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f-ApRANGE COLLEGE

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Frank & Laura Lewis
Library

.II.

LAGRANGE

C O i. I. F. G F.

To other eyes than ours it is

a mere death-cross
in the wind,

We will put aside these days like withered
springs, for we cannot climb above our town,
or we should see, at so great a distance, only
walls, and roofs, and roads. So high above
us, we could see no birth or death, no good

or evil, no joy or pain. But time, like some a shaded grass,

wingless bird, will bring a gift of distance.
And we will stand on hills.

a splattering of water
in the sunlight,

THE 1964
QUADRANGLE

LaGrange College
LaGrange,
Georgia

a rock to sit upon.

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3

4

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DEDICATION

He knew before we did

What dreams we dreamt,

What ambitious songs we sung,

What hurt we embraced
when ambition failed.

He sang before we did

the requiem for shrouded hopes -
a legacy to live by.

He gave to us

(before we knew enough to give)

His knoivledge with his power
that we might find ourselves -

Not as Ghouls amid Archadian woods -
but as men among our
million dreams.

ORGANIZATIONS

9

STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION

A student government body aiming to maintain the highest standards of conduct and scholarship and
assuming the direction of all matters concerning student activities.

Treas.; Mrs. Kelly, Faculty Adv., Noel Smith, Men's V-Pres.

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Legislative Council: First row: Deirdre Parker, Judy Sams, Ann McDonald, Dorothy Mathews. Second row: Amelia Mc-
Koy, Judy Hayes. Madeline Bates, Diane Nixon. Third row: Hugh Corless, Bill Smith, Sidney Johnston. Andy Jones,
Gary Brown, Charles Nixon. Not pictured: Diane Alford. Ted Alford, Frances Barefoot, Sally Culpepper, Randy Edgar,
Chip Fortenberry, Pat Jackson, Jerry Moore, Taylor Newton, Carol Sinclair, Sandra Turner.

Judicial Council: First row: Lucille Beasley. Billie Ayers, Mary Anne Harwell, Nancy Stipek. Second row: Robert
Welchel, David Corless, Bill Minningham, Charlie Knight, Charles Nixon.

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STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION CABINET

Striving to promote an atmosphere of freedom
for exchange of ideas . . .

for understanding of one another and of other peoples . . .
for discovery of truth . . .
through

discussion, study, service, and worship . . .

Standing: Janet Taylor, Wesley Fellowship Pres.; Irene Papadeas, Worship and Programs; Curtis Chapman, Co-Publicity Chm.; Donnie West,
President; Jerry Newsome, Freshman Class Rep.; Suzanne Nash, Co-Recreation Chmn.; Terri Adcock, Vice-pres. Seated: Frances Barefoot.
Treas.; Nancy Cherry, YWCA Chmn.; Nancy Chambless. Co-Publicity Chmn.; Jan Clayton, Christian Citizenship and Social Service. Not Pic-
tured: Roger Browning, Vincent Shaffer, Steddy Glisson, Mary Propst, Sam McCord, Dr. Kay, Mrs. Robinette.

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WESLEY FELLOWSHIP

Opportunity for Methodist students to grow spiritually, so-
cially, intellectually and emotionally.

First row: Donnie West, Treas. ; Janet Taylor, Pres.; Harold Tarpley,
V-Pres. Second row: Diane Aldredge, Bonnie Binford, Projects chm.;
Nancy Smith. Third row: Ellen Houseworth, Linda Akins, Worship chm.;
Walter Patrick, Fellowship chm. Fourth row: Theresa Hicks, Jean Bur-
gess, Sandra Carey. Fifth row: Ann Russell, Nancy Warren, Nancy
Cherry. Sixth row: Jan Clayton, Fellowship chm.

Wayne Deavours, Sec;
Bucky Patrick; Dr. Kay,
Faculty Advisor; Donnie
West; Ken Chapman; Lon-
zie Wester, Pres.; Frank
Puffer. Not pictured: Jerry
Newsome, Vice Pres. ; Terry
Phillips, Treas.; Lee Ram-
sey, Publicity.

PRE-MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION

A brotherhood of men united through their preparations for the ministry or church related
vacations.

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Barbara Starr, Jeff Hoss, Hulon Alsabrook, Pres.; Gary Brown, Sec-Treas. ; Frances Barefoot, Roger Browning, Nancy Chambless, V-Pres.
Curtis Chapman, Dr. Davis, Faculty Adv., Susanne Nash.

BAPTIST STUDENT UNION

Stimulating Christian fellowship among Baptist students, serving
as a link between college and local church.

14

CHRISTADELPHIANS

Janet Taylor,
Pat Lanham.
Bonnie Binford,
Pres. ; Theresa
Hicks, Jean
Burgess, Sec;
Nancy Cherry,
Diane Aldredge,
V-Pres. ; San-
dra Carey, San-
dra Roberts,
Nancy Smith,
Treas.; Ann
Russell, Linda
Akins, Diane
Nixon, Jan
Clayton.

As "sisters in Christ," to strive to attain higher levels of Christian service, to discover and ex-
plore fields of Christian vocations; to grow in His love.

CIRCLE K

Young men of recognized leadership whose aims encompass campus and community
improvement.

Top row: Gary Brown, Low-
ery Tillison, Charlie Knight,
David Corless, Bryon Col-
lier, Vincent Shaffer, Mil-
lard Martin, Hugh Corless,
Ken Chapman, Dan Me-
tee, Sammy McCord, Cur-
tis Chapman, Donnie West,
Harold Tarpley, Chuck
Nixon, Mickey Johnson.
Bottom row: officers, Robert
Welchel, president; Randy
Edgar, secretary; David
Travitz, treasurer; Charlie
Clark, vice president.

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PANHELLENIC COUNCIL

Coordination and cooperation for the social Greeks on campus.

First row Beth Leonard Sec; Nancy Stipek, Bill Smith, Chm.; Ted Hitchcock, Treas.; Mrs. Piatt. Faculty Adv ; Sammy McCord V-Chm.; De.
S^'slSJl^e^fao!^ Dr. Jones, Faculty Adv.; Judy McKoon, Ted Whitman, Millard Martin, Bill Mmnmgham, Kathryn Greer
Bill Thompson.

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PI

GAMMA
MU

To improve scholarship
in the social studies.

Seated: Donnie West. Dr.
Waights G. Henry, Mary
Anne Harwell, Diane Nixon.
Mrs. Mildred Robinette,
Miss Ann Clark, Ellis Dun-
bar, Student Vice-Pres. ;
Sammy McCord. Standing:
Mr. and Mrs. James B.
Blanks, Dr. Zachary Taylor,
Dr. C. Lee Harwell, Pres.;
Mr. Michael J. Brown,
Vice-Pres.; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Guptill. Not pic-
tured: Mr. and Mrs. Carl-
ton Guptill, Mr. Jack Hen-
derson, Dr. and Mrs. W. L.
Murray, Miss Sylvia Strick-
land, Sec.

SIGMA

To recognize and pur-
sue genuine scientific
interest among faculty
and students.

Jean Jackson, Saundra
Brumbeloe, Mr. Marvis
Webb, Jane Johnson, Byron
Collier, John Rice, Mac
Stillwell, Faith Shellnutt,
Mr. A. M. Hicks, Irene Pa-
padeas. Chuck Nixon, Miss
Verdi Miller, Mr. Richard
Bennett, Dr. John Shibley.
Mr. Grayson Bradley.

i

Standing: Miss Canady, Faculty
Adv.; Connie Robinson, Amelia
McKoy, Treas. Jane Johnson.
Seated: Sue Goethe, Jane Wil-
banks, Laura Hill, Donna Howell,
Mildred Eidson, Sec.

WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

Athletic activities for all interested girls to create team cooperation and a spirit of good
sportsmanship.

MEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

Seeks to promote the physical development of men students by regulating a program of
intramural athletics.

Sam Gipson, Dr. Judson Harris,
Sponsor; David Travitz, Glenn
Stone, Sec.-Treas. ; James Allen
New, Pres.; Jerry Moore; Randy
Edgar, Vice Pres.

ART
LEAGUE

Creative minds uniting for
better understanding of
the visual arts.

First row: Judy Savage, Janice Christian, V-Pres.; Sue Goethe, Suzanne Nash, Michael O'Brien. Second row: Cherry
Mahaffey, Kathryn Green, Ouida Harmon, Linda Long. Third row: Betty Rutledge, Nancy Chambless, Treas.;
Curtis Chapman, Sec; Wayne Minor, Pres.

Arlin Wallace, V-Pres.; Miss Strickland, Dr. Estes, Cindy Bennett, Pres.; Billy Hearnberg, Sec.-Treas.

ALPHA
PSI

OMEGA

An honorary society for
achieving excellence in
drama.

19

First row: Susan Galloway, Sandra Smith, Carol Clyburn. Second row: Janice Christian, Scarlet Crenshaw, Kathryn Wooldridge, Renie Crooms,
Sandra Burgess, Sharon Crawford. Third row: Jane Yarbrough, V-Pres. ; Mary Snow, Sec-Treas.; Pam McFarland, Judy Whiting, Nancy Ramsey,
Connie Robinson, Joy Dorough. Fourth row: Dianne Efurd, Jimmy Smith, Kathryn Merritt, Jackie Reaves. Daphine Ray, Roger Browning. Jimmy
Jackson, Charlie Rivers. Fifth row: Mike Baker, Hulon Alsabrook, Pres.; Eddie Brown, Charles Thomas, Ellis Dunbar, Harold Tarpley.

CHORALAIRES

An opportunity for students in all departments to present sacred and secular music.

'20

Seated: Ken Chapman, Sue Lawhorne, Robin Hood, Miss Strickland, Fac. Adv.; Cindy
Bennett, Cherry Mahaffey. Sec. Standing: Mickey Johnson, Billy Hearnburg, Pres.; Drue
Linton, Dr. Estes, Fac. Adv.; Ted Hitchcock, Chip Fortenberry.

Mrs. Williams, Fac. Ad.; Richard Campbell, Bus. Mgr.; Arlin Wallace, ed.; Hulon Alsabrook, Circ. Mgr.; Clark
Stone, Asst. ed.; Cherry Mahaffey, Art ed.

SCROLL

A publication of the creative art of LaGrange College.

MUSIC

EDUCATOR'S
NATIONAL
CONFERENCE

To further music education among the
student body.

Sandra Burgess, Renie Croons, Mary Snow,
Carrol Clyburn, Jimmy Smith, Dr. Anderson,
Fac. Adv.; Jimmy Jackson, Daphine Ray, Kath-
ryn Merritt, Vice-Pres.; Judy Whiting, Nancy
Fordham, Sandra Smith, Sharon Crawford, Sec-
Treas.; Not pictured: Jane Yarborough, Pres.

RADIO STAFF

To provide informative and entertaining radio coverage of the events on the
LaGrange College campus and to give LaGrange College students experience
in the field of broadcasting.

Jim Cowan, News director; Johnny Long, Sports director; John White, Production co-
ordinator. Not pictured: Alan Thomas, Adv.

KOUPLES'
KLUB

The married students' opportunity to
meet together for fun and fellowship.

Mr. and Mrs. Bobby McClain, V-P res.; Mr. and Mrs. Max McCord, Sec; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Awbrey, Pres.; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Tyler and members' children. Not pictured: Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Blackstone, Treas. ; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ramsey.

23

Clark Stone, Sports Editor and Staff members Jeff Hoss and Mickey Johnson.

Purpose: To report objectively all news pertinent to the college
community, and to comment editorially on relative matters.

Drue Linton, Business Manager; Fred Brown, Editor.

HILLTOP

NEWS

25

S. Adams

J. Baikie

B. Binford, Sec.

B. Buchanan

* ti-M

S. Campbell

J. Carter

N. Cherry

mm

Jerry Moore, Alpha Phi Beta Dream Boy

]. Christian

J. Clayton

C. Clyburn

S. Lawhorne

P. McFarland C. Mahaffey, V-Pres

B. Mulling
W.A.A. Rep.

C. Newby

J. Porter

E. Roberts

A. Russell

J. Savage, Historian E. Sessk

E. Smith

G. Smith

L. Smith

S. Smith

T. Thigpen

C. Tyner

H. Walton

as

N. Warren

J. Wheeler

A. White

K. Wooldridge

ALPHA PHI BETA

T. Alford

W. Allen

H. Alsabrook. Sec.

M. Baker

C. Bonner

J. Cowan

D. Beck

D. Bennett

F. Bowles

C. Collar

C. Fortenberry

B. Hearnburg,
Sgt-at-arms

Ouida Harmon, Sweetheart

Mr. Sigma Nu Pi 1964, Sammy McCord

T. Hitchcock, V-Pres. L. Hornsby

J. Hoss

B. Hyatt

T. Jones

W. Kersey

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C. Knight

E. Lee

C. Lockman

J. Mathews B. McClain, Treas. S. McCord. Pres.

J. Mc

J. Nelson

M. O'Brien

B. Patrick

D. Smith

S. Stewart

H. Tarpley

L. Shelnutt

D. West
Chaplain

L. Shumake

L. Yarbough

SIGMA NU PI

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T. Adcock S. Ash L. Beasley A. Beason L. Black P. Bowen B. Brake

C. Clonts J. Crawford G. Crawford R. Crooms J. Davis D. Efurd C. Garner

C. Hodges R. Holloman J. Holstum R. Hood E. Houseworth S. Huttzfeldt J. Jackson

B. Maddox B. Mays K. Merritt S. Mouchet E. Nickelson A. Oliver I. Papadeas,

Sec.

L. Purcell D. Ramey N. Ramsey J. Reaves E. Reeves L. Renfro L. Reynolds

ALPHA KAPPA THETA

B. Rutledge L. Sigmon J. Smith

W.A.A. Rep.

J. Baggett

C. Banks G. Brown, Historian

R. Campbell

J. Carter

C. Clark

Judy McKoon, Sweetheart

J. Clark

C. Corbett

A. de Sarran

R. Edgar

B. Gambill

S. Glisson

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S. Johnston, Sec.

J. Jones

J. Jones

M. Martin

J. Mooney

N. Morgan

J. Nally

T. Parker

J. Rice

G. Roberts

V. Shaffer, Treas.

C. Stevens

F. Stokes

D. Travitz, M.A.A.

J. Phillips

C. Thomas

M. Walters T. Whitman, Pres.

PI DELTA KAPPA

33

B. Aldredge D. Aldredge L. Aldridge

J. Alexander

B. Ayers

M. Bates

D. Alford

C. Bales

D. Atkinson,
Pres.

F. Barefoot

R. Brand, Sec. P. Calhoun

S. Carey

C. Corley

C. Cramer S. Culpepper

N. Dill

I. Duncan

N. Hamby

J. Johnson,
Treas.

E. He

L. Johnston

A. Gifford

J. Hayes,
Historian

M. Lane

J. Glass

H. Heimer

E. Latham

B. Greene

S. Goethe

A. Herren

C. Hodges

S. Longino A. McBride

mm

M. Hackney

D. Howell,
W.A.A. Rep.

A. McDonald,
V-Pres.

J. Sams

S. Schroeder

H. McMonagle

A. Murray

L. Richardson

F. Shelnutt

C. Sinclair

D. Mangham

N. Smith

B. Starr

D. Matthews

N. Stipek,
Panhellenic Rep.

KAPPA PHI DELTA

B. England

D. Gambill S. Gipson, M.A.A.

D. Johnson

M. Johnson

A. Jones

B. Lewis

J. Long

J. McGhee

J. New, Treas. C. Nixon, Sec.

36

* AtM k

C. Owen

B. Sewell

T. Peterson

M. Skipper

J. Pike

M. Powell L. Ramsey

V. Seiber

n

'\ -.A

B. Smith, Pres.

N. Smith

E. Stephens

B. Thomas

B. Thompson,
Panhellenic Rep.

L. Tillison,
V-Pres.

R. Weaver

R. Whelchel,

J. Wilson

B. Witcher

GAMMA PHI ALPHA

Carol Sinclair, Sweetheart

37

QUADRANGLE STAFF
1964

Business Manager
LAURA JOHNSON

Advertising Staff
CURTIS CHAPMAN

rat

Advertising Staff
ELLYN ADAMS

Advertising Staff
PEGGY BOWEN

Advertising Manager
PAT LANHAM

f

General Staff
SUZANNE NASH

General Staff
MICHAEL O'BRIEN

Advertising Staff
ANN HERREN

Advertising Staff
ELLEN HOUSWORTH

General Staff
Introduction and
Dedicatory Poem
ARLIN WALLACE

General Staff
DOREEN YATES

Advertising Staff
DRUE LINTON

Advertising Staff
LINDA LONG

Advertising Staff
DONNIE WEST

MB

David Corless, Joe Phillips, Johnny Pike, Roy Awbrey, Hugh Corless, Coach Mariotti, T. J. Thompson, Richard Rowell, Larry Thigpen, Lew Hal-
ter, Glenn Lord.

Manager Joe Mc Ghee.

LAGRANGE COLLEGE PANTHERS

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INTRAMURALS

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48

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Waights G. Henry, Jr.
A.B.. B.D., D.D.
President

L aG range College
Lewis Library

ADMINISTRATION

Alan R. Thomas
B.S., M.A.

Director of News Service

Carolyn Drinkard Burgess
Director of Alumni Activities

John D. Anderson
B.P.S.M.. M.M., Ph.D.
Professor of Music

Michael John Brown
A.B., M.A.

Assistant Professor of History

Virginia Canady
B.S., M.S.

Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education

Ann Laurine Clark
A.B., M.A.

Assistant Professor of Modern Languages

Kathryn T. Cline
A.B., B.M., M.M.
Associate Professor of Piano and Organ

Sara Marie Davis
B.S., M.A., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Education

Paul Watson Doster
B.M., M.M.
Assistant Professor of Music

Maxie Chambless Estes
B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
Professor of Speech
and Drama

Chairman of Fine Arts
Division

Nicholas E. Flaskay
M.Sc.

Assistant Professor of
Modern Languages

Fred B. Freeman, Jr.
A.B., M.A.

Assistant Professor of English

Katherine F. Glass
A.B., A.B.L.S.
Associate Librarian

Carleton S. Guptill
A.B., M.A.
Associate Professor of
Social Science

Roger S. Guptill
A.B., S.T.B., M.A.
Visiting Associate Professor
of Religion

Judson Burton Harris, Jr.
A.B., M.S., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Health
and Physical Education

C. Lee Harwell
A.B., M.A., Ph.D.
Academic Dean and Dean
of the Faculty

Jarrell E. Hethcox
A.B.

Assistant Professor of Art

Arthur M. Hicks
A.B., M.S.

Associate Professor of
Chemistry

55

r

Richard Donald Jolly
B.S., M.S.

Assistant Professor of Mathematics

Walter Dickinson Jones
A.B., M.A., Ph.D.
Professor of English
Chairman of Humanities Division

Toombs Hodges Kay, Jr.
A.B., B.D., Ph.D.
Professor of Religion
Dean of Chapel

i

Mary Kirk Kelly
A.B., M.A.T.
Dean of Women
Assistant Professor of History

John Perry Leavell, Jr.
A.B., M.A.

Assistant Professor of History

Mildred Wright Robinette
A.B., M.B.A.
Associate Professor of
Business Administration

Ezra L. Sellers
B.F.A., M.F.A.
Professor of Art

John L. Shibley
B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
Professor of Biology
Chairman of Science and
Mathematics Division

Walter Malcolm Shackelford
A.B., M.Ed., Ed.D.
Professor of Social Science
Division

58

Sylvia Strickland
A.B., M.A.

Assistant Professor of Speech and Drama

Marvis Charles Webb
B.S., MA.

Assistant Professor of Chemistry

Murial B. Williams

A.B., MA., Ph.D.

Associate Professor of English

Virginia Burgess Ann C. Fowler Lelia Fulford

Assistant to Librarian Alumni Association Secretary to President

Charlene Spinks
Secretary to the Dean

Joan Hammett
Secretary to Dean of Women

Sandra Patterson
Secretary to Admissions

Evelyn Brannon
Assistant Business Manager

Eleanor Parker
Assistant to Librarian

Juanita Overcash
Associate Registrar

George B. Sullivan
College Representative

Clara Mae Towns, B.S.
News Service Secretary

Madeline M. Tucker
Secretary to Business Manager

Mrs. Mary Miller
Residence Counselor

Mrs. Mildred Piatt
Residence Counselor

60

Mrs. Sadie Pool
Residence Counselor

Kermit R. Fowler
Campus Engineer

Mrs. Kermit R. Fowler
Post Mistress

Mr. D. J. Evans
Dietician

Manager, Campus Chefs, Inc.

i

Mrs. Lenice Stewart
Residence Counselor

STAFF

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63

SANDRA HELEN SCHROEDER

MARY JENNIFER GLASS
CLASS SECRETARY

64

OWEN DELONEY EDGE, III

PHILIP HENRY NIPPERT

HOMER LANIER SHELNUTT

9

65

KENNETH WAYNE MINOR

MARY OUIDA HARMON ELIZABETH MORGAN GYS

66

SANDRA MARLENE TURNER

67

68

SANDRA COLEMAN CLARKE

JOHN BENJAMIN RICE

69

STELLA CAROL SINCLAIR SAMMY O'NEAL McCORD

EDITH ELIZABETH RUTLEDGE

70

MARY ANNE HARWELL

DANIEL BRADLEY METTEE WAYNE H. DEAVORS

72

NANCY LOUISE SMITH

CLARK FREEL STONE

JERRY BLAINE MOORE

DELIA ANN ATKINSON
CLASS VICE PRESIDENT

WILLIAM VAN HEARNBURG

j \ 1 -

#

pp

ALFRED WILLIS BROWN

74

BONNIE BINFORD

SUSAN MARIE GOETHE

ALBERT ARLIN WALLACE

NAN TAYLOR BRADLEY

75

INA ELIZABETH REEVES

NEWTON DANIEL BRUMBELOE

HULON ERVIN ALSABROOK

JOAN SWANSON WOODSON

CHARLES RAY OWEN
CLASS PRESIDENT

81

SENIOR CREDITS

DOROTHY DIANE ALFORD

Lagrange, Georgia
Psychology

Hilltop News Staff 1, 2, 3. Society Editor 3; Homecoming Queen 2;
Gamma Phi Alpha Sweetheart 2, 3; Kappa Phi Delta 1. 2, 3, 4.

HULON ERVIN ALSABROOK

LaGrange, Georgia

Spanish

Choralaires 2. 3, 4. President 4; Los Hijos del Cid 1, 3, President 3;
B.S.U. 3. 4, Music Chairman 3, President 4; M.E.N.C. 4; Sigma Nu
Pi 1, 2, 3, 4, Historian 1, Secretary 2, 3, 4.

DELIA ANN ATKINSON
Palmetto, Georgia
Psychology

Choralaires 1. 2; W.A.A. 2; Homecoming Maid of Honor 3; May
Court 3; Class Secretary 4; Panhellenic Council 4; Kappa Phi
Delta 1, 2. 3. 4, Vice-President 3, President 4.

BEVERLY FORREST BARBER

LaGrange. Georgia

English

Curtain Raisers 2. 3, Corresponding Secretary 3; Homecoming Can-
didate 2. 3; Town Girls' Cluh 1, 2, 3, 4, President 3, 4; S.C.A. Repre-
sentative 2; Alpha Kappa Theta 1, 2, 3.

CAROLYN LUCILLE BEASLEY

Swainsboro, Georgia

Religion

South Georgia College 1, 2; Alpha Kappa Theta 3, 4.

CYNTHIA TERI BENNETT
Decatur. Georgia
Elementary Education

Alpha Psi Omega 3, 4; Sigma 3, 4; Who's Who 4; . . . .
L 2, 3.

JOE BARRY BENNETT
Hogansville, Georgia
Chemistry

Oglethorpe University 1.

BONNIE BINFORD
Atlanta, Georgia
Religion

Young Harris College 1, 2; Wesley Fellowship 3, 4, Projects Chair-
man 4; Christadelphians 3, 4, President 4; Alpha Phi Beta 3, 4,
Secretary 4.

NAN TAYLOR BRADLEY
LaGrange, Georgia
Elementary Education

ALFRED WILLIS BROWN
East Point, Georgia
History

Georgia State 1, 2; Hilltop News Editor 4; Who's Who 4.

NEWTON DANIEL BRUMBELOE
West Point, Georgia
Business Administration

CHARLES BLANCHARD CLARK
LaGrange, Georgia
General Science

North Georgia College 1; Circle K 3, 4, Treasurer 3, Vice-President 4;
Pi Delta Kappa 2, 3, 4.

SANDRA COLEMAN CLARKE
Pine Mountain. Georgia
Mathematics

Augusta College 1; Columbus College 2; Kappa Phi Delta 3, 4.

MAXINE SUZANNE CLERKE
LaGrange, Georgia
General Science

West Georgia College 1; Choralaires 3; B.S.U. 1, 2, 3, 4; Town Girls'
Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Theta 4.

FRANCES VIRGINIA CRAW*unL

Blue Ridge, Georgia

Biology

Choralaires 2; Sigma 2, 3, 4; May Court 2; Quadrangle Literary
Editor 3; Who's Who 4; Class Secretary 3; Alpha Kappa Theta
1, 2, 3, 4.

WAYNE HILL DEAVOURS
Columbus, Georgia
History

Columbus College 1, 2; Pre-Ministerial Association 3, 4, Secretary 4.

JENNY LEE DOROUGH
Albany, Georgia
English

Emory at Oxford 1, 2; Quadrangle Editor 4; Alpha Phi Beta 3, 4,
Pan-Hellenic Representative 4.

ROBERT ELLIS DUNBAR
Zebulon. Georgia

Social Science

Young Harris College 1, 2; Pi Gamma Mu 3, 4, Student Vice-Presi-
dent 4; Gamma Phi Alpha 3. 4; Choralaires 4.

JUDY MAE DYSON
Austell, Georgia
Mathematics

Reinhardt College 1. 2; Sigma 3, 4; Judicial Council 4; Who's Who
4; Kappa Phi Delta 3, 4, Treasurer 4.

OWEN D. EDGE, III
Columbus, Georgia
Business Administration
Gamma Phi Alpha 1, 2, 3.

MARY JENNIFER GLASS
Newnan, Georgia
History

Class Vice-President 4; Quadrangle Assistant Editor 3; Hilltop News
Staff 3; Kappa Phi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 2, President 3.

CHARLES STEDMAN GLISSON, III
Atlanta, Georgia
Religious Education

Wesley Fellowship 1, 2, 3. 4; Hilltop News 2, 3, Sports Editor 2;
S.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Class Representative 1, Recreation Chairman 2,
Vice-President 3, Y.M.C.A. Chairman 4; Pi Delta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4,
Chaplain 4.

L. WIMBERLY GLOVER
LaGrange, Georgia
Social Science

Wesleyan College 1 ; Alpha Kappa Theta 2, 3.

SUSAN MARIE GOETHE

Buford, Georgia

Art

Cheerleader 1, 2, Captain 2; May Court Representative 1; Home-
coming Candidate 2, 3, 4; Art League 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 4; Letter-
man's Club 2, 3, 4; W.A.A. Council 2, 4, Treasurer 2. Vice-President
4; Quadrangle Staff 2, 3, Art Editor 2, Editor 3.

VARNEY ARTHUR GRAVES
LaGrange, Georgia

Social Science

Pi Delta Kappa 3, 4.

KATHRYN MOZELLE GREEN

Atlanta, Georgia

Art

Sigma Nu Pi Sweetheart 3; Art Student's League 1, 2, 3, 4, President
3; Choralaires 2; Girls' Vocal Ensemble 1, 2; Panhellenic 4; Curtain
Raisers 3; Alpha Phi Beta 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 3, President 4.

ELIZABETH MORGAN GYS
LaGrange, Georgia
Elementary Education

Woman's College of the University of North Carolina 1, 2; Alpha
Kappa Theta 3, 4.

82

MARY SMITH HACKNEY
Atlanta, Georgia

Psychology

Los Hijos del Cid 3; Quadrangle Staff 4; Kappa Phi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4.

JAMES POPE HARMAN, JR.
Greenville, Georgia
Business Administration

MARY OUIDA HARMON
Hogansville, Georgia
Art

Tift College 1; Legislative Council 3; First Prize Watercolor Student
Show 3; Homecoming Candidate 3; Sigma Nu Pi Sweetheart 4;
Alpha Phi Beta 2, 3, 4.

LAURA McGOWAN HARULT
LaGrange, Georgia
Social Science

MARY ANNE HARWELL
LaGrange, Georgia
History

Pi Gamma Mu 3, 4; Legislative Council 3; Judicial Council 4; Quad-
rangle Organizations Editor 3; Who's Who 4; Alpha Kappa Theta
1, 2, 3, 4, Social Chairman 2, 3, Treasurer 4.

WILLIAM VAN HEARNBURG

LaGrange, Georgia

Speech and Drama; English

Alpha Psi Omega 2, 3, 4, Business Manager 3, 4; Sigma Nu Pi
1, 2, 3, 4, Historian 1; MA A. Council 2; Curtain Raisers 1, 2, 3, 4,
Vice-President 2, President 3, 4, Sergeant at Arms 4.

HELGA ELIZABETH HEIMER
New York, New York
Spanish

St. Petersburg Junior College 1, 2; Spanish Club 3; B.S.U. 3, 4;
Kappa Phi Delta 3, 4.

MARTHA PEACOCK HILL
LaGrange, Georgia
English

University of Georgia 1, 2.

JUDITH HOLSTUN
Birmingham, Alabama
General Science

Pi Delta Kappa Sweetheart 3; Radio Club 3; Alpha Kappa Theta
1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 3.

ROBIN HOOD
Tallahassee, Florida
Elementary Education

Young Harris College 1, 2; Curtain Raisers 4; Alpha Kappa Theta
3, 4.

MARY SUE JOHNSON
Roanoke, Alabama
Elementary Education

LAURA BATCHELOR JOHNSTON
Atlanta, Georgia

Elementary Education

Girls' Ensemble 2; Hilltop News 3, 4; Quadrangle Staff 3, 4, Ad-
vertising Manager 3, Business Manager 4; Kappa Phi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4,
Reporter 3, Social Chairman 4.

SIDNEY GUY JOHNSTON
Rome, Georgia

Physical Education

S.G.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Los Hijos del Cid 2; Curtain Raisers 4; Tennis
Team 3; Cheerleader 4; Pi Delta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 4.

DAVID M. JORDAN
Columbus, Georgia
History

Columbus College 1, 2; Sigma Nu Pi 3, 4.

CHARLIE LEE KNIGHT
LaGrange, Georgia
Business Administration

M.A.A. Secretary 2; Judicial Council 3, 4, Chairman 4; Circle K 3, 4;
Pan-Hellenic Council 2, 3; S.G.A. Representative 2; Sigma Nu Pi
1, 2, 3, 4, President 2, 3.

PATRICIA ANNE LANHAM
Emerson, Georgia
Business Administration

Class Secretary 1; M.S.M. 1, 2; Hilltop News Staff 2, 3; Quadrangle
Staff Advertising Editor 4; Homecoming Candidate 4; S.G.A. 4;
Christadelphians 4; Alpha Kappa Theta 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 2.

WILLIAM ELVIS LEWIS
Tallahassee, Florida
Economics

Class Treasurer 4; Gamma Phi Alpha 1, 2, 3, 4.

OTIS MAX McCORD
LaGrange, Georgia
Business Administration
Kouples Klub President 4.

SAMMY O'NEAL McCORD
LaGrange, Georgia
Economics

Pan-Hellenic Council 3, 4, Vice-Chairman 4; Mr. Sigma Nu 3; Hilltop
News 4; S.C.A. Cabinet 4; B.S.U. 1, 2, 3. 4; Pi Gamma Mu 3, 4;
Circle K 3, 4; Sigma Nu Pi 1, 2. 3, 4. Scholarship Chairman 3, Presi-
dent 4.

BOBBY KENNETH McCLAIN
LaGrange, Georgia
Social Science

Kouples Klub Vice-President 4; Sigma Nu Pi 3, 4.

MILLARD FRANK MARTIN
Atlanta, Georgia
Business Administration

Circle K 2. 3. 4, President 3; Class President 3; S.G.A. President 4;
Who's Who 4; Pi Delta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4.

MARY KATE MASSEY
Americus, Georgia
Business Administration

Georgia Southwestern 2; Los Hijos del Cid 1; Class Vice-President
3; Kappa Phi Delta 1, 3, 4.

DOROTHY PATRICIA MATHEWS

Atlanta, Georgia

Spanish

S.G.A. 2. 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer 2, Women's Vice-President 4;
W.A.A. President 3; Los Hijos del Cid 2, 3; S.C.A. Council 3;
Choralaires 3; Who's Who 4; Kappa Phi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4.

OUIDA KATHRYN MERRITT
Columbus, Georgia
Music Education

Columbus College 1, 2; Choralaires 3, 4, Treasurer 3; M.E.N.C. 3, 4.
Vice-President 4; Alpha Kappa Theta 3, 4.

DANIEL BRADLEY METTEE

Atlanta, Georgia

Economics

Class President 2; Circle K 2, 3, 4; S.G.A. Men's Vice-President 3;
Pi Delta Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4, President 4.

CHARLES HUNTER MILAM, III
LaGrange, Georgia
Music Education

Orchestra 2, 3, 4; M.E.N.C. 1, 2. 3, 4; Choralaires 2, 3; Gamma Phi
Alpha 1. 2, 3, 4.

KENNETH WAYNE MINOR

Alva, Florida

Art

JERRY BLAINE MOORE

LaGrange, Georgia

Health and Physical Education

Class Treasurer 3; M.A.A. Council 3. 4; Legislative Council 3, 4;
Alpha Phi Beta Dream Boy 4; All-Conference Volleyball 3; Sigma
Nu Pi 1, 2, 3, 4.

SYLVIA GAY MOUCHET
Newnan, Georgia
French

Homecoming Candidate 1, 2, 3; Quadrangle Staff 3; Alpha Kappa
Theta 2, 3, 4.

S3

BRENDA MERLE MULLING
Metter. Georgia
Social Science

May Court 3; Quadrangle Staff 3; W.A.A. Council 3, 4, Treasurer
3; Alpha Phi Beta 1, 2, 3, 4.

JAMES ALLEN NEW
Decatur. Georgia
Speech

M.S.M. Treasurer 1; Basketball Team 1; Tennis Team 2. 3, 4;
Letterman's Club 2. 3. 4; Legislative Council 2; Dorm Council 4;
M.A.A. 3, 4, Vice- President 3, President 4; Gamma Phi Alpha 1,

2. 3, 4, Treasurer 4.

EDWARD TAYLOR NEWTON

Madison. Georgia
Social Science

Georgia Tech 1, 2; Tennis Team 3; Legislative Council 4; Pi Delta
Kappa 3. 4.

PHILIP HENRY NIPPERT
Atlanta, Georgia
Biol ogy

Pi Delta Kappa 3, 4.

DIANE ELAINE NIXON
Atlanta, Georgia
History

Young Harris College 1. 2; Hilltop News Staff 3. 4; Christadelphians

3, 4; Legislative Council 4; Pi Gamma Mu 4; Kappa Phi Delta 3. 4.

JOYCE ELLEN ODOM
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
Business Administration

Cheerleader 1; Letterman's Club 2, 3. 4; S.G.A. House President 4;
Alpha Kappa Theta 1, 2; Kappa Phi Delta 4.

CHARLES RAY OWEN
Meigs. Georgia
English

South Georgia College 1, 2; Quadrangle Staff 3; Class President 4;
Gamma Phi Alpha 3, 4. Chaplain 4.

ALICE ARMISTEAD PARKER
Barnesville, Georgia
History and Social Science

Emory University 1, 2; Quadrangle Staff 3; Kappa Phi Delta 2. 3.

JAMES EARL PATTERSON, JR.
Columbus. Georgia
General Science
Emory-At-Oxford 1, 2.

LEE KEMP RAMSEY
LaGrange, Georgia
Religion

Young Harris College 1, 2; Gamma Phi Alpha 3, 4.
INA ELIZABETH REEVES
Hogansville. Georgia
Elementary Education

B.S.U. 3; Homecoming Candidate 2; Homecoming Court 3; Alpha
Kappa Theta 1. 2, 3.
JOHN BENJAMIN RICE
LaGrange, Georgia
General Science

Sigma 2, 3, 4; Circle K 1, 2. 3. 4; Pi Delta Kappa 1. 2.
EDITH ELIZABETH RUTLEDGE
Atlanta, Georgia
Art

Art League 1. 2, 3. 4, Vice-President 2. Secretary 3; Pan-Hellenic
Council 3; Alpha Kappa- Theta 1. 2. 3. 4, Social Chairman 4.
JULIA RUTH SAMS
Cartersville. Georgia
Social Science

Choralaires 2, 3; Girls' Ensemble 1, 2, 3; Homecoming Candidate
2, 4; Legislative Council 4.

JUDITH LYN SAVAGE
Chattahoochee, Florida
Art

Chipola Junior College 1, 2; Art League 3. 4; Alpha Phi Beta 3, 4,
Historian 4.

SAMUEL ALBERT SAXON. Ill

Gainesville, Florida

Speech

Univer sity of Florida 1, 2; Gamma Phi Alpha 3, 4.

SANDRA SCHROEDER
Columbus, Georgia
Elementary Education

Columbus College 1, 2; Kappa Phi Delta 3, 4.

HOMER LANIER SHELNUTT
LaGrange, Georgia

Social Science

S.G.A. 2; Circle K 3. 4; Sigma Nu Pi 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 3.

STELLA CAROL SINCLAIR
Montezuma. Georgia
Religious Education

Choralaires 1, 2; Girls' Ensemble 1, 2; May Court Representative 1;
Homecoming Candidate 2; Homecoming Queen 4; Gamma Phi Alpha
Sweetheart 4; Legislative Council 4; Kappa Phi Delta 1. 2, 3, 4.

NANCY LOUISE SMITH
Rock Springs, Georgia
Social Science

Young Harris College 1, 2; Choralaires 3. 4; Wesley Fellowship 3, 4,
Secretary 4; Christadelphians 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Kappa Phi Delta 3, 4.

NOEL LYNN SMITH
Wrightsville, Georgia
Business Administration

Class Vice-President 1; Choralaires 1, 2, 4; Circle K 3, 4; Dorm
Council Chairman 4; S.G.A. Men's Vice-President 4; Who's Who 4;
Gamma Phi Alpha 1. 2, 3, 4.

WILLIAM HUGH SMITH
Atlanta, Georgia
Business Administration

Pan-Hellenic Chairman 4: Gamma Phi Alpha 1. 2, 3. 4, President 4.

CARLIS MacARTHUR STILLWELL
LaGrange, Georgia
Chemistry
Sigma 3. 4.

CLARK FREEL STONE
Hogansville, Georgia
English

Basketball Statistician 1, 2, 3, 4; Sports News Manager 3; Hilltop
News Sports Editor 3, 4; Scroll Assistant Editor 4; Quadrangle Staff
Sports Editor 3, 4; Editor of LaGrange College Basketball Brochure.
Ranked in Top Ten in "Duplicated" Brochures Division.

LAURA JANET TAYLOR
Toccoa. Georgia
English

Young Harris College 1, 2; Wesley Fellowship 3, 4. President 4;
Christadelphians 3, 4; Hilltop News Staff 3. 4.

SANDRA MARLENE TURNER

LaGrange. Georgia

French

S.G.A. 1; Legislative Council 3; Hilltop News Staff 1, 2; Cheerleader

2, 3; Alpha Kappa Theta 1. 2, 3.

ALBERT ARLINE WALLACE
Columbus. Georgia
Speech and English

Alpha Psi Omega 4; Grand Stage Manager 4; Curtain Raisers 3, 4.
Vice-President 4; Scroll 3. 4, Editor 4; Sigma Nu Pi 3. 4.

DONNIE JOE WEST
Augusta, Georgia
English and History

Augusta College 1, 2; Wesley Fellowship 3, 4, Treasurer 3, 4; Pi
Gamma Mu 3. 4; S.C.A. 3, 4; President 4; Pre-ministerial Association

3, 4, Vice-President 3; Circle K 3, 4; Hilltop News Religious Editor
3; Quadrangle Staff 4; National YMCA President's Congress 4;
Who's Who 4; Sigma Nu Pi 3, 4, Chaplain 4.

BOBBY VERNON WITCHER
Bowman. Georgia

Social Science

Young Harris College 1, 2; Cheerleader 3; Gamma Phi Alpha 3, 4.

JOAN SWANSON WOODSON

Dawson, Georgia

General Science

Sigma 3, 4; Honor Student 4.

84

Sherry Diane Adams
Freshman

Teresa Lee Adcock
Junior

Linda Juanell Akins
Junior

Brenda Louise Aldredge
Junior

Glenda Diane Aldredge
Sophomore

Madelyn Mary Bates
Junior

F. Anne Beason
Freshman Class
Social Chairman

Richard Douglas Beck, Jr.
Sophomore

Donald Lee Benefield Douglas Truman Bennett
Freshman Freshman

Elizabeth Loy Black
Junior

Peggy Anne Bowen
Freshman Class Secretary

Willie Frank Bowles
Freshman

Betty Neil Brake
Freshman

Grady Clark Bonner
Freshman

Rose Lee Brand
Junior

Donald Lindsey Brazell
Freshman

Gary William Brown
Sophomore

Barbara Ann Buchanan
Freshman

Marian Judith Brown
Junior

Saundra Bartlett Brumbeloe
Junior

Norma Jean Burgess
Junior

Sandra Gail Burgess
Freshman

H. Susan Calhoun
Freshman

Susan Esther Butler
Freshman

James King Byrd, II
Freshman

Ruth Eugenia Burgess
Junior

Penny Marie Calhoun Virginia Claire Callaway
Freshman Freshman

1 1+ tti

Georgia Sue Campbell Henry Richard Campbell, J
Sophomore Sophomore

Darrel Kenneth Chapman
Junior

87

Janice Carole Christian
Junior

Mark William Chapman
Freshman

Carleton Hoyt Collar, Jr.
Freshman

Hugh Clifford Corless
Sophomore

Hilda Grace Chastain
Sophomore

Nancy Louise Cherry
Sophomore

Lem Jay Clark, Jr
Sophomore

Sarah Carol Clyburn
Freshman

Janice Clayton
Junior

Carole Netelle Clonts
Junior

Byron William Collier
Sophomore

Charles Nims Corbett
Freshman

David Warren Corless
Sophomore

Chrissilda Corley
Sophomore

James Luis Cowan
Freshman Class Vice President

Sharon Annette Crawford
Sophomore

William Miles Cox
Junior

88

James Edward Crews
Freshman

Scarlett Marie Crenshaw
Freshman

Ella Joy Dorough
Freshman

Cynthia Irene Crooms
Junior

Carl Michael Duncan
Freshman

Iris Ruth Duncan
Junior

Sally Lane Culpepper
Sophomore

Nancy Virginia Dill
Freshman

William Evans England
Freshman

Randolph Munro Edgar
Junior Class Vice President

Ethel Dianne Efurd
Junior

Mildred Callie Eidson
Junior

Bentley Crowe Fallis
Sophomore

Victor Everett Fortenberry
Sophomore

Nancy Marcia Fordham
Junior

Joyce Iris Fuller
Freshman

Catherine Lee Funke
Freshman

Judith Hall Hayes
Junior

Roderick McKinstry Heitman
Junior

Laura Alice Hill
Sophomore

Judith Ellen Hitchcock

Freshman Walter Theodore Hitchcock

Sophomore

Bessie Delzanne Hobbs
Sophomore

Carol Lenora Hodges
Junior

Regina VeNora Holloman
Junior

Mary Charlotte Hodges
Junior

Donald Nathaniel Holloway, Jr.
Sophomore

Jefferson Alexander Hoss
Freshman

Mary Ellen Housworth
Junior

Donna Elizabeth Howell
Junior Class Secretary

Andrew Armstrong Hunt
Freshman

Sharon Elizabeth Hutzfeldt
Freshman

James Wesley Jackson
Junior

William Peter Hyatt, Jr
Junior

Elaine Hamilton Latham
Freshman

Geneva Elizabeth Leonard
Junior

Ernest Lamar Lee
Freshman

Linda Lucy Long
Freshman

Carl Davis Lockman
Freshman

John Carlton Long
Sophomore

Susan Kathleen Longino
Freshman

Leonora Anne McBride
Junior

Nancy Elizabeth McDonald Patricia Ann McFarland
Sophomore Freshman

Roslyn Marie McBroom
Freshman

Ann Merritt McDonald
Sophomore

Amelia Christine McKoy Judith Ann McMath

Sophomore Freshman

Arthur Joe McGhee
Sophomore

Julia Elaine McGarity
Freshman

Helen Lorraine McMonagle
Sophomore

Bonnie Carol Maddox
Sophomore

Elizabeth Edmiston Mays
Sophomore Class Treasurer

Lizabeth Anne Murray
Freshman

Cheryl Dean Mahaffey
Junior

Doris Helen Mangum
Freshman

James Ralph Matthews, Jr.
Junior

Mary Elizabeth Melson
Freshman

Caroline Story Milam Carson Neal Morgan, Jr.
Freshman Freshman

Vivian Lynn Meacham
Junior

Suzanne Allyson Nash James Columbus Nelson
Freshman Freshman

Martha Elon Nicholson
Freshman

Joseph Cleon Nalley
Sophomore

Carolyn Elaine Newby
Freshman

Charles Ware Nixon, Jr Michael Kenneth O'Brien
Sophomore Freshman

Jerry Baine Newsome
Freshman

94

Bi B Sandra Patterson \

4

Walter Edwin Patrick
Sophomore

Thomas Lyman Parker, Jr.
Junior

Patricia Ann Paul
Junior

Terry Lamar Phillips
Junior

^1

Mary Louise Propst
Freshman

Andrea Delores Ramey
Junior

Nancy Florence Ramsey
Junior

Wanda Jacquelyn Reaves Martha Lynn Renfro

Linda Ann Reynolds Leslie Bryan Richardson
Freshman Freshman

Sophomore

Sophomore

Daphine Johnson Ray

Nancy Elizabeth Rickett
Sophomore

ft

# * I

Glenda Elaine Roberts
Freshman

Mary Gail Roberts
Freshman

Millard Gary Roberts Sandra Lee Roberts

Freshman Freshman

Connie Mae Robinson
Freshman

Willis Alton Roberts, Jr.
Sophomore

i

n

Ann Kathleen Russell
Sophomore

Richard Lynn Rowell
Junior

96

Alain de Sarran
Junior

Mary Frances Snow
Sophomore

Sheri Stokes
Freshman

Samuel Newt Stewart Frederick Champion Stokes
Freshman Freshman

Charles Pitt Thomas
Freshman

Barbara Ann Starr
Junior

Troyanne Camille Thigpen
Freshman

James Larry Thigpen
Junior

Harold Thurman Tarpley
Junior

Mary Carolyn Tyner
Freshman

Patricia Unterspan
Freshman

Sharon Cecile Waller
Junior

Niles Buchanan Thomas
Freshman

Judith Moss Thomason William Arthur Thompson

Sophomore Sophomore Class Vice President

Lowery Ivie Tillison
Junior

Ann Lane Tullis
Junior Class Treasurer

Mary Quentilla Turner
Sophomore

Michael Sydney Walters
Freshman

Harriet Lavinia Walton
Freshman

Nancy Lavinia Warren
Freshman

Alexis Dorothy White
Freshman

Roger Weaver
Sophomore

Janice Virginia Wheeler
Freshman

Penelope Lucia White
Freshman

Jane Lee Wilbanks
Sophomore Class Secretary

Charles Oliver Williamson, Jr.
Sophomore

Charlenne Genelle Wilder
Sophomore

Dyan Faye Wilkes
Sophomore

Kathryn Jones Wooldridge
Freshman

James Olin Wilson, Jr.
Freshman

Jane Ellen Yarbrough
Junior

Deanna Carolyn Young
Sophomore

Larry Sanford Yarbrough
Freshman

Helen Doreen Yates
Freshman

99

UNDERCLASSMEN DIRECTORY

Ellyn Adams, Canton, Ga.
Sherry Diane Adams. LaGrange, Ga.
Teresa Lee Adcock, Decatur, Ga.
Linda Juanell Akins, Nashville, Ga.
Brenda Louise Aldredge, Palmetto, Ga.
Glenda Diane Aldredge, Palmetto, Ga.
Linda Louise Aldridge, Atlanta, Ga.
Jane Louise Alexander, Atlanta, Ga.
Clarence Terrell Alford, Atlanta, Ga.
Jerry Wayne Allen, LaGrange, Ga.
Ralph Warner Allen, Lanette, Ala.
James Ronald Anderson, Hogansville, Ga.
Susan Ash, East Point, Ga.
Wilson Herrin Austin, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.
Roy Melvin Awbrey, LaGrange, Ga.
Billie Marian Ayers, Newnan, Ga.
James Emory Baggett, Hollywood, Fla.
Janet Sue Baikie, Atlanta, Ga.
Charles Michael Baker, Key West, Fla.
Carolyn Sue Bales, Decatur, Ga.
Marybell Ball. Columbus, Ga.
Charles Wesley Banks, College Park, Ga.
Helen Frances Barefoot. Waycross, Ga.
Shirley Jean Bass, Pine Mountain, Ga.
Madelyn Mary Bates, Covington, Ga.
Jerry Eugene Beasley, Jesup, Ga.
Anne Beason. Dalton, Ga.
Richard Douglas Beck, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Donald Lee Benefield, Roanoke, Ala.
Douglas Truman Bennett, LaGrange, Ga.
Elizabeth Loy Black, Atlanta, Ga.
Jack Riley Blackstone, Augusta, Ga.
Grady Clark Bonner, LaGrange, Ga.
Frank McClellan Boozer, Atlanta, Ga.
John Ray Bouchillon, Milledgeville, Ga.
Peggy Anne Bowen, Dalton, Ga.
Willie Frank Bowles, LaGrange, Ga.
Betty Neil Brake, Macon, Ga.
Rose Lee Brand, Montezuma, Ga.
Donald Lindsey Brazell, Fernandina Beach,
Fla.

Willodene Brazell, LaGrange, Ga.
Jacqueline Brewer, Warner Robins, Ga.
Gary Wiliam Brown, Newnan, Ga.
Marian Judith Brown, LaGrange, Ga.
Travis Edward Brown, Cleveland, Tenn.
Roger Euless Brown, Douglas, Ga.
Saundra Bartlett Brumbeloe, West Point, Ga.
Barbara Ann Buchanan, West Point, Ga.
Norma Jean Burgess, McRae, Ga.
Ruth Eugenia Burgess, LaGrange, Ga.
Sandra Gail Burgess, Dallas, Ga.
Susan Esther Butler, Fernandina Beach, Fla.
Tommy Guinn Butler, LaGrange, Ga.
Joe Melvyn Byars, LaGrange, Ga.
James King Byrd, II, Maitland, Fla.
Susan H. Calhoun, Orlando, Fla.
Penny Marie Calhoun, Waycross, Ga.
Robert Alonzo Callaway, LaGrange, Ga.
Virginia Claire Callaway, LaGrange, Ga.
Georgia Sue Campbell, Woodbury, Ga.
Henry Richard Campbell, Jr., Fairburn, Ga.
Sandra Elizabeth Carey, Jacksonville, Fla.
Judith Mathews Carlsen, Atlanta, Ga.
John Glenn Carmichael, Atlanta, Ga.
John Leslie Carter, Jacksonville, Fla.
Joye Carter, Vero Beach, Fla.
Beverly Ann Castleberry, Chamblee, Ga.

Nancy Carolyn Chambless, Lizella, Ga.

Curtis Allen Chapman, Macon. Ga.

Darrel Kenneth Chapman, Decatur, Ga.

Mark William Chapman, Columbus, Ga.

Hilda Grace Chastain, Epworth, Ga.

Nancy Louise Cherry, Atlanta, Ga.

Janice Carole Christian, Opelika, Ala.

Michael Merrill Church, W. Palm Beach, Fla.

Lem Jay Clark, Jr., Macon, Ga.

Linda Joy Clark, Atlanta, Ga.

Janice Clayton, Adel, Ga.

Carole Netelle Clonts, Atlanta, Ga.

Sarah Carol Clyburn, Atlanta, Ga.

Judy Coker, Newnan, Ga.

Carleton Hoyt Collar, Jr., Leesburg, Fla.

Linda Darlene Colley, West Point, Ga.

Byron William Collier, Blakely, Ga.

Willie Fred Cook. LaGrange, Ga.

Charles Nims Corbett, Fernandina Beach, Fla.

David Warren Corless, Charleston, S.C.

Hugh Clifford Corless, Charleston, S.C.

Chrissilda Corley, Calhoun, Ga.

James Luis Cowan, Jacksonville, Fla.

William Miles Cox, Girard, Ga.

Sharon Annette Crawford, Carrollton, Ga.

Scarlett Marie Crenshaw, LaGrange, Ga.

James Edward Crews, Decatur. Ga.

Carol Elizabeth Crisler, Marietta, Ga.

Cynthia Irene Crooms, Cochran, Ga.

Mary Louise Crowe, LaGrange, Ga.

Sally Lane Culpepper, LaGrange, Ga.

William Eldridge Dabbs, Lanette, Ala.

Vivian Carol Dail, LaGrange, Ga.

Thomas Emmett Darden, Pine Mountain, Ga.

Carey Vance Davis, LaGrange, Ga.

Patricia Joanne Davis, Madison, Tenn.

Larry Edward Denney, Carrollton, Ga.

Alain de Sarran, St. Avertin, France

Nancy Virginia Dill, Groveton. Ga.

Carole Ann di Lucian, Winter Park, Fla.

Ella Joy Dorough, Chickasaw, Ala.

Carl Michael Duncan, Tavares, Fla.

Iris Ruth Duncan, Decatur, Ga.

Hugh McMath Duskin, West Point. Ga.

Kenneth Charles Easom, Cordele, Ga.

Randolph Munro Edgar, Atlanta, Ga.

Ethel Dianne Efurd, Columbus, Ga.

Mildred Callie Eidson. Atlanta, Ga.

Brenda Faye Elder, Smyrna, Ga.

Jerry Eugene Eley, LaGrange, Ga.

William Evans England, Atlanta, Ga.

Bently Crowe Fallis, LaGrange, Ga.

Edward Hentz Fletcher, Greensboro, Fla.

Nancy Marcia Fordham, Dublin, Ga.

John Wayne Forrester, Douglasville, Ga.

Victor Everett Fortenberry, Jr., Clarkston, Ga.

Emmett Jerry Fuller, Gabbettville, Ga.

Joyce Iris Fuller, Atlanta, Ga.

Catherine Lee Funke, East Point, Ga.

Linda Kaye Futch, LaGrange, Ga.

Susan Leslie Galloway, Atlanta, Ga.

Janine Marie Gambill. Cuthbert, Ga.

Richard Dick Gambill, Moultrie, Ga.

William Lee Gambill, Columbus, Ga.

Cathie Ann Garner, Shilo, Ga.

Thomas Dwight Garrett. LaGrange, Ga.

Gary Buckey George, Boulder, Colo.

Brazzilla Ann Gifford, Atlanta, Ga.

Cynthia Linn Gill, Richmond Hill, Ga.
Samuel Leland Gipson, Tampa, Fla.
Charles Stedman Glisson, III, Atlanta, Ga.
John Scudder Glisson, Atlanta, Ga.
William Larry Goodman, Columbus, Ga.
Kathie Jo Graham, Atlanta, Ga.
Thomas Lane Gray, West Point, Ga.
Barbara Ann Greene, LaGrange, Ga.
Lew A. Halter, Lake Worth, Fla.
Nancy Curtis Hamby, Hogansville, Ga.
Nancy Louise Hammett, Hogansville, Ga.
Elain Hance, Atlanta, Ga.
Hugh James Hansen, Fairfax, Ala.
Russell Charles Harvey, Fernandina Beach,
Fla.

Judith Hall Hayes, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
David Clifton Heck, Newnan, Ga.
Roderick McKinstry Heitman, Ft. Myers, Fla.
Pierre Charles Herault, LaGrange, Ga.
Beverly Ann Herren, Powder Springs, Ga.
George Hugo Hester, West Point, Ga.
Theresa Gold Hicks, Thomasville, Ga.
Laura Alice Hill, Royston, Ga.
Judith Ellen Hitchcock, Fernandina Beach, Fla.
Walter Theodore Hitchcock, Fernandina Beach,
Fla.

Bessie Delzanne Hobbs, Atlanta, Ga.
Carol Lenora Hodges, Albany, Ga.
Mary Charlotte Hodges, Blakely, Ga.
Regina VeNora Holloman, Villa Rica, Ga.
Donald Nathanial Holloway, Jr., Grantville, Ga.
David Irvin Holtberg, Atlanta, Ga.
Larry Franklin Horton, Columbus, Ga.
Jefferson Alexander Hoss, Atlanta, Ga.
Mary Ellen Housworth, Newnan, Ga.
Donna Elizabeth Howell, Rossville, Ga.
Richard Elmo Hudson, West Point, Ga.
Andrew Armstrong Hunt, Marietta, Ga.
Margaret Joanne Hutcherson, Toccoa, Ga.
Sharon Elizabeth Hutzfeldt, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.

William Peter Hyatt, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Kendrick Lamar Ivey, Wrightsville, Ga.
Bette Martin Jabaley, LaGrange, Ga.
Barbara Jean Jackson, Atlanta, Ga.
James Wesley Jackson, Lithia Springs, Ga.
Patrick Andrew Jackson, McDonough, Ga.
Toby Earl James, LaGrange, Ga.
Charles Burt Jenkins, Thomaston, Ga.
David Joseph Johnson, Waynesville, N.C.
James Andrews Johnson, III, Avondale Estates,
Ga.

Jane Hall Johnson, Turin, Ga.
Mark Euclid Johnson, Atlanta, Ga.
Ruth Dominick Johnson, Hogansville, Ga.
Susan Louise Johnson, Macon, Ga.
Andrew Nolan Jones, Atlanta, Ga.
Gerald Woodrow Jones, Gainesville, Fla.
Jack E. Jones, Blue Ridge, Ga.
John Terry Jones, LaGrange, Ga.
Elaine Leslie Kandul, Marietta, Ga.
George Fredrick Kemp, III, Shawmut, Ala.
Phillip Hunt Kendall, Monroe, Ga.
Suzanne Kersey, LaGrange, Ga.
Thomas Wesley Kersey, Brunswick, Ga.
Patricia Ann King, LaGrange, Ga.
Victor Michael King, LaGrange, Ga.
Bette Cole Kinman, Montezuma, Ga.

100

Barbara Luise Kinzy, Milledgeville, Ga.

David Lee Kirk, Columbus, Ga.

Tony Melinda Knowles, Columbus, Ga.

Marie Adams Krafka, LaGrange, Ga.

Cathrine Kramer, Atlanta, Ga.

Dixie Land, Columbia, S.C.

Margaret Cecilia Lane, Lake Wales, Fla.

William Lacey Lane. LaGrange, Ga.

Junious Alvin Langford, Jr., Carrollton, Ga.

Sue Annette Langley, Dalton, Ga.

John H. Lantz, Atlanta, Ga.

Elaine Hamilton Latham, Fairburn, Ga.

Mary Sue Lawhorne, Atlanta, Ga.

Larry Thomas Layton, Guatemala, Guat.

Ernest Lamar Lee, LaGrange, Ga.

Faith Smith Lee, LaGrange, Ga.

Geneva Elizabeth Leonard, Dublin, Ga.

Roby David Leverett. West Point, Ga.

Julia Ruth Lindsey, West Point, Ga.

Drue Burgess Linton, Jesup, Ga.

Carl Davis Lockman, LaGrange, Ga.

John Carlton Long, LaGrange, Ga.

Linda Lucy Long, West Point, Ga.

Susan Kathleen Longino, College Park, Ga.

Walter Neil Lord, LaGrange, Ga.

William Glenn Lord, LaGrange, Ga.

John Davidson Lott, West Point, Ga.

Loyd Edward Lovern, West Point, Ga.

Leonora Anne McBride, Fort McPherson, Ga.

Roslyn Marie McBroom, LaGrange, Ga.

Douglas McClellan, LaGrange, Ga.

Ann Merritt McDonald, Hazelhurst, Ga.

Nancy Elizabeth McDonald, Griffin, Ga.

Nancy Carol McDowell, LaGrange, Ga.

Patricia Ann McFarland. Decatur. Ga.

Julia Elaine McGarity, McDonough, Ga.

Arthur Joe McGhee, Decatur, Ga.

Judith Patricia McKoon, Columbus. Ga.

Amelia Christine McKoy, Atlanta, Ga.

Ernest Anthony McLeroy, Hogansville, Ga.

Judith Ann McMath, Moultrie, Ga.

Helen Lorraine McMonagle, Fernandina

Beach, Fla.
Janet Marilyn Mabry, Breman, Ga.
Bonnie Carol Maddox, Atlanta, Ga.
Cheryl Dean Mahaffey, Columbus, Ga.
Doris Helen Mangum, College Park, Ga.
Robert Lee Martin, Jesup, Ga.
Carol Jane Matthews, LaGrange, Ga.
James Ralph Matthews, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Howard Allen Mayberry, Jr.. West Point, Ga.
Elizabeth Edmiston Mays, Marietta, Ga.
Vivian Lynn Meacham, Atlanta, Ga.
Mary Elizabeth Melson, LaGrange, Ga.
Richard Ellis Menendez, Tallahassee, Fla.
Ouida Kathryn Merritt, Columbus, Ga.
Caroline Story Milam, Cornelia, Ga.
William D'arcy Miningham, III, Atlanta, Ga.
Shelly Felton Mitchell, LaGrange, Ga.
James Thomas Mooney, Jr., Covington, Ga.
Jerry Blaine Moore, LaGrange, Ga.
Carson Neal Morgan, Jr., Medena, Ohio
Colby Mosier, Huntsville, Ala.
Donald Walter Mullin, Decatur, Ga.
Lizabeth Ann Murray, Waycross, Ga.
Ronnie Gene Myers, Graceville, Fla.
Joseph Cleon Nalley, Gainesville, Ga.
Suzanne Allyson Nash, Buford, Ga.
Sue Evelyn Neely, LaGrange, Ga.
James Columbus Nelson, LaGrange, Ga.
Carolyn Elaine Newby, Atlanta, Ga.
Jerry Baine Newsome, Columbus, Ga.
Martha Elon Nicholson, Bainbridge, Ga.
Charles Ware Nixon, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Betty Joyce Norwood, LaGrange, Ga.

Michael Kenneth O'Brien, Fairburn, Ga.
Joyce Ellen Odum, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Shirley Annelle Oliver. LaGrange, Ga.
Nancy Jane Osborne, Winder, Ga.
Dean Owen Oxley. Jr., Fernandina Beach, Fla
Irene Delle Papadeas, Waycross, Ga.
Deirdre Ann Parker, Wrightsville, Ga.
Rugar Chastine Parker, Rome, Ga.
Thomas Lyman Parker, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Gary Maxie Parrish, Inman, Ga.
Sylvia Patrick, Monticello, Ky.
Walter Edwin Patrick, Warner Robins, Ga.
Sandra Patterson, LaGrange, Ga.
Patricia Ann Paul, Thomaston, Ga.
Peggy Anne Pease, Columbus. Ga.
Joseph Terry Peterson, Fernandina Beach,
Fla.

Carolyn Sue Phillips, Columbus, Ga.
Gerald Olin Phillips, LaGrange, Ga.
Terry Lamar Phillips, Newnan, Ga.
William Joe Phillips, Douglasville, Ga.
John Paul Pike. LaGrange, Ga.
Joseph Harold Pinder, Key West. Fla.
Maxine Pinson, Athens, Ga.
Brenda Poole, LaGrange, Ga.
Juanita La Verne Porter, Thomaston, Ga.
Marvin Auld Powell, Jr., Columbus, Ga.
Mary Louise Propst, Decatur, Ala.
Franklin William Puffer, Marietta, Ga.
Mary Linda Purcell, Atlanta, Ga.
Betty Jean Ragan, LaGrange, Ga.
Judy Kaye Rainwater. LaGrange, Ga.
Andrea Dolores Ramey, Macon, Ga.
Nancy Florence Ramsey, Bainbridge, Ga.
Dauphine Johnson Ray. Cuthbert, Ga.
Wanda Jacquelyn Reaves, LaGrange, Ga.
Martha Lynn Renfro, Opelika, Ala.
Linda Ann Reynolds. Donalsonville, Ga.
Eugene Hall Richardson, Franklin. Ga.
Leslie Bryan Richardson, Eviston, Fla.
Nancy Elizabeth Rickett, Dunwoody, Ga.
Mary Jean Riley, Atlanta, Ga.
Charles David Rivers, Orlando, Fla.
Glenda Elaine Roberts. Dalton, Ga.
Mary Gail Roberts, LaGrange, Ga.
Millard Gary Roberts, Columbus, Ga.
Sandra Lee Roberts, Newnan, Ga.
Willis Alton Roberts, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Elizabeth Louise Robertson, LaGrange, Ga.
Judy Elizabeth Robertson, LaGrange. Ga.
Connie Mae Robinson, McDonough. Ga.
Thomas Elvin Robinson, Jr., LaGrange, Ga.
Richard Lynn Rowell. Manchester, Ga.
Ann Kathleen Russell, Indian Rocks Beach,
Fla.

Susan Vickers Rutledge. Fairburn, Ga.
Ellen Elaine Sessions, Macon, Ga.
William Jacob Sewell, Cumming, Ga.
Vincent Byron Shaffer, Columbus, Ga.
Alicia Faith Shelnutt, LaGrange, Ga.
Marion Manley Shivers, Franklin, Ga.
Walker Thomas Shoaf, III, Gainesville, Ga.
Sandra Jane Shuford. LaGrange, Ga.
Larry Nelson Shumake, LaGrange, Ga.
Linda Laurel Sigmon, Albany, Ga.
Michael Allan Skipper, Sebring, Fla.
Thomas Floyd Slagle, Roanoke, Ala.
Barbara Ruth Smith. Palmetto, Ga.
Donald Ray Smith, LaGrange, Ga.
Edward Lee Smith, Covington, Ga.
Guinndalyn Ruth Smith, Dalton, Ga.
James Wesley Smith, LaGrange, Ga.
Joan Renice Smith, Sylvania, Ga.
Linda Lee Smith, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

Martha Elaine Smith, Fernandina Beach, Fla.
Sandra Elaine Smith, Dalton, Ga.
Sharon Elaine Smith, Jacksonville, Fla.
Ruth Estelle Snelling, Comer, Ga.
Mary Frances Snow. Jacksonville, Fla.
Barbara Ann Starr. Forest Park, Ga.
Hugh Edward Stephens, LaGrange, Ga.
Sandra Elaine Stephens. McDonough, Ga.
Charles Albert Stevens, III, Colorado Springs,
Colo.

Ellen Harman Stewart, LaGrange, Ga.
Samuel Newt Stewart, LaGrange, Ga.
Nancy Dell Stipek, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Frederick Champion Stokes, Winter Park, Fla.
Sheri Stokes, Atlanta, Ga.
Milton Glenn Stone, Moreland, Ga.
Stacy Steward Storer, Atlanta. Ga.
Thomas Franklin Strother. West Point, Ga.
Harold Thurman Tarpley, Waleska, Ga.
James Larry Thigpen, Sylvania, Ga.
Troyanne Camille Thigpen, Covington, Ga.
Charles Pitt Thomas, Thomaston, Ga.
Niles Buchanan Thomas, Birmingham, Ala.
Judith Moss Thomason, Atlanta. Ga.
Thomas Jackson Thompson. McCaysville, Ga.
William Arthur Thompson, High Springs, Fla.
Virgil Daniel Thornhill. LaGrange, Ga.
James Peek Tilley, Ozark, Ala.
Lowery Ivie Tillison. LaGrange, Ga.
George Mathieson Timmons, Dunwoody, Ga.
David Henry Travitz, Jr., Marietta. Ga.
Terry Dennis Traylor, LaGrange, Ga.
Madeline Moore Tucker, LaGrange, Ga.
Ann Lane Tullis. Newnan. Ga.
Mary Quentilla Turner, Morgan, Ga.
David Eugene Tyler, LaGrange, Ga.
Janice Anita Tyler, LaGrange, Ga.
Mary Carolyn Tyner. Macon, Ga.
Patricia Unterspan, College Park, Ga.
Joseph Thomas Upton, Albany. Ga.
Lucia Van Houten, LaGrange, Ga.
Robert Roland Vinson. Alpharetta, Ga.
Linda Gale Wade. LaGrange, Ga.
Sharon Cecile Waller, Atlanta, Ga.
Michael Sydney Walters, Houston, Tex.
Harriett Lavinia Walton, Powder Springs, Ga.
Nancy Lavinia Warren, Jacksonville, Fla.
Roger Weaver, Sylvania, Ga.
Lonzie Hartford Wester, Jr., Waycross, Ga.
Janice Virginia Wheeler. Atlanta, Ga.
Robert Edward Whelchel. Jr., Chickamauga,
Ga.

Alexis Dorothy White, West Point, Ga.
Jean Rholetter White, LaGrange, Ga.
John Benjamine White, Pine Mountain, Ga.
Penelope Lucia White, West Point, Ga.
Judy Lynn Whiting, Macon, Ga.
Charles Theodore Whitman, Atlanta, Ga.
Julian Combs Whitten, Fairfax, Ala.
William Walter Whorton. III. Fairfax, Ala.
Jane Lee Wilbanks, Dublin. Ga.
Charlene Genelle Wilder, Columbus, Ga.
Dyan Faye Wilkes, Columbus, Ga.
Frank Jay Williams. Tampa, Fla.
George Hubert Williams, Cedartown, Ga.
Charles Oliver Williamson. Jr., Jacksonville,
Fla.

James Olin Wilson. Jr., Glenn, Ga.
Kathryn Jones Wooldridge, Buena Vista, Ga.
John Milton Wrighter, Gainesville. Fla.
Jane Ellen Yarbrough, Waycross, Ga.
Larry Sanford Yarbrough, Hogansville, Ga.
Helen Doreen Yates, LaGrange, Ga.
Deanna Carolyn Young, Atlanta, Ga.
Warren Burt Young, Fayetteville, Ga.

101

Mayor Gardner Newman, L. C. Alumni Club Pres. Delma Fowler, and
Vice-Pres. Ranee Sprayberry inspect one of the highway signs erected
by the LaGrange City Council.

CITY OF LAGRANGE

GRADUATION '63

107

109

WILLIAM'S FURNITURE CO.

LEHMAN'S JEWELRY

112

INTERNATIONAL LATEX

117

Homecoming candidates Madelyn Bates, Sue
Goethe, Ann Herren, Sue Langley, Ann Mc-
Donald, Bonnie Maddox, Deirdre Parker, Su-
san Rutledge, Carol Sinclair, Jane Wilbanks.

Judy Thomason, Judy Sams, Elizabeth Reeves,
Cherry Mahaffey, Judy McKoon, Pat Lanham,
Jean Jackson, Jennifer Glass, Beverly Cas-
tleberry, Cindy Bennett, Diane Aldredge.

PEPPERELL MFG. CO., DUNSON DIVISION

1959 Homecoming Queen, Ann Gower Nelson;
Diane Aldredge, Second Runner-up; Elizabeth
Reeves, First Runner-up; Jane Wilbanks, Maid of
Honor; Linda Purcell, 1962 Homecoming Queen;
Carol Sinclair, 1963 Homecoming Queen; Diane
Alford, 1961 Homecoming Queen; Homecoming
Chairman, Mickey Johnson.

HOMECOMING 1963

120

LAGRANGE JEWELRY

HOMECOMING PARADE

121

CITY WALGREEN DRUGS

CLEVELAND-DODD

122

'INHERIT THE WIND

WAID TIRE

127

128

BIG OAK DRIVE-IN

129

BOWEN STUDIO

PRACTICE TEACHING

131

COLEMAN LIBRARY

CALLAWAY MILLS

135

Outstanding Senior
Who's Who
DONNIE WEST

Outstanding Senior
Who's Who
DOTTIE MATHEWS

Miss LaGrange College
SUE GOETHE

THE CITIZENS AND SOUTHERN BANK OF LAGRANGE

Mr. LaGrange College
Who's Who
NOEL SMITH

142

Most Representative
Freshman Girl
JUDY CARLSEN

Most Representative
Freshman Boy
LARRY GOODMAN

143

May Queen
Outstanding Senior
DEE ATKINSON

145

Junior May Court Representative
JUDY HAYES

Sophomore May Court Representative
KATHIE GRAHAM

146

EDITOR'S REFLECTIONS

It is only as the last deadline is met that the editor can pause and anticipate the publication of the year-
book. It is from our QUADRANGLE cover design, with its city silhouette, to our concluding insert, with its
collegiate contributions, that we have attempted to portray our city-college theme. Within this span LaGrange
College is depicted as it functions within the city of LaGrange. The QUADRANGLE recognizes specifically
and expresses appreciation to our advertisers who are sponsoring a pictorial review of college life in our
"Year Recap.''

Much help in the initial planning of this yearbook was given by Harrell Brooks of Foote & Davies. An aid
in our photography department has been another company representative, Dick LoPachin. Cherry Mahaffey,
lay-out editor, and Pat Lanham, advertising manager, have been tireless staff members. The general staff
made possible the QUADRANGLE as a unit. The willingness of the '64 graduates to be photographed in-
formally permitted an innovation in our senior section. Preparation of this yearbook was facilitated by the
interest of faculty sponsors and that of our other campus publications.

I anticipate an increasing meaningfulness for having edited the 1964 QUADRANGLE and working with
you of LaGrange College and LaGrange, Georgia. I wish for the succeeding staffs the splendid cooperation
existing between the campus and the city.

Jenny Dorough, Editor

148

Let <DUR ^eUflfcQUS awd fedf>M SfeftPF
PACK YUK tern <u>WB OF KM6VnJH&B~

mo'

BMfo L* you kmw ydu Ve Be % cdUW&

Oct. 8, 1963

Dear Mrs. Burgess,

I thank you for your nice letter. I feel much of a has-been in the LC Alumni Association, especially since I
have learned that so many of my classmates have passed on to their reward. My son, my daughter-in-law and I
have recently made a trip through LaGrange to Macon, Ga., to see my sister, whose husband died in August.
We went through Roanoke, crossed over the new bridge, came into LaGrange down Vernon St., where I used
to know every pig track, and I was as completely lost as tho' I was in Paris, France. We circled the college and
could find neither the front door nor the back door and pretty soon found ourselves going down a rough to
Vernon St. again. Did we feel silly! So we says to ourselves, "We'll come back this way and then we'll surely
see somebody''. But we did not come that way

In the heart of LaGrange I was just as much in a fog. Nothing had a familiar look. We finally found the
Baptist Church and went from there to the cemetery. Bill and Mary said, "Mother we thought you grew up
here". Well, I couldn't even find Miss Mollie Rowland's store nor Mr. E. R. Bradfield's store nor Mr. McCaine's
grocery. And the shelters over the stores were all gone. They made it so nice and cool for the merchants to sit
out in the shade and watch for the country trade. I was disappointed about the shelters.

Love to you and to everyone,
Sara Ivey

P. S. Did you know my mother Mrs. Addie Bull Tomlinson was the originator of the LC Alumni Association?

Editor's Note: Mrs. Sara Tomlinson Ivey graduated from LAGRANGE FEMALE COLLEGE in 1899 and lives in Birmingham, Ala-
bama. Her letter to the director of alumni activities reveals the strong city college relationship as it existed in 1899.

President, dean term
first week one of best

The Student Gowmtnent Asso-
ciation's handling of the 1963 fall
orientation wrtk was deemed a
success by b>lh the president and
the academic dean of tjGrangc
College.

"I think H was one of the best
orieniatKin tncj )m we have had",
said College President Weights G
Henry He continued. "All of the

have had" However the dean
pointed out several areas of the
program that might be improved
Hi- suggested that more coordi-
nation might be attained among
the students responsible for the
processing and the programs and
that those students responsible
ir.ght become better Informed a-
their Jobs. He also pointed

4+ %\it ftltop Betos

Unpublished play by
Drama Department
See page 3 f or story

Representing Gear pits Oldest Independent Institution of Higher Learning'

VOLUME VI, NUMBER 25

LAGRANGE COLLEGE, LAGRANGE, GEORGIA

MARCH 31, 1964

new students that I have talked Dfrt that there was a weakness in.
to have given a very favorable proeessin of the old students,
reaction to orientation. If things

had been confused bv the SGA Suggesting met nod, of ta -
we would km gotten a different P* ** d " n f *J
reaction." would be a pled idea for those

. responsible for orientation week.

Academic Dean C U* Harwell to me ^ soon w( , b mwrnben; of
slated "This was probably t*~
best orientation week that I

the administration who are in-
volved tn the planning. In that
way the problems that existed
this year might be :mrrieriiate!y
ri-roedied and in that way the
ground work could be laid for an
even belter orientation week next

Ask how the* SGA came to as-
sume the responsibility of orien-
tation week. afUlard Martin. SCA
president, said, "It Is a tradition
tha! has passed through the years.
Our main job after processing
was to aid the students and help
them to adjust.

SGA President, Executive Officers
Elected By Record Student Vote

WE'RE NUMBER ONE

Commenting on
the week. Martin
that there were
made but all In 1

the success of
aid. "We know

some mistakes
li we feel that

! successful week."

33 Voices Of College Choir
Spark Chapel Tomorrow

Two major sacred music com- 1
positions inspired by tee Chrurt-;
mas story one from the 17th
Century, the other from the 20th :
Century will be presented by
the Choralaires at the LC chapel <
Wednesday morning.

The program will feature -'Re-
jcice Beloved Christians" by Die-,
inch Buxtehude, the Danish or-'
ganisi and composer of an ear-
lier period, and "A Ceremony of-
Carols" by Benjamin Britten, the;
renevned contemporary English \
composer

Professor Paul Doster will di-t
reel the 33 voices of taGrange
College Chora ia ires in the two.
cantatas. Accompaniment will be;
by string ensemble.

The two rarely sung choral
masterpieces by Buxtehude and*
Britten were recently performed I
at the Trinity Methodist Church!
in LaGrange

Not content jusi as organist. 1
Buxtehude had conceived the '
idea of a aeries of great musical]
performances as part of the]
church services on the five Sun- j
day evenings before Christmas, i

The people it Lubeek, Germa- j
ny. took great pride in the series j
of pre -Christmas programs and j
they continued for almost two!
centuries.

Britten, on the other hand, j
ranks among the fine living com-
posers today. His ^Ceremony of!
Carols", written us 1942. is re-t
preventative of his choral and;
solo vocal works, although his in- -
ternatior.a! reputation rests on '
composition of practically every

In Britten's "Ceremony of Ca-
rols", pianist Nancy Fordham
will accompany the Chora '.aires
SolnisU will be Janice Christian
and Sandra Smith.

Soloists Jane Yarbrough, Kath-
ryn Memtt. and Rulon Aisc-
bnaok will be featured in Buxte-
hude's cantata. Accompaniment
will be by organist David Heck
and the following string players:
Mrs. Paul Doster and Torn An-
derson, violins; Janice Chnstian,
cello; and Dr. John Anderson,
string bass.

78 Percent Voters Turnout
Sweeps In 5 Elected Heads

through
i the GIAC

Homecoming Promises To
Be One Of Biggest Ever

Homecoming 1963 promises to be one of the biggest
ever, according to the Alumni Association and Student
Chairman Mickey Johnson.

This year's schedule for the i allow the various newspapers
October 26th event will include : and radio and television stations
a Homecoming parade, an ino- ' in the area to give proper recog-
vation that makes its debut this nltion to the queen before the
year. The parade will start at the actual Homecoming date
gym parking lot and proceed ' The queen will be crowned on
down Vernon, around the square. : the Quadrangle on Saturday af-

and back up Broad Street.

Parade Marshal) Dean Oxley
reports that several bands frof;
the nirrounding area will partic-
ipate in the parade, which will J
include floats, decorated cars and
the like. The Alumni Association

campus crgtnaHtic
be judged on ti

before Homecomin

teraoon before the parade. Re:
entry in the parade will lead tb<
parade.

The Homecoming: dance will
be held in the college gym at I
o'clock. Music for the festivities
will be provided by Frank Pat-
rick and bis orchestra from At-
lanta. During intermission, tht
queen and her court will b*
presented for the last time.

la charge of dot-orations fc,
the dance and Gamma Phi arc

demonstrate some of the
ome w-rth West Georgia
rhers won ihe game tak-

Art And Religion

JTopic For Chapel;
McLean To Speak

The relationship between re-
; Ifflton and art will be the pro -
gram topic in the Wednesday's
chapel Mr. James A. McLean, a*
ajftant professor Gf art at La-
Orange Cottage. wHl present an
* 4Huatratad lecture relating art to
both historical and contemporary
| reJfo'on.

[ Mr, Hctaan has a bachelor of
[ejiv'oity degree from Soutr>em
t*tetho4^t Unlveosity.

"McLean t*id he plana to "give
| my tnteretat!on of what art -r,

to cad Intjo question some of the

popular concept te m of religious
.art and I f* * * * of the new

relationfllpa ' between r*llfl>n

and art" ' ' '

By CINDY BENNETT
and JOHN WHITE j

A record 73*& of the LaGrange
; College student body, last Wed-]

ncsday, elected Lowery Ttllison

president of the Student Govern- j

ment Association.
! Same 365 students cast ballots!

for the five SGA posts up fori

election.

In the other seats, Ted Hitch- |
cock defeated Hugh Corless for i
men's vice- president. Jane John-)
son won over Mildred Eidson for i
women's vice-president. In the !
race for secretary. Judy Carlson
defeated Jane Alexander. \

'And I Got A Cow
For Christmas'

Although most college students
profess a marked indifference to
Christmas, it is nevertheless their
secret desire for Sania Claus to
| bring them something really Dig-
Ginger Crawford, Ottlda Har-
mon, and Cindy Bennett got
so rethtng really big for Christ-
mas Jt was a cow. It wasn't a
stulfed cow or a toy cow, but a
real cow. Thsre were ways they
could tell. It was a real cow.

"Santa" brought the cow to
them on December 12th. The cow
had a big red bow around its
waist, it had a rope halter with
three labeled ropes hanging from
it, and it bad an instruction book
that toldr the girls how to work
their cow. The instruction book
said that the cow was a Midnight
Snack Maker and that it was
good for life (its).

While the lucky girts were try-
ing to figure out what to do with
their cow, it was calmly eating
the shrubs on the patio and giving
dirty looks to the faculty. Finally.
th power* behind the prank ad-
mitted their guilt, and the cow
was reurned to its rightful owner
in Pine Mountain. Ga

There was a run -off election
for the post of treasurer which
was held Thursday. Buck Tho-
mas won Ihis run-off over Bill
GambUl.

According to Low cry Tiliisori.
president-elect, the SGA for the
coming year "will do its best to
work toward more coordination. "

Asked how he felt about his
election, Tilllson answered, "I
was real surprised. I had ex -
pected a run-off. The majority
was what really surprised to*.*

When questioned as to bis spe-
cific aims for the corning year,
TUlison said, "Personally, I will
work toward getting the amend-
ment back into consideTation and
in a form the legislature will
like " He referred to the recently
tabled -organization coordination
amendment "Another point is
behavior in chapel. Something
needs to be done. I expect to
bring up a new system
know exai

its

I d-3-n't
,-hat it will be at
n the planning

stages now."

Ted Hitchcock, newly elected
men's vice-president, said that

ibe felt honored at his election
and hopes to fulfill the duties of
the office to the best of big abil-
ity. Hitchcock said, "I was very

1 pleased with the fine turnout by
the students tor the election it
was a demonstration of their in-
terest in their student govern -

Frosfi men take Pitts, ***** Wid
women set to occupy
Turner this week

Pi Delt

handle cl
and Alpha

rod AKO
r.d Sigma

Polls To Be Open
Until 2:00 P. M.
For Student Votinc

the Quadrangle This

i Due to increased atudent en-
rollment this fail there will be a

i chang* to dormitory as^^astrriSnt.

I The women stwieri? who faare
room assignment* m pft* dormi-

tWy wffl new oeeapy Tamer
doroniory. Men students wiih
room aastgnments in Tamer Hail

i*2l bow occupy pfs* dorepitory,
A***B&ing to Presides? Henry,

i8*eT# wear* simply more students
eoroBad ibis year t ukv,,^
tisaa eatdd) be properly- housed

: #( foescer arrangetnent,

a yaar/' aecordisg to

;l^sa4ajit Henry *tt U Quite like-

tT that we will r*rers* the neap "
"I do not foreaee that any social

pf**4ei arBI arise out of thia ar-

** n l * ae '' 1 - Our bSgajeat procletn
*&i eetne when aye ask toe gtrU
P an*e back istte Pstw

Weekend Drama Spots 'Medea'

the E .binson Jeff<r ; adapUtion!
of the Greek drama 'Medea' to!
be presented o>n the LaGrangej
CoUefe staga* [he Tth and 8th of j
Pebruatry. j
Coder the direction of senior j
drama student Arixn Wallace the'
play wiil feature Sylvia Sirick-j
land. ajatstaRt profenacr of speech '
and drama, in the title role off
Medea, granddaughter of the Sun*

Duskin will
ma. Medea's

natiaer said that he chose the Other members of the cast m-

effers ptay because it is good elude Carol Sinclair. Mary Fronts,

rama; it b structurally sound, fiobin Hc-od, Sidney Johnston,

se play is down u> earth and Jimmy Matthews, Don Rolloway,

ie language is beautiful and Nancy Osborne. Rin Austin, and

istly anderstood. Johnny Long

Jay Clark is cast In the ro{e The ro embers of the production

I Creon. Clark was last seen on staff are Jkmmy Matthews. Chip

w college stag*; fit Hrnebeck yortenbefry, Philip B. Kendall,

t Tnnertt the Wind.' In the role arid Sam Saxon.

President Henry To
8e Govef Rapper tn
College Rummage Safe

Dr. Henry, president of the
college, is going to take on a new
job sometime in the next week.
Mounting the soap box and tak-
ing gavel in hand. Dr. Henry is
going to become an auctioneer

The president will be wheeling
and dealing, fast talking and
raising prices at a college rum-
mage sale which is scheduled for
the near future..

Up for sale will foe [terns that

Local Alumni Club
Takes Lead For
Appreciation Week.

The educational, cultural, and
economic value of LaGrane* Col-
lege to the city of LaG range is to
be recognized during & forthcom-
ing "LaGrange College Apprecia-
tion Week"

Plans for the week-iocg event,
scheduled from Sept. 15 to Sept
21 the week students arrive
f- r the academic year, have been
announced by the sponsor, tho
local LC Alumni (men'sl Club.

In announcing plans for the
week the club president, Delma ;
Fowler, a local certified public
accountant? said, *An apprecia-
tion week, such as we are plan-
ning, will give the citizens, busi-
nesses, and industries of this city
an opportunity to demonstrate
their appreciation for all the col-
lege has contributed and stood
for during its 132 years' exist-
ence."

'^Through activities of this
week." Fowler continued, "we al-
so want to introduce all new stu-
dents at the college to the warm,
friendly city of LaGrange. We
want them and their parents to
know that I-aGrange appreciates
the fact that they selected our
town for their education and col-
lege home away from home."

Appointed as general chairman
of the event is the Rev. John Kay.
assistant pastor of the First Me-
thodist Church,

In outlining the week's activi-
ties. Rev. Mr. Kay said the high
points would be free refreshments
and brochures on LaGrange as
the students arrive on campus on
Sunday, Sept IS, and then a
swim and dance party and barbe-
cue on Monday. Sept, 16.

Image Series Continues
Shibley Set For Wed.

Schedule Change
Set for Monday,
November 4

Classr* ommltj held * ttfl
wm naet at tb* ifeoo o dark
acw on Mtssday, November *

The only execrptjao* to this
wili be tbfls* seamce a&d art
nasracw wTuee nornsasV oaaet
tor two tan on that day
This t eh adafla change win p*r-
mrt a larger eageber f stu-
dent* aa agcswS tht U B
PhiliJp* trsessoriai program to
be acid m that day.

Wed** in the
*th f rsOaCt'C

A u . i-

By JANCT TAYLOR

An exploration of the image
of man as seen through the arts
is being presented by the La-
Grange College Student Christian
Association and will continue
through May 20.

"The Image of Man as Seen '
Through Drama" was the title of!
the inspiring and stimulating pro- ,
gram presented by Dr Max Es-
tes at the SCA meeting on Wed-
nesday, April L Through the ase ;
of a reading. Dr. Estas presented
a program in which the life of
n-an was traced from birth to
death.

Thur exploration of the image
of man was continued when Mr.
James McLean presented a pro-:
gram entitled "The image of Man
As Seen Through Art "

Equally interesting programs
are planned for the rest of spring :
quarter. The program for April
15 will be presented by Dr. John ;
Shibley who will discuss "The
Image of Man As Seen Through |
Natural Seieriee.*'

Mr Carlton 5. GuptiO wilt dis-

iss man and his image as it la
irtrayed Ln the field of sociolo-
t. This program will take place
i April 32.
l The final program in this se-
' ries, on April 29, will be con-
cerned with man and religion and
| will be under the direction of Dr,
Toombs Kay.

On May 6. the SCA will ex-
plore the position of Christianity
and politics. This program will
feature talks by outstanding lo-
cal members of both the Republi-
can and Democratic parties.

May IS will be the date of the
program in which the students
will have an opportunity to par-
ticipate tn a discussion on poll-
tics This will foe done with the
help of a panel discussion.

The last SCA program for this
year will be a program honoring
graduating seniors entitled "Stu-
dent Exrt", this program will fo-
cus on the relationship of college
life to the world.

All students are Invited to these
programs which are held each
Wednesday at 8:45 p m. in the
Little Chapei.

m Medaa when she disem-en
that- even though she haw w*eti;
her magieal powers to enable Ja-
son to overcome ail obstacles and
obtain the gold* n fierce-; though
for hi* love she has betrayed her
oam coeaa tiy and killed her bro-
ther: fie has abandoned her to
further his own ambition.

Several Greek tragic poets
wrote tabout the legend erf Medea.
J*fr*r etKMse to adapt the Euri-
pide* vrrsioo because he found

Survey Shows Campus liberal On Race Question

Historian To Be Honored

Ow of Troop Oxanty'i mint a. m. on y ^s- Nov. 4.
tense* mi **o wm * fioAmMtj Gov Htm an#m. fx Go*.
** W|W m Sas?wfw i&m*A peter ZaeH <J**r. niket and

Dunne the past three weeks, members of the Haitop
News staff have conducted a survey concerning the attitude
of tAeLaGrange CoHeue student body toward deseereRH-
wm. The staff worked on the survey under the guidance
o* Mr. Carieton S. Cmptill, associate professor of Socia) Sci-
ences.

ladivhtaala qassuoaea kr tkrj eraer per tnl mptmx teuar
sw> were ssvjwims at random! to 19%

fme complete list of reatetared! Accoropanrinr Qss ejuenion-
stndeDta. CTOj aasaa was j paira was a persona! fnfprmauoo

stsl This sample pnniead aj abM on wfbrh ravondoiu ware
maa-sncuon of stanras reprr- asaed to state sorh pcruaent in-
setttatrre of tha antsra audeml fonaanon as ace, claas-auuKilaK,
urn star of oontatawn. ma>or.
Tea satver waa diittihutaH by and marttal rtatua. TMs data waa
campns niaa W or ttaaa arnoj noad in aaatoatlnt Uv nmr ao-
racetaM queasaonnairsa raapwid- rasloakailr per rent raapooses
ao. Aecar dHn to M r Coptlll. ths; wars aontputad ecrordSnf to srr.
p*r teat rraponaa was aarr pood j csaw^taorfituj. and star of h ow* -
for a pur say of una tape, the ae- j town.

The LaGrange Panthers meet West Georgia
Wednesday mht. Han^m^ in the balance is
the number, one GIAC spot

(Story tm Paee t)

RegistroHon
Tomorrow

LC Welcomes Old

Cagers slate
big season

SPORTS

LaGn

ire

vv

Biro

agha

r-St.u

thern of Alabama and Rollins . (
Florida, .in thr panthers'
4 basketball schedule announce
Sat-irday h> Coach Al Mannn.

Trie 23-game slate includes par-
Unpaii.m in the Rome Tip-Off
Tntirrwment and home-and-homc
competition with each of the five
other Georgia Intercollegiate
Conference teams.

In addition to meeting Bir-
mingham-Southern and Rollins
for the first Ume. the LC cagers
will take on Georgia Southern in
LaGrange another firrt-

l-i 1 rear during Mariotti s
fint season at the LC helm, the
Panther aggregation compiled Us
beat record In three years, win-
ning 12 and losing 11.

LaGrange will play two warm-
up contests before opening the
regular season: a game against
alumni players on Homecoming
afternoon. Oct 26. and an Inter-
squad game, sponsored by the :
college alumni rlub of LaGrange
on Nov. 15.

The schedule ( indicates GIC
game):

Nov. 20. Troy State at La-
Grange

Nov. 22-23. Tip-Off Tourna-
ment f Belmont College at Nash-
ville. Tenn.. Berry, Snorter) at
Rome.

Dec 3, Blmingham-Southern
at LaGrange.

Dec. 4. Shorter at LaGrange

Jan 4. Mercer at Macon.

Jan 7. Georgia Southern at La-
Grangc.

Jan. JO. 'Piedmont at La-
Grange.
Jan- 14. Berry at Rome.

Sports Outlook

What Now For The Panthers?

By Clark Stone

Jan 18. Valdosta State at La-
Grange

Jan. I*]. Wej! r;,- rc at Car-
rotjton.

Jan 23. Georgia State at La-
Grange

Jan. 25, Birmingham -Southern
at Birmingham. Ala

F^b 1. 'piedmont at Demorest.

Feb. 3, Rollins al Winter Park
Ha.

Feb 5 *Wert Georgia

La-

Grance.

Feb 8, Georgia Southern at ,
Statesboro

Feb. II, Georgia State at At-
lanta

Feb. 13. 'Shorter at Rome. ]
Feb. 15. Mercer at LaGrange.
Feb 18. ferry at LaGrange.
Feb. 21. 'Valdosta State at Val-
dosta.

Feb. 25, Troy State at Troy.
Ala.

CHUCK N

LC Vs Berry Friday I
In First Home Game I

Despite the fact that three
tfralght tennis matches have been
washed out, the LC tennis team
will try this week Xr, get in two
note matches

Wednesday's match takes the
Panther* to Oxford for a match
*frh iVrnry- at -Oxford Friday
afternoon LC hosts Berry Collage
In a match that was originally
scheduled for last weak, but was
rained out.

Berry College was trompled
S-0 by West Georgia In a match
played last week The best Ber-
ry could do was lose one aft by
valy 4-S. all others were six
love. one. or two acts.

The LC-West Georgia match
for last Tuesday was also ra.nM
out "Even the re-arheduled
matches are being rained out'*,
commented Caacft Judaon Harris

Some effort was made to play
Tiiaaday's Weal Georgia game
since they had already arrived
on campus nsV>r* | It tiagai to
rain. But even while some futile
attempts |e weep' the courts dry
ware being made, more rain be-
gan to fall.

As rt icx.sp Boa,, th* west O-

five prv-Chr:

hat the 4 .nf. : encc hopes for
thi Panthers are.

Before the season began Coach
Al Mar JotiJ eery pessimistically
placed LaGrangc fifth in stand-'
mgs behind Valdosta State. Shor-
ter, Berry and West Georgia, not
necessarily in that order.

News from Rome report'
Snorter's Coach Bill Foster as
saying his Gold Wave would fin-
ish in first place This was before :
Shorter had even played a game.

Well, so far the tentatively ;
ranked first place and fifth :
ranked teams have played twice 1
wtlh Shorter winning both. 75-;
TO and 64-62 tn overtime.

You can surmise from these !
scores that there is going to be I
a mighty tight battle among the|
second, third, and fourth place;
clubs.

As far as South Georgia's Val-
dosta Stale Rebels are concern-
ed well. I do not know. As:
isual. a!! news reports on that
team stopped in the middle of I
October.

You don't analyze the Rebels
till after the game not before. ;
Shorter may know something I :
don't, but Valdosta has taken the;
GIC title three straight years.:
and until I see differently, they'
are stiTl the champs.

I got a took at Berry during;
the tournament in Rome last 1
month, and they have added a
few new faces to their line-up.
TJ .-landing near the 6-4 mark.

However, their offense little
impressed me. and I doubt if they
wind up as near the top as ex-
pected.

West Georgia has a chance to
finish third or fourth because est
one boy Ron Underrtnei
has been described as the boy
wnti -dljoots bke a aemi-p
And if he is hot, things can
bad on opponents.

The way I fee Ft, LC has

after these: outside shot at third place, a
games just' scant possibility for second, and
ni call what you will the chance

SPORTS BRIEFS

Plans for a freshman basket-

ia!I team were dissolved last
veek because of lack of fresh-
nan players. With the loss of
> n Woodward from the team,
7nach Al Moriotti disclosed that
he number of eligible boys is
>nly five.

Cats Rouse Rebs
Take 54-51 Win

Pi Delts Squeak By
Gamma Phi's 2-0

A spirited Pi Dell team broke
tht Gamma Phi three-game win-
ning streak but week by defeat*
ing Utf Goblins 2-0. This war the
first lo*s for Gamma, the first
win for Pi Delt.

Rin Austin in the second, half
rushed rough Gamma Phi
bfoejeen to tag Chuck Nixon in
the end zone for the two point
safety Pi f>elt walked on ice
'.r.-.r- Ihk point trying to protect
their slim lead.

LC, Shorter Tied
In Conference

LaGrange College defeated dc-
> fending GIC champ' Valdosta
I Stale 54-51 Saturday night to
I hold on to a first place tie in the

conference with Shorter. Both

teams have identical records of

three wins, one loas.
I While the Panthers were slip- '
\ ping past the Rebels, Shorter was

bombing Berry 00-45. LC puff*

West Georgia In

Pi Delt Captures
Basketball Crown
In Intramural Play

nds grabbed against
ime Richard RoweH and Ron U0r*iner
pponents battle 'or the ball.

(Photo by Rod Heitmant

Wednesday night's

Valdosta Champs,
Corless All GIC

College Basketball Season Closes
With Troy Victory Over Panthers

LaGrange College ended its 63-
64 basketball season last week
with an 88-68 lou to Troy State
College in Troy. Alabama The
Panthers finished with a 13-10
overall record.

This was the second best year
in the ten-year history of bas-
ketball at LaGrange. The best
was the 58-59 season when LC
had a 16-5 record.

In the Troy State game the
Panthers fell behind 13-4 early
In the game and despite a hearty
effort thai pulled the Panthers
to within four points of catching
Troy at 44-40. there was never
a change in the lead.

Tn>y State led 49-40 at the
halt, and behind a 50 per cent
field goal output stretched the

Pi Delt Topples
Sigma Nu Five
In Season's Opener

Pi Delta Kappa ripped Sigma
! Nu Pi 58-34 last week in the op-
* ening game of the intramural
basketball season.

nd hnlf LaGr

rtoy State (Riii: Duce 9, Hays
ThtBpen 25. Clark 10, Wilk-

CLARK STONE
4 STRAIGHT FOR RE8S

Valdosta State College won
; fourth straight GIAC champion'
i ship last week, beating Shorter

College 35-32 in a pL
i in Columbus.

i The same two teams met
play-off last year to decide the
conference champs, a game Val-
dosta won 78-76 in overtime.

In hurt week's game Valdosta
led 9-4 early in the game, which
was the largest lead held by ei-
ther team With thi

the half Shorter

I ver by more than three points,
j With 1J0 left m the game Val-
J dosta closed in for the kill, took
_ i the lead, and held it.

Valdosta bit 14 of 31 field
-off game! a*"* 1 * fjr * P r Shorter hit

j 13 of 30 for 43 per cent. Chuck
a ' Bonovitch was the only player
J on either team to score in double
figures He bad 12 points.

CORLESS ALL -Gl AC

Hugh Corless has been named
to the AU-GIAC team for the se-
mules I cond * trai * ht > xar TWb "
aught* lflst ' he lc<1 th ** tam man ' de "

vido^'" a nd'T. u u h n- no,ab "'

j Ing scorer.
.. ! Others named as coherence

Shorter maintained a lead a.i "> r

through the second half, but ne- 1 svlpi

College Sees Four Netters
Rank in GIAC Standings

L-riatives wcrel Berry Ren-
Bo'ner and Don Jenkins;
West Georgia Bill Shotwcll,
David Brookins. and Ron Uodcr-
einer, Valdosta SUle Chuck
Bonovitch, Bobby R itch . and
Mike Perry; Shorter Wayne
Huntley and Bill More.

Named as the most valuable
player in the GIAC was West
Georgia's Bon Undereiner Vht
conference coach of the year waa
Valdoata s Gary Colaon.

.vas named

r last week
ed before

Panthers were rated cigJ
the nation, hitting 104
w a 759 percentage. Tl
u also listed Hugh Cork
( 17th best free thrower
malt college category.
only other GIC team r
*d in the ratings was Bcri
EC which ranked 17th in

The Viking? have allow

enlace with 66 per cent.

The Season Re-Cap - Best Since 1958

By CLARK STONE fin l?

Not since 1058 has LaGrange
College's won-lost record been as
good as It was this past season
at 13-11. This is due to several
factors the moat prominent
being Coach Al Mariotti

In hi- rookie year a* Panther
bos$ Mariottt took a group of
mostly freshmen and sophomores
and molded a team that finished
with a 12-11 record, the ""best
since the 59-60 season when LC

at 14-12.
With this initial year past him,
Coacb Mariotti proceeded to
scout around for the new mern-
bt-rs of this year's Panther team
and surprising to everyone (.es-
pecially conference opponent.' I
came as close as any team in LC
history to w inning the GIC.

It was not until the fourth
game of the season that the Pan-

Pi Delfa Randy Ctfaar tabes a good cut at a p
Nu'i Hay Awbray. Awbrey wen the game 13-8 i
in Intramural standing*.

(Photo by Rod Heitman)

, match WW

Goblins Cap Title

Gamma Phi Alpha defeated Pi Delta Kappa 2-0 last
week, capturing the intramural football title for the fourth
atratght year. On the aeaaon the Goblins won five, lost two.
and tied three. ,

The aafety came early in the 'hree
first period after Sam Glbaon had However, Neil Lord Intercept-'
Inlrrrepteft for Gamma Phi deep . ed and kept Gamma from e-
in PI Dell territory The Goblins tending their lead before the half
moved lo th* 16 but gave up the In tnf , ^ond half neither team
ball on down* could generate a aeoring Itljaal.]

71. The first three losses went to;

Troy, Shorter, and Belmont. I
Jn the only other pre-Christ- \

mas contest, again against Short- '
, er, the Panthers came up on the;
I short end of a 64-62 overtime i
; battle.

With a 1-4 record at the quar- ;
, Per break, the Panthers could .
j find comfort only in the MWt that 1
1 three vt these first four losses
' were by nine points and under.

The Panthers reopened the seJ- '
I son agaln.it Mercer in Macon and '
' pulled out an 80-70 victory In
their second straight overtime
, game.

Against Georgia Southern LC
! came within three points (63-80)
; of knocking of! the strongest j
] team they would fare all season. : j

Three conference games fol- 1
j lowed, and the Panthers burst;
1 Into a rash of victories beating 1
' Piedmont 87-64, Berry 80-5B. and

Vaidoata 54-51.

This brought the Panthers up
I to a 5-5 record, and with the
{ task of facing West Georgia in

Carroll ton. Efforts fell short as
' the Brnvcs slipped pa*t LaGran- 1

ge 87-78.
. However, the Panthers came
I back to win the next five game: .
j Georgia State 84-56. B ham-Sou-
j them 80-07, Piedmont 85-65,
I Rollins 70-64. and West Georgia
j 75-72.

j The winning *treak was a- i
j bruptly snapped by QcOTgU Sou-
thern 110-70 In the psMat beat-l
i ing the Panthers sustained iff

After a win over Georgia Stale
j 68-48, the Panthers had only ;

three conference games to play,
I but two of these were against ,

Shorter and Valdotta on their!
I home rourts.

SIGMA NU FIGHTS
PI DELT TO A
0-OTIE

Intramural football otandlnn'
became even more entangled last
week when Sigma. Nu and PI Delt 1

tied 0-0

Pi Delt failed on two chancea

In ihe first period to icore. once

LaGrange had one of Its poor-
est nights of the sea<on against
Shorter as the conference hopes
took a turn for the worse. The
63-45 defeat was the fewest a-
mount of points scored by the :
Panthers all year.

The Panther* retaliated against;
Mercer, beating the Bears 83-68, !
and then turned Berry 102-54 in
(he largest accumulation of points 1
all season.

Then came the do-or-else game
in Valdosta. and the Panthers
were once and for all out of the
race. VaJdosta's 70-60 win gave
LC a tie with West Georgia for
third place, and led eventually
to Valdosta's fourth straight
championship.

Of the Panthers' ten losses,
four were by scores of five points
or less Two were by ten or less
points.

Five Griddcrs Stand Gut
In Fall Intramural Play

By Clark Stone
Intramural football goes into its third week of action to-
day, with undefeated Gamma Phi t^kin^ on win'ess Pi
Delt In the team's initio! meeting Gamma Phi took a 7-0
win. Players of this and other gam"s are highlighted below,
i. Gamma

Chuck Nil
quarterback and safety man h-i-
becomc especially feared by op-
ponents because of his accural--
parsing ability. It waa Nlvon
who furnished the needed mo-
mentum to guide Gamma Phi
past PI Delt In the opening week
of play.

BUI Smith, another Gamma
Phi. has become a respecled pan
reir-ivcr In thr first part of the
*<-nson because of his ability to
get open Smith's diving catch in
the end inne against Pi Delt was
the only wore In those two teams'
flrsl meeting At his safety posi-
tion he Is a tough defender V>
hake.

Ted Alfnrd. Sigma Nu quar-
terback, wu fundamental In the
o-n defeat of Pi Delt last week.
Several of Ml pass** were drop-
ped by potenUal receivers; how-
ever, when the passing game
tailed, he gained good yardage
on runs up th* middle.

Another Sigma Nu. Jerry
Moore, turned tn hi* usual superb
performance HU defensive and
offensive line play against PI Dell
was outstanding It was Moore's
timely fumble recovery that set
up Sigma Mu x winning TD last

Another Sigma N*u lineman f
special nnte Is George Timmon*
It was Timmons who broke
through Pi Delt blockers to grub
Taylor Newton for a two-point
safety and Insured Sigma Nu of
victory. To quote an overheard
comment about Timmons- "He
V>ok> Hke one of those things he
draws "

Kappa Phi 1$ Victor
In Volleyball Game

Kappn Phi def.-i.ted Alpha
Phi's vclleyball tenm last week
!*>H, -n. and 11-4. In the flr.(
wrek of WAA action.

In the first game Kappa Phi
-look the win tn overtime. At the
end of regular play K*t>na led
12-11, but needed another point
for the win This Uiey got on the
flrtt serve In the eitra period

Alpha Phi combined good team
work and Heterminntlpn In Ihe
econil game to lake ihe win. Ihr
flrnl win for an Alpha Phi team
Jn over a year It wai Kappa'*

rtrst toga,

The deciding third game was a
romp for Kappa, who took ad-
vantage <if Alphn Phi's bad aerv-
e? and won easily

P! DELTS FAIL TO
KNOCK GOBLINS OUT
OF FIRST PLACE

Gamma Phi Alpha stood off I
three Pi Delt scoring assaults in |
the first half and a final bid la I
the waning moments of the je- j
cond last week, settling for a 0-0 1
tie.

For the Goblins It was the
third scoreless tie of the season,
the second to Pt Delt.

A steady drizzle hampered play
to a degree, but the real damper
to Pi Delt was Bobby Wltcher.

Witeher Intercepted three PI
Delt passes and kept Pi D barked
up with quick kicks and regular
formation punts.

Oddly enough, It was Wltcher
himself who, after playing a bril-
liant defensive game, set up PI
Delt's final chance to score. With
three plays left tn the game.
Witeher went back to punt deep
in his territory.

The met football sliced off his
foot and rolled out of bounds on
the Gamma 2S. However, as In
three earlier attempts to push a-
cross a score, the Pi Delts were
not rucceatful.

Gamma Phi never had good
field position, getting past mid-
field only once most of their
offense operating Inside their own
30.

PI Delt had at least three good
chances to score In the first half
-from the 10 and from the II
twice Each time po a se salon was
tost, once on downs, interception
by Wltcher. and a charging line
that forced a punt after a big
loss.

Knights Rip Goblins
In Move Up, 17-9

By BILL ENGLAND
The Sigma Nu Knights used a

Civil Rights On A Street Corner

By PRE BROWN

It has been about t- o ti ,
now tince the first sudden
and violent outburst of civil
rights decroriitra lions tock
place m Atlanta. the pro-
gressive ojif of Lie south. The
focal point of the denxaistr*-
nons wu a fashionable

restaurant located in the
heart of the down town area.
This writer had the cession to observe pic-
keting of the restaurant, nearby motels, and
Hotel* that followed in the wake of the violence.

The main entrance to Lrbs restaurant is lo-
cated on the corner of Farsyth and Lucky
Streets- A *mgie line of perhaps twenty pickets,
mostly Negro, but spotted by several white
marchers, talked slowly down Lucky Street,
rounded the corner and continued their pro-
cession iown Forsyth. Reaching the end of trie
restaurant building the line circled around and
repeated the process m the opposite direction.
The placards which the demonstrators bore
were marked "Let Kveryone Be Served", using
the letters of the restaurant s name as the first
letter is each word.

The majority of the marchers were young,
perhaps in their late teens or early twenties,
and were dressed usually in sports clothes.
Some jeans wen worn and these were a few
pairs of canvas shoe*. One of the white picket -
an wore the bohrsuan emhlema of starat iaag
unruly hair, rotten sneakers, and a dirty neck.

He smiled as he walked, this vanguard of a
truth jet revealed to the gray flannel world.

Across Forsyth, in front of a theatre and a
hotel, marched members of tne Ku Klux (dan
They cut a heron: figure, these valiant Klaaa~
men. - Len ..- of expression, cloaked and hooded
in white robes that rippled in the February
wmd. One's thoughts turned to legends that
have grown tn rough the years around these
guardians of tne Southern Way. Tales of meet-
in> - at the base of Stone Mountain, the ragged
granite walls lighted by flaming torches; tales
of hangings and of midnight beatings gripped
one's mind.

Set under tbe peaked noods w ere faces,
drawn and unshaven, and beneath the flowing
white robes were feet shod with muddied bro-
gans and street shoes worn at the heel. These
*ere men one felt, who the afternoon before
had stungted the roof, or driven the truck, or
-canned the assembly line.

Among the crowd that had gathered to ob-
serve the spectacle, newsman and photographers
wandered about, waiting, s little impatiently
it seamed, for some signs of violence to erupt
from the marchers or the onlookers. There were
policemen circulating, moving the crowd on.
Only if you went into Lebs or the coffee shop
across the street could you watch the demon-
straCocs for any lengta of t&nav

Nudged by a policeman you walked down the
street to the tot where you had parked roar
car feeling that you weren't quite stare that
you bad seen anyone that night who kaaaar
lust exactly what bat was about.

An election u over.
One president has been cho-
sen and another, or at least
a Presidential hopeful. Witt
be selected today.

Aruona Senator Barry
Cvldw-aler, Xew Yore. Gov-
Wakyin Rockefeller, and
Senator Margaret Chase
Smith of Maine have been
erking~.\\-w Hampshire ever Uke O' Gene
used to do rural Georgia

The sgt of electronics has changed things
somewhat r> tne stump-i peaking and red
gallus days of Taimadge. but one unactable
fact remains he who carries New Hamp-
shire's Republican Primary bas a head start-

Looknig back at the campaign bB New Hamp-
shire, it was a relahveiy blase' affair, with
each candidate taking the attitude. Oh. well,
its time fur roe to campaign" None of the
really dynaa-.ic issues of a Presidential candi-
date were brought out.

In short, the campaign seemed sort of a half-
hearted attempt at a popularity poll, with real
approval not coming from the voters but from

Same Old Bull . . Elephant \

By JOHN WHITE

George Gallup or Elmo Roper.

Rockefeller, of course, was the first to an-
nounce tua candidacy. Coldwatcr. in true dra-
matic style, neld fast to the date he set some
three months earlier. And with the eyes of
practically the wnole United SUtes on his home
in the fun-baked desert land around Tucson,
Se donned turban and began to mount the Pre-
sidential elepbant.

Tw j :r,mu> dlti Maine s silt Lie United
States Senate. Margaret Chase Smith, exploded
her aombah c ll tceaily ao iurpr.se to anyone for
a n*d Deen .eakec to me pre> a few days ear-
lier in topical Washington style). She announ-
ced she caa decided to ran for the Republican
Presidential nomination too. To cap it all she
says she is not a conservative or a LioeraL or
a middle-of-the-road candidate. A modern
Susan B Anthony, perbape*

Anyway, that's the lot a conservative, a
middle -of - the roader. and a middle of the
middle of the roader.

And maybe, who knows, as Sew Hampshire
RepuOlicans go. so goes the rest of the Bepub-
iican Party*
I doubt it

By CtNDV BENNETT

'A> sit beseiged on all sides by philosophies
and rrwci which give recipes for the good life.

"Love thy neighbor. ' "Seek

Rare Es&ae Calls To Question Human Dignity

cry of protest against inequality, it has been
a r> MlBBaw by those who were not inferior
but nevertheiess suppressed. T!:e*e are the pvo-
pio who suffer a needless injustice which it
is up to m to remedy. U we rise to ban the
in:is. we may eiUninaU the need for injustice*
of another kind, but if we fail to notice, they,
being individual* of worth and inspectors of
human dignity, ^rtsll overcome eventually. But
will human dignity by proved a false assump-
tion?

The tenets Bit Christianity
ind of democracy may he
great cornerstones of cjvjiiia-
Uoo. He L-.at as n ay, I feel much of the strife
of our time could be alleviated by one simple
belief that snoUd be instinctive to mankind.
The belief, of which I speak :s human dignity
a respect Bat bS> IBMCt Human dignity Is
the quality which raises men above animals
and is the result of human lateUigejcce.

Bwtfll here we could go on into an abstract
pmlusopttcal di^cuisior.. out assuirutig far the
momeat that human dignity ii a reality. that r
mankind is mere than savage animal, ahottlds'f
we then BB committed to ourseives as individ-
uals _f worth?

If each of m had a srroeg conviction in our
own value, and strove to cur own desirea

and amhitioris. to be satisfying to ourselves, and
if this cor.vrcticr. were coupled with a respect
for ma n kind. ttould Uiere be any place in our
world for social injustice'' If ours were not a
give and take, but rather a strive and earn
world, there would be inequality, ales are not
equal in endowments and capabilities. But tt
would be a just and natural inequality, baaed
not on color of skin, the form of a god, or a
do l l a r sign, but on native ability, ambrbos.
and industry.
Throughout history, wbmeeer there has bees

EDITORIAL

Rah.
RAH,

Etc

BY

ICKEV JOHNSON

School spirit.' An. what a glor-
ious term. It sets the neart ablaze
wrth visions of cheerleaders.

A windy Saturday
I afternoons, the
I cheering crowds.

and teams bat-
[ tung for victo-
i ry over the foe.
[ This is indeed a
vivid picture.
Too bad tt does
not happen a-

Now waii. dear reader, don't
fling the paper down in disgust
lm NOT going to talk about
school rpmt at LC. 1 like our
spirit fine. But I hare some sug-
gestions as -a> CHANGING our
spirit, not increasing tt, for if we
increase tt we would sureiy shase
the rafters of the gyav

Over-Organization Poses
Danger At LaCrange College

ITbere is a danger ao a campus she size of ours, and
perhaps ao any campus, that over-ertanuaoon be-
comes disorganuaoon. to the detriment of the school
the arga m n m nns, and the students which those re-

i spoil

Many of tne organizations which are a part of our
campus are an integral part of our lives. Thev offer
many advantages, and serve varans purposes: Dup-
Uotuoo of purposes, lack of purpose, and divergence
froth purpose are pnfaUs easily encountered.

To avoid or remedy these Possible mistakes, a

SSI ZHt't J^f coortu ? tin ? *y should esst
whsch would be respocmbk- for seranj- up and en-
farcrnt standards wtuch an oreanizaTiora should be
reqtared to meet and which would examine and re.

THE HILLTOP NEWS

PumMMtm wtteKLv v twi cTuorTt or

LACftAn^E COLU.GC

^L- ***** Jotoseo, Jeff Boss, 9anuny

w****- ^ Lewharae, Judy Tawaaaaeo. C2tdy
i i 'i t wava T rjaeaw Htw j

rt-raCry Aarv^r,

Caariea WCiiarmaon
Ja Laaa
Hr Alan a Thovaa*
Dr Marie gatm

Of course.
Lial we have
toe bail games. I feel that this
oN-erCow cculd be used at other
places. Fur ijixtahce, why not
nave cheerieauer* at chapel? You
know, to cheer the speaker on.
Can yuu irnagme the glow that
would lignt the face of tne speak-
er if we all chanted. "Two bits,
four bits, six bits, a dollar, all
for Dr Kay stand up and hoi-
ler*:~

Or maybe neve a deiegated
persoe each dorm to lead
chewrs at houee newtiegx.

Or better rail, nave a fight song
for each academic coarse. You
mow. to the tune of "We Are
liae Panthers." yeu d sing -We re
m economies, eeoaocnles are we,
we never aose the good ole GXP
Yju give the teat Doe. well do
the rest. Ooc. we re gocma run the
wurid "

Wouldn't that be inspiring*
How aoout marching to hnttory
with "Atih* eyes have sees the
coming of Perry Law-* Lit uatt

. . . * etc.

And as a ftnal note, cocauder
the trnpact of this little dmy as
weeat-

-Wa imre rou LC. on. yea we da.
We doui loee amy irbuoi lake we

love you.
And when we leave for hecne,

ware blue.
Oh LC we - . r yo'-

Som Saxon

An Iuia;e Has Been Shattered

An old ditty is running through ooy
head. IVe forgotten who wrote tt It goes
something like thir

For the want of a nail a snoe was lost.

For the want of a shoe a horse was lost.

For the want of a horse a battle was
lost.

For the want of a battle a war was lost

For the want of a war a nation was lost.

All for the want ol a nail.

Seemingly msig^uScant things ire often deeply irnporUnt.
A thought is a little thing but action without thought is
chaos, and chaotic action is almost always destructive. '.I
seems curious to me that destructive action takes an inCtrute-
ly short time to complete in comperuon with coustruiruve
action. The city of Hiroshima was the work of a thousand
or more cutmauve years of Oriental culture. The Auenic
Bomb was the culmination of thousands of years of Western
science reaching back to the culture of ancient Graace. They
were both materially destroyed in the searing blast of one de-
structive split second. Destructive action is extremely swift
and its consequence is awesomely irrev ocab le

Premeditated destmcuve action logically thought through
is often horrible, but infinitely more horrible to me is the re-
sult of thoughtless action,* that chaotic deatrucLveness that
can obliterate in a few seconds the thoughtful planning and
work of a hundred years,

LaGrange College has been in existence for more than ISO
years They have been good years and bad years, but m Us
first century of growth and the better man 30 years there-
after, LaGrange College has had a reputation for respoasi-
biiity thai has won the respect of the conmnualty and the
state The image oi 130 years of thoughtful responsibility b a
surprisingly fragile thing. Sunday aJfternoon. April 5, that
image was shattered. At least fur one man and his family
it was shattered.

The man. a lifetime resident ot LaGrange, was driving
toward town on Broad Street, As he passed the new men's
dorm bis side window was shattered by a forcefully propelled
projectile Flying glass cut the faces of his wife and child.
The man stopped a passing car and its driver helped him
take his family to City -County Hospital The man told the
attending physician that this was not the Curt time his car
had been struck while driving by the dorm. At least one tame
beaVm H had been pelted by a thrown rock.

No one will ever be able to completely convince thi* man
that LaGrange College students are mature individuals. It
will do no good to tell htm of 2 consecutive years of oru-
ible student government, the 113 years of respoetaibuity and
thoughtful planning, or the . r 4 - hours of hard and .-....>
work that have made up those years. The thoughtless action
has erased the work of years.

Perhaps we can never restore what one thoughtless per-
son has destroyed, but we can try First, we ran assure La-
Grange that all students are not like this. We can assure the
man that the majority of LaGrange College students are not
irresponsible and that none of them we feed would have done
this thing If they had understood the seriousness of the act.
We do not defend tn any way the person or the act commit-
ted We ccodemn the act and believe the persoe. should be

For the want of a th oug h t an Image shattered. Dow do
we rebuild the Image* Simply by th Inking before ere threw a
rock, a wet wad of paper, a cherry hoavh, or pull a fire alarm
or shoot a ahatg shot. Through awsughtful action. Us two years,
ten years, perhaps, the wouad wOl begf* te aa*L Let e hope
w. Let us try k> make tt a*.

Goltlwater: A Profile
And A Defense

EDITORIAL

Sy DRUE LINTON

i four children. His education include*
0K and military schools and a year at
University of Arizona. He was a war-
M transport pilot now a major general
in the Air Force Reserve He is ooard chairman of his family-
owned Goldwater s Lnc, a Phoenix department store His po-
litical record consist* of two term* on the Fhoerux city council
and two terms in the 0, S. Senate, His religion u Episcopal.

Goadwaier as a conservative'" is a man who aots. and
will demand, if ne becomes President, radical caanges in the
government af the United States. For example, it is said Us
Goldwaicr tnmks that Use Tennessee Valley AiUhorvty should
oe sold to private industry In essence, this could be said to
be true Mr G Idwaser does want it sold to private -p du si r r
but to different firms who would operate it more efficiently
ifr. Goldwaier is said U> want the income tax law abolished.
This is definitely not true He merely says that toe steeply,
unrealistic progressive incotne tax rates should oe tnoderated
in order to increase initiative, expand investment and pro-
rr.vte economic growth-
Mr. Goldwater has been called a panicer and an idiot
Bar his statement that our ihterctjntineriul w taffies may not
be reliable. The true fact a that Goldwater has the exper-
ience, the mfarmation. and the support to make these state-
ments. Goldwaier i experience and information stem from
the fact that he is a major general in the Air Force settee
reserve, a jet pilot, and a member of the Senate Armed Sar-
v-ces Cocar.jttee.

Jusi these poatbous should cause the American people to
think maybe statements such as these might carry unuawal
weight. But Sot only does Goldwater have this support, he
also has the strtsig support jf General Curtis EL LcMa> Air
Force Chief of Staff, who said in reference to misvfle reii-
abiiity, "I am not satisfied.* Admiral George W Anderson,
that Chief of Ssvsl Operations backed Goldwater by aeytegt
1 do not have the same co n fi de n ce in any of the missile sys-
tems as do seme of the technicians who attest to the perform-
ance of the rruasiiea - "

I could go Ob and on stating Goldwater'* political ideeai
and want* sod fmd that in reality they all demand aoeae
change Goldwater has offered Ms n cenis iation as stated hi
his words. "To offer a choice, not en echo.''

APPRECIATION WEEK

The first LaGrange College Apwecialksn Week which was o
reived and engineered by the Siter.'j Alumni Club of LaGrange i
a benefit to the enure eoilege.

The efforts of this dub and the consideration of th centire t
of LaGrange, it i ba Weagawa heat, acd its merchants is g.atcfully
knowiedged.

^d Said lkt?re Lorxaad

%\it hilltop Bcttis

"This 1* More Than I EatpectetT

The tune was somev,here between 2:00 and 2:30
Saturday afternoon- The place was on the LaGrange
College campus, the street beside the athletic field.
The event. Hornecorruiife Parade 1963. Shortly be-
fore 2:30 the floats began to move out. up Vernon
Street toward the square in the city. The crowd was
thinly scattered at the bottom erf the hill on Vernon
but as the parade moved farther on, the people stood
closer together and there were more people than
could stand shoulder to shoulder, so the line along
the street doubled and then tripled and people stood
on front door step* and on the bumpers of cars.

The people on the floats waved and the crowds on
the street waved back and they talked. "Whys that , tt
more than I expected- they said- -'Why, tins ts really
quite a show". Those college kids must have really
put some work on those floats*. These are some of
the takings that they said.

It was not just the parade. It was the whole show.
Homecoming 1963 was a success.

The entire campus deserves recognition for Uw
atmosphere of the day: those who gave tours, those
who served meals to the alumm: those who built
floats; everyone who did their part to make the da)
what it was.

Particular recognition, however, should go to sonw
of those who were directly involved in the prepara
tion for the day: Mickey Johnson, student Home
coming cfiairrnan: Dean Oxley. parade chairman: Er
vin WUUams, alumni Hojxw*hMning chairman: Mn
Burgess, director of alumni activities: and Mr. Mik
Brown, president of the Alumni Association.

We hope that such a tradition as was establish*
here last week will not be broken but that it will con
tinue to grow and become more effective through ad
vanced planTting and preparation.

SCA V* Curuertoue
Proposal* i .ttiuineutled

Lost uetk the Student Government Associa-
tion Legislative Council heard a proposal by
Millard Martin. SGA president to better coordi-
nate tiie thirty-odd organizations which exist on
thf LaGrange College campus.

M.irtin's plan contained four aspects: I) The
SGA would assume a greater degree of control
over the campus organizations. The SGA would
penodtcailv review the organizations and deter
mine if these groups were attempting to achieve
the purposes *et forth in their constitutions,
charters, and by laws. 2) The Executive Coun-
cil would be expanded 3 ) Class presidents
would automatically be included on the SGA
cabinet. 4 ) Spring elections would be better co-
ordinated.

We commend Martin on these proposals and
encourage the student legislature to accept the
plan.

We feel that activities which affect the entire
student body should, by definition, fall under the
jurisdiction of the Student Government Asso-
ciation, and that all organizations, bv virtue of
their influence on segments of the student popu-
lation, should be held responsible to the SGA
the people we have chosen to govern and repre-
sent us, for upholding their purposes.

The need is for a group to serve as the corner-
stone from which the rest of our organizations
radiate. The SGA has recognized this need and
is acting to fulfill it.

VOIR PART

The President of tne USataad Slates a dead-
He died at 2 00 EST in a Dallas. Texas. hoApUai just thirty

rranules after being scut witn a lureign rifle hile ndiog in

a parade

He was buried yesterday :o Arlington N.v.m: Cemetery.

Those are tne tacts What are we. as American college
students, to learn from them'* John Kennedy told us that see
were moving into a New fruntier. where people would gain
the seng-aoaght trcedum on which Arner-ca is built. In his
firm. New England accent John Kennedy tried u> guide us.
w show as where we are going . and why.

N - * in a very true sense of the word. EttB leader is dead
In hie he was a mortal man .striving : - what every Ameri-
can dream* of. la death he la a symbol taat should serve to
guide -as in the yean to come.

On a crowded Dallas street. John T Kennedy paid tne price
tor freedom. But this is not the first Mote teat freedom has
been bought. It was t-augbt at N'om-ancr the Ytarne. and
on Use Burma Road Men paid for it heavily on Guadac anal
and : * J una. Gettysburg and Antieterr,.

John Kennedy was the symbol at an age, an age of youth
and vitality. We at LaGrange College will be tneemg into
our prune in a very few rears. We ran profit from Kertxusdy'a
youth and his action.

Today we muuro for a (alien leader, not struck down by
an invading eeartny or an alien daveaae, hut by a man from
hi* own country But John Kennedy would not want us to
rnourn. for he taid us one cold, wtotery day tn January of
1*61:

"Ash not what your country can do for you, but wbat you
can do for your country.*

John rusgerald Keonedy has doste hia part Are you pre-
pared to do yours?

Amendment Can Unify

The just passwd by the Student Govertt-

bmxu Asaooatauc LcvaslaUve Cuuoefl can bring toot
degree of unity to use now scattered -arapus organisa-

Tbe SCA nas recognised lie pr joie n of over-jrganl-
aatioc at LaCrange College and has Uaeo a step toward
its correetuai.

The purpose* of the *mrulir.er.t *. set forth by Use
Legislative Couacxl la u4 lu *a-a Bag power to aooiiah
clube that now exist on cernpus. bet sisnpry to exist as
a coordinating body that could effectively direct student
activity

The HiliU*p News concurs with tne aim* of the Stu-
dent AxeodaUuo.

Under the provisions of the new amendment a cam-
pus club would be requested to r^iavrat to the SGA ts*
purpijsaes. r.Artutaon. and by-laws. PvrlOaltcauJy the
i (i - would be reviewed by the SGA and if H
did not meet the objective* set forth ft would be ad-
vteed of wars to improve the organ i ration.

AJ a heat rewxrt, the SGA could revoke the charter
of a elab that aerved only to clutter the student hand-
book

The maths objection to the new ruling seem* to be
that various club* are rsesitaxtt to grant to the SGA the
power to revoke their charter*.

Perhaps, then, the various ciuot could uabenit to the
legislature specific rule* saach as rrunirnara .-.iimter of
member*. rrUnlrxiurn nurnher of "-.eetings per quarter,
and certain officers that awuid aovera tne jrgaTurarlneML
The Jfgxnlralirrps could he jwdged -o the baxds of the
rniea had set forth tar Ueelf

IT the condUfcree were mat. there oeuld be do 3Ga
poww exercUd U thaw were sad met then the campus!
wesias be well rat of * riagaalaatrta* that was preaeut km
only.

Drawing

Sue Goethe '64

154

Photographed by Dick Aunspaugh

Anna, Anna

I have seen them whose eyes

have seen the vineyards burn.
They have come
bearing swords in the night

whose flute has failed to find

the mountain paths.
And now I drink their
wine of lies

who strew my precious grapes

upon the winderness.

Arlin Wallace

156

Southeastern Competition
Second Prize Winner 1964

What wood is this?

It has no summer birds.

These voiceless, feathered fiends

that flit about these wind-gnarled limbs,

They sing no song to me.

I could have found a gentler

spring across the Acheron.

Instead I found a path

amid this wood.

It leads to madness.

Arlin Wallace

FINALE

Once again I begin
On the eves of time
To toast away the tears
Which fall dread-down
not a soul to cleanse
nor a memory to erase.

From our love
(of no true name)
Comes no tomorrow
Dread-down falls today.

Richard Campbell

157

5~e // ; Oboe 9'

Great : Fl v tes /'a.d +' Pre/ude

Janes W. Jacllje"

Season for Loneliness

Billy Hearnburg

It was the autumn of the year a time the leaves wear masks of lively
color as though to conceal their dying. A time when a lonely man's lone-
liness is magnified by the very season.

Perhaps it was in the gleaming edge of the November wind; perhaps
it was in the bubbling school children as they went homeward two by two;
or perhaps it was the assemblage of birds on the cold wires. Whether it
be these or other reasons, the autumn can make a void about a man.

Jake moved toward home in a void. "Dern cold wind one of these days
I'll make enough money to hire a taxicab. Believe I'll go through the park
and save myself a little time," Jake mused as he rubbed the crisp white
stubble on his chin.

"Dern cold wind," he mumbled again as he turned into the park and
straight into the wind. He pulled his besieged field jacket about him. "One
of these days I'll make enough money to buy me one of them fancy over-
coats. Gunna get me one of them top-hats too." The wind snatched at his
few clumps of white hair. Very common white hair; in fact, one might say
that Jake was totally unimpressive except for one thing his eyes. Jake's
eyes were blue the blue that burns like the autumn sun.

Jake looked like anybody's grandfather, but he was nobody's grand-
father. Nobody called him father, nor uncle, nor friend. Jake did not know
why he was alone, but he knew that he was alone.

He shuffled on past the lake, the statue, the playground, the bench
the bench Jake tried to go on by, but he only made it a few steps.

"Well, what we got here? You ought'nt be out here in the cold; you
should be at home by the fire." The puppy just looked at Jake with the
look that only a dog or a small boy can give.

"Looks kinda like a Pekinese, but no, reckon he's not. Just a dog, no
certain kind I reckon." Jake was about to leave when he muttered, "Well,
I'll be, he licked my hand ; now why would you want to lick an old codger's
hand. Cute little fellow; I don't see nobody around, but he's probably got
an owner. Still, I don't see nobody around. I wonder Oh, dern, if I took
him home, he'd probably just get sick and die. Still, if he don't belong to
nobody, he might need me." With that Jake swooped up the little dog and
pressed him tightly against his worn jacket.

"Gee, thanks mister, I've been looking all over for my puppy. Thanks a
lot for finding him. I'll take him now."

"Sure, sure son, glad to do it here's your dog."

"Bye mister, and thanks again."

"Good-bye, son." The void, filled for a moment, flew open again. Jake
shuffled toward home. It was the autumn of the year.

159

Proof Moonlight Crucifixion Cherry Mahaffey '63

160

Lewis Library
LaGrange College
601 Broad Street
LaGrange, GA 30240