill, Mo. Edith Kent McElwain, a, Louisville, Ky. William Charles McFee, Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. Harry H. McGee, a, Savannah, Ga. Judith Ann McGraw, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Pam McHenry, a, Nashville, Tenn. Sarah Mena McIntyre, a, Birmingham, Mich. James Hart McKillop, III, a, Winter Haven, Fla. Richard Lee McKinley, e, Fairborn, Ohio Bob McLaughlin, a, Decatur, Ala. Sharon Ann McMahon, n, Cookeville, Tenn. Lee Cameron McNeil, e, Amarillo, Tex. Steven Dale McNish, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. David Lynn McPheeters, e, Atlanta, Ga. Lilybeth Means, a, Nashville, Tenn. Mindy E. Millar, a, Germantown, Tenn. Barbara Elizabeth Miller, a, Cedar Rapids, Iowa Dawn Rozear Miller, a, Columbia, Tenn. Emmy Rosalynde Miller, n, Chattanooga, Tenn. Marc Taylor Miller, a, Huntington, W. Va. Kitty Lou Milliken, a, Frankfort, Ky. Cynthia Suzan Mills, e, Lafayette, La. Joseph Bradford Millsap, a, Waxachie, Tex. Jack Fagerland Milne, a, Jacksonville, Fla. 370 I JUNIORS v rf V --ew V ez E . fi x . '22 U Y -av 55. N .X A -.v X . I j ZA E H M V6-1 H M1 1 V , ff' ,T - . 1 2 ,L , . N ,I-if is as 'H' 4'-if 2-Y' ' - ' . Qi.. Ll xxx - K I . N X -in ,i gmt? fe f + ,t fi A to A . 4 1 J V . , . s , 1 , 'ai 'T -5, t .J Q au- .YLB X L19 , .L -, W E V4 . 5 ' 5 S V 4 'I Kx4,J I N 3' W 1 if I N in I I , a Ls, L fi ,. , I V h V J. '1 7 ' V x ,1 'M W Q f y 6 1 Q A ije' '- v ,, Q ti' 5' r -2. I as 2- .3 5 .4 :' . gg, ' 7 ' ' - J- ,gil X' V 4 rm F 'R if ' v H 4 U I if fir ' s mi .45-F. 1 if may , i N F3 7 f q 'I - Q lg 2 ,. -,px ,Q T M' -.2 . '- g., .U-5. Q If V - V A- ,,,. :FA ' , , am 47' t .....,, .mi 5 , 'T , , . 3 T ,,c .n fn 1 4 I ,, .. is I . A ax K . '1, ' 1 ' ip hi 77 A 'Ah h s I' 4 ,drgrri g :lf TIP ' 'A . j'. , f .-. ,, . . Y 1, I- . ,-i .1 5- ? VI AA A A . A ,sa .Tit , W. .1 .-A U rl U ' 3' 'Tk A , V ' 'J h xl, p N N r I we A . A I-il . i,A5..' l - -A , ' I A 'A X W ag ,. . ' .4 ' . v l-t 0 I X . V , lfr, ,, , .l i 'I ' E N A .fy ark , N - i . 4 , , I l - . M D ' , , A I fp I 1 P92 ' J W' 9 if wfj If W its I is A1473 - + 4 ,H X6 g if ,- 3 6 ul y Z! . 4 I -my V K, il N A- Nll' il 4 .J f D n fe , , g f., , A A DY' I lit- gg .gf 1 Q, 'll , .f if - qi '4 5 ' .I if A l Q al - ' 5, J 35 . 4 r ,: 549 e 'wh ' X ' -lf, B fit J John Thomas Mohr, a, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas William Moller, a, Northbrook, Ill. Robert Henry Montgomery, Jr., a, Kingsport, Tenn Debra Moore, a, Florence, Ala. S. Meade Moore, III, a, Nashville, Tenn. Nancy Morgan, a, Dallas, Tex. Scott Hoffman Mortimer, a, Springfield, Va. Anne Kathryn Moss, a, Orlando, Fla. Mark Edward Moss, e, Hopkinsville, Ky. Thad J. Moyseowicz, a, Maitland, Fla. Liz Mullen, e, Little Rock, Ark. David Meredith Mullins, a, Mobile, Ala. William P. Mulloy, a, Louisville, Ky. Diane Munchak, a, Rome, Ga. Robert Cornelius Murphy, a, Nashville, Tenn. Ted Murphy, e, Nashville, Tenn. J. Reese Murray, a, Birmingham, Ala. William Eric Murray, a, Tulsa, Okla. Charles Monroe Myer, a, Birmingham, Ala. Steven Linden Nelson, a, Louisville, KY. Teresa Linda Nichols, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. Amy Reid Nielson, n, Palatine, Ill. Nancy Christian Nielson, n, Cincinnati, Ohio Clyde Leonard Noel, Jr., a, Cupersino, Calif. Frank D. Nonnenmacher, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Steve Coleman Norris, a, Nashville, Tenn. John Ed Norton, a, Lewisburg, Tenn. William L. Norton, III, a, Gainesville, Ga. Dennis Earl Oglesby, a, Decatur, Ill. J. Wills Oglesby, a, Nashville, Tenn. Frances Lowe Olsen, a, Atlanta, Ga. Pamela Sue Orcutt, a, Dallas, Tex. Jetf Overby, a, St. Augustine, Fla. Luther Walter Owens, a, Montgomery, Ala. Matthew Arthur Page, a, Tulsa, Okla. Melody Suzanne Parker, n, Birmingham, Ala. . Pamela Susan Parnell, n, Boca Raton, Fla. Stephen LLoys Parr, a, Little Rock, Ark. Thomas Franklin Parrish, e, Nashville, Tenn. Thomas Gary Parrish, n, Tallahassee, Fla. D. Charles Payne, a, Export, Penn. Cathy Pearson, a, Nashville, Tenn. Charles Head Peay, a, Birmingham, Ala. Benjamin Harrison Pedigo, a, Atlanta, Ga. Barbara Acker Penick, a, Little Rock, Ark. Louise Rhett Perry, n, Charleston, SC Martha Ann Peters, n, Russellville, Ark. Ann Ellen Peterson, n, Atlanta, Ga. JU NIORS I 371 Kari Jo Peterson, a, Boca Raton, Fla. Laura Lee Peterson, n, W Dunwoody, Ga. Sally Pettit, a, Poplarville, Miss. Ronald Clark Piacenti, a, Park Forest, Ill. Rose Marie Pinder, a, Nashville, Tenn. Paul Douglas Pitzer, a, Moorestown, NJ Virginia Ann Place, n, Berlin, Conn. Marion Francis Placido, a, Atlanta, Ga. Mason Plunkett, e, Montezuma, Mont. B. Elizabeth Pope, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Adrian Valdemar Popescu, e, Atlanta, Ga. James Ormond Powell, a, Little Rock, Ark. Sarah Ann Powell, a, Milwaukee, Wisc. patricia Ann Primm,'a, Nashville, Tenn. Linda Lee Protiva, n, Atlanta, Ga. Cary Watson Pulliam, a, Columbia, Tenn. Jean Eckert Qualman, a, Cleveland, Tenn. Steve Quattrochi, a, Warwick, RI Sydney Warren Rabey, a, Mobile, Ala. Sherrie Gail Rackley, a, Houston, Tex. Susan Gail Rains, n, Kingston, Tenn. Cecil Benjamin Rainwater, a, Atlanta, Ga. Linda Anne Raker, n, Louisville, Ky. Mark Preston Ramsey, a, Memphis, Tenn. Ruth Powell Rand, a, Durham, NC Elizabeth Bradley Rankin, a, Clarksville, Tenn. Max Lehman Ray, a, Lewisburg, Tenn. LLoyd Walter Ream, a, North Canton, Ohio Mark Allen Redmond, e, Canton Ohio Camille Reed, a, Tupelo, Miss. John William Reed, a, Kettering, Ohio Paula Reed, a, Bloomington, Ind. Dawn Elisabeth Reimann, n, Oak Brook, Ill. Joyce Reiter, a, Miami, Beach, Fla. Marta Render, n, Louisville, Ky. Orville Reed Rhorer, a, Frankfort, Ky. Jack Rich, a, New Orleans, La. Lester Daniel Richmond, a, Middletwon, Ohio Henry Hardeman Roberts, a, Memphis, Tenn. Margaret Ann Roberts, e, Nashville, Tenn. James Thomas Robertson, a, Memphis, Tenn. Joan Evans Robertson, a, Glen Ellyn, Ill. Dan R. Robinson, e, Carthage, Tenn. Lolli Robinson, a, Cherry Hill, NJ Nancy Patricia Robinson, n, Lookout Mountain, Tenn. Charles Price Robison, a, La Paz, Bolivia Mark B. Rockey, e, Pennington, NJ Linda Rogers, a, Long Island, NY 3721 IUNIORS f rn A 'sim' as :J - V, ,P Q1 'T if. 8 gr., ,gf xg J ,fi tx' ' , . X i J? ' J it er .rl R A wr--J V 1 W . A ,Www gf '- 1 ny , br f - J . Ji' Yi Ai J' A e , . .L R -.Af . ' I . 'rg A , wa i 1 ' x - W' 7 'fzlgiyj' 'WF' I I uh F '2- ., -:- -ag .f j -f n ' ,Sg- wr, g . i ' ' -2.3 2 VM 4 rf., '-fn, '- rn- . ., 3 ' ig ax -... .f V' , :f. Q, 0 -4 -xy Q lt. s . ,X - -' ' w N!! Il 1 ' ' i f ,E 1 as A J If . gw JXV .3-FQ JA ' ffl . 'su l.. J, .4 .,-5 1 V .,. X' Jl pg, ' ' 'l wk' f ' I 1 - .FFL Q , 7. fi W W , 'f :Q ' ,N -lf .V ' fe 0' 5 f. :- ? : 0 , g 2 J s Ax It 'P ri dw V4 'T H V L ra' 1 at B J 1 p 1-' If . 3 S 'ii , ' E5 ' Jlllyl 'Q 'X V' A Z1 A 4 '13, ' I J- ,, xt e rubs li ani? 1 .A 7 f X' ,N n J f if A , 15 A ' me W M A 'xr' R Q: A-Ga! - . . , aff' F-,fi 'X -'J V 4 5 ' Q I 7,49 iii -tal-.'l .ic ' . ai .Jilgjyl ff? - e . - QI ,, - 7 N A A rr- '-' 1 53, ' M W -. T' g 'Y J 7- A L crm'-. , K N V- f l, W N 4 4 W ' pf' ix C? L 5,1 1 1. nf A N as xi. 1 5' TT 2 ' 'I hifi, p 1 'ai if, L 3 '45 ' 1 L J lfl. , s .. '25 'J' V . I , Pl ,-. , li 4,1255 f FT X! xr I 'S N1 mf- - A., 'Vx 1 Fr ' ' ' nm V . f 1 - '15 1 , ilasl n W' ,A '?' 1 he . 1' , V V ' '. ' N ff. w 'FP 1 in .V - ' 'da' --e - ' ':- 1. 'V B . G X 0 5 - Robert Rogers, a, Dyerburg, Tenn. David Andrew Ross, a, Bethesda, Md. Mary H. Rossiter, n, Summit, NJ Richard A. Rua, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Sharon Anne Rubin, a, Princeton, NJ Sue Layton Sadler, a, Nashville, Tenn. Kathryn Schaffer Sanders, a, Knoxville, Tenn. Patty Ann Sanders, a, Houston, Tex. William Daryl Sanders, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. Larry Marvin Saripkin, a, Memphis, Tenn. Jim Satterwhite, a, Nashville, Tenn. James William Scheurich, a, Tulsa, Okla. Rudolph Schmidt, e, Mountainside, NJ Paul Richard Schratz, Jr., a, Annapolis, Md. Donald Mark Schroeder, e, Novato, Calif. Frederick Edmund Schulz, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Stephen David Scofield, a, Atlanta, Ga. Charles Thomas Scott, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Robert Scott, a, Birmingham, Ala. Stephen Whitfield Scott, a, Memphis, Tenn. Joseph Robert Seehusen, a, Baltimore, Md. Helen Ann Chris Siikas, a, Nashville, Tenn. Tom Schaliler, a, Memphis, Tenn. Elizabeth Shapiro, a, Nashville, Tenn. Linda Ann Shaw, a, Hudson Falls, NY Cheryl Ann Shepard, n, New Orleans, La. Candy Jo Sheris, a, Fairfax, Fa. Christopher Warren Sholes, a, Johnson City, Tenn. Lawrence Andrew Simons, a, Columbus, Ohio Ricky Phillip Simovitz, a, Tampa, Fla. Samuel Randolph Simpson, III, a, Camp Hill, Penn. Mary Ellen Slaughter, a, Birmingham, Ala. John B. Sloope, a, Riverdale, Ga. Christopher Woodbridge Smith, a, ST. Petersburg, Fla Dale Thomas Smith, e, Nashville, Tenn. David Michael Smith, a, Springfield, Ohio Leland Lemuel Smith, Jr., e, Nashville, Tenn. Luther Aubrey Smith, a, North Little Rock, Ark. Peter Bradley Smith, a, St. James, NY Richard Ernest Smith, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Kelvin Snyder, a, Beaver, Penn. John Albert Sobel, IV, a, Clearfield, Penn. Harriet Solms, a, Coral Gables Fla. Janet Southmayd, a, Tulsa, Okla. Kenneth Craig Spain, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Brett Speed, e, White Plains, NY Vivian Coward Spicer, a, Memphis, Tenn. Robert Tyler Spratlin, e, Atlanta, Ga. JUNIORS I 373 Anthony Louis Springman, e, Alton, Ill. Steven Blair Starr, a, Arlington Heights, Ill. Conrad Andrew Stauffer, e, Princeton, N.J. Robert Malcolm Stebbins, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Augusta Hill Sterne, a, Atlanta, Ga. Alec Brock Stevenson III, a, Nashville, Tenn. Jeanne M. Stewart, a, Memphis, Tenn. John M. Stewart, a, Birmingham, Ala. Stephan Kline Stewman, a, Atlanta, Ga. Mary Catherine Stiwinter, n, Baltimore, Md. Elizabeth Ann Stoneburner, a, Lookout Mtn., Tenn. Earl B. Stover III, a, Silsbee, Texas Jane B. Stranch, a, Nashville, Tenn. Happy Reid Stratton, a, Memphis, Tenn. Warren Martin Strauss, a, Huntsville, Ala. Victoria Louise Streuli, a, Memphis, Tenn. John David Strickland, a, Cullman, Ala. Julia McCra.ry Stringfellow, e, Nashville, Tenn. Tilman Werner Stuhlinger, a, Huntsville, Ala. Walker Sturdivant, a, Glendora, Miss. Daniel S. Sulkin, e, Memphis, Tenn. Timothy Hagan Sullivan, a, Dallas, Texas William Hailey Summers, Jr., a, Brentwood, Tenn. Richard Henry Sundermann, Jr., a, Little Rock, Ark. Holly Jean Sutherland, n, Pittsburgh, Pa. John David Swain, e, Seymour, Ind. Annette M. Swank, e, Berwyn, Pa. Larry Allen Sykes, a, Garden City, Mich. George Milum Testerman, a, Rogersville, Tenn. Betty Button Thomas, a, Shelbyville, Ky. Carolyn Ann Thomas, a, Stillwater, Okla. Donald Julian Thomas, e, Ashland City, Tenn. Mary Alicia Thomas, a, Shelbyville, Tenn. Mary Sue Thomasson, a, St. Louis, Mo. Robert Hollis Thomison, a, Nashville, Tenn. Jane Thompson, a, Indianapolis, Ind. Mark Chambers Thompson, a, Newark, Del. Nicki Lynn Thompson, n, Lexington, Ky. Douglas Ward Thomson, a, Terrace Park, Ohio Betsy Lee Thrasher, n, St. Petersburg, Fla. Mary McTyeire Tigert, a, Nashville, Tenn. David Alexander Tipton, a, Memphis, Tenn. Michele Lynn Toomay, n, McLean, Va. Brooke Lyon Tower, a, Nashville, Tenn. Patricia Ann Trangenstein, n, Dayton, Ohio Bruce Carlile Trimble, a, Ormond Beach, Fla. Tom Jay Tsai, a, Ravenna, Ohio Sally Caldwell Tucker, n, Nashville, Tenn. 37-1 l JUNIORS - . sr V , r ' i 36' . - . N G -A -2 M Y J-ax 'fr A J -, org., -'fr 1 'E'- H a A t A W t we 4 If 1, la X V 'l - X Y 5 A - , .ff at ,N p x . ,, Q H I -A .X 3 JN ,-lxwfx A y fi 7 . X, 1 'A x 3 K . Q .3 - X V 3' :F Z. Q, X 1, Z-1 ' ' I ' . LEW, If IANZQ l g - 5 ' 1 I ll- F . 1: H ' 0,1 J, '1- . 4- f L Ll N ' .Q if x ' ' W xi' . A l 1 . H -1 1 5: 4 CT t.. , h ,. , ie .1 ri ' .3-Q 1 ,I 'v 'H , Q I .tg tt' steal Q Q t.. ' or 5 ,' 1 it . r V 1 ,al S' 'IK 1 H ' , -as-1 - ' A X' ' 1 ' . . r f I a For aa 1 H A T 'U .r-so -, fl. l -Q Y . J + , liz lm V - , A. S ' , l , - Y H H f., gif. Li Nil Y , 1. V lb Y 1 i ' Nu ' l 1 f' --,, ml- its? X wx? . X 1-5 Ne- A lj -..AM ,vc It vii , 1' K .H -.Q 1 it 'I X , 25125. X 1 2 , lf. l l ' G fx' 'J T + ,- Qi - . - r f- 7' 8' r fa.. 'N FN l ' ' ' JL ,J :Q l as J. +V -,fi . k yi f N. I N a f X - x 1 f I - r, . Y. ,, .1 W-N V , : 2 .or A .3 lk: .1 xg 1' 1 7 I 'Lx ' -er . fgj 5 if f' fy K i 5 N f. T D ' VTP ' , ,A F? ..1 ,. ,- , .. , gr, 3 PS4 ' 33 57' iv i '5 -. '5 fy f - '. . M. 'f ' 1 '1 , I' ' J 1 . 'il ef' ' 1 W if, '1 .rn ' . ' ,,,j'F . V A Y I ls' .' X' FJ ' Q JMR . A -X x , it I . .aa fa A F' Il' uf, 'V' - 'kg Sfsg f: V. f-5 ' '- , 5 v l -- I A 2 5 .J A f Q Qi .., s A - 'W . J '4 Q, I , , , J. lr, 5. ,I , .. ,.A,,, -if . fe-- ' Q JV ' I ll r . -I 1. . '- '-A- ' - .' y I, Q- ' ,A 1,5 41 ' X , T ,., 1, , fx, .. . '11 .IE-IQ. ' P JA , u x lie I + J ' 1 f li 1., ., .1A I '09 1 - 4 'J - ' . i ,t , 5 .F ,wr , A . 'A -45, . . . K ' f J ' - P 'V ' 'T . . ,f 2 1 V . 1 it ' .' if Tramble Thomas Turner, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. James Richard Tybout, a, Worthington, Ohio Roy Thomas Tabor, a, Evansville, Ind. Benjamin Thomas Tacker, Jr., a, Memphis, Tenn. Tafee Anne Tallamy, n, Berkeley Heights, NJ Linda Joyce Tarbox, a, Akron, Ohio Mary Fern Tate, N, Birmingham, Ala. Cary E. Tenent, a, Memphis, Tenn. Stephen Pierce Upham, e, Mt. Vernon, Ohio Cynthia Jane Ustruck, e, Olean, NY David Alan Vail, a, Poughkeepsie, NY Steve Vale, a, Atlanta, Ga. Michael Jordan Vincent, a, Monessen, Penn. Michael Kirk Von Rosenberg, a, Houston, Tex. Ray M. Wagoner, a, Hampstead, NH Robert Wright Walken Horst, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Carolyn Gillespie Walker, a, Sarasota, Fla. Cherrie Rebecca Walker, n, Dyersburg, Tenn. John Gerald Wall, a, Nashville, Tenn. K. Jane Wall, a, Griffin, Va. Natalie Elaine Walsh, n, Spartanburg, SC Jennie Ward, n, Artesia, NM William Galloway Ware, e, Birmingham, Ala. Eugene Lovern Watkins, a, Nashville, Tenn. Linda Marie Watts, n, Lutherville, Md. Teddi Waxelbaum, n, Atlanta, Ga. William Bryan Webster, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Susan L. Weeks, n, Kankakee, Ill. Herron Pearson Weems, a, Laurel, Miss. Nancy Verne Wells, a, Orlando, Fla. Sally Margo Wells, a, Savannah, Ga. Robert Allen Welsh, e, Ft. Pierce, Fla. Cynthia Kellogg Wessel, n, Nashville, Tenn. Barbara Lee Weston, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Fur Wheeler, a, Bolivar, Tenn. David Caldwell White, a, Hillendale Forest, Md. Gregory Joseph White, e, Nashville, Tenn. Mary Ellen White, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Paul Wickey White, a, Germantown, Tenn. Joseph Morford Whitson, e, Nashville, Tenn. Mary Anne Whitten, a, Memphis, Tenn. Jeanne Price Whittenburg, n, Amarillo, Tex. Cheryl Faye Whitworth, a, Louisville, Ky. David Frank Wiggans, a, Dallas, Tex. Margaret E. Wilkinson, a, Corona Del Mar, Calif. Bruce Conklin Williams, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Craig Larry Williams, a, Cleveland, Tenn. Alexander Wilson, a, Nashville, Tenn. JUNIORS I 375 Catherine Martha Wilson, e, Dallas, John Thomas Wilson, a, Carmel, Tex. Ind. Mary Glenn Wilson, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Robert Scott Wilson, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Tara Lee Winkler, a, Birmingham, Ala. Randy Kirk Winstead, a, Cincinnati, Ohio John Charles Wolff, a, Rockville, Md. William Edward Wolski, a, Kettering, Ohio. Ann H. Womer, a, Shaker Heights, Ohio. Hale Wright, a, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Jeffrey Mason Wright, e, Frontenac, Mo. Linda Marie Wright, a, Huntsville, Martha Ellen Wright, a, Dalton, Terrance E. Yemm, a, Mobile, Ala. Ga. Ala. Judith Ann Yoder, n, Reading, Pa. Rex Garner Yon, a, Chattanooga, Howard Matthew Yonge, e, Pensacola, Gene Bailey Young, e, Groves, Martha Lindsay Yount, a, Winston-Salem, N.C. Laurence Alan Zuckerman, a, Chattanooga, Michael Andrew Zulian, a, Kansas City, Tn. Fla. Mo. Tn. Mo. N ,, Q , rv-W A 'N rfb ' fs- :A f'vO 9' ,, ' Y? '?, J- 'L Q. C-if 'G 1 'Q N5 J 0- f wif ' 'I - H 'ff I' ff? rf 'lo A A I mt- f M- A ml .b 'fpj M fB f ff 1 , s, 'Qi .4 ft H , 'f' H Z4 if -1- Q ,., nj , . , -i f mfg, U F1 I N Lx .Wg-. i A + rs , .fra 1F s,, , , X ff Al' , ' 2 Q it J in 'iz S' ' fi f Q. ' f - 'Fr - . - ,- ', , N fp K f Y 1 ' Q .HH ',kl .',-, VL ' 'Y lb -fl 1 'T A Q' ..1' --4, ,-,a E. ' 'ni - A A' i --7 gg Q L , , , A-vi-lL,725lli, ,3:H P n 1' 1 .,ie 1 ...wH131-.,nX::g.im1 A ,ll I4 .u .3 i I' g .A . . .. IIZXQVJW.-:-iillf T Wi,g:.2:1 Lg. 4, lLyf'L L E 'Q ........i.....-..-...- 378 I JUNIORS '4 ',. 'F -all 1- ' J-J ' , +452- . -I U' ., lbfx-A-tvs-, , fl-5' SQL 5 g I- ,eff I, .1555 4 . '3 Q -4 , f r ,v,, I th. ..-,, ,, .,--,Y-fgiq-1 vw. --uv- Q ff 4 ' WX ' ff 0 f it I ' liilb A 13 JYf'4f' , ' 45 jf 1 Qi ,vat ' ' K KA ii '. ' '2 ' -' Q 4 N 4 4, b , 'KAXL ,BX D K J'.',,,ffJ f W ws iff X , , P4 X ?4 i iv!! X 01 5 4 , il xY ,V I it .V ,4,... 4 v N' S ',' V. k, 'Lak 4 x , - .. Q ffiisggmzg' ga 1-A ,x N0 N an N Zlgzfn , .H J Q . i 430-fflI:fm1 QM ww Y .- ..r.1.-.-.-v '1+,.1-f-1 1 -. 1- I f , 4 .- Paul Norman Aas, a, East Hartford, Conn. John Abernathy, a, Nashville, Tn. Stephen D. Abernathy, e, Huntsville, Ala. Salvador V. Acosta Jr., a, Dallas, Tex. Thomas L. Adams, a, York, Penn. Richard W. Adams, a, Loxahatchee, Fla. V f i Marie Janet Ainsworth, a, Madisonville, Ky. Femia Sophia Antonia Alberts, e, Tampa, Fla. Mark Chadbourne Aldredge, e, Dallas, Tex. Gordon L. Alessio, a, Upper Saddle River, N.J. Louis John Alfieri, e, Keyport, N.J. Susan Adaline Alford, n, Emmitsburg, Md. Deborah Lynn Allen, a, Nashville, Tn. Gail Ellen Anderson, a, Nashville, Tn. William Bowers Anderson, a, Hopkinsville, Ky. Richard Wyatt Andrews, a, San Antonio, Tex. George Martin Armstrong, Jr., a, Columbia, Tn. Russell Gilman Ashbaugh III, a, Edwardsburg, Mich. Polly Anne Asher, a, Pewee Valley, Ky. Ann Gayley Atkinson, a, Winnetka, Ill. Neal Hertzel Attermann, a, Maplewood, N.J. Mary Anne Attwell, a, Houston, Tex. Marshall Jeffrey Bachman, e, Atlanta, Ga. Kathryn Cochran Baehr, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. George Lee Bagley, a, Orlando, Fla. af 37 -3, C: M if .- A J . v. vr Q, ff. 43' 7 1 . ' I 1. , -'T fd ,' egegsiif' 3. , , A, ,- - 1. . . f 15.1 A A , - , ..' in xv fig , . f 'P .I rw Lf , ii ' 5, i if 'f ' '-'B' rv , .. ' ' 1' . M4 . Q. ,r - , , 1 'A ' k L -. .LV WI , -. 15' 5 3.1 Q 'I I3 -3 l ,. l 1 1:-va? , 'sg 1:1 IA N, X 4 . , K X ' N , - 4 ' V,-'f iv' -7! ' , - , fo, s . :Q Q V I, -f 53' .I 14 - - w X -L ' --I f 'fP fig' C nthia Van D ke Bailey, n, Memphis Tn. A , Y Y Y Andrew C. Baird a, Signal Mountain, Tn. Joseph Dill Baker Jr., e, Frederick, Md. Robert Howell Baker III, a, Wilmington, Del. Kathleen C. Baldridge, n, Nashville, Tn. Anna Maria Banks, a, Middletown, Ohio. Michael Scott Barksdale, a, Atlanta, Ga. William Winston Barnard Jr., a, Memphis, Tn. Richard D. Barnes, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Thomas Walker Barnes, a, Winchester, Ky. Wendell Kirk Barnett, e, Nashville, Tn. James Robin Barrick, e, Nashville, Tn. Robin H. Barringer, a, Conway, N.H. Louis LeGarde Battey, a, Augusta, Ga. Sally ann Baum, n, Columbus, Ohio. Amy Baxter, a, Decatur, Ga. Skip Bayless, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Sao I SENIORS fm ' , i . l V 1, n u 4 - ' Q , Al X . fi 11. . X1'w4 -44. Q Q -v T1 N: 1 iii ' ' N x 'Q is . f,if1l'J . .Wt J? S' - . 'l i 1 rl r 1 . 'T' fl' 5? , 45, . , h 3, ,A 1' Y ' - 5 ..... x ' E' y'. I 'V I A , 2 I 2 I -ff? 1 .. 'Q 1 :..g. - ...sqm f - f - ll , - 'P - N ,, ' . ' ' x fv- .I 1 .T I . T-gh. 1' X 1 f. :I Ai . L . . :,. X, , . -. . Q - ,t .. -X f'A 01-5 .7 - ..,, ' f ' ' gba ': rw X H ' I Y Y into ,' rg in F rl ' F 4. Q 1 . .. 4 ...-r . ,I g II 'bu N- gr. , .4 0 . 5-9 I Q? 9, , , -n jf' I ,J N TW fx n fav Ax X ,S 1, 0 N XJ x 'l . 5' 1- f --, ff 1- , a ' r- B 4 ,. ., X 4. 1 . ,, . 7 Y f x ff. ' ' I 'Alf-s.'.5lz-1. . of A We Mi I . WLDJ 1 . ni 5 . ' 'T 113- Ls A I liz- ll' ' -' 4 I , 'I va A M 9 ff X. er - A 'viii X fl. . -'v fr, X rd ...J We f 4 1 Curtis Landry Baysinger, e, Baltimore, Md. William Douglas Beakely, e, Centerville, Tn. Sally Hays Bealle, a, Tuscaloosa, Ala. John Louis Bean, e, Richmond, Va. Bramlet Les Beard, a, Rossmoor, N.J. Mary Kathleen Becker, n, Jefferson City, Mo. Ernest Denton Bennett III, a, Sparta, Tn. Don Benson, a, Nashville, Tn. John Howard Bernstein, a, Omaha, Neb. James H. Berry Jr., a, Little Rock, Ark. Edmund Milton Bevington Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. Virginia Applegarth Bevington, a, Atlanta, Ga. Evelyn Sue Biles, n, Beirut, Lebanon. Stephen Christian Biles, n, Nashville, Tn. Leonard James Billingsley, a, College Station, Harry Crawford Binion, a, Mobile, Ala. Russell M. Blain, a, Tampa, Fla. Frank Williamson Blair III, e, Nashville, Tn. Barbara A. Block, a, Louisville, Ky. Pamela Bloss, a, Nashville, Tn. Alice Sylvester Boggs, a, Spartanburg, S.C. Elizabeth Ramsay Bohner, n, Nashville, Tn. Patricia Ann Bolton, a, Ormond Beach, Fla. Mary Helen Bond, a, Louisville, Ky. William John D. Bond, e, Louisville, Ky. Stayton M. Bonner, a, Wichita Falls, Tex. Stephen Bonner, a, Sulphur Springs, Tex. David Gregory Bonnet, a, Temple, Tex. Marvin Keith Booker, a, Madison, Tn. Charles Stuart Boone, a, Davenport, Iowa. Elizabeth Wright Bourland, a, Tupelo, Miss. Howard Griswold Bowden, a, New York, N.Y. Bruce Keefe Bowen, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Janet Mary Bowen, N, Washington, D.C. Thomas Clemens Bowie, e, Columbia, Tn. Tex Lynette Lellner Boyle, n, North Palm Beach, Fla. William Erskine Boyle, a, Signal Mtn, Tenn. David Buchanan Boyd, a, Nashville, Tenn. Frederick Snyder Boyer, a, Dayton, Ohio William Boyett, e, Talladega, Ala. Laura Jenne Brakebill, a, Memphis, Tenn. Brenda Carol Brakefield, a, Nashville, Tenn. SENIORS I 381 Linda Bracey, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Perry Brandt, a, Memphis, Tenn. Elizabeth Earl Branscomb, a, Birmingham, Ala. Elizabeth Ruth Brewer, n, Ft. Mitchell, Ky. James Ellis Brittain, e, Longwood, Fla. Barrett Brock, n, Birmingham, Ala. John William Brock, III, a, Rossville, Ga. Mildred Ann Brooke, a, Bessemer, Ala. Danforth Dayle Brown, a, Spokane, Wash. Daniel Leah Brown a St. Louis Mo. y 1 9 1 Brenda Brown, n, Orlando, Fla. Catherine Brown, a, Ft. Myers, Fla. Ella Frances Brown, a, Lookout Mtn., Tn. Ruth Pointer Brown, a, Franklin, Tn. Anne Fowler Browne, a, Louisville, Ky. Mark Allen Browning, a, Atlanta, Ga. Anita Kathleen Bryce, a, Mt. Lebanon, Penn. Dean Walter Bucalos, a, Massapequa, NY Thomas W. H. Buck, a, Birmingham, Ala. Phyllis Mae Burbridge, a, Little Rock, Ark. Hiram Speer Burdette, III, a, LaGrange, Ga. John Lindsay Burnett, Jr., a, Baton Rouge, La. Linda Burns, a, Shelbyville, Tn. Helen Burrus, a, Nashville, Tn. Robert Herriott Bush, a, Mt. Sterling, Ky. Virginia Pipes Butler, a, St. Francisville, La. Reginald William Buzzeu, a, Macon, Ga. Elizabeth Karen Cain, a, Nashville, Tn. Peter Charles Calandruccio, a, Memphis, Tn. William Louis Caldwell, a, Memphis, Tn. Mary Letitia Callender, a, Jackson, Ms. Letitia Jane Cameron, a, Nashville, Tenn. Douglas Meriwether Campbell, a, Lookout Mtn., Tn. Sally Ryan Campbell, n, Sparta, Va. William Craig Campbell, a, Raleigh, NC John Frederick Cantrell, a, Danville, Ky. Steven M. Cardney, a, Elmhurst, Ill. Dorothy M. Carmichael, a, Tuscumbia, Ala. Robert Spencer Carr, a, Orlando, Fla. Pamela Jarrett Carter, a, DeLand, Fla. 193Patricia Lee Carter, a, Moline, Ill. Sam Turner Carter, a, Sheflield, Ala. 382 I 'sl' 'VIORS fx 'UTS gl. , gg , f 1 '2- -A af, fi , rr. Q an ' i . I ca N. I ll 3 ,JT -2 -.Q .-Sv 3, T' ' X xv.. 1 . E? Y? are 'B '3- W ., i F. John Cashier, a, Fayetteville, NY Robert Norman Catanach, a, Woodbury, NJ Michael Levi Chambers, a, Nashville, Tn. Robert Stewart Chambers, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Rebecca Elizabeth Chatham, n, Louisville, Ms. Robert Lewis Chess, a, New Concord, Ohio Melissa Childers, a, San Antonio, Tex. Willmam Millard Choate, a, Ashland City, Tn. Kenneth Anthony Chung, e, Kingston Jamaica, W.I John Steward Civils, Jr., a, Gardendale, Ala. Henry Alexander Claiborne, a, Brownsbille, Tn. Cory Robert Clark, e, Jacksonville, Fla. Donald Edward Clark, e, Nashville, Tn. Kathleen Ann Clark, n, Gaithersburg, Md. Charles Thornton Cleaver, II, a, Dallas, Tex. Heath Ford Clift, a, Arlington, Va. Howard William Cline, e, Louisville, Ky. Mike Cloyd, a, Birmingham, Ala. William E. Cobb, a, Nashville, Tn. Charles Scott Cobean, a, Pleasantville, NY Claude Carr Cody, a, Houston, Tex. James Thomas Coleman, n, Nashville, Tn. Emmy Lous Collins, a, Peoria, Ill. Joseph Leonard Collins, a, Mahwah, NJ Elizabeth Ann Colvin, n, Atlanta, Ga. Meta Carolyn Conder, a, Potomac, Md. Catherine Ann Connett, e, Saltville, Va. Lot Howell Cooke, a, Arlington, Va. Gail Alan Cooper, a, Nashville, Tn. Larry Lamont Copeland, a, New York, NY James Paul Cordner, e, Medfield, Mass. Frank Edward Corrigan, a, Atlanta, Ga. Stanley W. Cotton, a, Evansville, Ind. Heather Anne Coyle, a, Danbury, Conn. Rebecca Carol Craven, a, Knoxville, Tn. Paul William Crego, e, Joliet, Ill. William Crews, a, Laurel, MS, Edward Franklin Crockett, III, a, Sheffield, Ala. Thomas Edward Cromer, a, College Grove, Tn. William Burdett Cudo, e, Jackson, Ms. Floyd Leroy Culler, a, Oak Ridge, Tn. Richard Latta Cummings, a, Nashville, Tn. SEINIORS I 383 Laurie Anne Cunningham, a, Houston, Tex. Charles Patrick Curley, e, Hermitage, Tn. John Curtas, a, Winter Park, Fla. Liz Curtis, a, Glouchester, Mass. Gregg Ann Custer, a, Upper Saddle Ruver, NJ Philip Lynn Custer, e, Nashville, Tn. Rena Ann Dabney, a, Atlanta, Ga. Douglas Dominic Dahlhauser, a, Hendersonville, Tn. Mary Ann Dale, a, Nashville, Tn. Frances Winship Dannals, a, Atlanta, Ga. George Knox Darfus, a, Winter Park, Fla. Elizabeth St. Clair Dasher, a, Atlanta, Ga. Jean Campbell Davis, a, Winston-Salem, NC Michael Kent Davis, a, Shelbyville, Tn. Thomas Patrick Davis, e, Little Rock, Ark. Lynn Lampton Deakins, a, Lookout Mtn., Tn. Camille Elliott Dean, a, Anchorage, KY. Deborah Ruth Deason, a, Nashville, Tn. Richard Deason, a, St. Louis, Mo. Ira Jack Deitsch, a, Springfield, Mass. Jeffrey Thomas Delargy, e, St. Petersburg, Fla. Charles Neal Delzell, a, Nashville, Tenn. William Robertson Delzell, a, Nashville, Tenn. Debra Royce Demaray, a, Birmingham, Ala. Allard Eamer Dembe, a, Cleveland Hieghts, Ohio Angela Demopoulos, a, Spartanburg, SC Ruth Ann Dent, a, Nashville, Tenn. Susan Stewart DeVane, n, Ft. Pierce, Fla. Todd Deveau, e, Rockford, Ill. Susan Elizabeth Dew, a, Normall, Ill. Lawrence Glenn Dewberry, a, Decatur, Ga. Kenneth Gibson Diehl, e, Nashville, Tn. Theo Alvin Dillaha, e, Little Rock, Ark. George Joseph Dillinger, a, Thomasville, Fa. Louise M. DiNatale, n, Arlington, Mass. Samuel Jefferson DiNicola, a, Utica, NY David Winston Dodson, e, Lexington, Ky. David Warren Douglas, a, Little Rock, Ark. James F. Dowden, a, Dumas, Ark. Nancy Ann Draper, a, Nashville, Tn. Suzanne Louise Drexel, a, Greenville, Del. Robert Earle Duke, e, Nashville, Tn. 38-l I Sl-NIOIIS 1 .. 5, , 31. , Y dx I . fl f KI ' ' '-f-:-.' Qu 1 as all ff ,Za C: Q 'r .- X , ,, ,,. . 1 i A , 7' it few- T '- i .- f -f .wa , 'W . , rc 1 f ' in 6 A ,ev -3- , 1 -J N.. ' 1 wa ' J - 6 VY iw aff 5- S if 1 ff f f gg ,,- K H15 Q 2 X fx r fi ..- -., an w , -ii. -1- . lf? s f A W 15 3 sa iii 'ir 7 s o 'Q , 1, - - Q ' .,.i '1.i I 5 Q A . A-31 A 1. if 5 I qv- 'df' rr! 1-M j '- 441197 4 v, 1 :S is Il , , flf 'f 5-v ,. .- 1' F Sn. z '-'4, Q 1 ' A Ph. :Eg 3 II 1- J 4 .,n , is 'Z' y . l lf. T! 1- ,QA . 'Abu Zi 1 .ul .ff 1.4 '-?f ,,,-xr, 'Z-vfll 'X Sl ' ' 4 A ' W fl, ' 41 .1 wa , F 1.4, . W1 . N. if U ' ' V7 ,gf U 1-'.h ,,. Xa ' mx 1, if , - I yy ' y x flier LM Q . FW l ,gs UT ,gn I' J thx 'x' 7. ii' 0 vj , Z ,X , X P If J' fx' K . ,,- 1 . E , x . , Ark ', I j V' . 1 1 - N .5 f .1 1 X 3 ' 4' . m K ' . .- , J E Y., I ... by . W ,A V Q 1 X l ..- 1 r ', 'I ' ll I' WY , L -- l . . - 9 , ai lf, , '-.- vi .. A l r . 'I ' L .W V .F 1 ne. 1 ' . lb 1. Q-f .W .. .A .fri A . ' gg F .. , .ma F' ' ' f f Laurie Applegate Durbrow, a, Cincinnati, Ohio William McMeen Durfee, e, Toledo, Ohio Darryl William Durham, a, Louisville, Ky. Andrew Roy Dyer, e, Nashville, Tn. John Cheek Eason, a, Nashville, Tn. Larry Eckenfelder, en Hyannisport, Mass. William David Edmonds, a, Germantown, Tn. Mary Irwin Edwards, a, Nashville, Tn. Philip Hughes Egger, a, Kingsport, Tn. Michael Glynn Ellis, e, Vicksburg, Ms. Ava Marie Ellwood, a, Houston, Tex. Mary Louise Elson, a, Oak Ridge, Tn. Robert S. Epstein, a, Key Biscayne, Fla. Elizabeth McKinley Evans, n, Nashville, Tn. James Evans, e, Nashville, Tn. James Allen Evans, e, Dayton, Ohio Jane Evans, n, Atlanta, Ga. William Morrison Ewers, a, Nashville, Tn. Karen Falk, a, Douglaston, NY Thomas C. Farrar, a, Nashville, Tn. Julie Anne Fassett, a, Lima, Ohio Patricia E. Faulkinberry, a, Birmingham, Ala. David Lee Fehrman, e, Ferguson, Mo. Ruth Elizabeth Fenstermacher, n, San Antonio, Tex Dudley Fields, a, Signal Mtn. Tn. Raymond Finkleman, a, Silver Spring, Md. Celeste Ann Funucane, n, Ballwin, Mo. Ellen Elizabeth Fisher, n, Sikeston, Mo. Alexis Fitzhugh, a, Griffin, Ga. George Raymond Fleming, Jr., a, Clarksville, Tn. Philip Edward Fleming, a, Huntsville, Ala. Catherine Hughes Fletcher, a, Birmingham, Ala. Michael Wallace Fletcher, a, Western Springs, Ill. Elizabeth Gay Flitcraft, n, Dayton, Ohio Gaylord Robert Mason Forrest, e, Murray, Ky. Dean M. Fortune, a, St. Petersburg Beach, Fla. Olive Echols Foss, a, Spartanburg, SC John Williams Fowler, Jr., e, Memphis, Tenn. Robert B. Frankel, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Barbara Jean Franklin, e, Greenville, Ky. Calvin Octave Franklin, a, Germantown, Tn. Wilson Stevens Franklin, a, Atlanta, Ga. SENIORS I 385 Harold Edwin Fredericks, a, Memphis, Tn. Ellen Virginia Freeman, n, St. Petersburg, Fla. Jeanne Ann Freeman, a, Altus, Okla. Gregory Hewitt Diller, a, Wenonah, NJ Eva Louise Furner, a, New Canaan, Conn. Jessie Frances Gallagher, a, Memphis, Tenn. William Dawid Gamble, a, Birmingham, Ala. Alice McLean Gant, a, Burlington, NC Patricia Lynn Garvin, a, Greenwich, Conn. Michael M. Geitz, a, Summit, NJ Nancy Magdalene Geren, a, Chevy Chase, Md. John Ragan Gibson, a, Nashville, TN. Linda Carol Gibson, a, Sheffield, Ala. Florence Day GiH'ord, a, Nashville, Tn. Gerald Edwin Gilbert, a, Nashville, Tn. Pamela Joan Gilstad, a, Lake Park, Fla. Gerald Davis Gividen, a, J upiter-Tequesta, Fla. Robert B. Glass, a, Centralia, Ill. Cary Stuart Gold, a, Atlanta, Ga. G. Hawkins Golden, a, Dallas, Tex. Ellen Ruth Goldstein, n, Louisville, Ky. Warren Scott Goodrich, e, Nashville, Tn. Joseph C. Gordon, e, Hobbs, NM Mary Frances Gorman, n, West Chicago, Ill, George Keith Graham, a, Scottsdale, Ariz. Deborah Delores Grant, a, Nashville, Tn. Robyn A. Graves, a, Columbia, SC Nancy Ann Green, a, St. Luios, Mo. Janet Elizabeth Green, n, Plainwell, Mich. James T. Gregory, a, Atlanta, Ga. Charles Arthur Grice, a, Nashville, Tn. John Andrew Rainier Grimaldi, a, Tampa, Fla. Spencer Lawrence Grover, a, Leland, Ill. John Edward Grubbs, a, Paris, Ky. Larry Dean Gurley, a, Sardis, Tn. William David Guttermuth, a, Louisville, Ky. David Nelson Gwaltney, a, Osceala, Ark. Jeffrey Carson Hagedorn, a, Tell City, Ind. Linda Ledgerwood Hagens, a, Houston, Tex. Carol Marie Hall, n, Birmingham, Ala. Frederick Jones Hall, a, Washington, DC Owen Herschel Halpern, a, Atlanta, Ga. 398 I SENIOHS CT V an A v... 9 New , m I ' . -eg R f' f-1 K 1 V .-, Vx 'G n ' fi x N if . 'Y 0, - ,ix- N Fi f , ga' 1 1 :li 'Af K f f as fs--, 3 :Qs f new 4 Zril r 107-'F A , ., ,-. ...ax A A F Nu ff? J I v - 'T J 5 Ng I - ., x .N . , U Y X ,A 'FN 'S :T I '- 5 'X If-. . by 7 K X R ,,. x 6: f fr- Yi . 1-17 I ND, Y V, 1 X 'Y' 'V ' .. - 1 if 'F ' - xt in . I . 5 ' , X , - - :Y V V V, ws 7 , 'XV Vim - .vi l V lj 1 V' -wr l ' fy has 2 iw 'xi '. 2 8 gm' Brad John Hammond, a, Batavia, NY Eugene W. Hammond, e, Atlanta, Ga. Janet Hampeter, n, St. Louis, Mo. Larry Maxell Hargett, e, Little Rock, Ark. John R. Harman, a, New Canaan, Conn. John Carlisle Harmuth, a, Wayne, Penn. Holly Ann Harper, n, Fayetteville, Ga. Kathleen Grant Harrell, a, Nashville, Tn. Anna Dale Harris, e, Middlesboro, KY. Kathleen Elizabeth Harris, e, Birmingham, Ala. Richard Lowell Harris, a, Houston, Tex. C. Ben Harrison, a, Memphis, Tn. Paulene L. Harrow, a, Columbus, Ga. Matthew James Hart, a, Bellerose, NY Ann Dawson Havens, n, Medfield, Mass. Martha Nan Hawkes, a, Memphis, Tenn. Arthur Newton Hayden, Jr., a, Henderson, Ky. Lisa Ann Head, a, Houston, Tex. Victoria Ann Henderson, n, Taipei, Taiwan Elizabeth Fabian Hendrickson, a, Atlanta, Ga. Robert David Henning, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Mary Rees Henry, a, Tullahoma, Tn. Cliiford David Hepper, a, Palos Verdes Est., Calif. Catherine Claudinia Hershey, a, Nashville, Tn. John M. Hesser, e, Cincinnati, Ohio H. Scott Hestevold, a, Nashville, Tn. Cheryl Louise Hibbett, a, Nashville, Tn. James Lowry Hibbett, a, Nashville, Tenn. Rebecca Lynn Higginbotham, n, Hamburg, Ark. Linda Gregory Higgins, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Thomas Edward Higgins, a, Kettering, Ohio Jean Marie Higham, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. Phyllis Jean Hight, a, Memphis, Tn. Stephen Ferell Hinton, a, Live Oak, Fla. G. Byron Hodge Jr., a, Spartanburg, SC Jeannett Andrews Hofman, n, Atlanta, Ga. Hubert Rex Holland, Jr., a, Paduccah, Ky. Dinah Holman, a, Albany, Ga. Judy Kay Holmes, a, Nashville, Tn. Dave Craig Holt, e, Signal Mtn., Tn. Joel Randall Hooper, a, Clearwater, Fla. Mark Hoover, a, kankakee, Ill. SENIORS I 387 Brenda Faye Hopson, a, Oak Grove, Ky. Thomas Olin Horton, a, Islip, NY Stanley Raymond Houle, a, Madison, Tn. John Moflitt Howell, a, Atlantic Beach, Fla. Jack Swope Houser, a, Nashville, Tn. Albert DuBoise Huddleston, e, Tarpon Springs, Fla. William J. Huddleston, a, Hattiesburg, Ms. David James Huet-Vaughn, a, Overland Park, Kan. Yolanda Huet-Vaughn, a, Prairie Village, Kan. James Douglas Huggins, e, Atlanta, Ga. L. Wearen Hughes, a, Arlington, Tn. Suzy Huhtala, a, Fairview Park, Ohio Trina Hunt, a, Columbia, SC Valerie Ann Hunt, a, Houston, Tex. Patrick Teaslie Hunter, a, Lake City, Fla. Eugene E. Huskey, a, Longwood, Fla. Wayne Paris Hyatt, Jr., a, Russellville, Ala. David J. Hyman, a, Chattanooga, Tenn. Paul George Hyman, Jr., a, Miami Springs, Fla. Mary Elizabeth Inman, n, Jekyll Island, Ga. Edwin Andrew Isakson, a, Roswell, Ga. Warren S. Jacobs, a, Glen Rock, NJ Anne Jelfrey, n, Columbus, Ohio James Fletcher Jemigan, Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. Margaret Nita Jewett, n, Aurora, Ohio Deborah Elaine Jimmerson, a, Clarksville, Tn. Alexander Dixon Johnson, a, State College, Penn. Fred Lee Johnson, a, Bristol, Tn. Robert A. Johnson, a, Camden, Tn. Sally Stuart Johnson, a, Baton Rouge, La. F. Lex Jolley, a, Atlanta, Ga. Dennis Harrell Jones, a, Augusta, Ga. Phillip Ritchie Jones, e, Nashville, Tn. Meryl Steinunn Jonsson, a, Nashville, Tn. John Merriman Jordan, a, Augusta, Ga. Mary Margaret Judd, a, Reston, Va. Robert C. Juer, a, Tullahoma, Tn. Laura Elise Junge, a, New Orleans, La. Virginia Quinn Kaderabek, a, Brentwood, Tn. Pamela Phaedra Kalanzis, a, Middletown, Ohio William Francis Kaminer, a, Atlanta, Ga. Deborah Ann Kasbeer, a, LaGrange, Ill. 388 I SENIORS Pm- an fn x r M 1:35- 1.-R:.'fv V ..,. p Q . , p -- Y -- f- - V - gagx. f . u limliilliff-Y 5 V l I t .P 2, Q V I W ' R 1 ' r Q3 iff. 1 B1 X. L. Q .-5 :if ' ,. 'i S 5 5 - 17- U ' P . J 'J V fit ax -45. wr' - ' xx I X 1 42? . , x., J :M N A Q I am J J ' A V 1- 4 1 - N li:-1 .Ui Q: wmv y p 5-' . a p A ,. Y . R FY 5 A V f- Q P : .. ' xg? . i .' fi. gy f: 2 1 r 1 J' ,Q 1 A VC 'V' N 'M if 41 V f wi . l 37.15-V 511' I ' I-J' 4 ga N, s I .. ' 9 A Q ., , 1 .p I nl 151 I ' 4- I '5 X' ' e , 5 . 8 ' , ,ii jf! hp, Y' 97 :NL as -4 Sl. sff' ri an--W W pug rg 3 'D al iff- WW 1 V PV 1- - JZ' g N 3 f N sv 3 I. ,. 1. M, sq- I , lg I 5 'Q rf' ' X ,r . rf 'Y ' X ll ' . .'..i-fl'J'.fwLl5fI'l ' l ' j?'f,QQ.-,f W-.,.E Qi? '. 'I fn 3. 0 -, X4 'G A .: ,N ll 'J f- -Ffa 1+ . --' J C .. if f . A i W, 1 X ' A 1 , H ff , . rr , n .r . ,N ,. U.. ' . lr AAV - h a- . .a J is ' .A , ' . ' , 2 2 gr Ja I 'T' ,. ' ' mi, . g s V, , Xa f ' A f fe, ' ,LP f I - K ,M Yi? if .' -Q-.N r ,. 9 'A Q F' 1 64 ,rick 1 , rv ,fm V ,R -ML 5 QL , --1- ' .-4 -x jf, -' , . 1 Y ki Y s ka' ll' if ' I Ain I I ' ' -at . rw- . 'P 0. 4 'K' 5- l .J fp , pig A be . 3 Q- -- X - N-Y i fm! f Y A ' ' ,fg- , . 'W 'V' -J ' g.,f p 5 -, - '71 ' ' If ,JH . , I I I - ., I, V G, h . ,, V .Lv V ' Lf. '-71 1 'ffji ,Q -' QL V gl' I .' 4 i g .fi j is X .NW A , f Ifeaj ffm- F, 1 ' f 'wr ' Elizabeth Kaufman, n, Ligonier, Penn. Aubrey Houston Keach, a, Henderson, Ky. Elizabeth Jane Kellerman, a, Lexington, Ky. Alton Devan Kelly, Jr., a, Dallas, Tex. Joy Ann Kendall, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Douglas Pelham Kendrick, a, Austin, Tex. Raleigh Barbee Kent, a, Birmingham, Ala. Anthony Joseph Kessler, a, Loretto, Tn. Mary Carolyn Kimpel, a, Pinjarra, Western Australia David A. King, a, Bath, Maine Michael Patrick Kirk, a, Miami, Fla. Richard M. Kittle, e, Joliet, Ill. Jeanne Elizabeth Klima, a, Huntsville, Ala. Gerald Benjamin Kline, a, Clarksdale, Md. Martha Louise Kling, a, Centreville, Md. Susan Watkins Knight, e, Nashville, Tn. Katherine Ann Kumpuris, a, Little Rock, Ark. Peter August Kurilecz, a, Dallas, Tex. Stephen Porter Lainhart, e, Cincinnati, Ohio. Peter Breckenridge Lambert, a, Omaha, Neb. Wanda Gould Lang, n, Nashville, Tn. Bazile Rene Lanneau Jr., a, Natchez, Miss. Douglas John Lapidus, a, Bowling Green, Ky. Anthony Alfred LaRiche Jr., a, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Roberta Ann Lashlee, n, Crainhem, Belgium. William Daniel Leader, a, Signal Mountain, Tn. Susan Mae LeBourg, a, Gadsden, Ala. Linda April Leckle, a, Birmingham, Mich. Anthony Byron Lee, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Mary Margaret Lee, n, Oklahoma City, Okla. Jeffrey W. Levi, a, Chicamauga, Ga. Lansford William Levitt, a, Los Angeles, Cal. David B. Lewis, a, Birmingham, Ala. Andrew D. Littlejohn, a, Dallas, Tex. David Livingstone, a, Saint Petersburg, Fla. Fred W. Lloyd, a, St. Augustine, Fla. John Samuel Logan, a, Hattiesburg, Miss. Howard William Loveless Jr., a, Memphis, Tn. Thomas Allen Lovinggood, a, Cape Girardeau, Mo. Donna Jeanne Lucas, a, Huntsville, Ala. Jones Wilson Luna, a, Lewisburg, Tn. Diane Gertrude Maclntyre, a, Brookline, Mass. SENIORS l 389 Gaylia Sue Mahan, n, Chattanooga, Tn. Dennis Maine, e, Maplewood, N.J. Philip King Mun Mak, e, Hong Kong. Richard Forbes Mann, a, Potomac, John Mark Manner, a, McKenzie, Philip Edward Manners, a, Atlanta, Claudia Gibbs Manson, a, Metairie, Joseph Scott Marahle, a, Nashville, Roy Douglass Markham, a, Tiptonville, Md. Tn. Ga. La. Tn. Tn. Cleveland Hester Marsh, a, Porto, Portugal. Frederic Meeker Martin, a, Indianapolis, Ind. William C. Martin III, a, Nashville, Tn. Nancy Lee Martindell, n, Memphis, Tn. Susan Rebecca Mason, n, New Orleans, La. Paul Richard Matalon, e, Jamaica, West Indies. Dyer Anthony Matlock, e, Nashville, Tn. Ernest Crawford Matthews, a, Nashville, Tn. Harold Jerome May, a, Clarksdale, Miss. Robert Weaver McBride, e, Dallas, Tex. Martha Jane McCauley, a, Oklahoma City, Okla. Mary Katherine McChesney, a, Berkeley, Calif. Thomas Stuart McCloy, a, Elizabethtown, Ky. Thomas Jarmon McCown, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Katherine Elizabeth McCreery, a, Benton, Ill. Carroll McCullough, a, Murfreesboro, Tn. Elizabeth Ann McCurley, n, Jackson, Ms. Teresa Belle McCurry, n, Canton, Ohio Kathleen Marie McGonagle, a, San Antonio, Tex. John Dillard McHenry, a, Nashville, Tn. Robins Pharr Mclnwsh, a, Gainesville, Fla. George Bryant McKee,' a, Marietta, Ga. Garnett McMillian, e, Chiekamauga, Ga. William P. McMullan, a, Jackson, Ms. Alexander McNab, a, Ross, Calif. Susan Selby McRae, a, Jackson, Ms. Peter Edwin Meaden, e, Houston, Tex. Wayne Jay Meisels, a, Snyder, Barry E. Menzel, a, Pompano Beach, W. Harvey Miles, a, Jackson, David Ralph Miller, a, McMinnville, Louis Jay Miller, a, Memphis, Rebecca Lynn Miller, n, Hinsdale, 390 I SENIORS NY Fla. Tn. Tn. Tn. Ill. 4- llc I0 r . A Q5 Us L ,. - r .ci ,,. r i V ' In - at 'lf 5 ,. g I, A ls lrgjilg V , '21, V - ' iff 1 i 4 -Q in F if F Xing, y fx x, -M. 9' 1. K 'A '. H .Tl ' ,ii 1 A A 'Y I G, if W l X 'f ' F Y. U Fiqh' V - A f-85,1 1, wwf -m a e l f . w I 9 .. l ...fa 1'-3 N., .59 . 7 . 4 ,. If 1 ' r Pg v--'s , Uv . , I J . ' f li 1 9, l -A . ' Lila J, . .5 K. N 7, I Y ... f .. qi. , f , .fn ' I KVA-,A I' 6.4 X y ', 'E . A7 'Aj' . 1:77 Q M g ' 'V 1 9 g fl K fi ni fa PM fr A AS 6 5 Q' ? 1 - V -V L-3 M? TNTUA' ' 1 ',vW::1z, A1 V K' 1 William Farrington Miller, e, Houston, Tex. Thomas Jackson Miner, a, Florence Ala. Marilyn Elizabeth Miniss, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Robert John Miodonski, a, Glencoe, Ill. Lydia Marsena Mitcham, e, Macon, Ga. John Carl Morgan, e, Wichita Falls, Tex. Kay Hilary Morgan, a, Kirkwood, Mo. Mary Lynn Morrill, a, Erwin, Tn. Charles Morrison, a, Meridian, Ms. Richard Gilbert Morrison, e, Huntsville, Ala. Daniel Thomas Moulton, e, Towson, Md. J. Hammond Muench, a, Pottersville, NJ Michael Craig Muller, a, East Carondelet, lll. Jerry Edward Muntz, a, Nashville, Tn. John Murray, e, Findley, Ohio George Clinton Myers, a, Atlanta, Ga. Emily Anne Needham, a, Sioux City, Iowa Hollis Elien Neier, e, Cloverdale, Ind. Elizabeth Susan Neilson, a, Libertyville, Ill. Douglas James Neuman, a, Geneva, Ohio Virginia Ann Nevils, n, Franklin, Tn. Janice Lenore Nichols, a, Nashville, Tn. Sam George Nicholson, a, Augusta, Ga. Gay Porter Nienhuis, n, Tulsa, Okla. Kathleen Dorothy Nolan, a, Atlanta, Ga. Robert Stephlen Noth, a, Memphis, Tenn. Deborah Sue Oiford, a, Decatur, Ala. William Reynolds O'Neill, a, Alexandria, Va. Cydnie Browning O'Rourke, n, Ft. Wayne, Ind. James Patrick O'Rourke, a, Nashville, Tn. David Lindsay Orrahood, a, Owensboro, Ky. John Thomas Orrahood, a, Owensboro, Ky. Robert Bryan Orrand, a Nashville, Tn. Linda F. Overcash, a, Atlanta, Ga. Mary Elizabeth Overton, a, Memphis, Tn. Jewell Elizabeth Owen, a, Fayetteville, Ark. Linda Marjorie Owens, a, Albany, Ga. J. Craig Oxford, a, Nashville, Tn. Melissa Paisios, a, Hinsdale, Ill. Kate Keary Palmer, n, Memphis, Tn. Wayne Lawson Palmore, a, Atlanta, Ga. Stephania Sylvia Paparozzi, n, Morgantown, W. Va SENIORS I 391 Haworth Houston Parks, Jr., a, Nashville, Tn. William Kyle Parks, e, Andalusia, Ala. Neil Hamilton Parnes, a, Princeton, NJ Travis Lee Parr, a, North Little Rock, Ark. Elizabeth Boyd Parrish, a, Nashville, Tn. Brooks Patterson, a, Nashville, Tn. David Patterson, a, Columbus, Ohio John W. Paul, e, Lower, Ala. Mary Kavanagh Payme, a, Alexandria, Va. Ann Marie Pearson, a, Jackson, Tn. Jane Elizabeth Pearson, n, Woodland, Calif. Constance Peister, a, Nashville, Tn. Mann Pendelton, e, Wytheville, Va. Daniel Jefferson Perky, a, Leawood, Kan. Jeffrey James Perout, e, Mayfield Heights, Ohio Virginia Weatherford Perry, a, Nashville, Tn. Harold Alan Phillips, a, Nashville, Tn. David J. Pine, a, Manhasset, NY Barbara Bennett Pinson, a, Nashville, Tn. Li Po, a, Tangiers, Moroco Michael Podurgal, a, Betendorf, Iowa Robert Neil Pope, a, Miami, Fla. James Tinsley Porter, Jr., e, Atlanta, Ga. M. Nanette Powell, n, Chapel Hill, Tn William Howard Powell, Jr., e, New Albany, Robert Charles Pozen, a, Miami Beach Carissa M. Prater, n, Muncie, Dennis Richard Price, e, Louisville, Ky. Mercy Prieto, a, Louisville William Duryea Proudfit, a, Houston, Tex. Ind. , Fla. Ind. . Ky- Robert Miller Pulley, a, Houston, Tex. 1 Patricia Ann Pyle, a, Pittsburgh, Penn. Sue Gail Quarels, a, Nashville, Tn. Susan Corrin Radclitfe, William Edward Raikes, III, Stephen Doe Ramee, Charles Lee Ramiller, John Arthur Ramsey, Julia Hill Rankin, nv 9, af 91 3, 9, Lexington, Ky. Ft. Pierce, Fla. Savannah, Ga. Nashville, Tn. Nashville, Tn. Mt. Holly, NC Houston Tex. Parker Armstrong Ransom, a, , Russell Beverley Ray, a, Memphis, Tenn. Mary Elizabeth Rees, a, Arlington, Va. 392 I SENIO RS .N,, 1' ' W w 7 1 - , r 5 Q .IL fi .YL ' H fa ' I r V X, L. .Ca so I, ' ' . x p IL, WA . 'ah : ni Wm, 3 ,rxm - -' ' I , '5-. w - Y- , f '7 ' '11 ' ' x .' I X i X X aa., 5-g If ,fi53'Yff.3'1 1, L- '-T ,Z Xa, .3 ,.. , ll -1 -3 .. . xg Q, iNj,.f X A 'X 4:4 A. gp, Q A ,rf G.. . al N, ,M 'V I .662 ,. . ,Sir 13:5 5 -.Q w N ' . V 4 IF V ' f im ' ' 'F ig' 'K 4 ' .. 5. as as +2 se s . s X I . 1 - ,.-sf' v ,I ea- L '51 I A l I '-is N 3 G ' QV? I ' N X ' . fi 'v-ffl! . fi XQE? V. . y ' 'K Ib ,IIV ' i ' L '32, ' X xl . N 1 a V 4. t.-. ' 'Z .--.- ' W I 'fn ,- I ,,,f s i AX. nv 'Wh J 'fav L... .Hg . luv. '. I' N 7 fm A ev- 4,5 .i I' X Y' P .xi s-.... N l .f 4 'I gl'-T .I H l- :Qi 1 - f ' X fi W 'fi '?l- T Y' p' . ' '53 ef -2 J sf. .-3 . f. V YI f ya ' 1 1 -i I H l FL -gc . 1-' I 'ff li l il 1 '.f.1 -1 ... 'v , .1 ,x 5 1 .sl 4 is , 76 av' ' 'J if V 5 e 54 1 N7 ,ix - lv -T, , , K x 'l ' 1 q ,Ji R .1 . - g 4 x , ... 1 'IT A F: ru A vi 'ff . 35 r vxlxxgr X' -Z .-T, . , v L ,fl ' , f A .4 it ,,,,f.f. .fm- I . , 1 . ' '- i V JL5, ' ? - A ' ., - ' 1' ff Nl 3 .APA .1 H .far as Susan Kathleen Reese,l1, New Paltz, NY Brooke Reeve, III, e, Savannah, Ga. Michael Henry Regen, e, Nashville, Tn. Mary Elizabeth Reynolds, a, Nashville, Tn. Cynthia Rich, a, Pulaski, Tn. Pamela Ann Riddle, a, Wichita Falls, Tex. Mary McClelland Ridley, e, Smyrna, Tn. Roderick Mark Riggins, a, Memphis, Tn. Steven Riggs, e, Washington, DC Steven Allen Rlley, a, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Maribeth Robbins, a, Wheeling, W. Va. John Roberts, a, Richmond, Va. Clare Roslie Robertson, a, Athens, Ga. Ronald Patey Robertson, a, Dickson, Tn. Rutledge Lee Robinson, a, Atlanta, Ga. Nathan Carttar Robison, a, La Paz,Bo1ivia Lewis Paisley Rogers, a, Houston, Tex. Gail Ellen Rogin, a, Atlanta, Ga. Stephen Edward Rohrabacher, a, Houston, Tex. Richard Ralph Roland, a, Schenectady, NY Thomas Lindsay Rosenblatt, a, Ft. Adams, Ms. Cecil Hilliard Roos, a, Houston, Tex. Howard Ralston Ross, a, Tullahoma, Tenn. Steven Russell Ross, e, Nashville, Tn. Jay Elliott Rothberg, e, Nashville, Tn. Anne Sugg Rountree, n, Dickson, Tn. Charles Allen Rudd, a, Madisonville, KY. Wendy B. Rumsey, a, Dallas, Tex. Dorothy Rita Runyon, a, Clarksville, Tn. David Walter Russell, a, Staunton, Ill. James Edward Russell, a, Memphis, Tenn. Stephen M. Sainati, a, La Grange Park, Ill. Nancy Salmon, e, Nashville, Tn. J. F. Sanders, a, Tucson, Ariz. Sara Rice Sandlin, a, Columbia, SC Wade Thompson Sanders, a, Brentwood, Tn. Robert Sasser, a, Nashville, Tn. Juliana Schley, a, Princeton, NJ Beth Schobel, n, Lyndhurst, Ohio Timothy Porter Schoettle, a, West Memphis, Ark. Richard A. Schroeder, e, Evansville, Ind. Sally Josephine Schunemann, e, Maitland, Fla. NPNIOILN f 393 Charles F.W. Schwartz, a, Nashville, Tn. Douglas S. Schwartz, a, Great Neck, NY George Banjamin Schwartz, a, Philadelphia, Penn. Elizabeth Lee Schwinghamer, a, Huntsville, Ala. Marilyn Brooks Scobey, a, Atlanta, Ga. John Christopher Scott, a, Memphis, Tn. Tym F. Seay, a, Dallas, Tex. Susan Kathleen Sebree, a, Nashville, Tn. Kelly B. Seid, a, Greenville, Ms. Sally Elizabeth Self, a, Greenwood, SC Bronwyn Jane Semmer, a, Leawood, Kan. Philip Campbell Sensening, a, Bangor, Maine Richard Dean Senty, a, St. Petersburg, Fla. Susan Alexander Shands, a, Jackson, Miss. Dorothy Marlena Shanks, a, Nashville, Tn. Logan Garnett Sharpe, a, Checotah, Okla. Barbara Ellen Sharrock, a, Columbus, Ohio Scott William Shaw, a, Western Springs, Ill. Joseph A. Sheehan, a, St. Louis, Mo. William Shippen, a, Laurel Bay, SC Corinne A. Shotliff, a, Mendota, Ill. Dee Ann Showalter, a, Winter Park, Fla. Robert M. Silgals, a, Paducah, Ky. Jean Moyse Simmons, a, Baton Rouge, La. John Edward Simmons, a, Nashville, Tn. Richard Simpson, a, Tulsa, Okla. Rick J. Simpson, a, Oklahoma City , Okla. R. Lynne Simpson, n, Erin, Tn. Jesse Haynes Pate Skene, a, Macon, Ga. Robbie Slocum, a, Macon, Ga. Alan Calhoun Smith, a, Jackson, Miss. Cheryl Lee Smith, a, Manchester, Mo. Dennis Morgan Smith, Jr., e, Memphis, Tenn. Eric Smith, a, Memphis, Tenn. Gayle Smith, a, Nashville, Tn. Herb E. Smith, a, Whitesburg, Ky. Jerry Warren Smith, e, Madison, Tn. Lana Louise Smith, a, Milford, Iowa Nancy Hope Smith, n, Boonsboro, Md. Suzanna Mitchell Smith, n, Cookeville, Tn. Robert Carl Smithson, a, Franklin, Tn. R. Tyler Smoot, e, McLean, Va. 394 I SENIORS '.,.. , ' ,,'. '75 'K' fins' M. K-A ff E' ' 'f ' ee-' V A Q T1 x 1 fir. , Fd ' f fffbiwl C l I VA MC FFL, , .N A ff Av' 551. , Q WK. , - N , :mi T ,lj y, -gf. u -in. ,QL ' , -8 'T' zz ' S' A 'Q , . X 'sf . F 4 ff.. A .l ' 4' V ' J i il - ' .: hs 1: '2 . 10 . L V A ' , U Y-, Q 'I ,-, fi if is M- .. ' , xr. - 1 f M at ,wmv xp A L4 p p V I .C f Q, Se 4 1 'gi-, k'NTi4?i , 1 , A ' ful J - a it X V F- '? ' -- 4. , , ' . .1 ' 'T' . L Jim k u 4. I '.,,- -, A-, .3 , '4 . A I 1 0 N ,lvrq I Q.-- X A ' p gh ., 4, '14, !?: '1 , ' FF- - 1 L' V 'flj' ' W . ll A l- f 4 5 -5 ' . ' '7 ' l T7 , --C-. Ii, :V N . , X I 1 ks .4 -av -.1 I V lr' S 4-A M' 1 XJ Q Q. in 'I N. wa - ,,-.,1 H, 'S 1 K xr, v- N I I R .- 0 ,vi A' Ll. , , A . , A, , Li . Y af I 'G 91. , 'A X A tix- ,Ii -fi Y .FJ Y in I -:- , 'x X I I -' 1 - 1 I . , I n- ' .. ' - r W or , 3, Q 4 ' ,Q f-Q .TA 5 ,f '?.wIf , 'ws' xr! - 'Gi x, . N1 U N-km J grw Q-Km gli ,W 'TRI - 4 v-11 rs- P - , fn-I . wr ,- -'L- -9 . . is . X rr, z 1. - I 'J' I 'I 2-iv 11' ,L I :g ' -'F X A f, ' tg in. -Q I , ii-1 ,fax ' . 11' . . -6 'Q- V. ' 1 ' Y . 145, g , ,rg , rg . 'fr' I Ili' .1 k -1 ' -fi , Harriet W. Solms, II, a, Coral Gables, Fla. John Solomon, a, El Dorado, Ark. Sabine Speer, a, Huntsville, Ala. Mark Kenneth Spiegel, a, Nashville, Tn. Ernest Webb Spradley, a, Dallas, Tex. Gregg Creek Spyridon, a, Pascagoula, Ms. Todd StaH', a, Evansville, Ind. Peggy Jane Stall, a, Metairie, La. Sara Suzanne Stalls, a, Clovis, NM Edward Denmark Staples, e, Orlando, Fla. Sharon Alice Starr, a, Nashville, Tn. Elbert S. Stegall, III, a, Jackson, Tn. James Greig Stein, Jr., a, Potomac, Md. Nelson L. Stephenson, Jr., a, Memphis, Tn. David Caroll Stewart, a, Brownsville, Tn. Deborah Ann Stewart, n, Vienna, Va. Ella Mae Stewart, a, Ashland, Ky. William David Stiehl, a, Belleville, Ill. Gerald Lee Stigall, a, Memphis, Tn. Harry James Stone, a, Green Cove Springs, Fla. David Lynn Stratton, e, Atlanta, Ga. Barbour Strickland, a, Winston-Salem, NC Peter L. Strickland, a, Forest City, NC Patricia R. Strief, a, Dallas, Tex. John Albert Struck, II, a, Pensacola, Fla. Andrea Lee Sukow, a, Louisville, Ky. John Michael Summers, a, Chattanooga, Tn. Mary Edmond Suttles, a, Houston, Tex. Warren Dundle Sweat, a, Chamblee, Ga. Clay H. Swindell, a, San Antonio, Tex. Audrey Camille Talley, a, Nashville, Tn. J. Kenneth Tate, e, Miami Beach, Fla. Shepherd D. Tate, a, Memphis, Tn. John M. Tatum, e, Hattisburg, Miss. Betsy Hawes Taylor, a, Little Rock, Ark. Sylvia Taylor, a, Nashville, Tn. Julian Edward Teske, a, Jacksonville, Fla. Edward Arthur Thoenes, e, St. Louis, Mo. Busch Hinkle Thoma, a, Tullahoma, Tn. Lacy Glenn Thomas, III, a, Clewiston, Fla. Cathy Jo Thompson, e, Coral Gables, Fla. Fred Wolford Thompson, Jr., a, Newark, Del. SENIORS I 395 William Carroll Thompson, a, Cincinnati, Ohio William Richardson Timmons, III, a, Greenville, SC Judith Ellen Tobias, a, Oak Ridge, Tn. Stanley Earl Todd, Jr., a, Richmond, Ky. David Gilbert Toma, a, Nashville, Tn. Henry Balam Tomlin, e, Greenville, SC Tommy Tompkins, e, Burdette, Ark. Alexander M. Torrance, a, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Alan Ray Tower, a, Nashville, Tn. Ellen Patrice Towler, a, Aiken, SC Lindsey Carol Townsend, n, Ft. Thomas, Ky. Barbara Trenchi, a, Tullahoma, Tn. Trudy Marie Trevarthen, a, Jasper, Tn. William Lowrey Trewhitt, a, Cleveland, Tn. Laura Anne Trickett, a, Nashville, Tn. Susan Charlotte Trigg, n, Houston, Tex. Helen Harris Triol, n, Savannah, Ga. James R. Trulock, II, e, Winter Park, Fla. Julie Truss, a, Birmingham, Ala. Jill Tucker, n, Winter Park, Fla. Donald S. Turner, e, Upper St. Clair, Penn. Judith Ann Turner, a, Roanoke, Va. Noel Carson Turner, Jr., a, Atlanta, Ga. Linda Gayle Tschumi, a, Little Rock, Ark. Charlotte Ann Turner, a, Memphis, Tn. Anne Louise Tyler, a, Nashville, Tn. Thomas M. Upchurch, a, Montgomery, Ala. Jan Van Breda Kolff, a, Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. Will Van Eenenaam, a, Houston, Tex. Charles Frank Van Fossan, a, Warren, Ohio Jerome Beeler Van Orman, Jr., a, Ft. Wayne, Ind. Paula Kate Van Slyke, a, Oak Ridge, Tn. David Cain Veeneman, a, Louisville, Ky. Cynthia Venn, a, Houston, Tex. Elizabeth Ann Vidal, a, Atlanta, Ga. David Mark Vollmer, a, Houston, Tex. William Cameron Wagner, e, Villa Park, Ill. Brook Virginia Walker, a, Dallas, Tex. C. David Walker, e, Germantown, Tn John Knox Walker, III, a, Jackson, Miss Joseph Paul Walker, III, a, Dallas, Tex Lewis Vicars Walker, a, Sarasota, Fla. 196 I Sl' NIORS ,X ...Aga Q f .1 , 4 D ., K wg. X X . ' -A ,.-fa? L . A y in ,4- --14 R Q 'vs . D, -v fag ' 1 K My 1 il' -ff 'im '.! n X, I 33 ' 1 I I. - , ' K K My , n , I VJ..-flia '. . AJ 1 '- ' 7 as 7 'H N E , wr . , , X .2 ' 6 X r.'-f '!Y- ' x ' J .sw f - f . f 1 4 . gras i ,1 .V f T57 ' , jf s- V, gp ' . fr A ,. v- A -fi, L' - -S - . ff U- 1- .Q-Q. Xe- V 0 A' '- If iff 2 ':::F,,,45 A A X . ' :EiY':'f.'fEi X ' N , , 'Li 'hr 1 . 51 J '3' Q .7 . I 3 ,. lf, I x 1' ,,,. , 3- . ' . X '72 Y, .3 , X. A ' ' l .f I XI: ,K , K Tiff 4- fm N - L ' - 'if 1 'Y -W ' J :su 'I V -if ' X lzykyl ,I - ' , f 1 , K ' I ll' 'WI .5 .wi -- N , .1 1 it for fire V, .,,, g , . 4: v 0' lb 2, 'sw- 3 A , V, 1 l. I A n V. K X, is .55 'Lf' L -A ' ' b L-1 A Q, 'X .K ' I --,- ,L ..,a.n-...-'--. 'Qj . JH - A- s -1 .L A - 5 4. , ' , ,. g s. A-, -:. ,, IH, 1. 5- 7 'W ,.t Q, -E -' ,f W .' . 'N f s,- xx-P Nh ,jf-9 f .- A ' - 1 ' - HN? ' L it 0 X 163' ix X' K'-.. A ' A if . Lx V I Q I V- F-YH? -'fav ' ' 'iwfi' ' 2 '- K f.: Q .5 . N fx ' 7 ' -'Q U .NIL X 'ij- ' 5-Q I f r ,K X 'K . . 4,- i. H . ,, .Qi X , 'fbi FU? fwil l ' ' fl f t-- Q., -:J la Q fs W. Q .3 W 1 fi ,, ,.' .- Q ,. , ' R' . 5' -1 N , 1 , -- my ' ' ' ' ' 'T- N5. fi, ' .fit V, . , 9h f Y V I F i i . L 4 - V I - 5 V V -. 3 In Tl ' 4 .rf 4 - as -sb I' ' ! '5 .--. , .3 .TL 1 1 2 , . 7 Ivy' , - Y 'D N t f f? . W I , if A -- 1-' , ,A Q- . xlffl' V. 1 ' Q 3 Jigs, 2 ' Q 5' v p V 'X f ' - LN. V YW fix! , T A L l 1 ', i I i i 1' CJFWTWCWW' Richard Hampton Wall, a, Radford, Va. Thomas Patrick Wall, a, Nashville, Tn. Martha Williams Wallace, a, Greenville, SC David Warring Walls, n, Seaford, Del. Johanna Christina Walsh, n, Miami, Fla. Robert Ross Warren, a, Nashville, Tn. S. Coleman, Washington, a, Miami, Fla. Allen Waiter Watson, e, Nashville, Tn. Eugenia Portwood Wattles, a, Atlanta, Ga. Ann Avery Watts, n, Nashville, Tn. Sheila Marie Watts, a, Greenbrier, Tn. Virgina Alexander Watts, n, Dalton, Ga. William Vann Bartlett Webb, a, Nashville, Tn. Walter Sillers Weems, a, Laurel, Ms. Jennifer Elaine Wegener, n, Covington, Ky. Charles S. Weiss, a, Jacksonville, Fla. William David Weiss, a, Alexandria, La. William Douglas Welch, e, Nashville, Tn. Steven Wiley Wells, a, Brentwood, Tn. Douglas Clark Welsh, a, Highland, Ind. Philip Cartwright Welsh, a, Wrightsville Beach, NC George Whitaker, a, Jacksonville, Fla. James Edward White, a, Nashville, Tn. Lisa White, a, Birmingham, Ala. Susan Meade White, a, Davidson, NC Robert Scott Whitelaw, a, Western Springs, lll. David Cook Wilby, a, Haddonfield, NJ Jane Karen Wilcox, a, Atlanta, Ga. William Holder Wilcox, a, Oak Ridge, Tn. Cynthia Gale Wigton, a, Swarthmore, Penn. Barbara Graham Williams, n, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. C. Nicks Williams, a, Mt. Pleasant, Tn. Fred Adkins Williams, a, Louisville, Ky. Gregory Williams, a, Atlanta, Ga. Julia Maire Williams, n, Nashville, Tn. Margaret Sharp Williams, a, Lookout Mtn., Tn. Margaret Simpkins Williams, a, Nashville, Tn. Snap Williams, a, Dallas, Tex. Susan Ewin Williams, a, Arlington, Va. Blake Kendrick Williamson, a, Dallas, Tex. William Carroll Wilshusen, a, Dallas, Tex. Blair Jackson Wilson, a, Nashville, Tn. SENIORS 1397 Cynthia L. Wilson, a, Toledo, Ohio Joanie Wilson, a, Cincinnati, Ohio Ann Elizabeth Winters, a, Houston, Tex. David Gregory Winters, e, Natick, Mass. Wendy Jane Wolf, n, Louisville, Ky. Chip C. Woltz, e, Birmingham, Ala. Robert W. Wood, a, Nashville, Tn. Suzanne Wood, e, Tullahoma, Tn. Larry Anthony Wooden, a, New Orleans, La. George Turner Wright, a, Mountain City, Tn. Charles Wellington Wyatt, Jr., a, Charlotte, NC Paul Griffin Yale, a, Tyler, Tex. Michael Tucker Yankee, a, Signal Mtn., Tn. Virginia Allison Yarborough, a, Maryville, Tn. Larry Creston Young, a, Manchester, Tn. David Spender Zachry, a, Oak Ridge, Christie Leigh Zellner, a, East Point, a. -al f' .- Q. . fi' X, . . 5 'N is Y I , X 1 I ?0-wk V 1 ' ., F .Q .......- .D I r' f' . . I ! W -,. x S i. 'fl I -h . , A4 A' f 'X y g Ma mgaxifl 393 I SEN IORS qv-'dir iliiffr 'Q 0 7' ' g ' ' s. 1 C rf, U--1, Q- s . . 5 , 4 1 - w .-., -g 1 . I 0 . 'Q ' 'Q . 1 1 'lv ' , 'E ' ' ff. 'gunz'- L. v M, Q s 5, I 'U 1V,, 2,21 1,55 .., , '. .u 4 st ' - . 0 f 1 , gg 5351 mf 'Na ' ' -as v ., u pa gif- 1 -' . '24 -f. A r , L, 1. Q.. .,, 1, S Xbm ' V.- 'Ps .1 -1 if.-il' 8- an P I A X ff 1 fm ., nv rm- ' Jhl 61 va, 1.- Z7 I I , ' I I i --gi xx, 'hx ',. f. ,ii Brightening prospects for students entering the job market in May were dimmed late last fall by the energy crisis, but new Vanderbilt graduates may be in a better position than most new job-seekers. It was generally expected . . . in the fall of 1973 . . . that the job market would be more favorable than it had been since 1969, said University Placement Service director Ava Sellers, but with the advent of the energy crisis, that impression has been tempered somewhat. In the 1970's she continued, we're going to have a greater supply of graduates generally than the market will demand or absorb. Sellers noted, however, that job opportunities for en- gineers will still be better than they have been in the last few years. In view of the shrinking job market, the best bets for new graduates are in the fields of engineering, bank- ing and sales, and various personal services, according to Sellers, and she warned, Most other fields are going to be highly competitive. Simple numbers of job openings and applicants do not present an accurate picture of the Vanderbilt gradu- ate's position in the job market, Sellers said, because 402lllALl'MI'Nl success on the job market is largely a matter of com- peting and prevailing. Vanderbilt graduates are prepared to compete and prevail on the job market, according to Sellers, because of their experience in competing for admission to Van- derbilt and the emphasis on competition in academic work here. While having a major in a particular area can be helpful, Sellers said the choice of major is not generally a primary factor in job opportunity. having 24 hours in pea-picking or dog-catching does not necessarily make you an extraordinary pea-picker or dog-catcher, she explained, adding, Somewhere along the way, the person has to be articulate about what he wants to do and be convincing. Another factor in the Vanderbilt graduate's favor, according to Sellers, is the schoo1's provinciality. The changes in the job market have not been as drastic in the South and in the Nashville area, she said. Probably the majority of the Vanderbilt graduates are from the Southeast and central region . . . and they tend to go back to the region from which they came. The job market is even tighter for graduate students, according to Sellers. In engineering and natural sciences, she said, I think the market is very favorable at the master's level . . . at the Ph.D. level it tends to become cautious. The prevalent job market is still at the bachelors level, she said. Sellers explained, There is a point at which one prices himself out of the job market. Further, Sellers said, college and graduate students may disrupt other employees. lf you have an educa- tional situation with people with a high school back- ground working on an assembly line . . . they have a certain cohesivenessf' she explained. Someone ffrom collegel may be an agitator, may not be accepted. lt's kind of like a fraternity system at work, she added. Sellers emphasized that new factors may arise to change the job market projections. You may always be sure that it's changing, she said. -Pate Skene P ff,-1-i ' 8 4 X T-L E,-1, ,H V lx- el M if 511 1436, 1,2 I Q 1-Q' 4 1 .1 ,.,-- WELCOME I 403 l01 I ADMI Fewer people are applying to colleges, more of those are going to junior colleges, and Vanderbilt is an expen- sive choice. Altogether, as Admissions director David Wood put it, These are not the best of times as far as admissions ofiices go. Last year 72.371 of all applicants to the College of Arts and Science were offered admission to get a fresh- man class of 878. In Engineering the figure was 95.770, and in Nursing it was 85'Zn. Applications for next year's A8aS entering class are down some, Wood said, and Engineering is about the same as last year. 'Tm concerned about N ursing, he said. Wood said grades for the 1973! 74 freshman class were higher than the year before, but cumulative SAT scores were about 13 points lower. This, he suggested could reflect a change in emphasis on the part of the Admis- sions Committee. Why are times so tough for the admissions office? Decreases in the number of eligible students and in the percentage of high school seniors going to college have made things hard on colleges across the country, Wood said. He added that this is most likely due to the lessening emphasis on obtaining a degree and in- creased willingness to opt for other alternatives. Wood also said more of the high school seniors who do enter college are attending junior colleges and either 0 SIGN quitting after two years or transferring to four-year schools later. While these factors are hurting four-year colleges nationwide, Vanderbilt's high and increasing tuition is scaring off otherwise-interested students, according to Wood. I for one would think that the cost would be a big factor, he said, adding, No one costs more than we do in the South-Tulane might be more. The admissions office measures to combat dwindling applications begins with visits to high schools in the fall. Six staff members, plus interested professors and students, visit schools to plug Vanderbilt. High school students visiting the campus are shown around by student guides. Since guides in the past tended to be untrustworthy, guides are now paid for their services, Wood said. Last spring the Admissions office initiated Top Appli- cants Weekend, inviting 400 of the top applicants to visit Vanderbilt for three days. About 200 came to the weekend, and about half of those are currently enrolled, according to Admissions Counselor Lindy Branscomb. Branscomb said the Top Applicants Weekend was not a push-Vanderbilt weekend but an apportunity for the applicants to see Vanderbilt life. Top Applicants Weekend will probably become a con- tinuing part of the admissions office work, Branscomb said. Another innovation was not as successful, and will be discontinued. Last fall, Branscomb and Lucy Scott Fuqua accompanied an alumni tour to Europe to recruit European applicants to Vanderbilt. Since the tour of- fered free transportation to and from Europe, Brans- comb said the trip was less expensive than many recruit- ing trips in this country, but we won't go back again, I'm sureg We didn't get the kind of response we ex- pected. Honor scholarships are awarded in Engineering and in Nursing, Wood said, and these help ease the admis- sions crunch in those two schools. I know in Nursing and Engineering we enroll many people each year who became interested in the school because they saw in a flyer that we have honor scholarships. Wood said, ,--li . lla explaining that even those students who do not receive the scholarships may decide to come to Vanderbilt after the possibility of honor scholarships has aroused their initial interest in the school. One of my major complaints, Branscomb added, is that we don't have any honor scholarships in Arts and Science. Considering the decreases in the numbers of students applying to colleges in general and Vanderbilt in partic- ular, Wood suggested, We might have to cut down on the freshman class. Wood said, however, that a reduc- tion in the freshman class size would have to be decided by the A8zS deans. -Pate Skene ADMISSION Q P'-4 . j'7'l wa . 'V 'u' 5 I s, FRESHMAN WEEKEND I 407 HONORS .f ,.,-1:'.:, 1 Q I , -f 4. , mr. '14 . ,j ,.,- r ,F -,., , - ' ' ' 3-4-' ,, . J x dl 'U ' , . . 1 . 1- , ., A + W W 1 ' Tiff? . W ,. 1 n .- 5' . J . -1 - i-' ' ' .. Q: . +,,-4 F617 dff' :Q 1 -1 - lzf.-4-. A ,.-., .. . .-.wg - ,. w f117 f -'infer - . A .,. 'f , .Jw A g .uf X .I if. -f AWF., Q L . I :QW Q, ' ...lv 1 ', z , 'lg .1-E I .A f-.vi 5 +475 L4-'YQ 1 ., -w ' - . , .. Mn ,1 x I X .Mt ,.-.Ls- + .'f-FV' iw-Fil .lffiif -. ,, -553175 , ffm ... ' A J 'JT-H , . . J ,F . if ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA HONORARY FOR FRESHMEN WOMEN Noel Basi Sarah Lynn Smith Linda Wrede Berrylin Ferguson Mary Frances Dominick Laura Roosevelt NURSING Joyce Marie DeBrosse Dawn Louise Dudgeon Joyce Marie DeBrosse Dawn Louise Dudgeon Evelyn Elizabgwh Hankey Laurie M. Lawrence Donna Sue Lilly Pamela Ann Momenthy Ellen Sheldon Moore Dina Marie Norris Elizabeth Lynn Oldfield Sharon Elaine Sanders Mary Judith Willons ENGINEERING Mary Elizabeth C1'oss Nancy Stowe Greenberg Sandra Kaye Iden Dianne Marie Mannarelli Tonya Yvonne Sanders ARTS 81, SCIENCE Pamela Mary Auble Carey Burnice Beard Ina Ruth Bigham Clare Elizabeth Colquitt Carol Cantrell Culp Evelyn H, Dinkins II Melanie Graham Dorsey Marianne Dunstan Lisa Ann Ehrichs Lynn Marie Gerwin Rebecca Ann Halbower Nettie Clare Harding Susan Mary Henry Mary Helen Lane Florence Ruth LeCraw Catherine Marie Lett Margaret Ann McNichols Sara Helen Murphy Julie Jean Mushro Mary Lynn Mustoe 410 1 HONORS Marianne C. Nicastro Cathy Jean Nikoden Jennifer Ann Patchell Ellen White Payne Jean Malian Rainey Sarah Keen Raup Ashley Kennedy Rowe Deborah Ann Schulte Anne Mebane Sewell Juanita Faith Sharpe Mary Nell Simpkins Elizabeth Anne Stark Nancy Elizabeth Tusa Lee S. Van Deest Dorian Vanessa Weaver Susan Carrington Williams Nancy Clare Yarnell Linda Jean Ziiirin Elyn Ronna Saks ATHENIANS HONORARY FOR JUNIOR WOMEN Nita Irby Diane Lauver Nancy Morgan Deregal Burbank Dorothy Minnich Jo Anne Anderson Jamie Baker Tricia Bargo Betty Cunningham Frances DeLoache Christine Devanny Anne Dierdorli' Eileen Effinger Julie Gillespie Rosalynne Harty Kitty Lou Milliken Nancy Nielsen Kari Jo Peterson Linda Anne Raker Marta Render Karen Stall Donna Tanner Cynthia Ustruck Cathy Welsh Mary Ellen White Ann Womer CHI EPSILON CIVIL ENGINEERING HONORARY Douglas Beakley Cathey Connett John Gass Rob McBride Femia Alberts Tom Davis Barbara Franklin Tom Green Randy Hodges Richard Malavenda Mike Regen DELTA PHI ALPHA GERMAN HONORARY Paula Reed, President Samuel A. Nolen, Vice Pres Mary Ann McKeen, Ties. David Edmonds Jeff Anderson Martha Lee Wyatt Trudy Trevarthen John Bowley Kent Krause Jim Lynch David Groves Robert Silgals Suzanne Drexel John Dupree Mary Kay Burbach Frank Gilliam George Busse Doug Welsh Julie Gillespie Bob Homm Ann Womer Jeff Morgan ETA KAPPA NU ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING HONORARY Phillip R. Jones. K. Anthony Chung Edward A. Thoenes Stephen D. Abemathy James D. Evans William K. Parks Martin J. Adkins Luis J. Batista David L. Fehrman King Mun Mak Walter D. Marianelli Dyer A. Matlock Charles L. Ramiller Mark E. Shepard Annette M. Swank Stephen A. Townes Alan B. Weatherly ETA SIGMA PHI CLASSICS HONORARY Sam Carter Jerry Muntz Tes Brown John Howell W. Leonard Arendall David Boyd Randy Bryant Steve Cardey Claude Cody Gail Cooper Suellen Craig Michael Crowe Camille Dean Thomas Davidson Don Fisher John Gibson Tom Higgins Susan LeBourg Lissa LeGrand Elizabeth McCurley Libby Pope Philip Powers Jean Quallnan John Ramsey Kirk Reeves Cynthia Rich Betsy Taulor Cheryl Whitworth Janet Wray OMICRON DELTA KAPPA LEADERSHIP HONORARY Gerald Benjamin Kline Russell M. Blain John Stewart Civils, Jr. David B. Lewis Ernest C. Matthews S. Coleman Washington LOTUS EATE RS HONORARY FOR SOPHOMORE WOMEN Kay Wischmeyer Patti Early Barb Carroll Adair Wakefield Anne Atkinson Jo Lynn Baker Judy Bond Amy Camil Brown Nancy Ford Dinah Grashot Gene Heard Catherine Ives Lynda Mersereau Terry Northcutt Kathy O'Conor Anne Phillips Patricia Rogers Sally Samoriga Kathy Scofield Nancy Stein Scarlett Stewart Barb Tate Sally Wolff MO RTAR BOARD HONORARY FOR SENIOR WOMEN Susan Williams Peggy Stall Cindy Venn Lisa Head Linda Overcash Ginger Applegarth Bevington Cindy Bailey Phyllis Burbridge Virginia Butler Sally Campbell Ann Carroll Patty Carter Cathy Connett Ruth Dent Maly Louise Elran Eva Fu1'ner Mary Fran Go1'man Wanda Gould Janet Gren Janet Hanpeter Katie Harris Linda Leckie Nancy LeQuire Donna Lucas Marilyn Minks Bebe Owen Ann Marie Pearson Janie Pearson Connie Pelster Nanci Raybin Gail Rogin Sally Self Sabine Speer Cathy Jo Thompson Jane Wilcox PI TAU SIGMA MECHANICAL ENGINEERING HONORARY Jerry W. Smith Allen W. Watson Steve W. Guion William M. Durfee Richard Heydel Rebecca A. McBride Richard A. Schroeder James R. Tootle James R. Trulock Gene Young HONORS ! 411 lll I HONOR PHI BETA KAPPA Class of 1973 Beaumont, Penelope Susan Bradford, Ellen Graham Dudley, Bunyan Stephens III Woolley, Kevin Scott Class ol' 1974 Anderson, James Draper Armstrong, George Martin, Jr. Bell, Elliot Ingram Berry, James Harrod, Jr. Bond, Mary Helen Booker, Marvin Keith Buckthal, Julia Elizabeth Burbridge, Phyllis Mae Butler, Virginia Pipes Carroll, Ann Mary Chance, Joseph Franklin Chess, Robert Lewis Cooper, Gail Alan Cowles, Ann Elizabeth Crise, William K. Deitsch, Ira Jack Delzell, Charles Neal Dembe, Allard Eqmer Dent, Ruth Ann Elson, Mary Louise 4: Gregory, James Ted Grimaldi, John Andrew Rainier, Jr. Hall, Laurel Jean Nitsch Head, Lisa Ann Henrickson, Elizabeth Francis Hoppes, Elizabeth Sue Jensen, Carl Frank Johnson, Alexander Dixon, Jr. Johnson, Sally Stuart Jones, Stephen Lamar Kent, Raleigh Barbee III Kessler, Anthony Joseph Kirkemincle, Katherine Jane Lambert, Peter Breckenridge Logan, John Samuel Lucas, Donna Jeanne Lutin, Charles David Markham, Roy Douglas Martin, Frederick Meeker McCloy, Thomas Stuart Miller, David Ralph Miller, Louis Jay IMiodonski, Robert John t'Muntz, Jerry Edward Murphy, Claire Lamphere Murray, Lesly Gaynor Neuman, Douglas James Nolan, Kathleen Dorothy Nygaard, Thomas William Orrahood, David Lindsay Ostrander, Kent Ward 'lOwen, Jewell Elizabeth Faulkinberry, Patricia Erma P211'k9l', R0b61't BYBUIIOH Gilstacl, Pamela Joan Pearson, ANU Millie Englund, John Caldwell H Fabian sk Pinson, Barbara Bennett Robertson, Ronald Paiey Russell, Franklin Lee Schoettle, Timothy Porter Schwartz, George Benjamin Sell, Sally Elizabeth Shahan, John Stobie Silgals, Robert Maishall Snyder, Richard Wayne Speer, Sabine Ellen Swingle, Hanes McPherson Thomas, Lacy Glenn Tobias, Judith Ellen Truw, Julie Turner, Judith Ann Tyler, Anne Louise Van Orman, Jerome Beeler, Weems, Walter Sillers Wilcox, Jane Karen Wilson, Henry Lytle, Jr. Young, Marion Valerie 'Elected in Junior Year Class of 1975 Drury, Laura Nelle Saripkin, Larry Marvin Sheris, Candace Jo Sobel, John Albert IV White, Alice Patricia Winder, James Edward J PHI ETA SIGMA HONORARY FOR FRESHMAN MEN Charles Patrick Fitzgerald James Vincent Bonnet Robert Douglas James Paul D. Vanliandingham Engineering Daniel Q. Aucremanne Sanfolrl Samuel Brown John Ford Chappell James Clark Peter V. Groetzinger Socrates A. Ioannides Danny Gene Johnson Mark Davis Mayo Douglas R. McConkey James Aitkens Mitchell, Jr. David Newton Patrick John Olfner Robert Oswalt Steven Dean Owens William Stoess Pease Johnny Marvin Price Ted Ed Pruitt Sigmund M. Redelsheimer John Charles Roaity Joseph Willcox Rudolph Van Chapman Saylor Steven Howard Selznick John Shireman James Louis Thomas Robert Earl Ustruck Mark Gregory Wessel Arts and Science Jerrold Holt Batte Leon Williams Bell III Michael Neuhaus Bellmont Bruce Robert Beyer William Leyden Branyon George K. Busse William Edward Caldwell Mark Robert Cambisios Ernest Ping-Lim Chin Richard Nils Dean William R. DeLoache, Jr. John Dubois John Ca1'roll Dupree Steven Carl Erickson Kent Farish Kenneth William Frasure Clinton Mills Froscher John Michael Gaffney Gary Alan Goforth Stuart Harrison Gold David Allen Goldsmith Robert D. Goldsmith Marvin William Goodwyn, Jr. William L. Granberiy, Jr. Timothy Green Mark Allen Greenberg William Julian Gregory William Walker Gwinn, Jr. Mark A. Hall Forrest Cleave Ham Richard Andrew Hamblen Douglas Eugene Hanlin Michael Scott Hertzog Phillip Keith Hill David William Higgs David Edward Hollinberger Charles Houston Michael Howard Clay Straus Jenkinson James Edward Johnson William Reed Lamb Charles Harwick Lee William Norris Little, Jr. Harold Dwight Lyons, Jr. Greg Allan Martin Charles Alan May William M. McClee1y, Jr. Kenneth Gary Menendez Braxton Lee Monroe Mack Jay Morgan III Bryan Mark Mulloy Eric Marinus Nelson Gordon Earle Nichols James Wilson Owen III James Littleton Pardue Robin Gray Presson John Paul Ramsay Robert Mark Saitz Jeffrey Lewis Schniitter John Sherman Shaw III Elton Shouse Smith Paul Heermans Smith, Jr. John Eugene Spitler John Walter Sweat William Newton Thompson Barry Forrest Tillman John Warren Titus John Wallace Townsend David E. Turner Richard Alan Turner Robert Wampler Steven Weinstein Martin Paul Willard Aaron Howard Wolfson George Dewey Wright III 41-1 I HONOILS PHI SIGMA IOTA ROMANCE LANGUAGE HONORARY Nancy J. V. Luther James Ted Gregory H. Griswold Bowden Raymond Paul Poggenburg Phyllis Mae Burbridge Virginia Pipes Butler Alexis Fitzbugh Elizabeth Compton Inerlandi Jack Louis Jordan Jean Leblon Christopher Robinson McRae Mary Lindsay Nesbitt Kathleen D. Nolan Emily Jeanne Raker Wade Thompson Sanders Elizabeth Lee Schwinghamer Corinne Shotlifl' Sarah Suzanne Stalls Susan Ewin Williams Virginia Allison Yarborough RAVEN A secret organization working to pro- mote the development and betterment of Vanderbilt, Quoth the Raven: Ne- vermoref' Skip Bayless Jim Berry Russ Blain Tom Buck Bill Buzzell John Civils Howard Cline John Fowler David Hyman Mark Ilgenfritz Gerald Kline Steve Lainhart David Lewis Ernie Matthews Jay Miller Pat Mulloy Keith Riggs Leonard Sattelwliite Doug Schwartz Neal Shnidelman Robbie Slocum Howard Stringfellow Mike Swisher Jim Tanner Shep Tate Coleman Washington SCABBARD AND BLADE MILITARY HONOR SOCIETY Richard G. Morrison Stephen L. Jones Curtis L. Bay:-ringer Lex F. Jolley John M. Abernathy Lawrence F, Dewberry Robert M. Forrest George F. Gilbert John D. McHenry Thomas J. Miner J. F. Sanders William D. Shippen John M. Tatum Alexander M. Torrance Phillip C. Welsh Henry L. Wilson SIGMA DELTA PI SPANISH HONORARY James T. Gregory Howard S. Marshall Virginia P. Butler Phyllis M. Burbxidge S. Suzanne Stalls Gail E. Anderson Alice S. Boggs Mary Elise Burnett Guy E. Burnette David D. Clark Judith K. Davidson Alexis Fitzhugh Sherron E. Kritzer Judith A. McGraw Robert M. Pulley Emily J. Racker Elizabeth L. Schwinghamer E. Webb Spradley Candace J. Sheris Mary E. Suttles Allen T. Turpin Janet E. Martinez SIGMA THETA TAU NURSING HONORARY Cindy Bailey J o Anne Anderson Tricia Bargo Madeleine Blankenship Lynnette Boyle Sally Campbell Sarah Cornett Susan DeVane Ruth Fenstermacher Celeste Finucane Carol Gardner Mary Fran Gorman Janet Gren Janet Hanpeter Ann Havens Anne Herring Lynn Higginbotham Wanda Land Roberta Lashlee Mary Lee Nancy Martindell Polly McClanahan Theresa McCurry Susan McGoon Gay Nienhuis Libby Ogrodnick Janie Pearson Virginia Place Nanette Powell Anne Rountree Lynne Simpson Rita Slayden Patricia Trangenstein Helen Triol Jennifer Townsend Mary Trueblood Jennifer Wegener Alice Sue Wilson SKULL AND BONES PRE-MEDICAL HONORARY Richard Lowell Harris David Nelson Gwaltney Rebecca Ann Brooks Steven David Fayne Paul Banks Paul R. Barkus John E. Bartness Jonathan Berman Carl Frederick Blatt, Jr. Philip Arthur Boese Franklin D. Boyce Anthony Netterville Brannan Robert Herriott Brmh Felix L. Caldwell James R. Cannon Christie Parker Carter Michael Eugene Crowe Floyd Leroy Culler Elizabeth Joy Cunningham Stephen Franklin Daugherty James Phillip Davis Raymond Daniel Davis Richard Joseph Eiseman Harry Harper Ferran Charles Patrick Fitzgerald Gary Stanton Fonarow Charles Manis Friedman Robert Harold Funke James R. Gewin Larry Ginley Robb B. Goff Gary Robert Gropper John Edward Grubbs Larry Dean Gurley Fred Habeeb Carol Marie Hall Jack Lansford Hammond L. Hunter Handley, Jr. Stephen Jay Heishman Charles Edwin Hornaday Ilh I IIOINORS Heyward Carithers Hosch Daniel Ivan Huyser Gilbert Lawrence Hyde Philip C. Johnson Dennis Harrell Jones Richard James Jordan Raleigh B. Kent Richard H. Kisber R. Craig Kuykendall Mark Lee Moore David Meredith Mullins William C. Murphy, Jr. Charles Monroe Myer John Wills Oglesby James Wilson Owen Stephen Edwin Parey Neil Hamilton Parnes Craig Scott Phillips Laurence Daniel Preble Cary Watson Pulliam Joseph William Rogers Patricia A. Rogers Stephen Mitchell Sainati James William Scheurich Timothy Porter Schoettle Joseph Robert Seehusen Kelly Seid William D. Shippen, Jr. Ricky Phillip Simovitz J. Alan Solomon Grylynn Jane Speas Sabine Ellen Speer Harry James Stone Richard H. Sundermann, Jr. Betty Button Thomas David Alexander Tipton David Alan Vail Kenton Ittner Voorhees Nola Jean Wecker William David Weiss Margaret Elma Wilkinson John Leland-Joseph Wolford Jeffrey Mason Wright TAU BETA PI ENGINEERING HONORARY Curtis Baysinger James Cordner Cathy Jo Thompson Elliott Rothberg Richard Morrison Phillip Jones Catherine Connett Phillip Custer Todd Deveau James D. Evans Barbara Jean Franklin John Gass Stephen Guion William Parks Charles K. Riggs Dennis Smith Edward Thoenes Stephen Abernathy Mark Crowell Philip Mak Cynthia Ustruck James Tootle Charles Ramiller Luis Batista Allen Elster Robert Heinemann Walter Marianelli Douglas Bea kley HONORS By Bob Gillespy and Rosalynne Harty I could not love you so well, had I loved not honour more. They say Diogenes died looking for that honorable man. Perhaps he should have come to Vanderbilt. For here in the Athens of the South, there exasts any of a dozen enclaves-cluts, one might call them-sheltering literally hundreds of those worthy individuals. The groups range in type and purpose from grade point organizations fAlpha Lamda Delta and Phi Eta Sigma for freshmen, Phi Beta Kappa for upperclassj to special interest honoraries CTau Beta Pi in engi- neering, Sigma Theta Tau in Nursing, Scabbard and Blade for the military, and the handful of foreign culture fraternitiesj to more diversified organizations bringing together individuals with both grades and special achievements lLotus Eaters, Athenia ns, and Mortar Board for womeng Omicron Delta Kappa for menb. Whatever their official requirements for membership, the honoraries share a common written goal: to facilitate interaction between a hand-picked group of achievers, and to encourage those individuals to use their many respective talents for the common good. Curtis Baysinger, current president of Tau Beta Pi sums up this dual purpose: I conceive of our function as two fold, he said. First, to distinguish or give recognition to those who have achieved or per- formed well in Engineeringg and secondly, to provide some service to the school as well as attempt to provide some worthwhile activity for our members. Most of the organizations find they can perform the function of bestowing 'thonor rather well. A backlog of traditions eases this task: the pins, badges, and ritual-laden initiations stay pretty much the same year in and year out. What changes however is the leadership, and concurrently, mem- bership of the groups. And with that change comes the differences in handling the second function of the honoraries: service. Some groups have made great gains in recent years in furthering that goal. Particularly the chain of sophomore, junior, and senior women's honoraries have been remarkably successful in their efforts to go beyond their traditional tea and cakes images. This past year, the sophomore group fLotus Eatersl polished up an idea started by their immediate predecessors-a student-faculty auction-and made a roaring success of it. The Athenians also jazzed up a traditional project, Athenian Sing, with innovations llike encour- aging greater non-Greek participation and reestablishing the Dinah Shore Awardj to raise money for scholarships and for charity, Mortar Board went one step further sponsoring a series of con- sciousness-raising carrer seminars in the name of women's concerns. Other groups also carried off successful service-oriented projects. Alpha Lamda Delta sponsored a garage sale for a scholarship fund, Tau Beta Pi published and revised a guide to the Engineering School for entering freshmen, and several of the foreign language honoraries worked within their departments for curriculum change and review. Athenians is a whole lot more than just an honorary to me, explained that active group's president Nita Irby, I've tried to get the group involved with the campus as a whole, citing campus-wide trash collections and a reunion brunch by freshman halls for junior women as other 'service' projects by her group. Other honoraries are finding the call to service a distinctly fainter one. Basically, we're just for people interested in Spanish, admitted Jim Gregory, president of Sigma Delta Pi. Unless we sponsor some- thing big like a movie or a lecture that other people might want to come to, it's pretty much just for the people in the group. And that, at least, is better than doing nothing-which some of the groups frankly admit they've been next to doing. The problem for many of the honoraries that recruit activist membership, according to Irby, is that by its very nature, the members are people who are already busy, already involved in lots of other things, so it's hard to get them all together to work on something else. And honoraries based primarily on grade-points find a similar prob- lem. What you traditionally get, one grade-point honorary president explained, is people who are used to devoting all their time to their studies. So they don't want to do a lot else because one, they don't want to neglect their studies or two, they don't feel it's worth their time. Still, the honoraries have their defenders. It fills the same need for group activities for girls that sororities would, pointed out Dorothy Cuniggim, Dean for Student Services and advisor to three honoraries. They also serve as an incentive to some students,', she added. One other purpose is to give us a chance to get together with people interested in the language and culture iof Spain,J in something other than a lecture situation, Gregory offered. Too, Cuniggim suggested, the emphasis on tradition establishes a link with both past honoraries and, for the nationals, with others acros the country. She pointed to the recent defeat-narrow but decisive-of motions to open two honoraries to coed membership. There is a certain tradition within the organizations that would become different with such a change, she continued. Some of the older organizations don't wish to lose that historic tradition. That doesn't mean, though, that the groups are impervious to change, Cuniggim asserted. The groups really are trying to make their purpose relevant to today, she said, noting that whatever-the nationals stipu- late, Vanderbilt honoraries can be what they want to be locally. What they want to be , unfortunately, is what is still in transition. Still there are hopeful signs after a hiatus during the strident sixties, there is once again a g'rowinginte-rest in membership, Cuniggim says, evidenced by this spring's revival of ODK. Whatever else they evolve into at Vanderbilt-tools for activism or forums for social pleasantry-one aspect of honorary membership seems to be remaining constant: For students with their eyes on graduate schools, fellowships, and just plain jobs, Cuniggim suggests: this kind of thing is still helpful. HONORS I 417 GALLERY GALLERY GALLERY GALLERY GA ' -4 i, .5-lv--'-7 B . 1 ' Q..-J. 4...-.- . 3 ERY GALLERY GALLERY GALLERY G N Vx ALLERY nr- -1 Qfev Y' , .gl I -f ,cv rn' Q- ,.,, 'ved-4 avi 'K-ff!! vt. C C111 -..ai M. ,vw 1 .v' ,.,..a05 ,, 7 454 of ll ,rl fr? 'll' YQICU fiat-KQJQ-CIF I--lvl '5 .4 Ng ,.. U V' . 1 , A.4f2.f, -.Lv ' '!.'4:f- ., . ' 1 a 1 , , - '. 3125 ,1..:L4 , ,,. Ill' I :gg .4 'fi' ,,. .,..a A 422 1 SURPRISE This past late August, most of the Commodore's photographers were still unreturned. And so an- other crop of freshmen slipped in without really having their pictures made. And that's a shame Qreallyj. For better or worse, that first week on campus is a telling experience. Similarly, the lion's share of adjustment to college life is freshman year adjustment. Once again, for better or worse. And so if we can't really show it to you in graphics, maybe I can try to tell you about it. For me. The Holiday Inn Vanderbilt was the first stop. There I was, with all my worldly possessions crammed into the trunk, my letterman's jacket from high school carefully sealed in plastic. At best, I'd have to say our seven-year old Chevy looked modest. In any event, that suggests the first set of pictures: proud parents, just arrived with their probably scared and certainly well-groomed chil- dren. Pictures might, for instance show those touristy-looking people and cars fwhich clutter themselves on trips, anywayj containing a year's supplies. All packed. After the emptied family cars all leave, things really start happening. My year, we had a house- mother. So, on one side of the double doors she'd be luring in the residents for Russian tea. And, on the other side, all hell would be breaking loose. Or at least so it seemed to an only child from Macon. You see, you just couldn't be surprised. If crazes for Wild Wild West and Star Trek swept the hall like a fever: no surprise. If Mike fed his parrot mescaline: no surprise. If Peter was study- ing his chemistry at 9 a.m. Sunday: no surprise. I'm just not sure how to portray all this in graph- ics. Maybe if you kept a full-time photographer lurking behind the water fountain in, say, Mims 3 and Scales 2, you could do it. But you'd still need be careful since you'd have the pranks and experi- ments and freaky things, but you'd still be missing. For sure. In the midst of all the hullabaloo, there are some serious things going on. It's a real and valid and necessary stage, and it should be re- corded. Maybe a series of before and after pictures from freshman year. Or a graph of shrinking long distance costs as junior checks in less often. I just don't know. But the freedom on the other side of those double doors is one that can grow you up. And even if your letterman's jacket gets left at home, you face surprise. -Robbie Slocum Editor SURPRISF 423 My idea of good company, Mr. Elliott, is the company of clever, well-informed people, who have a great deal of conversation, that is what I call good company. You are mistaken, he said gently, that is not good company-that is the best. Good company requires only birth, education, and ma rmers, and with regard to education is not very nice. -Jane Austen in Persuasion By DAN BISCHOFF Vanderbilt has long since reached the peculiar institutional stage at which it takes on a life of its own, like an organism that feeds, cries, infiicts pain, wets and grows. Mostly grows. In the past 15 years years or so it has grown as though it had a thyroid disorder. In the same sense, that is, that Rome could consider the Capitoline to be the navel of the world. Rome saw the whole world revolving around itself, and Vanderbilt, as one of its own self-perceptions, has always had growth. And though the analogy seems a little off-I do not consider myself to revolve about my navel-the spirit of the thing is what counts. In the past 100 years Vanderbilt did grow tremendously-mostly older, but in other ways, too. The enrolhnent ballooned from the original 307 to nearly 7,000, and the endowment, which began at S600,000, now tips the scales at almost S150,000,000. Originally the campus embraced all of 75 acres, part of that cornfieldg now it boasts 175 acres, part of that McGugin Center. The Board of Trust has decided to rein in on such expansion, at least of the rawest kind, by stabilizing enrollment. Presumably there are just so many people willing to come to Vanderbilt who are qualified and capable of contributing to the University. And as a private institu- tion we hope to limit our student body to a reasonable facsimile of the best the South has to offer. 424 I GOOD COMPANY Pretty much, as much as is reasonable, we did. In the sixties there was a baby boom and college crush in which everyone and his brother- in-law wanted to come here to school. That coincided with the begin- ning of Alexander Heard's tenure as chancellor and his effort to expand Vanderbilt into something more than a good regional university. Van- derbilt took great strides at that time toward lapping over its bounda- ries onto the rest of the nation. We built things like the Stevenson Center and the Microbiology Department, we followed through on Chancellor Emeritus Harvie Branscomb's efforts to establish a dormi- tory life fwhich means a campus-oriented lifej here. But those plans were based upon an enrollment of greater size and presumably greater quality than we had ever had before. We now have the facilities of a university with an average enrollment of 7,000, so we need 7,000 warm bodies to fill those facilities. Otherwise, the money we put into things like Stevenson Center-and the tabs that those things brought-goes to waste. In 1974 things aren't as easy for private institutions. People aren't as ready to spend their money on just any education any more, they want to be sure of the best possible. There are many things that Vanderbilt can claim to attract people with, and people come here because we are southem, because our faculties are reasonably compe- tent and in some places excellent, because they haven't anything better to do at the time, and because they can afford it. Mostly because they can afford it. But if they can afford it they can also afford Duke and Virginia or some school up east. And that is were we get caught in a pickle. Lately, it seems, people have been deciding more and more on the other options. But we need those warm bodies, and the result is that we have begun accepting 75'Z: of the people who apply here. No one wants to be elitist about anything, but this is ridiculous, this 75'Z:. And we only need to fill 7,000 slightly warm places, not 20,000 brightly smoking ones. The result of all that has been a tacit and slowly slipping lowering of standards. Every university gets its complementary share of morons-that's part of the definition-and we shall always have ours, but it isn't a question of whether or not we are admitting illiterates. We are admitting mediocrity, which isn't as bad but just as boring. Admitting the high school senior who qualifies as above average iwhich means next to nothing in our high schoolsl does two things to us as an institution of higher learning. Immediately it cheapens the degree in a way, not everyone who graduates from this place is certifiably an exceptionally bright, active, motivated person. And, secondly, it lowers the quality of life around here. Vanderbilt is not such a bad place, as places go. Of course, itis no Atlantic City, but then again it's no Khe Sanh, either. To a school which is already top-heavy with tenured faculty twhich some critics claim runs the risk of stagnationj and a tradition-bound-in-brass attitude toward education, the student body is not necessarily what is most important. Not that anyone would say otherwise. It's just that we are here for four years at a time and they're in for life. An off-hand attitude toward teaching blends admirably into the type of southern stereotype we attract, the kind of stereotype that sort of takes an off-hand attitude toward existence. Which is fine for a southern belle and lousy for a southern university. What Vanderbilt needs is more national prestige-even if it means deficit spending, but it needn't mean that-an innovative, attractive, and intelligent programming for the average arts and science undergrad. We need to step up recruiting, which means more money for recruit- ments, to drag the quality of this student body up to that of the faculty. Probably we can't have really new programming until we shake up the faculty, which has, like other facilities at private institutions around the nation, become encrusted with powers that stand in the way. But most of all we need a student body that can effect that type of change and . . . well, Catch-22. THE VANDERBILT WGMAN On a campus that is known for its magnolia trees and soft Southern accents, their very presence in positions of authority is slightly jarring. Together with a handful of other women in traditionally male jobs on campus, they are efficiently-and of- tentimes, gleefully-laying to rest the clasic image of the TVC. I don't think she exists anymore, agreed SHC director Nanci Raybin, at least she's not as easy to characterize. -from ll Husller article hy Rosalynne Harty WOM HN I -125 HI Andrew Lytle, visiting professor of English But there was another sort of recruit who came in from the country to answer Davis's callg and if he rode, it was on the back of a mule. The last of the Yeomanry, too, went to war. He brought with him no fine candies, but a jug of molasses, a sack of corn, and his father's musket which, if outmoded, could knock a hole in a man. One more friendly and generous than the rest drove his best cow into camp. These young men were without medieval visions. They were going out to fight because they had heard the Yankees were coming down to tromp their fields and tear up their barns. They were the plain people, the freest people in the South, whom the cotton snobs referred to as the pore white trash. And they were going away, leaving their steadings to their women-folks, l-IH ps R' to defend their particular way of life, although they would not have spoken of it in such flat terms. These men made up the largest body of people in the South. There were some four millions of them living in the hill country, on the borders of the plantations, and in the newly settled states like Arkansas and Missouri. The only difference between them and the cotton snobs was that of a generation or two, and the difference that the rich snobs were ashamed of their pioneer ancestry and they were not. Davis and his advisers made one great mistake that overshadowed all the other errors of policy: they chose to rest the foundations of the Confederacy on cotton and not on the plain people. Andrew Lytle. -Bedford Forrest and his Critter Company wiv- i I' .. ., ,MA-v-Q 1 .A , V A wi: ' .1 ' 1' , Afl ' -..rw 'fuk' Ji 'M' .MQ 1 ,-. IPL. ' J ., u.L ' xt' 4 -Q fy: 7'fgl. ,f 1 ':',. 453 R-+1 ' f-5, 3443 . r 5' ,' L r F fi' .I-1' '. , ,fl w ' - xy! 1 . tg .QA ,z thi . . V.-,I I, A ,. S ' '4. u 1 N 4 1 'i I Q -,Q -xg... A- ' ffrr 1, ,X --'reg V, Jil.,- . 'tg-.-Q 'X' If . 6 '11 'L A x JB f M my 9532129-' f E LANGUAGE LABORATORY i 'SM 'Vg 4- Namc: ,:4- J- '- Courscz, Cb -:S AL Dale: L: H 11+ U3 E Frarmh E551-Ein: 1+ I Teacl1cr'sNurne:,E-E-gl' 'l-1 i Section: W NOTICE: When you leave this lab position, clean up after yourself. Do not leave behind, pieces of paper, letters, pencil erasings, or anything which was not in the position when you arrived to use it. Anyone apprehended marking up the booths or otherwise defacing lab property will be ostracized, made to clean up the mess, will lose lab privileges, and will be sent to the Dean's office. Stephen V. Dock, Coordinator 132 I GALLI RY Jw nl of 1 , gt ' , I .4 - A '23 ,. - 35- 1 3' -M iw- ...J ., 1 -,. - -V.-.WW I I .., :vin .. ' 'E-E : J ' he ' 'Q . I vQ.,,, ,L Q 9 ' ' WE A U- 45-p-.aj-.,,,,.u I . . If Affflilfl Ni . 'S' . ' J r fi: 4 5- Q.. . '1 3 ' V' . Q '- Z '- g' Y X., 3' ' ' 4 -. - ln 'sw ,- me N as 'V . . I , ' ' -L f -if 1' Q Sirk. 1 QQ? . -.... .1 W. - . qgpirv. I . , .isiif nf ' .2 - V . ' , ff' x -'Qu-7' '4' 'X - A, , ,Jr 4 . W r .f 'ff - f 'Y 1 I af . , . il 1 1- -.- ig. -0 1 ,I 1 5 C .. .ga ..v V ,N Q P , 4 , ,X - ... - . - .X . ' ' ' -'Kr If , fzvif... , . --,,. sn, ' i., -Q .QQ . 'Q ' 'Z ' gf - .334 5 4 ' U 'J V ' 'Y' ' 1 fa gg-Lf, - ' -4' l . ' . , I ' ' -K , .'5't,. S75 'V ' -1 A -A 4 . 4734, f Av- .5 Ld vw- ., .3 :lg 'Cx I X .Y 1'J'Q. .. ' '. gr ,. . , 1 8 l A . h , . .4 V., ,uf nf ,L 7 - ,-,NJ A A '6' 3 . 1 F A A . 1 4 K in A P 1 J I A 3. ..-jyyg :. V- LI: A . V... . ' :Mu .M -, ' i iifv 434 I GALLERY x I I I half' u 5. T l I nm A., .J H-. Fx 5 E 4 1 X-fi1'.Q3'Nx. A 'JP Q' lining X' 'Q ,- 94 GALLERY I 435 1 V . v 4 A .g N 1' , , -5. ff 11 .4 +1 ,gm x ff' ' ' .V 1 '- .U J 'oy 12- xp, Y' J ' ' flux 1. a :fix HE JM '41 ,j f 'A u 5151, p x' 1 Q pmt! vw uf- 'ww 1 -'mf 'x ff' 4 S'4 4' 1 ,C 5 xxx X .. Eiliifirdkvffiztl ,wx - ,'-.J-ww, -Q ,f ve-'S x f . -4 ,vi-1-QL. -0 gf 5- , .Q K--xiii . A :UN , 6 A :I .tw ,- ,, ,Agia E . , 1 ,N v 'gym fi 'ifdi , -3,94 SL ,, Q11 if 1' 1 '-':., Bifiil ggi? Nj: , lf' 1.1 ' L LF ji: f -14, .W ., , Agfw,-ff 4 .'-' 171 ' A I: - Esaifi If J QS . WP vf ' ' .fl:g:?f:,ex' Iigw '-Ta 8 an-'S ,Blawg .64 itgffit-Si, -ff -:,..,...,' jp. 1, .I . I , . ,,.4 . .I -Tri -H ' H., A ,.., R. ' 'J' 'n -' V ' ,-,.. ...N 438 I GALLERY v , . , Q, ,I - -46 -mr .x .a. ,hh Q ,.-7 gun GALLERY I 439 -w1.. V: ua. f. ., I -- 'v , L . -A .-1.x A' ,xyf--V'-f lmgfwgitf Mxarv- M -140 I GALLERY - , :Hi- i f x icy ix X ,. A , 4 ,, if . 9 v-A ,KW , X Xx X QV! 'KN x X f y Q A W 2 '4 ' 'MN ' ' M WX Wf TM- W ff iw f ff K' .x X . ,f 2 K fzglll . W f X .. 'gn .. X., 'vg2c'g1fZ'NW Q ' , Q 1' In K -:..-- '-in iv: 5 -5 ' Q Q 1- ' ' ff 'Q ak? .l I I W -A, , ., ,fl V NX' , '- in . K h l .X ld.-vvny. Q - 'Q -. X wx 'S fa Sw Q ' N X 1'-E .why I, FY .f , ,STS ' 4 ',.. ' -A 1 'W 1' igiwiif. .K I ' 'BLSKQX . . 1 k iv fx mv L 1' XX vzuylw X I- -,N Q r f ,. uf 'X 4,27 ' XP: ,4-LQQ-F sw f f X Xp PRC!! l , , X 41:53 F . If X . I I XSS NA xl '- N , .'l5fL2'f , X ' NF ' .. ' w1fgf:ftf2i'h ' A QKQGWCN fN Q., ' , flitff-'ff 1 Y , -L I 'url' I E? 41? H' ' e X ' f f, eff-ri-ageS:Nf V ,HJ ' 1 ', ' HX , f 122'-5 5' I, If 0 jk I l w:l :Js'9'kx'-Z: ' ' . XAVXFX 4' . ' . . - .gasiff V-5525117-f5?g: i 5iflS:f'f,t .- ' ' ,f 39 3 ' W nf ff ifffgffifia '-. H - ' - -SN' l- -'12 ' nv an U' x f N SX -IJPWA an MN 5,-'JXX - ,, ' - '.q':'sll XR ' ff' ,, ,-gr: 7-19 ff? A X- xx ' W 'rgfgjgisl , . A -x 4 f ,:,.' u La--.Q , , ' VM XY 'I 'Mi WN vi ,f:1i+:f'f:' 'Wi M' X 1-1 i . Ma, N Sq X-X Mx ' f 1' W'f'fTff'. ' 5 ' E x 5-1' f - ' at A ' - ' 'hire Eiiflffffffffzft ' M 7 9 X .'2ifC lg . l ' ' ' . 1 415, !'.i:'fnii'- 'IKM' qflptr - A X A '21'hfT.. 'NW E'1 .t. -1- fff: 7ff rQ:m,9f . 'R-So ng UM, F X X I ' - 'Q' 1 4 - '. 'il21lf.i' 1 ' , 'mxwtxvwwf ' U W? ' - -7--FA we V ' ' -,. H .J7' ADVE TI 1 G QUALITY YEARBOOKS FOR 68 YEARS QUALITY COMM ODORES FOR 68 YEARS PRINTINGCO. QQEZYLLI. Benson Printing C mpany 136 Fourth Avenue, Nor Nashville, Tennessee 37 The inning Combination Vanderbilt slxgounnn sw wx 5 fi lg 1 M x? 1-l-I-l-I-. THE WORLD'S INNKEEPER 'I' SOUTHEAST 981 MURFREESBORO RD I2 EAST AT3 OHARDING PLACE VANDERBILT.2613WEST END I NORTH AT TRINITY LANE CAPITOL HILL. IAMES ROBERTSON PKY Ali' Crmzis GWELGRS excuusive leweuzy MANUFACTURING JEVVELEFIS - DIAMOND IIVIPOFITEFIS 'I 58 Sth AVENUE NOFITI-I I NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 372203 E61 51 E55-35'I'I THE SOUTHERNER 1610 CHURCH STREET Fine Wines and Beverages JOHN A. FREUD COMPANY ELLISTON PLACE SODA SHOP 9 GINNIS INCORPORATED SOUGGALLATIN ROAD NASHVlI,I,.E. TENNESSEE 37216 LIFE 8: CASUALTY IS A VITAL HART OF LIFE IN NASHVILLE. WEST END AT TWENTY-FOURTH NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 327-4081 EDWARD VANTINE STUDIOS, INC. HAMILTON, NEW YORK Nationally Known Phot College ographersn RICH-SCHWARTZ BEAUTY SALON Exquisite Styling Specialize in Hair Coloring 327-3850 2400 West End Avenue Y 5 UQUOR sfo s 0 N 'S 1316 Broad sr. Q A BFOWII t 2 Bn.ocKs Fnom cAMPus X 5 . the Corner of lx 4 19th and Brood .92-f 3813 HILLSBORO ROAD 8 A M II P M NASHVILLE. TENNESSEE f 385-3883 329 2242 0 9 ., .b ' - FINE STATIONERY, GIFTS 8: 're ed' ' ACCESSORIES FOR FIFTY YEARS . 1 , ' at v P S I B QQ' ' ,W S 1 av wxnet--C 'S SPECIFICATIONS: Offset lithograph presswork by Benson Printing Com- pany, Nashville, Tennessee, in 16 page signatures on a 25 X 38 inch MIEI-ILE two-color press. The inside paper is 80 lb. Paloma Matte by Consolidated Papers Inc. Wisconsin Rapids, Wise. Endsheets are 65 lb. Mist Green Talisman Cover by Simpson-Lee Paper Co., Vicksburg, Mich. Endsheet designs by Michael Johnson. Trim size is 9 X 10 inches. Offset printing plates and color separa- tions by Gulbenk Engraving Company, Nashville, Ten- nessee, using a 150-line ELIPTICAL DOT SCREEN. Binding by Benson. Smyth sewn in 16 page signatures, rounded and backed with headbonds. Cover by Durand Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Illinois. The base material is Dupont Fabrikoid in the Dark Green 7035 color on 160 point binder's board, embossed with a hand-tooled die, hot-stamped in silver mylar foil and rubbed by hand with a black overtone. Cover design by Michael Johnson. Headlines and text are Harris Intertype Century Schoolbook from Gulbenk graphics. Press run was 4500 copies. The Commodore is a division of Vanderbilt Student Communications, Inc., financed by an activity card allocation of 38.25 per student. The Commodore, 1974 Edition, is dedicated to Paul Hempill. Special thanks to Dr. Compton and the Philosophy Department, who let us shoot the class pictures in their seminar room. To Colernill Flying Service who helped with aerial photography. To Liz Schwartz, who provided the lacrosse pictures. To Alumnus Magazine and the Vanderbilt University News Bureau, who also provided pictures. Thanks to Dan Bischoff for artwork. Thanks also to Dean Glen Clanton and June Dorman. Thanks to Clark Thomas for professional photography. Thanks especially to Pandora. 18 SPFCIHC KI'lON -if ti A in , -u .:.....1- - Billy Benson f fig l 4 g f N W fy g if ,Q M L? f ,iff XS if if ah! f?,12'1' V GJ? ,K K 'gn 37 f A 'Q gg U X ' , vi X c f A E I 1 I w K 'J fl ! s . .1 E z ' M ifsyf' ' 5 -. if 51? gf ' K '1 . f 'M 1 f - P EQ. 1: ' 1ff.ff K i, Qi' J 'EP f .. ' 1 ,faiyq tn I ' vip! E ,J 1 fi ,Ffa i nz' J .- - . .ffl 1' fliivvx, X Af' ,L 'F 'fy I-'iv 1 Q. ' W, LIXX 1 N' ,f I ffl fv- P v we ,iff fa - ' - f fr i? P 4 5' ' g I if R s ifgvf i ' .1 E i hifi W-,lf ig' ff L ,X Ay if rj 1' ibf'fZ'fZ f: ' g L r -JU w hlw yx if ., 1 f x j lf, A J 'Aff 1, . W-.. M., , lf! -11 1. lf -f J. If -17 1' f f, X --, - 'f ff-.M 4 x A .ff A My 7,Mff A4., ., ,f r 4 ' Ji ' f .6-rf ffff . ' 1 A x IW V if-9 Z .li f ff: H ' ' rv - -, L 'f if W ' ffl I 1 125 U' x 7 1.4 ...wan .--.,-Y. .,.i.,..M-,,.,..i,.1,-:,...1,,.L,.,.,.f1. ---M-rv--H-Tn.-4----Y-1-,-.-.,.f.-A----q.w--- ..... 1 .,,, , ,,,, ..,.. .., .,.'Qz.'-,., .. .L , . . , . -4 ,. , ........-.... ....,..n-J..--4
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.