Notre Dame vs Clemson (11/12/1977)

Transcription

Notre Dame vs Clemson (11/12/1977)
Clemson University
TigerPrints
Football Programs
University Archives
1977
Notre Dame vs Clemson (11/12/1977)
Clemson University
Follow this and additional works at: http://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms
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Recommended Citation
University, Clemson, "Notre Dame vs Clemson (11/12/1977)" (1977). Football Programs. Book 130.
http://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms/130
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Eastern's plane allows President hrancis Willis (left) to visit
three Plant Food Division plants the same day, just as it lets
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CLEl^/ISOlSr
Official
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Design: Joseph King and Associates
Printed By: Tlie R.
Production Assistance: Beulah R. Cheney, Depailment of Public Relations
L.
Bryan Co.
For the second consecutive year, Clemson's football programs were judged among the top five in America. The
College Sports Information Directors of America appointed a committee of publications experts who rated the
Clemson programs among the top four in the country in 1975, and the 1976 programs among the top five.
Li*.
7
45
31
»
70
CONTENTS
Photo Credits: Thanks to Jim Burns, Charles Haralson, Jim Martin, Hal Smith, Vince Ducl<er, and Ben Hendricksof
Clemson's Communications Center.
Today's Features
3 Today's
Players & Coaches
Game
Clemson,
Irish
meet
for first time.
Band
5 Tiger
Today's program highlights the season's performances.
7 Bennie Cunningham Recalls
The Pittsburgh Steelers' starting tight end talks about his Tiger
days.
31
A Banner Year
And
Bill
for the
ACC?
Foster's Tigers should be
in
the thick of the league
Departments
race.
45 A Fan
Tom
13 Tiger Coaching Staff
17 Head Coach Charley Pell
19 Meet The Tigers
28 Notre Dame Players
34 Coaches' Family Profiles
36 Tiger Roster
38 Lineups/Numerical Rosters
41 Notre Dame Roster
for All
Seasons
Hunter does more than cheer
for
Clemson
University.
49 Six Inducted Into Clemson Hall of Fame
These individuals are honored during special halftime ceremonies.
69 Spotlighting the Seniors
Ken Callicutt, Ronnie Smith, and Archie Reese are featured in
their final Death Valley appearance.
70 A Lton's Share
Some comic passages about football from Mark Steadman s
50 IPTAY Officers/ Representatives
65 Tiger Cheerleaders/Alma Mater
76 Stadium Information
Basketball
book.
73 Meet the Bengal Babes
These lovely coeds assist the Tiger
75 Clemson's senior sponsors
3 Today's Game
9 Clemson University/President Edwards
1 1
Administration
13 Athletic Director
47 ACC Viewpoints
Season Begins
Tuesday. Nov. 15
staff in recruiting.
They're here to help us salute outstanding careers turned
our senior players and student managers and trainers.
in
by
vs.
Marathon
Oil
7:30 p.m.
Friday & Saturday. Nov. 25 & 26
IPTAY Invitational, 7 & 9 p.m.
In Littlejohn
Coliseum
Only U.
Now
S.
Choice Aged Western Beef
serving N. Y. Strip as well as our popular Rib-Eye Steaks
Entertainment nightly
Greenville's largest
and most complete salad bars
2711 Wade Hampton Blvd.
{V/2 miles
(yes,
beyond Liberty
Life
now
on
there are
TWO!)
Hwy
29 N.)
left,
Today s Game
Regardless
what happens
of
this
week in the season finale
Clemson Tigers authored the Cin-
afternoon and next
against arch-rival South Carolina. Charley Pell's
derella Story
When
labeled
exactly
college football for the 1977 season.
in
North Carolina settled
for
a 13-13
game of the year in the ACC,
how much respect they had for the
the
what Atlantic Coast sportswriters
Dooley and his Tar Heels showed
tie in
Bill
"
Tiger defense.
For what the Clemson Tigers have accomplished
earn Coach of the Year honors
NCAA Division
select few
as
I
in
the
coaches
ACC. And
to get strong
this
fall
Charley
Pell is
he's certainly going to be
a cinch
one
to
of the
Clemson, Irish
Meet for First Time
consideration for that national honor
well.
Today's
seniors
in
game
Death
Dame
against Notre
Valley.
will
signal the final
appearance
for
two dozen
Fourteen players will rub Howard's Rock and run down the
managers and
hill
be
on these sidelines for the last time. And if you think these student assistants are of less
importance to the entire football program at Clemson, just ask the players or the
for
the last time
in their
coaches They're
all
career. Five student
five
student trainers
will
Clemson Family.
part of the
for the final time are Thaddeus Allen, Lacy
Roy Eppes, Steve Godfrey, John Goodloe, IVlark Heniford,
Brian Kier, Archie Reese, Ronnie Smith, Trav Webb, Rick Weddington, Jimmy
Weeks, and Ken Weichel.
Senior student managers are Sam Gough, Jack Griffin, Donnie Kinard, Dennis
McElhannon, and Randy Templeton. And the senior student trainers include Bill
Blackston, Henry Judy, Hank Morrow, Paul Thacker, and David Williams.
The majority of the seniors are represented at today's game by sponsors, who are
pictured on page 75.
Clemson University would like to thank these seniors for their total contribution to
Players appearing
Brumley. Ken
Memorial Stadium
in
Callicutt,
the football program.
Bill McLellan, Head Football Coach Charley Pell, and every
Clemson Tigers would like to thank the fans for their support this
season. And although we won't know until late this afternoon, a record Death Valley
Athletic Director
member
of the
crowd could witness the Tiger-Notre
Notre Dame's Fighting
Irish
Dame
clash.
are clearly the most formidable opponent to ever invade
Death Valley, Picked by many pre-season prognosticators to claim the 1977 National
Championship, Dan Devine's Irish have 18 of 22 starters back from last season's
Gator Bowl Championship team.
And if that's not impressive enough, consider the fact that Notre Dame is ranked
among the top five in the national polls, has an offense that averages 422 yards and 33
game, and a defense that has allowed but an average of 93.5 rushing yards by
opponents and given up only one rushing TD all season.
points a
eight
Jerome Heavens is the top Irish rusher with 798 yards and four TDs on 1 76 carries.
Dave Mitchell and Vagas Ferguson have netted 253 and 222 yards, respectively.
Junior quarterback Joe Montana directs the Notre Dame "I" attack, and
he's not
if
dishing the pigskin to Heavens, Mitchell, or Ferguson, he's looking for All-America
end Ken MacAfee who has 625 yards receiving and four TDs, or split end Kris
who has 383 yards and one TD.
Defensively, the Irish are led by DE Ross Browner, LB Bob Golic, and backs Luther
Bradley and Ted Burgmeier.
Browner was last year's Outland Trophy winner as the nation's outstanding lineman. Golic leads the Insh in tackles with 111.
tight
3.
Haines,
#»#
Steve Fuller has 1,455
single-season
effort in
total
in
history.
the
in
fall,
ACC.
Mini-back Warren Ratchford s 524 yards
rushing and 35
Steve Fuller ranks
among
all-time leader
2.
is
the nation's top quarterbacks. His 3,295
only 463 stiy of passing
North Carolina with '45 yards on three catches.
been a standout
all
Bobby Gage as the
Dwight Clark was Clemson's top receiver against
season
at tackle for the
3.
Archie Reese has
Tiger defense. His 64 tackles
down lineman. Big Arch has sacked
opponent ball carriers for losses 1 4 times this fall. 4. Diminutive tailback
Warren Ratchford has 1 .226 yards rushing In this his third season, and is
rank sixth on the team and tops as a
which ranks as the fifth best
The Tiger signal-caller has a shot at winning
offensive yards this
Clemson
Player of the Year honors
1.
career offensive yards
only 54 yards shy of moving into the top
already the career leader
is
a
Clemson team
high,
In
1
career rushing leaders. Rat
kick returns with
756 yards on 35
is
returns.
and he had 65
pass receiving against UNC.
DE Mark
1
Heniford was the leading head-hunter for the Tiger defense last week with
And the linebackers played well. Bubba Brown had 1 2 tackles, Ron Smith
and Randy Scott had nine. And don't forget big Archie Reese. The Tiger tackle
5 tackles.
had 10,
had eight stops and terrorized the Tar Heel offense all day.
Clemson enters today's game 7-1-1, and the Irish stand
drubbing of Georgia Tech.
7-1, fresh off a
69-14
3
;
firsi
place
in
lashlon
'
41
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THE CLEMSON UNIVERSITY
TIGER BAND
presents
Season's Highlights
"7
III
THE TIGER BAND TIGERETTES
front row from left. Susan Sams of Charleston: Debbie Rowel! of TIGER BAND drum major is Richard Moose
Greenwood, Tigerette captain; and Paula Peeler of Shelby, N.
Back row from left. Stephanie Newberry: band commander is Tom Waldrop
f\/lcCoy of Aiken: Leslie Dunlap of Greenwood: and Mary Roberts of Greenwood. The Tigerette Hanahan.
coordinator
is
of
of
Mrs. Marti Carter,
The Clemson University Tiger band under the direction of Dr. Bruce
Cook closes the home season today with highlights of the season s
strains of this
performances.
sion unit
The band helps fire up the crowd for this afternoon s contest with
powerhouse Notre Dame with its pre-game program of 'Sock
To Em" and Tiger Rag,' Clemson's traditional fight song. The pre-game
program continues with Clemson University Chorus, under the direction
of Dr. William Campbell, singing the National Anthem to the accompaniment of the band. The chorus concludes the pre-kickoff activities with its
acapella rendition of the Clemson Alma Mater.
perennial
It
sound
John Tatgenhorst arrangement give way to the futuristic
Wars." As the band moves into a flower drill, the percusfeatured to the music of David Miller s arrangement of the
of "Star
is
popular motion picture's theme.
The Tiger Band features the Tigerette twirlers, as moves into another
Chuck Mangione tune, the jazz/rock piece, "Bellavia."
After the Hall of Fame presentations, the Tiger Band introduces the
it
Clemson's basketball pom-pom squad, to the tune of Wayne
arrangement of "Rocky.
Having completed its program of this season s highlights, the Tiger
Band exits the field to its most well know selection, "Tiger Rag. The band
IS under the field direction of drum major Richard Moose of Newberry. The
band commander is Tom Waldrop of Hanahan.
Rally Cats.
"
Scott's
"
The Tiger Band enters
gione s
"El
Gato
Triste,
the field at halftime to the tune of
"
and moves
into
a circle
drill
Chuck Man-
Next, the Latin
By Kelly Durham
Department of Public Relations
5
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^ Sports Feature
Bennie Cunningham Recalls
Few student-athletes can boast of the success that followed
Clemson's Bennie Cunningham over the past decade.
Still, the most outstanding accolade that can be thrown his way is
that he remains the polite, unassuming young man that he was on
that very first day he entered Clemson.
Bennie grew up in nearby Seneca, less than 1 miles from where
he electrified the Death Valley crowds.
His most memorable play came in a 29-28 loss to Tennessee at
Knoxville his junior year
in
1974.
Condredge Holloway, UT's artful dodger, had connected with fleet
Stanley Morgan of Easley on a controversial hidden-receiver play
that covered 65 yards and brought 66,334 Vol partisans to their feet
Neyland Stadium.
minutes later the score was tied at 7-7. Tiger quarterback
Mark Fellers lofted a pass from his own 35-yard line which Clemson's
"Young Giant engulfed with his fingers at the Vol 45.
The 6-5, 255-pound Tiger flat turned on the burners. Not only did
Bennie glide away from three UT defenders, including two of the Vol
defensive backs, but he carried a 190-pound UT safety the remaining 10 yards to paydirt.
The play covered 65 yards.
He caught another TD aerial that afternoon which was two of
seven scoring passes he nabbed that season. And that total tied
Glenn Smith '51 for most TD receptions in a single year.
in
Two
"
takes hours of dedication and hard work to compete in college
And for the most part, people will find that this hard work
and sacrifice is not always fun. Yet most things in life which are worth
achieving will require hard work, dedication, and sacrifice.
Clemson University was no exception. It took many hours of hard
work to play football for the Tigers and still maintain a successful
academic record. But can truthfully say that my years at Clemson
were certainly some of the best years of my life.
All of the coaches, my teammates, and the Clemson fans gave me
all of the moral support that
could have possibly asked for, and this
is something that can't be measured in tangibles.
could spend the
rest of my life and never repay all of those people for that support and
confidence.
One of the greatest thrills about playing football for the Tigers was
the excitement, enthusiasm, and honor of running down the hill
before a Saturday kickoff.
The bank was always lined with Clemson fans. It was like running
through a tunnel with a deafening roar that penetrated your helmet.
You finally hit the field level and ran through a tunnel of the band with
the members playing 'Tiger Rag. You were already excited, and
when you finally reached the end of the band tunnel and broke for the
sidelines, you saw an unbelievable sight. Thousands of orange-clad
Clemson fans, standing, cheering, screaming. That's something
will never forget.
Of all the games that remember from my Clemson career, our
1974 game with Tennessee was one of the most exciting. Although
we lost that particular game, we played before over 65,000 fans on a
crisp autumn afternoon and in a beautiful setting. Not only did we
play well that day, that was the last game we lost of the year on our
way to a fine 7-4 finish. We concluded the season with a 39-21
thrashing of arch-rival South Carolina which was a pleasure beyond
It
athletics.
I
I
I
"
I
I
compare.
always remember the years that spent at Clemson University.
The support of the fans and the fellowship between people, not just
as teammates but the entire student body and the entire Clemson
community as well, are the main reasons that am proud to say that
I'll
I
I
was
a Tiger.
I
V
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University Feature
The
mind
story of
of
Clemson
University
Thomas Green Clemson
of teaching, research
When
— from
to
its
and public service
the aging Mr.
its
—
in
the
a story
of
unique purpose.
has
he was mindful of a special
this institution that
would have, one he stated clearly.
economic conditions of his time, Mr. Clemson saw the
college he dreamed of as the great hope for South Carolina farmers and
the state's economic recovery. For only through the application of scientific education and technology to problem solving, he believed, could the
people hope to attain a better quality of life.
In his wisdom and with an eye to the state's future needs, Mr. Clemson
entrusted the Board of Trustees with the power to change the college's
curricula to meet the changing needs of future generations.
Today, more than 84 years since that first class met in July 1893, the
basic mission which Thomas Clemson stated
an institution to serve the
people s needs
remains unchanged. But as these needs have
changed and new technology comes of age, the University's programs
have reflected these changing needs, as Thomas Clemson knew they
must do.
Serving as Clemson's president for the past 19 years. Dr. Robert C.
Edwards has set the pace for strong leadership and administrative direction duhng the university's greatest period of growth both in academic,
physical expansion and in service to the State and its citizens.
mission
In
University
is
Clemson envisioned
flourished so well on his plantation lands,
demson
beginning as an idea
emergence as an important center
it
the bitter
—
—
Where
the Blue Ridge
yawns
its
greatness
.
.
Clemson students number about
10.500 on campus.
More than 1 1 ,000 students pursue a wealth of academic programs in
the university's nine colleges and graduate school. Colleges are agricultural sciences, architecture, education, engineering, forest and recreation
management and textile science, liberal arts, nursand sciences.
In terms of academic excellence, the quality of students entering Clemson is high and they are well prepared. In the 1 976 freshman class 61 per
cent graduated in the top 20 per cent of their high school class.
As a land-grant university, Clemson has statewide responsibilities in
teaching, research and public service programs which are not available
from any other source in the state.
And one of Clemson's major distinctions is the fact that the General
Assembly has seen fit to assign the responsibility to Clemson of several
state regulatory and consumer protection programs that are elsewhere
resources, industrial
New
Biological
Sciences Center.
ing
handled by governmental agencies.
Like the changing needs of the state and nation, Clemson's physical
facilities have grown to serve these requirements. On the campus proper
of 600 acres rise academic buildings, student housing, service facilities
and equipment valued at $125 million.
Centerpieces o* the campus
and symbols of Clemson's heritage
are Tillman Hall with its clock tower and Fort Hill, the stately antebellum
mansion of John C. Calhoun and later his son-in-law, Thomas Clemson.
—
—
9
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facilities
Board of Trustees / Athletic Council
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Paul W. McAlister
(Chairman)
Laurens, S. C.
Robert R. Coker
W. G. DesChamps,
<r
James
J.
W. G. McCabe,
Buck Mickel
Jr.
Greenville, S. C.
Greenville, S. C.
<!
C. Self
Greenwood,
Jr.
Bishopville, S. C.
Hartsvllle, S. C.
S. C.
M. Waddell.
Beaufort. 8.
Jr.
C
Lewis
T. Kenneth Cribb
Spartanburg, S. C.
F.
Holmes,
Jr.
Trenton, S. C.
Paul Quattlebaum, Jr.
Charleston, S. C.
McTeer, Jr.
Columbia, S. C.
T. B.
E.
Oswald Lightsey
Hampton, S. C.
D. Leslie Titidal
Pinewood.
S. C.
ATHLETIC COUNCIL
Dean Kenneth
Chairman
N. Vickery
Raymond
Billy L.
Dr. J. V. Reel, Jr.
George G. Poole, Jr.
President of IPTAY
Forest E. Hughes
Noblet
President of Faculty Senate
Edge
Immediate Past President
of Faculty
Secretary
Dr.
I.
Dr. L.
Senate
Immediate Past President
of
IPTAY
Carolyn Briscoe
Dr.
Corinne H. Sawyer
Chairman of Scholarships and Awards
Pamela R. Sperling
Chairman of Graduate Student Association
W. Gahan
Harshman
Davis T. Moorhead
President of Alumni Association
Joel A. Berly,
Garner Bagnal
Immediate Past President
John O.
Dr. R. C.
Dr. B. J.
Skelton
Dr. E. A.
Vaughn
J.
of
Alumni Association
III
President of Student Senate
Griffin
President of Block
C
Club
11
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Class of 1949. Vice President
Ui^
Athletic Director /Coaching Staff
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
Bill
Only the
title
third
McLellan
man
to
own
of Athletic Director at
the
Clem-
son over the past 46 years. Bill
McLellan was elevated to his present position February 4, 1971,
following what had been more
than a decade of service to the
University's athletic organization,
A
He
joined the athletic staff
native of
Hamer,
S,
C,
the
45-year old McLellan graduated
from Dillon High School and entered Clemson where he earned a
pair of football letters, and was a
member of the Tigers' 1 952 Gator
Bowl team.
May 1, 1958 from Clemson's De-
partment of Agricultural Economics and Seed Certification where
he had spent one year as assistant agronomist and two years as
assistant economist.
Although carrying the title of Assistant Business Manager,
McLellan has been credited with handling the majority of the
department's athletic business and operation long before his
appointment into his present role.
In 1966, McLellan was named Assistant Athletic Director, and
two years later was appointed Associate Athletic Director,
During his reign as Athletic Director, Clemson's athletic prog-
ram has experienced a major upheaval.
The Tigers can boast of the finest athletic facilities in not only
the Atlantic Coast Conference, but in the South as well.
The modern and spacious Jervey Athletic Center is one of the
most complete facilities in America, and this complex serves as
the home for Clemson's 18 sports
12 men's and six women's.
The basketball Tigers play before packed crowds in attractive
Littlejohn Coliseum, and many of the Clemson games are telecast on either regional or national networks.
—
And
home
the football Tigers, after averaging better than 44,000 at
be playing in a remodeled Memorial Stadium in
have some 53,000 permanent seats.
But conference titles and Ail-American honors have come to
other sports as well, and McLellan's direction has given Clemson
a program that was ranked 20th in the nation in overall excellence
in 1975-76. Moreover, the basketball, fencing, and tennis teams
enjoyed top 20 ranking in 1976-77, and the baseball and soccer
teams both boasted of the nation's top rank at some point during
their respective campaigns.
McLellan earned a B.S, degree from Clemson in agronomy in
'54, and a master's in agricultural economics in '56. He is married
to the former Ann Rogers of Fork, S. C. They have four children
Suzy, a senior at Winthrop; Bill, a sophomore at Spartanburg
Methodist College; Cliff, a freshman at Tennessee Tech; and
Arch Anna, a sophomore at Pendleton High School,
last
fall, will
'78 that Will
—
COACHING STAFF
Front row, left to right, Tom Moore, Mickey Andrews. Joe Kines, Dwight Adams, Clyde Wrenn,
and head coach Charley Pell.
Back row, left to right. Mike Sugar. Jimmye
Laycock. Buddy King, Danny Ford, and Willie
Anderson.
13
Bank
Offside (Infraction
illegal
Substitution Infractions!
I
Procedure
or Position
of
scrimmage or
free kick formation)
Illegal
Motion
Incomplete Forward Pass
Ineligible Receiver
Down
Field
Penalty Declined,
on Pass
No
Play, or
No Score
Dead; If Hand
Moved from Side
to Side: Touchback
Ball
Helping the Runner, or
Interlocked interference
is
ii
Forward Pass or
Touchdown
or
Illegal
Hands and Arms
Field Goal
Personal Foul
use of
Illegal Shift
Illegally Passing
Kick Catching
or Handling Ball Forwardl
Interference
Loss of
Down
Roughing the Kicker
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,
'%i
Coach Charley Pell
"Coach"
Charles Byron (Charley)
football
coach December
Pell
1,
was named Clemson's20th head
1976.
Born in Albertville, Ala., the 36-year old Pell is in his second
year on the Tiger staff, having served as assistant head coach
and defensive coordinator during the 1976 campaign.
Pell played but one year of high school football, but went on the
University of Alabama where he was a three-year letterman for
the Crimson Tide.
180 pounds, Pell was a two-way starter as an offenand defensive tackle, and played in the Orange,
Sugar, and Bluebonnet Bowls during his career.
In his junior season, '61 Alabama won the National ChampionAt a
light
sive guard
,
entered the coaching profession as a graduate assistant to
his former tutor, Paul "Bear" Bryant in '64.
Charlie Bradshaw hired the young Pell as defensive line coach
at the University of Kentucky where the latter spent the next four
years, from '65 through '68.
Pell's first taste of head coaching came in December of '68
when he was selected to rebuild the Jacksonville, Ala., State
University grid program.
During the next five seasons, '69 through '73, Pell built aggressive defensive teams that garnered a five-year mark of 33-1 3-1
including a 30-7-1 ledger his last four campaigns.
Pell
Head Coach Charley
A&M
10-0 which included a 21-7 win over
Orange Blossom Classic, and was ranked
second in the nation. His '72 team finished 1 0th nationally, and his
'73 squad ranked fourth.
In '70, he was conference, district, area, and state of Alabama
Coach of the Year, and runner-up for national coaching honors.
He earned the state accolade again in '73.
He joined VPI's staff as assistant head coach and defensive
coordinator in 1 974, and remained there until coming to Clemson.
Pell took
his arrival
in
the
a defensive
and molded
it
unit that
into
one
ranked 128th nationally
that finished the '75
prior to
season as
29th toughest against scoring.
earned
degree
in business administration from
married to the former Ward Noel of
Carrick (7).
Lexington, Ky., and they have a son
Pell
ship.
JSU team was
His 1970
Florida
Alabama
in
his B.S.
'64.
He
is
—
PELL'S HEAD COACHING
Year
School
'69
Jacksonville State
70
'72
Jacksonville State
Jacksonville State
Jacksonville State
'73
Jacksonville State
'71
5 Years
Pell, wife
RECORD
Record
Pet.
3-6-0
10-0-0
6-3-0
.333
1.000
.667
.750
.778
.713
7-2-1
7-2-0
33-13-1
Ward, and son
Carrick,
17
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^ Clemson Tigers
^^^^ e9
Tigers
I
Clemson
s student assistant football
clude, front row.
left
to
Bill Wingo Back row, left
and Nelson Wallace.
Mike
coaches
for thie
1977 season
in-
O Cain,
Rickey Bustle, O. J. Tyler, and
to nght, Bob Coffey, Harold Cain, Craig Brantley,
rigfit,
19
OF CLEMSON
p. O.
BOX
U. S. 123
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& 76
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The New Hawks Have Arrived
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^ Clemson Tigers
Clemson
s student
managers
are. front row,
left
to right,
Donnie Kinard,
Paul Wessinger, Henry Blalock, and Randy Steen. Back row,
left to right, Steve Rivers, Ray Love, Lawrence Mudge, Jim Gough, Sam
Gough, and Randy Templeton.
Jack
Griffin,
21
GRADIiinOW
nizE.
CLEAR UP YOUR FUTURE
IN
THE 2 YEAR AFROTC PROGRAM.
What's up after college? That question is enough to get a lot of young people down.
Air Force ROTC college graduates have that worry, too. But their immediate future
(and longer if they choose) is much more secure. As a commissioned officer, there's a
good job....Travel. Graduate level education. Promotions. Financial security. And really,
lots more.
If you have two academic years remaining, there's a great 2-year AFROTC program
still available to you. Look into the details. We think you'll be pleasantly surprised. And
pleasantly rewarded.
Contact:
Donovan
305 Tillman Hall
656-3254
Cpt. Brian
Put
it
all
together
in Air
Force ROTC.
FORT
HILL
FEDERAL SAVINGS
ASSOC.
College Avenue, Clemson, 654-5574
/
Colonial Plaza, Seneca, 882-1925
I
Steve Ryan
Junior
Bubba Brown
Sophomore
Randy
Rich Tuten
Junior
Scott
Junior
Brown
Sophomore
Lester
Mark
Clifford
Sophomore
Chris Dolce
Sophomore
Gary
Webb
Junior
Greg Earley
Sophomore
Jimmy Wells
Junior
Mike Foulks
Sophomore
Tlie77
Tigers
Assistant trainers Larry Sutton and Herman McGee and head trainer Fred
Hoover kneel in front of Clemson's student training corps Front row, left to
right, are Mike Brown, Bill Blackston, Hank Morrow, and David Williams.
Back row, left to right, are Paul Thacker, Doak Fairey, Tim Tate, Van
Yates, Henry Judy, Tony Blackwell, and Jay Bennett.
23
Calvin
Summey
says
.
.
.
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^ Clemson Tigers
U
Jim Goehring
Sophomore
Bob Goldberg
Sophomore
Chris Pickens
Chip Pruett
Sophomore
Sophomore
Rex Varn
Sophomore
Sophomore
Rick Wyatt
Billy Lott
Sophomore
Tony Masone
Sophomore
Darrell
Misenheimer
Sophomore
Tracy Perry
Sophomore
Jimmy Russell
Sophomore
Marvin Sims
Matt Smith
Jim Stuckey
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Ken Yeomans
Sophomore
Eric Young
Sophomore
Charlie
Bauman
Freshman
Steve Bertz
Freshman
TIie77
Tigers
Clemson linebackers Randy Scott (35). Ronnie Smith (38), and Bubba
Brown (47) have teamed for almost 300 tackles through nine games, and
all rank among the top four on the team in individual tackles.
25
Harold Goggins
Like Jonathan, Harold
a Cadet Sergeant, and a
is
junior.
A product
of Clinton,
Harold has been the
Ti-
gers' second-leading
ground gainer during his
first two grid seasons at
Ciemson.
ACADEMICS!
ATHLETICS!
ARMY ROTC!
His best single-game effort
was 137 yards
Carolina his
in
17
South
freshman
carries against
All
Help to Make
Triple
A
Leaders
year.
Ciemson Army ROTC
Learn What It
Takes To Lead!
Jonathan Brooks
Jonathan is a Cadet
Sergeant from Saluda,
and a standout defensive
end
for the Tigers in this
season.
Jonathan has been one
his junior
ACC's most outstanding defenders since
arriving at Tigertou'n in
of the
Contact CPT Brown
Room 105 Tillman
656-3107/3108
1975.
^e^'s a lot
of Old Savannah
in South CaiDlina
Old Savannah Brick
CiaftedBy^icht^
q^ichtex. Brick,
EO. Box 3307, Columbia, §.C. 29230
^ Clemson Tigers
Bo Blanton
Freshman
Scott
Weeks
Freshman
Mike Gasque
Eddie Geathers
Freshman
Freshman
Bill
Robbins
Freshman
David Sims
Jerry Winstead
Freshman
Freshman
7 f
•
Tlie77
Tigers
Senior tackle Lacy Brumley
ference candidate.
is
an
All-Atlantic
Coast Con-
27
SS(
Today's Opponents
Dan Devine
Head Football Coach
Notre
Dame
Wkien you need
something
more
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^ Sports Feature
Tiger Outlook Bright in
Predicted Banner Year for the ACC
In what should be a banner year around the
basketball-crazed Atlantic Coast Conference, third-year
Clemson coach Bill Foster has every right to believe that
his Tigers will be in the thick of the fight for the 1978
league title.
The 10th winningest active major college coach with a
12-year record of 237-86, Foster has eight lettermen
back from his record-setting 1977 team that won 22 of
28 games.
The Tigers
will
have
to
be
the best years ever for the
best every night to
could be one of
at their
better last season's performance, as
78
ACC.
Seniors Colon Abraham (12.8), Jim Howell (6.1), and
Stan Rome (15.3) top the returnee list, and in addition to
boosting Clemson's inside game, the trio will be counted
on to provide the leadership in 1978.
Four junior lettermen include Greg Coles (8.6), Marvin
Dickerson (4.3), Derrick Johnson (8.5), and Jim
"Chubby Wells (6.6).
Coles and Johnson have two seasons of above average backcourt experience in the ACC, whereas Dickerson and Wells have given the Tigers impressive play in"
side.
(3.2), who plays the point guard along
the lone returning soph letterman.
Bobby Conrad
with Johnson,
is
Non-letterman returnees include Lee Anderson (1.8)
and David Poole (1.0).
Four newcomers to the 78 contingent include John
Campbell, Larry Nance, Billy Williams, and Stewart
Zane.
Campbell and Williams are sophs who enter Tigertown
a year at Anderson JC and Brevard-Fla., CC, respectively, whereas Zane, a junior, transferred from
after
UNC-Charlotte.
Nance
is
the only true freshman.
Foster's Tigers
meet Marathon
Oil of Lexington, Ky., in
a 7:30 exhibition in Littlejohn Coliseum Tuesday night,
then open the regular season November 25-26 in their
own IPTAY Invitational with Ohio, Rhode Island, and
Texas
Christian.
WINNINGEST ACTIVE
MAJOR-COLLEGE COACHES
Coach
College
Nevada-
Yrs.
Won
Lost
Pet.
9
224
139
109
340
399
36
37
34
113
135
83
108
67
,862
.790
.762
Jerry Tarkanian.
Las Vegas
Denny Crum,
Gale
Louisville
6
Catlett, Cincinnati
5
16
Dean Smith, North Carolina
Ray Mears. Tennessee
Bobby Knight, Indiana
vanBreda Kolff, New Orleans
Lou Carnesecca, St. John s
Bill
Bob
Gaillard,
Bill
Foster,
San Francisco
Clemson
21
12
16
9
7
12
241
307
190
142
237
51
86
.751
3
,747
,744
,740
Colon Abraham is generally regarded as one of the best pure shootin the ACC, and earned the nickname as "designated sniper," 2.
Jim Howell owns a career field goal percentage of better than 50 per
cent, and his rebounding strength could be a prime factor for the Tigers
in 78, 3, Stan Rome was Clemson's top scorer last winter. He's a
two-time AII-ACC second-team pick, and one of the nation's best allaround athletes.
.739
.736
.734
1
.
ers
(Continued on page 43)
31
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^ Tiger Staff
The Fred Hoover Family
Fred Hoover
trainer for the
is
season as head
and the family is
both campus and community
his 19th
in
Clemson
extremely active
in
Tigers,
affairs.
Catherine is a sophomore at Clemson where
she is majoring in horticulture. A member of
Alpha Delta Pi Sorority,.Catherine was a Bengal
Babe her freshman year.
Bryan is a junior at Daniel High School and
member of the Lions' football team. Although he
does not play on the school s basketball team, he
enjoys spending his free time shooting basketball and dabbling in photography. Bryan is a dedicated weight lifter and big fan of the Tigers and
the Dallas
Cowboys.
in
of Mt.
Vernon,
III.,
while he
the Air Force.
Although Elva relaxes
machine
in
or with her plants,
sewing
she has dedicated
front of her
her efforts to her children.
"The entire family has learned through the
how to live with the long hours, explains
who unlike a coach, has a year around job,
not one that is seasonal. And the summers are
spent in camps and clinics.
years
"
Fred,
"Elva has been a wonderful mother to our
dren," he adds, "and on
had
to
be a father as
From
chil-
many occasions she has
well, with
me on the
road."
left
to right, Craig, Willa, Cal,
get ready to hit the road on another high
school scouting thp.
High school sweethearts in their hometown of
Chester, Clyde and the former Willa Lynn, enjoy
nothing better than packing up the boys and
doing something together as a family.
Willa is a graduate of Columbia College and
has seven years of public school teaching included in her repertoire.
takes a special breed of woman to be a
football wife, and according to her husband,
"Willa is a super football wife and a great
mother."
It
in
the
Clemson Women's Club,
Willa
has worked with the bible school at Clemson's
United Methodist Church where she is currently
teaching Sunday school.
Her home is open to many of the University
students where she normally serves them
homecooked meals on the weekend.
A second-grader at Morrison Elementary
School, Craig loves his Tigers, the Minnesota
Vikings, and air hockey, whereas Cal, a preschooler at the Episcopal Day School where
Willa is teaching this fall, is a Tiger and Oakland
Raider fanatic.
Although Cal,
The Tom Bass Family
Tom Bass is one of the veteran members of the
Clemson staff, having been at Tigertown since
1967.
He served as a member
of the football coach10 years, and is currently an administrative assistant under AD Bill McLellan.
The Bass clan includes, from left to right, Steven, John, Susan, Tom, and Laura.
The former Susan Price of Knoxville, Tenn.,
attended East Tennessee State University, and
is now completing work on her undergraduate
degree in early childhood education at Clemson.
Susan, active in the Clemson United Methodist
Church, finds time for reading and needlepoint in
between her duties around the home and with
her studies, and she plans to enter the teaching
ranks upon earning her degree.
Steven is a seventh grader at R. C. Edwards
Junior High School, and active sportsman. He
pitched for his youth league baseball team this
summer, has played basketball, and is currently
involved in soccer. He also enjoys his local Boy
Scout troop.
John began his educational process this fall as
a first grader at Morrison Annex, and according to
Tom, "was so anxious to get started that he
ing corps for
couldn't sleep the night before his
now
years old, has seen
hundreds of football games, he had never seen
an official throw a flag. Early in the '77 season
while with his father at a high school contest, he
noticed that procedure for the first time and remarked, "Daddy, what's that guy throw that pa-
nanna peel for?"
The Wrenns are
34
and Clyde
Wrenn
Active
Fred met Elva Cook
was
The Clyde Wrenn Family
in
five
their sixth
year
at
Clemson.
A
cle,
first
day."
and Evel Kneivel on a bicyJohn has mastered the sound of a siren.
collector of cars
"You'd think a
fire
truck or police car
was
in
your
front yard," explains his father.
Laura, a fourth grader at Morrison,
is
quite
gymnastics, swimming, and diving, and
is currently being tutored by Phyllis Grant, one of
the divers on Clemson's Lady Tiger Swimming
team.
active
in
7.
\; •
V:;/. ;;. ;A
v.* .V.
•
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OUR BEEF
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Toa
What mcdces Hungry Bull better is the beef we serve.
Only the best
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your steaks, fresh -cut daily, weren't the finest quality
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—
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1977
21
NO.
Tigers
NAME. Hometown,
POS.
High School. Coach
HGT.
OBED
2
PK
ARIRI
Owern,
Va
WGT.
AGE CL
oo
C
3
AL LATIMER
4
STEVE FULLER"
5
WILLIE
Altamonte Springs,
Spartanburg.
Pa
C, Spartanburg,
S,
Ga
7
BRIAN KIER"
8
BILLY LOTT
9
JOHN GOODLOE
Haines
City, Fla
Ga Wayne
Jesup.
Va
Thomas
,
City.
MIKE
1
N C
13
J.
166
19
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56
BOB GOLDBERG
6-4
198
20
Jr.
57
DAVID REED
DB
5-9
1
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90
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58
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1
195
18
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180
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61
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Ware
185
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193
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63
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171
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Summerville, S
17
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Poquoson, Va
18
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,
6-1
914
99
Cr
or
6-4
ooc\
on
jr.
TE
6-4
9ni
90
ou.
TE
6-1
994
90
DT
6-4
994
1
Q
o
Pr
11
Q
o
ou.
TE
Graham,
Bill
Joye
TE
MARK CLIFFORD
Jr
Coral Gables. Garry Ghormley
,
ANTHONY
KING*
Ga Habersham
.
5-9
171
23
Sr.
6-0
1
7ft
ou.
C
0"^
C70
6-0
220
20
So.
So.
QR
oO
5-11
213
19
GOEHRING*
PK
5-11
166
19
So.
Q7
o
/
Whitehall,
.
DB
6-2
178
18
Fr.
98
C
,
OL
6-2
248
18
So.
99
Jackson.
.
Greer, Jim
Tenn
Greeneville,
.
,
L
T.
22
DT
6-3
99n
1
DE
6-3
1
yo
90
OU.
DT
6-9
251
18
Fr.
LB
5-11
220
20
Jr.
Loris,
DE
5-11
199
21
Sr.
BOWMAN
Crossville, Tenn,.
LB
6-2
195
19
Fr.
Cr
1
Q
3
1
Hanna, Jim Eraser
MARK HENIFORD"*
NICK
99R
Roy Gregory
MARTY LYONS
,
6-1
6-4
Few
JOE MALONE
S C
DE
DT
Wayne Marchant
MARK THORNTON
Lons,
I
Andy Melosky
SCOTT WEEKS
Anderson, S C
Doug Shaw
1
Northern Durham, Herb Goins
,
Pa
Greeneville,
1
Byrnes, Dalton Rivers
,
C
Ir
McManus
STEVE DURHAM
0£l
OA
Central. Fred
Donald Graham
Cumberland Co., Dan Van Winble
Denotes number
36
1
OL
OL
CLIFF BRAY*
Greer, S.
LB
Myrtle Beach,
5-11
Rocky Mount, Walt Wiggins
Airport,
C-,
Jackson, S
RB
.
C
Whitehall.
RB
EDDIE GEATHERS
rr.
Q
y
99"^
TE
KEN WEICHEL*
Doug Shaw
C Greenwood, Pinky Babb
Q
y
Napoleon, Charles Buckenmeyer
,
JIM
Loudon, Tenn.. Loudon, Bert Ratledge
Greenwood, S
.
Greer, Jim
,
oU
Mann, Jim Slaton
JIMMY RUSSELL*
f
1
1
Tuscola, Joe Caldwell
.
Durham, N C
BUBBA BROWN*
1
OCiA
A. Cline
STUCKEY'
Cornelia.
Person Senior. Larry Dixon
,
S C
Greer. S
TRACY PERRY*
r.
Campagna
TRAV WEBB*"
Cobb
Myrtle Beach,
N C
Miami. Fla
LESTER BROWN*
Myrtle Beach,
Russell.
.
Jr.
Jr.
1
Charles Macaluso
Virgil
JONATHAN BROOKS"
George Dostal
,
Mayo,
.
JIM
Oo
6-2
Q
y
Stone Mountain, Ga., Tucker, Kenneth Townley
DB
S C
C
ft4
OH
ft'^
OL
1
Gannger. Ron Wright
,
Ga
Graham, N
5-11
Flora,
So.
Fr.
1
Smith, Claude Manzi
L,
ftT
oo
Rose
P
Delta,
Will
STEVE BERTZ
Sylva-Webster, Babe Howell
RICK BASICH
Ben
,
A C
,
N C
Saluda, S
LB
STEVE GODFREY*
Roxboro,
RB
5-11
SE
41
Greenville,
6-4
99Q
Hoggard, Ray Durham
,
C
C
Cayce, 8 C,
DAVID SIMS
,
RB
6-1
oO.
ri.
C, Byrnes, Dalton Rivers
S.
Napoleon,
LB
40
Brown,
STEVE GIBBS"
Richardson
Bay, John
L,
JIMMY WEEKS**
George Dostal
City, Fla.,
N C
Rocky Mount. N C
RONNIE SMITH***
C
A
,
GREG EARLEY
Waycross, Dale Williams
Delta,
Hanna. Jim Eraser
RON WEST
Clyde.
GARY ADKINS*
,
N C
Darlington. S,
Ed Foster
RB
,
L
SMITH
East Point.
RANDY SCOTT*
Ga
.
TONEY WILLIAMS*
Story
CHUCK ROSE
Waycross,
Hanna, Jim Eraser
THADDEUS ALLEN"*
Nathan Rustin
Clinton. Keith
L,
DARRELL MISENHEIMER
Salisbury. N C East Rowan, W
BILLY HUDSON*
Honaker, Larry Smith
Atlanta, Ga,. Riverwood. Charles
48
BILL
MG
i
Palmer
JOE BOSTIC**
N C, Gannger, Ron Wright
City, Ala,, Pacelli.
Ellis
ROCKY MYRICK
Charlotte,
DB
MARVIN SIMS
47
DB
5-9
SE
HAROLD GOGGINS"
46
5-11
6-1
DB
S.
32
44
yn
/ U
Westside, Will Roberts
,
31
Delta,
Jr.
9n
Mann, Jim Slaton
LACY BRUMLEY***
N C. Chase, John Keeter
Charlotte,
Panama
5-11
RB
DB
S C
DWIGHT CLARK"
39
162
22
91 n
L Mann, Jim Slaton
J.
C T
Columbia, S
YOUNG
Sylva. N.
SE
DB
Southern Alamance,
,
30
38
184
L,
.
STEVE RYAN
Delta,
RQ
oy
L Mann, Jim Slaton
J
,
RICK WYATT*
37
Jr.
Chester, Jim Kimmell
,
28
35
6-2
6-1
DB
S C
Henrietta,
33
20
6-2
Shannon
CHRIS PICKENS
Duncan,
ROY EPPES*
Clinton.
DB
DB
GARY WEBB*
Phenix
183
Jefferson Co.. Leroy
Mayewood.
.
Greensboro, N
ZACK MILLS
ERIC
5-10
J
,
Anderson, S
Andrew Lewis. Mike Stevens
,
Moncks Corner,
27
68
Few
KEN CALLIGUTT"*
Townville,
Fr.
Payne, David Bettingfield
Ft
,
Graham, N C
25
19
6-0
East Mecklenburg. Don Hipps
,
C T
Wilmington,
BILL BRITTS
Greenville,
186
DE
C
C,
Anderson, S
6-0
.
JOHNNY LYONS
Brodie
UNDERWOOD
Chester.
23
Gene
Greer, Jim
,
Payne, Ala
Salem. Va
Jr.
Q
y
Tucker. William Mount|oy
.
S C
Kannapolis,
BO EDWARDS
Greer,
20
DB
Central,
,
19
Poquoson, Olen Evans
,
OGDEN HANSFORD"
Macon, Ga
173
O
DE
OL
ARCHIE REESE'*
Summerville, John McKissick
,
Tenn
S C,
Greenville, S.
fi7
1
1
Joe Chilbert
JEFF MILLS"
Jr.
oo 1
Independence, Buster Ledford
.
N C
Mayesville.
184
VI,
JIMMY WELLS*
Hensley
80 BLANTON
bo.
6-1
919
LB
N C
Greenville,
6-1
So.
Evarts. Charles Hunter
,
Charlotte.
Purcell
SE
y
Ir
Bob Martin
DANNY JAYNES*
Sam Ward
5-10
f
KEN YEOMANS
S C, Ware Shoals, Joe Burgess
Shoals,
Ky
Richmond. Va
DB
99*^
ROBBINS
Jefferson City,
JERRY BUTLER'
Pope Paul
,
5-10
77
,
15
N, J
DB
1
Charlotte,
D. HAGLAN*
Conway. Pa Freedom, Len Waitkus
6-2
Jr.
Norman Lineburg
Radford,
,
QB
6-1
DT
1
Smith, Claude Manzi
L.
Parsippany,
,
5-11
6-2
jr.
OL
Lake Hiawatha, N J
6-2
1
JEFF BOSTIC
6-0
FLK
Gus
Martinsville. Dick
.
oo
DB
DB
Va
Jr.
George Loughrey
layers Park,
,
21
Evarts,
REX VARN*
l\/lartinsville,
14
DB
QB
OA 1
Charles Pruett
,
OB
151
Don Herndon
RICK WEDDINGTON*
Charlotte,
Ga Glynn Academy,
Island,
Runnemede,
Western Alamance,
,
OL
R A
Ir
jr.
Sanderson, Jim Brown
,
5-8
QB-P6-1
N C
Simons
Radford, Va
GASQUE
Elon College,
N C
5-10
Carr
TONY MASONE
1
LB
RB
Ed Carpas
Dale,
Bridgeport, Conn,, Central,
1
Bill
OA
^
^ O
CHIP PRUETT
County. John Donaldson
.
Chester,
10
Haines
.
OH
Max Dowis
Griffin.
,
So.
Lyman, Richard Copeland
Fla,,
9'3
R
Lower Menon, Roger Frassen
,
Greensboro, N C, Ben
JORDAN"
Griffin,
22
Denny Williams
Gatfney,
,
157
St
WARREN RATCHFORD"
Gaffney, S
5-9
AGE CL
907
Wakefield. Harry Haughl
,
STEVE KENNEY*
Ghost
Nigeria, Holy
WGT
JEFF SOOWAL*
Raleigh,
1
HGT
1
Arlington,
....
.
..
R 1
D-
POS
NAME, Hometown
51
Philadelphia.
NO.
8
7
.
of varsity letters
earned
!
Perone's
has got it for Tiger fans
Faced with the same old problem of where (and what) to eat before the
game? Give us a call ahead of time and we'll have a delicious box lunch
ready for you.
After the game, try "The Lighter Side" where you dine in casual comfort
and can order a sandwich, crepes, a spinach salad, quiche, prime ribs ... or
a complete dinner!
And
if
Perone's
.
you really want to celebrate a Clemson victory right, "The Forum"
is the place to spend your Saturday evening! They feature dining, dancing,
and top-name entertainment.
.
.
before or after the
game
.
.
.
has
it
for you!
\
y
mi
Vince Perone^s
GREENVILLE'S
1
MOST EXCITING RESTAURANT
East Antrim Drive, Greenville, S. C.
Join
P&3siPi
^
.
When Clemson Has The
NOTRE DAME DEFENSE
CLEMSON OFFENSE
15 Jerry Butler
SE
79 Jimmy Weeks
53 Steve Kenney
55 Jeff Bostic
71 Joe Bostic
69 Lacy Brumley
88 Anthony King
4 Steve Fuller
22 Ken Callicutt
2 Warren Ratchford
12 Rick Weddington
LT
89
79
74
94
58
55
43
LG
C
RG
RT
TE
QB
FB
TB
FLK
When
Steve Heimkreiter
73
66
56
65
Tim Foley
Ted Horansky
LT
OLB
RGB
20 Luther Bradley
33 Jim Browner
7 Joe Restic
LOB
SS
FS
C
RG
RT
SE
71 Steve McDaniels
Haines
QB
3 Joe Montana
30 Jerome Heavens
34 David Waymer
44 Dave Mitchell
LH
RH
FB
THE TIGER SQUAD
PK
RB
DB
OL
MG
Ratchford,
51 Tuten,
Latimer,
4
Fuller,
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
60
62
64
65
66
68
69
5
7
8
9
10
QB
Kier
DB
DB
Lott
QB
Jordan,
DB
Goodloe,
Ma.sone. QB-P
12 Weddington. FLK
13 Varn, DB
14
15
17
18
Haglan,
Butler,
DB
SE
DB
DB
20 Underwood, DB
21 Britts, DB
22 Callicutt, RB
24 G. Webb. DB
25 Eppes, DB
26 Ryan, DB
Rollins,
Hansford,
27 Young,
SE
FB
28 Wyatt,
30 Clark, FLK
31
M. Sims.
RB
32 Goggins, RB
35 Scott, LB
37 Adkins, SE
38 R. Smith, LB
39 D. Sims, P
40 Basich, DB
41
Godfrey,
RB
44 L. Brown. RB
46 Perry, RB
47 B. Brown, LB
48 Russell, PK
49 Geathers, DB
THE
50 Dolce,
3
7
9
10
12
13
14
16
17
18
19
DE
Bauman,
MG
LB
Yeomans, C
M, Smith,
OL
DT
J. Mills, DT
Pickens, OL
Brumley, OL
71 Joe Bostic, OL
72 B. Smith, DE
73 Misenheimer, OL
74 Hudson, OL
75 Allen, OL
76
77
78
79
80
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
Wells,
Reese,
Williams,
West,
OL
OL
Earley,
J.
Weeks, OL
Gibbs, DE
Stuckey, DT
Brooks. DE
T.
Webb, TE
TE
Clifford, TE
King, TE
Bray,
Durham, DT
90 Goehring, DE
92 Weichel, DT
98 Heniford, DE
LB
LB
LG
88
FS
RC
SQUAD
FS-P
CB
61 Leopold,
HB
OB
FS
Dickerson, SE
Harrison,
PK
Reeve.
FB
Orsini,
DeCicco, CB
Koegel, QB
Burgmeier, CB
Schmitz, HB-SE
20 Bradley.
MG
RT
RE
Morse.
6 Lisch,
OL
DE
MG
Restic,
5 Dover,
Jeff Bostic,
Reed,
LE
LT
54
55
56
58
59
60
4 Muno, SE-P
DT
Goldberg,
IRISH
2 Courey, QB-HB
3 Montana, QB
Soowal, LB
Kenney, OL
Pruett,
Ball
84 Jonathan Brooks
83 Jim Stuckey
51 Rich Tuten
65 Archie Reese
98 Mark Heniford
35 Randy Scott
38 Ronnie Smith
25 Roy Eppes
18 Ogden Hansford
26 Steve Ryan
13 Rex Varn
LG
Dave Huffman^,
Ernie Hughes
Anri.
MG
Bob Golic
Doug Becker
18 Ted Burgmeier
CLEMSON DEFENSE
TE
1
RT
RE
OLB
Willie Fry
NOTRE DAME OFFENSE
Ken MacAfee
Kris
LE
LT
Ross Browner
Ken Dike
Jeff Weston
Has The
Notre
81
82
Ball
CB
21 Knott,
HB
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
36
40
42
43
44
45
46
47
50
CB
Flynn,
^
fJB
Boushka, CB
Domin, HB
Gibbons, CB
Chnstensen, SS
Johnson, SS
Heavens, HB-FB
Ferguson. HB
Browner, SS
Waymer, HB
Acromite, FB-LB
Eurick,
Stone,
HB
HB
LB
Mitchell. FB
Becker,
Pallas,
FB
Boggs, LB
Hankerd, LB
Murphy, C
Whittington,
Golic,
LB
LB
C
Huffman,
LB
Heimkreiter,
Vinson,
Meyer,
OG
OG
LB
63 Hautman, C
64 VanDenburgh, DE
65 Hughes, OG
66 Horansky, OG
67 Tull, OT
68 Wroblewski, DT
69 Leon. OG
70 Zettek, DT
71 McDaniels.
72
73
74
75
OT
Rayam, DE
Foley.
OT
Weston. DT
Case. DT
76 Martinovich, OT
77 Calhoun. DT
78 Huffman, OT
79 Dike, DT
81
MdoAfee TE
82 Haines, SE—
85 Hart, SE
89 Browner, DE
90 Thomas, DT
j
91 Bush,
DE
\
92 Czaja, TE
93 Grindlnger, TE
94 Fry, DE
97 Hart, TE
99 Unis. PK
99 Bowman. LB
TODAY'S GAME OFFICIALS
Referee
Umpire
Linesman
psi
Courtney Mauzy (57|
Frank Strocchia, B-10
W
R Cummings
(13)
Line Judge
Judge
Back Judge
Field
Richard Waltertiouse, B-10
Jerry Menz, B-10
Maynard Sinckler (60)
Cola Bottling Company,
Anderson, South Carolina
YOU'VE GOT
TO BE GOOD TDM
OUR UNE-UP.
Haideear
On your team,
you've got to be good to break
into the starting line-up.
So it is with our team. You've got to be
good to make on Hardee's menu.
Check out our line-up. It's the best
it
ine-up
in
town.
HARDEE'S
HARDEE'S
BIG DELUXE'
With
all
the
makings
greatness.
A quarter
HARDEE'S
pound of
FRENCH FRIES
The golden boys
charbroiled
beef with all
the fixin's.
of our line-up.
HARDEE'S
ROAST BEEF
A powerfully
They come in
two sizes,
big and bigger.
big
sandwich, heavily
recruited from the
HARDEE'S
BIG TWIN "
awesome.
A quarter pound
It's
of charbroiled beef
west. Sliced thin,
piled high, with
your choice of
tangy sauces, it's
one
big beautiful
sandwich.
with lettuce, cheese,
and special sauce.
Spartan Food Systems, Inc.
Post office
Box 31 68 Spartanburg,
S. C.
29304 Telephone 579
of
1
220
SHAKES
They're
rich,
like the best
of the pros.
Irish
NO.
POS
NAME, Hometown
MIKE
COUREY
Sioux
NAME. Hometown
POS
54
MIKE WHITTINGTON
55
WGT
6-2
BOB GOLIC
AGE CL
190
Fr.
56
DAVE HUFFMAN
Dallas,
OB
6-2
191
Jr.
58
MUNO
SE-P
STEVE DOVER
WY
RUSTY LISCH
6-0
176
So.
59
DAVE VINSON
6-1
199
Jr.
60
HOWARD MEYER
6-4
209
Jr.
61
LEROY LEOPOLD
Milford,
FS-P
6-2
192
Jr.
63
HAUTMAN
JIM
MA
CB
6-0
183
Jr.
64
TOM VanDENBURGH
RANDY HARRISON
Hammond,
12
FS
6-1
199
Jr.
65
ERNIE HUGHES
TY DICKERSON
SE
6-2
185
So.
66
TED HORANSKY
Cleveland Heights.
DAVE REEVE
PK
6-3
216
Sr.
67
STEVE ORSINI
NICK DeCICCO
South Bend.
17
FB
5-10
201
Sr.
TOM WROBLEWSKI
CB
5-10
193
Sr.
69
JOHN LEON
OB
6-4
187
Fr.
70
SCOTT ZETTEK
Elk
CB
5-11
187
Sr.
71
STEVE SCHMITZ
20
HB-SE
5-11
193
Sr.
OH
23
72
CB
6-2
202
Sr.
73
TIM FOLEY
HB
6-1
201
Sr.
74
CA
JEFF
26
CB
BOUSHKA
6-0
172
Jr.
75
27
Park.
29
36
202
Jr.
77
CB
6-1
183
Fr.
78
SS
6-1
193
Sr.
79
SS
6-0
190
Jr.
81
HB-FB
6-0
209
Jr.
82
HB
6-1
194
So.
85
IN
SS
6-3
204
Jr.
89
OH
DAVE WAYMER
ACROMITE
STONE
Seattle,
43
HB
6-
184
So.
44
FB-LB
45
90
6-3
208
Fr.
91
HB
5-10
196
Sr.
92
46
182
Fr.
Jr.
LB
6-2
218
So.
C
6-3
240
Jr.
DE
6-4
220
So.
OG
6-3
253
Sr.
OG
6-3
249
Jr.
OT
6-3
234
Sr.
DT
6-3
238
So.
OG
6-2
235
So.
DT
6-5
239
So.
OT
6-6
276
Sr.
DE
6-5
245
So.
OT
6-5
257
So.
DT
6-4
250
Jr.
DT
6-3
224
Jr.
OT
6-5
255
So.
DT
6-5
250
Jr.
OT
6-5
260
Fr.
DT
6-2
228
Sr.
TE
6-4
249
Sr.
SE
6-0
178
Jr.
SE
6-1
193
So.
DE
6-3
248
Sr.
DT
6-4
238
So.
DE
6-6
230
So.
TE
6-5
234
So.
TE
6-6
238
Jr.
DE
6-3
237
Sr.
TE
6-4
234
Jr.
PK
5-11
182
So.
PAT BOGGS
MA
KRIS HAINES
OH
SPEEDY HART
A2
ROSS BROWNER
OH
JOHN THOMAS
NC
ROB BUSH
MARK CZAJA
93
NY
DENNIS GRINDINGER
Dallas.
LB
6-0
224
Sr.
94
TX
WILLIE FRY
Memphis, TN
FB
6-0
198
So.
97
KEVIN HART
Birmingham, Ml
FB
6-2
199
Jr.
WA
Columbus,
47
6-1
AZ
PETE PALLAS
KEN MacAFEE
Lewiston.
OH
DAVE MITCHELL
Yakima
223
Amsterdam, NY
HB
DOUG BECKER
Phoenix,
KEN DIKE
Thomasville,
WA
Hamilton,
6-3
TX
Warren,
NC
TERRY EURICK
JIM
OG
OH
HUFFMAN
TIM
Phoenix,
Saginaw, Ml
42
MIKE CALHOUN
Sidney,
Lincoln Park, Ml
40
ROB MARTINOVICH
Brackton,
IL
BROWNER
BILL
6-3
Wl
VAGAS FERGUSON
Charlotte,
Sr.
Merrillville, IN
Lac,
Warren,
34
76
Dallas,
JEROME HEAVENS
JIM
Fr.
VA
JOHNSON
Richmond,
33
1i
Austintown,
East St Louis,
32
6-4
Wl
Fond du
30
CB
HB
ROSS CHRISTENSEN
PHIL
236
OH
Cincinnati,
IL
TOM GIBBONS
Racine,
6-2
Houston, TX
Alexandria,
28
OG
NY
JAY CASE
KS
TOM DOMIN
Villa
WESTON
Rochester,
TOM FLYNN
Wichita,
Jr.
OH
Cincinnati,
DAN KNOTT
DICK
224
Village. IL
HARDY RAY AM
West Palm Beach. FL
24
6-2
Orlando, FL
LUTHER BRADLEY
Chowchilla,
LB
WA
Seattle,
Muncie, IN
21
Grove
STEVE McDANIELS
East Dubuque. lA
Lakewood,
Jr.
WV
Wellsburg,
TED BURGMEIER
19
247
Indianapolis, IN
OH
Cincinnati,
68
IN
KOEGEL
TIM
6-5
South Bend, IN
Hummelstown, PA
16
C
OH
BOB TULL
Bloomington, IN
14
Jr.
Boise. ID
IN
Indianapolis. IN
13
240
Merrillville, IN
Muskegon, Ml
10
6-3
OH
Cincinnati,
MORSE
JIM
LB
TX
Port Arthur,
Belleville. IL
JOE RESTIC
So.
CA
San Jose,
Kemmerer,
QB
215
TX
Liberty,
HB
LB
OH
Cincinnati,
CA
Los Angeles
AGE CL
TX
STEVE HEIMKREITER
Monongahela, PA
KEVIN
WGT
6-2
OH
Willowick,
City, lA
JOE MONTANA
HGT
Miami. FL
HGT
QB-HB
NO
99
JOE UNIS
Dallas.
LB
6-2
214
So.
LB
6-4
236
Fr.
C
6-1
207
Sr.
TX
OH
JOHN HANKERD
Jackson Ml
50
TERRY MURPHY
Saginaw, Ml
41
THE WORLiyS LARGEST
SUPPLIER OF
CLEMSON SOUVENIRS
We've got sweatshirts, decals, glassware, pennants, key chains, hats,
socks and blazers.
We've got everything and anything to
help you spread the Clemson Tiger
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We've got mugs, ties, cuff links, bracelets, ceramic and stuffed Tigers, and
Tiger Paws in stick-ons, sew-ons, and
And we've
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Come
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see us when you're in town to
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104 College Avenue
Clemson, South Carolina 29631
Telephone 803-654-4203
^ Sports Feature
Tiger Outlook Bright
(Continued from page 31)
BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE
1977-78 TIGER
November
IPTAY INVITATIONAL AT CLEMSON
Clemson vs. Texas Christian, 7:00
Ohio vs. Rhode Island, 9:00
IPTAY INVITATIONAL AT CLEMSON
25
26
Consolation, 7:00
Championship, 9:00
Furman
30
at Greenville,
8:00
Lee Anderson
John Campbell
THE CITADEL AT CLEMSON, 3:00
AMERICAN UNIVERSITY AT CLEMSON,
3
7
South Carolina
1
1
at
20
Palmetto Classic
7:30
Columbia, 8:10
APPALACHIAN STATE AT CLEMSON,
7
Greg Coles
m
December
7:30
Charleston
Clemson vs. Catholic, 7:00
Citadel vs. Canisius, 9:00
Palmetto Classic at Charleston
Citadel vs. Catholic, 7:00
Clemson vs. Canisius, 9:00
21
at
BOSTON UNIVERSITY AT CLEMSON,
30
7:30
Bobby Conrad
Marvin Dickerson
January
4
7
11
14
1
6
21
25
28
31
'NORTH CAROLINA AT CLEMSON,
SOUTH CAROLINA AT CLEMSON,
-DUKE AT CLEMSON, 7:30
7:30
9:00
"Wake Forest
at Greensboro, 7:00
College Park, 9:00
-VIRGINIA AT CLEMSON, 4:00
FURMAN AT CLEMSON, 7:30
'North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 8:00
'North Carolina State at Raleigh, 9:00
'Maryland
at
February
4
8
1 1
STETSON AT CLEMSON, 7:30
-WAKE FOREST AT CLEMSON, 7:30
'MARYLAND AT CLEMSON, ;00
'Virginia at Charlottesville, 9:00
22
25
'Duke
'NORTH CAROLINA STATE AT CLEMSON,
at
ACC Tournament
ACC Game
1-2-4
'Denotes
77-78
Name
Stan
7:30
Durham, 7:30
BISCAYNE AT CLEMSON,
March
3
Johnson
1
15
1 8
No.
Derrick
Rome*"
10 Bobby Conrad'
11
Lee Anderson
12
14
15
Derrick
Greg Coles"
21
Colon Abraham'"
22
23
24
25
32
Larry
Johnson"
David Poole
Nance
John Campbell
Williams
Marvin Dickerson'
Jim Wells'
Billy
Jim Howell"'
44 Stewart Zane
41
'Denotes number
at
7:30
Greensboro
G
F
F
F
C
r,
TIGER ROSTER
Pos.,Hgt. Wgt.
6-5
F
205
G 6-2 165
6-0
170
G
6-2
160
G
G 6-3 175
6-3
185
G
6-5
F
208
6-8
F
180
6-9
234
C
205
190
6-6
205
6-7
210
6-10 228
6-4
6-6
of varsity letters
Chubby Wells
Class Hometown
Sr.
Valdosta, Ga.
So.
Glen
So.
Mayesville, S. C.
Ellyn,
Indianapolis, Ind.
Jr.
Columbia, S. C.
East Elmhurst, N. Y.
Sr.
Darlington, S. C.
Fr.
Anderson, S. C.
Blenheim, S. C.
So.
So
Jr.
Raleigh. N. C.
Charleston, S. C.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sr.
Williston, S. C.
Jr.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Jr.
Williams
Stewart Zane
III.
Jr.
Jr.
Billy
earned
43
SEE
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The Third Generation Monte
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^ University Feature
Tom
Hunter has been called a fan
for
all
seasons.
It's
an
unofficial
honor which
this
1909
Clemson alumnus
which says
alma mater.
it
all
nghtfully deserves, and one
about his feelings toward his
He's sure to be
he always
is,
in
the stands today, just like
But it doesn't
rootin' for the Tigers.
to be an athletic event to bnng Tom Hunter out for Clemson.
No matter what arena Clemson's performance is in -athletic or academic-Thomas Mitchell Hunter is there on the sidelines as a fan of the total
have
Clemson
University
There's no mystery, however, about Mr. Hunter's devotion to Clemson.
He simply feels that his Clemson education was largely responsible for much
of the success he has enjoyed in a 60-year career as an engineer, designer,
executive, inventor, and consultant in the field of electrical power transformers.
was one
ever did," Mr. Hunter said of his deClemson. He was one of seven boys and a girl born to Mr.
and Mrs. Robert T.C. Hunter of Prosperity in Newberry County.
"It
of the best things that
I
cision to attend
Mr. Hunter has often said that his
took the course
life
it
should have taken
when he came to Clemson and earned an engineering degree.
But even before Tom Hunter unpacked his bags at Clemson
1905,
in
the Hunter family's lives and that of the institution were closely intertwined.
Mr. Hunter's father was a member of the S.C. House of Representatives the
year it voted on acceptance of Thomas Green Clemson's bequest for establishment of the college
And an older brother, Joseph Everett "Little Joe Hunter, was a member
Clemson's first graduating class in 1 896. After teaching four years in the
public schools of Newberry County, Little Joe" Hunter returned to Clemson where he taught mathematics to three generations of Clemson men
and was one of the best loved professors of all time.
"
of
In
1973,
Tom
meant to him
in
Hunter expressed
a lasting
his appreciation for
what Clemson has
and far-reaching way.
With a deferred gift of $500,000 to the Clemson University Foundation,
Mr. Hunter established the first fully endowed chair at the university and
one of the few of its kind in the nation.
"The Hunter Endowed Chair of Bioengineering was announced
"Little Joe" Hunter who died in October 1952
"
March 1973 and honors
age 78
in
at
At that time Mr. Hunter said: "They say in Wall Street that it is always good
on the ground floor, but the Good Book also says that it is not good
for man to be alone: therefore, hope others will join me so am not alone.
to get in
I
I
Since then, others have joined Mr. Hunter and the welcome mat is always out Two other endowed chairs have been announced -The Charles
Carter Newman Endowed Chair of Natural Resources Engineering in the
College of Agricultural Sciences and The Frank Henry Leslie Endowed Chair
of Natural Sciences in the College of Sciences.
Like the Hunter chair, the Newman and Leslie chairs were established
through the Clemson University Foundation which receives and manages
current and deferred gifts to be used for the advancement of Clemson
University
The Foundation
is
working
of the university's nine colleges
to
by
have
1
at least
one endowed chair
in
each
982.
Tom
Hunter sat back in his favorite rocking chair in his seventh
suite which overlooks the campus that has been so
much a part of his life. He reflected on those early days at Clemson and his
professional life when he designed transformers for such men as Thomas
A Edison and Guglielmo Marconi who developed wireless telegraphy.
Recently,
floor
Clemson House
Tom
Hunter's professional career took him North for 67 years,
magnetism of Clemson brought him, as it did "Little Joe"
Hunter, back to the campus for his retirement years in the early 1 970s.
Although
that hard-to-define
In a real sense, he has come back to the place where he
foundation for his life's work.
built
a solid
For me, Clemson was the beginning that made
possible for me to
accomplish all of the things that have
By John Allen, Department of Public Relations
"
it
"
I
Photos by Vince Ducker and Ben Hendricks
Graphics by Joseph King. Joseph King and Associates
ARA-Slater's philosophy is a unique,
systematic approach designed to
achieve our most important goal:
STUDENT SATISFACTION. This concept
is a result of our experience with
millions of students. We have the
flexibility to understand your needs
and the capability to satisfy them.
At Clemson,
practical,
ARA demonstrates
new methods
for providing
to serve students what they
want and to accommodate them
by providing this same
efficient service for special
events or festive holiday meals.
We're here to provide the type
of service that will benefit
the entire school and community.
THA T'S WHA T WE THINK A DINING
SERVICE IS ALL ABOUT.
nourishing, well-balanced meals to
athletes, students
and
staff.
Our
corporate and regional specialists
give ARA's dining service manager
expert advice in planning menus,
purchasing goods, controlling
waste, utilizing labor. The support
of this team effort is carried out
daily in Schilletter Hall
and
Harcombe Commons, and
House
Buffeteria.
It is
at the
our desire
Clemson
your campus
dmmg
service
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r, ^ headquarters at
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tSt
Where Are They
ACC Viewpoints
Now?
BEN ANDERSON,
DAVE
Clemson
time
SIME, Duke: One of Duke's allathletes, Dave Sime is remembered by most fans for his seven
Clemson: Enterinj?
of 1969 without a
football scholarship, Ben Anderson
started all five freshman games that season and then started 33 consecutive varin
tlie
fall
team three
in track, but he also played
for the Blue Devils.
At one time billed "the world's fastest
human," Sime was a natural at the lone-
world records
football
He was named
to AlI-ACC
and was selected to the All-America Academic second team. In addition to being an outstanding athlete, he was also a campus
leader. As a senior he was awarded the
Norris Medal, emblematic of the best
all-around student at Clemson. He also
received the Cro.xton Ferris Mobley
sity contests.
straight
years
ACC
PAUL HOOLAHAN
BEN ANDERSON
for the highest scholastic average
student athlete; received the first
F. Byrnes American Government
as the outstanding senior majoring
Political Science; received a
Award
NCAA
Post-Graduate scholarship; and received
the Jim Weaver Post-Graduate scholarship. Graduating from Clemson with a
3.78 GPR, he entered the University of
South Carolina Law School where he
earned his law degree, being one of the
top graduates in his class. He currently
serves as the assistant university counselor for
Fla., office.
COLLICE MOORE, N.C.
LARRY RUSSELL
Clemson University.
PAUL HOOLAHAN, North Carolina: A
former All-Atlantic Coast Conference offensive tackle, Paul Hoolahan is now
athletic fitness director at North Carolina. He was a star performer on the
1970 UNC team which posted an 8-3
record and went to the Peach Bowl. Don
McCauley set an
single-season
rushing record that year and much of his
yardage was a result of Hoolahan's
blocking. After leaving North Carolina,
he became supervisor of the Aquatics Division of Nassau County Recreation and
Parks on Long Island. Simultaneously,
he served as a football coach and director of physical development at St. Francis Preparatory School. He returned to
Carolina in June 1976 to accept his pres-
NCAA
COLLICE MOORE
DAVE SIME
athletes.
LARRY RUSSELL, Wake
Forest:
The
1970 marked Wake Forest's first
and only ACC football championship.
There would be few arguments that the
player who keyed that team was quaryear
terback Larry Russell, a firebrand
who
graduated from Wake as a two-time allconference player and the school's sixthleading passer and second-leading rusher.
Russell coached at Wake for one sea.son
imder Tom Harper, but quickly decided
that it might be time for a departure.
"If
I
really
wanted
to,"
he says now,
"I
could have found a place for
myself in football, but my head wasn't
in it." In June, 1973, he took a job selling furniture in Indiana and Ohio. Then,
he got the opportunity to become a furniture sales representative, working out
think
of
his
I
hometown
of
Newberry
Port,
Mass. He has worked there for Classic
Leather Vanguard, St. Timothy and
Craftwork Guild Furniture companies
from January of 1975 to the present.
All-
Sizzlin'
He
Steak Houses
in five
married to the former Ann
Nichols of Greenville and they have three
cities.
is
children.
UNC
men and women
State:
Atlantic Coast Conference tackle in 1960
in the days of one-platoon football, Collice Moore was also a fine punter and
pass receiver on tackle-eligible plays,
one reception going for a touchdown that
beat Mississippi Southern, 20-13. He
later played in the North-South All-Star
game and in the Senior Bowl. His most
memorable game was a 3-0 win over
North Carolina after the Tar Heels had
first-and-goal at the one during the last
three minutes. He is now the senior
member of Moore and Sauter, a real
estate consultant and development firm
in Greenville, N.C. He is involved in appraisal of all classes of real estate as a
professional appraiser with the prestigious M.A.I, designations, owns and
leases Greenville office buildings, and has
a partnership with franchise rights for
Western
ent position. In his role as athletic fitness
director, his chief responsibility is to
supervise strength development programs
for all
varsity intercollegiate teams.
The program differs from sport to sport
and from position to position within a
sport. He supervises programs for both
position on the football squad
1957. His blinding speed made him a
deep threat on every play. In baseball,
he led Duke to the
crown in 1957
with a .376 batting average. In track, he
had no ecjual. In a span of two weeks as
a sophomore, he set three world records
in the 100 and 220 dash events and the
220 low hurdles. Today, he has added
the title of doctor to his name and is one
of the leading ophthalmologists in the
United States practicing from his Miami,
in
James
in
and baseball
some end
Award
of a
great
COL.
TOM FIELDS
HERBERT BRYANT,
Virginia: Entering
the University of Virginia in the fall of
1928. J. C. Herbert Bryant became one
of the few Cavalier athletes ever to earn
four varsity letters in one year. He accomplished that feat in the 1929-30 acasession, earning them in football,
baseball, boxing and track. In competition which included all colleges from
demic
Maryland through Florida and west to
the Mississippi plus Tulane and LSU,
Bryant was voted by the sports writers
as the "Best All-Around Athlete in the
South" for the year 1930-31. He was
selected to the first team All-Southern
football squad in 1932 and at 5-11 and
214 pounds his senior year, he was the
fastest player on the squad. He was also
state champion in the shot and discus
twice. He is currently Chairman of the
Board and Director of O'Sullivan Corporation in Winchester, Va., and a partner in Herbert Bryant Associates of
Alexandria, Va. He has been a director
of numerous businesses and has had a
seat on the New York Stock Exchange
since 1942.
TOM
FIELDS, Maryland: While attending Maryland in the early '40's, Tom
Fields was a member of the cross country and track teams. He was the school's
first cross country All-American and during his stay won six Southern Conference
championships, capturing titles in the
mile, two mile and cross country. He was
also a member of the Maryland relay
team that captured the Champion.ship of
the Americas crown in the distance medley and four-mile relays. He entered the
Marine Corps and during his 28 years
of service rose to the rank of colonel
and saw combat action in three wars.
During World War II, he served in combat at Guadalcanal, Bougainville, and
Iwo Jima. At the time of his retirement
he was the Deputy Director of Informaation at Marine Corps Headquarters. He
now heads up the Maryland Education
Foundation. When he took control of this
fund raising organization, contributions
for the 1970 fiscal year totaled $30,000.
By the end of the 1977 fiscal year, contributions for athletic scholarships at
Maryland had exceeded $700,000. Membership in the Terrapin Club increased
from the original 132 members to its
current level of 1,650.
47
University
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—
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Rd.,
Clemson,
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C,
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^ Sports Feature
Five former Tiger athletes and one special inductee are being named to the
Clemson University Athletic Hall of Fame during special halftime ceremonies at
today's game. This is the fifth annual induction and brings to 30 the number who are
now members.
The special inductee is Hoke Sloan, who was a charter member of IPTAY in 1934,
and
active
is still
for
He is the
was a field worker
the organization today as a representative at-large.
in
largest total contributor to the club,
and from
937 through
1
1
946,
IPTAY.
Sloan also served as varsity tennis coach
money
tennis activity on the
for
28 years and
later contributed
Hoke Sloan Tennis Center, which
for construction of the A.
is
the
the hub for
Six Inducted Into
Clemson Hall of Fame
campus.
Wallace R. Roy
of Orlando, Fla., earned two letters in both football (1924-25)
and basketball (1925-26), but he was probably most famous for his track accomplishments for three years.
In 1925 he set new school, state and conference marks in the quarter mile and
came in fifth in the NCAA meet in Chicago a year later in '26. He was a member of
distance medley relay team which set a new American record in the Tech Relays in
1 925. And in 1 926 was awarded the (Billy) Laval Medal as the best all-round athlete
in the state. Coach Bud Saunders called Roy 'the finest athlete
ever coached."
George Fritts was a tackle on Clemson's first bowl team
the 1940 Cotton. He is
Dr.
I
—
now
assistant principal at
Savannah
(Ga.) High School.
threw the discus and shot put and was state
1940 when Clemson won the state meet.
Fritts, a native of Lenoir City, Tenn., lettered in 1939-40-41 in football and each of
these years was named to the all-state squad as well as to the All-Southern teams.
He was also a member of the All-South unit and played in the Blue-Gray Classic in
Montgomery, Ala., in 1941 along with teammate Joe Blalock, a previous inductee
Lettering in track
champion
in
in
1
940-41 -42,
the discus
Fritts
in
Hoke Sloan
Dr.
Wallace Roy
,
into the Hall of
Fame.
Frank Gillespie,
letterman.
He
now
Valrico, Fla., was Clemson's last three-sport
1943 before spending three years in the Signal
Clemson, he was a starting guard on the Tiger football team
lettered
Corps. Returning to
with
in
IBM
baseball
in
in
three years.
A
native of Beckley,
W.
Va., Gillespie
three years and played three
all-state
ing
team.
A near
year
was
was
in
also a starting guard
in textile
in
basketball for
made the
baseball at third base where he
A' student in the classroom,
and double majored
Gillespie
more years
engineering and
he majored
in electrical
engineer-
was president of the senior class.
the recipient of the McKelvin Award, emblematic as athlete-of-the-
the Southern Conference.
in
was a dash man on the track team in 1949-50-51, but is best
remembered as the tailback on the 1948-49-50 football teams which were undefeated in '48 and '50 and champions of the 1 949 Gator Bowl and the 1 951 Orange
Bowl. Following the 1 950 season, Calvert was named All-America first team safety.
Calvert, a native of Spartanburg, was one of four backs on the 1948 team who
would gain over 2,000 yards before completing their Clemson careers.
Jackie Calvert
After defeating Presbyterian
the next two
games
in
the opening
game of '50,
Calvert gained 550 yards
against Missouri and N. C. State and the Tigers were
second undefeated season
in
three years and a victory over Miami
in
off to their
the
Orange
Bowl.
Rusty Adkins, the sixth inductee today, played only baseball, but he
left
his
mark
he was all-conference and All-America
three consecutive years. When Adkins completed his eligibility, he owned 1 season
and career school records and was second or third in nine others.
During his career he scored 109 runs, had 150 hits, 22 doubles, 17 triples, 239
total bases and a .379 lifetime batting average, third best in history. If those figures
well in that sport. Lettering in 1965-66-67,
don't impress, consider the fact that the Fort Mill native
striking out
He
and
hit
safely
led the Tigers to the
in
conference championship
against Auburn about 2 a.m.
inning
— his last
Citadel
in
hit
went 32 games without
Jackie Calvert
Rusty Adkins
41 consecutive games.
in
as a Tiger
the District
— just
III
playoffs,
like his first
1965. There were 148 others
in
in
1967, and
he
one
—
in his last at
bat
home run in the 13th
a home run against The
hit
a
between.
49
IPTAY Officers and Representatives
i><^^ B K
IPTAY ORGANIZATION
— DISTRICT
B. K. Chreilzberg, Director-District
304 Whitehall Road
Anderson, S C 29621
ABBEVILLE COUNTY
Rosenberg, Chairman
William B. Baxley
Charles B Murphy
M Earle Williamson
Phil
George G. Poole,
IPTAY Pres.
Jr.
ANDERSON COUNTY
Director, District VI
S T King, Chairman
Randy Bell
Victor G Chapman
Cecil W Comer
R, Carol Cook
Walter
T,
Cox.
Jr.
Joe B Davenport
Dr. James P Hentz
Robert Lee Hill
II
C 29302
O C
Batchelor
Alan J Coleman
William J Coleman
Frank Gibbs
E. Raymond Parker
James R Sanders, Jr.
John
G
GREENVILLE COUNTY
Alan
M
Kermit Watson. Chairman
Miles E, Bruce, Vice Chairman
Floyd S Long, Vice Chairman
Dr Charlie
Eugene Kneece,
Vice Chairman
M
EDGEFIELD COUNTY
O Dukes, Jr Chairman
B Herlong, Vice Chairman
Joe F. Anderson
J. W. Gilliam, Jr.
E
DeBruhl
Dillard
H
Calvin
Henry M. Herlong
Garrett
Thomas H Ryan
Clark Gaston, Jr
GREENWOOD COUNTY
F.
Reeves Gressette,
IPTAY Vice Pres.
Director, District
Jr.
Dr. F, Erwin Abell. Jr
Wayne
Richard H. Ivester
V
L.
McCord. Chairman
Bell
Z. K. Kelley
Johnson Craig
F. Buist
W.
William J
Nevit Y. Johnson
Thomas K Norris
William H Orders
W. M.
Self
Mccormick county
T C Faulkner,
W
C
Harper,
McCurry
Chairman
Eddie Burrell
Jerry R Byrd
Charles E Dalton
J
Director, At-Large
J.
Garner Bagnal
Craig Jumper
Charles M Stuck
NEWBERRY COUNTY
Earle Bedenbaugh, Chairman
Clifford
Plyler
Richard Taylor,
Harold Townes,
S.
Gray Walsh
Riggs Goodman
Robert M. Guerreri
Floyd M. Hunt
Dr Tom C Lynch, Jr,
Rushton
William C. Singleton
W. E. "Doc" Vaughan
Joseph A. West
Jr.
Jr.
W
Joseph R Adair, Chairman
T. Heath Copeland
H. M Fans
Charles J Glenn
Gray Hipp. Jr
Dave C Waldrop,
C
Ralph
Dr
Carl
Charlie
Bussey
Director, At-Large
Lawrence Starkey
Director, At-Large
W
SPARTANBURG COUNTY
M Manning, Jr Chairman
C
G.
Atkinson,
Jr..
DesChamps.
Director
Jr..
Director
Edwards, Director
Harper Gault, Director
Lewis F, Holmes, Director
Frank Howard. Director
F E Huglies, Director
Dr. G J Lawhon, Jr., Dij-ector
Calhoun Lemon, Director
Chns Suber, Director
W. H, Taylor, Director
Marshall Walker, Director
Bill McLellan, Athletic Director
George Bennett, IPTAY Executive Sec.
Ralph E Cooper
R Adams, Jr
Andy N Beiers
John Brady
A. B Bullington,
Albert
W
Cecil
Ernest Jamerson Corley, Jr
G Coune,
Bruce Finley
Comer
M
John
Cornwell.
B,
50
Jr
W. A Hudson
A. P Kerchmar
Arthur
W
O Shields
Phil Prince
Marvin C Robinson, Jr
Robert L Stoddard
UNION COUNTY
Harold E Blackwell, Chairman
Hunter S Harris, Jr
B. E. Kirby, Jr,
B.
Shedd
M
Gault
Golightly
Hair
Col George B Herndon
Harry J Johnson
Virgil F Under, Jr
Easterling, Jr
Hendnx,
Gassaway
William E
Jr.
Harry H Gibson
Wilbur K. Hammett
L. J-
Fred
John
Don E
Cooper
Jack Cnbb
Kenneth Cnbb
John
Jr
Larry Flynn
Jr
William
W.
III
,
Gerald Emory
Judge Bruce Foster
Dr. R, C.
Bailey
William B. Clinton, Jr
James P McKeown
W
T.
Chairman
W Brunson
George Bullwinkel
William T Clawson
Wessenger
W.
,
Alley
I
Jack
T.
Director, At-Large
Lewis, Jr
Thomas R
Prater
Carl
M
George
P Roper
N
Jr
RICHLAND COUNTY
Hugh F Morgan, Jr.
W- Brooks Owens
Cecil
Derrick
Lyon C Fellers
Melvin Larry Longshore
C H Pete" Ragsdale III
Terry C Shaver
J H Simpson, Jr.
Wade Smith
C Gurnie Stuck
LAURENS COUNTY
III
T Smith, Vice Chairman
C
Louie
Slaftery
David Wilkins
M
Gil
M
A Henry
W
Patterson, Jr
J.
E.
Patterson,
Gaston Gage, Jr
Roddey E Gettys
H Ralph Corley
T.
Neely, Jr
James E Smallwood
Neville
PICKENS COUNTY
James V
N
George
John G
Jr,
James Tracy Childers
Ben G Compton
James A Compton
John F Palmer
I.
Jr
OCONEE COUNTY
Charlie Bussey
IPTAY Sec.-Treas.
Dave H Caughman, Chairman
Johnny L Cagle
Henry M. Lee
Terry L Long
Seabrook L Marchant
Eaves, Jr
Robert M Erwin, Jr.
K. Fooshe, Jr,
Smith
LEXINGTON COUNTY
W
William E. Burnett
M
Clyde
Joe D Gibson
Joel
Gray III
Charles D Hunt
Robert
,
J
Henry EIrod
Sharpe
III
Timmerman
A,
H O Weeks
Jr,
Bryan
W. Lem
W
Townsend, Jr.
James L. Walpole
Carol H Warner
F
H Burnett
Gordon S. Davis
Jr.
Jr.
Malony
Tewkesbury
j
III
W
McLure
John
Dave Merry
Henry M Simons,
W
III
Jr
Davis O, Smith
John B Smith, Jr
"Buddy" Wenck
Frederic
E Ralph Wessinger
W
SALUDA COUNTY
J.
W
Riser,
Bernard
L.
Chairman
Black
B Coleman
James A Dernck
Benjamin H Herlong
Tom C Wnght
Alfred
Kenneth Yarbrough
III
III
Director-District
E Hines Hamilton, Chairman
William R Alexander
Ronald Barrett
R, S Campbell
Gary Clary
Wiley Hamnck
Van Stephen Moss
Bryan,
— DISTRICT
AIKEN COUNTY
,
W
A
Timmerman
Director, Distnct
1513 Morninghill Drive
Columbia, S C 29210
CHEROKEE COUNTY
John M Hamnck. Jr Chairman
Dr
Dr. J. H.
IPTAY ORGANIZATION
Dr John H Timmerman,
II
Phillip
Ramseur
G
Spartanburg, 8
II
— DISTRICT
Grover Henry, Director-District
71 5 Dupre Drive
Peter H
Miller, Jr.
Robert
IPTAY ORGANIZATION
Alonzo
Percy C. Osteen,
A. R,
I
Charles
Ralph King, Jr.
Randall McClain, Sr.
G.
Director. Distnct
I
C Evans Putman,
Dr. C. Patnck Killen
J.
I
^
IB
Grover Henry
Ghreitzberg
Director. District
III
Lawrence Starkey
Bill
G
M, Reaves
Director. District IV
IPTAY ORGANIZATION
— DISTRICT IV
Reaves. Director-District IV
515 Richardson Circle. E
Hansville. S C -29550
IPTAY ORGANIZATION
R Reeves Gressette. Jr.
Director-Distnct V
P O Box 614
CHESTER COUNTY
Orangeburg.
B Bankhead. Chairman
Edward C Abell
ALLENDALE COUNTY
M
Bill
J.
F. E. Abell
Richard A. Coleman
Curtis A. Fennell
George R. Fleming
Ed Lindsay
CHESTERFIELD COUNTY
James H Hoover. Chairman
Fred C.
Craft, Jr.
DARLINGTON COUNTY
Qr.
W
Dr.
Thomas James
J.
Kennedy. Chairman
Phil
Btell. Jr.
Wilton Carter
McCown
William B,
III
Harry McDonald
Dr. M. B Nickles. Jr
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
Edward M Crawford. Chairman
M
Boulware
K.
BAMBERG COUNTY
D, H, Atkinson
Claude (McCain. Chairman
G. H. Furse,
R Herman
Lawrence
Rice
C Kennedy,
Norman M Smith
Lachicotte
LANCASTER COUNTY
W. P Clyburn
Manon D Lever
Garret! J
James
t^obley
Alton lyiobley.
Jr.
LEE COUNTY
Green DesChamps
Don R McDaniel.
Ray
Calhoun. Chairman
Jr
.
David E Angel
III
W
Ben
Jr
R Sanders
R. Smith, Jr.
Jr.
William H. Bull
Dr. William L
M Gressette. Jr.
CHARLESTON COUNTY
Coleman Glaze. Chairman
W. R. Bailey
Coleman
Frank A. Douglass.
Leiand Finklea. Jr.
Harold B, Haynes
L. Chappell Jones
Dr. H. A. Jordan
James W. King
Jr.
Greg Jones
William C, Kennerty
Allen
Samuel W. McConnell
Hans F. Paul
GEORGETOWN COUNTY
Mac
R. Harley
Carl S. Pulkinen
Paul Quattlebaum,
Walter A. Renken.
Crawford Sanders
J,
Yank Barnneau, Chairman
A, Cox
Glenn
Frank H. Inabnit,
Sam M
Harper
James P. Jayroe
Jacksonville, Fla.
A. H. Lachicotte. Jr.
Orange
J.
HORRY COUNTY
Chairman
Jr..
L Bradham
Buddy Gore
John H, Holcombe.
Monroe Henley
Brentwood. Tenn
Benjamin K, Sharp
Cleveland, Tenn.
Johnny L Osteen
Germantown, Tenn.
Atkinson
III.
William B, Boyle
E,
Glenn
C. Higginbotham, Jr.
Chairman
Dr
Williams,
III
Jr.
O. Bowen. Sr.
Wyman
L.
Morris
Furman
John C. Sharpe
Germantown. Tenn.
Harry
W. Smith
Kingsport, Tenn.
Thomas
C. Breazeale,
P.
Corker
Signal Mountain, Tenn.
Davis T Moorhead
Alexandria. Va.
John
Col. David C.
J.
W
Jr.
Knoxville, Tenn.
Robert
Wilder. Jr
C.
WILLIAMSBURG COUNTY
W
Jack G. Vallentine
Chairman
Fort. Jr..
T.
Mac DuBose
R. L
Dr
Russell, Jr
Russell S. Wolfe
Chairman
Jr,
ORANGEBURG COUNTY
.
Ohio
Wayne Ward
MARION COUNTY
Weldon E Wall
Jr
Andnshok
J.
Stillwater, Okia,
W
Reeves Gressette.
E.
Hurt, Jr,
J.
James
SUMTER COUNTY
William B. Bookhart. Jr
Alvin
A.
T
Sen
James C
Jr.
Fla.
Bessent
Emerson
G Mace
Duncan C Mclntyre
William F Speights
F.
Baltimore, Md,
Warren. N.
Robert
Frank Crews
Gohagan
Carl
Cincinnati,
JASPER COUNTY
M
Park. Fla.
R, S, Winfield
W. S. Daniel,
John H. Holt
J.
Jr.
Shell
Bob Spann
T. C-
Salisbury
HAMPTON COUNTY
L.
Jr.
Lewis Horton
S. F. Horton
Dexter Rickenbacker
David
Tom
Winter Park.
Chairman
F.
Jr.
Jr.
Tom
W.
Middlebury, Conn.
Jr.
D Byrd
Gene W Dukes
F.
V. Roberts
William Lindsay Wylie
Jr.
H.
B.
Thomas, Winston-Salem
Leon R Young
Manon W. Sams,
James R White
Lawton
S, Bonds, Statesville
Abrams. Winston-Salem
Kirkpatnck, Winston-Salem
Albertville, Ala.
R. G. Horton.
A.
Pete Folsom, Hendersonville
R- Morns, Jr., Hickory
Robert E. McClure, Launnburg
W. D. Moss, Jr., Mooresville
Dr. T. G. Westmoreland, Shelby
Tom
OTHER STATES
William D. Anderson,
David
,
Arthur
Wood
Ryan White.
Jack W. Carter
Dr. Jerry
Edgar L. Miller, Jr Charlotte
George A. Hutto, Jr., Cramerton
Dr. Joe B Godfrey, Forest City
Col. J. L. Edmonds, Greensboro
Walter M. Nash III, Greensboro
Robert
Edward L Young
Thornhill
W-
W. W. Allen, Gary
John B Cornwell III, Charlotte
James B. Foster, Charlotte
Don
COLLETON COUNTY
Clifford
H. Spencer. Jr., Asheboro
Eddie N, Dalton, Asheville
Manly E. Wright, Asheville
J, H.
Robert Stout
Van Noy
NORTH CAROLINA
James
Dr, C. R. Sweanngen, Jr., Smithfield
William T, Worth. Southern Pines
Stephen H. Mudge
John F Poole
Wilbur 0, Powers
Tom Robertson
John G, Rose
Miss Beverly Hafers
DORCHESTER COUNTY
John Bracknell
S, L, Campbell
E- M
Buck George
Thomas E Grimes III
W. F Harper
Alford Haselden
T Jenkins. Jr.
Floyd D Johnson
J C Pearce
William
Chairman
Martin,
FLORENCE COUNTY
William T. Howell,
James D Armour
James G, Bagnal
C Rhea,
Robed
Joseph Powell
Henry Thornley
J.
F A Spencer
J.
Carmichael
L. B, Hardaway. Jr,
Charles G Lucius. Jr.
F,
CALHOUN COUNTY
J.
C- Smith
YORK COUNTY
Aquille M Hand.
DILLON COUNTY
W. Gordon Lynn, Chairman
A. B. Schirmer, Jr.
Sr
MARLBORO COUNTY
C E
Jr.
Jr.
Jerry A. Brannon. Lilburn
Andrew P Calhoun. Savannah
William C Lawson. Savannah
Swilley
Charles
Gainesville
U Pnester, Jr., LaGrange
Eugene P Willimon, Jr., LaGrange
A.
Rufus M Brown. Chairman
Mrs. Rufus M Brown
Marvin Cockfield
L M Coleman. Jr
Dreher Gaskin
P
H. F
BERKELEY COUNTY
William A. Grant
Ronald Small
H M Anderson,
Jr.
Gibbons
Robert E. Jackson
I,
H. B. Rickenbaker
III
Charles T Brown
Henry Chambers
Robert H. Fellers
James S Gibson.
Bryan Loadholt
Harry J Tarrance
Watson. Chairman
Ken Carson
G.
Dr.
BARNWELL COUNTY
Howard G Dickinson
W
Garner Bagnal
Director, At-Large
Theodore B Gardner. Chairman
KERSHAW COUNTY
J. F,
C 29574
Mullins. S.
CLARENDON COUNTY
D Crum
Grover
— DISTRICT VI
P O. Box 541
Archie E. Baker
H. L. Dukes. Jr
Coleman
Harold R Jones
J.
IPTAY ORGANIZATION
George G Poole, Jr
Director-District VI
291 15
Lawrence
Dennis Yarborough
Louis
Wiley
C
S,
— DISTRICT V
BEAUFORT COUNTY
James C Stone
John R Thomas
Dan L Tillman
Patrick K White
Director, At-Large
G. Poole, Jr
Director, Distnct VI
Snow. Jr., Chairman
C Cottingham
Rogers
Vienna. Va.
H Cox
Fred P Guerry,
Joe W, Turner, Albany
Mickey Earl Reeves, Athens
Douglas C Edwards, Atlanta
IPTAY REPRESENTATIVES AT-LARGE
Clemson
R. R. Red" Ritchie. Clemson
Hoke Sloan. Clemson
Gene Willimon. Clemson
Frank Cox, Germany
Howard
C. M. Shook, Piedmont
Jr.
James M Kennedy
GEORGIA
E. Hord. Atlanta
Thomas W,
Augusta
John L. Murray. Augusta
Edwin Presnell, Augusta
Thomas E Peterson, Conyers
Eiserhardl.
Capt, Frank J Jervey.
Garry C. "Flip" Phillips, Seneca
Rotjert Cathey, Houston, Texas
Keith Waters, Texas
W, B. Croxton
Special Recognition
During the fiscal year of 1976-77, Clemson's IPTAY
Club experienced its finest year. For the thirteenth consecutive year contributions exceeded those of the previous
twelve month penod. IPTAY President George Poole, Jr.
and his staff, along with the more than 400 IPTAY Rep-
$2,000 IPTAY
resentatives, led the organization to a record setting year.
An increase
of
contributions
was
almost twelve percent above
last year's
and the organization achieved
realized
one hundred and seven percent
of
its
projected goal.
Denotes Life Member
Denotes Honorary Life IVfember
*
SCHOLARSHIP DONORS
Mr. Ralph E. Cooper
Dr.
Columbia. SC
Belton,
Mr. R. W. Dalton
Mr. Calhoun
SC
Greenville,
William
P. Kay, Jr.
Lemon
Daniel Construction Co.
Mr. & Mrs.
Mr. Currie B. Spivey,
Hampton, SC
Mr. & Mrs. George G. Poole,
Oswald Lightsey
Billy
Jr.
SC
Mullins,
E.
Inc.
NC
Powers
SC
Florence,
SC
Greenville.
James
Mr.
Bill
Piedmont Paper Co.,
Asheville,
SC
Barnwell,
Jr.
*
SC
P.
McKeown
Mr.
III
Columbia. SC
Memorial
Folk, Jr.
Jerome
Richardson
J.
Spartanburg. SC
Columbia, SC
Mr. Ellison S. McKissick,
Abney Mills
Anderson, SC
Forest Products, Inc.
Greenville,
*
Mr.
Amick Memorial
Batesburg, SC
Spartanburg, SC
Bankers Trust
Mr. & Mrs. C. Guy Gunter
Thomas
B.
McTeer,
Mr. Davis 0. Smith
Jr.
Columbia, SC
Grant's Textiles, Inc.
Columbia. SC
*
of S. C.
& Mrs. Hoke Sloan
Clemson, SC
Mr.
NC
Statesville,
A. D.
Jr.
SC
Greenwood, SC
Greenville,
Mr. Jack M. Blasius
Mr. & Mrs. Joe
Spartanburg, SC
Greenville.
The R. L. Bryan Co.
Columbia, SC
Coach Frank J. Howard
Clemson, SC
SC
F.
Hayes
Mgr., Inc.
Greenville,
GA
Mr. Allen K. Trobaugh
Mr. C. H. Morgan
SC
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Smith
Atlanta,
Spartanburg, SC
Midland, TX
SC
Clarence Koester, President
$1,000
TIGER SCHOLARSHIP
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.
Southern Area
Anderson, SC
Atlanta,
Imperial Die Casting Corp.
Clemson. SC
Pickens,
Capt. Frank J. Jervey
Mr. Larry
Clemson, SC
Columbia, SC
Mr. Robert R. Russell,
Tom
Lynch,
C.
Jr.
Mr.
James
V.
South Carolina National Bank
W. Flynn
Columbia. SC
J.
Hunt Machinery Co.
Columbia. SC
Patterson
Ann
Reece
Honor
Mr.
By:
of
& Mrs. W. P. (Pap) Timmerman
Dr. & Mrs. John H. Timmerman & Family
and
S.
Dennis Antiques
Mr. & Mrs.
Spartanburg, SC
Clemson, SC
Mr. Paul
Jeff
W.
Mr. W. Frank Durham,
Jr.
Republic National Bank
Mr. John H. Bailey
Mr. & Mrs. Lachlan
Columbia, SC
Columbia, SC
Spartanburg, SC
Spartanburg. SC
Plastic Injectors. Inc.
S. C. State Fair
Spartanburg, SC
Columbia. SC
Norman
Fredrick Pulliam
52
Mrs. Dorothy
Columbia, SC
J.
Crews
(Tim)
Timmerman & Family
Puritan Ind. Maintenance Corp.
Fairforest,
Spartanburg, SC
P.
Columbia, SC
Pickens, SC
Mr.
Jr.
Columbia, SC
SC
In
Mr.
Services
AWARDS
Holiday Inn
Clemson, SC
ARA
GA
SC
Spartanburg, SC
L.
Hyatt
Mr. Phil H. Prince
Spreader Service
Dick Hendley-Sanitation, Inc.
Fairfield
Greenville. SC
Monticello,
Truman W.
SC
SC
Greenville.
Mr. F. E. Hughes,
Winnsboro, SC
Southern Bank & Trust Co.
Mr. & Mrs. Rufus M. Brown
Mr.
Shirley, Jr.
SC
Greenville.
Jr.
Florence, SC
Mr.
James W. King
Johnsonville, SC
Mr.
Greenville. SC
Boulware
H.
First National Bank of S. C.
Anderson & Clemson Office
Anderson, SC
The Hearon Corp.
Mr. William Cooper
Frank Distributing Co.
Mr. Erwin C. Thornton
Mr. Billy G. Watson
Spartanburg, SC
Inc.
Mr. John M. Harper,
SC
City,
Spartanburg, SC
Anderson, SC
Mr. William G. Moorer
Lake
Spartanburg, SC
Tom O'Connor
Harper Builders,
Greenwood Packing Plant
Greenwood, SC
Mr. H. B. Risher
Spartanburg, SC
Mr.
United Investors
James
Anderson, SC
Jr.
Williamston, SC
Booth Boyle Livestock Co.
Sumter, SC
Mudge
Mr. John P. "Pat" Gore
Mr. Stephen H.
Myrtle Beach, SC
Johnsonville, SC
Dr.
Henry
Martin
C.
Anderson, SC
*
R. A.
Bowen Memorial IPTAY Scholarship
Macon. GA
Mr. G. P. Lachicotte
Lugoff.
Dr.
SC
John M. & Martha
B.
Thomason
SC
Florence,
Mr. Robert
L.
Morgan
Anderson, SC
Mr. & Mrs. T. C. Breazeale,
Mr. P. W. McAlister
Laurens, SC
Mr. Yank Barrineau
Andrews, SC
Windsor Associates
Anderson, SC
Mr. C.
Ed & Red Phillips Chicken Farm
Joseph Bailey Bright
Hendersonville,
DesChamps,
Bishopvilie. SC
Mr. W. G.
Jr.
Cribb, Jr.
L.
Georgetown, SC
Moncks Corner, SC
NC
Alley
1.
Irmo, SC
•
R.
W. Bond Clemson IPTAY
Mr. & Mrs. V.
F.
Under,
Greenville,
Jr.
M. W. Umphlett Memorial
Clyde D. & Calhoun W. Umphlett
Scholarship Endowment
SC
Atkinson
III
& Friend
Greenville,
Ware Brothers Const. Co.
Moncks Corner, SC
SC
Marion, SC
C. Atkinson, Jr.
William Evins
Greenville.
Mr.
SC
Bailey
F. A.
Mr.
William
L.
Cheezem.
Jr.
James
Coburg Dairy,
Inc.
Greenville, SC
Charleston,
Mr. Willie R. Hudson
Dr. Fletcher C. Derrick, Jr.
Greenville,
SC
L.
Lincolnton,
NC
Mr, Gary J. Gosztonyi
Greensboro, NC
Mr. John
Mr. Peter D. Dorn,
Pee Dee Dairy
Dewey
Dick Hendley
Alford
Hamilton
E.
Jacksonville, FL
Jr.
Mr. David Craig Dorn
Housekeeping,
Industrial
Goodson
Charleston, SC
Marion, SC
Mr.
Mr, Gordon
SC
Marion. SC
Eskridge & Long Constr. Corp.
NC
Charleston, SC
Harrison
F.
Henry Dowdy
J.
High Point,
III
Marion, SC
Dr.
III
NC
Asheville,
Mr.
Dr.
r.
J. Bennette Cornwell
Matthews, NC
Mr. Eddie N. Dalton
Mr. Gordon S. Davis
Mr.
Mr.
Moncks Corner, SC
Irmo, SC
T. C.
NC
Mr. D. William Brosnan
Asheville,
Mr. George
Jr.
TN
Knoxville,
Marion. SC
Greenville,
Mr. Earle Joiner Bedenbaugh
Intex Products, Inc.
Inc.
Libby &
Charleston, SC
Bill
Holcomb
McLean, VA
SC
Peeler Jersey Farms, Inc.
SC
Prosperity.
Greenville,
Gaffney,
Mr. William H. Lewis
SC
Fairmont,
SC
Sanders Bros.,
"In
Memory
of Elbert L.
Bailes
Mr. C. B. Martin
West Union, SC
Greenville.
Mr
"A Friend
Gaffney,
MrfiPP
Seneca. SC
Clemson"
Greenville, SC
VJarti
vvuiu Smith
uiiiiiii Phpurnlpf
v/iicviuici Riiirk
DUlun, Inr
iiiu.
Chemsize,
Inc.
Seneca, SC
Greenville,
SC
1
of
M.
Springfield,
Pfinp
SC
Plpmcnn
Dr. L. P.
Pliih
Varn
Orangeburg. SC
Or
Robert C. Edwards
Clemson. SC
Mr JdLK
IqpL Pitfman
rnillldll
IVIi.
Greenville,
Orangeburg. SC
-Roger
SC
Mr, C, Evans
Putman
G. Perry
Pond Constr. Co..
Mr. Horace
T.
Holmes
Trenton. oC
F.
E.
Riddle
Tpmnlp-\A/ptt^-rnrr1pll- MIpq
Atlanta,
Holmes
Trenton. SC
Mr.
J.
K.
Coleman
Piedmont. SC
Winnsboro. SC
Snyder's Auto Sales
Mr. Edward M. Crawford
Winnsboro. SC
Greenville.
SC
1
Mr
ITU. FInuH
nuyu T1. Rnnorc
nuycio
Clyde, NC
GA
Memory
ndipn
ivi
.
hu Alan Y
Mr. R.
Jr.
Inc.
In
Greenville, SC
Murray,
L. Ppphlpc
rccuiCo
Newport News, VA
ItII.
Darlington. SC
L.
L.
GA
Mr UaVIU
n^uiri
CP
ou
Mr. William M. Boyce
Mr.
Mr. John
Augusta,
Nickles, Jr.
B.
Uortpifilla
riansviiie,
R. B.
Laurip L.uwaiu
Friwarri UQiiiicii
Rpnnptt
kuuiib
SC
SC
Dr.
Fr/ink
NC
Inc.
'
of
dnu nciDcn udnnuii
Tannnn
Anderson, SC
A Friend
Spartanburg, SC
53
Special Recognition
CONTINUED
Mr.
James
NO
No^ Yrs.
IPTAY Member
is
hereby certified as a
July
to
1,
all
the
member and
Is
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
Mr. E. M. Seabrook,
James A.
Pete J. & Jim
Mr.
ABBEVILLE COUNTY
The C & S National Bank
Capital Bank Trust
Mr. Linwood Cheatham
Mr. Nathan W. Childs
William H. Baxley III, DMD
Mr. & Mrs. Wm. C. Dupre
C.
L.
Muggins
Mundy
Mr.
Dr. A.
Smith,
W. Ronald
Dr.
Barrett
Mr. R. S. Campbell,
Keller
Development
Jr.
Co., Inc.
Mr. E. Raymond Parker
Gaffney Broadcasting, Inc.
Jr.
CHESTER COUNTY
Joel W. Collins Memorial
Mr. J. B. Pressley, Jr.
Jr.
W.
Mr.
T.
Wrenn
Jr.
Mr. Chris Suber
Welborn Tire Service,
Mr. Harry
& K. C. Shuler
Robert Stout
CHEROKEE COUNTY
Stathakis
Fred Stringer,
Jr.
Jr.
Drs. J. O.
Dr. J.
Jr.
McClure, Sr.
Dr. J. Clayton Richardson
Dr. C. Eric Richardson
Dr. Donald C. Roberts
Dr. Joseph C. Yarbrough,
Mr. Ronnie A. Smith
Mr. T. Barney Smith
benefits thereof.
1977 to June 30, 1978
T.
Mr. Aaron A. Nettles,
The Peoples Bank of Iva
Piedmont Candy & Cigar Co.
Memory of C. Randolph
In
$500 Gold Card
John
Mr.
McCormick and
Lawrence A. Sutherland
Vernon Merchant, Jr.
Mr. P. C. Osteon,
44th Year
Ashley River Animal Hospital
Mr. O. R. Lever
Mr. Virgil P.
Dr.
entitled
Mr. William A. Grant
F. Little
G. Eugene Madden
Mr. Steven E. Madden
Mr. Harry Major
CHESTERFIELD COUNTY
Inc.
McLean Wilson
Dr. Billy
Mr.
Bill
Blakeney
Henley
Mr. B. K. Chreitzberg
AIKEN COUNTY
Mr. William R. Alexander
Boscobel Golf & Country Club
Mr. Jesse A. Cobb, Jr.
Mr. Frank T. Gibbs
Mr. R. Carol
Houndslake Corp.
Mr. Richard L. Meyer
R.
Cook
Doug Cromer
Dr.
Claude Dixon
Mr. A. H. Peters,
Mr.
J.
Jr.
Tewkesbury
Charlie W. Timmerman
F. A. Townsend, Jr.
Mr. Alan M.
Dr.
Mr.
Mr. T. Clifton
Tom
Weeks
Mr. R. H. Anderson
Anderson County Clemson Club
Anderson Orthodontic Assocs.
Drs. Croxton & McConnell
Mr. Charles
Forrester,
Baychem
L.
Johnson
Jr.
Walter L. Gaillard
Mr. Robert V. Harrell
Hartrow, Inc.
BERKELEY COUNTY
Mr. Malcolm Hare
Mr.
Jim Hellams
Drs. Hentz & Hentz, PA
Dr. Charles W. Hinnant
Mr. W. T. Hopkins
Mr. T.
Mr.
In
Grady
Memory
R.
of
Dr. Rhett B.
Dr. Peter E.
Jones
Max
CLARENDON COUNTY
John Wm. Green
W. Green Co.. Inc.
Mr.
II
BEAUFORT COUNTY
Dr.
ANDERSON COUNTY
Norman M. Smith
J.
Dr.
III
BARNWELL COUNTY
B. King
King Oil Co.
Myers
Myers
Denmon W.
W.
COLLETON COUNTY
Dr. J.
Mr.
Frank Biggers
James Ray Cook
IV
Orvin, Jr.
Salisbury, Jr.
John H. Swicord, M.D.
DARLINGTON COUNTY
T.
James
Bell, Jr.,
Dr. Paul A.
Dr.
Wm.
P.
Lawhon,
CHARLESTON COUNTY
Dr. G. J.
Charleston Oil Co.
Buddy, Van Noy, Tommy &
Mr. Harry M.
Ned
Mr. Dennis
Thornhill
Mr.
Bill
M.D.
Coward
Kennedy
Jr.
McDonald
M. Reaves
Yarborough
CAROLINA NATIONAL
[cl
the
EASLEY
•
BANK
LIBERTY
•
that cares!
PENDLETON • CENTRAL • CLEMSON
Member FDIC
54
'
DILLON COUNTY
Mr.
Joe
Carmichael
Mr Charles
Mr. W. G. Lynn
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Powell
Mr. Albert J. Rogers
Mr. T. Neal Rogers
Mr.
& Mrs. Harold L.
W. M. Hooks
Bobby Hudson
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
& Associates
Mr.
Mr.
John
Hood,
J.
Jr.
Pigeon Granite Co.
J. P. Brooks & J. P. Brooks,
Mr. William H. Wylie
Jr.
FLORENCE COUNTY
Joe L. Bostick
Memorial to Mr. G. Wilson Bryce
Mr.
Coleman
Dr. William L.
Mr. F. A. Douglass. Jr.
L. Chappell Jones
King Farms
Mr. Joe W. King
Mr. Tom M. Robertson
Bobby
Mr.
GEORGETOWN COUNTY
Mr.
Glenn
Mr. H. E.
Cox
Hemingway
A.
Mr. A. H. Lachicotte, Jr.
Orders
Allied Textile Sales, Inc.
Food Brokers,
L.
Ayers,
Bates,
Jr.
Dr.
James
E. Bostic, Jr.
Mr. Charles A. Bryan,
Chas. S. Tanner Co.
Mr. William E.
Jr.
Mathews
M. Clary
Cooper Motor Lines, Inc.
Mr. Walter B. Crawford
Mr. Alonzo M. Debruhl
Mr.
J.
Wm. Lem
Dillard
Edwin W. Evans
Mr. Raleigh J. Farr
Thomas
M. Floyd, Jr.
Mr. Harrison S. Forrester
Mr.
Mr.
L.
E.
Freeman
Mr.
J.
M.
Gllfillin
Plyler
Mr. Charles Jeter
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Stroud
B. Sturgis
F Gnffin,
Jr.
Mfg. Co. #1
Harrison
Mr. J. D. Harrison
Robert T. Harrison
Mr.
Caughman
Mr.
Woodrow
Mr.
Lee Harold
"Eugene
Mr.
Mr.
John H. Holt
Jones T. Hunter, Jr.
John O. Lewis, Jr.
Mr.
Mr.
Walker
Inc.
Duncan
Mr.
D. Wells,
Mr.
J.
Mr.
Max Whatley
C. Mclntyre
L.
Hayes
W. Joe Henson
G.
Carolina Ceramics,
Mr. O. K. McKenzie
Mr. Gordon R. McLellan
John F. McLaunn,
Mr. Drake H. Rogers
W.
Carolina Ceramics,
Jr.
Mr. Terris
NEWBERRY COUNTY
Brown
K.
Trucking Co.,
"Tiger Booster
Mr.
Roy
E.
Inc.
Long
McCoy & Jennings
Pinson,
& Mrs. Jeff Rockwell
Mr. George F. Smith, Jr.
A. M. Tuck, Inc., #1
Dr.
A. M. Tuck, Inc.,
Gordon
Mr.
S. Leslie, Jr.
Oil
Mr.
& Mrs.
Mr.
J.
F.
Mr. David G. Jeter
Ml.
W.
Jr.
Dr.
C. Harper, Jr.
Frank A, Hoshall,
Mr.
Jimmy Benton
George J. Bishop
Mr.
In
J.
Keese
Parker
Joseph Rukat,
Jr.
W.
Mr. E. M. Bost
ORANGEBURG COUNTY
Mr.
W.
J. J. Kirby, Jr.
A. Cartwright, Jr,
L.
of Mr. S. C.
Monts,
Bank of S.
W. Smith
Kenneth M. Suggs
Roy N. Taylor
National
Mr.
Mr.
H. D. Folk
Mr. A. S.
Dargan
Holcombe Motor Co.
Sumter Petroleum Co., Inc.
Mr. LeIand M. Bradshaw
Mr. F. Reeves Gressette, Jr.
Mr. R. G. Horton
Mr. D. A. Kennerly
SALUDA COUNTY
Mr. S. F. Horton
Mr.
M. Russell, Jr.
Mr. W. E. Verdery
Mr. James A. Derrick
S & S Farm Supply
Mr.
John
Jr.
L Humphries
J.
Inc.
C.
Mr. Frank
Cannon
Mr. Davis Heniford.
McMeekin
Sr.
Mr. Leon
Fort
Jr.
Richard Newton Assoc.,
Patrick Construction Co.
Mr. John C. Rivers
Sadler & Company, inc.
First
III
Grigsby,
John L. Mack, Sr.
John D. McConnell
Memory
Mr.
Jr.
Deryl Keese & William C.
Mr. Nick Milasnovich
Mr.
& Mrs.
L.
Mr. C. M. "Buddy" Lewis
Col.
Company, Inc.
W. H. Mauldin
Wyman,
W. T. Eraser, Jr.
& Mrs. Donald R. Fugate
Don E. Golightly
Mr. Robert
Young
M.D.
James W. Engram
Mr. David Waldrop,
Mr. David C. Waldrop, Sr.
III.
Mr.
Mr.
Jr.
Inc.
Eller
Mr. Clifford T. Smith
OCONEE COUNTY
Lawton
Inc.
Mr.
Mr.
#2
HAMPTON COUNTY
L.
Mrs. Clarence W. Senn
Mr. Terry C. Shaver
Mr. Harry S.
Inc.
W. L. Harrington, Jr.
The Continental Group,
Mr. C. M. Murphy
Charles Edward Corley
MARLBORO COUNTY
G& P
Inc.
Jon M. Whitaker
Dr. F. E. Abell, Jr.
Mr.
Barber & Associates,
Mr. Jackson O. Byers
Jr.
GREENWOOD COUNTY
P. Willimon
RICHLAND COUNTY
B. P.
Mr. Lewis B. Smith
Thrailkill
Robbins
Col. Richard C.
& Mrs. Thomas E. Skelton
T. E. Jones & Sons of Easley
Mr. R. A. Jones
Mr. W. E. Vaughan
Mr. Henry Yonce and Mr. Charles
Yonce
Witt, Jr.
Daniel
Peek
Dr.
Mr. Ernest Alread
Threatt-Maxwell Const. Co.,
Mr. Clarence R. Turner, Jr.
Moore
Sam Ray
Mr.
Lt.
H. Taylor
Bill
Mr.
James
S.
MARION COUNTY
Chambers
Fred M. Thompson
J. P. Thompson, Jr.
HORRY COUNTY
Mr.
Raymond
Mr. J. E.
Ben
L.
Mr. Christopher G. Olson
& Mr. Kenneth M. Mattison
Mr. Brad Pressley
Tatham
Gray
Mr. C. L. Greene
Jack & Patsy Greene
Mr Donald
R. McDaniel, Sr.
John T. Drafts
Mr. Warren Craig Jumper
Mr. George M. Shealy
Mr. Robert R. Taylor
Thermo-Kinetics. Inc.
Dr.
of
Mr. William C.
& Mrs. Thomas O. Spell
James B. Stephens
&
Sam
Dr.
DesChamps
LEXINGTON COUNTY
Robert S. Small
Mr. Jack R.
Don
Mr.
Mr. Marshall
Mr. A. P.
Hardwood
Inc.
Mr.
L.
II
Clemson
Meehan
Messrs. Gene & Bob Merritt
Niver, Jr.
Mr. Wallace P.
Dr.
Wm.
Thomas M. Hunter
Mr. Allan R. Minovitz
Shook
Edwin
& Mrs. Billy L. Edge
& Mrs. Marvin C. Ellison
Byron & Mickey Harder
Coach Frank J. Howard
Mr. Jerry A.
LEE COUNTY
Shealy Elec. Wholesalers,
Mr. Gordon Sherard
Dr.
Dukes
III
Dr.
McDonald's
Glenn
Hollingsworth
Inc.
Rudder
Mr.
J. T.
W. W.
Jr.
James Rochester Co.,
Mr. James Rochester
D.
Benjamin C. Dysart
Lanford Co.
Francis Realty Co.
Mr. Charles F. Rhem,
J.
Dubose
J.
Mrs. William E.
Mr. R. Frank Kolb
Mr. J. P. Paris
Mr. D. C. Poole
Mr.
&
Mr.
Mr.
Mr. John Perkins
George M.
James
G. Bowling
Ronald L. Carlay
Mr. T. Heath Copeland
Mr.
N. Patterson, Jr.
Mr. C. R. Goulet
Dr. Floyd
LAURENS COUNTY
Co.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Dr.
Col.
"Choppy" Patterson
Mr. R. H.
& Mrs. Harry G. Batson
Ralph W. Blakely
Mr.
Mr. Kelly
In
Jr.
Grady Ballard
Aaro Rents, Inc.
Mr.
I.
Dist. Co., Inc.
Mr.
Palmer
Loom Reed
Palmetto
Mr. L.R.
Mr.
&
F.
Inc.
Mr.
L. L.
James A. & Al Adams
Memory of W. Olin Small
Mr. L. S. Stewman
Mr. & Mrs. Dauane Johnson
Mr. Jim Thrailkill
GREENVILLE COUNTY
Mr. T.
Tile
John
McNamara, Jr.
George Singleton, Jr.
F. Watson
LANCASTER COUNTY
Jr.
Mr. Earl B. Mills
Mr.
Mr. Paul Patnck
Allstate
J.
Mr. Murray M. Stokely
Wood, AIA
Mr. Allen P.
Joseph C. Jackson
Mr.
Mr.
Watford
J.
Norman Canoy
of Paul E. Bowie, Jr.
Eddie Burrell
Mr. Doyle C. Burton
Carolina National Bank
Mr. Mason Garrett
Central Concrete & Plaster, Inc.
Mr. E. E. Clayton
Mr. C. M.
Mr.
J.
Memory
Mr.
Mr.
Jones
Mr. Harold R.
Mr.
Mr. T. F.
Mr.
FAIRFIELD COUNTY
W. M. Estes, Jr.
Barbara S. & Adrian J. Glenn
In
Dr. C. F. Higgins
Mr.
Seabrook L. Marchant
Mr. Buck Mickel
Mr.
KERSHAW COUNTY
Dr. Willis A. King, Jr.
Mr.
& Mrs. Robert H. Herlong
& Mrs. John A. Hughes
PICKENS COUNTY
A and A Builders
C. Fred Kelley. D.M.D.
Scholarship
Mr. Fred J. Mappus,
Diversified Industries, Inc.
Inc.
C. S. Boland, D.D.S.
Roland M. Knight
'Littlejohn Memorial IPTAY
Gene W. Dukes
Thurmon W. McLamb
Riddle & Wilkes/ Architects/
Dr.
EDGEFIELD COUNTY
Mr.
Mr.
Hix
Johnson
Mr. Fred A.
DORCHESTER COUNTY
Bailey
Hewell
A.
Mr. Charles E. Whitener
55
Special Recognition
CONTINUED
Mr. Robert
L.
Mr. Robert T.
SPARTANBURG COUNTY
Henry
Dr.
Anderson
S.
Y. C. Ballenger Electrical Contr.
Mr. A. Courtney
Cobb
Joe
A. Harris, Inc.
Mr.
L. J.
Hendrix,
Mr. Grover C.
Jr.
Henry
"
Snow
Wilson
I.
Mr.
III
Mr. A. J. Rigby,
Danville,
Mr.
Jr.
Mr.
Leigh Textile Company
"A Friend From Spartanburg"
James Sam Seastrunk
Mr. Raymond S. Waters
Mr. Boyd West
Woman's Clinic
Dr. James O. Johnson
Dr.
Mrs.
Hugh
Mr.
B.
Betchman,
Boozer
John
Cannon's,
E.
R. Smith, Jr.
Mr.
Mr.
W.
Mr. A.
J.
Gaughf
Wilson Greene, Jr.
Mr. Sam M. Harper
Mr. Jasper T. James III
Dr.
Mr.
J. T.
James,
Mr.
Korn Industries,
Dr.
Wyman
Mr.
Sammie
L.
Inc.
Morris
The National Bank
of S. C.
Mr.
J.
M. Sprott, Vice Pres.
W.
L.
Ragland
Mr. Charles A.
John C. Boesch,
Charlotte,
Mr. R. A.
Mr.
In
Segars
J.
NC
Bowen,
O. Buck
GA
Buchanan
Dalton,
of Patrick N.
NC
Calhoun
Mr.
NC
Jr.
NY
TN
Mrs. Harry W. Smith
Kingsport, TN
Superior Synthetic Fibers,
Mr.
NC
Swails
J. P.
NC
Swearingen,
Mr. Arthur E.
Mr.
W.
Thomas
NC
T. Vick
NC
Salisbury,
Westmoreland
Dr. T. G.
Mr.
NC
Jr.
NC
Winston Salem, NC
Mr. Don Tomberlin
Shelby,
Kane
NC
Don
V.
Whelchel
Mr. Stanley Riggins
Jr.
J. Hall
GA
J. B.
Sr.
NC
W. Smith
Mr. Harry
Asheville,
Johnson City, TN
Mr. Joe B. Maffett
NC
Memory
Charlotte,
S. Hunter
Lane,
NC
Putnam,
John Rosenwald,
York,
Smithfield,
Thomas P.
& Kenneth
Jr.
D.
Dr. C. R.
NC
Charlotte,
Jr.
Hugh
NC
Wilkesboro,
GA
Asheville,
PA
Bobby B. Jolley
Jamestown, NC
Mr. Joseph Crosby Jones
Mr. Jeff
Mr.
Joseph D. Swann
Stone Mountain, GA
Mr.
NC
W. Purser
Greensboro,
Holland
James
Atlanta,
GA
Statesville,
Macon,
Morris
E.
GA
Mr. Lloyd
Mr.
Mr. Carroll F. Hutto
Anderson
Mr. Emerson E. Andrishok
Warren, NJ
Mr. J. Garner Bagnal
Mr.
Jr.
W.
Augusta,
Burlington,
Guyton
Charlotte,
Atlanta,
T. Fort, Jr.
NC
NC
S. Presnell
Charlotte,
Godfrey
B.
Charlotte,
Norman Warren
Mr. William D.
NC
Philadelphia,
OUT OF STATE
Britton, Jr.
J.
M. Dubose
Joe
Edwin
Kingsport,
Donald A. Fowler
Mr. P. V.
Mr. Harold S.
John
GA
Marion, NC
Garrison Machinery Co.
Mr. Charles K. Segal
Mr. J.
Manuel Fernandez
Forest City,
Mr.
New
Inc.
Dr.
James M. Perry
Mr. E.
VA
Statesville,
Mr.
of Albert Pavlik
OH
Cherryville,
Mr.
Mr. Marshall E. Walker
Mr. John N. Warren, Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Erwin
J.
Memory
Rutherfordton,
K. Benfield, Jr.
Joseph L. Huckabee
Mr. W. Bennett Kirkpatnck
Mr. Claud H. Morrow
Mr. Calvin B. Morrow
Ben
W.
Elberton,
Mr.
Mr.
SUMTER COUNTY
Jr.
GA
Toccoa,
YORK COUNTY
Moore
C.
Chinners,
OH
Ben G. Crosland,
Thomas O. Morris
Hemingway Pharmacy
Insulfab Plastics, Inc.
W.
Village,
In
Euclid,
Lee Connelly, Sr.
Greensboro, NC
Atlantic Chemical Corporation
Greensboro, NC
WILLIAMSBURG COUNTY
Mr. D.
Jr.
Bay
Cathey
Mr. Roland
Mr. F. E. Huggins
Paul Holcomb
Dr.
Jack & Jean Burch
Dr. H. Russell Caston,
"Bubber
Gibson
Mr. Harry H.
Mr.
TX
James E.
Houston,
James
Vicent Caggiano
Wendell Christopher
Mr.
UNION COUNTY
Mr. J. G. Moxon
Ocala, FL
Carlson
NC
Charlotte,
Charlotte,
NC
Mr. Charles Richard
Wood
Worth, TX
Mr. Charles N. Wyatt,
Ft.
Elberton,
Jr.
GA
Montgomery
Martinsville,
VA
SINCE 1897
J
DALTON & NEVES
COMPANY
E
ENGINEERS
1
121
CT7'D\7Tr^T7
ff
MANLY STREET
GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA
29601
—^^^^
LI
Inc.
$250 Gold Card
Is
hereby certified as a
entitled
to
the
all
member and
Is
benefits thereof.
July 1,1977 to June 30, 1978
ABBEVILLE COUNTY
Dr John L Guy
Mr
M
Earle Williamson
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
Mr.
J.
Furman
Leonard Patterson
Mr. J
Roy
Pennell, Jr
James E Pennell, M D PA
Mr W V Trammell
Mr A R Ramseur
Rhodes Development Co., Inc.
Mr James R Rogers
.
AIKEN COUNTY
Alexander Moorman
Assoc.
Mr John G Calhoun
H C Coward & Son
Mr Donald L Fulmer
Mr Elbert Hines Hamilton
Mr H Earle Holley, Jr.
Mr Arthur Leroy Jones
Mr Eugene H Kneece. Jr.
Mr John G Molony
Mr
Molony, Jr.
Wm W
Mr.
Dr.
James
W,
L.
Walpole
G Watson
ALLENDALE COUNTY
Mr
Mr.
W
Mr Leon 8 Allen
Mr Baylis E Anderson
Anderson Orthopedic Clinic PA
Mr & Mrs Samuel Ashley
Mr & Mrs. Sack Bagley
Dr Robert
B.
Belk
Mr Richard P Black
Dr Carroll
Bowie
Mr Donald L Bunton
Mr Jimmy Caldwell
W
Mr. Jerry
Charles L Colley, Randy D Bunion
Dannie K Ragsdale
Herbert Byrant & Jim Cooley
Mr John A Davenport
Mr.
W M
Dillard
Dr Leonard
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Tom
W
Douglas
W
Dunaway, Jr
George H Durham, Jr.
Larry Earwood
A Fant
A Fan!
Lamar Gaillard
George L. Graham
Dr Charles R Griffin
Mr & Mrs. Nardin Heard
Mr Robed Lee Hill
Mr. Roy B Jeftcoat
Mr Wallace Jones
Mr William P Kay, Sr
Mr & Mrs. Raymond A. King
Mr S T King
Mr Ralph F King, Jr.
Mr Frank H. Turner. Jr.
Mr Olin S Kirkpatnck
Mr James
Logan. Jr.
Mr C L. Lomas
Mr
C. McGregor, Jr
Marshall
Marshall
Ill
W
W
Dr Harold L. Murray
Mr D K Oglesby, Jr.
Murray,
In
L M Watson
L Lyies, Jr & S J Watson
Mr & Mrs Rick Whatley
Mr P Louis Whitworth
Wholesale Eleclncal Supply Co.
O
Luther
Jr,
Mr.
James
R.
III
Woodham
I
Memory of S V Sottile
Dan H Swanger
DILLON COUNTY
W
Mr Laurens
Floyd
Trussell
Randy
J
McCall,
L.
Mr William B. McCown
"Mr Alex S Morrison
Mr. John C. Walker
Mr. W. G. Wofford
Jr,
Crawford E Sanders
Preston 0, Toole
DORCHESTER COUNTY
Trussell
Richard E Wheeler
Tom B Young
Berlin
Mr
B Myers Lumber Corp.
R Dupriest, Jr
Earl
Inc.
CHEROKEE COUNTY
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr Lewis
E. Brown
J, E Brown, Jr.
Mr N R Davis, Jr.
'A Tiger Supporter"
Dr E Gray Jeffords
Mr Claude McCain
Mr J L McMillan
Mr Victor Whetstone,
Mr.
James
Wilkins
Michael
EDGEFIELD COUNTY
Brown
A Vaughan
Lawrence E, Childers
Gary E Clary
Wylie Hamrick
John M Hamrick, Jr.
B R Kernels
Mr Joe F Anderson, Sr
Mr Douglas W. Curtis
& Cres Curtis
Mr D C. Herlong
Mr T H Herlong
Mr Frank W. Herlong
Mr L. D. Holmes, Jr,
CHESTER COUNTY
FAIRFIELD
BARNWELL COUNTY
Mr J B Bankhead
Mr James
Bankhead
Mr William T Barnett
Mr. Steven Epps
Mr. George R Fleming
Mr William J Arnette
Mr Louis M Boulware
Mr. Warren R. Herndon
Mr. John C. Renwick, Jr
Mr. James W. Stephenson
Mr Robert H
Mr.
Memory
Class
Bottling
M
Howie
L. Fuller
Mr. Peer
Carl S. Pulkinen
Jr.
W
"In
O Chapman
Coca-Cola
Mr.
Hans F Paul
Thompson.
BAMBERG COUNTY
ANDERSON COUNTY
Kennedy
E.
David
Mr Kenneth S Wohltord
Terry, Jr.
Mr,
W
Fredenck J Terry
C.
Mr. Harris Hicks
Cullum
Felder
Lucas
C Masters
Charles F McCrary
Frank
P Sloan, Jr.
Robert W. Smith
George M Taylor
James
Gregory Alan Jones
R.
Wm.
William C.
Allan
Williams Plastenng.
Ross Brewer
John F, Brunson
W. M.
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Coleman
Glaze
Mac R Harley
J. W. Carter
Ray Clanton
Mr Edward B. Crawford
Mr Martin S Diggers
John
Mr. Steve Pearce
of
of Col
Jr
Francis
M
Zeigler,
1923"
Birt
Walter H. Jenkins
Mr. Frederick D. Mixon
James M.
Mack D
Shuler
BEAUFORT COUNTY
Mrs S
Gough
Mr Sammy Worthy Gough
Mr.
P Johnson
W
W
Mr
E Lindsay
John B. Pressley
and Miss Joan B Pressley
Bates Associates, Architects/ Planners
Dr.
Mr T R. Garrett
Mr Bryan Loadholt
Mr J Harry Tarrance
J. A.
BERKELEY COUNTY
Mr William Bntt
H. Rhyne Jones
Mr Eugene F Oliver
Mr D D Page, Sr.
Mr F M Peagler
Mr Nolan L Pontiff, Jr.
A (Bill) Russell
Mr
W
CALHOUN COUNTY
C. O. Bull Oil Co.
C. F. Evans
Eldon V, Haigler.
Mr
S.
Jr.
Adams
W
III
FLORENCE COUNTY
Bob s Bar-B-Q
Mr Thomas D Birchmore
Mr B M Brodie
Mr Harry Wm. Clanton, Jr,
Mr. L M. Coleman. Jr.
Clyde S Bryce. Jr..
P.E Engineenng Consultants
The Darnell Co.
,
B
CLARENDON COUNTY
Dr Clarence E Coker, Jr
Mr, Marion E Dubose
Mr Roger L Flowers
Mr G H Furse, Jr,
Mr. Scott H Jackson
Robert E. Jackson, M.D.
Mr W. J Rawlinson
Mr H, B. Rickenbaker
Mr. Horace F Swilley
Mr,
H Houck
Ricky Bailey
Mr
M. Cornwell
Jr.
White Memorial
Mr, Calvert
CHARLESTON COUNTY
Mr John
Halsted M, Stone
Mr. Fred Triplet!,
COLLETON COUNTY
& Co.
III
Gilreath, Jr.
W
Mr Ted W. Craig
Mr.
W
COUNTY
Edward
W
J.
Huffines
Werntz,
Jr,
L.
Darnell
Mr.
L. B.
Mr.
Howard
Finklea, Jr.
F.
Godwin
Guyton
Laddie Green Hiller
Mr H. Michael Kaylor
Mr. John E. Lunn
Mr Julian H Price
Mr. Don Quattlebaum
Mr John E. Taylor, Jr
Dr. E. D.
Tom
Gressette Pest Control
Dr, J,
P
Mr
W
J
Truluck,
Jr,
Truluck,
Jr.
Welch
Edward L. Young
Mr, Robert
Mr.
DARLINGTON COUNTY
GEORGETOWN COUNTY
Mr Richard L Baird
Mr. Loyd C. Morris
Mr. Edwin
Gay Bass,
McKorell Bros,
Jr.
Mr. Julian A. Reynolds
Threatt-Maxwell Contractors
Special Recognition
CONTINUED
Mr.
W.
Jordan.
J.
Mr. Lewis S.
Mr. Dwighl F. Allen
Mr. Julian M. Langston.
Atkinson
Mr. Jack
L.
Mr.
Austin,
J, E.
Mr. Frank S. Leake.
Mr. C. P. Ballenger,
James
Mr.
Balloch
Elliott
II
Mr.
Mr. John M. Chewning,
Mr.
Jr.
Co
Inc.
,
Huckabee
Mr. Clarts Gaston.
Jr.
Mr. Charles F Gentry.
Mr.
W
N Ginn
Mr.
Bill
R, Gosnell
Mr.
Dan Gosnell
Joel W. Gray
Billy L. Gngsby
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Odom &
Melissa
.
Inc
Mr.
Jr,
III
Mr. David R. Schumpert.
Nick P Anagnost
Mr.
Mr.
Mr
Crawford,
Jefferson Gray
Coy
L.
Y Johnson
George L. Johnson.
Charles E. Key
Marshall Long
P R. Nickles
John H Roberts
B F. Scott
Joe H. Seal
W. R Swearingen
Sonny Tinsley
Howard Tolbert
Jr.
Nevit
Jr.
Gohagen
Hampton Gas Co Inc.
Winston A Lawlon, Jr
Jr.
Joe W. Sellers
Leon Sham Co
John F Guest
Edward D Guy.
Spartan Express, Inc.
Suitt Construction Co.,
Inc.
Mr. Caldwell Harper
Harper Brothers. Inc.
Mr. John Russell Terry
Mr. Major L. Higgins
Texize Chemical Co
Mr Charles C Thompson
Jr.
Mr. Francis K. Hinnant
Mr. C.
W
Mr.
In
Wm.
Vissage Auto Parts Co..
Mr. Joel W. Wells
R. Jolly. Jr.
Memory
of Mr. Ernest
G. Jones
Mr
J
R.
Bedenbaugh
Mr Gary Coleman
Mr Walter S. Ramage
LEE COUNTY
Mr James K Alexander
W
Mr
Mr.
In
Ray Alexander, Jr,
Carroll Green DesChamps
G H McCutchen
Memory
C B
of C. B. Player
Player.
Mr Hughey
Jr.
&
II
by
C. B. Player
III
Tindal. Jr.
LEXINGTON COUNTY
Mr Billy Amick
Mr Alvin N Berry
Mr F U Black
Mr E Gerald Brotherton
Mr Michael Buzhardt
Mr, B M. Cassady
Dr William S Fairey
D H Caughman
Mr. Frederick
C Gore
Dan P. Gray & John R. Gray
Grayco Steel Corp.
Inc.
LAURENS COUNTY
Jim & Gary Coleman
Mr James
Barnette. Jr.
Marion T Bellamy
Mr F L. Bradham
Mr. Robert C Crenshaw
W
Mr
E Thrailkill
Mr Gerald S Tomplins. Jr.
Mr J Harold Townes. Jr AIA
Blackmon
R H Collins
Mr. Oscar S Porter III
Mr. Grady P Robinson
Mr Randy Senn
Alford
D.
HORRY COUNTY
W
Hinton
H Ivester
Johnson
Mr. Richard
Mr. Dale
.
J,
Inc.
Jr.
Sr.
Mr.
B.
Rouse, Sr.
Mr Jacob D. Rouse. Jr
Mr. William F. Speights
Mr.
Mr Lester P. Branham,
Mr, W, L. Jackson
LANCASTER COUNTY
Robert
David
Calvin Summey-th' Lumber Yard.
Mr. James A. Taylor
Mr.
Durant
Clarence L Beaudrot
M Werts
HAMPTON COUNTY
Mr.
III
C
Mr, Bethel
C. O. Browning
.
Mr.
Mr Earl O Neil McCoy. Jr
Mr H. E Pearce, Jr
Mr E W. Prince, Jr
Dr & Mrs Edward Leroy Proctor
Mr R S Winfield
Wm. Thomas Anderson
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr
Mr F
D Robbins
Mr Stephen G. Roberson
Laverne
Cole
Mr
Mr Benjamin T Rook
Mf E R Roper
Sahara Stone of S, C,
Mr. James L Sanderson
E. Foster, Jr.
Mr. E. Cole
Jr.
JASPER COUNTY
GREENWOOD COUNTY
Jr
W
Mr. C. V. EIrod
Mr James
W
,
Labruce Nursery
KERSHAW COUNTY
Mr. B.
Jr,
F Dawes
Dean Construction
Donkle,
Mrs. Jerry
Co
Inc.
Co.
.
C
L.
Yeargin Construction
Jr.
W. Cantey Davis,
I.
&
Jr
W
H.
Felt
Inc..
& Linda
Mr Charles C Withington.
Wood, Jr
Mr John
P.
S Delk
Darby.
Mr,
Mr.
Willson
Mr H. J. Parton. Jr
Mr Douglas F. Patrick
Mr J Grant Scott
Piedmont Pnntmakers & Supply Co
Mr James W. Moore
Mr William M Poe
Mr Raymond E Putman
Mr Ken
Reed
Ellis L,
Billy
Willson Riggins Landscape.
Jr.
Orders Mattress Co Inc
Mr. Russell Hunter Park
Jr.
Cline
Mr.
Mr. William
Carter
Mr. Paul T. Norris
Mr. Palmer Covil
Mr, Richard A Curtis
Mr.
W. Gordon McCabe,
L. A. McKinney
Mount Vernon Dryer
Mr Kenneth L. Nail
Mr William J, Neely.
Chemurgy Products, Inc. #1
Chemurgy Products #2
Mr. Philip D. Cunningham
Lamar
Thomas
Mr.
McNamara
Moody
Moore-Tinsley Supply Co
Claude M. Burdette
Bill R, Chandler
Mr. Sidney
Mr Edward C Wilhoit
Mr David H Wilkins
Mr J V Williams
Mr & Mrs Charles P Willimon.
Lewis, Jr
Mr William
Mr. Billy Bullock
Mr.
G
Dr James
Mr. Peter H. Bryan
Mr.
L.
Mr.
Mr.
Jr.
James A, Boling
Hugh J. Bonino
Mr.
Jr.
Jr.
"Bud" Long
Jr.
Batson
Mr. John H. Beckroge,
Mr. H.
Mr
W. Balentine
Mr. David
Kay
Mr. Terrell Lanktord
Jr.
Mr Arthur R Hardee
Mr Oscar L. Hodge
Inlet Development Corp.
Dr Murray T Jackson
Ms. Dora Wiley Wham
Mr. Clyde H White
Mr James D Whiteside
Jr.
GREENVILLE COUNTY
Mr. Ernest
Mr, J
Jamerson Corley,
Jr.
E. Corley
Mr, T, A.
Henry
Tinsley
Jewelers,
Inc,
Your Diamond Store
118
S.
PENDLETON STREET
EASLEY,
PHONE
Owned and Operated
by
ED BURRELL
Former Clemson Basketball Manager
58
S. C.
29640
803-859-4991
Contact Ed About Giving
Your Watch "A New Face"
With The Official Tiger Paw
Mr. Leiand A, Jackson
Mr & Mrs Richard L. Johnston
Mr & Mrs. Tyrone McCarly
Messrs Stuart & Stan Miller
Wrenn Machine
Memory
Jr.
Bryan Huggins
T Hunter West, Greenville, SC
of
Ray C. Smith
Mccormick county
W
James
Dr
Gilben
NEWBERRY COUNTY
H
Mr Walter B Cousins
Mr. Buddy Neel
Mr,
Mr. Harold
RICHLAND COUNTY
Ted Plemons
Mr.
Mr. William McF. Scurry
T,
W. Suber
Mr. Ferd
Summer
J.
John
Booker
Mr. Robert H Cureton
Dr.
P.
Mr Walter
Mr Robert
E. Dixon, Jr.
A.
Ferguson.
Jr,
C Holleman
Mr. Louis
Ike
Mr John N Landreth
Dr Harry B.
Mr.
J.
Mr. Robert
D.
Dr.
Whitt Miller
Mr
Don
Jr,
Mr,
M
Hughes Lighting
Mr H, A. McGee. Jr.
Creations,
Mr Julian A, Ott
Power Oil Co.
Mr. Ted Shuler
Mr,
James
Mr,
John
C. Ulmer,
Inc.
Jr,
T, Zeigler, Jr
Mr Harold Albertson
Mr & Mrs George U Bennett
H Blanton
Mr James A Brewer
Mr Jerry R Byrd
Dr Terence M Clark
Clemson Service Station, Inc.
Educational & Counseling Clinic
Mr & Mrs, John A Connell
Mr. Redmon Coyle and
Mr. Nicholas Fletcher
III
Mr James Telford Craig,
Mr Roy S Dalton
Mr Ernest O Defore
Jr.
Home
Mr Alton B Cumbie III
Mr & Mrs Gary Ellenburg
Mrs Carolyn F Fowler
Dr Richard C Fox
Mr Alan R. Franklin
G & B Enterprises, Ltd.
Mr Roddey E Gettys III
Mr Steven C Gibert
Mr Robert M Guerreri and
Mr Frank Guerren
Mr Daniel Hallford
Mr Jimmy R Holliday
Home Savings & Loan Assn.
Mr Randolph D. J Jackson
Dr.
G
Jameson
Ansel King,
J
"
Dr, Robert S, Hill
Augusta, GA
Mr, John R. Hines
Jr
Ortando, FL
Mr. Clifton E. Holley
Hixon,
Jr.
2d
A
W- Gibson
Harvin
Lowder
Riley
David & Ruth McLellan
Dr. Henry W. Moore
Mr. Jeffrey A. O'Cain
Mr, Thomas M, Parker,
Mr.
Sr.
Mr, E, E, Fowler
M
Mr J
Dr.
Mr.
Jr,
W.
W,
Marietta,
Cox
Mr.
George Z, Siokos
Lawrence Steedly
Mr.
Donald H. Kelly
Mr,
Dr.
John
A.
Realty
Flint
& Const,
Mr P. R Hargett
Mr William Frampton Harper
Mr Patterson N. Harvey
"Haselden and Owen
"
W. Hicks
Mr. C. C. Jenkins,
Fredericksburg,
Mr
Bill
Miller, Jr.
Mitcham
Mr, Michael S.
NC
Lexington,
Nash
Mr, Walter M,
III
Greensboro, NC
Dr. Robert F. Poole, Jr
NC
Jr.
C
L
Mr.
U
John
Jr.
Alexander, Jr,
Mr, Marvin B. Banton
Mr.
Mr,
Beason
Kingsport,
James
Jr.
Charlotte,
Mr,
E, Blessing
TN
Brennan
NC
Lawrence H, Buchanan
Greensboro.
Mrs.
NC
•Mr,
Jr,
MD
C. T. Sutherland. Jr.
NC
E.
Webb
NC
Carmen
H. Winburn
NC
& Mrs, Harold Wood
Roanoke,
Mr,
Snapp,
Snee
& Mrs. Bob
Charlotte,
NC
E.
& Mrs.
Chartotte,
Mr Whit Blackmon
Columbus, GA
,
J.
Stoneville,
NC
James
John
Salisbury,
GA
Heyward Bellamy.
Charlotte.
Mr.
,
Mr,
GA
Forest City,
NC
I.
TX
Houston,
VA
D. Barrentine
Buttonwillow,
Mr, O,
Mr. Oliver
Barbary
Gainesville,
Jr.
Quentin S Broom
Adams,
NC
NC
Charlotte,
Burlington,
Winston Salem, NC
Mr, James C, Attaway
Col,
L.
Mrs. E. T, Mcllwain
Covington, GA
Mr. Robert W. Sistrunk
H Abrams
SPARTANBURG COUNTY
ACME Distr of Spbg Inc
R.
AR
Rock,
Raleigh,
Jr,
OUT OF STATE
J
Jr,
Mr, Dan Wheeler
Wheeler Tire Service
Mr. Kenneth Yarbrough
T
&
Greensboro,
Mr, Edgar L.
Mr James Ed Robinson
Mr, Marion B,
Mr,
Co,, Inc.
Mr. D. P, Herlong
A. Wells, Jr
Whiteside,
Little
'Mr.
,
Sr.
Mr. Lewis
SALUDA COUNTY
Mr. R.
Jr.
N
Mr V A Ballard
Mr Joseph
Barnett
Mr E N. Miller III
Culp Bros Inc
W
Mr. Benjamin F. Whaley,
Mr
TN
May, Jr,
Monroe, NC
Dr, Robert C. McDaniel
YORK COUNTY
Seaman Electric Supply, Inc.
Mr Norman E Shuler
Mr, Pelham W Simmons
Mr.
Andrew Lyons
GA
& Mrs Hal Malone
Greenville,
S W, Horton
Lipscomb
B.
NC
Mr. Ralph C.
Jr.
Dodson
Ames H. Wells
Wm. B. Wells
NC
GA
John
Mr. Robert
C. Cottingham
H,
Mr,
Sanlord,
Connor
Mr. Fred P. Guerry, Jr,
Mr.
Mr. C, Kenneth Powell
Market Restaurant
Mr. Henry E
Hank Reynolds,
Mr. Bob Robinson
Mr, David W, Roof
Mr,
GA
Vernon W. Kennington
Decatur,
WILLIAMSBURG COUNTY
Eugene R, Patterson
Pearman
Mr Arthur M. Suggs
Mr Paul E Thacker
Mr, H. T Thompson,
Mr, Joe Ben Weeks
H. Jones, Jr,
Mr Robert A, King
Columbus, GA
Mr Charles T. Kirkley
Hoke
Mr, Harold R.
Mr. Maurice G. Pearson,
Mr,
FL
James
Dunwoody, GA
Mr William B Kellett
Toccoa,
Wilder, Jr
NY
Plant City,
Mr R
L
Jackson
B,
York.
F. Jeff coat
Mr. D, Leslie Tindal
UNION COUNTY
May
James Lee Mays
James T McCabe
W
TN
Edwin
Mr Nevon
Mr,
'
Friend
Jr.
I,
James
Lt-
APO New
Demosthenes McCreight &
Dr. John W. Shaw
Piedmont Printmakers & Supply Corp.
PICKENS COUNTY
Dr. J. H.
Mr B
NC
Asheville,
S, N,
C, Williams,
Duckett Funeral
West
Joye
W
Mr.
D
Harris
L.
Laurinburg,
Mr,
Mr,
Mr. O.
IL
Donald
Hermitage, TN
Mr, Harry L. Hill
Erter, Jr
Mr, Jack
Guest
Northbrook,
Mr,
Jr,
NC
Mr. Karl M.
and Ernest C, Brown,
C Johnson
M
Mr. Steve C. Ghffith,
Mr. M, D. Fort
Mr.
Mr,
Jr,
Malcolm
NC
Charlotte,
Southers Construction. Inc.
Dr. David K. Stokes. Jr.
Troy H. Cnbb & Sons. Inc
Dr Harold S. Vigodsky
W
III
Farnum M. Gray
Mr.
"
Jr.
NC
Charlotte,
Charlotte,
R Boyle,
Flint
L.
Mr. Rupert P Smith
Jack
Jr.
D. Fisher
Thomas W. Glenn
Mr,
Curtis Edens, Jr
Cement Co.
James
TN
Jr.
Houston. TX
Mr. Robert A. Gettys.
Arden, NC
Jr,
W, Shoolbred. Jr.
J. Clyde Simmons
Memory of Nathan Sims
Benny Sisk
Mr. Charlie
Jr,
Greensboro, NC
Mr, Robert B, Ehlen
Anoka, MN
Mr Ford F. Farabow.
Washington. DC
Mr. Robert
III
D.
Dempsey
Edmonds
Hixon.
W. O'Shields
Ted Wilson, Wm
& Belton L. Mims
Jr
George G Matthews,
George G. Matthews,
Mr,
Mr.
Or Lloyd
Mr.
Clemons
NC
PA
Col, J, L,
Mr.
Jr.
Jr.
SUMTER COUNTY
Gnmes, Jr
James W. Hancock,
Mr, Charles
W
J.
"In
Inlrachem Recruiters
Mr,
Dempsey
Mr
W. Dukes. Jr
Mr Thomas J Etheredge III
Mr C O Farnum
Mr Maynard D Funchess
Mr, W. C. Higginbotham, Jr
Mr,
Mr.
T. E.
Cauthen
Dr. M. Rodney Culler
W, Z. Dantzler & Son
Mr. Robert H.
Al
T Dukes
W. Dunn,
Dr Larry Frick
Giant Portland
Jr,
Bustiee
McGarity,
Mr, A,
Inc,
W
Mr E R Bair. Jr
Mr George L Binnicker,
Mr William B Bookhart,
Mr. Charles Parker
C
Mr, Marvin C, Robinson
Jr.
Mr George
Eleazer,
Dr, George H, Fann
Greg S. Fansh
Mr John G. Farmer
ORANGEBURG COUNTY
C
Johnny M. Wade
Mr. W. M, Manning,
Mr, F, M. Foster
Dr Ray Elam
A, Richardson
Mrs. Starr
J
Jr,
Co.
Barry Anthony
of
City,
Mr, Jerry E.
Fuller
York,
W, Lee,
Oil
Memory
In
Tabor
& Mrs, Wilbur K Hammett
Robert M, Hicklin
Miss Margaret Lee
Lyman
SD
James Walker Clark
San Diego, CA
Mr,
Mr, Frank
A.
Col.
Culclasure
Mr. Joe
Jr,
Mr. Garry C. Phillips
Dr,
Mrs.
Mr, Arthur
W
Cooper
W. Cowsert,
James W,
Dreher Packing Co.,
Mr. Arthur Nuttall,
C E Gray
W
Seneca.
Thomas
&
Mr,
AL
Chase
Huntsville,
Mr, R. A. Earnhardt
Mr.
Greensboro, NC
Mr. Loyd B Chapman
Mr.
Morgan Bank & Trust
Mr. George R, O'Cain,
Cogburn
Mr. Charles
Mays
Lane E. Mays, M
Mr Bill McLees
Betts Wilson
Robert H. Blease
John H. Bollin & Co.
Nash Broyles
Jack W. Brunson
Mr. Henry Parrott Byrd
Mr. Ray O Bnan Carter
Mr. W. T. Cassels, Jr,
Mrs. Frances L, Chappell
Service, Inc.
Inc,
Mr, Timothy M. Drake
Dr.
OCONEE COUNTY
K-Mac
Jr,
Mr & Mrs Sims T Ballew
Mr, Walton G, Snow
Mr. & Mrs. J. M Bell
Bobby Blair
C. Gurnie Stuck
Spartanburg.
Williams
B Condrey
Buckeye Corp
Albert T Correll
Mr. Billy W. Davis
Mr. C.
Mr. M.
L. Pitts
of
E.
W, Calvert
Mr, Jackie
Jr,
Bowman
Gene
Mr,
NC
Asheville,
Jr,
E Anderson,
L.
Budweiser
Pridemore
J.
F. Blair
Mr. H. J.
DM D
Lynn,
Mr W. J. Ragsdale
Mr. Cantey M. Richardson
Mr R R Ritchie
Mr. Robert W. Robinson, Jr.
Shealy, Smith & Welborn, P A,
Mr Drewry N. Simpson
Systems Management, Inc,
Col. & Mrs. E. N, Tyndall
Mr. Ernest Jones Washington, Jr.
MARLBORO COUNTY
Mr.
&
Mr. William
M West
Mr Thomas
W. Joe Lanham
Mr Wm D. Lowery
Mr C V Marchbanks, Jr,
Mr, & Mrs. L Paul Miller
Modern Home Builders
Mr George B (Bud) Nalley,
Mr Jerry L. Pace
MARION COUNTY
In
George F Bolen,
J. J.
Tools, Inc.
Mr Lacy Edwards,
Mr, Earl
Mr, Ralph Kirk
Mr.
Lexington Supply Co.
Mr, Richard E, Burdelte
Mr Charles Ellenbrug
Wm,
VA
Lindsay Wylie
Soulhbury, CT
Mr Francis A, Yarborough
Wilmington. NC
If
Filmed highlights of each week's game with Coach Charley Pell and the Voice
of the Clemson Tigers, Jim Phillips, are seen each week on the following stations.
Consult local
listings for times.
WFBC-TV • WCIV-TV • WBTW TV • WRDW TV* WNOK-TV
GREENVILLE
CHARLESTON
FLORENCE
AUGUSTA
COLUMBIA
brought to you by
First National
We Ve Ready To
Bank
Play
HOME SAVINGS
AIMD
LOAN ASSaCIATIOM OF THE PIEDMONT
EASLEY
•
LIBERTY
•
PICKENS
• CLEMSaN
^ Special Thanks
Ben Satcher
Ben Satcher Ford Co..
Lexington, S C
Joe B Feagle,
Inc
Steve Chappel
Camden,
George Coleman, Jr.
George Coleman Motors
George Campbell
John Forster Motors
J. H. Satcher
Satcher Motor Co.
Greenville, S, C.
Travelers Rest, S. C.
Easley, S. C.
Aiken, S. C.
John Sullivan
Marion Burnside
Marion Burnside Motors
Columbia. S C.
Jr.
Feagle Motor Co.
Johnston. S C.
S-J Chevrolet-Buick.
Louie Williamson
Fairway Ford, Inc.
Inc.
S. C.
Anderson, S. C.
George Ballentine
George Ballentine Motor Co.
Greenwood, S, C
Al Smith
Judson T Minyard,
Greenville, S. C.
Inc.
Edsel Hemingway
Hemingway Motor Co,
Jim Connell
Connell Chevrolet, Inc.
Anderson, S. C.
Sullivan Motor Co., Inc.
Jack Tinsley
Tinsley-Crane Chevrolet
Pickens, S. C.
Andrews.
Forrest
S. C.
Hughes
Winnsboro Motor Sales Co.,
Inc.
Winnsboro. S. C.
Superior Motors.
Inc.
Orangeburg. S. C.
Jim Guthrie
Dick Flynt (seated). Pres.
D. E. Mosteller
Jim Hays (standing), V.P.
Guy Motor Co.
Triangle
Ponfiac-GMC
Inc.
Anderson,
S. C,
Charles Z. Yonce
Yonce Ford-Mercury
Edgefield, S. C.
Aiken, S. C.
Our Deep Appreciation
To
shown and listed on this page who
Clemson Athletic Department for use in
the automobile dealers
have donated cars
travel by
members
to the
of the staff.
Clemson
Athletic Department.
61
Regardless
the
occasion or person,
of tine
CLEMSON CANTEEN GIFTSHOP
has made
gift
#2— Baby
bib with Tiger (Plastic with
shopping easy Merely
select the product(s) you so desire,
complete the coupon and forward with
check to CLEMSON CANTEEN GIFTSHOP, Clemson University, Clemson.
S. C. 29631
#1— Rubber baby pants with Tiger
Sizes S (to 1 2 lbs ), M ( 1 2 to 1 8 lbs. ), L
(19 to 23 lbs,), XL (24 to 30 lbs.) $1 79
$1 79
and orange STOCKING
on front (one
all)
$3 98
terry cloth lining)
#3— Purple
CAP
size
CLEMSON
with
fits
#4— Adult gym
white
M
CLEMSON
shorts
W/navy stnpe Sizes S (28-30),
L (36-38), XL (40-
(32-34).
42)
#5—Child's SWEAT
SHIRT
or white. Sizes XS (2^),
(10-12). L (14-16)
#6— Child's
XS
S
(2-4).
(6-8).
M
$5.98
T-Shirt white with navy
Gamecock Sizes
Tiger socking
trim.
$3 98
orange
in
S
M
(6-8).
(10-12), L (14-
$3 49
16)
#7—Child's
navy and orange
T-Shirt.
Sizes XS (2-4). S (6-8), M (10-12). L
(14-16) (Orange not available in
XS)
#8—Child's
$3 49
orange
T-Shirt white with
tnm Sizes XS
S
(2-4).
M
(6-8),
L (14-16)
12).
(10-
$3.49
#9A—Adult navy unlined jacket with
PAW in Sizes S, M, L. XL .,$11 .98
9B— Children's unlined jacket available in Sizes S (6-8), M (10-12), L
(14-16)
$10.98
#10A— Adult
XL
orange unlined jacket
S, M, L,
PAW. Sizes
with white
$11,98
108
—Children's unlined jacket
able
in
Sizes
S
(6-8),
M
avail-
(10-12), L
(14-16)
$10,98
IOC— Adult orange light lined jacket
with
Sizes S, M, L, XL $16 98
#11
Adult navy light lined lacket
with CLEMSON UNIVERSITY Sizes
PAW
A—
M,
S.
L,
XL
$16.98
B— Adult navy also available in pile
1 1
lining
lie
Sizes S. M.
—Child's navy
Sizes S
.
,
$21.98
,
light lined lacket.
M
(6-8),
XL
L,
(10-12), L (14-
$15,98
16)
#12— Roll up nylon rain hat
Sizes 6'/a.
7V6
$4,95
#13—Adult short sleeve orange football jersey, 100% cotton. Sizes S, M,
7%,
7, 7Va, 7V4,
7</2,
XL
L,
$6,98
#14A— Adult
natural
football lersey,
100% cotton SizesS,
M,
XL $7 50
L,
148— Children's
natural football jer-
100%
XS
sey,
cotton. Sizes
(2-4).
M (10-12), L (14-16)
#15A— Adult orange football
50%
M,
L,
cotton.
50%
S
$6 50
(6-8),
jersey,
polyester Sizes S,
XL
$7.50
158— Youth
orange
football jersey,
50%
polyester Sizes S
(6-8), M (10-12), L (14-16)
$6 50
#16 Adult nylon mesh golf or tennis
shirt available in white or navy Sizes
50°o cotton,
—
S, M,
L,
XL
$9 98
#17— Orange golf hat with TIGER
PAW & adjustable strap
$4 98
#18A— Old fashioned glasses with
.
TIGER PAW, Set
,
.
$13 50
of 8
188— Old fashioned glasses with
COLLEGE SEALdone in silver Set of
$14 50
8
#19A— Highball
glasses with TIGER
Set of 8
$12 50
19B— Highball glasses with COLLEGE SEAL done in silver. Set of
8
$13.50
PAW
#20— Small mug CLEMSON/PAW
10 oz
crest metal tankard
$6.98
#21— Ash tray 5 in. diameter metal
W/PAW
$4.98
#22— Large mug CLEMSON/PAW
crest metal tankard. 16 oz,
$8 98
golf or tennis shirt. 50°o
.
,
#23—Adult's
polyester, available
Ordered By.
in
orange. Sizes
S, M, L, XL
$10 49
orange,
navy, or white with TIGER PAW
Sizes S, M, L, XL
$6,98
#25— Adult white T-Shirt with navy
trim Sizes S, M, L, XL
$3 79
#24—Adult's SWEAT SHIRT
#26— Adult navy or orange T-Shirt with
CLEMSON & PAW. Sizes S. M. L,
XL
#27-Adult
$3,79
SWEAT SHIRT with SEAL;
orange only Sizes
S,
#27—Adult T-SHIRT
M,
with
L.
XL $6 98
CLEMSON:
navy or orange. Sizes S, M,
Make Check
Money
order payable to:
Clemson Canteen Giftshop
or
Prices are subject to
change
Add
4%
Sales Tax to all
shipments plus $1 .50 to cover
postage and handling. For three
°^ "^o''© ''ems add $2.00 to
cover shipping.
S. C.
total
Ship
to:
XL
L,
$3.79
Limited Edition Prints
Available from the Clemson University Athletic Department
Print size 24" x 34V2" /
Image area 2IV2" x 32V2"
Send order early to
avoid disappointment
The
Athletic Department is offering a magnificent Hmited edition that will prove to be a collector's item. Only 1500 signed and numbered prints
Each has been personally inspected
by the artist and bears a small tiger paw emblem
with handwritten date of issue.
are available.
Crawford Nute encompasses a
sensitive portrayal of realism with an uncompromising gaze that cannot be forgotten.
The
craftsmanship of this reproduction is superb and
Artist Cheryl
should be included in the collections of inspired
Clemson supporters and print collectors alike.
The
Frank
J.
on display at the
Jervey Athletic Center through November.
original painting will be
$35
['lease
add $2.25
for postage and handling.
S.C. residents add 4% sales tax.
Name
Address.
City
State
Zip
Send check or money order
to:
Tiger Prints
University Athletic Department
P.O. Box 31
Clemson, South Carolina 29631
If YouVe Wanted a Place at the Lake.
biggest
You
can build now, for weekends
and vacations, and look forward to year 'round living
in the country.
after retirement.
Chickasaw Point
1,200-acre
is
cost of living reasonable.
a
community on
Lake Hartwell, one of the
and best fishing lakes
If you buy a
homesite or a home at Chick
asaw Point, you can enjoy
swimming, boating, tennis,
a country club atmosphere
and a rolling, hill-country
golf course that's one of the
most challenging in the
To reach Chickasaw Point,
exit 1-85 at the Fair Play, S.C.
Drive west on SC Fiighone mile to the vil-
exit.
way
59,
Turn left
and drive south on SC
lage of Fair Play.
Highway 182, following
signs to SC Scenic 1 1. Turn
Southeast.
then take the
Your property is protected
by 24-hour security and
right,
established architectural
entrance. For
Chickasaw Point
more information, you can write or call
Chickasaw Point, P.O. Box
to the
covenants guarantee the
quality of your environment
Fifty private residences
have already been built
Chickasaw Point, in
first left
68, Fair
Play S.C. 29643,
Tel:
(803) 882-3800.
at
a quiet,
rural setting that's conve-
Obtain HUD property report from
developer and read before signing any-
nient to shopping, medical
thing,
it
facilities
state
and
a
of the offering
major inter-
nor the value of the property
as an investment,
highway.
The climate
HUD neitlier approves the merits
This offer void
is
mild, the
Chickasaw
Point, P.O.
by
Box 68,
Fair Play
South Carolina 29643, Telephone:
in
if
any
states
law.
(803)
882-3800
where prohibited
^ Cheerleaders /Alma Mater
CHEERLEADERS
CLEMSON ALMA MATER
Where
the Blue Ridge
Where
yawns
its
greatness
the Tigers play;
Here the sons of dear old Clemson,
Reign supreme alway.
CHORUS
Dear old Clemson, we
And
STEVE KLENGSON
JIM
Mech Engineering
Greenville. S C
MEHSERLE
Walton Bch
.
Political
Fla
Science
Greenville,
all
triumph
our might
TERRY HALL
JOE ERWIN
Architecture
Ft,
with
will
8 C
Admin Management
Orangeburg, S. C.
That the Tiger's roar
may echo
O'er the mountain height.
Words By
Music by
COLIN RICHMOND
FULTON BREEN
Textile Tech.
Oneida, N. Y.
Entomology
Atlanta.
Ga
Animal Science
C.
JAN RUSHTON
GEORGE LANGSTAFF
RPA
Animal Science
Easley. S. C.
Head Cheerleader
Mech Engineenng
HILL
Corcoran, '19
Hugh McGarity
Ceramic Eng.
Lancaster, S, C.
Anderson, S. C.
MARY
Dr.
RANDALL ADDISON
CHRIS CARTER
West Columbia. S
A. C.
Kingsport. Tenn.
65
CLEMSON
Alumni Loyalty Fund-
They
performance measures
are doctors, la\v\ ers, teachers,
farmers, businesspersons, mihtarx
them. Tlie\ ha\e an opportunity to
And their roots are here on this campus. They are former students of this institution in tlie footliills of South Carolina.
lor
Clemson University has been
in
to potential,
Clem
f
strategists, puhh'c ser\ ants. Tlie\ lia\ e a lot
going
grow.
\\\)
son University utilizes wisely and rugally every source of aid ):)ossible from all sectors of
free societv
pri\ ate citizens and foundations, business and industrial organizations,
inv ol\
pro\ iding one of this nation's most
\
ed
ital
resources since 1893. Yet, the educational
capabilities of Clemson continue to mount,
and the University has a \ ibrant incentiv e to
demonstrate its ability, and an objective
i
—
and federal governments.
state
Now, more than
needs yon, your
ment
Clemson
e\ er before,
interest,
and Nour
in\ est-
Now, more than ex er be
fore, won t \ on consider what \ on can do for
Clemson?
in
education.
measure it.
As Clemson Uni\ ersitv continues its
contribution to the development of this state,
it remains an indispensable part of its hiture.
Combine capacity, abilit\' and opportunity
and you conclude that potential is \ irtually
\
ardstick to
luilimited.
with yoiu" help. Graduates, former
students and friends of Clemson are not onl\' a
soiu'ce of pride for the Unix ersitv but a
monumental strength in undergirding its
educational programs with annual in\ estments in the institution througli the Clemson
Alumni Loyalty Fund and other de\ elopment
opportunities at the University.
It is,
But greater challenges lie ahead. Knowledge has multiplied beyond comprehension;
the domestic and world situations have be-
come unw ield\ and precarious. To make
sin e
Clemson
Alumni
Association
It takes
teamwork
to make the yardage.
It's
we
just as true in textiles as
we have one
it is
in football.
And
teams in any
league! Our people are dedicated and hard-
think
of the best
working. And they pull together to make
our products even better.
At J. P. Stevens, every team
member is important to us. And we
know our employees like playing
for a winner. So, the next time you
buy Stevens products, you can be
sure there's the Stevens spirit of
teamwork woven into every yard!
J.
P Stevens & Co.
An Equal
Oconee
Savings
Building With
Common
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LENDER
,
Sports Feature
Spotlighting
Ken
Ken
Callicutt,
Ronnie Smith
Callicutt
Ronnie Smith, and Archie Reese are
three of Clemson's 14 seniors
appearance
in
The Seniors
who
will
make
Death Valley against Notre
their final
Dame
this af-
ternoon.
Archie
A prep Ail-American, Smith rushed for over 4,000
yards from his fullback position, and gained quite a reputation as a linebacker.
Although the Tigers gave him a shot at both positions,
Smith was a natural at linebacker. He got in enough playing time with the varsity as
and even picked
Tailback/fullback
Ken
Callicutt
will finish
his
Clemson
career as the Tigers' fourth-leading all-time rusher.
A product of Chester, he holds school records for most
yards rushing as both a freshman (505) and sophomore
Reese
off
a freshman to earn a
letter,
a pair of opponent passes that year.
He was a starter in both '75 and '76, and is a starter,
along with Bubba Brown, at his linebacking spot this
year.
Smith
A
is
majoring
in
pre-architecture.
Academic difficulties kept Callicutt out of action last
fall, and he even spurned an offer from a Canadian
Football League team last spring in order to return in '77
newspaper article carried the three-column
head
"Archie Reese Is A Doctor Of Defense."
And the way the 263-pound tackle is playing, he could
very well earn his Ph.D. by the end of the year.
One of the team's top tacklers, Reese, from Mayesville's Mayewood High School, has been one of the Tigers' leading "big play makers in 1977.
Nine-game sfats have him ranked sixth on the team in
total tackles and second to all-star linebacker Randy Scott
for his senior year.
in
(809).
That
latter
campaign,
in
1974, Callicutt turned
in
his
best single-game rushing effort of his Tiger career with
197 yards against South Carolina. And that same season he amassed 230 yards against North Carolina, 170
rushing and 60 passing.
One
is
also
of the three
one
married players on the team, Callicutt
of only four players in
Clemson
history to
have over 2,000 rushing yards in a career.
Few players have entered Clemson on the heels of a
prep career that would match the one that Ronnie Smith
enjoyed at Sylva-Webster High School in Sylva, N. C.
recent
—
"
tackles for a loss.
This talented lineman spent
offensive front
natural slot at
Reese had
some duty with Clemson's
was moved back to his more
defensive tackle late in that same season.
in
1975, but
showing
in
his
ever in '77, and is
most impressive regular season
his finest spring practice
certainly enjoying his
Clemson
career.
69
^ University Feature
assumed was
'A Lion's Share" is a mixture of the comic and the tragic, reflecting
author Mark Steadman's feeling that "Overall, life is tragic, but moment by moment it's a lot of fun. The things remember most are
the sort of comic passages.
Clemson
of the
X
University English faculty
with a collateral
story about an older man v^ho
finally fails,
at
all.
And he fails too."
The principal character,
Jack Curran, is based on
someone who was Steadman's best
year
friend for
is good
The only
Savannah player then on the
first team of a major college
was Leon Hook, who was play-
about a
idealist whoexpects too
and can
promise with
It."
Quarterback Aaron "Bomber" Stern had poise
and a great arm. too But one monumental failing canceled out all tiis natural strong points He
would absolutely run out of the stadium and climb
a light tower before he would let a tackier lay a
finger on him
t
much
com-
Steadman'sfirst published
"
book was "McAfee County
The onginal typescript for his
second book,"A Lion's Share"
was 800 pages.
He had to cut that to 600, which turned out to be 389 pages when
the hardback edition was printed by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. A
$1 .75 paperback by Avon Books is now on the stand.
He has reached the rewriting stage on "a somewhat shorter book,
a contemporary love story." By Coke Ellington
University News Editor
Boniface College was the Catholic boys' prep school, run by BeneThe "Fighting Irish is what they called themselves,
and their colors were green and white. They liked to think of themselves asa little Notre Dame, though their actual record as a football
team made that difficult, at least in the closing years of World War
dictine Fathers.
and
Dimmy Camack was
the fullback
five feet
seven inches tall and 195 pounds No matter
which way you turned him, he seemed to have
the same dimensions— frontward, sideways, or
upside down He always ran looking down at
the ground
he would rumble by. and Aaron
would sock the ball into his gut. dancing off to
the side to get out of the way Dimmy would hit
into the line without looking up to see if the
hole had opened or not. because, fundamenHit
tally, he didn't give a damn "Hit dat line
"
That was about it as far as Dimmy
dat line
was concerned More than a few of his teammates thought how nice it would be if they
could swap some of Dimmy's heart for just a
more head
little
Two weeks into
was
by a notary public. Anything
over 220 was regarded as an
outright lie just on the face of
And even
then, the really big
usually turned out to be
lardasses, who were suited up
mostly forthe psychological ad-
it.
men
vantage of having
listed in
the
their
weight
program
practice, the usual lethargy was gone. Everyone
Well, relatively. Things weren't A-1, letter-
and alert.
perfect, butthey were
silver and gold to
what they had been
before. A sense of
how well everybody
attentive
else was doing his
job began to filter in
under the helmets.
They were com-
upon the first real
which came just
before the season
opened. The tradiing
just after.
— (When Jack Curran
II
"
Georgia Tech at
175 pounds, and they felt like
they had to keep that in mind.
In those days a playing weight
of over 200 pounds had to be
sworn to on a Bible and signed
ing center for
potential.
of the world
first
closer to reality than
the late 1940s. In the
book Steadman projects and
magnifies his friend's heroic
as "the kind of romantic or
the
for really artful lying.
in
The author depicts Jack
in
It
since 1957, describes A
Lion's Share" as being about
"a high school football player
\nUo has great promise but
never has any promise
lie
But wasn't. And then Jack
had had a growing spurt over
the winter, going up an inch in
height, to 6 feet 4, and gaming
25 pounds. The standards of
the time wouldn't let that be
possible, and besides, the ones
who were making up the stories didn't have all that much
imagination and had to hold
I
"
Steadman, a member
a
place.
returns from a
New
Orleans prep school in
Boniface College in his hometown of
1947 to spend his last year at
Savannah, Ga., the team has won three games in four years. The
whole 1 946 first team is back for another season. The team includes
a quarterback who has a great arm but can't stand to be tackled,
one end with 9.9 feet and 2-flat hands, anotherend with great hands
but an uncanny knack for stopping a yard short of the first down,
and a 225-pound tackle who makes nonaggression pacts with opposing linemen Jack begins to pull the team together,]
They liked to talk about his size, but the truth is that the myth never
did catch up with reality there.
Jack weighed 240, but even the biggest of the bigmouths were
afraid to stretch the story that far. They didn t know how much he
weighed really, but were building on his playing weight for the 1 946
season, which they did know.
had been 215, which everybody
test,
tional
varsity-alumni
game
*
1
.
.
,
It
(3^
MARKSTEADMAirS
"AUON'SSHARE'^
70
Horse Rooney,
the All-State fullback
from the 1942 championship team - the
one that had beaten
Boy s High of Atlanta, was as mean a
snake as ever pulled
a green jersey over
Frog Finnechairo was
at left
end
and
his build
was very
peculiar Two-thirds of his height was from his waist down,
like one of those roly-poly toys with a weight in the bottom
he could
that you can t knock down Frog was short, but
make a vertical leap of four feet from a standing start Frog s
mam trouble was that he didn t move too well after he caught
the ball, and where he came down is where they nailed him
usually Also his sense of direction left a lot to be desired
He never did know where he was on the field If Boniface
needed 25 yards for a first down. Frog would go out and
I plant himself 24 yards down the field.
and as big a one as well He had made the first team at
939 as a freshman at the playing weight of 85, attracting the coach sattention by breaking the collarbone of the first-stnng
right guard during a practice scrimmage His senior year he had
weighed 215, and there weren't eleven men in the state who could
stop him in less than five yards.
his head,
Boniface
in
1
1
For the four years since his
graduation, Horse had had
his natural snake instincts
honed up for him by the Unit-
ed States Marine Corps,
which had put thirty more
pounds of meat on him, and
then had taught him eleven
ways to kill a man with his
bare hands. He wasn't in tiptop shape, but he figured to
kill about four or five linemen
before his wind
Starting with Jack
gave out
Curran
*
Horse had a quick start,
and was going flat out on the
second stephetook But Jack
had the faster reflexes, and
they came together on the
.Wjifrr
Flasher Lynch played right end, was the fastest man on the squad and had the reflexes of
a bat. and liked to show off No matter what
the play called for. he would break down the
then cut and
sidelines for 25 or 30 yards
begin running from one side of the field to
Aaron
the other to aggravate the secondary
would be back there yelling at him to turn
ball
coming
he
see
the
around so
could
alumni side of the line
Talking about afterward,
everybody who was there to
see put in terms of the way
they d felt seeing the newsreel
it
It
It
pictures of the atom bomb
going off in Alamogordo,
N,M, Jacktook him high, getting his right shoulder pad into Horse's face and wrapping his arms
around him on the outside. Jack never broke stride. There was just
a big cracking sound,
a fieldpiece going
like
off,
then the two of
them were moving away toward the alumni goal line, Horse's head
in Jack s shoulder and both legs sticking out under Jack s arms.
The impact split the center seam on Horse s helmet, and flipped
off his head backward so
hung on his neck by the chin strap, like
a Mexican bandit s sombrero. And his shoulder pads flapped up
out of his jersey like the wings on a beetle.
Jack set him down gently on the 42-yard line and stood looking
at him with his hands on his hips Then he looked back at the
other players Noone moved or said anything They were staring at him, some with their mouths hanging open, jumping
their eyes up and down from Jack to Horse and back again
it
it
With everybody watching him, he walked down the middle
where the ball was, on the varsity 35-yard line, moving very slowly and deliberately the whole way. When he got to
Then he reached down and tapped
the ball, he put his foot on
of the field to
it
It
with his
Our
hand
ball,
he said
^
About the Artist
few women editorial cartoonists in the
United States, Kate Palmer says this flaky profession causes her to cultivate a skepticism that ac
cepts nothing at face value and a habit of looking
One
of the
'
Graphics by Josepti King, Joseph King and Associates
for the potential
humor
in
every
political
and
social situation.
Getting from her home town of Orangeburg to the editorial page
of the Greenville News took her awhile
She started out as an art major at Winthrop College, but soon
transferred to the University of South Carolina, where she majored
in elementary education and drew a comic strip for the campus
newspaper She taught in Seneca for a year before she and Jim
Palmer, a Clemson University extension agronomist, got married.
They started raising a family, which now includes James, 6, and
Salley, 3. And Kate did some serious painting on a free-lance basis.
In 1 972 she began doing three cartoons a week for the Seneca
Journal and the Clemson Messenger That lasted about a year.
Then she found an opening at the Greenville News, where each
week she has been working two days and drawing four cartoons.
READY MIX
KBntuekij fried Ck\cken
CONCRETE
SENECA
CLEMSON
We Do
•
All
Phases
Steps
Concrete Work
Floors
•
Patios
•
of
•
•
Walks
Drive-ways
CENTRAL CONCRETE
&
tKentuclw / BUCKET
The
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CklC'^'V
wMvi
V famousColonel's
^
bucket
PLASTER, INC.
104
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E.
639-2415
646-7220
Main SL
good" chicken
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The £ister it Spins,
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The purpose of that rotating
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The more you're
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Keep that
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INTERNATIONAL
AND
STILL GROWING.
—
Formed
Harrison has grown
work
in
reason for our growth
only three short years ago,
rapidly,
excess of $50
completing
million
and now
job
are naturally proud of our growth,
but even prouder of what
we
feel
is
the
^^^^
Pel ham
we
,
,
quality
simple statement,
is
work
we
at a
admit,
the cornerstone for every
undertake.
Give us a
way we do
call.
We think
you'll like
the
business.
Electrical
Constructors,
Road /Post
Greenville,
A
but one that
employing over 1,000 people.
We
fair price.
,
Office
Box 568
South Carolina 29602
(803) 288-7790
Inc.
2^
Sports Feature
Clemson's Senior Sponsors
Elva
for
lola
Wactor
Alice
Trainer Henry Judy
Dawn Melody
for DE Mark
for
Heniford
for
DE Mark
Lee
LB Ronnie Smith
for
Patricia
for
OG
Gorena
Elizabetfi
for Trainer
Brian Kier
Holly Teal Heniford
Stallworth
Brenda biy
for
DB
Sfiaron
Heniford
Allen
Blackston
for
Edwards
for
for
Cindy Wilson
Travers Webb
TE
Jean Kinard
Manager Donnie Kinard
lor
Manager Randy Templeton
Pattie Berry
for
Mary Keasler
Arctiie Reese
DT
for
Nancy Wheally
DB Jofin Goodloe
for
OG
Ellen Dick
OT Jimmy Weeks
Alley
TB Stephen Godfrey
Crooks
Thaddeus
for
Harmon
Bill
Holly Callicutt
DB Roy Eppes
for
Kathy
for
TB Ken
Callicutt
Dillon
FLK Rick Weddington
for
Lynn Brumley
Lacy Brumley
Kathy Lark
Weichel
DT Ken
75
,
Stadium /Concession Prices
SOUVENIR PRICES
CONCESSION PRICES
Buttons
Buttons with Dangles
$
1
.50
2.00
2.00
3.00 & 5.00
5.00
1.00
Pennants
Plush Tigers
Hats
Shakers
Sun Visors
50
Party
Pops
25
Posters
1.00
Inflates
Cheerleader Dolls
Tote Bags
Rugs
Rain Coats
& 2.00
2.00
5.00
5.00
10.00
2.00 and 5.00
2.00
1.00
Footballs
Balloons
Hot Dogs
500
250
250
250
200
500
150
600
010
500
Peanut Butter Crackers
Peanuts
Candy
Gum
Drinks
Cups
of Ice
Cigarettes
Matches
Aspirin
USEFUL INFORMATION
GATES
Season Ticket Holders/Other
Visitors: Sea-
son
ticket holders and other visitors to the
stadium are requested to enter Gates 1 5, 9, 1 1
,
CONCESSION STANDS: Concession stands
are located beneath all stands and can be
reached by exit from any portal. A concession
price list is published on this page.
or 13.
Handicapped: A special entrance has been
vided at Gate 2 for the handicapped.
High School: Special High school
sold at Gate 1 1 only.
tickets are
Should you have tickets at the
window, you will find them at Gate 9.
Will Call:
Gates
pro-
EMERGENCY CALLS: Emergency calls are received over the telephone located in the press
box, the number of which is listed with the
operator as Press Box, Clemson Memorial
Stadium.
NOTICE: Possession or consumption of alcoholic beverages are prohibited by Act No.
550 of the General Assembly of South Carolina, 1967, and rules of the Alcoholic Beverage
Control Commission in this stadium and the
surrounding area. By order of S. C. Alcoholic
Beverage Control Commission.
:
NOTICE: Solicitation for any purpose is prohibited at an athletic contest in Clemson
Memorial Stadium and Littlejohn Coliseum.
will call
1 5 and 1 6 are closed pnor to the
are opened for exit purposes only.
4, 6, 7, 8,
games and
PASS OUT CHECKS: Pass
out checks will be
5 - 9 - 13. Any person
leaving stadium other than with team pass must
have pass out checks, as well as admittance stub
for other type tickets to be readmitted to game.
Ticket stubs will be secured in receptacles proavailable at
Gates
1
-
vided.
EMERGENCIES: First aid stations are located
under Section J on South side of Stadium and
under Section T on the North side. Trained
nurses are on hand all duhng the game. Should a
doctor be needed, ask any usher. Each usher
has been informed the seat location of docAmbulances are located
tors.
and
at
Gates
1, 5, 8,
13.
TELEPHONES: Telephones
Stadium Ticket Offices
at
are located at
Gates 1,5,9 and
1
3.
PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM: The public address system is intended primarily for the information of spectators concerning the game.
Please do not request the use of the public
address system to make social contacts at
the game.
OPEN:
11
FRI.-SAT.
A.M. - 10P.M.
A.M. - 11 P.M.
11
RESTROOMS:
Ladies' and men's restrooms are
located beneath the stands and can be reached
by
exit
from any
portal.
LOST & FOUND:
any article is lost or found,
please report same to Gate 1 Information Booth.
76
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