William Fleming High School - Colonel Yearbook (Roanoke, VA)
- Class of 1976
Page 1 of 234
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 234 of the 1976 volume:
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The 1976 Co onel , - ,. ' ' ?E?f4E2,u5Zi!:3zf?sa2f,i,z ,ff , FEW -Am WW :wie 1-,. Q, , f h X ni 1 x up l 11 -Y , ,, ,M V, 1 . . W M 1 , S fr 6 Q I V Y 3 1 DA ,. ., ,,,, ,.,1 , ., , 1, ,, , , , V,,, , , , V 1 , . . . ,. , ,M .-,,, W 1 ,Q , ,,.,,,,Tg M, FX , ,g WN., , ,. W M, H., ,. ,,,, ,M H - H. H. , jx X, W ,,:1,MJn::L :4,R, , ww-,. my ? f f k 'fr H fl YE 'W 'h iss ff! ff? 'f-- 'w f iv' - Wbfgf ML ga ,f V f h W rg. . 2 pf? f ' H x A12239 2 C .ggi V11 ' ixEg , ,w-1:5 yn ' f W, , . f , 1 ff Q f ' .H ' ' O -. Q 'x f Q 1- ees' ,Ei gf ff ' ' , 1, : - f m Af? 21- A mr ' if - Y J E, ' f H yy! h qv sm 44 1 h 15 A f ff g, : A.- , ff ff 'rr' 1' ' Q M h A f 1 k K si ., 3 x ' 6 , ,S 2. V' ' ' 'rr JE' k I g PQ, ' A I , K fy ,., gg! Q ,Mika , Q A 'B' W, m, 1 '- A ,, L, Y ., , 4 gg , + 5 EM is 1' , 1 X mu , -Q 'S is 1 f Volume 38 Wiiiiam Fleming High School Roanoke. Virginia 2401 7 .vw .4 very now and then, when the sun's at your back and the wind's in your hair, you can almost hear a time ten years ago. You can hear yourself breathing hard as you rounded the dirt spots you called first base, second base, third base, home. You -'il can hear the you're it! sounds of a just-before-bedtime tag game. You can hear yourself and a bunch of your friends giggling, peanut-butter jars in hand, waiting to prey on the light- ning bugs that would later become sparkly rings. You can hear the sounds of the house settling in at night. Where'd you go today? 0ut. What'd you do? Nothing much. But even with those nothing-much days, you still find a lot to look back on. A 47 xx ,' 'X ii Wi Happy days bring a smile to Larue Dickerson as he greets his ten-minute morning break, Waiting for the end, Senior Class President Jeff Boatwright watches as his classmates file by for diplomas. 2 A lot to look back on I I A lot to look back on The wood Opening . CampusLHe Spons .. Acadenncs , Peome . Index eg Donald Under- practice get soaks up ...2 .14 ..50 ..84 ..110 ..184 ..216 ..226 A lot to look back on 3 X 2 3 5 i 5 xt Q A 2 2 2 fi Q E if 5 5 5 H 4 5 Y i fi 2 a 1 I ,S FTW 545 'Your life was full of little things' x w e 53,9 Pnme time the last pep assembly lures ractrce field to sing the alma mater. With thumbs up for the Colonels. Twyla Carter. Karen Kasey, and Roslyn Crews do the leaneaelean at the Patrick Henry pep assembly. A lot to look back on 5 'Words couIdn't well enough' The people's choice for Homecoming Queen, Robin Roach receives congratuiations from mem- bers of her cheerieading squad. Something to shout about, Terry Coles 1343 paces the Colonels to their 46-44 upset over arch- rivai Patrick Henry, 6 A lot to iook back on MM' it . 5 Ls J, ' t,- s T35 is 'ti Myth v 'A is i -Fi' x-gy f 335- i Singing for '76, student director Robbie Harris ionns other Band and Choir members at the Cavalcade of American Music. Thank you, Lord, sing Carsaundra Johnson, Althea Croson, Dana Franklin, Wanda Jennings. and Joan Barnes for the Black History Week Assembly, 1 ometimes celebrations said the things you just couldn't find words for yourself. lt was hard to say, l love you. so you squiggled Happy Mother's Day on a cake for your Mom, or cut out red hearts and slipped them to your friends. You planned thirteen Christmas presents with the 82.65 you'd saved for three months, but you could only buy two: you made the rest with a little bit of paper and a whole lot of love. lt was hard to say, Happy Birthday, America, but you taped a flag to your bike and let it fly in the breeze, and sat on a hill and watched the fireworks burst overhead. You never grew too big to celebrate. May- be you didn't tape a flag to your bike any- more, but you still got goose bumps when the Choir sang America the Beautiful You took time to celebrate other tl- r-g too '-' coming Black History Week games when the scoreboard had more points on our side 'H' than on theirs When there was cause for celebration sometimes words couldn t say it well enough 1 - - 1 - I Sometimes you just couldn t smile Time runs out as Danny Grinnell watches his team face a 22-21 loss to the Andrew Lewis Wolverines, The Colonels closed the season with a 5-4-1 record, The beginning of the and finds Sheila Chatman and many of her classmates watching the Capping Assembly with tears in their eyes, -'F' 8 A lot to look back on hey used to say, Take your lickin's and smile like the dickens. But sometimes the lickin's seemed so hard that you couldn't make yourself smile, and not a pat on the back or even a whole pack of Lifesavers could help. And when you grew X 3 I older, there were still times when a whole pack. not even a whole crate, of Lifesavers could make the hurt go away. lt hun a lot when the Colonels didn't dance across the goal line I quite enough, or when the girls didn't make it to the State Basketball Tournament they waited so long to win. For some, it hurt that the last time a class stood to sing the alma mater would not be in the heart of nature's I wonder, but in the confines of a concrete civic center. For most, it hurt to leave at all. Most hurts soon went away, but some seemed to linger. lt never really stopped hurting when you found out that jersey number 88 would worn again, and then you realized battle hurt so much as it Warming up in the hot August sun. members of the Football Team work out with Assistant Coach George Miller. At the keyboard, senior Jennie Phillips plays for her third and final spring concert with the Choir. The grand finale for the Band finds seniors Sue Santolla and Sarah Feather in the last concert of their high-school careers. A lot to look back on 9 here comes a time in every man's life when he has to tue his own Your Dad told you so he plopped you on the bed you first much s bows and your Dad's longer. All yours did was wind knots. You've had to tie your own shoes ever since. You knew it would hurt a little when the Red Cross jabbed for blood, but you knew it would hurt a lot if you didn't them. You knew the Symposium would tell you tqymake something of life: You listened-and questioned so know how you could. You tried out for team when you knew you might not make you signed up for a course you thought you'd probably fail. You tripped, you stumbled, sometimes you fell. But you picked yourself up and put yourself back on your own two feet, wearing the shoes you had learned to tie so long ago. Baccalaureate at th Principal James C Taylor and Dean Senior Class. and students Day, 10 A lotto look back on 'A man has to tie his own shoes' uniforms, drummers Isaac Chilton, and Mike Erdmann the tempo for a concert at Making minutes count, junior Karen Grogan brings her books outdoors to study for a final exam in English. : ..,-vv M! ,-. A lotto look back on 11 Love is more than just a vocabulary word' hen you were little, you loved for many reasons. You loved because you didn't get dropped when you jumped off the four-step high porch. You loved because even though you colored outside the lines, your masterpiece was still hung on the refrigerator door. You loved because a tuck in bed felt good after an especially scary Twilight Zone or before the morning of your big debut as a Christmas shepherd. The four-step high porch doesn't seem so tall anymore. Coloring has made way for com- positions, and no one comes in now to pull the covers up under your chin at night. A lot has changed, but you've kept on lov- ing just the same. ,You love because someone did not choose the path to a dean's office or a college cam- pus, but thought the highest step to stand on was one where he could guide those in high school as they climbed. You love because someone takes as much time correcting your masterpiece as you took 'creating it, but still makes you feel that it's refrigera- tor-worthy. You love because someone still cares to tuck you in by making the time to listen, by taking the time to share. He is a gentle but demanding scholar, a master of the pun, the innovator of the English curricu- lum, a familiar face in the Flem- ing crowds, a one-time dean, and a lifetime friend. But it is not these titles, important as they are, that alone tell the story. lt is because, by his life, he has taught us that love is more than just a vocabulary word that we dedicate the 1976 Colonel to Mr. Charles L. Arrington. A Fleming graduate himself, Mr. Arrington waits for rows of his seniors to file by as the Capping Assembly gets underway. Q Dedication 13 H K 'ef H X' A W W J .f WWW' w ,M MWW w J 4 if WL, ,wlhmwwl he business of belonging was a big, big business. So you woke up on February 14. wondering if you'd come home lugging as many valentines as you'd left with, putting in a couple of extra to rattle around in the red and white shoe box. just in case you didn't. You started counting the days until the Christmas play as early as Halloween, knowing all along that the teacher's pet would get the Wise Man's part you wanted so badly. You headed out for recess, hoping you wouldn't be the last one chosen for the kick- ball team. For weeks. you practiced the latest dances with American Bandstanch only to discover an imaginary line that separated the password had fourteen new friendswho knew it, too. You made your way to the cafeteria on that first day of high school, hoping someone had thought to save you a place be- cause you really didn't want to face a lunch of fish sticks and french fries all alone. By now. you had traded in your shoe box for one small valentine from a very special person. You didn't hear Santa's footsteps quite so early, but you never got too old to cut down a Christmas tree or decorate your homeroom door. You found out that the pass- word to the Beta Club was a little hard to earn. You sweated itrout at Sadie Hawkins time, .hoping your favorite girl would havejthe nerve to step across the boys from the girls atyour.1silfU??i11imaginary line. sixth grade dance. You ham- mered some boards to the trunk of a tree and called it a club- house. just to find out that the fourteen other people who knew Shedding light on senior cheerleader Chuck Cooke. the Homecoming bonfire blazes as the Colonels shout for a victory over Pulaski County. Z-.You knew that one could be a lonely. number. But when you be- longed to something, when you belonged to someone, you felt a whole lot better. Campus Life 15 CUQXNC Tig X '76 Q America decks out in red, white, and blue to celebrate its happy two-hundredth. For starters, color America's two- hundredth birthday red. white, and blue. It seemed like everyone else did. Spirit of America Chevrolets cruised by Bicentennial license plates that sported George Wash- ington's profile. On picnic grounds, star- spangled frisbees sailed over buckets of Kenney's Great American Chicken and six packs of Red, White, and Blue. Coffin linings and key chains, tuxes and tumblers, fire hydrants and flashlights, Nutty Buddies and necklaces all took on as a common denominator - you guessed it - red, Star-spangled banner claims the attention of ROTC cadet Anne Ellis as she prepares Old Glory for storage until the next morning. white. and blue. And in Omaha, Nebraska. a bison named Tennial ate sweet feed from red, white, and blue gunny sacks. There was no way a person could survive the buycentennial, unless, of course, he were color-blind. Like Dr. Pepper, the year was distinc- tively different, distinctively '76. Americans may not have found the Bicentennial in Dolly Madison Doughnuts or Bicentennial decanters of Log Cabin Syrup. but most welcomed the real meaning of the cele- bration. In the Star City of the South, Colonels sang Happy Birthday, America to several different tunes. The Choir and Band joined for the Cavalcade of Amer- ican Music at the Civic Center in April. As the year wound down, the Choir donned red, white, and blue hats for a nostalgic round of songs at their American Potpourri, and the Band featured patriotic music at its final concert. The Literary Magazine, We The People, chose the Bicentennial theme for its cover,. and Photography students captured America on film for the Roanoke Valley Bicentennial Photography Contest. Throughout the year. the ROTC kept the flag flying as a silent reminder that red, white, and blue were more than just overused color schemes. Stars and stripes back-up Mary Ann Dillon and Patti Brown as they salute the Bicentennial with other Choir members at the Awards Assembly. J f 16 Bicentennial Celebrations ,ff If at ,fi All-American wrapping doesn't change the flavor of an ice cream cone as Shelia Wiley finds out when she takes a Nutty Buddy to lunch. Old Glory flutters above its '76 cousin, the Bicen- tennial flag, as yet another reminder of the nation's two-hundredth birthday. -ii' te Happy Birthday finds a different tune as Osborne Wheaton joins other city band and choir members at the Cavalcade of American Music. f W1 Bicentennial Celebrations XQQXNC T1 IQ Q 476 J' com. As a nation celebrates tradition, William Fleming changes its life style. If the Spirit of '76 seemed to surge throughout the year, measures were taken to make sure it didn't surge when it wasn't supposed to. Readin', 'ritin', and 'rithmetic weren't exactly taught to the tune of a hickory stick, but discipline tightened as the school year got underway. Hall passes became a way of life as teacher monitors checked the flow of traffic during classes. Security guards were employed almost around the clock to protect the campus Security blankets the campus day and night. Mr, Robert Fariss and Security Guard H. G. Moyers patrol the parking lot after school. Big Mac restrictor Mr. Larry Arrington stands guard in the parking lot during lunch to ward off McDonald's goers. 18 Changes from vandalism, but someone still man- aged to stencil Class of '76 on the walls of Coulter Hall not once or twice, but three times. Teachers on guard during lunch made it difficult lbut not impossiblel to head for the Golden Arches at McDonald's for a fourth-period break. Other rules out- lawed wearing hats inside, dressing in shorts or strapless tube tops when warm weather surfaced, and bringing unauthor- ized visitors to class. One of the most spirited additions to campus life came in the form of Mr. Irvin J. Cannaday, Jr., new dean of Smith Hall. Convinced that William Fleming is the finest high school in America, Mr. Cannaday set about to learn the names of all good Colonels and a few bad ones as well. lt was great to be in such a special place for such a special year, said the former assistant principal at James Madi- son Junior High School. No trespassing rules made roaming during class impossible Senior Renee Allen displays her key to a Coulter Hall guardian. Packed like sardines, cars jam into the expanded parking lot each morning to avoid tickets from parking on Ferncliff. J 1 i H,-ff l.s,-l t 5 . is ffg .... ' si At the helm of Smith Hall, Dean Irvin J. Cannaday, Jr., watches as his first class of seniors graduates Changes 19 S QXNCTJV 66 676 cont . Hemlines inch downward, hairlines inch upward, but mostly, it's Dee Cees versus Duckheads. Red and white ibut not bluel jerseys identify the members of the Country Club '76 cheering section at the last pep assembly ofthe year. Although some predicted it would be, it wasn't a year for red, white, and blue fashions. But when the Country Club '76 came into being, the halls bulged with those who donned the red and white, but left the blue at home. As founder of the forty-four member senior cheering section, Joel Sarver said that he got the group together to prove that spirit was alive and thriving at Fleming. The club did some- thing different at each assembly to keep the cheers bouncing from the rafters. 20 Fashions Mm' Most of the Country Clubbers whose cheers bounced from the rafters comple- mented their red and white jerseys with Fleming's forerunner in the fashion world - painter's pants. Style-conscious Colonels made a beeline for Sam's or the Army-Navy Store and plunked down 56.98 for a pair of Dee Cees or Duckheads, com- plete with loops for paint brushes. Denim still claimed the title of the most-worn fabric, appearing in dresses and pocket- books, jumpsuits and wrap-around skirts. A back-to-bib movement saw fans look- ing fresh from the farm, but spruced-up a little with scarves for girls and bandannas for guys. Other fashions - big-rimmed -is f ag-6' -ter-A 515115 132395-'w glasses, puka shell beads for both guys and girls, and shorter hair for guys - made the scene in '76. Big-soled shoes slid to the back of the closet as Earth Shoes began to pound the pavement. Longer hemlines pleased some and baffled others. Most girls saw the downward movement in dress lengths as much more comfortable to work in, but guys complained that longer dresses left less for the eye and more for the imagination. lt was a year when you didn't have to be a painter to wear painter's pants, a ski buff to wear ski sweaters, or a left-over from the fifties to wear straight-legged jeans. You just had to be style-conscious. ,.ss,..z.t- .., ,H 3 W. W iatr' -- .. jj B .K . y aw 2 ff f r ,,w 2 47 za. , ,,,, W ,,,., do M w?+ v' ' 'il 4 , 2 1 ,Q -L ,. ff , ', iff , 'Az' lfg. 1 if -ge, we- :. fu ' 23,1 Designer's touch sets Deborah Calfee's coiffure of braids apart from the crowd. The eyes have it in a fashion-conscious world. C-Ann Franklin peeps out from behind her pair of Elton John designer sunglasses. 1? 'E Y .Y 4 2 5 1 ef ,fe-44 Y -' Smart footing takes the form of Topsiders, thongs. and Wallabees. Toe mates include stripes, argyles, and toe socks. Fashion headliners - below-the-knee skirt, design- er scarf, and high heels - are the choice of senior Cindy Baughman. Fashions 21 Orang-u-tango music blasts across the Roanoke Civic Center as Tony Orlando delivers a lively Sweet Gypsy Rose, The trio performed ragtime music along with a string of their hits to a sell-out crowd 22 Best Sellers How about 'cha? asks C.B. fan Mark Cheat- wood on his four-wheeIer lcarl Citizen's Band radio, Air wave socializing increased as more and more truck, car, and van drivers picked up their C.B.'s for a radio check. its-W 1 :ff if it.i ' t x i Q y x f l x l A .1 me Fw ukxcssmgy s if 55 if t -- .S X Ek. A , ,Aer Standing room only finds lead singer Patrick Cuckoo's Nest fans fill the Cinema theaters as Simmons of the Doobie Brothers performing Long movie-goers Julie Waldron and Mark Hayslett take Train Running at their sold-out concert in the inarecord-breaking movie. Roanoke Civic Center. QXNC Tiff 659 P '76 CONT. Cuckoo's Nest, Tony Orlando, and C.B.'s crop up as crowd-pleasers. ft to ' Q , X ,f Ti H156 Q Fireworks companies weren't the only ones with cause to celebrate as the Bi- centennial rolled around. Lines formed in record numbers to sample the latest in movies, buy the best in books, and listen to the hottest in current sounds. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest swept the Academy Awards 'and vied with Jaws for crowds at Roanoke's seven new movie theaters. The Robert Redford- Dustin Hoffman version of All the Presi- dent's Men proved to be a ticket-office pleaser in spite of a Watergate-weary world. lf these big three proved ticket office pleasers, concerts at the Civic Center often left those behind the ticket window singing Plop, plop, fizz, fizz, oh what a relief it is as they downed Alka Seltzer. On the fifth anniversary of the Roanoke Civic Center, Tony Orlando and Dawn broke all previous attendance records as they played over two hours to a capacity crowd. The Doobie Brothers added an extra dimension to Homecoming Week- end, and the Commodores, K.C. and the Sunshine Band, and Marshall Tucker kept audiences clapping throughoiit the year, ln the lingo of '76, a concert or a book or a person or an idea could be solid or bad, and that was good. The words l'fire down meant really let them have it as in she really fired down on him when he didn't have his homework. And C.B, radios initiated a lingo all their own as 1O-4, handles, and put the pedal to the metal became everyday terms. In a way, it could be said that America showed up at its two-hundredth birthday with thick, square pizzas instead of thin. round ones: with new uses for old painter's pants: and spirited renditions of solid songs. Like the books all say, America is about freedom, and for its Bicentennial, the spirit was distinctively free, distinctively '76, Shark mania surfaces not only at the beach, but in fashion as well, Sporting a Jaws T-shirt, David Craft talks with a friend. Best Sellers 23 XSQXNCTIIQK Q '76 PCO nt. Symposium '76 focuses on the decision-makers in the Roanoke Valley. I 2 Miss Dorothy L. Gibboney Call them the Thomas Jeffersons of the day - decision-makers not waiting in the wings of the Constitutional Congress. but deliberating in executive and professional offices throughout the Roanoke Valley. Collectively, they share responsibility for the salaries and education and health and justice of literally thousands. Individually, they admit the same joys and frustrations and occasional uncertainties known by those with a fraction of their responsibili- ties. All of these guests impressed me. above all else, as being very human, said Renee Watson, one of forty-four seniors selected for Symposium '76, an informal question and answer session with eight of the Roanoke decision-makers. follow. Mr. John P. N 81 W Railway: The thing I value most in an employee is honesty. You can teach him skills, but if he doesn't have integrity, he'Il never be a real asset to the company. Dr. J. H. Hollingsworth, Jr., Cardi- ologist: A doctor has to remember never to play God. I remember one woman whom no one thought would pull through. She's alive and well today, and I pull her file every once in a while to remind myself. Mr. John W. Eure, Managing Editor of Valley's most prominent Highlights of each visit Fishwick. President of 24 Symposium '76 gif , ,.-.r , f Mr. John W. Eure The savings for our children's education came before many of the personal amenities of life. We wanted them to know we thought education was more important than any luxury they could think of. Mr. Carroll W. Brewster, President of Hollins College: There's no college that's right for everyone. Be sure you find a school that cares about your heart as well as your brain. Dr. Amelia G. Wood, Psychiatrist: Bringing up children is a terrifying respon- sibility. Nobody will ever be a perfect parent, but if we teach values - integrity, loyalty, the ability to love, and faith - that is the most we can hope to do. Dr. Wendell J. Butler, Dentist and Chairman of Roanoke City Public School Board: I know a lot about busing. I was World News: In my own family, bused all the way from my home in Texas to Washington, 'D.C. because Blacks were not then accepted at dental schools in Texas. I like being a dentist because I like people. My work on the School Board is merely an extension of my concern for them Miss Dorothy L. Gibboney, Retired Superintendent of Roanoke City Public Schools: When I hired teachers, I looked beyond the transcripts to find a real person. You know one when you find one: they're real because they care. Judge Beverly T. Fitzpatrick, Roanoke General District Court Judge: It's not always easy making decisions that affect people's lives as deeply as the Court can. I chose to stay at the lower court level because I love working with people: and the higher one climbs on the bench, the more removed he becomes from people. S. 192 X 41 f ' r Mb ,,-f W in fn, 595 ,, .f Q ' ,Q ' 2, G 4 4' '92 E,,!,jgQ ef if x E, J, Butler 'WW 1, ,,v , ,, , f H 5+ K ' 4 if Q , ,f f 5, . 1A, Z Dr. Amelia G. Wood X- F is ui r rr ..e . .1 M., Judge Beverly T. Qpatrick 1 Q Mr. Carroll W. Dr. J. H, HoIlingsworth,Jr. Mr. John P. Fishwick Symposium '76 25 N59 QE Qt QPW QS WYE ln ever-changing Colonel Country, some things still stay the same. It never comes easily, even with a bowl of Post Toasties waiting at the table or the sound of Rob O'Brady's voice on the clock radio at the crack of dawn. The school lunch for today. he says, is . . . . duddlelut, duddlela .... fish sticks, french fries, creamy cole slaw, and chocolate cake. But lunch is five hours away. There's still the morning to get through. It's not a special morning, mind you. lt's a typical morning in a typical day at William Fleming High School. The typical morning begins with a bus ride for some 500 students who map the route to 3649 Cove Road on a fleet of brand new school-system-owned yellow buses. By 8: 15, the new parking lot, speed breakers intact, is already bulging with 300 cars, two jeeps, and Wild Bill's vintage Greyhound. Occasionally, an early-morning Band practice stops the flow of traffic a minute or two. Occasionally, the smell of those fish sticks already baking spreads out across the campus. Occasionally, the blink- ing red lights of a landing jet silhouette themselves against the mountains that never seem to change, but never stay the same. Schedule l means routine - two fifty- minute classes, a ten-minute break, another class, then homeroom, stuck smack-dab in the middle of the school day. A voice on the intercom breaks through with those words you can set your watch by - l have two announcements. Sometimes, the Joseph Mayo Community Choir is practicing after school. Sometimes, there is another meeting of the Grapelettes. But in the typical day at William Fleming High School, all good announcements know they should come in twos. Lunch - waiting it out for those fish sticks that Rob O'Brady was duddlelut, duddlelaing about at the crack of dawn, or jetting to McDonald's for a Big Mac and a chocolate shake. The typical day ends 26 Typical Day for almost 200 students after fourth period. Two hundred-fifty more exit after fifth. The rest wait it out until 2:35. Most days, the campus stays awake with practices or meetings or games at least until the little hand points to six and the big one passes twelve. Even at night, play rehearsals, the sound of square dancers, an occasional basketball game or wrestling match, keep the place from settling in. Except for an occasional prankster with a paint brush in hand and 76 stenciled on his mind, the typical day rolls into the past tense as the mountains stand guard. Little Debbie Cakes and hot dogs make choosing a menu difficult for Doug Keith and Mark Pinkard. The a la carte line adds variety to the daily school lunch fare. ,y,,, ,,,,.,l,,, : , w e Qing .,, 5 :gf gif, j 4, ' mv, 1 , 3? it if Q35 ff me 4 5 1 . S S, HS' Oh thank heaven for 7-l'l slurpees on hot spring days. Sipping on the flavor of the month, cherry, . 'S -ers. if i'WaiN,. Q 5 N if ,Z A . is 3 . 3 if 2 i W ,S Q, ryr s -Ffa ' iss - 55-fr .. .w if! x H J 4 P9525 -3 W fs, Lisa Johnson waits for the bus to take her to the vocational classes at Addison. ww-Ms' Ten-minutes break the routine of the typical school day Mary Perkins and Richard Hamm take advan- tage of the morning break between second and third periods to socialize. pu., -we.. Q.. Y - Pts: ' 'Y' W ret J lin, ,W s f' is E 4 15 it if A219 ,.,. ,tg A55 , r -A :Qi-g if .ty 1-ff Q . .gif---ISXNQL 5 . ss . ..fefe.....,.,x.- - .fs ' 'f -ir Q- 13- I-isis. X get qi xx Ass . .ti 2-iswf :. J We .. - .- Q E-mf. si. .M A, ... Q 4 ' ,En 2 gg ie si Q . .,.gg,ge. .- :...1.t :.,.WQs-,f. : .s-N: V -f--'- ' r t s t rt el . WW - . , K t A Mfg-,g.EeS.f ' -, is V 1 I iff: K Q . VW A -.ir - ' I .1135 - ' ' 4.9 it ffi . Buses hug the curb at the end of the day, wait- ing to haul over 500 students home. The yellow caravan departs promptly at 2:40 each day. Typical Day 27 ia . . - P8500 Crea m, confetti, and concerts give the typical day a jar Sure-shot contestant creams Mr. T, J. Ross as he gets the bad end of the deal at the Price a Deal pep assembly, Roslyn Burnette, the big winner of the day, won the grand prize of throwing a cream pie at Mr. Ross. Not even the mountains knew the meaning of the word peace when rou- tine did a topsy-turvy and the sound of assemblies filled the air. Crammed onto every square inch of the color-coded bleachers, the juniors and seniors watched for the sophomores' shock at the first pep assembly. Most sophomores said that they had never heard so much noise in their whole life. J.V. cheer- leader Karen Cook agreed that an initiation into the Spirit of '76 left her a little numb at first, and for a few minutes, she was so overwhelmed that she forgot she was supposed to be cheering. For Head Cheerleader Robin Roach. pep assemblies meant hours of practice and planning and keeping fingers crossed that the pep assembly would live up to its name. With Shining Star and Takin' Care of Business as back-up music, the cheerleaders kept the agenda rolling with stunts and skits. Two skits that brought the most laughs were the chorus line of guys competing for the Ugly Man on Campus Contest and the take-off of a quiz show called Price a Deal. Cheerleaders weren't the only ones who wound up center stage on the gym floor during the school year. Senior Renee Watson. selected as Christmas Madonna, remembers waking up the morning of the Christmas Assembly with butterflies in her stomach. But when she reflected on the reason for what she was doing, the moment became very real for her. Butterflies squeezed their way into the lives of SCA candidates who answered impromptu questions about school life. Performances by a rock group, Freefare, and the United States Army Military Tach Band rounded out the schedule of typical days that man- aged. by hook or by crook, to turn out not-so-typical. Change of command finds SCA President Barry Simmons transferring his gavel to Darrell Davis at the SCA Installation Assembly. 28 Assemblies l J Saxophone soloist renders MacArthur Park as the Tach band from Langley Air Force Base per- forms. The band's songs ranged from I've Been Searching for So Long to Love Rollercoaster. r ' s 35 as .wmmsw 7 A 5 'Qs 'se .gn ...I J , Vg :ff lr 1 N. E' ,W What Child ls This? question the shepherds as Renee Watson portrays the Madonna at the Christmas Assembly. . . A . 5 . sg --.L as sxtqgg St AN L , i - ts ,. S Wxw ., 1 Xe' R' A Stargazing, Debra Wood looks into the eyes of Freefare's lead singer after he serenaded her with Feelings at a spring assembly. Assemblies 29 006' 9 ' ' D Club chow -downs change the fare from turnip greens and chili beans. Cindy Beta-field, portrayed by Cindy Brumfield, receives a make-up lesson as Amy Martin and Rhonda Calhoun look on in a skit for the Beta Club at the Oasis Restaurant. Most meetings began pretty much the same way . . . with the thud of a gavel or the ping of a yellow pencil or the pounding of a doubled-up fist. And most ended a little less dramatically some half-hour later. Go on back to class, the sponsor said. What happened in be- tween sometimes added up to practically nothing, but it often subtracted from the monotony of the routine school day. divided 'the doers from those who didn't, and multiplied the feeling of be- longing, of being about something other than yourself. It didn't really matter that the clubs that made a name for themselves could have been counted on your fingers and two big toes. What mattered was that what these clubs did really counted. DECA, the most bviously active club. met for monthly lu cheon meetings, but spent much of its time readying to com- pete for the Virginia Chapter of the Year Contest, which it won hands down for the second consecutive year. The FCA's monthly breakfasts meant food for thought as well as for the stomach. As athletes, FCA members sponsored the Relay Race against Patrick Henry and scored 4,044 points to win the forty-eight hour Basketball Marathon. Athletes in the Varsity Club sponsored a field-house dance and an outing to Smith Mountain Lake in the spring. An ancient roast to Mr. Ron Campbell comes from Kathy Meador as she recalls Latin class while Wanda Lester. Lisa Leonard, Velma Campbell. and Mr. Campbell watch. 30 Clubs 2 L 1 , , ,f Fourth down and none to go finds Mr Kenneth Weddle attempting to outeat students in the SCA Pizza Eating Contest. The teachers forfeited a night's homework when the students downed four giant pizzas to win. I 5 sv Q AQ YN? mt .ww T. X Foreign flavor draws Lori Cash and Laura Morgan to the serving line at the Modern Foreign Language CIub's Christmas Banquet. On top again, FIeming's DECA Chapter, chosen Virginia's Chapter of the Year for the second con- secutive year, Iures Mark Akers, Teresa Wright, and Terry Doss to the Awards Table at the club's spring luncheon. Clubs 31 cf- land football games turn club members into linament lovers. ' Basketbal Come and get it were key words, not only for DECA and FCA members. but also for members of the Latin Club and Modern Foreign Language Club. Both clubs sampled foreign flavors, the Modern Foreign Language Club at a Christmas buffet that featured glimpses of the Yuletide customs of foreign countries. Togas were in style as the Latin Banquet approached and over one hundred crossed over the River Styx in Charon's boat to Feriae in lnferis lA Holiday in Hadesl. Hot dogs and pizzas weren't exactly banquet fare, but the SCA sponsored contests to see who could down the most. The winners made it through eleven hot dogs, four pizzas, and who knows how many Alka Seltzers. Alka Seltzers took a back shelf to Absorbine Junior and Ben Gay as the SCA's Flamingo Football got underway. The game left the girls a little bruised by tackles and hits, and the guys a lot bruised by the 0-0 tie. The SCA also published the school's handbook. dis- tributed during orientation: coordinated Homecoming activities: and took care of the day-to-day business that came its way. The business of understanding one another better took priority as the Human Relations Club met for periodic discuss- ions and headed toward Franklin County for a one-day workshop. Simulated sur- vival games fscaling walls, climbing barbed-wire fences, making it to safe territoryl made strangers friends and friendships even stronger. The FTA, too, recognized sharing when it honored Mr. Robert Barton as Teacher of the Year at the spring Awards Assembly. Awards were also in store for ROTC Club members who played basketball against E. C. Glass' ROTC and went undefeated during the season. The ROTC also traveled to Fort Bragg Army Base in North Carolina, journeyed to King's Dominion. and jumped out of a Para- chute Training Tower at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland. The gift of life trickles from donor Kenneth Mallock at the Red Cross Donorama. The William Fleming Chapter collected eighty-five pints. 32 Clubs Z ? '-Ts. sr g A 1' Xi' t Q. ss? was Mad scramble for the ball creates havoc for players at the Varsity Club-Faculty Basketball Game. The teams struggled to a 66-66 tie, Odds and ends attract bargain hunters to the Girls' Club rummage sale at the Trail Drive-in. MJ. J J, K K , fa ww ' rf 'm...,,,,, ' ln the home stretch, Steve Harvey pivots around a Northside defender in the forty-eight-hour FCA Basketball Marathon. Fleming's chapter won 4,044-3.646 Cake frosts the year as SCA Treasurer Robin Roach, President Barry Simmons, Vice-President Dwayne Guynn, and Secretary Sandy Wilson cele- brate at a party on the last day of school, I' ar ,K Civ' W9 Hot dog hustlers John Remine and Tim Benson gobble down their fifth in as many minutes at the SCA Hot Dog Eating Contest. lf being part of a club roster meant anything more than a cancelled check for membership dues, it meant becoming part of something greater than yourself. From time to time, the urge to help out, to make life a little more enjoyable or land- scapes a little more beautiful, crept up and called clubs into action. Red Cross members shocked needle- shy donors with the fact that somewhere, someone needs blood every eleven seconds. Sleeves inched up, teeth gritted as Roanoke found itself eighty-five pints richer in the gift of life for William Fleming's efforts. Christmas meant a little more to the children at the Baptist Children's Home in Salem because Beta Club members shared stockings, Life- saver dolls, gingerbread men, and them- selves with a cottage of boys. The Home Economics Club treated children from the Landsdowne Day Care Center to a Christmas party, as well. As the year drew to a close, Beta Club members found themselves planting shrubbery in the center of the campus, partly because they wanted to make the place look a little better, partly because they wanted to leave a tangible part of themselves behind. It was a year when clubs couldn't count on a lot of members, but those who cared found time to make other people know that they could count on clubs. Rap up in Franklin County brings members of the Human Relations Club to the country. Julia Palmer, Michelle Keeling, Danny Martin, and Sandra McFalls walk back from a day's encounters in Copper Hill. Virginia. 34 Clubs E ,ew ar N, J., A W 1: f V 3 , If 5 gif? r MQ ,U 5 ii A' ifwh' if ' ' ,J Y ,izwn 1 ,yu ,, f , wi . 1 wg, A N' , . zfkiifzz yi I W, i , -f:: X I reg. Lame ' .. H 'fy , L ti ya ' I, ,gy ,, af ' A r um, 59, M. i I , ,, ,AK Q! 4 . X Santa's stopeover for the Landsdowne Day Care Center brings squeals of delight from children. Steve Myers donned the red and white suit and beard for the FHA's Christmas party. Surprise party finds Tammy Howard and Christine Marty celebrating Tammy's birthday at the Girls' Club's spring picnic, Ouarterback's corner finds Teresa McLawhorn looking for an open woman as Mark Richards hops in to sack the quarterback. The teams played to a O-O tie in the SCA Flamingo Football Game. Clubs 35 Tears stream down Nancy KeIley's face as she receives her Homecoming Maidfof-Honor crown from Principal James C. Wood. 36 Homecoming ,ff W1-1 41,V g 1 .Wi 2 1975 HOMECOMING COURT - lfront YOW, Kim Kimmonsg Cindy Akerson: Robin Roach, Oueeni Nancy Kelley, Maid-of-Honor: Rhonda Dobbins: Cookie Calloway lback rowl Bernice Jonesg Anne Callaway: Kelly Patrickg Johnnie Moore: Beth Weddle lnot picturedl Beth Evans. Soh shadows from the bonfire warm Cheerleader Tammy Howards face as she chants for a Home- coming victory over Pulaski County High School x-. ' Fe cfft' P55 Homecoming finds itself rained out and Doobied out, but better late than never. Speechless, Duncan Williams accepts the title of Mr. Touchdown at the Homecoming Pep Assembly. Students voted with pennies, dimes, and even dollars from among the senior football players. It almost seemed that Homecoming would never come. A sold-out Doobie Brothers concert postponed the dance for a week: the flooding of Victory Stadium delayed the game and announcement of Robin Roach as Homecoming Queen: and a wreck interrupted the motorcade as it headed downtown. Most people agreed. however, that Homecoming was worth waiting for. Homecoming '75 started when cheer- leaders and clubs plastered the walls with posters and dressed up the halls with crepe paper and balloons. Students dressed up, too, as they rolled up their jeans and donned their wildest socks on Sock it to 'em day. The SCA also added another new touch to Homecoming by sponsoring a hot dog eating contest on Thursday night. Competing against mem- bers of ten clubs, Ray Ball and Chipper Stiff tied for the championship with eleven hot dogs each. After the supper, a crowd of over 150 braved the drizzle to cheer around a bonfire. The roars con- tinued the next day as cheerleaders pulled a surprised Duncan Williams from the bleachers to accept the title of Mr. Touchdown. Students got an unwanted chance to rest vocal cords as the rain fell on Friday and drowned out the Homecoming Game. But rested vocal cords got a workout once again on Monday night as eighteen cars joined the motorcade to Victory Stadium, The motorcade was not to make it all the way without battle scars. Since the police were leading the motorcade, the cars were instructed to go through red lights. But when someone stopped suddenly. a chain of little wrecks followed. No one was hurt: little damage was done: the caravan continued on to Victory Stadium. On the following Saturday night. Brotherhood entertained at the fall dance, topping off Homecoming cele- brations that took their time about getting there. Rockin' steady to the sounds of Brotherhood. Tommy Ribble and his date Norma Kessler shoulder bump at the Homecoming Dance. f X 4 -.. .. x., aww, ftilv Homecoming 37 Sassy saxophone notes of Kirk Law take over the melody of Shining Star as Climax plays for the PTSA jam session. At the hop, Bart Cregger and Norma Graham pose for their Greasy Fifties picture. 1975 CHRISTMAS COURT - Betty Worley: Tina Ward: Cindy Brumfieldp Tammy Howard, Queen: Pauline Sottile, Maid-of-Honorg Iris Apostolou: Jennie Phillips: Sarah Wooldridge: Kelly Hildreth. 38 Dances cv' 459 Pigtails and ducktails take over as Colonel Country puts on its dancing shoes. Pe A close second to the Ohio Players, Brotherhood belts out soul music to a crowded dance floor at the Christmas Dance. If Fleming's Homecoming Dance took its time about getting there, most people got even by taking their time to get to the other school dances. It wasn't a matter of revenge, of course. It just took a little more time to grease back hair and braid pigtails Sadie Hawkins style and add finishing touches to formal gowns. Formal was the order of the night as the Girls' Club Christmas Dance got underway. As Brotherhood played That's the Way of the World, Christmas Court Queen Tammy Howard and her court took over the dance floor. Formal gave way to The Fonz as the Greasy Fifties Dance, sponsored by the Yearbook Staff, rolled around. As Coach Howard lWolfmanl Mack spinned the platters, over 120 jitterbugged to Bill Haley and the Comets, Chuck Berry, and the Big Bopper. lt was girls ask guys, girls pay the way, and the way usually led to the stand of Marryin' Sam lJoel Blankenshipl, who would tie the knot for a mere two bits. Not once, but twice, girls did the asking and guys did the waiting. The Sadie Hawkins Dance, also sponsored by the Yearbook Staff, brought out bibbed overalls and straw hats. The Cold Cuts from St. Mary's Junior College in Raleigh, North Carolina, spiced inter- missions with a-singin' and a-strummin' and a-thumpin' on washtubs, wash- boards, and keyboards. Keyboards also got a workout when the PTSA sponsored a jam session in late April. Climax backed up the dancing action as most of the school forked over 256 for an hour ofjamming it up. On the dance floors, in club meetings. at assemblies, throughout the thousand untypical moments of the typical day. action sliced campus life into almost as many pieces as could fit into the nine- month maze of a school year. lt was nine months when nothing never happened. Vegetable corsages and straw hats complete the attire for the Sadie Hawkins Dance. Sandy Wilson and Larry French bump to the disco music that gave the country dance a little city flavor. 'D 'Xe 1 1 A 31 ' Ntlfsf -an .js 're Q ,.' ' W, l Dances 39 PARTING SHOTS A lot has been said about leaving: parting is such sweet sorrowg leave be- fore you wear your welcome out: exit laughing. It was lVlay, 1976. After twelve years or 2,160 days or 12,960 hours, give or take a few for flu, colds, and aches and pains that cropped up un- expectedly on test days, the exit began, lt began about as subtly as hitting in pads the first day of football practice. You forked over 575, give or take a few, for a night at the Junior-Senior Prom. What was it about the Prom that made it worth two weeks' salary or three months' allowance or fifty games of Putt-Putt? It was a Civic Center Exhibition Hall turned ballroom with blue and white streamers and candles that flickered to the Royal Kings' version of Skin Tight. lt was hearing your name announced by Junior Class President Johnnie Moore and crossing over a bridge and into the ballroom, blue carnation in hand. lt was a long line for pictures and cake, and an awfully short one for the punch. It was a night when everybody, absolutely everybody, looked like an ad for Mr. Clean or Miss Breck. It was a special The exit begins in tuxes and tails. night with a special date, and you prob- ably wouldn't have missed it for all the S75 in the world. lt was Robin Anderson singing the theme song, Do You Know Where You're Going To?, and realizing that the end was near. You weren't really sure how to answer her question, except that you couldn't wait to go somewhere to slip out of the S40 rented tux with the starchy cummerbund and into some faded jeans for the after-Prom party. You exited laugh- ing, knowing that for a little while. that answer would have to do. 'V f , ,f ,. ' 1. 4 f - ,t vfgkrx V .tmfsmf if ' ' 4 .,i Y , f?SM,i1f 1 'fm 0:31 W X L, I , if ,, l i 40 Prom Q r x ,X , if at X ' 1 Do You Know Where You're Going To? ques- Boogie-down music sets the pace on the dance tions Robin Anderson as she performs the theme of floor for George Otey and his sister, Pam, as the the Junior-Senior Prom. Royal Kings play Love Rollercoaster. we xx 'vs i -963 Table talk focuses on Donna Hal! and Robert Amos as they pause to joke with friends during a break in the music. 3' ' 1 R xx x y , My s X N ,Lf T52 L T N : - l-k. ki is . ' it ill2jfQfQf'5 Nm. W Change of pace brings Tim Jones and Cindy Gray to the dance floor after a string of fast songs by the Royal Kings. -ex Q- N is .J g A 1 K is I E E 3 i i i 1 1 I Q Q 3 Do a Little Dance! invites the bass guitarist of the Royal Kings as the crowd follows his advice Prom 41 Coffee break keeps Lavina Conner and Ann Huff at the Senior Breakfast preceding practice for Graduation and Senior Day. PARTING SHOTS COI1t . Exit continues with knives and forks. For the next few weeks. the question Do You Know Where You're Going To? kept cropping up with answers like Honors Picnic, Senior Banquet, Gradu- ation Reception as the reply. While the ninety Honor Graduates made a beeline for the baked beans at the Honors Picnic, three-year-old Matt Johnson chased three-year-old Lindsey Tear around tables laden with hamburgers, potato salad, and apple pie ala mode. lt wasn't only the food, but the good- natured fun that highlighted the Senior Banquet. First, Master of Ceremonies Fred Howard roasted the roast beef l l bit into the roast beef, he jested, and it tried to bite me back. l Then, he presented mismatched Senior Super- latives with gifts of party hats, pacifiers, and Hershey kisses. With pacifiers put away, party shoes came out for dancing. Senior Breakfast meant scrambled eggs and all the trimmings at Peters Creek Holiday Inn. Over 220 lined up for the buffet breakfast preceding Senior Day and practice for graduation. It was line-up time again, but this time eggs gave away to ham biscuits and punch at the reception the afternoon of graduation. Perhaps the most memorable line-up. though, headed off Graduation by a couple of weeks. At the last pep assembly, seniors lined up at the goal post to run through one last time. There were tears, it is true. But there was also laughing as the seniors serenaded the halls with Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey hey, good-bye. Teachers seemed to under- stand. Nobody acted as if the seniors were wearing their welcome out, and they all exited, laughing. Taster's choice of delicacies lures seniors David Aronson, John Tinsley, and Mark Akers to the 3:30 reception before Graduation. 42 Senior Activities 4 fi .L S! 'L -V, .,f A A ,deb-.. f A! Y' N my S W The last hurrah of the year gets help from seniors Christine Marty and Karen Graham as they cheer at the final pep assembly. Guests oi honor Luanne Carter and Kandy Reed finish their apple pie dessert at the picnic for Honor Graduates. .MXSNM In the pulpit, Dr. Noel Taylor encourages the Senior Class to pay the price that life's best demands. On parade, Camper Hall seniors carry their caps and gowns to the Capping Assembly. Watching his step, Randy Byrd climbs on stage to receive his cap from Principal James C, Wood. Waiting her turn, Angeli Bower watches as class- mates file through the archway in caps and gowns. 44 Capping - Baccalaureate X X . .. vi: . PARTING SHOTS CONT. Exit follows in caps and gowns. lt was a good-bye to a different tune as the student body gathered for Capping Assembly on an overcast Friday morning. By then, the parties were over. By then, the confetti had been swept up from the last pep assembly. By then, the last- minute rush for gold tassles and straight pins and white dresses was over, too. Capping Assembly somehow seemed more solemn than the graduation that was to follow, perhaps because the clappers weren't there, perhaps because the seniors knew they were standing as a class in the school for the final time. Organ strains of Pomp and Circum- stance heralded the white-clad seniors who marched with blue robes folded neatly over their arms. lt only took a few seconds to get the cap in place, a few minutes more for robes to be zipped up. The Choir sang Shalom. Billie Over- street's soprano voice rang out You'll Never Walk Alone. A few teachers blinked back tears. Some sophomores and juniors, a parent or two, choked back sobs: some didn't even bother to choke them back. It had taken less than two hours for the 469 seniors to don caps and gowns. They lined up in even rows of blue, dotted every now and then with gold tassles and Beta Club cords. Pomp and Circum- stance played again, and the Class of '76 filed back to class. Sunday night, May 30: 7:30. Dr. Noel Taylor, mayor of Roanoke, preached the Baccalaureate sermon to the newly capped and gowned Senior Class in a crowded Civic Center auditorium. The best in life is not cheap, he said. The Choir sang Shalom. By then, the mes- sage was hitting home. A study in concentration, Sharon Dalton ponders the words of Dr. Noel Taylor at Baccalaureate. Capping - Baccalaureate 45 PARTING SHOTS cont . Exit ends with a touch of blue. It drizzled all day on June 3, but after much debate over whether to hold Gradu- ation outside at the school or inside at the Civic Center, Mr. James Wood said it was the most beautiful weather he had ever seen. Even the staunchest critics of an indoor graduation had to admit that it solved a lot of problems. The site had changed, but a lot stayed the same. The faculty members. robed in academic colors, still led the seniors, hall by hall, into the Civic Center Coliseum. The Choir sang Battle Hymn of the Republic. A Parting Blessing. and Shalom. After the invocation by Dana Franklin, Senior Class President Jeff Boatwright welcomed guests and prefaced remarks by Dr. M. Don Pack, Superintendent of Roanoke City Public Schools. Valedic- torian Paula Peterson, salutatorian Paula Robson, and class speakers Susie Hardie, Roger Norrell, and Kent Lovejoy each spoke on the Graduation theme, a poem by Edwin Markham. Deans called names while seniors clutched diplomas from Mr. Wood, some wondering if their Econogowns were wrinkled. knowing that nobody was looking at the gowns anyway. Ginny Fowler closed with the Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi. Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace, she prayed. Tassles turned. Graduation was over. What is it they say about leaving? Parting is such sweet sorrow? Leave before you wear your welcome out? Exit laughing? As the Band played Testament of Nations, the Class of '76 exited. But nobody was laughing. Tassle turning only a few minutes away, Lisa Boeh waits as the last of her classmates receive diplomas 46 Graduation 233 4 , M ' 1 I I If V, J M , M 4 ' 'rv 9 131 1:15 'H if 'Z' fv if Qi Q Q Q, 9, 'Q' -an QC f' 1 Q Kf?. 3.6 5 , 'Q u 4 f1'ff 4 x Y f f 4 4 ,ig srl N YAN, , -aff' 122 Q' as mv. if is f' fs if J Xu K 9 My ,f 5 V 5. S X 5 ii SGW .,! LCOKING BACK. . . To give an insight into the scope of campus life at William Fleming High School, recipients of the school's highest honors were asked by the Colonel staff to answer the question, What experience during the year will you most want to look back on? Their answers follow. I loved every minute of my three years here, and it's hard to single out any one experience to look back on. Working with Coach lLynnel Agee made a very real difference in my life, though. She made me love basketball, and she gave me a lot of confidence. I always felt secure here. A teacher came up to me before Graduation and said, Remember when things get rough next year, we lI still be here, behind you, backing you up. I always felt that the people here were behind me, were backing me up. It makes it hard for me to leave. Teresa McxLawhorn Il Dare You Award: B'nai B'rith Awardl , . .Q was as K is tl it W. . sf , K 3 K Sf. ai, tt X t ' gg k ks 1 .---'if Nix,- sig 5f'P:xgS.,.,f t,f , A , A . -it . s tef .-sms fl, H if ii' Q , 48 Honors Ever since I've been at William Flem- ing, we've been hoping for unity. This year, our prayers seem to have been answered. The school seemed to function as a family. The faculty and students worked together instead of fighting each other. As in any family, there were occasional problems, but as in any strong family, when someone erred, he was brought swiftly back into line. All in all, I'II remember the year as one when people cared and tried to make things work, a year when a lot of prayers were answered. Dean Lloyd Austin lVirginia Education Association Human Relations Awardl in The unity of the school is what I'lI remember the most. I have always gotten along well with different groups of people because I played in a band, and music has a way of crossing a lot of barriers. But this year, the whole school, or at least most of it, seemed to feel the same way I did all along. I hope Country Club had a part in the school unity, and I think it probably did. I'lI also remember how two teachers, in particular, helped to strengthen my feelings about the school and about my- self. Mr. iKennethl Weddle and Mr. IFlobertl Barton had two entirely different approaches to teaching, but they had something in common. They took an interest in their students as people as well as as students. It wasn't any one thing that they said or did, but that I knew they cared that mattered. Joel Sarver iNationaI Merit Scholarship Commendationl 2 The individuals are what made the year a special one for me. individuals who came from different backgrounds. but who found dedication as a common bond. l'lI remember working with students and teachers who forgot that the school day ended at 2:35. l'lI look back on watching students become more aware of their own abilities and hoping that in some way, I had helped. I am grateful, and proud, to have been selected as an Out- standing Young Educator because teach- ing means a great deal to me. Mrs. Linda Wakeland iJaycee's Outstanding Young Educator Awardl lt's the friends here l'll want to look back on the most. We shared a lot to- gether. l'll remember National Vectors Day: Bean Eaters Anonymous Club: French picnics: play practices: crossing my fingers for a bonus on Klassroom Kwiz: sharing Christmas dinner with the Annual Staff: sitting in the basement in Valle Crucis, making paper hats out of newspaper: riding down Fifth Avenue in a horse-drawn carriage. l'll also remem- ber the teachers who became good friends. I always felt they cared about more than my grades and test papers. They did a lot for me: I'm grateful to have passed their way. Ginny Fowler lNational Merit Scholarship Commendationl lGovernor's School for the Giftedl x . -an X 4' There have been a lot of people around here who have never come right out and said, I care, but I always thought they did. There were teachers who gave me so much more than their books and maps and equations: they gave me of themselves. There were the twenty-one people I worked with, laughed with, cried with, and shared far more than fourth period with: they taught me that a family could be more than a mother, father. sisters, and brothers. I always felt that the people I knew here were real. I've never said it aloud before, but there are a lot of people who are leaving with me and a lot who are staying behind that I care about and love in return. l'll look back on them and say, with a grateful heart, thank you. Susie Hardie IDAR Good Citizen Awardl If I had the chance to come back and relive my three years at Fleming all over again, I'd grab it in a minute. I realized what this school was made of when basketball season came around. I could feel it everywhere - on the courts, in the crowds, in the pep assemblies. I'm grate- ful for what the faculty has done for us all. I'd put our teachers and deans and principal and coaches up against anyone elses. I'm grateful for the things Coach lCharlesl Van Lear taught me. He taught me to appreciate not only winning, but to value being a gentleman as well, to pay attention to neatness and grooming, and to respect myself and other people al- ways. He always kept a positive attitude. I think he did a heck of a job. l'll look back on him as a true coach, as a true man. Dejay Anderson ll Dare You Awardl Being honored as Teacher of the Year has to be the highlight for me. It wasn't the trophy that mattered, of course. It was the feeling that students here thought I believed in them and cared about them. To me, that's a very important part of teaching. I got the same good feeling earlier in the term when a student cor- rected something I had said in class. I was glad he felt confident enough of himself to speak up about it, and glad he felt confident enough in me to know I'd be proud of him for thinking on his own. Mr. Robert Barton lSAE Teacher of the Yearl Honors 49 50 f Q1f55?5?QGHmuwnNa M ' was N f WgU1ai:w::i'1i1'1Nf?'' , , N ,,, . , , LV M, , 1 ,ww 1 ,, , T,,w,,,F,,, V X MM, ,, X N Mm HWWMM , , w ,ww 4 , 'Ea MM, 3 1 '- ,Qu W'3vg?- w-W37 ' , 2'1 NLF, - 3:',f5,,.1 M ,, Nikkiq4,Nf!p'f 'H J 1:NAM Uf1'2!mWiNf1123gHwE1w,3-.,, W V' ,Nw w ,. ,3 M 1 m. 1 ,1 1,.m,qNy111u, , If .WLC M' r , , Mxiswywv Sports long as IJ Sl! 11 3 I! Spons 51 O T T lilll www 'WN tt? W 5 , .., ,, Confetti confirms the answer to the cheerleaders question Who's number one? as seniors bombard Cookie Calloway with tiny bits of paper. Up in the air about the Colonels, senior cheerleader Chuck Cooke does a Russian in the Homecoming pep assembly. Stunts learned in wrestling practice came in handy in new routines, said Cooke. 52 Cheerleaders ' Accustomed to cheerleading skirts and sweaters with names like GI I S Debbie, Kathy, and Sharon printed on the front, spectators at Colonel competition take a closer look. Everyone knows that little girls are made of sugar and spice and everything nice. Guys, well - they're closer akin to snips and snails and puppy dog tails. But for the first time in Colonel history, the two joined forces as royal blue trousers and matching Pumas lined up with the traditional pleated skirts and saddle oxfords. At first, players dressing in the locker room would run for cover as someone yelled, 'Watch out! There's a cheerleader coming in here!'. laughed senior cheer- leader Chuck Cooke. But the ribbing was always good-natured. Conceding that he. too, had taken his share of riding, junior Lefty Leftwich confessed, lf l had to do it over again, l'd jump at the chance to be a Fleming cheerleader. Lefty and the rest of the squad pointed to the week-long Dynamic Cheerleading Camp at Roanoke College as a highlight of the year. Being the only two guys around the 131 girls made it a little hard to settle down to business, he admitted. After mastering cheers and chants and perfecting stunts with the two guys as bases, the squad claimed the title of Grand Champion and won the award for the most original cheer. The cheer, Colonels work to win, echoed through the stadiums and gyms and at pep assemblies throughout the year. The Varsity squad was joined by five J.V. Cheerleaders, who had also excelled at cheerleading camp. scoring 170 out of a possible 200 points. The cheerleaders recalled embarrassing moments i One of us fell out of the truck in the Homecoming Motorcade, and an- other lost her corsage at the halftime ceremonies. l. They also remembered stage fright l The first assembly was the scariest thing l've ever known. l. But it is the new sense of confidence that Head Cheerleader Robin Roach feels they'll remember the longest. Even though Lefty was transferred to Northside and Chuck laid off because of his demanding wrestling schedule, the two guys left us with a new sense of confidence. That, coupled with a feeling of closeness, kept us going through the year. Hey, hey barbariba chants Junior Varsity Head Cheer- leader Debbie Pugh as she tries to rally the Baby Colonels before the Lord Botetourt game. Swishing pom-poms and the Pep Bands version of 'Shining Star set the beat as junior Charlotte Jones dances through a pom-pom routine 1976 VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Ifront rowI Cookie Callowayg Tina Ward, Tara Smith Isecond rowI Robin Roach, Head, Dana Franklin, Assistant Head: Becky Pughg Cathy Austin Iback rowI Robin Anderson, Charlotte Jones, Tammy Payne, Tammy Howard Inot picturedl Chuck Cooke: Lefty Leftwich. ,Va fi Malaya W af M ' f' WWW' 'eggif 1976 JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Ifront rowI Cissy Meadorg Debbie Pugh, Head, Amy Williamson Iback rowI Jamie Williamson, Karen Cook. Cheerleaders 53 5? If 3 r' Q? 'Y ,Q-gi' uw , n v 'nNN' V ff U 2' 1 : H-1 ,WWW1UW ' Y K 5 'J Q Q if W- ,x + M , J M J KNEE' A NWN , 'A hx A fa Hifi! V , ' M F E J .. -L L fu? A ! V A ' as - gg 1 3 3 9, Q if Y L ' 'fu 1-1 ' Q E 's-. ja ,flax-.-. Q R QR 2 , I ' -1' Wa ' FWF W 1, f , ' , ' I- Ai!-lugs' u w!! H H L : '-'vw W,,,':, ,m,,,f' :qw uv. ' 1 ,i N ' F -1 ' ,lux W 'W '- w if Q ':,' ,w .g if 142421 ' -f'?'m - ' Lf 'W ' ' 1i.fs1?.-1L'ff Qi'51f+ - M f', f 5 1 'i?F5f'A'eQ f 4-'2i'1f '7? .- ' V ---f K, 1 ,Q - 1 J w 1 w 1 r 1 i ! 1 ,, I, Phooey on The forlune Teller com. Gritted teeth and forceful pushes prove useless after Charles Cheatwood l83l pulls down a twenty-yard pass in the Andrew Lewis game, Lewis grabbed a slim victory over Fleming, 22-21. Counting the seconds, Steve Smith l24l signals vic- tory as the Colonels defeat G. W. Danville in the sea- son's opener. Smith's interception clinched the Colonels' 21-14 win. mmm ,R kg 1975 VARSITY FOOTBALL Fleming Opponent 21 G. W, Danville 14 7 Cave Spring 10 14 Halifax 14 21 Andrew Lewis 22 14 Northside 7 25 Franklin County 12 36 Pulaski 15 O Patrick Henry 30 16 E. C. Glass 43 14 Fl. E. Lee O Season's Record: 5-4-1 56 Varsity Football ..,-f . at , ,, W V V W :ww,,1,'Vf- fsr'1ga:szrfzaanrpe,iMVr'ffz rfezsreera, VV I , are A .,:,, V' f V A ,tag , .fa V r Wir W Q? , wager- f few H r ivy! h ' ., ef,-' , ,V ,, , ,MaVm: V- v :iz re V ' 1 V V V Q 2 ,W E 1 aww' -' ,gl , Z 1 J r' H - ' , Mi' V ' -3.1, ...Whig ,V a f V' 4. , , ,. 'f ,: . - ,gf -.- r t rr 5 f ' - e rr if aaa .W , W' ' . f ' ,' , .,.V 'l N' ' . ' , 1 ' - V ., A ' 'V . 'V - 2 2 L , r V , 'er I : . 1' .. ' I 1975 VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM - lfront YOW, Richard Hamm: Mike Heck: Danny Grinnell: Kirk Law: Paul Andrews: Steve Smith, Flick Hawkins: Tim Jones: William Childress: Doug Alwine, manager isecond rowl Scot Nelson: Bruce Cunningham: Jeff Lowe: Eddie Otey: Butch Crottyg Larry Wolford: Jeff Boatwrightg Duncan Williams: Bryan Jenkins: manager lthird rowl Michael Thurman: Richard Smith: Daryl Drew: Roger Norrell: Steve Jones: Steve Wirt: Jon Whichard: James Arrington: Arthur McCoy: Tim Runion, manager lback rowl Maurice Ashford: Thomas Woods: Leslie Dunnaville: Michael Preston, Charles Cheatwood. John Sherffield, J C. Brown, Michael Vines: Jerry Caldwell: Roy Hughes inot picturedl Drejay Anderson. David Daniels: Dwayne Guynn: Kurt Kreiderg Jeff Moore: Keith Patterson: Barry Simmons: Waverly Thornhill: Doug Tuck. .....,-Ti? Lewis was the loss that hurt most, Steve Smith, All-Metro defensive back, said. Losing to a 2-A team really humili- ated us. lt was the lowest point of the season, Smith admitted. The Colonels blew a 21-7 lead to lose 22-21. l could not believe we made the same mistakes two weeks in a row, said Smith. Looks like we would've learned. As the Colonels were beginning to wonder why us? , on the Northside field. fate again disproved the fortune teller. With two minutes left in the game, Scot Nelson separated Northside's Roby Manuel from the football with a thunderous tackle, and teammate William Childress recovered to set up the winning touchdown. That game, said Larry Wolford, was the turn- ing point of the season. The next stop - Rocky Mount. For the first time in the season, the final re- sults showed a spread of more than seven points. The fact that everyone on the team played was a real pIeasure, said Lee. After the 25-12 victory, we were 2-2-1 the first half of the season. We just as well could have been 5-O. Momentum continued as the Colonels celebrated their Homecoming by derailing winless Pulaski 36-15. Led by All-Metro halfback Duncan Williams, who raced for 168 yards and a pair of touchdowns in 12 carries, Fleming piled up 352 yards on the ground. But while his players were en- joying their victory, Coach Lee was looking ahead to powerhouses Patrick Henry and E. C. Glass. Again, fate proved fickle to keep the Colonels from winning their most desired games. For Coach Lee, the 30-0 defeat by Patrick Henry was the most helpless I remember feeling on defense. We iust couldn't stop 'em. The Patriots completely controlled the action. They operated 63 times from scrimmage to the Colonels' 24, tracked up 23 first downs to 7, and gained 309 yards rushing to 51. Colonel country was invaded by strong E. C. Glass one week later. The result- another licking - a 43-16 defeat. But the Colonels salvaged pride as quarterback Barry Simmons played one of the best games of his career with 246 total yards and 102 yards rushing. Final game: Lee of Staunton. The 14-O shutout clinched a winning 5-4-1 record for the Colonels and fifth place in Western District competition. As it was, the season still made a liar of the fortune teller. lt was a long season because of our inconsistency. If offense was on, defense was off, said Wolford. But when they got together, we could stop anything. Every movement counts as Duncan Williams l41l drives for a first-down in the game against Pulaski County. The Colonels racked up 36 points to Pulaski's 15. ' Varsity Football 57 V w '- ' :'UQ2Ulfl?, ' ' m?:'f'! Q2 . , . UV ? ,Vi WLM F , 3. -'U f W111111'-w,:.1m xwx- W :N 11' 1... 'A 2 fr! x 'Q ' 5, . lx-:SJ , , , Q A I - J W We 'fl Az A ' Q! A 1' 'gfi 'WT i 1 W 'M , P' 1 E T 2, f if W, LQ -- w' E- Hn V 4 m W 5 M A 4, M . I iv? .ww um W , 1 'E' 3' f 1.35 3:3-g-Q' J , If E2 I 1 3 w Q 3 Q x' M X X f Q1 we W ,waxy f Y fx: Y 11 :M ' -f 'a fm , E 4 , T ' W N :Z We , 'ww H mm, . 'T X M x I g ,lx ,,,, , I! mu On ogoin, off cigoin CODY. J' 578665 M... sms. gm , . 2 'K i 3 an v .lm M L . ,,,, J , X, W ,,.f-W 1976 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM - lfront rowl Greg Robinson: William Childress: John Sherffieldg Dejay Anderson: Gary Yandle: Steve Robinson: Dar- John Coles: Jeff Moore: Terry Coles: Linwood Canna- rell Davis: Tom Ribble: Vincent Banks lback rowl day, manager. 60 Varsity Basketball The next two games found Fleming proving itself with a pair of wins over Botetourt and Halifax County before suc- cumbing to G. W. of Danville and Northside in close bouts. The 64-51 win over Halifax County was the first time in ten years that the Colonels had beaten the Comets anywhere. It was massacre in their ninth start as the Colonels romped over the helpless Franklin County Eagles 75-31. We had lost two close games, said Van Lear, and l think the kids just made up their minds to play their best. l'd have liked to have taken some of those points and that defense into the P. H. game. The next two starts showed Fleming in their beach days again. The spirited Colonels gave unbeaten Patrick Henry a run for their money, but went down 74-62. Halifax, too, got revenge before the Colo- nels notched their belts with a pair of wins over E. C. Glass and Pulaski County before losing to Cave Spring by only two points in overtime. It was up again for Northside. down again to Danville. up again to upset powerful P. H. 46-44 before finishing the season with a 15 point win over Franklin County. As the Colonels faced the Western District Tournament, they hoped to re- coup their season's losses and come away looking like the team even their most eager critics knew they could be. They lived up to their could be image in the first round of the tourney by beat- ing E. C. Glass handily 63-52 with the help of Terry Coles' 29 points. As the Colonels faced top-seeded Patrick Henry in the semi-finals, they had high hopes of unsettling the Patriots once again. But in their on-again, off-again season, the second victory never came to be. The Colonels faltered 67-60. settling for fourth place in the Western District and a third among Metro teams. lt's hard to settle for third place when you know you're better than that, said All-Regional forward Steve Robinson. lf we had played every game at our peak. we would have gone all the way. As it was. we split our season with ten wins and eight losses. It was like the old saying- 'When we were good, we were very. very good. but when we were bad, we were horrid. ' In a last-minute effort, Coach Charles Van Lear huddles his troops for the finishing instructions in the game against Halifax. 31 :isdn X . Q 91: -f .X K' t . mag Firing away against Patrick Henry, Terry Coles l34l hits a fifteen-footer to aid the Colonels in their victory over P. H. In the clutch. All-Regional forward Steve Robinson hits for two of his game-high 22 points against Pu- laski County. ivan 1976 VARSITY BASKETBALL Fleming Opponent 70 E. C. Glass 61 88 Lord Botetourt 73 53 Pulaski County 59 58 Cave Spring 71 72 Lord Botetourt 65 64 Halifax County 51 63 G. W. Danville 69 58 Northside 59 75 Franklin County 31 62 Patrick Henry 74 50 Halifax County 59 72 E. C. Glass 50 43 Pulaski County 38 55 Cave Spring 57 54 Northside 39 69 G. W. Danville 76 46 Patrick Henry 44 46 Franklin County 31 District Tournament 63 E. C. Glass 52 60 Patrick Henry 67 Season's Record: 10-8 Varsity Basketball 61 From the very beginning, there had always been somebody a little bigger and better. Wishing that they, too. could fit into the jerseys that would hang past their knees, the little Peewees watched as their heroes tipped the scales toward ninety. The Biddy League also marveled as guys a few inches taller sunk baskets Opening the season with what defensive halfback Leslie Dunnaville termed as playing like we never had before, the footballing Colonels rolled over New Castle 22-6. We played each game with everything we had, Dunnaville added. Archie Mayo scored twice and James Muse, who later rushed for over 1,000 fired up for that game more than any other, commented Dunnaville, and the spirit really paid off! The Colonels routed their county rivals 16-6. The spirit refused to die as the Jayvees hammered G.W. of Danville the following week 20-6, but the fire then fizzled with a 22-8 loss to Franklin County. with a little The fol- more ease. I lowing those same attempts I0 Heroes in hond-me-clowns Hljttlg guys rekindle looked forward to Without the glory reserved for the Varsity teams, the Jayvees finished with a succeeded as the the days when 5-3-1 record on the gridiron and claimed a 14-4 season on the courts. Baby Colonels they wouldn't have to look up to anyone anymore. But playing Jayvee ball doesn't nec- essarily mean being second best: it's just another stepping stone to a varsity career, commented Head Football Coach Jimmy Moore. Oh sure, there were times when we felt over-shadowed by the Varsity and just wanted someone to know that we were there, explained quarterback Bob Preddy. But the other teams knew we were there, and that's all that really mattered. The Baby Colonels left little doubt that they were there as they clinched a 5-3-1 sea- son's record - one of the best the Jayvees had gained in recent years. yards, tallied seven more points to stock- pile the Colonels' first win. During the next three weeks, the Jay- vees got a little taste of everything: a O-O tie with Cave Spring, an 18-6 win over the Wolverines of Andrew Lewis, and a 35-14 defeat at the hands of the E.C. Glass Hilltoppers. l really wish we could have had a second shot at Glass, commented Preddy. We just had a few rough breaks. l know that the second time around, we could have come out on top. With four games under their belts, the Colonels then traveled to Northside where they confronted the Vikings. We were defeated the Vik- ings once more with a score of 28-12. But in the last game of the season, the Comets of Halifax rolled over the Jayvees 35-20 as the fire finally sputtered out. Although most of the Junior Varsity players were proud of their winning season. all wished it could have been even better for Coach Moore. We tried to do everything we could for Coach Moore because it was his last year to coach, Dunnaville explain- ed. I'm glad we let him go out a winner. Over two decades of coaching come together in one thought as Coach Jimmy Moore ponders over his Baby Colonels' next move. 62 Jayvees Shootin' the hoop. Charles Cheatwood l44l maneu- vers between Franklin County defenders to add two points to romp the Eagles 57-42. FLENNQ nr-na..-1,..,,,,i- '?-vm-q,..-. ---..-Q, 'W' Z ll w 6 5 ,T W' ,,,,mq,14waa221 pargf r ,, , ,, ,ip M 'V M T V W '- c I m 4 -EM .Ml , V. V - -. di W '. A, J, .-.Q if :err 9' 'War 4: F' W , , ,V fi , W ' ' Q E , - , at X H AV KLV MM k ,f VA 22 Q I 1 , , , ' V V My ' ii - ' ' ' ' , , i l : lf 'ty , A fl ' ly ' ,X 5' , l -f , l fl .. 3 I,, . .l: 1975 J.V. FOOTBALL TEAM - lfront rowl Billy McCullough: Robert Saunders: Billie Davis: Michael Turner: Waverly Thornhill: Mike Smith: Don Southern: Larry Broughman: Mike Walters: Richard Cotton: Gordon Morgan lsecond rowl Vincent Younger: Donnie Mowbray: Matthew Ross: Mike Mayo: An- toine Bethel: Richard Markham: Michael Raymond: Joe Brewer: Don Young: Bob Preddy: Lorenza Wil- liams lback rowl Mark Shifflett: Archie Mayo: Mike Hollar: Mike La Brie: Fred Claytor: William Neely: Roger McKinney: Robbie Norris: Ricky Thomas: Eugene Leftwichi Tim Bonds lnot picturedl Leslie Dunnaville. The La Brie connection and the Davis smash com- bine to put points on the scoreboard against Halifax ltopl and to keep Northside's points off lbottoml, -ur r---ur-' -'iliudunusgp do-ul Huang.. 1975 J.V. FOOTBALL Fleming Opponent 22 Newcastle 6 O Cave Spring 0 18 Andrew Lewis 6 14 E.C. Glass 35 16 Northside 6 20 G.W. Danville 6 8 Franklin County 22 28 Northside 12 20 Halifax 35 I Season's Record: 5-3-1 Jayvees 63 l 1976 J.V. BASKETBALL TEAM - lfront rowl Billie Dunnavillep Charles Cheatwoodp Darryl Burksg Jimmie Davis: Tony Baxter: Michael Raymond: Michael Thur- Dickerson fnot pictured, Mark Grogan, mang Antoine Bethel iback rowi Juan Powell: Leslie ,E M ' qt A 7i'r 1 2 . ,, I , ,yy . , V. ir 1 I N 8 - M el'l e ' , H '- ,gr 5 an '- r-if 7, iv' - 5 4 fgigkw H H., G i Ar um , 7 4 , ir 1 r ei 4 Q at + r A V ' 4, M V 0' B f 14077 K ,WM , N - I gg 41:4 M V gi 22535112 ri Wie, is H I V 5 L H 5M,HG9 1976 J.V. BASKETBALL Fleming Opponent 40 E,C. Glass 51 65 Botetourt 52 52 Pulaski 35 46 Cave Spring 41 73 Botetourt 36 41 Halifax 43 54 G.W. Danville 67 33 Northside 20 57 Franklin County 42 65 Patrick Henry 39 39 Halifax 33 41 E.C. Glass 39 64 Pulaski 38 60 Cave Spring 37 48 Northside 43 45' G.W. Danville 55 61 Patrick Henry 54 43 Franklin County 41 Season's Record: 1 4-4 64 Jayvees Q 1 JK, W M How sweet it is to win, especially against city rival Patrick Henry. Head Coach Jim Ingram raises his arms in victory as the final buzzer sounds and the Colonels win 61-54. Turning it on against Newcastle, James Muse i36i rounds the corner behind lead back Mike La Brie i32l. The Colonels beat Newcastle 22-6 in the season's opener. The winning football season fielded by guys not-quite-ready for varsity jerseys started a chain reaction as the Baby Col- onels linked together a string of wins on the basketball courts as well. While most people were fin- ishing supper dishes or adding finishing touches of Brut or Charlie for the night's date to the Varsity game, the Jayvee players hustled onto the floor with little fanfare. Sometimes we felt our mothers were the only ones watching our game, said Junior Varsity starter Juan Powell. But if I had to choose, l'd rather have the satisfaction of winning than of seeing our names in headlines. The satisfaction of winning came often as the Junior Varsity clinched first place in the Metro, took home second place in the Western District, and finished with an overall record of 14 and 4. After losing their first game to E.C. Glass by eleven points, the Jayvees were ready to turn the tables. The next four games found the Colonels in the winners' circle as they trounced Botetourt twice and licked . Pulaski and In CaveSpring cont' by safe margins. lt took two losses, a close 43-41 heart- breaker to Halifax and a sound 67-54 drubbing by G.W. of Danville, to shock the Baby Colonels into winning form again. And then, for the next eight starts, the Junior Varsity couldn't be beaten. They trounced over Northside by 13, tallied 57 points to Franklin County's 42, clobbered Patrick Henry 65 to 39, slipped by Halifax by six, and avenged their opening loss to E.C. Glass 41 to 39. It was a repeat per- formance for the Colonels when they whipped Pulaski, Cave Spring, and North- side for the second time in the season. .D . Number nine wasn't to be. When the final buzzer sounded, G.W. of Danville had pulled ahead by ten, halting the Colonels' winning streak at eight. Nursing their loss, the Jayvees en- countered Patrick Henry at the Civic Center and came into the limelight again. Beat- ing the Patriots by seven was a highlight of my season, said standout Charles Cheat- wood, who met the Patriots once again when he was elevated to a varsity line-up. And seeing Fleming climb over Franklin County in overtime was a good way to end the season. Having worn both varsity and junior varsity jerseys in the same season, Cheat- wood said he found varsity competition a lot steeper. But playing on a winning Jay- vee team counts for a lot in itself, he said The headlines aren't there and the crowds don't cheer quite as loudly, but that winning feeling is always the same. ia- ' rf ,, A f .1 Out of the reach of Patrick Henry players, Michael Raymond soars for two more points in the fourth quarter. The Colonels ripped the Patriots 61-54. On the go against Franklin County, Juan Powell l24l drives the baseline. The Colonels prevailed over the Eagles 43-41 to capture a 14-4 season's record. Jayvees More thon just o pretty foce Out to prove that they were not only girls but athletes as well both Colonelette teams boasted of 6-2 seasons records and advanced to the Western District Semi Finals Six wins, two losses - but that was only part of the story. Crowds tripled from those of a year ago. Girls' sports finally received double-column coverage from local sports writers. Team members learned to live with floor-burned knees. jammed thumbs, and less than inch-long fingernails. But that, too, was only part of the story. What made crew socks and high tops preferable to Hanes and heels comprised the rest of the story. You've QOI to love the game before you can stay with it, replied All-Metro guard Teresa McLaw- horn. l've hit the wall many a time. but there's something in playing that makes it worth every knock. For Teresa, basketball has been a way of life. Like most of the team. I grew up playing with my older brothers, she said, and basketball just grew on me. Her third and final season with Coach Lynne Agee was the only one when the Colonel- ettes did not capture the Western District Championship. As usual, people down- graded Fleming's team in pre-season predictions, but I thought we just might pull through. Teresa added. Her predictions came close to coming true. Out of ten teams, the Colonelettes were one of a quartet to make it to the Western District Playoffs. But after pull- ing out game after game in the final minutes or in overtime during regular season play. the Colonelettes' luck ran out when they needed it the most. ln the opening round of the Western District Tournament, archrival Northside handed the Colonelettes a 44-32 licking after a first-half tie. With that, it was all over. Subconsciously, l knew that there would come the time when I would have to turn my uniform in, Teresa added, but l kept putting it out of my mind. When the uniform went, part of me went with it. Entangled in a web of Northside defenders, Frankye Holland l52l looks for an opening to clinch a Co- lonelette victory in the pre-season game. 66 Girls' Basketball - Volleyball Close up to the net, Jacquie Bonham l54l rejects a Patrick Henry serve. The Colonelettes lost to the Patriots in two close games. Tipping the scales in favor of the Colonelettes. All-Metro guard Teresa McLawhorn l24l evades Cindy Waddell l22l as Fleming takes Northside into overtime. W - 4 'V f 'f'2fw.,, J- f Hall' ein, hi YEL? 7 YELS7 it te L 4 .HJ its 53 , 1,53 1975 GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAM - lfront rowl Diane Wimbushg Janet Harrington: Cynthia Frac- tion: Marie Craig: Sue Bias lback rowl Janice 2 .tn ,f. .X . f' 1 Manerz Angie Wilson: Frankye Holland: Cathy Stinnette: C-Ann Franklin: Teresa McLawhorn lnot picturedl Darlene Cox: Carol Wilson, manager, , A 46 V 4 XM: fin-Q... i 1975 GIRLS' BASKETBALL Fleming Opponent 50 Pulaski 17 33 E. C. Glass 37 35 Cave Spring 51 66 G. W.-Danville 29 47 Franklin County 30 42 Northside 38 34 Halifax 32 47 Patrick Henry 32 Western District Playoffs 32 Northside 44 Season's Record: 6-2 Girls' Basketball - Volleyball 67 More thcin just o pretty foce Not only under hoops, but across nets as well, Colonelettes learned to live with close games. lt was unreal how closely our season resembled the Girls' Basket- ball Team's, said Volleyball Team co- captain Cindy Sullivan. Both teams finish- ed with a 6-2 record, and both made it to the semi-finals of the Western District Tournament. But basketball seemed to get more coverage from the local press. At times, the emphasis on Girls' Basketball left me wondering, 'When is someone going to notice that there is a Volleyball Team, too', admitted sopho- more Robin Blanton. But the Basketball Team was so great cheering for us, we just couldn't be even a little bit jealous. Team members said the Basketball Team really kept up their spirits after the Volley- ball Team lost to Patrick Henry. We really wanted that game, said Robin, and we all walked around like the air had been let out of us when we lost. Volleyball Team members admitted to playing the Patrick Henry game over and over in their minds long after the final point was scored. Some of us went around saying, 'lf only I had done this or that', Robin said. There were a lot of tears in the locker room, she continued, but I couldn't let myself cry. For the seniors, it was a case of 'if only'. But for most of us - a Not just another face in the crowd, Coach Lynne Agee huddles her team for a strategy-planning time to muster a last-minute victory over Halifax. f N. f.. rf :-.r. t' H x'iv'f-.- , -' - .... .,,, . - W .. I I 'L R We il Q? ,,.yy., . .,jj ,y.,, , ' M az- ,fe 'ii 'CG . , 4 , .... fs'--I ,,.. ?' if KMA W l yi! 3.1 .I -nw'-M3 'Wei' 5r 2if1',k-wzf' A 1 - 5 X 1 I bunch of beginners -there will be a next time. 1975 VOLLEYBALL Fleming Opponent 2 Pulaski 1 2 E. C. Glass 1 O Cave Spring 2 2 G. W.-Danville 1 2 Franklin County 1 2 Northside 1 2 Halifax O O Patrick Henry 2 Western District Playoffs O Cave Spring 2 I G V SeaS0n'S Record: 6-2 1975 GIRLS' VOLLEYBALL TEAM - tfront rowl Tinglerg Cheryl Jackson: Sheli Peterson: Jacquie Amy Adams: Cindy Sullivan: Gloria McCadden: Bonham: Robin Blanton: Cheryl Monk lnot pic- Valerie Rudd, Deidre Perry lback rowl Jaime turedl Cheryl Boydp Laura Linton, manager. 68 Girls' Basketball - Volleyball ,y,u.,,,,t f f qw wM,,,,,,t ' hrfff it A ,,,, W 4, My If ,V H f 2. - 5 ' , tg ,., , , ,J W 7, if Et Nr f, if , V X ff f ff A WW 1 6 MV 5? 2 f M, , ff f ,ff L , get K W tv Y Q 1 1 'T , Ax 22? E : 5 VV 5 he f iz em 4, .V ,JF ,V 1' M uv' 'ir Q r Raising a ruckus, Darlene Cox l5Ol drives around a Franklin County guard to fire a goal as the Colonelettes tally a 47430 win. Icing the cake, Janet Harrington 1353 looks for two more points to pad the Colonelettes' ten-point margin over Patrick Henry. -n 45,752 V -'wi in wget., I iv gn M its C vm iii se.-tn-as Undivided attention registers on the face of Robin Double trouble comes in the form of Sheli Peterson Blanton as she waits to return a Cave Spring serve. and Gloria McCadden as they team up to win against The Knights shut out Fleming 2-O. George Washington of Danville, 4 GMS' Bettabaii-tveitevtalt 69 ptx Q0 and '70 Sh OW Quite different from the rock 'em, sock 'em Saturday night bouts, the Colonel matmen boasted an 8-3 record, good for third place in the Western District. lt's showtime in Starland Arena. Joe Wrestle has just slipped into his flowered trunks, waved a comb through his bleached-blond hair, and laced up his monogrammed shoes. The crowd munching Cracker Jacks nervously awaits the fire- man's carriage, the claw, the souflex, and the atomic- bomb. Meanwhile, in the 3600 block of Cove Road, wrestling takes on a totally different look. As letterman Danny Grinnell put it, That professional wrestling is all just a show. Wrestling is a competitive sport. In their '76 debut, the grapplers started competing on the right foot with the help of standout Chuck Cooke's minute-eighteen second pin. Five other wrestlers also won to help claim the 31-30 victory over Andrew Lewis. In the following weeks, the Colonels split four down-to-the-wire decisions: a 36-21 loss to Glenvar, a 33-25 win over Pulaski County, a 32-27 decision against E. C. Glass, and a 32-23 defeat by Bote- tourt. lt seemed as if we were on an un- balanced see-saw, replied Cooke. The Colonels entered the match against unbeaten Cave Spring as decided under- dogs. We knew we could do it: we just had to prove it, Grinnell added after the Colonels upended the Knights 34-17. For the following two matches, the see-saw remained balanced as the wrestlers mauled 1976 WRESTLING Fleming Opponent 31 Andrew Lewis 30 21 Glenvar 36 33 Pulaski County 25 32 E. C. Glass 27 23 Botetourt 32 34 Cave Spring 17 62 G. W.-Danville O 62 Franklin County 7 16 Northside 36 44 Halifax County 12 44 Patrick Henry 17 Season's Record: 8-3 G. W. of Danville 63-0 and rolled over Franklin County 62-7. Once again, the balance swung down- ward as the Colonels fell to the hands of the Northside Vikings 36-16. But they were able to remain off the ground with a 44-12 licking of Halifax County and a 44-17 win against Patrick Henry to wrap up the season 8-3. Eight grapplers wrapped up post season honors, too. Seniors Daryl Drew and Chuck Cooke, juniors Eddie Otey and Mike Vines, and sophs Ricky Crouse, Archie Waldron, and Mike Turner continued in district and state matches. lt's funny when you think about it, Grinnell added. We didn't attract the crowds that the glamour-boy professional wrestlers did, but it was still a good feeling to know you've given your all. All tangled up, sophomore Archie Waldron maneu- vers around the mat against Cave Spring. The Colonel matmen whipped the Knights 34- 1 7. -E, 70 Wrestling NB - in N . I I H M,,.,,y,,l. I .lg l My it it lwwflri' QMff,fj'lc'2l , A Wim lf' 35' X42 V ' Q W C , P . ' i 'vs un, l , P K 1976 GRAPPLETTES - lfront rowl Diana Stull, Head, Laura Thompson, mascoti Jaime Tingler, Co- head isecond rowl Deborah Wimbush, Cathy Edwards, Anita Bannisterg Bonnie Duncan iback rowl Sheila Wiley: Amy Martin, Peggy Pillis. 1976 VARSITY WRESTLING TEAM - lfront rowl Eric Guerrant: Chuck Cooke, Marcel Whorley, Danny Grinnellg Archie Waldron, Marvin Pugh iback rowl Guy Bousman: Don Southernp Mike Vines: Eddie Oteyg Daryl Drew1Jon Whichard, Riding high, 119 pounder Danny Grinnell puts the moves on his Andrew Lewis opponent. The Colonels decisioned the Wolverines 31-20, .Jwffff . L slim, ,E . . ,. R Strength and force in one, grappler Eddie Otey 1976 J.V. WRESTLING TEAM-ifront rowl Percy iback rowl Wesley Campbell: John Cundiff: Jeff grinds his opponent to the mat. In their fourth outing, Keeling: Larue Dickerson, Donald Young: Ellison Brown: Lee Price, Tony Penn, Mike Craighead, the Colonels slid by the Hilltoppers 32-27. Curtis: Billy McCulloughp Kevin Farmer, Mike Turner Michael Macklin, George Otey. Wrestling 71 + fr W fl ,R 4 .4-1. ,M ,,v, 1, ,,.,.4 I ga-em. mam.. T 'T ,,A, ' ' V.., J I I - Giving opponents a run for their money, harriers gain experience as male and female track stars notch their belts with impressive wins. The urge to run is pretty strong. People run for the money, run for the hills, run for their lives, occasionally run around in circles. At William Fleming High School. the instinct to run - and jump and throw as well - was pretty strong, too. As Cross Country and Track seasons got underway. Colonels headed for the hills and hurdles. No matter what the outcome, they found themselves taking it all in stride. Pardon the pun, but it can safely be said that the Cross Country Team just didn't come out ahead in the long run. Nine men, with only one harrier returning for action from last year's line-up, took to the hills in seven different meets and came up on the short end of the stick every single time. At times, it seemed as if we were running in place, said senior standout Jeff Row- 72 Track land, who placed twelfth in the district. We weren't really that worried about winning. We ran because we wanted to get in shape, and we liked to run. lt was that simple. In the long run and the shorter ones, too, the Colonelettes were slow starters, but they wound up ahead of much of the field when the big race got underway. Like the Cross Country Team, the Girls' Track Team also lost every meet during the regular season, but unlike the harriers, they pulled ahead to distinguish themselves in the District Meet. The team underestimated its competition at first, said Coach Howard Mack, in his first year at the helm of the Girls' Track Team. They knew the going would be rough in district compe- tition, but when the going got rough, the Stride for stride, sophomore standouts Archie Mayo and Mike La Brie leap the hurdles in the Cos- mopolitan Track Meet. girls got tougher, he said. The trio of cinderettes who paced the Colonelettes at district competition in- cluded Frankye Holland lsecond in High Jump and fourth in the Hurdlesl, Angela Hopson lsecond in the 44O'sl, and Janet Harrington lfourth in the 220'sl. The 440 Relay Team lJanet Harrington, Debra Booker. Yolanda Reynolds, and Janice Manerl, 880 Relay Team lLavonia Wil- liams, Debra Booker, Nancy Reynolds, and Janet Harringtonl, and the 880 Medley Relay Team lJanice Maner, Debra Booker, Lavonia Williams, and Angela Hopsonl also qualified for regional competition. ' W g V. K 1' . K : G: X 'K 0 X ' QA ,. Q Nh. A N- W Y it is 3, , Out in front, Nancy Reynolds paces the 880 Relay wx Team's victory in the Cosmopolitan Track Meet. . SY' Nationally-ranked long iumper Daryl McCoy sails toward a new meet record at the Roanoke Relays. The Colonels pulled out fourth place among fourteen teams. 1976 INDOOR TRACK Fleming Opponent 56 Di Pulaski 39 W Lexington 14 M James Wood 38 W Broad Run 71 45 W Albemarle 79 W Andrew Lewis 23 34 E. C. Glass 84 84 Halifax 32 W Patrick Henry 31 58 W E. C. Glass 89 W A-et, Patrick Henry 10 G. W. Danville 20 Halifax 12 1976 INDOOR TRACK TEAM - lfront rowl Melvin Jeff Logan: Greg Wirt: Tim Jones: Toney Ramey: Pulaski 24 Clemons: Paul Andrews: Ricardo Harrison: Osborne Maurice Ashford: Al Mason lback rowl Mark Regionabsecond place Wheaton: Jeff Williams: Richard Hamm: Robert Wiebke: Herman Lewis: Steve Harvey: Keith Atkins: seasonfs record: 1-4 Saunders: Doug Booth: Steve Via, manager lsecond David Holdway: Kenny Dent: Daryl McCoy: Ronald rowl Jeff Rowland: Gary Bonds: Eugene Leftwichi Brower. Track 73 I I I Pardon another pun, but as the Indoor Track season got underway, the Colonels kept on trackin'. If injuries hadn't taken their toll, they could have kept on trackin' even longer. As it was, the cindermen com- piled a 7-3 regular season's record, losing to such notables as Albemarle and powerful E. C. Glass. As a team, the Colonels distinguished themselves as Metro champs by easily defeating area foes. In district competition, they settled for second, runners-up to E. C. Glass. Highlighting the individual performances for the Indoor Track Team were Daryl McCoy, Jeff Rowland, and Kenny Dent, who helped to fill the gap left by last year's graduating seniors when he transferred from New Jersey to Roanoke. McCoy's 23'6 long jump set a district record and was good enough to rank him third nationally. Dent's leap of 6'8 in the high jump also set a district record. placing him fifth in the nation. At the State Meet, both McCoy and Dent were hampered by pulled muscles, but Dent came in fifth and McCoy rallied for a third. Distance man Jeff Rowland established a new mark in the 1,000 yard-run with a time of 2:26, also a district record. ln spite of outstanding individual per- formances, the team record suffered be- cause of injuries. We had tremendous potential, said McCoy, but injuries early in the season held us back. If it hadn't been for them, who knows? Maybe we could have gone all the way. l, personally, think we could have, but I guess that doesn't matter now. Out of action with a pulled hamstring, sophomore Michael Thurman receives first aid from trackman Kenny Dent and manager Steve Via. 1976 GIRLS' TRACK TEAM - lfront rowl Ollie Wright, Debra Booker: Deidre Perry: Lucy Mack, Dawn Marsh, Torrea Buckner, manager lsecond rowl Lavonia Williams, Janice Maner, Yolanda Reynolds, Angela Hopson: Lorice Bennett, Debby 74 Track It . . Miller, Amy Adams, manager lback rowl Deborah Wimbush, Nancy Reynolds, Jacquie Bonham: Frankye Holland, Carolyn Moore: Mary Dillon, Terri Caldwell, Janet Harrington lnot picturedl Megan Lewis, Diane Wimbush, Vanessa Williams. 1976 GIRLS' TRACK Fleming Opponent 21 Cave Spring 75 Patrick Henry 32 57 Cave Spring 62 19 E. C. Glass 93 Halifax 0 31 W Northside 67 Patrick Henry 32 O Pulaski' O Cosmopolitan - Sixth Place Roanoke Relays - Fourth Place Western District - Fourth Place Season's record: 0-5 ' Forfeit by Fleming Tension mounts as senior Steve Harvey prepares to Picking up the pace, Jeff Williams takes the lead of hurl U19 discus in the l..yI'1Cl'1blJl'g Relays IO add to The 3 Patriqk Henry harrigr in thg last half of the 2,4 Colonel score. mile course, 45 hr : '-1 fwaeiwfiv 'f ,ll,l g 'f : fmf 1976 OUTDOOR TRACK Fleming Opponent 80 Northside 56 107 Cave Spring 29 42 E. C. Glass 94 92 Halifax 35 W Franklin County 38 M xt , -., 1. 5 1 1976 OUTDOOR TRACK TEAM - lfront rowl Marvin Pugh: Paul Andrews: Jeff Williams: Daryl McCoy lsecond rowl AI Mason, manager: Mike Mayo: Gary Akers: Allen Richardson: Bobby Manning: Waverly Thornhill: Doug Booth: Carl Carty: Melvin t . L Lynchburg Relays - Third Place Roanoke Relays - Fourth Place Cosmopolitan - First Place Western District- Second Place Season's record: 3-1 Clemons: Ellison Curtis: Jeff Pace: Steve Vie, man- ager lthird rowl Jeff Logan: Osborne Wheaton: Maurice Ashford: Robert Saunders: Jeff Thurman: Ronald Brower: Greg Wirt: Tony Ramey: Mike Ramey: Keith Atkins: Jeff Rowland: Mike Heck: Ricardo Harrison lback rowl Eddie Otey: Tim Dix: Mark Grogan: James Arrington: Mike Washington: Tim Hayes: Kenny Dent: Mark Wiebke: Steve Harvey: Herman Lewis: Mike La Brie: Archie Mayo: Jeff Lumsden. Track 75 A reoson for running com. Fifth in the nation. Kenny Dent receives last-minute instructions from Coach Bob Sandy for his state high jump attempt. Pardon one final pun, but the Colonels stayed on the right track as the outdoor season got underway. Competing in six regular season meets, the trackers clinched five wins, losing only to E. C. Glass. The team placed second in the district, fifth in the regionals, and sixth in the State Meet, with eighty-one teams competing. ln the Cosmopolitan Meet at Roanoke College, the Colonels swept the medals as Steve Harvey won third in the discus, 76 Track !', F if N :gtg 9 if K as ,X his ' gif ' Kenny Dent lfourth in statel high jumped' to first place, and Jeff Williams lsixth in state in quarter milel took the gold in the 100, 220, and 440, and tied the school record in the half-mile. Jeff Rowland won the 880 with a new school record also, and the Relay Teams made the day complete by winning almost every event. Assisted for the first time by former Roanoke College track coach. Mr. Larry Arrington, Coach Robert Sandy was en- couraged by the performances of three sophomore standouts. Hurdler Mike La Brie ran his best time at 14.8 seconds, and triple and long jumper Archie Mayo was . - -A wif - A . s 'ff :lst :R as 'tif ss. gs ,Q ws n-4' , A 3 Crossing the finish line. Herman Lewis breaks the rope ahead of his fellow trackers to put the Colonels out in front. the Colonel's second-highest scorer behind McCoy, whose 23'10 leap broke the all- time state record previously set by Fleming's Tony Easley last year. La Brie, Mayo, and pole vaulter Osborne Wheaton, who vaulted 12'6 , qualified for state competition. We came up against stiff competition, said Sandy, but the team learned to take it all in stride. ww. .: t Q. 1, . - are - -weve-vsQst..vmw.mf --ms --u..M..,c --f-we T ff'-'M A A sg: , . It .1 es if '- K- ,. if a in 'D is' LL' ' in 'X diff' 1 . . . e gi , 3 'ii 5 se t.: fi t 1: ' - . I ,zgglg Sf 16 - K i 3 ' L. : -.-. -eg ' . . . , , , N W .,:. F .h.,:.. ,. k Q : F L Q, 1 a D 1 1 , i1-PQ 'r 1 4 iff as . 1 as 4 1 - ii ? ' if 76?-f fav' x. L- 1975 CROSS COUNTRY TEAM-Ricardo Harrison: Jeff Rowland: Phil Justice: Jeff Williams: Wayne Jeff Brown: David Holdway: Tim Hayes: Van Wilson: Turner: Marvin Pugh. Out in the woods. senior David Holdway crosses the halfway mark in the Western District Cross Country Meet, On his way, long jumper Paul Andrews leaves the ground in the meet against the Northside Vikings. ,Q M A I 4 we asa' ' W . : T! A11 wa: , aa' 1: va ry: M wwwsi, 'Z if -1 fi , A 'W 3:1 .9 -W.: '32 1 , f if we 4 , I , 4 , fir , if 5, 1975 CROSS COU NTRY Fleming Opponent 50 Andrew Lewis f 15 44 William Byrd 16 36 Northside 20 47 Cave Spring 15 42 Pulaski 19 42 Patrick Henry 19 38 Patrick Henry 19 Season's record: 0-7 Track WU ' il' 'F-..-,nz On parallel bars and putting greens, the Colonels fought a battle against youth and inexperience to progress as the season got underway. Shaping up ond chipping out Anyone who has ever watched a chicken hatch knows it doesn't happen all at one time. First, there's a little crack, and then a little chipping, and the crack gets bigger and bigger until finally a ball of slightly damp fluff emerges. lt is a little wobbly at first, but gets steadier as the days go by. The time then comes when it is steady enough to strut around the barnyard as if it owned the place. For both the Gymnastics and Golf Teams, it was a time of chipping out. ln- experience and younger team members played a large part on team records as both teams salvaged only one win between them. With one of the youngest squads in recent history, the Gymnastics Team chalked up one win. But that win was the one we wanted to win the most, com- mented sophomore Kelly Patrick. With seven straight losses, the Colonelettes faced Patrick Henry at home in front of an unusually-crowded meet during sixth period. Paced by All-Regional contender Cathy Crawford, the Colonelettes rubbed the Patriots 94.95 to 80.30 to finish the season Out in the rough, senior Gary Yandle sets up to blast toward the ninth hole in the match against Northside. on an upward swing. At the beginning of the year, we set our goal to win two meets - Ngrthsidgs and Patrick Henry's, ex' 3 plained Coach Ca rol Quigley. We lost the meet to Northside in the season's open- er, and that really hurt us a lot. But beating i Patrick Henry in our last meet of the season was a good way to go out. Since most of i our team will be returning next year, things l should be beginning to shape up. The shape of things to come could also have been the motto of the Golf Team that found itself a little blue in the land of greens. Starting two ninth graders, the team, young and inexperienced, found itself with perpetual high scores at the time when low scores counted. The team finish- ed ninth in the district. With half our team in junior high school. we were definitely one of the youngest teams in the valley, said senior Gary Yandle. ln spite of our inexperience, we progressed steadily as the season got underway. We were losing games by much smaller margins at the season's end. lt was a learning season for us. if not a l X Q. Ni' 78 Golf- Gymnastics .i 1976 GOLF TEAM - lfront rowi Mark Arrington: Jeff Schwartz: Robin Anderson, caddy iback r0wi Doug Davis: Gary Yandle. winning one, said Yandle. 1976 GOLF Fleming Opponent 352 Northside 307 Patrick Henry 316 Andrew Lewis 322 359 Franklin County 342 Cave Spring 339 Patrick Henry 314 373 Pulaski 337 Patrick Henry 335 371 Cave Spring 341 Northside 341 Patrick Henry 312 343 Pulaski 326 Northside 301 351 Franklin County 341 Northside 308 335 Andrew Lewis 308 Northside 310 Western District - Seventh Place Season's record: 0-7 1976 GYMNASTICS TEAM - lfront row! Pam rowl Lorye Johnson: Kim French: Flobin Blanton: Brown: Kelly Patrick: Cindy Gray: Ollie Wright lback Linda Miliefg Cathy Crawford, s . 1976 GYMNASTICS Fleming Opponent 85.9 Northside 93.15 91.50 Cave Spring 187.70 78.8 Halifax 88.6 64.8 Pulaski 139.9 109.20 Franklin County 121.15 43.63 E. C. Glass 75.63 94.75 Patrick Henry 80.30 Season's record: 1-6 A birdie putt comes the way of golfer Jeff Schwartz as he rolls a 15-footer in against Pulaski County. f.f'? '5 tis .5 is -9 fag: W 1. r ' .' X -alji-,-s4:-t as 1.45.3 ff 556559-s . , N., N. .. K ,ss i !?i.Y,?V5-s K . .A ...- v.. . I , t , , ska. M 'A K... L egw'-clgg gv'fLig:,-'5ii?iS?L:ElKR35X -- xii ' l gf Qailyff f. . : . 5 1 0 1 ,.. use W I Limbering up. sophomore Kelly Patrick prepares for Horsing around, Ollie Wright vaults in the meet her routine on the beam in the meet with Halifax. against Patrick Henry to put the Colonelettes ahead. Golf- Gymnastics 79 cross the nets the next forgot her tennis shoes for Bock inthe swing of things Sporting a pair of wins, the Boys' Tennis Team swung for the best rec- ord in three years while the Girls' traded three wins for eight losses. lt wasn't a year for many first places. but it was a year for many first times. It was the first time in three seasons that the Boys' Tennis Team won a match. lt was the first time recently that a woman had coached a boys' varsity team at Fleming. lt was the first time someone could remember a coach not giving her players the shirt off her back, but the shoes off her feet. In spite of the firsts, scores repeat- ed the fate of past years. The boys finished the sea- son 2-12 while the girls lost eight games on the courts and pulled out only three wins. Coached by Mrs. Elea- County 6-3 losers. For the next eight out- ings, the Colonels never tasted victory again. You can blame our losses on in- experience, said Mrs. Culpepper. But since half of our starting team was sopho- around three wins and eight losses. Al- though Teresa McLawhorn. number one player, was a senior, half of the starting singles approached the net as underclass- men. lndividual performances sometimes seemed to overshadow team play. Teresa went three sets against Patrick Henry's Kinta Otterman, ranked sixth in the state, and Robin Blanton beat Lynn Fleming from Patrick Henry 7-6 in the tie-break- er. But in the land of slams, faults. and backhands, the word love resounded around the courts in more than one way. When I look back. it won't be the nor Culpepper, the Boys' r T - N Myfg ,,,, c I matches l'll remember the Team opened with its first , , , i A ikli ll . most, said senior Paula win in three seasons and . Robson. but the family- high hopes of more to Vi ' 7i T ' ljll , A i like team. Team members come. After the team had E Q ' 'i t 1 . remembered long talks on lost every match for two ' P, 2 the way. to matches, and Years, said team captain i . l L A their coach. Mrs. LYnne Jeel Blankenship, ir felt -1 f f ' .aj g I. gil ' ' Agee. She promised to good to be able to strut off . buy us all a steak dinner the court after beating ll 1 . ...kv-5 if we beat Patrick Henry Northside. It was hard to . , A . as ligafigg iia-lllii lshe never had to make keep on strutting after . A A I good on that promisel. facing Patrick Henry a- We ' .. and when Susie Ribble ' ll' Q61 i . l , tix-V.. ...., .. . i match. Although individual scores were mores and our number one player, Mike the Brookville match, Mrs. Agee took close, the Colonels were on the wrong side Brogan. won most of his matches. we look off hers and went barefooted, said of a 9-0 tally. Still smarting from that lick- forward to better seasons to come. Paula. lt was a year like that. ing, the Colonels encountered the Eagles Inexperience and youth also plagued at home and sent them back to Franklin the Girls' Tennis Team as it wound its way A Crogsgourt vqlley comes as Jaime Tingler puts one mm m1 away against her Patrick Henry opponent. ,..A, A,.J .15 ,.ji . ..,V f A , 3' 'W V ' A .g f mf ' ' f . J :Iy g ly. g i M, g Q . V ...,,. . y.y 1976 sims' TENNIS F eee 'cz' T . cc ei -f-- .,. c e W ref F'-ming opponent jj' 4' jf' sf,-.1 1 . ..., if gi 6 Vf., r 'iyf NJ H ,fil W V A 7 Brookville 2 ' . Q Q ' 2 Patrick Henry 7 ' :fi i --- P ' 'i ' 'i:'-' . f.. T C . ...tf -t2ri ti ? N ,?'I CUSS 2 r ie- ill L' as ' ' 5. .... it . . r..e- -'i- iti' c l 2 E' C- mass 7 A Y ' 'if we ' V ,A 'i'i' 1 O North Cross 6 , . . 'fit --,. T .e1' .'y' Q. V i 2 Halifax 6 1'f4 ... 1 G-W' Da Vi e 8 P 0 Patrick Hnenry 9 . ,, . , . . , , , , ... ... .,.,., , . .. . . 6 Brookville 2 5 Roanoke Catholic 0 1976 GIRLS' TENNIS TEAM - lfront rowl Paula Robson: Ann Hardie: Sarah Wooldridge: Robin 80 Tennis Caywood lback rowl Valerie Rudd: Jaime Tingler: Robin Blanton: Teresa McLawhorn: Susie Ribble. Season's record: 3-8 -..Jim .M-lk!!! A backhanded smash scores match point for one singles Mike Brogan as he succeeds in topping Bo Hjorth from Cave Spring 7-5, 6-1. Taking it to the nets, Joel Blankenship advances MM, against his Halifax opponent. i 4 s - 1' -1 .wwx-,?lQ'e9,,. X 3' . -1 af- -' - ., A Y S -- - 1--Q sf J-aw X . r Q- .. .s . , Qi Q, Ne,. ,s 'gi A1 ,V - We --H . W, 1- ,. K f' Y -Q--,t. . g Q . 4 .- is W, S K N5 1, ...,...,kX K ' of A - ' V A 5 , 1 ' . , M., - in -.--, ., 4 . ,, v 'M i 'if'f?ws.-W., e .1 : -i:,,:.,, yy i 'PT' 'W':+--------- We-4-.6 , fzfifzffi ig gan Y y yy 1976 BOYS' TENNIS f 2,9 if isei 7: i. saii if , , fiffff. , 1: A I -A I fr, New IV, in ,-Luffy, I , , , I '- r Fleming Opponent ,zlzzfy : i 7 rf , Q..- , 7 V 1 f we A-,V ,. - .M an if -lf? 5 N0ffhSIde 4 f -' W ' i 7 -9 ' 'fi -11.1 Jazz , F 0 Patrick Henry 9 , 347 ii 1225 5 7 i ff? '75 lg: 'if W 6 Franklin County 3 1' 3 ii p I i-' 'W - if- w e , , : ' ' , ya, ' ' M ' 1 Pulaski 8 f , Q i mi Q W 1 Andrew Lewis 8 R f '1, ' 2' ' i ' 5 '. ' , O E. C. Glass 9 x Q 4 ' 2 Cave Spring 7 S f a f fl - f 3 Northside 6 1976 BOYS' TENNIS TEAM - lfront rowl Richard Richard Johnson: Kenny Price: Tim Benson: Jeffrey 2 GW' Danville 7 Markham: Joel Blankenship: Mark Moody: Van Powell: Kent Lovejoy inot picturedi John Coles: O Franklin County 9 Speese: David Johnson lback rowl Mike Brogan: Eric Guerrant, 2 William Byrd 7 4 Halifax 5 2 DQ Patrick Henry 6 V2 Season's record: 2-1 1 Tennis 81 They din'T whdl they used lo be Topsy turvy describes the fate of the 1976 Colonels as they came from last place in 1975 to become Western District runners-up just one year later. Two and thirteen isn't exactly a record to brag about: last year, the Colonel nine didn't do much boasting. With seven of the starting nine returning from last year, some people predicted more of the same old thing. But the 1976 version of the Baseball Team. coached for the first time by Coach Jerry Campbell and joined by sophomore standouts Bob Preddy and David Mitchell, pulled itself out of the cellar to become the only metro team to make it to the Western District Playoffs. The rags to riches story wasn't the gift of a fairy godmother. What we lacked in talent we made up for with guts, said third baseman Kurt Kreider. At times, it seemed as if guts wouldn't be quite enough, he confided. ln the season opener, the Colonels tied Allegheny 2-2, with the game called be- cause of darkness. The next three starts found the Colonel dugout full of winners, but in the next game the number thirteen proved unlucky as Cave Spring knocked in 13 runs to the Colonels' 10. Avenging their loss, the Colonels shutout Patrick Henry 5-0 before the Eagles of Franklin County gave them a taste of their own medicine with a 7-3 licking. The Colonels notched their belts with four more wins before losing a pair to Cave Spring and Danville for the final four games of regular-season play. Fleming batted in winning scores to finish the season 12-4-1, good for second place in Metro and second in the Western District. ln the opening round of the Western District Playoffs, the rags to riches story almost had an unhappy ending. Trailing 10-2 in the sixth inning. the Colonels capitalized on a couple of Halifax errors and came up with some timely hits to pull within three runs at 10-7. With two men on base, Bob Preddy sailed a home- run over the left field wall to knot the score at 10-10. ln the final inning, the Colonels bombarded the Comets for four runs, and behind the relief pitching of Keith Patterson, held Halifax to a single run. They hung on for a 14-11 win. After a couple hours of rest, the Colonels battled against powerful G. W. of Danville for the Western District crown. Despite giving up a single run behind All-Metro ace Larry French's four-hit pitching, the Colonel bats couldn't put any runs on the board: . . they fell to the Eagles 1-O. Reflecting on the championship game, Coach Campbell commented, There's no doubt about it in my mind. lf we could have gone in fresh, we could have come out on top instead of settling for second. But second still looked pretty good to the guys who knew how it felt to be at the bottom just a year ago. Post season All-Metro honors went to Rick Hawkins and Larry Wolford, selected for the first team, and Larry French. Jeff Boatwright, and Kurt Kreider, who found places on the second team roster. As a reward for piloting his team to the Western District Playoffs, Coach Campbell was voted Coach of the Year by his fellow Metro coaches. As Campbell put it, The hardest thing in coaching is getting your team to believe in you. It was hard for the players to believe in me for a while. But then it started. When you win, it makes it easier. Then everyone begins to believe in you. And even more important, they begin to believe in themselves. Waiting for his pitch, sophomore starter David Mitchell follows the ball to the plate. ll 1.-ai t 1 -f A ..ms.sm.t-,sessstsm ,... . t 82 Baseball WS? M .W ff-F In motion. senior Larry French delivers a curve to his Newcastle opponent. French held the Comets to one hit as he fanned nine. On his way, shortstop Jeff Moore takes a lead off first base in the Colonels' playoff encounter with Halifax, r . . . we 1' ' f '1'Q 32?51VHQk?1.1.W24' .'L'fif5v?5. I y 'fi ,. 14 -,-4. lbw ', , fs- ,1 5'7 1 Q.. 'Q'f 'f ffgf'ff.2 ' f ff- fnigllfifrk 4'-ff!m., 'Ay wi f Y c ' Nazi . ft 11f.1'2!f93?z rr '1 X' 5 53ftN,J N nf Y . 4 1976 BASEBALL Fleming Opponent 2 Allegheny 2 12 Andrew Lewis 1 H 1,, . 1 .. . . QW. H 5 Newcastle O at ' N ' 6 Northside 2 A . y . y . . tytt t,tetyry , . M 10 Cave Spring 13 . 1 5 Patrick Henry O ,, . ,, 'rii 3 Franklin COUNTY 7 1' ' 1 yxe 1 76 it ' ,Qi Vqzbx ,.e'b 1 VAVA Q T . H to . 'IO B0tetOul't 6 1 X F ea- ly 1 g -. 4,4 i i 8 Allegheny 7 . llie 1 A 1' f 1 5 Pulaski 3 ees W Wagga M P Y L WML 7 E. C.GIass 6 5 T 1 A Xl 5.5. V 4 1':A r -. :Y . K ., - . 191 1 fgft.Sn1nn ff1fi1lN .1,a,. Wil' 1 if 1 f5z.iMNGp 53 3 CaVeSP f'9 4 it if, if ' if 1 I1 1 Si, 2 G. W. Danville 4 . H ' - P 8 Franklin County 5 1 tttllr,, 10 Ngrthside 1 v-1 '- . 'fir , :.- 1' - - 1 X5 2 . 52 - ,I 1 15,145 6 Halifax 3 , , A-ex if f,' 'Ve . , J 1 V .1 V irr X E , fri 3' 8 Patrick Henry 5 A EWG imiirflwb 'X EM 1 EMIN vv 1 D' 1' rs d Pl it . 12 5, N 1 A 1' ,R L 'IN L es ern is ric econ ace 3 , . 1 . ..,,. 1 ' A A A 1 IM . if . .5 14 Halifax 11 O G. W. Danville 1 1976 BASEBALL TEAM - lfront rowl Bob Preddy: Williams: Kurt Kreider: Butch Crotty lback rowl Seasorfs record, 12-4-1 Robert Underwood: David Mitchell: Jimmy Love Larry French: Jerry Caldwell: Jeff Moore: Jeff Moore: ' lsecond rowl Jeff Boatwrightg Rick Hawkins: Duncan Keith Patterson: Larry Wolford. l W I l Q Baseball 83 84 Academics H, W W A , ff? M Q here were some things you just had to learn the hard sway. You learned that orange seeds went into your ear a lot easier than they came out. You learned that crayons didn't colorilwell after they'd been left out in the sun all day. You learned that puppies weren't for squeezing, nofmatter irll how much you loved them, that Superman capes didn't make you fly. that ball0Qi1s flewsaway ifeyou didnft hold on tighit.lYou learned that spankings hurt a lot worse when you had to pick the switches yourself. lryy f But there were lots of things that made the hard lessons come easier, You learned that a kissiron a scraped knee worked better than mercurochrome ever could. You learned that your Dad's two strong hands relll were much better at holding up a bike than the training wheels you just took off. You .learned 1 that your Grand- mother's arms. barely able to lift a Thanksgiving turkey, were somehow big enough to cradle Ringing in the Bicentennial. junior Eric Guerrant joins Choir members in presenting American Potpourri at their spring concert. your brother, a cousin. and you. all at the same time. The lessons never stopped coming, even when you were old enough for high school. lt didn't take long to ,find out that math and Ns didn't usually go together, that l.R. cards were no good on test days. that term papers needed to be started at least a little earlier than the night before they were due. But youygalso learned that it feltilbetter to live with the C you earned than the A you could have cheated for. You learned that one round of applause ,made all the nights of never-ending practice worthwhile. You learned that dresses and tables and pictures and brick walls were beautiful because they were a part of you. And when you finally mas- tered something - you never thought you would, you felt like you could fly, even without the Superman's cape, and you knew that you had hold of something that wouldn't drift away like your childhood balloons. Academics 85 On. 5'5Y.i 2 Nw ii. A Q f' 55 W, 1' 2 ll , '.., N5 is illlss Silhouetted against the December sun, a visitor to the campus heads toward the Round House. Autumn leaves frame students as they take the ten-minute mid-morning break to soak up un- seasonably warm weather. Portrait Of QA School ls it better to be a big duck in a little pond or a little duck in a big one? William Fleming finds the answer. lt doesn't look much like the little white schoolhouse of yesteryear. lt's a lot dif- ferent from the red brick building that bore its name for the first twenty-eight years of its existence on Williamson Road. It doesn't look much like the school where Lucas Tanner roamed the halls or the building that echoed Welcome back, Mr. Kotter. There can be no Up the Down Staircase because there are no stairs. William Fleming High School: sketch it as a school within a school. Color it unique. Title it a home away from home. Home for the 1,516 students enrolled there might be any one of the four mini- schools called home halls - Camper. Coulter, Hart, or Smith. Since each hall has its own dean, guidance counselor, and faculty, most students don't feel quite as lost as they would in the typical big school. Everybody needs some place to go when things get rough. said Mr. Thomas Dixon, dean of Camper Hall. As originally planned, most students had sixty per cent of their classes in their home hall. But four years ago, depart- ments were grouped together. This de- partmental grouping made it easier for teachers to share ideas and equipment. but I think we lost some of the closeness the halls used to have, conceded Mr. Dixon. Although most people refer to Smith Hall as the place for math, foreign lang- uages. and DECA, others recognize it from the strange smell of chemicals fil- tering from the yearbook room or the bleep, bleeps of the Wang computer. Coulter Hall's bow-tied whistler-in-resi- dence, Dean Hartwell Philips, oversees the English Department, Sabre Staff. and Literary Magazine. The place not to wear your hat is Dean Lloyd Austin's Hart Hall, which houses social studies, VICA. and the new annex of the twenty-thou- sand volume main library. Distinguished by a slightly graying beard and a rosebud in his lapel, Dean Dixon, Fleming's longest-serving dean, finds time to frequently visit the science, ROTC, and Special Education classes in Camper Hall. Although most students are matched with their home hall at random, mem- bers of the same family inherit the hall of their older brothers and sisters. Each dean naturally thinks his hall is best, said Smith Hall's new dean, Mr. Irvin Cannaday, but in reality, the halls are evenly balanced with honor students and school leaders . Being a part of a small hall is one way to keep from getting lost in a big world, said Mr. Dixon. lt is still better to be a big duck in a little pond than to be a little duck in a big one. ln the hurt of neture's wonder, the fourteen-acre campus finds itself sandwiched between a mountain range and Woodrum Airport. Portrait!William Fleming High School 87 Portrait Cf QA School ln a big pond or a little one, the waters occasionally need to be ruffled. The ruffling came in the form of hall passes and stricter enforcement of discipline. Five minutes cut from each class period gave teachers one extra period for in- volvement duty - patrolling the halls, parking lot or cafeteria, or working with attendance problems in each hall. The changes have been effective, stated Mr. James C. Wood, principal. Some stu- dents resented the discipline at first, but almost everyone - teachers and students alike - cooperated to make the changes work. The results - a quieter, safer cam- pus - are worth far more than the price. Stricter enforcement of discipline was not the only change. An extra forty-five spaces in the parking lot, new coats of paint on the buildings, and a new guid- ance center became familiar as the year went on. Changes in personnel as well gave the campus a new look. With the promotion of former dean, Mr. Paul Foster, to Administrator of the General Services for the Roanoke City School System. Dean lrvin Cannaday took charge of Smith Hall. A newcomer to the guidance staff, Mrs. Beulah Dabney took up an office in Camper Hall. Along with four other guid- ance counselors, a job placement director, 88 Portrait!William Fleming High School Listening posts for Camper and Smith Halls, Guid- ance Counselors Beulah Dabney and Elizabeth Stone compare notes for mid-semester registration. Flanked by an almost-empty gymnasium. Principal James C. Wood and Dean Hartwell Philips await the influx of seniors for the year's first pep assembly. and a part time home-school counselor, she guided and helped students plan for everything from next semester's schedule to next year's choice of college. Nineteen new teachers brought the Fleming staff up to almost one hundred-thirty, including cafeteria workers, clerks, secretaries, para-professionals, and service personnel. With almost 1,700 in the Fleming family , said Mr. Wood, one of our top priorities is making every individual feel a part of the school. One thing's for sure, he said. The closer we are, the better we are, and we're getting closer all the time. Free and easy spirit prevails as Colonels meet out- doors for an impromptu pep rally to promote the Basketball Team's debut in the Western District Tournament. Study hall takes place in, of all places, a hall, With traffic controlled by passes, the corridor of Smith Hall proves a quiet refuge for sophomore Drema Johnson. Q 5242 44 11, L- f J ,, ,. ', r W My XA f X M , K O ff iv 2 4 if 1 I 1 ff Portrait!WilIiam Fleming High School 89 90 Curriculum The inside story brings a squeamish look to the face of Jackie Lowe as he hesitantly probes a dis- sected frog in a second period Biology class. Every good bride-to-be knows the secret to a successful wedding - some- thing old, something new, something borrowed, and something blue. William Fleming's curriculum committees took a hint from the bridal consultants in plan- ning its offerings for the year the same way - some old, some new, some bor- rowed, some even blue. Something old . . . Several of the old courses got face lifts. In addition to its regular classes, the Math Department came up with a new twist to an old theme with its one semester course, Probability and Statistics. Designed for students who have completed Algebra ll and want to continue taking Trigonometry, or even those who want to take two math courses simultaneously, the course began the year with the help of a new Wang com- puter. Mr. Kenneth Weddle, instructor, said that the atmosphere was more re- laxed than in an ordinary math course. ln fact, we ended the semester by taking schoolwide surveys, he added. Something new . . . The English De- partment, forerunner in new courses at William Fleming, got underway by adding Women In Literature to sixty-five other course offerings. The course ran the gamut from medieval monarchs to Agatha Christie. According to Mr. Charles Arring- ton, English Department Chairman, the Mini Course approach offers a solid col- lege preparation for those who want it and a liberal sprinkling of other relevant courses for those who don't. Sophomores in the English Department sometimes ran from Arrington to Arring- ton as Mr. Larry Arrington joined his brother Charles on the faculty. As Flem- ing's newest physical education and health teacher, Mr. Larry Arrington ex- pressed the objectives of the P, E. De- partment: We're trying to teach more leisure activities with the basic skills, he said. We still teach basketball be- cause it's such a high interest activity. but we are including such courses as golf and tennis as weIl. Ups and downs describe the fifth period gym class as sophomores learn the basics of gymnastics, Penny Saunders attempts a kickover on the parallel bars as Lesley Stultz spots her, just in case. I Ms- 7-my ff' QW 1 1 4 f A ,r 2 , Q ,V ,, Q -- r?f4fjf'jwr'4 f ,yweg f if f ,K r 254 5 7' f W, ' G 1 X 3 ilfhfi 25 .VL Q, ,f gy . M4522 1 r 4, i , jf :nj 'f , ' - ,Q Y it fr ' A ?'fz.,m, V ' No kids' stuff. the task of cutting out paper figures is taken seriously by senior Stuart Dillon as he applies Pythagoras' theorem. Caught red-handed by Customs Officer Tim Hayes, passenger Jeff Logan turns over the evidence. Participating in the classroom skit, the characters act out the incident in the new foreign language course, French for Travelers. In Q ' I W fn ,, r ,, g , ie Atv ,,pW,r , t,...uvW '7 W. As the world turns could be the theme for the bulletin board behind sophomore Tim Runion as he prepares an outline for his Current World History class. Curriculum 91 Pots and pans no longer have to dominate a woman's life as a new English mini-course illus- trates, Gena Hartman studies the woman's quest for equality in her Women in Literature class. Something old, something new, some- thing borrowed . . . Borrowing the ideas from the English Department, the Social Studies teachers hit the curriculum with twelve new courses. After taking one semester of basic United States History or A'American Government, students se- lected nine-week courses ranging from Colonial History to Current Politics. Miss Sarah Walton, Social Studies Chairman, explained that the new approach was designed to let students concentrate on a particular aspect of history. The Social Studies Department has tried to update its curriculum with something for every- one. she added. Realizing that it, too, needed to update the curriculum with something for everyone, the Foreign Language De- partment also did a little changing, ln addition to four basic years of Spanish, Latin, German, and French, a new French course, French for Travelers. joined its one-year-old big brother, Foreign Lan- guage Humanities, as an offering. French for. Travelers is exactly what it says it is, said the course's designer, Mrs. Donna Frost, lt's for those people who want to learn just enough to get them through the country if they're ever there, she continued. We study every- thing from the French alphabet to the complexities of reading a Metro map of Paris, added Julie Waldron. Map reading continued as the students in another new course, Senior Science, studied geology. Designed for students who want more science, but don't want to tackle chemistry quite yet, the course of study involved simple chemistry, com- puter programming, and geology. Something old, something new, some- thing borrowed, something blue . . . Something blue came in the form of the blue-ribbon reaction to the broad range of course offerings. With the total of 215 courses in its curriculum, William Fleming really deserves a trophy, com- mented Mrs. Doris Egge, Guidance Coordinator. Test tubes, beakers, and chemicals frame Johnnie Moore as she finds the normality of a solution in her second period Chemistry class. 92 Curriculum sages 59 - . . F mis . is fif- ,X ,'.., 55 if WWQ Triangled by a classmates arm, sophomore Ernest Anderson masters techniques of speed reading in the new Reading Improvement class. Poor Wang's dead, wail Smith Hall teachers. Mr. Eddie Johnson, Mrs. Genevieve Waring, and Miss Lois Cox sing the solemn dirge to Contract Math students as a final tribute to the departing computer. A g J ww if Curriculum 93 5 men up the es spice FS 8 COU electiv Vocational and w.' must kno has decreed you GODS Om et of all the things s di ady 3 DTS 3 Ste W dv Nobo LD Ji P o cu a. m 5, o 3: .-. cn -Q :I na 2. 4 m ui Little Dab'1l Do Ya Time was when the prescription for an education didn't vary much. Every student had to learn some Greek, whether he was interested in the class- ics or carburetors. Every student had to learn some algebra, whether he was interested in engineering or egg-scramb- ling. But today's schools exist for people. not the other way around. What is one man's feast may be another man's famine. Weary of a steady diet of strictly-academic courses, students now choosing alternatives seem to be say- ing, A little dab of something you really enjoy'll do you good. The menu for vocational students may vary from sheet metal work to brick laying, from food preparation to welding, but the dessert is the same -- skills for a job as soon as the ink dries on the diploma. I took vocational courses because I knew they'd put me one step ahead of the crowd. said sophomore Jeff Journell, a student in Heating and Air Conditioning. Like most other occupational-extention students, Jeff rides the bus to the vocational centers at Addison and Jefferson each day. Like most other vocational stu- dents, he spends most of his class time actually practicing his skills. Like most other vocational students, he prefers his vocational class to more academi- cally structured ones because he feels that they are more relevant. Another fan of the vocational pro- gram is printing student Bill Perigen. He says his class is more than worth the bus ride to Jefferson, but feels there should be a separate vocational wing at each high school, as proposed in the Roanoke City School Board's Capital Improvement Program. l think vocational students would feel more a part of the school if they didn't have to miss assemblies and announcements. Spit-shined and polished. ROTC cadets assemble for inspection by Colonel Charles White, Flight Commander Ivan Brewer, and Squadron Commander Kurt Kaiser. On stage, DE student Amy Adams models the latest evening wear for the fall presentation of Options and More Options sponsored by the Fashion Merchandising class. Spot-checking, ICT student Billie Overstreet tangles with plastic bags as she prepares clothes for cus- tomer pick-up at Quality Cleaners, I 35 ' J il Wi s in . m,A6n4mc .,,.' 2' ,Jil ii Z Trowel, mortar. and bricks provide hardware for a brick layer's handiwork. Larry Williams learns the skills of a mason in his vocational education class. Hair care claims the attention of Jackie Chambers and Judy Board as they examine Charles Hall's in the second semester of their Cosmetology class, QA Little Dab'll Do Ya COI'lt. Not everyone knows what job he wants to land after high school, but almost everyone likes to add a little spice to his basic academic load. Those so inclined could choose from a buffet of appetizing elective courses. ROTC offered a four-year sequential program to bridge the gap be- tween the pure sciences and aerospace. Eleven different art courses, too, of- fered the chance to compile an impres- sive portfolio or just to dabble a little for enjoyment. Industrial Arts as well offered eleven different choices in skills as diverse as furniture refinishing and technical drawing. The Business Depart- ment served up a medley of seventeen different courses. Work-study programs such as Distributive Education, lndus- trial Cooperative Training, and Coopera- tive Office Education supervised students in jobs at every spectrum of the em- ployment market. Some of my elec- tives, such as DE and Photography. have been real eye-openers, said senior Mark Akers. Typical of the eye-opening experiences in the electives program, according to Senior Home Economics student Jerry Caldwell, was egg-sitting. For three days, students treated their eggs like real babies. They named them, diapered them. dressed them, and learned to handle them gently. When l wanted to go some- where, I had to think of my little egg, laughed Jerry. l never really knew what responsibility a family could be until l egg-sat for a while. For their study of child development, members of the co-ed class received Red Cross certification in Child Development. l'm glad I made room in my schedule for electives, said Mark. ln a different way, l've gained as much from them as any course l've taken. Biceps bulge as vocational student Michael Washington planes his wood to a satin-smooth finish in Cabinet Making class. Academic Alternatives -ix 5'-fiat fifif 5 3355352 'nfs .-- d .Y X is 'l .,:.. K.. 1 if ii cf-if X Nts 7' , 1, f i 1 , Si52f1?' :29?Ef in ' ,ia V Qs iff 5 ls, x Wir Unfinished business occupies the time of voca- tional student Michael Turner as he files a valance in an Industrial Arts class. ij' i S Sticky fingers find a way to mold a coil pot from clay. Sophomore Betty Moody completes the project during her fifth period Ceramics class, No egg-scrambler. Jerry Caldwell celebrates the honor of Best Parent in his Senior Home Eco- nomics class. Students learned responsibilities of parenthood by caring for an uncooked egg for three days. Academic Alternatives 97 All About Women hostess Polly Ayers outlines the agenda of the program with gym teacher Mrs. Lynne Agee. Participants in girls' athletics discussed female advancement in the previously male- dominated sports world on the Sunday afternoon television show. The shape of things to come occupies the mind of Robin Blanton as she volunteers for a hair style at the Cosmetology booth at the Career-Job Fair. Representatives of over thirty occupations talked with students about job possibilities. 7 . ..., ' 'Q at Sr sf? the Q We A night off finds working girls Rhonda Cox, Sue Dudley, and Cindy Journell at the COE Employer Appreciation Banquet at the Barn Dinner Theater. Tables turned. Spanish student Cindy Gray be- comes the teacher for the third-grade students at Huff Lane Elementary School. 98 Speakers - Field Trips , - Bad News For Book orm Expanding the horizons from booklarnin' to education, special events give class routine a shot in the arm. 5 The oldtimer who sent his young'en to school to get some booklarnin' would drop his eyeteeth if he could see the typical William Fleming classroom. On the corner of each student's desk still lie modern-day versions of McDuffy's readers, but they're not as well-worn as they used to be. It's not that the books aren't used: they're just not the end of the Colonel's curriculum. We pay a 39.00 fee each year for book rentals, but most. of the experiences l'll remember didn't come from books at all, said senior Karen Kasey. Speakers, field trips, banquets, festivals, science fairs, and contests all expanded that old-timer's horizons from booklarnin' to education. Field trips ranged from a few hours at a local funeral home to a few days among the ruins of ancient Rome. Thanatology stu- dents didn't exactly rate their trip to local funeral homes and crematoriums on their list of top-ten things to do, but all did say it gave relevant insight into modern-day funeral practices. l didn't really enjoy it, said Kelly Hildreth, but l'm glad l went. Visiting the city courts and jail facilities gave Liberty and Law students a first-hand look at American justice. Among those taking careful notes of judicial proceedings were Teresa McLawhorn and Jeff Powell, who had their day in court as prosecuting attorneys in a, mock murder trial sponsored by the Virginia Trial Lawyer's Association. After challenging student defense attorneys from Cave Spring High School, Teresa and Jeff pleaded before the Virginia Supreme Court in Richmond where defendant Percy Snodgrass was freed on a split decision. Other field trips took the Senior Science class to VMI in November and the Ocean- ography class to the Virginia Institute of Marine Science at Glouchester Point. ICT students visited H 81 C Coffee Company, Pet Dairy, and Continental Homes. The Politicking comes to Fleming as Mr. Vic Thomas joins other candidates from the House of Delegates in an appearance before the Social Studies classes. Home Economics classes ventured to Ward's Mobile Homes to look at housing available in the community. Venturing out of the Star City and into the city of stars, the Fashion Merchandising class flew to New York City to see first- hand the fashion market and visit the showrooms of famous designers. The eight students accompanying Miss Elaine Win- gate actually saw merchandising at work rather than just reading about it. Being in New York City was enough in itself, but meeting designer Calvin Kline was the frosting on the cake for all of us, said Trina Epperly. Just window-shopping on Fifth Avenue was a real education in itself. Speakers - Field Trips 99 Bad News For Bookworms COI'1t. In contrast to the hectic pace of Broad- way and Fifth Avenue, Valle Crucis, North Carolina, population 1,108, welcomed a group of almost forty students for a week- end of mostly sitting and thinking. l took a good look at myself for the first time, and l had a chance to be a part of togetherness. You could feel the closeness, expressed senior Diane Wooldridge. The Human Relations Club also sponsored a day-long outing to Franklin County. There, teams of ten learned togetherness by helping each other scale an eight-foot wall. climb a simulated electric fence, and share other encounters. Junior Linda Robinson said that the day made her realize how im- portant other people can be. The outing was physically exhausting, but mentally enlightening, she said. Although the cool trout streams and country roads of the mountains offered plenty of opportunity for soul-searching, there were times when words spoke louder than silence. Over fifty guest speakers came to the campus to share their views with students in almost every department. The Thanatology course invited ministers, priests, lawyers, and life insurance sales- men to give their perspectives on death and dying. Other speakers included a Protective Service worker, an Information Specialist for the Roanoke City Public Schools, a civil engineer major from the University of Virginia, and candidates for public office. Not only field trips and speakers, but special projects as well led students from how the textbooks say it is to how it really is. The Roanoke Valley Foreign Language Festival, held at Northside Junior High School, lured students to mini-lands where they moved from country to country with passport and international currency in hand. Sidewalk cafes with foreign food and entertainment and authentic booths with student-made crafts for sale kept the pesetas, francs, and pecuniae flowing. Occasionally, students took a few min- utes from the actual learning situation to celebrate all they had learned. At the COE Banquet, student office workers honored their employees at the Barn Dinner Theatre. Latin students, and those in modern foreign languages as well, spiced up the menu for their annual banquets with foreign flavors. Although field trips and special events were limited to Mondays and Fridays, some teachers thought that too much time out of class made it hard to finish a term's work. But most students who ventured away from books and into the world felt the time was anything but wasted. I'll probably forget a lot of what's in my books, said Jimmy Harrison. But the places l've seen and people l've met - I could never forget those. sw V im . .,. M. 5 W, ,f,,. W 'A ' Center of attention, UVA senior Bill Blaine advises advanced math students of the challenging curriculum of engineering schools. 100 Speakers - Field Trips K. var ,... ,. it f 1 tg, 42 if w-40 4i2 .M 'H' 1 3' it ll , as-, . X ' gf if my ef w, 4 li No COUrt jester, Jeff Powell ponders the evidence before prosecuting Percy Snodgrass, an accused murderer defended by Cave Spring High School in a mock trial. Roanoke attorney Fred King and Teresa McLawhorn, co-attorney with Jeff, confer on a legal technicality. Funny money puzzles Deidre Perry and Sherry Shepherd as they sell the ojos de Dios hand- crafted by Mrs. Shelia Balderson's Spanish classes for the Roanoke Valley Foreign Language Festival, Buyers purchased international goods with pesetas, francs, and pecuniae, Grief therapist Leo Howard discusses the emotional impact of a terminal illness in Mr. Howard Mack's Thanatology class. Snuggled in thought, senior Diane Wooldridge takes in the mountain scenery at the Valle Crucis. North Carolina retreat. Speakers - Field Trips 101 Q7VIo e Than The Roar Cf The Crowd ln the spotlight or out, actors and musicians look back on more than sore muscles and stage fright. They wore grease paint and costumes from another age. They wore new blue uniforms with gold trimming and tall furry hats. They wore blue choir robes with gold stoles. Perhaps others saw William Flem- ing's performers as one of a group, a part of the team. The performers themselves knew they had to be that, but they also felt that they were far more than just a face in the crowd. The old saying about a chain being only as strong as its weakest link is as true on stage asianywhere else, said senior Ginny Fowler, a veteran of four Fleming Players' productions. Mrs, lDeborahl Mayberry makes each one of us feel im- portant, whether we pull the curtain or smear on make-up or build the sets or work with lights or play the leading roles. We ff X 'XX 3' 5 S... 102 Drama know we're part of a team, she said, but we also know we're an important part of that team. The team of Ginny and Fred Howard wound its way around a Superior rating in state competition with Next, a one-act play directed by Mrs. Deborah Mayberry. In addition, the Fleming Players debuted with See How They Run, a comedy, and ended with a mystery, Ten Little Indians. ln between, they sandwiched another one-act play, The Last of Sherlock Holmes, directed by Dottie Wilson and Robin Anderson: the Christmas Assembly: and Children's Theatre, which toured the city's elementary schools. Each major production required four nights of practice a week for six weeks. lt wasn't always easy fitting two hours of rehearsal into every night, but we all really enjoyed those practices, said junior Jon Whichard. By opening night. the cast was working together as a team. Not only the Drama Department, but the Forensics Team as well brought honors home. Coached by Miss Janet Baker, the Forensics Team entered the Western Dis- trict Forensics Tournament in February and came out winners in three events. Mark Akers placed third in Boys' Extempo- raneous Speaking: Gino Forrest ranked second in Boys' Poetry Reading, and Kevin Watkins received second in Boys' Prose Reading. At the Longwood College Invitational Forensics Meet. Gino brought back the trophy in Boys' Humorous Poetry Reading. osx Xt -:T Who dunnits come to the stage as the Fleming Players present Ten Little Indians. Jon Whichard, Jennie Phillips, Gino Forrest, and Linwood Cannaday look on as Ginny Fowler comforts Cheryl Cromer in the season's finale. Seven Little Indians attract the attention of Vera Claythorn lJennie Phillipsl as she ponders the fate of the three dead characters in the spring production of Ten Little Indians. Good tidings come the way of Jay Hardie as he portrays a shepherd in the Drama Department's Christmas Nativity. Front and center, Kevin Watkins and Terri Snow play opposite one another in the Fleming Players' debut of See How They Run. Mystery theatre presents Cheryl Cromer and Dwayne Guynn in the student-directed one-act play, The Last of Sherlock Holmes. 1 q7VIore Than The Roar Of The Crowd com. Eighty-seven spit-shined their shoes and polished their brass and brushed their blue velveteen hats each week during football season as the Marching Band stepped out to the beat of Drum Major Bill Barham. And during concert season, the eighty-seven practiced scales and perfected measures as Band Director Ullyses Broadneaux wielded the baton. I can't even count the mornings our day began with 7:30 practice, said Bill, or ended well after school was out. Bill said that the Band members took the countless practices and long hours of work because they got far more out of Band than sore muscles, frozen noses, and an occasional blister or two. Mr. Broadneaux really cared about each one of us, and he could relate to us, said Bill. What we are out of the Spot- light is as important to him as what we do in it. In the spotlight, the Marching Band, led by five Majorettes, eight Flag Girls, Q K 5 5 C xi 'PV T O4 Band and fourteen Sabrettes, made a name for itself by performing at almost every foot- ball game, in the Christmas Parade at Salem, and in the Vinton Dogwood Fes- tival, where it won third place honors in its category. The Band also traveled to Cary, North Carolina, for competition. The Concert Band as well kept in step by playing in the city-wide Cavalcade of American Music at the Roanoke Civic Center and at the dedications of the Richard Poff Federal Building and Fallon Park Elementary School. lt received a third-place rating at District Festival at E. C. Glass High School. In addition, the Pep Band played at assemblies and all home basketball games, and the Stage Band, which performed twice at junior high schools, climbed the scales to an Excellent rating in festival competition. The Band rounded out its season of per- formances with a Christmas concert for the school, a formal concert in the spring, and music for Graduation. ff ,. ,V 5 'nj 1.1 F' wx' i SABRETTES - lfront rowl Kim Jones: Tracy Wrenn: Sarah Feather: Susan Butler, Headp Leslee Ledden: Teresa Blackwell: Cindy Sullivan iback rowl Beth Weddle: Donna Frazier: Becky Andersong Cheryl Hart: Jody Moses, Sheila Keelingg Sandy Wilson: Patrice Hayden: Sharon Clark. Decorating for the Homecoming Motorcade, Jody Moses adds finishing touches to the Sabrettes' car. F'fT 1.4 We s 'P 'fees-1 , E C C in ta' 'Q Y: 'il Open-air concert finds the Band playing in down- town Roanoke for the dedication of the Poff Federal , , ' Building Adding a soft touch, Becky Pugh plays for the 1 Cavalcade of American Music. s. fa . r i ' ' , .4 , 1 ,L ,f Z? '7 - If pa : 75, fs, '-' -- : is.. Q- .-gang fr ' A . , 1 :a A .. H g 5 A f 'I F. K' A ' . 4 '. f Q .E A I A l TY in 'K 5 Q ,gg y , 1 .ne MAJORETTES AND FLAG GIRLS - lfront rowl Kim French: Rhonda Calhoun: Sue Santolla, Head Majorettez Twyla Carter: Debbie Pinson, Feature Twirler lback rowl Lisa Lackland: Donna William- son: Dana Naff: Cindy Brumfield, Head Flag Girl: Vicki Wheeling: Nancy Childress: Andrea Washing- ton lnot picturedl Charlotte Earley: Deborah Wimbush. Half-time capers find majorette Kim French per- forming a baton routine for the crowd at Victory Stadium. W. Band 105 g7VIore Than The Roar Of The Crowd com. lf not every soprano was watching the downbeat of Mrs. June C. Perry, Choir Director, in the Choir's finale at gradu- ation, at least there was an excuse. Tears streamed down the cheeks and blurred the eyes of many of the seniors who were singing with the Choir for the last time. lf you had known how the Choir mem- bers felt about the group, each other, and Mrs. Perry, you would understand our reluctance to let go, said Teresa Wise- man, a Choir accompanist for three years. Choir was something we really loved. Perry perfection began to shape the sixty-eight voices in the Girls' Chorus and continued to mold the ninety in the Concert Choir into a nationally-recognized group. Those voices echoed throughout the Roanoke Valley in a series of Bicen- tennial and religious concerts. Joining with band and choir members in other city schools, the Concert Choir and Girls' Chorus sang at the widely-acclaimed Cavalcade of American Music. As sum- mer approached and the July 4 Bicen- tennial celebration grew near, Girls' Chorus and Choir members decked out in red, white, and blue for American Pot- p0urri. a two-night concert held in May that featured soloists as well as the group. During the year, the Choir and Girls' Chorus also heralded the Yuletide season with concerts at Huntington Court United Methodist Church and joined the Band and Drama Department for a school-wide Christmas Assembly. ln addition, the eight Choir members selected for All-Regional Chorus traveled to Danville, Virginia, to perform under the direction of guest conductor Dr. Clair McElfresh. Student Director Robbie Harris felt that those in the Choir kept up the pace because they knew they were part of something very worthwhile. We never doubted for one minute that Mrs. Perry loved her music, he said, and we never doubted that she loved us. 106 Choir Season's finale draws seniors into Choir ranks for one last time at Graduation exercises. Veteran accompanist Teresa Wiseman rounds out her three years with the Choir by playing Twen- tiana for American Potpourri. She compiled more Choir points than any other Choir member ever has. Christmas greetings echo through the gym as W? 3 Terri Lawrence joins Choir members at the Yuletide X assembly, in the spotlight, junior Sheila Keeiing sings Touch Q Me in the Morning at the Choir's two-night spring concert. Singing America's praises, Choir members Debbie Price and Rhonda Calhoun join the Patrick Henry Choir members at the Cavalcade of American Music. Choir 107 Outward-bound issues of the '76 Sabre occupy staffer Luanne Carter's time as she prepares to exchange them with other schools. WE, THE PEOPLE STAFF: Nancy Childress: Debbie Karnes: Trudy Snead: Karen Hall: Cheryl Hart: Sherry Ballard, Co-editor: Danny Martin: Andrea Washington, Co-editor: Becky Pugh: Jennie Phillips, Coaeditor lnot picturedl Susan Greer: Barry King: Megan Lewis: Zelda Marshall: Kevin Watkins. ,Zwr1W awe ff We SABRE STAFF lfront rowl Lisa Shepherd: Kathy COLONEL STAFF: lfront rowl David Klever: Stephenson Lisa Boeh Photography Editor: Anne Barbara Tames: CindvJournell, People Editor: Nancy Cochran Cathy Crawford Luanne Carter: Leslee Kglleyl Photography Editor: Stephanie Diamond, Ledden, Editorial Editor lback rowl Susan Greer: Donna Hall, News Editor: Diana Stull, Business Editor: Greg Surbaugh: Jeff Powell: Cheryl Cromer. Managing Editor: Robert Amos: Manie Hicks: Bart Cregger: Cathy Dickinson: Tim Peters: Barry Simmons: Mrs. Jane Brill, Adviser lnot picturedl Dwayne Guynn: Kurt Kreider: Jeff Moore: Chipper Stiff. O8 Publications Campus Life Editor: Ginny Fowler, Business Man- agerg Susie Hardie. Editor-in-Chief: Sheila Poole, Managing Editor: Sherry Bohon, Academics Editor: Carol Wilson: Mark Richards, Sports Editor lback rowl Sarah Myers: Terri Caldwell: Mindy Brumfield: Cindy Brumfield: Tim Benson: Sarah Wooldridge: Ann Hardie: Mike Brogan: Angie Wilson: Joanie Hutton. n, A We :-:rr ' ' Q, what 1 r : ,:., 1 if 3 2 ,I yy 4. 2 1 2 Av ot just Paper nd Printers Clnk Only those who pulled an all-nighter to make a deadline, peddled popcorn to balance the budget, or scrounged around for all the news that's fit to print can ever understand what a publication really is. There are no rounds of applause for editors. Photographers never hear their names echoing around a stadium. Nobody cheers for a typist. The pressures of scho- lastic publications are so great that the annual sponsor, Miss Nancy Patterson, has been heard to say. Nobody in his right mind would work on high school publications. Mental institutions should give group rates to those who survive a year on publications, she laughed. Yet some sixty students with printer's ink running through their veins manned cameras, pica rulers, and typewriters to produce nine issues of the Sabre, the Bicentennial copy of We, The People. and ' s MW an expanded, more colorful version of the Colonel. Nobody ever realizes the time spent in producing a high-school yearbook, said Colonel Editor-in-Chief Susie Hardie. People think somehow pictures get taken and miraculously appear on a page. What they don't realize is that behind that page is some twenty-four hours of hard work, including interviews. taking and printing pictures, writing the copy and captions, and completing the design. She esti- mated that it took more than 8,000 man- hours after school to produce the 1976 Colonel. News magazine Editor Cheryl Cromer agreed that being on the newspaper is one long lesson in how to panic. Every staffer knows to expect lost or ruined negatives, a tight budget, and printer's mistakes that crop up from nowhere. But one of our main problems this year has been finding news to cover. she commented. Members of the literary magazine faced problems of a different kind. For one thing, said Jennie Phillips, Co-editor, the literary magazine didn't have a period in which to work, and the hour set aside for our meetings on club day didn't begin to scratch the surface. Unlike the news- paper and annual, the staff does not pro- duce all the materials for its publications, but solicits and edits work from any stu- dent or faculty member. Another problem for all the publications was balancing the budget. Even though the literary magazine was printed by stu- dents at the Jefferson Print Shop, it still cost more per copy than the S1 purchase price. To make up the deficit, staff mem- bers peddled pop corn at school. Although some staff members thought being on publications was more trouble than it was worth, most pointed to their work as one of the most memorable parts of their high school career. Both the lite- rary magazine lSecond Place rating in Virginia High School League competitionl and the yearbook, lTrophy and Medalist award winner for four consecutive yearsl point with pride to the honors they have brought home, and the members of the newspaper are proud to see their Sabre ranked a leader in scholastic publications. But it's not tangible awards they'll re- member most. lt was laughing together, hoping to- gether, crying together, and holding to- gether that l'll remember most, said Susie Hardie. And l've got a feeling we've made some friendships that will live a lot longer than the last deadline, she said. When the typewriters are quiet. the darkroom is clean at last, and the file drawers are emptied. there will still be something left of the '76 Colonel that can't be swept up or thrown away like last night's garbage, she pondered. lt seemed impossible, but somehow, we did it anyway. Decision makers Trudy Snead, Mrs. Nancy Rosen- baum, and Debbie Karnes work on the Bicentennial issue of We, the People. Publications 109 5 , in 4 ' ,Q mu, 1-. , ,ff -1 . a 1 I 1 w--1 J' 5 x , MLK-f',, 5,,f , 1 1 L., , X 1-.-W.-. '1 K V W, c A E 'x' ,fri S, I 95. Y,,f J E 2 5 5245 ,g,f?E31 ' Y 'rf X QQ. Wil' Q' 11 ,, wt, 'Qld ,,,. i main., Z! 1 eww WW11, Q . was , O Z' Q gp? e,3:t 11 -.5 , ,am Mr 1 , 1? 1 -is g wk, M1 wa Qmwif .x A.., W are 5 Li 3155: UW? '1 , , 41,1-Q. rp ' 9-,if W ,- 1 lm-1. W1 , ,1 411 V 1' i , V ' , . -2 - 1 , K . M WP 1 , . 6, 112 iii? , ' ,.Q...... 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When you think about it, school, too. was more than six water. some You were all set moved and blanket, the crackers. You started inside. You little green when you your own bed, warm brick buildings, a gym two trailers the down the part he to study the lt was the people who quickly through your life. but left somehow forever changed. It the people who lingered and left it somehow for- lt was thegffpeople vw Safe WHO a few bricksffandry .a mortar. or an oldiflsheet, clothespins, and three big inside, the picking a daffodil for her Steve Harvey. on a trust walk Carolina. of trust finds sophomore Sarah in People 1 1 1 she doesrft mind getting the blues There is an old saying that something about the outside of a horse is good for the inside of a man. Senior Amy Webb agrees. As a candidate for the B rating in Pony Club lthe second highest national ratingl, Amy ought to know. Amy said that the times the outside of her horse made her feel the best inside were at the four Regional Pony Club Rallies she has entered. My horse has never refused a jump at any rally, said Amy. Not only did her horse have to compete in stadium jumping, but also in cross-country and dressage. In ad- dition, Amy joined teammates in racking up points for.stable management and AMY VIRGINIA ADAMS: Girls' Chorus 10: Human Relations Council 12: Karate Club 10: Red Cross 12: S.C.A. 10: Track 10, 11, 12: Volleyball 12. CYNTHlA LOUISE ADAMS JAMES MARK AKERS: D.E.C.A. 11. 12. Co-Reporter 12: Drama 10, 11: F.C.A. 10, 11: Forensics 12: German Club 11: Modern Foreign Language Club 10. 11: Thespians 11, 12, President 12: Cross Country 10: Boys' State 11: Symposium '76 12. JAY AKERS JEFFREY TODD AKERS CINDY A. AKERSON: Girls' Club 10, 12: Human Relations Council 10, 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 10, 12: Red Cross 10, 12: Homecoming Court 10, 12. ANGELIA RENEA ALEXANDER JULIA LYNN ALLEN: Beta Club 11, 122 F.C.A. 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 10. MATTHEW STEVEN ALLEN: V.l.C.A. 11, 12. 112 Seniors by completing written tests. Although Amy admits that she values the ribbons amassed at these rallies the most, l l feel l worked harder for them l, she has also won over 100 ribbons in regular horse shows. But it is not just the competition she loves. l think Dolly jher horsel and Cocoa and Kelly lher poniesl have taught me a lot. lf you stay around horses long enough, you have to develop patience and tolerance. And knowing you've trained a horse who responds well and really trusts you . . . that's just got to make you feel good inside. she said. RENEE COZETTE ALLEN: Campus Life Club 10, 12: Human Relations Council 1O,12:S.C.A. 10. AUDWIN DEJAY ANDERSON: D.E.C.A. 10, 11, 12: F.C.A. 12: Human Relations Council 10, 11.12:S.O.D.A.10,11,12: J.V. Basketball 10: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Basketball 11, 12: Varsity Foot- ball 11, 12: Symposium '76 12. MICHAEL D. ANDERSON REBECCA ANN ANDERSON: C.O.E. 12: Girls' Club 12: Human Relations Council 12: Red Cross 11, 12: Sabrettes 12: S.O.D.A. 11. PAUL LEE ANDREWS: Baseball 10, 11: J.V. Football 10: Track 12: Varsity Foot- ball 11, 12. lRlS APOSTOLOU: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 10, 11. 12: Christmas Court 12: Girls' State 11. DAVID L. ARONSON BILLY JAMES ARRINGTON: Beta Club 12. KYLE JUAN ARTIS: Band 11, 12: Con- cert Choir11,12. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS - Lisa Maner, Vice- President lCoulter Halll: Ginny Fowler, Vice- President lSmith Halll: Dana Franklin, Vice- President lCamper Halll: Jeff Boatwright, Presi- dent: Teresa Blackwell, Secretary: Pam Patrick, Treasurer: Vicki West, Vice-President lHart Halll. Seniors 1 13 DIANA MARIE ASHWELL: C,O.E. F.H.A. 10: F.T.A. 10. DONNA SUE ASHWELL: C.O.E. F.H.A. 10: Girls' Club 10. CONNIE DIANE AYERS: D.E.C.A. 11, Reporter 1 1,Treasurer 123 Drama 10. Girls' Club 10, 11. 12: Sabrettes S.C,A. 10, 11. Foot-stomping and soul-searching music flood school activities throughout the year. Autumn finds Bart Cregger providing baritone sounds for Soul Train at the Homecoming Pep Assembly. Spring sees Pam Patrick harmonizing on Battle Hymn of the RepubIic at Graduation. WM twiki GARY LEE BALL: Band 11, 12: Drama 11. LINDA CHARLENE BALL: D.E,C.A. 10, 11: F.H.A. 10, 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10, 11: Red Cross 10, 11. SHERRY LYNN BALLARD: P,T.S,A. 10, 11, 12: Literary Magazine 11, 12, Prose Editor 1 1, Co-Editor-in-Chief 12. FRED E. BARGER: J,V. Football 10. WILLIAM ROBERT BARHAM: Band 10, 11, 12, Drum Major 121 Spanish Club 10: Stage Band 11,12:V.l.C.A. 12. CYNTHIA L. BAUGHMAN: Beta Club 11, 12: D.E.C,A. 11, 12: French Club 10, 11: S.C.A. 12: Symposium '76 12. 1 14 Seniors . f- I H u g, E: ' az-ff: .22?a-Zrar:af5- , ,125 if , . ,,.,, W, V ,,,VV . , ,,,, , ,,,,,, ' fi 4,Q,f, M9355 ...M M ,M ' 'V 9514,AZfZf , 'FY' ,z ' , , 1 4,3 ft wg . i, , t ,,,' , , ,- not ketties, X GREGORY PRESTON BEASLEY: Drama 11. TONY JAY BECKNER RAYMOND LEE BELCHER: D.E.C.A. 11. 12. DONNA KAY BELL: Class Vice-President 10: D.E.C.A. 12: Drama 10: Spanish Club 10: First Place District D.E.C.A, Public Speaking Contest 12. TERESA ANN BLACKWELL: Class Secre- tary 12: Flag Girls 11: F.T.A. 11, 122 Girls' Club 10, 11. 12. Vice-President 11: Sabrettes 12: S.C.A. 10, 12: Grapplettes 10: Tennis 10: Symposium '76 12. JEAN L. BLANEY: Flag Girls 10, 11, 12. but medals, for this Cooke Most of the giants in the sports world are just that - really big. Wilt Chamber- lain can stare a basketball goal right in the face. Mean Joe Green tips the scales at a mere 245. Joe Frazier can make mincemeat of a boxing bag with a playful pat. Wrestling is one sport when size doesn't really matter, said senior Chuck Cooke. Chuck, who has lost only three regular season matches in four years, said he sometimes drills a move at least a thou- sand times before he uses it in a match. And if I can't beat my opponent physically, I try to psyche him out. One way or the other, Chuck has whipped most of his opponents in district and regional competition. As a senior, he won the Roanoke Valley Christmas Tour- nament, the Western District Tournament. and the Northwestern Regional Tourna- ment in the 105-pound weight class. He qualified for state competition all four years and totaled sixty-seven wins to fourteen losses overall. He was selected Outstanding Wrestler from all the weight divisions at the Northwestern Regional Tournament. Winning is not something Chuck takes lightly. By the time I hit the ninth grade, I had tried almost every sport. but I was never really good at any of them. Wrest- ling gave me another chance, and it feels good to win. I DONALD JEFFREY BOATWRIGHT: Beta Club 11, 12: Chess Club 10: Class President 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 10, 11: Annual 11: Baseball 10, 11. 12: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Football 12: Symposium '76 12. JANIE FRANCES BODY: Art Club 11, 12: R.O.T.C. Club 10, 11. LISA DIANE BOEH: Modern Foreign Language Club 10, 11: P.T.S.A. 11: Red Cross 10, 11: Thespians 10, 11, 12: Newspaper Photography Editor 12. Seniors 1 15 he cuts records, but not for motovvn Those who marvelled at Daryl McCoy's eight-foot standing-broad jump in the fifth grade could look at his track per- formance today and say. You've come a long way. The senior track stand-out broke the school's indoor long jump record set by Tony Easley with a 23'6 leap. He won both the long jump and the triple jump events in District and Regional Tourna- ments and is ranked third nationally. He won first in the state with a 23' 10M long jump. He also runs the 440 relays with the Colonels and his 47' 10W triple jump placed third statewide. All in all. his leaps and laps have accounted for some fifty medals. But he SHERRY RENEE BOHON: Beta Club 11. 12: Drama 10. 11: Girls' Club 10, 11. 12. Vice-President 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12, Chairman 12. Co-Chairman 111 Thes- pians 11. 12: Annual 11, 12. Academics Editor 12: Christmas Court 11: Sym- posium '76 12: Who's Who 11. PAMELA DENISE BONDS: Basketball 10. LISA ELAINE BOOTH: Girls' Club 12. ANGELI R. BOWER: Band 10, 11. JAMES ADAM BOWLING: Tennis 10. TERESA LYNN BOYD AUDREY RORETTA BRADBURN: Red Cross 10, 11. MARK LYNWOOD BRATTON DAVID BOLLES BREENE: Art Club 10: Band 10. 1 16 Seniors doesn't worry too much about medals. and he has even thrown some away. To Daryl, breaking records is more important than piling up medals. Records are made to be broken, he said. l just hope I was made to break them. As he tries to break records, Daryl thinks only of that day's event - no further. l really have to psyche myself up every time I go out. Like most athletes, Daryl admits that he frequently thinks about the Olympics. A guy can't help dreaming, he said. He knows that to most people, 23'6 is a long, long jump. But to Daryl, it's still not long enough. .- 'tb Jr. ' Q 'MW' .. i ff' at REBA JEAN BREWER: Human Relations Council 12: Track 1 1. HENRY LEWIS BRIGHT: Band 10, 11. 12: J.V. Basketball 10: Track 11. PAM ANTIONETTE BRIGHT: Human Relations Council 12. SANDRA DIANE BROOKS: Band 10, 11, 12. WANDA GALE BROOKS: R.O.T.C. Club 11, 12. ADONNA TEREA BROWN: Band 10, 11: Sabrettes 10, 11. Balloon blow-up takes place as seniors Iris Apostolou and Christine Marty decorate their cars for the Homecoming Motorcade to Victory Stadium. DONNA MECHELLE BROWN JEFFREY JAVAN BROWN: Cross Coun- try 12: J.V. Wrestling 10, 11: Track 11: Varsity Wrestling 12. PATRICIA ELAINE BROWN: Concert Choir 11, 12: Drama 10: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Modern Foreign Language Club- 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 1O,11, 12. Seniors 1 17 Father of the bride Stuart Dillon waits for his daughter to say, l do, as Mr, James C. Wood per- forms the vows at the mock wedding sponsored by the Senior Home Economics class. PATTY O. BROWN: Beta Club 12: Human Relations Council 10, 12: S.C.A. 10, 12. Co-Chairman 12: S.O.D.A. 10. 12. GLORIA JEAN BRUFFEY: Concert Choir 11. 12: D.E.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10. DONNA ELLEN BUNDY: Campus Life Club 10. J. ' i i M . ...O f sa ff i1:'ii 'a,.'1:,,,a,. :K f'-.,:-- ....-. A- , .. :a:a.xs:E?fE. e .... ' mf .H al. . - 1,451 .gms 115125. mm, ---- -lag 5 HQ. .. .... ,f -fm-Wwe, :EEFWMW ' '5 ..-.A m,4:m.mMeW.1'a:mwi. W.Wa,,.,W.. m.Mim... ROSLYN CAROL BURNETTE: Concert Choir 11: Girls' Chorus 10: Cheer- leaders 11, 12, Secretary 12. SUSAN JEAN BUTLER: Band 10.11.125 Beta Club 11, 12: Class Vice-President 11: Sabrettes 10, 11. 12. Co-Head 11. Head 12: Symposium '76 12. RANDY ALAN BYRD: Spanish Club 11: Baseball 10: J.V. Football 10. JERRY WAYNE CALDWELL: S.C.A. 12: Varsity Club 10, 11, 12: Baseball 10, 11, 12: Track 10. 11: Varsity Football 9. 10, 11, 12: V.H.S.L. All-Star Football Game 12. JUDY BLANKENSHIP CALLAHAN: D.E.C.A. 10, 11. 1 18 Seniors 1, s 'V' J 1 f Q . my f ,f :. ll A . H ,,-.N:.w.wsM Q:,Ff'w' ,. . .... ,,, , ,,, Q ,W STEPHANIE DENISE CALLOWAY: F.C.A. 12: Human Relations Council 12: Cheer- leaders 12: Track 10. ALDO RAY CAMPBELL: D.E.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Strings 10, 11, 12. JACK LAWRENCE CAMPBELL: J.V. Football 10. JAMES WESLEY CAMPBELL: Band 10: Red Cross 10: R.O.T.C. Club 12: Track 102 Varsity Wrestling 10, 11, 12. LUANNE CARTER: Beta Club 11, 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 11, 12: Newspaper 12: Honors Seminar 11: Symposium '76 12. TWYLA MAIKO CARTER: Band 10, 12: Majorettes 12: Sabrettes 10, 11. 11, CHRISTINE CAROLINE CASAZZA TAMRE SUE CHAMBERS SHEILA JONES CHATMAN: Beta Club 11, 12: Concert Choir 10, 11: Sabrettes 11: S.C.A. 10. picture him in the wirmefs circle The odds were low. The stakes were high. Chipper Stiff came out on top. When the Sabre photographer and veteran of FIeming's first photography class looked at the field of 350 photographs entered in the N 81 W Railway's Photography Contest, he sized up his own entries and came away saying, No way. But the judges disagreed. Although competing against the work of professional as well as amateur pho- tographers, Chipper's natural color portrait of a friend was pinned for first place honors. l was so sure I didn't have a chance that I didn't even'go to the Awards Assembly. When my dad called and told me l'd won not one, but two awards, I just couIdn't believe it. In addition to his first place prize, Chipper also took third place honors for his color picture of the sunset at North Myrtle Beach. He also won third place in Roanoke CoIlege's Insight Photo Contest in the tenth grade. Although Chipper concedes -that it feels pretty good to win a photo con- test, he also admits that there's more to it than receiving prizes. Entering con- tests forces me to look at other photog- rapher's work, and looking at other peo- pIe's work can make me feel pretty hum- ble. Seeing what they have achieved with a camera makes me want to work harder. That's the important part to me, he said. Seniors 119 the original one-woman band JULIE ANN CHEWNING: Concert Choir 11: Drama 10, 11: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 11: Thespians 11, 12. NANCY SUZETTE CHILDRESS: C.O.E. 12: Flag Girls 12: Red Cross 11, 12: Literary Magazine 1 1, 12. BARRY ROBERT CHITWOOD VIRGINIA LEE CHRISTOPHEL: Debate Team 12: D.E.C.A. 10, 11. 12: Girls' Club 10: Human Relations Council 12: S.C.A. 10: D.E.C.A. Student of the Year 10. DAVID MICHAEL CLARK: Band 10: -Drama 12. SHARON ELIZABETH CLARK: Beta Club 11. 12: Concert Choir 11, 12, Secretary 12: F.C.A. 12: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12, Co- President 12, Secretary 11: Girls' Chorus 10: Sabrettes 11, 12: S.C.A. 12: Spanish Club 10: Track 11. MARSHALL BLAKE CLARY: Symposium '76 12. DARENA GAIL COLE CONSTANCE MARIE COLES: D.E.C.A. 11: Human Relations Council 12. 120 Seniors Musicians all have choices to make: what music to practice: what measure to crescendo: what interpretation to use. For senior Paula Peterson, the choices are even more complex. She has to decide what instrument to play. Her choices range from woodwind to reed to brass to double reed. She started playing a flute, branched out to a tenor sax, then took up the cornet. Her music dropped an octave or two when she learned to handle the slide of a big trom- bone, tried the baritone, and thinned her lips around the 'double reed of the bassoon. From double reeds, she switched to single ones, taking the alto and baritone sax in stride. Currently, she is teaching herself to play the clarinet. lt's fun to be able to switch instru- ments, said Paula, who regularly plays trombone in the Band. But if I had specialized in one instrument, I might be more prepared if I decide to major in music in college. Music is but one of Paula's options for a college major. Having taken private art lessons from Mrs. Mary Jane Burtch, a well-known local artist, and having had her own show. she is also considering a career in commercial art. Paula admits that having to choose between art and music is difficult for her. lt's like your friends. You don't try to rank them. You're grateful for them aIl. RONALD RICO COLES: Art Club 12: Chess Club 11: Concert Choir 10. 11, 12: Music Club 12: J.V. Basketball 10: J.V. Football 10. LAVINAJOLINE CONNER: F.C.A.11,12: Human Relations Council 11. CHARLES OTWAY COOKE: F.C.A. 9, 10. 11,12:S.C.A. 12: Varsity Club 9,10,11. 12, President 12: Cheerleaders 12: J.V. Wrestling 8: Varsity Wrestling 9. 10, 11, 12: Outstanding Wrestler Northwest Region 12. JEFF COULTER CHARLENE RENEA COUSSER WILLIAM RICKY COWDEN RHONDA KAY COX: C.0.E. 12: Concert Choir 10. 11: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12: P.T.S.A. 10. 11,12: Red Cross 10. KATHERINE MARIE CRAIG: Art Club 12: Chess Club 12: F.C.A. 12: P.T.S.A. 11: Basketball 12: Track 12. BARTON B. CREGGER: Band 10, 11, 12, President 12: Beta Club 11, 12: S.C.A. 12: Spanish Club 11, 12: Stage Band 11, 12: Newspaper 12: Symposium '76 12. Kid stuff finds Tony Ramey taking his little brother for a walk on a Sunday afternoon and Cheryl Cromer swinging with her new friend Eddie Layne at the Beta Club's Christmas party for the Baptist Child- ren's Home. Seniors 121 ROSLYN LEONA CREWS: Band 10. 11. 12: Beta Club 12: S.C.A. Chairman 12. CYNTHIA LEIGH CRITZER: Concert Choir 12: Girls' Chorus 10. CHERYL LOUISE CROMER: Beta Club 11, 12: Drama 10, 11, 12: French Club 10, 11. 12, Secretary 11: F,T.A. 10, 11. 12: German Club 11. 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 11, 12: S.C.A. 12: Thes- pians 11, 12, Vice-President 12: News- paper 11, 12, Managing Editor 12: Honors Seminar 10. 11, 12: Symposium '76 12. TANDY LEA DALES SHARON KAY DALTON: Beta Club 11, 12: Concert Choir 11: D.E.C.A. 10, 11. 12, Vice-President 1 1. am WL L -pa fx wi age? J He ,i A fail defies, V ....,.. ,... , .. ..,. ,.,r .::.c.. V- ,Mg . ., . :s:1:,r-:af-r.- ,ra-1. . my M, , ..H,ngM-..,-.-N-,.,.1r.aa:frf!: , -- If ,MM -ur- rw 'fa 11 .f '-nf . as a .'fa:..f--.mac 1 , : 'ev' QI' --'was asf: :lr .. -- i. , -if - 1' WS:-::'1a-:I W .,'14svff::f1.e:mlF'2: 2w Q se m : .rr FREDDIE DEEL JOEL RlCHARD DEHART: Art Club 10, 11. BRENDA DARLENE DEWS Sound asleep describes Mike Erdmann as he catches forty winks before battling quadratic formulas. 122 Seniors part of an army that doesn't wear guns Several Fleming students can call themselves the preacher's kid. but few can lay claim to the title of the preachers' kid. Since both his father and mother are ordained ministers in the Salvation Army. senior Marty Clary can. Admittedly proud of his parents for being the kind of people they are. Marty said he learned lessons about stewardship at an early age. It is easier to give money than time to the church. he said. but God's work needs both. Marty said he tries to give his'time as well as his money by driving the Salvation Army van part-time. Twice on Sunday and two nights during the week, he picks up people at their homes and drives them to the Salvation Army Church on Salem Avenue. Marty admits that being the preachers' kid hasn't always been easy. Although my parents don't put pressure on me. some people expect me to set an example in everything I do. he said. Marty knows that it is not easy to set an example, nor is it easy to follow one. I look at my DGFGFIIS and see the work they have done for God through the Salvation Army. They've always left the world a better place than they found it, he said. I think it would be impossible to live up to their examples. but. with God's help, l can try. STEPHANIE HELEN DIAMOND: Beta Club 11, 12, Secretary 12: Latin Club 10: Modern Foreign Language Club 11, 12: S.C.A. 11, 12, Co-Chairman 11, Par- liamentarian 12: Annual 11, 12. Campus Life Editor 12: Cheerleaders 10: Gym- nastics 10: Symposium '76 12. TEOUILLA RENE DICKERSON: F.H.A. 10 CATHY LYNNE DICKINSON: Beta Club 11, 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 10, 11. 12: S.C.A. 10: Newspaper 12: Symposium '76 12. STUART MONCURE DILLON: Beta Club 11 ,122 F.C.A. 10. 11, 12: Latin Club 10. 11: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Baseball 10. 11: Who's Who 12. TERESA GAYLE DILLON: Art Club 10: D.E.C.A. 10: Human Relations Council l 12:V.I.C.A.12. RITA LYNNE DIX: Basketball 10: Volley- ball 10. CARL JACKSON DOANE: Concert Choir 11 12 RHONDA LEIGH DOBBINS: Beta Club 12: Girls' Club 10, Spanish Club 10: Homecoming Court 12. CRYSTAL DAWN DOWNEY: Art Club 12: Girls' Club 11: Red Cross 10, 11. Seniors 123 JANICE MARIE DREW: Human Relations Council 11, 12: Karate Club 10: Red Cross 12: Spanish Club 10. PAMELA DELOIS DREW: Band 10. 12: Human Relations Council 10: Volleyball 10. GLENDA SUE DUDLEY: Beta Club 11, 12 -H - - a step in the write direction lt's a long way from a by-line in the New York Times, but senior Donna Hall feels her part-time job with the Roanoke Times is at least a step in the right di- rection. As an editorial assistant, she types, answers the phone, runs errands. works computers, and clips stories off the A. P. wire service. Sometimes she samples even bigger game - taking obituaries over the phone or jotting down livestock and stock exchange reports. And once, she laughed, I really made the big time - with a two-inch story on a dinner meeting. Admitting that journalism is kind of like an incurable disease. Donna said that she was first bitten by it as a typist for the Sabre. the school newspaper. From there, she said, I was drafted onto the news staff, where I began to write stories rather than just type them. Although Donna said that at times she never wants to see another newspaper, she admits that she gets a special joy out of seeing something she has typed in print. She looks forward to writing, not just typing, for a professional newspaper Sometimes it's easier for me to write than to say how I feeI, she said. But when I get that first by-line, it won't be hard to say how I feel then. DAVID WAYNE DUNCAN KAREN SUE DUNCAN: D.E.C.A.10. CHARLOTTE ANITA EARLEY: Art Club 123 Flag Girls 11, 123 Human Relations Council 11. 122 Karate Club 10: S.C.A. 10: Spanish Club 10, WENDELL LEWIS EASLEY: Tennis 10. 11. DEBRA KATHLEEN EDWARDS: Concert Choir 12. CATHY SUE ELLIS 124 Seniors IRA MARION ENTSMINGER. JR. TRINA CAROL EPPERLY: D.E.C.A. 11, 12, President 12: Human Relations Council 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10: First Place District D.E.C.A. Sales Demo Contest12. MICHAEL GEORGE ERDMANN: Band 1O,11,12. SARAH LYNNE FEATHER: Band 10, 11, 12, Secretary 12: Girls' Club 12: Human Relations Council 12: Red Cross 11: Sabrettes 10, 11, 12. Co-Head 12: Spanish Club 10. CHERYL RENEE FERGUSON: Girls' Club 1O.12: Red Cross 10, 12. REBECCA LYNN FERGUSON: Girls' Club 10. S!r8iChing Out for a noon break. senior Joy Watkins soaks up the sun of an unusually warm winter. WINSTON CLAY FEWOX: Band 10: D.E.C.A.1O.11,12. AUDREY LYNN FIDLER: Red Cross 11: Spanish Club 10. BONNIE M. FINNEY: Concert Choir 12: Girls' Chorus 10. Seniors 125 Curtain call lures characters from two one act plays front and center. In Next rated superior at regional competition, Ginny Fowler portrays Sgt Thech and Fred Howard portrays Marlon Cheever The Last of Sherlock Holmes finds Jennie Phillips lrightl cast as Mrs. Hudson PEGGY VICTORIA FLETCHER: Art Club 12: Beta Club 12. BONNIE SUE FLINCHUM RANDY DEAN FORREST: F.C.A. 12: Varsity Club 12: Baseball 10, 11: Varsity Basketball 11. CHRISTOPHER EMANUEL FOWLER: Concert Choir 10, 11: Red Cross 10: Spanish Club 10. VIRGINIA ANN FOWLER: Beta Club 11, 12: Class Vice-President 12: Drama 11, 12: Thespians 12: Annual 11, 12, Busi- ness Manager 12, People Editor 112 Governor's School for the Gifted 11: Honors Seminar 10, 11: National Merit Commended Student 12: Symposium '76 12. CYNTHIA JANNELL FRACTION: Band 10, 11: Basketball 10, 11, 122 Track 10, 11: Volleyball 10. LINDA KAYE FRALIN: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10. CECELIA ANN FRANKLIN: P.T.S.A. 10, 12: Basketball 10, 12. DANA MICHELLE FRANKLIN: Band 10: Class Vice-President 12: Concert Choir 11: Drama 11: F.C.A. 11, 12: F.H.A. 11: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: Human Relations Council 10, 11, 12: Red Cross 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, Co-Reporter 10: Cheer- leaders 10, 11, 12: Co-Head 12, Head 10: Track 10, 11: Symposium '76 12. 126 Seniors LARRY BURTON FRENCH: Beta Club 12: Chess Club 10: Class Vice-President 11: F.C.A. 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12. Co-Reporter 10: Varsity Club 12: Baseball 10. 11, 12: Symposium '76 12. FREDA ANN GALLOWAY: Human Rela- tions Council 10, 11, 123 Red Cross 10, 11, 12. SUSAN DELAINE GAPP BRENDA JOYCE GEARHEART NATHAN SCOTT GEARHEART AMY LYNN GIBSON CONNIE EILEEN GILLS VICKIE CAROL GOODMAN KAREN S. GRAHAM: V.l.C.A. 11, 12, President 12. Secretary 1 1. no trombones for this music man Thank you, Lord is not only a well- loved gospel song, but could also be the theme for members of the Joseph Mayo Community Choir. In its first year of existence. the Community Choir is be- coming well-known in the Roanoke Valley. We're young, and we have so much to be thankful for, said Joe. One of the things he is most thankful for is the dedication -of the sixty choir members who meet for a two-hour prac- tice once a week. We wanted anyone who was serious about singing to join, explained Joe. Most of the Choir mem- bers are Black students from Fleming. but the Choir was open to any young adult in the Roanoke ValIey. The Choir was formed about the mid- dle of January. a few weeks before its first appearance at the Black History Week Program. Without the help of music books, Joe taught the group music and words for a twenty-minute program of gospel songs. Roy Hughes, our pianist. was a great help in getting us going, said Joe. When it came time for our debut. we had gotten it altogether. Dressed in colorful pastel outfits, the Community Choir opened to a standing ovation at the Civic Center. From then on, it has been very much in demand for gospel sings throughout the state. We are grateful for the warm reception we seemvto get wherever we sing, said Joe. His group hopes to keep on making joyful noises for the Lord for a long time. Seniors 127 SUSAN LOUISE GREER: Beta Club 11. 12: Forensics 12: F.T.A. 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: P.T.S.A. 12: S.O.D.A. 12: Spanish Club 10: Literary Magazine 12: Newspaper 11, 12: Symposium '76 12. CYNTHIA GIGI GREGORY: S.C.A. 10: V.l.C.A. 12. WILLIAM BRUCE GREGORY getting geared up for school It takes a special driver's license, but that's not all. It takes a persistent alarm clock, but that's still not all. It also takes a sensitive nose to sniff out illegal smokers, and not-so-sensitive ears to someone who sneaks a smoke on her bus, and occasionally, she has to put up with going to my job, drown out noisy students. Senior Teresa Dillon, a school bus driver for Roanoke County Schools, passes all of these requirements. After nine days of viewing films and taking behind-the-wheel training on a thirty- five foot yellow bus, she took a written and driving test for a chauffeur's license. Each morning an alarm clock blasts her from bed at 6:00 A.M. and sends her on a two-hour route to Glenvar High School. DWAYNE THOMAS GUYNN: Drama 11 12: F.c.A. 11: S.C.A. Vice-President 12: Varsity Club 11: Newspaper 11, 12: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Football 11, 12 Symposium '76 12. MARILYN LESLIE HAIRSTON ROBERT RICHARD HALE, JR. DONNA LYNN HALL: Beta Club 11, 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 12: P.T.S.A. 11: Newspaper 11, 12, News Editor 12: Honors Seminar 11: Sym- posium '76 12. KAREN HALL: Art Club 12: Campus Life Club 12: D.E.C.A. 10, 12, District Vice- President 12: Literary Magazine 12. TAMMY REA HAMMOND 128 Seniors admitted Teresa. Teresa said that driving a bus isn't las hard as it looks, but having the res- ponsibility for all those lives gets to me sometimes. She said that getting up at 6:00 A.M. never gets any easier for her. Getting up at the crack of dawn is the worst part of my job, she said. lf I didn't like the kids so much, I don't think you'd find me behind the wheel that early in the morning. MARTHA SUSAN HARDIE: Beta Club 11, 12: Latin Club 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 12, Co-Reporter 10: Annual 11, 12. Academics Editor 11. Editor-in-Chief 12: Gymnastics 10: Volleyball 10: D.A.R. Good Citizenship Award 12: Symposium '76 12. KENNETH LEE HARPER: Concert Choir 10, 11, 12: D.E.C.A. 10, 11, 12: J.V. Football 10. DONALD LEE HARRIS MARCUS ANTHONY HARRIS: Concert Choir 10, 11, 12: J.V. Football 10. ROBERT KIMBROUGH HARRIS: Beta Club 11, 12: Concert Choir 10. 11, 12, Regional 11, 12, Student Director 12, Vice-President 12: Drama 10: S.C.A. 12: Varsity Basketball Statistician 11, 12: Boys' State 1 1: Symposium '76 12. JAMES EDWARD HARRISON, JR.: Band 10: Beta Club 11, 12: F.C.A. 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 10, 11: Cross Country 11: J.V. Football 10: Track 10, 11. RITA LORRAINE HARRISON DEBORA ANNETTE HARVEY: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 11: Red Cross 10, 11. STEVEN WILKES HARVEY: F.C.A. 12: Human Relations Council 12: S.C.A. 12: Spanish Club 11: Track 12: Boys' State 11: Symposium '76 12. All keyed-up, senior Debra Jones completes a typing assignment for a block typing class. Seniors 129 FAYLEEN MARIE HASKINS WILLIAM F. HAWKINS RANDY CORNELIUS HAWLEY: French Club 10. PATRICE MICHELE HAYDEN: D.E.C.A. 12: Girls' Club 12: Red Cross 12: Sabrettes 12: S.C.A. 10. STEVEN VINCENT HAYES TIM LYNN HAYES: D.E.C.A. 11: Cross Country 12: J.V. Basketball 10. Kwiz contestant Tommy Ribble adds twenty points to the score to help Fleming defeat Fries High School on Klassroom Kwiz. Tommy and his teammates, Ginny Fowler and Susie Hardie, won five games, two with perfect scores. MARK A. HAYSLETI' LINDA SUE HIGHBERGER: Concert Choir 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10. PATRICIA LOIS HILL: Art Club 12: D.E.C.A. 10. 130 Seniors no Caddies at his couritty club Maybe Joe Sarver can take as much credit as anyone else for bringing the hurrahs back to Colonel Country. Tired of apathy in the cheering section, he gather- ed together thirty-three friends who thought Fleming had a lot worth yelling about, ordered red and white lettered jerseys for each of them, and the Country Club was born. lt's not a club in the real sense of the word, admitted Joe. We don't have officers, a sponsor, or a constitution, and any senior can join. But we get the job done, he added. The job of Country Club '76 is simply to arouse school spirit. Country Clubbers cheering section. be a Country Club. I' FREDRICK W. HODGES: Band 10, 11, 12: Track Manager 10. JERRY LEE HOLDREN RAYMOND MARK HOLDREN: F.C.A. 11: Varsity Club 11. 12: V.I.C.A. 11, 12: J.V. Football 103 Varsity Football 1 1. E. DAVID HOLDWAY: Cross Country 123 Track 12. OWEN DOUGLAS HOLLAND DONNA MARIE HOLLAR JULIE ANN HORVATH: Red Cross 12. TAMMY LEIGH HOWARD: Beta Club 11. 123 Girls' Club 10, 11, 12, President 12: S.C.A. 11, 12, Co-Chairman 11: Cheer- leaders 10, 11, 12: Christmas Court Queen 12: Symposium '76 12. ELIZABETH ANNE HUFF: F.C.A. 12: F.H.A. Secretary 10: Modern Foreign Language Club 11: Spanish Club 10. Seniors 131 sit together at assemblies and games and try to have different gimmicks for each event - a special cheer. a painted ban ner, anything to add a little life to the Joe admits that he's proud to cheer with the all-senior Country Club '76 and hopes the other classes will stay in step by keeping up the tradition. We've all come away with sore throats. but the school has been infected by a new surge of spirit, Joe added. The name may change from year to year. but as long as there are people who care, there'll always DREAMA DAWN HUNT: Campus Life Club 10. 11, President 11: D.E.C.A. 11, 12, Vice-President 12: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12, Vice-President 12: Girls' Club 11, 12, Human Relations Council 11, 12: Cross 10. 11, 12: Symposium '76 12. ROBERT GLENN HURST: D.E.C.A. 11,12 STEPHANIE ANGELA JACKTER: Art Club 10, 12,Treasurer 10. HELEN JACOBS KENNETH LEE JANNEY, ll: D.E.C.A. 10. 11, 12. RANDAL ALAN JANNEY Red college makes a Wiseman even wiser Most college-bound seniors spend sleepless nights imagining what their first few days on the big campus will be like. Senior Teresa Wiseman has no need to toss and turn. She has already been there. Selected for the Junior Summer Scholar Program at Roanoke College. Teresa enrolled for a four-week workout after the eleventh grade. Together with regular college students. she attended five hours of lecture and laboratory work each morning in a class called Modern Concept of Biology. Used to a schedule of hard science and math courses at Fleming, Teresa said that this course was especially difficult because it concen- trated a year's work into one month. ANGELA OUINTELLA JEFFERSON: Con- cert Choir 11, 12: Karate Club 10: Red Cross 12. DEBRA LYNN JEFFRIES: Art Club 12: S.C.A. 12: Track 11. CARSAUNDRA EULALlA JOHNSON: Girls' Chorus 10: Knitting Club 11: S.C.A. 10. 132 Seniors We covered a week's material every day we met, she said. Getting used to a different style of teaching took some adjusting, too. Teresa said her professor. Dr. Philip C. Lee, lectured more than most high- school teachers do, and that more res- ponsibility was placed on the individual student. Because the people in my class really wanted to learn, there were no dis- cipline problems or class cut-ups, she said. For Teresa, one thing about the course was familiar. The almost straight-A stu- dent at Fleming pulled through four lec- ture tests, a lab test, and a final exam. Her reward: another A. Winter wonderland lures seniors Jeffrey Wright lleftl and Richard Salmon outside to work on art projects. February temperatures in the eighties kept snow to a few brief flurries. CLARENCE LEE JOHNSON DANNY LEE JOHNSON: J.V. Basketball 101J.V. Football 10. RICHARD LEE JOHNSON: Beta Club 11. 12: French Club 11, 12: Tennis 11, 12: Honors Seminar 11, 12: National Honor Society 10, 11, 12: Who's Who 11. DENNIS WANE JONES DONNIE LOUIS JONES: Concert Choir 12: R.O.T,C. Club 10, 12: J,V. Football 10. STEPHEN JEROME JONES: J.V. Football 10: Track 10, 11, 12: Varsity Football 11, 12. TONY NEIL JONES: J.V. Football 10. WILLIAM WATSON JONES, JR.: J.V Wrestling 12: Varsity Wrestling 12. CYNTHIA LEE JOURNELL: Drama 12: F.T.A. 11, 12: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12. Treasurer 11: Latin Club 10: Annual 11. 12, People Editor 12: Grapplettes Trea- surer 1O: Symposium '76 12. Seniors 133 JUNE VICTORIA JUMPER: F.H.A. 12: Human Relations Council 12: Red Cross 12. PHILLIP CHARLES JUSTICE: Cross Country 10, 1 1: Track 10, 11. KURT STEFAN KAISER: Human Rela- tions Council 12: Tennis 10: A.F.J.R.O.T.C. Squadron Commander 12. Proud parent, Mr, James E. Harrison, Sr., talks with friends at his son Jimmy's Baccalaureate service. DEBORAH MARIE KARNES: Art Club 10: Beta Club 12: Concert Choir 12: D.E.C.A. 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10: S.C.A. 10: Literary Magazine 12. KAREN LEE KASEY: Band 10, 11: Red Cross 11. ANNA MICHELLE KEELING: Human Relations Council 11, 12: Red Cross 11. 12. KITTY CAROL KEITH NANCY LYNN KELLEY: Beta Club 11, 12: Class Vice-President 11: Drama 11: Forensics 12: F.T,A. 10, 11, 12: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: Human Relations Coun- cil 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 11: S.C.A. Co-Vice Chairman 11: S.O.D.A. 11: Spanish Club 10: Annual 11, 12, Photography Editor 12: Cheerleaders 10: Homecoming Court 10. 12, Maid of Honor 12: Symposium '76 12. ROBERT E. KELLEY 134 Seniors 4 1' ' CYNTHIA JANE KENDALL: Concert Choir 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10. JOHN JAY KENNETT: Concert Choir 10, 11, 12. DAVID KENT KESSLER: J.V. Football 10: Track 10, 11. DAVID BRUCE KIBLER, Ill: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Football 1 1. REBINA GAYE KIMBERLING: Campus Life Club 10, 11, 12, President 12: Con- cert Choir 11, 12: Drama 10, 11: Girls' Chorus 10: Red Cross 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10. KIMBERLY SUE KlMMONS:D.E.C,A.10, 11, 12: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Homecoming Court 11, 12. portrait of an arti Some people may think of thirteen as an unlucky number, but the members of Brotherhood don't agree. Now thirteen members strong, the band has come a long way from the first time it played in a talent show at the Y.M.C.A. just two years ago or first cashed a paycheck for playing at the Ruffner Prom. Original band member and bass guitarist Kyle Artis remembers those early days clearly. Mike Waller, Marty Akerson, and I got together a few people we knew played instruments pretty well, and Brotherhood began. Practicing for two hours three nights a week, Brotherhood focused on new funk and built its repertoire by playing along with records. What we play now depends on who we're playing for. We try to be versatile, since we play for all age groups, Kyle said. The group plays somewhere on most weekends and stays booked during holi- day seasons, and it played at Fleming's Homecoming and Christmas Dances. Brotherhood often demands as high as S300 per dance, but Kyle is quick to add that making money is not the group's only incentive. Seeing people enjoy our music is a reward in itself. he said. THOMAS D. KINGERY LISA ROBIN LACKLAND: Flag Girls 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10: Spanish Club 10. TERESA DAVIS LAWRENCE: Red Cross 10,12:V.l.C.A.12. Seniors 135 TERRI LYNN LAWRENCE: Concert Choir 11, 12: F.T.A. 10, 11: Girls' Chorus 10 ROBERT BRIAN LAWSON: V.I.C.A. Newspaper 11, 12. LESLEE ANN LEDDEN: Beta Club 11 F.T.A. 11, 121 Girls' Club 10, 11, Sabrettes 10, 11, 12, Co-Head S.C.A. 10, 11, 123 Newspaper 11 Editorial Editor 123 Grapplettes Symposium '76 12. AVIS MARIE LEE: French Club 103 Girls Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10: Red Cross 11 12. ANNE MARIE LENESKI JAMES RODNEY LESTER CATHY DENISE LEVESY DENNIS OWEN LIGHT: Baseball Man ager 10. RENITA LYNN LIGHTFOOT: Red Cross 1O,12. ,fi I 5 Language lessons come alive as Spanish student Renee Allen Irightl and Latin student Peggy Fletcher try their hands with pifiatas and togas 136 Seniors music makes her go ,round the world Romania or bust could be the slogan of the fifty-five young people in Sing Out Roanoke Valley as the group inches its way to Europe with a song and a dance. One of those joining the entourage is senior Sharon Dalton, who has been with the group for two years. And I love it! she exclaimed. She loves it for many reasons. For one thing, she enjoys being with students from other Roanoke Valley high schools. She also likes the experience it gives her as a choreographer, since she makes up the dances that go along with each song. Most of all, she likes making people happy with her songs. The people she helps make happy band. ' Although individual performers in Sing Out receive no pay, the group charges a minimum of S50 for a per formance if the audience has to pay. The money they earn goes to finance their three-week trip to Romania, where they have been invited to perform at least a dozen concerts. There's an old saying I that music makes the world go 'round, that makes us go 'round the world. VICTORIA DENISE LIPSCOMB JAMES NEAL LOVE: S.C.A. 111 Baseball 1O,11,12. KENT ALAN LOVEJOY: Beta Club 11, 122 Tennis 10. 11. 12. MARTHA JO LYNCH LISA ELLEN MANER: Class Vice-Presi- dent 125 Red Cross 123 S.C.A. Chairman 12. RONALD BARRY MANN: Band 10, 11, 12: D.E.C.A. 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 10. ZELDA SUE MARSHALL: Art Club 12: Girls' Club 125 Literary Magazine Art Editor 12. DEBRA JEAN MARTIN VICKIE LEE MARTIN Seniors 137 range from elementary school children to senior citizens, and all ages seem to respond to the mixture of folk rock and love songs the group brews up. Their singing is accompanied by a twelve-piece said Sharon. ln our case, it is the music CHRISTINE MARIE MARTY: Beta Club 11. 12: French Club 102 Girls' Club 10, 11.12:P.T.S.A. 10: S.C.A. 11, 12. HARVEY WALTER MATHIS: Debate Team 12. GERALD HAYES MAXEY: J.V. Wrest- ling 10, Varsity Wrestling 11. VICKIE LYNN MAXEY: Concert Choir 11. 121 Girls' Chorus 10. VERONICA GAIL MAXFIELD: D.E.C.A. 10, 12. ARTHUR NEIL MCCOY: R.O.T.C. Club 10, 11, 12: Baseball 10: J.V. Football 10: Varsity'FootbaII 12. DARYL W. MCCOY1 Track 10, 11, 12. FATIMA SUSANNE MCCULLOUGH SANDRA LEIGH MCFALLS: F.H.A. 12. no reason to rock the boat By any standards, Fred Barger is no little guy. But the 5'1O senior didn't always feel so big his first weeks of Coast Guard Reserve Boot Camp in Cape May. New Jersey. From the moment you step on boot camp soil, there's no doubt about who's in charge, said Fred. Most of your hair goes, you line up for more shots than you can count, and you spend so much time in the water that you look like a prune. he laughed. But Fred feels that he got far more from boot camp than short hair, sore arms, and a water-logged body. I think my training will help me land a good job as an auto engineer or a machine operator in a power plant, he said. But the best thing about boot camp was the friends I made, he continued. We went through a lot of hard times together. Fred and his friends learned that Coast Guard Reserve is more than just dressing up in fancy uniforms and making sure boaters at Smith Mountain Lake have on life preservers. There's an old saying in the Coast Guard that you have to go out to rescue someone, but you don't have to come back. When I realized that that was what the Coast Guard was all about, it was a little easier to take orders, and I was a little prouder of my uniform and my rating and even my short hair. 138 Seniors at Q 'i i fi Bleacher buddies Gary Yandle and Steve Harvey watch with mixed emotions as the last pep assembly ends. MELISSA TREMEN MCGEORGE: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12. RHONDA E. MCGRADY: D.E.C.A.1O,11. TERESA ANN MCLAWHORN: Beta Club 11, 123 Concert Choir 125 F.C.A. 11, 12, President 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 123 Basket- ball 1O, 11, 12: Tennis 10, 11, 123 Sym- posium '76 12. DERECK C. MEADOR ANTHONY RAY MILLSAPSZ D.E.C.A. 12: Golf 10, 12. ROY MITCHELL, JR. STEPHANIE MIRANDA MOON JEFF DEAN MOORE: Varsity Club 11, 12: Baseball 10, 11, 12: Varsity Football 10. 11,12. THERESA LYNN MORRIS Seniors 139 JO ANNE MOSES: Girls' Club 10, 12, Treasurer 105 C.O.E. 12, Red Cross 113 Sabrettes 12: Spanish Club 10. MARIE BERNEDETTE MOSES: D.E.C.A. 11, 12: Girls' Club 1 1. 12. KENT AUSTIN MURPHY KATHYRN L. MUSSELMAN: Concert Choir 11, 125 Girls' Chorus 10. DANA GAIL NAFF: Concert Choir 11. 12. Choir Cabinet 12: Flag Girls 11, 123 F.T.A. 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12. ROBERT TYRONE NANCE DARLENE L. NAPPER: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: Human Relations Council 10. 11, 12. TINA MARIE NICHOLS: Girls' Club 10. 11, 12: Spanish Club 103 Cheerleaders 10, 11: Homecoming Court 10, 11. ROGER WAYNE NORRELL: Chess Club 10, 11, 12: Concert Choir 10, 11. Regional 11: Human Relations Council 10, 11, 12: Karate Club 10, 11: R.O.T.C. Club 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 10, 11: Varsity Club 10, 11, 12: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Football 1 1. 12. Leader of the pack, Duncan Williams lcenterl joins Joe Mayo. Linwood Cannaday, and Larry French in setting the style for Greasy Fifties Day. 140 Seniors 1? '? 1' W4 , g'r'2x:1 Q-9 V she doesn't mind going to the dentist lt's no secret that most people don't relish the thought of a trip to the dentist's office. But senior Susan Butler doesn't mind at all. In fact, she goes there almost every day. As a dental assistant in the office of her father, Dr. Wendell H. Butler, Susan answers the phone, makes appointments, seats patients, develops x-rays. and sterilizes the instruments. One time, she held the hand of a little girl who was afraid to have her tooth pulled, but Susan said her father relaxes his patients by talking to them and explaining exactly what he is doing. His patients don't stay scared of him for long. she laughed. Susan feels that the greatest benefit of her job has been meeting and learning to deal with people on a One-10-One basis. Although she has no intention of be- coming a dentist herself, her job has confirmed her interest in another medically-related field - speech pathol- ogy. She also said that she feels more at ease working for her father than for someone else. He's good about letting me off for school activities, she said. I play clarinet in the Band. He under- stands when I need to play my own instrument instead of sterilizing his. a-New .. -1- 'Ei tl qi, . 1 ff Q 'I 1 2 Q. V g . gf' a.,5:H.': ' GARRY LYNN OTEY PAMELA DENICE OTEY: Tennis 10. BILLIE GENE OVERSTREET: Concert Choir 10, 11, 12, Head Librarian 12: Human Relations Council 12: S.C.A. 12. RHONDA ELISE OWEN: Art Club Presi- dent 12: French Club 11, 12: Human Relations Council 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 11, 12: Red Cross 10: S.O.D.A. 11. I VICKI SUE PACETTI: Drama 12: Girls' Club 10, 11. 12. MELVIN REX PAGANS: Tennis 10. JULIA LYNN PALMER: Band 10: Beta Club 12: Grils' Club 10, 12: Human Relations Council 10, 12: Red Cross 10, 12: S.O.D.A. 10. 12: Honors Seminar 12. ELAINE VIRGINIA PARKER LINDA PATRICK Seniors 141 PAMELA ODELLA PATRICK: Band 11 12, Treasurer 123 Concert Choir 10 11 12, choir cabinet 12, Regional 12: Class Treasurer 12: Human Relations Council 10, 11, 12: Karate Club 10, 11, Secre- tary 11: Red Cross 12: S.C.A. 10. BEVERLY DENISE PAYNE: Art Club 11 Concert Choir 11, 125 French Club 103 Girls' Chorus 10, Girls' Club 101 Human Relations Council 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 11: Pep Club 10: Red Cross 11. 12, Secretary 12: S.C.A. 10: Girls' State 11. TONY PENN no u-haul needed for his moves Most people think a king is someone who sits -on a throne. And they think a bishop is someone who heads a church. And they think a pawn is the place where valuables are hocked. Senior Daryl Drew knows better. As Fleming's chess cham- pion, he takes terms like these in stride and goes on to more important things - like winning. By studying chess books and keeping up with the strategy of his favorite chess player, Petrosian, Daryl has managed to beat almost every Ruffner and Fleming student he tackles, sometimes in as few as four moves. But the chess board is not the only place where he knows his moves. On the wrestling mats as well, he is a VICKIE LYNN PERDUE ROY WILLIAM PERIGEN. JR.: Campus Life Club Secretary-Treasurer 12. WILLIAM TIMOTHY PETERS: Beta Club 11, 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 125 Newspaper 11, 12: J.V. Basketball Manager 102 Varsity Basketball Manager 10. PAULA LYNN PETERSON: Art Club 12: Band 10, 11, 12, Treasurer 11, Vice- President 123 Beta Club 11, 123 German Club 10, 11, 12, Vice-President 11 Pep Band Director 125 Stage Band 11 123 Honors Seminar 113 Symposium '76 12: Who's Who 1 1. JENNIE ELIZABETH PHILLIPS: Concert Choir Accompanist 10, 11, 12: Drama 10, 12: F.T.A. 11, 12: Girls' Club 10, 12: Red Cross 101 S.C.A. 10, 11, 123 Literary Magazine 11, 12, Co-Editor 12. Trea- surer 12: Grapplettes 10: Christmas Court 12: Symposium '76 12. JUDITH DIANNE PHILLIPS: Concert Choir 11: D.E.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Red Cross 10, 1 1. 142 Seniors champion at 185 pounds, having gone undefeated until the State Tournament, where he placed sixth. Chess and wrest- ling have a lot in common, he said. I like the one-on-one competition and the thinking aspects of both activities. Although Daryl likes chess a lot, he admits he likes wrestling more than anything. and hopes to wrestle pro- fessionally some day. Most people want to become doctors or professors, said Daryl, but all I ever wanted was to be- come a pro wrestler. And scouts who know predict he can win in the big time as well. With kings and bishops on his side, how can he lose? LINDA JOYCE PHILPOTT: Beta Club 11 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 11. MAFITY WAYNE POFF: V.I.C.A. Trea- surer 12. SHEILA ANN POOLE: Beta Club 11, 12, Vice-President 12: French Club 11, 12, Vice-President 12: Annual 11, 12, Man- aging Editor 12: Symposium '76 12. DELOISE ANN PRESTON DONNA MICHELLE PRESTON: Human Relations Council 12. MARK A. PRICE: Track 10. RANDY DEAN PRICE JEAN MARIE MARKHAM PROSSER MARVIN W. PUGH: Cross Country 12: J.V. Football 10: Track 10, 12: Varsity Wrestling 10, 12. 1 mum, Breaking points find seniors Bertha Whittaker Ileftl and David Holdway and Bill Thurman outside for the ten-minute mid-morning pause that refreshes. MARY SUE PULLANO: Beta Club 11, 122 F.T.A. 11, 12: Spanish Club 10: Who's Who 12. MICHAELWAYNE QUARLES BENJAMIN LESLIE RAGLAND A prize catch in the form of Steve Robinson awaits Roslyn Burnette in the cheerleaders' take-off of The Price is Right. JEB MARVIN RAMSEY: Modern Foreign Language Club 10, 11: S.C.A. 12: Golf 10, 11. JULIE SUZANNE RANDOLPH SHELBY J. REDD: Track 10. ANN MARIE REDDEN KANDY SUE REED: Art Club 10, 12: Beta Club 11, 12: Modern Foreign Lang- uage Club 11, 12: Spanish Club 10, 11. MICHAEL EUGENE REED 144 Seniors e- i I 2 Z LINDA GAIL REEDY: Drama 11: Girls' Club 11: P.T.S.A. 11: S.C.A. 11: V.I.C.A. 12. SUSAN EDITH REGNIER: Art Club 12: Beta Club 12: D.E.C.A. 10: F.H.A. 12, Vice-President 12. WILLIAM THOMAS REINHARDT JOHN DAVIS REMINE: Band 10, 11: Drama 11: Red Cross 12. MICHAEL LYNN REXRODE: Spanish Club 11. THOMAS WAYNE RIBBLE: S.C.A. Co- Vice-Chairman 11: Spanish Club 10, 11: J.V. Basketball 10: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Basketball 1 1, 12. MARK IRVIN RICHARDS: Beta Club 11, 12, President 12: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 10: Annual Staff Sports Editor 11, 12: J.V. Football 10: Sym- posium '76 12. BILL L. RICHARDSON: D.E.C.A. 11: Golf 10, 12. TERRI ANNETTE RICHARDSON: Human Relations Council 12: Pep Club 10, 11, 12 guardian ofthe swing-set generation School doesn't end for senior Cathy Dickinson when the bell blasts to dismiss her from her final class at William Flem- ing. For two and a half hours each week- day afternoon, she takes up a position on the other side of the desk at Church Court Day Nursery School. As a teacher's aide, she becomes substitute mother, favorite story-teller, snack fixer, and an expert on crayons and coloring books. Most of all, I am there to listen, she said. A four-year-old can have a lot to say. She said a child once compared her to his teddy bear, and from a kid that age, that's the worId's greatest com- pIiment, shelaughed. Although she has never studied child psychology, Cathy feels she has learned a lot about children from observing her own mother, who has worked with nur- sery schoolers for more than fifteen years. She said that there is no such thing as a typical afternoon. Something un- expected happens every day, she com- mented. One thing she tries to keep the same is her concern for the children. Each day I make it a point to give each child some special attention. Kids at this age are just finding out about the worId, she said. I want to help make the world they are finding out about a warm one. Seniors 145 ROBIN DARLENE ROACH: S.C.A. Trea- surer-Historian 12: S.O.D.A. 12: Cheer- leaders 10, 11, 12, Head 12: Brother- hood Award 12: Homecoming Court 10. 12, Queen 12. MICHEAL GRAYSON ROBERTSON: D.E.C.A. 11.12. STEVE ARNETTE ROBINSON: F.C.A. 12: Varsity Club 11, 12: J.V. Basketball 10: Varsity Basketball 10. 1 1, 12. he speaks for those who can't vim:- PAULA JEAN ROBSON: Band 10, 11. 12: Pep Band 10, 11. 12: Stage Band 10.11, 12:Tennis11,12. SONNY ROUTON: D.E.C.A. 10. 11. JEFFREY ARDEN ROWLAND: Cross Country 10. 11. 12:Track10, 11, 12. VALERIE LYNN RUDD: Concert Choir 11. 12: Tennis 11, 12: Volleyball 12. VERNON LEE RUDD: Art Club 12: Concert Choir 12: Guitar Club 12: Human Relations Council 12. RICHARD EARL SALMON: Chess Club 10: Drama 10, 11: Cross Country 11. 146 Seniors Everyone knows that dog is man's best friend, but senior Hanley Mathis takes the old adage one step further. I think man should be a friend to animals as well, said the employee of Valley Animal Hos- pital. He does more than just water and feed the animals, sterilize the instruments, and assist the veterinarian during surgery. l try to do what I can to give all animals a better Iife, he said. Some of the things Harvey has done for his furry friends include writing to Congress and the President to enact legislation to prevent cruelty to animals. In particular, he protests the use of steel- jaw traps and the clubbing of seals in the Arctic. l have tried to look at both sides of the issue. but I can't justify these cruelties to animals, Harvey com- mented. Harvey used to own gerbils and ham- sters, but now limits his pets to four dogs. A person shouldn't have more pets than he can love and care for. He enjoys caring for other peopIe's pets at the clinic, but he is opting for a career as a game warden instead of becoming a veterinarian. A vet can help an animal that has been mistreated, he said. but a game warden can prevent mistreatment from happening in the first place. PEBL' 81 :xnwi Ma W ::4gQ I Hin 'Iii nl' SUE ANGELA SANTOLLA: Band 10, 11, 12: Girls' Club 12: Majorettes 11, 12. Head 12: Sabrettes 10: S.C.A. 10: Span- ish Club 10. JOEL GLENN SARVER: Concert Choir 10, 11, 12, Stage Manager 12: Track 10. 11: National Merit Commended Student 12. ISAAC LOUIS SCOTT: Band 10. 11, 12. Drill Instructor 12: Concert Choir 12. KATHRYN LYNN SEAGLE HENRY LEWIS SHELOR VICKY ANN SHINAULT RICHARD BENTLEY SHORT BARRY STEVEN SIMMONS: S.C.A. 11, 12, Co-Chairman 11, President 12: Var- sity Club 11: Newspaper 11, 12. Sports Editor 12: Varsity Basketball 11: Varsity Football 10, 11, 12: Public Relations Committee 11: Superintendenfs Ad- visory Committee 11: Symposium '76 12. JOSEPH ELMER SMITH: Varsity Wrest- ling 10, 1 1. No Bicentennial bystander. J. C. Brown seeks the help of the voter registrar in completing forms to vote in the '76 election. a22 Seniors 147 NANCY KAY SMITH TERRY LYNN SMITH: Band 10: Concert Choir 11: Girls' Chorus 10. TRUDY ELAINE SNEAD: Beta Club 12: Literary Magazine Poetry Editor 12. PAULINE SOTTILE: Class Secretary 11: Girls' Club 11, 12: V.l.C.A. Secretary 12: Christmas Court 11, 12, Maid of Honor 12. VERNON VANMETER SPEESE: R.O.T.C. Club 10, 11, 12: J.V. Football 10: Tennis 11, 12. SUSAN MARIE SPICKARD: Girls' Club 12. snowed on snovvmoblles Most people think snow is for snowball fighting or making snowmen or closing school for the day. Senior Linda Philpott sees it as the stuff that makes snow- mobiling more fun than anything else l've ever done. Linda got her first taste of snow- mobiling two years ago when her father brought home two snowmobiles for the family to use. lt took a little while to get used to driving them, she said. Driving a snowmobile is a lot like driving a car. except the brakes and gas are on the handlebars. And the driver has to stay more alert because the ground is so bumpy. Roanoke Valley Snowmobile Association, which meets monthly. The thirty mem- bers, including Linda and her family. make use of mountain trails near Roanoke to go snowmobiling for the day and have planned longer trips to Pennsylvania and New York. They have also seen a snow- mobile race in Pennsylvania. Although Linda concedes that she en- joys getting my snowmobile out on a flat place and running it pretty fast, she has no desire to race. I just like to get out of doors, she said. They don't give trophies for having fun. but it's important just the same. LAURA KAY SPILLMAN: Concert Choir 10: Drama 10: Gymnastics 10. DAVID LEE STAPLES: Red Cross 10: V.I.C.A. 11, 12, Treasurer 11, Vice- President 12: Varsity Basketball Manager 10, 1 1. STEVEN A. STAPLETON: J.V. Football 10. 148 Seniors JOY DEBOARD ST. CLAIR: Concert Choir 12: Girls' Chorus 10. CARSON PERRY STIFF, Ill: Art Club President, 10: Newspaper Art Editor and Photographer 12. LIN STINSON Nursery know-how comes in handy as l.C.T, stu- dent Linda Reedy works as a teacher's aide at Roanoke Valley Christian School, DIANA FAY STULL: Beta Club 11, 12: F.C.A. 12: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12: Spanish Club 10: Newspaper 11, 12, Business Manager 11, 12: Grapplettes 11, 12, Head 12. GREGORY DWAYNE SURBAUGH: Newspaper 12. HARRY PRICE SURRATT: J.V. Football 10. CYNTHIA ANN SWANSON: Band 10, 11, 12: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12:Majorettes1O. MARK CHRISTOPHER TAMES: S.C.A. 11, 12: Spanish Club 11. MICHAEL DALE TAYLOR Seniors 149 RENEE TERRELL SANDRA BONITA TERRY: Art Club 11: Beta Club 11. 12: F.H.A. 11: Knitting Club 11: Red Cross 10. 11, 12: Literary Magazine 11, 12. JERRY WAYNE THOMAS TERRI LAVONNE THORNHILL: Girls' Club 10, 11, 123 Homecoming Court 10.11. JEFFREY L. THURMAN: Campus Life Club 12: Concert Choir 12. JULIE JEANETTE THURMAN .M PHYLLIS ANN TILLER: Girls' Chorus 10. ALLEN EUGENE TINGLER: Band 10, 11. EVELYN MAE TINSLEY: D.E.C.A. 12: Human Relations Council 125 S.O.D.A. 12: Grapplettes 10. l 1 1 50 Seniors M' Iiglln ,Vit Wi: H 4 .. 3' 'ffmg All tampa-cheer finds Sabrettes Leslee Ledden. Jody Moses. and Sarah Feather labovel shouting at a fall pep assembly and Debbie Zimmerman awaiting the outcome of the first baseball game in the spring. . . -1 .ins ' JOHN EARL TINSLEY: Beta Club 11, 12: V.l.C.A. 123 N.C.T.M. Math Contest 115 Renessaler Math and Science Medal 11: Who's Who 11. STANLEY ROBERT TINSLEY DAWN TERRI TURNER: Concert Choir 10, 11: Karate Club 11. his kind of medic-aid It is a typical weekend at Community Hospital. The countdown begins. Sur- gical mask . . . rubber gloves . . . white coat . . . sponge . . . mop? lt's not Marcus Welby practicing his bedside manner. lt's not Dr. Kildare with stethoscope in hand. lt's Roger Norrell, hospital orderly. preparing to disinfect an isolation room. When a patient has a highly contag- ious disease, Roger said, the room has to be completely de-germed after he leaves. Those of us who disinfect the room have to protect ourselves from those germs, just as doctors do. Disinfecting rooms is not the only thing that keeps Roger on the hospital grounds. He is also an assistant to the medical examiner who performs autop sies. When Roger first applied for the job, he was scared to death. But, just as the medical examiner predicted. h did get used to the morgue, and he is no longer squeamish about working there. l've learned a lot from my job at Community Hospital. Roger admitted but it is not something I want to do for the rest of my life. Instead, he hopes to major in history in college. But if that doesn't work out, l'd consider a career related to medicine. l'd have a head start, he laughed. At least I know my way around the hospital. RICHARD DEAN TURNER TOWANIA ANN TURNER DONNA JEAN TURPIN DONALD GENE UNDERWOOD EMILY SUSAN WADE: C.O.E. 122 Span- ish Club 10. FAYE ANGELA WAITS2 R.O.T.C. Club 10, 11. Seniors 151 JULIE K. WALDRON: Beta Club 12. SANDRA JUNE WALTERS: Concert Choir 12: Girls' Chorus 10. HERMAN ELDRIDGE WALTON, JR. ANDREA MARIA WASHINGTON: Art Club 11: F.H.A. 11: Flag Girls 12: Red Cross 10, 11, 12, President 12, Secretary 11: S.C.A. 10, 11, 12: Literary Magazine 11, 12, Circulation Editor 11, Co-Editor- in-Chief 12. ROBIN CHRISTINA WASHINGTON JOYCE ANN WATKINS: D:E.C.A. 10: F.H.A. 10. RITA RENEE WATSON: Class Treasurer 11: Drama 12: Human Relations Council 10, 11, 12: Red Cross 10, 11, 12: Christ- mas Madonna 12: Symposium '76 12. AMY SUE WEBB: Beta Club 11, 12: F.C.A. 11, 12: Girls' Club 12: Human Relations Council 11: Modern Foreign Language Club 11, 12: Spanish Club 10, 11: Symposium '76 12. VICKI DARLENE WEST: Campus Life Club 10, 11: Class Vice-President 11, 12: D.E.C.A. 11, 12, Treasurer 113 F.T.A. 11, 12, Secretary 12: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: Red Cross 10, 11: Sabrettes 10: Sym- posium '76 12. safety patrol, senior-style Lots of high-school students wear uni- forms: Band uniforms: R.O.T.C. uniforms: even waitress uniforms for part-time jobs. Mark Akers' uniform isn't exactly the ordinary run-of-the-mill kind. But then, his job isn't exactly the ordinary run-of- the-mill kind, either. On weekends, Mark works for Gobble Industrial Security Service as a guard for Roanoke Electric Steel. UsuaIIy, he said, my job is pretty routine, but when it rains, it really pours. Mark remembers twice when it really poured. Once, two mental patients from the V.A. Hospital came over and threaten- ed to blow up the place. They really meant business, he said, but I talked them out of it. Another time, a car tried to run him down in the parking lot. l asked the driver what he was doing there, and the next thing I knew, he was driving straight towafd me, Mark said. I guess there are some people that just don't like security guards. There are times, though, that Mark feels people do like security guards. When he delivers the paychecks to the 550 employees, he says he feels like Santa Claus. And the paycheck I deliver to myself makes it worth all the hassIe, Mark laughed. 152 Seniors CHARLOTTE ELVIRA WHEELER: Human Relations Council 12: V.l.C.A. 10. SELENA HOPE WHEELER VICKI LYNN WHEELINGZ Concert Choir 11, 12: Flag Girls 11, 12: F.T.A. 10, 11. 12: Girls' Chorus 10: Girls' Club 10, 11. 12: S.C.A. 10, 12. Bugle call brings juniors to their feet as senior Bill Barham leads an improvised Pep Band in the school song at a spring pep assembly. SUSAN VANESSA ROCHELLE WHITE BERTHA ANN WHITTAKERI Concert Choir 11: D.E.C.A. 10: Girls' Chorus 10. SHELIA J. WILEY: GrappIettes11, 12. REBECCA DIANE WILHELM: Drama 10. 11, 12: F.T.A. 10, 11: Red Cross 11: Grapplettes 11:Thespians 10, 11, 12. DUNCAN H. WILLIAMS: Band 10, 11, 12. Secretary 11: Varsity Club 11, 12: J.V. Basketball 10: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Basketball 11: Varsity Football 10, 11, 12. JEFFREY WILLIAMS: Cross Country 12: Track 10, 11, 12. Seniors 153 on the wright track with cleca For senior Teresa Wright, D.E.C.A. is more than just another word. It's not only a club, said the third-place winner in the Virginia D.E.C.A. Student of the Year con- test. It's a way of life that has opened more doors for me than I ever even knew existed. Some of the doors the employee of Hofheimer's has crossed were as close as across town. Others were further away - some five hundred miles to the northeast to be exact. Mr. IRogerl Lovern prodded me to try out for WROV correspondent. Since she liked her work at WROV, she branched out to WSLO, where her reports of school news were heard weekly. Teresa switched from studio lights to LAVONIA COLLEEN WILLIAMS: Track 12. DONNA GAIL WILLIAMSON: F.H.A. 11, 123 Flag Girls 11, 12: Girls' Club 11, 12: Newspaper 1 1. GERALD M. WILLIS: V.l.C.A. 12. DOTTIE LOU WILSON: Concert Choir 11, 12: Drama 10, 11, 12: Forensics 12: F.T.A. 10, 11, 12, Treasurer 11, 12: Girls' Chorus 10: S.O.D.A. 12: Spanish Club 10: Thespians 1 1, 12, Secretary 12. LINDA REANA WILSON SANDRA CAROL WILSON: Beta Club 11, 12: Concert Choir 11, 12, Secretary 12: F.T.A. 11, 12: Girls' Club 10, 11, 12: Human Relations Council 11: Red Cross 10: Sabrettes 11, 12: S.C.A. Secretary 12: S.O.D.A. 11: Grapplettes 10: Sym- posium '7612. DEBORAH RENEE WIMBUSH: Flag Girls 12:Grapplettes11,12:Track10,11,12. GREGORY MOORE WIRT: Golf 12: Track 12: Varsity Football 12. TERESA KAY WISEMAN: Beta Club 11, 12, Treasurer 12: Concert Choir Accom- panist 11, 12, Regional 12: Drama Accompanist 10: Girls' Chorus Accom- panist 10: Roanoke College Summer Scholar 11: Symposium '76 12. 1 54 Seniors Broadway lights early in February when she and seven other Fashion Merchand- ising students flew to New York City with their teacher, Miss Elaine Wingate. New York is just too exciting for words, she explained as she groped for the right ones to describe the showrooms of Vera. Art- bro, Bobbie Brooks, and Curly Block. The group was also a special guest of Seventeen Magazine and Parson School of Design, and still found time to hit all the tourist spots. lf I hadn't been in D.E., said Teresa, I wouldn't have had the oppor- tunity to go to New York. And, she laughed, I wouldn't have made all the money I spent there. wrrfv' Coach's corner finds Mr. James H. Sumpter, Jr. planning strategy as senior girls huddle to break a O-O tie in the Flamingo Football game. CECIL HENRY WOLFE THOMAS ANDREW WOODS: Chess Club 10, 11, 12: Drama 11: R.O.T.C. Club 10, 11, 12: Varsity Football 12. NANCY DIANE WOOLDRIDGE: Beta Club 11, 12: F.C.A. 10, 11, 12. Chaplain 12: Modern Foreign Language Club 10, 11: S.C.A. 10: Symposium '76 12. JENNIFER C. WORD: Girls' Chorus 11: S.C.A. 10. KATHY SUE WRAY: Beta Club 11, 12: C.O.E. 12: Girls' Club 10. NINA TERESA WRIGHT: Beta Club 11. 12: D.E.C.A. 11, 12, Secretary 12: F,T.A. 10, 11, 12, Co-President 12, Vice-President 11: Girls' Club 11, 12: Human Relations Council 12: S.C.A. 12: D.E. Student of the Year 12: Girls' State 11: Symposium '76 12: WROV and WS LO Correspondent 12. GARY WESLEY YANDLE: Class President 11: F.C.A. 10, 11, 12: S.C.A. 12: Varsity Club 12: Golf 10, 11, 12: J.V. Basketball 10: J.V. Football 10: Varsity Basketball 11, 12: Symposium '76 12. VIRGINIA ANN ZEBRASKY DEBRA KAY ZIMMERMAN: F.H.A. 11: Girls' Club 12: Karate Club 102 S.C.A. 11. Seniors 155 Robert Amos Robin Anderson Steve Anderson Donna Andes Kerry Armentrout Barbara Atkins Keith Atkins Cathy Austin Rodney Bailey Ronnie Baldwin Ray Ball Bridgette Barlow no bacon with these eggs Scrambled, over-light, hard-boiled, omelet-style - common adjectives for most egg-lovers just don't apply to junior Barry King. l like mine glazed, decorated with rhinestones, hand-painted, and carved, said the seventeen-year-old devotee of egguery. Barry's egguery - the art of creating decorative pieces from hollowed eggs - has taken many forms. Among others. he has created a pineapple, a wedding scene, and skaters on a frozen pond. One egg, containing a tiny orchestra, claimed a third place ribbon in the first Roanoke Valley Egg Show last year. Egguery has also brought Barry spend- ing money. His most expensive models carry price tags of 3200. But it is neither prizes nor the money that keeps Barry shaping minute characters from dough, carving trap doors and intricate windows from the goose, pheasant, and partridge eggs, painting tiny details with even tinier brushes. Like all artists, I just like to see if my hands can create what my mind dictates. Also, l like giving my eggs to relatives and sending them to Cher, said Barry. Barry has sent four of his eggs to,Cher - one as a wedding gift when she married Greg Allman, another for her daughter Chastity's birthday. She always writes me a hand-written thank-you note, Barry said. l guess she likes her eggs glazed, too. Kelly Basham Sue Bias Eva Bilios William Blair Jacquie Bonham Cindy Boyd Clayton Brammer Natalie Brower Sharon Brower Cindy Brumfield Patty Bryant Valerie Burnette 156 Juniors s t .. .3 5 5 -. . - 3: N- ss- .:- , .. W f Y Q 5 W We sg 4 ' ' ' ig. tk ji f A . X QXXSX Q ' isis N xt fi A Xflfsg at xg ii C Qi.. fl X 5, i w ,. C. Xl Y X ? X ia N E W' s . X l '. N- 155 fi' Gregg Burrows Rhonda Calhoun -' Anne Callaway Anita Campbell Rhonda Campbell Anthony Cash Julie Cauthern Mark Cheatwood Anne Cochran John Coles Andy Collier Linda Conner Vickie Cooley Robin Cox David Craft Cathy Crawford Bobby Cromwell Karen Crotts Shawn Crowder Bruce Cunningham Voula Dallas David Daniels Sue Daniels George DaVall Kathy Dean Paul Decker Vicki Deel Pamela Dews Steve Dillard Mary Dillon Terry Doss gg' LeNora Dowe Nancy Downey Albert Dudding Lucille Durham Patricia Etter l T , Kevin Farmer Evelyn Feazell JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS - lfront rowl Jill Weber, Vice-President lHar! Halll: Cindy Sullivan, Vice-President lSmlth Halll, Johnnie Moore, Presi- dent: Becky Pugh, Treasurer lback rowl Jacquie Bonham, Co-Vice-President lCamper Halllp Darrell Davis, Co-Vice-President lCamper Halllg Robin Anderson, Secretary: Steve Smith, Vice-President lCoulter Halll. Juniors 157 Thelma Ferguson Danny Fernatt Clayton Fowler Sheila Freeman Brenda Garrett Donna Gerhardt 'Norma Graham Cindy Gray Danny Grinnell Karen Grogan Eric Guerrant Tim Guthrie Paul Hackett Lawrence Hairston Chris Hancock Jay Hardie Lisa Harris Cheryl Hart Sheryl Hartman Rick Hawkins David Hayes Sharon Haynes Rickey Heptinstall Manie Hicks Curtis Hill Gwen Hodges Ricky Hodges Kevin Hopson Carmen Huffman Tina Hurd Joanie Hutton Kyle Hypes Cheryl Jackson Sharon Jackson Bryan Jenkins Connie Jennings 158 Juniors Triangles and trapezoids capture the thoughts of junior Kurt Kreider as he attempts to piece geometri- cal figures into the form of a square. 5 f fin fs, 4' sf Ss. af. ig , I gk .A SQA-wa M44 ' J X .ll.... ,.,l :yg . , V - - 1- ,-:iw I ji J, ,.,, J' ,S 5 ' I j v N- X 5 3 5 5- , . f i as Xia Y. QQ X .3 fl Q, Q Clarence Johnson David Johnson Lisa Johnson Martha Johnson Patty Johnson Rickey Johnson Charlotte Jones Debra Jones Dennis Jones Evelyn Jones Kim Jones Sonja Jones Tim Jones Rena Kasey Sheila Keeling Barry King David Klever Kurt Kreider gg i' ' . X Kyle LaPrad . 1 ' irzu Kirk Law . ., Lefty Leftwich Qh.. 1 K :Ef Lisa Leonard , .f C ? James Lester . 3 P l Wanda Lester Most foursomes find themselves dodg- ing balls on the golf course or dreaming of holes-in-one. This foursome finds itself at home in the halls of William Fleming, changing classes, comparing homework loads, discussing favorite teachers. What makes this foursome unique is its composition - a father, two daugh- ters, and a son. Mr. Jimmie Deel. a junior. is Fleming's oldest student, having re- turned to school after an absence of some eighteen years. I had wanted to finish high school for a long time, said Mr. Deel but I didn't have the time or the money. The employee of Veterans' Hospital knew that a high-school diploma could get him a better job. l decided to take the step. I told my family, and then l plunged in. Mr. Deel's admission that he has a pretty busy day is an understatement. He goes to school from 8:30 until 1:45 and then starts to work from 3:30 until mid- night. His schedule includes two classes of English. government, General Business. and Industrial Cooperative Training fl.C.T.l. Occasionally, he gets some studying done on the job, but usually he burns the mid- night oil way after his son Freddie la seniorl and daughters Vicki la juniorl and Cindy Ca sophomorel are sleeping soundly. Making the adjustment wasn't that bad though, he laughed. What was a shock was the way today's students differ from those he went to school with almost two decades ago. Their priorities are different, he said. They have more money than we did, and cars are more important to them. But in spite of the differences, he added, it's great to be back. Juniors 159 a paycheck he can't cash To most people, the word Red Cross means digging in pockets for nickles and dimes once a year during homeroom. For others, it means awaiting the jab of a needle on Blood Donorama Day. For junior Kim Williams, the Red Cross means far more. A Publicity Coordinator for the Eastern District Youth Service Program, Kim spends almost sixty-five per cent of his time working as a volunteer in one Red Cross program or another. l don't bother to mark down all the time I work at the Red Cross building because I would fill up a couple of pages a week, he said. Kim said that the adults give the youth a large part in the Red Cross because they feel that today's Red Cross young people are tomorrow's Red Cross direc- tors. His activities range from volunteer- Herman Lewis Ymelda Lewis Andy Long Thomas Lowery Keith Lugar Lori Lynch Sherree Macklin Daisy Manns Torey Manns Amy Martin Brenda Mason Debbie Matthews Tim Maxey James Mays Edward McCraw Martha McCray Hal Meador Timmy Miller Melissa Minnick Carolyn Moore Jeff Moore Johnnie Moore Mike Moore Sammy Morris A y 5, 160 Juniors ing for work on Blood Donorama Day to caring for the injured and dying in a mock disaster at Huff Lane Elementary School. He has helped construct a float celebrat- ing the twenty-fifth year of the Red Cross Blood program. At Addison Junior High. he organized an active Junior Red Cross chapter. He has also welcomed Viet- namese war refugees to Roanoke. Hi: newest responsibility is photographing Red Cross events, a job he shares with senior Doug Holland. Although Kim's mother says she never sees him anymore. Kim feels that the Red Cross has given him far more than the time he has given it. I may not have a check to cash every two weeks, but know- ing I am helping others by volunteering is a different kind of paycheck. 1 5 , mf' '. QM vi? 3 EL J , was 'D iiSx9N I K . X S 4 ,Aff Qlllgl g,.,,xQ, ,fi .zig- H' 'ii 14-'Q N.y' Miz... .i 3 gr vig 1 3 X. i s ,gftegxgz 'Q it X Q! X Sw ste- I .X 331 'E f-if ,. HN, ' 1f?i ?w ' 'fi 1. Q ci. vwlyf ,er , yt ffl: fury W 'S N 4 if ...., li? A ,ax .gs 'tx gg X Debbie Mullins Connie Murphy Patricia Muse Mike Myers Peggy Narum William Neely Scot Nelson Darrel Nickerson Barbara Nolley David Nunley Eddie Otey Tamara Padgett Keith Patterson Tammy Payne Shell Peterson Barbara Phifer Dennis Phillippe Peggy Pillis Debbie Pinson Diane Pinson Cindy Porterfield Belinda Potter Brenda Potter Jeffrey Powell Donna Preston Debbie Price Dianne Price Lee Price Becky Pugh Flick Raymond Joyce Reams Becky Reynolds Tim Reynolds Gary Roberts Lindsey Robertson Mary Robson Kenneth Roop Darryl Rudd No doubt about it, the Junior Class boasts at the Franklin County pep assembly, we're number one! Juniors 161 Teresa Russell Billy Sames Ava Sanders Karen Saunders Penny Saunders Jeff Schwartz Linda Shepherd Lisa Shepherd Earle Shumate Doug Simmons Lonnie Sloan Brenda Smith Nadine Smith Sandra Smith Steve Smith Tara Smith Terri Snow Jon Southern Ken St.Clair James Steahly Kathy Stephenson Cathy Stinnette Teresa Stokes Clarisia Stone Sherman Stovall Cindy Sullivan Belinda Taylor Steve Throckmartin Jaime Tingler Doug Tuck Lynn Turnbull Rebecca Underwood Robert Undenfvood Donna Varner Lori Vaught Robin Wade 162 Juniors K T511 if ff r ,go ., teas . ,f.w g1g-wi - Q it F E . in '35 ' Tiff 15, . E., - ::..::iy5g. -1 . A. Q X 5 .. at 5 . + N WN . mi N A RN wk si V Xt was is sith A L X at Q Jatt Y 9 S ,MQW- es t T? x S2 ia bfi A L, , as I 'Y' R 'l 5 L Q at Wm V Q Seas K5 SM S- J . .L K Iaggsiie F its Sis X ' ::. 'Eb' xxx is ' la X X fs X 1 i -agar Y N W ? ,, ii.-R Q x X X 3 , 'N Away from the crowd. Sue Bias uses the solitude of the Smith Hall G, E. Room to study away from the activity of Fleming's 1,515 other students. 9 JA' . . W. 'Ts :Eb 8 Pl' Karen Walker Mike Waller Tina Ward Faye Washington Kevin Watkins Bruce Webb 6- Jill Weber Beth Weddle Evelyn Wheeler Jon Whichard Tim Whitlock Mark Wiebke clothes to catfish-a model story 4- 5 i 'W I ,QP ' X A we 1, ,,lNl A I Q, W 9 9 ' ,rv At least once in her life. every girl dreams of spotlights. cameras, and a schedule book full of modeling assign- ments. Lori Vaught has realized parts of this dream as a model for Samuel Speigel's Women's Clothiers. The stately junior began her modeling career at the age of four, tiptoeing in Kiddie Korner clothes for prospective customers. Years later, a job offer from Horne's brought her more modeling experience. As a model, Lori has some say-so in what she models. My favorite designer is Geoffrey Beene, she said. , His clothes are simple, but very stylish. She usually receives a discount if she decides to buy any of the outfits she models. l'm afraid I sometimes spend as much as l make, she laughed. Having accompanied her grandmother, a department store buyer, on buying trips to Miami, Lori has had the opportunity to see professional models in action, but has decided that that career is not for her. Lori feels that the competition is fierce and the job demanding. Although pay for top models is high, she has decided to trade mirrors for microscopes. l've en- joyed modeling, she said, but l've always wanted to become a marine biologist. A course in oceanography and an oceanography fieldtrip to the Virginia shores confirmed her early job plans. l can understand that some people might not find oceanography as glamorous as modeling, Lori admitted, but l'd rather look at little fish than have crowds of people looking at me. . -Q, . i I v . ' l Denise Wilkerson James Williams Ray Williams Catherine Wills Carol Wilson Van Wilson Lee Wimmer Larry Wolford Lavonne Wood Karen Woods Betty Worley Tracy Wrenn .., , 3 1 Juniors 163 it was a long way to Williamson road It's a Friday night in Roanoke. Virginia. Most teenagers are cruising Williamson Road - going to Lendy's, to McDonald's, to Kenney's and back again - not really hungry for hamburgers at all. just cruising because. as they'll tell you, there's nothing new to do. But to fifteen-year-old Vietnamese war refugee, Dang Van Tho, there's a lot new to do. It was a long way from his large home in Saigon to his new apartment on Williamson Road. When the Communists took over Saigon, my family had to leave the country in a hurry, the 5'2 boy re- ported, hesitating as he selected his English words. We left all of our possessions - even our dog - to board a boat leaving the country, and we were shot at from all sides. In fact, if my father hadn't pushed my little brother to the floor to avoid rifle fire. he wouldn't be here now. The boat took Tho. his mother. an aunt, his younger brother. and a cousin first to Wake Island. then to Guam, then to California. From the West Coast, the family moved to Fort Chaffee. Arkansas, until it was adopted by Hunt- ington Court United Methodist Church and then brought to Roanoke. They are still awaiting the arrival of their father, now working in France. Although by the time Tho had moved to Roanoke he had already experienced many American firsts , the most challeng- ing was yet to come. l was so scared my first day at Fleming, admitted Tho, my stomach just wouldn't stay put. As he had anticipated, his main problem at first was communication. ln South Vietnam, Tho attended a French school and had studied English for only three years. With the help of his French teacher, Mrs. Donna Frost, Tho made it through the barrage of English questions on registration day. But, he conceded. not yet comfortable in English makes it harder for me to make friends or keep up with what's going on in class. Although his native land was different, Tho had become somewhat American- ized before he left Vietnam. We were all great rock fans, he said. Elton John and the Doobie Brothers were our favorites. Tho still listens to YelIow Brick Road often, and he still thinks of the roads he walked in Vietnam. Of course, l miss the country and the friends I left behind, he said. But America is a very beautiful country. l am very lucky to be here. ln fact. l am lucky to be alive. Jeff Abbott Kitty Adams Paul Adams Cheryl Aesy Gary Akers Doug Alwine Doug Anderson Ernest Anderson Gloria Anderson Paul Andrews Anita Arato Mary Jo Argabright Cathy Argenbright Anthony Armistead Jacquelyn Arnold Dewey Bailey Julie Baker Patricia Ball 64 Sophomores X , ... t .- il .X XX.. iv .:, L. . yn FX .s L Q Jeanne Ba ndy ' Pat Barkheimer Lorrie Beard 'f A . Beth Beckner Tim Benson Antoine Bethel e l ref, ' 5 5 ' ' Robin Blanton Lisa Blessard Judy Board Donna Bonham Debra Booker Doug Booth is. Guy Bousman Linda Bowman David Boyens Jay Brandon Benita Brewer Ivan Brewer Victor Bristow Mike Brogan Larry Broughman Celestine Brower Gail Brown Michael Brown Robin Brown Vickie Brown Melinda Brumfield Valerie Bryant Debbie Burden Darryl Burks Deborah Byrd Renee Caldwell Terri Caldwell Dwayne Cales Robert Campbell Velma Campbell SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS - Deidre Perry. Treasurer: Cheryl Boyd, Vice-President lCamper Halllg Donna Bonham, Vice-President lCoulter Halllg Beth Evans, President: Vickie Simpson, Vice- President lHart Halllz Rebecca Nichols, Vice- President lSmith Halll: Megan Lewis, Secretary. Sophomores 165 Linwood Cannaday Cindy Carter Jane Carter Lisa Carter Carl Carty Gregory Cash Lori Cash Keith Chattin Charles Cheatwood Marshell Childress Mark Chilton Craig Clark Donnie Clark Freddie Claytor Theresa Clements Melvin Clemons Donald Coles Alice Coley Lucretia Collins Kathryn Conner Karen Cook Mary Cook Fay Cotton Richard Cotton Candy Craft Sherry Craft Ricky Crouse Bobby Davis Rudy Dearing Ross Deaver Cindy Deel Jimmie Dickerson Kathryn Dickerson 166 Sophomores k,sfvz.- ,, X L . .3 s X X .Q 22 l' K A is Q 3 was l r is NW , L X . X - K- a . .' -'-- W ,gt - N : Y e K- X :NEW de NN Ns 2 , - r r I tl gs gi L Q Q I. -:fe I e 1- .- It -e nq- . if QQ as On the right track, sophomore Osborne Wheaton practices clearing the bar to prepare for upcoming meets. u. N 2 X ,X s K 1 Q ' fx :..':se:f:s-., s 7 . Wy, vA-g .rss 5 .J 5, N 1 Ns N , 1 K M ...,, l ., 0 D , i t ,Axe 'N - is Ronnie Dooley Susan Dowell Sharon Dudley Bonnie Duncan Ronda Durham Mike Economy Carl Edwards Cathy Edwards Jackie Edwards Danny Elliott not just two of a kind Their last names are both the same, but the similarity doesn't stop there. Their first names both begin with an F, but the similarity doesn't stop there, either. In fact, to identical twins Faith and Felicia Galloway, the similarities seem never- ending. More people think of us as one rather than as two, said Faith, but they forget that in addition to being a pair, we are also individuals. Both Felicia and Faith admit that there are more advantages than disadvantages to being a twin. Since we both take most of the same classes, only one of us has to take her books home, revealed Felicia. And being the same size, it's easy to wear one another's clothes. Faith admits that being a twin is an ice- breaker because people are always com- ing up and asking us if we're twins. You'd think they could tell,l' she laughed. I guess it's understandable that people mix us up, said Felicia. We can't fool Mom, but we can fool Daddy. Once when we were little, explained Faith. I bit Felicia. But when she told Daddy, and he came to punish me, he couldn't tell one of us from the other. He punished Felicia, thinking she was me. Now that's a real advantage, she ex- claimed. Both sophomores share the same taste in clothing, but only Faith still likes to dress like her sister. Up until the sixth grade, we always dressed alike, said Faith. But then I guess we realized it is important for each one of us to be a whole person, not just half a twin. ' 'f-.JSF S 4' . ' Q 33 N i.g55.i,, mg - -- X E 1 5 'f : l H D' 3 -.--. . - , f l Q .5 l V' ' - :Nm 'H W'E5'z f ' - . . -f .If .5 . iv . ,..1Nit K, 5 KA K ..rl. l 1-is --'. in fTs:3L53-efifiyl-fl '-1V-ffililii-'LS'i15. l f Wiilif, ff. i SEG-:gif '- l' . i ' K ti' '- .-1+ Slim .- . . -. ' ,sh R if l ' 'i'l:- -fl ' . xt . x . Qi . 5 L 9' Jeffrey English Lou Ann Eshleman Kathy Farmer Everett Feazell Jan Ferguson Thomas Ferris Conny Finney Sophomores 167 Kathy Firebaugh Gino Forrest Sandra France Kim French Faith Galloway Felicia Galloway Paul Galloway Tommy Garrett Cheri Gaylor Eddie Gill Theresa Gill Steve Glass Kenny Goodman Russell Goodwin Kathy Gray Jon Greene Cindy Gross Beverly Guerrant Ronny Ham Richard Hamm Danny Hammed Ann Hardie Pam Hardison Ethelyne Harper Janet Harrington Barbara Harris John Harris Sharon Harris Avila Harrison Gena Hartman i ix X . I we I its tttt - if -cies X Q .tx 5 N xc I E P we- 5 5 -:ra sa- s Q-- I I I I d -to-earth fun at 1,500 feet Most teenagers see sixteen as the magic number that separates walkers from drivers. Bob Preddy aims a little higher - 1,500 feet higher to be exact. On my sixteenth birthday, I want to give myself an extra-special present - my first solo flight, the sophomore confided. For Bob, flying has been a family affair, Following in the footsteps of his grand- father. an Air Force pilot, Bob was initi- ated in the cockpit in February of 1974 Since then, he has flown two or three times a month. l'd love to do it more 168 Sophomores often. Bob said, but the S20 for a forty-five minute lesson keeps me on the ground most of the time. Although S20 is a steep bite out of a teenager's budget, Bob feels it is worth every cent. I rationalize the cost by say- ing flying Iessons will help me become a career jet pilot in the Navy or Marines, Bob said. But the truth is I just love to get away from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. The best place I know to do this is above the clouds. wp .WN QQ? 1 J kgsxiawf 'K 1 'SP 1 X 1 4 at w K ag 5 , law, Ex '4i,m,5a.- as my A :yew-L-1 ,,. Q 9' Q -5 ' at ' Nm ff- xii l, , J, g J . ,,,,f fff.f'51th if gk I Long distance learning means a bus ride to trans- port vocational students to facilities at Jefferson and Addison. Sophomore Alfred Meador waits his turn at the bus stop. ' 1. ' .Lt f L, K i 7 t- X 1 .V H-,X A S ,' trilif ,,.. V ir, ew 'ff -fy, .gk ., A, H if X Mat 'V K Rebecca Havens Althea Hawley Greg Hayes Jerry Hayes Jerry Haywood Mike Heck Steve Henderson Mark Heptinstall Helen Herndon Kelly Hildreth Mitzi Hodges Mary Ellen Holdren Suzanne Holdren Angela Hopson Robert Hostetter Phillip Hunt Tina Hunt Jackie Hurd Connie Hutton Carol James Arnold Janney Larry Janney John Jasper Wanda Jennings Darryl Johns Donna Johns David Johnson Drema Johnson Kathy Johnson Lorye Johnson Robin Johnson Sophomores 169 Violin strings receive a workout from sophomore Cissy Meador as the Music Department offers a joyous rendition of the Halleluiah Chorus to an attentive audience at the Christmas assembly. JeffJones Milton Jordan Jeff Journell Patty Justice Gloria Kasey Doug Keith Bobby Kendrick Roben King Chris Kopitzke Robin Kyle Mike LaBrie Robby Lawrence Anthony Lawson Tamara Lawson Eugene Leftwich Megan Lewis Karen Likens Gary Litton Rita Lloyd James Logan Darlene Love Debra Lovell Jeff Lumsden Bobby Manning Pam Manspile Richard Markham Dawn Marsh Cindy Martin Denise Martin Kathy Mayo 70 Sophomores GV' x. 1' , .ag sei as SR 'Q me . ,- . he gee! . .. . ' 'if' st' ix is ' 7 , f i if x X f ' '. .2 . ggi 1 a K Q if si it 'I , iss f xx H X si X 5 'X X X a 5 , . - te- 11 31. 'C Y ' '5!. f X Q3 X Q f ik xx -C 3? X ts ' N ly xii Q, x X x X .N 1 My Michael Mayo Debbie McCraw Richard McFalls Honey McGeorge Connie McGuire Ricky McKinney John McLain Alfred Meador Cissy Meador Kathy Meador Linda Meador Donna Mick Linda Miller Malcolm Mishoe Charles Mitchell David Mitchell Cheryl Monk Betty Moody Bobby Moore Shirley Moore Laura Morgan Rebecca Morris Angela Moses Donnie Mowbray close-up of a not-so-easy rider 1 Most people can still remember the thrill of wobbling down the street on their first two-wheeler. Sophomore Craig Clark has exchanged his first two-wheeler for one especially made for moto-cross racing, but the thrill is still the same for him. Racing at speeds up to forty-five miles per hour, Craig competes on his S700 yellow Suzuki in monthly meets at Smith Mountain Lake, Claytor Lake, or Martins- ville, and has come out with a trophy in the 100 cc division. l used to play foot- ball, but I just wasn't big enough, said Craig, who wrestles for the Colonels at ninety-eight pounds. ln bike racing, it's not the size that matters: it's how long you can last that counts. Most of his moto-cross races are a half mile of hills and ditches. Racing against some ten other racers in an event has proved dangerous. Once, Craig wrecked into another bike and was run over by the people behind him, he had scars to prove it. l try not to think about how dangerous it is, he said, but the night before a race, I still get butterflies. Although Evel Knievel iCraig thinks he is a big fake who has given motorcyclists a bad namel has made a fortune from racing, Craig isn't in moto-cross for the money. There is prize money at most races, but the cost of keeping the bike tuned and repaired outweighs the money he usually wins. Something usually gets broken in each race, he admits, and it costs a lot. But as long as l'm not the thing that comes home broken, l guess I can't complain. Sophomores 171 Teresa Mundy Sandy Munsey Beth Myers Sarah Myers Becky Newman Clevie Nichols Rebecca Nichols Tammy Nichols Tanual Otey Brenda Overstreet Jeff Pace Annette Pakush Kathy Palmer Kathy Palmer Calvin Parker Kelly Patrick Penny Patrick Mary Perkins Deidre Perry James Perry Pat Phillips Harold Philpott Mark Pinkard Tammy Pinson Juan Powell Mark Pratt Bob Preddy Debbie Pugh Michael Ramey Tina Reavis Annette Reed Burton Reed Sandra Reese Susie Ribble Donna Richards Billy Richardson 1 :Sf , S x - x .t ax.. ' ,N mv '- -::fj f-' .. P sttt if if vis- X X X . slit g is C :i .1 XX: '--l' - t XX A 'X x X . Pj, P Q sifw F- Nm is x Q5 N QQ vw X Q X ea sf X 4 s, r i i asset by is X ff ts ig it N 5 8-X R' ' QS X X 'X tx X ws KN K Paw tc me ,SN Swag? Q x , ' Ni x X N N Y it if 'X Blah-busters in the guise of the Patrick Henry pe assembly find sophomores chanting, Get down. get down - Colonels are gonna get up! 172 Sophomores P 4 55 S ,ai-5 focus on a snap-happy photographer Some people find themselves happiest underneath a basketball hoop or in the mid- dle of a stage or behind a stack of books. For sophomore Rebecca Nichols, there's no doubt about it. l'm happiest behind the lens of a camera, she said. Although experience is the best teacher for a photographer, Rebecca said it had a big boost from her eighth grade science teacher, Mr. Charles Kennedy. The straight- A student began her photography career when Mr. Kennedy assigned the class to shoot a roll of film. develop it, and make a R, 5 . print. From that point on, I was hooked, she said. Her talent with F-stops and shutter speeds has not gone unnoticed. Her land- scapes exhibited in the Roanoke City Schools Administration Building drew raves from former Art Supervisor. Dr. Betty Tysinger. l thought the works were by a nationally-known photographer, Dr. Ty- singer said. I just couldn't believe that they were the efforts of a ninth grade student. Glen Richardson Phoebe Richardson Vickie Richardson Linda Robbins Connie Robertson Mark Robertson Wesley Robertson Deborah Robinson Walter Rosser Tim Runion Gloria St.CIair Pat Sanderlin Diane Sarver Robert Saunders Toni Saunders Connie Sawyers Charlyne Seaman Brenda Sewell it -A 1 , 5' , all xl X X s N , Ki Mark Shifflett Timmy Shortt Kathy Simmons Dawn Sisson Dwayne Slough Robin Slusher GH' chris small ' Andrew Smith Billy Smith Donna Smith Earl Smith Lee Smith frgbg Sophomores 173 Lou Smith Maria Smith Don Southern Sharon Sowder Kimberlie Sowers Mike Spencer I I S Q SEX? ris tamper N Kim Stanley ri yf Joann Stephens Dinah Stevens April Stiff ' Lonnie Stull not all the gobblers are at tech TW Q f T Oo Q ' 509 3 X . 9 vi! +Qv1qQif1 i?s 'a Qgiqe aegis Lesley Stultz Cindy Sweet Barbara Tames Cindy Tate Sheena Taylor Linda Thomas The mailman approached the front of the house, fumbling with a bulky package that couldn't fit into the mailbox. The large, oblong box with unusual gobbling sounds coming from inside might have made a passerby take a closer look, but the person receiving the package knew that the new additions to the household had arrived. Sophomore Richard Cotton raises turkeys in his backyard. lt's not very hard to raise animals. he feels, if you care about them. Caring for them takes Richard two or three hours a day, and even then, he finds himself looking out the window to make sure the gobblers are okay. He names a few of the gobblers and tells them apart by the shapes of their feet or their beaks. When he enters the pen, the turkeys somehow recognize him and don't bother him. But when they peck at you, it hurts a lot, he said. Richard's neighbors don't worry a bit about having gobblers next door. They have never complained, said Richard. They come over and joke about having turkeys as neighbors. Before Thanksgiving, Richard had sixteen turkeys, but after Turkey Day, the flock was down to four. The twelve missing were sold to friends and relatives as the main course for their Thanksgiving dinners. Reluctantly, Richard admits that he gets attached to some of his turkeys. l miss the gobblers when they're gone, he said. R . . , i. p T ' ' 1. - swf-. w as -fs so .4 , . . is s 'XC l r .1 li Sandra Thompson Waverly Thornhill Vicki Throckmartin Donnie Thurman Tammy Towriss Wayde Trent 174 Sophomores -...S 194' 'f V b if i I as - e W. as ff-v u -. . Le . . , W ..q ,.1ft .- t - A- ., -a .so - X - ,me gs X :X sg, .,. -A S 't 3 38 :ii-h is NQQQQ W s W' 5 .Wt il .-Ng ' x ts. . Q .. :t,:,,, to i fi eelsssste Q1 ' . . :'- Q t15f?f .X ,mi l e 'N t gsm.: M.-5 S- , . :SI ,- gggggfs. - M- -- a ,3- X E Qt QE? ix its N XX X 2 3 wi' X A .N 'il' i es f 'Cai-T -svffttsls '- . r'--Si? . fgflii-5--17i552s?Ea5 X 'kk if 5?:f'i3l:Qa2iV QDOSTWM '3'f'l3': 'iiiilikills 'if uw -X -f..5g':o-fliflirg . Q' . A - . S Y if 1 . K -- -' , ' . i ..., ' ' Y - I Q 5 is ' - ' 2 .g , ' - 'h- h P -fs R ::.:, -i Great expectations register on the face of Linwood Cannaday as the Wise Man awaits the birth of the Christ Child at the schools Christmas Nativity scene. Patty Trout Wayne Turner Kathy Underwood Vickie Vaughn Steve Via Michael Vines Greg Wairt Archie Waldron Mike Walters Denise Washington Michael Washington Marsha Webb Barry Weiler Gary West Dennis Wheeling Juanita White David Whittaker Alan Wilhelm Brenda Williams Jamie Williams Lorenza Williams Amy Williamson Debbie Williamson Angie Wilson Jeff Wilson Sarah Wooldridge David Workman Linda Wray Ann Wright Donald Young Renee Young Vincent Younger Sophomores 175 -.fa different kind of wrestling that-ch - It was a weird kind of wrestling match. There were no referees in black and white shirts to throw in the towel. There were no flexed biceps and clenched teeth. And both grapplers come out winners. Mr. Travis Hariston,-Building Manager, says that for years. he wrestled with the thought of becoming a preacher. l tried other jobs, stated Mr. Hariston. but the Lord wouldn't let go of me. I first preached in November of 1974, and l've been in the pulpit somewhere almost every Sunday since. Working for the Lord, for Mr. Hariston. isn't just a matter of an hour in the pulpit each Sunday. He says he tries to let his faith work for and through him in his job of supervising the night custodians. Wit- nessing through my life is far harder than speaking with my mouth, he laughed. Nor is the spoken word his only chan- ww E MR. JAMES C. WOOD: Principal. MR. KENNETH L. FRENCH: Activities Director. MR. LLOYD A. AUSTIN: Hart Hall Dean. MR. IRVIN CANNADAY, JR.: Smith Hall Dean, K. . MR. THOMAS H. DIXON: Camper Hall Dean. MR. HARTWELL PHILIPS: Coulter Hall Dean. MRS. LYNNE C. AGEE: Physical Edu- cation, Girls' Basketball, Cheerleaders. Girls' Tennis. MRS. MARY S. ALLEN: Mathematics. Red Cross. ...E nel of, communication. His ministry also takes the form of singing. He is a soloist with the Hill Street Baptist Church. He often sings with the William Fleming Concert Choir, and his wife and four children occasionally join him in the Hill Street Baptist Church Choir loft for special numbers. Although his mother was a music teacher, Mr. Hariston sings by ear, not note. And I sing for free, he admit- ted. l have too much fun singing to get paid for it. Although Mr. Hariston concedes that some day he may want to have a full- time pastorate, he is satisfied for the present with being an itinerant preacher. Being in a different pulpit each week allows me to meet and reach more peo- pIe, he said. And being around people makes me smile. Right now, I think that's the way the Lord wants it, and I know better than to wrestle with the Lord. - fi- ., Fig X MKS.. ,Eg 55 tl EQ? .QQ s. .. ft Q it fi 3 X Ka I MRS. REBECCA S. ANDERSON: Guidance, Girls' Club. MR. CHARLES L. ARRINGTON: Eng- lish Department Chairman. MR. LARRY W. ARRINGTON: Physical Education, Indoor Track, Outdoor Track. MR. CARY D. ATKINS: Guidance. Human Relations Council. 176 Faculty MISS JANET E. BAKER: English, For- ensics. MRS. SHELIA K. BALDERSON: Span- ish. MR. ROBERT G. BARTON, JR.: Social Studies. MR. EDMUND A. BESSELL: Social Studies, Chess Club. MRS. JANE S. BRILL: English, News- paper. MR. U. B. BROADNEAUX: Band, Marching Band. Concert Band, Stage Band. MRS. DELOIS C. BROADY: English. F.T.A. MRS. MARY F. BROOKS: English. MRS.. DOROTHY C. BROWN: Busi- ness Department Co-Chairman. MR. MICHAEL A. BRYANT: Social Studies, Wrestling. MR. JERRY CAMPBELL: Social Studies, Baseball, J.V. Basketball, J.V. Football. MR. RONALD W. CAMPBELL: Latin. MRS. LEILA M. CHRISTENBURY: English. MRS. EVELYN P. COLLINS: Home Economics, F.H.A. MRS. BARBARA H. COMER: Library, Girls' Club. MISS LOIS A. COX: Mathematics Department Chairman. Sporting a floppy hat, an attentive Mrs. Esther Riley listens to Dr. M. Don Pack, Superintendent of Schools, speak at a faculty tea. Faculty 1 77 Graduation night brings a smile to Mrs. Shelia Balderson as she watches her senior Spanish stu- dents graduate. MRS. KATHERYN H. CRAMER: Home Economics. MRS. BEULAH C. DABNEY: Guidance. MRS. JOSLYN C. DOWE: Social Studies, Sophomore Class. MR. DEAN L. EGGE: Art, Art Club. MS. DORIS C. EGGE: Guidance, Hu- man Relations Council. MR. ROBERT J. EVANS: Industrial Arts. MR. ROBERT L. FARISS: Social Studies, Debating Team. MRS. DONNA Z. FROST: French, French Club, Modern Foreign Lan- guage Club, Sophomore Class. MR. HENRY L. FULFORD: Art, Cross Country, Art Club. MS. CLAUDIA E. GEIGER: German, German Club, Modern Foreign Lan- guage Club. MRS. BIBB D. HALEY: Biology. MR. JAMES H. INGRAM: l.C.T., Base- ball, J.V. Basketball, V.l.C.A. MR. ERNEST E.JOHNSON JR.: Math. S.C.A. MRS. MARY J. JOHNSON: Business. MS. SINDI JONES: Art. MR-. THOMAS M. JONES, JR.: Biolo- gy. Chemistry. SGT. CECIL KINCER: R.O.T.C., R.O.T.C. Club. 1 78 Faculty gf 'wr ... X with Q at fill? H Q' if - 1 i ff MR. RAY LARGO: English, Beta Club. MR. VICTOR R. LAYMAN: Biology. MR. DON E. LEE: Driver Education, Football. MR. ROBERT L. LENOIR, JR.: Driver Education. Golf. aking music the hard way so-A-W- He couldn't find a house to buy: with a little help from his friends, he is building his own. He couldn't find a dulcimer to play: with a little more help from other friends, he built his own. And the same is true of banjos, violins, and just about anything else that can be shaped from wood. l like building just about anything. but l'm especially proud of my dulcimers, said Mr. Rouen Evans. Industrial 'Arts teacher. The dulcimer, a string instrument slightly smaller than a violin, is laid across the lap and strummed. I learned how to make one by visiting with old mountain folk in Kentucky, North Carolina, and Virginia. reported Mr. Evans. I have spent many a weekend rapping with these people, he said. Beneath their weathered faces are some of the most interesting people I've ever known. Taking instructions from his mountain friends. Mr. Evans learned the rudiments of playing a dulcimer before he construct- ed his first model. He concedes that he is no expert musician. but knowing how an instrument works is a great help in build- ing one, he said. He has also studied the piano, trombone, mandolin, banjo, guitar, trumpet. clarinet, and autoharp. Although his know-how extends from reeds to brass to strings, Mr. Evans has concentrated on the dulcimer recently. Since the first model, he has completed some eight or ten dulcimers. He sells them for S100-5125, depending on the finish and the quality. Since it takes me more than forty hours to complete one, l'm certainly not getting rich. stated Mr. Evans. But it's a great hobby. and hear- ing harmony come from something I've made is really music to my ears. I 1' i . . S, ., 5' . A . U ss' 5 Y x ' MR. DAVID I. LIPPS: String Orchestra. Guitar Club. MR. ROGER W. LOVERN: Distributive Education, D.E.C.A.. Senior Class. MR. JOHN H. MACK: English. Foot- ball, Girls' Track. Varsity Club. MISS MARY C. MAIER: Library, Li- brary Student Aides. MRS. DEBORAH J. MAYBERRY: English, Drama, Thespians, Play Pro- duction. MISS LANA L. MCCLOUD: Biology, Flag Girls, Majorettes, Sabrettes. MRS. CAROLYN M. MCCORKINDALE: Business. MR. GEORGE C. MILLER: Physical Education, Football, Wrestling, Varsity Club. Faculty 179 MR. JAMES T. MOORE: Driver Edu- cation, J.V. Football. MISS SHELBA J. MURPHY: Special Education, J.V. Cheerleaders, Girls' Club. MISS ELEANOR L. NEESE: Special Education, Boys' Tennis. MRS. MARGARET A. PACK: Business. fs if is getting accustomed to customs v. .. Sauerkraut, wienerschnitzel, knock- wurst, and lederhosen became as familiar as Big Macs and wranglers. In her fourth trip to Germany. Miss Claudia Geiger felt right at home as she joined thirty-three other American high school German teachers for the eight-week Goethe Sum- mer Fellowship in Freiburg, Germany. The classroom atmosphere was very relaxed, said Miss Geiger. For instance, we studied about German wines in class. and we followed the theory by taking a tour of a German winery. Although classes in grammar. conversation. and culture were scheduled for four hours a day. five days a week, the German teach- ers squeezed in time for sightseeing. Miss Geiger crossed the German border into Switzerland for a day's visit and into France for another side trip. But it is the one-week tour to Prague, Czechoslovakia she'II remember the long- est. l was traveling alone. and I had never been into a Communist country alone before. Crossing that border was the harriest moment of my life. The hundreds of slides she took in Europe often bring back memories of her trips there as she introduces her German students to many aspects of the culture. German has been good to me, Miss Geiger said. l began it as a lark in college because of my German ancestry, and l've stuck with it ever since. Although Miss Geiger has mastered German almost to the point of being able to travel undetected as an American. she says she has learned an even more important principal from her travels abroad. lt's not always what you say in a foreign language that counts, she said. lt's that a person tries to speak it. If he does it with a,smile, he's almost always understood. . I MISS NANCY R. PATTERSON: Pho- tography, Spanish, Foreign Language Supervisor, Annual. Mas. JUNE c. PERRY: Music, choir. Girls' Choir. MRS. ESTHER P. RILEY: English. Campus Life Club. MRS. ALMA F. ROBERTSON: Busi- ness. Red Cross. MRS. NANCY R. ROSENBAUM: English, Literary Magazine. MR. TRUMAN J. ROSS: Distributive Education, D.E.C.A., Junior Class. MR. ROBERT SANDY: Biology. Indoor Track, Outdoor Track, F.C.A. MS. SANDRA F. SAYERS: Social Studies. 180 Faculty 5 Fw.. 'tu MRS. NANCY C. SIMMONS: English. Sophomore Class. MRS. CARYL G. SOLOMON: Busi- ness, Red Cross. SGT. DAVID L. SPANGLER: R.O.T.C. R.O.T.C. Club. MS. DAWNE R. STANTON: Reading. MR. DONALD L. STINNETT: Social Studies. MISS ELIZABETH STONE: Guidance. Annual. MRS. CAROL K. TEAR: Mathematics. Knitting Club. MRS. LYNN M. THOMPSON: Social Studies, Grapplettes. Girls' Club. MRS. JOYCE H. TROUT: English. Junior Class. MR. CHARLES A. VAN LEAR, Ill: Driver Education, Basketball. MRS. LINDA C. WAKELAND: Home Economics. F.H.A. MRS. DOROTHY S. WALDEN: Eng- lish, Junior Class. MISS DEBBIE L. WALDRON: English, Cheerleaders. Beta Club. MISS SARAH G. WALTON: Social Studies Chairman. MRS. GENEVIEVE H. WARING: Math. MR. D. KENNETH WEDDLE: Mathe- matics. F.T.A.. P.T.S.A. Faculty Rep- resentative. I 4: : ' ' ' 'S r. 1- is . ' Education, Red Cross -ff ssl' . in No split infinitives, commands Mrs. Jane Brill as students in her English Contract class concentrate on their corrected themes. MISS BERTHA L WHITE Physical Li LT. COL. CHARLES J. WHITE: R.O.T.C., R.O.T.C. Club. MR. JAMES G. WHITE: Job Place- ment Service Director. MRS. PENNY WILSON: Reading. MISS ELAINE H. WINGATE: Dis- tributive Education, Fashion Merchan- dising, D.E.C.A. MRS. SHIRLEY W. WINGO: English, Literary Magazine. MRS. DOROTHY D. WITTEN: Mathe- matics. MRS. BILLIE B. WRIGHT: Business, C.O.E. MRS. MARGARET ASBURY: Library Clerk. MRS. LILLIAN G. DENT: Library Clerk. MRS. DARLENE KASEY: Central Of- fice Secretary. MRS. SHARON Y. LATHAM: English Office Secretary. MRS. JOANN B. PEAKE: Activities Office Secretary. m ef . . fi Q., , ggi? i Y 152' 'llifu f aff- .. Q, ,Q'..a-..z sf1.,.1.'-.- ,. fa I at ' , af Q -Q- 1 . . . yi Y f J if . , 5 42- ac..-a-- .1, f A rr- 1 4 always on het toes 1 82 Faculty The houselights dimmed: the audience broke into applause: a tiny six-year-old tiptoed onto stage. The audience, proud parents in Rochester, New York, focused on the tiny would-be ballerina. I'II never forget that recitaI, laughed the petite French teacher, Mrs. Donna Frost, as she recalled her early days in ballet school. I was dancing away when my over-sized costume fell off, and I found myself in white Ieotards. Most of Mrs. Frost's adventures en pointe have been more serious than her early debut in ballet shoes. For ten years. she practiced for weekly lessons and yearly recitals. She studied under Olive McCue, and her dance sessions with this nationally prominent teacher led Mrs. Frost to perform The Nutcracker Suite with the Mercury Ballet Company, a professional ,dance troupe in New York. On the way to being a professional ballerina herself, Mrs. Frost opted, in- stead, for a career in foreign languages. Most professional dancers have to prac- tice six to eight hours a day, and a sched- ule like that doesn't leave much room for a personal Iife, she said. But she still works out a little every day. just because I love being on my toes. She also enjoys keeping her classes on their toes by teach- ing them foreign dances. Not only at the ballet bar, but in the classroom as well, Mrs. Frost is on her toes. In her secondyear at Fleming, she has built the French Department and added a course in Foreign Language Humanities and French for Travelers to the curriculum. Married to a French teach- er from Patrick Henry High School, Mrs. Frost loves to travel. Wherever she is, she always tries to squeeze in time for at least one ballet. Watching others dance brings back beautiful memories, she said. Weary from an unusually hectic day, reading teacher Mrs Penny Wilson finds a moment of solitude in the MRS. MARY R. -PILSONZ Central Of- fice Secretary. MISS FRANCES L. SANDERSON: Central Office Secretary. MISS PHYLLIS C. WILLIAMS: Job Placement Office Secretary. MRS. BONNIE AKERS: Cafeteria. MRS. LALLY ALMOND: Cafeteria. MRS. LOIS GILL: Cafeteria. MRS. ALICE KEELING: Cafeteria. MRS. VIOLET LEFFEL: Cafeteria. MRS. PEGGY PEDIGO: Cafeteria. MRS. VIRGINIA PETERS: Cafeteria Manager. MRS. DORIS SHELTON: Cafeteria. MRS. DOROTHY TOLLEY: Cafeteria. MR. JAMES L. BROWN: Maintenance. MR. TRAVIS HARISTON: Building Manager. Faculty 1 83 ac M E x 184 Ad ertise ents - ou had a goodfthing going back theny iYour Mom would cut up the lemons and buy the sugar, pull out the pitcher and count out the paper cups. Your Dad would nail to- gether a few boards, hand letter b er-paper sign to read 5e , r give your and sisterysrafdime apiece and you llelrt were in busi- utch The postman. a few generous neighbors, your family and friends would buy up all the lemonade you didn't drink. and you'd spend the night counting a fistfull of nickles. pennies, and occasional dime, thinking it was to bejQri ch. soon youislfoundi 1ldt out that standscouldn't sup- your taste for the finer in life - Archie comic books, all-day suckers. and Mickey Mantle baseball cards. So you moved on to a bigger and better thing - the paper Humped over from the of forty-five xWorld News talk finds juniors Dowe and Robinson comparing produce at the open-air the Roanoke City Market. papers,liyQutlibravea the rain and the snow and Mr. Black's white dog. You ran home on collec- tion day, jingling with the quar- ters and half dollars that made you rich. You ran out once again to buy the finer things in life - 45 r.p.m. records, your first after shave, and presents galore for your girlfriend ofthe week. , , LatieriiorigsQyou found out ethatfff yiii money didn't come so easily. So you shopped more carefully for your finer things in life - the 56.98 painters' pants for sale at the Army-Navy store, the 810.99 version of Wallabees. and the 504: bandanna you found at the Girls' Clubfs rummage sale. And you padiocked your wallet to save ifoilftlflfi ireallY bi9 things your class ring, a tux for the Prom, Saturday night dates with your girl friend of the month. But no matter how hard you tried to save. you still couldn't resist stopping on a summer's day to buy a cup of lemonade from a kid who, like you, knew all aboutstheyfiner things in life. Advertisements 185 186 Advertisements The CARPET SHOP 2811 Williamson Rd., N.W. Roanoke, Va. 24012 Phone 362-1651 Tr? . 97ze most orfgi?Il,Zf drink. -ever: '76 KFCS-64 We make your house a home. ' RED ' f .4. BIRD A GARAGE ffl' f' is iff 3021 Preston Ave., N.VV. Roanoke, Va. 24012 Phone 362-1871 Complete Auto Repair And Tune Up ffm- CN . . . if it's for someone special e':e-9? Q'3-L'f3'7gf .QC 0 O'Brien's Meat Stores 5 5528 Williamson Rd., N.W. 26 West Main St., Salem - 3507 Franklin Rd., S.W. 4119 Lee Hivhway, Salem candy ' C8l'd5 -' glft5 4301 Appleton Ave., N.w. 511 Hardy Rod., vimon l A Better Communications Choice. Universal Communication Systems Inc 1401 Municipal Rd. 0 P.O. Box 254 Roanoke. Virginia 24012 l703l 362-3701 188 Ad Jenkinis Rings We're a dedicated group of professional and practical doctors, nurses, specialists, nursing, surgical technicians, and technicians. And were radiology, lab technicians, and searching for kindred spirits. radiation oncology. If you still have that old loin us. lt's a great future school spirit at graduation, for you. And Southwest we'd like to encourage you to Virginia, too. continue your education at Write:Director of Personnel Roanoke Memorial Hospitals. Roanoke Memorial Hospitals, Cur schools include Roanoke, Virginia 24014. Gul' commitment: 'I'okeepSoutl1westV' ' ' healthy as it is beautiful. isements Q. Qc Q? 0 Booklets 0 Stationery ,K 0 Newspapers O Invitations 0 Business Forms 0 Advertising Pieces sggv TOLERANDCOMPANY HH1WmmmwnmLNE 'R Roanoke, Virginia 24012 Q Telephone I703I 366-8851 UTHOGRAPHERSANDPRHHERS Highest Guaranteed Interest on Insured Savings . . . you can depend on it! I PEOPLES I FEDERAL SAVINGS 8- LOAN ASSOCIATION ROANOKE ' VINTON SALEM P f 1 Buicicssunc Le0p1e , Member Pe Ove rsiic Uples E f x 1 I PAINE,WEBBEF?,JACKSON e. cunris INCORPORATED MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE,INC. JAMES C. TAM ES 14 WEST KIRK AVENUE ROANOKE,VIRGINIA 24011 f703D 344-5571 Advertisements 191 WH ii IE QIIETTTS 62 B lg Resggftg 533.545, X., sxxrxazvaf AA7fn Ja.' Advertisements TCJWN 81 COUNTRY INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION I R Al ff- XX ggzggg xx' .gig kv WATCH STRAPS FASHION STRAPS NYLON STRAPS NECKCHAINS CHARM BRACELETS WATCH BRACELETS YOUR REPRESENTATIVE: CHARLES HU'I'I'ON 1209 Greenhurst Ave., N.W. Roanoke. Va. 24012 366-2747 -I-'iW:,. x Z f -f Y' . - :vi-Q' ' 1 1,jg,m-wwghf 1 fr., Mi M -'I-qflgfigg 41,37 by .Q f 4 ww 4 v ,ki S' 7.Th'Nu-J'1w?11 W ' w'55-is 4' fu ,K z , gf, mf . uf HEMS 81 HERS W, I? 2 I fi ,,.-wg-. , .. L - ' .-' X NICHOLAS MUNGER INSURANCE COMPANY 504 23rd St., N.W. Roanoke, Va. 343-1551 5 W -nn GENERAL ELECTRIC B E fllulullnnnlllIniuunnnmnunmmnunnummmmuunumnumm: , j 1... .... ........ . .. Hu LII I FW P HS P-12 ff P15I,fff5fIf ff9 fEI9I9M'fQ ,, ,Q gh 1i5s1!lsslIeln4FuIsIIIn u ppu n n I I my I ! u I I I pu. flflsqgd.- fi il 'iw V ,iff .,,:v-,, ' ,, A ' SALEM, VIRGINIA Ad 193 FERRCYS PIZZA And Italian Restaurant Lamplighter Mall 5524 Williamson Rd., N.W. Roanoke, Va. 24012 I E-I-DAIRY DlvlsloN INCORPORATED 339 1118 SALEM AVENUE, S.W. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 24006 PHONE C7033 344-5501 A ,W ,,,,, M, Q,,,,,,.,,,.- ,WH Vi Y 1. Advertisements 195 We 1 3 ' Cover Th S R A LT Y cospommou V3H9Y 1401 Peters Creek Rd. Roanoke, Va. 24017 Phone 563-0341 Jack Jacobs, Broker Kelley's Market Open 7 Days A Week 4129 Salem T p'k R k ,V , Ph 344-84 8 Join now and youill start your new Navy career with a pay raise. Along with all the other benefits that come with Navy life. Such as food, housing, clothing, medical care and 30 paid vacation days a year. You'll have a chance to learn a skill, too. In any one of more than 70 important job areas. And you can find out exactly what kind of training you may qualify for even before you enlist. The Navy will even help you continue or resume your education through the 01' Navy Campus for Achievement. Itis a great life. But it's not an easy one. Youive got to be able to stand up to a program of training and development designed to demand the most of you. And bring out the best in you. But all the while youire learning and growing you'll be getting the highest pay in Navy history. So why not find out what you qualify for. Now! Stop in and see your local Navy recruiter. U.S. Navy Recruiting Station 601 S. Jefferson St. Roanoke, Va. Phone 342-6859 BUILD YOUR FUTURE ON A PROUD TRADITION. Advertisements 197 ' os-6 'Me' DRY CLEANING AND UYEINGI .2 A n l 198 Ad 4026 Mex' 'I 362-375 W . St-I N I 3A2'm EAN! a. xl iniflnim t NATIONWIDE INSURANCE The man from Nationwide is on your side Wayne J Conner 3118 Williamson Rd. Roanoke, Va. 24012 362-3749 Blanket Protection For Your Business Or Your Family we iw 'Sy 35' CUSTOM PAINT AND S5gff. xffggg f rf' if I r I 65,516 27I5 PETERS CREEK ROAD Corner of Cove Road ROANOKE , VIRGINIA 24019 CUNNINGHAM'S BARBER SHOPS Styling Center Located at the corner of Hershberger Rd. and Cove Rd. 3332 Cove Rd., N.W. Call 563-1302 for a hairstyling appointment. Regular haircuts any time. F13-. Af' :IV ,,LH,f, f t,4L,4f,,1 ,M ,,, ?3L,tj1' ,, ' I1 AIIT Regular Haircut Center ' V ,fx L , V 4323 Appleton Ave. 2 A rttt Z can 366-9782 ' , I ft, Save for the future Ad I t 199 and nt t in ttrle ' clltn n T Ph0ne9a1-Qfni Nick D. Payne's Old Dominion Tire Company 3014 Trinkle Ave., N.W. Roanoke, Va. 24012 Tires Wheel Balancing Front End Alignment Brakes Shocks Tune Up Official Inspection Station Phone 563-0808 Expert Automotive Service Is Our Specialty Need Help? Call Superior for guaranteed satisfaction. Phone 362-3245. Superior Exterminating Co. Inc. 1312 Peters Creek Rd. Roanoke, Va. 24012 EVAN'S DRUG STORE 1107 Curtis Ave. Roanoke, Va. Prescriptions And Pretties WSH Q- Q, N, A :gy ass Nl R fi Where you don't have to be a millionaire, to dine like one. The Gourmet ROANORES AWARU wiNNiNc, RESTAURANT OPEN EACH DAY EXCEPT SUN. - l1A.M. - ll P. M. CROSSROADS MALL-RESERVATIONS 366-3444 202 Advertisements 4 a a it Q .X 6 5 K X ,. if , if fi . -,.. ?' .1 -5:53 e-:-:':-. . ::: f:::: .::fIvf5:R .EEN-lw v- '- :I 0 Vacuums your lawn as you mow. 4 Large Capacity bag between the handles. el 1 I lily? rH rr- .W ,,,::::,. ff f'1'i'5'x df Tough, dependable. Fingertip Controls. Q Big-job power. 0 5 forward speeds and reverse, Q 26 and 30N cut. 0 5 HP or 8 HP engines. 0 Self propelled 4 instant depth fOYXV21l'd SpCCLiS, g1gljL15tmCntg, i G All Snapper 1 vers meet .- AN.S.l. safety specifications. All Snapper mowers inuci All Snapper mowers ineet A N S I, safety specifications. A N Sl safety specifications. See Telephone Yellow Pages For Your Nearest Dealer GYOUR OEXTRA CTOUCH CFLORIST 1717 Peters Creek Rd. Telephone 366-4348 3434 Hollins Rd. Telephone 366-3016 5301 Williamson Rd. Telephone 366-1531 Adtme nts 203 at graduation . . give yourself a head start Whatever your life insurance needs may be now, they're sure to grow when you marry and start raising a family. That's why a Living Insurance policy plus OPAI lOption to Purchase Additional lnsurancel makes such good sense. It meets your current protection needs and assures you the right to increase your insurance every three years from age 25 to age 40 - regard- less of your health at that time. on family security. Want to start building your pro- gram of protection? Call or write for details about Living Insurance plus OPAI, today. lm- lwlvavlil wt if-it oi vlll Lvnml mln . 'xw NW 'l'hcrc's nobody else like you. ROANOKE DISTRICT AGENTS E.M. Ned Baber, CLU Charles M. Blair, Jr.. CLU Michael R. Carroll C. Mack Clark. CLU William W. Hopkins Gordon F. Ruble, CLU Joseph H. Surkamer, Jr. Andrew H. Thompson, CLU Barry C. Webb Marvin W. Taylor. District Manager 1402 First National Exchange Bank Building, Roanoke, Va. 2401 1 204 Advertisements ,? , 6' Trailer Sales Wifliamson Rd EDDIE'S PIZZA KING 3005 H II Rd R k V Hamlar-Curtis Funeral Home 1002 Moorman Rd. LEG G ETT'S Suburban Store Roanoke-Salem Plaza Roanoke, Va. Your Happy Shopping Place ' Pjlnl me 'Q Pilot Life Insurance Company 3565 Franklin Rd. Roanoke, Va. Phone 3442055 Dennis R. Baldwin David W. Alderman 344-5611 362-5250 ' ,la .. LX' l I H Q f , LA id!!!-W-A ii- iffl lm alfilldlkggllgl PIANO AND FURNITURE CO 1 ' V V 3. V E,A . win' if W L' -. ' ' 55 955023 ,fl :QQ llllla aging ' 2 gf 3015 Fleming A S.J. Conner And Sons, Inc. Plumbing Heating Mechanical Contrs. Residential 0 Commercial Industrial Repair Service 344-8383 lf no answer, call 343-6046 1507 22nd St., N.W. A 207 Needle-In-A-Haystack Towers Upper Mall Crewel Embroidery Needlepoint Latch Hook Rugs 344-6763 l . . KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CU. 4141 Melrose Ave. 1923 Williamson Rd. If it concerns doughnuts... look to this symbol of progress cn umm srunns 1- IN-ROBBINS BASIC X. 1 we x of L ix X Y N Q .yvv X i i L :RSS F ,S S W V ge p We E 1 ' A- '- ff K Q VV' S A We make people happy M Magic Touch Beauty Salon 1026 Hershberger Rd. Get the Magic Touch V fs ,- .f-,mf ify f KFLQ fx 'W-if 1 x ' ,Vw Q gk ,il .xx Ekit. .g f . .,.wf -X fy ,iffii L V ix H. K X K v '- Y fi: ,gg pix 4 X cw Adt ts 209 Ad Ask Me What's So Special About Roanoke Auto Spring Works Q C W-H-f QAM, K NN, X 3. . Q . S They're The Under-Carriage Specialist, Offering 'FRAME ALIGNMENT 'FRONT END ALIGNMENT 'DRIVE SHAFTS 'DRIVE SHAFTS TO BALANCED SPECIFICATION 'SPRINGS TO 'FRAME STRAIGHTENING SPECIFICATION ROANOKE AUTO SPRING WORKS 401 Williamson Rd., N.E. 343-1597 A '32 CRCTTS CZIWIGE Specializing in 'AUTO REPAIR BODY AND FENDER WORK 'WRECKER SERVICE CROTIS GARAGE INC. 504 8th St. Salem, Va. 24153 Phone 389-2271 I otlfins ohotogro phd on the moll, towers ioonoke viiginio 24lOl5 Portraits 0 Creative Weddings Commercial Photography Taken in natural color or black and white 67,71 an B auf? .founga High Styling 7717 Williamson Rd Roanoke, Va. 362-4212 9 huld 'ff' iw! our: au' , f isngfbecoming ,4 i' o 1 X 5 il, you , , ou J. o f COUIII7 I E. 1. THOMAS MARKET 5 Y- XX XX--out RXRXXNMNLQMRN FD ' 0 CENTER F Lk A WIIPRDTECTIVE LIFEQ3 E INSURANCE CCJIVIPANY HOIVIE OFFICE - BIFIIVIINGHIXIVI, ALAEANIA imma Williamson Road Pharmacy 3416 Williamson Rd. Roanoke, Va. R Russell Stover Candy Hallmark Cards Prescription Center 212 Ad rti ments AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS Lester A. Bauserman Owner Free Towing 0 Free Road Test Fast Service 0 Budget Terms 345-7 307 8 a.m. 'Ti16 p.m. Mon. Thru Fri. 1304 Williamson Rd., N.E. Roanoke, Va. Mr. Samuel P. McNeil Dr. Wendell H. Butler Mrs. Hugh D. Dowdy Chairman Vice Chairman . v--f ...kr ,,s.,,..-,.,1-,..:, A Mr. James W. Burks, Jr -- 15--aseiie-2211.11Q-2-W?11- .117 1 -fi ll---1Qs2L1b2iQ-351-ziia , , . 1- S .1 1. -- 1 1 1 .af .ffm , 1- - 1, 1. .., s. ,,..,,..g,5,m.W5,,x ,,,..,, ,. M .,,..m..,,,...,,,MX..,,..,..,,.,w.,5..g.,.,,. ..,,1.51..,1,, ,, , 1 , ,,-1-11. --,1.-.,,,,3.1a..N,fs,.w.1.. 'I.11-2MEL-55521-5+2.52g.1lsgss15-5-.J511sZ:15-5-14.11, ,--111, .1,-w-.g.g--1s,,.111---1511-I.-.Q1,. W... 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Mr. Lewis M. Nelson, Jr. 1 ii?L,,-2-iQ.1-s11.-11-ii'.1e 4-12?ifiw-Sz--iff-11.-sw----'1 -- .1 ,, ..., ,.,,.. ,, 1 ,, .1 ,1,,.--- .1m, .11wg- f .- 1 , l 12 fi S -S W wr WS ,. 1 f,...1.11 . .f..,f-:ef-19 1--V+ 1 1. , 1 .- ff 1.-2 , KL Q J , 1 , W 5 We . 1 2 W1 an 2 2 Y . K 2- E N ,f 1 1 1 . 1 S 1 5. , sa ,5 1 wk fa H K F rw f ff Q if fi V5 X J fx bw 5 S5 Q is sig S K if N J: Q K ww wg f fx i. X .f Q .Q 5 MEX? ,rw , 2 V , Q X x a 'S K i --' A-' 1 -192'.55-521551555-w?El'15 x f.1f,.1P-- :f..1 -!LiiQ11s- S, X , .1 ,,..., , ...., Q 1-51. ,K , ..,,, 11, 1 211- S 2 'S 1. --,M-neg 5119211 1 --1-:--gfziisz'-11 1.1-,,.15-1,-wr.. -ffy --W ,, 5. 152, gg -- , 1' 11, M. ,M M --A ' ,,.. 1-, 1. 1 .1 1, , 113-1,i'11-- --1--1. 1111- 3 .1 2.ag-ig---if11,2112--easing-13-fr-sf,.. --11.115 151 1 - - --'1 -- - ,.:-1- H--- 2z.ii1,fw11--133521saiifgiiwsfze-22-2.2261--iii-I1vff'V--U: 5 - 1 iifi ' V 'f 'Q .1196-.1 S?lii5i15 -3Y :flwY2 f m 4 1 1-faf511f,1G1f',-11'-wa 411- 1--1,.fvj ,. 5--, --,--v 11- iff-it 511552254 22-27 . . Mr. Daniel E. Wooldridge J - f - -., '-11-.jg--Q5 k-Qlf,f17-v1k1- -1, 5 , , , ,, - j L11 -- 5 V 1, K L .,,,- 1.1 --,1 ., or. M. n. Pack Superintendent 214 Advertisements 1151 -1, as new 11 11- 11. N 2.--me 1 Patrons Eugene G. Akers Miss Lesley Amrhein Mr. and Mrs. Clyde A. Angle Anonymous B.B. and Angie Mrs. C.C. Bain Junior Beckner Mr. and Mrs. Archie O. Benson Miss Cheryl J. Benson Mr. and Mrs. Doug L. Benson Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Benson Nancy Black Mr. and Mrs. J.L. Bohon Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Bohon Mr. and Mrs. Alan Brogan Mr. and Mrs. S.B. Brown Miss Angie Brumfield Mr. Billy Brumfield Miss Cindy Brumfield Mr. and Mrs. William Brumfield Miss Margaret Bushong Mr. Ronald B. Byrd Mr. and Mrs. Wade O. Caldwell David W. Craft Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Craighead Mr. and Mrs. Frank A, Cregger Mark B. Conner Mr. and Mrs. Allan R. Cochran Ron and Betty Crawford Miss Cheryl Cromer Mr. and Mrs. R.W. DeHart Jesse Drummond Mr. and Mrs. Jerry S. Farrar Mr. and Mrs. Barry L. Ferrell Mr. and Mrs. Claude S. Fowler Mr. John H. Franklin Barry Garnett Mr. and Mrs. R.W. Garnett Mr. Howard W. George Mrs. Lois Gill Miss Robin Lee Gill Mr. and Mrs. H.F. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Robert Guthrie David Hardie Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hardie Mr. and Mrs. L.R. Hawkins Mr. Michael Heptinstall Mrs. Vertie Heptinstall Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hogan Fred Horeis Mr. and Mrs. Leo Howard Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Hurd Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hutton Mr. and Mrs. William A. lrvin Mrs. Kathryn Jenkins Miss Cindy L. Journell Mr. JeffJournell Mrs. Opal H. Journell Miss Lynn Judd Mr. and Mrs. Luther L. Keith Sue and Dick Key Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Kopitzke Mr. Tommy B. Lane Mr. and Mrs. Virgil S. Lane. Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Lazenby Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ledden Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Lee Lucian and Nancy Mr. and Mrs. Ray Miller Mrs. Mary Milliner Mr. and Mrs. James V. Mills Mr. and Mrs. Ronald B. Mooney Mr. and Mrs. F.P. Murray, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Musselwhite Mr. Stephen A. Musselwhite Mr. and Mrs. T.L. Myers Miss M. Clare Newman Barry and Scot Nelson Miss Tina Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Michael Patrick Mr. and Mrs. Wessley Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Phillips Miss Jennie Phillips Mrs. Anne M. Ramsey Mr. and Mrs. Basil Ramsey Herm and June Reavis Miss Annette Reed Mr. and Mrs. lrvin J. Richards Rosie and Tony Sandy and San Chez Mrs. Sarah J. Simmons Miss Gladys Sloan Mrs. Ellen S. Smith Mr. G.B. Smith Miss Cookie Stover David Strickland Iris Sykes Mrs. Margaret Taylor TlQ9Y Mr, GS, Waters Mr. Mark V. Webb Mr. and Mrs. Norman Weber Mr. and Mrs. C.M. Weddle Mr. and Mrs. Corbin L. Wilson Sam and Jo Wilson Mr. and Mrs. M.W. Wiseman Mr. and Mrs. George Wolford Mr. James A. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Wooldridge Roger Worley Mr. Tommy H. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Mike A. Young 1' iii ,?u- Advertisements 215 AQAQA Abbott, Jeff 4.,,....,.. , , . 164 ACADEMIC ALTERNATIVES .... 96-99 ACADEMICS .,.4.....,........ 8 Adams, Amy . . . . 68, 74, 95, 112 Adams, Cynthia . ...... 4, 112 Adams, Kitty . . . . . 164 Adams, Mike Adams, Paul ,...,, .... 1 64 ADVERTISEMENTS , . , . .186-215 Aesy, Cheryl ,...,...,....... 164 AGEE, MRS LYNNE . . 66, 69, 80, 98, 176 AIRPORT HARDWARE ........,215 ASSEMBLIES . , . .28, 29 Atkins, Barbara .... . . 156 ATKINS, MR. CARY . . ..,.. 176 Atkins, Keith ........ . . . 73, 75, 156 ATKINS PHOTOGRAPHY ..,..... 211 Austin, Cathy ...,.. 53, 156, 219 AUSTIN, MR. LLOYD ..,.. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION ...4-8,176 Cx A? AKERS, MRS. BONNIE . . ..,. 183 Akers, Gary ,,.,..., . . , 75, 164 Akers, Jay . .... 112 Akers, Jeff . ,...,....,,. 112,199 Akers, Mark ,,.. 31, 42, 96, 102, 112, 152 Akerson, Cindy ..,. .,..... 3 6, 112 Alexander, Angelia . .... 112 Allen, Dennis Allen, Lynn ......,, . . 112 ALLEN, MRS. MARY . . . . 176 Allen, Matthew ...,,. ..,. 1 12 Allen, Renee ........ . . . 19,113 ALMOND, MRS. LALLY . , rr.. 183 Alwine, Doug ..... , . . . 56,164 Amos, Robert ..,,... . .41, 108,156 F. C. AMRHEIN 84 SONS .... .....192 Anderson, Dejay ..,.. 49, 56, 60, 113, 226 Anderson, Doug . . ..,. . . Anderson, Ernest . . Anderson, Gloria . . . Anderson, Michael . , Anderson, Rebecca .,... ANDERSON, MRS. REBECCA .....164 ...93,164 ...164 ..,,113 .. 104,113 --.176 Anderson, Robin ..,, 40, 53, 78, 102, 156, Anderson, Steve . . Andes, Donna . . Andrews, Paul . . ANDY'S .,... Apostolou, Iris . . , . , Arato, Anita , .... Argabright, Mary Jo . . Argenbright, Cathy . , 157 ...156 ...,,156 .. 56, 73, 75, 77, 113 188 38,113,189 164 164 164 Armentrout, Kerry , . . 156 Armistead, Anthony , . . . , 164 Arnette, Richard Arnold, Jacquelyn . . . . . 164 Aronson, David . . . . . 42,113 Arrington, Billy .,........ i 56,113 ARRINGTON, MR. CHARLES . 12,13,90, 176 Arrington, James . . ARRINGTON, MR. Arrington, Mack . . ....56,75 LARRY . . . 18, 76, 90, 176 ,78 SPECIALISTS ......,. ..., 2 13 Ayers, Connie .... . . . 114, 223 AYERS, MS. POLLY . . .... 98 Bailey, Dewey . . , . 164 Bailey, Jerry Bailey, Rodney . . , , 156 Baldwin, Ronnie .... .... 1 56 BAKER, MISS JANET . , . 102,177 Baker, Julie ..,........ .... 1 64 BALDERSON, MRS. SHELIA . . . 101,178 Ball, Gary ....,....... . . . 114 Ball, Linda .. .. 114 Ball, Patricia . . . . 164 Ball, Ray .... .... 1 56 Ballard, Sherry . , . , 108,114 BAND .....,........... 104,105 Bart Cregger, President, Paula Peterson, Vice- President, Sarah Feather, Secretary, Pam Pat- rick, Treasurer, Bill Barham, Drum Major, Mr. U. B. Broadneaux, Sponsor, Paul Adams, Ernest Anderson, Kyle Artis, Keith Atkins, Ronald Baldwin, lvan Brewer, Henry Bright, Stewart Brown, Melinda Brumfield, Susan Butler, Terri Caldwell, Rhonda Calhoun, Vel- ma Campbell, Harold Cannaday, Cindy Cart- er, Twyla Carter, Mark Chilton, Kathryn Con- ner, Roslyn Crews, Emmitt Dillard, Pam Drew, Mike Erdmann, Kim French, Cheri Gaylor, Doug Gravely, Charles Gross, Gene Haley, Ethelyne Haroer, John Harris, Robert Hickman, Fred Hodges, Fred Howard, Jackie Hurd, Tina I-lurd, Kyle Hvpes, Cheryl Jack- son, Darryl Johns, David S. Johnson, Doug Keith, Bobby Kendrick, James Kyle, Megan Lewis, Barry Mann, Cindy Martin, Everett Mayo, Carl Miller, Charles Mitchell, Cheryl Monk, Mike Moore, Beth Myers, Becky New- man, Rebecca Nichols, Debbie Pinson, Carl- ton Price, Annette Reed, Susie Ribble, Donna Richardson, Linda Robbins, Mary Robson, Paula Robson, Sue Santolla, lsacc Scott, Sherry Shepherd, Vickie Simpson, Robin Slusher', Don Southern, Jon Southern, Mariet- ta Spalrow, Cynthia Swanson, Mike Waller, Bruce Webb, Osborne Wheaton, Tim Whit- lock, Darryl Williams, Duncan Williams, Doug Williamson, Karen Woods, Tracy Wrenn, Ann Basham, Kelly .,.. BASKIN-ROBBINS Baughman, Cindy Baxter, Tony .... Beane, Arthur .. ...21, 156 209 114 .....64 Arrington, Paul ART CLUB, Rhonda Owen, President, Stephanie Jackter, Vice President, Deborah Jeffries, Secretary-Treasurer, Mr. Dean Egge, Mr, Henry Fulford, Miss Sindi Jones, Spon- sors, Dennis Body, Emily Brown, Billy Cook, Crystal Downey, lrish Hill, Zelda Marshall, Paula Peterson, Ann Redden, Vernon Rudd, Dawn Sisson, Linda Thomas. Artis, Kyle ....,.,....... 113,135 ASBURY, MRS. MARGARET ...... 182 Ashford, Maurice .......... 56, 73, 75 Ashwell, Diana ... . . ., 114 Ashwell, Donna . . . , 114 216 Index Wright. Bandy, Jeanne . . . . 165 Banks, Vincent . . . . 60 Bannister, Anita . . ..,.. 71 Barger, Fred . . . . 114,138 Barham, Bill . . . 104,114,153 Barkheimer, Pat . . ..... 165 Barlow, Bridgette . , , , 156 Barlow, Gwen Barnes, Joan . . . .7, 218 Barnett, Tracy Barnette, .left . . . . . 55 Barr, Dennis BARTON, MR. ROBERT . . . . 49,177 BASEBALL ....... . .82, 83 Beard, Lorrie . , . . . 165 Beasley, Greg . . . . . 115 Becker, Kathy Beckner, Beth . . . . 165 Beckner, Jay . . . . 115 Belcher, Lee . . . . 115 Bell, Donna , .. ,. 115 Bennett, Lorice . . ......... 74 Benson, Tim ........, 34, 81, 108, 165 BESSELL, MR, EDMUND ........ 177 BEST SELLERS ............. 22, 23 BETA CLUB. Mark Richards, President, Sheila Poole, VicePresident, Stephanie Dia- mond, Secretary, Teresa Wiseman, Treasurer, Mr. Ray Largo, Miss Debbie Waldron, Spon- sors, Lynn Allen, Robert Amos, Billy Arring- ton, Cathy Austin, Cindy Baughman, Jeff Boatwright, Sherry Bohon, Clayton Brammer, Patty Brown, Cindy Brumfield, Susan Butler, Rhonda Calhoun, Anne Callaway, Rhonda Campbell, Luanne Carter, Sheila Chatman, Sharon Clark, Anne Cochran, Linda Conner, Bart Cregger, Roslyn Crews, Cheryl Cromer? Viula Dallas, Sharon Dalton, Darrell Davis, Cathy Dickinson, Stuart Dillon, Rhonda Dob- bins, Sue Dudley, Kevin Farmer, Peggy Fletcher, Ginny Fowler, Larry French, Susan Greer, Karen Grogan, Donna Hall, Susie ln the fashion capital, Trina Epperly poses for a photographer at Seventeen Magazine as other Fashion Merchandis- ing students touring New York look on. Hardie, Robbie Harris, Jimmy Harrison, Gwen Hodges, Tammy Howard, Joanie Hutton, Kyle Hypes, Martha Johnson, Richard John- son, Kim Jones, Debbie Karnes, Nancy Kel- Iey, Kirk Law, Leslee Ledden, Victoria Lips- comb, Kent Lovejoy, Lori Lynch, Sherree Macklin, Amy Martin, Christine Marty, Martha McCray, Teresa McLawhorn, Jeff N. Moore, Carolyn Moore, Johnnie Moore, Mike Moore, Barbara Nolley, Julia Palmer, Roy Perigen, Paula Peterson, Linda Philpott, Jeff Powell, Becky Pugh, Mary Sue Pullano, Kandy Reed, Susan Regnier, Gary Roberts, Mary Robson, Paula Robson, Teresa Russell, Earle Shumate, Barry Simmons, Steve Smith, Tara Smith, Trudy Snead, Janet Spangler, Kathy Stephenson, Diana Stull, Sandra Terry, Jaime Tingler, John Tinsley, Julie Waldron, Amy Webb, Jill Weber, Mark Wiebke, Carol Wilson, Sandy Wilson, Larry Wolford, Diane Wooldridge: Teresa Wright, Kathy Wray, Bethel, Antoine .........,.. 64,165 Bias, sue ..,.. , 67, 156, 162 BICENTENNIAL . ..,. 16,17 THE BIKE SHOP . .. 196 Bilios, Eva ,,,. ..,.,.. 1 56 Blackwell, Teresa . . . 104, 113,115 Blanton, Robin . . Blessard, Lisa . . , Blagmon, Jerome BLAlNE,MR, BILL . ,. Blair, William ..,.. Blake, Michael Blaney, Jean . Blankenship, Joel . . Board, Charles Board, Judy . Boatwr ight, Jeff .63 Body, Dennie Body, Joanie . . Boeh, Lisa . . . Bohon, Sherry . , . Bonds, Carolyn Bonds, Garry . . Bonds, Pamela . Bonds, Terry Bonds, Tim . . . Bonham, Donna . , , Bonham, Jacquie . . . . . Booker, Debra . Booth, Doug . Booth, John Booth, Lisa . . Bousman, Guy . Bower, Angell . Bowling, James . . . Bowman, Linda . . Bowman, Tommy Boyd, Cheryl ..., Boyd, Cindy . Boyd, Teresa . . . Boyens, David . . . Bradburn, Audrey . . Brarnmer, Clayton . . Brandon, Jay . . . Bratton, Mark ,,.,. . . . .68, 69, 79, 80, 98, 165, 209 . ..., 165 -100 -156 ..115 ...B1 . . . . .95,165 . .2, 46, 56, 83, 113,115 115 . .46,108, 115 . 108,116,224 ...73 .,116 165 67, 68, 74, 156, 157 ...,74,165 . . .73, 75,165 116 , . . 71,165 . . .44,116 116 165 ..68 156 116 165 116 156 165 116 BREEDEN MOTOR st TRAILER SALES . . Breeding, Donna Breene, David . . Brewer, Benita . . . Brewer, Ivan . Brewer, Joe . , Brewer, Reba ....,.... BR EWSTER, MR. CARROLL Bright, Henry ......,,. Bright, Pam .,..... BRILL, MRS. JANE . . . Bristow, Victor .,...... 205 116 165 , . .88,94,165 .63 117 .25 117 ..117 ..,,108, 177,181 165 BROADNEAUX, MR. ULYSSES ,,.. 104, BROADY, MRS. DELOIS . Brogan, Leslie ,....,. Brogan, Mike ,,,,.... BROOKS, MRS. MARY . . Brooks, Sandra ...,... Brooks, Wanda . . BROTHERHOOD . . Broughman, Larry . . . Brower, Celestine . , Brower, Denise Brower, Natalie . Brower, Ronald . Brower, Sharon . Brown, Adonna Brown, Donna BROWN, MRS. DOROTHY Brown, Emily 177 177 186 . .81,108,165 177 117 .. 117,221 .39 , . .63,165 165 156 ...73, 75 ..156 ..117 117 177 Brown, Gail ........ . . 165 BROWN, MR. JAMES . ,. ... . 183 Brown, J. C. ...,.. . . . 56, 147 Brown, Jeffrey ... . . . 71,117 Brown, Joseph Brown, Michael Brown, Michael E. . , . . 165 Brown, Pamela . . . . . , . . 79 Jeff Thurman, Becky Underwood. Cannaday, Harold CANNADAY, MR. IRVIN Brown, Patti ... . . . 16,117 Brown, Patty D. , , , . . 118 Brown, Robin . . . 165 Brown, Stewart Brown, Vickie . . . 165 Bruffey, Gloria . . . ..... . 118 Brumfield, Cindy . . . . 30, 38, 105, 108, 156 Brumiield, Melinda . . , . 108,165 Bryant, Valerie ,.,..... . . . 165 BRYANT, MR. MICHAEL . . .. 177 Bryant, Patty .,,..... , , 156 Bryson, Georgie Buckner, Kisha Buckner, Torrea ,... . . , 74 BUD'S AUTO PARTS . . , . . 205 Bundy, Donna .... . . 118 Burden, Debbie . . . . 165 Burgess, Rob . . . . . . . 118 Burks, Darryl ..... . , . 64, 165 BURKS, MR. JAMES , . Burnett, Eddie Burnette, Roslyn . , . Burnette, Tracy Burnette, Valerie . . . Burrows, Gregg . . . Burrows, Steven Butcher, Jimmy . . Butler, Michelle ...214 . . 43,118,144 ..156 .,157 ...55 Butler, Susan ....... 104, 118, 141, 206 .....19, 87, 176 Cannaday, Linwood . . 60, 102, 166, 175, 226 THE CARPET SHOP . . . . . 187 Carroll, Sigllnda CARTER AND JONES , , . 198 Carter, B. Carter, Cindy . . . . 166 Carter, Cynthia L. Carter, Jane . . . . , 166 Carter, Lisa . . . ..... , 166 Carter, Luanne . . 43,108,119 Carter Terry Carter, Twyla . . , . .5,105,119 Carty, Carl . . . . . 15,166 Casazza, Casey , . , . 119 Cash, Anthony . . . . 157 Cash,Gregory . ,.,. 166 Cash, Lori . .. , . . 31,166 Cauthern, Julie . , . , . 157 Caywood, Robin . , . Chambers, Jackie . , Chambers, Tamre . . ...BO ...95 ...119 CHOIR ...,....,,...... 106, 107 Tony Andrews, President, Robbie Harris, Vice-President, Sandy Wilson, Secretary, Sharon Clark, Treasurer, Jennie Phillips, Teresa Wiseman, Accompanists, Mrs. June Perry, Sponsor: Robin Anderson, Anita Arato, Kyle Artis, Cathy Austin, Patricia Ball, Ray Ball, Jean Blaney, Jacquie Bonham, Ivan Brewer, Patti Brovvn, Gloria Bruffey, Rhonda Calhoun, Linwood Cannaday, Barbara Carr, Cindy Critzer, Kathryn Dickerson, Mary Dil- lon, Carl Doane, Nancy Downey, Ricky Dur- ham: Debra Edwards, Bonnie Finney, Sandra France, Mary Gill, Eric Guerrant, Kenneth Harper, Marcus Harris, Steve Henderson: Roy Hughes, Angela Jefferson, Connie Jennings, Lisa Johnson, Rickey Johnson, Charlotte Jones, Debbie Karnes, Sheila Keeling, Jay Kennett, Gaye Kimberling, Kirk Law, Eugene Leftwichi Rita Lloyd: Brenda Lockhart, Amy Martin, Vickie Maxey, Teresa McLawhorn, Tammie Moses, Kathy Nlussleman, Dana Naff, Peggy Narum, Sheli Peterson, Billie Overstreet, Parn Patrick, Debbie Price, Debbie Pugh, Tony Ramey, Vic Reed: Sandra Reese: Linda Robinson, Dar Saunders, Isaac ryl Rudd, Joe Sarver, Toni Scott, Linda Shepherd, Terri CHANGES ... ...18, 19 Chapman, Larry Chatman, Sheila . . , ,8, 119 .....166 Chattin, Keith . . . . Cheatwood, Charles . . . . 56, 63, 64, 65, 166 Cheatwood, Mark . . . . , 22,157 CHEERLEADERS .,.......... 52, 53 CHESS CLUB. David S. Johnson, President, Marie Craig, Vice-President, Steve Via, Secre- tary-Treasurer, Mr. Edmund Bessell, Sponsor, Paul Adams, Jeff English, James Mays. Chewning, Julie ----....... 120, 196 Childress, Marshell . . . ...... . 166 Childress, Nancy . . , , . 105,108,120 Childress, William . , , . .56, 59,60 Chilton, Mark . . .. 11,166 Chitwood, Barry , , . ..,,.,,.,.. 120 Snow, Joy St. Clair, Dinah Stevens, Cathy Stinnettei Cindy Sullivan, Waverly Thornhill, Jeff Thurman, Frank Walker, Sandra Walters, Vicki Wheeling, Jon Whichard, Dottie Wilson, Betty Worley: Melvin Young. CHRISTENBURY, MRS. LEILA . . , 177 Christophel, Ginny .,...... . . 120 Clark, Chuck Clark, Craig . . . . 166,171 Clark, David . , - . 120 Pizza pusher Mr. George Miller shovels in another slice as Daryl McCoy watches the faculty lose to the students in the Pizza Eating Contest. BUTLER, DR. WENDELL ...,., 25,214 Byrd, Deborah .....,.. ..,. 1 65 Byrd, Randy . . . . . 44,118 Caldwell, Jerry , . . . 55, 56, 83, 96, 97, 118 Caldwell, Renee . ....,, 155 Caldwell, Terri . . . 74, 108, 165 Cales, Dwayne . , ...,- 165 Calfee, Deborah . -'-1'- ' 21 Calhoun, Rhonda . - - 3011051101157 Callahan, Judy , , ....... 118 Callaway, Anne , . . . 36,157 Calloway, Cookie . . . 36, 52, 53, 119, 227 Calloway, Pete Campbell, Aldo . - . 119 Campbell, Anita . . . . 157 Campbell, Jack , , . . . 119 Campbell, James ,...,.,, . . 71, 119 CAMPBELL, MR. JEROME . . .... 82, 177 Campbell, Rhonda . . . . 157,193 Campbell, Robert ..,.. , . . . 165 CAMPBELL, MR. RONALD . . . , 30,177 ..,...30,165 Campbell, Velma ..,,.. CAMPUS LIFE CLUB. Gaye Kimberling, President, Robert Amos, Vice-President? Peggy Narum, Secretary: Linda Ball, Treasur- er, Mrs, Esther Riley, Sponsor, Renee Allen? Kelly Basham, Donna Bundy, Pam Ellington, Becky Havens, Doug Holland, Roben King, Vickie Maxey, Roy Perigen, Cindi Porterfield, Index 217 Doane, Carl ..,.... Clark, Donnie . . . . , , 166 Clark, Sharon . . . . . 104,120 Clary, Marty . . . 120,123 Claytor, Freddie . . . . . 166 Clement, Michael Clements, Theresa . . ,..... 166 Clemons, Melvin , . . . .73, 75, 166 Clevenger, Craig CLUBS ,........ 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 COCA-CO LA BOTTLING CO ....... 202 Cochran, Anne ,..,...,. 108, 177, 211 C.O.E .................,,... 98 Mrs, Billie Wright, Sponsor, Becky Anderson: Diana Ashwell, Donna Ashwell, Lisa Booth, Angell Bower, Reba Brewer, Nancy Childress, Lavina Conner, Rhonda Cox, Sue Dudley, Cynthia Kendall, Gaye Kirnberling, Lisa Lack- land, Anne Leneski, Christine Marty, Steph- anie Moon, Jo Anne Moses, Tina Nichols: Terri Richardson, Robin Roach, Donna Tur- pin, Emily Wade, Andrea Washington, Kathy Wray, Debar Zimmerman. Cofer, Angela Cole, Darena . Cole, Darrian 120 Coles, Bridget Coles, Constance , . . , . . 120 Coles, Cynthia Coles, Donald . ..,..... 166 Coles, John . . . . .59, 60, 81, 157 Coles, Ron , ...,,., 121 Coles, Terry , . . 6, 59, 60, 61 Coley, Alice . ...... 166 Collier, Andy ...,..... . . . 157 COLLlNS, MRS. EVELYN . . , . . 177 Collins, Lucretia ....... . . . 166 COMER, MRS. BARBARA , . .. 177 Compton, Michael ,..... . . . 47 Conner, Bentley Conner, Jan Conner, Kathryn . . ,..... 166 Conner, Lavina . . . . . .42, 47, 121 Conner, Linda ............... 157 S. J. CONNER AND SONS, INC. ,... 207 Conner, Wesley Crews, Roslyn , . . .5, 122 Critzer, Cynthia . ....,.... 122 Crockett, Connie Cromer, Cheryl . . . . . 102, 103, 108, 109, 121, 122, 226 Cromer, Dwayne . . ....,, 187 Cromwell, Bobby , . . 157 Croson, Althea . . ..,.. .7 Croson, Ralph CROSS COUNTRY . . . .72, 73, 77 CROTTS GARAGE . . . .. . . 211 Crotts, Karen ,... . . . 157 Crotty, Butch . . . 156,83 Crouse, Ricky . . . 166 Crowder, Shawn . , . . . 157 Culpepper, Mrs. Eleanor . . . . 80 Cundiff, John ......,..... . . . 71 CUNNINGHAM BARBER SHOP .... 199 Cunningham, Bruce .,,,,., 56, 157, 220 CURRlCULUM . .... 9093 Curtis, Ellison . , ,71, 75, 215 DABNEY, MRS. BEULAH ..,... 88,178 Dales, Tandy ......... . . . 122 Dallas, Voula . . . . 157 Dalton, Sammy Dalton, Sharon , , . .45, 122, 127 DANCES .... .... 3 8, 39 Daniels, David . , . . 56, 157 Daniels, Patricia . . . , 122 Daniels, Sue . . . 157 Daniels, Tim DaVall, George . . . . . 157 Davis, Billie . . . , .63,64 Davis, Bobby . . . . . 166 Davis, Darrell . . . . 60, 157 Davis, Doug . . . . . . 78 Davis, Timothy Dean, Kathy . . . . 157 Dearing, Rudy . , . . 166 Deaver, Ross ...... .....,.. 1 66 D.E.C.A. Trina Epperly, President, Dreama Hunt, Vice-President, Teresa Wright, Secre- tary, Connie Ayers, Treasurer, Mr. Roger Lovern, Mr. T. J, Ross, Miss Elaine Wingate, Sponsors, Mark Akers, Dennis Allen, Deiay Anderson, Mary Argabright, Kerry Armen- trout, Barbara Atkins, Tracy Barnett, Dennis Barr, Lee Blecher, Donna Bell, Frank Brown, Hooper, Tina Hunt, Bobby Hurst, Kenneth Janney, Connie Jennings, Twanda Jennings, Drema Johnson, Lorye Johnson, Rickey Johnson, Robin Johnson, Nannett Jordan? Debbie Karnes, Deloise Keatts, Eloise Keatts, Kim Kimmons, Robin Kyle, Wanda Lester, Darryl Logan, Debbie Lovell, Darlene Love, Barry Mann, Pam Manspile, Vickie Martin, Gail Maxfield, Mike Mayo, Gloria McCadden, Martha McCray, Richard McFalls, Tony Mill- saps, Becky Morris, Angela Moses, Marie Moses, Calvin Parker, Judy Phillips: Marvin Pugh, Sue Ramey, Tony Ramey, Becky Rey- nolds, Janice Rhodes, Donna Richardson: Jerome Richardson, Phoebe Richardson, Con- nie Robertson, Dreyma Robertson, Mike Robertson, Kenneth Roop, Sonny Routon, Ken St. Clair, Gladys Sloan, Rebecca Smith, Billy Smithers, Kim Stanley, Kathy Steahlyl Dinah Stevens, Kathy Stinnett, Mike Suttene field, Becky Tate, Evelyn Tinsley, Lynn Turn- bull, Archie Waldron, Sandra Walters: Jill Weber, Barry Weiler, Vicki West: Taruis West- brook, Vannessa Williams. Decker, Paul . . 157 Deel, Cindy . , . 166 Deel, Freddie . . 122 DeeI,Jimmie , , 159 Deel,Vicki . . . 157 DeHart, James DeHart, Joel . , 122 DELCO ... .. 203 DELONG'S . Dent, Kenny DENT, MRS. LlLLlAN . Dews, Brenda Dews, Pamela ii . . . , . 196 - - 73,74,75,76 . ..., 182 . , 122 M157 Diamond, Stephanie . . Dickerson, Jimmie . . Dickerson, Kathryn . Dickerson, Larue . , Dickersoh, Richard 1 Dickerson, Tequilla . Dickinson,Cathy . Dieber, Candy Dieber, George Dillard, Emmitt Dillard, James Dillard, Randy . . Dillard,Steve . . Dillon, Becky , . Dillon, Mary . Dillon, Stuart . . Dillon, Teresa . Dix, Rita . . . Dix, Tim .....,,. DIXIE CONTRACTING COMPANY ...,. DlXON, MR. THOMAS DOOBIE BROTHERS . Dobbins, Rhonda , . , Dooley, Ronnie . Doss, Terry .... DOUBLE-COLA .,.. DOWDY, MRS. HUGH DOWE, MRS. JOSELYN Dowe, LeNora ..... DOWEII, Sherri Dowell, Susan , . Downey, Crystal . . Downey,Nancy , Downs, Richard DRAMA . . . Drew, Daryl . Drew, Janice ...,., .. 108,123 ..64,166 ,..166 ...2, 71 .,,,...123 108,123,145 ,. 195 ..157 .....167 ..16,74,157 ..91,118,123 .. 123,128 .,..123 ...75 195 ..1O,87. 176 N123 ..,.22 ,.36,123 ...167 .,31,157 M209 ...214 ....178 .. 157,185 .. 167 .. 123 ...157 .. 102,103 ,.56,71,142 .,....,,.,124 Gloria Bruffey, Patty Bryant, Kisha Buckner, Debbie Burden, Laura Calloway, Jack Camp- bell, Tony Cash, Ginny Christophel, Marty Clary, Melvin Clemons, Craig Clevenger, Bent- ley Conner, Vivian Cook, Candy Craft, Kenny Craig, Tandy Dales, Sharon Dalton, Terry Doss, Sherri Dowell, Nancy Downey, Ronda Durham, Jackie Edwards, Danny Elliott, Cook, Billy Cook, Karen , , . . 53, 166 Cook, Mary Cook, Vivian Cooke, Chuck . . . 15, 52, 70, 71, 115, 121 Cooley, Vickie . , . . 157 Coon, Ernie Cooper, Anna Cotton, Fay ...... 166 Cotton, Richard . , . . 63, 166, 174 Coulter, Jeff ..,. ..... 1 21 Cousser, Charlene . . . . 121 Cousser, Charles Cowden,William . . . , . . 121 Cox, Darlene .... . . .67, 69 COX, MISS LOIS . . ..,. 93,177 Cox, Rhonda . . . . .47,98,121 Cox,Robin . , ..... 157 Craft, Candy, . . . . . . 166 Craft, David . . . ,23,157 Craft, Sherry . , . . . 166 Craig, Deborah Craig, Kenny Craig, Marie . . . . . . 67,121 Craighead, Mike ...,...,. ,,,. 7 1 CRAMER, MRS. KATHERYN .,..,. 178 Crawford, Cathy .,.... 79, 108, 157, 187 Cregger, Bart . . . .... 38, 108, 114, 121 209 218 Index Winston Fewox, James Fidler, Gino Forrest, Clayton Fowler, Arnetta Fraction, Scott Gearheart, Larry Gilbert, Brenda Glover, Cecelia Graham, Sybil Graham, Cindy R. Gray, Karen Hall, Tammy Hammond, Angela Hampton, Pam Hardison, Kenneth Harper, Ronnie Harris, Gena Hartman, Patrice Hay- den, Sharon Haynes, Helen Herndon: Belinda Hinkleg Ricky Hodges, Doug Holland, Kim With compass in hand, Joan Barnes completes her math assignment during the last few minutes of lunch. 77254. 7-v--....ww F ,ft il Drew, Pamela . . . . 124 DR.PEPPER . , . . 187 Dudding, Albert . . . 157 Dudding, Gene Dudley, Glenda ..,.. . . . 98, 124 Dudley, Sharon .,.,.. ,,.. 1 67 DUF-RITE CLEANERS . . , 207 Duncan, Bonnie ,.,,. , . 71,167 Duncan, David . . . . . 124 Duncan, Karen . . . . 124 Dunford, De-De Dung, Tho . . . .....164 Dunnaville, Leslie . . 56, 62, 64 Durham, Lucile , , . , . 157 Durham, Ricky Durham, Ronda . , , 167 Earley, Charlotte . , . 105,124 Easley, Wendell , . .,.. 124 Eckert, Andy . , . . . 167 Economy, Mike ..... . . 167 EDDlE'S PIZZA KING , . . . . 205 Edmonds, Judy Edwards, Carl . . .... 167 Edwards, Cathy . . . . . 71,167 Edwards, Debra . . Edwards, Jackie . . . EGGE, MR. DEAN . . EGGE, MS. DORlS . . Elliott, Danny . , , Ellis, Anne . . Ellis, Cathy . . . English, Jeffrev . . Entsminger, Ira . . . Epperly, Trina .... EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE . . , Erdmann, Mike .... Eshleman, Lou Ann . . Etter, Patricia ..., Eubank, Raymond EURE, MR. JOHN W. ,. Evans, Beth ........ EVANS' DRUG STORE ...124 ...167 ....178 ...92,178 ...167 ..,16 ...124 ...167 ....125 125,216 ......204 ..11,122,125 .....167 ..157 .......24 . ..36,165,167 .. ...... 202 Recess time finds junior Cathy Austin and senior Dana Naff taking their ten- minute mid-morning break outside. terson, Sheli Peterson, Becky Pugh, Marvin Pugh, Tony Ramev: Donna Richardson: Steve Robinson, Steve Smith, Cathy Stinnette, Diana Stull, Cindy Sullivan, Amy Webb, Dun- can Williamsi Angie Wilson, Sandy Wilson, Larry Wolford, Sarah Wooldridge. Farrar, Lisa ..,,,,..,.,... . . 206 FASHIONS . . . ........ , .20 Feather, Sarah . . , . .8, 104, 125,150 Feazell, Evelyn . . .....,.., 157 Feazell, Everett . , , . 167 Ferguson, Cheryl . . . . 125 Ferguson, Jan . . . . 167 Ferguson, Kim Ferguson, Mark Ferguson, Rebecca . . . . 125 Ferguson, Thelma . . . . 158 Fernatt, Danny . . . . 158 Ferris, Mark . . . . 167 Ferris, Mason Ferris, Rickie . . . . . 167 Ferris, Thomas . . . . . 167 FERRO'S PIZZA . . 194 Fewox, Winston .........,.... 125 F.H.A. Marietta Sparrow, President, Megan Lewis, Vice-President, Brenda Lockhart, Sec- retary, Linda Ball, Treasurer, Mrs. Evelyn Col- lins, Sponsor, Paul Andrews, Kelly Basham, Lisa Blessard, Vickey Jumper, Ymelda Lewis: Sandy McFalls, Steve Myers, David Pannell, Deidre Perry, Susan Regnier, Donna Richard- son, Gloria St. Clair, Cindy Sweet, Patty Trout. Hepinstall, Kevin Hopson, Carmen Huffman: Evans, Sonny ....... . . 202 Evans, Rhonda EVANS, MR. ROBERT . . . , ,178,179 Evans, Sonny ....,. . . . 202 FACULTY , . . , .176-183 Fagg, Michael FARRISS, MR. ROBERT . . . 18,178 Farmer, Kathy ....,.. ,... 1 67 Farmer, Kevin ............. 71, 157 F.C.A. Teresa McLawhorn, President, Gary Fidler, Audrey . . . . 125 Fidler, James FIELD TRIPS . . .. 98101 Finley, Susan . . . , , . 167 Finney, Bonnie . . . . . 125 Finney, Conny . . , , 167 Finney, Rita . . . . . 167 Firebaugh, Kathy ....... . . 168 FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ,...,.,., . . 199 FISHWICK, MR. JOHN P. ,.... .... 2 5 FITZPATRICK, JUDGE BEVERLY . . .25 Fletcher, Peggy .... ....,,, . 126, 136 Flrnchum, Bonnie . . . 126 Flinchum, Danny Forrest, Gino , . . . . 102,168 Forrest, Randy . . . . . 126 Foster, Ricky Fowler, Chris . . . , . 126 Fowler, Clayton . . ..,....., 158 Fowler, Ginny . . 46,49, 102, 108, 113,126 130 Foxx, James Fraction, Ar netta Yandle, Treasurer, Diane Wooldridge, Chap- lain, Mr. Robert Sandy, Sponsor, Amy Adams, Lynn Allen, Dejay Anderson, Robin Anderson, Keith Atkins, Beth Beckner, Debra Booker, Cheryl Boyd, Cookie Calloway, Wil- liam Childress, Sharon Clark, Darlene Cofer, John Coles, Lavina Conner, Butch Crotty, Darrell Davis, Nancy Downey, Beth Evans, Cynthia Fraction, Dana Franklin, Larry French, Mark Grogan, Tim Guthrie, Janet Harrington, Jimmy Harrison, Steve Harvey, Rick Hawkins, Kelly Hildreth, Frankye Hol- land, Angela Hopson, Anne Huff: Connie Jen- nings, David L. Johnson, Charlotte Jones, Tim Jones, Kurt Kreider, Leslee Ledden, Janice Maner, Tim Maxey, Linda Miller, Jeff N. Moore, Scot Nelson, Eddie Otey, Keith Pat- Fraction, Cunthia . .67 126 Fralin, Linda .. . . . . . 126 France, Sandra . . ....., 168 Franklin, C-Ann . . ,.., 21, 67, 126 Franklin, Dana . . . . .7,53,113,126 Franklin, Mark Franklin, Walker Frazier, Donna .... ..... . . , 104 Freeman, Sheila ......,......, 158 FRENCH CLUB. Ginny Fowler, President, Sheila Poole, Vice-President, Martha Johnson, Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. Donna Frost, Spon- sor, Doug Anderson, Jacquelyn Arnold, Eva Bilios, Mike Brogan, Keith Brown, Debbie Burden, Carl Carty: Robin Caywood, Theresa Clements, Ellison Curtis, Tho Dang, Sonny Evans, Kim French, Donna Hall, Ann Hardie, Cheryl Hart, Curtis Hill, Gwen Hodges, Con- nie Hutton, David L. Johnson, David S. John- son, Richard Johnson, David Klever, Memn Lewis, Daniel Martin, William McCullough, Connie McGuire, Linda Miller, Connie Murphy, Rhonda Owen, Annette Pakush, Kel- ly Patrick, Lee Price, Jeff Schwartz, Earle Shumate, Donna Smith, Sandra Smith, Janet Spangler, Barbara Tames, Vickie Vaughn, Robin Wade, Vanessa Williams, Angie Wilson, Bobby Ziogas. FRENCH, MR. KENNETH ........ 176 French, Kim ........,.. 79, 105, 168 French, Larry ....... 39,51,83,127,226 FROST, MRS. DONNA ...... 92,178,182 F.T.A. Sharon Clark, Teresa Wright, Co-Presi' dent, Drearna Hunt, Vice-President, Vicki West, Secretary, Dottie Wilson, Treasurer, Mrs. Delois Broady, Mr. Kenneth Weddle, Sponsors, Robin Anderson, Teresa Blackwell, Patti Brown, Rhonda Cox, Cheryl Cromer, Susan Gapp, Susan Greer, Cindy Journell, Nancy Kelley, Leslee Ledden, Amy Martin, Dana Naff, Jennie Phillips, Cindi Porterfield, Mary Sue Pullano, Diana Stull, Cindy Swan- son, Jaime Tingler, Vicki Wheeling, Sandy Wilson. FULFORD, MR HENRY ........ 178 GgGgG Galloway, Faith ........... 167, 168 Galloway, Felicia . . . . 167,168 Galloway, Freda . . . . , 127 Galloway, Paul . . . . 163 Gapp, Susan . . . . 127 Garrett, Brenda . . . 158 Garrett, Johnny Garrett, Tommy . . . . 168 Gaylor,Cheri . . . . . 168 Gaylor, Rick Gearheart, Brenda .... Gearheart, Scott . , . , . . ...127 ..-127 GElGER,MS. CLAUDIA . .. . . 178,180 GENERAL ELECTRIC . ...193 Gerhardt, Donna ....... ....... 1 58 GERMAN CLUB. Paula Peterson, President, Ms. Claudia Geiger, Sponsor, Dennis Allen, Robert Amos, Ronny Baldwin, Sherry Bal- lard, Robin Blanton, David Boyens, Patti Brown, Cindy Carter, Luanne Carter, William Childress, Mark Chilton, Andy Collier: Cheryl Cromer, Voula Dallas, Mike Harris, Rickey Kyle l-lypesp Charlotte Jones, Jeff Jones, Roben King, Karen Likens, Jeff Lumsdenl Lori Lynch, James Mays, Martha McCray, Mark Moody, Becky Newman, Rebecca Nichols, Belinda Potter: Becky Pugh, Debbie Pugh, Annette Reed: Susie Ribble, Mark Robertson, Cindy Sullivan, Tammy Towriss, Mike Waller, Mike Walters, Jill Weber, Beth Weddle, Carol Wilson, Larry Wolford. GIBBONEY, MISS DOROTHY ..,... 24 Gibson, Amy .......... . . 10,127 Gill, Eddie ..... . . . 168 GlLL,MRS. LOIS ., .. 183 Gill, Mary Gill, Theresa . . . . 168 Gills, Connie . . . . 127 Index 219 .... ..168 .......169 jill! M R , .,,,,,-NM W ,emi S Handling with care his clay finger pot. Bruce Cunningham completes a ceram- ics project for his second-semester art course, GIRLS' BASKETBALL ......... 66-69 GIRLS' CHORUS. Mrs, June Perry, Sponsor: Cathy Austin: Patricia Barkheimer: Beth Beckner: Darlene Cox: Cathy Edwards: Pamela Hardison: Pam Manspile: Brenda Over- street, Kathy Palmer, Phoebe Richardson: Vickie Richardson: Maria Smith: Denise Stan- ley, Kim Stanley. GIRLS' CLUB. Tammy Howard, President: Sherry Bohon, V1ce,Pres1dent: Betty Worley, Secretary: Kim Kimmons, Treasurer: Mrs. Bar' bafa Comer, Sponsor: Cindy Akerson: Becky Anderson: Robin Anderson: Donna Andes: Iris Apostolou: Connie Ayers: Linda Ball: Teresa Blackwell: Jacquie Bonham: Lisa Booth: Natalie Brower: Cindy Brumfield: Anne Callaway: Julie Chewning: Lavinia Con- ner: Kathryn Conner: Kitty Dickerson: LeNora Dowe: Nancy Downey: Beth Evans: Sarah Feather: Thelma Ferguson: Dana Frank- lin: Patrice Hayden: Kelly Hildreth: Dreama Hunt: Tina Hurdl Connie Jennings: Cindy Journell: Patty Johnson: Patty Justice, Rena Kasey, Michelle Keeling: Lenora Keeling: Nancv Kelley? Leslee Ledden: Christine Marty: Zelda Marshall: Debbie Matthews, Melissa McGeorge. Linda Miller: Jody Moses: Marie Moses: Dana Naff: Tina Nichols: Tamara Padgett, Julia Palmer: Kelly Patrick: Tammy Payne: Shel: Peterson: Jennie Phillips: 220 Index Pat Phillips: Vickie Richardson: Linda Robin- son, Sue Santolla: Robin Slusher: Tara Smith: Terri Snow: Pauline Sottile: Susan Spickacd: Gross, Cindy . . . Guerrant, Beverly Guerrant, Eric . . Guthrie, Gary Guthrie, Tim . . , Guynn, Dwayne . .,168 .. ........ 168 . ,..71,81,85,158 .......,.158 33, 56, 103.108, 128, 226 H111-1l1H Hackett, Paul , . . . . 158 HAGEN, MRS. ROBERT . . . . 214 Hairston, Arthur Hairston, Lawrence . , 158 Hairston, Marilyn . . 128 Hale, Rick .,.. . . 128 HALEY, MRS. BIBB . ......... 178 Haley, Gene Hall, Donna. . . . . .41,108,124,128 Hall, Karen .... Ham, Ronny . . . ......,...108,128 HAMLAR-CURTIS FUNERAL HOME ..... Hamm,Richard . Hammed, Danny . Hammond, Tammy Hampton, Angela Hancock, Chris . . Hardie, Ann . , Hardie, Jay . . Hardie, Susie , , Hardison, Pam . . . .,.27,56,73,168 .......168 ..128 ..,.,..158 . . . 80,108, 168 103,158 12, 46, 49, 108, 109, 129, 130 HAIRSTON, MR. TRAVIS . , . , .176,183 Harper, Ethelyne . Harper, Ken . . . Harrington, Janet Harris, Barbara . . Harris, Donald . . Henderson, David . . .,,59 Henderson,Steve . . . . 169 Hensley, Debbie Hensley, Donald Heptinstall,Mark . . . . 169 Heptinstall, Rickey . . . . 158 Herndon, Helen . . . . . 169 Hicks, Jennifer Hicks, Manie .... . , 108,158 Highberger, Linda . . Hildreth, Kelly . . Hill, Curtis . Hill, Donna Hill, Trish . . . Hill, Walter Hipes, John ......130 ...38,99,169 .....158 ...130 HOBBY 'N CRAFT . . . . 206 Hodges, Fred ..,. . . 131 Hodges, Gwen . . . . 158 Hodges, Mitzi . . , . . 169 Hodges, Rick . . . . . 158 Holdren, Debbie Holdren, Jerry . . . . 131 Holdren, Mark .... . . 131 Holdren, Mary Ellen . . , . 169 Holdren, Suzanne , , Holdway, David . . Holland, Doug . . .. ,... 169 ., .73,77,131 , .,.,. 131 Holland, Frankye . . . . .66, 67, 74 Holland, Sheila Hollar, Donna ,........ . . 131 Hollar, Mike .,.,....,.. . .63 HOLLINGSWORTH, DR. J. H. . . HOLLINS HARDWARE HOLLYDEAN BEAUTY ..25 ,........207 LOUNGE . . . 211 . . . . .67,69, 74, 129, 168 129 168 168 192 Harris, John . . Harris, Lisa . . . Harris, Marcus , , Harris, Michael Harris, Robbie . , Harris, Ronnie Harris, Sharon , . Cathy Stmnette: Terri Thornhill: Robin Wade: Tina Ward: Amy Webb: Vicki West: Vicki Wheeling: Donna Williamson: Sandy Wilson: Sarah Wooldridge: Tracy Wrenn: Teresa Wright: Debbie Zimmerman. GIRLS'VOLLEYBALL . . . 66-69 Glass, Steve ........ . . 168 Glover, Brenda Goodman, Kenny . . . . 168 Goodman, Vickie . . . . 127 Goodwin, Russell . , , , 168 Gordon, Larry THE GOURMET.. .. 202 Gowen, Jack GRADUATION . , . .46, 47 Graham, Cecelia Graham, Karen . . . . . 43, 127,206 Graham, Norma , . , . . 38, 158, 209 Graham, Sybil GRAND PIANO AND FURNITURE .. 207 GRAPPLETTES ............ . .71 Harrison, Avila , , 168 .. 158 .. 129 ...7,106,129 ... 168 HARRISON, MR. JAMES , .,.... 134 Harrison, Jimmy . Harrison, Rita . . Harrison, Ricardo Hart, Cheryl . . . Hartman, Gary Hartman, Gena . . Hartman, Sheryl . Harvey, Debbie . . Harvey, Ken Harvey, Steve , , . Haskins, Fayleen . Havens, Rebecca . Hawkins, Rick . . Hawkins, William Hawley, Althea . . Hawley, Randy . . l-layden,Patrice , Gravely, William Gray, Cindy A. . , Gray, Cindy R. . . Gray, Kathy . . Gray, Shelby Greene, Jon . . Greer, Susan .... Gregory, Cynthia Gregory, Bruce . . Grinnell, Danny . . . . Grogan, Karen . . Grogan, Mark . , Gross, Charles ...98,158 ..41,79 .. 168 ... 168 .. 108,128 ... 128 ,... ,... 128 8,56,7o,71,15e ... ... 11,158 ..64, 75 Hayes Barbara Hayes David . . Hayes Greg. . . Hayes, Jerry . . Hayes, Steve . . Hayes, Tim . , . Haynes, Harry Haynes, Kevin Haynes, Sharon . . Hayslett, Mark . . Haywood, Jerry . . Heck, Mike .... HEMS AND HERS ...129,134 ....129 . . . .73, 75, 77 104,108,158,202 . . 92, 168 ,,.158 ....129 . . . 33, 73, 75. 111,129 130 169 ...56,85,158 130 .. 169 ....,130 ... 104,130 .. 158 .. 169 ,. 169 ....... 130 .75, 77, 91, 130 ...158 .....22,130 .55, 56, 75, 169 . ,... . . 193 HOMECOMING ............. 36, 37 HONORS .... . .48, 49 Hooper, Kim Hopkins, Cheryl Hopson, Angela . . . . . 74,169 Hopson, Jay Hopson, Kevin . . . . 158 Hopson, Kevin , . . . 158 Horvath, Julie . . . . . 131 Hostetter, Robert . . . , 169 Houchins, Sharon Howard, Fred ..... . . . 43, 102, 126 HOWARD, MR. LEO . . ...... 101 Howard, Tammy . . . . . . 35, 36, 38, 53, 131 Howell, Marty Huff, Anne ..... . . 42,131 Huffman, Carmen . . . . 158 Huffman, Leroy Hughes, Roy .........,..,.... 56 HUMAN RELATIONS COUNCIL. Mr. Cary Atkins, Ms. Doris Egge, Sponsors: Amy Adams: Dennis Anderson: Renee Allen: Marty Akerson: Becky Anderson: Dejay Anderson: Kelly Basham: Reba Brewer: Pam Bright: Patty Brown: Rhonda Calhoun, Melvin Clemons: Connie Coles: Richard Cotton: Voula Dallas: LeNora Dowe: Sarah Feather: Dana Franklin: Freda Galloway: Brenda Glover: Sybil Graham: Karen Hall: Pam Hardi- son: Sharon Harris: Cheryl Hart: Steve Har- vey: Carmen Huffman: Dreama Hunt: Angela Jefferson: David S. Johnson: Martha Johnson: Patty Johnson: Kurt Kaiser: Rena Kasey: Letitia Keeling: Michelle Keeling: Kirk Law: James Lee: June McGeorge: Darlene Napper: Roger Norrell: Billie Overstreet: Tamara Pad- gett: Kathy Palmer: Beverly Payne: Paula Peterson: Jennie Phillips: Peggy Pillis: Terri Richardson: Faye Robinson: Linda Robinson: Vernon Rudd: Terri Snow: Pat Sanderlin: Marietta Sparrow: Jeff Taylor: Terri Thorne hill: Michael Thurman: Jaime Tingler: Evelyn Tinsley: Renee Watson: Barry Weller: Vicki West: Carol Wilson: David Workman: Teresa Wright. Hunt, Dreama . , . , 132 Hunt, Phillip .. ,,, 169 Hunt, Tina , I I I 159 Hurd, Jackie . I I I 169 Hurd, Tina ,., I I I 153 Hurst, Bobby . . . , , I I I 132 Hutton, Connie . . ,IIIII 159 Hutton, Joanne . . 108, 158, 224 Hvpes, Kyle . . .... ...... 1 58 Ill INGRAM, MR. JAMES . . . . . 64,178 J .J 'J Jackson, Cheryl . , . . . . 68 158 Jackson, Robin Jackson, Sharon . . . . . 158 Jackter, Stephanie . . . . 132 Jacobs, Helen . . . . . 132 James, Carol . . . . 169 Janney, James . . . . 169 Janney, Kenneth . , . . 132 Janney, Larry . . . . 169 Janney, Randall . . . . . 132 Jasper, John .... . , 169 Jeffries, Theodore Jefferson, Angela . . , . 132 Jeffries, Debra . . , . . . . 132 Jenkins, Bryan . . . . . .56 158 JENKINS' RING. . , ,... 189 Jennings, Connie . . . . 158 Jennings, Sandra Jennings, Wanda . . . . ,7 169 Jennings, Wendy Johns, Darryl Johns, Donna . . . . . 169 Johns, Phil Johnson, Carsaundra . , . .7 132 Johnson, Clarence . . . . 159 Johnson, Clarence L. . . . 133 Johnson, Danny , . . . . 133 Johnson, David L. . , . . .81 169 Johnson, David S. , . . . . . . 159 Johnson, Drema ,,.., . , . 88 169 JOHNSON, MR. EDDIE . . . 93 178 Johnson, Kathy .... .... 1 69 Johnson, Lisa , . . . . . 27 159 Johnson, Lorye . . . . . 79 169 Johnson, Martha .,... . . 159 JOHNSON, MRS. MARY . . 178 Johnson, Patty ...... . , 159 Johnson, Patty . . . . . . . 159 Johnson, Richard . . . . . 81 133 Johnson, Rickey . . . . . 159 Johnson, Robin . . . . 169 Johnson, Shawn Jones, Bernice . , . . . 36 Jones, Charlotte . . . . . 53 159 Jones, David Jones, Debra . . . . . 129 Jones, Dennis . . . . 133 159 Jones, Dolphfred Jones, Donnie . . , . 133 Jones, Evelyn . . . , . 159 Jones, Jeff . . , . . 170 Jones, Kim . . . . 104 159 Jones, Paula Jones, Ronnie JONES, MISS SINDI . ., 178 Jones, Sonja .... ,,.... 1 59 Jones, Steve ...... .... 5 5, 56 133 Jones, Tim ......., 41, 56, 73 159 JONES, MR. THOMAS , . ....... 178 Jones, Tony ...,.. . . . 133 Jones, William . . . . 47,133 Jordan, Mary Jane Jordan,Milton . . . . . 170 Jordan, Nannette Journell, Cindy . . . . . .98,108,133 Journell, Jeff . . . ...,. 94,170 Jumper, June . . . , . 134 Justice, Patty . . . .... . 170 Justice, Phillip . . . . . 77,134 Justus, David JUNIORS ,...... ...156-163 J.V. BASKETBALL , . . . .64, 65 J.V, FOOTBALL . . . . .62, 63 Kaiser, Kurt . . . ,... 88,94,134 Karnes, Deborah . . . . 108, 109, 134 Kasey, Cynthia KASEY, MS. DAR LENE . . ...... 182 Kasey, Karen ...... . . . .5, 99, 134 Kasey, Rena ....... .... 1 59 Kasey, Ruby KEE LING, MRS. ALICE . . .... 183 Keeling, Michelle ..... . . . 34,134 Keeling, Corenlius Keeling, Percy . . . . . 71 Keeling, Letitta Keeling, Sheila . , . . 104,107 159 Keith, Doug . ..,.. 26 170 Keeth, kitty . , ...... 134 Kelley, Nancy ..,. . . 36, 108, 134 Kelley, Robert ..... ...... 1 34 KELLEY'S MARKET . . .. . 196 Kendall, Cynthia . .. .. . .. . 135 Kendrick, Bobby ........ . . . 170 KENNARD-PACE CO., INC. . . . . . 192 Kennett, John .... . . . . . . 135 Kessler, David . . . . . 135 Kibler, David .... . . . 135 Kimberling, Gaye . . . ..... . 135 Kimmons, Kim ....,. . . 36,135,210 KINCER,SGT.CECIL . , ......, 178 King, Barry ,...... , . 108, 156,159 King, Evant KING,MR. FRED . .. ... 101 King, John King, Roben ,... . . 170 Kingsrey, Thomas . . .... 135 Klever, David . . ..... 108 159 Kopitzke, Chris . . ......... 170 Kretder, Kurt . . , . 56, 83, 108, 134, 158 159 KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUTS ..., 208 Kyle, Robin ........... . .. 170 LaBrie, Mike . . . . 63, 64, 72, 75, 170 Lackland, Lisa , , , . . 105, 135 Langhorn, Roland LaPrad, Kyle ........ . . 159 LARGO, MR. RAY ..... . . . 179 LATHAM, MRS. SHARON ,....... 182 Law, Kirk .,...,,.., . . .38,56,159 Lawrence, Robby . . ,..... 170 Lawrence, Teresa . . ..,.,., 135 Lawrence, Terri . . . . 107, 114,136 Lawson, Anthony . . ...... 170 Lawson, Tamara . . .... 170 Lawson, Robby .... . , 136, 204 Lawton, Stephanie LAYMAN,MR. VICTOR . . . . 179 Layne, Eddie ,,., .,....,..... 1 21 Lee, Avis . . . , Lear, Nathan Ledden, Leslee . . . . 104, 108, 136, 150 136, 188 Lee, Tyrone LEE, MR. DON .... LEFFEL, MRS. VIOLET Leftwich, Eugene . . . Leftwich, Lefty . LEGGET PLAZA . Leneski, Anne . ,..,.. LENOIR, MR. ROBERT Leonard, Danny Leonard, Dirk Leonard, Lisa . . Lester, James . . . Lester, Jarnes R. . Lester, Wanda . Lewis, Herman . . Lewis, Yrnelda . , Lewis, Megan . . Levesy, Cathy . Light, Dennis . . . Lightfoot, Renita . Likens, Karen . . . Linton, Laura .... LIPPS, MR. DAVID .. Lipscomb, Victoria . Litton, Gary .... Lloyd, Fita .... Lockhart, Brenda Logan, James . . . Logan, Jeff , . Long, Andy . . Long, William Lotts, David Love, Darlene . Love, James . . Lovejoy, Kent . . Lovell, Debra . . . ..54,57 ..63,73 -52 ..3O .....30 . .73, 75, 76 74, 108, 165, 179 183 170 159 206 136 179 159 159 136 159 160 160 170 136 136 136 170 .68 179 137 170 170 170 .,.73, 75, 91 ..51,83, ..46,81, LOVERN, MR. ROGER . , .. 179 Lowe, Jackie ,...... Lowe, Jeff .,.. Lowery, Thomas , . Lugar, Keith . . Lumsden, Jeff . M .,56. 160 170 137 137 170 . 226 .90 140 160 160 . 75 Jumsden, Jeff L. ..,., . . 170 LYDIA'S CRAFT SHOP . . 198 Lynch, Lori ,,.,.... . . 160 Lynch, Martha . , . . 137 Mmlvimlvl MACK, MR. HOWARD . . . 179 Mack, LUCY ........ , . 74 Macklin, Sherree . . . . 160 Macklin, Michael .,... . . 71 MAGIC TOUCH BEAUTY SALON ...,.... . . 209 MAIER, MISS MARY .. .. 179 Makay, Anne Malloch, Kenneth . Maner, Janice . . ....32 .,,67',74 Maner, Lisa , . . . 113,137 Mangum, Edith Mann, Barry , . . . , . 137 Manning, Bobby . . , . 75,170 Manns, Daisy . . . , , , 160 Manns, Torey . . . . . 160 Manspile, Pam . . . . . . 170 Markham, Richard . . . .81,170 Marsh, Dawn . . . . . 74, 170 Marshall, June Marshall, Zelda . , . 108,137 Martin, Amy . , . . 71,160 Martin, Cindy . , , , 170 Martin, Danny . . . . 34,108 Martin, Debra . . . 137 Ahead of the ranks, ROTC Cadet Major Wanda Brooks receives the DAR Female Achievement Award from Colonel Charles White at the Awards Assembly. 'WW W Index 221 Miller, Donna Powell, Juan . Martin, Denise , . Martin, Karen Martin, Vickie . , Marty, Christine . . Mason, Al ..,. Mason, Brenda . . Mason, Connie Mathis, Harvey . , Mathis, Pam Matthews, Debbie . . Maxey, Gerald , . Maxey, Tim , . , Maxey, Vickie . . . Maxfield, Veronica . . , MAYBERRY, MRS. DEBORAH . . .102 Mayo, Archie .,.,.. Mayo, Joseph . . Mayo, Kathy . . Mayo,Michael . Mays, James , . . McBride, Pamela McCadden, Gloria . McCadden, Tony MCCLOUD, MISS LANA McConnell, Matt MCCORKINDALE, MRS McCoy, Arthur ..... McCoy, Daryl . McCraw, Debbie , . McCraw, Edward . . McCray, Martha . . McCullough, Fatima . , McCullough, Billy . , McDowell, Kathy McFalls, Sandra . McFalls, Richard . . McGeorge, Honey . . McGeorge, Melissa . . McGrady, Rhonda . . McGuire, Connie . . McLain, John .... McLawhorn, Teresa . McKinney, Ricky , McKinney, Roger . McNeil, Mr. Samuel . Meador, Alfred . . . Meador, Bud Meador,Cissy . QUIT? gsnxun if ..170 .........137 . . .35,43,117,138 Meador, Dereck , . Meador, Hal . , Meador, Kathy . . Meador, Linda . . Meadows, Butch Meadows, Kenneth Mick, Donna .... MICK-OR-MACK .. Miller, Carl Miller, Debby , . MILLE Munn R, MR. GEORGE Linda Miller, Timmy . . Miller, Vickie Millner, Rick Millsaps, Tony . . Minnick, Melissa . . Mishoe, Malcolm . . Mitchel Mitchel Mitchel I, Charles . . I, David . , I, Roy . , Monk, Cheryl . . Monk, Kathy Moody, Betty . . Moody, Mark Moon, Stephanie . , Moore, Bobby . . Moore, Carolyn ..,. MOORE, MR. JAMES . Moore, Jeff D. .... . Moore, Jeff N. . . Moore, Johnnie . . Moore, Mike . . Moore, Robert .. ... ,73,76 ... 160 .. 138,146 ,, 160 .. 138 .. 160 .. 138 .., .,, ... 138 ,179 .,. ...63,72,75 ... .,,. 127 .... .... 170 ..63,76,169,171 .,, ..., 160 , ..68,69 .. ., 179 .cAnoLvN..179 .,. ... .56,138 ..73,75,116,138 . .,.... 171 .. 160 .. 160 ... 138 . ..63,71 . ,34,138 .. 171 . ,.. 171 ,. 99J39 .. 139,212 ,,. .., 171 . .., .,. 171 . . . 35, 48, 66, 67, 80, 101, 139, 201 171 ....63 ....214 .. 169,171 , .53,170,171 A Moore, Shirley , . Moorman, Debora Moorman, Larry Moorman, Michael Moorman, Wendy Morgan, Gordan . . Morgan, Laura . . Morris, Bernice Morris, Rebecca . . Morris, Sammy . . Morris, Theresa . . . Mortenson, Diane Moses, Angela . . 222 Index , . 30, . . .9, 179, . . .79, . . 11, . . .82, 83, . .68, . . 97, . . 74, . .,.. 62. 6O,83, 108. .54, 56, 83, . . . 36, 40, 157, . .31. 139 160 169 171 171 203 .74 217 171 160 139 160 171 171 171 139 171 171 .81 139 171 160 180 160 139 92, 160 160 171 .63 171 171 160 139 171 Moses, Jo Anne . . Moses, Marie .... ...... Mowbray, Donnie . . .. 104,140, .,.63. 150 140 171 MOYERS, MR. H. G. . .,. 18 Mullins, Debbie . . . , 161 Mundy, Michael . . . .64 Mundy, Teresa ............... 172 NICHOLAS MUNGER INSURANCE AGENCY . .,....,..... I. .. 193 Munsey, Sandy . . . , 172 Murphy, Connie ...... , , 161 Murphy, Kent ........ . . 140 MURPHY,MlSS SHELBA . . . . 180 Murray, Brenda Murray, Debra Muse, James . . , .64 Muse, Patricia . . . . . 161 Musselman, Kathie . . . . 140 Myers, Beth ..... . , 172 Myers, Mike . . ,... 161 Myers, Sarah . . , . 108,172 Myers, Steve . . ..... ........ 3 5 Naff, Dana . , . . . 105, 140 219 Nance, Robert . . .,.... 140 Napper, Darlene ....... . . . 140 Narum, Peggy .,,...... . . , 161 NATIONWIDE INSURANCE . . . 198 NEEDLE-lNfArHAYSTACK . . .... 208 Neely, William ......,.. . . .63,161 NEESE, MISS ELEANOR . .. 180 NELSON, MR. LEWIS . . . ,..,, 214 Nelson, Scot ...... . . . 56, 57, 161 Newman, Rebecca . . .,,.-- 172 Nichols, Clevie . . ....4- 172 Nichols, Kevin Nichols, Rebecca , . . . . 165, 172,173 Nichols, Tammy Nichols, Tina ..,. - - - 140 Nickerson, Darrel . . . . . 161 Nolen, Kenneth Nolley, Barbara . . ......-- 161 Norrell, Roger , . 46.56.140 151 Norris, Robert .............,.. 63 NORTHWEST HARDWARE . . , . . 208 Nunley, David ............... 161 OAKEY'S FUNERAL HOME ...... 198 OASIS RESTAURANT .... . . 192 O'BRIEN'S MEAT STORES . . . . 188 OLD DOMINION TIRE Pacetti, Vicki ..,....., . . 141 PACK, MRS. MARGARET . . .... 180 PACK, DR, M. DON .,.,, . . . 47, 214 Padgett, Tamara . . . - - 151 Pagans, Rex ..,.,..,.... . , 141 PAINE, WEBBER, JACKSON, AND CURTIS ........ ,. 191 Pakush, Annette . .,.. 172 Palmer, Julia . , . , .34,141 Palmer, Kathy . . . . . 172 Pannell, Lawrence Parker, Elaine . . . , . 141 Parker, Calvin . , . 172 Parker, Kitten Parks, William Parr, Carlton Patrick, Kelly . . . .36, 78, 79, 172 Patrick, Kim Patrick, Linda . ....... 141 Patrick, Pamela . . . . . 113,114,142 Patrick, Penny , ..,.... 172 Patterson, Jeff Patterson, Keith ...... . . . .56,83,161 PATTERSON, MISS NANCY . . . .109,180 Payne, Beverly - ....... Payne, Tammy ,,.,.. PEAKE,MRS. JOANN . . PEDIGO, MRS. PEGGY . Pelzer, Vincent Penn, Paula Penn, Tony ....,.,.. PEOPLE'S FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ....,,. Perdue, Vickie . Perigen, Roy . Perkins, Mary , . Perry, Deidre . . . . 6 Perry, James ...... . PERRY, MRS. JUNE . . PET INCORPORATED . . Peters, Tim ..,....., PETERS, MRS. VIRGINIA Peterson, Paula .,..,.. Peterson, Sheli ..,.... Phifer, Barbara PHILIPS, MR. HARTWELL Phillippe, Dennis ...... Phillips, Jennie . . . . . 1 PhHHps,Judhh .. , , Phillips, Susan Phhhps PIEDMONT SUPPLY, INC. Pat ........, PILOT LIFE INSURANCE CO. . .. . Philpott, Harold ..,... Philpott, Linda ...,, Pillis, Peggy ,....... PILSON, MRS. MARY . . Pinkard, Mark ..,.. Pinson, Debbie . . . ,... 5 A V -'--. ,. 7 SERVICE ...... .. . 208 Orlando, Tony . . ,...... 22 Otey, Eddie. . , 56, 71, 75,161 Otey, Garry . . . ..... . 141 Otey, George . , . . . .40, 71 Otey, Pamela , . . . . ,40,141 Otey, Robyn Otey, Tanual .. . .,.. 172 Overstreet, Billie . . . . 95, 140 Overstreet, Brenda .... 172 Owen, Rhonda ...... . , . . . 141 Pinson, Diane . . . Pinson, Tammy . . Poff, Marty , Poole, Sheila Porterfield, Cynthia PORTRAITXWILLIAM HIGH SCHOOL . . Potter, Belinda , , . Potter, Brenda . . Powell, Jeffrey . . . l3pPpl9 Pace, Jeff . ...... . , , . . . 75,172 Feature twirler Debbie Pinson dazzles her audience with another baton routine at the Spring Band Concert. Powers, Pratt, M Preddy, Preston, Preston, Preston, Preston, Preston, John ark . , Bob . Deloise . . Donna . . . Juber Michael , . Steve Price, Carlton Price, D avid 142 . . . 53,161 182 183 ,,,,,,71,142 191 . , ,, 142 .. .94,142 ..,...27,172 874J01J65J72 .,., ,,,. 172 .,. 180 .,.. 195 . ., 108,142 .... ..,, 183 ....46J2oA42 . . , .68,69,161 ...,....161 . . .. 88,176 .... 161 , 9, 38,102, 103, 08,109, 126,142 142 172 208 206 172 , . 143,148 . , . 71,161 183 .....26,172 ,. 105,161,222 161 172 143 .. 108,143 161 FLEMING .......86-89 161 161 81,101,108,161 . . . .64,65,172 . .. ,, 172 . .62,63,8l 168,172 ..,. 143 ., 143,161 .,.56 Reed, Annette ..., Seaman, David Price, Debbie . . , . 107,161 Price, Dianne ,. , , , 151 Price, Kenneth , . , ,81 Price, Larry Price, Lee . .. ,, 151 Price, Mark . . , , 143 Price, Randy . . , , 143 PROM ,.......... . ,40,41 Prosser, Jean , . PROTECTIVE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ........,....,. 212 PUBLICATIONS . . Pugh, Becky . . . Pugh, Debbie , . . Pugh, Marvin .... Pullano, Mary Sue . . 108,109 . . .53,106,108, 157,161 . . . ,52,53,172 . . .71,75,77, 143 .......144 CDQOQCD Quarles, Michael . , . . , , , 134, 144 Quesenbearry, Gary OUIGLEY, MISS CAROL . . . .78 Quinn, Wayne l72rlQrlQ Ragland, Allen . . , . 144 Ramey, Connie Ramey, Debra . , . , . 144 Ramey, Michael . . . . . 75.172 Ramey, Tony . . . . .73, 75,121 Ramsey, Job . . . Randolph, Julie . . ..,.144 ...,.144 Raymond, Michael . . . . .63, 64, 65 Raymond, Rick . . , . . . 161 Reams, Joyce ..... . . 161 Reavis, Tina ..... . . 172 RED BIRDGARAGE .. 187 Redd, Shelby .,... , , 144 Redden, Ann . , . , 144 ...,....,.,172 RED CROSS, Andra Washington, President: Lori Vaught, Vice-President: Beverly Payne, Secretary: Sandra Terry, Treasurer: Evelyn Feazell, Kim Williams, Student Advisers: Mrs, Mary Allen, Sponsor: Cindy Akerson: Becky Anderson: Donna Andes: Kelly Basham: Dar- ryl Burks: Nancy Childress: Crystal Downey: Nancy Downey: Janice Drew: Sonny Evans: Renee Ferguson: Mary Gill: Norma Graham: Doug Holland: Tina Hurd: Angela Jefferson: Bryan Jenkins: Vickey Jumper: Patty Justice: Rena Kasey: Michelle Keeling: Avid Lee: Renita Lightfoot: Lisa Maner: Becky Morris: Sandy Mundy: Kathy Parker: Kim Patrick: Roy Perigen: Cindi Porterfield: Barbara Phifer: John ReMine: David Simms: Vernon Speese. Reed, Burton . . . . , 172 Reed, Kandy , . . . 43, 144 Reed, Michael . . , . , 144 Reed, Vic Reedy, Linda . . . . 145,149 Reese, Sandra , . . . . 172 Regnier, Susan , . , , , 145 Reinhardt, William , . , . , 145 ReMine, John , . . . . 34,145 Rexrode, Michael . , . . . 145 Reynolds, Becky . , . . 161 Reynolds, Nancy . . . .73, 74 Reynolds, 'nm . . . . . 161 Reynolds, Yolanda , , , 74 Rhodes, Janice Ribble, Susie . . Ribble, Tommy . . , . . .80, 172, 209 58, 60, 130, 145 Richards, Donna . . ..,.-. 172 Richards, Mark . . . . ,.35,108,145 Richardson, Allen , . ...,.., 75 Richardson, Bill . . . , 145 Richardson, Billy . . , . . 172 Richardson, Glen . . , . . 173 Richardson, Jerome Richardson, Phoebe . , , , . 173 Richardson, Terri . . . . . 145 Richardson, Vickie . . . . . . . 173 RILEY, MRS. ESTHER ....... 177,180 Roach, Robin ....... 6, 33, 36, 53, 146 ROANOKE AUTO SPRING WORKS ........ , . ,... . , . 210 ROANOKE CITY SCHOOL BOARD , . 214 ROANOKE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL . . 190 THE ROANOKER RESTAURANT . . . 209 Robbins, Linda .,,..,.......,, 173 Roberson, Margery Roberts, Gary ..,...... . . 161 ROBERTSON,MRS, ALMA . , . . . 180 Robertson, Connie ..,... . . . 173 Robertson, Kathy Robertson,.Lindsey . . V V - 151 Robertson, Mark . . , . . 173 Robertson, Michael . . . , 146 Robertson, Robert Robertson, Wesley . , , . . 173 Robinson, Amanda Robinson, Deborah . . . . 173 Robinson, Greg , . . . . 60 Robinson, Kevin Robinson, Linda . . . . .,,.. . . 185 Robinson, Steve . . .60, 61, 144,146 Robson, Mary , ....,.. 161 Robson, Paula . . . ,46, 80. 146 Rock, Joyce Roop, Kenneth ....,.,... .,., 1 61 ROSENBAUM. MRS. NANCY ..., 109,180 Ross, Matthew ......... ,... 6 3 ROSS, MR. TRUMAN . . . ,... 28,180 Rosser, Walter ............... 173 R.O.T.C. Roger Norrell, Colonel Major Com- ptroller: Jeff Brown, information Officer: Daryl Drew, Personnel Officer: Carlton Price, Administration Officer: Daryl McCoy, Materi- al Officerg Maurice Jones, Squadron Com- mander: Vernon Speese, Operations Officer: Sgt. Cecil Kincer, Sgt. David Spangler: Col. Charles White, Sponsors: Jacqueline Adams: Warren Anderson: Cathy Argenbright: Minis Arnold: James Arrington: Don Bagby: Ray Ball: Bridgette Barlow: Lisa Barnett: Thomas Battle: Felix Beckham: Sherri Berger: Joy Bonds: Terry Bonds: Aubrey Brewer: Benita Brewer: Ivan Brewer: Michael Brown: Wanda Brooks: James Bulls: Rodney Bumbry: Toi Bumbry: Wesley Campbell: Siglinda Carroll: Doug Clatyor: Michael Clement: Angela Clements: Mike Coles: Teresa Collins: Lisa Copeland: Fay Cotton: Richard Cotton: David Craft: Dennis Craft: Warren Craft: Ricky Craig: David Daniels: Pam Dews: Victor Dil- lon: Dwayne Drew: Ricky Durham: Bill Eakin: Carl Edwards: Anne Ellis: Ira Entsmin- ger: Rhonda Evans: Sonny Evans: Barbara Flipper: Debra Gates: Fay Hairston: Ronny Ham: Ethelyne Harper: Marcus Harris: Rhonda Harris: Kevin Haynes: Carl Hicks: Glenn I-liss: Kevin Hopson: Caroline Hunt: Larry Hunt: Curtis Jackson: Bryan Jenkins: Dawn Johnson: Robin Johnson: William John- son: James Jones: Tina Jones: Milton Jordan: Pam Kasey: David Kessler: Ron Larry: Paula Lee: Mike Mayo: Antonio Milki: Mouris Milki: D. Ronald Miller: Dean Miller: John Millinerg Carson Morris: Helena Moyer: Valeria Muse: Fletcher Nicholson? Ronald Otey: Renee E Thompson: Angela Thornhill: Neal Truslow: Kevin Walker: Toni Ward: David Wood: Sonia Wright: Deborah Young. 7' Caught off guard. senior Connie Ayers hears her name announced as another Fleming winner in the DECA District Routon, Sonny ,..... ........ 1 46 Rowland, Jeff . . . .73, 75. 77 146 ROYAL KINGS . ......... 41 Rudd, Darryl , . ..... 161 Rudd, Valerie 68, 80, 146 Rudd, Vernon . 146, 159 Runion, Tim . . , .56, 91 173 Russell, Teresa . . ,... 162 Salmon, Richard . , . . , 146 Sames, Billy . . , , 152 Sanderlin, Pat . , , 173 Sanders, Ava . . . , , 162 Sanderson, Cindy SANDERSON. MISS FRANCES ..,,, 183 SANDY, MR. ROBERT .,....,, 76,180 Santolla, Sue ..,..... . . .9, 105,147 SA-RO REALTY CORP. . . ,..... 196 Sarver, Diane ,,.... . ..... ' . 173 Sarver, Joel . . . . .48,131,147 Saunders, Alvin Saunders, David Saunders, Karen ,,:: 152 Saunders, Penny , , 90, 152 Saunders, Robert . . . . .63,73,75,173 Saunders, Toni . ..,.,. 173 Perry: David Powell: T. T. Reynolds: Hugo Roach: Pam Robertson: Lindsey Robertson: Mike Rosser: Carlton Shears: Carlton Simp- son: Sammy Staples: Terry Thomas: Brenda Sawyers, Connie ....,.,.. . . , 173 SAYERS, MS. SANDRA ......... 180 S.C.A. EXECUTIVE COUNCIL. Barry Sim- mons, President: Dwayne Guynn, Vice-Presi- dent: Sandy Wilson, Secretary: Robin Roach, Treasurer-Historian: Mr. Eddie Johnson, Sponsor: lris Apostolou: Sherry Bohon: Jacquie Bonham: Roslyn Crews: Darrell Davis: Susie Hardie: Leslee Ledden: Lisa Maner: David Simms: Sherman Stovall: Teresa Wright: Gary Yandle, Schwartz, Jeff . . . .78, 79, 162 Contest. Scott, Isaac ..... , , 11,147 Scyphers, Rodney Seagle, Kathy .,., . . 147 Seaman, Charlyne . . . . 173 SENIOR ACTIVITIES . 37,38. 39, 40, 41, 42, 43 SENIORS . .. ..,. 112-155 Sewell, Brenda . . . . 173 Sewell, Gary Shelor, Henry . . , 147 Shelton, Diane SHELTON, MRS. DORIS Shepherd, Linda ..... ,..183 ...,162 Shepherd, Lisa . . . , . 108,162 Shepherd, Sherry . . ,.... 101 Sherffield, John . . . . .55, 56,60 Shifflett, Mark . , . .63,173 Shinault, Vicky . . , , . 147 short, Richard . . .3147 Shortt, Bruce Shortt, Timmy . . . . . 173 Shumate, Earle . . . . . 162 Sigmon, Debra Sigmon, Ray Sigmon, Taynia Simmons, Barry . , 28, 33, 55, 56, 108, 147 Simmons, Doug . , .... 162 Simmons, Kathy ..... . . 173 SIMMONS, MRS, NANCY . . 181 Simms, David Simon, Crystal Simpson, Mark Simpson, Vickie , . . . 165 Sisson, Dawn . . . . 173 Sloan, Gladys Sloan, Lennie , . , , 162 Slough, Dwayne . , , , 173 Index 223 e X, Stokes, Teresa . , . 162 Stone, Clarisia ......... . . . 162 STONE, MlSS ELIZABETH . . , . 88,181 Stores, Kermit Stovall, Sherman . . , . . 162 Strickland, David Strange, Leila Stuart, Joe Stull, Diana , . , . 71,108,149 Stull, Lonnie . . . ,..,, , 174 Stultz, Lesley , . . . , . 90, 174 Stump, David ........ 1 ....,.. 104 Sullivan, Cindy ....,.. ea, 104,157, 152 ,rm Sluder, Roy Slusher, Robin , , . Small, Chris , , , . . Smith, Andrew . , , . Smith, Billy . . . . . Smith, Brenda . . . Smith, Claude Smith, Danny Smith, Donna . . . 173, Smith, Earl . . . . . Smith, Jackie Smith, Joseph . . . Smith, Lee . . . . Smith, Lou . , . , Smith, Marie . . . Smith, Mike , , . Smith, Nancy . . . . Smith, Mike . . . Smith, Nadine . . , Smith, Rebecca Smith, Richard . . Smith, Sandra . .,,.,,.. . Smith, Steve . . . . .56, 57, 157, Smith, Tara . . . ...... , 53, Smith, Terry . . . . Smithers, Billy Snead, Trudy . . , . . 108,105-J, Snow, Terri ,.,.,..... . , . 103, SOLOMON, MRS. CARYL . . , . . SOPHOMORES ...... . . ,164 Sottile, Pauline . ...... 4, 38, Southern, Don . , . .63,71, 105, Southern, Jon . .... . . Sowder, Sharon . . . Sowers, Kimberlie ...... . . SPANGLER, SGT. DAVID . . . . 224 Index 173 173 173 173 162 199 173 147 173 174 174 63 148 63 162 56 162 162 162 148 148 162 181 175 148 174 162 174 174 181 Academics Editor Sherry Bohon and staff member Joan Hutton complete a page layout for the 1976 Colonel. Spangler, Janet SUMPTER, MR. JAMES .....,... 155 SUPERIOR EXTERMlNATlNG CO. .. 209 Surbaugh, Greg ...,..... 108, 149, 205 Surratt, Harry . . , , . , 149,196 Suttenfield, Mike Swanson, Cynthia . . . . . 149 Sweet, Cindy .... . . . 174 SYMPOSIUM '76 . . . . ,24, 25 Tabor, Ann Tabor, Clois Taborn, Rochelle Tames, Barbara .,,.. . . 108, 174 Tames, Mark ...,.....,... . . 149 TANDY LEATHER COMPANY ..... 195 Tate, Cindy ..,.......... . . 174 Taylor, Belinda . , . . . 162 Taylor, Jeffrey Taylor, Michael .... , . 149 TAYLOR, DR. NOEL ., ..1O, 44 Taylor, Rabbit Taylor, Sheena . . . . 174 Taylor, Thomas TEAR, MRS. CAROL . . . . 181 TENNIS .,...... . .80, 81 Terrell, Renee . . , . 150 Terry, Charles Terry, Lisa Terry, Sandra . .,...,...,.,,.. 150 THESPIANS. Mark Akers, President, Cheryl Cromer, Vice-President, Robin Anderson, Connie Ayers, Lisa Boeh, Sherry Bohon, Julie Chewning, Ginny Fowler, Fred Howard, Kevin Watkins, Diane Wilhelm, Dottie Wilson. TROPHY CUSTOM PAINT AND CYCLE .............. . . 199 TROUT, MRS. JOYCE . . . . 181 Trout, Patty ...,.. . . 175 Trussell, James Tuck, Doug . , . . . 56,162 Tucker, Michael Turnbull, Lynn . . . . . 162 Turner, Becky Turner, Dawn , . . . 151 Turner, Hunt Turner, Mike . . . . 53, 71,97 Turner, Richard . , . 151 Turner, Towania , . .,.. 151 Turner, Wayne . . . . . 77,175 TYPICAL DAY , . . . .26, 27 Turpin, Donna ....... . . 151 TYSINGER, DR. BETTY . . ...... 173 UUUUU Underwood, Donald ......,.... 3, 151 Underwood, Kathy , , . . 175 Underwood, Rebecca ...,....,., 162 Underwood, Robert ......,... 83, 162 UCS l UNIVERSAL COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMSI ...,.,.......,. 188 U. S. NAVY . .. 197 VvVvV Valentine, Bryan VAN LEAR, MR. CHARLES . . .... 58, 60. 181 VARSITY BASKETBALL ....... 58-61 VARSITY CLUB. Darrell Davis, President, Larry Wolford, Secretary, Steve Smith, Trea- surer, Keith Patterson, Chaplain, Mr. Howard Mack, Mr. George Miller, Sponsors, Delay An- derson, Paul Andrews, James Arrington, Maurice Ashford, Jeff Boatwright, J. C. Brown, Jerry Caldwell, William Childress, Chuck Cooke, Bruce Cunningham, Rick Haw- kins, Steve Jones, Kurt Kreider: Daryl McCoy? Jeff D. Moore, Jeff N, Moore, Scot Nelson, Roger Norrell, Eddie Otey, Jeff Powell, Mar- vin Pugh, Tony Ramey, Steve Robinson, John Sherffield, Doug Tuck, Jon Whichard, Duncan Williams. VARSITY FOOTBALL . . . . 54-57 Varner, Donna ....., . . 162 Vaughn, Vickie . . .... 175 Vaught, Lori . ..... 162,163 Via, Steve . . . . . .73, 74, 75,175 Viar, Ronnie Viar, Wanda V.l.C.A. Karen Graham, President, David Staples, Vice-President, Pauline Sottile, Secre- tary, Marty Poff, Treasurer, Mr. James ln' gram, Sponsor, Cathy Austin, Rodney Bailey, Bill Barham, Jay Beckner, Jim Bowling, Pren- test Cabblerg Bobby Cromwell, Sue Daniels, Paul Decker, Jimmie Deel, Teresa Dillon, Tim Dix, Evelyn Feazell, Mason Ferris, Delmas Fulk, Charles Garst, Donna Gerhardt, Connie Gills, Bruce Gregory, Cynthia Gregory, John Hipes, Tammy Howard, Dee Dee Jeffries, Bruce Kitts, Cornelius Keeling, Teresa Law rence, Robby Lawson, Tyrone Lee, Cathy Levesy, Dennis Light, Zelda Marshall, Debbie Mullins, Billie Overstreet, Dianne Price, Benny Ragland: Linda Reecly: Bill Richardson, Billy Sames, Tony Schrader, Lonnie Sloan, Jon Southern, Rodney Taborn, Phyllis Tiller, John Tinsley, Randy Waldron, Joe Whorley, Linda Wilson, Joy Yetter, George Ziogas. Vines, Michael ,.,......,. 56, 71, 175 SPEAKERS. . . . . .98,99,100,101 Soeese, Vernon . . ..... 81, 148 Spencer, Mike . . . . 174 Spickard, Susan . . . 148 Spillman, Laura . . . 148 Stamper, lris ...,...,,.. . . 174 PETE STAMUS INSURANCE . . , . 208 Standridge, Susan Stanley, Denise Stanley, Kim . . . . 174 Stanley, Wayne STANTON,MS. DAWNE . . . . . . 181 Staples, David ........ .... 1 48 Stapleton, Steven . . . 148, 200 St. Clair, Gloria . . . . 173 St. Clair, Joy . . . . 149 St. Clair, Ken . . . . 162 Steahly, James . . , . 162 Steahly, Kathy Stephens, Joann . . .... 174 Stephenson, Kathy . , , 108, 162 Stevens, Dinah . , . . . 174 Stewart, Buddie Stiff, April , . . ...... . 174 Stiff, Chipper .....,.,.. 108, 119, 149 STINN ETT, MR. DONALD .....,. 181 Stinnett, Kathy Stinnette, Cathy . . . , 67, 162 Stinson, Mary . . , . . 149 E. J. THOMAS MARKET ........ 212 Thomas, Jerry ....... . . 150 Thomas, Linda . . . . 174 Thomas, Ricky THOMAS, MR. VIC .,.... . . .99 THOMPSON, MRS. LYNN . . . . . 181 Thompson, Sandra Thompson, Sandra L. . ..... 174 Thornhill, Terri . . . ..... , 150 Thornhill, Waverly , . . . ,56,63,75,174 Throckmartin, Steve . . ..... 162 Throckmartin, Vicke . , . 174 Thurman, Bill . . . . . 143 Thurman, Donnie . . ,.., 174 Thurman, Jeffrey . . . 75, 150 Thurman, Julie . . . , . . . 150 Thurman, Michael . . . .56, 64, 74 Tiller, Phyllis .... .... 1 50 Tingler, Allen . . ....,,.. 150 Tingler, Jaime . . . . .63, 71.80.162 Tinsley, Evelyn . . ,....... 150 Tinsley, John . . . . .42,151 Tinsley, Stanley ..,... . . 151 TOLER AND COMPANY . . . . 191 TOLLEY, MRS. oonori-iv . . . . 183 TOWN at COUNTRY ..... .. 192 Towriss, Tammy . . . ...,....- . 174 TRACK ...., . . .72,73,74,75,76,77 Trent, Sheila . , .,...,..... . - Trent, Wayde . . . . 174 Williams, Lavonia ...,. Williams, Lorenza ,..,. WILLIAMS, MS. PHYLLIS Williams, Ray ......,. Williams, Shelby Williams, Vanessa . . Williamson, Amy . . . Williamson, Debbie . , Williamson, Donna . . . Williamson, Doug WI LLIAMSON ROAD PHARMACY Willis, Gerald ........ Wills, Catherine . Wilson, Angie . . Wilson. Carol , . Wilson, Dottie . Wilson, Jeff . . Wilson ' WILSON, MRS. PENNY . Wilson, Sandy . ..... . , Linda ,......, Van ,...,. . Wilson, Wimbush, Deborah ..,. Wimbush, Diane ..... Wlmmer, Lee .....,,. WINGATE, MISS ELAINE WINGO, MRS. SHIRLEY . Wirt, Greg E. .,..... . Vlhrt, Greg M. . . Wirt, Steve . . . Wiseman, Teresa ,.., Witcher, Florean WITTEN, MRS. DOROTHY Wolfe, Cecil ..,...... Wolford, Larry . . WOOD, DR. AMELIA . . Wood, Debra ....,. Wood, Eric WOOD, MR. JAMES . , , Wood, Robin , . Woods, Karen . Woods, Tom , . .. .74,154 . .. .63,175 ,, .. 183 ., 163 ,.. .74 .. ,53,175 . .... 175 .., 105,154 .. 212 , ....... 154 . .., ... 163 . .67,108,175 . .67,108,163 .,, 102,154 ,.. ., 175 ... .... 154 , .... 182J83 33,39,104,154 . .,. .77,163 71,74,105,154 ,. ... .67,74 ,.. 163 . ... 99J82 .. ,., 182 ,. .... 175 . . 73,75,154 ... .,.. .56 . 106,132,154 .. .. 182 , ...., 155 .. .54,56,5l 83,163 .. .25 , .29 , .... 10,36 46,88,118,176 .,. .... 163 ... 163 . .56,155 Weeks, Jerri Weeks, Terry W W Weller, Barry . . . , 175 West, Charles Waddell, Cindy . , , . .67 West, Gary , , , , , 175 Wade, Emily . . . . 151 West, Steven Wade, John West, Sue Wade, Robin ....----- - V 162 West, Vicki ...,,.,. , . 113,152 Waits, Faye ..,........ . . . 157 Westmoreland, Tommy WAKELAND, MRS. LINDA ..... 49,181 Wheat, 0155 WALDEN, MRS. DOROTHY ------ 181 Wheaton, Osborne , , .17, 73, 75, 166 Waldron, Archie . . , ..,,,.. 70, 71,175 Wheeler, Charlotte . . ...,.. . 153 WALDRON, MISS DEBBIE .....,. 181 Wheeler.Evelvl1 V V V i 163 Waldron, Julie ....... . , .22,92,152 Wl1eeIer,Selena V V 4 4 153 Waidron, Randy Wheeling, Dennis , , ....... 175 Walker, Kgren , , , 153 Wheeling, Vicki ,.... ..., 1 05, 153 Walker, Terry Whichard, Jon ..,... 56, 71, 102, 163 Wanacel Kim WHITE, MISS BERTHA ......, 181 Waller' Clifton WHITE, COL. CHARLES .......... 88, Weller, Michael . . , . , . 163 941132221 Waite,-5, Mike , , , I 163,175 WHlTE, MR. JAMES . . , . . . 182 Walters, Sandra. . . , . . 152 While' J'-1311113 - r - f A A 175 Walton, Herman .......,. . , . 152 White' Hickv WALTON, MISS SARAH .,,.... 92,181 White, SUSBH . V V V 153 WARING, MRS. GENEVIEVE .... 93,181 Wl1i110CkiTin1 - - V 4 - - V 163 Ward, Tina ........,.. 10, 38, 53, 163 Whittaker. Bertha . . V V 143, 153 Washington, Andrea . . , , . 104,105,108, Whiilakef, David - - - - - - 175 152, 196 Whorley, Joey Washington, Denise . . . , . . 175 Whorley, Marcel , , . , . . . . 71 Washington, Faye . . .... , . 163 Wiebke, Mark , , . . .73,75,163 Washington, Michael . . . , .75,96,175 Wiley, Shelia . . . . ,7, 71,153 Washington, Robin , . ..,... 152 Wilhelm, Alan . . .... . 175 Watkins, Joyce . . . .... 125,152 Wilhelm, Diane . . . . . 153, 209 Watkins, Kevin . . . 103,108, 163 Wilkerson, Denise . . . . . . 163 Watson, Rita Renee . . ..,,. 29, 152 Williams, Arthur Webb, Amy ..... . . . 112,152 Williams, Brenda . . .,.. , . 175 Webb, Bruce . .... 163 Williams, Duncan . . . . 56, 57, 83, Webb, Louis 153, 226 Webb, Marsha ....,... . . . 175 Williams, JSrnBS V - V - - - 153 ROY WEBBER FLORIST ..., 203 Williams, Jamie. . . . .' .... 53,175 Weber, Jill , ......., .... 1 57,163 Williams, Jeffrev . - V . .73, 75, 77. 153 Weddle, Beth ....,....,. 36, 104, 163 Williams, Kim . . .....V.V 160 WEDDLE, MR. KENNETH ...,. 31,90,181 Williams, Larry . . , . , , 95 Voliiine 38 of ieisiswilliam Fleming High School celoneliiaaeneke. A Virginia. 24017, was edited by Susie Hardie and Iithographed by Delmar Printing Company of Charlotte, North Carolina. Press run: 768 copies of 228 pages. Paper: 100 lb. glossy enamel. Endsheets: yestia. relismeeglvery. ainaieez ,160 psyiinaefs 5oarq,,:Smyrhe 'Vseiiiimf roundediand backed. Cover: Customed lithographed1.3in four- coior' process onwhite blu-back linen materiai with 48 pt.'Univers type printed in 1096 yellow and 2096 red process colors. Cover pho- tography by Susie Hardie with a Nikomat 35 mm. camera.,F 1.4 - 17135, on Kodakyl-iigh Speed Ektachrome film. rated at 160.ASA. 8. 10 pt,..1Jnivers Medigint with boldilead-ins for -tiaptions: 12.-pt. Univers'Bold in Opening, Closing, dividers, and sobheads. Headlines: 36 pt. handset in Letraset Souvenir Light lCampus Life and Peoplei. Avant Garde lSports1. Bookman Bold lAcademics1, Univers lOpening. Closingl. and 72 pt, Univers Bold Extended ldi- vidersl. All portraits by Linda Vllteiley for Delmar Studiosflfhe 1975 Colonel receivedthe Medalist rating fienirtlcsliimbia Scholastic Press Association and the Trophy Award from Virginia High School League. Photo Credits: 1976 Colonel Staff shotxenproximatelys16.000 black and whiteiand 2.000 color frames forthe candidslfrused in Volume 38. Both black and white and coloriprocessing were done exciusively by the Colonel Staff. All color reproductions are from individually separated 35 mm. High Speed Ektachrome transpar- encies. The Staff. wishes to thank Mark Akers, Wayne Deel. Jay Hardie, Linda Kelley, Tim Maitey. Bob Phillips, Lisa Shepherd. and Greg Surbaugh for their contributions to the-candid photography. Special thanks to Delmar employees Bob Anderson, Dick Edwards, Ralph Criminger, Ralph Van Dyke, Sam Dixon. Gary McCl.liiough, Nancy Evans. Plflii VEdwards, Diane Barrier, Sybil Parrish, Er'ic..Phifer. Cindy Brown, Christine Alexander, and representative Arnold Ward, for their technical expertise. ecnouragement. and understanding: Miss Marion Breeden. Miss Pat Clark, Dr. Mary Raye Denton. Mr. Richard Fitz, and,Colonel Charles Savedge, who, each in his own SDQQBl,W8Y. caredag . ,Q . g . g , Woods, William WOOLDRIDGE, MR. DA Wooldridge, Diane . . . Wooldridge, Sarah . , . Word, Jennifer . , Workman, David . . Worley, Betty . Wray, Kathy . . Wray, Linda . . Wrenn, Tracy . . WRESTLING .....,. Wright, Ann ....... WRIGHT, MRS. BlLLlE NlEL. ..212, 214 ..101,155,212 .. 38,80,108, 111,175 .... 155 ....175 ...38,163 ....155 ....175 ..1O-4,163 ..,7O,71 .. ...175 .. .,.182 Wright, Cheryl Wright, Curtis Wright, .lefr . , ..,,. 133 Wright, Ollie . . ...... 74, 79 Wright, Teresa . . . . 31,154,155 Yimdle, Garv . . . . .4,60,78,139,155 Young, Donald . . .,.. 63, 71, 175 Young, Melvin Young, Renee . , Younger, Vincent . York, Donnie ....175 ...63,175 ZZZZZ Zebrasky, Virginia , . . Zimmerman, Debra . . Zimmerman, Frank Ziogas, Bobby Zl0Qas, George ....3,l55 150,155 to all who. ' year and in the seventeen before it. have given me a lot to laugh at, a lot to love. a lot to look back on. V 11976 COLONEL STAFF Susie Hardie. Editor-in-Chief Sheila Poole, Managing Editor Business Ginny Fowler. Manager Terri Caldwell Angie Wilson Photography .3 Nancy Kelley. Editor Tim Benson David Klever Sports Mark Richards, 'Editor Mike Brogan V' ' Ann Hardie Miss Nancy Ruth Patterson, Adviser MissfQElizabeth Stone, 'Adviser 35, Susiegl-lardie Academics Sherry Bohon. Editor Cindy Brumfleld Jeanie Hutton Peoples - cindy Joumell, Editor 'iiir Mindy Brumfield Sarah Myers Carol Wilson Campos Life Stephanie Diamond.JEditor BarbaraVTames Sarah Wooldridge Advertisements 225 :li .VK Q4 .s f, ,F .. f. , .. Ni., Ni h w y s--1, . .1 gc C ..' M, Nm. jx gg- :X 1 'Y -ff535e1m,. A.,s,s.' , r v '.xv,'.'6 , . Y .l It 9 -, If P 1' ft ,I .Q Q if S V T1 ,. -ai+7-- i eggs 1 - I I ' j .fit .egg K as x.. 3 -as ye..-Q , 4 5 Sfglflfi hings were a lot different 5' if F55 if 11,-.1 . 'TAL T' is V ve. B 'if when your Mom sent Z rr A you off that first day of Q school. Your world was W Captain Kangaroo and the A f kids on the block Your B bi ' rr greatest worries making ru.-wi f i ' C. perfect ovals and remem- S -, .Q iw i 1 t . bering your ABC s. As you grew bigger your ..i world did too. The Bicen- . , ff-I. r 5 if? 'Vi ' -' 2 A ,, . N M if ,J J P fi .rw 'Win' X' ' ' N Q , is 5 x J 'IF by at 7 'K iff if 'Q 3 Q x f 4 tl 0 A XF -re A 1 i. il fix T EJ v 5 I 519.5 - vi R fj . t sf . , . . f agffq flw ,, . f I' at.. I I ' K .i -, ' ' ' K . - J! -U 'i',:'fj5.'1 in , ' A t -1 +129 vs ,rut X' s Q iN..g5a5i x l .L 3-. Qs. N Q' tennial rolled around, and you found yourself face to face with a world where New York City started counting its pennies, but Bold Forbes and Barbara Walters :didn't need to. anymore: a world where Patty Hearst came home the hard way, where a shark put a scare in America. lt was a world that saw Virginia crash the party when UVA won the ACC and VMI made it to the NCAA Playoffs: a world that saw Pittsburg claim its second straight Superbowl. and Cincinnati beat Boston in the closest World Series in memory. lt was a country that said good-bye to Howard Hughes and Casey Stengel, and a city that said good-bye to its mayor, Roy Webber. It was a country where a Brown and a Carter and a Reagan tried to prove that Ford didn't really have a better idea. ln a world that sometimes seemed too serious. you had to remember not to take your- self too seriously. After ali, it was a world that still found time to smile. XX.-W rv ix.. ' 1 ii WY ,Wf 'hu wiffiiaw Up to their ankles in creek water. Luanne Carter. Diana Stull. Cathy Austin, and Cheryl Cromer cool off at the Sabre Staffs end-of-school outing. A major breakthrough finds senior Jeff Moore rejoicing after his touchdown in the Colonel's game against Andrew Lewis. Letting the good times roll. seniors Becky Ander- son and Renee Watson cheer at a fall pep assembly. 226 A lotto look back on Z 5 he world still found time to smile' ' V gr' 3, ' F , Taking time out from Pythagoras' theorem, senior Dwayne Guynn admires his scissor work in Mrs, , Carol Teaf's Math for Humanities class. Merry-go-round action lures senior Tina Nichols to the playground at the Girls' CIub's spring picnic in Thrasher Park. A tot to look back on 227 'A lot h A ' as - to love to look back on' ack then, a mud puddle was a lot more than just a puddle of mud. lt was a harbor for the homemade ships you sailed, a vat of chocolate for the sour green apples you dipped. lt was the cool spot you ran to when the hot asphalt of sum- mer scorched your feet, a pharmacy of magic cures for anything that need- ed healing. Sometimes, it was the one place you could go to take a good, hard look at yourself, to mirror the person who lived deep down inside you. Maybe the person who looks back at you now from that mud puddle isn't quite the same as the one who sailed ships and dipped apples years ago. But when you look back again, you realize that you haven't really grown up at all, you've just grown a little taller. And you think, as you listen later to the sounds of the house settling in at night, that there's really no such thing as a nothing-much day. that as long as you can look into that mud puddle and see more than just mud, you'Il have a lot to laugh at, a lot to love, a lot to look back on. 228 A lot to look back on , . 'N- -TJ sae , fog, -ea? iii .ae if as. pr 'A 1 , r ' -H-2, . .Qs as . LET' xt ,.. VTEQSQIW YW 'S ,-,Ce fr .wig ' 4 X g if . .. . ,A :42,,:y5 N1 L , 3 535154, . ,aqy L 1 fgrv W he 1' , fl 'hxzfzw jf I '- 1? , kmf r' ,- K! fa g ws s 5- Q25 I 'S ,' ' ' M ,- 4,19 Af!! .:' ' I ' -F w . ' Y . -. .Wiley , . eff if T JE. 11 fijxf F. -35:43 5 wif? fi 55435-A 'w.53w1:- 1 ,Lb .1 , fart 1 leg.- -39. :Ffw , ' 'kgfs X.. f eff , 3 .,R,f- 'L - 31591 :gif X35 we ' Tw' V? , A 5. . , 359,
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