FALL, 1962 The Lee Chapel Is Rededicated Class Agents for 1963-64 1887-1913—Alumni Office 1914-A—Paui J. B. Murphy, ‘“Kolosandra,” 304 College Circle, Staunton, Virginia 1914-L—John L. Hughes, Box 32, Benton, Arkansas 1915-A—Madison P. Coe, 1735 New Hampshire Avenue, N.W., Washington 9, D.C. 1915-L—Wilbur C. Hall, P. O. Box 390, Leesburg, Virginia 1916-A—Robert B. McDougle, P. O. Box 288, Parkersburg, West Virginia 1916-L—T. A. “Quill” Myles, Box 126, Virginia 1917-A—Raymond L. Cundiff, Owensboro, Kentucky 1917-L—Harry V. Campbell, P. O. Box 1513, Charleston 25, West Virginia 1918 —Allein Beall, Jr., P. O. Box 467, Helena, Arkansas 1920-A—J. Waller Callison, Box 118, Staunton, Virginia 1920-L—John W. Drye, Jr., 350 Park Avenue, New York 22, New York 1921-A—H. Gray Funkhouser, 261 Elliot Street, Exeter, New Hampshire, 03833 1921-L—Fred C. Parks, Box 135, Abingdon, Virginia 1922-A—Dewey A. Reynolds, 65 Sunset Drive, Buena Vista, Tarpon Springs, Florida 1922-L—R. Bleakley James, 132 Alleghany Street, Forge, Virginia 1923-A—Herbert L. Elias, M.D., ville Centre, New York 1923-L—-Robert H. Carr, Sr., Box 460, Jasper, Alabama 1924-A—James V. Logan, Jjr., Denney Hall, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 1924-L—-D. Newton Farnell, Jr.,. P. O. Box 273, Greensboro, North Carolina, 27402 1925-A—John T. McVay, 1404 Washington Blvd., Hunting- ton 1, West Virginia 1925-L—Clarence E. Hinkle, Hervey, Dow & Hinkle, Box 10, Roswell, New Mexico 1926-A—T. T. Moore, Box 2421, Roanoke, Virginia 1926-L-—-W. Randolph Cosby, 2910 North Boulevard, Rich- mond, Virginia, 23230 1927-A—Cooper Turner, Jr., 12th Floor, United Planters Bank Bldg., Memphis 3, Tennessee 1927-L—Euchlin D. Reeves, 89 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island, 02906 1928-A—Gerald F. Horine, 915 N. Quaker Lane, Alexandria, Virginia 1928-L—W. P. Woodley, P. O. Box 389, Norfolk, Virginia 1929-A—George H. Lanier, Jr., c/o Turner Halsey Company, Inc., 40 Worth Street, New York 13, New York 1929-L—Samuel C. Strite, 138 W. Washington Str eet, Hagers- town, Maryland 1930-A—John P. Lynch, M.D., Virginia, 23226 1931-A—William P. Ballard, P. O. Box 1111, Norfolk, Va. 1931-L—Ethan Allen, 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York 5, New York. 1932-A—Charles E. Long, Jr., 4939 Brookview Drive, Dallas 20, Texas 1932-L—Charles A. Wood, Jr., Virginia, 25322 1933- A—Ralph Oe Barnett, 1617 Essex Road, Columbus 21, O. 1933-L—Bernard B. Davis, Box 36/7, Shelbyville. Kentucky 1934-A—George D. McClure, 2222 N. Field Street, Dallas 2, Texas 1935-A—Charles C. Smith, P. O. Box 53, Jacksonville, Fla. 1935-L—Thomas C. Smith, P. O. Box 1693, Tulsa, Oklahoma Fayetteville, West 1921 S. Griffith Avenue, Clifton 199 DeMott Avenue, Rock- P.O. 118 Paxton Road, Richmond, Box 484, Charleston, West 1936-A—James L. Price, Box 4735, Duke Station, Durham, North Carolina 1936-L—William H. Seaton, Jr., 307 McKinley Avenue, Charleston 4, West Virginia 1937-A—Horace Zach Kramer, 928 Peninsula Blvd., Wood- mere, New York 1937-L—Edwin M. Marks, P. O. Box 449, Memphis, Tenn. 1938-A—Gerald M. Lively, 3125 Broadway, Kansas City, Missouri, 64111 1938-L—C. William Karraker, Jr., Redding Ridge, Connecti- cut, 06876 1939-A—Thomas W. Moses, 800 Investors Building, Minneap- olis 2, Minnesota 1939-L—John D. Goodin, Box 457, Johnson City, Tennessee 1940-A—Louis F. Plummer, 161 Bolla Avenue, Alamo, Cal. 1940-L—O. B. McEwan, P. O. Box 753, Orlando, Florida 1941-A—Emil C. Rassman, 417 Midland Tower, Midland, Tex. 1941-L—-Fred Bartenstein, Jr., R. D. 1, Mendham, New Jersey 1942-A—Evans Jasper, Box 387, Bradley, Illinois 1942-L—Clifford L. Walters, 214 Beechwood Road, Louisville 7, Kentucky 1943 —Corneal B. Myers, 130 Central Avenue, Lake Wales, Florida 1944. —James P. Gilman, 324 Ciub Drive, Salisbury, N. C. 1945 — 1946 —Robert W. H. Mish, Jr., Box 887, Lexington, Va. 1947. —John A. McWhorter, Suite 400, Farragut Bldg., 900 17th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 1948-A—Lewis H. McKenzie, Box 510, Montezuma, Ga., 31063 1948-L—Carter R. Allen, P. O. Drawer 219, Waynesboro, Va. 1949-A—-Mark W. Saurs, 1900 Parma Road, Richmond, Virginia, 23229 1949-L—Jack B. Porterfield, Jr., 1609 2121 Building, ham, Alabama 1950-A—William P. Walther, Elm Street, Eldred, Penn. 1950-L—Rufus B. Hailey, Airport Road, Gatlinburg, Tenn. ee Upton Beall, 217 Professional Building, Tyler, exas 1951-L—E. McGruder Faris, Jr., Box 6091, Wake Forest College School of Law, Winston-Salem, N. C. 1952- re E. Thompson, 4915 Longfellow Court, Mc- Lean, Virginia 1952-L—-James Cc, Turk, P. O. Box 1089, Radford, Virginia 1953-A—Leonard B. Ranson, 7.4711 Tkeeide Avente Bal- timore 18, Maryland 1953-L—Robert L. Banse, 116 W. Evergreen Avenue, Phila- delphia 18, Pennsylvania 1954-A—-Norman L. Dobyns, 8022 Harwood Place, Spring- field, Virginia 1954-L—J. P. Kilgore, Box K, Amherst, Virginia 1955-A—J. Hardin Marion, III, 7217 Lanark Road, Baltimore, Maryland, 21212 1955-L—John F. Kay, Jr., 1300 Travelers Building, Richmond 19, Virginia 1956-A—Geoffrey T. Armbrister, 210 West Street, Mamaro- neck, New York 1956-L—David F. Guthrie, Jr., P. O. Box 553, Halifax, Va. 1957-A—John J. Fox, Jr., 500 Tuckahoe Blvd., Richmond, Va. 1957-L—Douglas K. Frith, Young, Kiser & Frith, 10 N. Bridge Street, Martinsville, Virginia ee B. Branch, III, 1045 Hurt Building, Atlanta , Georgia 1958-L—Robert G. McCullough, 1200 American Trust Build- ing, Nashville 3, Tennessee 1959-A—C. DuBose Ausley, Box 391, Tallahassee, Florida 1959-L—Owen A. Neff, 3406 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria 2, Virginia 1960-A—A. Prescott Rowe (address not available at present) 1960-L—I. N. Smith, Box 393, Kanawha Banking & Trust Company, Charleston, West Virginia 1961-A—Robert J. Funkhouser, jr., 8537-C Patterson Avenue, Richmond 29, Virginia 1961-L—Paul H. Coffey, Jr., 301 First National Bank Build- ing, Lynchburg, Virginia 1962-A—Charles E. Commander, III, 1042 N.E. Twentieth Ave., Gainesville, Florida 1962-L—W. Leigh Ansell, 416 24th Street, Virginia Beach, Va. 1963-A—William P. Boardman, 1156 Lincoln Road, Colum- bus 12, Ohio Birming- genet THE ASHINGTON AND LEE Editor WILLIAM C. WASHBURN, 1940 Managing Editor FRANK A. PARSONS, 1954 Editorial Associate Mrs. ROBERT STEWART THE WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. President Joun D. BATTLE, JR., M.D., 1934 Vice-President THOMAS B. BRYANT, JR., 1928 Secretary WILLIAM C. WASHBURN, 1940 Treasurer WILLIAM B. WIspoM, 1921 THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Joun D. BATTLE, JR., M.D., 1934, President THOMAS B. BRYANT, JR., 1928 JAMEs H. CLARK, 1931 H. ‘TYNDALL DICKINSON, 1939 E. STEWART EPLEY, 1949 ROBERT A. FULWILER, JR., 1925 ‘THomMAS W. MOsEs, 1939 E. MARSHALL NUCKOLS, JR., 1933 C. WILLIAM Pacy, II, 1950 E. ALTON SARTOR, JR., 1938 WILLIAM B. WISDOM, 1921 SHERWOOD W. WISE, 1932 EDITORIAL BOARD FRANK J. GILLIAM, 1917 FITZGERALD FLOURNOY, 1921 PAXTON DAvIS JAMEs W. WHITEHEAD JOHN D. BATTLE, JR., 1934 WILLIAM C. WASHBURN, 1940 Published quarterly by Alumni, Incor- porated, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Lexington, Virginia, Sep- tember 15, 1924. Printed at the Journalism Laboratory Press of Washington and Lee University under the supervision of C. Harold Lauck. Laan IRIN by PAS RIE Rs December, 1963 Volume XXXVIII Number 4 Cover: A distinctive view of the Recumbent Statue in the restored Lee Chapel. The pho- tograph was taken by A. Prescott Rowe for the special Chapel supplement published by the Roanoke ‘Times. TABLE OF CONTENTS The Rededication of Lee Chapel g Excerpts from Rededication Remarks 6 Problems of Restoration Challenge Supervisor 4 Museum ‘Theme Is “Three Faces of Lee” 9 Thoughts of an Alumnus. ¢2° 63. oe a INGWe OF the Liniversity. 2 ee le Fall Teams All Record Good Years... ee A The Bankers of 1929—A Distinguished Record . . . 16 Glee Club Feature of Parents Weekend. ..0°. 20. 0 22 Physics Library Honors Adrian Bendheim, Jr. . . . ~ 28 Alunini ‘Fund. Seeks $105,000 Goal) 2. 25 0 ee 4 Report of the 1962-63 Alumni Fund ee er Many Attend Homecoming Weekend -. 2500) 4. 47> 36 Plans Made for New Alumni Directory 8 LOST ALUMNI! Please Help Find ‘Them! Soe 80 Profiles of the Association's Officers 3. 232 ee 48 Class Notes Bo eee eo ee ek i A News, oF the Giaplels: 0 hr 58 ext Ct SPECIAL PHOTO CREDITS: Roanoke Times, p- 10, 11; Fred Loeffler, bottom p. 14; Barton- Gillett Co., p. 17; Lynchburg News, middle right, p. 55. 9 ae The restoration of Lee Chapel necessitated the removal of sev- eral trees and the transplanting of shrubs, but otherwise the ex- terior appearance of the campus landmark is unchanged, as shown in these photographs. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE ‘The Rededication Of the Lee Chapel President Cole, Benson Ford, And Robert E. Lee, LV, Foin In Pledging Renewed Emphasis Of the Noble Ideals of Lee ASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY rededicated its historic Lee Chapel in a simple but impressive ceremony in the Chapel’s auditorium on October 11th. The simplicity of the formalities was in keeping with that of the original dedication of the modest brick and limestone structure that Robert E. Lee had built to serve the spiritual needs of the students of Wash- ington College. After commencement exercises there in 1868, Lee reported to the college’s ‘Trustees that the Chapel, ‘dedicated to the services of Almighty God, is a pleasing as well as useful addition to the College buildings.” While the Chapel is no longer the scene of regular religious services, as it was in Lee’s time, the rededica- tion acknowledged the Chapel’s symbolism of the pro- found Christian influence upon the life of the great soldier and educator. The six hundred persons who witnessed the mid- afternoon ceremony heard brief remarks from Robert E. Lee, IV, of San Francisco, who represented the Lee descendants; from Benson Ford, president of the Ford Motor Company Fund, from whose resources came the gift of $370,000 which made possible the fourteen- month restoration project; and from Washington and Lee’s President Fred C. Cole. FALL 1963 Each speaker emphasized the appropriateness of the Chapel as a lasting monument to Lee’s memory, not so much the memory of a military commander but of an enlightened educator, a man whose life was patterned on principles of duty, truth, and integrity. Robert E. Lee, IV, great-grandson of the general and a 1949 alumnus of the University, spoke first, des- scribing his sentiments of the occasion: “It is a feeling of great pride, an awareness of a very strong personal link with our nation’s great past and with one of the notable figures of history. ‘The feeling is not one that I permit myself to savor very often, and indeed, it is more precious because of the infrequency with which it comes. But this sensation of pride—and humility—is inescapable for me in these surroundings.’ Mr. Ford declared that he and the others present were rededicating “a memorial to greatness.” “This Chapel,” he said, “holds deep meaning and stirring memories for the people of the South. But it is a shrine which belongs to a nation, for the man whose memory this structure honors belongs to all America. It is unfortunate that in spite of his fame, Robert E. Lee, the man, is still unknown to many Americans. It is not that his fame has been bounded by geography 3 or sectionalism. It is rather that too many know him only as the gallant leader of a vanquished army. There are many, born in the shadow of his greatness, who still do not know of the traits that made him a giant among men. “Lee, the General, is already en- shrined in history. Today, by this rededication, we also honor Lee the man of God, Lee the molder of young minds, Lee the healer of raw wounds. Today, our rededication of this shrine reflects the length- ening shadow cast by a great man across almost a century.” In his response to the remarks of Mr. Lee and Mr. Ford, President Cole reviewed briefly the years spent by Robert E. Lee as _ presi- 4 dent of Washington College and of the continuing influence exerted upon the University by Lee’s fore- sight as an educator. “Yet, if one were challenged to determine the area of Lee’s great- est influence upon this University,” President Cole said, ‘‘the answer would not be concerned with the academic curriculum, or the broad geographic origins of the student population, or similar tangible evidences of Lee’s presence here. His great contribution to this Uni- versity affects not so much young men’s intellect and learning as it does their hearts, their character, their attitude toward their fellow- men.” President Cole said “the climate On the rostrum for the rededi- cation ceremony were, above, I-r, BENSON ForpD, PRESIDENT COLE, REcTOR J. MorRIsoN HUTCHESON, and ‘TRUSTEE Dr. JouHN N. ‘THOMAS, and below, l-r, STUDENT Bopy PRESIDENT WILLIAM A. NOELL, JR., UNIVERSITY CHAPLAIN Dr. Davip W. SPRUNT, CHANCEL- LOR GAINES and ROBERT E. Ler, IV. of student life” established in Lee’s administration has developed into traditions “passed from one student generation to the next and guarded jealously by each.” ‘No Washington and Lee student since Lee’s time has graduated without having been personally in- volved in the preservation of these traditions,” said the president, ‘‘and I believe no student has graduated who is not the better man for hay- ing lived in a company of men so guided by principles of honor, integrity, and gentlemanly regard for the rights of others.” In expressing his gratitude to the Ford Motor Company Fund for making the restoration a reality, THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE President Cole said the University, through the Chapel and the Lee Museum there, will seek to em- phasize the “enduring, universal truths” that governed Lee’s life. “We shall suggest,’’ he continued, “that these lofty Christian princi- ples and personal guidelines are as timely and as important for pur- poseful living today as they were when Lee lived.” ‘Thus, in rededication of the Lee Chapel today, we not only re- affirm its heritage as a place of worship, but we encompass in its purpose a fitting tribute to the service and devotion to Washing- ton and Lee has spanned more than half a century.” And student body President William A. Noell, Jr., of Bluefield, W. Va., was cited as representative of a student body which “lives and studies under a code of honor and gentlemanly con- duct established by President Lee.” The invocation was given by University Chaplain Dr. David W. Sprunt, and the benediction was pronounced by Dr. John N. Thomas of the University’s Board of ‘Trustees. Among those attending the re- If General Lee found the Chapel “pleasing and useful” in 1868, those who were present for the re- dedication and the many _ thous- ands of others who have visited the restored Chapel at other times have found it beautiful and inspiring. ‘The charm and dignity of the audi- torium gains subtle emphasis from the soft hghting and gentle colors of wall, carpet, and woodwork. In the museum, the Lee memorabilia are presented in a well-lit, unclut- tered arrangement of new mean- ingfulness to visitors. Perhaps the most pleasantly sur- Mr. Lee, Mr. Ford, PRESIDENT COLE, and Mr. RAy Koot of Ford Motor Company Fund view the Recumbent Statue. memory of a great Christian and his influence upon this University and his nation,’ President Cole said. With the principal speakers on the rostrum were other distin- guished guests who were introduced by President Cole prior to the re- dedication remarks. Chancellor Francis P. Gaines was recognized as “one of the leading expositors of Robert E. Lee and the South” whose administration took first steps toward the Chapel’s ultimate restoration. Rector of the Board, Dr. J. Morrison Hutcheson, was in- troduced as an alumnus “whose FALL 1963 dedication were the Board of ‘Trus- tees, other representatives of the Ford Motor Company Fund, mem- bers of the Virginia Division of the United Daughters of the Confeder- acy, members of the Lee Memorial Foundation of Stratford, the Alum- ni Board of ‘Trustees, officers of the Parents) Advisory Council, the faculty, student body representa- tives, and other friends of the Uni- versity and admirers of Lee. A re- ception for the rededication partici- pants was held at the home of Pres- ident and Mrs. Cole following the ceremony. prising feature of the restored Chapel is the beauty of the tonal resonance of the Erben pipe organ, also restored to original excellence. Before the rededication, Professor James G. Leyburn played an organ prelude, and at the ceremony’s con- clusion he accompanied the Uni- versity’s seventy-voice Glee Club in an anthem and “College Friend- ships.” It was a beautiful and moving climax to what President Cole called “one of the most significant events to take place at Washington and Lee University in many years.” 5 “IT am proud that the Ford Motor Company Fund partici- pated in the preservation of this part of our American Heritage. The restoration of this historic Chapel was a novel undertaking for the Fund. For although we had often contributed to the sup- port and advance of education, this was the first time we had ever allocated funds for a project of historical restoration. We made our decision to underwrite the restoration of the Lee Chapel because we realized that this structure embodies some- thing important for every American. We made our decision be- cause we realized that, without our assistance, the University might be forced to draw upon resources which could otherwise be devoted to purely educational needs. We made our decision in the spirit of my grandfather who believed strongly in the value of reconstructing and preserving outstanding examples of our national past as an inspiration and lesson for the future. “As consecrated tomb, historical monument, museum, house of worship, place of inspiration, this Chapel can, we believe, cement anew and necessary understanding among all parts of our nation. By dramatizing the selfless dedication of Robert E. Lee to the principles of honor, human dignity, learning and ‘the thorough education of all classes of people, this Chapel can be- come a symbol of the fundamental values that unite us all. It will truly enshrine the memory of Robert E. Lee. Then, per- haps in years to come, people, in thinking of him, will not say he led an army in the service of half a nation. Instead, they will say he led a school in the service of all mankind.” BENSON Forp, President . The Ford Motor Company Fund Excerpts from the Addresses At the Rededication of Lee Chapel “There are in Lee Chapel inescapable sug- gestions of Lee’s greatness as a general and war leader. It is appropriate that this be true, but we are convinced that this should not be the primary emphasis here. Here in this Chapel, which 1s Lee’s last resting place, we propose to honor the memory of Lee as a man of learning, as a man of uncompromising principles of honor. We shall seek to emphasize the enduring, universal truths that governed Lee’s attitudes and his life, and we shall suggest that these lofty Christian principles and personal guidelines are as timely and as im- portant for purposeful living today as they were when Lee lived. And we shall suggest that the admirable traditions that enrich the lwes of Washington and Lee students are traditions which can be shared by all Americans.” —PRESIDENT FRED C. COLE “There are many statues, many memorials and tributes to Robert E. Lee throughout our country, but I know I speak for all Lee descen- dants when I say that this Chapel is the most honored monument to his memory of all. It ts comforting to me, and I know it is comforting to all members of the Lee family that the Chapel has been so beautifully restored and that its future preservation is assured. The memory of Robert E. Lee is not solely the possession of his descendants, for he is a part of history, and he belongs to all Americans, of both North and South. This Ghapel, as a symbol of the ideals and purposes of Robert E. Lee which so many of us strive imperfectly to achieve, will inspire many thousands of Americans in the future, as it has in the past.” —RosBERT E. LEE, IV THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Prior to the reopening of Lee Chapel in Au- gust, the Roanoke ‘Times published a special, sixteen-page supplement on the Chapel, the restoration project, and related topics. The sup- plement was prepared under the personal super- vision of BARTON W. Morris, '43, executive editor of the Times-World Corporation of Roanoke, who was ably assisted by FReD P. LOEFFLER, °48, Times state editor, and many other members of the ‘Times staff, as well as by A. PRescorr RowE, assistant director of Information Services at the University and Curator of Lee Chapel. The supplement represented the best accu- mulation of information about the Chapel ever assembled at one time. Below and on _ four following pages are several stories from the supplement, and in subsequent issues of the Alumni Magazine, additional features about the Chapel will appear from time to time. Much of the historical and descriptive material is familiar fo alumni, but they may find these accounts of particular interest for their school-age children. WILLIAM L. Dopp, supervisor of ihe restoration project, examines the floor plaque which marks the spot where Robert E. Lee was first buried on the Chapel’s lower level. The Many Problems of Restoration Were a Challenge to Its Supervisor By RANDY ARMBRISTER ILLIAM L. Dopp, an expert builder for the Lynchburg construction firm of John P. Petty- john Co., once lived in Lexington but until June 1962 “had never set foot in Lee Chapel.” Fourteen months later he knew as much, or more, about the physi- cal aspects of the historic old struc- ture as any man alive. RANDY ARMBRISTER is head of the Roanoke ‘Times Shenandoah Val- ley Bureau which is located in Lexington. FALL 1963 The 45-year-old native of Bu- chanan was construction supervi- sor for the infinitely complex pro- ject of restoring the beautiful Chapel built in 1867 while Gen. Robert E. Lee was president of the college on whose campus it stands. The $370,000 renovation job was Bill Dodd’s first such assign- ment. He has spent nearly a quar- ter of a century in the building pro- fession, he says, with most of those years consumed in putting up new structures. But the soft-spoken man frankly admits he’s “‘not ashamed of the job at all—in fact, I feel kind of proud of it.” Renovation of the lovely but aged chapel at Washington and Lee University was not an easy task. Dodd says “A new building can be done with one-third the headaches.” ‘The knotty problems arose from three major causes: Reinforcing the ancient brick building in floors, walls and roof; Keeping accurate track of all original materials so they could be put back in proper place; And the third, possibly most dif- ficult headache, was brought on— not by aged bricks and woodwork— but by people; visitors and “‘side- walk superintendent” types, Dodd recalls with characteristic calm. hese ..“'problem: “people, the construction chief explained, were not folks connected with Washing- ton and Lee University who might have been anxious over the disturb- ance of the cherished landmark. In fact, “I’ve never worked a job yet where the people who had to do with it had less criticism,’ Dodd said in praise of the school person- nel. And the difficult ones were not Civil War “buffs,’’> nor members of patriotic organizations—nor for the most part, even Virginians. Instead they were the ones Dodd pungent- ly described as ‘“‘a few out-of-stat- ers—who had their opinions as to what was going on, without know- ing what was going on!” They also “couldn’t see where all that money was going.” Dodd is an understanding easy- going person with respect to others, however, and the amateur experts didn’t disturb him much. The stubbornly curious sight- seers were the ones who helped age him he said. It made no apparent difference to these that the Chapel had been officially closed at the be- ginning of the work to prevent pos- sible injury to visitors. Elaborate and polite signs erected here and there by school officials explaining the project and why visitors couldn’t enter the Chapel seeming- ly made little impression. They were quite even when Dodd would personally warn them of danger—from falling objects, as the roof came down—or of plunging through the disman- tled flooring to the museum below. nonchalant “They'd just stand there and look at you,’ Dodd commented, mild curiosity about the ways of men still evident in his voice. Then he hit upon the solution Steel replaced wooden beams. to the problem—a simple and direct one. ‘The persistent visitors stop- ped short, unquestioningly, when confronted at the Chapel door by a flimsy cord strung across the opening with a little piece of card- board worded: KEEP OUT—FLOORS HAVE BEEN SANDED. “Very effective,’ Dodd observed. The construction supervisor had plenty of professional help for the restoration project. In addition to subcontractors handling phases of the work, Dodd, had the services: of D; KE. “Pat' Brady, Jr., Washington and Lee’s superintend- ent of buildings and grounds. And both Dodd and Brady need- ed plenty of help; it was learned that one back wall of the Chapel’s clock tower would have to come certain out due to its dangerous. state. “Frankly, I was afraid to fool with it,’ Dodd admits. But the wall] was taken out, strengthened, and rebuilt—every brick back in place. The necessary structual rein- forcement for the nearly 100-year- old Chapel in fact “is where most of that money went to, folks kept asking about,’ Dodd noted. “You can’t see it, but its there—inside.”’ Remarkably little of the original building was replaced. Most of the pieces which are substitutes were the necessary, and concealed, steel braces and trusses taking the place of unsafe wooden ones. Fven the slate shingles from the roof were individually marked to assure each would be returned to its place—as was each strip of floor- ing, and the sections of milled woodwork. The task Dodd’s renovators faced is revealed for ex- ample, in the fact that the Chap- el’s side walls were “bowing” out as the old trusses “began to give way, here and there.” monumental Dodd reports that the combined bulge of both walls measured g and 3/4 inches! And the roof was off keel. After installing new, safe roof supports it was found that the rear ceiling of the Chapel would need to be lowered by 8 and 3/4 inches— all because the original roof had “different piches for the front and rear gables.” The veteran builder know why this was, though he feels it “probably was an error, since back then they worked from day to day with what they had.” ‘The work of John P. Pettyjohn Co., and construction supervisor Bill Dodd on famous Lee Chapel is doesn’t done now, after fourteen fascinat- Dodd currently is working on an addition to a Win- chester utility firm. It has less head- aches but nothing like the chal- lenge of Lee Chapel, he noted. It sounded as if his usually carefree voice reflected a note of sadness. ing months. Cc THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE XHIBITIONS REVOLVING around KE the three most © significant phases of Gen. Robert E. Lee’s life are featured in the museum of Washington and Lee University’s newly restored Lee Chapel. The principal theme of the first- floor Lee Chapel Museum is “The ‘Three Faces of Lee’’ and the hun- dreds of historical items owned by the university are displayed to re- flect Lee as a soldier, an educator, and a gentleman. Items are grouped in eight specially designed and custom-built display cases. Although emphasis in the 14- month preservation project at the chapel was on restoration, changes were made in the nearly 100-year- old building to assure its future permanence and enhance its appeal to its many thousands of annual visitors. Considerable remodeling work was done in the museum area FALL 1963 Mr. and Mrs. W. KENT Forp, ’22, examine one of the original lamps which were first used to light Lee Chapel. The old fixture was discovered during the restoration. Chapel Museum Theme Depicts Lee As Soldier, Educator, and Gentleman By A. PReEscoTr ROwE, ’60 to aid in the effective display of Lee and Lee family memorabilia. ‘The Lee Chapel Museum, first opened to the public on January 19, 1928, is housed in a large room that served for many years as the headquarters and meeting room of the YMCA of the university. A smaller room, in which the muse- um shop is located, was used for the offices of the university treasurer during the late 1800’s. ‘The third room on the first level is the small ofhce used by Gen. Robert E. Lee from 1867 to 1870. General Lee was president of Washington Col- lege (now Washington and Lee) for A. Prescotr Rowe, ‘60, formerly curator of the Chapel Museum, is now with Rey- nolds Metals Company’s public relations staff in Richmond, five years beginning in 1865. Lee’s office was completely re- stored during the preservation pro- ject, and the original furniture in the room has been arranged by museum personnel as it presumably was when General Lee last used the office on September 28, 1870. Across the hall from General Lee’s office is the Lee family crypt, where the famous Confederate lead- er is buried along with his wife, children, and other members of his family. ‘The museum and its shop are done in a beige motif with monk’s cloth stretched over several walls to facilitate the hanging of paint- ings and historical photographs. In the center of the main room of the museum is a three-sided wall sur- rounding a stone that marks the place where Robert E. Lee was buried for 13 years (1870 to 1883). 9 In 1883, his remains were removed to the Lee family crypt. ‘The crypt was added to the chapel that year along with the chamber housing the famous Valentine recumbent statue of Lee. Over the original grave marker is a large oil portrait of Lee in his Confederate general’s uniform. ‘The painting was done in 1934 by James Montgomery Flagg, creator of the famous World War I “Uncle Sam” recruiting poster. Photo- graphs of Lee’s funeral on October 15, 1870, also are displayed in this area. ‘The center walls—an addition to the museum area—are the keystones for the exhibition scheme. In each of the three bays in the center are large photomurals of Lee. The first was taken by Civil War photogra- pher Matthew Brady and shows the famed commander in his uniform shortly after his surrender at Ap- pomattox in April, 1865. The sec- ond is also a Brady photograph taken in 1869 during Lee’s presi- dency of Washington College. The third blow up is Michael Miley’s dramatic head and __ shoulders photograph taken nine months be- fore Lee died. It is believed by historians to be the last photo- graph taken of the general. Under each of these murals are display cases for the most represen- tative items of Lee’s life as soldier, educator, and gentleman (family man). Wall cases opposite each of these central display areas also are arranged to accent these three phases of Lee’s life. Each exhibition case, furnished with its own source of light, is finished with a smooth surface of beige with flecks of gold. ‘The cases are outfitted with casters for mobil- ity and versatility in changing ex- hibits. | Exhibitions will be changed from time to time in an effort to display more effectively all of the items owned by or loaned to the univer- sity. No exhibit schedule has been 10 A young Chapel visitor views the portrait of Lt. Lee. arranged to date, however. One of the museum’s most val- uable holdings is its art collection. Probably the most famous portrait in the million-dollar collection is the Charles Willson Peale portrait of George Washington. This vi- brant painting shows Washington in the uniform of colonel in the Virginia Militia, a British Army unit. It was done while Washing- ton was in his go’s. ‘The Edmund West portrait of Lt. and Mrs. Rob- ert E. Lee also are significant ones in the collection. These were done in the late 1830's when the Lees were quite young. The portrait of General Lee shows him in his U.S. Army lieutenant’s uniform. ‘This West portrait of Mrs. Lee is the only one for which she ever sat. Other paintings displayed in the museum include one of Ann Carter Lee, General Lee’s mother, and the John Wollaston portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Parke Custis and their children, John Parke and Martha Custis. ‘The Custises were ancestors of Mrs. Robert E. Lee. A portrait of George Washington Custis Lee, General Lee’s son who succeeded his father as_ president of Washington and Lee, also is dis- played in the museum. The young- er Lee gave the university the Peale portrait plus a number of the oth- er paintings in the museum. In the auditorium is the well-known ‘Theodore Pine portrait of General Lee, An electrical track in the ceiling of the museum provides for special spotlights for each of the portraits and other special exhibits. Many of the remodeling changes in the Lee Chapel Museum were recommended by Dr. Kenneth W. Prescott, managing director of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia and special consultant for the museum. Each item in the museum’s hold- ings has been carefully catalogued by Mrs. Marjorie Crenshaw, wife of the head of the university’s history department. Today, every item in the museum has its own identifica- tion number as well as four file cards relating its historical signif- icance, donor and date given or loaned to the museum. During the cataloguing project, attention was also given to the res- toration of the historical items. ‘This restoration work was done by I. L. Hancock, HI, of Lexington. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE EMORIES BURN the brightest in Lee Chapel for those who re- ceived their education at Wash- ington and Lee University. This could be because of the historical significance of the struc- ture, built by a man whose influ- ence is still felt a century later, but perhaps it is more because much of the W&L student’s life centers around the building. It is here that one attended his first student meetings and heard of the traditions that were to become a way of life. And the philosophy of Robert E. Lee, whose recumbent statue could be seen beyond the rostrum, became very much a living ideal. Robert E. Lee, perhaps more than any other person, created the traditions of conduct that govern Washington and Lee a century lat- er. One heard about the man and his way of life from Dr. Francis P. Gaines, former university president and now chancellor who became a living legend in his own time. Through the four years that were The wide-angle lens pro- vides a striking view of the Chapel’s restored in- terior. Only the Peale portrait of Washington and the Pine portrait of Lee are displayed now in the auditorium. Other portraits that once hung there are now in the Mu- seum or on display else- where at the University. FALL 1963 Thoughts of An Alumnus By Fred LOEFFLER, 48 to follow much of what happened within the ivy covered walls of the building became mileposts along the road to graduation. And often as one sat on those hard and ungiving benches which left a lasting impression on one’s mind and elsewhere, eyes strayed from the speaker to the wall behind where hung the portraits of those who contributed more than their share to future generations. And once the college career reached its culmination, here was where the degrees were conferred on a hot day in early June. Some of those who received their diplo- mas might not have reflected on it that day, but later they came to realize just what the building and its builder meant in their own lives. Last year contributors to the annual Alumni Fund drive re- ceived a nail from Lee Chapel en- cased in plastic. ‘These handmade nails were available because of the restoration of the building whose creaky balcony had long indicated the need for such a project. The nails themselves were more than mere mementoes. Whether they realize it or not, most of those who attended college on the Lex- ington campus could indirectly as- sociate much with the nails—the voices, names and faces that will remain a permanent part of their memories. In just a few days, still another homecoming will cause a_ large number of W&L graduates to re- turn to Lexington. And as in the past, a visit to Lee Chapel will be a part of their schedule. ‘They will find some changes, but it stands much as it has for almost a century—a monument to a man, a philosophy and a way of life. 1] News of the University Student Body Numbers 1,256 For 1963-64 University Year TOTAL OF 1,256 students from A 42 states, the District of Co- lumbia, and eight foreign countries enrolled at Washington and Lee University this fall. E. H. Howard, University Regis- trar, reports that this year’s official enrollment is 25 higher than the 1962 total of 1,231. The Univer- sity registered 1,186 students in September of 1961. Virginia again leads the states in representation with 272 students. Maryland has the second highest total with go and New Jersey and New York each have 71. Foreign countries represented in this year’s student body include Argentina, Denmark, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, and the Vir- gin Islands. Washington and Lee’s current freshman class numbers 340 as com- pared with last year’s 334. This fall, there are 282 sophomores, 232 juniors and 240 seniors. In addi- tion, there are several “special” students on roll. In the School of Law, Dean Charles P. Light reports an enroll- ment of 156. The Law School to- tal includes 62 new men, 51 second year students and 42 seniors. ‘There were 142 law students last year. Washington and Lee’s_ enroll- ment climbed above 1,200 in the late 1940’s with an influx of World War II veterans. During the 1950's, the University’s enrollment hov- ered around the 1,100 mark. 12 B# DR. JAMES H. STARLING, professor of biology, will serve as Co-Ordi- nator of Pre-Medical Work at Washington and Lee, it was an- nounced in October by Dr. William W. Pusey, III, Dean of the College. Dr. Starling’s appointment plac- es him in charge of the University’s existing Pre-Medical Committee which directs the pre-medical cur- riculum at Washington and Lee. With the committee, Dr. Starling also will advise all students plan- ning medical careers, whether they have majored in the University’s pre-medical program or in some other specific major involving the Dr. JAMES H. STARLING sciences, humanities, and social sciences. “Washington and Lee’s students for many years have been success- ful in gaining admission to the best medical schools,” Dean Pusey commented. “The extension of the functions of the medical advisers under Professor Starling’s direction will enable all interested students to secure the best possible counsel- ing in their pre-medical education here’ Dr. Starling, 51, joined the Washington and Lee faculty in 1942. After Army service in the Pacific during World War II, he re- turned to the University in 1946, and in 1951 he became professor of biology. He has served as a_ pre- medical adviser since 1954. A native of Troy, Ala., Dr. Starl- ing earned A.B. and M.A. degrees at the University of Alabama and his Ph.D. degree at Duke Univer- sity. He is a specialist in parasitol- Ogy. @ JOHN R. NEEDHAM, Jr., has been appointed public services librarian for McCormick Library. A 1962 graduate of Tennessee Polytechnic Institute, he received his M.A. in library science from George Pea- body College this year. # AS GLASGOW Visiting Professor for the fall term, William Humphrey, novelist and short-story writer, is conducting a series of four public lectures and four readings from his works. His first lecture, “Ah, Wilderness!’’, was presented in Lee Chapel on October 3, with subse- quent appearances scheduled each month during the First Semester. Reading and _ discussion — sessions were scheduled in late November and early December. Humphrey is author of The Last Husband, a _ collection of short stories, and Home from the Hill, a novel published to broad critical acclaim in 1958. While in residence he will assist with the English De- partment’s creative writing class THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE and confer with student authors. He was first heard at Washington and Lee in 1960 when he appeared with John Ciardi and Merle Mil- ler on a Glasgow Committee-spon- sored program on “The American Writer and His Public.” Other writers who have been presented by the Glasgow program since its initiation in 1958 have been novelist Katherine Anne Port- er, playwright Edward Albee, and poets Howard Nemerov, Robert Lowell and Richard Eberhart. A PRIZE-WINNING essay by Dr. Wil- fred J. Ritz, professor of law, was published in the October issue of the American Bar Association Journal. The essay, “Free Elections and the Power of Congress over Voter Qualifications,” won _first- place honors in January in the sec- ond annual Samuel Pool Weaver Constitutional Law Essay Compe- tition of the American Bar Founda- tion. JAMES W. ““TATER” WALKER, 55, University athletic field mainte- nance supervisor for nearly 16 years, died October 29 of an appar- ent heart attack. | A familiar figure to W&L athlet- ic fans, and friend to university ath- letes of many student generations, Walker was found dead at the wheel of his truck near his home. He had been an employee of the University since 1948. His father, the late Samuel F. Walker, was the first maintenance man for Doremus Gymnasium. & THE OPENING CONCERT of the Con- cert Guild’s 1963-64 season featured Nelson and Neal, duo-pianists, in a Lee Chapel concert October 7. Highlight of the program was the North American premiere of Con- certino for two pianos, Op. 94, by Shostakovich. The Guild’s second FALL 1963 presentation was Stanley Hummel, pianist, on November 18. a Shenandoah, the University’s quarterly literary magazine, has be- come a member of the Association of Literary Magazines. ‘The nation- al organization, with a membership of 36 literary magazines, is designed to increase the usefulness and pres- tige of such publications, to combat the concept that the magazines are private enterprises for commercial ends, and to strengthen the eco- nomic conditions and capabilities of the magazines as a group. The fall issue of Shenandoah featured an interview with Pulitzer Prize winning poet Conrad Aiken. Two reviews of books on and by Aiken also were published in the issue. mw “BIEDERMANN AND THE FIREBUGS,”’ a comedy by Swiss playwright Max Frisch, was the opening presenta- tion of the Troubadours. Students featured in the four-night run in- cluded Timothy W. Dols, Balti- more, Md.; Stephen J. Colvin, Arl- ington Heights, Ill.; and Joseph Volpe, III, Arlington, Va. = THE EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States has given the University $1,000, mark- ing the seventh consecutive year that Washington and Lee has been among the independent colleges and universities sharing in the in- surance company’s program. @ A SERIES OF Six films about activi- ties carried out during the Inter- national Geophysical Year are be- ing shown at Washington and Lee during November, December and January. Designed for the layman, the fiims were prepared under the direction of the National Research Council. Their local showing is un- der the sponsorship of Washington and Lee’s department of geology. a THIS FALL brought an unusual number of outstanding lecturers to the campus. Dr. Raymond L. Wilder, research professor of mathematics and _ re- search mathematician in the Engi- neering Research Institute at the University of Michigan, discussed “Mathematics: Science or Human- ity?” “Social Ideas Behind Full Em- ployment”” was the topic of Dr. David M. Wright, professor of economics at the University of Georgia. Dr. U. ‘I’. Holmes, Kenan Profes- sor of Romance Philology at the University of North Carolina, de- livered a lecture on ‘French Ro- mances As An Early Novelistic Form.” The chairman of the Depart- ment of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University, Dr. Samuel E. Stumpf, delivered two lectures on “The Moral Order and the Legal Order’ for a special Seminar in Religion and Law. Ralph Ellison, — writer-in-resi- dence at Rutgers University and author of Invisible Man, lectured on “The Novel and the American Experience.” Howard L. Boorman, Director, Research Project on Men and Poli- tics in Modern China, Columbia University, spoke on ‘“The Sino-So-. viet Conflict: A Retrospective Sur- vey.” ‘The Washington and Lee and VMI affiliates of the National Com- mittee for Education in Politics presented Charles McDowell, Jr. 48, syndicated columnist, who spoke on “Politics in Virginia.” # FIVE SENIORS will compete in De- cember for Rhodes Scholarships to England’s Oxford University. ‘The University’s candidates are C. C. Flippen, Jr., Richmond, Va.; William A. Noell, Jr., Bluefield, W. Va.; William B. Ogilvie, Shreve- port, La.; ‘Thomas D. Supak, Vir- ginia Beach, Va.; and Tain P. Tompkins, San Francisco, Calif. Each plans to apply from Virginia and has received the endorsement of Washington and Lee’s faculty. £5 Fall ‘Teams All Record (sood Years 1 4 N PAPER AT season’s start, the C) 1963 Generals figured to be nearly as strong as the all-winning campaigners of 1961. Coach Lee McLaughlin could call on some two dozen lettermen from the 1962 team which lost only once in nine contests, and there were some of the best sophomores in years mov- ing up from the freshman ranks. ‘The schedule was tougher, to be sure, but the Generals had the in- centive of a six-game winning streak to continue and a College Athletic Conference title to de- fend. The beginning was a good one, and the win-streak stretched out to nine, and the first conference op- ponent went down handily. But then the troubles began, adding and then multiplying, and soon what was to have been a great year was only a good one, and at one At left, senior halfback HEN- RY SACKETT (20) turns the corner behind a_ wall of blockers enroute to a_ first down against Oberlin. Below, a view of the same play, tak- en at ground level just a spilt second behind the photo at left. Note the slight changes in the positions of the play- ers’ hands and feet. Good in- terference like this helped SACKETT rush for 633 yards, tops by a W&L back in thir- teen years. Other players are SyD BUTLER (37), JOHN Mc- DANIEL (78), BILL GOssMAN (60), and BiLL ANGEL (69). THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE point the Generals found them- selves burdened with the unaccus- tomed stigma of a two-game losing streak. Playing before friendly home crowds in the first three games, the Generals disposed of Randolph- Macon, 28-0; Oberlin, 29-13; and Centre, 28-8. Next came an inva- sion of Pennsylvania and a show- down with Susquehanna Univer- sty, a team like the Generals whose powerful running attack had failed to bring the Crusaders victory only once in their last 31 games. It shaped up as a small college Don- nybrook, and it was just that, al- though the 31-0 score by which the Generals fell does not accurately suggest their stubborn reluctance to bow. At game’s end, the Gener- als loaded their wounded on the Lexington-bound bus, while eight Crusaders checked in at the local hospital for X-rays and other treat- ment. Back in Virginia for the renewal of the long-standing rivalry with Hampden-Sydney, Coach McLaugh- lin scratched three injured regu- lars and as many second unit men from the ready roster, and hoped for the best against the fired-up Tigers, who were having one of their best years. The defense on both sides was brilliant, and four times the Generals denied the Tig- ers scoring bids, while W&L scratched out eleven points on a field goal and a touchdown run with an intercepted fumble. Hamp- den-Sydney got a begrudged touch- down in the fourth period, and then, after driving nearly to the Tiger 20, a penalty on a crucial fourth down play stalled the W&L drive, and Hampden-Sydney was in business again. The Tigers crunched out two first downs and then let fly with a long pass to the 15-yard line where General safety man _ Bill David gathered the ball in with two arms and a broad chest and crashed to the ground. The ‘Tiger receiver FALL 1963 scrambled onto David, wrapped one arm around the ball, just in time for the official to arrive from downfield, rule a simultaneous catch and award Hampden-Sydney the first down. It still took Hamp- den-Sydney five plays to against the disheartened Generals, but there were only forty-five sec- onds left and it wasn’t enough to change the 12-11 final count. SCcOre ‘The two-game skid ended the next week in Lancaster with a 28-6 triumph over Franklin & Marshall. ‘Then it was up the mountain to Se- wanee, where another band of ‘Tig- ers were growling and _ scratching more fiercely than in Death Valley. No one had come close to Sewanee in six games, and in tailback M. L. Agnew the Tigers had one of the country’s best and most versatile backs. Again, the final score in Sewanee’s favor, 35-6, does not re- flect the 60-minute ferocity of play. The Tigers were long ball hitters that day, catching the W&L defense napping on a half-dozen key long- range plays that brought touch- downs or made subsequent scores possible. A week later, the Tigers edged past Washington to climax one of their finest years, unbeaten and champions of the College Ath- letic Conference. The Generals, still injury-ridden, came back to bounce Southwestern at Memphis, 36-12, in a Wilson Field contest. The final contest with Washington University, which would have decided second place in the conference, was canceled be- cause of the President’s death. While injuries were perhaps a key factor in every loss, there were other influences that worked against the Generals. There was maybe a touch of “senioritis” among some of the seventeen final- year veterans. And with seniors seemingly entrenched in all start- ing positions, Coach McLaughlin didn’t achieve the spirited compe- tition for Blue Unit berths that he hoped for from the younger play- ers. The new substitution rules prevented McLaughlin from play- ing his sophomore-dominated third unit as much as normal in other years, and the same rule all but eliminated the possibility of the helpful advice from the bench that would punch in the touchdown or get a drive rolling. But there were outstanding in- dividual efforts. Halfback Henry Sackett gained more yards rushing (633) than any runner since Walt Michaels’ great work in 1950. End Buck Ogilvie’s blocking and _tack- ling rattled opponents’ bones while he boned up for interviews as a Rhodes Scholar candidate. Tackle Jim Sylvester, another Honor Roll student, got straight A’s in Mc Laughlin’s grade book, too, and halfback Bull David established himself as one of the Generals’ best pass catchers and pass defenders of any era. But the season was a winning season, and it helped complete a winning pattern at W&L this fall. Coach Dick Miller’s cross-country runners outdistanced six of their seven opponents, and_ freshman Charlie Head set a new school rec- ord for the home course in the final meet. Coach Joe Lyles’ soccer team dis- played a good scoring punch, but they failed to win some close ones and reluctantly settled for a highly respectable 7-5 season. Lyles’ de- velopment of soccer talent, both on the varsity and freshman levels, has brought the game to a new popu- larity in W&L athletics. Finally, as a bright promise of future happy Saturdays at Wilson Field, the freshman football team turned in a winning season for the first time since 1948. Coach Dana Swan's Brigadiers lost their first two games to Woodberry Forest and Staunton Military Academy, but they rallied to win four straight over Augusta Military, Bridgewater College Jayvees, Randolph-Macon Academy, and Hargrave Military. 5 The Bankers of 1929— A Distinguished Recor Led by the Class of 1929, Washington and Lee Alumni Hold Important Top Positions In Nation’s Foremost Banks F MANY CAREERS in which Washington and Lee alumni excel, one of the most noteworthy is banking. Indeed, a member of the University’s Board of ‘Trustees, Joseph E. Birnie of the Class of 1927, is President of the Bank of Georgia. The total number of al- umni serving as bank presidents is in the dozens, and more than forty alumni hold senior-officer positions in banks each having assets in ex- cess of one hundred million dol- lars. A recent survey to determine the qualities that contribute to the making of executives of large banks recorded Washington and _ Lee in a fifth-place tie with the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania among colleges most productive of presidents of the nation’s 300 largest commercial banks. Only Harvard, Yale, Michi- gan, and Princeton contributed more men to the group, and Har- vard’s high rank depended entire- 16 ly upon its Graduate School of Business. Among the 300 largest American banks there are six having Wash- ington and Lee men as presidents (of which only five were uncovered by the survey cited above). ‘Three of these men took the BS in Com- merce degree as members of the same class—1929g—long called “‘the bankers’ class’” and a class whose total achievements mark it as one of the great ones in the history of the University. Four other class- mates have reached vice-presiden- By JoHN McK. Gunn, Jr. cies of major New York banks, and at least eight other *Iwenty-Niners have attained positions of leader- ship in banking. Additional mem- bers of the class serve as bank di- rectors. Among these is another ‘Trustee of the University, Lewis F. Powell, Jr., who took his B.S. in Commerce degree magna cum laude, went on to become President of the Student Body, and then to be the first-ranking law graduate in 1931. Mr. Powell is more celebrat- ed, of course, as the President- Elect of the American Bar Associa- Joun McK. Gunn, °46, is assistant profes- sor of economics at Washington and Lee. His interest in the careers of University alumni is unbounded, and this article on banking is the result of one of several studies he is making that reflect the im- pact made by Washington and Lee men upon the nation’s economic, social, and political life. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE tion, but among his many, demand- ing responsibilities is a director- ship of Richmond’s State-Planters Bank of Commerce and Trusts. A career in banking is particu- larly fitting for graduates of a col- lege that seeks to develop com- munity leaders, where ‘“commun- ity’ is given both large and flexible definition. This is true because bankers affect so importantly the economic development of a com- munity, are drawn almost unavoid- ably to exercise leadership through- out a community's life, and through their aggregate influence have much control of the nation’s entire resources. Big Bank Presidents First among the *“ITwenty-Nine bank presidents according to the size of his bank is Adrian McCar- dell, President of the First National Bank of Maryland, whose total as- sets approach half a billion dol- lars. Mr. McCardell added a Harv- ard MBA to his W&L diploma, served for ten years as a national bank examiner, then entered Na- val service during World War II and gained the rank of Command- er: Following the War he became Vice-President of the Seaboard Cit- izens National Bank of Norfolk, whose current President is James Hoge ‘Tyler, III, BA 1931 and LLB 1933. Mr. McCardell moved briefly to Charleston, West Virginia, then to Baltimore in 1958. He was ele- vated to his present office in May 1961. Outside the bank, Mr. Mc- Cardell holds positions in the Boy Scouts of America and in the Na- tional Conference of Christians and Jews. Allen Morgan, ’29, joined the First National Bank in Memphis soon after graduating in Lexing- ADRIAN L. McCARDELL, "29, prest- dent of the First National Bank of Maryland. FALL 1963 ton. He devoted primary attention to development of underwriting business in state and local bonds, and under his leadership the First National Bank rose from a place of small significance in investment banking to become one of the larg- est underwriters of municipal bonds among all American banks. Toa recent W&L senior who want- ed to enter investment banking and thought therefore he must go to New York, Mr. Morgan said, “If you're talking about state and lo- cal bonds from the Mid-South, this is the market.” Mr. Morgan became a vice-presi- dent of the Bank in 1937, at the age of 28, and in 1960 he succeed- ed another W&L man, Norfleet Turner of: the Class. *of-.1924, as president. Mr. ‘Turner, who has many notable accomplishments, in- cluding the presidency of the Na- tional Bank Division of the Ameri- can Bankers Association and mem- bership on the Federal Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Sys- tem, then became chairman of the board. In addition to Messrs. Mor- gan and Turner, the First National Bank is served by five other Wash- ington and Lee alumni; and Bay Fitzhugh, a graduate of Vanderbilt but son of the late ‘Tom Fitzhugh of Washington and Lee’s Class of 1929, recently has been employed by the bank as a trainee. Just down the Valley in Roan- oke, Edward H. Ould presides over the First National Exchange Bank, an institution that is virtually a post-graduate division of the Un1- versity. George I. Ellis, Jr., of the Class of 1927, is a senior vice-presi- dent and trust officer. William N. Shearer, Jr., who took his law de- gree in 1949, has just been promot- ed to senior vice-president. John D. “Pete” Sterrett, Jr., BS 1938, and a native of Rockbridge County, 1S a senior vice-president who came into the First National Exchange organization through the merger of Epwarp H. Ourp, ’29, president of Roanoke’s First National Exchange Bank, is surrounded in his office by other Washington and Lee men in the bank’s organization. From left, they are WILLIAM N. SHEARER, JR., '49, GEORGE 'T. ELLs, JR., ’27; LyNN R. HAm™onp, III, 64; JOHN D. STERRETT, JR., 38; FREDERICK T. BROMM, ’47; THOMPSON W. Goopwin, ’62, and Mavison D. McKee, ’49. HAMMOND and Goopwin are in the bank’s training program. 18 THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE the First Farmers National Bank of Wytheville, of which he had been president. Madison D. McKee, Jr., a native of Buena Vista who took his BS in Commerce summa cum laude in 1949, 1s vice-president and cashier. And _ Frederick T. Bromm, a member of the Class of 1944 Whose war-interrupted AB in Economics was awarded in 1947, is a vice-president of the bank, in its loan division. Chairman of the Board C. Fran- cis Cocke, who was president of the American Bankers Association in 1951, 18 an alumnus of the Univer- sity of Virginia, but he is the son of Lucien Howard Cocke, Wash- ington and Lee 1878, a member of the Board of ‘Trustees for nearly thirty years, and Rector of the Board, 1924-1927. Joining Mr. Ould and Mr. Cocke on the Board of Directors of the bank is John D. Bassett, Jr., of W&L’s Class of 1924 and chairman of the board of the Bassett Furniture Company, world’s largest manufacturer of wooden furniture. For a W&L alumnus not a mem- ber of the Class of 1929 to become president of a hundred-million dol- lar bank, it seems necessary for him to have been a member of Phi Beta Kappa—at least. The three other presidents of banks in the big 300 achieved this distinction as un- dergraduates, as did also the vale- dictorian of the Class of 1914, Arthur W. McCain, who as presi- dent of the Chase National Bank in the late 1940's was W&L’s “biggest” bank president to date. John Francis Watlington, Jr., valedictorian of the Class of 1938, has been president of the Wacho- via Bank and “Trust Company, Winston-Salem, since 1956. The Wachovia is the largest bank be- tween Philadelphia and Dallas, and it has long been regarded as one of the most distinguished banks in the nation. Mr. Watlington is the principal of Dr. Gaines’ oft-told story, “You'd better not hire him— FALL 1963 JOHN F. WATLINGTON, JR., ’33 he'll take your job,” the obvious conclusion to which is that he did. Backing up Mr. Watlington are fellow alumni A. R. Bennett, of the Class of 1925, vice-president and head of the trust department of Wachovia at Durham; William G. Sizemore, BS in Commerce 1948, cashier of the banch at Asheville; and John Schuber, Jr., BS in Com- merce 1948 and LLB 1949 and an- other member of the Class of ’44 whose degee was delayed by the War, vice-president and trust of- ficer of the important Charlotte of- fice. Jack Schuber is also the im- mediate past president of the Char- lotte W&L Alumni Chapter. Another vice-president of the Wachovia Bank is Courtney R. Mauzy, an alumnus of the Univer- sity of Virginia but such a loyal supporter of Washington and Lee as to require inclusion here; Mr. Mauzy achieved some legitimacy as a W&L alumnus when he was ini- tiated into the W&L chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma in 1961, to- gether with his splendid son, Courtney, who was Tri-Captain of the undefeated football team of 1960 and a magna cum laude BS in Commerce in 1961. Younger alumni are “maturing through the ranks’’of the Wachovia Bank. “He'll take your job” could well be repeated as Royce Hough joins the Wachovia this fall after two years’ duty as an Army officer. Royce was President of the Stu- dent Body in 1958-59 and valedic- torian of the Class of 1959, and af- ter gracing W&L with a summa cum laude BS in Commerce, he fin- ished first in his class for the MBA degree at Cornell University. John Harold Hardwick, BA swm- ma cum laude 1931, serves as presi- dent and director of the Louisville Trust Company, where he has the pleasure of having as vice-president and trust officer his classmate, Wil- liam L. Jones. Vice-president and trust officer of the rival Liberty National Bank and Trust Com- pany is another classmate, Sidney W. Clay. In a rare coincidence, the “Thirty-One Bankers in Louisville were classmates again in the Har- vard Business School, where all three received MBA’s in 1933. Rounding out a clean sweep by Washington and Lee in Louisville’s major banks are Charles H. Semple, Jv., BS in Commerce 1939 and vice- president of the Citizens Fidelity Bank and ‘Trust Company; and A. Stevens Miles, Jn, BA ros, re- cently elevated to a vice-presidency of the First National Lincoln Bank, a bank which in a spirit that trans- cends incongruity, advertises itself as “The Oldest National Bank in the South,’ ‘Thomas C. Frost, Jv., whose 1950 BS in Commerce is another of the bankers’ swmma cum laude degrees, became president of a quarter-bil- hon dollar bank, The Frost Nation- al Bank of San Antonio, at an as- tonishingly young age. He is re- membered best in Lexington for his remarkable performance as a student and for his valedictory ad- o> dress. Mounting the platform to deliver the oration he had submit- ted dutifully for faculty approval, he reports, “I looked out at my classmates and decided I simply couldn’t do that to them,’ where- upon he pocketed the approved text and produced some extempo- raneous remarks that were highly entertaining to the graduating sen- iors, with only minor offense to the delicate sensibilities of the faculty. New York Banking In the banking hub of the World, W&L men find fellow alumni in all the leading banks, with vice-presi- dents in each of the six largest New York banks, a senior vice-president each in the First National City Bank and the Manufacturers Han- over ‘Trust Company, and some forty alumni in all employed by these half-dozen banking giants. ‘The Class of 1929 accomplished this penetration almost within its own number. Riley P. Stevenson is a vice-president of the First Na- tional City Bank, which recently surpassed the Chase in total size. Mr. Stevenson joined City Bank a few weeks after his graduation, and except for military service in 1942- 1946, his entire career has been with this bank, where he now is general credit supervisor for the entire Metropolitan Division. A senior vice-president of the First National City Bank is Frank T. “Pete” Mitchell, BA 1925, who after living in Brazil for many years now is responsible for all the very large overseas operations of the bank. Behind these two are a dozen other alumni, ranging from Fred L. Rush,, BA 1948 and LLB 1949, who is a trust officer, to William P. Boardman, BS in Commerce 1963 and vice-president of the Student Body last year, who is a new trainee. Another devoted alumnus, W. J. L. Patton, BS in Commerce 1922, recently retired as deputy comptroller of this ten-billion dol- lar institution. 20 Kenneth A. Durham, who took a summa cum laude BA, is vice- president of the Chemical Bank New York ‘Trust Company, in charge of their important ‘Thomas and Church Street office. Mr. Dur- ham was an executive in the textile industry until 1951, and he now heads a banking office located in the center of the primary textile market, whose major customers are firms in the textile industry. An- other alumnus, Robert Van Buren, BA 1950, was promoted last year to a vice-presidency of the Chemi- cal Bank. He and Mr. Durham head the second largest W&L con- tingent in New York Banking, a total of ten men. Included in this number is the son of a “Iwenty- RILEY P. STEVENSON, ’29 Nine Banker, Edward H. Ould, III, BA 1960. Robert B. Lee, BS in Commerce magna cum laude 1929, is vice- president of the Bankers ‘Trust Company, in charge of the ten- state Southern District of its East- ern Division. His duties in main- taining correspondent relationships with large Southern banks and de- veloping new business in both loans and trusts require him to travel extensively, and he often sees a number of his classmates, sev- eral of them in line of duty. Franklin Poore “Johnny” John- son, BS in Commerce 1929, was a vice-president of the Manufacturers Trust Company until 1958, prior to its merger with the Hanover Bank. He resigned that position af- ter twenty-four years in the bank to re-enter the securities business, with the firm of Cyrus J. Lawrence & Sons. Throughout his career Mr. Johnson has been concerned with securities analysis, and his efforts now are especially directed toward developing a workable system of comparative values of common stocks. An alumnus from another class, Philip H. Milner, of 1936, recently was made a senior vice- ROBERT B. LEE, ’29 president of the same bank, now the Manufacturers Hanover ‘Trust Company. Formerly in charge of the bank’s branch in the Empire State Building and then the branch in Rockefeller Center, he left his last position of vice-president in charge of public relations and busi- ness development to assume overall responsibility for the bank’s sixty- two branches in the metropolitan area. ‘The Manufacturers Hanover bank, employing nine alumni, stands close behind City Bank and THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE the Chemical Bank in affording op- portunity for development and achievement of Washington and Lee men. It is necessary to move only one class forward from 1929, to 1930, to find a vice-president of the Chase Manhattan Bank, Joseph C. Broad- us, who is a specialist in the petrol- eum division and another Harvard MBA. ‘The Chase Manhattan Bank’s petroleum department is the largest of any bank in the world, and Mr. Broadus frequent- ly is called upon to travel to Vene- zuela and the Near East, with oc- casional trips to Europe. Since the magnitude of some of the loans to petroleum companies is beyond the capacity of even the Chase, he of- ten must deal with officers of the other great banks, insurance com- panies, and other financial insti- tutions, to share these loans. Moving back a short time, Wil- liam A. McRitchie, LLB 1925, is vice-president of the Morgan Guar- anty Trust Company, where he has been engaged in personal trust work since 1928. Mr. McRitchie is the sole alumnus in the Morgan Guaranty bank, but its Board Chairman, Henry Alexander (called “the nation’s most prestig- ious banker’ by Time magazine), sent his son to Washington and Lee, partly upon the recommenda- tion of his good friend Norfleet Turner and seconded by Allen Morgan. *Twenty-Nine Around the South Washington and Lee has never sought to develop men who func- tion best only in giant organiza- tions nor to imply that community leadership is most admirable when rendered in the national commun- ity. Manifesting belief that leader- ship is both worthy and personally satisfying in every community are “I'wenty-Nine_ Bankers _ scattered through the larger South. Howard W. Gwaltney is president and chair- man of the board of the Bank of FALL 1963 Smithfield, Virginia, as well as president of two other business firms; he also served the town as Mayor for ten years. W. Van Gil- bert, who went into the Law School after three years and thereby delay- ed his BS in Commerce until 1930, is chairman of the board of the First National Bank of Athens, Ala- bama. McRee Davis serves as presi- dent of the First National Bank of Garland, Texas, which is affiliated with the famed Republic National Bank, of Dallas. Ernest Swope Clarke, who entered W&L with the Class of 1929 but earned his BS in Commerce in 1928, has been for many years president of the Citi- zens Union National Bank, of Lex- ington, Kentucky. RoBerT S. BACON, ’29 Robert S. Bacon is executive vice- president and trust officer of the First National Bank of Mobile, ‘“Alabama’s Oldest Bank,’ which is trying to complete Alabama’s new- est bank building, thirty-three stories tall, in time for celebration of its centennial in 1965. Joining Mr. Bacon on the bank’s board of directors are Joseph R. Mighell, Jr., BS 1913 and chairman of the board of the Mobile Steel Company, and Robert E. Stevenson, BS 1927, vice- president and also a director of the Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad. On the other hand, Mr. Bacon’s ’I'wen- ty-Nine classmate, Thomas J. Tay- lor, Jr., occupies a seat on the board of the Merchants National Bank of Mobile, his principal com- petitor. William 8B. Jacobs, another “Twenty-Niner with a Harvard MBA, has been for many years vice- president and trust officer of the Central National Bank, Richmond. He is also director of several other business firms, and he is unusually active in administration of com- munity affairs. In 1960, together with Dean Lewis W. Adams of the University’s School of Commerce and Administration, he represented Washington and Lee at a confer- ence on Business Education, held at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, un- der sponsorship of the Ford Foun- dation. Harry M. Wilson, Jr., 1s vice-president and assistant trust offcer of the Florida National Bank, Jacksonville. And Ballou Bagby is vice-president and cashier of the First National Bank of Dan- ville, Virginia. Outstanding Achievement The banking industry is charac- terized by men who put their roots deep into a community and become involved in its affairs. Except for those members who are executives in New York banks, the bankers of the Class of 1929 are serving in or near the same communities from which they entered Washington and Lee as students. From a class which numbered only 110 when it graduated from Washington and Lee, the “Iwenty-Nine Bankers, and the many other bankers who are W&L alumni, by their achieve- ments add great luster to the Uni- versity. hey seem to justify Frank- lin Johnson’s conclusion that “Dr. Hancock, Dr. ‘Tucker, et al didn’t do such a bad job after all for a bunch of guys whose minds were essentially centered on Sweet Briar and Hollins.” . 21 Glee Club Production Is Featured Attraction Of 1963 Parents’ Weekend ARENTS’ WEEKEND for 1963 was a record-setting affair at Pp virtually every turn. While official attendance figures differ little from last year’s all-time high, a number of events on the busy weekend program attracted crowds of students and their parents in unprecedented numbers. With the football team away from town, the soccer game between the Generals and King College was played on Wilson Field, and a crowd of some 1,100 persons—the larg- est ever to see a soccer contest at Washington and Lee— cheered the home team to victory. ‘The Glee Club and Brass Choir concert which climaxed the crowded Saturday schedule filled Doremus Gymnasium with an audience estimated at some 1,300. Soloist with the club was Miss Dorcas Campbell of nearby Fairfield, “Miss Virginia” for 1963-64 and one of the ten “Miss America” semi-finalists last September. Some 1,070 parents and guests of 508 of Washington and Lee’s students attended this year. ‘The Parents’ Advisory Council, co-sponsor of the weekend with the University, elected Houston attorney Durell Carothers as its 1964-65 Parents greet PRESIDENT COLE al reception chairman. in Evans Dining Hall. Miss Dorcas Campbell, the current “Miss Virginia,’ sang with the Glee Club at Parents’ Weekend. 29 THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE RICHARD BENDHEIM, _ left, of Richmond, presents PRESIDENT COLE with a portrait of his late brother, ApRiIAN LL, BENDHEIM, JR., “42, to hang in the library named for the distinguished alumnus. Washington and Lee’s Physics Library Dedicated to Adrian L. Bendheim, 7r. ASHINGTON AND LEE honored WX) the memory of a distin- guished Richmond alumnus when it dedicated the Adrian L. Bend- heim, Jr., Physics Library early in November. Located in the University’s new building for physics and_ biology, the library is a gift of the family and friends of the late Mr. Bend- heim, a 1942 graduate. During the brief public cere- mony, Richard Bendheim of Rich- mond, on behalf of the family and friends, presented the University with a portrait of the late Mr. Bendheim to hang in the library. Also participating in the dedica- FALL 1963 tion were University President Fred C. Cole, department head Dr. Edward F. Turner, Jr., and Uni- versity chaplain Dr. David W. Sprunt. In presenting the portrait of his brother, Richard Bendheim said, “Adrian graduated over twenty-one years ago, but really only left this fine University four and a_ half years ago. I know in my own heart that, next to his family and friends, Washington and Lee was second to none. His love and devotion to this birthplace of leaders is in the rec- ords and this everlasting memorial to his memory is truly heartwarm- ing to all of us.” Prior to his death on July 25, 1959, Bendheim was active in alum- ni leadership of the fund campaign to provide improved facilities for science instruction and research at Washington and Lee. The new fa- cilities realized through the cam- paign were placed in service in 1962. Bendheim, who was 37 when struck and killed by lightning while fishing at Virginia Beach, was a former president of the Rich- mond alumni chapter. He was ac- tive in the real estate business, and the Real Estate Board of Rich- mond now awards the Adrian Bendheim, Jr., Award annually to the city’s outstanding real estate salesman. 23 The Alumni Fund For 1963-64 Will Seek $165,000 Goal The Alumni Fund Council’s Chairman; Robert W.. Kime; “44, Is Enthusiastic About Prospects For Continued Dramatic Progress N AN EFFORT to build success I upon success, the Alumni Fund Council has announced a goal of $165,000 for the 1963-64 Alumni Fund. Some eighteen per cent greater than the $140,832 total which alumni contributed through last year’s fund campaign, the new goal reflects what the council’s mem- bers believe is a realistic and chal- lenging approach to alumni sup- port of Washington and Lee. In announcing new goals, Coun- cil Chairman Robert W. Kime, ’51, of Roanoke, said he was impressed by the significant growth of the Fund last year, and he expressed confidence that alumni are being caught up in a new spirit and new interest that reflect not only pride in their Alma Mater but also pride in their potential to boost the Uni- versity toward a promising future. As in 1962-63, the emphasis dur- ing the new Fund Year will be on increased participation by former students, Kime pointed out. ‘We stressed 100 per cent partici- pation last year, and we are stress- ing 100 per cent participation again in the new campaign,’ he said. “We <4 believe that this is the only goal that suggests the importance of the participation we seek.” ‘The increase in number of con- tributors in 1962-63 over the pre- vious year was dramatic — from 2,607 to 3,905. The latter figure represents the largest number of alumni ever to support Washington and Lee through the Alumni Fund’s annual effort. “The support of last year’s rec- ord-breaking Fund campaign was inspiring to all of us who serve on the Alumni Fund Council,” Kime said. ““We know it was possible only because so very many alumni, act- ing as class and regional agents and workers, gave so generously of their time and energy. They should be very proud of their achieve- ments, as should all alumni. Kime said the Council is confi- dent that the new dollar goal for the Fund can be attained, and that there will be further progress to- ward complete participation. “We saw last year how much the total amount can be influenced by the addition of new contributors,’ he declared. “A great many persons have increased the amounts of their ROBERT W. KIME, 751 regular contributions, and this is certainly commendable tremely important, but the main reason the Alumni Fund went from $84,299 to $140,832 in one year was the vital rise in the num- ber of contributors. “We are counting on everyone who helped make last year’s efforts so successful to continue and_ in- crease, where possible, their sup- port,” Kime said. “But we are also counting on a great many other alumni to renew their active par- ticipation in their University’s future.’ The number of alumni who con- tributed to the 1962-63 Fund rep- resents about thirty-six per cent of the alumni carried on the rolls of the Alumni Association. Compari- son of this percentage with other schools in general reflects favor- ably on the University, but the achievements of schools like Dart- mouth, Duke, Davidson, Amherst, Williams, Vanderbilt, Princeton, Bowdoin, and Yale inspires mem- bers of the Fund Council to seek a place for Washington and Lee in the American Alumni Council's “honor roll” of alumni giving. and ex- THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Sy Pride and Enthusiasm Bring Unprecedented Results For 1962-63 Alumni Fund Donald M. Fergusson, 51 Fund Council Chairman, Tells Of Successful Efforts To Win Greater Alumni Participation OR THE FIRST time in several years, a full report on F the annual Alumni Fund is made available to all alumni in the pages of the Alumni Magazine. The purpose of this report is to recognize publicly in a small way those loyal alumni who responded to the appeal for support of the University through the 1962- 63 Alumni Fund. In every way, the 1962-63 Fund was a record-break- er. The final total of $140,832 surpassed by more than, | $27,000 the previous record high of $113,682 in 1957- is 58. This money represents a significant increase in the resources of Washington and Lee, resources that have sometimes been referred to in Fund appeals as ‘“‘bread and butter’ dollars for the week to week and month to month conduct of the University’s program in high- er education. Washington and Lee is definitely a stronger institution in 1963-64 because of this un- paralleled support of alumni in 1962-63. But as important as the dollar total is to the on- er going work of Washington and Lee, the most signi- ficant aspect of the 1962-63 Fund was the growth of participation among the University’s former students. A final count of 3,905 alumni contributed to the 1962- 63 Alumni Fund, 527 more than those who helped make 1957-58 the previous banner year. Last year’s total was nearly 1,300 above the number of contri- butors in 1961-62. All of this, the Alumni Fund Coun- cil believes, points up a new spirit of participation on FALL 1963 the part of alumni, a spirit that recognizes the value of Washington and Lee’s contribution to the lives and careers of individual alumni, and a spirit that acknowledges the worthwhile influence that the Uni- versity will exert on future Washington and Lee men and higher education in general. ‘The emphasis of this report, then, is not upon how much an individual or class contributed. The empha- sis is upon the very important fact that they did give through the Fund. Except for proper recognition of the topmost classes, the amounts are not recorded, but the name of every participant is listed in grateful ac- knowledgment of his vital support. It should be pointed out with great emphasis that while this report is a complete listing of all those who gave through the annual Alumni Fund, it is not a complete recording of all support rendered the Uni- versity by former students. Some prefer to make di- rect gifts, outside the annual fund, that support spe- cial scholarship or other endowments; some whose sons are students contribute through the annual Par- ents’ Fund; others are completing their pledges to the University Development Program. All such gifts are important to Washington and Lee and its future. This report, however, lists only those alumni whose gifts through the Alumni Fund helped build the record to- tal of $140,832 and the record participation of 3,905 contributors. This is the Alumni Fund Honor Roll for 1962-63. (See the following pages.) 25 Alumni Fund Honor Roll, 1962-63 Classes 1877-1912 T. M. Glasgow, Sr... U. G. Medford C. C. Gray S. R. Millar, Jr. ae gt ee 3. Ww Paes Number in class: 499 G. L, Groover E. M. Millen A. T. West H. L. Robinson J. R. Handlan H. W. Miller J. B. Whitfield T. F. Walker R. W. Alley A. J. Harbert W. M. Miller W. J. Wilcox H. 8S. Yocum R. C. Millin “TT Wi “We J. D. Ankrom W. W. Hargrave s L, T. Wilson G. V. Yonce T. O. Bagley i W. Harman J. N. Montgomery R. B. Wine E. W. Barger F. N. Harrison D. T. Moore W. G. Wood *Deceased F. C.’ Bedinger G. E. Haw ee My Moore J. D. Zentmyer J. M. Bierer F. J. Heazel J. Tee *Deceased. 1914-A 73% J. R. Blackburn W. C, Hedrick P. W. Murray* ° R. P. Blake M. M. Herman BR. Neff P. J, B. Murphy, Agent w fp aton ~ u eros S. R. Neel 1913-A 54% = “Number in class: 68 . 8S. Boice . ah, W. T. Neel R. A. Smith, Agent ; i. Ww. G. Boogher* 7 0, "Hodgkin J: e Nok Number in class: 46 a so ee tiny . A. Bradham . . | ri ae O: H.. Breidenbach R. M. Hoffman R. Owen, drs H. M. Banks H. N. Barker J. F. Brown W. L. Hoge H. W. Phillips H. 8. Coffey R. J. Bear M. Brown J. M. Holloway ~J. Pilkington P. D. Converse H. Booth, Jr V. M. Brown R. C. Hood F. Pipes EK. S. Delaplaine C. S. Brown J. W. Bruce A. A. Houser H. C. Pobst i. W. Dien! D. C. Buchanan CT. ‘Carey H. M. Houston O. BR. Price a R. Elam B. 8. Burks 7 B. Caskie TB Hubbard F. K. Rader St F. Fiery H. P. Carrington WG. Coe F M. Hudson F. T. Reeves A R. aad ~ &: Colhoun R. J. Coke L. L. Humphreys a ae HADy. oC" Jalonick A. S. Cummins L. M. Collins J. M. Hutcheson ae R. W. Joh F. M : W. F. Riser nson . M. Davis F. Y. Conner, Sr. S. Jemison I. T. Ritenour M. K. Lockwood C. L. Dexter H. B. Conner J. W. Johnson C. P. Robinson J. R. Mighell EK. B. Doggett L. G. Cooper W. M. Johnson P. A, Rockwell C. C. Moore W. H. Eager B. W. Coulter R. S. Keebler R. H. Rowe > H. E. Peeples J. M. Farrar G. L. Coyle W. W. Keyser R. A. Ruff H. M., Satterfield. J. D. Flowers F. R. Crawford H. W. King T. B. Ruff R. A. Smith J. H Garmany Cc. Cc. Crockett A. C. Knight R. S. Sanders W. T. Thom, Jr. L, R Grabill, Jr H. L. Crowgey M. E. Kurth S. W. Schaefer W. L. Tucker Cc. D. Gray J. B. Dabney W. G. Lackey B. B. Shively e Twyman J. J. Halbert R. P. Daniel H. J. Lemley ae hae A. ee ccon . A fe C. T. Dawkins P. F, L’Engle Cc Pp. Srv Cc. B. WwW Vn ayne . . Snyder iltshire A. M. Hitz W. T. Delaplaine S. C. Lind A. D. Somerville R. R. Witt R. P. Hobson L. J. Desha A. G. Lively J. Somerville W. H. Womeldorf J. G, Jackson H, W. Dew A. W. Lybrand R. H. Spahr G. Kerns R. W. Dickey J. T, Lykes D. Stant B. J. Lubin G. J. Dominick W. R. McCain B. Stedman 1913-L 54% A: W. McCain H. A. Doss J. A. McClure R. B, Stephenson T. R. Bandy, Agent T. A. McCorkle D. R. Dunham W. McCoy R. B. Stotler Number in class: 24 R. B. McKnight J. W. Eggleston J. McCulloch C. W. Streit , F. P. Miller W. T. Ellis W. McDonald Cc. L. Syron T. R, Bandy W. Meadows Minter GP. Wishburne A. McDowell A. Tabb B. D. Causey P. J. B, Murphy R. T. Flanary J. C. McPheeters A. D. Trundle E. C. Dickerson L. O’Quin RL. Frink L ne oe at oad Jr. af ooo J: c ects : - -t. : . urner . J, Hanna . EF. Raines =! 4 Gee : C. H. Marstiller E. Vawter C. E. Hunter W. P. Schenck . asgow C. W. Mason R. T. Wallace H. P. Macfarland J. W. Selig Alumni Secretary BILL W ASHBURN congratulates freshman BILL JEFFRESS of Richmond for winning the annual Freshman Camp name contest spon- sored by the Alumni As- sociation. For his good work, he won the hand- some WeL blanket. 26 THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE . J. Wilkins* . B. Winfrey . G. Womble *Deceased 1914-L 40% J. L. Hughes, Agent Number in Class: D. S. Bone . Buchanan . Chadwick . Hudson . Hughes . Morrissett . Powell . Smith . Whittle . Wiliams 1915-A M. P. Coe, Agent Number in class: 54 Adams Adams Bear . Bell . Boatwright Burke RAWYQUU > ToypMmraokia 48% Ox Oo Davidson . Fowlkes . Gooch, Jr. Progr are ee ZU mS ae © . 2. 3 48 VE ee ee Raymond L. Cundiff....... 47 Law Classes TOA ee a Clande BR. Billo 7 ee 87 LOPS ea eae R. Bleakley James... 2.5... 2. 86 TUS ee Charles A. Wood, Jr......... 74 ADEPT a eS Euchlin D. Reeves.......... 69 LORE ce a os win (Mo Marks: 0 67 B. Rives E. L. Gladney, Jr. A. M. Bernstein M. S. Sanders H. E. Handley D, Blain J. M. Schmoele A. A. Lander J. W. Bowyer E. S. Smith A. R. LeCompte A. D. Burk D. W. Thornburg I, M. Lynn H. G. Funkhouser M. G. Twyman E. H. McCaleb, Jr R. D. Garcin, Jr. W. C. Wells, III G. EK. McClure - W.A .Gibbons, Jr. T. P. White H. K. McCormick C. L. Gilkeson’ G. R. Womeldorf G. T. Madison P. G. Harris H. K. Young N. R. Miller F. A. Henry ee Fy oe ue B. Hoke > . H. Patterson . D. Johnson 1917-L 87% C. M. Peale W. C, King C. R. Hill, Agent H. R. Robey W. R. Knebelkamp Number in class: 15 O. C. Rucker, Jr. C. G. G. Moss 7 Seed T. C. Standifer J. L. Patterson aiov.c bell M, P. Sutton W. B. Patterson a ae in Hob G. S. Terry F. M. Pollock 5. S° HA neg H. C. Trigg S. L. Raines oR win A. Wescott W. J. Rushton RE. Ki: J. H. Young, Jr. D. C. Storey Pk Miles E. A. Stuck J. P! Norris 1920-A 42% J. pe Treccase G. Ottenheimer H. F. Trotter, Agent = L. ae C. G. Peters Number in class: 83 Graham A. White C. B. Robertson Baber W. B. Wisdom H. G. Smith Bailey : D. Wright Bryant 1921-L 36% urn 1918 27% Burns F. C. _Parks, Agent Allein Beall, Jr., Agent Hage in class: 87 . Adams Ambler eall, Jr. Bear* Brandon Campbell . Crymble Holt Howe, Jr. Ignico Izard Jeter MacGregor Marx . Moreton, Jr. . Paxton . Raulerson Schulz * Shoun . Stumpf . Styles WO ™M © < pmo — — OD OR ROME bi sumer pitty Cin n Bee age ee . Cabell " Cushman " Edmondson Evins . Foss Hallman Hill . Howerton . Johnston . Jones Lowe McCabe . Madison, Jr. Moore Mueller Patty . Payne Poindexter “Powe . Robbins 2olston . Shirey RA TAS AO TOO DOSMSISROSS MTOM ag ee eee A 2 P ts KS Number in class: 33 J. F. Bain B. H. Barrow J. Bell 0 td 0 © < 3 cs Dingess Gibbons . McCann Moyler Neblett VSO MOUs rat SP ORF aS . C. Wood, Jr. 1922-A 32% D, A. Reynolds, Agent Number in class: 88 R. M. Barker W. H. Barrett Cc R J b> ie} a 5 oO . N. Bealer . M. Bear . A. Cranford . S. Dodd K. Ford Frantz Gray Haynes Livingston . Maben, Jr. " Madison Mattox Milbourne Patton . L. Patton Portlock . Powell " Reynolds . Robert, Jr. Telford aE Trotter, Jr . Van Swearingen B. Webb . A. Williams, Jr. M. Yeilding 1922-L 86% R. B. James, Agent Number in class: EK. Jackson R. B, James A. i Lubliner W. Neblett L. B Rouse G. W. Taliaferro 1923-A 28% H. L. Elias, Agent Number in class: 118 Aull Berryman . Berson, Jr. Bryan Cummings . Elias Frew . Hampton . Harriss, Jr. B. Holloway Hurt . Kennedy Kilmon . Lester, Jr. Liddell . Long . Lynn, Jr. . McDonald, Jr. McKnight. Mason Matson . Perry . Riggs . Ross . Royston " Smith Tucker . Vest . Vinson . Wade, Jr. Wall . Wickersham Womeldorf . C. Wright, Jr. 1923-L 42% R. H. Carr, Sr., Agent Number in class: 24 H. Carr . Faulconer* . Holbrook . Howard Hudak Jones . McCarthy . Overton . Ragsdale . Streeper *Deceased 1924-A ee soe De cose a eel ate SSAA ER EA DOR OOO ESOP AWG b Sap Qe De ot a FAAP DOA Tit iySHyHo 27% . M, Pickus Number in class: 161 . L. Allgood . Ames, Jr. . Ayres Bock . Bryan . Cameron - Carlson Dearborn B. Edwards Ehrenworth Gay . Gibson . Guerrant . Harrell " Hendon . Howard ’ Huff, Jr. . Jones . Kerr, Jr. Kirkman Leake Reo SOun Ss UTORSN ES alskry> ear 27 Alumni fathers who brought sons to W&L this fall included, l-r, FRANKLIN R. BIGHAM, . V. Logan, Jr. _ W. Manley, Jr. . K. Manning ’ Merritt R. Mitchell P. Morris L, Neal Newman . W. Ogden P. Phillips, Ee Phillips . M. Pickus W. Plowman FE. Riley, Jr. . C. Roberts _ Shropshire . C. Smith 'g. Spragins N. Thomas Turner B. Watts O. Whitfield A. Wiggins W. Wilkinson 1924-L 42% D. N. Farnell, Jr., Agent Number in class: 26 W. G. Burton JT. Beige, ea Bis op C. A. Cohen J. B. Dooley T. P. Duncan, Jr. D. N. Farnell, Jr. J. W. Greene M. P. Matheney S. Phillips C. A. Tutwiler R. G. Whittle D, P. Wingo 1925-A 44% J.T. MeVey, Agent Number in class: 153 E. W. Alexander Allen Altfather Anderson Andrews . Bolling, Jr. Bowers Broadus Brock, Jr. . Brown - Burton . Choate . Coe, Jr. . Copper renshaw . Driver, Elgin Fischer itz Fulwider, Jr. Gannaway Goode odman . Goodrich Harman Harrell Heartt Heilig OS SPAS gh HOnZ Jr. a AOR EP RWW JOnU On saWNOA s PME TL > a> yd NO GO 30, JOHN W. Hopkins, JR., sons are behind °30, and Dr. Ceci. W. HickAM, ’25. The their dads, l-r, Bos, WALTER, and JIMMY. . Hickam Holt . Howerton Hummer Kaylor Kemper Klein Langhorne Liebert Ludington McHenry . McMillan McVay Mattingly atz Miller Mitchell Moomaw, Jr. . Myrick . Phillips ollack . Putney Rex Robertson SF yma gaqyss avgnP rn I. Shepherd Shuman Simmons P. Sloan G. Smith, Jr. Spector W. Stuckenrath Cc, Traywick H. Uhli FE. Ward B. White . Witherspoon J. Womeldorf L. Woolfolk 1925-L 50% E. M. Abernathy, Agent Number in class: 16 SHO SWIMMERS OUM>> 0ST SHON SMES SOUS UO EK. M. Abernathy G. T. Clark D. G. Eristoff H. M. Gould C. E. Hinkle R. B. Houchins T. R. Nelson P. A. Norman G. S. Wilson, Jr. W. W. Wood 1926-A 33% E. A. Dodd, Agent Number in class: 147 Do M. Dozier, Jr. Lee Fagan Felsenthal Foley ne ater Meer SSN MRARASAs geo OWISsQHQuaeaP a eo. Fulton isen Gimson Goodman Gordon Harris . W. Hendrix, Sr. Hendrix Hill Johnson Jones . Knight Livingston . Lowry " MacCorkle MacCorkle . McGiffin, Jr. Marchman Martin G2 > O° ay Mayhew Moore Morris Nichols WusPavar Schuchart Smith . Smith Switzer . Thames, Jr . Wice . Wilkinson . Williamson . Wilson 1926-L 66% C. O. Davajan, Agent Number in class: 15 R. O. Bentley, Jr. L. Valentine B. G. Watkins 1927-A 21% Cooper Turner, Jr., Agent Number in class: 173 . S. Barnett 'E Birnie . Cayce Davis Dawkins ron Ellis W. Fall F. Forsyth Harris, Jr. .. aod, Eff T. Hopkins . Jolliffe Lanier London McCain . Magrill Moore waded eee) si nee S ots mR! . Ray " Redcay . Rogers, Jr. . Simmons . Stevenson aylor rner, Jr. ‘ante i) GU RODWAINO SST SSO ORAUSON TAPS DQWOOSA 2 S tt . Wilbourn 1927-L 69% E. D. Reeves, Agent Number in class: 16 J. P. Bumgardner . 2 Conrad Jones g? ‘Letcher S. Stemmons Varney . Whitley ee Other alumni fathers visiting the University in Sep- tember were WILLIAM R. SPHAR, JR., 735, left, and RopericK D. COLEMAN, RovDERICK behind. "40, with sons RoG and 1928-A 37% G, F. Horine, Agent Number in class: 172 prouse . Strahorn Streit . Stuart Tips : Torrey: if . Wainscott ’ Wurzbur ger Yarbrough . Yeatman J. W. Alderson, Jr. L. M. Armentrout N. F. Atria W. D. Bach S. A. Bloch C. E. Branham L. A. Brown B. K. Bullard H. H. Butler G. H. Carr, Jr. E. S. Clarke, Jr. J. B. Clower, Jr. P. Cohen D. P. Comegys J. B. Copper L. L. Davidge N. W. Diebel W. C. Drewry G. W. Dunnington J. B. Ecker V. A. Fisher W. M. Garrison J. E. Glaspie J. Goldstein R. J. Haller W. L. Harris Cc. J. Holland V. A. Hollomon G. F. Horine R. F. Howe Hi. R. Johnston S. F. Jones J. J. Kaplan R. E. Kepler J. G. Laytham C. H. Lindfors W. J. Luria J. G. McClure W. C. Magruder, Jr. A. R. Middlekauff J. W. Minton H. B. Neel WwW. C. Norman L. Odell L. H. Palmer W. M. Parker J. D. Reed, Jr. J. O. Rutherford J. Seales, Jr. EK. W. Sherrill I. H. Shupp W. H. Smith J. M. Spence, Jr. P. ©. E. C. H. B. T. G. S. J. G SP AAW SAP OS, fa we DO 1928-L 41% W. P. Woodley, Agent Number in class: 17 T. B. Bryant, Jr. Clarke R. Crozier W. Cubine E. Daugherty W. Stipes, II . P. Woodley 1929-A qeUA ZO 31% H. F. Day, Agent Number in class: 208 C. V. Amole Backus Bacon . Bailey, Jr. " Bailey . Berry Black, Jr. . Bush, Jr. . Carver ’ Castner avis . Day Ebert Fitzpatrick . Glass, III ‘Godwin Godwin amman, Jr. . Hearne Hemphill . Hinton . Hutchinson, Jr. Janney Jenkins . Johnson caine S| os > ites HP OPO BOOM SEIT Ons hr UP ROLE THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Johnston coy unkin . Kelly . Lanier, Jr. Lee OT oeett, JT: Lott Lowry Luft McCardell McCarthy MacDonough McPherson Morgan Offutt Pace Pharr SHRP EEN yE HR oC ° = re 3 47 A222 R. Preston J. Salinger G. Sargent M. Shackelford Sherwood D. Simmons N. Smith . C. Spengler, Jr. S. Stephens M. Taylor M. Waddell . C. Watson H. Wilcox a Williams ART SST COP AMEN SON EMS SUP Mer pnsendoar im 36% S. C. Strite, Agent Number in class: 14 P. R. Becker C. W. Hamilton R. D. Powers, Jr. W. S. Price S. C. Strite J. B. Towill 1930-A 33% J. P. Lynch, meen Number in Pk 187 W. T. Alsop J. Barnett R, Bigham C. Broadus P. Brown EK. Bullard UN Clapp, Jr Craddock Ww. Davis Davis . Davis, Jr. Denton . Doughtie, Jr. Evans . Felder, Jr. Gooch owen Grashorn . Graves Hampton Harman Hughes, Jr. rahncke Jennings . Jones . Jones Kaplan Keil . King, Jr. th cae Melosh ako TAO eel Ky Lewis . Lindsey, Jr. ilo yd pwns Lvach yons, Jr. McFarlin May Merrick Mitchell, Jr Mitchell Morison Morrow Nelson Nichols Painter Pilley Ralston Reis Roberson Roberts Rouse Schmitt Sprinkel, III Stuchell, or; uter . G. Tarrant, Jr. 3 “M. Vaught GoD; Vermilya Trini an ee Decay i Pe ee ee wT FALL 1963 W. W. Welsh S. Wender H. L. Williams, Jr. E. M. Wood, Jr. 1930-L N. D, Hall, Jr., Agent Number in class: 22 E. I. Bostwick L. H. Davis M. W. Ewell N. D. Hall, Jr. M. C. Montgomery FB, Orquhart, Jr. W. A. Ward, Jr. 1931-A J. L. Rimler, Agent Number in class: 220 W. P. Ballard M. Barron . C. Borland owes Bowes Calhoun Clark Clay Day, Jr. Dean Devine, Jr. Groop Haley Hall Hardwick Harvey Hickman Hornor Huntsberry Jenkins hnson Jones inkin . Kaetzel King . Lambert, Jr. Lancaster . Levin Levy . Lewis Luria, III ‘eConnell Martin, Jr. iller . Milliner, Jr. Minniece Morris . Myers, Jr. Myrose* . Noyes . Nunn . Orndoft . Osowitz "Pace eeper Phelps . Piersol Porter . Printz Riley Rimler . Robinson Rucker . Smith . Smith - Smoot " Snyder, Jr. : Stemmons . Thomas, Jr. . Thomas Tiffany . Vance . D, Wagers . Waxberg ‘Weinberg, ar. M. Weston . EF. Williams *Deceased 1931-L 53% Ethan Allen, Agent Number in class: 15 E. Allen . A. Glasgow . Gooch, Jr. E. Hoffman "B. Martin S. Sandifer ee Smith M. Weinberg 1932-A 29% C. E. Long, Jr., Agent Number in class: 211 M. W. Adelson wi ae Sysehywon re WQ SRAM Ar SS OO RIESE SP OMWP OP Ae iUbSUTW EP HOR OSRO SOM CRW mINOMUN Ob es ae 45% 30% Allen . Barnes, Jr. Brady Clothier. Jr. Cross . Cunningham Davidson, Jr. Dobbs . Fink . Hamilton . Harris Harris . Hoadley Hoyt, Jr. ‘Hudson Hunzicker, Jr. me ohnson, Jr. Ladd Lemay . Leslie Levy Lewis . Lewis Livingston . Long, Jr. ‘ Love . Lynch McCarthy . McKinney, Jr. McKnight McLaurin McVay Marks . Martin, Jr. Miller Morse Nesbitt Newman Northup . Oglesby, at Price Reinhold Richardson obertson . Rosenberg Routon . Sanford, Jr. . Shields, Jr. mith . Smith . Spector tark . Sturgis . Sullivan * Tucker . Varner, Jr. Walker ‘ Williams . Wilson, Jr. . Wise . Wise . Woodwall . Wright . Zimmerman 1932-L 74% C. A. Wood, Jr., Agent Number in class: "93 M. P. Burks, III Dattel . Harrell, Jr. Holstein Hughes . MacKenzie, Jr. "Malone Malone . Mathis . Peery, Jr. . Richmond Smith . Sparks . Speer, Jr. . Wood, Jr. 1933-A 33% R. C. Barnett, Agent Number in class: 193 C. Barnett Bear Blanchard yeaa maim 2S Se = ey > tg <. eae cetmeec tt SS 22 BR SOM DUS A MR SOMO MIT MROR SOS iO OM CMO SONS GOSH OMEGA I ee, mM op QQSAMP sesame PP Opt rg saP ec ee Brent . Bricken . Brooks, Jr. Brothers Calhoun ‘eon . Crighton, Jr. . Culley Cummings . Curtis

ro 1941-A 45% M. A, Saunders, Jr. J. Dempsher B. R. Schewel J. W. Deyo E. C. Rassman, Agent WwW. Ee Shannon c P. Didier Number in class: 219 A. Simpson, Jr Ii. P. Ditto, Jr. R. H. Adams R. W. Smit Jd cB: Dorsey, at. W. P. Ames, Jr. J. J, Speight, Jr. WwW. B. Dunson H. G. Ashcraft, Jr. R. E. Steele, III R. W. Ebe, Jr. A. W. Avent D. L. Stein G. A. Essig M. D. Barker R. L. Stein L. J. Fisher B. S. Berghaus J. B. Stombock T. O. Fleming A. T. Bishop, Jr. J. G. Street J. EK. Foard G. C. Boxill G. S. Suppiger E. M. Fountian A. Bratenahl R. N. Sweeney Cc. T. Fuller T. S. Brizendine J. D. Taylor R. D. Gage, III T. W. Brockenbrough C. G. Thalhimer Cc. T. Garten P. D. Brown L. L. Thigpen, Jr. L. C. Greentree T. Bruinsma W. J. Torrington W. B. Gunn F. C, Bryan T. S. Tuley, Jr. J. A. Hauslein W. Buchanan K, B. Van de Water, Jr. S. R. Hawkins D. M. Buchholz Cc. Van Vliet J. S. Hill E. E. Chamness H. Van Voast A. M. Hitz, Jr. C. H, Chapman, Jr. B. M. Wakefield, Jr. W. B. Hopkins R. H. Cofield C. M. Walker S. Hunt G. H. Collins R. F. Walker, Jr. S. Isenberg J. W. Crawford, III H. G. Wolf B. E. Jasper a SS eed Jr. H. M. Woodward BS - phe oe . B. Davis : . Johnson GB Day 1941-L 65% BP. Kadis A. R. DeLong C. H. Heiner, Agent G. E. Kearns, Jr. A. E. C. D’Emilio Number in class: 26 F. H. Kibling J. D. Durham FEF. Bartenstein, Jr. F. L. LaMotte C. Eccleston F. C. Bedinger, Jr. A. S. Lanier E. V. Echols C. E. Bowles, Jr. M. W. Lau W. L. Evans, Jr. C. B. Curtis J. H. Lawrence H. L. Farris, Jr. H. T. Dickinson R. A. Lawton THE TOP FIVE—AMOUNT Academic Classes Class Agent Amount LOo8 0 nee a Charies.C. Smith..é 35 $6,250.00 1028 I a ee ee Gerald F. Horine........ 4,777.27 tPF ee ek a Cooper Turner, Jr....... 4,334.86 1945. (eonibine@) = oe eS Edward B. Addison...... 4,065.00 TOR ee ee ee Bruce S. Parkinson...... 3,787.65 Law Classes Lb ee te as mR. Baaty oo 5,002.50 ee Wilbur C. Fide. 2,385.00 1952 ee oe ee Charles A. Wood, Jr..... 980.00 Tipe ea eee. Carter :R. Allens. 2... 835.00 1 ee ae Charles F. Heiner....... 765.00 A. Fleishman J. A. Gurkin, Jr. R. S. Leake K. T. Ford C. F. Heiner B. W. Lee, Jr. J. S. Friedberg R. Keehn D. C. Lewis, Jr. H. P. Friedman, Jr. C. M. Landrum G. R. Lloyd N. C. Gilbert C. F. McInerney J. B. MacBride D. J. Godehn J. E, Perry H. N. McClure H. G. Goodheart R. H. Shumate G. C. McCrary R. M. Gregerson L. G. Skarda H. McCulloch, Jr. L. R. Hanna, Jr. G. M. Smith, Jr J. H. McMillan R. M. Herndon A. T. Snyder J. K. Mallory, Jr. L. T. Himes Cc. W. Taylor J. G. Martire C. L, Hobson J.C, Williams, Jr. W. L. Monroe F. W. Hynson a £ e ee R. M. Jeter, Jr. 1942- ‘ arker W. H. Keland " 457% W. A, Phillips G. O. Keller B. E. Jasper, Agent R. L. Pinck H. @. Kincaid Number in class: 236 F. H. Pitzer, Jr. F. S. Kirkpatrick W. C. Aberg oe: Wok, Preston, Jr G. LaBaw S. R. Ames T. A. Rammer J. C. Larsen J. M. Atwood C. L. Refo R. E. Lee J. Barrie, Jr. P. G. Rembert R. E. Lehr EK. M. Boyd F, K. Rippetoe R. L. Levering L. J. Bradford G. Rives, Jr. W. J. Longan E. W. Brockman, Jr. R. . Root J. T. Lykes, Jr. G. M. Brooke R. 8S. Rosenfeld oa des McConnell N. H. Brower R. R. Russell, Jr G. K. McMurran P. R. Brown C. Lane Sator R. A. Mehler R. G. Browning C. L. Sartor W. B. Mize W. L. Bruce R. _ Schellenberg W. B. Morgan R. A. Brunn R. T. Sloan T. G. Morris EF. G. Burger Cc. BE. Smith, Jr. K. D. Moxley R. F. Campbell R. D. Spindle, III G. M. Murray, Jr. D. S. Carnahan, Jr. J. W. Stowers W. A. Murray R. Cavanna R. M. Suarez, Jr. J. F. Norton EK. A. Chriss P. C. Thomas, Jr. N. A. Park S. F. Ciener, Jr. R. H. Turner, III R. C, Peery T. A. Clark R. C. Walker J. T. Perry, Jr. K. S. Clendaniel L. J. Warms J. H. Price, Jr. C. B. Conner R. FE. Wersel KC. Rassman T,. M. Cox W. C. Wherrette R. A. Ric E. C. Cuttino R. B. Whitaker M. H. Rosenthal W. J. Daniel P, A. Wilhite, Jr.. F. A. Rusch C. W. Davis A. L. Wolfe, Jr. . Wright K. Yeomans 1942-L 52% C. L. Walters, Agent Number in class: 27 F. Bagley Blinn Butts . Clatterbaugh Dobbins ass, III Isgrigg . Jones, Jr. McCaskill, Jr. chaefer, _ Walters . Ward, Jr. Q ous > DOOR A TIOT ts Sea oe 1943 39% C. B. Myers, Agent Number in class: 244 . Alverson . Andrews . Barritt Basile eM. Jr. . Bowie Brainard . Bromley Cahn . W. Campbell . Cohen Q coat ppa Coulling, Jr. . Crawford . Darby, Jr. . Daves, Jr. - Ditto . Dudley . Eager, Jr. East . Easterlin . Ellis, Jr. Evans Fitzpatrick Fleet, Jr. ’ Flowers, Jr. . Funk . Galloway . Garges Garretson uesser Hamilton . Harnden, Jf: Hughes Hutcheson, Jr. Inman, Jr. Jefferson Johnson Kammerer . Keller Kimbrough . Kopald, Jt: . Lambert, Jr. . Long, Jr . MacCachran " McCausland . McCoy, Jr. M. Maish . Mankin . Mehorter Miller Mitchell . Morris, Jr. . Mouser, III Murrell Myers . Neilson Nelson . Noonan, Jr. Parsons . Paschal, Jr. . Peeples Priest . Rast, JT. Richardson . Runyan . Sanders . Sellers Sevier . Shepherd ’ Shuford . Signaigo, Jr. . Silverstein Ree easdi ce ere ok pace Qy O > © O a ren ee op) ty = . sullivan, Jr. . Sutherland, III . Swinford QS SOUP NAS VON GOSSAGE EDOGOWON DT > SADE DOTS OSE SOWA COWSS SOURS OPS SP AMO OMPMOQUROO ane 31 . Taggart Tenney, III hompson, JT. . Walker . Webster, Jr. . Wells, Jr. Wheater . Wilcox, Jr. . Wilson, Jr. ‘Zelnicker, Jr. _E. Zombro, Jr. HAw O° > > oO yr oO GBI SSRIS SD thy BPO s0<,0 1944-A & L 39% J. P, Gilman, Agent Number in class: 196 & . Ballenger, Jr. . Barns, Jr. Barrett Becker rown . Brown, Jr. Brown Calvert . Cancelmo, II Christian, Jr. Cc, Crittenden . O. Crockett, Jr. Ww. Davis, Jr. M. DeHaven . Donnan, Jr. . Dudley, Jr. Embry Ernst > 0 an n @ 5 a O ry Og Paar hU st VOMIT blag es) ae © 5 a 5 ’ Ss ae © ky 5 © 5 ey a" TS . Harman, Jr. Heard . Hempel, Jr. Hendrickson . Humphreys, Jr. . Jackson . Jarvis Johnson . Jordan cap Vaz Ors . Manger . Michaux, Jr. . Miller, III . Moore, Jr. Moses icholson . Noll, Jr. . Oost, Jr. . Peabody, Peak . Pope . Putnam, Jr. . Redman. JT. ” Beynclas, Jr. lock well Rowe . Runyan, Jr. Ryan ‘Schneider, JT; . Sherman . Smith Soth . Stansfield . Stansfield . Stilwell Taylor _ Theurer . Ulam . Upehurch, Jr. Valz, Jr; Van Buren, III “Waddington, Jr. . Ward, Jr. . Watson . Wemple . Wimmer . Wood 1945 A&L 27% E. B. Addison, Agent Number in class: 16 E. B. Addison B. Atkins, Jr. att at Z Jr. caty Orr POSTE SAASOASS DOSES WU SS SUA SD Se OO RIOD GOS OP BID OSORIO} ae = BBZBE Omen Oar HO en M. H. Churchwell, Jr. L, Crist, Jr. S. Dietler R. Easley, Jr. B. Evans M. Fetterolf W. Foerster . E. Frye guvBOassyans 9 no . R. Gaines Geise, Jr. Gunn, Jr. H. iW Harlan, Jr. Jackson Jones Kaylor, Jr. Kelly, Jr. . Kiendl W. McRea, Jr. B. _M. Hi E. L. T. . W. W Mowris . Naccarato Keefe . Orgain, Jr: Otter, ‘Jr. . Page, Jr. Philpott . Redmond, Jr. . Richards, Jr. _ Schewel . Searle, Jr. . Sinskey "Smith Smith . Sorrells, Jr. tieff . Stone, III Walker enderoth, Jr. M. Zamoiski oe gee oe ee Beamon wR . Brown, Jr. . Cheatham, Jr. F, oe B. Coulling, III . Criminale Cutting Dodson ischer, Jr. . Fowlkes, Jr. . Frierson Se aka Holley Hornickel . Hughlett, Jr. . Huntley . Keebler, JY. . Kelly, III . Kincheloe Lee Loeffier . McClintock, Jr. Magee Marsh Martin Mead tH. Mish Jr: . Morris, Jr. . Moxham Maras . Ottignon Quaintance Randall E. Reams . Sage . Smith . Smith a cabrtinnaic ots Wellford . Willis Winborne, Jr. WwW, Zinovoy 19447 A & L 35% J. A. McWhorter, Agent Number in class: 714 W. J. Berry . Braunschweig din . W. "Brotherton . Chittum, Jr. Curl . Dennis . Doswell . Gaulding, Jr. Harris . Lauderdale, Jr. . McWhorter . Mayes . Merrin, Jr. ee ee cco n sects awoomensoearee G eee q < 3 ° P qy ar) es oO oO qOSUSEN EDS WA AQP Hts awa Mr. and Mrs. WALTER H. WILLIAMS, TRS during the Homecoming Weekend. . A, Mosbacher . G. Patrick H. Pifer oe. Polk T. Romaine . R. Shamhart H. Shook . L. Silverstein, Jr. . A. Warms . R. Watkins . M. Wilcox, Jr. _ B. Wright, Jr. 1948-A 40% L. H. McKenzie, Agent Number in class: 90 EK. G. Adair, Jr. L. Adams C. Anderson . Armistead Booker Bosserman . Burton . Cranford, Jr. . Ellis Fox . French, Jr. . Hochstim Holladay . M. Hollyday Hopkins James oo ft3 ty! @O ace oe Oo Ss . McCutcheon, Jr. . McDowell, Jr. McKenzie bahngs ghisay! =" Mitchell Murray . Novak Potter . Rattner . Reynolds, III . Rowe . Stewart Vierbuchen . Vinson, Jr. . Williamson S. Yates 1948-L C. A. Allen, Jr. Number in class: 59 Allen . Ballengee Cavaliere Clark Cofer..Jr. DiLoreto Foresman Freed NMS Ss SOSMSSNOP Son See g47 Sea 63% > PRIOR G BoSWaVs ~ la Murry Geyer Grossman Hickey Fi ackson, Jr. Lee Lowery . Lukens, McNeer’ Mitchell Murphy Patterson Pettus . Pitcher, Jr. Pleasants Porter . Power, Jr. Preston . Scheifly Siple . Tolley, Jr. Toole . Tucker, Jr. Tucker Watts M. Werth 1949-A 39% M. W. Saurs, Agent Number in class: 222 Jr. BE SCOWAE PSP mAs sno” Mette ee ee qy > > 5 Q © - wR oO 5 a _ _ Pp>rPuel: 2. R. Bouldin . Brown ’ Caldwell urter, wt. . Chidsey, Jr. Choate . Cromelin, ST. . Davis Donald o9raBant se § 3D te w BL Foster, Jr. Gannon Gore, Jr. Graybeal Gusler Green, Jr. Gusler Guthrie SR ne W. S. i . Ss. ‘C. _S. . M. "49, visit the Lee Chapel museum . Hamilton Hamrick, Jr. H. Harding Harrison Hicks Hill, Jr. Hook, Jr. Huffman King Latture . Lauck, Jr. eGrand, Jr. . Lemon . Lindell . Little, Jr. McAden McCorkle . Malmo, Jr. - Mann, ar. Miller Miller . Minister, Jr. Moody Moomaw Morten . B. Murphy, Jr. Myers . Paxton, Jr Rice Racey Ramaley . Reid, Jr. . Robertson Ruble Sau Schoenfeld Feri Jr. . Smith, TII Stanley Stephenson llivan Taylor, Jr. Fr Taylor M. Thompson Treadgold Turrell . Warner, Jr. . Warren, Jr. _ Warren Whiteman . Whittle, III . Williams, Jr. . Wright, Jr. . Yankee, Jr. . Young 1949-L 42% J. B. Porterfield, Jr., Agent Number in class: 59 B. C. Allen H. D. Austin W. D. Bain a D Of ov sta gaiie Wats ADP EMO OS DOR SBO SAMS SS TORN SS SUM STOW USM SsROV Seas pe nae ater CS i AS . Bryant B. Coulter THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Dow . Hickhof . Fitzpatrick Forrer Glass Goldenberg Greer . Jolly . Kamen Kiser J, Koehler, II Lanier R. Larrick B. Porterfield, Jr. Raftery . H. Ramsey . W. Sharer " Silverstein Verano 2D, Williams 1950-A 38% B. S. Parkinson, Agent Number in class: 304 J. C. Auer Averett Bailey . Barnard . Barrett Bidwell Pees ee C I. Buck a. Burchell Jr. . H, Calvert, Jr. US. ‘Chapman D R C E . C. Dawkins, III . H. Denny, Jr. . Donovan, Jr. ugger liarle - . French, Ji Yr. French . Frost, Jr. . Gaines , Gilliam Gin Caneh: III Goodman Goodrich Guthrie Hamel Harte, Jr. Hedrick Helmen Hill Hodges, Jr. Hook . Humphris, Jr. Hunter . Kaylor Kerr, Jr. . Kirkpatrick, or. . Levick ' Lewis . Love, Jr. _ Lubs, Jr. ” McCormack, Jr. . McDonald ' McGee, Jr. McKenzie . McMath Malmo . Mastrianni . Mauck . Maynard, Jr. e . Mendelsohn peeMBeROet Senge ae hues roe Ds i, Q . G. Muhlenberg . Murray, Jr. Nickels . Parkinson . Peabody . Pease, Jr. _ Poweil, Jf. . Pruitt . Rickles . Roberts . Roberts Robertson obinson, Jr. . Root, Sr. . Rushton M. Scher . Scully ere gs Br stort Hh iP BRO Si HOO PURER! SNR gO Ht sBNOR HIS ROP MEP URO'UgenPt eer ounar ers ra bh FALL 1963 ™M haivitz shelmerdine, IV heridan 1tATATA Steele Stephens Stodghill . Sunderland Swinarton _ Switow Talley Taylor . Taylor . Thomes, Jr. . Townes Townsend . Trundle Turner, Jr. ‘an Buren Vaughan . Voelker, an. . Walther AW een . Wheater Whitehurst _ Wilhelm . Williams, Jr. Wing, Jr. et re, S2UOUP SEIU ONS US OTAD POR <4 "BP SSE iy? eg: cy > = ° oO as qy G. R. Young 1950-L 59% R. B. Bailey, Agent Number in class: 34 K. P. Asbury B. Bailey . Castle . Crittenden . Garrett Goddin Gray Hailey Harvey Hubard Joyce Lanier Ledbetter . Livesay, Jr. . McNeill, Jr. Maddox ory _ Sibl ey, Jr. Sutherland Todd oi. Wornom, Jr. 1951-A 48% W. U. Beall, Agent Number in class: 248 F. J. Ahern . Arata, Jr. Bagley . Baldwin Bassett Beall . Bean, Jr. MAMPSUAZr Seve eh nnd Pad Dl uae tiles —e ct N O ¢ . Boardman, Jr. on Bourne . Bowen, JY. . Bradshaw . Brown . Brown . Butler . Cancelmo . Clarke, Jr. . Coco . Collins. III Cook, . Courtenay, III . Cross, Jr. _ Curry, Jr. . Damewood . Daniel, Jr. widson . Davis . Davis . Eggleston, Jr. . Engleby, IIT . Fenhagen, II . Fergusson . Forkgen . Freeman, Jr. Gallagher. sayumm cl eeatsotcan. we cuit even | DISS WUPOWDIODONOUSNS He SARS OM OU Hd HO 3: . q2 ©, 2 @ 5D pees . Jones . Jones . Kannapell Kaplan . Kay, Jr. . Kling, Jr. Kunau . Lane, Jr. Lear . Lemcke, Jr. apaen i = Dd -D . Litwin . Lonergan McCutcheon acDonald McFall Marcus Martin . Miles, Jr. . Moller . More, ats . Moyler, Jr. Neal Neff . Niemeyer See ae © > mn Paradies . Patton, IV . Persinger - Peters, Iil Pittenger izitiz . Prout, II 2adulovic . Robert, Jr. . Roberts, aT. . Rosasco, III Rose Rosenfeld Ryer Sacra, Jr. lmons Sasscer Shanks . Shlesinger . Simmons Slaughter . smith . Smith . Snyder . Snyder . solomon . Stephens Taylor . I. Thompson, Jr. Trigg Tucker Turner . Uhlmann . Van Leer . Warfield . Wash aaa oe ed qHnwss! © © > ct — @ rs . Williamson . Winborne ° — mh Dey 4 , . Wooldridge . Yerkes, III 1951-L 44% E. M. Faris, Agent Number in class: 64 Ji Bailey, Jr. Ballard Bender . Bowles . Carey Carter . Davis. III Dowding . Karis, Jr. . Flood . Greer Harkett Kime F. Knight J. Kostel Lyons Mahood Mason HOURS SS MRAM SAAD AP BONUSES SSS $4 ge MT QUAH SP DOOR SAO Ages o> DAI DoW Papa ow Sy . Saraceno Oaere eee ee peak V white, Ys r. 1952-A 37% R. E, Thompson, Agent Number in class: 251 E. M. Anderson, Jr. R. F, Applegate OO ecu ee . Baer, II . Barron, Jr. "L. Batts Behrens, Jr. Boden, Jr. Borom Bowles Calechman Callaham, Jr. Calvelli Carden Clarke Connally, III Constine Cook Cooper Darling Dean, Jr. Denny, Jr. J. Eisler Erwin . Fuqua . Gardner illespie Glascock . Griffith, Jr. . Hansbarger, Jr. . Hansel, Jr. Harris N. Harris M. Hicks, Jr. . Holler . Horner, Jr. . Horowitz Howe, Jr. oe ee G20. by: pete Ingalls A. Jacob M. Jarrett . Kemble, Jr Kindred . Leyburn, Jr. Lummus . Lyon McCain, Jr. McClellan McClintock . D. McGrew, Jr. T. Mackey Maley . Manning, Jr. Maslansky D. Matz, Jr. endelsohn, III Mohr . Nelson, Jr. . Parker Patch HAE oP Rockel Rockwell Samuels . schaeffer, Jr. . Schenkel, Jr. . Shanno . Shepherd . Shuck . Sickle, JY. Smith pilman, Jr. . Stieff, Jr. Storey reuli, Jr. . Summers, Jr. . Thomas " Thompson Trammell . Waites . Warfield Weill . Whitman . Whittle, ais . Willett, Jr. . Williams . Williams . Williamson E. Woodroof 1952-L J.C, Turk, Agent Number in class: es Beck . Camper Coulson Elliott geese Be? Soe pee ee nce, oe ee es Rensrenbawenst 50% - McNamara . Morefield Nelson . Owens . Powell Richards . Richardson _ Strickler SWOT . Moreland . Norman, Jr. . Oo’ Connell . Oxner, Jr. . Perryman, Jr. . Pittman, III . Ritter . Rockel Rosenberg Sale, Jr. . Salsbury . Schuler, Jr. . Spence Stroud Sullivan Syme, Jr. . Thomas . Veal, Jr. . Watson . Werth camming anpvHnT on ig eee eee cdudtuneryeo geineos 1956-L 9% W. H, Hodges, Agent Number in elass: 11 H. H. Hodges C. J. Tzangas 1957-A 35% J. J. Fox, Jr., Agent Number in elass: 257 W. iH. Abeloff Alford . Allen, Jr. - Anderson Atler Bayard Belden ’ Bendheim, III T. Boone, ‘Jr. . G. Boyle . Buchanan, Jr. . Cairns ‘Campbell . Canfield ’ Clark . Collins, Jr. ' Conger, JY. Cremin. Jr. rutchfield . Cummings, Jr. . J. Curran F. Davis, Jr. H. Davis A. Dobyns, Jr. M. Drum H, Dunton M. Ehudin L. Elliott M. Erdreich, Jr. T. Evans, Jr. J. Fox, Jr. . H. Fralin, Jr. W. Frazier M. Funkhouser “M. Garner . Garson . Gee. Jr . Gold oo OMP OS? QOF RZD My! FHQQ Halper Aye OS: Uf You will receive full information later olve your Christmas itt problems wit WASHINGTON AND LEE Commemorative Plat (Wedgwood) Sold only in sets of eight different scenes rice, $24.00 per set, f.0.b., Lexington, Virginia Available in Blue color only ASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. Lexington, Virginia j 7 ‘