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WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY
THE Z. SMITH REYNOLDS LIBRARY
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1968 HOWLER
Wake Forest U
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The New University:
From a Tight Family Background to the Liberal Community
Wake Forest is nothing else but
Wake Forest. There can be no
other description of the institu-
tion, simply because there is no
other college like it.
The history of the University
is rich, long, and often humorous.
The traditions may be categorized
similarly. But the Wake Forest of
today is a dynamic moving center
of increasing prominence and
ideas.
Last year Wake Forest received
a new title. Wake Forest Univer-
sity carries on where the heritage
of Wake Forest Institute and
Wake Forest College left off. The
spirit of the new university can
be traced through the roots of its
past as can that of any organism.
But the philosophy of the sixties
demands new approaches, new
outlooks, and new visions.
During the 134 years of its
existence, Wake Forest's objectives
have not changed drastically, but
the means to achieve these ends
of total education have evolved
with the times. "To liberate men,
pro Humanitate, for humanity, is
the goal of Wake Forest Univer-
sity," says Tom Elmore, Dean of
Students. "It is to free students
from the limiting factors of im-
maturity, fear, prejudice, re
stricted vision, paucity o^ amo-
tion, confused objectives, and ig-
norance of self, society, and things
— to free them for self-fulfillment
and responsible living."
Throughout its history Wake
Forest has been an integral part
of the Baptist State Convention.
Following the founding of the
organization in 1830, the leaders
realized the need for Christian
higher education in North Caro-
lina. By 1834 Wake Forest Insti-
tute had been established under the
principalship of Dr. Samuel Wait.
WAKE FOREST COLLEGE
BIRTHPLACE
This simple provincial house was built before
1820. For some year* It was the home of Dr.
Cah/in Jones, a founder of the North Carolina
Medical Society, major -general
ar of,
r»rder'
1812 and Grand Master of the
in North Carolina. He was for 30 years a
trustee of the University of North Carolina.
In 1832 Dr. Jones sotd his home and plantation
at Wake Forest to the Baptist State Convention.
On February 3. 1834. Wake Forest Institute, as
It was called until 1838. was opened in the
building with an enrollment of 16 '^ajudents.
The dwelling house was used .
of the first President of the
Wait, and for classroom purposes.'
house was used as a chapel
substantial log cabins"
The house, now on its fourth,
from its original location In
the campus in 1839 to make
College Building." and later to
on Wingale Street It Is now
1830 period.
For the first five years Wake
was also a manual labor school.
But in 1838, this aspect of a lib-
eral education was abandoned in
favor of the new Wake Forest
College. The curriculum was in
harmony with the times; the em-
phasis was on training young men
for the ministry.
In 1894, Wake Forest moved
rapidly toward the twentieth cen-
tury by establishing schools of law,
medicine, business administration,
and graduate studies. By 1948,
Wake Forest had moved far be-
yond the closed conservatism of
one-track education. No longer
—
" The spirit of the new
University can be traced
through the roots of its
past . . ."
FOREST UNIVERSmr
MAY 2 5 '68
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were ministers the only product
of the Baptists; other professions
were becoming increasingly prom-
inent at Wake Forest.
The next step came when Wake
Forest recognized women and al-
lowed their admittance after 1942,
thus adding incentive to the al-
ready growing schedule of courses.
The forties were also years of
future planning by the college.
Wake Forest found that the day of
purely academic functioning
would work no longer. Wake For-
est College began to evolve into a
concept of Wake Forest, Incor-
porated. In 1946, the college and
the convention decided to accept
an offer made by the Z. Smith
Reynolds Foundation for $350,-
000 annually, provided the school
move to Winston-Salem.
Groundbreaking for the new
campus came on October 15,
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1951, with President Harry F.
Truman speaking. The fund rais-
ing was hectic and construction
painstaking, but by June 19 56,
Wake Forest College was a reality
in the Twin City.
Eastern North Carolinians
viewed the move with a combina-
tion of emotions. Some were sorry,
some were angry. In Winston-
Salem, the new college was greeted
with a detached warmth. On Fac-
ulty Drive, the old college "fam-
ily" remained aloof.
Wake had to prove itself to the
community, and it had to do so on
the merit of its contributions to
the city. Even today, the Univer-
sity is not fully assimilated, but
the increasing funds from the
community and the growing sup-
port of Wake's athletic teams at-
test that Winston-Salem is grow-
ing closer to the school.
"Wake had to prove itself to
the community, and it had
to do so on the merit of its
contributions to the city."
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"The first impression that
many students get of the
college is that it is a rather
stern and uncompromising
place . . ."
But, just as the city draws
closer to the college, the college
is doing more to serve its larger
community. As new blood has
entered the University, Wake
Forest has been flourishing cul-
turally. It has gained acceptance
by opening its lectures, art exhib-
its, and concerts to the public.
"We've always related to the
society we served," says James
Ralph Scales, President of the
University. Inherent in this state-
ment is also the change in Wake
Forest over the years: the new
environment, new students and
new faculty. All have affected the
change.
Both the admissions program
for students and the recruitment
procedure for faculty members
are acquiring a new, broader re-
servoir of intelligence and, hope-
fully, vision from which to draw
new blood to the University com-
munity. The spirit of the new
University is in these people: the
undergraduate, the graduate, the
alumni, the faculty and the ad-
ministration.
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WAIT CHAPEL
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Wake Forest built a tremendous
heritage at the Old Campus and
stimulated it by moving to Win-
ston-Salem. Dr. Harold W. Trib-
ble, President of the College from
1951 to 1967 guided the institu-
tion through the difficult building
process. The move, and the un-
equaled improvement in academic
quality which accompanied it
were the contributions of his ad-
ministration. In those seventeen
years, the total assets of the Uni-
versity grew from $10,299,000 to
$90,400,000; the average total
Scholastic Aptitude Test scores
of entering freshmen climbed
from 943 to 1139; and the per-
centage of faculty members with
the PhD. degree increased from
43 7c to 72%.
A new President and a new
spirit took over in 1967, and James
Ralph Scales' burden will be to
make the College a vital modern
University.
Part of the spirit of the Uni-
versity is the lingering Baptist
control. The mere sound of the
word "control" conjures images of
a strict monastery existence. "The
first impression that many stu-
dents get of the college," says Ed-
win Wilson, Provost, "is that it is
a rather stern and uncompromis-
ing place which means business
and is more than just a little im-
patient with students who are not
qualified and not serious."
If this impression is caused by
Wake's Baptist ties, it is one which
is quickly changing. The appeal
for more autonomy is slowly
yielding results, and the day when
Wake Forest will be allowed to
elect its own trustees is in the
foreseeable future.
Coinciding with the weakening
Baptist control is the declining
influence of the in loco parentis
philosophy which for many years
has been the determinant of the
college's social regulations. The
idea that the school should act in
place of a parent in determining
conduct rules is slowly being dis-
credited through constant criti-
cism by the ever-more-cosmopoli-
tan faculty and student body. By
1966, the percentage of North
Carolinians had decreased to 64%,
and the percentage of Baptists had
fallen below the half-way point.
Sff'Hi I I i M*
"The University is in fact
as personal as the student
makes it."
"~-z~mstt
.
There is, of course, a tendency
by the University to retain its
traditions, most of which deserve
to be preserved. As Elmore puts
it, "Today, the principle of edu-
cational community is central at
Wake Forest. Students, for the
most part, are required to live on
campus, not simply to preserve
order, but to assure the conti-
guity of persons who can learn
from each other. In an era of mass
education when state universities
feel pressured to continually ex-
pand, Wake Forest is dedicated to
the preservation and enlivement
of a community of scholars rather
than a conglomeration of stu-
dents."
Nevertheless, the University
feels the need to liberalize aca-
demically and socially. A very
important part of the "total edu-
cation" idea the university offers
is, of course, social. The establish-
ment of the Men's Residence
Council and the College Union,
the loosening of chaperone rules,
automobile regulations and coeds'
hour restrictions, and the orderly
■a
"The principle of educa-
tional community is central
at Wake Forest."
working of the student-adminis- §
tered honor code have encouraged ^
more responsibility for the indivi-
dual student. The strengthening
of dependence upon personal
judgment in college is, of course,
the purpose of relaxing the in loco
parentis restrictions which have
been carried over from earlier
days.
The academic tradition of
Wake Forest is liberal, as any fun-
damentalist will agree. But wheth-
er Wake Forest is a liberal univer-
sity in the modernistic sense is a
moot question. Wake Forest,
down to its 18th Century Geor-
gian architecture, is so rooted in
past that the "super liberal" will
be hard pressed not to find some
reason for disenchantment. For in
some circles, the fact that Wake's
President William Louis Poteat in-
troduced the first laboratory sci-
ence instruction at any Southern
college, and that he fought a win-
ning uphill battle to keep anti-
evolution laws off the North
Carolina law books may seem
:
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''Students . . . are required
to live on campus, not sim-
ply to preserve order, but to
assure the contiguity of
persons who can learn from
each other."
_
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rather insignificant. To one bred
in the spirit of Wake Forest, how-
ever, the facts are very important.
For as Southern colleges go Wake
has traditionally been a "liberal"
one.
Important to remember is that
Wake Forest is a private college;
it has certain characteristics which
create a more personal atmosphere
than that which exists at public
institutions.
According to Elmore, "the op-
portunity for interdisciplinary ex-
change is greater here. Students
are more visible. Faculty and ad-
ministration are more accessible.
The University is in fact as per-
sonal as the student makes it." The
cost of a good education is indeed
steep, but at Wake Forest it is
justified — if the student takes ad-
vantage of his superior opportuni-
ties.
The administration feels one
of its goals is to instill in the stu-
dent a sense of responsibility,
value, and direction. To the stu-
dent, these intangibles are not al-
ways so apparent. Often a student
is in college because it is the right
thing to do, or Daddy forced him,
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or Grandpa went to Wake Forest.
He looks for only social challenges,
or an easy way out.
The University cares about the
social challenge. It is important,
but what is more important is the
overall product. Wake Forest feels
it is turning out good, respectable,
highly integrated individuals. Lu
Leake, Dean of Women, calls for
a reduced ration of men and wo-
men in order to help achieve these
ends. Elmore believes these ends
may be reached by preserving and
enhancing the existing communi-
ties.
The idea of "community" life
is now a primary facet of the
Wake Forest future. Harold Trib-
ble's now famous conception of
the Wake Forest "family" has
given way to the "community."
But even this community must
change in the future. The stu-
dents, social ideas, and growth of
_
_
"As church schools go,
we've been remarkably free
of religious control . . ."
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fr Coinciding with the
weakening Baptist control
is the decline of the in loco
parentis philosophy . . ."
the universities are forced to
change. Because the whole trend
away from the small, private insti-
tution is believed by some to be
increasing, Wake will have to fight
to maintain its personal approach
and community atmosphere.
James Ralph Scales does not
believe this to be a great problem
at Wake Forest, however. His
overwhelming optimism is appar-
ent in all areas of the institution
and his forecast for Wake is ex-
tremely bright. "As church
schools go," he has said, "we've
been remarkably free of religious
control. Not many church schools
are as free as this and we are get-
ting better all the time."
He says that our financial out-
look is becoming even more aus-
picious.
Scales' opinion is the essence of
the new spirit of the university.
His outlook is fresh and his meth-
ods are professional. Yet, in wait-
"The institution tvhich al-
lows a man to be an intel-
ligent conservative has to
be liberal."
ing for his achievements, Wake
Forest will not be bored. The
president's personality permeates
throughout the campus and he
has given impetus to varied move-
ments from cultural to financial
to academic.
"The institution which allows
a man to be an intelligent conser-
vative has to be liberal," he ex-
plains in response to charges of
Wake's provincialism. "The liber-
al produces a disciplined mind and
most often a disciplined life."
President Scales holds lofty
goals for the new university. His
spirit, and that of the "new"
Wake Forest University, encom-
passes the vitality, innovation, vi-
sion and foresight of the future
and yet maintains the tradition
and hindsight of the past.
— G.B.F.
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1968 HOWLER
SPORTS— page 194
ACADEMICS— page 50
■■^^m^^^B
22
WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY • VOLUME 66
" JHS".«
STUDENT LIVING— page 12
CLASSES— page 232
'*f<
EPILOGUE— page 3 22
BROOKS STILLWELL. Editor / BARBARA BRAZIL, Associate Editor /
PAUL COBLE. Assistant Editor / GLENN FREEDMAN, Assistant Editor /
DAVID JAMES, Business Manager. Published annually by authority of the
Publications Board of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Caro-
lina. Printed by Footc and Davies, Division of the McCall Corporation,
Atlanta, Georgia.
The paradox of higher education, accord-
ing to Vice President Gene Lucas, is that
it is "big business, but it is not a busi-
ness." Wake Forest is just beginning to
recognize in itself the complexity which
Lucas implies is a part of the idea of
University.
The University has many facets,
academic and financial, ethical, philo-
sophical and structural, which the stu-
dent may never realize exist. It has many
faces, but all are directed to the end of
"total education" for its participants.
The 1968 Howler is an attempt to
weave together the threads of ancient
tradition and newly-found spirit which
characterize the "new" University. Be-
cause the community is a unified, directed
whole, its parts can never be completely
separated, and some will think the orga-
nization of the book to be too categorized,
or erroneously arranged. If this is our
fault, the staff must apologize, for our
purpose is to illustrate the essential unity
of the new Wake Forest.
The personality of the University is
moving in many new directions. Whether
developing a new Art Department or re-
vamping an archaic administrative struc-
ture, the mood of the University is one of
unbridled optimism — a feeling which is
generally shared by students, faculty,
administrators and alumni alike.
But the new spirit is much more com-
plex than we have suggested. As the
personality of the individual student is
different from that of the crowd, the
spirit of the student body is not quite
the same as that of their elders. But the
spirit of the University is a composite
of them both, for only when they are
joined is the community formed.
The Wake Forest of 1968, then, is
optimistic, complex and traditional, but
it has the flavor of something new. We
hope that the Howler adequately reflects
its mood.
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THE YEAR
The Measured Pace of Experience and Feeling
"Tomorrow is Wednesday and the day
after is Thursday, and then it's Friday."
— a sad but typical remark.
When a whole year goes from day to
day, it goes not slowly, but as if it had
not quite been. One wonders if a year
really is 365 days, or whether it's a
rounded-off 8 J A months with some breaks
in-between called vacations.
Maybe a year is another two semester
course from syllabus to exam. Or it's the
first year to leave friends and find out
what hours and q.p.'s mean, and what it's
like to have classes three days a week with
fraternity parties on weekends, and dorm
life all the time, and only the bus for a
sure ride to town.
And amidst all this, the days seem
like weeks, and the weeks seem like days,
and the month is gone — surely not finally.
And so is the year.
But it's not just a calendar year or a
month or a day ticked off in little black
numbers by the distorted time of a clock.
It is a measured year, though, measured
by experience and feeling; and the second
hand moves from the 12 to the 12 only
as fast as you do.
It seems that living it, the time didn't
go nearly as fast as remembering it, trying
to put each part of it back together.
It's a year too long for some, but never
long enough for others.
For some people the year is a graph
that never gets off the horizontal until it's
over; for others it's a jumble with big
highs and lows that were never realized
until they were over. . . . But it's always
that way.
This year was full of highs and lows
for Wake Forest, and for many students,
too. Each person's year was different, of
course, but we hope these pages cover
some of the high points in a way that you
remember them.
Whatever else may change, however,
the seasons are always remembered. Al-
though the year may overlap itself, the
seasons are always its vague demarcations.
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Orientation and a Concert in the Gardens
The year started a few days early for
freshmen and the people who were here
to orient them. Despite some confused
plans and an over-crowded two days, this
year's harried new students lasted through
Orientation. A solid day of testing gave
a break to the group leaders and an omi-
nous hint to the freshmen of the quiz and
exam schedules to come.
Of all the meetings, the group discus-
sions at advisor's houses were the most
beneficial. Here, the freshmen discovered
the relevance of such topics as "How to
relate to home life once you have adjusted
to college?"
Throughout the first week they met
their cousin's best friend, got quickly
conditioned to registration, and, like
everyone else, made those visits to the
P.O. that are so frequent at the beginning
of the year.
Then the Candid Weekend
of the Summit Conference
The year began uniquely for a group
of freshmen men who were allowed to
live in Faculty and Reynolda Gardens
Apartments as an experimental solution
to the problem of perennially over-
crowded dorms.
In Johnson Dorm, junior advisors for
the first time lived on halls with the
freshmen girls, helping them with their
initiation to college life and their inevi-
table questions.
The first fall week ended with the
Pozo-Seco Singers concert in Reynolda
Gardens. There had never been a concert
like that one — sitting on the hill on a
barely summer night — a small chill — and
a lighted, wooden stage at the edge of
the lake below. It was nice to move the
informal togetherness of a good concert
to the Gardens, a sort of special part of
the campus.
Many new things were tried and ini-
tiated this year; as one of these, the Sum-
mit Conference accomplished its purpose:
student, faculty, and administration
leaders met for a candid weekend at Camp
Hanes to discuss mutual problems of the
school.
Last year's skepticism at the whole
idea of a "frank" talk with the adminis-
tration was shattered by Vice President
Lucas and other members of the new
administration. Participants talked openly
and off the record, proposing new ideas
and explaining the reasons for past ac-
tions.
Of course, no decisions were made or
direct actions taken as a result of the
talks, but students and faculty members
gained a new understanding of the ways
and means of gaining realistic solutions
to their problems.
A trip to the P.O.
singers sing
Reynolda G;
Professors
rdcd.
thei
(opposite above). The Pozo-Se
i ballad on the make-shift stage
dens (opposite below).
gather at Camp Hanes (top), ai
ive and Karen Swartz (above) meet
i of individual talk that made the wee
cessful.
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Carnival Lights on the Court
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53
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The year streaks at the start, and the
fall is always full of activities — football
games, the first round of quizzes, Parents'
Weekend, and the Carnival.
For the second year the fall Carnival
was a school-wide undertaking to plan,
to panic at the thought of a week before,
to set out stake markers for, and to spend
the whole day building booths held up
only by a prayer.
It was a cold night for black-stock-
inged legs and little suits, for jumping
out of birthday cakes, eating candied
apples and making oil paintings, and for
playing miniature golf. But people came
and had fun, and they bought lots of
tickets.
And maybe the Carnival people had
more fun than the crowd.
The Carniv
al panorama
lit
h<
court
(above)
hile I. Calv
re vent
s his
igg
ions o
n an old
r (opposite
below)
and
twt
ittle g
rls stare
their oil painting
whir
form
(left).
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i^BHHi
Students dance in Reynolda Hall {abate) after Coach
Tate's speech at the pep rally (above right). At the
game Saturday night Austine Odom (above left) was
named Homecoming Queen. Throughout the weekend,
however, racial disturbances (right) simmered in Win-
—
Homecoming Concerts in a Background of Racial Disturbances
Homecoming weekend finally came,
accompanied by racial disturbances which
startled ^"inston-Salem.
People accused Wake Forest of being
unconcerned with the causes of the racial
problems; and other people said "I can't
understand why it happened." The degree
of the school's involvement in a solution
to the problems was debated, but however
mild the disturbances were, they made
evident the need to find a solution.
Homecoming itself was only allowed
token interruption, however. Concerts,
dances, and game went on as planned
with minor inconveniences caused by 1 1
and 11:30 curfews in town. Only be-
tween the planned events did talk and
tense questions seem to indicate student
concern.
After the pep rally Thursday night,
students took over Reynolda Hall for a
dance with the Fabulous Five.
The Simon and Garfunkel concert on
Friday night was sold out the week be-
fore. The singers were witty and seemed
to enjoy us as much as we did them —
even to the point of stopping a song to
stare at a photographer.
With a little different tempo, Smokey
Robinson, who almost didn't come Satur-
day afternoon, sang his good oldies,
promising to be better the second half.
And he was.
Then, with the game scheduled for
Saturday night, people scurried off to
dinner at Town Steak House or maybe
the big Staley's or a fraternity house.
Despite rumors of trouble at the sta-
dium, the game was played. It was cold —
but Wake Forest, who had not won a
Homecoming game in three years, beat
the South Carolina Gamecocks.
The disturbances should not be for-
gotten, but the concerts and game of
Homecoming '67 will be talked about and
remembered as good ones always are.
Simon and Garfunkel (opposite top) interrupt
their song to stare at a bothersome photographer,
while Smokey Robinson and the Miracles (below)
scream a loud tunc to the sold-out crowd. The
two concerts peaked the activities of the weekend.
m
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53
i
■!■■!■ I ■ — I
Other Entertainers Came
Other entertainers came to the campus
this year, and the College Union concert
attracted enthusiastic audiences.
The melancholy mood of the Glenn
Yarbrough concert was epitomized by the
songs with Rod McKuen lyrics. McKuen's
poetry was being discovered by many
people, and the Yarbrough style just
seemed to fit.
In a completely different frame, the
Flamenco music of Carlos Montoya made
a warm concert of improvisation. He
didn't talk much, but all he needed was
his guitar to say what was important.
With his hand up, he acknowledged the
applause.
The lettermen started off with "Up,
Up, and Away," and Dr. Scales and the
rest of the audience joined in with "Kan-
sas City." One of the three singers was
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new, but they sounded just the same. It
was a good audience for them.
And it was a good one for Dionne War-
wick. She started off with "Up, Up . . .,"
too, and when she got to "Valley of the
Dolls" everyone knew the concert was
almost over; but it was all right, because
for an hour she had been good.
Her lead guitarist had missed the plane,
and he had her sequined dresses. She didn't
have her make-up, and none of the coeds
had an appropriate dress to loan her. She
didn't quite look like her press releases
either. But people didn't pay just to come
and look at her; they paid to hear her
sing, and she did that well.
Collge Union concerts bring such big names
as Dionne Warwick (opposite above). The Letter-
men (opposite below), and the Flamenco guitar
of Carlos Montoya (above). Glenn Yarbrough
varies his concert with a reading of Rod Mc-
Kuen's poetry (above right).
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Christmas and How A Star May Have Come to Mean
There had been a Thanksgiving break,
classes started again, and the Christmas
season came to Winston-Salem. Then the
spirit of the season began to appear at
Wake Forest.
Of course, quizzes and papers still
punctuated the class routine, but Christ-
mas doings helped the spirit along. The
Moravian Love Feast was a traditional
candle-light service in the closeness of
Davis Chapel.
In the ancient German meaning, each
of the individual candles was brought
together to light the darkened church,
and members of the Moravian congrega-
tion served the coffee and rolls eaten as
symbols of a family meal.
And the Moravian star appeared in
the chapel one day in the same place it
hangs every year.
It got closer to the time to go home,
and people went shopping and bought gag
gifts for parties. The tall trees went up
in Reynolda Hall, the cafeteria, the dorm
parlors, and the gym, and even in the
windows of the boys' dorms.
But regardless of all these conventional
signs, a door in Johnson Dorm was evi-
dence of Charlie Brown's sad statement
that Christmas had been taken over by
a large Eastern syndicate.
A spirit lived, though, and the last
night before vacation, freshmen girls
gathered on the balcony to sing their own
Christmas carols to callers at the dorm.
As always there was the Christmas Ves-
per Service, but this year there had also
been Ted Bouchy's play, "How Does a
Star Mean?" Written with a narrative in-
troduction and a dramatic episode sur-
rounded by two sections of poetry, the
modern play asked how a star came to
have meaning. Everything in this world
has meaning, as long as it is remembered.
Only the meaningless lies beyond this
world in the realm of the forgotten.
In an emotional response to the play,
the listener was forced to ask, "Why is
a star remembered?"
It may have come to be remembered
for the conventional reasons and symbols
found in all the Christmas carols and
store windows. But each person must find
within himself how he came to remember
the star on top of every tree.
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Exams in One Long Day
Christrrus vacation was welcome, but
once it was over exams had to be faced.
In the two weeks before the gamut
started, term papers were due, there were
last minute quizzes, and professors gave
early exams with all good intentions.
(And still they expect you to study for
the Monday morning exam.)
Someone was on the borderline and
his exam would make the difference, or
he wondered if he would get his loan
back. Some might make Dean's List, a
few worried about their cum laitde's, and
others hoped that they would stay in
school.
But most just wished that it were that
second Wednesday of exams.
The cramming started the weekend be-
fore, and reading day was spent finishing
a term paper. Girls didn't roll their hair,
and they wore slacks without coats. Boys
didn't shave. People functioned on No-
Doz and coffee. And they took that dark
walk to breakfast at 7:00.
With two exams the next day and one
the following morning, a long day started
Sunday night and didn't end until Tues-
day afternoon. But a letter from home
ended with the reminder to get plenty of
rest and take care.
(left) wl
k (abate). The
quiet place to
tudy (opposite below), but
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Then it snowed — it always snows dur-
ing exams. And because it would have
been a shame to waste it, most people
went out to play. The weather brought
traying down the biology hill in long
chains, getting hit with a snowball on
the way to the P.O., and jamming the
cafeteria with people who couldn't get
off campus to eat.
Some people had to find ways home
in the snow; for the rest, exams were
not over yet. One last time someone said,
"If I could just get through this one. . . ."
and he did.
.S
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The University Theater's ffLook Back in Anger"
The fine arts usually come to Wake
Forest from off campus; they come from
local painters, from Indonesian dancers,
and even from Brazilian baritones. But
alongside the Artist Series and the College
Union contributions, the University The-
ater is perhaps a more exciting stimulus
to the arts.
This year, the Theater daringly pro-
duced John Osborne's "Look Back in
Anger," directed by Martin Bennison.
Selection of such a play brought a unique
orientation to capacity audiences of the
theater.
Successful productions were only made
possible, however, by a theater group,
extremely active despite limited facilities.
Mickey Finn, Linda Jones, and Ted
Bouchy were the principle actors in the
play, and the backbone of a group of
students with a wide range of talent and
experience, and a serious interest.
A theater is defined by its members,
and when it has such leaders it can be
effective as well as good.
"Look Back in Anger" was an example
of the expanding breadth of the theater's
capabilities; and the more exciting the
plays, the more exciting were the per-
formances.
"Look Back . . ." was presented realist-
ically and honestly. It may have shocked
seme people. But it was supposed to shock
the emotions — the satirical, the lonely,
the angry. The final scene stripped down
and at the same time reconciled the emo-
tions and personalities of the play.
The only disgruntled phrases heard
in the hall before and after the play were
those of the audience as they studied the
display of theater centers at schools
around the country.
Wake Forest's theater had its members,
and it didn't require such an arts com-
plex. But it needed one because it deserved
one.
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The Inauguration with a Different Accent
If anyone was looking forward to the
laziness of Spring at Wake Forest this
year, he was likely disappointed. For the
first time in eighteen years the institution
had a new president. The April inaugura-
tion was quite a happening.
Planning and preparation began back
in the summer under the able direction
of Dean, and then Provost, Edwin G.
Wilson. The logistical work proved to
be tremendous.
Invitations went out all over the United
States, and on the appointed day, forty
college and university presidents were
included among the representatives of
the over 200 participating institutions
in the academic procession.
Part of the big excitement of the day
centered around the appearance of Vice
President Hubert Humphrey, who de-
livered the Installation Address. Humph-
rey's appearance was all the more interest-
ing because of the Vice President's newly-
found Presidential hopes.
Wake Forest was not to be overshadow-
ed by Mr. Humphrey, however. Dr. John
Davis led the processional carrying the
University's new mace, engraved with
the symbols of the college. Dr. Wilson
proved to be a gracious and decorous pre-
siding officer as well as a master orga-
nizer, and student body president Chip
Cooper read a poem to Scales from the
students, which was written by The Stu-
dent's Literary Editor Ted Bouchy.
President Scales was a grand success
himself. Speaking in a strong and self-
assured voice, he promised continued aca-
demic excellence and increasing national
prominence for the school.
The year might be summed up by his
remarks: "Wake Forest will be speaking
with a different accent, but the substance
of its message is unchanged. The new
administration like the old is com-
mitted to the great cohesive values that
prompted the founders and planted in
generations of young men the habitual
vision of greatness."
Wake Forest in 1968 is optimism.
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THE WAKE FOREST WOMAN
Zestful and Creative, Sophisticated and Mature
Wake Forest needs a particular sort
of young woman: socially aware and ma-
ture, zestful and creative, interested in
the things of the mind as well as the heart
(in other words, wanting a B.A. as much
as a Mrs.). Striving to fulfill these cri-
teria, the Wake Forest coed is moving
in the direction of becoming a modern
woman: witty, cunning, sophisticated,
mature, feminine.
Some think that the campus has lacked
this sort of woman and that the appear-
ance of such a woman is still to be seen.
But their problem, it would seem, lies in
repeating an almost traditional mistake:
looking for the campus woman not on
campus but in last year's yearbook.
Regardless of the critics, the skirts
are getting shorter; and as the skirts
are shortened, the quality of woman on
campus is raised. We find now, with the
new rules as to what is tasteful apparel,
that our women are beginning to look
more like women who enjoy being wom-
en. The Scars and Roebuck Catalogue
style is disappearing; in its place has come
a high degree of sensitive individuality.
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"The substance of the Wake
forest woman is to be found
neither in her transcript nor
in the flattering words of
her date."
Even in their physical appearance there
is exhibited a noticeable and expected im-
provement. Perhaps the rumor is true:
the admissions directors have cleaned
their glasses. At least that seems to be the
popular consensus, capable of prompting
remarks such as, "The girls are getting
better here." But more important than
the face is the substance. That, too, is
improving.
The substance of the Wake Forest
woman is to be found neither in her tran-
script nor in the flattering words of her
date. Only the girl, as an individual mem-
ber of the college community, can ex-
plain, in fact define, what she basically is.
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"The Sears and Roebuck
Catalogue style is fast dis-
appearing; in its place has
come a high degree of in-
dividuality."
Straight to the source, a certain charm
is to be expected, as well as an adeptness
and growing concern in social matters.
Even Southern charm has been refined
through easeful, feminine graciousness,
obtained through maturity and self-
awareness and self-confidence. A simple
review of who is doing what well on
campus, especially in the areas of leader-
ship— political, social, creative — plainly
illustrates that the Wake Forest woman
does have a place on campus. An impor-
tant place.
Granted the responsibility of sharing
the burden of the challenging functions
of the University, the Wake Forest wom-
en strive to contribute their talents and
time not only to realize their personal
potentialities and individualities, but also
those of the University and its organiza-
tions.
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Significantly, these contributions are
made sincerely with a type of sophistica-
tion that is not to be criticized. For the
Wake Forest women are not IBMed mana-
quins; they are human individuals.
Which, in a world of growing computer-
ization and alike stylization, is all that
counts.
Being human and sentient, they cherish
the extension of self through art. They
respect the value of mature decision and
the right to make that decision wisely.
They are intensely involved in trying to
better themselves and their world. They
read, think, and act carefully. They smile,
care, and love deeply. And sometimes,
at those quiet times, their faces grow
dark, as only the face of a woman can do.
As most women should be and usually
are, they are concerned with their ap-
pearance, their manner, their purpose and
personality. They want to grow, to be-
come involved, to be a part of — a sig-
nificant part.
Which is all that any man could ask
for. Isn't it?
— T.F.B.
frThey read, think and act
carefully. They smile, care
and love deeply"
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ACADEMICS
An Education for Those Who Choose It
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It might be a false feeling, but you have
a sense of pride when you tell friend or
stranger that you go to school at
Wake Forest. Academically it's a good
school with a sound reputation; statisti-
cally, Wake compares favorably with the
best schools of the South and has an ever
improving reputation.
If you're a girl at Wake you've been
a leader in your high school and scored
about 1200 on your college boards. The
average score for a boy is slightly lower,
but is comparatively high also.
For a small school, Wake Forest has
a lot to offer — more than 3 00,000
volumes in its library, seventy-eight per
cent of its faculty with a Ph.D. degree,
advanced degrees in law, medicine, some
sciences, some humanities, and some
liberal arts curricula. Although the fine
arts department is just beginning to
grow, there is an excellent program of
guest speakers, artists, and performers
for those with a desire to participate in
a bit of extra-curricular development.
Fcr the top-notch concerts, a sell-out
house is always predictable, but for a
Vietnam panel discussion, the turn out
could only be termed a packed-house
if it was in a room small enough for
thirty or forty people to fill.
There are some departments which
command the devotion and hard-work
of their majors. For example, the sciences,
psychology, and education are all demand-
ing. But others, perhaps because of their
size, or a tinge of apathy from both
faculty and students, have a few require-
ments, and the students grudgingly ful-
fill them and move on.
Wake Forest is, indeed, a growing
university with an excellent faculty, and
intelligent student body. Yet, somehow
it is hard to imagine that draft-card
burners will ever sit on the neatly-
manicured grass of the plaza and demon-
strate. It is also inconceivable that profes-
sors, en masse, or even in twosomes or
foursomes, would ever seek the students
out for off-hours discussion in the tavern
or some other place where students while
away the out-of-class hours. It would be
shocking to walk into a hall in one of
the girls' dorms and hear discussion,
animated or polite, on politics or world
affairs, or the new left, or much of any-
thing besides the mundane gossip.
The academic climate at Wake Forest
is as elusive as it is individual. Probably
because the traditions of Wake Forest call
for a quiet, somewhat reverent atmos-
phere, most learning comes not from or
in a group, but individually.
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The professors are an extremely intelli-
gent group. But the student finds this
out, if he's interested, in discussion
within the confines of a faculty office.
The probing search for knowledge isn't
contagious at Wake, it's hard going.
There's a lot of busy work to attend
to, and after that's finished, there's play-
ing to be done.
All the ingredients are here for ex-
cellent educational development. There's
stimulus in some classroom, or in some
seminar, or in some auditorium, or in
some professor's office. If the student
rebuffs it, refuses it entrance into a
sheltered, narrow mind, he cheats
himself.
The academic climate at Wake Forest
is as individual as motivation, dedica-
tion, and achievement. But it's very easy
to slip out to the TOG when your term
paper's finished and not bother to hear
a lecture in DeTamble. The choice
whether to try to learn sitting on the
benches of the Tavern's back room or in
the blue-cushioned seats of the audito-
rium remains with the student. And at
Wake Forest the choice is important to
education.
— F.M.S.
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THE ADMINISTRATION
Contenders in a Political Situation
There is a new order within the ad-
ministration. Policies and decisions are
being made and carried out with an ease
that is evident to both students and
faculty members, especially those con-
cerned with getting things done. No one
better exemplifies this new order than
does Dr. James Ralph Scales, the new
president of Wake Forest University.
ae
Although Dr. Scales is determined to
develop the University on its old
strengths, he has predicted national rec-
ognition for Wake Forest as a small,
specialized university. As such a univer-
sity, Wake Forest has responsibility to
the society she serves, and, therefore, she
must choose the areas of development in
which she can do well. On the basis of
this philosophy. Dr. Scales has estab-
lished the Ecumenical Institute — a body
which will cross lines of various academic
disciplines in an attempt to reassess the
role of the Christian church in a modern
world. Other innovations which oc-
curred during Scales' first year in office
included the creation of an Art Depart-
ment, the beginning of a building for the
School of Business Administration, and
the establishment of a new scholarship
program designed to lure some of North
Carolina's brightest high school students
to Wake Forest.
Dr. Scales has also attempted to re-
define the relationships which exist be-
tween the president, the faculty, and
the student body. In relations between
the faculty and his office, he has stressed
the role of the new Faculty Senate.
Opposite: James Ralph Scales, President. Left: Edwin G. Wilsc
Provost. Right: Gene T. Lucas, Vice President for Business a
■■■■■
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Although he realizes that this relation-
ship has "all the faults of a democracy,"
Scales also recognizes in it the chance
for the faculty to "advise and consent"
in the aligning and re-aligning of the
achievements and goals of the academic
college.
As in his dealings with the faculty,
the new president has taken an open and
friendly interest in his relations with stu-
dents. In a discussion of student power,
he observed that students are only one
contending factor in the "political situa-
tion" that is the school. And, because
"politics is the science of the attainable,"
the limits of the school are thus defined,
as are those of the students. Within these
limits both sides must play a "game."
Dr. Scales has many long-range plans
for Wake Forest University, many of
which are natural to the organization
of a university. Thus far, his changes
have brought a division of labor and a
distribution of the decision-making
power. Two of the changes made in this
direction were the creation of the posi-
tions of Provost and Vice President for
Business and Finance. The positions,
alone, however, cannot fulfill the goals
of change; only the men who fill them
can do so.
Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, former Dean of
the College, was appointed Provost of
the University on October 13 of this
year. An English scholar and chairman
of the English Department, Dr. Wilson
had intended to return to full-time
teaching, but he accepted the new posi-
tion because of its purely academic na-
ture.
Above: William G. Starling, Director of Admis-
sions. Aboi'e Right: Thomas M. Elmore, Dean of
Students. Right: Leon H. Hollingsworth, Chaplain.
m
As Provost, he has become advisor and
coordinator for all academic affairs, a
role inherently necessary in the change to
university status.
Dr. Wilson, having actually fulfilled
the duties of the new position for sev-
eral years, was a natural choice for the
job — a man intellectually and sentimen-
tally dedicated to Wake Forest. His aim,
also, is that Wake Forest provide the
best it can within the areas it is able,
expanding in and across disciplines and
departments without wasting the energy
of unnecessary growth in one area at
the expense of another. With the influen-
tial power of his new position and the
sensitivity of his own outlook, he, too,
talks of long-range plans. By his experi-
ence and actions, Dr. Wilson will define
the position of Provost within the Wake
Forest community.
5&
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33!
Top: Merrill G. Berthrong, Director of Libraries.
Above left: Lu Leake, Dean of Women. Aboie
center: Mark H. Reece, Dean of Men. Above:
John G. Williard, Treasurer.
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The other man in a new position is Gene
T. Lucas, Vice President for Business and
Finance. Appointed by Dr. Scales in July,
1967, Mr. Lucas was formerly Vice Presi-
dent and Treasurer at Oklahoma Baptist
University. Mr. Lucas' job will be another
step in defining the decision-making
structure of the school, but his efforts will
be concentrated in the organization of
non-academic affairs.
Mr. Lucas has explained and discussed
the policies of his administrative position
with an easy sense of humor and au-
thority. He maintains that goals must be
continually reassessed and that the school
must be willing to take educated risks.
In this light, he has said that the organi-
zation must be "efficient" but not "edu-
cational," because to be "educational"
implies inefficiency.
In the chain of university structure, it
is through the deans that policy actually
reaches the students and faculty. If there
is a political game being played, then the
deans have to take active and influential
roles in the formulation and enforcement
of policies. This year, in addition, the
deans were in the forefront of the in loco
parentis debates as the middle men to
both sides of the question. They were also
the focus of student proposals for new
social standards and a student voice in
decisions on conduct policy.
Such other people as the Chaplain, the
Director of Admissions, the Librarian,
and the Superintendent of Buildings and
Grounds complete the administrative
structure. Although this structure lies
within the university, these positions still
form a small college structure consistent
with the goals of Wake Forest.
The offices of most of the adminis-
trators are found on the first and second
floors of Reynolda Hall. That is where
the decisions are made. But as slight
changes have come about, more decisions
are being made by more people. Almost
anyone can get into these offices to ask
questions, talk or complain. And, now,
people at least know which office door on
which to knock to find the explanation
and the solution.
— B. J. B.
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THE COLLEGE
Broad and Sound . . . Basically Progressive
■TO
June 12, 1967, Wake Forest College
became Wake Forest University by the
action of the Board of Trustees. But the
name change, for all intent and purposes,
was one of semantics and, in all likely-
hood, one of egotism as well. No funda-
mental principles have been changed; no
basic concepts have been altered. If any-
thing, that mission which has been Wake
Forest's since its founding has been made
even more clear: to give its students a
broad, but sound, basic liberal education
in the arts and sciences in addition to
specialized preparation in at least one
academic discipline.
This recognition brings us to the heart
of Wake Forest University: Wake For-
est College, the school of arts and sci-
ences. Of course there are the strong
schools of medicine, law and business
administration and an embryonic grad-
uate program in arts and sciences, but
Wake Forest's real strength throughout
its 134-year history has been its under-
graduate program. Leaders of the Uni-
versity, both old and new, are in full
agreement on this point. The new Presi-
dent of the University, James Ralph
Scales, speaking to student leaders in
December was explicit on this point. He
told the group: "We should do the things
we do well. . . . There is no such thing
as a repository of all knowledge. . . . We
must pick and choose."
Admittedly, there is a strong commit-
ment to transform, to build Wake For-
est into a university of national reputa-
tion. Yet no matter how strong this com-
mittment is, there is a stronger, more
fundamental commitment to the under-
graduate program. It will not be sacri-
ficed on the altar of the "University."
The foregoing is by no means intended
to give the reader the idea that the School
of Arts and Sciences is maintaining a
status quo, moving backward, or making
rapid advancement. It is simply meant
to clarify a point: the name change at
Wake Forest has had little, if any, effect
on the undergraduate school. This, how-
ever, is not to say that changes have not
occurred during the course of the aca-
demic year, for in many respects, many
important changes have been made in the
undergraduate college.
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The Professor — Not Al-
ways A Man -with Yellow
Notes
Although not an innovation directed
primarily at the School of Arts and Sci-
ences, the creation of the University Pro-
vost office, roughly equivalent to a vice-
president in charge of academic affairs,
will have a significant affect on under-
graduate education at the University.
Such a development is even more crucial
considering the man chosen to fill the
position, Dr. Edwin G. Wilson. A true
scholar, a natural teacher, a proven ad-
ministrator, and a man dedicated to Wake
Forest, Provost Wilson's intellect, exper-
ience, imagination and broad vision will
mean much to the direction of the under-
graduate school to meet demands our
complex, industrial, democratic society
will present.
Other changes have been effected in
an attempt to modernize and up-date
undergraduate education at the Univer-
sity. Curriculum changes are notable in
especially four departments — political
science, biology, religion and education —
in an effort to meet new demands. An art
department, sorely lacking in the college's
curriculum before, has been added. Class
attendance regulations have been aban-
doned in deference to greater student
maturity and responsibility.
A limited, but significant, step was
—
taken toward revamping the University's
grading system this fall when pass-fail
grading was introduced. Although limited
to four courses, one each semester during
the junior and senior years, it was a defi-
nite step away from the traditional letter
grade concept which has resulted in a
vicious student grade-consciousness.
Generous monetary contributions to
the University during the year, ear-
marked for undergraduate scholarships,
will also strengthen the caliber of the
undergraduate student. A scholarship
fund in excess of one million dollars in
honor of the late Guy T. Carswell and
his wife will put Wake Forest in a posi-
tion to compete more aggressively with
the University of North Carolina and
Duke University in attracting North
Carolina's "bright undergraduate stu-
dents." The Carswell scholarships, valued
up to $8,000 for four years, will be com-
parable to the John Motley Morehead
Scholarships at UNC-CH and the Angier
Biddle Duke Scholarships at Duke. In
addition, Junius C. Brown, a retired
Madison attorney, added approximately
$65,000 to his scholarship fund, making
it the University's third largest. The
Brown Scholarship fund, established in
1957, now is valued at more than $90,000.
However, innovations have not been
solely the result of Trustee, administra-
tion, or faculty initiative, or the result
of gifts to the University. Students have
been an active force, as can be seen in
the Student Government-sponsored "Ex-
perimental College." More than 700 per-
sons, the majority of whom were students,
participated in the twenty-six courses
offered by the "College's" first session.
The impetus for the program, as stated
in its catalogue, came from the "basic
assumption . . . that the desire for knowl-
edge should spring from an aroused in-
terest in subject matter rather than an
aroused interest in grade points." It was
"an expression of the belief that the ed-
ucational process most desirable for the
individual and society has not yet been
created. Thus, it (the Experimental Col-
lege) shall serve as a laboratory for the
testing of new teaching methods and
subject matter."
There are other examples of past and
continuing efforts to keep undergraduate
education at Wake Forest in the main-
stream, or the forefront, of American
higher education. Departmental and In-
terdisciplinary Honors Programs, the
South's first Asian Studies Program, for-
eign exchange programs, increased use
of seminars, special independent study and
research programs are but a few.
The professors at Wake rorest are a lively and
intelligent group. B. Yearns (opposite top) ex-
amines American history books which he will take
to India with him while teaching under a Ful-
bright Fellowship. J. Barfield (opposite left) finds
research in the library necessary to keep his lec-
tures up to date. I. Gentry, B. Seelbinder. and M.
Berthrong (opposite ri^ht) discuss topics of cur-
rent interest during a "studybreak." For P. Perri-
cone (below) "all work and no play" would take
all the fun out of teaching.
^s^-^s^ssassss^-
I III II I III 1111*111111 II 111 II I
-•— nuiii iiiiiiiiiniiniii 1 1 i _±
A Laboratory for Testing New Methods and Subject Matter
Nevertheless, the School of Arts and
Sciences, undergraduate division, is not
without its shortcomings; for there are
many areas in which it could be greatly
strengthened. Naturally there are areas
where improvement could and would be
made if only greater resources were avai
able. On the other hand, there are others
where change is not made because of
deeper, more fundamental reasons.
Many problem areas are the result of
a failure to recognize and then to adjust
to the changing student: a student who
is for the most part better prepared, more
aware, more intelligent, more mature,
more responsible than many graduates
of the College not too many years ago. A
brief glance at statistics points this out.
The average College Board score for the
freshman class entering in 195 9-1960
was 943; in 1966-1967, 1139. The per-
centage of entering freshmen ranking in
the top 2 5 per cent of their high school
graduating classes was 59.61 in 1959;
C Allen
R. Amen
E. Cocke
J. Davis
J. Dimmick
G. Esch
D. Hein
J. McDonald
T. Olive
R. Sullivan
R. Wyatt
J. Blalock
H. Miller
R. Noftle
J. Nowell
C. Earp
C. Harris
Slater Food Service manager Tom Armenaki (op-
posite top) learns a trade, while Steve Hagey and
others (below) ponder the thoughts of Paul Til-
lich. Dr. Bryan (lift) leads a discussion of ex.s-
tentialistic ideas.
in 1966, 90.61. In 1965, the University
estimated that 30 per cent of its graduates
were going to graduate and professional
schools; in 1967 the total is approximately
41 per cent. About half of this number
consists of graduate students and about
8 5 per cent of these receive some kind
of financial aid.
The failure to recognize this change
or, if it has been noted, the failure to act
on its implications, has led in many in-
stances to a too rigidly constructed, in-
flexable adherence to the College's re-
quired course schedule. For many students
basic courses are but a repetition of high
school courses. Too little use is made of
advanced placement, leading to student
dissatisfaction and underproduction. One
such example of this is in the foreign
language requirement. A student whose
high school foreign language is Latin
may, regardless of the number of years
he has previously studied the language,
take basic courses again for credit. This
J. Roberts
W. Tucke
J. Wilson
T. Elmore
J. Hall
J. Memory
J. Parker
H. Presserer
D. Reeves
S. Syme
J. Allen
L. Aycock
F. Berces
D. Brown
J. Carter
J. Drake
D. Fosso
T. Gossett
W. Hagen
I. Hollowell
A. Kenion
E. Phillips
tfgta-.-^r-
Faculty Liberalism in a Strong AAUP
is not the case with any other language
studied; repeating a course previously
studied in high school must be done with
no credit.
Another common complaint centers
around the 128 semester hours required
for graduation. Many argue that this
requirement necessitates an overload of
courses for all but the ablest of students
each semester. The consequences are ob-
vious: students must out of necessity
barely skim the material presented in each
course. If a student wishes to give one
or two subjects more thorough study, he
does so often at the consequence of an-
other subject. Many would prefer a re-
duction of the minimum semester hours
required for graduation which would al-
low lighter loads each semester and give
students a chance to really learn the ma-
terial for each course.
The often out-dated curriculum seems
to result from a common "liberal educa-
tion" phenomenon: a sacrifice of depth in
study for breadth of field. Many depart-
mental curricula are filled with survey
courses — and very little else. What the
student receives is a survey of broad gen-
eralities and little concentration on specif-
ic points. And, too, many professors con-
tinue to use antiquated teaching methods
which, in many instances, are neither
effective nor stimulating.
Perhaps the greatest failing of the
undergraduate college at Wake Forest
University is that the student is not chal-
lenged to think. In far too many cases,
the study of a subject means simply the
assimiliation of a professor's notes and
the textual material and then a regurgi-
tation: final exams.
Gerald Johnson, distinguished alumnus,
once reminisced about his experience at
Wake Forest: "What I learned at Wake
Forest was 'little Latin and less Greek';
but I came away with a profound convic-
tion that 'ye shall know the truth, and
the truth shall make you free.' In giving
me that, the College discharged its pri-
B. R.ayn<
B. Sha
J. Sim
H. Snug
J. O'Flaherty
K. Rupp
W. Hagen
B. Gokhalc
D. Hadley
E. Hendricks
J. McDowell
T. Mullen
P. Perry
Opposite: Dr. Richard C. Barnett, campus presi-
dent of the American Association of University
Professors, discusses the progr;
year. Left: Through monthly meetings, the
seventy-five local members remain alert to the
needs of the teaching profession. Belou : Miss Eva
Rodtiwitt and Dr. Donald Schoonmaker hear
about upcoming programs on student leadership,
in loco parentis, and research and publication.
A Faculty With An
International Flavor
■
mary dut) — it sat me on the road to be-
coming an educated man."
In this primary function the Uni-
versity's undergraduate school is failing
by not challenging its students to think.
But the burden does not rest with the
College alone. Students, too, have failed
by not daring, demanding, or, at times,
not caring to think. The two must strive
toward this goal: to think, and therefore,
to "know the truth."
— H.H.B.
Dr. Karl Rupp (opposite left) prides in sharing
Austria with Wake Forest as he prepares goulash
dents. The cold Norwegian winters
far off as Miss Eva Rodtwitt (opposite right)
enjoys a bright winter day. Since coming to Wake
Forest, Dr. Gokhale (above) has built a strong
Southeast Asia program. Formerly
this program. Dr. Htin Aung (left) is taking
this year to do research in Asian studies.
D. Broyle
J. Fleer
R. Beck
D. Catron
R. Dufort
S. Harbin
D. Hills
H. Horowit
D. Travland
J. Williams
r Woodmansi
I. Angel]
M. Bryan
R. Dyer
range of electb '' "*jT
their major j? Hamrick
g executives are requ C Mitchell
irs of fairly specific c C IaI,b,ert
. , P. Trible
required' courses in reD yja
future morticians rese
business statistics a .
marketing, but for tht <b2t
■ 111 iii'MJimiii I in |i i|m 'mi
1 "■" ' ■"
-
THE BUSINESS SCHOOL
Gripes about a Lucrative Investment
Few students are so consistently critical
about the process of their education as
the sixty-odd members of each graduat-
ing class who have the letters "BBA"
affixed to their diplomas. To the out-
sider, the gripes of the typical business
major sound so emphatic that one
wonders how anyone could sign up to
spend two years on the third floor of
Reynolda Hall. By the time of gradua-
tion, however, the pragmatic philosophy
of the stockbroker and banker seems to
have moderated the criticisms to words
of mild praise, and everyone wonders at
the change. The reason seems to be that
trained junior executives are not as com-
mon as history majors, and the starting
salaries at IBM are generally higher than
those at Reynolds High School.
The Wake Forest Business School has
much about which to be proud. It is one
of only 127 accredited institutions of
the more than 600 business schools in the
United States. Its graduates consistently
score very highly on the GRE and the
CPA exam. Twice Wake students have
received the highest scores in the nation
on the Graduate Record Exam. In addi-
tion, the school performs continuing
educational opportunities for businessmen
in the Piedmont area with its Manage-
ment Institute, which has grown to such
importance that it is now seeking a full-
time director.
There is some reason, however, for
majors to question the effectiveness of
their curriculum. While students in
other fields at the university are given
a wide range of elective courses to
supplement their major requirements,
aspiring executives are required to take
45 hours of fairly specific courses, plus
several required' courses in related fields.
Some future morticians resent having
to take business statistics and intro-
ductory marketing, but for the average
Ii liM'l I'l I1 " ~iTFi;
The business school received a tremendous boost in January \
the announcement that construction would soon begin on
school's new classroom building. The facility will be built t
funds donated by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and Na
Susan Reynolds, and will be named for the late Charles
Babcock, a major benefactor of the university.
W. Cage
L. Cook
R. Heath
D. Hylton
J. Owen
K. Scott
Wagstaff
■I
*' '* '■'■■'•^iim^ |H| *SS
Diversity for "Breadth of Scope"
student the wide range of requirements
provides what Dean Gaines Rogers calls
a valuable 'breadth of scope" to guide
him later in the diversified business
world. In addition, the business school
boasts some outstanding courses of its
own. For example, the steady growth of
the economics department has won it the
distinction of being considered one of the
best on campus, and Professor Owens'
business law courses are acclaimed as
being among the best of the university's
offerings.
Thus, even though the average qpr's
of business majors are not exactly among
the highest at Wake Forest, and though
the complaints about the work keep pour-
ing in year after year, judging from the
imminent affluence of seniors at interview
time, the grind seems very well worth it
in the end.
Gaines M. Rogers, Dean of the School of 1
Administration
The workings of price theory in a cap
economy are explained by Dr. Hugh Hima
one of his typical graphs.
S^rrSSISSSrnir^^^ffs;
ij«c:r-ssa3ss
THE LAW SCHOOL
Last Stronghold of the "Family" Philosophy
;.:rr:::
It is a nervous prospective lawyer who
enters the compact Law School building
examining his reflection in the glass of
the door and anxiously adjusting his tie.
The legendary admission interviews,
conducted by Dean Weathers, are re-
quired of each prospective law student
and serve two purposes: one, to determine
the student's character and the degree
of his motivation; and two, to acquaint
the student with the law school program
and the exacting study involved through-
out the next three years.
Dean Weathers looks for four variables
in every applicant:
— A good scholastic record in desirable
areas of undergraduate study.
— Acceptable Law School Admission
Test scores.
— Proper motivation.
— Good character.
And, in turn, the dean wishes to present
an accurate picture of the school and the
scholastic program to the prospective stu-
dent.
So, in the dean's spacious office, one
wall of which is filled with law books, the
applicant receives his introduction to the
school and its philosophy from a dean
with a flowing Southern voice.
Law at Wake Forest, as in nearly all
accredited American law schools, is
taught by the case study method. A par-
ticular course, whether it be in constitu-
tional or criminal law, uses a casebook
which is a collection of appropriate cases
from the entire Anglo-American system.
Briefs, or summaries of important as-
pects of the case, are prepared daily by
the student for each course. The briefs
are supplemented by outside articles and
readings, but the continued summarizing
and analyzing of cases is geared toward
developing the reasoning capacity of the
prospective lawyer.
mm "■•*?!
Aboie: Carroll W. Weathers, Dean. Belou-. H.
Lauerman, H. Divine, M. Faris, R. Bell, R. E.
Lee, J. Sizemore, J. Webster.
SSSSSS«!:.s::v:-::
The library — small but
strong
The Law School bulletin emphasizes
that the school's objectives are "not only
to train a student in legal principles and
doctrines, but also to stimulate his reason-
ing powers, to prepare him to present
legal propositions logically and analyti-
cally, and to develop in the student a
profound sense of legal ethics, professional
responsibility and the duty of the lawyer
to society."
The course offered and the method of
instruction utilized "are designed to
afford comprehensive and thorough train-
ing in the broad field of legal education
and to equip students to practice in any
jurisdiction where the Anglo-American
law system prevails."
The average student takes between
30 and 3 2 courses during the three years
of study. Although only eleven specific
courses are required for graduation, many
more are "desirable" since the student
must pass the bar examination the sum-
mer after graduation. Therefore, there is
little attempt by the student to specialize
during the three years. A few students
do, however, proceed beyond the Juris
Doctor degree offered at the University.
The school can boast about the quality
of its library. Even though it is only
36,500 volumes strong, it is "a carefully
selected working collection of legal ma-
terials." It does not compare in size with
law libraries elsewhere because increased
enrollment at other schools requires more
duplications of necessary books and
periodicals.
Although the students are not encour-
aged to be active in community projects
such as the Legal Aid Society during the
academic year, some students participate
during the summer.
»22
Left: "Quie
t Please" is
a mus
t in the Law Library.
Below: Oc
rasionally,
silenc
e is broken openly.
Joe Biesecke
r prefers tc
be n
ore discreet about it.
Right: The
noon hour
is al
tvays accompanied by
■ IS
-I
RTMT
^-
|
Ra?^^
N
L* ^
^
'■JW
^ ^ ^L
6l
Students are encouraged to become
active in the Student Bar Association,
which according to Weathers, is "a vita!
and important part of the law school."
The Student Bar aids with the orien-
tation of new students each September,
sponsors Law Day each year, publishes the
Intramural Law Review and assists with
the Graduate Brochure. In addition, the
Student Bar, with restricted financial
resources, strives to provide an extra-
academic program of broadening the stu-
dent's legal education.
The Wake Forest Law School has not
abandoned the "family" philosophy so in-
trinsic under the University's last admin-
istration. It is the last sector of the Uni-
versity in which students are still ex-
pected to be seen and not heard. Although
the past year saw growth and adjustment
for the rest of the University community
the Law School and its philosophy re-
mained basically unchanged.
— L. R. L.
ta — r- -
Hi
MMMb
limn i '" i h -i h, , ; i
3B
STUDENT BAR COUNCIL. Back row: Bill
Davis, David Wagner, Bill Cranfield, Don Von
Cannon, Jim Snyder, Wayne Foushee. Front row:
Coyt Everheart, John Wolf, Norman Singletary,
Sam Williams, Larry Hewitt. Bob McClymons.
STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION OFFICERS.
John N. Fountain, Secretary. Donald N. Dotson.
Vice President. Thomas J. Robinson, Jr., President.
Robert F. Fleming, Treasurer. BOARD OF EDI-
TORS OF THE LAW REVIEW. Ken Moser;
Mablon DeLoatch; Cary Boggan; John Memory;
Don Cowan, Editor-in-Chief; Doris Greene Ran-
dolph; Bonnie Hauch Danscr; Gerard Davidson,
Business Manaecr.
Hj^^^HHOBHi
___^ _ ' "' ~
■■'■'.'!'
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL
Women, Veterans, Teachers and Madmen
The Wake Forest Graduate School met
the first year of university status with
little change. Although graduate pro-
grams were added in the religion, educa-
tion, and physical education departments,
total enrollment in the school was only
increased slightly over 200 during the
fall semester.
The graduate school, which resumed
offering degrees in 1961, now has grad-
uate programs in 21 departments, includ-
ing M.A.'s and Ph.D.'s offered at Bowman
Gray School of Medicine.
In contrast to many universities, few
graduate students actually have teaching
responsibilities. Despite the move to uni-
versity status, Wake is attempting to
avoid the mass use of graduate students
as lower division instructors.
According to Dr. Henry S. Stroupe,
dean of the graduate school, the Univer-
sity policy is to keep the number of grad-
uate students teaching undergraduate
courses at a minimum. "The less full-scale
b^M
5sp^w55ss^-r^
■ ■JM^.iMJiasssssss^fflga j , , u,iiM^^M
Little Full - Scale Teaching
teaching the better, for the University
as a whole," he said.
Revised draft laws as a result of the
Vietnam war raised questions concerning
the school and its embryonic program.
One professor connected with the grad-
uate program estimated that applications
alone would "be down anywhere from
30 per cent to 5 0 per cent." Stroupe
added that "our school may consist of
women, madmen, veterans and teachers."
Most officials, however, concur that
the draft laws will not permanently dam-
age or destroy the program. A hardship
period of two or three years is expected,
but, according to one professor, "it
shouldn't affect us too seriously."
Stroupe stated emphatically that the
University would not lower qualifications
for admittance, despite the expected de-
crease in applicants. "No institution will
ever lower the criteria for acceptance,"
he said.
One professor compared the situation
with that of World War II. "There will
be some temporary effects but no perma-
nent ones," he said. "Enrollment cut-
backs, a reduction in the number of
classes, and fewer new programs are prob-
able results should this draft situation
continue."
— L.R.L.
fa&'L fat 0
STUD/ |fA*Dl
4 Gooi) LUiC
wm
g^^SS^5=~Ssi==3Sg^
i »i< i» ill ag^sssMwawjaqapy^jifij.**^^ ^,-
A —■■■■——■—■—■—
The pressures of the war and the leadership
of Colonel Turner have raised standards in the
classroom and on the drill field. Cadet Lieutenant
Forrest Hollifield (left) inspects his pi.
Turner (right) lectures a class on the U.S. Rol
in World Affairs.
■M
—
MILITARY SCIENCE
The Apex of Pragmatism
When Colonel Hugh J. Turner came
to Wake Forest in 1966, he found an
ROTC brigade which was in trouble.
Morale was low, apathy and cynicism
were widespread, and some cadets were
beginning to ask whether a program so
demanding of time and so lacking in
results should be permitted to continue
at an important university.
Any ROTC program is open to
criticism because of the nature of its
objectives. While most other depart-
ments of the University seek to provide
students with a basis for reasonable ques-
tioning, the Army is concerned with
providing the answers which its young
officers will need to know. Two years ago,
however, Wake Forest's program had
many more downfalls than its admitted
pragmatism. Classroom work had degen-
erated to memorizing lists summarized
from the field manuals, and droned out
by instructors in boring lectures in hot
stuffy classrooms. Drill, ironically listed
in the catalogue as "Leadership Labora-
tory," had become a dulling confirmation
of all the blown-up tales of Army in-
efficiency which cadets had heard their
fathers tell. The whole program dragged
on, surviving by the lure of qp's, a $40
monthly paycheck, and a short, two year
tour.
Even the "pragmatic" ROTC program has its
nts of fun. Cadets contest in field day
(right), and receive their eagerly awaited
paychecks from Major White (left).
Enduring the rigors of a Fort Bras
summer
Under Colonel Turner's administration
as Professor of Military Science, the situa-
tion changed rather drastically. Cadets
who for months had complained of ill-
prepared cadet officers cheered as discipline
tightened on their superiors, but they,
too, felt the sting as the standards for
haircuts and shoeshines seemed to raise
progressively higher, A Special Training
Unit was formed to help prepare juniors
for the rigors of a Fort Bragg summer,
and the campus caught the spirit of the
new training program as fatigue-clad
cadets began to periodically assault the
Reynolds Boathouse with M-l rifles and
blanks.
This year drill was shortened to only
one and a half hours per week, and a sur-
vey of underclassmen, traditionally the
pawns who the seniors marched around
the field, showed that a large majority
felt the period was beneficial. In addition,
promotions were based, for the first time,
on an objective performance rating. Al-
though many cadets realized that the best
cadets do not always make the best
officers, most approved of the new ap-
proach as being beneficial to the program.
The brigade at Wake Forest still has
stuffy classrooms, but the newly engen-
dered esprit makes up for even that.
Capt. Sech
Capt. White
SGM Shafer
•__
WVk1-* Hill <i • 4 V4
ft. £L^ . , iari s
m
.- . _ ' <MP flit
PERSHING RIFLES. S/«#: Stephen Sweet,
Commanding Officer; Dale Glendening. Jr. Execu-
tive Officer; James Miller, S-l; Thomas Boyles,
S-2; James This, S-3; Reginald Brown, S-4; David
Waiters, PIO James Watson, Fancy Pit. Ldr.;
Milton Teague, Jr., 22-5 Pit. Ldr., Charles Kirk-
patrick, Pledge Trainer; David Wood, Liaison
Officer; Dennis Loftin, First Sergeant. Active
Brothers: B. Sharpe, W. Toburen, R. Main, J. C.
Warren, D. Meech, G. W. S. Kuhn, III, T. Shouse,
R. Curd, P. Long, D. Burton, A. Eliason. Alumni
Brothers: A. B. Crusan, E. V. Hopkins, C. V.
Steiner, Jr., D. A. Taliaferro. H. F. Holoman,
J. J. Kincheloe, J. H. Knight, E. G. Moore, J. A.
Nix, D. E. Reinhardt, J. H. Humphries. Pledges:
J. S. Warren, J. C. Greenhaugh, M. W. Horton,
M. R. Knight. K. D. Maddrey, J. Q. Taylor. Jr.,
H. C Black III, H. C. Campen, J. C. Currin, Jr.,
J. R. Finch, C S. Gough, R. K. Jonas, D. R.
Klinger, H. R. Letton, R. T. MacLaren. J. S.
Nelson, D. B. Palmer, J. C Paris, J. C Pearigen,
D. S. Richardson, C. H. Schilling, L. D. Sears,
S. A. Slaybecker, L. E. Thurner, D. C. Waller,
D. E. Walker, J. D. Waugh, G. S. Webb, L. G.
Wilson, C. H. Wright III. Advisor: Major Robert
Topp. Sponsor: Miss Sandy Edwards.
Summer camp has all the delights of basic train-
ing everywhere: patrols in the early morning,
trips back and forth to training sights, and
homes which are, of necessity, very portable.
■HMMFHB
MHBHfBlUflW ii"l J 1 1 hi'
-
"""|| ■■""' ■' i niiwBmmniiiiiiniiirHri n ni'iiiiimiiiiypyiWiii1 * %
ORGANIZATIONS
The Chance to Participate
^■1
EBBS
" '
An overcast and drizzly fall afternoon
at Wake seems to punctuate the smallness
of the University and intensify the sen-
sation of a deserted, seemingly empty
campus. The puddle-filled sidewalks that
at first seem to connect the monument1;
to an empty five-hundred and forty-nine
acres, upon a closer look are the connect-
ing links of a maze of plans and
activities.
In the glistening pavement facing the
library, one can see reflected the inner
corner of its top. Just below, one can
barely see the red papered windows of the
attic, and below it the proscenium the-
ater. Entering the dimly lit, funneling
theater, one can sense the anticipation of
past audiences, the hopes of past per-
formers. The theater isn't empty even
now: there's the sound of a hammer, and
the voice of an actress converting her
personality into that of a fictitious char-
acter. The open paint buckets and the
smell of turpentine strike the observer
as he makes his departure, wandering
outside, back to the puddle which a
passing car has scattered over the asphalt.
As one enters Reynolda Hall, the smell
of the pit floats through the fresh air that
accompanies the end of an October rain.
At the top of the stairs leading to the
second floor a door swings onto the traf-
fic of Pub Row. The electric sign an-
nounces "On Air" in bold red letters, and
standing next to it one can hear strands of
a vaguely familiar melody. The dominant
sounds here, though are the eternal peck-
ing of a typewriter, the laughing, talking,
demanding, persuading voices of editors
and staffs, and the sounds of footsteps,
sometimes racing from room to room,
sometimes slow and hesitant, as though
they were an extension of a debating
mind.
The inviting door at the far end of the
hall is more awe-inspiring after a closer
look. The abbreviated mottos of the cam-
pus parties glare down from their exalted
positions over the high-backed chairs. The
floor is slightly littered with mimeo-
graphed copies of the notes from a past
legislature meeting, and an Ohl Gold ami
Black upon the desk announces the latest
subject of campus contention.
^
Out on the balcony a slight drizzle has
begun, enveloping Wait Chapel in a gray
cloud. A dozen students enter the build-
ing. It is the meeting place of the Uni-
versity: the place where failures and tri-
umphs of the campus are ultimately
shared. The policy speeches of the Presi-
dent, the honoraries tappings, the trial
run for a new anthem — all are brought
before the student body for appraisal
there.
The quiet descent of the Reynolds
steps is interrupted by a freshman scurry-
ing to make a late-afternoon music
lesson. And as one watches the student
rush around the plaza, he remembers the
enthusiasm which he, too, had felt to be
a part of Wake Forest. Each extracurri-
cular activity sponsored by the Univer-
sity or its students is reaching out to
capture this enthusiasm before the limita-
tions of a small community can wither it
into cynicism.
The campus is vibrant with the activ-
ity of organizations sustained by students
seeking an outlet for energy or an op-
portunity for personal enrichment. Trie
chance to participate exists at Wake
Forest, probably even more than it did
in high school, and more than it will
exist in the world outside. The next forty
pages tell the story of those who saw the
opportunity, and who grasped it.
&'■'■ '-'•'
SECTION EDITED BY
SARA JANE OAKLEY
^^^^=^^
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
The Search for Power in the New University
Despite the fact that Student Govern-
ment seemed to be tied up for the urn-
tecnth consecutive year in a mountain of
red t:>pe liberally sprinkled with the glue
of apathy, a few rather impressive steps
were made by the student administration
to change its image. President Chip
Cooper's pet project, the Summit Con-
ference, was supplemented by the pro-
grams of the Experimental College, the
reevaluation of Student Government it-
self, and the public relations work of the
Community Relations Committee. All
were signs of a newly directed student
activism.
The important incentive for SG's re-
newed activity seems to have been the
attitude of the new University adminis-
tration. President Scales was seen as mov-
ing toward a more democratic peaceful
coexistence with the student groups by
rejecting the rigid aloofness of the old
"family" system of Wake Forest College.
The changing attitude was probably best
seen at the Summit Conference, where
Vice President Gene Lucas gave student
and faculty leaders the first honest and
open discussion of University financial
policy which most of them had ever wit-
nessed. The three day conference was such
a complete success that even Pub Row
journalists, the traditional cynics of the
school, began speaking of the "spirit of
Sauertown Mountain."
Student Government's big success of
the year was the founding of the Exper-
imental College. Chairman Norma Mur-
doch guided the program from its ambi-
tious beginning (many people prema-
turely judged it too ambitious), through
its first semester, and saw over 700 stu-
dents and faculty members fill all 26
courses at the registration period. "Dean"
Murdoch did her job so well that Cooper
saw fit to appoint her first female Execu-
tive Director for CHALLENGE '69.
I
Far left: Pr
sident Scales explains the tuition
raise to the
legislature. Abate left: Reverend
Jake Viveretw
guides the discussion of controver-
sial medical
ssues in the Experimental College'
Medical Ethic
class. Left: Student Body President
Chip Cooper
discusses social regulations with
Student Afta
rs Committee chairman Dr. Olivs
at the Summ.
t Conference. Above: Treasurer Bil
Gordon exam
ines his books, looking for fund
for an expand
ng student government.
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Left: Committee Chairman Sam Long and Alun
Director Henry Garrity discuss plans to use stu-
dent speakers in University public relations work.
Below right: Betty Hyder explains the workings
of the Honor Counc.l to a freshman one
group.
Public Relations
And Student Indoctrination
2SQ
Another big contribution of SG this year
was made by the Community Relations
Committee's student speakers, who toured
the state accompanying Scales and
Alumni Director Henry Garrity on the
Wake public relations circuit. Students
gave a bit of the home touch to old grads,
who often appreciate a chance to look at
students more than a talk on new build-
ings or endowment funds.
Even with the big success projects,
however, Student Government found
itself powerless and only slightly influen-
tial in making rules to govern students,
and in taking action on crucial student
needs. Perhaps realizing the dilemma,
Cooper proposed in January a sweeping
reorganization of the legislature in an
attempt to move for new areas of student
responsibility. Under the plan, the legisla-
ture will work to obtain funds for carry-
ing out student welfare projects, and
power to regulate student conduct.
Three student enforcement bodies
already exist, and are struggling to carry
out rules which, for the most part, are
made by others. The Honor Council is
the most autonomous, having clearly de-
fined final jurisdiction over all violations
of the honor code.
mm
LEGISLATURE. Officers: Jerry Baker, speaker;
Donna Gill Goings, secretary; Bill Gordon,
treasurer. Seniors: David Pugh, Jan Wuerten-
berger, Becky Stevenson, Vicki Campbell, Ben
Crumley, Jenny Jacobcr. Bill Parker, Sara Urn-
stead. Juniors: Jim Carver, Jenny Lynn Boger,
Anne Bingham, Barbara Brazil, Brenda Fasnacht,
Norma Murdock. Sophomores: Bud Carlton.
Charlie Holland, Marian Scherer, Nancy Cum-
mings, Jim Cross, Carl Hibbert, Van Jeffords,
Susan Powers. Day Students: Adele Patrick, Kay
Key. Freshmen: Doug Miller, George Gatzogi-
annis, Carol Lougee, Dupey Sears, Mike Aiken,
Leslie Hall, Doug Waller.
MEN'S JUDICIAL BOARD. Faculty: Dr. Julian
Burroughs, Dr. Charles Talbert, Dr. Pendleton
Banks, Dr. Ivey Gentry, Mr. D. A. Brown, Dr.
Lee Potter. Students: Bill Overman, chairman;
Richard Henning, Mike Royster, John Ellis, Andy
Porter, Lex Graham. Administration representa-
tives (non-voting): Mr. Mark Reece, Dr. Thomas
Eln
HONOR COUNCIL. Ed Hallmann, chairman;
Emily Steifle, secretary; Tom Ginn, Judy Nanney,
Steve Royster, Joyce Green, Bill Lambe. Sandy
Edwards, Jim Martin, Terry Fuller, Jimmy Clack,
Jan Magee, Jim East, Betty Hyder, Dick Leader,
Sue Edwards.
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Women's Government: The Enforcers
The Men's Judicial Board is in a some-
what more shaky position. As the only
existing student-faculty committee it has
jurisdiction in men's conduct offense
cases. The rules in these cases are not
as universally accepted as the honor code,
and enforcement poses more difficult
moral choices for student members. The
conflict of interest between students'
rights and the need to protect the image
of the school can lead to serious questions
of judgment and justice.
Woman's Government likewise is faced
with enforcing rules which it does not
make, and with which most coeds often
disagree. President Wendy Farmer has
attempted this year to move to a con-
sideration of the conflicting basic philos-
ophies of student rights but has for the
most part been thwarted in efforts to
achieve even a meaningful dialogue con-
cerning self government for women.
Some progress has been made this year
in changing outmoded rules — the auto-
mobile-grade restrictions were abolished,
and coeds were allowed to close the dorms
themselves, a necessary step on the road
to later hours permission. The central
problem still remains unresolved, how-
ever. The rules changes were made only
with the advice of, not by the students
themselves. The Victorian philosophy of
in loco parentis still prevails in some
powerful faculty minds.
■ <fr ■■ ' '
Far left: Sara Umstead, Debbie Snapp, and Kitty
Harmon serve at the \T.G.A. reception for the
new housemother. Mrs. Denham. Above left:
DORM PRESIDENTS: Pat Carnes, Brenda Tem-
pleton, Emily Steifle, Sue Hrom, Becky Melton.
Sandy Edwards. Left: VT.G.A. OFFICERS:
Treasurer, Ty Porter; Social chairman. Betty
Anne Saeman; Secretary, Janet Bowker; President,
Wendy Farmer. Not pictured: Vice president,
Debbie Snapp. Above: A call-down card sym-
bolizes the never-changing status of women's rules.
■■■■■...■ , ■ . ■:■■■-. -"■■■■ " - ' - ■■
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PUB ROW
"Triumphs and Prejudices, In-jokes and Personalities"
W*C>
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Pub Row, whatever might be said against
it, is a very interesting place to spend
one's college years. To the outsider, it
sometimes seems to be a sort of zoo in-
habited by a clique of incessent misan-
thropes and tantrum children, who waste
money and try to set an endurance record
for using electricity. To the insider it is
much, much more.
It is true that Pub Row society is a
rather odd blending of communist fellow-
ship and American business pragmatism.
It is the only place on campus, with the
possible exception of the Theatre and the
snack shop, where a co-educational group
of people learn to live together for four
important years of their lives. Pub Row,
as anyone who has experienced its warmth
can tell you, inevitably becomes the most
important part of one's college years.
To the dedicated worker, its triumphs and
its prejudices, its in-jokes and its per-
sonalities pre-empt those of his frater-
nity, his suite, his golf foursome or his
date. Pub Row society offers the student
the best professional training, the closest
comradeship, and the greatest intellectual
challenge of any sub-group of the campus
community. It also demands the most of
its participants.
As the administration was marked this
year by subtle changes, student publica-
tions gained a new, more sophisticated
appearance, and Pub Row assumed a more
unified and cosmopolitan air. The all male
Publications Board (the first of its kind
in anyone's memory) carried out their
duties with a business-like efficiency
which would have amazed many of their
predecessors. In addition to their normal
duties of regulating all campus advertis-
ing and electing new editors and business
managers, the board, under President
Henry Bostic, found time to approve a
new poetry magazine and to update its
chaotic back files.
~ •;:■■:;"•■ .^"L^^aa^-
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■"■ 1" illilh I III IIWJiMT 1 1 "i3 ~
"Incessant Misanthropes and Tantrum Children"
^fcaMH
■■■
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sH£
Simpson gets pie i
n the eye, Finn looks for a
catcher in the rye.
Freedman puts mud in your
eye, Lemza dares
to question why; Whalen
earns how to fly
McNeill tries not to cry.
Daughtry decides
to give it a try, Bunn won-
ders if beer make
S you die, Barbara ponders
how to get a guy.
The Student finally recovered fully from
its most recent probation three years ago.
The magazine's newly revamped design
style and its more political format were
favorably received by the student body.
The Student's main accomplishment of
the year, however, was its unifying effect
upon the whole of Pub Row. Poetry editor
Ted Boushy's "creativity center" became
the gathering point for planning, griping,
partying and general socializing on the
hall.
Perhaps partially as a result of the
predominance of males as Pub Row edi-
tors, there was a new comradeship which
allowed much more cross-breeding of
staffs on all of the publications. Boushy,
Old Gold editor Bostic, and associate
editors J. D. Wilson and Linda Levi were
all contributors of the Howler. The Stu-
dent film reviewer Doug Lemza served
all three publications, and Houler assist-
ant editor Glen Freedman wrote a weekly
Old Gold column.
null III Ml in I | |
Communist Fellowship
and American Pragmatism
Old Gold and Black, under co-editors
Bostic and Ralph Simpson, was modern-
ized with a six-column, left-lead format
and some well integrated reporting of
major news stories. Columnists Freedman
and Lemza incited the fundamentalists to
anger with their rather unorthodox meth-
ods of sarcasm, and Pub Row's two favor-
ite Lindas (Levi and Carter) kept the
whole hall entertained.
The Holder completely re-vamped its
style, and attempted to present an annual
based upon photo- journalism, but devoid
of traditional yearbook trivia such as
group pictures of honoraries and mug
shots of individual fraternity members.
THE HOWLER
Walter Brooks Stillwell, Editor
Barbara J. Brazil, Associate Editor
Paul M. Coble, Assistant Editor
Glenn B. Freedman, Assistant Editor
David Exum James, Business
Manager
Section Editor!.: Cassandra Martin (Aca-
demics), Sarajane Oakley (Organizations),
Kitty Harmon (Student Living), Dennis
Whalen (Sports), Janet Bowker (Classes).
Managing Editor: Diane S. Baldwin. Con-
tributors: Henry H. Bostic, Jr., Theodore
F. Bouchy, Douglas J. Lemza, Linda R.
Levi, Faye M. Setzer, J. Jeter Walker, J.
D. Wilson. Stag Members: Susan Albert,
Chris Barnes, Diane Bracket!, Susan Don-
aldson, Dune Ford, Leslie Hall, Betty
Hyder, Mary Irvin. Libby Jones. Pam
Jones. Carol Naylor. Emily Stephenson.
Photographers: John Daughtry, Claude A.
McNeill, Don Bunn, William Clarke, Don
Rice. Business Staff: Don Thompson. Jeff
Mackie. Circulation Manager: Nancy
Cummings.
— ^^*^w— 1 '«
"7" — TTT
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Henry H. Bostic, Jr., Co-Editor
Ralph A. Simpson, Co-Editor
Linda R. Levi, Associate Editor
J. D. Wilson, Associate Editor
Linda S. Carter, Managing Editor
Charles D. Heidgerd, Business
Manager
Assistant Editors: Gray Lawrence. Barry
Robinson. Cartoonist: Laura Jordan. Staff
Writers: Patti Allen, Susanne Bennett,
Dianne Jones, Joey McConnell, Barbara
Peterson, Etta Wittrock. Sports Editor:
Dave Roberts. Associate Sports Editor:
Rudy Ashton. Sports Staff: Bill Upton,
Richard Sink, Doug Buckley. Advertising
Manager: Bill Lambe. Circulation Manager:
Sandy V. Hutchens. Business Staff: Beverly
Shaw, Woody Phillips. Photographers: John
Daughtry, Claude A. McNeill, Don Bunn.
THE STUDENT
Theodore F. Bouchy, Literary Editor
Claire Ivey, fiction Editor
William Twyford, Managing Editor
Robert Peel Finn, Poetry Editor
Carol Cuthbertson, Essay Editor
Charles E. McCartney, Business Manager
Art Director: Jim Grout. Editorial Assistants: Steve Garrison, Bob
Poetry Stuff: Norma Murdoch. Exchange Editor: Marilyn
Cohara. Fiction Staff: John Tate. Photographers: John Daughtry,
Claude A. McNeill. Staff Members: Shelly Abernathy, Pat Hodges,
Kirk Jonas, Debby Krueger, Maxine Mintz, Jeffrey Moalman, Nancy
Payne, Jenny Robinson, Al Shoaf, John Stringfellow. Circulation
Manager: Roy Grant. Business Staff: Larry Boileau, Ted Williams.
"~"- —
'•
If the publications modernized somewhat
in 1967, WFDD radio, situated at the
too-often-forgotten end of Pub Row, had
nothing less than a revolution. Overnight,
the small 10-watt, 10-year-old station
grew. After a mammoth renovation of
facilities, the stereo-multiplex station was
broadcasting 10 hours a day with a radiat-
ing power of 36,000 watts. The "revolu-
tion" was not without its hazards how-
ever. Due to technical difficulties,
WFDD's signal interrupted the signal of
a local television station, and local viewers
found the Beverly Hillbillies displaced by
the soundtrack of Handel's Messiah. After
a month's hassle with the FCC and several
trips to the homes of complaining towns-
people by station manager Ken Johnson
and production assistant Richard Green-
berg, the trouble was corrected.
Like all other members of the Pub
Row community, WFDD expanded and
improved its coverage this year. Dr.
Charles Allen's "Collector's Corner" and
Mark Poplin's "Music Off the Beaten
Path" gave rise to a reviving interest in
classical music. But the main dish of the
station's new offerings was the live broad-
casts of the Metropolitan Opera on
Saturday afternoon.
Pub Row in 1967 was a place for pro-
fessional training and extracurricular
participation. To its membership, though,
it was more than that. It was an indi-
vidual opportunity to partake of a group
effort — a chance to participate in the
closest intellectual community at Wake
Forest.
— D.J.L. and W.B.S.
In addit
T.V. sh
Jucting radio programs, WFDD
:nts produced and directed a
al station WSJS. Jennie Lynn
■ (abate), focuses
(left), gives direct!
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MUSIC GROUPS
Recording the Sounds of Wake Forest
Last spring the University's band re-
corded in a few hours what students,
faculty, alumni and friends had been
wanting for years — the "Songs of Wake
Forest."
As each person listens to this record
of the fight song, the Alma Mater and
other Wake Forest songs, his memory
will immediately be caught up in thoughts
of his college days. He may not specifi-
cally think of the efforts of the band,
but he will remember them in one way
or another each time he listens to the
record.
His mind may also turn back to the
ten o'clock chapel programs and the 86
faces which stared at him from the choir
loft. They were not just 86 individuals,
though, they were the Wake Forest Choir.
Tf he thinks back over the year he'll recall
the days they sang for chapel programs.
He may remember their Christmas vesper
service which was broadcast over WSJS,
or he may remember their Magnolia Fes-
tival concert in the spring. And, of course,
he'll remember the tall, stately, gray-
haired man who hypnotically attracted
the eyes of the choir members as he con-
ducted them in concert after concert.
But he may not remember that his name
was Dr. Thane McDonald. Nor may he
remember other music groups McDonald
conducted. One such group was the tour-
ing choir — 37 highly talented musicians
chosen from the main choir. He may
not recall that they performed at the
Baptist State Convention, throughout
North Carolina and neighboring states
during the year.
■■
CHOIR MEMBFRS
Soprano I: Mary Jacqueline Andrews, Barbara
Brock, Sara Busey, Sarah Davis, Kinda Hinson.
Judy Howard. Charlton Hynds. Susan Kinsey.
Sherry Nance, Jeanne Pfistcr, Judith Scaro. Sylvia
West. Soprano II: Constance Ange. Terrina Cheek,
Katherine Holliday, Mary Fran Hughes, Mary
Anne Lynch, Judy Nanney, Nancy Outlaw, Bev-
erly Preston, Donna Redding, Susan Scott, Susan
Turner, Allison Wiley. Alio 1: Carolyn Hlhn,
Susan Henderson, Susan Howard, Charlene Moretz,
Susan Nance, Carolyn Norfleet, Beth Smith, Helen
Smithson, Mary Stelling, Pamela Turner. Alio II:
Diane Burnette. Rene Carrie, Sharyn Dowd, Char-
Ianne Fields, Mary Lynn Hagcr. Molly Hirons.
Cheryl Honeycutt, Linda Jordan, Josephene Pres-
ton, Pattiiane Slessman. Accompanist: Nelda Mor-
gan. Tenor I: James Blackwelder, Charles Kirk-
land, Ronald McCord, Robert Schenkemeyer, Ran-
dy Thompson, William K. Ingram, Vaughn E.
Jennings, Dennis Lofton, Paul Orser, William E.
Smith, Stanley Whitley. Baritone: Charles Caskey,
James Chapmen, John A. Collins, Alan Curry,
Charles Dashiell, James Davis, Robert Dunning,
David Hall, Albert Lineberry, Dennis Melvin, Rob-
er
1.
Russell, Charle
Settle
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trie
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Beshears, Eric
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To
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Forres
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Kenne
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Marti
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aid
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^_____
A New Look in Dress and the Sound of Tonight
And he may not remember the Madrigals, an independent group of students who per-
formed 15th and 16th century music in concerts and on tours.
But as he listens to the words and music ". . . Rah, rah, Wake Forest, rah . . ." he'll
recall those football games in Bowman Gray stadium and the basketball games in
Memorial Coliseum with the band inspiring the Deacons on to victory. He'll remember
the flashy half-time shows as all 100 Marching Demon Deacons captured their audiences
eyes with their polished music and new uniforms. Again, he may not remember other
band groups — dance band, Varsity band, percussion ensemble, concert band (which
toured to Atlanta and back), but he will remember the band, the majorettes, the dedi-
cated director, Dr. Calvin Huber, and the enthusiastic drum major, John Stone.
And he'll remember that Wake Forest was proud of its choir and band.
Key, William Latta, James
>n, George McNabb, Stephen
in, Earl Marsalis, Don Mas-
Gerald Massey, David Meyer,
:y Ann Moate, Fred Morgan,
Jeffrey Nelson, William Newman,
a, George Norris, Stan Oetken,
id Parris, Randolph Perryman,
:t Sawyer, Charles Schaeff, John
, Michael Slinkard, James Slone,
James Starmer, Joel Stephens,
Steve Sweet, Mary Linda Taylor, Milton Lee
Tcague, James This, Max Thomas, Larry Thurner,
John Triplett, Davie White. John Wright,
John Yarrington. DRUM MAJOR: John Stone.
MAJORETTES: Becky Wylie (head), Marty
Heckerman, Karen Robbins, Jenny Robinson.
DIRECTOR: Dr. Calvin R. Huber.
BAND MEMBERS
Johnston, Pamela
Harry Arscnault, Henry Bl
ck, Diane Brackett,
Lawrey, John Ly
William Bryant, Robert Bu
rnside, James Byrd,
McNeill, Roger H
George Carter, Andrea Cole
■nan, Joseph Conrad,
line, Mark Mason
Richard Corritore, Wayn
Coussens, Roger
Gene Michael, Na
Crockett, Sam Currin, Ches
er David. Frederick
Bob Murdock, Jet
Davis, Elizabeth Derringer,
Wiley Doby, Frank
Traywick Newton
Donaldson. Phil Dubose, G
addy Eggers, Bobby
James Paris, Dav
Ervin, Harry Fcrber, Willi
m Gallagher, David
Susan Pierce, Jane
Gasque. Lawrence Gosnell,
James Gossler, John
Searle, John Slate,
Grecnhaugh, Eugene Griffith, Valjean Griggs,
George Grove, Stephen Gough, Ann Hagey,
Roger Harrill, Charles Higgins, Diane Hilde-
brand, Danicll Hobbs, Karen Hollifield, Calvin
Holt, R, chard Honcycutt, Ronald Honeycutt,
Mary Jo Hord, Rachel Horton, Sam Huffstetler,
Parks Huffstetler, John Humphries, John Hut-
ton, John Hyatt, Danny Inge, Ken Johnson, Jack
Paul
■MLM
New Uniforms and the appearance of the
Tonight show's Doc Severenson at a football
halftime show did not alter the traditional
work and fun of the average band member.
Drum Major John Stone leads the show (far
left). Diane Brackett heads a column of
marchers at practice (top left). Below left,
the group plays the fight song at Home-
coming.
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THE ARTS
An Image, A Movement, A Color of Sun
Let's be frank: Wake Forest Univer-
sity has no fine arts center; facilities
necessary for the development of art are
almost totally absent (the theater is in
the library, half the music department is
in what was to have been the gymna-
sium's bowling alley) ; there is no Art
Department.
But let's be proud: self-preservation
and dedication have established and de-
veloped art on campus — art that is fash-
ioned from a sensitive combination of
originality and uniqueness, honesty in
execution and sincerity of expression,
founded solicitation of emotion, and
something significant to say.
What is said in the artist's language
on campus is rich in its vocabulary. The
speakers — the College Union, the Music
Department, The Artist's Series, com-
munity programs, and the University
Theatre — are eloquent spokesmen of a
generation in a world determined not to
"blow its cool."
Three College Union committees en-
riched the University's cultural life this
year by providing excellent cinema, pro-
fessional concerts, and informative lec-
tures.
The him committee, headed by Hayes
McNeill, offered more than ninety excep-
tional films including "Shop on Main-
street," "8'i," "Juliet of the Spirits,"
"Silence," "Black Orpheus," and a festi-
val of eight Humphrey Bogart classics.
The Major Functions Committee's
booking of The Pozo-Seco Singers, Glenn
Yarbrough, The Lettermen, and Dionne
Warwick created an impressive billing.
The Homecoming entertainment demon-
strated that the College Union surpris-
ingly could outdo itself. Smokey Robin-
son and the Miracles, Bob Collins and the
Fabulous Five, and Simon and Garfunkel
performed. All in one weekend.
Earner's Broadway production of "Stop
the World, I Want to Get Off" (fir left) features
a colorfully costumed chorus of actresses. Marcel
Marceau as Biff (far left, below) entertains the
audience in Wait Chapel with his repertoire of
pantomimes. Carlos Montoya (left) strums his
guitar. The oriental enchantment of Indonesian
dancers (aboie) adds a foreign flair to the Wake
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*..,.
A Detailed Canvas on a Remarkable Frame
scribe the speakers in this year's CU Lecture Series.
Author James T. Farrell (left) provided his audience with
an artistic and scholarly treatise on his novel, Studs Lon-
igan. Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Mark VanDoren (top)
effectively and casually talked of his life and his writing.
Houston Smith (above) candidly discussed the religious
experience which is appurtenant to psychedelic drugs.
Critic Malcomb Cowley chatted informally about South-
ern literature. For the politically minded, Harrison Sal-
isbury (far right), assistant managing editor of the New
York Times, discussed his tour of North Viet Nam, and
urged an unconditional halt to U.S. bombings there.
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(Add to the popular groups a virtuoso
— Carlos Mantoya — and trie total pro-
gram easily could beat the french cuffs
off of any other small university in the
country — and many larger ones.)
As the concerts were impressive the
lectures were superb. The Lecture Com-
mittee presented James T. Farrell, Bill
Sands, Harrison Salisbury, Pierre Viala,
Saul Bellow, Drew Pearson, Rus Bergess,
and Mark VanDoren. Their words etched
a vision and sketched a shape of our
world; their ideas created a detailed can-
vas which stretched across a remarkable
frame of politics, sociology, economics,
and art.
What the College Union could not
provide the Artist's Series contributed.
Directed entirely by Dr. Charles M.
Allen, the series sponsored seven pro-
grams, each highly successful and artistic.
Amin Feres let loose his baritone voice.
The Mario Maya Company swirled in
flamenco dance. The Atlanta Symphony,
directed by Robert Shaw, spotlighted
pianist Grant Johanneson. The New York
Pro Musici) presented an enchanting pro-
gram of Tudor music.
More than thirty musicians from the
Indonesian Embassy and the Yugoslavian
Brank Krsmanovich Chorus contributed
to the international flavor of the concerts.
It was, however, the series' piece de
resiittwee, Marcel Marceau, who demon-
Ill
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The Theater:
Mirror of Campus Talent
Above: Mickey Finn and Phyliss MacMurray
enact a heated argument during the theater's
production of "Look Back in Anger." Abate
right: The stage crew sets up the scenery for
"Twelfth Night." Far right: The final set com-
tation of "Look Back in Anger." Rig.ht: Three
courtiers hide behind the props of "Twelfth
Night."
::'.' ■-•■■-.-•■ ■-
I — J I 1 .1.
strated the pure perfection and genius of
a master artist. His wordless performance
left reviewers searching for words of
praise.
Whatever vacant spaces were left in
musical experience were filled by the Uni-
versity Music Department and the Win-
ston-Salem Civic Music Association. The
community program included The Nor-
man Luboff Choir, The Chamber Sym-
phony of Philadelphia, pianists Stetcher
and Horowitz, and The American Ballet
Theater.
What deserves to be praised above all
the arts at Wake Forest, however, is that
of the University Theater. It must assume
almost the entire University artistic re-
sponsibility, in that dramatic art is depen-
dent upon and indicative of campus
talent.
Following the leadership of Dr. Harold
C. Tedford, Director of the Theatre, and
Martin Bennison, Assistant Director,
theater students somehow fought against
despicable facilities and overcame numer-
ous handicaps to produce an excellent
season.
The 1967-68 billing included produc-
tions which encouraged both artistic and
educational growth. Obey's Noah, Os-
born's Look Back In Anger, Shakespeare's
Twelfth Night, and Giraudeux' The Mad
Woman of Chaillot composed a represen-
tative program of distinctive theater.
Four University Reader's Theater presen-
tations, several laboratory plays, and
113
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»"■ JJHIIIIiUM'fflflHItiTOCT
The Theatre's Twelfth Night
Rita Case as Viola (above) "woos" the Countess
Olivia (Terrina Check) in the University The-
atre's production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Nigbt.
Sir Andrew Aguecheek (John Collins) and Sir
Toby Reich (Wiley Jones) (right) clap to the
antics of the clown while in a state of slieht
three Studio Theater productions imple-
mented the dramatic offerings and proved
the theatre worthy of a decent stage and
total
lversity support.
What the receptive audiences saw and
felt as they experienced Look Back In
Anger and Twelfth Night resounded
somewhere within them; something
clicked, and their thoughts went on and
on — until they were almost sure that
they had found the answer. But not quite.
Because art never gives away the com-
plete answer; it never quite shows all of
what it is to live, to suffer, to be moved.
But what art does crystalize in an image,
or a movement, or a line, or a frame of
celluloid, or a vibrato of voice, or a
color of sun is communicated.
Through art, people become their own
mirrors and more clearly see themselves
in their reflective actions. Their emotions
mingle with their thoughts. They become
more sentient, empathetic, receptive, un-
derstanding. They learn to cherish mo-
ments of truth.
They experience the impact of the
awareness of those "outdated abstrac-
tions"— spirit, humanity, soul.
If there is a University soul, it was
glued together this year by the arts. If
Wake Forest listened, it recognized that
Robert Penn Warren's words plum deeply
into the question of all art and life. For
what must be satisfied, above all and
through art, is the "need of feeling onr
life to be, in itself, significant."
— T. F. B.
fc.
IMH
HBU&SSSIRS^S
Left: Fabian (Tim Moyer) and Sir Toby plot
the downfall of Malvolio. Belou: Dennis Sayers
as the clown, Terrina Cheek as Olivia, and Linda
Jones as Maria perform during the play.
^-,~^-!^rrjra_Mw~-^Trrj-[(.p^»—- — ""*"_
in "' iihiuiimmiiiiiiii aB^rajttaaMB5fflg»g»^r'j^SSE
HONORARIES
PHI BETA
KAPPA
Glenda Shaffer Angel
Patricia Reed Head
Dayna Tate Pate
Helen Huntley Aull
Guy Cornelius Hobbs
David Lee Roberts
Laurence Sutherland
Kathryn Mae Hocutt
Emily Louise Steifle
Cain
Linda Ann Hood
Brenda Ann
Beverly Steele Cale
James Cranford
Templeton *
Mary Patricia Carnes
Hoyle, Jr.
Nicka Thompson
Charles Clinton
Mary Fran Hughes
Thornton
Caskey
Steven Rawlings
Rebecca Ann Wall
Jimmy Lewis Craig
Hursh
Richard Taylor
Karen LoRee
Adrienne Gayle
Williams
Edwards
Jordan
Stephen Thomas
Jo Cheryl Exum
Sharon Lee Kennedy
Wilson
Joyce Ann Green
Donna Bird May
Virginia Anne
John Constantine
Edward Boyd
Wuertenberger
Gretes
McConnell
Randy Byron
William Bullock
Hartman
Pittard III
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA
National Leadership
Honor Society
Jerry Herbert Baker
James Jeffrey Kincheloe
Kenneth Earl Barnes
Carroll Harden Leggett
Henry Hawes Bostic, Jr.
James Nello Martin, Jr.
Theodore Fadlo Boushy, Jr.
Jerry Allen Montgomery
Phdip Hoyt Cheatwood
William Henry Overman,
Paul Mitchell Coble
Jr.
Frederick Lamback
William Andrew Parker
Cooper III
Thomas Jefferson
Samuel Templeton
Robinson, Jr.
Gladding
Ralph Allen Simpson
William Charles Gordon
Walter Brooks Stillwell, III
Francis Edwin Hallman,
Richard Taylor Williams
Jr.
Stephen Thomas Wilson
Kenneth Stewart Johnson,
Jr-
SCABBARD AND BLADE
Honorary Military
Fraternity
Jones Byrd
Edward Moore
Phil Cheatwood
James Nix
William Eliason
W.lliam Parker
Walter Harlow
David Smith
John Humphries
WilHam Smith
Charles Jackson
James Soloman
James Kennedy
Brooks Stillwell
Jeff Kincheloe
Steve Sweet
Charles Kirkpatrick
James Watson
James Knight
David Watters
James Miller
M^^H^H
■"■■ ■
KAPPA MU
EPSILON
National Mathematics Honorary
Carlton Anderson
Jerry Hemrick
Glenda Angel
Calvin Holt
Jon Arney
Jim Hoyle
Edwin Below
Bill Link
Charles Boss
Patsy McGrady
Larry Cain
Cassandra Martin
Laura Caton
Margaret Matthews
David Chapman
Donna May
Paul Coble
James Moore
Edward Cooper
Sankey Painter
Allen Cox
John Picklesimer
Kathy Crawford
Susan Rivenbark
Karen Edwards
Marv Alice Steele
Wendy Farmer
David Taliaferro
Will Folger
Ph.l Tse
William Foster
Charles Turner
Courtney Garton
Linda Van Oot
Dale Glcndening
William Watts
Donna Goings
Mary Helen Whisenant
Joyce Green
Patricia Wieferich
Barbara Haddon
Richard Williams
Larry Hambrick
David Wilson
Iris Hansen
Lee Zinzow
W. E. Harrelson
ALPHA EPSILON DELTA
Honorary Pre-n
tedical fraternity
Dave Anderson
James Hoyle
Roy Blank
Don Matthieu
Arthur Browning
Jerry Montgomery
David Chapman
William Pittard
Jeff Cline
Randall Poe
Charles Crowell
Jim Price
John Gretes
Randy Spainhour
Lloyd Halvorson
Tom Templeton
Mike Harrah
Chuck Webb
Randv Hartman
John Whalley
Bill Hough
York Winston
BETA BETA
BETA
Honorary Biology
Fraternity
Milt Ackerman
Larry Freeman
Pat Hopkins
Kim Menke
Doug Shiflett
Susan Arnold
John Gretes
Doug Horner
Tom Morton
Al Shoaf
Roy Blank
Durante Griffin
William Hough
Judy Nanney
Charles Steiner
Sue Brockett
Dave Hall
Bill Hutton
Paul Orser
Marilyn Stiff
Martha Bryant
Lloyd Halvorson
Rickey Kelley
Ann Peale
Carol Talbott
Bill Coble
Nancy Hampton
Robert Kirsch
Bill P.ttard
Tom Templeton
Charles Crowell
Mike Harrah
Jeff Kline
Randy Poe
Chuck Webb
Joe Dobner
Randy Hartman
Briant LaFoy
Jim Price
John Whalley
Jamie Fonville
Pattie Head
Jane Lasley
Wanda Radford
York Winston
Linda Fox
Kay Hodges
Jim Martin
Beth Rosebcrry
TASSELS
Women's Honor*
ry
Leadership Society
Janice Crosswhite
Debbie Snapp
Wendy Farmer
Emily Steifle
Linda Levi
Jan Wuertenberger
Dayna Pate
"TB M>' m "^iV
i II' 1 1 l imillillll'iHillll
HONOR ARIES (continued)
PHI ALPHA THETA
National Honorary History Fraternity
Dwight Bartlett
Aleta Cochran
Howard Colvard
Tommy Denton
Miriam Early
John Patrick Exum
Gloria Halstead
Doug Harrell
Hayes Hofler
Mary Fran Hughes
Doug Jones
James Kennedy
Jan Kiger
Susie Newsom
Bob Perretz
Steve Poston
Barbara Saintsing
Alan Sasser
Kay StourTer
Martha Umberger
Jan Wuertcnberger
PHI EPSILON KAPPA
National Physical
Education Fraternity
Dwight Bartlett
Sam Green
Robert Bhnton
Robert Harris
Robert Brenner
Donald Maslinc
James Broadway
Mike Pulliam
James Callison
Tom Rosemond
Paul Crinklcy
Herbert Spear
Clint Ewald
Frank Stelling
Lowell Freedlund
Paul Swails
Gearl Gore
Jim Tiffany
PHI SIGMA
IOTA
National Language Fraternity
Helen Aull
Margaret Park
Linda Braswell
Anne Phillips
Charles Caskey
Anne Sabroske
Jo Cheryl Exum
Susan Smith
Kathryn Hocutt
Carolyn Snider
Susan Johnson
Emily Steifle
Virginia Jones
Helen Stein
Joanne Kline
Nicka Thornton
William Melson
Bill Twyford
Caroline Montgomery Joan Williams
»!lU-4*w!UiiH
ETA SIGMA
PHI
National Classical
Language Fraternity
Thomas Aquino
Cheryl Graves
Nelson Ann Baus
Michael Harrah
Jane Biggerstaff
Jennifer Hauck
Lindsey Biles
Connie Hoey
Anne Bingham
Glenn Karr
Martha Brookbank
Billv Kernodle
Warren Boutilicr
Nelda Morgan
Barbara Buchanan
Donna Neal
Betsv Burrell
Chris Quale
Ann Cober
Sandy Schaub
Aleta Cochrane
Sara Seanor 'j
Howard Colvard
Becky Stevenson
William Cooke
Calvin Stringfield
John Davis
Barrv Strosnider
Laura Ford
Brenda Templeton
Sue Gentry
Jon Wright
DELTA PHI
Honorary German
Bill Amen
David Anderson
Helen Aull
Allen Cox
Roger Crockett
Sharon Dowd
Lee Ebs
Betty Hyder
ALPHA
Fraternity
Charles Kirkpatrick
Linda Levi
Betsy McDonald
Susan Mauger
Brigette Schroder
Richard Stiger
Marshall Tessnear
Rebecca Wall
GAMMA SIGMA EPSILON
National Chemistry Honorary
David Anderson
Jon Arney
Charles Boss
Bill Clarke
Robert Duval
Wendy Farmer
Leonard Funderberk
John Gouch
Charles Hardin
Bruce Humphries
Richard Lavinder
Don Matthieu
Thomas Mutton
Robert Parks
Bob Sella
Jim Spooner
Steve Wilson
rigors of week-long campaigning begin
in the face of Jerry Baker as he listens
rly returns on WFDD radio. As BPOC car
POLITICS
The Dead Atheist
If it is true, as any Old Gold journalist
will tell you, that college should provide
training for future vocations as well ai
education with which to pursue them,
Wake Forest's aspiring politicians are
seemingly among its worst prepared
graduates. For unlike newspaper reporters,
the politicians have no means by which
to realize their own ambitions or the
aspirations of their constituents. Student
Government, everyone knows, has no real
power; and without power young poli-
ticians sort of pass away.
But most activists don't give up so
easily. Some of them started the Men's
Residence Council three years ago; some
spend their time planning such projects as
the Summit Conference and the Experi-
mental College; a few occupy most of
their college days leading pledges through
rush or planning social functions. Every
spring an energetic group seems to re-
organize or found a new political party.
Many potential leaders take part in
other politically oriented activities such
as the Young Democrats and Republicans,
the International Club, and the Debate
Team. The YRC and YDC highlighted
their year's activities with frequent
speakers of importance in their own
state-wide parties. State Democratic
Chairman I. T. Valentine and Senator
Sam Ervin addressed the Democrats,
while the YRC hosted former baseball
pitcher "Vinegar Ben" Mizell, now a
Republican candidate for Congress.
■fa.
rx->
the usually sedate Main Lounge of Reynolda Hall.
James Martin (above left) broadcasts returns
over WFDD radio while Bobby Ferrcll (left)
ntral" black-
board. Chip Cooper (above) is congratulated
after being elected President of the Student Body.
11
■ .;':-'■-■- -•■:.':: .".,■■; ';•-;■"' "
M
'■ IHMinillllllMII" ,| 1 1 ' \,\, I'm I If
Most Activitists Don't Give Up So Easily
The international club has been called
the "stay-at-home class" in international
relations. The club is open to all univer-
sity students who are interested in
promoting international understanding.
Through informal dinner meetings and
lectures, participating students exchange
their national dishes, customs, and opin-
ions.
The debate team sent its members
around the country representing Wake
and hosted other teams at the Dixie Clas-
sic and Wake Forest Novice tournaments
conducted on the campus. The traveling
debaters brought home two victories,
from the Birmingham Southern Tourna-
ment and the Wayne State Invitational
Tournament.
Perhaps the most representative campus
political group, when all things are con-
sidered, is the Wake chapter of Local 742.
This non-group excels at mocking the
more formal organizations' pompous and
often meaningless activities. It probably
deserves the title of 'best" campus organi-
zation since it has produced more signs in
its history than all of the others com-
bined.
Although there is much merriment in
its methods, 742 may have an element of
realistic concern in its make-up, because,
as someone once said, campus politicians
are often like dead athiests: all dressed up
with no place to go.
Laura Abernathy's extensive research file on the national debate topic proved
a great help as she and Larry Penley took first place at Detroit's Wayne
State Invitational Tournament.
3^^
_^M
DEBATE TEAM— Officers: Laura Abernathy,
President ; Wanda Radford, Secretary. Member!:
Chris Barnes, Ralph Dennison, Ray Emerick,
Steve Harvey, Danny Higgins, Dick Leader, Dan
Mosely, Doug Osborne, Larry Penley, Barry Schus-
ter, Tom Slonaker, Duke Wilson.
YOUNG REPUBLICANS CLUB— Officers: Joe
Holbrook, President,- Bobby Ferrell, Vice Presi-
dent; Joan Marie Shallcross. Recording Secretary;
Baxter Callaway, Corresponding Secretary; Bruce
Miller, Treasurer. Wue
YOUNG DEMOCRATS CLUB— Officers: Pat
Exum, President; Carroll Leggett, Law School
Vice President; Ralph Simpson, Men's Vice Presi-
dent; Judy White, Women's Vice President;
Sandy Hutchens, Secretary and Program chair-
man; Linwood Rich, Treasurer. Advisor: Dr. Jack
Fleer. Members: Mike Aiken, Jerry Baker, Carole
Bcatty, Bonnie Bell, Ed Below, Susanne Bennett.
Jennie Lynn Roger, Henry Bostic, Dennis Bowlin,
Jim Brassel, Bob Brenner, Coy Brewer. Charles
Brewer, George Carter, Chip Cooper, Fred Culler,
Betsy Daniel, Ken Ellis, Ken Emily, Jean Farley,
Robert Fleming, Aubrey Gerlaugh, Danile God-
win, Bob Grant, David Hawkins, Charles Hayes,
Dick Heidgerd, Danny Higgins, Ron Honeycutt,
Bill Hough, Burdell Jones, Bill Martin, Dianne
Mathis, John May, Mike Neale, Don Nelson, Mike
Nifong, James O'Brien, Mel Oliver. Doug Os-
borne, Ed Poe, Wayne Poplin, Bev Shaw, Brenda
Shackelford, Franklin Shirley, Henry Shore, Pat
Sinicrope, Sylvia Smith, Tamara Smith, Ray
Spurr. Paul Stainback, Charles Suggs, Joe Thcri-
ault, Becky Wall, Doug Waller, Vernon Watts,
William Watts, J. D. Wilson, Ed Wooters, Jan
INTERNATIONAL CLUB— Officers : Peter Chow,
president; Kathryn Hocutt, vice president; Caro-
lyn Snider, secretary; Julius Imosun, treasurer.
Members: Rita Andrews, Ritva Aniluoto, John
Atkinson, Michcline Bacca, Bodo Beer, Jennie
Lynn Boger, David Cedolia, Wayne Coates, Rich-
ard Corredor, Paul Craighead, Tom Deacon, Dan
Dever, Harold Dorenbecher, Sharyn Dowd, Linda
Edwards, Mary Edwards, Bobby Ferrell, Jerry
Francis, George Gatzogiannis, Uwe Gielen, Larry
Gosnell, David Green, Anita Hagbard, Erna
Haven, Guy Hobbs, Chul Hwangbo, Jim Huber,
Mrs. Julius Imosun, Kirk Jonas, Henry Koether,
Chris Kroustalis, Gee-Yin Kwok, Willuam Lee,
Mike Leffler, Chi Lin. Sophocles Michaelides,
Safar Na?ari, Jim Paris, Linton Robinson, Beth
Roseberry, Brigitte Schroeder, Bill Mork, Mrs.
Bill Mork, Barry Schuster, Scott Slaybecker, Mar-
eia Stone, K. N. Thomas, Elizabeth Thomas, Ping
Tse, Charles Wakefield, Paul Washburn, Wynd-
ham Wilkinson, Duke Wilson, Marion Yang,
Mrs. Usha Somasundaran.
Earl Zack.
PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES
Alpha Kappa Psi
G '7"' Q
EG C£
A mutual interest in business unifies the
members of Alpha Kappa Psi professional
business fraternity. Under the leadership
of officers Scott Cober, president, Buzz
Shuford, first rush chairman, Bill Rais-
ner, second vice president, Larry Daw-
kins, secretary, and Ray Nasser, treasurer,
the group brought business people to the
campus to speak to them and to show
them the businessman's place in society.
The fraternity, which contains many
Greeks, is strictly a professional one which
tries to bring its fifteen members in con-
tact with business and prepare them for
the positions they will occupy.
A K Psi members bone up on the latest issue of
The Wall Street Journal.
Scott Cober, Roger Crawford, Larry Dawkin
Ed Ferguson, John Fisher, Rick Henning, Ji.
Miller, Harvey Morris, Jr., Ray Nasser, Bi
Raisncr, Chris Saylor, Buzz Shuford, Dave Sici
loff, Steve Sweet, Bruce Williams, Walter Wilsoi
■■■■M
iSt
KU,"*'
"■ ._.-.
35 — "
Delta Sigma Pi
In its new house beneath Kitchin dorm,
the Delta Sigma Pi business fraternity
has managed to become a social, as well
as professional, fraternity. This year thev
competed in fraternity intramurals and
sponsored a dozen house parties. The na-
ture of the fraternity enables the mem-
bers to maintain close communication
with others in the business school and to
gain more practice in their chosen field.
Under president Jim Mason, senior
vice president Eric Clark, junior vice
president Randy Welfare, secretary Jim
Blackwelder, treasurer Bill Townsend, and
historian Butch Peatross, the fraternity
planned and financed three professional
tours to local businesses. Six speakers were
brought to the school by the fraternity.
As the year came to a close, the brothers
had reached the balance between social
and academic goals that they sought.
Gamma Nu: Robert Atkins, John Baker, Gregory
Baxter, C. M. Beach, James Blackwelder, William
Bley, William Brewer, Woodrew Binson, Douglas
Bris-Bois, V. C. Bruton, Douglas Buckley, Eric
Clark, John Garrity, Danny Inge, James Mason,
Dennis Melvin, Melvin Oliver, John Patton.
Erwin Paxton, Clarence Peatross, Douglas Ramsey,
Gene Rapleye, Grady Saunders, I. R. Squires,
Jeffrey Taylor, William Townsend, James Steed,
Teddy Shelton, Charles Welfare, Craig Wood.
1 -^
"■^
T"
The Timberlakc chapter of Phi Alpha
Delta brought fame to the campus by
being named the most outstanding
P. A. D. chapter in the United States.
The fraternity achieved this distinction
under the leadership of Justice Mahlon
DcLoatch, Jr., Vice Justice Sandy Weeks,
Clerk Russell Walker, Treasurer Alden
Thomas, and Marshall Henry Shore. The
presentation of the award was announced
after the district conclave held in Win-
ston-Salem in February. The Timberlake
chapter received the award because of
the quality of its professional program,
its social program, its service to the law
school, and its 1000 volume house library.
Three of the district officers are from
Wake's chapter: Eddie Welche is student
district judge, John McKinney is district
clerk, and Randy Mattocks is district
treasurer. Charles Taylor, a Wake law
graduate, is district alumni justice, so the
Timberlake chapter is well-represented.
Third year: Thaddeus Adams
Laurel Boyles, Mahlon DeLoatch
Brooks Doyle, John Fountain, I
William Harris, Ladson Hart. Willi;
, Reginald Joyne
; Nelson, Norman Nifong,
Robinso
icr, Robert Scott, Norman
tilth, Edwin Welch, Julian
Wray, Charles Young. Second year: E. C. Boggan,
Thomas Brown, Ray Brumley, William Brumsey,
Vernon Cardwell, Michael Carr, Joseph Dean,
James Dillard, Don Elkins, Koyt Everhart, William
Ezzel, Douglas Fann, Robert Feeman, Robert
Fleming, Henry Frenck, Wesley Grant. Zoro
Guice, Gerald Hayes, Lloyd Hise, Marvin Jaffc,
David Liner, Andrew Martin, Noland Mattocks,
Will, am Johnsc
Carroll Leggett, Brox
John Regan, Theodor
son, theodore Schvim,
Singletary, Kenneth S
Robert McClymonds, John McKinney, Robert
McNeill, Ronald Nicola, Norbert Pail, Charles
Redden, James Roberts, Henry Shore, Alden
Small, William Spence, Carl Tilgman, Russell
Walker, Sandy Weeks, William Wilson, Thomas
Windsor. First year: John Barlow, Carl Bell,
Raymond Bennett, Ronald Braswell, William
Broadaway, Ronald Brown, Amos Crumpler,
Russell Eliason, Leslie Farmer, Clinton Forbis,
Lawrence Gordon, Richard Gordon, Jake Helder,
Michael Hodnett, Malcom Howard, Max Justice,
Edmund Kirby-Smith, William Klopman, Roscoe
Lindsay, William Meek, Robert Odom, John
Penry, James Pfaff, Walter Pitt, Ronald Price,
William Pritchett, Richard Ross, Gregory Schiro,
Chester Schultz, Norman Schearin, Edwin Spcas,
Dwight Wagner, James Williams, James Wilson,
Robert Wolf, John Wolfe.
-'is^ks^^yaays^
Phi Delta Phi
Phi Delta Phi, one of the law school's
two fraternities, provides its brothers
with a social atmosphere associated with
the law profession. The Ruffinlnn chapter
this year has had several dinner meetings,
hosting expert lawyers and judges. The
association with established law people
and with each other gives the brothers
opportunities to gain practical law
knowledge beyond the books and class-
rooms.
The chapter has been led in their activi-
ties this year by Magister Ken Moser,
Historian Butch Lennon, Exchequer Curt
Cheyney, and Clerk Leslie Johnson. The
fraternity has won the All Campus
Athletic award in competition with under
graduate students. These activities, as
well as the house law library, house li-
brary, house parties, and their campus
affiliation, combine to fulfill the needs of
the Wake Forest law students who com-
pose it.
Third Year: Thomas Alexander, Curt Cheyney.
Dallas Clark, Don Cowan, Bill Cranfill, Rick
Danser, Gerald Davidson, Wayne Foushee, Larry
Graham, Ben Gram, Ed Grannis, Jr., Leslie John-
son. Albert Lahendro, Alton Lennon, William
McCarthy, John Memory, Kenneth Moser. Doug
Murray, George Simmons, William Smith. Robert
Tavle
Whin
Donald Tisdale
Bvn
u
Ma.
s
Richard Tow
Wiley Wooten, Jir
is Bumpass, Jr., And
Corbel
Head,
Howington, Bill Kafer.
lael McLeod, Jim Rainey
Second Year: Thomas I
, Stephen Daniel, Jr., William Davis,
Earnest Evans, Richard Feerick, James Gaulden,
Robert Hanner, Allan
Charles Lamm,
3ruce Robinson.
Archie Smith. Wayne Streitz, Thomas Thorton,
Carlton Tilley, Jr., McNair Tornow, Sam White-
hurst, Fred Williams, Jr. First Year: Bruce Bogie,
John Carriker, Harry Clendenin, III. William
Cobb, James Deinlein, Terrence Evans, Edward
Floyd, Mark Galloway, Robert Hannah, Richard
Harper, Clay Hemric, Jr., Howard Hudson,
Thomas Keith, Robert Leonard, Michael Lewis,
John Loughridge, Charlie Mclntyre. Jr., William
Marshall, Jr., William Nolan, Jr., Warren Pate,
Richard Pearman, Jr., John Rich, John Schramm,
James Snyder, Jr.. Richard Stanley, Robert Ste-
phens, Myron Stouffer, Robert Sumner, Donald
Von Cannon.
Phi Delt;
and disct
cuss legal problems (top),
rays to sit (above).
■* —
■•" ' - ■■•-- •-••■
___!
STUDENT LIVING
Not Dynamic, But Secure
Living at Wake Forest has often been
compared to Alcatraz, Sing-Sing, or Fort
Benning. The campus is about five miles
from town, and at least a mile to any
decent shopping center.
All the conveniences of a self sufficient
community are here. All are overpriced
excuses.
Nonetheless, life does exist, or persist,
as the case may be.
There is a lot of griping, but that's to
be expected. There are a lot of confor-
mists, too, und somehow they really have
no right to complain. They brought a lot
of their "misery" upon themselves.
A campus that is separated from the
town, too small to be a real university,
too large to be a college, and owned by
a religious group has to be at least a little
different.
Wake Forest is.
The dorms are frightfully like concrete
abortions. The architecture is a Georgian
perversion. The students are surrounded
by too little space for organized activities,
and too much room that is being wasted.
But, on the whole, with good old
American ingenuity, the students make
do with what they have and look for
ways to get more.
Students fall into niches soon after they
arrive here; the school may be easily di-
vided into group identities, rather than
affiliations. Some join the prevailing or-
ganizations, others simply fall compla-
cently into little friendship circles. But
most of the cliques transcend state, age,
or religious bounds.
Within the framework of the Univer-
sity, the little groups can find varying
methods of releasing themselves from the
daily tedium of classes and studying. The
College Union annually presents an out-
standing array of lectures, movies, and
entertainment. The independents, frater-
nities, and societies keep a heavy pace of
parties and service projects. Even the
religious groups have happenings — but in
a different vein.
What makes Wake Forest run is not
dynamic day to day changes, but rather a
sense of security one has in knowing
pretty much what will happen from one
minute to the next.
There are plenty of laughs and good
times, but no real excitement. Occas-
ionally, an isolated incident out of the
ordinary may occur. Less frequently, some
student will pull a hair-brained stunt
and be the toast of his clique for a few
days.
But students forget quickly.
Student living does have some remark-
able facets attached to it, though, which
are probably universal to institutions of
higher yearning. There is plenty of apathy
rSSSSSsSSSSSSS
and involvement, one-trackedness and
two-timing, indivuality and conformity,
and remolding of old personalities.
The personalities at Wake Forest usu-
ally have been generated from Christian
backgrounds and the students here often
get caught up in re-checking old habits
and shaping them into new models.
The extremes of this procedure are
ever-present: from the BSU suppers and
Vespers to a night at the tavern and other
nights at a local motel.
One of the real joys of Wake Forest
students is outsmarting the administra-
tion. The oldies know what's happening
and often overlook the less conspicuous
violations. They have to because the
courts would be filled with students who
do the things which come so naturally
to college people.
What good is coming to college any-
way if you can't get away with something
you shouldn't be doing?
— G. B. F.
m^rrMr^^''^^0^'-'-
"MM If I"l IgfclSfeSigS 'H. .. l|liiiLL>'l»,yg^—
Right: President Jeff Kincheloe, J. D. Wilsor
Dem Ward discuss possible dates for a futui
traction as Advisor Mark Reece talks to an
in New York. Below: Mary Ann Pregnall
tickets to John Matson for an up-coming mt
Opposite below: Carol Cuthbertson reaps the
fits of the work that was necessary in assembling
monthly art exhibit.
COLLEGE UNION
A Combination of Effort and Fate
Another College Union year is past.
Remembrance of big moments in the year
come back — like the weekend of Home-
coming when Simon and Garfunkel and
Smokey Robinson and the Miracles brought
their hit songs to the campus, or the
night of the Pozo-Seco Singers concert by
the bank of a moonlit Reynolda Lake, or
those nights in Wait Chapel when the
Lettermen or Glenn Yarbrough or Dionne
Warwick reached out and played with
people's emotions for a few hours.
These memories, and many more, were
provided by College Union. A person ap-
preciates a successful concert, dance, lec-
ture or movie, or at least thinks he docs.
But whether he ever thinks of what goes
into making College Union successful is
another question. To wonder why a Col-
lege Union worker gives up his time to
the organization is to realize that he gets
more out of these events than the average
student. It is true, he probably does not
get the full emotional impact from a per-
formance that the audience does, but he
gets something which goes much deeper —
the "behind the scenes" or "backstage"
experience.
For the audience, a performance begins
when the celebrity walks onto the stage,
but for the C.U. worker it began early
last spring when officers and committees
discussed, deliberated, and decided on
what attractions they wanted for the
coming year. Then, contracts were ne-
gotiated and completed. Spring passed
and the school year ended, but there was
wm
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'""■'". •-."'•
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, Frmit: Don Rice,
Jane Wade, Jim Martin, Robbie Johnson, Carolyn
Wright, Steve Kelley, Jim Gerrish. Above: J. D.
Wilson, Barbara Gutekunst, Vice President, Jeff
Kincheloe, President, Mel Oliver. Not pictured:
Austme Odom, Secretary, Mark H. Rei
Wayne Poplin, Dem Ward, Hayes McNeill, Jii
Byrd, Buddy Herring, Mary Alice Steele.
"'i I IIIUIUWUtBUPSPS^^
Making Last-Minute Adjustments
still much to do for College Union. Dur-
ing the summer months the College
Union activities calendar and various
brochures were put together and hurried
to the printer for distribution early in
the fall.
College Union, then is one organization
that encompasses the whole campus, yet
it is also an organization made up of
various specialties — each having its own
"behind the scenes" experiences.
College Union is postponing study for
a major quiz in order to set up micro-
phones, rearrange lights, and make last
minute adjustments to the stage for a
concert that night. Or College Union is
cutting classes for a week and neglecting
school work in order to escort Mrs. Glenn
Yarbrough around to the radio and tele-
vision stations and to the newspaper
offices to publicize her husband's concert
— or meeting personalities at the airport,
having dinner with them and catering to
their whims during breaks in the dressing
room — or printing posters to publicize
events and plastering them around cam-
pus, rain, snow, or shine, only to see a
student take them down for decoration
of his cinder block room.
College Union is previewing foreign
films before their scheduled showings in
DeTamble, or trying to convince stu-
dents that they want to play pool in the
basement of Reynolda Hall when spring-
time weather is calling them outdoors.
Better still, it is encouraging students to
go skiing, sailing, or on a cruise to Nassau
with the Union. It is an art collection.
And it is the one organization that uni-
fies all of the undergraduates — without
a building.
The ultimate goal of the College
Union is trying to please everybody on
campus. This being impossible, one per-
son complains that $10,000 spent for a
certain group is a complete waste of his
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things — from adjusting lights in the spire of th
chapel, to telling the audience that the perfor
Printing and Plastering Posters
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money, while the next person says that
he has been waiting for four years for
that particular group to come.
When things go wrong, College Union
is standing before 2,000 people at Home-
coming and telling them that the group
they have packed Wait Chapel to sec
may not show up, because of unstable
conditions in the community, and then
flying to Columbia, South Carolina, on
the night of the Simon and Garfunkel
concert to convince Smokey Robinson
not to break his contract, but to come
to Winston-Salem even though riots were
flaring in the city.
The College Union worker does every-
thing in his power to make a success
of the events he has contracted for,
booked, and publicized — at the same time
knowing that the success of the College
Union in the eyes of the students is,
for the most part, out of his hands. It
is up to the performers and fate.
In the end, though, it was worth try-
ing to build those memories, with the
hope that they would be good ones.
Pat Brown puts up one
of the publicity commit
tec s printed posters tc
promote the Lettermer
concert — only to see a
student walk off with it
Opposite: Even though
students took down pub
licity posters, more eve
nts were "sold out" thi
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M. R. C.
The Problems of Coming of Age
Sometime between the Fall of 1965 and
the Summer of 1967 the leaders of the
Men's Residence Council put away their
hammers and nails and began to fulfill
those promises of a "better world" which
had been delivered by their early prede-
cessors. It is somehow more than coinci-
dence that this "coming of age" of the
M.R.C. should correspond with that of
Wake Forest University, for both organi-
zations reflect a popular demand for
newer and more creative responsibility
in social and intellectual leadership.
The problem of turning such respon-
sibility into working reality has been by
no means an easy task. Founded only
three years ago on the ruins of the inef-
fective Independent Council, the M.R.C.
saw its duty lying in three areas: academ-
ics, athletics and social life. In meeting
its commitments, the organization has
scheduled more seminars, built better
libraries, organized more team sports,
and sponsored better name bands than
were ever possible under either the Inde-
pendent Council or College Union leader-
ship. The recent gift of $3,000 to Chal-
lenge '69 seems to indicate that the
Council's commitment to "total educa-
tion" philosophy is anything but dead.
In a large sense, the new determination
of the M.R.C. is made possible by the
University's vending machine-profit-
sharing program. Initiated for the first
time in September 1967, its funds have
enabled the M.R.C. to carry out its long-
range goals.
While monetary headaches are every-
where apparent, the M.R.C. has had its
own, more overpowering organizational
troubles. With new funds came new ideas,
and with them came the bureaucracy to
handle them. In addition, the desire and
demonstrated ability to handle problems
has, in effect, invited even more problem
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■^^■BR^—iiS
EXECUTIVE CENTRAL COUNCIL: Dougla:
Twiddy, President; Chuck Alexander, Vic,
President; Ken Martin, Secretary; Fred Morgan
Treasurer. Jeter Walker, Rick Strange, Tame:
Hemphill, David Gale, Bob McRae, Tim Moyer
Gary Ipock, Bill Parker, Al Shoaf, Steve Poston
Jim Spears, Joel Miller, Ron McCord, Joe Dobner
Bob Moore, Steve Sweet. Dr. Tom Elmore
Advisor.
Far left: Taylor House governor Jim Spears pre-
pares for Parents' Weekend. Above left: D. P.
Abernathy and Donna Jo Redding enjoy a Poteat
House party. Above: Kitchen housemen take in
a bridge game. Left: Poteat governor Bill Parker
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New Money
and New Bureaucracy
situations in which the M.R.C. must act.
The results of this encounter by the
M.R.C. with its announced goals has been
largely successful, despite the ever-present
need to "prove" competence, and the
never-ending criticism of the organiza-
tion. While some members of the Univer-
sity community disagree with the objec-
tives of the organization, others, notably
some representatives of the fraternities,
have objected strenously to the means
employed in attaining maturity. There
are rumors concerning an I.F.C. investi-
gation of the M.R.C, since some indivi-
duals have denounced the M.R.C. as being
opposed to everything the fraternal sys-
tem holds dear.
In view both of present circumstances
and past performances, however, the
M.R.C. would appear a great deal more
evolutionary than revolutionary. Its ideas
for turning out a "whole student" as the
product of a "total education" seem to
be in line with the traditional goals of
higher education, and, discomfittingly
enough for some, with the forgotten
beliefs expressed in a great many frater-
nity charters.
Although the revelation may be an
irrevocable blow to modern day Roman-
ticism at Wake Forest, the M.R.C. as it
now exists is not an organization staffed
with bomb-throwing red-shirters, as some
would have us believe. Whether the pro-
gram will succeed or fail in the long run
cannot now be determined. One can only
note that if the University continues to
grow in its present liberal direction, the
future of the M.R.C. seems, quite pre-
dictably bright.
— JJ.W.
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Opposite left: Poteat skimmer-bearers lounge in
front of the house. Ab&fe: Students take advan-
tage of Taylor House's quiet library facilities.
Left: M.R.C. president Doug Twiddy talks with
his advisor, Dean Tom Elmore.
DAVIS HOUSE
The Last Frontier
The embattled bastion of Davis Residence
House, created in the midst of four of the
campus' strongest frats, remains as a
silent monument to something.
Under Joe Dobner, governor; Cameron
Yow, lieutenant governor; Bobby Moore,
comptroller; and Dr. Judson Allen,
housemaster, men finally suceeded in
ousting that entrenched example of capi-
talism, McNabb's Studio. Replacing pic-
ture frames with a tube, the expansionists
prepared for an all-out assault on the
Wake Forest Beauty Parlour. The KA's,
fearful lest they be attacked after the
hair curlers, decided to take appropriate
actions.
Parties with Les Soeurs, successful Yad-
kin parties, lectures, house improvements
all worked to make the year a memor-
able one. In addition, Davis' "Doormats"
stormed to league victory in basketball.
All in all, Davis men can breathe a
sigh of relief. While there are no Indians
in the house, the frats have no Custer.
POTEAT HOUSE
A Pint of Blood for a Pound of Flesh
Poteat Residence House, long the strong-
est of the four men's Houses, enjoyed key
successes in athletics, academics, and soc-
ial life this year.
Under governor Bill Parker, It. gover-
nor Don Rice, comptroller Ed Jennings,
and housemaster Dr. David Evans, Poteat
held successful serenades, Mod Ball, Skim-
mer Ball, and Beach Weekend.
Being the first House to create study
carrels for its members, Poteat underlined
its academic responsibility with major
investments in this area.
By the time the men had cheered their
damsel Austine Odom to victory as
Homecoming Queen, financial resources
for "Miss Baby Deac" were low. House-
men sold pints of blood to the local blood-
bank for the coins necessary to win the
penny-a-vote contest. Sweetheart Donna
Jo Redding, who had been named "Miss
King," became the currently favorite
beauty in an increasing gallery of win-
ners.
Somehow, when guys put pints of
blood on the line, the term "apathy"
seems hardly to apply.
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KITCHEN HOUSE
Wind in the Dumpsters
on the
hour for
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of tl
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soap opera
(aboxe
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solitary
tuden
t take
advantage
of the
house libr
ry (top).
Under the able scrutiny of Dr. Don
Schoonmaker, housemaster, governor Bob
McRae, It. governor Joe Parvin, and
comptroller Wayne Hedrich, Kitchin
House completed its two-year programs
of physical plant improvement. The pur-
chases of a new color tube, carpets, extra
furniture, and about 150 books helped
to make the House a home, if only for
viewing "The Edge of Night."
Memorable seminars with Professor
Surindar Suri of Guilford College, ad-
vocate of the "College of the 21st Cen-
tury," the Forrest W. Clonts lecture
series, and a lively discussion of Look
Back in Anger with both director and
cast made the year academically success-
ful.
Lashing out athletically. Housemen saw
league victory slip away in basketball
and football. The "Harold W. Tribble
Memorial Bowling Squad," which saw
both sporadic membership and rare vic-
tories, went down with honor.
The least expansionistic of the four
houses, Kitchin remained the only house
which had not procured a second area for
study purposes — nonetheless, future pros-
pects, such as the Health Center area,
have given the Housemen some cause for
hope.
Perhaps because of the wind behind
the Dempster Dumpster, Kitchin did less
than seemed possible with its potential
for success. Donations are now being
taken for a large fan.
TAYLOR HOUSE
Fun on Tribble's Carpet
I AY LOR
HOUSE
Under officers Jim Spears, governor;
John Schaffer, lieutenant governor; Joel
Miller, comptroller; and Mr. Pete Moore,
housemaster, Taylor Residence House
moved rapidly from a tunnel and a
trunk room to an area formerly oc-
cupied by the Wake Forest Laundry.
Long hours with paint brushes and blow-
torches, as well as the timely purchase of
a carpet from Harold Tribble's house,
combined to make the House one of the
MRC's most attractive.
Marked by "Work Days" for towns-
people, open houses, parents' receptions,
parties, and an athletic race with Poteat
for the league championship, the year
was one of enjoyment and fulfillment.
Taylor serenade groups presented co-eds
with a variety of tunes in the fall and
spring semesters, while a number of
trophies accumulated in the House.
Although the movement of the dryers
made the Sigma Chi's a little hotter, the
concensus seems to be that no one de-
served the space (or the dryers) any
Above left: Taylor men welcome Wake's o»
"Doc" Murphy to the campus with a big ba
quet. Left: Taylor's homecoming decorati<
wins first place in the M.R.C. judging.
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WOMEN'S DORMS
The Coed's Other Life
Boys will be boys, but girls aren't always
what they seem to be. The rule says that
the coed is to behave in an attitude be-
coming a lady, and she usually does. This
is her coed life.
In the dorm, though, the coed lives
another life. It is one of gossip shared
and jokes told, of blind dates yeahed or
nayed, and of joys and sorrows blatently
displayed or protectively hidden. The
dorm is a world where the girl can let
loose and scream and laugh, but it's also
where privacy, so often needed, is so
hard to find. The coed can go into her
room and lock the door. She can go out-
side for a walk alone. But then the dorm
closes, and her world becomes a little
place with nowhere to go to be alone.
If she wants it, though, there's plenty
of company. Go down the hall to the
parlor, and there is always a bridge game.
A crowd is gathered around the rented
T.V. A group is getting ready to go to
the library to study or see people, or to
look for certain male faces. Someone has
a car, so everyone can go to the K&W,
to Sam's or the Tavern, or somewhere.
Part of the coed's other life is attached
to the idiosyncracies of the particular
dorm and hall. There's such a different
atmosphere on a Johnson hall that mov-
ing to Bostwick or Babcock is a living
turnabout. Maybe it's a comradeship
grown out of the confines of Freshman-
hood. Closed study, three date nights, jun-
ior advisors, and living with all your own
class — none of the next three years will
be the same. The lone Freshman hardly
gets to know the upperclassmen coeds.
They are her big sisters, they live in
another dorm. They belong to societies
and cannot talk to her, and they have
other interests. Coeds in Johnson are
pretty excited about their dorm life and
their coed life, too. They get mad when
there's no school spirit. They decorate the
dorm and hang lots of signs. And the
first semester they take blind dates with
diminishing abandon.
An upperclassman has usually made her
niche in the dorm life. It happens on a
Bostwick or Babcock hall where she lives
with a certain group of friends who have
similar interests, however broad and nar-
row. She tries to learn to be a woman
within the straight and narrow confines
of the WGA handbook — and the depths
of her own personality.
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In the classroom coeds are usually cool and
almost supernaturally bright, but in the dorm,
they are like most other women: they wash
clothes, cut their hair, spend hours in front of
a mirror, and, of course, play bridge.
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And if she isn't careful, she gets into a rut
with girls just like herself, and she doesn't
change very much.
But regardless of their class, all coeds
learn to play a game at college. The fun
begins with dutifully eating every meal
in the cafeteria where the boys are, that's
within the rules, spending an hour or so
in the library every night looking for a
date, also within the rules, and going to
class with enough regularity to have a set
of notes that some boy in the class will
want to borrow, decidedly within the
rules. Technically, each coed plays with
the deck stacked in her favor, for she
gets five Wake males to monopolize in
the game. But Salem and WC cut down
the odds somewhat.
The theater of operations is necessarily
the dorm. After all, she needs to be
around when some guy wants help for a
quiz, needs to be there in case some-
body should call for a date, and needs to
be there for the gossip which is charac-
teristic of women's gatherings every-
where.
Rules are around wherever she looks.
The school makes rules, the WGA makes
rules, her group makes rules. But her own
standards still set many of the bounds in
her game. The external rules she must
live by begin her separation from an
active, thinking reality. They brand her
a child, needing a protector, they don't
make her think for herself. Her McMul-
len blouses and Papagalloes are the visible
signs of the rut of conformity into which
she may fall. If she wants to develop as
an individual she really doesn't get much
help — in the dorm.
Many operations are necessary and proper in the
quest of the jeweled pin, from eating in the
pit and helping a guy with a quiz, to getting
dates for his buddies and entertaining him in the
parlor of the dorm. Despite the abuse which they
ny coeds win the
the end.
-
' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**
The Visible Signs of Conformity
Dorm life may be the coed's only life
outside the classroom. She may tell you
you it's a pretty good life. In any event,
she should be happy with it.
If she gives in to conformity and plays
silly little games too seriously, she'll make
the life of the game her life for good.
But if she wants another kind of educa-
tion, and if she wants to change, she can
still be happy at Wake Forest. The dorm
is where the coed doesn't have to play
the role. It's where she can show emo-
tion without qualm, where she can argue
and be criticized and still come out an
equal. That can be good for any kind
of woman.
And if she just gets excited, she can
be even more of a person than a coed
seems to be.
— B. J. B. and F. M. S.
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GREEKS
Setbacks, Successes, and a Bright Future
The Greeks and the societies at Wake
Forest found their year filled with steps
both backward and forward. The most
notable functions of the year included
the annual Midwinter's Weekend, Greek
Week, and the fraternity beach weekends.
The fraternity-society system suffered
a severe setback socially when, in Novem-
ber, Pi Kappa Alpha was placed on social
probation for one year by the Student
Affairs Committee. Also chastised in this
action were Lambda Chi Alpha and the
Laurels who received reprimands. The
action was brought about because of
violations of the chaperone rule.
Nonetheless, the Great-society system
moved through a year of unprecedented
public relations projects and goodwill
among the individual groups.
Officers for the Interfraternity Counc
this year included Doug Stokes, president;
Coy Brewer, vice-president; Jim Solomon,
treasurer; Art Aikman, secretary; and
Dick Heigard, deferred rush chairman.
Intersociety Council officers during
1967-1968 were Karen Swartz, president;
Jennifer Bivens, secretary; and Becky
Melton, treasurer.
A major problem confronting the soci-
eties was that of selective rush. Karen
Swartz said that the societies were work-
ing toward selectivity, but that within
the existing framework the rush program
was functioning as best it could.
The fraternities entered into the third
year of deferred rush. This concept of
rush still has two years of experimenting
to go, but the method was weak in that
"dirty rush" was rampant.
■
Stokes and Swartz Survive Rush Problems
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The fraternity system as a whole felt
the pressure of the M.R.C. cutting into
pledge class sizes, but Stokes felt that the
M.R.C. would not hinder the growth of
the houses.
At the Summit Conference in October,
both Stokes and Swartz expressed feelings
within their groups for a more liberal
policy and a future of off-campus housing
for the fraternities and perhaps for local
sororities in place of the present society
situation.
Thus, the Greek-society system at
Wake Forest may be summed up as opti-
mistic of the future, wary of the present,
but never having a problem of finding
time to participate in intramurals, to
study, and to raise hell.
The life blood of the campus is rep-
resented within these organizations, and
nothing can mute their voices.
— G.B.F.
«gg«M«a«wtri"fii[iTiniiiiriiriiifrii "1&'r"
. Barry Murphy, _-
»ug Punger. Back: Buzz Leavitt, Don Masline,
Bill Overton, Bill Mark, Chuck White, Chick
George, Pete Linden, Dave Conners, Don Hensley,
Debbie Boone, Sweetheart, Butch Henry, John
McQueeny, Jeff Willison, Larry Nagin, Ron
Jur
Freddie Summers.
The Alpha Sigs this year have proven
that a concentrated rush program can
build a house into a strong fraternity.
Officers Barry Murphy, president;
Doug Punger, vice president; Chuck
White, treasurer; and Mike Shaw, secre-
tary, gave the house a big boost in not
only social areas, but also led the house
on a successful campaign to collect
money for the Pilot Mountain State
Park project.
The men were proudest, however, of
their representation on the football team
which was lead by the "Alpha Sig back-
field" of Buzz Leavitt, Ron Jurewicz, and
Freddie Summers. A liberal assortment
of linemen and defensive men helped
round out the team and the house.
Sweetheart Debby Boone, pinned to
Don Hensley, added beauty to a house of
football beasts.
And, as the year ended, the Alpha
Sigs again gave thanks that their house
was closer than any other to the pit,
the dumpster, and the infirmary.
- '"'■'■ ■
35
ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Alpha Sigs Combine a Strong House and Backfield
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CAMEOS
Newest Sisterhood Grows in Strength
The newest society, Cameos, spent the
year building and picnicking.
Officers Gail Powers, president; Carolyn
Wright, vice-president and rush chair-
man; Jane Everhart and Laura Caton,
secretaries; and Nancy Gravely, treasurer,
served the club well in spite of the dif-
ficulties they encountered in solidifying
a new society.
This year the girls were active in many
areas. They picnicked with Kitchin House
and at sisters' homes. The Cameos won
the Lambda Chi Kidnapping Day, and
held a "Mini-golf" booth at the Junior
Class Carnival. In addition, the girls par-
ticipated in basketball intramurals and
helped usher at the University Theater
productions.
The Cameos were also proud of their
sweetheart, Jim Martin, who helped the
girls in every way he could.
Growth and sisterhood marked the
Cameos, whose optimism is mirrored in
their motto: "Society sisterhood, that is
our aim, bonded with pride in the Cameo
name."
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Ground Level: Pam Turner, Jenny Lynn Boger,
Connie Hoey, Gail Powers, Becky Green, Susan
House, Susan Smith, Peggy Parks, Lindsey Biles,
Laura Caton, Edith Creasy, Marty Andrus, Janet
Reavis. Up tole: Jane Everhardt, Carol Talbott,
Gail Detty, Carolyn Wright.
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DELTA SIGMA PHI
Delta Sigs Get the Runs
The men of Delta Sig who comprise the
extension of the Lazy Days Pool Hall
parlayed their best efforts of the year
into runs.
Officers Harry Fisher, president; Rick
Sloss, vice president; Bob Atkins, trea-
surer; and Jim This, secretary planned
and carried through major refurnishing of
their lounge.
Activities included the formal Playboy
weekend presided over by sweetheart
Claire Ivey, beach weekend, and mountain
weekend. That's a lot of weekends.
The brotherhood also held a Christmas
party with the Fideles and a brother-
pledge football game, and collected for
the United Fund.
Spearheaded by spearhead David Mc-
Naught, the D-Sig lunatic fringe pro-
vided laughs for the outside world.
The year was basically one of mixed
success for the house. Socially it was
great. But, oh, those runs.
Front Row: Bernie Krause, Jack Baldwin, Marv
Bond, Dick Wood, Bruce Jubenowsky, Sandy
Sanders, Pat Barnes, Chip Daskill, Dave Reynolds,
Claire Ivey. sweetheart. Courtney Garton, Charlie
Steir.er, Ed Kussler, John Hutton, Carl Keller,
Tom Mutton, Ted Blackburn, Roger Main, Jim
Naphas, Morris Martis, D. Calvert, Chuck Lou.
Second Row: Pete Stiles, Lee Noell, Paul Crissman,
Rob Blinn, James Butts, Rick Sloss, Joe Blythe,
Charlie Taylor. Terry Stuart, J. L. This, Chip
Morris, Larry Carroll, Greg Budd, Dave Mc-
Naught, Bob Kornegay. Below Plane: Bill Baldwin.
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Bottom Row: Jan Eaken, Cassandra Martin, Julie
Davis, Chrissy Eckval, Linda Hinson, Carol Han-
cock, Brenda Fasnacht, Lucy Holton, Sue Ellen
Anderson, Clare Ivey. On Tram: Nancy Cum-
mings, Karen Edwards, Susan Powers, Joan Wie-
mer, Ann Bingham, Jane Wade, Terry Clinc,
Vickie Campbell, Merley Glover, Suzanne Mc-
Br.de. Pat Strickland, Sarajane Oakley, Carol
Murphy, Naomi Thorpe, Carol Elliott, Sara Um-
stcad, Deborah Best.
r*
FIDELES
Fideles find a pistol in their pocket
The Fideles asked the students the most
searching question the campus has ever
heard, "Is that a pistol in your pocket?"
As part of the now legendary follies,
the Fideles not only entertained, but also
probed the mind with this and other
questions.
The officers this year included Jane
Wade, president; Sara Umstead and
Carol Murphy, vice-presidents; Cassan-
dra Martin, secretary; and Anne Bing-
ham, treasurer.
From caroling to basketball, from sere-
nades to parties, the Fideles proved why
they are annually one of the most active
societies on campus.
Fideles were proud of their "jock"
basketball team and their constructive
projects as well as having a successful
rush in 1968.
The girls thrived on their motto "First
in Friendship, Fellowship, and Fun,"
which must mean something.
The year is gone, and the "Wrath of
Wade" is lost to graduation. No one ever
did learn the answer to their question.
Despite usual lack of organization. Fideles come
through in the end. Janie Wade and Susanne Ben-
nett (top righl) sketch the sides of the Follies
booth, and cagers (bottom right) grapple for
rebound
th the Laur,
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Officers Donn Freeman, president; John
Crump, vice-president; Butch Baker, sec-
retary; and Jimmy Clack, treasurer, were
the dynamic leaders of the house.
One of the biggest events of the year
was the biennial Old South Weekend
which was held in March at Asheville.
This weekend gives the KA's a chance to
grow beards in an effort to bring back
the good old daze.
The KA's also enjoyed beach weekend,
and they held two beer blasts with the
Fideles. The Pikas still are wondering
how the KA's got away with it.
Nonetheless, the KA's had an extremely
active year and a brotherhood which was
active in most areas of campus life. Rob-
ert E. Lee would be proud of these wor-
shippers of the past.
Left to right: Don Polifka, Lex Grahm, Dick
Heidgard, Frank Rose, John May, Butch Baker,
Fred Wendorf, John Warner, Dick Ames, Chuck
Powell, Ivey Smith, Bill Sned, Darrell Smith,
Stan Rogers, Craig Swaim, Bill Brown, Donn
Freeman, David Ott, Fred Cook, Don Kobos,
Gary Milliard, Jimmy Clack, Bud Carlton, Bob
Lee, David Stanley.
Top: KA rush helps
Above: Butch Baker
illlllli I Iniiilllllll lllliiilTlll '"liMil
M ' mi |i MM\WP\
Below: A little help from the "bunny girls"
during rush helped cap a big Kappa Sig year of
intramurals, homecoming decorations, and fun.
It ^^±
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In J
KAPPA SIGMA
Plaid-Clad Kappa Sigs Preserve Their Image
The Kappa Sigs filled their '67-'6S, as
their image would direct, with glen plaids,
tassels and alpacas. The men seemed to
take pride in their traditional outlook of
clothes and shunned the newer mod
fashions.
Officers Ben Crumley, president; Phil
Cheatwood, vice-president; Boone Aiken,
secretary; and Ed Ferguson, treasurer,
planned and carried out an active and
full social and athletic schedule.
The Star and Crescent weekend and
Beach Weekend highlighted the year.
Parents Day gave the brothers a chance
to show off the house, and the annual
Mountain Trip, Thanksgiving Party, and
Commode Ball helped round out the year.
Kappa Sigma had reason to be proud of
its individual brothers, too. Bill Gordon,
student body treasurer, Henry Bostic,
co-editor of the Old Gold and Black,
Doug Stokes, I.F.C. president, and Bill
Overman, chairman of the Men's Judicial
Board, were the outstanding senior broth-
ers of the house.
The Kappa Sigs had a year to be proud
of. The men were active in every field
of campus life and showed well in all
areas. But the one question that bothered
everyone was how could those guys pay
their dues, be so active, and still buy
all those clothes? Maybe they eat right.
First Row: John Slate, Mark Mason, Henry Bostic,
Jay Hawk, Sweetheart, Don Thompson, Phil Cheat-
wood, Ben Crumley, B. D. Stokes. Second Row: Jim
Fredrickson, Ben Turner, Frankie McClain, Eddie
Arrington, Brown Bivens, Sandy Bigelow, Norman
Swenson. Third Row: Tom Lynch, Craig Summers,
Dan White, Richard Beck, Walt Kitchin, Ed Fergu-
son, Bill Parker, Mike Gunter, Rick Wash, Bill Eust-
ler, John Glover, Boone Aiken, Bill Summey. Fourth
Row: Jack Lewis, David James, Hand Barrett, George
Berkow, Kenny Culbreth, Steve Darnell, Cliff Pierce,
Tommy Boone, Al Edwards, Charlie Jones, Jones
Byrd, Gary MacUm, Chuck Adams, Bill Overman.
Fifth Row: Hoot Gibson, Bill Lambe, Jeff Mackie,
Mike Rubinstein, Bob Nixon, Chuck Floyd, Bob
Brenner.
ws
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I I I I I Hi 'II III llll jl '
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
Lambda Chi Fits Reprimand into Social Life
S ~~~~--r.~ 23 r^-r^X 2-^ ■
Lambda Chi, the house that was con-
ceived in heaven and ordained in hell,
spent the year under the brown cloud of
the "Great Reprimand."
Officers Tom Meisenhelder, president;
Carl Tucker, vice-president; George Find-
lay, secretary; and Shep Buckhalt, trea-
surer watched their men gather in a
scholarship and then a reprimand for
holding an unchaperoned outing.
An especially impressive year was high-
lighted by White Rose formal weekend,
beach weekend, The Kidnap, and a bas-
ketball tournament with ten participating
chapters. Crescent Girl Martha Gomer
represented the house proudly.
Ironically, Lambda Chi captured the
Sigma Chi trophy for the most graduating
seniors percentage-wise.
The Lambda Chi's, though, still suffered
under the old stigma. Try as they might,
they always ended up in second place.
Maybe this is why the house wears Avis
buttons and has Charlie Brown complexes.
Brothers Mark Hamilton, Car! Hibbert and Jim Hobbs fondle their dates
during Dog Day; Lambda Chi's congregate in front of their house in anticipation
of another big night. Right: Jack Jackson and Bob Wilson capture society girl
Carolyn Wright during the Lambda Chi Kidnap. Opposite Page, First Row:
Glen Carr, Paul Belvin, Tom Robinson, Randy Grant, Jim Martin. Second Row:
Hub Dockery, John Henry Jones, Tom Meisenhelder, George Findley, Carl Tucker,
Denton Bumgardner, Pete Heiberger, Art Aikman, Gene Stewart, Butch Moore.
Third Row: Tom Horner, Mark Hamilton, George Bode, Woody Mefford. Fourth
Row: Don Tate, Dick York, Joe Bryan, Colin Walker, Warren Boutilier, Bob
Sutherland, Andy Porter, Bob Wilson. Fifth Row: Dave Diamont, Shep Buckhalt,
Jim Kyle, Dan Ackley, Jay Randall. On Roof: Bill Patton, Dixon Crum, Bob
Johnson, George Spencer, Whit Whitley, Ruffin Branham, Len Prcsslar, Rick
Hartison, Ralph Beshears, Bob Clarke, Rick McCotter, John Gardner, Mike Queen,
Charlie Pamplin, Roy Wright.
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From he
r vantage
poii
t above
the
rest of t
le Laurel
, Na
ncy
Dorr
i.in
(Bottom
Right)
ches
De
rby
Day proceedings.
Then
, lik
r Shelia
Fulton
(right),
the
g.r
ent
themselv
es for eve
ryth
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car
washing
to wr
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(belt
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^!S55^==^3H5=S
LAURELS
Laurels Find Innocence Is Bliss
The Laurels had the most controversial
year of any of the societies. Under the
leadership of Linda Barrick, president;
Susan Yates, vice president; Linda Van
Oot, secretary; and Ann Meyer, treasurer,
the Laurels toed the line and refused to
be drawn into any questionable activities.
The annual Rent-a-Laurel days went
smoothly, as did the Laurel Legs Booth
at the Carnival. Even the Christmas
party with the KA's was fun.
After a successful rush, Derby Day
and Greek Week, the Laurels closed out
wrhat will be known to all members as
"The Year that Was."
Byron Wyche, sweetheart, and Dave
Bowdish, mascot, helped the girls cheer
their team on during intramurals, and
Mrs. Robert Johnson, the Laurel's
adviser, did her duty and gave advice.
Yet, nothing could help the girls
escape the ever present cloud of the
"Great Reprimand." The Laurels finally
found out the meaning of the old adage
"Never Let a Leak in your Beer Keg."
?=^fe««gi»gc=h^^ ■''ggST
**#> w
LES SOEURS
Bunnies Get Tie in Garter Bowl
: ".- Jo Hord,
Lam
Piracm, Pt£rv Per.-
Roberzsos,
:-:«d, Kithy
Bev Gadsten.
srs of the fleur-de-lis world filled
a fun year full of frantic, frenzied, fruit-
ful frolicking.
Maxine Zaiken, president;
Aleta Cochane, vice-president; Joan Marie
Shallcross, secretary: and Chris Severn,
treasurer, were the ones responsible for
all that "i" ing.
Activities this year were highlighted
by the Garter Bowl Game pitting the Les
Soeur Bunnies against the Poteat Play-
boys. Despite heavy pre- game betting no
fix could be proved and the match ended
in a draw.
Two men from Poteat were sidelined
with injuries and ihe Bunnies were penal-
ized heavily.
The year continued with a water-
balloon booth at the carnival, a Christ-
mas party with the men from Davis,
and of course intra-society basketball and
volleyball.
Tom Ginn, society sweetheart, was
serenaded on Valentines Day. The girl's
figured if you can't do it then, you can't
do it.
All in all, this was a successful year
for the Les Soeurs. But how can anyone
be happy full of fleur-de-lis fuzz?
■■*v(
Left: Sisters practice volleyball to help them-
selves ronnd into form. Bfloif: Si:::-
enjoys some of the delicacies as part of Derby
Day. Bottom: The Les Soeurs get set to par oc
their rush ikk.
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiijijWi ' l,rrrfT:Ffriiff^m'"mM'«gg=3;
Front Row: Hank Himcs, Pebble Will, Chip Seidle, Dan
Baxlev. Thurston Dcbnam. Braxton Culler, Don Smith.
Dave Pugh, Skip Haskel, Dan Byrum, Tommy Bell. Don
Wagoner, John Spivey. Paul LaRoque, Ingrid Kvam, Swe
heart. Back Row: Coy Brewer, Earl Trulove, Chris M
shall. Tony Liner, Mike Long, Grey Lawrence, Jim Vostcrs
Tom Preston, Ken Lilyquist. Randy Creech, Frank Baker
Bill Preston, Harold McDowell, Steve Teitlcman, Ken Er.k
son, Bob Jacobsen, Ramsey Breazeale, Johnny Walker
Denny Hauser, Stomp Allen.
*.-.-
■■
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Pika plans await next year
The Pikas added to their reputations for
hell raising this year by not being able
to do so. In what many considered to
be the outstanding social regression of
1967, the House that Brotherhood Built
was placed on social probation by the
Student Affairs Committee for social
violations.
President Ed Parker and V. P. Dan By-
rum had anticipated another big year
for their men, but due to the ruling,
their plans must wait.
However, in spite of such overwhelm-
ing problems, the house did manage to
contribute to the campus life in general.
Pikas were prominent in most areas of
campus life and, paradoxically, David
Pugh was head cheerleader for Wake
Forest.
Sweetheart Ingrid Kvam brought beau-
ty to the house, and the brotherhood
was able to continue such activities as
tube watching, dating individually, and
sitting on their wall.
Thus, the year went on for the Pikas.
Coy Brewer, secretary, had fewer min-
utes to take, and Ramsey Breazeale,
treasurer, had fewer checks to write. But
the Pikas won't toss in the towel.
As the New York Mets once said,
"There is no where to go but up."
PJMrfflJgBaggSgiwWS^'
J5JH5-=t:
SIGMA CHI
Sig Politicians Spend A Year On Top
The Sigma Chi's continued to hold
the honor of having more and varied ster-
eotypes applied to them than any other
house at Wake. The men, depending on
the occasion, have been called the "Milk-
men," the "Politicians," the "Scholarly
Jocks," and other assorted names.
The officers, Tom Irwin, president;
Ed Hallman, vice-president; Nat Siewers,
treasurer; and Homer Brookshire, secre-
tary, proceeded through the year holding
such varied activities as the annual Derby
Day, the Sweetheart Ball, and the party
for the underprivileged children at
Christmas time.
Again active in student affairs, the
brotherhood included the president and
vice-president of the student body, the
president of the College Union, and the
chairman of the honor council.
Sweetheart Janie Williams aided the
men in another year of successful rush,
and the athletes of the house represented
the University well.
All in all, 1967-1968 was a high spot
in Sigma Chi history. And they hit this
high on chocolate milk. Is this any way
to run a fraternity?
Seated: Steve Bierly, Jim Cross, Sam Huffstetler,
Jim Stone, Charles Holland, Byron Wyche, John
Hudson, Doug Jardine, Dick Ftedeking, Paul
Savage, Jim Hustine. Standing on Left: Tom
Jones, Bo King, Keith Lembo, Chip Cooper, John
Stone, Frank Beck, Steve Burns, Tom Irwin, Tom
Stuetzer, Grey Godde, Ron Carter, Phil Gasaway,
Ken West, Alfred Adams. Around Car: Tom Wil-
liams, Eric Fruin, Karl Haighler, David Bowdish,
Lee Callaway, Bill Rucker, Jim Byrd, Michael
Mulkey, Brad Brewer, Carl Tyner, Runo Ander-
son, Ray Spurr. Around Bull: Van Smith, Forrest
Hollifield. John Matson, Tom Ginn, Jeff Kincheloe,
Jim Wells, Homer Brookshire, Greg Roark, Dem
Ward, Ed Hallman, Bill Stout, Steve Kelley, Jerry
Chostner, Kip Quale, Dick Hesler, Hank Goehrig,
Bob Dunckel.
* -ASSESS
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* — • - - .
■
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sig Eps Get Most Pledges in Spring Rush
The Sig Eps, more commonly known as
the training camp for unsung ballplayers,
had the largest pledge class of the 1968
spring rush.
Officers Dan Dolan, president; Larry
Johnson, vice-president; Bill Mileham 3nd
Don Phillips, secretaries; and Rudy Ash-
ton, treasurer, made major redecorating
improvements in the house.
In addition, the house ranked at the
fraternity heap for the fall semester.
Sig Ep socially had an active year
highlighted by beach weekend at Crescent
Beach in May. The men also hosted the
North Carolina Sig Ep basketball tourna-
ment with eight participating chapters.
The men were proudest of their ath-
letes. Sixteen brothers played varsity
sports and the house became the Mecca
of the sweat sock world.
Nonetheless, though the jocks seem
to be the most prevalent factor in the
house, the brothers can always look
around and say, "A jock in time saves
nine."
Right: Brother Doug Horner organizes the
pledge class. Below: The brotherhood prai
various methods of communing with nature.
Top Ron: John Berwind, Dan Cannon, Don
Phillips, John Hopper, John Picklesimer, Dwight
Gentry, Mox Kettlehake, Vince Howard, Mike
Pezzicola, Tom Mohr, George Grove, Tom Mover,
Rudy Ashton. Middle Rou : Rick Kelly, Rich
Seibert, Lee Blank, Bill Bachovchin, Phil Smith,
Joel Ludlam, Bill Mileham, Jon bright, Dan
Sparling, Don Nelson. Jack Matsinger, Ron
Pruette, Ken Weeks, Bruce Humphries, Doug
Bailey, Rick Miners, Tom Million, Rob Caskey,
Jack Stutts. Bottom Rou: Bill Taylor, Tom
Woolley, John Bruce, Larry Johnson, Quen Tay-
lor, Ron Sizemore, Chuck Sizemore, Chuck
Hodierne, Scott Irby, Paul Orser, Vicki Campbell,
sweetheart, Bill Heitman, Phil McGee. Larry
Taylor, Tom Berry, Doug Horner, Craig Robin-
son, Pete Edens, Bob Katcr, Fred Piercy, Dan
Dolan.
'■ Ii'l IIIIIIHjlilltULJLi.,1 "jM'Hi.I'U^
k£*
Opposite Page: Another Sigma Pi party turns into
another orgy. Below: Sigma Pi's move in for
hand-to-hand contact. Bottom: The brotherhood
cheers as new pledges arrive.
■■■MH
^^^^__i
, Bill Robinson,
Rick Hcnning,
ck Sheola
Front Rou: Sonny Groom
Chuck Turner, Dan Coopei
Mike Pulliam, David I
Brunkshire, Ray Bogarr
Bruce Williams, Mike Lefl
Ken Bush, Harvey Morris, Randy Kanter,
James Warren. Second Rem: Bart Char-
lour, Jack Stickling, Dick Leader, Ed Ur-
ban, Steele Redding, Matt Leeper, Bo Kil-
gore, Jim Starmer, Kurt Carlson, Preston
Cole, Linda Dudley, sweetheart, Dane
Slaton. John Tantum, Dennis Pinkleton,
Dave Burton, Dave Bennett, Ed Roach.
SIGMA PI
Pi's Teach the Campus How to Have Fun
What can you say about the Sigma Pi's?
This fraternity, as much as any other at
Wake, has added to the Greek system in
different ways.
Officers Dave Bennett, president; Rich
Sheola, vice-president; Bill Robinson,
secretary; and Dan Cooper, treasurer,
planned an active year and rumor has it
that the Sigma Pi parties were among the
best on campus.
Sweetheart Linda Dudley, pinned to
Preston Cole, proudly represented the Pi's
at the annual Orchid Formal Ball, Beach
Weekend and Homecoming Party.
Of course no year would be complete
without the Orphan's Party. Let's hear
it for the Orphans.
What the Pi's offered to the Greek
system, as a point of interest, was the
ability to finesse Homecoming decora-
tions, and the ability to have parties with
the societies and still have a good time.
These abilities should not go unmen-
tioned. Who knows when the MRC might
start to copy the Pi's.
-^ggr?77=
i iiiiiinin'i.iiMjjiijjji i Mul
SOPH.
Sincerity Can't Snap Garter Girls' Losing Streak
LEFT PAGE. Front Rem-: Susan Henderson, Ann
Stoltz, David Pugh, Sweetheart, Austine Odom,
Patsy McGrady, Louise Gunby, Debbie Snapp.
Second Row: Carol Lindner, Gloria Howard,
Peggy Taylor, Jane Miller, Sara Davis, Nancy
Price, Susan Honeycutt, Harriett Farthing, Prue
McDermod. Third Row: Jo Lynne McNeill, Susan
Rivenbark, Donna May, Charlanne Fields. RIGHT
PAGE, Standing: Joanne Kline, Jean Stott, Nelda
Morgan, Betsy Smith, Carol Hester, Nancy Out-
law. Carolyn Norfleet. Ill Tree: Joyce Trigg.
Seated: Terry Fuller, Betty Hyder, Mary Anne
Pregnall, Diane Baldwin, Kathy Pagliara, Betsy
Burrell, Carolyn Hahn, Becky Si
Early.
The Garter Girls of S.O.P.H., with their
traditional flower, the white rose, in
hand, scampered through another year
of sisterhood and losing teams.
Under the direction of officers Susan
Rivenbark, president; Donna May, vice
president; Joanne Kline and Susan
Honeycutt, secretaries; and Joyce Trigg,
treasurer, the girls enjoyed the company
of the fraternities in planning many
outings.
Three sisters, Austine Odom, Karen
Swartz, and Debbie Snapp, were named to
Who's Who, and Austine was crowned
Homecoming Queen.
However, even with the coaching of
sweetheart David Pugh, the girls had
more laughs than victories during intra-
murals as they took pride more in their
feminity than their athletic prowess.
This femininity was best seen in the
party for the underpriviledged children
at Christmas, the Barbershop booth at the
carnival, the seranade for their sweet-
heart, and their alumni tea (contrary
to rumors, "S.O.P.H.ocles" did not at-
tend).
S.O.P.H.'s tradition is as rich as any
society's, but the sisters have yet to
answer the question, "Can a Garter Girl
be happy in a girdle world?"
S.O.P.H.s are a busy bunch of people. Susan
Honeycutt and Patsy McGrady rush a freshman
(right), and a new sister makes a society dress
(below). An S.O.P.H. sign (above) gives en-
couragement to a floundering Deacon football
nrrfflfflinimmpiiMfflrr in a
Any society that sells mistletoe at
Christmas can't be all bad; or maybe the
Strings just try harder. Regardless of
the reason, Strings had another big year,
alive with activities and spirit.
Under the leadership of Jan Wuerten-
berger, president; Suzie Owensby, vice-
president; Jenni Jacober, secretary; Foy
Edmond, treasurer; and David Diamont,
coach, the Strings filled the year with
"fun and togetherness," which, to you
outsiders, are the Strings' p3ss words.
The girls, who have two straight
Derby Day victories under their belts, are
shooting for their third win and the
right to retire the trophy.
In addition to sponsoring the Fall
Carnival's psychedelic floor show entry
and Glamour magazine's "Best Dressed"
contest, the Strings gaily completed
the year with a spirit worthy of their
twenty-first birthday.
Throughout the birthday festivities,
the girls somehow kept in mind the old
proverb, "A good String is always able
to pull some."
Front Row: Susie Owensby, JoAnn Eskridge,
Lois Wyche, Shirley Gazsi, Nancy Carol Bost, Pat
Hopkins. Second Row: Emily Stiefle, Mary
Stellings, Bek Howell, Becky Melton, Ty Porter,
Jan Wuerter.berger, Sue Ellen Parkinson, Betsy
McDonald, Linda Jones, Dotty Kay Turner, Iris
Hansen, Arden Harris, Dave
Barbara Delaney, Grace White, Ellen Sanford.
On SiJc: Rhonda Bean, Lois Bergman, Norma
Murdoch, Donna Marshall, Foy Edmond, Jenny
Jacober, Candy Corvey, Maria
STRINGS
A Twenty-first Year of "Stringliness'
iii'lii'iiniiii ii mum mm mi ■ ilrnw*^
front: Gary Gough, Kim Menke, Lawrence Nich-
olls. Dean Walters, Holt Felmet, Ray Nasser,
Scott Reid, Mike Pleasant, Sam Kern, Tom Dunby,
Rhett Ledbetter, Dave Stanback, Wayne Jordon,
Bobby Hathaway, Durante Griffin, Tom Wood-
ruff, Jay McNeil, Dave Siceloff, Paul Long, Lloyd
Halvorson, Bruce Wally, Bob George, Dave Talia-
ferro, Buzzic Shuford, Chris Sailor. Buck: Dave
King, Dave Ashcraft, Gene Fitzsimmons, Bill
Raisner, Bill Garnett, Herb Grote. Richard Lyle,
Sonny Hood, Milton Gold, Steve Dollinger, Jim
Garrish, Steve Earl, Jim Rutherford, Steward
Ours, Dave Van Delinder, Ed Polly, Jim Call
Glen Van Der Ploog.
J*
THETA CHI
Theta Chi's Take Top Trophies
Theta Chi, the house that is made up
of athletes, not athletic supporters, again
dominated fraternity intramurals.
Officers Ken Thomas, president; Dean
Walters, vice-president; Durante Griffin,
secretary; and David Siceloff, treasurer
directed their men through an active year
and an active workout.
Theta Chi dream girl, Mrs. Connie
Thomas, represented the house at the
major functions of the year: the Sword
and Serpent formal in March and the
Dreamgirl Weekend at Myrtle Beach in
May.
This year men of Theta Chi celebrated
their twentieth anniversary with an abun-
dance of parties and good times.
Whee.
Percy Bloxam, the demon deacon of
1966-1967, rounded into form and began
entertaining in 1967-1968.
The rest of the year was one trophy
after another, and the Theta Chi's will
be hard pressed to find enough room to
keep them. Maybe they could rent some
space from Davis House lounge.
RED »« UEUCOWL
Opposite page, top: Rushecs get a sample
of Theta Chi friendliness. Opposite page.
bottom: The brotherhood cheers for W.F.
playing at Carolina. Abate: Theta Chi's
move in for another point. Left: The
house gets decorated for homecoming.
111 "■^™iiiiiiiM||!W"Mptt»P^
Fmnt Row: Robert Arbano, Dave Gasqu
, Mike
Mandiple, Steve Owen, Chester David
Dean
Abernathy. Donnie Bobo, Al Stauch, Ed
Below,
Chip Biernbaum, James Stone. Second Ren
. Bob-
by Ervin. Frank Donaldson, Dave Myer,
Bobby
Ferrell, Jim Bubler, Charlie Caskey. On
Roof:
Ron McCord, Phil Russeell, Royce Givens.
Stand-
ing: Dan Hobbs, Bill Link, Roy Grant.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
A Talking Christmas Card for Vietnam
APO brothers began another year help-
ing move in freshman girls, in registra-
tion, and in student physicals. Intra-
Campus mail service and hospital service
continued without stay. In October, an
enlarged Student-Faculty Directory was
published, and on a Fall Workday pledges
painted at the Patterson Avenue Mission.
The traditional APO tree appeared in
Reynolds Hall for the Christmas season,
and soldiers in Vietnam heard WFU stu-
dents on APO's Talking Christmas Card.
A Spring Workday and help with the
Maritimcrs' Show, plus projects with local
scout troops ended the year. All in all,
1967-1968 was another year in which
Kappa Theta Chapter practiced its ideals
of Leadership, Friendship and Service.
wmm
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'^L
"J*
RELIGION
Directing the Winds of
Change
There can be little doubt that the
last years of the Tribble administration
were among the darkest in the long
relationship of Wake Forest College and
the Baptist State Convention. The almost
perennial defeats of Tribble's moderate
proposals to accept limited federal aid
and broaden the base from which trustees
are chosen had so embittered many
alumni and friends of the college that
any talk of the Baptists seemed to lead
to a discussion of the merits of separa-
tion, not reform. To many, the Baptists'
chance to accept Wake Forest as an
educational institution first and a Baptist
school second seemed to have passed.
They looked to the new president to
lead them in their quest for academic
excellence through separation.
To the more extreme fire-eaters,
James Ralph Scales has proved to be a
disappointment. They were surprised
when Biblical Recorder editor Marse
Grant endorsed the selection of Scales
as a strategic decision by the trustees to
keep Wake Forest as a Baptist institution.
They became nervous when the president
talked of attracting the brightest
scholars and then "scattering them
abroad to renew the mind and transform
the fellowship of the whole Christian
community." And if the first year is any
indication of the future, the Scales
administration intends to strengthen and
not sever the Baptist ties.
■ » mum m i' i ii iiiiw— —
BSU supper forums take all forms— even
picnics. Dean Tom Elmore and a group
of students (aboic) listen to a panel dis
while Buddy Herring and Charlene Fields talk
with Dr. Howell Smith (top).
*j.
The BSU's newest committee, the folk choir,
made a noticable dent in 'Wake Forest's normal
pattern of worship. The folk mass and its hymn
"Lord of the Dance" were a welcome sign that
the Church indeed wasn't dead. Charles Kirkland
(helm-) leads a rehersal.
A program of strengthening the ties,
however, should not be cause for rejoice-
ment in the fundamentalist camp, for the
Scales conception of the University's
place in the framework of the Baptist
world is not one of teaching dogma, but
one of "directing the winds of change."
And for those who remember President
William Louis Poteat's battle against
the "monkey laws," it is rather obvious
that Wake Forest is not going to lead
in the direction of a dogmatic Christian-
ity.
Actually, the broadening of the
religious philosophy at Wake Forest is
something which began long before the
election of President Scales. It is reflected
particularly in the structure of the
campus religious groups.
The Baptist Student Union, formerly
the dominant religious group on campus,
has integrated much of its activity with
the Interdenominational Center, which
is composed of the chaplains of all campus
religious organizations. Moreover, this
year's activities by the BSU showed a
broadening of its old program and a
willingness to experiment with new ones.
The Mission Committee continued its
work on the Patterson Avenue project,
where students worked with underprivi-
ledged children in Winston-Salem, help-
ing them to improve themselves in areas
as diverse as etiquette at the Girl's Club
and athletic events for the boys. The
newly formed folk choir (accompanied
by guitar, bass and banjo) led "folk
masses" at several area churches, and
led the worship service at the Summit
Conference. Supper meetings of the BSU
this year included a lecture about
"Listen," the state BSU's summer mission
program, and discussion lead by Dr.
Scales and several faculty members.
The Interdenominational Center's
major activities of the year were its
widely-attended Pre-School Retreat and
the New York Seminar over semester
break. The seminar included tours of the
City and Broadway plays as well as
discussions on religious topics.
The major theme of theological
liberalism was struck, however, by the
University itself. A de-emphasis on
evangelical sermons during the required
chapel programs was only the most
obvious sign that religion at Wake Forest
meant more than "Bible Belt" Chris-
tianity.
SSS3S^35KS?5-S
A Renewed Spirit of Ecumenism
Below left: Rabbi David Rose discusses an aca-
demic problem w.th a student. His course in
Post-Biblical Judaism was a popular new offering
of the Religion Department. Below: BSUers re-
move a sign from their mission house on Patter-
son Avenue. Bottom: Dan Gaddy and Linda Wat-
kins enjoy the quiet atmosphere of the attic,
which is operated by the interdenominational
chaplains. Right: Chaplains: L. H. Hollingsworth,
D. Riffe, E. Christman, J. Viverette.
The Religion Department, long one of
the most respected on campus, continued
to climb in prestige, and added to its cur-
riculum a course in Post-Biblical Judaism
taught by a Jewish rabbi.
Most importantly, the Trustees voted
in February to establish an Ecumenical
Institute at the University. It will begin
functioning fully in the summer of 1969
when its first planned conference of visit-
ing scholars will be held. The Institute
will be headed by former presidential ad-
visor and congressman Brooks Hayes, who
is one of the very few laymen to have
served as president of the Southern Bap-
tist Convention. Its studies will be in the
area of Christian history and the history
of the ecumenical movement itself, and
will draw upon the resources of the de-
partments of sociology, history, and En-
glish as well as religion.
Warren Carr of the Wake Forest Bap-
tist Church probably best summed up the
attitude of the University toward the
religious movement when he wrote in
The Student that "the emphasis of our
time insists that the true servants of
Christ will go where the action is." The
religious groups and the University, both
practically and philosophically, are cer-
tainly moving in this direction.
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in 'ii ini_
SPORTS
"You have to play to really know"
Montgomery pops in a fifteen foot jump-
er, Theriault climbs out of the mud
and off the halfback he's nailed behind
the line, Hodsdon finishes five miles of
hell . . . and the list goes on.
It looks easy when you see them do it,
and even though you know how hard
they worked, you can never feel the
strain. Imagine what it's like to spend
extra hours in a lonely gym — sunlight
gone from the windows above — prac-
ticing jump shots, and thinking of how
your legs will feel when you're through;
or try putting in three hours a day of
gut-busting, sometimes bloody football
practice from the middle of August till
the end of November, knowing all the
while that Spring ball will be twice as
hard; if that's not enough, get up before
dawn six days a week, run eight to ten
miles through damp woods and soggy
fairways — then go to class.
As an outsider, the closest you could
come to feeling what it's like would be
to put on a limp, damp uniform — any
sport's — after it's been worn in practice.
You would feel the caked scum of oily
sweat, bloodstained dirt, grass stains and
spittle. It's not pleasant to be near and
the smell is the worst part of all. But
at least you'd have the physical sensation
of what it's all about, and you'd be close,
yet still so far away.
As the rank and dirty uniforms adhere
themselves to floor and benches, there is
activity going on in which no one but an
athlete can participate. The locker room
is a world in itself with sights, sounds and
smells separate and distinct from those
outside. Here you see cuts, floor burns,
swollen ankles, boils, raw blisters and
bruises. There are jocks, hung on light
bulbs, worn as head bands, and wrapped
around 16 lb. shots. From the corners
come private pep talks; ethnic jokes and
off-key songs emerge from the showers,
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and in the treatment room you talk of
co-eds or listen to "Doc" — mostly you
listen to "Doc." He likes it that way.
The place has its own atmosphere, smell-
ing at once of sweat, Dial, baby powder,
deodorants, after-shaves and rancid ci-
gars. It takes a while to get used to, and
some of the uninitiated never do. They
don't last long. To be a part of a team
you must be part of the locker room. For
an outsider it's hard to understand but
then most of what an athlete represents is
difficult to understand.
In the truest sense of the word, sports
belong to the athletes, and not the pag-
entry of color, the pretty girls with pret-
ty boys and poor seats, and the rabid
alumni fans full of good spirits. A sport
is for those who in nine innings, four
quarters, or just a matter of seconds are
trying to realize the hours spent in
practice.
Competition, not observation, is the
name of the game, and win or lose, it
takes the same amount of work. If you're
part of it you know what it's all about.
If not, you're a spectator.
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SECTION EDITED BY DENNIS WHALEN
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FOOTBALL
Guts, Gore, and One Hellava Brawl
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What can be said of a football team
with a 4-6 season's record? A team that
according to its coach, fans, new stadium
promoters, and even players was to be
one of the best ever. Can you tell of a
superb offensive unit — quick, precisioned
and powerful; a defensive unit — big and
mean, with kill written all over them?
You really can't say those things about
the Wake Forest team of 1967, because
it just wasn't like that.
It was a different kind of team, with a
different kind of game from the one pre-
dicted at the start of the season. It was a
team of cocky, untried sophomores, of
juniors, veterans of only a single season,
and of seniors who had never known a
winning record. It was a ten game season
of mistakes, mismatches, big breaks, no
breaks, and heart — above all it was a
season for heart. Try to expkin how you
dropped six games in a row, with a 14-12
squeaker and a 5 0-6 slaughter played
back to back, then, using the same plays,
personnel and coaches, won the remain-
ing four, without saying it was heart.
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From an 0-6 Beginning • . .
Heart is what makes a football
player, and win or lose he's got to have it
or he quits. It's a combination of desire
and guts — the want to and the sticking
to. You lost six in a row, right? People
quit following you because nobody sticks
with a loser. Ticket sales dropped off and
effigies appeared on plaza light poles, mur-
murs of "dumb jocks" were more com-
mon. Your suitemates kidded you and
your girl friend cried, but football prac-
tice went on.
Into dusk, in the rain pads popped and
ribs ached, but you kept on. Some noses
bled, cleat marks always do, and stom-
achs heaved when pushed too far. Those
wind sprints at the end were some kind
of evil. Coaches yelled — Madden the
most, like he enjoyed it — and the yellow
baseball cap was always there. He saw
you drop the pass, miss the block, or
fumble the handoff. Sometimes he spoke,
but often he just watched, and that
scared you the most. Maybe you hated
Tate, blamed him for the losses. And if
you did you shut up and kept going.
There just wasn't any other way of
doing it.
t
The Duke game was played in Raleigh
because someone in the athletic offices
crossed signals. It was the first game of
the season and you wanted to make a
good impression, but the breaks went
the other way, and you came home 0-1.
You went to Houston and it was a
horror show. When Gipson wasn't going
inside for ten or fifteen, McVea went
outside for twenty, and Summers spent
most of his time running from, not at.
When it was over, everybody joked about
it — you cry only at the close ones —
but your pride hurt. There were Clemson,
Memphis and N. C. State as well.
Clemson was good, in "Death Valley"
they were great. But still it would have
been nice to make "Fat Frank" shut up
to lose at home. You went to Memphis
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— they've got a fairly new stadium, some
say a lot like our new one will be, but
you knew that a new stadium wouldn't
make a better team. Looks don't mean
a damn thing.
N. C. State was a national power and
to beat them would have really done a
lot for morale. But they wanted to win
too. They did, and you came home feel-
ing a little lower, but Monday you went
right back to work. You don't lick
wounds in this game.
Carolina is always a good game, and
this year the teams were really matched
— they'd won once to your six losses.
You played the same as always, but Butch
Henry's defensive work near the goal line
was a big help, and when it was over so
was the losing string. 1-6 didn't look
very good, but 0-7 would have looked
worse.
Homecoming and South Carolina was
next — Paul Dietzel, golf cart and all.
They were pretty good, too, and se-
niors remembered that they hadn't won a
homecoming game since coming to Wake.
Ericson and Tate especially remembered
the last one. The first time you had the
ball you drove for a touchdown, and kept
on driving till you'd won. A senior
walked off the field crying. The safety
was a thing of the past.
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To a 4-0 Ending
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Scheduling Tulsa must have been some-
body's idea of a joke. Their defense was
big, about 245 per man, and our offense
went about 215. Somebody wanted to
use "Doc" Martin for center, figuring
Summers might live a little longer be-
cause they'd have to run around the
middle of the line. You fooled everybody
— even yourselves, and it was some game:
Digit's interception, and whatever it
was that happened in the last second on
the goal-line.
By then a .500 season was out, but
you figured that .400 was better than
.300, so you really went after Maryland.
When it was over Tate had a new con-
tract and you had a 4-0 finish. Every-
one forgets the past.
For guys like Grant and Henry, Deck-
er and Stuetzer, and the other seniors, it
was all over. Maybe they thought back
to late August '64 when they met for
the first time, had their heads shaved and
began the closest four years of living
they'd ever know.
It wasn't a great football team, some
will argue that it wasn't even a good one,
but they didn't quit. That's what made
it worthwhile to them, and that's all
that counts.
BASKETBALL
The Year the Sophomores Learned to Walk
The coliseum is empty now, lit sparsely
and then only for the watchman. Some-
where out in Section B is seat 34; unlike
the rest it's occupied. The climate's dif-
ferent now: no bright lights, pep bands,
or cheerleaders. He sits where she sat
all year to watch him, and each game
of the home season comes back to him.
She wanted to come tonight, and he
almost let her, but what he had to think
about was for him alone. He wasn't
being selfish; he was saving her from
having to share the melancholy of silence
and disappointment.
It was supposed to have been a good
season — not perfect, but at least better
than the one before it. Some had picked
Wake to finish fourth in the ACC; and
with tournament play as it always is,
there was no telling how far they could
g°-
The team was young — often starting
four sophomores and a junior. Theirs was
a big load to carry, and the record would
seem to indicate their failure. But he
wasn't so sure, because even though they
compiled the worst record in the school's
history, next year they'd all be back, a
year older and a little wiser.
The sophomores had it rough all season,
but the junior may have had it the rough-
est. He's a gutty ballplayer, lacking
size and quickness, but making up for it
with hard work and a quality no one has
yet defined. Paul Long was gone, and to
the junior fell the task of leading a
group of sophomores who had compiled a
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Some They Won
most successful freshman season. They
were neither brash nor cocky, but their
confidence and eagerness was a lot to ask
a junior to control, especially when things
got rough.
They played the first game of the
season at home. It was an unusual begin-
ning, because Wake usually opens against
Davidson in Charlotte. N. C. State was
supposed to have been a Wake victory;
the only trouble was that no one had told
the Wolfpack. Bidenback was back, and
even though he got into foul trouble he
could still give you ulcers. People came
early and got a first look at another fine
freshman team. But the Wolfpack went
back to Raleigh one up on the varsity.
Auburn is an SEC school which believes
in other big sports besides football. He
remembered Vanderbilt from last year,
but somehow "Auburn" didn't ring with
the same authority as "Vanderb
"Tennessee," or "Kentucky." Wake led
at halftime, but foul trouble and some
calls gave the game to Auburn.
The difference was three points — that
didn't matter — only the "W's" and "L's"
count.
Practice was no different before the
Maryland game, except that it was an
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ACC game, so they put a little more
"want to" into the workouts. It was a
good game really, a little rough in spots,
but the "W" meant .500 in ACC play.
Christmas vacation began just before
the William and Mary game. Most stu-
dents had gone home, but quite a few
townspeople turned out to see Wake play.
When it was over they were well satis-
fied— they'd seen the sophomores win by
2 8 points. For the second time in as many
games, they put a win in the schedule
card.
There was a long road trip before
the next home stand, and he'd just as
soon forget about it. i"he trip added five
more "L's" to the chart. It was really
getting to be a long season.
The Temple game was another loss,
but at least it wasn't played in the Pales-
tra. He'd been there before, and he knew
that it was the place where the "home
court advantage" was born. Later on
Wake would play St. Joseph's there, and
then he could worry about the Pit. The
Most They Lost . . .
game of basketball is played one at a
time. And that's how you worry about
it — one at a time.
Two more losses were added to the
card as a result of road ga
The next three games constituted the
last home series; they were all ACC
games. Tournament time was getting
close, and Wake's ranking most certainly
depended on how well they did in the
final home stand. But the only rankings
helped by that series were those of Wake's
opponents: South Carolina, North Caro-
lina, and Clemson.
South Carolina was as rugged a ball
club as there was around. They looked
football players in basketball uniforms,
but they scored like they knew they were
in the right game.
North Carolina is usually a good game,
tense and close, but it just wasn't like
that this year. It was a hard loss to take,
but it wasn't as though there was a
choice. Carolina had too much this year:
too much Miller, Scott, Clark, and the
rest.
The Clemson game was about as du
a game as ever was played. Neither team
looked any good, but somewhere in the
mess Clemson managed 13 points more
than Wake, and that meant the third
home loss in a
There was one home game remaining,
but it had to wait until three more
road losses had been chalked up. By now
it was a known fact that teams couldn't
run with Duke and hope to win.
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Twice before Wake had tried to match
pace with the Blue Devils, and the
average loss was by thirty-five points.
The only hope was a slow-down, deliber-
ate game. It was close at half time —
Wake led by three. The end was also
close — Duke won by nine.
It really hurt to face people after that
game. What was wrong, they wanted to
know. Who was making the mistakes,
and how were they to be corrected? He
couldn't give specific answers because
there weren't any. The team went out
to play to win, but it seemed that all
they could do was lose. Sometimes he
thought he could hear her cheering in the
stands. It helped — it always does — but
it couldn't win games.
That was all there was to it, but
there'd be next year with new faces as
well as new hopes. Gil, Charlie, and Neil
would help. The sophomores would be
juniors, and Montgomery's job wouldn't
be quite as difficult.
No, he decided, they hadn't failed.
Nobody ever grows up in a year. If next
season should be 5-21, he could say they
failed; but this year was the year they
learned to walk.
With that in mind. Jack McCloskey
picked up his coat, nodded to the watch-
man, and went home.
II II II IWHIIIIII II I III I Ml I ' lii
MINOR SPORTS
Laundry Money Isn't Everything
They don't average five yards per carry
or 14 points and 12 rebounds per game;
nor do they enjoy the luxuries of per-
sonal dining service and monthly "laun-
dry money." Yet, the contribution of
the athlete who participates in a minor
sport is just as substantial as that of
the "major sport" scholarship athlete.
The term "minor sport" is quite mis-
leading, and it is used here only in the
context that these particular sports do
not furnish any appreciable income that
could be directed toward self mainte-
nance. Because of this fact, it is necessary
that we have money sports such as foot-
ball and basketball, for without proper
materials not even the greatest talent can
hope to make a good showing.
There are six of these so-called "minor
sports" at Wake Forest, each having its
own values, traditions, and personality.
But they all have the same goal — to win.
In concept, all are team sports, but,
•vith the exception of baseball, they break
down into varying degrees of individual
competition and require a great deal of
personal confidence and preparation.
"Cross-country is for nuts and people
who want to be like nuts." So said Johnny
Kelly of Groten, Conn., one of the coun-
try's best distance runners. People ask
Kelly why he keeps up his running, and
he answers that if he ever figures out
the answer, he'll quit. That's all you
can say about why there are those who
choose to run 75 to 90 miles per week,
to lower their heart rates into the 50's,
and to defy others to discover a single
ounce of excess fat on their frames.
Many students have been disturbed by
their roomie's going out before dawn to
do eight or ten miles of fartleck — chasing
rabbits, dawn, milk trucks, or whatever
else they may chance to romp by. Al-
though much has been said about "the
loneliness of the long-distance runner,"
the feeling experienced out there is not so
much loneliness as a peaceful solitude
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between the runner and the elements.
There is really no pain, and the fatigue
factor is psychological as much as any-
thing else, especially for a person in good
condition.
Cross-country runners may be looked
upon as nuts, but apparently they've
found something that few others have
found — a remarkable sense of self-dis-
cipline and physiological well-being.
Tennis — that's a neat sport. Two or
four guys run around, hammer this fuzzy
white ball back and forth, and call it
love. It sort of makes one wonder what
type of people play tennis.
Actually, however, tennis is a game
of much concentration and stamina, espe-
cially since the scoring can be quick and
decisive or long and tedious. And if a
player's mental attitude can be shaken
somewhere along the line, there is a good
chance that his opponent will notice it
and use it to his advantage.
In the past, Wake's tennis teams
haven't been what people would call
"smashing" — "faulted" might be a bet-
ter word, as long as the vocabulary is
out. The last few years, however, have
seen Jim Leighton take a young squad,
develop their confidence, and bring them
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An Equal Place . . .
to a point where they are able to begin
their season with a string of at least five
victories. There is little chance that they
will finish the season with a perfect
record, but, when you consider that not
long ago they had trouble winning a
single match, you must admit that they
have done quite well.
It is significant to note that two of
the minor sports are considered to be
among the most strenuous in all of ath-
letics. One, cross-country, has already
been mentioned as a sport for the inane
and masochistically oriented individual.
The other, swimming, goes one step fur-
ther— you gotta get wet.
There is a certain disregard for one's
personal comfort that goes along with
being a competitive swimmer. Watch
the thousand-yard freestyle sometime,
especially the face of the guy flipping
the cards over as he counts the laps from
one to forty for his teammate. Right
then you can see what swimming is all
about. By the same token, victory or
defeat in swimming is often measured by
a touch rather than a tenth of a second.
It's that close. But there's no victory for
second — there never will be.
Victories are nice to have, but for the
past few years only one Wake Forest
team has consistently managed to be on
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With Different Values, Traditions, Personalities
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top: the golf team.
Golf is not a sport of rugged action
or of beating a stop watch. Rather it is
one of perfection, timing, and nerves,
played by gentlemen in accordance with
all of the rules. Wake Forest has a golf
team that nears perfection: what else can
you call it when they win the two-round
conference tournament by thirty-five
strokes?
There is little need to dwell on past
success, however, for the present team
shows all of the excellence and consis-
tency that has characterized the past
clubs. To guys like Snipes, Thompson,
Harris, the Lewis's, and Coach Haddock,
who we just stand back, watch, and ad-
mire, our only words can be, "It's nice to
have you around."
In the years gone by, baseball was
a big crowd sport, but the rise in popu-
larity of basketball and football cut
heavily into attendance at the "ole ball
park." Baseball is a demanding sport,
requiring some thirty or more games
from its players. These long schedules
may be part of the reason for the decline
in college-level baseball, for it asks much
of the student. Also, the professional
organization, with its big bonuses, bites
heavily into the talent supply. Once the
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And A Common Goal — To Win
pro scouts start looking, a coach doesn't
know who will return for the next
season.
This year's team is young, but many
of its players got their hard knocks last
year. As a result, more games should be
won this year, and Jack Stallings should
be a little happier.
Contrary to popular belief, a track
team does exist; but as are most collegiate
track teams, it is not as close a unit
as are the football and baseball teams.
Track is too individualistic in college
to be warm and friendly. Each man is a
team in himself. If he is good, he is
given to his own schedule and training
program; he cannot be bothered with
running practice laps with those who
come out to get in shape or with those
who have only mediocre talent.
Track, however, does have one quality
unattainable in most other sports — the
feeling which you get when you've done
something really well and you alone are
responsible. It stretches the pride thing
a bit, but extra hours of practice can be
done only by a single individual. No
amount of coaching is ever going to im-
prove upon the basic desire to succeed
in an athlete.
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■■■■
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INTRAMURALS
"You sort'a back into it"
The emotionally-oriented behavior pat-
tern of the human being produces tensions
which must be relieved if the stability of
the organism is to be maintained. Tension
relievers are numerous in form and vary
from trips to the TOG (most relaxing)
to temper tantrums (most positive),
from extra studying (you can't please
everybody) to observing freshmen foot-
ball players at work (?) and play (most
humorous). Somewhere within this loose
structure of t.r.'s is the idea of going to
the gym to work off laminated tension as
well as other stuff. It is the nature of this
"other stuff," however, that draws our
attention. You might say we've backed
into the topic.
The entrance to the W. N. Reynolds
Gymnasium is guarded by two holly trees,
one male, the other female. Their presence
conveys the idea that the gym is open
to both sexes; but, as there are no little
holly bushes growing around, a segregated
and sexless atmosphere is to be maintained.
This, in fact, may discourage people from
spending time in the gym, for one cannot
possibly catch a pinmate on the handball
or basketball courts, and the showers are
definitely off limits. Actually, though,
segregation is not such a bad idea, for at
our tender and impressionable age some
disenchanting realizations would become
most evident.
As males go, the American variety is
the most physically unfit of his species,
while his female counterpart is reputed to
have the best proportioned fat anywhere
on earth, as well as the worst eating
habits.
n
The male spends his time feeding money
to vending machines or consuming vast
quantities of carbohydrates at the TOG,
and he has no ambition to do anything
else. Conversely, his women subsist on
Jell-O, Metrecal, and that frequent
Hershey bar which only their consciences
see them smuggle into the dorm. They
"pill" and diet themselves into a size 8
or 10 and haven't the strength to display
any athletic talent.
There are, of course, exceptions to the
rule. They are a dedicated minority of
flabby, middle-aged profs trying to re-
build what they might once have been,
P.E. fanatics, off-season "jocks," and
those few students who have learned
what the term "total education" really
means. The rest of us are content to
equate physical fitness with religion — we
give it one hour per week if we're not too
tired.
But the times are changing, and a few
hours spent in the gym now may make
things easier when the tassels and colorful
alpacas are replaced by combat boots and
o. d. fatigues. Coeds needn't worry about
High Tide and Green Grass
£*"
Ml
M
•■^^^^^^^31
-— i
j
J
■fc£*^
1
*k_»
exchanging their Villagers for uniforms,
but the productive process of time could
very well stretch their present facades.
Villagers are nice to get into now — but
will they be worth the effort in ten years?
Our excuse for sedentary living is that
the academic pressures of the great q. p.
hunt are such that we have no time for
concentrated physical activity. However,
we assure ourselves that when the four-
year hitch is up we'll make a conscien-
tious effort to remedy the present physical
situation. Want to bet?
Perhaps it is time we stopped sucking
in our tummies or wearing girdles for
their shape-producing qualities, and de-
cided to make better use of the gym
facilities. We could also hope that on a
dark night someone would come by and
plant some holly seedlings. Who knows
what might happen — it might even be
fun!
FOOTBALL
Bob Brenner, Richard Decker, Ken
Henry, David Stanley, Charles
Wakefield, Rick White, Bill
Bachovchin, Ron Carter, Bill
Graves, Lloyd Halvorson, Bill
Overton, Bob Perretz, Jay Powell,
Bill Stout, Bill Scheib, Runo
Anderson, Fred Barden, Joe Dob-
ner, Larry Hambrick, Don Hens-
ley, Dick Hessler, Tom Jones,
Mike Sasser, Jim Vosters, Bill
Brown, Ken Hemphill, Howard
Stanback, Phil Cheatwood, Ken
Erickson, Freddie Summers, Jack
Dolbin, Jimmy Johnson, Bux Lea-
vitt, Fred Angerman, Eddie Ar-
rington, Ivey Smith, Ron Jure-
wicz, David Smith, Chuck White,
Charles Floyd, Robert Grant, Tom
Million, Tom Stuetzer, Roman
Wszelaki, John Atkinson, Lowell
Freedlund, Harry Hames, Barry
Maynes, John McQueeney, Tom
Sklutas, Joe Theriault, Bill Angle,
Mike Blasiole, Jimmy Clack, Fred
Cooke, Bob Flynn, Chick George,
Carlyle Pate, Ted Philpott, Dan
White, Gary Williard, Ed Atkin-
son, Carlton Baker, Tom Deacon,
Dan Dever, Tom Gavin, John
Glover, Digit Laughridge, Paul
Savage, Larry Walt, Donald Ko-
bos, Larry Pons.
Head Coach: Bill Tate
BBS
TENNIS
Mike Rubenstein, Ed Parker, Dave
Ashcraft, Grayson Brown, Curt
West, Ron MacVittie, Cliff Pearce,
Alex Coxe, Rob Knapp.
Head Coach: Jim Leighton
GOLF
Jack Lewis, Leonard Thompson, Joe
Inman, Charlie Snipes, Norm Swen-
son, Charlie Cowan, Mike Long,
Chip Lewis, Al Bugbee, Van Jefif-
ards, Steve Earle, Ben Aycock.
Head Coach: Jesse Haddock
TEAMS
SWIMMING
Milt Ackerman, Don Riordan,
Frank Stelling, Bob Dunkel, Mike
Niel, David Slaton, Barry Hack-
shaw, Larry Chamberlain, Paul
Trivette, Ernest Glass, Jim Rich-
ardson, Burt Moody, Jim Hogan,
Ben Yarborough, Mac Smith,
Glenn Josephsen, Randy Strick-
land.
Head Coach: Leo Ellison
CROSS-COUNTRY
John Hodsdon, Jim Hope, John
Taggart, Richard Jonas, Phil Bea-
vers, Bob DuVal, Dave Boutilier,
Tom Browder.
Head Coach: Keith Hamilton
BASKETBALL
Dan Ackley, Jimmy Broadway,
Paul Crinkley, Larry Habegger,
Tommy Lynch, Jerry Montgom-
ery, Jay Randall, Newton Scott,
David Stroupe, Norwood Tod-
mann, Dickie Walker.
Head Coach: Jack McCloskey
TRACK
Charles Adams, David Asch, Rudy
Ashton, John Barnabic, Philip Bea-
vers, David Boutilier, Tim Browder,
Tom Clower, Lee Clymer, Paul
Craighead, John Danforth, Jack
Dolbin, Thomas Fitch, Robert
George, John Hodsdon, Tom Hutch-
inson, David Kahle, James Kyle, Buz
Leavitt, Archie Logan, Joel Ludlam,
John Matsinger, Gerald McGowan,
Joseph Mount, Gordon Selfridge,
John Shaffer, Mike Westermeyer,
Chuck White, Larry Yatsko.
Head Coach: Jack Armstrong
BASEBALL
Ruffin Branham, Wayne Brum-
baugh, Larry Cain, John Glover,
Bobby Harris, Joe Krieger, Russ
Mayer, Bill Myers, Bob Petrino,
Don Polifka, Jim Gadd, Bill Heit-
man, Doug Horner, Tom Berry,
Kent Emely, Jim Eschen, Steve
Freedman, Bob Kovarik, Digit
Laughridge, Craig Robinson, Joe
Scripture, Sonny Swails, Alex
Wyche, Dwight Bartlett, Bruce
Blanton, Bruce Garland, Art
Getz, Paul Jones, Dave Lindsay,
Jim Poole, Jim Rausch, Jon
Robinson, Jim Callison.
Head Coach: Jack Stallings
_
SCORES
j&^n-. ■'*
GOLF
(1968 Schedule)
Ohio University
"Red Fox" Invitational
Palmetto Invitational
North Carolina
Davidson
Virginia
South Carolina
Clemson
Maryland
Davidson
Duke
N. C. State
ACC Tournament
NCAA Tournament
ta
wtm
BASEBALL
(1968 Schedule)
Kent State
Georgia Southern (2)
Florida State Tournament
Maine
Brown
Colby College
South Carolina
Clemson (2)
V.P.I.
Maryland (2)
Virginia
V.P.I.
Georgia Southern
Duke (2)
North Carolina
N. C. State (2)
Duke
Maryland
Virginia
North Carolina (2)
Clemson
South Carolina (2)
N. C. State
North Carolina
CROSS-COUNTRY
(Won 4, Lost 4)
N. C. State
Duke
Davidson
Virginia
V.P.I.
North Carolina
South Carolina
Clemson
State Meet Jth Place
ACC Meet 5 th Place
Ilia
63
BASKETBALL
(Won 5, Lost 20)
N. C. State
V.P.I.
Auburn
Maryland
William & Mary
Tennessee
Oregon
Scton Hall
Duke
North Carolina
V.M.I.
Virginia
South Carolina
Temple
Davidson
Clemson
South Carolina
North Carolina
Clemson
Duke
Maryland
Virginia
Duke
N. C. State
St. Joseph's
ACC Championshi|
71
103
SWIMMING
(Won S, Lost 6, Tied
)
31
Maryland
82
49
Virginia
55
65
Davidson
39
65
V.M.I.
39
45
North Carolina
65
63
Old Dominion
41
57
William & Mary
47
52
Clemson
52
SO
South Carolina
63
68
Appalachian
36
39
Duke
65
39
N. C. State
ACC Championships
74
TRACK
(1968 Schedule)
Indoor Season
V.M.I. Relays
East Carolina
V.M.I.
N. C. State
North Carolina
South Carolina
Big Championships
ACC Championships
Outdoor Season
Clemson
Florida Relays
North Carolina
Colonial Relays
N. C. State
Virginia
Duke
V.P.I.
State Meet
ACC Championships
FOOTBALL
(Won 4, Lost 6)
WF
13
Duke
6
Clemson
6
Houston
12
Virginia
10
Memphis State
7
N. C. State
20
North Carolina
35
South Carolina
31
Tulsa
35
Maryland
mi^^r-v
TENNIS
(1968 Schedule)
High Point
East Stroudsburg
East Carolina
Bucknell
Kent State
South Florida
South Carolina
Clemson
Appalachian
Maryland
Virginia
Hope College
Cumberland
Duke
Toledo
Pheiffer College
North Carolina
Davidson
N. C. State
V.P.I.
ACC Championships
'I
ZJ7* '^
CLASSES
"They ain't what they used to be"
A class was a class then. If you had gone
to that little college in the sand hills of
Eastern North Carolina, you would have
known the kids that had entered as
freshmen with you. It wouldn't have
been the nice, polite-type of knowing
someone; the "hey's" and the "nice
day's" were there, too, but when you
greeted someone you really meant it.
You knew your class because you all had
things in common — sure, your being
raised by a good North Carolina Baptist
family had something to do with it, but
being hazed together and living, working,
and studying together really brought it
home. You were part of your class, you
were your class; and even after gradua-
tion class ties would remain.
A class is something different now. In
its four years here at this small university
in the Piedmont, the most a class ever
does together is have poorly-attended
meetings after chapel on Tuesdays. Only
two groups on campus, new coeds and
freshman football players, come close to
approximating the class-feeling of the
old campus. Everyone else seems oblivi-
ous; their class is to them merely an
academic categorization. Above the
freshman year, the main concern of stu-
dents is not so much whom they will
graduate with, but rather the fellow stu-
dents that they seem to fit in with.
There are all sorts of groups on the
campus: the fraternities and the pub row
crowd, the teams and the BSUers are the
formal groups covered elsewhere in this
volume; but there are others. The snack
shop bridge games and the bi-weekly golf
foursomes are made up of people with
less visible, but possibly more meaning-
ful relationships.
Groups are the classes on the Wake
Forest campus. In looking back over the
years you spent here, you will probably
remember only the groups. And if you
lacked the initiative to find one for your-
self, or to look around you and notice the
others, then you will probably remember
nothing. Classes make the school, whether
they are established by credit hours or by
interests; without them a learning institu-
tion would be only books and rooms with
nothing alive between the two.
— J.E.
WHO'S WHO AMONG
STUDENTS IN
AMERICAN COLLEGES
AND UNIVERSITIES
Tom Ginn, Dayna Pate, John Grctes, Vicki Campbell
234
Doug Twiddy, Jim Poston
Phil Cheatwood
VA+
1
Ralph Simpson, Brooks Stillwell, Linda Levi, Henry Bosi
li
Austine Odom. David Pugh
liL
SENIORS
ROBERT N. ABARNO Lighthouse Point, Fla.
MILTON J. ACKERMAN Riviera Beach, Fla.
ALFRED G. ADAMS Winston-Salem
CHARLES C. ADAMS, III Charlotte
ARTHUR JAMES AIRMAN Beaver Falls, Pa.
THOMAS W. ALBERT Reading, Pa.
RICHARD B. AMES New Kensington, Pa.
ROBERT H. ANDERSON, III Ocala, Fla.
RUNO CARL ANDERSON, JR. LaGrange, III.
GLENDA SHAFFER ANGEL Madison
JONATHAN SHUFORD ARNEY Morganton
SUSAN PALMER ARNOLD Bethesda, Md.
JAMES H. ARROWOOD
Concord
RUDOLPH A. ASHTON
Richmond, Va.
ROBERT G. ATKINS, JR.
Danville, Va.
BETTY L. AUSTIN
Arlington, Va.
CARLTON LEE BAKER
J
acksonville, Fla.
CANDY CARSON BAKER
Winston-Salem
JERRY HERBERT BAKER
Kannapolis
JOHN COLSON BAKER, JR
Winston-Salem
DIANE SECOR BALDWIN
Salisbury, Md.
LINDA KAY BARRICK
Bethesda, Md.
HERSCHEL D. BARTLETT
Greensboro
NELSON ANN BAUS
Baltimore, Md.
BEVERLY TATE BEAL
Lenior
DAVID DEAN BELNAP
Carlisle, Pa.
J. DAVID BENNETT
W
est Chester, Pa.
RICHARD V. BENNETT
Winston-Salem
CAROLYN E. BENZ
Washington, D.C.
RALPH LANE BESHEARS.
JR
Boone
JAMES ERNEST BEST, JR.
Greensboro
CHARLES K. BIERNBAUM
Woodstown, 1
JOE EARL BIESECKER
Clemmons
LILA JANE BIGGERSTAFF
Shelby
SUSAN ANN BISHOP
Raleigh
JENNIFER LOUISE BIVENS
Welch, W. Va.
ROY CRARY BLANK Upper
Marlboro, Md.
ROBERT GRAY BOBBITT
Winston-Salem
BERT BOVARD BOLDT, II
Winston-Salem
CHARLES BEN BOSS
Hickory
HENRY HAWES BOSTIC, JR.
Elizabethtown
ELLEN WRIGHT BOULDIN
Ridgeway, Va.
WARREN FOSTER BOUTILIER Salisbury
JOHN MILAM BRAME Walnut Cove
REBECCA IRENE BRANDON Durham
FRANK W. BRISTOW West Hartford, Conn.
DON E. BRITT, JR. Winston-Salem
JAMES BROADWAY Raleigh
PATRICIA SUE BROWN Winston-Salem
CHARLES WILSON BRUTON, JR. Troy
RICHARD JOSEY BRYAN Greenville
MARTHA G. BRYANT Newport News, Va.
WILLIAM THOMAS BRYANT Oradell, N.J.
KENNEY S. BUCKHALT Atlanta, Ga.
SENIORS
: B. Stevenson, Sec, J. Wuertenberger, V. Pres.;
D. Pugh, Pres.; V. Campbell, Treas.
dlk^A
RONNIE JEAN BULSON Annandalc, Va.
LARRY MAURICE BURCH Winston-Salem
LESTER M. C. BUTT Falls Church, Va.
CHRISTOPHER LYNN BYERLY Siler City
BARBARA SCUFFHAM BYRD Winston-Salem
JAMES PALMER BYRD Greensboro
JONES PHARR BYRD Sanfo
LAURENCE SUTHERLAND CAIN McLean, \
ROBERT PRESTON CALDWELL,
JR. Winston-Salerr
BEVERLY STEELE CALE Atlanta, Ga
REUBEN DeFOIX CALVERT Spartanburg, S.C.
VICKI WINDLE CAMPBELL Martinsville, Va.
MARY PATRICIA CARNES Miami, Fla.
GEORGE EMMITT CARTER, JR. Fayetteville
CHARLES CLINTON CASKEY Mooresville
KAREN LYNN CASTO Greensboro
PENELOPE CHAMIS Win:
PHILIP HOYT CHEATWOOD Lane
TERRINA GAYLE CHEEK
Dubli
1, Ga.
ALFRED PAGE CHESTNUT
Mc
reheat
City
NANCY JEAN CHRISTIE
W
nston
Salem
ERIC STEVEN CLARK
Li
awood
JOHN C. CLARK, JR.
Fayet
teville
THOMAS HENRY CLARK
Deal,
N. J.
WILLIAM LOWE CLARK, III
H
ckory
ANNE McRAE COBER
w
nston
Salem
SCOTT LOUIS COBER
w
nston
Salem
WILLIAM LEE COBLE
Burl
ngton
LARRY E. COCKERHAM
w
nston
Salem
JOHN ARTHUR COLLINS, III
Gre
enville
SENIORS
HOWARD CHARLES COLVARD Wilkesboro
GENE NORMAN COMBS, JR. Pikeville, Ky.
DANIEL K. COOPER Hagerstown, Md.
FREDERICK L COOPER, III Murfreesboro
WILLIAM ERNEST COORE Thomasyille
CHARLES PRESTON COWAN, JR. Salisbury
JAMES ALLEN COX
Jacksonyille
JIMMY LEWIS CRAIG
Monroe
JOHN PAUL CRINKLEY
Newland
CHARLES C. CROWELL, III
Lincolnton
BEN M. CRUMLEY Johnson City, Tenn.
JOHN CAMPBELL CRUMP
Winston-Salem
LINDA K. CRUTCHFIELD
Winston-Salem
SAMUEL BOOTH CURRIN, III Oxford
ALAN BRIAN CURRY
Ankara, Turkey
CAROL A. CUTHBERTSON
Lyndhursc, Ohio
JOHN CARY DAUGHTRY
Launnburg
CHESTER OSCAR DAVID
Winston-Salem
JOHN ALLEN DAVIS
Mooresville
LARRY REID DAVIS
Gastonia
JOHN PAUL DAVITT
Rockaway, N.J.
LARRIE WAYNE DAWKINS
Graham
DAVID HUNTER DIAMONT
Pilot Mountain
WILLIAM PENN DICKENSON
JR. Washington
EDGAR RICHARD DIMMETTE, JR. Charlotte
DANIEL JOSEPH DOLAN Atlanta, Ga.
WALTER E. DORSETT Waynesboro, Pa.
ROBERT JOSEPH DRDAK Bethayres, Pa.
THOMAS M. DRISKILL, JR. Charlotte
THOMAS W. DUNCAN Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
RALPH MILTON EDGAR
FRANK EDMONDSON
KAREN LoREE EDWARDS V
MARY MARGARET EDWARDS Win:
MATTHEW ALVIN EDWARDS Charl
THOMAS ARNOLD EDWARDS Charl
Chapel Hill
Asheboro
Sale!
GRAYDON P. EGGERS, JR. Chariot
KENNETH ROBERT ELLIS Fremo
JO CHERYL EXUM W.lsi
JOHN PATRICK EXUM Snow H
WENDY JEAN FARMER Virginia Beach, V
LUCIAN HOLT FELMET, JR. Rocky Mou
EDWIN HALL FERGUSON, JR. Concord
HARRY EDWARD FISHER Basking Ridge, N.J.
STUART C. FISHER Pacific Palisades, Calif.
THOMAS WARNE FITCH Arlington, Va.
JEAN VINCENT FITZSIMMONS Charlotte
WILLIAM AUGUSTUS FOLGER Toledo, Ohio
JAMIE TARPLEY FONVILLE Burlington
BETTY MORRIS FOX Winston-Salem
J. RODNEY FRANKS Brevard
GLENN B. FREEDMAN Massapcqua Park, N.Y.
DONN BENNETT FREEMAN Kings Mountain
MARY COLBY FROST Winston-Salem
-i p ^ jp
O £ « p C-
SENIORS
ERIC WILLIAM FRLTN Normal. III.
SHEILA ANN FULTON Winston-Salem
DAN W. GADDY Pageland, S.C.
LUKE G. GALANT Falls Church, Va.
DONALD WILLIAM GALLAGHER,
JR. Washington Crossing, Pa.
JOHN McCULLOUGH
GARRITY Winston-Salem
T. COURTNEY GARTON
LESLIE TINA GAYNOR
JAMES PRICE GERRISH
DARLA FAYE GILES
Richmond, Va,
Bethcsda, Md.
Chapel Hill
DONNA KAY GILL Durha
NANCY LOUIS GILLIAND Winston-Sale
THOMAS MOSS GINN Lakeland, Fla,
MERLEY ELIZABETH GLOVER Concord
DAVID HENRY GOEHRIG Ft. 1
WILLIAM CHARLES GORDON
GARY CARLETON GOUGH
WILLIAM ANTON GRACE
JOYCE ANN GREEN
RODNEY E. GREEN
RICHARD P. GREENBERG
JOHN WILLIAM GREER
JOHN C. GRETES
DURANTE AVAN GRIFFIN, JR. Lexington
Whitsett
odstown, N.J.
Trenton, N.J.
Lexington
Norfolk. Va.
HERBERT A. GROTE Huntington Sta.. N.Y.
JAMES WILSON GROUT Winston-Salem
BARBARA JEAN
GUTEKUNST Sellersville, Pa.
BARBARA JEAN HADDON Rocky Mount
DONALD KENNETH HAEHNEL Brevard
F. EDWIN HALLMAN, JR. Lithonia, Ga.
SENIORS
JON JAY HAMILTON Walpole, Ma
MICHAEL E. HAMMOND Lancaster, S.
MYRA JEAN HARKEY Monn
KATHLEEN SUE HARMON Sarasota, F]
DOUGLAS B. HARRELL Richmond.Va.
WILLIAM E. HARRELSON, III Whiteville
RANDY BYRON HARTMAN Lawndalc
WILLIAM R. HARTNESS, III Sanford
RICHARD GREGORY HARVEY Roanoke, Va.
S. T. HASKELL, III New Canaan, Conn.
JENNIFER JEAN HAUCK Charles, 111.
PATRICIA REED HEAD Winston-Salem
SUSAN R. HENDERSON Mauldin, S.C.
RICHARD G. HENNING Garden City, N.Y.
KENNETH DELMA HENRY Greensboro
DONALD LEO HENSLEY Winston-Salem
RICHARD D. HERBERT Jacksonville, Fla.
BUDDY O. H. HERRING Westport, Conn.
RICHARD D. HESSLER Ft.
Laude
dale, Fla.
AUBREY LEE HIGHFILL
Win
ton-Salem
JAMES EARL HILL. JR.
Win
ton-Salem
NANA ELAINE HILSENBECK
Win
ton-Salem
PAUL PRESTON HINKLE, JF
Spencer
GUY CORNELIUS HOBBS
Edenton
KATHRYN MAE HOCUTT
Spencer
JOHN PHILLIP HODSON
Del
nar, N.Y
R. HAYES HOFLER, III
Alexa
ndria, Va
FORREST H. HOLLIFIELD
Salisbury
CALVIN J. HOLT, JR.
si.,
inton, Va
LUCY HARTSFIELI) HOLTON Winston-Sale:
SENIORS
Jri.
JAMES MICHAEL HOPE York, S.C.
PATRICIA JANE HOPKINS Salisbury, Md.
DOUGLAS BRANCH HORNER Laurel, Del.
VINCENT HOWARD, JR. Cherry Hill, N.J.
DAVID BOWERS HOYLE Bethesda, Md.
JAMES C. HOYLE Roanoke Rapids
DAVID MUNROE HUDSON Moline, III.
MARY FRAN HUGHES Virginia Beach, Va.
JOHN M. HUMPHRIES Front Royal, Va.
STEVEN RAWLINGS HURSH Beaufort, S.C.
SANDY V. HUTCHENS, JR. Mount Airy
WILLIAM EUGENE HUTTON Burlington
THOMAS SAMUEL IRWIN Linden, N.J.
CHARLES E. JACKSON, JR. Shelby
JENNIFER LYNN JACOBER Westerville, Ohio
JAMES B. JACOBSEN North Tarrytown, N.Y.
KENNETH S. JOHNSON Louisville, Ky.
SUSAN V. JOHNSON King
CHARLES F. JONES Burlington
DOUGLAS R. JONES Simpsonville, S.C
DURWOOD BURRELL JONES Zebulon
JOHN DANIEL JONES Chapel Hill
JOHN HENRY JONES, JR. Asheville
RONALD VANN JONES Hickory
ADRIENNE GAYLE JORDAN Wilmington
G. MILLER JORDAN Cary
LAURA MATHILDE JORDAN Miami, Fla.
WALTER WAYNE JORDAN Durham
KAREN B. KAENZIG SpringHeld, Va.
STEVEN CRAIG KELLEY Rocky Mount
RICHARD JEAN KELLY Fair Lawn, N.J.
SHARON LEE KENNEDY Robbins
WILLIAM DWIGHT KERNODLE Burlington
SAMUEL R. KILGORE, JR. Spartanburg, S.C.
JAMES JEFFREY KINCHELOE Rocky Mount
JEFFREY JOHN KLINE Severna Park, Md.
ROBERT DOUGLAS KNAPP Hingham, Mass.
PETER L. KNAUSS Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
DENNIS WAYNE KNIGHT Teachey
WILLI M. KRAPELS High Point
THOMAS JAY KRAUSE Woodbridge, Va.
CANDITH E. KRUEGER Johnson City, Term.
JAMES H. LAMBERT ]
CAROL JANE LASLEY
MELDINE BURKE LAYTON
ROBERT EDWARD LEE, JR.
LINDA RUTH LEVI
CAROLYN L. LEWIS
sons, W. Va.
Kernersvilie
Pinston-Salem
Murfreesboro
Norfolk, Va.
Cherryville
J. ALLEN LEWIS. JR. Florence, S.C.
WILLIAM KERMIT LINK, JR. Lexington
STEVEN RANDALL LOFTIN Winston-Salem
ELIZABETH LOUISE LOWE Charlotte
JOHN CARNER LOWE Winston-Salem
VAUGHN CHARLES LUCKADOO Salisbury
SENIORS
M. CECEILA McADAMS Rockville. Md.
LARRY JEROME McDOWELL High Point
PATSY MARLENE McGRADY High Point
ROBERT HAYES McNEILL, JR. Wilkesboro
PATRICIA L. MANGUM Monr,
CYNTHIA STILL MANN Winston-Sale
C L. MARSHALL Charleston, W. Va.
WILLIAM ERNEST MARSHALL Raleigh
DONALD DREW MASLINE Jamestown
JAMES WILSON MASON Harrellsville
MARGARET E. MATTHEWS Burgai
DONNA BIRD MAY Lakeland, Fla
ROGER WILLIAM MAYHEW Lexington
ANN LASHLEY MEDLIN Laurinburg
THOMAS M. MEISENHELDER Winston-Salem
WILLIAM L. MELSON Wilmington, Del.
REBECCA ANN MELTON State Road
WILLIAM HOLMES MESSICK Clarksboro, N.J.
DAVID C. MEYER Colorado Springs, Colo.
JENNIFER SUE MILAM Barnesville, Ga.
WILLIAM D. MILEHAM Abington, Pa.
GEORGE THOMPSON MILLER Lexington
RICHARD ALAN MINERS Rumson, N.J.
LAURIN CAMILLE MINTON Greensboro
BOBBY GRAY MOORE
BRYCE GEORGE MOORE, JR. Bur
EDWARD GRANT MOORE i
JAMES EDGAR MOORE Winstor
LOIS CAROL MOORE G
FREDRIC L. MORGAN, JR. Ft. Mye
B
SENIORS
> «© Q©
d^ o q i^
•£ tip
f^ £b O |tS
i&fWijiij^ft
hi ©
Lfciftirf
VICKI ELLEN MORGAN High Point
BRADY KARL MORRISON Winston-Salem
DONALD LESLIE MORRISON Columbus, S.C.
THOMAS REX MORTON West Jefferson
JOE DAVID MOUNT Columbus, Ind.
CAROL ANN MURPHY Jacksnoville, Fla.
JOSEPH FRANK MYERS Reidsville
LINDA SUE MYERS Laurel Springs
WILLIAM B. MYERS Manasquan, N.J.
LAURENCE W. NAGIN Rockaway Park, N.Y.
JUDITH KAREN NANNEY Greenville, S.C.
RICHARD F. NASH
Boca Raton, Fla
WILLIAM A. NEWMAN Rockville, Md.
SUSIE SHARP NEWSOM Winston-Salem
DUNCAN LAWRENCE NICKLES Hickory
LYNN BARRY NICKOL York, Pa.
JAMES ANDREW NIX Fayetteville
AUSTINE BYRD ODOM Martinsburg, Va.
MELVJN JABEZ OLIVER, JR. Smithfield
W. H. OVERMANN, JR. Roanoke Rapids
WADE STEVEN OWEN High Point
SUSANNE OWENSBY China Grove
SUSAN RAY PARKER Envin
WILLIAM JOSEPH PARKER, JR. Laurinburg
DAYNA TATE PATE Atlanta, Ga.
JOHN BLAINE PATTON Columbus, Ohio
DOUGLAS H. PELTON, JR. Wyckoff, N.J.
RICHARD KENNETH PENN Winston-Salem
ROBERT L. PERRETZ, JR. Park Forest, 111.
DOROTHY JANE PETERSON Harrells
JEANNIE LUCILLE PFISTER Mi
ANNE CAROLYN PHILLIPS Green
PAUL EMERSON PINSON Williamson, W
WILLIAM B. PITTARD, III Norfolk
LARRY GARFIELD POINDEXTER
CLARK L. POOL
Siloam
Washington, III.
WAYNE WADE POPLIN Greensboro
ROBERT H. PORTER Arlington, Va.
JAMES GORDON POSTON Kingsport, Tenn.
ROBERT STEPHEN POSTON Bo.ling Springs
CHARLES COLLETT POWELL Wilson
JAMES KYLE POWELL Winston-Salem
DAVID SAMUEL PUGH. JR. New
CHERYL LYNN PULLIAM Winston-!
JAMES MICHAEL PULLIAM Ridgewav.
MICHAEL G. QUEEN Huntington, W.
JENNIE FRENCH RATLIFF Bluefield, W
CHARLES ROBERT REDDEN
DONNA JO REDDING Rural Hall
SAMUEL STEELE REDDING Asheboro
DOUGLAS EDWARD REINHARDT Elkin
DAVID ARTHUR REYNOLDS Belmar, N.J.
GLENNE G. RILEY Falls Church, Va.
DON FRANCIS RIORDAN Fort Pierce, Fla.
-— —
SENIORS
SUSAN FOXX RIVENBARK Greensboro
GREGORY ALAN ROARK Haddonfield, N.J.
DAVID LEE ROBERTS Galax, Va.
JOHN F. ROBERTSON Alexandria, Va.
THOMAS E. ROBINSON Wheaton, Md.
ELIZABETH ANN ROSEBERRY Charlotte
THOMAS C. ROSEMOND, JR. Wh
FELIX ANDREW ROW, JR. Wir
MICHAEL FRANKLIN ROYSTER
STEPHEN GEORGE ROYSTER
PHILLIP KAY RUSSELL
BETTY ANNE SAEMAN
Raleigh
Conover
CHRISTOPHER A. SAILOR Wilmington, Del.
LEE NATHAN SANGES Albemarle
JOHN PAUL SCHAFFER
LEWIS PETER SCHULTZ
NEWTON W. SCOTT
SUSAN ANN SCOTT
SARA LOUISE SEANOR
Atlanta, Ga.
STEPHEN H. SEARLE
Shippensburg, Pa.
ROBERT LEE SEILA
Lenior
BETTY LEE SEXTON
Winston-Salem
LENDA KAY SHAFFER
Mayodan
RICHARD A. SHEOLA
Ph.Ilipsburg, N.J.
DAVID MARVIN SICELOFF
Lexin ton
JOHN PAUL SIMPSON
Ralegh
RALPH ALLEN SIMPSON
Charlotte
SUSAN SODEMAN SINGHAS
Winston-Salem
CHARLES C. SMITH Colo
ado Springs, Colo.
DAVID ALLEN SMITH
Winston-Salem
SENIORS
Beach, Va.
son Springs
(P
DONALD D. SMITH Vir;
EARLE WILSON SMITH
JAMES FULTON SMITH
PHILIP J. SMITH
WILLIAM ALVAN SMITH, III
HELEN RUTH SMITHSON
DEBORAH D. SNAPP Kensington, Md.
WILLIAM H. SNED, JR. Salisbury
JAMES HOWARD SOLOMON Arlington, Va.
BARBARA LEE SOPER Silver Spring, Md.
DANIEL L. SPARLING Winston-Salem
JOHN KELLY SPEAS Boonville
JAMES ERNEST STARMER, JR.
ALAN R. STAUCH East Ha
JAMES BRUCE STEFFEY
EMILY L. STEIFLE
HELEN PAULETTE STEIN
REBECCA STEVENSON
W
Greensboro
ford, Conn.
inston-Salem
Rocky Mount
Hickory
W. BROOKS STILLWELL Savannah, Ga.
DOUGLAS DWIGHT STOKES Albemarle
ANNE BENTON STOLTZ Columbus, Ga.
PAMELA ELIZABETH STORIE Statesville
DAVID HENRY STROUPE Winston-Salem
ANN RANKIN STUART Badin
THOMAS N. STUETZER Wakefield, Mass.
ROGER CRAIG SUMMERS
Hickory
PAUL T. SWAILS
Rockingham
MARY KAREN SWARTZ
Bethesda, Md.
STEPHEN YOUNG SWEET
Mooresville
ERNEST TALLEY, III
Randleman
BRENDA ANN TEMPLETON
Olin
SUSAN REBECCA THOMAS
Walnut Cove
NJCKA T. THORNTON
Winston-Salem
THOMAS R. TOMLINSON
Scott AFB, 111.
E. EARLE TRULOVE, JR.
Cheraw, S.C.
PING KWAN TSE
Winston-Salem
CARL MILLON TUCKER, III
Pageland, S.C.
WILLIAM MONROE TUCKER,
JR. Greensboro
DOROTHY KAY TURNER
Winston-Salem
KARL FLEMING TUTT
Winston-Salem
DOUGLAS A. TWIDDY
Edenton
SARA E. UMSTEAD Newport News, Va.
GLENN A. VAN DER PLOOG Hawthorne, N.J.
EMILY JANE WADE
Dallas, Tex.
LARRY M. WAGER
Latham, N.Y.
J. JETER WALKER
Morganton
REBECCA ANNE WALL
Asheboro
DAVID ANDREW WALLACE
Winston-Salem
DEAN ALLEN WALTERS Si
ver Spring, Md.
RICHARD LEE WASH
Charlotte
JOHN CALVIN WEHUNT
Cherryville
CHARLES R. WELFARE
Winston-Salem
FREDERICK LEE WENDORF
Roankee, Va.
REBECCA LYNN WEST
Bethlehem, Pa.
■ IIITT— TTTiiirir I' llllllHW^M^— ^M
SENIORS
DENNIS WILLIAM WHALEN Meriden, Conn.
JUDITH ELLEN WHITE Winston-Salem
MICHAEL DEAN WHITE Chesapeake, Va.
HENRY HARPER WHITLEY. JR. Smithfield
ALDRIDGE DRANE WILDER, JR. Kinston
BRUCE NOLL WILLIAMS Rosemont, Pa.
JOAN TERRY WILLIAMS Greensboro
RICHARD TAYLOR WILLIAMS Mount Holly
SANDRA GAIL WILLIAMSON Wilkesboro
DONALD CARTER WILSON Greensboro
STEPHEN THOMAS WILSON Leaksville
LOUISE WISEMAN Chambersburg, Pa.
CAROLYN JANE WRIGHT Jacksonvi:
VIRGINIA ANNE WUERTENBERGER
JAMES LYNN YOUNG
MAXINE ZAIKEN
Shelby
:sneld, Mass.
i
Wake: Times, Places, and Things
%
y /■'»'--■';
w«
'?*:
t**."* ■■■»&:
Photographed By John Daughtry
JUNIORS
Dan Edward Abernethy
Raleigh
David Preston Abernethy,
Jr. Kinston
Brent Douglas Adams
Dunn
Jefferson Boone Aiken, III
Florence, S.C
Emmett Carlyle Aldredge,
Jr. Winston-Salem
Charles Jackson Alexander
Winston-Salem
Billie Jean Allen
Hot Springs, Va.
Charles Roger Allen
Forest City
William Otis Ameen. Jr.
Jamestown
David Scott Anderson
Thomasville
Laura Rita Andrews
Boiling Springs
William Hill Andrews, Jr.
Wallace
Martha Willois Andrus
Winston-Salem
Ritva Lemmikki Aniuloto
Helsinki, Finland
Robert Howard Armstrong
Kingsport, Tenn.
Harry Albert Arsenault
Stamford, Conn.
David Bee Ashcraft S.
Charleston, W. Va.
Larry Allen Ballew
Morganton
Phillip Louie Baucom
Concord
Gregory Stephen Baxter
Long Branch, N.J.
Clarence Maynard Beach.
Jr. Eden
Charles Lindsay Beck
High Point
Elizabeth Ann Beck
Lexington
Richard Carlie Beck
Lexington
John William Belchee
Bluefield, W. Va.
Thomas Alexander Bell, J
Raleigh
Edwin G. Below
Port Deposit, Md.
George C. Berkow Rol
ing Hills Est., Cal.
Thomas Frederick Berry Emmaus, Pa.
John Christopher Berwind West Islip, N.Y.
Thomas F. Bigelow Grand Rapids, Mich.
Lindsey Scott Biles Newport News. Va.
James Monroe Blackwelder Winnsboro, S.C.
Stephen Alexander Blackwood Greensboro
Willard Jackson Blanchard, Jr. Salemburg
John Brockman Bland Silver Spring, Md.
Jonas LeMoyne Blank Montgomery, Ala.
Robert Wright Blanton Clinton
Joseph Edward Blythe Richmond, Va.
James Bocholis, Jr. . High Point
James William Bodie Clover, S.C.
Jennie Lynn Boger Concord
John Benthal Bondurant Towson, Md.
Nancy Carol Bost Hickory
Carol Ann Bowen Greensboro
Thomas Egerton Bowers, Jr. Alexandria. Va.
Janet Elaine Bowker Bethesda, Md.
Thomas Jackson Boyles Winston-Salem
David Lee Bradshaw, III N. Providence, R.I.
Linda Jean Braswell Monroe
l-~ fp' f-^ F~' fl* 6*^
♦ ftj p £$ (^
r-.'< r;i ^
Barbara Jane Brazil
Ramsey Doyle Breazea
Carol Jean Breeding
Douglas Bris-Bois
Eva Karen Brown
Reginald Allen Brown
William Sears Brown
Arthur Wolfe Browni
Vinton Carr Bruton,
Stephen Richard Bur
David Lee Burton
Sara Forwood Busey
James Irvin Butler
James Alfred Butts, I
JUNIORS
Asheville
Oak Ridge, Tenn.
Winston-Salem
Concord
Allendale, N.J.
Murfreesboro
Mt. Gilead
Kingsport, Tenn.
Reidsville
South Hill, Va.
Tho
1 inda
Jamo
s Lloyd Call
Moore Callaway
Stancil Campbel
R. Case
izabeth Cato
ny Causby
Ha
Atlanta, G;
Rockinghar
Mad.so:
Durhar
Hendersonvill
Mayoda
Greensboro
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Houston, Tex.
New Bern
Salisbury
Elkin
Clyde David Chapman
William Fred Chapma
Jerry L. Chostner
Janet Louise Clark
William E. Clark
Terri Kathryn Clin
Aleta Lynn Cochr
William Preston
David Lee Cole.
Edward B. Cooper, Jr. Pageland, S.C.
Ricardo Garcia Corredor Bogota, Columbia
Charles Grayson Covington Thomasville
Nancy Reeves Cox Spartanburg, S.C.
Katherine W. Crawford Winston-Salem
Robert Maurice Crawford Bethesda, Md.
Edith Jane Creasy
aid Lan
aid Chr
Raleigh
Greensboro
Raynha
M.i
Herbert Dixon Crum, Jr.
Kenneth Len Culbreth
Martha Daniel Currin
Dotti J. Daigneault
James Randol Davis
Jerome Irvin Davis
Julie Ann Davis
Sarah Davis
Caldwell Newton Day, j!
Thomas Millard Denton
Gail M. Detty
Robert Newton Dickens
Jerry Lee Dickerson
Thomas Shirley Dickinsoi
Luther R. Doffermyre
Stephen D. Dollinger
Franklin Pierce Donaldson
Rosalind Jeanne Duck
Raynham, Mass.
Charlotte
Fayetteville
Angier
Oceanside, N.J.
Warrenton
Reidsville
Nashville, Tenn.
Johnson City, Tex.
Winston-Salem
Clinton
Salisbury
Mt. Gilead
(,1c.
Allen, Va.
11
mpton, Va.
Dunn
Washi
ngton, D.C.
Spr
ngfield, Va.
Mars Hill
JUNIORS
Linda Dudley
Charlotte
Jan Elizabeth Eakins
Fairfax, Va.
Miriam Elizabeth Early
Greensboro
Foy Margienette Edmonc
South Hill, Va.
Sandra Lee Edwards
Newnan, Ga.
William Alexander Elias
Jn Charlotte
Carl Ray Elledge
North Wilkesboro
Carol Faye, Elledge
North Wilkesboro
Phillip Ward Ellington
Hickory
John Clyde Ellis, Jr.
Lumberton
Bobby Jay Ervin
Salisbury
Donna Rae Farley
Bluefield, W. Va.
Harriet Gillespie Farthin
g Leniot
Brenda Lee Fasnacht
Charlotte
Robert Lee Ferrell, Jr.
Greensboro
Charlanne Fields
Greensboro
Frederick James Flagler,
III Winston-Salem
Saly Nading Fleenor
Winston-Salem
Dewey W. Foster
Elizabeth City
Patricia Lynne Foust
Lexington
Janet Elizabeth Fox
Winston-Salem
Robert R. Fredeking, II
Huntington, W. Va.
Lowell Leon Freedlund
Rockton, III.
Elaine Teresa Fuller
Salisbury
Josephine Tucker Furgur
son Plymouth
John Thomas Gardner, J
Brandon, Fla.
Will, am Garnett
Malvern, Pa.
Philip Warren Gasaway
Silver Spring, Md.
David C. Gasque
Winston-Salem
Andrea Sue Gentry
State Road
Dwight Lonnie Gentry
Hyattsville, Md.
Roland Boyden Gibson
Winston-Salem
Thomas Stewart Gibson
Laurinburg
Dale Dean Glendening,
r. Fayetteville
Clarence Edwin Godwin,
Jr. Oxford
O f£^f fife
*iJ* *rf,J
^^ r'1 ffr Y^ ' **^
Milton Elliott Gold, Jr
H. Gcarl Gore
Gloria Sheda Gossett
David Clinard Gree
Rebecca Jane Gree:
Shirley Jannette Gn
Cherryville
Lumberton
Murphy
Kurt Peter Gottschalk Ridgewood, N.J.
John B. Gouch Charlotte
John Payne Grady New Bern
Adam Crawford Grant Kannapolis
Cheryl Patricia Graves Alexandria, Va.
Nancy Jean Gravley High Point
Mount Airy
Stokesdale
Concord
Robert Denton Gregory Asheville
Valjean Guynitia Griggs Winston-Salem
Michael Bruce Grim Bluefield, W. Va.
lil4L**Lk.
£ * ft'
JUNIORS
C f -• #tf ft <^ C* to
Wins
George Weller Grove, Jr.
Michael Donwell Gunter
John Ralph Hagaman
Mary Lynn Hager
Carolyn Susan Hahn
Gloria Jean Halstead
Robert McClure Hambrech
Larry Nicholas Hambrick
Barbara Ross Hanauer 1
Iris Patricia Hansen
Donald Watson Hardeman,
Charles Vester Hardin, III
Michael Floyd Harrah
Mary Arden Harris
Robert Allen Harris, Jr.
Robert Morse Hathaway, Jr.
Susan Parrish Haviland
Mattie Lee Havner
Wayne Robert Hedrick
Peter Charles Heiberger
Charles Diedrick Heidgerd Boca Ra
Lowell Hemphill
Ray Hemric
Hickory
a-Salem
Alexis
Bethesda, Md.
High Point
Rochester, Mich.
Timonium, Md.
irmingham, Mich.
Arlington, Va.
Jr. Orlando, Fla.
Pauline, S.C.
Fairmont
Charlotte
Richmond, Va
KernersvilU
Hampton, Va.
N.J.
Enfield
Roydc
,ce Jam
Joseph
William
lamuel Holbrook, Jr
Norman Homan
Richard Allison Honeyc
Susan Alice Honeycutt
Lexington
Mooresville
Franklin Richard Hood, Jr. Falls Church, Va
James Boyd Hood, Jr. Huntersvilh
John Allen Hopper
Jasper White Home
Jimmy Lee Horton
Margaret Jean Hough
William Amos Hough, III
Susan Meredith Howard
Susan M. Hrom
llr.
Lexington
Charlotte
Gastonia
xel Hill, Pa.
Sam H. Huffstetler, Jr. Burlington
Bruce A. Humphries Fort Washington, Pa.
M. Cheryel Huncycutt Locust
Patricia Hunt High Point
Chul Hwangbo Winston-Salem
Nancy Elizabeth Hyler Blowing Rock
Danny Aubrey Inge Lynchburg, Va.
Garrison Durham Ip<
Claire Jean Ivey
David Stone Jackson.
Robert G. Jacobsen
David Exum James
H. Glenn James
Douglas W. Jardine
Danny Blair Jenkins
Freddy Gray Johnson
Robert Lee Johnson
Shirlee Lavon Johnsoi
Linda Ellen Jones
Lynda Carol Jones
Virginia Ann Jones
ck, Jr. Orange, Va.
Farmingdale, N.J.
Jr. Nashville
Hollywood, Fla.
Bethel
Norfolk, Va.
III..
nfield Hills, Mich.
Rockingham
Mount Airy
Hampton, Va.
JUNIORS
Linda Faye Jordan
Julia Dobbins Joy!
Barbara Kay Key
Jan Allen Kiger
Edward Davey King
William Benbow King
Mt. Oliv
Charles Kirkland, Jr.
Atlanta, Ga
Charles Edward Kirkpat
rick
Winston-Salen
Wayne Daniel Klohs We
William Hutchins Lambe, Jt
Julius Hamilton Lambeth
Westfield. N.J.
I Caldwell, N.J.
Charlotte
Mooresville
Judith Jean Lawson
Gordon Thaxton Leathers Henderson
Emmett Matthew Leeper Eustis, Fla.
Keith Douglas Lembo Hawthorne, N.J.
Jack Weston Lewis, Jr. Florence, S.C.
Wade Columbus Lewis Raleigh
Anthony Michael Liner Durham
William Douglas Livengood Winston-Salem
Anne Marlowe Long Charlotte
Lloyd Maxwell Long, Jr. Aylette, Va.
Paul Erwin Long Roxboro
James Edward Lowe Statesville
Michael Fred Lynch Winston-Salem
Jeffrey Thomas Mackie Winston-Salem
Ronald MacVittie Marietta, Ohio
Norman Charles McAllister Winston-Salem
James R. McCracken
Al T. McCulloch
Harold Carlyle McDowell
Philip Alan McGee Washingti
David Litbum McGlothlen
Phyllis Annette McMurray
George Anthony McNabb
John Paul McNeil, III
Robert Redfern McRae
Philip McNeill Maness
Cassandra Jo Martin
James K. Martin
James Nello Martii
Mark Stephen Mast
Douglas Joseph Ma
William Paul Mattt
Timothy Rae Messi
Anne M. Meyer
Hi
Harold Daniel Miller, Jr.
James A. Miller
Robert Bruce Miller
Thomas Jackson Million
Jesse Lee Mills, III
Mark Preier Montgomery
Nelda Nan Morgan
Nashville, Tenn..
Shelby
Snowhill, Md.
Alexander, Va.
Peachland
Burlington
Rocky Mount
Icrest Heights, Md.
Virginia Beach, Va.
Washington, D.C.
Winston-Salem
Winston-Salem
Kenmore, N.Y.
Granite City, III.
Winston-Salem
Richard Earle
is, Jr.
Henry F.
James E. Morris
James Winston Mor
Thomas Roy Moyer
Norma H. Murdoch
Robert Humphries ll
Canton
Kingsport, Tenn.
Mavodan
Richmond, Va.
Wilkesboro
:inKton
., N.J.
£*"*-*^ "•*■«• J*"'"*' J1*«J
\4-.<
&~. <*■*. f*\ JM i&s
1 1 >.li.k
P P & £ £
JUNIORS
*^+A,±1ik*
Barry Phillips Murphy
Edward Albert Myers
Donna Gail Neal
Tommy Durr Nixon
E. Carolyn Norflcet
Anne Morton Northington
Paul Nelson Orser
David Louis Ott
Stua
Cur
Our
James Griffin Owen
Kathern Ann Pagliara
Zankey Reid Painter
Charles Benjamin Parker
Janet Carolyn Parker
Waynesville, Va.
Wycoff, N.J.
Marshville
Lexington
Williai
Marga
Amir
. Parke
Parks
Adele Patrick
Winston-Salem
William Sloan Patters
on
Kings Mountain
Bill Patton
Morganton
Carolyn Apple Patton
Princeton, N.J.
Edward O'Dell Pauley
Ch
arleston, W. Va.
Bronnie Clifton Pearce
Clarence Ford Peatross
Brenda Ruth Peeler
Peggy Lynne Pennell
Barbara Ellen Peterson
Ruth Malene Pettit
Michael Louis Pezzicola
Barbara Ann Phillips
Harold Donovan F
Fred P. Piercy
Pamela Pinson
Glenn Michael Pie:
Randall Roy Poe
John Andrew Port.
Winston-Salem
Winston-Salem
Albermarle
Boomer
Forest City
Winston-Salem
Trenton, N.J.
Portsmouth, Va.
ps, Jr. Laviel, Del.
Riverside, N.J.
Williamson, W. Va.
t Fayetteville
Kingsport, Tenn.
Salisbury
James Douglas Price
Jimmy Carl Pyron
Wanda Lee Radford
Leaksville
Cliffside
William Russell Raisner, Jr. Winston-Salem
Douglas Thomas Ramsey Martinsville, Va.
Richmond George Reavis Harmony
Raymond Rudolph Renfrow Fayetteville
John Lloyd Reynolds Winston-Salem
Don Stephen Rice Silver Spring, Md.
Rosalyn Delores Richmond Pfafftov
Garland Duke Ricks, III Wilsc
Edgar M. Roach, Jr. Ed,
Earle William Robinson, Jr. Gastonia
James Edward Robinson Hickory
Stanley Gray Rogers Bluefield, W. Va.
JUNIORS
Michael H. B. Rubensteii
William Wigmore Ruck
Anne Elizabeth Sabroske
Barbara North Saintsing
Sandy Edward Sanders
Louis Alan Sasser
Glenn Randall Saunders
Philip Laurence Saylor
John Randolph Searle
Joseph Worrell Seidle
Charles Ronald Settle
Michael D. Shaw
James Stephen Sheffer
Teddy Dale Shelton
Tolly Martin Shuford
Christian Nathaniel Siev
Deborah Sue Simpson
Richard Miller Sink
Ronald Kelly Sizemore
Thomas M. Sklutas
John Williar
Richard L. Slo
Elizabeth Ann Sn
Elizabeth Ann Sm
nd Beach, Fla
Wii
Ohi
Findle
Falls Church, Va.
Charlotte
Elizabethtown
Malvern, Pa.
Kings Mot
[|]
hester, N.H.
High Point
Jr. Kannapolis
Ashbury Park, N.J.
William Eugene Smith
Carolyn Jean Snider
Greensboro
High Point
Charles Durant Snipes, Jr.
Laretta Kay Snyder
Greensboro
Winston-Salem
Randolph Fletcher Spainhc
James Pierce Spooner
Howard Craige Stallings
Richard Thomas Stange
Caroline Louise Starck
James Marsh Steed
Mary Alice Steele
ur Lenior
Springfield, Pa.
Spencer
Livingston, N.J.
Northport, N.Y.
Charlotte
Mary Kathenne Stealing North Augusta, S.C.
Joel Edwin Stephens Loris, S.C
Peter Morrison Stiles Charlotte
John Everett Stone, Jr. Kingsport, Tenn.
Jeanne LaRoque Stott Raleigh
George Frederick Streblow, Jr. LaGrange, Ga.
Marian Jean Sykes Burlington
Carol Elaine Talbott
David Andrew Taliaferro
Donald Keith Tate
John Lewis Tate
Jeffrey Stanton Taylor
Lou.s Laverne Taylor, Jr.
Milton Lee Teague
Burlington
Center Cross, Va.
Gastonia
Bcllevue, Wash.
Linwood. N.J.
Washington
Lumberton
Thomas Stokes Tcmpleton
Marshall Dean Tessnear
James Leslie This
Mary Elaine Thomas
Patricia Lynne Thomas
Margaret Sue Tobey
Mary Ann Tolbert
Hyattsville, Md.
Forest City
McLean, Va.
Charlotte
Silver Spring, Md.
Louisville, Ky.
Richmond, Va.
^9 ^T) Kp
£■ & P
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r
ft Jl%kJ .&. £*fc^w Jr*k
SI) f *
JUNIORS
Charles Willi.
Arthur Townsend Haddonfield, N.J.
Goldsboro
inkfurt, Ky.
inston-Salem
High Point
hville, Tenn.
Charles Wallace Turner
Pamela Annette Turne
Susan Byrd Tutt
David E. Tuttle
Twiford
Kelly Randolph Vann
Eve Helen Varellas
Lucinda Coretha Vaughn
Elizabeth Graham Waitt
Roslyn Anne Waring
John Terry Warner
Anne C. Wannall
James Smith Warren
Paul Victor Washburn
James Huntley Watson
Richard Glenn Watson
David Robert Walters
William M. Watts. Jr.
Chuck E. Webb
Barbara Knoop Weeks
Landon Earl Weeks
Daniel Edward White
Francia Lea White
Patricia Ann Wieferich
Lola Kay Wike
James Drewery Wilkins
Jerry Lee Williams
Thomas Paul Williams
Jeffrey Alan Willison
David Collins Wilson
Walter E. Wilson
York Edward Winston
Craig Marshall Wood
Murfreesboro
enville, Tenn.
K'inston-Salem
Silver Spr,
Md.
Wake Forest
Boiling Springs
Croghan, S.C.
Forest City
na Heights, Pa.
Asheboro
Fairport, N.Y.
Baltimore, Md.
Galax, Va.
Matthews
Asheboro
Bethesda, Md.
Taylorsville
Grrensboro
Burlington
4*^ tit .(Wife
<f"J. 1$ P
David Alan Wood Kensington, Md.
James Robert Wren. Jr. Winston-Salem
Dan Roland Yarborough Lexington
Susan Scott Yates Virginia Beach, Va.
Richard David York Raleigh
Lee Alan Zinzow Miami, Fla.
SOPHOMORES
Sus
Abe
AIh
Shelley Cor
Tommy Newell Abernethy
Daniel Ross Ackley
Michael Lee Adams
Roger David Alden
Suzanne Dorothy Alexanc
George M. Allen
Suellen Anderson
Mary Jacqueline Andrews
William Pleasant Andrew:
Thomas Malone Aquino
Benjamin Thompson Aye
William Walter Bachovc
:hy Kingsport, Tenn.
n .u h y
Belmont
erpool, N.Y.
Knightdale
der High Point
Farmville
Jacksonville, Fla.
; Brevard
,s Durham
Canastota, N.Y.
ck, Jr. Wake Forest
in Johnstown, Pa.
John Michael Baker
Fairfax, Va.
John Frederick Barden
Rocky Mount
Patrick Douglas Barnes W.
Long Branch, N.J.
David Donald Barrett
Miami, Fla.
Stephen Louis Barsotti
Allison Park, Pa.
Rhonda Duke Bean
Hickory
Elizabeth Caldwell Beatty
Mt. Holly
Chris Beavers
Winston-Salem
Philip James Beavers
Winston-Salem
Franklin Andrew Beck
Greensboro
Mary Emily Belk
Kingsport, Tenn.
Deborah Sue Best
Hickory
Robert Laurence Bingham
Lansdowne, Pa.
Ronald Gay Blanchard
Salemburg
William Frank Bley, Jr.
Fairfax, Va.
Robert Paul Blinn
Pennington, N.J.
Donald H. Bobo
Asheboro
Douglas Raymond Boff
Cherry Hill, N.J.
Raymond Harry Bogaty
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Guy Russell Boleman, III
Burlington
Thomas Edgar Boone
Wilson
Aik^A
Patsy Robin Bovender
Winston-Salem
Dennis Grant Bowlin
Dobson
Barry L. Brelow
Woodbridge, N.J.
William Donald Brewer,
r. Charlotte
Woodrow Wilson Brinson
Jr. Kenansville
Henry Michael Britt
Winston-Salem
Katherine Leinbach Britt
Winston-Salem
Audrey Nancy Britton
Ahoskie
Ellen Sue Brocket!
Alexandria, Va.
Martha Jo Brookbank
Winston-Salem
George Evans Brooks
Cary
Richard Gwyn Brookshir
c Lenoir
James Michael Broome
Gastonia
Grayson H. Brown
Gainesville
John Marian Browning
Arlington, Va.
Sandra Carol Buchanan
Roanoke, Va.
Douglas Pratt Buckley
Norristown, Pa.
Jesse Albert Bugbee
Trenton, N.J.
Robert Bulkowski
Farmingdale, N.J.
Heath Denton Bumgardn
cr Cape May
Court House, N.J.
John Robert Burger
Atlanta, Ga.
Gary Wayne Burke
Winston-Salem
Linda Dianne Burnett
Charlotte
Crystal Laurie Burns
Augusta, Ga.
Betty Ann Burt
Carthage
Kenneth Oakley Bush
Winter Haven, Fla.
James Irvin Butler
Arlington, Va.
Thomas Edward Byrd
Winston-Salem
Steven E. Byerly
High Point
Paul Harrcll Cale, Jr.
Crozet, Va.
Robert Wesley Callahan
Shelby
Clyde Lee Callaway, Jr.
Winston-Salem
Frank Daniel Cannon, Jr
Scaford, Del.
James Delaney Carlton
Salisbury
Ronald Vernon Carter
Newton-Conover
JkJfe.
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SOPHOMORES
Robert Alexander Caskey Montgomery, Ala.
James Day Chapman
Bart Aaron Charlow
Robert Neil Clarke
Jeflrey Lawrence Collin:
Karen Dupre Conger
William Frederick Cook
Asheville
South Fallsburg, N.Y.
McMurray, Pa.
Arlington, Va.
Charleston, W. Va.
Salisbury
Mary Kay Cornwell
Leila Byrd Corrie
Rhonda Gayle Cox
Paul Stephen Crissman
Roger Alan Crockett
James Estes Cross, Jr.
Catherine Ellen Cumby
Nancy Paige Cummings
Richard A. Curd
James William Curl, Jr.
Kathryn Neal Curlee
Pat Lynne Dailey
Kathryn Lynn Daniel:
Stephen Porter Dame]
Shelby
:e, S.C
t. A,ry
Graham
e, N.J.
"lington
Front Royal, Va
Charlottl
Virginia Beach, Va
Charles Robert Dashi.
T. E. Deacon (
Beverly Jean Dent
Charlotte
Jr. Salisbury, Md.
tawa, Ontario, Canada
Asheville
Elizabeth Cecelia Derringer
Dan Walter Dever Ottaw:
Joseph Jacob Dobner
Wiley Jacob Doby
Herb Ray Dockery
Wayne Leslie Dodson
Robert Brett Dunckel
Robert George Dunnir
Beverly Ann Duval
Stephen Boyd Ea
James M. East
Linda Jane Edwa
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Huntington, N.Y.
Charlotte
Winston-Salem
Rebecca Yvonne Edwards
Sue Ella Edwards
Christine Joy Ekvall
Nancy Carolyn Elliott
Mary Anita English
Jo Ann Eskridge
Elizabeth Jane Everhart
Brewer Moody Ezzell
Betty Jean Farley
Harry Joseph Ferber
David Gaertner Fergusson
John Guy Fisher, III
Susan Diane Fisher
Thomas Smith Fleming, Jr.
Robert Phillip Flood, Jr.
Anderson Gayle Floyd, Jr.
Charles Edward Floyd
Jean Adair Fogleman
Douglas Wayne Ford
Laura Christian Ford
Rocky Mount
Greensboro
Cleveland, Ohio
Laurinburg
Havelock
Lexington
Magnolia
ton-Salem
Hampton, Va.
Hudson, Ohio
Cranbury, N.J.
Dallas, Texas
Tarboro
Syr
X Y
Stua
He.
Fosi
Lynchburg. Va.
Wilkesboro
SOPHOMORES
Larry Eugene Freeman Ahoskie
Alan King Fulks Athens, Ohio
Peter H. Funk Westfield, N.J.
Dianna Lucille Furniss Virginia Beach, Va.
Charles Stephen Gaddy Danville, Va.
Beverly Scott Gadsden Charlotte
William Bryant Gallagher McLean, Va.
Daryl Wade Garton
Richmond. Va.
Greg C. Gaskins
Monroe
Thomas Jefiries Gavin
Fayetteville
Ricky Charles Gentry
Elkin
Vicki Ann Gentry
Rougemont
Gretchen C. Gerhardt
Chevy Chase, Md.
DeWitt Clinton G.bson
Winnetka, 111.
Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore
Winston-Salem
Dennis Wayne Goins
Mount Airy
Hampton Grey Goode
Martinsville, Va.
Gary Andrew Graham
Baltimore, Md.
Walter Alexander Grahan
, Salisbury
John Charles Greenbaugh
Harrington, Del.
Robert Bryan Griffin
Winston-Salem
Elizabeth Groff
Salisbury
Stephen Charlie Grubb
Winston-Salem
Martha Louise Gunby
Atlanta, Ga.
Robert Thomas Guth
Baltimore, Md.
Elizabeth Ann Guthrie
San Antonio. Texas.
Barry T. Hackshaw
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Karl Owen Haigler
Fayetteville
Bahnson David Hall
Burlington
Eleanor Cheryl Hall
Alexandria, Va.
Gregory Briggs Hall
Virginia Beach, Va.
Lynn Henry Hallman
Mt. Airy
Robert Ray Hamilton
Lancaster, Pa.
Nancy Jo Hampton
Burlington
Karen Hall Hancock
New Bern
Richard Evertt Hardison
Arlingotn, Va.
Betty Allen Harkness
Covington, Va.
Morris Hartis
Charlotte
David Lee Hartley
Frederick, Md.
James Dougles Hartzog
Lexington
Denson Gray Hauser, Jr
Winston-Salem
Holly Joan Hawkins
Miami, Fla.
David Kenneth Hayes
Baltimore, Md.
Martha Lee Heckerman
Charleston, S.C.
Kenneth Shell Hemphill
Thomasville
James Howard Herstine
North East, Md.
Jeanne Carol Hester
Greensboro
Carl Woodall Hibbert
Atlanta, Ga.
Laurel Marlene Hill
Thomasville
Linda Diane Hinson
Alexandria, Va.
Molly Lynn Hirons
Geneva, Switzerland
Daniel Ralph Hobbs
Greensboro
James Walker Hobbs
Charlotte
Deborah Hope Hodge
Troy
Vannie Kay Hodges
Baltimore, Md.
Charles H. Hodierne
Galesburg, III.
Cathy Suzanne Holden
Roanoke, Va.
SOPHOMORES
Charles Milton Holland
Raleigh
Katherine Street Holliday
Charlotte
Karen Lee Hollifield
Black Mountain
John Alexander Holthoust
r Elkin
Richard Allison Honeycut
t Lexington
Mary Jo Hord
Kings Mountain
Guy Thomas Horner
Henderson
George Robert Horton
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Mike W. Horton
Greensboro
Susan Virginia House
Springfield, Va.
Gloria Lynne Howard
Greensboro
James Dallas Howell
Jamestown
Rebekah Lou Howell
Gastonia
Thomas Dorbin Hughes
Alexandria, Va.
Roger Allen Hull
Mt. Pleasant, Term.
John Anthony Hyatt
Jonesville, Va.
Betty Frances Hyder
Kingsport, Tenn.
Nicholas Paul Iannuzzi
Medford, N.J.
Harold Ross Inman
Wilmington
Nelson Nolan Isenhower
Maiden
Wayne Thomas Jarman
Bethesda, Md.
Evander Gilbert Jeffords
Florence, S.C.
Thomas Parks Jennings
Windsor
Florence Cherny Johnson
Winston-Salem
Robert Francis Johnson
Burlington
Freda Lee Jones
East Flat Rock
Michael Evans Jones
Woodbury, N.J.
Paul Winthrop Jones
Longmeadow, Mass.
Susan Anne Jones
Raleigh
Carol Sue Jordon
Thomasville
Bruce Lewis Jubenowsky
Mountainside, N.J.
David Wayne Kable
Newport News, Va.
Robert Douglas Kater
Washington, D.C.
Jay Hubert Kegerreis
Richland, Pa.
Steven Bain Keiger
Tobaccoville
Carl Fred Keller
West Islip, N.Y.
David Glenn Kellum
New Bern
Thomas Max Kettlehare
Cincinnati, Ohio
Carl Norman King
Hickory
Samuel Cromer King, J
Lincolnton
James Brady Kinlaw
Altavista, Va.
Susan Irene Kinsey
Fayetteville
Rob Klosterman
Worthington, Ohio
Michael Russell Knight
Winston-Salem
Donald Joseph Kobos
Salem, Mass.
Robert Dumais Kornegay,
Jr. Rocky Mount
Burnell Handwerk Kraus
Woodbridge, Va.
Claudia Ann Krest
Roanoke, Va.
George W. S. Kuhn, III
Ft. Monroe, Va.
Bruce Allen Kushner
Elizabeth, N.J.
James Walter Kyle
Birmingham, Ala.
Edward Anthony Lake
Kingsport, Tenn.
Charles Butler Lassiter
Covington, Ga.
J. Gray Lawrence, Jr.
Asheville
Richard Gordon Leader
Wayne, Pa.
Evcrette Oden Ledbetter
Asheville
Robert Michael Lee
Jacksonville, Fla.
John Michael Leffler
Wichita, Kansas
Douglas John Lemza
Kendall Park, N.J.
Michael Edward Lewis
Winston-Salem
Kenton Richard Lilyquist
Raleigh
Carol Ann Lindner W
est Palm Beach, Fla.
Samuel Henry Long
Elberton, Ga.
Charles Benton Lott
Westfield, N.J.
Sherwood Lee Love
Gretna, Va.
Mary Anne Lynch
Wytheville, Va.
Sharon Lynch
Ocean City, Md.
Thomas John Lynch
Prospect, Ky.
John Hugh Lytton
Lumberton
Sara Frances Mabry
Albemarle
~s- i ' "\TT,T
SOPHOMORES
E. Warren MacKinstly So.
Dartmouth, Mass.
Suzanne McBride
Alexandria, Va.
Robert Kent McCarn
Lexington
Frederick W. McClure Jacks
onville Beach, Fla.
Ronald Scott McCord
Petersburg, Va.
Richard P. McCotter
Raleigh
Harold Paul McCoy, Jr.
Ahoskie
Florence Elizabeth McDonald Atlanta, Ga.
James Christopher McDuffie
East Rockingham
Gary Sanford McHam
Inman, S.C.
Sheila Faye McLawhorn
Greenville, S.C
Margaret Dianne McMichael
Winston -Salem
David A. McNaught
Winston-Salem
Jolynne McNeil
Greensboro
Claude Ackle McNeil, III
Elkin
Kenneth David Maddrey
Greensboro
Roger Phillip Main
Burlington, N.J.
Earl Lewis Marsalis
Edgewood, Md.
Jo Ann Martin
Winston-Salem
Jerry Cash Martin
Mount Airy
John D. Matsinger, Jr.
Media, Pa.
John Paul Matson Silver Spring, Md.
Susan Lynn Mauger
Oaklyn, N.J.
John Manwing May
Spring Hope
David Mattson Meech
Statesville
Thomas Fleetwood Mefford
Cincinnati, Ohio
Deanne Evelyn Mellen St
Albans, W. Va.
Dennis Henry Melvin
Fairfax, Va.
Clara Jean Michaels
Morgan ton
Frances Jane Miller
Charlotte
Joel Byron Miller
Statesville
Sophocles C Mishaelides
Larnaca, Cyprus
Nancy Ann Moate
Holden, W. Va.
Harvey Howard Morris, Jr.
Richmond, Va.
Judith Claire Morrow
Lebanon, N.J.
f^f 1»^ T*-*
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V L ■ \u l-'-l v - ^<4 A
David Kirby Morton
Winston-Salem
Timothy E. Moyer Blooming Glenn, Pa.
Michael Stephen Mulkey
Rockingham
Susan Elizabeth Nance
Clinton
James Harry Naphas
Pitman, N.J.
Michael Benjamin Neale
Springfield, Mo.
David Sanford Nelson
Winston-Salem
Joan Marie Nelson
Atlantic
Ted Owens Neuenschwann
:r Winston-Salem
Edward Traywick Newtor
Durham
Linda Maye Newton
Wilson
Lewis Leland Noell
Danville, Va.
Thomas Lee Nunnallee
Avon Park, Fla.
Sarajane Oakley
Louisville, Ky.
Stanley Gene Oetken
Longmont, Colo.
Cynthia Louise Olsen
Winston-Salem
John Eric Olson, Jr.
Alexandria, Va.
Nancy Sue Outlaw
Kinston
Mary Hellen Owen
Waynesville
Sandra Sue Owens
McGrady
Charles Lewis Pamplin
Silver Spring, Md.
Jeanne Ann Parks
Lexington
David Allen Parris
Rockville, Md.
Nan Beverly Patteson
Alexandria, Va.
Charles Winfield Paul
Washington
Christopher Merrill Peace
Halifax, Va.
Ann Louise Peale
Silver Spring, Md.
Randolph Gray Perryman
Lexington
Wilson Havwood Phillips,
It. Henderson
Frederick Cabell Philpott
Lexington
Linda Jean Peirce
Charlotte
Judith Louise Pike
Asheville
Dennis Lee Pinkerton
Lewisville
Dorn Carl Pittman
Burlington
Floyd Eugene Plott
Baltimore, Md.
T-~-
lUfclwi
J£ f£> £*
SOPHOMORES
Franklin Roosevelt Plum
Donald Kenneth Polifka
Larry Frank Pons
James Frederick Poole
Ann Cleveland Poot
Elizabeth Tyler Porter
Cynthia Susan Posten
Erwin Joseph Powell
Stephen Miles Powell
Susan Elena Powers
Mary Ann Pregnall
Beverly Jeanne Preston
Jo Anna Preston
Nancy Jean Price
Randy Lee Price
Joe Lee Puckett, III
James Leland Putnam
John Queen
Timothy Lee Quigg
Edward Sims Rankin
Janice Gayle Reavis
Scott Eldridge Reed
Jimmy Dean Reeves
Thomas Lenwood Rich
Susan Ma
Linda Gai
James Ba,
on Riggs
Robertson
lette Robins,
Linton H. Robinson
Walter Franklin Rose, Jr
Donald Lynwood Ross
Ryde
ny Da,
aid Ne
Helen Sandra Sava
Marian Lynn Sche
Robert C. Schock
Valde
Ashland, Mas
Philadelphia, Pa.
rvMe, Fla.
Charlotte
avista, Va.
Potsdam, N.Y.
Logan, W. Va.
easantville, N.J.
Greensboro
Crumpler
Fairmont
Livingston, N.J.
Black Mountain
Fayettevill,
Abosku
Morehead City
lincinnati, Ohio
Rochelle, N.Y.
Gary Herman Schroeder
Winston-Salem
Wesley Bryan Seamon
Kennapolis
William Martin Sedberry
Wood leaf
Christine Bowman Severn
Asheville
Donald Thronton Shafer
Coral Gables, Fla.
Joan Marie Dorothy Shall
:ross Smithfield
Bruce Edward Sharpe
Silver Spring, Md.
Beverly Ann Shaw
Charlotte
Doug Wayne Shiflett
Jacksonville, Fla.
Timothy Lee Shouse
Winston-Salem
Mack R. Shuping
Salisbury
Adelaide Alexander Sink
Mount Airy
Cyrus Thompson Sloan,
E. Thomas Slonaker
Barry Adrian Smith
Betty Jane Smith
Elizabeth Bryan Smith
Gregory James Smith
Judy Lynne Smith
Tamara Layne Smith
Jerrie Marion Snow
-Sale
vn
■die
Winst
W;
Norwich, N.Y.
Burlington
Lexington
Siloam
SOPHOMORES
James Bernard Spears, Jr.
Shelby
Richard Michael Spencer
Jonesville
Carolyn Hertzler Spindler
Winston-Salem
James Herschel Sprinkle
Marshall
Elmer Ray Spurr
Shawnee, Okla.
David Arnold Stainback
Berwyn, Pa.
David Wolfe Stanley
Charlotte
Charmelle Staples
Columbia, S.C.
Floyd Eugene Steward, Jr.
Rome. Ga.
Terry G. Stewart
Havelock
Marilyn Elaine Stiff
Valdese
Anita Elizabeth Stone
St. Albans, W. Va.
James Thomas Stone
Raleigh
Marcia Barrow Stone
Roanoke, Va.
Mary Kay Stoudenmire
Deland, Fla.
Patricia Ann Strickland
Line Level
Albert Jackson Strickling
Skokie, 111.
Rebekah Elizabeth Sueur
Mooresville
Charles Francis Sugg
Snow Hill
Joel Craig Swaim
Burlington
Thomas Callie Tadlock
Monroe
John Frederick Taggart New Fairfield, Conn.
John Ellwood Tantum
Robbinsville, N.J.
James Quent.n Taylor
Severn
Margaret Glenn Taylor
Wilkesboro
Mary Linda Taylor
Raleigh
William Lloyd Taylor
High Point
Joseph H. Theriault
Nashua, N.H.
Naomi Ruth Thorp
Arlington, Va.
John Leslie Tilley
irv
William Crawford Towns
nd Lumberton
James Wilson Trent
Durham
Joyce Helen Trigg
Mons, Belgium
John Jay Triplett
Pleasant Garden
Sally Troutman
Lenoir
Lillian Durant True
Columbia, S.C.
Carl Vann Tyner. II
Gastonia
Robert Donald Umbel
Poland, Ohio
Melinda Ann Underwood
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Edmond Theodore Urban
Hollywood, Fla.
David O. VanDelander S
Charleston, W. Va.
John P. VanZandt
Blawenburg, N.J.
Kristen Hope Vaughan
Kingsport, Tenn.
Walter Ray Vernon, Jr.
Roxboro
Frank Leroy Vestal
Winston-Salem
John Barrett Walker, III
Burlington
Richard Carr Walker
Williamsburg, Va.
Carroll Charles Wall, III
Lexington
Laura Elizabeth Wall
High Point
Roscoe LeGrand Wall
Winston-Salem
Bruce Douglas Walley
New Castle, Del.
Demming Morton Ward
Lumberton
John Vernon Watts
Asheboro
Jane Bell Weathers
Winston-Salem
Eloise Home Webster
Durham
R. Ken Weeks, Jr.
Norfolk, Va.
James Shelton Wells, Jr.
Greenville
$ ft p' ,£• f**« ft
SOPHOMORES
George Kenneth West
Bethlehem, Pa.
Alan Preston White
Winchester, Va.
Beverly Jean White
Annandale, Va.
Charles Jeffrey Whi
Winston-Salem
Dayle Diane White
Florence, S.C.
Ronald Edward Whi
Washington, D.C
Sally Ann Whitehu
st
Bethel
Melvin Stanley Whi
ley
Southern Pines
Richard Allen Whit
ingtot
Mount Dora, Fla.
Sharron Ann Wiist
Victoria, Tex.
Floyd Lee Williams
Burlington
James Davis Williarr
Malvern, Pa.
Gary W. Williard
Yadkinville
C. Conway Wilson
Charlotte
Rebecca Sue Wilson
Winston-Salem
Robert Bruce Wilso
Pitman, N.J.
Joan Lee Wimer
Silver Spring, Md.
Carolyn Connolley Wolf
Winston-Salem
Thomas Joseph Woll
■y
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Roy Wayne Wrigh
Salem, Va.
Stuart Thurman Wright
Roxboro
Alexander Thomas
W'vd
e Whiteville
Leon Wilson Wynn
Rrbersonville
John Newkirk Yarri
rcgton
Woodstown, N.J.
Christine Yeager
Walkertown
John Dennis Young
Jr-
High Point
Larry Robert Zane
Swedensbjro, N.J.
FRESHMEN
William Ivey Adair
Beaufort
Rod A. Adams
Baltimore, Md.
Michael Lee Aiken
Greenville
Sally Jo Ainsworth
Webester, N.Y.
Susan Jeanette Albert
Pulaski, Va.
Judith Anne Aldrich
Gastonia
Patti Allen
Louisville, Ky.
Constance Elizabeth Ange
Williamston
William Kevin Anglim
Madison, N.Y.
Mary Jane Antonoplos
Decatur, Ga.
Roy Alston Archbell, II
Aurora
Ernest James Arlart
Riverside, III.
Timothy Kirk Arnold
Falls Church, Va.
William Charles Arthur
Alexandria, Va.
Richard R. Ashford
Pearl City, Hawaii
Russell Zachary Aste
Miami, Fla.
Helene Annette Bacon
Kingsport, Tenn.
Bruce Bryon Badger
River Forest, 111,
Douglas Kent Bailey
Jacksonville, Fla.
Joel Malcolm Baillie
Zanesville, Ohio
John Steven Baker
Rockhill, S.C.
Martha Victoria Baker
Roanoke Rapids
Robert Carl Baker
Cedar Grove, N.J.
Ann Bartram Balls
Newton Square, Pa.
Richard Joseph Barbeau
Salem, Mass.
John Martin Barnabic
Valhalla, N.Y.
Christopher Keen Barnes
Cincinnati, Ohio
Kenna Elaine Barnes
Linwood
Nell Goodwyn Barnes
Charlotte
James Ward Bateman
Williamsburg, Va.
Jacquelyn Frances Bartho
omew Tarboro
Albert Floyd Beard, III
Fayetteville
Carole Bernardine Beatty
Kannapolis
Ronald Raphael Beauvais
Elgin, III.
Bonnie Wayne Bell
Roanoke Rapids
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Palm Beach, Fla
Betty Sue Benton
Brenda Ruth Bent.
Kenneth Robert Bei
Donald Bruce Bergey Norristown, Pa.
Gregory William Bergmann Middletown, N.J.
John William Bernhardt Hamilton Square, N.J.
Linda Kaye Berry Hillsborough
Henry Clark Black, III
William Carroll Blackerby
John C. Blanton
James Ray Blevins
Brad Eugene Boehmler
Marvin Andrew Bond
Michael Scott Booher
David Harris Boutilier
Robert John Bouwsn
Joel Grim Bowden
Robert Lewis Bradrield
ilmington, Del.
Bessemer, Ala.
Ahoskie
Lansing
)rexel Hill, Pa.
Liberty
Pisgah Forest
LaGrange, Ga.
FRESHMEN
w W O £- <ff} O
Robert Monroe Brady
John William Brassel
Bill Garfield Braswell, Jr.
Raymond A. Brerzmann, Jr.
Roxanna Lynn Brevard
Charles Robinson Brewer
Brooks
owder, Jr.
James Gregory Budd
John Paul Bullock
Salisbury
Rockville. Md.
Monroe
gston, N.J.
Matthews
Raleigh
Wake Forest
Lit
Donald Floyd Bun
Robert Michael B
Ann M. Callison
Teresa Ann Campbell
Henry Corwin Campen
Linda Gail Carr
Larry Patrick Cai
Dale William Cart
Gary Webb Cassel
Harold David Causby
Lawrence J. Chamberlai
Martha Larue Chappell
Richard Francis Chu
Carol Lee Clark
Donn Rickey Clayto
Richmond, Va.
Weatogue, Conn.
Dayton, Ohio
Concorc
Fayettevilh
ngton, W. Va
Chicago, III.
rrington, N.J.
Salisbury
Shelby
Wilkes-Barre, Va.
Asheville
Hurdle Mills
Willis Walter Cleveland
Patrick Wade Cliett P
Julie Mynette Clifford
Thomas Mitchell Clower
David Henry Coates
Everette Wayne Coates
John Herbert Noel Cockbu
Marilyn Corinne Cohara
Bradford Dean Cole, Jr.
Joseph Jerald Cole, III
Andrea Beth Coleman I
Thomas Wesley Comstock
Joseph Daniel Conrad
Ash by Morris Cook
James Franklin Cook, Jr.
John Ruben Cook, Jr.
Wesley Ray Cook
Donald Keith Cooper
David M. Cordier
Richard E. Corritore
Nicholas Angelo Cortese, Jr. Berlin, Md
Winston-Salem
eprune Beach, Fla.
Atlanta, Ga.
Roanoke, Va.
Hightstown, Pa.
Durham
a Beries Creek
Denver, Colo,
ilver Spring, Md.
izabethton, Tenn.
Atlanta. Ga.
Bethania
High Point
Clemmons
Newport News, Va.
Winston-Salem
Greensboro, Md.
Collingswood, N.J.
Elizabeth, N.J.
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FRESHMEN
Sammy McKenzie Covin
Alexander Brown Coxe
Paul Eugene Craighead
Samuel Lee Crawford
Gary Lee Crees
Eric James Crissm.n
Kevin J. Crosby
Charles Lee Crothers
John P.nkney Crowder
Donald Hurst Crowe
Paul Manly Crumpler
Fred Benjamin Culler,
Mary Louise Cunninghai
John Gray Currin, Jr.
Tin,
Cur
James C. Dailey
Nancy Ann Dando
Than
Da'
Elizabeth Allen Day
Susan Elizabeth Day
Ralph Edward Dennison
William Albert Dickson
Eunice Maria Doman
Susan Donaldson
Evelyn Antoinette Down
Anthony Drake
Boiling Stovall DuBosc
Phil Vaughn DuBose
Robert Francis Duffy
Mary Cheryl Duncan
Ma
Dw
ton Rockingham
Greenwich, Conn.
Rockmart, Ga.
Chapel Hill
Darlington, Pa.
Graham
Lockport, N.Y.
Greensboro
Charlotte
Morehead City
Clinton
[r. High Point
i Charleston, W.Va.
Graham
Oxford
Medford Lakes, N.J.
Jacksonville, Fla.
Lexington
Greensboro
Alexandria, Va.
Woodbury, N.J.
Jacksonville, Fla.
ft e t> £<
Martha Leslie Early
Martha Jane Earp Selma
Joseph Craig Easley Rocky Mount
Elizabeth Catherine Anne Eddins Albemarle
Sarah Matthews Elliott Cocoa Beach, Fla.
Charles Harrison Ellis Laurel, Del.
Richard Fain Embry Salisbury
Raymond Ralph Emerick, Jr. Ellicott City, Md.
Robert Kent Emley Hagerstown, Md.
Terrence Nicholson Eva
Karen Anne Fallon
Nan Blythe Falls
Brenda Lee Feathers
James Russell Finch
Constance Kathleen Fitch
Deanne Elaine Ford
Charlie Bradley Forrest, Jr.
Malinda Ann Fort
Jerry Eugene Francis
Steven Vaughan Frccdman
Rockville, Md.
Murf'reesboro
San Paulo, Brazil
Vanceboro
Charlotte
Westfield
Seaford, N.Y.
ft
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>ti
FRESHMEN
Rand
• Blade Freeman
Lexington
Robe
t Earl Fuller. Jr.
Goldsboro
Rick
James
Burrow Funderbu
Ronald Gadd
rk
Charlotte
Charlotte
Bruce
Harlan Garland
T
renton, N.J.
Melin
da Lee Garrett
Charlotte
Georg
e E. Gatzogiannis
Wor
cester, Mass.
Joseph Stephen Gaydica
Charlotte
Aubr
y Lee Gerlaugh
Mar
insville, Va.
K.r.
een Elizabeth Gerr
|U
h Baltimore, Md.
Stanlt
y Anthony Gest
Mount
Holly. N.J.
Arthi
r Henry Getz
Grosse Pointe, Mich.
Const
ance Rogers Giles
Greensboro
Erne
Wilson Glass, J
'■
Charlotte
Arba
Sherwook Godwir
,
r.
Littleton
Dae s
Earl Godwin
Ahoskie
Const
oe ring
Durham
Bruce
James Goodrich
Norwalk, Conn.
Lawr
nee Ervin Gosnell
Virgin
a Beach, Va.
James
Marshall Gossler,
u
Lenoir
Gilbe
t Stephen Gough
Hamptonville
Robe
t Maurice Grant.
Jr-
Taylorsville
Kathr
yn Elizabeth Grav
Fr
ankfort, Ky.
Wylie
Clondis Graves, Jr.
Greensboro
Debo
ah Helene Grey
Arlington, Va.
Susan
Elaine Guest
Charles
ton, W. Va.
John
Robert Gunnels
Falls
Church, Va.
Ann
Hags-
Laurel, Del.
Leslie
Ann Hall
Ale
sandria, Va.
I inda
Patricia Hall
Raleigh
Frank
Spruill Haltiwanger
Rockville, Md.
Susan
Verdice Hamill
Enfield
Edwin Timothy Hamilt
White
Plains, N.Y.
Richa
rd Reagan Hamlin
Win;
r Park, Fla.
George Nye Hamrick,
|l
Kannapolis
Doug
as Bruce Hanna
M.
tawaw, N.J.
Diane
Louree Hansen
Cocoa
Beach, Fla.
Roy Allen Hare
Durham
Roger
Scott Harrill
Forest City
Stever
Barnes Harvey
o
rchard
Lake, Mich.
Stever
J. Harvey
T
renton, N.J.
Debor
ah Haskell
New Ca
naan, Conn.
DeWi
tt Clinton Hauser,
III
Clemmoos
Erna
Catharini Haven
W
nston-Salem
Richa
rd Dean Hawes
Buer
a Vista, Va.
David
Broughton Hawk
Charlotte
Charl
■s Rufus Hayes
Wilkesboro
Harold Eugene Haves
Gastonia
James
Alex Hayes
Clemmons
Billy
McNeil Haywood
Mt. Gilead
Wintl
rop S. Headley
Wes
port. Conn.
Steph
n William Hedbe
g
St
aunton. Va.
David
Oren Heffner
Mocksville
FRESHMEN
Stephen Ford Heiner
Judith Elizabeth Hellard
Vernon Lamar Helms
George Franklin Henne,
Theodore Lynn Herr
Jimmie Kay Hiemstra
Danny Glenn Higgins
Donald Robert Hildabrai
Diane Lynn Hildebrand
Barbara Smillie Hill
Joan Patricia Hill
Neil Frank Hill
Candy L. Hinso
Warren Raymoi
Thorn Louis Hoagland Upper Marlboro, Md.
Anne Elizabeth Hobson Charlotte
Patricia Anne Hodges Charlotte
Charlotte
scataway. N.J.
Manheim. Pa.
Newark, Del.
Wilmington, Del.
Virgini:
W. Pain
John Henry Hoffcrbert
James Leanney Hogan
Joseph Clayton Holladay
Ronald Hinton Honeycuti
Richard Johnson Horton
Winna Marie Hostel
Harriet Hough
Martha Rose Howa
Michael Eugene Howard
Carol Lynn Howerton
Warren Fitzhugh Hoyle
Baldwin, Md.
Ocean City, N.J.
Winston-Salem
•eensboro
Clinton
>n, N.Y.
Denvei
Blacksburg, Va
James William Huber Scotch Plains, N.J.
Parks Reid Huffstctler Gastonia
John Thomas Hughes, Jr. Pittsboro
Tom Spicer, Jr.
John Raymond Hun
Thomas Bryan Ingrar
Cathe
Sylyia
ine Ann Jacks.
Jeanette James
Warren, Pa.
N. Wilkesboro
Newburgh, N.Y.
Atlanta, Ga.
Raleigh
Charlotte
Robert Scott Janney
Richard Everett Jester
David Lynn Johnson
Ira Alan Johnson
Lcnora Jane Johnson
Russell B. Johnson, Jr.
Jack Craven Johnston
Richard Kirk Jonas
Burdell Carter Jones
Dianne Silver Jones
Elizabeth Wilson Jones
Lana Gail Jones
Pamela Kaye Jones
Richmond, Va
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on-Salc
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FRESHMEN
Ronald Elbert Jones
Boomer
Margaret Long Jordan
Charlotte
Glenn H. Josephsen
Salem, N.J.
Michael Gray Kallam
Winston-Salem
Michael Edward Keenan
Newton
Edwin Lee Kellogg
Charlotte
Doris K. Kelly Indian H
rbour Beach, Fla.
George Alan Kelly-
Huntersv.lle
Richard Shreve Kennedy
Mayodan
Vincent Arthur Kiley
Tempe, Ariz.
William Lynn Killion
Salisbury
Kristin Ann King
Gastonia
Nelson R. Klamm Sha
ker Heights, Ohio
Donald Robert Klinger
Hampton, Va.
Robert William Knight
Charlotte
George Henry Koether, III
Glen Burnie, Md.
Robert Carl Kovarik
Arlington, Va.
Christina Kriebel
Perkasie. Pa.
Karl Joe Krieger
Huntington, Va.
Deborah Ann Krueger
Indianapolis, Ind.
Elizabeth Anne Landsperger
Greensboro
Marjorie Linda Lanier
Copperhill, Tenn.
Paul Lendon Lassiter
Raleigh
William Edward Latta
Hillsborough
James Donald Lawrey
Rockville, Md.
Stuart Hayes LeGrand
Shelby
Harold Richart Letton, Jr.
Carlisle, Ky.
Lloyd Arthur Levis
Vienna, Va.
Samuel Freeman Lewis, Jr.
Burlington
David Smith Lindsay
Richmond, Va.
Richard Michael Loflin
High Point
Archie Doyster Logan, Jr.
Reidsville
Carol Sue Lougee
Durham
Beverly Ann Lowdermilk
Rockingham
Sam William Lunsford, Jr.
Winston-Salem
Markham William Mabry Albemarle
R. James MacLaren. Jr. Towanda, Pa.
Evelyn Lynn McCall Newton, N. J.
Max William McCollum Monroe
Joel Caldwell McConnell, Jr.
James Michael McCourt
Harmon Caleb McDaniel, Jr.
Elizabeth Anne McDonald
Gilbert Ray McGregor
Joy Charlene McKinney
Clarence McCain McMurray
Stephen McMahon McNeill
Larry James McQuee
Herbert Larry McRa.
Deborah Sue Maine
Betty Jewell Malpass
Gordon Henry Malsbury
David Huff Maner
Roselyn Marie Mangun
Britton David Mann
rain, Ohio
Raeford
Longdale
Shelby
Raeford
Saloda, S. C.
Red Springs
tshington, D. C
Clinton
ivrenceville, N. J.
Adelphi, Md.
Elizabeth City
outh Point, Ohio
ji.ikitL - .-■■
FRESHMEN
Julia Elsie Manning
Freeman Adolph Mark
William Everett Martin
Gerald Rudolph Massey,
Fred Kevin Mauney
Russell X Mayer
Suzanne Meisburg
Gastonia
Elon College
Fieldale, Va.
Jr. Clinton
New Bern
Islip, N.Y.
Louisville, Ky.
Gene Young Michael
Charles Richard Miller
Dane Eric Miller
Douglas Rutledgc Miller
Kathcrine Sue Miller
William Lloyd Miller
Robert Dale Mills
Canton
Cumberland, Md.
Vandalia. Ohio
Hanover, Pa.
Winston-Salem
Bethlehem, Pa.
Mooresville
Maxine Elizabeth Mintz
Jeffrey G. Mohlman
Christine H. Monthan
Cincinnati, Ohio
Vienna, Va.
Herbert Maurice Moody,
Joseph Steven Moore
Paula Jean Moore
Jr. Charlotte
Silver City
Greenville, S.C.
William Richard Moore
Letha Marcelle Morgan
Sammy Lynn Morris
Four Oaks
Wilkesboro
Stanley
John McKnight Morrow
Paul Raymond Motz
Robert Scott Murray
Albemarle
Akron, Ohio
Milford, Conn.
Sherry Delaine Nance
Ann Carol Naylor
Vickie Gayle Needham
Mcbane
Columbia, S.C.
Seagrove
Donald Mason Nelson
Jeffrey Scott Nelson
Mary Earl Nettles
Fort Devens, Mass.
Cinnaminson, N.J.
Tarboro
Cynthia Joyce Newhall
J. Michael Nifong
Susan Marie Nix
George Richard Norris
James Eric Norris
Joan Nunnallee
James Charles O'Brien
Winter Haven, Fla.
Quantico, Va.
Yadkinvdle
Lenoir
Salisbury
Avon Park, Fla.
Easton. Pa.
Mark William Ogren
William Scott Orman
Donald Richard Ort
Douglas Floyd Osborne,
Cathy Diane O'Shell
Harvey Worth Owen
(Catherine Alice Owen
Lockport, 111.
Nashville, Tenn.
Doylestown, Pa.
r. Leaksville
Berwyn, Pa.
Mechanicsburg, Pa.
Roanoke, Va.
Stephen Anthony Owen
David Ballinger Palmer
David Robert Parsons
Wanda Elaine Parton
Neil Pastushok
Dennis Elwood Patterson
Rural Hall
Woodstown, N.J.
Medina, N.Y.
Ruthcrfordton
Rosclle Park, N.J.
Grove City, Pa.
,w flirt MmA*\ MJLa
4L
FRESHMEN
Nancy Carolyn Payne
N. Wilkesboro
Doll ye Peay
Dunn
Thomas J. Perkins
Bethel Park, Pa.
John Robert Perkinso
n.
r. Oxford
Paula Christine Perry
Charlotte
Kitty Peters
Coral Gables, Fla.
Carl Arthur Peterson
Irvington, N. J.
Robert A. Petrino
Ha
milton Square. N. J.
Frances C. Phelps
Bethesda, Md.
Mary Loraine Pierce
Sunbury
Susan Kathleen Pierce
Nashville, Tenn.
Judith Carol Pilcher
Lewisville
Mark Allen Pister
Wayne, N. J.
Douglas Wayne Pittm
an
Marion
Mark Allen Planting
Arlington, Va.
William Edward Poe
Charlotte
James Michael Potter
Taylors, S. C.
Ronald Douglas Pruet
Charlotte
L. H. Puckett, Jr.
Hampton, Va.
Charlie T. Rullen
Burgaw
Maria Cristina Rapela
Winston-Salem
Richard Leighton Rat
dm
Richmond, Va.
James Albert Rausch
E. Schodack, N. Y.
Sarah Evelyn Redfern
Wadesboro
Clifford A. Reed
Reading, Pa.
Robert James Reilly
Garden City, N. Y.
Robert Ralph Rhoads
Menier, Pa.
Janet Elizabeth Raym
er
Gastonia
Peter Scott Richards
McKeesport, P3.
Donald Sanders Richa
rds
3n Ridgecrest
James Carroll Richard
son
Jr. Winston-Salem
Mark Edward Richard
son
Huntington, W. Va.
Sandra Mary Richmor
d
Piafftown
Ronald Milton Riggs
Elizabeth City
Frederick Eugene Roa
:h
Rocky River, Ohio
P (? ©
Karen Elizabeth Robbins Worthington, Ohio
Stephen Lee Robertson Winston-Salem
Jenny Lou Robinson Boone
Jonathan Crawford Robinson Media, Pa.
Benjamin A. Rod
Carroll Dale Rog
Joseph Peterson 1
Lynn Ann Ruck
Julian Edward Ruffin
Charles Harold Ruppe
Wynne C. Saffer
burg, W. Va.
Roxboro
Washington
Dallas, Tex.
Ruther
Mount
fordton
Leesburg, Va
Ann Marian Samuels Oakridge, Tenn.
Janet Clyde Sawyer Nashville, Tenn.
Robert Eli Scarborough Spray
Charles Bellford Schaeff, III Lynchburg, Va.
Robert Walters Schenkemeyer Johnstown, Pa.
Donald James Schiller West Babylon, N. Y.
Charles H. Schilling, Jr. West Point, N. Y.
Peter George Schimert Hauppauge, N. Y.
5£5£2S33BEKc?
— "'"i— »i— »*
FRESHMEN
John Lewis Schnably
Berry Mark Schuster
Willy Joe Scripture
Lester Dupuy Sears
Thomas Arthur Seaver
Gordon Phillip Selfridge
Mercer Brannon Sell
Hagerstown, Md
Jacksonville, Fla
Virginia Beach, Va
Westfield. N.J.
North Augusta, S.C.
Linda Annetta Setterstrom
Brenda Frances Shackleford
Daniel Stephen Shannon
Michael Moore Sheffield
Betty Yvonne Shepard
Robert Morehead Shephard, Jr.
Jeffrey Lee Shue
hesterfield. Mo.
Mount Olive
Arlington, Va.
Atlanta, Ga.
Monroe
Richmond, Va.
S. S. Shu
Roben
e, Jr.
Franklin Sir
Antoinette Estelle Single-
Kathleen Ann Sirkel
Thomas Edward Sizemor
Hallie Joyce Skeen
R. Scott Slaybecker
Roger James Slaydon
Pattijane Slessman
Michael Eugene Slinkard
George Slogan, III
Susan Gail Smart
Gerald Lomax Smith
Mac Thornly Smith, III
Robert Gerald Smith
Sylvia Darlene Smith
Dorothy Anne Soper
Wil Aaron Spaul
William Daniel Spivey
Paul Jerald Stainback
Roger Lane Stancil
Charlton Heights, W.Va
Winston-Salem
High Point
McLean, Va.
Winston-Salem
Springfield, Va.
Annandale, Va.
e, S.C.
Urn
Fla.
Barbara, Calif,
er Spring, Md.
Roanoke, Va.
Winston-Salem
Henderson
Rocky Mount
^ l?3 (fl Ift f% (|$
^ P lli 4P ^? © ^
ttmmAMti,
fc^ti
Jo Ann Stanfield
Reidsville
Margaret Clinton Steffens
Bryantown, Md.
Ramona Jolley Stefiey
Spindale
Earl Raymond Stellrecht, J
Cuba, N.Y.
Emily Ann Stephenson
Lexington
David H. Stoops
Kittanning, Pa.
Bonnie Randolph Strickland
Tarboro
Laura Andcll Stringfellow
Bethesda, Md.
Albert Stuart, III
Richmond, Va.
Andrew James Stuart
Wilmington, Del.
Shirley Elaine Swanson
Winter Park, Fla.
Larry Bruce Sweazey
Jamesburg, N.J.
Susan Lela Swenholt
Falls Church, Va.
Emil Robert Szabo
Berwick, Pa.
Charles MacLellan Taylor
Danville, Va.
Max Alton Thomas, Jr.
Dallas
Michael Douglas Thompson
Raleigh
Randy Lee Thompson
Haw River
Laura Bennett Thomson
Miami, Fla.
Robert Faison Threewitts
Dondron, Va.
Larry Edward Thurner
Jacksonville
Frank Lesesne Todd, Jr.
Hendersonville
Robert McMitchell Townc
Lakeland, Fla.
Paul Sidney Trivettc
Hickory
Wayne Buard Tudor
Trenton, N.J.
&££££££
Jeff Michael Tweel
Robert L. Udey
Carol Jane Utt
William Keith Valentin.
Leonard Paul Vanness
Barbara Charlotte Veho
Alice Anita Walker
FRESHMEN
Huntington, W.Va.
Fayetteville, Ark.
Mount Airy
ne Raleigh
Wit
Md.
Chariot
ston-Sale:
D I
Glen,
alke
Jr. West Long Branch, N.J.
Steven Ward Spencer
Lewis Latane Ware Gastonia
Richard Arnold Watkins Burlington, Mich.
Frances Layne Watson High Point
Hazel Marie Watson Asheville
Richard James Watson N. Wilkesboro
Maribeth Cravatt Watts Winchester, Va.
Julius David Waugh Burlington
George Sidney Webb Carlisle Barracks, Pa.
Judith Lynn Weischedel
Stephen Laurin Welborn
Linda Diane Welfare
W. West
ael T. West,
Hollywood, Fla.
High Point
Greensboro
Beverly,
Charlotte
Winston-Salem
Mount Holly
Cheryl Lane 1
Cynthia Ande:
Dee Wiley
John Lee Wilkerson
Kathleen Deanne Wil
Linda Dockery Willi:
Robert Pershing Willi]
Charles Patton Wilson
Lewin Gray Wilson
Joseph Alexander Wingar
Gary Jay Winrow
Etta Marie Wittrock
Lynn Gayle Wood
Richard Walton Wood
Pamela Gwynn Woodson
Richard Earl Worthingtc
Robert Spencer Wray
Charles Stafford Wright
George H. Wright, III
Russell David Wright
Judith Gayle Wyers Wilmington, Del.
Benjamin Hall Yarborough, II Petersburg, Va.
John Harvey Yates Enfield
. Jr. Grifton
Naperville, 111.
Wrightsv.lle Beach
High Point
Bradenton, Fla.
Richmond, Va.
. Jr. Winterville
Reidsville
Kingsport, Tenn.
Asheville
Tabor City
Larry Wayne Yatske
Kathryn Burch Young
Earle Preston Zack
Ronald Henry Zenker
Gigi G. Zimmerman
OIo
ck, N.J.
Washington, D.C..
Mt.Dora, Fla.
lartinsburg, W. Va.
mm
ma
KJ
LAW STUDENTS
CHARLES ROGER YOUNG, President Hickory
WILLIAM PATRICK HARRIS, Vice President
Winston-Salem
THEODORE LAMAR ROBINSON, JR.,
Secretary Gastonia
THADDEUS AWASAW ADAMS, III,
Treasurer Winston-Salem
THOMAS WILLIS HAYWOOD ALEXANDER
Raleigh
LAUREL OTIS BOYLES Winston-Salem
DALLAS CLINTON CLARK, JR. Greenville
WESLEY DUANE CORLE Winston-Salem
JAMES DONALD COWAN, JR. Winston-Salem
DONNIE HAUCH DANSER Winston-Salem
FREDERICK TAYLER DANSER, III
GERARD HADLEY DAVIDSON Charlotte
MAHLON WINGATE DiLOATCH, JR.
BROOKS SHERWIN DOYLE Nazareth, Pa.
JOHN NICHOLAS FOUNTAIN Winston-Salem
WAYNE HAMPTON FOUSHEE Winston-Salem
JEROME BARRY FRIEDMAN Winston-Salem
LARRY GREGSON GRAHAM Winston-Salem
L. BENNETT GRAM, JR. Wallace
EDWARD WHITAKER GRANNIS, JR.
Fayetteville
BURNACE MONROE HANCOCK, JR.
Siler Citv
WILLIAM KELLY JOHNSON Yadkinvillc
WILLIAM LESLIE JOHNSON Winston-Salem
THOMAS W. JONES Sylvia
REGINALD THOMAS IOYNER Winston-Salem
ALTON YATES LENNON Winston-Salem
WILLIAM JOSEPH MCCARTHY
Coopersburg, Pa.
JOHN MADISON MEMORY Wagram
KENNETH ALLEN MOSER Winston-Salem
DOUGLAS PRESSEL MURRAY Winston-Salem
BROXIE JAY NELSON Winston-Salem
NORMAN LEE NIFONG Winston-Salem
THOMAS JEFFERSON ROBINSON, JR.
Asheboro
WYATT THOMAS SAUNDERS, JR.
Laurens, S.C
MEYRESSA H. SCHOONMAKER
\\ ,:
Salt
THEODORE ABRAHAM SCHVIMMER
Trenton, N.J.
PHILIP CARL SHAW Four Oaks
GEORGE CHARLES SIMMONS, III Morganton
NORMAN IVY SINGLETARY Winston-Salem
KENNETH ALDEN SMITH Pilot Mountain
WILLIAM 1EFFERSON SMITH Valdesc
ROBERT STANLEY TAYLERSON Wayn
t, N.I
DONALD KENNETH TISDALE Winston
•Salem
RICHARD S. TOWERS
Little Silve
. N.I
DAVID HOLLIS WAGNER, JF
Winston
-Salem
EDWIN WILLIAM WELCH
Winston
-Salem
BENJAMN HARVEY WHITE
JR.
Winston
-Salem
WILEY PORTER WOOTEN
G
raham
JULIAN BUNN WRAY
Winston
-Salem
WESLEY BENNETT GRANT,
President
Kan
napoli
JOHN THOMAS McKINNEY,
JR..
Vice President
Winston
-Salem
MICHAEL PAUL CARR, Trcas
urer Ch
arlottc
££!££
—.
LAW STUDENTS
M* M
SHERMAN RAY BRUMLEY Statesvill
VERNON ELLIOT CARDWELL Mayoda
ALBERT ANDERSON CORBETT, JR.
V* fP X& T^
ILL i.£
STEPHEN TALMAGE DANIEL, JR.
WILLIAM KEITH DAVIS
JOSEPH WAYNE DEAN
Rnvbi.n,
Conway
JAMES CLYDE DILLARD Flint,
ERNEST LEROY EVANS Al
KOYT TOODTORTH EVERHART, JR.
WILLIAM DAVID EZZELL H;
ROBERT W ALTER FEEMAN Annvill
RICHARD THACHER FFERICK
ROBERT FULLER FLEMING Henderson
ZORO JOSEPH GUICE, JR. Saluda
ROBERT PLEASANT HANNER Charlotte
GERALD WILTON HAYES, JR. Coats
ALLAN BRUCE HEAD Winston-Salem
MARVIN ASHER JAFFE Winston-Salem
CHARLES WILLIAM KAFER New Bern
CHARLES CADMUS LAMM Winston-Salem
ROBERT BRADFORD LEGGETT, JR.
Winston-Salem
DAVID VERNON LINER Winston-Salem
ROBERT CLYDE McCLYMONDS Miami, Fla.
ROBERT HAYES McNEILL. II Morehead City
ANDREW STEPHEN MARTIN Winston-Salem
NOLAND RANDOLPH MATTOCKS, JR.
Winston-Salem
RONALD DENNIS NICOLA Wayne, N.J.
NORBERT IOHN PAIL Pittsburgh, Pa.
JAMES LLOYD ROBERTS Macksville
HENRY BAASCOM SHORE East Bend
ALDEN THOMAS SMALL ^
THOMAS SPRUILL THORNTON
Wii
-Sale
CARL LEWIS TILGHMAN Beaufort
NORWOOD CARLTON TILLEY, JR.
Rock Hill, S.C
RUSSELL GRADY WALKER, JR.
\\ ii
SANDY NELSON WEEKS
on-Sale
Clintc
W. FRED WILLIAMS, JR. Winston-Salem
SAMUEL LATHAM WHITEHURST, JR.
New Bern
WILLIAM E. WILSON Oceanport, N.J.
WALTER WRINZA PITT, JR., President
Rocky Mount
WILLIAM LESTER MECK, II, Vice President
Clarksburg. W.Va.
RONALD GENE BRASWELL, Secretary
Lexington
CHARLIE SMITH McINTYRE, JR., Treasurer
Lumberton
IOHN RUSSELL BARLOW, II Kannapolis
RAYMOND TERRY BENNETT Winston-Salem
BRUCE ALLEN BOGIE Vincetown, N.J.
WILLIAM WEAVER BROADWAY Marshvilie
RONALD COLE BROWN Winston-Salem
JOHN ELAM CARRIKER Kittrell
HARRY HILLIARD CLENDENNIN
Winston-Salem
AMOS GILMORE CRUMPLER Fuquay-Varina
DON HOWARD ELKINS Winston-Salem
LESLIE BENTON FARMER High Point
LAW STUDENTS
TZZS^.. ». ■», "
EDWARD THORNTON FLOYD Raleigh
CLINTON SHERMAN FORBIS, JR. High Point
MARK ELLIS GALLOWAY Oak Ridge, Tenn.
LAWRENCE GILMORE GORDON, JR.
\\ i
-Vllei
Rl( HARD STEWART GOItHHN
ROBERT ALEXANDER HANNAH Elgin, III.
RICHARD ALLEN HARPER
JAKE CARSON HELDER
H. CLAY HEMRIC, JR.
MALCOLM JONES HOWARD
HOWARD VINSON HUDSON
CLEMMET MILLARD HUNT
MAX EDWARD JUSTICE Hendersonville
THOMAS JEFFERY KEITH Passaic, N.J.
EDMOND KIRBY-SMITH Kensington, Md.
ROBERT KELLER LEONARD Winston-Salem
ROSCOE LINDSAY, JR. Marion, S.C.
JOHN HALSTEAD LOUGHRIDGE
Lafayette Hill, Pa.
WII I I AM J. NOLAN Spindale
ROBERT WAYNE ODOM Ahoskie
WARREN LEONARD PATE Dunn
JOHN RODWELL PENRY, JR. Southmont
JAMES SAMUEL PFAFF Winston-Salem
WILLIAM WALTON PRITCHETT, JR.
Virginia Beach, Va.
DORIS GREENE RANDOLPH Pfafftown
JOHN MORRIS RICH Wake Forest
RICHARD ALLISON ROSS Durham
GREGORY WILLIAM SCHIRO
Hasbrouck Heights, N.J.
CHESTER GITT SCHULTZ Gettysburg, Pa.
NORMAN WILSON SHEARIN, JR.
Rocky Mount
LUCIE GERALDINE SHERVETTE Enfield
JAMES EUGENE SNYDER, JR. Winston-Salem
EDWIN MARION SPEAS, IR. Boonville
ROBERT CLIFTON STEPHENS, JR.
Win
n-Sale
DONALD MILTON VonCANNON
DWIGHT LOWRY WAGNER Salisbury, Md.
JAMES SAMUEL WILLIAMS Tabor Cit
JAMES LYNWOOD WILSON Winston-Sale.
ROBERT WARREN WOLF Webster City, Io«
JOHN GEORGE WOLFE, III Winston-Salei
M
GRADUATE STUDENTS
REBECCA SUSAN ANDERSON Lilesvillc
ROBERT B. BAILEY, JR. Winston-Salem
JANICE G. BAKER Albuquerque, N.Mex.
KATHERINE LAPSLEY BELL Columbus, Ohio
PAUL HENRY BILLINGS Statesville
IOSEPH EDWIN BOURQUE Winston-Salem
BLAKE PATRICK BOYLE Winston-Salem
OLIVER TAYLOR BURGESS. JR. Norfolk. Va.
KEYWOOD CARNELL CHEUES. JR. Littleton
DAVID OTIS COFFEY Wheaton, III.
RICHARD FRANCIS COLLINS Winston-Salem
JANICE LEE CZIKOWSKY Winston-Salem
HALLIE HARLAN DARBY Florence, Ala.
MILTON DOUGLAS EVANS Lincoln, Neb.
JAMES HENRY EVERETT, JR. Farmville
MARIANNE FARNHAM Travelers Rest, S.C.
SAMUEL TEMPLETON GLADDING
Decatur. Ga.
CAROL ANN GRIFFIN Red Oak
BETTIE JO HARDIN Asheboro
ANN MARIE HOFFNER Salisbury
FREDERICK MICHAEL HOOPER Reidsville
WILLIAM YU-MING LEE Winston-Salem
SHARON LETHERBURY Wilmington, Del.
CHI HO LIN Taiwan. China
GEORGE M. LOVE
Lima, Ohio
M. MAXINE McGINTY
Atlanta, Ga.
JOHN A. MANN
Winston-Salem
MARIETTA ROSE MARRA
Clearwater, Fla.
ZEB BRENT MORGAN
Winston-Salem
PHILIP M. MOUNT
Bronxville, N.Y.
SAFAR MOH'D NAZARI Afganistan
DAVID JOE PARRISH Johnson City, Tenn.
KEITH WESTCOTT REISS Winston-Salem
DANIEL JAMES RICHMAN Greensboro
BRIGITTE SCHROEDER Berlin, Germany
CHARLES ALEXANDER SINGHAS
Fairfax Station, Va.
JAMES LAURENCE SLOAN Alexandria, Va.
JAMES ROBERT TIFFANY, JR.
Falls Church, Va.
EMORY MARVIN UNDERWOOD
Winston-Salem
KAREN JANE WEBB Johnson City, Tenn.
JAMES GRACEN WILLIAMS Catawba
THOMAS RICHARD WILLIAMS, III Hickory
MARION LI-HUEY YANG
Taipei, Taiwan, China
SENIOR DIRECTORY
ABARNO, ROBERT NEWELL; Lighthouse
Point, N.J.: History: Alpha Phi Omega.
ACKERMAN, MILTON JOHN; Riviera Beach,
Fla.; Biologv; Kappa Alpha: Swim Team 1-4;
Beta Beta Beta; Monogram Club.
ADAMS, ALFRED GRAY; Winston -Salem,
History; Sigma Chi: Orientation Committee,
(3,4); S.N.E.A., President 4; C.U. Major Func-
tions Comm.; CHALLENGE '67.
ADAMS, CHARLES COCHRAN, III; Charlotte;
History; Kappa Sigma; Wingate College (1,2);
Track (3,4).
AIRMAN, ARTHUR JAMES, Beaver Falls. Pa.;
Spanish; Lambda Chi Alpha, Social Chairman 3,
Secretary 4; I.F.C.
ALBERT, THOMAS WARREN; Reading, Pa.;
Sociology; Tennis 2.
AMES. RICHARD BISSELL; New Kensington,
Pa.: History; Kappa Alpha; Golf (1,2); v'.R.C.
ANDERSON. ROBERT HENRY. Ill; Ocala, Fla.;
History; Debate Team (2,3); Orientation Comm.
(4).
ANDERSON, RUNO CARL, JR.; Grange. 111.;
Historv; Sigma Chi; Football; F.C.A.; C.U.
Major Functions Comm.
ANGEL, GLENDA SHAFFER; Movodan;
Mathematics; Kappa Mu F.psilon.
ARNEY, JONATHAN SHUFORD; Morganton;
Chemistry; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Gamma Sigma
Epsilon.
ARNOLD, SUSAN PALMER; Rcthesda, Md.;
Biology; Beta Beta Beta, President 4.
ARROWOOD, JAMES HARRY, JR.; Concord;
History; Band 1; Lambda Chi Alpha, Social
Chmn. (3,4).
ASHTON, RUDOLPH ALEXANDER; Rich-
mond, Va.: Math; Sigma Phi Epsilon: Track
Team (1-4); Monogram Club; Old Gold and
Black, Assoc. Sports Editor 4.
ATKINS. ROBERT GARLAND, JR.; Danville.
Va.: Accounting; Delta Sigma Phi.
AUSTIN, BETTY LOU; Arlington, Va.; History;
Gardner-Webb (1.2).
B
BAKER, CARLTON LEE; Jacksonville, Fla.;
Historv; Kappa Alpha, Treasurer 3, Secretary 4;
Football (1-4); Monogram Club. Sophomore
Class Vice President.
BAKER, CAROL CARSON; Cedar Grove, N.J •
Psychology.
BAKER, JERRY HERBERT; Kannapolis;
History; Sigma Chi; Vice President Student Body;
Omicron Delta Kappa (3,4); Executive Director
CHALLENGE '67; Honor Council 3; Freshman
Class President; B.P.O.C, Chairman 3; Y.D.C.
(2-4); Commencement Marshall 3; Who's Who.
BAKER, JOHN COLSON; Cedar Grove, N J •
business; Baseball I.
BALDWIN. DIANE SECOR; Salisbury, Md.-
Psychology: S.O.P.H., Rush Chmn. 2, Social
Chmn 3. Pledge Trainer 4; W.G.A. House Presi-
dent 3; Executive Secretary CHALLENGE '67;
Student Legislature 3: B.P.O.C. Treasurer 2;
Homecoming Court 3; Commencement Marshall
3; Managing Editor HOWLER 4.
BARRICK. LINDA KAY; Bethesda, Md.; His-
tory; Laurels, Vice President 3, President 4
Cheerleader (2-4); Homecoming Court 4; Com-
mencement Marshal] 3.
BARTLETT, H. DWIGHT; Greensboro- History-
Baseball (1-4): Phi Alpha Theta.
BAUS, NELSON ANN; Baltimore, Md.; French;
Strings; Eta Sigma Phi.
BEAL, BEVERLY TATE; Lenior; History Alpha
Phi Omega; WFDD.
BELNAP, DAVID DEAN; Carlisle Pa •
Psychology.
BENNETT, JOHN DAVID; West Chester. Pa.;
History; Sigma Pi, Secretary 3, President 4.'
BENNETT, RICHARD VERNON; Winston-
Salem; English: Mars Hill College (1,2).
BENZ, CAROLYN ELIZABETH; Washington,
D.C.; Riology: Laurels.
BESHEARS, RALPH LANE, JR.; Boone: His-
tory; Lambda Chi Alpha; Y.D.C. (1-3); Choir.
BEST, JAMES ERNEST, JR.; Greensboro; Bi-
ology; Sigma Pi; Cross Country 3; Madrigal
Singers (2,3).
BIERNBAUM, CHARLES KNOX; Woodstown,
N.J.; Biologv: Alpha Phi Omega; Gamma Sigma
Epsilon.
BIGGERSTAFF, LILA JANE; Shelby; Latin;
Wesley Foundation, Secretary 2, Vice President
3; L.D.C. 2; Eta Sigma Phi, Vice President 4;
S.N.E.A. 4.
BISHOP, SUSAN ANN; Raleigh; Psychology-
Laurels; College Union, Major Functions 4,
Travel Comm. (2-4); W.G.A. Social Functions
Comm. 4.
BIVENS. JENNIFER LOUISE; Welch. W. Va.;
English; Laurels; I.S.C., Secretary 4.
BLANK, ROY CRARY; Upper Marlboro, Md.;
Biology; Delta Sigma Phi; Beta Beta Beta; Alpha
Epsilon Delta: Swimming Team; Monogram
Club.
BOLDT, BERT BOVARD; Delray Beach, Fla.;
Biology.
BOSS, CHARLES BEN; Hickory; Chemistry-
Gamma Sigma Epsilon; Madrigal Singers.
BOSTIC. HENRY HAWES, JR.; Elizabethtown;
Political Science; Kappa Sigma. Song leader 3;
Old Gold and Black, Ass't. Editor 2, Managing
Editor 3, Co-Editor 4; Y.D.C; Circle K; Who's
Who.
BOULDIN, ELLEN WRIGHT; Ridgewav, Va.;
Music; Les Soeurs; Organ Guild; College
Theater; Choir.
BOUTILIER, WARREN FOSTER; Salisbury;
Political Science; Lambda Chi Alpha; Eta Sigma
Phi; SSL (1,2).
BRAME, JOHN MILAM; Walnut Cove; Psy-
chology; Alpha Phi Omega: Davis House.
BRANDON, REBECCA IRENE; Durham; Psy-
chology; and (1.2).
BRISTOW, FRANK WALKER, West Hartford,
Conn.: English.
BRITT, DON E„ JR.; Winston-Salem; Political
Science; Kappa Sigma.
BROADWAY. JAMES WESLEY; Raleigh;
Physical Education; Basketball (1-4); Monogram
Club; Phi Epsilon Kappa.
BROWN, PATRICIA SUE; Winston-Salem;
German; College and Touring Choir (1-3); Col-
lege Union.
BRUTON, CHARLES WILSON, JR.; Ton;
Biology; Football (3,4); Monogram Club.
BRYAN, RICHARD JOSEY; Greenville; Political
Science; Lambda Chi Alpha. Historian 3.
BUCKHATT, KENNEY SHEPHERD, JR.; At-
lanta, Georgia; History; Lambda Chi Alpha,
Treasurer 4.
BULSON, RONNIE JEAN; Annandale, Va.;
Economics; Hockey (1-4); Student Government;
Commencement Marshall 3.
BURCH, LARRY MAURICE; Franklin; History-
Alpha Phi Omega.
BUTT, LESTER; Falls Church, Va.; Psychology;
Lambda Chi Alpha.
BYERLY, CHRISTOPHER LYNN; Silver City:
History; Theta Chi, Social Chmn. 4.
BYRD, BARBARA SCHUFFHAM; Winston-
Salem; Biology.
BYRD, JAMES PALMER; Greensboro; English;
Sigma Chi, Vice-President (3,4); College Union;
Circle K (1,2). President (3.4); IFC (1,2), Vice
President (3.4); Band.
BYRD, JONES PHARR; Sanford; English; Kappa
Sigma; Scabbard and Blade (3,4), College Union
CAIN, LAURENCE SUTHERLAND; McLean,
Va.; Physics; Baseball (1-4); Basketball (1,2);
Kappa Mu Epsilon; Monogram Club; FCA.
CALDWELL, ROBERT PRESTON, JR.; Gas-
tonia; Political Science; Pi Kappa Alpha.
CARTER. GEORGE EMMITT, JR.; Fayetteville;
Biology; Band: MRC
CALE. BEVERLY STEELE; Atlanta, Ga.; Psy-
chology; Les Soeurs.
CALVERT, REUBEN DeFOIX, JR.; Spartanburg,
S.C.; Biology: Delta Sigma Phi; IFC (2-4).
CAMPBELL, VICKI WINDLE; Martinsville, Va.;
Spanish; Fideles; Sweetheart of Sigma Phi
Epsilon 4: YDC (1,2); Legislator 1; Secretary
Junior Class; Treasurer Senior Class; C.U. Small
Socials Comm (1,2), Major Functions Comm
(3,4); ISC 2; Who's Who.
CARNES, MARY PATRICIA: Miami, Fla.; Psy-
chology; Fideles: W.G.A. Treasurer 2. Dorm Presi-
dent 4: Choir (1-3): BSU; Honors; Who's Who.
CASKEY, CHARLES CLINTON; Mooresville;
Political Science; Alpha Phi Omega; Phi Sigma
Iota.
CASTO, KAREN LYNN; Greensboro; Mathe-
matics Kappa Mu Epsilon; Les Soeurs (1,2);
International Club (1,2).
CHAMIS, PENELOPE; Winston-Salem; Business;
W.G.A. Day Student Representative 4.
CHEATWOOD. PHILIP HOYT; Lancaster, S.C.;
Historv; Kappa Sigma; Football (1-4); Scabbard
and Blade, Vice President 4; Who's Who.
CHEEK, TERRINA GAYLE; Dublin, Ga.; En-
glish; Laurels, Songlcader 3; Orientation Comm
4; Choir; C.U. Major Functions Comm (2,3);
Old Gold and Black 3.
CHESTNUT, ALFRED PAGE; Morehead City;
Biologv: German Club; IUCF, President 4.
CHRISTIE, NANCY JEAN; Winston-Salem; En-
glish.
CLARK. ERIC STEVEN; Linwood; Economics;
Delta Sigma Pi, Vice President 4; CHALLENGE
'67: Business School Student Assn. Secretary.
CLARK, JOHN C, JR.; Fayetteville; Mathe-
matics; Kappa Sigma, Social Chmn 3.
CLARK, THOMAS H.; Pleasant Place Deal, N.J.;
Business; Delta Sigma Phi.
CLARKE, WILLIAM LOWE, IV; Hickory;
Chemistry; Howler Photographer (1-4).
COBER, ANNE McRAE; Winston-Salem; Latin;
Eta Sigma Phi; BSU; C.U. Major Functions
Comm.: Wesley Foundation.
COBER, SCOTT LOUIS; Winston-Salem; Ac-
counting; Alpha Kappa Psi Secretary; C.U. Major
Functions Comm.; BSU; Wesley Foundation.
COBLE, WILLIAM LEE; Burlington; Biology; Pi
Kappa Alpha: Beta Beta Beta; IFC (2-4).
COCKERHAM, LARRY EDWARD; Winston-
Sale
Bi,
COLLINS, JOHN ARTHUR, III; Greenville;
History; Choir; College Union; WFU Theatre;
Old Gold and Black (1,2); YRC (1,2).
COLVARD, HOWARD CHARLES, JR.; Wilkes-
boro; History; Eta Sigma Phi. President 4.
COMBS, GENE NORMAN, JR.; Pikeville. Ky.;
Biology; Lambda Chi Alpha; C.U. Publicity
Comm.
COOPER, DANIEL K.; Hagerstown, Md.; His-
torv; Sigma Pi.
COOPER, FREDERICK LAMBACK, III; Mur-
frcesboro; Political Science; Sigma Chi; Omicron
Delta Kappa; Legislature 2; Student Body Vice
President 3, President 4; Financial Director
CHALLENGE '67; SSL, Vice President 3; Com-
mencement Marshall 2. Chief Marshall 3; YDC;
Who's Who.
COORE, WILLIAM ERNEST; Thomasville;
Greek; Golf (1,2); Eta Sigma Phi.
COWAN, CHARLES PRESTON, JR.; Salisbury-
Religion; Golf (1-4); Monogram Club; FCA.
COX, JAMES ALLEN; Jacksonville; Physics;
Kappa Mu Epsilon; Delta Phi Alpha.
CRAIG, JIMMY LEWIS; Monroe; Philosophy.
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CRINKLEY, JOHN PAUL; Newland; Physical
Education: Basketball (1-4); Monogram Club,
President 4; Phi Epsilon Kappa, Vice President
4.
CROWELL, CHARLES CARLOS, HI; Lincoln-
ton; Biology; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Beta Beta
Beta.
CRUMLEY, BEN MADISON; Johnson City,
Tenn.; Economics; Kappa Sigma, President 4.
CRUMP, JOHN CAMPBELL; Winston-Salem;
Business; Kappa Alpha, Social Chmn 3, Vice
President 4.
CRUTCHTIELD, LINDA KAREN; Winston-
Salem; English.
CURRIN, SAMUEL BOOTH. HI; Oxford;
History; Theta Chi; Football Mgr. (1,2).
CURRY, ALAN BRIAN; Ankara, Turkey;
Sociology; C.U. Travel Committee (1); Choir
(2,4).
CUTHBERTSON, CAROL ANN; Lyndhurst.
Ohio: English; College Union; Maritimers (2,3);
English Club (2,4); College Theatre (3,4);
Graylyn Society (3,4); Student Magazine 4.
DAUGHTRY, JOHN CARY; Laurinburg; Psy-
chology; Taylor House; Photographer for
HOWLER, Old Gold and Black. The Student.
DAWKINS, LARRIE WAYNE; Graham; Busi-
ness Administration.
DAVID, CHESTER OSCAR; Winston-Salem;
Psychology; Alpha Phi Omega, Vice President
4; Band; Graylyn Society 4.
DAVIS, JOHN ALLEN; Mooresville; Political
Science; YDC (1-3); College Union 2; Eta Sigma
Phi (3,4).
DAVIS, LARRY REID; Gastonia; Economics;
Economics Club; BSU.
DAVITT, PAUL JOHN; Rockaway; Mathematics;
Cross Country; Monogram Club.
DIAMONT, DAVID HUNTER; Pilot Mountain;
History: Lambda Chi Alpha; Basketball 1;
I'h,
DICKINSON, WILLIAM PENN, JR.; Washing-
ton; Economics;
DIMMETTE, EDGAR RICHARD, JR.; Charlotte;
Business: Delta Sigma Phi; Alpha Kappa Psi;
School Spirit Comm. (1,2); YRC; CHALLENGE
'67; Wesley Foundation 3.
DOLAN, DANIEL JOSEPH; Atlanta, Ga.; His-
tory; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Rush Chmn. 3, Presi-
dent 4: Old Gold and Black 1; Onentauon
Comm. 3.
DORSETT, WALTER E., JR.; Waynesboro-
English.
DRDAK, ROBERT JOSEPH; Betha
Pa.;
His
Track 1 .
DRISKILL, THOMAS MALCOLM, JR.; Char-
lotte; Mathematics; Delta Sigma Phi, Social Chair-
man; YRC (1,2); CHALLENGE '67; Honor
Council 2; Wesley Foundation.
DUNCAN, THOMAS WEBB; Poughkeepsic,
N.Y.: History; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
EDGAR. RALPH M1XTON; Chapel Hill
chology; Tennis 1.
EDMONDSON, FRANK; Ashboro; Bi
Kappa Sigma.
EDWARDS, KAREN LoREE; Vienna,
Mathematics; Fideles; Kappa Mu Epsilon
Orchesis; Gymnatics 3.
EDWARDS, MARY MARGARET; Wi
Salem; Religion; BSU, Secretary 4; CAPER
International Club 4.
EDWARDS, MATHEW ALVIN, HI; Cha
Marketing; Cross Country and Track 1.
EDWARDS, THOMAS ARNOLD; Cha
Finance.
ology;
Va.;
(3,4);
(3,4)
EGGERS, GRAYDON POE, JR.; Boone; Instru-
mental Music; Band; President of Concert and
Marching Bands 4; Basketball Mgr. (1,2); Mono-
gram Club.
ELLIS, KENNETH ROBERT; Fremont; Political
Science; YDC (2,3,4); Old Gold and Black 2.
EUTSLER, WILLIAM EDWARD, JR.; Cheraw,
S.C.; Psychology; Kappa Sigma, Co-Social and
Co-Rush Chmns.; Old Gold and Black Business
Staff.
EXUM, JO CHERYL; Wilson; Religion; Choir
2: Phi Sigma Iota (3,4): Orientation Comm. 4.
EXUM, JOHN PATRICK; Snow Hill; History;
YDC; Phi Alpha Theta.
FARMER, WENDY JEAN; Virginia Beach, Va.;
Chemistry; Laurels; WGA, Secretary 3, President
4; Tassels; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Gamma Sigma
Epsilon: Who's Who.
FELMET. LUCION HOLT; Rocky Mount; His-
tory; Theta Chi.
FERGUSON, EDWIN HALL, JR.; Concord;
Accounting; Kappa Sigma, Treasurer 4; Old Gold
and Black 2; Alpha Kappa Psi (2, 4), Secretary 3.
FISHER, HARRY EDWARD; Basking Ridge,
N. J.; History; Delta Sigma Phi, President 4;
History Honors.
FISHER, STUART CORNELIUS; Pacific Palis-
ades, Cal.; Speech; WFDD; University Theatre.
FITCH, THOMAS WARNE; Arlington, Va.;
Sociology; Kappa Alpha; Track; Monogram
Club; French Club.
FITZSIMMONS, JEAN VINCENT; Charlotte;
Political Science; Theta Chi, Pledge Marshall.
FOLGER, WILLIAM AUGUSTOS, II; Toledo,
Ohio; Physics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Amer. Institute
of Physics.
FONVILLE, JAMIE TARPLEY, JR.; Burlington;
Biology; Beta Beta Beta.
PA 3-8631
Open 5:00-12:00 P.M. Daily
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.
2000 Reynolda Road
FRANKS, J. RODNEY; Brevard; Psychology.
FREEDMAN, GLENN BARRY; Massapcqua Park.
N. Y.: History; Lambda Chi Alpha; HOWLER:
Old Gold and Black; The Student.
FREEMAN, DONN BENNETT; Kings Mountain;
Biology; Kappa Alpha, Secretary 3, President 4.
FROST, MARY COLBY; Winston-Salem; English;
Randolph Macon I; President Day Student As-
sociation (2,3): WGA Day Student Represen-
tative 3; Westminster Fellowship (2-4): SNEA 4;
YRC.
FRUIN, ERIC WILLIAM; Normal, 111.: Philoso-
phv: Sigma Chi; Legislature 2; Swimming Team
(1-3), Captain I.
FULTON, SHEILA ANN; Winston-Salem; His-
tory; Laurels (2-4).
GADDY, DAN W.; Pageland, S. C: Psychology.
GALANT, LUKE GUSTAVE; Falls Church,
Va.: Psychology; Theta Chi.
GALLAGHER, DONALD WILLIAM, JR.; Wash-
ington Crossing, Penna.: English.
GARRITY. JOHN McCULLOUGH; Winston-
Salem: Accounting; Delta Sigma Pi, Treasurer 2,
Vice President 3, Debate Team 1.
GARTON, THOMAS COURTNEY; Richmond,
Va.; Mathematics; Delta Sigma Phi; Kappa
Mu Epsilon (2-4).
GAYNER, LESLIE TINA; Monroeville, Pa.;
Biology: Theater.
GERRISH, JAMES PRICE; Bethesda, Md.:
Mathematics: Theta Chi: College Union Execu-
tive Comm. and Travel Comm; Baseball 1.
GILES, DARXA FA YE; Chapel Hill; English;
Laurels.
GILLILAND, NANCY LOUIS; Winston-Salem;
History: Meredith (1, 2).
GINN, THOMAS MOSS; Lakeland, Fla.; Biol-
ogy; Sigma Chi, Pledge Trainer (3,4); Junior
Class President: Circle K (2-4); Honor Council
4; Orientation Comm. (3,4); Graduation
Marshall 3; BPOC.
GLOVER, MERLEY ELIZABETH; Concord: His-
torv; Fideles, Vice President 3; Homecoming
Queen 2; Commencement Marshall 3.
GOEHRIG, DAVID HENRY; Ft Lauderdale,
Fla.; Psychology; Sigma Chi; Chapel Speaker.
GOINGS, DONNA GILL; Winston-Salem; Math-
ematics: Laurels. Pledge Master 3, Social Chmn.
4: Kappa Mu Epsilon: Legislator 3; Secretary
Student Government 4; Commencement Marshall
3; Cheerleader I; SAM: Who's Who.
GORDON, WILLIAM CHARLES; Rome, Ga.:
Psychology: Kappa Sigma, Secretarv 3: Old Gold
and Black, Business Mgr. 3; President Publica-
tions Board 3; Student Body Treasurer 4; Omi-
cron Delta Kappa 4; SAM; Who's Who.
GOUGH, GARY CARLETON; St. David's, Pa ■
History; Theta Chi.
GRACE, WILLIAM ANTON; Green Brook
N. J.; Mathematics.
GREEN, JOYCE ANN; Whibett; Mathematics;
S.O.P.H.; Kappa Mu Epsilon, Treasurer 4; Honor
Council 4.
GREEN, FODNEY EUGENE; Woodstown N I ■
History; Davis House.
GREENBERG, RICHARD PAUL; Trenton, N. J ■
Political Science; WFDD, Program Co-ordinator
GREER, JOHN WILLIAM; Lexington; Political
Science.
GRETES, JOHN CONSTANTINE; Norfolk Va •
Biology; Men's Judicial Board 2; Junior Class
Treasurer; Alpha Epsilon Delta (3, 4)- NLA
(1-3): Who's Who.
GRIFFIN, DURANTE AUAN, JR.; Lexington;
Biology; Theta Chi, Secretary 4; Legislature 3;
Chmn. Chapel Committee 3; Beta Beta Beta
GROTE HERBERT AUGUST; Huntington Sta-
tion, N.Y.; Mathematics; Theta Chi
?ThT' . ,Ar^ES WILSON! Winston-Salem;
Enghsh: Art Director Student Magazine; English
GUTEKUNST, BARBARA JEAN; Sellersville,
Pa.: Physical Education; Legislature 2; College
Union, Representative 3, Vice President 4; Field
Hockey (2-4); P.E. Majors Club (3. 4): Who's
Who.
H
HACHNEL, DONALD KENNETH; Brevard
N. C; Psyschology; Taylor House.
HADDON, BARBARA JEAN; Rocky Mount;
Mathematics; Les Soeurs, Pledge Master 4; Kappa
Mu Epsilon, Vice President 4: C.U. Maior
Functions Comm. (3,4); WRA Secretary-
Treasurer 2.
HAIGLER, BOYD FRAZIER; Winston-Salem;
Mathematics.
HALLMAN, FRANCIS EDWIN. JR.; Lithonia,
Ga.: Political Science; Sigma Chi. Rush Chmn.
3, Vice President 4; IFC 3; Treasurer Freshman
Class; Honor Council (3, 4), Chmn. 4: Choir
(2-4): Omicron Delta Kappa: Who's Who.
HAMILTON, JON JAY; Walpole, Mass.; His-
tory: NLA.
HAMMOND, MICHAEL EUGENE; Lancaster,
S. C: Mathematics.
HARKEY, MYRA JEAN; Monroe; Psychology.
HARMON. KATHLEEN SUE; Sarasota, Fla.;
English; Virginia Intermont (1.2); Student
Relations Comm. 3; HOWLER 3. Student Living
Editor 4; Editor of Student Handbook 4; Orienta-
tion Comm. 4; SNEA 4.
HARRELL, DOUGLAS BYRON; Richmond, Va •
History.
HARRELSON. WILLIAM ERNEST; Whiteville;
Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon.
HARTMAN, RANDY BYRON; Lawudale; Biol-
ogy; Alpha Epsilon Delta, president 4; Beta
Beta Beta: Gamma Sigma Epsilon (2-4)- Orien-
tation Comm.
HARTNESS, WILLIAM RUFUS, III; Sanford-
Physics.
HARVEY, RICHARD GREGORY; Roanoke, Va.;
Religion: Sigma Pi, First Counselor 4; Chapel and
Touring Choirs 1.
HASKELL, SHERWIN TRUMBULL; New-
Canaan, Conn.; Business: Pi Kappa Alpha.
HAUCK, JENNIFER JEAN; St. Charles, 111.;
English: Laurels (1,2); Eta Sigma Phi (2-4);
Kappa Sigma Sweetheart 4.
HEAD, PATRICIA REED; Winston-Salem: Biol-
ogy; Fideles; Beta Beta Beta: Choir (1,2).
HENDERSON, SUSAN REBEKAH; Mauldin,
S. C; Religion: S.O.P.H.; Chapel and Touring
Choirs; C.U. Maior Functions Comm.; BSU.
HENNING, RICHARD GEORGE; Garden City,
N. Y.: Business; Sigma Pi; Alpha Kappa Psi,
Vice President; Men's Judicial Board 4; College
Union (3,4).
HENRY, KENNETH DELMA; Greensboro;;
Phvsical Education; Alpha Sigma Phi; Football;
Phi Epsilon Kappa.
HENSLEY, DONALD LEO: Winston-Salem;
Physical Education; Alpha Sigma Phi; Football;
Monogram Club.
HERBERT, RICHARD DAVID; Jacksonville,
Fla.: Business Administration.
HERRING. BUDDY O. H.; Westport, Conn.;
History; Kitchen House: College Union (3, 4);
CHALLENGE '67: Student Government 4.
HESSLER, RICHARD DALLAS; Ft. Lauderdale.
Fla.; History; Sigma Chi; Football; Monogram
HIGHFILL. AUBREY LEE; Winston-Salem; Mar-
HILL, JAMES EARL, JR.; Whiteville; History;
Theta Chi.
HINKLE. PAUL PRESTON, JR.; Spencer; Math-
ematics; Davis House.
HOBBS. GUY C; Edenton; German; Delta Phi
Alpha; Free University of Berlin 3.
HOCUTT, KATHRYN MAE; Spencer; Spanish:
University of the Andes 3; BSU; YDC 2; Phi
Sigma Iota. President 4; International Club, Vice
President 4; SNEA 4.
HODSON, JOHN PHILLIPS; Delmar, N. Y.;
Mathematics; Cross Country, Captain; Track;
Monogram Club.
HOFLER. R. HAYES, HI; Alexandria, Va.;
History: Phi Alpha Theta, President; Old Gold
and Black.
HOLLIFIELD, FORREST HUGHY; Salisbury:
Political Science; Sigma Chi; Orientation Comm.;
Choir (3.4).
HOLT, CALVIN JACKSON, JR.; Staunton, Va.;
Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Band; Orienta-
tion Comm. 4; BSU.
HOLTON. LUCY HARTSFIELD; Winston-
Salem; Psychology; Fieldes; Freshman Scholar;
Cheerleader 1; Old Gold and Black Advertising
Mgr.
HOPE. JAMES MICHAEL; York, S.C.; History:
Track; Cross-Countrv. Co-Captain 4; Monogram
Club.
HOPKINS. PATRICIA JANE; Salisbury, Md.:
Biology; Strings; Beta Beta Beta; YRC (2,3);
College Union 3; Student Relations Comm. 2.
HORNER. DOUGLAS BRANCH; Laurel, Del.;
Biologv; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vice President 3;
Baseball.
HOUGH, MARGARET JEAN; Lexington; Latin
HOWARD. VINCENT, JR.; Cherry Hill. N.J.;
Business; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Swimming Team;
Monogram Club.
HOYLE, DAVID BOWERS; Bethesda. Md.: Psy-
chology; Baseball 1; MRC.
HOYLE, JAMES CRANFORD, JR.; Roanoke
Rapids; Mathematics; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Kappa
Mu Epsilon.
HUDSON, DAVID MONROE; Moline. Ill ■
Biology; Lambda Chi Alpha.
HUGHES. MARY FRAN; Virginia Beach, Va.:
History and Religion; Phi Alpha Theta, Secretarv-
treasurer 4; BSU: Gravlvn Society (2-4); Choir;
Organ Guild 4.
HUMPHRIES, JOHN McCULLOUGH; Front
Royal, Va.; Political Science; Pershing Rifles;
Scabbard and Blade; Davis House Controller;
Marching and Concert Bands.
HURSH, STEVEN RAWLINGS; Beaufort, SC-
Psychology: Sigma Pi.
HUTCHENS, SANDY VESTAL, JR.; Mount
Airv; Business Administration: Wineate College
(1,2); Treasurer, CHALLENGE '67; YDC (3,4)
State Financial Chmn.; Old Gold and Black Cir-
culation Mgr. 4.
HUTTON, WILLIAM EUGENE; Burlington:
Biology; Sigma Chi; Beta Beta Beta.
IRWIN, THOMAS SAMUEL; Linden, N.J.;
Accounting: Sigma Chi, Treasurer 3, President
4; Beta Gamma Sigma.
JACKSON. CHARLES EDWARD, JR.; Shelby:
Economics: Lambda Chi Alpha; Track I;
Scabbard and Blade (3,4).
JACOBER, JENNIFER LYNNE; Westerville,
Ohio; History: Strings. Social Chmn. 3, Secretary
4; Legislature 4; WGA Social Standards Comm.
JACOBSEN. JAMES BRUCE; North Terrytown,
N.Y.; Anthropolgy; Alpha Sigma Phi; Track and
Cross Country 2; Monogram Club.
JOHNSON, KENNETH STEWART; Louisville,
Kv.; Speech; Band; Inter-Disciphnarv Honors:
WFDD. Stauon Mgr. (3.4); Who's Who.
JOHNSON, SUSAN V.; King; English; Les
Soeurs. Rush Chmn. 3; Social Chmn. 4.
JONES, CHARLES FRANCIS; Burlington;
Economics; Kappa Sigma.
JONES, DOUGLAS RANDOLPH; Simpsonville,
S.C.; History.
JONES, DURWOOD BURRELL, JR.; Zebulon;
Mathematics: Poteat House; Alpha Kappa Psi;
The Student (3,4).
JONES, JOHN DANIEL; Chapel Hill; Biology.
JONES, JOHN HENRY; Ashev.lle; History;
Lambda Chi Alpha; Track: Cross Country 1.
JONES, RONALD VAN; Hickory; Psychology;
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
JORDAN, ADRIENNE GAYLE; Wilmington;
Political Science.
JORDAN, GRAYDON MILLER; Cary; History.
JORDAN, LAURA M.; Miami, Fla.: Mathematics;
Strings (1,2); Student, Art Editor 2; University
Theafer (2,3); Wesley Foundation; BSU; Amc
Mgr. 2; Orientation Comm. (2.3); Old Gold and
Black 4 ; Who's Who.
JORDAN, WALTER WAYNE; Durham: Biology;
Thcta Chi.
K
KAENZIG, KAREN B.; Springfield, Va.; En-
glish; Les Soeurs; SNEA.
KELLEY, STEVE CRAIG; Rocky Mount;
Marketing; Sigma Chi; Honor Council 3;
Orientation (3.4): College Union, Maior Func-
: Con
Chn
KELLY, RICHARD JEAN; Fairlawn, N.J.;
Biology; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Beta Beta Beta.
KENNEDY, SHARON LEE; Robbins; Education.
KERNODLE. WILLIAM DW1GHT; Burlington;
Biology; Lambda Chi Alpha; Gamma Sigma
Epsilon; Eta Sigma Phi.
KILGORE, SAMUEL REA, JR.; Spantanburg,
S.C.; Marketing; Sigma Pi; Tennis 1; Student
Facilities Comm. 3.
KINCHELOE, JAMES JEFFREY; Rocky Mount;
Political Science; Sigma Chi; College Union.
Vice President 3. President 4; Omicron Delta
Kappa; Scabbard and Blade; Who's Who.
KLINE, JEFFREY J.; Sevcrna Park, Md.;
Biology^jAlpha Epsilon Delta; Beta Beta Beta.
KLINE, RHODA JOANNE; Boulder. Colo.;
Spanish; S.O.P.H., Secretary 4; Cheerleader 1;
Phi Sigma Iota.
KNAPP, ROBERT DOUGLAS; Hingham, Mass.;
History; Pi Kappa Alpha; Tennis.
KNAUSS, PETER LLOYD; Poughkcepsie, N.Y.:
History.
KNIGHT, DENNIS WAYNE; Teachey; Religion;
BSU; Poteat House.
KRAPELS, WILHELMINA MARIA, High Point;
Spanish.
KRAUSE, THOMAS J.; Lancaster. Pa.; Soci-
ology; Track and Field; Gym Club 3.
KRUEGER, CANDITH ELLEN; Johnson City,
Tcnn.; French; Fideles.
LAMBERT. JAMES H.; Parsons, W. Va.; Soci-
ology.
LASLEY, CAROL JANE; Kcrnersville: Biology;
Beta Beta Beta, Secretary 4; College Union (3,4);
Choir 2; Homecoming Court (3,4).
LAYTON, MELDINE BURKE; Winston-Salem;
Physical Education; WRA, President 3; P.E.
Majors Club (2-4); Day Students' Vice President
4; Petals, Treasurer 3; ISC (2,3).
LEE, ROBERT EDWARD, JR.; Murfreesboro;
History; Kappa Alpha, Rush Chmn. 4.
LEVI, LINDA RUTH; Norfolk, Va.; Polit.cal
Science; Old Gold and Black Associate Editor;
Tassels; Who's Who.
LEWIS; CAROLYN LOUISE; Cherryville; Music:
CAPER Company Commander 4; C.U. Small
Socials Comm. 4.
LEWIS, JOSEPH ALLEN, JR.; Florence, S.C.;
History; Kappa Alpha; IFC.
LINK, WILLIAM KERMIT, JR.; Lexington;
Mathematics; Kappa Mu Epsilon; Alpha Phi
LOFTIN, STEVEN RANDALL; Gastonia;
Speech.
LOWE, ELIZABETH LOUISE; Charlotte; En-
glish; Laurels, Secretary 3; F-WAC 1; SAM.
LOWE, JOHN C; Statesville; Marketing; Mitchell
College (1,2); Phi Theta Kappa.
LUCKADOO. VAUGHN CHARLES; Salisbury;
Sociology; Choir (1,2); Organ Guild, President
(3,4).
M
McADAMS, MARIAN CECEILIA; Rockville.
Md.; Sociology; Fideles; ISC (3,4); Orientation
Comm. 3; WGA 4.
McDOWELL, LARRY JEROME; High Point;
Mathematics; Phi Mu Alpha; Madrigals.
McGLOTHLEN, DAVID LILBURN; Nashville.
Tenn.: Philosophy: University Theatre (2.3).
McGRADY, PATSY MARLENE; High Point;
Mathematics; S.O.P.H.; Kappa Mu Epsilon.
McMEILL, ROBERT HAYES, JR.; Wilkeshoro;
English: C.U. Film Committee Chairman (2-4):
Who's Who.
MANGUM, PATRICIA LOUISE; Monroe; Mathe-
matics; Strings.
MANN, CYNTHIA STILL; Winston-Salem:
Religion; Les Loeurs; Marching and Concert
Bands (1-3): BSU; African Student Club.
MARSHALL. CHRISTOPHER LEE; Charleston,
W. Va.; Mathematics, Pi Kappa Alpha; Tennis
1 ; YDC.
MASLINE, DONALD DREW; Jamestown;
Physical Education: Alpha Sigma Phi, Secretary
3; Marching and Concert Bands; Swim Team I;
Cross Country 2: Phi Epsilon Kappa.
MASON, JAMES WILSON; Harrcllsville; Ac-
counting: Delta Sigma Pi, President 4: Represen-
tative BSSA 4.
MATTHEWS, MARGARET ELIZABETH;
Burgaw; Mathematics; Meredith College (1,2);
Kappa Mu Epsilon.
MAY, DONNA BIRD; Lakeland. Fla.: Mathe-
matics; S.O.P.H., Vice President 4; Concert Band
(1,2); Majorette (1.2), Head Majorette 3;
Kappa Mu Epsilon.
MAYHEW, ROGER WILLIAM; Lexington;
Mathematics: Basketball (1,2).
MEDLIN. ANN LASHLEY; Laurinburg; French;
Fideles; SNEA. Vice President.
MEISENHELDER, THOMAS M.; Favetteville,
N.Y.: Sociology; Lambda Chi Alpha, President 4.
MELSON, WILLIAM LLOYD; Wilmington,
Del.: Spanish; Taylor House: Phi Sigma Iota;
Choir (2,3).
MELTON, REBECCA ANN; Elkin; Psychology;
Strings; ISC, Treasurer 4; WGA House President
4; C.U. Small Socials Comm. 3.
MESSICK, WILLIAM HOLMES; Clarksboro,
N.J.; History.
MEYER, DAVID CROMWELL; Colorado
Springs, Colo.: Sociology; Alpha Phi Omega;
Pershing Rifles; Rifle Team; Marching and
Varsity Bands.
MILAM, JENNIFER SUE; Barnesville, Ga.:
Mathematics; S.O.P.H; Chapel Choir (1-3); Tour-
ing Choir (1.2); College Union (1.2).
MILEHAM. WILLIAM DUNNING; Abington.
Pa.; History; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
MILLER, GEORGE THOMPSON; Lexington;
Psychology; Kappa Sigma, Pledge Master 3;
Honors.
MINERS, RICHARD ALAN; Rumson, N.J.;
Historv; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
MINTON, LAURIN CAMILLE; Greensboro;
Physical Education; Les Soeurs; Maritimcrs,
President 3; Concert Band (1,2), Secretary-
Treasurer 3; College Union (1,2); P.E. Majors
Club (3.4).
MOORE, BOBBY GRAY; King; Mathematics;
MRC. 4.
MOORE. BRYCE GEORGE, JR.; Burlington;
History; Lambda Chi Alpha.
MOORE, EDWARD GRANT; Monroe; Political
Science; Scabbard and Blade: Pershing Rifles;
Distinguished Military Student.
MOORE, JAMES EDGAR; Charlotte; Mathe-
MOORE, LOIS CAROL; Gastonia; English:
Strings, Pledge Master 2; Poetry Editor Student
2; Interdisciplinary Honors 2.
MORGAN, FREDRIC LESLIE. JR.; Fort Meyers,
Fla.; Psychology; Band; BSU; MRC (2-4); YRC
(3,4); International Club (3,4).
MORGAN, VICKI ELLEN; High Point; Religion;
Laurels, Scribe, 3; University Theatre (1,4);
Legislature 2; Orientation Comm. 2; Wesley
Foundation; Who's Who.
MORRISON, BRADY KARL; Winston-Salem;
Sociology.
MORRISON, DONALD L.; Roanoke, Va.; Psy-
chology.
MORTON, THOMAS REX; West Jefferson;
Biology; Beta Beta Beta; Taylor House.
MOUNT, JOE DAVID; Columbus, Ind.; History;
Thcta Chi; Track.
MURPHY, CAROL ANN; Jacksonville, Fla.;
Mathematics; Fideles.
MEYERS. JOSEPH FRANK; Reidsville; Mathe-
matics; University Theatre (2.3).
MY'ERS. LINDA SUE; Laurel Springs: Psychol-
ogy; Maritimers (1.2); Wesley Foundation (2,3).
MYERS, WILLIAM B.; Manasquan. N.J.;
History; Delta Sigma Phi; Baseball; MonogTam
Club.
N
NAGIN, LAURANCE WILLIAM; Rockaway
Park, N.Y.; History; Alpha Sigma Phi; Rifle
Team.
NANNEY, JUDITH KAREN; Greenville, S.C.;
Biology; Les Soeurs; Honor Council 4; BSU.
NASH, RICHARD FELTON; Boca Raton, Fla.;
Psychology; MRC.
NEWMAN, WILLIAM ANDERSON; Rockville,
Md.: Political Science; Marching and Concert
Bands; YRC, Treasurer 4; CHALLENGE '67.
NEWSOM, SUSIE SHARP; Winston-Salem;
History.
NIKOL. LYNN BARRY; York, Pa.; Finance.
NICHOLS. DUNCAN LAWRENCE, JR.; Hick-
ory; History: Theta Chi, Social Chmn. 3: IFC
(2,3), Social Chmn. 3.
NIX, JAMES ANDREW; Favetteville; English;
Pershing Rifles: Scabbard and Blade; Lt. Gov.
Davis House.
ODOM, AUSTINE BYRD; Martinsburg. W. Va.;
Biology; S.O.P.H.; College Union Secretary
(3,4); Cheerleader (1-4); Commencement
Marshall 3; Homecoming Queen 4; Who's Who.
OLIVER, MELVIN JABEZ, JR.; Smithfield;
Business Administration; Delta Sigma Pi: Kitchen
Dorm, President: College Union (3,4); BSSA 2,
Treasurer 3, President 4; YDC.
OVERMAN. WILLIAM HENRY, JR.; Roanoke,
Va.: Psychology; Kappa Sigma; Business Staff
HOWLER (2,3); Men's Judicial Board 3, Chair-
man 4: Who's Who.
OWEN, WADE STEVEN; High Point; Biology;
Alpha Phi Omega; BSU.
OWENSBY, SUZANNE; China Grove; Biology;
Strings, Vice President 4; ISC 3; Orcheisis;
School Spirit Comm.
Polil
PARKER, SUSAN RAY; 1
Science; German Club 1.
PARKER, WILLIAM JOSEPH, JR.; Laurinburg;
Historv; Kappa Sigma; Legislature 4; Scabbard
and Blade; Football Manager (2,3), Head 4;
Football 1.
PATE, DAYNA TATE; Atlanta, Ga.; English;
Fideles; Vice President Junior Class; Tassels 3,
President 4; Chief Commencement Marshall 3;
BSU; Student Government Secretary 3: Orchesis
1 ; Who's Who.
PATTON, JOHN BLAINE; Columbus, Ohio;
Finance; Delta Sigma Pi.
PELTON, DOUGLAS HOWES. JR.; Wyckoff,
N.J.; Mathematics; Kappa Alpha; Cross Country
(1,2,3); Track (1,2); Monogram Club.
PENN, RICHARD KENNETH, JR.; Miami, Fla.;
Physical Education; Football: Monogram Club.
PERRETZ, ROBERT LEE, JR.; Park Forest, 111.;
History; Sigma Chi; Football; Track (1.2).
PETERSON, DOROTHY JANE; Harrells;
Physical Education.
mm
6V)ND^
Journal eAND Sentinel
We love you
Graduating? Congratulations! Coming
back next year? We'll be among the first
to welcome you again. Either way, we
hope you've enjoyed Winston-Salem as a
student at one of the country's finest and
most outstanding schools, as much as
we've enjoyed having you. Good luck!
WINSTON-SALEM
Journal »«■> sentinel
Morning Sunday Evening
\m
Represented Nationally By
SAWYER-FERGUSON-WALKER CO.
The Hoi
Pennant ^4^
Race /- %-
rresses Interests
Enduring Liver Transplants
Leave 3 Girls Alive and \\ ell
LaU
CLASS OF '69
• W. FOURTH AT CHERRY
• REYNOLDA MANOR
SHOPPING CENTER
• COLLEGE VILLAGE
SHOPPING CENTER
HIGH POINT
PFISTER, JEANNIE LUCILLE; Monroe;
Psychology; Les Loeurs; Chapel and Touring
Choir (1-3), President 4.
PHILLIPS, ANNE CAROLYN; Greensboro;
Spanish; S.O.P.H.; Homecoming Court (1,2);
Magnolia Court (1,2); Choir; Phi Sigma Iota;
SNEA; C.U. Maior Functions Comm.
PINSON, PAUL EMERSON; Williamson,
W. Va.; Business; Band 2; C.U. Major Functions
Comm. (3,4).
PITTARD, WILLIAM BULLOCK; Norfolk, Va.;
Biology; Beta Beta Beta; Alpha Epsilon Delta,
Secretary 4.
POINDEXTER, LARRY GARFIELD; Siloam;
Mathematics; WFDD (1,2); YDC 2; BSU; C.U.
Maior Functions (3,4).
POOL, CLARK L.; Washington. III.; Business;
Basketball.
POPLIN, WAYNE EADE; Greensboro; History;
MRC; C.U. Major Functions Comm (3,4); YDC.
PORTER, ROBERT H.; Arlington, Va.; Biology.
POSTON, IAMES GORDON; Kingsport, Tenn.;
Biology; Taylor House; Governor 3; YRC 1;
Marching, Concert, and Dance Bands; Who's
Who.
POSTON, ROBERT STEPHEN; Boiling Springs;
History; Poteat House, Councilman 4; MRC
Secretary 3.
POWELL, CHARLES COLLETT, UI; Wilson;
History; Kappa Alpha; YRC.
POWELL, JAMES KYLE; Blanch; History and
Physical Education; Phi Alpha Theta; Phi Epsilon
Kappa.
PUGH, DAVID SAMUEL, JR.; New Bern;
History; Pi Kappa Alpha; Senior Class President;
Cheerleader 3, Head 4; Commencement Marshall
3; Basketball (1,2); Who's Who.
PULLIAM, CHERYL LYNN; Winston-Salem;
History; Meredith (1,2).
PULLIAM, JAMES MICHAEL; Ridgeway, Va.;
Physical Education; Sigma Pi; Phi Epsilon
Kappa, President.
QUEEN, MICHAEL GLENN; Huntington,
W. Va.; Marketing; Lambda Chi Alpha; Honor
Council; SAM.
RATLIFF, JENNIE FRENCH; Bluefield, W. Va.
Psychology.
REDDING, DONNA JO; Rural Hall; Sociology
Choir; Madrigals (2,3); Petales (2,3); BSU
Campbell College (1).
REDDING, SAMUEL STEELE; Asheboro
Political Science; Sigma Pi.
REINHARDT, DOUGLAS EDWARD; Elkin
Greek; Pershing Rifles.
REYNOLDS, DAVID A.; Belmar, N.J.; English
Delta Sigma Phi.
RILEY, GLENN GALLEMORE; Falls Church
Va.; Religion; Circle K; MRC Treasurer 3; Et;
Sigma Phi (3.4).
RIORDAN, DON FRANCIS, JR.; Fort Pierce
Fla.; Mathematics; Legislature 1.2; Swim Team
Monogram Club, Vice President; Circle K; FCA
C.U. Major Functions Comm. 4.
RIVENBARK, SUSAN FOXX; Greensboro
Mathematics; S.O.P.H.; Treasurer 3, Presiden
4; ISC 4; Kappa Mu Epsili
F-WAC 2.
ROBERTS, DAVID LEE; Gal;
Old Gold and Black, Sports E
Sports Director 4; Choir (1,2).
ROBERTSON. JOHN FOSTER; Alexandria, Va.
English.
ROBINSON, THOMAS EDWARD; Wheaton
Md.; Mathematics; Lambda Chi Alpha; Marching
Concert, and Stage Bands.
ROSEBERRY, ELIZABETH ANN; Charlotte
Biology; Beta Beta Beta; Madrigals; International
Club.
Secretary
Va.; English
,,r 4; WFDIi
ROSEMOND, THOMAS COWLES, JR.; Winston
Salem; Physical Education; Phi Epsilon Kappa
Tennis (1-3).
ROWE, FELIZ ANDREW, JR.; Winston-Salem
History.
ROYSTER, MICHAEL FRANKLIN; Grover
English; Lambda Chi Alpha, Pledge Trainer 3
Rush Chmn. 4; Men's Judicial Board 4; Ori
tion Comm. (2,4).
ROYSTER, STEPHEN GEORGE; Grover;
Economics; Lambda Chi Alpha; Honor Council
(3.4).
RUSSELL, PHILLIP KAY; Raleigh; English;
Alpha Phi Omega, Vice President; BSU; Phi Eta
Sigma.
SAEMAN, BETTY ANNE; Conover; Psychology;
S.O.P.H. (1,2); WGA Social Functions Chmn. 4.
SAILER. CHRISTOPHER ALDRICH; Wilming-
ton, Del.; Business Administration; Theta Chi.
SANGES, LEE NATHAN; Albemarle; Sociology;
Wingatc College (1,2); Choir (3,4); MRC
(3,4).
SCHAFFER, JOHN PAUL; Westfield, N.J.;
Biology; Taylor House, Whip (3,4); Track 4;
742.
SEXTON, ELIZABETH LEE; Winston-Salem;
English; Day Student Secretary.
SHAFFER, LENDA K.; Mayodan; Biology.
SCHULTZ, LOUIS PETER; Metuchen, N.J.;
Political Science; Sigma Pi; IFC Deferred Rush
Chn
SCOTT, SUSAN ANN; Greensboro; English;
BSU, Secretary Treasurer 3, Class Representative
4; Choir; School Spirit Comm. (1-3).
SCOTT, NEWTON W. UI; Winston-Salem;
Physical Education; Basketball.
SEARLE, STEPHEN H.; Shippensburg, Pa.;
Philosophy; Poteat House 4; Band 1; University
Theatre (2,3).
SEILA, ROBERT LEE; Lenoir; Chemistry;
Lambda Chi Alpha.
SHEOLA. RICHARD A.; Phillipsburg , N.J.:
Psychology; Sigma Pi. Secretary (1,2), Vice
President (3,4), Pledge Trainer (3.4).
SICELOFF, DAVID MARVIN: Lexington; Busi-
ness; Theta Chi. Treasurer 4; Alpha Kappa Psi,
Treasurer 4; Basketball 1.
SIMPSON, JOHN PAUL; Raleigh; Political
Science.
SIMPSON. RALPH ALLEN; Charlotte; History:
Old Gold and Black; Ass't. Editor 2. Assoc.
Editor 3. Co-Editor 4; YDC, Treasurer 3, Vice
President 4: Co-Chmn. TNP (2.3): Who's Who.
SINGHAS, SUSAN SODEMAN; Winston-Salem;
English; Concert Band (1,2).
SLONE, JAMES S.; Paintsyille, Ky.j History-
Alpha Phi Omega. President 4; Band (2,4).
Li. Goy. Kitchin 3.
SMITH, CHARLES CROWE. IH; Colorado
Springs, Col.; History: Track: WFDD 2; Chapel
Choir (2.3).
SMITH. DAVID ALLEN; Atlanta. Ga.; History;
Kappa Sigma: Football; Monogram Club; Scab-
bard and Blade.
SMITH. DONALD DAWSON; Virginia Beach,
Va.; Speech; Pi Kappa Alpha, Pledge Master 3:
University Theatre (3,4); Old Gold and Black
(3,4); Track and Cross Country 1.
SMITH, EARL WILSON: Jackson Springs;
Philosophy: Poteat House; BSU; YRC; C.U.
Maior Functions Comm 4.
SMITH. JAMES FULTON, JR.; Clinton; History-
Kappa Sigma: Basketball Mgr.; Circle K.
SMITH. PHILIP J.; Newton, Pa.; History; Sigma
Phi Epsilon. Socir.l Chmn.: IFC.
SMITH. WILLIAM ALVAR, HI; Camilla, Ga.;
Economics; Sigma Chi; Scabbard and Blade
(3,-1); Distinguished Military Student.
SMITHSON. HELEN RUTH; Hamilton. Ohio:
Biology; Strings; Chapel and Touring Choirs.
Secretary -Treasurer 4.
SNAPP. DEBORAH D.; Kensington. Md.:
English; S.O.P.H.; WGA. Representatiye 1,
House President 3. Vice President 4; Honor
Council 2; Tassels. Secretary 4; Orientation
Comm. (2,3): Who's Who.
SNED, WILLIAM HARMEN, JR.; Salisbury
Economics; Kappa Alpha: Economics Club: YRC
SOLOMON, JAMES HOWARD: Arlington, Va.
Political Science; Delta Sigma Phi, Secretary 3
IFC, (2,3), Treasurer 4; Scabbard and Blade
Distinguished Military Student; Soccer Club
(1.2).
SPARLING. DANIEL LEROY; Medford Lakes,
N.J.: Psychology; Sigma Phi Epsilon.
SPEAS, JOHN KELLY; Boonville; Business
Administration.
STARMER. JAMES ERNEST. JR.; Greensboro;
Sociology; Sigma Pi: Band.
STAUCH. ALAN RICHARD; Hartford, Conn.;
Accounting: Alpha Phi Omega, Treasurer (3,4);
Track Mgr. (3.4); YRC.
STEFFEY, JAMES BRUCE, Forest City: Business
Administration; Alpha Kappa Psi; Beta Gamma
Sigma, Vice President.
STEIFLE, EMILY LOUISE; Greensboro: Mathe-
matics; Strings: Tassels, Vice President; Phi
Sigma Iota, Vice President; Honor Council,
Secretary; WGA House President (3,4); Who's
Who.
STEIN, HELEN PAULETTE; Rocky Mount;
French: Les Soeurs; Phi Sigma Iota.
STEVENSON, LONA REBECCA; Hickory-
English; S.O.P.H.; Social Chmn. 3, Rush Chmn.
4; Secretary of Senior Class; Eta Sigma Phi.
STILLWELL. WALTER BROOKS; Sayannah,
Ga.; Political Science; HOWLER, Organizations
Editor 2, Assoc. Editor 3, Editor 4: Scabbard and
Blade; Men's Judical Board 3: Omicron Delta
Kappa, President 4: Orientation Comm. (2-4);
Who's Who.
STOKES. DOUGLAS DWIGHT; Albemarle;
English; Kappa Sigma, Social Chmn.; IFC (2,3),
President 4; Old Gold and Black (2,3).
STOLTZ, ANNE BENTON; Columbus, Ga.;
Mathematics; S.O.P.H.
STORIE, PAMELA ELIZABETH; Statesyille;
English.
STROUPE, DAVID HENRY; Winston-Salem;
Physical Education; Basketball, Captain 4; Phi
Epsilon Kappa; Who's Who.
STUART, ANN RANKIN; Badin; Biology; Les
Soeurs: Howler.
STUETZER, THOMAS N.; Wakefield, Mass.;
History: Sigma Chi; Football.
SUMMERS. ROGER CRAIG; Hickory: History;
Kappa Sigma; HOWLER 1.
SWAILsi PAUL TAYLOR; Rockingham;
Physical Education; Baseball; MonogTam Club;
Phi Epsilon Kappa, Treasurer 4.
SWARTZ. MARK KAREN; Bethesda, Md.;
English: S.O.P.H.: Cheerleader 1; F-WAC Comm.
Chmn.; ISC (2,3). President 4; Delta Sigma
Phi Sweetheart 3: Who's Who.
SWEET, STEPHEN YOUNG; Mooresyille:
History; Alpha Kappa Psi; Davis House; Pershing
Rifles; Scabbard and Blade; Marching and
Concert Bands. Vice President 4; MRC Council-
TALLEY, ERNEST IH; Randleman; Economics;
YDC.
TEMPLETON. BRENDA ANN; Olin; Latin; Les
Soeurs; Honor Council 3; WGA House President
4: Eta Sigma Phi; ISC (3,4).
THOMAS. SUSAN REBECCA; Walnut Coye;
English; University Theatre.
THORNTON. NICKA THOMPSON; Elkins,
W. Va.; Psychology; Fideles; College Union
Representatiye 1: Phi Sigma Iota; CHALLENGE
67.
TOMLINSON, THOMAS RUSSELL; Scott AFB,
Illinois; Mathematics; Sigma Pi.
compliments of
L.
ROBERTS
DOWNTOWN
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TROLL, FRED ROBERT, JR.; Rethesda, Mil.
History; Lambda Chi Alpha.
TRULOVE, ELMER EARL, JR.; Cheraw, S.C.
Business: Pi Kappa Alpha.
TSE, PING-KWAN; Hong Kong; Physics
International Club. President 3; Amer. Institute
of Physics.
TUCKER. CARL MILLON, III; Pageland, S.C.
Economics; Lambda Chi Alpha, Treasurer 3, Vic.
President 4; IFC (1,2): Honor Council 3
Economics Club.
TUCKER, WILLIAM MONROE, JR.; Greens
boro; Political Science; Lambda Chi Alpha
Basketball and Baseball Athletic Trainer (1-3).
TURNER. DOROTHY KAY; Winston-Salem
Mathematics: Strings (3-4); Peace College (1,2)
TUTT, KARL FLEMING, IE; Winston-Salem
Speech: Pi Kappa Alpha; WFU Theatre.
TWIDDY, DOUGLAS ANDERSON; Fdenton
Business; President MRC 4; Who's Who.
u
UMSTEAD. SARA ELIZABETH; Newport News,
Va.; Psychology: Fideles, Rush Chmn. 4; WGA
Representative (2,3); Legislature (3,4): Orienta-
tion Comm (2-4).
VAN DER PLOOG, GLENN ARTHUR; Haw
thorne, N.J.; Political Science; Thcta Chi.
w
WADE, EMILY JANE; Dallas, Texas; Biology:
Fideles, Treasurer (2,3), President 4; College
Union Hostess (3,4); Cheerleader 1: Who's Who.
WAGER, LAWRENCE MILES; Latham, N.Y.;
Biology.
WAITT, ELIZABETH GRAHAM; Atlanta, Ga.;
Psychology; Strings: ISC 2; Majorette (1,2).
WALKER, J. JETER; Morganton; Political
Science; Chmn. of Kitchin House; Orientation
Chmn; Old Gold and Black; Chmn. BPOC.
WALL, REBECCA ANN; Asheboro; English;
Delta Phi Alpha (3,4): YDC; BSU; Wesley
Foundation: The Student; I-es Souers.
WALLACE, DAVID ANDREW; Winston-
Salem: Psychology; Track I.
WASH, RICHARD LEE; Charlotte: Mathematics
Kappa Sigma; Football Mgr. 3.
WALTERS, DEAN ALLEN; Silver Spring, Md.
Political Science; Theta Chi, Vice President
SAM.
WEHUNT, JOHN CALVIN; Cherryville
History.
WELFARE, CHARLES RANDALL, JR.
Winston-Salem; Business: Delta Sigma Pi
Treasurer BSSA 4.
WENDORF, FREDERICK LEE; Roanoke, Va.
Speech; Kappa Alpha; Old Gold and Black 2
WFDD.
WEST, REBECCA LYNN; Bethlehem, Pa.
English; Orchestra.
WHALEN, DENNIS WILLIAM; Menden, Conn.
English; Track (1,2); HOWLER Sports Editor 4
WHITE, JUDITH ELLEN; Winston-Salem
History; YDC, President 4, State Secretary 3
Legislature 2; Student Handbook Editor (2,3)
CHALLENGE '67; HOWLER (1.2), Academic
Editor 3.
WHITE, MICHAEL DEAN; Chesapeake, Va.;
Public Administration.
WHITLEY. HENRY HARPER, JR.; Smithfield;
History; Lambda Chi Alpha; Choir.
WILDER, ALDRIDGE DRANE, JR.; Kinston;
wiy*/ Campus Shop
424 W. 4TH 9T.
WmstonSolem, N. C. 27101
WILLIAMS, BRUCE NOLL; Strafford, Pa.;
Business; Sigma Pi: President Alpha Kappa Psi,
Vice President Monogram Club: Swim Team
(1-3); Band (1-3); YRC (1-3).
WILLIAMS, JOAN TERRY; Greensboro; English
and French: S.O.P.H.: F-WAC 2; Secretary
SNEA 4: Phi Sigma Iota (3,4); Orientation
Comm. 4.
WILLIAMS, RICHARD TAYLOR; Mount Holly;
Physics; Kappa Mu Epsilon (3,4).
WILLIAMSON, SANDRA GAIL; Wilkesboro;
Physical Education; WRA (3,4); P.E. Majors
Club (2-4).
WILSON, DONALD CARTER; Greensboro;
Biologv; German Club. President 4: Rifle Team
(1-3); Pershing Rifles; Scabbard and Blade; YDC
(1,2); Taylor House 4.
WILSON STEPHEN THOMAS; Leaksville;
Chemistry; College Union Movies (1,2);
Omicron Delta Kappa: Who's Who.
WISMAN, LOUISE G.; Chambersburg, Pa.;
English.
WRIGHT, CAROLYN JANE; Jacksonville, Fla.;
English; Cameos, Rush Chmn and Vice President
4: College Union (2,3); Eta Sigma Phi (3,4);
ISC 4.
WUERTENBERGER, VIRGINIA ANNE; Char-
lotte; Historv; Strings, Treasurer 3, President 4;
Tassels; Old Gold and Black (1-2); Secretary
Freshman Class; Vice President Senior Class;
Orientation (2-4): Outstanding Freshman
Scholar; Maritimers: Who's Who.
YOUNG, JAMES LYNN; Shelby; Bu
Sigma Phi.
ZAIKEN, MAXINE; Pittsfield, Mass.;
chologv; Les Soeurs, Vice President 3, Pi
%&m^s
NOW WE'RE 4
• DOWNTOWN
• NORTHSIDE
• PARKWAY
• THRUWAY
X
FASHON SHOP
s
WINSTON -SALEM, N. C.
downtown / parkway plaza / reynolda manor
FRANK VOGLER AND SONS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
120 S. Main
DIAL 722-6101
FACULTY DIRECTORY
Allen, Dr. Charles M.; 2108 Faculty Dr., Wins-
ton-Salem 64
Allen, Dr. Judson B.; 1-B Wake Forest Apts. Win-
ston-Salem 112
Amen, Dr. Ralph D.; 100 Friendship Circle, Win-
Wi
n, Mr. Genn A., Jr.; 10-B Crestcourt Apts.,
ston-Salem 68
Angell. Dr. John W.; 11)8 Belle Vista Court, Win-
ston-Salem 69
Armstrong. Jack; 1776 American Dr., Winston-
Salem 229
Aung. Dr. Htin; 6-1 Wake Forest Apts., Winston-
Salcm 69
Aycock, Mr. A. Lewis; 2080 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Baird, Dr. Herbert W.; 37-16 Ogburn Ave., Win-
stnn-Salem ...... ........ .64
Banks, Dr. E. Pendleton; Pinewood Lane, Pfaff-
town 70, 73
Barefield. Mr. James P.; Graylyn, Winston-Sa-
lem 63. 66
Barnett, Dr. Richard C; 313 Wake Dr., Winston-
Salem 66, 67
Barrow, Dr. Harold M.; 1864 Faculty Dr., Win-
i-Sale
68
Beck, Dr. Robert C; 126 Rosedale Circle. Win-
ston-Salem 51, 69
Bell, Mr. Richard G.; 104 Belle Vista Court, Win-
-S.ile
75
Bennison, Mr. Martin J.; 6-D Wake Forest Apts..
Winston-Salem 70, 114
Bcrces, Mr. Francis Albert; 8-D Wake Forest
Apts., Winston-Salem 65
Berthrong, Dr. Merrill G.; 2032 Facult)' Dr., Win
ston-Salem 57, 63
Black, Dr. Charles S.; 1930 Faculty Dr., Win
ston-Salem 6'
Blalock, Dr. James C.j Stimpson Dr., PfafT
town 64
Brantley, Mr. Russell H.; 1832 Faculty Dr., Win
ston-Salem 59
Brauer, Dr. Alfred T.; 410 Patterson Place, Chap
el Hill 67
Brehme, Dr. Robert W.; 1055 Peace Haven Rd
Winston-Salem 6
Bridgewater, Mr. F. Dale; 5010 Ryandale Rd
Winston-Salem . 6
Bronner, Dr. Frederick L.; 3-B Wake Forest Apts
Winston-Salem 66
Brown, Mr. D. A.; 2132 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem 65, 93
Broyles, Mr. David B.; 1-J Wake Forest Apl
i-S.il.
69
Bryan. Dr. G. McLead; 3700 Old Pfafftown Rd
Winston-Salem 65, 69
Bryant, Dr. Shasta M.; 135 Aaron Lane, Winston-
Salem 70
Burroughs, Dr. Julian C, Jr.; 2116 Faculty Dr.,
Winston-Salem 70, 93
Cage, Dr. William E.; 4834 Westmoreland Dr..
Wimton-Salem 72
Campbell, Dr. Ruth F.; 8-H Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 70
Carter, Dr. John A.; 10-E Faculty Dr., Winston-
S.il,
65
Casey, Miss Dorothy; 6-A Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 68
Catron, Dr. David W.; 7-A Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 69
Christman, Rev. Edgar D.; 2-D Wake Forest
Apts., Winston-Salem 92
Cocke, Dr. Elton C; 2140 Faculty Dr., Wil
Sale
64
Cook, Mr. Leon P., Jr., 2904 Pioneer Trail, Win-
ston-Salem 72
Crisp, Miss Marjorie; 6-A Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 68
I)
Davis, Dr. J. E., Jr.; 2124 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Delgado, Mr. Marcel E.; 1420 Arrowood Court,
Winston-Salem . 70
Denham, Mrs. Louise; Rabcock B Dormitory,
Wake Forest University 95
Dimmick, Dr. John F.; 2860 Wcsleyan Lane, Win-
ston-Salem 64
Divine, Dr. Hugh William; 2027 Faculty Dr.,
Winston-Salem , ... .75
Dodson, Dr. Nathan T.; Rt. 2, Box 140, Pfaff-
Drake, Mr. Justice C; 1888 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 65
Dufort, Dr. Robert H.; 4-A Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 69
Dyer, Dr. Robert A.; 1415 Peace Haven Rd., Win-
ston-Salem 59, 69
Earle, Dr. John R.; 753 Austin Lane, Winston-
Salem 70
Earp, Dr. Cronje B.; 2148 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem 64
Easley, Dr. John A.; 105 Belle Vista Court. Win-
ston-Salem 69
Eckroth, Dr. David R.; 317 Sunset Dr., Winston-
Salem 64
Ellison, Mr. Leo; 2113 Independence Rd., Win-
ston-Salem 68, 228
Elmore, Dr. Thomas M.; 2511 Aaron Lane, Win-
ston-Salem 56, 65, 141, 190
Esch. Dr. Gerald W.; 6-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 64
Evans, Dr. David K.; 1970 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem 18, 70
F
Faris, Mr. E. McGruder; 2000 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 75
Ferm, Dr. Vergilius; 1-C Wake Forest Apts., Win-
ston-Salem 51,67
Fleer, Dr. Jack D.; 2992 Ormond Dr., Winston-
Salem 69
Flory, Dr. Walter S.; 2025 Colonial Place, Win-
ston-Salem 62
Fosso, Dr. Doyle R.; 4-D Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 65
Foster, Mr. Elliott O.; 1234 Polo Rd., Winston-
Salem .66
Frascr, Dr. Ralph S.; 1865 Mcadowbrook Dr.,
Winston-Salem 62
Furches, Mr. J. Frank; Box 128, Clcmons 62
G
Garrity, Mr. M. Henry; 2800 Robinhood Rd.,
Winston-Salem . . . 59, 92
Gav, Mr. Roland L.; 112 Belle Vista Court, Win-
ston Salem 67
Gentry, Dr. Ivey C; 2041 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem 63, 67, 93
Gettman, Mr. Larry R.; 1-G Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 68
Gokhale, Dr. Balkrishna G.; 2724 Genning Dr.,
Winston-Salem 66, 69
Gossett, Dr. Thomas F.; 1 19 Rosedale Circle, Win-
ston-Salcm 65
Gray, Dr. Thomas A.; 2132 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem . 65
Griffin, Dr. George J.; 109 Belle Vista Court,
Winston-Salem .59
Gross, Dr. Paul M., Jr.; 6-F Wake Forest Apts.,
Winslon-Salcm 69
Gulley, Dr. William H.; 3281 Polo Road, Win-
on-Sa
7(i
H
Haddock, Mr. Jesse I.; 3124 Burkcshore Rd.,
Winston-Salem 228
Hadley, Mr. David W.; 10-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem . 66
Hagen, Mr. William M.; 124 Rosedale Circle,
Winston-Salem 65
Hall, Dr. Jerry A.; 146 Mayficld Dr., Winston-
Salem 65
Hamilton, Mr. Keith E.; 705 Anson St., Apt. H-
1 1 , Winston-Salem 68
Hamrick, Dr. Emmctt W.; 162 Rosedale Circle,
Winston-Salem 69
Hamrick, Dr. Phillip J.; 2651 Green Crest Dr.,
Winston-Salem 64
Harbin, Mrs. Susan P.; Clemmons Village Apts.,
Clemmons 69
Harris, Dr. Carl V.; 6-C Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 64
Haven, Dr. Ysbrand; 1030 Yorkshire Rd., Win-
ston-Salem 68
Hayes, Dr. Merwyn A.; 145 Billiesue Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 70
Heath, Dr. Ralph C; 2815 Lyndhurst Ave., Win-
ston-Salem 72
Hein, Dr. Dale; 8-A Wake Forest Apts., Win-
ston-Salem 64
Helm, Dr. Robert M.; Royall Dr., Winston-Sa-
lem 67
Hendricks. Dr. J. Edwin; 1000 Macon Dr., Win-
ston-Salem ... 66
Hester, Dr. Marcus B.; 6-H Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem ... 68
Higgins, Dr. Robert P.; 621 Quarterstaff Rd.,
Winston-Salem 62
Hills, Dr. David A.; 7-C Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem . . 69
Himan, Dr. Hugh Kenneth; 10-D Wake Forest
Apts., Winston-Salem 72
Hollingsworth, Dr. Leon H.; 37 Edith Ave., Win-
ston-Salem 56, 92
Hollowell. Miss Ida M.; 6-G Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 65
Horrowitz, Dr. Herbert; 1099 Foxhall Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 69
Howard, Dr. Fredrick T.; ID Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 67
Hubcr, Dr. Calvin R.; 301 Wake Dr., Winston-
Salem 67, 106
Hylton, Mr. Dclmer P.; 1856 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 72
I
Jenkins, Mr. Hiram V.; Brewer Heights, Apt. 12,
Clemmons 70
Jenson, Mr. Teddy J.; 3-C Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 70
Johnson, Dr. J. Robert, Jr.; 115 Belle Vista Ct.,
Winston-Salem 67
Jones, Mr. Hubert A.; 2-C Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem . . . 67
Jones, Dr. H. Broadus; 1938 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 65
K
Kenion, Dr. Alonzo W.; 1045 Dcepwood Ct.,
Winston-Salem 65
King, Dr. Harry L., Jr.; 25-A College Village
Apts., Winston-Salem 70
L
Lauerman, Mr. Henry C; 101-B Westgate Circle,
Winston-Salem 75
Leake, Miss Lu; 10-A Wake Forest Apts., Win-
ston-Salem . . .19, 57
Lee. Dr. Robert E.; 2180 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem 75
Lcighton. Mr. James; 1878 Meadowbrook Dr.,
Winston-Salem 228
Lucas, Mr. Gene T.; 3540 York Rd., Winston-
Sale
55
M
McCIoskey, Mr. John W.; 2848 Regency Dr.,
Winston-Salem 206
McCollough, Mr. J. Lawrence; 8-C Wake Forest
Apts. Winston-Salem 68, 229
McDonald, Dr. Thane E.; 127 Rosedale Circle.
Winston-Salem 67
McDowell, Dr. James G.; 183 Idlewild Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 64
Martin, Mr. Robert L.; 5-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 68
May, Dr. J. Gaylord; 3318 York Road, Winston-
Salem 67
May, Dr. W. Graham; 2931 Good Hope Rd.,
Winston-Salem 67
Memory, Mr. Jasper L.; 2008 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 65
«<-*V ■. CBAMPTON * ASJOCIAT£J
Wf-t. HENLEY DEITRICK. -COn3ul.tani
PROP05BD STADIUM POB
Proposed Stadium for Wake Forest College
George W. Kane9 I ne<
Contractor
DURHAM
111 Corcoran St. Bldg.
ROXBORO
Roxboro Bldg.
WINSTON-SALEM
Reynolda Station
GREENSBORO
603 Jefferson Standard Bldg.
HENDERSON
231 South Garnett St.
FACULTY DIRECTORY— Continued
. ;—■ - '■ -jz
Merrill, Mr. Sammy R.; 3-J Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 66
Miller, Dr. Harry B.; 9-D Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 64
Mitchell, Dr. Carlton T., 3121 Shannon Dr., Win-
-s,,l.
69
Moore. Mr. Harold S.; 2051 Rovall Dr., Winston-
Raynor. Mrs. Beulah L., 1946 Faculty Dr., W
Reece, Mr. Mark H.; 2017 Faculty Dr., Winston
Salem 57, 132
Reed, Col. John F.; 427 Plymouth Ave., Winston
v.k
.59
Sale
5''
Moses, Dr. Carl C; 3431 York Rd., Winston-
Salem 69
Mullen, Dr. Thomas E.; 105 Woodrow Ave, Win-
ston-Salem 66
N
Noftle, Dr. Ronald E.; 1790 Houseman Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 64
Nowell, Dr. John W.; 4115 Student Dr., Winston-
O
O'Flaherty, Dr. James C; 2164 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 66
Olive, Dr. A. Thomas; 9 -A Wake Forest Aprs..
Winston-Salem 27, 64, 90
Owen, Dr. Jeanne; 6-E Wake Forest Apts., Win-
ston-Salem 72
Parccll, Mr. Harold D.; 1-1 Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 70
Parker, Dr. John E., Jr., 725 Sylvan Rd., Win-
ston-Salcm 65, 70
Patrick, Dr. Clarence H.; 1880 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 70
Patterson, Mr. Grady S.; 2100 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salcm 59
Reeves, Dr. J. Don; 2920 St. Calire Rd., Winston
Salem 6!
Richards, Dr. Claud H., Jr.; 835 Ransom Rd.
Winston-Salem 6!
Rifle, Rev. David; Rt. 1, lames St., Winston-Sa
lem 92
Roberts, Mr. John E.; IB Wake Forest Apts.
Winston-Salem 6!
Robinson, Dr. Mary F.; 1939 Faculty Dr., Win
ston-Salem 70
Robinson, Dr. Paul S.; 1939 Faculty Dr.. Win
ston-Salem 67
Rodtwitt, Miss Eva M.; 1-H Wake Forests Apts
Winston-Salem . . 69, 70
Rogers, Dr. Gaines M.; 214 N. Hawthorne
Winston-Salem . . . ........ 73
Rose, Rabbi David H.; 705 Sylvan Rd., Winston
Salem 92
Rupp, Dr. Karl H.; 2164 Faculty Dr., Winston
Salem . . . . 66, 69
Sanders, Dr. Wilmcr D.; 819 Yellowstone Lane.
Seclbinder, Dr. Benn M.; 720 Austin Lane, Win
ston-Salem 63, 67
Shafer, SGM Thomas D.; 1218 Pleasant View Dr.
Winston-Salem 8'
Shaw, Mr. Bynum G.; 1527 Overbrook Ave.
Winston-Salem ... 61
Shields, Dr. Howard W.; 9-B Wake Forest Apts.
Winston-Salem 61
Shirley, Dr. Franklin R.; 1947 Faculty Dr., Win
ston-Salem 70
Shockley, Mrs. Sandre I.; 2031 Indcpcndi
Winston-Salem 68
Shoemaker, Dr. Richard L.; 1830 Meadowbrook
Dr.. Winston-Salem 70
Shorter, Dr. Robert N.; 7-B Wake Forest Apts.
Wnston-Salem 6>
Sizemore, Mr. James E.; 1900 Faculty Dr., Win
ston-Salem 75
Smiley, Dr. David L.; 1060 Polo Rd., Winston
Salem .. 22, 51, 67
Smith, Mr. James H.; 9-C Wake Forest Apts
Winston-Salem 67, 190
Snuggs. Dr. Henry L.; 1872 Meadowbrook D:
Wir
i-Sale
66
W:
52,
Perricone, Mr. Philip J.; I04-A Williamsburg Ct„
Winston-Salem 63, 70
Perry, Dr. Percival; 121 Belle Vista Ct., Winston-
Salem . . 66
Phillips, Dr. Elizabeth; 1-H Wake Forest Apts.,
Wir
i-Sali
.65
Pollock, Dr. Michael L.; 3-H Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 68
Potter, Dr. Lee H.; 1927 Oakland Dr., Winston-
Sawyer, Dr. John W.; 116 Belle Vista Ct., Win-
ston-Salem 67
Scales, Dr. James R.; 2601 Wake Forest Dr..
Winston-Salem 55, 91
Schoonmaker, Dr. Donald O.; 216 Carter Circle,
Winston-Salem 67, 69
Schwartz, Mr. Howard D.; 1608 Northwest Blvd.,
Winston-Salem 70
Scott, Mr. Karl M.; Rt. 3, Old Hollow Rd., Win-
ston-Salem 72
Sears. Mr. Richard D.; 1232 Brookwood Dr.,
Winston-Salem 69
Sebo, Mrs. Katherine A.; 200 E. Lebanon, Elon
College 69
Sechtman, Capt. Paul L.; 1838 Brantlev St.. Win-
ston-Salem 84
Stallings, Mr. Jack T.; Rt. 2, Box 323, Pfaff
town 22<
Starling. Mr. William G.; 2110 Independence
Winston-Salem 56
Stroupe, Dr. Henry S.; 2016 Faculty Dr., Win
ston-Salem 67, 79
Sullivan. Dr. Robert L.; 10-F Wake Forest Apt:
Wisntoi-Salcm I
Syme, Dr. Samuel A., Jr.; 924 Marguerite D
Winston-Salem 65
Talbert, Dr. Charles H.; 3091 Prytania Rd., Win-
ton-Salem 69, 93
Tate, Mr. William L.; 3740 Will Scarlet, Winston-
Salem 200,228
Tedford, Dr. Harold C.j 2-A Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 70
Tefft, Mr. Stanton K.; 945 Palm Dr., Winston-
Salem 70
Tillett. Dr. Anne S.; 139 Rosedale Circle, Win-
ston-Salem 70
Tillett, Dr. Lowell R.; 139 Rosedale Circle, Win-
ston-Salem ... 67
STAY
STATLER HILTON
I
NORTH CAROLINA'S NEWEST
LARGEST AND FINEST
WINSTON-SALEM
Marshall & High Sts
OH 1-40
GREENSBORO
830 W. Market St.
RALEIGH
1707 Hillsborough St.
FOR THE BEST IN WEEKEND
ACCOMMODATIONS
STAY . . . STATLER HILTON INN
Fowler-Jones
Construction Company
BOX 4062, NORTH STA. 10 32ND ST., N.W.
Telephone 723-0336
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
R0MINGER FURNITURE
COMPANY, INC.
ESTABLISHED 1900
Mrs. E. R. Cunningham J. ~y/. Cunninghar
Chairman of Board Presiaenr
OLDEST • LARGEST • BEST
WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA
From The Open Hearth
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
Prepared to your special order
OPEN HEARTH RESTAURANT
The house that service
and quality built;
The favorite of Wake Forest
students and faculty.
PA 3-9703 24-HOUR SERVICE
2803 Reynolda Rd. Al Dillard, Mgr.
Travland, Dr. David A.; Colonial Estates, Apt. 5,
Bcthania Station Rd., Winston-Salem 69
Tribble, Dr. Harold W.; Greenhill Rd., Blowing
Rock
Trible, Dr. Phyllis; 6-J Wake Forest Apts., Win-
i-Sale
.69
Tucker, Mr. C. Wayne; 147 Rosedale Circle,
Winston-Salem 65
Turner, Col. Hugh J., Jr.; 1039 Peace Haven Rd.,
Winston-Salem . 82, 8-1
Turner, Dr. Thomas J.; 2072 Faculty Dr., Win-
Via, Dr. Dan C, Jr.; Ill Belle Vista Ct., Wii
W
Waddill. Dr. Marcdlus E.; 3750 Will Scarlet Rd.,
Winston-Salem 67
Wagstaff. Dr. Joseph V.; 2960 Kedron Ct., Win-
sLm-Vllem 72
Weathers, Mr. Carroll W.; 766 N. Stratford Rd.,
Winston-Salem 75
Webster, Dr. James A., Jr.; 1819 Faculty Dr.,
Winston-Salem 75
Weller, Dr. Judith A.; I -A Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 67
White, Capt. Eddie J.; 1733 Princeton St., Win-
ston-Salem 84
White, Major Ervin L.; 601 A Jersey Ave., Win-
ston-Salem 83, 84
Williams, Dr. George P., Jr.; 1961 Faculty Dr.,
Winston-Salem 68
Williams, Dr. John E.; 2035 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 69
Williard, Mr. John G.; 2011 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem 57
Wilson, Dr. Edwin G.; 10-H Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem . .55, 61
Wilson, Mr. James W.; 3-E Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 65
Woldscth, Dr. Rolf; 311 Wake Drive, Winston-
Salem 68
Woodmansee, Dr. John J.; 7-D Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 50, 69
Wyatt, Dr. Raymond L.; 10-C Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem 64
Yeams, Dr. W. Buck; 2152 Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem 63, 67
STUDENT INDEX
Abarno, Robert NeweJI: 2228 N.E. 25th St.,
Lighthouse Point, Fla. 33064 188, 236
Abernathv, Laura Susan; 208 McTeer Drive,
Kingsport, Tenn. 37663 122, 170, 256
Abemathy, Shelley Conine; 4410 Rockcrest Dr.,
Fairfax, Va. 22030 . 256
Abemethy, Dan Edward; 201 Transylvania Ave.,
Raleigh, N.C. 27609 . . .188, 248
Abemethy, David Preston, Jr.; 1702 Charlotte
Ave., Kinston, N.C. 28501 248
Abemethy, Tommy Newell; 203 Park Dr., Bel-
mont, N.C. . 256
Ackerman, Milton John; 511 W. 25th St., Riviera
Beach. Fla. 33404 119,228,236
Acklcy, Daniel Ross; 702 Balsam St., Liverpool,
N.Y. 13088 168, 229, 256
Adair, William Ivey; 121 Craven St., Beaufort,
N.C. 28516 264
Adams, Alfred G.; Rt. 2. Copeland Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27103 177, 236
Adams, Brent Douglas; Box 811, Dunn, N.C.
248
Adams, Charles Cochran, HI; 2137 Chatham Ave.,
Charlotte, N.C. . 167, 229, 236
Adams, Michael Lee; Rt. 1, Knightdale, N.C.
27545 256
Adams, Rod A.; 5914 Meadowood Rd., Balti-
more, Md. 21212 264
Adams. Thaddeus Awasaw, HI; 27G College Vil-
lage, Winston-Salem, N.C 274
Aiken, Jefferson Boone, III; 1423 Madison Ave..
Florence, S.C 167, 248
Aiken. Michael Lee; 1213 Drexel Ln„ Greenville,
N.C. 27834 93, 264
Aikman, Arthur James; 105 Hillcrest Ave.,
Beaver Falls, Pa. 15010 168, 236
Ainsworth. Sally Jo; 456 Backus Rd., Webster,
N.Y. 14580 264
Albert, Susan Jeanette; 112 Fourteenth St., N.,
Pulaski, Va. 24301 264
Albert, Thomas Warren; 1407 N. 14th St., Read-
ing, Pa. 19604 236
Alden, Roger David; 613 Whittier Dr., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 256
Aldrcdge, Emmett Carlyle, Jr.; Lot 18, Wake
Forest University Trailer Park, Winston-
Salem, N.C 248
Aldrich, Judith Anne; 1514 Jackson Rd., Gas-
tonia, N.C. 28052 264
Alexander. Charles Jackson; 1208 Ebert St., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27103 248
Alexander, Suzanne Dorothy; 210 Edgedale Dr.,
High Point, N.C. 27262 256
Alexander, Thomas Willis Haywood; 2831 Exeter
Cr.. Raleigh, N.C. 27608 . 127, 274
Allen, Billie Jean; Box 62, Hot Springs, Va.
24445 248
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Allen, Charles Roger; Box 370. Rt. 3, Forest City.
N.C. 248
Allen. George M.; 1(1(1 Duke Dr.. Farmvilk, N.C.
27828 174, 256
Allen, Patti; 3319 Ellis Way, Louisville, Ky.
40220 264
Ameen, William Otis, Jr.; Rt. 2, Box 43. James-
town, N.C. 27282 248
Ames. Richard Bissell; 343 Argonne Dr.. New
Kensington, Pa. 15068 165, 236
Anderson, David Scott; 308 East Guilford, Thom-
asville, N.C. 27360 . 248
Anderson, Rebecca Susan; Blewett Falls, Liles-
ville, N.C. 277
Anderson, Runo Carl, Jr.; 802 S. Spring Ave..
LaGrange, 111. 60525 177, 228, 236
Anderson, Robert Henry, III; 1850 Edwards Rd..
Ocala, Fla. 32670 236
Anderson, Suellcn; 386 Tidewater Cr., E., Jack-
sonville, Fla. 32211 162, 256
Andrews, Laura Rita; Box 233, Boiling Springs,
N.C. 28017 248
Andrews, Mary Jacqueline; 215 Grove Cr., Bre-
vard, N.C. 28712 105, 172, 256
Andrews, William Hill; Rt. 2. Box 348, Wallace,
N.C. 28466 248
Andrews, William Pleasant; 2706 Wedgedale Dr.,
Durham, N.C. 27703 . .256
Andrus. Martha Willois; 976 Vernon Avenue,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 159, 248
Ange, Constance Elizabeth; 313 Jamcsvillc Rd..
Williamston, N.C. 27892 . 105, 264
Angel, Glenda Shaffer; Rt. 2. Madison, N.C.
27025 236
Angerman, Fred Charles; 625 Decker St., Monon-
gahela, Pa. 15063 228
Angle. William M.; 117 N. Dunlap. Youngtown,
Ohio 44509 228
Anglim, William Kevin; Madison, N.J. 07940
264
Aniluoto, Rirva Lemmikki; Raaseporint 1, Hel-
sinki 90, Finland 248
Antonoplos, Mary Jane; 338 Hilklale Dr.. Deca-
tur, Ga. 30030 . 264
Aquino, Thomas Malonc; 101 Charles Ave.,
Canastota. N.Y. 13032 118, 256
Applcyard, Deborah Lee; 2239 Westfield Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 264
Arlart, Emest James; 31 North Delaphine Rd.,
Riverside, III. 60546 264
Armstrong, Robert Howard; Box 3067, Kings-
port, Tenn. 248
Arney, Jonathan Shuford; 214 West Park Dr..
Morganton. N.C. 236
Arnold. Susan Palmer; 9515 Milstcad Dr., Bethes-
da.Md. 20034 116,236
Arnold, Timothy Kirk; 7527 Lee Highway, Falls
Church, Va. 22042 264
Arrington, Charles Edward; 206-B Student Apts.,
Winston-Salem, N.C 167, 228
Arrowood, James H.; 418 Caldwell Dr., Concord,
N.C. 28025 236
Arsenault, Harry Albert; 48 Crane Rd., N.. Stam-
ford, Conn. 06902 106, 248
Arthur, William Charles; 5304 Neville Ct., Alex-
andria, Va. 22310 . 264
Asch, David; Box 1924, McClcllan A.F.B., Sacra-
mento, Calif. 229
Ashcraft, David Bee; 1208 Village Dr., South
Charleston. W.Va. 186,228,236
Ashford, Richard R.; 955A Laniwai Ave.. Pearl
City, Hawaii 96782 264
Ashton, Rudolph A.; 8211 Shelley Rd., Rich-
mond, Va. 23229 . 179, 226, 236
Astc, Russell Zachary; 6800 S.W. 64th St., Miami,
Fla. 33143 264
Atkins, Robert Garland, Jr.; 483 West Main St..
Danville. Va. 24541 236
Atkinson, John Thomas; 53 Fairway Hts. Dr.,
Thornhill, Ontario, Canada 228
Austin, Betty L.; 627 S. 29th Rd., Arlington,
Va. 22202 236
Aycock, Benjamin Thompson, Jr.; P.O. Box 472,
Wake Forest, N.C. 27587 . 228, 256
11
Bachovchin, William Walter; 418 Shcridon St.,
Johnstown, Pa. 159116 17", 228, 256
Bacon, Helcnc Annette; 3906 Skvlanil Dr., Kings-
port, Tenn. 37664 . 264
Badger, Bruce Byron; 1030 Ashland Av
111.
isin
264
Bailev, Douglas Kent; 1468 Alttha Dr., Jackson-
ville. Fla. 32211 179, 264
Bailev. Robert B., Jr.; 3107 N. Cherry St. Ext.,
W.nston-Salem, N.C. 277
Baillie. Joel Malcolm; 2805 W. Ray Dr., Zanes-
ville, Ohio 43701 . . 264
Baker, Candy Carson; 108-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 236
Baker, Carlton Lee; 6849 Hyde Grove Ave.,
Jacksonville, Fla. 32210 . . . 165, 228. 236
Baker, Frank Snow; Rt. 8, Box 337, Raleigh,
N.C. 27609 174
Baker, John Colson, Jr.; 108-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem, N.C 236, 256
Baker, Janice G.; 1707 Calle Los Vecinos, Albu-
querque, N.M. 87107 277
Baker, Jerry Herbert; 901 E. Nance St., Kanna-
polis, N.C. 28081 93, 120, 234, 236
Baker, John Steven; 1201 Mary Dale Ln., Rock
Hill, S.C. 29730 264
Baker, Martha Victoria (Vicky); 782 Williams
St., Roanoke Rapids, N.C. 27870 264
Baker, Robert Carl; 33 Catherine Court, Cedar
Grove. N.J. 07009 . .. . 264
Baldwin, Diane Secor; 1204 Taney Ave., Salis-
bury. Md. 21801 100, 182. 236
Baldwin, Jack Rankin, Jr.; 106 W. Vandalia Rd..
Greensboro, N.C. 27406 161
Ballew, Larry Allen; 200 Newland St., Morgan-
ton, N.C. 28655 248
Balls, Ann Bartram; 103 Tvson Rd., Newtown
Square, Pa. 19073 264
Barbeau, Richard Joseph; 8 Memorial Dr., Salem,
Mass. 1)1970 264
Barden, John Frederick; 934 Tarboro St., Rocky
Mount, N.C. 27801 228, 256
Barlow, John Russell. TJ; 305 Bost St., Kanna-
polis, N.C. 28081 275
Barnabic. John Martin; 55 Greenwood Ln., Val-
halla, N.Y. 10595 . 229, 264
Barnes. Christopher Keen; 4012 Miami Rd.. Cin-
cinnati, Ohio 45227 264
Bames, Kenna Elaine; Rt. 1, Box 335, Linwood,
N.C. 27299 264
Bames, Nell Goodwyn; 1709 Dilworth Rd., W„
Charlotte, N.C. 28203 264
Barnes, Patrick Douglas; 23 Arlene Dr., W. Long
Branch, N.J. 161, 256
Barrett, David Donald; 2318 N.W. 35th St.,
Miami, Fla. 33142 256
Barrett, Hand James; 739 Richmond St., Laurin-
burg, N.C. 28352 167
Barrick, Linda Kay; 9214 Villa Dr., Bethesda,
Md. 20034 170, 236
Barsotti, Stephen Louis; 209 Belladonna Dr.,
Allison Park, Pa. 15116 256
Bartholomew, Jacquelyn Frances; 1004 S. Howard
Cr., Tarboro, N.C. 27886 264
Bartlctt, Herschel Dwight; 3806 Yanccyville St.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27405 229, 236
Bateman, James Ward, Jr.; P.O. Box 1651, Wil-
liamsburg, Va. 23185 264
Baucom, Phdip Louie; 315 Crestsule Dr.. S.E.,
Concord, N.C. 28025 248
Baus, Nelson Ann; 5506 Knollview Court, Balti-
more, Md. 21228 118,236
Baxlcy, Daniel William; Rt. 3, Box 128, Rocking-
ham, N.C. 28379 174
Baxter, Gregory Stephen; 320 Hollywood Ave.,
Long Branch, N.J. 07740 248
Beach, Clarence Maynard, Jr.; 425 Hamilton St.,
Eden, N.C. 27288 248
Beal, Beverly Tate; 238 Tremont Park, Lenoir,
N.C. 28645 236
Bean, Rhonda Duke; 1031 6th Ave., N.W.,
Hickory, N.C. 28601 184, 256
Beard, Albert Floyd. Ill; Rt. 5, Box 272, Fayette-
villc, N.C. 283111 264
Bcatty, Carole Bemadine; P.O. Box 65, Kanna-
pohs, N.C. 264
Beatty, Elizabeth Caldwell; Box 315, Rt. I, Ml.
Holly, N.C. 28120 256
Bcauvais, Ronald Raphael; Rt. 1, Box 244, Elgin,
111. 60120 264
Beavers, Chris; Rt. 8, Shattalon Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 256
Beavers, Philip James; 2701 Windsor Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 229, 256
Beck. Charles Lindsay; 602 N. Rotary Dr., High
Point, N.C. 27260 248
Beck, Elizabeth Ann; 202 Salem St., Lexington,
N.C. 27292 248
Beck. Franklin Andrew; 2406 Sherwood St.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27403 177, 256
Beck, Richard Carl; 715 58th St., N.W., Braden-
ton, Fla. 33505 248
Beck, Richard Carlie; Rt. 6, Lexington, N.C. 167
Bclchec, John William; 711 Parkway, Bluefield,
W.Va. 24701 181, 248
Belk, Mary Emily; 1513 Greenfield Ave., Kings-
port, Tenn. 37664 256
Bell, Bonnie Wayne; 710 Vance St., Roanoke
Rapids, N.C. 27870 264
Bell, Katherinc Lapsley; 370 Brevoort Rd., Co-
lumbus, Ohio 43114 277
Bell. Thomas Alexander. Jr.; Raleigh, N.C.
174,248
Belnap, Davij Dean; 130 Cioghan Dr., Carlisle,
Pa. 17013 236
Below, Edwin G.; 10-C Barton Rd., Port Deposit,
Md. 21904 118, 188, 248
Belvin, Paul Aaron; 109 Bramston Dr., Hampton,
Va. 23366 168
Bennett, Carol Susanne; 3424 Hvcliffe Ave.,
Louisville, Ky. 40207 101, 163
Bennett, J. David; Box 286, West Chester, Pa.
19380 181, 236
Bennett. Raymond Terry; 2824-C Teakwood Ct.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 21706 275
Bennett, Richard Vernon; Rt. 7, Phelps Cr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27105 236
Bennett, William James; 236 34th St., West Palm
Beach, Fla. 33407 264
Benton, Brenda Ruth; P.O. Box 7, Indian Trail,
N.C. 28079 .264
Benton, Betty Sue; 230 Summit Ave., Box 804,
Mount Holly, N.C. 28120 264
Benton, Kenneth Robert; 1462 Briarcreek Rd.,
Charlotte. N.C. 28205 264
Benz, Carolyn Elizabeth; 2804 McKinley Place,
N. W., Washington, D.C. 20015 . . 170, 236
Bergey, Donald Bruce; 2201 Third St., Norris-
town. Pa. 19401 264
Bergman, Lois Ann; 3716 Forest Grove Dr.,
Annandale, Va. 22003 184
Bergmann, Gregory William; 92 Twin Brooks
Ave., Middletown, N.J. 07748 264
Berkow, George Cheyne; 21 Hidden Vallev. Rd. 1,
Rolling Hills Est. Calif 167, 248
Bernhardt, John William; 1 Azalea Way, Box
2626, Hamilton Square, N.J. 08690 264
Berry. Linda Kaye; Orange Hi Rd., Hillsborough,
N.C. 27278 264
Berry, Thomas Frederick, 169 Pine St., Emmaus,
Pa. 18049 179, 229, 248
Berwind, John Christopher; 3 Carolee Court,
West Islip, N.Y . 179, 248
Bcshears, Ralph Lane, Jr.; P.O. Box 46, Boone,
N.C. 28607 105, 168, 236
Best, Deborah Lou; 45-32 Ave., N.W., Hickory,
N.C.
Best, J
8601
162. 256
[dlewild Av
236
W.ivn
38 Che
2, Cle
nut Dr.,
188, 236
ns. N.C.
77, 236
Emest, Jr.;
Greensboro, N.C. 27410
Bierlv, Steven T.; 1707 Tho
19087
Biernbaum. Charles Knox;
Woodstown, N.J. 08098
Bicsecker. Joe Earl;
27012
Bigelow, Thomas F„ Jr.; 2134 Englewood Dr.,
E. Grand Rapids, Mich. 28150 167, 248
Biggcrstaff. Lila Jane; Box 50, Rt. 8, Shelby,
N.C. 28150 118, 236
Biles, Lindscy Scott; 78 Kendall Dr., Newport
News, Va. 23601 118. 159, 248
Billings, Paul Henry; 2126 Amity Hill Rd.,
Statesville, N.C. 28677 277
Bingham, Evelyn Anne; Long St., Lexington.
N.C. 27292 93, 118, 162
Bingham, Robert Laurence; 29 E. Essex Ave.,
Unsdowne, Pa. 19050 256
Bishop, Susan Ann; 727 Runnvmede Rd., Raleigh,
N.C. 27607 236
Bivens, Jennifer Louise; 383 Va. Ave., Welch,
W.Va. 24801 . 170, 236
Bivens, Luther Brown; 1 1 1 Tuxedo Ter„ N.W.,
Atlanta, Ga. 30305 16"
Black. Henry Clard, III; 55 Paschall Rd., Wil-
mington, Del. 19803 85, 106, 264
Have you ever noticed how comfortable you are with
certain brand names? They are like old friends. You
can depend on them.
That's the way it is with Hanes.
Three generations of satisfied customers attest that fact.
And today more quality products proudly bear the fa-
miliar Hanes name than ever before. Ladies' seamless
hosiery. Long-wearing underwear and socks for men and
children. Sleepwear for every member of the family.
Infants' and children's wear. Style setting sportswear
and athletic uniforms.
Retaining the respect of old friends while winning new
ones is a way of life with Hanes.
L. A. REYNOLDS COMPANY
1025 W. FIRST STREET
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
PHONE 722-7152
Contractors:
Asphalt Paving
Grading — Excavating
Landscaping
GARDEN STORE
1100 W. First Street
Winston-Salem. N. C.
NURSERIES
Lewisville, N. C.
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Blackerby, William Carroll; 236 Owen Ave,
Bessemer, Ala. 35020 26-1
Blackweldcr, James Monroe; P.O. Box 36, Winns-
boro, S.C. 29180 105, 248
Blaekwood. Stephen Alexander; 609 Kemp Rd.,
W., Greensboro, N.C 248
Blanchard, Ronald Gay; Box 128, Salemburg.
N.C. 28385 . 256
Blanchard, Willard Jackson, Jr.; Box 128, Salem-
burg, N.C. 28385 248
Bland, John Brockman; 9506 St. Andrews Way,
Silver Spring, Md. 20901 . . . 248
Blank, Jonas LeMoyne; 328 Center Dr., Mont-
gomery, Ala 179, 248
Blank, Roy Crary; 12907 Pennsylvania Ave., Up-
per Marlboro, Md. 20870 119, 236
Blanton, John C; 510 Pembroke, Ahoskie, N.C.
27910 264
Blanton, Robert Wright; 411 LaFavette St., Clin-
ton, N.C. 248
Blasiole, Michael; 2427 Windsor Ave., S.W.,
Roanoke, Va. 24015 228
Blcvins, James Ray; Box 188, Lansing, N.C.
28643 264
Bley, William Fraank, Jr.; 10314 Monroe Ct.,
Fairfax, Va. 22030 , . . . 256
Blinn, Robert Paul; Rt. 1, Box 209-B, Penning-
ton, N.J. 08534 161, 256
Blythe, Joseph Edward; 3038 Clarendon Dr.,
Richmond, Va. 23235 161, 248
Bobbin, Robert Gray; 1640 N.W. Blvd. 18,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 236
Bobo, Donald H.; 510 East Kivctt, Ashcboro,
N.C. 27203 188, 256
Bocholis, James, Jr.; 3840 N. Main St., High
Point, N.C. 27260 248
Bode, George Henry; 2345 Adams Ave., Hunt-
ington, W.Va. 25704 167
Bodie, James William; 413 Knox St., Clover,
S.C. 29710 248
Boehmlcr, Brad Eugene; R.F.D. 2, Berryville,
Va. 22611 264
Boff, Douglas Raymond; 128 Antietam Rd.,
Cherry Hill, N.J. 08034 . 256
Bogaty, Raymond Hanry; 685 Blue Ridge Rd..
Pittsburgh, Pa. 15239 181, 256
Boger, Jennie Lynn; R.F.D. 4, P.O. Box 220.
Concord, N.C. 28025 93, 159, 248
Boggan, Elton Carrington; 2835-D Teakwood Ct.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 78
Bogie, Bruce Allen; 649 Medford Dr., Vince-
town R.D. 1, N.J. 08088 127, 275
Boldt, Bert Bovard, II; 1031 Polo Rd„ N.W.,
Apt. 2. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 236
Bond, Marvin Andrew; 114 W. 8th Ave., Balti-
more, Md. 21225 161, 264
Bondurant. John Benthal; 1447 Putty Hill Rd.,
Towson, Md. 21204 248
Booher, Michael Scott; 476 Rader Dr., Vandalia,
Ohio 45377 264
Boone, Deborah; 708 Pocahontas Ave., Ronce-
verte, W.Va. 24970 156
Boone, Thomas Edgar; 505 Clvde Ave., Wilson,
N.C. 27893 ...... 167, 256
Boss, Charles Ben; 747 4th St. Dr., N.W., Hic-
kory, N.C. 28601 236
Bost, Nancy Carol; 649 5th St., N.W., Hickory,
N.C. 28601 184, 248
Bostic, Henry Hawes, Jr.; P.O. Box 575, Eliza-
bethtown, N.C. 28337 19, 97, 101,
167.235,236
Bouldin, Ellen Wright; Rt. 2, Box 296, Ridge-
way, Va. 24148 236
Bourque, Joseph Edwin; 903 Palm Dr., Winston-
Salem. N.C. 277
Boushy, Theodore F.; 5313 Rodwell Rd., Fayette-
ville. N.C. ... ... 101, 114
Boutilier, David Harris; 1803 Rosemont St.,
Salisbury, N.C. 28144 229, 264
Boutilier, Warren Foster; 1803 Rosemont St.,
Salisbury, N.C 118, 168, 236
Bouwsma, Robert John; 161 Friendship Rd.,
Drcxel Hill, Pa. 19026 264
Bovender, Patsy Robin; 749 E. Sprague St.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27107 256
Bowden, Joel Grim; General Delivery, Liberty,
N.C. 27298 264
Bowdish, David Lawe; Mcndham Rd., Bernards-
ville, N.J. 07924 169, 170
Bowen, Carol Ann; 203 W. Greenway N, Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 248
Bowers, Thomas Edgerton, Jr.; 2101 Prices Ln.,
Alexandria, Va. 22308 248
Bowkcr, Janet Elaine; 7613 Quintana Court,
Bethesda, Md. 20034 95, 170, 248
Bowlin, Dennis Grant; P.O. Box 242, Dobson,
N.C. 27(117 256
Boyle, Blake Patrick; 2824-D Teakwood Ct.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 277
Boylcs, Laurel Otis; 3610 Kingston Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 ... , .274
Boyles, Thomas Jackson; 1513 Cloverdale Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 248
Brackett, Anita Diane; Rt. 1, Pisgah Forest, N.C.
28768 106, 264
Bradfield, Robert Lewis; 731 Cherokee Rd.,
LaGrange, Ga. 31240 264
Bradshaw, David Lee, III; 245 Lexington Ave.,
N. Providence, R.I. 02904 248
Brady, Robert Monroe; Rt. 1, Box 779-B, Salis-
bury, N.C. 28144 265
Brame, John Milam; Roosevelt Rd., Walnut Cove,
N.C. 27052 236
Brandon, Rebecca Irene; 3207 Eubanks Dr., Dur-
ham, N.C. 27707 236
Branham, John Ruifin, Jr.; 3110 Ashcl St.,
Raleigh, N.C 168, 229
Brasscl, Jon William; 6912 Breezewood Ter.,
Rockville, Md. 20852 265
We appreciate the confidence of our many thousands of customers
who prefer our Holsum Bread and made it an outstanding
favorite in this area year after year since 1925.
JONES BAKERIES, INC.
Bakers of HOLSUM
Braswdl, BUI Garfield. Jr.; Rt. 1, Monroe, N.C.
28110 265
Braswdl, Linda Jean; Rt. 1, Monroe, N.C.
28110 172, 218
Braswdl, Ronald Gene; Rt. 10, Box 721, Lexing-
ton, N.C. 275
Brazil, Barbara Jane; 9820 Newhall Rd., Potomac,
Md. 20854 93, 99, 248
Breazeale, Ramay Doyle; 57 Faircrest Rd., Ash-
ville. N.C. 28804 174, 24S
Breeding, Carol Jean; 105 California Ave., Oak
Ridge, Tenn. 37830 248
Brelow, Barry L.; 48 Seymour Ave., Woodbridge,
N.J. 07095 256
Brenner, Robert Milton; 617 Southwest Tenth St.,
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33315 167, 228
Bretzmann, Raymond A.; 24 Amherst PI., Living-
ston. N.J. 07039 265
Breur, Noel Bradford; 707 Linwood Dr., Spring-
field, Mo. 177
Brevard, Roxani
Dr., Matthews
Brewer, Coy Est:
ettcville, N.C.
Brewer, Charles
Raleigh, N.C.
Brewer, Samuel Wait, IH; 316 North Main St.,
Box 111, Wake Forest, N.C. 27587 265
Brewer, William Donald, Jr.; 3047 Arundel Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28209 . . ... 256
Brewington, Janette Crans; Rt. 3, Box 421,
Statesville, N.C. 28677 265
Brinson, Woodrow Wilson, Jr.; P.O. Box 34,
Kenansville, N.C. 28349 256
Bris-Bois, Douglas Robbins; 428 Lawndale Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 249
Bristow, Frank Walker; 28 Foxndge Rd., West
Hartford, Conn. 06107 236
Britt, Don E., Jr.; 224-B Melrose St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27103 236
Britt, Henry Michad; 2861 Weslevan Lane,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 256
a Lynn; 600 Highland Forest
N.C. 28105 . 265
res; 1606 Morganton Rd., Fav-
174
Robinson; 2027 Reaves Dr.,
Britt, Katherine Ldnbach; 224-B Melrose St.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 256
Britton, Audrey Nancy; 816 West Church St.,
Ahoskie, N.C. 27910 256
Broadway, James (Jimmy) W.; 1308 Westmore-
land Dr., Raleigh, N.C. 229, 236
Broadway, William Weaver; Box 34, Marshville,
N.C 275
Brock, Barbara Lvnn; 2711 Plyers Mill Rd.. Silver
Spring. Md. 20902 105
Brock, Maxine Elaine; R.F.D. 1. Moravian Falls,
N.C. 28654 265
Brockett. Ellen Sue; 8606 Cyrus PI., Alexandria,
Va. 22308 119, 256
Brookbank, Martha Jo; Rt. 2, Carawav Ln.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 118,256
Brooks, George Evans; 530 Greenwood Dr.. Garv,
N.C. 27511 256
Brooks. Troy Ldghton; Rt. 6, Box 634, Charlotte,
N.C. 28208 265
Brookshire, Homer E.; 412 S. Student Dr., Win-
ston-Salem. N.C. 177
Brookshire, Richard Gwyn; 115 Powell Cir.,
Lenoir, N.C, 28645 181,256
Broome. James Michael; 501 Armstrong Park Rd.,
Gastonia, N.C. 28052 . . 256
Browder. Tom Smith, Jr.; 906 Onslow Dr..
Greensboro, N.C. 27408 229, 265
Brown, Eva Karen; 633 Grandview Dr., N.E.,
Concord, N.C. 28025 249
Brown, Grayson H.; 3124 N.W. 18th PI., Gaines-
ville, Fla. 32667 228, 256
Brown, Patricia Sue; 1222 Miller St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27103 ...136,236
Brown, Reginald Allen; 57 Meeker Ave., Allen-
dale, N.J. 07401 85, 249
Brown. Ronald Cole; No. 53, Wake Forest Trailer
Park, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 275
Brown, Ronnie Lee; Rt. 2, Irish Road, Box 704,
Rural Hall, N.C. 27045 265
Brown, William Sears; 306 W. High St., Mur-
freesboro, N.C 165, 228, 249
Browning, Arthur Wolfe, Jr.; 378 Lakcmoore Dr..
N.E.. Atlanta 5, Ga. 30305 249
Browning, John Marion; 7000 N. Fairfax Dr.,
Arlington, Va. 22213 256
Bruce. John MacMillan; 1422 Emory Rd., Wil-
mington, Del. 19803 179
Brumbaugh, Wavne Douglas; 21 OS Arlonne Dr..
Catonsville, Md. 21228 229,265
Bramlev, Sherman Ray; 592 Dogwood Rd., States-
ville,' N.C. 28677 275
Bruton, Charles Wilson, Jr.; 460 Triumph St.,
Troy, N.C. 27371 .236
Bruton, Vinton Carr, HI; Box 237, Mt. Gilend.
N.C. 27306 249
Brvan. Edna Lee; 3700 Old Pfafftown Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 265
Bryan, Richard Josey; 1000 Edgewood Cir.,
Greenville, N.C 168, 236
Brvant. Martha Gentry; 19 Elm Ave., Newport
News, Va. 23601 119, 236
Bryant, William Thomas; 112 Merntt Dr., Ora-
dell. N.J. 07649 106, 236
Brvson, Emma Ellen; R.F.D. 2. Box 396, Bre-
vard, N.C. 28712 265
Buchanan. Barbara Ann; 8810 Three Chopt Rd.,
Apt. 202, Richmond, Va. 23229 118
Buchanan, Sandra Carol; 4217 Holmes St., N.E.,
Roanoke, Va. 24012 256
Buckhalt, Kennev Shepherd, Jr.; 1401 Harvard
Rd.. N.E., Atlanta. Ga. 30306 168. 236
Buckley, Douglas Pratt; 33 Rittenhouse Blvd..
Norristown, Pa. 19401 256
Budd, James Gregory; 303 Walnut St., Delmar,
Md. 19940 161, 265
Bugbee, Jesse Albert; 8 Kensington Ave., Tren-
ton, N.J. 08618 228, 256
Bulkowski, Robert; Hwy. 33 and 34, R.D. 2.
Box 162, Farmingdalc. N.J. 07727 256
Bullock, John Paul, Jr.; 38 Paisley Park, P.O.
Box 711. Sumter, S.C. 29150 265
Bulson, Ronnie Jean; 7804 Rebel Dr., Annandale.
Va. 22003 237
i\Mirr.-x. "rrzr..
II 'I I II I I I III 1 1 I I
TAYLOR OIL COMPANY
Oakwood Drive
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
McPHAIL'S
Two shops for your convenience
410 N. SPRUCE STREET
264 S. STRATFORD ROAD
''Gifts of Distinction"
PA 4-0554 PA 5-961 1
Sanitary Container
Service Corp.
Featuring: Dempster-Dumpster Systems
3301 Glenn Avenue
7240842
8 a.m. calculus. .. late
rush. ..arrive.. .quiz.. .
Eng. ..read. ..write. . .
...correct... Psych...
psychotic-neurotic
Pavlov. . . bell . . . lunch
whew.. .pause «,
CoKe
Bottled under the authority of the Coca-Cola Company by: Winston-Salem Coca-Cola Company
■flHB
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Bumgardner, Heath Denton; 15 North Bovd St.,
Cape May Court House, N.J. 08210 168, 256
Bumpass, Thomas Merritt. Jr.; 1011 E. Polo Rd„
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 . ... 127
Bunn, Donald Floyd, Jr., 3804 Hawthorne Ave.,
Richmond, Va. 23222 . . ... 99, 265
Burch, Larry Maurice; Box 6326, Winston-Salem,
N.C. 27109 . . 236
Burger, John Robert; 1343 Downs Dr., Atlanta,
Ga. 30311 256
Burgess, Oliver Taylor, Jr.; 6435 Newport Ave.,
Norfolk, Va. 23505 277
Burke, Gary Wayne; 340 Elmwood Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27107 . 256
Burnett, Linda Diatvnc; 7300 Sardis Rd„ Char-
lotte. N.C. 28211 105, 172, 256
Burns, Crystal Laurie; 2622 Raymond Ave.,
Augusta, Ga. 30904 256
Burns, Stephen Richard; 4407 Glen Eden Rd„
Kingsport, Tenn. 37664 168, 249
Burnsidc. Robert Michael; 114 Nod Rd., Weato-
gue, Ct. 06089 106, 265
Burrell, Betsy Deane; 320 W. Thomas St., Salis-
bury. N.C. 28144 118, 182
Burt. Betty Ann; Box 116, Carthage, N.C. 28327
256
Burton, David Lee; 2461 Hyde Manor Dr., N.W.,
Atlanta, Ga. 30327 85, 181, 249
Buscy, Sara Forwood; 514 Robson Dr., Manassas,
Va. 22110 105, 249
Bush, Kenneth OakJey; 900 Oleander Dr., S.E.,
Winter Haven, Fla. 33880 181, 256
Butler, James Irvin, Rt. 2, Reidsville, N.C. 27320
249, 256
Bun, Lester, M.C., 6208 Annehese Dr., Falls
Church, Va. 22044 237
Butts, James Alfred, m, 302 Franklin St., South
Hill, Va. 23970 161, 249
Byerly, Christopher Lynn, 220 S. 3rd Ave., Siler
City, N.C 237
Byerly, Steven E., 715 Gatewood Ave., High
Point, N.C. 27260 256
Byrd, Barbara Scuffham, 1107 Peachtree St., Wm-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27107 237
Byrd, James Palmer, 908 Westndge Rd., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 106, 118, 177, 237
Byrd. Jones Pharr, 600 Carbonton Rd., Sanford,
N.C. 167, 237
Byrd, Thomas Edward, 354 Anita Dr.. Winston-
Salem. N.C. 27104 256
Byrum, Daniel Stclle, 1328 Brooks Ave.. Raleigh,
N.C. 27607 174
Cain, Laurence Sutherland, 1424 Mayflower Dr.,
McLean, Va. 22101 ... 229,237
Caldwell, Robert Preston, Jr., 2810-C Carriage
Dr., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 . .. 237
Cale, Beverly Steele, 75 Palisades Rd., Atlanta,
Ga. 30309 237
Cale, Paul Harrell, Jr., St. George Ave., Crozet,
Va. 22932 256
Call, Thomas Lloyd, 456 Joy Dr., Hampton, Va.
23366 249
Callahan, Robert Wesley, 806 N. Lafayette St.,
Shelby, N.C. 28150 256
Callaway, Baxter Moore, 236-A Kinsey Ct., At-
lanta, Ga. 30305 249
Callaway, Clyde Lee, Jr., 2028 Stadium Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27107 177,256
Callison, Ann M., 1406 Kipling Dr., Dayton. Ohio
45406 186, 265
Callisno. James S„ 1406 Kipling Dr., Dayton,
Ohio 45406 229
Calvert, Reuben DeFoix, 1746 Old Charlotte Rd.,
Spartanburg, S.C. 29302 . .161, 237
Campbell, Daniel Stancil, Rt. 1, Box 324, Rock-
ington, N.C. 28379 114, 249
Campbell, Teresa Ann, Rt. 4, Box 346, Concord,
N.C. 28025 265
Campbell. Vickie Windle, 718 Jefferson St.. Mar-
tinsville, Va. 24112 93, 162, 179, 234, 237
Campen, Henry Corwin, 612 Pilot Ave., Fayette-
ville, N.C. 28303 85, 265
Cannon, Frank Daniel, Jr., P.O. Box 161, Seaford,
Del. 19973 . 179, 256
Cardwell, Vemon Elliott, Rt. 1, Mayodan, N.C.
275
Carlson. Kurt Lantz, 1804 Parkview Ave., Rock-
ford, III. 181
Carlton, James Delaney, P.O. Box 442, Salisbury,
N.C. 28144 93, 165, 256
Carnes, Mary Patricia, 4290 N.W. 3 St., Miami.
Fla. 33126 95, 234, 237
Carr, Linda Gail, 17 Chestnut Dr., Huntington,
W. Va. 25705 . 265
Carr, Michael Paul, 3127 Cambridge Rd., Char-
lotte, N.C. 274
Carrie, Rene Yvonne, 2911 Marlm Dr., Cham-
blee, Ga. 30050 ... .105
Carrikcr, John Elam, Rt. 1, Kittrell, N.C. 127, 275
Carroll, Larry Patrick, 2918 Pine Grove, Chicago,
III. 60657 . 161, 265
Carter, Dale William, llll W. Gloucester Pike,
Ba
N.J.
1007
265
Carter, George Emmitt, Jr., 710 Rush Rd.. Fav-
etteville, N.C. 106, 237
Carter, Linda Sue. Rt. 3, Box 503, Madison, N.C.
27025 97, 249
Carter, Ronald Vernon, 520 West Twelfth St.,
Newton-Conover, N.C. 28658 177, 228, 256
Carver, James Lee, II, 1000 N. Duke St., Apt. 18,
Durham, N.C. 27701 93, 249
Case, Rita Ellen, 410 Second Ave., E„ Hender-
sonville. N.C. 28739 ...... 114, 249
Case, Thomas R., Box 471, Mayodan, N.C.
27027 249
Caskey, Charles Clinton, 131 Cedar St., Moores-
v.llc, N.C. 28115 . 105, 188, 237
Caskev, Robert Alexander, Q42-C Maxwell A.F.B.,
Montgomery, Ala. 36112 ... 179.259
Cassell, Gary Webb, Mount Hermon Rd., Salis-
bury. Md. 21801 265
Casto. Karen Lvnn, 2508 Dellwood Dr., Greens-
boro, 27408 237
Caton, Laura Elizabeth, 1714 Peppendge Rd.,
Asheboro, N.C. 27203 . . .159,249
Causbv, Harold David; 900 W. Warren St., Shel-
bv, N.C. 28150 265
Causby, Joe Tommy; Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103
249
Caviness, Ronnie Alfred; 4020 N. Cherry St., Apt.
3, Winston-Salem. N.C. 249
Chamberlain, Lawrence J.; 125 W. Pearl St., But-
ler. Pa. 16001 . . . , 228, 265
Chamis, Penelope; 2520 Country Club Rd., Wins-
ton-Salem, N.C. 27104 237
Chapman, Clyde David; 216 5th St., Spencer,
N.C. 249
Chapman, James Day; 276 Kenilworth Rd., Ash-
villc, N.C. . 105, 257
Chapman, William Fred; 210 South Main St.,
Kannapolis, N.C. 28081 249
Chapman, William Holmes. HI, Rt. 7, Box 93,
Durham, N.C. 27707 79
Chappell, Martha Larue; 406 Stewart Ave., Clin-
ton. N.C. 28328 265
Charlow, Bart Aaron; Box 302, South Fallsburg,
N.Y. 12779 . 181, 257
Cheatwood, Philip Hoyt; 102 Bnarwood Rd.,
Lancaster, S.C. 29720 . 118, 167, 228, 235, 237
Cheek. Terrina Gayle; 109 LaCross, Box 114,
Dublin, Ga. 31021 105, 114, 115, 170, 237
Chestnut, Alfred Page; 110 Hollv Ln., Morehead
Citv, N.C. 28557 237
Cheves, Keywood Camell, Jr.; Box 86, Littleton.
N.C. 277
Cheynev, Curtis P., HI; 40 Decatur Rd.. Haver-
town, Pa. 19083 .127
Chostner. Jerry L.; 717 Kemp Rd.. W., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 177, 249
Chow, Peter, 222 Waterloo Rd., Kowloon H.K.
123, 249
Christie, Nancv Jean; 1900 Robinhood Rd., Wins-
ton-Salem. N.C. 27104 237
Chulada, Richard Francis; 262 Kidder St., Wilkes-
Barre, Pa. 18702 265
Clack. James Thomas, 124 W. Ridge St., Rocky
Mount. N.C. 27801 93, 165, 228
Clark, Carol Lee; 32 Alclare Dr., Ashcville,
N.C. 28804 265
Clark. Dallas Clinto, Jr.; 620 Maple St.. Green-
ville, N.C 127, 274
Clark, Eric Steven, Rt. 1, Box 66, Linwood, N.C.
272°9 .. 237
Clark, John C, Jr.; 305 E. Park Dr., Fayette-
villc, N.C. 237
Clark, Janet Louise, 9805 Shadow Wood, Hous-
ton, Tex. 77055 249
Clark. Thomas Henry; 34 Pleasant PI.. Deal, N.J.
07723 237
Clark. William E.; 909 Highland Ave.. New
Bern, N.C. 28560 249
Clarke, Robert Neil; 203 Julnch Dr., McMurray,
Pa. 15317 168, 257
Clarke, William Lowe, III; 551 3rd St., N.E.,
Hickory, N.C. 28601 237
Clayton, Donn Rickey; R.F.D. 2, Hurdle Mills,
N.C. 27541 265
Clendenin, Harry Halliard, III; 2810 Carnage Dr.,
Georgetown Apts. F, Winston-Salem, N.C.
27106 127,275
Cleveland, Willis Walter; 1945 Beach St., Wins-
ton-Salem, N.C. ....... 265
Clictt, Patrick Wade; 306 Ocean Front, Neptune
Beach. Fla. 32050 265
Clifford, Julie Mynette; 6430 Scotualley Rd., At-
lanta, Ga. 30328 265
Cline, Terri Kathryn; 1619 N. Jackson St.,
Salisbury, N.C. 28144 . 162, 249
Clower, Thomas Mitchell, Jr.; 4446 Fontaine Dr..
S.W., Roanoke, Va. 24018 . 229, 265
Coates, David Henry; Eastward St., Hightstown,
N.J. 08520 229, 265
Coates, Everette Wayne; Rt. 8, Box 260, Goodwin
Rd., Durham, N.C. 27704 265
Cobb, William Maddox, Jr.; Apt. 13, Gravlin
Court, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 . 127
Cober, Anne McRae; 1011 Polo Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 118,237
Cober, Scott Louis; 1011 Polo Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 237
Coble, Paul Mitchell; 327 Courtland Terrace,
Burlington, N.C. 27215 100,118
Coble, William Lee; 820 Central Ave., Burling-
ton, N.C. 27215 119, 237
Cochrane, Aleta Lynn; P.O. Box 527, Elkin. N.C.
28621 118, 172, 249
Cockburn. John Herbert Noel; Box 347, Buies
Creek. N.C. 27506 265
Cockerham. Larrv Edward; 4068 Leo St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27105 237
Coffey, David Otis; 1213 Howard Court, Wheaton,
111. 60187 277
Cohara, Marilyn Corinne; 1490 S. Vine St., Den-
ver, Colo. 80210 265
Cole. Bradford Dean, Jr.; 1706 Myrtle Rd., Silver
Spring, Md. 29002 265
Cole, Joseph Jerald, III; P.O. Box 327, Fremont.
N.C. 27830 265
Cole, William Preston; 249 Central St., Holliston,
Mass. 01746 181, 249
Coleman. Andrea Beth; 616 Maple St., Elizabeth-
ton, Tenn. 37643 106,265
Coleman, David Lee; Rt. 1, Box 60, Tabor City,
N.C. 28463 249
Collins, John Arthur. HI; 1700 East Fifth St.,
Greenville, N.C. 27834 . 105. 114, 237
Collins, Jeffrey Lawrence; 6141 12th St., N„
Arlington. Va. 22205 . . 257
Collins, Richard Francis; 3411 Locksley Ln.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 .277
Colvard, Howard Charles; P.O. Box 247, Wilkes-
boro, N.C 118,238
Combs, Gene Norman, Jr.; N. Mavo Trail, Pike-
ville, Ky. 41501 238
Comstock, Thomas Weslev: 1952 Rollingwood
Dr., S.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30316 265
Conger, Karen Duprc; 3708 Washington Ave.,
Charleston. W. Va. 25304 257
Connors. David Andrew; 775 Ocean Ave., New
London. Conn. 06340 156
Conrad, Joseph Daniel; Bethania, N.C. 27010
21.5
Cook, Ashbv Morris; 615 Gatewood Ave., High
Point, N.C. 265
Cook, James Franklin, Jr.; Rt. 2, Clemmons, N.C.
27012 265
Cook, John Ruben, Jr.; 808 Todd's Ln., Newport
News. Va. 23605 265
Cook. Wesley Ray. Rt. 7. Old Hollow Rd., Wins-
ton Salem, N.C. 27105 265
Cooke William Frederick; 212 Milford Hills Rd.,
Salisbury, N.C. 28144 165. 228, 257
Cooper. Daniel K.; 829 Forest Dr., Hagerstown,
Md. 21740 181, 238
Cooper, Donald Keith; Sunset Ave., Greensboro,
Md. 21639 265
Cooper, Edward B., Jr.; 200 Evans Mill Rd..
Pageland, S.C. 29728 . . 118, 249
Cooper, Frederick Lamback, HI; 209 Liberty St.,
Murfreesboro, N.C. 90 91, 168, 235, 238
Coore, William Ernest; P.O. Box 584, Thomas-
ville, N.C 118,238
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Corbctt. Albert Anderson, Jr.; Box 114, Wilson's
Mills, N.C. 27593 127. 275
Cordier. David M.; 1015 Park Ave., Collings-
wood, N.J. 08108 . .265
Corle. Wesley Duane; 5-F Faculty Apts., Wins-
ton-Salem, N.C. 274
Comwell, Mary Kay; Rt. 1 Shelby, N.C. 28150
257
Corredor, Ricardo Garcia; Avenida B No. 85-44
Bogota. Colombia. South Am
Corrie, Leila Byrd; Rt. 1. Flore
411 Sch.llt
249
S.C. 29501
170, 257
■ St.. Eliza-
106, 265
Corritore. Richard E., J:
beth, N.J. 07206
Cortese, Nicholas Angelo, Jr.; Rt. 3 Box 65
Berlin. Md. 21811
Corvey, Candace Ruth; 350 Millbank Rd., Bi
2t.5
Mav
Pa
184
Coussens, Wayne Ray; 3501 Chester St., Virginia
Beach, Va. 23452 . . .106
Covington, Charles Gravson; Box 969, Erwin
Height... Thomasville, N.C. 27360 . .249
Covington, Sammy McKenzie; Rt. 3, Box 360,
Rockingham, N.C. 28379 ....... 266
Cowan, Charles Preston. Jr.; 302 Milford Hills
Rd., Salisbury, N.C. 28144 228, 238
Cowan, James Donald, Jr.; 17-A College Village
Apts., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 78, 127, 274
Cox, James Allen; 8 East Bayshore Blvd., Jack-
sonville. N.C. 28540 238
Cox, Nancy Reeves; 1380 Drayton Rd., Spartan-
burg, S.C. 29302 249
Coxe, Alexander Brown; 102 Zacchcus Meads Ln.,
Greenwich, Conn. 06901
228, 266
Craig, Jimmy Lewis; Rt. 5,
, Mon
roe, N.C.
28110
238
Craighead, Paul Eugene; Rt. 1
Rock
mart, Ga.
30153
229, 266
Cranfill, William Thomas, Jr.;
4536
Oakwood
Cir.. Winston-Salem, N.C.
78, 127
Crawford, Katherine W.; 41)8
Lockl
nd Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103
249
Crawford. Robert Maurice; 6010 Roosevelt St.,
Bcthesda, Md. 20034 ... 249
Crawford. Samuel Lee; Rt. 1, Box 170, Chapel
Hill, N.C. 27514 266
Creasv, Edith Jane; 5417 Thaver Dr., Raleigh,
N.C. 27609 157, 249
Creech, James Ransom, Jr.; 403 Wagefield St..
Zebulon, N.C. 174
Creed, Donald Lamonte; 2304-C Golden Gate
Dr., Greensboro, N.C. 27405 249
Crees, Gary Lee; R.D. 2, Darlington, Pa. 16115
266
Crinkley, John Paul; P.O. Box 73, Newland, N.C.
28657 229, 238
Crissman, Eric James; Rt. 3, Box 668, Graham,
N.C. 27253 105, 266
Crissman, Pau] Stephen; Rt. 3, Box 668, Chapel
Hill Rd., Graham, N.C. 27253 161,256
Crockett, Roger Alan; 27 Garnet St., Penns Grove,
N I li8lll,9 106, 257
Crosby, Kevin J.; 154 Lincoln Ave., Lockport,
N.Y. 14094 266
Cross, Donald Christopher; 84 Sherwood Ln.,
Raynham, Mass 249
Cross, James Estes, Jr.; 608 Countrv Club Dr.,
Burlington. N.C. 27215 . 93, 168, 257
Cross, Susan Barker; 84 Sherwood Ln., Raynham,
Mass. 249
Crothers, Charles Lee; 304 N. Elam Ave., Greens-
bom, N.C. 27403 266
Crowder, John Pinkney; 1637 Flynnwood Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28205 266
Crowe. Donald Hurst; 213 Virginia Ave., More-
head City, N.C. 28557 266
Crowcll, Charles Carlos, III; Rt. 2, Lincolnton,
N.C. 28092 238
Cram, Herbert Dixon, Jr.; 4401 Halstead Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28209 168, 249
Crumley, Ben Madison; 811 West Maple St.,
Johnson City, Tenn. . 93, 167, 238
Crump, John Campbell; Apt. 3, Colonial Estates,
Bethania Sta. Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106
238
Crumpler, Amos Gilmore, Jr.; Box 128, Fuquay-
Vanna, N.C. 27526 275
Crumpler, Paul Manly, Jr.; 204 Warsaw Rd., Box
406, Clinton, N.C. 28328 266
Crasan, Alan Boyd; 1300 Andover Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 285
Cratchficld, Linda Karen; 740 Ransom Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 238
Culbreth, Kenneth Len; 122 S. Churchill Dr.,
Fayetteville, N.C. 28303 167, 249
Culler, Fred Benjamin, Jr.; 131 F.nglewood Dr.,
High Point, N.C. 27263 266
Culler. Roy Braxton, 1223 Westwood, High Point,
N.C 174
Cumby, Catherine Ellen; Rt. 2, Clemmons, N.C.
27012 257
Cummings. Nancy Paige; 1723 Serena Dr., E.,
Jacksonville, Fla. 32211 45, 93, 162, 257
Cunningham, Mary Louise; 1531 Bedford Rd.,
Charleston, W. Va. 25314 266
Curd, Richard A.; R.F.D. 3, Boonton, N.J. 07005
85, 257
Curl, James William, Jr.; 328 Blue Ridge Avenue,
Front Royal. Va. 22630 257
Curlee, Kathryn Neal; 6133 Creola Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 172, 257
Currin, John Gray, Jr.; 211 Banks St., Graham,
N.C. 27253 85, 266
Currin, Martha Daniel; Box 38, 600 E. Mclver,
Angler, N.C. 27501 249
Currin, Samuel Booth, HI; 306 College St., Ox-
ford, N.C. 27565 238
Currin, Samuel Thomas; 418 Broad St., Oxford,
N.C. 27565 106, 266
Curry, Alan Brian; 36/10 Kennedy Gad, Ankara,
Turkey 105, 238
Cuthbertson, Carol Ann; 1966 Carnberly Dr.,
Lyndhurst, Ohio 44124 . . . 133, 238
Czikowsky, Janice Lee; Apt. 212-A, Faculty Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 277
eebles
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Sherwood Plaza Shopping Center
Robin Hood at Peace Haven Road
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DAILY — 10 'til 9 p.m.
SAT. — 10 "til 6 p.m.
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Savings and Loan Association
WINSTON -SALEM, N. C.
725-5371
Main Office— Corner Third and Liberty
Northside Branch— Northside Shopping Center
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ernersville Branch— Main Street, Kernersville, N. C.
Compliments
of
PINE HALL BRICK
AND
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2701
Shorefair
Drive
WINSTON-SALEM,
N.
C.
COLLEGE
BOOKSTORE
The College Bookstore is owned and operated by Wake Forest
College for the convenience of its students and faculty. We hope
that we may continue to serve you by moil after you leave the
campus. When writing us, please give the year in which you
graduated. P. 0. Box 7711, Winston-Salem, N. C. 27106
Daigneault. Dotti J.; 247 Hallman Ave., Ocean-
side, N.Y. 11572 172, 249
Dailey, James C; 50 Manhassett Trail, Medford.
Lakes, N.J. 08055 266
Dailey, Pat Lynne; 1605 Barnard's Cove Rd..
Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 . . 257
Dando. Nancy Ann; 8466 Lamanto Ave., S-,
Jacksonville, Fla. 32211 266
Danforth, John Almy; 218 Mt. Rd., North Wil-
braha
Ma
Daniel, Martha Elizabeth; 1605 Highland Dr.,
Wilson, N.C. 27893 266
Daniel, Stephen Talmage, Jr.; Rt. 3, Roxboro,
N.C. 127, 275
Daniels, Kathryn Lynn; Rt. 5, Box 470 Morgan-
ton, N.C. 28655 ..... 257
Danser, Frederick Taylor, HI; 44 N. Hamilton
Ave., Trenton. N.J. 78, 127, 274
Darbv, Hallie Harlan; 729 N. Wood Ave., Flor-
ence. Ala. 35630 277
Darnell, Stephen Porter; 613 Jefferson Dr., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28211 167, 257
Dashiell, Charles Robert, Jr.; 608 Hunting" Park
Dr., Salisbury, Md. 21801 . . 105, 161, 257
Daughtry, John Cary; 106 Prince St., Launnburg.
N.C. 28352 . . . . 99, 238
David, Chester Oscar; 1060 Deepwood Ct., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 ...... 106, 188, 238
Davidson, Gerard Hadley, Jr.; 5718 Lansing Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. .78, 127, 274
Davis, F. Michael; 300 N. Green St., Box 297.
Selma, N.C. 27576 106, 266
Davis, John Allen; 313 West McLelland Ave..
Mooresville, N.C. 28115 .... 238
Davis, Jerome Irvin; 1310 Richardson Dr., Reids-
ville, N.C. 23720 248
Davis, James Randal; Rt. 2, Box 14, Warrcnton,
N.C. 25789 105, 249
Davis, John Reid, Jr.; Rt. 1, Box 384, Raeford.
N.C. 28376 118, 266
Davis. Julie Ann; 4507 Price Circle Rd.. Nash-
ville, Tenn. 37205 45, 162, 249
Davis, Larry Reid; 2308 McLean Ave., Gastonia,
N.C. 28052 238
Davis. Sarah Margarette; 105 West 12th Ave.,
Johnson City, Tenn. 37601 . . 105, 182, 249
Davis, Steven Thomas; 119 North Channel Dr.,
Wilmington. N.C. 284U1 266
Davis, William Keith; Box 247. Conway, N.C.
27820 . 78, 127, 275
Davitt, Paul John; 161 Lakeside Dr., Rockavvay.
N.J. 07866 238
Dawkins, Larrie Wayne: 213 S. Nelville St., Gra-
ham, N.C. 238
Day, Caldwell Newton, Jr.; 2322 Sink St., Win-
ston-Salem. N.C. 27107 ...... 249
Day, Elizabeth Allen; 202 29th St., W„ P.O. Box
1083, Bradenton, Fla. 33505 266
Dav, Susan Elizabeth; 5303 E. Sunset Rd.. Knox-
ville, Tenn. 37914 266
Deacon, Thomas Edward; 727 Pleasant Pk. Rd..
i i»
i int.
Canada
308 Spring St.
Dean. Joseph Wayne; 308 Spnng St., Hamlet.
N.C. 275
Debnam, Wilbur Thurston, Jr.; 800 Church St.,
Sebulon. N.C. 174
Decker. Richard Paul; 4110 Student Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27109 228
Deinlein, James Nichol; 136 S.W. Gordon Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 127
Delancy. Barbara Ann; 4727 Cordell Di
Va
24H1S
184
DeLoatch, Mahlon Wingate, Jr.; 1000 Main St.,
"SSI,
N.C
Dennison, Ralph Edward; 1315 Cl<
ston-Salem, N.C. 27101
Dent, Beverly Jean; 18 Chateau PI
N.C. 28805
Denton, Thomas Millard; Rt. 2, Box 71, Clinton,
N.C. 28328 . . .249
Derringer, Elizabeth Cecelia; P.O. Box 66, Stone
Ridge, N.Y. 12484 106, 257
78, 274
St., Win-
226
Asheville,
257
Detty, Gail Margaret; 905 Confederate Ave., Salis-
bury. N.C. 28144 159
Devcr, Dan Walter; 98 Knoxdale Rd., Ottawa 12.
Ontario, Canada 228, 257
Diamont. David Hunter; Dodson Mill Rd., Box
161. Pilot Mountain. N.C. 168, 184, 238
Dickens. Robert Newton; 336 W. Allenton, Mt.,
Gilcad. N.C. 27306 249
Dickerson, Jerry Lee; 1210 New York Ave., Rt.
2. Glen Allen. Va 249
Dickinson, Thomas Shirley; 409 Melville Rd-
Hampton. Va. 23361 249
Dickinson, William Pcnn, Jr.; R.F.D. 3, Box 404,
Washington, N.C. 27889 . .238
Dickson, William Albert; 52 Orchard Way. N.,
Rockville, Md. 20854 266
Dillard, James Clyde; 1015 Gainev, Flint, Mich.
48503 274
Dimmette. Edgar Richard, Jr.; 1756 Queens Rd.,
W., Charlotte, N.C. 238
Dobner, Joseph Jacob; 10200 W. Armitage, Mel-
rose Park. 111. 60164 119, 228, 257
Dobv, Wiley Jacob; 4213 Old Lexington Rd.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27107 106, 257
Dockerv, Herb Ray; 703 Elk Spur St., Elkin,
N.C. 28621 168. 257
Dodson, Wayne Leslie; Rt. 1, Opal Dr., Rural
Hall, N.C. 27045 257
Doffermvrc, Luther R.; 311 S. O. Ave., Dunn,
N.C. 249
Dolan, Daniel Joseph; 2367 Tristan Cir.. N.E.,
Atlanta. Ga. 30329 . . . ... 179, 238
Dolbin. Jack T.; 1308 Howard Ave., Pottsville.
Pa. 17901 ., 228, 229
Dolinger, Stephen D.; 2205 Gaylord Dr., W.E.,
Washington, D.C.. 20023 . - 177, 249
Doman, Eunice Maria; Rt. 7, Box 318, Lexing-
ton, N.C. 27292 266
Donaldson, Franklin Pierce, Jr.; 5300 Atlee PI.,
Springfield, Va. 22151 106. 188, 249
Donaldson, Susan; 1106 Sunset Dr., Greensboro,
N.C. 27408 266
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Dorman, Nancy Lee; 3805 Montrose Drwy.,
Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 170
Dorsett. Walter E., Jr.; 21 East Third St., Waynes-
boro, Pa. 17268 238
Dotson, Donald Larry; Rt. 1, Box 652, Winston-
Salem, N.C 78
Dowd, Sharyn Echols; 2503 N. Broad, Rome, Ga.
30161 105
Downs, Evlyn Antoinette; 6305 Everglades Dr.,
Alexandria, Va. 22312 266
Doyle, Brooks Sherwin; Box 474, R.F.D. 3, Naz-
areth. Pa. 18064 274
Drake, Anthony; 9 Wake Forest Trailer Park,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 266
Driskill, Thomas Malcolm, Jr.; 339 Sclwyn Ave.,
Charlotte, N.C 238
DuBose, Boiling Stovall; 280 Hampton Ct., At-
hens, Ga., 30601 196, 266
DuBose, Phil Vaughn; 822 Willow St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27101 106, 266
Duck, Rosalind Jeanne; Drawer F, Mars Hill,
N.C. 249
Dudley, Linda; 1335 Lynbrook Dr., Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 181, 250
Duffv, Robert Francis; 8 Cedar Cir., Woodbury,
N.J. 08096 266
Duncan, Mary Cheryl; Jacksonville, Fla. 32211
266
Duncan, Thomas Webb: 81 Haviland Rd., Pough-
keepsie, N.Y. 12601 266
Dunckel, Robert Brett; 1201 N.W. 14tb Court,
Fort Lauderdale. Fla. 33311 177, 228, 257
Dunning, Robert George; 2503 Old Snow Hill
Rd., Kinston, N.C. 28501 105, 257
Duval, Beverly Ann; Rt. 7, Whittier Rd., Win-
stnn-Salcm, N.C. 27105 257
DuVal, Robert Clarke; 2804 Oakland Ave., Rich-
mond, Va. 23228 ... 229
Dwiggins, Mary Betsy; 4007 Dogwood Dr.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27410 266
Eakins, Jan Elizabeth; 3514 Old Post Rd., Fair-
fax, Va. 22030 162, 250
Earlc, Stephen Boyd; 33 Bay Dr., E., Huntington,
N.Y 186, 228, 257
Early, Miriam Elizabeth; 2502 Immanuel Rd..
Greensboro. N.C. 27407 182, 250
Early, Martha Leslie; 2502 Immanuel Rd.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27407 266
Earp, Martha Jane; Rt. 1, Selma, N.C. 27576
266
Easley, Joseph Craig; Box 564, Raleigh Rd. Ext.,
Rockv Mount, N.C. 27801 266
East, James M.; 4227 Walker Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 93, 257
Eddins, Elizabeth Catherine Anne; 214 E. North
St., Albemarle, N.C. 28001 266
Edens, Joseph Pierce; 612 25th Ave., N.W.,
Hickorv, N.C 179
Edgar, Ralph Milton; 417 Chapel Hill, N.C.
238
Edmond, Foy Margienette; Box 617, South Hill,
Va. 23970 184, 250
Edmondson, Frank; 1219 Mt. Rd., Ashcboro,
N.C. 27203 238
Edwards, Karen LoRee; 110 Oak St., S.W., Vien-
na, Va 146, 162, 238
Edwards, Linda Jane; 401 Hearthside Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 257
Edwards, Matthew Alvin, HI; 5700 Preston Ln.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28211 , .... 167, 238
Edwards, Mary Margaret; 401 Hearthside Dr..
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 238
Edwards, Rebecca Yvonne; 1220 Hill St., Rocky
Mount. N.C. 27801 257
Edwards, Sue Ella; 2316 N. Elm St., Greensboro,
N.C. 27408 93, 257
Edwards, Sandra Lee; 67 1st Ave., Newnan, Ga.
30263 85, 93, 95, 170, 250
Edwards, Thomas Arnold; 5700 Preston Ln.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28211 238
Eggers, Graydon P., Jr.; 500 Tracy Cir., Boone,
N.C. 28607 106, 238
Ekvall, Christine Joy; 104-B Westgate Cir., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27109 162, 257
Eliason, Russell Allen; Apt. A-5, No. 95, 1950
Beach St., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 85, 118
Eliason. William Alexander; 333 Brandvwine Rd.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28209 250
Elkins, Don Howard; 4552 June Ave., Winston-
Salem, N.C 275
Elledge, Carol Faye; Rt. 1, Box 333, North
Wilkesboro, N.C. 28659 250
Ellington, Phillip Ward; 549 W. Center St.,
Hickory, N.C. 28601 250
Elliott, Nancy Carolyn; 30500 Providence Rd.,
Cleveland, Ohio 44124 162, 257
Elliott, Sarah Matthews; 912 Ball Rd., Box 41,
Cocoa Beach, Fla. 32931 266
Ellis, Charles Harrison; 802 Central Ave., Laurel,
Del. 19956 266
Ellis, John Clyde, Jr.; 510 Godwin Ave., Lum-
bcrton, N.C 93, 250
Ellis, Kenneth Robert; Box 156, Fremont, N.C.
27830 238
Embry, Richard Fain; 427 Lincolnton Rd., Salis-
bury, N.C. 28144 266
Emcrick, Raymond Ralph, Jr.; 29 The Oaks Rd..
Elhcott City, Md. 21043 266
Emlcy, Robert Kent; 210 Woodpoint Ave., Hag-
erstown, Md. 21740 229, 266
Engelmcier, Kent Lewis; 4640 Sunflower Dr.,
Rockvillc, Md. 20853 266
English, Mary Anita; 819 West Covington St.,
Launnburg, N.C. 28352 257
Erickson, Ken R., Jr.; 329 Mohawk, Park Forest,
III. 174, 228
Ervin, Bobby Jay; Rt. 3, Box 665, Salisbury, N.C.
2«H4 106, 188, 250
Eschen, James L.; 13 Hillcrest Rd., Suffern, N.Y.
10901 229
Eskridge, Jo Ann; 108 Ketner Blvd., Havelock,
N.C 184, 257
Eutsler, William E., Jr.; Rt. 1, Box 600, Cheraw,
S.C. 29520 167
Evans, Ernest Leroy; 410 Pembroke Ave., Ahos-
kie, N.C 127, 275
Evans, Milton Douglas; 5310 Madison Ave., Lin-
Coin, Neb. 68504 277
Evans, Susan Claire; 6527 Bay Tree Ct., Falls
Church, Va. 22041 47
Evans, Terrencc Nicholson; 110 Liberty St., Mur-
freesbom, N.C 127, 266
Everett, James Henry, Jr.; 1 1 1 E. Home. Ave.,
Farmville, N.C. 27828 277
Everhart, Elizabeth Jane; Rt. 3, Lexington, N.C.
27292 159, 257
Everhart, Koyt Woodworth, Jr.; No. 1, Wake
Forest Trailer Park, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106
78. 275
Exum, Jo Cheryl; 421 Westover Ave., Wilson,
N.C. 27893 238
Exum, John Patrick; 114 W. Greene St., P.O.
Box 535, Snow Hill, N.C. 28580 . 123, 238
Ezzell, Brewer Moody; Rt. 1, Magnolia, N.C.
257
Ezzell, William David; Rt. I. Box 181, Harrells,
N.C 275
F
Fallon, Karen Anne; Caixa Postal 547, Sao Paulo,
SP, Brazil 266
Falls. Nan Blythe; 1028 Belvedere, Gastonia, N.C.
28052 266
Farley, Betty Jean; 935 Ferndalc Ave., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27107 257
Farley, Donna Rae; 1229 Hcatherwood Rd.,
Bluefield, W. Va. 24701 250
Farmer, Leslie Benton; 2602 Westchester Dr.,
High Point, N.C. 27260 275
Farmer, Wendy Jean; 1016 Curlew Dr., Virginia
Beach, Va. 23451 95, 116, 170, 234, 238
Farnham, Marianne; P.O. Box 396, Travelers
Rest, S.C. 29690 277
Farthing, Harriet Gillespie; Box 307, Lenoir,
N.C. 28645 182, 250
Fasnacht, Brcnda Lee; 3327 Auburn Ave., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28209 . . . ,42, 93, 162, 250
Feathers, Brenda Lee; Loren Lane, Rt. 1, Pfaff-
town, N.C 266
Feeman, Robert Walter; Annvillc Rd., R.F.D. 2,
Annville, Pa. 17042 275
Feerick, Richard Thacher; Maloney Rd., Rt. 3,
Knoxvillc, Tenn. 37920 127, 275
Felmet, Lucian Holt, Jr.; 241 BriarcliU Rd.. Rocky
Mount. N.C. 27801 177, 238
Ferber, Harry Joseph, II; 1421 N. Mallory St.,
Hampton, Va. 23363 106, 257
Ferguson, Edwin Hall, Jr.; 670 Miramar Dr.,
Concord, N.C. 28025 167, 238
Fergusson, David Gaertner; 41 York Dr., Hudson,
Ohio 44236 257
Ferrell, Robert Lee, Jr.; 1406 Larson St., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27407 121, 188, 250
Fields, Charlanne; 2707 Fairway Dr., Greensboro,
N.C. 27408 105, 182, 190, 250
Finch, James Russell; 1438 Pinehurst Dr., S.W.,
Atlanta, Ga. 30311 85, 266
Findlcy, George Wright; 271 Orange Grove Rd.,
Palm Beach, Fla 168
Finn, Robert P.; Hidden Point Rd., R.F.D. 5,
Annapolis, Md. 21401 98, 115
Fischer, Susan Diane; 709 Kirkwood, Dallas,
Texas 75218 38, 257
Fisher, Harry Edward; Box 249-A, R.F.D. 1,
Basking Ridge, N.J. 238
Fisher, John Guy, III; 19 Brainerd Dr., Cranbury,
N.J. 08512 257
Fisher, Stuart C; 1227 Turquesa Ln., Pacific
Palisades, Calif 238
Fitch, Constance Kathleen; 1617 Tweed St., Rock-
villc, Md. 20351 266
Fitch, Thomas Want; 1701 N. Kent St., Arling-
ton, Va. 22209 229, 238
Fitzsimmons, Jean Vincent; 3137 Ivydale Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28212 177, 238
Flagler, Frederick James, 01; 2016 Gaston St..
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 250
Flcenor, Saly Nading; 365 Rcynolda Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C 250
Fleming, Robert Fuller; Rt. 2, Box 319, Hender-
son, N.C. 27536 ... . . . . 78, 275
Fleming, Thomas Smith, Jr.; 616 N. Howard Cir.,
Box 1234, Tarboro, N.C. 27886 257
Flood, Robert PhUip; 110 Cooper Ln., Syracuse,
N.Y. 13214 257
Floyd, Anderson Gayle, Jr.; 312 N. Thompson
St., Whitevillc, N.C. 28472 257
Floyd, Charles Edward; Rt. 3, Chatham, Va.
24531 167, 228, 257
Floyd, Edward Thornton; 525 Wade Ave., Ra-
leigh, N.C. 27605 127, 276
Flynn, Robert Martin; 50 Cowdrey Ave., Lynn,
Mass 228
Foglcman, Jean Adair; 1713 Bolton St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27103 257
Folger, William Augustus; 2219 Grecourt, Toledo,
Ohio 43615 238
Fonville, Jamie Tarpley; Rt. 5. Burlington, N.C.
27215 119, 238
Forbis. Clinton Sherman, Jr.; 1310 Eastchester
Dr., High Point, N.C. 27260 276
Ford, Dianne Elaine; 1714 Pennvlane, S.E., De-
catur, Ala. 35601 266
Ford, Douglas Wayne; 5806 Fitzhugh Ave.,
Richmond, Va. 23226 257
Ford, Laura Christian; 1101 Federal St., Lynch-
burg, Va. 24504 118, 257
Forrest, Charlie Bradley, Jr.; Rt. 1, Box 123,
Vanceboro, N.C. 28586 266
Fort, Malinda Ann; 1335 Greylyn Dr., Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 266
Foster. Dewey W.; 1404 Crescent Dr., Elizabeth
City, N.C 250
Foster, Stuart Dean; 401 South Cherry St.,
Wilkesboro, N.C. 28697 257
Foster, William Wade; 114 Stcdman St., Fayette-
ville, N.C. 32106 118
Fountain, John Nicholas; 28-F College Village
Apts., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 . .78, 274
Foushee, Wayne Hampton; 2864 Galsworthy Dr.,
Winston-Salem. N.C. 27106 . 78,127,274
Foust, Patricia Lynne; Rt. 2, Box 425, Lexington,
N.C. 27292 250
Fox, Betty Morris; 1656 Reynolda Rd., Winston-
Salem, N,C. 238
Fox, Janet Elizabeth; 628 Roslyn Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27104 250
Fox, Linda Louise; Rt. 2, Box 32, Asheboro, N.C.
27203 119
Francis, Jerry Eugene; Rt. 2, Westfield, N.C.
27053 266
Franks, J. Rodney; Brevard, N.C. 28712 238
Fredeking, Robert Richard, D; 335 Woodland Dr.,
Huntington, W.Va. 25701 168, 250
Fredrickson, James Warren; 3111 Prvtania Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27100 167
Frcedlund, Lowell Leon; R.F.D. I, Box 310,
Rockton, III. 61072 228, 250
Freedman, Glenn Barry; 209 Henry St., Massape-
qua Park, N.Y. 11762 98, 238
PORTRAIT BY:
TOMMY McNABB
DAN BYRUM
CLASS OF *69
A PORTRAIT— THE PERFECT GIFT FOR ANY OCCASION
C
1/ 1 abb J^tudio
ON THE CAMPl'S
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Vaughan; 3980 Anne Dr., Sir,
Frcedman, Steve
ford, N.Y. 11
Freeman, Donn Bennett; ' ' 1 3 Sharon Dr.. Kings
Mountain, N.C. 28086 165, 238
Freeman, Larry Eugene; 602 Mem,, rial Dr..
Ahoskie, N.C. 27910 119, 258
Freeman, Randy Blake; Rt. 3, Box 380. Lexing-
ton, N.C. 27292 267
Friedman, Jerome Barry; 113 Inverness St., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27105 274
Frost, Mary Colby; 227 New Dr.. Apt. C, Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 238
Fruin, Eric William; 10 Kent Dr., Normal, III.
61761 168, 239
Fulks, Alan King; -14 Maplewood Dr.. Athens,
Ohio 45701 258
Fuller, Elaine Teresa; 909 Fairmont Ave., Salis-
bury, N.C. 28144 93, 182, 250
Fuller, Robert Earl, Jr.; 1805 E. Beach St.. Golds-
boro, N.C. 27530 267
Fulton. Sheila Ann; 1342 Berwick Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 271 03 170,239
Fundcrburke, Rick Burrow; 6939 Lakeland Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28214 267
Funk, Peter H.; 735 Clark St.. West-field, N.J.
07090 258
Furgurson, Josephine Tucker; Rt. 2, Box 24.
Plymouth, N.C. 27962 250
Furniss, Diana Lucille; 315-34th St., Virginia
Beach, Va. 23451 258
Gadd, James Ronald; 1305 Camp Greene St.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28208 229, 267
Gaddy, Charles Stephen; 370 Forest Or., Dan-
ville, Va. 24541 258
Gaddv, Dan W.; Rt. I, Pageland, S.C. 29728
92. 239
Gadsden, Beverly Scott; 2538 Portland Ave.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28207 172. 258
Galant. Luke G.; 2241 Meridian St., Falls Church,
Va. 22046 239
Gallagher. William Bryant, Jr.; 7022 Capitol View
Dr., McLean, Va. 22101 106, 239, 258
Galloway, Mark Ellis; 104 Pomona Rd., Oak
Ridge, Tenn. 37831 127, 276
Gardner, John Thomas, Jr.; P.O. Box GG, Bran-
don, Fla. 168. 250
Garland. Bruce Harlan; 6 James PL, Trenton,
N.J. 08690 229. 267
Garnett, William Allan; 455 Monument Ave.,
Malvern, Pa. 19355 177, 250
Garrett, Melinda Lee; 2318 Cumberland Ave.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28203 267
Garrity. John McCullough; 28(10 Robinhood Rd.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. .239
Garton, Darvl Wade; 7505 Century Dr.. Rich-
mond, Va. 23229 258
Garton, Thomas Courtney; 7505 Centurv Dr.,
Richmond, Va. 23229 161. 239
Gasaway. Philip Warren; 12404 Venice PL, Silver
Spring, Md. 20904 . 177, 250
Gaskins, Greg C.; 203 South College St.. Monroe,
N.C. 28110 258
Gasque, David C; 2851 Northbridge Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27103 106, 188, 250
Gatzogiannis, George E.; 48 Bcllevue St., Wor-
cester. Mass. 01609 93, 267
Gaulden, James Carlos, Jr.; 1471 Brookwood Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 127
Gavin, Thomas Jeffries, III; 1910 Newark St..
Fayetteville, N.C. 28301 228, 258
Gavdica, Joseph Stephen; 3318 Tinkerbell Ln.,
Charlotte. N.C. 28210 267
Gayner, Leslie Tina; 4564 Northern Pike, Mon-
rocullc, Pa. 15146 239
Gazsi. Shirley Kathleen; 1 Bonnie Rae Dr., Yard-
ville, N.J. 08620 184
Gentry, Andrea Sue; Box 366, State Road. N.C.
27109 118, 250
Gentry, Dwight Lonnie; 4021 Beechwood Rd„
Hyattsville, Md. 20782 179, 250
Gentry, Ricky Charles; Rt. 2, Box 84, Elkin, N.C.
28621 258
Gentry, Vicki Ann; Rougemont, N.C. 27572
258
George, Charles Peter, Jr.; Rt. 2, Box 46, Bruns-
wick, Ga. 31520 156, 228
George, Robert A.; RFD 1, Rochester, Pa.
15074 186, 229
Gerhardt, Gretchen Caroline; 4214 Oakridge Ln.,
Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 . 258
Gerlaugh, Aubrey Lee; 912 Spruce St., Martins-
ville. Va. 24112 267
Gcrmuth, Kathleen Elizabeth; 4413 Ridge Dr.,
Baltimore, Md. 21229 . . 267
Gerrish, James Price; 4508 Burling Rd., Bethesda,
Md. 20014 133,177,239
Gcst. Stanley Anthony; 6 Forest Court, Mount
Holly, N.J. 08060 267
Getz, Arthur Henry; 1119 Buckingham Rd.,
Grosse Pointe. Mich. 48230 229, 267
Gibson. DeWitt Clinton, in; 1205 Elm, Winnetka.
111. 60093 .258
Gibson, Roland Bovdcn; 119 Lindbergh St.. Win-
ton-Salem, N.C. 27104 . . 250
Gibson, Thomas Stewart; Rt. 3, Box 142, Launn-
burg, N.C. 167, 250
Giles. Constance Rogers; 606 Catalina Dr., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 267
Giles. Darla Faye; 314 Clendale Dr.. Chapel Hill,
N.C. 27514 170, 239
Gill, Donna Kaye; 604 Colonial St., Durham,
N.C. 27701 . 93, 170, 234, 239
Gilliland. Nancy Louis; 3424 Kinnamon Rd..
Wisnton-Salcm, N.C. 27104 239
Gilmore. Glenda Elizabeth; 2600 Grosvenor PL,
Winston-Salem, N.C. . . . 170, 258
Ginn, Thomas Moss; 1923 Cherokee Trail, Lake-
land, Fla. 33803 93, 177, 234, 239
Gladding, Samuel Templeman; 179 Lamont Dr.,
Decatur, Ga. 30030 277
Glass, Emest Wilson, Jr.; 3421 Bonneville Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 228, 267
Glendening, Dale Dean, Jr.; 482 Waterbury Dr.,
Fayetteville, N.C. 28301 85, 250
Dining and Lodging
127 South Cherry Street
And rich estates, if he but look,
Are held by him who hath a book.'
Who Hoth a Book
Stanza 1
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
TEtEPHONE PA 3-3604
230 NORTH CHERRY STREET
Glover, John Campbell; 3701 Carhle Dr.. Char-
lotte, N.C. 167, 228, 229
Glover. Merlev Elizabeth; 319 Sunnvside Dr.,
Concord, N.C. 28025 46. 146, 162, 239
Godwin. Arba Sherwood, Jr.; Rt. 1. Box 79,
Littleton, N.C. 27850 . 267
Godwin. Clarence Edwin, Jr.; 214 Main St., Ox-
ford, N.C. 250
Godwin. Daniel Earl; 420 Colonv Ave., Ahoskie,
N.C. 27910 267
Goehrig, David Henry; 3300 N.E. 36 St., Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla. 33308 177, 239
Goehring. Constance Fern; 2215 Charlotte St.,
Durham, N.C. 27705 267
Goins, Dennis Wayne; 308 Arlington St.. Mount
Airy, N.C. 27030 258
Gold. Milton Elliott, Jr.; 508 E. 1st St., Cherry-
ville, N.C. 28021 186, 250
Goodc, Hampton Grey, Jr.; 1908 Dundee Ln„
Box 417. Martinsville, Va. 24112 177.258
Goodrich, 1
walk. C,
ok Trail, No
6850
:e Giln
e, Jr.; 4227 Sylv
276
Gordon. Law
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Gordon, Richard Stewart; 214-A Student Apts.,
W.F.U., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 276
Gordon, William Charles; 108 Hvclift Rd., Rome,
Ga. 30161 . 91. 93, 234, 239
Gore, H. Geari; Box 515, East 9th St., Lumber-
ton. N.C. 28358 250
Gosnell, Lawrence Ervin; 3337 Doncaster Court.
Virginia Beach, Va. 23452 106, 267
Gossett. Gloria Sheila; Box 249, Murphv. N.C.
28900 250
Gossler. James Marshall, III; 227 Norwood St.,
N.C. 28645
Gottschalk, Kurt Peter; 111 Walth
Ridgewood, N.J.
Gouch. John B.; 5827 The Pla
Gough. Gary Carleton; Creek D:
Willi.
Stephen; Rt. 2, Hamptonville,
85. 106, 267
Anton; 184 Green Brook Rd..
Green Brook, NJ. 088 13 239
Gradv, John Payne; P.O. Box 3036,
N.C. 28560
Gary Andrew; 1504 Upshirt
I'irn.
Graha
Moi
Grali i
Md.,
Larrv Gregson; 4536 Oakwood Cir.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 127, 274
Graham. Walter Alexander; Rt. 1, Box 566,
Salisbury, N.C. 28144 93, 165, 258
Gram. L. Bennett, Jr.; 208 E. Bonev St., Wallace,
N.C. 127, 274
Grannis. Edward Whitaker. Jr.; 1709 Morganton
Rd., Favetteville, N.C. 127, 274
Grant, Adam (Randy) Crawford; P.O. Box 3.
Kannapolis, N.C. 28081 168, 250
Grant, Robert Bernard; 6107 Revnolda Station,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 228. 267
Grant. Rov Edward; 407 Ridgewood Dr., Rome,
NY. 13440 1S8
Grant, Wesley Bennett; 303 William St., P.O.
Box 3, Kannapolis, N.C. 28081 274
Graves, Cheryl Patricia; 4901 Seminarv Rd., Apt.
230, Alexandria, Va. 22311 . 118, 182, 250
Graves, Kathryn Elizabeth; 130 Randolph Rd.,
Frankfort. Kv. 40601 267
Graves, Wylie Clondis, Jr.; 1903 Pembroke Rd.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27408 267
Graves, William Ralph, Jr.; Andrews Rd., Mur-
phy, N.D. 28906 228
Gravley, Nancy Jean; 2308 VanBuren St., High
Pmnt, N.C. 27260 250
Green. David Clinard; 1102 North Main St.,
106, 267
Mount Airy, N.C. 27030
250
vValthery Ave.,
Green. Jovce Ann; Box 12
8. Whitsctt. N.C.
250
27377
93, 182, 239
Charlotte, N.C.
Green. Rodney E.; 33 S. Ma
n St., Woodstown,
. 250
7.
239
r.. St. David's,
Greenberg. Richard Paul; 15
Morningside Dr.,
. 186, 239
Trenton. N.J. 08618
102,239
Box 258, Stokes-
159, 250
Greene, Shirlev Jannette; 3 Firs
N.C. 281)25
Greenhaugh, John Charles; 228
Del a
250
Ave.,
1995.
Greer. John William; S
27292
Gregory, Robert Denton
Ashcville, N.C. 28804
Gretcs, John Constan
Apt. 31, Norfolk, \
85, 106. 258
:. 6, Lexington, N.C.
239
105 Kimberlv Knoll,
250
■; 2513 Little Creek Rd.,
2 55 is 119,234,239
Grey, Deborah Helene; 2218 N. Vermont. Arling-
ton, Va. 22207 267
Griffin, Carol Ann; Box 46. Red Oak. N.C.
27868 277
Griffin. Durante Avan, Jr.; 106 Hillcrest Dr..
Lexington, N.C. 27292 119, 186, 239
Griffin. Robert Bvron; Trailer 48. Wake Forest
University, Winston-Salem, N.C. 258
Griffith. Eugene Jeffrey; 1908 Sawyer PI, Mc-
Lean, Va. 22101 106
Griggs, Valjean Guynitia; 2512 Kirkwood St.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27105 - 106, 250
Grim. Michael Bruce; 805 Virginia Ave., Blue-
held. Va. 24605 250
Grochmal, David Michael; 904 Marque Ct.. Va.
Beach. Va. 23462 174
Groff, Elizabeth; 217 W. Colonial Dr.. Salisbury,
N.C. 28144 258
Grote, Herbert August; 50 Lewis Ct.. Huntington
Sta., N.Y. 11746 . . 186, 239
Grout. James Wilson; 212-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem. N.C. 27106 239
Grove, George Weller, Jr.; 862 North Center St.,
Hickory. N.C. 28601 106, 179. 251
Grubb, Steven Charlie; 8 Wake Forest Trailer
Park. Winston-Salem. N.C. 27106 . 258
Guest, Susan Elaine; 845 Lower Chester Rd.,
Charleston, W.Va. 25302 . 267
Guice, Zoro Joseph, Jr.; Rt. 1, Box 105, Saluda,
N.C. 28773 . 275
da you knotv . . .
that you are graduating into one of the most promising areas of the nation?
A recent urban research study forecasts "a linear city" for the 300 miles
stretching through the industrial Carolinas. Here, in the 20,000 square miles
served by Duke Power, scores of thriving towns connect busy cities. Re-
search centers, colleges and universities, and hundreds of industries thrive.
Here in the Carolinas Crescent, there is real challenge and opportunity.
There is a place for you to fill, a job for you to do, in an exciting future that
begins — right now.
O DUKE POWER
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Gunbv, Martha Louise; 3964 Pow
rs Ferrv Rd.,
Atlanta, Ga. 30305
182, 258
Gunnels, John Robert; 7000 Aron
■jw Dr., Falls
Church. Va. 22042
267
Gunter, Michael Donwell; 509 H
wthorne Ln.,
Gastonia, N.C. 28052
167, 251
Gutckunst. Barbara Jean; 55 E. Gr
indview Ave.,
Sellersville, Pa.
133,234,239
Guth, Robert Thomas; 1936 Ced
r Ln.. Balti-
more, Md. 21222
258
Guthrie, Elizabeth Ann; 227 East
^erimeter Dr.,
San Antonio. Tex. 78227
258
11
Habcgger, Larry Fricke; 7330 Zionsville Rd.,
Indianapolis, Ind. 46268 229
Hackshaw, Barry Thomas; 741 N.W. 37th St.,
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33309 228, 258
Haddon. Barbara Jean; 606 Hill St., Rocky Mount,
N.C. 27801 239
Haehncl, Donald Kenneth; 104 Park Ave., Bre-
vard, N.C. 28712 239
Hagaman, John Ralph; 2855 Monticello Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 251
Hager, Mary Lynn; Mount Zion Rd., Alexis, N.C.
28006 105
Hagy, Ann; Rt. 2, Box », Laurel, Del. 19956
106,267
Hahn, Carolyn Susan; 9810 Ingl
thesda, Md. 20034
Haigler, Karl Owen; 3213 Brechi
ville, X.C. 28303
Hall, Bahnson David; 2844 S. Fairway Dr., Burl-
ington, N.C. 27215 258
Hall, Eleanor Cheryl; 7408 Gatcwood Court,
Alexandria, Va. 22307 258
Hall, Gregory Briggs; 520 Cedar Ln., Virginia
Beach, Va. 23452 . . 258
Hall, Lydia Patricia; 217 Marsh Ave., Raleigh,
N.C. 27606 267
Hall, Leslie Ann; 1905 Paul Spring Parkway,
Alexandria, Va. 22308 . 93. 267
Hallman, Francis Edwin, Jr.; 2541 Caso Blanca
Dr., Lake Capri Estates, Lithoma, Ga. 30058
93, 105, 177, 235, 239
105, 182, 251
Rd., Favettc-
.177, 258
Hallman. Lynn Henry; 1012 Mitchell St., Mount
Airy, N.C. 27030 258
Halstead, Gloria Jean; 204 Parns Ave., High
Point, N.C. 27260 251
Haltiwanger, Frank Spruill; 502 Gilscot PI.,
Rockvillc, Md. 20351 267
Halvorson, Lloyd Eric; 934 Douglas Dr., Mc-
Lean, Va. 119,186,228
Hambrecht, Robert McClure; 455 Cherry Tree
Ln.. Rochester, Mich. 251
Hambrick, Larrv Nicholas; 2021 Reuter Rd.,
Timomum.Md. 21093 118,228,251
Hames, Harry Owen, Jr.; 292 Polk St., Marietta,
Ga. 30060 174, 228
Hamill, Susan Vcrdice; Rt. 3, Box 264. Enfield.
N.C. 27823 267
Hamilton. Edwin Timothy; 21 Bloomingdale Rd.,
White Plains, N.Y. 10605 . 267
Hamilton, Jan Jay; 19 Prospect St., Walpole,
Mass. 02081 240
Hamilton, Mark Randall; 1005 Rota Dr., A.P.O.
San Francisco (Guam) 96334 168
Hamilton, Robert Ray; 225 Princess Ave.. Lan-
caster. Pa. 17601 258
Hamlin. Richard Reagan; 660 Anay Way, Winter
Park, Fla. 32789 267
Hammond, Michael Eugene; Rt. 1, Lancaster,
S.C. 29720 240
Hampton, Nancy Jo; 620 Country Club Dr..
Burlington. N.C. 27215 258
Hamrick. George Nve, Jr.; 1808 South Main St.,
Kannapolis, N.C. 28081 267
Hanauer, Barbara Ross; 6801 Post Oak Dr.. Bir-
mingham, Mich. 48010 251
Hancock, Burr
City, N.C.
Hancock. Kare
N.C. 28560
Hanna, Dougl
Monroe, Jr.; Bo
482
274
Hall; P.O. Box 571. New Bern.
162, 258
Bruce: 6 Northfield Rd., Ma-
N.J. 07747 267
Hannah. Robert Alexander; 200 Wing Park Blvd.,
Elgin. III. 60120 127, 276
Hanner, Robert Pleasant; 3326 Providence Rd.,
Charlotte, N.C. 127, 275
Hansen, Diane Lourec; 149 Bimini Road, Cocoa
Beach, Fla
2931
267
Hansen, Iris Patricia; 5924 N. 5th Rd., Arling-
ton. Va. 22203 118, 184, 251
Hardeman, Donald Watson, Jr.; 627 Ensenada
Dr., Orlando, Fla. 32807 251
Hardin. Bettie Jo; 339 W. Kivett St., Asheboro,
N.C. 27203 277
Hardin, Charles Vester, III; Rt. 1, Pauline, S.C.
29374 251
Hardison, Richard Everett; 1401 N. Ivanhoe St.,
Arlington. Va. 22205 158
Hare, Roy Allen; 3828 Somerset Dr., Durham,
N.C. 27707 267
Harkey, Myra Jean; Box 631, Rt. 8, Monroe,
N.C. 240
Harkness, Betty Allen; 1440 Midland Hgts.,
Covington, Va 258
Harlow, Walter George; Hunter Apt. 5, Powers
Rd., W.nston-Salem, N.C. 27106 .. 118
Harmon, Kathleen Sue; 3003 Bay St., Sarasota,
Fla. ... 95, 100, 240
Harper, Richard Allen; 320 N. Norwood St.,
Wallace, N.C. 28466 127, 276
Harrah, Michael Floyd; 308 Trinity St., Fair-
mount. N.C. 28340 118, 251
Harrell, Douglas Byron; 1017 West 48th St.,
Richmond, Va. 23225 240
Harrelson. William Ernest, III; Rt. 3, Box 232-A,
Whitcville, N.C 240
Harrill, Roger Scott; P.O. Box 190, Forest City,
N.C. 28043 . . 106, 267
Harris. Mary Arden; 2417 Kendnck Dr.. Char-
lotte, N.C. 28214 184, 251
Harris, Robert Allen, Jr.; 404 River Rd., Mo-
toaca, Va. 23803 229, 251
Hartis, Morris; 4227 Tottenham Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 258
Hartley, David L.; 704 Wvngate Dr., Frederick,
Md. 21701 . 258
Hartman. Randy B.; Rt. 3, Lawndale, N.C.
28090 240
Hartness, William R.; 615 Carr St., Sanford, N.C.
27330 240
Harvey, Richard G.; 1612 Terrace Rd., S.W.,
Roanoke, Va. 24015 240
Harvey, Steven B.; 5527 Old Carriage Ln.,
Orchard Lake, Mich. 48033 267
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Tuttle Lumber Company
Dependable Building Materials
1721 Stadium Drive
Phone 723-4318 • P. 0. Box 4595
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
vood Dr.,
174. 258
Rd., Winston-
267
Harvey, Steven J.; 91 Darrah Ln., Trenton. N.I.
08638 . . 267
Hartzog, James D.; 608 Long St., Lexington,
N.C. 27292 258
Haskell, Sherwin T.; 289 Wahackme Rd., New
Cannan, Conn. 06840 174, 240
Haskell, Deborah; 2S9 Wahackme Rd., New
Canaan, Conn. 06840 ....... 267
Hathaway, Robert M., Jr.; 215 Riverwood Dr.,
Richmond, Va. 23229 186, 251
Hauck, Jennifer J.; Box 592. Rt. 1. St. Charles,
111. 44, 118, 149, 167, 240
Hauscr, DcWitt C.j Rt. 1, Clemmons, N.C.
27012 .267
Hauser, Denson G., Jr.; 1236 Wedge
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103
Haven, Ema C; 1030 Yorkshii
Salem, N.C. 27106
Haviland. Susan P.; Rt. 3. P.O. Box 796, Ker-
nersMlle, N.C. 27284 251
Havner, Matrie L.; 1417 Fitch St., Winston-Sa-
lem. N.C. 27107 251
Hawes, Richard D.; 2129 Chestnut Ave., Buena
Vista, Va. 24416 267
Hawkins, Allen W.; 2305 60th PI., Langdale,
Ala. 36864
Hawkins, David B.; 2638 Portland Ave., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28207 267
Hawkins. Holly J.; 8301 S.W. 149 Dr., Miami,
Fla. 33158 267
Haves. Charles R.; Rt. 2, Box 87-A. Wilkesboro,
N.C. 28697
Hayes, David K.; 11 N. Svmington Ave., Balti-
more, Md. 21228 258
Hayes, Gerald W., Jr.; R.F.D. 1, Coats, N.C. 275
Haves, Harold E.; Gaston Country Club, Gas-
tonia. N.C. 28052 267
N.C.
Hayes, James A., Jr.; Rt. 2,
27102 ........ 267
Haywood. Billy M„ Jr.; P.O. Box 469, Mt.
Gilead, N.C. 27306 . 267
Head, Allan B.; 26 Wake Forest Trailor Court,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 127, 275
Head. Patricia R.; 26 Wake Forest Trailor Court.
Winston-Salem. N.C. 27106 119, 240
Headlev, Winthrop S.; 1109 Greens Farms Rd.,
Westport. Conn 267
Heckcrmann, Martha L.; 4416 Withers Dr..
Charleston, S.C. 29405 170, 258
Hedberg. Stephen W.; 112 Oak Ter., Staunton,
Va. 24401 . 267
Hcdrick, Wayne R.; 2141 N. Rodger Peed,
Hampton, Va. 251
Hefrner, David O.; 733 Park Ave., Mocksville.
N.C. 27028 261
Heiberger, Peter C; 100 Longview Dr., Prince-
t.m, N.I 168,251
Hcidgerd, Charles D.; 299 N.W. 11th St., Boca
Raton. Fla. 33432 165. 251
Heiner, Stephen F.; 516 Manning Dr., Charlotte,
N.C. 28209 268
Hcitman. William H.; 208 Evans Ave., Willow
Grove. Pa. 19090 . . . 179, 229. 251
Helder, lake C; Box 243, Clemmons, N.C. 276
Hellard, Judith E.; Rt. 2, Hampton Rd., Clem-
mons, N.C. 27012 268
Helms. Vemon L.; 4730 Idlewild Rd., N., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28212 268
Helscher, David C; 109 South Buchanan St.,
Ahngton, Va. 22204 251
P.O. Box
Hemphill, I;
N.C
Hemphill, Kennith S.; 514 Duke St., Thoi
Mile, N.C. 27360 .
Hemric, H. Clay; 251
25 1
N.C.
Hemric. Icrry R.; Rt.
228, 258
Pinewav Dr., Burlington.
127, 276
Dobson, N.C. 27017
251
4 Murray Dr., Mauldin,
.. 105, 182,240
Henne. George F., Jr.; 1824 Brunella Ave- Pis-
cataway, N.J. 08854 268
Henning, Richard G.; 7 Carteret PL, Garden City,
NY. 11530 .93, 181, 240
Hcnrv, Kenneth D.; 1500 S. Benbow Rd.. Greens-
boro, N.C 156, 228, 240
Henslev, Donald L.; 332 Burke\
rood Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104
156, 228,240
Herbert. Richard D.; 2316 Bavvie
w Rd., Jackson-
ville. Fla. 32210
240
Hcrr. Theodore L.; Box 117,
Manheim, Pa.
17545
268
Herring, Buddy O. H.; 48 B
rr Farms Rd.,
Westport, Conn. 06880
190, 240
Herstinc, lames H.; North East Heights, North
East, Md. 21901 258
Hessler. Richard D.; 3161 S.W. 20th St.,
Lauderdale, Fla. 33312 177, 228, 240
Hester, Jeanne C; 3105 Henderson Rd., Greens
boro, N.C. 27410 182, 25S
Hewitt, Lawrence W.; 2807-D Teakwood Ct.
Winston-Salem, N.C. 78. 12
Hibbert, Carl W.; 2143 Melante Dr., N.E., At
93, 168, 258
Hickman. Thomas N
Enfield, N.C. 27823
Hiemstra, I. Kav; 31
lanta, Ga. 30331
Higgins, Charles R., I
lotte, N.C. 28211
Higgins, Dannv G.; 2
N.C. 27241
623 Sherrod Heights
251
Pynte Cr.. S.W., At-
195, 268
6117 Brace Rd., Char-
106, 251
N. Cascade St.. Eden,
268
Highfill, Aubrey L.; 3321 Emory Dr.. Winston-
Salcm, N.C. 27103 240
Hildabrant, Donald R.; 1603 Nottingham Rd.,
Newark, Del. 19711 268
Hildebrand. Diane L.; 2510 Woodlvn Wav,
Greensboro, N.C. 27407 106,268
Hill. Barbara S.; 114 Somerset Rd., Alapocas,
Wi
Hill. Jo
ung
Del. 19803
P.; 803 Isabelle St., Ka
iM
Hill, James E.. Jr.; 122 N. Hawth.
ston-Salem, N.C
Hill. Laurel M.; 415 Spring St.
N.C. 27360
Hill, Neil F.; 909 Ditchley Rd., Virginia Beach.
Va. 23451 268
148
. 268
napolis.
N.C
268
ne Rd.,
Win-
240
Thomasville,
25s
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Hilsenbeck. Nana E.; 1746 Ralcc Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27107 240
Hinkle, Paul P., Jr.; P.O. 191, Spenser, N.C. 240
Hinson, Candy L.; 358 Linda Ln„ W. Palm
Beach, Fla. 33405 268
Hinson, Linda D.; 8810 Fircrest Pl„ Alexandria,
Va. 22308 . ... 105, 162, 258
Hinson, Warren R.. Jr.; Rt. 4, Box 9, Lexington,
N.C. 27292 .268
Hirons, Molly L.; 45-A Cheminde la Blonde,
Vandocuvres, Geneva, Switzerland 268
Hoagland, Thorn L.; 3605 Cambridge Court,
Upper Marlboro, Md. 20870 268
Hobbs, Daniel R.; Rt. 10, Box 350, Greensboro,
N.C. 27406 . .106, 188,258
Hobbs, Guy C; 5(12 N. Broad St., Edenton, N.C.
27932 . 240
Hobbs, James W.; 1124 Guilford Dr., Charlotte.
X.C. 28209 168, 258
Hobson, Anne E.; 1201 Burtonvvood Cir., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28212 268
Hocutt, Kathrvn M.; 113 Charles St., Spencer,
N.C. 28159 240
Hodge, Deborah H.; Box 847, Troy, N.C.
27371 .258
Hodges. Patricia A.; Rt. 8, Box 93, Charlotte,
N.C. 28205 268
Hodges. Vannie K.; 6 Honeysuckle Ln., Balti-
more, Md. 21220 . . . 258
Hodiernc, Charles H.; 180 Circle Dr., Gales-
burg, III. 179, 258
Hodson. John P.; 57 Louise St., Delmar, N.J.
12054 229, 240
Hoey, Constance J.; 747 Way Cross Rd., Ellicott
Cm-, Md. 21043 118, 159, 251
Hofferbcrt, John H.; Box 246, Alliston Dr.,
Baldwin, Md. 21013 . 105, 268
Hoffner, Ann M.; 302 Merritt Ave., Salisbury,
N.C. 28144 277
Hoflcr, R. Hayes, HI; 7917 New Orleans Dr.,
Alexandria, Va. 22308 240
Hogan, James L.; 142 Ocean Rd., Ocean City,
N.J. 08226 228, 268
Holbrook, Joseph L„ Jr.; 211 North Race St.,
Statesvillc, N.C. 28677 251
Holden, Cathy S.; 7002 Tinkerdale Rd., Roanoke,
Va. 24019 .-. 258
Holladav. Joseph C, 805 Conway Ct., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 268
Holland, Charles M.; 3022 Churchill Rd., Ra-
leigh. N.C. 27607 93, 177, 259
Hollidav. Katherine S.; 2325 Crescent Ave., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28207 105, 259
Hollifield, Forrest H.; 429 Hudson St., Salisbury,
N.C. 28144 82, 105, 177, 240
Hollifield, Karen L.; Rt. 1, Box 369-B, Black
Mountain, N.C. 28711 106, 259
Holoman, Henry F., Jr.; 2325 Redbud Ln., Win-
ston-Salcm, N.C. 85
Holt, Calvin J., Jr.; 309 Valley View Dr., Staun-
ton, Va. 24401 106, 240
Holt, Robert F.; 4116 Sacramento Dr., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27406 268
Holthouser, John A.; 142 Hawthorne Rd.. Elkin,
N.C. 28621 259
Holton, Lucy H.; 1807 Runnymcade Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. . .. 162, 240
Homan, William N.; 523 Lake View Dr.,
Swcdesboro, N.J. 08085 251
Honcycutt, Richard A.; 1728 Greensboro St.,
Lexington, N.C. 27292 . .251,259
Honcycutt, Ronald H.; 1232 Sunset Ave.. Clin-
ton, N.C. 28328 106, 268
Honeycutt, Richard L.; 2119 Tudor PI., Raleigh,
N.C. 27610 106
Honcycutt, Susan A.; 134 E. Stewart, Box 544,
Mooresville, N.C. 28115 ,. . 182,251
Hood, Franklin R.; 2913 Westcott St.. Falls
Church. Va. 22042 186, 251
Hood, James B„ Jr.; Rt. I, Box 158, Hunters-
ville, N.C. 28078 251
Hooper, Frederic M.; 410 Gardner, Box 718,
Rcidsvillc, N.C. 27320 277
Hope, James M.; Rt. 1, York, S.C. 29745
229,241
Hopkins, Elwyn V., Jr.; Box 7627. Revnolda
St.ni.in. Winston-Salem, N.C. . . . . S5
Hopkins, Patricia J.; R.F.I). 6. Salisbury. Md.
21801 119, 184, 241
Hopper, John A.; 18 Woodcliff Dr.. Madison,
NJ. 179, 251
Hord. Mary J.; 200 Cleveland Ave., Kings Moun-
tain, N.C. 28086 106, 172, 259
Home, Jasper W.; Rt. 1, Pleasant Garden,
N.C. 251
Horner, Douglas B.; 404 4th St., Laurel, Del.
19956 119, 179, 229, 241
Horner, Guy T.; 713 College St., Henderson,
N.C. 27536 168, 259
Horton. George R.; 7909 Colonial Rd., Brooklyn,
N.Y. 11209 259
Horton, Jimmy L.; Rt. 1, Box 100, Fancy Gap,
Va. 2432S ' 251
Horton, Mike W.; Rt. 9, Box 158, Greensboro,
N.C. 85, 106, 259
Horton. Richard J.; 27 E. Pleasant St., Hamilton,
N.Y. 13346 268
Hosteller, Winna M.; 712 Wolfsnare Crcs.. Vir-
ginia Beach. Va. 23454 . . .268
Hough, Harriet; P.O. Box 70, Lcaksville, N.C.
27288 268
Hough, Margaret J.; 107 Druid Hills, Lexington,
N.C. 27292 251
Hough, William A., Ill; Rt. 1, Box 320-A,
Huntersville, N.C. 28078 251
House, Susan C; 7421 Exmore St., Springfield,
Va. 22150 159, 259
Howard, Gloria L.; 3712 Liberty Rd., Greens-
boro. N.C. 27406 182, 259
Howard, Judy L.; Rt. 1, Wanda Vista Ct., Pfaff-
town, N.C. 27040 105
Howard, Malcolm J.; 1230 Polo Rd.. Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 276
Howard, Martha R.; 3800 Statesville Rd., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28206 268
Howard. Michael E.; Rt. 1. Denver. N.C. 268
Howard. Susan M.; 407 S. Hanna St., Gastonia,
N.C. 28052 105, 170. 251
Howard, Vincent, Jr., 63 Madison Ave., Cherry
Hill, N.J. 08034 179, 241
Howell, James D.; 110 Woodland Dr., James-
town. N.C. 27282 259
Howell, Rebekah L.; 109 Patrick St., Gastonia,
N.C. 28052 184, 259
Howerton, Carol L.; 402 Edgewood Ln., Blacks-
burg, Va. 24060 268
Howington. Richard B.; Apt. 19, Graylyn Ct.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 127
Hoyle. David B.; 7501 Democracy Blvd., Apt.
B-424, Bethcsda, Md. 20034 241
Hovle, James C; 627 Wilson St., Roanoke Rapids,
N.C. 27870 .241
Hovle. Warren F.; P.O. 267. Lincolnton, N.C.
28092 268
Hrom. Susan M.; 1036 Drcxel Ave., Drcxel Hill,
Pa. 19026 95, 251
Huber, James W.; 2080 Brookside Dr., Scotch
Plains, N.J. 07076 268
Hudson. David M.; 3459 40th St.. Moline, III.
61265 241
Hudson, Howard V.; 25 Volturno St., Ft. Bragg,
N.C. 127, 276
Huffstetler, Parks R„ III; 501 West Fifth, Gas-
tonia, N.C. 28052 ...... 106, 268
Hughes, John T., Jr.; Box 237. Pittsboro, N.C.
27312 106, 177, 251
Hughes, Mary F.; 2220 Virginia Beach Blvd.,
Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 .. 105, 241
Hughes, Thomas D.; 6421 14th St., Alexandria,
Va. 27307 ......... 268
Hughes, Thomas L.; Box 174, West Jefferson.
B.C. 28694 259
Hull, Roger A.; 404 Hav Long Ave., Mt. Plea-
sant. Tcnn. 38474
Humphries, Bruce A.; 303 Powder Horn Rd..
Ft. Washington. Pa. 19034
Humphries, John M.; Box 1147, Front Royal,
Va. 22630
Huneycutt, M. Cheryel; Box 273, Locust, N.C.
27108
Hunt, Clemmct M.; Buckeye Cove Rd., Swan-
nanoa, N.C. . . . 276
Hunt. Patricia; 720 Ferndale Blvd., High Point,
N.C. 27260 , 170, 251
Hunter, Jon S.; 419 Concwango Ave., Warren,
Pa. 16365 268
Hursh, Steven R.; P.O. Box 66, Beaufort, S.C.
29902 241
Hutchens. Sandy V., Jr.; 200 West Oakdale St.,
Mount Airy. N.C. 27030 71, 241
Hutchinson, Tarn S„ Jr.; Rt. 4, Box 36, North
Wilkesboro, N.C. 28659 229, 268
Hutton, John R.; 20 Wintergrecn Ave., New-
burgh, N.Y. 12550 . . 106, 161, 268
Hutton, William E.; 540 Circle Dr., Burlington,
N.C. 27215 241
Hwangbo, Chul; 1102 Salem Valley Rd., Apt.
C-9, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 251
Hyatt, John A.; Box 188, Jonesville, Va.
24263_ . 106, 259
Hvder, Betty F.; 805 Fairmont, Kingsport, Tenn.
37660 . .... . 92, 93, 182,259
Hyler, Nancy E.; Box 371, Blowing Rock, N.C.
28605 251
Hynds, Charlton; 114 Gavle Dr., Sumter, S.C.
2«105 105
Iannuzzi, Nicholas P.; 6 Haines Ave., Medford,
N.J. 08055 259
Inge, Danny A.; 9101 Timber Lake Rd., Lynch-
burg, Va. 24502 106, 251
Ingram, Thomas B.; 1375 Pollard Dr., Atlanta,
Ga. 30311 105, 268
Inman, Harold R.; 125 Laurel Dr., Wilmington,
N.C. 259
Inman, Joseph C; 2515 Timber Ln., Greensboro,
N.C. 27408 228
Ipock, Garrison D„ Jr.; 401 E. Main, Box 167,
Orange, Va. 22960 251
Irby, Walter S.; 239 E. Main St., Washington,
N.C. 27889 179
Irvin, Mary A.; 187 Virginia St., S.E., Concord,
N.C. 28025 268
Irwin, Thomas S.; 420 4th Ave., Linden, N.J.
177, 241
Isenhower, Nelson N.; 619 E. Main St., Maiden,
N.C. 28650 259
Ivey, Clare J.; P.O. Box 625, Farmingdale, N.J.
101, 161, 162,251
I
Jackson, Catherine A.; 3509 Churchill Rd., Ra
Icigh, N.C. 27607 268
Jackson, Charles E., Jr.; Rt. 4, Box 125 Shelby.
N.C. 28150 118, 168, 241
Jackson, David S., Jr.; Box 37, Birchwood Dr.
Nashville, N.C. 27856 25
Jacober, Jennifer Lynn; 109 S. Knox St., Wester
ville, Ohio 43081 93, 184, 241
Jacobsen, James B-; 35 Howard Ave.. North Tar
mown, N.Y. 241
Jacobsen, Robert G.; 301 N. 31st Rd.. Hollywood
Fla 174, 251
Jafle. Marvin A.; 2680 Grosvenor PI., Winston
Salem, N.C. 27106 275
James, David E.; Bethel, N.C 251
James, H. Glenn; 5535 E. Princess Anne Rd
Norfolk, Va. 23502 25
James, Sylvia J.; 8622 Newell-Hickory Grove Rd
Charlotte, N.C. 28212 268
James, Thomas G.; 221 Van Buren St., Hcrndi
Va. 22070 268
Janney, Robert S.; Box 166, Luray, Va. 22835
268
Jardine, Douglas W.; 5074 Dianna Dr., Bloom
field Hills. Mich. 48018 177, 25
Jarman, Wayne T.; 9507 Nowell Dr., Bethcsda
Md. 20034 259
Jeffords, Evandcr G.; 1018 Sante Drive, Flor
S.C 93, 228, 259
Jenkins, Danny B.; 750 W. Washington St., Rock
ingham, N.C. 251
Jennings. Thomas P.; 406 Sterlingworth, Wind
snr, N.C. 27983 . 259
Jennings. Vaughn E., Jr.; Rt. 4. Box 243. Taylors
ville, N.C. 28681 10=
Jester, Richard E.; 69 Huntley Cir.. Dover, Del
loooi 268
Johnson, David L.; 712 Ashview Dr., Winston
Salem, N.C. 27103 268
Johnson. Florence C; Student Apt. 202-A, Wake
Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. 259
Johnson, Freddy G.; 325 Church St., Mt. Airy,
N.C. 27030 251
Johnson, Ira A.; Box 305, Rt. 1, Rose Hill, N.C.
28458 .268
Johnson, James R.; 113 Smythe St., Lynchburg,
Va. 74501 . . . 133, 228
Johnson, Kenneth S.; 3109 Hunsinger Blvd.,
Louisville, Kv. 40220 97, 102. 106, 234, 241
Johnson, Lawrence F.; 1100 Fairview Dr., Lex-
ington, N.C. 27292 179
Anne Phillips, class of 196ft, wears a gown from the Rendezvous R
MOMTALDO'S
Winston-Salem, N. C.
agggggssaf-HITifflgr
i§i
o£ i\\t %aihett
(From the year 1470)
<?fct&
An Interfratemiiy Social Order
Senior Members
Jones Pharr Byrd, K2
John Carroll Clark, Jr., K5
William Edward Eustler, Jr., K^
Thomas Warne Fitch, KA
Robert Douglas Knapp, IIKA
George Edgar Parker, IIKA
Charles Collett Powell III, KA
William Harmen Sned III, KA
Elmer Earl Trulove, Jr., IIKA
Byron Calder Wyche, 2X
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Johnson. Lenora J.J Rt. 1. Box 154, Randleman,
N.C. 27317 168
Johnson, Robert F.; 2910 Armficld A^e., Burling-
ton, N.C. 27215 259
Johnson, Robert L.; 423 Whealton Rd., Hamp-
ton, Va. 23366 168,251
Johnson, Russell B.; 17 St. Ives Dr.. Se\erna
Park, Md. 21146 - 268
Johnson, Shirlee L.; Box 5. Rt. 11, Winston-
Salem, N.C. 251
Johnson, Susan V.; King, N.C. 27021 241, 172
Johnson. William K.; Havs, N.C. 294
Johnson. William L., Jr.; 3200 Robin Hood Rd.,
Winston-Salem. N.C. ... 127, 274
Johnston. Jack C. Jr.; 3221 Westfield Rd.. Char-
lotte, N.C. 28209 106, 268
Jonas, Richard K.; Qtrs. 174-A, DGSC. Rich-
mond, Va. 23219 . . 85, 229, 268
Jones, Burdell C; Box 769, Chatham, Va. 24531
268
Jones, Charles F.; 404 Shadowbrook Dr., Bur-
lington, N.C. 27215 167, 241
Jones. Durward B., Jr.; Rt. 4, Zebulon, N.C. 241
Jones. Douglas R.; Rt. 3, Hammond Rd., Simp-
sonville, S.C. 29681 241
Jones, Dianne S.; King St., Winston, N.C. 27986
268
Jones, Elizabeth W.; P.O. Box 276, Winton,
N.C. 27986 268
Jones, Freda L.; Box 424, East Flat Rock, N.C.
27S26 259
Jones, John D.; 812 Christopher Rd., Chapel
Hill, N.C. 241
Jones, John H.. Jr.; 197 Hanover St., Asheville.
N.C. 168, 241
Jones. Lynda C; 930 Greenwood Dr., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 251
Jones, Linda E.; 1571 Bishop Hollow Run, At-
lanta, Ga. 30005 . . 38, 49. 184. 251
Jones, Lana G.; 644 Petree Road, Winston-Salem,
N.C. 27106 268
Jones. Michael E.; 463 Delaware St., Woodbury,
N.J. 08096 259
Jones, M. WUey. Jr.; 1812 Barracks Road, Char-
lottesville, Va. 22901 . 114
Jones. Pamela K.; P.O. Box 147, Galax, Va.
24333 268
Jones, Paul W.; 1Q5 Memweather Dr., Long-
meadow. Mass. 01 106 , . . ...229,259
Jones. Ronald E.; Rt. 1. Box 286, Boomer, N.C.
28606 269
Jones, Ronald V.; 121 20th Ave.. N.W., Hickorv.
N.C. 241
Jones, Susan A.; 1604 Fairview Road, Raleigh.
N.C. 27608 . 259
Jones, Tom P.; 718 W. Ponce de Leon Ave..
Decatur. Ga. 300311 177, 228
Jones, Thomas W.; Box 603, Svlvia, N.C. 28779
274
Jones, Virginia A.; 6 Glenbrooke Cir., E., Rich-
mond, Va. 23229 251
Jordan, Adrienne G.; 224 N. 27th St., Wilming-
ton, N.C. 28401 241
Jordan. Carol S.; Ill Montlieu Ave., Thomas-
ville, N.C. 27360 259
Jordan, G. Miller; 429 S. Harrison Ave., Cary,
N.C. 27511 241
Jordan, Linda F.; Rt. 2. Box 83, Elm City, N.C.
27822 105, 252
Jordan, Laura M.; 6363 S.W. 107 St.. Miami,
Fla. 9QR02 235. 241
Jordan. Margaret L.; 3242 Mountain Brook Road,
Charlotte, N.C. 28210 269
Jordan. Walter W.; 2407 Sparger Road. Durham.
N.C. 27705 186, 241
Josephsen. Glenn H.; 376 Griscom Dr., Salem.
N.J. 08079 228, 269
Joyce. Julia D.; Box 295, Yadkinville, N.C.
27055 ... .252
Jovner. Reginald T.; Trailer 3. WTake Forest
University, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 274
Jubenowsty, Bruce L.; 310 Indian Tr., Mountain-
side, N.J. 07092 161, 259
Jurewicz, Ronald I.; 9619 W. Grant St., West
Allis, Wis. 53227 156, 228
Justice, Max E.; Rt. 6, Box 291, Hendersonville,
N.C. 28739 276
K
Kaenzig. Karen B.; 5311 Oldcastle Ln., Spring-
field. Va. 22151 241
Kafer. Charles W.; 604 Pollock St.. New Bern,
N.C. .127, 275
Kahle. David W.; 210 Longwood Dr., Newport
News. Va. 23608 . 229
Kallam, Michael G.; Rt. 7, Pinebrook Ln., Wins-
ton-Salem, N.C. 27105 269
Kantcr. Randall N.; 3Q7 Bellc\ue Ave., Trenton.
N.J. 08618 181, 252
Karr. Glennon J.; 8 Shelton Ave., Trenton, N.J.
08618 118, 252
Kater, Robert D.; 1349 Iris St., N.W., Washing-
ton. D.C. 20012 179, 259
Keenan, Michael E.; 845 Ridge Dr., Newton,
N.C. 269
Kegerrcis, Jay H.; Rt. 1, Box 165, Richland, Pa.
17087 259
Keiger. Steven B.: R.F.D. 1, Tobaccoville, N.C.
27050 - 259
Keith, Thomas J.; 159 Passaic Ave., Passaic.
N.J. 127, 276
Keller, Carl F.; Ill Seguams Ln., W., West
Islip, N.Y. 11795 161, 259
Kellev, Steven C.j 1003 Western Ave., Rockv
Mont, N.C. 27801 133, 177, 241
Kellogg, Edwin L.; 2234 Sharon Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28207 . . 269
Kellum, David G.; 1802 Park Ave., New Bern,
N.C. 28560 259
Kelly. D. Katherine; 466 Bimini Lane, Indian
Harbour Beach, Fla. 32935 269
Kelly, George A.; Rt. 2. Huntersville, N.C.
28078 269
Kellv, Richard J.; 34-02 Norwood Dr.. Fair Lawn,
N.J. 07410 179, 241
Kennedy, James V„ 2004 Hamilton Rd., Greens-
boro. 'N.C. 27408 118
Kennedy, Richard S.; 405 N. 7th Ave.. Mayodan.
N.C 27027 269
Kennedy, Sharon L.; Rt. 1. Robbins. N.C. 27325
241
Kemodle. William D.; 423 Glenwood Ave., Bur-
lington, N.C. 27215 118. 241
Kettlehare. Thomas M.; 5605 Mapleridge Dr.,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45227 179, 259
Key, Barbara K.: 2585 Woodberry Dr., Winston-
Salem. N.C. 27106 93, 252
Kev. Pamela Gail; Rt. 1, Keystone, Bristol, Va.
24201 106
Kiger, Jan A.; 3620 Reynolda Rd.. Winston-
Salem. N.C. 27106 252
Kiley, Vincent A.; 932 E. Laiolla Dr.. Tempe,
Ariz. 85281 269
Kilgore. Samuel R., Jr.; Edgecombe Rd.. Spar-
tanburg, S.C. 181, 241
Killion, William L.; 1«25 Rosemont St., Salis-
bury, N.C. 28144 269
Kinchcloe, James J.: 1617 Rivera Dr., Rockv Mount,
N.C. 85, 118, 132. 133. 135. 177, 234. 241
King. Carl N.; Rt. 1, Box 557-A, Hickorv, N.C.
28601 259
King. Edward D.; 220 Ralston Rd„ Richmond.
Va. 23229 186,252
King. Kristin A.; N.C. Orthopaedic Hospital.
Gastonia. N.C. 28052 - 269
King. Samuel C. Jr.; Box 713, Lincolnton, N.C.
28092 259
King. William B.; Smith Chapel Road, Mount
Olive. N.C. 177, 252
Kinlaw, James B„ Jr.; 2110 Laurel Ln., Alta-
Vista, Va. 24517 259
Kinsey, Susan I., 5854 Wood Haven Cir.. Fav-
etteville. N.C. 28301 105, 182, 259
Kirby- Smith, Edmund; 10104 East Bexhill Dr..
Kensington, Md. 276
Kirkland, Charles; 1103 Glenwood Dr.. Augusta,
Ga. 30904 105, 191. 252
Kirkpatrick, Charles E.; Box 6752, Reynolda
Stat.on. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109. 85, 118.
252
Kirsch, Robert M.; 819 Kimball Ave., Westfield,
N.J. 07090 .252
Kitchin, William W.; Coharie Dr., Clinton, N.C.
167
Klamm, Nelson R.; 22450 Douglas Rd., Shaker
Heights, Ohio 44122 . . 269
Kline, Jeffrey J.; 134 Boone Trail, Severna Park.
Md. 21146 241
Kline. Rhoda J.; 559 Watonga Wav, Boulder.
Colo. 80302 182
Klinger. Donald R.; 1805 Darville Dr.. Hampton.
Va. 23363 85, 269
Klohs, Wavne D.; 15 Evergreen Rd., West Cald
well, N.J. 07006 252
Klosterman. Rob: 227 Sanbridge Cir., Worthing
ton. Ohio 43085 ... 259
Knapp, Robert D.; 883 Main St., Hingham
Mass. 02043 . 174. 241
Knauss, Peter L.; 82 East Cedar St., Poughkeep
sie, N.Y. 12601 241
Knight, Dennis W.; Box 97, Teachey, N.C.
28464 241
Knight, James H.; 145 Fishel Rd., Winston
Salem, N.C. 27107 85, 111
Knight, Michael R.; 145 Fishel Rd., Winston
Salem, N.C. 27107 85, 259
Knoop, Barbara E.; 219 Oak Forest Ave.,
timore, Md. 21228 255
Kobos, Donald J.; 6 Hersey St., Salem, Mass.
01970 165, 228, 259
Koether, George H., HI; 108 3rd Ave., S.E.. Glen
Burnie, Md. 21061 269
Komegav. Robert D„ Jr.; 301 Shady Circle Dr.,
Rockv Mount. N.C. 27801 161. 259
Kovarik. Robert C: 3025 N. Smart St., Arling-
ton, Va. 22207 . . 229, 269
Krapels. Willi M.; 800 Carrick St., High Point,
N.C. 27262 241
Krause, Bumell H.; 732 Giles St., Woodbndge,
Va. 22191 . . 161, 259
Krause. Thomas J.; 536 Golf Rd., Lancaster, Pa.
17602 241
Krest. Claudia A.; 5055 Sunnv Side Dr., S.W..
Roanoke. Va. 24018 259
Kriebel. Christina; 642 Highland Dr., Perkasie.
Pa. 18944 269
Kireger, Karl Joe; 1701 Washington Blvd.,
Huntington, Va. 25701 229, 269
Krueger. Candith E.; 814 Wedgewood Rd.. John-
son City. Tenn. 241
Krueger, Deborah A.; 9503 Nora Ln., Indiana-
polis, Ind. 46240 269
Kuhn. George W. S., HI; 96 Ingalis Rd., Ft.
Monroe. Va. 259
Kushner. Bruce A.; 140 Springfield Road, Eliza-
beth, N.J. 259
Kyle, James W.; 3301 Hermitage Rd., Birming-
ham. Ala. 35223 168, 229, 259
Lahendro. Albert, L.; 8404 Sky View Dr., Apt.
101, Alexandria. Va. 22309 127
Lake, Edward A.; 917 Broad St., Kingsport,
Tenn. 37660 259
Lambe, William H.. Jr.; 4550 Bradburv Dr.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28209 . 93, 167. 252
Lambert. James H.; 205 Main St., Parsons, W.Va.
2t.287
241
Lambeth, Julius H.; 2001 Liberty Dr.. Greens-
boro, N.C. 27408 252
Lamm. Charles C, Jr.; 19 Wake Forest Trailer
Park, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 127, 275
Landsperger, Elizabeth A.; 4305 Harvard Ave.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27407 269
Lanier, Marjorie L.: Copperhill, Tenn. 37317
...... 269
Laroque, George P.; 1306 N. Independent St..
Kinston, N.C. '74
Laslcy, Carol J.; 295 W. Mountain St.. Kerners-
ville, N.C. 27284 .119, 241
Lassiter. Charles B.; 4150 Brookhaven Dr., S.E.,
Covington, Ga. 30209 259
Latta. William E.; Box 493. Hillsborough. N.C.
27278 106, 269
Laughridge. Digit; 3301 S. York St., Gastonia,
RC .... 228, 229
Lawrence. J. Gray: 13 Park Rd., Biltmore Forest,
Asheville, N.C. 28803 . . 97, 174, 259
Lawrev, James D.; 301 Cedar Ln., Rockville, Md.
20851 . 106, 269
Lawson. Judith J.; 156 S. Svcamore St., Moores-
ville, N.C. 2S115 252
Lavton, Meldine B.; 1840 Faculty Dr., Box 7432,
Winston-Salon, N.C. 27109 241
Leader. Richard G.; 1661 Weedon Rd., Wayne,
Pa. 19087 . . ... ......93, 181, 259
Leathers, Gordon T.; 305 S. Chestnut St., Hen-
derson. N.C. 27536 . . . . 252
Lcavitt, WUlard H.; Birch Hill Rd., Weston,
Conn. 06880 . ...... 156, 228, 229
Ledbetter. Everett (Rhette) ; 38 Duke St., Ashe-
ville, N.C. 28803 ... 186, 259
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Lee. Robert E., Jr.; 706 High St., Murfreesboro, Lewis, Wade C. Ill; 2214 Anderson Dr., Raleigh,
N.C. - 165, 241 N.C. 228, 252
Lee, William Y.; Box 6509, Reynolda Station. Lilyquist, Kenton R.; 755 Currituck Dr., Raleigh,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 277 N.C. 27609 174, 259
Lee. Robert M.; 604 10th Street, N. Jacksonville. Lin, Chi H.; 146 Lan Chin St., Chia Y„ Taiwan,
Fla. 32050 259 China 277
Lecper, Emmett M., Jr.; P.O. Box 1483, Eustic, Linden, Peter N.; 8 Gloucester St., Boston Mass.
Fla. 32726 , .... 181, 252 15('
LerTIer. John M.; 1456 Burns, Wichita, Kansas Lindner, Carol A.; 515 Mayflower Rd., West Palm
181, 259 Beach, Fla. 33405 182, 259
Leggett. Carroll H.; Box 104, Buies Creek. N.C. Lindsay David S; 2306 Fow Du Lac Rd Rich-
275 mond, Va. ISZZy lly, Iby
LeGrand. Smart H.; 104 H.lls.de Dr., Shelby, Lindsay, Roscoe, Jr.; Box 992, Marion, S.C. 29571
N C 28150 269
Lembo. Keith D.; 76 Ruth Ave., Hawthorne, N.J. Lineberry Albert S.. Jr.; 1105 Montpeher Park
177 75? Greensboro, N.C. I to
. _ . ' ' ' ,n ' ,, n „ i ,. ' , i, Liner, Anthony M.; 2805 Shaftsburv Dr., Durham,
Lemza, Douglas J.; 69 Stillwell Rd., Kendell ' ,,7n/ ' 174 jc-,
Park, N.J. 08824 98,259 , ■ A -a v M n i wi„'.ta„
Lennon, Alton Y.; 807 West End Blvd., Apt. C-3, ^^ V"S 3"35 G''mCr AvC" Ww%
Wins,o„BSalemN.C 27104 127,274 Link, w„liam K., Jr, Bos 402. R, 8, Lexingin-
Leonard, Robert K.; 1 j24 Pineola Ave., Kings- ' ^^ 27292 188 241
port Tenn 37664 127, 276 Livengood.' William D.; 4218 Orville Rd., Win-
Letherburv, Sharon; 5(13 West 32nd St., Wilming- ,„%,!,„ Mr 771 n7 757
t™ n~l 10807 777 sron-saiem, in.l.. z/iu/ . .. ljl
ton, Del. 1*802 . . .Ill L fl. Richard M.; 612 East Green Dr., High
Letton, Harold R., Jr.; Rt. 2, Carlisle, Kv. 85, 269 p ^ N c 77260 269
Levi, Linda R.; 8052 Dell St.. Norfolk Va 23508 LMn '^^ R. 221.A' n! Spring St., Winston-
97, 116, 235, 241 Saiem Nc 241
Lewis, Carolyn L.; Box 313, Cherryville, N.C. Loftjn wi„iam D.; 412 Sardis Ln., Charlotte.
24' N.C. 28211 85, 105
Lewis, J. Allen, Jr.; Box 350, Florence, S.C . A h; D . Box 427 Rcidsvllle, N.C.
29501 241 |732|1 229] 269
LTn' 7o^,W-; Rt 2' Gr°VC ^7k P« 77TT5? Lo"S- Annc M-; Rt '■ Box 170' S,cclc Creck Rd-
SC' 29501 167' 1Q5' 228' 252 Charlotte, N.C. 28134 252
Lewis, Lloyd A.; 2410 Rockbridge St., Vienna, L u . M , po Box 26 Ay|ette Va.
Va. 22180 269 23009 252
Lewis, Michael E.; 1619 Lynwood Ave., Winston- L Michael M.; 429 Inwood Rd.. Linden, N.J.
Salem, N.C. 27104 259 07fl3n 228
Lewis. Michael J.; Rt. 4, Winston-Salem, N.C. Long, Paul E.; S. Main St., Box 326, Roxboro,
27107 . 127 N.C. 27573 85, 186, 252
Lewis, Samuel F., Jr.; Rt. 4, Burlington, N.C. Long, Samuel H.; 409 Hickory Dr., Elberton, Ga.
27215 269 30635 92, 259
Lott, Charles B.; 2130 Gamble Rd., Westfield,
N.J. 07090 161, 259
Lougce, Carol S.; 2128 Sprunt Ave., Durham,
N.C. 27705 93, 269
Loughridge, John H., Jr.; 3108 Quarry Ln., La-
favctte Hill, Pa. 19444 127, 276
Love, George M.; 2241 W. High, Lima, Ohio
45805 277
Love, Sherwood L.; Box 495, Gretna, Va. 24557
259
Lowdermilk, Beverly A.; 532 Stanley Ave., Rock-
ingham, N.C. 28379 269
Lowe, Elizabeth L.; 201 S. Canterbury Rd., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28211 170, 241
Lowe, John C; 841-C West 6th St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27101 241
Lowe, James E.; 518 Queens Ct.. Statesville, N.C.
28677 252
Luckadoo, Vaughn C, Rt. 6, Box 216, Salisbury,
N.C. 28144 241
Ludlam. Joel A.; 11 Linden Ave., Merchantville.
N.J. 08109 ... 179, 229
Lunsford, Sam W.; 533 Acadia Ave., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27107 269
Lvle, Richard R.; 937 Brookmont Ave., Jackson-
ville, Fla. 32211 186
Lynch, Mary Anne; National Fish Hatchery,
Wytheville, Va. 24382 105, 259
Lynch, Michael F.; 454 Westcott Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 252
Lvnch, Sharon; 404 N. 14th St., Ocean City, Md.
21842 259
Lynch, Thomas J.; 6615 Foxcroft Rd., Prospect,
Ky. 40059 167, 229, 259
Lvtton, John H., Jr.; 404 Winona Ave., Lum-
berton, N.C. 28358 106, 259
M
MacDermod. Prudence E.; 107 Tulip Dr., Gaith-
ersburg. Md. 20760 182
MacKinstly, E. Warren, Jr.; Shipyard Ln., South
Dartmouth, Mass. 02748 260
KONA KAI
Lounge and Restaurant
Sheraton Motor Inn
Reservations: 765-4321
MacLaren, R. James, Jr.; 314 State St., Towanda,
Pa. 18848 85, 269
MacVittie, Ronald B.; 494 Chamberlain Dr.
Marietta, Ohio 45750 . 228, 252
McAdams. Marion C; 321 Lorraine Dr., Rock-
v.lle, Md. 20852 242
McAllister, Norman C; Rt. 11, Griffith Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27103 252
McBride. Suzanne, 600 N. Pickett St., Alexandria,
Va. 223IH 162, 260
McCall. Evelyn L.; 9 Linwood Ave., Newton,
N.J. 07860 269
McCarn, Robert K.; Rt. 6, Lexington, N.C. 27292
260
McCarthv. William J.; R.D. 1, Coopersburg, Pa.
127. 274
McCIain, James F.; 416 North St., Anderson, S.C.
167
McClure, Frederick W.; 1701 Arden Wav, Jack-
sonville Beach, Fla. 32050 260
McClymonds, Robert C; 1201 N.E. 88 St., Miami.
Fla. 33138 78, 275
McCoIIum, Max W., Jr.; 1218 Forest Ave., Mon-
roe, N.C. 28110 269
McConnell, Joel C; Box 495, Cornelius, N.C.
28031 269
McCord, Ronald S.; 1764 Fairfax St., Petersburg,
Va. 23803 105, 188, 260
McCotter, Richard P.; 332 Buncombe St.. Raleigh,
N.C. 27609 168, 260
McCourt, James M.; 2345 Harborview Blvd., Lo-
rain, Ohio 44052 269
McCoy, Harold P., Jr.; Rt. 2, Box 17-H, Ahoskie,
N.C. 27«10 260
McCracken, James R.-. 785 Austin Ln., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 252
McCullough, Al T.; Rt. 1, Box 143, Matthews,
N.C. 28105 252
McDaniel. Harmon C, III; 1765 Winship St.,
Macon, Ga. 31201 269
McDonald. Florence E.; 181 Pine Lake Dr., At-
lanta, Ga. 30327 . 184, 260
269
174, 252
High Point,
McDonald, Pamela L.; 2362 Mav
Unci Raton, Fla. 27106
McDowell, Harold C; 100 Dogwo
mont, N.C. 28012 .
McDowell, Larry J.; 3102 Corina Cir
N.C. 27263 .. 242
McDuffie, James C; 103 White St., East Rocking-
ham, N.C. 28379 260
McGee, Philip A.; 5708 Joyce Dr., D.C. 20031
179, 252
McGintv, M. Maxine; Box 63. Oglethorpe College,
Atlanta, Ga. 30319 277
McGlothlen, David L.; 3942 Woodlawn Dr.,
Nashville, Tenn. 37205 252
McGowan, Gerard E., Jr.; 770 East St., Dedham,
Mass. 02026 229
McGrady, Patsy M.; 135 Orville Dr., High Point,
N.C. .182. 242
McGregor. Gilbert R.; Rt. 3. Box 172, Raeford,
N.C. 28376 269
McHam, Gary S.; 14 A. St., Inman, S.C. 29349
167, 260
Mclntyre, Charlie S., Jr.; 306 East 19th St., Lum-
berton, N.C. . . . . . . . 127, 275
McKinney, Joy C; P.O. Box 77, Lawndale, N.C.
.'Mr'
.269
Win-
McKinney, John T., Jr.; 2636 Fairlawn Dr.
stun-Salcm, N.C. 27106 274
McLawhorn, Sheila F.: Rt. 5, Lake Circle Dr.,
Greenville, S.C. 29609 170, 260
McLeod, John M.; 1009 W. Harnett St., Dunn,
N.C. 127
McMichael, Margaret D.; 2362 Elizabeth Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 260
McMurray. Clarence M.; 129 Hillside Dr., Shelby,
N.C. 28150 269
McMurrav, Phyllis A.; 1309 Hunt St., Shelby,
N.C. 28150 257
McNabb. George A.; Hopkins Ln.. Box 116, Snow
Hill, Md. 21863 106, 252
McNaught, David A.; 421) Pennsylvania Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C . 161, 260
McNeil, John P., Ill; 4319 Ferry Landing Rd.,
Alexandria, Va. 22309 . . 186, 252
McNeil, Jolynne, 549 Woodvale Dr.. Greensboro,
N.C. 27410 182, 260
McNeill, Claude A., Ill; 248 Dutchman Creek
R.I., Elkin, N.C. 28621 99, 260
McNeill, Robert Hayes, Jr., Country Club Rd.,
Wilkeboro, N.C. 234, 242
McNeill, Robert Hayes, H; Box 601, Morehead
City; N.C. 28557 275
McNeill, Stephen M.; 514 Fulton St., Raeford,
N.C. 28376 106, 269
McQueen, Larry J.; 120 E. Wheeler Cir., Saluda,
S.C. 29138 . . 269
McQueenev, H. John; II Hancock St., Everett,
Mass. 02149 156. 228
McRacken, Herbert L.; 405 West 2nd Ave., Red
Springs, N.C. 28377 269
McRae. Robert R., Jr.; Box 116, Peachland, N.C.
2S133 ... 252
Mabry, Markham W.; P.O. Box 38, Albemarle,
N.C. 28001 269
Mabry, Sara F.; 420 Cannon Ave., Albemarle,
N.C. 28001 .259
Mackie, Jeffrey T.; 2440 Reynolda Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27109 167, 252
Maddrcy, Kenneth D.; 406 E. Elam Ave., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 85, 260
Main, Roger P.; Oxmead Rd., Burlington, N.J.
08016 . 85, 106, 161, 260
Maine. Deborah S., 6304 Loch Raven Rd., Wash-
ington, D.C. 20031 269
Malpass, Betty J.; 107 West Rd., Clinton, N.C.
28328 . . . . 269
Malsbury, Gordon H.; 2431 Main St., Lawrence-
ville, N.J. 08648 269
Mandeville, Michael E.; Rt. 4, Box 267-A, Can-
dler, N.C. 28715 . 188
Mailer, David H.; 1902 Wooded Court, Adelphi,
Md. 20783 269
Maness, Philip M.; 1010 Central Ave., Burlington,
N.C. 27215 252
CITY BEVERAGE DELIVERY
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CALL
CITY BEVERAGE
For all kinds of
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908 BURKE ST.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
HARRY S. DAVIS
OWNER
DEACONS STOP UNC AGAIN
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Mangum, Patricia L.; 300 N. Thompson St., Mon-
roe, N.C. 28110 . . 242
Mangum, Roselyn M-; P.O. Box 402, Elizabeth
City, N.C. 27909 . 269
Mann, Britton D.; Rt. 3, Box 446, South Point,
Ohio 45680 269
Mann, Cynthia W.; 101-B Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27109 242
Mann, John A., 101-B Faculty Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27109 277
Manning. Julia E., 2515 Sheffield Dr., Gastonia,
N.C. 28052
Mark, Freeman A.;
N.C. 27244
Mark, William R.;
Mass. 02166
Marra, Marietta R.
Fla. 33517
Marsalis, Earl L.;
M,l 21040
Marshall, Christoph.
ton, W. Va.
Marshall, Donna L
Fla. 33155
Marshall, Willia:
Rt. 2, Box 270, EIc
69 Oakland Av
309 Sunny Ln„ Cle
270
270
Newton.
156
ater,
277
15 Silvcrbell Dr., Edgewood,
106, 260
r L.; 733 Myrtle Rd., Charles-
174, 242
; 5880 S.W. 53 Ter., Miami,
184
E.; 515 Cole St.. Raleigh. N.C.
127, 242
Martin, Cassandra J.; 327 Clifton Rd.. Rocky
Mount. N.C. . . 100, 162,252
Martin, Jo A.; 421 Springdale Ave., Winston-
Salem. N.C. 27104 . 260
Martin, Jerry C.j 119 Muse Ave.. Mount Airy,
N.C. 27030 260
Martin, Andrew S.; 109-R Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 275
Martin, James K.; 2510 Gaither St., Hillcrest
Heights, Md. 20031 105, 121, 252
Martin. James N., Jr.; 4329 Ben Gunn Rd., Vir-
ginia Beach. Va. 23455 9;
Martin, Stephen M.; 4100 Ind
Stoi
\|.
Martin, Wil
lin, Ga. . .
E.; Box 322, Fielda
Masline, Donald D.; Ccdarwood, Rt. I, James-
town, N.C 106, 156, 242
Mason, James W.; Harrellsville, N.C. 27942 242
Mason, Mark S.; 6432 31st St., Washington, D.C.
20015 106, 167, 252
Massey, Gerald R., Jr.; R.F.D. 4, Clinton, N.C.
28328 . 106, 270
Masters, Douglas J.; 1407 Capri Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27103 252
Matsinger. John D., Jr.; 900 Twyckenham Rd.,
Media. Pa. 19063 . 179, 229, 260
Matson, John P.; 9503 Bruce Dr., Silver Spring,
Md. 20901 132, 177, 260
Matthews, Margaret E., Box 206, Burgaw, N.C.
28425 242
Mattocks, Noland R., Jr.; 620 Walnut St., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 275
Mattox, William P.; 1833 Queen St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 252
Maugcr, Susan L.; 155 E. Bettlewood Ave., Oak-
lyn, N.J. 08107 260
Mauney, Fred K.; Box 1463, New Bern, N.C.
28560 270
Mav, Donna B.; 355 Chub St., Lakeland, Fla.
33801 . 182, 242
May, John M.; Box 233, Spring Hope, N.C.
27KH2 165, 260
Mayer, Russell X.; 140 Nassau Ave., Islip, N.Y.
11751 229.270
Mayhew. Roger W.; Rt. 6, Lexington, N.C. 27292
242
Maynes, Barry R.; 17 Oakes St., Millburv, Mass.
01527 228
Meek, William L., H; 514 Stanley Ave., Clarks-
burg, W. Va. 26301 275
Medlin. Ann L.; Wcstwood, Launnburg, N.C.
28352 242
Meech, David M.; 436 W. End Ave., Statesville,
68, 252
N.C. 28677
. 85, 181,
260
es Cir.,
Meflord, Thomas F.; 105 Stear
is Ave., CI
lcin-
156
nati. Ohio 45215
168,
260
. 24089
Meisburg, Suzanne; 2901 Dunde
Rd., Louis
ville,
270
Kv. 40205 .......
27ll
Meisenhelder, Thomas M.; 7365 Reynold.!, Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 .168, 242
Mellcn, Dcanne E.; 935 Hughes Dr., St. Albans,
W. Va. 25177 260
Melson, William L.; 2913 Van Buren St., Wil-
mington, Del. 242
Melton, Larry M.; Rt. 2, Box 93, Gastonia, N.C.
28052
105
Melton,
Rebecca
A.; State Rd.
N.C. 2867
95,
184, 242
Melvin,
Dennis H.; 34
Andove
r Dr.
Fairfax,
Va. 2
2030
105, 260
Memory
, John M
Wagrar
n, N.C.
.78,
127, 274
Menke,
Kim G.
12436
Walken
Dr.,
Omaha,
Neb.
68123 .
186
Messick
William
rl.; Kings Highway, C
arksboro,
N.J. 08020
.242
Messinger, Timothy R.; 72 Curtis Parkway, Ken-
more, N.Y. 14223 252
Meyer, Ann M.; 2009 Garfield, Granite City, 111.
62040 170, 252
Meyer, David C; 2322 Marlborough Rd., Colo-
rado Springs, Colo. 80909 106, 242
Michael, Gene Y.; 14 Newfound St., Canton, N.C.
28716 . .. 106, 270
Michaels, Clara J.; P.O. Box 636, Morganton, N.C.
28655 260
Milam, Jennifer S.; 306 Moye St., Barnesville, Ga.
30204
Milcham, William D.; 1905 Chesl
ton, Pa. 19001
Miller, Charles R.; 23 Su
Md. 21502
Miller. Dane E.; 820 Larry Ave., Vandalia,
45377
Miller, Douglas R.; 304 Clearview Rd., Ha
Pa. 17331
Miller. Frances J.; Rt. 2, Box 1133-B, Charlotte,
N.C. 28210 182, 260
Miller. George T.; 202 Chestnut St., Lexington,
N.C. 27292 93, 242
Miller, Harold D., Jr.; 751 Mission Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27103 252
146, 242
e., Abing-
...179,242
Dr., Cumberland,
270
270
270
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Taylor Dormitory
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Miller, James A.; P.O. Box 44, State Rd„ N.C.
28676 85, 118, 252
Miller, Joel B.; Rt. 7, Box 130, Statesville, N.C.
28677 260
Miller, Kathrine S.; 120 Evergreen Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 270
Miller. Robert B.; 18 Rhoda St., Canton, N.C.
28716 252
Miller, William L.; 1258 Broadway, Bethlehem,
Pa. 18015 270
Million, Thomas J.; 004 Clenwood Dr., P.O. Box
<>34, Kingsport, Tenn. . . 179, 228, 252
Mills, Jesse L., HI; 218 N. 4th Ave., Mavodan,
N.C. 27027 . 252
Mills, Robert D.; 218 East Kennerlv Ave., Moores-
ville, N.C. 28115 270
Miners, Richard A.; 13 Circle Dr., Rumson, N.J.
07760 179, 242
Minton. Laurin C; 215 Homewood Ave., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 . . . . 172, 242
Mintz. Maxine E.; 543 Dale Dr., Fayetteville.
N.C 270
Moates. Nancy A.; 801 Clubhouse Dr., Holden,
W. Va. 25625 106, 260
Mohlman, Jeffrey G.; 7484 Hosbrook, Cincinnati,
Ohio 45243 270
Mohr. Thomas D.; 128 Longview Dr., Spring-
field, Pa. 19064 179
Montgomery, Jerry A.; 1888 Facultv Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27109 229
Montgomery. Mark D.; 1512 W. 45th St., Rich-
mond, Va. 23225 252
Monthan, Christina H.; 2560 Oak Valley Dr.,
Vienna, Va. 22180 270
Moody, Herbert M.. Jr.; 817 Stanfield Dr., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28210 228, 270
Moore, Bobby G.; R.F.D. 1, King, N.C. 27021
242
Moore, Bryce G., Jr.; 1422 Beech Dr., Burlington,
N.C 168, 242
Moore, Edward G.; 706 Deese St., Monroe, N.C.
85, 118,242
Moore, James E.; 204-A Wake Forest Apts., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 118,242
Moore, Joseph S.; Rt. 4, Box 312, Silcr City, N.C.
27344 270
Moore, Lois C; 1279 Queensgate Ave., Gastonia,
N.C. 184, 242
Moore. Paula J.; IS Tranquil Ave., Greenville,
S.C. 29607 270
Moore, William R.; Main and Sanders, Box 164,
Four Oaks, N.C. 27524 270
Moretz, Charlene S.; Rt. 1, Box 311, Belmont.
N.C. 2SII12 105
Morgan, Fredric L., Jr.; 1412 San Juan Ave.,
Fort Mvers, Fla. 33902 106, 242
Morgan, Letha M.; Box 61, Wilkesboro, N.C.
28697 270
Morgan, Nclda N.; P.O. Box 61, Wilkesboro,
N.C. 28697 105, 118, 182, 252
Morgan, Richard E.; 500 Lakewood Dr., Lexing-
ton, N.C. 27292 252
Morgan. Vicki E.; 410 Forrest Ave., High Point.
N.C. 27262 .147, 170, 234. 243
Morgan, Zeb B.; 504 Corona. Winston-Salem,
N.C. 27103 277
Morris, Henry F., Jr.; 506 North Broadway, Pit-
man, N.J. 08071 . . 161, 252
Morris, Harvey H., Jr.; 10506 Waltham Dr..
Richmond, Va. 23229 , .. 181,260
Morris. James E., II; R.D. 2, Chestertown, Md.
21620 252
Morris, Sammy L.; 202 Moore St.. Stanley, N.C.
28164 270
Morrison, Brady K.; 3051 Greenvvay Ave.. Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 . 243
Morrison, Donald L.; 1435 Noble St., Columbia.
S.C. ...... 243
Morrow. Judith C; Cokesburv Rd.. R.D. 2. Le-
banon, N.J. 08833 266
Morrow, John M., Jr.; 921 North 10th St., Albe-
marle. N.C. 28001 270
Morton, David Kirby; 1729 Brookwood Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 260
Morton, James W.; 1729 Brookwood Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 252
Morton, Thomas R.; West Jefferson, N.C. 28694
243
Moser, Kenneth A.; Apt. 12 Gravlyn Ct., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 . 78, 127, 274
Motz, Paul R.; 371)5 Motz Dr.. Akron, Ohio
44313 270
Mount. Joe D.; 3230 Woodland, Columbus, Ind.
47201 229, 243
Mount, Philip M., 48 Greenfield Ave., Bronxville,
N.Y. 277
Mover, Timothy D., Blooming Glen, Pa. 18911
260
Mover, Thomas R.; 110 Lvle Cir.. York. Pa.
17403 ........ 252
Mulkev, Michael S.; 704 Hillcrest Dr.. Rocking-
ham, N.C. 177, 260
Murdoch, Norma H.; 1241 Adams St.. Macon,
Ga. 93, 184, 252
Murdock, Robert Humphries, Jr.; 311 Hoke St.,
New Bern, N.C. 28560 106, 252
Murphy. Barry P.; 1414'/; E. Polo Rd. Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 156. 253
Murphy, Carol A.; 1318 Townsend Blvd.. Jackson-
ville, Fla. 32211 162, 243
Murray, Douglas P.; 323 Lawndale Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27104 127, 274
Mutton. Thomas P.; 1000 Hazelton St., Eustes,
Fla. 32726 161
Myers, Edward A.: 140 Stanley Ave., Landisville,
Pa. 17538 . .. . 253
Myers, Joseph F.; 405 Euclid Ave.; Manasquan,
N.J. .243
Mvers, William B-: 405 Euclid Ave., Manasquan,
N.J 229, 243
N
Nagin, Laurance W.; 425 Beach St., Rockaway
Park, N.Y. 1169J 156, 243
Nance, Sherry D.; Rt. 1, Mebane, N.C. 27302
105, 270
COLLEGE PLAZA
SHOPPING CENTER
(ACROSS FROM COLISEUM)
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STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Nance, Susan E.; Coharie Dr., Clinton, N.C.
28328 105, 260
Nanney, Judith K.; 2409 Wade Hampton Blvd
Greenville, S.C. 29607 °3, 105, 11'', 172, 24i
Naphas, James H.; 31 S. Summit Ave., Pitman
-NL'- °8?71 161,260
Nash, Richard F.; 560 Golden Harbour Dr Boca
Raton, Fla. 33432 243
Nasser, Raymond T.; 239 11th Ave., Huntington
W. Va. 25701 ,gI86'
Naylor, Ann C; 122 Ila Ln„ Columbia, SC
29206 270
Nunnallee. Jane, Rt. 3, Box 1548, Avon Park
Fla. 33825 270
Nunnalee, Thomas L.; Rt. 1, Box 1548 Avon
Park, Fla. 33825 260
Oakley, Sarajane; 3765 Stanton Blvd., Louisville
Ky. 40220 ioo, 162, 260
OBncn, James C.j 4495 Henry St., Easton, Pa.
18042 270
Odom, Austine B.; 223 N. Tennessee Ave , Mar-
tinsburg, W. Va. 25401 18, 30 182 '43
Oetken, Stanley G.; 627 Kimbark St., Longmont,
Colo. 80501 106, 260
Ogren, Mark W.; 403 Farrell Rd„ Lockport, III
60441 270
Oliver, Melvin J„ Jr.; Brogden Rd., Smithfield.
N.C. 275/7 133 7j3
Olsen, Cynthia L.; 3110 Shannon Dr , Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 260
Olson, John E., Jr.; 4314 Robertson Blvd., Alex-
andria. Va. 22309 260
Orman, William S.; 4019 Sneed Ave., Nashville
Tenn. 37215 ... 270
Orser, Paul N.; 516 Haws Ln„ Oreland Pa
„ 19075 105. 179, 253
Ort, Donald R.; R.D. 3. Doylestown, Pa. 18901
Osbome. Douglas F., Jr.; 210 Center Church Rd
Leaksville. N.C. 27288 270
O'Shell, Cathy D.; 2 Robins Ln Berwvn Pa
19312 >n> 27,j
Ott, David L.; 5534 Sherrell Dr., N.E. Atlanta
Ga. 30305 ,65 25i
Ours, Stuart S.; 8005 Mimosa Dr., Vienna, Va
22I80X, 186! 253
Outlaw, Nancy S.; 1013 Westover Ave., Box 474
Kinston. N.C. 28501 105, 182, 260
Overmann, William H„ Jr.; 519 Vance St., Roa-
noke Rapids, N.C. 167,243
Overton, W.lham A.; 64 Munroe St., Boston,
Mass. 1)2119 ,56j 228
Owen, Harvey W.; 25 Winding Hill Dr., Me-
chamesburg. Pa. 17055 .. 270
Owen, James G.; Box 780, Waynesville, N.C.
28786 253
Owen, Kathryn A.; 3075 Sedgefield Rd., Roanoke
Va. 24015 270
Owen. Mary H.; P.O. Box 780, Waynesville, N.C
28786 260
Owen, Stephen A.; Rt. 1, Box 881, Rural Hall
N.C. 27045 ... 27o
Owen, Wade S.; 1421 Trinity Ave., H,gh Point.
N.C. 27260 ... V 2J3-
Owens, Sandra S.; Rt. 1, Box 55, McGrady, NC
rl I c 260
Owensby, Suzanne, 309 W. First St China Grove
N.C. 28023 . . is4 243
Pagliara, Kathleen A.; 408 Holly Dr., Wyckoff
N-J. 07481 182, 253
Pail, Norbert J.; 1203 Haslage Ave.. Pittsburgh.
Pa. 1^212 275
Painter, Zankey R.; Rt. 2, Banner Elk, N.C. 28604
■■■•■■ 118,253
Palmer, David B.; 212 North Main St, Woods-
town, N.|. 08098 85, 270
Pamphn, Charles L., ni; 1104 Brantford Ave
Silver Spring, Md. 20904 168 260
Paris, James C.J 114 Batchelor Dr., Greensboro,
N.C. 27410 106
Parker, Charles B.; 318 South Elm St., Marsh-
ville, N.C. 28103 253
Parker, George E.; 1513 Canterbury Rd , Raleigh
N.C. 27608 228
Parker, Janet C; Rt. 7, Box 110, Lexington, N.C.
„ 2/292 253
Parker, Susan R.; Old Post Rd., Erwin NC
2«339 ... 243
Parker, William A.; 1710 W. Marker St.. Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 253
Parker. William J„ Jr.; 122 South Main St., P.O.
Box 2s, Laurinburg, N.C. 93, 118, 167, 243
Parkinson, Sue E.; 1518 S. Live Oak Parkway
Wilmington, N.C. 28401 184
Parks, Jeanne A.; 328 County Home Rd Lex-
ington, N.C. 27292 ' 260
Parks, Janet L.; Rt. 1. Union Grove, N.C. 28689
159
Parris. David A.; 526 Calvin Ln., Rockville, Md
20851 85, 106,260
Parrish, David J.; 1611 Idlewild Rd , Johnson
City, Tenn. 37601 277
Parsons, David R.; 11044 W. Center Ext, Me-
dina, N.Y. 14103 270
Parton, Wanda E.; P.O. Box 108, Rutherfordton
N.C. 28139 270
Pasrushok. Neil; 173 E. Webster Ave Roselle
Park, N.J. 07204 270
Pate, Carlyle D.; 428 Shadowbrook Dr., Burling-
ton, N.C. 228
Pate, Dayna T.; 4650 Millbrook Dr , N W At-
lanta. Ga. 30327 47, 116, 234, 243
Pate. Warren L.; 902 West Cumberland St
Dunn. N.C. ]27, 276
Patrick, Adele; Box 7314 Winston, Salem, NC
93, 253
Patterson, Dennis E.; 601 Stowe St., Grove City
Pa. 16127 276
Patterson, William S.; 207 Parker St., Kings
Mtn., N.C. 27086 165 253
Patteson, Nan B.; 3812 Greatneck Ct • Alexan-
dria. Va. 22309 260
Patton, B.; 109 Terrace PI.. Morganton, N.C.
„ 28655 168, 253
Patton, Carolyn A.; 109 Parkside Dr.. Princeton
N.J. 08540 253
Patton, John B.; 2341 Onandaga Dr., Columbus
Ohio 43221 243
Patton, Mary L.; 3257 Ridge Ave., Macon, Ga
31204 270
Paul. Charles W.; P.O. Box 62, Washington
N.C. 27889 g260
Pauley. Edward O.; 129 Angel Ter Charleston
W. Va. 25314 253
Payne, Nancy C; Rt. 1, Box 336, North Wilkes-
boro, N.C. 28659 271
Peale. Ann L.; 2015 Dayton St.; Silver Spring
Md. 20902 ,70, 260
Peace, Christopher M.; 86 Maple Ave., Halifax
Va. 24558 260
Pearce, Bronnie C, Jr.; 220 Pine Vallev Rd
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 167, 228, 253
Pearigcn, James C; 922 Evans Rd., Nashville
Tenn. 37204 85
Pearmaw. Richard M.; 1 N. Woodrow Ave Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 '127
Peatross, Clarence F.; Ill S. Sunset Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 253
Peay, Eleese P.; R.F.D. 1, Dunn, N.C. 28334
271
Peeler. Brenda R.; 221 South Third St., Albe-
marle, N.C. 28001 253
Pelton, Douglas H., Jr.; 431 Grandview Ave
Wyeckoff, N.J. 243
Penley, Larry E.; 2370 Hiwassee Cir., Kingsport,
Tenn. 37664 J22
Pcnn, Richard K.; Tranquil Courts Apt. 4, Betha-
nia Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C. 243
Pcnnell, Peggy L.; Rt. 1, Box 310, Boomer, NC
28606 172, 253
Penry. John R., Jr.; Box 63. Southmont, NC
27351 276
Perkins, Thomas J.; 3453 Thornwood Dr., Bethel
Park, Pa. 15102 . , .271
Perkinson, John R., Jr.; 112 Rectory St., PO
Box 1247. Oxford, N.C. 27565 ' 166, 271
Pcrrctz, Robert L., Jr.; 272 Sangamow, Park For-
est. III. 60466 228, 243
Perry, Paula C; 2212 The Plaza, Charlotte, NC
28205 27,
Ferryman, Randolph G.; 305 West Second St
Lexington, N.C. 27292 106, 260
Peters, Kitty; 6200 Mavnada St., Coral Gables
Fla. 33146 271
Peterson, Barbara E.; 419 West Main St., Forest
City, N.C. 253
Peterson, Carl A.; 125 Laurel Ave., Irvington
N.J. 07111 6271
Peterson. Dorothy J.; Harrells, N.C. 243
Petrino, Robert A.; 70 N. Crest Ave Hamilton
Sc|., N.J. 08690 . 2?9 271
Pettit, Ruth M.; 1418 Ebert St., Winston-Salem,
N-c 253
Pezzicola, Michael L.; 960 Lanning Ave., Tren-
ton, N.J. 08638 179 253
Pfaff James S.; 32-F College Village, Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27104 ... 276
Pfister. Jeannie L.; 1501 Griffith Rd., Monroe,
N-C- 28H0 .. 105, 172,243
Phelps, Frances C; 10008 Holmhurst Rd., Be-
thesda, Md. 20034 . . . . 271
Phillips, Anne C; 100 Kemp Rd., W., Greens-
boro, N.C. .... 182, 243
Phillips, Barbara A.; 2021 Colorado Ave., Ports-
mouth, Va. 23701 253
Phillips, Harold D„ Jr.; 701 Central Ave., Laurel
Del. 19956 ..... 179 253
Phillips, Wilson H„ Jr.; Box 297, 1704 Cypress
Dr., Henderson, N.C. 27536 260
Ph.lpott, Frederick C; 11 Vance St., Lexington
N.C. 27292 228,260
Picklesimer, John D.; 69 Pease Ave., Verona, N J
07044 118, 179
Pierce, Linda J.; 1947 Lansdale Dr., Charlotte
N-C 28205 260
Pierce, Mary L.; Box 187, Sunbury
N.C. 27979 ... 271
Pierce. Susan K.; Apt. D-3, 2001 21st Ave
S. Nashville. Tenn. 37212 . . . 106 271
Piercy, Fred P.; 720 Chester Ave., Riverside, N J
„.,l,8»75 179,253
Pike, Judith L.; 98 Blue Ridge Ave., Asheville
N.C. 28806 . . . . . 260
Pilcher, Judith C.J Rt. 1, Box 315, Lewisville
N.C. 27023 271
Pinkleton, Dennis L.; 3927 Decatur St., Rich-
mond, Va. 23224 181, 260
Pinson. Pamela; Fjiruew Addition, Box 433, Wil-
liamson, W.Va. 25661 172, 253
Pinson, Paul E.; Box 336, Williamson, W.Va
2566' . .243
Pister, Mark A.; 9 Lake Dr., W., Wayne, N I
07470 . 271
Pitt. Walter W.. Jr.; 920 Western Ave., Rocky
Mount, N.C. 27801 275
Pittard. William B„ III.; 5432 E. Princess Anne
Rd., Norfolk, Va. 23502 243
Pittman, Dorn C; 2515 Pineway Dr., Burlington,
N.C. *260
Pittman, Douglas W.; Rt. 4, Box 70, Marion
N.C. 28752 271
Planting, Mark A.; 6231 N. 28th St., Arlington,
Va. 22207 S27l
Pleasant, Glenn M.; 2425 Mirror Lake Dr., Fay-
etteville, N.C. 28303 186.253
Plott, Floyd E.; 2900-B Kings Ridge Rd., Balti-
more, Md. 21234 260
Plummer, Randall R.; Box 355. Henrietta,
NC . . . . 261
Poe. Randall R.; 1521 Crescent Dr., Kingsport,
Tenn. 37664 253
Poe, William E., Jr.; 2101 Collision PI., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28207 271
Poindexter, Larry G.; Rt 1 Siloam
N.C. 27047 243
Polifka, Donald K„ Jr.; 9220 Forest Haven Dr ,
Alexandria, Va. 22309 165, 229, 261
Pons, Larry F.; Rt. 1, Box 325. Valdese,
NC. 228, 261
Pool, Clark L.; 1003 Eldridge St., Washington,
III. 61571 243
Poole, James F.; 25 Roberts Rd., Ashland,
Mass- 229, 261
Poot, Ann C.J Rt. 9, Box 65, Greensboro NC
27409 261
Poplin. Wayne W.; Box 7632, Greensboro, NC
27-t03 ... 243
Porter, Elizabeth E.; Peach Ridge Rd., Athens
Oh„, 45701 95, i84, 261
Porter, John A.; 1039 Holmes St., Salisbury, N.C.
28I'H 93,253
Porter, Robert H.; 939 South 26th St., Arlington,
Va. 22202 g24i
Postcn, Cynthia S.; 3715 Venablc Ave., Charles-
ton, W.Va, 25304 170, 261
2>
)
1
1
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• '■••
i
^^^» ? *
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GOURMET
THRUWAY SHOPPING CENTER
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
QUALITY CRUSHED STONE
FOR EVERY USE
VULCAN MATERIALS COMPANY
Mid-east Division
Winston-Salem
Forty Years Service to the Construction Industry-
Sales Offices
Raleigh, N. C. — Winston-Salem, N. C. — Richmond, Va. — Danville, Va. — Occoquan, Va.
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Poston, James G.; 3104 Memorial Blvd., King-
sport, Term. 37664 235, 243
Poston, Robert S.; P.O. Box 792, Boiling Springs,
N.C. 243
Potter, lames M.; Woodburn Dr., Rt. 4. Taylors,
S.C.
271
Powell, Charles Cj 1204 Kenan S
Wilson, N.C. 165, 243
Powell, Erwin J.; 218 E. Robert St., Phila
I'.i.
261
Powell, James K.; Winston-Salem, N.C.
27109 . . 228, 243
Powell, Stephen M.; 2 Carnage Ln., Levittown,
N.Y. 11756 261
Powers, Susan E.; Rt. 2, Box 141-T, Franklin,
Va. 23851 93, 261
Powers, Susan G.; Box 95. Lansing, N.C.
28643 159, 162
Prcgnall, Mary A.; 1234 Grandview Dr., Jackson-
ville, Fla. 32211 132, 182, 261
Prcslar, Len B„ Jr.; 114 Glendale Ave., S.E..
Box 1182, Concord, N.C. 28025 ... 168
Preston. Beverly J.; Rt. 4, Box 356-P, Gainesville,
Fla. 32601 . . 105. 261
Preston, Jo A.; 6125 Gatepost Rd„ Charlotte,
N.C. 28211 105, 261
Preston, Thomas B.; P.O. 7747, Winston-Salem,
N.C. 174
Preston, William G.; 4213 Washington Ave.,
Charleston. W.Va. 25304 174
Price, Jimmy D.; 1703 South Perry St., Gastonia,
N.C. 28052 253
Price, Nancy J.; 312 Myrtle Ln., AltaVista, Va.
24517 182, 261
Price, Randy L.; 54 Clinton Ave., Waverly, N.Y.
14892 261
Pritchcrt, William W., Jr.: 5513 Forest View Dr.,
Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 276
Pruette. Ronald D.; 1115 Cedarwood Ln., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28212 179, 271
Puckctt, Joe L., Ill; Rt. 1, Huntersville,
N.C. 261
Puckett, L. H., Jr.; 14 Aspenwood Dr.. Hamp-
ton, Va. 23360 271
Pugh, David S., Jr.; 806 Chattawka Ln., New
Kern, N.C. 28560 93. 174, 182, 235, 237. 243
Pulliam. Chreyl L.; 2420 Country Club Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 243
Pulliam, James M.; Rt. 3, Box 436, Ridgeway, Va.
21148 . 181,243
Punger, Douglas S.; 88 Chester Rd., Lvnbrook,
N.Y. 156
Putnam, James L.; Ill Leroy St., Potsdam, N.Y.
13676 261
Pyron, Jimmy C; 515 Bryant St., Leaksvillc,
N.C. 253
Quale. Christopher D.; 13 Twin Hills Rd.. Pough-
keepsie, N.Y. 12603 118, 177
Queen, John S.; P.O. Box 910, Logan, W.Va.
25601 261
Queen, Michael G.; 110 Honeysuckle Ln., Hunt-
ington, W.Va. 25701 243
Quigg, Timothy L.; 43 Loraine Ave., Pleasant-
ville, N.J. 261
Radford, Wanda L.; Box 427, ClifTsule, N.C.
2KH24 172,253
Rainev, James E.; 668 Maple Ave.. Ashcboro,
N.C. ... 127
Raisncr, William R., Jr.; 1101 Barclay Ter„ Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 186, 253
Ramsey, Douglas R.; Box 32. Martinsville. Va.
: i 1 1 :
253
Randall. Jay C; 1304 Perry Park Dr., Kinston,
N.C. 28501 168, 229
Randolph, Doris G.; Rt. 1, Pfafftown, N.C.
27040 78, 276
Rankin, Edward S.; 610 West 12th Ave., Gas-
tonia, N.C. 261
Rapela, Maria C; 1850 Runnvmede. Winston-
Salem, N.C 271
Raj-din, Richard L.; Rt. 12, Box 90, Roanoke,
Va. 24017 271
RatlifJ, Jennie F.; 2915 Oak Grove, Bluefield,
W.Va. 24701 243
Rausch, James A.; Box 102, Woodlawn Ave.,
East Schodack, N.Y. 12063 229, 271
Reavis. Janice G.; Rt. 2, Harmonv, N. C.
28634 . . 159, 261
Reavis, Richmond G.; Rt. 2, Harmony, N.C.
28634 253
Redden, Charles R.; Rt. 2, Clemmons, N.C.
27102 ... 243
Redding, Donna J.; Box 518, Rural Hall. N.C.
27045 105, 243
Redding, Samuel S.; Box 291, Asheboro,
N.C. 181,243
Redfern, Sarah E.; P.O. Box 215, Wadesboro,
N.C. 28170 . ... 271
Reed, Clifford A.; 500 N. Brobst St., Reading,
Pa. 19607 . . 271
Reed, Scott E.; 223 E. Avondale, Greensboro,
N.C. 27403 186, 261
Reeves. Jimmy D.; Crumpler, N.C. 28617 . 261
Rcilly, Robert J.; 150 Harrison St., Garden City,
N.J. 11530 271
Reinhardt, Douglas E.; Rt. 1. Box 309-A, Elkin,
N.C. 28621 85, 243
Reiss, Keith W.; 2580 Owen Dr., Winston-Salem,
N.C. . 277
Renfrew, Raymond R.; 330 Vallev Rd„ Fayette-
ville, N.C. 28305 253
Reynolds, David A.; Apt. 2-F, 205 Second Ave.,
Belmar, N.J. 161, 243
Reynolds. John L.; 3366 Nottingham Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 253
Rhoads, Robert R.; R.D. 6, Menier, Pa.
16137 271
Rhymer, Janet E.; 3039 Club Dr.. Gastonia, N.C.
28052 271
Rice, Don S.; 110 Fidlcr Ln., Apt. 411, Silver
Spring. Md. 20910 133, 253
Rice, James C; 808 Birch Crest, Statesville, N.C.
28677 149
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Rich, John M.; Box 203, Wake Forest, N.C.
275X7 127, 276
Rich, Thomas L., Ill; Box 663, Fairmont, N.C.
28340 ... . ... 261
Richards, Peter S.; 1004 Sweitzer Rd., McKees-
port. Pa. 15135 271
Richardson, Donald S.; Yates Ave., Ridgecrest,
N.C. 28770 85, 271
Richardson, James C, Jr.; 820 Kenwick Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 228, 271
Richardson, Mark E.; 2208 Inwood Dr., Hunting-
ton, W.Va. 25701 271
Richman, Daniel J.; 3903 Madison Ave., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 277
Richmond, Rosalind D.; Dozier Rd., R.F.D. 1,
Pfafttown, N.C. 27040 253
Richmond, Sandra M.; Dozier Rd., Rt. 1, Pfaff-
town, N.C. 27040 271
Ricks. Garland D.; 1605 Grove St., Wilson, N.C.
27893 253
Riggs. Ronald M.; 1001 Maple St., Elizabeth
City, N.C. 27909 271
Riggs, Susan M.; 70 Belmont Dr., Livingston,
N.J. 07039 261
Riordan, Don F„ Jr.; 1003 Ohio Ave., Fort
Pierce, Fla. 33450 228, 243
Riley, Glenn G.; 3103 Hazelton St.. Falls Church,
Va. 22044 243
Rivenbark, Susan F.; 813 Greenwood Dr., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 151, 182, 244
Roach, Edgar M., Jr.; Rt. 2, Box 152, Eden,
N.C. 27288 181, 253
Roach, Frederick E.; 21218 Erie Rd., Rocky
River. Ohio 44116 271
Roark, Gregory A.; 539 Woodland, Ave., Haddon-
field, N.J 177, 244
Robbins, Karen E.; 445 Crandall Dr., Worthing-
ton, Ohio 43085 106, 271
Roberts, David L.; Rt. 4, Box 273, Galax, Va.
24333 244
Roberts, James L.; 444 Sanford Ave., Mocksville,
N.C. 27028 275
Robertson, John F.; 6121 Yellowstone Dr. Alex-
andria, Va. 22312 244
Robertson, Linda G.; Star Rt., Box 1-A, Black
Mountain, N.C. 28711 172, 261
Robertson, Stephen L.; 3219 Anderson Dr., Wins-
ton-Salem, N.C. 27107 271
Robinson, Bruce H.; 2725 Coolcemee Dr., Ral-
eigh, N.C 127
Robinson, Craig G.; 124 N. Travmore Ave., Ivy-
land, Pa. 18974 - 179, 229
Robinson, Deborah, 509 Bouldcrcrest Dr., Mari-
etta, Ga. 30060 170
Robinson, Earl W., Jr.; 106 S. Belvedere, Gas-
tonia, N.C. 28052 181, 253
Robinson, James B.; 3348 Marth Custis Dr., Alex-
andria, Va. 22302 97. 261
Robinson, James E.; 813 8th St. Dr., S.E., Hick-
ory, N.C. 28601 253
Robinson, Jonathan C; 909 Winding Ln„ Media,
Pa. 19063 229, 271
Robinson, Jenny L.; Rt. 3, Box 70, Boone. N.C.
28607 186, 271
Robinson, Linton H.; 2412 Barrington, Fayette-
ville, N.C 261
Robinson, Thomas E.; 2802 Parker Ave., Whea-
ton, S.S., Md. 168, 244
Robinson, Thomas J., Jr.; 424 Redding Rd., Ashe-
bor„, N.C 78, 274
Robinson, Theodore L„ Jr.; 1751 Davis Park
Rd.. Gastonia, N.C. 28052 274
Rodgcrs, Benjamin A.; Briarwood, Martinsburg,
W. Va. 25401 271
Rogers, Carroll D.; 220 Charles Cir., Roxboro.
N.C. 27573 271
Rogers. Stanley G.; 504 Parkway, Bluefield, W.
Va. 24701 .165, 253
Rose, Walter F., Jr.; P.O. Box 506, Ahoskie, N.C.
27910 165, 261
Roseberry, Elizabeth A.; 1501 Wendover Rd.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28211 244
Rosemond, Thomas C, Jr.; 2372 Walker Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 .... 244
Ross, Donald L.; Box 8434, Revnolda Station,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 105, 261
Ross. Richard A.; 910 Green St., Durham, N.C.
27701 276
Rowc, Felix A., Jr.; 112-A Wake Forest Apts.,
Faculty Dr., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 244
Rowlett, Joseph P.; 404 Walnut St., Washington,
N.C. 27889 271
Royster, Michael F-;
R"\M
Rube
Stephe
F.;
Box 204,
Grc
ver, N.C.
.93, 244
G.;
Box 204,
Grc
ver, N.C.
93, 244
:in. Michael H.; 824 Peninsula Dr., Or-
mond Beach, Fla. 167. 228, 254
Ruckcr, Lynn A.; 11010 Wonderland Trail, Dal-
las. Tex. 75229 271
Ruckcr, William W.; 1530 Ovcrbrook Ave., Wins-
ton-Salcm. N.C. 27104 . . . . 177, 254
Ruffin, Julian E.; 709 Cokey Rd., Rocky Mount.
N.C. 27801 271
Ruppe, Charles H.; Rt. 4, Box 130, Rutherford-
ton, N.C. 28139 271
Russell, Phillip K.; 1111 Kent Rd., Raleigh, N.C.
27606 188, 244
Russell, Robert J.; 3126 Oakdale Rd., S.W. Roa-
noke, Va. 24018 105, 271
Rutherford, J.; Mossville, 111. 61552 186
Ryder. Lee K.; 2237 North Trenton St., Arling-
ton, Va. 22207 261
Sabroske. Anne E.; 1150 Country Club Dr.. Find-
lay, Ohio 45840 182, 254
Saeman, Betty A.; 210 Tenth St., S.E. Conove
N.C.
C.J Rt. 1, Box 28
95, 244
Salter, Wynne C.j Rt. 1, Box 289, Leesburg, Va.
22U75 .271
Sailer, Christopher A; 3600 Montchanin Rd.,
Wilmington, Del. 19807 186, 244
Saine, Jimmy D.; Vale, N.C. 19807 281, 244
Saintsing, Barbara N.; 2420 Claremont Dr., Falls
Church, Va. 22043 254
STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Samuels, Ann M.; 247 N. Purdue, Oak Ridge,
Tenn. 37830 271
Sanders, Sandy E.; 1963 Ferncliff Rd., Charlotte
N.C. 28211 ........ 161, 254
Sanford, Ruth E.; 2727 Hampton Ave. Charlotte
N.C. 28207 184
Sangcs, Lee N.; -160 E. Cannon Ave., Albemarle
N.C. 28001 105, 244
Sansing, Ronald N.j 908 Lunsford PI., Charlotte,
N.C. 28205 261
Sasser, Carl M.; Apt. 3, Powers Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 . 228
Sasser, Lours A.; P.O. Box 248, Elizabethtown,
N.C. 28337 254
Saunders, Dariel L.; Rt. 8, Hilltop Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 44
Saunders, Glenn R.; 27 Andrews Rd., Malvern,
Pa. 19355 254
Saunders, Wyatt T., Jr.; Box 153, Clemmons,
N.C. 27012 274
Savage, Helen S.; Box 414, Morehead City, N.C.
28556 261
Savage, Paul C.j 4851 Myrtle Ave., Cincinnati,
Ohio 45242 177, 228
Sawyer, Janet C; 2000 Stonehurst Dr., Nash-
ville, Tenn. 37215 106, 271
Sayers. Dennis M.; 6402 Arrow Dr., Lisle, 111. 115
Saylor, Phillip L.; 4130 Winchester Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 105, 254
Scarborough, Robert E„ Jr.; 112 N. Jackson St,
Spray, N.C. 27352 271
Scaro, Judith E.; P.O. Box 56, Franklinville, N.C.
27248 105
Schaeff, Charles B., HI; 606 Horseman Dr.,
Lynchburg, Va. 24502 106, 271
Schaffer, John P.; 636 Prospect St., Westfield,
N.J. 07090 244
Schaub, Sandy S.; 65 Pt. Watson St., Cortland,
N.Y. 13045 118
Scheib, William H.; 150 Broad St., Leetsdale,
Pa. 15056 ... 228
Schenkemeyer, Robert W.; 2000 Sunshine Ave.,
Johnstown, Pa. 15905 . 105, 271
Scherer, Marian L.; 7606 Loannes Ct., Cincinnati,
Ohm 45243 93, 184, 261
Schiller, Donald J.; 542 18th St., West Babylon,
N.Y. 11704 271
Schilling, Charles H., Jr.; Quarters 70. West
Point, N.Y. 10996 ... 85, 271
Schimert, Peter G.; 21 Dewberry PL, Hauppauge,
N.Y. 11787 271
Schiro, Gregory W.; 150 Berkshire Rd., Has-
brouck Heights, N.J. 07604 276
Schnebly, John L.; R.F.D. 3, Hagerstown, Md.
21740 ,272
Schock, Robert C, 71 Interlaken Ave., New
Rochelle, N.Y. 10801 . . . 261
Schoonmaker, Meyressa H.; 216 Carter Cir.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 ...... 274
Schramm, John J.; 1640 Northwest Blvd., Apt. 7,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 127
Schroder, Brigitte; Trmgardstrasse 8, I Berlin 37.
Germany . 277
Schroeder, Gary H.; 1059 E. Polo Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27109 . 261
Schultz, Chester G.; 76 E. Broadway, Gettysburg,
Pa. 17325 . .. . 276
Schultz, Louis P.; 106-B W.F. Student Apts
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 244
Schuster, Barry M.; 4345 Silverwood Ln„ Jack-
sonville, Fla. 32207 272
Schvimmer, Theodore A.; 562 Bellevue Ave
Trenton, N.J. 08618 . . . 274
Scott, Newton W., m.; Rt. 1, Pfafftown, N.C.
229, 244
Scott, Susan A.; Rt. 3, Box 355, Greensboro, N.C.
27-fl0 105, 244
Scripture, Willie J.; 1504 Lineham Ct., Virginia
Beach ,Va. 23458 , , 229, 272
Seamon, Wesley B.; 2003 South Ridge Ave
Kannapolis, N.C. 28081 26l'
Seanor, Sara L.; 763 Houston Mill Rd , Atlanta
Ga. 30329 H8, 244
Scarle, John R.; 136 Vivion Dr., Aiken, SC
25801 106, 254
Searle, Stephen H.; 110 E. King St., Shippens-
burg, Pa. 17257 244
Sears, Lester Dupuy; Rt. 3, Box 606. Farmville
Va. 23901 85i 93| 272
Seaver, Thomas A.; 911 Pamlico Dr., Greensboro
N.C. 27408 272
Sedberry, William M.; P.O. Box 4, Woodleaf,
N.C. 27054 261
Seibert, Richard A.; 58 Brown St., Bloomfield,
Conn. 06002 105, 179
Scidle, Joseph W.; Spring Mill Rd., Gladwyne,
Pa. 19035 174, 254
Seila, Robert L.; 129 Circle Dr., Lenoir, NC
28645 244
Selfridge, Gordon P.; 638 Lenox Ave., West-
field, N.J. 07090 229, 272
Sell, Mercer Brannon; 1802 Curtis Dr., North
Augusta, S.C. 29S4I 272
Setterstrom, Linda A.; 84 River Bend Dr., Ches-
terfield, Mo. 63017 272
Settle, Charles R.; 1325 Maple St., Elkin, NC
28621 . . . 105, 254
Severn, Christine B.; 4 Pine Tree Rd., Asheville,
N.C. 28804 .. 172, 261
Sexton, Betty L.; 210-B Student Apts., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 .244
Shackleford, Brenda F.; 201 W. Pollock St„
Mount Olive, N.C. 28365 272
Shafer, Donald T.; 6500 Cellini St., Coral Ga-
II,
261
Shaffer, Lenda K.; 105 S. 3rd Ave., Mayodan,
N.C. 27027 .255
Shallcross Joan M.; 1109 S. Vermont St.. Smith-
field ,N.C. 27577 172, 261
Shannon, Daniel S.; 399 N. Edison St., Arling-
ton, Va. 22203 272
Sharpe, Bruce E.; 604 McNeill Rd., Silver Spring,
Md. 20910 261, 285
Shaw, Beverly A.; 3715 Severn Ave., Charlotte,
N.C. 28210 261
Shaw, Michael E.; 540 Kerper St., Philadelphia,
Pa. lr'l 11 156, 254
Shaw, Phillip C; Rt. 1, Four Oaks, N.C. 27524
274
Shearin, Norman W., Jr.; 512 Bethelhcm Rd.,
Rocky Mount, N.C. 27801 276
Sheffer, James S.; 727 N. Oak St., Hinsdale, 111.
60521 254
Sheffield. Michael M.; 4785 Long Island Dr.
Atlanta, Ga. 30305 272
Shelton, Teddy Dale; Rt. 1, Pilot Mountain, N.C.
254
Sheola, Richard Arthur; 8% Gates St., Phillips-
burg, N.J. 08865 181.244
Shepard .Betty Yvonne; Rt. 1, Monroe, N.C.
28110 272
Shepherd, Robert Morehead, Jr.; 5066 Edgemere
Blvd., Richmond, Va. 23234 272
Shervette, Lucie Geraldine; 310 W. Burnette Ave.,
Enfield, N.C. 27823 276
Shiflett, Doug Wayne; 1137 Sunneymede Dr.,
Jacksonville, Fla. 32211 261
Shoaf, Richard Allen; 420 North Salisbury St.,
Lexington, N.C. 27292 119
Shore, Henry Baascom; Rt. a, East Bend, N.C.
27018 . . .. 275
Shouse, Timothy Lee, 4435 Graccmont Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 85, 261
Shue, Jeffrey Lee; RD. 1, Dallastown, Pa. 17313
272
Shuford, Tolly Martin; 412 Fulton Rd., Kings
Mountain, N.C. 28086 ... 186, 254
Shumate. Samuel Stilwell, Jr.; Box 185, Charlton
Heights, W. Va. 25040 . 272
Shuping, Mack R.; Rt. 2, Box 742, Salisbury,
N.C. 28144 261
Siccloff, David Marvin; 1 Canterbury PL, Box
868, Lexington, N.C. 27292 186, 244
Siewers, Christian Nathaniel; 1908 Winterlochen
Rd.. Fayettevillc, N.C. 28305 254
Simmons, George Charles, 111; Rt. 5, Box 824,
Morganton. N.C. . . 127, 274
is, Robert Franklin; 308 W. Poinsett St.,
Gr,
9651
272
Simpson. Deborah Sue; 919 Clarke Rd., Mar
tinsville, Va. 24112 254
Simpson, John Paul; 2612 Dover Rd., Raleigh
N.C. 27608 244
Simpson, Ralph Allen; 6735 Linen Lake Dr ,
Charlotte, N.C. 28212 97, 98, 101, 244, 235
Singhas, Charles Alexander; 10220 Pohick Rd.,
Fairfax Station, Va. 22030 . . 277
Singhas, Susan Sodeman; 4416 Old Town Dr.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 244
Singletary, Norman Ivey; 3421 Pennington Ln ,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 78, 274
Singleton, Antoinette Estelle; 9515 Burke View
Ct., Burke, Va. 22015 272
Sink, Adelaide Alexander; Rt. 7, Hollyview Farm
Mount Airy, N.C. 27030 .261
Sink, Richard Miller; Hillside Dr., Rt. 1, Thom-
asville, N.C. 27360 254
Sirkel, Kathleen Ann; 105 Kimberly Ter., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27408 .272
Sizemore, Thomas Dcward; 190(1 Faculty Dr.,
Box 7304, Renolda Station, Winston-Salem,
N.C. 272
Skeen, Hallie loyce; Rt. 5, Box 127, High Point,
N.C. 27263 272
Sklutas, Thomas M.; 130 Gabrielle St., Man-
chester, N.H. 03103 . 228, 254
Slate, John William, III; 301 Shadow Valley,
High Point, N.C. 106, 167, 254
Slaton, David G.; 27100 Ridge Road, Damascus,
Md. 20750 181, 228
Slaybecker, R. Scott A.; Research Analysis Corp.,
McLean, Va 85, 272
Slaydon, Roger James; 755 Westview Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27103 272
Slessman, Pattijane; 8708 Cromwell Dr., Spring-
field, Va. 22151 . . .105, 272
Slinkard, Michael Eugene; 3502 Epsilon PL, An-
nadale, Va. 22003 106, 272
Sloan, Cyrus Thompson, III; 207 Withlacoochee
Ave., Marion, S.C. 29571 261
Sloan, George; 134 Wintergreen Rd., Wilming-
ton, N.C. 28401 . 272
Sloan, James Laurence; 708 Enderby Dr., Alexan-
dria. Va. 277
Slonaker, E. Thomas; 4 Tyler Court, Ellicott
City, Md. 21043 261
Slone, James Seymour; 489 West St., Paintsville,
Ky. 41240 106
Sloss, Richard L.; 2332 Banchory Rd., Winter
Park, Fla. . . . . . 161, 254
Small, Alden Thomas; 3-D Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 275
Smart, Susan Gail; 128 N. Main St., Rutherford-
ton, N.C. 28139 . 272
Smellcy, James Hamlett; 915 Carolina Ave., N.W.,
Apt. B, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 254
Smith, Archie Leak. Jr.; 2827-C. Teakwood Court.
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 127
Smith, Barry Adrian; 404 Bethel Dr., Salisbury,
N.C. 261
Smith, Betty Jane; 203 South Hawthorne Rd.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 . 182, 261
Smith, Charles Crowe; 2211 Waraick Ln., Colo-
rado Springs, Colo. 80909 244
Smith. David Allen; 39 Wake Forest Trailer Park,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 118,228,244
Smith, Donald Dawson; 2813 River Rd„ Virginia
Beach, Va. 23454 174, 245
Smith. Darrell Lee; Georgetown Apts. (1), Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 165, 254
Smith, Elizabeth Ann; Box 93, Newell, N.C.
28126 254
Smith, Elizabeth Ann; 84503 Greenview Rd., New
Bern, N.C. 28560 254
Smith, Elizabeth Bryan, 115 Wavnewood Dr
Waynesville, N.C. 28786 105, 261
Smith, Everette Grover, Jr.; 706 Chapel St., Kan-
nap,,!. s, N.C. 28081 254
Smith, Earl WUson; Rt. 1, Box 35, Jackson
Springs, N.C. 27281 .. 245
Smith, Gregory James; 18 Split Oak Dr., East
Norwich, N.Y. 11732 261
Smith, Gerald Lomax; 129 Sunset Dr., Westview
Apts., Winston-Salem, N.C. 27292 272
Smith, James Fulton; 25-C College Village, Win-
ston-Salem, N.C 245
Smith, James Ivey; Fountain. N.C. 27827
165, 228
Smith, Judy Lynne; 917 Rainey St., Burlington,
N.C. 27215 261
Smith, Kenneth Alden; P.O. Box 245, Pilot Moun-
tain, N.C. 27041 . . 274
Smith, Mahon Thornly; 23 Timberlake Dr., Green-
ville, S.C. 29609 , . 228, 272
Smith, Philip J.; 192 N. Chancellor St., New-
town, Pa. 18941) 179, 245
Smith, Robert Gerald; P.O. Box 544, Umatilla.
Fla. 32784 . . 272
Smith. Robert Marshall; 113 Cold Indian Springs
Road, Asbury Park, N.J. 07712 254
Smith, Suzi Diann; 39 Memorial Rd., W., Cald-
well, N.J. 07007 254
JnOOTE & DAVIES
POST OFFICE BOX 1000 — DORAV1LLE, GEORGIA 30040
IVISION OF McCALL CORPORATION
Creative Yearbooks . . .
A result of professional
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superior production flexibility,
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STUDENT INDEX— Continued
Smith, Sylvia Darlene: 1276 Camino Palomera.
Santa Barbara. Calif. 93105 . 272
Smith. Susan Marie; 7973 Kirkland Dr.. Cincin-
nati, Ohio 45224 159. 254
Smith. Tamara Lane; 24 Monticello Dr., Lexing-
ton, N.C. 272"2 ... 261
Smith. William Alvan; 26U East Broad St., Box
208, Camilla, Ga. 31730 118, 177, 245
Smith, William Eugene; 818 N. Eugene St..
Greensboro, N'.C. 27401 105, 254
Smith, William Jefferson; 1065 Tarvia St., Val-
desc, N.C. 127, 274
Smithson, Helen Ruth; 933 Campbell Ave., Ham-
ilton, Ohio 45IJ11 245
Snapp. Deborah D.; 3518 Ravmoor Rd.. Kensing-
ton, Md. 20795 95. lis. 182, 234, 245
Sned. William H-, Jr.; 300 W. Marsh St., Salis-
bury, N.C. 245, 265
Snider, Carolyn Jean; 2808 English Rd.. High
Point, N.C. 27260 123, 254
Snipes, Charles Durant, Jr.; 3807 Madison Ave.,
Greensboro. N.C. 228, 254
Snow, Jerrie Marion; Siloam, N.C. 27047 261
Snvder, James Eugene, Jr.; 402 Park St., Lexing-
ton. N.C. 78, 127, 276
Snyder, Loretta Kay; 603 Knollwood St., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C 254
Solomon, James Howard; 4320 37th Road N„
Arlington. Va. 22207 . 118, 245
Soper. Barbara Lee; 8115 Hartford Ave., Silver
Spring, Md. 20910 . . 245
Soper, Dorothy Anne; 8115 Hartford Ave., Silver
Spring, Md. 20910 272
Spainhour, Randolph Fletcher; 181 South Prospect
St., P.O. Box 177, Lenoir. N.C. 28645 254
Sparling, Daniel L.; P.O. Box 7331, Winston-
Salem, N.C 179, 245
Spaul, Wil Aaron; 3939 Richlands Ave., N.W.,
Roanoke, Va. 24012 272
Spears, James Bernard, Jr.; Rt. 7, Shelbv, N.C.
28150 . . 262
.Speas, Edwin Marion, Jr.; Box 4, Boonville, N.C.
27011 276
Speas, John Kelly; Box 4, Boonville, N.C. 27011
. 245
Spencer, George Franklin; 77 Louise Dr., S.E.
Concord, N.C. 168
Spencer. Richard Michael; 339 N. Bridge St.,
Jonesville, N.C. 262
Spindler, Carolyn Hertzler; 5038 Pine Ridge Dr.,
Winston-Salem. N.C. 27106 262
Spivey, John Hubert; Rt. 2. Box 20, Rocking-
ham, N.C. 28379 .174
Spivey, Willie Daniel; 202 Wcstdale Rd.. Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27101 272
Spooner, James Pierce; 345 Lester Rd., Spring-
field, Pa. 19064 254
Sprinkle. James Hcrschel; Box 425, Marshall.
N.C. 28753 262
Spurr, Charles Lewis; 1845 Buena Vista Rd.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 177
Spurr. Elmer Ray; 1613 Dawson Ln., Shawnee.
Okla. 74801 262
Stainback, David Arnold; 2221 Buttonwooil Rd.,
Berwyn, Pa. 19312 186, 262
Stainback. Paul Jerald; P.O. Box 545, Henderson,
N.C. 27536 106, 272
Stallings, Howard Craige; 312 Newton St., Silen-
cer, N.C. 254
Stanback, Howard Jan; 2401 Reel Oak Ave.,
Durham, N.C. 27707 228
Stancil. Roger Lane; 321 S. Howell St., Rocky
Mount, N.C. 27801 272
Stanfield, Jo Ann; Box 488, Reidsville, N.C.
27320 ... 272
Stange, Richard Thomas; 4 Bardcn PL, Livingston,
N.J. 07039 254
Stanley, David Wolfe; 1993 Maryland Ave.,
Charlotte, N.C. 165, 228, 262
Staples, Charmellc; 6912 Gill Creek Rd., Colum-
bia, S.C. 29206 172, 262
Starck, Carolina Louise; 112 Asharoken Ave.,
Northport, N.Y. 11768 254
Starling. Thomas Williams; 603 S. Grandview
Ave., Daytona Beach, Fla. 32015 181, 245
Starmer, James Ernest, Jr.; 2417 Lawnd.ile Dr.,
Greensboro. N.C. 27408 106
Stauch, Alan Richard; lr'3 Britt Rd., East Hart-
ford, Conn. 06118 188, 245
Steed, James Marsh; 2920 Freeman Mill Rd.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27406 ... 254
Steele, Mary Alice; 2431 Randolph Rd., Char-
lotte, N.C. 2S2"7 254
StefTcns. Margaret Clinton; Box 27, Brvantown,
Md. 2111,17 272
Steffev, James Bruce; 107-A Student Apartments,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 245
Steffey, (Mrs.) Ramona Jolley; 615 East Main
St.. Spindale, N.C. 28160 272
Steifel. Emily L.; 220 Kensington Rd., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27403 93, "5, 116, 184. 234, 245
Stein. Helen Paulette; 1005 Blondwood Dr., Rocky
Mi., N.C. 27801 172, 245
Steiner, Charles Vemon, Jr.; 12418 Buckingham
St., Chester. Va. 23831 85, 161
Stilling, Marv Kathcrine; 811 Hammond Dr..
North Augusta, S.C. 29841 105, 184. 228,
254
Stellrecht, Earl Raymond, Jr.; 14 Bradley Ave.,
Cuba. N.Y. 14727 272
Stephens, Joel Edwin; 5314 Main St., Lons. S.C.
29569 106, 254
Stephens, Robert Clifton, Jr.; 3018 Gilmer Ave.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 27105 127, 276
Stephenson, Emily Ann; 8 Hillcrcst Dr., Lexing-
ton. N.C. 27292 272
Stevenson, Rebecca; 550 11th Ave. Cir., N.W..
Hickory, N.C. 2S601 93, 118, 182, 237, 245
Stewart, Floyd Eugene, Jr.; 205 Mimosa Dr.,
Rome. Ga. 30161 168. 262
Stewart, Terry G.; Box 725, Havcrlock. N.C.
161, 262
Stiff, Marilvn Elaine; P.O. Box 578, Valdese,
N.C. 28690 172, 262
Stiles. Peter Morrison; 3813 School House Ln.,
Charlotte, N.C. 28211 105, 161, 254
Stillwell. Walter Brooks; 50 Richmond Dr., Sa-
vannah, Ga. 31406 100, 118, 235, 245
Stokes, Douglas Dwight; 916 North 1 6th St.,
Albemarle, N.C. 154, 167. 245
Stoltz, Anne Benton; 2525 Techwood Dr., Colum-
bus, Ga. 31906 182. 245
Stone, Anita Elizabeth; 131 Rivervicw Dr., St.
Albans, W. Va. 25177 262
Stone, John Everett, Jr.; 3138 Skvland Dr.. Kings-
port, Tcnn. 37664 106, 177, 254
Stone. James Thomas; 2101 Dixie Trail. Raleigh,
N.C. 177, 188, 262
Stone, Marcia Barrow; 4019 Lake Dr., S. W.,
Roanoke. Va. 24018 262
Stoops, David H.; R.F.D. 7, Kittanning, Pa.
16201 272
Storie. Pamela Elizabeth; 514 Lakeside Dr.,States-
villc, N.C. 28677 245
Stott, Jeanne LaRoque; 1017 Gardner St., Raleigh,
N.C. 27607 182, 254
Stoudcnmire. Marv Day; 808 Fastovcr Cir.. Dc-
lanel. Fla. 32720 262
Stouffer. Mvron Thomas; 3315 Windsor Rd„
S.W., Roanoke, Va. 127
Stout, William Richard; 534 Wile Ave., Souder-
tun, Pa. 18964 177, 228
Streblow, George Frederick, Jr.; 801 Forest Ave..
LaGrange, Ga. 254
Streitz, Wayne Campbell; Silver Ln., Clayton,
N.J. 08312 127
Strickland, Bennie Randolph; 1013 Romaine, Tar-
boro, N.C. 27886 228. 272
Strickland. Patricia Ann; Box 226, Pine Level,
N.C. 27568 162, 262
Strickling, Albert Jackson; 8442 N. Keystone
Ave., Skokic, 111. 60076 181, 262
Stringtellow. Laura Andell; 6004 Roosevelt St.,
Bethesel.i. Md. 20034 . 272
Stringficld, Preston Calvin, IH; Box 1911. Hick-
ory, N.C. 28601 118
Strosnidcr, Richard Barry; Mount Jackson. Va.
22M2
118
Stroupc, David Henry; Box 7323 Reynolds Sta-
tion, Winston-Salem, N.C. 229, 234, 245
Stuart. Albert, III; 104 Windsor Way, Richmond,
Va. 23221 272
Stuart. Andrew James; 307 Alders Dr., Wilming-
ton, Del. 19803 272
Stuart, Ann Rankin; Box 806, Badin, N.C.
28009 245
Stuctzcr, Thomas N.; 7 Cordis St.. Wakefielel,
Mass. 177, 228. 245
Sueur. Rcbekah Elizabeth; 369 Ccilar St., Moorcs-
ville, N.C. 172, 179, 262
Sugg, Charles Francis, Jr.; 112 W. Greene St.,
Snow Hill, N.C. 28580 262
, Freddie S.; 590 Blue Hill Ave., Boston,
12 121 156, 228
s, Roger Craig; 524 6th St., N.W., Hick-
ory, N.C. 28601 . 167, 245
Summey, William P.; Box 1238, Gastonia, N.C.
... 167
Sumner, Robert Warren; 2013 S. Mcbane St.,
Burlington, N.C. 127
Sutherland, Robert M.; 1115 Fourth Ave., W.,
Hentlersonville. N.C. 28739 168
Suails, Paul (Sonny) T.; Box 501, Rt. 3, Rock-
ingham, N.C. ... 229, 233, 245
Swaim, Joel Craig; 703 Engleman Ave., Burling-
ton, N.C. 27215 . 165, 262
Swanson, Shirley Elaine; 1631 Norfolk Ave.,
Winter Park, Fla. 32789 272
Swartz, Mary Karen; 5916 Wilmett Rd., Bethesda,
Md. 20034 27, 154, 234, 245
Sweazley, Larry Bruce; Box 205-C, R.D. 1, James-
burg, N.J. 08810 272
Sweet, Stephen Young; 378 Fieldstone Rd.,
Mooresvillc, N.C. 28115 85, 106, 118, 245
Swenholt, Susan Lela; 3414 Barger Dr., Falls
Church. Va. 22044 272
Swenson, Norman Virgil, Jr.; 4729 Addison Dr..
Charlotte, N.C. 28211 167, 228
Sykes, Marian Jean; 2228 Lacy St., Burlington,
N.C. 27215 254
Szabo. Emil Robert; 630 E. 16th St., Berwick,
Pa. 18603 . . .. 272
Tadlock, Thomas Callie, Jr.; 1008 E. Franklin
St., Monroe, N.C. 28110 262
Taggart. John Frederick; Box 167, New Fairfield,
Conn. 06810 229, 262
Talbott, Carol Elaine; 1607 W. Davis St., Bur-
lington, N.C. 27105 159, 254
Taliaferro, David Andrew; Rt. 2, Box 6, Center
Cross, Va. 22437 85, 186. 254
Tallev, Ernest, III; Rt. 2, Randleman, N.C. 27317
245
Tantum, John Ellwood; Robbinsville Rd., Rob-
binsville, N.J. 181, 262
Tate, Donald Keith; 840 E. 6th Ave., Gastonia,
N.C. 28052 168, 254
Tate, John Lewis; 2803 169th Ave., S.E., Belle-
vue. Wash. 98004 254
Tvlerson, Robert Stanley; 1 Fern Ter., Wayne,
N.J. 07470 127. 274
Taylor. Charles MacLellan; 310 Townes St., Dan-
24541
161, 272
Taylo
, James Quentin, Jr.
Sev
rn, N.C. 27877
Taylo
, Jeffrey Stanton; 102
Lin
vood, N.J. 08221
Taylo
, Louis Laverne, Jr
Ma
P...
85, 179, 262
e-Lvnnc Blvd.,
254
Jr.; 205 W. 15th St..
Washington, N.C. 27889 . 179, 254
Taylor, Margaret (Peggy) Glenn; 348 Forest Hills,
Wilkesboro, N.C. 28697 182, 262
Taylor, Mary Linda; 752 Saint George Rd.,
Raleigh, N.C. 27610 106, 262
Taylor, William Lloyd; 3201 Archdale Rd., High
Point, N.C. 27203 179, 262
Teague, Milton Lee; 705 West 24th St., Lumber-
ton, N.C. 83, 106, 254
Tcitclman. Steven Richard; Mountain Lodge Apt.
16, Bethania Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C. 174
Templeton, Brcnda Ann; Box 243, Olin, N.C.
28660 95, 118, 245
Templeton, Thomas Stokes, II; 8320 Nicholson
St.. Hyattsville. Md. 20784 . . 254
Tcssnear, Marshall Dean; 18 Poplar St., Forest
Citv, N.C. 28043 254
Thcriault, Joseph H.; 6 Notre Dame St., Nashua,
N.H. 03060 148. 228, 262
This. James Leslie; 7206 Capitol View Dr., Mc-
Lean. Va. 221IU 85, 106, 254
Thomas, Max A.; 205 N. College St., Dallas, N.C.
28034 106, 272
Thomas, Mary E.; 7132 Sherbourne Dr., Char-
lotte, N.C. 28210 - 254
Thomas. Patricia L.; 10100 Quinby St., Silver
Spring, Mil. 20901 254
R.; Rt. 2, Wal
27052
Thompson, Donald W
N.C.
245
Cha
M'
66, The Citadel,
167
Thompson, Leonard S
inburg, N.C
Thompson, Michael D.; 2414 Medway Dr., Ra-
leigh, N.C. 27608 272
n
— - *
rhi
lompson, Randv L.; P.O. Box 34, Haw River.
N.C 27258 . 105, 272
Laura B.; 320 W. Enid Dr., Miami.
1 la
si 4"
Thornton. Nicka Thompson; 2S10 Pclham Place,
Apt. E, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27109 2-15
Thornton, Thomas S.; 2810 Pelham Place, Apt.
E, Georgetown Apts. Winston-Salem, N.C.
127, 275
Thorp. Naomi R.; 3511 N. Potomas St., Arling-
ton, Va. 22213 162, 262
Threewitts. Robert F.; Box 131. R.F.D. 1. Den-
dron, Va. 23839 . 272
Thurner, Larry E.; -104 Seminole Trail. Jackson-
ville, N.C. 2S540 85. 106, 272
Titfanv, James R., Jr.; 60-16 Brook Dr., Falls
Church. Va. 22044 277
Tilghman, Carl L.; Rt. 1, Box 83-F, Beaufort,
N.C. 28516 275
Tilghman, Lynda B.; Rt. 1, Box 83-F, Beaufort,
N.C. 28516 43
Tillev. John L.; 214 Orchard St.. Mr. Airy, N.C.
27030 262
Tilley. Norwood C, Jr.; 1107 Evergreen Cir.,
Rock Hill, S.C. . . 127. 275
Tisdalc. Donald K.: 1125 Polo Rd., Wuiston-
Salcm, N.C. 27106 127. 274
Tobev, Margaret S.; 1200 Girard Dr., Louisville.
Kv. 40222 254
Toburcn, William B.; Wedge Dr.. Rt. I, Pfaff-
town, N.C. 27040 . 85
Todd. Frank L. Jr.; 1529 Ridgewood Ave.. Box
2150. Hendersonville, N.C. 272
Todmann. Norwood L.; 101 W. 147th St.. New-
York, N.Y. 10039 229
Tolbert. Mary A.; 2412-A Stuart Ave.. Richmond,
Va. 23220 .254
Tomlinson. Thomas R.; 1402-B. Paegelow Scott
AFB, III. 245
Tomow. Winston M.; 315 Pine St., Laurinburg,
N.C. 127
Towers. Richard S.; Seven Bridge Rd., Little
Silver, N.J. 127. 274
Towne. Robert M.; 2323 Jomla Ave., Lakeland,
Fla. 33803 272
Townscnd. William A.; 300 Center St., Haddon-
field. N.J. 255
Townscnd. William C; Rt. 4. Box 472. Lum-
berton. N.C. 28358 262
Trent. James W., Jr.; 2223 Elmwood Ave., Dur-
ham, N.C. 27707 262
Trigg. Joyce H.; Cande Div. Hq. Shape. APO,
New York, N.Y. (Mons, Belgium) 182, 262
Triplett. John J.; Neellev Rd., Pleasant Garden,
N.C. 106, 262
Trivettc. Paul S.; 547 3rd St.. N.E. Hickorv,
N.C. 28601 228, 272
Troutman, Sally; 511 Mountain View St., Le-
noir, N.C. 28645 262
Troutman. Susan L.; 1108 E. Hollv St., Golds-
boro. N.C. 27530 255
True. Lillian D.; 1700 Roslvn Dr.. Columbia,
S.C. 29206 . .. 172, 262
Tmlove. E. Earl, Jr.; 610 W. Greene St.. Chcraw.
S.C. . .. 174,245
Tse. Ping Kwan; Box 8098, Reynolda Station.
Winston-Salem. N.C. 27109 245
Tucker, Carl M.; Box 7, Pageland, S.C. 29728
168, 245
Tucker. William M., Jr.; 303 Kensington Rd.,
Greensboro, N.C. 245
Tudor. Wavnc B.; 116 Lake Dale Dr., Trenton,
N.J. 08638 272
Turner, Ben; 4250 Freedom Dr., Charlotte, N.C.
167
Turner. Charles W.; Rt. 6, Frankfort, Ky. 40601
118, 181, 255
Turner, Dorothy K; 3124 Burkeshore Rd.. Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27106 184, 245
Turner, Pamela A.; 2703 Fairway Dr.. Greens-
boro. N.C. 274118 105, 15'', 2=;5
Turner. Susan E.; Rt. 6. Bux 87, Henderson-
ville. N.C. 28739 .... 105
Tutt, Karl F.; 103-B Wake Forest Apts. Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27109 . . . . 245
Tutt. Susan B.; 103-B Student Apts., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27109 255
Turtle. David E.; 1232 Kensington, High Point.
N.C. 27260 255
Tweel, Jeff M.; 2109 Wiltshire Blvd., Box 1986.
Huntington, W. Va. 25701 . 273
Twiddv. Douglas A.; 114 Pembroke. Edenton.
N.C. 2"l's2 141. 235, 245
Twvford. Charles W.; 5510 Bon Air Circle. Nash-
ville, Tenn. 37209 101, 255
Tyner, Carl V, II; 2562 Pinewood Ln„ Gastonia,
N.C. 177, 262
U
Uhbel, Robert D.; 41 Ridgeview Ln., Poland,
Ohio 44514 262
I'mstead. Sara E.; 9900 River Rd., Newport
News. Va. 236IH 93, ''5, 162, 245
Underwood. Emory M.; lohnshorough Apts., Apt.
4. Old Vinevard Rd., Winston-Salem, N.C.
L'ndcrwood. Melinda A.; 499 West Melrose Cir..
Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. 33312 172. 2(,2
Urban. Edmund T.; 414 South 57th Ter.. Hollv-
wood, Fla. 33023 181, 262
Utlev. Robert L., <->>> Pembroke. Favetteville, Ark.
273
Utt. Carol J.; 333 Franklin St., Mt. Airy, N.C.
Valentine, William Keith; 2823 Mavview Rd..
Raleigh. N.C. 27607 273
Van Delinder, David O.; 2°2K Macon St., South
Charleston. W. Va. . . 186. 262
Van Der Plogg. Glen A.; 5 Wagner PI.. Haw-
thorne. N.J. 186, 245
Vann, Kelly R.; Rt. 1, Murfreesboro. N.C. 27855
255
Van Ness, Leonard Paul; 2227 Firethorn Rd.,
Baltimore, Md. 21221) . ... 273
Van Zandt. John P.; Rt. 518. Blawcnburg, N.J.
OS504 . 262
Varellas, Eve H.; Rt. S. Greenville, Tenn.
48, 255
Vaughn. Kristen H.; 3641 Orebank Rd., Kinqs-
port, Tenn. 37664 262
Vaughn, Lucinda Cj 2333 Booker St., Winston-
Salem. N.C. 27105 255
Vehorn. Barbara Cj 5528 Vallev Forge Rd.. Char-
lotte, N.C. 28210 273
Vernon. Walter R.; R.F.D. 1, Roxboro, N.C.
"3
262
Vestal. Frank L.; 145 Stanton Dr.. Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27106 262
Von Cannon, Donald M.; 28 Wake Forest Trailer
Park. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 78. 127. 276
Vosters, James B.; 6120 Moss Ranch Rd., Miami.
Fla. 228
W
Wade, Emilv J.; 4S25 Gulfstream Dr.. Dallas.
Tex. 75234 133. 162, 234, 245
Wager, Larry M.; 18 Southern Dr., Latham,
N.Y. 12110 245
Wagner. David H.; 3440 Cumberland Rd.. Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27105 78. 274
Wagner. Dwight L.; 725 Fcrndale Rd.. Sahsburv.
Md. 2 1 Si ll 276
Wagoner. Donald H.; 1318 Lutz Avenue. Ra-
leigh, N.C. 174
Waitt, Elizabeth G.; 3442 Stratford Rd., N.F ...
Atlanta. Ga. 30305 255
Wakefield. Charles T.; IS Bmscarth Rd., Toronto
5. Canada 228
Walker. Alice A.; 21 15 Link Rd.. Winston-Salem,
N.C. 271H4 273
Walker. Donald E.; 17 Franklin Parkway, West
Long Branch, N.J. 117764 85. 168, 273
Walker, John B.; 1222 Mav Court, Burlington,
N.C. 27215 174, 262
Walker, J. Jeter; 219 Riverside Dr.. Morganton,
N.C. 121. 245
Walker. Richard C; Box FM. Williamsburg, Va.
23185 229, 262
Walker. Russell G.; 2826 Teakwood Court. Apt.
D, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 . 275
Wall. Carroll Cj 410 Countrv Club Dr., Lexing-
ton, N.C. 27292 262
Wall. Laura E.; 209 E. Rav Ave.. High Point.
N.C. 27262 172, 262
Wall. Rebecca A.; RFD 3. Box 3S4, Asheboro.
N.C. 272113 245
Wall, Roscoc L.; 822 N. Pine Vallev Rd.. Win-
ston-Salem. N.C. 27106 174, 262
Wallace, David A.; 619 Oak Summit Rd.. Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27105 . 245
Waller. Douglas C; U.S. Naval Air Station. FPO
San Francisco, Cal. 96654 . . 85. 93
Wallev. Bruce D.; 401 6th St., Hollowav Ter..
New Castle, Del. 19720 . 186, 262
Walt. Lawrence Cj 1014 N. Pegram St., Alexan-
dria. Va. 228
Walters, Dean A.; 145 Fleetwood Ter.. Silver
Spring, Md.. 20901 . . 186, 245
Wannall, Anne C; 305 Southwest Dr., Silver
Spring, Md. 20901 254
Ward. Demming M.j 2006 Barker St., Lumber-
ton, N.C. 28358 132. 177. 262
Ward, Glenn S.; 502 Newton St., Spencer, N.C.
28159 273
Ware, Lewis L.; 2700 Club Dr.. Gastonia. N.C.
273
Waring, Roslyn A.; 644 Dogwood Rd., States-
ville, N.C. 28677 . 254
Warner. John T.; Apt. B-2, 130 Salem Cir., Ra-
leigh, N.C. . 165, 254
Warren, James Cj 108 Overlook Dr., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27105 85
Warren, James S.; Box 426, Wake Forest, N.C.
27587 85, 181, 254
Wash. Richard L.; 3518 Countrv Club Dr.. Char-
lotte. N.C. 28205 167. 245
Washbum. Paul V.; Box 795, Boiling Springs,
N.C. 28017 254
Watkins. Linda E.; 3 Notch Rd.. California, Md.
20619
92
Watkins. Richard A.; 338 E. Leroy St., Burling-
ton, Mich.
9029
273
Watson.
Frances L
; 2301
E. Lexington
Ave.,
High
Point,
N.C.
27262
273
Watson,
Haze
M.:
121 Ca
roll Ave., Ashevilh
N.C.
28S0I
273
Watson.
James
H.j
Box 92
Mt. Croghan
S.C
85, 118. 254
Watson, Richard James; 505 Ninth St., North
Wilkesboro, N.C. 28659 273
Watson. Richard Glenn; 507 Arlington St., Forest
City, N.C. 28043 . 254
Watters, David R.; 1221 Minnesota Ave., Na-
trona Heights, Pa. 15065 85. 118. 254
Watts. John H. V.; 1433 Westhant Dr., Ashe-
boro, N.C. 27203 262
Watts. Maribeth Cj 314 Stonewall Ave. 1. Win-
chester. Va. 22601 273
Watts. William M., Sr.; 1433 Westmont Dr.. Box
549, Asheboro, N.C. 27203 254
Waugh. Julius D.; 321 W. Ruffin St.. Burlington,
N.C. 27215 85, 273
Weathers, Jane B.; 766 N. Stratford Rd., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 262
Webb. Chuck E.; 31 Countryside Rd., Fairport,
N.Y. 14450 105, 255
Webb. George S.; c/o Col. William Webb, Staff
& Facultv, USAWC, Carlisle Barracks. Pa.
17013 " . 85, 273
Webb, Karen J.; 1601 Idlewilde Rd., Johnson
City, Tenn. 37601 277
Webster. Eloise H.; 3505 Manford Dr.. Durham,
N.C. 27707 262
Weeks, Landon E.; 438 Country Club La„ Galax,
Va. 24333 255
Weeks. R. Ken; S733 Commodore Dr.. Norfolk.
Va. 23503 . 179, 262
Weeks, Sandy N.j 108 Stewart Ave., Clinton,
N.C. 28328 275
Wehunt. John C; Rt. 1. Cherryville. N.C. 245
Weischcdel. Judith L.; 3445 Buchanan St., Holly-
wood. Fla. 33021 273
Welborn. Stephen L.; 309 Albertson Rd.. High
Point. N.C. 27260 273
Welch, Edwin W.; 202-B Wake Forest Apts.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 21709 . 274
Welfare. Charles R.; 2641 Revnolda Rd., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 27109 245
Welfare. Linda D.; 625 Candlewood Dr., Greens-
boro. N.C. 27403 273
Wells, James S.. Jr.; P.O. Box 676, Greenville,
N.C. 27S34 177, 262
Wcndorf. Frederick L.; 3S6S S. Lake Dr.. S.W.,
Roanoke. Va.. 12801 165. 245
Wennrich. Susan C; 78 Grant Ave., Glens Falls.
N.Y. 12801 273
West, Curt W.; Rt. 1. Mt. Ulla, N.C. 28125
228, 273
West, George K.; 1581 Irene St., Bethlehem. Pa.
177, 263
West, Rebecca L.; 1581 Irene St., Bthlehem, Pa.
18017 245
West, Sylvia A.; Rt. 6, Box 252, Kinston, N.C.
28501 105
Westcrmeyer, Michael T.; 1221 Lee Ave., Melrose
Park, III. 60160 229,273
Whalen. Dennis W.; 62" Broad St., Meriden,
Conn. (I645U 99, 246
White, Alan P.; 216 South Loudoun St., Win-
chester, Va. 22i.ni 263
White, Benjamin H„ Jr.; 1348 Brookwood Dr..
Winsti.n-Salem, N.C. 27106 127, 274
White. Beverly J.; 4706 Pont.ac Dr., Annandale,
Va. 221103 .263
White, Charles J.; 1212 Magnolia St., Winston-
Salem, N.C. 156, 228, 229, 263
White, Cheryl L.; 610 Chester Rd., Winston-
Salem. N.C. 27104 273
White, Dayle D.; Rt. 1, Quinby Forest, Florence,
S.C. 29501 106, 263
White. Daniel E.; 216 London Cir.. Matthews,
N.C. 167, 228, 255
White, Francia L.. 1301 Sunset Dr., Asheboro,
N.C. 27203 255
White. Grace W.; 1522 Hermitage Ct., Durham,
N.C. 27707 184
White, Judith E.; 2432 Maplewood Ave., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27103 . , . . 87, 151, 246
White, Michael D.; 310 Sunset Dr., Chesapeake,
Va. 23706 246
White, Ronald E.; 2601 Buckner Ln., Washing-
ton, D.C. 20031 ... 263
White. Richard G.; 50 Robin Hill Dr., Naper-
ville, III. 60540 228
Whitenhurst, Sally A.; Box 661, Bethel, N.C.
27812 263
Whitenhurst. Samuel L.. Jr.; Rt. I, New Bern,
N.C. 127, 275
Whitley, Henry H„ Jr.; Box 759, Rt. 3, Smith-
field, N.C. 168, 246
Whitley. Melvin St.; Box 607. S. Bennett St..
Southern Pines, N.C. 28387 . 105, 263
Whittington, Richard A.; Ill South Grandview,
Mt. Dora, Fla. 263
Wieferich. Patricia A.; 7913 Kentbury Dr., Beth-
esda, Md. 20014 118, 255
Wiist, Sharron A.; 201 Tampa Dr., Victoria, Tex.
77901 263
Wike, Lola K.; Rt. 4, Box 254, Taylorsville, N.C.
28681 255
Wilbur, Cynthia A.; 9 Lawnbank Rd., Beverly,
Mass. 01915 273
Wilder, Aldridge D„ Jr.; 800 Cavalier Cr., Kins-
ton, N.C. 28501 246
Wilev, Dee; 1909 Knollton Rd., Timonium, Md.
21093 . . . 105, 273
Wilderson, John L.; 4014 Sulkirk Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28210 273
Wilkins, James D.; 120 E. Keeling Rd., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 255
Williams, Bruce N.; Apt. 1029 Chetwynd, Inc.,
Rosemont, Pa. 181, 246
Williams, Floyd L.; 415 Williamson St., Burling-
ton, N.C. . . 263
Williams, James D.; 527 Monument Ave., Mal-
vern. Pa. 19355 263
Williams, James G.; Rt. 2, Box 74, Catawba.
N.C. 28609 277
Williams, Jerry L.; 309 Shaffner St., Burlington,
N.C. 27215 255
Williams, James S.; P.O. Box 452, Tabor City,
N.C. 78, 276
Williams. Joan T.; 3614 Birchwood Ln„ Greens-
boro, N.C. 27410 246
Williams. Kathleen D.; 2035 Faculty Dr., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 273
Williams, Linda D.; 127 West Glendale Ave.,
Mt. Hollv, N.C. 273
Williams, Robert P.; 119 Country Club Dr.,
Concord, N.C. 28205 ....... 273
Williams, Thomas P.; 921 Fairmont St., Latrobe,
Pa. 15650 177, 255
Williams, Thomas R.; 25 '>th Ave., N.E., Apt. 4-C,
Mt. Lodge Apts., Hickory, N.C. 28601 277
Williams, W. Fred, Jr.; 49 Wake Forest Trailer
Park, Winston-Salem, N.C. 127, 275
Williamson, Sandra G.; Box 59 Wilkesboro, N.C.
286'<7 246
Williard, Gary W.; R.F.D., Yadkinville, N.C.
165,228,263
Willison. Jeffrey A.; 3909 Guest Ln., Alexandria,
Va. 22312 156, 255
Wilson, C. Conway; 5035 Wedgcwood Dr., Char-
lotte, N.C. 282 10 263
Wilson, Charles P.; Box 8, Marion, N.C. 273
Wilson, David C; 426 N. Hamilton St., Leaks-
ville, N.C. 27288 255
Wilson, Donald C; 1405 Old Hickory St.,
Greensboro, N.C. 27405 246
Wilson, Jackson D„ Jr.; 208 Mitchell Ave., Mt.
Sterling, Kv. 40353 86, 132, 133
Wilson, James L.; Rt. 1, Box 4, Winston-Salem,
N.C. 276
Wilson, Lewin G.; 4047 Sheffield Dr., Charlotte,
N.C. 28205 85, 273
Wilson, Rebecca S.: 39(10 Guinevere Ln., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27104 263
Wilson, Robert B.; 507 Wildwood Ave., Pitman,
N.J. 08071 . . 263
Wilson, Stephen T.; 112 N. Hamilton St., Leaks-
ville, N.C. 27288 245, 246
Wilson, Walter E.; 615 Woodshurst Way, Balti-
more, Md. 21228 255
Wilson, William E.; 45 Comanche Dr., Ocean-
port, N.J. 07757 275
Wimer. Joan L.; 1113 Tiffany Rd., Silver Spring,
Md. 20904 162, 263
Wingatc, Joseph A.; Rt. 2, Box 58, Gnfton, N.C.
28530 273
Winrow, Gary J.; 530 S. Sleight, Naperville, 111.
60540 273
Winston, York E.; 236 Brandon Ct., Danville,
Va. 24541 119, 255
Wisman, Louise; Rt. 8, Box 431, Chambcrsburg,
Pa. ......... 246
Wittrock, Etta M.; 14 W. Henderson St., Wrights-
ville Beach, N.C. 28480 273
Wolf, Carolyn C; 103-D Williamsburg Ct., Win-
ston-Salem, N.C. 27103 263
Wolf, Robert W.; 1015 Walnut St., Webster
City, Iowa 50595 276
Wolfe. John G„ III; 2067 South Hawthorne Rd.,
Winston-Salem, N.C. 21703 78, 276
Wood, Craig M.; P. O. Box 185, Fries, Va. 24330
255
Wood, David A.; 9632 East Bexhill Dr., Kens-
ington, Md. 20795 85, 255
Wood, Lynn G.; 509 Ferndale Blve., High Point,
N.C. 27260 273
Wood, Richard Walton; 203 N. 21st St.. E.,
Bradcnton , Fla. 33505 161,273
Woodruff, Thomas G.; 1643 Woodvale Rd.,
Charleston, W.Va. 25314 186
Woodson. Pamela G.; 18 Ralston Rd., Richmond.
:;:
273
Woolley, Thomas J.; 1101 S.W. Renmar Dr.,
Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. 33314 . 179, 263
Wooten, Wiley P.; 312 W. Elm St., Graham,
N.C. 127, 274
Worthington, Richard E.; Lora Ln., Box 203,
Winlcrvillc, N.C. 28590 273
Wray, Julian B.; 209-B Student Apts., Winston-
Salcm. N.C 274
Wrav, Robert S.; 1400 Courtland Ave., Reids-
ville, N.C. 27320 273
Wren James R., Jr.; 2821 Bleeker Square, Apt.
D. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 .255
Wright, Carolyn J.; 3633 Ledbury Dr., E„ Jack-
sonville, Fla. 32210 133, 159, 246
Wright, Charles S.; 1520 Crescent Dr., Kings-
port, Tenn. 37664 273
Wright, George H., HI; 1 Ccdarcliff Rd., Ashe-
ville. N.C. 28803 85, 273
Wright, John M.; 2107 Sundale Rd., Johnson
City, Tenn. 37601 106, 118, 179
Wright, Russell D.; 106 Live Oak St., Box 581,
Tabor Citv, N.C. 28463 273
Wright, Roy W.; 1423 Narcissus St., Salem, Va.
24153 168, 263
Wright, Smart T.; 412 South Main St., Roxboro,
N.C. 27573 263
Wszclaki, Roman J.; 1333 Manitoba Ave., South
Milwaukee, Wise 228
Wuertenberger, Virginia A.; 5513 Topping PI.,
Charlotte. N.C.
28209 43, 116, 184, 234, 237, 246
Wyche, Alexander T.; Baldwin Woods, White-
ville, N.C. 28472 229, 263
Wyche, Byron C; Baldwin Woods, Whiteville,
N.C. 28472 170, 177
Wvers, Judith G.; 100 Surrey Park, Wilmington,
Del. 19803 273
Wylie, Rebecca E.; 3227 Eastborn Rd., Charlotte,
N.C. 28210 106, 172
Wynne, Leon W., Jr.; P.O. Box 726, Roberson-
v.lle, N.C. 27871 263
Yang, Marion; 118 Chin Hsi St., Taipei, Taiwan,
Republic of China ...... 277
Yarborough, Benjamin H.; 1928 S. Westchester
Dr., Petersburg, Va. 23803 228, 273
Yarborough, Daji R.; 225 East Tenth Ave., Lex-
ington, N.C. 27292 . 205
Yarrington, John N.; Laurel Ln. R-2, Woodstown,
N.J. 08098 106, 263
Yates, John H.; Rt. 1, Box 32, Enfield, N.C.
27823 . . 273
Yates, Susan S.; 108 88th St., Virginia Beach,
Va. 170, 255
Yatsko, Larry W.; Box 307, Oiowick, N.J. 08858
229, 273
Yeagcr, Christine; Rt. 1, Box 223, Walkertown,
N.C. 27051 263
Yeatts, James C, IH; Rd. 221, Floyd, Va. 24091
127
York, Richard D.; 429 Vick Ave., Raleigh, N.C.
25S
Young. Charles R.; 97 18th Ave., N.W. Hickory.
N.C. 28601 , , . .274
Young, James L.; 412 Franklin Ave., Shelby,
N.C. 28150 246
Young, John D.; 1320 Robin Hood Rd., High
Point, N.C. 27260 . . . .263
Young, Kathryn B.; 2513 Fernwood Dr., Greens-
boro, N.C. 27408 273
Zack, Earle P.; 3303 Fessenden St., N.W. Wash-
ington, D.C. 20008 273
Zaiken, Maxine; 194 Lenox Ave., Pittsficld, Mass.
01201 172, 246
Zane, Larry Robert; Box 286 Salem Pike, Swe-
densboro, N.J. 08085 . . . . 263
Zenker, Ronald H.; [307 E. 8th St., Mt. Dora,
Fla. ..... 273
Zimmerman, Gigi G.; Showers Ln., Martinsburg,
W.Va. 25401 273
Zinzow, Lee A.; 7280 S.W. 129th St., Miami,
Fla. 33156 255
A Note on the Meaning of the New Wake Forest
One of the more obvious realizations
which has come out of the discussion
about our move to university "status"
is that the titles "Wake Forest student"
and "Wake Forest alumnus" no longer
have any particular distinctiveness (ex-
cept that they designate one as being
relatively intelligent and satisfactorily
educated, if that's important). The mark
of a modern university has stained the
magnolia campus, for the definitive char-
acteristic of Wake Forest in 1968 is, by
any measure, its diversity.
It is a real problem to present diversity
as a spirit in a yearbook. Do you use
mod lavouts in one section, and a Baptist
hymnbcok format for the next? We de-
cided to do something different: to pre-
sent some serious essays, and to use diver-
sified writers.
(That we were diversified is obvious;
whether we succeeded in being serious is
for you to decide. Any yearbook with an
introduction by a New York Jew, which
was edited by a Georgia Baptist, and
which contains a conclusion written by
a Connecticut Catholic for a North
Carolina college can't be all straight).
Assistant editor Glenn Freedman, who
authored the introduction and the Greeks
section is the antithesis of what Wake
Forest people used to be like. A self-
proclaimed unwashed cynic, he tries to
be impartial by celebrating the pre-Sab-
bath and the post-Sabbath for all religions
which he can find out about. (But please
enclose money with your new suggestion.
The tavern's prices are exhorbitant ) .
Associate editor Barbara Brazil is like-
wise unconventional. She's got drive and
a sense of pride that is lacking in the
average girl, and comes close to personify-
ing what Ted Boushy wrote about the
new "Wake Forest Woman." Barbara is
a good bit more serious about Wake and
its positive virtues than is Glenn, but
she agrees with much of his argument
against romanticizing the past: "What's
good about Wake Forest is what's hap-
pened to it since 1956."
Many other members of our Hauler
family deserve much more praise than we
can ever give them. Assistant editor Paul
Coble was our production specialist, and
without him, it is difficult to see how we
could ever have assembled and prepared
the materials from our writers and photo-
graphers. Our contributors, Ted Boushy,
Henry Bostic, J. D. Wilson, Linda Levi,
Jeter Walker and Doug Lemza, did an ex-
cellent job involving much dedication.
Section editors Cassandra Martin. Sara-
jane Oakley, Kitty Harmon, Dennis Wha-
len and Janet Bowker pulled us through
the final production of our material.
Photographers John Daughtry, Mac Mc-
Neill and Don Bunn did a magnificent
job with poor darkroom facilities and a
very slim staff of fellow shutter-bugs.
Diane Baldwin's office entertainment and
her tedious work with the index and the
class photography schedules were like-
wise flawless. Special thanks go to Kitty,
John and Glenn, whose teamwork in pro-
ducing the Greeks section was more suc-
cessful than we could ever have hoped it
to be. Lastly, our publisher's representa-
tive, Mr. Harrell Brooks of Foote and
Davies, was our inspiration, our friend
-nd our most constructive critic.
The conclusions which we can draw
about Wake Forest can be only hazy and
impressionistic, since her spirit is de-
fined by a people marked by diversity.
But it is important whether one leaves
the community with an attitude which is
positive or negative.
We admit to being prejudiced in favor
of our Alma Mater. Thus, we can relate
one personal experience which sums up
the feelings of the editor.
There was a day in the cold of Jan-
uary when one of our contributors re-
turned to Pub Row from an interview
on the other side of Reynolda Hall. In
a moment of rare seriousness, he told us
what he thought of Wake Forest and
where it was headed. He said that Wake
was a place that asked for, and got the
cynical disapproval of its students. But
as universities go, there could be but two
valid criticisms of the school. First, it
was not a place with small seminars in
every course. Second, it was not a multi-
university, with twenty-thousand massed
bodies present at all times. He said that
Wake Forest was optimistic, pragmatic
and reasonably progressive. In the most
fundamental sense, there was little to
criticize.
That speaker was our staff cynic, Glenn
Freedman.
To hear Glenn make such a statement
was worth the whole effort of producing
the Howler, for it shows that to come
to love Wake Forest does not require a
worship of the past. The substance of
the present is, of itself, enough. What
does matter is that we not be taken in
by the myths of Wake's reactionism, and
that we remember her for what she is.
We hope that you will remember her, and
that you will respect the old University
when you leave it for the great green
world outside.-
We're sure we will.
Four Years and the Rain
I've been walking out in the drizzle for about two hours now, and I guess I'm pretty soaked, but I can't go back
to the dorm just yet. Everybody may still be there, and they just wouldn't understand how I feel right now. The
rain is wet, but it's quiet, and that's about all I want to be part of for awhile.
It's been a long time since 6:30 this morning, and somehow I wish today hadn't ever begun. Yet, I really
don't ever want if to end. A poet once wrote that dawn is a most beautiful time of day, but I guess he didn't have
an alarm clock to fell him about it. I rolled over a couple of times, pretending not to hear if, but it was no use —
/ had to get up. A face that showed about four hours sleep looked out at me from the mirror, and even cold
water didn't do much good. The idea of shaving crossed my mind, but I'd never tried it before on that amount
of sleep; and, Techmatic razor or not, I wasn't about to try now.
At two o'clock History 324 and I had a final meeting to determine my proficiency, and I wanted to do a
decent job, even if it meant getting up in the middle of the night. I'd figured out that over four years I'd taken
forty finals, which added up to about 11 5 hours. Have you got any idea how many minutes that comes out to
— seconds even?
I got dressed, hauled my roommate out of the rack so he'd get to his nine o'clock exam on time, and took a
look at what poets ivrite about. It was pretty all right, but a few more hours sleep is what I really had in mind.
Hunger was far from my mind, and missing a meal in the Pit didn't really bother me, so I headed for the
library. It doesn't open till 8:30, but tvith a jackknife and a little ingenuity you can open a window where
Smiley teaches The South. I had the reserved book room to myself. A little while later, the reut-a-cop came
through, gave me a startled look, and scurried off, presumably to find a broken window or jimmied door lock.
Those guys are pretty efficient though. I mean, how many riots, rapes, or murders have we had on campus lately,
and even Dean Reece can't bribe Bunker Hill.
My study effort could be termed a failure. I made decent progress for about two hours; then "Slmttles" came
through. Everybody has his own version of a "Shuttles" — he's the biggest hell-raiser you've met in your four
years at Wake. He came by to remind me of tonight and to repeat his oath to break his own record for beer con-
sumed in a single evening. His presence ruined my concentration for the rest of the morning, and I ivas lost in a
daydream of what tonight was to have been. The idea was to turn loose four years of pent-up "waiting" in the
shortest amount of time. We'd start at the TOG and Trophy Room and keep going till our money or muscular
co-ordination ran out. We were graduating seniors who would celebrate the end of q.p.'s, beady-eyed profs.,
freshmen football players, and exams. Tomorrow we might regret it, but tonight nobody would give a damn —
least of all "Shuttles."
** """*
■.■.■.■.'.■.«eW"—.:"ri*v.-J.:
/ went back to the dorm at noon or so to read the paper and relax. "Room mate" was back and already raising
hell. He ivas sure he'd gotten at least a "B" from Broyles, and with it his cum laude. Me, I was graduating cum
fortuna, but fames Ralph would shake my hand just the same. A couple of other guys came by too, and I
needn't tell you what a group like that, who are done with exams, sounds like to a guy who still has one to take.
"Peanuts" took my mind off it all for a moment. Snoopy makes a lousy vulture, but "Peanuts" makes life
worth living. If everybody read that comic strip, Shultz would get the Nobel Peace Prize.
The racket got worse, so I got out and went to the P.O. As I left, they reminded me to get back as fast as I
could when the exam ivas over. To them, my exam was of little importance; to me, it was of much concern.
I %vas as fired up as they were, but until five o'clock the beer and good times would just have to ivait. But once
we got going. . . . EB-FG-DC, and 1 had a letter from where I hoped to be in three days. I hadn't seen her since
spring break, and any day now I'd be eating bark off of trees. Have you ever tried to read a letter and walk
straight? You can't do it. I bumped a prof., a pair of coeds and a parked lawn mower that damn near killed
me. On the concrete they gotta park a lawn mower!
Dr. Baruett smiled as he passed out the tests and blue books. It wasn't a bad exam, but I could have been
better prepared.
Around 1:1 5 the sky started to darken, and by four there was a good drizzle coming down. I looked out the
window for a moment that must have lasted ten minutes and tried to remember how many days it had rained in
my four years here. There wasn't a specific number, but I remembered not having an umbrella plenty of times
when I wished I did.
At the first bell for five I handed in my blue book, and smiled back at Dr. Barneft. Maybe he liked smilers.
As I closed the classroom door behind me I got an empty feeling in my stomach, and the nearer I got to the
front door, the ivorse it got. I really can't explain it, but its part of the reason why I'm not back with the other
guys right now.
I stood in the doorway of Humanities and looked up at the Chapel clock. If said 4:5 5. I looked out at the
rain hitting the puddles — // didn't say anything. All of a sudden I felt alone like I've never felt before. I think
I could have started to cry, if I hadn't been so confused as to why I felt like I did.
Let's face it, I was supposed to be happy and ready to go raise hell, yet there I was, alone, confused, and in
some ways even scared. It's taken the solitude of the rain to tell me what it's all about. Feeling like I did, I knew
I couldn't go back to the dorm. I didn't want to go out and raise hell tonight; I just wanted to be alone for a
while — /';/ the rain. It ivas warm, almost soft , and the early evening of a late May shower had a scent all its own.
Somehow I found myself on the track, and I remembered freshmen P.E. It was four years ago that I had run
the cross-country course at 8 A.M., and only once did I ever eat breakfast before I ran — the first time. The
course was still the same. The yellow paint was worn a little, but other trees had been painted since then. I passed
a stone bench out there where I'd sat with my first date at Wake. It ivas during orientation, and we ivere both
scared — of school, of each other.
I didn't finish walking the P.E. course but cut across the football practice field and climbed to the top of
the bleachers. It was too wet to sit down, but I wasn't thinking of that. Up at the top, in the left comer, were
my initials, carved with a Coke bottle cap I'd found on my way to a freshman game. Funny, I didn't remem-
ber whether I was a freshman or sophomore when I did it, but the fact that I remembered the initials was all
I cared about. I scratched a Roman numeral two, and told myself some day I'd come back a third time.
It ivas really warm out, and the wet grass looked inviting. I took off my socks and shoes and ivalked barefoot
to the gym. Dr. Barrow came out as I went in, and he smiled like he knew what it was like to walk barefoot
through wet grass. My feet squished as I climbed the stairs to the sun deck, and since the gym was nearly de-
serted, the squishing sounded spooky. I remembered the sun deck from a warm night last spring. We sniick up
there after hours, and she ivas afraid of getting caught. She wasn't the only one, but I didn't tell her that. We
didn't get caught, but another couple were already there, so we went over to the swings. The sun deck ivas emp-
ty now, and, as I watched the rain splash in the puddles, I wondered if that couple were still dating.
Concrete sidewalks don't feel as good as wet grass, so I put my stuff back on and walked over to the swings.
I'll bet we went there fifty times in two years, and each time seemed better than the one before it. I never rode
the swings — only pushed. To me, swings are for kids and for big people who find times when they have to be
like kids for a while. There's a freedom in being a kid that big people cannot approach. Like the sun deck, the
swings were empty, and for the first time in years I sat down and tried them. I guess this was a time ivhen 1
needed to be like a kid.
From the sii'ings I could see the ditch in the "boonies" where a suite mate wiped out his VWs oil pan a couple
of years ago. If really made a mess. I remembered parking in the "boonies" and getting caught by the campus
cop. He was more embarassed than we ivere and tried hard not to look directly at us. It was all pretty cute.
Swings aren't much fun by yourself, so I left them to their wet solitude, cut across the "boonies," Derby Day
Hill, and headed toward the library. At the locked end there's a neat little place to be alone with a date, and
sooner or later everyone finds it. It wasn't till Homecoming of my junior year that I found it though. We just
walked around that night and somehow ended up there. It was our first date, and we were both pretty cau-
tious; but finding that spot really helped make Homecoming a permanent thing. There's a tree there — every-
one's got a special tree.
I hadn't eaten all day, and all of a sudden I knew it. There ivere candy and Coke machines in Salem Hall, as
well as a chance to dry off. Last year we'd gone down there looking for a coffee machine, as we'd been out sliding
between the library and Salem and U'ere cold and wet. All we found was a Coke machine that wouldn't make
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change. It didn't matter because ice got warm anyway. The machine made change this time, but I preferred
the last time I was down there.
It came to me that because of the rain there teas little chance of anyone's being in the gardens, so I thought
that would be a good place to be. I cut through Winston Hall and stopped at the back doors. When you're
alone, there's not much to see out the back except a parking lot, road, and pine trees across Faculty Drive. Two
people can see much more than that though. From the fall I remembered clear and windy clouds across the
moon. Wintertime ivas ice on the pines and Orion's belt, and once in a while some snow to slide on. Springtime
was best because we'd stand out on that little balcony and smell the rain that had fallen earlier in the day, or
just listen to the sounds in the twilight. It's been nice there the last couple of years; to have stayed a little longer
would have been neat, but the gardens seemed the best place to be right now.
The path lights weren't on yet as it was still kind of light, and because of the rain they might not come on at
all. It didn't matter, for who hasn't been down that path so often that he couldn't find his way blindfolded.
There's an iron pipe in the ground as you ivalk down the path. I tried to dig it out once, but it's in concrete
rut a foot down — it'll be there a long time.
7 cut back around the other side of the pond and walked a ways through the woods. There were many nights
and sunny afternoons that we'd walk these paths with little or no care in the world. The time of year really
didn't matter.
As you come back toward the boat house, there's a little look-out place that's been fixed up in the last couple
of years. We'd sit up there in early evening and watch the little kids play on the hill across the way. I wondered
if they ever saw us. It was really nice there, and ive carved our names in the rafters; but I didn't put a number
there. It wouldn't have been right to do it alone.
The rain started to come down harder again, and I headed for the boat house. There ivas no point in running,
for I was about as wet as I was going to get. Besides, for once in four years, it felt good to take my time. What
light there was was slowly fading, and there were deep shadows all over that seemed to be trying to tell me some-
thing. I don't like shadows as a rule, but those in the rain are different. It's a feeling I have few words for, but
when I'm alone and not lonely, a shadow can be nice.
I've been here on the boat house porch for about half an hour now, just watching the rain land in the pond.
It's just like it was in the puddles and on the sun deck, but now I know what it's all about. The shadows were
like the rain in the sense that a shadow is the image of something, tvhile the rain landing in the puddles and
pond is the memory of four years coming back.
I feel better now, but I'd still like to walk in the rain some more. It's kind of fun really — soft and warm; like
I said. There's somebody on the bridge by the falls throwing pebbles into the pond. I ivonder who else is nutty
enough to be done here right . . . "Shuttles." He's as net as I am. It's kind of hard to believe what I'm think-
ing right now but as ive pass, we just look and say nothing.
It's better that way.
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