|
n |
« |
. ■ |
|
£• |
V.:"" |
■ |
|
> |
» SSr ^ |
|
|
- » ■■> |
||
|
IB, ' |
»»:" «§ |
' * |
|
ia |
•" « " ■•-.It |
■ |
|
H |
as <■■>■ «■% |
|
|
Lv |
'*■'■» |
|
|
' |
a*? ■■'$ '* ' |
' |
|
:«£ |
||
|
■ •-■ ■*( Wf |
'■ |
|
|
► ■< • |
* |
|
|
:' |
. |
|
|
1 w" |
1 |
|
|
»'$ ■*< '■ |
||
|
■ |
I |
|
|
■ |
. |
|
|
■ |
'■
-
:
■
I
!
if
•
■
1 .il ' P
■
■'•
', ■
S
I
I '
'■
.
:
■ . I
•
■
-•
-
i
:
- is
:■
mi* m&
■
.
■ ■
!
■ ■ . . ■
■ . ■
( ■
1
•-
'•«.*"»
v
i* '
■ .>
■
L<91*'
■
J.
1893-1993
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2011 with funding from
Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/centennialofcumbOOcumb
f
omen
The Centennial Of W At C^umberland University
1893-1993 A Narrative Account of the Progress of Education
of Women in the South
7hr(
i^
by
G. Frank Burns
University Historian
Cumberland University Press
Lebanon, Tennessee 37087
1993
Printed by The Lebanon Democrat. Layout and design by Julie Benson. JJ
t
^
CENTENNIAL OF
CUMBERLAND WOMEN
Dedicated To Imogene Bradley Ahles
"Our deeds still travel with us from afar, And ivhat we have been makes us what we are."
— George Eliot
\=
J
Miss Cumberland 1993, Lorie Hammock, drives forward into the future in the spirit of Cumberland women.
THE CENTENNIAL OF WOMEN AT CUMBERLAND UNIVERSITY
In September, 1893, Morella Cowden enrolled as a stu- dent in the Theological School of Cumberland University at Lebanon, Tennessee. The previous year, a Kentucky Pre- sbytery had ordained a woman minister and sent women as commissioners to the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, and they were seated by vote of the commissioners.
The question of education and training of women missio- naries had long been discussed, for women had been sent to the foreign mission field all along, usually with their husbands.
The first woman to receive a degree from Cumberland University, however, for Morella Cowden did not return for a second year's studies, was Mary Hunter (Mrs. S.P.) BixJer of North Liberty, Ohio. The Bachelor of Divinity was conferred upon her in 1896.
The University catalog for 1896 states that she received a Certificate of Completion. But in the catalog for the follow- ing year, when Mrs. Bixler was a graduate student, she is listed as "B.D., Cumberland University," and no other wo- man student was listed earlier as holding a degree. There- fore some action must have been taken between June, 18%, and the publication of the following year's catalog, and it is
she who must be recorded as the first woman graduate and not the three women who received degrees from the college in June, 1898.
It is undeniably true that coeducation was not officially permitted, other than in the Theological School, until 1897 and therefore Helen Buquo, Bachelor of Arts, Mary Phelps Darby, also B.A., and Judith Frances Darby, Bachelor of Sci- ence, are still listed as the first to receive a collegiate bacca- laureate degree from Cumberland University. Miss Buquo was a resident of Erin, Tennessee; the Misses Darby of Evansville, Indiana.
The official statement on coeducation appears in the 1898 catalog. It reversed the statement specifically prohibiting women from matriculating as candidates for any degree. There were, however, two women, listed as students in the Middle Class of the Theological School in 1894-1895, with- out any notation that they are other than regular students, and one of them, Mrs. Bixler, did eventually receive her Bachelor of Divinity degree.
Before the Civil War there was an institution in Lebanon called the Cumberland Female Seminary and it was appa- rently under the patronage of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. An advertisement in the Banner of Peace, Sept. 17, 1852, announced:
"The next session of this institution will commence on Monday, the 4th of October next. The spacious new build- ing will be dedicated by appropriate exercises. A numerous attendance of the friends of education, and citizens gener- ally, is expected."
This institution had no connection with Cumberland University.
Between 1893 and 1898 fourteen women were on campus as regular or special students, although the University had in 1894 also made a contract with Lebanon College for Young Ladies (better known as L.C.Y.L., L.C., or "Elsie") to operate that full-fledged, collegiate-level school for women as The Annex of Cumberland University.
It is suggested in the University history that the admi- nistration did not object to having women as students, they just didn't want anyone to know they were there!
THE L.C. CONNECTION
The first female students admitted to Cumberland Uni- versity were enrolled in the Business School in 1875-1H76. The eight were listed in the University catalog as:
Miss Mattie Bardwell, Starkville, Mississippi; Miss A.M. Cahill, Nashville; Miss R.G. Grossman, Nashville; Miss Ellie Hennessey, Springfield; Miss Mollie Hennessey, Ashland City; Miss M. Matthews, Nashville; Miss Eliza Nail, Nash- ville; Miss Sallie Spaulding, Nashville.
Mrs. Lizzie Mace Baker of Lebanon believed that she was the first woman to receive a diploma from Cumberland. It was awarded April 27, 1892, and is signed by Chancellor N. Green, W.J. Grannis, and Herbert Grannis. This indicates that it was a diploma of the Preparatory School where Grannis was principal, rather than a collegiate degree. Ear- lier diplomas were issued to females by the Cumberland University School for Girls, a separate institution with no organic connection with the college. Mrs. Baker was a daughter of Thompson and Jennie Martin Mace. Before her marriage she taught in Lebanon.
Lebanon College for Young Ladies, a separate institu- tion, became the Annex of Cumberland University by a contractural agreement in 1894. Both schools retained their separate charters and administrations and in 1898 the agreement was terminated by mutual ageement. Cumber- land became a coeducational institution officially in 1897. That spring as stated above the first degrees conferred by Cumberland University upon women graduates were given
Helen Buquo, Erin, Tennessee, and Mary Phelps Darby, Evansville, Indiana, Bachelor of Arts, and Judith Frances Darby, Evansville, Bachelor of Science.
Here is the place to review the story of preparatory edu- cation in Wilson County because the education of girls and young women is an integral part of that story. In 1828, Campbell Academy was moved into Lebanon and a two- story brick structure rose on a rocky hilltop on High Street. In the 1830's, there came to Lebanon from New England two sisters, Harriet Abbe and Mrs. Ann Abbe Kilborn. They opened a school for young ladies a few hundred yards south of Campbell Academy and called it Abbe Institute. The two schools had the same board of trustees until 1846 when a separate charter was granted Abbe Institute.
As in other parts of the South, the education of young females was considered in Wilson County of the 1830's to
be an unnecessary evil. Writing in 1888, an elderly lady recalled that her father sent her to school enough for her to have been a good scholar if she had been allowed to pursue scholarly studies. But alas: "The only books which I was permitted to carry were the spelling book and Testament," she said. "To learn how to read was thought enough for girls. Hence, most of them were not even allowed to write or study elementary arithmetic."
Girls were not the business of the new Cumberland Uni- versity Preparatory School when it held its first classes in 1842. The preparation of young men for entrance into a college which accepted only males as students was its con- cern. The first teachers were T.N. Jarman and C.L. Price, both of whom were upperclassmen of the college. Price served only five months. In February, 1844, classes were moved from their temporary home in the church house of the Cumberland Presbyterian congregation, located across the street from Abbe Institute. It is more than probable that the young ladies of the Institute were sad to see the boys go across town to the new college building located on a large, shady bluegrass campus. Here the classes were organized more formally and the preparatory school received a new teacher, B.S. Foster, who served until 1846. R.P. Decherd began work as a teacher in January, 1846, and was ap- pointed the first principal on February 16, 1850. It was at this time that the Preparatory School became fully separate from the college in fact as well as name. The university organization was being perfected, with the opening of the School of Law in 1847. In 1852, a School of Engineering was opened, and in 1854 the Theological School.
The curriculum of the Preparatory School is itemized in the Cumberland University catalog of 1848. It included two years of Greek, three of Latin, with Caesar in the third year and Vergil and Cicero for seniors, and also elementary geometry and algebra as fourth-year subjects. There was an English class for those not preparing for college. This list reveals that the school was not merely the one sub- collegiate class, but offered, after its reorganization in 1846, the four years standard in academies and admitted at least some students who did not intend to progress into college, although in general the curriculum was in the strict classi- cal mold.
STUDENT LIFE IN THE EIGHTIES
If there was a time that could be called normal, it may have been the 1880's in a small college town. The last days of B.W. McDonnold's presidency had been stormy; Nathan Green Jr. brought a serene attitude to the administrative side. His was the calm judicial temperament supported by a naturally mild and loving nature.
The students came into town mostly on the little train that ran from Nashville out the branch line to the depot at the end of South Cumberland, an interesting building with a mansard roof and iron winged wheels supporting its bal- cony. A hack met the train and brought the students to town. They boarded with families of the town or at Camp Blake for the young preaching probationers. This custom would last into the twentieth century, making a close tie between town and gown and introducing a cosmopolitan flavor to Lebanon life.
Social life for the young men revolved around the Greek letter fraternities. Eight had been founded at Cumberland before the Civil War.
After Benjamin Foster founded the Lebanon College for Young Ladies in 1886, there was an opportunity, although strictly limited, for feminine companionship. Many a Leba- non young woman would marry a law student or a preacher. Love has always found a way.
There were outings to the river, buggy rides out shady West Mam Street across the bridge over Barton's Creek, picnics, dances at Baird's Hotel, whist parties, and
dinners in the hospitable homes. The famous sulphur well was at the end of a country lane not far from Divinity Hall and Sunday afternoon walks there were popular.
In 1887 there was an opera house on the second floor of the new West Side Hotel, and repertory companies would present melodramas and comedies. Caruthers Hall was also the scene of plays and lyceum programs, both musical and dramatic. The literary societies flourished: Amassagassean for the college students, Philomathean and Caruthers for the lawyers, and Heurethelian for the Theologs, the latter producing the college magazine. Class and club elections were heated affairs. The bicycle craze was beginning as the Gay Nineties arrived; and tennis was popular with the young ladies. So were croquet and wading in the creeks on a pleasant Saturday afternoon. Sans Souci, a club for the local society belles, flourished in the 1890's and was hostess for many entertainments to which students were invited.
After 1893 the scattering of women students attended classes in either Corona Hall on Main Street or Divinity Hall on a hill more than a mile to the west. Most were married and lived with their student-husbands in apart-
Annie May Bates & Nellie Childress were members of the Kentucky Club in 1903. Nellie was editor of the Cumberland Weekly that year.
merits or rented houses in the town. The cornerstone of a new building was laid in 1892 with elaborate ceremonies. And in September, 1896, students of the Literary School began to meet classes in the new building.
One student was moved by the departure from the place where so many lessons had been taught and where the changing seasons of a quarter-century had passed from au- tumn's gold to winter's snows and then to springtime's li- lacs and composed a tribute in verse, in the mood of Prince- ton's "Old Nassau:"
CORONA HALL
Which "Weir" and "Jid" and "Buck" and So often taught with wondrous care.
'Mc."
How, having nobly earned degrees,
They've wandered from this fountain great,
And Alma Mater's honor fair Raised high in business, Church, and State.
And now closed fast these portals are.
We're glad, yet sadly do we pass From this, so sweet and cherished spot,
To yonder proud and stately mass.
Of all the scenes of college days That linger on sweet mem'ry's wall,
There's none so dear to C.U. "Lits" As that of old Corona Hall
Just think of all the hundred terms,
Of months and years so long now past,
In which so many awkward lads Have 'neath this roof their fortunes cast.
And how those fellows, some of them, Have bravely learned the lessons rare,
The future student, great and wise, Will toil and "bust" 'neath tower tall,
But this is not so dear to us As mold'ring old Corona Hall.
1897 Phoenix
A GREAT NAME IN WOMEN'S EDUCATION
A graduate of Cumberland was to become one of the great figures in the higher education of women in the South.
William E. Ward had graduated from the Lebanon col- lege in 1851 with a Bachelor of Arts degree, returned the next year as a law student, and returned again in 1854-1856 as a student in the School of Theology. Dr. Ward became a Cumberland Presbyterian minister.
In 1865 he opened a seminary for young ladies in Nash- ville at the corner of Summer and Spruce Streets, succeed- ing the Nashville Female Institute. It became an immediate
Miss Clara Earle was the first woman member of the college faculty.
success and within the year had moved to new buildings on Spruce Street between Church and Broadway.
Soon afterward Dr. Ward went to Lebanon on business for Ward's Seminary but also moved by nostalgia for the scenes of his college days.
In 1866, the magnificent Cumberland University build- ing, designed by the famous architect William Strickland, lay in ashes. Standing on the old campus at the corner of College Street and University Drive (Now East Spring Street) beside a fragment of Corinthian column, Dr. Ward took a piece of charred wood and, remembering the exam- ple of Christopher Wren at Saint Paul's after the Great Fire of London, scrawled — "Resurgam."
"I shall arise," Dr. Ward wrote, and arise Cumberland did, by sheer determination. It was a portent of crisis after crisis surmounted, of tough survival by what seemed al- most miraculous means over unbelievable difficulties. The phoenix, the legendary bird rising from its ashes, an emb- lem of resurrection, became and remains the emblem of Cumberland, one hundred fifty years after its birth.
Ward's role in female education continued to be impor-
tant, his school growing until by 1874 there were forty-eight graduates. Upon his death in 1887 Ward Seminary was ac- quired by a joint stock company which continued to oper- ate the school until its merger with Belmont College in 1913 and became famous as Ward-Belmont School.
But it may have been in quite another aspect of female education that W.E. Ward should be remembered. In 1875 in the course in physical education Ward's Seminary organ- ized the first girls' basketball team in the South and one of the first in the nation.
ADMINISTRATORS: MRS.
LINDSLEY, MRS. WOOTEN,
MRS DOUGLAS
Greenwood Seminary, a highly selective boarding school for young ladies of several states, was established by Nathaniel Lawrence Lindsley, son of the noted educator, Philip Lindsley of Nashville.
Greenwood, chartered in 1851, was located in Dr. La- wrence Lindsley's home, a pleasant two-story brick man- sion four miles southeast of Lebanon on the plantation acreage inherited by the Lindsleys from Nathanel La- wrence, father-in-law of Dr. Philip Lindsley. Lawrence was a native of New Jersey who joined a North Carolina batta- lion when the British occupied the town of Princeton where he was a student in the college. He became a lieutenant, was present in the Long Room at Fraunces' Tavern in New
Co-eds of 1907 strike an attitude for the camera. Pearle liarbee & Virginia Oliver are at the right of the back row.
York City when General Washington bade farewell to his officers in 1783, and was an original member of the Society of the Cincinnati. The State of North Carolina granted him two tracts of land of 2,560 acres each, one of them on Spring Creek in Wilson County where Greenwood was to be built and the seminary later established.
It is not unlikely that the ownership of this land was the factor that influenced Philip Lindsley's decision to come to
Nashville as president of a small college rather than to con- tinue his promising career with the College of New Jersey. At any rate, he did operate the farm on Spring Creek for several years, leasing it to surrounding farmers who did the actual work. His son, Nathaniel Lawrence Lindsley, served Cumberland University from 1844 to 1849 as professor of ancient languages; J.B. Lindsley was university historian. Greenwood Seminary was to con- tinue until 1883, Mrs. N. Law- rence Lindsley operating the school after her husband's death. Its demise, coupled with that of the other schools for girls in Wilson County — Corona Institute in 1873 and the Lebanon Female Institute in 1876 — contributed to the modification of Cumberland University Preparatory School from an exclusively male domain to a coeducational school. From Corona, Cumberland acquired the building on West Main Street in which the College of Arts, left scattered by the destruction of the university property by fire at the close of the Civil War, could be housed. From the Lebanon Female College and Greenwood Seminary, Cumberland was to obtain students, first for its temporary substitute for co-education, the Cumberland University School for Girls, which was operated from 1877 to the mid-1880's, and then for its co-educational preparatory school.
(The status of girls and women at Cumberland is not eas-
ily determined by official records, whether of the school itself or of the U.S. Commissioner of Education, from whose annual reports much of the foregoing information has been deduced. The Commissioner's Report for 1878 lists a female department of the Preparatory School which opened in the spring of 1877 with Miss Amanda Anderson as principal, and reports the enrollment of the Preparatory school as 38 females and 70 males. The Cumberland catalog lists female students in the business school in 1873; but as has been stated co-education was not formally approved until 1897. So it does seem to have been policy to accept women but not to acknowledge their presence.)
In 1902 David Earle Mitchell, the newly-installed, 26-year-old, Pennsylvania-born president of Cumberland, I.W.P. Buchanan, professor of mathematics, and Amzi W. Hooker. Lebanon businessman, established a new preparat- ory school in Lebanon: Castle Heights School. It was in- stantly successful, enrolling 140 boarding students and 40 day students. Many of these were female, for Castle Heights was at first co-educatonal.
From 1902 to 1910 Cumberland University had no pre- paratory school, but it was found necessary to maintain a sub-freshman class for those who, as President Winstead Paine Bone tactfully stated in the official history of the Uni- versity, "lacked a little of being ready for college entrance."
|
1*1 Ml ml i^ar J:::::'| |
1 • |
If - ilf ""'ill Brti |
° |
||
|
smarm S& W^^mCA PrJf*^- |
•• ©'# m>- - |
||||
|
f pg**||f ,Jf"" ^*mwM ^ ZjU,-j|£j ^B-.:':V;:. ■;■■ "''''■ -■ '■-■''' '; : ;';■- |
^M |
4 |
|||
|
W*] |
|||||
|
fly j_4Jlj !E?''*i* ■&<. |
■*■■£$->• i^ I?l 12? ' |
||||
|
In 1915 the domestic science (later called "home ec") class was full. |
Miss Margaret Campbell, later a member of the college faculty, is seen here as a college girl of 1916.
The sub-freshman class was fully co-educational. Cumber- land's sub-freshman class of 1909-10 enrolled 24 students. At the beginning of the next year, the Preparatory School officially re-opened.
During the first decade of the twenthieth century, women became full partners in academic and campus life at Cumberland.
The law school soon attracted women students from Cali- fornia to New York, more than a score before 1922. The college faculty included eight women teachers before 1923. In addition the School of Music included seventeen women instructors of piano, violin, and voice during the same per- iod, although this was not remarkable as music had long been considered a woman's field.
What was perhaps more remarkable was the selection of a woman as dean of the new Yancey School of Journalism in 1922. She was Mary Stahlman Douglas, who later was to be book editor of The Nashville Banner for many years.
It was more a matter of tone. Women students fitted into the social patterns of the campus. That seven of nineteen of the freshmen of 1916 were women was not even a matter to be noticed.
For many years anyone who attended Cumberland Uni- versity before 1914 would remember "Miss Earle." This
was especially true of the growing number of women stu- dents, to whom Clara Earle was an inspiration.
Miss Earle, professor of modern languages from 1902 to 1914, was the first woman member of the Cumberland faculty.
She was born in Washington County, Arkansas. Her father, the Rev. F.R. Earle, was for many years president of Cane Hill College and after graduating from that college she went to the University of Arkansas, where she earned both the Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees. On comple- tion of her course there she was elected an instructor in the Department of Modern Languages. During the time of her professorship at Fayetteville she spent her summers at the University of Chicago.
After four years she resigned to undertake studies at the Sorbonne and the College de France. While in Europe she
also traveled in Italy and Spain. Returning from the Conti- nent Miss Earle joined the faculty of Arkansas Cumberland College and remained there one year until she was elected Professor of Modern Languages at Cumberland University. She was also appointed Dean of Women.
Her attractive personality and competence in the class- room made Miss Earle a popular member of the university family. Her stay in Lebanon of twelve years ended in the general reorganization of the faculty in 1914 at the close of the administration of Dr. Winstead Paine Bone. By that time Miss Earle had been joined on the teaching staff by another woman, Kate Adele Hinds (Mrs. Willard Steele) who like her father, Dr. J.I.D.Hinds, taught chemistry and biology. They were the forerunners of a long line of women teach- ers: never again would Cumberland have an exclusively male faculty.
Clara Earle then went to the College of the Ozarks in Clarksville, Arkansas, where she remained for the rest of her professional career.
WORKS CONSULTED
The Alumni of Princeton University, Vol I. Bone, Winstead Paine. A History of Cumberland University.
Burns, G. Frank. Phoenix Rising. Lebanon, 1992. Catalogs and bulletins of Cumberland University, 1848-1927.
The Lebanon Democrat, 1902-08. Private papers of Joseph C. Grannis. Green, Nathan Jr. Echoes From Caruthers Hall. Kennedy, H.S. "Our Public Schools." Lebanon Banner, Spe- cial Edition, 1907 Lawlor, Richard and Virginia. "Schools and How They
Grew" in The History of Wilson County: Its Land and Its Life.
Lindsley, J. Berrien. "A Historical Sketch of Cumberland University." The Theological Medium, 1876. The Phoenix, yearbook of Cumberland University, 1895. Public and Private Acts of the General Assembly of Tennes- see, 1858.
Private papers of Mary Morris Smith. Schlink, Ellen Taylor. This Is The Place. Vol. I. 1975. Speer, William. Sketches of Prominent Tennesseans. U.S. Commissioner of Education. Reports, 1869-1879. Wilson County Quarterly Court. Minutes, 1869.
WOMEN IN THE LAW SCHOOL
In 1902 Mrs. Mildred (W.P.) Bouton was the first woman to complete the regular course in the School of Law. She had received special permission from Judge Nathan Green Jr., Chancellor of the University and professor of law. But when she completed the course successfully, she did not
receive a diploma but a Certificate of Completion.
Soon after that the University began to admit women stu- dents to the law school without prejudice, one, Mrs. Loren Felix Vaughn of Poplar Bluff, Missouri, in the summer of 1905. The young college president, David Earle Mitchell, a man of progressive ideas, must be given much of the credit for this. It was many years before the first woman was ad- mitted to the more conservative Vanderbilt law school in Nashville, just as Cumberland admitted Hispanic and Na- tive American students years before they could attend law schools in Texas, Oklahoma, and Florida.
The Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Consti- tution was adopted in 1919. By June, 1922, twenty-one wo- men had studied law at Cumberland.
The chapter of Iota Tau Tau, women's legal fraternity, established at Cumberland in 1929, provided several offic- ers for the national organization. The founder at Cumber- land was Sara Hardison, who continued as law librarian until the school was moved to Birmingham, Alabama, in 1961. She had received her law degree from Cumberland in
THEDnOENIX
„ V - 1 - O 1 v5 V
t>
UNIVERSITY
Co-Ed House on Hatton Avenue was the first women's dormitory in 1916. It was later the Price residence.
Dressed up to sing were these members of the Cecelia Club of 1929. Elsie Mae Alexander (later Mrs. C. V. Baker) is seated fourth from left.
January, 1923, serving as secretary-treasurer of the class. One institution in the law school that attracted almost one hundred percent of the women "legal eagles" was the public speaking class. In 1934-1935 for example there were twenty-one students of public speaking. One-fourth were women. The class was taught by May Gregory Russeau who had gained her experience as a member of the Redpath Chautauqua. She was proud to claim as her pupils some of the notables of American public life (she was particularly proud of Governor Frank G. Clement, a speech student of 1937-1939).
WOMEN AT CUMBERLAND LAW SCHOOL
fornia, LL.B.
1913-14: Iva Leone Boslough, Storm Lake, Iowa, LL.B.
1914-15: Kate Campbell Robertson, Ruth Forcum.
1916-17: Sara Buchanan.
1917-18: Mrs. Jessie Miller.
1918-19: Maggie Williams.
1919-20: Nell W. Lewis, Elizabeth Jecusco.
1920-21: Mrs. Merrie T. Bostick Fields, Mrs. Pearl Rieves McKeown, Hallie Decker Martin, Ellen E. Meier, Graynella Packer.
1921-22: Mrs. Lanta H. Thompson, Mrs. Birdie R McKen- zie, Mrs. Lurline Melton.
SARA HARDISON
1906: Lena K. (Mrs. Loren Felix) Vaughn, Poplar Bluff, Missouri, LL.B., 1906. also attended summer, 1906.
1907-1908: Alberta Sandel, Nashville, Tennessee. Gra- duated January, 1908 (picture in Phoenix).
1908-1909: student, Edith Likens, Clarksdale, Mississippi. Elizabeth (Mrs. George W.) Todd, St. Louis, Missouri, LL.B.
1911-1912: Mrs. H.H. Thomas, Lebanon, Tennessee. No degree.
1912-1913: Mrs. Edward Johnson, Lawrenceburg, Tennes- see, LLB. Mrs. Hermann Jasper Mohr, San Francisco, Cali-
Sara Hardison knew more law- yers by their first names than any other person in America.
She taught thousands of law students the fascinating course in legal bibliography, completion of which taught the embryo lawyers where to find the law. Judge Sam Gil- breath would say: "A lawyer does not need to know all of the law. But he does need to know where to find the law. And Miss Sara will show you."
She eagerly read the list of successful applicants for the bar. She had provided most of them tips on how to prepare
D
for the important examination and referred them to cases which were likely to be the subject of questions. "Now, Henry," she would say, "I think you should be sure to look up Tuck against Payne and know it."
Miss Hardison joined the faculty of the law school in 1922. She served until the school moved to Birmingham. Offered the same position at Samford University, she re- jected the offer, saying, "My life is here. Why should I leave?"
Judge Gilreath, Dean Arthur Weeks, and "her boys" saw to it that she had a retirement income, and she finished her life in the comfortable little house that she and her sister Madge shared just off the University campus on McClain Avenue.
The Hardisons had come to Lebanon from Culleoka. She attended Cumberland and received the Bachelor of Laws degree in 1922. It was not generally known but Miss Hardi- son had also earned the Bachelor of Music degree from the Schubert Conservatory of Music. After hours in the law li- brary she would sometimes slip up to the auditorium on
the second floor of Caruthers Hall and play on the concert grand piano that stood on the stage!
Miss Hardison was the founder of Zeta chapter of Iota Tau Tau national legal sorority at Cumberland in 1929. The first chapter had been established at Southwestern Univer- sity, Los Angeles, California, in 1925. Because Cumberland had many women students in its law school, particularly after 1920, the chapter flourished. There were eleven actives in 1933.
The students in 1953 dedicated the school yearbook, The Phoenix, to her, with the words: "For the past thirty years she has represented to the students the high ideals of this, Our Alma Mater. For this we are grateful."
THE LAST WOMAN TO
RECEIVE HER LAW DEGREE
IN LEBANON
Peggy Ford Williams is chief counsel for the Tennessee Department of Agriculture. She was the last woman to gra-
"Hoop-La" was a 1921 musical show. The chorus line in this scene, "Down Melody Lane", included Mildred Prewett (Mrs. Dan
Ingram), fourth from Left; Elizabeth Doak ( Mrs. Bateu Gresham), fourth from right; and
Sue Finley (Mrs. Glenn Stephens), far right.
W
duate from the School of Law of Cumberland University in Lebanon. And she has more careers and avocations than the average woman.
She was born in St. Charles, Missouri, the daughter of Major Ray C. and Pearl Russell Ford. When Castle Heights Military Academy opened a junior college, Major Ford came to Lebanon with his family and became Dean of the College.
Peggy graduated from Lebanon High School, attended Lindenwood College and Murray State University, then earned the Bachelor of Laws degree at Cumberland in 1961. She was also a cheerleader, was elected Miss Cumberland, and was a member of Iota Tau Tau honorary legal fraternity.
Upon admission to the bar she opened her office for the practice of law here and continued in private practice until 1974 when she became general counsel for the Tennessee Department of Labor, later transferring to the Department of Employment Security. When her husband, Dr. Ralph Williams, became terminally ill she left state government to care for her family.
After a period in private practice she returned to the De- partment of Employment Security as counsel and appeared in courts across the state. In 1989 she was named chief counsel for the state agriculture department.
She has also been a college teacher, serving as a member of the evening faculty of Cumberland for five years with classes in business law.
TO ADMIT WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Looking back over the years it is apparent that the real gift of the law school was not the graduates who won fame and renown but the spirit of faith in the lasting tenets of democracy, passed on, like an unfailing torch, to five gener- ations of young men and women.
Indeed, after 1902, much earlier than other professional schools, the law school at Lebanon admitted women with- out prejudice, as well as Native Americans, Asiatics, jews,
and Hispanics, and after World War II black students, all those groups who found the doors of other American pro- fessional schools closed to them.
But the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, whose central administrators were on the campus in Lebanon, had been the only major Protestant denomination in the South that was not divided either by the slavery issue or secession and it was the Cumberland Presbyterians who in the 1890's or- dained women as both elders, ministers, and commission- ers to the General Assembly. It was a strong tradition of equality and democracy that underlay the teaching of the law.
Football Cheerleaders with the help of Third National Bank produced the first sports seat cushions in 1992.
WOMEN AND THE ARTS
From the establishment of a School of Music at Cumber- land in 1903, women students and faculty have played a leading role in fine arts studies: music, art, and drama.
"The arts is man's essential speech," Clara Hieronymus, writer on the performing and graphic arts for The Tennes- sean and nationally known critic, told the Cumberland board of trustees in 1982. The University has from its begin- ning recognized this, but particularly so during the last thirty years.
For example, Cumberland had for several years had the only handbell choir in a Tennesseee college, and it had won superior ratings at handbell festivals. The bells were a gift from Mrs. Virginia Golladay Lawlor Wilkinson as a me- morial to her late husband, Richard Lawlor, a member of the Community Chorus for many years and a longtime supporter of music at Cumberland.
The College Singers were the principal music group on campus, however, and young women college students were always its nucleus, particularly as soloists. The Singers pre- sented two programs each year — a concert in the spring and Dinner at Cumberland at Christmastime time. The
m
choir also participated in the Tennessee Collegiate Choir Festival in the spring.
In the fall of 1961 President Ernest Stockton had sug- gested the formation of a Cumberland Trio, three singers who could present programs, and Robert Smith, director of music, complied. This became the Cumberland quartet the next year: Ellen Donnell, Jane Couch, Preston "Rusty" Cury, and Steve Fairbanks, with Betty Massey as pianist.
The tenure of Frances (Mrs. John) Sellars, a graduate of the Julliard School of Music and Virginia Intermont Col- lege, at Cumberland began in 1963. She has also been choir director at the First Presbyterian Church since 1957 and was music director at Walter J. Baird Junior High for years, also.
In 1965-1966 there was a college choir of sixty voices. A special choir of fifteen presented a suite from "The Sound of Music." One of the traditions inaugurated by Mrs. Sellars was the making and hanging of large Christmas wreaths at the entrance of Memorial Hall. She also performed annually as Santa Claus!
The annual Christmas Eve musical program at the First Presbyterian Church was her concept, and it has become a major community event. Another interest is the Wilson County Museum for which she provides a great deal of energetic motive power.
The support of Pat (Mrs. Joe) Bryant, a graduate of the college, cannot be overlooked. In October, 1976, a plaque was placed in Bone Hall in appreciation for the many gifts of Dr. and Mrs. Bryant to the Music Department, including six pianos, choir robes, music, and instruments.
Music was in the college curriculum from the beginning. Piano and violin were the most common instruments but by the 1890's there was a college military band and stu- dents played in the town band, as they did in the 1930's as well. The Cumberland Quartet was a touring attraction over a thirty-year period from 1913 to 1942. Culture was also served by annual visits of the Chautauque, which set up its tent on the eastern campus and an annual Lyceum series which featured such offerings as the operatta, The
Bohemian Girl "in two parts" and the Croatian Tamburitza Ensemble, as well as the fairly well known symphony or- chestra of the Czech conductor, Bohumir Kryl.
Through the efforts of faculty member Lucie Scott Brown, John Hartford gave a concert just before leaving for Holly- wood. Another Cumberland student, Nancy Noland, re- ceived an NBC contract as a singer.
In 1969 the star of the Metropolitan Opera, Blanche The- bom, presented a concert before a capacity crowd in Baird Chapel.
The art of painting has not played quite as large a role in college activities. With the opening of the two-year liberal arts college Cumberland's serious instruction in art was be- gun by Lunette Gore Partlow, artist-in-residence and in- structor of art from 1956 to 1971. Mrs. Partlow (formerly Mrs. Reggie Gore) was a graduate of the Theodore Kane School of Art, had taken the European tour, and attended the Universities of Tennessee and Wisconsin.
Kathy McGovern joined the Cumberland College faculty in 1973. She spent fourteen years as professor of art, leaving in 1987 to open the Reddon Art Studio in Lebanon. Her work included painting, print making, drawing, pottery, and crafts.
She is doing a series of paintings of landmark structures in Wilson County, and has made prints from many of them, including Caruthers Hall. Other paintings include the old Lebanon Public Square, buildings at Castle Heights Mili- tary Academy, the Herschel Ligon farm, and the Wilson County courthouse where Sam Houston once spoke. In 1976 she designed and printed the American Revolution Bicentennial religious medallion, an elaborate work in four colors including gold.
One of the most cherished works of art on campus is the Jesse Bessley child sculpture given in 1976 by the Year Round Garden Club in memory of Lori Miller, the young daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Miller, killed in a 1974 traffic accident.
From 1878, Caruthers Hall was the town venue for travel-
V M\
The outstanding women's basketball team of 1924 and the play-off team of 19S3 were comparable. Team leaders,
Frances Vaughan (Mrs. Dave Robison) is next to the coach at right of front row; Lacresha Cotton, fourth from left,
back row, was most valuable player in district 24, NAIA, in 1924.
JS
ing companies as well as home talent shows. In the 1920's there was a particularly memorable performance on the ukulele of "You Gotta See Mama Every Night or You Won't See Mama at All," by a Lebanon student, Margaret Coe. The Cumberland Players, directed by a professor's wife, Mrs. Robert Wherry, performed such serious plays as J.B. Priestly's Dangerous Corners, The Ninth Guest, and The Land of Heart's Desire from the middle 1930's. Under the Baptist administration there was a full-fledged program of speech and theatre, and a Little Theatre Guild with Audrey Bradshaw, Charlie Kerley, and Betty Lou Sisk as presidents
while during the junior college years such ambitious vehi- cles as Silent Night Lonely Night, Ibsen's Ghosts, and At the Hawk's Well, as well as Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple, and The Mousetrap were undertaken.
(Most of this chapter on the fine arts has been taken from Chapter 5, "New Beginnings," of PHOENIX RISING (Le- banon, 1982) by F.G. Burns. Sources for that chapter in- cluded personal memory, files of The Cumberland Colle- gian and The Phoenix, and interviews with the quoted teachers, Dr. Bert Coble's doctoral dissertation, now in the Ernest & Bettye Stockton Archives, was also helpful.)
WOMEN'S SPORTS
The first female athletic teams were the 1902 tennis club and the 1903 basketball team. However the first official wo- men's basketball team was the 1905 group, which adopted the name Cumberland Co-Eds for itself. The name stuck
through 1951, the young women preferring not to be called "dogs."
Helen Smith, arriving in Lebanon with her parents, en- rolled and graduated from Castle Heights School, which was co-ed then, and also graduated from Cumberland where in 1911 she was a member of an outstanding wo-
m
men's basketball team as well as a superb student of languages.
Women's basketball matured at Cumberland in the 1920's. The 1923 basketball team, coached by Panthea Brad- shaw, made two long road trips: to Johnson City for a game with East Tennessee Normal and on February 9 and 10 to Maryville College and Abingdon, Virginia, to play Martha Washington College.
The 1924 team, led by Frances Vaughan, was at that time considered the best in the history of the school, meeting and defeating the best teams in the state.
The 1951 women's basketball team, state college champ- ions, is listed in the Cumberland Sports Hall of Fame with a team citation. The players had been recruited from All-State and All-Regional high school players and won every game except one non-collegiate contest. The starting players were Bobby Jane Smith, Rubye Wood, Bill Cantrell, Elaine Milli- gan, and Louise Maynard.
The 1970 tennis team was unisex, as Marguerite McClure was the first and, so far, the only female member of a previ- ously all-male varsity tennis team.
Betsy Stephens was All-Tennessee in tennis in 1977 and
4
I't \
For three years (1933-1935) Kathryn McClain (Mrs. J.P. Leathers) ivas a star of Cumberland women's sports.
Although women did participate in intercollegiate and intramural sports or enjoyed informal tennis games even in the 1990's there was still enthusiastic female participation as cheerleaders and at pep rallies, with bonfires and wild cheering before significant games. From the early 1960's on, required phys ed courses featured folk dancing instruction and bowling, with the frailer young women caroming down the alley after the ball.
Now in the nineties there is varsity competition for wo- men in basketball, volleyball, tennis and Softball. The 1979 women's team was particularly successful and its coach, Hal Williams, was named Tennessee Junior College Athle- tic Association Coach of the Year. The 1980 team was ranked second in the nation by the NJCAA. Two years later the Cumberland women went to their first national tourna- ment. The 1983 team ranked second nationally and went to the NJCAA tournament finals before losing. Nicki Neal and Sherri Chaffin won Ail-American honors.
|
f^gy |
■;■■•■-•"**■■-•■-■*;_:■ |
~i |
\M\ |
il : |
|
|
V"!£jfc W '*§m |
mkk |
bJPtik £ |
«^ , ^nHP |
' &/^U: |
|
|
If w |
i Jr~ ""* |
jmmmm |
Wet \$%&> ■&& |
W$!i&^i& m |
'^OHm |
|
P- ' |
Ifyi '* .'if |
Mm W&m |
|||
|
1 , |
s |
wm |
mm - m |
||
|
BL J |
it |
mv |
|||
|
%m m* |
VM«^f |
4m |
• -* *f? |
The Sigma Delta Sigma sorority of 1938 wear their furs on a chilly winter morning.
Women members of the Cumberland Sports Hall of Fame include:
Frances Vaughan Robison, basketball, 1924-28. Bobby Jane Smith Lowe, basketball, 1951. Nicki Neal, basketball, 1987. Frances Wesson, basketball, 1928. Katherine Vaughan Beard, basketball, 1932.
THE RESIDENCE HALLS
Dreams can come true. Sometimes they become reality in the most peculiar way. In a university prospectus of 1928 there appears a drawing by George Waller, architect, of the campus and buildings of the future. Every part of the dream, except the separate science building (and that is in the blueprint stage) became real. But oh how long it took!
In 1928 Memorial Hall and the Men's Dormitory (later
1ST
In the women students' lounge in Memorial Hall in 1940 Frances Coleman (Mrs. C.T. Scott), Bettye Hatfield (Mrs. E.L. Stockton), and Evelyn Jennings (Mrs. James Edwards) knit for the war effort.
>r. W.P. Bone Hall) were there. The projected buildings ■ere a music building, a women's residence hall, a gymna- um, a science building, and a library. In 1993 there have )me into being Bone Hall (built as a women's residence all but later used as a fine arts building), the gymnasium F 1938, the Doris & Harry Vise Library, and the Dallas loyd Recreation Center. And in addition there are Justin otter Hall, Edward Potter Hall, Mary White Hall, the indsey Donnell Stadium and Kirk Field, the Woody Hunt aseball Stadium and Ernest Stockton Field, Rudy House, id the Brown Cottage.
But Cumberland women have been moved from place to lace since they first acquired a home. One of the first deve- ipment proposals of President John Royall Harris was fty Hall, a building similar in appearance to the men's Drmitory across the campus. It would have housed fifty 3ung women. Until this could be built (it never was) other jarters were necessary as female enrollment increased, fter a fruitless effort to acquire a large residence on Hat- >n Avenue, the University did secure the J.I.D. Hinds resi- ence on West Main and this was used as a woman's dor-
mitory for twenty years. Later another nearby residence was rented and as Hinds House and McClain House the two were almost as great rivals as the Greek letter sororities.
In 1938 the new women's residence hall at the southern edge of the campus was ready for occupancy. Instead of rooms, there were suites, two rooms with a connecting bath.
When Second Army leased the University buildings in 1942, women students were moved into the Edward Gra- ham residence on Hatton Avenue. After the war, the wo- men's residence hall was restored to its intended purpose and received the name Tennessee College Hall after the merger of that Murfreesboro woman's school with Cumber- land under auspices of the Tennessee Baptist Convention.
When the men's dormitory, Dr. W.P. Bone Hall, burned in 1957 the men students were then housed in Tennessee College Hall and the women were moved into the former fraternity house (now Rudy House) and it was named Howard Hall, honoring Freda (Mrs. M.S.) Howard, presi- dent of the University Women's Club. Mrs. Howard as
1993 Basketball Cheeleaders pose for a picture before the opening ceremony for the Dallas Floyd Recreation Center.
president of the Lebanon chapter of the Association for Pre- servation of Tennessee Antiquities had been instrumental in the restoration of a number of oil portraits of University dignitaries. Other women students were moved to a frame house that faced West Spring Street, Hereford House (no longer standing). Finally Mary White Hall was completed. There was nothing like dormitory life to forge lifelong friendships. It was like a large family, ruled by the matron with the firm hand of a grandmother who knew what mis- chief and what fun might be planned. "We're sisters, sis- ters," they sang.
SUPERLATIVES
The first selection of superlatives, or campus beauties, was for the 1924 yearbook. In a section titled "Features" were full page photographs of Nana Jennings, Prettiest Girl, Literary Department; Anne Pursley, Most Popular, Literary Department (both chosen in a chapel election); Mabel With- erspoon, Phoenix sponsor; and Margaret Grisham, Kick-Off sponsor.
The first co-ed to win the title "Miss Cumberland" was Panthea Bradshaw, in 1925. Her photographs, showing her in classroom attire, formal wear, and sports dress, with her tennis racquet, lead the section candidly titled "Beauty Sec- tion," followed by Helen Hathorn, the Kick-Off sponsor, and Mary Bruce and Ray Patton, college sponsors. In all, twenty-two young women of the college were honored.
In 1928, a plain young woman was selected "Prettiest Girl." She was Nell Plain, a freshman from Madisonville, Kentucky, and a sister in Delta Phi Omega.
Dignitaries selected beauty superlatives on several occa- sions: in 1940, Earl Carroll, of the Vanities fame, picked Annette Sellars as Prettiest Girl. In 1963, Walter Sharp of the Tennessee Fine Arts Center selected Jane Miller Couch, a Lebanon sophomore. In 1964 Mrs.Tennessee, Betty Jo Welch, chose Ann Witt as Miss Phoenix and in 1965 George Allen, friend of presidents, selected Barbara Harris for the same honor. For several years Mr. and Miss Cumberland became Mr. and Mrs. Cumberland.
CAMPUSOLOGY AND THE JAZZ AGE
When President John Royall Harris, soon after taking of- fice, was asking his board of trustees to support his request to authorize a women's dormitory, he reminded them of an adage: "Where the girls are, there the boys will be."
Certainly the mating of true hearts has long been a func- tion of college life, and many a long married couple was struck by Cupid's arrow on the campus at Cumberland. Law students were attractive prospective partners and many a local girl found her mate at the "Little Athens of the South," as Dr. Stockton Sr. was known to say. Some cam- pus romances withered, however. One former student re- turned for an Alumni Weekend "fifty years later" and found himself and his wife (whom he met and wed some time after leaving school) seated next to his college "true love."
The true flavor of the 1920's was captured in a joke ad in the 1923 Phoenix:
LYRIC THEATRE Saturday Happy Stratton Presents:
Mabel Witherspoon, starring in a real super special, THREE O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING, supported by an all-star cast, including Mildred Prewett, Louise Grimmet, Sue Fiunley, and others.
(Dr. Harris will see them 48 hours later.)
Special music: Eddleman's Jazz Hounds.
Admission $1.50 (Red ribbon)
Don't miss this feature. Last one that students will ever see while in Cumberland. One night only.
And of course it was not the last night of such an event: later students enjoyed themselves at Greenbrier Lake, Horn Springs, the Rainbow Club, the Plantation Club, Bartons Creek boat dock, or the rock quarry, depending on their class year!
(Dr. Harris as the president of Cumberland was chief dis-
ciplinary officer, a role later assigned the Dean of Students (Col. Lloyd Brown and Darryl Robinson, for example.)
And in the heart of the Jazz Age. The Phoenix for 1926 inquired:
THINGS WE NOTICE We wonder. . .
if a centipede really can Charleston?
if Miss Parks (Miss Cumberland) still acts prissy.
if Helen Armstrong intends to be a lawyer.
if "thou shalt not dance."
if Willard Henson ever studies anything but Tiny (Knee).
if you know Mrs. Alward (an Education Teacher) is from Seattle.
Onompus dances were strictly forbidden until at least 1938. Drinking would get you "shipped," and co-eds were not permitted to marry without the consent of the faculty. Although young women were observed from time to time slipping out of dorm windows, hours were pretty well en- forced well into the 1960's. And one young man, later presi-
dent of a bank, was pushed off the porch roof of Howard Hall for attempting entry into a second floor window! He had been mischievously given reason to think he would be welcomed.
RULERS OF THE PRINTED WORD
It was 1948, one hundred six years after the opening of the college in Lebanon and fifty-four years after Morella Cowden enrolled as a student, before a woman served as editor of the annual. Even then, after Jean Sedberry in 1948 and Audrey Bradshaw in 1949, it was another twelve years before The Phoenix was entrusted to female hands.
Not until the two-year college era did a woman student edit The Cumberland Collegian. Beth Donnell, editor in 1959-1960, was the first of three sisters to work on The Col- legian staff. Ellen, in 1961-1963, was a writer and proof reader, and Mary Ann, as editor in 1967-1968, won the All- American rating off the Associated Collegiate Press.
Mrs. William Dickinson, seated at left
wrote
with members t>[ the Company of Scholars and Adventurers in l<>(>4, the words to the new Alma Mater.
But the women made up for lost time. Twelve of the se- venteen editors of The Collegian from 1959-1960 until regu- lar publication of the newspaper was interrupted for a long while were co-eds.
THE WOMEN AS EDITORS:
Collegian: 1960-Beth Donnell; 1961- Lynn Nokes; 1962-Margaret Alexander; 1963-Pam Oldfield, (co-editor with Bob Boyce); 1964-Pamela Oldfield; 1965-Jackie Ryan; 1966-Janice Dowdy; 1967-Linda Vines; 1968-Mary Ann Donnell; 1970-Daphne Bell; 1971-Diane Johnson; 1975-Karen Fraley.
Phoenix: 1949-Jan Sedbery; 1950 Audrey Bradshaw; 1962-Kay Williamson (Co-editor); 1963-Ronna Evans; 1966-Sandra Lewis; 1967-Nancy Hailey; 1968-Brenda Whitehurst; 1969-Dianna Markham; 1970-Angela Alexan- der; 1971-Dianne Hawks; 1972-Pat Nalley; 1975-Sharon Fra- ley; 1976-Cindy Cannon; 1977-Diane McEachern (co-editor with Chris Hefte).
WOMEN'S ORGANIZATIONS
Activities for women students were limited until the mid-1920's, when sororities were organized. In 1923 there was only the Young Women's Christian Association, the national YWCA having acted at its convention in Hot Springs, Arkansas, to encourage the college organizations. The sixteen members that year included most of the ack- nowledged women campus leaders. That women were moving into positions of leadership was shown by the staff of The Kick-Off, the student newspaper, where the three assistant editors, Panthea Bradshaw, Mildred Prewett, and Marvine Bone, were all recognized leaders in classroom and extracurricular activities.
The Hypatian Literary Society, although co-ed, was pre- dominately female.
In 1931 the red-headed students banded together, as the Cumberland Cardinals, thirteen strong, of whom four were female: Josephine Harris, who was secretary-treasurer, Eli- zabeth Wilson, Lucy Connell, vice-president, and Amy Jo Byars.
The first women to serve on the Student Council were Rosalie Bengal, Frances Wesson, and Aurine Wilkins, in 1925-1926.
One of the most interesting and exciting organizations to come to life at Cumberland was a transplant from the Uni- versity of Tennessee. Beta Chapter of the Zebra Club was organized by four Cumberland co-eds, Dorothy Donaldson, Josephine Harris, Virginia Golladay, and Mattie Walker. The Lord High Horse, Miss Donaldson, announced, "The club fosters love of parties and wholesome cooperation to
that end! Zebra Be Praised!"
Miss Golladay, later to become University Trustee Mrs. RD. Wilkinson, was the first Queen of the May when the May Day fete was celebrated.
Until 1932-1933 the Glee Club was entirely male. In the fall of 1932, however, women became participants under the direction of Mrs. Theora Ferrell, head of the voice de- partment. The accompanist, Dr. Graves Thompson, a young Harvard Ph.D., later went to Hampden-Sydney College, his Alma Mater, and continued to teach Latin and the classics until he was in his nineties!
The first sorority chapter, Delta Sigma Beta, was char- tered in 1924 with eleven members. Its colors, green and white, and its flower, the sweet pea, symbolized the spring- time of life. It was not, however, represented on the Univer- sity Pan-Hellenic Council.
However, in 1916 there was a unisex social fraternity! The remembers of Zeta Chapter of Kappa Alpha Zeta that year included Marie Weeks, a freshman.
Two young women have a conversation in a campus scene, autumn of 1968.
The principal organizations for many years were the Greek letter sororities, Sigma Delta Sigma and Delta Phi Omega — Sigma Delt and DPO — both organized in 1926. Their rivalry in the annual Stunt Night skits was equaled only by that between the Hinds House and McClain House women's dormitories.
w
Rose Fly, director of Mitchell Library for over a decade, received much credit for the accreditation of the two-year college.
Both sororities were allied to fraternities, Sigma Delt to S.A.E. and DPO to Lambda Chi, and a number of marriages resulted. Sigma Delta Sigma has now been revived.
In 1926 a chapter of Sigma Beta Kappa, national honor society, was chartered. Women charter members were Eli- zabeth Harris, Claudia Reeves, Rosalie Bengal, Mary Bruce, Aurine Wilkins, and Lucile Alexander.
During the period of Baptist sponsorship, there were many organizations for women students: the only Greek letter organization which had women members was Alpha Psi Omega drama honor society but the Cynthian and Tha- lian Societies were sororities in all but name, and there was the Town and Country Club for commuters.
After 1960 many American colleges became known as "suitcase colleges." This meant that on weekends every re- sidential student packed up and went home. Cumberland College of Tennessee was one of these, as the old Univer- sity, with its large enrollment of students from other states, could never have been.
Students in the two-year school did their best and they were quite lively times. At various times young men and women were involved in the Honor Council, Phi Theta Kappa, the junior college honor society based on the Phi Beta Kappa idea, the Company of Scholars and Adventur- ers, a challenging notion fnr good students who wanted a variety of activities outside the classroom, the Spel linkers,
who went underground, and other more conventional groups. The Heurethelian Society, named for an earlier literary society, was active for a few years in the 1970's.
There have always been places to go: Sno-White Drive-In, the Rainbow Club, Horn Springs, Shannon's, the movies, even Bartons Creek boat dock or the rock quarry (occasion- ally policed by the Dean of Students) or, if real desperate, the cemetery!
And there was Sadie Hawkins Day, established in the mid-sixties, which gave everybody a chance to dress up like hillbillies from Dogpatch and for the girls to chase the boys like Daisy May chased Li'l Abner, and then of course a dance that night. There was a memorable Botany class field trip to Gatlinburg, and guitars and songs and students sit- ting on the main stairway and standing in the second floor hall.
And whether four-year or two, after the ban on dancing was relaxed in 1937 there were dances always, not as elabo- rate as the memorable Blue Barron tea dance sponsored by the Pan-Hellenic Council in 1938, nor as informal as the fraternity house dances on weekends, but occasions for girls to wear their formals. Once Mrs. Brown stopped a dance because of the kind of language in a vocal, but mostly the dances were proper pleasure. There was the dance in the lower floor of the Student Center when "Adam Eden" took liberties with "Eve Eden" as they descended the stairs. There was the costume dance with the Purple Haze providing the music. There was the annual YWCA Winter Carnival, and a White Christmas Ball, and a Winter Won- derland Ball, Valentine Balls, the Spring Fling, the crowning of the Basketball Queen at Homecoming and the elaborate ceremonies of 1947 with ten queens and Betty Jo Branham as THE Football Queen.
Terry Thompson said it in the 1980 Phoenix:
"It won't be easy saying goodbye to this place... to these friends, but I have so much more to learn about the world, about myself, and it's time to move on. I only know that wherever I go, whatever I do, the days I've spent right here will always be a really special part of my life... a time to remember."
THE UNIVERSITY WOMAN'S CLUB
It is not possible to observe the Centennial of Women at Cumberland University without noticing the loyal and energetic group of women who have made up the Univer- sity Woman's Club (or, during the Cumberland College of Tennessee era, the Cumberland Woman's Club).
The club was founded in February, 1924, as a federated dub, Its membership has always been composed of wives
IBT
of members of the faculty and administration, wives of local trustees, women members of the faculty, and all wo- men connected with Cumberland.
Over the years many projects have been sponsored: scho- larships, furnishing and redecoration of dormitory rooms, donations of books to the library, and awards at Com- mencement. The club's social function has been of equal importance in providing a focal point for making friends among "town and gown." One popular annual event was the "Taste and Tell" luncheon with sampling of bite-size morsels prepared by club members from their favorite re- cipes. A collection of these recipe cards was then made available for purchase, the proceeds going into the scholar- ship fund. A major event of 1988-1989 was the "Harbinger Gala," a black tie dinner for the benefit of the scholarship
fund.
The women supported another special project, the purch- ase of Oneida flatware and Lenox china for hospitality in the Rudy House.
Frances (Mrs. John) Sellars discusses plans for a concert in Baird Chapel, a suite from The Sound of Music, in 1966.
The Portia Club
Wives of law students and women in the law school were organized for social purposes in the Portia Club, active un- til World War II.
The Dames Club
After the war the organization for women law students, wives of students, and wives of the law faculty was the Dames Club. This was particularly active when a large number of returning veterans attending school under the
G.I. Bill were married and, in many cases, fathers. Mrs. Sam Gilreath, wife of the dean and a former faculty member herself, was active in organizing and encouraging the organization.
Cardinal Key
Organized as Silver Scroll in 1940-1941, the honor society for women became a chapter of Cardinal Key, sister frater- nal order to Blue Key. Isabelle Moss was president in 1941, Margaret Sanders in 1942.
The Year Round Garden Club
Not a university organization but important nevertheless is the Year Round Garden Club of Lebanon which has sponsored landscaping and tree planting on the campus since 1962 and gave a Jesse Beesley child sculpture in mem- ory of Lori Miller, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Miller who was killed in a traffic accident in 1974. The club spon- sors an annual Christmas dinner and auction for the benefit of its landscaping projects.
Everybody, faculty included, dressed Dogpatch style on the annual
Sadie Hawkins Day. Here, in 1968, is Mrs. Sidney Berry, professor of
American History, with Tom Hardaway, professor of biology.
THE CHRISTIAN INFLUENCE
Many of the organizations led by women students during the past one hundred years have been Christian in nature. These have included the Young Women's Christian Associ- ation (YWCA), the Student Christian Association, the Bap- tist Student Union, the Christian Student Union, the Bible Circle (1885-1909) for wives of faculty and students in the Theological School, the Student Volunteer Band, composed of Cumberland students who were committed to Christian work in foreign lands, and the Life Service Group (1886-1935).
Because Cumberland was founded by Cumberland Pre- sbyterians and remained under church auspices until 1951, and maintains an ecumenical relationship with various reli- gious faiths, it continues to provide the opportunity for ex- ploration of ethical and moral systems. There is a full offer- ing of courses in religion and philosophy, comprising 24 semester hours in the undergraduate college.
Three campus beauties in October, 7967, are Dee Read, Cynthia Muse, and Barbara Rogers.
THE HEREFORDS
From the time Grace Hereford entered the second year of Cumberland Prep in 1917 until her sister Ada graduated in 1936, at least one of the five Herefords (Grace, Nannie, Francis, Julia, and Ada) and sometimes three were in school at Cumberland.
Nannie Hereford was born in Osaka, Japan, a daughter of Presbyterian missionaries. She spent her childhood years with her family in Hiroshima. At the age of fourteen she came to Lebanon, Tennessee, for her high school education, attending the Preparatory Department of Cumberland Uni- versity and earning the Bachelor of Science degree in 1930. Only a few others were in this last class of students who spent eight years at Cumberland! Among them were Jose-
phine Bentley and Elsie May Alexander Baker.
Appointed by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Mis- sions, she sailed for Japan in June, 1932. After attending language school in Tokyo she was assigned to Hokusei Jo Gakko (Northern Star Girls School) in Sapporo, Hokkaido. As war approached in 1941 the American teachers became an embarrassment to the authorites of the school, and so they were requested to leave. The Presbyterian board sec- ured a transfer for her to Silliman University in Duma- guete, Negros, The Phillipines. She arrived there just one month before Pearl Harbor. However, it required six months for the Japanese Army to work its way down to this southern island. The group spent part of this time in the mountains but eventually the Japanese discovered them and they were brought back to the city, then moved to Ba- coloc. Six months later, in March, 1943, they were taken to Manila to Santo Tomas Internment Camp.
In February, 1945, American troops liberated the inter- nees and eventually a troop ship brought her back to the United States and she rejoined her family, who had spent the war years in Lebanon. After a year of furlough she was ready to go back to work. Unable then to go back to Japan she returned to the Philippines for a five-year term teaching English and Bible at Silliman. After that she did go back to Japan, this time to do evangelistic work, first in Utsunom- iya, then in Niigata Prefecture. Finally, her last three years were spent in Tokyo at Joshi Gakuin, a former Presbyterian mission girls school.
Retiring in 1974 she settled in Nashville with her sister, Dean Julia Hereford of the Vanderbilt University of Nurs- ing. Dean Hereford was co-chairman of the Graduate Edu- cation Commitee of the Southern Regional Education Board.
Grace and Egon Hessel retired to Ohio.
ARLINAR A. STAFFORD
She is better known as "Sister" and she is a healing hand for all whom she meets. Arlina A. Atkins Stafford was a member of the first graduating class of Cumberland Uni- versity after the four-year college was restored. However she had attained respect and honors before then.
In 1976, during the Bicentennial celebration, she was cho- sen one of the "Hidden Heroines" of Wilson County. Only recently she received the associate's degree from the Vic- tory Bible Training Center in Nashville.
Born in Wyatt, Missouri, she was reared in Edith Chapel, Illinois, and began her education there in the Perkins elementary school, attending Douglass and Lovejoy High schools, and after graduating from Erma Lee Beauty Col- lege, Cleveland, Ohio, was licensed by the Ohio State Board. "Our motto at Perkins School was 'We are not at the top but we are climbing,'" she said. "Now I will climb for Jesus as long as there is a Jesus and that is forever!"
Sister Stafford joined the Church of God of Prophecy No. 3 in Cleveland, Tennessee, in 1963, received sanctification and was baptized in 1964, and began her ministry in 1966 with missionary work in Toledo, Cleveland, Milwaukee, and Benton Harbor, Michigan. She attended Church of God of Prophecy Training Institute and the Professional Broad- casters School at Knoxville.
"I moved to Tennessee on faith, with nothing, and no- where to put it," she said. Sister Stafford became pastor of the East Lebanon Church of God of Prophecy, 215 McGre- gor Street. She began attending Cumberland College, then completed the baccalaureate course as a member of the first graduating class of the renewed Cumberland University, receiving the Bachelor of Arts and the Bachelor of Science degrees.
She is now employed by Cedarcroft Inc. as Evangelist, and the University. She will continue with Victory Bible Training Center in September, 1993.
Sister Stafford is a member of the Church of God of Pro- phecy of Lebanon, whose pastor is the Rev. Tony Coile. She is married to Walter F. Stafford and has a son and three grandchildren. She also has one foster child, Sandra Schie- man Stafford, and one godchild, Andy Raines.
GOLDEN STOCKTON BAIRD
Having been instrumental in bringing co-education to the University, eleven Cumberland women served on the mis- sion field overseas. One of the more recent fraternal work- ers has been Golden Stockton who, with her husband, Dr. Richard Baird, completed decades of service in Korea. Both continued to be active in denominational affairs.
A Cumberland admissions counselor & a Miss Tennessee
contestant, Bonnie Dehoff (Mrs. Ray Fakes) was later Tennessee's entry in the "Teacher in Space" competition.
WOMEN WITH A MISSION
MRS. Y.P. WOOTEN
In the fall of 1920, Mrs. Virginia Tomlinson Wooten, prin- cipal of the Wooten private school in Lebanon, which from 1917 had been offering a four-year high school course, was invited to become principal of the Cumberland University Preparatory School. She accepted. Mrs. Wooten was a na- tive of Maury County, Tennessee. She came to Lebanon when her husband, Yandell P. Wooten, a pharmacist, moved his business, and joined the faculty of a private elementary school. She earned the Master of Arts degree at George Peabody College for Teachers and then did further graduate study at Peabody. Her high reputation as a trainer of teachers was soundly based on her record. Many mem- bers of the profession who are now nearing retirement in Tennessee and Kentucky received their undergraduate in- struction in education in her classes after she became Pro- fessor of Education in the College of Arts & Sciences in 1927. They, as well as the co-eds whom she served as Dean of Women remember "Phoebe" as affectionately as the gen- erations before remembered "Old Tom" or "Uncle Bill." During her administration as principal, Mrs. Wooten ob- tained accreditation from the Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools of the Southern States; built enrollment to a high point of 123 students in 1924, larger than either Lebanon High or Castle Heights Military Academy, its local rivals; and planned the curriculum on a standard basis, "thoroughly preparing for college or life," as Mrs. Wooten stated in a prospectus. After the school year of 1926-1927,
TET
the Preparatory School was closed. Its last faculty was com- posed of Mrs. Wooten, Charlene Miller, and Ralph T. Donnell.
DOROTHY JENKINS
Mrs. William Jenkins has been a member of the Cumber- land faculty since 1977, with an appointment in develop- mental studies and English. She holds certification as a De- velopmental Specialist, in addition to her academic degrees. As an administrator she is coordinator of Developmental Studies, and Director of the Undergraduate Teacher Educa- tion Program.
Developmental Studies has been a crucial field of instruc- tion, both during the last years of the two-year college program and the building of an accredited four-year curri- culum as educators came to realize that students who leave high school poorly prepared for college work should not be turned away out of hand but offered an opportunity to level their abilities. Thus developmental studies courses have found a place in all institutions of higher education (even at Harvard!).
Professor Jenkins earned the Bachelor's degree at Sam- ford University at Birmingham, the Master of Arts at George Peabody College of Vanderbilt University, and the Educational Specialist degree at Appalachian State Univer- sity with additional study at the University of Tennessee, Peabody, Mddle Tennessee State University, and Tennes- see Technological University.
CHARLENE McCOIN KOZY
Dr. Charlene Kozy is chair of the Working Adult Degree Program. She joined the Cumberland faculty in the fall of 1985 as assistant professor of education.
She has her B.A. degree from Tennessee Technological University and the Master of Arts and Doctor of Arts from Middle Tennessee State University, with additional study at Tennessee State University, the University of Tennessee, and The United States International University. Her academic fields are history and political science.
The Working Adult Degree program began in January, 1984, with Dr. Phyllis Phillips as coordinator and Harriet Lancaster as administrative assistant. The Tennessee Na- tional Guard was its nucleus and Guardsmen, who com- pleted the program, are known as the "Wings of the Phoenix."
With Dr. Kozy as coordinator, the program has become even more vital. She supervises a dozen sites of off-campus courses. In August, 1989, there were five hundred students enrolled in a menu of one or more courses.
It is in this kind of way that Cumberland has become a quite different place from the residential-commuter school that existed before World War II and even into the mid-1970's.
WOMEN TRUSTEES
LAMBDESJ, Ina Smith SHORT, Mrs. L.M. EDGERTON, Virginia WILKINSON, Virginia Golladay
Lawlor SHATTUCK, Mrs. Mark BUCHTEL, Alice Hooker RUDY, Jeanette C. MOSS, Sandra W. ROBERTS, Ann B. LESTER, Lynn Hill
Bowling was a popular physical education course for young women in the late 1960's.
WOMEN TO REMEMBER ELIZABETH HARRIS McDAVID
When Elizabeth Harris McDavid died in September, 1968, Cumberland College of Tennessee lost one of its most distinguished teachers, a woman who was not only a gra- duate of Cumberland but one of the faculty who were brought to Lebanon by President Ernest L. Stockton to strengthen the new two-year liberal arts programs.
She was the first woman to earn a Doctor of Philosophy degree in English at Vanderbilt University, receiving the
EH
doctorate in 1935. She had previously received a Bachelor's degree from Cumberland and the Master's from Vanderbilt.
She was born in Auburn, Kentucky, a daughter of Prof, and Mrs. W. Lee Harris. She attended Lebanon High School where her father had been principal.
Dr. McDavid's teaching career spanned forty years, be- ginning in 1928 at Lincoln Memorial University. She also taught at Vanderbilt, Grenada College in Mississippi, Col- lege of the Ozarks in Arkansas, Winthrop College in South Carolina, Southern Illinois University, and Cumberland. She was considered an authority in comparative literature and had participated in meetings of the Modern Language Assocation.
Her husband, from whom she was later divorced, was Raven McDavid, an internationally known scholar in the field of linguistics. They had one daughter, Betty, now the wife of James David Mason of Knoxville.
While at Lincoln Memorial she met the poet Jesse Stuart and maintained a correspondence with him, although she considered him inferior to the Fugitive Poets whom she had known at Vanderbilt. Dr. McDavid herself was a member of the Facets group of poets who were of a somewhat later period than John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, and the Fugi- tives and who included the well-known critic and author Cleanth Brooks.
In 1958 she joined the Cumberland faculty where her brother, Thomas F. Harris, had become assistant to the president. She died September 5, 1968 in Vanderbilt Hospi- tal. Her funeral services were held at the First Presbyterian Church, of which she was a member. Many of her students attended, honoring a teacher whom they were never to forget.
IMOGENE AHLES
Rod and Imogene Ahles, trustee and secretary to the president,
alumni who have made a difference, are shown at the 1992 John
Duncan-Law Day dinner which they helped arrange.
Whenever it becomes necessary to learn something about the administrative side of Cumberland University the first thought has been to "ask Imogene."
Imogene Ahles, administrative secretary to the president, to every president of Cumberland, in fact, since Dr. Charles Havens, has also been a member of the faculty of both the two-year college and the four-year university, a member of major committees, including the Award of the Phoenix commitee, active in the Cumberland Woman's Club, taker of mintues of the Board of Trustees and the executive com- mittee, and unofficial adviser and repository of memories on every conceivable matter from the present address of Dr. Havens and the name of the tennis coach when Sam Hatcher was on the team to the current week's schedule of meetings in the K Room.
In other words, Imogene, who was the wife of Lebanon attorney and judge Rodney Ahles, was the ideal executive secretary.
Her closet, which opened off the reception room of Presi- dent Ray Phillips' office, is legendary. It houses minutes, notes, yearbooks, flower vases, photographs of trustees and faculty, brochures, catalogs, computer printer ribbons, and other Cumberland memorabilia whose nature was known only to Mrs. Ahles. Her closet and her memory were inva- luable when the anniversary history of Cumberland was being written. But whenever something was confidential, to Mrs. Ahles it remained a confidence.
She was a graduate of Watertown High school and re- ceived the Bachelor of Arts degree from Cumberland. She was often offered but each time declined an Award of the Phoenix on the modest grounds that an employee of the school should not be eligible. Her faculty assignments in- cluded professor of secretarial science in Cumberland Uni- versity and Cumberland College of Tennessee.
She also served as registrar of the college and secretary to the business manager.
She was a Rotary Ann and was First Lady of the Noon Rotary Club in 1989-1990.
On July 21, 1993, Imogene Bradley Ahles died, after a long illness.
VIRGINIA GOLLADAY LAWLOR WILKINSON
Student, teacher, trustee, benefactor, founding donor of the handbell choir, and an Honorary Doctor of Humanities, Virginia Golladay Lawlor Wilkinson has been one of the University's most loyal and most active alumnae.
She is a native of Lebanon and a graduate of Lebanon High School. She received the Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude from Cumberland in 1932. She also holds
Virginia Golladay Lawlor Wilkinson, member of the board of
trustees, is shown at the Lawlor Building, new home of the
Continuing Education program.
a Master of Arts degree from Vanderbilt, and was a mem- ber of the Cumberland English faculty for three years.
After graduation from Cumberland she went to Washington, D.C., and was employed there when she met and married Richard D. Lawlor, an engineering graduate of Tufts University. After World War II, he owned and oper- ated the Lawlor Insurance Agency in Lebanon.
Her career of public service is distinguished. She has been regent of Margaret Gaston Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, president of Robert Hatton Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, president of the Le- banon Woman's Club, co-founder and member of the board of the Sound and Light Theatre Company, president of His- tory Associates of Wilson County and co-author of the chapter on Education in the 1961 History of Wilson County, sponsored by the Tennessee Historical Commission.
Among other honors and offices, she has been literary director of the Woman's Club of Nashville and program director of the Browning Club of Nashville. A Methodist, she has been chairman of the Official Board of the First Methodist Church and president of the Woman's Society of Christian Service.
She is a member of the Cumberland Board of Trustees and donated the Lawlor Memorial handbells for the newly organized choir in memory of her late husband. She is mar- ried to Dr. R Dean Wilkinson and they now live in Hermitage.
DR. JEANETTE C. RUDY
Jeanette Cantrell Rudy served as a public health nurse in Davidson County, Tennessee, on the staff of Dr. John J. Lentz, after receiving her R.N. from the St. Thomas Hospi- tal School of Nursing in 1948. In 1949 she became the wife of Daniel Clees Rudy, co-founder of the Rudy's Farm Saus- age Company. Their life in Pennington's Bend inspired her to write a comprehensive history of that Davidson County community.
Through numerous organizations and philanthropic ac- tivties she has contributed generously to the Nashville, Donelson, and Lebanon communities over the years. After her husband's death she founded the Dan Rudy Cancer Center at St. Thomas Hospital.
She is a major supporter of the Nashville Police and Fire Departments and was the major donor of the National Po- lice Memorial in Washington, D.C.
Gun collecting is a hobby that is closely related to her
Dr. Jeanette Cantrell Rudy, member of the board of trustees,
and former President Bob Clement participate in the
dedication of the Rudy House.
love of dove hunting, but she also collects bottles, rocks, signed baseballs, paintings, Indian artifacts, and stamps, and has the best collection of Federal Duck Si, mips in the world. She has been Ladies' State Trapshooting champion for nine years.
She is ,i member of the bo.ird of trustees of ( iimherland
m
University, received the Doctor of Humanities degree from Cumberland in 1990, and through her efforts the University established its School of Nursing. She was then honored by the naming of the Jeanette Cantrell Rudy Division of Nurs- ing. Also bearing her name is the Jeanette C. Rudy Hall on the campus, restored through her efforts and her generosity.
Young women were on the front row in the new Jenkins language laboratory in 1969.
BETTYE HATFIELD STOCKTON
During the twenty-five years that Ernest L. Stockton Jr. served as President of Cumberland University there was a feminine hand strengthening him and supporting the social graces of college life.
It was President Stockton's unfailing custom when intro- ducing the spouse of a guest speaker to present "his lovely wife." Such an introduction was certainly also true of his gracious hostess, who came to be known as the First Lady of Cumberland, having that title longer than any other woman.
Bettye Hatfield Stockton came to Cumberland from Mt. Juliet in 1940, a sophomore after one year at David Lips- comb College, accompanied by her sister, Mary Jennings Hatfield, who was a freshman.
It was a very active year for her. She became a member of Sigma Delta Sigma, of the Cumberland YWCA, and the Cumberland Players, and was a reporter for The Collegian. That spring of 1941 when Professor Louis Adams' political science class "declared war" on the Axis powers she was featured in a news photograph as one of three co-eds "knit- ting for the troops."
And later that year she married Ernest Stockton, who
was then an officer in the United States Coast Guard. When peace returned he went to graduate school, then became a classroom teacher at Castle Heights Military Academy. Mrs. Stockton became a faculty wife. At the boys' school that meant becoming involved with cadet life and as Stock- ton advanced in rank and responsibility acquiring the re- sponsibilities of a faculty hostess. Moving into the Presi- dent's house at Cumberland was an extension of this life and she performed her role superbly.
There is one daughter, Sharon, who also attended Cumberland.
Lynda Miller and friends enjoy a musical time in the women's residence hall after supper (1968).
Mrs. Stockton is a member of Le Coterie, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Cumberland Woman's Club, and is a member of the College Street Church of
Christ.
A CELEBRATION OF WOMEN
CENNTENNIAL OF
CUMBERLAND WOMEN
Honorees (Living)
Mrs. Margaret McClure Averett Mrs. Connie Whitehurst Baker Mrs. Ellen Donnell Barlament Mrs. Carol Joyce Wheeler Bass Mrs. Kathryn Vaughan Beard Ms. Josephine Bentley Mrs. Van Blanchard Mrs. Margaret F. Talley Bone
m
In 1991, Bull in a China Shop was another in a long series of
dramatic offerings at Cumberland. Among the ■performers were
Mitsy Reams, a merit scholar, and Margaret Piercey of the
Alumni office (left, back row).
Mrs. Mary Gordon Bone
Mrs. Nancy Smith Boyd
Mrs. Martha Mann Bradshaw
Mrs. Betty J. Agee BritneLl
Mrs. Lillian Phillips Bryan
Mrs. Patsy O. Bryant
Mrs. Alice Hooker Buchtel
Ms. Dorinda Carlisle
Dr. Elizabeth L. Cato
Mrs. Blanche Paty Catron
Mrs. Gay McFarland Chamberlain
Mrs. Betty Massey Clay
Dr. Mary Clement
Mrs. Gwendolyn Ligon Davis
Mrs. Sandra Ann DiBella Donnell
Mrs. Sandra Moss Duncan
Mrs. Kathy McGovem Eckler
Mrs. Joarm Newby Edgington
Mrs Bonnie DeHoff Fakes
Mrs. Jimmie Wall Farris
Mrs. Tabitha Amngt/jn Ferguson
Ms. Burta Ferrell
Mrs Patricia Martin FitK
" Kose Fly
Mrs Karen G U-e Franklin
Mrs. Karen Oldham Franklin Mrs. Mary Anne Baird Gannon Mrs. Rosalyn Marie Stokes Garnett Mrs. Jo Dean Cantrell Garrison Dr. Tipper Gore
Delegates to the Tennessee Intercollegiate State Legislature in 1991 were Cindy Locke, /./. Stribling, and Maggie Mclean.
Mrs. Janie Cook Graham
Mrs. Brenda Whitehurst Gregory
Mrs. Frances W. Wesson Gregory
Mrs. Bertha Bonner Grissom
Dr. Frankie Hendrix Kinnard Hagan
Miss Lorie Elaine Hammock
Mrs. Linda Harrrll
Mrs Nelle Dale Ferrell Harris
Mrs Terry Jeanne Atkiason Harris
Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Forrester Hawkins
Ms. Nannie Hereford
Ms. Crace Hereford Hassel
m
Mrs. June Heydel
Ms. Reba Whitson Holt
Ms. Yvonne Lyons Huser
Mrs. Dot Jenkins
Mrs. Jewell Jennings
Mrs. Sarah Reed Jennings
Ms. Ranie Lee Jewell
Mrs. Anita Knox
Dr. Charlene McCoin Kozy
Dr. Sylvia Denney Lacy
Mrs. Pet Lancaster
Mrs. Katheryne B. McClain Leathers
Mrs. Lynn Hill Lester
Mrs. Majorie Loyd Huff
Ms. Dorothea Allen McBratney
Miss Maggie McLean
Ms. Alice Vaughan McComb
Ms. Keith McCurdy
Mrs. Leslie Reese McElhannon
Mrs. Gwendolyn McFarland
Ms. Nancy Meidinger
Mrs. Katherine Rowers Miller
Ms. Lynda J. Miller
Major Betty Moshea
Ms. Nicki Neal
Mrs. Beth Nelms
Mrs. Lisa Johnson Newman
Mrs. Lynn Nokes
Senator Anna Belle Clement O'Brien
Mrs. Evelyn Prichard Orr
Mrs. Selma Greenberg Cash Paty
Ms. Elizabeth Perkins
Mrs. Margaret Waddell Peters
Dr. Phyllis Purnell Phillips
Mrs. Margaret Piercey
Mrs. Pace Pope
Mrs. Rosalie Bengel Price
Mrs. Anne B. Roberts
Mrs. Frances Vaughan Robison
Dr. Jeanette Cantrell Rudy
Mrs. Frances Sellars
Mrs. Attie Gene Shriver
Ms. Penny Elizabeth Simmons
Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Witt Slagle
Mrs. Lillian White Sloan
Sister A.A. Stafford
Mrs. Bettye H. Stockton
Mrs. Catherine McDaniel Strayhorn
Miss Beulah Thomas
Ms. Laura H. Thompson
Mrs. Vicki Ann Roddy Trisdale
Happy about their honors are jean Marie Smartt, Cindy Locke, and Jana Wallace at the 1992 Awards Banquet.
Mrs. Eloise Vaughan Tyree
Mrs. Doris Vise
Mrs. Clara Pauline Bass Wallace
Mrs. Frances Yvonne Sanders Wallace
Mrs. Linda Watlington
Mrs. Diane Dunnebacke West
Dr. Virginia Golladay Lawlor Wilkinson
Mrs. Debra Bass Winfree
Mrs. Ruth Elizabeth Mathis Witt
Mrs. Pam Wright
Mrs. Mary Ann Donnell Wyatt
Honorees (Deceased)
Mrs. Imogene Ahles
Doris and Julie Vise, with trustee Harry Vise, celebrate the ground breaking for the Doris & Harry Vise Library building.
Tlie structure won a state architectural award.
Ms. Alma Baird
Mrs. Thelma Berry
Mrs. William P. Bouton Sr.
Mes. Mary Owen Campbell Kelley Bruce
Mrs. Nelson Bryan
Mrs. Margaret Campbell
Ms. Ellen Chambers
Ms. Carolyn Cleveland
Mrs. Lucille Phillips Davis
Mrs. Mathe Walker Donnell
Ms. Virginia Edgerton
Mrs. Katherine Bryan Flippen
Mrs. Alice Bone Cilreath
Ms. Sara Hardison
Ms. Julia Hereford
Mrs Mildred Prewett Bowen Ingram
Mrs. (Catherine PumeU James
Mrs Ina Smith Lambdin
Mrs Elizabeth Harris McDavid
Ms Helen Smith Meaas
Ms. Virginia PreweH Mi/.elle
Mr. Laban Lacy Rice
Mrs Nancy Noland Scott
Mrs Frances Shaltuck
Mrs. L.M. Short Mrs. Margaret Sanders Smith Mrs. Lois Bryan Spitzer Ms. Jennie Lou Gower Wells Mrs. Virginia Wooten
Dr. Phyllli Phillips, Cumberland's I inl lady, founder and
coordinator of the Working Adult degree program,
l'. tin- tn-. ['trillion for thr. i elebratinn of the Centennial of Women at Cumberland.
EJ
1890'sAt Weir's Castle, Cumberland River. Front row llr: Judge Nathan Creen, Jr., (unknown), Bessie Weir Doak, Mary Brewett Martha Martin Burke. Back row llr: (first name unknown) Fitzgerald, Mary Fonville, Alice Williamson Hooker.
W
1890's Parti/ at Hunter's Point. In front llr: judge Nathan Green, jr., Bill Slate, driver.
On top, front llr: (unknown), Sarah Dodson Ferrell, (unknown), Alice Williamson Hooker, Willie Buchanan.
On top second row llr: Martha Martin Burke, (unknown), Martha Williamson Bone, Johnnie Lester.
On top in back: (unknown)
■JJJIilili Mu. JWKft
-.-.* .
]H')I)\ / . Iianim < ullegr I or , nung I adiet (war, on North Cumberland Street al Village Shopping < enter).
m
1890's Lebanon College For Young Ladies, (names unknown)
«^'-
1890's Caruthers Hall, Cumberland University, Law School, (was located where Lebanon Bank now stands on West Main Street in Lebanon)
w
|
1921 |
SENIORS |
Cook, Janie C. |
|
LAW SCHOOL |
Chambers, Ellen |
Perry, Mecca A. |
|
Fields, Merrie T.B. |
Etter, Rilla Mabel |
JUNIORS |
|
McKeown, Pearl R. |
Jackson, Helen Page |
|
|
Packer, Miss AG. |
Smith, Alice Robertson |
Alexander, Josephine |
|
Wright, Mrs. Aubry B. |
Smith, Medora Riggs |
Bradshaw, Panthea Bone, Ready |
|
SENIORS |
JUNIORS |
Cleveland, Janet Finley, Sue |
|
Bone, Alice Williamson |
Askew, Sarah Ruth |
Grant, Lillian |
|
Bryan, Lois |
Cook, Janie Colburn |
Hereford, Grace |
|
Perry, Mecca Ann |
Old, Grace |
|
|
JUNIORS |
SOPHOMORES |
Purnell, Katherine |
|
Chambers, Ellen |
SOPHOMORES |
|
|
Etter, Rilla |
Alexander, Mary Josephine |
|
|
Jackson, Helen Page |
Bone, Martha Ready |
Bandy, Sammie Ross |
|
Smith, Medora |
Bone, Marvine Frances |
Bryan, Katherine |
|
Smith, Alice |
Cleveland, Janet Owsley |
Bryan, Mary Thomas |
|
Finley, Sue |
Cook, Anna Gray |
|
|
SOPHOMORES |
Grimmett, Louise |
Drane, Frances Elizabeth |
|
Hereford, Grace |
Grimmet, Louise |
|
|
Askew, Ruth |
Martin, Margaret Williamson |
Lester, Annie Lee |
|
Boswell, Lenora |
Perry, Caroline Seay |
Page, Annie Leta |
|
Bradshaw, Panthea |
Prichard, Vashti |
Prewett, Mildred |
|
Laine, Opal |
Purnell, Katherine |
Pursley, Anne B. |
|
Mace, Elvira |
Stone, Julia |
Stratton, Alice Fisher |
|
Perry, Mecca |
Thackston, Ariel M. |
|
|
Cook, Janie |
FRESHMEN |
Witherspoon, Mabel |
|
FRESHMEN |
Bandy, Sammy Ross Bradshaw, Sarah |
FRESHMEN |
|
Alexander, Josephine |
Bryan, Katherine |
Andrews, Pearl |
|
Ballard, Robbye |
Bryan, Mary Thomas |
Arlington, Elizabeth |
|
Bone, Martha Ready |
Cook, Anna Gray |
Arlington, Tabitha |
|
Bone, Marvine |
Denney, Kathleen |
Barry, Marie |
|
Bullington, Audrey |
Luck, Alice Frances |
Bass, Clara |
|
Burge, Bessie |
Maddux, Frances |
Bell, Reba |
|
Campbell, Era |
Page, Leta |
Bengal, Rosalie |
|
Cleveland, Janet |
Patrick, Doris Lillian |
Cawthon, Lila |
|
Drane, Frances |
Prewett, Mildred |
Coe, Margaret |
|
Finley, Sue |
Pursley, Anne Brevard |
Green, Eleanor |
|
Grimmett, Louise |
Ray, Mabel |
Grisham, Margaret |
|
Hale, Katherine |
Stratton, Alice Fisher |
Hendrickson, Ruby |
|
Hereford, Grace |
Thackston, Ariel Maverine |
Jones, Macye |
|
Humphreys, Grace |
Vaughan, Alice |
Mothershead, Sara Beth |
|
Humphreys, Madeline |
Vaughan, Eloise Kirkpatrick |
Sheehan, Evelyn |
|
Martin, Margaret |
Smith, Emma Lee |
|
|
Oakley, Elizabeth |
SPECIAL |
Tilley, Agnes |
|
Page, Leta |
Weaver, Lillian |
|
|
Perry, Caroline |
Hemingway, Gilla Ann |
|
|
Purnell, Katherine |
Seale, Margaret |
1924 |
|
Stone, Julie E. |
Shannon, Mary |
LAW SCHOOL |
|
1992 |
1 92.'J |
Arcenaux, Althea |
|
LAW SCHOOL |
LAW SCHOOL |
King, Floy Grace Long, Charlotte Annelln |
|
Chilton, Marjorie |
Hardison, Sara |
Phillips, Agnes Keatinge |
|
Dee, Bezie |
Armstrong, Opal |
Sullivan, Claudin Copeland |
|
Hardi son, Sara |
Babendeer, Eleanore S. |
|
|
M'Kenzie, Mrs. BR. |
Healey, Bertha Ash lock |
SENIORS |
|
Melton, Mrs. Lurline |
Pulliam, Eulalee |
|
|
Smith, Mrs. Griffin |
Alexander, Mary Josephine |
|
|
Thompson, Mrs. Laura H |
SENIORS |
Barnett, Bernice M . |
|
Wright, Mrs. Aubrey B. |
Bone, Marvine Fra: |
Hone, Martha Ki-nily Bradshaw, Paul hca |
Cleveland, Nancy Janet Finley, Sue Harrison, Anne D. Hereford, Grace Old, Gladys Page, Annie Leta Purnell, Katherine Pursley, Annie B.
JUNIORS
Andrews, Fannie Andrews, Pearl Bryan, Katherine Bryan, Mary T. Clayton, Margaret Cook, Anna Grey Drane, Frances Grisham, Margaret Perry, Carolyn Seay Smith, Alga B. Taylor, Mary Witherspoon, Mabel
SOPHOMORES
Bengal, Rosalie Cawthon, Lila Coe, Margaret Lee Cook, Julie May Green, Eleanor Harrison, Marion L. Jones, Macye Mothershead, S.B. Park, Hazle S. Reeves, Lorene Rogers, Mrs. H.T. Shearer, Jo Sullivan, Nannie J. Taylor, Myrtle Tilley, Agnes Wilson, Dolores
FRESHMEN
Alexander, Lucile Anderson, Helen Barnes, Kathleen Jean Barton, Mrs. T.C. Bone, Mildred Bruce, Mary S. Chapman, Margaret Chapman, Mildred Covington, Gertrude Crowe, Mattie Davis, Frances I. Dil worth, Frances Donnell, Sue Eddins, Anna Griffith, N. Dea Grissim, Bertha Hankins, Lucile Harris, Anita Harris, Elizabeth Howse, Virginia Jennings, Nana V. Jones, Betty M. Jones, Martha Mclnturff, Katherine McSpadden, Mary L. Miller, Mary Helen
Murphy, Blanche Overton, Marguerite Parks, Rebecca Price, May E. Shearer, Edna Rose Shearon, Susie M. Stephens, Evelyn Talley, Margaret F. Vaughan, Mary Wilhoit, Ellen Nora
1925
LAW SCHOOL
Keen, Mrs. G.R. Thompson, Ada M. Ayers, Berenice Berry, Zora N. Bradley, Mrs. C.S. Carnell, Odyne Herndon, Lillian E. Robinson, Olivie F. Williams, Mrs. Parham H.
SENIORS
Andrews, Effie Pearl Andrews, Frances Bryant, Katherine Cawthon, Lila Coe, Margaret Lee Davis, Estey Hendrickson, Ruby Prichard, Vashti Reeves, Lorene Smith, Alga B. Tilley, Agnes Witherspoon, Mabel
JUNIORS
Bengal, Rosalie Collins, Clara Collins, Marian Harris, Nell Jones, Mayce Mothershead, Sara Newman, Mary Reeves, Claudia F. Robinson, Jennye Wilkinson, Aurine
SOPHOMORES
Alexander, Lucile Chapman, Mild7-ed Chapman, Margaret Donnell, Sue Mason Davis, Frances Jennings, Nana V. Miller, Margaret Miller, Mary Helen Parks, Rebecca Robison, Edith Shearon, Susie Thackston, Dorris Tilley, Frances Willhoit, Ellen Nora Ward, Evelyn
m
FRESHMEN
Bass, Nancy Bass, Ernestine Bruce, Janey Brumley, Estelle Bryant, Lucile Cabell, Mary Beth Cardwell, Lula Conaster, Bernadine Craftoin, Virginia Clenny, Frances Davis, Juanita Eichenberger, Grace Ewell, Hazel Fryer, Marguerite Gaines, Gertrude Graves, Nancy Gray, Camilla Hamilton, Dorothy Hancock, Rebecca Hathorn, Helen Henson, Willard Hibbett, Alma Hill, Mary Walker Johnson, Myrtle Littlefield, Kittye Luke, Marie McClain, Neva McSpadden, Ida Mullens, Vera Page, Dot Rhea, Louise Rusch, Helen Smartt, Cornelia Sanford, Stella Smith, Allene Wesson, Ruth Wesson, Frances West, Anna
1926
LAW SCHOOL
Clary, Edna Mitchell, Mrs. Ella Armstrong, Helen Aspray, Ivy Crawley, Thelma Dean, Mrs. Mary O. Franklin, Lila Hobbs, Mary Maddox, Frances J. Parks, Rebecca Schaefer, Violet L.
SENIORS
Bengal, Rosalie Crowe, Mattie Goodbar, Charlie Hamilton, Louise Harris, Nell Miller, Mary Helen Mothershead, Sara Beth Reeves, Claudia Frances Robinson, Jennye C. Thackston, Ariel Vaughan, Mary Wilkins, Aurine
JUNIORS
Alexander, Lucile Bruce, Mary Chapman, Mildred Davis, Frances Irene Donnell, Sue Mason Harned, Mary Ethel Harris, Elizabeth Lee Rice, Hula Shearon, Sue Miller Talley, Margaret Wilhoit. Ella Nora
SOPHOMORES
Bruce, Janey Bass, Nancy Crutcher, Catherine Davis, Juanita Eichenburger, Grace Ewell, Hazel Farris, Ruth Gaines, Gertrude Henson, Willard Hathorn, Helen Hicks, Mary Gordon Hancock, Rebecca Hill, Mary Walker Jackson, Eddie May Luke, Marie Martin, Mildred Mullins, Vera Overton, Margurite Patton, Laura Rhea Rhea, Mary Louise Ruch, Helen Smith, Anna Green Wesson, Willie Ruth Wesson, Mary Frances
FRESHMEN
Alexander, Elsie Mae Bryan, Gladys Ellen Campbell, Alma Cawthorne, Mary Vertrees Clark, Lucile DeFoor, Sarah Denton, Annie Sue Edwards, Aileen Evans, Hilda Freeman, Margaret French, Mary Frances Fortsch, Ethel Fryer, Sue
Holland, Mary Norton Jones, Virginia Keith, Virginia Mai Ligon, Emma Lemons, Bernice Mae McDaniel, Catherine McDaniel, Mildred
-., Elizabeth McCartney, Estelle Newby, Margaret Elizabeth Patterson, Martha Pierce, Mary 01 ga
Riley, Mrs. J.H. Rucker, Susannah Dickson Robinson, Jennie Lansden Smith, Marian Eleanor Smith, Valeria Shorter, Lucile Thomas, Nina Vaughan, Frances Whitsitt, Frances
1927
LAW SCHOOL
Longhuame, Emma Lawson, E.L. Petti nger, Helen M. Sommerville, S.E.
SENIORS
Alexander, Mrs. B.F. Alexander, Lucile Chapman, Mildred Davis, Juanita Donnell, Sue Mason Harned, Mary Ethel Knee, Mrs. Irvin (Willard) Rice, Hula Shearon, Sue Miller Talley, Margaret F. Wilhoit, Ellen Nora Witherspoon, Mabel Kirby Young, Mrs. Will D.
JUNIORS
Gaines, Gertrude Hicks, Mary Gordon Patton, Rhea Rhea, Louise Smith, Anna Green
SOPHOMORES
Fortsch, Ethel
French, Frances Fryer, Anna Sue Hereford, Nannie Keith, Virginia McCollum, Aubrey McDaniel, Katherine Patterson, Esther Smith, Marian E. Smartt, Cornelia A.
FRESHMEN
Not Listed
1 928
LAW SCHOOL
K|.-:.h'M Ruth
! h on, Kmina li
Harris, Muriel Pondei Gloi ia C. White, Lillian Ray
SENIORS
Foster, Mrs. Carrie Watkins Gaines, Gertrude Jackson, Eddie Zep Shannon, Mrs. Virginia H. Smartt, Cornelia Smith, Anna Green Vaughan, Frances Wesson, Frances
JUNIORS
Browning, Mary Bryan, Ellen Fortsch, Ethel Holland, Mary Norton McDaniel, Catherine Patterson, Estha Steen, Dolly
SOPHOMORES
Barber, Florence Gernt, Erna Alma Hancock, Katherine Hereford, Nannie Martin, Rosamund W. Miller, Mrs. Victor M. Palmer, Helen E. Plunk, Mildred Posey, Martha Strong, Jane Ellis Thackston, Ruby Nell White, Lillian Ray Willhoit, Mary Louise
FRESHMEN
Baxter, Alberta Lee Brittle, Mary Elizabeth Bryant, Mildred Loena Davis, Catherine Elizabeth Follis, Virginia Freeman, Eugenia Freeman, Ruth Alice Gernt, Annetta Gladys Gernt, Esther Florence Hamilton, Belle Mina Harris, Josephine Rae Johnson, Lois Merle Jones, Gladys Reginald Jones, Martha Desha Laine, Jamie Lemons, Mary D. McArthur, Mary Evelyn McCowan, Jodie McKay, Louise Major, Virginia Moore, Eugenia Payne, Clara Lavelle Plain, Marguerite Galloway Rogers, Florence Russell, Elizabeth Tanner, Lotta Kugenia Tysen, Mary Levisa Walker, Nellie
Whitlock, Florence Elizabeth Williams, Kallie May Willis, Ruth Gertrude Wilson, Margaret
m
1929
LAW SCHOOL
White, Lillian Beasley, Willie Louise Boyer, Mildred Clouse, Eunetta Leslie, Mrs. R.W. Martin, Carrie Morse, Elizabeth Scheffein, Grace Stees, Dolly
SENIORS
Browning, Mary Fortsch, Ethel Miller, Mrs. Victor M. Patterson, Estha Shelley, Margaret Walker Stees, Dolly (also LL.B.)
JUNIORS
Alexander, Elsie Mae Barber, Floreine Hancock, Katherine Hereford, Nannie Martin, Rosamund Plain, Nell Morgan Plunk, Mildred Thackston, Ruby Nell
SOPHOMORES
Brown, Eddie Bryant, Mildred Freeman, Eugenia Freeman, Ruth Gernt, Annetta Gernt, Esther Hamilton, Belle Mina Harris, Josephine R. Jones, Martha Desha Lemons, Mary D. Major, Virginia McArthur, Mary Evelyn Newbell, Lena Payne, LeVelle Plain, Marguerite Tanner, Lotta E. Troxler, Rebekah
FRESHMEN
Arlington, Allie Coe Byars, Amy Jo Carson, Inez Covington, Pauline Fariss, Pauline Freeman, Elizabeth Golladay, Virginia Hill, June Ligon, Helen Ligon, Stewart Martin, Frances Jean Walker, Mattie
1930
LAW SCHOOL
Barber, Floreine Flowers, Georgia Frazier, Sarah Ruth Gerhardt, Rosa Hawkins, Erma Y. Jeter, Ruth Jones, Macye Lowry, Maybelle Mandle, Ida
SENIORS
Alexander, Elsie Mae Barber, Floreine (also LL.B.) Freeman, Ruth A. Hancock, Katherine Hereford, Nannie McLean Jarrad, Margaret Louise Jeter, Ruth Louise (also LL.B.) Thackston, Ruby Nell
JUNIORS
Bryant, Mildred
Duncan, Elizabeth Josephine
Gernt, Annetta
Gernt, Esther
Harris, Josephine Rea
Johnson, Lois Merle
Jones, Martha Desha
Major, Virginia
Payne, LaVelle
Rogers, Florence
Scoggin, Katherine
Troxler, Rebekah
SOPHOMORES
Byars, Amy Jo Freeman, Elizabeth Golladay, Virginia Ligon, Helen Ligon, Stewart Summers, Linnie Sue Vaughan, Katherine Walker, Mattie
FRESHMEN
Adams, Amelia Belding, Virginia Bond, Nina Bond, Lena Cox, Mildred Dillard, Louise Gill, Mary Hamblen, Mary Harrison, Peggy Hereford, Julia Hill, June Hobson, Ruth Houser, Helen Ivy, Elise M. Humphreys, Julia Jennings, Lois Johnson, lone Jones,Winifred
Ligon, Emma Mae MacDaniel, Rebecca Mosley, Mildred Perkins, Fay Porter, Martha Ramsey, Virginia Rogers, Marian Sperry, Bennie Lee Thackston, Marie Williams, Allie D. Winfree, Elsie Witherspoon, Thelma Whitehurst, Mrs. Onan Young, Esther
1931
LAW SCHOOL
Frazier, Sarah Ruth Mousle Dorris B. Adams, Louise Allen, Julia Mary Donaldson, Dorothy Gann, Catherine Gilmore, Laura F. Peters, Mrs. Margaret W. Rauch, Sarah West, Mary
SENIORS
Bryant, Mildred Leona Gernt, Annetta Gernt, Esther Florence Harris, Josephine Rea Jones, Martha Desha Major, Virginia Payne, Clara Lavelle Rogers, Florence Scoggin, Katheryn Anne
JUNIORS
Byars, Amy Jo Freeman, Elizabeth Golladay, Virginia Laine, Jamie A. Ligon, Helen Ligon, Stewart Walker, Mattie Medora Wilson, Elizabeth
SOPHOMORES
Bratton, Irene Clark, Elizabeth Ray Hamblen, Mary Margaret Hereford, Julia Jane Ivy, Elsie Margaret Jones, Winifred English Sperry, Bennie Lee Thackston, Marie Vantrease, Tommie Allene Vivrette, Mary Porter Williams, Allie O. Winfree, Elsie Elma Young, Ester Elisabeth
FRESHMEN
Bandy, Katherine Beauchamp,Beaulah Bullington, Margaret Connell, Lucy Davis, Helen Davis, Mabel Flowers, Sarah Grigsby, Bess Hancock, Mildred Hewgley, Dorothy Hibbett, Emma Matherly, Claire Rink, Julia Rink, Mary Simms, Alma Swain, Frances Tramel, Reba Tilley, Mrs .Vance
1932
LAW SCHOOL
Freeman, Eugenia Jones, Thelma Saverio, Mrs. E. George
SENIORS
Byars, Amy Jo Edgerton, Miriam Freeman, Elizabeth Gold, Mrs. Mazie L. Golladay, Virginia Kidd, Ethel Louise Ligon, Helen Ligon, Stewart Noland, Edith Adelaide Sperry, Bennie Lee Vaughan, Ann Katherine Vivrette, Mary Porter Walker, Mattie Medora
JUNIORS
Clark, Elizabeth Ray Gaston, Helen Hamblen, Mary Margaret Hereford, Julia Jones, Winifred Neblett, Ruby Rob Sherrell, Frances Thackston, Marie Williams, Allie D. Winfree, Elise Young, Esther
SOPHOMORES
Davis, Helen Elizabeth Davis, Mabel Flowers, Sarah Eleanor Grigsby, Bess Kelton Hancock, Mildred Hibbett, Emma Nannette Yahola, Margaret Bullington
FRESHMEN
Bockman, Miriam Burnette, Eleanor Austelle Childs, Betty Gentry, Margaret Anne Jordon, Christine Key, Edna Earle Moss, Alberta McMahan, Stella Jane Noland, Hannah Pryor, Margaret Smith, Elizabeth Thomson, Marie Wilson, Elizabeth Young, Ina
1933
LAW SCHOOL
Fisher, Mrs. Marion Kirk Kellam, Ina Mae Vines, Geraldine Barry, Caralisa Harris, Josephine Rea Jackson, Grace Waverlyn Schneider, Mary R. Stone, Glaldys Tallman, Pauline Electa
SENIORS
Bruce, Frances Clark, Elizabeth Gaston, Helen Hamblen, Mary Margaret Hereford, Julia Thackston, Marie Sherrell, Frances Williams, Allie Winfree, Elise
JUNIORS
Davis, Helen Davis, Mabel Flowers, Sarah Hibbett, Emma Maples, Mildred Tucker, Mary Ethel
SOPHOMORES
Burnett, Eleanor Childs, Betty McClain, Catherine McDaniel, Agnes Tramel, Corrine
FRESHMEN
Doherty, Helen Ellis, Freda Eskew, Christine Eskew, Frances Fult«, Dorothy Gwin, Barbara Hall, Ophelia
Harris, Sarah Hereford, Ada Howard, Elizabeth Johnson, Dorothy List, Martha Loudon, Dorothy McAlister, Florence Owen, Laura Paty, Blanche Pritchard, Evelyn Spears, Aline Spears, Carrie Stubblefield, Jessie Thackston, Mary Neil Wilson, Violet Young, Helen Ware
1934
LAW SCHOOL
Berridge, Helen M. Meriwether, Ruth Tippens, Julia Bestic, Mildred B. Burke, Beulah Ruth Chambers, Ellen Friddle, Mrs. Annie B. Graham, Nelda Erwin Mashburn, Winnifred G. Maloney, June Elizabeth Noble, Alletha B. Patterson, Amelia Short, Mrs. Ruth M. Slaughter, Evelyn M. Suarez, Mary Wiggin, Mrs. Rose L. Williams, Anne Elizabeth
SENIORS
Davis, Helen Elizabeth Davis, Hazle Flowers, Sarah Eleanor Hancock, Mildred Hibbett, Emma Nannette Summers, Linnie Sue Tucker, Mary Ethel
JUNIORS
Burnett, Eleanor Bone, Minerva Childs, Betty McClain, Katherine McDaniel, Agnes Tramel, Reba Corinne Walker, Nell
SOPHOMORES
Doherty, Helen
Dynl, Alice
Eakew, Prances Northern
I'M I Is, Dorothy
Hall, Ophelia
Hurrm, Sarah 1 lill
m
Hereford, Ada Thomas Howard, Elizabeth Howser, Hilda Hughes, Charlene Kleyensteuber, Mary Kathryn List, Martha McAdoo, Madelyn Owen, Laura Paty, Blanche Prichard, Evelyn Roberts, Mary Ellen Stubblefield, Jessie Thackston, Mary Neil Wilson, Violet
FRESHMEN
Bailiff, Lucille Cash, Mariam Cash, Margarete Craig, Nelle Cowles, Elizabeth Davis, Ruth Eskew, Geraldine Forrester, Sarah Elizabeth Graves, Marjorie Hunt, Alice Johnson, Katherine Jones, Elizabeth Kyle, Mary Belle Larkins, Elizabeth McCaleb, Eula McClain, Margaret McCulley, Nannie Lou Rose, Grace Rambo, Mary Smith, Sarah Tuthill, Vesta Vorhies, Dorothy Lu Walters, Mary Owens Warren, Lucille Williams, Ann Cummins
1935
LAW SCHOOL
Gholson, Virginia Mashburn, Mrs. Winnifred Owens, Gara Louise Rea, Mrs. Mabel C. Slaughter, Evelyn
FRESHMEN
Beard, Lineal Bingham, Carrie Bryan, Elizabeth Bryan, Helen Burton, Lillian Cagle, Alyne Childs, Dorothy Close, Catherine Coleman, Pauline Davis, Mary E. Denney, Jane Donnell, Prankie Eatherly, Mary P. Eskew, Helen Ferrell, Mildred Fly, Hazel Ford, Mrs. James
Franklin, Jessie Graves, Irene Hayes, Elizabeth Jackson, Mary Ransom Jennings, Inez Johnston, Annie Lee Lemons, Halie Lynch, Opal McAdoo, Janet McClain, Betty Jo Moore, Hilda Morgan, Martha Newby, Mildred Odom, Aileen Palmer, Sue Paty, Ludy Ray, Ruth Seagraves, Sue Shorter, Rose Simms, Edna Taylor, Virginia Tripp, Louise Tripp, Margaret Vandergriff, Nola Williams, Charlotte William, Mary Florence Williams, Mary Ruth
SOPHOMORES
Bradley, Arah Cowles, Elizabeth Craig, Nelle Davis, Ruth Eskew, Geraldine Graves, Marjorie Hopkins, Louise Jones, Elizabeth Larkins, Betty McCully, Nannie Lou Smith, Margaret Tuthill, Vesta Warren, Lucille Walters, Mary Owen Woolard, Josephine
JUNIORS
Hereford, Ada Howard, Elizabeth (Snooks) Houser, Hilda Kleyensteuber, Mary K. List, Martha McAdoo, Annette McGinnis, Katheryne Organ, Mary Paty, Blanche Prichard, Evelyn Roberts, Mary Ellen Robison, Catherine Sherrell, Virginia Spears, Aline Spears, Carrie Stubblefied, Jessie Thackston, Mary Neil Troxler, Ruth
SENIORS
Bone, Minerva Burnett, Eleanor Dohertv, Helen
Kelley, Freda Mae McClain, Katheryne Patton, Frances Walker, Nelle
1936
LAW SCHOOL
Bowles, Gladys Everhart, Lusyl P. Guerra, Delia Hancock, Mrs. Frances Scott, Lillian Campbell Smith, Madye Troell, Joye Wilson, Eleanor
SENIORS
Bradley, Arah George Duncan, Elizabeth Josephine Hereford, Ada Howard, Elizabeth (Snooks) Howser, Hilda
Kleyensteuber, Mary Kathryn List, Martha McGinnis, Kathryne Paty, Blanche Prichard, Ida Evelyn Roberts, Mary Ellen Robison, Catherine Sherrell, Virginia Smith, Margaret Lucile Spears, Aline Spears, Carrie Stubblefield, Jessie Thackston, Mary Neil Troxler, Ruth
JUNIORS
Cowles, Elizabeth Craig, Nelle Elizabeth Davis, Ruth Eatherly, Elizabeth Eskew, Geraldine Kremer, Betty Larkins, Betty McCully, Nancy Lou Palmer, Sara Warren, Lucile
SOPHOMORES
Beard, Lineal Bryan, Elizabeth Bryan, Helen Bates Burton, Lillian Coleman, Pauline Davis, Mary Ellen Denney, Jane Donnell, Frankie Eskew, Helen Fly, Hazel Henry Franklin, Jessie Jackson, Mary Ransom Lemons, Halie Lynch, Opal Odum, Aileen Paty, Ludy
fET
Ray, Ruth Seagraves, Sue Taylor, Virginia Tripp, Louise Tripp, Margaret
FRESHMEN
Baird, Emily
Baker, Aline
Bass, Martha
Cleveland, Sally
Craig, Mary E.
Davis, Mary
Doak, Belle Langford
Forrester, Laurine Waters
Jennings, Louise
Meador, Dorothy
Nokes, Pauline
Paty, Mary Neil
Perkins, Rubye Lee
Rousseau, Jennie May
Seay, Ann
Seay, Elinore
Stone, Edna
Thompson, Volene
Vanhooser, Sophia Josephine
Williams, Elisabeth
1937
LAW SCHOOL
Jenkins, Delia
Loughlin, Mabel
Mitchell, Doris
Phillips, Jaye Juanita Manora
Thompson, Alvaretta
SENIORS
Cowles, Elizabeth Craig, Nelle Elizabeth Davis, Ruth Golden Eatherly, Elizabeth Sue Eskew, Geraldine Larkins, Bettie Carlew McCully, Nancy Lou Palmer, Sara A Troxler, Ruth Warren, Lucille
JUNIORS
Bailey, Judith Bryan, Helen Bates Burton, Lillian Coleman, Pauline Davis, Mary Ellen Denney, Jane Donnell, Frankie Franklin, Jessie Graham, Martha Green, Mrs. Charles Lemons, Halie Nicholson, Frances Odom, Aileen Paty, Ludy Ray, Ruth Taylor, Virginia
SOPHOMORES
Baird, Emily Morrow Baker, Alene Comer, Eula Belle Craig, Mary Estelle Doak, Belle Langford Jennings, Louise Perkins, Rubye Lee Shelby, Alberta Stone, Edna Thompson, Volene
FRESHMEN
Amonette, Edith Badgett, Mildred Baker, Bermerdine Bass, Bessie L. Bass, Dorothy Bassett, Marjorie Burton, Rilla Burton, Lora Smith Callis, Irene Carter, Myrtle Gann, Roberta Gannaway, Margaret Gossett, Marie Gregory, Flora Neal Gwynn, Mary Rankin Halbert, Mary Sue Hancock, Sarah Martha Harvell, Minnie Lou Hodges, Virginia Hollaway, Mary Franc Jennings, Fannie B. Johnston, Mildred Merwin, Sue Morse, Margaret M. Orr, Dorothy Adele Pope, Evelyn Ricketts, Frances Richardson, Frances Reed, Edna Elizabeth Rummage, Margaret Simmons, Dean Smith, Margaret Warren, Billie Williams, Emma Lou Wright, Mary Alice
1938
LAW SCHOOL
Irwin, Alice Mackey, Blanche Matthews, Margaret B. Pittman, Mrs. Ruthe Rossen, Tommie Gene
SECOND YEAR
Jenkins, Delia
SENIORS
Bryan, Helen Bates Burton, Lillian Close, Catherine Coleman, Pauline Crippt, Mucon D.-iv.t. Mary Kllt-n
Denney, Mina Jane Donnell, Elizabeth Bryan Donnell, Frankie Franklin, Jessie Graham, Martha Knox, Lucy
Nicholson, Mary Frances Odom, Aileen Paty, Ludy Pice, Halie Lemons Ray, Ruth Woolard, Josephine
JUNIORS
Baker, Alene
Comer, Eula Belle
Craig, Mary
Purnell, Mignon Theresa
Thompson, Volene
SOPHOMORES
Amonette, Edith Badgett, Mildred Bassett, Marjorie Bugbee, Elizabeth Burton, Lora Smith Burton, Rilla Callis, Irene Gann, Roberta Gannaway, Margaret Gossett, Frances Marie Gwynn, Mary Rankin Hancock, Sarah Harper, Frances Harvill, Minnie Lou Holloway, Mary Franc Jennings, Fannie B. Merwin, Sue Amanda Morse, Margaret Orr, Dorothy Adell Simmons, Dean Reed, Edna Warren, Billie Williams, Emma Lou Wright, Mary Alice
FRESHMEN
Anderson, Katherine
Atkinson, Lena
Baird, Mary Knight
Baird, Mildred Neal
Bridgwater, Mary Katherine
Burnett, Myra
Cleveland, Sylvia
Cooksey, Martha Wilson
Cox, Kathryn
Dean, Jane Yokley
Duff, Martha
Grandstaff, Sara Katherine
Grannis, Mary Ann
Hall.Thelma
Hinch, Helen
Killen, Nelle
Meador, Ernestine William
Molyneux, Katheryn Louise
Mil . . I: . 1 1 »< 1 1 < ■
Ej
|
Murphey, Josephine |
Corley, Mary Louise |
Beard, Betsy |
|
Phillips, Lillian |
Cragwall, Sarah |
Burton, Nelle Caroline |
|
Plant, Mrs. W.E. |
Dance, Hazel |
Cragwall, Sara Lucille |
|
Ray, Thelma |
Davis, Mary Casey |
Dance, Hazel |
|
Russell, Elizabeth |
Derryberry, Dorinda |
Davis, Mary Casey |
|
Schreur, Grace |
Eatherly, Rachel |
Derryberry, Dorinda |
|
Taylor, Flora Ellen |
Erwin, Marianna |
Eatherly, Rachel |
|
Turner, Virginia |
Fisher, Rebecca |
Erwin, Mariana |
|
Walker, Carrie Robertson |
Fly, Margaret |
Everett, Gela |
|
Walling, Lonnie |
Graves, Opal |
Fitts, Virginia |
|
Walling, Nettie |
Greer, Lurene |
Greer, Lurine |
|
Weakley, Rebecca |
Hamm, Louise |
Hamm, Louise |
|
Whitefield, Sara Helen |
Hart, Ann |
Hunter, Eloise |
|
Young, Hazelene |
Hunter, Eloise |
Jackson, Marian |
|
Jennings, Evelyn |
Jennings, Evelyn |
|
|
1939 |
Ligon, Lanova |
Nicholson, Georgia |
|
LAW SCHOOL |
Manning, Katherine |
Pritchard, Bettye Kate |
|
Nicholson, Georgia |
Sweeney, Eleanor |
|
|
Berry, June |
Neal, Pauline |
Welty, Evelyn |
|
Patton, Shannon |
Williams, Margaret |
|
|
SENIORS |
Prichard, Bettye Kate |
Winfree, Janey |
|
Smartt, Mary Lester |
Zarecor, Billie |
|
|
Craig, Mary |
Smith, Louye |
|
|
Reed, Edna |
Sweeney, Eleanor |
FRESHMEN |
|
Thompson, Volene |
Weakley, Mary Edith |
|
|
Williams, Emma Lou |
Welty, Evelyn |
Arnold, Virginia |
|
Williams, Margaret |
Barr, Jeanne |
|
|
JUNIORS |
Boyd, Frances Elizabeth |
|
|
1940 |
Bryan, Mary Nelle |
|
|
Bassett, Marjorie |
LAW SCHOOL |
Burton, Hewlett |
|
Burton, Lora Smith |
Cooper, Betty |
|
|
Callis, Irene |
SENIORS |
Evins, Frances |
|
Gann, Roberta |
Forrester, Frances |
|
|
Harper, Frances |
Weakley, Rebecca |
Foster, Virginia |
|
Harvell, Minnie Lou |
Hassell, Doris |
|
|
Hopkins, Louise |
FIRST YEAR LAW |
Hewgley, Frances |
|
Orr, Dorothy |
Jackson, Anna Claire |
|
|
Warren, Billie |
Broadbent, Dorothea |
Johnson, Ruth |
|
Hall, Peggy Dean |
Kelley, Edna Lee |
|
|
SOPHOMORES |
Phillips, Katherine |
Kennedy, Rebecca |
|
Van Aken, Phyllis |
Killen, Katherine |
|
|
Anderson, Katherine |
McDowell, Katherine M. |
|
|
Barber, Margery |
SENIORS |
McEwen, Margaret Eloise |
|
Burnett, Myra |
Manner, Helen Ruth |
|
|
Cleveland, Sylvia |
Bassett, Marjorie |
Prichard, Charlene |
|
Dean, Jane |
Callis, Irene |
Reeks, Billie |
|
Duff, Martha |
Gwynn, Mary Rankin |
Reeks, Cissy |
|
Grandstaff, Sarah |
Harper, Fraances Elizabeth |
Roland, Ruth |
|
Hall, Peggy |
Morse, Margaret |
Ross, Imogene |
|
Hinch, Helen |
Orr, Dorothy Adele |
Rousseau. Margery |
|
Killen, Nelle |
Warren, Billie |
Sanders, Margaret |
|
Molyneux, Katherine |
Sellars, Annette |
|
|
Moss, Isabella |
JUNIORS |
Simmons, Helen Lucy |
|
Murphey, Josephine |
Stallworth, Rebecca |
|
|
Turner, Virginia |
Anderson, Katherine |
Thompson, Virginia |
|
Walker, Robbie |
Baird, Mildred Neal |
Warren, Virginia Nelle |
|
Walling, Lonnie |
Burnett, Myra |
White, Dorothy Mayes |
|
Whitefield, Sarah Helen |
Coleman, Frances |
Williams, Ruth |
|
Winters, Nettie Walling |
Grandstaff, Sara Katherine Kelley, Annie Kate |
Winfree, Blakie |
|
FRESHMEN |
Moss, Isabelle |
1941 |
|
Murphey, Josephine |
LAW SCHOOL |
|
|
Amonette, Ruth |
Whitefield, Sara Helen |
|
|
Arrington, Vivian |
Broadbent, Dorothea W. |
|
|
Arnette, Sarah Elizabeth |
SOPHOMORES |
Fisher, Kay Phillips |
|
Beard, Betsy |
Hall, Peggy Deane |
|
|
Berry, Katherine |
Amonette, Emma Ruth |
Long, Dorthea Allen |
|
Burton, Nelle Caroline |
Arlington, Vivian |
Van Aken, Phyllis Farr |
EfT
|
SENIORS |
McCampbell, Alyne Clay Page, Mildred Gwinn |
Yarbrough, Cora Magaret |
|
Anderson, Katherine Sullivan |
Philpot, Barbara Wylene |
|
|
Baird, Mildred Neal |
Rice, Clydene |
1948 |
|
Burnett, Myra |
Seat, Frances |
LAW SCHOOL |
|
Carter, Lena Newbell |
Smith, Francele |
Swingley, Carmine |
|
Coleman, Frances Ann |
Sperry, Jewell Madelyn |
|
|
Fly, Hazel H. |
Thornton, Lois |
SENIORS |
|
Hays, Julia Helen |
Van Aken, Helen Louise |
|
|
Moss, Nancy Isabelle |
Clayborne, Lucie May |
|
|
Murphey, Josephine |
1942 |
Bradshaw, Jamie Dean |
|
Greene, Winifred Jones |
LAW SCHOOL |
Goodloe, Lola Gene |
|
Kelly, Annie Kate |
Guillory, Verna Dean |
|
|
Cantrell, Jo Dean |
Hewgley, Frances |
|
|
JUNIORS |
McClain, Carrie George |
|
|
SENIORS |
Neely, Virginia Lois |
|
|
Badgett, Emily Grace |
Ridenour, Jessie Wilson |
|
|
Baskin, Rebecca |
Badgett, Emily Grace |
Rowland, Vaughtie B. |
|
Corley, Mary Louise |
Baskin, Nancy Rebecca |
Williams, Mildred |
|
Cragwall, Sara Lucille |
Cragwell, Sara Lucile |
|
|
Graves, Opal Ailine |
Graves, Opal Ailene |
JUNIORS |
|
Jackson, Marian Virginia |
Hassell, Doris Marie |
|
|
Jennings, Evelyn |
Lester, Elizabeth Cox |
Branham, Betty Jo |
|
Lester, Elizabeth Cox |
Smoot, Sarah Owen |
Coke, Nell |
|
Nicholson, Georgia |
Dean, Helen Ruth |
|
|
Smoot, Sara |
JUNIORS |
Graves, Mildred |
|
Welty, Evelun Louise |
Greenlaw, Marilyn |
|
|
Winfree, Janet |
Arnold, Virginia Crice |
Harris, Bonnie |
|
Hatcher, Jean |
Hughey, Clara C. |
|
|
SOPHOMORES |
Hooper, Mrs. Nora Mae |
Johnson, June |
|
Loomis, Claire Jackson |
Moss, Peggy |
|
|
Arnold, Virginia |
Roberts, Mrs. Mary Lee |
Nicholson, Charlotte |
|
Barr, Jeanne Glenn |
Rousseau, Margery Buell |
Perrigan, Anita June |
|
Brown, Elizabeth Mai |
Russell, Fredda Ruth |
Pentecost, Martha |
|
Bryan, Mary Nelle |
Sanders, Margaret Hardy |
Pierce, Judith |
|
Burton, Hewlette |
Sellars, Annette |
Prince, Martha |
|
Forrester, Marjorie Frances |
White, Dorothy Maye |
Sedberry, Jean |
|
Foster, Virginia Gertrude |
Stephenson, Dorothy |
|
|
Gardner, Sara Ann |
SOPHOMORES |
Terry, Lena |
|
Gower, Jennie Lou |
Thompson, Carolyn |
|
|
Hassell, Doris Marie |
Beard, Evelyn |
Von Cannon, Christine |
|
Hatfield, Bettye |
Davenport, Doris |
|
|
Hewgley, Frances |
Freeman, Mrs. Sexton |
SOPHOMORES |
|
Jackson, Anna Claire |
Giddens, Mary Susan |
|
|
Johnson, Ruth |
Hackett, Frances Wendolyn |
Day, Kim |
|
Killen, Mary Katherine |
Hughes, Evelyn Christine |
Eddins, Nelda |
|
Lemons, Nettie Elizabeth |
McCampbell, Alyne Clay |
Franklin, Dolores |
|
Reeks, Margaret Frazier |
Page, Mildred Guinn |
Grime, Lois |
|
Ross, Imogene |
Price, Lennis Rose |
Henry, Betty |
|
Rousseau, Margery Buell |
Rose, Elizabeth Ann |
Krisle, Nancy |
|
Sanders, Margaret Hardy |
Thornton, Lois |
Lynch, Patricia |
|
Sellers, Annette |
McCall, Julia |
|
|
Thompson, Virginia Eloise |
FRESHMEN |
Marler, Ruth |
|
Warren, Virginia Nelle |
Metcalf, Shirley |
|
|
Williams, Ruth |
Baker, Mary Ethel |
Owen, Joan |
|
Bass, Dorothy |
Satterfield, Geneva |
|
|
Cartwright, Martha Frances |
Stone, Dorothy May |
|
|
FRESHMEN |
Freeman, Mrs. Mary Scott Hassell Heyl, Lucy Barbara |
Wilbourn, Claudia |
|
Dance, Helen Love |
Johnson, Vermelle Thurston |
FRESHMEN |
|
Davenport, Doris Bayze |
Johnson, Sue |
|
|
Freeman, Margaret Jane |
Martin, Irene Keatts |
Adams, Carnita |
|
Giddens, Mary Susan |
McDowell, Nellie |
Baird, Wallis |
|
Hackett, Wendolyn |
Odom, Elene |
Barrett, Barbara |
|
Hatfield, Mary Jennings |
Powers, Mrs. Betty Moss |
Birchett, Mary |
|
Harden, Mabel Adele |
Ray, Frances Gray |
Bradshaw, Audrey |
|
Hughes, Evelyn Christine |
Tedder, Charlotte June |
Bryant, Mam- |
|
Johnson, James Margaret |
Walker, Mary Frances |
Bryant, Ruth |
|
Ligon, Katherine |
Wallace, Justine |
Davenport, Imogene |
|
McEachern, Clara Elizabeth |
Welly, Loii Pal ri< ia |
DeLozier, 1 [elen |
|
'.'.'< it- 1- '..\:>rj Evelyn |
Willis, Alpha Walker |
Driver, Helen Fletcher, Martha Franklin, Ann Gannon, Virginia Grimes, Blanche Hankins, Ruth G. Hollis, Edith Jenkins, Dovie Jones, Jeane Kay, Gloria Moore, Louise Morgan, Inez Pistole, Mary Shannon, Ruth Stevens, Edna Summers, Peggy Sutton, Louise Taylor, Mary Tomlinson, Lois Walker, Billie Woodall, Catherine
1949
LAW SCHOOL
Swingley, Carmine
SENIORS
Coke, Sarah Nell Dean, Helen Ruth Eddins, Nelda Ganeko, Lyn Graves, Mildred Harris, Bonnie Mai Hughey, Clevia C. Johnston, June Pentecost, Martha Perrigan, Anita June Pierce, Judith Prince, Martha Sedberry, Jean Sexton, Ruby G. Stephenson, Dorothy Welch, Peggy M. Wilbourn, Claudia
JUNIORS
Frame, Laura Lee Franklin, Dolores Greenlaw, Marilyn Grime, Lois Kerley, Charles Evelyn Krisle, Nancy McCall, Julia Marler, Ruth Metcalfe, Shirley Owen, Joan Robinson, Ruth Stone, Dorothy
SOPHOMORES
Adams, Carnita Barrett, Barbara Bassette, Anita Birchett, Mary Bradshaw, Audrey Bryant, Ruth
Coleman, Ann Coverdale, Mary Ellen DeLozier, Helen Franklin, Anna Gannon, Virginia Hollis, Edith Kay, Gloria Moore, Louise Reynolds, Jean Shannon, Ruth Tomlinson, Lois Ann Turner, Mrs. Willis Walker, Billie Ann Williams, Marie B.
FRESHMEN
Banks, Laura Bingham, Josephine Boren, Julia Ann Branham, Clara Gene Crenshaw, Ruth Dickens, Fannie Mae Green, Dorothy Grime, Margaret Grizzard, Martha Harsh, Harriet Julian, Ruth Lamberson, Dorothy Major, Levelie Manning, Betty Nelson, Marjorie Nixon, Jean Pistole, Mary Plunk, Annie Puryear, Mary Jo Robinson, Audrey Rose, Jean Rose, Jeanne Shaw, Ila Pearl Sisk, Betty Lou Sisk, Ethel Thompson, Rose Wrather, Cora Ella
1950
LAW SCHOOL
Swingley, Carmine Coffman, Patricia
SENIORS
Franklin, Dolores lone
Grime, Clara Lois
Krisle, Nancy
Mingledorff, Lasura Lee Frame
Milligan, Barbara Barrett
Owen, Joan
Terry, Lena
JUNIORS
Bassette, Anita Biggs, Ethel Birchett, Mary Bradshaw, Audrey DeLozier, Helen Dean, Helen Ruth Franklin, Ann Hollis, Edith
McCall, Julia Parker, Jean Rose Vandergriff, Lois Walker, Billie Ann
SOPHOMORES
Dwyer, Anne L. Grime, Margaret Kerley, Charlie Manning, Betty Sue McDowell, Nellie Nelson, Marjorie Puryear, Mary Jo Sisk, Betty Lou Sisk, Ethel
FRESHMEN
Berryhill, Jo Ann Bilbrey, Mary Jewell Crenshaw, Ruth Angell Davis, Betty Driver, Pearl Duren, Mabel Fitzgerald, Jo Ann Hackney, Betty Hancock, Esther Hunt, Bobbie Jean McCall, Mary Nell Patrick, Ann Price, Jacqueline Rinks, Billie Webb, Hazel Woodson, Bertha Dale
1951
LAW SCHOOL
Coffman, Patricia J.
SENIORS
Birchett, Mary Bradshaw, Eleanor Audrey DeLozier, Helen C. Eskew, Frances McCall, Julia
JUNIORS
Dwyer, Anne Lucile Grime, Margaret Lucile Puryear, Mary Jo Sisk, Betty
SOPHOMORES
Baird, Anna Margaret Baxter, Joyce Harriet Berryhill, Jo Ann Bilbrey, Mary Jewell Craddock, Nancy Evelyn Davis, Betty Driver, Glenice Pearl Fitzgerald, Jo Ann Hackney, Betty Joyce Hayes, Jolene Juanita Hunt, Bobbie Jean
McCall, Mary Nell McKinney, Icie Lee Price, Jacqueline Wood, Rubye E.
FRESHMEN
Adkerson, Martha Alice Brintle, Betty Ann Bryan, Jean Cantrell, Willietta Crook, Sara Sue DeGlopper, Betty Dotson, Mary Kathleen Eddins, Adele Felts, Sarah Almeda Ford, Peggy Grime, Rebecca Anne Hancock, Ladye Grace Hodge, Lou Isabel Huddleston, Helen Sue Jennings, Jo Anne Jennings, Kathryne Marie Langford, Alpha LaFevor, Evelyn Dorris Martin, Gwendolyn Maynard, Louise McCall, Mildred McPherson, Nancy Milligan, Elaine Pilkinton, Vivian Ruth Pistol, Virginia Powell, Nola M. Sisk, Lois Jean Smith, Bobby Jane Sparkman. Mary Norma Thomas, Martha Duan Tyree, Billie Jean Walker, Mary Ann Winfree, Bobbye Faye Woodson, Bertha D.
1952
LAW SCHOOL
Bingham, Mrs. Louise Coffman, Patricia Joyce Falleaf, Mrs. William
1953
LAW SCHOOL
Bingham, Louise Falleaf, Louene Shaw, Lida B.
1954
LAW SCHOOL
Beckley, Margaret L. Falleaf, Mrs. William A. Shaw, Lida B.
1955
LAW SCHOOL
Beckley, Margaret Louise
1956
I.AW SCHOOL
Mitchell, Tommie Sue
1957
LAW SCHOOL
Mitchell, Tommie Sue Gilreath, Catherine Young, Frances Ann
JUNIOR COLLEGE
Bates, Lois Davis, Virginia Davis, Wynelle Draper, Frieda Evans, Mary Irene Flippen, Lynda Gossett, Bettye Graves, Sue Groves, Lucy Harris, Eva Jo Hemontoler, Dolores Jackson, Patricia Jarrell, Ann Knight, Hazelene LaFevor, Peggy Leeth, Lucile Moseley, Mae McFalls, Louise McNabb, Marjorie Neal, Mrs. Sidney Newby, Joann Phillips, Beatrice Simpson, Jean
1958
LAW SCHOOL
SOPHOMORES
Graves, Sylvia Sue Clark, Reba McNabb, Marjorie Allison, Jean Simpson Johnson, Dolores Jarrell, Eunice Ann Mitchell, Diane LaFevor, Peggy Anita Gossett, Bettye Lue Phillips, Beatrice Mosely, Mae Ray, Viola
FRESHMEN
Carter, Claudette Steed, Millie Anne Walls, Mary Ann Holland, Helen
1959
LAW SCHOOL
Thompson, Mary
SOPHOMORES
Steed, Millie Anne Carter, Claudette
Fuller, 1/ K ' leen
m
FRESHMEN
Donnell, Beth Green, Beverly Burton, Judy Davis, Bryna Hobson, Judy Phillips, Sue Piper, Elizabeth Tribble Cleverene Woodall, Sabra
1960
LAW SCHOOL
Thompson, Mary Ann Wilson, Evangeline Harder, Martha Willimas, Peggy F.
SOPHOMORES
Burton, Judie Donnell, Beth Piper, Elizabeth Tribble, Cleverene
FRESHMEN
Allen, Bobbie Nell Armstrong, Myrna Clark, Lillian Frye, Kathleen Gregg, Bobbie Gregory, Ottie Harlin, Doris Jenkins, Mary Ligon, Brenda Ligon, Rose Marie McMurtry, Mary Ferhne Nokes, Lynn Rice, Kitty Lou Ryman, Jacqueline Stewart, Betty Jane Waters, Dorothy Matlock, Mary Vanhook, Anita
1961
LAW SCHOOL
Thompson, Virginia Williams, Peggy Ford
SOPHOMORES
Allen, Bobbie Nell Armstrong, Myrna Clark, Lillian B. Nokes, Lynn
FRESHMEN
Alexander, Mnrgnrct Anne Cassetty, Tommie .Jean Clark, Nancy Jane ll;ill, Margaret Ann Hayes, Betty Jo McPherson, Mary II. Robinson, Mane Sue Stinson, Barbara Jo Williamson. Elizabeth Kay
1962
SOPHOMORES
Alexander, Margaret Ann Casetty, Tommie Jean Clark, Nancy Jane Hayes, Bettye Jo Williamson, Elizabeth Kay
FRESHMEN
Bentley, Virginia Ann Castleman, Florence Elizabeth Couch, Jane Miller Donnell, Ellen Evans, Ronna Jean Fakes, Billie Lynn Franklin, Peggy James, Velma Lea Jones, Betty A. Locke, Donna Sue Massey, Mary Fostene Price, Rena Joyce Reynolds, Linda Carol Richards, Kaye Frances Sandlin, Mackie Dean Scott, Nancy Marlene Simmons, Judith Kaye Skulley, Ruby Annette Stults, Carol Lee Wilkerson, Sarah Anne Winfree, Nora jean Witcher, Janie Sue
1963
SOPHOMORES
Atwood, Brenda Sue Bentley, Virginia Ann Castlemen, Florence Elizabeth Clark, Nancy Jane Couch, Jane Miller Donnell, Ellen Evans, Ronna Jean Fakes, Billie Lynn Franklin, Peggy Alice Maria Green, Kathy Mae Massey, Betty Frances Massey, Mary Fostene Midgett, Wilma Frances Price, Rena Joye Scott, Nancy Marlene Skulley, Rubye Annette Stults, Carol Lee Wilkerson, Sarah Anne Winfree, Nora Jean Witcher, Janie Sue
FRESHMEN
DiBella, Sandra Ann Frappier, Judith Ann Gillespie, Patricia Sue Greer, Edna Edura Gregory, Julia Kay Hardaway, Pauline Hobbs, Lynette Faye James, Velma
Jones, June Knehr, Patricia Ligon, Rose Marie McDonald, Ina Kay McDonald, Marilyn Elizabeth Oldfield, Pam Payne, Viviam Rollins, Mary Evelyn Ross, Judith Carol Schatz, Madaline Gayele
1964
SOPHOMORES
Agee, Dorothry Marie Ash, Joy Aulgur Burnham, Betty Fitch DiBella, Sandra Ann Frappier, Judith Ann Frazier, Judy Gail Greer, Edna Edura Gregory, Julia Kay Hardaway, Pauline Davis Harris, Barbara Ann Knerr, Patricia Ann Oldfield, Pamela Carol Osborn, Emily Jean Rollins, Mary Evelyn Ross, Judith Carol Sadler, Judi Carole Suddarth, Frances K. Wilmore, Elizabeth Ann
FRESHMEN
Agee, Betty Joyce Atwood, Betty Brown, Del oris Brown, Jan Carter, Janice Carter, Walteen Clark, Martha Swindell Denton, Jane Gill, Judy Gregory, Alice Hobbs, Margaret Jones, Mary McCoy, Bobbyette Middaugh, Beverly Nichols, Patricia O'Dell, Ann Presley, Brenda Joyce Randolph, Shirley Russell, Pattie Rutledge, Joyce Smith, Frances Smith, Rubye Lynn Spain, Reba Swingley, Ellen Woodard, Jimmy Faye Young, Margaret
1965
SOPHOMORES
Agee, Betty Joyce Baker, Elizabeth Ann Brown, Deloris Brown, Jan
Carter, Janice Kaye
Carter, Walteen
Denton, Jane
DiBella, Sandy
Gill, Judy Frances
Harris, Barbara Ann
Hobbs, Margaret
Jones, Mary
McCoy, Bobbyette
Ryan, Erlene Rebecca (Jackie)
Russell, Pattie Lee
Rutledge, Lynda Joyce
Smartt, Aneska Jane
Smith, Frankie
Smith, Ruby Lynn
White, Carol
Williams, Rita Lynn
Young, Margaret Ann
FRESHMEN
Bobo, Cynthia
Brown, Becky Ann
Brown, Linda
Brown, Lowenid
Carey, Eva
Carter, Margaret Carol
Cooper, Peggy
Cotham, Lois
Dowdy, Janis
Harvey, Clara Ann Downs
East, Barbara Ellen
Estes, Carolyn
Fann, Peggy
Gann, Annette
Greer, Libby
Grigg, Brenda
Hampton, Jeanie
Hunter, Jo Ann
Jakes, Beverly Carol
Jenkins, Terry
Jones, Linda Sue
Layne, Emily Jean
Loftis, Jessica
McKee, Carol
McNeil, Kathy
Marler, Margaret
Munro, Jane
Petty, Nancy Jane
Polston, Paulette Frances
Rains, Betty
Ray, Anna Julanne
Sapp, Maureen
Shadden, Vickie Ann
Smith, Carolyn
Thorneberry, Connie
Timbs, Sharon
Underwood, Linda
Watts, Helen
Witt, Ann
Young, Carolyn
Young, Mary Jo
1966
SOPHOMORES
Brown, Becky A. Brown, Linda A. Carey, Eva M. Carter, Margaret C. Cooper, Peggy J.
Cotham, Lois Dowdy, Janis S. East, Barbara E. Edwards, Gwyn Estes, Carolyn Fann, Carol R. Gann, Annette Grigg, Brenda F. Jenkins, Terry- Lewis, Sandra Marler, Margaret Rains, Betty Russell, Pattie Timbs, Sharon
FRESHMEN
Allen, Billie Jean Allison, Maureen Bryant, Pat Coe, Allie Mae Denney, Gloria Denney, Sylvia Dillard, Ruth Dixon, Claydene Dudney, Judy Frost, Donna Gorham, Carolyn Hailey, Nancy Haley, Mary Grace Harding, Nancy Harlan, Lynne Harris, Shirley S. Henry, Cherie Hester, Anita Hobbs, Scherland Jennings, Elizabeth Krantz, Sheryl Lane, Lanita Lowber, Susan Loyd, Marjorie Lynn Miller, Lynda Mitchell, Patricia McCormack, Carolyn McCoy, Darlene McLerran, Ruth Oldham, Linda S. Pugh, Theresa K. Rains, Sue Richardson, Carol Rutherford, Emily Silvey, Linda Skeen, Patricia Smith, Margaret Ivy Spurling, Carol Staggers, Betty Stewart, Bettye Vines, Linda Walker, Nancy Wilburn, Mary F. Winfree, Judy Wise, Sally
1967
SOPHOMORES Allen, Billie Jean Allison, Maureen Bates, Mary Delle Bryant, Pat Coe, Allie Mae Denney, Sylvia M.
Dillard, Ruth A. Dudney, Judy A. Hailey, Nancy Harlan, Lynne Harris, Shirley S. Henry, Cherie B. Hester, Anita J. Hobbs, Scherland Lane, Lanita J. McCormack, Carolyn A. McCoy, Darlene McLerran, Gayle McLerran, Ruth Miller, Lynda Patterson, Brenda Rains, Sue Skeen, Patricia Smith, Margaret Ivy Spurling, Carol Stewart, Bettye Winfree, Judy Wise, Sally
FRESHMEN
Bonner, Mary Ruth Bowman, Charlotte Brown, Linda Carden, Ruth Corley, Joanne Donnell, Mary Ann Dunlap, Susan Durham, Anita Fisher, Brenda Flynn, Peggy Gibbs, Victoria Goodman, Ganet Groves, Patricia Harris, Yvonne Hutchison, Virginia Johnson, Faye Johnson, Jannie Johnson, Sara Johnston, Jeri Jordan, Jessica Kirkpatrick, Bettie Lou LaFevor, Nancy Loomis, Diane McCoy, Myrtle Patrick, Patricia Perigo, Alice Perkins, Elizabeth Roark, Kay Schuette, Marilyn Stafford, Jacqueline Stanton, Lucy Steakley, Sherry Sullivan, Dora Thompson, Peggy Tucker, Marilyn Turner, Gayle Westbrook, Barbara Ann Whitehurst, Brenda Wingate, Georgia
1968
SOPHOMORES Allison, Sandra B.-irry, Mary
■i . Mary Ruth Carden, Ruth
Carter, Janice Donnell, Mary Ann Durham, Anita Goodman, Ganet Groves, Patricia A. Harrell, Linda Harris, Yvonne Jordan, Jessica M. Keaton, Esther L. Kirkpatrick, Betty Lou McCoy, Myrtle G. Perkins, Elizabeth Reeves, Patricia A. Stover, Marcia L. Thompson, Peggy Turner, Sharon Gayle Wallace, Joan E. Westbrook, Barbara A. Whitehurst, Brenda M. Wilson, Sharon S.
FRESHMEN
Aldridge, Marsha Alsup, Julia Atwood, Jane Barnes, Sharon Bates, Bonnie Burks, Sue Carter, Polly Ann Curtis, Sandra Delbridge, Jackie DeWeese, Linda Eatherly, Alice Eberle, Judy Floyd, Helen Gamble, Sarah Hawks, Beth Hayes, Linda Hightower, Glenda Hodges, Emily Horton, Brenda Hutcheson, Jan Lee, Barbara Luther, Arminta Macon, Donna Maggart, Brenda Majors, Doris Markham, Diane Martin, Pat Mason, Danice McClure, Marguerite McLean, Becky Miller, Mona Muse, Cynthia Nabors, Lynn Palmore, Elaine Pardue, Beverly Ragland, Carolyn Read, Cecilia Dee Reynolds, Frankie Robertson, Desiree Ryan, Judy Sanders, Thia Smith, Mary Ann Swain, Marilyn Waldrnp, Jan
Weeks, Virginia Weld, K)ithryn We it, Virginin Wheeler, Low-lln
El
Whited, Darlene Williams, Amanda Williamson, Candance Winner, Wanda Wolfe, Jenny Wright, Glenna Young, Linda
1969
SOPHOMORES
Aldridge, Marsha Bates, Bonnie Brown, Rita Sue Carter, Polly Corbin, Dee Read Curtis, Sandra Delbridge, Jackie DeWeese, Linda Eatherly, Alice Gallienne, Linda Hightower, Glenda Hodges, Emily Horton, Brenda Hutcheson, Janice Lamborn, Betty Lee, Barbara Leo, Thia Sanders Luther, Arminta McClure, Marguerite McCoy, Jane Atwood Maggart, Brenda Majors, Doris Markham, Diane Martin, Pat Price, Frankie Ragland, Carolyn Raines, Margaret Hall Ryan, Judy Swain, Marilyn Webb, Diane Weeks, Virginia West, Virginia White, Evelyn Williamson, Candace Winner, Wanda Wolfe, Jenny
FRESHMEN
Alexander, Angela Alexander, Lynda Anderson, Beverly Askins, Diane Atkinson, Barbara Baird, Austelle Barrett, Ann Bell, Daphne Bentle, Sherry Botts, Janet Brothers, Janet Brown, Karen Brown, Nancy Bush, Sallye Chambers, Edith Collier, Melissa Cox, Anita Crawford, Ellen Dixon, Margaret Gallman, Barbara
Gann, Linda Goad, Carol Goodale, Becky Hamilton, Elizabeth Haralson, Martha Harruff, Debbie Hatcher, Marjorie Hyde, Rita Keith, Paulette Kemp, Deirdre Keyes, Rosemary Lane, Diane Lee, Karen McCoy, Alpha Moss, Pam Phillips, Becky Powell, Judy Ramsey, Bonny Rhoton, Mary Ann Seay, Jewel Shanks, Susan Stidham, Margie Stroud, Joan Summar, Judy Thurman, Jan Tomlinson, Becky Upton, Suzanne Walker, Marcia Wilson, Diane Winanis, Lynn Winfree, Cathy Winfree, Jan Witcher, Karen
1970
SOPHOMORES
Alexander, Angela Anderson, Beverly Askins, Diane Atkinson, Barbara Baird, Austelle Baker, Cecile Barrett, Ann Bell, Daphne Botts, Jane Brothers, Jan Brown, Nancy Chambers, Edith Cox, Anita Faye Dixon, Margaret Ann Doughty, Sharon Francis, Diane Goad, Carol Gann, Linda Harruff, Debbie Hatcher, Marjorie Haralson, Martha Kemp, Diedre McCoy, Alpha Phillips, Rebecca Moss, Pam
Savage, Virginia Carolyn Powell, Judy Short, Brenda Stidham, Margie Stone, Sherry Bentie Swain, Judy Summar Teeple, Paula Rhea Waldrop, Jan Walker, Marcia Diane
Weeks, Virginia Lee Wilson, Diane Winans, Lynn Witcher, Kathy Wilson, Jan Thurman
FRESHMEN
Alexander, Lynda Fay Arlington, Judy Atkinson, Terry Janne Bane, Ernestine Bowden, Patricia Boze, Nita Brenan, Nancy Brown, Laurie Brown, Susan Brownlow, Linda Bryant, Mary Bush, Sallye Chaffin, Ellen Chitwood, Chyrel Coggins, Jacqueline Coe, Margaret Cole, Laura Corder, Emilie Marie Crockett, Jenny Cummings, Julia Davis, Thala Rae Dedman, Betty Jo Eberle, Kathy Geer, Charlotte Glover, Kathy Griffin, Betty Graham, Sandra Hanna, Anna Dianne Hawks, Diane Hobbs, Judy Lee Holt, Nancy Jane Holt, Reba Whitson Howell, Carol Joyce Huffman, Libby Hunter, Kathy Jenkins, Glenda Johnson, Diane Johnson, Virginia Kathy Joyner, Nicki Kellar, Mary Kinnard, Karren Knight, Loleta Lamb, Renee Laurence, Judith Lawler, Pat Lecornu, Patty Lovelace, Sherrill McCary, Madeline May, Pam May, Patricia Mierzejewski, Deborah Murray, Brenda Myers, Lynda Oakes, Joellen Parker, Linda Porter, Teresa Ann Roberts, Marie Rucks, Mary Speck, Bobbie Jean Stone, Reita Stringfield, Shirley Tarpy, Peggy Taylor, Amdrea Turner, Mara Vann, Lynndal
Verble, Frances Walker, Donna Waters, Gail Whitman, Diane Wileman, Leta Marie Young, Martha Cecile Yarbrough, Cheryl
1971
SOPHOMORES
Arlington, Judy Atkinson, Terry Jeanne Bane, Ernestine Brownlow, Linda Chaffin, Ellen Jo Coggins, Jacqueline Cole, Laura Cummings, Julia Davis, Thala Dedman, Betty Jo Griffin, Betty Grisham, Sandra Hanna, Anna Diane Harris, Barbara Hawks, Dianne Howell, Carol Huffman, Libby Hunter, Kathy Jent, Brenda Johnson, Diane Johnson, Kathy Joyner, Nicki Kellar, Mary Knight, Loleta Knopf, Priscilla Lee, Linda May, Pam May, Pat Murray, Brenda Myers, Lynda McCrary, Madelyn Oakes, Jo Ellen Roberts, Marie Speck, Bobbie Jean Stone, Reita Beth Stringfield, Shirley Tarpey, Peggy Verble, Frances Walker, Betsy Whitman, Diane Yarbrough, Cheryl Young, Martha
FRESHMEN
Anderson, Janet Bell, Connie "Berry, Harriet Bianca.Toni Black, Phyllis Bryant, Billie Ann Buhler, Lynn Carn-i , <•
■-bie Chaffin, Ann Crowell, Jackie
Dunklin, Wynne Dunnebacke, Diane Ferrell, Felice Fox, Mary Joe Gatlin, Susan Gleaves, Debbie Grandstaff, Jo Anne Grindstaff, Anne Hagan, Melinda Hale, Marianne Helms, Rosemary Hightower, Beth Hill, Diane Holmes,Cindy Johnson, Kathy Jones, Beverly Keys, Sheila Knowles, Kathy Langford, Jewell Manning, Cindy Marler, Becky McClanahan, Jamie Merry man, Linda Moss, Jean Nalley, Pat Paisano, Toni Paris, Sandra Reed, Nancy Sanders, Mattie Smith, Brenda Smith, Karen Tarkington, Brenda Taylor, Shirley Thomas,Theresa K. Vantrease, Faye White, Brenda Whitehurst, Connie
1972
SOPHOMORES
Bell, Connie Berry, Harriet Buhler, Lynn Cartwwright, Debbie Dunneback, Diane Ferrell, Felice Helms, Rosemary Johnson, Kathleen Hightower, Beth Holmes, Cynthia Knowles, Kathy Lee, Linda Moss, Jean Nalley, Pat Ogle, Judy Smith, Karen Swan, Lisa Taylor, Shirley Tinnon, Keene Vantrea e Faye
White, Br< WhiU on me
• Debra
m
FRESHMEN
Adams, Fran Baird, Angela Baird, Myra Bess, Sandra Blaylock, Debbie Boyd, Charlene Coe, Wanda Cook, Karen Finchum, Agnes Fletcher, Lois Flowers, Karen Foster, Donna Gross, Patricia Hamilton, Sandra Hughes, Danielle Lineberry, Patsy Lipsey, Susan Massey, Jane McClanahan, Penny Melvin, Mary Belle Morgan, Virginia Nesbitt, Jana Newton, Karen Postell, Marilyn Powers, Edna Reed, Cynthia Rowe, Nancy Rush, Peggy Ruth, Lindi Seat, Elizabeth Shaffer, Carol Sharpe, Debbie Sloan, Evelyn Soukup, Kathryn Tanner, Sue Walker, Joyce Waters, Jane Watts, Peggy Wiggins, Brenda Wilson, Beth
1973
SOPHOMORES
Adams, Fran Baird, Angela Beesley, Alice Boyd, Charlene Butts, Barbara Ann Coe, Wanda Finchum, Agnes Herrera, Jana Lineberry, Patsy Massey, Jane McClanahan, Penny Melvin, Mary Belle Nesbitt, Jan Newton, Karen Postell, Marilyn ler, Linda , Ntituy Ruth, Lindi Tanner, Sue Walker, Jo Watts, Peggy Wiggins, Brenda
|
FRESHMEN |
Lasater, Jenny |
Gentry, Denise |
|
|
Lowrie, Deborah J. |
Gulley, Diane |
||
|
Bagwell, Sheree |
Neal, Glenna J. |
Hopper, Vicki |
|
|
Barnes, Gail |
Preus, Camilla |
Leffers, Charlotte |
|
|
Biller, Marsha |
Pugh, Ester |
Lundeen, Marjorie |
|
|
Blankenship, Pam |
Scott, Rebecca |
Malone, Rhea |
|
|
Bugg, Lynn |
See, Angela P. |
McPeak, Anita |
|
|
Cannon, Deborah |
Waller, Linda |
Pistole, Patsy |
|
|
Carson, Debby |
Washburn, Virginia |
Smith, Pat |
|
|
Chipkevich, Sue |
Whorton, Carol |
Stark, Marsha |
|
|
Clark, Little Susie |
Winkler, Sherrie E. |
Stevenson, Sally |
|
|
Creecy, Deborah |
Winton, Lillian |
Stokes, Roslyn |
|
|
Edenfield, Jane Ann |
Wong, Allison |
Tharp, Sharon |
|
|
Gatlin, Jenny |
Truslow, Jeannie |
||
|
Gentry, Pam |
FRESHMEN |
Waller, Melanie |
|
|
Graves, Deborah |
Yeager, Amy |
||
|
Green, Brenda |
Adams, Diane E. |
||
|
Grundy, Jackie |
Ashby, Patricia |
FRESHMEN |
|
|
Guthrie, Deborah |
Baird, Millie F. |
||
|
Haney, Susan |
Bardill, Kathleen |
Armstrong, Kathy |
|
|
Hart, Mary |
Belcher,Kathy |
Baughman, Cheryl |
|
|
Howard, Heloise |
Bennett, Donna L. |
Bechman, Debra |
|
|
Hurley, Pam |
Bilbrey, Pamela |
Bennett, Linda |
|
|
Kennedy, Lisa |
Bledsoe, Sharon L. |
Blackburn, Martha |
|
|
Knowles, Vicki |
Boykin, Regina G. |
Booher, Kathleen |
|
|
Lacy, Glenna |
Lecornu, Glenda L. |
Brown, Cynthia |
|
|
Lasater, Jenny |
Leffers, Charlotte |
Cannon, Cindy |
|
|
Leonard, Cathy |
Looper, Marilyn |
Carelli, Lori |
|
|
Lowrie, Debbie |
Loudin, Donna R. |
Cobb, Cathy |
|
|
Metcalfe, Donna |
Lundeen, Marjorie |
Davenport, Judith |
|
|
Morgan, Cindy |
Lyttle, Evonne E. |
Dirkson, Cynthia |
|
|
Neal, Joy |
Majors, Nancy |
Dudney, Moira |
|
|
Newby, Jackie |
Malone, Edith R. |
Eatherly, Vicki |
|
|
Officer, Denise |
McPeak, Anita C. |
Garrett, Donna |
|
|
Phillips, Nancy |
Metcalfe, Debra |
Grubbs, Kathy |
|
|
Preus, Cam |
Moeckl, Birgit E. |
Hobbs, Delphene |
|
|
Pugh, Ann |
Montgomery, Kathy S. |
Hobbs, Ruth |
|
|
Scott, Becky |
Oldfield, Kristina |
Hutto, Lou Ann |
|
|
Skelton, Susan |
Pistole, Patsy E. |
Jenkins, Medeanna |
|
|
Sloan, Evelyn |
Sheetz, Sherry E. |
Jennings, Jan |
|
|
Smith, Deborah |
Smelser, Cathy |
Jewell, Wanda |
|
|
Staker, Shelley |
Smith, Patricia |
Johnson, Anita |
|
|
Stewart, Mary |
Stark, Marsha |
Jones, Lisa |
|
|
Stowers, Linda |
Stevenson, Sally |
Keilnoltz, Carol |
|
|
Taylor, Kay |
Tharp, Sharon L. |
Kemper, Linda |
|
|
Waller, Tippy |
Underwood, Kathy |
Korfhage, Konda |
|
|
Warren, Marissa |
Virden, Laura L. |
Lain, Luanna |
|
|
Whorton, Nancy |
Waller, Melanie |
Lannom, Vicky |
|
|
Winton, Lillian |
Weatherford, Carolyn |
Parkhurset, Paulette |
|
|
West, Jacqueline |
Pettus, Rhonda |
||
|
1974 |
Wright, Vickie L. |
Pollard, Doris |
|
|
Yeager, Amy Lou |
Preus, Suzie |
||
|
SOPHOMORES |
Randall, Donna |
||
|
1975 |
Refich, Misko |
||
|
Biller, Marsha |
Rosen, Leslie |
||
|
Blankenship, Pamela |
SOPHOMORES |
Santiago, Wanda |
|
|
Cannon, Deborah |
Sizemore, Terri |
||
|
Clark, Little Susie |
Adams, Diane |
Steenbergen, Sheila |
|
|
Creecy, Deborah |
Belcher, Kathy |
Stone, Ellen |
|
|
Edenfield, Jane Ann |
Bennett, Donna |
Tramel, Georgia |
|
|
Garrett, Violet |
Bledsoe, Sharon |
Winfree, Nan |
|
|
Gatlin, Jennifer |
Burton, Mary Jane |
Woolard, Anita |
|
|
Gentry, Pamela |
Cox, Candy |
Wright, Pam |
|
|
Grundy, Jackie |
Fisher, Lynn |
||
|
Guthrie, Deborah |
Fraley, Karen |
||
|
Haney, Susan |
Garmon, Connie |
||
|
Katzenmiller, Carolyn |
Gates, Tari |
||
|
Kennedy, Elizabeth |
Gaut, Donna |
1976
SOPHOMORES
Armstrong, Kathy Barr, Sarah Batsel, June Baughman, Cheryl Booher, Kathleen Brown, Cynthia Cannon, Cindy Corelli, Lori Cobb, Catherine Davenport, Judy Dirkson, Cynthia Eatherly, Vicki Grubbs, Kathy Hutto, Lou Ann Jewell, Wanda Jones, Lisa Kemper, Linda Lain, Luanne Lannom, Vicky Leonard, Lisa Lott, Mary Lowe, Ginger McClanahan, Janice McCloud, Teresa Nininger, Lisa Poillard, Doris Preus, Suzie Randall, Donna Santiago, Wanda Sizemore, Terri Steenberger, Sheila Stone, Ellen Trammel, Georgia Whiteman, Judy Winfree, Nan Wright, Pamela Young, Debra
FRESHMEN
Austin, Trudy Baird, Rejeanna Bass, Susan Beck, Cindy Bone, Susan Bonner, Sandra Brooks, Stepha Brown, Betsy Cantrell, Janic Caplenor, Micky Cavitt, Karen Cross, Carla Sue Dowell, Patti DufTel, Nancy Duke, Charlotte Eady, Deborah Eatherly, Cindy Edwards, Celeata Evans, Sharon Frye, Becky Graves, Celia Grissim, Jo Ann Guethlein, Nancy Hamilton, Cindy Hardison, Karen Hefte, Chris e, Linda
Jacobs, Dianne Johnson, Tina Lankford, Karen La Rue, Rita Lester, Lydia Lester, Sherry Lewis, Holli Lowe, Terry Manier, Gale McCurdy, Keith McEachern, Diane McKinney,Mary Mires, Vicki Mooneyham, Deborah Murphy, Janie Murray, Vicki Owens, Bernadette Parkinson, Vicki Parks, Kathy Pettway, Leigh Phelan, Kay Presley, Janice Roberts, Rita Roberts, Sherri Roby, Rose Sanders, Mary Pat Sanford, Ellen Shackelford, Claudette Sisk, Lee Ann Smallwood, Cathy St.Clair, Lucile Sullivan, Bicki Taylor, Pam Terry, Denise Thomas, Sue Tripp, Brenda Tuggle, Lisa Turner, Barbara Turney, Faith Wagner, Janice Waldron, Tammy Webb, Leslie Wilee, Gwen Williams, Nancy Williams, Vicki Wills, Annie Wilson, Zenobia Woodard, Jessica Young, Kim
1977
SOPHOMORES
Baird, Sara Belcher, Sandy Bone, Susan Caplenor, Micky Cross, Sue Duffel, Nancy Duke, Charlotte Dunklin, Jean Edwards, Celeata Evans, Sharon Gra .cs, Celia Grissim, Jo Ann ' , lethlein, Nancy
Hardi ion, K;iriTi
Hefte, Christine Hinkle, Kathy I \', i ie, Linda
m
King, Debbie Kirkendoll, Audrey Lewis, Holli Lowe, Terry Manier, Gail McCurdy, Keith McEachern, Diane Mires, Vicky Mooneyham, Debora Murphy, Janie Pack, Dianna Pettway, Leigh Presley, Barbara Roberts, Rita Roberts, Sherry Sanders, Mary Pat Sanders, Vicki Sanford, Ellen Taylor, Pam Turney, Faith Vastola, Anna Wagner, Janice Webb, Leslie Williams, Nancy Williams, Vickie Wills, Annie
FRESHMEN
Allison, Teresa Baird, Kathy Brewington, Cynthia Carr, Jerri e Clinton, Pam Collier, Ewanda Cooper, Sharon Davies, Karen Davis, Alicia Duffey, Susan Egner, Pam Fraley, Donna Gentry, Kim Grandstaff, Nancy Griffin, Danita Griffin, Sandra Harris, Frances Howell, Terry Inman, Wilier Jennings, Karen Jones, Kathy Jones, Vonelle Keene, Kay Keisler, Cheryl Kerrigan, Ann Frances King, Cindy Lancaster, Lucy Lane, Linda Lankford, Sandra Lewis, Marcia M:iil in, Kathy McAllister, Denise McWhirter, Suzanne Mondii, I Kna I '..i ..-II, Mindy Phillips, Betty i 'i imrose, Jayne
Reeves, .Joyce
Rich, ' rlenda
I!., I, in:. on, Tm:i
Scafe, Janet : lemich, I >onnn
Shannon, Karen Smith, Angie Smith, Tina Stithem, Vicki Stokes, Jewell Strange, Clair Sullivan, Debbie Sullivan, Judy Syler, Linda Terry, Lori Trotter, Sharon Truett, Nancy Tyree, Elaine Van Hooser, Kathy Wayman,Teresa White, Monica
WOMEN STUDENTS NOT PICTURED
Becton, Erika Bennett, Linda Brown, Carolyn Camp, Kathleen Collinsworth, Mary Lou Condra, Trudy Croy, Allene Eady, Deborah Evans, Daina Finch, Jennie Flaherty, Jennie Forbes, Cynthia Goodman, Carolyn Hammontree, Donna Hardy, Ora Hofstetter, Barbara Johnson, Pamelia Jones, Nancy Lehew, Debra Lewis, Sylvia Lott, Mary Moore, Marty Nesbitt, Diane O'Bryant, Pam Owens, Bernadette Payne, Jackie Pearce, Jean Pulley, Deborah Ridley, Elaine Selby, Andrea Shackelford, Claudette Stafford, Brenda Sullivan, Kathy Summar, Jennifer Tripp, Brenda Wiley, Ann Wilson, Donna Word, Faye
1978
SOPHOMORES
Becton, Erika Bennett, Linda Clinton, Pam Condra, Trudie Cooper, Sharon
Cotten, Mary Jo Davies, Karen Davis, Alicia Duffey, Susan Egner, Pam Enoch, Phyllis Griffin, Danita Hammontree, Donna Harris, Frances Harris, Linda Howell, Terry Hutson, Beth Johnson, Pam Lane, Linda Leaver, Denise Lewis, Marcia Lewis, Sylvia Manier, Gail McWhirter, Suzanne Parsell, Mindy Presley, Barbara Semich, Donna Smith, Helen Stithem, Vicki Stokes, Jewell Sullivan, Debbie Trotter, Sharon Truett, Nancy Tyree, Elaine Wayman, Teresa White, Monica Wiley, Ann Word, Faye
FRESHMEN
Allen, Brenda Anderson, Rhonda Barnes, Judy Barrett, Charlita Barrett, Vicki Bass, Linda Beatty, Pam Bennett, Sherry Brown, Terry Brown, Vanessa Bugg, Susan Clark, Gloria Crowe, Robbie Crutcher, Donna Dobson, Donna Driver, Jill Dykes, Margie Elliott, Kim Eskew, Becky Gardner, Brenda Grandstaff, Nancy Graves, Hazel Graves, Melanie Guss, Karen Hopper, Jeanie Huddleston, Cora Jackson, Angela James, Darlene James, Teresa Johnson, Debbie Lambert, Rita Lawson, Kathy
IST
Leffell, Julie Lowe, Barbara Lowry.Lesa Manning, Vanessa Martin, Cathy Martin, Donna McFarland, Kathy McGlohn, Donna Meier, Lisa Montgomery, Jane Moreland, Cathy Nauman, Tesa Pewett, Laura Pitman, Gwen Powers, Lori Proffitt, Kathy Pugh, Tammy Quattlebaum, Beth Raines, Justine Rodgers, Cathy Rogers, Dana Rucks, Elaine Self, Betty Shamblin, Kathy Sloan, Patricia Smith, Missy Spears, Debbie Spencer, Jan Stephens, Betsy Sudekum, Beth Tapley, Linda Taylor, Cindy Triplett, Jan Truett, Sharon Trusty, Wanda Tyler, Carol Walker, Linda Walsh, Angela White, Glenda Williams, Debbie Wilson, Ola Wood, Karen Wynne, Pam
1979
SOPHOMORES
Anderson, Rhonda Baker, Sherry Barnes, Judy Barrett, Charlita Bass, Linda Bennett, Sherry Brown, Lesa Bryson, Joan Clark, Gloria Crutcher, Donna Driver, Jill Dykes, Margie Elliott, Kim Enoch, Marcy Eskew,Becky Graves, Melanie Guss, Karen Hammontree, Lisa Hopper, Jeanie
|
Jackson, Angie |
Lewis, Cheryl |
Brown, Sandy |
|
James, Teresa |
McCann, Beth |
Bryant, Angela |
|
Johnson, Debbie |
Miller, Marsha |
Chaffin, Denise |
|
Kucsar, Jill |
Morgan, Sherry |
Cherry, Beth |
|
Lambert, Rita |
Morris, Sara |
Clark, Debra |
|
Lawson, Kathy |
Moss, Debbie |
Clark, Trinda |
|
Leffel, Julia |
Nichols, Sharon |
Cotten, Leisa |
|
Martin, Cathy |
Ortengoen, Renee |
Craven, Beth |
|
McGlohn, Donna |
Peters, Jan |
Crutcher, Sherry |
|
Montgomery, Jane |
Raines, Connice |
Dale, Dalydia |
|
Morris, Donna |
Ramsey, Jane |
Dies, Lisa |
|
Nauman, Tesa |
Rushing, Kellie |
Ebrabimian, Mina |
|
Paris, Beverly |
Russell, Wanda |
Fields, Bonnye |
|
Pewett, Laura |
Shankle, Bonnie |
Fields, Donnye |
|
Pittman, Gwynn |
Shotwell, Jennifer |
Fitzgerald, Melinda |
|
Powers, Lori |
Sutphin, Nikki |
Givens, Eyonda |
|
Proffitt, Kathy |
Taylor, Cynthia |
Gordon, Eretha |
|
Pugh, Tammy |
Thibault, Debbie |
Gregory, Sandra |
|
Quattlebaum, Beth |
Turner, Judy |
Gunter.Lori |
|
Self, Betty |
Whitley, Alisa |
Henderson, Vicki |
|
Shipp, Coyee |
Williams, Loretta |
Hicks, Sharon |
|
Sloan, Patricia |
Williams, Sandra |
Hindsley, Gwenn |
|
Stephens, Betsy |
Hindsley, Robin |
|
|
Tapley, Linda Sue |
1980 |
Hughes, Jalana |
|
Taylor, Cindy |
Hyde, Tanya |
|
|
Thornton, Susan |
SOPHOMORES |
James, Linda |
|
Trotter, Sharon |
Johnson, Kathy |
|
|
Trusty, Wanda |
Belcher, Donna |
Jones, Clarissa |
|
Williams, Debbie |
Chaffin, Melia |
Ladd, Patricia |
|
Wood, Karen |
Chamberlain, Dawn |
Lester, Kendra |
|
Word, Faye |
Chirimumimba, Mary |
Lewis, Laura |
|
Cubbs, Melissa |
McJunkin, Patti |
|
|
FRESHMEN |
Drennon, Connice |
Mills, Suzanne |
|
Freeman, Delaine |
Nave, Nancy |
|
|
Agee, Lou Alice |
Glowa, Mary Anne |
Neal, Pam |
|
Belcher, Donna |
Holcomb, Jayma |
Nelson, Suzy |
|
Bowman, Janice Makalia |
Holleman, Susan |
Paine, Kim |
|
Boyd, Arbadella |
Homeyer, Dinah |
Partlow, Susan |
|
Cain, Lillian |
Hughes, Debbie |
Presley, Pam |
|
Chaffin, Melia |
Hunt, Leslie |
Price, Deitrice |
|
Chirimumimba, Mary Shingai |
Jakes, Phyllis |
Pugh, Shirley |
|
Christian, Becky |
Johnson, Gaye |
Rigsby, Pam |
|
Clemmons, Mickey |
Jones, Debbie |
Roberts, Sherry |
|
Combs, Kathy Cubbins, Melissa |
Kerr, Paula |
Russell, Katrina |
|
Lee, Amy |
Seay, Jac 'Que |
|
|
Ervin, Wendy Sue |
Lewis, Cheryl |
Smith, Leigh Ann |
|
Gay, Tammi |
McCann, Beth |
Tapley, Janice |
|
Glowa, Mary Ann |
Miller, Marsha |
Thurman, Kristie |
|
Gross, Pam |
Morgan, Sherry |
Vanhuss, Sherrie |
|
Hall, Valerie |
Morris, Sara |
Weik, Nina |
|
Hedges, Karen |
Rushing, Kelly |
Williamson, Diane |
|
Henderon, Marsha |
Shankle, Bonnie |
Williamson, Marianne |
|
Holcomb, Jayma |
Smith, Janet |
Wills, Rhonda |
|
Holleman, Susan |
Speck, Cynthia |
Wilson, Leslie |
|
Homeyer.Dinah |
Sutphin, Nikki |
Woods, Janie |
|
Houston, Kathi |
Taylor, Cynthia |
|
|
Hughes, Debbi |
Thibault, Debbie |
1981 |
|
Hunt, Leslie |
Thomas, Andi |
|
|
Jakes, Phyllis Jennings, Leanne |
Webber, Regina |
SOPHOMORES |
|
Williams, Sandra |
Adcock, Kimberly Kay |
|
|
Johnson, Gaye |
Aken, Renee Alleen |
|
|
Johnson, Maranda |
FRESHMEN |
Alsup, Sherry K. |
|
Jones, Ashby |
Arndt, Pamela Lynn |
|
|
Jones, Lisa |
Arndt, Pam |
Baker, Tami Denise |
|
Kerr, Paula |
Baird, Sonya |
Beard, Lisa Kelly |
|
Krantz, Tei |
|{<-ll, B<-cky |
Hell, Rebecca Anne |
|
Lackey, Kimberly |
Binkley, Tammy |
Binkley, Tammy 1 teniae |
|
Lee, Amy |
!',;■• kei , Leiza |
Blair, Kimberly Jay |
|
Bruner, Teresa Lynn |
Lea, Donna |
Tebbe, Susan |
|
Cherry, Elizabeth B. |
Logan, Becky |
Thompson, Cynthia |
|
Clark, Trinda Lee |
Malicoat, Debbie |
Uffelman, Maria |
|
Cotten, Leisa Jo |
Matland, Liz |
Wilson, Tina |
|
Crutcher, Sherry Elaine |
McMillen, Tracy |
Winfrey, Terry |
|
Fields, Bonnye Jane |
Mendenhall, Vicky |
Woodley, Ronda |
|
Fields, Donnye Sue |
Morgan, Ann |
|
|
Golden, Rita S. |
Murray, Stephanie |
FRESHMEN |
|
Gordon, Doretha |
Nance, Montre |
|
|
Gregory, Sandra Jean |
Nelson, Deborah |
Arm stead, Lori |
|
Hall, Cynthia Jean |
Oates, Teletha |
Beck with, Laura |
|
Hilley, Kay Roxanne |
Randall, Sandra |
Belton, Brenda |
|
Hughes, Jalana L. |
Rawlings, Anita |
Boggus, Shari |
|
James, Linda L. |
Ridner, Cindy |
Bolton, Malissa |
|
Johnson, Elizabeth Katherine |
Scruggs, Moreen |
Cairns, Linda |
|
Ladd, Patricia Ann |
Sharp, Anita |
Carman, Jennifer |
|
McJunkin, Patricia Lyn |
Simmons, Penny |
Corder, Erna |
|
Mills, Suzanne Arlene |
Smith, Sandy |
Drury, Holly |
|
Nave, Nancy Jewell |
Staley, Regina |
Edwards, Kathy |
|
Neal, Pamela |
Stephens, Amy |
Fisher, Robin |
|
Owens, Mary Louise |
Stephens, Charnell |
Fuqua, Jennifer |
|
Paine, Kimberli Ann |
Sutton, Laurie |
Gardner, Angie |
|
Rigsby, Pamela D. |
Swain, Dana |
Gray, Michelle |
|
Seay, Jac' Que Jhanee |
Tebbe, Susan |
Gregg, Rita |
|
Weir, Nena |
Thompson, Denese |
Hamilton, Christie |
|
Williamson, Marianne |
Tomerlin, Glenda |
Hilliard, Pam |
|
Wills, Rhonda Darlene |
Tramel, Sabrina |
Hudson, Lina |
|
Wilson, Leslie Yvonne |
Uffleman, Marie |
Hunter, Rachel |
|
Woods, Janie Lynn |
Williams, Shelia |
Irwin, Wendy |
|
Winfrey, Terry |
Jackson, Angela |
|
|
FRESHMEN |
Woodley, Rhonda |
Jarrell, Jennifer |
|
Young, Julie |
Jenkins, Elizabeth |
|
|
Adams, Wanda |
Jones, Tamera |
|
|
Baird, Kathy |
1982 |
Martin, Wawieece |
|
Banda, Ann |
North, Deitra |
|
|
Boggs, Rebecca |
SOPHOMORES |
Payne, Stace |
|
Bowers, Brenda |
Seay, Glenda |
|
|
Bowers, Susan |
Bush, Tressa |
Sledge, Anna |
|
Bush, Teresa |
Carney, Sandra |
Tanner, Tonia |
|
Carney, Sandra |
Carver, Bridget |
Yate, Yvette |
|
Carver, Bridget |
Castleman, Sonia |
Thompson, Belinda |
|
Castleman, Sonia |
Corley, Donna |
Towers, Elizabeth |
|
Collinsworth, Rhonda |
Evans, Melinda |
Walker, Chryl |
|
Crowe, Linda |
Fields, Bonnye |
Walker, Cynthia |
|
Cunningham, Jennifer |
Fields, Donnye |
White, Sandra |
|
Curry, Yvette |
Fletcher, Carol |
Williams, Gina |
|
Daniels, Shannon |
Gentry, Melva |
|
|
Dedman, Sharry |
Guthrie, Dawn |
1983 |
|
Drake, Gail |
Hackett, Martha |
|
|
Dunn, Nancy |
Hinkle, Cynthia |
GRADUATES |
|
Dyer, Dara |
Johnson, Lisa |
|
|
Dyer, Karen |
Jordan, Veneda |
Armstead, Ellen Anola Johnson |
|
Evans, Malinda |
Killian, Tracy |
Beckwith, Laura Lee |
|
Flippim, Denise |
Knight, Vickie |
Boggus, Shari Lynn |
|
Fletcher, Carol |
Mallicoat, Debbie |
Bolton, Anna Malissa |
|
Frazier, Donna |
McMillen, Tracy |
Carman, Jennifer G. |
|
Garibaldi, Grace |
McPeak, Beverly |
Carver, Bridget |
|
Garland, Shelby |
Mendenhall, Vicki |
Dansby, Sharon |
|
Gentry, Melva |
Morgan, Ann |
Ford, Tracy Lane |
|
Gividen, Gina |
Nance, Montre |
Fuqua, Jennifer |
|
Guthrie, Dawn |
Oliphant, Joanna |
Hamilton, Christine Elizabeth |
|
Hackut, Martha |
Randolph, Sandra |
Hodge, Deborah |
|
Harris, Angela |
Rawlings, Anita |
Hunter, Rachel |
|
Hinckle, Cindy |
Ridner, Cynthia |
Irwin, Wendy Renee |
|
Johnson, Cynthia |
Scruggs, Moreen |
Lane, Lisa Gay |
|
Johnson, Lisa |
Simmons, Penny |
Jackson, Angela Denise |
|
Jordan, Veneda |
Smith, Sandra |
Jarrell, Jennifer Lane |
|
Josey, Linda |
Staley, Regina |
Jones, Tamera |
|
Kauffman, Sharri |
Stephens, Amy |
Lancaster, Harriet M. |
|
Killian, Tracy |
Summers, Yvonne |
Lane, Lisa Gay |
|
Kinnard, Mary |
Sutton, Laurie |
Miller, Sue |
|
Moore, Christy LeAnne |
Hickman, Shirley Lee |
Brockett, Penny |
|
Payne, Stacey Kathleen |
Johnson, Debra Lynn |
Buehler, Paula |
|
Pierce, Rita |
Lancaster, Harriet Meadors |
Daniel, Dana |
|
Simmons, Penny |
Lannom, Anna Gayle |
Dockins, Cynthia |
|
Sullivan, Linda Gaye |
Morse, Lisa Kelly |
Dodds, Rita |
|
Tanner, Tonia |
Smith, Sharon A. |
Fisher, Penny |
|
Tate, Yvette |
Stafford, Arlinar Agness |
Fletcher, Carol |
|
Thompson, Belinda |
Swindle, Meshel Darlene |
Griffith, Antonia |
|
Vanzant, Nancy |
Trevathan, Ursula E. |
Hailey, Jacqueline |
|
Walker, Cindy |
Trisdale, Vicki Ann |
Hamilton, Sandra |
|
Walker, Cheryl Lynn |
Warren, Michelle Cooksey |
Lee, Nickie |
|
White, Sandra |
Lindsey, Cynthia |
|
|
SENIORS |
Malone, Anita |
|
|
JUNIORS |
Matthys, Linda |
|
|
Armstead, Nola |
Simpson, Tracy |
|
|
Aaron, Shelia |
Barrett, Geneva |
Taylor, Kim |
|
Bone, Janet |
Beckwith, Laura |
Walker, Kimberly |
|
Bradshaw, Lori |
Bolton, Mallissa |
Woodard, Linda |
|
Brummet, Karen |
Carman, Jennifer |
|
|
Bumbalough, Lenita |
Daniels, Susan |
FRESHMEN |
|
Busby, Kathy |
Eisenbraun, Sherry |
|
|
Carney, Lisa |
Fields, Bonnye |
Annable, Jill |
|
Cartmell, Maria |
Gannon, Mary Ann |
Brandon, Beverly |
|
Cetas, Lisa |
Gentry, Melva |
Corby, Kimberly |
|
Clemmons, Tracey |
Hunter, Rachel |
Crandeb, Melony |
|
Coles, Nancy |
Jackson, Angie |
Crook, Barbara |
|
Culver, Belinda |
McCurdy, Keith |
Davis, Karen |
|
Cunningham, Barbara |
Oldham, Melody |
Dedrick, Cheryl |
|
Dohm, Susan |
Oliphant, Joanna |
Dickens, Lucie |
|
Dunkin, Dawn |
Pellegrin, Jean |
Evins, Betsy |
|
Finch, Tami |
Sanders, Kay |
Finley, Misty |
|
Gardner, Sharon |
Sewell, Elizabeth |
Foster, Melissa |
|
Gilliam, Darla |
Simmons, Penny |
Graves, Debbie |
|
Greer, Donzala |
Tomkins, Dick |
Grimes, Laura |
|
Gregory, Teena |
Walker, Cheryl |
Hailey, Donna |
|
Gunter, Lynell |
Wix, Linda |
Hancock, Fredda |
|
Hunter, Beverly |
Harris, Susan |
|
|
Jewell, Ranie |
JUNIORS |
Henley, Marcia |
|
Knowles, Candy |
Jarrad, Reagan |
|
|
Lester, Susan |
Bell, Bobbie |
Jennings, Melissa |
|
Massey, Annabelle |
Blackburn, Winnie |
Jewell, Tammy |
|
Nelson, Karla |
Bradshaw, Lori |
Johnson, Lisa (Mt.Juliet) |
|
Otto, Teresa |
Cetas, Lisa |
Johnson, Lisa (Ashland City) |
|
Perkins, Judy |
Chapman, Lynn |
King, Jill |
|
Price, Sharon |
Clemons, Tracey |
Lawrence, Lisa |
|
Reed, Angie |
Daniel, Terry |
Lawson, Teresa |
|
Reed, Shelly |
Gregory, Kim |
Lewis, Lemonica |
|
Reed, Vickie |
Gregory, Teena |
Littrell, Ramona |
|
Reynolds, Angela |
Haden, Robin |
Massey, Genia |
|
Reynolds, Tammy |
Joyner, Sherri |
Matlock, Yvonne |
|
Saade, Suraya |
Jewell, Ranie |
Morgan stern, Sali |
|
Seay, Denise |
Leeman, Vickie |
Netherton, Rajeana |
|
Shannon, Sherlvon |
Odum, Alison |
Odum, Trina |
|
Shrum, Karen |
Perce, Rita |
Petrone, Nina |
|
Smith, Theda |
Reed, Angela |
Reynolds, Letitia |
|
Spivey, Patricia |
Reed, Shelly |
Smith, Angela |
|
Strunk, Linda |
Rourke, Karyl |
Stone, Sue |
|
Taylor, Lisa |
Smith, Theda |
Taylor, Judy |
|
Thomas, Lisa |
Stokes, Rosa |
Thomas, Jeanie |
|
Thompson, Julie |
Williamson, Gina |
Tranmmell, Christy |
|
Wilkerson, Sandra |
Woodruff, Karen |
Trejos, Grace |
|
Young, Julia |
Vanhook, Vanessa |
|
|
1985 |
Warren, Peggy |
|
|
SOPHOMORES. |
Webb, Michelle |
|
|
FOUR YEAR GRADUATES |
Whit,., Melba |
|
|
Alsup, Renee |
Wilkerson, Wanda |
|
|
Barton, Brenda C. |
Barnes, Jiecky |
Winfree, Kimberly Youni; NcKii |
1986
SENIORS
Bradshaw, Lori Cetas, Lisa Daniel, Terri Fields, Bonnye Fields, Donnye Gentry, Melva Gregory, Kimberly Gregory, Teena McCurdy, Keith Leeman, Vikki Jewell, Ranie Neal, Nicky Odom, Alison Pierce, Rita Reed, Angie Reed, Shelly Reese, Ann Sanders, Kay Sewell, Elizabeth Simmons, Penny Walker, Melissa
JUNIORS
Alsup, Renee Brockett, Penny Buehler, Paula Fulleton, Robbyn Griffith, Toni Haden, Robin Hailey, Jacqueline Lee, Nicky Malone, Anita Noel, Missy Pomeroy, Julie Shumate, Stephanie Smith, Patti Stokes, Rosa Walker, Kim Walker, Tina Weston, Teresa
SOPHOMORES
Caudill, Debbie Corby, Kim Crouch, Jill Davis, Teresa Dedrick, Cheryl Dickens, Lucie Dunavant, Doris Evins, Betsy Fagan, Barbara Foster, Melissa Graves, Debbie Hamlet, Rita Jefferson, Alexa Jewell, Tammy Johnson, Lisa Keith, Lisa King, Jill Lawson, Teresa Lawrence, Lisa Lewis, LeMonica
Littrell, Ramona Matlock, Yvonne Massey, Gina Minchey, Sonya Morgenstern, Sali Petrone, Nena Robinson, Claudia Tipton, Mary Walker, Beth Winfree, Kimberly
FRESHMEN
Barkalow, Camille Basham, Renee Brown, Patti Browning, Misty Bumbalough, Jennifer Burks, Ruthie Burton, Kimberly Christian, Angela Corley, Kim Craig, Dana Criscoe, Beth Dawson, Melissa Dowda, Wendy Dyer, Laura Goad, Michelle Goolsby, Deanie Graham, Michelle Graves, Barbara Gumz, Lola Hackett, Kim Hendricks, Laura Henry, Kayla Hunter, Malinda James, Sammie Jones, Dawn Johnson, Bonnie Lamers, Janet Linville, Jenier Luna, Angie McCall, Sabrina McCall, Sandra McCoin, Kathleen Midgett, Lisa Offutt, Jo Susan Oldham, Karen Raleigh, Kathy Robinson, Tracy Silcox, Nikita Smith, Connie Smith, Kelly Smith, Sharon Solomon, Pam Stark, Lisa Strassner, Krista Sullivan, Tammy Walker, Wanda Wilkie, Nancy Williams, Linda Woodard, Amanda Woods, Sheryl Young, Teresa
1987 SENIORS
Alligood, Bertie Wilson
brown, Uarroll Davis,Teresa Darrell, Cynthia Gividen, Gena Lynn Hamilton, Christie Holt, Carol Judd, Melissa Kohoyashi, Yoshike Lee, Nickie Lowe, Sherry Lee Malone, Anita Faye Noel, Melissa C. Oliver, Carroll Onaise, Lisa Phillips, Donna Pomeroy, Julie Pond, Amber L. Prockett, Penny Shumate, Stephanie Simmons, Penny Elizabeth Stokes, Rosa Malone Weston, Teresa Carol
JUNIORS
Brandon, Beverly Basham, Renee Clarkin, Laurene Coats, Anita Gail Cobb, Michelle LeeAnn Corley, Kimberly Couch, Jill Annable Dedrick, Cheryl Dickens, Kathy Lucille Evins, Betsy Rhea Flannery, Julie L. Flippin, Maria Feras, Billie Flowers, Diana L. Foster, Melissa Denise Graves, Debbie Hamlet, Rita Holder, Wanda Howell s, Margaret Ann Jefferson, Alexa F. Anderson Jennings, Jewell Bennett Keith, Lisa Carol King, Kathryn Jill Lee, Lori Lynn Lewis, Lamonica Lindsay, Cynthia Ann Littrell, Ramona Sue Massey, Genia Ann Matlock, Yvonne Milligan, Beverly Pelfrey, Vicki Patrone, Nina Marie Robinson, Claudia Smith, Angela Jane Thomas, Rebecca Jean Tipton, Mary Lawson, Teresa
SOPHOMORES
Brown, Melinda Beth Corley, Kimberly Craig, Dana Christian, Angela Dawson, Melissa Goolsby, Diana Lynn Henry, Kayla Denise
High, Gail Hunter, Melinda Isabell, Donna Tallon Lamers, Janet Linville, Jennifer Carol Oldham, Lucy Karen Potts, Sharon Simms, Stephanie Smith, Connie Smith, Kelly Smith, Sharon Solomon, Pamela Stark, Lisa Ree Strassner, Krista Sullivan, Tammy Walker, Wanda Lynn Wilkie, Nancy Rebecca Williams, Linda Kay Woodard, Mildred Young, Teresa
FRESHMEN
Adcock, Jill
Anderson, Stephanie
Appling, Amy
Austin, Jan
Berry, Kim
Biggs, Linda
Booker, Rosa
Boyer, Lou Ann
Burton, Beverly
Carlson, Lori
Carter, Karen
Cartwright, Sharon
Clairidy, Laura
Cunningham, Donna
Davis, Tabatha K.
Delozier, Kimberly Kay
Dixon, Patricia
Durham, Paula D.
Farris, Caroline Lee
Gale, Cynthia Ann
Galloway, Lori Ann
Garrison, DeShae Laine
Goad, Sharon Dennise
Gooch, Pamela Ann
Hale, Susan Carole Hale, Lori Ann Hall, Jacque Michelle Halliburton, Lisa Renee Hawkins, Doris Louise Hendricks, Laura Ann Henry, Cynthia Carr Hill, Ella Marie Hix.Ti fume Hill Hix, Karen Danette Holmes, Angela Gail Hooten, Amanda Dell Horton, Sheri Hudson, Nina Luu Jackson, Alice F. Jackson, Laura Leigh Jamison, Stacy Jeanne Janssen, Deborah M. Jones, Cynthia Sue Kippes, Rhonda Michelle Kjellgren, Denise Marie Kruarattanakul, Sutthinee LaChapelle, Kathleen E. Lancaster, Kathleen E.
Linville, Sharon Joy Linville, Melony Michelle Lynch, Janice Michelle Lynch, Kimberly Madden, Jennifer Lynn Maggart, Cynthia Lee Markham, Alice Gaylene McCoin, Kathleen McGinness, Megan Alicia Morgan, Tara Leigh Moss, Penny Annette Officer, Tracy Darlene Oldham, Mary Elizabeth Oldham, Allene Osborne, Ellen Denise Patterson, Denise C. Patterson, Tammy Renee Phillips, Jamie O'Shea Poynter, Leslie Diane Poteete, Melissa Reasonover, Lori Adell Redmond, Deborah Charolett Rigney, Robin Elisa Shepard, Mary Denise Simpson, Rebecca Gwynne Spidle, Stacey Kay Sullivan, Leslie Kay Thurman, Elizabeth Lee Timbs, Kelly Marie Tummins, Amy Lynn Vianne, Sarrina Vivian Washburn, Stacy Donzella Wharton, Paquella Noree Wheeler, Stephanie Annette
1988
SENIORS
Basham, Renee Brandon, Beverly Crockett, Penny Brown, Carroll Brown, Patti Brown, Tonya Cassetty, Sherri Coats, Anita Gail Corby, Kimberly Davis, Teresa Dedrick, Cheryl Demond, Betty Dyer, Kristin Fears, Leigh Foster, Melissa D. Graves, Debbie Gregory, Joy Hallums, Barbara Hamlet, Rita Holder, Maria Flippin Holder, Wanda Jefferson, Alexa Jennings, Betsy Keith, Li a King, Jill Knowlcs, Linda Lawson, Teresa Lee, I/ori Lee, Nick i<-
I>-wn, Lcrn'.mc.-i MtiHHt-y, Genia
Matlock, Yvonne Mengelberg De Anna Miley, Sheila Milligan, Beverly Parrish, Catherine Pelfrey, Vicki Petrone, Nena Petty, Lucy Pomeroy, Julia Ramage, Gina Robinson, Claudia Rogers, Carol Simmons, Penny Smith, Angela Smith, Connie Smith, Patti Stokes, Rosa Sutton, Nina Tipton, Mary Weston, Teresa
JUNIORS
Baker, Tammy Bowman, Trina Christian, Angela Corley, Kim Cothron, Jennifer Craig, Dana Cranfield, Patti Dawson, Melissa Goolsby, Deanie Gryszko, Debbie High,Gail Judd, Melissa Kruarattanakul, Sutthinee Lamers, Janet Linville, Sharon Oldham, Karen Smith, Carolyn Smith, Sharon Solomon, Pam Stark, Lisa Sullivan, Tammy Thomas, Jeanie Thomas, Tammara Thompson, Mary Gwyn Walker, Beth Walker, Wanda Wilkie, Nancy Woodard, Amanda Young, Teresa
SOPHOMORES
Anderson, Stephanie Austin, Jan Berry, Kim Booker, Rosa Boyer, Lou Ann Burton, Beverly Carter, Knren Cartwright, Shannon Clariday, Laurn Clemmons, Kelly Dixon, Patti Galloway, Lori Gregory, Jamie Hale, Lisa l [alliburton, I A
m
Hatcher, Patricia
Hendricks, Laura
Henry, Cynthia
Hill, Ella
Hittle, Melissa
Holmes, Angela
Hudson, Nina
Isbell, Donna
Janssen, Debbie
Jones, Cindy
Kjellgren, Denise
Lancaster, Kathy
Linville, Melony
Lowery, Wendy
Lynch, Kim
Lynch, Michelle McCoin, Kathleen Maggart, Cindy McGinness, Megan Moss, Penny Oldham, Lexene Oldham, Mary Beth Osborne, Denise Patterson, Tammy Reasonover, Lori Rigney, Robin Shepard, Denise Simpson, Becca Spidle, Stacey Sullivan, Leslie Thurman, Liz Vianne, Sarrina Winningham, Donna
FRESHMEN
Adcock, Jill Bain, Lisa Bennett, Willa Blades, Beth Bradley, Nancy Brawner, Dawn Brewington, Denise Buster, Rachell Collier, Allyson Cook, Lourae Cowan, Tracy Criscillis, Shirley Davis, Lynn Davis, Tabatha Decker, Dee Dee Crawford, Donny Drake, Emma El am, Tammy Eldridge, Cheryl Embury, Lisa Fussell, Nell Gabriel, Karen Gammons, Patricia Garrett, Monica Gibson, Linda Gibbs, Sandy Grandstaff, Beverly Grandstaff, Lisa Gregory, Tammy Grinter, Rhonda Gross, Bobbie
Haines, Libby Hale, Judy Haney, Theresa Hulan, Nina Hunt, Lara Jarrett, Karen Jennings, LaDona LaChapelle, Kathleen Law, Choi Lawing, Brenda Lee, Mimi Manning, Shelonda Martinez, Veronica McFadden, Carolyn McPeak, Julie Beth Payne, Wendy Prichard, Stephanie Purvis, Leslie Ray, Melissa Reece, Leslie Rhodes, Audrey Sadler, Joyce Sadler, Melanie
Sells, Annette
Skelton, Kelly
Smith, Elizabeth
Snipes, Kellye
Spain, Christy
Steele, Tara
Sullins, Patricia
Swallows, Jennifer
Taylor, Daphne
Taylor, Michelle
Thomas, Susan
Thompson, Patricia
Tidrow, Susan
Tomlinson, Traci
Turner, Ivyia
Vermilye, Kathy
Webster, Stephanie
Williams, Amy
Williams, Fawn
Williams, Rose
Woodard, Carolyn A.
1 989
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Armstead, Nola Baker, Carrie Beckwith, Laura Blackburn, Lorie Burkitt, Cindy Cornelius, Hilke Dodd, Debra Hassell, Gailon Herron, Joy Kemp, Ellen Lott, Mary Maxwell, Martha Patton, Deborah Schnmidt, Susan Stafford, Arlinar Sowell, June Tramel, Shirley Underhill, Sandra Vance, Teresa Wright, Cari
WORKING ADULT DEGREE PROGRAM
Coley, Bobbie Petersen, Kathryn H.
SENIORS
Adams, Wanda
Baines, Lisa
Basham, Renee
Batsel, June
Bean, Cindy
Bowman, Trina
Christian, Angela
Corby, Kim
Cothron, Jennifer
Craig, Dana
Cranfield, Patti
Dawson, Melissa
Goolsby, Deanie
Gregory, Joy
Gryszko, Debbie
Hallums, Barbara
High, Gail
Holder, Wanda
Judd, Melissa
Kemp, Mary
King, Jill
Kruarattanakul, Sutthinee
Lamers, Janet
Lee, Lori
Lewis, LeMonica
Linville, Sharon
Mengelberg, DeAnna
Nelson, Karla
Oldham, Karen
Pilkinton, Carol
Rich, Susan
Smith, Carolyn
Smith, Connie
Smith, Joyce
Smith, Sharon
Solomon, Pam
Sullivan, Tammy
Walker, Wanda
Wilkie, Nancy
Woods, Antonia G.
Woodard, Amanda
JUNIORS
Austin, Jan Berry, Kim
Blankenship, Candace Burton, Beverly Carter, Karen Clemmons, Kelly Clairday, Laura Davenport, Angie Dixon, Patti e Galloway, Lorie Hale, Lisa Halliburton, Lisa Hatcher, Pat Hendricks, Laura Henry, Cynthia Hudson, Nina
w
Isbell, Donna Kippes, Rhonda Kornmeyer, Gayle Lancaster, Kathy Linville, Melony Lynch, Kim Mclnturf, Melissa Moss, Penny Oldham, Mary Beth Osborne, Denise Patterson, Tammy Reasonover, Lori Rigney, Robin SchoefFel, Joanne Singleton, Cynthia Smith, Ruby Taylor, Kathy Vianne, Sarrina Wilson, Lacritia Winningham, Donna
SOPHOMORES
Adcock, Jill Bennett, Amy Booker, Rosa Bradley, Nancy Brawner, Dawn Cantrell, Kay Collier, Allyson Cook, Lou Rae Davis, Tabatha Decker, Dee Dee Dyer, Kristin Eldridge, Cheryl Embury, Lisa Gibbs, Sandy Gibson, Linda Grandstaff, Lisa Gregory, Tammy Gross, Bobbie Haines, Libby Hulan, Nina Hunt, Laura Jarret, Karen Kemp, Tammy E. Knight, Vickie Lineberger, Luci Manning, Shelonda Martinez, Veronica McCall, Mahalia McDowell, Donna McPeak, Julie Moore, Pam Nave, Joey Payne, Wendy Purvis, Leslie Reece, Leslie Simmons, Penny Skelton, Kelly Snipes, Kellye O'Connell, Christy S. Thomas, Susan Thurman, Liz Tidrow, Susan Webeter, Stephanie Wright, Wendy
FRESHMEN
Baines, Kera Baker, Kim Barbee, Adrema Bass, Audrey Bennett, Heidi Benton, Linda Borders, Mira Jane Brizandine, Angela Brown, Michelle Cassetty, Miranda Cate, Rhonda Cook, Denise Copeland, Tammy Cotton, Lacresha Dawson, Kathryn Denney, Melissa Drake, Emma Eades, Wendy Elmore, Karen Farmer, Tanya Fisher, Tracy Ford, Debbie Ford, Kim Fortmeyer, Delene Garcia, Christy Gardner, Debbie Geer, Tina Gentry, Shelia Gibbs, Ginger Gibbs, Mary Ann Glasscock, Melissa Goad, Melina Graham, Patricia Grandstaff, Cindy Groce, Lisa Guffey, Jana Hale, Nicole Hayes, Tammy Hayes, Vickey Hong, Jennifer Jones, Vickie Kimbrough, Susan King, Becky Kippes, Ashley LaRowe, Jamie LaViers, Maria Lee, Mimi Lee, Sonya Lester, Myra Massey, Angela Mathison, Sherry McDonald, Terry McGee, Susan McLean, Margaret Moore, Kim Nelson, Kerry Osborne, Catherine Pelletier, Norma Poston, Angela Ray, Teresa Redmon, Dawn Reece, Tammy Rhodes, Audrey Richnrdson, Sandie Roberts, Lis;i Roddy, Penny I landers, Shelia
Sanford, Natalie Shepherd, Tanna Smart, Jean Marie Smith, Kim Sneed, Christina Stark, Jennie Sivilay, Bounyong Thomas, Holly Thompson, Shaton Vanatta, Lisa Vanatta, Lori Walker, Tonya Wallace, Jana Whiteside, Melinda Whitley, Teresa Williams, Angela Wilkerson, Ericka Yarbrough, Melinda
1990
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Beard, Tara Blackburn, Lorie Burkett, Candy Hassel, Gail Hutto, Lou Ann Morgan, Karen Patton, Deborah Smith, Claudia Wren, Suzanne
WORKING ADULT DEGREE
Batsel, June
SENIORS
Austin, Jan Batsel, June Berry, Kim
Blankenship, Candance Booker, Rosa Boyd, Laura Carter, Karen Christian, Angela Clemmons, Kelly Davenport, Mary Dawson, Melissa Dixon, Patti Dyer, Kristin Farley, Gale Furr, Linda Goolsby, Diana Gregory, Jamie Hale, Lisa Halliburton, Lisa Hallums, Barbara Hardge, Martha Hatcher, Pat Hendricks, Laura Henry, Cynthia High, Gail Isbell, Donna Jancareic, Ann Kitchens, Patricia Kornmeyer, (Jnyle Ix-wis, i/emonicn
B2
Osborne, Denise Purvis, Leslie Reasonover, Lori Rigney, Robin Ritter, Patricia A. Robinson, Rhonda Singleton, Cynthia Smith, Carolyn Smith, Nancy Taylor, Kathy Thompson, Mary Gwyn Walker, Wanda Whited, Kathy Willis, Cynthia Wilson, Lacritia Winningham, Donna
JUNIORS
Adcock, Jill Bradley, Nancy Cartwright, Shannon Claud, Tonya Coke, Kay Cook, Lourae Davis, Tabitha Decker, Dee Dee El kin, Julikarel Embury, Lisa Gaboury, Melinda Gibbs, Sandy Gibson, Linda Lou Gregory, Tammy Haines, Libby Home, Susanne Hulan, Nina Hunt, Lara Jackson, Melanie McCall, Janice Manning, Shelonda Martinez, Verinica Moore, Denise Moore, Pam Moss, Sherri Payne, Wendy Reece, Leslie Skelton, Kelly Snipes, Kelly Swallows, Jennifer Sweeton, Michelle Taylor, Michelle Thomas, Susan Webster, Stephanie Wright, Wendy
SOPHOMORES
Atchley, Nancy Barbee, Adrema Bass, Audrey Benton, Linda Borders, MiraJane Carroll, Kellie Davidson, Mary Davis, Karen Dawson, Kathryn Denney, Melissa Eades, Wendy R. Elmore, Karen Farmer, Tanya Fisher, Tracy
Ford, Debbie Ford, Kimberly Fortmeyer, Delene Gardner, Deborah Graham, Patricia Granstaff, Cynthia Groce, Lisa Guffey, Jannie Harris, Teresa Hong, Jennifer Hsiu-Yi Kemp, Tammy King, Becky Kippes, Ashley Lee, Mimi Yun-Chi Lee, Sonya Hsiang-Chi Massey, Angelia McDonald, Terry McLean, Maggi Moore, Kim Nelson, Kelly L. Norton, Linda Osborne, Katherine Owens, Sonia G. Potts, Shannon Ray, Teresa Reece, Tammy Richardson, Sandie Roberts, Lisa Roberts, Wanda Schoeffel, Joanne Smart, Jean Marie Thomas, Holly Thompson, Shaton Vanatta, Lori Walker, Tonya Wallace, Jana White field, Mary Ann Whiteside, Melinda Whitley, Teresa Williams, Angela Wynne, Linda Yarborough, Melinda
FRESHMEN
Adcox, Christy Y. Adkins, Misty Baker, Tracy Barnes, Julie Barrickman, Wendy Beavers, Kim Bennett, Vicki Birmingham, Terri Bowman, Donna Brummett, Sharon Byrd, Amy Candela, Lisa Carrington, Ginger Cawthon, Julia Corley, Wendy Cox, Courtney Cox, Teresa Dalton, Amanda Dalton, Christi Davis, Angela Davis, Jennifer Davis, Marlena Dickens, Stacy Dowlen, Teresa Dye, Amy E.
Eakes, Kim Fakes, Regina Fears, Christina Fields, Christy Gayhart, Jennifer Granstaff, Melissa Gregory, Angela Gregory, Anne Gregory, Jennifer Gregory, Robin Gregory, Tyria Hall, Tina Hankins, Brigitte Harper, Beth Ann Harper, Jill Harris, Jackie Haynes, Michelle Hice, Renee Howell, Heather Jennette, Laurel Johnson, Kristy Kelly, Amy Faith Kirby, Leigh Ann Knowles, Candace Laine, Kellie Leonard, Angie Link, Arkeisha Litchford, Ann Martin, Carol Martin, Cyndi Martin, Tanya Massey, Tracy McGowan, Tonya Meyer, Trina Mimms, Suzette Murray, Debbie Myers, Leslie Norton, Angela Oldham, Debra Oldham, Toni O'Neal, Bethany Palk, Kathy Petzoldt, Daine Porter, Tammy Purnell, Lynn Reams, Mitzi Revercomb, Nicole Reynolds, Stacey Richardson, Christie Roe, Margaret Rohtert, Bev Scott, Emir Spivey, Chrystal Swafford, Brigitte Swafford, Kristi Tidwell, Dawn Troutt, Amy VanMaldegem, Hendril Vastine, Jenny Walls, Linda D. Wender, Nell Whitman, Bea Wilkerson, Kim Williams, Lynn Winningham, Diane Wrather, Melissa Wright, Kim Wright, Kristie Young, Nikki
1991
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Beard, Tara L. Bonacci, Debra Gilmore, Connie Hilber, Janna Johnson, Debra Partlow, Mary Llew Pitt, Jacqueline Wren, Suzanne P. Wright, Ramona
SENIORS
Adcox, Jill Baines, Martha Blankenship, Candy Bradley, Nancy Cartwright, Shannon Coke, Kay Cook, Lourae Davis, Tabitha K. Decker, Dee Dee Drake, Emma Duncan, Liz Embury, Lisa Enzfelder, Darlene Eubanks, Lisa Fakes, Regina Fields, Christy Gallant, Pauline Gibbs, Sandy Gibson, Linda Lou Gregory, Robin Gregory, Tammy Haines, Libby Hickman. Rosa High, Gail Homes, Susanne Hulan, Nina Hunt, Lara Kornmeyer, Gayle Lee, Mimi Lineberger, Luci Long, Deborah Luppe, Maureen Lynch, Kimberly Manning, Shelonda Martinez, Veronica McCall, Mahalia McCain, Kathleen Moore, Pam Moss, Sherri Norton, Sherrie O'Brien, Michelle Osborn, Denise Owen, Patricia Payne, Wendy Potts, Sharon Reece, Leslie Reeder, Edwina Sawyer, Lela SchoefTel, Joanne Skelton, Kelly Sloane, Tracy Snipes, Kellye B iroeton, Michelle
Thomas, Susan Towns, Dawn West, Tammy Wilson, Lacritia
JUNIORS
Barbee, Adrema Benton, Linda Best, Cynthia Borders, Mira June Brown, Cheryl Costley, Vicki Cotton, Lachresha Dalton, Amanda Davidson, Mary Davis, Terri Denney, Melissa Douthit, Barbara Durham, Donna Elkin, Juli Karel Elmore, Karen Fisher, Tracy Ford, Debbie Gardner, Deborah Gerber, Lisa Graham, Patricia Grandstaff, Cynthia Groce, Lisa Gross, Cindy GufTey, Jannie Harris, Teresa Hollis, Kellie Hong, Jennifer Jarboe, Emmala King, Becky Kippes, Ashley Lee, Sonya Massey, Angelica McCall, Sandra McDonald, Terry McKee, Elizabeth Midgett, Tina Moore, Kim Neal, Delene Nelson, Jerry Rawlings, Lynna Reece, Tammy Roberts, Lisa Smart, Jean Marie Thomas, Holly Thompson, Shaton Walker, Tonya Wallace, Jana Whitley, Teresa Wilder, Karen Williams, Angela Wilson, Laura Yarbrough, Melinda
SOPHOMORES
Adcox, Christy Ballard, Judith Barnes, Julie Barrukmnn, Wendy
Bow man, I )onna
BrummeU, Sharon Byrd, Amy Candella, Li ie
EI
Carrigan, Ginger Cawthon, Julia Clayton, Tammy Cox, Courtney Crutcher, Ray Lynn Davis, Angela Davis, Marlena Dickson, Stacy Dyer, Trina Fears, Christina Goolsby, Brenda Grandstaff, Melissa Green, Christa Green, Sherrill Hardin, Tina Hare, Connie Harper, Beth Anne Harper, Jill Harris, Jackie Homewood, Margaret F. Howell, Heather Laine, Kellie Litchford, Ann Locke, Cynthia Marint, Cyndi Massey, Tracy McGowan, Tonyann Meyer, Trina Mimms, Suzette Norton, Angela Norton, Linda C. O'Neil, Bethany Palk, Kathy Peak, Kim Petzoldt, Diane Proffitt, Mika Pumell, Lynn Reams, Mitzi Reese, Cynthia Richardson, Christie Roberts, Bev Shoulders, Beverly Simpson, Dana Spivey, Chystal Vastine, Jenny Walls, Jenny Wilkerson, Wanda Winningham, Diana Woodard, Tracey Wright, Audrey Wright, Kristie Young, Nikki
FRESHMEN
Adcock, Mary Carol Aldridge, Donnn Alvis, Regina Austin, Crystal BaCOrl, Shannon
Baltzy, Jeanette
lien ..hi ( 'indy
Bilbrey, Joyce Bixby, Meh
Hi anchaud, .Janice L. liuhler, Sherry
Burns, Crystal Burnside, Amanda
|
Butler, Tammy |
Bonacci, Debra |
Thomas, Rebecca |
|
Carmen, Paula |
Cooper, Patricia |
Thompson, Shaton L. |
|
Carter, Jessica |
Corey, Traci |
Wallace, Jana |
|
Cluck, Kimberly |
McGee, Shannon |
Webb, Tammy |
|
Coggins, Margaret B. |
Morgan, Karen |
Whiteside, Melinda |
|
Copeland, Marsha |
Shumate, Stephanie |
Wilder, Karen |
|
Crews, Gai |
Weaver, Deborah |
Williams, Angela |
|
Easterly, Kim |
White, Eugenia Massey |
Woodard, Traacy |
|
Edwards, Karen |
Wynne, Linda |
|
|
Gray, Charity |
SENIORS |
Yarborough, Melinda |
|
Gray, Vicko |
||
|
Gernt, Rebecca |
Baines, Martha |
JUNIORS |
|
Gilley, Julia |
Benton, Linda |
|
|
Givens, Jennifer |
Best,Cynthia |
Ballard, Judith Ann |
|
Hailey, Stephanie |
Bradley, Nancy |
Barbee, Adrema |
|
Hall, Tina D. |
Cassetty, Melissa |
Barnes, Julie A. |
|
Hamilton, Kellie |
Costly, Vicki |
Barrickman, Wendy A. |
|
Hankins, Briatte |
Cotton, Lacresha |
Bowman, Donna Jean |
|
Hannon, Laura |
Dalton, Amanda |
Brown, Charlotte |
|
Harville, Sandra |
Davidson, Mary |
Brown, Michelle |
|
Haskin, Cindi |
Davis, Tabitha |
Byrum, Amy |
|
Hilton, Carla |
Davis, Terri |
Candela, Lisa D. |
|
Hoffman, Shannon |
Downs, Denise |
Carrigan, Ginger |
|
Holden, Kristen |
Durham, Donna |
Cawthon, Julia A. |
|
Hunt, Jeri |
Eubanks, Lisa |
Clayton, Tammy |
|
Irwin, Melanie |
Fakes, Regina |
Cox, Courtney |
|
Johnson, Misty |
Fields, Christy |
Davis, Angela |
|
Johnson, Teresa |
Fisher, Traacy |
Davis, Jennifer' |
|
Jones, Jennifer |
Gibbs, Sandra |
Dishman, Tammy |
|
Kennedy, Rebecca |
Graham, Patricia |
Dye, Amy |
|
Knight, Melanie |
GranstafT, Cynthia |
Dyer, Trina |
|
Landrom, Laurel |
Gregory, Robin |
Elrod, Dona |
|
Lanius, Mia L. |
Groce, Lisa |
Fears, Christina |
|
Link, Alycya |
Guffey, Jannie |
Frizzell, Barbara |
|
Martin, Tishara |
Harris, Teresa |
Gerber, Lisa |
|
McCarver, Sharisse |
Hickman, Rosa |
Granstaff, Melissa |
|
McCauthern, Letetia |
Hill, Michele |
Green, Christa |
|
McClellan, Dona |
Hulan, Nina |
Gregg, Von da |
|
McCormack, Sandy |
Hunt, Lara |
Hammock, Lori |
|
Meadows, Sherry |
Keen, Debbie |
Hannon, Laura |
|
Nixon, Phyllis |
King, Becky |
Hardin, Pamela |
|
Nokes, Kelly |
Kippes, Ashley |
Hardin, Tina |
|
Odom, Rebecca |
Lamberson, Claudia |
Harper, Jill |
|
Peden, Stephanie |
Lee, Mimi |
Hislop, Tammy |
|
Porter, Netrean |
Lee, Sonya |
Isham, Roxanne |
|
Poston, Lisa |
Lineberger, Lucy |
Jarobe, Emmala |
|
Poulton, Tiffany |
McCall, Sandra |
Keen, Vanessa |
|
Reed, Christine |
McDonald, Jerry |
Laine, Katherine |
|
Richardson, Victoria |
McKee, Elizabeth |
Litchford, Ann |
|
Ricketts, Tammy |
McLean, Margaret |
Locke, Cynthia |
|
Shanks, Jyl |
Martin, Carol |
McFarlin, Brenda |
|
Shavers, Dreonn |
Midgett, Lisa |
McGowan, Tonyann |
|
Shute, Tammy |
Midgett, Tina |
McNutt, Linda |
|
Smith, Holly |
Mitchell, Martha |
McQuay, Emma |
|
Smith, Julia |
Moore, Kimberly |
Reynolds, Beth Ann |
|
Stribling, J.J. |
Morton, Roselle |
Martin, Cynthia |
|
Sandrick, Trice |
Neal, Delene |
Mimms, Suzette |
|
Walker, Emily Jo |
Nelson, Kerry |
Norton, Angela |
|
Welch, Brandy |
Norton, Sherrie |
Norton, Linda |
|
Wiley, Donna |
O'Brien, Michelle |
Palk, Kathryn |
|
Williams, Kimmy |
Payne, Wendy |
Petzoldt, Diane |
|
Woodard, Stacey |
Potts, Sharon |
Phillips, Anita |
|
Wotruba, Tina |
Roberts, Lisa |
Pominville, Kathi |
|
Young, Sherry |
Shoulders, Beverly |
Proffitt, Mika |
|
Smartt, Jean Marie |
Randolph, Deborah |
|
|
1992 |
Steenberrgen, Sheila |
Reams, Mitzi |
|
GRADUATE STUDENTS |
Stout, Kristi |
Reese, Cynthia |
|
Blackburn, Lorie |
Thomas, Holly |
Richardson, Christine |
ma
Rohtert, Beverly Simpson, Dana Snyder, Tarry Spivey, Chrystal Tribble, Cynthia Turk, Rebecca Underwood, Lynn Walls, Linda Winfree, Stephanie Winningham, Diane Woodmore, Beckie Wright, Audrey Young, Nikki
SOPHOMORES
Akins, Sue J. Alvis, Regina Bacon, Shannon M. Baltzly, Jeannette Bass, Audrey Beason, Cynthia Bixby, Melissa Branchaud, Janice Brown, Cheryl Butler, Tamla Carman, Paula Carter, Jessica Copeland, Marsha N. Crawford, Mary Anne Crews, Eleanor G. Davis, Tracy Dickerson, Stacy Easterly, Kimberly Edwards, Karen R. Ford, Debra Freeman, Kimberly Gardner, Deborah R. Gilley, Julia Givens, Jennifer L. Gray, Charity Gray, Vicki P. Green, Sherrill Grubb, Michele Hailey, Stephanie Hamilton, Kellie Hankins, Brigitte Hilton, Carla Holden, Paige Johnson, Misty L. Lanius, Mia McCarver, Sharissa McCormack, Sandy Marshall, Kathy Martin, Tishara Mitchell, Martha Moore, Connie Nokes, Kelly Peak, Kimberly Peden, Stephanie Phillips, Molly Poston, Lisa Poulton, Tiffany Richardson, Victoria Richardson, Tammy Scott, Gwendolyn Shanks, Jyl Shaver, Vickie
Shavers, Dreonn Shute, Tammy Smartt, Donna Smith, Holly Smith, Marjorie Sneed, Leigh Ann Stephens, Kristie Stribbling, Jennifer J. Templeton, Jennifer Trice, Sandrick Walker, Emily Walker, Helen Welch, Brandy Westmoreland, Nicole Wilson, Laura Woodard, Stacey Wotruba, Tina Young, Sherry
FRESHMEN
Abbott, Angela D. Allen, Amy Allison, Leann Anderson, Monica Anderson, Tina Aul ridge, Rachel Bargeb, LeAnne Barrett, Lesley Bass, Felicia Bass, Nicole Bates, Kaneshia Beard, Brandi Bentley, Donya Bilbrey, Gina Bilbrey, M. Joyce Binkley, Dora Bradley, Connie Brady, Sally Brannon, Tara Browning, Wendy Byrd, Stephanie Carey, Mariette Cavender, Jennifer Cavender, Natalie Clere, Maria Cook, Holly Coots, Amanda Corbitt, Barbara Cripps, Carol Crowell, Bridget Cunningham, Tiffany Davidson, Lindy Davis, Cheryl Dies, Kim Evans, Lisa A. Flohr, Christy Ford, Lisa Geo rge, Tracy Geralds, Carrie Gibson, Adrienne on, C<-na
Goad, Hobbie
Goodman, Cindy Graven*, Candy Greer, Rhonda
"iry, S. Kern- Ma' kbartii, Kirn
Hannon, Laura Harlow, Tonya Hawker, Dana Henley, April Henshaw, Kelli Hewitt, Sara Hickmac, Rosa Jackson, Jennifer Jenkins, Tami Johnson, Teresa Jones, Kristina Jones, Tamika Judkins, Kristina Keen, Christy Kenny, K. Melissa Koperski, Karla Lee, Beatrice Lester, S. Michelle Little, Crystal McClellan, Dona McDaniel, Christy Mc Kinney, Peggy McMurry, Relita Maddox, Shannon Manning, Traci Martin, Becky Martin, D. Rebecca Mathews, Brandy Morris, Rachal Mowry, Zina Myatt, Deena Neal, Karen Odom, Rebecca Parker, Bethany Parks, Madeanna Pfaff, Wendy Porter, Netrean J. Reeves, April Reynolds, Angela Rich, Angela Roberts, Ann Marie Robinson, Tawandra Rodgers, Lisa Sandusky, Jane Schiron, Denise Shannon, Daphne Smith, Carrie Smith, Kristine Smith, Lorie Smith, Shirley Smith, Tina Srivastava, Vartika Striver, Deborah Summers, Stephonia Tellefsen, Kristi Thompson, Casey Vanntta, Valerie Vantrease, Valerie Vanvalkenburg, Heather Vnughan, Erica Vaughan, Jennifer Warmnth, Leslie Warrick, Jody Whittaker, Christine Will in, Karen Wilson, Amy Winfree, Lori R.
Young, Dawn
1993
GRADUATING CLASS
Agee, Leslie Dawn Armstead, Ellen Anola Johnson Barbee, Adrema Lee Barnes, Julie Ann Barrickman, Wendy Ann Bilbrey, Gina Bowman, Donna Jean Byrum, Amy Byrd Cagle, L. Darlene Carrigan, Virginia Ann Cassetty, Melissa Denney Clayton, Tammy Hennessee Cooksey, Ruth Elizabeth Corey, Traci Dawn Cotton, Lachresha R. Davis, Angela Raechelle Davis, Jennifer Lee Davis, Karen Waters Dishman, Tammie Dawn Durham, Donna Jean Ford, Debra Renee Fulkerson, Kathryn M. Gardner, Deborah Rena Gibson, Gena Lynn Gilmore, Connie S. Groce, Lisa Danette Grubb, Michelle M. Hammock, Lorie Elaine Harper, Jill Yvette Hibler, Janna Suzanne Hislop, Tammy McKenzie Hollis, Kellie Michelle Jennings, Kendra Leanna Keen, Debbie W. Keen, Vanessa Leann Lee, Beatrice Maynard, Robin Rigney McCall, Sandra Kay McDonald, Terry Ruth McReynolds, Elizabeth Anne Meidinger, Nancy Sue Morton, Rosella Marie Gourley Moshea, Betty A. Neal, Delene D. Norton, Angela Danvelle Petzoldt, Diana Lynn Powell, Evelyn Turner Price, Brenda Rodgers Reams, Mitzi Lee Rogers, Hazel Lavonn Thompson, Shaton Tribble, Cynthia Marie Walls, Linda Dianne Weaver, Deborah Jean Webb, Rita Dean Winningham, Diane Marie Woodard, Tracey D. Woodmore, Beckie Webb Woods, Tamara L. Young, SheiTy L.
'The names on the previous list were taken from the available yearbooks from 1921-1993. If a year is omitted it is because there was not a yearbook. The names were listed as they appeared ineachyearbook.
nil m
Cumberland University, Main Building ( under construction ), 1890's.
Mrs. Winstead P. (Mary Cordon) Bone & Mrs. Samuel (Katherine) Cook taught knitting classes at Cumberland in the latter 1960's.
■IKS
1890's Group of Lebanon College For Ladies. Front row: (unknown), Cotty Rice, (unknown), Martha Martin Burke, (unknown), Alice Williamson Hooker, (unknown).
'■
111 fell
x^'-nH
■
m
m
H
;. i^. i JSft(
■
■
I ;.
'§ s...
1
:
■
■
■
■
i
a i
.
.
""
j
■.
OREGON RULE - CO.
1
U.S.A.
5
FoREGONRULECO.il U.S.A.
11
|
1 1 ■ fH |
KLtf
■
'
'
1
ft H
I ' .
- - ■ ...
;.
-
■ .
•
. •
■
■
■
- ■ .
i
«*-
-
>:•':
■ff ■
msm
•4 *■■:*
?4 *;&.-&■.-;
■ - ■ ■
i
;r:-e-
Iftw
■
■
* V'
H
^^H
:*,.->
£*
«»
Hta
|SjK
ElmE
7
ra
8
0 i
9
■
10
11
12
..
,
.
8
10
■