Silhouette (1986)

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AG*NE*S SC*0T*T 19*86

STUDENT LIFE

CLASSES
D0;RM LIFE

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The Centennial Class

Class Of '89 Arrives With Aplomb

efore they
even arrived
' on campus
they were somehow
an extra-special
class. Their
graduation will
mark Agnes Scott's
one hundreth
birthday, and the
old girl is pretty
excited about the
occasion. She
started getting
ready last year
when Inman got a
lovely face lift, and
this year she plans
to re-do Main and
Rebekah to match.
By the time the
class of 1989
graduates she will
be all fixed up for
her second century

of liberal edui^altiori
for women.
When they first
^ arrived they were

just as confused
and homesick a
class as anyone had
ever seen. But
within a short
period of time they
were showing signs
of a certain cocky,
"Spirit of '89" that
was pretty
irrepressible.
Despite freshman
English papers,
stolen underwear,
and thousands of
Orientation Council

meetings, the
Centennial class
demonstrated their
vigor. "Spirit or89"
tags adorned every
freshman shirt, anH
yellow and white
signs ornamented
the campus in the

most unlikely
places. Freshmen
toured Inman with
a proprietary air
that both
exasperated and
amused the resident
seniors, and
aroused admiration
for their foolishness
when they talked
about the Black
Kitty as if they had

already won it.
Rarely has a class
arrived at Agnes
Scott with such
aplomb. Even as
they learned the
true meaning of the
word "study", they
remained truly
unquenched. If their
grades keep up
with their spirit,
Agnes Scott may
just have a
phenomena on her
hands! Only time
ran truly tell what
the Centennials are
made of. but they
show every sign of
being a class that
will do the old girl
proud.

PLI

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bf 1982 nearly one hun-
dred and twenty freshmen ar-
. rived to begin a new face of their
lives. They approached Agnes Scott
as most freshmen do, with the ambi-
guity of excitement and fear com-

' bined. Soon after they were un-
packed they realized that they were
not the only new faces at Agnes
Scott. Joining them to begin a career
here was the college's first woman
president, Ruth Schmidt.

So began the class of 1986's lega-
cy of new beginnings. During the
four years the class has been at Ag-
nes Scott they have seen the com-
puter age come to ASC, the college
hymn become nonsexist, and the
Honor System bitterly debated.

In the face of these changes the
class of '86 has kept a close tab on
some valued traditions. One such
tradition is that of the Agnes Scott
ring. Every Junior's pride, every
Senior's confidence, the Agnes Scott

r- gold and onyx class ring stands as a

j timeless reminder of the heritage of
academic excellence at Agnes Scott.

, Another tradition retained by the

I class of '86 was the importance of
the Black Cat celebration and the
coveted Black Kitty. This year the
senior class revived an ancient tra-
dition associated with Black Cat by

' bringing back the mysterious Indian

Ahwoo.
^ As they began the final stage of

- their Agnes Scott career, the class of
'86 once again experienced a new
beginning. It is only fitting that they
should be the Hrst class in Inman.

His Own Kind Of

DEAN

Mr, David
Behan stays
in perpetual
motion. He's always
gesturing, smoking,
pacing,

questioning. Even
when he's simply
listening he's
actively involved.
Eyebrows race up
and down
skeptically, ideas
flicker in his eyes,
and when he
disagrees with
what is being said
he grimaces
slightly. He's a
philosopher,
completely
immersed in ideas
the way an athlete
is immersed in
sport. He's subtle,
quick, and to the
point. And he is

now the Associate
Dean of the College
here at Agnes Scott.

One of the things
David Behan feels
strongly about is
liberal education.
As he puts it, "I
believe in it and
I've preached it.
Working in
administration is
one way to put my
beliefs about liberal
education into
practice. It's
something you do
because you want
to achieve certain
things." When asked
what particular
things he wanted to
achieve he replied,
"Oh, I don't have a
shopping list. I like
the notion of the
faculty/

administrator. I
don't like the split
between the two. I
hope that I can help
break down the
'we-they' attitude."
Dr. Behan is
continuing to teach
two classes in
addition to his work
as Associate Dean.
Dr. Behan is also
concerned about
faculty advising. He
is attempting to
assign students to
faculty members
whom they will
have as teachers, so
that there is a
better chance of
developing a firm
relationship
conducive to good
advising. "The
student's education
is her

responsibility, but
her advisor can
help her make
'informed choices'
about her academic
program," Behan
observed.

Working with
Dean Ellen Hall is
one of the things
Behan likes about
his new job."She's
delightful, and we
see eye to eye on
educational
philosophy."

^ w'BMWM' wmmtiiimm^imMiikiimisiiSS

41

1

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Meet The "New" Dean

Fifteen Minutes With Dean Hudson

Dean of
Students
Gue Hudson
does not miss
much. She's
always on the
alert, attentive to
the people and
events around
her. She has a
refreshing candor,
and can get more
done well in
fifteen minutes
than any other
person on earth.
She laughs deeply
and easily, and
her humor is
highly contagious.
After serving as
the Associate
Dean of the
College for 11
years, she is now
bringing her
considerable
talents to the
office of the Dean
of Students.

When asked
why she wanted
to be Dean of
Students, Hudson
replied. It's a job
I've always
thought I'd like to
try to do. Our
students are our
greatest resource.
They are the
significant part of
the college. They
bring a

committment to
academic
excellence and a

willingness to
learn and grow,
and that makes
Agnes Scott
unique."

A highlight of
her work as Dean
of Students is
helping students
develop as
leaders. "I enjoy
helping guide
their ideas and
watching them
grow with them
and carry them
out. Our students
carry things off
with great poise
and with a
professional air.
The finished
product which
they design is
quite impressive."

When asked
what remarks she
would direct to
the student body.
Dean Hudson
thought for
several moments,
then replied,
"That I value
them as
individuals and
Agnes Scott as an
institution. I think
the environment
here is conducive
to bringing out
the best in them
and making this a
better place to
educate young
w^omen."

v^i*%!

Scottie the
certain

institutions
which are of
paramount
importance.
Thursday night at
IP.J.'s is one; Black
ICat and Spring
IFormal are others.
Alongside these
venerable
landmarks of
Scottie lifestyle
another must take
its place. The
Thank God! It's
FRIDAY!!! party, a
time-honored
Tradition at Agnes
Scott, it serves

t several integral
purposes in the

^ student community.

jiFor sonie.^ it,. signals.

at least for a while, the
For others it nf 1

provides the "Hair

of the Dog that Bit i
Them" cure fo:
lingering Hale
hang-over. ]
Freshmen and
sophomores in
guys at TGIFJ!
Juniors and Seni^
enjoy happy \

reunions with gu:
they haven't seei
since the last TG.
most of whom
they've taken j'
Black Cat at I
once. ' ^

For everybody t.
TGIFs provid^^^^
chance to ^^l^^^^^l >4 J^^
unwind after ^^^^Bt^

rs, and of
" tties.

^C^"'^

It's A Love-Hate Relationship

You can't live with them, and you can't shoot 'em.

The relationship
which is the
most
wonderful and
mysterious of all
human bonds is not
the greatly
overrated
relationship
between the sexes.
Anyone who went
to college can tell
you that. The
relationship that is

most wondrous
when it works and
most awful when it
doesn't, is the
roommate
connection.

Every sensible
person has
nightmares prior to
leaving for college
their freshman
year, nightmares
that their roommate
will want to

decorate in
chartreuse and
deep magenta and
will be fond of
waking at 5 am to
listen to Gregorian
chants. Some of
these nightmares
come true.

Fortunately, most
don't. Not that all
roommates are
perfect matches,
but somehow good
roommates learn to
put up with one
anothers' quirks.

>A.fl'inilSB

'harm, and culture

iithern
leisure about Agnes
Scott that by rights
shouldn't be here.
After all, ASC sits
right in the middle
of Metropolitan,

Cosmopolitan boas

Atlanta. And Agony studelii;
Spot professors organizations wl

maintain a sizzling keep Scotties on tin
intellectual pace run. In the Midst of

without giving
student sanity a
second thought.

such, who would
expect to find old-
fashioned Southern

AND Agnes Scott leisure?

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International Flare

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On one routine jaunt across
Agnes Scott's campus
many visitors are
surprised by the variety of
languages they encounter. On a
typical day one may hear
Spanish, french, Vietnamese,
Chinese, and an array of arable
tongues. It is not that we offer
most languages of the world in
the classroom (we don't), but
that we attract students from
most every continent. Agnes
Scott students enjoy the benefits
of international students that
few colleges can offer.

Senior, Laura Smith, says her
exposure to students from
radically different social and
cultural backgrounds has
"changed her life." She has
gained a better perspective on
life in America as well as in
foreign nations.

What attracts these students
to a relatively small college in
Decatur, Georgia? Senior, Pilar
Duque, from Cali, Colombia,
admits that she came to Agnes
Scott because of the
recommendation of her sister,
junior, Monica Duque. What
brought Monica here? A book of
the most competitive colleges in
America. Pilar says her sister is

success oriented, and Agnes
Scott was a challenge for her.

Tuba Goksel, a junior from
Istanbul, Turkey, has an Agnes
Scott heritage. Her mother is a
graduate of Agnes Scott. During
her three years at Agnes Scott,
Tuba has gained a better
understanding of herself. She
has developed a strong
independence which she
attributes to being so far from
home.

For French assistant, Jeannie
Lucie Fourneyron, the
opportunity to come to the
United States and to Agnes Scott
was gratefully accepted. She
was one of five applicants for
the position of French Assistant.
She is currently studying for her
Matrise. A Matrise is
approximately equivalent to our
Master's degree.

Each international student
brings with her to Agnes Scott
the uniqueness that her country
affords. However, students are
not the only international
influence at Agnes Scott. There
are many professors from a
variety of countries: Turkey,
France, Germany and South
Africa just to mention a few.
Both students and faculty add a
flare to Agnes Scott that few
colleges can enjoy.

with renewed interest in Agnes
; Scott's facade came a new and vital
interest in athletics. We now enjoy
r the enthusiasm of four intercolle-
; giate sports, Volleyball, Soccer,
i Basketball, and Tennis.

These sports provide students the
opportunity to excel not only in the
classroom but on the field as well.
Participation in these activities en-
courages development of the whoj[e
? person, not just mental growth "
\ physical and emotional. Thro
S athletic competition many studt
; develop a healthy pride in
I knowledge of their own stren)
i and abilities. Along with this p
I comes the desire to succeed and
': prove. For Basketball player Ani
Tonn, the competition provides*
I positive release from the pressti
; of academics."

In addition to the self-discipl.
and spirit of achievement these
; sports inspire, they allow plavers to
: meet students from colleges aci;
' the state. Many players find tl^
encounters an excellent stagej
share the Agnes Scott way of )
They feel their performance onj
I field or the court to be an exten^
I of the Honor System. ;

I The buildings at Agnes Scott ij
I be undergoing exterior imprci,
i ments this year; however, their in-
I ner structure remains the same.
f Likewise, the athletic program f
! been revived, but its heart reac^
'**^back into the Agnes Scott tri
'j one of excellence and achieve-
it.

Where Do You Get
Your Men?

Tech, Emory, and Morehouse!

Oh, you go to Agnes Scott? Isn't that all girls? Where DO
you get your men???????"
How many times have your peers from co-ed
institutions asked you the above inane questions? And
how many times have you explained that you attend a WOMEN'S
College, and that you get your men at various convenient places,
usually Morehouse, Tech or Emory? (And how many times did you
really want to reply cordially, "It's none of your #$%#&!!
business!"?)

Despite the skepticism of co-ed counterparts, Agnes Scott
Women do date a wealth of wonderful men. There are lots more
eligible bachelors in Atlanta than in Athens, Tuscaloosa, and
Clemson combined

GREAT SCOTT!

WE DID IT AGAIN

On a bright October day
Agnes Scott once
again hosted its annu-
al Great Scott! festival. Stu-
dents, parents, faculty, and
local citizens all took part in
one of the most successful
Great Scott! celebrations
yet. Among the many fes-
tivities were performances
by Studio Dance Theatre,
London Fog, The Agnes
Scott Orchestra, and The
Dolphin Club. Between per-
formances the visitors were
treated to a delectable ar-
ray of exotic and down-
home cooking. Tours of cam-
pus included the newly ren-
ovated Jennie B. Inman Hall
and concluded with the new-
ly opened book store and
post office.

Though the day was en-
joyed by those of all ages,
the children seemed most
pleased. Thrilled by Black
Kitties, entertained by
clowns, and treated to bal-
loons and hot dogs, they
gave glowing reports of the
day. (Of course that was be-
tween playing on the Deca-
tur Fire Department fire en-
gine and visiting the spook
filled Haunted House.)

All in all, it was truly a
Great Scott!

W'iMJHS

The Things That We Remember

A t til

Z\ t times the tenor of
-^^^^ academic life at
Agnes Scott becomes so
hectic that those special
moments get lost in the
shuffle. For every time
the average student
takes a leisurely walk
across campus, she
dashes across it in
desperate haste to turn a
paper in at least 1000
times. For every time
that she sits and enjoys a
quite conversation with
Miss Hanna, there are
many times she zooms

past with an abbreviated
"hey." Corresponding to
each afternoon spent
enjoying a beer at a
TGIF, are 5 or 6
afternoons spent in the
library stacks
researching that
independent study. The
routine can be, and
usually is, rigorous. But
as a result, the moments
when we stop, relax, and
let loose are so much the
better. When that paper
is finally done and done
well, that's the time for

that long-awaited talk,
relaxing walk, or cool
beer. And those times are
the times when the hard
work is really worth it.
And when we're looking
back, those times will be
the times that we
remember most vividly
and cherish most
intensely the times
that aren't always
captured by the
photographs, but are
abundantly stored in
memories.

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Southern Nights

When The Sun Goes Down The Magic Begins

There's something about Atlanta
at night. When the sun goes
down the magic begins. Just ask any
Scottie; she can tell you all about it.
As the street lights flicker to a glow,
the city awakens. The hurried pace
of traffic, tests, and classes slows,
and the allure of those bright lights
begins. For some it signals a night of
dancing at any number of Atlanta's
nationally aclaimed night clubs. For
others it's dinner and a movie fin-
ished perhaps by cocktails atop the

world's tallest hotel. Or, for those
thursday night thrills, it's a night at
A.S.C.'s favorite pub P.J. Haley's.
However, the magic isn't limited to
Atlanta. Right here at Agnes Scott
the twilight signals an imaginary
transformation. Ordinary classroom
buildings become looming gothic
castles haunted by the previous
day's students, and common dorma-
tories transform to spectacles of in-
viting light.

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BLACK
CAT

1985

It was a beautiful October
night. The stars were out and
so were the Scotties. Excited
by the week's festivities, they
flocked to Atlanta's Perrimont
Plaza to dance the night away.
And so on October 19 Black Cat
1985 was completed. After an
eventful week of pranks,
cheers, and games Black Cat
had its culmination in a black
tie affair. The evening's enter-
tainment. Phoenix, was a huge
success and students from Ag-
nes Scott, Emory, Ga. Tech,
Morehouse, and colleges from
across the state joined in cele-
brating the traditional Black
Cat.

Seniors

Snatch

The Cat!

'86 Wins Again!

he battle for the Bla '
Kitty raged fiercely
^ around Agnes Scott
during the week prior to the
Formal. The Seniors and ,g.
Juniors opened up with 2
sensational class pranks
which transformed the Quad
into Camp Ahwoo and Made
ASC co-ed for a day. Those
incorrigible sophomores
brought the Decatur High
School Band to campus for"li~
rousing performance, and the

feshmen staged a bogus
eindatory convocation.
The race for that much
veted Cat was close until
e bitter end when the
Seniors edged their way out
in front by a win in the
"prank" category. The Merry
Men were sorely j

disappointed as the
Highlanders distinguished
themselves with their second
Black Kitty. Highlanders
tliAvVA 0nt a winning way!!!

The Worst Of Times

The Period,

/t was the best of times, it was the worst
of times, it was the age of wisdom, it
was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch
of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it
was the season of Light, it was the season
of Darkness, it was the Spring of hope, it
was the Winter of despair, we had
everything before us, we had nothing
before us, we were all going direct to
Heaven, we were all going direct the other
way in short, the period was so far like
the present period, that some of its noisiest
authorities insisted on its being received,
for good or evil, in the superlative degree
of comparison only.

A Tale of Two Cities
Charles Dickens

AGNES SC0TT C0LLE*GE

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Administrative Assistants to the President: Mar-
cia Mitchell; Bertie Bond

eans

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David P. Behan, Dean of the College

Ellen Hall, Dean of the College

i

Not Again

r or the past two
years Agnes Scott has
been under going her
centenial face-lift. One
of the inconveniences of
the renovation plan is a
conspicuous shortage
of parking. And as
man5' a Scottie has dis-
covered not every place
her car will fit is con-
sidered a legal parking
space. How many morn-
ings has the phone rung
before the alarm? A call
from your friendly pub-
lic safety officer re-
questing that you kind-

ly move your car. If this
request is not heeded
stricter measures are
taken. Yes, the dreaded
ticket. And if the beige
slip of paper (worth
$5.00 in the common
market) waving from
beneath the wind-
sheild-wiper isn't
warning enough,
there's always the last
resort towing (a mea-
sure only taken once or
twice to date).
However, releif is in
sight. Next year all
parking lots will once
again be open and get-
ting a ticket will no
longer be a weekly or-
deal.

mmm

poreign T anguage

311

Ingred I. Wieshofer, Associate Profes- Gerlinde Steinke, German Language Assis-
sor of German tant

Gunther Bicknese, Professor Of German;
Chair of the Department

1~

jChristabel P. Branrot, Associate Professor

lof French

Huguette D. Chatagnier, Associate Professor of French; Chair of the Department

Constance Shaw, Professor of Spanish; Chair of the
Department

Luis Pena, Assistant Professor of Spanish

jl^jUjanH

Cail fahi-
Literature

oiiate Professor of Classical Languages and
if the Department

Salley Anne MacEwen, Assistant Professor of Classical Lan-
guages and Literatures

"Good"

News

X prayed, laughed, sang,
wept, and talked with women
from all over the world," says
Dr. Deirdre Goode about her
experience in July of 1985 as a
delegate from the Episcopal
Church at the Nairobi (Kenya)
Convention, where the U.N.
Conference to Review and Ap-
praise the Achievements of the
U.N. Decade for Women (1975-
1985) met along with the Non-
Governmental Organizations
forum.

For Dr. Goode, this trip was
exciting not only because of all
the opportunities the conven-

tion offered, but also because
she was revisiting the country
where she was born. She spent
nights at St. Scholastica's Con-
vent during the convention. Dr.
Goode found at the convent "a
haven of tranquilty," where she
learned that "there is nothing
more powerful than a communi-
ty of spiritual women."

With workshops on a range of
topics and discussions on global
issues, the convention brought
women together into one pow-
erful voice on concerns that af-
fect us as individuals and wom-
en who, as the NGO Forum song
says, "Build the world."

Thank you. Dr. Goode for
bringing back and sharing with
us this rich experience.

P hilosophy

Richard D. Parry, Professor of Philosophy; Chair of the Department

^ible And T? eligion-

Deirdre J. Good, Assistant Professor of Bible and Reli- Kwai Sing Chang, Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Bible and Religion

gion; Chair of the Department

Marie H. Pepe, Charles A. Dana Pro-
fessor of Art; Chair of the
Department

Ronald L. Byrnside, Charles A. Dana Profes-
sor of Music; Chair of the Department

Jay Fuller, Associate Professor of Music

Raymond J. Martin, Professor of Music,
College Organist

Theodore Mathews, Professor of
Music

Paul Lifton, Assistant Professor of Theatre

Dudley W. Sanders, Assistant
Professor of Theatre; Chair of the
Department

Becky B. Prophet, Instructor in Theatre

Sandra T. Bowden, Professor of Biolo- John F. Pilger, Assistant Professor of Harry Wistrand, Associate Professor o

gy; Chair of the Department Biology Biology

Aches And Pains

W,

hat's worse than taking an econ. exam?
Taking an econ. exam when you have the flu.
Especially in the Winter, the campus is graced
with the whezes and sneezes of unfortunate
Scotties whose heads are filled with more than
the usual knowledge of last nights cramming.
These poor souls at last can find a refuge in the
Infirmary, where the quiet, the understanding
of the nurses, and enough remedies to fell a
horse might get them back on their feet just in
time to tackle that psych, paper they've so
looked forward to writing.

4

P hysics And A^stronomy

Arthur L. Bowling, Jr., Associate Professor of Physics and As
tronomy; Chair of the Department

Alberto C. Sadun, Assistant Professor of Astronomy

A/r athematics

Virgina Leonard, Visiting Professor of Math-
ematics

Sara L. Ripy. Professor of Mathematics

William Leonard, Visiting Professor of Robert A. Leslie, Associate Professor of Myrtle Lewin, Assistant Professor of
Mathematics Mathematics Mathematics

Hieroglyphics?

X^ooks like hieroglyphics to you? Well, it's
not. It's antique graffiti. If you look closely
you can see dates such as 1934, 1919, and
even one 1917. Where is this mark of Ameri-
can heritage? Right here on our own campus.
These names and dates, written in chalk,
were preserved in time on the main support
beam on the bell tower of Main dormatory.
Along the wooden stair case leading to the
tower are inscribed names and dates from the
turn of the century to the 1970's. According to
one member of the Foster & Cooper Construc-
tion Company, the college plans to seal this
piece of Agnes Scott history with clear var-
nish to preserve it for all posterity.

ociology

Constance A. Jones, Associate Profe:
Sociology; Chair of the Department

John M. Tumblin, Professor of Sociology
and Anthropology

Caroline M. Dillman, Assistant Profes-
sor of Sociology

p

A.S.C. Marches

S,

'ome Agnes Scott students march to the
beat of a different drum, like Val Roos. What
makes her so different? Well, she marches to
the drums at Georgia Tech, (and I don't mean
the fraternity drums either!) She is a member
of the Yellow Jacket Band, She and several
other Scotties may be seen each week parad-
ing across the field at Georgia Tech. Val plays
in the band; other Scotties are members of the
Flag Corps as well. So, next time the Yellow
Jacket Band marches by, see how many Scot-
ties you can pick out!

p

I A olitical Ocience And

s

E

conomics

Gus B. Cochran, III, Associate Professor of Cathrine V. Scott, Instructor in Political Albert Y. Badre, Smith Professor
Political Science; Chair of the Department Science Enterprise

of Free

William H. Weber, III, Associate Professor Edward C.Johnson, Associate Professor of 'John Studstill, Director of Global
of Economics,Chair of the Department Economics Awareness

mmmumm

Lyn Gates, Instructor in Education

Margaret P. Amnions, Professor of Education; Chair of
the Department

Age Of Computers

JL he computer age has come, yes even to
Agnes Scott. Now students no longer have to
wait in endless lines, fill out tons of forms,
and then fill them out again. The time honored
tradition of registration at Agnes Scott is now
not so traditional. Its just more convenient.
Thanks to the miracle of science what used to
be a three day process for student and a three
week ordeal for faculty has been condensed
into a five minute visit to the local registra-
tion computer terminal. Although Agnes Scott
has gone modern, they have not illiminated
the human element. Students still visit their
academic advisor and are still present to re-
cieve the schedule. They just get it more
quickly!!

A

Marylin B. Darling, Associate
Professor of Physical
Education

Kathryn Manuel, Professor of Physical Education, Chair of the Department

Kate McKemie, Professor of Physical Education

Cynthia Peterson, Instructor in Physical Education

-

A

ccounting

Kate Goodson, Comptroller; Lea Ann Hudson, Assistant Comptroller; Janet Gould, Personnel & Payroll, Kay Maggard,
Accounts Receivable; Lewanda Daniel, Accounts Payable; Miriam Lyons, Clerical Assistant

D

evelopment

L to R Penny Wistrand, Ann Brut-
van, Mary Chastain, Jill Adams,
Gail Schaedel.

Miriam Dunson; Chaplain

Rick Scott, Vice President of Development

dmissions

Ruth Vedvick, Director of Admissions

1

War Zone

HP ^

W arning!!! You're living in a WAR ZONE. Bet
you didn't even know. Don't worry, you needn't run
to the nearest bomb shelter. This war is being
waged from broadcasting booths across the city. It's
the ever fierce Radio Wars. Every radio station with
in 50 miles is battling for your attention, and, more
importantly, your ears. They are parading across
bumpers and on billboards. They are giving away
everything from $50.00 to a pair of Mazada RX-7's
just for being the right caller knowing the correct
word, or for sporting their bumper sticker. So, now
that you know, are you involved in the Radio
Wars?????

i

19 GEORGIA* 83

1-^

]ji-_j^tt9? ^m

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^' ^

. DISCOVER

WflBEFMQD

mma^^gkit^gaMmmmi^ag^i

rS

tudent

H

ealth

Patricia Murray, Nurse; Rosemary Kriner, Director

P

hysical JTlant

p

Bill Korth, Public Safety Director

James Hooper,
Physical Plant
Director

Lucia Sizemore. Director of Alumnae Affairs; Paula Schwartz. Hostess of the
Alumnae House: NOT PICTURED: Elizabeth Smith. Manager of the Alumnae
Office

Sitting Mildred Walker. Secretary to the Librarian; Judith Jen-
sen, Librarian; Sue Trowbridge, Technical Services Asst. Stand-
ing Lillian Newman, Associate Librarian; Cynthia Richmond,
Technical Services Librarian; Elizabeth Ginn, Perodicals and
Readers Services Librarian.

On The Move

s,

'pring found many scotties moving again
last year, only they were not just moving
their room from college back to home. They
were loading boxes with books and scrap
books and manuals. Fall found them unload-
ing. This was the year that student offices
moved from Rebeccah to the Infirmary.
Throughout the year Bekins boxes littered
the upper floor of the building as clubs un-
packed in stages. For many it was a big
change. Late hours spent in club offices left
many a leader feeling spooked when she real-
ized she was alone in the building. However,
the moves are now complete, and believe it or
not, the place feels like home (well almost).

^i^22Sf?^i

AGNES SC0TT C0*LL*E*GE

Seniors

Senior Class Officers:
Agnes Parker Vice-Presi-
dent

Tricia McGuire President
Nancy Carter Secretary/
Treasurer

1

Home Away From Home

D<

'orm life at Agnes Scott is
an interesting experience.
Whether in the luxuirous In-
man Inn, or the small and pri-
vate Hopkins, residents find
their own method to turn four
blank walls and twelve cubic
feet of space into their own
home away from home. For
Joan McRae the "nesting in-
stinct" is seen as she perches,
phone in hand, in the mist of

her Inman loft room. For oth-
ers cleanliness is a must,
books neatly stacked and
beds made every morning by
8:30 a.m. prompt. Whether
you are a "nester" or a "neat-
nik" after a few short days or
weeks of dorm living those
four blank walls come to life,
your personality emerges,
and Inman, Hopkins, Winship,
or Walters becomes Home.

%r^^

Barbara Ann Caulk

Francis Theonie Dakos

Julie Johnson Banner

Deborah Lynn Davis

d

Maria Del Pilar Duque

Joanna Setson Durand

Kimberly Noel Durham

Wash Day Blues

T,

he clothes have overflowed
the hamper for a few days now,
the cue to go hunting for spare
dimes and quarters. After accu-
mulating enough change to
wash and dry a few loads of
clothes, it's time to haul the pile
of sweats, socks, skirts, dress-
es, panties, bras, and jeans
down to the laundry room. IF
there happens to be a washer
available, pile in the clothes on
the cold setting so they don't
have to be sorted, stick in the

quarters and go. As Ansley Sco-
ville could tell you, twenty min-
utes or so later, somebody has
piled the sopping mass on top of
the next dryer, and it's time to
put them in that honorable ap-
pliance. Two dimes later the
clothes are at least semi-dry. If
the panty-hose accidentally got
stuck in the dryer instead of on
the drying rack and have tied
everything in knots, getting the
clothes out may be a bit diffi-
cult.

Ruth Feicht

^HH

fli

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H

^

1

\

Karen Dawn Fortenberry Cristina Mildred Gerson

Josephine Grace Gilchrist Maria Adelina Gonzalez Karen Renee Green-Grantham

Nancy Elizabeth Hardy

Hope Frances Hill

Edie S. Hsiung

Rebekah Lee Martin

Leigh Ellen Matheson

Joan Elise McRae

The Search Begins

G.

Iraduation is a time of com-
pletion. Yet, for most graduates
it is only the start. For some it
marks the beginning of an ad-
vanced, expanded education as
they prepare for graduate
schools across the nation from
Harvard to Emory. For others it
beings the search for a career
as they interview with compan-
ies such as IBM, AT & T, and
Procter & Gamble. However,

for all it is yet another transi-
tion, perhaps the greatest. It
signals the beginning of life: life
outside the confines of institu-
tions and academia. Which ever
path the graduate chooses, it is
evident that, as one Atlanta ex-
ecutive remarked, "Agnes Scott
graduates have an edge; they
are prepared to meet a chang-
ing world head on and conquer
it."

The Legend

Of

Ah woo

A,

L

.hwoo, in his earliest incar-
nation, was a plaster of paris
Indian whose permanent home
was in Mollie Merrick's office.
He was officially the property
of the Senior Class, and each
year during Black Cat festivi-
ties the Juniors attempted to
steal him. The Seniors were
obliged to recover Ahwoo be-
fore the night of the production
and class competition, or face
certain loss of honor.

In 1981 a disgruntled senior
spirited Ahwoo away. Rumer
had it that, one day, Ahwoo
would return, but for the next
two Black Cats he was lament-
ably absent. Then, in 1984, Ah-
woo returned for a brief mo-
ment of glory in the of Cathy
Scott's younger brother. (The
Juniors had no luck spiriting
him away, although they gave it
their best try.) This year Ahwoo
was officially reincarnated
when Laura Smith and the rest
of the Senior Class presented
the Ghost of Ahwoo during the
Black Cat festivities. The Class
in Plaid presented Ahwoo's
Ghost to the Merry Men at the
annual Spring Capping ceremo-
ny.

The Highlanders Remember

Black Kitty and Company 1984

One of the first Marriages 1985

Juniors

Shannon Adair Claire Armistead Amy Bailey

Julia Blewer Laure Lee Boice

p

1

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L_

M

r

^

^^^^^_iij_i

1

k

SJ

Kim Bradshaw Barbara Breuer Sherlee Brooks Elizabeth Buck Pam Callahan

Elaine Crosby

Ronda Deas

Gina Dixon

Donna Doorley

Lisa Duerr

Monica Duque

Cash In A

Flash

T.

he Tillie Teller is, at best, a
mixed blessing. On the way to
P.J.'s late Thursday evening it's
a blessing to be able to pick up a
$10 bill to buy a few beers. But
when the statement comes in
and those late night impulse
visits to Tillie have ravaged the
old bank account, it's a curse,
especially when the Big B Com-
pany has tacked on SOcf for ev-
ery visit (just ask Becky Mo-
ses). Proposals have been made
to get a Tillie of A.S.C.'s very
own, but most Scottie's would
probably prefer not to have
their money any more accessi-
ble. There's such a creature as
TOO much of a good (?) thing.

Susan Hand Dawn Harrison Amy Hedgwood Ana Hernandez Rachel Hubbard

Charlotte Hoffman Julie Huffaker Mary Humann Mary Humphreys Sally Humphries

Myra Johnson

Beverly Jones Gayle Jordan Lainey Kahlstrom

Lori Nesmith Kerry O'Hourko

Kllcn Parker Wendy Parker

Liliana Perez

Gretch

en Pfifer

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Laura Robinson

Debbie Rose

Ghost Stories

A.

L.S any college with an almost
one hundred year history does,
Agnes Scott has its share of ghost
stories. The most tragic is that of
the lone ghost of fourth Main. A
student, saddened by life, she
hanged herself in the tower room
of Main. Today she is said to walk
the halls, and students report see-
ing a wispy figure pause in the
hall then disappear. Another trag-
ic story is that of the ghost that is
said to inhabit Dana's pottery lab.
An artist working at one of the
wheels is supposed to have gotten
her hair caught in the wheel and
died. It is believed by some that
her ghost haunts the lab, protect-
ing others from her tragic fate.

These are but two of the many
chilling tales of Agnes Scott's one
hundred year history. If you feel
brave one night, perhaps you can
visit Dana, or look up for a long
while into a fourth Main window,
and maybe you will have a ghost
story of your own to tell.

Pramoda Rao

Skotti Ray

Hong-Kim Saw

Melanie Sherk

Laura Sisk

4

m

f

micheiobI <>

**Can I See
Some IPr

In 1984 President Ronald Rea-
gan, in response to national out-
cry against the high incidence of
car accidents and deaths due to
drunk driving, signed a bill which
required states to raise their
drinking age to 21 or face loss of
federal highway funds. In re-
sponse to this the Georgia 1985
session which raised the drinking
age to 20 as of September 30,
1985, and to 21 as of September
30, 1986. Students protested, but
as Johnna Wardman can tell you,
were still forced to provide proof
of their age at liquor stores across
Atlanta. Most college students be-
lieve tougher drunk driving laws
are the answer. Nevertheless, Ag-
nes Scott will continue to support
the Georgia state law.

Susie Somerlot Anne Marie Sophy Jennifer Spurlin Meda Stamper Jacqueline Stromberg

Luanne Swain

Cynthia Terry

Loucy Tittle

Angela Tonn Andee Turnbough

f

OPHOMORES

^^ I ^-

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fr f9-

H

Julie McConnel Treasurer,
Christa Lankford Secretary, Ross
Hall Vice President, Tracy McMa-
hon President

.V,

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k

t

Stacy Ackerman Laurie Adams Elizabeth Adams Laura Allen

9 EL

^^^t^m'^' " ^^^^B

Nancy Arne Carol Ashmore Donna Beck Stephanie Boyd Elizabeth Brown

. .A^^ ^^^^^H

Beth Brubaker Meg Bryant Camille Burton Crissi Calhoun Renee Caudhill

Adele Clements Melanie Cliatt Sarah Copenhaver Lori Doyle Melissa Dyffes

^^^^^^'^^^1

Collette Ellis

Claire Glutton Angela Gottsche Patricia Grant

Nancv Jones

Anne Marie Huff Heidi Hitchcock Krista Hedberg Julie Hartline

Beverly Garcia

Eleanor Ivey

Gina Greely

Karen Gray Laura Grantham Julie McConnell Lynnette Lounsbury

Julie Kleinhans

Elizabeth Lands

Krista Lankford

Margaret Leonard

Kelly Martin

Pizza Wars

A heres a new pizza kid on the
block. Domino's has reigned as the
delivery pizza king long enough.
Since fall quarter there has been a
choice in delivery pizza. Watch out
Domino's; Pizza Hut delivers. Mid-
night no longer finds Scotties eager-
ly awaiting the Domino's Man. Now
they anxiously anticipate the Pizza
Hut truck. Now Scotties enjoy a
choice in delivery pizza style and
price. What remains the determining
factor when deciding upon a pizza?
For a select few, taste alone decides;
but for most price is the main consid-
eration. If it is Monday after pay-
day, Pizza Hut it is; however, if it's
Thursday before, Domino's cheese,
if you please.

Physical Fitness

JiLvery night it's the same thing.
As the sun sets, Scotties emerge.
Donning walkmen, running shoes,
and sweats, they begin their even-
ing workout ritual. For Lisa
Guino, this ritual includes a
hearty workout with the Anges
Scott weight machines. Some
choose aerobics or "Stretch with
Gretch" in the new Inman exer-
cise room. While others enjoy a
solitary strole or jog around cam-
pus. As the American obsession
with fitness continues, its effects
are visible at Agnes Scott. Along
with an increase in the number of
those who workout for "fun" has
been a renewed interest in Athlet-
ics, as seen in the emergence of
three new intercollegiate sports:
Basketball, Soccer, and Volley-
ball. Whether the interest is per-
sonal or competitive it is obvious
that at Agnes Scott there is an em-
phasis not only mental fitness but
on physical fitness as well.

ROTC at ASC

When is the last time you
saw a troup march across
a campus, or heard re-
veile? Probably the last time you
watched a war movie on Channel
17. However, for Gina Manfra and
Rose Poe (not pictured), this is not
such an odd occurrence. They, like
other Scotties, have taken advan-
tage of the R.O.T.C. program at
Georgia Tech. In addition to the
broad base of a Liberal Arts edu-
cation these women have the
benefits of military training and
the bonus that the Army provides.
They add another facet to campus
life at Agnes Scott,and give evi-
dence to the saying "there's noth-
ing a Scottie can't do if she puts
her mind to it."

RESHMEN

Kimberlee Cadora Tina Carr Melissa Cohenour Jennifer Cooper Milagros Davila

Kathryn Deane Eleanor Dill

Julie DeLeon

Marjo Dobbs

Alisa Duffey

Deborah Erb Rebecca Earnshaw Michelle Faile

Andrea Farmer

Conchi Gonzalez Heather Goodall Amy Goodloe

Angel Greene Sharon Hargraves

Sarah Jewett

Katie Kelly

Tracy Kerrigan

Karen King

A Time Of
Questions

rSob (a ficticious name) went to
church every Sunday while growing
up. The first Sunday at college ar-
rived. Did he go? According to local
clergy most students from Bob's
background didn't. For most stu-
dents college represents a time of
questioning. The combination of ex-
posure to new ideas and the freedom
from parental rules causes many
students to examine their beliefs.
The required Bible course adds an
additional element to these self ex-
aminations. For some it adds to the
confusion. For others it aides in their
questioning. Clergy seem to agree
this time is often healthy and impor-
tant to the spiritual development of
the individual. They add too that this
questioning may occur, though most
college years, after college as stu-
dents face the responsibilities of ca-
reer and family.

Mailbox
Mystery

Lc

^ove-letter, sweep-stakes win,
or returned essay marked in red?
When you reach into that mail-
box, should you read with joy or
dread? Usually, there is a pot-
pourri of news waiting for you,
some from home, some from the
Deans, and most from Mr. Ad,
whose cutely printed paper fills
the giant gray garbage bin by the
end of the day. As Shari is finding
out, that little wooden box with
our own number on it can make or
break your day. A phone bill,
Shari? Where's the garbage bin?

Eloise Lindsay Jennifer McCaslin Samantha McClintock Molly McCray Laura McWilliams

"-' pBII'^

Kim Mitchell

^^^H ^H^K ^

Judith Maguire Deborah Marean Tammy Martin Thea Mayne

Hazel Mitchell Mitrina Mogelnicki Lorie Moore

Denise Moreno Nelathi Nanayakkara Sarah Napier

Alyson Miller

Gwendolyn Palmer

Sharon Tiller

Dawn Unger Melissa Wallace

ilMir

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Dig In!

G,

I ooey brownies, diet Coke,
fried Chicken deluxe, and the sal-
ad bar! These are the things little
Scotties are made of. And with
this staple, if they're not careful,
little Scotties become big Scotties.
But after your groggy morning
classes, what better way to un-
wind than to sit with your friends
in the dining hall and enjoy a plate
of delectable vittles? Then when
the sun is sunk and academia is
gladly put on the shelf for one
brief, blessc^ moment, bleary-
eyed Scotties stumble toward the
"clean, well-lighted place" of Leti-
tia Pate Evans and relax in this
oasis of friendship and epicurean
delights, for, as Adele Clements
will tell you, a fine education
needs lots of food for thought.

Prineanna Walker Carolyn Weaver Sonya Wells

Laura Wertzberger

Lynli Whisnant

Amy Wiese Courtney Williams Karen Wiseley

AGNE*S S*C0TT C0LLEGE

Inman

The Inman Inn

A he show place of Agnes Scott College
was not the easiest place to live. But as the
residents of Inman Hall discovered it can be
an educational experience. Inman became the
host to an array of distinguished guests from
Alumnae to .African College officials. You
never knew who would be "Touring" the lob-
by, or when some curious "touree" would de-
cide to venture into a loft room. Enevitably
the room was not clean as anyone on first
floor can tell you. Yet even through the bar-
rage of receptions and ceremonies Inman
residents enjoyed the benefits of a
$7,000,000.00 renovation! Central heat and
air conditioning were but two of these bene-
fits (when they worked). When they didn't it
was always Mr. William Warren who was
quick to respond. We in Inman thank you for
all your time and hard work! It was not unno-
ticed!

Julie O'Kelley Inman Resident Assistant

The few, the lucky, the residents of Inman 1986!

lA

Hopkins

"Slave Quarters To
Inman?"

P or the residents of Hopkins it was
life as usual in 1986. Living in the
smallest dorm on campus had its ad-
vantages and its disadvantages. One
of the biggest advantages was the
close knit relationships that devel-
oped. With only thirty residents in the
entire dorm it was easy to become
friends with most everyone. One of the
disadvantages was constantly having
to keep up with a key. All in all, the
residents were able to take the good
with the bad and enjoy their year in
Hopkins.

<*.0f

Hopkins 1986

Winship

'We Never Close'

Xn Winship dorm life had its truest
meaning. They laughed, played, and
studied. Living in a dorm with residents
from all classes was mixture of fun and
adjustments. However, with a Dorm
"Mummy" like Ms. G. life was never dull.
Since the administrative offices were re-
located in Winship basement the dorm
had an open door policy that relieved
residents of the burden of keeping up
with a key.

Karen Grantham (Ms G) Winship Resident Assistant and |>-
Dorm Mummy

Winship and their Dorm Mummy!

Walters

The New A.S.C. Beach

in 1986 Walters became the center of cam-
pus life as the Post Office relocated to the base-
ment. Walters played host to several distin-
guished guests as well. Amont them was actor
Wayne Rogers who visited ASC's version of
"The Swamp". On warm afternoons the side
yard of Walters became ASC's own beach!
Break out the Hawian Tropic and the Jimmy
Buffet; here comes the sun!!

Ms. Hanna Longhofer Walters Resident Assistant

4

AGNES SC0TT C0LLEGE

^IgammtiofU

Student
Service

mm

Student service clubs play a major role
in the lives of many Agnes Scott students.
Not only do these organizations provide
services that effect every member of the
campus community, faculty and students
alike, but they also teach their members
valuable lessons on caring and giving.
From these clubs come the governing
body of our college, the majority of our
student leaders, and most all student
backed services. Members of these orga-
nizations are responsible for facets of
campus life including legislating many of
the rules we live by, providing opportuni-
ties for spiritual growth, and bring enter-
tainment to Agnes Scott through films
and social functions.

Rep Council

Rep Council is the governing body of
Agnes Scott. Its members are com-
posed of A.S.C. students who are
elected by their peers. Rep Council is re-
sponsible for much of the communication be-
tween faculty and administration and the
students and among other functions. Elec-
tions are held in the spring for most posi-
tions and in the fall for positions such as
freshman representative.

Back row L to R: Ruth Feich, Sharon Hargraves, Sally
Humphries, Julie Blewer, Trudy Smith, Laura Sisk, Jill
Reeves, Scott Posey, Pam Tipton, Barbara Caulk, Mer-
cy Badia; Second row L to R: Bridget Cunningham, Lyn-
ette Landsberry, Sarah Copenhaver, Anne Spry, Dana
Maine, Genie Chilcutt; Front row L to R: Beth Leonard,
Kathie White, Beth Carpenter, Maria McGinnis, Mary
Carter Whitten

Officers L to R: Ruth Feicht President; Trudy Smith
Vice-President; Beth Carpenter Treasurer; Genie
Chilcutt Secretary

C.A.

Christian Association is
the organization devoted
to Christian service at
Agnes Scott. Their programs in-
clude weekly devotional meet-
ings and a variety of service ac-
tivities for the Atlanta
community, as well as, the col-
lege community.

Back row L to R: Donna Beck, Edie
Hsiung, Renee Roberts. Mary Layman,
Pam Callahan; Front row: Clair Armis-
tead. Roberta Daniel, Dolly Purvis, Ka-
tie Milligan. Kathy Richards

BSA

Board of Student Activities is the orga-
nization responsible for coordinating
the activities of campus organizations.

L to R: Samantha McClintock, Ellen
Weinberg, Beth Webb President;
Margaret Hamm Secretary/Trea-
surer, Mary Morris

I

'^

Film Series

Film Series is the or-
ganization responsi-
ble for coordinating,
ordering, and showing film
at A.S.C. Their work is ap-
preciated!!!!

Back row L to R: Anita Irani, Mini
Abraham, Angela Tonn, Bella Da-
vid; Front row L to R: Carol Ash-
more, Promoda Rao, Mary Morris,
Angela Howard

Officers: Angela Ton Co-Chair-
person; Carol Ashmore Secre-
tary; Promoda Rao Co-Chair-
person

Social Council

Social Council is the organization re-
sponsible for planning all social events
at Agnes Scott. The council is com-
posed of students. Petitions are accepted in
the spring and are open to all A.S.C. stu-
dents.

Back row L to R: Jill Thomas, Margaret Luke, Ellen
Weinberg, Jane Castles, Karen Green-Grantham; Sec-
ond row: Milla Davila, Jan Clapp, Mary Human, Rachel
Rochman, Julie Kilgore, Julie Lenaeus, Lis Pleasant;
Front row: Lori Adams, Amy Gottsche, Donna Dorley,
Donna Martin, Sally Mairs

Officers L to R: Mary Human Treasurer, Rachel
Rochman President, Margaret Luke Vice-Presi-
dent, .Julie Lenaeus Secretary.

Orientation

The Orientation Councl is the organiza-
tion responsible for orienting new stu-
dents to student life and the time hon-
ored traditions of Agnes Scott College.
Membership is open to all students, and peti-
tions are accepted in the spring.

Back row L to R: Ross Hall, Felicia Williams, Hope Hill.
Roberta Mcleod, Dawn Harrison; Second row: MoUie
Merrick, Sandy Dell, Jan Clapp, Donna Martin; Front
row: Jill Reeves, Charlotte Hoffman, Mahrukh Maval-
vala

Officers L to R: Donna Martin Vice-President; Sandy-
Dell President; Dawn Harrison Treasurer; Jan
Clapp Secretary

4

College

Republicans

College Republicans are composed
of students active in the Republi-
can Party of Georgia. Member-
ship is open to all A.S.C. students.

Officers: Beth Webb President; Nancy Hardy
Vice-President

Back row L to R: Mary Ruth Oliver, Amy Cooke,
Katherine Deane, Luanne Swain, Melissa Poulton;
Second row: Beth Land, Lisa Averill, Patrica Roy,
Beth Webb, Nancy Hardy; Front row: Beth Carpen-
ter, Allison Miller

Students Working For Black Aware-
ness is an organization designed to en-
lighten the A.S.C. community to the in-
dividual needs and opportunities of black
women in Atlanta and in the world. Their
scope is not limited to only women but in-
cludes men and women of all races in all
areas of life.

Back row L to R: Karen Green-Grantham, Princeanza
Walker, Karen Moore, Caroline Sigmund: Second row L
to R: Cynthia Terry, Stephanie Boyd, Tanya Savage,
Angela Howard, Kecia Cunningham, Shawn Dock, Rose
Poe, Charlene Johnson: Front row L to R: Felicia Wil-
liams, Roxie Reed, Charline Pinnix, Sherlee Brooks

Officers L to R: Felicia Williams Publicity Chair,
Roxie Redd Treasurer, Karen Green-Grantham
Advisor, Stephanie Boyd Secretary, Shawn Dock
President

?

An affiliate of the Kiwanis Club, Cir-
cle K is a service organization meet-
ing the needs of the Decatur and At-
lanta areas. Working closely with the
Georgia Tech Chapter they complete pro-
jects with the Battered Women's Shelter
and other Atlanta organizations.

Back row L to R: Kathryn Smith, Kathie White, Sarah
Kegley, Jill Smith, Hong Tran, Beth Smith; Second row
L to R: Mary Morris, Charlene Johnson, Mary Lay-
mon, Lynn Wilson, Beth Land, Tina Car, Anne Ma-
quire; Front row L to R: Sherlee Brooks, Bella David,
Charna Hollingsworth, Julie Hartline, Charlene Pin-
nix

Officers L to R: Charlene Pinnix Vice-President,
Mary Laymon President, Lynn Wilson Treasurer,
Ann Maquire Secretary

SAR's

Student Admissions Representa-
tives are students who are in-
volved in the admissions process.
They host perspective students, contact-
ed interested high school students, and
provide a host of other services to assist
the admissions office at Agnes Scott.

Officers: Trudy Smith President

Back row L to R: Julie DeLeon, Shannon Gibbs, Dee
Agee, Molly McCray, Cherie Arnette, Karen
Youngner, Loucy Tittle, Robin Treadway; Front
row: Tonya Savage, Rebecca Bradley, Louisa
Parker, Nelathi Nankerra, Trudy Smith, Anne Le-
cock, Denise Moreno, Sarah Kegley

Spirit Committee

Spirit Committee is the organization
which is responsible for several little
"surprises" throughout the year.

Back row L to R: Nancy Hardy, Jan Clapp, Beth Webb,
Becky Moses, Mary Laymon, Matrina Mogelnicki;
Front row: Holly Rogers, Carol Valintine, Trudy Smith,
Debbie Rutledge, Beth Land, Debbie Davis

Officers: Nancy Hardy
Secretary/Treasurer

President, Carol Valentine

College Bowl

College Bowl is an inter collegiate
team which competes with colleges
across the nation in information and
trivia questions. This year's College
Bowl team had one of the best records in
A.S.C.'s history.

Captains: Angela Ton, Pamoda Rao

Back row L to R: Angela Howard, Cristina
Gerson, Ginny Rosenberg, Marja Dobbs;
Front row L to R: Daphanie Burt, Caroline
Sigmund, Angela Tonn, Promoda Rao, Debbie
Marean

Academic

LUBS

Academic clubs compose a large
part of the organizations at Ag-
nes Scott. Many of them are hon-
or organizations, and many pro-
vide vital services and functions to the
entire campus. These clubs often contain
some of the most active members of the
campus community. Some of the activi-
ties they are involved in include Black
Cat, elections, and many thought provok-
ing discussions. These organizations in-
volve the faculty, in many cases, and they
provide opportunities for leadership that
are invaluable for their members.

^^V!*:fl,'S\

lit' ??.-*:^

Mortar Board

Mortar Board is composed of Se-
niors who have achieved aca-
demic excellence. Members
are selected by previous members.
Among the responsibilities of Mortar
Board is coordinating the events of
Black Cat and approving all petitions.

Back row L to R: Mia Pucket, Scott Posey, Anne
Spry, Sandy Dell, Holly Rogers, Trish Mcguire,
Agnes Parker, Robin MacLeod, Sally Rackley,
Front Row: Pam Tipton, Barbara Caulk, Hope
Hill, Andrea Morris, Rachael Rocbman

Officers: Sandy Dell Treasurer, Holly Rogers
Pres'ident; Agnes Parker Vice-President;
Anne Spray Secretary; Pam Tipton Editor

Honor Court

Honor Court is the judicial body
charged with upholding the Honor
System at Agnes Scott. Its members
are elected by the student body and are
responsible for trying all cases involving
violations of the Honor System.

Back row L to R: Kathy Kirkland, Mishana Mogel-
nicki. Sunny Burns, Becky Rankin, Holly Rogers; Sec-
ond row L to R: Elizabeth Buck, Jeanie Norton, Amy
Peoples; Front row L to R: Jackie Stromberg, Laura
Smith, President Amy Hutchins

D

Dana Scholars

ana Scholars are students recognized for their aca-
demic excellence. These students are awarded an
annual scholarship.

Back row L to R: Elizabeth Buck 87, Kitty Cooper 86, Beth Baxter
86, Tricia Maguire 86, Amy Hutchins 86, Jackie Stromberg 87,
Sunny Burns 86, Holly Rogers 86, Laura Smith 86, Scott Posey
86, Mary Carter Whitten 86; Third row L to R: Mary Humann 87,
Dawn Harrison 87, Charlotte Hoffman 87, Melanie Sherk 87, Merci
Badia 86, Anne Sophy 87, Anita Irani 87, Margaret Hamm 87,
Bridget Cunningham 87; Second row L to R: Lori Tinsley 88, Becky
Rankin 88, Beth Leonard 88, Christa Lankford 88, Amy Gottsche
88, Gina Greeley 88, Karen Schultz 88, Kathi White 88, Claire
Guitton 88, Pam Tipton 86; Mahrukh Mavalvala 88; Front row L to
R: Nancy Hardy 86, Meda Stamper 87, Jennifer Spurlin 87, Sandy
Dell 86, Agnes Parker 86, Joanna Durand 86, Mia Puckett 86,
Beth Webb 86

Centennial Scholars

Centennial Scholars are members of the
centennial class at Agnes Scott. They
were selected through a series of inter-
views. The scholarship was awarded based on
these interviews and on past academic
performance.

Back row L to R: Melissa Cohenhaur, Caroline Lewis, Mary
Ruth Oliver, Vee Kimbrell, Jill Owens; Second row L to R:
Carolyn Weaver, Sharon Tiller, Dolly Purvis, Marjo Dobbs.
Louisa Parker, Susan Rights; Front row L to R: Karen Wis-
ley. Mini Abraham, Kim Baker, Elisa Jann, Allison Adams,
Allison Miller, Shari Ramcharan

Phi Sigma Tau

Phi Sigma Tau is an
honor society for
Philosophy majors
at A.S.C. Membership is
based on a variety of cri-
teria. Among these re-
quirements scholastic
achievement is consid-
ered of great impor-
tance.

Back row L to R: Debbie Mor-
ean, Melanie Sherk, Scott Po-
sey, Shannon Adair, Margaret
Lackey; Front row L to R: Kitty
Cooper, Patti Spellman, Nancy
Hardy, Kathy McKee, Jackie
Stromberg, Lisa Duerr, Donna
Dorley, Beth Smith, Jennifer
Aultman

Officers L to R: Kathy McKee,
Patti Spellman, Scott Posey,
Melanie Sherk Executive
Committee Chair, Jackie
Stromberg, Shannon Adair

Performing
Arts

EDBS

One of the wonders of Liberal Arts Edu-
cation is the exposure it provides to
the fine arts. Here at Agnes Scott we
enjoy the talents of a large group of students
those involved in the various performing
arts organizations on campus. These talented
people capture beauty, not only for the stu-
dents at Agnes Scott, but they are invited
throughout the year to perform across the At-
lanta area. Their presence at Agnes Scott at-
tests to the true value of our education and
the environment of our college.

f?

Arts
Council

The Arts Council
coordinates the
activities of the
various arts organiza-
tions on campus. In ad-
dition to this service
they provide free tick-
ets to students for
many local plays and
concerts.

L to R: Maria Gonzalez,
Margaret Luke, Mary Mor-
ris, Beth Smith, Julie
McConnel, Andrea Morris,
Caroline Sigmund, Karen
King, Mary Ellen O'Neill

Officers L to R: Beth Smith
Vice-President; Mary-
Morris Secretary; Julie
McConnel Treasurer;
Mary Ellen O'Neill Presi-
dent

i

Dolphin Club

The Dolphin Club is Agnes Scott's
syncronized swimming team. They
perform for organizations across
Atlanta as well as at A.S.C.

Back to front L to R: Mary Edwards, Sarah Good-
win, Dana Maine, Debbie Rose, Laura Robison,
Mercy Badia, Joan McGuirt, Robin Treadway, Me-
lissa Poulton. Laura Sisk, Collette Ellis. Shannon
Gibbs, Laura Allen, Karen Wisely, Jill Owens, Su-
san Terry, Cardyn Weaver, Jill Jordan, Krista Hed-
berg, Felicia Perritt, Shelly Trabue NOT PIC-
TL'RED: Lauren Snee

Glee Club

The Glee Club is one of the musical
performing organizations at Agnes
Scott. Their performances included
many concerts for the Atlanta and A.S.C.
communities.

Back row L to R: Valyn Roos, Charna Hollings-
worth, Roxi Reed, Elizabeth Buck, Pam Callahan,
Suzie Summerlot, Michele Ingram, Nancy Carter;
Third row: Owen Hareg, Annie Pate, Katie Milli-
gan, Caroline Lewis, Eloise Lindsay, Mary Carter
Whitten, Karen Green-Grantham, Pat Grant; Sec-
ond row: Kathy Richards, Beth Brubaker, Renee
Hand, Dawn Harrison, Charlene Johnson, Jennifer
Cooper, Debi Erb, Marion Robbins, Maria McGin-
nis, Andrea Farmer, Rose King, Laura Robison:
Front row: Dr. Ted K. Mathews, Maria Gonzalez,
Claire Armisted, Allison Adams, Nethiathi Nankar-
rah, Nancy Eckles, Allison Mills, Susan Quave, Amy
Markle, Renee Roberts, Robin Hensley Accom-
panist

Black Friars

The Black Friars is the per-
forming arts organization
at Agnes Scott. They per-
form at various times
throughout the year, and these
performances are attended by
members of the Atlanta communi-
ty as well as the A.S.C.
community.

L lo R: Heidi Si

en. Pr

Kahlst

ille

Rebekah Marlin
Mila Davila
eanie Norton

1 Whe

, Debbie Marean. Third ro'
J King. Rachel Hubbard Secretar
Bryant - Treasurer, Angela Snedde
m Tiller, Second Row: (kneeling) Sart
nd Historian, Laura Thurston - Pul
Anne Spry Arts Council Rep., Tin
Director Becky Prophet. First Ro\
ig) Amy Hegwood - Publicity, Anr
ick, Mandy Roberts, Jcanine Dwinnc

London Fog

London Fog is <
mony entertain

ne of Agnes Scotfs fav
ing groups. Their gentle
i audiences throughout

R: Heidi Hitchcock. Julie Walls. Loucy
e. Pam Tipton. Amy Gottsche. Dr. Ron
side. Amy Hutchinson, Beth Leonard.
' Sophy. Donna Martin. .Margaret Luke,
a Maguirc

Studio Dance

Studio Dance Theatre is a performing
dance company composed entirely of
A.S.C. students. Their performances in-
clude not only college events but an array of
functions across Atlanta. Auditions are held
at the beginning of each quarter and are open
to all A.S.C. students

Back row L to R: Margaret Lackey, Beth Land, Meda
Stamper, Nancy Hardy; Third row L to R: Sharon Wal-
lace, Beth Smith, Paige Floyd, Holly Rogers Guennie
Palmer, Gina Greeley, Paige Prater, Marilyn Darling;
Second row L to R: Andrea Morris, Johna Wardman,
Sarah Napier; Front row L to R: Stacey Akerman, Melis-
sa Martin, Ann Marie Huff, Rebecca Bradley

Officers, L to R: Meda Stamper President, Ann Marie
Huff Vice-President of Publicity, Andrea Morris
Arts Council Rep., Beth Land Vice President of Cos-
tumes, Marilyn Darling Director, Melissa Martin
Assistant publicity, Margaret Lackey Secretary/Trea-
surer

International

And

Language

m^^ Language

iLlubs

Another asset at Agnes Scott is
the large population of interna-
tional students who attend
each year. Through contact with
these students others learn to respect
new and different cultures. Often in-
stead of learning how different an in-
ternational student is they learn that
we are really more similar than they
realized. These students and the or-
ganizations dedicated to them provide
Agnes Scott with a wealth of re-
sources that few colleges enjoy.

Tf

*

Chimo is an orgnization dedicated to
the interaction of international stu-
dents with A.S.C.'s student body.
They provide activities designed to expose
students to the wealth of different cultures
at A.S.C.

Back row L to R: Sherlee Brooks, Susan Vargas, Merci
Badia, Colette Ellis, Ana Quintana, Melissa Poulton,
Amy Markle, Gretchen Pfeifer, Julie DeLeon, Angle
Howard; Second row L to R: Caroline Signund, Shen Qi,
Anita Irani, Monica Duque, Bella David, Nelathi Nan-
ayakkara, Lori Doyle, Mini Abraham; Front row L to R:
Hong Kim Saw, Mahrukh Mavalvala, Carol Ashmore,
Promoda Rao

Officers L to R: (Back row) Monica Duque Vice-
President, Promoda Rao Trasurer, Mahrukh Maval-
vala Historian; (Front row) Ana Quintana Presi-
dent, Caroline Sigmund Publicity Chair Person

Spanish Club

The Spanish Club is an organization de-
signed to acquaint Agnes Scott students
with Spanish culture and to provide stu-
dents of Spanish with an opportunity to im-
prove their language skills.

Back row L to R: Colette Ellis, Amy Markle, Amy Wiese,
Becky Moses and Caroline Sigmund. Second row L to R:
Jill Smith, Becky Rankin, Ann Marie Huff, Mercy Badia,
Ana Quintana, Molly McCray; Front row L to R: Sarah
Kegley, Leslie Turner, Amy Gottsche, Andrea Morris,
Monica Duque, Thao Tu, Allison Miller

Officers, Back row L to R: Mercy Badia President, Ana
Quintana Spanish Hall Director, Front row: Colette
Ellis Secretary/Treasurer, Monica Duque Spanish
Hall Director

French

The French Club is an orga-
nization designed to
aquaint Agnes Scott stu-
dents with French culture.
Much like the German Club, the
French Club also provides stu-
dents the opportunity to improve
their language skills.

Back row L to R: Karen Wisley, Trudy
Smith, Donna Martin, Jeanne Fourneyron,
Second row L to R: Barbara Caulk, Agnes
Parker, Joany McRae, Rachael Rocliman;
Front row L to R: Amy Bailey, Kim Baker,
Gretchcn Pfeifer. Michelle Ingram, Beth
Land, Meda Stamper

German

German Club is an organiza-
tion designed to acquaint Agnes
Scott students with German cul-
ture and to provide students of
German with an opportunity to
improve their language skills.

Back row L to R: Josic Gilchrist, Gretehen
Pfeifer, Anna Cheshire, Shannon Adair;
Front row L to R: Barbara Caulk, Agnes
Parker, Jayne Huber, Shawn Mucklow,
Gerlinde Zeitze

Residence
Hall

LUBS

Residence Hall organization are
composed of those brave stu-
dents who were willing to face
fire drills at 3:00 A.M., loudness dur-
ing quiet hours, and violations of vari-
ous honor codes with a smile. They
were the ones who made sure that
dorm life had some sense of order.
Some even managed to have a good
time!

Interdorm

Inter Dorm is the governing body of
the dorms at Agnes Scott. The
members of Inter Dorm are elected
in Spring Quarter.

Back row L to R: Natalie Whitten, Carol Ash-
more, Monica Duque, Melanie Sherk; Fifth row:
Claire Guitton, Paige Carter, Kathren Martin;
Fifth row: Felicia Wheeler, Susan Terry, Tuba
Goksel, Fourth row: Gina Greeley, Annie Pate,
Margaret Hamm, Laura Young; Third row: Me-
lissa Martin, Beth Baxter, Lori Tinsley; Second
row: Wendy Parker, Ellen Parker, Kitty Cooper,
Liliana Perez; Front row: Mia Puckett, Joana
Durand

Officers, Back row: Beth Baxter Inman Presi-
dent; Mia Pucket Inter Dorm President; Joana
Durand Inter Dorm Vice-President; Tuba
Goksel Hopkins President; Front row: Paige
Carter Walters President; Ellen Parker
Walters President; Margaret Hamm Inter
Dorm Secretary

i

Sports

LUBS

Sports organizations enjoyed a re-
newed interest this year as Ag-
nes Scott students played a vari-
ety of sports including Soccer,
Basketball, Tennis, and Volleyball.
Participants had the benefits of phys-
ical activity, as well as, a lot of fun.
Most teams had a winning season, and
Agnes Scott can look forward to hav-
ing these teams for many years to
come.

<J

'^iS^.

(f

;i^

i

A.A.

Athletic As-
sociation is
the organi-
zation responsi-
ble for coordinat-
ing athletic ac-
tivities such as
soccer, basketball
and volleyball at
Agnes Scott.
Membership is
open to all A.S.C.
students. Peti-
tions for officers
are accepted in
Spring quarter.

Top to bottom: Adele
Clements member
at large; Pilar Duque
President: Mary
Carter Whitten
Vice-President; Mi-
shana Mogelnicki
Secretary /Treasurer

Soccer

Another team at A.S.C. is the
Volleyball Team. This season they
competed against an array of vol-
leyball clubs in the area.

Back row L to R: Cathy McKee, Lee Woo-
len, Mishana Mogelnicki, Gretchen
Pfeifer, Rose King, Lisa Olliff, Amy Pee-
ples; Front row: Lisa Rissmiller, Eleanor
Dill, Sallv Mairs, Sharon Hargraves, Tuba
Goksel, Pilar Duque. NOT PICTURED:
Virginia Scott Coach

Volleyball

The soccer team also provid-
ed A.S.C. with excitement.
They finished the season
victorious.

Back row L to R: Mary Carter Whitten,
Joan McGuirt, Hong Tran, Johna Ward-
man, Adele Clemants; Second row: Carolyn
Weaver, Nancy Arne, Mahrukh Maval-
vala, Sarah Copenhaver. NOT PICTURED:
Sarah Philips, Renee Caudill, Lynlie Whis-
nant, Kate Mckemie Sponsor

Publications

Jtudents involved in publications or-
ganizations not only completed and
published, but they also have the
benefits of learning valuable skills.
These skills may some day assist
them in landing that ideal job. Publi-
cation organizations are responsible
for creating and publishing all publi-
cations for students still at Agnes
Scott. These include the Handbook,
The Profile, The Aurora, and The Silhou-
ette. This represents all types of liter-
ature and creative layout.

The Profile is Agnes Scott's award
winning newspaper. Published
biweekly, The Profile keeps stu-
dents informed about college news as
well as news of interest in the Atlanta
area. The Profile staff encourages all
interested students to submit articles.
Petitions are accepted in Spring quar-
ter for the position of Editor-in-Chief.

Profile staff L to R: Heather Rogers, Meda
Stamper, Beth Brubaker, Monica Duque, Beth
Mullis, Becky Moses, Mary Carter Whitten, Pi-
lar Duque, Noel Durham, Susan Vargas, Beverly
Garcia, Louisa Parker

Editorial Staff: Beth Mullis Assistant Editor;
Becky Moses Editor-in-Chief

i

The Aurora

T,

he Aurora is the literary magazine at
Agnes Scott. It is published three times a
year and contains poetry, fiction, and art
work by students. Students are encouraged
to submit their work. Membership to staff
is open to all.

Aurora staff: (L to R) Dorothy Sussman,
Maria Gonzolas, Vicki Wood, Julie De Leon
Not Pictured: Claudette Cohen

Aurora Editors: Vicki Wood and Dorothy
Sussman

Handbook

he Handbook Staff is responsible
for creating the Agnes Scott Handbook.

Handbook Staff L to R: Beth Webb, Gene
Chillcut, Donna Doorley, Anne Sophy,
Mary Carter Whitten, Mary Laymon

Editors: Beth Webb, Mary Carter
Whitten

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to

Cook's ^katmacy

Elton L. Cook, R.Ph.
SallleW. Cook, R.Ph.

Phone 934-7302

(404I 659-0959
(404) 659 44 12
RETAIL

TLX54 2918

(404)523-2236
WHOLESALE

GEORGIA BOOK STORE, INC.

Wholesale and Retail

JOHN H COOL
General Manager

1 24 EDGEWOOD AVE N E
Atlanta. Gcorcia 30303

Jim's

CUSTOM DRY CLEANERS

240 E. Trinity PI.

377-0278

DECATUR. GA 30030

Alma Fuller Realty Co.

o

Executive Square
Decatur. GA 30032

Carol L. Fuller

Sales ASM--1 lie
lion Dollar Club 1983 19.-14

Bus 404 294-7751
Res 404-294 6474

E.A

ANDERSON & ASSOC.

E

ngineers - Planners -

Surveyors

61 Mount Vernon

Highway

Atlanta, Georgia

30328

EDWARD A

ANDERSON

(404) 252-9988

04)373.5323 ffl MAYTAC

DECATUR COIN LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING

MAYTAG WASHERS S DRYERS

PATRICIA HAWMOND

(OWNIK)

433 Mcdonough st.
decatur. georgia 30030

<^

Telephone (404) 378-1403
MARGARET A. LLOYD

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

TECHNICAL SPECIALTIES CORPORATION

!- , ; . . II. .;i: I )! Dim,

250 Arizona Ave,, BIdg. A Atlanta. GA. 30307

(404) 377-1848
(404) 377-1884

7^^u44ive ^)HtkotU, Qitcotpouxted

A COMPLETE LINE OF BUSINESS MACHINES

JIM RIEGERT
President

124 CLAIRMONT AVE
DECATUR. GA 30030

ROAD SERVICE

378-9383

or
377-1026

DECATUR GULF SERVICE

Complete Auto Service

102 W College Avenue
Decatur, GA 30030

'it^j(^^ COLLISION SERMCE

A .^^ FREE ESTI\L\TES

^^ Phone (404) 377-5334

\M w i'().\( i: i)i: i.Ko.N .w'u. i)i;( .vn K. (..\ :m);)

DICK TIMAAONS

1555 LAVISTA ROAD N E
ATLANTA GEORGIA 30329

636-7569

Fine Flowers - Friendly Service'

/> ^ '^
We re for YOU

(Next door to NBG)
Decatur Georgia

I404) 378-4231

R Wesley (Red) Skeltc

Avondale Body Shop

373 2747

COLI.KGE OF COURT REPORTING

1776 PEACHlREh SI . N W
SUITE 220 SOUTH
ATLAlvfTA. GEORGIA 30309
(404) 8761227

C^arlhn L^louer Jnsurance Agency

3&4e CLJklRMONT ROAD
CMAMBLEE, OKOROIA 303.4I

Bottled Under Authority of "The Coca-Cola Company" by THE ATLANTA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY

OakCreek

atmosphere ot leisure

280 NORTHFRN AVE., AVONnALK , i^A . 3000:?
292-<724
ALL ADULT LTVT'jn

FOUR APART'-rt:NT STALES TO CHOOSE FRO"

ALL UTILITIES IMCLUDEn
.WALLPAPERED BATHS WITH "AR^LE VAMTTIES

FULLY CARPETED
KITCHENS WITH DISHWASHERS A'lD DISPOSALS

DRAPES THROUGHOUT
SUPERS CY", SAUNAS AND HEALTH EOTttd'IENT

rvo POOLS

CENTRAL MASTFR ANTENNA SYS-^FM

AMPLE "ARKING
INDIVIDUALLY CONTROLLED MEAT AND AC

RELAX AND GET THE MOST OUT 0'=' LIFE AT
OAK CREEK APARTMENTS WITH THE GREAT
COMBINATION OF RECREATIONAL ^ACTLTTIES
AND GRACIOUS APARTMENT LIVING.

LAWN & TURF, INC

2570 Old Covington Highway
CONYERS, GEORGIA

GEORGIA'S OLDEST AND LARGEST

DISTRIBUTOR OF TURF AND GROUNDS

MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT, IRRIGATION AND

SUPPLIES FOR:

GOLF COURSES CEMETERIES
SCHOOLS PARKS LANDSCAPES INDUSTRY

CONYERS, GA

ATLANTA AREA

(404) 483-4743

OUTSIDE ATLANTA

AREA

1-800-282-3640

PHONE; 981-6750

Mills Body Shop, Inc.

5374 COVINGTON HWY.
DECATUR, GA. 30032

J.R.MILLS

BOB MILLS

IHIallowell

CHATTANOOGA

(EQUIPMENT COMF*r-JY|

ATLANTA

1084 HOWELL MILL ROAD, N.W., ATLANTA, GEORGIA

30318 PHONE 404-875-0256

COMPLETE ENGINEERING LAYOUTS STEEL SHELVING SHOP

EQUIPMENT LOCKERS PALLET RACKS

Complete floral Service

> Worldwide Delivery

> We Accept All Ma|or Credit Cards

"fSb^fef-

FLOWER SHOPS. INC

1026 Sycanwre Drive Decatur, Ga. 30031 378-1721

pope CHevROLei

CHEVROLET

469-7121

6130 MEMORIAL DRIVE STONE MOUNTAIN GA 30086

m

I environmental
chemical
systems, inc.

2771 Winston Industrial Parkway

Winston. Georgia 30187

PC, Box 399

Oouglasvllle, Georgia 30133

Bus 404/949-5421
Res. 404/949-14 15

<t

y ^

Caravan's

Cralt Sljack

Crab Sl)dck aijd Tavern

Our Specialty Steamea
"Live Blue Crab"

4761 MEMORIAL DRIVE

DECAIUH GA 300J2

(4041 292 1305

Chtvron

Road Service
WRECKER Service

r^llNOH REPAIRS

OAK

GROVE CHEVRON

63431 32

2764 LJiVISTA ROAD
DECATUR. CiA

BabyLand
General* Clinic

(404) 377-2352

402 E HOWARD AVE
MARGIE SPENCER, L P D DECATUR. GA 30030

Little People *, Cabbage Patch Kids and Accessories

LEVOLOR RIVERA BLINDS
AND WOVEN ALUMINUM

VBS

HARRY BRYANT

JOANNA WINDOW SHADES
LOUVER DRAPE VERTICALS

VENETIAN BLIND SERVICE CO., INC.

194 Peachuee Street, S W /Atlanta, Ga 30303

PHONE

521-1308

Cecil Malone Company

P.O. Box 19815 Station N
700 Antone Street, N.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30325
(404) 351-3991

GENERAL CONTRACTOR

^!^.

_ - til ^

W Sage Hill Shopping Center
y^ 1 799 Briarcliff Road
i2-) Atlanta, Georgia 30306

404-874-3116

PAT HALEY

r\

DAYS INN

4200 WESLEY CLUB DRIVE
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30034

404-288-7110

Toll Free Reservations

1-800-325-2525

MCS PAINTING
& DECORATING CO.

PAINTINC. COMKACTOKS

PO BOX 109

HIRAM. GEORGIA 30141

TALMADGK McBRAYEK. President

"44:5 119,5

DANIELS
BUSBY

Architects

Interior Designers

Planners

909W.PeachtreeSt.

Atlanta,Gcorgia 30309

(404) 892-2890

containers!

The Ultimate in Space-Saving Ideas!

Baskets
Jars
Gadgets
Memo Boards

Personalizing Supplies
Hallmark Cards
Dorm Organizers
Gifts

Toco Hills Shopping Center - 325-0991

VOLT INFORMATION SCIENCES, INC.

Technical Services Division

2358 Perimeter Park Drive

Suite 330

Atlanta, Ga. 30341

404-455-6235

1-800-241-1838

Chapman's Auto Repair

Complete Auto Service

(Motor's & Trans.)

120 N. Columbia Drive
Decatur, Ga 30030

NORTHWEST LEASING CENTER

2103 Cobb Parkway

Marietta, Georgia 30067

(404) 952-1110

Statewide Toll Free

1-800-551-CARS

Call Regarding Our College Graduate Service

BLOOMING EARTH

Florist and Greenhouse
1652 CHURCH STREET
DECATUR, GA. 30033

AL CANTRELL
OWNER. MANAGER

404/292-3479

_ ^""-^^

1 Homes ^^^ y^^

i^h^uf^o?^]

**<!*

Thibadeau-Burton Realtors

1448 B McUndon Drive

Decatur, Georgia 30033

Office (404) 491-7792

Home (404) 351-2099

377-2565

Pry (Ulpantng

248 W PONCE OE LEON AVENUE

Marguerite (Smith) Gorbandt

CozART Smith

Co-Owners

Decatur, GA

Haynes Grading, Inc.

Ralph C Haynes

PRESIDENT

Brince H. Manning, hi

Attorney at Law

Manning * Leipol.d

127 East Ponce df Leon Avenue

Decatur Georgia 30030

Office (404) 378-2500

"Good Service is Our Motto-
cleaning LAUNDRY . SUEDE - LEATHER - DRAPES
SPREADS RUGS CURTAINS . ALTERATIONS FIRE CLAIMS

liJAZf czHoui c:yym.xLc

icariLZLnq
2675 McAfee Rd, Decatur, Ga.

289-3260

GARY REED
OWNER

RESIDENT 284- 1 S4

I

NATIONAL ELEVATOR CORP.

ATLANTA OFFICE
1155 Fleming Street, Suite 2
Smyrna, Georgia 30080
Phone: (404) 432-7861

284-9914 or 264-5604

Buddy Oakes & Sons Car Care Center

^Jl^ Specialize in Brakes, Tune-uD, Tires. Batteries, Towing Serv.
/jf- ,. I* ^' Conoitioning, Accessories & Mecnanic on Duty

^Hours Mon -Fii 7 00 - 10 DO. Sal 8 00 10 00 & Sun. 10 00 6 00
3568 Memorial Dr, At Columbia - Oecalur, Ga. 30032

"All Work Guaranteed"

_173j

Southern (3uaranty

Land and Mortgage Co., Inc.

201 Allen Road
Suite 408

Atlanta, GA 30328
(404) 256-3633

Pittsburgh faints

m:ake painting
worth the effort.

ppnrsBiRGH

''PAIN T S

the
name
you can

build on

UT

Im WILLIAMS BROS.
^^^ Central Offices 934 Glenwood Avenue SE
^V Atlanta, Georgia 30316 (404) 627-8421

Moving Forward
With

ly)

UNITED
FEDERAL

SA\IN(.SMOA\
ASSOtlAIION

MAIN OFFICE: 945 Cherokee Road- Smyrna, GA 30080 436-2421

FOSTER

LB.FOSTER
COMPANY

p.r,<,

P.O. Box 47387
Doraville, Georgia 30362
Phone 404 448-4211

Conslruclion tqu.pa
Highway Products

mic

MARTIN W. MANN
Vice President

Mann Industrial Corporation

Phone: 404-934-8698 4761-M Hugh Howell Road
Tucker, Georgia 30084

CONSUmNGSINCE 1959

ANTHONY

ADVERTISING

INCORPORATED

SPECIALISTS IN

UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE

YEARBOOK AND HANDBOOK

ADVERTISING

A few pages of selected advertising will help defray soaring
printing costs. Student Publication Advisors and Publishers'
Representatives are welcome to call us for further information.
Our staff of professionals will work closely with you and your
publisher.

1517 LaVISTA road. NORTHEAST ATLANTA. GEORGIA30329

(404) 329-0016

JZJ

Woelpcr Tile Contractors

P.O. BOX 723352

ATLANTA, GA 30339

(404) 956-8953

GETTING THE BEST OF ANYTHING
MEANS KNOWING WHERE TO FIND IT!

^ decQtuf ^

Goujn & Bridal

We'll Help With All The
Details Personalizing Your
Wedding, Prom, Pageant or
Other Formal Affair.

373-4696

117 E COURT SQ DECATUR
(AT MARTA STATION)

SOUTHERN

CASH REGISTER CO

' Electronic Cash Registers
' Point of Sale Terminals

& Inventury Control

Systems

(404) 455-1930

5612 New Peachtree Rd.
Atlanta, Georgia 30341

Architects

BaileyAssociates

Hunt Tower
Gohesville
Georgia 30501
404 534 0612

Isfe

ORTHEAST ELECTRIC CO.

WARNER B. KEE

989 CONFEDERATE AVE. S.E.

ATLANTA. G A 30312

622-5301

QUALITY

CRAFTSMANSHIP

PRIDE

By The Professional Plumbers & Pipefitters
Local Union 72

HELPING by providing
HELPING by tiiunng tl

PLUMBERS & PIPEFITTERS LOCAL UNION 72

TOM PAYNE, Buiintn Manaqei

BOB COKER. Ager.1

CHARLIE COX, Agent

COMMERCIAL GRADING, INC.

DDQG

ED MANFRA

455-4591

CFS Continental

6814 Best Friend Road
Doraville, Georgia 30340
(404) 449-4444
800-282-5689

Food Servicers to the Nation

Ifyourbank

isntFitstf

you should

have second

thoughts.

FIRSTATIANTA

TOLSON, SIWPSON X ASSOCIATES

CONSULTING ENGINEERS. P.C.

2511 CARROLL AVENUE. N E.
ATLANTA. GEORGIA 3034>

404-451-7681

I CONDITIONING - ELECTRICAL - FIE PPOTECTION

-(EATING -' PLUMBING - POWER PLANTS

For conimunications
equipment, you don't
need to look any further.

Residential telephones

Business communications equipment, installation
and service.

Office systems and data communications.

Equipment from ttie best manufacturers.

Competitive prices; flexible financing and lease/
purctiase options

Excellent service and attractive maintenance plans.

loMlieBOial T anijihtn

800 251-6122

(Home i I line business phone sales)

800235-5273

(Muili line equipment sales/olfice
systems)

800 272-2355

(Business equipment service
under warranty or contract)

Southern Bell
Advanced Systems

DON JACKSON S

SPARTAN
LINCOLN MERCURY

SALES

SERVICE

BODY SHOP
PARTS

LEASING

DAILY RENTALS

USED

768-0601

J41i STEWART AVE

(BETWEEN CLEVELAND

t CENTRAL)

MALLORY & EVANS. INC.

MECHANICAL CONTBACTOBS - CNCINEEBS

DeKalb Teachers divisioi
Georgia Federal Credit Uni

1

on

lia

)33

Area Code 404
292 0717

646 KENTUCKY STREET

P O BOX 447

DECATUR. GA 3O03I

Atlanta Clarkston Lithor
452-8233 292-6868 482-A(

^^

WO Foster
|ra& Cooper

l.^^W GENERAL

mmmmM contractors

FOSTER & COOPER, INC.
4641 Stone Gate Industrial Blvd
P.O. Box 1148
Stone Mountain, Ga.
30086-1148

(404) 292-0080
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

Carl J. Roper, P.E.

Vice President
Business Development

r Trust
Company

Bank
will suit
youtoaT

if

UvnteFDiC

179 f

MECHANICAL SERVICES. INC.

COMMERCIAL ft INDUSTRIAL

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE ft INSTALLATION

PROCESS PIPING PLUMBING

464 HENRY FORD AVENUE

HAPEVILLE GEORGIA 30354

TEL 1404) 7660292

Distinctively Buckhead

Corporate Affairs Elesant Picnics

Wedding Receptions Cocktail Parties
Business Luncheons Buffets & Dinners

(404) 233 9002

%

THE T[J<EDcj / CATERING COMPAK^/

6ERTSON

PriCAL

abOratories, inc.

p. O. Box 4121
Atlanta, Georgia 30302

SALON
INTERNATIONAL

A FULL SERVICE BEAUTY SALON FOR

- MEN 4 WOMEN -

CUTS STYLING* PERMS. SHAMPOOS

MANICURES PEDICURES ETC ETC

292-7635

9 00
'0 00

5 00 TuE AED 4 FHi

4752 MEMORIAL DRIVE

SEaR NAliOS WISE
*UT0 STQOE

vv,

^

A.).S. SHOE WAREHOUSE
1190 Huff Road

(S Minuln liom tuckhrd
oil How4l MIU RomJI

355-1760

Tliinkof \()Lir Riairc \\ ith C&S

The Citizens and Southern
Banks in Georgia

NOfiTH

-^%^ hs.

'4

Oat

DECATUR TOOL
RENTAL

2852 NORTH DECATUR ROAD

DECATUR, GEORGIA 30033

(404)299-1234

13

A f=Jkif^Ct-tiLO ir^OUBTmCB COMfAr^v

James E. Boese

Accounting Manager

4950 South Royal Atlanta Drive

Tucker, Georgia 30084

Teleplione: (404) 939-6082

Jp

Atlanta's Leading Specialty Store For Women

PHIPPS PLAZA

3500 Peachtree Rd N E.

Atlanta, Georgia 30326

404-261-5465

Bresco

FOOCi SERVICE EUUiPMENT & SUPacES
LAKGE 'NVENTORY - IMMEDIATE OEUVERY

^'^J;^F>F')'J .:.'. .,">:-. Si,s3

?:'.:tS- r.'ii-'WASH'si j;r;r_,- ,,:> "i^

rl--~.f TABLES uLAiOAWt C- S^nS-:f

:0"UERC;*L SLATING BAR K LC'JN^E [5P"

- MICROWAVE OVENS REFRKSeSATORS

SLICERS - TOASTERS STLfJ* TABlJI^

CUTLERY SILVERWAHE flOO'-IS TABLES

STAINLESS STIEL S ALUMINUM JTEHSIIS

CUSTOM STAINLESS FABRICATION ANO V'"E

KC3ART - DELf lELD DLIKE

SOUTH BEND VULCA'I HAP' SCOTSMAN
SrtENANGO CHINA

UBBEV GLASS WLLRATH

SERVING THE ENTIRE
:i2 6" AV SO

stf-rii'.isii w Kima kign s KMODaiuG

252-0076

iJ- xof^iiionaL ^c

^.thituxtd

jVaiU

h

2>

aUi)

2275 Oak

Road

Suite D-2

Snellville. GA

979-4995

What can |
Marsh & McLennan I
doabont your risks?;

Protect

yon from! ,i"':,m"I'^!!;'""
them J -'' -^

mm^) LTD

'225 North McDonough Street
Decatur, Georgia 30030
404 tel: 373-3337

Diaanostic ^^^ESIS WOMEN'S DIAGNOSTIC CENTER
Center ^^''^ Barfield Road, Suite 200, Atlanta, Ga. 30328

2

For
Women

[Nl^SIS

'^^^:<^mi^-'\;:-%s

1^'^

Our Center is dedicated to women's special needs m breast health care and
early diagnosis of breast disease.

Our services include:

Breast Physical Examination

Instruction for Breast Self-Examination

Diaphanography

Mammography

Ultrasound. Breast, Obstetrical/Gynecological and
Abdominal Evaluations

We are pleased to be of service If you have any questions, please call -
(404) 843-0200.

ULTON OUPPLY I^OMPANY

P O BOX 4028
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30302

m

.>^^ J Bmaj^iM^

WQ^M&m^Q^

3097 Piedmont Road, NE Atlanta, Georgia 5U3U5

4M231-5UUU

SALES - LEASING - SERVICE

R. W. DOWNS PLUMBING, INC.

Repairs Remodeling New Installations
Commercial Residential

BOBBY DOWNS

PRESIDENT

(404) 299.3100

AMERICAN

STANDARD PLUMBING FIXTURES

SHARIAN

INC.

Oriental

40-1-37J

Rugs

-2274

Decatur

CA

Rug A

nd Carp

t Cleaning

JOIN THE FRESH FOOD
LUNCH BUNCH.

Morrisons believes you deserve something
better than the same old factory-tasting fast
tood At lunch time, were ready to serve you a
delicious home-tresh meal, with an exciting
variety of over 1 00 dishes including crisp
salads and oven<rusly breads All at
brown bag lunch prices, too'

10 LOCATIONS IN ATLANTA

Sanring vvary 6ar ot in* r** "O"' t * <

LABORERS
INTERNATIONAL
UNION of North America

S^ Baranco
ImfPontiac

4299 COVINGTON HWY , P O BOX 36237
DECATUR. GEORGIA 30032

(MC) McKenney's

^^^^ ^ Mechanical Contractors

1056 Moreland Industrial Boulevard

Atlanta. Georgia 30316-3296

(404)622-5983

CONTRACTOR

Commercial & Industrial

Plumbing Heating Ventflating Ajr Condiboning

Ejierg> Management Service

FLAVaRICH

'Freshness From Our Family to Yours"

We Deliver
Cruises Amtrak Airline Tickets

THE DECATUR TRAVEL AGENCY. INC.

160 Clairmont Avenue Suite 190
Decatur, Georgia 30031

(404) 373-9493

KAY EUTON
363-0514

K.B. DRUMMERS, INC.

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

P.O. BOX 465
STATE FARMERS MARKET FOREST Park. GA 30051

Garlon Hunt

404 378-1170

Pager: 894-9191

HUNT'S

WRECKER SERVICE

TOW ANYWHERE

2748 East College Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030

Lamar Hunt

HAR"

'iaii uo., One. 11

RACE TRACK ROAD

post office box 756
Mcdonough Georgia 30253

SPECIALIZING IN
CONTRACT GLASS AND GLAZING

(404) 957-2914

2964 peociitree rood, n.w iutte600 atlonta, georgia 30303

(404) 237^725

ta

Carlos E. Taylor, Jr., A.IA

Taylor
Anderson

architects
Inc

AROUNDTHECORNER

PRIN TING Ji^ TYPESETTING

We are "AROUND THE CORNER"

for all your printing services.

FREDDY DODD 3845 N. DRUID HILLS ROAD

Phone: (404) 6331814 DECATUR, GA. 30033

lOAKTREE PLAZA AT \ DEKALB MALLI

Mordn

Davis

& Company

Certtfled Public Accourvontj, Membet? Amertcon Insiirure o* Csfrifted Public Aaouvonfi

567 LoDoono Drive. Decorur. Georgia 00032 (404) 299-1900

^^HB^^ INCOHPOfiATEO

Commercial Printing Publications
Computer Services

Established 1900

(404) 267-2596
Met. Atlanta 523-2264

Monroe, Georgia 30655

LEMONADE

534 PERMALUME PLACE N.W.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30318

-^

VIILLrtGe H^IR

1540 N Decatur Rd
Atlanta GA 30307
Emory Village

Unisex Styling For Men & Women
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

GLADNEY & HEMRICK, P.C.

CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

ATLANTA

2250 N DRUID HILLS ROAD, IM^ SUITE 228
ATLANTA GEORGIA 30029

RALPH H. BIRDSONG& ASSOCIATES

MARTIN & JONES PRODUCE CO.,

Ga State Market Building E

Units 8. 9 & 10
FOREST PARK, GA. 30050

INC.

A. C. S. Inc.

PROFESSIONALS IN HEATING h AIR CONDITIONING
SALES AND SERVICE

377 8976

710 HILLMONT AVt

DECATUR GEORGIA 3003 1

JOE H PINSON

PRKaiDENT

KEN ANDERSON-Owner

Doug Blac1<

Manager

iriXi^^'^

261-9806

PIEOMONT

AT
UNmtCRfill

GLENN'S

ONE HOUR

CUSTOM DRY CLEANERS

GLENN BAflNETT - OWNER

608 CHURCH STREET
DECATUR GA 30030

3321 LENOX RD. NORTHSIDE PARKWAY
AT WEST PACES FERRY RD

(404) 378 7565

SPENCER'S TIRE COMPANY

?6M EAST COLLEGE AVENUE
DECATUR GA 30030

BEN SPENCER

JIMMY DEARING

Conapliments
of

JOHNSON & HIGGINS

17th Floor Trust Company of Georgia Tower

25 Park Place. N E -P O Box I I I I

ATLANTA. Ga 3037 I

^, ^i?\

^i

i

f JILL'S _

^

^

3308 Memorial Or Phone 289-0888

Oecoiur, Georgia 30032

5706 Memorial Dr Phone 292-8446

Sione Mountain Georgia 30083

Sensational
Subs

a meal on a ban

y

RICHARD PALTER

President
SENSATIONAL SUBS INC
5412 Buford Highway

Doraville Georgia 30340

(404) 457-1283

J.I. (SKEET) KAHANOW

355 3120

ZEP MANUFACTURING COMPANY

304 SYCAMORE STREET

DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030

EDITH N' BASSETT
EMMA L. RAY

TELEPHONE

373-9808

>)

GA WATS NO
OTHER STATES

800 282

aoo-24 1

406 1
6365

Ci

m5

\

TRU

-KUT,

Inc.

ROBERT T
PRESI

G

DE^

JNTE

"

1121 SPRING ST N W
ATLANTA. GA 30309
TEL 40* 873 4341

RANDALL AND LASETER

ARCHITECTS

150 EAST PONCE DE LEON AVENUE

POST OFFICE BOX 247

DECATUR. GEORGIA 30031-0247

(404) 377-7620

RoL-rt R. BucLer, D.D.S.

(404) 873-7474

B42 CHTTRCH 8TRKKT
DKCATUH. OA 30030

AMERICAN

^ ^ STANDARD PLUMBING FIXTURES
R. W. DOWNS PLUMBING. INC.

Repairs - Remodeling - New Installations

Commercial - Residential

Water Heater and Sewer Replacements

Free Estimates

(404) 299-3451

(404)296-2100

SUBURBAN STORAGE

MINI-WAREHOUSES

RUDY & ZELLA MATHES 2940 NORTH DECATUR ROAD

MANAGERS DECATUR. GEORGIA 30033

NEW AND USED RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

BUY SELL TRADE

SHORT TERM LEASING

w

Vick Wholesale. Inc.

BILLY VICK LARRY 'RED KLINGER

765 Traberl Ave , N W (Rear) Atlanla. Ga 30318 404/352-1523

fVescrip+ions

(JHcuiinmij s (^potnecMy One.

542 CHURCH STREET

DECATUR. GEORGIA 3030

PHONE 378 5408

I OtOTA Phone 299-0551

WILLETT TOYOTA, INC.

2650 North Decatur Rd
Decatur. GA 30033

DAVID SISK

Body Shop Manager

WANDA PILGRIM

}aT\

GARY E COTON

PRESIDENT

WORLD TRAVEL ADVISORS

6 EXECUTIVE PARK

SUITE 220

ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30329

4O4-32J370O
TELEX 80-4294

OFFICE

PHONE

377

6436

RABERNNASH COMPANY,

INC.

Specialists i

n Floor Covering

727 E

COLLEGE AVE 1

RUTH

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DECATUR. GA

3003 1

(crown)

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Station Ma

Crown Central
corporat

GA18

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225 C

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oniAL Dh
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355 7883

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350 Mead Rd.
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(404) 378-3453

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SUITE 203

1 25 TRINITY PLACE

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378-01 22

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116 N Avondale Road

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(404) 296-0285 30002

Consignment Shop-Women/Children Clothing

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by Bobbie U

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4756 BANTRY COURT

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506 East Howard Avenue
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121 Sycamore Street
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(404)371-8486

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17 North Avondale Plaza

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Spring Break

lose your eyes. You're lying
on your back with the HOT,
FLORIDA, sun beating down on
your stomach. The smell of sun
tan oil mixed with salt fills your
head. Nearby, twenty different
radios blare an equal number ;of
songs. Then you hear it the
crisp, clean snap of a beer can be-
ing opened not just any beer ei-
ther it has to be Budweiser!
Need I say more? Spring break
'86. Not everyone spent time on
the beach, however. Stories
Spring Quarter came from as far
away as Colorado, New Orleans,
Maryland, and even England. Do
we know how to have fun or
what? Now about that beer

Spring Fling

W,

hat would

Spring quarter be with-
out Spring formal? This
year's formal took place
at Tower Place and was
truely a smashing suc-
cess. Capping kicked off

as Julie Blewer sported
a Burger King hat laced
with flowers. The band
and the food were quite
memorable. Despite a
few minor setbacks a
good time was had by all.

m

Capping 1986

D.

ear Cappee,

Consider yourself contacted.
Now, to prove your loyalty to
your capper you must go to the
dining hall and 12:00 on Friday,
get on top of a table and break
dance to "Home Grown
Tomatoes".
Love,
TC

Capping, the mystical jaunt
embarked upon every spring by
juniors. To the underclassmen it
remains, and justly so, a great
secret. They watch with amuse-
ment as juniors perform numer-
ous ridiculous tasks for a sadis-
tic senior known only as "TC".
This year there was much to ob-
serve. The talent show revealed
many new starlets who ex-
pounded upon subjects such as
the joys of Alabama cow tip-
ping, the Muppets do the Car-
bon Cycle, and ASC's own ver-
sion of Rambo. Spots visited by

the infamous bus included a
construction site (with the ex-
quisite Dunk & Dine, or Dive as
my cappees insisted), and nu-
merous fraternities at Emory
and Georgia Tech. The capping
committee was relieved to re-
port that, with the temporary
exception of one confused se-
nior, there were no casualties
this year.

There is, however, another
side to capping cloaked be-
hind years of traditions, burn-
ing candles and black robes.
And it is here, in this facet, that
the true meaning of capping can
be located. During that brief
ceremony the weight of leader-
ship and responsibility is shift-
ed from the shoulders of the
fading seniors to those of the
young rising seniors. As Elijah
passed his mantle of Elisha, so
the seniors of 1986 passed their
mantle to the seniors of 1987.

M

Graduation

A.

>nd so it ends and the circle is complete. The
caps and gowns lay scattered like fall leaves
around the lobby of Inman. And what lies ahead?
The world. There are no limitations Agnes Scott
taught that. Families, higher degrees, careers.
Some will walk among kings and statesman, some
among paupers and patients, and some among
children.

Only time will reveal the outcome of the incredi-
ble potential unleashed upon the world when this
class graduated. And what is left? Hopefully a sol-
id legacy of the wisdom to honor the past without
limiting the future. A legacy rich with memories,
and solid ideals to stand on. Margaret Lee Rubeck
wrote: "A man (woman) leaves all kinds of foot-
prints when he walks through life. Some you can
see, like his children and his house. Others are
invisible, like the prints he leaves across other
people's lives, the help he gives them and what he
has said his jokes, gossip that has hurt others,
encouragement. A man doesn't think about it, but
everywhere he passes, he leaves some kind of
mark. All these marks added together are what a
man means."

I hope we left good marks.

^

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When Bad Things
Happen

I

.n the Rome and Vienna In-
ternational Airports, a few
days after Christmas tourists
were gunned down by terror-
ists as they waited for depart-
ing flights. Dallas, August 2,
1985 a Delta airliner crashed
moments before landing, killing
147. Ten days later Japan, in
the worst crash in aviation his-
tory 520 people die. Meanwhile
in Beruit the death toll contin-
ued to escalate as fighting be-
tween Druze, Christian and
Moslem militias went on. The
South African tragedy wors-
ened as peaceful protests
turned to violent blood baths
against Botha and his racist
apartheid policies. Earth-
quakes killed thousands and
trapped others for days in the
rubble in Mexico City. And last-
ly, in late October, the aging
movie star Rock Hudson fell

prey to the disease that is fast
becomming the "black plague"
of the 80's AIDS, as Yul Bren-
ner died of cancer.

What legacy are we leaving
for our children?

"Turning and turning in the

widening gyre

The falcon can not hear the

falconer;

Things fall apart; the center can

not hold;

Mere anarchy is loosed upon

the world.

The blood-dimmed tide is

loosed, and everywhere

The ceremony of innocence is

drowned;

The best lack all conviction,

while the worst

Are full of passionate

intensity."

William Butler Yeats,

The Second Camming.

Mm

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r

A Farewell To Heros

n January 28, 1986, a fuel rocket
malfunctioned on the Space Shuttle
Challenger, resulting in it's explosion
and the deaths of all seven crew mem-
bers. Dead are: Michael Smith, Pilot;
Francis Scobee, Commanding Officer;
Ronald McNair, Mission Specialist; Elli-
son Onizuka, Mission Specialist;
Christa McAuliffe, Civilian Observer;
Gregory Jarvis, Mission Specialist; and
Judith Resnik, Mission Specialist. The
Silhouette extends its' deepest sympa-
thy to the survivors of these
individuals.

Christa McAuliffe could have been an
Agnes Scott Alumn. She was a bright,
enthusiastic teacher and mother of two.
Maybe that's why it hurt so much when
she died. So often we watch the trage-
dies which unfold before us on the tele-
vision daily, and we can distance our-
selves because those involved don't
look like us, or have less than we do, or
don't believe the same things, or don't
act in similar ways. But on January 28

when the Space Shuttle exploded short-
ly after takeoff, it was this woman's
death that impacted most of us. The ex-
plosion which took seven lives that day
sent shock waves all the way back to
the living rooms of America, and yes,
even into the rarely disturbed halls of
Agnes Scott.

What can be gained from this tragic
event? On a personal level that is a
question each one must answer for him/
herself. The larger application could be
that all new experiences involve risk of
one kind of another. If the human race is
to continue to grow and move ahead
then there will be similar risks to be
faced. It will take men and women like
the Challenger's crew to push forward
and take the risk no matter the per-
sonal cost. Astronaut Ronald McNair
summarized it best, "You can only be-
come a winner if you are willing to walk
over the edge."l

ITime, February 10, 1986, 127:20-26.

m^^^m

From Despair To Hope
T

J. here were moments in the past year when hope
overcame despair. Two scientists, Dr. Yevegency
Chazpy, a Russian, and Dr. Brenard Lown, an American
received the Nobel Peace Prize for founding the Interna-
tional Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear War. During
a news conference, the two worked together to save the
life of a journalist who collapsed due to heart failure.
Gorbechoff and Reagan had the first of what is hoped
will be many successful meetings to heal ties between
the two countries. Rock stars like Bruce Springstein
banned together to fight hunger in Africa and assist the
plight of the American farmer. Agnes Scott students par-
ticipated in the Hands across America campaign which
was also for the troubled farm land. President Reagan
triumphed against cancer. Lastly, Haley's comet made its
pass through our portion of the universe, reminding us of
the finite nature of the problems that concern us so often.
By the time it makes its pass by again there will be new
griefs, and always new reasons to hope.

Fighting
Back

JL/ver since injustice entered
the world there have been people
who have stood up against it
Christ, Martin Luther King Jr.,
Gandhi, Abraham Lincoln. And in
this time when, despite all our de-
nials to the contrary, injustice still
stalks the world like a hungry
wolf, there have been people who
have stood up for what they be-
lieved was right. Winnie Mandela,
the wife of South Africa's anti-
aparthied leader Nelson Mandela
is one such. Since her husband's
imprisonment in 1964, she has
continued to lead the battle
against aparthied in his place. In-
justice was also thwarted when
the Italian authorities refused to
stop the terrorists responsible for
the Akilli-Laurro hyjacking.
American fighter jets intercepted
the plane carrying the hyjackers
to freedom and forced a landing.
They now await trial for their ac-
tions. Fighting terrorists was a
theme that ran strong throughout
this year. Reagan vowed revenge
on any country that assisted in
terrorist activities. This was test-
ed when evidence linked Lybia to
the bombing of a German disco
where one American soldier died.
In April, American jets attacked
several Lybian targets. As for this
last incident, only time will tell
where the true injustice existed.

T,

his year had its share of winners. President
Reagan triumphed over cancer. Corazon Aquino
proved her mettle when she rose above the sham-
bles of post Marcos-Phillipines and assumed the
role her assasinated husband would have taken
The presidency. Ted Turner, despite losing a hos-
tile take over bid for CBS, did manage to purchase
MGM and to sponsor the Good Will Games with
Russia. Meanwhile Pete Rose battled his way to
history by breaking Ty Cobb's hitting record.
Lastly, this years winners could not be mentioned
without a tribute to Bishop Desmond Tutu. In this
year he received the Nobel Peace Prize for his
support of peaceful resistance to apartheid in his
country.

V ^

'" ItfJl^JLMlJlMM

Laura Smith Photography Editor and copy writer; Pilar
Duque Photographer

Shari Ramcharan Class Section Editor; Beth Webb Open-
ing Section Editor

The Silhouette Staff: Laura Smith, Beth Webb, Pilar Duque, Debbie Davis, Julie O'Kelley, and Shari Ramcharan

ILf-

The Silhouette 1986

Debbie Davis, Editor 1986

In any project of worth there is a mixture of
satisfaction and frustration; the yearbook is no
exception. As editor, I have attempted to incorpo-
rate creative design with news of interest to Ag-
nes Scott. I believe the purpose of the yearbook is
to capture a year of history and preserve it. In
designing the book I sought to capture the con-
trasts of Agnes Scott its blend of tradition and
dynamics, I hope that each page is a vivid memory
of 1986 at A.S.C.

Throughout the year there were a few people
who deserved special recognition for their contri-
butions to this book. I would like to express my
appreciation to Shari Ramcharan for her consis-
tent commitment, to Julie O'Kelley for managing
the financial matters with much expertise during
a year of transition, to Mr. John Hancock who is
responsible for all class photos, as well as, most
candid shots contained in the book, and the stu-
dent body at A.S.C. for their patience.

I have attempted to preserve an entire year
from fall to spring. I trust it was worth the wait.

fyMfU ^DjuuO

.ost of us remember hii
old gentleman who ate lunch
hall every Sunday afternoon,
who knew him. Dr. McNair w
teacher who demanded nothir
the best from his students. M(
former student, recalled how
grade papers containing typog
errors. His oratory prowess w
known and respected. He cou
crowd to submission, or to thei
over a subject such as academ
blessed Agnes Scott with man
faithful service as a dedicate
will be missed. Now it is time
follow the advise he himself u
hold close Lest we forget
forget

f 2.

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