^^m^m
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/silhouette19919288agne
RIGHT Here & RIGHT Now
Silhouette
RIGHT Here & RIGHT Now -
the Silhouette has arrived in your (hopefully
eager) hands after far too many delays and
misadventures. This Is a compilation issue
covering two academic years. As such, this
edition is the product of two distinctly differ-
ent editors - and staffs - and represents a
medley of their ideas and concepts.
Margaret Hammond ('91 Editor) contributed
the colorful retrospective view of the world
outside ASC in mini-mag form (pages 49-
72). Katie Tanner ('92 Editor) had the energy
to persevere with production in spite of the
odds. So ...
^fua^me t^ ^i^^enetee . . .
if you will, that a creative, intelligent mind
can contribute to the production of your
yearbook ... or to the service of any number
of organizations here at Agnes Scott.
Become involved!
RIGHT Here & RIGHT Now
the Silhouette is setting a new course.
With this "compilation" edition, we aspire to
close the door once and for all on books
produced and delivered after the fact - often
with a loss of detail.
If portions of this book are found lacking in
material, thoroughness or description, please
you might have made by being an active
participant on the Silhouette staff.
RIGHT Here & RIGHT Now
we present the 1991 -1992 Silhouette.
HEREy^
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Pamela Wolf Allen
DoRAViLLE. Georgia
Jerri Delores Lori Ammons
Mableton, Georgia
Annmarie Anderson
Clarksville, Georgia
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Linda Wertz Anderson
Lawrenceville, Georgia
MicHELE Anne Barard
New Orleans, Louisiana
Stephanie Yvonne Bardis
Decatur, Georgia
Ashley Catherine Barnes
Atlanta, Georgia
Beth Ann Blaney
Raleigh, North Carolina
Julia Ella Booth
Zebulon, Georgia
Katrina Ann Brewer
Atlanta, Georgia
Jennifer Marie Bridges
Decatur, Georgia-
Ashley Beth Carter
Atlanta, Georgia
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Cara MaryJo Cassell
Atlanta, Georgia
KiMBERLY Anderson Chastain
Tucker, Georgia
April Marie Cornish
Decatur, Georgia
Susan Kimberly Cowan
Macon, Georgia
Catherine Lee Craddock
Athens, Georgia
Davina Alane Crawford
Covington, Georgia
mc
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Kathryn Elisabeth Cullinan
Columbia, South Carolina
Allison Kirke Davis
Atlanta, Georgia
Sara Christine Dickert
KiNGSPORT, Tennessee
Denice Lynne Dresser
Bent Mountain, Virginia
Carol Dianne Duke
Atlanta, Georgia
Melissa Anne Elebash
Pensacola, Florida
.
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Christian Victoria Ford
Columbus, Georgia
Valerie Claudia Fuller
Hayesville, Georgia
Elizabeth Ann Gardina
Atlanta, Georgia
Regina Greco
Atlanta, Georgia
Bettina Magdalena Gyr
Houston, Texas
Sharon Elizabeth Harp
Lakeland, Florida
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Anne Francoise Harris
Charlotte, North Carolina
Elizabeth Nicole Harrison
Scottsville, Kentucky
Debra Leigh Harvey
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Lana Rare Hawkins
Lake City, Florida
Holly Joye Henderson
Pavo, Georgia
Christia Elaine Holloway
Marietta, Georgia
imimmi
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Joy Elizabeth Howard
St. Mary's, Georgia
Alyssa Lynne Hurd
Alpharetta, Georgia
Sakina Masuma Husein
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Margaret Ellen Innes
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Kristy Lyn Jay
Macon, Georgia
Betty Karen Johnson
Columbia, South Carolina
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Heather Jill Kelley
Lakeland, Florida
Janet Lynn Kidd
Elberton, Georgia
Joan Sanford Kimble
Decatur, Georgia
Carole Sue King
Atlanta, Georgia
Julie Elizabeth King
Athens, Georgia
Kimberly King Kizirian
Tallahassee, Florida
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Velma Julia Lanford
Atlanta, Georgia
Christina Marie Lewandowski
Atlanta, Georgia
Yvonne Grant Lindsey
Atlanta, Georgia
Jin Liu
Shanghai, Ppls. Rep. of China
Alicia Glenn Long
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Wendy Lyn MacLean
Orlando, Florida
IS
Mary Cecelia Mathewes '
/It. Pleasant, South Carolina
Jean Odette McDowell
Decatur, Georgia
Sarah Ann McMillan
Savannah, Georgia
Lauren Russell Miller
Athens, Georgia
Melanie Cassandra Mortimer
DuNwooDY, Georgia
Cynthia Marie Mossman
Lexington, Kentucky
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Margaret Estelle Murdock
GuLFPORT, Mississippi
Daphne Michelle Norton
CoNYERS, Georgia
Stephanie Margaret Pfeifer
Dacula, Georgia
Geraldine Elaine Pike
Columbia, South Carolina
Jennifer Miriam Pilcher
Augusta, Georgia
Cathy June Pitney
McDonough, Georgia
*****^
Shannon Lane Price
Decatur, Alabama
Jennifer Nell Prodgers
Atlanta, Georgia
LeAnn Hall Ransbotham
Smyrna, Georgia
Michelle Virginia Roberts
Mobile, Alabama
Lessye Katherine Robinson
Decatur, Georgia
Vivian Emelina Sakir
Decatur, Georgia
Jennifer Carole Seebode
Roanoke, Texas
13
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Elizabeth Anne Seward
Augusta, Georgia
Tamera Lynn Shirley
Clarkesville, Georgia
Natasha Darshan Singh
New Delhi, India
Erika Vedra Stamper
Jacksonville, Florida
Lydia Leigh Stanford
Clayton, Georgia
Mary Alice Smith
Martinez, Georgia
Stephanie Dale Strickland
RoswELL, Georgia
Suzanne Frances Sturdivant
Raleigh, North Carolina
DiERDRE DiONNE StURGIS
Augusta, Georgia
Sarah Katherine Tarpley
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Christine Beth Tibbetts
Decatur, Georgia
Stephanie Ruth Wallace
Marietta, Georgia
Allyson Holt Whitley
Burlington, North Carolina
Candace Alicia Woodard
Pensacola, Florida
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Andrea Carol Abrams
Decatur, Georgia
Anjail R. Ahmad
Decatur, Georgia
Frances Elizabeth Akins
Winterville, Georgia
Courtney Elizabeth Alison
Bush, Louisiana
Eve Champion Allen
Augusta, Georgia
Kerri Diane Allen
Columbus, Georgia
Lisa Kirsten Anderson
Brandon, Mississippi
Laura Elizabeth Andrews
Winter Haven, Florida
Helene Elizabeth Barrus
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Elizabeth Lyon Bass
Columbia, South Carolina
Anne Elizabeth Beardon
Atlj\nta, Georgia
Teresa Ann Beckham
Raleigh, North Carolina
Meredith Leigh Bennett
Newberry, South Carolina
SiDRA Irene Bennett
Cedar Park, Texas
Ruth Sandra Blackwood
Orange, Connecticut
Rebecca Barry Boone
Wilton, Connecticut
Carol Louise Braswell
Montgomery, Alabama
Bernadette Teresa Brennan
Stone Mountain, Georgia
17
zzs
Amy Katherine Bridwell
Inadialantic, Florida
Jennifer Melinda Bruce
AcwoRTH, Georgia
Jessica Charlotte Carey
Decatur, Georgia
Juliet Antonia Carney
Tallahassee, Florida
Beth Anne Christian
KiNGSPORT, Tennessee
Brooke Marie Colvard
Piedmont, Alabama
Caroline Regan Cone
Frankfort, Kentucky
*5iL-,#iij>i-.
CouLEEN Clare Cordis
Beaumont, Texas
Michelle Lee Cox
West Columbia, South Carolina
KiMBERLY Grace Creagh
Marietta, Georgia
Jenessa Huntingdon DeFrees
Atlanta, Georgia
Paula Noelle Dixon
Valdosta, Georgia
Staci Anne Dixon
Macon, Georgia
Cindy Renee Dunn
Williamson, Georgia
Vanessa Lynn Elliott
RoswELL, Georgia
NiTA Afroza Faruque
Atlanta, Georgia
Jeanette Marie Elias
Houston, Texas
Rhina Maria Fernandes
Kabwe, Zambia
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Barbara Noelle Fleming
Arlington, Virginia
Christy Elizabeth Foreman
Marietta, Georgia
Laurie Ann Fowler
Peachtree City, Georgia
>
Elizabeth Alexander Fraser
Decatur, Georgia
Rita Diane Ganey
Eagle Lake, Florida
Anna Ruth Gladin
East Ellijay, Georgia
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Shannon Williams Grace
Panama City, Florida
Elissa Anne Gydish
Orange Park, Florida
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Margaret Ann Hammond
Gadsden, Alabama
Mary Ann Hickman
Etowah, Tennessee
Anne Marie Haddock
Albany, Georgia
Ginger L. Hicks
Decatur, Georgia
mmc
Amy Buice Higgins
Cornelia, Georgia
" '^
KiMBERLY Dee Hinder
Wauchula, Florida
Kristin Houchins
Stockbridge, Georgia
Christine Annette Jackson
Carrollton, Georgia
Janet Elizabeth Johnson
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Pamela Jean Kellner
Stone Mountain, Georgia
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Sara Talin Keyfer
Atlanta, Georgia
Laura Noel Khare
Columbia, South Carolina
Sarah Loyce Kimble
LiTHONiA, Georgia
Amanda Elizabeth King
Jacksonville, Florida
Donna S. Kimball
Atlanta, Georgia
Julianne Elaine Kite
Knoxville, Tennessee
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Kristin Liane Lemmerman
Lancaster, California
Sarah Ruth Lightfoot
KiNGSPORT, Tennessee
Sarah Anne MacMillan
Tallahassee, Florida
LocKEY Allen McDonald
Decatur, Georgia
Sandee Kay McGlaun
Gainesville, Georgia
Karen Anne McNay
Decatur, Georgia
aaEBEC
Susan Lyn McTier
St. Simons Island, Georgia
Lee Butler McWaters
Decatur, Georgia
Eva Maria Mihlic
Novi Sad, Yugoslavia
Angela Nicole Miller
Pensacola, Florida
EULALIE DrURY MeLLEN
Tucker, Georgia
Claudia Christine Miller
Lebanon, Georgia
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Cathleen Genevieve Monturo
LiLBURN, Georgia
Elizabeth Ann Morgan
milledgeville, georgia
Ami Nagao
Alpharetta, Georgia
Cynthia Anne Neal
Abington, Virginia
Catlin Yvette Olsen
Pensacola, Florida
Donna Louise Perkins
Yatesville, Georgia
Emily Winnette Perry
CoNYERS, Georgia
Carolyn Paige Priester
Jacksonville, Florida
Mary Elizabeth Quinley
Williamsburg, Virginia
Stephanie Jon Richards
Glyndon, Minnesota
Lisa Ann Rogers
Baltimore, Maryland
Kara M. Russell
BuFORD, Georgia
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Laura Elise Shaeffer
Marietta, Georgia
Christie Sinhee Shin
Decatur, Georgia
Mary Elizabeth Simmons
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Dawn Michelle Sloan
Gallatin, Tennessee
Faith St. Michael
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Barbara Grace Stitt
Chattanooga, Tennessee
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Barbara Bailey Swann
Clarkston, Georgia
Jennifer Gail Trumbull
Nashville, Tennessee
AsAKO Taniyama
Alpharetta, Georgia
Allison Paige Theisen
Stone Mountain, Georgia
Amy Lynn Tyler
West Point, Georgia
Barbara Anne Van Campen
Rekem, Belgium
Annetta Leora Williams
DuNwooDY, Georgia
Laraine Beth Williams
McDoNOUGH, Georgia
Mary Elizabeth Williams
ToccoA, Georgia
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Susan Adams
Elena Adan
Cathy Alexander
Wendy Allsbrook
Laura Barlament
Kelli Barnett
Layli Bashir
Julie Bragg
Laura Camp
Sarah Carruthers
Ellen Chilcutt
Madeline Cohn
Crystal Couch
Kristin Counts
Karen Cox
Anna Crotts
Michelle Diaz
Sara DiGiusto
Sarah Fisher
Jennifer Garlen
eizJA 4 '93 \ 31
Lauren Granade
Aimee Griffin
Cari Haack
Betty Hammond
Ginger Hartley
Stephanie Hawes
Stacey Honea
Elizabetln Isaacs
Meredith Jolly
Wendy Jones
Many Frances Kerr
Akiko Kizaki
32 } ^leu^ o^ '93
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Robin Lane
Mary Curtis Lanford
Lisa Lanl<shear
Jennifer Lard
Cara Lawson
Claire Lemme
Amber IVIartin
Micineile Martin
Debbie Miles
Andra Moore
Helen Nash
Brooke Parish
e&j^ 4 '93 \ 33
Tracy Peavy
Jeanne Peters
Allison Petty
Ella S J. Porter
Carrie Powell
Shannon Ramker
Cathy Rouse
Misty Sanner
Barbara Scalf
Chen Song
Fotini Soublis
Liz Strickland
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Shakina Swift
Katie Tanner
Nil<i Twilla
April Van Mansfield
Chrissie Van Sant
Alexandra Wack
Jen Waddell
Helyn Wallace
Deborah Watters
Angela Weaver
Tina Wells
Alaina Williams
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Karyn Adams
Leila alHusaini
Janelle Bailey
Maria Baiais
Ashley Banks
Beth Barnes
Tracy Barnes
Darby Beach
Bethany Blankenship
Raquel Bordas
Britt Brewton
Alyson Bunnell
Emily Callahan
Sarah Cardwell
Tracy Casteel
Melanie Clarkson
Ju''e Colley
Leigh Gopeiand
Marina Cosiarides
Perrin Cothran
36 / (^laaa. o^ '94
Elizabeth Franklin
Kathy Gilmore
Tiffany Goodman
Tara Greene
English Hairrell
Gharmain Hankins
Courtney Harris
Willa Hendrickson
Debbie Herron
Elizabeth Hertz
Kathleen Hill
Josie Hoilman
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Staci Holsomback
Emily Hornak
Laura Home
Kaki Horton
Betsy Horton
Beth Hunt
Kim Johnson
Mary Jordan
Claire Laye
Stephanie Lynn
Marianna Markwalter
Sharon Martyr
o^ '94 \ 39
SHS
Laura Rice
Kelley Rogers
Jessica Roosevelt
Sara Sabo
Kari Sager
Donna Scott
Tamara Shie
Julia Short
Amy Smith
Michelle Smith
Carole Sneed
Charlotte Stapleton
eioi^o^ '94
41
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Kim Sullivan
Kate Tittle
Helen Tucker
Christine Wade
Kim Walker
Lara Webb
Nikki Webb
Laura Wells
Stacia Wells
Christy Wilson
Nancy Zehl
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jmu
Tammy Bain
Christy Beal
Ciiarla Bland
Judy Bowers
Cara Carter
Elizabeth Cherry
Carrie Clemence
Laura Collins
Nadine Curry
Emily Davis
Ann DeLoach
Emily Dembeck
Holly DeMuth
Angie Dorn
Annette Dumford
Kathryn Durkee
Daniela Edelkind
Laura Edwards
Melanie Effler
Joy Farist
Ci<iuiA<4 '95
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Gretchen Fouchecourt
Nicole Gosnell
Amy Green
Tina Gurley
Deirdra Harris
Amanda Heins
Daka Hermon
Laura Hinte
Kelly Holton
Jenrvfcr Jenkins
Yiofik-j jirnenez
Eryn Livingston
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Shannon Lord
Liza Mann
Kavitha Mathew
Cathy May
Angela McNeal
Charmaine Minniefield
Kerry Murphy
Wendy Parker
Kim Plafcan
Stephanie Price
Cheryl Reid
Wendy Riviere
WW
Sonya Saskin
Ashley Seaman
Lisa Sebotnick
Dana Shea
Jennifer Sherrouse
DeeDee Smart
Jennifer Smith
Mary Snyder
Jennie Sparrow
Julie Stinson
Emiiy Stone
Katl-iieen Stromberg
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Margo Thompson
Ayn Van Syke
Tracy Walker
Cynara Webb
LaToya Williams
Holly Williamson
Kim Wright
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A look
at the
lATorld
b^ond
Agnes
Scott
1990-98
r" "^""^
)
U.S. Troops
leave for
Middle East
As of mid-October (1990),
more than 200,000 U.S.
troops had been deployed
to Saudi Arabia, Pentagon
soTXPces said. They were prepar-
ing to defend the desert kingdom
from a possible Iraqi attack.
Iraq had about 430,000 men in
Kuwait and southern Iraq, ac-
cording to the Pentagon.
U.S. soldiers were flown in on
commercial jetliners to meet up
with their roughly 300 Mi-
Abrams tanks and other equip-
ment which was shipped from
their bases several weeks prior.
dswr/wc^
*7ftadc^tat
fit
The portrait of Saddam Hussein shows a man with a
strange duality: tough, yet fearful; inspiring fear in his
own people, yet also basking in a kind of populist
veneration from m.any of the region's Arabs.
Fear and terror surround
the Iraqi President, and . . .
analysts believe that this
^imate could be his undoing.
"^^1
The _. J one of a poor orphan who rose to
power thx&agl'j. opportunism ajid brutality, whose anti-
Western views were shaped in childhood, and who now
- commanding the world's fourth largest army - is
trying to deliver on his nationalist dreams.
^ty.
^^There's no doubt in my mind that
we'll succeed here if we have to,**
said Col. Barry Willey.
The U.S. Army's heaviest ground firepower reached
Saudi soil in August (1990) for deployment behind
Arab forces manning the front line in the standoff with
[raq.
Dozens of Ml-lP tanks and M2 Bradley armored
infantry fighting vehicles, and scores more heavy
support vehicles, rolled off two huge transport ships at
a port in northeastern Saudi Arabia and made their
way north into the desert.
"Bring them (the Iraqis) on," said a U.S. sergeant.
'We have the training and technology; they've got the
aimibers. We'U take them out."
U.S. Tanks
R JS a C H
'Pft "pocea-
Operation Welcome Home
Desert Storm Conunander
General H. Norman
Schwarzkopf gave a thumbs
up to the crowd as he made his
way up Broadway during New
York's Operation Welcome
Home ticker tape parade in
June 1991.
Schwarzkopf, General Colin
Powell and Defense Secretary
Dick Cheney were the grand
marshals of the New York
parade, with over 600,000
people turning out to welcome
the soldiers home. More than
1 million people attended
welcome home parade May 1 9
in Hollywood, and an estimated
800,000 turned out for the
parade in Washington.
"U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" the flag-
wa-ving crowd chanted during
a half -hour of nighttime fire-
works over the Bast River in
New York City. The $1 million
display was accompanied by
the New York Pops Orchestra.
A teary-eyed Korean War vet-
eran said, "These young boys
put their Uves on the line and
now they're getting their re-
ward."
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In the aftermath
Environmental
disaster
Kuwait Oil Well Fires
Firefighters were iinprepared for the sight they were
met with in Kuwait scores of oil wells sending
plumes of red and orange flames 30 yards into the air.
Oil lakes and soot blackened the sand.
Diirlng the seven-month Iraqi occupation of Kuwait,
more than 730 oil wells were damaged or set ablaze.
Firefighting crews have been able to extinguish 584
wells since the effort began in March 1991.
When the effort to combat the blazes began in
March, it took an average of four days to put out one
well fire. Now the teams are averaging 8.5 weUs each
day, according to OU Minister Hamous al-Rquba.
OU experts say that if the effort continues at the
same rate, the wells should be capped before the end of
the year, earUer than the projected date of March
1992.
The faster rate of progress has been attributed to
the increase in the number of firefighting companies,
the avaUabUity of needed equipment, the completion of
the water system and the growing experience of the
firefighters.
Teams from the United States, Canada, China, Iran,
Kuwait, Hiongary and France are all working together
to clean up this environmentaJ disaster.
Refugees
of war
About 2 million Iraqi
Kurds and other minori-
ties fled north in April
1991 when Kurdish rebels
in the north and Sluite
Muslim rebels in the south
faUed to oust President
Saddam Hussein in the
aftermath of the Persian
Gulf War. At least 6,700
of the Iraqi refugees died
fleeing to the Turkish
border.
The United States spent
about $443 million on the
Kurdish relief effort.
'Pft- "pOCMi.
^
Summit Agreements
Celebrating the fruits of their summit diplomacy, President Bush
and Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev shook hands and signed a
sheaf of agreements, including a conditional trade accord. During the
June (1990) summit, the leaders also embraced a preliminary deal to
cut long-range nuclear arms.
The two leaders also agreed to strive for an elusive agreement on
reduction of troops, tanks and other conventional weapons in Eiirope.
Elections in Romania
Vice-;:-:! Romanians voted May 20 (1990) in their first free elections
in 53 j-^^-s. Interim President Ion niescu won in a landslide victory, but
the Wrj optiosition candidates alleged nixmerous instances of election
fraud, jliesau had been heavily favored to win the presidency.
The main issi:.es of the camipaign included moving Romania's central-
ized sociahsi:. 3yst,em to a free-market economy and dismantling the
CoTTiTTTunist system.
Convoys of Soviet tajiks moved into Moscow^
less than two miles from the Kremlin. The
Communist hard-liners who ousted Gorbachev
sent the army's tanks rolling within a mile or
the Russian Parhament building.
I think what is
happening now
. . . represents an
event of momen-
tous importance,
not only for our
two countries but
for the world,"
- MikhaU S. Gorbachev
Jime 1990
As a former Gorbachev adviser spoke to the;.
crowds, denouncing the coup and demandin^t
that Gorbachev be allowed to address the*
Soviet people, hands were raised m applause, t
Freedom has come to the Soviet Union
A real coup...
Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and his family
fere placed under hoiise arrest in the Crimea on
August 19, 1991, as an eight-man emergency commit-
ee led by Vice President Gennady Yanayev took power
a a coup attempt in the Soviet Union.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin caUed on Russians to
esist the takeover, and resist they did. Constructing a
protective himian waU around Yeltsin's headquarters,
lis supporters demanded Gorbachev's return.
On Wednesday, as the Communist Party denounced
tie takeover, Yanayev and the other coup leaders fled
Moscow. Latvia and Estonia declared inomediate
independence from the Soviet Union.
Before dawn on Thursday, August 22, an Aeroflat jet
arrived at Vnukovo airport, Moscow, bringing home
Gorbachev and his entourage.
The coup had failed, and before the day was
through, aU coup leaders were arrested except for
Interior Minister Boris Pugo, who reportedly killed
himself.
Crowds of perplexed people wandered among the many Soviet tanks
parked behind the Red Square during the military coup hours.
issian President Boris Yeltsin waved the white-blue-and-red Russian
fColor flag from the Russian Federation building before a crowd of
out 1 00,000 jubUant supporters celebrating the end of the three-day
up attempt. Bodyguards held bulletproof shields in front of him.
In addition to telephone service being cut to all KGB buildings and
Gorbachev naming a new chief of the KGB, the statue of the founder
of the KGB was toppled whUe thousands of Muscovites watched.
'?(t "paCMA-
ous
Massive crowds turned out
for African National Congress
leader Nelson Mandela at every
stop on his six-week tour of
three continents. Mandela vis-
ited 1 4 nations in Europe, North
America, and Africa, achieving
his goals: urging foreign govern-
ments to maintain sanctions
against South Africa, raising
fiinds for the AUG and explain-
Ln.s: the goals of his movement.
^tc'pa,
Does
Mike Tyson
live near
here?
ff
The ANC says it aims to create
a non-racial democracy and to I
distribute the nation's wealth
more equally. Mandela, the
ANC's deputy president, has said
he favors a mixed economy, j
Nelson Mandela, one of the
world's most celebrated poUticali
prisoners, was freedby the South !
African government in Pebru^
ary after 27 years in prison. He
was serving a life sentence foiii
allegedly plotting sabota-ge toj
overthrow the white govmment.i
- Nelson Mandela,
dioring his visit tio
New York City
Ghamoorro
victory
Violeta Barrios de Chamorro,
publisher of Nicaragua's opposition
newspaper, led a 14-part coalition
to victory over Sandinista rule de-
spite political inexperience.
"The Nicaraguan people have
shown that they want to live in
democracy, in peace and in free-
dom," Mrs. Chamorro told more
than 1,000 cheering supporters at
her election headquarters on Feb-
ruary 26, 1990.
The general election was moni-
tored by more than 3,000 interna-
tional observers. They all pro-
nounced the voting free and fair
and the count clean.
Back In SOUTH AFRICA
President F.W. de Klerk, African
National Congress president Nelson
Mandela and Zulu Inkatha leader
Mangosuthu Buthelezi came together
in September 1991 when black and
white leaders gathered to sign a peace
pact in a bid to end faction fighting
that has claimed hundreds of lives in
South Africa.
The accord, which created groups
to investigate violent acts by police
and citizens, marked the first joint
agreement between the government
and the two main black movements.
It was also seen as an im.portant
test of whether the main political
groups can work together for reforms
to end white-minority rule.
The government and the ANC
reached a cease-fire in August 1990
and Mandela and Buthelezi agreed to
peace terms in January 1991. But in
both instances, the violence raged on.
At least 6,000 people have been
killed in the past six years.
^tt "pocui^
German
reimification
World leaders welcomed a united
Germany into the international
commiianity on October 3 (1990),
but concerns about the balance of
power tempered some European
enthusiasm..
"A new era is beginning for
Germany, for Europe and indeed,
we hope, for the world," Secretary
of State James A. Baker m declared
in New York.
In a message to governments
worldwide. Chancellor Helmut Kohl
pledged that Germany would never
again pose territorial claims that
marked Germany from its initial
unification in 1871 to its defeat and
division in World War n. "In the
futiire, only peace will emanate
from German soil," Kohl said.
His message came after Germany
held a nightlong nationwide celebra-
tion with fireworks and music.
The nation united at the stroke of
midnight when a giant German flag
was raised in front of the battle-
scarred Reichstag building in Berlin.
Kohl and other leaders joined in
singing the national anthem.
The unification came 1 1 months
after the Berlin Wall fell in a peace-
ful revolt that cast aside Commvmist
East German overlords.
ALL
6i
I want my wall back.
ff
- T-shirts in West Berlin,
in response to the deluge of shoppers
from the Eastern Bloc
Civil war in Yugoslavia
Both Croatia and Slovenia proclaimed radependence on June 25,
and within 24 hours, military tanks were rolling toward border
crossings and airports, attempting to secure the countty. The trade
of artillery fire began.
Strong ethnic and political divisions have existed in the country for
centuries, but the peaceful co-existence that has been maintained in
the region for decades has splintered.
More than 5,000 people have been killed since civil war began in
Yugoslavia, and the coimt is stiQ rising.
Get a piece of the Rock!
Stores across America and abroad are sell-
ing out of chunks of cement and rock?!?
Yes, it is true. People everywhere are buy-
ling pieces of the Wall. Novelty shops are not
ieven able to keep them in stock. The average
jseUing price is about fifteen doUars a "chunk."
! The only thing better than buying a piece of
jthe Wall is knocking off a chunk yourself!
% "Pacui, \ 59
Mideast peace talks
Smashing
a 43-year
taboo
Arabs and Israelis left Madrid,
Spain, with mixed feelings of frus-
tration and anticipation after an
intense foray into the realm of
peace. Israel and Syria were mired
in recriminations, but prom.ised to
m.eet again.
The talks smashed a 43-year
taboo on direct Israeli- Arab talks,
setting in motion a process of face-
to-face negotiations to resolve one
of the most intractable regional
conflicts in the world.
The United States and Soviet
Union sponsored the November
talks, and President Bush's assess-
ment was: "We have a long way to
go and interruptions wiU probably
occiir, but hopes are bright."
Syria refused an Israeli request
to establish direct contacts to
arrange the site for the next round
of talks, schediiled later in Novem-
ber, 1991.
Nonetheless, both agreed to meet
again if the United States comes
up with an acceptable location.
Officials on both sides said Washing-
ton or other sites in North America
were possible.
G-7 Economic
Sinninit
Leaders of the world's seven
largest industrial democracies
began arriving in London on July
14, 1991, for the July 15-17
economic summit fociising on aid
for the Soviet Union.
Mikhail Gorbachev made a two-
l''i'jr presentation to the leaders
oJ '.:.i United States, Britain,
Cai..'./v5., France, Germany, Italy
and J&p-u"- that closely followed
the S3-page l&tter he had sent to
each of tnein the week before.
By the close of the summit, the
Group of Seven had offered
Gorbachev technical assistance and
a special association with the
International Monetary Fund, but
not the enormous economic aid he
had sought.
Although financial aid was not
forthcoming, Ljubo Sire, director of
the Center for Research into Com-
munist Economies, said, "the very
fact that this m.eeting has taken
place has unproved the chances for
the Soviet Union to attract invest-
m.ent."
"It always makes a difference
when the powers that be in Western
countries become interested in the
fate of a country with which trade
is possible."
Terry Atiderson freed
Terry Anderson emerged on
December 4, 1991, from the dark
hole of 6 1/2 years of captivity in
Lebanon and was handed over to
U.S. officials, ending a brutal hos-
tage ordeal for both himself and the
[Jnited States.
Asked what had kept him going
tn captivity, Anderson, the chief
Middle East correspondent for The
l\5S0Ciated Press, said it was his
3ompanions, his faith and his
stubbornness.
"You just do what you have to
io," he said. "You wake up every
lay and summon up energy from
jomewhere, and you get through
he day, day after day after day."
Anderson, 44, the longest-held
ATestern hostage, came to personify
he long-running hostage ordeal.
You
just do
what
you
have
to do.
Asked if he had any last words for
his kidnappers, he rolled his eyes
and said: "Goodbye."
The freedom of Anderson marked
the end of a hostage saga that
haunted two American presidencies.
He was the 1 3th and last Ameri-
can captive freed since Shiite
extremists in 1 984 launched a
campaign of seizing foreigners in
Lebanon to drive out Western
influence which they claimed cor-
rupted the nation. Many of the
Americans were tortured and
beaten during their captivity, and
three died.
Terry Anderson is shown in
Wiesbaden, Germany, on December
5, 1991, with former hostages
Joseph Gicippio (left) and Alann
Steen (right).
Su^maiie c^a^t^^ ...
Souter becomes
105th Justice
David H. Souter, a mjld-inan-
nered, well-read and previously
little-known judge from Mew
Hampshipe, became history's
105th Supreme Court justice in
October (1990) after pledging to
"do equal right to the poor and to
the rich."
In a brief ceremony in the
crowded courtroom, Souter, 51,
was administered the judicial
oath of office by Chief Justice
William H. Rehnquist and aJmost
immediately got to work hearing
high court arguments with his
eight new colleagues.
Thurgood
Marshall
retires
Thurgood Marshall, the first
African- American member of the
Supreme Court, was less than a
week shy of his 83rd birthday
when he announced on Jiine 27,
1991, that he was retiring. His 24
years on the bench followed 23 of
fighting before that court and
others for the rights of the op-
pressed and forgotten.
He won 29 of the 32 cases he
arguel before the Supreme Court
while he ^^ras head of the NAACP
Legal Defense Fund and, later,
while he was the federal
government's solicitor general. No
victory was sweater, or more
earthshaking, than his 1954 coup
in Brown vs. Board of Education
4^
. . . the court
[is] at a
pivotal time in
its history.
ff
when the coiort ruled that racially
segregated schools were imconstitu-
tional.
Marshall, the great-grandson of a
slave, grew up in Baltimore and
graduated from Lincoln University
in Pennsylvania. He was refused
admission to the University of
Maryland Law School and attended
Howard University instead. He
traces his passion for civil rights to
his father, who was a country club
steward.
Marshall's pioneering civil rights
career helped reshape the racial
norms of the nation and earned hin
an exalted but iiltimately lonely
position on its highest court.
J
Sci^2ne0ie CJ^aiCe^t^^ ...
Clarence Thomas
"Only in America"
Forty-three year old Clarence
Thomas grew up poor, Black axid
Democratic in Pinpoint, Georgia, but
later switched parties and becamie a
controversial symibol of Black
conservatism.
"Only in America," Thomas said
after President Bush announced his
nomination as the second Black
justice on the Supreme Court.
Thomas will succeed Thurgood
Marshall who has retired.
Prior to Thomas's nomination to
the Supreme Coiirt, he served as an
assistant attorney general in Mis-
souri, a legislative assistant to Sen.
John Danforth (R-Mo.),
seven years as
chairman of the
Equal Employment
Opportunity Commls- )) IhlOUglh iS
Anita Hill
sion and a judge of the U.S. Circmt
Court of Appeals for the District of
Colinnbia.
In addition to the controversy of
Thomas's legal views, a charge of
sexual harassment was brought
against him by law professor Anita
HOI. Thomas vehemently denied
the allegations and said, "This is
Kafkaesque. Enough is enough."
After much debate over who was
right and who was wrong -
Clarence Thomas, Anita HUl, the
system itself - the United States
Senate voted to confirm hun.
On October 18, 1991, Clarence
Thomas became the
106th United States
Supreme Court
Justice.
"Find someone you can trust. . ."
Although Thomas was confirmed,
professor Hill insisted that by
letting her story be known she had
accomplished everything she set out
to do. "All that's happened has
made the general public much more
aware of sexual harassment than
ever before," said Hill.
She offered one piece of advice to
victim's of sexual harassment.
"Try to find somebody you caji
trust and teU them, " she said, "try
to find somebody who can help
make you feel that you are not at
fault. Find someone you can trust
because you can't take it an out on
yourself, you can't Internalize it."
Life has not been the same for
law professor Anita HUl since going
public with allegations that Supreme
Court Justice Clarence Thomas
sexually harassed her nearly a
decade ago.
HUl was valedictorian of her high
school in 1973 and went on to
Oklahoma State University as a
National Merit Scholar, graduating
in 1977 with a degree m Psychol-
ogy. From there she went to Yale
University to receive a law degree
in 1980.
Most friends and colleagues
described her the same way
honest, slacere and a principled
person.
^<* "pOCUi,
<ous
ounting the homeless
.7 xniMon spent
A legion of clipboard-toting coimters sought out
helters, subways and steam grates on March (1990)
n the broadest attempt ever to find out the extent of
Lomelessness since it became a national disgrace in the
,980s.
Some hom.eless didn't mind the government intru-
ion. "It shows that they're starting to recognize us as
Lumans and not the scimi of the earth, "said one young
aajQ of the streets.
Another homeless man said, "What are they going to
Lse the num.bers for anyway? To tell us there ain't no
Lomeless problem? I'm a living example that there is
, problem. We need jobs, not surveys."
The U.S. Census Bureau is spending $2.7 million to
taUy homeless Americans, but critics fear an
undercount will allow the government to justify cuts in
services.
The homeless now estimated to number 250,000
to 3 mUlion were asked their name, age, sex, race
and marital status.
As Washington, D.C.'s deputy mayor for economic
development said, the count is important because "only
when we know how many homeless there are can
improvements be made in the delivery of services."
Five TT.S. Presidents
open Reagan Library
Ronald Reagan threw open the doors of his presiden-
tial library on November 5, 1991, and invited the
public to judge his turn in the WMte House.
A military band played "HaU to the Chief" and the
crowd of 4,200 invited guests cheered as President
Bush and former Presidents Carter, Nixon and Ford
joined Reagan in the first gathering ever of five past or
current presidents.
The National Archives will operate the library at an
estimated $1.5 mOlion annual cost to teixpayers.
Flag Protection Act
The U.S. Senate rejected a
constitutional amendment against
flag burning on Jvme 26, 1990,
with critics arguing that it was
already dead and being debated
largely as ammunition for use
against them at election time.
The Senate voted 58-42 in
favor, leaving it nine short of the
required two thirds majority
needed to approve amendments.
President Bush called for
approval of the measure, which
said simply that "Congress and
the states shall have power to
prohibit the physical desecration
of the flag of the United States."
But the House rejected it with
Democratic leaders sa3nng that it
amounted to placing limits on
freedom of speech.
^K "pocaa-
^Tiecu^ a^ t^ fdiZHet Sf^i^
# # #
Earth Day '90
On April 22, 1990, an estimated
200 million people all over the
planet celebrated the 20th anniver-
sary of Earth Day as activists
pleaded for the rise of a new "con-
servation generation" to care for
the fragile enviroment.
In Washington, Earth Day founder
Gaylord Nelson upged more than
100,000 people massed at the foot
of the Capital to work to motivate
politicians and coiporate leaders to
envipomental action.
"I don't want to come back here
20 years from now and have to teU
yoim sons and daii^ters that you
didn't do yoiir duty," said Nelson,
74, who originated Earth Day when
he was a Senator from Wisconsin.
Earth Day was celebrated in more
than 3,600 U.S. commimities and
in 140 other nations, according to
organizers.
We've got to
raise a
conservation
generation.
- Gaylord Nelson
*}Hr "pa-
Earthquake
in Philippines
A m.ajor earthquaike jolted
Mamla and surrounding Luzon
island on J\aly 16, 1990, killing
at least 1 93 people and leaving
hundreds more trapped in col-
lapsed buildings.
Most of the victims in Baguio,
about 50, were at the Hyatt
Hotel. The entire front section of
the Hyatt, the city's plushest
hotel, collapsed.
Aftershocks continued the
following day, forcing many
residents to sleep on the streets
after the quake, which measured
7.7 on the Rlchter scale.
A 7.8 quake struck the Philip-
pines in 1976, killing 8,000
people. Most died in a tidal wave
that struck Minaneo.
^mC6ecf(Md ,.,
^^^!^^^H
Solar Eclipse
v^
^^^ n July 11,1991, the moon slipped over the
^M sun in the celestial ceremony of the eclipse,
^^ turning day into night for thousands of
viewers and scientists.
About 500 astronomers and tens of thousands
of tourists came to see the moon line up between
the sun and Earth and plunge into darkness a 1 60-
mdle-wide swath stretching from Hawaii to Mexico's
Baja Peninsula, central and southern Mexico,
Central America, Colombia and Brazil.
One after another, spectators around the
mountaintop astronomy observatory in Hawaii
exclaimed, "Oh, my God!" as the sky went dark.
This was the f ipst time an eclipse path of totality
passed over a major observatory, scientists said.
One objective of the scientists was to learn more
about why the siin's corona is about 3 million
degrees Parenheit, while the sun's surface is only
10,000 degrees. Other experiments involved
taking photos through the siin's atmosphere and
watching the effect on Earth's atmosphere.
Southern Floods
The Southern U.S. spent much of the Spring of 1990
rtn?lnging itself out after weeks of flooding turned entire
iowns into muddy lakes where buildings poked up like
onotty tree stumps, and the toU of shattered lives was
iremendous.
While parts of the Mid-West dealt with heavy rainfall
ind floods, those states suffering the most damage
were Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi.
Biospheres
A sealed structure of steel and glass will be "home"
for two years to f oiir men and four women; nothing will
be introduced from the outside. The structure, called
Biosphere 2, is about the size of 2- 1 /2 football fields and
contains aU necessities of life.
In addition. Biosphere 2 houses 3,800 species of
animals ajid plants and five ecosystems.
This $100 million project has taken seven years to
put together and hopes to be the model for other self-
sufficient environments.
om\js
Madonna
Madonna kicked off her
1990 world tour, "Blonde
Ambition," with a seven-concert
tour of Japan beginniag ia
April, then came back to
perform in the U.S. and on
to more shows in Europe.
ir two-hoiir
singt:
througi
5oent
costume changes, reinvent!
herself with each chan
"Express Yourself" is Ji
AlthoUp...
what Madonna does.
her performance is "Causing a
Commotion," the "Blonde
mbition" tour is nothing less
than a satisfying show
"pOtMO,
Roseanne sang ...
sortof
It was crude, even lewd.
Majiy people said that Roseanne
Barr was a disgrace for her shrill
rendition of the national anthem at
a National League baseball double
header and a crude on-field gesture
afterward.
But others said simply: Lighten
up.
They maintained the comedian
who stars on the popular sitcom
"Roseanne" did the best she coiild
or may have become confused by
the sound system's delay and re-
sorted to shtick.
Paul Simon is stOl singing after
lU these years. On August 15,
991, Simon and a 17-piece band
rawn from five nations stepped on
tage in Central Park for a free
oncert lasting almost three hours.
Irstwhile partner Art Garfimkel
ras not, however, by his side.
The concert was a retrospective
f Simon's career, from the simple
eginnings of low-budget doo-wap of
tie '50s in Queens, NY to the
ulsating South African sounds and
hythms of his 1986 "Graceland"
Ibum and the Afro-Brazilian
rumming and Antonio Carlos
Still singing
after all
these years
Jobim chord chem.istry of his latest,
"The Rhythm of the Saints."
Most of Simon's work is a com-
plex miixture of music from the
United States and other lands
Jamaican reggae, Louisiana zydeco,
gospel, jazz, rock, English pastoral,
the Blues and African chants.
The Central Park concert, at-
tended by over 500,000 fans, is
part of a longer trip, a pause in his
"Born at the Right Time" tour of
almost 14 months that he says wiLL
end early next year in Africa after
stops in Japan, China, Australia,
and South America.
- The big question
on the popular
television series
Twin Peaks
*?K "poeiU,
Nolan Ryan
wins 300
Defeating the Milwaukee Brewers
on July 31, 1990, Texas Rangers
pitcher Nolan Ryan won his 300th
game. "I feel more relieved than
anything else after all the buildup,"
Ryan said after joining the 300
Club.
A crowd of 51,533 showed up to
cheer Ryan on at Coiinty Stadium.
Ryan has becom.e one of ten
major league pitchers to win 300
games.
End of an era
Magic Johnson retires
Magic Johnson, whose
beaming sm.ile aJid spar-
kling play entertained bas-
ketball fans for more than a
decade, announced on No-
vember 7, 1991, that he
had tested positive for the
AIDS virus and was retir-
ing.
" B e -
cause of
the HIV vi-
rus I have
attained, I
will have
to an-
nounce my
retirement
from the
Lakers to-
day," Johnson told report-
ers at the Formn, where he
played for 12 superstar
seasons with the Los Angeles
Lakers.
Johnson said he would
become an AIDS activist and
campaign for safe sex.
More than just a basket-
ball star who led the Lakers
to five NBA championships,
Johnson has been a philaji-
6i
I plan on...
livingfora
long time.
^t-
thropist, a prominent
corporate spokesman and
a role model for young
people. His broad grin,
familiar nickname and
electrifying ability have
made him familiar to
people around the world.
"I'm going
to go on,
I'm going
to beat it
and I'm
going to
havefim,"
he in-
sisted, dis-
playlng
some of
the irre-
pressible zest for Ufe that
he brought daily to the
basketball court.
Johnson, whose given
name is Earvin, received
his nickname from a
Lansing, Michigan,
sportswriter after a 36-
point, 18-rebound, 16-
assist performance in
high school.
lEOUiWMUi
Georgia beats Clemson; N.C. State edges Tech / El
SljcI\llanta3ournnl
THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION
SUNDAV INSIDE
ieKjiib County
lesegi-egation
i'^ I
f s Atlanta
City goes
crazy over
tniracle team
v^ iiou\tott.
What's ahead for the Braves
Playoff (1 kets
PLAYOFFS ^
T
Hill
SPECIAL BRAVES SECTION INSIDE / Fi
World Series
1990
The Cincinnati Reds, given no chance
to beat the Oakland Athletics, needed
only four qiiick games to win the
World Series In one of the biggest
upsets in baseball history.
The Reds completed their improb-
able sweep on October 20,1990, in
spite of losing two star players to
injiiries. Cincinnati relied on Jose Rijo
and rallied for two runs in the eighth
inning to win 2-1, and that was it.
World Series
1991
After all the twists, turns and ten-
sion, the closest of World Series ended
in the closest of games.
The Minnesota Twins squeezed past
the Atlanta Braves 1 -0 on pinch-hitter
Gene Larkin's single in the bottom of
the 1 0th inning on October 27, 1991,
to win Game 7 and end baseball's most
dramatic odyssey.
Never before had three Series games
gone into extra innings , and the Braves
and Twins saved the best for last,
matching zero for zero, pressure pitch
for pitch, even turning back bases-
loaded threats in the same inning.
"I've never felt
more elated in
my entire life.
Ifeltlikean
exclamation
point had just
been laid down
in the life
of our dly ."
- Atlanta Mayor
Maynard Jackson,
after learning that his city had
been selected as the site of the
1996 Summer Olympics
72 / ^li "^liCM,
RIGHT Here & RIGHT Now
Silhouette
iUiunnae
Affairs
Academic
Computdng
Tom Maier, Director
Wendy Davis
Not pictured Colleen Russo
Art
Donna Sadler
Accounting Personnel
Kay G-n- 'an, Alumnae Services
Cynthia Poe, Alumnae House Hostess
Lucia Sizemore, Director
Anne Schatz "'--:- Activities
/ "yftettvui. & j';r>-i.-tfe6(i-
Karen Roy, Assistant Vice President, Finance Miriam Lyons, Accounts Payable
Lil Daniel, Accounts Receivable Kate Goodson, Comptroller Janet Gould, Acting
Director, Personnel & Payroll Susan Hester, Staff Acountant
^^B^BH^BBI^^^^l^^
Admissions
Front row: Faye Noble Kathryn Dean Jenifer Cooper Terry Lahti, Director
Back row: Sally Mairs Anne Miller Elizabeth Orth
Tower Council
Campus Events
& Conferences
Dot Markert, Conference Coordinator
Mollie Merrick, Assoc. Dean of Students
Classical Languages
& literature
^
II
1
i
i
4
i '
Gail Cabisius Sally MacEwen
Chemistry
Left: Alice Cunningham
Top: Leon Venable
76 /'TH'Stttana. & THetOeoi.
Chaplain
Patti Synder, Chaplain
Christian
Association
Candy Woodard, Mary Rognoni,
Misty Sanner, Niki Twilla
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B^B
Career Plamiing Sc Placement
Agnes Scott offers students off-campus
work experience through the Internship and
Externship programs. The Career Planning
and Placement Office has sponsored this
productive program for eleven years, and
the program continues to grow.
The internship program offers a wide
range of opportunities, from working with
exotic animals at Zoo Atlanta to taking an
government internship in Geneva, Switzer-
land. These placements may last for a
summer - or as long as a year. So far there
have been a total of about 275 internships to
choose from in many different fields
throughout the year.
During the Christmas break, CP&P also
offers week-long externships for people who
want to try a shorter program. In 1991, they
offered about 60 externships to Agnes Scott
students. If a person does not find a job quite
suitable to her, CP&P offers to work with her
and create an externship which she will
enjoy. Usually these jobs are in the Atlanta
area.
CP&P stresses that any student may
become an intern or extern, and the offers
are not limited exclusively to
upperclasswomen. "In fact," CP&P Assis-
tant Director Laurie Grant Nichols said, "last
year more first-year students participated
than any other year."
Whether an internship or an externship,
these jobs provided great benefits to their par-
ticipants. Some offered a salary, some became
full-time positions, and all of them opened doors
forthose who became involved in the programs.
However, if you don't find your cup of tea in
this long list of opportunities, Career Planning
and Placement is willing to help create a special
externship for you. These programs are open
to everyone, not just the upperclass students.
Some of these jobs, though not many, offer a
salary as well as gainful experience. And who
knows? In just a few weeks, you may learn a
lesson or even land a full-time job.
Jo Rannsey
Amy Schmidt, Director
Laurie Nichols
Career
Advisory Board
Janelle Bailey, Mariken Ronde (Chair),
Juliet Carney, Meredith Jolly
Laurie Grant Nichols, Advisor
Counselor
Computing & Information Systems
Left: Rob Thies, Director
Scott Nichols Maria
Botelho Matthev\/ Parkin
Top: Ninette Waters
Carolyn Malcom
iargaret Shirley
"THetOvii. & 'JHetOeea,
Dean of Students
Jan Johnson, Administrative Assistant
Gue Huson, Dean of Students
Brenda Jones, Assistant Dean of Students
78
& "J^Cmieci,
Social Council '9 1
Front row: Shannon Grace, Lisa Rogers,
Wendy Baker, Chrissie Van Sant, Davina
Crawford, Colleen Covatts
Back row: Sally McMillan, Shannon Ramker,
Sara DiGiusto, Bernadette Brennan, Elizabeth
Fraser
Evolution within
the Dean's Office
in the past two years we have seen an
interesting progression of personalities in
the Assistant Dean of Students position at
the College: from Karen Green (left, "Ms. G"
to those who knew her, which was every-
one) to Brenda Jones, a powerhouse of
energy and acerbic wit, joined above by Patti
Snyder, Chaplain, and Dean Hudson. Fol-
lowing Brenda is VictorWilson,anothercoup
for Dean Hudson; not only has she main-
tained cultural diversity in her staff, but gen-
der diversity as well.
Orientation
Council
Front row:
Catherine Craddock, Dawn
Hayes, Lisa Rogers, Regan Cone,
Fran Akins, Ginger Hicks
Back row:
Jean IVIcDowell, Margaret
Murdock, Janet Kidd, Jenessa
DeFrees, Winnie Varghese
Social Council '98
Front row: Crystal Jones, Charia Bland,
Stephanie Richards, Shannon Grace
Back row: Perrin Cothran, Claire Laye Julie
Bragg, Helyn Wallace, Lauren Granade
im
Dean of the College
Front row:
George Brown, Global Awareness
Sarah Blanshei, Dean of the College
Dolores Shelton, Administrative Assistant
Back row:
Sharon Maxted, Administrative Assistant
Harry Wistrand, Associate Dean of the College
Dana Scholars
The Global Awareness
program provides the opportunity
for an international experience to
every Agnes Scott student. The
Global Awareness Office,
formerly under the direction of
Dr. George Brown in the Office of
the Dean of the College,
coordinates summer programs,
as well as German and French
exchange programs offered by
the College. The office also helps
students plan in-country experi-
ences, such as studying a year
"abroad" in another American
institution, the most recent
addition to the Global Awareness
program is the winter program, in
which students "combine
classwork in the fall and spring
semesters with a January travel
experience." This introductory
experience is designed particu-
larly for sophomores, although it
is available to any students who
has been at Agnes Scott for at
least one semester.
The destinations for the
"January experience" in the past
have included Hong Kong,
Germany, France and Mexico.
Front row:
Adrienne Vanek,
Allison Davis
Back row:
Carl Haack, Margaret
Murdock, Catherine
Craddock, Shannon Price,
Cindy Dunn, Brooke
Parish, Amy Higgins
Development
Liz Schellingerhoudt
Jean Kennedy
Bonnie Johnson,
Vice President
Peggy Owens
Peg Walton
The summer programs have
included travels in Greece,
England and Nepal, among
others. The 1991 host cities in
January were Oaxaca,
Mexico, and Tbilisi, Georgia,
U.S.S.R. The destinations for
each year's travels depend
primarily upon student
interest, faculty specialty, and
ability to establish a beneficial
host family system in the
prospective community.
Classes in the fall semes-
ter help each student learn
about the culture of the
community she will visit, as
well as help her focus on a
special project which she will
research during her stay. In
the spring, the emphasis in
the class is on positive re-
entry adjustment to home
after what is sometimes a life-
changing experience.
The College has made a
significant commitment
(financial and othenwise) to
the Global Awareness
program, with the idea that
"'global awareness' ... should
be a fundamental component
of any liberal arts education."
The Agnes Scott community
takes pride in the over fifty
percent of the graduating
class of 1991 has participated
in an overseas experience.
The Global Awareness office
hopes to make that percent-
age even higher in the future.
Quotes are from the 1991-93
Agnes Scott College Catalog.
Special thanks to Dr. George
Brown for his help with this
articie.
"THetttona, & "THetOeea^
Economics
Ed Sheehey
Rosemary Cunningham
Ed Johnson
Education
Beth Spencer
English
Left:
Jack Nelson
Chris Ames
Steve Guthrie
Peggy Thompson
Linda Hubert
Right:
Pat Pinka
Not pictured:
Bo Ball
Christine Cozzens
80 /TUaOo'ui, & -y/teHSeea,
Top, left to right:
Regine Reynolds-Cornell
Christabel Braunrot
Bottom, left to right:
Rosemary Eberiel
Hugette Chatagnier
Susanne Koenigsmann, Teaching Assitant
Ingrid Wieshofer
Gunther Bicknese
Kathy Gillmore, Mary Claire King, IVlartha Daniel, Susan
Abernathy, Susanne Koenigsmann, Ruth Hennig, Kristin
IVlezger, Jenessa DeFrees
F*G
Faculty
Services
Seated:
Pat Gannon
Standing:
Nita IViilan
Janet Spence
Shirley Weathers
Health
Services
Vlary Lu Christiansen
^at O'Doherty (seated)
One of Agnes Scott's
unique benefits is the trust
that is established in fellow
students through the
upholding of the Honor
Code. Though its restrictions
may seem rigid and conse-
quences of noncompliance
somewhat harsh, the
freedom the Honor Code
Jeanette Elias
Cynthia Neal
Daphne Norton
gives compensates tenfold for
any negative first impressions
of the system. A student can
leave her dorm room door
open; washed clothing left
overnight in the laundry room
will still be there - and might
even be folded. "Lost" items
are often found in the exact
spot where they were left. "It's
wild to be able to leave your
notebook in the dining hall on
Monday, remember it on
Wednesday, and it still be
there," stated Willa
Hendrickson ('94). The
liberties that the Honor Code
allow alleviate some of the
"always on your guard"
feelings that may come with
being around so many people
in a large university.
Probably the most benefi-
cialfeatureoftheHonorCodeisthat
since one is "bound by honor"
and "pledged" to refrain from
breaking the code, professors
trust students with take-home
tests. Given the freedom to take
a test at leisure in a setting
comfortable to that student rather
than in a stressful environment
with the professor proctoring at
the door not only takes pressures
off both the teacher and student,
but also treats the student as the
mature, responsible adult she is.
History
Tommie Sue Montgomery
Latin American Studies
Michele Gillespie
Michael Brown
Penny Campbell
Kathy Kennedy (seated)
Mani Kamerkar
Interdonn
Officers:
President:
Susan Cowan
Vice President:
Denice Dresser
Secretary: Brooke Price
Dorm Presidents:
Sarah McMillan - Main
Vanessa Elliot - Rebekah
Allison Davis - Inman
Eve Allen - Winship
LM
library
Front row: Carl Beck Kay Heupel Scott Lillian Newman
Resa Harney Second row: Joyce Manget Cynthia Rich-
mond Judith Jensen, Director Third row: Amy Chambers
Dement Lee Sayrs
Mathematics
Many times people feel
more comfortable tackling
problems when they are
among friends. In the
Collaborative Learning
Center (better known as the
CLC), people are encour-
aged to work together in a
relaxed learning environ-
ment. The CLC is only a
part of what is housed inside
the student annex, located
between Winship Hall and
the Alston Center. The
annex building is also the
meeting place of Rep
Council, other student
government offices, and the
Faculty Club. However, four
of the rooms on the bottom
level of the annex, two of
which are equipped with
computers, are designated
for collaborative learning.
The operation of the CLC
was started in 1 989 by Dr.
Myrtle Lewin and Dr.
Christine Cozzens. Its
Bob Leslie Daniel Waggoner Larry Riddle Myrtle Lewin
purpose was to "provide a place
where any student could sit down
and work in a talking environ-
ment so collaborative work could
take place." It allows and
enormous amount of freedom
and provides an alternative study
area to the library. "It is like a
talking study hall," Dr. Lewin
said. You can work here with
food, of course not at the
computer tables .... There has
been no abuse to the rules and it
has generally been used with the
kind of respect it deserves."
Many people have made
great use of the facilities.
Christie Shin, an RTC at Agnes
Scott says, "I spend one or two
hours here daily. Sometimes I
come here to study when I
have time in between classes.
I have two children and a
husband, so sometimes I
don't want to study at home."
Sophomore Melissa Johnson
spent about an hour a week in
the CLC as part of a tutorial
math program required for Dr.
Lewin's classes. With other
people, Melissa says, "it
makes it more interesting and
less monotonous."
Peer tutors can be found to
help students with math and
some of the sciences. In
time, Dr. Lewin hopes that
more professors will make
use of the CLC as a place to
give students the nudge they
need, while encouraging them
to work on their own. "Tutor-
ing," Dr. Lewin says, "is not
the main part of collaborative
learning. The heart of
collaborative learning is to
have the student do what she
wants to do, not what the
teacher wants her to do."
Music
Cal Johnson
Ted Mathews
Ron Byrnside
London Fog
Front row:
Michelle Cox, Laura Home,
Ellen Chilcutt, Julie Bragg
Back row:
Julie Dykes, Kate Little,
Claire llaye. Amy Higgins,
Lauren Fowler, Ron Byrnside
Media
Resources
Linda Hilsenrad
"MMtotA & "THetOeeak ^'^
Office
Services
Ruby Perry-Ellis
Witkaze
Front row:
April Cornish, Kelley Rogers, Bryn Perry, Melanie Clarkson,
Melissa Johnson, Delvory Gordon, Kiniya Harper
Back row:
Natasha Browner, Kimberly Colliet, Shanika Swift, Rebecca
Nowlin, Kech Payne
Advisor: Ruby Perry-Ellis
Philosophy
David Behan
Physics & Astronomy
Alberto Sadun, Astronomy Art Bowling, Physics
Political Science
Gus Cochran Cathy Scott
College Democrats
Front row:
Leigh Bennett
Wendy Allsbrook
Back row:
Julie Bragg
Elena Adan
Winnie Varghese
Deborah Watters
Missy Mullinax
College Republicans
Front row:
Amy Bridwell
Fran Akins
Emily Hornak
Mary Frances Kerr
Back row:
Bernadette
Brennan
Amanda King
"""n ffl
President's Office
During the year,
President Rutli Schmidt
will often set aside time
from her busy schedule to
strengthen her relations with the
Agnes Scott community by
opening her door to personally
address questions and concerns
of campus community members
during what is called the
President's Open Office Hour.
During this time, students,
faculty, and staff members
can go In to see her and ask a
brief question or offer
suggestions that may later be
considered for a college
project. If this hour is not
opportune, one can schedule
an appointment with President
Schmidt or talk with someone
who may be able to answer
their questions.
This is a welcome chance
to meet the president, to show
her the level of community
concern about certain issues,
and that individuals are willing
to get involved. For the
president, it is an opportunity
to develop a more personal
relationship with the Agnes
Scott community.
Bertie Bond
President Ruth Schmidt
Theresa Sehenuk Tan Hille Lea Ann Hudson
Psychology
Seated:
Ayse Garden
Barbara Blatchley
Standing:
Tom Hogan
Eileen Cooley
Psychology Club
Front row:
Ayse Garden, Rhina Fernandes,
Lisa Anderson,
Allison Davis,
Ginger Hicks
Back row:
Helen Harber,
Janet Kidd,
Gourtney
Alison, Julie
King
Post Office
Robert Bell
Grover Harris
Ursula Booch
')HeMt<m.& "VtettteeaK 85
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& ')f(etftee^
Physical Education & Athletics
Athletic
Association
Wendy Jones
Christy Jackson
Mary Curtis Lanford
Basketball
Front row:
Britton iVlcMullin, Cliristy
Jacl<son, Noelle Dixon, Amy
Tyler, Dee Dee Tucker
Back row:
Tara Squires, Hawa
i\/leskinyar, Wendy Jones,
Doris Black Coach, Kim
Creagh, Tracy Casteel, Cindy
Peterson Asst. Coach
Not pictured: Betty Hammond
Soccer
Front row:
Tracy Barnes, Becca Boone,
Elizabeth Hartz, Marika
Ronde
Back row:
Cheryl Appleberry Trainer,
Amanda Daniel, Anne
Bearden, Beth Barnes,
Tamara Shie, Tony Serpico
Coach
Tennis
Front row:
Courtenay King, Kristin
Mezger, Cathy Alexander,
Kristin Louer
Back row:
Cindy Peterson Coach,
Cheryl Appleberry Trainer,
Kate Simkins, Reina Barretto,
Mary Beth Quinley, Debbie
Miles, Elizabeth Seward
r
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^WgggtWfWgWTggttWTggtWWggtWggtWWWttWP
Publications
Center:
Celeste Pennington, Manager
Silhouette
Profile
Front row:
Josie Hoilnnan, Tonya Smith,
Barbie Stitt
Back row:
Rita Ganey, Laura Shaeffer,
Sandee IVIcGlaun
Front row:
Stephanie Hawes, Kathy Gillmore
Back row:
Kelli Barnett, Elena Adan, Josie
Hoilman, Jenessa DeFrees, Tonya
Smith
Above:
Kelly Holton
Katie Tanner, '92 Editor
Natasha Browner
Right:
Margaret Hammond, '91 Editor
Public
Relations
Carolyn Wynens
Sara King Pilger
"THettfyti. & THetOeeak 87
Rep Council '91
Rep Council '93
Front row:
Robyn Porter, Kara
Russell, Mary Frances
Kerr, Deborah Watters,
Tammy Shirley, Holly
Henderson
Second row:
Amy Higgins, Wendy
Allsbrook, Talin Keyfer,
Betsy Johnson
Back row:
Ellie Porter, Stephanie
Strickland, Margaret
Murdock, Debbie Miles,
Janet Johnson, Donna
Kimball, Annetta Wil-
liams, Laura Shaeffer
Officers:
Tracy Peavy, Secretary
Amy Higgins, President
Jessica Carey,
Vice President
Meredith Jolly, Treasurer
R.S.O.
\ ""z'
& "THeMtee^i.
(Alphabetically)
Martha Barfield, Helene
Barrus, Susan Buckley,
Ramona Davidson, Cynthia
Davis, Nancy Dickenson,
Leslie Dowdey, Leslie
Glenn, Sandi Harsh,
Ginger Hicks, Angela Hill,
Deborah Houston, Carole
Ivory, Priscilla Jaggers,
Rosemarie Kelly, Donna
Kimball, Sue King, Peggy
Lyie, Melody Martin, Lee
Butler McWaters, Kathy
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B^SI^
Monturo, Dianne O'Donnell,
Hyun Park, Melanie Pavich-
Lindsay, Gina Pursell, Christie
Shin, Marcia Sneddon, Susan
Stanley, Faith St. Michael,
Mary Jo Thompson, K.C.
Thurmond, Connie Tibbitts,
Beth Williams
aiegistrar
ary K Jarboe, Registrar
a Ruth Thies
Sociology &
Anthropology
Martha Rees
Bernita Berry
Service Organizations
Jennifer Bruce
Lisa Anderson
Rhina Fernandes
Circle K
Front row:
Jenny Sparrow, Holly
DeMuth, Tracy Casteel
Back row:
Ginger Hartley, Wendy
Riviere
iAlA
Front row:
Chrissie Van Sant, Wendy
Allsbrook, Madeline Cohn,
Talin Keyfer
Back row:
Kelli Barnett, Barbara Scalf,
Deborah Watters, Winnie
Varghese
Spanish
Spanish Club
T
llT" -!|*i
Id
It Ki
J^J
f
Jr^
,
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11 .
Molly Simmons, Kristin Houchins,
Elena Adan, Emily Hornak,
English Hairrell
Rafael Ocasio
Eloise Herbert
Student
Activities
Ellen Wheaton
90 /'me*aiyu.&'me*aee^
Theatre
Right:
Becky Prophet
Not pictured:
Dudley Sanders
From the production Gome Back to the
Five 8e Dime Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean
tl'
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RIGHT Here & RIGHT Now
Silhouette
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Bottled Under Authority of "The Coca-Cola Company" by THE ATLANTA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY.
RABERN - NASH COMPANY, INC.
specialists in Floor Covering
727 E. College Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30031
(404) 377-6436
ECLECTIC COIIECTIIIES
Estates Bought
Consignments
Sport Cards
Used Furniture
MICHAEL RUDY
2707 E. College Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030
(404) 377-2100
BUCK'S DECATUR
116 E. PONCE DE LEON AVENUE
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
(404) 373-7797
SensaUonal
Subs
SENSATIONAL SUBS, INC.
5414 Buford Highway
Doraville, Georgia 30340
(404) 457-1283
wondaleI
veterinary
HOSPITAL
Small Animal
Medicine & Surgery
David G. Williams DVM
MoN - Fri 8am-6pm
Sat 8am-Noon
Near Avondale Marta Station
6 Avondale Rd. Av. Es.
294-4800
HUNT'S WRECKER SERVICE
154 Olive Street
Avondale Estates. Georgia 30002
(404) 292-6697
Garlon Hunt
Lamar Hunt
24 Hour Wrecker Service
A
ATLANTA
AUTOMOTIVE, INC.
2748E. COLLEGE AVENUE
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
(404) 373-1577
SUPERB FOOD
BREAKFAST, LUNCH AlHD DINNER
ALWAYS COOKED TO YOUR ORDER
_ ^ ^_ Clairmont at
INTERNATIONAL HOUSE OF Briarcliff Road
633-1889
6AM -11PM
PANCAKES RESTAURANT
^TSTWlS^^TS
American Professional Risk Services, Inc.
STEWART BROS.
Blacki
Top 1
2480 PLEASANTDALE ROAD ^^
P.O. BOX 48426 I^OSSdinc
DORAVILLE, GEORGIA 30340
OfTice Phone: 447-5810 Shop Phone: 366-1711
/" p; N
li
MECHANICAL
INDUSTRIES COUNCIL
1950 Century Blvd. Suite 5
Atlanta, Georgia 30345
(404)633-9811
NEIGHBORHOOD
PLAYHOUSE
PERKIN ELMER
Atlanta Branch Office
510 Guthridge Court
NorcrosB.GA 30092
RANDALL AND LASETER
ARCHITECTS
150 EAST PONCE De LEON AVENUE
POST OFFICE BOX 247
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031-0247
(404) 377-7620
Offia., 373-2296-7
Rps., 469-6338
%p6eTt L. LittUjidd
Mlomeij at Law
One 'Decatur 'foivn Center
SuiU 340
450 Tonce "De Leon Avenue
"Decatur, georgia 30030
INC.
/ACS/
Heating & Air Conditioning
Since 1969
P.O. Box 1346 Decatur, Georgia 30031
Patricia J. Morrell
PRESIDENT CEO
MUKKhLL
LANDSOAPIN<
DESIGN MMNTfLSACt SEASO.N.U COLOR INSTALLATION TbtHNII^AL SW.ll.tS IKKILAIIIIS
P.O. BOX 620245 Atlanta, Georgia 30362 (404)662-8775 FAX (404I6620732
CDCFTXaDa(xs3ajQM. iD
lr->n c3..lna.
THE ONE AND ONLY
ORIGINAL
ARTISTIC ORNAMENTAL
IRON CO., INC.
1(404) 373-652l~|
RESIDENTIAL 4 COMMERCIAL
BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENTAL
IRON GATES
CUSTOM DESIGN & INSTAl,Ij\TION
ELBCTTEIC 0PENEES-RADIOa)NTROIJJJ)
1977 College Avenue N.E. professional design service
Best of Luck on the Future
From
The Elegant Sandwich
Perimeter Lenox Underground
396-1770 231-9018 577-4770
JEWELRY REPAIR DESIGN
HANDCRAFTED JEWELRY TRADEWORK
6075 ROSWELL ROAD
SUITE 619
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30328
OFFICE: 252-0028
W.J. SKILLERN
DAVID SKILLERN
SKILLERN'S AUTO SERVICE
252 SOUTH COLUMBIA DRIVE
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
(404) 373-7979
(404) 373-6611
Service At Its Best
DON DAVIS SERVICE CENTER
359 W. Ponce De Leon Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030
ComputAr Balancing
Front End Allgnmsnl
Brakawork Tun-ups
TIras Botlarlas Acc*orlaa
Road Sarvic* Wracksr Sarvlc*
378-6751 Automatic Car Wa.h - 373-9122
PRINTING
Ute
^^*^
CHARLIE MIZELL
OWNER
The Decatur Commons
205 Swanton Way
Comer of Commerce Dr. & Swanton Way
Decatur, Georgia 30030
(404) 378-4231
Fax: (404) 373-3884
\Mm
tin
kee (Jlibb
Established 1968
Pamela de Journo
2 Pine Street
Avondale, Georgia 30002
(404) 294-5222
er
James Moore & Associates
70 Perimeter Center East
Atlanta, Georgia 30346
(404) 394-2666
Insurance and Bonding
Compliments
of
Dearborn Animal Hospital
715 East College Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030
Ben Spencer
(404) 378-7565
SPENCER'S TIRE COMPANY
402 East Howard Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030
GEORGIA VALVE AND FIHING COMPANY
3361 West Hospital Avenue
Atlanta, Georgia 30341
Bus. (404) 458-8045 the
Fax (404) 454-7930
:/-77/jj
SWAGELOK
companies
Compliments of
McKinney's Apothecary Inc.
542 CHURCH STREET
DECATUR, GEORGIA
PHONE 378-5408
Js^^ A= Wts'Lilj Sk i llij s:
fZf^^J' 2 til ft I'actotes
5680 OaUbrook Parkway-Suite 145-Norcross, Georgia 30098
DESIGN & INTEGRATIO N OF
LIFE SAFETY CONTROL SYSTIEMS
WILLIAM J. SKILLAS
(4(M) 242-7501
CI Bank South Service
Our first name is Bank, but
our femily name is Soutli.
Al Bank South, we have a simple philosophy is a lol to like about us. After all. our first name is
to treat each of our customers with the special
attention and service that will make them feel
right at home with us like part of the family.
If you're looking for a little more attention and
personal service from your bank, you'll find there
Bank, but our family name is South
-0^
<S
Pytombar FDIC. 1988 Bank South Corporation.
Sharian, Inc.
Rug Cleaning and
Oriental Rug Sales
368 W. Ponce De Leon Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030
(404) 373-2274
\%9&
GARY E. COTON
PRESIDENT
World Travel Advisors
1605 Chantilly Drive, N.E.
Suite 100
Atlanta, Georgia 30324
(404) 325-3700
TELEX 80-4672
On The Occasion Of Our
100th Anniversary, We'd Like To
Celebrate By Thanking Our Customers
This year Trust Company Bank is 100 years
old. In ail this time. Trust Company has been an
integral part of Atlanta, lending strength and
support to the growth and prosperity of this dty,
our state, and region. We are grateful to all our
customers and friends who have helped us reach
our 100th year with a continuing record of prof-
itability, strength and stability. As we move into
our second 1 00 years, we are confident that Trust
Company Bank will maintain its steady progress
and high level of dependable service to this com-
munity. We thank you for helping us achieve this
milestone anniversary.
One Hundred "rfears Of Service
SonTniU, A SunTnm Bank, Tnut Compuiy Bank aid ihe T Design uc
iciviceiniriciof SunTniftBanki.Inc Member FDIC
Mordr, Davis
& Company
567 LaDonna Drive, Decatur, Georgia 30032
The Soundd Investment Co.
3586 Pierce Drive
Chomblee, Georgia 30341
404-458-1679
THE ANSWER TO ALL YOUR TAPE NEEDS
REEL TO REEL / 7" TO 1 4" / CASSETTES / 8-TRACK
VIDEO / ALL MAJOR BRANDS / TAPES
AUDIO AND VIDEO DUPLICATION
CHAnANOOGA
ATLANTA
\mtjfj ?.9MPANY I
1084 HOWELL Mill ROAD, N. W., ATLANTA. GEORGIA 30318
PHONE 404-875-0256
COMPLETE ENGINEERING LAYOUTS STEEL SHELVING
SHOP EQUIPMENT LOCKERS PALLET RACKS
What can
Narsh & McLennan
do abontyonr risks?
I
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them
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U U
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We're Marsh & McLennan,
the world's leading insurance
broker. We have risk
management specialists
in every major industry,
trained to give your company
the best possible insurance
protection at the least cost.
sh <i McLsn
DISPATCHED ^^CC^^^tO^ {\)
PEST SERVICES, INC.
OVER 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE
MOISTURE CONTROL & TERMITE REPAIRS
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD & COMMERCIAL
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-OUTSIDE and INSIDE PROTECTION-
'FIGHTING TERMITES,
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IS NO GAMEr 2525 DALLAS HWY S.W.
! esq MARIEHA. GA
"^ 30065
404-422-0534
TERMITE
CLEARANCE
LETTERS
PRE-TREATNEW
CONSTRUCTION
SURETY BONDED
TERMITES
ROACHES
FLEAS k TICKS
ANTS
MITES
FUNGUS
CARPENTER >EES
POWDSIPOSIKriiS
RATSk MICE
MiaiPEDESk
CENTIPEDES
SILVERFISH
MOTHS
HORNETS
SCORPIONS
WASPS
GEORGIA DUCK AND
CORDAGE MILL
POST OFFICE BOX 865
SCOHDALE, GEORGIA
30079
MANUFACTURER OF CONVEYOR
BELTING AND INDUSTRIAL
TEXTILES
|>NV^./<r -r-^ - --'-;-,..,-;.. w::^
mi^'j^x;^ ..^:v.^.
Gary Nelson
Manager
601 E. COLLEGE AVENUE
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
(404) 373-3335
BURTON'S GRILL
1029 Edgewood
Atlanta, Georgia 30307
(404) 525-3415
Custom Prescription Compounding
Senior Citizens Discounts
Surgical Supplies
Fast Personal Service
215 CLAIRMONT DECATUR, GA 30030
(404) 3786415
Scientific Water Treatment.^.ethicaUy applied
TECHNICAL SPECIALTIES CORPORATION
250 Arizona Avenue, N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30307
(404)378-1403
Congratulations
Class of 92
McCurdy and Chandler
250 Ponce de Leon Ave.
Decatur, Georgia 30030
(404)373-1612
Learn How lb
Afford College
Decatur Federal is a
friend of the family.
Ihlk to our college loan specialists.
Decatur Federal is one of the
largest education lenders in
Georgia. Our college loan
speciSists can provide a wide
range of low-cost, government-
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VCfe'll give you personal
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Federal's College Loan Depart-
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Stop by any branch office for an
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FDIC INSURED
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The Family Bank
DAVE
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AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE CENTER
IMPORT DOMESTIC
COMPLETE MECHANICAL SERVICE BODY WORK PAINT
301 DeKalb Industrial Way Decatur, Ga 30030 (404) 292-8803
Mention this Ad with Student ID receive $10.00 off oil change.
W. Hugh Spruell, m.d.
RHEUMATOLOGY
2712 North Decatur, Georgia 30033
(404) 292-8333
BY APPOINTMENT
BEN W. JERNIGAN, JR. D.M.D.
General Dentistry
SUITE 340 FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING
SLS W. PONCE DE LEON AVE. DECATUR, GA 30030
(404)378-1466
SHIELDS MARKET
143 Sycamore Street
Decatur, Georgia 30030
(404) 377-6897
1 14 E, Trinity Place
Decatur, OA 30030
(404) 371-9554
Open 7 Days a Week
MOGHUL SALUTE
Authentic Indian Cuisine
Famous For-Quality & Taste, Party Catering &
Carryout Services
Lunch 1 1 :30 A.M. -3:00 P.M. Cocktails With Live Music
Dinner 5:00 P.M. -10:30 P.M. 11:00 P.M.-2:30 A.M. (Weekend)
Available For Parties & Conferences
/IFCO
Realty Associates
Twelve North Parkway Square
4200 Northslde Parkway, N.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30327
An
Answer
to Energy Savings
& Affordable Comfort
Atlanta Gas Light Company
Georgia Naluial Gas Compan, Savaruiah Gas Company
Piccadilly
Classic American Cooking
2595 N. Decatur Road
Decatur, Georgia 30033-6126
(404)373-5116
mRVFIELD
takes the best and
makes it BETTER
Carfton Q Cover Insurance Agency
3646 Clairmont Road
Chamblee, Georgia 30341
(404)451-1646
AUTO FIRE HOMEOWNER BURGLARY GLASS
LIFE ACCIDENT HEALTH and ALLIED LINES
'^.
INSULATION
GENERAL OFFICES
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
DIVISION OF NATIONAL SERVICE INDUSTRIES INC.
3250 Woodstock Road, S.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 302316
Lewis E. Watson
Branch Manager
Phone: (404) 622-4611
Home: 483-2355
PLUMBERS and STEAMFITTERS LOCAL 72
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR UNITED ASSOCIATION SKILLED CRAFTSMEN
Composid of journeymtn and apprentices zuhc Have juris diction aver every
6rattc/i of tAt pCumiin and pipe fitting industry.
Grinnell
FIRE PROTECTION SYSTEMS COMPANY
2385 Lithonia Industrial Blvd.
Lithonia, Georgia 30058
(404) 482-7346
BOB CARROLL
APPLIANCE COMPANY
2122 North Decatur Plaza
Decatur, Georgia 30033
(404) 634-2411
Dairg
Two Locations To Serve You
NISAR MOMIN
FIROZ MOMIN
253 E. Trinity Place
Decatur, GA 30030
(404) 373-6773
2100 Pleasant Hill Rd.
Duluth, GA 30136
(404) 476-1125
If you
want a bank
that gets
things done,
welcome to
Personal Banking.
Welcome to
WACJIOVIA
AHEUGSNGGNCEFI8
AMERICAN CONCEPTS
I Fasteners Tools Const Supplies
Hardware & Maintenance Products
1170 Custer Avenue S.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30316
Office (404) 622-3080 FAX: (404) 627-6668
LAW FIRM OF
C. ANTHONY CUNNINGHAM, Esq.
119 EAST COURT SQUARE
SUITE 209-A
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
Phone (404) 378-4340 FAX: (404) 378-3489
OFFICE-(404) 522-5872 / 522-5135-6
LABORERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF
NORTH AMERICA
LOCAL NO. 438
AFFILIATED WTTH AFL-CIO
AND NORTH GEORGIA BUILDING TRADES COUNCIL
1004 EDGEWOOD AVENUE, N.E.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30307
BloGuard
Pool and Spa
Products
Relax. Bring your pod to HoCjuaid
Bio-Lab, Inc., 627 East College Avenue, Decatur. GA 300."? 1
Compliments
of
JOHNSON
jSlLJIGGINS
191 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Suite 3400
Atlanta, Georgia 30303-1762
ymuita
^^ DAIRIES ^
'<(f^Hmeto m Fresh Dairj
ATLANTA DAIRIES, INC.
777 Memorial Drive S.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30316-1195
(404) 688-2671
PETl DAIRY
Engineering
Associates
I
nc.
@
ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT CONSULTANTSSINCE 1956
The Facility Management Consultant Division of Engineering
Associates Provides Consulting Services in the Areas of:
Maintenance
Housekeeping
A I -Grounds Care
Energy Conservation
W Telecommunications
2625 Cumberland Parkway / Suite 100 / Atlanta, Georgia 30339
(404) 432-8833
'Modernization Planning
Capital Improvements Budgeting
'Cost Reductions
'Productivity Improvement
'Operations Analysis
Compliments of
GEORGIA
FEDERAL
CREDIT
UNION
'Your Family's Financial Cooperative'"
Ciarkston
292-6868
Atlanta
452-8233
Conyers
483-5211
Dalton
226-1199
:k bridge
4-3600
Lithonia
482-4033
LaFayette
638-5800
A
TRADITION
IN PRINTING
SINCE 1939
LETTERHEADS
ENVELOPES
BUSINESS CARDS
BROCHURES
NEWSLEHERS
FLYERS/INSERTS
BOOKLETS
FORMS
LABELS
EMBOSSING
NUMBERING
DIE-CUniNG
225 N. McDonough St. Decatur, GA 30030
"WE NOW OFFER OFFICE & ART SUPPLIES"
BRUCE GRUBER, Owner (404) 373-3337
National
Linen
Service
William C. Maine
Vice President
General Manager
525 Glen Iris Drive, N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30308
(404) 522-7335
A Division of National
Service Industries, Inc.
Short Term Commitments
Long Term Gains
Earn while you learn. Make a short term commitment to a
temporary assignment during vacations or breaks. Earn good
pay with Western Temporary Services and gain valuable
experience on the job. Work when you want, where you want,
for as long as you want. We're always here when you need
money most. Give us a call. Western Temporary Services. The
one to call when you want to work.
Stop in and ask for your complimentary "Guide to Successful
Interviewing" booklet. Over 350 offices worldwide, 100%
American owned.
1 1 50 Hammond Dr. N.E
Sandy Springs, GA 30328 ^tj
393-4455 888-0003 279-0007
Perimeter Midlown Gwinnett
8 Divisions
EOE-M/F/V
Western
lEINBlEVSEtVICES.
^yijj^^igligigij
* '""''^^^''^
^^
yv^MMMj r*wv. CONFERENCE PLAZA
WINSER OF DEVELOPMENt^MODlERNIZATtON AWARD
The new Holiday Inn Atlanta-Decatur Conference Plaza submits the
Atlanta alternative. An ultra-modem hotel and conference plaza
amidst a quiet historic setting in the heart of Decatur.
Look what we have to offer. . .
185 deluxe guest rooms 14,000 square feet of quality meeting and banquet space 104 fixed-seat amphitheater
The All-American Cafe Restaurant The ReUnion sports bar and patio A fitness center with all the latest exercise
equipment MARTA rail station less than two blocks away Indoor Pool Gift Shop Complimentary parking
The closest Hotel to Agnes Scott College Special rates for Agnes Scott College students, parents, and faculty.
^feasejoin us for tHe foCCozvin^ food 'Bar in tfie
Served Monday - Friday
Located in tfie
Cobby of the OCotef
Friday
SPECIAL SEAFOOD BUFFET
f-OOpLm.- 10:00 p.m.
BREAKFAST BUFFET
7.00 a.m. -10:30 a.m.
LUNCHEON BUFFET
11.30 a.m. -2:00 p.m.
tl0.9$ - Adnks
t9.9S - Senior Cilizais
l5.$0-CliiUiai$-l2]rnt
15.23 - AdulU
14.7$ - Senior Citizros
f2.50-CbU(lrca5'12yn.
15.95 - Adults
14.95 - Senior aiiztos
t3.50-ChUdica5-12yn.
Sunday
BRUNCH
11.00 am.. 2 00p.m.
(8.95 - Adults
J7.95 - Senior CitUens
1450 -Children 5-12 yn.
130 Clairemont Avenue
Decatur, Georgia 30030
^ \^OyicXX) SVVA?
Tel: (404) 371-0204
1-800-225-6079
FAX: (404) 377-2726
Dear iSignes Scott,
Well, "the" yearbook has finally arrived -right
here, right now. These past two years have been
ones of hard work, frustration, lots of creativity,
desperation, etc., for the Silhouette staff. But this
conglomeration of 1 99 1 and 1 992 is completed at
last, and we hope that you are pleased.
This book would not be here now if it wasn't for
the wonderful understanding and help of Pat
Arnzen, Dean Hudson, Dan Troy, Anthony Ad-
vertising, Margaret Hammond, Natasha Browner,
Wendy Riviere, Kelly Holton, and everyone else
who helped us along the way. Thanks! I want to
personally wish Natasha and future editors of the
Silhouette "Good Luck." Gosh, imagine the dif-
ference if Agnes Scott's yearbooks started com-
ing out in May again (or at least in the same
academic year)!
I'm really glad this book is out so the Silhouette
staff can make a fresh start and all of us can
finally have a yearbook. Enjoy this collection of
memories and look back at 1991 and 1992 with
fondness.
Fondly,
Katie Tanner
Class of 1993
Additional thanks are sent to Kathy Gillmore and
Julie Cross, both of whom spent many hours on
the '91 edition but are no longer at ASC.
-Pat
104