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THE
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY/VOLUME 58 NUMBER 1
CONTENTS
1 ASC Career Network
4 Fund Report
Summary Report by Classes
Special Gifts
Giving by Classes
Parents and Friends
Businesses and Foundations
19 Endowments
Special Funds
Memorial Funds
Scholarship Funds
Library Funds
Student Loan Funds
Annuity Funds
29 President's Report
43 Book Reviews
44 Evelyn Hanna Visited
46 Freshman Class Profile
48 Denise McFall Joins Staff
49 Association Tours
51 With the Clubs
55 From the Classes
News and Profile
67 Alumnae Council 1979
68 Nominations
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY STAFF:
Editor / Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Managing Editor / Juliette Harper '77
Design Consultant / John Stuart McKenzie
ALUMNAE OFFICE STAFF:
Director of Alumnae Affairs
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Coordinator for Clubs
Jean Chalmers Smith 38
Assistant to the Director
Juliette Harper '77
Secretary
Frances Strolher
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS:
President / Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
Vice Presidents
Region I / Susan Blackmore Hannah '64
Region n / Polly Page Moreau '62
Region m / Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Region IV / Peggy Hooker Hartwein '53
Secretary / Lebby Rogers Harrison '62
Treasurer / Susan Skinner Thomas '74
Member / Council for Advancement and
Support of Education
Published four times yearly: Fall. Winter.
Spring, and Summer by Agnes Scott College
Alumnae Office, Decatur, Georgia 30030
Second class postage paid
at Decatur, Georgia.
(U.S.P.S. 009-280)
ALUMNAE/STUDENTS/CAREERS
TWORK
o
.
TUNE IN TO the ASC
Network this fall and turn
on an Agnes Scott student to
the career she's been looking
for all along.
We've formed a national
network of alumnae in various
professions to advise students
of opportunities in your
fields, and we need your help.
Your sponsorship and advice
can provide the vital link
between the knowledge the
student acquires in the
classroom and the skills she
needs to implement that
knowledge after graduation.
We want you to join the
ASC Network and help a
student make a better
informed choice about her
future career.
We've listed the various
programs for bringing a
student into your office for a
look behind the scenes
whether you are a sales
manager or a chemical
engineer.
SHADOW PROGRAM
Invite a student to spend an
afternoon with you in your
office. She'll be interested in
learning not only what you
do, but why you like your job
(or why you don't). She'll
want to know the educational
requirements of the job, what
goes on in the office, and how
you get things done.
Your advice to her about
job opportunities within your
field will help her make a
more informed career choice.
EXTERN PROGRAM
Give a student the chance not
only to see but to experience
your daily work routine. An
extern would spend a week
during Christmas or spring
vacation (on an unsalaried
basis) with you and your
colleagues. This short, but
intensive, program makes
career exploration possible
for many students who
otherwise might not have a
chance for "on-the-job"
exposure.
INTERN PROGRAM
Challenge a student by
creating a new or filling an
existing intern position. This
longer 'on-the-job" training
should provide a good
introduction to a career field
while giving the student
practical experience at
performing responsible
duties. Our flexible program
allows several options,
including taking a student on
a salaried or unsalaried basis,
part-time or full-time, during
the academic year or summer.
Many times an internship
may complement a student's
studies and earn academic
credit, but this is not a
requirement.
SPEAKER
Contribute to the College by
sharing your work, graduate
school, and/or lifestyle
experiences with current
students and other alumnae
as a speaker for a career
conference or workshop.
ADVISER
Offer to talk informally with
a student or alumna seeking
advice about your career field
and entry-level jobs. Help
someone relocating to your
area get a jump on researching
the local job market by
sharing your knowledge and
contacts with her.
MENTOR
Help an Agnes Scott student
or alumna enter and advance
within your organization or
career field. Perhaps now
your main contribution may
be contacting us about job
openings, but keep in mind
our highest goal a network
of professional women who
will serve as mentors for
bright, aspiririg protegees.
Here's how you can let us
see your prime time efforts.
You can be an ASC Network
affiliate by returning the
attached card indicating your
sponsorship of one or more of
the above programs. If you
have any questions about the
ASC Network, please contact
KathleenK. Mooney, Director
of Career Planning, Agnes
Scott College, 404-373-2571,
ext. 365.
Let us hear from you soon.
Remember, it's your show!
Join the ASC network
It's your show!
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By Paul McCain. Vice President for Development
Under the leadership of Alumnae Fund Chairman Dorothy
(Dot) Holloran Addison '43 of Atlanta. 2.845 alumnae gave
$289,648 to the 1978-79 Agnes Scott Fund. This figure
includes $13,387 in bequests from four alumnae. This
number of donors represents 32 percent of the active
alumnae. Assisting in the Fund Drive were 55 class fund
chairmen and 510 class agents.
During the past year combined gifts of 3,958 alumnae,
parents and friends, businesses and foundations to Agnes
Scott totaled $815,009. This amount includes gifts for
endowment and for the renovation of Buttrick as well as for
scholarships, equipment, and many other improvements.
Except for those who preferred to give anonymously, all
individuals, foundations, and businesses who made their
gifts directly to Agnes Scott are listed on the following
pages. These donors made their gifts to the College from
July 1, 1978, through June 30, 1979. Gifts received after the
latter date will be shown in the report for 1979-80.
The Tower Circle is that group of donors whose gifts were
$1,000 or more. The Colonnade Club includes those who
gave $500 or more, the Quadrangle Quorum for donors of
$250 or more, and the Century Club for those who gave $100
or more. The asterisk (*) in the class listing indicates an
alumna who served as a class agent. Double asterisks (**)
are for donors who are now deceased.
Please let the Agnes Scott Fund Office know of any
corrections which may be needed so that we can be sure our
records are accurate.
To worker and donor alike, the entire College community
welcomes this opportunity to thank you and express our
appreciation for your fine response.
Vice President for Development Paul McCain and Alumnae Fund Chairman
Dorothy Holloran Addison '43
SUMMARY REPORT BY CLASSES
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Honor
Guard
Maryellen Harvey Newton
149
40
$
47,339
1951
Jeanne Kline Brown
41
25
6,593
1923
Alice Vlrden
37
31
2,920
1952
Barbara Brown Waddell
43
27
1,997
1924
Frances Gilliland Stukes
32
31
3,120
1953
Jane Hook Conyers
48
36
1,661
1925
44
38
5,295
1954
Eleanor Hutchinson Smith
35
29
4,030
1926
Rosalie Wooten Deck
41
37
2,240
1955
Sarah Petty Dagenhart
43
29
3,185
1927
Louise Lovejoy Jackson
56
40
7,060
1956
Louise Rainey Ammons
42
29
4,415
1928
Miriam Anderson Dowdy
48
41
4,326
1957
Elizabeth Ansley Allan
49
28
8,095
1929
Helen Ridley Hartley
73
50
6,820
1958
Carolyn Tinkler Ramsey
51
31
4,047
1930
Shannon Preston Cumming
46
37
2,362
1959
Eleanor Lee McNeill
59
34
2,164
1931
Martha Sprinkle Rafferty
41
42
14,543
1960
Becky Evans Callahan
45
26
2,525
1932
Varnelle Braddy Perryman
41
35
5,135
1961
Mary Wayne Crymes Bywater
56
30
3,340
1933
Mary Sturtevant Cunningham
50
40
2,097
1962
Lebby Rogers Harrison
52
27
3,263
1934
Nelle Chamlee Howard
46
40
3,040
1963
Mary Ann Lusk Jorgenson
40
20
1,719
1935
Julia McClatchey Brooke
39
32
5,030
1964
Lucy Herbert Molinaro
60
30
2,208
1936
Sarah Frances McDonald
46
36
3,230
1965
Anne Schiff Faivus
57
29
1,859
1937
Kathleen Daniel Spicer
43
38
3,080
1966
Anne Morse Topple
58
28
2,490
1938
Goudyloch Erwin Dyer
53
37
3,230
1967
Anne Davis McGehee
49
26
1,324
1939
Lou Pate Jones
64
50
4,340
1968
60
29
2,071
1940
Helen Gates Carson
53
36
54,956
1969
Julie Cottrill
72
31
2,226
1941
Gene Slack Morse
47
32
3,217
Mary McAlpine Evans
1942
Claire Purcell Smith
57
38
14,463
1970
Mary-Wills Hatfield LeCroy
65
30
1,813
1943
Anne Paisley Boyd
46
37
14,045
1971
Christy Fulton Baldwin
62
30
1,811
1944
Betty Williams Stoffel
43
30
2,977
1972
Sharon Jones Cole
43
20
1,308
1945
50
34
2,587
1973
Judy Hill Calhoun
54
24
1,522
1946
Mary McConkey Reimer
50
30
3,780
1974
Lib McGregor Simmons
42
22
850
1947
Marguerite Born Hornsby
51
34
3,755
1975
Debbie Shepherd Hamby
39
22
1,264
1948
Rebekah Scott Bryan
47
31
3,233
1976
Nancy Leasendale Purcell
41
22
1,630
1949
Nancy Huey Kelly
56
34
3,853
1977
Ann Pesterfield Krueger
35
23
1,015
1950
Pat Overton Webb
30
21
1,253
1978
Kay Cochrane
22
12
379
Tower Circle
**Mary Donnelly Meehan '10
Louise Hunter Marshall '10
Julia Smith Slack '12
Annie Tait Jenkins '14
Mary West Thatcher '15
Alma Buchanan Brown ' 16
Maryellen Harvey Newton ' 16
Ruth Anderson O'Neal '18
**Julia Ingram Hazzard '19
Lulu Smith Westcott '19
Lillian G. Patton '20
Myrtle C. Blackmon '21
Ida Brittain Patterson '21
Quenelle Harrold Sheffield '23
Mary Keesler Dalton '25
Frances Tennent Ellis '25
Dora Ferrell Gentry '26
Olivia Ward Swann '26
Caroline McKinney Clarke '27
Willie W. Smith '27
Louise Woodard Clifton '27
Ruth Thomas Stemmons '28
Ethel Freeland Darden '29
Mary Warren Read '29
Violet Weeks Miller '29
Julia Thompson Smith '31
Margaret G. Weeks '31
Mr.
Diana Dyer Wilson '32
Mrs.
Betty Lou Houck Smith '35
Mr.
Marie Simpson Rutland '35
Mr.
Martha Marshall Dykes '39
Mrs.
Marian Franklin Anderson '40
Mr.
Virginia Milner Carter '40
Mrs.
*Marie Scott O'Neill '42
Mr.
Betty Henderson Cameron '43
Mr.
Dorothy Holloran Addison '43
Mr.
Betty Scott Noble '44
Dr.
Scott Newell Newton '45
**Mr.
Mary Duckworth Gellerstedt '46
**Mrs.
Dorothy Peace Ramsaur '47
Mr.
Vanesse Orr Rowe '48
Dr.
Mary Elizabeth Hays Babcock '49
Dr. .
Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
Miss
Catherine Warren Dukehart '51
Dr. ,
Louise Hill Reaves '54
Mr. i
Helen McGowan French '54
**Miss
Jo Ann Hall Hunsinger '55
Mr. 1
Nancy Thomas Hill '56
Mr. 1
Suzella Burns Newsome '57
Mr. 1
Betsy Jefferson Boyt '62
Mr. .
Mr. M. Bernard Aidinoff
Mr. 1
Mr. W. 0. Alt
Paul H. Anderson
Louise Risley Barnes
Dan D. Cameron
Clifford M. Clarke
Howard P. Conrad
Harry L. Dalton
Isobel A. Fraser
Alex P. Gaines
L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr.
John S. Hunsinger
and Mrs. Rudolph W. Jones, Jr.
David N. Landers
Helen B. Longshore
J. Erskine Love, Jr.
and Mrs. Paul M. McCain
James Newsome
Bess Patton
and Mrs. Marvin B. Perry, Jr.
C. Oscar Schmidt, Jr.
Gertrude K. Sevin
Hal L. Smith
P. L. Bealy Smith
Ferdinand Warren
James H. Wells
T Wilson, Jr
* Fund Agent ** Deceased
Fall 1979
Quadrangle Quorum
**Jesse Z. Ham '15
Agnes Ball '17
Eileen Dodd Sams '22
Virginia Wing Power '26
Catherine Mitchell Lynn '27
Evelyn F. Satterwhite '27
Patricia Collins Dwinnell * 28
Mary King Fowler '28
Nannie Graham Sanders '28
Ann Todd Rubey '28
Helen Gouedy Mansfield '29
Jane Bailey Hall Hefner '30
Crystal Wellborn Gregg '30
Myra Jervey Bedell '31
Fanny Willis Niles Bolton '31
Imogene Hudson Cullinan '32
Lila Norfleet Davis '32
Lovelyn Wilson Heyward '32
Elizabeth Alexander Higgins '35
Betty Fountain Gray '35
Nina Parke Hopkins '35
Lisalotte Roennecke Kaiser '35
Laura Whitner Dorsey '35
Annie Galloway Phillips '37
Dorothy Avery Newton '38
Zoe Wells Lambert '38
Jane Hamilton Ray '39
Lou Pate Jones '39
Haydie Sanford Sams '39
Eloise McCall Guyton '40
Anne Chambless Bateman '42
Betty Medlock Clark '42
Ruby Rosser Davis '43
Mabel Stowe Query *43
Lucile E. Beaver '46
Anna George Dobbins '47
Charlotte Hevener Nobbs '47
May Turner Engeman '47
Anne Irwin Smith '50
Harriet Durham Maloof '54
Anne Patterson Hammes '54
Virginia Love Dunaway *56
Helen Sewell Johnson '57
Sue Lile Inman '58
Martha Holmes Keith '59
Charlotte King Sanner '60
Sally Smith Howard '60
Elizabeth Dalton Brand '61
Robin Patrick Johnston '63
Margaret Murphy Hunter '65
Mary Chapman Hatcher '69
Sally Elberfeld Countryman '69
Lou Frank Guill '69
Susan E. Morton ' 71
Sharon Jones Cole '72
Julia C Goodloe '73
Ms. Carol Aycock
Mrs. George M. Bevier
Mr. Otis Burnham
Mr. Scott Candler, Jr.
Mr. Neil 0. Davis
Mrs. Barbara Derketsch
Mr. Earl H. Elberfeld
Mrs. Rachel R. Gordon
Mrs. Esther A. Graff
Mr. Sam F. Hatcher
Mr. Samuel M. Inman, Jr.
Mr. K. Webb Kennedy
Lions Club Schwabisch Hall
Mr. James Ross McCain
Dr. Kate McKemie
Mr. M. Lamar Oglesby
Col, and Mrs. Henry A. Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Rockwell
Mr. Hansford Sams, Jr.
Mr. W. A. L. Sibley, Jr.
Mrs. Carolyn Snow
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Thompson
Mr. William C. Wardlaw
Mrs. Henry C. West
Colonnade Club
Mary E Hamilton '15
Oman Buchanan Albaugh '16
Goldie Suttle Ham '19
Marguerite Watts Cooper '19
Jean McAlister '21
Elizabeth Flake Cole '23
Jane Knight Lowe '23
Frances Cilliland Stukes '24
Victoria Howie Kerr '24
Mary Ben Wright Erwin '25
Pearl Kunnes '27
Roberta Winter '27
Mary Shewmaker '28
Hazel Brown Ricks '29
Raemond Wilson Craig '30
Mary Effie Elliot '32
Elinor Hamilton Hightower '34
Hyta Plowden Mederer '34
Carrie Phinney Latimer Duvall '36
Frances Wilson Hurst '37
Helen Gates Carson '40
Aileen Kasper Borrish '41
Louise Isaacson Bernard '46
Amelia Davis Luchslnger '48
Katherine A. Geffcken '49
Emy Evans Blair '52
Sara Mclntyre Bahner '55
Susan Hogg Griffith '58
Nancy Holland Sibley '58
JoAnn Sawyer Delafield '58
Carolyn Tinkler Ramsey '58
Elizabeth Harshbarger Broadus '62
Suzanne Jones Harper '68
Jeanne Jones Holliday '76
Susan Kathleen Bethune '79
Mr. Wo A. Bethune
Mr. Thomas H. Broadus
Mrs. Aline M. Brown
Dr. Robert P. Coggins
Dr. Julia T. Gary
Mr. Ben S. Gilmer
Mrs. Edward Hansell
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Markert
Dr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Martin
Mr. J. A. Minter, Jr.
Mr. C. B. Rogers, Jr.
**Mrs. Susan V. Russell
Mr. John A. Sibley
**Mr. Edraond H. Smith, Jr.
Century Club
LIzzabel Saxon '08
Gladys Camp Brannan '16
Margaret T. Phythian '16
Virginia Allen Potter '17
Janet Newton '17
Regina Pinkston '17
Virginia Haugh Franklin '18
Katherine Seay '18
Lucy Durr Dunn '19
Alice Norman Pate ' 19
Elizabeth Witherspoon Patterson
Margaret Bland Sewell '20
Romola Davis Hardy '20
Marian Harper Kellogg '20
Julia Brantley Willet '21
Lois Compton Jennings '21
Lucile Conant Leland '21
Elizabeth Enloe MacCarthy '21
Mary Finney Bass '21
Sarah Fulton '21
Sarah McCurdy Evans '21
Eleanor Buchanan Starcher '22
'19 Helen Burkhalter Quattlebaum '22
Emma Proctor Newton '22
Ruth Scandrett Hardy '22
Viola Hollis Oakley '23
Lucie Howard Carter '23
Martha Mcintosh Nail *23
Attie Alford '24
Martha Eakes Matthews '24
Katie Frank Gilchrist '24
Elizabeth Henry Shands '24
Barron Hyatt Morrow '24
Corinne Jackson Wilkerson '24
Mary L. McCurdy '24
Margaret McDow MacDougall '24
Isabel Ferguson Hargadine '25
Virginia Perkins Nelson '25
Sarah Tate Tumlin '25
Memory Tucker Merritt '25
Pocahontas Wignt Edmunds '25
Helen Bates Law '26
Edyth Carpenter Shuey '26
Elizabeth Chapman Pirkle '26
Gene Dumas Vickers '26
Edith Gilchrist Berry '26
Gertrude Green Blalock '26
Juanita Greer White '26
Catherine Mock Hodgin '26
Florence Perkins Ferry '26
Norma Tucker Sturtevant '26
Margaret Whitington Davis '26
Willie May Coleman Duncan '27
Mildred Cowan Wright '27
Grace Etheredge '27
Clarice Hollis Fears '27
Elizabeth Lilly Swedenberg '27
Elizabeth Lynn '27
Ruth McMillan Jones '27
Virginia Sevier Hanna '27
Elizabeth A. Vary '27
Mary Weems Rogers '27
Madelaine Dunseith Alston '28
Louise Girardeau Cook '28
Sarah Glenn Boyd '28
Olive Graves Bowen * 28
Kathryn Kalmon Nussbaum '28
Anna Knight Daves '28
Evangeline Papageorge '28
Mary Shepherd Soper '28
Gladys Austin Mann '29
Virginia Branch Leslie '29
Lucile Bridgman Leitch '29
Bettina Bush Jackson '29
Sally Cothran Lambeth '29
Sara Douglass Thomas '29
Elise M. Gibson '29
Marion Green Johnston '29
Elizabeth Hatchett '29
Cara Hinman ' 29
Katherine Hunter Branch '29
Elaine Jacobsen Lewis '29
Sara Johnston Hill '29
Mary Alice Juhan '29
Geraldine LeMay '29
Katharine Lott Marbut '29
Edith McGranahan Smith T '29
Katharine Pasco '29
Lillian Adelaide Wurm Cousins '29
Helen Hendricks Martin '30
Carlton Jones Bunkley '30
Lynn Moore Hardy '30
Dorothy Daniel Smith '30
Sara Townsend Pittman ' 30
Sara L. Bullock '31
Ruth Etheredge Griffin '31
Dorothy Grubb Rivers '31
Ruth Pringle Pipkin '31
Harriet L. Smith '31
Martha Sprinkle Rafferty '31
Ellene Winn '31
Catherine Baker Evans '32
Varnelle Braddy Perryman '32
Penny Brown Barnett '32
Susan Love Glenn '32
Ruth Conant Green '32
Louise Hollingsworth Jackson '32
Louise H. Stakely '32
Nell Starr Gardner '32
Jura Taffar Cole '32
Miriam Thompson Felder '32
Page Ackerman '33
Bernice Beaty Cole '33
Julia Finley McCutchen '33
Caroline Lingle Lester '33
Frances Oglesby Hills '33
Letitia Rockmore Nash '33
Mary Sturtevant Cunningham '33
Annie Laurie Whitehead Young '33
Marie Whittle Wellslager '33
Helen Boyd McConnell '34
Pauline Gordon Woods '34
Lucy Goss Herbert '34
Louise McCain Boyce '34
Frances M. O'Brien '34
Dorothy Potts Weiss '34
Gladys Pratt Entrican '34
Virginia F. Prettyman '34
Mabel Talmage '34
Dorothy Walker Palmer *34
Carol Griffin Scoville '35
Elizabeth Heaton Mullino '35
Anna Humber Little *35
Julia McClatchey Brooke '35
Jacqueline Woolfolk Mathes T 35
Mary Beasley White * 36
Meriel Bull Mitchell '36
Louise Jordan Turner '36
Sarah Frances McDonald '36
Louisa Robert Carroll '36
Mary Margaret Stowe Hunter '36
Mary Vines Wright f 36
Eloisa Alexander LeConte '37
Kathleen Daniel Spicer '37
Lucile Dennison Keenan * 37
Fannie Harris Jones '37
Barbara Hertwig Meschter '37
Dorothy Jester '37
Rachel Kennedy Lowthian '37
Vivienne Long McCain '37
Enid Middleton Howard *37
Marjorie Scott Meier '37
Frances Steele Garrett '37
Elizabeth Blackshear Flinn '38
Martha Brown Miller '38
Jean Chalmers Smith '38
Lulu Croft '38
Doris Dunn St. Clair '38
Goudyloch Erwin Dyer '38
Eloise Estes Keiser '38
Bertha Merrill Holt '38
Nancy Moorer Cantey '38
Virginia Suttenfield '38
Grace Tazewell Flowers "38
Virginia Watson Logan '38
Elsie West Duval '38
Louise Young Garrett '38
Jean Bailey Owen '39
Helen Moses Regenstein '39
Mary Murphy Chesnutt '39
Margaret Pleasants Jones '39
Julia Porter Scurry '39
Mamie Lee Ratliff Finger '39
Elinor Tyler Richardson '39
Margaret Barnes Carey '40
Evelyn Baty Christman '40
Eleanor N. Hutchens '40
Mildred Joseph Colyer '40
Ruth Ashburn Kline '41
Louise Franklin Livingston '41
Caroline Gray Truslow '41
Anne Martin Elliott '41
Marjorie Merlin Cohen '41
Martha Moody Laseter '41
Pattie Patterson Johnson *4l
Gene Slack Morse '41
Frances Spratlin Hargrett '41
**Carolyn Strozier '41
Jane Vaughan Price '41
Betty Alden Waitt White '41
Rebekah Andrews McNeill '42
Betty Ann Brooks '42
Susan Dyer Oliver '42
Francis Ellis Wayt '42
Doris Henson Vaughn '42
Julia Patch Weston '42
Louise Pruitt Jones '42
Margaret Sheftall Chester '42
Frances Tucker Johnson '42
Mary Jane Auld Linker '43
Betty Bates Fernandez '43
Maryann Cochran Abbott '43
Margaret Downie Brown '43
Sterly Lebey Wilder '43
Clara Rountree Couch '43
Barbara Wilber Gerland '43
Katherine Wright Philips '43
Bettye Ashcraft Senter '44
Frances Cook Crowley '44
Elizabeth Edwards Wilson '44
Elizabeth Harvard Dowda '44
Julia Harvard Warnock '44
Martha Lasseter Storey '44
Margaret Powell Flowers '44
Marjorie Tippins Johnson '44
Virginia Carter Caldwell *45
Elizabeth Farmer Gaynor '45
Elizabeth Glenn Stow '45
Mary Ann Turner Edwards f 45
Dorothy Lee Webb McKee '45
Martha Baker Wilkins '46
Edwina Bell Davis '46
Fund Agent ( * Deceased
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Bible professor Mary Boney Sheats.
Conradine Fraser Riddle '46
Anne Lee Mitchell '46
Celetta Powell Jones '46
Marie Beeson Ingraham '47
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Jane Cooke Cross '47
Helen Catherine Currie '47
Genet Heery Barron '47
Marianne Jeffries Williams '47
Margaret Kelly Wells '47
Betty Radford Moeller '47
Barbara Smith Hull '47
Barbara Anne Blair '48
Adele Dieckmann McKee '48
Virginia Drake Blass '48
Kathleen Hewson Cole '48
June Irvine Torbert '48
Marybeth Little Weston '48
Mae Osborne Parker '48
Rebekah Scott Bryan '48
Betty Blackmon Kinnett '49
Bettie Davison Bruce '49
Betty Jeanne Ellison Candler '49
Kate Durr Elmore '49
Martha Goddard Lovell '49
Rudy Lehmann Cowley '49
Reece Newton Smith '49
Nancy Parks Anderson '49
Betty Jo Sauer Mansur '49
Virginia Vining Skelton '49
Jo-Anne Christopher Cochrane '50
Jessie Hodges Kryder '50
Margaret Hunt Denny '51
Jimmie Ann McGee Collings '51
Sarah McKee Burnside ' 51
Ann Boyer Wilkerson '52
Jeannine Byrd Hopkins '52
Catherine Crowe Merritt '52
Kathren Freeman Stelzner '52
Jean Robarts Seaton '52
Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Bertie Bond '53
Ann Cooper Whitesel '53
Belle Miller McMaster '53
Patricia Morgan Fisher '53
Mary Ripley Warren '53
Louise Ross Bell '53
Norma Wang Feng '53
Jane Williams Coleman '53
Ulla E. Beckman * 54
Sue Born Ballard '54
Julia Grier Storey '54
Eleanor Hutchinson Smith '54
Mitzi Kiser Law '54
Ellen Prouty Smith '54
Nancy Whetstone Hull '54
Susanna Byrd Wells '55
Harriet Hampton Cuthbertson '55
Helen Hinchey Williams '55
Catherine Lewis Callaway '55
Sarah Petty Dagenhart '55
Joan Pruitt Mclntyre '55
Dorothy Sands Hawkins '55
Agnes Scott Willoch '55
Margaret Burwell Barnhardt '56
Claire Flintom Barnhardt '56
Sallie Greenfield '56
Harriett Griffin Harris '56
Sarah Hall Hayes '56
Emmie Hay Alexander '56
Nancy Jackson Pitts '56
May Muse Stonecypher '56
Anne Sayre Callison '56
Robbie Ann Shelnutt Upshaw '56
Mary D. Beaty '57
Carolyn Herman Sharp '57
Elaine Lewis Hudgins '57
Katherine Miller Nevins '57
Jean Price Knapp '57
Ann Shire Penuel '57
Miriam F. Smith '57
Anne Terry Sherren '57
Martha Davis Rosselot '58
Patricia Gover Bitzer '58
Sara Margaret Heard White '58
Carolyn Magruder Ruppenthal '58
Mary Jane Milford Spurgeon '58
Phia Peppas Kanellos '58
Blythe Posey Ashmore '58
Caroline Romberg Silcox '58
Cecily Rudisill Langford '58
Harriet Talmadge Mill '58
Jane King Allen '59
Mildred Ling Wu '59
Suzanne Heath Manges '59
Ann Rivers Payne Hutcheson '59
Jean Salter Reeves '59
Carolyn Wright McGarity '59
Nell Archer Congdon '60
Margaret Collins Alexander '60
Shannon Cumming McCormick '60
Carolyn Anne Davies Preische '60
Rebecca Evans Callahan '60
Louise Florance Smythe '60
Marcia Tobey Swanson '60
Grace Woods Walden '60
Ann Avant Crichton '61
Barbara Best Teckemeyer '61
Sally Bryan Minter '61
Kay Gwaltney Remick '61
Janice L. Henry '61
Julia Maddox Paul '61
Barbara Mordecai Schwanebeck '61
Nancy Stone Hough '61
Patricia Walker Bass '61
Martha Campbell Williams '62
Carol Cowan Kussmaul '62
Betty Pancake Williams '62
Marjorie Reitz Turnbull '62
Lebby Rogers Harrison '62
Sarah Cumming Mitchell '63
Dorothy Laird Foster '63
Suzanne Smith *63
Diane David Hamrick '64
Harriet King Wasserman '64
Martha MacNair McMullen '64
Anne Minter Nelson '64
Margaret Moses Young '64
Lila Sheffield Howland '64
Doris El-Tawil Krueger '65
Diane Miller Wise '65
Sandra Wilson '65
Alice Airth '66
Nancy Bruce Truluck '66
Mary Jane Calmes Thomas '66
Jan Gaskell Ross '66
Anne Morse Topple ' 66
Malinda Snow '66
Martha Thompson '66
Ruth Van Deman Walters '66
Louisa W. G. Williams '66
Anne Diseker Beebe '67
Jane Keiger Gehring '67
Susan Stevens Hitchcock '67
Susan Stringer Connell '68
Minnie Bob Mothes Campbell '69
Martha Wilson Keesler '69
Sherian Fitzgerald Hodges '70
Cheryl Granade Sullivan '70
Ann Mizell Millar '70
Catherine Oliver '70
Sandra Wilson Harris '70
Mary Alice Isele Johnson '71
Ann A. Jarrett '71
Granville Sydnor Hill '71
Bernie Todd Smith ' 71
Deborah Jordan Bates '72
Linda Maloy Ozier '72
Resa L. Harris ' 73
Judith Maguire Tindel '73
Mary Louise Brown Forsythe '75
Shelby White Cave '75
Sally Stenger '75
Emily Dunbar ' 76
Susan Grier Phillips '76
Lark Todd Sessions '76
Elizabeth Doscher Shannon *77
Linda Shearon '77
Barrow-Gwinnett-Newton Agnes
Scott Alumnae Club
Decatur Agnes Scott Alumnae Club
Triangle Area Agnes Scott
College Alumnae Club
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Abernathy
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Barclay
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Benson
Mr. E. L. Bothwell
Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Bowden
Mr. Harllee Branch, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bringhurst , Jr.
Mr. Morrison W. Brinker
Mr. and Mrs. Waverly C. Broadwell , Jr.
Mrs. Helen S. Carchidi
Mr. John H. Carter, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Collar, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Curd
Mrs. Jean M. Davis
Decatur Music Teachers Association
Dr. F. William Dowda
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Dunbar
Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Dunbar
Mrs. Julia C. Duncan
Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Dunstan
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Echols
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Elebash
Mr. Lawrence L. Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Gaither
Mr. Blake P. Garrett
**Mr. James R. Gilliam, Jr.
Mrs. N. Howard Gowing, Jr.
Dr. Marjorie Grene
Mrs. James E. Hara
Mr. and Mrs. John S, Harrison
Mr. W. E. Hunter
Mr. Donald R. Keough
Mr. Kenneth L. Kinney
Dr. C. Benton Kline
Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Leroy
Mrs. Elsie W. Love
Dr. Kathryn A. Manuel
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Matthews
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Mcintosh
Dr. W. Edward McNair
Miss Elisabeth Mitchell
Dr. Chester Morse
Mr. Herbert H. Nussbaum
Mrs. John Pancake
Dr. and Mrs. Walter B. Posey
Mr. and Mrs. Francois L. Sheats
Mr. Horace H. Sibley
Mr. and Mrs. Roff Sims
Mrs. L. Noel Smith
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Speer, Jr.
Dr. Chloe Steel
Mr. Augustus H. Sterne
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stimson
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Swink
Dr. J. Randolph Taylor
Mrs. W. M. Terrill
Dr. and Mrs. J. N. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Wallace, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Wendling
Mrs. J. Parham Werlein
Mr. John C. Wilson
Women of the Church,
Decatur Presbyterian Church
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Zarkowsky
Institute
Annie Wiley Preston
Academy
Lillian Beatty Cory
Mildred Beatty Miller
Julia Green Heinz
Ruth Green
Susie E. Johnson
1908
Lizzabel Saxon
1910
**Mary Donnelly Meehan
Emma Eldridge Ferguson
Louise Hunter Marshall
Lila Williams Rose
1906
Ida Lee Hill Irvin
1911
Mollie McCormick McCord
Ruby Stevens Cone
Fall 1979
1912
Martha Hall Young
Julia Smith Slack
Carol Stearns Wey
1913
Mathilde Brenner Gercke
Margaret Roberts Graham
1914
Theodosia Cobbs Hogan
Annie Tait Jenkins
Kathleen Kennedy
Linda Miller Summer
1915
Anonymous
**Jesse 2. Ham
Mary E. Hamilton
Mary Hyer Dale
Isabel Norwood
Grace Reid
Almedia Sadler Duncan
Mary West Thatcher
1916
Elizabeth Bogle Weil
Alma Buchanan Brown
Omah Buchanan Albaugh
Gladys Camp Brannan
Evelyn Goode Brock
Maryellen Harvey Newton
Katherine Hay Rouse
Margaret T. Phythian
Janie Rogers Allen
Jeannette Victor Levy
Clara Whips Dunn
1917
Virginia Allen Potter
Gjertrud Amundsen Siqueland
Agnes Ball
Gladys Gaines Field
Mildred Hall Pearce
Jane Harwell Heazel
Janet Newton
Regina Pinkston
Katharine Baker Simpson
Alice Zachry
Goldie Suttle Ham
**Julia Ingram Hazzard
Virginia Newton
Alice Norman Pate
Lulu Smith Westcott
Marguerite Watts Cooper
Llewellyn Wilburn
Elizabeth Witherspoon Patterson
Agnes Scott Income
1978-79
1920
Margaret Bland Sewell
Eloise Buston Sluss
Roraola Davis Hardy
Sarah Davis Mann
Julia Hagood Cuthbertson
Marian Harper Kellogg
Cornelia Hutton Hazelhurst
Eunice Legg Gunn
Margery Moore Tappan
Lillian G c Patton
Margaret Sanders Brannon
Louise Slack Hooker
Mary Beall Weekes Clements
Margaret Woods Spalding
Rosalind Wurm Council
1921
Myrtle C. Blackmon
Julia Brantley Willet
Ida Brittain Patterson
Thelma Brown Aiken
Eleanor B. Carpenter
Lois Compton Jennings
Lucile Conant Leland
Virginia Crank Everett
Frances Dearing Hay
Elizabeth Enloe MacCarthy
Mary Finney Bass
Elizabeth Floding Morgan
Louise Fluker
Sarah Fulton
Sophie Hagedorn Fox
Helen Hall Hopkins
Hariwill Hanes Hulsey
Margaret Hedrick Nickels
Anna Locke Ingram Liles
Melville Jameson
Anna Marie Landress Cate
Jean McAlister
Sarah McCurdy Evans
Gladys McDaniel Hastings
Charlotte Newton
Eddith Patterson Blair
Edith Roark Van Sickle
Eula Russell Kelly
Elizabeth Smith DeWitt
Julia Tomlinson Ingram
Evelyn Wade Harwood
Margaret Stuart Wade
Marguerite Wat kins Goodman
Helen Wayt Cocks
Student Charges
43.0%
Agnes Scott Expenditures
1978-79
Student \
Services
^ 7.6%
Administration
20.2%
Instruction and
Library
33.0%
Scholarships
7.8%
1918
Hallie Alexander Turner
Ruth Anderson O'Neal
Elva Brehm Florrid
Martha H. Comer
Ruby Lee Estes Ware
Olive Hardwick Cross
Virginia Haugh Franklin
Susan B. Hecker
Alvahn Holmes
Margaret Leyburn Foster
Dorothy Moore Horton
Katherine Seay
1919
Margaret Grace Barry Owen
Cora Mae Bond LeVert
LaGrange Cothran Trussell
Elizabeth Dimmock Bloodworth
Lucy Durr Dunn
Lois Eve Rozier
Louise Felker Mizell
Mary Ford Kennerly
Katherine Godbee Smith
1922
Agnes Adams Stokes
Sarah Alston Lawton
Elizabeth A. Brown
Eleanor Buchanan Starcher
Helen Burkhalter Quattlebaum
Eunice Dean Major
Caroline Farquhar
Catherine Haugh Smith
Genie Blue Howard Mathews
Lilburne Ivey Tuttle
Julia Jameson
Anne Ruth Moore Crawford
Carolyn Moore Gressette
Emma Proctor Newton
Dinah Roberts Parramore
Ruth Scandrett Hardy
Louie Dean Stephens Markey
Emma Julia Thomas Johnston
Frances White Weems
Food Service,
Dormitories
20.0%
1923
*Dorothy Bowron Collins
Margaret Brenner Awtrey
Thelma Cook Turt6n
Mary Cooper Christian
Louise Crosland Huske
Rebecca B. Dick
Eileen Dodd Sams
Christine Evans Murray
Helen Faw Mull
Elizabeth Flake Cole
Maud Foster Stebler
*Philippa C. Gilchrist
Emily Guille Henegar
Jennye Hall Lemon
Quenelle Harrold Sheffield
Elizabeth Hoke Smith
Viola Hollis Oakley
Lucie Howard Carter
Ruby Hudson Baker
Jane Knight Lowe
Plant ^
Operation
11.4%
Lucile Little Morgan
Elizabeth Lockhart Davis
Josephine Logan Hamilton
*Beth McClure McGeachy
Martha Mcintosh Nail
*Anna Meade Minnigerode
Susye Mims Lazenby
Elizabeth Molloy Horr
Caroline Moody Jordan
Lillian Moore Rice
Fredeva Ogletree
Elizabeth Ransom Hahn
Edith Ruff Coulliette
Nancy Tripp Shand
Jessie Watts Rustin
Mary Lee Wilhelm Satterwhite
Margaret Yeager Brackney
Fund Agent '* Deceased
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
1924
Anonymous
Elizabeth Askew Patterson
Attie Alford
*Grace Bargeron Rambo
Rebecca Bivings Rogers
Sara Brandon Rickey
Helen Lane Comfort Sanders
Martha Eakes Matthews
Katie Frank Gilchrist
Frances Gilliland Stukes
Ann Hatton Lewis
Elizabeth Henry Shands
^Victoria Howie Kerr
*Barron Hyatt Morrow
Corinne Jackson Wilkerson
Mary L. McCurdy
Margaret McDow MacDougall
Sara McDowell Joiner
Annie Will Miller Klugh
Mary Mobberly
Pauline Murphey Gradick
*Catherine Nash Scott
Weenona Peck Booth
Margaret Powell Gay
Merle Rhyne Walker
Carrie Scandrett
Isabelle Sewell Hancock
Daisy Frances Smith
*Polly Stone Buck
Augusta Thomas Lanier
Annadawn Watson Edwards
Helen Wright Smith
1925
Frances Alston Everett
Frances Bitzer Edson
Lulawill Brown Ellis
Mary Brown Campbell
Louise Buchanan Proctor
Mary Caldwell McFarland
Catherine Carrier Robinson
Isabel Ferguson Hargadine
Frances Gardner Welton
*Lucile Gause Fryxell
Alice Greenlee Grollman
Ruth Harrison McKay
Sallie Horton Lay
Margaret Hyatt Walker
*Annie Johnson Sylvester
Mary Keesler Dalton
Eunice Kell Simmons
Georgia May Little Owens
Martha Lin Manly Hogshead
Josephine Marbut Stanley
Mary K. McCallum
Anne McKay Mitchell
Mary Ann McKinney
Lillian Middlebrooks Smears
Virginia Perkins Nelson
Julia F. Pope
Floy Sadler Maier
Josephine Schuessler Stevens
Elizabeth Shaw McClamroch
Mary Sims Dickson
*Carolyn Smith Whipple
Ella Smith Hayes
Emily Ann Spivey Simmons
*Sarah Tate Tumlin
Frances Tennent Ellis
*Eugenia Thompson Akin
Memory Tucker Merritt
*Mary Belle Walker
Virginia Watts Beals
Frances White
Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Mabel Witherspoon Meredith
Mary Ben Wright Erwin
*Emily Zellars McNeill
1926
Helen Bates Law
Mary Louise Bennett
Lois Bolles Knox
Esther Byers Pitts
Katharine Cannaday McKenzie
Edyth Carpenter Shuey
*Elizabeth Chapman Pirkle
Clarkie Davis Skelton
Louisa Duls
Gene Dumas Vickers
Jeffie Dunn Clark
*Ellen Fain Bowen
Dora Ferrell Gentry
Mary Freeman Curtis
Edith Gilchrist Berry
Gertrude Green Blalock
Juanita Greer White
Olive Hall Shadgett
Charlotte Higgs Andrews
*Hazel Huff Monaghan
Mary Elizabeth Knox Happoldt
Betty Little Meriwether
Margaret Lotspeich Whitbeck
Catherine Mock Hodgin
Virginia Peeler Green
*Florence Perkins Ferry
Allene Ramage Fitzgerald
*Nellie Bass Richardson
Mildred Scott
Susan Shadburn Watkins
Sarah Quinn Slaughter
Mary L, Smith
Elizabeth Snow Tilly
Evelyn Sprinkle Carter
Olivia Ward Swann
Norma Tucker Sturtevant
Margaret Tufts Neal
*Margaret Whitington Davis
Maud Whittemore Flowers
Virginia Wing Power
Rosalie Wootten Deck
1927
Evelyn Albright Caldwell
Reba Bayless Boyer
Maurine Bledsoe Bramlett
Josephine Bridgman
Annette Carter Colwell
Dorothy Chamberlain
Susan Clayton Fuller
Lillian Clement Adams
Willie May Coleman Duncan
*Mildred Cowan Wright
Martha Crowe Eddins
Marion Daniel Blue
*Catherine Louise Davis
Mabel Dumas Crenshaw
Grace Etheredge
Katharine Gilliland Higgins
Mary Heath Phillips
Mary Rebekah Hedrick
Elizabeth Henderson Palmer
**Clarice Hollis Fears
Katherine Houston Sheild
Mae Erskine Irvine Fowler
Lelia Joiner Cooper
Pearl Kunnes
Louise Leonard McLeod
Elizabeth Lilly Swedenberg
Georgia Linkous Bivins
Louise Love joy Jackson
Lamar Lowe Connell
*Elizabeth Lynn
Virginia MacDonald
Carolina McCall Chapin
Caroline McKinney Clarke
Pauline McLeod Logue
Ruth McMillan Jones
Catherine Mitchell Lynn
Elizabeth Norfleet Miller
Stella Pittman Dunkin
Miriam Preston St. Clair
Douglass Rankin Hughes
*May Reece Forman
Edith Richards
Evelyn F. Satterwhite
Virginia Sevier Hanna
Mamie Shaw Flack
Sarah Shields Pfeiffer
Miss Mary Shive
Willie W. Smith
*Emily Stead
Edith Strickland Jones
Elizabeth A. Vary
Mary Weems Rogers
Roberta Winter
Louise Woodard Clifton
**Grace Zachry McCreery
1928
Myrtle Bledsoe Wharton
S. Virginia Carrier
Patricia Collins Dwinnell
Lucy Mai Cook Means
Nancy Crowther Otis
Mary Cunningham Cayce
Mary Ray Dobyns Houston
Madelaine Dunseith Alston
*Carolyn Essig Frederick
Irene Garretson Nichols
Margaret Gerig Mills
Hattie Gershcow Hirsh
Louise Girardeau Cook
Sarah Glenn Boyd
Olive Graves Bowen
Elizabeth Grier Edmunds
Muriel Griffin
Rachel Henderlite
Mary Hough Clark
Alice Louise Hunter Rasnake
Kathryn Kalmon Nussbaum
Mary King Fowler
Anna Knight Daves
Virginia May Love
Irene Lowrance Wright
Katharine MacKinnon Lee
Mary Bell McConkey Taylor
Elizabeth McEntire
Sarah McFadyen Brown
*Gwendolyn McKinnon Oliver
Geraldine Menshouse Condon
Frances New McRae
Evangeline Papageorge
Martha Riley Stephenson
*Elizabeth Roark Ellington
Nannie Graham Sanders
Mary Sayward Rogers
Mary Shepherd Soper
Mary Shewraaker
Mary Stegall Stipp
Ruth Thomas Stemmons
Ann Todd Rubey
Edna Volberg Johnson
Josephine Walker Parker
1929
Class of 1928
Elizabeth Allgood BIrchmore
Leila W. Anderson
Miriam Anderson Dowdy
Pernette Adams Carter
Margaret Andreae Collins
Gladys Austin Mann
Therese Barksdale Vinsonhaler
Lillie Bellingrath Pruitt
LaRue Berry Smith
Virginia Branch Leslie
Lucile Bridgman Leitch
Miriam Broach Jordan
Hazel Brown Ricks
Bettina Bush Jackson
Virginia Cameron Taylor
Dorothy Cheek Callaway
Sally Cothran Lambeth
Sara Douglass Thomas
Mary Ellis Knapp
Mary Ficklen Barnett
Nancy Elizabeth Fitzgerald Bray
Elizabeth Fliedner Crowell
*Ethel Freeland Darden
Lenore Gardner McMillan
Margaret Garretson Ford
*Betty Watkins Gash
*Elise M. Gibson
Helen Gouedy Mansfield
Marion Green Johnston
Mildred Greenleaf Walker
Amanda Groves
Pearl Hastings Baughman
Elizabeth Hatchett
Cara Hinman
Marian Hodges Anthony
Ella Hollingsworth Wilkerson
*Hazel Hood
Katherine Hunter Branch
Dorothy Hutton Mount
Elaine Jacobsen Lewis
Sara Johnston Hill
Evelyn Josephs Phifer
*Mary Alice Juhan
Jean Lamont Dickson
*Geraldine LeMay
Katharine Lott Marbut
Mabel Marshall Whitehouse
Mary Lou McCall Reddoch
Alice McDonald Richardson
Edith McGranahan Smith T
Elinore Morgan McComb
Esther Nisbet Anderson
Eleanor Lee Norris MacKinnon
Katharine Pasco
Rachel Paxon Hayes
Susan Pierce Murray
Letty Pope Prewitt
Mary Prim Fowler
Helen Ridley Hartley
Louise Robertson Solomon
Rowena Runnette Garber
Martha Selman Jacobs
Sally Southerland
Mary Gladys Steffner Kincaid
Clara Stone Collins
Susanne Stone Eady
Dorothy Turner Gravatt
*Mary Warren Read
Violet Weeks Miller
Frances G. Welsh
Effie Mae Winslow Taylor
Hazel Wolfle Frakes
Katherine Woodbury Williams
*Ruth Worth
Lillian Adelaide Wurm Cousins
1930
Pauline Adkins Clark
Walterette Arwood Tanner
*Marie Baker Shumaker
Elisabeth Branch Johnson
Frances Brown Milton
Emily Campbell Boland
Lucille Coleman Christian
Lois Combs Kropa
Lilian Cook McFarland
Katherine Crawford Adams
Gladney Cure ton
Elise Derickson
Elizabeth Dodd Thomas
Clarene H. Dorsey
Anne Ehrlich Solomon
Alice Garretson Bolles
lone Gueth Brodmerkel
Jane Bailey Hall Hefner
Helen Hendricks Martin
Alice Jernigan Dowling
Carlton Jones Bunkley
Katherine Leary Holland
Sarah Marsh Shapard
Mary McCallie Ware
Ruth McLean Wright
Frances Messer Jeffries
Blanche Miller Rigby
*Emily Moore Couch
Lynn Moore Hardy
Carolyn Nash Hathaway
Margaret Ogden Stewart
Shannon Preston Cumming
Elsie Roberts Dean
Lillian Russell McBath
Dorothy Daniel Smith
Helen W. Snyder
*Martha Stackhouse Grafton
Sara Townsend Pittman
Mary P. Trammell
Crystal Wellborn Gregg
Evalyn Wilder
Harriet B. Williams
Pauline Willoughby Wood
*Raemond Wilson Craig
*Missouri Woolford Raine
Octavia Young Harvey
1931
Margaret Askew Smith
Laura Brown Logan
Sara L. Bullock
Marjorie Daniel Cole
Annie Dean Norman
*Helen Duke Ingram
Ruth Etheredge Griffin
Marion Fielder Martin
*Helen Friedman Blackshear
Dorothy Grubb Rivers
Sarah Hill Brown
Anne Chopin Hudson Hankins
*Myra Jervey Bedell
Elise C. Jones
Marian Lee Hind
Ruth McAuliffe
Anne McCallie
Jane McLaughlin Titus
Shirley McPhaul Whitfield
Katherine Morrow Norem
Frances Musgrave Frierson
Fanny Willis Niles Bolton
Fall 1979
Ruth Pringle Pipkin
Katharine Purdie
Alice Quarles Henderson
Kitty Reid Carson
Jeanette Shaw Harp
Elizabeth Simpson Wilson
Elizabeth Smith Crew
Harriet L. Smith
Martha Sprinkle Rafferty
Laelius Stallings Davis
Cornelia Taylor Stubbs
Julia Thompson Smith
Martha Tower Dance
Cornelia Wallace
Louise Ware Venable
Annee Watson Reiff
Martha Watson Smith
Margaret G. Weeks
*Ellene Winn
1932
Virginia Allen Woods
*Catherine Baker Evans
Sarah Bowman
Pat Boyles Smith
Varnelle Braddy Perryman
Penny Brown Barnett
Louise Cawthon
Mary Dunbar Weidner
Diana Dyer Wilson
Mary Effie Elliot
Grace Fincher Trimble
Marjorie Gamble
Susan Love Glenn
Nora Garth Gray Hall
Ruth Conant Green
Louise Hollingsworth Jackson
Julia Grimmet Fortson
Anne Hopkins Ayres
Martha Elizabeth Howard Reeves
Alma Fraser Howerton Hughes
Imogene Hudson Cullinan
Elizabeth Hughes Jackson
La Myra Kane Swanson
Pansey Kimble Matthews
Martha Logan Henderson
Clyde Lovejoy Stevens
Louise McDaniel Musser
Mary Miller Brown
Lila Norfleet Davis
Mimi O'Beirne Tarplee
Mary Claire Oliver Cox
Flora Riley Bynum
Sara Lane Smith Pratt
*Louise H. Stakely
Nell Starr Gardner
Jura Taffar Cole
Velma Taylor Wells
Miriam Thompson Felder
Mar tine Tulle r Joyner
Lovelyn Wilson Heyward
Louise Winslow Taft
1933
Page Ackerman
Mary Alexander Parker
Maude Armstrong Hudson
Bernice Beaty Cole
*Margaret Bell Burt
*Elizabeth Grier Bolton
*Nell Brown Davenport
Alice Bullard Nagle
Evelyn Campbell Beale
Josephine Clark Fleming
Sarah Cooper Freyer
Ora Craig Stuckey
Eugenia Edwards Mackenzie
Margaret Ellis Pierce
May Belle Evans
Mary Felts Steedman
Julia Finley McCutchen
Thelma Firestone Hogg
Betty Fleming Virgin
Mary Carretson
*Margaret Glass Womeldorf
Virginia Heard Feder
*Lucile Heath McDonald
Anne Hudmon Reed
Mary Hudmon Simmons
Margaret Jones Clark
Cornelia Keeton Barnes
Roberta Kilpatrick Stubblebine
Blanche Lindsey Camp
Caroline Llngle Lester
Margaret Loranz
Vivian Martin Buchanan
Rosemary May Kent
Eulalia Napier Sutton
Gail Nelson Blain
Frances Oglesby Hills
Mary Louise Robinson Black
Letitia Rockmore Nash
Sara Shadburn Heath
Laura Spivey Massie
Ethel Stein Wise
Mary Sturtevant Cunningham
Marlyn Tate Lester
Margaret Telford St. Amant
Johnnie Frances Turner Melvin
Annie Laurie Whitehead Young
Marie Whittle Wellslager
Amelia Wolf Bond
Katharine Woltz Farinholt
Lucile Woodbury Ranck
1934
Sarah Austin Zorn
Alae Risse Barron Leitch
Helen Boyd McConnell
Dorothy Bradley
Laura Buist Starnes
Nelle Chamlee Howard
Mary Dexter Boyd
Martha Elliott Elliott
Martha England Gunn
Pauline Gordon Woods
*Lucy Goss Herbert
Jean Gould Clarke
Mary Grist Whitehead
Elinor Hamilton Hightower
Elaine Heckle Carmichael
Lillian Herring Rosas
Elizabeth Johnson Thompson
Marguerite Jones Love
Edith Kendrick Osmanski
Janie Lapsley Bell
Marion Mathews
*Louise McCain Boyce
Mary McDonald Sledd
Carrie Lena McMullen Bright
Ruth Moore Randolph
Sara Moore Cathey
Frances M. O'Brien
Reba Pearson Kaemper
Lola Phillips Bond
Hyta Plowden Mederer
Dorothy Potts Weiss
Gladys Pratt Entrican
Florence Preston Bockhorst
Virginia F. Prettyman
Dorothy Ramage Thomas
Carolyn Russell Nelson
Louise Schuessler Patterson
Mary Louise Schuman Barth
Caroline Selden
Rosa Shuey Day
Mary Sloan Laird
Rudene Taffar Young
Mabel Talraage
Virginia Tillotson Hutcheson
Dorothy Walker Palmer
Eleanor Williams Knox
1935
Elizabeth Alexander Higgins
Vella Marie Behm Cowan
Mary Borden Parker
Marian Calhoun Murray
Jennie Champion Nardin
Virginia Coons Clanton
Mary Lillian Deason
Alice Dunbar Moseley
Fidesah Edwards Alexander
Willie Florence Eubanks Donehoo
Mary Jane Evans
Betty Fountain Gray
Jane Goodwin Harbin
Mary Green Wohlford
Carol Griffin Scoville
Anne Scott Harman Mauldin
Elizabeth Heaton Mullino
Katherine Hertzka
Betty Lou Houck Smith
Anna Humber Little
Josephine Jennings Brown
Frances McCalla Ingles
Julia McClatchey Brooke
Marguerite Morris Saunders
Clara Morrison Backer
Nina Parke Hopkins
Aileen Parker Sibley
Nell Pattillo Kendall
Juliette Puett Maxwell
Martha Redwine Rountree
Grace Robinson Hanson
Lisalotte Roennecke Kaiser
Sybil Rogers Herren
Marie Simpson Rutland
Elizabeth Thrasher Baldwin
Amy Underwood Trowell
Laura Whitner Dorsey
Jacqueline Woolfolk Mathes
Elizabeth Young Hubbard
1936
Lena Armstrong Albright
Catherine W. Bates
Mary Beasley White
Jane Blair Roberson
Sally Brosnan Thorpe
Meriel Bull Mitchell
Elizabeth Burson Wilson
Alice Chamlee Booth
Bazalyn Coley Mynatt
Mary Comely Dwight
Marion Derrick Gilbert
Florrie Lee Erb Bruton
Sara Frances Estes
Emily Gower Maynard
Lilian Grimson Obligado
Jean Hicks Pitts
Mary Henderson Hill
Marjorie Hollingsworth
Frances James Donohue
Louise Jordan Turner
Augusta King Brumby
Ruth King Stanford
Carrie Phinney Latimer Duvall
Kathryn Leipold Johnson
Ann Bernard Martin
Alice McCallie Pressly
Josephine McClure Anderson
Dean McKoin Bushong
Sarah Frances McDonald
Frances Miller Felts
Sadie Morrow Hughes
Frances Napier Jones
Sarah Nichols Judge
Janie Norrls
Myra O'Neal Enloe
Mary Richardson Gauthier
Louisa Robert Carroll
Mary Alice Shelton Felt
Mary Margaret Stowe Hunter
Marie E. Townsend
Virginia Turner Graham
Mary Vines Wright
Mary Walker Fox
Virginia Williams Goodwin
Irene Wilson Neister
Martha Young Bell
1937
Eloisa Alexander LeConte
Lucile Barnett Minnan
Frances Belford Olsen
Louise Brown Smith
Millicent Caldwell Jones
Virginia Caldwell Payne
Frances Cary Taylor
Cornelia Christie Johnson
Kathleen Daniel Spicer
Lucile Dennison Keenan
Helen DuPree Park
Jane Estes
Sara Forester Pitts
Michelle Furlow Oliver
Annie Galloway Phillips
Nellie Gilroy Gustafson
Alice Hannah Brown
Fannie Harris Jones
Barbara Hertwig Meschter
Dorothy Jester
Catherine Jones Malone
Molly Jones Monroe
Rachel Kennedy Lowthian
Mary Jane King Critchell
Jean Kirkpatrick Cobb
Martha Sue Laney Redus
Florence Lasseter Rambo
Vivienne Long McCain
Mary Malone Martin
Isabel McCain Brown
Enid Middleton Howard
Ora M. Muse
Mary Pitner Winkelman
Marjorie Scott Meier
Marie Stalker Smith
Frances Steele Garrett
Virginia Stephens Clary
Vivienne Trice Ansley
Carlene Wallace Willis
Dorothy Williams Guess
Jessie Williams Howell
Betty Willis Whitehead
Frances Wilson Hurst
1938
Anonymous
Jean Barry Adams Weersing
Nell Allison Sheldon
Jean Austin Meacham
Nettie Mae Austin Kelley
Dorothy Avery Newton
Louise Bailey White
Genevieve Baird Farris
Mary Alice Baker Lown
Tommy Ruth Blackmon Waldo
Elizabeth Blackshear Flinn
Katherine Brittingham Hunter
Martha Brown Miller
Frances Castleberry
Jean Chalmers Smith
Sara Corbitt McDaniel
Lulu Croft
Doris Dunn St. Clair
Goudyloch Erwin Dyer
Eloise Estes Keiser
Mary Ford Lallerstedt
Carol Hale Waltz
Helen Julia Hawkins
Nell Hemphill Jones
Ruth Hertzka
Catherine Hoffman Ford
Sarah Hoyle Nevin
Winifred Kellersberger Vass
Ola Kelly Ausley
Mary Anne Kernan
Ellen Little Lesesne
Martha Long Gosline
Jeanne Matthews Darlington
Elizabeth Maynard McKinney
Elizabeth McCord Lawler
Lettie McKay Van Landingham
Bertha Merrill Holt
Nancy Moorer Cantey
Margaret Morrison Blumberg
Helen Rodgers Dopson
Joyce Roper McKey
Mary Smith Bryan
Virginia Suttenfield
Grace Tazewell Flowers
Anne Thompson Rose
Mary Tribble Beasley
Doris Tucker
Ellen Verner Scoville
Elizabeth Warden Marshall
Virginia Watson Logan
Zoe Wells Lambert
Elsie West Duval
Louise Young Garrett
1939
Alice Adams Williamson
Mary Allen Reding
Jean Bailey Owen
Ethelyn Boswell Purdie
Alice Caldwell Melton
Catherine Caldwell Wallace
Rachel Campbell Gibson
Lelia Carson Watlington
Alice F. Cheeseman
Sarah Cunningham Carpenter
Jane Dryfoos Bijur
Margaret Edmunds O'Brien
Catherine Farrar Davis
Virginia Farrar Shearouse
Jeanne Flynt Stokes
Elizabeth Furlow Brown
Susan Goodwyn Garner
Dorothy Graham Gilmer
Frances Guthrie Brooks
Eleanor T. Hall
Fund Agent ! * Deceased
10
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
rfh r t jy| "
/
8%ti ,...
^ ' "'V-ii"'' ;1 '
Jane Hamilton Ray
Emily Harris Swanson
* Jacqueline Hawks Alsobrook
Mary Hollingsworth Hatfield
Cora Kay Hutchins Blackwelder
Phyllis Johnson O'Neal
Katherine Jones Smith
Elizabeth Kenney Knight
Jenny Kyle Dean
Dorothy Lazenby Stipe
Helen Lichten Solomonson
Emily MacMorland Wood
Ella Mallard Ninestein
Martha Marshall Dykes
Sara McCain McCollum
Emma McMullen Doom
*Mary Wells McNeill
*Marie Merritt Rollins
Helen Moses Regenstein
Mary Elizabeth Moss Sinback
Mary Murphy Chesnutt
Carolyn Myers King
Annie Houston Newton Parkman
Lou Pate Jones
Margaret Pleasants Jones
Julia Porter Scurry
Mamie Lee Ratliff Finger
Jeanne Redwine Davis
Virginia Rumbley Moses
Betty Sams Daniel
Miriam Sanders
Haydie Sanford Sams
Mary Elizabeth Shepherd Green
Alice Sill
Penny Siraonton Boothe
Selma Steinbach El rod
Dorothy Still Freeman
*Mary Frances Thompson
Sarah Evelyn Thurman Fuller
Virginia Turalin Guffin
*Elinor Tyler Richardson
Ann Watkins Ansley
Mary Ellen Whetsell Timmons
1940
Elizabeth Alderman Vinson
Grace Anderson Cooper
*Margaret Barnes Carey
Evelyn Baty Christraan
Marguerite Baum Muhlenfeld
Susan Blackmon Armour
Anna Margaret Bond Brannon
Joan Brinton Johnson
Virginia Brown Cappleman
Jeanette Carroll Smith
Helen Gates Carson
Ernestine Cass Dickerson
Mary Chalmers Orsborn
Lillie Bell Drake Hamilton
Anne Enloe
Carolyn Forman Piel
Annette Franklin King
Marian Franklin Anderson
Florence J. Graham
Nettie Lee Greer Howard
Wilma Griffith Clapp
Mary Heaslett Badger
Margaret Hopkins Martin
*Gary Home Petrey
Louise Hughston Oettinger
Eleanor N. Hutchens
Mildred Joseph Colyer
Sara Lee Mattingly
Mary Matthews Scott
Sarah Matthews Bixler
Eloise McCall Guyton
Virginia Milner Carter
Nell Moss Roberts
Betty Jean O'Brien Jackson
Esthere Ogden Blakeslee
*Beth Paris Moremen
Katherine Patton Carssow
Irene Phillips Richardson
Nell Pinner Wisner
Mary Reins Burge
Hazel Solomon Be a z ley
Edith Stover McFee
Ellen Stuart Patton
*Louise Sullivan Fry
Mary Mac Templeton Brown
*Henrietta Thompson Wilkinson
Emily Underwood Gault
Grace Ward Anderson
Polly Ware Duncan
Violet Jane Watkins
Willomette Williamson Stauffer
Claire Wilson Moore
Jane Witman Pearce
1941
Mary Arbuckle Osteen
Ruth Ashburn Kline
Myra Barber Caven
Elizabeth Barrett Alldredge
Miriam Bedinger Williamson
Martha Boone Shaver
Nina Broughton Gaines
*Sabine Brumby Korosy
Gentry Burks Bielaski
*Harriette Cochran Mershon
Freda Copeland Hoffman
Virginia Clayton Corr White
Doris Dalton Crosby
Dorothy Debele Purvis
Martha Dunn Kerby
Ruby Leone Evans Andrews
Louise Franklin Livingston
Lucile Gaines MacLennan
Caroline Gray Truslow
Nancy Gribble Nelson
Florrie Guy Funk
Ann Henry
Rebekah Hogan Henry
Aileen Kasper Borrish
*Helen Klugh McRae
Julia N. Lancaster
Sara Lee Jackson
Anne Martin Elliott
Marjorie Merlin Cohen
Martha Moody Laseter
Margaret Nix Ponder
Pattie Patterson Johnson
Elta Robinson Posey
Louise Saras Hardy
Lillian Schwencke Cook
Hazel Scruggs Ouzts
Gene Slack Morse
Frances Spratlin Hargrett
Elizabeth Stevenson
**Carolyn Strozier
Elaine Stubbs Mitchell
Dorothy Travis Joyner
Jane Vaughan Price
Betty Alden Waitt White
Grace Walker Winn
Cornelia Watson Pruett
Mary M. Wisdom
1942
*Rebekah Andrews McNeill
Martha Arant Allgood
Jean Beutell Abrams
Betty Bradfield Sherman
Betty Ann Brooks
Martha Euffalow Davis
Edwina Burruss Rhodes
Harriett Caldwell Maxwell
Edith Candler Thomas
Anne Chambless Bateman
Jane Coughlan Hays
*Edith Dale Lindsey
Mary Davis Bryant
Dale Drennan Hicks
Carolyn Dunn Stapleton
*Susan Dyer Oliver
Francis Ellis Wayt
Virginia Franklin Miller
Lillian Gish Alfriend
Margery Gray Wheeler
*Margaret Hamilton Rambo
*Julia Harry Bennett
*Margaret Hartsook Emmons
Kathleen Head Johnson
Doris Henson Vaughn
Neva Jackson Webb
*Mary Kirkpatrick Reed
Ila Belle Levie Bagwell
Caroline Long Armstrong
Susanne McWhorter Reckard
Betty Medlock Clark
Virginia Montgomery McCall
Dorothy Nabers Allen
*Elise Nance Bridges
Jeanne Osborne Gibbs
Mary Louise Palmour Barber
Julia Patch Weston
Louise Pruitt Jones
Claire Purcell Smith
Tina Ransom Louis
Prise ilia Reasoner Beall
Theodosia Ripley Landis
Elizabeth Robertson Schear
Edith Schwartz Joel
**Marie Scott O'Neill
Myrtle Seckinger Lightcap
Margaret Sheftall Chester
Marjorie Simpson Ware
Eleanor Smith Bischoff
Ruth Smith Wilson
Jane Stillwell Espy
Jane Taylor White
Mary Olive Thomas
Frances Tucker Johnson
Myree Wells Maas
Annie Wilds McLeod
1943
Emily Anderson Hightower
Mary Anne Atkins Paschal
Mary Jane Auld Linker
Mamie Sue Barker Woolf
Betty Bates Fernandez
Anna Black Hansell
Mary Brock Williams
*Flora Campbell McLain
Mary Jane Campbell Mitchell
Alice Clements Shinall
Maryann Cochran Abbott
Joella Craig Good
*Jane Dinsraore Lowe
Margaret Downie Brown
Betty DuBose Skiles
Jeanne Eakin Salyer
Anne Frierson Smoak
Nancy Green Carmichael
Susan Guthrie Fu
Helen Hale Lawton
Betty Henderson Cameron
Nancy Hirsh Rosengarten
Dorothy Holloran Addison
Dorothy Hopkins McClure
Mardia Hopper Brown
Imogene King Stanley
Sterly Lebey Wilder
Bennye Linzy Sadler
Mary Martin Rose
Anne Paisley Boyd
Betty Pegram Sessoms
Frances Radford Mauldin
Hannah L. Reeves
*Ruby Rosser Davis
Clara Rountree Couch
Margaret Shaw Allred
*Helen Smith Woodward
Fall 1979
11
Aileen Still Hendley
Regina Stokes Barnes
Mabel Stowe Query
*Mary Ward Danielson
Marjorle Weismann Zeidman
Barbara Wllber Gerland
Kay Wilkinson Orr
Harjorie Wilson Ligons
Katherine Wright Philips
1944
*Bettye Ashcraft Senter
Betty Bacon Skinner
Virginia Barr McFarland
Clare Bedinger Baldwin
Claire Bennett Kelly
Marguerite Bless Mclnnis
Louise Breedin Griffiths
Mary Carr Townsend
Mary Frances Carter Dixon
Margaret Cathcart Hilburn
Jean Clarkson Rogers
*Frances Cook Crowley
Barbara Jane Daniels
Mary Louise Duffee Philips
Anna Eagan Goodhue
Elizabeth Edwards Wilson
Ruth Farrior
Sara Agnes Florence
Pauline Garvin Keen
Elizabeth Harvard Dowda
*Julia Harvard Warnock
Claire Johnson Yancey
Catharine Kollock Thoroman
Ruth Kolthoff Kirkman
June Lanier Wagner
*Martha Lasseter Storey
Quincey Mills Jones
Margaret Powell Flowers
Martha Rhodes Bennett
Anne Sale Weydert
Betty Scott Noble
Julia Scott Rogers
Marjorie Smith Stephens
Katheryne Thompson Mangum
Johnnie Tippen
Marjorie Tippins Johnson
Betty J. Vecsey
Mary E. Walker
Mary Cromer Walker Scott
Mary Frances Walker Blount
Anne Ward Amacher
Betty Williams Stoffel
Oneida Woolford
1945
Ruth Anderson Stall
Carol Barge Mathews
Marian Barr Hanner
Elizabeth Blincoe Edge
Virginia L. Bowie
Frances Brougher Garman
Ann Campbell Hulett
Betty Campbell Wiggins
Elizabeth Carpenter Bardin
Virginia Carter Caldwell
Geraldine Cottongim Richards
Mary Cumming Fitzhugh
Elizabeth Daniel Owens
Harriette Daugherty Howard
Betty Davis Shingler
Ruth Doggett Todd
Pauline Ertz Wechsler
Mary Elizabeth Espey Walters
Jane Everett Knox
Elizabeth Farmer Gaynor
Joyce Freeman Marting
Barbara Frink Allen
Elizabeth Glenn Stow
Elizabeth Gribble Cook
Anne Hall King
Betty Jane Hancock Moore
Mia Hecht Owens
Emily Higgins Bradley
Jean Hood Booth
Eugenia Jones Howard
Dorothy Kahn Prunhuber
Beverly King Pollock
Jane Kreiling Mell
Mary Louise Law
Martha Mack Simons
Alice Mann Niedrach
Bettie Manning Ott
Sylvia McConnel Carter
Montene Melson Mason
Molly Milam Inserni
Sara Milford Walker
Scott Newell Newton
Mary Norris King
Marilyn Schroeder Timmerman
Emily Singletary Garner
Julia Slack Hunter
Lois Sullivan Kay
Mary Ann Turner Edwards
Dorothy Lee Webb McKee
Frances Wooddall Talmadge
1946
Jeanne Addison Roberts
Vicky Alexander Sharp
Mary Lillian Allen Wilkes
Martha Baker Wilkins
Margaret Bear Moore
Lucile E. Beaver
Helen Beidelman Price
Emily Bradford Batts
Mary C. Cargill
Mary Ann Courtenay Davidson
Joan Crangle Hughey
Lu Cunningham Beville
Edwina Bell Davis
Mary Duckworth Gellerstedt
Conradine Fraser Riddle
Harriet Frierson Crabb
Elizabeth Horn Johnson
Betty Howell Traver
Louise Isaacson Bernard
Martha Johnson Haley
Lura Johnston Watkins
Peggy Jones Miller
Barbara Kincaid Trimble
Anne Lee Mitchell
Stratton Lee Peacock
Betty Long Sale
Harriet McAllister Loving
Mildred McCain Kinnaird
Mary Frances McConkey Reimer
Anne Murrell Courtney
Marjorie Naab Bolen
Ann Noble Dye
Anne Noell Wyant
Celetta Powell Jones
Mary Ragland Sadler
Anne Register Jones
Louise Reid Strickler
Eleanor Reynolds Verdery
Claire Rowe Newman
Mary Russell Mitchell
Carolyn Ryle Croxson
Mary Jane Schumacher Bullard
Margaret Scott Cathey
Peggy Trice Hall
Lucy Turner Knight
Verna Weems Macbeth
Elizabeth Weinschenk Mundy
Winifred Wilkinson Hausmann
Eva Lee Williams Jemison
Elisabeth Woodward Ellis
1947
Marie Adams Conyers
Louisa Aichel Mcintosh
Elizabeth Andrews Lee
Glassell Beale Sraalley
Alice Beardsley Carroll
Marie Beeson Ingraham
Marguerite Born Hornsby
Virginia Brown McKenzie
Eleanor Calley Cross
June Coley Loyd
Jane Cooke Cross
Sara Frances Cooley Mason
Helen Catherine Currie
Anna George Dobbins
Anne Eidson Owen
Mary Fuller Floyd
Dorothy Galloway Fontaine
Mynelle Blue Grove Harris
Genevieve Harper Alexander
Marjorie Harris Melville
Genet Heery Barron
Charlotte Hevener Nobbs
Ann Hough Hopkins
Louise Hoyt Minor
Sue Hutchens Henson
English professor Anne Warner.
Anne Jackson Smith
Marianne Jeffries Williams
Kathryn Johnson
Clara Jones Black
Rosemary Jones Cox
Margaret Kelly Wells
Mary Ann Martin Pickard
Margaret McManus Landham
Edith Merrin Simmons
Florence Paisley Williams
Betty Lou Patterson King
Dorothy Peace Ramsaur
Betty Radford Moeller
Ethel Ragan Wood
Ellen Rosenblatt Caswell
Lorenna Ross Brown
Nancy Shelton Parrott
Barbara Smith Hull
Sarah Smith Austin
Caroline Squires Rankin
June Thomason Lindgren
May Turner Engeraan
Mary Wakefield Tipton
Ann Wheeler TImberlake
Barbara Wilson Montague
Christine Yates Parr
1948
Dabney Adams Hart
Virginia Andrews Trovillion
Rose Ellen Armstrong Sparling
Ruth Bastin Slentz
Betty Bateman Willingham
Martha Beacham Jackson
Barbara Anne Blair
Lela Anne Brewer
Flora Bryant Hackworth
Barbara Coith Ricker
Mary Alice Compton Osgood
Edna Claire Cunningham Schooley
Susan Daugherty
Amelia Davis Luchsinger
Nancy Deal Weaver
Adele Dieckmann McKee
Virginia Drake Blass
June Driskill Weaver
Mary Faulkner James
Ruth Gait HoneKamp
Harriet Gregory Heriot
Minnie Hamilton Mallinson
Martha Hay Vardeman
Jean Henson Smith
Kathleen Hewson Cole
Amanda Hulsey Thompson
June Irvine Torbert
Marybeth Little Weston
Sheely Little Miller
Mary Manly Ryman
Louise McLaurin Stewart
Vanesse Orr Rowe
Mae Osborne Parker
Lora Payne Miller
Betty Powers Crislip
Harriet E. Reid
Anna Clark Rogers Sawyer
Teressa Rutland Sanders
Rebekah Scott Bryan
Anne Shepherd McKee
Mary Gene Sims Dykes
Martha Sunkes Thomas
Anne Page Violette Harmon
Lida Walker Askew
Barbara Waugaman Thompson
Barbara Whipple Bitter
Sara Catherine Wilkinson
* Fund Agent "* Deceased
12
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
1949
1951
Rita Adams Simpson
Mary Aichel Samford
Eugenia Akin Martin
Caroline Alexander Bryan
Mary Jo Amnions Jones
Beverly Baldwin Albea
Betty Blackmon Kinnett
*Susan Bowling Dudney
Frances Brannan Hamrick
Roberta Cathcart Hopkins
Alice Jean Caswell Wilkins
*Lee Cousar Tubbs
Alice Crenshaw Moore
Josephine Culp Williams
Marie Cuthbertson Faulkner
June Davis Haynie
Bettie Davison Bruce
Betty Jeanne Ellison Candler
Kate Durr Elmore
Elizabeth Flanders Smith
Evelyn Foster Henderson
Katherine A. Geffcken
Martha Goddard Lovell
Joyce Hale McGlaun
Mary Elizabeth Hays Babcock
Nancy Huey Kelly
*Henrietta C. Johnson
Nancy Johnson Reid
Mary Frances Jones Woolsey
Winifred "Lambert Carter
Rudy Lehmann Cowley
Rebecca Lever Brown
Carolina Little Witcher
Frances Long Cowan
Reece Newton Smith
Nancy Parks Anderson
Patty Ann Pershon
*Lynn Phillips Mathews
*Georgia Powell Leramon
*Mary Price Coulling
Dorothy Quillian Reeves
Betty Jo Sauer Mansur
Carmen Shaver Brown
Sharon Smith Cutler
Edith Stowe Barkley
Rachel Stubbs Farris
*Doris Sullivan Tippens
Jean Tollison Moses
Newell Turner Parr
Virginia Vining Skelton
Martha Warlick Brame
Julia Weathers Wynne
Olive Wilkinson Turnipseed
Jeanette Willcoxon Peterson
Elizabeth Williams Henry
Harriotte Winchester Hurley
1950
*Louise Arant Rice
Hazel Berman Karp
Jo-Anne Christopher Cochrane
Betty Cole Houten
*Betty Jean Combs Moore
Dorothy Davis Yarbrough
Elizabeth H. Dunlap
*Jean Edwards Crouch
*Elizabeth Flowers Ashworth
Ann Gebhardt Fullerton
Anne Haden Howe
Sarah Hancock White
Marie Heng Ho
*Jessie Hodges Kryder
Anne Irwin Smith
Marguerite Jackson Gilbert
Norah Anne Little Green
Alline Marshall
Carolyn Sue McSpadden Fisher
Miriam Mitchell Ingman
Jean Osborn Sawyer
Pat Overton Webb
Ida Pennington Benton
Polly Anna Philips Harris
*Ann Pitts Cobb
Joann Piastre Britt
Ann Sartain Emmett
Martha Stowell Rhodes
Marguerite Taylor Paullin
Sally Thompson Aycock
Nancy Anderson Benson
*Mary Hayes Barber Holmes
Noel Barnes Williams
Su Boney Davis
Nancy Cassin Smith
Julie Cuthbertson Clarkson
*Anna DaVault Haley
Harriett Everett Olesen
Lorna Floyd Hardy
Luverne Floyd Smith
Nell Floyd Hall
Betty Jane Foster Deadwyler
Freddie Hachtel Daum
Cornelia Hale Bryans
Louise Hertwig Hayes
Nancy Hudson Irvine
Margaret Hunt Denny
Mary Page Hutchison Lay
Sally Jackson Hertwig
Charlotte Key Marrow
Mary Lindsay Eastman
Janette Mattox Calhoon
Eleanor McCarty Cheney
*Jimmie Ann McGee Collings
*Sarah McKee Burnside
Jackie Sue Messer Rogers
Julianne Morgan Garner
Tiny Morrow Mann
Carol Munger
Mary Anna Ogden Bryan
Eliza Pollard Mark
Mary Roberts Davis
Annelle Simpson Kelly
*R. Jenelle Spear
Cissie Spiro Aidinoff
Martha Ann Stegar
Marjorie Stukes Strickland
Ruth Vineyard Cooner
Catherine Warren Dukehart
Joan White Howell
Ann Marie Woods Shannon
1952
Charlotte Allsmiller Crosland
Katie Berdanis Faklis
*Ann Boyer Wilkerson
Mary Jane Brewer Murkett
Barbara Brown Waddell
Jeannine Byrd Hopkins
June Carpenter Bryant
*Sybll Corbett Riddle
Patricia Cortelyou WInship
Catherine Crowe Merritt
Theresa Dokos Hutchison
Clairelis Eaton Franklin
Emy Evans Blair
Shirley Ford Baskin
*Kathren Freeman Stelzner
Phyllis Galphin Buchanan
Kathryn Gentry Westbury
Ann Hays Greer
Ruth Waldo Heard Randolph
Betty Holland Boney
Margaret Inman Simpson
Louise Jett Porter
Margaret Ann Kaufmann Shulman
Helen Land Ledbetter
*Margaretta Lumpkin Shaw
Wynelle Melson Patton
Sylvia Moutos Mayson
*Ann Parker Lee
Edith Petrie Hawkins
Hilda L. Priviteri
Catherine L. Redles
Lillian Ritchie Sharian
*Jean Robarts Seaton
Frances Sells Grimes
Jackie Simmons Gow
Jeanne Smith Harley
*Winnie Strozier Hoover
Pat Thomason Smallwood
Alta Waugaman Miller
*Lorna A. Wiggins
Sylvia Williams Ingram
Anne Winningham Sims
Florence Worthy Griner
Geraldine Armstrong Boy
Mary Birmingham Tiramons
Bertie Bond
Georganna Buchanan Johnson
Julia Clark Williams
Frances Cook
Ann Cooper Whitesel
Virginia Corry Harrell
Margaret Cousar Beach
Jane Cray ton Davis
Jane Dalhouse Hailey
Anne DeWitt George
Donya Dixon Ransom
Susan Dodson Rogers
Georgia Dudney Lynch
Donna Dugger Smith
Mary F. Evans
Patricia Fredricksen Stewart
*Frances Ginn Stark
Sarah Hamilton Leathers
Florence Hand Warren
Virginia Hays Klettner
Peggy Hooker Hartwein
Ellen Hunter Brumfield
Anne Jones Sims
*Sarah Leathers Martin
Betty McLellan Carter
Margaret McRae Edwards
Belle Miller McMaster
Patricia Morgan Fisher
Carlene Nickel -Elrod
Sue Peterson Durling
Mary Ripley Warren
Mary Beth Robinson Stuart
Ethel Ross Spilos
Louise Ross Bell
Rita May Scott Cook
Dianne Shell Rousseau
Priscilla Sheppard Taylor
Lindy Taylor Barnett
Charline Tritton Shanks
Norma Wang Feng
*Vivian Weaver Maitland
Barbara West Dickens
Jane Williams Coleman
Mary Ann Wyatt Chastain
1954
Ulla E. Beckman
Sue Born Ballard
Harriet Durham Maloof
Martha Duval Swartwout
*Florrie Fleming Corley
Chor Jee Goh Chow
Julia Grier Storey
Ellen Griffin Corbett
Nancy Hall Bond
Katharine Hefner Gross
Louise Hill Reaves
Barbara Hood Buchanan
Eleanor Hutchinson Smith
*Carol Jones Hay
Jacquelyn Josey Hall
Patricia Kent Stephenson
Mitzi Kiser Law
Caroline Lester Haynes
Helen McGowan French
Mary Louise McKee Hagemeyer
Clara Jean McLanahan Wheeler
Joyce Munger Osborn
Anne Patterson Hammes
*Judy Promnitz Marine
Ellen Prauty Smith
Mary Rainey Bridges
Caroline Reinero Kemmerer
Mary Frances Sistar Minick
Anne Sylvester Booth
Carol Tye Dozier
*Joanne Varner Hawks
Nancy Whetstone Hull
Gladys Williams Sweat
Chizuko Yoshimura Kojima
Jane Zuber Garrison
1955
1953
Charlotte Allain Von Hollen
*Allardyce Armstrong Haraill
Joan Adair Johnston
Betty Akerman Shackleford
Carolyn Alford Beaty
*Ann Allred Jacksor.
Yvonne Burke White
*Susanna Byrd Wells
Georgia B. Christopher
Carolyn Crawford Chesnutt
Constance Curry
Sara Dudney Ham
Beverly Espy Dayries
Jane Gaines Johnson
Letty Grafton Harwell
Lib Grafton Hall
Grace Greer Phillips
Jo Ann Hall Hunsinger
Patty Hamilton Lee
Harriet Hampton Cuthbertson
Ann Hanson Merklein
Vivian Hays Guthrie
Ann Hemperley Dobbs
Helen Hinchey Williams
Anne Hoover Gulley
Beverly Jensen Nash
Mary Knight Swezey
Catherine Lewis Callaway
Mary Love L'heureux Hammond
Evelyn Mason Newberry
*Callie McArthur Robinson
Sara Mclntyre Bahner
Margaret McMillan White
Pauline Morgan King
Patricia Paden Matsen
Sarah Petty Dagenhart
Joan Pruitt Mclntyre
Louise Robinson Singleton
Anne Rosselot Clayton
Dorothy Sands Hawkins
Agnes Scott Willoch
Georgia Syribeys Sotus
Clif Trussell
Beverly Watson Howie
Margaret Williamson Smalzel
Elizabeth Wilson Blanton
1956
Ann Alvis Shibut
Paula Ball Newkirk
Barbara Battle
*Stella Biddle Fitzgerald
Juliet Boland Clack
Mary Lee Bridges Traxler
*Judy Brown
Anne Bullard Hodges
Nancy Burkitt Foy
Margaret Burwell Barnhardt
Vivian Cantrall White
Mary Jo Carpenter
Carol Ann Cole White
*Alvia Cook
Memye Curtis Tucker
Claire Flintom Barnhardt
*June Gaissert Naiman
Nancy Gay Frank
*Guerry Graham Myers
Sallie Greenfield
Ann Lee Gregory York
*Harriett Griffin Harris
Sarah Hall Hayes
Louise Harley Hull
Emmie Hay Alexander
Nancy Jackson Pitts
*Virginia Love Dunaway
Carolyn Moon Horn
May Muse Stonecypher
Jacqueline Plant Fincher
Louise Rainey Ammons
Rameth Richard Owens
Betty Richardson Hickman
*Anne Sayre Callison
Marijke Schepman deVries
*Robbie Ann Shelnutt Upshaw
Sally Shippey McKneally
Justine Stinson Sprenger
Jane Stubbs Bailey
Nancy Thomas Hill
Sandra Thomas Hollberg
Virginia Vickery Jory
1957
Elizabeth Ansley Allan
Peggy Beard Baker
Mary D. Beaty
Susanne Benson Darnell
Margaret Benton Davis
Elizabeth Bohlander Bazell
Suzella Burns Newsome
Bettye Carmichael Maddox
*Betsy Crapps Burch
Catharine Crosby Brown
Fall 1979
13
Laura Frances Dryden Taylor
Harriet Easley Workman
Dede Farmer Grow
Sally Fortson McLemore
Jeannlne Frapart Row
Catherine Girardeau Brown
Patricia Guynup Corbus
Marian Hagedom Briscoe
Helen Hendry Lowrey
Carolyn Herman Sharp
Margaret Hill Truesdale
*Frances Holtsclaw Berry
Katharine Jenkins Loworn
Jacqueline Johnson Woodward
Mary Jones Helm
Rachel King
Elaine Lewis Hudgins
Marilyn McClure Anderson
Virginia McClurkin Jones
Katherine Miller Nevins
Grace Molineux Goodwin
Nancy Nixon McDonough
Frances Patterson Huffaker
*Jean Price Knapp
Barbara Quattlebaum Parr
Dorothy Rearick Malinin
Virginia Redhead Bethune
Martha Riggins Brown
*Jackie Rountree Andrews
Helen Sewell Johnson
Jene Sharp Black
Ann Shire Penuel
Miriam F. Smith
Nancy Ann Snipes Johnson
Eleanor Swain All
Emiko Takeuchi
Anne Terry Sherren
Sara Townsend Holcomb
Eleanor Wright Linn
1959
1958
Paula Bagwell Camp
Anne Blackshear Spragins
Mary Byrd Davis
Mary Clapp Carden
Jeanette Clark Sparks
Mary Helen Collins Williams
Martha Davis Rosselot
Nancy C. Edwards
Patricia Gover Bitzer
Eileen Graham McWhorter
Ann Juliet Gunston Scott
Helen Hachtel Haywood
Jo Hathaway Norton
Sara Margaret Heard White
Catherine Hodgin Olive
Marjorie C. Hoge
Susan Hogg Griffith
Nancy Holland Sibley
Nancy Kimmel Duncan
Nora A. King
Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Sue Lile Inman
*Carlanna Lindamood Hendrick
Sheila MacConochie Ragsdale
Carolyn Magruder Ruppenthal
*Maria Martoccia Clifton
Janice Matheson Rowell
Louise McCaughan Robison
Caro McDonald Smith
Martha Meyer
Mary Jane Milford Spurgeon
*Phia Peppas Kanellos
Blythe Posey Ashmore
Gene Allen Reinero Vargas
Dorothy Ann Ripley Lott
Grace Robertson McLendon
Caroline Romberg Silcox
*Cecily Rudisill Langford
Joan St. Clair Goodhew
JoAnn Sawyer Delafield
Elizabeth Shumaker Goodman
Deene Spivey Youngblood
*Langhorne Sydnor Mauck
Harriet Talmadge Mill
Delores Ann Taylor Yancey
Joyce Thomas Pack
Carolyn Tinkler Ramsey
*Marilyn Tribble Wittner
Rosalyn Warren Wells
Mary Ruth Watson
Margaret Woolfolk Webb
Wardie Abernethy Martin
Theresa Adams Parkins
Charlene Bass Riley
Martha Bethea
Nancy Blount Robinson
Mary Bryan DuBard
Helen Burkitt Evans
Cynthia Butts Langfeldt
Celeste Clanton Hutchinson
Betty Cobb Rowe
June Connally Rutledge
Helen Culpepper Stacey
Ruth Currie McDaniel
*Anne Dodd Campbell
Caroline Dudley Bell
Mary Dunn Evans
Betty Edmunds Grinnan
Marjorie Erickson Charles
Gertrude Ann Florrid van Luyn
Patricia Forrest Davis
Sara Anne Frazier Johnson
Katherine Freeman Dunlap
Betty Garrard Saba
Judy George Johnson
**Marianne Gillis Persons
Theresa Hand DuPre
Harriet Harrill Bogue
Martha Holmes Keith
Rosalind Johnson McGee
Hazel King Cooper
Jane King Allen
Jane Kraemer Scott
Eleanor Lee McNeill
Patricia Lenhardt Byers
Mildred Ling Wu
Helen Maddox Gaillard
Suzanne Heath Manges
Leah Mathews Fontaine
Martha McCoy
Runita McCurdy Goode
Lila McGeachy Ray
*Donalyn Moore McTier
Mary Morris Hurlbutt
Ann Rivers Payne Hutcheson
*Paula Pilkenton Vail
*Carol Promnitz Cooper
Lucy Puckett Leonard
*Susan Purser Huffaker
Jean Salter Reeves
Marianne Sharp Robbins
Anita Sheldon Barton
Roxana Speight Colvin
*Annette Teague Powell
Linda Todd McCall
Barbara Varner Willoughby
Delos Welch Hanna
*Susie White Edwards
Pauline Winslow Gregory
Carolyn Wright McGarity
1960
Angelyn Alford Bagwell
Nell Archer Congdon
Nancy Awbrey Brittain
Marion Barry Mayes
Gloria Branham Burnam
*Mildred Braswell Smith
Margaret Collins Alexander
*Phyllis Cox Whitesell
Celia Crook Richardson
Shannon Cummlng McCormick
Carolyn Anne Davies Preische
Nancy Duvall
Rebecca Evans Callahan
Anne Eyler Clodfelter
Louise Florance Smythe
Margaret Goodrich Hodge
Margaret J. Havron
Katherine Hawkins Linebaugh
Louise Healy Patterson
Eleanor Hill Widdice
Carolyn Hoskins Coffman
Dana Hundley Herbert
Linda Jones Klett
Julia P. Kennedy
Charlotte King Sanner
Frances McFadden Cone
Ellen McFarland Johnson
Helen M. Milledge
Ashlin Morris Burris
Warnell Neal
*Everdina Nieuwenhuis
Jane Norman Scott
Ann Parker Thompson
*Emlly Parker McGulrt
Mary Jane Pfaff Dewees
Rosemary Roberts Yardley
Ann Sims Dennis
Sally Smith Howard
Barbara Specht Reed
Sybil Strupe Rights
Marcia Tobey Swanson
Edith Towers Davis
Raines Wakeford Watklns
Carrington Wilson Fox
*Grace Woods Walden
1961
Anonymous
Ann Avant Crichton
Ana Maria Aviles McCaa
Barbara Baldaut Anderson
Elizabeth Barber Cobb
Barbara Best Teckemeyer
Pamela Bevier
Alice Boykin Robertson
Nancy Bringhurst Barker
Sally Bryan Minter
Margaret V. Bullock
Joan Falconer Byrd
Judith Clark Larsen
Mary Clark Schubert
Edith Conwell Irwin
Jane Cooper Mitchell
Mary Wayne Crymes Bywater
Elizabeth Dalton Brand
Lucy Davis Harper
*Julia Doar Grubb
Harriett Elder Manley
*Alice Frazer Evans
*Kay Gwaltney Remick
Nancy Hall Grimes
Janice L. Henry
Patricia Holmes Cooper
Judy Houchins Wightraan
Harriet Jackson Lovejoy
Sarah Kelso
Margaret Lipham Blakely
Julia Maddox Paul
Ginger Marks Espy
Ann McBride Chilcutt
Millie McCravey Clarke
*Sue McCurdy Hosterman
Mary Ann McSwain Antley
*Mary Jane Moore
Nancy Moore Kuykendall
Prudy Moore Thomas
Barbara Mordecai Schwanebeck
Grace Ouzts Curry
Emily C. Pancake
Anne Pollard Withers
Joanna Roden Bergstron
*Lucy Scales Muller
Joyce Seay Teel
Page Smith Morahan
*Nancy Stone Hough
Virginia Thomas Shackelford
Patricia Walker Bass
Mary Elizabeth Webster Richardson
Jane Weltch Milligan
Florence Winn Cole
Marian Zimmerman Jenkins
Mildred L. Zimmerman
1962
Sherry Addington Lundberg
Vicky Allen Gardner
Nancy Bond Brothers
*Carey Bowen Craig
Martha Campbell Williams
Gail Carter Adkins
Vivian Conner Parker
Carol Cowan Kussmaul
Julia Duncan Sather
*Pat Flythe Koonts
*Peggy Frederick Smith
Elizabeth Gillespie Proctor
Elizabeth Harshbarger Broadus
Jean Haynie Stewart
Jan Heard Baucum
Judy Heinz Luxford
Ann Hershberger Barr
Margaret Holley Milam
Amanda Hunt White
*Betsy Jefferson Boyt
*Norris Johnston Goss
Beverly Kenton Mason
Milling Kinard
Lynne Lambert Bower
Letitia Lavender Sweitzer
Laura Ann Lee Harris
Dorothy Lockart Matthews
Linda Locklear Johnson
Peggy McGeachy Roberson
Mary Ann McLeod LaBrie
Ann Middlemas Johnson
Susan Mustoe Lloyd
Jane Nabors Atchison
Nancy Nelms Garrett
Ethel Oglesby Horton
Pauline Page Moreau
Betty Pancake Williams
Sylvia Pruitt Karcher
Marjorie Reitz Turnbull
Lebby Rogers Harrison
Robin Rudolph Orcutt
Elaine Sayers Landrum
Ruth Seagle Bushong
*Ruth Shepherd Vazquez
Carolyn Shirley Wimberly
Margaret Shugart Anderson
Jo Allison Smith Brown
Sandra J. Still
Angelyn Stokes McMillan
Mary Stokes Humphlett
Bebe Walker Reichert
Jan Whitfield Hughen
1963
Angelina Bagiatis Demos
Frances Bailey Graves
Bryce Burgess Beasley
Nancy Butcher Wade
Lucie Callaway Majoros
Teresa Carrigan Simmons
Lynne Cole Scott
Sarah Cumming Mitchell
Leland Draper
Janie Fincher Peterson
Anna Belle Freeman Pyle
Mary Ann Gregory Dean
Jane Hancock Thau
Margaret Harms
Judith Hawley Zollicoffer
Ellen Hodgson Oakes
Mary Hunt Rubesch
Dorothy Laird Foster
Elizabeth Lee Neal
Betty Libby Alderman
Lyn Lindskog Deroy
Carol Lown Clark
Anne Miller Boyd
Laura Mobley Pelham
Lucy Morcock Milner
Patricia 0* Brian Devine
Robin Patrick Johnston
Linda Plemons Haak
Ann Risher Phillips
Suzanne Smith
Kaye Stapleton Redford
Nell Tabor Hartley
Elizabeth Thomas Freyer
Mary Beth Thomas
Louisa Walton McFadden
Lydia Wammock Thompson
Elizabeth Webb Nugent
Miriam Wilson Knowlton
Susan Winbigler Ware
Kay Younger
1964
Susan Aspinall Block
Lucia Bacot
Nancy Barger Cox
Karen Baxter Harriss
Mary Evelyn Bell
Susan Blackmore Hannah
Sylvia Chapman Sager
Eleanor V. Chiu
Carolyn Clarke
Judy Conner Scarborough
Charlotte Connor
Carolyn M. Craft
Dale Davenport Fowler
Diane David Hamrick
Anne Foster Curtis
Garnett E. Foster
Karen Gerald Pope
* Fund Agent
Deceased
14
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Nina Griffin Charles
Martha Griffith Kelley
*Elizabeth Hemphill Echols
Judith Hillsman Caldwell
Judith Hollingsworth Robinson
Dianne Hunter Cox
*Susan Keith-Lucas Carson
Lila Kelly Mendel
Harriet King Wasserman
Mary Louise Laird
Jan LaMaster Soriero
Lynda Langley Burton
Nancy Lee Abernathy
Shirlev E. Lee
*Martha MacNair McMullen
Jean McCurdy Meade
Joanna McElrath Alston
Susan McLeod Holland
Anne Minter Nelson
*Mary Mitchell Saunders
Margaret Moses Young
Laurie Oakes Propst
Pauline Richardson Crolley
Carol Roberts Collins
Sandra Shawen Kane
Lila Sheffield Howland
*Lib Singley Duffy
Marion Smith Bishop
Margaret Snead Henry
Judith Stark Romanchuk
Elizabeth Stewart Dimmock
Kitty Strickland Croxton
Sylvia Thorne
Jane Wallace Brosnan
Ninalee Warren Jagers
Mary Lynn Weekley Parsons
Frances Weltch Force
Suzanne West Guy
Barbara Ann White Hartley
Leonora I. Wicker
Florence Willey Perusse
Mary Womack Cox
*Maria Wornom Rippe
1965
Sally Abernethy Eads
Barbara Adams Hilliard
Betty Armstrong McMahon
*Nancy Auman Cunningham
Roberta Belcher Mahaffey
Margaret Bell Gracey
Dorothy Bellinger Grimm
Rita Bennett Colvin
Sally Blackard Long
Pauline Boyce McLean
Joanne Branch Grant
Jane Brannon Nassar
Mary Broach McGee
Betty Brown Sloop
Patricia Buchanan Masi
Lynne Burton-Haigh
Sally Bynum Gladden
Kathryn Coggin Hagglund
Helen Davis Hatch
Molly Dominy Herrington
*Ann Durrance Snead
Doris El-Tawl Krueger
Nancy Hamraerstrom Cole
Lillian Harris Lockary
Kay Harvey Beebe
Carol Jean Holmes Coston
Linda Kay Hudson McGowan
Gay Hunter Culp
Marty Jackson Frame
Betty Johnson McRae
Jere Keenan Brands
Kenney Knight Linton
Angela Lancaster
Elisabeth Malone Boggs
Elizabeth W. McCain
Marcia McClung Porter
Linda McElfresh DeRoze
Diane Miller Wise
Brandon Moore Brannon
Margaret Murphy Hunter
Elaine Kay Nelson Bonner
Nina Nelson Smith
Sandra R. Nelson
*Dorothy Louise Robinson Dewberry
Barbara Rudisill
Harriette Russell Flinn
*Laura Sanderson Miller
Anne Schiff Faivus
*Catharine Sloan Evans
Elyene Smith Thompson
Nancy Solomonson Portnoy
Susan Stanton Cargill
*Sandra Wallace
Charlotte Webb Kendall
Sandra Wilson
Sue Wyatt Rhodes
1966
Economics department computer aids students.
Alice Airth
*Beverly Allen Lambert
Elizabeth Allgeier Cobb
Teena Biscoe Rodgers
Nancy Bland Towers
Marilyn Breen Kelley
Barbara Brown Freeman
*Mary Brown Bullock
*Nancy Bruce Truluck
Emily Anne Burgess
Mary Jane Calmes Thomas
Vicky Campbell Patronis
Carol Davenport Wood
Alice E. Davidson
Jenny Dlllion Moore
*Martha Doom Bentley
Virginia Finney Bugg
May Day Folk Taylor
*Jan Gaskell Ross
Mary Jane Gilchrist Sullivan
Susan Goode Douglass
Marganne Hendricks Price
Suzanne Holt Lindholm
Frances Hopkins Westbrook
Ellen King Wiser
Mary Kuykendall Nichols
Linda E. Lael
Adelia MacNair Hall
Connie Magee Keyser
Helen Mann Liu
Margaret Marion Ryals
F. Ellen McDaniel
Barbara Minor Dodd
Portia 0. Morrison
Anne Morse Topple
Sara Moseley Junkin
Julia Murray Pensinger
Beverly Myers Pickett
Carolyn Newton Curry
Margaret Peyton Stem
*Linda Preston Watts
Virginia Quattlebaum Laney
Betty Rankin Rogers
Kay Roseberry Scruggs
Deborah A. Rosen
Gail Savage Glover
Suzanne Scoggins Barnhill
Lucy L. Scoville
Louise Smith Nelson
Malinda Snow
Karen Stiefelmeyer Leffingwell
Sarah Stowers Moore
Barbara Symroski Culliney
Martha Thompson
Sarah Uzzell-Rindlaub
Ruth Van Deman Walters
*Carol Watson Harrison
Louisa W. G. Williams
1967
Judy Barnes Crozier
Mary Lynn Barnett Tennaro
Cynthia Carter Bright
Sara Cheshire Killough
*Linda Cooper Shewey
Ida Copenhaver Ginter
Marsha Davenport Griffin
Anne Davis McGehee
Jane Davis Mahon
Anne Diseker Beebe
Anne Felker Cataldo
Celia Ford Fisher
*Mary Helen Goodloe-Murphy
Fontaine Harper Fulghum
Andrea Huggins Flaks
Elizabeth Hutchison Cowden
Judith Jackson Mozen
Linda Jacoby Miller
Jo Jeffers Wingfield
Mary Jervis Hayes
Lucy Jones Coo ley
Jane Keiger Gehring
Susan King Johnson
Karen Kokomoor Folsom
Caroline Lester Tye
Jane McCurdy Vardaman
Clair McLeod Muller
Ann Miller Morris
Mary Mitchell Apple
Sandra Mitchell
Judy Nuckols Offutt
Diana Oliver Peavy
Caroline Owens Crain
Ann Roberts Divine
Eliza Roberts Leiter
*Carol Scott Wade
Pamela Shaw Cochrane
*Susan Sleight Mowry
Patricia Smith Edwards
Isabelle Solomon Norton
*Susan Stevens Hitchcock
Nancy Tilson Loop
Rosalind Todd Tedarda
Anne Waldrop Allen
Lucy Waters Clausen
Janice Weatherby Riley
Sandra Welch Reeder
Vicki Wells Reddick
Grace Winn Ellis
1968
Anonymous
Anonymous
Elizabeth Alford Lee
Judith Almand Jackson
Sarah Bainbridge Akridge
Lucie Barron
Margie Baum Pearsall
Patricia Bell Miller
Jane Boone Eldridge
Louise T. Bruechert
Wallace Bryan Ribnik
Jan Burroughs Loftis
Mary T. Bush
Laurie Carter Tharpe
Anne Cates Buckler
*Carol Cole Renfro
Mary Corbitt Brockman
Gretchen Cousin Autin
Patrice Cragg Darden
Rebecca Davis Huber
Betty Derrick
Katherine Doster Stoddard
Paige Dotson Powell
Ellen Drew Conway
Sally Elberfeld Countryman
Louise Fortson Kinstrey
Ethel Gilbert Carter
Nina Gregg Bush
*Lucy Hamilton Lewis
Sylvia Harby Hut ton
Charlotte Hart Riordan
Olivia Hicks
Candace Hodges Bell
Janet Hunter
Barbara Jenkins Hines
*Suzanne Jones Harper
Adele Josey Houston
Caroline Kludt Rlcketts
Gail Livingston Pringle
*Susan McCann Butler
Katherine McCracken Maybank
Becky McRae McGlothlin
Katherine A. Mitchell
Margaret Moore Hall
Cue Pardue Hudson
Martha Parks Little
Patricia Parks Hughes
*Nancy Paysinger Hove
Cindy Ferryman Burleson
Cynthia Pharr Brackett
Susan Philips Moore
Catherine Price Laube
Lucy A. Rose
Angela J. Saad
Johanna Scherer Hunt
*Patricia Stringer
Susan Stringer Connell
Christine Theriot Woodfin
Ann Wilder
Stephanie Wolfe Sidella
1969
Anonymous
Anonymous
Patricia Auclair Hawkins
Catherine Auman Maere
Beth Bailey
Peggy Barnes Carter
Sandra Beck Scott
Carol Blessing Ray
Mary Bolch Line
Joette Burkett Yarbro
Penny Burr Pinson
Mary Chapman Hatcher
15
Martha Cooper Maddux
Julie Cottrill
*Janie Davis Hollerorth
Barbara Dings Kent
Christine Engelhard Meade
Lou Frank Guill
*Jo Ray Freiler Van Vliet
Prentice Fridy Weldon
Alyce Fulton Perkins
Pam Gafford McKlnnon
Anne Gilbert Potts
Margaret Gillespie
Mary Gillespie Dellinger
*Lalla Griffis Mangin
*Diane Hampton Flannagan
Ruth Hayes Bruner
Marion Hinson Mitchell
Nancy Holtraan Hoffman
*Jean Hovis Henderson
Holly Jackson
*Sara Jackson Chapman
*Carol Jensen Rychly
Kathy Maria Johnson Riley
Kay Jordan Sachs
Beverly LaRoche Anderson
Letitia Lowe Oliveira
Patricia May Touw
Mary McAlpine Evans
Suzanne Moore Kaylor
Katherine Moorer Robinson
Kathryn Morris White
Minnie Bob Mothes Campbell
*Mary Anne Murphy Hornbuckle
Jean Noggle Harris
Kathleen Pease
Virginia Pinkston Daily
Elta Posey Johnston
Elizabeth Faye Potter
Patsy Rankin Jopling
Carolyn Robinson Caswell
Flora Rogers Galloway
Mattie Sayrs Anderson
Dorothy Schrader
Nancy Sowell Williams
Eliza Stockman
Anne Stubbs
Tara Swartsel Boyter
*Jeanne Taliaferro Cole
Ann Burnette Teeple Sheffield
Sally Thomas Evans
Jane Todd
*Sarah Walker Guthrie
Sheryl Watson Patrick
Shelia Wilkins Harkleroad
Martha Wilson Keesler
Rose Wilson Kay
Sally Wood Hennessy
Sharon Yandle Rogers
*Betty Young von Herrman
1970
*Janet L. Allen
Martha Allison Parnell
Susan Atkinson Simmens
Aria Bateman Redd
Diane Bollinger Bush
*Bonnie Brown Johnson
Patricia Brown Cureton
Leslie Buchanan New
Mary Bullock Shearon
Deborah Ann Claiborne Williams
Lily Comer Foster
Carol Cook Uhl
Carol Crosby Patrick
Barbara L. Darnell
*Linda DelVecchio Owen
Susan Donald
Mary Douglas Pollit
Sharron Lee Downs Landers
Catherine DuVall Vogel
Sherian Fitzgerald Hodges
Marion Gamble McCollum
Lynne Garcia Harris
Hope Gazes Grayson
*Cheryl Granade Sullivan
Edi Guy ton Edmiston
Sharon Eunice Hall Snead
*Martha Harris Entrekin
Mary-Wills Hatfield LeCroy
Camille Holland Carruth
Harriette Huff Gaida
Ruth Hyatt Heffron
Amy Johnson Wright
Barbara Kinney
Maria A. Lindsay
Mary Margaret MacMillan Coleman
Judy Mauldin Beggs
Eileen McCurdy Armistead
Carol Ann McKenzie Fuller
*Chris McNamara Lovejoy
Gail Miller
Caroline Mitchell Smith
Ann Mizell Millar
Catherine Oliver
Christine Cope Pence
Martha L. Ramey
Susan Reeve Ingle
*Nancy Rhodes
Eva C. Saggus
Norma J. Shaheen
Carol Sharman Ringland
Beverly Shepherd Oxford
Sally A. Skardon
Martha Smith Rumora
Sue Snelling DeFurio
Sally Stanton
Claudine Sumner Jones
Pamela Taylor Clanton
Sally Tucker Lee
Jean Wall Olstin
Sue Weathers Crannell
*Ruthie Wheless Hunter
Sandra Wilson Harris
Norris Wootton
Sue Wright Shull
1971
*Cynthia Ashworth Kesler
Deborah Banghart Mullins
*Carol Banister Kettles
Evelyn Brown Christensen
Vicki Brown Ferguson
Jane Carlson
Julia Couch Mehr
Mary Carolyn Cox Perkins
Sallie Daniel Johnson
*Dale Derrick Rudolph
*Carol Durrance Dunbar
Jane Duttenhaver Hursey
*Rose Anne Ferrante Waters
Sandra Finotti Collins
Dianne Floyd Blackshear
Frances Folk Zygmont
Christine Fulton Baldwin
Margaret Funderburk O'Neal
Carolyn Galley
Harriet Gatewood Parker
*Janet Godfrey Wilson
Deborah Haskell Hurley
Paula Hendricks Culbreth
Susan Hopkins Moseley
*Mary Alice Isele Johnson
Ann A. Jarrett
Edith Jennings Black
Mary Pearl Landrum Squires
*Linda Laney Little
Candace D. Lang
*Karen Lewis Mitchell
Patricia Lindsay Green
Edna Patricia Lowe Swift
Mary Martin Smith
Lee H. McDavid
*Stella McDermid Haberlandt
*Alexa Mcintosh Mims
Bonnie Mcintosh Roughton
*Marti McLemore Boyce
Constance Morris Heiskell
Susan E. Morton
*Katherine Mueller Wright
*Stewart Nelson Mead
Vicki Nesbitt White
*Eleanor H. Ninestein
Betty S. Noble
Rebecca Owen Crim
Linda Ozee Lewis
Elizabeth Palme
Grace Pierce Quinn
*Jan Roush Pyles
Sarah Ruffing Robbins
Patricia Schellack Wright
Katherine Setze Home
Jane Stambaugh
*Granville Sydnor Hill
*Dea Taylor Walker
*p e ggy Thompson Davis
Bernie Todd Smith
*Caroline Turner
Wimberly Warnock
*Ellen Willingham
1972
Harriet E. Amos
Pamela Arnold Milhan
Mary Jane Beaty Watkins
Deborah Boggus Hays
Mary E. Brandon
Patricia Carter Patterson
Kathryn Champe Cobb
Lizabeth Champe Hart
Susan Correnty Dowd
Madeleine del Portillo Smith
Barbara Denzler Campbell
Beatrice Divine
Ellen Flynn Giles
*Jerry Kay Foote
Mary Susan Fryer
*Dianne Gerstle Niedner
Terri J. Hiers
Claire Hodges Burdett
Leila Elizabeth Jarrett Hosley
Sharon Jones Cole
*Deborah Jordan Bates
*Anne Kemble Collins
Sidney Kerr
Susan Landers Burns
*Sally Lloyd Proctor
*Linda Maloy Ozier
Jane Martin Wright
Susan Mees Hester
Mary Jane Morris MacLeod
Nancy Owen Merritt
Mary Ann Powell Howard
Gayle Saunders Dorsey
Margaret Smith Alexander
Montie Smith Acuff
Linda Story Braid
Nancy Thomas Tippins
Rose Trincher Prisant
*Susan Watson Black
Nancy Weaver Willson
Pamela Westmoreland Sholar
*Paula Wiles Sigmon
Susan Williams Gomall
*Juliana Winters
*Ann Yrwing Hall
1973
*Faye Ann Allen Sisk
Carolyn Arant Handell
Susan Bell Bohler
Sally Bryant Oxley
Kathleen Campbell Spencer
Nancy Carter Dunn
Deborah Corbett Gaudier
Ann Cowley Churchman
Deborah Dalhouse Riser
Ivonne delPortillo Betancourt
Sheryl Denman Curtis
Virginia Lee Estes Hill
Debbie Gantt Mitchell
Julia C. Goodloe
Ellen Gordon Kidda
Mary E. Gray
Marsha L. Hall
Judith Hamilton Grubbs
Lelah Ruth Hamilton Riccio
Andrea Hankins Schellman
*Resa L. Harris
*Carolyn Hassett-Powell
Judy Hill Calhoun
* Fund Agent
Deceased
16
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Melissa Holt Vandlver
Meredith Howe Pharis
Julia LaRue Orwig
Margaret B. Lines
Anne MacKenzie Boyle
Margaret MacLennan Barron
Judith Maguire Tindel
*Jerrilyn McBride Berrong
*Janifer Meldrum
Louise Minor Lyon
*Deborah Newman Mattern
*Priscilla Offen
Donna Parker Underwood
Elizabeth Rhett Jones
Marti Ryman Koch
*Nadja Sefcik-Earl
Judy Sharp Hickman
*Clare P. Smith
Tinsley Swann
Pamela Todd Moye
*Joy Trimble
Laurie Turner Walburn
Eleanor Vest Howard
Nancy Vick
Nancy Wallace Davis
Edith Waller Chambless
Betsy Watt Dukes
Cynthia Wilkes Smith
Jocelyn Williams
Elizabeth Winfrey Freeburg
Lady Louise Wornat Emrich
1974
*Sara E. Barrett
Elizabeth Bean Burrell
Diane Beller Cormani
Julie Bennett Curry
Betty Binkley
Marianne Bradley
*Patsy Cook Bates
*E. Celeste Cox
Elizabeth Crabill Shirk
*Teressa S. Dew
Judy Carol Duncan Baxley
Angie Dunn Thompson
Davara Dye Potel
*Lynn Ezell
*Mary Gay Bankston
*Tania M. Gumusgerdan
Rosanne Harkey Pruitt
Rebecca Harrison Mentz
Wendy Hellings Aldrich
Cecilia Henry Kurland
Beth Holmes Smith
Patricia Hughes Schoeck
Mar^ Jane Kerr Cornell
Gretchen Keyser
Carolyn Lacy Hasley
Amy Ledebuhr Bandi
Teresa Lee Echols
Lib McGregor Simmons
Patricia R. McGuire
Ann McMillan
*Melisha Miles Gilreath
Melanie Moore
Claire Owen
Linda Parsons Stewart
Ann Patterson
Ann Poe Mitchell
Gayle Rankin Meyer
*Martha Rutledge Munt
*Janet Sarbaugh
Susan Skinner Thomas
*Martha Stephenson Kelley
Christine Weaver Ternenyi
1975
''Susan Balch Clapham
*Vicki Baynes Jackson
Connie Bowen Hart
Mary Louise Brown Forsythe
Melodye G. Brown
*Victoria Burgess Stephan
*Anna Case Winters
*Shelby White Cave
Rose Ann Cleveland
India Culpepper Dennis
Louise Dawsey Caldwell
Sharon Forney Lee
Allison Grigsby Spears
*Motte Hay Turner
Denise Hord Mockridge
*Susan Landham Carson
Mae Logan Kelly
Vail Macbeth
Frances Maguire
Susan McLarin Johnson
*Rebecca McSwain Reynolds
*Mary Gay Morgan
Marie H. Newton
Jayne L. Peterman
Ellen Phillips Smith
Catherine Pirkle Wages
Melinda Rapp Stuk
Irmina L. Rivero
M. Christi Roberts
*Victoria A. Roberts
Margaret A. Robison
Angie Rushing
Lyn Satterthwaite MIchaud
Sally Stenger
Shelley Tapp
Martha Thrift Simmons
*Anne Darby Tison Hunter
*Rebecca M. Weaver
*Beth Wickenberg
1976
Eva A. Ad an
Katherine W. Akin
Lisa Banks
*Elizabeth Holland Boney
*Brandon Brame
Pamela S. Braswell
*Jan Brisendine Funs ten
Alexandra Coclin
Alethea Dillard
Sue Diseker
Emily Dunbar
Sally Echols Leslie
Susan Grier Phillips
*Lea Ann Grimes Hudson
*Pamela Jane Hamilton Johnson
*Sherry Huebsch Druary
*Jeanne Jones Holliday
Julie K. Jordan
Frazer Kinnett Loomis
Nancy Leasendale Purcell
Henrietta B. Leland
Jane Maas
Jonoise McGehee Morehead
*Peggie Miller Chamblee
Melissa Mills Jacobs
Genevieve New Chaffee
*Janet Lynn Norton
Jennifer Rich Kaduck
Lori Riley Day
Martha Sue Sarbaugh Veto
Elizabeth Scott Guynes
*Martha Marshall Smith
Pedrick Stall
Janet Tarwater Kibler
*Lark Todd Sessions
Win Anne Wannamaker Hipp
Lynda Weizenecker Wilson
Denise C. Westbrook
Dorothy Wilkes
Barbara Ann Williams
Jeani Williams Rochelle
1977
*Mary Anne Barlow Alford
*Lydia Maria Bendeck
*Nancy Burnham Schwahn
*Renee Davis Hall
*Dana deWitt Truitt
Anita R. Dodson
Elizabeth Doscher Shannon
Elaine Francisco Carlos
Martha Ann Hackl
Glenn Hankinson Paris
*Cynthia Hodges Burns
Caroline Inman Dubberly
Sue Jinks
Melissa S. Landon
Gloria A. Lewis
Marianne Lyon Howard
Beth Mason
Eleanor McCain Jinks
Patricia M. McWaters
Melinda Morris Knight
Beverly Nelson McCallum
Dana Nichols Stuckwish
Clara O'Kelley Bennett
Francine Oliver
Julie Ann Pflughaupt Boyd
Julie Poole Knotts
*Linda Shearon
*Tamara A, Shell
Susan L. Speigel
*Sarah Shurley Hayes
Caroline Swink
Lois Turner Swords
*Lydia Wilkes Barfoot
Kay Williams Barnard
Lynn Wilson
Susan Willoch Shaver
Catherine Winn
Sarah W. Workman
1979
1978
Ellie Autrey Alderman
Judy Bartholomew
Janet A. Blount
Ann Burchenal Tabb
Mary C. Downey
Sue Fisher
Sue Jordan
Janet Kelley Jobe
Linda Kimbrough Cook
Laura McDonald
Jeanie Moores
Alice L. Newton
Mary Jane Norville
Kathleen Ann O'Brien
Sharon Pittraan Powell
Madelyn Redd
Thelma F. Ruddell
Kathryn Schnittker White
Sally J. Stamper
Susan Kathleen Bethune
Bess Cox
Ragnhild Steineger
Alumnae Clubs
Agnes Scott Alumnae Club of
Anderson, South Carolina
Barrow-Gwinnett-Newton Agnes
Scott Alumnae Club
Agnes Scott Alumnae Club of
Cobb County-Marietta
Decatur Agnes Scott Alumnae Club
Huntsville Alumnae Association
Shreveport Alumnae Club
Agnes Scott Alumnae Club of
Tidewater, Virginia
Triangle Area Agnes Scott
College Alumnae Club
Associated Alumnae Clubs of
Washington, Do C.
Parents and Friends
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Ms.
and Mrs. Ralph Abernathy
Henry W. Adams
and Mrs. LeRoy Adams
and Mrs. S. Everette Adams
Tom Adams
M. Bernard Aidinoff
Hooper Alexander, III
0. Alt
Paul H. Anderson
Carol Aycock
Mrs. James A. Bain
Mr. A. B. Baker
Mr. and Mrs. D. Banyar
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Barclay
Mr. and Mrs. Dean D. Barger
Mrs. Louise Risley Barnes
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Benson
Col. and Mrs. Leo E. Bergeron
Mr. W. A. Bethune
Mrs. George M. Bevier
Mr. Gordon Bondurant
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Bondurant
Mr. E. L. Bothwell
Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Bowden
Mr. Harllee Branch, Jr.
Christabel P. Braunrot
Mrs. Henrietta F. Breen
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bringhurst, Jr.
Mr. Morrison W. Brinker
Dr. and Mrs. Rufus K. Broadaway
Mr. Thomas H. Broadus
Mr. and Mrs. Waverly C. Broadwell
Mrs. Aline M. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Martin P. Brown
Mrs. Carl J. Bruechert
Mr. William D. Burch
Mr. William Burchenal,
Otis B. Burnham
and Mrs. George B.
and Mrs. Ronald L.
and Mrs. William A.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Jr.
Butler
Byrnside
Calder
Mr. Dan D. Cameron
Mr. Scott Candler, Jr.
Mrs. Helen S. Carchidi
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Carlso:
Mr. John H. Carter, Jr.
Ms. Jane Cauvel
Mr. Clifford M. Clarke
Dr. Robert P. Coggins
Mr. Carleton H. Collar
Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Collar
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Collar
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Collar, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Collins
and Family
Mrs. Howard P. Conrad
Mr. James T. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Cooper,
Dr. Lee B. Copple
Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Cox
Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Cribbs, Jr.
Dr. Alice J. Cunningham
Judge and Mrs. R. S. Cunningham
Mrs. S. M. Cunningham
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Curd
Mr. Harry L. Dalton
Mrs. Janie P. Davenport
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Davidson
Mrs. Jean M. Davis
Mr. Neil 0. Davis
Decatur Music Teachers Association
Mr. and Mrs. L. del Portillo
Dr. Marshall Dendy
Mrs. Barbara Derketsch
Mrs. Frances S. Diseker
Dr. F. William Dowda
Mr. and Mrs. L. N. DuBard
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dunbar
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Dunbar
Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Dunbar
Mrs. Julia C. Duncan
Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Dunstan
Mrs. Frances P. Durham
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Echols
Mr. Earl H. Elberfeld
Mrs. J. C. Elder
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Elebash
Dr. George E. Engelhard
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Estes
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Geer Ezell
Faculty Flower Fund of
Agnes Scott College
Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Farley, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Farmer
Mr. Walter S. Flory
Mr. Lawrence L. Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Foreman
Ms. Sara A. Fountain
Mr. William C. Fox
Mrs. Isobel A. Fraser
Robert V. Frierson, Sr.
and Mrs. W. Joe Frierson
Alex P. Gaines
and Mrs. James C. Gaither
Blake P. Garrett
Dr. Julia T. .Gary
Mr. L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr.
**Mr. James R. Gilliam, Jr.
Ben S. Gilmer
Lois J. Goodman
Rachel R. Gordon
N. Howard Gowing, Jr.
Esther A. Graff
Graham Bible Class,
First Presbyterian Church
Dr. Elvena M. Green
Mr.
Dr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Fall 1979
17
Dr. Marjorle Grene
Mrs. Lydell Grey
Mrs. S. H. Griffin
Mr. Edwin R. Haas, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hagan
Mrs. Edward Hansell
Mrs. James E. Kara
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Harling, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Harris
Mr. William R. Harris
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Harrison
Mr. Sam F. Hatcher
Mrs. John Hearn
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hellender
Mrs. Horace Henry
Miss Mary Leila Honiker
Ms. Ruth Alice Howell
Dr. Claire Hubert
Mrs. R. E. Huggins
Mr. John S. Hunsinger
Mr. W. E. Hunter
Mr. Conley Ingram
Mr. Samuel M. Inman, Jr.
Mrs. Glenn W. Ives
Mr. James Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Jones
Dr. and Mrs. Rudolph W. Jones, Jr.
Mrs. W. H. Jones, Sr.
Dr. and Mrs. William H. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Justice
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Keith-Lucas
Mr. K. Webb Kennedy
Mr. Donald R. Keough
Mrs. Joseph Kesler
Mr. Samuel C. Ketchin
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Kiefer
Mr. Kenneth L. Kinney
Ms. Helen Neal Kleiber
Dr. C. Benton Kline
Ms. Evangeline B. Klug
Mr. Ellwood L. Koch
**Mr. David N. Landers
Mr. C. R. Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Leggett
Miss Susan F. Leonard
Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Leroy
Mrs. Elsie W. Love
Mrs. Valeria W. Lewis
Ms. Mary Lichlyter
Lions Club Schwabisch Hall
Mrs. W. H. Little
Mr. and Mrs. Homer A. Locke
Mrs. Helen B. Longshore
Mr. J. Erskine Love, Jr.
Mr. Murray Lumpkin
Mr. and Mrs. Ian MacFarlane
Dr. and Mrs. Arch L. MacNair
Dr. Kathryn A. Manuel
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Markert
Dr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Martin
Mr. Ferrin Y. Mathews
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Matthews
Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Maynard
Patricia and Megan McAtee
Mr. James Ross McCain
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McCain
Dr. and Mrs. Paul M. McCain
Mrs. Sue McCollister
Col. and Mrs. Thomas G. McCunniff
Mrs. Katie Houston McDonald
Ms. Terry S. McGehee
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Mcintosh
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. McKean
Dr. Kate McKemie
Dr. and Mrs. Alexander S. Mc Kinney
Mr. John C. B. McLaughlin
Miss Rozelle McLendon
Mr. C. B. McLeod
Dr. W. Edward McNair
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse M. Meadows
and Family
Mr. Dennis W. Michaud
Mrs. S. Allen Middleton
Mary Lou Miles
Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Mills
Mr. J. A. Minter, Jr.
Mr. C. B. Mitchell
Miss Elisabeth Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. S. Richard Morrison
Dr. Chester Morse
Mrs. A. L. Moses
Miss lone Murphy
Mrs. E. A. Murray
Mr. Heidt F. Neal, III
Ms. Debbie Neely
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Nelson, Jr.
Mrs. Robert H. New
Miss Lillian Newman
Dr . James Newsome
Mr. William E. Nuessle
Mr. Herbert H. Nussbaum
Mr. M. Lamar Oglesby
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lamar Oglesby
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Owens
Mrs. John Pancake
Ms. Lillian Parks
Miss Bess Patton
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Payne
Dr. and Mrs. William J. Pendergrast
Mrs. Virginia Key Penn
Mrs. Lucile D. Perkins
Dr. and Mrs. Marvin B. Perry, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Glenn Petty
Mr. John Pfeiffer
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Pittenger
Mrs. W. W. Plowden
Dr. and Mrs. Walter B. Posey
Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Pridgen
Mrs. Julia Y. Promnitz
Mrs. Bona Purswell
Mr. and Mrs. Tom W. Rankin
Mr. Robert S. Riley
Col. and Mrs. Henry A. Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Robinson
Mr. William Walter Robinson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Rockwell
Mr. C. B. Rogers, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Rogers
Mrs. Minnie B. Rogers
Mr. and Mrs. R. 0. Rogers
Mr. Joseph M. Rubens, Jr.
**Mrs. Susan V. Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Salter
Mr. Hansford Sams, Jr.
Mr. J. Maryon Saunders
Mr. C. Oscar Schmidt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred H. Schrader
Mr. William L. Scobee
Mrs. Burton A. Scott
**Miss Gertrude K. Sevin
Mr. B. M. Sharian
Mr, and Mrs. Francois L. Sheats
Mrs. R. L. Sheffer
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Shepard, Jr.
Mr. Horace H. Sibley
Mr. John A. Sibley
Mr. W. A. L. Sibley, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Alden Simpson
Mr. Tom Simpson
Mr. and Mrs. Roff Sims
Mr. and Mrs. Harlon P. Sisk
Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Skellie, Jr.
**Mr. Edmond H. Smith, Jr.
Mr. Glenn B. Smith
Mr. Hal L. Smith
Mr. John E. Smith, II
Mrs. John R. Smith
Mrs. L. Noel Smith
Mr. P. L. Bealy Smith
Mrs. Carolyn Snow
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Speer, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Spence
Ms. Margaret H. Spencer
Dr. Chloe Steel
Mr. Augustus H. Sterne
Mrs. J. L. Stevens
Mrs. Edith Stewart
Mrs. Frances Stewart
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stimson
Dr. E. L. Stoffel
Ms. Frances Waggoner Strother
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Strozier
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Summer
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Swink
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Talton
Dr. J. Randolph Taylor
Mrs. W. M. Terrill
Dr. and Mrs. J. N. Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Thomas
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Thompson
Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Tinkler
Mrs. Margaret Towers
Mr. and Mrs. A. Randall Tuten
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Walker
Mrs. C. J. Walker
Mr. Robert J. Wall
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Wallace, Jr.
Mr. William C. Wardlaw
Mr. Ferdinand Warren
Mrs. T. H. Weatherly
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Weinburgh
Mr. James H. Wells
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Wendling
Mrs. J. Parhara Werlein
Mrs. Henry C. West
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Westmoreland
Mr. Wendell K. Whipple
Mr. John C. Wilson
Mr. W. T. Wilson, Jr.
Harry and Penny Rush Wistrand
Women of the Church,
Decatur Presbyterian Church
Mrs. Clara C. Wyatt
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Zarkowsky
Fund Agent
Deceased
Businesses and Foundations
Anonymous
Anonymous
Akers Foundation, Inc.
Alexander & Alexander, Inc.
American Credit Foundation
of North Carolina, Inc.
American Mutual Liability
Insurance Company
American Telephone and
Telegraph Company
Arthur Anderson and Company
Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling
Company
Atlanta Gas Light Company
* Atlantic Richfield Foundation
The Badger Company, Inc.
Baxley Federal Savings and
Loan Association
Bergstrom Endowment Fund
Blake Builders Supply Company
*The Boeing Company
*Boise Cascade Corporation
Burnham Enterprises, Inc.
*Celanese Corporation
*The Chase Manhattan Bank
*Chevron U. S. A., Inc.
*Citizens and Southern Fund
*The Coca-Cola Company
* Colgate-Palmolive Company
*Columbia Gas Transmission
Corporation
Connecticut Mutual Life
Carle C. Conway Scholarship
Foundation
Harry L. Dalton Foundation, Inc.
Daniel International Corporation
Decatur Federal Savings & Loan
Association
Duke Power Company
The John C. Echols Memorial Fund
Emory Woods, Inc.
The Equitable Assurance Society
of the United States
* Exxon USA Foundation
Sylvia M. and Frank W. Ferst
Foundation, Inc.
* Fireman's Fund American Foundation
* The First National Foundation, Inc.
First Presbyterian Church of Houston
*Ford Motor Company
John and Mary Franklin Foundation, Inc.
General Electric Foundation
Georgia Foundation for Independent
Colleges, Inc.
Gulf Life Insurance Company
Stella and Charles Guttman Foundation, Inc.
The Hartford Insurance Group Foundation
The Harvey Hubbell Foundation
*Hercules, Inc.
*Hewlett-Packard
* Honeywell Fund
Household Finance Corporation
* Illinois Tool Works Foundation
*Integon Foundation, Inc
international Business Machines
Corporation
* International Paper Company Foundation
Jefferson-Pilot Corporation
*Johnson & Higgins of Georgia, Inc.
*The Kendall Company Foundation
Lanier Brothers Foundation
*Martin Marietta Corporation
Metropolitan Foundation of Atlanta
*Milliken and Company
Mobil Foundation, Inc.
*Monsanto Fund
*M0NY - Mutual of New York
*The N. C. R. Foundation
* National Distillers & Chemical
Corporation
*New York Telephone Company
Patterson-Barclay Memorial Foundation, Inc.
Pfizer, Inc.
The Presser Foundation
*Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company
*The Prudential Insurance Company
of America
* Raytheon Company
*Reliance Insurance Companies Foundation
Robinson-Humphrey Company, Inc.
*Rohm and Haas Company
Savannah News-Press
*Shell Companies Foundation
The Sears-Roebuck Foundation
Simmons Company
SmithKline Corporation
*South Carolina National Bank
Southeastern Electric Exchange, Inc.
*Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph
Company
Southern Natural Gas Company
*Sperry Rand Corporation
J. P. Stevens & Company, Inc. Foundation
*The Sun Company, Inc.
TRW Foundation
*Texaco, Inc.
The Torrington Company
*Trust Company Bank
The J. M. Tull Foundation
D. A. and Elizabeth B. Turner Foundation
UPS Foundation
Union Oil Company of California
Foundation
United States Gypsum Foundation, Inc.
United Technologies
United Virginia Bankshares Foundation
Gertrude and William C. Wardlaw
Fund, Inc.
*Western Electric Fund
*Westinghouse Educational Foundation
The David, Helen, and Marion Woodward
Fund
Made matching gifts
18
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Agnes Scott's Endowment and
Other Permanent Funds
Through the Years alumnae and
friends of Agnes Scott have provided
gifts to build the College and to
strengthen its programs. Many of these
gifts have made it possible to improve
faculty compensation, to increase finan-
cial aid to students, and to add books for
the Library and equipment for the
classrooms and laboratories.
Most of the gifts received each year
are unrestricted. The College can apply
them to scholarship awards or to some
other budget needs. When a gift is
designated for a specific purpose, the
College respects the donor's wish.
Some restricted gifts are made for the
Endowment so that the principal will be
held intact and only the income will be
used for general or specific purposes.
Gifts for student loan funds are meeting
a growing need. Sometimes a donor will
make a gift but will select a life-income
plan such as an annuity, thereby benefit-
ing both the College and the donor.
Agnes Scott is indebted to alumnae
and friends for their interest and
generosity in establishing the following
permanent funds for the College. The
amount shown for each fund represents
the total of all gifts received through
August 31, 1979. This list describes
individually all funds of $1,000 or more,
but it does not include scholarships
provided annually by the donors.
Please let the Development Office
know of any errors or omissions so that
corrections can be made.
Special Funds
The Walters Fund, established in 1955
through a bequest from Frances Winship
Walters, represents the major part of
Agnes Scott's Endowment. Mrs. Wal-
ters attended Agnes Scott Institute and
served as a trustee for sixteen years. As
the residual beneficiary of her estate,
Agnes Scott received $4,291,630, the
largest amount by far that the College
has ever received from any source.
The English Fund was established in
1947 by a grant of $500,000 from an
anonymous foundation. The income is
used for maintaining and strengthening
the program of the English department.
The History and Political Science Fund
was established in 1964 through a grant
of $500,000 from an anonymous founda-
tion which the College had to match with
an equal amount from other sources so
that the total would be $1,000,000. The
income is used to maintain and
strengthen the program of the Depart-
ment of History and Political Science.
The General Endowment Fund of
$2,008,850 represents the gifts of indi-
viduals, corporations, and foundations
whose gifts ranged in amount from a few
dollars to several hundred thousand
dollars.
Memorial Funds
Wallace McPherson Alston Professorship
of Bible and Religion of $500,000 was
established in 1973 by the Board of
Trustees in honor of Agnes Scott's third
president at the time of his retirement
after a quarter century of distinguished
service to the College.
Anna Josephine Bridgman Fund of
$2,030 was established in 1974 by the
Board of Trustees in her honor when she
retired after twenty-five years of service
as professor and chairman of the biology
department. The income is used for the
Bridgman Biology Library.
William A. Calder Fund of $2,035 was
established in 1971 by the Board of
Trustees to honor this professor for his
twenty-four years of service as chairman
of the Department of Physics and As-
tronomy. The income is used to pur-
chase equipment for the department.
John Bulow Campbell Fund of
$142,945 was established in 1940 by this
generous trustee from Atlanta as the first
gift to the College's Semi-Centennia!
Fund. The income is available to
strengthen the College's operations.
Charles Murphey and Mary Hough
Scott Candler Fund of $1,000 was estab-
lished in 1963 by their three sons Scott,
Murphey, and Milton as a memorial to
these friends, neighbors, and supporters
of Agnes Scott, Mr. Candler having
served as a member of the Board of
Trustees from 1889 to 1935 and Mrs.
Candler having been a daughter of
Colonel Scott, the College's founder.
Marion T. Clark Research Fund of
$4,335 was established in 1978 by his
family and friends as a memorial to this
William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor of
Chemistry and chairman of the depart-
ment and in recognition of his eighteen
years of service at Agnes Scott. The
income is used to assist the student
research program.
Mary Keesler Dalton Art Fund of
$30,914 was established in 1972 by Harry
L. Dalton of Charlotte, North Carolina,
in honor of his wife, Class of 1925. The
income and principal, if deemed appro-
priate, is to be used to purchase works of
art for the College's Dalton Galleries.
Charles A. Dana Professorship Fund of
$556,000 was established in 1973 with a
grant from the Charles A. Dana Founda-
tion and matching funds from Agnes
Scott. The income is used as supplemen-
tal compensation for at least four Dana
Professors.
Christian W. Dieckmann Fund of
$3,425 was established in 1961 by his
friends to honor this professor and
musician for enriching the lives of
generations of students from 1905 until
his retirement in 1950. The income is
used for musical recordings and other
equipment in the music department.
Agnes Scott Donaldson Fund of $10,000
was established through a bequest from
this member of the Class of 1917. The
income is used where it is most needed.
Letitia Pate Evans Fund of $100,000
was established in 1955 through a be-
quest from this generous benefactor and
trustee of the College to provide an
income for the maintenance of and
improvements to the Dining Hall named
in her honor.
William Joe Frierson Research Fund of
$3,715 was established in 1975 by the
Board of Trustees and friends to honor
him for his twenty-nine years of service
Fall 1979
19
as professor and chairman of the chemis-
try department. He was the College's
first William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor
of Chemistry. The income is used to
assist student research.
Robert Frost Prize Fund of $1,105 was
established in 1963 by members of the
Class of 1963 to provide an award for
creative writing and to honor this distin-
guished and frequent visitor to the
campus.
Paul Leslie and Carolyn White Garber
Fund of $4,453 was established in 1976
by the Board of Trustees and friends
upon Professor Garber's retirement after
thirty-three years of service during
which he was professor and chairman of
the Department of Bible and Religion.
The income is used to purchase Bible
teaching aids.
General Memorial Fund of $102,318
was established with gifts from many
alumnae and friends to strengthen the
program of the College.
Agnes Raoul Glenn Fund of $15,010
was established in 1944 by Thomas K.
Glenn of Atlanta in memory of his wife.
Nancy Groseclose Visiting Scholars
Fund of $3,240 was established in 1979
by the Agnes Scott trustees and other
friends to honor this professor and
chairman of the biology department for
her thirty-two years of service. The
income is used to bring to the campus
visiting scholars in biology and closely
related fields.
Amy Walden Harrell Fund of $3,000
was established in 1972 by a bequest
from her husband. Bishop Costen J.
Harrell of Decatur, as a memorial to this
alumna of the Institute.
George P. Hayes Fellowship Fund of
$2,825 was established in 1967 by the
Board of Trustees in honor of this
professor and chairman of the English
department upon his retirement after
forty years of service. The income is
used to provide assistance to a graduat-
ing senior or recent graduate who is
beginning a program leading to a M.A. or
Ph.D. degree in English.
Jessie Lawrie Johnson Hicks Fund of
$3,121 was established in 1960 by Dean
and Mrs. C. Benton Kline of Agnes
Scott in honor of Mrs. Kline's mother.
Fred A. Hoyt Memorial Fund of
$25,000 was established in 1971 with a
bequest from this Atlanta friend of the
College. The income is used to purchase
capital equipment and to enhance our
admissions and public relations pro-
grams.
Charlotte Hunter Memorial Fund of
$1,265 was established in 1974 by her
classmates and friends in appreciation of
this member of the Class of 1929 who
had served for ten years as assistant
dean of students. Use of the income is at
the discretion of the president.
'rV\A/3
Visiting professor in religion Benton Kline.
Samuel Martin Inman Fund of
$194,953 was established in 1923 with a
bequest from Jane Walker Inman of
Atlanta, as a memorial to her brother
who was chairman of the Board from
1903 to 1914.
William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor-
ship of Chemistry of $500,000 was
established in 1969 by the William Rand
Kenan, Jr., Charitable Trust to per-
petuate this business leader's interest in
strengthening higher education.
Wilma St. Clair Huot Kline Fund of
$2,300 was established in 1960 by Dean
and Mrs. C. Benton Kline in honor of his
mother.
Ellen Douglass Leyburn Professorship
of English of $303,509 was established in
1969 by the Board of Trustees and her
friends as a memorial to this member of
the Class of 1927 who as professor of
English and chairman of the department
inspired her students during her thirty-
two years on the Agnes Scott faculty.
Adeline Arnold Loridans Professorship
of French of $300,000 was established in
1956 by the Charles Loridans Founda-
tion in memory of this alumna of the
Institute who was the wife of the
long-time French Consular Agent in
Atlanta who had created the foundation.
William Markham Lowry Fund of
$25,000 was established in 1910 by
Robert J. and Emma C. Lowry of
Atlanta in memory of their son. The
income is used for the natural science
departments.
Mary Stuart MacDougall Museum
Fund of $2,505 was established in 1952
by alumnae and friends in her honor at
the time of her retirement as professor
and chairman of the biology department
after thirty-three years of service. The
income is used for the improvement of
the MacDougall Museum.
James Ross McCain Lectureship Fund
of $30,740 was established in 1966 by the
students, faculty, alumnae, and friends
20
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
of Agnes Scott as a memorial to the
second president whose total span of
distinguished service to the College had
been fifty years. The income is used to
provide a series of lectures on some
aspect of the liberal arts and sciences
with reference to the religious dimen-
sions of human life.
Michael A. McDowell, Jr., Fund of
$2,095 was established in 1975 by the
Board of Trustees to honor this musician
upon his retirement as professor and
chairman of the music department after
twenty-five years of service on the
faculty. The income is used to purchase
audio equipment for the music depart-
ment.
Louise McKinney Book Prize Fund of
$1,692 was established in 1937 by friends
in honor of her service as professor of
English from 1891 until her retirement in
1937. The income is used to provide a
prize for the student who, in the opinion
of the faculty of the English department,
has accumulated during the year the best
personal collection of books which can
be the foundation of a lasting library.
Mary Angela Herbin McLennan Medi-
cal Fellowship Fund of $25,000 was
established in 1975 by Alex McLennan,
Atlanta attorney, in memory of his
mother. The income is used to provide a
grant for an Agnes Scott College
graduate to attend medical school.
Walter Edward McNair Fund of $2,735
was established in 1977 by the Board of
Trustees to honor this member of the
English department upon his retirement
after his twenty years of service to the
College which included not only his
teaching but also his being an assistant to
the president and director of develop-
ment and public relations. The income is
used to fund the visits of Phi Beta Kappa
lecturers and visiting scholars.
Mildred Rutherford Mell Lecture Fund
of $4,963 was established in 1960 in her
honor by her college associates and
other friends upon her retirement as
professor and chairman of the
economics and sociology department
after twenty-two years of service during
many of which she was also chairman of
the Lecture Committee. The income is
used to bring outstanding speakers to the
campus.
Ellen White and William Wyeth New-
man Prize Fund of $2,859 was estab-
lished in 1976 by Dr. Eleanor Newman
Hutchens '40 of Huntsville, Alabama, in
honor of her grandparents who made it
possible for her to attend Agnes Scott.
The income is used for the Writers'
Festival prizes in poetry and prose.
Joseph Kyle Orr Fund of $21,000 was
established in 1941 by the trustees as a
memorial to this Atlanta business leader
whose twenty-three years of leadership
as chairman of Agnes Scott's Board of
Trustees saw the College attain rapid
growth and recognition. The income is
used to strengthen the administrative
work of the College.
Mary Noble Phelps Memorial Fund of
$10,000 was established in 1974 by her
mother, Mrs. A. M. Noble of Smithfield,
North Carolina, in memory of this
member of the class of 1938.
Frank P. Phillips Fund of $50,000 was
established in 1950 with a bequest from
this friend of the College from Colum-
bus, Mississippi.
Margaret T. Phythian Fund of $3,145
was established in 1964 by the trustees
and friends in honor of this member of
the Class of 1916 upon her retirement as
the first Adeline Arnold Loridans Pro-
fessor of French as well as chairman of
the department after a teaching career of
forty-one years at the College. The
income is used to assist a student in a
special summer study of French.
Janef Newman Preston Poetry Fund of
$3,495 was established in 1962 by this
1921 graduate and long-time member of
the English department and her friends
to encourage creative writing. The in-
come is used for annual awards to the
Agnes Scott students writing the best
original poem and the best prose piece.
George Washington Scott Memorial
Fund of $29,000 was established in 1909
by the citizens of Decatur to strengthen
the College which he had helped to
establish. The income is used for one of
the academic departments.
Carrie Scandrett Fund of $7,288 was
established in 1969 by Agnes Scott
alumnae, faculty, students, administra-
tion, and trustees to honor, upon her
retirement, this 1924 graduate who re-
mained at Agnes Scott to become the
College's second dean of students and to
serve her alma mater with distinction for
forty-four years. The income is used for
the student affairs program.
Thomas G. Snow Memorial Fund of
$4,000 was established in 1972 by Melin-
da Snow '66 of Atlanta in memory of her
father. The income is used by the
English department to sponsor activities
of intellectual value.
Chloe Steel Visiting Professor Fund of
$2,932 was established in 1976 by trus-
tees and friends upon her retirement
after having been professor and chair-
man of the French department during
her twenty-one years of service. The
income is used to bring to the campus a
visiting professor of French.
Laura Mayes Steele Fund of $159,307
was established in 1977 from the estate
of this member of the Class of 1937 who
served the College for forty years, first
as secretary to the president and later as
registrar and director of admissions.
Mary Frances Sweet Fund of $184,000
was established in 1956 with a bequest
from this College physician and profes-
sor of hygiene who served in these
capacities from 1908 to 1937 and re-
mained a campus resident until her
death. The income is used for the
College's health services.
Mary Nancy West Thatcher Fund of
$47,600 was established in 1962 by this
generous member of the Class of 1915
who served as president of the Alumnae
Association in 1926-27 and as an active
trustee from 1947 to 1971.
Lillian Dale Thomas Award Fund of
$2,500 was established in 1977 by her
cousins Lucia B. Donnelly, Frances B.
Hulver, and Beverly S. Burbage in
memory of this 1930 graduate whose
devotion to sharing her love of Greek
and Latin led her to a career of teaching.
The income is used to provide an award
for excellence in these languages.
Margret Guthrie Trotter Fund of
$2,330 was established in 1977 by the
Board of Trustees and her friends as a
memorial to this professor of English
who for thirty-three years had encour-
aged her students to be more creative as
writers and poets. The income is used to
help finance Agnes Scott's Writers'
Festival, an event which she launched in
1972.
Frances Winship Walters Fund of
$50,000 was established through a be-
quest from this generous alumna and
trustee. The income is used for the
operation and maintenance of the Wal-
ters Infirmary.
Annie Louise Harrison Waterman Pro-
fessorship of Theatre of $100,000 was
established in 1953 by this generous
alumna of the Institute and trustee from
1947 to 1953.
George Winship Fund of $10,000 was
established in 1957 through a bequest
from this Atlanta business leader who
had served as a trustee for twenty-five
years, eighteen of which he was chair-
man of the Board.
Roberta Powers Winter Fund of $4,277
was established in 1974 by the Board of
Trustees and her friends in honor of this
member of the Class of 1927 upon her
retirement as the College's first Annie
Louise Harrison Waterman Professor of
Speech and Drama as well as department
chairman after thirty-five years of ser-
vice. The income is used to bring visiting
speakers from these fields to the
campus.
Myrna Goode Young Latin Award
Fund of $2,000 was established in 1979
by the Agnes Scott trustees to honor this
professor of classical languages and
literatures for her twenty-three years of
service. The income is used to establish
an award to the graduating senior with
the highest scholastic average in Latin
with a "B" or better grade as the
minimum.
Fall 1979
21
Scholarship Funds
Martin J. Abney Scholarship Fund of
$5,000 was established in 1975 by a
bequest from Louise Abney Beach King
"20 of Birmingham. Alabama, as a
memorial to her father.
Akers Scholarship Fund of $5,000 was
established in 1978 through the interest
of business leaders C. Scott Akers of
Atlanta and John M. Akers of Gastonia.
North Carolina.
1 ucile Alexander Scholarship Fund of
$5,056 was established in 1951 by her
friends to honor this 1911 graduate who
returned to her alma mater to teach first
chemistry and then mathematics before
she received an advanced degree in
French from Columbia University. Hers
was the first graduate degree earned by
an Agnes Scott alumna. She was head of
the French department for twenty-eight
years before her retirement in 1948.
Preference is given to students majoring
in French.
Louisa Jane Allen Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of S3. 546 was established in
1958 by her friends and family as a
memorial to this 1956 graduate after her
tragic automobile accident.
Mary Virginia Allen Scholarship Fund
of S3.064 was established in 1979 by the
Agnes Scott trustees and friends to
honor this alumna of the Class of 1935.
professor and chairman of the French
department, for her twenty-eight years
of service. The income is used to assist a
French major to study in France for an
academic year.
Samuel Harrison Allen Scholarship
Fund of $1,965 was established in 1969
by Clara May Allen Reinero '23 and her
family of Decatur in memory of her
father.
Mary McPherson Alston Scholarship
Fund of $6,930 was established in 1960
by Dr. and Mrs. Wallace M. Alston to
honor this mother of Agnes Scott's third
president.
Wallace McPherson Alston Scholarship
Fund of $9,000 was established in 1973
by his many friends at the time of his
retirement in appreciation of his distin-
guished service during his twenty-five
years at Agnes Scott, twenty-two of
which he served as the president.
Sara Davis Alt Scholarship Fund of
$1,400 was established in 1979 by her
husband. William O. Alt. of Atlanta, in
memory of this member of the Class of
1935.
Neal L. Anderson Scholarship Fund of
$15,000 was established in 1976 by Ruth
Anderson O'Neal '18 and her husband.
Alan S. O'Neal, of Winston-Salem.
North Carolina, as a memorial to her
father, a Presbyterian minister and
trustee of Agnes Scott from 1923 to
1931. Preference is given to a student
who is majoring in Bible and religion.
Arkansas Scholarship Fund of $4,800
was established in 1962 by alumnae in
that state. Preference is given to stu-
dents from Arkansas.
Armstrong Memorial Scholarship Fund
of $2,000 was established in 1924 by
George Ferguson and Lucy May Camp
Armstrong of Savannah. Preference is
given to students who are interested in
serving with the Young Women's Chris-
tian Association.
Atlantic Ice and Coal Company Schol-
arship Fund of $2,500 was established in
1924 by the employees of this company
when William B. Baker of Atlanta was
its president. Preference is given to a
student from a community where the
company plants have operated.
Atlas Finance Company Scholarship
Fund of $1,100 was established in 1963
by the firm when Robert R. Snodgrass of
Atlanta was its president.
Man Reynolds Babcock Scholarship
Fund of $25,000 was established in 1964
by the Mary Reynolds Babcock Founda-
tion of Winston-Salem. Preference is
given to students from North Carolina.
Charlotte Bartlett Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of $4,791 was established in
1972 by Ruby Stafford (Mrs. Charles
W.) Bartlett of Tampa in memory of her
daughter of the Class of 1950.
Nelson T. Beach Scholarship Fund of
$25,000 was established in 1954 by
Louise Abney Beach '20 of Birmingham.
Alabama, in memory of her husband.
The Presbyterian Foundation holds
S15.000 of this amount for the College.
Mary Livingston Beatie Scholarship
Fund of $1 1.500 was established in 1950
by W. D. Beatie and Nellie Beatie of
Atlanta in memory of their mother.
Annie V. and John Bergstrom Scholar-
ship Fund of $1,500 was established in
1924 by Martha Wynunee Bergstrom of
Atlanta in honor of two of her children.
.lulianne Williams Bodnar Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $3,457 was estab-
lished in 1972 by her classmates and
friends as a tribute to this member of the
Class of 1963.
J. O. Bowen Scholarship Fund of
$6,000 was established in 1950 by J. O.
Bowen, Decatur businessman.
Martha Bowen Scholarship Fund of
$1,000 was established in 1935 by her
classmates and friends as a memorial to
this member of the Class of 1925 from
Monroe. Georgia, who had died before
graduation.
Bovd-McCord Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $6,500 was established in 1976
with a bequest from Miss Clem Boyd as
a memorial to her parents. William and
Frances McCord Boyd, of Newton
Counts. Georgia.
lain MacDonald Brittain Scholarship
Fund of $15,000 was established in 1963
by Fred W. and Ida Brittain Patterson
'21 of Atlanta in memory of her mother.
Judith Broadaway Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of $16,588 was established in
1966 by her classmates, family, and
friends as a memorial to this member of
the Class of 1966 who had died just
before graduation. Preference is given to
a student majoring in philosophy.
Celeste Brown Scholarship Fund of
$3,665 was established in 1964 by
Dorothy Brown (Mrs. John H.. Jr.)
Cantrell '29 of Spartanburg. South
Carolina, in memory of her mother.
Dorothy Dunstan Brown Scholarship
Fund of $2,300 was established in 1965
by Edgar and Florene Dunstan of
Decatur in honor of their daughter of the
Class of 1947.
Maud Morrow Brown Scholarship
Fund of $1,500 was established in 1961
by Annie Graham King '06 to honor her
teacher of Latin and Greek while she
was at Agnes Scott. Preference is given
to students in classics.
John A. and Sallie Burgess Scholarship
Fund of $1,700 was established in 1950
by these Atlanta friends of the College.
Caldwell Memorial Scholarship Fund
of $1,600 was established in 1960 by
George E. and Lida Rivers Caldwell
Wilson ' 10 of Charlotte in memory of her
parents, the late Dr. and Mrs. John L.
Caldwell. Preference is given to students
from North Carolina and Arkansas who
are daughters of ministers serving in
small churches.
Laura Berry Campbell Fund of
$100,000 was established in 1964 with
gifts from Mrs. John Bulow Campbell of
Atlanta because of her interest in the
College and its students.
Annie Ludlow Cannon Fund of $1,000
was established in 1949 by this member
of the Class of 1909. Preference is given
to daughters of missionaries and minis-
ters or to students interested in Christian
service.
Ella Carey Scholarship Fund of $5,550
was established in 1969 by a grateful
member of the Class of 1927 to honor
this maid and friend to students and
faculty alike during her years of service
in Main Hall. Preference is given to
Black students.
Captain James Cecil Scholarship Fund
of $3,000 was established in 1950 by his
daughter. Preference is given to descen-
dants of those who served the Confed-
eracy.
Chattanooga Alumnae Club Scholar-
::
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
*rr
6 (
New film room in Buttrick seats eighty.
ship Fund of $2,009 was established in
1961 by alumnae in that community.
Preference is given to students from that
area.
Dr. and Mrs. Tolbert Fanning Cheek
Scholarship Fund of $1,500 was estab-
lished in 1929 by Mary Simmons Cheek
to be a memorial to her husband, but it
now honors both members of this
pioneer family of Birmingham,
Alabama.
Irvin and Rosa L. Cilley Scholarship
Fund of $59,084 was established in 1964
by Melissa Cilley, a member of the
Spanish department at Agnes Scott from
1930 to 1963, as a memorial to her
parents. She later bequeathed her estate
to the College for this fund.
Citizens and Southern National Bank
Scholarship Fund of $25,000 was estab-
lished in 1962 as a part of this bank's
interest in the education of youth.
James J. Clack Scholarship Fund of
$1,500 was established in 1922 by this
friend of the College from Starrs ville,
Georgia.
Caroline McKinney Clarke Scholarship
Fund of $14,625 was established in 1961
by Louise Hill Reaves '54 in honor of her
mother, an alumna of the Class of 1927,
a lifelong friend, neighbor, and support-
er of the College.
Class of 1957 Scholarship Fund of
$9,316 was established in 1962 by mem-
bers of this class.
Class of 1964 Scholarship Fund of
$3,994 was established in 1964 by mem-
bers of this class. Preference is given to
students from other countries.
Class of 1965 Scholarship Fund of
$1,174 was established in 1965 by mem-
bers of this class. The award is given to a
student for her junior or senior year and
is based on both merit and need.
Class of 1968 Scholarship Fund of
$1,325 was established in 1968 by mem-
bers of this class. The award is given to a
Black student.
Jack L. Cline, Jr., Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of $2,665 was established in
1962 by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jasper
(Jack) L. Cline of Atlanta.
Howard P. Conrad Scholarship Fund
of $28,000 was established in 1971 in his
memory by his wife of St. Clair,
Michigan. Their daughter, Patricia, was
a member of the Class of 1963.
Augusta Skeen Cooper Scholarship
Fund of $15,100 was established in 1949
by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Inman Cooper
in honor of this member of the Class of
1917 who had stayed on at Agnes Scott
to teach chemistry for thirteen years.
Preference is given to students in that
department.
Thomas L. and Annie Scott Cooper
Scholarship Fund of $12,511 was estab-
lished in 1935 through gifts from this
Decatur family, Mrs. Cooper being the
daughter of Colonel George W. Scott,
the founder of the College.
Laura Bailey and David Robert Cum-
ming Scholarship Fund of $1,000 was
established in 1961 by Laura Cumming
Northey '43 of Charlotte, North Caroli-
na, as a memorial to her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Cunningham
Scholarship Fund of $7,305 was estab-
lished in 1950 by their family and friends
in recognition of their service to the
College for more than thirty years.
Preference is given to students from
missionary families or from foreign
countries or to students interested in
mission work.
Mary Cheek Davenport Scholarship
Fund of $2,000 was established in 1925
by this friend from Marietta to assist
primarily the daughters of missionaries
or a student interested in missionary
work.
Andrewena Robinson Davis Memorial
Scholarship Fund of SI, 000 was estab-
lished in 1961 by her cousin, Patricia
Morgan Fisher '53, to honor this member
of the Class of 1932.
Lillian McPherson Davis Scholarship
Fund of $2,570 was established in 1962
by Jean M. Davis of Greenville, South
Carolina, in memory of her young
daughter.
Marie Wilkins Davis Scholarship Fund
of $4,000 was established in 1939 by her
mother's bequest as a memorial to this
alumna who attended Agnes Scott Insti-
tute.
Emily S. Dexter Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $1,365 was established in 1974
by her cousin, Ethel S. (Mrs. Charles R.)
Cady, of Green Bay, Wisconsin, in
recognition of her thirty-two years ser-
vice as a teacher at Agnes Scott.
Preference is given to students in
psychology.
Emily S. Dexter Scholarship Award
Fund of $10,610 was established in 1972
by Ruth Pringle Pipkin '31 of Reidsvilie,
North Carolina, to recognize and honor
Miss Dexter for her service as a teacher
of psychology at Agnes Scott from 1923
to 1955. A special committee selects the
recipient from members of the rising
senior class who are taking advanced
courses in psychology.
S. Leonard Doerpinghaus Summer
Study Scholarship Fund of $4,602 was
established in 1968 by the students,
colleagues, and other friends as a
memorial to this professor who had
taught in the biology department for
almost ten years before his untimely
death. A special committee makes this
award for use in summer study at a
biological field station.
David Arthur Dunseith Scholarship
Fund of $1,250 was established in 1963
by Wallace M. Alston and Madelaine
Dunseith Alston '28 in memory of her
father, a Presbyterian minister in
Clearwater. Florida, and former trustee
of the College.
Georgia Wood Durham Scholarship
Fund of $6,500 was established in 1938
by the late Jennie Durham Finley in
memory of her mother. Preference is
given to students from DeKalb County.
Fall 1979
23
James Ballard Dyer Scholarship Fund
of $38,453 was established in 1949 by
Diana Dyer Wilson '32 in memory of her
father. Preference is given to students
from Virginia or North Carolina.
Inez Norton Edwards Scholarship Fund
of $1,103 was established in 1978 by her
family and friends as a memorial to this
Auburn, Alabama, mother of Agnes
Scott alumna, Nancy '58 and Helen
Propst '50.
Kate Durr Elmore Fund of $25,295 was
established in 1949 by Stanhope E.
Elmore of Montgomery, Alabama, in
memory of his wife. Preference is given
to Presbyterian students, particularly
those from East Alabama Presbytery
and other parts of the state.
Jennie Durham Finley Scholarship
Fund of $5,000 was established in 1938
by this friend of the College to assist
students, preferably from DeKalb
County.
Rufus C. and Wynie Coleman Franklin
Memorial Scholarship Fund of $50,000
was established in 1978 in their honor by
their daughter, Marian Franklin (Mrs.
Paul H.) Anderson '40. of Atlanta. The
income is used for students from
Emanuel County, Georgia, where she
was reared.
Helen and Ted French Scholarship
Fund of $3,250 was established in 1977
by this Atlanta member of the Class of
1974. The income is used to assist
Return-to-College Students.
Lewis McF"arland Gaines Scholarship
Fund of $1,300 was established in 1963
by Ethel Alexander Gaines, an alumna
of Agnes Scott Institute, in memory of
her husband, the son of the first presi-
dent of Agnes Scott.
Gallant-Belk Scholarship Fund of
$1,000 was established in 1951 by W. E.
Gallant of Anderson, South Carolina.
Kathleen Hagood ( .amine II Scholar-
ship Fund of $10,000 was established in
1963 by E. Smythe Gambrell of Atlanta
as a living memorial to his wife who was
an alumna. The award is made to an
outstanding student preparing for Chris-
tian service.
Iva Leslie and John Adam Garber
International Student Scholarship Fund
of $7,451 was established in 1968 initially
as a memorial to Mrs. Garber by her
husband. Dr. John A. Garber. and her
son and daughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs.
Paul Leslie Garber, of Agnes Scott.
Upon the death of Dr. John Garber in
1975 this scholarship became a memorial
to him as well when further gifts from
family and friends were received. The
recipients must be students whose citi-
zenship is other than that of the United
States of America.
Jane Zuber Garrison Scholarship Fund
of $1,175 was established in 1963 by Mr.
and Mrs. Ozburn Zuber of Anderson,
24
South Carolina, in honor of their daugh-
ter, Mrs. Robert C. Garrison '54.
Leslie Janet Gaylord Scholarship Fund
of $2,525 was established in 1969 by the
trustees of Agnes Scott to honor her for
her forty-seven years of teaching in the
mathematics department. Preference is
given to students in that department.
General Electric Scholarship Fund of
$2,000 was established in 1966 with the
grants received by the College when its
student team appeared twice in the
General Electric College Bowl in March
of that year.
General Memorial Scholarship Fund of
$56,687 was established with gifts from
many alumnae and friends to provide
financial assistance to students.
Georgia Consumer Finance Association
Scholarship Fund of $1,000 was estab-
lished in 1962 by its members throughout
the state.
M. Kathryn Click Scholarship Fund of
$5,364 was established in 1974 by the
Board of Trustees along with many of
her students and friends in recognition of
her thirty-six years as a teacher, of
which for twenty-eight she was chairman
of the Department of Classical Lan-
guages and Literatures. Preference is
given to a student in this department.
Frances Gooch Scholarship Fund of
$2,025 was established in 1978 by the
Board of Trustees as a memorial to this
associate professor of English for her
teaching speech and theatre from 1915 to
1951.
Lucy Durham Goss F'und of $3,239 was
established in 1938 by Jennie Durham
Finley in honor of her niece, Mrs. John
H. Goss, a student in the Institute.
Esther and James Graff Scholarship
Fund of $15,127 was established in 1960
by Dr. Walter Edward McNair of Agnes
Scott in honor and appreciation of Mr.
and Mrs. James R. Graff.
Sarah Frances Reid Grant Scholarship
Fund of $6,000 was established in 1935
by Mrs. John M. Slaton of Atlanta in
honor of her mother.
Kenneth and Annie Lee Greenfield
Scholarship Fund of $3,375 was estab-
lished in 1962 by Sallie Greenfield Blum
'56 of Kernersville, North Carolina, in
honor of her parents.
Roxie Hagopian Voice Scholarship
Fund of $1,000 was established in 1963
by this member of the music department
for fourteen years.
Louise Hale Scholarship Fund of
$4,417 was established in 1951 by
Elizabeth Anderson Brown '22 of Atlan-
ta in memory of this member of the
French department for thirty years.
Preference is given to students taking
French.
Harry T. Hall Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $10,000 was established in 1919
by Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Bradley of
Columbus in memory of Mrs. Bradley's
brother. Preference is given to students
from Muscogee County. Georgia.
Sarah Belle Brodnax Hansell Scholar-
ship Fund of $5,000 was established in
1961 by Granger Hansell of Atlanta in
memory of his wife, a member of the
Class of 1923.
Weenona White Hanson Music Scholar-
ship Fund of $2,500 was established in
1925 by Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. Hanson
of Birmingham to honor Mrs. Hanson
for her years of encouragement to
music. Preference is given to students
from Alabama.
George W. Harrison, Jr., Scholarship
Fund of $18,000 was established in 1938
by a bequest from this Atlanta friend.
Quenelle Harrold Scholarship Fund of
$20,320 was established originally in
1926 as a graduate fellowship by Mrs.
Thomas Harrold of Americus in honor of
her daughter, Mrs. Frank Sheffield, of
the Class of 1923, but in 1976 it became a
scholarship fund.
Harwell-Hill Scholarship Fund of
$10,000 was established in 1974 through
a bequest from Ann Rebecca (Rebie)
Harwell (Mrs. Lodowick Johnson) Hill
'13 of Atlanta and is a memorial to her
and her sister, Frances Grace Harwell
'23.
Margaret McKinnon Hawley Scholar-
ship Fund of $5,066 was established in
1940 through a bequest of Dr. F. O.
Hawley of Charlotte, North Carolina, as
a memorial to his wife, an alumna of
Agnes Scott Institute.
Loudie and Lottie Hendrick Scholar-
ship Fund of $5,000 was established in
1935 by Lottie Hendrick of Covington,
Georgia, and is a memorial to these
sisters.
Gussie Parkhurst Hill Scholarship
Fund of $2,000 was established in 1950
and is named for the donor. Mrs. DeLos
L. Hill of Atlanta. Preference is given to
daughters of ministers.
Betty Hollis Scholarship Fund of $1,343
was established in 1947 as a memorial to
this 1937 graduate by Julia Lake Skinner
(Mrs. E. R.) Kellersberger ' 19 who is the
author of the inspirational biography,
Betty, A Life of Wrought Gold.
Robert B. Holt Scholarship Fund of
$10,471 was established in 1954 by Dr.
Phillippa G. Gilchrist '23 in honor of her
former professor and colleague who
served as professor of chemistry at
Agnes Scott for twenty-eight years.
Preference is given to students in
chemistry.
Nanette Hopkins Scholarship Fund of
$294,068 was established in 1973 by a
bequest from Florence Smith (Mrs.
Joseph T.) Sims '13 of Berkeley, Califor-
nia, as a memorial to Dean Hopkins for
her outstanding service to Agnes Scott
from 1889 to 1938. Assistance is given to
promising music students.
Jennie Sentelle Houghton Scholarship
Fund of $10,400 was established in 1945
by Dr. M. E. Sentell of Davidson, North
Carolina, in honor of her sister. The
recipient must have already attended
Agnes Scott at least one year.
Waddy Hampton and Maude Chapin
Hudson Scholarship Fund of $4,691 was
established in 1968 by Anne Chapin
Hudson (Mrs. Frank H., Jr.) Hankins '31
in memory of her parents. Preference is
given to Black students.
Richard L. Hull Scholarship Fund of
$3,000 was established in 1961 by Nora
Glancy Hull (Mrs. Baxter) Maddox in
memory of her first husband.
George Thomas Hunter Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $25,000 was estab-
lished in 1963 by the Benwood Founda-
tion of Chattanooga to honor its founder,
who was a pioneer in the Coca-Cola
bottling industry. The recipients are
students from Chattanooga or Ten-
nessee.
Louise and Frank Inman Fund of
$6,000 was established in 1951 with gifts
from these Atlanta leaders, Mr. Inman
having been an Agnes Scott trustee for
thirty-five years.
Louise Reese Inman Scholarship Fund
of $3,829 was established in 1963 by Sam
and Sue Lile Inman '58 of Greenville,
South Carolina, in memory of his grand-
mother, Mrs. Frank Inman, an alumna of
Agnes Scott Institute.
Jackson Scholarship Fund of $56,816
was established in 1953 with a bequest of
Elizabeth Fuller Jackson, a member of
Agnes Scott's history department for
twenty-eight years. It is a memorial to
her and her parents Charles S. and
Lillian F. Jackson.
Louise Hollingsworth Jackson Scholar-
ship Fund of $7,720 was established in
1965 by Mr. and Mrs. Mell Charles
Jackson of Fayetteville, Georgia, to
honor Mrs. Jackson, a member of the
Class of 1932.
Ann Worthy Johnson Scholarship Fund
of $5,000 was established in 1971 by
Agnes Scott alumnae and other friends
in memory of this member of the Class
of 1938 and in appreciation of her
leadership as director of alumnae affairs
at Agnes Scott for sixteen years.
Gussie O'Neal and Lewis H. Johnson
Voice Scholarship Fund of $5,000 was
established in 1973 with a bequest from
this member of Agnes Scott's music
department for forty years who, with his
wife, a former student of the Class of
1911, developed the voice section of the
department.
Jones-Ransome Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $1,000 was established in 1963
by Georgia Hunt (Mrs. William E.)
Elsberry '40 in memory of her aunts,
Leila and Azile Jones and Elizabeth
Jones Ransome, who made it possible
for her to attend Agnes Scott.
Annice Hawkins Kenan Scholarship
Fund of $50,000 was established in 1969
by a grant from the Sarah Graham
Kenan Foundation of Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, in memory of this early alumna
of Agnes Scott. Preference is given to
students from the Atlanta area or from
North Carolina who intend to teach.
Annie Graham King Scholarship Fund
of $1,000 was established in 1970 by Mr.
and Mrs. James A. Minter of Tyler,
Alabama, in memory of this alumna of
1906.
Martin Luther King, Jr., Scholarship
Fund of $9,605 was established in 1968
by gifts from students, faculty, and
friends to provide financial assistance to
Black students.
Mary Elizabeth Trabert Kontz Scholar-
ship Fund of $1,005 was established in
1937 by Judge Ernest C. Kontz of
Atlanta in memory of his mother.
A. M. and Augusta R. Lambdin Schol-
arship Fund of $2,200 was established in
1963 by Henrietta Lambdin (Mrs. Hugh
J.) Turner '15 of McDonough in memory
of her parents.
Lanier Brothers Scholarship Fund of
$2,540 was established in 1971 by a gift
from the Atlanta foundation established
by these three brothers who have been
business leaders in the state: Sartain,
Thomas H., and J. Hicks Lanier.
Ted and Ethel Lanier Scholarship Fund
of $1,000 was established in 1950 by
these Atlanta friends of Agnes Scott who
were especially interested in its music
department. Preference is given to stu-
dents from the Atlanta area.
Harriett Haynes Lapp Scholarship
Fund of $2,040 was established in 1978
by the Board of Trustees as a memorial
to this member of the physical education
department who had served for forty
years before her retirement in 1964.
Kate Stratton Leedy Scholarship Fund
of $1,000 was established in 1923 by
Major W. B. Leedy of Birmingham in
memory of his wife. Preference is given
to students from Alabama.
Ruth Leroy Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $5,715 was established in 1961
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter W.
Leroy, of Baltimore. Maryland, and by
friends of this 1960 graduate.
Lindsey Scholarship Fund of $7,000
was established in 1923 by Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Lindsey of Decatur. Preference
is given to students from the metropoli-
tan area of Atlanta.
Helen Burk Longshore Scholarship
Fund of $73,370 was established in 1977
through a bequest from this aunt of
Jackie Pfarr (Mrs. D. S.) Michael '53 of
Ridgewood, New Jersey, whose daugh-
ter Susan was a member of the Class of
1974.
J. Spencer Love Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $18,000 was established in 1962
by his wife, the former Martha Eskridge
'31, who is now Mrs. Nathan M. Ayers
of Greensboro, North Carolina.
Captain and Mrs. John Douglas Malloy
Scholarship Fund of $3,500 was estab-
lished in 1926 by their sons, D. G. and
J. H. Malloy, of Quitman, Georgia.
Maplewood Institute Memorial Schol-
arship Fund of $2,500 was established in
1919 by alumnae of this once well-known
institution which had served as a pioneer
in higher education for women in
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, from 1841 to
1884.
Volina Butler and B. Frank Market
Scholarship Fund of $2,000 was estab-
lished in 1976 by James B. and Dorthea
Swann Markert in memory of his
parents.
Nannie R. Massie Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of $2,000 was established in
1921 by her sister, Mrs. E. L. Bell, of
Fall 1979
25
Lewisburg, West Virginia, in memory of
this teacher of French and history at
Agnes Scott who had to resign for reason
of health after teaching a few years.
Pauline Martin McCain Memorial
Scholarship Fund of 515,479 was estab-
lished in 1954 by friends of this beloved
wife of Dr. James Ross McCain, the
second president of the College.
Alice Mcintosh Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $3,130 was established in 1963
by her husband and former trustee of the
College. Henry T. Mcintosh, and daugh-
ter, Martha M. (Mrs. George W.) Nail
'23, of Alabany, Georgia.
Sarah Agrippina Pipes McKowen
Scholarship Fund of $2,840 was estab-
lished in 1949 by May McKowen (Mrs.
B. B.) Taylor '06 of Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, and Jane Taylor (Mrs. Ed-
ward S.) White '42 of Atlanta in memory
of their mother and grandmother.
Mary Angela Herbin McLennan Schol-
arship Fund of 52,328 was established in
1961 in her memory by her son, Alex
McLennan, of Atlanta. Preference is to
be given to graduates of Decatur High
School.
Lawrence McNeill Scholarship Fund of
51.000 was established in 1925 as a
memorial by his wife, Florence McCon-
nell McNeill, of Savannah, Georgia.
Hvta Plowden Mederer Scholarship
Fund of 59,000 was established in 1962
by this alumna in the Class of 1932, Mrs.
Leonard John Mederer, of Valdosta,
Georgia.
Mary Donnelly Meehan Scholarship
Fund of 51,000 was established in 1978
through a bequest from this member of
the Class of 1910.
Jacqueline Pfarr Michael Scholarship
Fund of 51,000 was established in 1963
by her father, John S. Pfarr, in honor of
this member of the Class of 1953.
Mills Memorial Scholarship Fund of
51,000 was established in 1924 by George
J. Mills of Savannah. Georgia, and is a
memorial to him and his wife, Eugenia
Postell Mills.
James A. and Margaret Browning
Minter Scholarship Fund of 521,750 was
established in 1963 by their son, James
A. Minter, Jr.. of Tyler, Alabama, an
active trustee of Agnes Scott from 1959
to 1978.
William A. Moore Scholarship Fund of
55.000 was established in 1892 from a
bequest in his will. This leading citizen
of Atlanta provided the College's first
endowed scholarship. Preference is
given to students whose parents are
Presbyterians.
John Morrison Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $3,000 was established in 1919 in
memory of her husband by Iola Bell
Morrison of Moultrie, Georgia, the
mother of Ella Bell Morrison (Mrs. John
B.) Carlton, an alumna of Agnes Scott
Institute. Preference is given to a student
from Colquitt County, Georgia.
Margaret Falkinburg Myers Scholar-
ship Fund of 51.000 was established in
1971 by Mrs. Arthur W. Falkinburg of
Atlanta in memory of her daughter, a
member of the Class of 1941.
Elkan Naumberg Music Scholarship
Fund of $2,000 was established in 1919
by this New York established manufac-
turer who desired to encourage training
in classical music.
New Orleans Alumnae Club Scholar-
ship Fund of $5,643 was established in
1955 by members of this Agnes Scott
group. Preference is given to students
from that area.
Maryellen Harvey Newton Scholarship
Fund of $7,164 was established in 1972
by her husband, Henry Edgar Newton,
of Decatur, to honor this member of the
Class of 1916 and other members of their
family who are alumnae: Jane Anne
Newton Marquess '46, Martha Reese
Newton Smith '49, and Anne Marquess
Camp '70.
Katherine Tait Omwake Scholarship
Fund of $2,000 was established in 1973
by the trustees of Agnes Scott in
recognition of her forty-three years of
service as a member of the psychology
department. Preference is given to stu-
dents majoring in psychology.
Ruth Anderson O'Neal Scholarship
Fund of $25,000 was established in 1962
by her husband, Alan S. O'Neal, of
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, to
honor this leader of the Class of 1918
who served as president of the College
YWCA. Preference is given to students
majoring in Bible.
Marie Scott O'Neill Scholarship Fund
of $12,015 was established in 1978 by a
bequest from this member of the Class
of 1942 from Atlanta. She was a great
granddaughter of Colonel George W.
Scott, the founder of the College.
Elizabeth Roberts Pancake Scholarship
Fund of $1,040 was established in 1969 in
her memory by members of her Class of
1959.
Wingfield Ellis Parker Memorial Schol-
arship Fund of $7,284 was established in
1970 by her parents, William Douglas
and Frances Tennent Ellis '25, and her
husband, Richard K. Parker, all of
Atlanta. Preference is given to students
majoring in English or Bible.
Lillian Gertrude Patton Latin Scholar-
ship Fund of $10,000 was established in
1979 by her sister. Bess Patton, of
Chattanooga, Tennessee. The award
honors this 1920 Agnes Scott graduate
for her untiring devotion to the Latin
language and for her forty-nine years of
distinguished and dedicated teaching of
this language. The scholarship is
awarded on the basis of financial need
and for excellence in Latin.
John H. Patton Scholarship Fund of
$1,000 was established in 1967 by his
daughter, Sarah Eunice Patton (Mrs. A.
V.) Cortelyou '18. as a memorial to her
father who was the long-term minister of
the First Presbyterian Church in Mari-
etta, Georgia.
Pauley Scholarship Fund of $1,000 was
established in 1951 by William C. and
Frances Freeborn Pauley '27 of Atlanta.
Barbara Murlin Pendleton Scholarship
Fund of $2,608 was established in 1975
by alumnae and friends as a memorial to
this graduate of the Class of 1940 and in
appreciation of her leadership in all
phases of the Alumnae Office at Agnes
Scott for nine years. Preference is given
to alumnae returning to the College for
further study.
Colonel Joseph B. Preston Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $1,000 was estab-
lished in 1926 by his wife, Clara J.
Preston, of Augusta. Preference is given
to students from Georgia.
George A. and Margaret Morgan
Ramspeck Scholarship Fund of $2,000
was established in 1920 by their daugh-
ter, Jean Ramspeck Harper, to honor
one of Agnes Scott's first trustees and
his wife, both of whom were active
leaders in Decatur.
Mary Warren Read Scholarship Fund
of $45,537 was established in 1960 by
this alumna of the Class of 1929 who has
been active in promoting the College and
who has been a trustee of Agnes Scott
since 1964.
Frederick Philip Reinero Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $1,105 was estab-
lished in 1974 by his wife, Clara Mae
Allen Reinero '23. of Decatur.
Alice Bovkin Robertson Scholarship
Fund of $1,235 was established in 1969
by her parents. Judge and Mrs. Samuel
J. Boy kin of Carrollton. Georgia, to
honor this member of the Class of 1961.
Preference is given to students majoring
in mathematics.
Henry A. Robinson Scholarship Fund
of $3,825 was established in 1970 by the
Agnes Scott trustees to honor this
professor who served as head of the
mathematics department from 1926 to
1970. Preference is given to students
majoring in mathematics.
Louise Scott Sams Scholarship Fund of
$1,500 was established in 1979 by her
niece, Betty Scott (Mrs. J. Phillips)
Noble '44, of Charleston, South Caroli-
na, in memory of this member of the
Class of 1903 who was the granddaugh-
ter of George Washington Scott.
Bettie Winn Scott Scholarship Fund of
$4,940 was established in 1961 in her
memory by her children to recognize her
role along with that of her husband, the
late George Bucher Scott, a long-time
Agnes Scott trustee, in sustaining the
College in its early years.
26
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Julius J. Scott Scholarship Fund of
$2,000 was established in 1962 by this
trustee who served as a member of the
Board from 1920 to 1976. Preference is
given to daughters of missionaries.
William Scott Scholarship Fund of
$10,000 was established in 1938 in his
memory by his wife, Annie King Scott,
of Pittsburgh. He was a nephew of
George Washington Scott, founder of
the College.
Scottdale Mills Scholarship Fund of
$7,010 was established in 1962 to provide
financial assistance for the daughters of
missionaries.
Mary Scott Scully Scholarship Fund of
$11,409 was established in 1942 by C.
Alison Scully of Philadelphia, Pennsyl-
vania, in memory of his mother, a
granddaughter of the Agnes Scott for
whom the College was named. The
award is made to a student who has
completed at least one year at Agnes
Scott.
Mary Boney Sheats Bible Scholarship
Fund of $2,297 was established in 1973
by her family and friends in recognition
of her service as a professor of Bible at
Agnes Scott and as a leader in the
Presbyterian Church. The award is given
to a student majoring in Bible and
religion.
Mary D. Sheppard Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of $2,500 was established in
1924 by alumnae and friends of this
former professor of philosophy and
German at Agnes Scott from 1891 to
1903. Perference is given to students
from Haralson County, Georgia.
Wade E. Shumaker Scholarship Fund
of $1,000 was established in 1978 as a
memorial to him by his wife, Marie
Baker Shumaker '30, of Decatur.
Margaret Massie Simpson Scholarship
Fund of $1,515 was established in 1978
by her family and friends for this
member of the Class of 1934, the wife of
George E. Simpson of Smithfield, Ken-
tucky.
Slack Scholarship Fund of $8,663 was
established in 1953 by Searcy B. and
Julia Pratt Smith Slack '12 of Decatur in
recognition of their daughters, Ruth S.
Roach '40 Eugenia S. Morse '41, and
Julia S. Hunter '45.
Hal and Julia Thompson Smith Schol-
arship Fund of $65,798 was established
in 1959 by this Agnes Scott trustee and
alumna of the Class of 1931. Mr. Smith,
a prominent Atlanta business leader, was
an active member of the Board from
1952 to 1977 and served as its chairman
from 1956 to 1973.
Lillian Smith Scholarship Fund of
$2,000 was established in 1978 by Agnes
Scott's trustees as a memorial to her for
thirty-three years of service before her
retirement in 1938 as professor of Latin.
Evelyn Hanna Sommerville Fund of
$8,000 was established in 1965 by the
Roswell Library Association in honor of
its president, Mrs. Robert L. Sommer-
ville '23. Preference is given to students
desiring to be librarians.
South Carolina Scholarship Fund of
$1,106 was established in 1968 with the
gifts of students from the state who had
made their pledges while enrolled in
1964. Preference is given to students
from South Carolina.
Bonner and Isabelle Leonard Spearman
Scholarship Fund of $10,654 was estab-
lished in 1962 by this member of the
Class of 1929 in appreciation of the
opportunities the College offers its stu-
dents.
Carolyn Strozier Scholarship Fund of
$10,715 was established in 1979 by her
mother and friends as a memorial to this
member of the Class of 1941 who had
been active in the Alumnae Association
while on the staff of Rich's.
Frances Gilliland Stukes and Marjorie
Stukes Strickland Scholarship Fund of
$14,006 was established in 1962 by Dean
Emeritus Samuel Guerry Stukes. The
scholarship honors his wife, '24, and
daughter, '51.
Samuel Guerry Stukes Scholarship
Fund of $21,010 was established in 1957
by the Board of Trustees to honor Dean
Stukes upon his retirement after forty-
four years of distinguished service as a
member of the faculty. He also served as
an active trustee from 1944 to 1971. The
income is used for awards to the three
Stukes Scholars, the students who rank
first academically in each of the rising
sophomore, junior, and senior classes.
Jodele Tanner Scholarship Fund of
$2,010 was established in 1950 by class-
mates and friends as a memorial to this
1945 graduate who remained to teach in
the biology department. Preference is
given to students in one of the sciences.
James Cecil and Hazel Itner Tart
Scholarship Fund of $1,665 was estab-
lished in 1963 by this Treasurer Emeritus
who served Agnes Scott for forty-eight
years.
Martin M. and Agnes L. Teague
Scholarship Fund of $2,175 was estab-
lished in 1962 by Annette Teague (Mrs.
Monteith) Powell of Whiteville, North
Carolina, in honor of her parents from
Laurens, South Carolina.
Henry Calhoun and Susan Wingfield
Tennent Scholarship Fund of $4,093 was
established in 1973 as a memorial to her
parents by Susan Frances Tennent (Mrs.
William D.) Ellis '25 of Atlanta. Prefer-
ence is given to students majoring in
history or English.
Mary West Thatcher Scholarship Fund
of $50,598 was established in 1954 by
this 1915 graduate who is now a resident
of Miami and whose service to the
College includes being president of the
Alumnae Association in 1926-27 and an
active trustee from 1947 to 1971. Prefer-
ence is given to Christian students from
other countries and to other students
preparing for Christian service.
Pierre Thomas Scholarship Fund of
$2,100 was established in 1978 by the
Board of Trustees to honor this member
of the French department for his sixteen
years of service to the College before his
retirement in 1967.
Martha Merrill Thompson Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $2,000 was estab-
lished in 1924 by members of the Class
of 1905 and other friends of this alumna
from Thomasville, Georgia. Preference
is given to students who plan to do
missionary work.
Samuel Pierce Thompson Scholarship
Fund of $5,000 was established in 1933
by his wife as a memorial to this resident
of Covington, Georgia. Their daughter,
Julia (Mrs. Count D.) Gibson, was a 191 1
graduate.
Henry Claude Townsend Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $5,000 was estab-
Fall 1979
lished in 1920 by his wife, Nell Towers
Townsend, of Anderson, South Caroli-
na. Preference is given to students who
plan to be missionaries.
Elizabeth Clarkson Tull Memorial
Scholarship Fund of $55,000 was estab-
lished in 1959 by Joseph M. Tull of
Atlanta in memory of his wife to assist
students selected on the basis of Chris-
tian character, ability, and need.
Joseph M. Tull Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $55,000 was established in 1964
by the J. M. Tull Foundation to honor
this outstanding business, church, and
civic leader of Atlanta and to assist
students worthy of Agnes Scott's ideals.
Kate Higgs Vaughan Fund of $115,000
was established in 1975 through a be-
quest from this member of the Class of
1924. The income is used annually for
the Wilson Asbury Higgs Mathematics
Scholarship and the Emma Baugh Music
Scholarship as memorials to her father
and mother. When more income is
available, it is used to fund additional
memorial scholarships.
Wachendorff Scholarship of $1,000
was established in 1932 by Charles and
Edward Wachendorff of Atlanta in
honor of their mother.
George C. Walters Memorial Scholar-
ship Fund of $5,000 was established in
1920 by his wife, Frances Winship
Walters, Agnes Scott alumna, trustee,
and benefactor.
Annie Dodd Warren Scholarship Fund
of $29,568 was established in 1961 by Dr.
and Mrs. William C. Warren, Jr., of
Atlanta in honor of his mother.
Ferdinand Warren Fund of $2,035 was
established in 1968 by Mr. and Mrs.
Romeal Theriot of New Orleans and
their daughter, Christine (Mrs. Richard)
Woodfin '68, of Atlanta in honor of this
artist and member of the National
Academy who served as professor and
chairman of Agnes Scott's art depart-
ment for eighteen years. Although ini-
tially the income was used for a fellow-
ship, the donors later designated it as a
scholarship for an art major.
Washington, D. C, Alumnae Club
Scholarship Fund of $1,437 was estab-
lished in 1961 by its members during the
College's Seventy-fifth Anniversary
Campaign. Preference is given to stu-
dents from that area.
Joy Werlein Waters Scholarship Fund
of $2,756 was established in 1963 as a
memorial by her friend. Dr. Rosemonde
Peltz, physician at Agnes Scott, and
mother, Isabel O. (Mrs. J. Parham)
Werlein of New Orleans. Preference is
given to students majoring in art.
Eugenia Mandeville Watkins Scholar-
ship Fund of $6,250 was established in
1915 as a memorial to this 1898 graduate
of the Institute by her father and Agnes
Scott trustee, L. C. Mandeville, of
Carrollton, Georgia, and her husband.
Homer Watkins. of Atlanta.
W. G. Weeks Memorial Scholarship
Fund of $5,000 was established in 1963
by his wife, Lily B. Weeks, of New
Iberia, Louisiana. Their four daughters
are alumnae: Violet (Mrs. Maynard M.)
Miller '29, Margaret Weeks '31, Olive
(Mrs. Henry C.) Collins '32, and Lilly
(Mrs. Lee D.) McLean '36.
Lulu Smith Westcott Scholarship Fund
of $31,481 was established in 1935 by her
husband, G. Lamar Westcott, of Dalton,
Georgia, in honor of this 1919 graduate
of the College. Mr. Westcott served
actively as a trustee for more than thirty
years. Preference is given to students
interested in missionary work.
Llewellyn Wilburn Scholarship Fund of
$2,025 was established in 1978 by the
Board of Trustees to honor this member
of the Class of 1919 for her forty-three
years of service in the physical educa-
tion department, of which she was
chairman at the time of her retirement in
1967.
Josiah James Willard Scholarship Fund
of $5,000 was established in 1919 as a
memorial to this Presbyterian business
leader by his son. Samuel L. Willard, of
Baltimore, Maryland. Preference is
given to the daughters of Presbyterian
ministers of small churches.
Nell Hodgson Woodruff Scholarship
Fund of $1,000 was established in 1935
by her husband, Robert W. Woodru-ff, of
Atlanta.
(Continued on page 41)
28
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
The President's Report
"RELEVANCE" REEXAMINED
One of the rallying cries for the student protests of the late
sixties and early seventies was "Relevance." Academic
programs, campus movements, educational policies even
faculty and trustees had to be "relevant," to relate directly
and at once to what were felt then to be the educational,
political, and social needs of the day. Even campuses which
escaped actual upheaval felt the pressure to overhaul their
academic offerings, and often their traditional structure of
governance, in order to satisfy the insistent demands of
students, and some faculty members, that courses and
teaching methods (including testing and grading) be
"relevant" to student concerns and needs. Looking back,
we boicnow what some of us suspected then: that much of
the "relevance" of those heady times was faddish,
superficial, and ephemeral. A truth of history became again
apparent: that little of the currently "relevant" is apt to be
truly relevant in the future.
As the tumult and upheaval of the early seventies subsided
into the new calm or the old apathy of the decade's
middle years, the call for "relevance" in higher education
began to reflect increasingly a new concern: the anxiety of
young people for jobs in a time of continuing inflation and
rising unemployment. This anxiety was shared by college
administrators and faculty, who were experiencing the
beginnings of the predicted decline in college enrollments
and the increases in financial troubles which such declines
were causing in more and more institutions.
One result of these concerns over shrinking enrollments
and tighter budgets and they continue to be legitimate
concerns was a renewed wave of educational changes: in
curricula, in educational philosophies, in admissions
policies, in testing and grading. Some of these changes were
soundly conceived, in a spirit of genuine academic
experimentation; others were little more than gimmicks
designed to attract students in an increasingly competitive
market.
Now, with the advent of the eighties, many colleges and
universities are beginning to reexamine the changes made in
recent years, especially those designed to insure survival by
bolstering enrollment and so increasing income. To be sure,
some of the changes were salutary and effective; others,
however, have not worked, or worked only until their
newness wore off. In addition, and more serious, some
innovations were altering the essential nature of the
institution, thereby endangering the very survival they were
designed to insure. For example, numerous career-oriented
programs introduced in some liberal arts colleges were
shifting the colleges' traditional emphasis from liberal
learning to professional training. In other cases, the influx of
large numbers of part-time (often adult) students, in evening
or weekend programs, was changing the nature of a formerly
homogeneous, full-time student body in a residential campus
setting. A third phenomenon was a declining emphasis on
the role of religious and moral values in the curriculum and
in campus life, especially in church-affiliated institutions.
The present reexamination of the effects of these changes,
and others like them, has served to focus attention on some
of the traditional strengths and values inherent in programs
and philosophies which were abandoned or watered down on
some campuses in the name of educational "relevance" and
fiscal security. A renewed concern for traditional programs
and values is bringing a fresh appreciation of their
long-range relevance and usefulness and a realization that
survival may be possible without abandoning the heritage
which, over the years, has given an institution its reason for
being.
What has been Agnes Scott's response to these pressures
of recent years? Certainly we have felt them. We are well
aware of the current desires of students, and their parents,
for "relevant" and "practical" educational programs, for
vocational and professional training that will develop salable
skills. We are sympathetic with such concerns, and we have
moved to meet them, with new courses and programs, with
an expanded and strengthened Career Planning Office. But
we have done so without sacrificing our emphasis on the
liberal arts and our faith in their value and usefulness both
for living and for earning a living. Similarly, we have
recognized the widespread interest of women today in
continuing their formal education, for pleasure as well as for
profit. Our very successful "Return to College" program is
one answer, and today about ten percent of our students are
in this program. In its development and administration,
however, we have to see that it is harmoniously assimilated
into the campus life and programs of Agnes Scott's
traditional residential character. (Our proposed new Student
Center will be another step in enriching the campus life of all
our students.)
Most important, in a larger society characterized by
increasing secularism and moral confusion, Agnes Scott has
emphatically reaffirmed its continuing commitment to our
Judeo-Christian heritage and the moral and religious values
inherent in it. Our Honor System continues strong and
strongly supported; our students show an increasing
willingness to assume the responsibilities, as well as the
freedoms, of self-government; our total educational program
still seeks to recognize and stress both the intellectual and
Fall 1979
29
President Marvin B. Perrv
the moral, or spiritual, dimensions of the life of the mind.
As I have said before in these columns, Agnes Scott has
traditionally moved to the beat of "a different drummer,"
rarely responding to the rhythms of "trendy" academic
bandwagons or falling into the lockstep of dominant national
fads. Rather, we have insisted on adherence to our own
stated purposes and principles, sometimes against the
current of strong and seductive fashions in education.
It is tempting to say a bit smugly, perhaps that our
traditional academic practices and principles are once more
in fashion; that we have never deserted the "new" programs
and policies, viz. a core curriculum, distribution
requirements, rigorous standards, which many colleges are
"discovering" again today. But, despite our good fortune in
difficult times, we have no cause for complacency; and we
must continue to welcome sound experimentation and
innovation, to combine our traditional standards of
excellence and coherent structure with flexibility and
imaginative concern for the individual student's interests
and needs.
THE COLLEGE YEAR: 1978-79
Among the pleasures of academic life is the college
calendar, a unique combination of repetition and change, of
traditional rites and annual innovations. Each year a fresh
start, with its hopes and resolutions: new faces, new
courses, new activities. But behind the kaleidoscope of
change there flows the steady current of custom and ritual
and steadfast purpose. The 1978-79 year, Agnes Scott's
ninetieth, was no exception: enthusiastic freshmen, some
new teachers and staff, changes in programs and schedules,
the disruptions of campus renovation; but also Black Cat,
football weekends, Honors Day, Investiture, Sophomore
Parents' Weekend, Founder's Day, and, at last,
Commencement!
It is my hope that our efforts in recent years to increase
the flow of campus news to our various publics have made
unnecessary a detailed account of each College year in these
annual reports. In this conviction, this year's review is more
selective, describing briefly events and developments of
1978-79 which should be of particular interest to alumnae
and other friends of Agnes Scott.
Academic life at Agnes Scott continues to be demanding
but reflects increasingly our current need to combine our
traditional strengths with adaptations and innovations which
serve better the needs of young women preparing today for
lives which almost certainly will include some form of
gainful employment. We continue to stress those courses
which develop not only skills of writing and calculating but
also those equally important intellectual disciplines of clear
thinking, logical analysis, discrimination in terms of moral or
ethical values, and cultivation of creativity and imagination.
At the same time, we are broadening our offerings here
which give students somewhat more specific acquaintance
with fields of study and skills which they may find
immediately helpful in later job opportunities. Our efforts
this past year to strengthen our program in astronomy
constitute a case in point. In addition to new course
offerings and the opening of a refurbished planetarium under
a professional director, we are also making available to
students, especially those interested in sailing, a very
practical course in navigation, to be offered at the Bradley
Observatory by a widely respected sailing school in the area.
Our Preparatory Program for Business, offered for the first
time last year, has created great interest among students if
we are to judge from last year's registration in the courses
comprising it.
Gratifying also is the continuing strong interest in our
Return to College program under there capable direction of
Assistant Dean of the College Mildred Love Petty '6 1 . The
Office of Admissions received more than 350 inquiries in the
past year, and enrolled students in this program constituted
approximately ten percent of our student body. Seven RTCs
were in this year's graduating class, including a
grandmother. Of those enrolled in the 1978-79 academic
year, almost twenty were over forty years of age, twenty
30
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
were between thirty and forty, and twenty-eight were under
thirty years of age. Some eighty percent were married, with
the remainder single or divorced or widowed. More than
eighty percent had children. As of spring 1979, more than
half our RTCs were degree candidates; twenty-five were
full-time students, and thirty-two were part-time students.
Their academic interests range across the entire spectrum of
our curriculum. Their academic performance was definitely
above average, and a significant proportion captured
competitive academic honors in various fields. We are
enthusiastic about this program, and we hope to make it
increasingly attractive to women of all ages in the Atlatna
area. To that end, we are stressing the availability of
financial aid for RTC students. Last year more than half of
them received some form of financial aid from Agnes Scott.
In her annual report to me, Dean Julia Gary pointed out
her perception of "an increased awareness on the part of our
faculty for the necessity of professional growth and
development." As evidence, Dean Gary called attention to
the increase in faculty attendance at national and regional
professional meetings and at seminars and conferences in
particular disciplines. Almost fifty percent of the full-time
teaching faculty attended a national meeting during the year,
and at least as many participated in regional or local
meetings. Faculty publications during the year represented
more than one-third of our academic departments, and
members of some half dozen departments presented papers
at various national and regional meetings. Faculty summer
grant proposals in 1979, according to Dean Gary, were
"exceptionally strong and numerous." In response to this
increased interest in summer work, I was able to increase
our budget for summer grants, and all proposals
recommended by the faculty committee were funded. While
superior teaching remains our chief academic concern, it is
certainly true that teaching is enhanced by opportunity for
productive scholarship and further study. We intend to
continue to make such opportunities available for our
faculty through our summer grants program and our
sabbatical policy.
Our "new" McCain Library is a source of much pleasure
and satisfaction. Librarian Judith Jensen reports that the
addition of some new equipment has facilitated the handling
of incoming inter-library loan requests and the preparation
of cataloging the new materials we acquire. She reports
further that "the Library is operating smoothly," that we are
increasing our collections at a steady rate, and that both
student circulation and total circulation in 1978-79 were the
highest in the past several years.
The Agnes Scott community suffered a grievous loss with
the sudden and untimely death of Professor Marion Thomas
Clark on September 9, 1978, at the very beginning of the
College session. Dr. Clark, who was William Rand Keenan,
Jr., Professor of Chemistry and Chairman of the
Department, suffered a fatal heart attack in the mountains of
North Georgia, where he and his wife were visiting friends.
A native Georgian, Marion Clark earned his B.A. and M.A.
degrees in chemistry at Emory University and his Ph.D. at
the University of Virginia. Before joining the Agnes Scott
faculty in 1963, he served as an acting chairman at the
Oakridge Institute of Nuclear Studies and taught at
Birmingham Southern College and Emory University.
During his busy career he was a visiting scholar in chemistry
at Stanford University, President of the Georgia Academy
of Science, and Chairman of the Georgia section of the
American Chemical Society. His many honors included
membership in Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, and
Sigma Xi. His contributions to Agnes Scott were many, and
they will last: as dedicated and compassionate teacher,
imaginative scholar, and Christian gentleman. Professor
Clark was succeeded as Chairman of the Department of
Chemistry by Dr. Alice Cunningham, who has done a superb
job in rallying and carrying forward the strong department
which Marion Clark had done so much to maintain.
The close of the academic year brought the retirement of
three of Agnes Scott's most able and devoted teachers,
whose combined service at the College totaled some
eighty-three years: Mary Virginia Allen '35, Adeline Arnold
Loridans Professor of French; Nancy Pence Groseclose,
Charles A. Dana Professor of Biology; and Myrna Goode
Young, Professor of Classical Languages and Literatures.
All too rare today is the combination of commitment and
competence which each of these splendid teachers and
colleagues exemplified. Each was honored on Alumnae Day
by tributes read by their former students at the annual
meeting of the Alumnae Association, and the Board of
Trustees established appropriate endowment funds in their
honor. At the close of the academic year each was further
honored at dinners sponsored by their departmental
colleagues. A fourth long-time faculty member, Mary Fox,
Instructor in Chemistry, retired from academic duties but
will continue to edit the College catalog. We are grateful for
her dedication and competence as both laboratory instructor
and editor.
In the area of student life and student activities, it was, in
Dean of Students Martha Kirkland's words, "a busy, good
year." Even the inconveniences caused by the renovation of
Buttrick Hall, which were borne with cheerfulness by
students and faculty alike, turned out to have advantages for
the campus community in bringing about a change in class
locations, traffic patterns, and social group gatherings. We
also learned that good teaching and learning could go on
wherever good students and dedicated teachers met
together.
There is little question, however, that the renovation of
Buttrick Hall was the central fact of life at Agnes Scott
during the past year. Now that this very sizable project is
complete, at a cost of over a million dollars, it is evident that
we have virtually a new classroom building, with a modern
heating and cooling plant, new wiring and lighting, wall to
wall carpeting in corridors and classrooms, and enlarged
audiovisual facilities. New to the campus is the Media
Resource Center which covers a large part of the ground
floor of Buttrick Hall. Under the direction of Linda
Hilsenrad, the Center contains a refurbished language
laboratory, sound room and control room, a production
room for the preparation of audiovisual materials (films,
slides, T.V. programs), and a new film room for showing
slides and motion pictures. With the completion of the
Buttrick Hall project, the humanities and social sciences
departments now have a teaching center which should give
efficient and comfortable service well into the next century.
Beyond a doubt, the issue which generated most
discussion in 1978-79 was the proposed revision of the policy
regarding the use of alcoholic beverages on campus.
Originating in the Representative Council of Student
Government, the proposal was approved and forwarded to
Fall 1979
31
to the Administrative Committee of the College (students,
faculty, and administrators), where it was revised and
returned to Representative Council for further
consideration. The process was repeated before a final
version reached the Executive Committee of the Board of
Trustees in May, where after careful consideration it was
approved and forwarded to the full Board for action at the
spring meeting. In the light of Agnes Scott's history and
customs, this issue was understandably one on which there
were differences of opinion. After serious discussion, the
Board approved the revised policy. It provides that alcoholic
beverages be permitted in dormitory rooms, dormitory
kitchens, and in a designated public room in each dormitory.
Consumption of alcoholic beverages is not permitted in
hallways and in other public rooms of the dormitories.
Enforcement of the new policy will be the responsibility of
the officers and appropriate committees of Student
Government, subject to review by the Administrative
Committee of the College, and ultimately by the Board of
Trustees. The policy will be examined at the end of each
year and revised or revoked if such action appears necessary
for the overall good of the College. During my tenure at
Agnes Scott no issue has received more thorough and
prayerful consideration than the policy relating to the
consumption of alcoholic beverages on campus. It is my
judgment that the Board has acted wisely in expressing its
confidence in the ability of our students, through Student
Government, to regulate this controversial area of their
social life on campus. I have found our students responsible
and trustworthy, and I believe they will administer this new
policy to the credit of the College. If they are unable or
unwilling to do so, I shall not hesitate to intervene.
It is especially fitting, in the light of our new alcohol
policy, that the coming year will see consideration given to
the development of a Campus Alcohol Abuse Prevention
Program at Agnes Scott. The Program will be planned and
carried out with the cooperation of the Student Health
Service, and will undoubtedly adapt aspects of similar
programs already in effect at other colleges and universities.
We have been pleased with the very favorable reception
given our new student health policy and program. In an
attempt to involve students in evaluating our health services
and their professional personnel, Director of Student Health
Services Rosemary Kriner circulated to students last May a
general questionnaire. Of those who returned the
questionnaire, almost 909f reported a generally positive
experience with our health services program and staff. A
number of helpful suggestions were made, and some of these
will be incorporated in the coming year. As a part of our
health education emphasis, the Health Services staff
prepared and made available to students in the past year a
non-technical handbook designed as a guide for self-care in
cases of common aches and pains, fevers and chills. The
manual was well received, and plans are under way to make
it more widely available.
In her first year as Director of Career Planning, Kathleen
Mooney has increased markedly the services and scope of
the Office of Career Planning, including weekly circulation
to students of information on job opportunities, part-time
work, and interviewers scheduled for campus visits. A
recent survey of the Class of 1978 by the Office reaffirms
the fact that within a very short time after leaving the
College, the great majority of Agnes Scott graduates are
successful in finding jobs, enrolling in graduate programs,
and otherwise establishing themselves in their new lives.
Under consideration for the near future are the expansion of
these programs and the gradual development of a women's
center at Agnes Scott to serve women of the Atlanta area.
Services will include career counseling and testing and
information about opportunities for women of all ages at
Agnes Scott and other institutions.
Director of Financial Aid Bonnie Brown Johnson '70
reports increasing interest and use of all our financial aid
opportunities, including private, state, and Federal
resources as well as those of Agnes Scott. There is a steady
increase in the number of students requesting and receiving
financial aid, and a consequent increase in paper work and
record keeping. We are very proud of our financial aid
program, under Mrs. Johnson's direction, which is still able
to meet 1009f of officially indicated need among our
students. Approximately 70% of our student body now
receives some form of financial aid, with over 40% receiving
more than one-half million dollars annually of Agnes Scott
funds.
Assistant Dean of Students Mollie Merrick '57. in her
annual report, found student attitudes in this past year to be
"extremely positive." Student housing and transfer patterns
were indicative of this positive attitude. We began the year
with a small increase in boarding students and an 889r return
of upperclassmen. Only eighteen students left the
dormitories during the year as compared with thirty-one the
year before. The number of students having academic
transcripts sent to other institutions, an indication of
possible transfer, was markedly lower. Our retention rate is
accordingly far better than the national average. For these
positive student attitudes and performances, the wise and
understanding efforts of Dean Kirkland and Assistant Dean
Merrick have been ably supplemented by Dean Gary and her
staff, especially Gue Pardue Hudson '68, Class Dean for
Freshmen and Sophomores. During the winter quarter the
College gave students the opportunity to take an intensive
reading and study skills improvement course offered on the
campus by a professional organization. One hundred
students completed the course, pronounced it very helpful,
and recommended that the College continue to provide this
service.
Despite our gratifying student retention levels of the past
three years, the attraction to Agnes Scott of sufficient
numbers of qualified students continues to be our chief
priority. Our Director of Admissions, Judy Maguire Tindel
'73, and her staff have left few stones unturned in seeking to
reach and interest students throughout the world who may
meet Agnes Scott's requirements. College admissions is an
increasingly competitive activity, one in which Agnes Scott
must continue to make its programs and strengths known
amid a flood of lavish recruiting publications with which we
must compete without compromise of our standards. I have
the greatest respect for the energy and imagination with
which Director of Admissions Judy Tindel and her staff have
planned and carried out our admissions programs in a time
which is fraught with uncertainties and frustrations.
Although Agnes Scott has a stable admissions situation at
present and an enviable student retention record, we are still
unsatisfied with our recruiting efforts; and we are continuing
to seek ways to improve them while remaining true to the
mission and character of the College.
32
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Student Government President Kemper Hatfield meets with President Perry weekly.
Our Return to College program, to which I have referred
above, is one of the most encouraging and significant of
recent developments here. The growth of the program, its
enthusiastic reception, and the splendid performance of our
RTC students promise a continuing strong future for it.
A new major effort to attract outstanding all-round
students to Agnes Scott will be inaugurated in September
1980, when our first Honor Scholars arrive on campus.
Approved in principle by the Board of Trustees in May of
1978, the Honor Scholars Program has been worked out by a
faculty-administrative committee, and announcements of its
inauguration have been sent to some 20,000 high schools
throughout the country. In addition, alumnae screening
committees have been formed, and additional information
releases planned. The program is designed to bring to Agnes
Scott each year at least ten outstanding freshmen whose high
school records in both academic and extracurricular areas
indicate outstanding ability and promise. Honor Scholars
will be chosen through a national selection process from
candidates who present superior secondary school records,
high Scholastic Aptitude Test scores, and evidence of
leadership qualities. Three regional alumnae committees will
screen the applicants, and thirty-five finalists will be brought
to the campus, as guests of the College, to be interviewed by
the Honor Scholars Program Committee. Up to ten students
will be named Agnes Scott Honor Scholars and will be
eligible to receive scholarships of $2,500 each year that they
continue to exhibit superior academic work while at Agnes
Scott. Need is not a factor in the selection of Honor
Scholars, but any proven financial need up to total College
expenses will be met through the Agnes Scott College
financial aid program. It is hoped that many of the thirty-five
finalists each year will become interested enough in Agnes
Scott to enroll here. There are a number of such programs
already in operation at American colleges, and the number is
increasing. We are well aware that the competition for such
outstanding young women will be keen indeed. But the
program is designed not only to attract and enroll superior
students but also to give alumnae and other friends a large
share in the finding and selection of such students. In its
approval of this program, the Board of Trustees emphasized
that its support should in no way decrease funds for our
financial aid programs for needy students. Accordingly,
funds to support the Honor Scholars Program must be
"new" money designated for this purpose. I am glad to
report that sufficient funds are now in hand to begin the
program, but more will be required as it moves beyond its
initial year. We believe that there will be a number of
alumnae and other friends who are interested in recognizing
outstanding students who may have no financial need.
Our efforts in recent years to increase the variety and
attractiveness of Agnes Scott's publications were
recognized by the Council for the Advancement and Support
of Education (CASE) at its national meeting in New Orleans
in July. Agnes Scott publications received awards and
citations in eight categories ranging from letterhead
stationery to College events calendars and student recruiting
brochures. Hundreds of colleges and universities competed
together, and no other college of Agnes Scott's size won as
many awards. The chief credit for this fine showing goes to
Fall 1979
33
our Director of Public Relations, Sara Fountain, and her
staff and consultants.
A very important function of the Office of Public
Relations is the dissemination of news of coming events at
Agnes Scott and of the achievements and recognition of
students, faculty, and alumnae. The notable increase in both
the amount and quality of such news stories is due in large
measure to the excellent work of Agnes Scott News Director
Andrea Helms. The many concerts, lectures, dramatic
presentations, along with our summer conferences,
constitute still another important aspect of our public
relations program. Success of such events in recent years
has been largely the result of the conscientious and efficient
work of our Coordinator of Campus Events and
Conferences Dorothea Markert, with the untiring efforts of
Director of Physical Plant Vaughan Black and his staff. I am
happy to express my appreciation to these administrators
who have made not only the College events themselves but
the advance announcements of them such an effective part
of our total public relations program at the College.
Each succeeding year is a rich one in the quality and
variety of educational, cultural, and social events which
occur on the campus, most of them open to the public
without charge. Again space forbids a complete listing of
such events, but the following '"highlights" are a sample:
JANUARY
14- Invitational Art Show Works by Atlanta Black
February 15 artists
21-24 Focus on Faith Preacher: Professor David Willis.
Princeton Theological Seminary
FEBRUARY
1 Lecture "Genius and Poetry," Professor Richard
Poirier, Rutgers University
6 Lecture "Black and Woman," Professor Gloria
Gayles. Talladega College
8 Dance Concert for children Agnes Scott Studio
Dance Theatre
9, 10 One-act plays- directed and designed by Agnes
Scott theatre students
17, 18 Children's Play Cinderella, produced by theatre
19, 20 department and Blackfriars
18- Student Art Show works by Agnes Scott art
march 8 students
21 Founder's Day Convocation Dr. Mark Curtis,
President, Association of American Colleges. In-
scription unveiled on gravestone of founder George
Washington Scott in Decatur Cemetery.
22 Synchronized swimming show Agnes Scott Dol-
phin Club
26 Lecture ""The Woman's Journey," Professor
Emeritus Joseph Campbell, Sarah Lawrence
College
28 Celebration Mime Theatre of South Paris, Maine
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 1978-79 COLLEGE YEAR
SEPTEMBER
18
24-
OCTOBER 19
-Registration and orientation open Agnes Scott's
ninetieth session
-Art Show of paintings by Ferdinand Warren,
Professor Emeritus of Art, former chairman of the
art department
OCTOBER
4
16
22-
Honors Day Convocation Speaker: President Mer-
rimon Cuninggim, Salem College
Lecture "The Romantic Will in Creative
Women," Elizabeth Hardwick, novelist, essayist,
and advisory editor to The New York Review of
Books
Art Show of American paintings on loan from the
December 7 Robert P. Coggins collection of American paintings
NOVEMBER
4-5
10, II
17, 18
DECEMBER
3
Investiture Speaker: Dr. Margaret Pepperdene,
Ellen Douglass Leyburn Professor of English;
Preacher: The Reverend Richard G. Hutcheson, Jr.,
Chairman, General Assembly's Committee on Re-
view and Evaluation, Presbyterian Church in the
United States
Reading Eudora Welty, Pulitzer prize-winning
author
Lecture "La France des Lumieres, essai d'ana-
lyse d'une civilisation," Professor Paul Verniere,
The Sorbonne
Blackfriars production
Ladyhouse Blues
-Christmas Concert the Agnes Scott Glee Club and
Madrigal Singers
MARCH
7
27
29
8-29
11, 12
12
19
19, 20
25
26, 27
27-29
MAY
11, 12
18, 19
14
JUNE
3
-Foreign Language Drama Contest for Georgia high
school students
-Concert Guarneri String Quartet
-Lecture "Fundamentalism," James Barr, Regius
Professor of Hebrew, Oxford University
-Concert Atlanta Chamber Players, professional
chamber music ensemble in residence at Agnes
Scott
-Lecture "Is Gandhi's Philosophy Relevant
Today?", Dr. G. Ramachandran, private secretary
to the late Mohandas K. Gandhi
-Art Show National Invitational Color Blend Print
Show
-Writers' Festival Speakers: Harry Crews, Donald
Davie, Josephine Jacobsen
-Romeo and Juliet, presented by The Acting Com-
pany of New York
-Spring Concert the Agnes Scott Glee Club
-Applicants' Weekend prospective freshmen visit
campus
-Phi Beta Kappa Convocation Speaker: President
Robert Q. Marston. University of Florida
-Spring Dance Concert Agnes Scott Studio Dance
Theatre
-Alumnae Weekend: over 700 alumnae return!
-Blackfriars production
Babes in Arms
-Illustrated Lecture "Degas in New Orleans," Dr.
Jean Sutherland Boggs. Director of the Philadelphia
Museum of Art
-Ninetieth Commencement 121 seniors awarded
degrees. Baccalaureate preacher: Dr. Sara Bernice
Moseley, Moderator, General Assembly, Presbyte-
rian Church in the United States
34
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Late summer saw the completion of the renovation of
faculty offices and classrooms in Buttick Hall, the second
major project of our overall physical plant modernization
program begun in 1974. The renovation of McCain Library
was completed in 1977; other projects include the rewiring
and lighting of the campus (1973-74), the air-conditioning of
Gaines and Maclean Chapels in Presser Hall (1974), the
air-conditioning of Winship Dormitory (1974), a new roof for
Rebekah Dormitory (1975), and the renovation of the Dana
Fine Arts Building (1977-78). Indeed, further work on the
roof of Dana has been undertaken this summer, and roof
repairs have been made on Presser Hall. Currently nearing
completion is the strengthening of the roof of Bradley
Observatory in order to make possible the installation of
outside telescope mounts as a part of our developing
astronomy program. According to Dr. Robert Hyde,
recently appointed Assistant Professor of Astronomy and
director of the Bradley Observatory, "Students at Agnes
Scott are very fortunate in having the opportunity to
experience astronomy directly rather than just read about it
in textbooks. The Bradley Observatory is one of the finest
astronomical facilities in the Southeast." Housed in the
Observatory with a thirty-inch Beck telescope are numerous
small telescopes, an astronomy library, and a planetarium,
as well as darkroom facilities and a lecture hall.
Engineering studies are now in progress for what will
almost certainly be a third major renovation project: the
modernization of Campbell Hall, classroom and laboratory
building for the natural sciences. In addition to modernizing
laboratories and other facilities, alterations and
improvements will be made to incorporate the latest
instructional procedures and to meet current safety
regulations for scientific laboratories.
Planning is under way for a student center and a new
recreation center (gymnasium, swimming pool, exercise
rooms, and playing field). Also a major project, this social
and recreational complex will be Agnes Scott's first new
building in more than a decade.
The wide ranging activities of the Agnes Scott Alumnae
Association made 1978-79 another great year in alumnae
affairs. Major credit for this banner year belongs to national
Alumnae Association President Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
and Director of Alumnae Affairs Virginia Brown McKenzie
'47, and their colleagues of the Alumnae Council throughout
the country. Hundreds of other alumnae served the College
as Agnes Scott Fund agents, alumnae admissions
Conley Ingram chairs the development committee.
Fall 1979
35
36
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
representatives, and officers and members of fifty alumnae
clubs throughout the country. Again I had the pleasure of
visiting a number of alumnae groups, where my admiration
for our alumnae and my gratitude for their loyalty to alma
materwere renewed.
A highlight of the alumnae year was the November visit to
Washington, when alumnae traveled from Atlanta and other
cities for three days of touring the capital (including the
White House) and meeting with Washington area alumnae.
Originated by Alumnae Association President Cissie
Aidinoff and coordinated by Continuing Education
Chairman Sylvia Williams Ingram '52, the Washington visit
was a great success; and a similar trip is planned for New
York City in the coming year. The Alumnae Council meeting
in October set a new record when some 125 members met on
the campus for an intensive day of workshops and
discussions. Similarly, Alumnae Day in April set a record
when more than 700 alumnae returned for the annual
meeting and luncheon. Recipients of the Outstanding
Alumnae awards on this occasion were Penny Brown
Barnett '32 (Service to the College), Goldie Ham '19
(Community Service), and Martha Stackhouse Grafton '30
(Distinguished Career).
Once again the generous contributions of alumnae were a
major factor in the success of the Agnes Scott Fund, to
which some 3,200 alumnae contributed almost $290,000 to
the total of almost $820,000. Indeed, as Cissie Aidinoff
wrote to alumnae in the summer Quarterly, Agnes Scott is
"alive and well ... an enlightened and strong academic
community." Our condition owes much to the continued
interest and support of our alumnae everywhere, and we are
deeply grateful.
The energetic efforts of the Office of Development, under
Vice President Paul McCain's direction, and the careful
financial planning of Vice President Lee Barclay and his
staff resulted in another good financial year. All employees
received salary increases, which this year, in keeping with
President Carter's guidelines, averaged approximately 7%.
The Board of Trustees authorized an increase in our
guaranteed pension formula, resulting in larger income for a
number of our retired employees. A good health record for
the year enabled us to increase significantly our major
medical coverage in the coming year for all employees with
practically no additional cost to them.
As in the past, Agnes Scott received in the 1978-79 fiscal
year the financial support not only of alumnae but also of
hundreds of other friends individuals, corporations,
foundations support which has again enabled us to
continue strengthening our programs, facilities, and
resources. For this support, in whatever amount, we are
truly grateful. The accompanying table indicates the sources
of these gifts and the uses to which they were allocated in
1978-79. We have tried to send out personal thanks to every
donor. A number of gifts and grants are worth of special
mention, however, and I am glad to record them here. From
two anonymous foundations we have received generous
grants of $166,850 and $20,000, the first to aid in the
renovation of Buttrick Hall, the second for scholarships.
Marian Franklin Anderson '40 (Mrs. Paul H.) and her
husband made a gift of $51,306 to establish the Rufus C. and
Wynie Coleman Franklin Memorial Scholarship, the income
from which will aid Agnes Scott students from Emanuel
County, Georgia. From the estate of the late Mrs. Helen B.
Longshore came an additional $21,368 to be added to the
scholarship established in 1977 in her memory. With a gift of
$20,000 the John and Mary Franklin Foundation completed
the last two-thirds of its grant for audiovisual equipment.
The J. M. Tull Foundation gave $20,000 for student
scholarships. Mrs. Howard P. Conrad, mother of the late
Patricia Conrad '63, added $15,000 to the Howard P. Conrad
Scholarship established in 1971 in memory of Patricia. To
assist in the renovation of Buttrick Hall, the David, Helen,
and Marion Woodward Fund made a grant of $15,000. From
Ruth Anderson O'Neal '18 (Mrs. Alan S.) came gifts of
$12,000 for additions to the Ruth Anderson O'Neal and the
Neal L. Anderson Scholarships. A bequest of some $11,800
from the estate of the late Marie Scott O'Neill '42 (Mrs.
Frank Q.) established the Marie Scott O'Neill Scholarship.
From Mr. and Mrs. Hal Smith we have received a gift of
$11,298 to add to the Hal and Julia Thompson Smith '31,
Scholarship Fund. An unrestricted gift of $10,650 was
received from Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Cameron (Betty
Henderson '43). With a gift of $10,000 Miss Bess Patton
established the Lillian Patton Latin Scholarship in honor of
her sister of the Class of 1920. From the Gertrude and
William C. Wardlaw Fund came a gift of $10,000 to aid in the
renovation of Buttrick Hall.
Agnes Scott's share of the contributions made by Georgia
business firms to the Georgia Foundation for Independent
Colleges in 1978-79 was $43,188, the largest in recent years.
We continue to be most grateful for this expression of
confidence in Agnes Scott by the Georgia business
community.
In the summer issue of the President's Newsletter I
introduced to you two new members of the Board of
Trustees. Pictures and biographical sketches of these new
trustees were included; accordingly, I shall merely record
their names here, together with my conviction that they will
bring fresh vision and strength to the leadership of Agnes
Scott: Edward P. Gould, President of the Trust Company
Bank of Atlanta, and the Reverend Wallace M. Alston, Jr.,
Minister of the Nassau Presbyterian Church, Princeton,
New Jersey. Two faithful trustees of many years, Mary
Warren Read '29 (Mrs. Joseph C.) and William C. Wardlaw
were elected Trustees Emeriti. We have been enriched by
their wise counsel and active support. Also at the spring
meeting of the Board of Trustees Alex P. Gaines was
succeeded by Lawrence L. Gellerstedt, Jr., as Chairman of
the Board. The College is greatly indebted to Mr. Gaines for
his wise and efficient chairing of the Board through a
significant period in life of the College. He will remain active
as a trustee. Succeeding Mr. Gellerstedt as Vice Chairman
of the Board is trustee G. Conley Ingram. As Vice
Chairman, Mr. Ingram will chair the Executive Committee
of the Board. He is also Chairman of the Board's
Development Committee.
PLANNING FOR A LEAN DECADE
It has been my hope since coming to Agnes Scott that
these annual reports of each year's activities should serve as
periodic reassurance to the College community and our
friends that we on the campus continue true, and freshly
Fall 1979
37
responsive, to the historic mission of the College. Our
alumnae and others who support us are entitled to such
reassurance, especially in times so fraught with difficulties
for private liberal arts colleges. I hope that these reports
show also that as we seek to deal with daily concerns in each
College year we are also actively mindful of Agnes Scott's
future needs. Again this is especially important in a time
when virtually all projections point to the 1980s as a decade
which will sorely try the survival power of many American
colleges and universities, especially those in the private
sector. Population projections indicate a significant drop
nationally in the number of young people of traditional
college age. Combined with continuing inflation and
widespread economic uncertainty, this decline will bring to
many colleges grave financial problems.
It is with these somber predictions very much in mind that
our planning for Agnes Scott's future has been carried out.
Last year I reported to you that the Long-Range Planning
Committee (consisting of students and faculty as well as
administrators, trustees, and alumnae) submitted to the
Board of Trustees its analysis of Agnes Scott's needs
human, material, and financial for the next quarter
century, together with proposals for securing the resources
which will enable the College to meet the demands of this
crucial period. I think you will be interested in the brief
summary statement of the Long-Range Planning
Committee's report entitled, "Agnes Scott Looks to the
Future":
"As Agnes Scott approaches its centennial in 1989 and
then prepares for the twenty-first century, the Long-Range
Planning Committee recommends to the Board of Trustees
for its consideration the following development program:
1. Attract and retain a select student body by maintaining
a curriculum strong in traditional liberal arts disciplines
and values yet responsive to the needs of young women
interested in professional and business careers.
2. Attract and retain a highly qualified faculty through
competitive compensation and ongoing opportunities
for their professional growth.
3. Encourage the factors which strengthen the College's
Christian emphasis and heritage, its Honor System,
and its representative Student Government.
4. Plan and construct new physical education and
recreational facilities as well as a new student center
and complete the renovation and improvement of the
present buildings on campus.
5. Organize and launch a financial drive which will
provide as soon as possible the $50,000,000 Agnes
Scott will need to accomplish the above objectives."
The Board of Trustees has accepted in principle these
recommendations of the Long-Range Planning Committee.
They constitute a large order, with a large price tag. One's
immediate reaction is apt to be: Can Agnes Scott raise in the
next twenty years such sizable funds, funds which in effect
will double our present resources?
In considering such a question, I turned to College records
of twenty years ago, in the 1958-59 College catalog and in
President Alston's annual report for that College year. I
found encouragement in such a review. It revealed evidence
of steady growth, in resources as well as expenses, when the
figures are compared with those of 1978-79. For example,
our Library collection has doubled in size since 1959, from
75,000 to over 150,000 volumes; from 339 periodical titles to
Chairman of the Board L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr.
Vice Chairman Conley Ingram
38
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
almost 800 today. Our operating budget has increased from
approximately $1,354,000 in 1959 to over $5,500,000 in 1979.
Our assets in plant and equipment have almost tripled from
just over $5,000,000 in 1959 to almost $15,000,000 in 1979.
Finally, our endowment income has increased from some
$365,000 in 1959 to over $2,250,000 in 1979. The clear
implications of these growth figures of the past twenty years
are twofold: first, we must maintain this kind of growth in
resources if we are to continue as an outstanding college;
and second, such goals are nor unrealistic. We have more
than doubled our resources in the past twenty years, thanks
to the hard work, careful planning, and generosity of many;
and we can do it again in the next twenty years !
In concluding this report of another good year, let me
return again to the summary statement of our
recommendations for the future. They deal primarily with
people and with human values. They call for the
maintenance of a select student body, of a highly qualified
faculty, for the continued encouragement of our heritage of
academic excellence, Christian principles, and concern for
the individual. Finally, they call for the maintenance of a
physical plant and educational equipment which a select
study body and a strong faculty will need for the quality
educational experience which Agnes Scott has always
sought to provide. Most of the needed new money will go for
additional endowment for academic development (including
faculty and programs) and student financial aid. People and
their needs thus continue to be our chief concern.
Implicit in these recommendations for the future is the
renewed dedication of Agnes Scott's leadership to the
principles which have guided the College since its founding:
a positive commitment to liberal arts education, i.e., to the
joys as well as the uses of learning; an abiding faith in the
human values of our Judeo-Christian heritage ; the
maintenance of academic and personal standards of
excellence; concern for the individual's twofold search for
self-fulfillment and service to others. This is the kind of
college we have been for almost a century. It is the kind of
college which this report and its recommendations indicate
we intend to be in the future. Significantly, it is the kind of
college which current educational research is showing to be
the most effective and satisfying college experience yet
devised in this country.
Plans are already under way for organizing and carrying
out the programs necessary to secure the funds and with
them the resources needed to meet the challenges of the next
quarter century. I know our efforts can be successful. I am
convinced, too, that these efforts will enable us to transmit
to those who follow us at Agnes Scott a strong and lively
institution, proud of its heritage and confident of its future.
y/?UA^ *~y^
PERSONNEL CHANGES
BOARD OF TRUSTEES:
Elected to Board, May 1979:
Edward P. Gould
Wallace M. Alston, Jr.
Elected Trustees-Emeriti, May 1979:
Mary Warren Read
William C.Wardlaw
Elected Officers of the Board, May 1979:
L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr. Chairman
G. Conley Ingram Vice Chairman
FACULTY APPOINTMENTS EFFECTIVE DURING ACADEMIC YEAR
1978-79:
David W. Boykin (Ph.D.), Visiting Professor of Chemistry
(part-time, fall quarter)
Robert L. Brown (M.A.), Lecturer in Music (part-time)
Carol Lyn Butcher (Master's candidate), Lecturer in Music
(part-time)
M. Eloise Brown Carter (M.S.), Instructor in Biology
Caroline Matheny Dillman (M.A., Ph.D. candidate), Instructor
in Sociology and Anthropology (part-time)
Paul W. Frame (Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Biology
David L. Giberson (B.S., Ph.D. candidate), Lecturer in
Chemistry (part-time, fall quarter)
Charles Steven Hall (M.M.), Lecturer in Music
Robert S. Hyde (Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Physics and
Astronomy; Director of the Bradley Observatory
Ayse Ilgaz-Carden (Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Psychology
Mani P. Kamerkar (Ph.D.), Lecturer in History (spring quarter)
Jean Lemonds (B.M.), Lecturer in Music
Warren Little (B.F.A.), Lecturer in Music (part-time)
Gordon E. McNeer (Ph.D.), Lecturer in Spanish (part-time)
Bruce L. Taggart (Ph.D.), Visiting Assistant Professor of
Classical Languages and Literatures (fall quarter)
John W. Toth (Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Theatre
Joyce Cummings Tucker (M. Div.), Lecturer in Bible and
Religion (part-time, spring quarter)
Anne Bradford Warner (Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of English
Donald F. Young (Ph.D.), Assistant Professor of Mathematics
ADMINISTRATIVE AND STAFF APPOINTMENTS EFFECTIVE DURING
YEAR BEGINNING JULY 1, 1978:
Vaughan W. Black, Director of Physical Plant
Dee Chubb, Manager of the Bookstore
Maria M. Cimadevilla (M.A.), Assistant Food Service Manager
Susan Stringer Connell (B.A.), Assistant in the Department of
Chemistry
Emmanuelle Desquins, Assistant in the Department of French
Natalie C. Endicott, Manager of the Alumnae House
Juliette J. Harper (B.A.), Assistant to the Director of Alumnae
Affairs
Linda M. Hilsenrad (M.A.), Director of Media Services
Lucile R. Jarrett (B.A.), Assistant to the Director of Admissions
Margaret H. Kirk (B.A.), Assistant to the Dean of Students
Kathleen Krank Mooney (M.A.), Director of Career Planning
Janet L. Norton (M.A.), Assistant to the Dean of Students
Linda L. Palmer (B.A.), Assistant to the Dean of Students
Cynthia T. Richmond (B.A.), Technical Services Assistant,
Library
Katherine J. Schreiner (M.S.L.S.), Technical Services Librarian
Anita Moses Shippen (B.A.), Special Projects Coordinator.
Office of Admissions (part-time)
Jean Chalmers Smith (B.A.), Coordinator for Clubs, Alumnae
Office
Fall 1979
39
Julius D. W. Staal (F.R.A.S.), Director of the Planetarium of the
Bradley Observatory
Jane B. Sutton (M.A.), Assistant to the Director of Admissions
Rosa S. Tinsley, Secretary, Office of Career Planning
Elizabeth Dowd Wood (M.Ed.), Groups Coordinator, Office of
Admissions (part-time)
FACULTY PROMOTIONS EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1978:
Steven A. Haworth to Assistant Professor of Political Science
Jack L. Nelson to Professor of English
SABBATICAL LEAVES DURING 1978-79:
Penelope Campbell. Associate Professor of History and Political
Science (year)
Jay C. Fuller, Assistant Professor of Music (year)
Linda L. Woods. Associate Professor of English (fall)
Elizabeth G. Zenn, Professor of Classical Languages and
Literatures and Chairman of the Department (fall)
RETIREMENTS EFFECTIVE JUNE 1979:
Mary Virginia Allen. Adeline Arnold Loridans Professor of
French and Chairman of the Department
Verita M. Barnett, Manager of the Bookstore
Nancy P. Groseclose, Charles A. Dana Professor of Biology and
Chairman of the Department
Myrna G. Young, Professor of Classical Languages and
Literatures
Mary Louise Currie, former Deferred Giving Officer,
Development Office. August 15, 1979
Eloise Hardeman Ketchin. Retired Manager of the Alumnae
House, February 5, 1979
Joe B. Saxon. Retired Supervisor of Buildings and Grounds,
April 20, 1979
Florence E. Smith, Associate Professor of History and Political
Science, Emeritus, May 5, 1979
Lou Henderson Voorhees, Retired Assistant to the Dean of
Students, November 30, 1978
Merle Grubbs Walker, former Associate Professor of
Philosophy and Chairman of the Department, February 3.
1979
GIFTS, GRANTS, AND BEQUESTS
RECEIVED 1978-79
sources:
Alumnae
Parents and Friends
Business and Industry
Foundations
$289,648
140,874
62.388
322,099
5815,009
deaths:
Annie May Christie, Associate Professor of English, Emeritus,
September 7, 1978
Marion Thomas Clark, William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor of
Chemistry and Chairman of the Department, September 9,
1978
uses:
Current Operations
Endowment
Plant
Other restricted purposes
$328,389
211,072
221,396
54,152
$815,009
SUMMARY OF CURRENT REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES
educational and general:
Student Charges
Endowment Income
Gifts and Grants
Sponsored Programs
Other Sources
1978-79
1977-78
$1,778,831
$1,568,046
2,382,957
2,263,769
328,389
303,182
8,559
85,341
208,962
107,113
$4,707,698
$4,327,451
AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES:
Student Charges
Other
717,094
374,868
$ 699,148
403,002
$1,091,962 $1,102,150
EXPENDITURES
EDUCATIONAL AND GENERAL:
AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES
TOTAL EXPENDITURES
1978-79
1977-78
Instruction
$1,593,884
$1,454,210
Sponsored Programs
6.880
70,199
Library/Academic Support
243.910
217,130
Student Services
424,385
358,750
Institutional Support
1.131,310
994.145
Operation/Maintenance of
Plant
639.108
572,774
Student Financial Aid
434,091
445,109
$4,473,568 $4,112,317
$1,118,503 $ 979.653
$5,592,071 $5,091,970
TRANSFER FOR ENDOWMENT, LOAN,
PLANT, AND RESTRICTED PURPOSES $ 190,000 $ 210,781
TOTAL REVENUES
$5,799,660 $5,429,601
TOTAL EXPENDED OR TRANSFERRED
$5,782,071 $5,302,751
EXCESS OF REVENUES OVER
EXPENDITURES AND TRANSFERS
$ 17,589 $ 126,850
40
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
(Continued from page 28)
Helen Baldwin Woodward Scholarship
Fund of $25,365 was established in 1963
by her daughter, Marian Woodward
(Mrs. John K.) Ottley, of Atlanta.
Preference is given to students of out-
standing intellectual ability and
character.
Anna Irwin Young Scholarship Fund of
$13,531 was established in 1942 by Susan
Young (Mrs. John J.) Egan, an alumna of
the Institute, in memory of her sister, an
1895 graduate, who served as professor
of mathematics for twenty-two years.
Preference is given to students from
other countries.
Mason Pressly Young Scholarship of
$10,000 was established in 1979 by the
Blake P. Garrett, Sr., Family of Foun-
tain Inn, South Carolina, in memory of
this long time Presbyterian medical
missionary to China and father of two
alumnae: Louise Young Garrett '38 and
Josephine Young (Mrs. Francis) Sullivan
'44 of Greer, South Carolina.
Lucretia Rohbins Zenor Scholarship
Fund of $2,453 was established in 1962
as a memorial to her through a bequest
from her daughter, Mary Zenor Palmer,
of Yazoo City, Mississippi, an alumna of
the Institute.
Library Funds
Agnes Lee Chapter of the United Daugh-
ters of the Confederacy Book Fund of
$1,000 was established in 1956 by this
Decatur chapter with the transfer of this
amount -from its loan fund. The income
is used to purchase books on southern
history and literature.
Edna Hanley Byers Book Fund of
$4,573 was established in 1962 by Agnes
Scott's librarian whose active service
spanned thirty-seven years prior to her
retirement in 1969. The income is used to
acquire books of general interest to the
college community, including biography
and literature.
Asa Griggs Candler Library Fund of
$47,000 was established in 1940 by the
Board of Trustees from the generous
gifts of this prominent Atlanta business
leader who was one of the chief promo-
ters of Christian education in the South.
The income supports the operation of
the Library.
Andrew Carnegie Library Fund of
$25,000 was establilshed in 1951 by the
Board of Trustees in recognition of Mr.
Carnegie's generosity in having provided
funds to build the College's first library
in 1910. The income supports the opera-
tion of the Library.
Annie May Christie Book Fund of
$2,186 was established in 1962 by the
Board of Trustees to honor this member
of the English department from 1925 to
1962. The income is used to acquire
books in American literature.
Melissa A. Cilley Book Fund of $2,212
was established in 1963 by the Board of
Trustees to honor this member of the
Spanish department at the time of her
retirement after thirty-three years. The
income is used to purchase books in
Spanish and Portuguese.
Class of 1928 Memorial Book Fund of
$4,770 was established in 1978 by the
members of this class as a part of their
fiftieth reunion. The income is used to
place books in the Library as memorials
to members of this class.
Class of 1933 Book Fund of $1 ,619 was
established in 1978 by the members of
this class as a part of their forty-fifth
reunion. The income is used to place
books in the Library as memorials to
members of this class.
Florene J. Dunstan Fund of $2,823 was
established in 1974 by the Board of
Trustees and friends to honor this
professor and chairman of the Spanish
department who taught at Agnes Scott
for thirty-three years. The income is
used to enhance the collection of Latin
American literature.
Muriel Ham Book Fund of $2,839 was
established in 1965 by the Board of
Trustees and friends in memory of this
professor of German and Spanish who
taught at Agnes Scott from 1921 to 1964.
The income is used to purchase books in
the fields of German and Spanish.
G. Benton Kline Book Fund of $1,972
was established in 1969 by the Class of
1969 to honor this former dean of the
faculty for his eighteen years of service
as teacher and administrator. The in-
come is used to acquire books in
philosophy and religion.
Emma May Laney Book Fund of
$7,853 was established in 1956 by a
group of her associates and former
students to honor this professor of
English upon her retirement after she
had served thirty-seven years on the
faculty. The income is used for the
acquisition of rare books in English
literature.
The McCain Book Fund of $16,040 was
established in 1951 by faculty, students,
alumnae, and friends to honor President
James Ross McCain upon his retirement
after his twenty-eight years of out-
standing service as president of the
College.
Eleanor Brown McCain Book Fund of
$1,560 was established in 1979 by her
family and friends as a memorial to her
for her role in the life of the campus and
community. The income is used to
purchase books in the humanities.
Isabel Asbury Oliver Book Fund of
$1,025 was established in 1962 by
Creighton M. Oliver, Jr., of Trenton,
Florida, in memory of his wife, a
member of the Class of 1947.
Wingfield Ellis Parker Book Fund of
$2,000 was established in 1977 by Wil-
liam D. and Frances Tennent Ellis '25 of
Atlanta as a memorial for their daughter.
Elizabeth Gray and Marvin B. Perry,
Sr., Book Fund of $2,000 was established
in 1978 by President Marvin B. Perry,
Jr., in memory of his mother and father.
Walter Brownlow Posey Book Fund of
$2,389 was established in 1970 by the
Board of Trustees in honor of this
professor and chairman of the history
and political science department for his
twenty-seven years of service. The
income is used to purchase books in the
field of American frontier religion.
Janef Newman Preston Memorial Fund
of $1,045 was established in 1973 by
family and friends in memory of this
member of the Class of 1921 who was a
member of Agnes Scott's English de-
partment for forty-six years. The income
is used for the acquisition of books in
English literature of the nineteenth
century.
Gertrude K. Sevin Book Fund of
$2,832 was established in 1979 through a
bequest from Agnes Scott's first profes-
sor of biology when it became a separate
department in 1911. She served in this
capacity for four years.
Florence E. Smith Book Fund of $2,655
was established in 1965 by the Board of
Trustees to honor this member of the
history department for her thirty-six
years of service. The income is used to
purchase books in history.
Alma Willis Sydenstricker Book Fund
of $1,300 was established in 1960 by her
friends as a memorial to this professor of
Bible who served from 1918 to 1943. The
income is used to acquire books in
Biblical studies.
Time, Incorporated Book Fund of
$10,000 was established in 1966 with a
grant from Time, Incorporated as a part
of its effort to recognize and strengthen
selected colleges.
Catherine Torrance Book Fund of
$1,215 was established in 1962 by her
family as a memorial to this teacher who
had come to Agnes Scott in 1909 as
co-principal of the Academy and who
from 1913 until her retirement in 1943
served as professor of Greek and Latin.
The income is used for books in classical
art, archaeological literature, and
philosophy.
Edgar D. West Book Fund of $3,762
was established in 1966 in his memory by
his brother, H. Carson West, of Spartan-
burg, South Carolina.
Fall 1979
41
Student Loan Funds
Fund of SI, 000 was
1945 through gifts of
Alumnae Loan
established in
alumnae.
Bing Crosby Loan Fund of $5,500 was
established in 1966 by the Bing Crosby
Youth Fund to provide financial assis-
tance to deserving students who have
completed their freshman year satisfac-
torily.
General Student Loan Fund of
$171,306 has been established with gifts
from alumnae and friends and grants
from the Board of Trustees.
Lucy Havden Harrison Loan Fund of
$1,000 was established in 1919 by her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Harri-
son, and her brother, George W. Harri-
son, Jr.. of Atlanta as a memorial to her
by giving funds to the College which had
been in her saving account.
Pearl C. Jenkins Loan Fund of $1 1.000
was established in 1925 by Mrs. Jenkins
of Crystal Springs, Mississippi, whose
daughter, Annie Tait Jenkins, was a 1914
graduate and who herself has added
substantially to the fund.
Nell Jones Memorial Loan Fund of
$4,605 was established in 1973 through a
bequest from her mother. Eleanor
Branch (Mrs. Roy G.) Jones, of Decatur.
David N. Landers Student Loan Fund
of $4,775 was established in 1979 from a
trust through the generosity of this
former Atlanta business leader
Mary Louise Latimer Loan Fund of
$29,940 was established in 1962 with a
bequest from her mother. Chloe Fowler
(Mrs. William A.) Latimer, of Decatur,
as a memorial to this member of the
Class of 1935.
Hugh L. and Jessie Moore McKee Loan
Fund of $5,500 was established in 1940
by Mrs. McKee, and Atlanta friend of
the College.
Virginia Peeler Loan Fund of $1,000
was established in 1926, by Mary Vir-
ginia McCormick of Huntsville, Ala-
bama, in honor of this 1926 graduate.
Fugenia Williams Schmidt Loan Fund
of $4,000 was established in 1975 by her
husband, C. Oscar Schmidt, Jr., of
Cincinnati, Ohio, in memory of this
member of the Class of 1940.
Ruth Slack Smith Loan Fund of $5,000
was established in 1953 with a bequest
from this 1912 graduate. Mrs. Smith had
served as a university educator and
administrator before becoming execu-
tive secretary of the Student Aid Foun-
dation during her "retirement.'"
Annuity Funds
Grin C. and Florence Schuler Cathey
Fund of $1,000 was established in 1962
by this alumna of the Institute and her
husband of Keatchie, Louisiana.
Martha Curry Cleckley Fund of
$10,288 was established in 1975 by
Virginia Prettyman '34 in appreciation
for the devotion Mrs. Cleckley had for
Dr. Prettyman's mother.
Annie Tait Jenkins Fund of $21,000
was established in 1976 by this member
of the Class of 1914 from Crystal
Springs, Mississippi. This will become
an addition to the Jenkins Loan Fund.
Lois Compton Jennings Fund of $5,560
was established in 1973 by this member
of the Class of 1921 from Ponca City,
Oklahoma.
Shields-Pfeiffer Fund of $5,000 was
established in 1976 by Sara Shields (Mrs.
John) Pfeiffer '27 of Atlanta. This will
establish a scholarship in her name.
Mary Shive Fund of $1,150 was estab-
lished in 1979 by this alumna of the Class
of 1927 from Norfolk, Virginia.
Frances Gilliland Stukes Fund of
$10,000 was established in 1976 by this
member of the Class of 1924 from
Decatur. This will become an addition to
the Frances Gilliland Stukes and Mar-
jorie Stukes Strickland Scholarship
Fund.
Olivia Ward Swann Fund of $5,000
was established in 1978 by this alumna of
the Class of 1926 from Birmingham,
Alabama.
William C. Warren Fund of $77,375
was established in 1975 by Dr. William
C. Warren, Jr., of Atlanta. This will
become an addition to the Annie Dodd
Warren Scholarship Fund which he
established in honor of his mother.
42
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Book Reviews
Burnsite by Shirley Graves Cochrane
'46. The Washington Writers' Publishing
House, Washington, D.C. $3.00.
Reprinted with permission from
Washington Review, August-September
1979.
Shirley Cochrane's collection of
poetry, Burnsite, is a strong one, offer-
ing thirty-three poems whose thematic
undercurrents are those of loss and
renewal. It is satisfying to read poems
which have been seriously assembled
with a plan in mind, poems which clearly
assert a reason for their being bound
together. These poems are subtle and
tough, mature and generous.
The title poem, "Burnsite," placed at
the beginning of the book serves with the
last poem, "After the Fire," as a frame,
the former posing a question and the
latter approaching an answer. What falls
in between is almost always an array of
heartening and impressive work.
There is a suggestiveness in Coch-
rane's work which, curiously enough,
leaves no room for doubt. She is able to
write around a subject, without naming it
exactly, leaving the reader to draw from
a poem its certain knowledge.
Shirley Cochrane's poetry is intimate.
One senses a person, perhaps a member
of her family, behind her poems,
prompting their inspiration. But the
integrity of her images allows these
poems to include us all.
The poems in Burnsite are, in the best
sense, like relatives, individual in their
form and content, while belonging to the
same family tree. "After the Fire"
makes a highly satisfactory closing
poem, calling forth echoes from the first
poem in the collection, in which the
process of life persists, as does this
smart and honest poet. Gardner McFall.
Halfway Home by Julia Coley Duncan
'62. St. Martin's Press, New York, New
York. $10.95.
Reprinted with permission from the An-
niston Star. June 10, 1979.
If you were raised in a small Southern
town a few years ago, and perhaps the
custom survives, you'll remember the
call of a young friend: "Walk me
halfway home!"
Julia Coley Duncan remembers. She
remembers in exquisite, sometimes bit-
tersweet joy that point in childhood
when the edge of young wonder meets
the first hard, resisting, and instructing
stones of maturity. Her twelve-year-old
Annie Trammell, growing up (to her own
wonder and amazement and to the
frequent astonishment of her family) in
small, railroad-through-the-middle-of-
town Winton in the fifties, fights the
walls of the grown-ups' world pressing
inward upon her.
But the world is not about to let any of
us alone very long, and it doesn't ignore
Annie. The fifties are a time of change,
and change often means pain. In small
towns like Winton, the change in the
fifties meant the pain of challenge and
loss as old ways had to accommodate the
new. It also meant the pain of ugliness
sometimes which, in turn, often revealed
nobility.
In the explosive crisis that crackles
across Winton, Annie bears a deep,
crucial witness, not only to the event
that shocks her town and stirs her father,
but also to her first close experience with
the personal loss of death, the pain of a
beloved small world breaking up and the
burdens of maturity.
If Halfway Home sounds a little like
To Kill a Mockingbird II, that is both
fortunate and unfortunate, fortunate in
that Julia Coley Duncan shares qualities
of things long remembered with Harper
Lee, unfortunate in that Halfway Home
is its own book, and it owes no debts to
other works. Cody Hall
Unravelling Yarn by Jeanne Osborne
Gibbs '42. H. Dan Abrams, Atlanta, Ga.
$8.95.
Reprinted with permission from Georgia
Life, Autumn 1979.
In her second book of poems. Unravel-
ling Yarn, Jeanne Osborne Gibbs, well-
known Georgia poet, has set words free
in extraordinary ways. Her writings
reveal a sensitive and provocative search
for the meaning of life and the entangled
skein of circumstance. The author pre-
sents a true lyric adventure in a medita-
tive world.
Her poems take their form straight
from life but escalate their impact
through alternating symbol and reality.
The energy of her expression seems to
flow from an appreciation of the original
Source. Her poetry has that consistent
life and strong sense of abundance
shown in these lines:
Where once I saw all men by
my reflection,
I see a hand that points a
new direction.
In poverty there is a certain form of
wealth which is reflected in her poem,
"Poor Man's Paradise": .
Why is it flowers never bloom so
well
As on some low unpainted
hollow shell
Of house where poor men dwell?
The publisher has made a distin-
guished book with format and illustra-
tions worthy of the poetry. Unravelling
Yarn is dramatically illustrated by Vee
Brown, professor of art at Young Harris
College. He seems equally skilled in
abstract, imaginative, and realistic draw-
ings.
Jeanne Osborne Gibbs has a strong
commitment to craftsmanship, and she is
attuned to the purity of sound and its
significance. Her contribution to litera-
ture helps to restore man's belief in his
own image and self. Jannelle Jones
McRee
Fall 1979
43
Evelyn Hanna, Author of
B\ Jane Guth
Back behind the fountain on Ros-
well Square, surrounded b\ old magno-
lias and oaks, overlooking two verandas,
white-columned and windowed from
floor to ceiling, in a green armchair-
desk, sits a brilliant mind, housed in the
body of Evelyn Hanna. Now seventy-
eight, the author of Blackberry Winter,
Sugar in the Gourd, and The History of
Upson County, continues to read vora-
ciously and to comment on everything
with a breathtaking wit and insight that
both startles and delights.
What does she think of the novels of
today? "Oh. this is the age of biog-
raphy." she replies, and spreads her
hands over several books on the ottoman
before her. "Some of the best biog-
raphies ever are being written now
really good ones, well-researched. Take,
for example, this book on the life of
Charlotte Bronte. Then there have been
others in recent years on Thomas Wolfe,
Edith Wharton, but of course the really
superb biography, the best ever written
is Boswell's Life of Johnson."
One of the daily tasks of Chestene, the
indispensible caretaker of "Miss Eve-
lyn," is to return armfuls of books to
Roswell's Public Library, which Evelyn
helped found and to bring back another
armful for the next few days' reading.
"The mind just keeps on working,"
Evelyn explains, "although the body is
degenerating."
To understand the mind of Evelyn
Hanna is to go back to the days when she
was young a fiery-eyed young lady,
quite surprisingly the author of a novel
which was being considered for a
Pulitzer Prize Award, standing in the
office of her English publisher in Lon-
don, demanding to know why the word,
"Rebs" in her novel had been changed
to "Reds," and "muscadine wine" to
"nettle beer"! Surveying her. in her
tartan-plaid suit and her red felt breton.
Robert Sommerville. who was to be-
come her husband, must have been
amused and impressed that an American
author would cherish her southern tradi-
tions to the extent of crossing the
Atlantic to defend them. Of course, the
words "Rebs" and "muscadine wine"
Evelyn Hanna Sommerville '23
were reinstated in the next English
edition of Blackberry Winter which was
issued to an eager public under the
modest library advertisement of "Much
better than Gone with the Wind."
And to understand how Evelyn Hanna
became a writer is to go back to her
childhood when she wrote her first essay
one Sunday afternoon on "The Cruelty
of Parents," after being told by her
mother that she must take off her best
Sunday dress on coming home from
church and Sunday School. The essay
proved to be a very satisfying experi-
ence, as well as theraputic. Then, not
long after leaving college. Evelyn was
commissioned by the Upson County
Historical Society to write its story.
Accompanied by her mother, she went
into courthouses and family archives to
uncover pages of fascinating facts equal
to any early American pioneer drama.
The seeds for her forthcoming novel
were found here.
Like any red-blooded American au-
thor. Evelyn wound up in New York
City, with a manuscript under her arm
and stars in her eyes. Here she and a
girlhood friend took an apartment and
soon made contact with Columbia Uni-
versity, where two professors suggested
important changes in the sequence of her
novel. After much work, "hard, labori-
ous work," as Evelyn reminds young
writers. Blackberry Winter was pub-
lished and she became the newest
discovery of the literary world. Her
scrapbooks of newspaper articles show
the acclaim she received and the audi-
ences she lectured to, from New York to
California. Among her literary acquain-
tences and advisors were Jonathon
Daniels, Conrad Aiken (whose house she
lived in in England) Edna Ferber. Robert
Nathan. Colonel and Mrs. Clifford
Early, and many others.
After a long and arduous pursuit,
Robert Sommerville finally won the
hand of his American novelist. They
settled down in a flat in London she to
write for several years her famous
column for the Atlanta Constitution and
he to continue to manage the business
which he had inherited from his father,
Robert L. Sommerville, Esquire. Robert
also continued to hold the position of
sub-editor of the London News Chroni-
cle. Eventually, the couple came to
America and to the South, where Evelyn
really belongs. For the next decade, their
antebellum house built in 1840 absorbed
their creative abilities. As director of
Atlanta's transit system and lecturer at
Emory University, the University of
Alabama, and the University of Wiscon-
sin. Robert Sommerville gave to the
business world and to the intellectual
world distinct contributions. He and
Evelyn were "at home" on "Holly
Hill," their restored raised cottage in
Roswell, and at their beautifully fur-
nished apartment in Atlanta. In 1968
Robert had a series of heart attacks
which finally claimed his life. Evelyn
was left a widow.
Wandering through the house which
she and her English squire restored,
Evelyn points out many reminders of the
past. A bronze vase she found in Italy,
the wrought iron fencing she and Robert
brought over from an old English man-
sard roof in London, the Italian marble
fireplaces that were shipped to Savan-
nah, then carried by oxcart to "Holly
44
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Mackberry Winter Visited
)des '38
Hill" when the house was being built. If
you are lucky and the weather is right,
you may have tea and shrimp bisque
served by Chestene on the back veranda
which runs the full length of the house.
Looking down on the landscaped
grounds below you can see the small
greenhouse where Robert grew his favo-
rite orchids.
Finally, you will most certainly walk
up the twenty-three steps to fiddler's
gallery where the Hanna library is
housed. Here where orchestras once
played for balls in the spacious hall
below, row after row of books, first
editions, bearing famous autographs,
appear. Recently, Evelyn has divided
most of her books between Emory and
Agnes Scott, to be awarded after her
death. For she says, "These are my
children. I have never had any others."
In the coveted collection are a first
edition of A Connecticut Yankee in King
Arthur's Court, a first American edition
of Lord Byron's poems, and a first
edition of John Brown's Body. Auto-
graphed editions include Boswell's Jour-
nal of a Tour to the Hebrides with
Samuel Johnson and a novel by Somer-
set Maugham. A rare volume, a first
editon of Blackberry Winter bound in
maroon morocco leather, will go to her
nephew in New York. And a few
volumes of special interest will go to her
niece in Atlanta, who is already "on the
downward path" of becoming a book-
worm, as Evelyn puts it.
Of her brief stay at Agnes Scott,
Evelyn says, "Agnes Scott is tough. You
have to be tough to graduate from there.
I couldn't take the math and science. I
wanted only to read and write. By the
time I entered high school I had already
read all of the classics in my father's
library Thackeray, Dickens, Shake-
speare, Sir Walter Scott, Edward Bulwer
Lytton, and others.
Perhaps the spirit of Evelyn Hanna is
in part of every character she has
created in her novels. Whatever it is, she
possesses determination. Although a
semi-invalid, she walked up the twenty-
three steps to her fiddler's gallery each
day in preparation for her appearance as
one of our beloved and revered alumnae
authors at Agnes Scott College's 1979
Alumnae Day. She is indomitable.
- ***** \ y\M
gefAgs .-- r ^
wm> -;^^ r ^mm^----' \
Holly Hill, drawn by Ernest E. DeVane for The Roswell Historical Society
Fall 1979
45
Freshmen Score High on Academic/ Leadership Ability
By Judy Maguire Tindel '73
Director of Admissions
On September 5, nearly 150 new
freshmen arrived at Agnes Scott. The
day was the culmination of what had
been for many of the students a long,
intensive search for the right college.
The members of the class of 1983 were
carefully selected by Agnes Scott's
Admissions Committee from a slightly
larger freshman applicant pool than in
recent years. The Admissions Commit-
tee had spent many hours in 1978 and
1979 reviewing hundreds of files before
offering admission to the young women
who gave evidence of the ability to
succeed in Agnes Scott's demanding
programs. The class of 1983 chose Agnes
Scott over many other colleges by which
they were also accepted; these colleges
include Emory, Vanderbilt, UNC-
Chapel Hill, Duke, Randolph-Macon
Woman's College, Rice, Georgia Tech,
University of Georgia, William and
Mary, and Furman. The students' pri-
mary reason for enrolling at Agnes Scott
was the College's reputation for
academic excellence.
The academic profile of the class is
outstanding. Nearly 33% of the fresh-
men ranked by their schools placed
within the top 59? of their high school
classes, 51% ranked within the top 10%,
seventy-eight within the top 25%, and
virtually all within the top 50%. Seventy-
three percent of the class graduated from
public schools and 27% from private.
There are four Agnes Scott College
National Merit Scholars in the class.
SAT averages for the Agnes Scott
class contrasted to national trends to-
wards declining scores and increased
over 1978 averages by several points.
1979 SAT score averages for women are
as follow:
Southern Agnes
National Regional Georgia Scott
Verbal 423 405 385 538
Math 44'- 423_ 405. _5_2?
Composite X66 828 790 1067
The 1979 ACT profile is much the
same with the Agnes Scott average of 25
substantially higher than the national
average for women of 17.9 and the
southern regional average of 16.5.
The geographical distribution of the
class includes twenty-one states, Puerto
Rico, Austria, Australia. Colombia, Fin-
land, and Germany. The Southeast con-
tinues to be the most heavily represented
region and Georgia the largest state.
Forty-four percent of the class are
residents of Georgia.
Extracurricular activities of the class
reflect heavy academic honors with 85%
of the class having received awards.
There is great interest in civic and
community involvement with 57% of the
class noting such commitments while in
high school. Nearly 50% of the class
listed active involvement in athletics
including among others soccer, gymnas-
tics, track, cross country, and even
weight lifting! Over a third of the class
held positions of leadership in school or
extracurricular activities. A third of the
class listed interest and involvement in
activities related to the fine arts.
There are eighteen daughters of alum-
nae and twelve sisters of alumnae in the
class. The educational level of parents of
the freshmen is varied: 26% of the
fathers and 45% of the mothers have no
or some college, 33% of the fathers and
41% of the mothers hold bachelor's
degrees, 11% of the fathers and 11% of
the mothers hold master's degrees, 21%
of the fathers and 1% of the mothers
have advanced professional degrees, and
9% of the fathers and 2% of the mothers
hold Ph.D.s. Parental occupations vary
greatly, although a high percentage of
fathers are employed in the medical,
legal, and engineering professions and in
business. In addition, there are, among
others, ministers, college professors,
members of the armed services, a
mayor, a diplomat, a forklift driver, an
aircraft mechanic, a sheet metal worker.
and an FBI agent. Mothers' occupations
include many elementary and secondary
school teachers, three college profes-
sors, a physician, an accountant, a police
department radio dispatcher, a marriage
and family counselor, and an interior
designer.
Financial aid continues to be essential
to students entering Agnes Scott and
Agnes Scott continues its commitment to
meet their financial need. Nearly 45% of
the 1979 freshmen receive institutional
need-based aid. The college tuition, fees,
room, and board total $5,050 in 1979. Of
those freshmen receiving financial aid.
the following chart provides a picture of
income ranges and average awards.
Average award
% of aid re-
(including ASC
c i p i e n t s
grants, loans.
Total
within each
employment.
Family
i n c o m e
and State and
Income
range
Federal grants)
S 0-
9,999
15%
$4,620
$10,000 -
14,999
18%
$4,381
$15,000 -
19,999
18%
$3,849
$20,000
24.999
26%
$2,694
$25,000 -
29.999
12%
$2,134
$30,000 -
34,999
9%
$1,963
$35,000
39,999
1%
$ 400
$40,000 -
1%
$3,604
A quick review of the freshman class
academically, geographically, socio-
economically. and socially reveals a
strong, able, and diverse group of
well-rounded young women. We are
proud to call them Agnes Scott students.
46
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Franklin Scholarship Fund Established
By Andrea Helms
Swainsboro, Georgia, native Marian
Franklin Anderson '40 of Atlanta has
established, in memory of her parents,
the Rufus C. and Wynie Coleman
Franklin Memorial Scholarship Fund for
Emanuel County (Georgia) high school
girls who attend Agnes Scott.
Marian's father. Dr. Rufus C. Frank-
lin, was a physician in Emanuel County
for over twenty-five years, and her
mother, Wynie Coleman, was a native of
the county.
The chief purpose of the Franklin
Memorial Scholarship Fund, in Marian's
words, is "to encourage the attendance
at Agnes Scott of superior students from
Emanuel County who wish to receive an
education of high quality such as the one
which was offered me by the College."
Marian has given over $50,000 for the
scholarship fund. This gift is large
enough to provide a student from
Emanuel County with at least $2,500 a
year while she is attending Agnes Scott.
Should a scholarship student have
financial need above the amount of the
Franklin Memorial Scholarship, such
need will be met fully through Agnes
Scott's regular financial aid funds. How-
ever, financial need is not a primary
qualification for being awarded the
scholarship.
Recipients of the Franklin Scholarship
will be selected by the College on the
basis of character and superior academic
achievement and promise. The scholar-
ship is renewable so long as the reci-
pient's performance lives up to the
promise indicated by her entering
record.
Marian Franklin Anderson '40
Alumnae Clipping Service Requested
The Agnes Scott news office and the
alumnae office are establishing an Alum-
nae Clipping Service. We're asking
alumnae everywhere to send us clippings
about Agnes Scott College, her students,
her faculty and administration, and her
alumnae.
The news service sends out hundreds
of stories each year and needs to
evaluate their usage throughout the
country. The alumnae office wants clip-
pings about alumnae to augment its
records. The office of alumnae affairs
keeps individual folders to preserve
information and correspondence pertain-
ing to each alumna.
The College is interested in any item
that mentions Agnes Scott, her history,
her present scene, her students, her
alumnae; stories about Honors Day,
Who's Who, Founder's Day, alumnae
club meetings; births, marriages, deaths;
news stories, feature stories, pictures
with cutlines.
If you send us a clipping at the
Alumnae Office, Agnes Scott College,
Decatur, Georgia 30030, we'll send you a
postpaid return envelope to use the next
time you find an Agnes Scott item in one
of your local publications. We'd ap-
preciate your help by being the Alumnae
Clipping Service.
Fall 1979
47
New Assistant joins Staff
fiy Jet Harper '77
Denise McFall, left, and students confer.
Denise Hunter McFall has joined the
Agnes Scott staff in a dual role as
assistant to both the director of admis-
sions and the dean of students. A
graduate of North Carolina Central
University with a B.A. in English and
education and a native of Westchester
County, New York, Denise comes to
Agnes Scott after two years at Emory
University.
From the Admissions Office Denise
works with Student Admissions Rep-
resentatives and also travels for recruit-
ment, focusing on national metropolitan
areas, particularly in the Southeast. In
addition. Denise serves as liaison be-
tween the Admissions Office and the
Public Relations Office. Her work in the
Office of the Dean of Students consists
of advising various student organiza-
tions, such as Students for Black Aware-
ness, and she will also assume counsel-
ing activities.
While at Emory's Nell Hodgson
Woodruff School of Nursing, Denise
was project director for a federally-
funded project aimed at the recruitment,
admission, and retention of minority
students into the university's various
academic programs. Denise was respon-
sible for the development and implemen-
tation of this program, as well as the
creation of appropriate academic and
non-academic support systems, such as
tutorial sessions and counseling. She
belonged to several committees, includ-
ing the university's Affirmative Action
Subcommittee on the Handicapped,
Committee on the Status of Women,
Black Caucas, Employee Training Task
Force, and the nursing school's Affirma-
tive Action Committee. She was the
chairperson of the school's Minority
Recruitment and Retention Advisory
Committee.
Prior to moving to Atlanta, Denise and
husband Bernard lived in Charleston.
South Carolina, where she was assistant
advertising director and media specialist
for the Sam Solomon Company, and
earlier, copy chief and production coor-
dinator for a radio station there. Her
work in New York, where Denise lived
before moving to Charleston, includes
media and broadcast work as well as
teaching in an elementary school.
Denise is pleased and excited to be
part of the Agnes Scott community. She
sees the College's flexibility in fitting the
job to the person as one of the strengths
of a small college. Denise says she is
working in "three areas of great interest
to me interacting with students, re-
cruiting and admissions, and also utiliz-
ing my public relations background."
With her talents and experience. Denise
is a welcome asset to the College
community.
48
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Association Plans Tours
Great Britain Trip
The Agnes Scott Alumnae Associa-
tion is planning two trips in 1980, one to
Great Britain and one to Italy. Both
tours offer two options.
In August of 1980, alumnae will leave
Atlanta for London. The nine-day Op-
tion I will provide accommodations in
small inns or hotels in Stratford, Conti-
nental breakfast and dinner, free use of a
rental car with unlimited mileage allow-
ance and deductible collision insurance
throughout the stay (exclusive of
gasoline), transfer from London airport
to Stratford and return, and a fully
staffed hospitality desk. This option
costs $989 per person.
Option II of the Great Britain tour is a
nine-day bus tour through England and
Scotland with stays in London, Strat-
ford, Harrogate, Edinburgh, and Carlisle
and includes Continental breakfast and
lunch or dinner every day and a tour
escort. Cost is $1,099 per person.
Italian Trip
The Italian trip is scheduled for
October of 1980, leaving from Atlanta
and arriving in Rome, with a duration of
eight days and seven nights. Option I
will concentrate on Rome and the
Vatican City with optional tours that
can be arranged to Florence;
Naples/Capri/Sorrento; Pompeii; and
Venice. The cost for Option I is $689 per
person.
A bus tour, Option II visits Rome,
Venice, and Florence and costs $829 per
person. Both options of the Italian tour
provide accommodations in first class
hotels (double occupancy), Continental
breakfasts every day, private bus trans-
fers from airport to hotels and return.
Option I will provide a hospitality desk,
and Option II includes a full-time tour
director.
Watch for further notices.
49
In Memoriam
Arthur F. Raper, B.A.. M.A., Ph.D.,
former acting professor of sociology at
Agnes Scott from 1933 until 1939, died
August 10, 1979. He was a resident of
Oakton, Va.
In the late 1920s and for most of the
1930s Mr. Raper was research secretary
for the Atlanta headquarters of the
Commission on Interracial Cooperation.
He subsequently served as a U.S.
adviser on rural, urban, and industrial
development to foreign countries. He
was the author of Tragedy of Lynching,
Preface to Peasantry, Sharecroppers All,
Tenants of the Almighty, and Rural
Taiwan Problem and Promise.
Mary Currie, B.A., M.C.E., a former
director of Christian education who
came to Agnes Scott in 1965 to serve on
the dean of students' staff as senior
resident, died August 15. 1979, at the
home of her sister in Hamlet, N.C.
Before she left the campus in 1976, she
had served as assistant dean of students
and later, as special development
officer.
Eleanor Brown McCain, wife of Paul
Moffatt McCain, died July 5, 1979.
Though she was not an alumna nor a
member of the faculty or administrative
staff, she was an integral part of the
College community. She first became
associated with the College as daughter-
in-law of former President James Ross
McCain; then.in 1969 when her husband,
Paul, became Agnes Scott's vice presi-
dent for development, they moved to
South Candler Street, adjacent to the
campus, where she lived the remainder
of her life. She was a friend to all who
knew her.
Sentimental Pilgrimage
By W. Edward McNair
This past summer it was my good
fortune to journey for the fourth time to
Stratford, Ontario, to attend the marvel-
ous dramatic performances that are
annually presented there. This time 1
planned my trip to include a stop in
Alexandria, Huntingdon County, Penn-
sylvania, so that I could visit the grave of
Agnes Irvin Scott for whom Agnes Scott
College is named. Some might call this a
sentimental pilgrimage. Perhaps it was.
At any rate, in the early afternoon of
August 10 I reached Alexandria, a small
town in the Juniata River valley. Alexan-
dria (population 495) is off the main
road, and one will not ordinarily pass
through it unless he takes special pains
to do so. It is located in the mountainous
country of central Pennsylvania about
two hundred miles west of Philadelphia.
When one observes the rugged terrain,
he cannot help marveling at the determi-
nation and strength of those who. like
Agnes Irvin and her mother, pursued
their way into such territory before the
days of canals, railroads, and highways.
Agnes Irvin came to Alexandria from
Ireland in the spring of 1816. She was
then almost seventeen years old. Five
years later she married John Scott. In
1829 her fourth child, George, was born,
and it was he who founded Agnes Scott
College and named it for his mother.
The old Presbyterian burying ground,
now the town cemetery in Alexandria, is
on a gentle rise overlooking the com-
munity. I had no knowledge of which
grave was Agnes Scott's; thus, there was
no way of finding it but to canvass all the
graves in the old part of the plot.
Fortunately, because the grave is clearly
Edward McNair visits Agnes Scott's grave.
marked, I was able to find it in a matter
of minutes and pay my respects to this
woman whose name I have used
thousands of times.
On the gravestone there is simply her
name and the appropriate dates, etc.. but
nothing about how she has been immor-
talized through one of America's most
distinguished colleges for women.
Perhaps the correction of this omission
might become a College project. Any-
way, I'm glad I went to Alexandria
possibly the first Agnes Scott College
person ever to visit Agnes Scott's grave!
50
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
With the Clubs
Barrow-Gwi nett-
Newton
BGN Alums turned out in the largest
numbers yet to hear Dr. Edward
McNair's popular talk on "Anecdotes of
Agnes Scott" at their September 14
meeting in Lawrenceville, Ga. Club
President Julia Kennedy '60 reported
that a letter from Lois Turner Swords
'77, assistant to the director of admis-
sions, was read, informing the group that
seven high school students from the
BGN area were entered at Agnes Scott.
The club was thanked for its successful
recruitment efforts. Plans for the future
include a business meeting in November
and guest speakers for February and
May.
Charleston
A Summer fete honoring current stu-
dents and prospective students of the
Charleston, S. C, area took place
August 21 at the home of Ruth Hyatt
Heffron '70 in Mount Pleasant. Club
President Allyn Smoak Bruce '68 re-
ported "a very successful evening,"
which gave alums, students, and pros-
pective students an opportunity to get
acquainted.
Columbia
South Carolina alums in the Columbia
area invited returning and prospective
Agnes Scotters to a Coke party given at
Quail Run Apartments August 11. Club
Secretary Janet E. Short '73 wrote that
the group is very much interested in
helping the College recruit new students
and has hostessed a number of parties in
the past also for this purpose.
Dallas-Fort Worth
Freshman Anne Drue Miller and her
parents, John and Jane Miller, were
honored by alums and husbands at a
dessert party August 22 at the home of
Susan Aspinall Block '64. Reporting on
the event, Susan wrote, "Have you ever
seen a stack of Silhouettes spanning
almost 40 years of Agnes Scott? During
dessert and coffee Anne Drue viewed all
Director of Admissions Judy Maguire Tindel '73 speaks at Charleston meeting.
Fall 1979
51
With the Clubs
the annuals brought by alumnae, ranging
from Winnie Kellersberger Vass '38 to
Martha Parks Little '68. Joan Lawrence
Rogers '49, Lucy Hamilton Lewis '68,
and Marsha Knight-Orr '73 told the
Millers of their own freshman experi-
ences. Club President Mary Monroe
McLoughlin '45 expressed each alum-
na's vicarious pleasure at seeing Anne
Drue's excitement as she enters her first
year at Agnes Scott."
Decatur
Alumnae from the Decatur area wel-
comed Dr. and Mrs. Marvin B. Perry,
Jr., at the club's annual fall luncheon
September 27 at Druid Hills Golf Club.
A very large group of about seventy
listened as campus events and develop-
ments were described by the president in
his talk. Mrs. Perry gave the blessing.
Assistant Director of Career Planning
Libby Dowd Wood, Dean of Students
Marty Kirkland, and members of the
Alumnae Office staff were among the
group present. Club President Mary Ben
Wright Erwin '25 presided.
Evening
(Metropolitan Atlanta)
The Evening Club began its new year
of programs September 24 with Dr. Bill
Weber of the economics department
speaking on the importance of
economics at Agnes, Scott. With the
Alumnae House's living room full and
overflowing. President Susan Balch
Clapham '75 led the meeting, and com-
mittees were formed for the club's
annual book discussion in January, an
ice cream social for seniors, and a
financial seminar for students.
Muscle Shoals Area
A Beautiful Afternoon tea drew
together alumnae from the northwest
part of Alabama at the home of Mary
Hollingsworth Hatfield '39 in Florence
September 27. Co-hostess was Jane
Kelly Watson '62. Katherine Akin "76.
assistant to Agnes Scott's director of
admissions, in Alabama to interview
prospective students for" the College,
was honor guest and speaker. Illustrating
her talk with a slide show, she presented
"A Campus Update" for the alums and
mothers of current students.
Kentuckiana Club holds annual picnic in July.
New Orleans
Hurricane Bob blew away plans for
the mid-summer meeting of the New
Orleans Club, planned for July 11 at the
New Orleans Hilton. The storm hit the
very day an alumnae luncheon was to
bring together Regional Vice President
Peggy Hooker Hartwein '53, New Or-
leans Club President Sarah Turner Ryan
'36, Betty Brougher Campbell "43, Peggy
Lamberson '78, Mary Elizabeth Barrett
Alldredge '41. Mary Catherine Matthews
Starr "37, Gail Nelson Blain "33, Noel
Barnes Williams '51, Ruth VanDeman
Walters '66, Mary Seagle Edelblut '42,
and Evelyn Baty Landis '40. Alumnae
Director Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
was already in town attending a confer-
ence and had planned a campus update
for the group but cancelled the gathering
as winds blew stronger. No bad alumnae
damage or casualties except the lun-
cheon.
Kentuckiana
For the third summer alums and
families of the Kentucky-Indiana border
area gathered for fun and picnicking July
7. Anne Eyler Clodfelter '60 and hus-
band Don hosted the event at their
lakeside home in Brownstown, Ind.
"Swimming, boating, water-skiing, and
fishing made the day fly by," wrote Club
President Edith Towers Davis '60.
"Three members of the class of '60
Anne, Edith and Mary Carrington Wil-
son Fox plus Mary Cla-yton Bryan
DuBard '59 enjoyed reminiscing about
shared experiences at Agnes Scott.
Elaine Orr Wise '65 told about the
changes when she attended five years
later. Toward dusk the group sat on the
dam and watched dirt track racing
below. Everybody left tired and happy
and looking forward to next year's
outing." The club has invited Dr. Mar-
garet Pepperdene as luncheon speaker
next March.
Young Atlanta
The Young Atlanta Club opened the
year's programs with a very successful
gathering September 11. Melissa Holt
Vandiver '73. professional wardrobe
consultant, gave an interesting and infor-
mative program entitled "Expressing
Your Personal Style: how to dress well
on a budget and still knock 'em dead."
The group of about thirty-five -met in
Rich's auditorium at Lenox Square for
Melissa's talk, demonstration, and prac-
tical tips.
52
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Linda Preston Watts '66; Debbie Jackson Williams '73; Sally Lloyd Grace Harris Durant '15. Gladys Gaines Field '17. Dr. Perry, and
Proctor '72, President; and Carolyn Webb Thomas '75 are officers for Edith Roark Van Sickle '21 attended Mobile club dinner in March,
the newly formed club of Mobile.
Beth McFadden '75 date, and parents of prospective students mingle at dinner at Martha Lambeth Harris '61 and Vivian Weaver Maitland '53
Country Club of Mobile. at Mobile club dinner
Lu Cunningham Beville '46 planned candlelight dinner for Perrys, alumns, Ann Tiffin Hays Greer '52 and Ellen Perry chat with Gladys
prospective students and their parents. Field.
Fall 1979
53
Eva Ann Pirkle Winter '40 advises students.
Construction Is Her Special Field
Mathematics opened the door
to a career in teaching building
construction management for
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
associate professor Eva Ann Pirk-
le Winter '40. Eva Ann is one of
the few women educators in con-
struction management nationally
and the only one at UN-L. A
mathematics and Latin major and
Phi Beta Kappa graduate of
Agnes Scott, Eva Ann received
her master's in mathematics from
Duke University in 1944. She
leads a busy life as professor,
advisor, author, wife, and mother
and is the recipient of awards and
honorary memberships.
Eva Ann returned to work in
1967, after a twenty-year ab-
sence, as math instructor at UN-
L. In 1974 the university trans-
ferred and promoted her to the
College of Engineering as an
assistant professor in construc-
tion management. The move
came when Eva Ann indicated
she possessed the skills necessary
to teach two of the construction
management courses in computa-
tion and analysis. She had the
mathematical skills and know-
ledge of the application of compu-
ters in the construction industry
and of the contruction industry
itself. In 1977 Eva Ann was
promoted to associate professor
of construction management and
given tenure.
She is faculty advisor to both
the student chapters of the Socie-
ty of Women Engineers and the
Associated General Contractors
of America. Eva Ann wrote For-
tran for Construction, used by the
construction management depart-
ment as a textbook for a course
required of all construction man-
agement and architecture majors.
Also, she designed and developed
the Construction Management
Achievement Survey, a follow-up
of graduates asking for informa-
tion on kinds of jobs they hold,
geographical locations, salary
levels, additional education, etc.
The culmination of all this
activity came in 1977 when Eva
Ann received the undergraduate
Teaching Award for the College
of Engineering. These $1,000
awards, established in 1977 by the
Nebraska State Legislature, en-
courage excellence in under-
graduate teaching. The College of
Engineering was authorized to
present one award that year, and
Eva Ann was the college's first
recipient. Another indication of
Eva Ann's skill and ability came
when she was granted member-
ship in the Society of Women
Engineers, although she is not an
engineer.
In addition to her regular
teaching activities, Eva Ann ac-
tively participated in the instiga-
tion of a new and very successful
workshop on careers in science
for women. The 1977 workshop
was financed and encouraged by
UN-L's Colleges of Arts and
Sciences, Engineering, and Ag-
riculture. Eva Ann represented
the College of Engineering on the
planning committee. Based on the
experience gained in this work-
shop, two members of the UN-L
Graduate Women in Science ap-
plied for and received a National
Science Foundation grant to con-
duct a workshop on the same
topic in 1978. A planning commit-
tee was organzied to implement
the grant, and again Eva Ann
served as the representative of
the College of Engineering. In the
1978 workshop Eva Ann was
responsible for securing the dis-
cussion leaders. There were twen-
ty-six of these women, all recog-
nized as leaders in their own areas
of expertise. The workshop was
an outstanding success with over
200 students attending. A discus-
sion panel was videotaped by the
University of Nebraska's educa-
tional television station, and the
program has been aired re-
peatedly.
Never idle, Eva Ann is present-
ly working on a new course she'll
begin teaching in the spring of
1980 a survey of data manage-
ment systems as related to the
construction industry. To get in-
formation on the "state of the
art" among Nebraska contractors
who are members of Associated
General Contractors, Eva Ann
will conduct a survey to deter-
mine what use Nebraska contrac-
tors currently are making of com-
puters and what uses they antici-
pate or would be interested in in
the future.
Eva Ann's honorary member-
ships include Sigma Lambda Chi,
national scholastic honor society
for construction; Tau Sigma
Delta, national honor society for
architecture and allied arts; and
Sigma Xi, national science honor
society of which she is an as-
sociate member. She will be listed
in the 1980 (Fifth) edition of
World Who's Who of Women.
published in Cambridge, England.
Jet Harper
60
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Deaths
Faculty
Arthur F. Raper, August 10, 1979.
1940
James McGinnis, son of Sam
Olive Griffin McGinnis, May T.
1979.
1914
Zollie McArthur Saxon, July 10,
1979.
1923
Ethel Cockrell, July 22, 1979.
Imogene Allen Booth, April 22,
1979, sister of Clara May Allen
Reinero.
1929
Mrs. Carroll E. Greenleaf,
mother of Mildred Greenleaf
Walker, May 24, 1979.
Gilberta Knight Davis, March 13,
1979.
Jack McDonald, brother of
Eugenia McDonald Brown, June
24, 1979.
1931
Julia Wilson McMillan, June 8,
1979.
1932
Henry Joyner, husband of Mar-
tine Tuller Joyner, November 19,
1978.
1933
Jack McDonald, husband of
Lucile Heath McDonald, June 24,
1979.
1939
Imogene Allen Booth, sister of
Mary Allen Reding, April 22,
1979.
Terry Trux Lackland Cheeseman,
mother of Alice Cheeseman, May
3, 1979.
1941
Carolyn Strozier, May 25, 1979.
Mary Julia Means Head, October
30, 1978.
1945
Louis Isaacson, father of Ramona
Isaacson Freedman, June 7, 1979.
1946
Louis Isaacson, father of Louise
Isaacson Bernard, June 7, 1979.
1948
Zollie McArthur Saxon, mother
of Ann Saxon Johnson, July 10,
1979.
1954
Mrs. J. H. Kite, mother of
Catherine Kite Hastings, May 29,
1979.
1959
Rudolph Johnson, husband of
Sara Anne Frazier Johnson, April
14, 1979.
1964
Jill Keith-Lucas, mother of Sue
Keith-Lucas Carson, April 16,
1979.
1965
Elmo Harvey, father of Kay
Harvey Beebe, April 19, 1979.
1966
Imogene Allen Booth, mother of
Martha Booth Burleigh, April 22,
1979.
Fall 1979
65
66
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Mail Attached Card Now
Alumnae Association Seeks Nominations
Election of the following officers, with two-year terms,
will be held at the Annual Meeting on Alumnae Day, April
19, 1980:
The President is the national head of the volunteer work of
the Alumnae Association and is responsible for the work of
the Executive Board. She works closely with the director of
alumnae affairs on implementation of Association policy.
The Vice President serves as leader and resource person for
clubs, projects, and other activities of her region. (Vice
president of Region III must be from Florida, Georgia, or
Tennessee. Vice president of Region IV must be from
Alabama, Mississippi, or any state west of the Mississippi
River.)
The Secretary takes minutes at all meetings of the Executive
Committee, the Board, and the Alumnae Association. She is
also responsible for writing letters on behalf of the Board at
the president's request.
The Awards Chairman appoints a committee to select
Outstanding Alumnae to be honored at the Annual Meeting.
The Class Council Chairman heads all class officers in their
work for the Association and Agnes Scott. She corresponds
with class presidents, vice presidents, and secretaries and
coordinates their efforts relating to news gathering, re-
unions. Alumnae Weekend, and Alumnae Council.
The Club Chairman, in cooperation with the regional vice
presidents and the alumnae office, encourages the establish-
ment of new clubs and assists in facilitating the operations of
all clubs.
The Entertainment Chairman assists in planning social
events connected with Alumnae Weekend, Alumnae Coun-
cil, and any other Alumnae Association activity as needed.
The Projects Chairman researches possible fund-raising
plans which may be requested by individual clubs or the
Association.
The Publications Chairman is available to assist the alumnae
office staff in matters pertaining to the Alumnae Quarterly
and other alumnae publications.
Please list your nominees on the attached card accom-
panying this page and return to the alumnae office.
Christmas Citrus Purchases Benefit College
Tree ripened oranges
and grapefruit delivered
fresh from a grove in the
heart of the Florida citrus
belt. Order from November-
May. Prices include
shipping charges except
for the far west. No
shipment to Texas or
Arizona. Guaranteed for
safe arrival. Perfect gift
- ' '
for holidays and anniversaries. Deadline for Christmas
order is December 1. Phone orders accepted.
Send check and order form to:
Benson Groves, Inc.
3315 N. Orange Blossom Tr.
Orlando, FL 32804 Pho. (305) 293-8482
10% benefits the Central Florida ASC Alumnae Club.
Please mention our name when ordering additional fruit.
TREASURE TRUNK: Use this woven, dome top basket SHIP ORDER TO:
long after the '/; bushel of citrus has been enjoyed:
$22.00 for a basket of oranges ; grapefruit_ . ; Xmas del. .
mixed_
ORANGES AND GRAPEFRUIT
$19.95 for a bushel box of oranges
; mixed
$16.95 for 3 A bushel box of oranges
; mixed
$13.50 for Vi bushel box of oranges
; mixed
$ 8.95 for !4 bushel box of oranges
; mixed
$26.50 for a basket of citrus, pecans, tropical candy, Street or box #
marmalade, and jelly p.
Phone, if known
; grapefruit Gift card signed:
Sender's name _
; grapefruit
; grapefruit
; grapefruit
Street address
City
Other del. date
State
Zip
State
Zip
Phone
68
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
From the Director
Virginia Brown McKenzie
Executive Board Officers, 1979-80
Organized in 1895, the Alumnae As-
sociation of Agnes Scott has as its
purpose the futherance of the intellectu-
al, spiritual, and financial aims of the
College. Its work is done under the
leadership of an Executive Board
elected by the membership.
Pictured on this page are the members
of the Executive Board. Under each
name is noted the alumna's position and
her term of office. It is important for us
all to know who these creative and
dedicated volunteers are.
In January the Nominations Commit-
tee will name their choice for ten of the
jobs on this Board. The remaining
positions will be filled the following
year. Each office is for a two-year term.
Please consider carefully the ten offices
described in this publication and send
the postpaid card with your nominations
to the Alumnae Office.
Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
President
1978-80
Susan Blakemore Hannah '64
Vice President Region I
1979-81
Polly Page Moreau '62
Vice President Region II
1979-81
Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Vice President Region III
1978-80
Peggy Hooker Hartwein '53
Vice President Region IV
1978-80
Lebby Rogers Harrison '62
Secretary
1978-80
Susan Skinner Thomas '74
Treasurer
1979-81
Jane King Allen '59
Alumna Trustee
1976-80
Mary Duckworth Gellerstedt '46
Alumna Trustee
1978-82
Kathy Blee Ashe '
Career Advisory Chairman
1979-81
Anne Foster Curtis '64
Class Council Chairman
1978-80
Eleanor Lee McNeill '59
Club Chairman
1978-80
Betty Fountain Edwards Gray '35
Education Chairman
1979-81
Gayle Gellerstedt Daniel '71
Entertainment Chairman
1978-80
Barbara Wilber Gerland '43
House Chairman
1979-81
Mary Ben Wright Erwin '25
Nominations Chairman
1979-81
Blythe Posey Ashmore '58
Projects Chairman
1978-80
Caroline McKinney Clarke '27
Publications Chairman
1978-80
Anita Moses Shippen '60
Alumnae Admissions
Reps. Chairman
Dorothy Holtoran Addison '43
Alumnae Fund Chairman
1978-80
Nelle Chamlee Howard '34
Alumnae Garden
Chairman
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY, AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
THE
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY / WINTER 1980
The Department of Mathematics/ p. 2
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THE
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY/VOLUME 58 NUMBER 2
CONTENTS
1 Association President's Letter
2 Update:
The Department of Mathematics
By Dr. Sara Ripy
5 Women and the Freedom to Achieve
By Dr. Ayse Ilgaz-Carden
8 With the Clubs
9 From the Classes
Front Cover
Pythagorean theorem symbolizes verities of mathema-
tics.
Back Cover
Alumnae Weekend Schedule
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY STAFF:
Editor / Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Managing Editor Juliette Harper '77
Design Consultant John Stuart McKenzie
ALUMNAE OFFICE STAFF:
Director of Alumnae Affairs
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Coordinator for Clubs
Jean Chalmers Smith '38
Assistant to the Director
Juliette Harper '77
Secretary
Elizabeth Wood Smith '49
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS:
President / Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
Vice Presidents
Region I / Susan Blackmore Hannah '64
Region II / Polly Page Moreau '62
Region III / Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Region IV / Peggy Hooker Hartwein '53
Secretary / Lebby Rogers Harrison '62
Treasurer / Susan Skinner Thomas '74
Member . Council for Advancement and
Support of Education
Published four times yearly: Fall. Winter.
Spring, and Summer by Agnes Scott College
Alumnae Office. Decatur. Georgia 30030
Second class postage paid
at Decatur. Georgia.
(U.S.P.S. 009-280)
Alumnae Association President
joins National Work Force
Back to work. How many times have
those of us who were once professional-
ly employed dreamed of or even thought
about going back to work at a full-time,
nine-to-five, paying job?
We all remember the fun, the glamour,
the glory, and the excitement. We may
even still remember the challenges and
the exhilarating feeling of a job well
done. We may still see the people at the
other desks and remember the thrill of
handling a complex problem or of
meeting a nearly impossible publication
deadline. Clearly, we remember the
paychecks and even some of the things
on which we spent those paychecks.
Two months ago, I received that
long-thought-about phone call. "Come
to work," the voice said. The job was to
be terrific, the people exceptional, and
the work challenging. In the beginning,
the hours would be flexible, and I could
set up the structure of the organization
as I considered most effective.
Who could turn down such terms? I
couldn't; so on Monday, November 26,
1979, 1 became the Executive Director of
the New York Citizen's Committee for
the Democratic National Convention.
During the past three weeks, I have
been busy! My flexible hours are more
than nine to five. I have been to
twenty-seven meetings and have written
ninety-six letters. I have made and
received dozens of phone calls and have
been able to leave the office for lunch
only three or four times. I have begun to
draw up specific projects and programs
and have hired my staff and some of our
consultants. I have also begun to realize
what is truly involved in going back to
work.
I have learned that I must get out of
bed an hour and a half earlier each day to
organize my house and my life. No more
leisurely reading of the New York Times
over my second cup of tea in the
morning; I scan the headlines for politi-
By Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
President, Alumnae Association
cal news and hope that 1 am not too tired
to "read" the paper at the end of the
day. I cannot hear the fascinating lec-
tures and speeches which are available
on almost every day of the week at one
or another of New York's finest institu-
tions. No more matinees or opera re-
hearsals. No more twice-a-week tennis,
and absolutely no more of those long,
talky lunches with friends who have just
done this or read that. And most
importantly, no more board meetings. I
have already missed two International
Center board meetings where notes were
taken and decisions made which sub-
stantially affected the work of the
Center and its funding for its foreign
student programs for the coming year.
Why then have I taken this job? Why
am I working? Why have I given up my
comfortable (and rewarding) life style
for the problems of approximatley 6,000
delegates, 2,500 alternates, hundreds of
foreign dignitaries, and scores of press
and accompanying persons at a political
convention?
Well, I'm not absolutely sure; and as
there are two vice presidents from a
major international corporation waiting
to discuss with me what their company
can do for the convention, and as I have
an ad agency representative who wants
the Committee's business due in my
office in fifteen minutes, and as I have
on my phone "hold" button the person
with the greatest souvenir ever that he
wants me to buy and distribute to all
delegates, I just don't have the time to
figure out why I have done this. How
can I tell you why I have put myself in
this wild situation? I guess in my heart I
really do know why. It's fun; I work
extremely hard, and the job is most
rewarding. There is a great deal of
excitement, and, not insignificantly, I
am expecting my first paycheck at the
end of this week. These things are all
part of going back to work, and I love it.
Winter 1980
U pdate
The Departmer
The Mathematics Department at
Agnes Scott offers a curriculum which
has three fundamental purposes: to
serve all students in a liberal arts
environment, to give mathematics
majors a solid background for more
advanced study, and to help students
develop skills and acquire mathematical
tools which will be beneficial in the
marketplace. The statement:
The curriculum in the Department
of Mathematics is designed to help
students to think clearly and
logically, to analyze problems, to
understand and be able to use the
language, theory, and techniques
of mathematics, and to develop
skills and acquire mathematical
tools needed in the applications of
mathematics,
which appears in the mathematics
section of the 1979-1980 catalog, is itself
new. but the ideas it represents are not.
In so far as I know, that has been the
design of the department's curriculum
for many years. It is true that there have
been some changes from time to time but
basically the curriculum is a core
curriculum, and not subject to numerous
changes.
The following is a list of courses in the
curriculum at the present time. The
number in parentheses after a course
indicates the year in which it was added
to the curriculum. The courses with no
number in parentheses were offered in
some form in the 1958-59 session. In
many of them there have been changes
in the level, the title, the number of
credit hours, the emphasis, or even the
content to some extent.
101. Finite Mathematics (1965)
115. Elementary Statistics (1967)
120. Introductory Calculus. Analytic
Geometry I
121. Introductory Calculus, Analytic
Geometry II
150. Introduction to Computer
Programming (1969)
201. Differential and Integral Calculus
301. Fundamentals of Real Analysis
(1967)
Sara Ripy, department chairman, specializes in classical analysis.
307. Linear Algebra
309. Differential Equations
310. Advanced Calculus
312. Introduction to Numerical
Analysis
314. Introduction to Modern
Geometry
315. Topology (1962)
32 1 . Introduction to Modern Abstract
Algebra (1959)
322. Modern Abstract Algebra (1959)
328. Mathematical Statistics and
Probability
345. Topics in Mathematics (1974)
352. Theory of Functions of a
Complex Variable
410. Special Study
41 1. Mathematics Seminar (offered
1968-71. dropped, and added
again in 1978)
490. Independent Study
Even though the above listing is
complete, perhaps a few comments are
appropriate. In 1958 the basic course
was college algebra and trigonometry.
Elementary analysis (now 120. 121) was
added in 1959. Gradually it became the
basic course. College algebra and
trigonometry was dropped in 1965 and
finite mathematics was added. The
major upper level course changes have
been the additions of abstract algebra in
1959. topology in 1962. and
fundamentals of real analysis in 1967.
Mathematics 345 enables us to enlarge
the curriculum without the commitment
demanded by the normal addition of a
course. One course offered as a topic.
Mathematical Models and Applications,
will be added to our curriculum next
year. Other topics that have been or will
be offered are number theory. Boolean
algebra, calculus on manifolds, and
game theory. A course in the history of
mathematics will be added next year.
Mathematics 410 and Mathematics 490
offer the student the opportunity to do
independent study in an area of interest
to her. More structure for the major was
approved in 1972. The specific
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
f Mathematics
Ripy
Bob Leslie's emphasis is in differential equations.
Albert Sheffer's areas of interest are Lie algebra and Lie groups.
requirements for the major at the present
time are 201, 301, 307, 321, one of 310,
315, 352, and one of 309, 312, 328, with a
minimum of forty-five credit hours and a
maximum of seventy-two credit hours.
Next year the seminar will be required
for the major.
During the decade of the sixties one
hundred and sixty-six students
graduated from Agnes Scott with a
major in mathematics. During the
decade of the seventies there were
seventy-six.
Our majors have adequate preparation
for graduate study. In recent years
majors have been accepted for graduate
work in mathematics at such universities
as Clemson, Colorado State, Duke,
Emory, Texas, and Vanderbilt.
The department has maintained a
traditional liberal arts approach to the
study of mathematics and has not
succumbed to the increasing demands
for strictly career-oriented courses. It is
true that mathematics is a practical
major as well as an intellectually sound
and stimulating one. Also it is true that
employers do appreciate the skills which
are developed in studying mathematics.
Courses such as statistics and
probability, computer programming, and
numerical analysis provide the student
with mathematical tools which are useful
in many professions. Recent majors
have been employed by corporations
such as IBM. International Harvester,
Southern Bell, and Westinghouse. Other
mathematics majors have completed
M.B.A. programs. Still others have
become teachers and/or administrators
at the elementary level, at the secondary
level, and at the college level.
In 1975 a dual degree program in
engineering with Georgia Tech was
established. Later the joint program was
extended to include information and
computer science, industrial
management, and management science.
A participant in the program attends
Agnes Scott for three years and Georgia
Tech for two. Upon the completion of
her work, she receives the B.A. degree
from Agnes Scott and also a bachelor's
degree from Georgia Tech. The
Winter 1980
Mathematics
(continued)
engineering student takes mathematics
through linear algebra and differential
equations. One student (a mathematics
major here) has completed the program
and two students are studying at Tech
now. A number of our present students
have indicated an interest in the
program. And last year the faculty
approved an interdepartmental major in
mathematics-physics.
Majors in disciplines such as
chemistry, economics, physics, physics-
astronomy, and sociology are required to
take certain mathematics courses.
Mathematics 101. 115, 120, 121, 150, and
328 are courses which may be taken as
part of the Preparatory Program for
Business. The dual degree program, the
business prep program, and majors in
other disciplines are not under the
direction of the mathematics
department; nonetheless, the
mathematics courses included in each
are a concern of the department. They
must be considered in planning our
curriculum.
The department believes that
mathematics is a basic component of the
liberal arts and that a knowledge of
mathematics is a valuable possession.
Besides possessing intrinsic beauty and
value, higher mathematics is
indispensable to a genuine understanding
of much of man's intellectual
achievement. Its study is challenging and
can be very rewarding. It serves as the
common language of the sciences, even
the social sciences to an increasing
extent. Morris Kline puts it this way:
Mathematics is a model of exact
reasoning, an absorbing challenge to
the mind, an esthetic experience for
creators and some students, a
nightmarish experience to other
students, and an outlet for the
egotistic display of mental power. But
historically, intellectually, and
practically, mathematics is primarily
man's finest creation for the
investigation of nature. The major
concepts, broad methods, and even
specific theorems have been derived
from the study of nature; and
mathematics is valuable largely
'Morris Kline. Mathematics and the Physical
W-W/i/INew York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company.
1959), p. vii.
-'Michael Spivak. Calculus on Manifolds: A
Modern Approach to Classical Theorems of
Advanced CalculusiNew York: W. A. Benjamin.
Inc., 1965), p. v.
Don Young's speciality is control theory.
because of its contributions to the
understanding and mastery of the
physical world. These contributions
are numerous. 1
Mathematics is not static. All one
needs to do to get some indication of the
current areas of research activity in the
discipline is to look at a recent issue of
the Mathematical Reviews. In 1965
Robert Gunning and Hugo Rossi wrote;
Mathematics has been expanding in all
directions at a fabulous rate during the
past half century. New fields have
emerged, the diffusion into other
disciplines has proceeded apace, and
our knowledge of the classical areas
has grown ever more profound. At the
same time, one of the most striking
trends in modern mathematics is the
constantly increasing interrelationship
between its various branches. Thus
the present-day students of
mathematics are faced with an
immense mountain of material. In
addition to the traditional areas of
mathematics as presented in the
traditional manner and these
presentations do abound there are
the new and often enlightening ways
of looking at these traditional areas,
and also the vast new areas teeming
with potentialities. Much of this new
material is scattered indigestibly
throughout the research journals, and
frequently coherently organized only
in the minds or unpublished notes of
the working mathematicians. And
students desperately need to learn
more and more of this material. 3
In the fall of 1977 Dr. Stephen
Puckette, who is a member of the
mathematics department at the
University of the South, visited our
campus as a mathematics consultant.
This service was provided at our request
by the Mathematical Association of
America. At that particular time it
seemed most appropriate to have the
department examined impartially with
special attention given to the curriculum
and recommendations made for a
replacement for Mr. Wilde. Ron Wilde
(M.A.T.. Duke University) taught in the
department from 1965 until his
retirement in 1978.
The members of the department at the
present time are Robert Leslie (Ph.D.,
University of Georgia), who came in
1970; Albert Sheffer. Jr.. (Ph.D.. Rice
University), who came in 1976; Donald
Young (Ph.D., University of Virginia),
who came last year; and Sara Ripy
(Ph.D., University of Kentucky), who
came in 1958.
No update of the mathematics
department at Agnes Scott would be
complete without a word of
acknowledgement, appreciation, and
gratitude to Leslie Gaylord (M.S.,
University of Chicago) and Henry
Robinson (Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins
University). Miss Gaylord came to
Agnes Scott in 1921 and retired in 1968.
"Dr. Rob" came in 1926 and retired in
1970. They each made significant
contributions to the department and to
the College. Those of us in the
department now are indebted to them. A
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Women and the Freedom to Achieve
By Ayse Ilgaz-Carden '66
While I was a student at Agnes Scott,
I can remember sitting in one of those
chairs on a number of occasions and
listening to a speaker. Quite often I
would not be just listening but carrying
on a silent dialogue with the speaker.
The essence of my contribution to the
dialogue was, "If you would just let me
tell you what's important, significant,
and relevant. . . ." And here I am, and
believe me, one part of me is extremely
happy for a dream come true. But there
is another part of me the part that I try
to discourage and keep under lid and
cover, the part that would give anything
to be sitting with you down there and
carrying on a silent conversation with
the speaker. My psychologist colleagues
would tell me that this is only a reflection
of the conflict and anxiety I must feel
over achievement. Being a woman, I am
supposed to be more prone to that kind
of thing. That is what I want to talk to
you about today: women and whether
we are free to achieve. I do not think that
I need to apologize for my topic to the
male members of my audience; after all,
I am going to talk about your daughters,
wives, friends, mothers, or students.
In 1968 Matina Horner reported the
results of her research which led her to
theorize a motive to avoid success
among women. Since then the study of
achievement-related conflicts has
attracted a great deal of attention and
generated considerable controversy. The
theorized motive and the findings of the
relevant studies have been dissected
many times, from a variety of view
points, and revisions have been
introduced both by the original author
and others. One finding, however, has
remained relatively consistent through
these years, consistent even in the
context of changing definitions of and
attitudes toward success and the
increasing impact of the women's
equality movement: the finding that
Ayse Ilgaz Carden '66, assistant
professor ofpyschology, delivered this
address at Senior Investitute on October
27.
Dr. Ayse Ilgaz-Carden
Assistant Professor of Pyschotogy
women continue to display indications of
a motive to avoid success and behave in
ways consistent with the existence of
such a motive significantly more
frequently than men. Reviewing some of
these findings recently Horner
concluded that young men and women
still tend to evaluate themselves and to
behave in ways consistent with the
dominant stereotype that says
competition, independence,
competence, intellectual achievement,
and leadership reflect positively on
mental health and masculinity but are
basically inconsistent or in conflict
with femininity. Thus, despite the fact
that we have a culture and an
educational system that ostensibly
encourage and prepare men and
women identically for careers, the
data indicate that social and, even
more importantly, internal
psychological barriers rooted in this
image really limit the opportunities to
men (Horner, 1975,p.207).
The kinds of activities we choose to
engage in and our eventual level of
competence in these activities are in
great measure determined by our
expectations. There are many studies
which indicate that men in general have
higher expectations of success than
women. According to Frieze, this is true
"Not only in clearly defined masculine
tasks and apparently 'sexless'
intellectual tasks, but also, in some
cases, for feminine tasks" (Frieze, 1975,
p. 161). One implication of such findings
for women is clear: they will seek
activities traditionally consistent with
the female role since expectations of
success will be highest and achievement
motivation will be untainted by anxiety.
In fact, we know that this is happening
on a grand scale all over the country.
Alexander Astin, in his study of the
impact of college experience on the
American youth concludes that
"Perhaps the most important factor
influencing career outcomes is sex"
(Astin, 1978, p. 159). According to his
findings,
Men and women differ considerably in
their educational and their intellectual
development during the undergraduate
years. Although women earn higher
grades than men, they are less likely to
persist in college and to enroll in
graduate or professional school.
Moreover, women's aspirations for
higher degrees decline, while men's
aspirations increase during the
undergraduate years. Compared with
men, women are more likely to
acquire general cultural knowledge
and skills in foreign languages, music,
typing, and homemaking (Astin, 1978,
p.129).
What about our judgments as to why
we experience success or failure? To
what factors do we attribute our
successes and failures? Although
research results are not very conclusive
about certain aspects of the attribution
question, a relatively stable pattern of
sex differences can still be detected
(Frieze, 1975). In general, men are more
likely to interpret their successes in
terms of their ability. Women, on the
other hand, more readily see external
factors, such as luck, as being
instrumental in their success. Causes of
failure experiences also appear to be
interpreted differently by men and
women although in the case of women
findings are not as clear cut. Men tend to
see lack of effort as a frequent cause of
failure while women are as likely to see
Winter 1980
lack of ability or presence of adverse
external conditions as possible causes of
their failure. The implications of these
findings are very important, especially in
understanding what happens after
success or failure. As one would predict,
men are more likely to continue working
toward achievement in the face of failure
because it was lack of effort on their part
which caused the failure to begin with. It
is an internal quality which they can
control. What about women after
failure? They are much less likely to
continue because, after all, how can they
affect the lack of ability or identify and
deal with adverse external conditions?
They do not fare any better with success
experiences, either. While men see
success in terms of their ability, their
continued success experiences will
enhance their self-esteem and add to the
security and stability with which they
approach similar experiences. Since
women, however, do not see an internal
stable characteristic such as ability as
the cause of success, when they
succeed, the"y need not experience
increased motivation to approach similar
experiences or have increased self-
esteem as a result of success. These
different expectations and perceived
reasons for success and failure will
continue to flourish in the fertile milieu
of sexual stereotypes and the absence of
appropriate role models.
"To stereotype," according to Elliot
Aronson, "is to assign identical
characteristics to any person in a group
regardlesss of the actual variation among
members of that group" (Aronson, 1976,
p. 175). Thus, if to be a woman is to be
"nice," gentle, dependent, expressive,
impulsive, emotional, passive, and "not-
too-numerically-inclined" and to be a
man is to be independent, aggressive,
competent, dominant, and unemotional,
and these expectations are directed to a
person because of the person's sex, they
will have a limiting effect on the choices
available to that person. In this sense.
stereotypes are detrimental to the
potentially rich growth process of the
individual because of the limitations they
place on the availability of choices and
rigidity they impose on possible roles.
As Aronson points out.
The notion of sex roles appropriate to
sex identity, is quite useful in
understanding the pressures that
society places on both men and
women. The most striking feature
differentiating male and female sex
roles is the greater diversity of
acceptable role behaviors available to
men and the lack of such choice and
diversity for women (Aronson, 1976,
p.183).
Rosenthal's now famous research into
the phenomenon of "self-fulfilling
prophecy" reaffirms how powerful
these societal expectations can be in
shaping our cognitive and emotional
behavior (Rosenthal, 1968).
Behind the usually subtle pressures of
stereotypes we can still see various
forms of active discrimination. Higher
admission requirements for women
practiced by certain colleges, even some
state colleges, higher availability of job
opportunities to men, more exacting
standards applied to women in hiring
practices as well as in subsequent on-
the-job performance evaluations, and
unequal salaries are all easily
documented areas of possibly
diminishing but nevertheless continuing
discrimination. One of Alexander
Astin's recent findings relates to this last
area of discrimination. Concerning
beginnning salaries in teaching, which is
traditionally considered to be a more or
less feminine profession, Astin reports
that "Even after background factors
such as interests, high school and college
grades, and fields of study are
considered, men earn better than $1000
more in salary than women" (Astin,
1978, p. 159).
Fewer Support Systems
The picture that emerges indicates that
women in fact have every right to feel
anxious in the face of possible
achievement since it is realistic to
assume that they will be achieving in a
less supportive environment both in
subtle and overt ways. This recognition
leads Irene Frieze to conclude that
achieving women
must be professionally better than
men in order to experience any career
success. Furthermore, they perform at
this high level without many of the
enviromental supports that
professional men frequently have.
These supports which are unavailable
for women include the many services
of the wife and general societal
recognition and support for
achievement (Frieze, 1975, p. 166).
Role Models Needed
The absence of appropriate role
models serves to compound the effects
of the stereotypes on women's
orientation toward achievement. How
can a young girl aspire to achieve in
professions where there are no or only a
few females? How can she have very
good feelings about competence and
achievement when almost all the role
models demonstrating these qualities in
the textbooks she reads and the movies
she sees are depicted to be men? The
importance of the availability of role
models is clearly seen in the results of a
number of recent studies investigating
the backgrounds of high-achieving
women. As we would expect, these
women quite often have highly educated
mothers who provide the much needed
role models for them. In cases where the
mother is not a professional herself, she
is very likely to be a person who believes
in the values of achievement and
competence and actively tries to
inculcate these values in her daughters.
According to Birnbaum's findings, for
example, this is a mother who
is recalled as having been a somewhat
attractive, dominant, and very
competitive woman who often worked
outside the home and yet also was
perceived as somewhat dependent on
and very close to her husband. In
many ways, she sounds like an ideal
role-innovative model, a competitive,
work-oriented woman of considerable
energy and independence who is also
comfortable with closeness or
dependency (Birnbaum, 1975, p. 409).
In this respect, the role of fathers and
husbands is also of great interest.
Women who show high achievement
orientation most often report having
fathers who are high achievers
themselves and both by role modeling
and by active encouragement support
their daughters' achievement strivings.
The support of husbands is also crucial.
Again, according to the results of the
Birnbaum study, most achieving women
have extremely supportive husbands
who view marriage in terms of mutual
enrichment and friendship and are proud
of their wives' accomplishments. This is
attested to informally by the personal
communications of many of our own
Return To College women as well as a
number of the female members of the
Agnes Scott faculty, among whom this
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
speaker is very happily included.
The modeling and support of family
members, however important, are not
sufficient to free the female to achieve.
The variety, quantity, and quality of the
female role models which the greater
society provides are also significant
factors. As the number of women in high
achievement roles increases and they are
recognized and supported in these roles
by both men and women, achievement
motivation will begin to be freed from
conflicts originating from sex roles and
will be, for men and women alike,
merely "an internalized standard of
excellence, motivating the individual to
do well in any achievement oriented
situation involving intelligence and
leadership ability" (Horner. 1969).
What can be done to help women to be
free to achieve? Irene Frieze suggests
the institution of programs designed to
directly affect expectations and causal
attributions of women. The teaching of
the consistency of femaleness and
achievement, in terms of actual success
experiences and active role modeling,
would be at the core of such programs.
Helping women have more confidence
in their abilities would benefit both
traditional and career-oriented women
since it would provide them with a
better basis upon which to determine
the most appropriate life style for
themselves (Frieze, 1975, p. 168).
I suggest that there are already
existing programs in the country which
incorporate these essential elements in
the encouragement of women toward
achievement and, judging by the
outcome, they are doing a very effective
job. I am referring to women's colleges.
Impact of College Years
In 1978, Alexander Astin published his
book, Four Critical Years, in which he
presented the major findings from the
first ten years of a highly comprehensive
longitudinal research project conducted
jointly by the University of California
and the American Council on Education
in Washington. The research was
designed to study the impact of the
college experience on the American
youth and included more than 300
colleges and universities of all types and
collected data on more than 200,000
students. Among the many findings
concerning the impact of college
experience there was one finding which
was, according to Astin, highly
"dramatic" and quite unexpected: single
sex colleges were found to have almost
uniformly positive effects on their
graduates. This finding is made even
more significant by the fact that, again
according to Astin, "only a handful of
those institutions that were single-sex in
the early 1960s have been able to resist
the temptation to become coeducational
through the late 1970s" (Astin, 1978, p.
246).
Value of Women's Colleges
Virtually all of the findings concerning
the effect of women's colleges on their
students are positive and involve
dimensions which further achievement
in women. For example, these colleges
were found to increase involvement in
academic pursuits among their students,
increasing both the likelihood of
completion of the degree and the
aspirations to higher degrees. The
students attained higher levels of
intellectual self-esteem compared to
students from coeducational institutions.
This esteem was readily manifested, for
example, in higher levels of verbal
assertiveness in the classroom.
Furthermore, these students reported a
great deal of satisfaction with the college
experience which allowed them active
participation and greater involvement in
campus life. They reported great
satisfaction with the fact that they could
attain positions of leadership and be
actively involved in roles instrumental in
the actual running of the college.
Another source of satisfaction involved
their close interactions with the faculty
and the quality of student friendships.
These are significant findings and show,
in fact, that in terms of the teaching of
achievement values, these colleges are
doing a highly effective job of providing
motivation, active support, experience,
and modeling. In these times when the
quality of the education process at all
levels is under criticism, even the
secretary of HEW, Mrs. Patricia Harris,
must have been impressed indeed by
these findings. September 24 issue of
The Chronicle of Higher Education
reports her quoting Astin's findings in a
meeting on September 18 in Washington,
attended also by our own president,
where she pledged active support of
women's colleges. This would have been
very good news indeed to Margaret
Mead, the famous anthropologist, who
many years ago experienced many of the
realities that Astin's research revealed in
1978. In Blackberry Winter, reminiscing
about her early years in college, she
writes:
in the setting of this coeducational
college (DePauw) it became perfectly
clear both that bright girls could do
better than bright boys and that they
would suffer for it. This made me feel
that coeducation was thoroughly
unattractive. I neither wanted to do
bad work in order to make myself
attractive to boys nor did I want them
to dislike me for doing good work. It
seemed to me that it would be much
simpler to go to a girls' college where
one could work as hard as one pleased
(Mead, 1972, p. 100).
At a later page, she continues:
By the very contrast it provided,
DePauw clarified my picture of the
kind of college at which I wanted to be
a student a place where people were
intellectually stirred and excited by
ideas, where people stayed up all night
talking about things that mattered,
where one would meet one's peers
and, still more important, people with
different and superior minds, and not
least, where one would find out what
one could do in life (p. 101).
In the fall of 1920 she came to a women's
college, Barnard College,
Where I found and in some measure
created the kind of student life that
matched my earlier dreams. In the
course of those three undergraduate
years friendships were founded that
have endured a lifetime of change, and
by the end of those years I knew what
I could do in life (p. 102).
I hope that Agnes Scott is as good to
you. It was to me. A
Aronson, E. The social animal. San Francisco:
W.H. Freeman, 1976.
Astin, A. Four critical years. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, 1978.
Birnbaum, J. A. Life patterns and self-esteem in
gifted family-oriented and career-committed
women. In M. T. S. Mednick, S. S. Tangri. and
L. W. Hoffman (Eds.). Women and achievement.
Washington. Hemisphere Publishing Corporation,
1975.
Frieze, 1. H. Women's expectations for and causal
attributions of success and failure. In M. T. S.
Mednick, S. S. Tangri. and L. W. Hoffman
(Eds.), Women and achievement. Washington:
Hemisphere Publishing Corporation. 1975.
Horner. M. S. Sex differences in achievement
motivation and performance in competitive and
noncompetitive situations. (Doctoral dissertation.
University of Michigan) Ann Arbor, Mich.:
University Microfilms, 1968.
Horner, M. S. Fail, bright women. Psychology
Today. 1969 (November).
Horner, M. S. Toward an understanding of
achievement related conflicts in women. Journal
of Social Issues, 1972, 28, 157-175. Reprinted in
M. T. S. Mednick, S. S. Tangri. and L. W.
Hoffman (Eds.), Women and achievement.
Washington: Hemisphere Publishing Corporation.
1975.
Mead. M. Blackberry winter. New York: William
Morrow, 1972.
Mednick, M. T. S.. Tangri, S. S.. and Hoffman.
L. W. Women and achievement. Washington:
Hemisphere Publishing Corporation. 1975.
Rosenthal. R.. and Jacobson. L. Pygmalion in the
classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils ,
intellectual development. New York: Holt.
Rinehart& Winston, 1968.
Winter 1980
With the Clubs
Atlanta
Such an overflow crowd of alums and
friends turned out October 18 to hear
President Marvin B. Perry. Jr.. at the
Piedmont Driving Club that the number
of tables outgrew the room for which the
luncheon was planned and had to be
moved to the ballroom. Classes from
many decades were represented. Atlanta
Club President Jane Taylor White '42
presided, and Frances Ellis Wayt '42
introduced the speaker. Margaret
Shepherd Yates '45 was luncheon chair-
man. Dr. Perry assured his listeners that
the College has maintained its high
academic standing and that S.A.T.
scores of entering freshmen are far
above national scores and are above
those of recent classes, whereas the
national trend is down this year. He told
alumnae they could help Agnes Scott by
remaining the active, well-informed and
supportive group they are; by mention-
ing the College with pride and helping to
publicize her name; by helping locate
outstanding prospective students; by
helping find job opportunities for
graduates; and by continuing to contri-
bute "your hard-earned dollars." He
said he has found alumnae to be "tre-
mendously interested, loyal, and
generous."
Cobb County
Career Planning Director Kathleen
Mooney's talk October 20 at the Cobb
County Club's coffee brought forth a
lively discussion and many questions
from alumnae about the work of her
office and how it could help them as well
as current students. The speaker re-
ported that she herself "had a really
good time" and enjoyed the exchange of
ideas with alums, some of whom plan
follow-up visits to the campus. Many of
them shared reasons for choosing their
occupations and told of special
memories of Agnes Scott days. "It was a
warm gathering of friends," wrote Club
President Florrie Fleming Corley '54,
"and likely friends from as far away as
Cumming, Ga." A special story by
Susan Aikman Miles '68, club secretary
and a columnist for the Marietta Daily
Journal, featured Kathy's message and
Agnes Scott's career planning program.
Susan and her fellow-columnist and
fellow-alum, Nancy Dendy Ryle '49,
were co-hostesses at Nancy's home.
Decatur
An impressive planetarium demonstra-
tion by Director Julius Staal on the
Christmas star plus a fascinating com-
mentary and showing by Dr. Bob Hyde
of slides from his wondrous collection of
pictures of the universe enthralled De-
catur Club members who visited Bradley
Observatory on campus December 6.
Coffee was served in the "back room"
amidst Christmas greens and berries,
and the rainy day interfered with fes-
tivities not a bit. Observatory Director
Hyde and Mr. Staal offered another
program for alumnae, faculty, staff and
friends of the College December 18.
The new film room in Buttrick. ele-
gantly carpeted and furnished, was the
setting for the club's October 25th
program by Dr. Michael Brown, profes-
sor of history. The room was filled
nearly to capacity, as members and
friends crowded in to enjoy Dr. Brown's
colorful photographs of gardens and
famous buildings in England taken dur-
ing "Alumnae Travels in England," trips
on which many in the audience had
accompanied the speaker.
Delaware Valley
Dr. Art Bowling, assistant professor
of physics, gave his popular talk on
"Black Holes in Space" for alumnae of
the Philadelphia area October 27. His
listeners were delighted, and Program
Chairman Nancy Boothe Higgins '61
wrote afterwards, "He has opened my
eyes to a body of information 1 knew so
little about. Everywhere I read now I am
recognizing some point he made. He is a
great asset to the College." Dr. Bowling
reported on his return to campus that the
alums in the Philadelphia area were very
enthusiastic over prospects of steering
students towards Agnes Scott and were
pleased to hear about the new honors
scholarships being offered.
Fairfield-Westchester
Party responsibility in the changing
structure of political life in the U.S. was
the topic of discussion by Dr. Gus
Cochran, assistant professor of political
science, at a September 29 luncheon in
Cos Cob, Conn., at the home of Sister
Davis Luchsinger '48. A congenial group
of alums enjoyed his stimulating talk and
then joined in a spirited discussion
reflecting their "sincere involvement in
the political affairs of their communities
and the country," wrote Club President
Martha Stowell Rhodes '50. Dr. Cochran
is on sabbatical at Boston College this
year but has continued to speak to
alumnae groups. He wrote that he
enjoyed visiting with the Fairfield-
Westchester area alums and that "it was
good to see a little bit of Agnes Scott a
long way from home."
Gainesville
Dr. Michael Brown of the history
department and Director of Alumnae
Affairs Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
drove up from the campus to Gaines-
ville, Ga., for a delightful luncheon
meeting of North Georgia alumnae at the
home of Bess Sheppard Poole '45 Sep-
tember 27. Dr. Brown gave his presenta-
tion of "Alumnae Travels in England."
President Becky Deal Geiger '57 pre-
sided, and Donna Reed Newell '72 was
program chairman.
Houston
Club President Barbara Faris Gram
'76 wrote enthusiastically about a party
for prospective students at the home of
Elizabeth Heaton Mullino '35 the
weekend of October 19 planned by the
College's alumnae admissions represen-
tatives in the Houston area. The AARs
included Mary Margaret McMillan Cole-
man '70, Fran Amsler Nichol '73.
Melody Snider Porter '78. and Sybil
Corbett Riddle '52.
Middle Tennessee
A sunny autumn day set the scene for
a gathering of alums in the Nashville
area October 20 at the home of Ann
Shires Penuel '57. Although it was
primarily a social occasion, the brunch
provided a chance for the large group
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
present to hear a campus update by
Director of Alumnae Affairs Virginia
Brown McKenzie '47, who flew up that
morning for a quick visit. "It was a
really nice surprise to have Virginia with
us!" wrote the outgoing club president,
Anne Hoover Gulley '55, "and our
whole brunch was very successful."
Incoming officers are Terri J. Hiers '72,
president; Emasue Alford Vereen '58, NCWYOfk
vice president; and Marcia McMurray
'72, secretary-treasurer.
Johnson '70, and Director of Alumnae
Affairs Virginia Brown McKenzie '47,
spoke of how the group could help the
College and described changes which
have taken place on campus. The New
Orleans group has one of the oldest
alumnae club scholarships established
for Agnes Scott.
New Orleans
A lovely morning coffee at the home
of Club President Sarah Turner Ryan '36
brought together about twenty-five
alumnae October 30 for a pleasant visit
and a campus update. Director of Ad-
missions Judy Maguire Tindel '73, Direc-
tor of Financial Aid Bonnie Brown
National Alumnae President Cissie
Spiro Aidinoff '51 was hostess at her
apartment overlooking Central Park Oc-
tober 11 at an elegant luncheon for New
York alums and an alumnae group
touring Manhattan. Dr. and Mrs. Marvin
B. Perry, Jr., were special guests.
President Perry brought news from the
campus to the group at Cissie's, which
numbered around fifty. Alexandra Coc-
lin '76 is president of the New York
Alumnae Club and was one of the local
alums who joined the travelers for the
Broadway play Evita and a dinner party
at the Cosmopolitan Club the following
night. Former Alumnae President
Marybeth Little Weston '48 also took
part in some of the events.
Winston-Salem
The many alums and friends who heard
Dr. Margaret Pepperdene discuss poetry
and liberal arts at their Winston-Salem
luncheon September 29 were en-
thusiastic in their praise of the program,
which one called "the best thing I ever
heard." A large group attended the
meeting of the recently organized club,
which is making splendid progress under
the leadership of Anne Pollard Withers
'61. Mrs. Pepperdene herself reported
she had "a glorious time and came back
laden with apples and pumpkin bread."
IX
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Deaths
Academy
Bessie McCowen Medlock, August
24. 1979.
1913
Lav alette Sloan Tucker,
1979.
July 28.
1917
Lilly Currell Simrill, July 7, 1979.
1918
Catherine Montgomery William-
son, February 13. 1979.
1919
Goldie Ham Hanson, September
22, 1979.
Sallie Kate McLane Johnson, sis-
ter of Mary McLane Lawrence,
September 1, 1979.
1920
Paul Tappan, husband of Margery
Moore Tappan, September 24.
1979.
Juliet Foster Speer, October 4,
1979.
Lilly Currell Simrill, sister of
Elise Currell, July 7, 1979.
1921
Mrs. Mark Britt, sister of Sara
McCurdy Evans, October 14,
1979.
1922
John Hardy, husband of Ruth
Scandrett Hardy. October 18,
1979.
1923
Anna Belle Glenn, November 5,
1979.
Mary Stewart McLeod, October
21, 1979.
1924
Mrs. Mark Britt, sister of Mary
McCurdy, October 14, 1979.
Charles Booth, husband of Nonie
Peck Booth, May 12, 1979.
1926
Linton Deck, husband of Rosalie
Wooten Deck, October 5, 1979.
Mrs. Charles Norfleet, Sr.,
mother of Elizabeth Norfleet Mil-
ler. September 12. 1979.
Wayne Bramlett, husband of
Maurine Bledsoe Bramlett. Sep-
tember 26, 1979.
1928
Virginia Norris,
1979.
September 24,
1929
Frances Juhan Garner, sister of
Mary Alice Juhan, October 21,
1979.
Virginia Norris, sister of Eleanor
Lee Norris MacKinnon, Sep-
tember 24, 1979.
Tom Gash, brother of Betty
Gash, August 11, 1979.
Helen Fox, July 27, 1979.
Thyrza Ellis Durden, sister of
Mary Ellis Knapp, September 30,
1979.
1931
Elaine Exton, July 17. 1979.
William Smith, husband of Ruth
Peck Smith, September 1979.
1934
Percy Butler, husband of Tennes-
see Tipton, April 5, 1979.
Mrs. J. W. Chamlee. mother of
Nelle Chamlee Howard,
November 7, 1979.
1936
Mrs. J.W. Chamlee. mother of
Alice Chamlee Booth, November
7, 1979.
1937
Thyrza Ellis Durden, September
30, 1979.
1938
Nell Scott Earthman Molton, Oc-
tober 7, 1979.
Lavalette Sloan Tucker, mother
of Nancy Tucker Bayer, July 28,
1979.
1939
Frances Juhan Garner, mother of
Mary Evelyn Garner Davis, Oc-
tober 21, 1979.
1927
Grace Zachry McCreery, August 1942
2, 1979. Bessie
mother of Betty Medlock Clark,
August 24, 1979.
1943
Myrtle Dinsmore. mother of Jane
Dinsmore Lowe, July 14, 1979.
1945
O. L. Whatley. father of Martha
Whatley Yates, December 1978.
1948
Mrs. J. J. McManmon, mother of
Patricia McManmon Ott, Sep-
tember 15, 1979.
1950
Bessie McCowen Medlock,
mother of Dorothy Medlock
Rivine, August 24, 1979.
Catherine Montgomery William-
son, mother of Ann Williamson
Young. February 13, 1979.
1951
Joan Wood Sayles, November 19,
1979.
Joan Stickney McDowell, April 27,
1979.
1955
Goldie Ham Hanson, mother of
Ann Hanson Merklein. Sep-
tember 22, 1979.
1958
Goldie Ham Hanson, mother of
Elizabeth Hanson Duerr, Sep-
tember 22, 1979.
Robert Butler, husband of Ann
McWhorter Butler, September 9,
1979.
1959
Marianne Gillis Persons, August
13, 1979.
D. C. Westbrook. father of Laura
Westbrook Kemp, August 20,
1979.
1963
Mrs. Thomas Hartley, mother of
Nell Tabor Hartley, September
12. 1979.
1967
Maudine Arnau Wilson, mother
of Suzanne Wilson, February 15,
1979.
McCowen Medlock,
Winter 1980
19
20 Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Campus Scenes on Prints and Stationery
Offered by Alumnae Office
Six pen and ink sketches of campus scenes by John Stuart
McKenzie have been printed on fine text paper suitable for
framing. The drawings which may be displayed singly or as a
group are 5" x IVi" printed on paper 1 3 A" x 1 1". The set of six
may be purchased from the Alumnae Office for ten dollars
($10.00) including tax and mailing cost.
Stationery suitable for gifts and for your personal
correspondence is now available also. These same six
sketches have been printed on folded note paper and
packaged with matching envelopes. Each package contains
twelve folded note cards (two copies of the six scenes) and
twelve envelopes. The package of stationery may be
purchased from the Alumnae Office for five, fifty ($5.50),
which includes tax and mailing cost.
If you wish to order either of these items, fill out the form
below and mail it with your check to the Alumnae Office,
Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia 30030.
9/,i,*i Oewr, AepttSutt
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Alumnae Office, Agnes Scott College
Decatur. Georgia 30030
Enclosed is $_
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Name
for
for
set(s) of prints of campus scenes (5 $10.00.
packages of Agnes Scott stationery (S $5.50.
Street .
Phone
City, State, Zip,
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY, AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
Make Plans
Friday, \oril IH
ive Board meeting
Now for
Fun, Friends,
(HI p.m.
Luncheon 50th Rem 1930
and Festivities
p.m.
S "irday, April 1")
Repi
10:00 10:50 a.m.
Alumnae
Weekend
11:00 a.m.
10 p.m.
1:15 p.m.
'Mowing Luncheon
il Alumnai
ling alumi
President Perry's greeting
Reunion class meetings for photographs
Luncheon and recognition of
-ert for alumnae, faculty, and retired
faculty in Quadrangle
10 4:00 p.m.
Authors' reception
Evening
inion funt.'
Sunday April 20
8:15 9:00 a.m.
Tray-through-the-line bi
April 1 8-20
1980
9:00 10
10:00 a.m.
11:00 12:00 noon
Added VllraiiK
Observat*
d Buttrick will open foi
ands and children, including annual (ennis
icnt for men
Cia Cefc hrating Reunions:
1975
10th
160 20th 1940 40th 1920 60th
Mh 1935 45th 1915 65th
(V 30th 1930 50th Any earlier cla
sth 1925 55th
Ames Scott
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY / SPRING 1980
THE
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY/VOLUME 58 NUMBER 3
=*z=
CONTENTS
1 Honor Scholars Weekend
2 Update:
The Department of Music
By Dr. Ronald Byrnside
5 Glee Club's Winter Tour
6 Four Personal Views of the
Middle East
14 Registration for the Draft
15 Book Reviews
16 With the Clubs
19 The ASC Network
21 From the Classes
32 Association President's Letter
33 From the Director
Daughters of Alumnae
About the cover:
Cover shows new designer scarf which is being sold
by the Alumnae Association. For more informa-
tion, see page 20.
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY STAFF:
Editor Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Managing Editor Juliette Harper '77
Design Consultant John Stuart McKenzie
ALUMNAE OFFICE STAFF:
Director of Alumnae Affairs
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Coordinator for Clubs
Jean Chalmers Smith '38
Assistant to the Director
Juliette Harper '77
Secretary
Elizabeth Wood Smith '49
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS:
President / Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
Vice Presidents
Region I / Susan Blackmore Hannah '64
Region II / Polly Page Moreau '62
Region III / Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Region IV / Peggy Hooker Hartwein '53
Secretary / Lebby Rogers Harrison '62
Treasurer / Susan Skinner Thomas '74
Member , Council for Advancement and
Support of Education
Published four times yearly: Fall. Winter.
Spring, and Summer by Agnes Scott College
Alumnae Office. Decatur. Georgia 30030
Second class postage paid
at Decatur, Georgia.
(U.S.P.S. 009-280)
Academic Awards
First Honor Scholars Weekend Held
By Mary K. Owen Jarboe '68
On February 14-16, 1980, thirty-five
outstanding high school seniors visited
the Agnes Scott campus as finalists in
the first Agnes Scott Honor Scholars
competition. The new no-need awards
have been established to recognize
superior academic achievement and
leadership and are being offered for the
first time to freshmen entering in
September 1980. Students selected as
Honor Scholars will receive $2500
awards which are renewable based upon
successful college performance. Honor
scholars who have financial need above
the $2500 awards will have that need met
through the Agnes Scott Financial Aid
Program. In establishing the Honor
Scholars Awards, the Board of Trustees
stated that new money was to be raised
to fund the program so that the need-
based aid program would not be affected
in any way.
In order to be eligible for the
competition, students had to be accepted
applicants for admission with superior
high school records and Scholastic
Aptitutde Test scores of at least 600 on
both the verbal and mathematics
sections. The thirty-five finalists were
chosen from a large group of students
who entered the competition. The
finalists came to the campus from eleven
states. In addition to their outstanding
academic records, the students selected
as finalists presented evidence of
involvement in various ways in their
schools, churches, and communities.
Many are active in student government,
musical groups, service clubs, and
athletics. Their interest areas are
diverse, but a number commented on
interests in science and mathematics.
During Honor Scholars Weekend,
each finalist spent fifteen minutes with
an interview panel composed of
Professors Bowling, Brown,
Pepperdene, Pinka, Tumblin, Wistrand;
President Perry; Dean Gary; Dean
Kirkland; Director of Admissions Judy
Maguire Tindel '73 ; and alumnae Jane
King Allen '59, Marian Franklin
Honor Scholars finalists met with four department chairmen.
Anderson '40, and Joyce McKee '75.
The interviews were interesting and
rewarding for the panel members, and
the finalists were able to learn more
about the College through these
sessions. Personal interests as well as
current events were discussed with the
finalists.
In addition to the interview sessions,
the finalists attended a dinner at the
Atlanta Historical Society on Thursday
night with members of the interview
panel, the admissions staff, and the
director of financial aid. Lawrence and
Mary Duckworth Gellerstedt '46 also
attended the dinner as trustees of the
College. Before the dinner, everyone
enjoyed seeing an exhibit on women in
Atlanta's history which featured a
number of articles from Agnes Scott. A
question and answer session was held
after the dinner.
On Friday, the students visited classes
of their choice, met with faculty
members, and participated in the
interview sessions. Friday evening, the
finalists attended either the Atlanta
Symphony or the Alliance Theatre.
Finalists stayed in the dormitories
Thursday and Friday nights with student
hostesses. All of these activities were
planned with the idea of giving the
finalists an opportunity to learn about
the academic program, student life, and
the many opportunities available to
Agnes Scott students in Atlanta.
Based upon comments from the
finalists, interview panel members,
faculty, and current students, the first
Honor Scholars Weekend appears to
have been quite successful. It is hoped
that a number of the thirty-five finalists
will be students at Agnes Scott in
September. The names of the Agnes
Scott Honor Scholars will be released
after May 1 .
Spring 1980
Update
The Department of
By Dr. Ronald Byrnside
Professor Ronald Byrnside, chairman, earned his doctorate at the University of Illinois.
There is no evidence that man has any
physiological need for it, yet in the most
remote corners of civilization and in the
most distant reaches of history it seems
that man has everywhere and always had
music. Since he doesn't need it. but has
always had it, one must conclude that
music is very important to man. It is, in
fact, one of man's self-created treasures.
This idea is at the core of the philosophy
that guides and animates music
instruction at Agnes Scott College.
Music is more than a discipline, hut it is a
discipline a humanistic discipline, and
one that is a central part of a truly liberal
education.
Our curriculum in music is designed to
be rich and diverse enough to
accommodate the special needs of both
music majors and non-majors. The
department currently offers nineteen
different courses in music theory,
history and appreciation, and applied
music instruction in voice, piano, organ,
harpsichord, flute, clarinet, bassoon,
violin and 'cello. Beginning next year,
qualified students will be accepted into
the newly created program in music
education.
One of the biggest changes in the
make-up of the music department over
the past few years has been the growth
of instrumental music. A string quartet,
a woodwind quintet, and a
baroque/classical ensemble are now
active on campus. Several members of
the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra have
joined our part-time faculty to help meet
these new demands in instrumental
applied music. The College now owns a
single manual Burton harpsichord which
is used for ensemble and solo purposes.
The instrument was built from a kit in
the summer of 1976 by our own
Professor Theodore Mathews.
The Atlanta Chamber Players, now in
its fourth year of residency at Agnes
Scott, has enjoyed wide critical acclaim
and was recently awarded a much
coveted grant from the Paul Chamber
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Music
Music Foundation of New York. Harold
Schonberg, music critic of the New York
Times, had high praise for the ACP,
listing them first in a list of distinguished
regional chamber music ensembles. In
addition to formal concerts the group
regularly offers a series of open
rehearsals to which our students and the
public are invited.
Jean Lemonds is the newest member
of our full-time music faculty. Professor
Lemonds has appeared as recitalist at
numerous colleges in the Southeast and
at several Atlanta churches. She is also
director of the Agnes Scott Opera
Workshop which very successfully
produced Menotti's The Telephoneand
Barab's A game of Chance in February.
As part-time accompanist, Sandra
Barnes works closely with Professor
Lemonds and also with many students of
applied music, since she regularly
accompanies many of them at quarterly
applied music juries.
Professor Raymond Martin joined the
faculty in 1950. In addition to his duties
as College organist, Professor Martin
teaches organ, harpsichord, music
theory, and various courses in the
history and practice of church music.
Last year Professor Martin completed a
term as an officer in the American Guild
of Organists. He also directs the Organ
Guild at Agnes Scott and is coordinator
of student recitals on campus.
Professor Ronald Byrnside, chairman,
is a member of the Council of the
American Musicological Society, a
consultant to the National Endowment
for the Humanities, and lecturer in the
winter series cosponsored by the Atlanta
Symphony Orchestra and the High
Museum of Art. He is the author of two
books and scholarly articles on a variety
of musicological topics.
Professor Theodore Mathews
continues his good work with the Agnes
Scott Glee Club, a group that regularly
provides enthusiastically received
programs on and off campus. In May
Spring 1980
Professor Raymond Martin received his S.M.D. from Union Theological Seminary
(New York).
Assistant Professor Jay Fuller studied at the Johns Hopkins University. Peabody
Conservatory of Music.
The Department of Music
(continued)
1979 the Glee Club appeared with the
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in a
performance of Hoist's The Planets.
During the past Thanksgiving/Christmas
recess, the Glee Club enjoyed a highly
successful tour of England and Russia.
Professor Mathews also teaches music
theory and is the architect of the new
music education certification program.
Professor Jay Fuller, recently
returned to us from a richly-deserved
sabbatical (1978/79), is presently the
president of the Decatur Music
Teachers' Association. Professor
Fuller's gentle ways, intensely musical
attitudes, and solo recitals continue to
serve the College and her aspiring
pianists in indispensable ways.
Ultimately the worth and value of the
College and her several departments
must be measured by the quality of her
graduates. We are particularly proud of
this year's graduating music majors. Of
the nine music majors in the Class of
1980, four will go on to do graduate
work, two are teaching privately and
playing in their community orchestras,
and one wil pursue a career as a
composer/performer in the field of
contemporary church music.
Every one of these students gave a
formal senior recital. Attempting to
perfect one's musical abilities with skill,
intelligence, and sensitivity is a very
demanding and time-consuming
undertaking. These students have
accepted the challenge, paid the price,
and have met with no little success.
What is of overriding importance and
what makes these students special is that
their musical studies and
accomplishments were pursued and
achieved within the larger context of a
first class liberal arts education. Two of
these students were double majors in
music and math, one was a double major
in music and classics, one in music and
chemistry, one in music and French and
one in music and history. Four were
Associate Professor Ted Mathews
received his Ph.D. from the Universi-
ty of Michigan.
Lecturer Jean Lemonds was trained
at Westminster Choir College.
members of Mortar Board; Kemper
Hatfield (pianist) was president of the
Student Government Association, and
Jenny Spencer ('cellist and organist) was
president of Honor Court.
The Nannette Hopkins Music
Scholarship program (begun in 1976/77)
has been a positive force in attracting to
the campus students who are
academically solid and musically gifted.
We urge you, the alumnae, to bring this
program to the attention of gifted high
school seniors in your area and to help us
as we endeavor to find the very best
students for Agnes Scott College. We
hope you wil visit the campus soon and
often, and when you do, please stop by
to say hello to us in Presser Hall.
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Glee Club Overseas
ASCs Good Will
Ambassadors
"Do you have your passport?" "How
many travelers' checks do you have
left?" "Can we stop at the beriozka shop
again?" "Where's Oz?" "Where is that
fish and chips shop?" "What time is
breakfast tomorrow?" With these and
many other questions, the Agnes Scott
College Glee Club Tour Group set out to
enjoy themselves in "MerrieOlde
London Towne" and the unfamiliar
territories of Leningrad and Moscow in
the Soviet Union.
Thanks to family, friends, school and
alumnae support. President Perry's help
and the revised calendar which provided
a longer Christmas break, the England-
Russia concert tour finally happened
after three years of involved planning.
The group of Glee Club veterans,
Andrea Helms of the Public Relations
Office, and Glee Club director Ted
Mathews and his family finally got
underway on November 26, 1979, from
the Atlanta Airport. The direct Delta
flight was exciting, but not half as
thrilling as the landing at London's
Gatwick and the scenic drive into
London to disembark at our new home,
the Ivanhoe Hotel.
Under the auspices of our beloved
courier, Oz, the next two weeks were a
whirlwind of early breakfasts, short,
hurried rehearsals, concerts, and lots of
shopping and sightseeing. The first three
days in London involved a concert at the
Ernest Bevin School, a bus sightseeing
tour of all the high spots (London
Bridge, the Tower, Big Ben,
Buckingham Palace, and Trafalgar
Square), another concert at Oxford
Polytechnic, a walking tour of the
colleges of Oxford (New College,
Merton College, Christ Church, and all
of their beautiful chapels and
quadrangles), plus enough time left over
for dinners on the town, pub visits,
shopping on Oxford and Regent Streets,
and, of course, theatre visits. Annie and
Eva were two favorites.
Spring 1980
By Dottie Enslow '80
This non-stop pace had a slight respite
when we left London for Russia.
Waiting in Heathrow Airport, we
experienced the proverbial Aeroflot
delay: "Have eighty pence worth of light
refreshments" wait. But it was worth it
when we finally arrived in Leningrad at
midnight to greet Irina, our guide, sleepy
customs officials, and the first snowfall
of the year. If we thought the pace in
London was fast, in Russia we did
double-time. In Leningrad we visited the
Hermitage, the Opera, the Revolution
Museum, the Revolution Cruiser
"Aurora," the Peter and Paul Fortress
(where all the czars are buried), the
Piskarouskoye Cemetery (for
Leningrad's 600,000 who died during
World War II), as well as any and all
beriozka shops, the foreign currency
souvenir store, being always on the
lookout for china tea sets. We sang one
concert at the Leningrad Music College,
but we always returned to our Hotel
Kievski for bony fish and ninety-cent
Pepsis.
The sleeper train which took us to
Moscow was a highlight. Moscow was
fascinating, and our hotel, with a view of
the Olympic Stadium, was extremely
modern. The group gave two concerts,
one at an International Students' Club
and the other at the Moscow Music
Institute. Between these concerts, we
had a tour of Moscow which included
the Kremlin, Red Square, Lenin's Tomb
(with his embalmed body on display), the
Tretyakov Museum, several stops on the
elaborate and immaculate Metro, the
Exhibition of Economic Achievements,
featuring a space exploration hall, and,
of course, the beriozka shops again.
Everyone agreed that Russia was
interesting, but the bitter cold winds,
beet salads, and constant bony fish
dishes were gladly left behind on our
return to London.
The afternoon of our return saw us
visiting the State Apartments of Windor
Castle. The next day was free, so
everyone went out until the group met to
go see Ira Levin's Deat ht rap that
evening. Our final concert abroad was at
Richmond Parish Church on Sunday
morning with a farewell party for Oz that
afternoon. Our terms as goodwill
ambassadors were over, but everyone
looked forward to January back at Agnes
Scott to share our pictures and memories
of this once-in-a-lifetime trip.
Gretchen Lindsay '81 in Church Square at the Kremlin
Four Personal Views of the Middle East
As the Terror Began in Iran
By Willa Wagner Beach '49
In April of 1974 my husband accepted a
job with Bell Helicopter International in
Tehran, Iran. Never having been the
adventurous type, I wasn't exactly
enthusiastic. For the first four months I
was the classic example of a culture
shock victim. However, after a language
course, which included instructions in
history, customs, and Ta'rof, their
politeness code, I threw off my fears,
began to ride city buses and taxis, and
was able to go around town for shopping
and social visits with enjoyment. The
Iranians were more than friendly. One of
my earliest and nicest memories is of an
old man stopping me on the street and
presenting me with a rose. Once, while
we were sightseeing in the nearby
mountains, we came upon some workers
having their lunch. Nothing would do but
that we join them to share their tea,
barbari bread, and onions. No matter the
language barrier; just all smiles,
hospitality, and delight when we uttered
a few words in Farsi, the Persian
language, even badly pronounced. They
were eager to help us correct our
pronunciation. Our syntax was beyond
even their help.
The two questions most often asked of
me on my return have been: "What was
housekeeping like over there?" and
"What else did you do with your time?"
Housekeeping was very much the same
for us as Stateside except that I spent
more time in the kitchen. Absence of
convenience foods meant back to the ol
do-it-yourself recipes. All fresh
vegetables, fruits, and eggs were first
washed, then soaked in Clorox or other
disinfectant. Just getting the groceries
was the biggest problem. I walked much
more than any other time in my life.
Eventually, we bought a car, but I would
not drive in their undisciplined traffic.
All neighborhoods had small kuche
(alley) stores and there were some
supermarkets loosely patterned on ours
here. As time went on, more and more
imported European and American
products began to appear on the shelves.
Nice to have, if you didn't mind paying
two dollars for a can of Campbell's
tomato soup! I have many fond
memories of our little kuche store. My
trying to ask for things in Farsi, with my
southern accent, often got blank stares,
smiles, and a shrug. When all else failed,
I pointed.
Helping run Bell's Thrift Shop and
participating in the activities of the
American Women's Club kept me quite
busy. The AWC had many interest and
activity groups: bridge, bowling, skiing,
geology, archaeology, gemology, and
travel, to name a few. Every other year
the AWC ran a Charity Christmas
Bazaar for the benefit of the Iranian
orphanage. It was such a large
undertaking that we began work on the
crafts and projects in June.
My social life was never dull: visiting
friends, entertaining at home, or dining
out in the many good restaurants. There
were three theaters which occasionally
showed foreign language films. Of the
three television channels, two were in
Farsi, natural or dubbed, the other was
in a foreign language, usually English.
The Farsi channels would often
simulcast the original on FM radio, so
we could have two-language stereo!
Like all large metropolitan areas,
Tehran had its problems with power
outages. We kept candles and our naft
(kerosene) lantern always ready. The
stores did a brisk business in flashlights,
batteries, and gas lanterns. In the
summer of '78, as unrest began with
strikes and demonstrations against the
Shah, we were never sure if power
failures were due to poor maintenance or
deliberate cuts by protesting workers.
As the power could be off up to
twenty-four hours, we became frugal
about going into the refrigerator or
freezer. Many a time our ancient Philco
did an unplanned and messy defrost. In
October, during a time of planned,
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Willa visits the tomb of poet Saadi in Shiraz.
nightly, power cuts, we began to be
serenaded by Iranians out on their flat
rooftops chanting "Allah Akbar" and
"Death to the Shah." We thought it an
impressive demonstration of their piety
and anger until we noticed that when the
electricity came back on, they all
vanished downstairs to their television
sets.
As riots and demonstrations
increased, the foreign language news
broadcasts became heavily censored,
then curtailed. We began to listen to
short wave BBC, VOA, and Radio
Moscow news programs. It was the only
way to discover what had happened that
day, as even the Farsi news broadcasts
were more rumor than fact. The
American Embassy issued daily bulletins
advising which areas of town to stay
away from and always admonished,
"Keep a low profile." The constant use
of that phrase made all of us groan, for
we felt that if our profile got any lower
we'd have to go underground.
As riots and strikes increased, so did
shortages of consumer goods, especially
bottled gas for cooking, gasoline, heating
oil, and kerosene. We became
apprehensive about using our cooking
gas bottle and began to cook only one
meal a day. Many people, foreign and
Iranian, wanted to leave; but there were
no commercial flights, and trains and
buses were not running. Driving to the
border would have been almost
impossible; no gasoline enroute,
brigands on the road, thieves and
religious fanatics attacked some cars and
trucks. Even if we had reached the
border, the customs men would not have
processed our exit papers. So, we kept a
low profile and ventured out of our
apartments only into the immediate
neighborhood.
In mid-January the Shah left the
country. For a week everyone relaxed
and life went back to almost normal.
However, the provisional government
proved useless and the revolutionary
factions couldn't agree among
themselves, except they all agreed,
"Yankee, go home." When the official
word from the company came, I had less
than two weeks to sell the apartment
furnishings, pack and try to ship our
personal possessions, pack for travel,
then move into the Hilton Hotel to be
processed out. We spent only one night
in the hotel, one night which became the
most frightening of any I had spent since
the troubles began. I had heard the
stories of room searches, money and
valuables taken, windows being shot out
as a few loyalists and the revolutionaries
clashed over control of the nearby radio
station; but nobody had told me that the
hotel grounds were the fire-base! The
place was an armed encampment. We
couldn't turn around without bumping
into a very young Khomeini guard
amateurishly fondling his rifle. One
guard managed to tear-gas the lobby,
just playing around with the canister !
Bedtime started with a bomb scare.
Everyone in the lobby was turned
outside, everyone else told to stay in his
room. Happily, there was no bomb.
About 2 a.m., right under my second-
story window, the nightly "fire drill"
started. No one ever knew the real
reason for these firings, but it is difficult
to sleep through machine gun chatter and
carbine firings. I got very little sleep.
At 5 a.m. we loaded onto buses and
were escorted to the airport. After
seemingly endless hours of standing in
line, thorough search of our single
permitted suitcase, passport check,
identification check and recheck, we
were allowed to leave. Pan American
Airways "Freedom Flight 6" lifted off at
2:30 p.m. January 19, 1979. Shouts and
tears released our emotions. Farewell,
Iran.
Iran is a country of extremes: ancient
and modern, very rich, very poor, with a
middle class just beginning to emerge. I
saw many evidences of the good that the
Shah was trying to accomplish in
education, welfare, medicine,
technology, and transportation.
Khomeini appears bent on destroying
these progressive steps and turning the
clock back to medieval times. I am
saddened to see the turmoil and unrest
where, for almost five years, we were
happily at home. It is frightening to
realize the global repercussions.
Spring 1980
Growing Pains for Abu Dhabi
By Mariana Guion Mabry '64
Abu Dhabi, land of mystery, oil, sand,
frustration, and progress? Certainly the
last four and perhaps a bit of the first.
Ahu Dhabi is the largest, and, because of
its extensive oil resources, the most
important of the seven former Trucial
States which make up the United Arab
Emirates (U. A. E.). The U.A.E. was
established December 2, 1971, a
federation of Abu Dhabi, Dubai,
Sharjah, Ajman. Umm al Quawain, Ras
al Khaimah, and Fujairah. The ruler of
Abu Dhabi, HH Sheik Zayed bin Sultan
al Nahyan, is the president of the
U.A.E. . and HH Sheik Rashid bin Saeed
al-Maktoum, ruler of Dubai, is the vice
president. He and the rulers of the other
Emirates make up the Supreme Council
of Rulers.
The U.A.E. is thus a relatively new
voice in the Middle East, and has so far
tended to follow the lead of Saudi Arabia
in the areas of politics and oil pricing.
Sheik Zayed, relatively conservative in
his outlook and determined to use the
country's one limited resource wisely,
has nonetheless authorized a
tremendous amount of expenditure in his
effort to develop Abu Dhabi for his
citizens' benefit. The per capita income
of Abu Dhabi may be the highest in the
world, for although the population of
Abu Dhabi has been estimated at more
than 200,000, the native population
probably numbers less than 50,000.
As is to be expected in a land which
has only one shot at prosperity, there is a
variety of laws designed to protect the
interests of the Abu Dhabians and to
ensure that whatever commercial
interests are developed, the nationals
benefit from all ventures. For example,
no foreigners may own land or buildings;
none may come to Abu Dhabi without a
local sponsor, and, thus, no business
may be established without an Abu
Dhabi citizen participating as majority
partner. Since there is no provision for
naturalization, this means a native-born
Abu Dhabian.
If these terms seem stringently self-
protective, it should be noted that Abu
Dhabi has nothing but the oil beneath its
sands, and whatever the laws. Abu
Dhabi is inundated with foreigners
making money hand over fist, with
hundreds more waiting for a sponsor in
order to come in and cash in on the
riches. Many schools have been built,
perhaps more than can ever be needed,
and health services are free at the local
hospital and maternity clinics, although
most Westerners seem to prefer the
better-established hospital at Dubai for
any serious illness. Low-cost and free
housing has been made available to
encourage the nomads to live in the
town, and Sheik Zayed has a policy of
giving houses to nationals to be rented to
foreigners as a source of income.
Although there is a cadre of educated
Abu Dhabians who serve at the higher
echelons of the government agencies and
various businesses, one does not see
many native Abu Dhabians in daily life.
The menial work is done mainly by the
Baluchis, while the Arabs from other
Middle Eastern countries, in addition to
the vast numbers of Indians,
Palestinians, and Lebanese, fill most of
the clerical and shop positions. The work
force is thus swelled by over 100.000 of
these people who have flocked to Abu
Dhabi because they can earn more there
than in their own countries.
Of the seven Emirates, only Dubai, an
important Arab trading port for
centuries, was in any sense developed
before the discovery of oil. Abu Dhabi
was little more than a patch of desert,
with the town of Abu Dhabi, a small
fishing village perched on an island close
to the mainland. The oil revenues, which
began to flow in the mid-1960s, have
brought the town leaping into the
twentieth century. In its rapid push
toward urban and social development,
Abu Dhabi has become a boom town,
with the attendant inevitable problems.
Construction is rampant, and since there
is a great deal of "get-rich-quick-itis,"
buildings are going up as rapidly and
cheaply as possible. Construction is
almost exclusively of cement blocks,
and the cement is most often made with
salty sand, leading to cracks and leaks in
the newest of structures. Houses,
apartments, office buildings, and hotel
rooms are inadequate for the masses of
people flooding into the country from all
over the world.
One's introduction to Abu Dhabi,
after the bleak drive from the airport into
town on Airport Road, is typically
unpredictable. Does one still have the
hotel room that was booked? Can one
keep it until a house is available? To say
that hotel space is at a premium is a gross
understatement. The government
"reserves" 60 percent of all hotel space
on a permanent basis. The companies
operating in Abu Dhabi pay to "reserve"
a room or two for their incoming
personnel. All of these rooms, however,
are constantly filled, and if the
government decides to preempt them,
one either finds lodging with friends or
one leaves the country.
We were in a hotel for almost four
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Spring 1980
Abu Dhabi
(continued)
months, from October 1975 to early
February 1976, waiting to find a house
with access to water and electricity, and
we were exceedingly fortunate to keep
our room when the annual December
celebration of the establishment of the
U. A.E. brought hundreds of government
guests to Abu Dhabi. The cost to the
firm for this extended stay at the hotel
for our family of four was over $24,000.
After a three-month search, we found
an empty house, with a city water main
running close by. and electricity already
installed. It took almost another month
to find out who was responsible for
renting it and to get the lease signed. The
lease called for a two-year rental period
at 80,000 dirham ($1 equaled
approximately 4 dirham) per year. Lease
notwithstanding, when the second year's
rent was due, the owners asked for
140,000 dirham, and a compromise of
100,000 dirham was reached after
lengthy negotiations. We knew several
families in the same area who were
forced to leave because they could not or
would not meet the huge annual increase
in rent.
The housing complex where we lived
presents an interesting example of Abu
Dhabian expediency. There were about
thirty houses built in this particular area.
Some months prior to our arrival, Sheik
Zayed had needed space to house a
number of his guests. Twelve of these
houses were completely furnished on a
crash basis with wall-to-wall carpeting,
drapes, water, electricity, air
conditioning, telephones, and all
appliances and furniture to
accommodate the visitng dignitaries,
who stayed for several weeks. At the
end of their stay, Sheik Zayed ordered
the houses stripped of all furnishings and
appliances, and the now-empty houses
were given, one each, to a native Abu
Dhabi family to rent as a source of
income. As our house was one of the
twelve, we were able to move in with a
minimum of difficulty by Abu Dhabi
standards. Nonetheless, we still had to
have a pipe connecting the house to the
main water line, a water tank added to
the roof, and an electric pump installed
to pump the water to the roof tank in
order to have water for use in the house.
Planted and well-tended roundabout and new construction
This water was orange in color because
of the rusty pipes, and due to the flimsy
nature of the tank coverings, could not
be considered sanitary. We bought
expensive bottled water for drinking and
cooking.
Daily life for Westerners in Abu Dhabi
was a blend of near-idyllic living with a
myriad of continual frustrations. Our
children attended the French School,
which began at 8:00 a.m. and finished at
1:00 p.m., due to the intense heat in the
afternoons. Since these hours meshed
nicely with my husband's working hours
(8:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.; 4:00 p.m. -7:00
p.m.), we were able to enjoy a long lunch
together, often with a family swim at the
Club. The Club was originally
established by the British but had been
opened for membership to all
nationalities by the time we arrived in
Abu Dhabi. Since it was the only facility
of its kind in Abu Dhabi, sporting a
lovely beach and sailing facilities, a
swimming pool, two cement squash
courts, two tennis courts, a billiard room
and a very good restaurant, the waiting
lists for membership were long, and it
often took more than a year to be
considered for membership.
With their shortened school hours, our
children had plenty of time to finish their
homework and play before dinner. There
was not much adult entertainment in
Abu Dhabi, so one's friends, always
invaluable, took on an added
importance. There were only about a
half-dozen restaurants to choose from,
and apart from the Club, or dancing or
bowling at the Hilton, one would join
friends in the evening for dinner, bridge,
or conversation. The movie theaters
were usually too crowded to be
comfortable, but there was a good
selection of films, and many people had
television sets which provided a limited
number of programs in English. Almost
all types of consumer goods were
available in Abu Dhabi if one could
locate them and could afford to pay
prices which were generally exhorbitant.
What tended to make life in Abu
Dhabi difficult for Westerners were the
problems encountered in getting what
elsewhere would be considered as
routine tasks accomplished. If power or
water failed, there was no one to call.
One simply waited until it was restored.
Appliances were sold without
guarantees, so if an appliance failed,
which they did with annoying frequency,
one could buy a new one, but there was
little or no hope of having it repaired. We
were not allowed to test drive our new
car, and when we got it, we discovered a
cracked window (hidden by a dealership
sticker), a speedometer which didn't
work, a gas gauge which didn't register,
and the radio, tape deck, and air-
conditioning inoperative.
Obviously, not all difficulties
encountered were as troublesome as the
above. We learned to deal with lice
(horrors!) and sunburn, and found that
we had a great deal of leisure to develop
friendships and a variety of projects and
hobbies. If this article seems to present a
somewhat mixed attitude to life in a
foreign country, it may reflect fairly
accurately my feelings after two years in
Abu Dhabi. It was an interesting
experience, as any such adventure must
be, and the memories are on the whole
pleasant or, at least in retrospect,
amusing. Perhaps, one should not ask
for more.
10
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Alumna Marries Turk,
Adopts New Culture
By Letitia Moye Unver '61
A 1961 graduate of Agnes Scott, I met
my Turkish husband in America when he
came to study for a master's degree. In
1965 we returned to Turkey and taught in
a boys high school in Tarsus, an ancient
town in the south. Later we moved to
Ankara, the modern capital located on
the central Anatolian Plateau. My
husband has been involved with a
private development foundation:
working in rural areas with a chicken
project near Tarsus, a dairy proect in
Diyarbakir in far eastern Turkey, and
improvement of bee keeping in the
Ankara region. I taught English several
years and have two sons, twelve and
eight. Not working full-time recently has
given me time to enjoy my boys and take
part in various activities related to the
development foundation.
Actually, daily living takes more and
more energy. This past winter
has been colder than usual
with snow most of January, and
our apartment has had no fuel oil for
three separate periods of weeks. We
stayed warm with a small coal and wood
stove in the living room. Electricity has
also been cut off almost every morning
from 8:30 to 12:30.
Our condominum in a building with
eight other families is typical of Ankara
housing, there being almost no suburbs
and single family dwellings. Of necessity
I speak Turkish now with my neighbors
and when shopping. My boys are
bilingual and attend a private school
where math and science courses are
taught in English.
Excellent seasonal fresh fruits and
vegetables, yogurt and lamb are among
the staples in our diet; as yet, frozen
foods haven't reached us. These staples
take a lot of preparation as well, but a
maid once a week helps with the heavy
cleaning.
Letitia's Husband, Altan Zeki, Writes:
The increase in oil prices on the
international market hit Turkey very
hard because the country has to import
about 80 percent of its oil ; but Turkey
does not have enough foreign exchange
to pay for the oil imports the total of its
annual exports of goods and services will
not be enough for the oil imports alone.
The result has been acute shortage of
gasoline and fuel oil. Curtailing of other
imports has created stagnation in the
industry, thereby creating
unemployment. Prices have been
soaring. Recently, the prime minister
warned about three digit inflation,
instead of just two digit inflation that
is, inflation that has been running close
to 80 percent annually may soon go over
100 percent.
The political situation is not very
comfortable either. Considerable tension
and conflict exists between the extreme
right and left wing political factions. The
situation is further complicated by the
endless divisions and factions within the
left. Political violence and assassinations
are quite frequent; both between the left
and right wing groups, and also within
the left.
Basically, Turkey is still a working
democracy, mildly left of the center
government which was voted in with the
1977 elections. However, when the
economy and the political violence did
not improve, the voters n the 1979
elections brought in a more conservative
government. Situated next to Iran, and
not too far from Pakistan and other
trouble spots in the Middle East, and
with a long border with the Soviet
Union, Turkey's geographic loation and
political position are certainly both
critical and significant. A
Spring 1980
11
Istanbul scene taken b\ author
She Calls Istanbul Home
By Betsy Boatwright Goksel '62
Betsy and youngest daughter
"Go to Ireland and dig peat!" was Dr.
Hayes' advice as I wavered, or rather
stagnated, among classmates who were
either discussing the very new Pill in
preparation for June weddings or G.R.E.
results in preparation for graduate
school. Ireland and Turkey in 1962
seemingly had nothing in common, not
even the terrorism that besieges them
both today, but "Kismet" or Fate led me
to The American College for Girls in
Istanbul, a division of Robert College at
that time. Kismet was helped along by
Dr. Hayes, who had taught at Robert
College from 1921 to 1925; Dr. Catherine
Sims, a former Agnes Scott history
professor who was the dean of the Girls'
College; and Ipek Aksugur, a graduate of
the Girls' College and member of the
class of '63 at Agnes Scott. I accepted
the job with no idea of my salary and
only a vague notion of where Turkey
was. Ahead of me were two years of
adventure before having to make
serious, life-binding decisions in an
unknown, mysterious country far from
home.
The two years have extended to
eighteen years, the "serious life-binding
decisions" having been made here after
meeting a young Turkish military officer
at an International Work Camps meeting
shortly after my arrival in Turkey.
Istanbul is now my very familiar home,
yet in many ways Turkey remains
unknown and mysterious.
The Girls' School, where I continue to
teach, has merged with its counterpart
and is now Robert College, a coed junior
and senior high school consisting of
bright, highly-selected Turkish students,
many of whom continue their education
in the United States. Its campus is an
oasis of green and beauty in a rapidly
sprawling city.
My three daughters Tuba, Dilara,
and Diba Nigar are both bilingual and
bicultural, celebrating with equal
enthusiasm Turkish national holidays
and the holidays and traditions that I
hold dear.
The haunting call of the muezzins
awakens me in the morning to red
streaks of dawn silhouetting the gentle
Asian hills, the sparkling Bosporus with
its ferryboats and colorful fishing boats
continues to thrill me, and the street
sellers with their wares of yogurt,
vegetables, or pots and pans create an
exciting, oriental scene.
Yet in many other ways, both subtly
and obviously, the Turkish scene has
changed over the years. Now
interspersed among the street sellers are
soldiers with machine guns. Each day
the newspapers bring dread, fear, and
desperation into Turkish homes as the
number of deaths from anarchy
increases and inflation soars. Many
necessities coffee, margarine, toilet
paper, gasoline, and fuel oil, to list a
few are unavailble, and depression is
hard to fight off, as schools close for
lack of heat, and businesses stop
production. Turkey's economy, as well
as its internal peace, is at its lowest ebb
since the founding of the Republic in
1923.
As a foreigner in Turkey I have
enjoyed the privilege of being forgiven
for foolishnesses (such as rolling in the
grass with my children) or social slights
that a Turkish lady would never commit.
I have been respected as a teacher, an
honored profession in Turkey. I have
felt fear, not as a foreigner but as a
human being caught in the anarchy that
rages here. I have never felt hostility
aimed at me because of being American,
though perhaps my marriage to a Turk
and my relative fluency in Turkish has
helped to counteract this. I have felt a
coolness, even antagonism, towards the
United States as a power, beginning
around 1965 and continuing now with
great resentment because of the arms'
embargo. However, this antagonism is
very rarely extended to a personal level,
and tourists are usually surprised and
warmed by the hospitality and kindness
of the Turks.
I must state that my knowledge of
Turkey is limited to Istanbul. The
attitudes in Istanbul, the center of
culture and industry, are not
representative of all of Turkey. In some
areas the Anatolian Turk is more
hospitable and helpful, while in others he
is more intolerant. Turkey is a large and
varied country, from the sophistication
and westernization of Istanbul to the
remote backward villages of the East,
isolated by lack of roads, education,
medical care, communication; from the
overwhelming beauty of the
Mediterranean coast to the bare plateaus
of Central Anatolia. Today the country
is being torn apart by various factors
religious, nationalistic, and political. I
have identified myself with this country,
so rich in history, natural beauty, and
human values, and I hope, as we all do,
that the future will bring a settlement of
the many troubled areas. A
12
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Spring 1980
13
Draft Registration: Yes and No
By Gina Philips '81
"Women in the Military Should They
Be Drafted?" and "Women in Combat
Closer than You Think" are recent
articles from Newsweek and U.S. News
and World Report, respectively. These
articles have provided information used
in my formulating an argument against
drafting women. The arguments for and
against have proven to be valid and
evenly matched. The question no longer
pertains to draft registration but to the
expansion of women's employment in
combat-related jobs or actual combat.
President Carter has assured us that
breaking the 204 years of military
tradition will "not be a move away from
an all volunteer force but simply a
time-saving measure to help mobilize
troops in case of an emergency." The
U.S. News article clearly points out that
women in combat follows closely at the
heels of accepting women for the draft.
In conjunction with this reality, it is
imperative that one sees the argument
against the draft from political.
economical, and, most importantly,
sociological points of view.
Politically, Congress is split on the
debate. Those opposed question the
advantage of drafting women, excluding
any combat-related jobs. Volunteers
already cover non-combat military jobs,
and there is an excess of volunteers.
Presently, no woman is stationed closer
than fifteen miles from a combat area.
One Congressman concludes that
instigating the women draft excluding all
combat-related jobs defeats the purpose
and becomes a mere gesture.
Economically, one can look at the
employment percentages of women in
the military today without the draft. The
precentage of volunteers is expected to
increase from an 8 percent portion of the
total military to a 12 percent portion by
1985, and the overall portion of men is
expected to drop by 25 percent by the
1990s as the percentage of women
increases. With this increase of women
in the military service is an increase of
military pregnancies. It is calculated that
of the 14 percent of women pregnant
during the year, 8 percent are pregnant at
one time, but even more astounding is
the fact that one-half of the pregnancies
are to unwed mothers. Issues of
abortion, child support, and parental
(continued on page 20)
By Carol Chapman '81
I OPPOSE selective slavery for anyone,
male or female. However, since there is
no avoiding the fact that President
Carter is seeking from Congress the
authority to register women for non-
combat military service, we should now
attempt to determine what advantage, if
any, there may be in the registration of
women.
The question of whether or not women
should be required to join their male
friends and relatives in filling out
registration forms at their local post
offices is probably the most inflammable
fuel to feed the pro-ERA fires in quite
some time. The 150.000 women
currently serving in the all-volunteer
armed forces have proved that the
incorporation of women in the military is
not the far-fetched notion it was once
thought to be. As Carter acknowledged
in his February 8 statement. "There is
no distinction possible, on the basis of
ability or performance, that would allow
me to exclude women from an obligation
to register." Furthermore, the principle
of equal rights means equal obligations,
including the obligation of possible
mandatory military duty. Carter himself
further stated, "In every area of our
national life, women are meeting the
responsibilities of citizenship . . .Just
as we are asking women to assume
additional responsibilities, it is more
urgent than ever that the women in
America have full and equal rights under
the Constitution. Equal obligations
deserve equal rights."
Unfortunately, "full and equal rights
under the Constitution" is still not a
reality. It is with this fact in mind that
some women are bitterly retorting. "We
meet the responsibilities, but where are
the accompanying rights and privileges?
Why should we be called upon to defend
a constitution in which we are not even
included? No ERA, no registration, no
draft." Their indignation is justifiable.
Required draft registration is a slap in
the face to the women who have fought
long and hard for a guarantee of equal
rights under the Constitution.
Yet, properly wielded, the registration
of women for the draft could be a
powerful tool for the ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment. It would be
hypocritical of our feminist friends to
demand equal rights in every facet of
American society on the one hand, but,
faced with the prospect of required
(continued on page 20)
14
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Book Reviews
Tennessee
roots
Fefcia Stewart MD.
FeUcia Guest
:, Gary Stewart, MB,
ffipbert Hatcher, MJ3.
Art for All the Children, by Frances E.
Anderson '63. Charles C. Thomas,
Springfield, Illinois. $18.75.
Reprinted with permission from National
Art Education Association Newsletter,
July, 1979.
Art for All the Children was created out
of desperate need for literature that
integrates the concepts of special educa-
tion with those of art education and
developmental psychology, and it speaks
to those needs with a clarity, organiza-
tional logic, and thoroughness that is
refreshing and comforting.
One of the particularly valuable as-
pects of this book is its reliance upon
discoveries made about learning specific
to diverse handicapped conditions. The
author's definitions of various impair-
ments form a social, intellectual, and
physical profile that is most helpful for
identification purposes. She cautions the
reader that while description is neces-
sary for understanding, labeling and
catergorizing special children can aggra-
vate feelings of stigmatization. The
profiles provided include the learning
disabled, behaviorally disordered, hear-
ing impaired, mentally retarded, visually
impaired, and physically handicapped.
She then explores the issues of evalua-
tion and assessment, the success or
failure of an activity being dependent
upon the criteria for judging the merits
of an art experience. Since this book is
designed to help parents as well as art
teachers and therapists, the author does
not assume the reader's fluency with
development theory and presents a dis-
tilled summary of the stages of chil-
dren's artistic development with a help-
ful breakdown of behaviors in a check-
list of age-appropriate skills.
This book is a welcome addition to the
growing literature addressing art ac-
tivities for impaired children. It belongs
on the bookshelves of college libraries,
on the desks of art educators, art
therapists, recreation therapists, and
parents. Dvora Krueger
Tennessee Taproots by Paul and Sophie
Montgomery Crane '40. Earle-Shields
Publishers, Old Hickory, Tennessee.
$9.95.
This book of discovery is the first to
bring together all ninety-five county
courthouses of Tennessee, with color
pictures of each one. A symbol of the
county, each courthouse reflects the
economic activity, civic pride, and the
health of local government. The county
courthouse system is a basic building
block of democracy in America and is
still the place at which the ordinary
citizen meets his government.
Primarily a picture book, Tennessee
Taproots presents each courthouse as it
looked in 1976. Each is an example of
the style of architecture in public build-
ings at the time it was built. A table,
giving the construction dates, shows the
architectural history of the courthouse
and the changing styles.
The book presents three types of
information: factual information, which
may be readily available but has not, in
recent years, been complied in one
volume; information that deals specifi-
cally with the courthouse itself; and
points of interest, significant happen-
ings, and famous personalities of each
county.
The factual information gives the date
of the founding of the county, the origin
of the name of the county and the county
seat, the land area in square miles, the
principle rivers which drain the county,
and the population figures as reported in
the U.S. census reports of 1850, 1900,
and 1970. Each county is ranked by
population in the state.
The courthouse information includes
the number of courthouses built in each
county with the dates, cost, and the
names of architects and builders where
they could be found. Noteworthy trials
and special events involving the cour-
thouses are listed.
Under "points of interest" are listed
various items which highlight each
county.
My Body, My Health: The Concerned
Woman 's Guide to Gynecology by
Felicia Guest '66, Felicia Stewart, M.D.,
Gary Stewart, M.D., and Robert
Hatcher, M.D. John Wiley and Sons,
New York, New York. $6.95.
My Body, My Health was written be-
cause women and their doctors are now
making health care decisions together.
Women who read My Body, My Health
will find the thorough, up-to-date infor-
mation they need to make informed
decisions on everything from birth con-
trol to major surgery.
Written by two gynecologists and two
family planning experts, My Body, My
Health is a comprehensive, unbiased,
readable, illustrated guidebook for
women of all ages. It avoids the pitfalls
of obsolete data, paternally reassuring
attitudes, limited viewpoints, and politi-
cal overtones. The book covers forty-
one major topics, including breast and
pelvic examinations, early signs of preg-
nancy, methods of birth control, deci-
sion-making about unplanned preg-
nancies, abortions, sterilization opera-
tions for both men and women, repro-
ductive tract infection, and menopause.
More than 130 illustrations, along with
practical checklists and actual case his-
tories, illuminate the text.
Designed as a standard reference, My
Body, My Health will be updated regu-
larly as new information becomes availa-
ble. A professional edition of the book,
which includes additional information
for clinicians, has been published also.
Spring 1980
15
With the Clubs
Atlanta
Winter programs for the Atlanta Club
have included '"New Roles of Women,"
presented by Dr. Connie Jones, assistant
professor of sociology, at the home of
Flake Patman Jokl '44 in November;
"Liberal Arts in a Business Career," by
Dr. William Weber, associate professor
of economics, at the home of Christie
Theriot Woodfin '68 in January; and a
visit to the campus for the College
Founder's Day celebration in February.
Succeeding Jane Taylor White '42 as
president of the Atlanta group is Frances
Ellis Wayt '42, who has been program
chairman. Serving with her will be
Frances Steele Garrett '37, first vice
president; Gail Savage Glover '66, sec-
ond vice president; Nell Floyd Hall '51,
secretary; and Martha Davis Rosselot
'58, treasurer.
Augusta
Dr. Caroline Dillman's talk on
"Southern Culture in Transition" was
"most interesting," reported the club
president, Linda Todd McCall '59, after
the luncheon meeting March 1 at the
Augusta Country Club, "and our mem-
bers were very responsive." The sociol-
ogy professor and her husband, Fred,
drove down for the occasion and com-
bined her speaking engagement with a
little family research, for Dr. Dillman
herself has "roots" in the area. Incom-
ing officers for the Augusta Alumnae
Club are Susan Bell Bohler '73, presi-
dent; Carol Jensen Rychley '69, vice
president; and Patsy Rankin Jopling '69,
treasurer.
Barrow, Gwinnett,
Newton
BGN alums returned to the campus
February 16 for a look at the miniature
reproduction of Solomon's temple in
Rebekah Reception Room and a talk by
Dr. Paul Garber, professor of Bible
emeritus, whose research was behind the
model's creation. Among guests in the
audience were Mr. and Mrs. Morris S.
Hale, Jr.. of Atlanta, who later wrote to
the Alumnae Office expressing apprecia-
tion for the "informative and well-
presented" talk and praise for the club's
entire meeting. Following an introduc-
tory prayer by Elizabeth Cash Gilmer
'28, Club President Julia Kennedy '60
presented a check for $150 from the club
to the College for use in Alumnae
Association work and invited members
to stay for lunch in Evans Dining Hall.
Charleston
Birmingham
Dr. Constance Shaw's slide presenta-
tion of the "Student Trip to Spain" for
the Birmingham Club February 16 was
both "entertaining and informative,"
according to reports from President
Mary Anne Murphy Hornbuckle '69 and
Vice President Pam Coffey '74. The
Spanish professor, who heads the de-
partment at ASC, said she had "a lovely
time" and would have liked visiting with
the alums even longer. The group met at
the home of Cissie Harris Anderson '62
for a "delightful luncheon, for which
everyone brought her favorite dish. We
enjoyed the change from meeting in a
restaurant we were far more comfort-
able and able to talk to friends," said the
officers. Serving with Mary Anne and
Pam are Virginia Finney Bugg '66,
secretary; Betty Young vonHerrmann
'69, treasurer; and Carol Sharman Ring-
land '70, career liaison person.
Central Florida
Orlando area alums were so en-
thusiastic about the talk and pictures on
"Agnes Scott Summer in Marburg"
given at their March 1 luncheon meeting
by Dr. Giinther Bicknese. chairman of
the German department, that they now
hope he will plan a similar trip for
alumnae. The Central Florida Club's
meeting was at Dubsdread Country Club
in Orlando, with President Melba
Cronenberg Bassett '59 presiding. Vice
President Mary Ann Gregory Dean '63
took Dr. Bicknese for an afternoon tour
of the city. The professor said he had "a
great time" on the whole trip to Florida.
"It never snows in Charleston," but it
surely did the weekend Dr. Ayse Ilgaz-
Carden '66 and her husband, John, drove
over for a visit to the Charleston Club.
"Women and Success" was the title of
the psychology professor's talk to alums
at a luncheon March 1 at the Colony
House. Everyone was so enthusiastic
over the talk and interested in the
subject that the meeting lasted into late
afternoon. Then the snow came. The
Cardens were snow-bound at their inn
until Monday morning, when the high-
way patrol finally opened one lane of the
interstate. Safely home. Dr. Carden
described the weekend as "a fantastic
experience" in more ways than one.
The Charleston steering committee is
headed by Allyn Smoak Bruce '68.
Charlotte
Dr. Michael Brown, professor of
history, and his wife, Lee, drove to
Charlotte February 23 for a presentation
of his beautiful slides of "Alumnae Trips
to England" for the club's Founder's
Day luncheon at the Myers Park Country
Club. An early social hour drew together
a large group, visiting with the Browns
and each other. Club President Resa L.
Harris '73 and Secretary Helen DeWitt
'75 reported that the program was "a
tremendous success," enjoyed by some
fifty alums. Incoming officers are Sarah
Petty Dagenhart '55. president; Judy
Hamilton Grubbs '73. vice president;
Kathy Fitch Piette '78, secretary; and
Fran Woodward Clark '72, treasurer.
Cobb County
"Mary Boney Sheats captivated us
with her masterful overview of women
in the Bible," wrote President Florrie
Fleming Corley '54 after Dr. Sheats
spoke at the Cobb County Club Found-
er's Day luncheon February 23 at the
Morrill House Restaurant in arietta. Ga.
"Many had further questions for her
16
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
afterwards." Dr.Sheats told the group to
"read the Scriptures with open eyes"
that the Bible is more balanced towards
male and female than is generally
thought. Academy Graduate Bertha
Hudson Whitaker, now eighty-seven,
was present with her sister, Ruby Baker,
and brought her 1907-08 College Bulle-
tin. Bertha went to Agnes Scott on the
street car from Marietta and has wonder-
ful tales to tell.
Decatur
Columbia
Alums in the Columbia area are among
the latest groups to enjoy Dr. Edward
McNair's popular "Anecdotes of Agnes
Scott." The English professor and direc-
tor of public relations emeritus flew to
South Carolina February 23 for the
club's Founder's Day luncheon at Hud-
son's, a historic home turned restaurant.
Club President Jackie Rountree An-
drews '57 sent an enthusiastic report of
the day and commented, "Dr. McNairis
such a delight; everyone loved him. The
whole occasion was a special treat, and
no one seemed to want to leave." Helen
Wright Smith '24 brought her book of
"Songs of Agnes Scott 1922," and
several Agnes Scott yearbooks and club
scrapbooks were on display. The club
voted to present a book to the College
library in memory of Mildred Derieux
Gantt '47, "a faithful member for many
years." Incoming officers are: Judy Hill
Calhoun '73, president; Margie Richard-
son '73, secretary; and Dr. Christina
Yates Parr '47, treasurer.
Dallas, Fort Worth
Dr. Ted Mathews, who headed a group
of Glee Club students touring and
performing in England and Russia this
winter, flew to Dallas and gave a slide
presentation of the trip for texas alums.
A large group thoroughly enjoyed his
program, and the music professor re-
ported "a great time" himself. The
spring luncheon was at Pittman House in
Dallas.
Founder's Day this year included the
lavish morning coffee at which the
Decatur Club entertained in Rebekah
Reception Room preceding the Convo-
cation talk by Dr. Edgar F. Shannon, Jr.,
president of the United Chapters of Phi
Beta Kappa. The College community
and Atlanta as well as Decatur alums
were invited to the celebration. In
January the club, which is headed by
Mary Ben WRIGHT Erwin '25, enjoyed
a musical program by the Agnes Scott
Madrigals.
"a great success." In February the
College's public relations director, Sara
Fountain, told members of the club how
word of Agnes Scott is being spread and
her publications revamped and updated.
Her talk was entitled "Agnes Scott:
What It Takes the ASC Marketing
Campaign" and took place in the Alum-
nae House.
Jacksonville
Evening
(Metropolitan Atlanta)
Another outstanding book discus-
sion sponsored by the Evening Alumnae
Club drew more than fifty alums and
friends to hear and take part in a session
led Dr. John Gignilliat, of the history
departent, on Restoring the American
Dream by Robert J. Ringer. Participants
gathered by the fireside in Winship
Dormitory for a three-hour presentation,
and many stayed for lunch afterwards in
Evans Dining Hall. President Susan
Balch Clapham '75 reported the morning
"Near East Women" was the topic for
discussion by Dr. Mildred Davis Harding
'38, who was the speaker for the
Jacksonville Club at its Founder's Day
celebration February 23. Mildred has
lived in Cairo, Baghdad, and Beirut,
where she and her husband taught. The
group et for a pot-luck "of great variety
and superb quality," wrote President
Elizabeth Lynn '27, in the home of
Peggy Ringel Zell '53. Mothers of cur-
rently enrolled Agnes Scotters from the
Jacksonville area were invited. Officers
were prevailed upon to serve one more
year, and in addition to Elizabeth in-
clude: Anne Elcan Mann '48, vice
president; Betty Libby Alderman '63,
secretary; and Betty Ann Green '53,
treasurer. Barbara Duncan '78 is career
planning representative.
Some alumnae attending the Dallas, Ft. Worth meeting in March. Front row, I to r: Virginia
Gray Pruitt '32, Louise Sullivan Fry '40, Esther Rich '29. Back row: Joan Scott Curtis '73,
Norah Little Green '50, Mary Lou Kleppinger DeBolt '54, Martha Parks Little '68, Ann Morris
Synowsky '68, Anne Sylvester Booth 54, Cherry Wood '73.
Spring 1980
17
Kentuckiana
The Chapel Restaurant in Louisville
was the setting for this year's spring
luncheon of the Kentuckiana Club, and
Dr. Edward McNair, professor of En-
glish and director of public relations
emeritus, was guest speaker. President
Edith Towers Davis '60 wrote after-
wards that his talk on "Anecdotes of
Agnes Scott" was delightful and was
enjoyed by everyone. The club will have
its annual family picnic during the
summer and another gathering at Edith's
farm in September, alice Finn Hunt '67
has been elected to succeed Edith as
president for the next two years. Barba-
ra Hunt Gresham '66 will serve as career
planning liaison, and Dr. Catherine
Bates '36 will be admissions representa-
tive, following Mary Bryan DuBard '59.
who is moving to Birmingham.
Knoxville
An enthusiastic group of alums in the
Knoxville area has met with Montene
Melson Mason '45 in her home to plan
for a new alumnae club. It is scheduled
to get underway this spring at a luncheon
featuring a talk by Dr. Wallace M.
Alston. Agnes Scott's president
emeritus, to renew old ties with the
College. The steering committee in-
cludes Vicky Allen Gardner '62, Polly
Anna Philips Harris '50, Maureen Wil-
liams Bates '72, Ruth Shepherd Vazquez
'62, Dana Nichols Stuckwish '77, and
Sue Czarnitzki Ayers '62.
Tallahassee,
Thomasville
Alumnae in the Tallahassee-
Thomas ville area had a "perfectly mar-
velous time" together at their first
meeting February 22. a luncheon at the
home of Nancy Love Crane '57 in
Tallahassee. Alums car-pooled down
from Georgia's Thomasville for a happy
gathering with the Floridians. One of the
main hopes of this new club is to make
active efforts to reach prospective stu-
dents for the College, and they plan to SUPlCOaSt
have an update from the Agnes Scott
admissions staff in order to be current
with campus developments, academic
changes, and admissions requirements.
Florence Worthy Griner '52 has steered
the group in its successful beginnings.
San Francisco
President Bev Myers Pickett '66 had
preparations complete for alums in the
Bay Area to meet at her home in San
Francisco February 24, when heavy
rains paralyzed travel in parts of Califor-
nia and caused a cancellation of the
Sunday evening get-together. Admis-
sions Representatives Katherine Akin
'76 and Ceil Jarrett '77, who were to
bring the group a "Campus Update."
had to postpone their visit to the west
coast. Bev hopes to plan another event
later in the year perhaps a downtown
luncheon in San Fran.
Will
Alums in the Tampa-St. Petersburg-
Sarasota area have chosen a new name
and are hereafter the "Agnes Scott
Suncoast Alumnae Club." President
Pam Arnold Milhan '72 wrote that the
group had enjoyed very much Dr. Marie
Pepe's "fascinating slide presentation
about women in the arts" on February
16 and that afterwards they partook of
"the great Florida sunshine." The club
is planning meetings in various parts of
the large territory covered by its mem-
bership, and this event was a Continental
breakfast in Sarasota. Many had driven
great distances in order to be present.
Marie Pepe reported that the club had "a
marvelous group"in attendance and that
its number was swelled by many hus-
bands, including her own Charlie. Future
club plans include a seminar-workshop
at another location.
in;
Suncoast Club met October 20. Speakers were Katherine Akin
4Lv
76 and Stephanie Segars '81.
18
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
TH
m
ALUMNAE/STUDENTS/CARUI RS
NETWORK
"Tune in to the ASC Network . . . and
turn on an Agnes Scott student to the
career she's been looking for all
along. "
This line, signaling our first national
effort to establish an ASC Network,
appeared on page one of the fall
Quarterly. I stress national, because last
April we did a preliminary mailing to
Atlanta-area alumnae to test potential
interest in such an advisory network. As
a result of these first efforts, ninety-five
alumnae (and nineteen husbands) are
charter members of the ASC Network.
By joining the Network, you become
part of a group of alumnae who have
offered to assist students and other
alumnae to explore, enter, and advance
in their career fields. Perhaps you can
sponsor a student for one of our off-
campus experiential programs:
The Shadow Program Invite a
student into your office to spend a
few hours discussing your job, its
responsibilities, satisfactions and
dissatisfactions, and background
required for entry-level jobs.
The Extern Program Help a
student experience your job by
having her work with you and your
colleagues for an unsalaried week
during a school vacation.
The Intern Program Provide a
long-term experience (perhaps a
summer, or part-time during the
year) that enables a student to
perform responsible duties while
providing a good introduction to
your career field.
As a "Networker" you might prefer to
assist in other ways, perhaps as a
workshop speaker or an informal career
Joan Loeb spent an externship learning about
Oriental rugs at Sharian's.
adviser. If you are in a position to help a
student or alumna enter and advance
within your organization or career field,
please sign on as a mentor. A Network of
professional women who will serve as
mentors for bright, aspiring protegees
remains our highest goal.
Perhaps when you read the original
copy, you did not apply it to your
situation. We hope you will consider it
now. The only requirement for joining
the Network is an interest in helping
students and other alumnae. We need
women working outside the home to be
sponsors and mentors, but we need all of
you who are living in other parts of the
country to share your knowledge about,
and contacts in, your area with someone
moving there and seeking employment.
Your experiences and friends may be all
she needs to get started.
If you still hesitate, you are not alone.
Comments from those already "signed
on" have ranged from concern about
their helpfulness from a distance to
whether a particular career field is of
interest to students. In spite of this
hesitation, they wrote to us and our
formal Network now stretches from
Massachusetts to Texas to Alaska. Your
role may be different at a distance: you
may be asked to write more advice than
to sponsor an extern, but full-time
internships are possible anywhere, and
career mentors are needed in every field
regardless of geographic area.
How has the Network helped already?
Most apparent is the new Extern
Program. As a result of last year's
Atlanta mailing, twenty-eight students
spent a week during their Christmas or
spring break working with alumnae, their
spouses, or friends, in such career fields
as corporate planning, pediatrics, retail
management, and teaching. Next year
we hope to expand this program to other
areas, especially in the Southeast, but to
do this we need to hear from many more
of you.
What other practical benefits has the
Network had? We can count one student
internship (several have been offered,
and now the first has been arranged),
several Shadow Program sponsors,
numerous people called upon for
informal advice, and two jobs being
vacated by ASC alumnae that have been
filled by other ASC women.
Some of this happened through the
years, but the ASC Network now gives
you a means to increase the frequency of
such contacts and assistance in the
future. Sign on to the Network today by
returning the coupon on this page to
Kathleen K. Mooney. Director of Career
Planning, Agnes Scott College, Decatur,
Georgia 30030. A Kathleen Mooney
Mail to Kathleen K. Mooney, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga. 30030
Sign me on as an affiliate for the following programs:
Shadow Speaker
D Extern D Adviser
D Intern D Mentor
Name
Address.
CI
ass.
Career Field.
Tributes of Appreciation
Since April 15, 1979, gifts have been
made in honor or in memory of the
following:
IN HONOR
Mary Virginia Allen
Alma Buchanan Brown
Dorothy D. Brown
Sally Elberfeld Countryman
Florene Dunstan
Kenneth and Annie Lee Greenfield
Nancy P. Groseclose
Mary Boney Sheats
Roberta Winter
Myrna Goode Young
IN MEMORY
Julianne Williams Bodnar
John A. and Sallie Burgess
Ella Carey
Melissa Cilley
Marion T. Clark
Jean McPherson Davis
David A. Dunseith
James Ballard Dyer
Inez Norton Edwards
George E. Erwin
Isabelle S. Fink
Helen Fox
Lucy Durham Goss
James E. Gilliam, Jr.
Frances K. Gooch
Goldie Ham Hanson
Rebekah Hough Scott Harman
Muriel Harn
Cleo Hearon
Robert B. Holt
Waddy and Maude Hudson
Mariwill Hanes Hulsey
Sally Kate McLane Johnson
Emma May Laney
Ellen Douglass Leyburn
Volina Butler and B. Frank Markert
Mec Mclntyre McAfee
Eleanor Brown McCain
John McCain
Pauline Martin McCain
Grace Zachry McCreery
Fanny McCaa McLaughlin
Claude Candler McKinney
Louise McKinney
Bessie McCowen Medlock
James A. and Margaret Browning Minter
Nell Scott Earthman Molton
Mrs. Charles Norfleet, Sr.
Virginia Norris
Marie Scott O'Neill
Mr. & Mrs. H. B. Patterson. Sr.
H. B. Patterson. Jr.
John H. Patton
Elizabeth Gray and Marvin B. Perry, Sr.
Marianne Gillis Persons
Sarah Shields Pfeiffer
Janef Preston
Jeb Russell
Eugenia Williams Schmidt
Florence E. Smith
Laura M. Steele
Carolyn Strozier
Samuel Guerry Stukes
Merle G. Walker
W. G. Weeks
Ruth Blanton Wood
Mason Pressly Young
Show Your College Ties
The projects committee of the Alum-
nae Association arranged with designer
Frankie Welch to produce a scarf espe-
cially for us. The 33" x 7 3 Ia" cranberry on
nude scarf illustrated on the cover of this
magazine bears an Agnes Scott motif
and the words, "Agnes Scott Alumnae
Association."
Won't you show your College ties and
accent your spring wardrobe. Mail the
coupon below to the Alumnae Office.
Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia
30030.
Alumnae Association, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia 30030
Enclosed is $ for scarves (5 $10.
Name:
Address:_
Phone:
Philips
(continued from page 14)
care become economically important
factors.
Sociologically, one knows that the
most fundamental structure or model of
our society is the family. The divorce
rate has skyrocketed, and the structure
of the family has fallen apart, yet we
continue to act amazed when our
national fiber begins to crumble.
Watergate and Abscam should be of no
surprise as the family structure
continues to disintegrate. If women are
drafted and if women ultimately see
combat duty, how are we going to begin
to restructure our nation's stability? The
drafting of women is more than an ERA
issue. Instead, it is a question of the
nation's priorities.
Clearly, there is a need for women in
the military services in order to release
men for combat duties. But with a
surplus of volunteers today, is it
necessary to draft women unless the
combat-related jobs are included? And
are we ready to bring home women in
body bags? This argument against as
well as the argument for need further
study before either can be enacted into
law.
Chapman
(continued from page 14)
military service, to amend their battle-
cry to "Equal rights in everything but
this!" I believe there is a middle
position. It is only fair that if men are
forced to register for the draft, then
women should be, also. That is, we
should assert the eligibility of women for
the draft. However, until the Equal
Rights Amendment is ratified, we should
stand firmly in opposition.
Even if the ERA is finally added to the
Constitution, if only to justify the
registration of women for the draft. I still
personally object to the draft. But I also
refuse to be sexist. I am ashamed of the
woman who would stand and watch.
without the slightest sense of guilt, her
husband or brother but not herself
be drafted. And I sympathize with the
woman who. in an ERA-less society, is
suddenly being proclaimed "equal" in
such a cursory but potentially deadly
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Deaths
, ERRATUM
> In announcing the death of the
mother of Nell Tabor Hartley '63
in the winter issue, we listed her
j name incorrectly. It is correctly
j listed in this issue. We regret the
error.
Institute
Kitty Huie Aderhold, February 4,
1980.
Frances Ardelle Carlton Sibley,
September 18, 1979.
Academy
Lillian Beatty Cory, sister of
Mildred Beatty Miller, September
23, 1979.
Blanche Burch Harp, February 8,
' 1980.
Annie Aven Smith, October 14,
: 1979.
! 1910
Annie Inez Smith Moore, January
! 20,1980.
Keturah White Marshall, Sep-
: tember 18, 1979.
J
1 1911
Eleanor Coleman Burchard, De-
cember 20, 1979.
Kate Young Miller, May 23, 1979.
1916
Jeannette Joyner Locke Welch,
, October 24, 1979.
i 1920
i Lucy Beman, December 10, 1979.
L
I 1921
Mariwill Hanes Hulsey, January
11, 1980.
Adelaide Park Webster, De-
: cember 12, 1979.
i Lewis Ingram, husband of Julia
\ Tomlinson Ingram, January 20,
1980.
I
1922
Gena Callaway Merry, January
26, 1980.
1926
Helena Hermance Kilgour,
November 17, 1979.
Julian Sturtevant, husband of
Norma Tucker Sturtevant, Au-
gust 20, 1979.
Clifford Bennett, brother of Mary
Louise Bennett, November 23,
1979.
1927
Sarah Shields Pfeiffer, December
23, 1979.
Wayne Bramlett, husband of
Maurine Bledsoe Bramlett, Sep-
tember 26, 1979.
1929
Mary Hughes Jones, July 8, 1979.
1933
Leone Evans Andrews, sister of
May Belle Evans, January 6,
1980.
1934
Helen Eidson Hooper, November
8, 1979.
Isabel Lowrance Watson, January
29, 1980.
Frederick Woods, husband of
Polly Gordon Woods, November
19, 1979.
1941
Leone Evans Andrews, January 6,
1980.
1945
Robert Howard, husband of
Eugenia Jones Howard, De-
cember 4, 1979.
1946
Gertrude Day Woodward,
November 18, 1979.
1947
Mildred Derieux Gantt, December
10, 1979.
1949
Thomas Fancher, husband of
Nelda Brantley Fancher, January
25, 1980.
1952
A.B. Bottoms, father of Anne
Bottoms Wouters, December 8,
1979.
1959
Neill Roderick McGeachy, father
of Lila McGeachy Ray, De-
cember 17, 1979.
Eugene Witherspoon, father of
Mary Mac Witherspoon Harrell,
December 21, 1979.
1961
J. R. Mitchell, husband of Flor-
ence Gaines Mitchell, January 7,
1980.
Mrs. J. W. Chambers, mother of
Kacky Chambers Elliott, March
2, 1979.
J. W. Chambers, father of Kacky
Chambers Elliott, July 11, 1979.
1962
Neill Roderick McGeachy, father
of Peggy McGeachy Roberson,
December 17, 1979.
1963
Mrs. Roy Tabor, mother of Nell
Tabor Hartley, September 12,
1979.
1964
Mrs. J. W. Chambers, mother of
Barbara Chambers Donnelly,
March 2, 1979.
J. W. Chambers, father of Barba-
ra Chambers Donnelly, July 11,
1979.
1966
Neill Roderick McGeachy, father
of Libby McGeachy Mills, De-
cember 17, 1979.
1976
Mildred Derieux Gantt. mother of
Eva Gantt DuPree, December 10,
1979.
29
Youth Not Wasted on the Young
By Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51, President, Alumnae Association
This column is the last one I shall write
as president of the Agnes Scott Alumnae
Association. It seems impossible that
two years have passed since my election,
but my term is now almost over. 1 do
serve until June 30, 1980; but the real
work (and fun) ends Alumnae Weekend
when I have the honor of passing the
gavel on to the president-elect.
Throughout the two years, I have
shared my thoughts and impressions of
the College with you through this
column, and I hope that I have given you
some feeling of what I have been seeing
when I visited the campus. It is quite
difficult to be a student at Agnes Scott
today. I treasure my years there, but I
couldn't do it again.
I couldn't put in those hours of
studying and then talking. I don't have
the stamina to jog for miles, play all that
bridge, and eat that dining hall food!
Also, the women today face basic moral
questions that we never had to deal with.
We knew that one didn't drink or smoke;
the rules told us so, and we generally did
what the rules told us to do. Today the
women must decide for themselves
whether to smoke and whether or not (or
when and how much) to drink.
We never had to make decisions on
how to run our social lives; with our
double date sitting in the back seat, it
was not difficult to say no or to move a
hand. Today, with the privilege of going
to a man's dormitory room at Emory or
Tech or having a man in your room,
decisions and courses of action or
inaction must be thought about and
settled ahead of time.
For us communism was evil and
totalitarianism had to be eliminated.
Today students have to work out detente
and the draft. Are they for ERA but
really not willing to fight alongside their
"equal" brothers'?
I respect and admire the students who
are at Agnes Scott today, but I do not
envy them. Some people feel that youth
is wasted on the young that one's
college years are the best years of one's
life. Nonsense, I say. Only young people
have the stamina to deal with the
problems and make the decisions of
these difficult years. You have to be
young to have the energy to face and
resolve the issues which affect your
entire life. These college years are just
the beginning. If young women have
survived at Agnes Scott, then they have
had to come to grips with and develop
basic values and standards. This is as
true today as it was when each of us was
at Agnes Scott. My superior Agnes Scott
education helped me to get a trainee job
in the field in which I had studied. I was
able to "succeed" in my work by
adapting my Agnes Scott learning
techniques and skills. In addition, along
the way, I found an intelligent, sensitive,
supportive husband and together we
have two attractive, bright, and funny
children.
I am lucky, I know, but I would not
have been able to build my life as I have
without the background, challenges, and
values that I found at Agnes Scott. I
didn't spend the happiest or best years of
my life at the College; I am having these
years now.
I must attribute a great deal of what I
am to Agnes Scott and for that I thank
the College. I also thank you, the
alumnae of Agnes Scott, for giving me
the honor and privilege of serving as
your president and for being part of two
of the best years of my life.
Trips to
Britain
and Italy
Won't you join the alumnae who have
already signed up for the Alumnae
Association's two trips this year. We
travel to Great Britain from August
24-September 1 and to Italy from Oc-
tober 28-November 5. There are just a
few more weeks to sign up before the
deadline.
Write or call the Alumnae Office for
information; Alumnae Office, Agnes
Scott College, Decatur, Georgia 30030.
(404) 373-2571, ext. 207.
32
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
From the Director
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Come to the Aid of Your College
Now is the Time for All Good Women
Although the overall response to our Million Dollar
Challenge Fund is encouraging, we now have fewer alumnae
donors to the Agnes Scott Fund as compared to the same time
last year. One conjecture of opinion is that we have many new
givers for the Million Dollar Challenge Fund while a great
number of our regular sustaining contributors are delaying
their annual gifts for some reason.
The cause for delay may be that money is tighter this year,
and our regular donors are postponing their gifts until the last
possible moment. Or some of our regular contributors may
not understand the method of giving this year and are waiting
for clarification.
Let us urge you to continue your loyal support of the
College. Undesignated annual gifts to the Agnes Scott Fund
are essential because they may be used where the College
needs them most. We do want to sustain the usual thoughtful
giving to our Annual Fund. Please act now to send in your
regular gift. In addition, we would appreciate your con-
tributing or pledging to the Million Dollar Challenge Fund.
If you have any question about giving at this time, please
talk with someone in the Development Office or the Alumnae
Office. We can assist you and will gratefully appreciate your
generosity.
We know that the alumnae will follow their usual
magnanimous bent to support the needs of Agnes Scott
College. A
Daughters of Alumnae
First row, I to r: Patti Higgins '82 (Martha Richardson
Higgins '57). Elizabeth Walden '83 (Grace Woods Walden
'60), Bonnie Armstrong '83 (Rae Carole Hosack Armstrong
'60), Lane Langford '83 (Cecily Rudisill Langford '58),
Sarah Campbell '81 (Ann Williamson Campbell Young
'50), Becky Lowrey '82 (Helen Hendry Lowrey '57).
Second row. Laura KJettner '81 (Virginia Hays Klettner
'53), Emily Sharp '83 (Carolyn Herman Sharp "57), Cheryl
Andrews '83 (Jackie Rountree Andrews '57), Summer
Smisson '83 (LaWahna Rigdon Smisson '52), Kitsie
Bassett '83 (Melba Cronenberg Bassett '59), Lynda
Wimberly '81 (Joyce Skelton Wiberly '57). Third row:
Margaret Sheppard '82 (Anne Thomson Sheppard '53),
Maryellen Smith '82 (Reese Newton Smith '49), Gina
Philips '81 (Virginia Dickson Philips '47), Robin McCain
'83 (Wendy Boatwright McCain '60), Jenny Howell '82
(Jean White Howell '51). Fourth row: Katie Miller '83
(Libby Hanna Miller '59), Teace Markwalter '82 (Maria
Harris Markwalter '59), Scottie Echols '83 (Billie Rainey
Echols '57), Becky Durie '81 (Betty Averill Durie '51),
Polly Gregory '82 (Pauline Winslow Gregory '59). Fifth
row: Malinda Roberts '81 (Shirley Heath Roberts '52), Uisi
Inserni '83 (Molly Milam Inserni '45), Laura Newsome '81
(Sis Burns Newsome '57), Darby Bryan '81 (Patricia
Boring Bryan '54), Susan Roberts '83 (Shirley Heath
Roberts '52).
Not pictured: Ellen All '81 (Eleanor Swain All '57). Ellen
Anderson '81 (Nancy Parks Anderson *49), Nancy Blake
'82 (Nancy Brock Blake '57), Beth Brittingham '82 (June
Strickland Brittingham *43), Anna Bryan '80 (Mary Anna
Ogden Bryan '51), Margaret Conyers '81 (Jane Hook
Conyers '53), Cindy Dantzler '80 (Nancy Niblack Dantzler
'58), Lynn Garrison '83 (Jane Zuber Garrison '54), Carol
Goodman '83 (Carolyn May Goodman '56), Grace Haley
'80 (Anna DaVault Haley '51), Kemper Hatfield *80 (Mary
Hollingsworth Hatfield '39), Margaret Kelly '83 (Genny
Lucchese Kelly *55), Jennifer Knight '80 (Dorothy Adams
Knight '51), Sharon Maitland '80 (Vivian Weaver Maitland
'53), Martha McGaughey '81 (Martha Patterson
McGaughey '45), Mildred Pinnell '82 (Leonice Davis
Pinnell '59), Carol Reaves '82 (Louise McKinney Hill
Reaves *54), Jenny Rowell '83 (Janice Matheson Rowell
'58), Kim Schellack '83 (Mary Elizabeth Walker Schellack
'44), Beth Shackleford '82 (Betty Akerman Shackleford
'55), Martha Sheppard '81 (Anne Thomson Sheppard '53),
Becky Sprenger '82 (Justine Stinson Sprenger '56), Lynn
Stonecypher '81 (May Muse Stonecypher '56), Patti
Tucker *80 (Patricia Conner Tucker '57), Lisa Wise '80
(Patricia Singley Wise '69).
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY, AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
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THE
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY/ SUMMER 1980
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THE
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY / VOLUME 58 NUMBER 4
-**-
CONTENTS
1 Fifty- Year Club
2 1979-80 Giving
Summary Report by Classes
Special Gifts
Giving by Classes
Parents and Friends
Businesses and Foundations
16 Update:
The Department of Philosophy
By Dr. Richard Parry
19 An Agnes Scott Education
By Dr. Martine Brownley
22 With the Clubs
26 Alumnae Weekend in Review
28 Recent Gifts and Bequests
30 From the Classes
44 Association President's Letter
45 Three Outstanding Alumnae Honored -
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY STAFF:
Editor / Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Associate Editor / Juliette Harper '77
Design Consultant / John Stuart McKenzie
ALUMNAE OFFICE STAFF:
Director of Alumnae Affairs
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Associate Director
Jean Chalmers Smith '38
Assistant to the Director
Juliette Harper '77
Office Manager
Elizabeth Wood Smith '49
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS:
President / Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Vice Presidents
Region I / Susan Blackmore Hannah '64
Region II / Polly Page Moreau '62
Region III / Jean Salter Reeves '59
Region IV / Marcia Knight-Orr '73
Secretary / Margaret Hopkins Martin '40
Treasurer / Susan Skinner Thomas '74
Member / Council for Advancement and
Support of Education
Published four times yearly: fall, winter,
spring, summer by Agnes Scott College
Alumnae Office, Decatur, Georgia 30030
Second class postage paid
at Decatur, Georgia
(U.S.P.S. 009-280)
Front cover:
This photograph by Floyd Jillson, reprinted by permission
of Atlanta Newspapers, was run on the front cover of the
June 1. 1980, issue of the Atlanta Weekly magazine, with
the caption "Pick the Agnes Scott Woman." All six are
Agnes Scott women. Bottom row, 1-r: Beth Maisano '82,
'79-80 sophomore class president; Yu San Chooi, interna-
tional student from Malaysia. Center row: Burlette Carter
'82, a Truman Scholar; Helen Anderson '81, 80-81
interdorm council chairman. Back row; Carol Tveit, a
Retum-to-College student; Pat Arnzen '80, editor of the
'79-80 Silhouette.
Back cover:
After Agnes Scott's ninety-first Commencement June 1 ,
economics professor Bill Weber congratulates graduate
Katherine Zarkowsky Broderick.
Class of '30 and earlier classes filled Rebekah Hall a! candlelight dinner.
Fifty-Year Club
Charter Members Inducted
It really was a good party, the first meeting
of the Fifty-Year Club, made so by the
purpose, the place, and the people.
Traditionally, the fiftieth reunion class has
been specifically honored during Alumnae
Weekend. The College has wanted to give
recognition also to those graduating earlier
than the fifty-year class. So the Fifty-Year
Club was created. A steering committee
(Mary Ben Wright Erwin '25, chairman;
Carol Stearns Wey '12, Llewellyn Wilburn
'19, Frances Gilliland Stukes '24, Louisa
White Gosnell '27, Mary Warren Read '29)
was appointed to plan something special. A
seated dinner in Rebekah Reception Room
(formerly Rebekah Dining Room) on Friday
evening, April 18, was the result. The
response was enthusiastic. The 175 guests
included the oldest alumna, Annie Wylie
Preston, 101, Class of 1899, more than forty
members of the Class of 1930, and represen-
tatives from most of the years between. They
came from far and near. Many who could not
attend expressed regrets in nostalgic letters.
By Mary Ben Wright Erwin '25
many of which were read during the evening.
President Perry was master of ceremonies
and Mrs. Perry returned thanks and asked
God's continued blessings. Dr. Paul McCain
recognized Annie Wylie Preston of the
earliest class and Juanita Greer White '26,
from Nevada, who came the greatest dis-
tance. Dr. Edward McNair, emeritus profes-
sor of English, now College historian and
archivist was the speaker, relating stories of
Agnes Scott in the '20s and '30s. Frances
Gilliland Stukes '24, with Dr. McNair at the
piano, led us in singing the Alma Mater and
Annie Wylie Preston prayed the benediction.
Officers who were elected for 1980-81
are: president, Josephine Bridgman '27 of
Decatur, vice president, Carolyn Smith
Whipple '25 of Perry, Ga.; secretary-
treasurer, Mary Prim Fowler '29 of Atlanta.
Plans are already being made for the next
meeting at the time of Alumnae Weekend in
April, 1981, for classes 1931 and earlier.
It really was a good party. The purpose
early Agnes Scott alumnae were honored and
urged to help the College maintain its
standards of excellence and its rich tradi-
tions; the place dear to all of us; the
people bound by love for Agnes Scott.
Summer 1980
Report on 1 979-80 Gifts to Agi
By Dr. Paid M. McCain. Vice President for Development
During 1979-80, [he second year Dorothy (Dot)
Holloran Addison '43 of Atlanta served as
Alumnae Fund Chairman. Agnes Scott received
$1,299,117 from 2.544 alumnae representing 29
percent of the active alumnae This amount
included gifts to the Agnes Scott Fund and the
Million Dollar Challenge Fund. This gift total
from alumnae was one of the largest in the
College's history. This figure, however, includes
$642,500 in bequests from five alumnae. The
fifty-seven class fund chairmen and the 351 class
agents had key roles in this successful effort.
During the past year combined gifts of 3,618
alumnae, parents and friends, businesses and
foundations to Agnes Scott totaled $1,810,513.
This amount includes all gifts for endowment,
scholarships, equipment, and many other im-
provements.
Except for those who preferred to give anony-
mously, all individuals, foundations, and busi-
nesses who made their gifts directly to Agnes Scott
are listed on the following pages. These donors
made their gifts to the College from July 1 . 1979,
through June 30, 1980. Gifts received after the
latter date will be shown in the report for 1980-81.
The Tower Circle is that group of donors whose
gifts were $1,000 or more, the Colonnade Club
includes those who gave $500 or more, the
Quadrangle Quorum for donors of $250 or more,
and the Century Club for those who gave $100 or
more. The asterisk (*) in the class listing indicates
an alumna who served as a class agent. Double
asterisks (**) are for donors who are now
deceased.
Please let the Agnes Scott Fund Office know of
any corrections which may be needed so that we
can be sure our records are accurate.
To worker and donor alike, the entire College
community welcomes this opportunity to thank
you and express our appreciation for your fine
response.
Dot Holloran Addison '43 and Paul McCain.
Summary Report by Classes
Honor
Guard
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
Chairmen
Maryellen Harvey Newton
Alice Virden
Frances Gilliland Stukes
Rosalie Wooten Deck
Mary Lovejoy Jackson
Miriam Anderson Dowdy
Pernette Elizabeth Adams
Frances Glover Welsh
Shannon Preston Cumming
Martha Sprinkle Rafferty
Varnelle Braddy Perryman
Mary Sturtevant Cunningham
Nelle Chamlee Howard
Julia McClatchey Howard
Sarah Frances McDonald
Kathleen Daniel Spicer
Goudyloch Erwin Dyer
Mary Hoi lingsworth Hatfield
Helen Gates Carson
Gene Slack Morse
Claire Purcell Smith
Anne Paisley Boyd
Bettye Ashcraft Senter
Mary McConkey Reimer
Marquerite Born Hornsby
Rebekah Scott Bryan
Jo Culp Williams
Pat Overton Webb
Jeanne Kline Brown
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131
32
26
41
41
47
42
53
56
40
44
46
45
42
41
37
45
55
61
43
49
41
45
55
46
38
46
49
34
39
36
27
25
35
37
34
36
36
46
41
38
37
39
34
32
33
32
43
42
29
33
33
32
37
28
25
30
30
24
24
Amount Chairmen
$740,531 1952 Barbara Brown Waddell
4,231 1953 Jane Hook Conyers
4,305 1954 Florence Fleming Corley
15,470 1955 Sarah Petty Dagenhart
7,285 1956 Louise Rainey Ammons
10,492 1957 Elizabeth Ansley Allan
5,650 1958 Carolyn Tinkler Ramsey
10,128 1959 Jane Kraemer
1960 Becky Evans Callahan
7,145 1961 Mary Wayne Crymes Bywater
316,905 1962 Lebby Rogers Harrison
7,584 1963 Mary Ann Lusk Jorgenson
4,250 1964 Marion Smith Bishop
4,953 Lucy Herbert Molinaro
8,185 1965 Anne Schiff Faivus
3,605 1966 Ann Morse Topple
4,455 1967 Anne Davis McGehee
13,210 1968
9,465 1969 Carol Blessing Ray
8,124 1970 Mary-Wills Hatfield LeCroy
5,385 1971 Christy Fulton Baldwin
3,625 1972 Sharon Jones Cole
4,806 1973 Judy Hill Calhoun
2,255 1974 Carol Culver
4,200 1975 Debbie Shepard Hamby
6,630 1976 Nancy Leasendale Purcell
5,450 1977 Ann Pesterfield Krueger
3,259 1978 Kay Cochrane
3,850 1979
2,720 1980 Ann Huffines
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Amount
47
30
5,038
36
27
3,122
29
24
5,370
32
22
4,310
46
32
5,672
42
24
5,466
44
27
6,254
40
23
2,335
44
25
3,205
57
31
5,345
40
21
7,054
37
19
3,405
41
21
2,305
58
29
2,658
49
24
2,905
40
21
1,837
55
27
2,963
64
28
3,119
51
24
2,055
55
27
3,4 38
44
21
1,929
40
18
2,023
28
15
885
28
16
2,481
33
18
1,731
22
15
785
12
7
310
11
6
200
9
5
615
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
s Scott College
Tower Circle
| 1 11 ! !
L___
/
Bertha Hudson Whitaker Acad.
*Mary Wallace Kirk Ml
Annie Tait Jenkins '14
Mary West Thatcher '15
Alma Buchanan Brown ' 16
Oman Buchanan Albaugh '16
Maryellen Harvey Newton '16
Lulu Smith Westcott '19
Myrt le Blackraon ' 21
Ida Brittain Patterson '21
Elizabeth Enloe MacCarthy '21
Jean McAlister '21
Mary Stewart McLeod '23
Victoria Howie Kerr '24
Mary Keesler Dalton '25
Mary Ben Wright Erwin '25
Dora Ferrell Gentry '26
Juanita Greer White '26
Florence Perkins Ferry '26
Caroline McKinney Clarke '27
Mary Shive '27
Willie Smith '27
Louise Woodard Clifton '27
Ruth Thomas Stemmons '28
Hazel Brown Ricks '29
Ethel Freeland Darden '29
Mary Warren Read '29
Violet Weeks Miller '29
Raemond Wilson Craig '30
Julia Thompson Smith '31
Margaret Weeks '31
Diana Dyer Wilson '32
Mary Elliot '32
Elinor Hamilton Hightower '34
Betty Lou Houck Smith '35
Carrie Latimer Duvall '36
Louise Young Garrett '38
Jane Hamilton Ray '39
Martha Marshall Dykes '39
Betty Sams Daniel '39
Haydie Sanford Sams ' 39
Helen Gates Carson ' 40
Virginia Milner Carter '40
Ruth Slack Roach '40
Aileen Kasper Borrish '41
Dorothy Holloran Addison '43
Scott Newell Newton '45
Mary Duckworth Gellerstedt '46
Louise Isaacson Bernard '46
Elizabeth Walton Callaway '47
Cissie Spiro Aidinoff '51
Catherine Warren Dukehart '51
Jean Roberts Seaton '52
Louise Hill Reaves '54
Susanna Bryd Wells ' 55
Jo Ann Hall Hunsinger '55
Nancy Thomas Hill '56
Suzella Burns Newsome '57
Nancy Holland Sibley '58
Jo Ann Sawyer Delafield '58
Emi ly Bailey Bigby '61
Elizabeth Jefferson Boyt ' 62
Sally Stenger '75
Mr. Maurice J. Bernard, III
Mrs . Howard P. Conrad
Mr. Harry L. Dalton
Capt . J. Wallace Daniel
Mr. Carlton Duggan
Mr. Howard M. Duvall, Jr.
Mr. Blake P. Garrett, Sr.
Dr. Julia Gary
Mr. L. L. Gellerstedt , Jr.
Mr. William H. Hightower, Jr.
Mr. John S. Hunsinger
Mrs. Judith Bourgeois Jensen
Dr. Rudolph W. Jones, Jr.
Mr. J. Erksine Love, Jr.
**Mrs . E leanor Brown McCain
Dr. Paul M. McCain
Dr. James D. Newsome
Dr . and Mrs . Marvin B . Perry, Jr.
Mr. C. B. Rogers , Jr.
Mr. Hansford Sams, Jr.
Mr. C. Oscar Schmidt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Francois Sheat s
Mr. John A. Sibley
Mr. W. A. L. Sibley, Jr.
**Dr. Florence E. Smith
Mr. Hal L. Smith
Mr. P. L. Beal Smith
Mrs . Ona Strozier
Mr. William C. Wardlaw, Jr.
Mr. G. L. Westcott
Mr. W. T. Wilson, Jr.
Colonnade Club
Jane Harwell Heazel '17
Katherine Seay ' 18
Quenelle Harrold Sheffield '23
Jane Knight Lowe '23
Frances Gilliland Stukes '24
**Helena Hermance Kilgour '26
**Marie Whittle Wellslager '26
Mildred Cowan Wright '27
Pearl Kunnes '27
Roberta Winter '27
Patricia Collins Dwinnell '28
Mary Shevrasker '28
Josephine Barry Brown '30
Fanny Niles Bolton '31
Martha Williamson Riggs '32
Elizabeth Cobb Boyd '33
Mary Virginia Allen '35
Anne Scott Harman Mauldin '35
Nina Parke Hopkins '35
Frances Steele Garrett '37
Margaret Watson '37
Frances Wilson '37
Evelyn Baty Christman '40
Nell Echols Burks '40
Sara Lee Mattingly '40
Pattie Patterson Johnson '41
Margaret Downie Brown '43
Ruby Rosser Davi6 ' 43
Barbara Wilber Gerland '43
Betty Smith Satterthwaite '46
Jane Cooke Cross '47
Charlotte Anne Hevener Nobbs '47
Katherine Geffcken '49
Ida Pennington Benton ' 50
Patricia Cortelyou Winship '52
Jane Williams Coleman '53
Sara Mclntyre Bahner '55
Nancy Wheeler Dooley '57
Susan Hogg Griffith '58
Carolyn Tinkler Ransey '58
Martha Holmes Keith '59
Elizabeth Harshbarger Broadus '62
Robin Patrick Johnston '63
Suzanne Jones Harper '68
Virginia Pinkston Daily '69
Jeanne Jones Holliday ' 76
Mr. T. Maxfield Bahner
Mr. Thomas H. Broadus
Mrs. Alline M. Brown
Mr. Otis B. Burnham
Mr. J. R. Calloway, Jr.
Mr. Alex P. Gaines
MrB. Rachel Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Markert
Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Martin
Col. and Mrs. Henry A. Robinson
Mr. Joseph W. Satterthwaite
Dr. Erica M. Shiver
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Wells
Quadrangle Quorum
Margaret Phythian '16
Agnes Ball '17
Margaret Bland Sewell '20
Romola Davis Hardy '20
Mary Finney Bass '21
Sara McCurdy Evans ' 21
Eleanor Buchanan Starcher '22
Helen Burkhalter Quattlebaum '22
Viola Hollis Oakley '23
Isabel Ferguson Hargadine '25
Sarah Tate Tumlin '25
Catherine Mock Hodgin ' 26
Virginia Wing Power '26
Catherine Mitchell Lynn '27
Summer 1980
*Fund Agent
Evelyn Sattervhite '27
Mary King Fowler '28
Ann Todd Rubey ' 28
Helen Gouedy Mansfield '29
Jane Bailey Hall Hefner '30
Dorothy Daniel Smith '30
Martha Stackhouse Grafton '30
Sara Townsend Pittman '30
Crystal Wellborn Gregg '30
Pene lope Brown Barnet t ' 32
Susan Love Glenn '32
Imogene Hudson Cullinson '32
Ruth Conant Green '32
Lila Norfleet Davis '32
Lovelyn Wilson Heyward '32
Letitia Rockmore Nash '33
Laura Spivey Massie ' 33
Mary Sturtevant Cunningham '33
Nelle Chamlee Howard ' 34
Pauline Gordon Woods ' 34
Mary Hamilton McKnight '34
Elizabeth Alexander Higgins '35
Betty Fountain Gray '35
Mary Green Wohlford '35
Anne Humber Little '35
Mary Beas ley White '36
Eloisa Alexander LeConte '37
Fannie Harris Jones '37
Goudyloch Erwin Dyer '38
Nancy Moorer Cantey '38
Julia Porter Scurry '39
Eloise McCall Guyton '40
Ethelyn Dyar Daniel '41
Ann Henry '41
Martha Moody Laseter '41
Gene Slack Morse '41
Frances Spratlin Hargrett '41
Anne Charabless Bateman '42
Julia Patch Weston '42
Margaret Sheftall Chester '42
Frances Tucker Johnson '42
Maryann Cochran Abbott '43
Barbara Connally Kaplan '44
Elizabeth Farmer Caynor '45
Martha Baker Wilkins '46
Luci le Beaver '46
Marianne Jeffries Williams '47
Barbara Blair '48
Anne Jones Crabill '48
Rebekah Scott Bryan '48
Betty Jeanne Ellison Candler '49
Ruby Lehmann Cowley '49
Helen Edwards Propst '50
Martha Stowell Rhodes '50
Mary Hayes Barber Holmes ' 5 1
Sara McKee Burnside '51
Carol Hunger ' 51
Emy Evans Blair '52
Ann Herman Dunwoody '52
Jean Isbell Brunie '52
Ellen Hunter Brumfield '53
Patricia Morgan Fisher ' 53
Harriet Durham Maloof '54
Anne Rosselot Clayton '55
Virginia Love Dunaway '56
May Muse Stonecypher '56
Jean Salter Reeves '59
Phyllis Cox Whitesell '60
Charlotte King Sanner '60
Sally A. Smith Howard '60
Ann Broad Stevenson ' 61
Betsy Dalton Brand '61
Marguerite Dickert Ligon '61
Ann Leigh Modlin Burkhardt '61
Ann Hutchinson Beason '62
Lebby Rogers Harrison '62
Elizabeth Thomas Freyer '63
Becky Reynolds Bryson '64
Laura Dorsey Rains '66
Lucy El len Jones Coo ley ' 67
Sally Elberfeld Countryman '68
Georganne Rose Cunningham ' 68
Evelyn Brown Christensen '71
Ann Jarret t '71
Susan Morton ' 71
Deborah Jordan Bates ' 72
Mary Louise Brown Forsythe '75
Mrs . George M. Bevier
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Birdsong
Mr. Scott Candler, Jr.
Mr. Neil 0. Davis
Mr. Earl H. Elberfeld
Mrs. Esther A. Graff
Mr. Garnett L. Keith
Mrs. Elsie W. Love
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Minter, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Pepe
Mr. Wesley G, Pippert
Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Stuhr
Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Thomas
Century Club
Louise Van Harlington Ingersoll Inst.
Annie Wiley Preston Inst.
Gladys Camp Brannan ' 16
Katherine Hay Rouse ' 16
Virginia Allen Potter '17
Janet Newton ' 17
Regina Pinkston ' 17
Katherine Simpson '17
Virginia Haugh Franklin '18
Elizabeth Dimmock Bloodworth ' 19
Lucy Durr Dunn ' 19
Elizabeth Witherspoon Patterson '29
Marian Harper Kellogg '20
Elizabeth Lovett ' 20
Margaret Bell Hanna '21
Julia Brantley Willett '21
Lois Compton Jennings '21
Lucile Conant Leland '21
Sarah Fulton '21
Cama Burgess Clarkson '22
Ruth Scandrett Hardy '22
Harriet Scott Brown '22
Eileen Dodd Sams '23
Elizabeth Hoke Smith '23
Lucie Howard Carter '23
Lucile Little Morgan '23
Martha Mcintosh Nail '23
Edith Ruff Couliette '23
Attie Alford '24
Martha Eakes Matthews '24
Elizabeth Henry Shands '24
Barron Hyatt Morrow '24
Corinne Jackson Wilkerson '24
Mary McCurdy '24
Margaret McDow MacDougall '24
Catherine Nash Scott '24
Helen Wright Smith '24
Mary Caldwell McFarland '25
Bryte Daniels Reynolds '25
Mary Ann McKinney '25
Lillian Middlebrooks Smears '25
Harriet Pade Prouse '25
Carolyn Smith Whipple '25
Memory Tucker Merritt '25
Pocahontas Wight Edmunds '25
Helen Adelaide Bates Law '26
Edyth Carpenter Shuey '26
Elizabeth Chapman Pirkle '26
Gene Dumas Vickers '26
Edith Gilchrist Berry '26
Mary Elizabeth Knox Happoldt '26
Grace Ogden Moore '26
Sarah Quinn Slaughter '26
Olivia Ward Swann ' 26
Norma Tucker Sturtevant '26
Margaret Whitington Davis '26
Reba Bayless Boyer '27
Blanche Berry Sheehan ' 27
Lillian Clement Adams '27
Martha Crowe Eddins '27
Mabel Dumas Crenshaw ' 27
Grace Etheredge '27
Elizabeth Henderson Palmer ' 2 7
Maude Jackson Padgett ' 27
Elizabeth Lilly Swedenburg '27
Louise Lovejoy Jackson '27
Elizabeth Lynn ' 27
Kenneth Maner Powell '27
Mary Ruth McMillan Jones '27
Douglass Rankin Hughes '27
Virginia Sevier Hanna '27
Mamie Shaw Flack '27
Emily Stead ' 27
Elizabeth Vary '27
Leila Anderson '28
S. Virginia Carrier '28
Madelaine Dunseith Alston '28
Louise Girardeau Cook '28
Sarah Glenn Boyd '28
Olive Graves Bowen '28
Muriel Griffin '28
Anna Knight Daves '28
Evangeline Papageorge '28
Elizabeth Roark Ellington '28
Virginia Branch Leslie '29
Lucile Bridgman Leitch '29
Bettina Bush Jackson '29
Virginia Cameron Taylor '29
Sally Cothran Lambeth '29
Sara Douglass Thomas '29
Elise Gibson '29
Elizabeth Hatchett '29
Cara Hinman ' 29
Katherine Hunter Branch ' 29
Sara Johnston Hill '29
Mary Alice Juhan '29
Geraldine LeMay '29
Katherine Lott Marbut '29
Eleanor Morris MacKinnon '29
Katharine Pasco '29
Letty Pope Prewitt '29
Helen Ridley Hartley '29
Effie Mae Winslow Taylor '29
Lillian Wurm Cousins '29
Margaret Armstrong Durdin '30
Lucille Coleman Christian '30
Elise Derickson '30
Clarene Dorsey ' 30
Dorothy Dudley McLanahan '30
Mildred Hutcheson Rouse '30
Alice Jernigan Dowling '30
Leila Carlton Jones Bunkley '30
Judy Maloney Officer '30
Sarah Marsh Shapard '30
Mary McCallie Ware '30
Frances Messer Jeffries '30
Blanche Miller Rigby '30
Lynn Moore Hardy ' 30
Carolyn Nash Hathaway '30
Jo Smith Webb '30
Belle-Ward Stowe Abernethy '30
Mary P. Trammel ' 30
Harriet Williams '30
Sara Bullock '31
Ruth Etheredge Griffin '31
Dorothy Grubb Rivers '31
Anne Hudson Hankins '31
Anne McCallie '31
Katherine Morrow Norem '31
Ruth Pringle Pipkin '31
Jeanette Shaw Harp '31
Harriet Smith '31
Laelius Stallings Davis '31
Martha Watson Smith '31
Catherine Baker Evans '32
Varnelle Braddy Perryman '32
Grace Fincher Trimble '32
Marjorie Gamble '32
Elizabeth Hughes Jackson '32
Louise Stakely ' 32
Jura Taffar Cole '32
Miriam Thompson Felder ''32
Martine Tuller Joyner '32
Bernice Beaty Cole '33
Louise Brant Habel '33
Josephine Clark Fleming '33
Mary Felts Steedman '33
Julia Finley McCutchen '33
Caroline Lingle Lester '33
Elizabeth Lynch '33
Annie Laurie Whitehead Young '33
Marie Whittle Wellslager '33
Helen Boyd McConnell '34
Sybil Grant '34
Mary Grist Whitehead '34
Lucy Goss Herbert '34
Lillian Herring Rosas '34
Elizabeth Johnson Thompson '34
Louise McCain Boyce '34
Marion Mathews '34
Frances O'Brien '34
Dorothy Potts Weiss '34
Gladys Pratt Entrican '34
Virginia Prettyman '34
Rosa Shuey Day '34
Mary Sloan Laird '34
Dorothy Walker Palmer '34
Eleanor Williams Knox '34
Carol Griffin Scoville '35
Katherine Hertzka '35
Julia McClatchey Brooke '35
Laura Whitner Dorsey '35
Virginia Wood Allgood '35
Jacqueline Woolfolk Mathes '35
Meriel Bull Mitchell '36
Lilian Grimson Obligado '36
Ori Sue Jones Jordan '36
Louise Jordan Turner '36
Ruth King Stanford '36
Sarah Frances McDonald '36
Dean McKoin Bushong '36
Louisa Robert Carro 1 1 '36
Mary Alice Shelton Felt '36
Mary Margaret Stowe Hunter ' 36
Mary Vines Wright '36
Mary Walker Fox '36
Lucile Dennison Keenan '37
Kathleen Daniel Spicer '37
Annie Galloway Phillips '37
Alice Hannah Brown '37
Barbara Hertwig Meschter '37
Barton Jackson Cathey '37
Dorothy Jester '37
Sarah Johnson Linney '37
Vivienne Long McCain '37
Isabel McCain Brown '37
Enid Middleton Howard '37
Marjorie Scott Meier '37
Dorothy Avery Newton ' 38
Elizabeth Blackshear Flinn '38
Martha Brown Miller '38
Jean Chalmers Smith '38
Lulu Croft '38
Doris Dunn St. Clair '38
Eloise Estes Keiser '38
Martha Long Gosline '38
Bertha Merrill Holt '38
Virginia Suttenfield '38
Anne Thompson Rose '38
Elizabeth Warden Marshall '38
Zoe Wells Lambert * 38
Jean Bailey Owen '39
Elizabeth Furlow Brown '39
Frances Guthrie Brooks '39
Phyllis Johnson O'Neal '39
Emma McMullen Doom '39
Mary Wells McNeill '39
Mary Ruth Murphy Chesnutt '39
Lou Pate Jones ' 39
Mamie Lee Ratliff Finger '39
Jeanne Wilson Redwine Davis '39
Elizabeth Shepherd Green '39
Aileen Short ley Whipple '39
Penny Simonton Boothe '39
Virginia Tumlin Guffin '39
Elinor Tyler Richardson '39
Ann Watkins Ans ley '39
Betty Alderman Vinson '40
Margaret Barnes Carey '40
Marguerite Baum Muhlenfeld '40
Elizabeth Davis Johnston '40
Mary Lang Gill Olson '40
Eleanor Hutchens '40
Mildred Joseph Colyer '40
Virginia McWhorter Freeman '40
Mary Reins Burge '40
Louise Sullivan Fry '40
Mary Mac Terapleton Brown '40
Henrietta Thompson Wilkinson '40
Ruth Ashburn Kline '41
Virginia Corr White '41
Louise Franklin Livingston '41
Caroline Gray Truslow '41
Helen Hardie Smith '41
Beth Irby Milam '41
Dorothy Travis Joyner '41
Jane Vaughan Price '41
Mary Wisdom '41
Betty Ann Brooks '42
Susan Dyer Oliver '42
Doris Henson Vaughn '42
Louise Pruitt Jones '42
Claire Purcell Smith '42
Elizabeth Robertson Schear '42
Marjorie Simpson Ware '42
Dorothy Webster Woodruff '42
Olivia White Cave '42
Mary Jane Auld Linker '43
Mary Brock Williams '43
Laura Cumming Northey '43
Nell Floyd Hall '43
Susan Guthrie Fu '43
Frances Radford Mauldin '43
Lillian Roberts Deakins '43
Clara Rountree Couch '43
Kay Wilkinson Orr '43
Bettye Ashecraft Senter '44
Betty Bacon Skinner '44
Frances Cook Crowley '44
Elizabeth Edwards Wilson '44
Elizabeth Harvard Dowda '44
Julia Harvard Warnock '44
Martha Lasseter Storey '44
Margaret Powell Flowers '44
Marjorie Tippins Johnson '44
Anne Ward Amacher '44
Ruth Anderson Stall '45
Elizabeth Carpenter Bardin '45
Virginia Carter Caldwell '45
Pauline Ertz Wechsler '45
Elizabeth Gribble Cook '45
Sue Mitchell '45
Mary Neely Norris King '45
Bess Sheppard Poole '45
Mary Ann Turner Edwards '45
Suzanne Watkins Smith '45
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Dorothy Webb McKee '45
Frances Woodall Talmadge '45
Jeanne Addison Roberts '46
Emily Ann Bradford Batts '46
Mary Ann Courtenay Davidson '46
Conradine Fraser Riddle '46
Mildred McCain Kinnaird '46
Ann Noble Dye '46
Bettye Phelps Douglas '46
Celetta Powell Jones '46
Eleanor Reynold Verdery '46
Elizabeth Weinschenk Mundy '46
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Eleanor Calley Cross '47
Betty Crabill Rogers '47
Helen Catherine Currie '47
Dorothy Galloway Fontaine '47
Genet Louise Heery Barron ' 47
Margaret Kelly Wells '47
Marguerite Mattison Rice '47
Virginia Owens Watkins '47
Betty Jean Radford Moeller '47
Ellen Rosenblatt Caswell '47
Lorena Ross Brown '47
Barbara Smith Hull '47
Jean Williams Hand '47
Adele Dieckmann McKee '48
Jean Henson Smith '48
Kathleen Hewson Cole "48
June Irvine Torbert '48
Marybeth Little Weston '48
Emily Lady Major '48
May Comer Osborne Parker '48
Ann Rogers Sawyer '48
Barbara Whipple Bitter '48
Bettie Davison Bruce '49
Kate Durr Elmore '49
Katherine A. Geffcken '49
Martha Goddard Lovell '49
Ruby Lehmann Cowley '49
Harriet Lurton Major '49
Katherine McKoy Ehling '49
Nancy Parks Anderson '49
Patty Ann Persohn '49
Betty Jo Sauer Mansur '49
Virginia Vining Skelton '49
Jo-Anne Christopher Cochrane '50
Sarah Hancock White '50
Marie Heng Jan '50
Jessie Hodges Kryder '50
Dorothy Medlock Irvine '50
Anna DaVault Haley '51
Lou Floyd Smith ' 51
Nell Floyd Hall '51
Margaret Hunt Denny '51
Mary Caroline Lindsay Eastman '51
Mary Anna Ogden Bryan '51
Ann Boyer Wilkerson '52
Catherine Crowe Merritt '52
Kathren Freeman Stelzner '52
Ruth Heard Randolph '52
Louise Jett Porter '52
Edith Petrie Hawkins '52
Frances Sells Grimes '52
Jackie Simmons Gow '52
Bertie Bond '53
Ann Cooper Whitesel '53
Belle Miller McMaster '53
Mary Ripley Warren '53
Louise Ross Bell '53
Julia Grier Storey '54
Eleanor Hutchinson Smith '54
Carol Jones Hay ' 54
Mitzi Kiser Law '54
Anne Patteron Hammes '54
Caroline Reinero Keramerer ' 54
Anne Sylvester Booth '54
Nancy Whetstone Hull '54
Jane Zuber Garrison '54
Jo Hinchey Williams '55
Catherine Lewis Callaway '55
Peggy Anne McMillan White '55
Sarah Petty Dagenhart '55
Joan Pruitt Mclntyre '55
Dorothy Jean Sands Hawkins '55
Agnes Scott Willoch '55
Barbara Battle * 56
Margaret Burwell Barnhardt '56
Shirley Calkins Ellis '56
Mary Jo Carpenter '56
Sarah Davis Adams '56
Claire Flinton Barnhardt '56
Priscilla Goodwin Bennett '56
Sallie Greenfield '56
Ann Gregory York '56
Harriett Griffin Harris '56
Sarah Hall Hayes '56
Emmie Hay Alexander '56
Helen Haynes Patton '56
Nancy Jackson Pitts '56
Anne Sayre Calliaon '56
Robbie Ann Shelnutt Upshaw '56
Margaret Benton Davis '57
Margery DeFord Hauck '57
Carolyn Herman Sharp '57
Frances Holtsclaw Berry '57
Rachel King '57
Elaine Lewis Hudgins ' 57
Margaret Minter Hyatt '57
Jean Price Knapp ' 57
Martha Riggins Brown '57
Anne Terry Sherren '57
Carolyn Wright McGarity '57
Martha Davis Roaselot '58
Patricia Gover Bitzer '58
Nora King '58
Carolyn Magruder Ruppenthal '58
Maria Martoccia Clifton '58
Mary Norton Kratt ' 58
Phi a Peppas Kane 1 los '58
Blythe Posey Ashmore '58
Dorothy Ripley Lot t '58
Caroline Romberg Si lcox '58
Harriet Talmadge Mill '58
Delores Taylor Yancey '58
Marilyn Tribble Wittner '58
Jane King Allen '59
Jane Kraemer Scott '59
Mildred Ling Wu ' 59
Ann Rivers Payne Hutcheson '59
Nell Archer Congdon '60
Gloria Branham Burnam '60
Carolyn Davies Preische '60
Linda Jones Klett '60
Julia Kennedy '60
Ashlin Morris Burris '60
Everdina Nievwenhuis '60
Jane Norman Scott '60
Marcia Tobey Swanson '60
Grace Woods Walden ' 60
Ann Avant Crichton '61
Pame la Bevier ' 61
Sally Bryan Minter '61
Mary Clark Schubert '61
Lucy Davis Harper '61
Julia Doar Grubb '61
Harriett Elder Manley '61
Katherine Gwaltney Remick '61
Janice Lynn Henry '61
Sarah Kelso ' 61
Barbara Mordecai Schwanebeck '61
Emily Pancake '61
Harriet Smith Bates '61
Nancy Stone Hough '61
Patricia Walker Bass '61
Isabel Kallman Anderson '62
Marjorie Reitz Turnbull '62
Robin Rudolph Orcutt '62
Virginia Allen Callaway '63
Frances Anderson ' 63
Frances Bailey Graves '63
Judith Brantley '63
Sarah Cumming Mitchell '63
Mary Ann Gregory Dean '63
Bonnie Hatfield Hairrell '63
Dorothy Laird Foster '63
Anne Miller Boyd '63
Kaye Stapleton Redford '63
Suan Keith-Lucas Carson '64
Harriet King Wasserman '64
Martha MacNair McMullen '64
Anne Minter Nelson '64
Julia Norton Keidel '64
Lila Sheffield Howland '64
Elizabeth Singley Duffy '64
Lenora Wicker ' 64
Mary Womack Cox '64
Patricia Gay Nash '65
Molly Gehan Garrison '65
Kenney Knight Linton '65
Elyene Smith Thompson '65
Judith Weldon Maguire '65
Sandra Hay Wilson '65
Barbara Brown Freeman '66
Alice Davidson ' 66
Jan Gaskell Ross '66
Ellen McDaniel '66
Anne Morse Topple '66
Julia Murray Pensinger '66
Gail Savage Glover '66
Malinda Snow ' 66
Sarah Uzzell-Rindlaub '66
Louisa Williams '66
Judith Jackson Mozen '67
Julia Nuckols Offutt '67
Caroline Owens Crain '67
Susan Stevens Hitchcock '67
June E. Derrick '68
Susan McCann Butler '68
Allyn Smoak Bruce '68
Patricia Stringer '68
Susan Stringer Connell '68
Ann Teat Gallant '68
Evelyn Angeletti '69
Mary Chapman Hatcher '69
Margaret Frank Guill '69
Jo Ray Freiler Van Vliet '69
Diane Hampton Flannagan '69
Minnie Bob Mothes Campbell '69
Elta Posey Johnston '69
Anna Eliza Stockman '69
Betty Young von Hernnan '69
Peggy Chapman Curington ' 70
Deborah Ann Claiborne Williams '70
Sherian Fitzgerald Hodges '70
Cheryl Granade Sullivan '70
Ann Hoefer Henderson ' 70
Catherine Oliver '70
Martha Ramey ' 70
Deborah Banghart Mullins '71
Julia Couch Mehr ' 71
Mary Carolyn Cox '71
Rose Anne Ferrante Waters '71
Gayle Gellerstedt Daniel '71
Mary Martin Smith '71
G. G. Sydnor Hill '71
Bernie Todd Smith ' 71
Anne Stuart Kemble Collins '72
Linda Maloy Ozier '72
Anastacia Coc lin '73
Julia Cox Goodloe '73
Resa Harris ' 73
Margaret Lines ' 73
Judith Maguire Tindel '73
Cynthia Wilkes Smith '73
Shelby Cave '75
Marie Newton ' 75
Emi ly Dunbar ' 76
Susan Grier Phillips '76
Martha Marshall Smith '76
Lark Todd Sessions '76
Elizabeth Doscher Shannon '77
Linda Shearon ' 77
Jan Burroughs Loftis '80
Katherine Zarkowsky Broderick ' 80
Mr. Thomas M. Adams
Dr. Wallace M. Alston
Mr. and Mrs. D. Banyar
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Barclay
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Benson
Mr. Herbert Bolton
Mrs. Henry L. Bowden
Mr. Harllee Branch, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bringhurst, Jr.
Mrs . John A. Butler
The Covenant Class of the
Decatur Presbyterian Church
Mr. Emmett B. Cart ledge , Jr.
Mrs. Helen Carchidi
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Carlson
Mr. W. L. Clifton, Jr.
Mr. John H. Cross
Mr. William M. Curd
Mr. Al Daniel
Dr. Walter Ray Davis, Jr.
Mr. Hugh Dorsey
Mrs. Elizabeth R. Dowd
Dr. F. William Dowda
Mr. and Mrs. Gary S. Dunbar
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Dunbar
Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Dunstan
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Echols
Mr. C. C. Elebash
Mr. and Mrs. Earl G. Ezell
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Ferst
Dr. Julia T. Gary
Mr. L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr.
Mrs. Mary C. Gowing
Dr. Nancy P . Grose close
Mr. William B. Hairrell
Mrs . James E . Hara
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Harrison
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil B. Highland, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene S. Homey
Mr. Conley Ingram
Dr. and Mrs. C. Benton Kline, Jr.
and Chris
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Knox
Dr. and Mrs. Leon Lenoir, Jr
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. McClurkin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Mcintosh
Mr. and Mrs. Drayton McLane, Sr.
Dr. W. Edward McNair
Dr. C. W. Morse
Mrs. Edward A. Newman
Mr. W. A. Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Pepe
Mr. Wesley G. Pippert
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Potter
Mr. William R. Riers
Mr. John E. Smith, II
Dr. Chloe Steel
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Swink
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Wallace, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs Robert L. Wendling
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Westmoreland
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton B. Wilburn
Mr. John C. Wilson
Women of the Church ,
Decatur Presbyterian
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Yandle
Mr. and Mrs. William Zarkowsky
Institute
Louise Van Harlingen Ingersoll
Annie Wiley Preston
Academy
Ruth Green
Bertha Hudson Whitaker
SuBie Johnson
Mary Russell Green
Isabelle Simpson Fink
Johnetta Wright Mathyer
1908
Rose Wood
1909
**Lutie Head
1911
**Lena David Farrar
**Mary Wallace Kirk
Mollie McCormick McCord
Mary Robinson Myrick
1912
Martha Hall Young
Julia Smith S lack
Carol Stearns Wey
1913
Jame W. McGaughey
Margaret Roberts Graham
1914
Theodosia Cobbs Hogan
Mildred Holmes Dickert
Annie Tait Jenkins
Kathleen Kennedy
Linda Miller Summer
1915
Mary Hyer Dale
I sabe 1 Norwood
Almedia Sadler Duncan
Louise Warren McMilla
Mary West Thatcher
1916
Alma Buchanan Brown
Oraah Buchanan Albaugh
G ladys Camp Brannan
Maryellen Harvey Newton
Katherine Hay Rouse
Margaret T. Phythian
Mary Glenn Roberts
Clara Whips Dunn
Summer 1980
Fund Agent
1917
1922
Virginia Allen Potter
Gjertrud Amundsen Siqueland
Agnes Ball
Ai Is le M. Cross
Mildred Hall Pearce
Jane Harwell Heaze L
Janet Newton
Regina P. Pinkston
Katharine 8. Si rap son
1918
Elva Brehm Florrid
Martha Comer
Ruby Est es Ware
Virginia Haugh Franklin
Susan B. Hecker
Margaret Leyburn Foster
Dorothy Moore Horton
Katherine Seay
1919
Margaret Grace Barry Owen
Elizabeth Diraraock Bloodworth
Lucy Durr Dunn
Lois Eve Rozier
Louise Felker Mizell
Mary Ford Kennerly
Katherine Godbee Smith
Mary Parks Mason
Lulu Smith Westcott
Marguerite Watts Cooper
Llewellyn Wilburn
Elizbeth Witherspoon Patterson
1920
Marga
Elois
Romol
Sarah
Julia
Maria
Elizai
Virgi
Marge
Marga
Mary
Marga
Rosal
ret Bland Sewell
e Buston Sluss
a Davis Hardy
Davis Mann
Hagood Cuthbertson
n Harper Kellogg
beth Lovett
nia McLaugh 1 in
ry Moore Tappan
ret Sanders Br anno n
Weekes Clements
ret Woods Spalding
ind Wurm Council
1921
Anonymous
Margaret Bell Hanna
Myrt le Blackmon
Julia Brantley Willet
Ida Brittain Patterson
Thelma Brown Aiken
Eleanor Carpenter
Lois Compton Jennings
Lucile Conant Leland
Elizabeth Enloe MacCarthy
Mary Finney Bass
Betty Floding Morgan
S. Louise Fluker
Sarah Fulton
Sophie Hagedorn Fox
**Mariwill Hanes Hulsey
Melvi lie Jameson
Anna Marie Landress Cate
Jean McAlister
Sarah McCurdy Evans
Gladys McDaniel Hastings
Charlotte Newton
Eddith Patterson Blair
Edith Roark Van Sickle
Eula Russell Kelly
Elizabeth Smith De Witt
Julia Toralinson Ingram
Evelyn Wade Harwood
Margaret S. Wade
Marguerite Watkins Goodman
Helen Wayt Cocks
Agnes Adams Stokes
Sarah Alston Lawton
Eleanor Buchanan Starcher
Cama Burgess C lark son
Helen Burkhalter Quattlebaum
Eunice Dean Major
Otto Cilbert Williams
Mary Louise Harle
Catherine Haugh Smith
Genie Howard Mathews
Julia Jameson
Anne Ruth Moor Crawford
Carolyn Moore Gressette
Dinah Roberts Parramore
Ruth Scandrett Hardy
Harriet Scott Brown
Louie Stephens Markey
Laurie Stubbs Johns
Emma Thomas Johnston
Frances White We eras
1923
Dorothy Bowron Collins
Margaret Brenner Awtrey
Louise Crosland Huske
Rebecca Dick
Ei leen Dodd Sams
Christ ine Evans Murray
Helen Faw Mull
Maud Foster Stebler
Emily Cuille Henegar
Quenelle Harrold Sheffield
Elizabeth Hoke Smith
Viola Hoi lis Oakley
Lucia Howard Carter
Jane Knight Lowe
Lucile Little Morgan
Elizabeth Lockhart Davis
Josephine Logan HamiLton
Elizabeth McClure McCeachy
Martha Mcintosh Nail
**Mary Stewart McLeod
*Anna Meade MinniRerode
Susye Mims Lazenby
Elizabeth Molloy Horr
Caroline Moody Jordan
Fredeva Oglet ree
Elizabeth Ransom Hahn
Edith Ruff Coulliette
Dorothy Scott
Nancy Tripp Shand
A 1 ice Vi rden
Jessie Watts Rustin
Margaret Y eager Brackney
1924
Attie Alford
*Grace Bargeron Rambo
Helen Comfort Sanders
Martha Eakes Matthews
Emmie Ficklen Harper
Frances Gilliland Stukes
Ann Hatton Lewis
E lizabeth Henry Shands
Victoria Howie Kerr
Barron Hyatt Morrow
Cor inne Jackson Wi lkerson
Marguerite Lindsey Booth
Mary McCurdy
Margaret McDow MacDougall
Annie Miller Klugh
Pauline Murphey Gradick
Catherine Nash Scott
Weenona Peck Booth
Lucy Rhyne Walker
Carrie Scandrett
Isabelle Sewell Hancock
Daisy Frances Smith
Polly Stone Buck
Augusta Thomas Lanier
Annadawn Watson Edwards
Helen Wright Smith
1925
Mary Bowdoin
Lulawill Brown Ellis
Mary Brown Campbell
Louise Buchanan Proctor
Mary Caldwell McFarland
Catherine Carrier Robinson
Elizabeth Cheatham Palmer
Bryte Daniels Reynolds
Isabel Ferguson Hargadine
Frances Gardner Welton
Lucile Gause Fryxell
Alice Greenlee Grollman
Eleanor Hardeman Cain
Margaret Hyatt Walker
Annie Johnson Sylvester
Mary Keesler Dalton
Georgia Little Owens
Martha Manly Hogshead
Josephine Marbut Stanley
Mary Mt_Callum
Anne McKay Mitchell
Mary Ann McKinney
Lillian Middlebrooks Smears
Harriet Pade P rouse
Julia Pope
M. Priscilla Shaw
Mary S lms D icks on
Carolyn Smith Whipple
Marianne Strouss McConnell
*Sarah Tate Tumi in
Eugenia Thompson Akin
Memory Tucker Merritt
Mary Belle Walker
Virginia Watts Beals
Frances White
Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Mabel Witherspoon Meredith
Mary Ben Wright Erwin
Emily Zellars McNeill
1926
Helen Bates Law
Mary Louise Bennett
Esther Byers Pitts
Edyth Carpenter Shuey
Elizabeth Chapman Pirkle
Edythe Coleman Paris
Clarkie Davis Skelton
Louisa D. Duls
Gene Dumas Vickers
Jeffie Dunn Clark
E lien Fain Bowen
Dora Ferrell Gentry
Mary Freeman Curt is
Edith Gilchrist Berry
Juanita Greer White
Olive Hall Shadgett
Helena Hermance Kilgour
Hazel Huff Monaghan
Charlotte Higgs Andrews
Pilley Kim Choi
Mary Knox Happoldt
Elizabeth Little Meriwether
Catherine Mock Hod gin
Grace Ogden Moore
Virginia Peeler Green
F lorence Perkins Ferry
Ailene Ramage Fitzgerald
Nellie Richardson
Mildred Scott
Susan Shadburn Watkins
Sarah Quinn Slaughter
Elizabeth Snow Tilly
Evelyn Sprinkle Carter
Olivia Ward Swann
Norma Tucker Sturtevant
Margaret Tufts Neal
Marie Whittle Wellslager
Virginia Wing Power
Maud Whittemore Flowers
Margaret Whitington Davis
Rosalie Wootten Deck
1927
Frances Alston Everett
Frances Bitzer Edson
Reba Bayless Boyer
Blanche Berry Sheehan
Maurine Bledsoe Bramlett
Charlotte Buckland
Annette Carter Colwell
Dorothy Chamber lain
Susan Clayton Fuller
Lillian Clement Adams
Willie Mae Coleman Duncan
Mildred Cowan Wright
Martha Crowe Eddins
Catherine Louise Davis
Ma be 1 Dumas Crenshaw
Grace Etheredge
Emilie Ehrlich Strasburger
Katharine Gilliland Higgins
Elizabeth Henderson Palmer
Katherine Houston Sheild
Maude Jackson Padgett
Lelia Joiner Cooper
Pearl Kunnes
Louise Leonard McLeod
Elizabeth Lilly Swedenburg
Georgia Linkous Bivins
Louise Love joy Jackson
Frances Lowe Conne 1 1
Elizabeth Lynn
Carol ine McKinney C larke
Mary Ruth McMillan Jones
Catherine Mitchell Lynn
Kenneth Maner Powe 1 1
Elizabeth Norfleet Miller
Miriam Preston St. Clair
Inez Patton Cunningham
Edith Richards
May Reece Forman
Douglass Rankin Hughes
Evelyn Satterwhite
Virginia Sevier Hanna
Mamie Shaw Flack
Mary Shive
Willie W. Smith
Emily Stead
Edith Strickland Jones
Elizabeth Vary
Roberta Winter
Louise Woodard Clifton
1928
Elizabeth Allgood Birchmore
Leila W. Anderson
Miriam Anderson Dowdy
Myrtle Bledsoe Wharton
Frances C. Brown
Virginia Carrier
Patricia Collins Dwinnell
Lucy Cook Means
Nancy Crowther Otis
Mary Cunningham Cayce
Mary Dobyns Houston
Madelaine Dunseith Alston
Carolyn Essig Frederick
Irene Garretson Nichols
Margaret Gerig Mills
Hattie Gershcow Hirsch
Louise Girardeau Cook
Sarah Glenn Boyd
Olive Graves Bowen
Elizabeth Gner Edmunds
Muriel Griffin
Rachel Henderlite
Mary Hough Clark
Mary King Fowler
Anna Knight Daves
Virginia Love
Irene Lowrance Wright
Katherine MacKinnon Lee
Mary McConkey Taylor
Elizabeth McEntire
Geraldine Menshouse Condon
Frances New McRae
Evange line Papageorge
Martha Riley Stephenson
Elizabeth Roark Ellington
Mary Sayward Rogers
Mary Shewmaker
Mary Stegall Stipp
Ruth Thomas Stemmons
Ann Todd Rubey
Edna Volberg Johnson
Josephine Walker Parker
1929
Margaret Andreae Collins
Gladys Austin Mann
Lillie Bellingrath Pruitt
LaRue Berry Smith
Virginia Branch Leslie
Lucile Bridgman Leitch
Miriam Broach Jordan
Hazel Brown Ricks
Bettina Bush Jackson
Virginia Cameron Taylor
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Faculty members in graduation procession: Connie Jones, Steve
Haworth, Ayse Ilgaz-Carden, Bob Hyde, John Toth, Anne Warner,
Don Young.
Dorothy Cheek Callaway
Sally Cothran Lambeth
Sara Douglass Thomas
Mary Ellis Knapp
Nancy Fitzgerald Bray
*Ethel Freeland Darden
Lenore Gardner McMillan
*Betty Gash
Elise Gibson
Helen Gouedy Mansfield
Amanda Groves
Pearl Hastings Baughman
Elizabeth Hatchett
Cara Hinraan
Ella May Hoi lingsworth Wilkerson
Hazel Hood
(Catherine Hunter Branch
Dorothy Hutton Mount
Sara Johnston Hill
Evelyn Josephs Phifer
*Mary Alice Juhan
*Geraldine LeMay
(Catherine Lott Marbut
Esther Nisbet Anderson
Eleanor Norris MacKinnon
Katharine Pasco
Letty Pope Prewitt
Mary Prim Fowler
Helen Ridley Hartley
Louise Robertson Solomon
Martha Selman Jacobs
Helen Sisson Morrison
Sally Southerland
Mary Gladys Steffner Kincaid
Clara Stone Collins
Susanne Stone Eady
*Mary Warren Read
Violet Weeks Miller
Frances G . Welsh
Effie Mae Winslow Taylor
Hazel Wolfe Frakes
Ruth Worth
Lillian Wurm Cousins
1930
Margaret Armst rong Durdin
Walterette Arwood Tanner
*Marie Baker Shumaker
Josephine Barry Brown
Ruth Bradford Crayton
Elizabeth Branch Johnson
Frances Brown Milton
Mary Brown Armstrong
Emily Campbell Boland
Lucille Coleman Christian
Lois Combs Kropa
Lilian Cook McFarland
Gladney Cureton
Elise Derickson
Clarene Dorsey
Dorothy Dudley McLanahan
Anne Erhlich Solomon
Alice Garretson Bolles
lone Gueth Brodmerkel
Jane Hall Hefner
Emi 1 ie Harvey Massicot
Mildred Hutcheson Rouse
Alice Jernigan Dowling
Leila Jones Bunkley
Katherine Leary Holland
*June Maloney Officer
Sarah Marsh Shapard
Mary McCallie Ware
Ruth McLean Wright
Frances Medlin Walker
Frances Messer Jeffries
Blanche Miller Rigby
*Emily Moore Couch
Lynn Moore Hardy
Carolyn Nash Hathaway
Mera Neary Cannon
Margaret Ogden Stewart
Shannon Preston Cumming
Helen Respess Bevier
Elise Roberts Dean
Lillian Russell McBath
Nancy Simpson Porter
Dorothy Daniel Smith
Jo Smith Webb
*Martha Stackhouse Grafton
Belle Ward Stowe Abernethy
Mary Terry Cobb
Sara Townsend Pittraan
Mary P. Trammell
Crystal Wellborn Gregg
Evalyn Wilder
Harriett Williams
Pauline Willioughby Wood
*Raemond Wilson Craig
Missouri Woolford Raine
Octavia Young Harvey
1931
Margaret Askew Smith
Laura Brown Logan
Sara Bullock
Eleanor Castles OBteen
Annie Dean Norman
Helen Duke Ingram
Ruth Etheredge Griffin
Marion Fielder Martin
*Helen Friedman Blackahear
Jean Grey Morgan
Dorothy Grubb Rivers
Sarah Hill Brown
Anne Chapin Hudson Hankins
Elise Jones
Marian Lee Hind
Helen Manry Lowe
Ruth McAuliffe
Anne McCallie
Jane McLaughlin Titus
Shirley McPhaul Whitfield
Katherine Morrow Norem
Frances Musgrave Frierson
Fanny Niles Bolton
Ruth Pringle Pipkin
Katharine Purdie
Alice Quarles Henderson
Martha Ransom Johnston
Jeannette Shaw Harp
Elizabeth Simpson Wilson
Elizabeth Smith Crew
Harriet Smith
Martha Sprinkle Rafferty
Mary Sprinkle Allen
Laelius Stallings Davis
Cornelia Taylor Stubbs
Julia Thompson Smith
Martha Tower Dance
Louise Ware Venable
*Martha Watson Smith
Margaret Weeks
1932
Virginia Allen Woods
*Catherine Baker Evans
*Pene lope Brown Barnet t
Sarah Bowman
Varnelle Braddy Perryman
Pat Boyles Smith
Mary Louise Cawthon
Diana Dyer Wilson
Mary Elliot
Grace Fincher Trimble
Julia Forrester
Majorie Gamble
Susan Love Glenn
Nora Garth Gray Hall
Ruth Conant Green
Julia Grimmet Fortson
Louise Hollingsworth Jackson
Anne Hopkins Ayres
Alma Howerton Hughes
Imogene Hudson Cullinan
Elizabeth Hughes Jackson
LaMyra Kane Swanson
Pansey Kimble Matthews
Martha Logan Henderson
Clyde Lovejoy Stevens
Hettie Mathis Holland
Louise McDaniel Musser
Mary Miller Brown
Lila Norfleet Davis
Mimi O'Beirne Tarplee
Mary Oliver Cox
Bell Owens Livingston
Flora Riley Bynum
Jane Shelby Clay
Sara Lane Smith Pratt
*Louise Stakely
Jura Taffar Cole
Velma Taylor Wei Is
Miriam Thompson Felder
Mart ine Tuller Joyner
Martha Williamson Riggs
Lovelyn Wilson Heyward
1933
Mary Alexander Parker
Bernice Beaty Cole
Willa Beckham Lowrance
Margaret Bell Burt
Elizabeth Grier Bolton
Louise Brant Habel
*Nell Brown Davenport
Alice Bullard Nagle
Evelyn Campbell Beale
Josephine Clark Fleming
Elizabeth Cobb Boyd
Sarah Cooper Freyer
Ora Craig Stuckey
Eugenia Edwards Mackenzie
Margaret Ellis Pierce
Helen Etheredge Griffin
Mary Felts Steedman
Julia Finley McCutchen
Thelma Firestone Hogg
Mary Lillian Garretson
*Margaret Glass Womeldorf
Virginia Heard Feder
*Lucile Heath McDonald
Anne Hudmon Reed
Mary Hudmon Simmons
Margaret Jones Clark
Polly Jones Jackson
Nancy Kamper Miller
*Cornelia Keeton Barnes
Roberta Kiipatrick Stubblebine
Margaret Loranz
Caroline Lingle Lester
Elizabeth Lynch
Vivian Martin Buchanan
Rosemary May Kent
Eulalia Napier Sutton
Gail Nelson Blain
Frances Oglesby Hills
Letitia Rockmore Nash
Sara Shadburn Heath
Laura Spivey Massie
Mary Sturtevant Cunningham
Marlyn Tate Lester
Annie Laurie Whitehead Young
Marie Whittle Wellslager
Amelia Wolf Bond
Katharine Woltz Farinholt
1934
Sarah Aust in Zorn
Alae Risse Barron Leitch
Helen Boyd McConne 1 1
Laura Buist Starnes
Nel le Chamlee Howard
Martha Ellis Brown
Martha Boyd Elliott
Martha England Gunn
Sybil Grant
Mary Grist Whitehead
*Pauline Gordon Woods
*Lucy Goss Herbert
Jean Gould Clarke
Elinor Hamilton Hightower
Mary Hamilton McKnight
Lillian Herring Rosas
Elizabeth Johnson Thompson
Marguerite Jones
Janie Lapsley Be 11
*Louise McCain Boyce
Mary McDonald Sledd
Carrie McMullen Bright
Marion Mathews
Ruth Moore Randolph
Sara Moore Cathey
Martha Norman
Frances 0' Brien
Reba Pearson Kaemper
Dorothy Potts Weiss
Gladys Pratt Entrican
Florence Preston Borkhorst
Virginia Prettyman
Dorothy Ramage Thomas
Carolyn Russell Nelson
Louise Schuessler Patterson
Summer 1980
*Fund Agent
Class of '80 joins ranks of alumnae
Caroline Selden
Rosa Shuey Day
Mary Sloan Laird
Rudene Taffar Young
Mabel Ta Image
Virginia Tillotson Hutcheson
Tennessee Tipton Butler
Dorothy Walker Palmer
Eleanor Willians Knox
Bella Wilson Lewis
1935
Class of '35
Elizabeth Alexander Higgins
Mary Virginia Allen
*Vella Marie Behm Cowan
Dorothea Blacks hear Brady
Mary Borden Parker
Marian Calhoun Murray
Jennie Champion Hardin
Carolyn Cole Gregory
Sarah Cook Thompson
Fidesah Edwards Alexander
Willie Florence Eubanks Donehoo
Betty Fountain Gray
*Jane Goodwin Harbin
Mary Green Wohlford
Carol Griffin Scoville
Anne Scot t Harman Mau ldi n
Elizabeth Heaton Mutlino
Katherine Hertzka
Betty Lou Houck Smith
Anne Humber Little
Frances McCalla Ingles
Joseph ine Jennings Brown
Julia McClatchey Brooke
Marguerite Morris Saunders
Clara Lee Morrison Backer
Alberta Palmour McMillan
Nina Parke Hopkins
Aileen Parker Sibley
*Nell Pattillo Kendall
Juliette Puett Maxwell
Martha Redwine Rountree
Grace Robinson Hanson
Sybil Rogers Herren
Mary Summers Langhorne
Elizabeth Thrasher Baldwin
*Amy Underwood Trowe 1 1
Laura Whi tner Dorsey
Virginia Wood Allgood
Jacqueline Wool folk Mathes
Elizabeth Young Hubbard
1936
Catherine Bates
Mary Beasley White
Meriel Bull Mitchell
Elizabeth Buraon Wilson
Alice Cham lee Booth
Mary Comely Dwight
Sara Cureton Prowell
Florrie E rb Bruton
Sara Frances Estes
Emily Gover Maynard
Lilian Grimson Obligado
Mary Henderson Hill
Jean Hicks Pitts
Marjorie Hoi 1 ingsworth
Frances James Donohue
On Sue Jones Jordan
Louise Jordan Turner
Ruth King Stanford
Carrie Latimer Duvall
Ann Bernard Martin
*Alice McCallie Pressly
Josephine McClure Anderson
Sarah Frances McDonald
*Dean McKoin Bushong
Frances Miller Felts, Jr.
Frances Napier Jones
Sarah Nichols Judge
Janie Norris
Mary Richardson Gauthier
Louisa Robert Carroll
*Mary Alice Shelton Felt
Margaret Smith Bowie
*Mary Margaret Stowe Hunter
Virginia Turner Graham
Mary Vines Wright
Marie Townsend
Mary Walker Fox
Ann Carolyn White Burrill
Virginia Williams Goodwin
Irene Wilson Neister
Martha Young Bell
Vivienne Trice Ansley
**Margaret Watson
Frances Wilson Hurst
1937
*Eloisa Alexander LeConte
Luc l le Barnett Mirman
Frances Belford Olsen
F. Louise Brown Smith
Virginia Caldwell Payne
Frances Cary Taylor
Cornelia Christie Johnson
Lucile Dennison Keenan
Kathleen Daniel Spicer
Mane Estes
Michelle Furlow Oliver
*Annie Galloway Phillips
Alice Hannah Brown
*Fannie Harris Jones
Barbara Hertwig Meschter
Barton Jackson Cathey
Dorothy Jester
Sarah JohnBon Linney
Catharine Jones Ma lone
Molly Jones Monroe
Mary Jane King Critchell
Jean Kirkpatrick Cobb
Martha Sue Laney Redus
Florence Laaseter Rambo
Vivienne Long McCain
Mary Malone Martin
Isabel McCain Brown
Enid Middleton Howard
Ora Muse
Elizabeth Perrin Powell
Marjorie Scott Meier
Marie Stalker Smith
Frances Steele Garrett
Virginia Stephens Clary
1938
Anonymous
*Jean Adams Weersing
Nell Allison Sheldon
Nettie Mae Austin Kelley
Dorothy Avery Newton
Genevieve Baird Farris
Mary Alice Baker Lown
Tommy Ruth Blackmon Waldo
Elizabeth Blackshear Flinn
Katherine Bnttingharo Hunter
Martha Brown Miller
Frances Cast le berry
Jean Chalmers Smith
Lulu Croft
Mildred Davis Harding
Doris Dunn St. Clair
Goudyloch Erwin Dyer
Eloise Estes Keiser
Jane Guthrie Rhodes
Sarah Hoyle Nevin
Winifred Ke 1 lersberger Vass
Ola Kelly Ausley
Mary Anne Kernan
Ellen Little Lesesne
Martha Long Gosline
Jeanne Matthew Darlington
Ellen McCallie Cochrane
Elizabeth McCord Lawler
Lettie McKay Van Landingham
Jacquelyn McWhite James
Bertha Merrill Holt
Nancy Moorer Cantey
Margaret Morrison B 1 umber g
Helen Rodgers Dopson
Joyce Roper McKay
Mary Smith Bryan
Virginia Suttenfield
Grace Tazewell Flowers
Anne Thompson Rose
Mary Tribble Beasley
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Jane Turner Smith
Elizabeth Warden Marshall
Zoe We 1 Is Lambert
Elsie West Duval
Margaret Wright Rankin
Louise Young Garrett
1939
Mary Allen Reding
*Jean Bailey Owen
Ethelyn Boswell Purdie
Alice Caldwell Melton
Rachel Campbell Gibson
Lelia Carson Watlington
Alice Cheeseman
Sarah Cunningham Carpenter
Jane Dryfoos Rau
Margaret Edmunds O'Brien
Catherine Farrar Davis
Elizabeth Furlow Brown
Susan Goodwyn Garner
Dorothy Graham Gilmer
Frances Guthrie Brooks
*Eleanor Hall
Jane Hamilton Ray
^Jacqueline Hawks Alsobrook
Ruth Hertzka
Mary Ho llingsworth Hatfield
Cora Kay Hutchins Blackwelder
Phyllis Johnson O'Neal
(Catherine Jones Smith
Elizabeth Kenney Knight
Jenny Kyle Dean
Dorothy Lazenby Stipe
Helen Lichten Solomonson
Emily MacMoreland Wood
Ella Mallard Ninestein
Martha Marshall Dykes
Emma McMullen Doom
Mary Wells McNeill
Marie Merritt Rollins
Mary Moss Sinback
Mary Murphy Chesnutt
Carolyn Myers King
Annie Newton Parkman
Amelia Nickels Calhoun
*Lou Pate Jones
Julia Porter Scurry
Mamie Ratliff Finger
Jeanne Redwine Davis
Betty Sams Daniel
Haydie Sanford Sams
Elizabeth Shepherd Green
Aileen Shortly Whipple
Alice Sill
Mary Penny Simonton Boothe
*Mary Frances Thompson
Virginia Tumlin Guffin
*Elinor Tyler Richardson
Ann Watkins Ansley
Elizabeth Wheat ley Malone
Mary Ellen Whetsell Timmons
Annie Lou Whitaker Reynolds
1940
Betty Alderman Vinson
Grace Anderson Cooper
Marguerite Baum Muhlenfeld
Betsy Banks Stoneburner
Margaret Barnes Carey
Evelyn Baty Christman
Marguerite Baum Muhlenfeld
Majorie Boggs Lovelace
Joan Brinton Johnson
Virginia Brown Cappleman
Ruth Byerley Vaden
Jeannette Carroll Smith
Helen Gates Carson
Ernestine Cass Dickerson
Margaret Christie Colmer
Elizabeth Davis Johnston
Lillie Drake Hamilton
Nell Echols Burks
Anne Enloe
Ruth Ey.les Lewis
Annette Franklin King
Marian Franklin Anderson
Mary Gill Olson
Florence Graham
Nettie Greer Howard
Sam Olive Griffin McGinnis
Wilma Griffith Clapp
Penn Hammond Vieau
*Mary Heaslett Badger
Margaret Hopkins Martin
Gary Home Petrey
Eleanor N. Hutchens
Mi Id red Joseph Co Iyer
Jane Knapp Spivey
Sara Lee Mattingly
Eloise McCall Guyton
Virginia McWh or t e r F reeraan
Sarah Matthews Bixler
Virginia Milner Carter
Nell Moss Roberts
*Beth Paris Moremen
*Katherine Patton Carssow
Irene Phillips Richardson
Nell Pinner Wisner
Mary Reins Burge
Isabe 11a Robertson White
Ruth Slack Roach
Hazel Solomon Beazley
Harriet Stimson Davis
Edith Stover McFee
Ellen Stuart Patton
Louise Sullivan Fry
Mary Mac Templeton Brown
Henrietta Thompson Wilkinson
Emily Underwood Gault
Polly Ware Duncan
Violet Jane Watkins
Willomette Williamson Stauffer
Claire Wilson Moore
Jane Witman Pearce
1941
Frances Alston Lewis
Mary Arbuckle Osteen
Ruth Ashburn Kline
Elizabeth Barrett Alldredge
Miriam Bedinger WilLiamson
*Sabine Brumby Korosy
Gentry Burks Bielaski
*Harriette Cochran Mershon
Freda Copeland Hoffman
Virginia Corr White
Doris Dalton Crosby
Dorothy Debele Purvis
*Martha Dunn Kerby
Ethelyn Dyar Daniel
Louise Franklin Livingston
Caroline Gray Truslow
Nancy Gribble Nelson
Florrie Guy Funk
Helen Hardie Smith
Ann Henry
Rebekah Hogan Henry
Beth Irby Milam
Aileen Kasper Borrish
Helen Klugh McRae
Julia Lancaster
Sara Lee Jackson
Margaret Lentz Slicer
Martha Moody Laseter
Valgerda Nielson Dillard
*Pattie Patterson Johnson
Georgia Poole Hollis
Elta Robinson Posey
Louise Sams Hardy
Lillian Schwencke Cook
Gene Slack Morse
*Frances Spratlin Hargrett
Elizabeth Stevenson
Dorothy Travis Joyner
Jane Vaughan Price
Grace Walker Winn
Cornelia Watson Pruett
Nancy Willstatter Gordon
*Mary Wisdom
1942
Martha Arant Allgood
Elizabeth Bradfield Sherman
Betty Ann Brooks
Martha Buffalow Davis
Edwina Burruss Rhodes
Harriett Caldwell Maxwell
Anne Chambless Bateman
Gay Currie Fox
Edith Dale Lindsey
Mary Davis Bryant
Dale Drennan Hicks
Carolyn Dunn Stapleton
*Susan Dyer Oliver
Margery Gray Wheeler
Kathryn Greene Gunter
Margaret Hami It on Rambo
Julia Harry Bennett
Margaret Hartsook Emmons
Kathleen Head Johnson
Doris Henson Vaughn
Frances Hinton
Neva Jackson Webb
Elizabeth Jenkins Willis
Mary Kirkpatrick Reed
Caroline Long Armstrong
Susanna McWhorter Reckard
Virginia Montgomery McCall
Dorothy Nabers Allen
*Elise Nance Bridges
Jeanne Osborne Gibbs
Mary Louise Palmour Barber
Julia Patch Weston
Louise Pruitt Jones
Claire Purcell Smith
Tina Ransom Louis
Elizabeth Robertson Schear
Edith Schwartz Joel
Myrtle Seckinger Lightcap
Margaret Sheftall Chester
Marjorie Simpson Ware
Jack le Stearns Potts
Jane St i L Iwe 11 Espy
Jane Taylor White
Mary Olive Thomas
Frances Tucker Johnson
Dorothy Webster Woodruff
Myree Wells Maas
Olivia White Cave
Nancy Wimpfheimer Wolff
1943
Emily Anderson Hightower
Mary Anne Atkins Paschal
Mary Jane Auld Linker
Sue Barker Woolf
*Betty Bates Fernandez
Anna Black Hansell
Mary Brock Williams
*Flora Campbell McLain
Alice Clements Shinall
Maryann Cochran Abbott
Joella Craig Good
Charity Crocker Cole
Laura Cumming Northey
*Jane Dinsmore Lowe
Margaret Downie Brown
Betty Dubose Skiles
Jeanne Eakin Salyer
Anne Frierson Smoak
Susan Guthrie Fu
Helen Hale Lawton
Dorothy Holloran Addison
Dorothy Hopkins McClure
Mardia Hopper Brown
Benny e Linzy Sadler
*Mary Mart in Rose
Bryant Holsenbeck Moore
Anne Paisley Boyd
Betty Pegram Sessoms
Frances Radford Mauldin
Hannah Reeves
Lillian Roberts Deakins
*Ruby Rosser Davis
Clare Rountree Couch
Margaret Shaw Allred
Aileen Still Hendley
Regina Stokes Barnes
*Mary Ward Danielson
*Marjorie Weismann Zeidman
Barbara Wilber Gerland
Kay Wilkinson Orr
Katherine Wright Philips
1944
Bettye Ashcraft Senter
Betty Bacon Skinner
Zelda Barnett Morrison
Virginia Barr McFarland
Clare Bedinger Baldwin
Claire Bennett Kelly
Marguerite Bless Mclnnis
Louise Breedin Griffiths
Mary Carr Townsend
Margaret Cathcart Hilburn
Jean Clarkson Rogers
Ethlyn Coggin Miller
Barbara Connally Kaplan
Frances Cook Crowley
Barbara Daniels
Agnes Douglas Kuentze 1
Pauline Garvin Keen
Ann Eagan Goodhue
Elizabeth Edwards Wi Ison
Sara Agnes Florence
Pauline Garvin Keen
Elizabeth Harvard Dowda
*Julia Harvard Warnock
Catharine Kollock Thoroman
Ruth Kolthoff Kirkman
*Martha Lasseter Storey
Martha Liddell Donald
Quincy Mills Jones
Aurie Mont gomery Mi 1 ler
Margaret Powell Flowers
Martha Rhodes Bennett
*Anne Sale Weydert
Betty Pope Scott Noble
Marjorie Smith Stephens
Katheryne Thompson Mangum
Johnnie Tippen
Marjorie Tippins Johnson
Martha Trimble Wapensky
Betty Vecsey
Mary E. Walker
Mary Walker Scott
Mary Frances Walker Blount
Anne Ward Amacher
Betty Williams Stoffel
Oneida Wool ford
1945
Ruth Anderson Stall
Carol Barge Mathews
Marian Barr Hanner
Mildred Beman Stegall
Elizabeth Blincoe Edge
Virginia Bowie
Frances Brougher Garman
Leila Burke Holmes
Ann Campbell Hulett
Betty Campbell Wiggins
*Elizabeth Carpenter Bard in
Virginia Carter Caldwell
Geraldine Cottongim Richards
Mary Cumming Fitzhugh
*Beth Daniel Owens
Harriette Daugherty Howard
Betty Davis Shingler
Mary Anne Derry Triplett
Ruth Doggett Todd
Pauline Ertz Wechsler
Jane Everett Knox
Elizabeth Farmer Gaynor
Joyce Freeman Marting
Barbara Frink Allen
Carolyn Fuller Hill Nelson
^Elizabeth Gribble Cook
Anne Hall King
Mia Hecht Owens
Emily Higgins Bradley
Jean Hood Booth
Eugenia Jones Howard
Beverly King Pollock
Frances King Mann
Jane Kreiling Mell
Mary Louise Law
Martha Mack Simons
Alice Mann Niedrach
Molly Milam Inserni
Sara Milford Walker
Sue Mitchell
Scott Newell Newton
Margaret Norris
Mary Nee ly Norris King
Isabel RogerB
Ceevah Rosenthal Blatraan
Marilyn Schroder Timmerman
Bess Sheppard Poole
Emily Singletary Garner
Julia Slack Hunter
Joan Stevenson Wing
Lois Sullivan Kay
Mary Ann Turner Edwards
Suzanne Watkins Smith
Dorothy Lee Webb McKee
Frances Woodall Talmadge
1946
Jeanne Addison Roberts
Mary Lillian Allen Wilkes
Martha Baker Wilkins
Summer 1980
*Fund Agent
Margaret Bear Moore
Lucile Beaver
Emily Bradford BattB
Kathryn Cameron Burns
Mary Cargill
*Mary Ann Courtenay Davidson
Edwina Bell Davis
*Mary Duckworth Gellerstedt
*Conradine Fraser Riddle
Shirley Graves Cochrane
Elizabeth Horn Johnson
Betty Howell Traver
Louise Isaacson Bernard
Martha Johnson Haley
*Lura Johnston Watkins
Peggy Jones Miller
Stratton Lee Peacock
Ruth Limbert G ri scorn
Betty Long Sale
Mary Martin Powell
Mildred McCain Kinnaird
Mary McConkey Reimer
Anne Murrell Courtney
Marjorie Naab Bolen
Ann Noble Dye
Bettye Phelps Douglas
Celetta Powell Jones
*Anne Register Jones
*Louise Reid Strickler
E lea nor Reynolds Verde ry
*Mary Russell Mitchell
*Betty Smith Satterthwai te
Jean Stewart Staton
Doris Street Thigpen
Martha Sunkes Thomas
Marguerite Toole Scheips
Peggy Trice Hall
Lucy Turner Knight
Mary Vinsant Grymes
Verna Weems Macbeth
Elizabeth Weinschenk Mundy
Winifred Wilkinson Hausmann
Eva Lee Williams Jemison
1947
Virginia Barksdale Lancaster
Joanne Benton Shepherd
Marguerite Born Hornsby
Virginia Lee Brown McKenzie
Eleanor Calley Cross
June Coley Loyd
Jane Cooke Cross
Betty Crabill Rogers
*Helen Catherine Currie
Anne Eidson Owen
*Mary Jane Fuller Floyd
Dorothy Galloway Fontaine
Mynelle Grove Harris
Genevieve Harper Alexander
Charlotte Anne Hevener Nobbs
Genet Louise Heery Barron
Anne Hough Hopkins
Louise Hoyt Minor
Sue Hutchens Henson
Marianne Jeffries Williams
Rosemary Jones Cox
Margaret Kelly Wells
Mary Jane Love Nye
Marguerite Mattison Rice
Edith Merrin Simmons
Virginia Owens Watkins
Betty Patterson King
Betty Jean Radford Moeller
Ellen Rosenblatt Caswell
Lorenna Ross Brown
Nancy Elizabeth Shelton Parrott
Barbara Smith Hul I
Sarah Smith Austin
Caroline Squires Rank in
Elizabeth Walton Callaway
Jean Williams Hand
Barbara Wilson Montague
1948
Dabney Adams Hart
Jane Barker Secord
Ruth Bast in S lentz
Martha Ellen Beacham Jackson
Barbara Blair
Lela Ann Brewer
Barbara Coith Ricker
Mary Alice Compton Osgood
Edna Cunningham Schooley
Nancy Deal Weaver
Adele Dieckmann McKee
June Driskill Weaver
Anne Ezzard Eskew
Josephine Faulkner James
Nancy Geer Alexander
Harriet Gregory Heriot
Martha Hay Vardeman
Jean Henson Smith
Kathleen Hewson Cole
Caroline Hodges Roberts
Amanda Hulsey Thompson
June Irvine Torbert
Anne E. Jones Crabill
Marybeth Little Weston
Sheely Little Miller
Barbara Macris Darby
Emi ly E . Lady Major
Mary Man ly Ryman
Lou McLaurin Stewart
Mae Comer Osborne Parker
Betty Powers Crislip
Harriet Reid
Ann Rogers Sawyer
Zollie Saxon Johnson
Rebekah Scott Bryan
Anne Shepherd McKee
Charlien S imma Miller
Mary Gene Sims Dykes
Jacqueline Stewart
Page Violette Harmon
Lida Walker Askew
Barbara Waugaman Thompson
Barbara Whipple Bitter
Sara Catherine Wilkinson
Emily Wright Cumming
Margaret Yancey Kirkman
1949
Class of 1949
Rita Adams Simpson
Gene Akin Martin
Caroline Alexander Bryan
Mary Jo Amnions Jones
Beverly Baldwin Albea
Louisa Beale McGaughey
Susan Bowling Dudney
Alice Caswell Wilkins
Roberta Cathcart Hopkins
Lee Cousar Tubbs
Alice Crenshaw Moore
Jo Culp Williams
*Bettie Davi son Bruce
Betsy Deal Smith
Betty Jeanne Ellison Candler
Kate Durr Elmore
Evelyn Foster Henderson
Katherine Geffcken
Martha Goddard Lovell
Nancy Huey Kelly
Henrietta Johnson
Winifred Lambert Carter
Katherine Lee Wal lis
Ruby Lehmann Cowley
Rebecca Lever Brown
Frances Long Cowan
Harriet Lurton Major
Katherine McKoy Ehling
Nancy Parks Anderson
Patricia Persohn
Lynn Phillips Mathews
Georgia Powell Lemmon
Mary Price Coulling
Dorothy Quillian Reeves
Betty Jo Sauer Mansur
Carmen Shaver Brown
Shi r ley Simmons Duncan
Sharon Smith Cutler
Edith Stowe Barkley
Doris Sullivan Tippens
Jean Tollison Moses
Newe 11 Turner Parr
Virginia Vining Skelton
Martha Warlick Brame
Jeanette Willcoxon Peterson
Elizabeth Williams Henry
Harriotte Winchester Hurley
Betty Wood Smith
1950
Catherine Davis Armfield
Dorothy Davis Yarborough
Elizabeth Dunlap McAliley
Helen Edwards Propst
Jean Edwards Crouch
Ann Gebhardt Fullerton
Anne Haden Howe
Sarah Hancock White
Marie Heng Jan Ho
Jessie Hodges Kryder
Marguerite Jackson Gilbert
Norah Anne Little Green
Alline B. Marshall
Carolyn Sue McSpadden Fisher
Dorothy Medlock Irvine
Miriam Mitchell Ingman
Jean Niven Morris
Jean Osborn Sawyer
Pat Overton Webb
Ida Pennington Benton
Polly Philips Harris
Ann Pitts Cobb
Joann Piastre Britt
Emily Pope Drury
Emily Ann Reid Williams
Joyce Rives Robinson
Martha Stowell Rhodes
Isabel Truslow Fine
Sarah Tucker Miller
1951
Esther Adler Schachter
Nancy Anderson Benson
Mary Hayes Barber Holmes
Noel Barnes Williams
Nancy Cassin Smith
Anna DaVault Haley
Harriett Everett Olesen
Lou Floyd Smith
Nell Floyd Hall
Suzanne Lorna Floyd Hardy
Betty Jane Foster Deadwyler
Anna Gounaris
Freddie Hachtel Daum
Nancy Lee Hudson Irvine
Margaret Hunt Denny
Mary Page Hutchison Lay
Sally Jackson Hertwig
Charlotte Key Marrow
Jeanne Kline Brown
Kay Laufer Morgan
Mary Caroline Lindsay Eastman
Patricia McCartney Boone
Eleanor McCarty Cheney
Jiramie Ann McGee Collings
Sarah McKee Burnside
Julianne Morgan Garner
Ca rol Munger
Mary Anna Ogden Bryan
*Eliza Pollard Mark
Barbara Quattlebaum Parr
Mary Roberts Davis
Stellise Robey Logan
Caronelle Smith Garren
*Jene I le Spear
Cissie Spiro Aidinoff
Martha Ann Stegar
Catherine Warren Dukehart
Joan White Howell
Marie Woods Shannon
1952
Class of '50
Louise Arant Rice
Hazel Berman Karp
Jo-Anne Christopher Cochrane
Betty Jean Combs Moore
Charlotte Allsmiller Crosland
Ann Boyer Wilkerson
Mary Jane Brewer Murkett
Barbara Brown Waddell
June Carpenter Bryant
Patricia Cortelyou Winship
Landis Cotten Gunn
Caroline Crea Smith
Catherine Crowe Dickman
Clairelis Eaton Franklin
Emy Evans Blair
Betty Finney Kennedy
Shirley Ford Baakin
Kathren Freeman Stelzner
Phyllis Galphin Buchanan
Kathryn Gentry Westbury
Barbara Grace Palmour
Susan Hancock Findley
Ann Tiffin Hays Greer
Ruth Heard Randolph
Shirley Heath Roberta
Ann Herman Dunwody
Kathryn Howard Mahlin
Margaret Inman S imps on
Jean Isbell Brunie
Louise Jett Porter
Margaret Ann Kaufman Shulman
Helen Land Ledbetter
Margaretta Lumpkin Shaw
Sylvia Moutos Mayson
Ann Parker Lee
Edith Petrie Hawkins
Hi Ida Priviteri
LaWahna Rigdon Smisson
Lillian Ritchie Sharian
Jean Robarts Seaton
Frances Sells Grimes
Betty Jane Sharpe Cabaniss
Jackie Simmons Gow
Katherine Jeanne Smith Harley
Winnie Strozier Hoover
Pat Thomason Smallwood
Frances Vandiver Puckett
Lorna Wiggins
Sylvia Williams Ingram
Anne Winningham Sims
Florence Worthv Griner
1953
Geraldine Armstrong Boy
Evelyn Baaaett Fuqua
Bertie Bond
Georganna Buchanan Johnson
Sarah Frances Cook
Ann Cooper Whitesel
Virginia Corry Harrell
Susan Dodson Rogers
Rene Dudney Lynch
Frances Ginn Stark
Sarah Hamilton Leathers
Florence Hand-Warren
Virginia Hays Klettner
Peggy Hooker Hartwein
Ellen Hunter Brumfield
Anne Jones Sims
Rosalyn Kenneday Cothran
Sarah Leathers Martin
Betty McLellan Carter
Margaret McRae Edwards
Belle Miller McMaster
Patricia Morgan Fisher
Martha Norton Caldwell
Mary Ripley Warren
Mary Beth Robinson Stuart
Louise Ross Bell
Shirley Samue Is Bowden
Rita May Scott Cook
Dianne Shell Rousseau
Triocilla Sheppard Taylor
Lindy Taylor Barnett
Margaret Thomason Lawrence
Anne Thomson Sheppard
Charline Tritton Shanks
Vivian Weaver Maitland
Jane Williams Coleman
1954
Mari lyn Be lanus Davis
Lois Dryden Hasty
Harriet Durham Maloof
Martha Duval Swartwout
Florence Fleming Corley
Julia Grier Storey
Katharine Hefner Gross
Louise Hill Reaves
Barbara Hood Buchanan
Eleanor Hutchinson Smith
*Carol Jones Hay
Jacquelyn Josey Hall
Patricia Anne Kent Stephenson
Mitzi Kiser Law
*Mary Lou Kleppinger DeBolt
Caroline Lester Haynes
Mary Louise McKee Hageraeyer
Clara McLanahan Wheeler
Joyce Munger Osborn
Anne Patterson Hammes
Judy Promnitz Marine
Mary Newell Rainey Bridges
Caroline Reinero Kemmerer
Anne Sylvester Booth
*Joanne Varner Hawks
Nancy Whetstone Hull
Chizuko Yoshimura Kojima
Jane Zuber Garrison
10
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Molly Milam Inserni '45 and daughter Uisi '83 at reunion time
1955
Betty Akerman Shackleford
Carol Alford Beaty
Helen Ann Allred Jackson
Susanna Byrd Wells
Constance Curry
Elizabeth Grafton Hall
Letty Grafton Harwell
Wilma Hachtel Fanz
Jo Ann Hall Hunsinger
Patty Hamilton Lee
Vivian Hays Guthrie
Jeanne Heisley Adams
Jo Hinchey Williams
Beverly Jensen Nash
Mary Evelyn Knight Swezey
Sallie Lambert Jackson
Catherine Lewis Callaway
Mary L'heureux Hammond
Callie McArthur Robinson
Sara Mclntrye Banner
Peggy McMillan White
Pauline Morgan King
Sarah Petty Dagenhart
Patricia Paden Matsen
Joan Pruitt Mclntyre
Anne Rosselot Clayton
Dorothy Jean Sands Hawkins
Agnes Scott Willoch
Clif Trussell
Pauline Waller Hoch
*Margaret Williamson Sraalzel
Elizabeth Wilson Blanton
Mary Clark Hollins
Carol Ann Cole White
*Alvia Cook
Memye Curt is Tucker
Sarah Davis Adams
Claire Flintom Bernhardt
Jane Frist
*June Gaissert Naiman
Nancy Gay Frank
Priscilla Goodwin Bennett
*Guerry Graham Myers
Sallie Greenfield
Ann Gregory York
Harriett Griffin Harris
Sarah Hall Hayes
Louise Harley Hull
Emmie Hay Alexander
Helen Haynes Patton
Nancy Jackson Pitts
Virginia Love Dunaway
*Carolyn Moon Horn
May Muse Stonecypher
Jacqueline Plant Fincher
Louise Rainey Amnions
Rameth Richard Owens
Betty Richardson Hickman
Anne Sayre Callison
Marijke Schepman de Vries
Robbie Ann Shelnutt Upshaw
Sarah Shippey McKneally
Jane Stubbs Bailey
Nancy Thomas Hill
Sandra Thomas Hollberg
Vannie Traylor Keightley
Virginia Vickery Jory
1956
1957
Ann Alvis Shibut
Paula Ball Newkirk
Barbara Battle
*Stella Biddle Fitzgerald
Juliet Boland Clack
Martha Bridges Traxler
*Judy Brown
Anne Bullard Hodges
Margaret Burwell Barnhardt
Shirley Calkins Ellis
Mary Jo Carpenter
Elizabeth Ansley Allan
Peggy Beard Baker
Margaret Benton Davis
Marti Black Slife
Nancy Brock Blake
Suzella Burns Newsome
Bettye Carmichael Maddox
Elizabeth Crapps Burch
Catharine Crosby Brown
Becky Deal Geiger
Margery DeFord Hauck
Laura Dryden Taylor
Dede Farmer Grow
Catherine Girardeau Brown
Marian Hagedorn Briscoe
Helen Hendry Lowrey
*Carolyn Herman Sharp
Margaret Hill Truesdale
Frances Holtsclaw Berry
Rachel King
Elaine Lewis Hudgins
*Marilyn McClure Anderson
Virginia McClurkin Jones
Mollie Merrick
Katherine Sue Miller Nevins
Margaret Minter Hyatt
Grace Molineux Goodwin
Frances Patterson Huffaker
*Jean Price Knapp
Dorothy Rearick Malinin
Virginia Redhead Bethune
Martha Jane Riggins Brown
*Jacquelyn Rount ree Andrews
Ann Shires Penuel
Frazer Steele Waters
Nelle Strickland McFather
*Eleanor Swain All
Anne Terry Sherren
Nancy Wheeler Dooley
Carolyn Wright McGarity
Eleanor Wright Linn
Margaret Zepatos Klinke
1958
Anne Blackshear Spragins-Harmuth
Jeanette Clark Sparks
Betty Cline Melton
Martha Davis Rosselot
Sara Hazel Ellis
Katherine Freeman Dunlap
Patricia Gover Bitzer
Ann Gunston Scott
Helen Hachtel Haywood
*Jo Hathaway Norton
Catherine Hodgin Olive
Susan Hogg Griffith
*Nancy Holland Sibley
Nora King
Eugenie Lambert Hamner
Carolyn Magruder Ruppenthal
Maria Martoccia Clifton
Janice Matheson Rowell
Mary Louise McCaughan Robison
Martha Meyer
Judith Nash Gallo
Nancy Niblack Dantzler
Mary Norton Kratt
*Phia Peppas Kanellos
Blythe Posey Ashmore
*Dorothy Ripley Lott
Grace Robertson McLendon
Caroline Romberg Silcox
Joan St. Clair Goodhew
JoAnn Sawyer Delafield
Romona Segrest Peyton
Elizabeth Shumaker Goodman
Shirley Spackman May
Deene Spivey Youngblood
Katherine Sydnor Piephoff
*Langhorne Sydnor Mauck
Harriet Talmadge Mill
Delores Taylor Yancey
Joyce Thomas Pack
Carolyn Tinkler Ramsey
Marilyn Tribble Wittner
Rosalyn Warren Wells
Mary Ruth Watson
Margaret Woolfolk Webb
1959
Margaret Abernathy Martin
Charlene Base Riley
Nancy Blount Robinson
Mary Bryan Dubard
*Helen Burkitt Evans
Betty Cobb Rowe
Helen Culpepper Stacey
Mary Dunn Evans
Elizabeth Edmunds Grinnan
Majorie Erickson Charles
Gertrude Florrid Van Luyn
Patricia Forrest Davis
Sara Anne Frazier Johnson
Betty Garrard Saba
Judy George Johnson
Theresa Hand Du Pre
Harriet Harrill Bogue
Maria Harris Markwalter
Martha Holmes Keith
Rosalind Johnson McGee
Hazel King Cooper
Jane King Allen
Jane Kraemer Scott
Eleanor Lee McNeill
Patricia Lenhardt Byers
Mi ldred Ling Wu
Helen Maddox Gaillard
Leah Mathews Fontaine
Runita McCurdy Goode
Lib McGeachy Ray
*Donalyn Moore McTier
Ann Rivers Payne Hutcheson
Lucy Puckett Leonard
Susanne Rosinson Hardy
Jean Salter Reeves
Isabella Strait Huffman
Edith Tritton White
Nancy Trowell Leslie
Barbara Varner Willoughby
*Susie White Edwards
1960
Angelyn Alford Bagwell
Lisa Ambrose Hudson
Neil W. Archer Congden
Nancy Awbrey Brittain
Marion Barry Mayes
Gloria Branham Burnam
Cynthia Butts Langfeldt
*Phyllis Cox Whitesell
Shannon Cumming McConnick
Carolyn Davies Preische
Louise Feagin Stone
Margaret Goodrich Hodge
Margaret J. Havron
Eleanor Hill Widdice
Carolyn Hoskins Coffman
Frances E . Johns
Linda Jones Klett
Julia P. Kennedy
Charlotte King Sanner
Kathleen L. Kirk
Ellen McFarland Johnson
Helen Mabry Beglin
Frances McFadden Cone
Caroline S. Mikell Jones
Helen M. Milledge
Ashlin Morris Burria
Linda Nichols Harris
*Everdina Nieuwenhuis
Jane Norman Scott
Emily Parker McGuirt
Diane Parks Cochran
Mary Jane Pfaff Dewees
Kay Richards Summers
Martha Sharp Smith
Sally A. Smith Howard
Barbara Specht Reed
*Sybil Strupe Rights
Marcia Tobey Swanson
*Edith Towers Davis
Raines Wakeford Watkins
*Ann Whisnant Bolch
Carrington Wilson Fox
Rebecca Wilson Guberman
Grace Woods Walden
1961
Judith Albergotti Hines
Ann Avant Crichton
Ana Aviles McCaa
Emily Bailey Bigby
Pamela Bevier
Nancy Jane Bringhurst Barker
Anne Broad Stevenson
Cornelia Brown Nichols
Sally Bryan Minter
Margaret Bullock
Joan Falconer Byrd
Mary Clark Schubert
Betsy Dalton Brand
Lucy Davis Harper
Sandra Davis Moulton
Marguerite Dickert Ligon
Julia Doar Grubb
Harriett Elder Manley
*Alice Frazer Evans
Katherine Gwaltney Remick
Nancy Hall Grimes
Summer 1980
*Fund Agent
Janice Lynn Henry
Harriet Higgins Miller
*Patricia Holmes Cooper
Judith Houchins Uightman
Linda Ingram Jacob
Harriet Jackson Lovejoy
Sarah Kelso
Rosemary Kittrell
Margaret Lipham Blakely
Eugenia Marks Espy
Betty Mattern York
Ann McBride Chilcut t
Sue McCurdy HoBterman
Edna McLain Bacon
Mary Ann McSwain Ant ley
Anne Leigh Modlin Burkhardt
Barbara Mordecai Schwanebeck
*Mary Jane Moore
*Nancy Moore Kuykendall
*Prudy Moore Thomas
Grace Ouzts Curry
Emi ly Pancake
Anne Pollard Withers
Joanna Roden Bergstrom
*Lucy Scales Muller
Harriet Smith Bates
Page Smi th Mo rah an
Nancy Stillman Crais
*Nancy Stone Hough
Kay Strain King
Virginia Thomas Shackelford
Patricia Walker Bass
Jane Weltch Milligan
Florence Winn Cole
Betty Sue Wyatt Wharton
Marian Zimmerman Jenkins
1962
VioLet Allen Gardener
Sara Blomquist Swartz
*Carey Bowen Craig
Gail Carter Adkins
Vivian Conner Parker
Carol Cowan Kussraaul
*Patricia Flythe Koont s
*Peggy Fredrick Smith
Kay Gilliland Stevenson
Elizabeth Harshbarger Broadus
Jean Haynie Stewart
Ann Hershberger Barr
Margaret Holley Milam
Lynda Horn George
Amanda Jane Hunt White
Ann Hutchinson Beason
Elizabeth Jefferson Boyt
Norris Johnston Goss
Isabel Kallman Anderson
Beverly Kenton Mason
Milling Kinard
Let it ia Lavender Sweitzer
Dorothy Lockhart Matthews
Ann Middlemas Johnsjn
Nancy Jane Nelms Garrett
Ethel Oglesby Horton
Pauline Page Moreau
Sylvia Pruitt Karcher
Marjorie Reitz Turnbull
Lebby Rogers Harrison
Robin Rudolph Orcutt
Ruth Seagle Bushong
*Ruth Shepherd Vazquez
Carolyn Shirley Wimberly
Margaret Shugart Anderson
Jo Allison Smith Brown
Sandra Still
Mary Stokes Humphlett
Ray Taggert Thomson
Burnam Walker Reichert
1963
Virginia Allen Callaway
Frances Anderson
Frances Bailey Graves
Leewood Bates Woodell
Judith Brantley
Doris Bray Gi 1 1
Cantey Bryan Mills
Lucie Ca 1 laway Majoros
Teresa Carrigan Simmons
*Sarah Cumming Mitchell
M. Leland Draper
Janie Fincher Peterson
Lucy Gordon Andrews
Mary Ann Gregory Dean
Jane Hancock Thau
Margaret Harms
Bonnie Hatfield Hairrell
Judith Hawley Zollicoffer
*Mary Louise Hunt Rubesch
Dorothy Laird Foster
Lyn Lindskog Deroy
Carolyn Marie Lown Clark
Anne Mi 1 ler Boyd
Lucy Morcock Milner
Robin Patrick Johnston
*Linda Plemons Haak
Ann Risher Phillips
Jane Sharp Poole
* Nancy Sibley Rerape
Suzanne Smith
Kaye Stapleton Redford
Nell Tabor Hartley
Elizabeth Thomas Freyer
Louisa Walton McFadden
Elizabeth Webb Nugent
Flora Jane Womack Gibson
Kay Younger
1964
Eve Anderson Earnest
Nancy Barger Cox
Karen Baxter Harriss
Ann Booton Currie
Carolyn C larke
Judy Conner Scarborough
Charlotte Connor
Anne Foster Curtis
Ga met t E . Foster
Karen Gerald Pope
Judith Hillsman Caldwell
Dianne Hunter Cox
Susan Keith-Lucas Carson
Harriet King Wasserman
Mary Louise Laird
Jan LaMaster Soriero
Eleanor Lee Bartlett
Nancy Lee Abernathy
Shirley Lee
*Martha MacNair McMullen
Joanna McElrath Alston
Susan McLeod Holland
Anne Minter Nelson
Mary Mac Mitchell Saunders
Julia Norton Keidel
Laurie Oakes Propst
Polly Paine Kratt
Becky Reynolds Bryson
Lila Sheffield Howland
Elizabeth Singley Duffy
Marion Smith Bishop
Margaret Snead Henry
Pamela Stanley McCaslin
Mary Lynn Weekley Parsons
Suzanne West Guy
Barbara White Guarienti
Margaret Whitton Ray
Leonora I. Wicker
Mary Womack Cox
*Maria Wornom Rippe
1965
Class of '65
Barbara Adams Hilliard
Betty Armstrong McMahon
Nandy Auman Cunningham
Roberta Belcher Mahaffey
Margaret Bell Gracey
Dorothy Ann Bellinger Grimm
Rebecca Beusse Holman
Sara Blackard Long
Pauline Boyce McLean
Joanne Branch Grant
Jane Brannon Nassar
Elizabeth Brown Sloop
Patricia Buchanan Mas i
Lynne Burton-Haigh
Sally Bynum Gladden
Virginia Clark Brown
Kathryn Coggin Hagglund
Jean Crawford Cross
He len Davis Hatch
Mary Beth Dixon Hardy
Molly Dominy Hernngton
Ann Durrance Snead
Betsy Feuerlein Hoffmann
Elizabeth Fortson Wells
Patricia Gay Nash
Molly Gehan Garrison
Nancy Hammerst rom Cole
Kay Harvey Beebe
Lucia Howard Sizemore
Linda Kay Hudson McGowan
Marty Jackson Frame
Bettye Johnson McRae
Kenney Knight Linton
A. Angela Lancaster
L lbby Ma lone Boggs
Elizabeth McCain
Marcia McClung Porter
Linda McElfresh DeRoze
Diane Mi 1 ler Wise
Brandon Moore Brannon
Elaine Nelson Bonner
Nina Nelson Smith
E laine Orr Wise
Sandra Robertson Nelson
Dorothy Robinson Dewberry
Harriette Russell Flinn
Laura Sanderson Miller
Anne Schiff Faivua
Catharine Sloan Evans
E lyene Smith Thompson
Nancy Solomon son Portnoy
Betsy Feverlein Hoffmann
Sandra Wa 1 lace
Charlotte Webb Kendall
Judith Weldon Maguire
Sandra Hay Wilson
Sue Wyatt Rhodes
Nancy Yontz Linehan
1966
Beverly Allen Lambert
Frances Baldwin Hodges
Harriet Biscoe Rodgers
Nancy Bland Towers
Marilyn Breen Kelley
Barbara Brown Freeman
Mary Brown Bullock
Emily Burgess
Vicky Campbe 11 Patronis
Carol Davenport Wood
Alice Davidson
Jenny Dillion Moore
Martha Doom Bent ley
Laura Dorsey Rains
May Day Folk Taylor
Jean Gaskell Ross
Susan Goode Douglass
Sue Ellen Hipp Adams
Suzanne Holt Lindholm
Frances Hopkins Westbrook
Ayse I lgaz-Carden
Mary Kuykendall Nichols
Linda Lael
Connie Magee Keyser
Helen Mann Liu
Margaret Marion Ryals
F. E lien McDaniel
Frances McKay Plunkett
Barbara Minor Dodd
Anne Morse Topple
Sara Moseley Junkin
Julia Murray Pensinger
Beverly Myers Pickett
Margaret Peyton Stem
Linda Preston Watts
Sandra Robertson Nelson
Kay Roseberry Scruggs
Deborah Rosen
Gail Savage Glover
Suzanne Scoggins Barnhill
Lucy Scovi 1 le
Louise Smith Nelson
Malinda Snow
Susan Thomas
Sarah Uzzel 1-Rindlaub
Carol Watson Harrison
Nancy Whiteside
Louisa W. G. Williams
Donna Wright Mart in
1967
Jane Watt Balsley
Mary Lynn Barnett Tennaro
Linda Bixler Whitley
Margaret Calhoun
Sara Cheshire Killough
Linda Cooper Shewey
Ida Copenhaver Ginter
Marsha Davenport Griffin
Jane Davis Mahon
Anne Diseker Beebe
Gayle Doyle Viehman
Anne Felker Cataldo
Mary Helen Good loe-Murphy
Gale Harrison
Anne Hunter
Elizabeth Hutchison Cowden ^
Judith Jackson Mozen
Jo Jeffers Wingfield
Mary Jervis Hayes
Lucy Jones Cooley
Penny Katson Pickett
Karen Kokomoor Folsom
Jane McCurdy Vardaman
Claire McLeod Muller
Ann Mi Her Morris
Sandra Mitchell
Julia Nuckols Offutt
Caroline Owens Crain
Ann Roberts Divine
Eliza Roberts Letter
Carol Scott Wade
Susan Sleight Mowry
Patricia Smith Edwards
Susan Stevens Hitchcock
Nancy Tilson Loop
Rosalind Todd Tedards
Anne Waldrop Allen
Janice Weatherby Ri ley
Grace Winn Ellis
Julie Za chow ski
1968
Anonymous
Sharon Adams Donohue
Sarah Bainbridge Akridge
Lucie Barron
Jean Binkley Thrower
Linda Bloodworth Garrett
Louise Bruechert
Mary Thomas Bush
Laurie Carter Tharpe
Carol Cole Renfro
Mary Corb ltt Brockman
Gretchen Cousin Autin
Rebecca Davis Huber
June Derrick
Katherine Doster Stoddard
Janet Eastburn Amos
Sally Elberfeld Countryman
Donna Evans Brown
Louise Fortson Kmstrey
Lucy Hamilton Lewis
Sylvia Harby Hutton
Olivia Hicks
Candace Hodges Bell
Janet Hunter
Barbara Jenkins Hines
Margaret Susan Johnson
Suzanne Jones Harper
Adele Josey Houston
Victoria Justice
Rebecca Lanier Allen
Eleanor McCallie
Susan McCann Butler
Katherine McCracken Maybank
Betty Miller Layng
Katherine Mitchell
Margaret Moore Hall
Martha Parks Litt le
Patricia Parks Hughes
Nancy Paysinger Hove
Susan Philips Engle
Catherine Price Laube
Gene Allen Reinero Vargas
Georganne Rose Cunningham
Angela Saad
Johanna Scherer Hunt
Allyn Smoak Bruce
Patricia Stringer
Susan Stringer Connell
Ann Teat Gallant
Ann Wendling Price
Elizabeth Whitaker Wilson
Ann Wilder
Stephanie Wolfe Sidella
1969
Anonymous
Evelyn Angeletti
Patricia Auclair Hawkins
Catherine Auman DeMaere
12
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Beth Bailey
Mary Gene Blake Wiseman
Carol Blessing Ray
Mary Belch Line
Mary ELlen Bond Sandridge
Cheryl Bruce Kragh
Carey Burke Jones
Joetta Burkett Yarbro
Penny Burr Pinson
Mary Chapman Hatcher
Julie Cottrill Ferguson
Janice Cribbs
Janie Davis Hollerorth
Virginia Davis Delph
Margaret Frank Guill
*Jo Ray Freiler Van Vliet
Pamela Gafford McKinnon
Mary Garlington Trefry
Anne Gilbert Potts
Glenda Goodman McKinnon
*Lalla Griffis Mangin
Sara Groover Frazier
Nancy Hamilton Holcomb
Diane Hampton Flannagan
Ruth Hatcher Thomson
Marion Hinson Mitchell
Lee Hunter Eise
*Sara Jackson Chapman
*Carol Jensen Rych ly
Margaret Johnston Nesbit
Kay Jordon Sachs
Beverly LaRoche Anderson
Mary McAlpine Evans
Dianne McMillan Smith
Suzanne Moore Kaylor
Kappa Moorer Robinson
Kathryn Morris White
Minnie Bob Mothes Campbell
*Mary Anne Murphy Hornbuckle
Jean Noggle Harris
Kathleen Pease
Virginia Pinkston Daily
Elta Posey Johnston
Elizabeth Potter
Patsy Rankin Jopling
Carolyn Robinson Caswell
Dorothy Schrader
Anna Eliza Stockman
Tara Swartzel Boyter
*Jeanne Taliaferro Cole
Burnette Teeple Sheffield
Sally Thomas Evans
Elizabeth Thorne Woodruff
Jane D. Todd
Sheryl Watson Patrick
Shelia Wilkins Harkleroad
Rose Wilson Kay
Sally Wood Hennessy
Sharon Yandle Rogers
*Betty Young von Herrmann
1970
*Janet Allen
Aria Bateman Redd
Diane Bollinger Bush
Patricia Brown Cureton
Leslie Buchanan New
Mary Bullock Shearon
Marcia Caribaltes Hughes
Frances Lynn Carssow
Peggy Chapman Curington
Deborah Claiborne Wil 1 iams
Carol Crosby Patrick
Barbara Darnell
*Linda Del Vecchio Owen
Susan Donald
Mollie Douglas Pollitt
Catherine DuVall Vogel
Sherian Fitzgerald Hodges
Marion Gamble McCollum
Lynne Garcia Harris
Hope Gazes Grayson
*Cheryl Granade Sullivan
Edi Guyton Edmiston
Sharon Hall Snead
*Martha Harris Entrekin
Mary-Wills Hatfield LeCroy
Ann Hoefer Henderson
Camille Holland Carruth
Harriette Lee Huff Gaida
Amy Johnson Wright
Barbara Kinney
Judy Mauldin Beggs
Patricia McCurdy Arraistead
Carol Ann McKenzie Fuller
Christine McNamara Lovejoy
Colleen Nugent Thrailkill
Dr. Margaret Pepperdene and friends. Alumnae Weekend
Catherine Oliver
Martha Ramey
Susan Reeve Ingle
*Nancy Rhodes
Carol Sharman Ringland
Sally Skardon
*Martha Smith Rumora
Betsy Sowers
Sally Stanton
Pamela Taylor Clanton
Jean Wall Olstin
Sue Weathers Crannell
Ruthie Wheless Hunter
Rita Wilkins Chambers
Elizabeth Winey Bunn
Norris Wootton
1971
Gertrude Person Allen
Cynthia Ashworth Kesler
Deborah Banghart Mul lins
*Clare Bard Perkins
Evelyn Brown Christensen
Swanna Cameron
*Jane Carlson
Linda Corder Muldoon
Julia Couch Mehr
Mary Carolyn Cox
*Dale Derrick Rudolph
Karen Derrick Moon
Carol Durrance Dunbar
Jane Duttenhaver Hursey
*Rose Anne Ferrante Waters
Sandra Finotti Collins
Frances Folk Zygmont
Margaret Funderburk O'Neal
Carolyn Gailey
*Harriet Gatewood Parker
Gayle Gellerstedt Daniel
*Janet Godfrey Wilson
Anna Gordon Burns
Carol Hacker Evans
Deborah Haskell Hurley
Paula Hendricks Culbreth
Ann Jarrett Smith
Edith Jennings Black
Charlene Kruizenga
Mary Landrum Squires
*Karen Lewis Mitchell
.Edna Lowe Swift
Mary Martin Smith
Tyler McFadden
Alexa Mcintosh Minis
Marquis McLemore Boyce
Margaret Morrison Hamilton
Susan Morton
*Katherine Mueller Wright
*Eleanor Ninestein
Rebecca Owen Crim
Barbara Paul
Grace Pierce Quinn
Arabelle Plonk Shockley
Susan Propst Craben
Patricia Schellack Wright
Katherine Setze Home
Jane Stambaugh
*"G. G." Syndor Hill
*Dea Taylor Walker
*Peggy Thompson Davis
Bernie Todd Smith
M. Caroline Turner
Wimberly Warnock
Ellen T. Willinghara
1972
Harriet Amos
Mary Beaty WatkinB
Deborah Boggue Hays
Kathryn Champe Cobb
Lizabeth Champe Hart
Susan Correnty Dowd
Made leine del Portillo
Barbara Denzler Campbell
Beatrice Divine
*Jerry Kay Foote
Debra Ann Gay Wiggins
*Dianne Gerstle Niedner
Louise Roska-Hardy
Terri Hearn Potts
Claire Hodges Burdett
Mary Jean Horney
Leila Jarrett Hosley
Elizabeth Johnston
Sharon Jones Cole
*Deborah Jordan Bates
*Anne Kerable Collins
Sidney Kerr
Sally Lloyd Proctor
Deborah Long Wingate
Linda Maloy Ozier
Martha Jane Martin Benson
Susan Mees Hester
Mary Jane Morris MacLeod
Nancy Owen Merritt
Mary Ann Powell Howard
Gayle Saunders Dorsey
Amante Smith Acuff
Gretchen Smith
Linda Story Braid
Barbara Thomas Parker
*Nancy Thomas Tippins
Rose Trincher
*Susan Watson Black
Nancy Weaver Willson
Pam Westmoreland Sholar
*Paula Wiles S igmon
Susan Williams Gornall
*Julianna Winters
*Ann Yrwing Hall
1973
Carolyn Arant Handell
Edith Bailey Laetsch
Sally Bryant Oxley
*Anastac ia Coc lin
* Deborah Corbet t Gaudier
Ann Cowley Churchman
Deborah Dalhouse Riser
Ivonne del Portillo
Sheryl Denman Curtis
Virginia Lee Estes
Debbie Gantt Mitchell
Julia Cox Goodloe
Judith Hamilton Grubbs
Andrea Hankins Schellman
*Resa Harris
Cynthia Harvey Fletcher
Judy Hill Calhoun
Melissa Holt Vandiver
Meredith Howe Pharis
*Debra Ann Jackson Williams
Margaret Lines
Anne MacKenzie Boyle
Judith Maguire Tindel
Janifer Meldrum
*Deborah Newman Mattern
Jane Parsons Frazier
Libby Rhett Jones
*Nadja Sefcik-Earl
Judy Sharp Hickman
Janet Short
*Clare Smith
Laura Tins ley Swann
Pamela Ann Todd Moye
*Joy Trimble
Nancy Wallace Davis
Edith Waller Charabless
Suzanne Warren Schwank
Betsy Watt Dukes
Cynthia Wilkes Smith
Laura Jocelyn Williams
Elizabeth Winfrey Freeburg
1974
Elizabeth Bean Burrell
Julie Bennett Curry
Betty Binkley
Marianne Bradley
Summer 1980
*Fund Agent
13
*Patey Cook Bates
Davara Jane Dye Potel
*Lynn Ezell
Mary Gay Bankaton
Rosanne Harkey Pruitt
Rebecca Harrison Mentz
Cecilia Henry Kurland
Patricia Hughes Schoeck
Mary Jane Kerr Cornell
Mary Frances Lawless Luke
Amy Ledebuhr Bandi
Teresa Lee Echols
Lib McGregor Simmons
Ann McMi llan
*Welisha Miles Gilreath
C lsire Owen
Ann Patterson
Anne Poe Mitchell
Gayle Shute Rankin Meyer
Martha Rut ledge Munt
Carolyn Siak Deadwyler
Martha Stephenson Kelley
Kathenne Tarwater Smith
1975
Susan Balch Clapham
*Vicki Baynes Jackson
Mary Louise Brown Forsythe
Melodye Brown
Debra Carter
*Anns Case Winters
Shelby Cave
India Culpepper Dennis
Sarah Harrison
Denise Lea Hord Mockridge
Susan Landham Carson
Mae Logan Kelly
Frances Maguire
Ruth McManus Mansfield
Mary Gay Morgan
Marie Newton
Jayne Peterman
Ellen Phillips Smith
Catherine Pirkle Wages
Irmina Rivero Owens
Victoria Roberts
Angie Rushing Hoyt
Lyn Sat terthwaite Michaud
Sally Stenger
Melissa Stretch Druckraan
Marsha Thrift Simmons
Rebecca Weaver
Becky Wilson
1976
Katherine Akin
Lisa Banks Kerly
Gay Blackburn Maloney
E 1 izabeth Boney
E. Brandon Brame
Alexandra Coclin
Sky Eva Craft Joiner
Emily Dunbar
*Sarah Franklin Echols Leslie
*Susan Grier Phillips
*Jeanne Jones Hoi 1 lday
Liz Hornsby
Deborah Huband Smith
Mildred Frazer Kinnett Loomis
Nancy Leasendale Puree 1 1
Henrietta Leland
Laurie Jean McDonald Fite
Melissa Mills Jacobs
Jennifer Rich Kaduck
Lori Riley Day
Elizabeth Scott Guynes
Martha Marshall Smith
Pedrick Stall
Jane Sutton
Janet Tarwater Kibler
*Lark Todd Sessions
Laura Underwood
Lynda Weizenecker Wilson
Denise Westbrook
Karen White Holland
Angele Willcox Dunlap
Barbara Ann Williams
Laurie Williams Attaway
1977
Mary Anne Barlow
Holly Anne Bennett Rielly
*Nancy Burnhara Schwahn
Elizabeth Doscher Shannon
Martha Hackl
Glenn Hankinson Paris
Jet Harper
*Cynthia Hodges Burns
Sue Jinks
Melissa Landon
Melinda Morris Knight
Beverly Nelson McCallum
Alice Newton
*Clare O'Kelley Bennett
Susan Pedrick McWilliams
Julie Pflughaupt Boyd
Julie Poole Knotts
Sandra Saseen
Linda Shearon
*Sarah Shurley Hayes
Nancy Sisk Chancey
Kay Williams Barnard
1978
Mary Brown Diehl
Nilgun Ereken Turner
Dr. Henrx Robinson attends Alumnae Luncheon.
Sue Ellen Fisher
Janet Kelly Jobe
Al ice Newton
Mary Jane Norville
Kathleen 0' Brien
Kathryn Schnittker White
Melody Kathryn Snider Porter
Sally Stamper Hrabe
Susan Willoch Shaver
Sally Workman
1980
1979
Nancy Atkins
Ellanor Toomer Cullens
Deborah Daniel-Bryant
Susan Gledhill
Anne Jones
Gretchen Keyser
Denise Koon
Laura Lynn Peterson
Karen Rogers Burkett
Patricia Diann Sanders
Susan Sturkie
Class of 1980
Catherine Beck
Jan Burroughs Loftis
Patricia Elebash
Jodie Jeffrey
Joanna Splawn
Mary Tiniacos
Katherine Zarkowsky Broderick
Alumnae Clubs
Alumnae Association of Cent ral Florida
Barrow-Gwinnett-Newton Agnes Scott
Alumnae Club
Decatur Agnes Scott Alumnae Club
Fairfield-Westchester Alumnae Club
Kentuckiana Agnes Scott Alumnae Club
Middle Tennessee Area Agnes Scott
Alumnae Club
Agnes Scott College Alumnae Club
of Tidewater, Virginia
Associated Alumnae Clubs of Washington
Fund Agent
* Deceased
Parents and Friends
Mrs. Henry W. Adams
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy R. Adams
Mr. Thomas M. Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Alexander, Jr.
Dr. Wallace M. Alston
Mrs. George Archer
Mr. T. Maxfield Bahner
Mr. and Mrs. D. Banyar
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Barclay
Mrs. X. Era Bark ley
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Barnes
Mr. and Mrs. James 0. Bartlett
Reach Park Women's Club
Mrs. G. E . Bean
Dr. David P. Rehan
Benevolence Fund, Decatur
Presbyterian Church
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Benson
Mr. Maurice J. Bernard, III
Mrs. George M. Bevier
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Birdsong
Mr. Herbert Bolton
Mrs. Hei nz Booch
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey G. Booth
Mrs. William Hugh Boswe 1 1
Mrs. Henry L. Bowden
Mr. Harllee Branch, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Brannen
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs
Mrs
Mr,
Mr,
Mr,
Mr.
Mrs
Mr.
Mrs
Mr.
Mrs
Dr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs
Mr.
Mrs
Mr.
Cir
and Mrs. John J. Rnnghurst
Thomas Broadus
and Mrs. Waverly C. Broadwa
J. C. Bruver
Aline M. Brown
and Mrs. Herman Brown and
Cor inne
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
and Mr s .
and Mrs.
Howard G. Brown
Martin P. Brown
Michael Brown
Ph i I ip Brown
. Oscar K. Bryant
W. D. Burch
. Christine Burroughs
Walter E. Burton
. John A . Rut ler
and Mrs. Ronald L. Byrnside
J. R. Calloway, Jr.
Scott Candler, Jr.
. Helen S. Carchidi
and Mrs. William C. Carlson
. Anne Gragg Carr
Emmett B. Cartledge, Jr.
cle 3, Decatur Presbyterian
Church
W. L. Clifton, Jr.
and Mrs. Hall Conley
Howard P. Conrad
Dr. Lee Copple
Covenant Class, Decatur
Presbyterian Church
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Craig and Catherine
Mrs. Loma Crocker
Mr. John H . Cross
Mr. Charles B. Cunningham
Mr. William M. Curd
Mr. Harry L. Dalton
Mr. Al Daniel
Capt. J. Wallace Daniel
Mr. Nei I 0. Davis
Dr. Walter Ray Davis, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. DeGrandi
Mr. and Mrs. Ingram Dickinson
Mrs. Caroline Dillman
Ms. Viola Conner
Mr. Hugh M. Dorsey
Mrs. El izabeth R. Dowd
Mrs. Nancy B. Dowling
Ms. Lois M. Dubberly
Mr. Carltun Duggan
Mr. and Mrs. Gary S. Dunbar
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Dunbar
Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Dunstan
Mr. Howard M. Duvall, Jr.
The John C. Echols Memorial Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Echols
Mr. Thomas K. Eddins, Jr.
Mr. Earl H. Elberfeld
Mr. C. C. Flehash
Elementary Education Courtesy Fund
Ms. Natalie Endicott
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F.step
Mr. and Mrs. Earl G. Ezell
Faculty Flower Club of Agnes Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Ferst
Mr. William W. Fink
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Florence
Mr. W. S. Flory, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Floyd
Ms. Sara A . Fount ain
Ms. Pheobe W. Franklin
Mr. J. W. Friar
Dr. and Mrs. W. Joe Frierson
Mr. Alex P. Gaines
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Leslie Garber
Dr. Julia T. Gary
Mr. L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr.
Georgia Association of College Stores
Georgia Bookstore Managers Association
Mr. Charles B. Gmden
Mrs. Methlee C. Goodloe
Mrs. Rachel R. Gordon
Mrs. Marty C. Cowing
Mrs. Esther A. Graff
14
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Mrs, Winifred F. Greer Ms.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Gregory, Jr. Mrs
Mr. G. R. Griffin Mr.
Mary, Carter and Luther Griffith Ms.
and the Wiggins Mrs
Colonel and Mrs. F. F. Groseelose Mr.
Dr. NancyP. Groseelose Mrs
Miss Roxie llagop lan Mr.
Mr. William B. Hairrell Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Hakanson Mr.
Mrs. Victor Hanson Mr.
Mrs. James E. Hara Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Harrison Mrs
Ms. Nina L. Hartline Mr.
Mrs. John L. Hearn Dr.
Mrs, Shirley Heermann
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Highland, Jr. Dr.
Mr. William H. High tower, Jr. Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene S. Horney Mr.
Mr. John S. Hunsinger Col
Mr. Conley Ingram Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Inman Mr.
Mrs. Glenn W. Ives Dr.
Mrs. Sue Boney Ives Mr.
Mrs. Victoria Jenkins Mr.
Mrs. Judith Bourgeois Jenson Mrs
Mrs. Bonnie B. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Johnson Dr.
Dr. Connie A. Jones Mr.
Dr. Rudolph W. Jones, Jr. Dr.
Mr. William T\ Justice Mr.
Mr. Garnett L. Keith Mr.
Mr. Alan Keith-Lucas Dr.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Jennings Kerr Mrs
Mrs. Frances Scott Key The
Dr. George Savage King Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick R. Kinser Mrs
Dr. and Mrs. C. Benton Kline, Jr. Mrs
and Chris Dr.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Knox Mr.
Mr. /ind Mrs. R 1 Iwood L. Koch Mr.
Mr. C. R. Lnwii'iice Mrs
Sarah B. Le land Mr.
Dr.
Markert
J . Mart in
Mays
Mrs.
Dr. and Mrs. Leon Lenoir
Susan Leonard
Desha Lester
and Mrs. R. L. Lewis
Pettie V. Light
Elsie W. Love
J . Ersk i ne Love , Jr.
H. T. Lowery
and Mrs. James B.
and Mrs. Raymond
Ferrin Mathews
and Mrs . John E .
Margaret McA lister
Eleanor Brown McCain
James Ross McCain
and Mrs. John L. McCain and
Paul and F. loise
Paul M. McCain
and Mrs. L. W. McClurkin
Raymond C. McCreery
and Mrs. T. G. McCunniff
Julius A. McCurdy
and Mrs. Robert E. Mcintosh
Kate McKemie
and Mrs. Drayton McLane, Sr.
John C. B. McLaughlin
Wallace H. McLenmore
and fami Ly
W. Edward McNair
and Mrs. Edward W. McPherson
and Mrs. Harris Minter
J. A. Minter, Jr.
and Mrs. Roy Morgan
C. W. Morse
Isabella M. Morris
Guy Moseley Family
James W. Mull
Edward Newman
Sarah Newman
James D. Newsome
M. Lamar Oglesby
and Mrs. William
. Rose F. Pancake
W. A. Parker
and Mrs. Richard Par
Owens
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Payne
Mrs. Gerald C. Paysingei
Mr. and Mrs, Charles W. Pepe
Dr. and Mrs. Marvin B. Perry
Mrs. Juliette R. Pharr
Dr. J. Davison Philips
Mr. Wesley G. Pippert
Mrs. W. W. Plowden
Dr. and Mrs. L. del Port i I lo
Dr. and Mrs. Walter B. Posey
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Potter
Colonel and Mrs. Joseph F. Puett
Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Quiltian, Jr.
Mrs. George Randel
Mrs. Jack C. Reddick
Mr. and Mrs. William Reid
Mrs. Paul H. Ridge
Mr. William R. Rivers
Col. and Mrs. Henry A. Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Robinson
Mr. C. B. Rogers, Jr.
Mr. Joseph M. Rubens, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Salter
Mr. and Mrs. Hansford Sams, Jr.
Mr. Joseph W. Sat terthwa ite
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Schrader
Mr. C. Oscar Schmidt, Jr.
Mrs. Burton A . Scott
Mrs. Leonard A. Scott, Jr.
Service Corps of Retired Executives,
Chapter 48
Mrs. P. G. Sessions
Mr. B. M. Sharian
Miss Eugenie Sheats
Mr. and Mrs. Francois L. Sheats
Robert B. Shelley
E rica M. Shiver
Horace H. Sibley
John A. Sibley
W. A. L. Sibley, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roff Sims
Duckie and Virgil Smith
Dr. Florence E. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn R. Smith
Mr.
Dr.
Mr.
Mr.
Spencer, Jr.
Stephenson
St imson
Stiff
Mr. and Mrs. Hal L. Smith
Mr. John F. . Smith, TI
Mrs. Margaret W. Smith
Mr. P. L. Bealy Smith
Mr. Walter A. Smith
Dr. and Mrs . Samue I R .
Mrs. M. K. Stamm
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M.
Mr. Augustus H. Sterne
Ms. Kathenne Stearns
Dr. Chloe Steel
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert H.
Mr. and Mrs. Les Stiyer
Dr. E. Lee Stoffel
Ms. Frances Wag gone r Strother
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Stroud
Mrs. On.T M. SL roz ier
Dr. and Mrs. William B. Stubbs
Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Stuhr
Mr. and Mrs. John F, . Swink
Mr. Pierre Thomas
Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Tinkler
Mr. and Mrs. Fred G. Tobi
Mr. Donald Wakeford
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Wall
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Wallace, Jr.
Mr. William C. Wardlaw, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Watt, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Weinburgh
Mr. and Mrs . James H. We I Is,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Wendling
Mr. G. L. Westcott
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Westmoreland
Mr. and Mrs. C. Cody White, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton B. Wilburn
Mr. James A. Wilkerson
Mr. John C . Wilson
Mr. W. T. Wilson, Jr.
Women of the Church,
Decatur Presbyterian Church
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Yandle
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Zarkowsky
Mrs. Mildred Z immerman
Businesses and Foundations
Anonymous
*The A. S, Abe 1 1 Company Foundation
*Alcoa Found at ion
Alexander and Alexander, Inc.
The Allen Company
Ame rican Mutual Insurance Companies
*Amencan Telephone and
Telegraph Company
*Arthur Anderson and Company
*Armco Foundation
Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Company
Atlanta Found at ion for Independent Col leges
Atlanta Gas Light Company
Atlantic Richfield Foundation
Walter Ballard Optical Company
*Beat rice Foods Company
Be 1 1 Laboratories
Blake Builders Supply Company
*The Boeing Company
*Boise Cascade Corporation
*Bowater Carolina Corporation
Burlington Northern Foundation
Burr Brown Foundation
Cardinal Federal Savings and
Loan Association
Carolina Mills, Inc.
Carol ina Power and Light Company
Chevron U.S.A. , Inc.
Cities Service Foundation
The Citizens and Southern Fund
Walter Clifton Foundation, Inc.
The Coca-Cola Company
Columbia Gas Transmission
Corporat ion
Connecticut Mutual Life
Insurance Company
Container Corporation of America
Continental Bank Foundation
Cooper Industries Found at ion
Carle C. Conway Scholarship
Foundat ion
C ross roads , Inc .
Harry L. Dalton Foundation,
I nc.
Daniel International Corporation
Decatur Federal Savings and
Loan Association
The Dover Fund
The Camille and Henry Dreyfuss
Foundat ion, Inc.
Duke Power Company
The Dunn and Bradstreet Corporation
Foundat ion
Eastman Kodak Company
Eaton Corporation
Florence C. and Harry L. English
Memoria 1 Fund
Exxon Education Foundation
Exxon USA Foundation
FMC Foundat ion
The Sylvia M. and Frank W. Ferst
Foundat ion
Fireman's Fund American
Foundat ion
First Presbyterian Church
of Houston
Ford Motor Company
John and Mary Franklin
Foundat ion, I nc .
The French Government
Blake P. Garrett , Sr.
Foundat ion
General Electric Foundat ion
Georgia Council for the
Arts and Humanities
The Georgia Foundation for
Independent Colleges, Inc.
Georgia Highway Express, Inc.
Price Gilbert, Jr. Charitable Fund
Griffin Hardware Company
Stella and Char les Guttman
Foundat ion, Inc.
Halliburton Education Foundation, In
The Hartford Insurance Group
Foundat ton, I nc .
Hercules Incorporated
Gulf Oil Foundation
*ICI Americas, Inc.
Illinois Tool Works Foundation
Integon Foundation, Inc.
International Business Machines
Corporation
I saacson ' s
Jef f erson-P ilot Corporat ion
The Kendall Company Foundation
Lanier Brothers Foundation
The Ray M. and Mary Elizabeth Lee
Foundat ion, I nc .
The Liberty Corporation Foundation
Life of Georgia
Manufacturers Hanover Foundation
Harriet McDaniel Marshall Trust
Milliken and Company
Monsanto Fund
The Mony Trust
National Endowment for the Humanities
National Library Bindery Company
of Georgia
Pat terson-Ba re lay Memoria 1
Foundat ion, I nc .
P itney Bowes
The Presser Foundation
The Prudential Foundation
The Quaker Oats Foundation
Raytheon Company
*R. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc.
Reynolds Met a Is Company Foundat ion
Walter H. and Marjory M. Rich Memorial Fund
Richardson-Merrel I , Inc.
Riegel Textile Corporation Foundation
Rohm and Haas Company
Scott's Landscape Company
The Sears-Roebuck Foundat ion
She 1 1 Companies Foundat ion
S immons Company
Southern Bell Telephone and
Te legraph Company
Southern Natural Gas Company
*J. P. Stevens and Company,
Inc . Foundat ion
TRW Foundation
Transame rica Corporation
The United States Gypsum Foundation, Inc.
Texaco, Inc .
Trevathan Printing Company
Trust Company of Georgia
The J. M. Tull Foundation
United Airlines Foundation
United Virginia Bankshares
Foundat ion
UPS Foundation
West inghouse F. due at iona I Foundat ion
Westvaco Foundation
David, Helen and Marian Woodward Fund
Summer 1980
*Made matching gifts
15
U pdate
The Departmer
Bv Dr. R
In the AGNES scott ideal. President Gaines
wrote that the College should have "a liberal
eurriculum fully abreast of the best institu-
tions of this country-" Many new eolleges in
the nineteenth century must have taken this
as part of their ideal. What was unusual in
this instance is that the ideal was being
enunciated for a women's institution, where
something less was frequently thought suffi-
cient. The early history of the College shows
that the Agnes Scott Ideal was difficult to
realize precisely because many parents be-
lieved that a "finishing school" was all their
daughters needed. But President Gaines
persevered, and his ideal was realized and
accepted.
The philosophy department also has a goal
which is difficult of achievement. It is a goal
of a slightly different and more particular
kind: nevertheless, it is one we pursue with
something like the same idealism of our
academic forebearers. The goal of the
philosophical curriculum shows two equal
emphases: the passing on of collected wis-
dom of our tradition and the training of
critical and analytic minds. It is not enough
for our students that they learn what the
various philosophers of our tradition have
thought; they must also leam how to think in
the philosophical manner. No one who
simply knows what Plato said or what Kant
said is philosophically educated. One must
also know how to think in those creative and
critical ways that define the discipline of
philosophy.
That twofold goal makes teaching philoso-
phy at Agnes Scott a challenging enterprise.
In some colleges and universities, it is
thought enough to teach analytic thinking,
while largely ignoring the traditional
teachings of philosophers. In others, the rote
learning of the philosophical teaching of
others, without learning how to think like a
philosopher, is thought enough for under-
graduates. The temptation is great to fall into
one of these two patterns. Some students
enjoy the activity of criticism and analysis
without the responsibility for learning the
tradition: other students enjoy the passivity
of absorbing the thought of others without
the responsibility of thinking for themselves.
We require our students both to absorb the
tradition and to think in those critical ways
without which the tradition is meaningless.
The curriculum of the department is
organized in order to realize these goals.
Although the course offerings have remained
essentially the same over the years, there
have been some innovations. The greatest
w as the addition of a series of freshmen level
courses. These courses are designed to start
students thinking critically about traditional
problems, e.g.. the existence of God and the
relation between morality and the state.
Logic, now a freshman course, is also a was
of beginning critical thinking. The backbone
of the philosophy major remains the year-
long sequence in the history of philosophy,
stretching from the pre-Socratics to the
beginnings of Kant's philosophy. The upper
level courses contain standard offerings in
such systematic areas as the theory of
knowledge and metaphysics and in such
historical major figures as Plato and Kant. A
notable addition to these is a course in Marx
and Marxism, offered jointly with the poli-
tical science department.
Enrollments in the department are very
healthy. These numbers suggested to us the
appropriateness of establishing a chapter of
Phi Sigma Tau. the national honorary society
of philosophy. This has been the chapter's
first year and a successful one it was.
Programs have included student-led debates,
talks by visiting faculty, and even a social
event. Topics have been women's liberation,
the immortal Socrates, and faith's relation to
reason. One of the few organizations on
campus dedicated to public discussion of
important intellectual issues. Gamma of
Georgia chapter has gained a deserved
reputation in a rather short amount of time.
There are other opportunities for philoso-
phy students to try their critical skills. Even,'
year for the past three, the Philosophy
Colloquium has provoked discussion by
bringing on campus spokesmen and women
of various controversial topics. Offered in
winter quarter, the Colloquium has explored
capital punishment, human experimentation,
the Marxist, libertarian, and democratic
concepts of freedom, and the relation be-
tween faith and reason. Also in the winter
quarter, philosophy students participate in
the Undergraduate Philosophy Conference.
The Conference, over twenty years old now .
is composed of such colleges as Agnes Scott.
Emory, Vanderbilt, Sewanee. and the Uni-
\ersit\ of Tennessee at Chattanooga. The
annual meeting is held on one of the member
campuses: only students may present papers
and only students may ask questions. This
16
Agnes Scott Alumnae yuarterl>
of Philosophy
D. Parry
past year, our group went to Sewanee where
we delivered two excellent papers. One was
on Plato's metaphysics in the later dialogues,
given by Cynthia Hampton '80. Carol
Chapman '81 gave a paper on Norman
Malcolm's assessment of St. Anselm's onto-
logical argument. The Conference is a
welcomed opportunity for our students to
talk philosophically with students from other
colleges and to compare their philosophical
training with that of others; they always
come back to Agnes Scott impressed with
themselves.
Members of the department have some
responsibility for preparing students for such
accomplishments. In the not so distant past,
our complement included Mrs. Merle G.
Walker, of happy memory, and Mr. C.
Benton Kline. Occasional teachers in the
department were President Wallace M. Al-
ston, Mr. Kwai S. Chang. Mr. Richard M.
Wolters. and Mrs. Linda B. Cornett. The
present members are Mr. David P. Behan
and Mr. Richard D. Parry. Mr. Behan
received his B.A. from Yale University and
M.A. and Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University.
After finishing graduate school, he was Dean
of Morse College at Yale and taught courses
in the Yale philosophy department. He also
pursued research as a visiting fellow at Christ
Church College. Oxford, coming to Agnes
Scott in 1974. Mr. Parry, presently depart-
mental chairman, earned a B.A. at George-
town University, an M.A. at Yale University,
and Ph.D. from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. He taught for one
year at the University of South Carolina
before coming to Agnes Scott in 1967.
Finishing graduate school is just the
beginning of an education in philosophy.
And the department believes strongly in
continued professional growth. The reasons
are obvious. In a small college, it is all too
easy for one's interests to become parochial;
one's thinking can become straitened not to
say enfeebled by the less than earth shak-
ing problems of the campus. Professional
activity can keep this myopia from setting in.
Moreover, through research and writing one
keeps abreast of developments within his
field. And doing so is necessary if we are not
to make students victims of outdated theories
and interpretations sometimes as old as the
teacher's last year in graduate school.
Accordingly, both Mr. Behan and Mr.
(continued on next page)
Richard Parry, department chairman
Summer 1980
17
The Department of Philosophy
(continued)
Parry maintain active research interests. Mr.
Behan has given papers at the Locke
Conference in Toronto, the Hume Society,
the Southern Society for Philosophy and
Psychology, the Georgia Philosophical Soci-
ety, and the Emory Philosophy Department
Colloquium. Mr. Parry has read papers
before the American Philosophical Associa-
tion, the Southern Society for Philosophy
and Psychology, the Georgia Philosophical
Society, and the Emory Departmental Collo-
quium. Both have attended National Endow-
ment for the Humanities Summer Seminars.
Mr. Behan going to work with Roderick
Chisholm at Brown University and Mr. Parry
working with Gregory Blastos and D. J.
Furley at Princeton University.
Mr. Behan's publications appear in the
Canadian Journal of Philosophy and Philo-
sophical Inquiry. Mr. Parry's appear in the
Southern Journal of Philosophy , the Person-
alis!. Philosophy and Phenomenological Re-
search, and the Journal of the History of
Philosophy.
Mr. Behan's philosophical interests center
around the issue of the person. Concentrating
on the work of Rene Descartes, John Locke,
and David Hume. Behan has attempted to
reconstruct their philosophical positions on
the concept of a person. The issue is a central
one in the history of philosophy. In the past,
persons have been identified with their
physical bodies, with their souls, or with
some combination of the two. In his writing
and in his teaching, Behan approaches the
issue with an insight both original and
well-grounded in the philosophical tradition.
Mr. Parry's interests were first of all in
contemporary theory of action as it was
elaborated by such analytic philosophers as
Gertrude Anscombe and Gilbert Rylc. Some
of his publications are in this area. However,
he has become increasingly interested in the
thought of Plato, especially in the early and
middle dialogues. There Socrates insistently
compares the virtuous man to a craftsman:
according to this comparison, the good man
is one who knows how to use the assets of his
life so that he does well and is happy. The
comparison between virtue and craft has
been subjected to scholarly scrutiny of late;
Parry has been among the scrutinizers.
delivering a paper at the Christmas meeting
of the American Philosophical Association
which uncovered some of the flaws in a
recent book on the subject. It might be noted
here that the comparison has more than
scholarly interest and, in fact, has much to
do with teaching ethics. The comparison
Associate Professor David Behan
between craft and virtue offers a theory of
morality which is based on a style of life, or
a way of living. Such a morality offers an
alternative to most present day theories
which base morality on following rules.
Finally, a word about our graduates is in
order. Some are in law school and in
seminary: others are in business and in
education. If we are right about philosophy's
contribution to developing critical powers,
these women are more acute lawyers, mini-
sters, business people, and educators. Natu-
rally, a number have gone to graduate school
in philosophy, attending Stanford. Rice.
Chapel Hill, University of California at
Davis, and Frankfort. The most recent
graduate of our program will be going in the
fall to study ancient philosophy with Regi-
nald E. Allen at Northwestern University.
Not all our graduates teach philosophy for a
profession; but all are philosophers to one
degree or another. The critical mind which
seeks the fundamental assumptions in any
area is not easily stilled. A,
18
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Phi Beta Kappa Address
An Agnes Scott Education after a Decade
By Dr. Marline Brownley '69
I am deeply pleased to have been asked to
speak on this occasion honoring those whose
academic achievements have been recog-
nized by their election to Phi Beta Kappa.
Speeches on these sorts of occasions usually
seem to be directed toward the general
advantages of a liberal arts education. But as
an alumna of this college, as one who has
shared with you the academic life here. I
want to try to speak more precisely to what
the experience of this liberal arts education at
Agnes Scott means to a young woman,
whether she was a student in the late sixties,
as I was, or in the late seventies.
First of all, I want to address something
which as a student 1 took for granted: the
importance to me of an education conducted
by women for women. There were and still
are few colleges or universities in this
country including many women's col-
leges that have on their faculties more
than a few token women. Yet Agnes Scott
from its founding brought to this faculty the
best women it could find in the academic
profession, women trained in the finest
graduate schools in the country women
who were breaking ground in a profession
which has been dominated by men since
universities began. When I came to Agnes
Scott, of the sixty-five faculty at the rank of
assistant professor or higher (that is, those
holding the Ph.D. degree), thirty-six were
women: more than half. Given the position
of women in this culture, both when I was in
college and also right now, the influence of
women faculty, administrators, and staff
must be pervasive in order to create an
environment in which young women can
recognize and develop their full intellectual
potential.
This influence of women on women works
at every level in the educational process.
When 1 was in graduate school, a number of
us were sitting at lunch one day when one of
the graduate students mentioned that she had
been assigned to give a lecture the next week
for the American Literature course. She said
that she was very nervous. All of us
responded with the usual words of encour-
agement: that she knew her material well,
that she had plenty of poise, that she would
do an excellent job. In the midst of the
babble she stopped us. "You don't under-
stand," she said. "I've never even heard a
woman lecture before." Here was the crux
of her uncertainty. I was amazed; I was even
more amazed when 1 found out that of all the
male and female graduate students around
the lunch table. I was the only one who had
ever heard any woman give an academic
lecture. It had never occured to me that there
was anything unusual about it.
This example not only relates to those of
us who left Agnes Scott and became
teachers; it also applies to all the students in
the College with me. For all of us. Agnes
Scott provided women who were strong
individuals, independent and intelligent hu-
man beings who through their examples
encouraged their students to be the same.
Agnes Scott provided less feminist rhetoric
and more feminist reality than any place I
have seen since. In the context of liberal
learning, the defensiveness too often charac-
teristic of feminist polemic was unnecessary.
Self-regard and regard for others was a way
of life and a way of thinking integral to the
women who taught me, and their sense of
themselves as women, broadened and
deepened by their humanistic learning, com-
municated itself intangibly, unselfconscious-
ly, but thoroughly. That influence has
continued to provide a viable way for me to
function in a world which at best is
uncomfortable with and at worst hostile to
women who desire roles beyond the tradi-
tional ones.
Just as my teachers conveyed what it
means to be an educated woman without
polemic, they also conveyed the essence of
devotion to learning without the pretentious
affectation or the short-sighted pedantry
which too often characterizes the academic
profession. I remain grateful that I received
at Agnes Scott a rigorously traditional liberal
arts education. My best teachers recognized
the purpose of this kind of education and
made me aware of it to open the mind, to
stimulate the curiosity with material which
simultaneously disciplines and matures a
mind. My time was not wasted by gimmick-
ry or by modishly fashionable courses,
which may perhaps speak to the moment but
which do not last. I had none of the
interdisciplinary courses which have diluted
too many colleges with dilettantism -
courses which, I have since learned, are
more to the advantage of the faculty than to
the student. Agnes Scott's core curriculum
insured an education characterized by both
variety and depth; I have recently watched
both my graduate institution and the univer-
sity where I now teach return from the
do-it-yourself education of the '60s and '70s
to the same kind of core curriculum which
Agnes Scott has maintained all along, which
it never gave up.
Henry David Thoreau writes:
Men sometimes speak as if the study of
the classics would at length make way
for more modern and practical studies:
but the adventurous student will always
study classics, in whatever language
they may be written and however
ancient they may be. For what are the
classics but the noblest recorded
thoughts of man? They are the only
oracles which are not decayed, and
there are such answers to the most
modern inquiry in them as Delphi and
Dodona never gave.
Recognizing that those who know the past
have the best chance of understanding the
present and the future, Agnes Scott taught
me the classics in every area which I studied.
It did this so well because it recognized
precisely what its task was. Agnes Scott left
to the large research universities the special-
ized professional training which only these
institutions have the resources to offer;
Agnes Scott left to technical schools and
vocational colleges the practical skills which
these institutions are best equipped to teach.
The finest of my teachers knew that the value
of a liberal arts education can only be
evaluated in terms of ultimate, not immedi-
ate, utility in terms of the depth and
flexibility of the trained mind. Thus,
(continued on next page)
Summer 1980
19
An Agnes Scot
although Agnes Scott prepared me excellent-
ly for graduate school, it prepared me
equally well to work on a Washington
Congressional staff, which is how 1 spent the
first year after I graduated. My classmates
are doctors, social workers, bankers, house-
wives, teachers, artists, lawyers, and so on.
They do their work well because they think
well, not because they received specialized
training or vocational skills in college.
Agnes Scott prepared us for whatever we
chose to do. for the essential reason that
pervading the best of my education was the
insistence that all learning must have a direct
and vital reference to human life. It is said
that Hegesias. a teacher in the school of
Hedonistic philosophers in Alexandria, des-
paired of ever attaining happiness. He
propounded his philosophy of complete
pessimism in the strongest terms to his
students. Finally his lectures had to be
legally prohibited by Ptolemy because so
many suicides resulted from his teaching. In
a more positive manner, the best teachers at
Agnes Scott presented their material in such
a way that it related directly to life as it was
lived by their students then, and as it would
be lived by them in the future. We felt we
were not just an audience for performers, but
were respected as individuals and as sharers
in the joy of learning. As one of my
professors noted to me years later, she was
not simply teaching material in her courses.
she was using material to teach students.
Such a distinction sums up the attitude
toward learning that I experienced at Agnes
Scott. Learning was not allowed to exist in a
vacuum: the material in the classroom was
intimately connected with the life we lived.
The strength of humanistic study in any
discipline has always been the move from
fact, through imagination and intellect, to
value. The great humanists have always
emphasized the need for this kind of move-
Education
(continued)
lent. Samuel Johnson, speaking specifically
f books, writes:
Many of the books which now crowd
the world, may be justly suspected to be
written for the sake of some invisible
order of beings; for surely they are of no
use to any of the corporeal inhabitants
of the world. Of the productions of the
last bounteous year, how many can be
said to serve any purpose of use or
pleasure? The only end of writing is to
enable the readers better to enjoy life.
or better to endure it. . ."
o enable men and women "better to enjoy
fe or better to endure it" to provide the
nowledge necessary for conscious living
ither than mere existing that is what
umanistic study at its best can do. This kind
f education forces students to come to terms
'ith what it means to be a human being and
'hat is required to continue to realize their
.ill humanity. Stephen Spender writes of
the transforming power of art, which, if it
annot save external society, can perhaps
:deem inner life." In a culture where people
:em unable to make lasting commitments to
nything, and where ambiguity of every sort
- social, religious, sexual, intellectual
;ems the rule, only a redeeming of inner life
an begin to return individuals to that sense
f their own significance which too often
;ems lost in modern society.
The education I received at Agnes Scott,
/hich informed human minds instead of
ffering professional or vocational expertise,
/hich emphasized the organic relationship
etween learning and living, which was
irected toward the potential significance of
le individual, and which was transmitted by
lose who were themselves models of the
ignificanceof what they taught, gave to me
nd to many other young women the
onscious ability "better to enjoy life, or
etter to endure it. "A.
*$<;%
1
v ^m ' <flM ^^r
(?SW
With the Clubs
Albany
Athens
A brand new club is the outcome of a
gathering graciously planned by Edith Jen-
nings Black '71 to welcome Mary Boney
Sheats. professor of Bible and religion, when
she was in the area for a church seminar
March 17. Alums were invited to the lovely
home of Ann Hilsman Knight '43 and
enjoyed hearing Dr. Sheats speak and bring
news of the College. "She was the perfect
person to make a very divergent group of
alums feel welcome and informed," wrote
Edith, who has agreed to serve as acting
president. "We hope to meet next year for a
coffee or luncheon in an alum's home, and
several in the group are interested in helping
entertain prospective students and an admis-
sions representative from the College in the
fall." Serving with Edith as acting treasurer
is Marguerite Booth Gray'78. Classes repre-
sented ranged from 1923 to 1978 Scotties
all! Edith circulated a questionnaire to get
feed-back from the group about preferences
for meeting times and speakers.
DIRECTOR of Financial Aid Bonnie Brown
Johnson '70 was honor guest and speaker for
the annual luncheon meeting of Athens
alumnae March 22 at Davis House. She
showed slides of the campus and gave the
group an update on events and changes.
President Louise McCain Boyce '34 wrote
that Bonnie "made an excellent presenta-
tion!"
Atlanta
The widespread entry of women into the
work force, considered by many to be the
major social change of the century, was
described by Dr. Caroline Dillman. assistant
professor of sociology, in a talk to the
Atlanta Alumnae Club March 20. She quoted
figures from the U.S. Department of Labor
showing that 90 percent of the country's
families are no longer "traditional"
Ann Hilsman Knight '4J. hostess; Dr. Mary Boney
Sheats. speaker; Edith Jennings Black '71 . acting
president, at Albany meeting
!-
Classmates Jo Smith Webb 'JO and
Evalyn Wilder 'JO attend Albany
meeting .
headed by a man. who is the sole wage-
earner. The large group of alums present
joined in the discussion and had many
questions for the speaker. Hostess Isabelle
Leonard Spearman '29 shared informally
with some of her guests information of
interest about her various collections of art
pieces.
Columbus
Assistant Dean of College Mildred Love Petty '61.
center, spoke at Columbus meeting.
A large group of Columbus area alumnae
(and even one alum from Aubum, Ala.)
gathered at the Big Eddy May 10 for "a
delightful luncheon and a most informative
talk by Mildred Love Petty '61 ," wrote Club
President Marty McMillan Alvarez '71.
Dean Petty told of new curriculum develop-
ments as well as physical changes on the
campus, and all the guests "thoroughly
enjoyed this occasion." Marty gave the
group a brief summary of alumnae activities
in Columbus during the past several years
and an up-date on new alumnae in the area.
Serving with her will be Janet Eastburn
Amos '68. incoming vice president.
Danville
Dr. Sheats. Allison Wallof Baxter '56. and Candy
Hollandsworth Donnell '48
Lucille Dennison Keenan '37, Eunice Tomlinson
Owens '2J. and Ann Knight
Danville, va . alums got themselves
together in early May for "a delightful time"
at the home of Elizabeth Johnson Thompson
'34 and plan to do so again! They are
included in the Lynchburg zip code mailing,
but that city is a bit of a distance, so with true
Agnes Scott initiative, the group just up and
met. Margaret Holley Milam '62 was kind
enough to write and let the Alumnae Office
know about the goings-on. The group plans
to meet in the fall and contact high school
students who are interested in Agnes Scott.
22
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Houston
Houston's new club president. Melody Snid-
er Porter '78, has found that classes of the
alums in her area go all the way from 1911 to
1980, and she hopes to interest all of them in
a variety of activities this year. She has
written to her constituents for suggestions
and for names of possible prospective stu-
dents for ASC. Houston's spring meeting
took place March 22, when the group
enjoyed Dr. Edward McNair's "Anecdotes
of Agnes Scott" at a luncheon at Greenway
Plaza Hotel. "We all thoroughly enjoyed
hearing those stories it was a delightful
talk," wrote Marie H. Newton '75, club
secretary and also head of Houston alumnae
admissions representatives. "He really made
the College seem quite alive to those of us
living such a distance away and a number of
years out of ASC." Marie described the role
of our AARs and introduced two student
applicants attending the luncheon. Colette
Howard and Michelle Pickar.
alumnae club. Director of Alumnae Affairs
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47 flew up to be
with the group and give them a "Campus
Update." Adding a great deal to the program
was Susan Whitten, Agnes Scott sophomore,
speaking from a student's point of view.
"We are all so glad finally to have an
'official' organization here in Lynchburg."
wrote Ann. "Virginia was wonderful and
brought us up to date on the many changes
taking place on campus and in the metropoli-
tan Atlanta-Decatur area. So many of us
were delighted to find other alumnae right
here in Lynchburg!" Ann heard from friends
and from alums in the area who couldn't
make this first meeting but plan to come next
time. Anna Katherine Fulton Wilson '38
drove down from Lexington. Va. Ann's
teen-age daughters Lisa. Janie, and Susan
helped hostess. Officers serving with Ann
will be Sally Echols Leslie '76, vice presi-
dent, June Driskill Weaver '48, secretary,
and Jody Hopwood Turner '73, treasurer.
Memphis
Associate professor Claire M. Hubert was
honor guest and speaker for the Memphis
Alumnae Club at their luncheon March 15 at
the Colonial Country Club. She spoke on
"Women In French Culture," describing
their position as compared with that of
American women. She brought news to the
campus also and said that although many
schools were gradually dropping language
requirements, Agnes Scott still maintained
her traditional standards in that field. Betty
Mann Edmunds '70 heads the Memphis
group and wrote that they all "enjoyed Mrs.
Hubert's presentation very much."
New England
"Presidential politics'" was the title of Gus
Cochran's talk for the New England Club
March 26. A large group of alums and
Knoxville
The efforts and enthusiasm of Montene
Melson Mason '45 and her steering commit-
tee resulted in a highly successful inaugural
meeting of Knoxville area alums. A very
large group gathered for luncheon March 22
at the Hyatt Regency and heard President
Emeritus Wallace M. Alston speak on
"Agnes Scott's Friendship With Robert
Frost." Sis Burns Newsome '57, of the
Agnes Scott Board of Trustees, "came up
from Atlanta to boost the first meeting of a
club in her hometown." wrote Montene.
"Her mother. Mrs. Brantley Burns, came to
the luncheon also. It was gratifying to have
such a good group to welcome Dr. Alston.
His program was well received, and I saw
how much he is appreciated and loved."
Polly Anna Philips Harris '50 has been
chosen president, Ruth Shepherd Vazquez
'62, vice president. Dana Nichols Stuckwish
'77. membership chairman. Vicky Allen
Gardner '62, treasurer, Maureen Williams
'72, secretary, and Sue Czarnitzki Ayers
'63, publicity chairman.
Lynchburg
Ann hershberger barr '62 was hostess to
Lynchburg area alums at a luncheon in her
home March 15 and has agreed to serve as
president of the enthusiastic, brand new
Bra! W
f y, y 1
f ^ k
Sis Burns Newsome
at Knoxville meeting
Dr. Alston
Montene Melson Mason '45, Polly Anna Phillips
Harris '50, and Dr. Alston look at Silhouette.
Knoxville club members and guests enjoy lunch-
eon.
Oak Ridgers at Knoxville meeting look
over College information.
Summer 1980
23
With the Clubs
husbands as well as four prospective students
and their mothers attended the luncheon at
the Harvard Club of Boston. Associate
professor of political science and department
head. Dr. Cochran has been in the Boston
area for research during his sabbatical from
Agnes Scott and has spoken to several
nearby alumnae groups. His most interesting
talk provoked much discussion among listen-
ers. Continuing as club leaders are Dudley
Lester Tye '67. Harriet Talmadge Mill '58.
Charlotte King Sanner '60. and Betty Whita-
ker Wilson "68.
Agnes Scott as it is now and seeing copies of
the Profile and other ASC literature Julia
brought.'" wrote Club Secretary Linda Ozee
Lewis '71. Ann Roberts Divine '67 is
president of the club, which plans a fall party
for prospective students.
Tidewater
Richmond
A box LUNCH gathering at the home of Kay
Gwaltney Remick '61 brought together Rich-
mond alums and some prospective students
March 29 to hear Kathleen Mooney. director
of career planning, tell of the activities of her
office at Agnes Scott. Steering Committee
Chairman Nancy Thomas Hill '56 wrote that
it was "'an excellent presentation," and that
everyone enjoyed the informal setting of
Kay's home rather than a restaurant this
time. Succeeding Nancy as chairman is Betty
Alvis Girardeau '64.
Savannah
Tidewater area alums from the Newport
News-Norfolk-Virginia Beach area were
invited to a ""bring-a-salad" luncheon at the
home of Betty Lockhart Anglin '59 March
29 and to hear College news from Judv
Maguire Tindel '73. director of admissions.
"Judy was a wonderful speaker." reported
Club President Chee Kludt Ricketts '68.
"She made each of us very proud to have
attended Agnes Scott and inspired us to be
alert for other young women who might have
an interest in ASC. She took us on a walking
slide tour of the campus, pointing out
physical changes, such as renovation of the
library, and told about current requirements,
tuition, courses, and career planning, as well
as social changes. She suggested ways we
could serve Agnes Scott and enthusiastically
answered our many questions." Chee is
succeeded by Susan McCann Butler '68.
incoming president. Jean Price Knapp '57 is
the new secretary -treasurer.
A visit to Savannah by Dr. Marvin B. Perry.
Jr.. brought alums together to receive news -p .
of the College and to renew their friendship IlianSie
with the President. "Everyone very much
enjoyed hearing him and being together for
luncheon." said Lydia Wammock Thomp-
son '63, vice president of the club. In the
absence of the president. Nell Hemphill
Jones '38. who was out of town, Lydia gave
generously of her time and interest in
planning the event, which gathered alums
from the twenties through the seventies and
met at the Oglethorpe Club March 22.
Frances Belford Olsen '37 has been asked to
serve as secretary.
St. Louis
Too lebrate Founder's Day. alumnae in St.
Louis gathered at the home of Anne Fclker
Cataldo '67 for a salad and dessert pot-luck
luncheon March 29 and had a campus update
from Alumna Admissions Representative
Julia Doar Grubb '61. who had visited the
College. "We all enjoyed hearing about
"Penny Campbell did a wonderful job for
us." wrote Catherine Auman DeMaere '69.
president of Chapel Hill-Raleigh-Durham
area alums, after their meeting April 26 at
the Carolina Inn at which the Agnes Scott
history professor spoke. "She brought slides
which showed automatically during the
social hour before luncheon, and this served
as excellent conversation material, bringing
back happy memories and updating everyone
on campus changes. She particularly brought
news of retired professors, and we were
delighted to hear about them. She also told
about her sabbatical time at Africare in
Washington. D.C." Among alums present
was Dr. Virginia Suttenfield '38. a former
regional vice president of ASC Alumae
Association, who has recently moved to
Chapel Hill from Connecticut. New officers
of the club are Betty Fuller Smith '61.
president; Virginia Neb '72.. secretary; and
Bettye Ashcraft Senter '45. treasurer.
Washington, D.C.
An ineormal get-together, blue jeans and all.
brought alums from the District area to
President Joan Adair Johnston's home in
Fairfax. Va.. March 15 for a salad-casserole
pot-luck luncheon and a sharing of ideas for
future club activities as well as a recounting
of what each one present had been doing,
both fun and work. Corky Feagin Stone '60
told of her newly published book, expanded
from her doctoral dissertation. Plans for the
future include a splash party and a luncheon
with speaker from the College. Joan con-
tinues in office and will have serving with
her Sandra Creech Birdsong '63. vice presi-
dent; Martha Griffith Kelly '64. secretary;
Frances Folk Zygmont '71. treasurer; Bar-
bara DuVall Averch '58. A.A.C.W. repre-
sentative; and Chris McNamara Lovejoy '70.
Maryland advisor.
Winston-Salem
Dr. Margaret Pepperdene. chairman of the
English department. Has speaker at the Winston-
Salem meeting in September '79.
President Anne Pollard Withers '61 . Susan
Keith-Lucas Carson '6-1. and Martha Rtg^ms
Brown '57 at Winston-Salem meeting
24
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterl)
College Graduates Eight Alumnae Daughters
Alumnae mothers and their senior daughters gathered on the steps ofPresser
after graduation on June I. Front row, left to right: Grace Haley , Cindy
Dantzler, Patti Tucker Zaic, Sharon Maitland, Jennifer Knight, Kemper
Hatfield, Anna Bryan. Second row: Anna DaVaull Haley '51 , Nancy Niblack
Alumnae Trip
to Italy
The alumnae trip to Italy is scheduled for
Oct. 28 Nov. 5, 1980, leaving from
Atlanta and arriving in Rome. Option I will
concentrate on Rome and the Vatican City
with optional tours that can be arranged to
Florence. Naples/Capri/Sorrento; Pompeii;
and Venice . The cost for Option 1 is $8 1 9 per
person (double occupancy).
A bus tour. Option II visits Rome, Venice,
and Florence and costs $1069 per person.
Both options of the Italian tour provide
accomodations in first class hotels (double
occupancy). Continental breakfast every
day, private bus transfers from airport to
hotels and return. Option I will provide a
hospitality desk, and Option II includes a
full-time tour director.
Write or call the Alumnae Office for
information: Alumnae Office. Agnes Scott
College. Decatur. Georgia 30030. (404)
373-2571, ext. 207.
Dantzler '58, Patricia Conner Tucker '57, Vivian Weaver Maitland '53.
Dorothy Adams Knight '51 , Mary Hollingsworth Hatsfield '39. Mary Anna
Ogden Bryan '51 . Not pictured: Lisa Wise and Patricia Singley Wise '69.
Summer 1980
25
President hosts Class of '30
Gathering to visit and sing
Weekend draws record crowd.
Mary thanks Cissie.
26
Professors Parry (philosophy) and Dillman (sociology) lecture.
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
^^Mr ^^^^H
J
Hf j^H
MM ^^B
1 x^c
^ j^
^^._^_
*^
"J
p
-jM^L-J
Outstanding alumnae Papageorge '28, Scandrett '24, White '26 receive awards.
Mumnae
Day
Rhodes '38 shows WOW medal.
April 1 9,
1980
'75ers reunite.
Prospective students
Annie Wiley Preston '99 accepts ovation.
Two generations celebrate.
Summer 1980
Consort Cup champ
Perry welcomes alumnae.
27
Carolyn Strozier
lHece/?t(l
HB&nec(^
The generosity of alumnae who remember
the College in their wills is greatly appreci-
ated. In the month of May alone the College
received the money from bequests of four
alumnae: Mary Stewart McLeod '23, Helena
Hermance Kilgour '26. Marie Whittle Well-
slager '26. and Margaret J. Watson '37.
One important reason Agnes Scott con-
tinues to be a respected, academically-
strong, solvent institution is that her alumnae
and other friends, through gifts and bequests,
help to provide for faculty salaries, library
improvement, special equipment, preserva-
tion of campus buildings, and scholarships
for deserving students.
Tin Carolyn Strozier Scholarship Fund of
$10,715 was established in 1979 by her
mother and friends as a memorial to this
member of the Class of 1941 who had been
active in the Alumnae Association while on
the staff of Rich's.
The Mason Pressly Young Scholarship of
S10.000 was established in 1979 by the
Blake P. Garrett, Sr.. Family of Fountain
Inn. South Carolina, in memory of this
long-time Presbyterian medical missionary
to China and father of two alumnae: Louise
Young Garrett '38 and Josephine Young
(Mrs. Francis) Sullivan '44 of Greer, South
Carolina.
An alumna who wishes to remain anony-
mous made a gift of $10,000 to establish a
new scholarship in 1979.
Mason Pressly Young
ASC Women in Politics, Reply
The winter issue of the Alumnae Quarterly,
which will be mailed in January, will feature
Agnes Scott women in politics. The editors
request all alumnae now holding or running
for an office to write to the Alumnae
Quarterly and to list the following informa-
tion: name: Agnes Scott class; city, county,
state, or national office now being held or
sought; and party affiliation.
It the alumna has some special episode in
her political career which she would like to
share in writing, the Quarterly staff will be
happy to read about it. and the information
may be used in a story. "Agnes Scott
Women in Politics." All pertinent informa-
tion should be in the Alumnae Office by
November 15 to be included in the winter
(January) issue.
28
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
Chapel Organ Is '80 Class Project
As its gift to the College, the Class of
1980 has chosen the project of restoring the
1940 Austin organ in Gaines Chapel, which,
aside from age. has other, more severe
problems. A few days following the 1979
Commencement, a leather "blowout"
occurred in the right side portion of the organ
in the regulator, or reservoir, which fur-
nishes the necessary wind supply. At a
nominal cost this was repaired in time for the
opening of the '79/'80 session. Unfortunate-
ly, in early September 1979. a much more
extensive blowout occured in the leather of
the other side of the organ. It is of such
magnitude that even a temporary patch
would cost more than a thousand dollars.
The College is exploring the possibility of
a complete rehabilitation of the instrument
by Austin, who would replace the worn-out
parts, bring usable pipe work up-to-date, and
improve the overall tonal scheme. This
would cost approximately $150,000. In the
meantime, the College is using the 1970
Schlicker organ in Maclean Auditorium for
convocations held in Gaines by linking a
microphone to the sound system in Gaines.
The Class of '80 has donated the $300 in
its treasury and is asking each member to
pledge donations of at least a dollar a month
for the next two years. In July 1982. after the
class has made its entire donation, it will
challenge all other classes to match its
donation. The Class has already pledged
$1,538, and $173 has been paid.
Class officers are Sandy Burson. pres-
ident; Dottie Enslow. vice president; Eliza-
beth Mosgrove, secretary; and Ann Huf-
fines, fund chairman.
We applaud the Class of '80 for its timely
gift and look forward to hearing "live"
music in Gaines again.
'QMifcd&ufa/en, ht
Since April 15. 1980, gifts have been made
in honor or in memory of the following:
IN HONOR
M. Bernard & Cissie Spiro Aidinoff
Mary Virginia Allen
Josephine Bridgman
Caroline McKinney Clarke
W. Joe Frierson
Nancy P. Groseclose
Jack L. Nelson
Carrie Scandrett
Mary Boney Sheats
Myma Goode Young
IN MEMORY
Martha Eskridge Ayers
Verita Barnett
Julianne Williams Bodner
L. A. Brown, Sr.
Blanche Lindsey Camp
Jere Warren Chamblee
Render P. & Elizabeth Potter Connally
Arden Locher Davison
Alice Ferrell Davis
S. Leonard Doerpinghaus
Inez Norton Edwards
Helen Ewing
Mary Louise Fowler
Marcia Mansfield Fox
Mary E. Hamilton
Isabel D. Hornebrook
Louise Van Harlingen Ingersoll
Emily Kingsberry
Ruth Leroy
Janet MacDonald
Mary Stuart MacDougall
Eleanor Brown McCain
Pauline Martin McCain
Carolyn McCallum
Molly McCormick McCord
Alice Mcintosh
Mary D. McKee
Floy Sadler Maier
Marton Majoros
Lucy Henry Patillo
Sarah Shields Pfeiffer
Martha McLendon Robertson
Sallie Stribling
Carolyn Strozier
Louise Sloan Thomas
Merle Walker
Harriet Blackford Williams
Summer 1980
29
Deaths
Institute
Louise Van Harlingen Ingersoll,
March 10. 1980.
Sallie Stribling, February 13. 1980.
1909
Lutie Pope Head, June 4. 1980
1911
Molly McCormick McCord, Febru-
ary 18. 1980.
1913
Louise Sloan Thomas, November 1 .
1979.
1915
Marv E. Hamilton, March 19,
1980.
1919
Helen Ewing, January 5. 1980.
W. J. Kennedy, husband of Mary
Ford Kennedy, March 4. 1980.
1924
Flora Alford, sister of Attie Alford.
November 1, 1979.
1925
Floy Sadler Maier, October 16.
1979.
1926
Alice Ferrell Davis, sister of Dora
Ferrell Gentry, February 17. 1980.
Quillian Spratling, brother of Frances
Spratling, May 27, 1980.
1927
Martha McLendon Robertson,
November 29. 1979.
Glenn Duncan, husband of Willie
May Coleman Duncan, May 23,
1980.
Alfred Davis, husband of Sarah Jane
Small Davis. March 16, 1980.
Robert Buchanan, husband of Ann
Heys Buchanan, November 9, 1979.
1928
Alice Ferrell Davis, February 17,
1980.
Emily Kingsberry, March 13, 1980.
Caldwell Withers, husband of Louise
Sherfesee Withers. October 19,
1979.
Avery Craven, husband of Georgia
Watson Craven, January 1980.
Herbert Rasnake. husband of Alice
Hunter Rasnake, April 28, 1980.
1929
Marv Louise Fowler, December 31,
1979.
Lucy Henrv Patillo, February 7,
1980.
1930
Harriet Williams, March 3, 1980.
1932
Raymond Musser. husband of Louise
McDaniel Musser, February 5. 1980.
1933
Blanche Lindsev Camp, February
15, 1980.
Martha Eskridge Love Avers, Mav
25. 1980.
1935
Jessamine Ward, sister of Man.
Seymour Ward Tyler, May 22, 1980.
Josephine Sibley Jennings, mother of
Josephine Jennings Brown. May 5.
1980.
Carolyn McCallum, June 1979.
Thad Morrison, father of Clara Mor-
rison Backer, March 3, 1980.
1938
Mary McKee. mother of Gwendolyn
McKee Bays. May 4. 1980.
Thad Morrison, father of Margaret
Morrison Blumberg. March 3, 1980.
1939
George Williams. Sr., husband of
Eunice Knox Williams. Julv 13.
1979.
1944
Mrs. A. A. Bless, mother of Mar-
guerite Bless Mclnnis. November 2.
1979.
Render Pyron Connally and Eliza-
beth Potter Connally. father and
mother of Barbara Connally Kaplan.
July 9, 1979. and February 24. 1980.
1948
Mrs. F. G. Brewer, mother of Lela
Anne Brewer. November 1979.
Mrs. E. B. Powers, mother of Betzie
Powers Crislip. September 1979.
Leonard Schenk, Jr., son of Sheelv
Little Miller. March 9. 1980.
Jennings Payne, father of Jen Payne
Miller. March 7. 1980.
1949
Ellis McGlaun, husband of Joyce
Hale McGlaun, March 1980.
1954
Arden Locher Davidson, May 3 1 .
1979.
Rosa Ormsby, mother of Connie
Ormsby Verdi, April 15, 1980.
1956
Wilton Hall, father of Sarah Hall
Hayes. February 25. 1980.
1958
John Law, Jr., father of Louise Law
Hagy. April 2, 1980.
1960
John Law. Jr.. father of Jane Law
Allen. April 2. 1980.
1962
Caldwell Withers, father of Elizabeth
Withers Kennedy. October 19. 1979.
1963
Marton Majoros. husband of Lucie
Callaway Majoros, April 6, 1980.
1969
Muriel Victor Auman Frazier. sister
of Catherine Auman DeMaere, April
2, 1980.
Summer 1980
43
New President Begins Term
Jackie Simmons Gow '52
It is with much pride and no small amount of
trepidation that I want to thank you for
electing me president of the Agnes Scott
Alumnae Association. This is a great honor
and I hope that together you and I can be of
real service to Agnes Scott.
As president-elect my first assignment was
to help Dr. Paul McCain, vice president for
development at ASC. by organizing the 19X0
Alumnae Phonathon.
For each of five nights during mid-May.
ten to fifteen Agnes Scott alumnae from the
greater metropolitan Atlanta area spent two
hours telephoning a total of more than 1 ,0(X)
alumnae throughout the country. The Trust
Company Bank graciously made some of
their offices and telephone lines available for
this project.
The College and the Alumnae Association
are grateful to the fifty alumnae who made
these calls:
Debbie Smith Abernathy. Jane King
Allen. Mary Anne Barlow, Penny Brown
Barnett. Mary' Rainey Bridges. Melodye
Brown, Susan Balch Clapham, Margaret
Benton Davis, Lori Riley Day, Leslie Doyle,
Tish DuPont, Lib Blackshear Flinn, Jackie
Simmons Gow, Martha Scott Haley. Jackie
Josey Hall, Shelia Wilkins Harkleroad.
Jet Harper. Caroline Lester Haynes. Can-
dace Bell Hodges. Melissa Mills Jacobs.
Mary K. Owen Jarboe, Anne Jones, Anne
Register Jones. Sara Cheshire Killough.
Julie Poole Knotts. Paul McCain, Sarah
Frances McDonald. Martha Patterson
McGaughey, Joan Pruitt Mclntyre. Virginia
Brown McKenzie, Eleanor Lee McNeill,
Clair McLeod Muller. Sis Burns Newsome.
Lila McGeachy Ray.
Mary McConkcy Reimer. Kathy Oates
Roos. Martha Davis Rosselot. Sarah Quinn
Slaughter. Betty Lou Houck Smith. Betty
Wood Smith. Jean Chalmers Smith. Louise
Stakely, Julia Grier Storey, Frances Gilhland
Stukes. Elizabeth Wells, Jane Taylor White.
Pat Cooper Wilburn, Liz Jenkins Willis,
Virginia Allen Woods. Bettv Ann Gatewood
Wylie.
Although some of us felt slighty hesitant
about our abilities in this endeavor, when the
job was done, we all admitted it was great
fun getting to chat with alums from every
state. And it was quite satisfying to realize
we had been successful in our undertaking
for Agnes Scott. Most alumnae were delight-
ed to have this contact with the College, and
we who called were pleased to have com-
ments from those reached.
We do thank you for your interest and
support. As a direct result of the Phonathon.
Agnes Scott received $12,840 in specific
pledges and. we hope, a similar amount from
"intended" gifts and pledges. Thus, we
expect the total gifts from the Phonathon to
amount to over $20,000.
Agnes Scott is indebted to all the alumnae
who participated in the Phonathon. and we
also sincerely appreciate the fine response of
you alumnae who contributed.
Again, thank you for electing me. I look
forward to a rewarding and exciting two
years of working with you.
Treat Yourself to College Items
Six PbN and ink sketches of campus scenes by
John Stuart McKenzie have been printed on
fine text paper suitable for framing. The
drawings which may be displayed singly or
as a group are 5" x 7 1 /;" printed on paper 7 3 A"
x 11". The set of six may be purchased from
the Alumnae Office for ten dollars ($10.00)
including tax and mailing cost.
Stationery suitable for gifts and for your
personal correspondence is now available
also. These same six sketches have been
printed on folded note paper and packaged
with matching envelopes. Each package
contains twelve folded note cards (two
copies of the six scenes) and twelve en-
velopes. The packages of stationery may be
purchased from the Alumnae Office for five,
fifty ($5.50). which includes tax and mailing
cost.
The project committee of the Alumnae
Association arranged with designer Frankic
Welch to produce a scarf especially for us.
The 33" x l 3 /*" cranberry on nude scarf bears
an Agnes Scott motif and the words. "Agnes
Scott Alumnae Association."
Won't you show your College ties and
accent your fall wardrobe by wearing one of
these attractive scarves.
If you wish to order one of these items, fill
out the form below and mail it with your
check to the Alumnae Office. Agnes Scott
College. Decatur. Georgia 30030.
Alumnae Association, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia 30030
Enclosed is $ for sets of prints @ $10.
Enclosed for packages of stationery (5 $5.50.
Enclosed is $ for scarves (a $10.
Name:
Address:.
Phone:
^iaiis*
One section of College scarf
Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly
From the Director
Virginia Brown McKenzie '47
Outstanding Alumnae for 1980
All of agnes SCOTT'S graduates are
outstanding women. As President Perry
stated in the induction ceremony for the
Fifty- Year Cub, their "exemplary lives
continue to be Agnes Scott's finest testimo-
nial, the most telling measure of her suc-
cess." The impact of these former students
on their respective communities is frequently
publicized in newspapers or noticed by
classmates or other friends who send clip-
pings to the Alumnae office or write com-
mendations.
The Awards Committee consider all the
nominations and customarily select three to
be cited during Alumnae Weekend at the
Annual Meeting. Hand inscribed award
certificates were presented this year to:
Evangeline Papageorge '28, distinguished
career, Carrie Scandrett '24, service to the
College; and Juanita Greer White '26,
community service.
Evangeline Papageorge has been a human
dynamo ever since she, as a child, dressed
herself in her mother's tablecloth and wrote
on the door with chalk to imitate her
teachers. At Agnes Scott she majored in
chemistry and was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa; then she proceeded to Emory Univer-
sity for her M.S.; University of Michigan,
Ph.D.; and Yale for postdoctoral studies.
Dr. Papageorge became Emory Medical
School's first full-time woman faculty mem-
ber when she was hired as assistant in
biochemistry and progressed to executive
associate dean. Since her retirement in 1975,
she has been consultant to the office of the
dean, Emory University School of Medicine.
Having spent a half century teaching and
advising at Emory University, she is admir-
ingly referred to as a "catalyst of learning."
As for service to the College, the commit-
tee chose Carrie (Dick) Scandrett who has
been a beloved and influential member of the
Agnes Scott community for fifty-five years,
first in an assistant's position in Dean
Nannette Hopkins' office, through thirty-one
years as dean of students, and still in
retirement as counselor and friend. By
administration, faculty, and alumnae she is
known for her propriety, integrity, strength,
and loyalty to the College.
Her neat, inviting home, touching the
periphery of the campus, is, and has been
through all these years, a favorite visiting
place for students and faculty who have
known her and therefore grown to love her.
The alumna who was honored for her
community service is Juanita Greer White,
magna cum laude. Phi Beta Kappa graduate
from Agnes Scott and Ph.D. from Johns
Hopkins, who has used her intelligence and
energy to improve the situation of the aging,
the status of women, and the outreach of
higher education.
In 1972 she received the Distinguished
Nevadan Award, and in 1976 the life
sciences building at the University of Nevada
was named Juanita Greer White Hall because
this soft-spoken, well-organized research
chemist saw the need for a degree granting,
four- year public college in southern Nevada
and embarked on a campaign to make this
dream a reality.
Yes, all of our graduates are outstanding,
and many deserve special recognition. The
Awards Committee of the Alumnae Associa-
tion would appreciate your help in identify-
ing those alumnae whose achievements
should be honored. Please fill out the
nomination form on this page and send any
biographical information you wish to be
considered by the Awards Committee. This
year's deadline for receipt of these nomina-
tions is September 30.
NOMINATIONS OUTSTANDING ALUMNA AWARDS
Alumnae Association
Agnes Scott College
Decatur, Georgia 30030
Service to Agnes Scott College
Service to the Community
Distinguished Career
Your name and class
ALUMNAE QUARTERLY, AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
Lib:
>^y-A,nes Scott Coll ege
De catur, CA 30030
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